HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-29 - Orange Coast Pilotr
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__.·r~or cares a ree ~
Weekend RDonion
· ·Be~~h · <Qoy_ Killed ··
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MONDAY. AF.TERNOON, NOVEMBER 29, )97 1
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F-aeing Se~a1e
Romana Acosta Banuelos, 46, a .native or htiami, Ariz., is appearing
before the Senate Finance Committee today bn he r nomination to be
U.S. Treasurer. SQe faced congressional questioning on why she al-
lo\ved illegal Mexican aliens to work at her fo od plant in Gardena.
She is shown \Vith Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.), who acted as a char·
acter \\'itness in her behalf. Story Page 4. '
Death Rid es California
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High,fays -60 Lose Lives
California authorities today were coun-
ting up the traffic death toll following a
long Thanksgiving Day 'A'ekend that saw
high\vays generally snarled from Sen
" Ysidro in the south to Yreka In the· north.
General esUmates this morning rt!ach-
cd 60 motorists dead, with an exact count
expected later in the drf/:
One accident In the Sacramento area
killed sevtn persons including six from
one family returning home from a reu-
nion with relaUVes. (See: story on Paget
today.)
A second. fiery accident in San Diego
O.ruge ..
',,>-
\t'fiat•er
Coast ·
'
County claimed the life of Sandra Scott,
20, when two station wagons CQllided
headon, 2.5 miles south of San Onofre.
California Highway Patrol cfficer5
·finally had to set up special traffic lanes
to skirt the blackened wreckage until it
could be removed.
Traffic was. snarled south·of the border
too -for up to two hours -when U.S.
Qistoms Officials opened 15 of 17 special
border checkpoints to catch drugs or
cther contraband slipping through with
tourists.
The CHP said the worst traffic by far
was in the metl'()politan Los Angeles-
Orange county area , where vehicles were
bumper,to bumper and moving slowly on
most freeways.
Elsewhere, weather phenomena in·
eluding blowing dust in San Bernardino
County and Jow clouds and fog in Kern
County slowed d(lvers 'ot cars lo a snail's
pace.
Call Made
To Rese1~ve
30 Roon1s
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of 11141 Oallr l'llet Staff
\Vhen the Japanese Embassy in Wash-
ingt-On. D.C., calls to reserve 30 rooms
at a San Clemente .m9tel -and no one
has been told in advance -clerks be-
<.'Ome concerned.
When such a call came into the San
Clemente Inn Friday, the staff asked a
toJ>-level Presidential a<lie if the ~all was
a hoax.
It wasn't, bul it Was embarrassing
nonetheless.
The news or the President's meeUng
with Japanese Prime Minister Elsaku
Sato was not to have been announced
until later.
And apparently, the Japanese jumped
the gun.
Sources gave the account of the rescr·
vation snafu and indications were that
Saturday's official announcement of the
historic Sato visit Jan. 7 and 8 at the
Western \Vhite ltouse \vas made much
sooner than originally planned.
Other announcements over the weekend
also came wlthout waming, includiiig de-
llllls of lhe departure for \Vashington.,
The holiday stay by the President and
First Lady ended Sunday -sooner than
originally e:tpeCted.
Earlier plans had-called for the Presi·
dent to remain in San Clemente Wltil
Tuesday or Wednesday, but at an early
morning briefing Sunday Press Secretary
Ron Zie,gler announced the President
planned t-0 leave that afternoon at 4
o'clock.
The announcement came at about the
same time as news or the assassinaUon
of Jordanian Premier Wasti Tel oo the
IS.. ~IBASSY, Page %)
· Skies · v:ill be partly cloudy and
teffiperatures a coostant 65 Tues-
day, with more sun showing over
the Oran~ Goast. Overnight M>ws
are tabbed at. Sd degrees.
Reunwn Ends in Death
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i INSIDE TODA. Y
VC Jivine arld private inter-
esis are planning a ;oint venture
to form a nationally famau1
tMdicat .. oom~lu in Ora1117e
Cdu11i11 by 1974. Story Page JO,
As Beach Youth Slain
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,._119M4 NfW* 44 ~c....., 11 Srtm hrlw ,.
'-" 11·27 '*" ~ •n , .......... 1• -" w-. Wllffe ... ,.
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~weekend reunion or four ~lgh \sc~t
friends ended in tragedy Saturday-in
• Huntington Beach when One "W)ls fatally
wounded in a &hooting accident.
Charles W. 'Erickson. 17, of 20972 Sea
l\.Iist. Lane. died at 10: 10 p.m. in Paclfica
Hospital of a gunshot wound tn the head.
Police said Erickson and two com·
panions Wert visiting at the home of a
fourtJ.t friend, Richard J. Bagley, 18,-of
19552 Westwlnds Lane .
Tbt four boys were all graduated trom
• • ---Edison High School last June and have
been attendin& different colleges.
< Officer• said Bagley was apparently
showing his friends a .22-caUber rifle in
hi! bedroom when the gun discharged,
-wounding Erickson.
The youth was rushed to Pacifica
where he died abou t two hours later.
Police 1ald no charges have been filed
in the case, but invesUgatlon l! con·
ttnulng today. Funeral arrangements are
pending today. for Erickson. ...
Joan
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I . . 1
Irvine SJDith
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T _o Appear at ti CI
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' P.reside~t Departs
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·PRESIDENT NIXON PREPARES TD LEAVE SAN CLEMENTE AFTER 4-DAY HOLIDAY
Chief Executive HHds Tow1rd Helicopter at Lori n Coast Guard Station Sunday
·1 . H . f r VIn e e1ress
Se.ts UCl Speech ..
Heiress Joan lrV\ne Smith will ~Qpear
on the UC Irvine campus Tuesday, Dec.
7, to speak in opposition to the' proposed
inc:orporation ol the city of Irvine.
,Pt1.rs. Smith has accepted an invitation
trom the Associated Students of UCI
(ASUCI) to address students and in-
terested members or the public at noon
on t.hat date in the•Sclence Lecture Hall .
A spokesman klr the Irvine heiress said
today, "We hope all the registered wters
in the Irvine area will come to hear wbat
she has to say." The iJlCOl'poraUon elec-
tion is scheduled Dec. 21.
-In previous slatemenl! to the press,
Mrs. Smith his vigorously opposed in·
corporation or the new city !t this time,
maintaining il could result in.creation Of
'!a giant slum," through wt\Olesale Ii·
. quidaUon of Irvine lands to help the
lrvtne Foundation meet its economic
obligations.
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C'lerk's Mistnke Cited ..... ~__.. \'
In U.S. Market Frigh.t
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WASffiNGTON (AP) -A $400 million ·-' clerical error by the Federal Reserve
Board was acknowledged t.oday as the
cause of a big fright in the government
securities markets last week.
The financial communltjr roUnd money
so· tlghl In the banking •Y•lem lhal the
market sagged for treasury aecurilies,
until the Fed,eral Reserve'a money
managers became aware of the problems
last Frk!ay.
The flrsl viclim of the error was the
system's own open market committee,
which.governs the flow of money lnto the
banking system by its buying and selling
of federal securities.~ '
.-Thinking there was $400 milJkln more
u.sh In the vaults of thf banking ly!item lhan was thert, the committee wis stingy ..
"
about adding funds to the mcney supply.
The result was a sharp rise In the in-
terest rate whibh banks pay one another
for short-term funds. and a general
scarcity of investment money avail~ble
for the purchase of about $8.l billion
worth or bills being offered by the
Treasury during the week.
The Treaslll')''l)fr~-had to ·poy
more Interest than it otherwiie would
have done. No eslimate was Jmmcdiately
available on the ultimate cost lo tbt
government.
A Federal Reserve spokesman said tne
error was' not a misjudgment 1n
estimating, simply a clerical error ln
reporting the estimated 1'vault cash''
among the reserves or the banking
system and governs the volume of f\lnds
they can tend.
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I DAll.Y.PllDT s
: Old Frien:ds to Hear· President's Plans \
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. WASHJNcirOfi 1if?t -_-P?esldent .Nix·
on. expteted to 'anilounce a date Joi:_ hls'.
Qlina tr!P. wllhln 41 hours, ls described-as
eqer tO fiit Eut:Wisf tenifons, .-bl.It
pot at Uii eij;efrsi of old ttieMshfps, \ ·
·Press Sec~efary Roniki -L, 'Ziegler s:a1d·
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a 'desire tCJ":haVe me:arl fl.II consUl~tions ·
wit~ ·major ·allies ·prlo to Journeys to
Pek!nfaild Mosmw·was a key reason for
Ni16n'ro:annotmcfid intentionS to meet , durini ·the·next~five ·Weeks with leadera •-
of Britain, France, Wesl Germ Japan
-* ·-*-*....: -{:("
'Fatal Flaws'. cited ·· -
Will _lZ·eto .Ow:n~T
Bill, :Presidem ~rns .
and Canada.
Talking to a group of newsmen aboard
Air Force One as the President flew here
Sunday night from California, Ziegler
said:
"The purpc>se or th·e consultations is to
Inform our allies about our views of Ote
.. ~·o_rJd...a.pd to infQr.m them..about what the
President intends $_.ll accomplish ... The
President want!! to hear their views, and
he's·going to give his."
Another White House. ofricial, who
declined fo be identified. said Ni:r:on was
bound for Peking ·and Moscow "to rela x
tensions but not to sacrifice allied unity."
This source said the ·allied leaders
would not be granted ··an absolute .veto''
over any initiatives Nixon may take in
the Communilt capitals. "But," he ad·
ded, "U, thereare grave concerns, they
will be taken into Consideration."
Ignoring reports that hitches have
WASHJNGTON (UPf) _·-Preslddif. aritfciflates·no trauble raising. inoney for developed, Ziegler continueL lo promise
Nixon wil! .veto hi!_ own ta~ bill if it cort-a Niioh-fHJettiOh campaign. . that a date for the President's Peking
tairus eilher a pi-oVision tO finlnce MacGregor · contended that 1he cam· trip will be announ ced within 48 hours.
pl-esideotlal c'a·rii~Jgns with tax rricirieY.. pilign fillahCi~ ptin-would permit major There ha ve been several published and
er billion.s _ofJ,11 cuts he did not seek,_-t'he__ political contributors to concentrate on broadcast reports sugges ting the historic
\fhite H.ouse ;Yid toda)'." • primary elections, thus multiplying their mission might be postponed or c8nceled.
~Cla?t. 'MacGregor,· Niion's _chief "con;-impact--on -the · 11election of presidentia l .Ziegler: confirmed-du~ng the night ~at-
gressioo'il lobb)'ists aaid NixQQ favor.ed a . n0niiiiee5. . -N1Io n will me~t here tn Decetnber with
bU! paised___by the' H®~. · bUt sai!f tilt'-•He sald'it also ~~uld reduce -public con-Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliot
Senate· version contained "fil'iil fliii"--t.rol "Over the ·pohtical'""Pr~ess·and Collld. --Trudeau. •
'. · W on1anDies
In Fie1·y . -... . \
Coast Crash
A fiery , headon crash Suoday alter.noon
along an· unguaided stretch or freeway
near the San Onofre Nuclear Generating_
Station claimed the \ife_of a 20-year~ld
wo.man (rom San Diego !nd injured 11-
other persons -most of them children.
Highway patrolfuen said the 12:40 p.m.
collision tied up already c:ongested holl·
day tralfic for hours.
The dead woman was Sandra Scott, •
~ssenger in her uncle's auto which burst
jnto Oame after being "sideswiped by a
-station wagon that wenl o~ "of control. ·
· Patrolmen said lhe mish&p was cAused
when the Station wagon carrying 10
persons and driven by Mrs. Gwendolyn
McKinney, 27, of 829 'l'ownsend St.-, Santa
Ana, went out of contro~
The heavily-laden car careened across
• the upguarded . divider strip and
·• sideswii>ed a northbound car driven by
Edward Scott Jr., 43, of Inglewood.
Two other cars became involved In the
crashes· as their drivers tried to avoid the·
two autos in the initial collision. NQ one
was injured in those two ears. 1
Patrolmen gav~ this list of the injured: that Nixon· would not accept ••prOdUce ·:a · ·pr-0\if"'ra~lon of Political Before leaving California, Ziegler an~
Mac:GUJ;ol.._s..i~ tt\t ~liU~Def>;art= ~rti.es'1'.~3ll~e f~ndll Would ao'~ minor nounc~ th~ ch!ef ~xetUtive !_nd W!.,sl, __ _
ment bas been ln.!trueted to review the patty:candidates based on the percentage German Chancellor Willy Brandt will
_ -In the McKin~y car, Mrs. McKi n·
ney : Mrs. Ida Nani Stevens, 53, of 21282
Lemon Tree Lane, H.utinl{lon Beach; her
children, Lao-y,.11, and Brenda, 10; twin
children . of Mrs. McKinney, William and
Willie Mae, 9. All of the injuriet-Were
1evert,-but not crilical, officers said.
constitutlo~llty of permitting lndivid_uals-of tlfe vote they could win. confer Dec.-.28-29 at the Florida White
to earmifk $l of their.: income tax pay· AmOng the'' b·u d get · bu 1 ting '' House in Key Biscayne.
ment for pfesidenfi al Campaigns. Buf he· amendments added by the Senate, Earlier the White House had unveiled
indicated -Nixon has decided to veto Ole MaeGregQI'" ctted :· . plans for Nixon meetings with:
bill·ra•"""r than.challenge it"in court: . :...:A mea sare·to permit a lax deduction -President Georges Pompidou of "'~ •.. , • , · ~· ~ fdt the cost of college tuition which he France in the Azores Dec. 13·14. N~ met for more than three hours said w·outd~cost l2.4 blllion annually. -British Prime Minister Edward
'A:ijh MacGregor and memben ·of ~~ ~~tt ·iikfuse from 7 percent to 10 per: Heath In J:Jennuda Dee. 20-21.
.taff 16. 4'iacuu ·the. tax bill.-MacGregor cent-m. tberinvestment tax credit for -Japartese Prime· Minister·Etsaku Sate> ~layed the PresidtDl'1 'thinking t«?; rirm~ ope:r.atlng ln inner city 11lums or at the Western Wbite House in San
newsmen. less· than .an hour and · a halt rural areas which he said would cest S750 Clemente, Jan. &.-7.
tiefore ··H;ouse ·and $e11:1~-conferees at•.• mi!Uon. . • -''No other meetings are being planned
ranged lo ·m.~t to· s~ discussions -on a -An Increase ir1 the personal ex-or discuued ," Ziegler said.
compromise:· measure-. . : emptldn to "S*XJ on 1972 income, which he The anonymous White House source
• 'lbe-House approved tax. cuts toti\ing sakl'.'~oula CGkf up• to $2 billion. said Nixon, in Peking and ?o.1oscow, would
'3-5-4 billion.for 1971 througf. 1973 -dc'Se: '· · • · not be speaking fer other leaders. He
Cb whal.N'Uoo asked Tbe .Setlate boQstedf said :
tbe total to ·more than ·$1'7.bi llfon besides 2·. ·Ba: ·nd.i'ts· Rob "We are not representing the others. adding. Qie .co,n.trove;rsiaf'+cafupaign .Pro-· We are formulating our position, taking
-ilsion to allow J;11_xQ·i!yers tO. iiuthqrize "Use ._ into consideration their views. Our posi· ~-,?l.o~~tr li~mt.tC!:~eS fo11...j>res\tl~ri! ·~=-a· •:_m· .· e M. arket" lion is that.we are not going to sacrifice
a Cl(l'IRl l Q.tl(._ ·-.. •...• ..· . D allied unity' to a relaxation of tensions
"1acGtegor ··aatd 'NtxOo .ricnain1 .com-... w~ want to be conscious of the vital
rqitted J.o passage.of a.'tax Cl.It bilf th3t · w·~ -· c1· k o· concerns of our allies." fioutd-"prQ~rJy gttm)Jlat.e. the·'.econoiny. ~-. ~ ne~~ . · . er i ed: Asktd if he -felt the allies understood ~MacGreg~·u1d If Niion :vetoed the JU.: Nixon's purposes, the source replied :
D!lI bbe-ltioubstl·td urge c'ongi-ess ·.to iwu: a. ~o: mtn ·robbed' David Wilson. 19, a "I th ink there is an understanding of ~~taye':r.~u . ~ute before a~journitlg_-~~~-derk· in tQe· Seven-Eleven Market in our general purposes, but I think there is
W!:,"ln mv opin\Ol\, the Conoress wlll".ffOt: Ttistln·early tod3y and dropped about $25 also a degree of uncertainty as to what
• J •·, in ~n~e in the. parking lot as they fled,· ou? moves mean. !fhe purpose of these co_ home f-Or c:iu-istmas without passlni ,:-polK!e reported .· \ · , meetings is to remove as much of that 1u1table-~!I~ bill,". MacGregor said . . .. )The 11\dhJUJfwtobk ··place in the $Ame uncertainly as possible." -~MacGregor contended that Nixo!J'S op-matket at 16791 McFadden Ave., in which
Jib:sition to the tax checkoff Plan, which .. Thomas·P. Grove, 22, was shot to death cOUld provide up to ,$20.~ million each to the Democratic a~,ltfipubti~aj) prfJlde~; d4:(iqg1a ho~up1;s1 Jlibe 7. , , ,
f:lal candidates in 1912, •all made .on c:on1· tJsh!:~&':nfha7~~m~~il'ted earlier
ttitutional a n d philoti)phical -i"f1ct Grove• -died , lhree day.11 later. Later jolitical ...:.. grounds. · • · ' ' )Republicans in the Senate·voted almosl· ehargedin the crime ·are Kathy Yeaw, 25.
W\lnimoualy against the pi'ovision which of Orange and Floyd L. Strong, 19, of
Would provide needed funds ta'"finanCJallv . Santa Aos .who ·tfere·arresled· by Tustin
It.rapped Drfmbctlta wtttreas the GOP Police ·After ·a long-investigation In whlc h' • . . .. . . _ district attorney's invest i g-. tors
1{ai11: • Toiiigltt,-,
~ot Very M.~c!i,;
''.A f~bI~ · stonD fron_t moving "~n.to_
Southern California "todiY With cool but
liwnid .ie.rn.P.Cr•turt;s rraY. .~ring ra~~~.Y.~ ~plghJ; .~UJ •. dop'J. f~ ~O r_escue' ytiur_-taJosbe~ (FOP-. JtiQthb,lls. . . . . . l'be weatheMnap. says-_if ·91mp~ss is·
due, it will barely-mf the. streelll. . . _·
Scattettd sprinkles were reported
around the area this morning, mosU y
toward inland mountains, where wind
warnings have been JX>Sled for tonight.
Snow at higher elevations is expected,
plus fog In the foothills, according to the
U.S. Weather Bureau .
Cleir and mostly sunny is the predic·
tion overall on the Orange Coast through
Tqelday, with temperatures around the
)ow 60s, forecasters said.
OIAN•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
H•t ..... •'-" ,. .... ,....., ... .-
OIWI~• COAST ,UILllHIM~ COW'AHY
l •'-••I H. We.••
P••-IM 1"111111\W
J 1,\: I. Curl1'f
Viet 'r•IM!I! 1~ GtMr1l Ml...,.,
Tio•rt1•t IC11vil
(<Iller
1~11111t A. /r!lurphi111
M1Mtllll IEl lllr
Ch1rltt H. L•o• Ridi1rJ '· Nill
AMltllftl M• .... "'9 f:dllll,..
OfHc.H
Cf_llt MIMI :ut W•t lt'f ltTl'f'f H...-..;rt IHU.: JUI "'"'"" lev'W9rf LlflN 1-111 21t ,.,., ..,_,.,.
M ...... i ...... --~II: tNl'J 1 .. e.~ ltultvt .. a..,. ci.-111 al Hor111 IEI C.1111M It"\
participated. ·
Alsii -jailed ·wat Mark Lenihan, 20, of
Garderr'Grov·e,-cliarged ·with being an
acce!iSOtY to murder.. . .
~.T~e -~r19 Plea.~ed; i~ocent wh~,. .. ar· ralgnea-last N'ov. 12 ana will face _a jury
trial begirmiftr·Jan: 3, 1972. ·
Police . said , ~8Y.: they · had not:
disp>v.e.red · any ··eonaection between the
two holdups . ..:.Witsoo was not injured.
-He tokl police Lbe two men entered the
mar Ii.it ,about 1-a."m.-ordered lYi"O· packs.
of .. _cigai-tUes .. .and, then threate11ed bim
.Willi a cfiiOme-plated revolver.
.He Jiaid .. they told him to "lie down on
the noor or be shot, ':_before they grabbed
about $100 from the cash. regl11ter and
fled.
From Page I
EMBASSY ...
steps of a Cairo Hotel.
The President's allentlOn earlier in the
stay was on American football, but aoon
after the holiday it switched to intema·
tlonaltlssues -the pending trip to Peking
and the five conferences with world
leaders.
The Chief Executive forsook his tradi-
tional golf cart for the short trip from
his home to the wailing btlicopter Sun·
day afternoon.
He rode in a car, instead.
Appearing jaunty and in good spiriL'I
Mr. Nixon swiftly greeted Coast Guard
officers. then wheeled and strode swiftly
to the chopper.
A3 ~egotiated the ladder he brisk-
ly skipped several steps in his haste to
board.
The departure was probably the first
in San Clemente where it was certain
when the President would return.
The first week in January.
' DAU. Y ,IL.OT , ..... W 0-M LtMl.I
Off to the Races
Jockey Danny Velasquez clings tenaciously to his mount in winning
the Ostrich Stakes at Bay Meadows Race Track in .San Mateo. Ostrich
races have been a pre-holiday feature at the track. Ever try to handi·
cap an ostrich race?
Hussein Nam es l\loderate
To Succeed Buried . Tel
Ar..tr..1AN (UP IJ -Jordanian Premier
Wasfl Tel, assassinated Sunday in Cairo
by four Palestinian guerrillas, was buried
today to the sound of a 21 gun salute.
King Jfusseln named a moderate to SUC·
ceed him but brought in a tough line o_!·
ficia\ as his national seeurity adviser.
Tel, 51 , hated by the guerrillas for
ordering the Jordanian army to crush
their revolt last 11ummer. was killed by
four bullelll as he stepped from his car al
a Cairo hotel on the banks of the Nile
following a luncheon with Abdel KhalU
Hassuna, secretary aeneraJ of the Arab
League.
Munzi Soleiman Kha!ifa, 23. leader of
the rour man death 1quad. told UPI Cor-.
respondent Maurice Guindi in Cairo that
Tel's death was only the first of a series
of murders intended to eliminate
everyone who has opposed the cause of
the Palestine guerrillas in the Arab
world .
Khalifa raised his hand in the V for vie·
tory sign and said, "We have taken our
revenge on a traitor." He said he had.
drunk Tel's blood after the shooting to
emphasize his hatred of the man.
Hussein named Deputy Premier Ahmed
AJ-Lawzi, SO. as prime .ninister lo suc-
ceed Tel and gave him the portfolio of
defense minister, a job also held by Tel .
Political sources said Al-La wzi was con-
sidered unbiased and nuetral on Palesti~
nian guerrilla matters.
The sources. said Al-Lawzl-was not
known for hi! ·strong character and sug.
' gested his new cabinet may be merely a
caretaker one. Like Tel, Al-Law~i is _a
Bedouin. He had served as chief of pro-
tocol al the king's court and was chief or
the court.
Hussein named former I n t e r i o r
Minister Mohammed .Rasoul Al·Kilani ·as ·
his adviser on national security affairs.
Al·Kilani Jias tlie reputation of being
tough toward the guerrillas, a suggestion
that Hussein's own tough stcjQ<I .woufd qot.
change. .
Anis Moasher, .minister ol transport,_
took over Al-Lawzl's· post as miaister or
finance.
l'he leader of the gang that killed Tel
said the prime minister was murdered to
avenge the death . of a Palestinian guer·
rilla captain in .'ror<lan, police sources
sl(t"d. .
Tel was ha.led by the Palestinian gu~r·.
rillas for ordering the army to crust)
their revolt this summer. He died trying
to get his own gun out to fight back. .
Hussein, dressed in his uniform as
supreme . ~mmander of the arJTled
forces. a red and white kaffiya headdress
and a black armband. led 1.500 mourners
to the cemetery atop ~ne of the citf"s
seyec hills.•
ONDS: OUT OF PAWN
EST(<TES
OVERSTOCKS
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1, 2, 3,
-In the Scott Vehicle, the -driver,
Edward Scott, who suffered major frac-
tures and back injuries; his wife, Amy1
41 ; Annette Scott, 14; Ralph .Scott, 11,
and Gail Scott, 15. .
All the injured were taken to an
Oceanside hospital for treatment.
The specific cause of the crash was still
under investigation, patrolmen said. They
added they still were trying to determine
the exact reason (or the McKinney car'•
sudden swerve across the clogged
freeway.
Theaters Yield
' .$5,000 to Pair
Two armed men held up employes of
the Cinedome theaters, 3001 W. Chapman
Ave., Orange, late Sunday·night and got
away with an estimated $5,000 in
weekend. receipts, police reported.
Investigatol'S said' cashiers were about
to place the money in a night depository
in the theaters' offices when accosted b)'
the pair described as beYii about 25
years old.
The suspects fled northward on State
C.01\ege Boulevard after gribbing th• money. · · ·
Anaheim Driver Dies
After Auto Ac cident
Anaheim motorcyclisl James W.
\\'right was fatally injured early today
when he crashed into a parked car on
Kate\Ja Avenue, east of Garden Drive.
Police said Wright , 27. ·of 10070 S.
Gil bert St.. Anah eim, died al 5 a.m. in
the .Orange County r..1edical Center
follow ing the 1 a.m. mishap.
4,
.!!)-5, ILLUSTU.TlONS
• L. I NOT
• AVAIL.AILI
6 7, ••
DOM RACITI
WE Will,_
BUY YOUR
We aJways have lar91 selec tions of Giamonds & diamond jewelry at
be tter than wholesale prices which we cover with our uni1:1u1 money back
9uarant1e. Come in and compare before you btly.
DIAMONDS,
JEWELRY,
OLD GOLD
1 1.111t. T.W, .. 4'....C • ..o ......... ..,,.,,.. '1299. 6. L.cllet Dln'IOIHll ci .... , ,....,.,
1 ct. T.W. '99
2 Mer4111l1 Dl-•IHll 1.11 c.t.
• ,..., ""' • .i .... v...., Willlnt '1995
3 ·-''"'"'~ .. .-11" '495 • I fill hret
A . t .. "' w ...... s.t, 40 "· •-'129 !11 ... '-."'· .. ...., 41•-"*
5 lAi4M 0-.el Dl ... M hlltolto
• 1 /J c.oret '89 . l
7.
flNI QUALITY Y.Y.S. DIAMONDS
l rUll011t c11t 11 f Olltt •r l••ll• wlftolt-e
111•111tl11tt. ·-.tl ct. , • , , , , , • Sl14.00
·'' ~'· .•...... s•1 2.oo
1.01 ct .•••••••• s•s•.oo
1.01 ct .••• .", •.• Stt7 .so
fol. Gtt11t, •••-'• 4"lt11 d~ rllf s399
wltti 2.61 ch. 111 il•111011th
u.1~.,~ct.·11_..; Y;Y.S.cl•Htr '1,000
11 ir;. .. ,. 111011-.Hfi1i
Dl•montl Cente r for Orang~ Count11
COSTA MESA JEWELRY-li.J,OAN
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENT>S
' STEREO EQU IP,
OR MOST
ANYT HING
OF VA LUE ,
BRING TH EM
'-IN FOii
IMME DIATE
ESTIMATE
~. 1•11, Or•'lt• c.1.. ""41•""" ~...,. ... -'""'"· lll!Jllf)!4'1t. •!Norlll .,,.1111 or ••VWll-~h lltrtilt Ny. 9 r~ WllNolf • lfl'C0tl ,.,. •
\Vhile ~tauricc Allard conducU, dilncers rehearse scene from Lloyd r .. ' ,1 · Pfantsch'' "A Day for Dancing!' \Vork will be featured in UC Irvine
Christmas concert th is "'eekend. Performances are scheduled for
Opert Dail11 g to 8 Fi'nd it Ht.f't Flr1t
"' ........ •YfW!f -·
ltitW el ... ,....1.., ""' '' N•.....,.., ltftfl . 1• C.11 M•1, (111,,,11i.. •Wtuf,illll " ""*" u.u ,,,..,"'"'' ,., .... 11 d .1J -e,ir1 ll'lll•tttr '1t11~1.,., UJJ -"''1·
8:30 p .m. t'riday and Sunday and ror 2 p.m. and 4 ~m, Saturday in
UCJ's Fine Arts VIiiage Concert Hall . Tickets price at 11 are avail·
able al Fine Arts VIiiage Box Om ce. ·
' ... ~
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN .COSTA MESA -"tttwt .. H.,b« • FrHwoy
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. ._onting1Qn Bea:ell . .
-ountain Valley
Today's Fl•al
' -N.Y. Stoeks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 'f9 7f YO~ .. 64. NO. •285, j SECTIONS, 34 PAGES . '
.TEN CENTS
Kuntington MayOr Issue: ·:weak' Oli 'Strorig'
By ALAN DIRKIN
Of hit Of!H~ ltl•t l lltff
The proposal for a fullkthne elected
mayor of Huntington Beach is boiling
down to a choice between a "weak"
mayor who would be paid $9,600 a year
and a "strong" mayor earning $18,000.
The choice will be voted · upon by the
seven.member Citizens Charter Revision
Committee at a meeting at 7:30 'p.m.
Tue6day in the adntinistrative anne:a:.
l'he committee's' recommendation will
be reviewed brthe council nezt ·month
and-the-final-form wW be· submitted to
voters during the April coliilcilmanic
election.
"
The· charter coriimlttee has spent
months ioina: over the proposal with· the
' assistance of Dr. P.aul Schmidt, assiitant
professor of political science at Cal.Slat&.
Long BeaCh. The study was ordered bf
the councll after the issue was narrowly
defeated by Voters in November 1970.
A .zriajority oC councilmen indkated
that the question should be put before the
electcrate again.
Two alternatives will be voted upC>D by
the commtttee Tuesday night. Both call
for -the--mayor-4.o devote full-time-~-the
o!fice. to serve a fou r-year tenn, t!) in-
terpret city policies and program.I,
' llPI ,,.......,.
NlXON°NOMINEE ROMANA B/\NUELOS'FACES SENATE Ql)ESTIONING
: $~ Vflllo s.n, .Ai.n Cr•••'°f', 5Meq,1ihff Hlfl ng el Alient
IJ:ep_laced by "Mociera~e \
preside at counCil meetings, serve as a
,lobb~jst before other public· agencies, in-
vestigate cJtiuns complaints, and give an
• mmual state of the city message.
The differences in the alternatives in-
volve the staff proposed for the position
aod whether the mayor should analyze
the city'& onnuaJ budget.
In the allmlaUve.that woold pay '9,IOO
anaually, tlll'! m.:yor would have a
secretary wbilt in the altemaUve paying
$11.000 he would. have an u:ecutlve· assis·
tant, who would prepare special report.II
for the--mayor~ a._ secretary, and ODe' -0r
two administrative interns,. either half·
time or full time.
.
The •·stronger" mayor also would
analy'te the city's annual budget and
make spfcific reCommendati-0ns to the
council.
Olher points noted in the report
prepared by Dr. Schmidt stipulated that
the may<>r's staff would be hired ·by a
majority or the council and "shall serve
at lhe pleasure of the city council ... '
The report recommends, boWever, that
the staff would have the same fringe
benefit& and privileges granted other city
emplol__es. __ _ •
... The report suggests that-tlie firsrelee-
tion for mayor be in the tm general
election. The council would' continue to
.have seven member~ with the mayor
having regtilar voting.rights.
Ir the first election results in an in-
crti.se in the size of tl}e council, th.e coun-
cilman receiving the lea.st votes in the
most recent preceding municipal election
would vacate lib seat. --
If thl3 condition· is approved by th4
council and the whole questi-0n is passed
by voters, it would throw a new twist Into
this April's election for three CDUncll
.. aOI, those held by Donald S,h Ip I e y,
Mayor -George Mteracken, and Jerry-
Malney.
Romana ·Defended
'
Raid on Plant Said 'fut Up Jqb' ..
WASHINGTON (AP) -The head of
the Immigration Service agreed wlth a
aens:tor-today that the. immlgration
agents' raid on Mrs. Romana Banuelos's
California plant last month was "a put up
job."
Ri:iymond F. Farrell, commissioner -0r
the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization
Service, made the statement during a
Senate Fffiance C-Ommlttee hearing on
President Nixon's nomination or ~lrs.
Banuelas for U.S. Treasurer.
Agents found 36 illegal aliens among
about 300 employes at her Ramona Food
Products plant in Gardena in the Oct. S
raid.
Sen. Wallace Bennett (R-Ulahl, charg·
ed that the raid was "a..put up job," in-
iUated bf federal employes sympathetic
to jobless Amtricans. ·
·Bennett said the Banuelos company
was chosen because of its maximum
publicity value.
"Senator, I agree with you," ~d Far-
rell.
The immigration service's Los Angeles
district director, George K. Rosenberg,
has said the raid wll.!l called partly
because or an informer's tip an9 ~use
the company was on his ''active file" of
finns whert illegal aliens were-li):ely lo
be found ,
Farrell said slx raids bad been. made at
the plant iince 1967 with no more than a
dozen aliens being found at any time until
last Odober.
Mrs. Banuelos faced almost exclusive
questioning on Mexican alien employ·
ment at her plant.
She denied she knew illegal aliens
worked at her e<>mpany until the I~
migration Service Wonned her.
Committee Cbairman Russell Long (D-
La.), asked bow she would know . lf an
employe was an illegal alien.
"That's one thing we don't know," she
said.
Some said it was easy to obtain, forge
or lie about the neci!ssary "green card"
shoWlng that ·a person ls legally tn this-
country, as well as the soclal security
card, two requirements for employment.
The J~atioil Ser.Yices last yeir rounded up :m.ooo illegal aliens. ntere
are an estimated %50,000: in the Los
Angeles aru.
Sell. Abraham Riblcoff (l).Q)nn.), uk-
('d. if Mrs. Banuelos wu i.ware that iJ.
legal immigration boosts unemployment
for Americans.
"I don't know," stteSila:
·Although the first three candidates
would be elected theoretically to two
year-term• the _person run'ning third
would ha~·e to live up bis.seal if a fuU..
time mayor is e1ected later in the year.
PresenUy the' mayor Of · Huntlngton
Beach is not required'lo work at the job
full time. He ls elected amually by
fellow councilmeii. He receives the same
compensation -~ a month which ffi.
eludes expen5e5 -as other councilmen.
· Last week • full·time secretary, Mrs.
Eleanor Hauser, was appointed-by the ci·
ty-to-handle correspondence"" for ~thL
mayor and clty counclL :-, -1
Rites Set
Premier Buried in Jordan Ribicoff charged, "You -Cion't Item to
be aware of problems · of Mexican
Americans on th'e lower economic scale."
Funeral services will be con·
ducted at 10 a.m. Tuesday at
the First Methodist Church of
Huntington Beach for retired
science teacher Clarence E.
Mason, 61, who died Friday, He
taught at iluntington Beach
and Marina High Schoo!J for more than 25 years. Burial will
be at Good Shepherd Ceme-
t ery, Huntington Beach.
A~1~fAN (UPI) -Jordani.a'n Premier ficial as his n_ational security adviser.
\\'asfi Tel, ~assinated Sunday in' Cairo Tel, SI, hated by the guerrillas for
by'four Palesilnian guerrill3s, was burJ~-.otdering the Jordanian army to crush
today to the sound -0f a 21 gun salute. their revolt last sumriler, was killed by
King Hussein ·,named a modtrate to su~ four .bullets as he stepped from his car at
c~t'.(i him bu.t brought in a tough line of. a. Cairo hotel on the banks of the Nile
!J1arison GetS Life Terni
In Additional Deaths
LOS ANGELES (APJ -Charles
f.1anson, Btready µoder a death sentence
for the seven Sharon Tate murders, was
given life imprisonment today by a jury
which convicted him of the murders of a
stuntman .and a musician two years ago.
In the Tate case, Manaon was given
eight death~sentences, including one for
conspiracy in the seven August 1969
slayings. Three female co-defeodanls also
. were convicted and. sentenced to death
for the Tate Slayings.
. Today's verdict was o~ two counts or
murder and one of conspll'acy. ~fanson, 'f/, one Jjme leader or a
"family" of wanderini: hippie types, was
found @illy Nov. 2 ~f the slayings of
Giry Hilimall , a Malibu mus~clan. an.d
Donald "Shorty" Shea, a sometime movie
stuntman whose body nevel' has been
found. Manson was impassi9e as he heard the
verdict, his only nervousness displayed
by repeatedly slipping his loafers.off and
on to expose his SQCk\ess bare feet.
Then, as Superior Court Judge Ray-
Rain Tonight-
Not Ve ry Mu clt
mond Cl]oate was congratulating the
jurors for their many days of duty away
from home, Manson burst o u t
larcastically: "Shake th~hand.'' ~Janson. sporting a cre~t and showing
several days' growth of a black beard,
then swiveled toward a s s e m b I e d
newsmen ant spectaklrs in I h e
courtroom and declared :
"You're in prison! You~e in prison!
You're in prison!" Each time he said
t.his, .h.e stared at· a different· reporter in
the front row of the courtroom spectatnr
11ection.
Without interruptiOO;-Manson then
stared directly at the jurors and said.
"the only thing they can judge is what
they 're told to judge." lmmediately
afterward he "''as taken in tow by a
,' bailiff and led from the court
The surprise verdict came shortly after
the eight·man, four·woman jury resumed
itir; dellbef-ations after l!\klng the weekend
off. It began dellberaling Frlday and
v;orked for about 'Jive hours before
recessing.
The trial began last June 2.1.
,,, During hi1 trial, various y-OUng def~
tors from ~lanson's clan testified that he
ordered followers to kill both Hinman and
Shea and . oversaw the Shea kiijiqg A feeble stomt front moving into himse:tt.
Southern California today with cool but Witnesses said Hinman: 34, was slain 1~
hul1)id temperatures may bring rain by his Malibu home after he refused lo giv~
tpnighl. but don't rush to reKtJe your Man!On money and· all or his possessions.
galoshes rrom mothballs. Hinman was found stabbed to death In
, , the weatttennan says if dampness is July 1989, a few weeks before the Tate
dueJJLJtfil barely \\'el the streets. slayings.
Scattered sprinkles were reported The death setne was marked by bloody
aroupd the area this morning, mostly scrawlings aimilar to those later found al
toward inland mountains, where wind thi Tate mansion.
warnings have been posted for tonight. A Mamon dlsctple. susan Atkins, also
snow at hlglt_er elevations ,Js expected, sentenced to deatlrfor the Tate sl&ylngs,
plus fog~Jn the foolJ)llls, according to the -tias confessf!O kllllng Hlnman:-She1ecelV·
U.S. Weather Bureau. ed a life sentence after her guilty plea In
clear and m~Uy sunny Is the predic· that case. Another · Manson follower,
tion overall on tile Orange Coast throu&h Robert Bta~lell, was found guilty of the
1\ttsday, with temperatures around tbt lflnmari' kllllna: and Is on San Quentin's
low. &Os. foreasters Mid. death row. ~ • ...._ .,
I -.
· rol1owing a luncheon with Abdel Khalek
Has1una, secretary general of the Arab
League.._
~iunii Soleiman Khalifa, 28, leader or
the four man death squid. told UPI Cor-
respondent Maurice Guindi In Cairo that
Tel'! death was only the first of a series
of murders intended to elimlnate
everyone who has opposed the cause or
the Palestine guerrillas In the Arab
world.
Khalila raised his hand in the V for vic-
tory sign and said. "We have taken our
revenge -0n a lraitw." He said be had
drunk Tel°s blood after the shooting kl
emphasiie his hatred or the man.
Hussein named Deputy Premier Ahmed
Al·I:..awii, SO, as prime 1ninlster io !UC·
ceed Tel and gave him the portfolio of
defense minister, a job also held by Tel.
Political sources said Al·Lawzi was con·
sidered unbiased and nuetraJ -0n Palesti-
nian guerrilla matters.
The sources said Al-Lawzl wa! not
known for his strong character and sug-
gested his new cabinet may be merely a
caretaker one. Like Tel. Al-Lawzi is a
Bedouin. He had served as chief of pro-
tocol at the king 's court and was chief of
the court .
Hussein named former I n t e r i o r
Minister Mohammed Rasool Al-Kilani as
his adviser on national securlty arfairs.
Al-Kilani has the rtpulation of being
totigh kli,yard 'the.,_guerrillas, a csuggestion
lhat Hussein's own tough stand would not
change.
Anis Moasher, minister of transport,
took over Al-Lawzi's post as minister or
finance.
'Mle ·leader or 1fle gang that killed Tel
said the prime minister was murdered lo
avenge the death of a Palestinian guer-
rilla captain in Jordan, police sources
said. .
Tel wrui hated by the Palestinian guer·
rillas for ordering the army to crush.
their revolt this summer. He died trying
kl get his own gun out to fight back.
Hussein, dressed in his tinifonn as
supreme commander [ of the armed
forces; a red'and White kaffiya headdress
and a black armband, led 1,500 mourners to the cemetery atop one of the city's
seven hills. •
A 21-gun salute was flred as Tel's coffin
wu lowetfld inkl the grave:rtli Widow
stood nearby, dressed Jn a black ankle·
length dress. Only a few feet away was
the grave of Hussein's grandlather, King
Abdullah, who was assassinated in 1951.
Foreign Minister Abdullah S a I a h
funped to the graveside, the result of , a
_slight wound he suffered at Tel'i s:lde
during uteassassinalion.
After a ~minute ~rivate service at the
royal palac;t mosque, Tel's cofrlq, draped
In the b1ack1 red, white and green Jorda·
nlan nag, was carried on a gun carriage
to (be hllltop cemetery.
•
Reaches Plt1nallle
Robert L. Mohr of H1111Ungton
BeaCh will receive Scouting's
highest honor, the Eagle Scout
award, during ceremonies Tues-
day at Fairview State Hospital
in .Costa Mesa. Mohr, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Mohr,
10141 Theseus Drive, complet-
ed requirements-for eagle
status by doing volunteer work
atitbe hospital for the mentally
retarded.
Bandit Holds Up
Cafe-But Pays
His Coffee Tab
A polite IA>ng Beach bandit took $2,000
at gunpoint from a smorgasborg
restaurant, then used small change to
pay his e<>ff~ tab before leaving.
Polic~ ·said the stocky-built man drank
several ~~ of cotfee at Sir George's
Smorgruiborg in Long Beach before walk·
ing kl the back office where he asked for
a job.
When told there were no }obs available,
the man drew a resolver and forced
manager Jack Boro.sklnd to open the
fioor safe. He colle<ifed $2,000 in weebnd
receipts and walked back into the
restaurant, telling Boroskind to watt in
his office for 15 minutes, police sakt.
Restaurant witnesses told police the
bandit then stood in line, h'anded' his e<>f·
fee bill~across the counter and Mid his
tab, then casually walked out 'the~front ·
door. ~ ·
P-01ice described lhe man as Cauculan.
about 25 years old, S' 4" tall with &·full
beard and floppy straw hat.
School Board Meets
Ocean Vle.v School District truslees
will hold their fir&t meeting for the
month Ol November at 7:30 o'clock
tonight at dlatrlct headquarters .
$400 Million Pen Slip
Huge Clerical Error
Sparked .Market Scare
WASIUNGTON (APl.-A 14-00 million
clerical 'error by the Federal Reserve
Board was acknowledged today as the
cause or a big fright in the government
securities markets last week.
The financial community found money
so tight in the banking system that the
market sagged for treasury s·ecurities,
until the Federal Reserve's money
managers became aware of the problems
last Friday.
The first victim of the error was the
system's own open market commlttff,
which governs the fiow o! money into tbe
Jury Selection
In Coast Man's
Fraud T1ial Set
Jury selection began today in the
Orange County SUperior C-Ourt fraud tri.al
of· a Newport Beach businessman and his
\aw).ter partner In an insurance enterprise
which authorities allege bilked several in-
vestors of an estimated $160,000.
Judge Lester Van Tatenhove ordered
selection of a panel this morning after re.
jecting pretrial motions which included
the precedent-setting argument by defen-
dants ·Ralph K. Benware, 39; of 411 lsth
St., and Orange attorney Rkliard
Murphy, 41, that Or~nge County's jury
ayate.m does not guararftee the lncluslon
of businessmen in the jury.
Judge Van Talenhove has rejected the
theory that it was vital for both defen·
dants, in view ot,.the nature or grand
then and state imurance code violation
charges against them, to . h a v e
tminessmen in the jury bolt.
He also rejected motions for a cllange
of venue ud continuance of the trial. Ohlrges againsl both men were filed
more than a ye&r ago.
Btnware and Murphy wera accused l,n
an Orange county Grand Jury indictment
of unlawCtilly ... diverting .funds Crom the
Casualtf ·Insurance Company to---tatlsfy
the demands of ln'1estors in the Cali!or.
nla caduceus ComP1D7.
banking system by its buying and sellinl
of rederal securities.
Thinking there was $400 million more
cash in the vaults of the Nnking ·system
than was there. the committee was stingy
about adding runds kl the m-0ney supply.
The result was a sharp rise in the in·
terest rate which · banks pay one ·another
for short-term funds, and a general
scarcity of investment money avail~le
for the purcha'se of about $8.1 billion
worth of bills being offered by the
Treasury during the week._
The Treasury there.fore had to pay
mor~· interest than it otherwise would
have done. No estimate was immediately
available ·on the ultimate cost to the
gove"rnment.
A Federal Reserve spoiesman.said-the--
err-0r was not a misjud~ent in
esfup.ating, simply a clerical error in
repor.Ung the estimated "vault cash"
among the reserves of the banking
system and sovems the volume. -0f funds
they ,can lerid.
Oruge
l''eatller
Skies will be partly cloulfy and
temperatures a constant 65 Tues.
day, with more sun showing over
the Orange Coast. Overnight Jow1
are tabbed al SO degrees.
INSWE TODAY
UC Irvi ne and private inter•.
ests are plannt110 a johlt venture
to form a na.tio11aJ111 famous
medical complu in Orange
Countu by 1974. Storv Page IO.
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33 Am.eric·an~L-ost
·-Big Copier .Go.e$ _Down Off V~etnam CO!J,s~
_;,.._ SAI~N (UPI). -Doiens of Am~rican -~~ho~r·w~t" down In bad we1ih~r
aircraft and ships ranned out over the :i.~\l!l~Y abou~ a .half hour out cf Da Nang
northern -coast of South Vielilam today on a flight to th~ Phu Bal headquarters .of
-·looking for · a .Chi.nook helicopter believed the JO!st Airborne Division, which
-down _aL·sea with:··3B Gls. aboard, but aready is leaving the war zone
• •
found nothing, v~s. spokesmen said. piecemeal under President NI x 0 n I s
' --" "! ..
• • I .
DAILY f'ILOT 11111 P/ttll
50 MILES OF TOGETHERNESS FOR FOUNTAIN VALLEY FAMILY
P1t1r Bouwens With His Children, Aridy, 9; and Htltn, 12
~ •
Wltbdt1W11 proeram. · , ~If the ~ meq 1boant were lost Jt would
be one of the worst air d\1111siers of the
war,· lopped e:nfy by the Jarl. 25, 1966
crash of a CJ2.1 transport in which 46
Amerl<;ans · died, and the Jan. I. 1968
crash of another Chinook that killed 41,
spokesmen acknowledged.
The twin rotor helicopter was one of six
·planes ind choppers whose loss was an·
nounced MoOOay·by the·u.s. Comm1nd •
An HH53 "'Super Jolly" rescue helicopter
4 /ell in the Nha Be River 12 m 11 es
southeast of Saigo,n la st Thursday, with
three killed, two injured and one missing ,
t!?e command said in a delayed report .
Over the weekend two OH6 "Loach''
observation choppers were shot down just
Inside South Vietnam near the tri-border
Communist sanctuary area In the central
highlands where the froJltiers of Laos, ·
Cambodia and South Vietnam Cilme
together. Four crewmen were injured.
One Loa ch was able to call In air
strikes Sunday by U.S. and Vietnamese
jets and American helicopter gunships
that were Jaid to have killed 41 guer-
rillas, destroyed 22 bunkers and set off
therce iiJ)tOs'ions andllni fire~atlng
fuel and ammunition were hit, the com·
mand said.
Vietnamese spokesmen said in another
fight about 15 miles to the S()Utheast,
close...to lhe ... Kogtum provincial capita !,
green beret·trained b9rder r a n g e r s
caught up wilh 1 big guerrilla force and
killed 45 of them. Two rangers were kill·
ed and 27 were wounded.
Laotian government forces launched an
affensive..jn the northeastern edge of the
Bolovens Plateau, successfully cutting
North Vietnamese supply lines and
relieving Communist pressure on gove~
ment positions at Paksong and Saravane,
200 miles southeast of Vietniane.
The South Vietnamese operation mean·
time ground into its seCilnd week with Ill·
tie more than minor skirmishing.
The only significant action was the am-
bush ol an armored column moving up
highway 13 from South Vietnanf"'toward
the Snuol plantation. 85 miles north of
Saigon Sunday. Sketchy reports said the
column was ambushed with rocket
grenades .and small arms fire , but {here
was no word on casualties or destruction.
" __ Youth Wins-Laguna Hike;
The U.S. 6'mmand in Saigon also an-
nou1tctd that troop strength under Presi·
dent Nixon's withdrawal program drop-
ped by another 2,600 men last week, to a
total of 182.000.
That w11 the lowest total si nce:
November, 1965, when there were 169,000
American fighting men 1n Vietnam.
•
20 Finish· 50-mile Cou1·se
' .
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
ot 1tlt Dlll't l'tlel Stiff
For seven hours and 25 minutes Satur-
·Rescue Post 717 which sponS()red the
hike," said rhat 80 people entered this
yeat's event with ·20 eorrapJeting the en-
tire 50 miles . . day IS-year-old James Reilly of La Habra
dki "nothing but run" to become the 1971
winner of the ninth annual SO.mile hike in
Laguna Beach.
Young Reilly, a member of both ih~
cross country and track team at La
Habra High School, left th"! starting point
at S:20 a.m. rounded the first 25 mi le lap
in three hours. 21 minutes and C(lmpleted
the entire 50 miles at 12:4S p.m.
"Gosh, my feet feel hea vy," Reilly ex-
claimed on completing the course -
down Pacific Coast Highwa y, through the
, hills in Laguna Niguel into Leisure \Yorld
then back into Laguna Beal.'h. ;
"I thought I'd never get over those
hills. One after .another for miles," the
youthful track buff commented. After
resting a ~·hile, he left with his falher to
get ''a nice big hamburger, some frerich
fries and root beer." .
P.1arty Kruger. JS, of 127 Emerald Bay-,
look second Pl<!ce with a time of 7:S7. Bill
Graves. IS, of Garden Grove f91lowed him
in with a time of 7:5a.
The longest time for the SO miles was
logged by Richard Parker, I~. of 465 W.
Third St.. Tustin, who spent 14 hours. SI
minutes on the route. J~e started at 5:23
a.m. and ran the last step at 8: 14 p.m.
Bruce Balley, leader of the Search and
OU.N•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
OlAXGE COAST l"\JILtsHlN QI COMPAHY
k•"•rt N. W1ti
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Most· of the 60 persons who didn't com-
plete the SO miles, he said, dropptd out
after the first 2S miles. "We gave·rides to
about 12 people who pooped out on the
rou te," Bailey said. ,
"There were no injuries except for a
case of stomach crarrws and lots of
blisters," he added.
The oldest hike r was Laguna Beach
physician Dr. Thaddeus Jones, 62{1 Glen-
neyre St. The 47-year-old Jones Com-
pleted the SO miles in 8:57.
The Search and Rescu e Post will hold a
banquet Saturd ay at l p.m. at St. Mary's
Episcopal Church Guild Hall for those
who completed the hik~. Medals will be
·awarded them. ,.
One Man Jailed
In Wild Beach
Family Squabble
A Huntington Beach man playin g lhe
... role of peacema ker in a .domestic 1pat
earned a pistol potshot for his efforts
Sunday in Santa Ana .
One witness to the shOOtirfgr a retir
policeman -gave chase when t
suspect fled.
He in turn was pulled over. when I
police spotted his cir. almo.'\I Identical
that of the suspect sought on attempt
murdtr cha_rges.
By the time it was all over:
-One man was jailed .
-Qne other was badly shake
-Ofle mQre was miffed.
lnvestigators said Jerry ricksen, 27,
of Huntington Beach , orignal Intervened
\\"hen he 5aw a man cuffi a woman
around in a car and motione or them to
i \Op.
Suddenly B pistol bullet sma. ed into
the windshield and ricocheled round
like a buulng bet. It did no t hit Ericksen
or hfs small son.
Roger Ericksen had hit the floo r on
dad~s oraers,· ·
Re.tired West Covina police officer
Ra lph McAdiDll! witnessed the gunplay
and tailed the suspect. but lost him when
stopped by patrolmen who thought he
~·as the quarry.
~ Given details br the pursuer. lhf)'. went
lo 824 S 8iri;h St .• and arrested suspeel
G. W. Crust. 4\ bookinb him on suspicion
of assault \rith intent to commit murder.
:Footbridge Approved
Ihe FouriLaio Vitlley &:boo\ Dlstrkt has
-been granred permission by the Or1n1e
County Board of Supervi.l\Ora lo build a
pedestria~ bridge over the county Flood
Control Distrjct'' Ocean View Chtnnel to
provide aecw lO the Urba n H. Pl1van
School.
( ,, ,
Caspers Pla1iS .
$100-a-person
Fund Reception
Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W.
Caspers of Newport Beach is throwirig a
$100-a-head fUfJd raising party T\lesday
night in the Ha 'Penny lnn I n
Westminster, wbich he owns.
Tom Fuente•. executive assistant to
Caspers, said today that about 300 in-
vitatians had been mailed last week and
ihat "the res'ponse has been Wonderful."·
Fuentes said he could not .yet estimate
the number of gue.sts who will gather at
the 5:30 to 8 p.m .• coclrtail reception billed
as "Celebrating a year of Orange County
progress with the honorable Ronald W.
Caspers."
· "l l"'·ould m:ike a wild guess that there
will be more ·than 21)11 pen;ons there,"
Fuentes said today.
Caspers staged another fund rilsing
party last March -a $1 ,000 1 Ciluple din-
ner at lhe Chez Cary in Orange. That af-
fair became highly publicized when it
was disclosed that the supervisor's office
staff had used the county pastage meter
to mail the invitations.
Caspers, who just a few days before
had urged economy in county postage
procedures, apalogized calling it, "a.
clerk's error." He reimbursed the stamp
fund for the $3. ll expended.
His short career on lhe board has been
arked with finan cial news.
Caspers repartedly !pent a recard
$81 ,695 on his election campaign in which
he unseated incumbent Alton Allen of
Laguna Belch in the June primary in
1970. The sum is four-times more than
the greatest amount s~nt previously in
an Orange County supervisorial cam-
paign.
Caspers admitted Cilntributing $46,984
of his own money to the campaign. He is
the former president and now chairman
of the board of Keystone 5'1v\ngs and
Loan .Association· with offices in
Westminster and Anaheim .
Service Station
Attrndant Beaten
Dutmg Robbery
·A 61 -year~ld serYice station attendant
wa s beaten with a pipe 111 he struggled
with tht..."~an who robbed "h I 1
Wtstmlnsler ·station early Sunday morn-
ing .
Police said Orville Pearson suffered
htad. c.uts in the fight which ended when
the lone bandit got away with tll3 in
r~lpts:
PearsoJ. who was the lone attendant 1t
the: Roy Frazel Shell stal\on,-8111\d he. was
1ttaeked sharlly after mfdnight when he
atttmpted to _put the cash into the ti.I·
tlon.'s safe. ·
Detectives said they believe the suspect
had blddeti In the station's storage room,
waltlng for Pearson 10 open tl\e ••fe. The
robber ii deacribed 1s 1 e1ucaalan of
medium build Jn his early 2Qs.
f; ~
, '
Lionhearted
Two yet-unnamed lion cubs play in the Overton Park Zoo at Memphis
on a peaceful afternoon. The cubs were born Oct. 4 to A{z:ic.an lioness
''Kenya." · · •
Top Municipal Leaders
Meet to Mull Problems
HONOLULU (UPI) -Top munici pal
leaders from around the nation thrashed
out some touchy policy decisions today
while a battle emerged for the presidency
of the National League ot Cities.
Some 2,500 mayo rs, Ciluncilmen and
other city officials were attending the
481h annual congress of cities, believed lo
be the largest ever in the history af the
Natklnal League or Cities.
A resolution calling for the abolition of
private ownership o( hand guns was ..
·a m o n g the most controversial items
under Clsc ussion. Mayor Ro.man . S.
Cribbs of Detroit, chairman of the
league's Public Safety Committee. plans
to pri:sent the resqlution whi~h . contains
two suggeslons for curbing · priyate
ownership or hand guns.
Norman Miller. special assistant to
Cribbs, said "The resolution proposes a
change in the wording af the second
amendment to ·lhC cOnstit ution so that
'the right of the people to keep and bear
arms' is changed to the righl of the peo-
ple to keep and bear long gun s:0
The resolution -also makes an
alternative suggestion that the private
ownership of hand guns be diminished
through a federal ~latute stemming frOm
an aet of Congress.
Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York
came out in favor af the resolution Sun-
DIDfO--•
day saying "Gun .control ls absolutely
essential." .He .s3id , "Congr.ess mu 1 t
move on t.h.ls-. This mayors' convention
mu to. push It.:•
The question or who.will be next ye~r's
president of the league his attracted
much attenfiOn. · · · •
Normally, the first viCe president of the
league steps .up to the presidency, but
this yea r the success ion is in · doubt.
Mayor Louie Welch o( Houston, who
would normally become the president,·
face s a runoff electiQn for mayor at home
and was· uii261e lo atterid the.. congress .
He would be ineligible to serve if beaten
but the runoff is not for a C<:luple or
weeks and the league .is holding Its elec-
tions .\Vednesday.
Anahein1 Driver Dies
After Auto Accident
Anaheim motoreycllst James W .
Wright~was fal81jy injured early today
"'hen he crashed into a parked ear on
Katella Avenue. east of Garden Drive.
Police said \Yrif::ht, 27, "o'f 10070 S.
Gilbert St., Anaheim, ditd · at 5 a:m. in
.the Orange County Medical Ceriter
following the 1 a.m. mish~p.
s-: OUT OF PAWN
ESTATES
OVERSTOCKS
ILLUSTRATIONS
NOT
.t.YAIU.ILE
Tall\:s Still
Seeking _End
.To ~alkout
: LOS ANGEL~S (AP) -Neg0Jlallon1
resumed today in a bid to end a week'(lld
Teamsters Union strike that has halted
vlrtually all construction in Southern
California.
Neither the Teamsters U n i o n "°r
representatives of the. bulldln1 Industry
~Id a~ss the effect of the strike on
Orange County. Pickets have stopi>ed
"'ork at scattered projects in the Cotµlly ,
but not at all sites. -: ' Meanwhile, a joint emergency com·
mitlee, comprising three 1.1nion and three
· managem.ent representatives, w a 1
rev1ewing a list of 17 projects to
-determine which are vital to the public
safety S() work can be resumed on them.
The strike, causing an estimated $4
million 'I day in payroll losses, was called
last Monday by Teamsters Joint Council
42 in JLd!!!R.9.ksOncerning union jusjsdic-
tion over independent owner-operators of
dump trucks, used in many construcllon
projects. The owner-operators say they
number about 3,000 in California .
Teamsters representatives said nearly
all their 16,000 members in 11 Southern
California counties are off the job and
their picket ijnes are bel.ng honored by 16
olhel' AFL-CIO unions. Management
wants the indtpendents exempted from
the contract;-the unio n says Jt want."
them cansidered as workers under union
rults.
In addition to the jurisdiction question,
the 'Fe8!"tlsters also are asking for a wage
increase-oi-85 centa an -hour for each af
the next three years.
· Chase Exceeds
100 1nph; Police
Arrest Suspect
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 29-year-old
shipping clerk has been booked for in-
vestigation of charges stemming from a
wild half-hour chase that extended over
45 miles at !ii>f!eds up to 100 miles an
hour, police said today.
Sgt." 'Diivid Aikins said George Wall, of
Los Angeles, was booked for investigation
of car theft, assault with a vehicle and
driving under the influence o( alcohol.
The chase, which involve~ some 15
police cars and whiz.zed through live Los
Angeles Cilmmunitles, began Saturday
nig ht in Westwood. There, police spotted
a man driving a late-model Lincoln Con·
tinental-.thal had been reparted stolen on.
ly minutes earlier, authorities said.
The man Ignored orders to pull over,
poliJ:e said, and raced away, touching off
a high~peed pursuit that:
-Took ·the cha sers and chasee t~rouglt
the communities of Wes twood Village,
Palms, Venice. Santa Monica and West
Los Angeles. and on and off the· Santa
Monica Freeway al least four times.
-Caused one police car to break down
on the ffeeway and another to spin out of
C(lntrol and crash into a telephone pole
with oobody injured.
-,-Ended when the. man's car collided
with a police car in Santa Monica and he
was arrested. No one was injured in this
collision.
••
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' H DAILY ,,IDT 3
J apa,n J~mps Gun~·· ~-~Clemente-~Rooms · ·ne.ser_yed
By JOllN VALTERZA
Of tti• D•llr 'lllt st.it
When the Japan~se Embassy tn Waah-
ingtoo, P.C., calls to l'tSl!J"Ye • rooms
at. a San Cleaiente motel -wid no ooe
· has been told in advance -clerb be-
come concerned
When _such a call came into the San
Clemente Inn Friday, the staff asked a '
top-level PresldenUal adle if the call WIS
a holx.
t<_,.' It waan\ but . it-wu embamalng
nooetbeleu.
The ..,..,, of the ~deol'• meellng
witb Jlj\I-Prime :dln!ster Eia.UJt
Salo -nol lo ba•• been -unW J~.
And oppmntly, U.. J•-Jumped tl>e ..... Bourcei p .. the ICalllllt of the,._.
vation .Wu and lndk:ationa we~ that
Saturday'• official ani'lOUnWllent of the
historic Sato visit Jan. 7 and 8 at the
Western White House-was made much
soope.r than oriJfnally planned.
• Qther announcements over the weekend
aJao came without warning, includiog dt?
· talla of the departure for Waablngton.
'Jbe..,bollday stay by the ·President and
Finl tody ended Sunday -sooner than
• •
·Nixon Se~s Big .Meets
Old Friends ·to Hear President's Plans
·WASHINGTON CAP) -President Nir·
on. expected to atfnounce a date for his
China trip within 48 hours, is descrl~ IS
eager to ease East-West tensions -but
not at the expense of·old friendshipe.
Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
a desire to have meaningful consultatio111
Ocean Accidents
with. major allla prior to )Qw'.neyr to
Peking and Moacow wu a key reason for
'Nixori'1 ··announced intention* to meet
during the nezt five weeks with leader•
of Britain, France, West Germany, Japan
arw:I Canada. , -
Tllilng lo a lnJUP·Ofnewsmen aboard
•
Air Force One as the President flew btre
Sunday night from Calilomla, Ziegler
aaid:
"The purpose o! the consultations ii to
inform our alliu about our Views of the
world and to in!omi them about wbal the
President inten-~ to accomplish •• : The
President wants ~ their view11,-and
he's going to give his.''
originally ~.
Earlier plans had callectfor the Presi-
dent to remain in San Clemente until
Tuesday or Wednesday, but at an early
morning lirlellng Sunday.1'1= SecrolalY
~ Ziegler announced the Pre!ldent
planned to leave tba& afternoon at 4
o'clock.
The announcemep.t came at about the
same time u ~· of the assassinaUon
of Jordanian Pi:emier Wull T1il m the
steps of a Cairo Hotel. •
The President'• attenUon earlier 1n the
stay was on, American football, but IOort
after ~ holiday ii -lo lnlema-
tlonal ;_. -the pendlng trip to l'HfnC
and the five conference• with world
leaders.
The Chief Enolti.. lonook. bis tradi-
tional 1011 ml !or the obor1 trip from
bis home. lo the waitlog belJcoplU SuJI.
day afternoon.
He rode' in a car, instead .
ApPearlng jaunty and In good oplrita
Mt. Nilon swi!Uy greeted Coast Guard.
· ~U~. 'then wbee_led and strode swif~
Ii> the chopper. · .S
A> be negn!Dled U.. ladder be bi!W
ly &kipped aeveral lllepa In bis IWta lo
boanl.
Young Skin .Diver Dies;
Diving Teacher Rescued
Another White House Officlal~ho _.
declined to' be.identlfied, said Nixon was
bPund for ~eking ·and Moscow "to relar
tensions but not to sacrifice allied unity."
... A ~Montebello youth sklndlving with~bi3
father drowned and an Anaheim diving
instructor &wimming alone nearly drown-
ed in separate weekerid incidents in the
Laguna Beach area.
The dead youth was identified as Ted
,Piamanco, 18. He was proaoWJced dead
. on arrival at South Coast Community
Hospital Friday afternoon after being
pulled unconscious from Scotchman's
Cove by hls diving companions, one of
whom was his father, Jerry Gierrianco.
Lifeguards said the victim &Urfaced
calling for help, but apparently inhaled
· water and lapsed into unconscious ness
before he could be puUed to the beach.
· Efforts to revive the diver by lifeguards
failed .
He's Got New
Record (Burp)
SYDNEY (l]pl) -Peter Wilcox,
'29, claimed a world beer drinking
record Friday night. He downed
one gallon in six mimrtes, 4S aec--
onds. ·
The record was set at a high
school end-of-year ball at sub~n
Doubel Bay.
To the cheers and applaust of
400 friends end clamnates, Peter
broke the record and declared, "I
sure will have a-giant hangover."
'The Gulness Book of Records
shows the previous world rec<>rd
for drinking a gallon of beer was
seven minutes, 33 seconds.
Peter, six-feet-two and 219
pounds, was acromprulied by a
drum roll.
I
Lifegy_trdJ· agaln responded to a diver
~ in troubJe SUnda.y-afternoon at Shaw's
Cove off CliU Drive when Mike Co:r, 18,
collapsod on the beach alter barely mak·
Ing It a!hoi'e.
Cor waa ruabed lo South Coaat
HospitaJ, where be was reported in
satWaclory condition Jn the Intensive
care unit. A hospital apotesman aaid the
mao sulitalned Internal lnJuriea lo both of
bla lungw.
According to Ilieguardl, eox; a diVing
instructor, was alone in about 45 feet of
water when the incident occurred. Cox
later told autboriUes that ht had become
dizzy underwater, ao ht dropped hls
weight belt artd tank and started to
aurface. He blacked out on the way and
up WI 11e ·rep1nec1 colllclousoesa oo the
IUdace. He then swam to abore and col·
lapoed.
Girl w Att.end
Naval Academy?
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Jacob K.
Javits (R-N.Y.), is conalderln g,
nominating a girl for admillioo to the
U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md.
Paul Leventhal, Javil!' p r e s g
secretary, said tbe senator has asked the
Navy whether girls formally are excluded
from ffie traditlorially male:only school
for future Navy and Marine Corps of-
ficers.
'!be pre• 1 1eeretary II.id Javite:, who
recenlly broke Senate tradition by
nominat.illg a girl page, received a letter
from a New York girl who "really wants
to go" to the academy.
'-·.
Tbi.s aotll'Cil aaid the allied leaders
would not be granted ''an absolute veto"
over any lajtiatives Nixon may take i~
the Communi&t capitals. "But," be ad·
ded, ''if there are grave concerns, they
will be taken into consideration." •
Ignoring~ rtpOrts that hltChes have
developed, Ziegler continua.: to promise
that a date for the President's Peking
trip will be announced. wi~in 48 hourt.
There have been several published and
broadcast reports suggesting the historic
n:iission might be postponed or canceled.
~ Ziegler confirmed during the night that
Nixon will meet here in December with
Canadian llrime Minister Pierre Elliot
Trudeau./ . •
Before leaving California, Ziegler an-
nounced the ·chief executive and West
German Chancellor Willy Brandt will
confer Dec. 28-29 at the Florida White
House in Key Biscayne.
Earlier the White House had unveiled
plans for Nixon meetings with :
-President Georges Ponipldou of
France in the Azores Dec. 13-14.
-British Prime Minister Edward
Heath in Bermuda Dec. 2~21.
-Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Sato
at the Western White House in San
Cleme11te, Jan. 6-7.
"No other ·meetings are ~ing pJaMed
Or discuued," Zlegler said.
The anonymous White House source
aaid Niion. in Peking and Moscow, Would
not be ape,aking for other leaders. He said: ·
"We are not representing the-others.
We are formulating our position, taking
into consideration their views. Our posi-
tion is that we are not going to sacrifice
allied unity to a relaxation of tensions
•.. We want to be conscious of the vita l
concerns of our allies."
Asked if be felt the allies understood
Nixon'& purposes, the source replied:
"I think there is an understanding of
our general purposes, but I thl11k there is
also 1 degree of uncertainty as to what
our moves Dtean. The purpose of these
meeUng11 is '&f remove as much of that
uncertainty as possible."
' . ,.
' '
OAl\;Y PILOT .... ,.._
PRESIDENT NIXON PREPARES TO LEAV~ SAN CLEMENTE AFTER 4-DAY HOLIDAY
Chief Exacutlve Hud1 Toward Helicopter at Loran Cout Guard Station Sunday
Fiery Collision
Near Onofre Unit
Kills Woman, 20'
A fiery, headon cras_h Sunday afternoon
along an unguarded stretch of freeway
near the Saa Ohofre Nuclear Generating
Station claimed the life of a 2tl-year-old
v.·oman from San Diego and Injured 11
other Pe'rsdns -~most of thMI children.
Highway patrolmen said the 12:40 p.m.
collision tied up already congested boll·
day traffic for hour&. 1 'The dead woman was Sandra Scott, a
passenger in her uncle 's auto which burst
Jnto flame after being sideswiped by a
station wagon that went out of control.
Patrolmen said the mishap was cause d
when the station wagon carrying 10
persons and driven by Mrs. Gwendolyn
McKinney, 27, -Of 829 Townsend St., Santa
Ana. went Q..Ul of. control. · ,.
The heavily-laden ca r careened acros.s
the unguardeQ divider strip a n d
sideswiped · a northbound car driven by
Edward Scott Jr., 43, of Inglewood.
Two other cars became involved In the
crashes as their drivers tried to avoid the
two autos in the initial collision. No one
was injured in those two cars.
Campaign Funding Hit .
' .
Nixon Will Vet0-Tax Bill
If 'Fatal Flaws'Left In
WASHINGTON (bPI) -President
Nizon will veto his own taz bi11 ll tt con-
. tains either a provision to finance
presldeoUal campatgna with tar money
or billions of tax cuts he dld not seek,. t.be
WWte House said today.
Clark MacGregor, Nixon~a..chiel con--
gressional ·lobbyists, said Nixoo favored 1
bill p8s&ed by the Ho111e, but aald the
Senate version contained 11f1taJ Oaw1"
that Nixon would not accept.
MacGregor said the Justice .. Depart-
ment has been instructed to review the
constitutionality of pennitUng Jndlvlduals
to earmark $1 of their income tu: pay·
ment for presidential campa1gns. But he
indicated Nlmn has decided to veto~e
bill rather than challenge lt In court. ~ ~ 1
NlJ:On met for more than three hours
with MacGregor and members of his
staff to discuss the tu bW. MacGregor
re.layed the President'• thinking to
newsmen lesi than an hour and a half
before House and Senate• conferees ar--'
rll'Jged to meet to start disCU!Slons on a
compromise meuure.
-Thti Houu !PProved tax cull totallnl
llU billion for 1971 tliiougb 1173· -=--
to what Nilon asked. The Senate boosted
the total to more than $27 bllllon. beside1
~d<ling the controversial campajgn pro-
~islon to allow taxpayers to authorize· UBI
of $1 of their income tues: for presi<fen..
tial campaigning.
MacGregor said Nl:zon re.ma.ms-i:Om-
mitted to. passage of a tu cut bill that
would "properly stimulate the economy.••
MacGregor said if N'LlOil vetoed the las
bill he would urge O:lngress to pass a
suitable substitute before adjourning 1<1(
the year.
"In my opinion, the O:lngrea wUI Ml
go homt for Christmas without passing II
suitj\ble tu bill," MacGregor aaid.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town !
Salisbury-Steak .... 89~
A blend of 50% tender beef-501'> an pork , • coane lfl'UDd for texture I
Lean tender beef, spiced to perfection l smoked & cooked for finer flavor!
Rack of lamb ................ OVIN on ................ 9f·
Ready for you to .. ..,,n to !Mt., then IDIS!I U.S.D.A. Choi<& !reoh lamb!
•
Fresh.squeezed ••. then rushed to you ••. fresh! No pre.serv&tives, no coloring ••• ju11t pure juice from Ruby ~TpxutGrapefruit ••• or golden richness from orchard ripened orangea. And both packed in our·aensational
n pouch!' Just' snip and pour rie-ht from the bag I
Pork_& Beans ..... 5 : $1 ---
:VaQ Camp's, •• 1erve 'em hot and hearty with SaU.bucy Sl.eak l No. 2 caua. . .
Kleenex .......... : .. ;.·4: $1
Facial tissues 11trOn.i enough for bir meezea, 200 et. pkp., colon or white.
Jack La lanne's Crackers .......................... 39 ..
.From the Sunshine cnclten, Soya or Sewn• ... for health and rood ta.te l
, Buddig' s Sliced Meats .......................... 3 "' '1
-..l!ricee '" •f.f!ct ~. Tu.,~" lliWm<d.Ufi, r.-----.!'W~ar,,,e,,_r_,,thin,,,·::..::•li:::::"cea • : • cooked, ready to e&t; low fat, high protein ! 3 oo. J>laii-Nov. t9, !0, Dtc. 1-:-~ to r .
.Bacfloin Port• .: ...... :: .. 1111T1 ....... ~ .. ·'1.29 ..
So lean .and tender I Par-bon for 1 hour lhen hoke In Ille"""'-°" II-II.QI . . .
ARCADIA· "''''l .lllr! H11r'1
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11 ,' '.11 PASADENA . ,11;,'1,' SOUTH PASADEN A: UM· HUNTINGTON BEACH i;ii'ii. NEWPORT BEACH : :717 New~orl Rl1n Jlld
i[I R:1fl'"fl0 Crn ff't ' '1 'I. ' (: 1 '• '1~ P1.il r r1 111!11 l ilH1 Hunt1,1~!11n 01 .. W.1rnrr .lnrl ,\J~OIHJlloll RoJllil'f.1:~ CPiif P! ' ;·,I I f .J\, '111 ;• 01 ft ,[!,:1.'f V1ll:igr Ctn:r·. . .
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;::_•· -·~
f DAILY ,!LOT )
__ ffijacl{ers -Swallow Lie by Stew:~r'dess
\
\ •• l i,ps
Top 10 Tales ·
Pretty Grim
By THOMAS MtIRPHINE
• Of ... DMt'I f>llft Steff
SECOND GUESSES DEPT. -n.Js fa
the ilme of year when newspaper peoplt
are ukell lo cAat their ey.. backwanfa
acroaa the last 11 mnnlht and select "The
Top l<Y' news 1torle1 in the nation, 1tatl.
county, or whatever. It ls ldme choie. ·
y.., Id -roquesta for ranllinr ll>t nnk new1 from places like Tbt
Alsociited Pren, UPI or other presa
orpn1Jation1. Tom Pendergast, genlat
head man of The AP In Los Angela, Just
By Tiii A111daled Pr<o11
A .1tewardeu from a Trw World
Alrllna jeUlner hijacked lo CUba llYI
ooe of tbt three men who commandetred
lbt p!IM admllt.d kllllq a New MulcO
otate trooper.
• "The 1mallest one, his· name wa1
Michael 'but bad been cbangod to the
. Afr~an name Mahcha1• !aid he killed the
officer:t' 1tewardeu'lf'\lln Harrell said
after lht and five other crewmembera of
lbe Boelna m returnee! to Miami from
H.,.ana &undl:y. -
The FBI ldenllfJed lbt tbrei hijackers
aent me a llst asking for the Top 10 in
California during 1971. He gave me •'--RC
chofl!f'of 1torle1 ll11ed A through Z. r hive often suspected that aorrle newt
edllora might check back lo make. IW'O
bow they played the new1 before ~
rank lt 1t the end of the year. Thil 11
.cbutfnc, ol. course.. lt'a a way of. un-derllnlna .bo" tnlelllgeot your Jlldgmenl w11 the first time . Al for Qle, J jUst gnb
the list and blast ahead with my lop 10 cbolces.
THEN LATER, aomebody can come
back and uy, "JI you thought that atory
wu 10 bot, bowcome back 1n March you
played ll oo Page 18 n.,I lo the
Cl'Oll"VIO.~..»Ullle?"
I lhlill<.ro\iihl to say.10methlng about
the stories I didn't select, which includt
only 6rii Cahdidate offered from Orange
County. That w11 the ·Ca!Uomla Angela
having their worst-ever season. 1
Some things are best just forgotten.
ANOTHER _~CANDIDATE waa Frank
Sinatra retiring. If he mak,. the lop JO
quitting, what wW be do when be un-
retires? .
as the same. trio charled with gunning
clown lroopfr R<lbert llooeobloom when
he made a roullnt 1lop of their vehicle
No•. 8 near Albuquerque, N.M.
The FBI ldentUled them u Michael R.
Flnnoy; 20, of .San FranclJcn and
Berkeley~ Ralph ft. Goodwin, 2•, of
Berkeley; and ·Charles Hill, 21, no
hometown.
Tbe pilot of lbt bljackod fllgh), Capt.
.John McGbee,.. aa1d he feared "Someone
was going to dle" when the three young ,
men stormed aboard the plane aa It was
boanllng -are al Albuquerqua ear-
fy SllurdV.
"These men boarded In a vlolent,
agitated m&Mtr and were obviously
ready to commit murder," McGhee uJd
after bringing the plane. back from an
overnight stay at Havana. .
Once the plane was air:borDt from
Albuquerqutt, at~wardw Betty Canbre
said, ehe lied ·at knifepoii:,t to coavihoe
"their leader that lhfa alrpltnt couldn't
fly all the way to Africa."
She · sa!d $.e told lli1n ohe'd been lo
Cuba twice and knew hijackers would be
tretted nicely by the island's Communist
regllne.
••J lied." lhe admitted.
'' .
Gov. ·Reagan was Offered as a1 possible
choice because he failed to "pay any 1tate
Income taxes. Now that's pickinJ: on him.
Wby don't we wait unW he p1y1, then put
him in the Top 10?
PAKISTANIS UH OX CART TO CARRY BELONOfNGS AWAY FROM BATTLE AREAS ON ~ORDER.
Fralh Plthtlnt Rtportod Bet-n T-Naflon1 Dt1plto fnltrnatlonal PH<o Ploa1
~Ill' Qiaj'e:z: Wll I candid.ate fw ~__._ _ ..._
ding hil lettuce boy"'ll. I doubt If he's oa .
the hit parade .with too many housewives. N t Call f p r,~~lou checked the price of 1et1uce JXOll s or eace
* Anyway, after I tried to cull out the
a1 ... , ... , fended up with a list of 10. Six o· n India-Pakistan Borde1· of these stories dealt with violence. That
may give you a noUon of what kind Of
year it was in CallCornla. My choices lo .,
like this :
I. THE SAN FERNANDO Valley eartl> NEW DELHI (UPI) -President Nixon
qulle tn whicb-IDQre tbJn. 60 persona !oat tent personal messqu to I n d I a ,
their Uves. One--cf the wors1-m-recerit-Pakistan and the Soviet Union today urg-
memory. It wW have long repercu1slon1 Ing an end to fighting aloq the Indian·
In the number cf public structuret that Pakistan border.
fa iled the test. U.S. ambassador to Jndla Kenneth B.
J. Fin'Y DIE when 1 jetliner and Keating delivered Nilon's meuage to
fighter headed for El Toro Marine C.Orp1 Prime Minister Indira Gandhi In a SO.
Air Station collide in midair over the San minute meeUng.
Gabriel Mountain•. 3. THE BODIES of 25 •lain migrant Following the meellng with Keating,
workers fowMI. in an orchard near Yuba
City.
4. THE CALIFORNIA Supreme Court
invalidates local property taxes for flnan.
clng publlc schools. We're likely to hear
from this one for a long time to come.
5. MARINER I beccmes the first
1pa~raft to orbit another planet under
direction from acientlstl at Pasadena'•
Jet Proflulsion L.aboratory.
I. SOLEDAD BROTHER G e o r g e
Jackson and five others die In gunfire at
San Quentin Prison .
7. CHARLIE M~N and the girls,
guilty of murder as charged.
8. EXPLOSION KILLS 17 in un·
derground waler tunnel at Sylmar.
9. HARRY BRIDGES and his
LongsOOremen closing West Coast ports
for 100 days.
10. THE CALIFORNIA Legislature in
its longest session 1n history. ThiJ one
has been good for a lot of laugbl. n
makes the list after you rev iew the other
nine seleeticns.
Then you can see bow much we've
needed some laugbl.
He Can, Sleep
At Night Now
PARIS (UPI) -Roger !Ins•
lngnol hasn't 1lept at night ln 3(1
years. But today RO!lsignol, the
night custodian at one cf Paris'
plushest hotels, aroee from a bed
slept in by such mllllcnaires as
stavros Niarchot and Henry Ford.
After aMounclng his retirement
from the night watch of the Pl.ua
Athenee, Rossignol. SS, was given
the roya1 treatment for one
weekend at the Paris Hotel near
the Champs Elysees.
"I stayed In the royal suite, and
was served champagne and flowers
by the very men I've worked w:lth
fer aJJ the!e years," said Rossignol.
Mrt. Ghandt met far 20 mlnut.s with her
Rnior cabinet advisers . She also held a
ltCOnd meeting wllb her armed forces
chiefs and senior officials from the
fcrelgn and defeme m.lnlstries. It was not
known U they di.scuued. Nixon'.s note.
Keating declined to discuss the content!
of the message but IOUrces said Nixon
asked for an end to the fighting and a
withdrawal of troops from the border
areu of the two countries.
The notes were drafted at the Western
White House in San Clemente by Nl1on
over the holiday weekend, the sources
aafd.
Earller, MWI reports said Indian
Defense Minilter Jagjlvan Ram i;a1d lll-
dian troopl!I had been cniered to move Into
East Pakistan as far aa necessary to stop
Pakistani aiUJ!ery attacp. •
Ram said the order was· issued after
Pakistan Increased It. shelling of border
areas, the reports aald.
Four civilians were killed and 14 "W'OWld·
ed In a Paldr!tanl arimery attack on the
town of Balurghat, about 180 miles north
ol Calcutta, &inday.
Fighting, which. started in the area
Saturday, still was going on today.
India, claiming Pakistan t r o o p s
threatened their defensive positions,
mqved lnto Pakistan in the Dinajpur area
and destroyed three Pakistani tanks.
Government IOl1reetl said earlier Jndlan
commanders bad authority to take broad
1teps In prolecllng their delenalve posl·
Uons. ·
2--'Storms Buff et Nation
. Cities in Iowa, Mi:ssQuri Hard Hit by Snow
Anti-communist
Sweeps to Win
l1i Uruguay Vote
MONTEVIDEO (UPI) -Anti-com·
munist government candidates Juan
Maria Bordaberry swept to victory •in
Montevideo today, and mounting official
returns from Sunday's presidential elec-
tions showed voters had rejected a leftist
coalition's bid for power. ·
The 43-year-old Bordaberry, President
Geo r & e Pacheco Arero's hand;:iicked
nominee, also was running in fr~nt In the
interior and hi:t victory in the ll·man
presidential race nationwide seemed
assured.
Uruguay's 2.8 ·miWon population is
almost evenly divided between Mon-
tevideo and the interior.
A Bordaberry triumph means a con-
tinuation of outgoing Pacheco Areco's
hN'd-line tactics a g a in s t Uruguay's
Tupamaro guirriDas who had given con·
ditional support to the broad front.
Retired Gen, Liber Seregn.i, the front'•
candidate, was quoted as recognizing
dtfeat early today, only hours after he
had bitterly denolUlced the electioIIJ as
"the dirtiest I have .ever seen."
The front, a collection of Communists.
Socialists, ChrlsUan Dem o c rat 1 ,
Trotskyltes and dissidents from the tradl·
tional Colorado and Blanco parties, hoped
to foll o\v ln the footsteps of the coalition
which put Marxist Salvador Allende in
power in Chile last year.
Henderson, Sl , is accused of failing te
Investigate complaints of wholesale kilJ.
ing cf civilians in the assault on the South
Vietnamese hamlet on March 16, 1968.
Colonel Insists
He Was Ignorant
Of My Lai Deaths
Hospitalized Merry
Hears Redskin Game
WAS!ITNGTON (AP) -AFLOO
Presrdent George Meany fell well enough
to 1lt up tn hl.s hospital room SiJnday and
listen to a broadca$t cf the Washing\on
jledsklns·Phlladel phla Eagl•• pro football
game. The 77-yel.Mlld Mcaay was
hoopli<llred Thureday .a fl e r suffering
chest pains.
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Mc<lhee 111d he then convlncecl lbt bJ.
jackm that he Modecl a rell1eJlng atop.
Altu )he fugiUvet relwed lo lei him lly
lo Allanl< or Miami. the plane landed at
Tampa, Fla., where the 0 puaenaers
were allowed to deplane.
A Federal AviaUon Administration
spokesman said Cuban ofnclals informed
the FAA that Iba trio WU, lakan tnlo
custody and disarmed of two guns and a
knife When the jet landed 1n·a,avana.
In· the Pacific Northwest, 1ln lnl..Wve
~ch ii contlnuin& for a man who bl·
jacked a NOrthwist Alrllna 'm lalt Weil-
•
Nixon Extension
nesday and then bailed out with $200,000
IJt ~ money. •
Tbe_ I aitllnl had delivered fou r
puacbUta and the money to the hijacker
1n Statit1 after he commandeered the
aircraft between Portland,· Ore., and
Seattle, The 36 other passe11gers and two
of the, 11il:·member crew were permltled
to JeaVe the plane at Seattle .
He. apparently bailed out over the
Woodland, Wash., area as the pl1ne made·
a slow. low-level Digbt-at bil command
-from Seattle to Reno, Nev., en route to
his domaildod destinaUon Mulco.
Added Economic
Powers Studied
'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate to.
day considers a bill to give President
Ni.Ion control cvei the economy lor 17
more months -power IO vast some
Democrats warned that Congra.s would
rue vcting for it.
Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wis.), said
,he would fight Ille bill He predid..i con·
.unera: and workers alike would be upo-ln
arms belcre the 17 months are over and,
presumably, woold be ready to retaliate
against President and Congress alike.
But the mood cf the Oeniocratlc ma·
jority seemed to be to give Ni.Ion all he
sought in economic conlrols so that be
could nol blame the Democrats U ln-
flaUon and unemployment still were
headaches in 1972.
Republicans . for their part, lhowed lit·
tie appetite for trying to strike from the
bill a section inserted by the Senate
Banking Committee over the White
House's objections.
It wculd restore to workers back pay
for negotiated raises prevented from tak-
ing effeet durine the 91k!ay wage-price
freeze unless such ratsea a r e
"unreasonably inconshtent" wjtb the Pay
Board'• guid•llnes.
The Pay Board bu voted twice ever
labor'• abjections to refuse to allow
retroactive pay raises to ·take e.Hect
across-the-board.
Raises worth $2 billion to $S billion -a
relative drop in the overall economic
bucket -would be restortd by the bill.
Proxmire, chairman of the Houae-
Senale Economic Committee, said he
would offer an amendment limiting the
extension of presidential .authority to
April 30, 1972 instead of April 30, 1973, the
date Ni1on wants.
"This program is so co m p I e J: ,
CUI'rency Leaders . .,
. To Discuss Devaluing
. ROME (UPI) -Deputy lreasury
ministers and bankers from the 10
wealthiest nations of the non-Communist•
world tc>day got rid cf IO)Dt of the
preliminaries for two days of talks
among their bosses on who should
devalue and who revalue their money.
The group of 10 will confer Tuesday
and Wednesday on the cWTent monetary
crisis whic h was spawned by President
Nixon's Aug. 15 decision to cut the dollar
from gold and Impose a 10 percent surtax
on aome imports.
.. .
unworkable and unenforceable that It is
bound to engender hostility by consumers
and workers alike throughout the country
and the serious economlc confusion is
likely to slow the economy aod aggravate
1µ1employment," Proxmire said in a
.statement prepared for the debate. "We
should wait to see bow the program
·worU before extending it 17 months."
· In Separate economic acUon, the Price
Commlssloo rejected lod•Y a requeot by
a big meat packer; Oscar Mayer Co.1 for
a 1,31 percent price hike.
It was ·only the second ·price increase
request that the commission rejected.
·slnee it began administering controls
Nov. 14. "
The guideline for Phase II prices
forbids Increases that would boost a
firm's margin of profit on sales from U:·
ceeding the average margin in the best
two of the last three years.: The com-
mission said Oscar Mayer's margin
already i. higher In 1971 than the base
periiJcl.
_Unaware Plant
E1nployed Aliens,
Nominee Testifies
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Romana
ACosta Banuelos lns~sted today she. dld
oot knowingly permit illegal Me1ican
aliens to work in her Southern California
food plant -which was raided shortly
after she was nominated by President
Nixon for U.S. Treasurer.
Mrs. Banuelos, testifying bef«e the
Senate Finance Committee,.also denied a
report by the U.S. Immigration and '
Naturalization Service that there had
.~P five raids prior. to the one on Oct. 5
for Illegal aliens at her taco and tortilla
factory ·1n Gardena.
She said the Immigration service found
eigbt..to 11 altens during one raid in the
1prlng of 1968.
'Ibe Senate committee ls considering
Mrs. Banuelos' appolnbnent to the large.
ly ceremonial position, which In recent
years has traditionally gone to a \\"Oman.
Thirty-six Mexicans were arrested
when Mrs. Banuelos' firm, Ramona'•
Food Products Co., was raided Oct. 6 -
15 days after· her appointment was an-
DOWlced -by federal agents.
Sign of Lite Sought
Red Craft Nears Mars;
2nd's Fate.Not Given
MOSCOW (UPI) -One Soviet
spacecraft approached Mara today on a
mission seeking possible life, but there
wu no word on the fate of its lister ah!p
already due at the planeL
Pravda, the Communist p 1 rt 1
newspaper, l&id Sunday the unmllmtd
Mars 3 waa "approeching Mars" at the
end cf its ll.J:-montb journey from earth.
But it saJd nothing about Man 2, which
blasted olr nine days ahead cf Mari 3.
today lo photograph II> big brother
Phobos.
(The 1eienUsts were heartened by th e
success ol the difficult maneuver re-
quired to get the Deimos picture Friday.
and not discouraged by the failure of an
attempt to photoifaph Phobos Saturday .
;\ spokesman called it "a b'icky
business.") ' -
Man 2 and Mars 3 are the biggest ll1l!
manned spaceships in history, five tonr
each. They blasted off May 19 and May
28 respecUvely on the 29(>.milllon m i 1 e
flights.
(In Manchester, England, scienUsts at
the Jodrell Bank Observatory said Sun·
day one of the two ships had arrived and
was <lrbitlng Mar.i, but they did not know
which one.
"We are assuming II ii Mars 2," a She Cries 'Wolf' Jodre\I spokesman said. "But It could be
the other one. 'lllm '1 no flnn lndlca-
lion.") -And Mea .ns It
Sunday's Pi:avda report caught the Jn-•
ter:est of Western space experl.S because MOSCOW (AP) _ When 11 woman
previously, t.he few Soviet P~ telephoned MOSC()w aulborftlet and told
reports always treated them as a joint them two wolves were loping around
mission and mentloned both ships. Moecow'a heavily traveled Leninsky
At this pclnt, the Western analysts said Prospekt Boulevard. officials told her to
they were hesitant to speculate whether save her Jakes for Aprll Fool's Day.
the Mars 2 mi'f_ion had gone wrong But tbe woman persisted. She said lihe
because it was po.5.11bl the ship had land· knew the difference between a dog and 3 ed or wu in orbit wolf and two wolvu wue living In 811
The SovtN often delay rtport.a: oa area of new apartm~nt house C'Orl•
apace missions until they are confident struction about 3even inlles from the
111 ls well. Kttmlin.
ln addltlcm, the U.S. Mariner .. t.ld.ars "A team .of hunters started searchln!C
probe hll been wat<:hlng a global dust the-area; 'llley qulcklr g•therod r<porU
storm tN.t could have caused postpcne-of "strange gray dogs" near t11rbage
ment of SovJet...aul"V"al plans. cans. 'lbcn Chey found wolf tracks In tha
(Jn Pisedena, o.ur., ld:arfnet t _Iden-snow and remains cf cat. Jnd dogs. U.u, who got lbe hell plctur.. ev•r 'Th•Y finally Oullled two •dives In a ,,.
taken of another planet'• moon with &!lo• clon cf Votontoscvsky. Par~ and one wa!I
of the Marilin 11tellllfl Deimos, set O\Jf klll~. . ' ' ,
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ED I TI 0 N
* *' 2 8~, 4 SECTIONS, ~2 ~A~ VOL. 64, NO. -' .
Jordanians
"
Bury Tel
Jn Amman
AMA1AN (UPI) -Jordanian Premier
• Wasfl Tel, assassinated Sunday in Cairo bY four Palestinian gum-Illas, was buried
today to the sound of a 21 gun salute.
King llussein named a moderate to suc-
ceed him but brought in a tough line of-
Jicial as his national sec~uritY advis~.
Tel, 51, hated by the guerrillas for
ordering the Jordanian army to crush
~ir revolt last summer; was killed -by
four bullets as tie stepped from his car at
a. Cairo hotel on the banks o! the: Nile
following a lunCheon with Abdel Khalek
Hassuna, secretary general of the Arab
League.
Munzi Soleiman Khalifa, 28, leader of
the four man death sguad, told UPI Cor· r~pondeiit Mai,UoiCe QUlndi -in Cairo that
Tel's death was only the first of a series
of murders intended to eliminate
everyone who has opposed the. cause of
tlje Palesliru!. guenillu -In the Arab
world.
Khalifa raistd his hand in the V for vic-
tory sign and said, "We have taken our
revenge on a traitor." He said he had
drunk Tel 's blood after the shooting to
emj)hasize his hafreil Of f man.-
Hussein named Deputy Premier Ahmed
AJ-Lawzi. 50. as prime .ninister to suc·
ceed Tel and gave him the portfolio of
defense minister, a job also held by Tel.
Political sources said AJ-Lawzi was con·
sidered unbiased and nuetral on Palesti·
nian guerrilla matters. .
The sources said Al·Lawzi waS not
known for bis strong character and sug·
eeStea lilSnew Cabinet may bt mere.Jr•
caretaker one. Like Tel, Al-Lawzi is •
Bedouin. He had Served as chief cf pro-
tocol at the king's court and was chief of
the court.
Hussein named former f,ft ,t e rior
Minister Mohammed Rasoul AJ,.Kllani aa
his adviser on 111tiow· -U7,allairs.
Al·!GJani has q, repulation of being
tough Iowan! tge guUfilllf, a 11111estion
that HU1Hin'1 own toup ltlnd. wOuJd not
rhange.
Anis Afoasher, mirmter of tranaport.
took over Al·Law:ii's post as minister of
finance.
The leader or the gang that killed Tel .
said the prime minister was murdered to ·
avenge the death of a Palestinian guer·
i:!Jla caPtain In Jordan, police sources
sil .
el W8<S bated by the Palestinian guer·
rillas fof ordering the army to crush
their revolt this summer. He died trying
to get his own gun out to fight ·back.
Hussein, dressed in his uniform as
supreme commander of the armed
forces , a red and white kaffiya headdress
and a black annband, led t,500 mourners
to the cemetery atop one of tht city's
seven hills.
A 21-gun salUte was fired.as Te1'1 coffin
was lowered into the-grave. His widow
stood nearby, d"res9ed in a bllck ar*Je-.
length dress. Only a few feet away was
the grave of Hussein's grandfather, King
Abdullah, who was assassinated in 1951 .
Foreign Minister Abdullah Sa I a h
limped to the graveside, the result of a
slight wound he suffered at Tel'• side
during the assassination.
After a 30-mlnute private servlct at the
royal palace mosque, Tel'1 coffin, draped
in the black, red, white and green Jorda·
ntan nag, wu: carried on a gun carriage
to the hilltop cemetery.
Navy War ·Games
Nu'v Under vay
Off Coastline
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Tbe Navy opened
five da ys · of war games off So.ulbern
California today. A task force of 10
warships and a submarine left San Diego
to take\ part.
A spokesman for the l!t Fleet. said
new highly classified electronics equip-me~t would be used to locate and identify
"enemy" vessels. Among the ·new weapons system•
reportedly was the Seasparrow ..utiait
missile adapted for firing from an-
tisubmarine. rocket lauochen ~board
destroyers and destroyer escorts.
Vice Adm. Ray Peet, 1st Fleet com·
mander, was aboard the gship, the iuided
mi.Mile crWser Providence.
Fire Chief Ge ts
, K udos Thursd(iy
Newport Beach Fire Chief R. J. "Jan"
Brl!COe, who is retlrl~ at the end o! this
year. wfll be honored Thursday durmg a
1e1t1monlal runn... 1ehodut«1 for 1:30
.. 9kJJ'I· at the BAiboa Pavilion. ReserV•tlon., for .the dinntr will be ac-
cepted through noon Tuesday by Bat·
talion Chief J1mes Reed at fl.rt depart·
91enl headquartf:ra. Tickets are priced 1t
)It Heb.
I •
• ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR NIA MONDAY, NOVEM BER 29, ·197f TEN CENTS
---. . -·
. Romana Defended ' .
'
,Raid on Plant Said 'Put Pp Job'
' . '
U,I T.......,.
NIXON NOMINEE ROMANA BANUELOS FACES SENATE QUEsi:toNING
·Shown With Sen. Alan Cr1n1ton, She Expl1inf Hiring of Aliens
. ---San Onofre Area Wreck
-Adds to Highway Toll .
California Authorities toda y were c:oun-A second. fi ery accident In San Diego
ting up the traffic death toll following a-County claimed the life of Sandra Scott,
Jong Thanksgiving Day weekend that saw 20, when two station wagons collided
highways generally snarled from Sa~ headon, 2.5 miles south of San Onolre.
Y$idro in the south to Yreka in' the north~. ~~C"'aHfornia· flighway Patrol officers
Generil estimates thill morning reacli· ·nnally had tOS"et up special traffic lane_s
ed IO motorists dead, with an exact count to skirt the blackened wreckage until it
ezpected later in the day. eou1d be removed . ·
One accident in the Sacramento area Traffic was snarled soul.b of the border '
killed seven perspns including six from too_ for up to two· hours -when U.S.
Ont; family returning home from a Customs cfficials opened 15 of 17 special
;t:,".)1111 rtlativ.,. (See story on Pag t., clteckpolnll to catch ~ 1'C
Jury Selection
In Coast Man's
Fraud T1ia] Set
Jury selection began today in the
Orange County Superior Court fraud trial
of a. Newport Beach busintssman and his
lawyer partner in an insurance enterprise
wbkb authorlUes allege bilked several in-
veston of an estimated '160,800.
Judge Lester Van Tatenhove ordered
selection of 1 panel this morning after re-
jecting pretrial motions which Included
the precedent-setting argument by defen·
dants Ralph K. Benware, 39, of •11 15th.
St., and Orange attDmey Richard
Aturphy, 41, that Orange County's jury
system does not guarantee the inclu sion
of bu!lnessmen in the jury.
Jud~e Van Tatenhove has rejected the
theory that it was vital for both defen·
dants, in view of the nature of grand
theft and state insurance code violation
charges against them. to ha v e
t;>usineasmen in the jury box.
He also rejected motions for a change
of venue and , continuance of the trial.
Charges igain.st bolh men Wtf!, filed
more than a year ago.
Benware and Murphy were accused in
an Orange County Grand Jury indictment
or Wllawfully diverting funds from tl1e
Casualty Insurance Company to satisfy
the demands. ()f investors in the Cali/or·
nia Caduceus Company.
Benware and Murphy were the govern·
lng offictrs in both enterprises •. They
were named in a series of civil-suits filed
against "'their operations before criminal
charges were. brought against them by
the Dtstrict Attorney's office.
other · band slipping tbrotig)i with
tourists.
The CHP said the worst traffic by tar
was in the metropolitan Los Angeles·
Orange county. area, where vehicl!S were
-bumper to bumper and moving slo\YIY ob
most freeways. •
Elsewhere. weather phenomena in·
eluding blowing dust in San Bernardino
County and low clouds and fog in Kern
County slowed drivers of cars to a snail 's
pace.
Irvine Heiress
Speaks Against
Cityhood at UCI
He.ires,, Joan Irvine Smith will appear
on the UC Irvine campus Tuesday, Dec.
7. to speak in opposition to the proposed
incorporation of the cil y cf Irvine.
Afrs. Smith has accepted an invitation
from ·1he Associated Students of UC!
( ASUCI l lo address student s and in·
lerested members of the public at noon
on that date in the Science Lecture HalL
A 11pokesman for the Irvine heiress said
today, "We hope all the registered voters
in the Irvine area will come to hear what
she has to say." The incorporatiOn elec·
tion is scheduled Dec. 21.
In previcus statements to the press,
~1rs. Smilh has vigorously opposed in·
corporation of the new city at this time ,
maintaining it could result in creation or
''a giant slum," through wholesale Ii·
quidation of Irvine lands to help the
Irvine Foundation meet its f'conomic
obligat ions.
..
WASIJL"'GTON CAP) -The head of
the ImmlgraUon Service agreed with a
senator today that the immlgr8tion
agents• raid on Mrs. Romana Banuelos's
. California plant lasl month Was "a put up
job."
Raymond F. Farrell. commissioner of
the U.S. Immigration and .Naturalization
Service. made the statement during a
Sehate Finance Committee hea·rtng on
President Nixon's nomination of Afrs.
Banuel0s for U.S. Treasurer.
Irvine Board
Hasn't Acted
On Park Issue
. The· Irvine company has·noi refused to
dedic!te a one-acre park ·1n Cameo
Shores to Newport Beach -eVen though
City Attorney Dennis O'Neil said there is
no legal reason it should.
An Irvine spakesman said this morning
that the company's board of directors.
contrary to earlier r<;ports. has not acted
on the proposal. 1
The Cameo Shores Community
Association has asked the park be given
to the city so it can stop paying taxes on
the parcel.
A cgmpany official had touched off a
controversy-last-month by saying the
_board of directors of the company ha~
lun\ed down the proposal when, in fact.
-the board isn't scheduled to act on it \Ultll
January. .
The .park~ located en the ea11t aide of
Cameo Shotts Dr:Ive, doe15 npt inc]uc\e 1 1
din 'rtdlnc trail and 111-. cwrl
below the bluffs, a spokesman said.
nte company officials declined to
predict what action the board would take
next month.
According to Newport Beach's •t·
tomey, they don't have to do anything.
-"The city has never improved the land·
for park purposes nor has the city ever
maintained Ure park," O'Neil said .
"There is no implied offer or ac·
ceptance, and therefore no · implied
dedication." he said.
Association spokesmen said tbey had
been told by Irvine Company officials the
company would giye the land to the city.
According to the earlier, incorrect
report Irvine directors refused to ap-
prove the action, saying the parcel may
havi some bearing on their downcout
development.
Action on accepting the parcel bad
a\reac!y proceeded· through the city's
Parks, Btaches and Recreation Com-
mission and the city council.
O'Neil noted that the city was notified
last month that the company di~ not wish
to convey the property and councilmen
asked for an inves tigation.
Irvine now has a formal agreement
with the Cameo Shores Community
Association, O'Neil explained, that allows
use of the area provided the association
pays the truces on it .
This was fine until taqs on the parcel
shot up last year, he pointed out.
"There is no evidence," O'Neil said.
that the Irvine Company ever intended to
donate the park to the city.
Pay Signing Ended
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Professors
at state colleges no longer .have to sign
for their pay by stating they really
did the teaching work they were assign·
ed. The state college tru stees l o d a Y
abolished !he controversial requirement
which the professors resented a 11
humiliating.
Mrs. McNamara,
Collins I sland
Pioneer, Dead
Fund Raises S-;t
Mrt. George McNamara, 75, who with
her husband bought Colllas Island in 1948
and developed the ltmll'Y. homes an Jt,
"died Sunday. SttviceJ wilt take plac. Wednttday at
t p.m. in 'p,acjfic View Chapel. Bur:lal
•111 be In Pac{fic View Memorial Park.
Mni. McNamara lived at 6 Collins Is-
• land, 1ince moVing the.re 23 years a.go
upon . py.rchasing the ~land from actor
James Cagney.
She was past "matron of Manchester
Lodge 449, Order o( Che Eastern Star. In
Los Angeles and was a past president of
the Newport Harbor Emblem Club.
She was also a member of tM Hoag
Memorl1l Hospital Auxiliary. Aa 1n Em·
blem Club member, she directed visit•·
tiMJ to the hospital while · servinf u
chairman ol the club's community aer·
vice committee. , ·
She 11 111rvived br her husband. The
McNamam had no children.
•
Supervisor Caspers Throws Pa~ty
f~lb District Supervisor Ronald W.
Caspen at Newport Beach is throwing a
$100.a·bead fund raising party Tuesday
night in the Ha 'Penny Inn I n
Westminster, which ~e owns.
Tom Fuentes, executive assistant to
Caspers, said today that about 300 in·
vitatlons had been mailed last week and
that '1the resi)&nse. has been wonderful."
Fuentes said he could not yet estimate
the number of gue.111!: who will gathe r at
the 5:30 lo 8 p.m. cocktail reception bllled
as "Celebrating a year of Orange Count y
progress with the honorab le Ronald W.
caspers.~•
"I would make a\'J"lld guess thtrJhete
wW be more than\"200 personr •re,''
Fuentes said today.
C3spert stagtd another fund ""'tllalng
party llst March -a $1,000 a couple d1n·
ner al the Cficz Cary In Orange. Thol ef-
lalr became blahly ~ubUcized when it
wu dlacto.ed ibal !be superv~r'• office· '
staff had u!led ~ county pollilage meter
to mail the invitations.
Catpeni, who just a few days be.fore
had urged economy in county postage
procedures, apologized calling It,· "a
clerk's error." He reimbursed. the stamp
fund for the $3.18 expended.
His short career On the board has been
marked with financial news.
C8SJ>CQ reportedly sp'ent a record
$81 ,695 on his election campaign in which
he unseated Incumbent Alton Allen .or
Laguna Beach in the June Primary In
1970. The sum is four limes more than
the greatest amount spent previously In
an Orange County supervisorlal cam·
paign.
Caspers adm!(!ed contributing 14!,91l
or his own money to the cam.palgn. He Is
the former prtsident and now chalnn1n
of the board of Kiyatone Savings ind
,Lof.n .Assocl&tlon with officts In
Westmfnster and Ana.helm.
<
' •
Agenis found 36 Ulegal alien! a-g
·about 300 employes at her Ramona Food
Products plant in Gardena in the Oct. .5
raid .
Sen. Wallace Bennett CR-Utah), charg·
ed that the raid was "a put up job," in-
itiated by federal employes sympathetic
to jobless Americans.
Bennett said the Banuelos·-company
was chosen because cif its maximum
publicity value.
"Senator, I agree with )"OIJ," aaid Fv-
rfll. \_ . -
The imm.igrati09 servtce's Los Anaele.1
district director, George· K. Rolenberg,
has said the raid was called parf.11
because of an informer's tip and because
the company was on his "active file." ol
firms where illegal aliens were·likely to
be found. •
Farrell said six raids had been made-at
the plant sinct 1967 with no more than a
!See· BANVELOS, Piie !)
$400 Million Pen Slip
Huge · Clerical Error
Sparked Mark~t Scare
WASHL"'GTON (AP! -A·$400 mUlion
clerical error by the Federal Reserve
Bo8rd was acknowledged today as the
cause of a big fright in the government
securit\es markets last week.
The financial community found money
so tight in the banking system that the
market sagged for treasury securities,
until the Federal Reserve's money •
managers became aware of the problem·s
last Friday.
The. first victim of Ille error was the
Chief of Travel
j' or Pre.siden~.
·Plans to Retire
WASHINGTON (APJ • Ed.iin "JIQI"
Fauver, who has helped organiu:
presidential trips .. since the days or
Franklin O. Roosevelt, made his ·ra.rewen
trip to California with Pi'esldent Nixon
this weekend.
He said be was going on leave and wUI
retire officially Jan. 20.
He told those aboard a chartered press
plane Sunday night, "Jiggs isn't going to
be around to &et your baggage for )'OU
anymore."
Reminiscing about how times have
changed in presidential travel, Fauver
recalled the switch from train travel in
the days of FDR to the modern jets. He
remembered how for m er President
Dwight D. Eisenhower atopped off for a
few days rest in between. He didn't keep
the pace of later presidents.
Fauver, 64, or Hillcrest Heights, ~fd.,
s.ys he plans to write a book about his
experiences as \Vhite Rouse chief or
telegraph and travel service under six
presidents.
He said he was on the road so much
during a recent campaign that "I didn't
sleep in my own bed for more than one
night In five weeks."
·Fauver said he didn't want to face
another election year. "It's time to retire
while I have good health," he said.
Fauver started at the White House in
January 1942 and wW steP down after a
30-year career.
Ma cliinists Strike
Rohr Plants
SAN DIEOO (AP) -Machinist union
members have voted lo strike two
Southern California plants of Rahr Corp.,
one of which makes subway cars for the
long-delayed San Francisco Bay Area
Rapid Transit system.
The walkout today idled 4,200 workers
at Rohr plants in nearby Chula Vis~ and
Riverside, northeast of here.
company cfficials vowed to kee:p the
plants open but a BART dlredor, Nello
Blanco of Richmond, said a prolonged
walkout would be 11very tragic" for the
$1.38 bUlion dollar system, ach«lul«l to
open Its first link in March.
Sllrvivors Get
Boost in Aid
SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Legislation
increasing Survivor benefits for some
members of the Public Employes Retire·
menl System was signed Friday by Gov.
Ranald Reagan. 'rlle bill by Assemblyman Robert E.
Badham Ol-Newport Beach), will -I
benefits for members whose survivors
art not covered by social security.
A wiQow Or surviving child, for ,tl·
amp!" would have their benefits rolsed
from $90 to $180 a month.
•
I .,
•
system's own open market commitfet,
which governs the no~ of money into the
bJnking sy.1tem by its buying and •llinC
of federal securities.
Thinking there was $400 million moN
cash in the vaults of the banking Sy!lem'
than was there, the committee was·stingy
.about adding funds to the money suppfy.
The result was a sharp rise in the in·
terest rate which banks pay one another
for short.term funds, and a general
scarcity cf investment money available
for the .IIDlchase o( about $1.t_ billion
worth cT-bills being oUered by the
Treasury during the week.
. The Treasury therefore had to pay
more Interest than · it otherwise would
have done. No estimate was immediately
available en the ultimate cost to tba
aovemment.
A Federal Reserve spokesman aaki the
error was not a miajudgment in
eatimatlng, simply a clerical error in
relJorUng the estln'lated "vault cash'•
among !be ~rve1 ol !be blnkln(
system and gO'Vem1 the volume of fundl
they can lend.
Teenager Falls
On Spiked Rod
A prowl beneath. a Cororia del Mir clilf·
top home under cOnrtruction endtd in..
agony for an Anabelm teenager wbo fell
Saturday, Impaling his thigh on a 1pe1r-
like steel reinforcing rod .
Lynn Beason, 16, was pulled free of th•
concrete-strengthening rod at 2709 Cove
St., by witnesses before Newport Beach
police and firemen arrived.
Beason was _taken to Hoag Memorial
Hospital by ambulance. where he is listta
ht fair condition today after getting the
severe puncture patched up without re.
quiring surgery.
•
Capitol Bombing·
Cost: $118,139
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The March 1
bombing or the U.S. G@pitol cost the tu:·
·payera $118,130 repair -·• price $81,881
lower than expected, it wu revealed to-
day.
In testimony made public by the Houff
Appropriations Committee, actinc· Capi~l
architect Marlq E. tamploll s a i d the
building was put back in shape more
cheaply than was expected.
There were no injuries and the ca!e·
has not been solved, although • grand·
jury reportedly is still investigating. ~
Oruge
Weadter
Skits will be parily«lou<b> and
temperatures a constant IS Tue.
day, with more sun showing over
the Orange Coast. Overnight lows
are tabbed at SO decrees.
lNSWE TOD.ll'
UC Irvine and prlvott i11te,...
t sts ore pla.intng a joint venture
to form .o na:tlonauu famtnu
medical complex iti Oranoe.
Coun<u b~ 1974. Scorri Pog< 10. . I
kallllf 2' MtYltt It L~ M ••• ,. H N•ltlMf JI"°" •..s
C1Ul'H"l'll1 • t Or-twllfY 14 Cll•~llf" tt>M Srl'tl9 1"wtw 11
Ctmk t It '-'9 ~
''"""'" '' Sltdl ......,_ J1 l)MrJI~ " ~ ll • .n.r... .._ • ""'"*' '' •~Hf'tlit!'M"' 11 WMtllw I
,111-tNt Wll ... W•· ti M~ 11 ..,_..., ,.... 1•11"
AMI I.I""" If WWM HIWt ...
,,
. '
"
.·
_,
.!
D.lll V PILOT H
' ' M"dq; Noft-?', 1971
. ' ' 33 Americans
1
~Big Copter ~O,e~~J!bw'ri ~Off : Vietnam C~t
... , . .. . ,· '
SAIGON (UPI) -Dozens of American 'l'be.chopper went down in bad weather withdrawal pro1ram.
•trcralt. and !!'hips fanned out over tbe ,SuncMy about •ha.If hour out of D1 Nan& If (.he 33 men i.board. Were loft tfwould
flOrthern coast of South Vietnam ttxlay on-1.flightlo the Pbp Bal ~adql41rter.s of be one of the · worst...-air disasteri1of the
' looking for·•·.Chinook pelicopler believed the .IO!st Airbo!·ne Di\'ision, which war, topped only by the Jan. ~. 1966
,;klwn 1t : Sf:a with .33 Gls aboard,. but ar,ady. · ~ · leav,1n~ . the w~r ZO~e crash of· a Cl2.1 transport In which 46
found nothing. U.S. spokesmen said. piecemeal . ~?er Pr.~dent N 1 x on s Am~icans died, and the Jan. a, 1968
• crash of another Chinook that killed 41,
~anson Gets. 'tife-'fe71t1
' ,A---;-----
ln Additional Deaths
•• • '1..0s ANGELES (AP)· -Charles courtroom and declared :
Manson. alre8.dy under a death sentence ''You'ri' in' prison! YO:u're in prison !
the sevf:n Sharon Tate murders, was You're in prisdn!" Each time he said
•ven lift .imprisonment today by a jury this, he stared at a. different reporter in
1'1!1Ch convicted him or the murders of a the front roW or the courtroom spectator
aimtman and a musician two years ago. sec:tion.
In the Tate case, Manson was gi ven Without interruption, Manson then t death sentences, Including one for ~nspiraeY in the seven AuJilust 1969 stared directly at the jurors and said,
Myings. Three female co-defent:ants also "the only thing they can judge is what
Were convicted add sentence.d to death they're told to judge." Immediately
for the Tate slayings. afterward he was taken in tow by a ~oday's verdict was on two counts of bailiff and led Ei-om the court. ~~rder and one of conspiracy. The surprise verdict came shortl y after
..-J..1anson, 37, one· time leader of a the eight~man, four·woman jury resumed
'Uamily" of wandering hippie types, was ilS deliberations after taking the weekend
(jiind guilty Nov. 2 of the slayings of off. It began deliberating Friday and
lifry Hinman , a Malibu mus~cian , an.d worked for about five hours before
oOnald "Shorty" Shea , a sometime movie recessing.
, ituntman whose body nevel' has been The trial began last June 23.
'°und. • · During his trial, various young defec-
• Manson was impassive as he heard the tors from Manson's clan testified that he
terdict, his only nervousness displayed ordered fol!Owers lo kill bolh Hinman and '1 repeatedly slipping his loafers off and Shea and oversaw the Shea killing
ill to expose his socklw.bare feet.. himself.
• Then at Superior Court Judge Ra.y-Witne:sseS said Hinman, 34, was slain at
!bond 'choate was e-0ngratulaling the his MaJjbu, home after he refused to give
-Manson money and all of his possessions. jurors for their many days of duty away Hinman was found stabbed to death in
from · home, Manso n burst o u l July 1969, a few weeks be(ore the Tate
aa.rcas.1icahy: "Shake their hand.." slayings.
-Manson , sporting a crewcut and showing · The ~ejith .sc~pe was marked by bloody
I d , th r bl k bea d scrav.1hngs s1m1Jar to those later /ound at gevera ays grow 0 a ac r ' . the Tate mansion.
then swiveled tov.•ard ass em b 1 e d A ~anson disciple, Susan Atkins also
newsmen and spectators in t h e sentenced to. death for the Tate slz.~ings,
has conressed killing Hinman . She receiv·
.Judge McRoherts
spoketmen acknowledged.
·The twin rotM-helicopter was one of six
planes and· choppers whose loss was an4
nouneed 'Monday by the U.S. Command.
An HHS3 "Super Jolly" rescue helicopter-
fell in the. Nha -Be River 12 m i I e s
southeast of Saigon last Thursday, with
lhree killed, two injured and one missing,
the command said in a delayed report.
Over the wetke11d two OH5 \''Loach"
observation choppers were shot down just
inside South Vietnam near the tri-border
Communist sanctuary area in the central
highlands where the fronUers of Lao{,
Cambodia and South Vietnam come
together. Four crewmen were injured.
One Loach was able to call in air
strikes Sunday by U.S. and Vietnamese
jets and American helieopter gunships
that were said to have killed 41 guer·
rlllas. destroyed 22 bunkers and set off
theree explosions. and one fire, indicating
fuel and ammunlliQn were hit, the corr)·
mand said.
Vietnamese spokesmen said in another
fight about 15 miles· to -the southeast,
close to the Kontum provincial capital. -
green beret-trained border ta n g er s
caught up. with a big gu~rrilla force and,.
killed 45· of them. Two rangers ·were kUI·
ed and 27 were wounded.
Laotian government forces launched an
orfensive in the northeastern edge of the
Bolovens Plateau, successfully cutting
North Vietnamese supply Jines and
relieving Communist pressure on goverfl"
ment positions at Pak.song and Saravane,
200 miles southeast of Vietniane.
The South Vietnamese operation mean·
time ground into its second week with lit· ....
tie more than minor skirmishing .
The only significant action was t~e am·
bush of an armored columi:i moving up
highway 13 from South Vietnam toward
the Snuol plantation. 85 miles no~th rif
Saigo n Sunday. Sketchy report s said the
column was ambushed with rocket ~renades and· small arms fire. hut there
was no word on casualties or destruction.
·----Services Slated
ed a life sentence after her guilty plea in
that case. Anolher Manson follower,
Robert Beausoleil, was found guilty of the
Hinman killing arid is on San Quentin's
death row. One Man Jailed
In Wild County
F~mily STiahhle ln Los -~nge.les ...
Funeral services are-sel·Tuesday for.1
fttired Los Angeles County . Superior
::Ourt judge who collapsed and died
laiurday on his boat in Newport Harbor
.ftllle preparing for a cruise with friends.
._;R!tes for JlWge James M. McRoberts, 1', who maintained homes in Bayside
W.llage and Los Angeles. will be at 10
a.m. in St. Alban's Episcopal Church,
~est Los Angeles.
Police Said in their report the tentative
:ause of death was a hear~ ittack. Of-
Jcers said McRoberts had cardiac
w gery 10 months ago and saw-his physi-
lian last week. ·
,..A fire .d~partment rescue squad sent to
kldgt.;l\1cRoberts' 18-foot cabin cruiser
terthea at 300 Ee Coast Highwa y attempt-.ii resuscitation without success.
Judge MeRoberts was taken to Hoag
Kemorial Hospital , where he Yi'RS pro-
iounced dead. .
'fie left two boating friends. ~enneth
lfe.Namara and Russell HoWell. about 10
1.m., sa y'ing he v.·anted to call their boat·
rom his for-a radio check before leaving
he harbor.
The pair told .police they heard nothing
tnd finally v.·ent to check a half ·hour
ater. find ing Judge JtlcRoberts collapsed
1n the deck of the boat.
The jurist. appointed b,v Governor
~win J. Knight in June 1958. was
1upervising judge of the northeast
listrict of the Los Angeles County
luperior Court system in Van Nuys.
He leaves his wife Jane, a daughter. a
:rand.son and a granddaughter.
OIAM61 COAST
DAILY PILOT
ClAHtl COAST ~IUSHIMO COMf'.IJrf -
l 1Mrt N. W11i
f'tMid«ll •11111 PllDHllWI'
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I ..
In the Shea case. witnesses testified
. that Manson liated Shea~ a stuntman end
oceasional ranch h111nd at the "family"
headquarters Spahn Ranch. They said
Shea ·. h~ been .hired by a neighboring
rancher· to ,.ketp. lhe .M:IJison gana of! ,his proper!}'. ' '
Chase Exceed~
100 mph; Police
Arrest Suspect
" LOS ANGELES <APJ -A 29-ye ar-old
shipping clerk has been booked for in·
vestigation -0f charges stemming fr om a
\''i\d half-hour chase ·that extended over
45 miles at speeds up to 100 m'iles an
hour, police said today.
Sgt. Da vid Aikins said George Wall, of
Los Angeles, was booked for investigalion
or car theft. a!lsault with a vehicle and
driviRg under the influence of alcohol .
the chase, which involved some 15
police cars and whizzed through five Los
An~eles communlt' , beg Saturday
night in 'Vest\Yood. re, lice spotted
a,, man driving a lale·m L;ncoln Con·
tinen!al that had been reported stolen on-
ly minutes ear-lier, authorities sairl.
The man ignor~d orders to pull· over,
police said, and raced 8\\'By,·touching off
a high-speed pursuit that :
-Took the chasers and chasee through
the communities of Westwood Village,
Palms, Venice, Santa Monica and West
Los Angeles . and on and off the Santa
Monica Freeway at least four times.
--Caused one police car to brea~ down
on the freeway and another to spin out of
cont rol and crash into a telephone pole
with nobody injured.
-Ended when the man·~ car collided
u·ith a police ca r in Santa ~1onica and he
\vas arrested. No one v.•as injured in thl!
collision.
, From Page 1
BAN UELOS. ••
dozen aliens being founrl:at any time until
last October.
f\frs . Banuelos fa ced almost exclusive
questioning on Mexican alien employ·
menl at her plant. ·
She denied she knew illegal aliens
worked Al her company unt il the Im·
.migraliOn· Service: infotMtd her.
Committe~.ClijlirrJu,n R1.1sscl1 Long (0.
La .): asked how she would knov.· if itn
employe was an illegal alfen.
"That'.s one thing we don't know," she
:r;aid.
Some. said it was easy lo obtain. forge
or lie about the rfecCssa ry .. gr{'(>n card"
showing t~at . 11 person is ltgally in thi~
cnuntry, as \\'ell as the social ~l'curlty
card. tv.·o requirements for employm ent.
The.. Immigration Services list year
rounded up 412.000 i!lraat aJ1tn.s. There
are an estimated 150,000 in the Los
Angeles area.
~n. Abraham Ribi L'Off t D·C(lnn I, ask-
ed if ?.1r~. Banuclo~ was aw11re that II·
legal imttiilitralion boosts unemployment for Americans. • •
·•·1 don't know." she 1111id
Ribicoll cllaraM, "You don't stem to
be aware or problell)s of ~1t1lc1n
Americans on the lower economic aca.Je."
"
•
A Huntingtcn Beach man playi11g the
role of peacemaker in a domestic spat
earned a pistol potshot fo r his efforts
Sunday in Santa Ana.·
One witness to the shooting - a retired
policeman -gave chase when the
suspect fled .
He In turn was pulled over, when loCal
police spotted his car, almost identical to
that of the suspect sought on attempted
murder charges.
By the time it was all over:
-One man was··jailed.
-One other was badly shaken.
-Ohe more was miffed.
Investigators said Jerry Ericksen, 27,
of Huntington Beach. orignally intervened
~·hen he saw a man cuffing a woman
around in a car and motioned for them lo
stop.
Suddenly a pistol bullet smashed into
the windshield and ricocheled around
like a buzzing bee. It did not hit Ericksen
or his small son.
Roger Ericksen had hit the floor on
dad's orders.
Rttired West Covina police officer
Ralph McAdams witnessed the gunplay
and tailed the suspect, but lost him when
stopped by patrolmen who thought he
was the quarry. ,
Given details by the pursuer, they went
to 824 s,. Birch St., and arrested suspect
G. W. Crust, 43, bookinS him on suspicion
of assault with intent to commit murder.
2 Bandits Roh
Same Market
Where Clerk Died
Two men robbed David \\1iCson. 19, a
clerk in the Seven·Eleven l\larket in
Tustin early todaY. and dropped about $25
in change in the parking lot as they fled,
police reported.
The holdup look place in the same
market at l6791 l\1cFadden Ave., in which
Thomas P. Grove, 22, was shot to death
during a holdup last June 7.
Three persons were indicted earlier
this month for that crime .
Grove died three days later. Later
charged in the crime are Kathy Yeaw, 25,
of Orange and Floyd L. Strong. 19, of
Santa Ana who were arrested by Tustin
police after a Jong investigation in which
district 1ttoiney's invest ii a tor 1
participated. ~ . Also jailed was Mark Lenihan, 20, of
Garden Grove, charged wilh being an
accessory to murd.q.
The trio pleadect1nnocent when 11r~
raigned last N0\1• 12 and wlll face 1 jury
trial beginning Jan. 3. 1972.
Police said today they hAd not
discovered any connection between the
two holdups. Wilson was not Injured.
He told police '!ht two men entered the
market about I a.m. ordertd two packs
of clgarette.s and then threatened hlm
with 11 chrome·platcd rev(IJver.
He said they told hi m to "Ile d~wn on
the noor or be shot," before they ~abbed
about SIOO from the. cash realster Jhd
fle<\.
)
,. _.r •
Christ1nas Dance
\VhiJe Maurice Allard conducts, dancers rehearse scene from Lloyd
Pfantscb1s "A Day for Dancing." \Vork will be featured in UC Irvine
Christmas concert this weekend. Performances are scheduled for
8:30 p.m. Friday and Sunday and for 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Satuiday ~n ·•
UCI's Fine Arts Village Coneert Hall. Tickets priced at $1 are avail-
.able at Fine Arts Village Box Office.
-.
Top M11nicipal Leaders
Meet to Mull · Problems
HONOLULU (UPI) -Top municipal
leaders rrom around the nation thrashed
out some touchy policy decisions today
wh ile a battle emerged for the presidency
of the N'ational League of Cities.
Some 2,500 mayors, councilmen and
other city officials were attending the .
48th annua l congress of cities , believed to
be the largest ever in the history of the
National League of Cities. ·
A resolution calling for the abolition ·or
private ownership of hand guns was
't. m o n g lh~ most controversial items
under discussion. r Mayor ROm~n S.
Gl'ibbs of Detroit, chairman ot the
league's Public Safety Commitiee. plans
to present the resolution which contains
two .!luggesions for curbing private _
ownership of hand guns.
Norman Miiier, special assistant to
Gribbs, said "The resolution proposes a
change in the wording of the second
an1endment to the constitution so that
'the right of the people to keep and bear
arms' is changed to the right of the peo-
ple to keep and bear long guns."
The resolution also makes a n
alternative suggestion that the Private
ownership of hand guns be dimin ished
through a federal statute stemming from
·an act of Congress.
Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York
ca me out in favor of the resolution Sun-
.
day saying "Gun control Is absolutely
essential." He' said, "Congress mu st
move on this. This mayors' cOn\'ention
mu:.. pu_sh it,"
The question of who will be 11ext year's
president of the .league has attracted
much attention.
Rain . Tonight-
Not V ~ry M,~c h ·
..~ · .. ,. \ "'"
A feeble storm front 1noving into
Soulhern California today~ \\'ilh cool but
humid temperatures may bring rain by
tonight, but don't rush to rescue your
ga\oshe~ from mothballs.
-·The v.·eathcrman says if dampness is
due, it wil! barely wet the streets.
Scattered sprlnkles v.•ere reported
around the area this morning, mostly
towa rd inland mountains, where wind
warnings have been posted !or tonight.
Snow at higher elevations is expected;
plus fog in the foolhilis, according to the
U.S. Weather Bureau.
Clear and mostly sunny is the predic-
tion overall on the Orange Coast through
Tuesday, with temperatures Around' the
low 60s, forecasters sai~.
ONDS •: OUT OF PAWN
ESTATES
OVERSTOCKS
I. 2.
6 7.
ILLUSTUTlONS
HOT
AVAIL.AILI
Talks Still,
. .
:To Walkout •
LOS A'NGFXES (AP) -Negotiatio ns
.resumed. Wday:ifl.a !>id to end a week~d
'I'eamsterS Union strike that has halted
vwually all construction in Southern
California.-
Neither the Teamsters Un H> n rt0r
representatives o( the-building ~try
could assess the effect of the strike on
Orange County. 'Picket& have stopped
v.·ork at scattered projects in the county,
but not at all sites.
l\1eanwhile. a joint emergency com·.
mi!fee, comprising three u11ion analhree
management representatives, · w a 1
reviewing a 'list of 17 projects to
determine . which are vital ·to the public
.safety so v.·ork can be resumed on them.
'Qie strike, causing an estimated M
million a day in payroll losses, was called
last Monday by Teamsters Joint Council
42 in a dispute co11_cerning union jurisdic·
lion over independent owner-operators of
dump trucks, used in many construction
projects. The owner-operators say they
num~~ a~ut 3,000 in California .
Teamsters representatives-said nearly
all their 16,0QO members in 11 Southern
,Cplifornia. counties are off the job and
their picket lines are being honored by 16
other AFl.rCIO unions. Management
wants ffie indei>endents exempted fro m
the e-0ntract; the union says it wants
them considere<l as workers under U11ion
.rules. . . . . . . .
· In addition to the jurisdiction question,
tpe Teamsters also are asking for a wage
increase of 85 cents an hour for each of
the next three years.
A spokesman for the building con-
tracto rs said contract talks. recessed
over the Thanksgiving weekend, were
·proceeding slowly because the union
negotiators were bringing up "one pro-
blem at a time."
"If they put all their demands on the
table at the same lime we would know
where we stand," he said.
Council Advised:
Take-No Action
'On T~rowawa ys
The Californ'ia Supre"* Court will not
reconsider its ruling that upheld the right
~o di~tributr tQrowaw.ay newspapers and
1n light of this, NewPQrt Beaci) should
shelve plans to enact similar legislatiotl,
Citv Attomey Dellllis O'Neil said today.
"I'm going to recommend~ that the
council do absolutely nothing at this
time,'• O'Neil said this morning. Ht
stressed he couldn't speak for council-
men, ho1vever.
"I don't know how much the council
wants to ge involved;., he said. "If they
feel they v.•ant to pursue it, we 'll go ahead
&)d draft legislation."
Councilman Lindsley Parsons. who last
month asked O'Neil to see what could, be
done, said this morning, "I'm certainly
going to ha ye some disappointed con·
stituents. •f ·
Parsons sajd he asked for tougher leg-
islation al th~ir reqµest.
4.
DOM RACITI
••
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We always have 1ar9e selections of dia monds & diamond jewefry at
better t han wholesale prices whi ch we c:over with our unique money back-
quarantee. Come in and comp are before you buy. '
BUY YOUR
DIAMONDS ,
JEWELRY,
OLD GOLD
•
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lil•,.11k Dl•ill•11~ 1.tt cf.
Yett ft11e celer. v.,., lllrlttlnt
' G0tt" Sellt1lte 01-IHI l ltt
1 f11ll COl'•I
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6 locllft DleM011d Cl1111tr PeMeti' s99 • 1 er. T.w.·
fl NI 9UALITY Y.Y.S. DIAMONDS
7-l rllllm' clil 11 f H l'I '' IMlal
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.92 er. , • , •••• , 5174.00
.t6 er. , •••• ,, • St12.00
1,01 ''· ••• ,, •• , Sflf.00
1.01 er ..•.•••• , Stt7.10
5 Lffl" Ov•I Olo1Mtd S.thlte
• 1 /J c•r•f 189
fol .• .,.,., ,,.,.,. Hi«J• d11.1-rlllf s399
wlr• 2.61ctt.111 dle1110H•
1111 . 1.40 ct. dl11Me11t1 Y.Y.S.clelhy '1,000
111 Genh Me11•tl11t
Dlatttond Cente r for Ora11ge Co111t t H
COSTA MESA JEWELRY & LOAN
Optll Daily 9 to 3 Ff11d fl 1-ltrt Flr&I
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646,7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MlSA -lttwtH Horbt< & "'"'"'
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS
STERJO_ EQUIP.
OR MOST
ANYTHING
OF VALUE.
BRI NG THEM
IN FOR
IMM ED IATE
EST IMATE
"
·1
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' '
-' ..
• .. ·-,.. .
f;osia Mesa • •
T...iay's Flnal
-EDITION -'-N. Y.-StoetrQ""'---c'11
VOL. 64, NO. 285, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, ·NOVEMBER 29; '1971 TEN-CENTS
Costa M-esa -Seen S-hort of Cash for .Parl{ Land -----_... '
By TERRY COVILLE
Of lt1t O.lly '"11•1 Sl•ff
Residents wlll help de'sign the 300.aCre
J<~alrview Park Tuesday night. but no Qne
has decided how Costa Mesa can acquire
the park land ffom the state.
A recently approved state Jaw has set
the price of the 300 acres at roughly $6
million-..... 50 percent of its fair market
value. .J
~ City officials ha\•e admitted that Costa
.r?o.tesa can't come up with $6 million.
A joint venture \Vith the county still
boil s doy,•n to $3 million for each agency.
Local offkials, with the help or state
Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport
Beach),, are workillg on the 'slim chance
thft the land can be leased like the ~
~Cl"e city golf ~urse.
..J Costa Mesa leases its goU course land
next to Fairview State Hospital at $10 an
·acre each year. At that price, a 300-acre
park lease would be $3,000 anhually.
The State Department of General
Services, however, isn't interested In the
lease proposal.
"The golf course is a buffer to the hos-
pital. The slate felt it needed to retain
control of the laad," says ¥tbur Collins,
assistant director of general services.
"The 300 acres betweetl the golf course
and ·the Santa Ana Ri ver is not the
same," Collins added. "We feel we ought to get at least hall the value of the land.''
Collins did say there is no deadline for
di sposal of the land, but be would like to
see ~lty proposals for a park as soon as
possible. .
The city's Project 80 Qlmmittee, with
the help of residenU, will start putting
together a· plrk proposal Tuesday night. 1 A public hearing on Fairview Park is
scheduled fol" 7:30 p.m. in city council
chambers, Tl Fair Drive. ·
Anyone may speak at the hearing, o(.
fei-ing sugR:estjons for park development.
lolore lhJn· 200 written S\Jggestions: many
from "elementary school students, hav~
-already been sent to Assistant City
Manager Robert Duggan, advisor to the
Project 80 Citizens Committee.
Some proposals include:
-freserving lhe 90-acre lndjan burial
grounds as an archaeological site. while
using it. for picnic purposes.
•
-Building an archaeological museum
and exhibits.
-Coiistructlng a 7 ,O(JO to 18,000 seat
football stadium on 15 acres close to
Estancia High School.
-Develop a botanical garden ..
-Install biking, bicycle and equestrian
trails.
-Create a lake for fishing, model
boating and possibly canoeing.
-Build active sports areas for tenni s,
softball. basketball ..
Once the Project s> completes lts list of
suggestions, and learns which are most
• lXOll td e e-
. ~irate · Pipes Up
Note Sent to Nevada Newspape r
RENO {API -A letter with a note
signed by •Jo. B. Cooper"·-::;_ the name
reportedly used by the hijacker who got
$200,000 and then apparently parachuted
from a jet airliner between Seattle and
Reno 'last week -\Ya s received by the
Reno Evening Ga zette today,
The note, with printed words-pasted to
paper. was turned O\'er to the Federal
Bureau of Investigation here.
An agent placed the note ii'! a
transparent pllistic case and said an at·
tempt would be made to trace' the letter
and note. The envelope was postmarked
at Oakdale, a small town southeast of
Stockton in central California.
Th!!. FBI agent said the lfUer and ~le
will. De turned over to the FBI Jaborat<Wy
in Wlishlngton, for analysis.
Tht note, in various kids ol type, ap-
parent11 from a newspaper, said: "At-
--~
tention thanks for hospitality·,vas in a rut
0 . B. Cooper". It was addressed in
faintly han~printed peociJ· 10 '·Reno
Newspaper, Keno. Nev.·•
The search continued in tht Pacific
North west for a man who hijacked the
Northwe st Airlines 727 last \Yednesday
and then b_aile:d. ..Q.U~-· with J200,000 in
ransom money.
The airline had delivered four
parachutes and the money to the hijacker
in Seattle after he commandeered the
aircraft between Portland and Seattle.
The 36 other passengers and two of the
si:r-member crew were permit.led to leave
the plane in Seattle.
He apparently bailed out over the
Woodland, Wash., area as the plane made
a slow, low-level night -at his command
-trom Seattle to Reno, en route to his
demanded destinaUon, Me.xico. 1 • ,
Manson Gets Life Term
On Top of D~th Penalty .
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charles
P.tanson, already under a death sentence
ror the seven Sharon Tate murders, was
given life imprisonment today by a jury
which convicted him of the murders of a
stuntman and a musician two years ago.
In the Tate. case, Manson ."1!lS gi'"'.en
eight death sentences. including one for
conspiracy in the seven August 1969
slayings. Three fem ale co-defen<:11nts al sd
\vere convicted and sentenced ~ dealh
for the Tate slayings. ~
Today's verdict was oa two counts or
murder and one of conspiracy.
Manson, 37, one time leader , of a
"family" of wandering hippie types, \\'as
found guilty Nov.-2 .... of the slaylngs of
Gary Hinman a Malibu musician. and
Donald "Shortf" Shea, a sometime movie
stuntman whose body !lever bas been
found .
P.fanson was impassive as he heard the
"·ercllct, his on1y nervousness displayed
by repeatedly slipping his loafers off and
on to expose his sockless bare feet .
Then. as Superior Court Judge Ray-
moncl Choate v.•as congratulating the
jurors for their many days of duty a\\·ay
from home, ~tanson burst o u I
sarcastically: "Shqke their hand.'' .
l\1anson , sporting a crewcul and Sho\\'lng
several da)•s' growth of a black beard.
then s\\•ivcled toward a s s e m b I c d
nev.'smen and spect"ators in t h e
1,500 Laid Off .
By Doug},µs
LONG BEACH (UPI\ -Nearly
1,500 workers at the McDonnell-
Douglas plant were lald off for two
weeks today as a result of a
strike In Canada.
Company-o(ficlals said the Toron·
to strike by the United Auto and
Aerospace Workers had cut off
delivery of wing assemblies for
1-DC9 arid DCIO jetliners.
They said other layoffs might be
necessary after the two-week
\:....peri!>d if the Toronto strike was not
JCl!led. -
5. · No pr.ogress was reported In the
Canadian negotiation.\, whiai the
UAW reportedly bQpn to use 19
establish precedents for new con-
tracts covering Am e r.i can
aerospace planLs. .....,
•
courtroom and declared :
"You're in prison! You 'r'e in prison!
You're in prison!" Each time he said
this, he stared at a different reporter in
the front row of the courtroom spectator
section.
Without Interruption. ~1anson then ·
stared. directly at the jurors and said,
'"the only thing they can judge is what
they're told... to judge." Immediately
aftenvard he was taken in lO\\' by a
bailiff and led from the court.
The surprise verdict came shortly afler
the eight·man. four·woman jury re sumed
its deliberations after taking !he weekend
off. It began deliberating Friday and
worked for about five hours before
' . recess1ng.
The trial began last June 23.
During his tri1fl. various young defec-
tors from 1'-fanson 's clan testified that he
ordered followers to kill both Hinman and
.,See MANSON, Page Z I
Mesa Man Faces
Trial in Death
Of Girl's Son
A Costa P.lesan booked on mUrder •
charges after he allegedly inflicted fatal
injuries on his girlfriend's 3-year-old son
was ordered today to face trial Feb. 9 In
Orange County-Superior Court.
Ju~e BffOn K. Millan acceyted the in-
nocV!t plea. o! David Brent Hansen, 22,
and ordered the defendant returned to his
courtroom Jan. 14 for a pretrial hearing.
Hansen is held In Orange County jail
without bail. ·
The young draftsman~· accused of1he
fatal beating of steve idry, son of
Mrs. Deborah Gu idry .. 7, \Vilson St.
tlansen !iv~ .with the woman and her
lhree children at her ·apa rtment at the
lime of the alleged kihing.
Hansen WB!I arrested Oct. 24 shortly
after he arrived at Hoag ~1@morlal
Hospital with the body of the little boy.
Doctors immediately determined the
cause of death ::is Internal Injuries
resulting from a heavy and sustained
beating.
Police believe the beating wa 5 ad-
ministered at the Wilson Street home
while 'Mrs. Guidry was tlbsent frotn the
resldeooc.
Jordanians
BilryTel
h1Ain1nan
' AM~1AN (JJPI) -Jordanian Premier .
Wasfi Tel, assassinated Sunday in Cairo
by four Palestinian guerrillas, was buried
today to "the sound of a 21 gun salute.
King Hussein named a moderate to su..c.~-
ceed him but brought in a tough. line of-
ficial as hi:s national security advjper.
Tel, 51, hated by the guenillas for
ordering the Jordanian army " cMJsh
their revolt last summer, lvas lhled by
four bullets as he stepped from his' car at
a Cairo hotel on the banks of the Niie
following a luncheon with AbdeT Khalek
f!assuna , secretary general of the Arab
League. Ul"I Til......,.
l\iunz.i Soleiman Khalifa, 28, leader of
the four man death squad, told UPf Cor·
respondent Maurice Guindl in Cairo that
Tel's death was only the first of a series
of murders intended to eliminate
everyone who has opposed the ca use or
lhe Palestine guerrillas in the Arab
world .
NIXON NOMfNEE ROMANA BANUELOS FACES SENATE QUESTIONING
Shown With Stn. Al1n Cr1n1ton0She·Expl1ins Hirin'g of Aliens
Khalifa raised his hand in the V for vic-
tory sign and said. "We have taken our
revedge on a traitor." He uid he had
drunk Tel's blood after the shooting to
emphasize his hatred of the man.
Hussein named Deputy Premier Ahmed
Al-L.awzi. 50, as prime .nlnister to sue·
ceed Tel and gave him the portfolio of
defense minister, a job also held by Tel. '
Political sources said Al-Lawzi was con·
sidered unbiased and nuet ral on Palesti•.
nian guerrilla matters.
The sources said Al·Lawzi was not
known for his strong character and s~g
gested his new cabinet may be merely a
caretaker one. Like Tel, Al·Lawzi is a
Bedouin . He had served as chier of pro·
tocol at the king's court and was chief of
the court.
Hussein named former I n t e r I o r
Minister lt1oha mmed Rasool Al-Kilani as
• his adviser on national security affairs.
Al-Kilani has the reputation of being
tough-toward the guerrillas, a suggestion
that Hussein 's ow n tough stand would not
change.
Anis P.1oasher. minister of tran!])Ort.
took over Al-Lawzi 's post as minister of
finance.
The leader of the gang that killed Tel
said the prime minis ter was murdered to
avenge the death· of a Palestinian guer·
rilla captain in Jordan, police sources
said.
Tel 1vas hated by the Palestinian guer·
rillas fpr ordering the army to Crush
their revolt this summer. He died trying
to get his own gun out to .fight back.
llussein, dressed in his uniform as
supreme commander of the armed
forces, a red and white kaffiya headdress
and a black armband, led 1,500 mourners
IS.. JORDAN, Page J)
•
Official Says Banuelos
. .
Plant Raid 'Put Up Job'
\VASfffNGTON (AP) -The head of
the Immigration ~rvice agreed with a
senator today tha't the i1Vmigratlon
agents' raid 071" Mrs. Roman:rBanuelos's
California plant last month was "a put up
job."
Ra,ymond F. Farrell, commissioner of
the U.S. Immigration and Naturallzation
Service, made the statement during a
Senate Finance Committee hearing on
President Nixon's nomination of J.1rs.
Banuelos for U.S. Treasurer.
Agents found 36 illegal aliem among
about 300 einployes at her Ramona Food
Products pl:int in Gardena in the Oct. 5
raid. (See earlier story, page 2)
Sen. Wallace Bennett (R-Utah), charg-
ed that the raid was "a put up job," In·
itialed by federal employes sympatl:letic
to jobless Americans.
Bennett said the .Banuelos company
was chosen because of its maximum •
publicity va lue.
"Senator, J agree with you." sald Far.
rel I. ' The immigratio1 servjce's Lo~ Angeles
district director, G~rge K. Rosenberg,
has said U:ie raid was called partly
because of an informer's Up and because
the company was on his ''active file" of
firms where illegal aliens were likely to
be found.
t'arrell said six raids had been made at
Ute-plant since 1967 with no more than a
doien aliens being found at any lime Until
last October.
-Mni. -Banuelos faced· alm011l -exclilsive
questioning on Mexican alien employ-
ment at her plant.
She denied she knew illegal aliens
worked ai her company until the Im-
migration Service informed her.
COmm.ittee chairman Russell Long (D-
La.), asked how sht would know if an
employe was an illegal alien .
''.That's one thing we don 't know," she
said.
Some said it was ea_sy to obtain, forge
or lie about the necessary "gr~ card"
showing that a peraon is legally in this
country, as well as the social security
card, two requirements for employment.
T e · ration Services last year
r nded up 412,000 illegal aliens. There
re an estimated 250,000 in the Los
Angeles area.
1 Sen. Abraham Ribicoff (D-Conn.), ask-
ed if Mrs. Banuelos was aware that il -
legal immigration boosts unMiployment
for Americans.
"I don't know," she said.
Ribicoff charged, "You don'[ seem to
be aware of problems o( Mexican
Americans on the lower economic scale."
$400 Million Error
Financial Wizards Rocked
~1ASHINGTON (AP) -A $400 mllllon
clerical error by the Federal Reserve
Board "'as acknowledged loday as the
cause of a big rrlght In the govti'nment
securities markets last week. ~
The linanclal community found money
so tight In the banking sy.alellJ..,lhat the
markeL sagged for t~sury ~rities,
until the Federal Reserve·s. money
mana gers became aware or tbe ~roblems
last Friday.
The first victim of the error was the
aystem's own open market commlttee,
whlch governs the now of money into· the
banking system by its buying and selling
of federal securities.
Thi~klng there wali '1400 mill iOn more
cash In 1he·vaults of the banklng sys tenl
than was there, the committee was stingy
abotlt adding funds to the money supply.
the result was a sharp riSe in the in-
terest rate which banks pay one another
for short·tenn funds, and a general
scarcity of Investment money avatlable
tot the purthase of ~about '8.1 ·billion
worth or ~ills .being offered ~7 the
•
Treasury-during the wtek.
The Treasury therefore had to pay
more interest than lt otherwise would
have done . No estimate was immediately
available on the ultimate cost to the
government.
A Federal Reserve spokesman sald the
error was not a misjudgment iii
e1thnating. simply a Clerical error In
reporting the estimated ''vault cash"
among the reserves of the banking
system and governs the volume of fund•
they can lend.
• I
popular, a master plan for the park will
be presented to the city council.
City offlci'als estimate It will take one
to two months to design the park master
plan.
A single design for the park has been
set as . one . requirement by state
authorities for discussion on release ol
the 300 acres to a local government.
If the land~ is not tumed O\fer to Jocal
agencies for park land, it can be auc--
tioned lo the highest bidder for any type
of dev elopment.
Date Slated
F oi· Historic
China Trip
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on's historic journey to Peking will begin
next February 21, the White House an-
nounced today ..
Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler told
newsmen that additionaf i nformation -
such as the length of the Nixon visit to
Communist China and !he stops to be
made en roJ,lte -will be disclosed
"within the nut 14 hours."
In personally announcing on July 15
that he planned to beco01e the first
American President ever to visit
P.fainland China, Nixon 1 said his purpose
was "to seek the nonnaliza!ion of rela·
t1ons" bet Ween the two countries and· to
exchange views on questions of mutual
interest and concern .
The formal announcement o! the dat&
for Nixon's arrival Jn Pekini, released
simultaneously here and in the Com·
munist capita!i was unusually brief:
"The government or the People's
Repub lic of China and the governmtnt of
the United States o( America have
agreed that President Nixon 's visit t1>
China shall begin on February .zt, 1972."
Zi egler said the February date actually
had been decided upon in October when
Henry A. Kissinger, Nixon's assistant for
National Security A!faini, made bis ,se.
cond visit in four months to Peking to
preparl! for th~ Ptesident's journey.
Mesa Tot Saved
Fron' Dro\ming
Little Christian DeLay got an ac-
cidental, unscheduled backyard baptism
In the swimming pool at bls family '•
Costa Mesa home today.
His mother, Mrs. Rene DeLay, Jost no
time in saving the litttest DeLay when he
toddled into the water at 283 BowliJ)g
Green Lane.
~ire Department rescue crewmen ar·
riving at 9: 15 a.m., said she was shaking
the 18--month-old boy upside down to
drain out the water.
They stripped off little Christian's wet
clothes, wrapped him in a warm blanket
and pronounced him in good shape.
although mama whisked him off to th•
family doctor for a checkup.
He had already fallen peaetfully
asleep.
Orange C:eut
•
Weatlaer
Skies will be partly cloudy and
tem-petatuftS_a conit.int 66. l'Uet-
day, with more sun showing over
the Orange Coast. overnight Iowt
are tabbed at 50 degrees.
INSWE TODAY
UC Irvine and private inter·
e.su ar( pla1111ing a ;oi11i venture
to form a natio11all11 famouS'
medical complc:i-~n Oronge.
County b11 1974. Star~ Page. 10. .. ,. • ... ~ .. ..
" • " .....
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33 Airt~ricans Lost
·'Big Copter G~~-~owii: Off Pietnam Coast-
'tsA1GoN <OP!) -Do~ns of American o; a-fliahfto tht Phu Bal·headquarter• ol cr11h of a C12.1 transport ht which 41
aircraft and ships fanneO oul over Jhe the 'lOlst · Alrbornf: · Dlvision1 wblch Americans died, •nd the Jan. 8 l*
northern coast of Soutb Vlctnam today aready rs leavihg the war · U1ne crash of anolher Chinook-that killtd 41
'kfokina:. fOt i Chinook hclieopter DelicvM pi~c.em~al 1lnder ·President NI x on'• apo~esmen acknowledged. '
dOwn ir sea wilh 33 Gis aboard, but w1thdr11.wal .. pro~ram . Tilt twin rotor helicopter was one or six
found nothing, U.S. spokesmen said . 1f the 33 men aboard."''~' lost It would plarfes and choppers whose Joss was an-
The chopper went down in bad weathe r be one of the worst air disast~rs of the nounced Monday b~he u .S. Command.
Sfmday about a half hour aut. or Da Nani wa~, topped only by the Jan. ·25, !966 An HHSJ "Super Jolly" rescue helicopter
~ _ \ --• ~ f~ll in the Nha Be River 12 mi I e s
-Ban .. --"!""". ~ "-"-:.0 -..... --: aoutheast of Saigon last'"fhur~llay ,• with ·Ono'f r ri A re·a Wreck thre• kill«!, two Injured and one missing, G the command said in a delayed report.
Over the weekend two OH6 "Ld.ach" I ' ,
Jtfdds to Highway Toll
' .
observation choppers were shot down just
inside South Vietnam near the tri·border
Communist sanctuary area in the central
highlands where the frontiers of ·Laos,
Cambodia and South Vietnam · come
together. Four crewmen w~e injured.
!California .,ut~IUes today wert: coun-ot~er contraband r m thro h 'tb One Loach was able to call in air 1 ipp I ~ wi strlke1 Sunday by .U.S. and Vietnamese ~up the traffic death toll followiitg a tourisb. l&i°i Thanksgiving Day weekend that saw The CHP o ld· the worst traffic. by far
}W{hwaya aenerally snarled from San was in the metropolitan Los Ange\es-Yiidro in the south to Yreka in the north. Orangf'i county area,· where vehicles were
(General estimate! this morning reach· bumi>er tO bumper and moving slowly oo
e4f1 50 motorists dead, with an exact count most fr'l_eways.
J!;¥!M'Cted later In the day. ___ -Elsewhere. weather phenomena in•
One accident in the Sacramento area eluding blowing dust in San Bernardino
kl11cd seven persons including six from. County and low clouds and rog in Ktrn
oie family retumlng home lrom a reu-County slowed drivers of cars to a snail's
rdon with relatives. (See story on Page 9, Pace.
tdiday.) ;A second, fiery accident in San Diego -
diunty oom<d the Iii• of Sind" Scott, }...vine He1' ress 2,Q, when two station wagons collided _,. ,. "'
liadon, 2.5 miles south of San Onofre ..
i.California Highway Patrol officers Speaks A.gai'nst finally had to set up special traffic lanes
ti skirt the blackened wreckage until it
eould be removed. Ci hood l UCJ . ~Traffic Wll l<W;Jod 50Uth Of theborder ty a
~ 7 for up to two hours -when U.S. Qistoms officials opened 15 of 17 spe_clJl HeireS! Joan Irvine Smith will appear
tiirder checkpoints to catch drugs or on the UC Irvine campus Tu,esd~ay, Dec.
1 7, to speak I n opposition to tli't.. proposed
Pla incorporatiDn of the city of Jrviri~ · Caspers 11.S Mrs. Smith has accei:ited an invltaliolJ
from the Associated Students of UCI
$100-a-person
Funef Reception
Filth Distric t S"upervisor Ronald... W.
Caspers· of Newport Beach is throwing a
$100.a·head fUnd raising party Tuesday
filiht In the lia'PeMy . Inn l n
Westminster, which he -owns.
Tom .EtwlteJ, . executive assistalli to ·
Caspers , said today that about 300 in·
'd.talions !)ad bf:en m;1iled last week and
that "tht respOnse Ila! beeO wOnderlul ...
Fuentes 1ai~ he could not yet estimate
the number of iUests who will 1ather at
Uie 5:30 to B p.m. cocktail reception billed
ls "Celebra ting a year of Orange County
fiogre1p1 lfilb· the honorabl& .Ronald W.
~pu1." ' .1"I would.m:ike a wild guess that there
will be hiorf: than 200 persons there,"
191entes said today.
'Cuper11 staged another fund raising
party last March -a $1,000 a.couple din-
ntr at the Chez Cary in <;>range. That af-
fair became highly publicized whe n it
.wu disclOsed·th"al the su pervisor's office •U il~d used· the county postage meter
ti) mill the invitations.
~·caSper!, who just a few days berore
tii.d urged economy In county postage
procedures, apologized calling it, "a
dm'k'a etror." He reimbursed the stamp
fW:id for the $3.111 expended.
... His short career on the board has been
marked with 'financial news. _
(ASUCI) to address students and irl-
terested members of the public at noon
on that date in the Science Lecture Hall .
A spokesman for the Irvine heiress said
tod~, "We hope all the registered voters
in the Irvine area will·come to hear what
11he has to say." The jncorporation elec-
tion is scheduled Dec. 21.
._ In previous statemenU to the P ress,
Mrs. ·smith has vigorously oppoged in-
coiporalioil-of the -ne• city at this time,
main~ining ~t c,puld result in creation of
"a giant alum..1' UV-ou1h wholesale li-
qui~ation-Ct Irvine la~ to help the
ll\Yine Foundation meet its economic
ol:tigatlons.
f'r~m Page I
MANSON.
Shea and oversaw the
himself.
• •
Shea killing
Witnesses said Hinme,n. 34, was slain at
his Ma libu home after he refused to give
Manson money and all or his possessions.
Hinman was found stabbed to dea th In
July 1969; a few weeks before the Tate
slayings._
The death scene was marked by bloody
scrawllngs si milar to those later found at
the Tate mansion.
jets and American helicopter gunships
that were said to have killed 41 guer-
rillas, destroyed 22 bunkers and set off
theree explosions and one !ire, indicating
fuel and ammunition were hit, the com·
mand said.
Vietname se spokesmen said in another
fight about If. miles to the southeast,
close to the Kontum provinciil cayilal,
-green beret-trained border range r s
caught up with a big guerrilla force and
killed 45 of them . Two rangers were kill·
ed ana 27 were wounded.
Laotian government fon:ts Jau nt hed an
offensive in the northeastern edge or the
Bolovens Plateau, auccessfully cutUng
North Vietnamese supply lines and
relieving Communist pressure on govern-
ment positions at Paksong and Saravane,
200 miles southeast or Vielniane .
The South Vietnamese operation inean•
time ground into its second week with lit·
tie more than minor skirmishing-:--
The ooly 1!gn.ificant action was the am·
bush ol an armored column moving up
highway 13 from South Vietnam toward
the Sriuol plantation, 85 miles north of
Saigon Sunday. Sketchy reports said the
column was ambushed with rocket
grenades and small arms.fire, but there
was no word on casualties or destruction.
One Man Jailed
In Wild County
Family Squabble
A Huntington Beach man playin1 the
role of peaeemaker in a domestic spat
earned a pistol potshot for hi1 effort.a·
Sunday in Santa Ana.
One witness to the shooting -a retired
policeman -gave chase when the
su11pect ned. ,
Ht In turn was pulled over, when local
police spotted hi1 car. almost identical to
that of the su!pect 'ought on attempted
murder charges.
By the time it was all over :
-One man was jailed.
-One other was badly shaken.
-One rT}Ore was miffed .
Investi1ators said Jerry Ericksen, 27,
of Huntington Beai;.h, orignally intervened
when he saw a' man cuffing a woman
around in a car and motioned for them to
&lop.
Suddenly a pistol bullet smashed into
the windshield and ricocheted around
like a buzzing bee. It did not hit Ericksen
or his small son.
Roger Ericksen had hit the floor on
dad 's ord ers.
Retired West Covina police officer
Ralph McAdams witnessed the gunp!ay 1
.·
I
Cliristinns Battee
\Vhile Ma urice AJ!ard conducts. dancers rehearse scene Crom Lloyd
Pfantsch's "A Day fo r Dancing." \Vork will be feature·d in UC Irvine
Christmas cl)ncert this weekend. Performances are scheduled for
8:30 p.m. Friday an d Sunday and for 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Saturdiy in
UCl's Fine Arts Village Conce rt Hall. Tickets priced at $1 are avail·
able at Fine Arts Village Box Office.
Top Municipal Leaders
Meet to Mull Problems ..
HONOLULU (U PI) -Top municipal
leaders from around the nation thrashed
out some touchy policy decisions toda,y
while a battle emerged for the pres idency
of the National League ol Cltit'S.
Some 2,500 mayors, councilmen and
other city officials were attending the
481h aMual congress of cities, believed to
be the largest eve r in the history or the
National League of Cities.
A resolutio'n calling for the abolition of
private ownership of hand guns was
a mo n g 1tht most conlroversial items
under discussion. Mayor Roman S.
c:..tbbs of Detroit, chairman of the
league's Public Sa fety Committee, plans
to present the re solution which conla in!I:
lwo suggesions for curbing private
ownership of hand guns.
Norman Mlll er, special assistant to
Gribbs, said "The resolution proposes a
change Jn the wordil)g-or the second
amendment to the ·OOnstitution so that
'the right of the people to keep and bear
arm.s ' is changed to the rlg ht or the peo-
ple to keep and bear long guns."
The resolution also makes · an
alternative suggestion. that thi; private
ownership of hand guns be diminished
through a federa l statute stemming fr.om
an act of Congress .
Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York
came out in fa11or of the resolution Sun-
day saying "Gun control Is absolutely
essential." He said; ''Congress must
move. on thiS. This mayors• convention
mu~: push it."
The question of who wlll be 11ext year's
president of the league has attracted
much attention.
Rain Tonight-
Not Very Mµch
A feeble .. storr:i front moving info
Southern Cali fornia today with cool but
humid temperatures may bring ra in by
tonight, but don't rush to rescue your
galoshes from mothballs.
The wcath~rman says Ir-dampness ij:
due, it will barely wet the streels.
Scattered sprinkles were reported
around the area this morning, mostly
toward inland mountains, where wind
warnings have been posted' for tonight.
Snow at higher elevations is expected,
plus fog in the footh.ills, according to the
U.S. \Veather Bureau.
· Clear and mostly sunny is the predic-
tion overall on the Orange Coast through
Tuesday, with tertlperatures around the
low 60s, forecasters said.
• OUT OF PAWN
-Talks Still
Seeking-End
To·.walkout
LOS ANGELES ·(AP) -Negotiations
resumed t.oday in a bid to end a week-old
Teamsters Union strike that has lialted
virtually all construction in Southern
California. -
' Neither the Teamsters U·n Io n Mor
representatives of -the building Industry
could assess the efrect of the strike on
Orange County. Pickets have stopped
work at scattered projecls in the county, ·
but not at all sites.
Meanwhile, a joint emergency com-
mittee, comprising three union and three
management representatives, w a 1
reviewing a list or ' 17 projects to •
determine which are vital to the public
safety so work can be resumed on them.
The. striki:, causing an estimated $4
million a day in payroll losses, was-called
last Monday by Teamsters Joint Council
42 in a dispute concerning union jurisdic·
lion over independe nt owner~operators of
dump trucks. used in many construction
projects. The owner--0perators say they
number about 3,000 in California'.
Teamsters representalives said nearly
all their 16,000 members in 11 Southern
California counties are orf the job and
their picket lines are being honored by II
other AFL-CIO unions. Management
v.•ants the indepe»dents exempted from
the contract ; the union says it wantl
them Considered aS workers wider u~on
rules.
Jn addition to the jurisdiction question,
the Teamsters also are asking for a wage
increase of 85 cents an hour for each of
the next three years.
A spokesman ror thi: building con-
tractors said contract ta lks, recessed
over the Thanksgiving weekend, were
proceeding slowly because the union
negotiators were bringing up "one pro-
blem at a time."
"If they put all their demands on the
~table at-the-same time we would kno lf
where we stand," he said,
Drug Suspe~t
Not Too Lucky
Charles D. Goodpaster wa:'t carryinl
a rabbit's loot as he told police, and thi l
was not his lucky_ day.
Stopped at 19th Street and Newport
Boule\·ard. as a possible arrest warrant
suspect, Goodpaster reportedly told Cost.a
Mesa Police Officer Bob Be!g the bul1e
in his pocket was a lucky rabbit's foot.
Searching the . suspec t f u r th e r,
Patrolman "Berg said he found a packet
of 35 barbiturate pills and a hypodermic
syringe.
Goodpaster was booked on appropriate
drug charges.
He had no prior arrest warrant, it turn-
ed out. ... Caspers reportedly spent a record
$81 ,695 OJ! his _e!ectio·n campaign in \1>hich
he unseated incumbent Alton Allen of
Laguna Beach in the Ju,ne primary in
1970. The sum is four times more than
the greatest amount-spent -pr,eviOusly in~
an Orange County supervisoria l cam-
paign.
A l\fanson i:lisciple, Susan Atkins. also
sentenced to death for the Tate sla.yi ngs,
has C<infessedKilling Hinma n. She receiv-
ed a life sentence after her guilty plea in
that case. Another Manson follo"er,
JWbert Beausoleil,. was f.ound 1uilly oJ-tht._
Hinman killing and is on Saa Quentin'•
death row.
and tailed t~-suspect,..but-l-O!Lbim...wh.e,~'1----1-IH
stopped by patrolmen who thought he ONDS • ESTATES
Caspers admitted contributing $46 ,984
of his own money lo the campaign. He is
the former president and now chairman
(Ir the board of Keystone Savlnfs an d
Loan Association with offices l n
Westminsler and Anaheim.
OIAllH COAi?
DAILY PILOT
OlAIMI COAS"1' l'\JlltlMntt CCIA'ANY
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In the Shea case, witnesses testiried
that Ma nson hated Shea. a stuntman and
occasio nal ranch hand at the "family"
headquarters Spahn Ranch. They 1atd
Shea had been hired by a neighboring
rancher to keep the Manson gang off his
property.
One young woma n said ahe ~h~ard
Shea's dying screams (In a night in
August 1969 and later was told how
Man son had ordered fa mily m,ember
Steve Grogan to decapitate Shel, then
had women famil y members chop the
body lo pieces and dispose of It.
frona Pnge I
JORDAN ...
lo the cemetery atop one of the city's
seven hills.
A 21 -gun salute was fired as Tel '1 cotrin
\1'8~ lo\\·ered into the grave. His widow
stood nearby, dressed in a black ankle-
length dress. Only a rew feet away was
the grave of Hus5ein's grandfather, King
Abdullah, who was assassinated In 1951.
. Foreign Minister Abdullah S a I a h
limped to the graveside. the result of a
slight wound he suffered al Tel's side
during the assassination.
Aftei·a 30-mlnute private service at the:
royal palace mosque. Te.l's corfin, draped
in the black, red, white and 1reen Jon:!•·
niar1t flag , was carried on 1 gun carriage
to the hiUtop cemetery.
George Tolin
Services Held ..
Final rites were conducted today ror
George W. To!J.o, an tlcctrcian and 11-
ycar resident or CMla Me!:a, Who died
Thanksaiving Day al the age or 63.
Mr. 'rolin leave« his widow, Jeanne of
lht family home, 271 RoM: Lant; a
daughter, Mrs. Patricia: llaen o (
• Jonesboro, Ark., and 1 ir'"ddallghttr.
I I. •
was the quarry.
Given details by the pursuer. they went
to 824 S. Birch SI., and arrested suspect
G. W. Crust, 43, bookin1; him on ~uspicion
of assault with Intent to commit murder.
Judge McRoberts'
Services Slated
111 Los Angeles .
Funeral services are set Tuesday for 1
, rel.ired l.,()s Angeles County Superior
Court -judge who collapsed and died
Saturday on his boat in Ne wport Harbor
while preparing ror a cruise with rriends .
Rites for Judge James M. McRobert s,
69, who maintained homes in Bayside
Vllla1e and Los Angeles, will be at 10
a.m. in St. Alban 's Episcopal Church,
West Los Ange.Its.
Police said ln their report the tentative
cau se of death was a heart attack. Of-
fi cers satd McRoberts had cardiac
surgery 10 months ago and saw his physi-
ci1n last week.
A fire department rescue squad sent to
·.Judge McRODe.rts' ,8-foot cabtn cruiser
berthed at 300 E. Coist Hi1hway attempt·
ed resuscitation without success.
Judie fd:cRoberts was taken to Hoag
Memorial Hospital, where he was pio-
nounced dead. +
He lert two boating friends. Kenneth
?tfcN1m1r1 and .Russell Howell, about 10
... 1.m., aaying ht wahted to call their boat
from his for 1 radio check be.lore leaving
the harbor.
Tht pair told polict Uley heard nothlnR
and finally went to check a h1U·hour
la ter, finding Judge McRobertJ collapstd
on the dttk or the boat.
The jurist, appointed by ·Governor
C.oodwin J . Knight ln J une 19M, was
supervlslng Judge ·of the ·northeast
district of the Los Angeles C.OUnty
Superior Court sy1tem in Van Nuys. •
Ht leave& his wUe Jane. a dau,bter, I
grandson and a 1randdaughter. .-. ,,
• OVERSTOCKS
1. 2. 3. 4. --
~ •
ILLUITkATIONS m NOT
AYAILAILI
' 5. . 6. 7. 8.
We alw ays have large select ions of diamonds & diamond iewelry at
better thon wholesale prices which we cover with our unique money back
guorantee. Come in and compa re before you buy .
1. 1.SI cf. T.W, h1 dh1r11•114 '1299 6. l.ctl" Dl•iq11d Clu-.r ,.,,.._ .. , '99 .60 1t1. Ge11t1 s.,,htrn 1 &t. T.W,
2. M•tct11lt Dl•111W 1.11 ct. '1995 flNI qUALITT Y.Y.5. DIAMONDS
Ylr/'fh1e..-••l•r. Yerr ltrllll•t 7. l dlll•at c.ut I• ••11t1 .., 19'i.t ..11 •• 1r.
M•u11tl11t1.
3. e1 ... " s.u,.1,. DI•'"•"' J.l11, '495 ,,2 ct ••••••••• 1174.00
1 f11ll C•f•f . ,, ct .•••••••• l tl J .00
4. l•llll• WHllll11t S.t, 40 ct. CHNt $129 1.01 Cf •••• ;-•••• $919,00
wlffl 10 cf. 111 1in•ll dl•M•lllllt
1.01 ct.,.. •••••• Stt7.l 0
' 1.1. GMh., •1111•f• dft)t11 dllt'-r ''"' '399 5 • Lo.di•• 0..1 Dl•m•11d S.llr•I,. '89 with J.6J C."-111 llll•m•llili
l /J c•rt'f lltl. 1.40 ct. dl•mo11ll Y.Y.l .cl•fltr '1,000 111 li•11t1 mo1111tl11'
Open Dafl11 9 to 6 f'f11d it //,.re Flrit ...
1838 NEWPORT ILVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lttwHo Ha1bor ~ ftHway
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DOM RACITI
WE Will
BUY YOUR
DIAMONDS,
JEWELRY,
OLD GOLD
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS
STEREO EQUIP.
OR MOST
ANYTHING
OF VALUE.
BRING THEM
IN FOR
IMM EOl~TE
ESTIMATE
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Saddlehaek
EDITIOtl
VO L. .64, NO. 285, 3 SECTIONS , 34 PAGES
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Near Onofre I/nit
San ·J;)i~gan Dies
In ·Fiery ~rash
A fiery, he adoµ crash Sunday afternoon
along an unguarded slretch of freeway
near the San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station cla imed the life of a 26-year-old
v.·oman fro m San Diego and injured 11
other persons -most of them ch1Jdren.
HJg;hv;a~ patrolmen said the !!.:40 p .• m.
colltsion bed up already congested boli·
day traffic fo r hours.
The dead woman was Sandra Scott, a
passenger in her uncle"s auto" whlch burst
into flame after being sideswiped by a
station wagon that went out of control.
Patr9lmen S;ald the mishap \fas caused
when the station wagon carrying JO
persons and driven by Mrs. Gwendolyn
McKinney, 27, of·829 Townsend St., Santa
Ana, went oilt of control.
Oceanside hosPital for trtatment.
' The specific cause of the crash was &till
under investigat ion, patrolmen said. They
added they still were trying to determine
the exact reason for the Ji1cKiMey i::ar':i:
sudden swerve across the clogged
freeway.
Wall Street
Scare· Linked
To Mistake
The heavlly-laden car careened across the unguarded divider strip ·and WASHINGTON (AP ) -A $400 million
sideswiped 8 northbound car driven by clerical error by the Federal Reserve
Edward Scott Jr., 43, of lnglewood.---Board was acknowlcdgtd today as the
. Two other cars became involved in the f crashes as their drivers tried to avoid the cause o a big !right in the government
two autos in the initial collision. No one securitits markets last week.
l\-"88 injured in those two cars. The financial community round money_
Patrolmen gave this list of the injured: so tight in the banking system that the
-In the McKinney car, ?.lrs. Mc Kin-market sagged !or treasury securities.
ney; Mrs. Ida Nani Stevens, 33, of 2128Z until the Federal ..Reserve's money
Le~1lon· Tree Lane, Hut.imrton Beach; her manager& became aware of the problems
children, Lal'Ty, 11 , and Brenda, 10; twin last Friday.
childrett of Mn. McKtnney,Wllllam ud The first' victim of -the error was the
Willie Mae, ~· All of the injuMa we.re system's own open markef committee.
severe, but mt critical, officers said. which. governs the flow of money into the
-In the Scott Vehicle, the driver, banking system by its buying and sellina:
F.dward Scott, who suffered major frac-(lf !ederal securities.
tures and batjc injuries; his· wife, Amy, Thinking there was $400 million more
41 : Annette Scott, 14; Ralph Scott, 11, cash in the vaults of the banking system
and Gail Scott, 15. than was there, the committee wa s stingy
All the injured were taken to an about add.log fund s to the money supply.
Capo Schoolmen
'
To Set Override
Election Tonight
The result was a sharp rise in the in·
terest rate which banks pay one another
for short·tenn fund s, and a general
scarcity of investment money available
for the purchase or about $8.l billion
worth of bills being offered by lhe
Treasury during the y,·eek.
The Treasury therefore had to pa y
more interest than it otherwise would
have done. No estimate was immediately
available on the ultimate t.'llst to the The election date, ainount and duration g(lvemment.
of a tax override will be set by Trustees A Federal Reserve spokesman said the
of the Capistrano Unified School District error "'as not a misjudgment in
at tonight's meeting. ·' estimating, simply a clerical error in
. The ~ent tax override now ·in 'effect reporting the estimated ''vault cash'"
1n the d1st~ct expires June 30. . among the reserves of the banking
Trustees tn recent weeks have discuss-system and governs the volume of funds
ed the possibility of a three--year duration _ they can lend.
for their next override request. But the
date or the election &nd the amount to be
requested has not yet been detennined.
Superintendent Truman Benedict has
sU?.!ed that he at least would need the
same 50 cent level to continue the same
quality of services now provided. He was
asked by lhe board to make a specific
recommendation at toriight's 8 p.m.
, meeting in Serra School, Capistrano
Beach.
Cha(les Dargan. who served as
chainnan or the cit.iten's committee for
the last override two year! ago, sug-
gested during a recent study se!Sion that
. the figure requested be one that will be
re(\listic ln view of the district's growth.
He pointed out that a new high school
will be opening neJt year and opening 1
new elementary school might become
necessary in the near future . ·
Help Lin,e Sets
Pot Luck Feast
The · Sadd1eback Valley Ministerial
Association; sponsor of the area's "Help
Line," will host a pot luck supper Thurs-
day at 6:30 p.m.
The event will be held in the social hall
of st. George's Episcopal Church, 23eGl
Pasto de Va1encia. The guest speaker for
lhe evening will be Dr. John Gllfillan1 a
professor of psychiatry at the University
or Southern California.
Further infonnation about the supper
may be obtained from Kay Gertz al 830-
9421.
Capo Trustees Eye Vote
By District for College
Trustees or the Capistrano Unified But last ~eek Capistrano board
Sc:hool District are expected to pass a membets ctimplalned that in the past six
strongly ~,,rded resolution tonight urging months Ifie only Saddleback respanse was
tbe ruture election o( Siddlebatl O>Uege the malling of staUstlcal charts.
Trustees by dl1trtct.. And Trustee &b Dahlberg, angry at
Reacting to "'hat some trustees believ-receiving nothing else, said he could not
ed was a "snub" Qh the part of tbe Sad-understand the chart!.
dleback officials. the Capistrano board Dahlberg won unanimous concurrence
will again request that the college from fellow tn11tees of a plan to attend
trustees adopt a plan whertby they will the Dec. 13 8addleback trusfee meeting
be elected by district instead of at-large. ~ 1nasse, even though the Capistrano
eapistrano Unified '& board made •:/---~rd has a meeUng on the 1ame nliht.
slmilar request six months ago. The trustees agreed they would adjourn
re&olulion was not formally ackno their n1eeting early and all attend 1
ed and no acUon was taken. dleback .
The board had asked the Saddl ack The college trUstees are currently
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ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • MONDA¥, NOVEMBER 29, .197 1 TEN CENTS
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--ews o·n
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30 Rooms
Reserved .
In Clemen
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ftlt 0.llY l'O•t S"ff
When the Japanese Embassy in Wasfl..
ingt.on, D.C., calls to reserve 30 rooms
at a San Clemente motel -·and no on•
has been told in advance -clerks be..
come concerned.
When such a call ca~ into the San
Clemente Inn Friday, the staff asked a
-; tOiJeveI PreSidenti!I a die· if the call wat
a hoax.
It wasn't, but it wa! embarrassing
-nonetheless. l The news of the Presldent•s meetlnt
~.
DAIL'( PILOT Slllf .. hell
v•ith Japanese Prime :oJiinister Eisaku
SajO was not to have been announced
unUJ later.
And apparently, the Japanese jumped
the gun. ·
Sources gave the account of-the reser-
PRESID~NT NIXON PREPARES ·TO LEAVE SAN ~1.EMEN'l'E~AFTER <I-DAY-HOLIDAY
Ch ief Executiv e He•ds Toward Helicopter at Loran Coast Guard St•ti on Su nd•y
vation Snatu .Bnd indications were that
Saturday's offici al announcernent of lht
61st.or1C SilOViiit Jan. 7 and a-a:r-the
\Yestem White House was made much
sooner than originally planned.
Nixon Meeting--Top ., Alli~s
Won 't Sacrifice ()ld Friends__ for Chjna Amity
\VASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on, expected to announce a date for his
China trip within 48 hours, is deScribed as
eager to ease East-West tensions -but
_not at the expense of old friendships.
Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
a desire to have meaningful consultations
with major allies prior to journey11 to
Pelting and Moscow was a key reason ror
Nixon's announced intentions to meet
during the next live weeks with leaders
or Britain, Franee, West Gennany, Japan
Talking to a group or newsmen aboard
Air Force One as the President flew here
Sunday night from CaliforrUa, Ziegler
saKl :
"The purpose of the consultations is to.
info rm our allies about our views of the
world and to inform them about what the
President intends to accomplish ... The
President wants to hear their views, and
he's going to give his."
Another White House official, who
declined to be identified, said Nixon wa~
bound for Peking and Moscow "to relax
tensions but not to sacrifice allied unity."
-President Georges Pompidou or
France in the Amrcs Dec. lS.14.
-British Prime Minister Edward
Heath in Bermuda Dec. 20-21.
-Japanese Prime P.1inister Eisaku Sato
al the Western \Vhite House in San
Cleme11te, Jan. ~7.
"No other meetings are being planned
or disc\Jssed," Ziegler said.
The anonymous \Vhite House source
said Nixon. iii. Peking and Moscow, would
not be speaking for other leaders. He
said :
';We are not representing the others.
We are formUlating o·ur position, taking
into consideration· their views. Our poSi-
tlolf .is that we are not going to sacrifice
2 Or~11ge Coast
Men Appointed
To New Offices
. ' Two Orange Coast residents have been
elected to regional and lntemational or.
rices at a meeting of lhc Christian
Buslnessmen':i: Committee .(CBli1C) in
Alabama.
John C. ?t1cCill, or 23571 Veinzzano
Bay, Laguna Niguel. was chosen as a
board member of CB~tC International.
McGill Is one of the owners of Los
Angeles-based Ma yflower Atarkets.
San Clemente dentist Ralph Sturde-
vant, of 31351 Del Obispo Road, SAn Juan
Capistrano, wr.s elected regional direc-
tor for the art;as of San Clemente,
Newport Beach · and the ~Saddleback
Valley.~
allied unity to a relaxation of tensions
... We want to be conscious or the vital
concerns of our allies.''
Asked if he felt the allies understood
Nixon's purposes, the source replied :
"I think there is an understanding or
our general purposes, but I think there is
also a degree of uncertainty as to what
our moves mean. The purpose of these
meetings is to remove as much of that
uncertainty as possible."
This source said the allied leader!
v;ould not be granted •·an absolute veto"
over any initiatives Ni xon may take in
the Communist capitals. "But," he ad·
ded, "if there are grave concerns, they
will be take!\> into consideration."
Ignoring reports that hitches ha ve
9eve1oped, Ziegler continue<:. to promise
that a date for the President's Peking
trip will be announced within 48 hours .
There have been several published and
broadcast reports suggesting the historic
mission might be postponed or canceled,
_Ziegler confirmed during the night that
Nixon will meet here in December with
• Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliot
Trudeau.
Before leaving California , Ziegler an-
nounced the chief executive and West
Gennan Chancellor Willy Brandt will
confer Dec. 28-29 at the Florida White
House in Key Biscayne.
Earlier the White House had unve iled
plans f(lr Nixon meetings with:
Declaring that Nixon's consultatklns
could not be characterized as routine, he
said :
"We are not going ... to lecture them
about predetermined positions but to get
their view11."
Joining Nixon at all the meetings will
be Secretary of state William P. Rogers.
Treasury SecretarY John B. Cocnally and
Henry Kissinger, the President's national
security affairs adviser.
The White House source said monetary
Issues were certain to come up in Nixon's
co nferences with the British. French,
West Germans, Japanese and Canadians.
But lie added, "I don't thihk we can
come to a final resolution of monetery
issues in a series of bilateral meetings."
Santa Faces Busy Month
In San Clemente Streets
s3nta Claus will really earn his money
on the streets and parking lots of San
Clemente's business district this year.
His bosses at the chamber of com-
merce pJan to wort the big man overtime
starting Friday Evening wlien Santa ·
makes his season debut starting at ~6~
p.m. ..
Chrlstma's wishes. ·He'll also hand out
candy and gift packets .
The South Coast Area Jaycees are
coord,lnatlng the debut of Santa, &S$isted
by the Chamber's.Women's Division. ·
PoliCe cars and fire engfues will pro-
vide an escort.
Starting ()O Monday Santa will make
the rounds of all local businesses, and
chamber offlcl8Js said a schedule will &c Appropriate ceremonial music will come from 'the musicians of the Sari read,Y ~ater this ~eek. .
Clemente High School Band during the I~ past years, St. Nick used a local flJ"e
initial appearance at the Grant ts Plaza _engine as _bis means or ~avel.
Sholfping Center, rollow'ed by stOps at This _year,. say the sP1;5nsors, he ha s
four other san Clemente business cen-choieh a red convertible, 1nste_ad.
ers.
Shorecliffs ShopJ>ing Center will liosl
St. Nick at 7 p.m., and' at 7:00 ht 1"ill
show at the Safeway' parking lot. United
California Bank Js nex~ 'itarting at I
o'clock, and Alpha Beta perking Jot Will
round olf the evening at 8:30.
Chiklrin will find Sanla receptive to
Pay Signing Ended ·
'Y' Indian ~laidens
' P~ogrlll\l et Tuesday
south-Coast ar.t;a dad! and their young
daughters interested in the YMCA Indian
l\1aidens program can register and
recelft information on the acUvity at a
meeting Tuesday e~rilng :-1t-Pilisades
School in Capistran<> Beach.
·Other announcements over Ute weekend
also came without warning, including de-
tails of the departure for Washington.
The holiday stay by the President and
First Lady ended Sund~y -9000er than
originally expected.
Earlier plans had called for the Presl-
dtnt to remain in San Clemente until
'I'Uesday or Wednesday, but at an early
morning briefing Sunday Press Secretary
Ron Ziegler announced the President
plaMed to leave that altemoon at 4
o'clock.
The announcement came at about tbt
same time as news of the assassination
of Jordanian Premier Wasfi Tel.on the
steps o~ a Cairo Hotel.
The President's attention earlier in the
stay was on American football , but soon
after the holiday it switched to intema·
·. tional issues -the pending trip to Pekinc
and the five conferences with world
leaders.
The Chief Executive forsook hi:i: tradi·
tional golf cart for the short trip. from
his home to the waiting helicopter Sun-
day afternoon.
He rode in a car, instead~
Appearing jaunty and tn good tpirita
f\tr. Nixon swiftly greeted Coast Guard
officers, then wheeled and strode swiftly
to th e chopper.
As he negotiated the ladder he brisk·
ly skipped several steps in his haste to
board.
The departure was probably the first
In San Clemente where it was certain
when the President would returri.
The first week in January.
Postmaster Begins
El Centro Duties-
Charles L. Covault, lint su~rintendent
of the Laguna Hill! branch post office
began duties this month as postmaster or
the El Centro post office .
The My Pilot last week erroneously
reported that , Covaull had been named
postmaster of the El Toro branch. Mrs.
Noe.lie Changala is postmaster of that
branch and has held the position since
1~7.
Ora•ge
Weat•er
Skies will be partly cloudy and
temperatures '-constant. 65 Tues-
day, with more sun showing ovet
the Orange Coast. Overnight lows
are tabbed at 50 degrees.
INSIDE TODAY
UC Innnt and private tntt,..
eJ'ts are ptanntng a joitJ&. venture
to form a nationallu Jamou.!
medical complt: in. Orange
County by 1974. Story Paue 10.
ANliAtl Ill
L. ,..._ '''' 14 C1H*'"'l1 f
c .. ullltd 2W4
CMT!lcl 1, C"UMN ,,
OHltl lffflcn 11
ltttwltl "'" • •~tttl•l"'"tfti . t• l'IRatlct "'11 Hfnotc-,.
group to make a study Of the procedure elected at-large, even though they arc
Ji!ed for thelr election In view of rapid l'rom . specific districts. The Capistrano
growth in the southern part or thef!911ege UnlUed Board Is elected from districts by •
district. -the people within those same are11s.
Both men are members of the Sad·
dleback Valley chapler of th< CBMC.
LOS ANGELEs (UPf) -Professon
at state colleges no longer have to slin
ror thelr Pl'Y by stating lbey really
did the ~aching work they we-re assign-
ed. The state college trustees ~.fonday
abolished the controversi al reqUirement
which the professors re$tgted as
humlHatlng.
The event will :i:tart at 7:30 p.'m. The
unique'. rather-daughter program is
sponsored by the South Coast lt'MCA.
Persons lntcrtisted, but unable to -attend
Tuesday's meelliig can conlJli!. Rod
Carpenter at tho....Y, 494-9431 , and stiir
.register, aides said.
1\1111 .. ,,..,. 1J
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% DAil V PILOT SC
OfficiflJ Buried
.
MIOLUl (UPI) , Jordanian Premier
W_asfi Tel, 118assinated sUnday in Catro
by four J,?aUUnlan guerrtllas, was buried
today lo tbe sound or i 21 gun sllutel'-
Kittc ~ named a moderate to suc-
ceed ~ tail brougtit tn a tough line of·
fklal u hls •tiaoal .sttUrtty adviser.
TeL '"'·-~ .bY. the gu~.rillar Jor
ordering the J<rdanian army to crush.
their revolt last summer, was killed by
City Leaders
lfigh.t ~~d Tape ..
~lb--'U.S~ .Meet
-'l'ar t11died
wa~te =~c-ontrols
' . Confrtint C.ouncil '.
'
tour bullet$ as he stepped from h!J car at
a-Caire .Aatet-on the .banks of the Nile
foll.o!Virig a luoc}leon with Abdel K~Alek
Ha'sSliria~ SeerNiry. gtintral of · the Arab
Le:ague.
Munzi Sole.iman Khalifa, 211, leader of
the four man death .squad , told UPI Cor-
re!pOl'ldenf Maurice Guindi in Cairo that
Tel's death was only the first of a .series
or murders intended to eliminale
eve:ry6ne who llas opposed the cause of
the Pales~ guUrllias in the Ara b r.
, World-. ---· ·· --' "'
Khalifa raised his hand in the v for vie-Fa...: .. 9 S,,,....ators ·
A proposed new wa3le management ta"
will be up for consideration by -the
Laguna Beach· city cooncil Wednesday
~..;;_ night, -aod m.11.y be 11dopted as lltl· urgency
measure, which WQuld· mbkt it effecliv~
immediately.
UPI T..._lt
Adoption as an urgency measure, which
requires a four-fifths council vote,
eliminates the ~normal -ordinince pro-
cedure of two reilding!I and a JO.day wa it
before the laW goe! into efreCt. The WaSle
management would qualify as a measure
involving revenue.
Under the.-program prepared by-city--..
manager· Lawrence Rose, paymenl"'of the
waste :management tax would be man··
datory fo;. all property owners and the
tax would be set each year by resolution,
3sking it possibly lo.adapt the amount to
changing costs.
It would consist of a bpse tax of $1 .50 a
month per parcel of land, plus a
!!Ur~ha~g~ a3 . property i!I developed.
Res1depUal sureharges · would' be $2 for
the first sb1glt:-" family uiilt plus -$1 fo r
each additional family unit up Lo five.
The commercial-i:esidenlial charge for
hotels. motels, apartments and residen-
tial parcels hairing more than six family
units .would be $1 per unit. Commercial
surcharge would be $1 "for each separate
business oceupancy and industrial char&e 1
would ~ $.1.50 for eaCh separate building. lory. sign and .,id, ".We hne taken our "••• .., •• ~
reYenge'.9n a .ti.8itor." He said h~ had Romana Acosta Banuelos, 46, a native of Miami, Ariz., is ·apPearing
drunk ::f'cil's blood. ,al!:J!r: the !!hooting to before the Senate Finance Com ·1 today on her nomination to be
empba.size.hl.s.batred of the man. · U.S. ·Treasurer. She faced congressional questioning on why she al·
Hu.sse1n n'amec! Dep.ity Premier Ahmed lowed illegil Mexican aliens to work at her food J>lant in Gardena.
South Laguna
General Plan
An ex:emption of 50 percent of the.
surc harge is provided for each residential
· , unit in which a waste compactor ls in· -... stalled. -Al·Lawzi, .50, ·as prime JninlsJ,er· to suc· She is shown with Sen. Alan Cranston (D·Calif.), who acted as a char· c~·'i'el .a~ 'gave htm the parlfo\lo .oL dete'nae miriJst.tr, a job also held by-Tel. __ ac_l_er_w_il_n_es_s_i_n_h_e_r_be_half_._S_l_or.;.y_P_a-'g"-e-4_._· -----=------
P9liticat l\()UreeS said Al-Lawzl was con· --'* "HONOLULU: ·(UPI) ...... "Toir municipal si dered unbiased and nuetral on Pate.sti· To Be Sho~n
The proposed taXwould replace general
fund assessments for sanitation or other
\Yaste management cost!!, now amounting
to 23 cents per $100 of assessed valuation.
leaden from arounl1 the nation thrashed out so·me touchy p(.l\icy decisions today nian guerrilla. matters.
while a battle eJJ1ergt)d lo.r the pusidency fte sou.recs l akl A1-Lawzi was not
of the National Lea(tle 1'f'Cities. kl'loWri .fot-~il strong character ·and 1ug. Police Use Mace to Seize . ' The recent ly cgmpleted .general .plan
for South Laguna will . be -presented. for .
pu.blic scrutiny Monday ~l an open
me:eting of the South l.i;guna 4 Civic
Association.
The tax would be bil!ed bimonthly and
collected by the ci ty to pay the costs of
the new waste management system,
principally the coHtttor of refuse wh()
will contract with the city under the nelf
agreement . Provision is made for
penallks on delinquent bill payment
which could lead eventually to a lien
against the delinquent property.
Some 2,:iOO mayort•, councilmen and · gisted .hia new cabinet may be me.rely a
othe.r city offidal1 1"ere .Uending the car~t:akU ·one. L)ke Tel , Al·La~zi iii a
4lth annurt congress of citiei, believed to · Bedooin. He ~ad served as chief of pro-be the largest e.ver in the history of the Natior:W-League of Cities. loeol al the.-klng'.s court and was chief of Three in Clemente Brawl · The plan, prepared under the guidance
of landscape architect Fred' Lang,· will ·
soon to presented to ·county supervlsora:
for official consideration and adoption, A resol"tion calling for U.. ·abolition of U.. 'c:oorC
private ownership of hand guns _ w_as Hus!elh · hluti~ ·former Jn t er Io r
a mo a I the most Mroversial Ut:m! Mfnister. 1't:o:hitnn'led Rasool Al·Kilahi a3
uiidir ·· aiscbssion. 'Mayor Roman s-;--hiriii:lvt!er on n.:ttonal security iffafrs.
Gribbs of• Detroit, 'chail"nl&n of the · Al-lCilani· has 'the r•putation or being
JeagUe"s Public Safely Comm~ttee, plans tough toward the guerrillas, a suggestion
to present the resolutiOn which contains · tbatHusseitl'a own· tough stand would not
two suggesions for ~cur!bing private change. _
O!'nerstfip of .hand guns. Allls · Moasher. mlnlster of traruipjjrt,
Norman MiHe.r, special =assistant to · took ·o·ver'Ai'Lawzi'I post as mlnl!t.er of
G.ribbs, said "The ·resolutioo proposes a ; fii:!ail.Ct.
change . in tbe wording <lf the second .. i'he leader of the gang that killed Tel
amendment to the con.rtitutlon so .that sild the prime minister wa!I murdered to
'the rigl;ll of the people to keep and bear aienge the death of a Palestinian guer·
auns' is .changed lG .the right of the peo-rilla t:iptaln in Jordan, police sources
ple to ke~p and bear k>ng guns.'" "said.
The ·resolution . also .makes :a n -lfet· was ·hattd by the Palestinian guer-
altemalivt suggestion lhat the private rillas for ordering the army to crush
__ o~ship of hand--~~ be diminished their revolt thit summer. He died trying
through a Tedeiil sfil.ul! .stemming lrom-;-to ·get·hls" ow-tr gun out to fight b-atk. -
aa ad of <;.ongress. -. HUSSf!in, dressed in hi!! uniform as
Mayor Jahn V. -Lindsay of New . Yorlc.. supteme commander of the · armed·
e1me aut in la•Qr of the resolution 'sun. forces, a ·red and white kaffiya headdress
day saying "Gun con.tr:ol is absolu~ly and ·a black armband. Jed 1,500 mourners
essential.'" He said, "Congress mu .s-t to the cemetery atop one or the city's
m011e on this . This mayors' convention · seven hills.
mus:. pv'~7!t,'' ., .• . ,. ; ·A;·11~gun salute was fired as Te\'s coffin
:The question of who win be •ext year :S was ' lb\f'ered into the grave. His widow
w sident o~ the league has attracted stood nearby, dressed in a black ankle·
n)uch attention. length dress. Only a few feet away was
Nonnafty, the fir1t ,V1«:pr~_14ent.ol,:the · the .grave of Huasein's grandfather, KiJig
league steps up la the Pre11dencj, bOt Abdullah who was a3Sllss.inatcd in 1951.
this year l~ 1ucce11ion · 11 in ·doubl .~oreigri. Minister. Abdull.ah Sa I ah.
:Mayor µ>uie -Wel~h or Houston ... w limped to the graveside, the result of a
Would nonnally become the presiden slighl wound he. suffered at Tel'!! side
faces· a runoff election for mayor at'ho duri ng. the .as·sassioaiion.
and was· u·riable lO alterid the congress Aftet a 30.minute private service at the M:e~Miulii,bt inel.iglble ~-~e~ve if beaten roya l palace mosque, Tel 's coffin, draped
bpt ·the-runoff is not for a couple 6f · the black. red, white and green Jorda-~ks and the leligue 1s hol~ing its elee-nian nig~ waS ?trted on a· gun Carriage
lions Wednesday. t.o th~; hilltop cemetery.
Laguna Po1ice
Slate · Allciion
Bicytle!, jewelry 8nd s u·rrbo"ir·d1·
makes op the "loot" _that-will !>f-~~
booed off by the Laguna Beach Ponce
Department Dec. JI at 10:30 a.m: -
According to Del. George Plelts, the
department. over the past year , has ac-
cumulated 35 bicycles. ~veral surfboards
and scores of rings and watches. "We've
also g1>l a lot of odds and ends that "'''
haven't 11orted through yel." Pletts ad-
ded.
Irvine Heiress
Speaks Acgainst
Cityhood at UCI
Heiress Joan Irvi~e Smith will appear
on the UC lrvi9e campus Tuesday, Dec.
7, to speak in opposition to the .proposed
incorporation af lht city of Irv ine.
Mrs. Smith ,has accepted an invitation
from the Associated Student!! of UC I
(ASUCll to address-stuOents ·arid in·
terested members of the public at noon
on that date in the Science Lecture Hall.
Police used the chemical mace to wb-
due thtte San Clemente brQthers after an
alleged assault on a lone police officer
who was dispatched Saturday to stop tht
three from fighting each other.
The melee began, officers said, when
neighbof'! called to-report a fight going
on among Manuel Morales, 2~, Rojelio
Morales, 22, and Rafael, 21.
The incident took place at II p.m. on
the lawn of an apartment at 317 Cabr!llo.
As officer Louis Graham arrived,
reports said, he was pu.shed and shoved
by the three men and a neighbor phoned
police for assistance for the officer.
Manson Given:
Life Sentence
In Shea Sl~ying
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charle11
Manson, already under a death sentence
for the seven Sharon Tate murders, w;13
given life Imprisonment today 5y a jury
which convicted him of the murders of a
stuntman and a musician two years ago ..
In the Tate case, Manson was give n
eight death sentences, including one for
conspiracy in the seven August 1969
slayings. Three female co-defendants also
were convicted and sentenced to death
for the Tale slayings.
Today '!! verdict was on two counl! of
murder and one of conspiracy.
Manson, 37, one time leader of a
"family" of wandering hippie types ., was
found guilty Nov: 2 of the slayings tlf
Gary Hinman. 1 Mal ibu musician, and
Donald "Shorty" Shea. a sometime movie
stuntman whose body never has been
found . ·
Hospital Board
Directors Narned
Four more members have been named
to the board of d irec tors of Sad·
dlebeck Community Hospital, which is
now being constructed in Laguna Hilb.
·The 1nn ual pre-Christmas sale wil l
begin with time for prospective buyers to
look over the merchandise, follo,.·ed by
the auction itseU.
The new directors bring the total board
A .spokesman for the Irvine heiress ~aid membership to J7.
today, "We hope all the regislered voters They are V. P. Baker of Newport
OUNAI COAST
DAILY PILOT
WNIH "'9"Alf P\llLISHIH COtt\PAAY
ltktt N. w.,4 ,,. ... 111111 ...... lllllf'
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-t:.ittt
in lhe Irvine area will come to h'ear wha t Beach, president of Balboa Oil Company:
she: has lo say." The incorp6ration elec· Dr. Lydia Dea ne of Laguna Hills, a
lion is scheduled Dec. 21. retired psychiatrist: Dr. Allen Howard of
Jn previous statements to the pres!!, Laguna Hills, a urology profe:ssor at the
Ptlrs. Smith has vigorously opposed in-UC Irvine school of medicine, and
corporatitln of the new city al this lime, Bernard Ingram of Laguna Hills,
maintaining it could re.suit in creation of chlirman of the board of Burlingame
"a gfant slum." through wholesale Ji. Surgical tlld Hospital Equipment Com-
quidation of Irvine lands to htlp the pany of San Diego.
lr'f'.ine Foundation meet it3 econorpic __ !"-~ ... ~bed. non-prof'il facility is
obligations. • ~d for completion in mid-1973.
TII~"''' A. M.,,,111•• MIMlinl IEdl"r
Q1rft1 H. Ltet a,;,~,,.. P .. H1D
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2J2 '•rt1t A~tftUt
M1'1Jia1 ,JJr111: ,.o. 101 •••, !2•12
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Jal l'lortA El C.•I~• ~ •• 1, t2672
.· Caspers Money Raiser
Slated in Westminster °"" .,.... c-te Meot• UI W'11 ••f t trNt
.._,, l"tft: IPJ Nr#llO<I I W!tvtl'f
.....,..... ._,.. 1717$ ..,. """''
•
Fifth Uiitrict Superv\MJr Ronald W.
Caspers of Newport Beach is throwing a
·SJOO.a:he.ad· fund Taising party Tuesd!'y
night in the Ha 'Penny Inn In
Westminster. wh ich he owns.
' Tom Fuentes. executive assi!ltant to
Caspers, said today that about 300 In-
vitations had been-mailed last week and
that "'the re3ponse has been wonderful.··
F\ient!s said he ·could not yet e!!limate
the number of euest.s who wlll gather at
\he $:30 to R p.m. cocktail reception bll~
'".''Celebrating a year of Orange County
progrest with ttJe honorable ·Ronald W.
Casper5."
"I 11.·ould mike a wild guess that U\e:rc
w\11 be more than 200 penons lhtre,"
F11entes said today.
Caspers staged anothtr rund ra13lng
party..l aSL March.-a $1,000 1 couple djn.
ncr al the Chu Ca_~)' In Orange. That af·
f11ir .._became 'highly publlclied when It
was dfsclbsed that the tupervi30r'1.office
I
staff had used the county p<>Stage meter
to mail the Invitations.
Caspers. who just a few rlays before ,
had urged economy in county postage
procedures, apologized calling ii. "a
clerk's error." He reimbursed the stamp
fund for the $.'!.II expended .
Hi!! short career on the board has been
marked with financial news.
Caspers repartedly spent a record
$81 ,695 on his election campaign in which
he unseated incumbent Alton Alltn of
Lagun1 Beach in the June primary In
11711. The sum is four times more than
the greatest amount sptnt previously ln
in Orange County .supervi.sorlal cam·
palgn. • ·
Caspers admltt~d contributing $45.984
of his own money ~the campaign . He is
the former president and now ch•irman
of tht botrd of KeysjOne Savings and
LoAn A~ll'lion with offices l-n
Westminster and Anaheim.
• "
Two other officers arrived and subdued
the three men in.side an apartment.
The three brothers were booked on
chllrges of di!!turblng the · peace and
aueult on a police offi cer. They posted
bond the following day, police said.
Manuel and Rafel Morales live at 266
CaHe Vlclcirla , Apt. D. Rojelio Jives at the
apartment where the arrests took place,
police said.
All three men al ready awai~ court ac·
lion in another alleged assault on a
Marine several weeks ago. That incident
1ssertedly took place afte r a pool game
at a South El Camino Real bar, officers
said. The victim was hospitalized.
Leslie Sentelle
Services Slated
Funeral services will be held at.10 a.m,
Tuesday for longtime Lagun a Beach resi ·
dent Leslie C. Sentelle, who dled
Thanksgiving Day al'her home. She was
70.
Mrs. Senlel\e, a member or the First
Congregational Church, came to Laguna
Beach in 1925 and was employed for 36
year3 by the Laguna Beach Wa ter
District.
The services wlll be conducted in· •·
Pt1cCormick Mortuary Chapel by th~ Rev.
Philip Gregory of the Flr!!t Congrega-
tional Church. Burial wi ll follow at the
Ft. Rosecrans National Cemel~ry .atop
~oint Loma in San Diego.
Mrs. Sentelle, who lived at 709'Canyon·
View Drive, is survived by a daughter,
Mrs. Margery Newcomb: three brothers,
Lewis Field of Vis ta , Eugene Field of
Escondido and Marshall Field of La
,Jolla ; three granddaughters and three
great granddaughters.
If approved, the land u.se plan would
allow for rezoning the entire unin-
corporated area of South Laguna for an
ultimate population .of 10,000.
As presently zoned, Lang and his
associates have . speculated that .the.
population of the 1.400 acre -area could·
reach 68,000. The population is now about
4,000. -
Lang feels that unq>ntrolled ·develop-
ment of the area should not be allowed
for a numhtr of reasons, one of which is
that two earthquake faults ·run -through
the communlly. The "holding capacity ''
of the land . he has said in discussing the
plan1 is based <>n seismic considerations,
sewage tre~hnent and water limitations
and a -desire to pre~erve th~ existing
South Laguna envirorment .
Laguna Beach school offic ials ha¥e
gi ven official support th the j>llin. Lang
has determined that one more elemen-
t<!rY school might be require<! for the
area and ha!! determined that only One
, plot of ground exists fn the: commi.J'nity
Oat enough on Whicti fo build a scl'I001d. ''South Lagu·na is B . beautiful· artA , ,, .
siy!I association prssident Jo Fletcher,
"and' we are strlving:'fO keep it that
way;" ·· '
"The pl"an ptesentlltion will be held at
7:!'l0 p.m. at the Methodist Church; 21632
Wesle'y Drive.
Anaheim Driver Dies
A.fter Auto Accident .
Anliheim motorcyclist James W -.
Wright was fatally· injured early · today
whent>he crashed into a parked ear-on·
Katella Avenue. east of Garden Drive.
Police said Wright, 27, of 10070 S. ·
Gilbert St., Anaheim·, died at S a.m. in
tbe Orange County . Medical Center
following the 1 a:m. mishap.
Jury Selection
111 ·Coast Man's
Fraud T1ial Set
Jury selection began tod ay--In ·th.e
Otange County Superior Court fraud tria.J · -
of a Newport Beach businesSman and hiS
lawyer partner in an insurance enterprise.
which authorities allege bilked several in-
vestors of an estimated $160,000.
Jlldge Lester------Van ~atenhove ordered
selection of a panel 1his morning after r~
jecting pretrial motions which Included
the precede:nt-setling argument by defen-
dants Ralph K. Benware, 39, of 411 15th
St.. and Orange attorney Richard
Murphy, 41 , that Orange C.ounty's jury
system. does not gu.arantee the inclusion
of businessmen in the jury.
Judge Van Tatenhove has rejected the
theory that it was vi tal for both defen·
dants, l~ View of the nature of grand
theft and state in surance code violation
charges against them, to ha v •
businessmen in the.jury box.
He also rejected motions for a change
of ven\Je .and. continuance of the trial.
Charges against both men were filed
more than a year ago.
Benware and Murphy were accused in
an Orange County Grand .Jury ind ictment
of unlawfully diverling funds from the
Cas11!filty Insuraflce Company to satisfy
the demands of investors in the Calilor·
nia Caduceus Company ..
B!!nware and Murphy "-'ere the govern·
ing_ offiC!er! in both enterPrises. They
were named in a series of civil suits filed
against their operations before criminal
charges were brought against them by
the Distrjc.t· Attorrtey's office.
0ND... s·· •·OUT OF PAWN
• ESTATES
• O~ERSTOCKS
'
1. I 2.
.f!?J .• 7.
'
ILLUSllATIDNS
NOT
AVAIU.ILI
4.
DOM RACITI
' a.
We ,!ways have large selections of (Hamonds & diemond i•welry at
better than wholesale prices which we cover wit~ our un ique rnoney back
guarantee. Come in and compare befo re you buy.
WE Will
BUY YOUR
DIAMONDS,
JEWELRY,
OLD GOLD
1. 1.11 f.f, T.W. 11 111•"'•11• '1299 6. Ledl .. Dl•lfl111d Cl11•r 'Htl•t '99 .• 0 en. l..in lll'l'hlrM 1 ct. T.W .
'1995
PINI 9UALITY V.Y.S, DIAMONDS
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1 fill ..... , ·'' •'· ••...... Stlt.oo
' 1.01 ''· •••.•••• lflt.00
4. LHI .. WM4hlf S.t, '40 ,,, ,_.., '129 l .DI ct •• , • , • , , • Stt7 .10
wl .. 10 ct. II ••ll dlff .. • (11. hts. •••ett ....... i1:1 .. 1 ... rlttt '399
5. LMIM O,.et Dl-"4 hllteli. '89 wlril Z.•I ctf. It ifl-11ft
1/J •«-' Ill), 1.40 ''· JiMi.H Y.Y.J.ci.tlrr '1 000
la Gtt1n 111t1111tl111 I .
Dlamond_C$nter for Orat1"e Co11nt11
COSTA MESA JEWELRY & LOAN
Opt" Dail¥ 9 _to 8' Ftnd fl Herc Pir~t
1838 NEWP'.oif•aLVD. ~PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN C0$TA MISA -~ Hor .... I. r. .. woy
~ .
• \
•
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS
STEREO EQUIP •
OR MOST
ANYTHING
OF V_ALUE.
BRING THEM
IN FOR
IMMEDIATE
ESTIMATE
!!! • -·
•
'
I
,
I\
..
' I
'
!
-.. -~ .. -----• . .
• •
Lag~na Beaeh Today's · Ff'aal
N.~. StockS EDITION
VO~. 64, NO. 285, 3 SECTIONS. 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO~Nl.A
a an s
•
• MONDAY, NOVEMBER ~9. '197 1 TEI:! CENTS
• •t ISi
30 Rooms
Diver Qies Off Laguna
.... , . ~·-· ' '
'• ' ' ~t '; • ... ' "\ •,
t Reserved ·-,. .
-Drowning Claims Youth; Man Rescued ·-· In Clemente
A ~Ioptebello youth skindiving with his
father drowned and an AnaheiI:n diving
ihstructor swimming alone ne!ll'lY drown-
ed in separate weekend incidents in the
Laguna Beach area. ·
The dead youth was identified as Ted
Body to Get
. •
Temporary
Zoning Law
An urgency interim zoning ordinance,
· limiting building height in Laguna Beach
inr8ccordance with the ordinance adopted
in the Aug. 3 initiative election, has been
prepared for adoption by Uie city rouncil
Wednesday.
The measure. which would become ef·
fective immediately-upon adoption; is
designed to prevent any aUempt to obtain
a building permit for a structure higher
thap: 36 feet during the period that the
legality of the initiatlve ordinance is
being test.eel in court.
A suit challenging lhe legality of the
height limit ordinance, filed by J,aguna
realtor Vern Taschntr, 1J scheduled. for
hearing in Superior Court Monjiay •.
The urgency measure Is ba .. updn the
fact that tht plannlna comml&iklll, on in-
stnicllon of the city council. ii atrttnUy
holding public hearings on amendments
to place the btighl Limit In the city JOOIDi
code.
The measure proposed for adoption
We<tnesday, notes that the council in·
structed the plannlng commission Aug.
18 tO commence hearii1gs ort amendments
to limit the height of all buildings in the
city lo 36 feet or three stories and that
the state code "authorizes the legislattve
body of .a city lo adopt as an· urg~~cy
measure an interim ordinance prohibdmg
any uses which would be in conflict wit.h
a contemplated wning proposal wbi~h lbe
legislative body planning co!Dmiss~~ or
planning department Is considering.
The Interim nleasure · wotild be ef-
fective for 1Ml days after adoption and
could be extended .for one year after a
...,J hearing. . . . . Taschner's suit charges the 1n1Uat1ve
procedure' was an ill~gal method ~r
establishing a height hmlt because it
circumvents public hearings required by
st.ate law for zoning changes. The hear·
ings now being undertaken by the pl~n
ning commission, and later by t~ . c1~y
L"Ouncil. would place the height 11m1t in
the city code by state-approved pro-
cedure.
Cyclists R~ady
For Community
Ride in Laguna
The newly-formed Laguna Beach Cycle
Club barely out of its training wheels ,
will 'sponsor. its first communlty ride
beginning al a a.m. Saturday.
Sponsored by lhe city Recreation
Department . the 20-mile club rlde will
depart from the Feslh•al of Arts parking
tot, proceed out Laguna Canyon, circle
. 8round Lion Country Safari and return lo
Laguna Beach. Officials add that a repair
bus will accompany the group lo "pick up
breakdowns and poop-outs." •
Department officials have invited
persons "between the ages of U and 120"
to take part in tbe event, although
children uoder J2 may o.ecmmpany the
riders if accompanied by an adult.
(Adults over 120 will probably be ac·
companied by the: l'Jews media.)
Membership in the cycle. club Is not rt·
quired for a resident to t:ikc part ln this
first ride. However. orflctals note that
beginning in January, the club will
sponsor such treks each month and will
provide members with a newsletter.
Membership ls $2 per person or S3 per
famil y. l\tembtrship forms may be ob-.
lalned from the department at 175 N.
Coast Hishway, from Sports World at 2llO
Broadway or rrom Laguna Cycltry at 240
Thall• SI.
Further Jntonnatlon c o n e e r n I n g·
Saturday's ride may ht obtained lrom the
dep:Mt.ment at fft.112-t ut. ~-
Giamanco1 18. He was pr0111ounced dead
on arriva at South Coast Community
Hospital Friday afternoon after being
pulled unconsciaus from Scotchman's
Cove by his diving companions, one of
whom was his Iather. Jerry Giamanco.
Lileguard3 said the victim surfaced
calling for help, but apparently inhaled
water and lapsed int.a. unconsciousness
before he could be pulled to· the beach.
Efforts to revive the diver by lifeguards
failed .
Lifeguards again _responded to a diver
in 'trouble Sunday afternoon at Shaw's
Cove off Clilf Drive wh"en Mike Coi:, 18,
collapsed on the beach after barely mak-
ing it ashore.
C.Ox was rushed to South Coast
Hiispital. where he was reported in
satisfactory conaition in the intensive
care unit. A hospital spokesman said the
man sustained internal injuries to both of
hi s lungs.
According to llieguard.s. Cox. a divini instructor, was alone in about 45 feet of
water when the incident occurred. Cox
later told authorities that be had become
ditty lfl'K!erwattt;-so he-dropped his
Fiery Collision
Near O!ipfre Ullit
Kills W 01nafl,, · 20
A' fiery, headon crash Sunday afternoon
along an unguarded stretch of freeway
near the San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station claimed the life or a 2CJ..year-old
woman from San Diego and injured 11
other persons -most of them children.
Highway patrolmen said the 12:40 p.m.
collision tied up already congested holi-
day tra[fic for hours. Ttte dead woman was Sandra Scott, a
passe.nger ln her 'uncle's auto which burst
into flame after being sideJ!wiped by a
station wagon that went out of control.
Patrolmen said the mishap was caused
when the station wagon carrying 10
persons a_nd driven by ~rs. Gwendolyn
McKinney, 'J:l, of 829 Townsend St .. Santa
Ana, went out of control. . 1lie beavily-Jadea car c•eeoed acroM
the unguarded divider !trip an d
sideswiped a northbound car driven by
Edward Scott Jr .• 43, of Inglew~.
Two other cars became involved in the
crashes as their drivers tried to avoid the
two autos in the initial collision. No one
was injured in those two cars.
Patrolmen gave th L<i: list of the injured:
-In the McKinney car, Mrs. P.1c1{in-
ney; ~frs. Ida Nani Stevens, 33. or 21282
Lemon Tree Lane, f{utington Beach; her
children, Larry, 11, \and .Brenda, 10: twin
children or 1ttrs. McKinney, William and
Wi.IUe Mae, 9. All of the injuries were
severe, but not critical, oftlcers said.
-In the Scott Vehicle, the driver.
~Edward Scott, who suffered major frac-
tures and back injuries; his wife, Amy,
ti; Annette &oil, II; Ralph Scott, JI,
and Gall Scott, 15. Al1 the injured were taken to an
Oceanside hospital for treatment.
The specific cause of the dash was still
under tn-..esligaUon, patrolmen said. They
added they still were tryine to determine
the .e:xact reason for the McKinney car's
sudden swerve across the clogged
freeway.
National Auto
·Deaths Hit 59 ~;
Under Estiinate
By United Press International
The death ·count in the· fouMay
Thanksgiving· holiday weekend !inlslied
under the National 5alety Coqncl1'1 mlrnat• of ao to 120 killed, a mw
United Press International count ahowtd
today.
Tht. UPI count showed 595 persons kill-
ed in traffic since the 102-hour weekend
began at 6 p.m. Wednesday. It ended at
midnight Sonday.
Last yeat111 Thanksgiving holiday toll 1 was 651.
A breakdown of acckfental deaths:
Traffic 595 ; fires 62: planes 26: other
49. Total 1'32. . r'
Califor nia repor~c d~~lhs. New York had 32, Florida and IS3ls-
sipi· 30 tach, and Ohio, Georgia, Jlihols
and Michigan· 28 each.
only Al$ab, MaiiNI and !be Dbtrlct of
Columbia reJ)Orted no traffic deatru:.
/
weight belt and tank~ and started lo
surface. He blacked out on the way and
up said he regained consciousness on the
surfact. He then swam to shore and col-
lapsed.
Chanters Lack
Permit, Lose
•
Worship Site
The chanting throb or the East and the
musical drama of the West met SUnday
afternoon in Laguna Beach, J>nlY to be
Pulled quietly apart by the police.
The musical ranurung of heads at the Fe~_tival grouns was halted when il was
learned that the East -some 30 Hare
Krishna chanters -did not have a permit
to use the facilities.
T he Kr!Sliiia merilbers were sent llome,
but the We:;t -the Lyrk: Opera Associa-
tion of Orange County-played on in the"
F<.l_rum theater, rehearsing "Madame
Butterrty'' ind "La Boheme."
-, By JOHN VALTERZA
Of tile DlllY "lltf Slltf
When the Japanese Embassy in WaaJt..
ington, D.C., calls to reserve ~ roomt
al a San Clemente motel -arid no one
has been told in advance -clerks be..
come concerned.
When such a call came into the San
Clemente Inn Friday, the stair asked a
top-level Pi'eiidentlal adle If tbTciD wli
a hoax .
It wasn't, but it was embarra~ine:
nonetheless. •
. .The news of the President's meeting
with Japanese-Pr~ :~inistt:r Elsaku
Sato was not to have been announced
until later. .
And apparently, the Japanese jumped
the gun.
Sources gave the account of the reser--
v~tion snafu and indications were thaj
Siturday's offiClal an{K>Uflcement. of the
historic Sato visit Jan. 7 and 8 at th•
Western White House was made mucb
sooner than or-iginally~p1anned--
Other announcements over the weekend
·a1so came witbout warning, including de-
tails of the departure for Washington.
The holiday stay by the President and
First Lady ended Sunday -sooner than Grouhds officials Carl Callaway said
the chanters, who had set .up candles, an
tlltor ai)d nip OD the upper lemct of tho
jounds, were distl,U'bing the opera
rtbeanal and had to leave.
, , T • ·-"<""t originally ezpecled.
O\ln.Y' rn..OT .,.,,.,.. Earlier plans bad called for ·the Presl-50 MILES OF TOGETHERNESS FOR FOUNTAIN VALLEY FAMILY dent to remain in San Clemeijle until
Peter Bouwens WJth Hi_1 Chil_dren, Andy, 9; 1nd Helen, 12 ~ Tues~ay or. ~edntSday, bttt at~ He noted that the opera association had
ptrmlsiion -and had paid -to use the
theater. The Krishna sect members had
neither applied for nor obtained the.
~ry permit from city and festival
authorities, he said.
~ morning br1e!mg Sunday Presa Secretary
Ron Ziegler announced lhe President
"We have to know y;ho uses the
racilities." Calloway said, "because we
don't -want-one . to interfert with the
other."
-Youih Wins Laguna Hike;
Krishna leaders told authorities they
wanted to use the grounds for their
regular Sunday religious c e r e m o n Y
becil.use theY bad no where else to go.
The sect members were recently ordered
by a Superior Court j u d g e to stop con-
ducting public Sunday services at their
temple, 641 Ramona Ave .• because of
noise compllftnts received f r o m
neighbors.
20. ·Finish 50-mile Cou1·se
Laguna Burglars
Net Over $1,000
During Weekend
L~oll: Beach resident s and
buslnessrhen reported the loss to burglars
of more than $1,000 in merchandise and
cash over the weekend.
Police said one of Ute victims was Van
King, of 409 Jasmine St., producer of the
J971 Festival of Issue.,,. King told police
he returned home from a trip Saturday
and discovered his $200 stereo missing.
investigators said entry was made
through an unlocked window.
By · FREDERICK. SCHOEMEHL
Of flit dlK~ .. li.t Stiff
For seven hours and 25 minutes Satur-
day 15-ytar-old James. Reilly of La Habra
did "nothing but run" to become the 197l
winner of the ninth annual SO.mile bike in
Laguna Beach .
Young Reilly, a member of both the
er@ country and track. team at La
11abra High School, left thl! starting point
at 5:20 a.m. rounded the first 25 mile lap
in three hours, 21 minutes and completed
the entire 50 miles at 12:45 p.m.
''Gosh, my feet feel heavy." Reilly ex-
claimed on completing the course -
down Pacific Coast Highway, through the
hills in Laguna Niguel into Leisure World
thtn back Into Laguna Beach.
"I thought I'd never get over those
hills. One after another for miles," the
youthful track buff commented. After
resting a while, he left with bis father to
get "a nice big hamburger, some french
fries and root beer."
Marty uger, lS,'of 127 Emerald &y.
took s nd place with a time of 7:57. Bill
Grav , 15, of Garden Grove follOftd him 7 i a time o~ 7:f>8.
The longest time for the 50 miles was
logged by Richard Parker. 15, of 465 W.
Third St.~ Tustin, who spent 14 hours, SI
minutes on the route. He started at 5:2.'J
a.m. ·and ran the 1a!t step at 8:14 p.m.
Bruce Bailey, leader of the Search and
Rescue Post 717 which sponsored the
hike, said that !Kl people entered this
year's event with 20 completing the en-
. tire SO miles.
. Most of the 60 persons who didn't .com-
plete the 50 miles, he said, dropped out
after the first 25 miles. •·we gave rides to
about 12 people who pooped out on tf)e
route,·• Bailey said.
"There were no injuries except for a
case of stomach cramps and lots of
blisters." he added.
The· oldest biker was Laguna Beach
physician Dr. Thaddeus Jones, 620 Glen-
neyre St. The 47-year-old Jones com-
pleted the 50 miles in 8:57.
The Search and Rescue Post will hold a
banquet Saturday at 1 p.m. at St. Mary's
Episcopal Church ·Guild Hall (or those'
who completed the hike. Medals will be
awarded them .
Two -women residents, Ella Santos al)d
Frances Ruma, both or 2859 Terry Road,
reported the loss or $900 in stereo equip-
ment, jewelry and furnishings . Police
said the thief ent~d the home by forc-
ing open a locked window.
Clerk's Mistake ·Cited
In two related crimes, officers said an
unknown suspect Friday night sro'ashcd
the front door windows and entered l\\'O
different businesses in a Laguna Canyon
office complex. Police said officials at
Pacific Heating Company , 2175 Laguna
Canyon Road, reported the loss of $12 to
In U.S. Market Fright
the thief. ,
Next door at 2171 Laguna Caeyon Road,
National Auto Glass Company officials
said the office was entered bu! ap-
parently nothing was taken.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A $400 million
clerical error by the Federal Reserve
Board was acknowledged today as the
cause of a big fright in the government
securities marke~ last week.
The financial community fouod money
30 tight in the banking system that the
market sagged for treasury securities,
until the Federal Reserve's mOney
manager11 became aware of the problems
T F II last Frklay. · , eenager -~ s The finl victim O! the error WH the
0 S iked R d system'& own open market committee, n p· 0 wbicb governs the now o( money into the
banking system by Us buying and selling
A prowl beneath a Corona del.~lar cliff-of-federat...aecuriUes-.
top bome .. under constructlon ended in Thinking there was $400 million more
agoliy for an Anaheim teenager who fell cash in the vaults of the banking system
Saturda y! lmpalin' his thigh on a spear-than was thtre, the committee was stingy
like stee reinforcing rod. about adding funds to the money supply.
LyM Beason. ta. wn:,,ulfed·free of the The re.Wit was a sharp rise In the in·
concrete-strengthening rod al 2709 Cove terest rate which banks pay one another
St, by witnesses before Newport Buch for short-tenn funds, and a eeneral
police and liremen arrived. scarcity of Investment money available
Beason wa1 taken to Hoag Mel't\(l'"!'l for the purchase of about $8.1 billion
•Hospital by ambulance, where he ls llsled · worth of bUls being o(fered by the
la faJr CoildiUon today after getting the Treasury during the week. .
stvert RW1clure-patched up wltholit re· Tht Treasury ther~Jore had to pay
quiring surgery, moro lntemt than tt ofherwtse would
..
have done. No es timate was immediately
available on th.e ultimate cost to the
government.
A Federal Reserve spokesman said the
error was not • misjudgment in
estimating, simply a clerical eri'or in
rtparting the estimated .. vault-cash"
among the reserves of the banking
system and governs the volume of funds
they can lend.
Pay Signing Ended
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -_Professors
at state colleges no lon~er have to sign
for their pay by staling they really
did the teaching work they were assign-
ed. The state college trustees tod ay
abolished the controversial requirement
which the professors resented a s
humlllat\ng. · -
A watchdog measure, It was approved
last May, 1~ months aher a state
college professor was fired f o r
"moonJlghUng" at one colle·ge while a
1rad 1tudent taught one of his . dally er ......
planned lo Jeave that afternoon at 4
o'clock.
The announcement came3 tati0ut the
same time as news of the assaS!inaUoa
of Jordanian Premier Wasfi Tel on the
steps of a Cairo Hotel.
-The President's att.ention earlier in the
stay was on American football, but soon
after the holiday it switched to tntema..
tional issues -lhe pending trip to Peking
and the five conferences with world
leaders.
the Chief Executive forsook bis tradi-
tional golf cart for lhe short trip from
his home to the waiting helicopter Sun-
day afternoon.
He rode in a car,'instead,
Appearing jaunty and in good spirits
Mr. Nixon swUtly greeted Coast Gua~
officers, then wheeled and strode swiftly
to the chopper.
As he negotiated the ladder he brisk·
ly skipped several steps in his haste-ht
board .
Signals Shut Off
In South Laguna
Early morning commuters in the South
Laguna area ran into traffic snarls today
when short circuits, apparently caused by
rain. resulted in an areawide electric
blackout th a t included traffic signal
lights.
A spokesman for the San Diego Gas
and Electric Company, which serves
most of the Sooth Laguna area, said the
blackout started at 5:57 :1.m. but most of
the affected cable poles were back, tn
service in 45 .minutes, the rest within an
hour.
Sher Ir f·'-s deputies directed traf-
fic until the signals were restored to
operation. ..
Oruge
Wea,.er
Skies will be ~<loudy and
temperatures a cons t 65 Tues-
day, with more showing over
the Oranie cout. Overnight lows
are tabbed at 00 d~•·
INSIDE 'J'ODAL
UC Irvine and privatt fnter·
tstl art planning a ;otnt venture '
to f orm a nc.donallV f amous
medical complt~ tn Ora nge
County by 1974. Storu Page 10.
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·'
J! DAil Y PU.OT SC • -------Official Burle~
• ' ~ .··.:· :. . .. ·. '
~MAN (UPI) -, Jgr<Jp.r:ii~n Premier
Wain Tel, .assassinated Sunday in Cairo ·
by tour Palastinlan guerflllas, was bu~iect:
t.oday to I.he sound of a ·11 . gun &aliife.
King Hussein named a moderate to sue-.
ceecL.hjm but brought !~ 8 tough line or-
Hcial u.tUJ nat3onal.&ecLi.rity adviser.
Tel1 ll bated_ bi Ult gu~rrill8'' for
ordmng the Jordanian army to crush
their revolt last summer, was killed by
City Leaders
Fight Red Tape
. ' .
In U.S. Meet
HONOLULU (UPI) -Top municipal
leaden from around the nation thrashed
out some .touchy policy decisions today
while a b3ttle emerged for the presidency
of the National League·or-Cltie!.
So!Jle 2,500 mayors, rouncilmen and
other cJty officials w'ere attending the
48th annual congress Of.cities, believed to
be the largest .ever in the history of the
National League oI Citie.s. · "'
A reSolutJon .calling-tor the-abolition Of
private owner.ship .of band guns was a tn o n I: U>e lllO!t controversial items
under aisCussion. Mayor Roman S.'
Gribbs of · Detroit,.· Chalrrnin or -the
ltague'i Public Safety Commfttee. pfans·
"" present the resolution whi~h contatns·
two suggesions.:. for ··c\irbing ptivite
QWnership ol hand guns.
Norman·· Mtner, special· assistant .to
Gribbs, .&aid ·~The reSCllution proposes a
etiange~iri the wot.ding ·or the second
amendment to the cot1stituUon so· that 'Ute rlght of the people-to. keep and bear
Urns' is..changed to tfie right of th.e ~
jlt to k~ and bear long guns."
....: .. !lbe • U$Olution . ·~"' :makes · &"1\ alternative suggestion · tha.t . the priv~~
vwnersbip of hand· .guns ·be diminish~
Virougb a federal :statuk: ·stemming froril
-,.
-fOur bullets as he stepped from his car a~
a .Oalm-:hotd on the banks of the Nile
follo>Ving a lunch·oon with Abdel Khlilek
H!siuiia, -secrefary:general of the Arab
League.
Munzi Solelman Khalifa, 23, leader of
the fuu.r ~in dea~ squad, told .UPI Cor-
-reseo.nden~ Mauric1e _Gu1ndi in Cairo that
Tel 's death was only the fir.It of a series
or murders intended lo eliminate
~vrcyone wti<> has 9pposed the cause of
the Palestine g}lerrillas in the Arab" --...,_ .. ···' ,.. world.
Khalifa raised his hand in the V for vic-
tQry. ~ige and· said, "We have t..aken' bur
revensa ,on .a lraitor." .. He said he had
driuik . TOl's blOQd . after the ohOOtlng .to
eiriJ)hasizt his hilred of the man.
Hussein nariled. Deputy Premier Ahmed
Al·Lawzl, 50, as prime .• ninister to suc·
ceed Tel. and gave him the portfolio of
defease minister, a job also he!~ by Tel.
PollUcal sources Said Al·La"'zi Was con·
side.red unbiased and nue tral on Pal~sli·
nil.In· guerrilla matters. .
·The .sources said Al-Lawzi was -not
knOwn for ·his strong· character and sug·
ie$~ his new cabiJ!et may be merely a
caretaker one." Wke
1
Tel, Al-Lawzi is a
Bedouin. He ·had served as chief or p~
toobl at the king's court and was chief of
the cotirt. ·
: Hui!ein-. named . ~Ormer I n t e r i o r
M~ Mob.a.mined RisouJ AI-Kilani as
his adViser 'pn n.ttonal security affairs.
AJ·Ki1ant has the h:)>Utatlon~ of &.ing
tough toward the guerrillas, a suggestion
that Hu'Ueln's awn toogh stand would not
change. · · · · ·
Ami· Moasher, rh.iiilster of transport,
toOk CVer Al·l.:aWti'iipost as minister Of nnance: · : ..
. ~ .le~d~r ~r ~~ g~~~ that k_lll~ Tel
sai<fttie ·pr1me rrun1ster was mur~ered tG
avl!ngt the declth of a· .Palestinian guer·
r11tit'-captain Jn J6rdan, polle! sources
Said. ·. . . .
•
Facing Senators
Romana Acosta Banuelos; .46, a native or Miami, Ariz., is aJlpearing
before the Senate Finance Corrlmittee today on her nomination· to be
U.S. Treasurer. She faced congressional questioning on why she al-
lowed illegal Mexica n aliens to work at her food plant in Gardena.
She is shown with Sen. Alan Cranston (D·Calif.), who acted as a char·
acter witness in her ~ehalf. Story Page 4.
Police Use Mace to Seize
Three in Clemente Brawl
Police ustd · lhe chemical mace to 1ub-
due th.rte San Clemente brothers after an
alleged-assault on a lone police officer
who wu dls21tched Saturday to stop the
three from fighting each other.
The melee began, officers said, when
neighbors called to report a fight going
on among Manuel Morales, 24, Rojelio
Morales, 22, and Rafael, 21.
The incident took place at 11 p.m. on
the lawn of an apartment at 317 Cabrillo.
As officer Louis Graham arrived,
reports said, he was Pushed -and shoved
by the three men and a neighbor phoned
police !or assistance for the officer.
Two other officer! arrived and subdued
the three men inside an apartment.
The three brothers were booked on
charges of disturbing the peace and
assault on a police officer. They posted
bond the following day, police said.
Ma~uel and Rafel Morales live at 266
Calle Victoria, Apt. D. Rojelio lives at the
apartment where the arrests: took place,
police said.
All three men already await court ·aC:-
tion in another alleged assaul t go-a
Marine several weeks ago. That incident
assertejl.ly took plac~ after a pool game
at a SouttWjl: Can!i'io Real bar. officers
said. The Yrctim was hospitalized.
•
Tnr Studied
Wast~· Controls
' A proposed new WBste ·management tax
will be up for consldel'l.tiol\ by the
Laguna Bea-ch city coum:ll Wednesd•y
night, and ma~_be ad&pted a1 an urgency
measu·re, whiCh Would nfake it effective
immediately.
AdoptiOn as an urgency measure, which
requires a four-fifths coullcil vote,
eliminates the · normal. ordinance pro-
cedure of two ~ings al¥i a 3G-day wait
before the law "goeS into' if feet. Tne w8Sle -~
management would qualify as a measure
)Qvolving revenue. ,
Under th ...... program prepar~ ·-b)i c1iy
South Laguna
General Plan ·
To Be Shown
The recently completed general plan
fo; South Laguna will be presented for
public scrutiny Monda)r.,at an open
mel:ting of the South l.4gllna Ovic
Association.
The plan, prepared under the guidance
of ' landscape architeet Fred Ung, will
SJOrJ to presented to county supervisors
for official consideration and adoption.·
n approved, ·the land ·use plan would
allow for "rewnlng the entire unifl..
corporated area of South Laguna for an
ultjmate population ol 10,000.
·As presently zooed. ·Lang and his
associates have· speculated that the
population of the J,400 acre area rould·
reach 68,000. The popula tion is now about
4,000 .
manager Lawrence ROse, payment of the
waste ril&nagement tax woold' be man·
datory (Or ..all property owner! a11d .tht
tax would be set each year by resolution,
asking it possibly to adapt the amOunt l.G
changing costs.
It would consist of a base tax of $1.50 a
month per parcel of land, plus a
sUrcharg__e · as property is developed.
Resideiltl.af' surchl!_rges: Would be $2 for
the first sittgle-family-unit plus $l for
each additional family unit up to five.
The commercl,al-residential charge for
hotels, motels, apartments and residen-
tial parcels having more than. six· family
units would be $1 -pei: unit. Commercial
surcharge would be $1 for each separate
business occup.lincy and industrial charge
would be $3.50 for e8ch separate building.
An exemption of 50 percent of the
surcharge Is provided for each residential
unit in ·which · a. -waste ·compa.ct'or is in·
stalled.
The proposed tax would replace genefal
fund .assessm.enls for sanitation or other
waste.r_nan_agemeot costs. now amounting
to 23 cents pe'r ,~}00 of assessed valuation.
The tax wotild be billed birnonthly and
co!lected by the city to pay the costs of
the new w a s·t e management system, '
principally the collector of refuse wh~
will contract with the city under the new
agreement. Provision is 'made for
penalties on delinquent bill payment
which could lead eventually to a lien
against the delinquent property.
Jury Selection
In Co~st Man'~·
Fraud Trial Set .
Jury selectiOn began today in the
Orange County Superior Court frawd ti-ial
of a Newport Beach businessman and his
lawyer partner in an insurance.enterprise
which authorities allege bilked several in-
vestors of an estimated $160,000.
--_. act orCoDgress •.. ·: .. --. · ---=-
~ Mlyor John V •. -Lindsay of .New . Yor~
ea.me out in favor of the resolution~~un+
iay. saying "Gun cont,rol is abscl~telr
Wsential." He Niil, 11Coniress m.u.1 ~
move on this. This mayors" coovention
wausf pyat\ ·\l.-'-1• :: • •••• : .t. :;~.::, ~·The question ol who witl·be..aext years
~esident of the league has attr:act~
much attention.
' Tel wa.S-h3fed' by-the ·Palestinian guer·
rillas fol-ordering tile army to crush
ttitir rtvOlf this -Suhurier. He died trying
to get 1iiS-OWil 'gtin ·oot ·to fight baCk. ·
"lfiisSeln, ~rmea-·1nllis Uniform a8
Slijn:tne ~riuriabder · of the ai'med
fGl'Celi, .8. red and white kaffiya headdress
and a blaC:k armband, led 1,500 mourners
to the cemetery atop one of the city'1
Manson Given
Life Sentence
In Shea Slaying
Leslie Sentelle
Services Slated __ .
Lang feels th~t uncontrGlled develop-
ment of the area ·should not be allowed
for a number of reasons, one of which is
that two earthquake faults .run through
tt1e community. The ··'holding capacity,.
of the land. hE! has said In dl&.cusslng the
plan. is based on seismic considerations,· '
sewage treatment arid water limitations
and_ a desire to pr~serve the existing
South Laguoa envirqnmenl.
Judge Lester Van Tate:nho9"e ordered
selection of a panel this moriiing after re.
jecting pretfial motion's whiCh included
the precedent-setting argument by defen·
dant.s Ralph K. Benware, 39. of 411 15th
SI., and ·orang-e attorney Richard
Murphy, 41, that Orange County's jury
system.does not g\Jarantee the inclusion
~ NormaDy,.,the first Viet president oC the
league s~ps up to lhe.:.Jftsidency: 1tl• this year the succels'lon iS in dOubt.
)tayor Loute . Welch · of Houston._ w~
would 11ormally -become-,the . pres~ent!
faces a runoff election for mayor at home
ind wa1 unable· to-attend-the congress.
Be would be ~i.Tieliglble to .iirve it beaten l>Ut the runoff' ·Is not ·for --&. couple of ~eeks and. the. leajue: is holding its elec~
tions Wednesday.
Laguna .. Police
' .
.,
,Slate Auction
< ,. Bicycles, ]ewelry aod s u rf boar d s
mates up the ''loot" that will be a:uC.
tiooed off by the Laguna . Beach Police
SeVl!n hllls: ·
: ·A:21:gun ta1tltlfti38Jlr.ed a1 T~l's coffin
waS 10Wer.ed lnto ~the· gtave.·Hl! widO\f
stood nearby, "dressed in a black ankle·
le~ngth drfS;S-. Only.~ r~w feet away was
Uili! .gr\_yr, cif Mussein'1 grandfatht!r , King A\Xrullali.~Wh<t .Wa1 l'ssassinated Jn 1951.
\Foreign M"iri.iStef Abdullah S a I a h
Jimp'.ed 'tG the graveside, ·the result or a
slight wound he suffered at Tel's side
durltig'lhe assassination.
Artet a' 30..miliute private se rvice at the
royal palace mosque , Tel's coffin, draped
black, red., white and grei:;n Jo~da·
a,. was cari:ied on a gun carriage
to h1Utop'cemetery.
.
Irvine Heiress
Speaks ·Against
Ciiyhood at UCI
Departm'ent Dec. IJ-at lf):30e.m. ----·ReiresS-Jo'iJllrvine Smith will appear
According to Det . George Plelts, the . . . -department. over lbe past year, has ac· (Jn the UC I_rv1ne ca~pus Tuesday, Dec.
cumulated 35 bicycles, several surfboards 1, to speak 1n, opp<1sit1on to the proposed
and scores or rings and watches. "We've incorporation ot--the city or Irvine.
also got a lot or odds and ends tha t we Mrs. Smith has accepted an invitation
haven't sorted through yet,'' Pletls ad-from the Associated Students of UCI ded. · The annual pre-Christmas sale will (ASUCI J to address students and in-
begin with lime for prospective buyers to terested members of the public at noon
look over the merchandise. followed by on that date in the Science Lecture Hall.
the auction itself. A spokesman for the Irvine heiress said
J1c\ •• cu,1..,
'41 ,,..'""' .,,. "-'' MWfW
today, "We hope all the registered voters
in the Irv ine area will come to hear what
she has to say." The incorporatlon elec·
tion is scheduled Dec. 21.
In previous statements to the press,
-Mrs. Smith has vigorously opposed in·
corporation of the new city at this time,
maintaining it could result in creatio'n ()f
''a giant slum," through whG!esale JI.
qaidation of Irvine lands to help the
Irvine Foundation meet its econom.Jc
obl igations.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charles
~fanson, already under a death sentence
for the seven Sharon Tate murders, was
given life imprisonment today by a jury
which convicted him of the murders of a
stuntman and a musician two years ago."
Jn the Tate case, Manson was given
eight death sentences. including one Jor
conspiracy in the seven August 1969
slaylngs. Three female co-defendant!' also
were convicted and 1entenced to death
for the Tate slayings.
Today's verdict was on two counts of
murder and one of conspiracy.
Manson, 37, one time leader of a
•·family" of wandering hippie types, was
found guilty Nov. 2 of the slayings: ()f
Gary Hinman, a Malibu musician. and
Donald "Shorty" Shea. a sometime n:iovie
stuntman wh<ise body never has been
found.
Hospital Board
Directors 1Va1ned
Four more members have been named
to the board oC di rec_t.or s of Sad·
dleback Community Hospital. which is
now being C<Jnstructed in Laguna Hills.
The new directors brjng the total board
membership to 17.
They are V. P. Baker of Newport
Beach, president ()f Balboa Oil Company;
Dr. Lydja Deane of Laguna Hills, a
retired p~chiatrist: Dr. Allen Howard o(
Laguna Hills, a urology-professor at the
UC Irvine school ()f medicine, and
Bernard · Ingram ()f Laguna Hills,
chairman of the board of~ Burlingame
Surgical Md Hospital Equipment Com·
pany of San Diego.
The fi()()..bed, non.profit fa cility is
scheduled for completion in mid-1973..
n;,,.,, A. Mvrplrti11• ·
MIMSI~ Efll'Ot
Ch•rl11 H, l oot llitJ.11"1 r. H11J
A1111t.1nl Mt""lflQ t:••!tt•
L .. 1111• ._. Offlc•
·Caspers Money Raiser
I
22? f Oft ll ... Vt llU•
Mt1tla111cllllr111: r.o. t oe '''• f2612
S...C ...... Offlt• aos N•ttli 11 Camlfto R.·1.t, fl672 .,,.,.._.
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•
Slated in Westminster
Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W.
Casper! of Newport Beach is throwing a
SIOO.a-hea4 fund r.11lsl.ng party Tuesday
night · in lhe Ha1Penny Inn In
\Yestminster , which he owns.
Tom Fuentes, executive assistant to
Caspers, said today that about 300 ln·
vita.lions had been maUed last week ind
that ".Jhe re sporlse -has been wonderful."
r·uentes s1id he could noL yet estlmate
lhr number of guests who will gather al
the $:30 lo ft p.m. cocktail reception billed
aS' "Celebrating a year of Orange County
'P:rO(l'eSll with the -honorable Ronald W.
Caspers." ,
"I v.·ould make a wild guess that there
v.•ill be more than 200 persons there,''
.fo'uent,s .sa.id today. ·
Caspers si..iged another fund raising
party last March -I $1.IJGO a( c1ple din·
ner at the Chei Ciry in Orang .• TMt ar.
!1lr become highly ptJbllelzt when It
WIS d.ltcloied--\hlt·lht IU!)'rYt:Ktr't orfice
'· ,
,.
11..&ff had used the county po&tage meter
to mall the lnvitations.
Caspers, who just a few days beklre
bad urged economy in county po,stage
procedures, apologiied calling it, "a
clerk's error." He reimbursed the stimp
fund for the $3.18 expended.
His short career on the board bas be.en
marked with financial news.
Caspers reportedly spent a record
$81,695 on his eleetie>n campaign In whJch
he unseated incumbent Alton Allen of
Laguna Beach in the June primary in
1970. The sum is four times more than
the greatest amount spent previously ln
an Orange County 1upltvisorlal cam·
palgn:
Caspers admitted contriboling $46,984
or his own money to the campaign. He Is
the former pre!!ident and now ch11\rman
of I.he board of Keystone St.villas and
Loan Auociation with oUices t n
Westminster and Anaheim-. . ' .
Funeral ~rvices. will be held.at 10 a.'!]l_.
Tuesday for longtime Laguna Beach resi-
dent Leslie c. Sentelle. woo · died
Thanksgiving Day at her home. She was
70 ..
Mr's. Sentelle, a member or the First
Congregational Church, came to Laguna
Beach In 1925 and was employed ror 36
years by the Laguna Beach Water
District.
The services will be conducted in •
McCormick Mortuary Cha pel by the Rev.
Philip pregory of the First Congrega·
tional Church. Burial will follow at the
Fl. Rosecrans Nationa l Cemetery atop
Point Loma in San Diego. •
Mrs. Sentelle, who lived at 709 Canyon·
View Drive, Is survived by a daughter,
Mrs. Margery Newcomb; three brothers,
Lewis Field of Vista, Eugene Field of
Escondido and Marshall Field of La
Jolla; three granddaughters .and three
greal granddaughters.
L;iguna BeaCti school of.fjcials have
given official support to the plan. Lang
has determined that one more ·elemen-
tary school might ·be. "req uired for the
.area and has determined that ·()nly-one
plot of ground~ exists in fht commu"liity
flat enough tln which 'to build ·a 9cb6old. "sdUth' (agiinB: is '"a · beautirur area,"
says association prssident Jo Flttcher,
"and we are .. striving to1 keep -it .that
way ." ~ · · ', • ' ·
The plan presentation will be held at
7:30 p.m. at the MethOOist Church, 21632
Wesley Drive.
Anaheim Driver Dies
After .Auto Accident
A·nabeim motorcyclist James W.
Wright was fatally injured -early today
when he crashed into a parked car on
Katella Avenue, east of Gacden Drive.
Police said Wright , 27, -0f 10070 S.
Gilbert St., Anaheim, died at S·a.m. tn
t.he Orange County Medical Cent.er
following the l a.m. mishap. ·
of busitressrnen in the jury. .. _
Judge Van Tatenhove has rejected the
'th~ry . that it ·was v'ital for both def en·
dants,:111'~tle'.{_of th~' nature of grand
theft aild sta'.te insurance cOde violation
chai:ges against them, to . h a v e
busiilessmen in the jury box.
He also rejected motions for a change
of· venue and continuance of the trial.
Charges against both men were filed
more than a year ago.
Benware and Murphy were accused in
an Orange County Grand Jury indictment
of unlawfully diverting funds from the
Casualty Insurance Company to satisfy
the demands of inyeStors in the Ca lilor·
nia Cadticeus Company.
Benware and Murphy were the govern-
ing officers in both enterprises. They
were riamed in a series of civil suits filed
against their operation! before criminal
charges were brought against them by
the District Attorney's office.
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San Cle111enie
· ~~istran0-ED I TI ON
-\'.OL 6-4, NO. 2as, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES
' •
a an
Near Onofre Vnit
-
. ~an -Diegan Dies
In F·iery Crash
'
A fiery, headon crash SO.nday afternoon
along an unguarded stretch of freeway
ne8r the San Onofre Nuclear Gerierati.ng
Station claimed the life of a 20-year-old
woman,. from San Diego and injured 11
other perso~ -most or the,m children.
H~ghway patrolm~n said the 12:40 p.m.
collision tied up already congested holi-
day traffic for hours._
The dead woman was Sandra Scott, a
passenger in her uncle's auto which burst
into name after being sidesv.iped by a
station wagon that went out of control.
Patrolmen said the mishap \Vas caused
when the station wagon carrying to
persons and driven by f.1rs. Gwendolyn
McKinney, 27, of 829 Townsend St., Santa
Aria, went out of control.
The heavlly-taden car careened across
the unguarded divider strip a n d
sideswiped a northbound car driven by
Edward ScotLJr., 43, of Inglewood.
Two other cars became involved in the
crashes as their drivers tried to avoid the
two autos in the Initial collision. No one
was injured in those two cari.
Patrolmen gave this list of the injured:
'-In the McKinnty Cir, fdrt. McKin-
ney; ,Mrs. lila ·Nani ~evem, 33, of 211.82:
Lemon Tree Lane, HuUnaton Beach; her
children, Latty, 11, ind l!cenda, 10; twin
children of Mrs. McKinney, Willlam arid
Willie Mae, 9. AH of the injuries were
severe, but not critical, officers said.
-ln the Scott Vehicle. the driver,
Edward Scott, who suffered major frac-
tures and back injuries: hir wife, Amy,
41; Annette Scott, 14; Ralph Scott, 11,
and Gail Scott, 15. ·
.All the injured were taken to an
Capo Schoolmen
To Set Override
Election Tonigl1t
1be election da,te, amount and duration
of a la1 override will be set by TnlstteS
of the Capistrano Unified School District
at tonight's meeting.
The SO-cent tai: qvcrride now in effect
in the district expires June 30.
Trustees in' recent weeks have discuss-
ed the pos:iibility of a three-year duration
for their nelt override request. But the
date of the election and the amount to be
requested has not yet been detennlned.
Superintendent Truman Benedict ha.s
st&ed that be at least would need the
same 50 cent level to continue the same
quality of servicts now provided. He was
asked by the board to make a specific
recoinmendation 1t tonight's I p.m.
meeting in Serra School, Capistrano
Beach. ~
Charle' Dargan, who served as
chairman of the citizen's committee for
tbe last override two years ago, sug-
sested during a recent study session that
the figute requested be one that .,,.;11 be
realistic in view of the district's growth.
He pointed out that a new high school
will be ope'*1g nett year and opening a
new elementary school might beeomt
necessary in the ~car future .
Oceanside hospital for treatment.
The specific cause of the crash was :itill
under investigation, patrolmen,.atd. They
add® they still .were trying to detennlne
the exact reason for the McKinney car's
sudden swerve across the clogged
freeway.
Wall Street
Scare Linked
To Mistake
WASHINGTON (AP) -A $400 million
clerical .error by the Fedel-at Re serve
~Board was acknowledged today as lbe
cause of a big fright in the government
securities markets last week.
Tbe financial community found money
so tight in the banking system that the--
. market J88ged for treasiiry securities,
until tht Federal Reserve's money
managers became aware of the problems
lu t Friday.
The first victim or the error was the
system's own open market committee,
whic:h governs the flow or money into the
banking system by its buying and selling
of federal .s~itles.
Thinking &here was $400 million more
cash in the vaults or the banking system
than was there, the rommittee was stingy
about adding ·funds to the m<1ney supply.
The result was a sharp rise in the in-
terest rate whic:h banks pay one another
for short·tenn funds, and a general
scarcity of investment money available
for the purchase of about $8:1 billion
worth or bills being offered by the
Treasury during the week.
The Treasury therefore had to pay
more interest than it otherwise would
have done. No estimate was Jmmediately
available on the ultimate cost to the
government.
A Federal·Reserve spokesman said the
error was not a misjudgment in
estimating. simply a clerical error in
reporting the estimated "vault cash"
among· the reserves of the banking
system and governs the volume of funds
they can lend. ·
Help Line Sets
Pot Luck Feast
The Saddleback Valley tlinisterial
Association, sponsor of'the area's "Help
Line,'' will host a pot luck supper Thurs· ....
day at 6:30 p.m. ••
The event, will be held in the social hall
of St. George's Episcopal Church, 23801
Paseo de Valencia. The-guest speaker for
the evening will be Dr. John Gilfillan, 1
professor of psychiatry at the Unlversity
or Southern Ca1i(ornia. .
Further information about the supper
may be obtained from Kay Gerti at 830·
9424.
Cap_o Trustees Eye Vote ,
By District for College
Trustees ot the Clpistrano tJni!ied
School District are expected to pas1 a
strongly worded resolution tanigh~urging
the rulure election of Saddleback College
Trustees by district
Reacting to what some trustees believ-
ed was a "snub" on the part of the Sad·
dleback officials, the Capistrano board
will again request that the college
trusties adopt a plan whereby they will
be elet:ted by district Ins tead of at-large,
Capistrano Unlfied 's board made a
similar request six monUts ago. The
reSolution was not formani_ acknowledg-
ed and no acUon was taken •.
nte board had asked Ow Saddleback
1roup to m11ke a study of the proctdure
used for their election In view ol rapid
growth In tbe ooutJ!enf pert of Ibo 1$lltge
41stricL.
.r"·
But last week Capistrano board
members complained that In the past sit
months the only Sadclleback response was
the mailing of sialistical charts.
And Trustee Bob Dahlberg, angry at
receiving nothing else, said he could not
understand the charts ..
; pah1berg won unanimous concurrence
from fellow trustees of a plan to altend
the Dec. 13 Saddleback trustee meeting
en masse. even though I.be Capistrano
board has a meeUhg on the same night.
The trustees agreed they would adjourn
'lhelr nieeting Wly and all attend Sad--
dleback.
The college trustees a~ currently
elected atil~rge, even though they are
from 1peclfid \districts. The Capistrano
Unllltd<BoardJs electedJrom districts by
the people wttbin those same·erea
ORANGE.COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER' ~9, "197(
s ews-n
OAIL '( Pl LOT Slf lf Pl!tllt
-!>RESIDENT NIXON PREPARES TO_LEAVE SAN CLEMENTE AFTER 4-DAY HOLIDAY
Chief ExecutiYe Heads Towa rd Hel icopter at Loran Coast Gu1 rd Station Sunday •
Nixon Meeting Top Allies
Won't Sacrifice ·Oltl Frie~ for Chir!a, Amity
\\'ASIIJNGTON (AP) -President Nix·
Qn, expected to announce a dale for· his
China trip within 48 hours, is described as
eager to ease East-West tensions -but
not at the expense of old fr iendships.
Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
a desire to have meaningful consultations
with major allies prior to journeys to
Peking and Moscow was a key reason for
Nixon's announced ~ntentions to meet
during the next five weeks with leaders
of Britain, France, West Germany, Japan
Talking to a group of newsmen aboard
Air Foret One as the President fiew here
Sunday 1light f;om Calllornia, Ziegler
said :
"The purpose of the consultations ts to
inform our allies about our views of the
world and to inform them about wh at the
President intends to acromplish ... The
President wants to hear their views. and
he's going to give his."
Another \Vhite House official, Y:ho
declined to be identified, said Nixon was
bound for Peking and Moscow "to relax
tensio ns but not to sacrifice allied unity.''
allied unity to a relaxation of tensions
. . . \Ye want to be conscious of the vital
concerns of our allies."
Asked if he felt the allies understood
Nixon's purposes. the source replied :
''I think there is an unde,rstariding of
our general purposes, but I think there is
also a degree or uncertainty as to what
our moves mean. The purpose of these
meet ings is to remove as much of ·that
uncertainty as possible."
This source said the all ied leaders
would not be granted "an absolute veto"
over any initiatives Nixon may take in
the Communist capitals. "But." he ad-
ded, "if there aree~gr1ve concerns, they
will be taken Into eonsideration."
Ignoring repo rts Ulat hitches have
developed, Ziegler continuec.: to promise
tha t a date for the President's Peking
trip will be announced within 48 hours.
~ere have been several published and
broadtast reports suggesting the historic
mission might be postponed or canctled.
Ziegler confirmed during the night that
Nixon will meet here in December with
Canadfan Prime MiniJ:ter . Pierre Elliot
Trudeau.
Before leaving California, Ziegler an-
nounced the chief executive and West
German Chancellor Willy Brandt will
confer Dec. 28-29 at the F1orida White
House in Key Biscayne.
Earlier the White House had unveiled
plans for Nixon meetings with:
Declaring that Nixon's consultations
could not be characterized as routine, he
said:·
"We are not goini ... lo lecture them
about predetermined positions but to get
their views."
Joining Nixon at all the meetings will
.be Secretary of State William P. Rogers,
Treasury Secretary John B. Connally and
Heru-y Kissinger, the President's nationa l
security affairs adviser.
The White House source said monela?_'. issues were certain to come up in Nixon s
conferences with the British, French,
West Germans, Japanese and Canadians.
But he added , "I don 't think we can
come to a final resolution or monetery
issues in a series of bilateral meetings."
-President Georges Pompidou of
France in the Azores Dec~ 13-14.
-British Prime Minister Edward
Heath in Bennuda Dec. 20-21.
-Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Sato
at the Western White House · in San
Clemeftte. Jan. 6-7.
"No other meetings are being planned
or discu ssed," Ziegler said.
Santa Faces Busy Month
In San Cfen1ente Streets
The anonymous White House source
said Nixon, in Peking and Moscow, would
not be speaking for other leaders .• He
said :
"We are not representing the others.
We are formulating our position, taking
into consideration their vlews. Our posl·
tion is that we are not going to sacrifice
2 Orange COast
Men Appointed
To 'New Offices -
Two Orange-Coa.st residt_nts have bet!!)
elected to regional and lri£ernatibnal of-
fices at a meeting or the Shristian
Businessmen's Committee «CBMC) in
Alabama. •
Santa Claus will really earn bis ·money
on the streets and parking lots of San
Clemente's business district this year.
l{is bosses at the chamber of com-
merce plan to work the big man overtime
starting Friday Evening when Santa
·makes his season debut starting at 6:30
p.m.
Appropriate ceremonial music will
come from the musicians of the San
Clemente High School Band during the
initial appearance at the Grantts Plaza
Shopping Center. followed by st.cps at
four other San .Clemente business cen~
ers,
Shoreclifis S)loppU,g, Center will host
SL Nick aL 7 p.m., and at 7:30 he wUl
show at the Safeway parking lot. United
canfomia Blink is next starting at I
o'clock, and Alpha Beta parking Jot will
round off the~vening at 8:30.
ChUdren WTIJ find San.!!J. receptive to
Pay Signing Ended
John C. McGillt of 23571 Verrau.ano
Bay. Laguna Niguel. was chosen as a
board member of CBf\fC International .
McGill is one of the ownerS of Los
Angeles·ba!!ed Mayfl ower fl.tarkets .
San Clemente denllst Ralph Sturde· LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Pro(easors
vant,Qf 31351 Del Obispo Road, San Juan at" stale rolleges no 1onger have to •l&n
C&plBU:ano, w2~ elected regional dJree-for their pay _by .!l1ttng they rta.llY
tor ·r« the areas ot san Clemente.-did the teaching work they were asst4n-
Newport Beach and the Saddleback ~ ed. The state college trustees Monday
Valley. ·' .-. abolished the controvcrsi§l requirement
Both men are -membtts or the Sad· which the PfOfessora resented 1 1
dleback Valley chapter of the C.SMC. bumlllalin1.
•
• ·" •
Chrlltma's wishes. He'll al so band out
~ndy and gift packets.
The South Coast Area Jaycees are
coordinating the debut of Santa, assisted
by the Char.nber's Women 's Division.
Police cars and lire enslnes will pro-
vide an escort..
Starting on Monday Santa will make
tbe l'OUQds of .all }ocal businesses, and
chamber officials said a schedule will be
ready la.ter this wedt.
ln past years, SL Nick used a local fire
engine as his means of travel. .
This year, -say the rpOnsors;'be has
chosen a red convertible, Instead.
'Y' Indian Maidens
' ' -Program 8e t ~uesday
sOuth Coet area d~ds and their young
daughters interested in lhe YMCA Indian
Maidens program can register and
receive information on the activity at a
meeting Tuesday evening at Palisades
School in Capistrano Beaci!_.
The event will start at 7:30 p.m. The
unique, father-daughter program ts
spoasortd by lh< Sooth Coast YMCA.
Persons Interested, but unable to attend
Tuesday'• meeting can con~ Rod carpenter al the Y, 494-11431, and stlll
re,i.ttr, aldts said. (
......
--Today's~ Fliial
~.Y. S~•
• •
TEN CENTS . '
• • •
1l ·8f
30 Rooms
Reserved
In Clement~
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 tllt olally ...... ll•tf
·When the Japanese Embassy in Wash.
ington, D.C .. calls to reserve 30 rootnJ
at a San Clemente motel -and no one
has been told in advance -clerb be. ' come concerned.
.When wcb a call came into the San
Clemente Inn Friday, tbe stalf uked a
top..leVel Presidential adie if the c1U wa1
• boll.
It wasn't,' but it was embarrwing
nonetheless.
The news · oC Ute Presi~t's mettinC
with Japanese Prime :dinister. Eisaku·
Sato was not to have been announced
until later.
And apparently, the Japanese jumJ>e4
the gun.
Sourees gave the account ot the reser-
vation snafu and indications were .. thai
Saturday's official announcement o( the
historic Sato v.isit Jan. 7 and a_ a.t the
Western White House was made much
sooner than originally planned.
Other announcements over the weekend
also came without warning, including de-
tails of the departure for Washin&ton.
"'!be holiday stay by tbe Praldenl •11\l
First Lady ended Sunday -aooner lbait
originally etpeeted.
Earlier ·Plans had called (or the Presi-
dent to rtmaln In San Clemente untll
Tuesday or Wednesday, but at an early
morning briefing Sunday Press Secretary
Ron Ziegler announctd the President
planned to leave that 1Memoon 1t 6
o'clock .
The. announcement came -.at. abOut the
same µme as news ot the assaSllnatiCll
of Jordanian Premier Wasfi Tel on the
steps of a Cairo Hotel.
The President's attention earlier ID the
stay was on American football, but soon
after the holiday it switched to intern&•
tionai issues -the pending trip to Peking
and '> the five conferences with world
leaders.
The Chi!f Executive forsook bis tradl·
tional golf cart for the short trip lrorn
his home to the waiting helicopter Sun·
day afternoon.
He rode in a car. instead.
Appearing jaunty and in good_ spirits
Mr. Nixon swiftly greeted Coast Guard
officers, then wbee1ed and strode swiftly'
to the chopper.
As he negoUated the ladder he briJ:k·
1y skipped several steps in hiii baste to
board.
The departure was probably the first
tn San Clemente where it was certain
when the President would return.
The first week in January.
Postmaster Begin~
El Centro {)uties
Charles L. Covaul~ fint 1Uperlnleodent
of the Laguna Hills branch J)OSt ofOce
began duties this month 1s postmaster of
the El Centro post office.
The Deily Pilot last week enoneouaJy
reported lhat Covaull bad been named
pos,lmasler of the El Toro branch. Mz:s.
Noelle Oiangala is postmaster 0( thlt
branch and has held the position 1ince
1967.
11'19atller ,
Skies Will be partly ' cloody and
temperatures 1 constant &S Tuts--
day, with more sun showing over
the Orange c:out. Overnight lows
are tabbed et iO degrea. • • INSIDE TOD~ Y
UC Irvine and private fllter-
tsts are pla11ntng a joint venture
to form a nationaU11 famoM1
~diecl complt:i: in Orange
countv bv 1974. Storv Page 10.
lffllllf • L. M. l1Jtl 14
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•
J DAILY PILOt SC MM(l1, .Novtrnbff 2t, 197~ "\
• • • s '· ......... -
Tar Studied ----Moderat6= Picked . ~ -Wa-ste (;ontrols
~AMMAN .(UP-IJ L Joriianlip Premier
Wasti T~.) assassi.~uited Sunday Jn Cairo.
bf four PajestlAl•n.guerrWas, was bur~t
today to. the"IOUnd oJ 4 U 'f!UD W~
Kida Hussein named a moderate to suc-
ceect'6im Dut brough~ in a tough line of·
ficial u his natipnal se8lrity advistr.
• ... ] .I • j \
fOur bulletS as he stepped from his car at
a . Cairo hotel OJl the .banks Or. the Nile
fOIJowing' a luncheon With A~el Khalek
,
A proposed new wasl~.management tax
will be up for consiperation ~y the _
Laguna . Beach city coon~·1 Wednesday
·. ni,ght, and may be adopled s an urgenfY '
' ...measure, whicb. wouW mak it effecth:e
immediately. •
l
manager Lawrence Rose, payment of the
waste management ta:r would be man·
datory for ·~11 property owners and the
tax would be set each year by resolutlon,
a~king it_wss_ibly to adapt the amount to Himuna, JeCr.tW¥..'.ic.ntral lh.e.· Arab \
League. changing costs. · •
Tel, si. ~t~ bf the guirriila;, for
orderin,i the Jordanian armY to CruSh
their revolt last summer, was killed by
City Leaders --
fight Retl Tap~_
Iri U.S. Meet
HONOLULU (UPI) -Top munlcip•I.
leaders from around the riation thrashed
out some touchy policy decisions today
while a battle emerged for the presidency
of the National League Ol Cities.
Some 2,500 mayors, councilmen apd
other city officials were attending the
48th lnllYll eongrtss Of cities, -believed to
be the largest ever in the history of the
Nation;J 4que of Citie$. ~ __ .
A re~luliDn calling for the abolition of
private owner.hip of hand guns was
a m o n 1 the 'mO!t controversial item;,
under ·,discussion: .Mayor Roman S.·.
Gribbi-of Detroit, chainnan of th~ Jilgue~; Public Safety Committee, planJ·
tQ. pres,nt the resolution .which contalns
two suggesions · for curbing private
O)"nership of hand guns . -
"l'Jorman .Miller. spt?c.ial _ assistant to
· .. Cii'ibbs, said "The resolution proposes a:.
Change , in the wori:ling or the se.cood_
alnendment to the const.itution so , the\".
·~he right of the people to ~eep and ~ar
~tms' Is change<J to the right of the'peo-
-ate to keep and tiear long guns." _
-,The resollition p.tso • w11.kes a n.
atternative suggfstion 'that" t~e private
ownership oJ . bar>4 guns ~ diminished
through a fedef~I ~ta_tute a~mming fro~
--1lli Jcl 9f .CQJ'lgress, .-·~
... Mayor ;John V. l-Jpd11ay· o:f New 'Yl?rk
came out in favor of the resolution Sun-
d•y saying ·"Gun co'ntfof is absoli.J.le,IY.
&ential." He said, ·'Congr.ess m. u. ~ l_
move on · thi:S. This ma Yors' · convenµori
w.ust push It." ..
' .~. q~bti6n " who wnr. bi llext , ..... ~sident of ttie league has attracted
mtich attention.
' ---,,
;Nonnally,,lhe lirot.~IF!\P.'1.Went'!I,~. league 1teps up to the :pr;~a'l~ncy,, ..
ibis year: the succegslon is in doil .
{tlayor . LOuie Welch of HOUStPn, whQ
iould nOtmally becotne , tilt president~·
laces a runOff eleetioil for mayQr al h~ll)$.,
uid was ut1•ble to .altend the congr~SJ:
~e would be' iiieligiblt" to serve If bea.te~.
~t the · runOff ·is not tor a .couple Pf:
,.teks ahd the. l~ague fs hol!iitig Its el~c-
l!Ons We,dnesday. . ,
taguna Police
t Slate Auction
" \ilicycles, jewelry and 1 u r f bo ard.a
makes up the "loot'! that wjll be a~c:
tioned off by the Laguna Beach Police_
Department Dec. 11 at.-W;lO &.m. ·-
According to Det. George Pletts, the
department. over the past year. has ac-
cumulated 3~ bicycles. several surfboards
and scores of rings and watches. •·we've
also gut a lot of odds and ends that we
haven't sorted through yet. .. P!ells ad-
ded.
The annual pre-Christmas sale will
begin with time for prospective buyers to
look over the merchandise, followed by
the auction itself.·
DAILY PILOT
G1N1011 Q)Arf •uaLdKIW. ctlilPAH't '
~•'-'•rt N. w.M Pr•lifMt llNI P..-llMr
J11\ •· c,,1.., ~ Prlt ... " c;-tr~ n.,,.., '''"11 t:tltar
1'.1unzi Sole.iman Khalifa, 28, leader of
the four. mJn death squad, told UPI Cor-
·rCspondei«' MaW:lCe"'ClllDdf in CairO:. that
-Tel'S cl'e8th .. ~as onlY ~t"M1irst of l series
of murders intended to eliminate
everyone who ·has opposed the cause of
fhti Pllestiiie luetrillas in lhe Arab
-world;----.__..__ ~-
Khalifa raised his hand in the V for vic-
tor~_ 1,igf! ~~.&aid, "We 'have 4.keo our r!vertie ·on a traitor." He said he had
dfunk 'i'B'l'-blOOd a·rier the shooting to
. eriipb.s;Ultl> hair<duf the man. ·ffussem:namea Deputy Pre~1er Ahmed ,
Al-~wzi, 50, as pr.ime .ninister to a:uc· · c~· 't~l: tnd ·g~ve ~i~ the portfolio o( def~se .rif!nlster, a job also held Dy Tel.
Polltl.Cal-Sl::lUrces'-s&fd Al-Lawz1-was con-
sidered UJ\tli8~d· and nuetral on · Palesli·
~a,JJ ,tverfjll~ .IP~tt;e.rs.
_The ·JIQllr.ces. Said Al-Lawti was not kOO...:n~fof.~JUs.'.BJ.rong;ch.aractei and sug-
gested hl!: new :cablnet may be merely a
caTetaktt tone.' r.ike Tel , Al-Law:d ls a
B.edou.in. He had Serv~cf as chief of pro-
tocol:at;lbe -kiri,g1a c:ourt and was chief or
the court:
·Hu!!eln .. -named former Int e r·I or·
Minister. ~ed. Rasool Al-Kilanl as
hi.s_adv\!U .oo Jlltional security affairs.
Al-Kifani · baJ .the "'~lion·· .of being ·
tough toward the guerrillas, a suggestk>n
ttiat1Uu.ssdn'1 •wn toua:h 1tand would not
change. • ,
.Anis:·MoaSher, minister of transport.
took ever· AJ.-LawzPg post as mlnls.ter of·
finance. , , . · ·_-•
The leader of the gang that killed Tel
said jbe·Pl'fill~:ml.niM~r was murdered to
ayepge the deal,h· ()f _a· Palestini.an guer-
ri.lla captain ip. ·Jordan, police sources
said. -.
, Tel w~s· hated .:by the Palestinian guer-
rillas for ordering the army to crush
their revolt ·this sumriler. He died trying
ta.get. ~-~Wl)._jUn·OUl tG fight back ..
-·Hussem,. dressed--tn . his uniform as
suPre.me oomr!l~~ · of tll0;: ~r-med
ferces; a red and _whlte kaffiya headdres1
a(ld-a blac;k armband, led 1,500 mourners
to the cemetery atop one of the city's
seven .hills. . .. • .
·A 21~~f.l!t!ta.wu tired as T.el's coUin, Wa5'.1owerea · mto .. ·!he .,1F.8"e. ;His Widow
stood nearb)', diessed' Jn a black ankle-
length dress. Only a few feet away was
tbl f".*':t :o11Bieefn '1 ilt>Mfothet, King
Afldallafrl: ~ho"Mis assassinattd in 1951 . ·
. Foreig'n Mfn1ster .:Abdu.llah S a 1 a h
li:roped . ~'the' grav~ide; the result of a
slight wound he suffered at Tel's side
dur-tng the assasMnatlOn, ·
After a 31)..minti.te ·priyate ser:.:ice a.t Ult:.
royal palace mosque, Tel's coffin, draped
in the black. red . white and green Jorda-
nian flag, was carrled on a gun -carriage
to the ·hillfup ctn'letery::
Irvine . Heiress ·
'' ~ .. .. . ..
~peaks Against
Cityh-Ood at lJ.CI
Heiress -Joan frvine Smith will appear
on the UC Irvine campus Tuesday, Dec.
7. to;'6peak in ~opposition to the proposed
incorporation of the city of Irvine.
Mrs. Smith has accepted an invitation
from the Associaled StUdents of UC[
(ASUCJ) to addres s_ ~t_udents ~nd in·
tereste·d members of the public at noon
o1r that date in the Science Lecture Hall.
A Sl?Okesman for the Irvine heiress said
today, "\Ve hope all the registered voters
in the Irvine area will come to hear wha t
she has to say." The Incorporation elec-
tion ls scheduled Dec. 21 .
In previous statements to the press,
·t1rs. Smith has vigorously opposed in-
corporation of the new city at this time,
maintaining it could result in creation of
"a giant slum :' through wholesale JI.
qufdation of Irvine lands lo help the -
lr'!ine Foundation meet its economic
_ <!bfigalions.
Faeitag Senators
Romana Acosta Banuelos, 46, a native or Miami, Ariz ., is appearing
-before the Senate Finance Commit tee today on her nomination to be
U.S. Treasurer. She faced co ngression al questioning on why she al-
lowed illegal Mexican aliens to ·work at her. food plant)..i!1 Gardena.
:She is shown with Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calil.), who act'ea as a char·
acter witness in her behalf. s.tory Page 4.
Police Use Mace to Seize
Three in Oemente Brawl
Police used the chemical mace to sub-
due three San Clemente brothers after an
alleged assault on_a tone pglite officer
who wag dispatched Saturday to stop the
three from fighting eac~ other.
The mel ee began, officers ~id, when
neighbors cal!o<f to report a fight going
on among Manuel Morales , 24, Rojelio
Morales, 22, and-Rafael;-21~
The incident took place at II p.m. on
the lawn of an apartment.at 317 Cabrillo.
As · ·offietr Louis Graham ·arrived,
reports said, he was pushed and shoved
by the three men and a neighbor phoned
police for assista nce for the officer.
Manson -Given
Life Sentence
In Shea Slaying
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charles
Manson, already under a death gentence
fir the seven Sharon Tate murders, wa!
given life imprisonment today by a jury
which convicteO him of the murders of a
stuntman and a musician two years ago.
In the Tate case, Manson was · given
eight death sentences, including one for
conspiracy In the seven August 1969
slayings. Three female co-defendants also
were convicted and sentenced to death
for the Tate slayings.
Tdday 's: verdict was on two counts of
murder and one of conspiracy.
Manson, 37. one· time leader of a
"family'' of wandering hippie types, wa11
found guilty Nov. 2 of the s\ayings of
Gary Hinman. a Malibu musi.cian. an_d
Donald "Shorty" Shea. a sometime movie
stuntman whose body never has been
found.
-~--~
Two other officers arrived, and subdued
the three men inside an apartment.
The three brothers were booked on
charges · of disturbing the peace and
assault on a police officer. They posted
bond the following day, police said.
Manuel and Rafel Morales· live at 266·
Calle Vlctorla rApt. D. Roje\io lives at the
apartment where the arrests took place,
police said. .
All three men already await court ac-
tion in another alleged assaul! on a
Marine several weeks ago. That incip~nt ·
assertedly took "place after a pool game
at a South El Ca mino Real bar. officers
said. The. victim was hospitalized.
Leslie Sentelle
Services Slated
Funeral services will be held al IO a.m,
Tuesday for longtime Laguna Beach resi-
dent Leslie C. Sentelle, who died
Thanksgiving Day at her .home. Sbe was
70.
Mrs. Sentelle, a member of the First
. Congregational Church, came to Laguna.
Beach in !925 and was employed for 36
years by the Laguna Beach Water
District.
The services will be conducted in the
McCormick Mortuary Chapel by the Rev.
Philip Gregory of the First Congrega-
tiona l Church. Burial will follow at the
Ft. Rosecrans National Cemetery atop
Point Loma in San Diego.
Mrs. Sentelle, who lived at 709 Caayon
View Drive, is survived by· a daughter,
Mrs. Margery NeWcomb; three brothers,
Lewis Field of Vista. Eugene Field of
Escondido and Marshall Field of La
Jolla; three granddaughters and three
great granddaughters.
Adoption as an urgency measure, which
requlreS a four-fifths council vote,
eliminates tjie .normal ordinince pro-
cedure of two readings and a 30-day Wait ·
before Ult liw gots into effect. The waste
management would qualify as a measure
involving' revenue.
Under the progra ~ prepared by cit¥_
South Laguna
• General · Plan
To Be Shown
The recently complc!t~ gener:a1 ·plan
for South LJguna will be presented. for .
public scrutiny Monday at· a:n open
meeting or the South Lagurla Civic
Association. ·
The plan, prepared under the guida'\ce.
of landscape architect Fred Lang, will .
soon to presented to county supervisors
for official consideration and adoption.
If approved, the land use plan would
allow for rezoning the entire . unit}·
corporated area of South Laguna for an
ultimate population ol 10,0QO. ·
As presently 'ZOJled, Lang and·· bis
associates have , speculated that the.
population of the 1,400 acre . area could
reach 68,000. The population is now about
4.000.
Lang feels that uncontroll~d develo?:-
ment of the area ·should not ·be allowed
for a number of reasons , one of which is
th<it two earthqua.ke·:fau!ts run ttlrougtl
the community. -The ''holding capacity''
of the land. he has said in discussing the
plan, is based on seismic c.onslderatlons,
sewage treatment and >A'ater limitations
and a desire to preserve the existing
South Laguna environment.
Laguna Beach school officials have
given official support to the plan. Lang
has determined that one more e\emen·
tary school might be· required for the
area and has determined that only one
plot of ground ·exists in the COmJT\OOily
flat enough on ·which to build a schoo!d.
"South Laguna is ~ beautiful area ...
says association pr5sident JO . Fletcher.t'
"and we ire ·strivilig to ke Cp it thit
way." ,
The plan presentation will be held at
7:30 p.m. at the Methodili_Churcb, 21632
Wesley Drive.
Anahehn · Drive1· Dies
After Auto Accident .
Anaheim motorcYciist James W .
Wright was fatally Jnjured early today
when he crashed into a parked car on
Katella Avenue. east of Garden Drive.
Police said . Wright, 27, of 10070 .s.
Gilbert St., Anaheim , died at 5 a.m. 'in
the Orange (9u~nty ~1edica1 Center
following the 1 a.m,. mishap.
It would consist of a base tax of $1.50 a
month ~r pa,rc~I of land, plus a
surcharge as property jg developed.
Residential · sureharge.t-would be S2 for
the first single· family unit plus _$1 for
each additional family unit up to five.
The co'Jl_mercial·residential "charge for
hotels, motels, apartments and residen·
tial parcels hav!ng more than six famil)'
units would be $1 per unit. Commercial
surchafge would be $1 for each separate
business occupancy and industrial charge
would be s:J,50 for each separate building.
An eiempt.i9n of 50 percent of the
surcharge is provided for each residential
unit in which a wa~te compactor is in-
st!lled. "
The proposed tax: wotjld replace general
fu nd assessments for sanitation or other
waste management costs, now amounting
to 23 cents per $100 of assessed valuation.
The tax would be billed bimonthly and
collected by the city to pay the costs of
the new w a s t e · man agelrient sysfem,
principally the collector of refuse who
will contract with the city under the new
agree~eJJI. Prpvision Is made tor
penalties on delinquent bill payment
which could lead eventually to a lien
against the delinquent property.
Jury ~Selection
In Coast Man's
Fraud T1:ial Set
Jury selection began today tn the
Orange County Superior Court fra ud trial
of a NeiYPQrt Beach businessman and his
lawyer partner In an insurance enterprise
which authorities atlege bilked several In-
vestors of a-n estimated $160,000.
Judge Lester Van Tatenhove ordered
selection of a panel this morning after re·
jecting pretrial motions which included
the precedent-setting argument by defen-
dan ts Ralph K. Benware, 39, of 411 15th
St., and Orange attorney Richard
Murphy, 41. that Orange County's jury
system doe,! not guarantee the inclusion
of businessmen in the jury.
Judge Van Tatenhove has rejected the
theory that it }VAS vital for both defen·
dants, in . vi'eu• of the -nature of grand ·
theft and state insurance code violation
charges against them, to h a v e
businessmen in the jury box.
He also rejected motions for a chan ge
of venue and continuance of the trial. "'""
Charges against both men were filed /
more than a year ago.
Benware and Murphy were accused in
an Orange County Grand Jury indictment
of unlawfully diverling funds from the
Casualty Insuranre Company to satisfy
the demands of investors in the Calilor·
nia Caduceus Company.
Benware and Murphy "'ere the goverrt-'
ing officers in both enterprises. They
were named in a series of civil suits filed
against their operations before criminal
charges wer~ brought against them by
the District Attorney's office.
Hospital Board
Director$ Na1ned ONDS •OUT OF PAWN
• ESTATES
• OVERSTOCKS Four more members have been named
to the board of directOrs "of Sad-
dleback Community Hospital, which is
now being constructed in Laguna HiU11.
1'he new directors bring the total board
n1embershlp to 17.
They are V. P. Baker of Newport
Beach, president of Balboa Oil Company:
Dr. Lydia Deane of Lagun3 Hills. •
relired psychiatrist: Dr. Allen Howard of
Laguna Hills, a urology professor at the
UC Irvine school of medicine, and
Ber/lard Ingram of Laguna 11ills,
chairman of the board of Burlingame
Surgical 211d Hospital Equipment Com-
pany of San Diego.
The 600-bed. non·profit facility is
scheduled for completion in mid-1973.
.. , . •' .' .... ~ . ' ·'
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;.. . ' .. '.'.• . .../:· •· 7&.:. J ~~ '
1.
-~5.
2.
• 6 7.
ILLUSTU.TIONS
NOT
.AVAIL.AILI
I.
DOM RACITI
~11111' A. M11r11lr.i11•
MIMtll\I EdllOr
Ch1rl11 H. l111 Rit~•r .. P, tl1ll
A11ll\tlll M11111ing ltltoft. ..
1 .. -•• JHc)I Offk•
"lJ? f11t1t A Y1nu•
: .Caspers M·oney Raiser We always have large selections of diamonds & diamond itw,elry at
better than whol esale prices wh ich we cover with our unique money back
guarantee. Come in and compare before you buy.
WE WILL
BUY YOUR
DIAMONDS,
JEWELRY,
()LO GOLD
I
-I
(
M1nlft9 1d dr11t: r.o. lo•'''· t2lS:t S• c1._.. Offke
to5 N.,.ih 11 c .... 1~. R11l, tll72
Othr OMctr
0.!1 "'°""" .tit W"t ••r S!•Ht ti..._tJ a11c~; 1Hl .H"'1161' a w 11v11'f hlMlllllfltll lewJI~ 11111 •llCll Aovltw•rf
I
Slated in Westminster
Flfth Djstr!ct Supervisor Ronald w.
Caspers· of Newport Bea·ch is throwing a
SlpG-a·head. fund .ra ising party Tue;sday
night In · the lt<i'Penhy Inn In
\Vestminster. which he owns.
Tom Fuentes, executive assistant to
Caspers, said t:oda)'. that about 300 ln·
v\taliOns had been ma11ed last week and
that "the response"has bttn wonderful."
....:::::>f:.uentts. sajd .be could .noc. yet esUmate
the noniber of ftu~sts wh"o Will 'ather al
th~~:~~ A p.m. cocktail receptioi:i billed
as 'Oelebrahng 11 yea:r of Ora.nge County
progte:ss ~ith tl}e 1l9n9rable Ronald W,
Ca!iprers. '1 _
··1 would make 11 wild ·1Juess lh•l there
will be more than ~ persons therftt"
Fuentes !a1d tbda y.
Cispef! .• 5taged ·al'IOlher fund ra~lng
party l11st March -a Sl ,000 1 ~uplt din-
ner at the Chci Cary In Or11nge. That af·
fair bec11_me highly publicized whtn It
was disclosed tbal the superv isor's office
"
start had used the county postage meter
fo mail the invif.afions.
Caspers, who just a few days before
had urged economy in county postage
procedures, apologized calling II. "a
clerk 's error." He reimbursed tbe stamp
fund for the $3.t8 expended.
His short career on the board has been
marked wlth financial ne~·s.
Caspers reportedly spent a record
$81 ,695 on his election campaign in which
he unseated incumbent Allon Allen 'b
Laguna Beach In the Juni primary In
1970. The sum is four times more than
~he greatest amount spent previously in
1n Orange County 11upervlsorlal cam-
paign.
Ct1spers admitted contributing $46.984
of his own money ll) the c1mpaign. He Is
the former president and now ·chalrm11n
of tile 00.rd of Keystone :&Vinl:s ind
Loan • Assoclalion with ()fficcs i n
Westminster and Anaheim.
•
1 I .It ct. T.W. I• dlewi111d
• .lCI ch. Go""' s.,pllJr" '1299 6. Lodi" Dl•ll'l•nd Clttftr PHdtflt
I 11. T.W. '99
2 .... ,,, DI•*"' I.II '" s1995 • v.,., f'111e 11l•r. 'f'MY i.r1111 ... t
3 ...... ,, ...... ,__. .... '495
• 1ftill1....t
4 '""' w.J.,,. "'· 40 "· -'129 • .1 .. 1 Cl 1t. ~ ... 11 .11 .......
5 , ..... °"" ··-·" .. ,, ... ,. '89 • 1 /) •• ,.,
FINI 9UALl!'I' Y.Y.S. DIAM~NDS
7 l rllli11ftt 111t It '"" 9f ledl• M1.1t~lr•
• mo1t11til19'.
.92 If .......... Sl74.CIO
.t, c.t. ••• ••••• SfJJ,00
1.01 ct.·••••,., Stl.t .00
I.DI 11., •••• , •• Stt7.50
•
1111. Ge11t1, ···••rt dfflt• d;..t« rt91 s399
wltti 2.,s c.tt. 111 •H1111•••
Diamond Center tor Orange Count11
COSTA MESA JEWELRY & LOAN I
Open D<ill11 ~ to e: rtnd It lltr~ First
1838 NEWPORT BLVD.· " PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MlSA -·lotw•" H•bot • frHwoy
I
MU SICAL
INSTRUMENTS
STEREO EQUIP.
OR MOST
ANYTHING
OF VALUE.
BRING THEM
IN FOR
IMMEDIATE
ESTIMATE
~------~
I
-·
•
DICK TRACY:::
MEET RETSEN
NESTER;BOYS.
,..,_.,.....,,,_ .,..,_.,.......
MUTI AND JEFF
I WAl(TA
LEARNERS
PERMIT
FOR MY
BOY.'
FIGMENTS
PLAIN JANE
t
•
. , DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R A. POWER I
ACROSS
1 Part of a
baseballer's
uniform
4 Curtail
sharply
9 Station
14 Miscellaneous
coll ecti on
15 Characteri stic
rate of
activity
lb Actress -
Rya n
17 Canine distase
19 Russian
association or
lablll'trs ...
20 Stop up
21 Bandleader
-·Brown
22 Roman house·
hold deity
23 Fall heavily
24 Yields
26 Popul atioo
center
29 Business ad·
viser: Abbr.
31 Man In blue: _
lnrormal
32 Site of the
Taj Mi hal
31 OccurrellCe
36 Friend s
38 Korean sol·
dler: Informal
39 Upset
41 Chemical
compound
2 3
"
17
20
"
\
3l " "
"
" ..
~
"
" .. .. ..
II
"
••
43 Pa lm cockatoo
44 Separate
40 Wanted
urgently
47 Speak in a
vehtment
manner
.49Toa·:
Exact ly
50 Trtnltroto·
luene: Abbr.
51 Canadian
P'OVlnce: Abtt ..
52 ElXOP'lll
54 He died: Latin
58 Ending used
with capital
and soc!al
60 "-Havoc":
1943 play by
Richard
Kenward
bl Carried
bZ Rlght.nand
page of a book.
64 Maul Island
mountain
bb Fisherman
67 Growing
outward
68 Organic doct
h!f Lovt rs'
meet ing
70 Underground
t O'ldult
71 Be In dtbt
DOWN
3 Adhe~ive
4 In -: Moving
In rhythm
5 Item of moon
!anding
equlJ)ment:
Informal
& Of adequate
ame1unl
7 Accelerate:
2 words
8 Cavalryman
If Graduated
pl ale
10 Prin ting
mistakes
11 fGrmer n1me
of Len ingrad
12 Ch~racter1zed
by untly
13 -Aviv
18 Ma le re line
2~ Edible re1ots
25 Firs t-aid
devices
l f uture officer 27 Comriosed as
2 Anlsttd SOii(! ' an author
28 Withoot clothing
30 Papa! name
33 Armadillo
34 Sav•ge
35 In a des~rate
manner
37 British W!a)'.m
40 Trousers:
Informal
42 Captir!d again
45 Series of
relaled 1or;lr.
formations
48 Personal
preferences
53 Rule of an
organ!zation
SS "Good!"
5b Kird of re!a\lve
57 Pester
S'f Clvil WTong
bl Former htavy·
weight champ
62 Rrlurn: Abbr.
b3 Suffix usrd
with mountain l5 French stason
5 ' 1 a 9 10111213
"
JO
..
"
..
n
-.
•
• t •• fy Clinter Goll!:! " Ll'L ABNER
OAILV ,!LOT. 19 ~_l
ly Al Capp
ALL RM! VOLUMES ·
WHEN~ LDOK INSIDE!
Ryan
YE~ HERE>HE IS WHEN WHATS THE ~E WAS FIRST BROUGHT You NG ER
INTO "THE COMIC STRIP GENERA"TION
WORLD IN COMIN G
'
PEANUTS
1921 ,.o? .,.
,-:\I.~··
''f.'' l ..... 0 ,
~
By Dale Hale
By Frank Ba9inski
JUDGE PARKER
H .A.Vlt.16
A111ZlVEO lN
MONTl<!EAL,.
JEEP AND A88EV
.-.RE MET .-.r
THE .A.lllPOlrr
~V ER\C
AAC> Pl!:IVEtJ T'O
nlE HOTEL!
I'll T,l.k:E YOU TO VOIJR
ROOM ,1.Ntl TMEN WE'LL !OIN
M'l APPLETON FOR tllNNEI<!!
HE .• HE'S THE Pl!:OtllJCEI<!
01= THE COMMEl<!Cl-'LS
'WE'LL SE SHOOTLN6
TOMORROW!
MISS PEACH J
PERKINS
lllA ! THE SCHOOL .;urr
PUl!CM~SIO TMAT WI
THIS MORNll'I' !
SALLY BANANAS
J•tl.N~,.....,,.a..,;,.tf ,.,..,l>l<lT<I•-----.::•::;"-'
GORDO
oc;..fT "Jl.ltNK 'fH&"{
LIKED IT EIT~ER/T
™E'Y FL.UNG ME
AN' IT OUTTli'
WINDER-
I' ·'
By Gus Arrlala
~GOT'
Tli!S Tli/IJG AJ!aJr"
APPJ.ES/
. -•~ ,uosr
MOON MUI.LINS
0
0
soy, WHEN 'TH'
'l_q\'ERNMeNT S,AYS
.n<.ASe 2 IS GONNA
81' RE<;ULATeD,
"THeY MEAN
RE6ULATE/> ...
ANIMAL CRACKERS
MISS SPENCER,
MISS C.Al<!SON ••
-
By Harold Le Dawe
AFTER VOllR TRIP, I TliOUGHT
~~~A~teH: ~~Till~EiLC°-'v_. __ I
TO H,t.VE CllNNER IN l/o.V TH,l,f
SUITE .. WHERE WE CAN WILL Se' ee MORE RELA~EC> !=INE, Mil.
,t.NC> INrollM,t.L ~ ,t.PPLETON!
I• ~ORN·l'"EO ~
I: /1065 • :z;
JI /<NOW
I ·END ~ --.,)J UP
-JV!TJ/
APPLES
IN
'TliJ:IR VA P.Sf
By hrd Jahnson
ly Ro9er Bollen
r BALOHeQ l
fl '
"Ob de.ar! Tonight we meet In the ballroom an dance l'lltf
cares away to sensuous Latin rhytbmt."
•11 •1111111111
El~f!OLO, TME
FIAVAt;!S
OF
TIME ...
By Jahn Miies
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DENNIS THE MENACE
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%0 O,lJLY '!LOT SC MMdaY, HCMmbtr 29, 1971 . " Your !llo1ie11. Complete-New York Stock List
AW•IWk M 11 111' UJ4 1)1/o ···-· COtllf;"'-~ ~!~-I'• 10'.!o +lb ralldU•-• AW t,\llf J,..i rtjO J'lt. 22\.'I 21\14 f ~ COr.M l,1<11 U\.o \)')I -\l Granu~lls l
Amt<Oll .to 11 ~· .. ~ ll~ 1th 'lj, Cont I l,JO 1'._.. 26~ + ... Gr1,.r W 1 • .)11 A,.,.IM ,,_ Ml )Jl't 11.. '-CM/ ll pt 2 38,.. Jlh ... , \,ra~I ill l"'
"""" l11t; 1 20<! a :it 1 Con SH -~ \4 f ' t ..... Grayorw JO
ArnfK ... ·:n ?!".-ll"i ""' -"' Con!Ttl .to "' ti 201' ,.21 "" \\ g" Al.P 1.30 '-MP lft( ·"' u "" J11'e Sii; +11'1 ~ll'OI 0.11 -t5' Jt ',?.."! ' +1 n ... kOr 1.1111 A~ .Ml .,..
1
J' ,L~ ,•,. '"'° + It. nD•I pj•.$0 ylilO 5JYI •n $3""' -l1i tNor!f'Ol'I lf AmN• Corp -... ,,~ ,,. WllOCI I.to J ·""' n '2\lo +" (i!NoNflli: 1 60 AmtlM' 1 7CI :U'lll """' ~ 1-~-Uftil .!le ru :It n ,,~ +1 GINN ~ * Al'Ntr Ph.~ 1 .SO .SO 511 Ii -In 1.e UO ltt' 'n'"" lt\'t ti (ii Wttl Finl I.mill• pl .. 7 ,.. f\.li tV:I W -L..bs HS 2' ·\lo ~ Ill (ilWUnll too A111111M 1.tcl ; :IS1' :D ml Iii COINIW TA: ,7 11 1514 l ... +!"I GWUio pl I &I Amie .10 '~ 4" 4\lo • , Coo.if l'tl.:U I :IO\li 201' 10~ -"" Gtr W•lfl Inv ~~~ .... , Ul'o 12\'t l~--+ Iii C-l•nG ' :It 10 65 '4\lo U1't: Grn Git.Ill '' ....,.,.,,,... N 27:!4. 2'\o'J ~ + "6 C-R" :.as.-lOf l"' 11 It~ ilrnShoe"'1:20 AlltOl"J .•tb llH !.!"• ll... 1~ i VJ COPWld Sil I t) 1•1~ ls.It 16\\. J Grwhollncl I ANI Cit~ J.l'll ,,,. ... ,... )t., l.'i CorGIW 2 -.flt 112'111 1_, l't, II' G~lmd wt •tClltCP li 31 11* 1J 12lo41 '' Cowt11 Com Jt tl'I Wt ?'Ill> + \'t G 11« 'Ill APc:oO l.nf IO 1th lt\'t lfYI 41 Co11 !dUl .:!IO S4 33\lo '2h ll\lo + 'Ii G mm0CP 1 "°"<·• CC!, .1' U N t1" t'llo t \o'J CPC Intl lJO ltl ~ 2'\'t l0\1o tl\11 G r/'lol J.1'9 ..-.. ,...., 16 1'~ 1"° 1Mll Vt Cr1n1 1 . .ob :It ff1' :tt 3'1' 1 GI lliltl .6illl .-.PL "'Cl... 2 \t\o'J " 11" . !rt<;IFlfl .n ~ lffi 11\1 11•V• \ti G IMO!\ 2.llMI Appt&.d ft!l•t .. '" tlfi ..., ! .... rotllN•t I... 51 l2"9 32"' lJlol 16 C..N OU I SO
Arc.ti• ~'.. 51 1, IS\o, ,, '1 CtO!JSJ!"I~ 1" " 11"' 2 ~ ;,n. + '• GuHRu i>UO
On Buying Stocl{s
By SYLVIA POR~R Let~s sa,y you havt j t been
placed in charge of you com·
pany 's $10 million profi -S:iar-int plan. The r e..t i i n g
m~aer had switched the en-
-Ure fund to short-ter;m U.S.
should help modlry .tn·
llalionary psychology in the
U.S. -an absolute essentla11tt
f.·e are to move back~owatd
price stability. or cou e, th\s !
v.·ill take time, but 'A'h e this
is occurring, the as i c
ecoOOmiCforces at work in
our economy should be lessen-
ing the fQ!'ce of inJlatiori its~lf._2
AftA ~Ve 1.11 ts l•l l:lt 1401'1 ~ romplC .IO S6 l•to l~\1' 116\li +"Gull ~tv(t
An::tllN •I! 7 311'f!l!lli '1\io ., , C'rawCOll .ilf 1n 9W • 9a\o + \' GlfRt$ p!J JO Artll O.io I u 31\IJ 311 ..... l " Crow" Cork 101 11\/o Ult !lllo •.. GllS1UIH 1.IM
Treasury obligations a n d
similar highcut-grade
eecuritie.s In 1969 ,._ a -superb·
policy earning an average 6~
to 7 perCent and protecting the
principal from the erosion in
stock prices. But now your
fellow workers are fidget ing
aod want more action. You 'r.e
in charge.
In quest of professional help,
you are having a business
luncheon meeting w i t h
Frede'rick Frank, managing
director in charge of research
for Lelunan Bros.. Inc.. and
Robert A. McCabe, also a
pcy'tner of the world famous,
prestigious Investment bank-
You: But even though 1962
may be a year of impressive
economic recovery in the U.S ..
will corporate profits recover
as impressively too?
Arcilc em.. 2tS ~ 31V, J'/1.<i 1.\1. CrwnZtlt 1.:10 S6 HU ?IV. ~ t &Ii GulfSltU pt S Ariz PS~ 1.0I n llV. 11"' lllo\i 'lol CTS Cori .•O 19 tt'I. n'• ~ 'Ito UullSU pf• .ii ArleM 0 Sit SS HO ·~ • .._ .... Culll16" 21. JO U'°' 1•" lSV. + \I t:>u/I Wn 60 Arlen R!trDv M•·1J\\ lH\" 1:1'11 tl\li cumml!:n .• t Jl so.,., J1 " GlfW"l"d. wr Armco Srt 1 7ll ltV. 16 l•l'J :\lo Cunn Oru1 lS 141 av. •~ + \~ <luUW p1 s ~ Armc p!2 10 rl! 211/• 14-\l 77 •;. Curlll-'Wrl S2 11\t 10'1o 11 +'It Gu!IWp! 3:11 Armr at• Ji 1100 6]V, '3V. 6JVo . Cu•llHW~ A S 1~'~ 16 16 + V. G1tllon lllll Arm1t Ck .fq 11' olOlll 3' J'lfo + "\ Cu11trM 1 20 ll JJ>,!,o l2~ JlV. + \, ArmCk pfl 7S .1110 5' 55141 S6 +'II C~tloos .159 7J ??~ 21"° tt•o + '• Arm ftu ),j(I xl!l 3'1}o J.5Vt lfl;li .... ~I CYPrUI Mlft J '' 27lli , ...... !~~ + ~ litckWll '~ l J•~· ll'~ :Ulii t .., ,_.;._.,;,I"~ Cor• .tO u nv. 17\o !W. + ill D li•ll Pr 1.60& 1<!• ~'"' ll'• ~,, '~ "" .-.rvln Ind I I 1t ~ lllo "U. - --· !"tllltiurl I.OS J<9i 67l' 66'> '1'-" +l•o Alllld OU 1.l'O !ft 21~ 21"'4 »V:i + h Otl'l'IOll Cfll'P 101 •Jlt ..at. '1 +1V. liamll W6' 7l • l•o l._ -\o I.
CAPRICE OFFERS NEW .ti-DOOR SEDAN -Chevrolet's top of the line series,
~ the Caprice, is now offered as pillar sedan for those who prefer the more rig·
id construction and lower price of the "post" sedan. . . .
•
In High Gear
Production Under Way
.-.11110 prJ.«I ' •S ••V. •s Otn River l) ·I 1« I .... ..,,,, P•P 1 u in' 16\o 111• ... , .. AHd lrtw . 1.• 7111 6'11 71.ii +·>ii 0•"1 CP 1.1' .i 11"-JO\, Jl~ 1'1" litmmlld ·'° 6' 9 ,,,_ i!"" + 'O AsMI OG 1.l'O 143 lN 51'4 511'1 tl\\ Ott! llld .Xlb 71 "'" "1''t ,,,,., +1 H•ndlmn .61 70 35\'t :u•, <~ -' '• And SPO 1.2b 11 2.lt~ 1~' 26¥1 " DIJ't Ind •f 2 11 Ml\i "~ •a"" +1 Hana Htr .n ;.a 16\.l l6'~ 6'4 + '• Tl'tn••, 1' I J>.t 1fo +\lo D•vcoCP 1.lt •l 1110· 1110 17'• t \ro li1ftn (p 50 J2 11'~ 1•"• U'" + '1 e .lag 33 12~~ ll~ 11 -V. ~V(O PU.25 r110 66~) 6' ru· 1 HI""' M l,JO 11 __,i1~11 d \\i "'!" -'II Ell.Si 62 11V, 111'1 11\o'Jl "-1vlJ•L ·1,1.,. "' llV. 111'1 f~+ ~Harcourt 1 20 lt'~ J'l'·'I :JO•i; + '• A!ICE •f!.11 1 'H 90 to '"" •vlnnu ,..,, 16 l I.lo J•'• • ... H111co CP l 6 tt•~ ltll\ 19\~ -"• All Rlchl1d' n1 ~ ,1 61'N ,,, ., nPL '·" ~ 1•"• J'!'t 1 I -\1 HarlSMrl IQ I , •.• ,,. .. 1• ... ~ t •
'
. Hreco 2 ,. .,,~, nv. •7'• I•• H ,,~ '° ra ll'lt lo>.0 ll"':t '-AtlRch Pf3.JS JlOO SO'J l SJ -I:. !m6rP 111 ,•1 1711. l11'i !7h Vo lrV ' 1 '-All ill!th Pl) • 106 101 1°' t'"' II Mn!e flo Uh 21'1 l• \, ~twU ~1i.li't 1of u:z ""' ~l~ ·~ AllRch prJ,IO Hl U'lt "'"" l!V. 1~ tit Air j,o lSI~ I•'~ '1 ll" h li•vn, 2t 6'\ l~J • '• .-.1111 Cor• •s 1'4 1\lo 1\li ..... Otllec Int' •i.. ••'t .~ H~~"1~ I I\~ ;• ,.,,_ •• .-.To IP>C .oe. 101 I"' no I'\\ t :i.. O.nn MIQ 60 tt•) :n~. 2th +:t>\ , " l,u!Om Diii l•l 6711 61 ~"' 1 0...nyJl$1 :o.i 19' I ,,.. 71, ........ Hllh· ••. OIQ 31 35'1? JO• s,•,·,·. +1>1 Aurom1n tnd 22s 61,l, J"" 11.!o + " ~nl!PIYlftt 1 11 30 2f :» + \)~ M-"l•M .)Or '' 13:i;, 1~"' A~co Coro 1'0 Ult, Tl'lt U\lo +1 ~rKa o!_B 1 591• J7>1o l9'> +l !:!:J~a~J 116 ~ ~\I :Iii"' ~ · + ~· •~coco wt "'' J.\'o J1tr J"t + Sotalnc: .•o 62 21•1 2\\ol l'ii _ h'"' .. u · 1: 1.1,:~ ! ,: Avco pfl.10 ll a ,lllo •l +1 e!Edls 1.•0 1]7 Xll~ XI ?O 1 '' litl ... ,,.. Curt 56 61. ''" >•' ., ...
vntt . "' 1J 10 '• Oei Ed p,5·so 1 19,. 19 19v + ~ li1lmr~P 10 11 2)'1• 22.,., :i.:i·~ I'(!.
__ing firm. Both men .are in
... their late 30s.
McCabe: Our ne\v estimates
on corporate profits say they
will. We place the rise in pre-
tax corporate profits from
1971 lo 1972 at 15 11: percent to
a total of. $84 billion and the
rise in after·tax corporate pro-
fils at 19 percent to a total of
$56 billion. \Ve also see the
gross national product up
more than 9 percent with con·
sumer prtces-up about-3 per:-
cenl.
Averv Pd J4 16• 761' 15\o'I ~' Der Ed Df9.31 1100 lit 111 111 v. Htlll'f Int .7$ 12' 21 ''"• t•" A 1'-. 1 ,l 10 10'14 i , Det Ed p!1 611 120 lOJ lOl JQ3 1,:, MetmPd .IOb 'i8 18 111,
Avl\OI on.so 1 521.0......Sl'.4. ne. ..., ·ee~ter 1, · , 16,; l6-16~ + ll Hern1to11 C11p --t --'3'>11 !\to i,~ + ,·~ Avon Pd 1.:111 2611 9~ 97 91:, V. Dfal FINi" SO t lS'o l5''o U!o lil"'!llnc .55D 7 7(. 1 I\ •
0 N C
• M d l A111eo11 1.20! ~a,:: 11 17. i" g1:~1;~~,,!,:'~ 13-l ?f~ ?f·• ?Ir:;~~=~~~~ ,1.;ir ls1 ;J~· ;m ~eo..:. ..
lalKkW 50 m_ 1111o 26 1n; ±' 0115 g1 01.20 n It'• Hl'o t'-'o +'lo Hwbltln ,IS m •7>1 ..i. j~,,., +1>.11
•,
You : What shOuld l do with
the $10 million ?
Frank: The depreciation
charge against earnings 'vill
Frank: Put 90 percent in
com,mon stocks. Now.
be at rec.'Ord levels so that
cash·flow·totats"Will-be-equally1----
n ew ap rlce 0 e R•)r011f ·.XI ,",',--ltli lf'4· f 1 gklt~ 6i '"' •4 6''1 t •Jo liew Pie~ .20 61• 42'4 '1'' 41111 t •o '.:r,,:.~· •• ,fu," 110 u n~ +'ho1~~g:: J. l't.,.. :f~ ff~t'~~lr.'onvH~\r1 !! .:~ .(9~ ~t"+~ Ii c. J 50 u 56,MI'" -Yi DIQllll EwlP 1l• 64 6S 6i'-1 IV. Hob••• 1.20 I SJ"" 571.ii m + ... · Ball90r Punl Jt 1\1 .,,, •Vii + .,.. OIUl11ot1m .•0 47 10'~ t>lo t'·• -..., HcernW1I qo ?6 ?l'1 l', ..
impr~ssive -\\.'ith favorable By CARL CARSTENSEN interior courtesy lights. and
carpeted lower door panels.
BtnoP !!I 1 I 22 22 + '¥1 DllllnQ of A 2 ' tt' I 1SV. 1J'' ' Hoff El«lrn •1 IJ,,,, )b •l -·-·----·--------"' ftfl.2S 2 10'1 uv. i.v. Diiion Co .eo 1• ,., 1.s '!',., + 4li Kolldl'"" .2s 196 cl"" CO>,\ 1 t "
Inter'·or choi·ces of the new •,•,,•,<0•,•:,1v."• '•j l'••" 11v. j1"-.:.... \'i O!•nev .10ti l>l'I 1 2•; 1101ti 1 ?to +s 1o1011v u1 .)Op s 12"> n"' A ... ,. lit~ 71? ~j11Se•o 1.olO 2S ,so, SJ\lo $3"• ,.... "lo aoml'S!ke . ..:> l& 221'> 2? lli ~ "'~
You : In this confusion? 90
percent? Why?
Frank: Because the inherent
strength of underly i ng
economic forces in the U.S.-
supports the current level of
stock prices as v e r y
reasonable by most standards.
And because we think that, in
coming fnonth.s, a much more
constructive altitude w i I I
develop about our economic
expansion, how Jong the ex·
·p.anslon will last and to what
degree corporate profits will
respond.
McCabe: Because a new in-
terval of relative prosperity
will be widespread in 1972. The
recessionary forces in several
European countries will mar
the U.S. prosperity on I y
_J!lodestly_. Our. gen!!:ral advice
Is to be fully inv~sjed in
stocks.
implications for i m proved
balance sheets and lesser
reliance on borrowing in the
open ·market. Very important,
too, is that many corporations
continue committed to ·curb
labor costs.
You: Bul what about the in·
ternational monetary system?
That's in chaos now!
Frank: A solution is so
necessary that we are con·
vinced a workable new system
will · be designed in coming
months and it will finance--
growing trade among all na·
tions.
McCabe: We can't document
this optimism. admittedly, but
the alternative to agreement~
is a p"'rolonged period ot world
deflation. That's even more
politically unacceptable to any
of the leading countries than
compr'omise and agreement.
Of lhl OtUY l'llOI !1111
Chevrolet is adding a "post''
4-door sedan to its caprice
series and production i s
already under "·ay on the new
model.
Robert Lund, Chevrolet
general sales manager. said
the newest Caprice "offers
top-of-the-line luxury to the
buyer who prefers the rigid
construction and lpwer price
o! a pillar body sedan."
It broadens customer choice
among Caprice models, which
Lund said are t•showing one of
the strongest sales gains in
the industry -up 64 percent
over sales last year."
Lund said the Caprice,
\Vhich in November has passed
the 1 mlllion sales figure since
its 1965 introduction, has done
an outstanding job f o r
Chevrolet by keeping owner
loyalty at a new tJigh for the
division. "Caprice has become
Caprice is available m 15
colors, 6 two-tones and 5 col·
ors of Chevrol~t's new "wet·
look " vinyl roof cover.
lour •oor sedan include three !,•,•,• ",•,,.M, 1 .sno 5111, 2:i. :j:' · ~ v1r11nc1 .u 9S 1•.~ 6~i 11'1 + "" onvw11 1.~ MJ 111"" 11c"" 1 m, ...,,. .,,.. n:t 1f JO itb •ll'o •1\1 .\Ii IYMOe 2.llQ 1' 11l1 26\'o 11 ~ '\ oovrBI 1.10 30 3CH• 'l'fV. ~ +1"11 brocade cloth and vinyl com-B•,•,',",',, .?]! ,'~ n~ 51 51 -v. rPePC>et" .10 11 .u._ Jl J••tr !''h Hoso11c11 ,...., 1~1 311~ J~ 37''• +1Y1 I 11 ..., ~ ,.,. ,,1~ 1~ .+ v, ~eM1'• .10 17 56"-56\lo 56.._ 41 Hoir ln!I .M 1! 21\4 ?7l\ 11v. !' binations plus a custom knit ••le "nJa r100 32 •• 32 t' omFnc1 .•lei n •~• 111< a>;, ~ liavd1U1e '° ts 12\o'J 11 ,,..;. · 1o1o ltt!I M!I 'l lOV. th 10\lo J) "'Cley ... 310 22\~ 2Ht 12 ~1 V. !"Giid! •1 2:1s ? Jl\'t 31'/o 11\\ l nylon and Vl·nyl 1·nter1·0r 1·n 3a1" Ml pl t 1n:. "" lt\11 . ork CP .32 JS 11t. 11 -1a11o 1"11HOY•M11 "° ,. 20 1,,. "'° _ ,4 a11'1ll'ICI .:io 1113 '3\lo 12\io '1"" -V. r Oliver I llh lJ llh .. liov•rilF 110 161 51\'J ~ 1 + •:. el'ther black or green e.uSC11Lb .ao •• 10~ 1'3V. 'il +'"" HY 1.0 41 U\'• u 11\1 + ""1o1ou~F pr. '.IO u 's2 1s1\'f i 1•L +>'" ' B•XT L•b .1 1 67j ll\:i J21'o -·Dewer Co .7S 2 ~ '91/t 19\; +Vo liou•F of'» 1 SS SS s,s" '• e..::i Cllll .so _ l~Y! 1ov, o~ ... Dowehm I.to 1'2 n 69,,. 10\o +1lo HouiF o1i11 1 11 11 n +1·· •e•r !'ef: .Sll •• .,.,, 33\ii );"' i "° OPF Inc IOI ~ l\.i f>, + ""Hcu•LP 1 31 '' ... ,, c•'i c•'c'o + '-'I ~•1F ' 1.}g 1ft 39!~ ~ 2~ ..., Ort~oCp 1.40 n 21'-i 26,,. 27'~ '+1\io liou•kt:>• '° 11 :;ri~~ lt :it~ + 1·1
R • p I s ill K:'~f.'t_ <,!' 41' ~ 19 l6liil cl~ lV. Or•nlnd LIO 1• ''" 11 2n .. + Vo MouG Pf'l.SO is •llo 'l" ll'h -''o t-le( liA~ 9 15,. V. ~ Oren pl 2 10 11 :!JV. 311,\ 3,,,., +1 · How Jo~n 'l4 ~J Sj ] t~ •'.< ±"' . uss1an eop e :~ffoP:I '· l4 Ul.lo 1:h, ~ ~ DrtHr PIB 1 I lO 2911 30 + >.~ HDwmet .70 JI 1 '!,\ 1i~l> 2'.;. i? 111 en l.l'O s ~ 20'Mo 20v. I \ti D~rl~• CP 1 31 1c•• 14\lo 1•'11i + \1 Hubbtd l.•6o 31 jl l~ 71\o tv. ·• 11, Ii tot! • llV. l1"'1o 3JI.:. i Duk• Pw 1.10 7QJ 71 .. 2'\1 ?1\o -• ... HudB1v .IOa 12 6:0.. 1''9 ~:: l).
1:1 ~Z,· '° 1.0 .., •NI ., }~ Ollkt pfa.10 1190 111 110•, 111 .. liuoh li~t . .a J 10'19 1014 1oi: •.... emi.• o :t0 ' IS!o 1~ 1m \tr Du~• oll.20 110 106 106 106 +1 Hunr Chm .16 2 1511 !S\li !S'llo -*" ·'"
L . • • s d d encl!• .60 l•j Jt~ :It J'/\O \ D~kf Pl6.7i I I 91 n _ h li11vck Co ,4 Ji 1,.,. 12 '111'11 + "\ -t eN!lx 01 l 611 Jt1 'i 60 ounlrd l.J:>t 11 5111, s1•0 5n, _ :io ldo!l\oPw 1.10 16 j'"'" ll\• jl l~ o:o .~& agglng In an ar S ~e.,,,uc11 1.IO 101 1'1-1 60'4 I'"' "'DuPllln .nt 713 70\lo 1t•1 10 +1 ld~~I Bis .611 •1C2 Jlt 15"11 5\i -'• ~enetl PU.XI s •14. ..,~ "'111.t dl.rPonr loll 61 l•O 1J9V. Ull ']'~ Idell ~I •.1S "2 11 16 11 ... Jh -,~~olf'' 1.so l~ 3~ lJ 3i1~ + (? d\IP<!nl pt•.SO 12. '',. " 69-l .w Ht"E~n1D~.1~ J: ~1 li1~ ~(: :,;·;;
u you were Ivan and Anna goods (8.3 percent) exceeded ,~~i:JF.i. ~~t ff,;~ !la ,~"' i'il ~:~u~: ~gi ll~ n~ ll~ i ~ m ~r:r:f~.7& J~~g ~~ i'jU r; ;~~
I M h. h 11 T~r" '.rl 69 "" U\~ "" 1-1 DuciLt •Pl 1 vm 21•,, 1•~· u -v. 111 Pow on.10 ii.o 1a 2 _ ., n oscow on t 1s, t e 54th for the first Ume the output of 1<1;cko1c1r.r 2..0 t u v. ''" °" J.151:11.11 y100 '' 26 76 .. 11 Pow 012.0. 1100 ,., ,., l + ~
year of the Russian revolution, capital goods and this new :r;~Jo11~~a·? J! 1:"' l#i': 1 ~.: \'a 8~::',°,,, ':..",., 1~ '~:!, 1~~ 1J~ +1tl 1~:rtiD1.:am ?1~ :~t: !l Jr! 4 1 ~
ho uld t d d f I. I' h I ed . l«k R 24 '17 lHt. 33\io ~ !' ' E "" lr>eomt Ctoll IJ ''• 9\lt 9"' + i.,. w wo ours an ar o 1v-po icy as cont nu since 1ue B• 1 •'° 111 ~ lib v. 11'1 --r---:-1ncccu ·•'° 6 101-. lO'lt 1011o + 10 · 'th h t f ltlbtlfe fi r 1 61 ll\'4 12\11 h '4 E~lePlc ,90 71 2l'o ?l 13'• t 1' /"dfan Hd .IO 16 76\o U'IO 26 + •1 1ng compare w1 t a o a them 1971 's economic plan is l°''llO co 40 soi 1j;• ,.~ uo,;; 1:0 Eis.co co .so 21 1c•. 1J" u,,, •• 1~l"'~G• /;'!.. • 1!11" 1s 'l -,.
gcnerat1'on ago'. And how d··-ted, among ot•er thi'ngs, •,.."•'•,•,..Uti 691 11 16'11 u 1~ E111 Air un 71• 111ra 17l• in. +1 .. , '" L" .... 1170 tl 95 , ... "'""-t' 2l\ 10 '"" ID f ~ E111G11 96f 170 ?f 7Ht 19•, t \ti i"dll~ tl~ 19 15 1•'o J•h -·\\.
would it compare with the !iv-10 increa!i1ng "the production 1~1h1 ~11 201 !71v. R!Z ll.... :;1l i::~~111 k.~ 1 ::i~: 11 ~\· +,~ 1:.11~::,d90 l f:v. f~ ,:\IJ +·•~
ing standard of, say, John and of consumer goods In wide!~;.;• .110os ~~ ::: 2~1: 1Hz + ~ ~~~fi'n '/.;,~ 60 xta~ :~ ~:Z !:"" +·
1::rd"i'11·ls' ~: ,!l il !&i! ti:: 'la · N y k C't ' d nd Jood nd ts 1>1Ed" 1.U !j ll~ J7 ll'lol + v. · SO " 11(, nl1nd ? 10• ?!\;. 26\li ?): + '• " _!y_. tn ew __!>! I y_, ema , pr UC ••. e. ... i::o ort.11 1; "II'> lH 111 _ l"I Ecl!JdJk_ .11 176 2l 11.!>i 2l +1-14 l"""°"t Cora qo---t1~ 1!'11 un +-~
h . ho . I h ] Bour"• Int l I to I!'< 1 '" + ~~ Et~rd NC .10 lJ d ''~·411> + ~ .. lnJllco .10 186 16'• 151~ 16 11\• You would De belter off than oustng, sp1ta s, s c o o s Br•nAlr l9f !m 1s ...,3 '"' t h e<1 .. onBrc1 1 '3 JI 31 l1 + ·~ 1~11t p1A1.1s 12 "~1 16'41 n 1 1 • ,, 8tiaas5tr6' 1 J ~ JO•.~ JGl:o 1~ EGl.G .lo 10' 11•1 10•1 21>o + '" ln101rcoo 1 130 26'•• 1s~ 2&1,) •;, 1n past generations in Russia Bri•t Mv 1.20 260 6!'4 ~ •'"" t ~. Elect "'""" 11 s ••· s + ,. 1n1erco 1.:io s c1•1J c! ...i1'1 i •• BtillMv pf 2 ! "l.I •tlll 44>0 'IJ EIK!n Oil• 310 •1'~ 1.i:l1 "4"> +2'lt lnlrlklnc: l.IO 15 ?l't 16'~ ?6'N 'Ir -but your standards would Yet, the usual boasts ofBrltP•l .•l<I .so 13~ ii... 13~.-l.EIMemM191 1•9 ,., ~'"' 5,, tBM5lO c91302•om•.:ic»1~-'-1'"
be h I th 8r1Pt1 In Oo l ll~ 1Jft ll>'lo .. EIMMtt ot 1 I 9 l'o I''• _ ,, ln•C~'ll N~c 139 21'• Xlh 21'Pa + '• muc ower an your Soviet leaders on the an-Bcrwv 1o111e 1 ' •21. '2\• •11. + , .. e111;n NII » l'• l'~ " + , 1n1F11Fr .60b 1ao 1s•i 'l 151, + ~~ You : The cross-currents are
hard to understand. I can't
help feeling anxious and
unsure -particularly since
price:incomes policies have
failed sooner or tater in ever
Atlantic country which has
tried them in the past 30
years. And after the policies
have b cc om e ineffective,
wages and prices have soared.
\'ou: If I give you the $10
mnHon to invest, 1vhat sort of
stocks 1vill yo u put it into?
• a synonym for peak luxury in
a popularly price car," Lund
Id I . nd Id . SawvliAlpll )50i·1 WoS01'o+l \,E1Pi10NGl 115 16,.16, ii•" ,'lntli•tvloo 6:)826\iol'OM•'a .. I ea ers c aim a you wou niversaries of the Bolshevik Brtw'<'G11 .10 11 n ""' 11 +1 EuraCp 1 ·o u U\o ,,,· 110' •.,.• 1n11o101aa ,,Ja f ll n~. 1:11, .i. ·~
I'll be • fl · I . l~r.nUG 1.n u 24''> 1~\;, 1•'~ -'• , '' ·• • ... nl 1rw11111 135 '"" •1<.o •h ... ~ s 1 su enng rom acute revolution are not confirmed Brown ca ,\ ''· 6t.o 611 -11 ,~• ,, ,1.16 116 n•. 7!\.i ni,. + •• rn11,,.,,. pl 11 •·~ ,r; •'II + 1:
h • h f' Jd f lw"SllrD .20 l~o 10\o lO"i ... rMrv ' I J<'O n"t 1a... 11'11 +1"" ln!MlllW .05o 166 U>I 11'~ lei\ s ortages in I e 1e so hous· by the facts. BwnStioe 1.so J2 31 ,.,,., :m< +'•Emery In .JO '' 11.,, 11 111., + ~1 ln1 Mr.a n 1•, 8'• 1,, _.:-,;
Frank: Phase II controls
Frilnk and McCabe : Com·
panies in consumer related
fields, such as retail chains,
consumer services,· consumer
finance. consumer marketing
research; money sensitive
companies, such as rea! estate
investment trusts.
.l.~v1rti11m1n1
Denture Invention
\ Far People w1th
•1Uppers1' •nd ''Lowers''
'the nun:sl thin& lo having your awn teeth is poll\ib!e--J1ow with a plastic cuam discovery that ectu· ally ho!dlJ holh "uppers" and
"')owcf'$" as J1cvcr before poosihle.
I t'1 a discovery called fl XODl':st•
for daily home t11e (U.S. Pat. tJ.003.988) and it ha! rc volu-
tioniud den Lure 11•urinr;. F1xo~sT
forms an elastic mcmhrane that help!! absorb the ~hocks of biting
and che11·inR-
\V1th F1XOllEto.T many denture
w~rers may eat. tipenk, lnuah. wit ft lit lie worry of dcntureacomini;: loose?. One application muy ln~L for
houni. Dentures that fit are Ci'll'n· turl lo h'ahh. See your dcnt1~l
regularly. Gctc.asy·tO· UK F IXODEST
Otnturc Adhcsi,·e Cream.
HOW TO MAKE
$MONEY$
IN APARTMENTS
0~ rJ \l>i if.1 ~ ~i I! !ti ilJ;J ~
said. ·
"Over the years, Ca price
has been given greaier ex-
terior and inte r io r ·in-
dividuality from our other
regular cars. Closely turned to
today's consumer emphasis
upon _maximum value for his
automotive dollar, Caprice is
a t t:r a c t i n g luxury·minded
buyfrs from higher priced car
lines. This is a strong factor in
its sales inb-ease."
The new Caprice model
joins the Caprice roupe and
Caprice sport sedan, both
hardtops. and the Caprice·
styled Kingswood EsU>J.e sta-
tion wagon as Chevrolet's top.
of-lhe-line models.
Its Caprice features include
a special grille, side moldings,
"'heel covers, rear fender
skirts and a 400 cubic inch V-8
engine. Turbo Hydra·matic
transmission variable·ratio
power steering and power
disc·drum brakes are stan·
. b . foods I flr11n1w~ .12 ll' 3~ 37lo ll\~ +l\o EmhArl L10b 15 Jl11 ll'o ll + ~. !n1Mvllll 1.20 I! n 12•1 ,, .. -.; 1ng. as1c , popu ar con· ~lousing for Jvan remains Buell~' 1.10 P, 11 ii~ 11 +1 EMIL.rd .o ~ 316 c•; •·~ ·~ + 1.11 j"' N1c••1 1 Jill! '9lo 21r 11,,,, ... :;!ii.
d t b'I . Budd o I lO•o I + 11J Em?Otll 1.H 1 77"t 11"1 l7._ "'Pio 50 943 ~'Ill 19h JO'r.. sumer goos, auomoies, dreadfully cramped and saysjudd oa1s uo S6 5, S6 +1 Empireuas 11 U'• '™ l!1i:0.:1·~1,""',~oo.1 .' u10 ~ .sa 58 · I' A f th • lldotl Ind 16 1 i.10 1 + \\ E"91hM!n olO 300 70'• 19 2011 +i• "' echlr~ ll 1•.~ 61\ ii'" .-.·~. ma1or app 1ances. s or e Nash Soviet housing I i s auuFaro 1.70 I ll'l(o 3.)1 ]J\~ + .. EnnlsBF C!P 16 5'• 5'"1 !'o :'I i"'Tl&Tf 1.IJ 901 511 1 5°" +J•., compar1·son w•'th John and ' u!ov•W ·'° 19 16\i 16 16 E<1ulmt 1119 1 ?I'll 7S'• 11• •• "1 & PfC • l30 "' 16' 1 ± " "notorious for its scarcity 111~~ R•1rrio •l• 6'!1> •. 6'" i.,. E<1u1r Gs 1.n 10 ll•~ 31,,, 3ii:, + "'1~~l&TT .,01r 1 zno 16111 1611~ 1i1·~ ,,,. Mary, any average ' u ari.» 2 ll\O 1211o 1l"-t\ E<1uHL1 1169 ,, 111-i 110.:, 111 " f • 2 1.u ... l•l'" lo•, +s'• poor quality of constructi~n, ~~IN~ tta Ut !:t; ll~ !;,. t' ~ E<1u11Fd '.10g sis 33•, n1~ n•~ + · 1:. l~ITt ~ gl~ 1 ! 1;~v. 1;1\(, lft , t••
U.S. worker, even in such a and problems 0 f ma!ll-rmNor vl.u I" n. I"' 1"' .. ll' ,111t '.,;.,10 '' 311-> xr,.~ l''" +1 IT&T Df1 •.$0 s 9G 1, co · 'l h'gh t 't N y k · Burlld'<.10 IM 2J .. 1 1J\,t1'4 <IU~ ""' 1~ ,",... "•±'41nlT&TDfJ c 5l 19 11 If " 3,, I -cos Cly as ew or , JS tenance " Ivan alld Anna Burro~1 .60 Jn 1nv. 130v. 137,, 3 11e.1n1111110 ~ #1'1 •P• 1'" 1n1T~T PIK• ,, 17 1, j1 · cv better off than Ivan and Anna . Bush u"1v 6 !Oh 10¥. ioi;, '~ ,,.,.le . c ' ·~~ •1'• .1-. I Vi lf6Ti;.tN 2.2s 401 ~v. 6jlf P.11 1~ waste enormous amounts of -C-,~~~f c>p·~.: ~ 22~ ,t:~ ll~-~ \~~T"'i!c f'ro s ~t ~1-1 1 si:~ 1 '"'
in Moscow. time simply standing i n £:~"(~0 1;,~ tt 31r; llSl~ 31 ~ ; .• ~~';, . .!''~i.~ lj•, ~ ¥.}! o,1•• tl~ l~!,~~~c: 1 ~ •;~ 3J,, ~ 1 ~
The position of the Soviet queues to buy goods in c11,, F1n1nt 11 •'" '•'• 11.-+ ,,f ;~~fiJ'dl01 1j,, P1~, ',~fr 2,>l1 l"lr 1nter11ee Pl s 1 ,,,. 1'9v. 12f 1 ~ . . bl Ct lhn Mno U '"" + \io tffld · itY• "" •'-• . . lnlpb(;o :10q 101 '!'" 1 a\o'J consumer JS unquestlona Y Russian stores, and as~:;::::111}!1::t 1 ~ ~t,. ~1.¥: ~"'+1::_ :i.erq~·~~ ~· .,~ 1::-t l:~t~1~:~~;~:"1·;i ;I J7Ji l~~ 17llt ..... ~
improving. To illustrate: in recently as September 1970, c:~ ~·:r, .e1 uf 11v' ,~{l 61.\ -t1 ~~y~~"c;~ Jj ?:11 ~ ~~ 71~ 1"'"''' s1•l 161 a>! tit 'ill f: ~
19'UI, at the pre--war of Pravda reported a steady c,:•,,S',"• "• •,•,1 •l •1v. ~J~ +11
" ~:!~~~1 i°' :tI 1J~ 1,., 1J¥• t ""•• •,::,~1.30 1R 'f:l't la::' ~~' + ~
kt. t b kl f I· t f ·t "nC ·• 3111 ll\'o ll\1-~ F1lrm"'ol I f M'.!i 16, 1,·• ow1fG1'1,11 "19 19•, 1~ 1. , , v.·or 1me o uy a wee y sup-stream o comp a1n s rom 1 s c>'",,'u" hso HS sJ•~ 50\; sJ·~ t • Fels11u ~ !' st~ 5;" • a. tow•Pow J.611 i1 22'1 """' , .. · ·
I f th
'
. I th b . ,, lit .... 1• !lh lll'> U\~ "' FtmlyFln '° 116 I ·{ ,,... 12 I -.. IOWIPSv 1 ;o 22 2l \'o 101:. • i• p Y o e seven essen 1a readers about e a sence 1n 1roe1011 l 1600 11 16 1• -• l'•nsttti 1.;.; 53 '• ,,: ~~ -1t 1pe_o !"os .l..i 61 11i.. 1211 .-~ food I f '] I f f I d Ctro Fr1! .l6 131 lJ'Ao lJI> 1$1~ + ~ F.,r West Fin Jl 10•0 10' 10 t ITE Imp .10 111 l1~ ll~ 31 :j:2 s or a am1 y o our stores o g assware an Caro PL1 r."' 110 1• 21(• 23,,. + '• F•••llMI• ..... 11~ ,,,~ ,,,: n~' 1,v. 1\rk co,,, J76 1111 ll 3.l:u. _ ·~
persons accord''ng to Edmund h' k . d f ks Ciro Te<; 1.XI IO 16·1\ 15'1. 1S'4 -" Fe.Ide,, 50 17'1 40•· 31~ '°. t'''-ITT Sv pf'.50 1 111 1 172 +• , c tnaware, nives an or , Carrie•CP .611 100 11\'. lf.\ti 41 1.!o +H; "l'd••al i.;o ,, ?"1 n•: 7,~~ 1-~ -J-K · ' Nash economist in t h e bl k t b th t I t Cerr P1 2.15 uo JJ'h »•~ ll' > FodM011 1 eo 51 jS'' 1••• 25 t .--, an es, a owes. e c. c1r1w11 .«r.t isi. 1&"' 11•• 11.1 + '• Ftd NM ·1.2o 1" 4': l'l• i•>.1 •1: Ja~e• .1so 5; 1 5,, 7 +1
D'· .. 1's1·on ol Fore•'gn Labor If I · I k h t CaJl/eCke 60 106 ''""' l•I(, "''" F~PaPBd t 11 1:;1, 22i.. 1i1· ~ ,, . Ja""I" .60 ' 16 15•, I•'• + .. • • van LS UC Y enoug O CllerTr I.Cl •J1 '°"' 3'll .io~·~ ;,\ F-P•P 1>11.1.s z.50 " ,, 11 • _: ,; J•on d 1 66o •Q 10 t1. "'
Condl.t1'ons US Bureau ol t h' t · ted cc• cor. •o •i-. •10. ,,, Fe11s1gi,s .60 1,•, 1•'• 1111 Jll' • JDnF tnl.66a 1 1•. ,,,. 10., + ''1
• · · ge IS name on a res nc ecoear" .t• 11 111, 16,. 111~ +·· Fe<1or11s Inc 50, ~·· 5,;-z ,' JeH~Pnot 11 1113 o,1·, "''' Labor Statistics. By tnid·l970, ·1· 1· If the pu chase ol Ce-t•nesee" 2 120 6ll• 66:w u:o.. .+>1" Fl!'CIOep1srr 1 1111 ., "~• ,, + •. Jtwe1 co i..i.o s. s.r.•, }S\oo ~,f· + 11
wa1 tng lS or r ce11n Pf.t..1.~ • "°"' 611,, '°'" _ ,• Fe<1fr11 Dfv ,,1 R\O ~·, ·~•-+ .~ '!"" wa11 .so 100 Js•, l•'o :i.•, + ,, that -qu1·red workt1·me was a h 'II a·t two to lour Cenco 1n1 .» 1u ltl-7 JA-Jt• .,,! F'rro CP .70 JO ,.,.. JO +, J•niw 01 Ll!-l 89 Jt 311~, •o•· + •• '"' Car. e W I Cton Hvd 1.•I 1 12 jl~ 21 + ~ l'lbrebrd .7~ cJ ,",,'.,• 1910 19'o .. 1! Jt<an!"v .teQ JI 211,1, 22 -'" down slightly to 20 hours -years before 'he gets it Meats c ..... n1u 1..51 .,, 111• 61~ 1 + "-FldU"B" 2.20 s " 11', + \~ '"""M'" 110 1tt u'\ t.~.~ lP' + ,, • CenllPS 110 ~ 'jll 11¥o 1~ + 1, l'lelactM 1.olO ~~ ••~• 29 19 JohnJcll .co. ll l 92 •v , 'ri<t. 'f'll·l despite the consumer's retrcal and vegetables are scarce Ctn•L•E• · 1 ; 1'" 13 23, + 1" Flllroi l.IO .... 71 •1 11 ;11, + '• JDnn• s., .10 11 J? j,1-. J1' + '• • CtonMPw Ll'O II 1,._ 11116 1,,.; + ,• Fin F!'Ol!r1tn 41 16"" !6 lt•; .J.-'J JonLOQn .~O 4' 57~1 11 + ~· during the depression 1930s Services across the board are cen1sw11 1 10 •H• '"'' ... "' + .~ ~~'t~~Dt"'1 •1! 52'0 jj'• j''lo 'll'• +i•. ',0"L8ua .ll<i J2 12•. 12~ JI• .. •?
d d . Cen! Sov1 1 " 2?\t 'H• 21'h + ~ F M' · 1:18 ') 6'1o 26•1 +1 orgt•11n LlO I 191. 19:W, !"< 1 .. an the evasta t1ng war years inadequate cenfe1u1 ·" 11s ll!'o 11.,, 11.14 F'lN'TB '-':y> J10 111~ 14 5"' +i'llo Jo11f115 10 11 n" 11\1 ?J\: ,,:
l'n the 19'"s. . C•'"O Co .IO 173 111, 111'1 !ll'o ... ,. 1=:1N~ll Ofl l 11~; ~~l: &1·,~ 6•ll. + .. Joy Mfg I'° SI !9'> ~ 59 '"" ..., C'rl·!t'td .IO • 21! tt<'o ~·~ •1 -11~ I'• NSl{P>C ·1 1 .,,,,, •,~, .. .C'h +1•, 1C1lsit..lum 50 96 11'1 17•4 11,, + _ . . . Cf"r!.ftd a! fll 1 o10 40 "° J F-INS. •• ., :>?''> \.> 1(111 S'1>1 'JJ I 60 hQ Smee 1954. Soviet wage-price ce''"'"lr .111 u ll n 22 1 F:1vali'k11.'~ ,.Y 1l~ f P'" f~1 .. -1. I(,,, Mal • 1s 1 s9 51•., '° . . ed Ch•dbrn IP>C Ill l ;11, 1•;, + '• F~tWIK 1 M ' l" ll . ll • 1(1( Al pf • r; 2 SO'll so•., i:· + . The e c . d . policy has been design lo NEW VOR!C CAP I. MondlY'S Con'IPle!e Clwidb pl,liD ! l'• l'• ]'lo -I• FlSC:hlKIO :86 I 1,·· 1 JI = :• l<•l"C'm .50 ii 11 1l'4 I "' '·i
n w aprice se an in· keep prices relatively stable New Yoik '1°'k Ex(ll•.,ge PFlctt: . ~::!~:f ~:'2 x~ ~f;: ~)~ j~~ t1., ~!~~~~c'i~6 xl: 11~ J1,'• t ~' ~:!~:;: _:l1:3~ ~ i1,,., 31 ~ ~2'"
dar<i.
lerior includes full-foam front h'l 'd' 1 N Ch•1eM1nh 1 110 5514 s~ 3"' .._ ·~ F1eer Enr 11 12" tl:i.. 19,-; :lO' l • K4r.eM!P' 1~, 78 iir j1'1 11:iii. -'' seat with fold.<Jown center w 1 e prov1 1ng or an aver2.ge ',·~;:,Hi.ii Low Clo•• Ch~• Ch•MT 2.129 1'6 s.o " .u +l•• Flen1!n~ .50 lO i"6.1. ln 1,,,.; .,.1,"' l<CtYPLt 2 oe 71 ' 1'• 11.., + ..
I . · f · · Checkl!t' Mot 9 '10\'r .~ •. ~ 2G'1> t ~~ Fllntkole 1 215 19'1 19 19' 1 KC Sau Ind 2 .JI fh 32'~ J? .. + 11 armrest, foam-cushioned rear annua increase in wages o Chel"'• .2• " 11:i.r. ., 11,,., ,, Fl~E coast ,~,, ;3;u ,,,, nih f .;·KC seu pt 1 l'> J7 J1:i.,, +1 bo t 5 t -A-Chem!lrn .IO tt 11\li 161\ 111.!o tl'I l'I• Gas .&O 1'1'> 1r.i0 1o ,• Z1 sea t. extra sound deadening 8 u percen · Ab•cusF .1., , 1)·~ 15,. 1!'• .. l~is'C~~ Iii" 6~ i? ~J"-sJ 1 1~ ~:::.:rr 'i·¥2 1it} ;~~ ;~:· •1:v. + ,; 1C1~ GE 1 ·~ 1~g ~r~ ;~~~ ~l "' + ·~
body insultation. grained ae· In 1968, according to plan.:2~1Lrnd1~a'° l~i sei. s1•0 ~J.t1:~~~~1a;Jo "' •Ntr ,5:,Z ~r'4 1,;;F11s1e~1 · 1J ,,,,is·! ~t:!.tl'·~=~~E~IU 11 11,, i~~! ,,,,~, ..
cents on in strument panels Soviet annual rate of growth AcmtCM-• .IQ JO ~i; ttl~ lt'> +:i: ·~CM E1~1 11't' 3! J~ J~~ 5'~ P. ~:~1;:, 1211' ~~ ll;: ~1~ ~;: :t 'i: ~•:Y t7", · x~g 16;! 9,, 2:~; t ;! TAX SHELTER and
INCOME BENEFITS
and doors. electric clock and in the output of consumer!~e~1.J: ·~! ~~ ~r~ tt~: >.ocf~[M~u5s"/p, fJ ,;~? ,~:? ,;"" t, .. f~~·(a111~'10 ~: ?~ ?t'; ?I~'I'. :::.:,d 1106 ~ ~~ •• ~"' 11 .+ '' -----'------------.ld Mllll1 1G ~l ... t i. 'I'll + \(, hlPneuT 1 •! JSllill l!i,,.,, l''\ l'MC 110:21 •• J) J6\·1 36·· .;, •w,cllrl ~~ n 10·. 10'• ~~ •• t 1·: Addrfll 751 XIII lO'• 21' • ]O>.. l"" hR1P" UP I 10 "' 10 1 .. FOOCI F8;f ."II ,. u·, 1•'. -u·, -"" k•,<erRa 611 •l ?l'l ,,., '°'• 1' Adm!•1I 60 1!\, 1•'• "'• l'I !~RI (I NW l lfV. 19\, lt'' ' Foctt Cli 60 2 ' l'o '. + ICttblor 70 • 11'~ 11 741
•NOV 3~~~oTP~M~R l~5T!?c~?c. H.B.
•DEC. I •7 :J O P.M:COSTA :~~A HIGH SCHOOL
• D!C. 2 • 7:30 P.M. CO RONA DEL MAR H. S.
LEASE or BUY 1972 coNTINENTais
• • • 0 1972 MIRCURYS .#'
Bud Bowen •••
o.r .... .....,. --· -.... ""' .... "'-" -... ,..,, ... .._ ...... 1.,
wltto -"'II liWo!.,.._t. to-,,.,._,
0.. M 1114 itltl ff "' -rttl
IOOCttT " •H 1¥4 ......, ... ., • • ,
540-5630
ohnson&son
j.ltlJ.lllllli§§A lHi :gg-1--
"""•L it 1.60 1.a 60l, .SI" 60'' 1 ' ~«Full '°" •• '" 9V, ,. ~ .. F'oottP! iXt 6 ]('• 1, ?•' . ' l<elltr lr\d 1! ;o It' • 'I A•tn•LI /12 ' 511'1 11 Sl>o 't ~rl1 Cr~fl cl 6._ 6\~ .,: ,~ F'ord M 260 606 6l'l tS•\ 65'' .... ,• kellagq l \)5 }6'"' ai! ?O · l'i •~ulrt• o lXI 1 6\lo 1 , .. hrl1Cf1 c~nf • l!'o 1~·· lJ+,-;, ForMcKs .Mi St J1'1 211'·• 1n: :+ ,• k•l1eiH ! JD t :JS l•'•• ~· + 'l A l~n l"c !7 20'• 19\', 10'• 1 V. C~ron"111! .60 .SI 11>1 16•~ 11'\ + i: l'McK atl.10 I l!'-, JS\~ 35'-> "Ktnd1ll .611 41 •t •01li •'• -'I Ar Prod .?Ob !l ~IV. ""'-•81~ YtChtoml DI! 1 IO'"' 79 tt)t, FoS!Whl .llO J 1!' ... 7~') Xl•O +·; l<tnnml•I !0 lll 2 ·ll> '°~' .+1'" Arailnc .IO<I H, 1!1~ 1,71) 11'~ 1 §•vslr .60 S69 27'4 11 11'1J .. 11 Fl>llWhlDf 1 17 '!6 ... 11 + ,• ICa~nmttl ID JI ;i 11 Vi+ AJ ll'ldu1trle1 l\\ l j'i . •Vilt• wt 'O 13 !?14 17'• + ,,; l'oxboro 2011 JS 1llo 77't 27 • + •i l(~nr.econ '1 19 ?!' 711~ 11 · + '' Ak1on1 1• 2S 3J\o 31•4 l \', -14' / Mii 2.0ll' 111 2Ji\ n:it 71'4 _" l'r1nk Stf .•O 11 Ii'~ h'o 11" '+, ICv Ullt 1.oe ;a ' ll ?I•• -'1 All G•f 1.10 ll 16io 1640 l'h t l!o C "nBell 1 :Ill ?l 11 20\i 2014. _ 1)' FrffllMJn .10 Ill 1~"1 16 1' ;. ,; IC!rrMcG llO 111 ~::: 26'1 Wo-+ 'o Atalkt 1niet1 "°' 16'9 UI• 16\o'J '1 Cl"" UE Ii" llO 2••1 ni. 241• + ''t Fruehl 1.70 2' ""'' n•. 1µ;, .._ ,1 Ke•'-'c 0,. iO 1 9 :it l•'• .. , ' All)stloC ,J? CO 11~ J(1lo ?S + ~ ClnG r.'" 1100 17>.;, 6AI. 6711. FUQ\111" .tlf :U7 17't 111t 17'. + • IC•vl!"" :i.;0 II 1',1, t• to +I .-.lberlJM .U ~?', .1 .. 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""'' ti 'l'll " is•. lS • ll\t + ....... J..-•~ 1. ,,\ 114 ,,, ..... ii"'°' \""' Cl ., H • 11 • ._ I O' ~ .... r lleav y Ttabp?
An In spector at the BQrg.\Varner Corporation in
Pa ... \\on't gel any ba-sS notes out of'-this monster.
It s 11 cast iron housing for a single stage cenlrlfu·
gal compressor-used 1n air conditioning systems.
WhlsUer Is shown checking lhe Inside diameters.
•
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Mondu Novtmbff 29 l~l SC
Con1plete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange Li st
1: • .! " ' • ' ll " '
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'.. H DAILY PILOT
• 0
•
U.S. Roads
Will Get
; N~w Signs
: WASHINGTON (AP) -1·
• There'11 a new look coming In
highway arut street traffic
1 sip, and ~t'ement varkings
·" ~ihout Oe Uni~ States.
~ ' _ Tt .• nas!m is cliallging over i
'-' · Ira\~· to an 1'11ernalional-t
;-lype system of traffi~ntrol
' devices which emphasizes. pie-
. tuns and symbolic signs more
than written messages.
o•
The Federal Highway
Administration says -states
and local communities have
unW 1973 to meet the-new
ataodards for pavement mark-
c. ing, unW 1975 for signs, and :
until-!977-for signals.
1• Not 8U signs will be cbang-
~ :.i eel, says FHA Adminl.!trator
~ F. C. Turner. Many that have
proyen effective in the past, or
t · t~t contain mesSag!'!S dilficult
r11.. to symbollze, will be retained.
,,., As the new'symbol signa are
introduced, companion word
·~ messages also will be used uO-:
tu the public becomes ac-
customed to them.
i> "While 11ymb01ic sig~ are
not entirelJ new -curve and
i?" crosstQad ~mbols have been 1
:i ----!n-use for some-time--SW·
111 bo~ have several advintaies
over word messages," Turner
aaid. .
"They provide almost fn..
.... , st.ant communication with the
~1r Qrlyer, since . they can be
understood at a glance Without ~ having to read .. ,;Familiari·
ty with the symbolic aigr! will
.... help Americans tr a v·e 1.1 n g
abroad, as well as foreign
.,, visitors to the United States."
Tumer added that while the ~. United States is mo· v Ing
~ toward more- . of the In·
ternational·type signs, Euro-
pean nations have agreed to
-t. adopt th~ familiar U.S. red-
~ '1~ and-white stop sign.
• 1.i Colop are particularly' Im-'•"' ..,_.., In .. _ , .., ¥V" ... nt we 'new system.
Red indicates stop or a pro-
hjbition. Green 'sbows that
movement is permitted or
· , gives directional guidance.
~ Blue is for s1g~ leading to
\ mo..torist services, o r a n g e
• l warns of construction or
maintenance work · and brown
' , provides public-recreation and
... , scenic guidance.
Yellow Indicates a general
waming. Black on white is us-
ed for regulatory signs, such
as those for speed limits.
'. Shapes of signs also are
i . signifi cant.
D i a m o n d -shaped signs
,, signify a warning. Vertical
.; , rectangular signs provide a
traffic regulation, w hi I e
i'I horizontal rectangular si3ns
contain guidance information .
'-· An octagon means stop, an
ol,· inverted triangle means jield,
• .i..., a pennant means no passing,
.. and a pentagon shows the .. ' !-. . presence of a school.
...... Yellow pa~·ement markings
l...'.. are to be used much more
than in the past.
Yellow lines delineate a
separation of trarfic now in
oppos ing directions. T h e
>+• center line on two-way
1 roadways will be dashed
r yellow· to differenti ate from
the dashed white lines used on
'multiple one-way roadways, to
warn drivers leaving one-way
roads that traffic will be op-
posing them to the left of the
yellow line.
;: · JCPenney
IT ,
COSTA MESA STORE
noo HARIOR ILVD.
1,ecl•I HoUcl•y StON Houre -_.., SUNDAY-•
' :12 to 5 p.m.
,_
• KI DS LOVE
•• UNCLE LEN
~~T UAOAYS IN .,
~-· . DAILY PILOT
11
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Monda. Novtmbtr 29, 1971
•
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--~--...... -------·
' •
: . From MarIOOro · l ~ •
to America's-loW.·IBE cigarette smokers-.,
•
•
Ma1 \bo10lights:14mg'.'11(1.1 mg. nic otine
av. p11 ciga1eua bv FTC method
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. -' . ; ·\' . -i
.,
.. ~ ....... .. .. ~··"
•
l. ,1
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t -
i' •
Lighter in ta~te, low in . tar.
Some people prefer lhe taste of a low tar and nicotine
cliuette. For them. we've ,made Marlboro Llabts.
The same ~I quality you ~I wllh famous Marlboro Bed-
only Lfalats were developed especially for lhose who prefer
lhe llitater tute of a low tar smoke.
----'
llillloro IJOll-dle new low tar clfarette from America's fUlesliJ'Owllf.brand.
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Police Battle-Wilderne ss-' .. in Hun-t~ for--Bodie s· . . . •
HOUSTON (UPI) -Sheril!'1 c1epuu,.
said they will bav• to use machetes to
1lash . into • lhiek underbrutb ot a
wilderness 35 miles ·west o( Houat.on
whe,. the head!~ bodlea of two teen-q-
ed glr)4 have been foond!
Sheriff C. V. "Buster" Kem .aid the
thicket might yield more bodies -or
cluu to seven fatal attacks (>D girls and
young 'fOmen in the Houston aria in the
past six months.
"Wt don't know wbat_inlldl we'll find
out theN," Kem atkL ••But when we're
lbrough we'll know wbat'a out there."
lie aid hll men woujd cul through the
area with bJg knives becaua the un.
derbnuh II t0 tllJck It w o u 1 d choke
1asoline-driv'm-chlln A Wi. ~ "It'1, • very, very thick place,'' the
sheriff sald. "In 10me places, you can't
even aee through it or under It."
The latest hodiM, uncove..d f[•m the
thicket, were tllOle of Qolette Anise •
Wllsoo-;-13; ilid-Glcrlda GollZalez;-19. Tbe
.
bodies bad no b!ads, but Kem_ old that
part could have been work of animalS:.
Miss Wilson, of Alvin, Te:r., had ·at~
tended a aummer band camp 1n Sugar
Land, a Houston. suburb, and was let out
near her borne in Braioria County by the
band director June 17. Her mother ar~
rived to pJck her up, ·OOt she had vanish· td. I I
Miss Gonzal~ worked for a Houston ~ry chain and left Oct. 28 for a vac;~·
tian. lt-1'1S the last-her family and
I
friends saw or htr. _
Kem said 53 of his men hacked through
part of the wild thicket Saturday and
found some different bones, but it was
not knoi,yn" immediately U they were
animal J>t. huma n.
Kern said:-bis investigation Wou1d move
Inside until Tue~day, while he tries to link
the seven sex murders in the Houston
area with killings in the Dallas area yet
unsolved.
· A2iss Gonza\ei' body was fOIDld Tu~
day and MJu wu.>o'1 11teJel!m WU
discovered Friday; '
Of the other five ldllJnp. tine wero
Galveoton leen4gen. Two of tholr bodlel
we,. found lloatJnc, nudo from the walot
down, 1n a ~ near Houllon Nov. 17
· and 11. 'Ille otllet l!rl\-ppepred !Oii
aummer . and wu ipdtted Ooatfn& in .
Galveston Bay.
All throe Galveston vlctl!m bad hid
their hands and feet tied.
A lee!Hlger •nd I ll·yt~~ld womu,
..
1iplj! ol HoultAl!1, ""-the othtr two v!O> tJma. Adtll Mll'P.M Ctabtree, IS, d1$1p.
peered Nov. 1 and wu found two day1
Jai... In a dllcl! Ip 1dja<:tni'MootComq
County.
Linda l"ayo llutherllnd, 11, ~.
Nov. 4, •d Jter body w., found four daya.
later In Brazoria CoWl~. P.olico lald her
killer threw her from a bridge and then
shot ·her four times with a abotgun u 1be
tried te crawl ·away. 1 "" ..
•
·Ki ssinger's Son Piqued
Over ~iegler's · Remarlis
January Business Census
To Check B.uying.Hahi~
\\'ASHINGTON (UPO -Ten-year~ld
David Kissinger, who rev ea I e d that
President Nixon would make his hiatoric
trip to Peking n~ March. ta mad at
Young Voters
Could Upset .
Party Balance
White Houie Preu Secretary Ronald
Ziegler for questioning hiJ credibility.
Hll father, llrelidential Sec u r 1 t y
Adviser Henry Kissinger, told reporters
Sunday night !hit David hal beeo reading
his pnss notices ever since he said 'what
his: father and ZJe&ler had ap.Psren!ly
been k~ping a aecret, The incident oc-
curred Wednelday aboard the preoiden.
tlal jet en roof< to Calilomia.
JIJislnger lald bis blond, curly-haired
10n came stomplne Into b.iJ bedroom at
Sen Clemente Iller the lnclden~ In-
censed by a newspaper re'j>ort that
Ziegler bad told reporten to "d!Megard
him."
Kluinger told reporters aboard the
WASHINGTO)I (UPI) -Cenau1 takers
will fan out acrou the country qalD 1n
January, lhil time checking •hero and
what peopl• are buying lnltead of juat
counting noses.
The <"115111 bureau, It WU dlacl-1 Jn
congressional testimony rt1eued today,
will survey the buying_habita: of-17,000
familiea -and will resurvey them thre1
more times during 1971.
The cbec:kup will bt dpno by 'c0111111
takera for the Bureau of Labor statistics
(BLS), the statllticlana -pol together
ttie monthly consu.mer~ and wholeaale
p r I c e IDdices which are tile c b i e f
baron)eters of the coat of liVjng,
The aurvey ii intended, •ccordlng to
million for just an annual survey, the
way it wu done in 1960.
Moott 's bureau haJ been under firo bi
"""11 monlhl from--Gd HouM,
memhera who charged !hit the aclo_
ministration bu been trying to use U.,
government statistJclanS for political
J>1!!P>IOI, rather than leUJng !be monthlz
fll1ll'OI sepok lir tbemli>Jve1. -,,
Britisher Guilty
In ·sex Attacks
.,
PRINCETON. N.J. (AP) -A Gallup "Spirit of '6" returning to Washington
Poll reJ>orts that if every potential voter Sunday night that David felt Ziegler had
18 years or older registered there would "undermined his credibility" -at least
be 30 million more Democrats than as far as his clwmates were concerned.
R€ptiblicaiis. . _ David wu not ciiDOard the plane for
The su!Yey published Sunday 1a1d that the return trip. But Zii:gler insisted he
the reg15 trabon figures woul~ ~ as had not been barred _ onJy that he had
follows : Democrats •. ~ m 1 l _l ! o n ; _-to get-b&clr~to-tehool-ln-Boston-right after
' .• ~
the testimony before the HOUH Ap. 0 B " G• Js ·p!'O)Jl'lailona Commi!tee, to put together a n oys, 11''
new market basket of goods and services
for the new coot of living Index. The last ST. HELn;R, Jersey {AP) -A father
such massive survey wu made in 19111). of thrff with a 1tute for cqiell and'
11164 but-Included only-one-follow-up in-l"Otesque maakl-wu found IUill)'-~
terview. 1 of a 1erie1 of sex attacks on chlldred
The new survey came 11 a surprise to which for 10 years terroriz.ed~thla vacao'
many memhera of the commi!tee. lion island Jn the Englab 01anneJ.
"Who origjnat..i the !do&~ this dr• Jeroey'1 Royal Court 10und Edward' epu icans, millK>n, undeCii:lea'., ~ Thanksgiving.
million. L
-The Gallup Poll said tht latest figures
continue a 1G-year trend. Jn 116t, a study
indicated 18 million more persons prefer·
red the Democratic party. 1n 1965, the
difference was 2.4 million.
At the sanie time, the Gallup Poll 1aid
more self-professed Republicans than
Democrats were acruany registered
voters. It reported 26 percent of those
calling themselves Democrats we:en't
registereQ. The p ere ent age of
nonregistei'ed Republicans Is 24, the poll
said.
He's Got New
Record (Burp)
5YDNEY (UPI) -Peter Wilco ..
29, clai_med a world beer drinking
record Friday nlghl He downed
one gallon In BiI minutes , 45 sec-
onds.
'Nie record was set at a high
school end-of-year ball at suburban
Douhel Bay.
To the cheers and applause of
400-!riends and classmatu. Peter
broke the record and declared, ''I
sure will have a giant hangover."
The Guiness Book of Records
shows the previous world record
for drinking a gallon of beer WU
seven minutes, 33 second.!.
Peter, six.feet-two and 219
pound•. -""""'1!Pl'ned by a drum roll.
Students Split
Almost Evenly
On Pot Question
The Girl Frimid
Model·turned-aetress Twiggy and her mana ger,"'Jusiin DeVilleneuve
arrive in New York for two \veeks of pe rsonal appearances in con·
nection with her first movie, "The Boy Friend."
me.tic new thing?" asked Rep. Dan I e I p · eJ .... '-·-"---~-Flood ftp llSll 1. ...,, I cons.._-..;;wuq ~-""~-~-..__-(~ a.), a eul><ommJUeo chair· IUllty on all 11 charges lnwl9inj
m~~ffrey H. Moore, ....... 1, __ , ____ of and girls 11 young u I yun: comm~ 1960 and Jaat year. • the BLS Uid the quarters survey wu,a """'-j 1oo· • •• joint decision of his bl,uuu, the Census .ii1e U!_)!' t 45 minutes to reach ft&.
Bureau and the Office of MJnagement verdict. Pi.1$nel will be: ientenctd by &he
and Budget, wblch..11 the White Houat'I Island's fuU court Wednesday I(
budget-keeping arm. psychiatric~ are l'fady bf.lore hL He pleaded Innocent. S rt. Ph • • R t Although the purpose of the survey ls _to During the week-long· trial, the pro..
NEW YORK (AP) -The N.iUonaJ po s ys1 Cl an epo r s get a new idea of what Americana Int eecu.Uon produ~ a_ maca.J>re ~ Institute of Student Opinion (NISC) aays , _ -buying, alia where tliey ere buyinf·tli<tr which it claimed J".alanel wore during hf&
a poll Of 95,000 high school students shows goods and atrvices, the quarterly reports attack• against dlfldren.
49 percent say they would favor legaliz·' M p ' Pill could glve Preaident Nixon an up.to-data The ouUit consisted of 1 grotesqu.
Ing the aale and ... of marijuana ll there • 'Lo.sers ore r o11e to . s guide on whelher hll anU-inllaUon pr.. mask topped by a wig. It was worn with
were . medical proor that it does no gram Is working. a ralncoat and Jn11tband1 studded with
permanent harm to the user. '!he questions will bl ''vfry ddailed," aiU1. ' · '•
Five percent In the poll aaid Ibey would llld Moore, cauilq Flood le uk If Ibero Pollce uld they found the par wb"' favor legallzlng marijuana without any NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Athletes who "There Is evidence in some well done tw.d been "any 11quawlu: about it yet?" they arrested Pa.Unel in a rt.Glen car. Ji.
restriction•; 11 percent aiid they would take pep pills may impair not improve 8tudles that when all of the partlcipanta "No, not yet," Moore replied. ll1d be Wll on hll way to a 11:1 OflY and
l~allze-lta tale providing there was 8 their performances, a noted sports physi~ in certain events are tested, io~ers, arl Moore uld that Ult quarierlJ'. _...,, ~ I•ter denild ruponalbllJty 6:lr *be a,
minimum 1ge lor buying It; and 35 per· c;:lan sald Sunday_ more pi-one to dabbJe..fn the area if ttru was propoled wttb the w.: ,t1i4t tad• ()ft children. . I<
cent would conUnue to Dllke it.I aale and Dr. Donald ~. Cooper told the gimmicks th3n the winners," he said. "consumers ctn remember, we hope, Medical wttneuu told the court ~
use illegal Amercian A1edical Association's annual Cooper, team physlcian..lor-bklahoma what they 1 p e n·t within the i.t three scra&ch marks.found on the dilld ,victlmS
Tbe na tionwide NISO poll, conducted by confereoce on sport.'J medicine that there State University and the 1968 U.S. Olym· months." could have been Cluaed by tbe.nalll oa
Scholastic Magazlne.s, Inc., queried ls ve,:Y .JitUe scientific evide_nce to in-pie Team, said there appears to be a cor· The survey will ~ $8.l million com· the· costume. v
students in more than 2,000 schools. Of di cate that amphetamines giye athletes relation between drug use and IOi!iing. -pared with the estimated ~ of f'.3 The prosecution also produced evide~
the total, 33,000 were seniors and 62,000 any extra energy or strength. He said cyclists were tested for drug., that Plifsnel practiced aomt: sort of black
junior high pupils. after racing in Winnipeg In 1967 and it magic, In a room at his bouie they found
In a.[elaled question, the students were No Bo. tulisnl Fowfd wasn'I unlil authoriliea got to t h e 7th Makes Appearance what appeared to be .. allar or lhrlne
asked whom they would tum to if they 11th. 14th, 18th, 2Qth and 32nd place with a dagger,. a &1as1 ,challce and a
had 1 drug pro hi em. Twenty·tbree per· BERKELEY (AP) -Tests have failed finishers that they follnd evidence of drug NEW YORK (AP ) _ Lady Amalia porcdain toad.
cent selected their parents, a fraction to prove whether botulism caused the use. Simila r! ret~u1~ wFere repodrteltdl in P'leming, who wu expelled from her The court beard bow children were
less than 23 percent11ld they would seek death.i or two ' elderly Santa Barbara more recent es mg m ranee an a y. taken from their beds during the night
out IOl'De agency that lids young people; sisters who drank home-canned celery "I personally do not believ~ the am-naUve Greece, plans to appear before the and ~1uulted tn fields ..
l9 perceilt said they wouid turn to ju1ce that may have been contaminated, phetamines or the a m p h e t a m I n e ~ Senate F9relgn RelaUons cdnmtttee Jn The prosecution aaJd PalMeJ also lJad at
friends; 11 percent would go to a physi· state health officials say. barbiturate combinations can make any Washington UUJ week. The a.year~ld boot about GlllN de Rail, IDll'lhal of
cla.n; 10 percent to their brothers or Mary M. Smith, 85, and Jo Grac e athlete perform better than he could widow of Sir Aleundet Jl'Jemlaa, t b • France during the 1500I, who was ~~
1ister1; five percent to a teacher and Hawley, 77, died within three days of drJg-free," Cooper aaid. ''In fact, in many Scotti9h dl8cover• d. penlciI1ln. arrived "1cted of numerous aez crimes againd,
four ~ to a clergyman. The re-each other.:;.lie r this month after ~th instances, the dru gs may very well be beer from London Sattrday to pltlld for children. The p>Uce llld Paianef wa{
maining all percent chose various other suffered _lJ!_ same food poisoning de tr i men t a l to an athlete's an end of American aJd to tbt Greek pmud tJ. hJ1 ~Uy'• history and clahnecr
!:::==~=========·=========='--~""'=::...._:.=~~--:--::;;;;;i~::~~==~sy~m~p~lom!.;;;;;;~:::;;;;~·~·;:::::::::.:::::P<'::'f:or:m:a:nc:e:.':'::::::::::::::::::g:o:v:er:nm::ent::;::::::;:::-~~..,..-~~~a-co_nn~"'-U_o~n-wl_th~De~Ral~•-·~~~~.·
• Ii
'
El Rancho has the hottest price in town !
Salisbury Steak .... 89~
A blend of 50% tender beef-00% lean pork •• coarae ground for texture!
Pastrami -IY THE PIECE--99~ --• .............. .
Lean tender beet, 11Plced to )>Ol'foctlan A omobd A cooked torflne_r tln<lt I
Rack of Lamb ................ DVEJ( -• ............... 9'·
Ready !or you to eeuon to lute, thou rout! U.SJ>.A. Choice !rsh Iambi
Back Loin Port Ribs ........... ~ iium ............ '1.22 1b.
So 1 .. n and t<:nderl Par-boll !or I hour then I>.ke in th• oven or B-B-Qf (
• "" . -
)
• '
Prices in effect M,on., TueB., lVed.,
No v. !9, 30, Dec. 1. No 1ale1 lo dea ler1 •
"
' I' ~ .. . ,
.
.J
•
·Pork & Beans --.5· t .. ~
• • • • • I •• 1
Van Camp'• ••• aerve 'em hot and hearty with S&U.bury Steal<! No. 2 cana. . .
Kleenex:..~ ........ ~: .. A ~= $l . . ,
Facial lluuea •tn>D.-.b·fer blr -· ~00 ct. pkp., colora "' whlt.o.
Jack La Lanne' s · CnCkers ................. : ....... .-39-.
----~-J:J:nm the Sunshine crack..., Soya or Sau.me ••• tor health and r06d taste I
's~llced Meats .: ........................ 3"' '1
slices ••• cooked, ft&dy to eat; low !at, hirh prot.in I 8 oz.. pkp
--·
•
•
••
I
MonW. No...,btr 2'1, 1971 f llAILY JJLOT
Hijackers Swallow Lie by Stewardess
By THOM.\S MURPHINE
ot tllt DallY ,1191 ST9ff
SECOND GUESSES DEPT. -This ls
the time ot..year when newspaper people
are pked to cast their eyes backwards
across the lilt 12 months and select .. The
Top 10" news stories in the natloit , state,
county, or whatever. It is some chore.
you get these requests /or rankiog the
rank news from places like The
Associated Press, UPI or olher pres!
organiuUons. Tom Pendergast, genial
bead man or The AP in Los Angtles, just
sent me a list asking for the Top 10 in
California during l!t7L He gave-me 1
choice of stories listed A lhrougb Z.
I have orten suspected that some news
ediWrs might cheek back lo make sure
how they played the news before they
rank it at the end of the year. This is
cheating, of course. It's a way of ~
derlining bow intelligent your judgment
was tPe first time. As for me, I just grab
the list and b!a.st ahead With my top 10
choi~s. ;
THE.~ LATER. "60mebody can come
back and say, "If you tbooght that llory
was so bot, boweome back in March you
played it on Page 18 nezt to the
crosswonl pm:det"
I t!ilnt i-ooght to say something about
the ~u 1-illiln't select, which include
only one candidate offered from Orange
Olwrty. That was the California Angela
ha\ing their worst.ever season.
Some things are 6est just forgotten.
ANOTHER CANDIDATE was Frank
Sinatra retiring. If he makea Ille t<>p 10
quitting, what will be do when be un-
retires1 .----... • ·-.
By Tbe A110d1ted Pre11
A atewardeM from a Tr1n1 World
Airlines jetliner hijacked to OJba aaya
on& of tbe three men who commandeered
the plane 1dmltted klllllll a New Mexico
state trooper. .
~ ''11le smalll!:!f: one, bis name w11
. Michael but had bl!:en changed to the.
African name M,ahcha, said he killed ~
officer," stewardeu Ann Harrell Aid
after she ind five other crewmembers Of
the ~g m returned to :P.iiaml from
Havana Sunday.. •
Thi!: FBI identified the three hijackers
•
•
t
•
as the wne trio chaiged with gunntn1
down trooper RDbert Roo<!lbloom wh<n
he made a routine stop of their vehicle
Nov. a near Albuquerque, N.M.
The FBI SdenUfled tfiem a:s Michael R.
Finney, 20, of San Francisco and
Btrkeley; Ralph L. Goodwin, 24, of
Berkeley: and Charles Hil~ 21, no
hometown.. ~ Th• pilot of the hli•ck'll night, Capt.
Jo~ McGhee, said he feared "aomeone wu going to die" when the three young
men stormed aboard the plane a:s it was
boarding passerigers at AlbuqUerque ear-
ly Satunlay.
~. •
"1'hese men boarded in a violent,
agitated manner and were obviously
ready to commit murder," McGhee uid
after bringing . the ~ane .ba.ck from an
overnight stay at Havana.
Once the plane was airborne from
Albuquerque, stewardess Betty Canbre
said, she lied at knifepoint to convince
"their leader that this airplane couldn't
fly.all the way to Africa."
She said she fold him oj>e'd been to
Cuba twi~ and knew hijacKers would be
treated nicely by the island's Communist
regime.
"I lied," she admitted.
Ul'I T1lffllol9 Gov. Reagan was offered as a possible
choice becan1.e he failed tOpay.any state
income taxes. Now that's picking on him.
Why don't we wait wtW be pays, then put
him in the Top 10?
PAKISTANIS USE OX CART TO OARRY BELONGINGS AWAY FROM BATTLE AREAS ON BORDER.
fresh Fighting Reported BetwMn Two Nations Despite International Peace Pleas
Cesar Chavez was a cindiClate for elf.
ding his lettuce boycott I doubt if be'11 on
the hit parade with too many housewives.
Have you checked the prjce of lettuce
lately? r
Anyway, after I tied to cull out the
al~rans, I ended up with a list of 10. Six
of these stories dealt with violence. That
may give you a noUon of what kind of
year it was ln California. My: choice.a go
like this: t•I
1. THE SAN FERNANDO Y.alley !'I'll>.
quake in which more· than eo J)etlOOj lost
their · lives. One of the worst in recent
memory_ It will have long repercussions
in the number of public slructurea that
failed the test.
i. FIFTY DIE when a jetliner and
fighter: headl!:d for El Toro Marini!: Corps
Air Station collide in midair over the San
Gabriel Mounlains.
3. THE BODIES of 25 slain mlgrant
workers found in an orchard near Yuba
City.
f. mE CALIFORNIA Supreme Court
invalidates local property laJCl!:s for finan.
cing public schools. We're ~ikely to hear
from this one for a long time to come.
5. MARINER I becomes the first
spacecraft to orbit ano1her planet under
direction from scientills at Pasadtna'1
Jl!:t Propulsion Laboratory.
I. SOLEDAD BRo'rHER G I!: o r g e
Jackson and five others die in· gunfire at
San Quentin Prison.
7. CHARLIE rt1ANSON and the girls,
guilly of murder as. charged.
8. EXPLOSION Kn.LS 17 in un·
derground water tunnel al Sylmar.
9. HARRY BR I D G ES an<I his
Longsho remen closing West Coast ports
for 100 days. "
10. THE CA.LIFOR~1A Legislature in
its longest aeS$ion in history. This one
has been good for a lot of laughl. It
makes the list after you revil!:W the other
nine selettions. Thl!:R you can sl!:e how much we've
needed some Jaugbs.
Nixon Calls for Peace
On India-Pakistan Borde1·
NEW DELHI (UPI) -President Nixon . Mre. Ghandl met for lll minutes with her
1tnt penonal meaages to I n d i a , .,senior cabinet advisers. She also held a
f.'akistan and tbl!: Soviet Union today urg-aecond meeting with her armea forces
ing an end to fighting along thl!: Indian-chil!:fs and :senior officials from the
Pakistan border. foreign and defense ministries. It ·was not
U.S. ambassador to India Kl!:nneth B. known if they .discussed Nixon's note.
Keating delivered Ni1on's message to Keating decllned to discuss the contents
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in a 30. of the message but sources said Nixon
minute meeting. asked for an end to the fighting and a
Following-the meeting with Keating, withdrawal of troop.! from the border
areas of the two countries.
He Ca11 Sleep
At Night Now
PARIS (UPI) -Rogl!:r Ross-
ingnol hasn't slept at night in 30
years. But today Rossignol, the
night custodian at one of Paris'
plushest hotl!:l:s, aro&e from a bed
slept in by such millionaires as
Stavros Nlarchos and Henry Ford.
After announcing hls retirement
from the night watch of the Plaza
A~henee. Rossignol, 65, was given
the royal treatment for one
"'·eekend at the Paris Hotel near
the Champs Elysees.
"I stayed in the royal :suite, and
was served champagne and Dowers
by the very men I've worked with
for all these years," said Rossignol.
Thi!: ootes were draftl!:d at the Western
White House in San Oemente by Nixon
over the holiday weekend, the sources
aald.
Earlier, news rtporls :said Indian
Dl!:fense Minister Jagjivan Ram &aid In-
dian troops bad been ordered to move into
East Pakistan as far as necessary to stop
Pakistani artillery attacks.
Ram said the order was issued after
Pakistan increased its shelling o( border
areas, the reports said. '
Four civilians were killed and 14 wound-
ed in a Pakistani artillery at.tack-on the
town of Balurghat, about 180 mlll!:s north
of Calcutta, Sunday.
Fighting, which started in the arl!:a
Saturday, still was going on today.
India, claiming Pakistan '-r oops
threatened their defensive positions,
moved into Pakistan in the Dinajpur area
and destroyed three Paltistatii tanks.
Government sources said earlier indian
commanders bad authority to late broad
steps in protecting their defensive posi-
tions.
2 Storms Buffet Nation
• •
Cities in f7>wa,--Missouri Hard Hit -by-Snow
Temperature•
9t UftllN p,.u lftlemtll9MI
T-r•lurft end 11recl•ll1tl"" for
..... 1 .... 0U. ~·loll •ndl~~ •• ~ ··"'· "1111 Lew l"rec . " " . 11 ~,
" " ., "
.. ... ·"
mTIEWOFHOAA "ATIOMAl wtATNlR StRVltl TO 7:1tA..M. f:ST ti ..jO-lt
SNOW
4.1 J.I .fl • •
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• 26 .1• 4 .. ,. • :u .111 " . " " Sol ,. ••
2' " T ·I' •II .07 " ~ JI • lt a -• JI .1'1 '° M ... .. " ...
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A1iti-communist
Sweeps to Win ,
111 Uruguay Vote.
?\tONTEVIDEO (UPI) -Anti-com-
munist government candidates Juan
Maria Bordaberry swept to victory in
Montevideo today, and mounting official
returns from Sunday's presidential. elec-
tions showed voters had rejected a leftist
coalition's bid for power.
The 43-year-Old Borda berry, President
"Georg; e Pacheco Areco's hand-picked
nominee, also was running in front in the
interior and his victory in the it.man
presidential race nationwide seemed
assured .
Uruguay's 2.8 mill ion population i:s
almost evenly divided 1 betWeen fo..!on-
tevideo and the interior.
A Bordaberry triumph means a con-
tinuation of outgoing Pacheco Arec~»s
hNd-line tactics against Uruguay's
Tu pamaro guirrillas who had given con·
ditlonal support to the broad front
Retired Gen. Liber Seregni, lhe front's
candidate, was quoted as recognizing
dl!:feat early today, only hours after he
had bitterly denounced the elections as
"the dirtiest I have ever seen."
The front, a collection of Communists,
Sociallsts, Christian De m o c rats ,
Trotskyltes and dissidents from the tradi-
tional Colorado and Blanco parties, hoped
to follow in the footsteps of the coalition
which put Afarxist Salvador Allende in
power in Chile last year.
Henderson, 51, is accu sed of failing ti)
investigate complaints of wholesa~ kill-
ing of civilians in the assault on the South
Vietnamese hamlet on March 16, 1968l
'
••
Colonel Insists
He Was Ignorant
Of-M y-hai-l}eath s
FT. MEADE, Md. (UPI) -Col. Oran
K. Henderson, under intense cross ex-
aminallon, Insisted repealedly today that
he had no knowledge at the time or the
1968 M:Y Lai massacre that-any of his
troops had shot unarmed civilian's. t
The prosecutor~ h1aj. Carroll J.
Til;:henor, questioned Hehderson ex-
tensively at his court.martial Jrial about
the colonel's ct>nversations wi"1-'various
persons ln\·olvcd in the assa ult. f\1ore
than 100 unarmed civilians were killed in
and around the hamlet.
Henderson, speaking softly during
anothtr day of qutstioning, satd Ote:t he
cot1ch1ded therl!: was no basis for a r~rt
ol wild ahooting by ground troops and Ol
••wttd flrlng" by helicopter gunships.
Hospitalized Merry
Hears Reclskhl Caine
WASHINGTON (AP) -AFU lO
Presldl!:Rt George ~1cany f~lt v.'ell enough
to sit up In his hospital roorn Sunday and
listen to a broadcast of the '\Vashinglon
Red skins·Phlladelphie Eagles pro football
game. The 77·.vear-old Meany was
'ho<pltallzed Tbunday aft el' ou!fering
chest pains.
McGhee said he then convlnoed the hi·
jackers that bl!: needed a rdu~ling 1top.
Mter the fugitives refused to Jl!:t lllm Oy
to Atlanta or M18.m1, Ute plane'"Janded at
Tampa, Fla., where the 43 passengers
were allowed to deplane.
A Federal AviaUon Administration spok~sman said Cuban officials lnfomlr.t
the FAA that the trio was taken lrito
custod,Y and-disarmed of two guns a.acla
knife when the jet landed In Havana.
Jn the Paclli~orthwest, an intl!:nsive
search is continuing for a man who hi·
jacked a Northwest Airlinl!:I 727 last Wl!:d·
Nixon Extension
nesday and then-balled out with !200,000
in rallSQ{D money.
The airl,it\e had delivered four
· paracfithes ifill the monl!:y to the hijacker
1n S(!attle after he commandeered the
aircraft between Portland, Ore., and
Seattle. The 36 other passengers and two1
of the six-me~ber crew were rmltted.
to leave the plane at Seattle. .. .
He _appar~lty bailed out· ov~ tM~ _
Woodl.a.nd,.Wasb ., area a:s the plane ma~
a slow, low-tevei flight -at his command
-from Seattle to Reno, N_l!:V., en route to.
his demanded destination Muico.
Added Economic
Powers Studied
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate to-
day co~· ers a bill to give President
Nixon ntrol over the economy for 17
more onths -power so vast some
Democrats warned that Congress would
rue voting for it. ~
Sen. Williat'fl Proxmire (D-Wls. ), said
he woold fight the bill. He predicted con-
sumers and workers alike would be up in
anns before the 17 months are over and,
presumably, wouJd be ready to retaliate
akainst President and Congress alike.
But the mood of the Democratic ma-
jority seemed to be to give Nixon all he
sought in economic controls so that he
&uid not blame the Democrats if in-
flation and unemployment still were
headaches in 1972.
Republicans for their part. showed llt·
tie appetite for trying to strike from the
bill a section inserted by the Senate
Banking Committee over the White
House's objections.
It would restore _to workl!:rs back pay
for negotiated ralses prevented from tak-
ing effect during thl!: 90-day wage-price
freeze unless such raises are
"unreasonably inconsistent" with the Pay
Board'Sgfiidellnes.
The Pay Board has voted twice over
Jabo'r•s objections to refuse to allow
retroactive pay raises to take effect
across-the-board.
Raises worth $2 billion to $6 billion -1
relative drop in the overall economic
bucket -would be restored by the bill.
Proxmire, chairman of the HoUse-
Senate Economic Committee. said he
would oUer an amendmeot limiting the
extension of presidential authority hi
April 30. 1972 instead of April 30, 1973, the
date Nixon wants.
"This program is so c o m p I e x ,
Currency Leaders
To Discuss Devaluing
ROME (UPI) -Deputy treasury
ministers and bankers from the 10
wealthiest nations of the non-Communist
world today got rid of some of the
preliminaries for two da ys of talks
among their bosses on who should
devalue and who revalue their money.
The group of 10 will confer Tuesday
and Wednesday on the current monetary
crisis which was spawned by President
Nixon's Aug. 15 decision to cut the dollar
from gold and impose a 10 percent surtax
on some imports. \"?'\
unworkable and unenforctabll!: that it ls
bound ~o engender hostility by consumers :
and workers alike throughout I.he country:
and the serious economic confusion ii .
likely to slow the economy and aggravate ·
unemployment," Proxmire said in a.
statement prepared for the debate. "We
&hould wait to see bow tbt program
works before extending it 17 months."
In separate economic action, the Price
Commission rejected tod&y a reque!t by
a big rpeat packer, Oscar Mayer C.o., for
a 1.31 per~nt_price hike.
lt was only the second price increase
request that the commission rejected ~
since it began administering controla:
Nov. 14.
The guideline for ,Ph~se II prices
£orbids. increases that" would boost a
firm's margin of profit on sales frOlri. ex·
ceeding tbl!: average margin in the best
two of the last three Ytars. The com·
mission said Oscar Mayer's margin
already ls higher in 1971 than the base
period-'
Unaware Plant
Employed Alieni,
No1ninee Testifies
W ASIDNGTON (UPI) -Romani
Acosta Banuelos insisted today she did
not knowingly pemtit illegal Mexican
aliens;to work in her Southern California
food plant -which was raided shortly
after she was nominated by President
Nixon for U.S. Treasurer.
Mrs. Banuelos, testifying beb'e the
Senate Finance Committee, also denied a-
-report by the U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service that there had
been five raids prior to the one on OCt. 5
for illegal aliens al her taco and tortilla
factory in Gardena. · .i ._
She said the immigration servict! f'o4nd
eight to 11 aliens during one ra.id in tbt~
spring of 1968. t
The Senate committee is considerinl
i1rs. Banuelos' appointment to the large.
ly ceremonial position, which in recent
years has traditionally gone to a woman.
Thirty-six Mexicans were arrested
when Mrs. Banuelos' firm , Ramona'•
Food Products Co., was raided Oct. 5 -
15 days after her appointment was an-
nounced -by fedei'~I agents.
Sign of Lile Sought
Red Craft Nears Mars;
2nd's Fate No.t Given
MOSCOW (UPI) -One Soviet
spacecraft approached Mars today on a
mission seeking possible life, but there
was no v.'ord on the fate of its sister ship
already due at the planet.
Pravda, the Commimlst p arty
newspaper, said Sunday the unmanned
-Man 3 was "approeching Mars'' at the
end of its slx-ptonlh journey from earth.
But It said nothing about Mars 2, which
blasted off nine days ahead of Mars 3,
(In J\fanchl!:Sler, England, scientists at
the Jodrell Bank Observatory :sald Sun·
d:.ly one of the two ships hatl arrived and
was orbiting Mars , but they did' not know
\\'hich one.
"We are assuming it is ?\1ars 2,'' a
Jodrell spokesman :said. "But it could be
Ole other one. There's no firm indica-
tion.") -Sunday's Pravda report caught the in·
lercst of \Ve slcrn spa.cl!: experts because;
previously, the fe~~ Soviet progress
reports always treated them as a joint
mission and mentioned both ships.
At thi! po1nt. the Western analysts said
they were hesitant to !peculate whether
the Mars 2 mls,,lon had gone wroni
because it was possible the ship had land·
ed or was in orbit.
n1~ Soviets often delay rtports on
space mi~ibns until th~y are confident
all is well. '1 •
In addition. the U.S. Mariner 9 Mars .
probe has bttn watching a global dtist
storm that could have caused postpone.
mr.n l of Soviet arrh•ril plans,
(Jn Pasadena, Cf.Hf., Marlntr 9 lcien-
tists, who got tJie btst plcturts ever
taken of another planet's moon with lholl
of tho Mutlu aatelllla Delmoi, HI out
today to photograph Its big brother
Phobo.!1,
~ scientists Wl!:re heartened by the suc~the difficult maneuver re·
quired to get the Oe.im05 picture Friday,
and not diSCOllfaged by the failure of an
attempt to photograph Pbobos Saturday,
A spokesman called it "3.-.tr:~.CJQ'.--"'
business.' )
Mars 2 and Mars 3 are the biggest un-
manned spaceships In history, fivl!: ton1
each. They blasted off May 19 and May
28 respectively on the 291).mlllion m I 1 e
flights.
She Cries 'Wolf'
-And Mean.s It
:r.1oscow-(AP) -'Vhen a woman
telephoned Moscow aulhoritieai and told
them two wolves were loptnr arwnd
M09COw'1 heavily traveled Leninsk;t
Prospekt Boull!:vard, olfidals told her to
save her jokes ror April Fool's Day.
But the woman penis~ She said she
knew the difference between a dog and a
wolf and two wolves were living in an
area of new apartment house. con-
struction about seven miles from the
.Kremlin .
• A .. team of ·huri{ers started searching
the area. They quickly gaU1ered reporte
of "strange gray dogs" near garbage
cans. Then they found wolf tracks In the
1now l,J)d remains or cat.a and dogt.
'nley fipaUy Oushed two wolves In a se-
clon of Votoatosovaky Pm ,.d one ,. ..
tilled.
• .
DAILY I'll.OT f I
Stev~dores
I
In Eastern
·Ports Back
~)\' YORK, (UPI) -Lon(shor<men
1t major AUa~lc and Gulf Coest porta
cortji>lylnc wi federal court ordfn1
were back on docks in foi-today'
catchipg up wit . the work· tha~ad aC:
cpmulaltitl during the\r 51-day strike.
A tentaUve end to' 'the lengthy 1trike
was ordered by the courts lrlday and
Saturday and it appeared today that the
'5,000 mernber1 of the IntematlonaJ
Lona;sboremen'1 Assoclalion (g..A}-l'ere
p>mplying .with the temporary llkl.ay
restralninl order.
The orders were part of t b e
government's pl'8 to impost the Taft·
HarUey Act requiring an 11).day "cooling ·
ofr' period during which netoUalionJ
would continue between the shippers and
the ILA.
In Mobile, Ala., Houston . a n d
Philadelphia stevedores were at work
Sunday. A spokesman for t h e
PhiladelP.hla Marine Trade Association
said 400 Oockworkers could be counted on
to work there today.
In New York this morning, members of
the ILA local 824 were on hand to unload
the Greek cruise liner J ~lympia as 1be
slipped Into pier 'IT. Union deckhand•
opened pier doors and put up the
1angplank. ·
One worker complained of "being kind
of stiff'' from the long idleness, wb,lle
another uld, "Nixon should have called
u1 b1ck to work five d1y1 after the strike
began. I never wanted to go on alrike in
the first place, especially before the
holidays."
Other New York longshoremen were to
begin unloading the 69 vessels lhat hive
bin at anchor a 1 n c • tbe strike began
Sept. 30.
'
ParlgOJle"! . . """~· J . Cleani~
-incoine Ceiling Chemical
Ban Urged •
. Urged for Aged WASIUNGTON (UPI) -
Hexachlorophene, an active in-
gredient Jn deodorants and
other hygiene product.a, should
' be banned for nonprescription 1 use beca'use of possible harm.
.. ful elfects, according to Ra'lph WASHINGTO'N !UPI) -A move was
under way today to put the White H01.15e
confere~ ol aging behind a · r~·
mendaUon ~ admlnlslraUon might find
eriibafrusinC - a plea for guarinte«l
annual income for the nation's 26 million
senior Citlunt. ·
'Ibe idea wu picking up support among
the 3,®0 delegat.ea who gathered Sunday
for the five-day meeting called by the ad·
minil;tra~ a national policy for the aged. •, I'
The 1 ber Muaachuaettidelega·
tion wu on record tn favor of an lncome .
Spock Chosen
As Candidate •
DALLAS (UPI) -The People"
Party, a coalition of peilce•and civil
"lights-groups, chose Dr. Benjamin
Spock as its 1971 pmldenlial can·
did.ate Sunday. A b11ck, Julius
HoblOn, a Wuhingtm, D . C. ,
economirt WU named II a running
m•te. -11ie two nominations were in-
tended 11 only tenlaUve, ilowever,
with the possibility IOme better
known liberals will be available to
b.ead up the party after the 1972
Democratic National convention.
Spock, 68, accepted the preside.n·
ti.al nomination with a clenched-list
uilute.
I ~
Nader. · guarantee cf $3,000 ror a &tngl~ person
and ,$4,5\)0 per couple to\ the age\f. In ad·
diUon, black members attending the con-'
ference -calling themselves the Na.,. tiOnif C a u c lt s on the Black Aged -Ul'I ,........,
were also agreed to the concept, although MEET CHAIRMAN
The consumer advocate pro-
pos~ the ban Sunday In. a Jet-
tec_Jo])r. Charles c. Edwards.
cominlssioner of the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA). their chajr_man said n_o money figure had __ A_•_lh_u_•_F_la_m_m_l_n..;;g __ · there have been . rumors been decided.
The $3,000 to $4,500 range for an in-
come guarantee was also recommended
by Dr. Jean Mayer, a Harvard nutri·
tionist and conference participant. Mayer
also told a news conference Sunday that
the nation's high school cafeterias should
be open~ to the aged poor -estimated
to nwnber In excess of S millfon -to
provide them with government subsidized
meals. •
The income guar'antee recommendalion
could embarrass the \Vhite House In the
same fashion that boisterous militants
did during the 1969 White l{quse con·
fetence on food, nutrition ancf1healtb. The
militants' demand for a guaranteed an·
nual income of $5,000+for poor famJHes
later was said by pr'esidential adviser
Daniel P. Moynihan to ti.ave insulted
President Nidon.
Arthur S. Flemming, 66, chainnan o[
the conference, said the issue of
guaranteed income for life aging will be
"one in which delegates will take a great
interest."
Flemming predicted income issues
would dominate the conference. He said
the administ ration's welfare refonn pro-
posal, passed by the House and stalled in
the Senate Finance Committee, would of·
fer the aged. by 1974, $1.50 a month for a
single retired person
Rebelling
Prisoners
Captured
. that the FDA would prohibit
nonprescription use of be1-
achlorophene followi ng tes6 in
which rats suffered brain
damage when exposed to cer-
tain levels •.
The chemical ill readily
absorbed through the-s k I n ,
Nader said, and its effects on
human beings are uncertain.
RAIFORD, Fla. (AP) -A Nader cited tests in which in-
specially trained emergency: fants b a t h e d In hex·
squad of about 20 guards arm:-Sclilorophene products showed
ed with nightstirks and tear concentrations of the toxJc
gas has captured six knilt:! . chemical_ in their b I o o d
wielding prisoners and rescued streams. lour host.ages !ollowlng \ an Brain damage to r.1 t s
escape 11tte1npt at Raiford resintea-when the amount of
state Prison. hexachlorophene in Ule blood
Louie \'ialnwrlght, director reached a range of 1 part per
or the state Division of C.or· million (ppm).
rections1 said th: prisoners The infa1ts showed levels of
surrendered ·sunday "without .65 ppm, while some 1dults
a blow being struck." No ln· who used hexachlorophene
juries were reported. · products in bathing bad levels
W a I n w r i g h t said Ule of .38 ppm, Nader said.
emergency squad surprised Hexachlorophene is U!ed in
the prisoners by removing the RlOlil spray d e o do r a n t 1 ,
hinges from a locked rear feminine hygiene sprays, an·
door and rushing into a prison tiseptic soaps, special &hower
hospital ward while the would· soaps. some burn olntment.5
be escapees were negoAi_ating and .,so!!_le cleansing products
with prison ofDcials. for Wants.
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Cultured pearls and 14 karat gold. Drop
eamngt, $25. Necklace. $59.50. Cl&Ater
ring. $30. Ring with diamond, $75. -oome cluster, $100;--
HIDE-A-WAY FOR CHRISTl,(AS
SIA.VICK'S
Jewelers Since 1917
U FASHION ISLAND f
NEWPORT BEACH-6'44-llBO
Open Mon. thru S•t., 10 •.m. to t :lO p.m.
Shot as Deer
-Jlictim of Hunter
Returns to School
Policeman
Murdered
In Chase
· Sears has eveeylhing for Christmas
SALMON, Idaho (AP) -
More than 1 year after ib"i
WU criUcally Injured by
a hunter who mistook her for a
deer, 7·year-old Karyn
Preatwich returns to school to-
day.
Karyn, with her Jett leg In 1
east to h* waist, propped her
crutches on a anowql(>bile
Thanksgiving Day and .t.oot a
spin-by herself-around her
home in North Fork, near
Salmon in northeast Idao.
The girl's plight attraded
nationwide attention after she
WIS 1truci in the abdomen by ·
Colorado Has
Top Radiation
WASHINGTON (AP)
Colorado residents are ti·
p>sed to the highest 1e;e1 of
natural radiation In the United
Sbtu, the Atomic Energy
Commission says.
An AEC breakdown in-
dicated Colorado usldents art
exposed to 250 millirems of
r1diltion annually.
Nevada resident! are ex-
posed to 150, California 115,
and Arizon1, 145. The national
average was placed at l3{t
milllrems.
1 high-powered rifle bullet
Nov. 5, 1970, "hilt wattlng for
1 acbool bul. About $17,000 has
betn donated to pay for
medical bills.
While the rirl Wll spending
seven months in the hospital,
an ~nonymou1 donor gave
$2,000.
A man from Washington
state sent bi• coin collection,
valued at $350. He aid he
worked 25 yeara on it.
A family ln Georgia 1ent
l!llO-The man who mistakenly
shot her, Roy Wells, 53, of
Torrance, Calif., sent $500 and
gave her a doll for be'r birth·
day. Wells, charged originally
with 1ssault with a deadly
weapon, pleaded guilty to a
reduced charge of negligent
use of a firearm .
Wells rushed the girl to a
hospital after the mishap.
"The man nld he thought I
wu a deer," Karyn se.id at the
hospital.
She was wearing a brown
coal
"I just can't believe that
people who don't even know
her can cart about her so very
much," her mother said.
Kayrn's father, Don a 1 d
Prestwich, worb for the U.S.
Forst Service.
ALBANY, N.Y. -An Albany
policeman Wtli shot to
death early today and a short
time later a man was arrested
in nearby Schenectady on a
murder charge.
The dead policeman, Sgt.
Michael McNeil, was found
alumped over the wheel of a
patrol car, a bullet in his bead,
police aald. His body was
found shortly after he radioed
his headquarters that he was
Involved in 1 chase of another
vehicle.
Police in Schenectady said
they arrested Joseph Guerin ,
22, Bridgeport, Conn., on a
murder charg'e. Arrested on
chargu of hindering pro-
secution were David Clough
and Stan Alexcbynas, both of
Schenectady, police sakt
In New Brunswick. N.J ., lwo
state troopers were shot and
wounded Sunday when they
stopped a car for a routine
traffic Wpection. One of the
alleged assailants later was
shot to d'eath in a sbisotout
with police and the other two
were captured. 1
Police said trooper Gary
McWhorter, 27. was in good
condition and trooper George
Ayers, 28, was In satisfactory
condition following surgery.
COAST MUSIC
' '
invites you to aitend
ALL STAR ORGAN CONCERT
featuring YAMAHA, THOMAS, &. CONN ORGANS
Tuesday Evening, Nov. 30, at 8 p.m.
THI NIWPORTIR INN. ,Monte Carlo Room)
1107 )crmbor" Id. I Neor oanK""'ar.1-Newport leach---
' About to purchase an organ for your home, buf confused by the
many claims? Interested in having your questions answtred onct
and for all -by hearing thrtt of the finesf argon lines of todoy
demonstrated live by three top organists? Coasf Music presents,
on All-STAR ORGAN SPECTACULAR featuring RALPH WOLF for
Thomes Organs, TOM HAZELTON for Conn Organs, end TURLEY
HIGGINS for Yomoho Organs.
Adm ission will be strictly by tickef. You may obtain yours now
by visiting the organ department of Coast M~ic, at 1839 New·
port Blvd., Costa Mesa. There is no charge for ticketi, but due to
th• limited number of sects, it would be appreciated if adults
onty attend this event.
We th ink you will th0<0ughly enjoy this unus"'ll approach in tho
presentation of compqrotive organ features. Plan to be there! Door,,, •••
COAST MUSIC SERVICE
1839 Newport llvd., Co1ta Mesa 642·2851
...
•
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Sears
••
II I __ .. ·-
•
"herb garden" fits
in 89 heantifnily
9-Speed Table Mixer L
with.Automatic Timer
3699 ,
and
SeanlO-Cup
Coffeemaker
Sears Buffet
Solid -a)umiogo ~ dy. Block Tdloo• ll U..
terior will not stick. Say
"'°'bandies. Detachable
heat O'.><JIJOI with sig. 2995
nil l;gbr.lmlnenible.
Here-are bat-a f'ew
ofS-..-. A• 1 "'1>1RYFZ!l&
CHPl'>IMA'> \HOPPING HOUW\ MOl'.lllfl.T !HllU \J\TUQOAY Q JO AM 10 9 I'M ~UN0.:\1' 11 h M 10 6 P-,. IRtl PAlllllN< -· -· -·------i
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• . "
--_.._,. ·--~ ----
'·
!Sears!-=.--.. ,,., --......
I '
,
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="~~ ___
....... _ ......... --. -•m
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• DAILY PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE
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A Rea ssur~n,g ;, F~nd~_µg
In a period when mytbJ aboo.t.youn~ ,peoplo are.,-;· isliPl.Y,•to' iUtilrls&-•niaftiiJ~;·~·cent«·:tQ;·
mora ·widespread aDd wUder thlJI uaual. ltr reusurini and;lifw-'TMll-fbi.edltorial paie.) •
tQ. have some of them 1uthorltallvely explode!!: ' . , Jl~9tj,..1tucly of re~g -p1Uern1 llllde by e·
•. One wrong ldH about ~1y'1 )'OJIDJ people. d.,.el· . • . • pecjA!d ·W. •JI% l!'mm(IU iurvey in 19701 ni!Orjed ; !llfi 9i0d from the clrcumitance thalolllelra 11 the first (On· DOWSplper llllCO.;,,crtl .. S ·wJlh edUCltioll IDCI. lncomL ~Uon to grow up with te1evillC01 •la:.t,U fl<!Wer. Older · • ft ruches a llilh ol ¥1 percent Of tllo!e who i\l<nd or
JltJOple gener'1!Y deplore the "flcV' tl!at teenqtrs spend · graduate .from colle1e. ond IMI pereeat ror those .with
loo much time 1bsorbing the 1111i!Olfrcialit1es· ol"TV:''lf . · ,Incomes above f!0,000, 1 ye1r. · ·
·their ear! aren't glued to stereo •)>takers blaring, out · ·:At the s0me Lime, TV viewln(·decr ..... -u the-ed• rock music. -.. ~ · . .. .. uc.ation and lncome1levell Ne. · ·
As it turns out, It im't a "!acl"•it•all. Gilbert Youth • · Th1t tocia¥'s..)'outh i1 not wmeamefued by-TV•·
Ra!earch, 1 leader in surveYin,....d ~porting on young so many adulta have supposed ls a reasslµ'ing finding .·
ptople, recently found in a nationwide.surveylo! tho.<e The prinU!d word. continu!& to 'have: high lnlpael ·in tht
aged 14 to 25 yellfl old !hit they. diHer lit Pe' f~m their • lelevis101t 1ge. . • ' · · · ·
efders In their lltpendonce on a doily.newspaper for; a ln'tbis eri'of tlie lmowledJe,explooion, yoiith•m(lre ·
wide range of news and lnform1tio11-· • than ever aeed&.lo .rpll Jn "1'e1dth .and'ttepth.· Super·
• The Gilbert stu<IY ~\'tiled thlt: . .. !icial :lnformatio~·wo 't suffice· ill on inyreuin(ly·com· ·a , plei "World. · · : ' '-Seventy-three percent of all H · to 25-year·ol, ~ 1 · read one or more "daily newspapen oQlthe•average week . • , ·
.: day. This compares w1u. 1s percenvo1 .a11 1du111. .. . . . Alc.o . ol . ~ the Sky . ·
: -Young peofl• typically ~pend·~ •• •niu'cb
time with each negpoper u 1M·1vetage adult, ond rthey
absorb the advertisjng u well .as ,tl,te editorlal'coJI\enl.
-At, th~ grow up; yount'people'rHd newspopers .
more and ·W'ltcb .TV1leo: ~ .' . • : '
• ~'l'hose-young 'people-wlio are;more mature; mole
res~nsible and ·more Ui:ely tO 1t.tain future leadership
pos1t}<;>ns are the most likely to read;·tbe ·newgpaper on
any given day.' . . . · ·.
-la high school, 72 percent of :1re1hm.en and soph·
omores but 81 percient of juniors ·a.ad 1enior1 an4 82
percent of those who drive aulolliolillel read .-daily
newspaper on the aver1ge week day. ·
· . Major airlinea ha•• dropped their two.drink -limit
· on domo1tic. fliJhta, a restrictfon .agroed to in 1958 but
1 · , broken many times ,as ·custo~er pressures ,mounted.·
· DesPlta · fHr• 1thft more-'than two drinks· would · -brlne ... saftiy-+lllzards and .f.n!Wyance tO ,other'pissengers
by inebriated o¥er·~ers, airline officials r e p or t
they've bad no problems ev.en on overseu 'flight! where
there have nel'er been drink limits.
·What the111 :ol!icills·don't •talk about is tho profit upet:t. The airlines· are· in 'interatate .eommerce,· pay ·n:o
stat• tax. So ·thiy ·!Juy·the liquor chHply, sell ·It ·high
(fl.50 •a drink i1icdinmon· now). · ' · ·
· W_ith most ~Jihes'hurtlng financially, could it be
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~\'1.0~ \~ ~9\tl~
"to C"IN~ iO
CUlTIVATE: C\Ei\\?
l~\'l>R C~ifl~
, ~us .. \mE~!
..
--Among high school boys,, 78.:percent r°'d the
neW! and 6ports sections of the·n~spaper th,ree times
a week or more. (It ia no &urptile .that 74 percent of Uie
boys and 76 percent ·of tbe girls r-ead:the comics,·bUt·it
· that. like· popcorn · In thoatros, liquor 1ales. iJoft could
provid• th• margin of profit? H1fdly, but'lt's an'lntrigu·
· 1Dg -thou&ht. 'Didn 't you forget 8omething, Mr. MeaIJy?' ·
' ' -~.
Reagan· Econofti11 · ParelaUe P'lan . in. J.873
Want ~a UC _ D:egree?;$5,,0;0.0
•
8ERKELEY,June7,1973-Monthan ,...., , · -~:-,"'L ' '
21:1,(ila undidatn were awarded their ·f; ' . · · \ :·: ~-· l
diplomu by lll• Uni••nity of CaUlorni> f "'Art -lfnnilui · 1
today under the new Ronald Reagan r .. , • ' • ~ r r ' . .
Economy Purchase Plan. . '-•+ "\. ~ _ ~·~~1ct""!kfi,,,,,~
Al tbe £ovemor·proudly lold·tbe-Ouo111-. . · ·
llt !be Commmce-with the !ado llld !tauno. By adlJn& oil
ment E1ercises: the ,Uftiwnity'1 musty,.yel,Jo·w1n1,
'"!be &onomy Pur-,.ldom·ra~ ~. the .. !lltlod ,....
chaae Plan; jn one than $3.1 milliM. olmple lltep, h .. . .. .. . " fOlYedithe education-·More import.ant, tht•~ altered
al criait in Califor· rad\cally the adm~'s thlntiJ'll. Dia. reduced fal&ions InstUd of viewinr _the .uilJttraity Ui a
on our campuses. lillbWty. into whkb ~ fundl muat be
.
Studem. w11o ·bad 1""' complalned •bout
the lick ol relevahc.e of a college educa·
tion., could now get the degree without the
education.
_.Parent.!, who had bi& compLl\!!ed lhat
a college dell'ff cost a minimum ol
•10,000, wen deli&bte& to aet out for
'5000. And as for employers, they aaid
~ noticed ·little difference in the
caliber of tiaccalaureates theythired.
But but of .l.lJ, of ·coorae; ba1 been the
linandal 'windfall to the 1t.te. Today'•
eommencement u:erclaes akme -netted
...... -1100 million ln-dqrel lllel. eued tht fiscal woea , mJd&tlv poured, U.. pverner cune1a
ot·tbouSlllds ot par-iie 1rro;-.. hit 11 "'';::·a tna1Ute trov1 , -n ui,:A ·n;w &tudmll iW1 lllllil ..
<nts ood lifted aJieavy burden lroip the •·•si<ll lhlfCIUll pncluqt'""1dl.111W at1oo4in&fletiuru and mdiq 1loob -
sboulden ·Of'tbe tarpayers:" re~ue. tf'gfffa:"'or'M'dtgreea. lut their inunberl
Under the lioveinor's E co 11 om y Next hi ao. 111turally-, •II . ~ are It few, the 1ovemor bu been' abk to
P=hau Plan, th• univmity oow simply unlvtnity'1 VIII lrt ..U<Clion. In ·qui<k · · ll'lni. tbt'llllivmity'1 budget more lhan Ill
aella a degree to anybody who wanta one succnaioo .. an ,U10ttment of prlvate·aild ~ Moreover, aalea of the
for a flat fee of $5000. induitrial buyer• r plcled ' off· · t tfle · uillwrlity'1, ~now 1urpltia lands and
.
A B-rref· ;Note
On Safety
Mys~iqu£·
The 'Little Things'
Can Be Decisive
r.,
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-:.:!..-' i Royce Br_i_er _ ___,i
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. We are 10 constituted, psychologlcally.
that very often "little things" play a
more decisive role in our lives than
"6ig thiilgS." OUi' scale o f-va:loes, 1n-
action, is quite different from our
The headline of a brief news story Out philosophy of values in the abstract.·
of Detroit rea.dli: • "Ford Recalls Two ~ was having lunch witb a friend visiting from the East, when he cxinfided
Models -Bad ·Steering." The stOrY 11iys tbat his m.airiage. had gone on the rocks.
about 13,000 cars were in need of fem. J ·.made the appro-
farctment of the steering system. · ' priale 110ises Of sym-
About twice a week in recent years you pathy (there is real-, . ly ·nothing .sensible. encounter almlltr ttema: from Ford, , . one ,Can offer at a
General Motor1, <Ja'ya1er, American iahd . time like thi$) •. end '
some toreip. di!tribu!:or-1. It would 1be in-be went on to say tefestinl to knn ·(but it ts unPublicii.ed) ··that ·the marriage
:.iv~t percentaQ of owner& see or heed had been rocky for
such warnings. several Years, but
Probably not bad dragged a1ong·
many. Jt ia 00-t>UTet for one reason or another.
Reislp8ll'S phrase, than ••inner-oriented.1•
Appearances become , more important
than reality; the thought of other people/I
reactions can· dominate· our own reac·
tions; and unwillingness to make a clean
statement of what ' many consider
''failure" (the sense of shame} contro11
our rationaJ knowledge that the sooner
a· break Is made, the better.
The~ bad U.1 genesis in the Reqan unlvtnity'1 cyclotron, campanile, • ca~ bUUdinp ·hive: brought in close to •1.3
· Adrainlilraifon'shistoric' ..pori 1n the pOlli-cli>lr and the eotlre f1eulty ot vc billion to date.
fall of 1171 urging the university to sell Santa: Cruz. M for-the Santa Barbara But delpjte the mainifice.nt rueee.u of
'of -lau~·k> vis.it an "THE FUNNY THING is" h"e
1utborized deaJeT, reflected, "although it was an in~lerabfi
We like to imagine that we ire guided
by principlei, b_y logic, by a nice
hierarchy of values, ranging down from
the significant . to the trivial -but,
in actual practice, what seems to be
trivia] may take priority over the ess~~
tial._{~1ore_tljen, I imagine, have qui t
their jobs in a fit of pique. over 5ome
reaJ or fancied slight, than for 11ome
immulable principle qi 11ocial behav}or.)
!ti, collecUons of rare books for a CUIJIUS, it wu IOld'·in a• bloc II' a tat the IOVfrnQf'S higher education Economy
bandtome profit. 1ite .for a IUJ'fboard manufactunr. PurPwe ·Plait, he took the opportunity
loday·ln deey ,.porta he plaM<d lo ..U
TllEllE WERE, of course, -ob-BUT 'llJTll .enrollment -~ ud tbt · unlvuaity's football twn to welt
jedJons at tho tlm• from •Qheads, laculcy d!JcoOttot'_.,,, cira.ilci<ldlin -1 ..... sfat.:-lor two oil M and u un· ~ and othor unwordly types. wu requirod. Thus, the·declllcin "to ..U dilclooed ' sum of cub.
But u the governor said, "Seen one rare t1'e univt rsity's ultimate· product: the · ''lntt 1II:,. uJd the covemor frown· •-•, seen 'em all." d•gr .. · · I I .. .,. .... ~ . · , .. , ng y, lM!l•.s -a.grut univlt(sity witbou\
And tber< was certainly no orguinJ ·Tbil st•P"J>rov<d universally po~. 1 loo,tbalMwnl" • ·•
Call It the.· Divine Distress
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part:JC\Zlarly the big 11ituation at home, we stayed together
ones with their shops ~ -..-( month after month for what seems like
tO: cocnputeritie you. ,J,J. ··~. ·the.;most trivial of reasons."
If the ntlmate is one ~/'J.·1 ' · '· "\ "How do you. mean?" I asked.
how, you s Pe D d • ~ · ,. "Well, we'd decide to Separate and
three hours read in& then there'd be some activities going
1119 copies of Motor· on the coming :weekend that ,,,.e wanted
land Ja the showroom. If it's a day, you·~ to take part in -so we'd postpone
stuck with a bus, ot amiethiJI& equally it. The next week, we had invited people
dreadful. to dinner, or some ralatives were coming
ANOTllE!l A S P E CT of this
ledmologl<oI rite, In genuflectioo to
Ralph" Nader, is that you rarely see news
of a car mis~p ' d~ to these auppo~
defect.a. Clrs ·rarely veer oU a high~ay
. unlen they are knocked off, and almost
"°®dY dies of carbon monoxide v..lson·
ing without plUnlng II.
to to WA, ....()l'--One of the kids was in
a school play. These weren't just ei:cuses
we ga ve eacb other -we both really
wa'nted out -but somehow the Uniing
n~ver .seemed quite right, socially.''
EVEN IN MAKING grave deci.si01'S,
for our own basic weUare. we tend
t.o be more · "outer-oriented," -i D
"RE,SPECTABIUTY" began as an ad-
junct of morality, but in many cases
becomes s 1ubltitute for it ; what tbe
neighbors will think ol us becomes more
important than what we really are,
or do ; how people will .view U5
detennines our actioM fully as much
as what we want and need for ourselves.
We desire the good opinion of others,
even at the ei:penSe of sincerity.
Most bad marriages go on longer than
they should, partly because the .couples
genuinely, want to make it work. but
also because they have a 50Cial engage-
ment on the 14th they'd both hate to
miss, or be missed at. . ,,,. .,..r !Ah ca<ury Fronch painter
and diirist. ~ene Delacroix, once cried
to a friend,. .. J,am miserable, I am not in
love with an)'one."
.. I wu 60 happy," he continued~ 0
"when
I wu unhappily in love ! The.re w1s
&Omr:thing ei:citlng even· in. my jealou_sy.
In order tD ·live truly, in my O'!n riy.
that is •to say· through my feelings and
passions. I am obliged to seek these Joya
sei;, ln~loft II ..,. ol tbe 'lbina• which
clillkiiullh'u 'lrun the l!llmals. Animals ~ _ be . fdi'ld of :elCb other ,.,bUt they are ~-ot ' that '. 111anic clash o!
de1u1ion1 which la: modem 'romantic love.
toward.I amity. Ufe ii: I arut bul&r.
and even heals deluakma, You· aft
remind~. in·remarkable ways, that.iyour
passage ot la{liatrjwun"t wOrth all•tbat
lroobl<. all lhlt pain, llld qulte"otten."11
that loot. '· When the lr\le·•llt. of ~-out·o! love
So the·averagimotortst, seeing his own
modd IW!l<d, lhlnkl, .. .i1. ~old clunk
runa all rlgbt,_iso-why ltl!fer?
The conct.Pt or safety in 1tinsport goes
back to the old railroad. wrecks, which
were many and bid. A Civil War
brigad.ier·who hid·•tood in the cornfield
P.rotecting Prj12acy ·
fmn painting, to ~ .
1ffiit them from.my
art by rorao.
"But thia: is not'M-
bire's way, and when
l fall back Oft my
empty bt.trt. weigh-
ed down by erviuJ · that I've bfgulled _
and distracted by ar· 1
tificlal means, r ftiel --
only too "-ell ·that my name needJ au.
!rp•oeo and that I should palnt·vsy cllf·
ferenU1 if I were kept constanUy'in 1JU1o
ptOM by the rwtt; ucitemetlt of love."
NOW1!EllE RAVE I road hippier
words about the curious st.ale <if"being out
of love,•whicll could be called with some
slliht estrovag111Ce tbe divine distr<u.
OUllH COAST
DAILY PILOT
~ iii . m. 11 a auratnc. rq'ina
drorill.iwilb Ille script.boing wiltten by
the lovers. Two conadousnesse1 wed for
a1tlme,•·andt.are raiii.d to a higher con-
aciou&nfP. ll'tte operative · ind mqkll
word !1 eacitemenL Tbe world outstiie· is -iw~ enrlcbed by I"' 11t1 ·111e
.lOVWI -.bostowed Oii lbemMIYU-A tinyilo1fir,.Virth' to the llllmu eyt, .wW
be dlloc'"l'll lll!l'<arelled-'by the·llllOt-
ted io,.r. People In 1ui..a;r: tr1inl Will
look~ble. A pMz0111 a •llC:r• menl'... lllln on tbe . pa.vemeat 11 an . Ir·
ridelctat litoxlcatlon. The world.JI alJ brlghl'Hd tl(ht, for lhat 11 the way the
lover woold 'bave It -the lover'• list
delusion.
BuT · lllNCE LOvt ls a delusional
ay1tem, ln which two people qiee to 1c-
cept f6r-a time preri\ilU that are
be1lcally :1bsunl, th<re 11 bound to be
troublf... Exetpt In its p I a c t d ,
domeltlclled tnar1ta! tonn. the divine
delulloa II not mode to l11L People ore -.«i N. Weed, !'llbllaMr foofo..hllt not that put fools.
--· r.-J:dllM --1-AIW lbe--final 1l111·is·thrown aaalnst ' -~·""' · the wall, the lut U1ly.accu1t11on pa.sled,
Albm W. -Ille Jut biller fl'Olllied Coupl!nl dOM, WI rdllorlal Poil• £dilor _......,, separ1ted lovm. 'Ibis II not hllnS out ol loft. l"lr from JI. •
Th& delu1ionl w1icll bfouaht. the thine
about 1WI pmfll, .u In btilfM llld often
lnmttd fonn. Tbe llint becomes a
bitch. wbttt all that 1he ever w11 or wUI
be, 11 .a WOllllJI, -Bui the blltjl 11 11111
lormldlbly atlradht. lilce &II< ll 1UU 1 .
d•lu1lon. Unfortunat.i7, she Is 1bMnL '
Th CIU I I~ c:rilmnly,f .. ling1 on
u . t U Ta~ Uh be1ni au! lovt. ,
comes. YoU find yoilrself 1n'a J'Qlrvelously
pe.acerut st:atas. At first: that ls. ' Il'a
ra'ther like beliig on 'the wagOn. You do
•vorythin& . b<tter, you're buutUully
coonllnated: yQlr phy•iul bWtb ftlCbol
1 delicious peak. And you are-.a pain in
the arse, to yourself and everybody
about.
at Antietam while 1even thousand men The lelephone is such an essential and
Wt.n!: mowed down about him in an hour. commonly used me.ans of commuhicaUon
got into a railroa:d wreck .in 1870, and that special .laws are often enacted t.o
fainted dead away at the horror of it.' " prevent abusive we.
But·tbose horror1 only involved a :feW -Recently the state Legislature passed
of o~ur grandpappies. Now, when 175 the lnva~on . o_f Priv~cy Law, limiting
million people I day, occupy rapidly unauthonz:ed ·wtretapp1ng, Use of any in-
-moving vehicles, Mfety -avoidini strument to tap telephone 1Iines is a
1..•_StolVLY IT!.D~WNS on.you thit·you tDaiminJ:'~delth _becomes 1 mys. crime. It·is also 11 crime to.read or' at. u.~e • l~e..ud ~ Jitue deatiJ!. Your akin tiqut. '( 7 te.m~.I! to lea.m the conteni., of a com·
lln t •sti'etchld~th passq:. aftf:, mott. munJti.Uon in transit. part I cu I a r I y Tbllt UDend11fahlcll . :ten~· of ... tbtr-•Wit,~a•~nQUES-OP"TEN breed supenti-telegrams. Use of .the intercepted com·
Wt , w }s the hallmark of the ~.~or at least, obsession. Everybody municaUon is a crime. :=°~~n~i:iy =~~ niuat ·aet into the Kt of 11ving us from . Evi\if:nce obtained by wiretap is barred
yoor-lile -.-,: ~· . s • OW'lelvts, usually by m·u I t i f a r i o u .s in court. If the evidence b uroneously
• . . · 1ebemes to make m<ltot v e b l c I e 1 admitted, the court decision may be
No,w. of·coarseoyou 1rt a· sitting duck. f()Gtprool. reversed . Wiretap!! for criminal in-
~~1~to ~~~ts ~~-on~·~·ol These obsessions bed e v I I the ve1Ugati9ns require court approval . _.. .... ,. .-o udp .,_ .. ,~"'you lawmaker1, spreading over the Congress Y~•m Jor It aa a.child after a toy. And and le9lslatures. The l1wmakers. who are
thtn you meet~ber! and.·embrace her and only interested in bN'Vestlng votes, listen
all thole. old delusions too, and )'(IU.know t,o. the obsessed, and buy the most r::n ad:K~· But damned ii better voclferot11 and menacing.
j 1 Tbty require wt belts. l!ld few but
. !MouperflllOy. like 'l\Jny Randall In '"Ill• ~'"'!-----....---. Odd Couple," ose lllem. FOii' yettihonce
'De--~-
• Gloomy
Gus
''If " .don't bani ttlJtther we
WU ha.nc aeparate.ly.'' Let's qutt
trytnc to unload our frffway and
•illlorl problems "' our oelibbon and ,._rt • unli.d !root lo aol•·
11111 problems lhat 11'1 buic to U1
11[ . "'
' -J.E. T.
,... flM'-,.,.,. ,.....,... ...... ...
-~ flt-. ., ""' _,. ..... ... .., "' ..... !9 ·-~ -.. ...,, ,. ... .
• •
tboy'Il require those interior bags that In·
fl&te in your face on collision contact. U
your blttlfY!in"i IOOl~~ertlon, your
car la dead. So, llon6-sober, tooling a
highWl)' 1t moderate speed without a
problem, if your bag baa a loose con·
-ion. you're dead.
It works with dummies, say the
ob1e1Hd. Sure. but dummies aren't drlv·
Ina. except the. small segment of real live
ones at the wheel . We haven 't )1et found
1 way lo foolproof tba ...,ed, tbe con·
g<nltally unaware. or the downrlgbt
1tupid.
YotrC1n't document lt.. but It's a guess
tht very bad driver, whattvtr the cause~
1s r!lponsl ble for half the casualties on
the o1r .. t1 and hlghway1. The othor hall
are bis vlctlnu.
•
ANOTHER LAW makes It a crime to
eavesdrop on a confidential com-
munication. Specifically barred i Ii
eavesdropping 'by means of an electronic
ampllfyina or recording device. It is·not a
crime t.o Overhear a conversation or even
t.o tell about~ It ln court. It ls the elec-
tronic ampllficaUon that ts unlawful.
It is a crime to tnspan on another's
property for the purJ>06e of eave.sdrop-
pi.ng .or making a wiretap. It is ~lso a
crime to possess, se1I. manufacture or
transport eavesdropping devices.
It Is permitted to record a conversation
you may have had with another person.
However, that recordlng may not be
made for any "injurious act."
IN A RECENT CASE 1n lnlurance
claims manager rec:orded a teJephone
conyersation be bad with 1 claimant. The
Cllllrns man Slid he taped all con-
versations In the office ao he v.·ould know
exactly what commitments h11d been
made. The claimant tteelved a anal!
award from h!s lnsurance company bued
t
\
~-
on scime incriminating remcirks he' made
that were recorded.
The claimant liUed the claims adjuster
for secretly recording the conven;ation .
The court saia..~lhere 'was no right to
recovery. Any ~ can testifY to what '
tie hl!ard or spOKe.· An"d he can r~ord It.
But he cannot record the conversations
for purposes or blackmail, theft or other
injurious acts.
Note: California lawytrs of/tr this
column so 110.t; may know abOut our
laws. "-
~--B11. George ---
near George:
I've written a love &Ong titled,
"You Caught My Glance With Your/
Toceador Pants and Now I'nf
Growing Sentimental Over You."
V.'h.tt cao I do next"!
HOPEFUL LYRICIST
n .. , Hopeful:
I'm sendi.'lC you tJMi addrw of
aoother client. He •Tote, "I Got
a Red NO&t. What Looka Like II R06e
_Frnm Crying My Heart Out and
bryin& M.v Tears With My Sleeve.''
Leave me a.Jme and write to tiim·
that's what you can do next. '
(The Secret' of Sideways 1bink·
Ing are avaDable to you for t..'le,
price of a three-cent slefllP.· Th1t
wUI be ~lght cents, plea5t!;°(J.q ado
v~ce.) t.__ .J
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Mond.,, Novembff 29, t9n DAILY PILOT f . .\.
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...... . ... . .·.~ -10· SERVICE:CRAllEJIJECKINI~;·:~ , . ' ;• -.
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ON BUSINESS OR PERSONAL ACCOUNTS, NO _MINIMUM'lSAIANCE,ECR-LI F'E.'O'F THE ACCdUNT. ,·,
/' . .. i.. .: ·' ' .\~'·-·, :.: ··-;::
! ... : :.:· : ' -.... : .. • ·-.--. -· .. ' . . -. : •• ·. ' ..
free
grqnd \ ..
prize ··
drawing
24" Color Console Television
....._., In a.magnificent designer cabinet plus 12 other
exceptional prizes all to be given away
. on. December 10th at 3 p.m. ,.
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"!~."; :; ;~·J. '!./"· · •.. ::::: .. ; .. · .... ; ..... free;~~· ::::
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. ·l'ElllONALIZEll QOLD CAR ~ -Brfilojb.qr'.l!oll1•tr1>car key In' and
we,wil~m,ake you a beautiful gold, mo~"gr•rttmitd-duPUc,;te. If ybu driYli .
:•·foreign car, we flave an equally dlatirictlve monog,rammed gold key
·rtngforyo_u.· , t·occount -............ : , .... --:-;" ~
EXTRA . H;OUR/ .• 1 gifts "
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OPEN 9:00 .A.11.;TO 5:00 P, •• ; 'Chooseaplace sel.tlnmfr~m'c'.~ithero~~of
'MONDAY THAU THUR8DAY : . · .. ··. \ ·1~t~r~ai1(ina1 •s ~teg~~i~1cipr siaini~ss tableware Ff'ID.AY-9:00.~.M. TO 8100 RM. , ·· designs when you oii&i:i ~new account. 11 tree ...
. $.AlURDAY . . .. ·p1ace1;ei1fngpedam11y) .. -·
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. · OP.EN 9:00 A>M.·To 1i00 P~M~ ' ·.··. ·· · · . -;:-; ; : .: . ._,_ -~ You need not be preseni to win.
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Visit.us during our Grand Opening Testlvltfes ••. . .
· let'~ gQt acquainted.
· · · . .Open a checking or savings accoUnj.$25 or more. '. : EXTRA :~ HOUR/:-· .. 1 ;,o~~~.a:~%super'.?f~~~kaccount$SOOormore.
. . :. . . . . . . . -, . , .. , . . . . Alj~i.llOh.al place ~tf!n?s:a[E\iivailable. Ask for details. _.,.. __ ~_ ---..;----·:· "-l __ _ .. . . .. .
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•. • , r DAILY PILOT JDITORIAL PAGE . ' '
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~1-i;Cl\ 15 GOil\~ A Rea ss ur iri.g , Findiµg
.
In a period when myths a!JoT.t. youn~ ,people are· •
more •widespread and wtlder th~, ltrremurinc
IQ have some of them authorttaUV.ly explodeil: .
• One wronc idea about tod.ay'a ,younJ people, dove!· ...
1>,ed fromj the circumstance 'thalltlleirt II the first CeD·
eration to )grow up'tflth televisiontift'.Jull fiqwer. Older ·
people generally deplore tbe "flct" that toenac•rs _spend too much time absorbing the m~rficiiliUe• of TV; 'if ..
their ears aren't glued to 11en.; 1peanra blaring out
!'OC!k music. ..: ._ . _ · • .
. . ls liktlY'to •unirlse many that 42 percent« botb boyt
ud,lifh .... ·!he.editorial pa1e.) " •· , ~ot!i-. llucly ot re~g .pattom1 made by the·rea·
• 1pec\ed ·W. ltl',Slm,mou survey in 19701 rePOrted ·tlt,ft
--newapaper UllC'e4acre1~1 'with educ;ation an'd.' income.
. . It reaches a 'IJiib~ot .s7 J:IUCent of thole who att.nd _or
· .. paduat. from eolle1e and lie percent tor those with
iO ("\NI'< IO
CUl..TIVAi£ (IQ?
l~~R CW.Pc1i11~
'FOR U:!,. lm.ERS! .
..
As It turns put, it isn't 1 "fact"•it all. Gilbert Youth ·
Research , a leader in surveying and rePOriing on younc
~pie, recently found in a nationwtde~survey of th~e ~·
aged 14 to 25 years old that they.dlf1er lltUe'fr;om their
elden in thetr dependence on · a daily newspaper for· a
wide range of news and tnformttion. ·· · ' The Gilbert llUdJ revealed that: • .
: -Seventy-three percent bf·lll 14· to 25-year-o!as,
read one or more daily newspapers on 1he-averai:e wef:k
day. This comparea with 78 percent '<>l ·lll adults.
-Youn11 people typically apelid · al!llOlt as niuch
time with each newspaper u the ·averige adult, and 'tJ1ey
absorb ,the advertising .. welJ .u "the editorial' con\enl.
-A< they grow up. younc 'peopte 'read newspapers
more and ·watch TV:les1. · . . , '
-Those young..:peopt&-wbo·are:more.-ma.ture; more
res~nsible and more likely to attain future leadership
positions are the most likely to read: the· newspaper on
any given day.' . . . · .:
-Jn high school. 72 rrcent o(fre!hm_en and soph·
om9res but 8~ percent o juniors ·and seniors and 82
percent of those who drive automobiles read a daily
newspaper on the average week day.
-Among high school boys •. 7&:percent re•d the ·
news and sports sections o! ~e ·newspaper three times
mcomea above tl0.000 a year. -· ,
· · ·At the silJte..time: TV viewing· decreue1 as the ed ..
ucation and income· levels rise. · " ·
Tbat tncb¥'1:youtb tir'not u .mesmerized by-TV aa
so many adult& have .aul)'~Sed is a reassijling finding.·
The ·print.d word. cori\{Jiues to 'have: high Impact in ~·
• tetevmon. ap. · • . • -· · .
· 1n·tbls era'of the ltnowledse-uploo1on. youth•more·
than .ever nee4 to J"etd ,Jn breadth and·dopth.· Super·
ficlal '.intormation•-won't IUffice·ln an in<;rusingly'com· plex -world. · · _ · . .
Alcohol • ~
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the Sky
. Major airlines have dropped their two.drink liMit on domestic. flisbts; a restriclfon agreed to in ·1955 but
1 1 broken many time1 .11 cuato~er pressures ,mounte4.
Despjte·.iears •that more-than two drinks• would
• ~I safety~llaurds and · .nn.Dyanci tO other· pissen&ers
by inebriated ove.r~ers, airline officials r e p or t
they've h'd no problems ev.eD on oveneu flights where
there have never been. drink limits.
·What these :of!icials'd•O:t ·talk about ls the profit u_pec~ The airlines arerin 'interstate .commerce; pay ·no
state tax. So ·theil1uy·the liquor cheaply .. setl ·It 'high
. (,1.50•1 drink i11coinmon. now). •
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a week or more. (It is no surprise .that 74 percent of the
boys and 76 percent of the Sirls rad 'tbe·comicsr but it _
Willi most ~lihe!' hurting· financially, 'could it be
·that,_ like popcorn ·in theatres, liquor sales .aloft could
proV!de the margin of profit? Hardly. but it's an 'lntrigu-
. ing.thoueJiL 'Didn 't you forget something, Mr. MBBDy?'
. H~an · E~11 ·Pure1uue .Pl.an in. J.9.73 A · Brief· ·Note
On Safety
Mystique
The.'Little Things' Want a UC Degree?.$5,,0:0.0 .
Can Be Decisive BERKELEY. June 7, 1973 -More than
20.fi® ~dales were awarded their
diplomu bY the Unlve~ity cf California
today under the new· Ronald Reagan
Ectmon:ty Purchase Plan.
As tlie governor prou<lly told'tbt'1hron1
at the Commence·
men t Exercises:'
''The Econm>y Pur-
chase Pla11, in one
simple step, h a s
solved the education-
al crisia jn Califor·
Ilia, reducid Wis.ions on our campuses,
eallCI the fiscal woe1
ot thousands of par# ..,. ud llfted a .hoary burden trOip the
lhoulders 'of"tbe tnpa.yers."
Under the Govei-nor's E con om y
Pu.rcbase Plan, the univerlity now simply
sells a degree to snybody who want& one
for a flat fee of $5000. •
Tho plao,hnd Ila genes~ tn the 11<o1111
Adnliniltrotians bialmic ttp<irt-Jn the
fall of 1m W)lng the unlvenity to .. n
tts collections of rare books for a
hondlomeprofiL 4 • mEaE WERE, of course, IQl'De .obo
jectlons at the time from eggheads,
bookworms and other unwordly types.
But as the governor said, "Seen one rare
book, seen 'em all."
And there was certainly no arguing
-.. --~.--' ' \ .J~ I ,; . -1 (' ..... l-• . ••
( .,.~Art 'Uifp~-.
! .., • ' 'J' ,., .,.. ~ ·, .. .. ' .. '• ... *" ' '4·-c ·1,i.;t. ~· -wlll! the facts and .ngum. By oelltni off
the ·university's musty, yel.t0Win1,
seldom· read boojt1, Ille~ llllled moro
tlwl SU milliooi. '· .
Stud"'t.. .mo bad 1..,, oomplalned about
the lack of relev'!lloe of a coDege eduea.·
t.ion, could now get the degree without tbt
education.
Parent.!l, who had Jon& complained thal
a college delJ'ff cost a minimum ol
SI0,000, wtn delighted to get out for
'5000. 'And u for employers, they Aid
they notlcod""UWe d~f«ence In the
caliber of baccalaureates they hired.
But bat of .an, of course,· ba1 been the
financial 'windfalJ to the 1~f,,e. Today'•
commenctment exerclaes aloM •netted
men t1w1.1100 millioo ln·ciqne u1.._
·More Important: u.O .. ~-altered radjcally the adm!n!Mlkln'a fhlnklnr.
Imtud of viewin1 _the .tWvir&ity ai• a
Jiabili,!Y into wbicb ~ IUDdl must be
llUdllnsJy poured, the IOvtmer CllM1o He i£ tOf ·what it wai -a lttlJUl'I trove Taut:, A. F!W ltudenta t:tilJ inaW, oa
ef. asieti thft' ceuld iftduqa ~-•••W IUendinli lettuns and: rudinl tlookl -revenue. 4ftlfeff"er no 'degreea. But their numbers
Nert te au,. uturaDy, wu . Q1e: -are ae fn, the governor bu been. ahk. to .
univtraity'1 vut art collection. In ·«tUick · · trW tbe'Wliveriity'1 budget more than to
sucoeuion,.an usortment of private· Md ~ Moreover, 1alts of the
indudrial buyer•· picltt:d ' off · t lfe · ulUV!J'.sify'• t now IUJ'lliU. lands and
university'& eyclotron, campanile, 1 cap-buiklinp hive,.brought in dose to $1.3
pella-choir..and the eaUre-1aculty of UC bllllo1Uo data.
Santa. Cruz. Al for the Santa Barbara But delpjte the maptificent 1ucceu of
ClftlJIU•.Jt was IOld'·in a• bloc 11 a tat the governor's higher edacalion Economy
lite.for a sutfboard manUfacturu. Pur~ ·Plan, he took tbe opportunity
. BUT WJTll .wollment dwlQd1lns Cid
faculty diaoonleot'-"11· --was required. Thus, the«lecilion to sell
t1'e univ1raity'1 u1Umate product: the
degree. . ..
'Ib1s •lep proved univmally polfll!lr.
, '
today·to dell)' nporta he plamied to .. u
the· univ~mity'1 foothill tmn to West
Tau·Stfte.for two oil wells and an un·
disCloled 'sum of cash.
"A'ftir all;" said the 1overnor frown·
lngly, "wbat'1·a-great university without
• footbdit.Um?" -.
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' ' . R~yce' Brie_r_~J
.i_ ____ _
The headline of a.brief news story out
el Detroit reads: ''Ford Recalls Two
. We are sO constituted, psychologically,
that very often "little things" play a
more decisive role in our lives than
''&lg tlilligs.11 OUr scale of values, in
action, is quite different from our
philosophy or values .in the abstract.·
I wa1 having lunch with s friend
vi.iiiting from the E~t, when be co¢ided Models -Bad Steering.'' The storY sa'.ys tbal bis m.airiage had gone on the rocks.
about 13,000 cars were in· need oI fem. ' I ·.made the. apprO:
forceme.nt of the 1teerin.g system. · ·. priale 11bises or sym·
About twice 1 week in recent years you . pathy (thereis re.al.
encounter slmllar itmu: from 'FOrd, ly ·n~thijlg sensi ble . one .calf offer .at a Gnierll Motors, OU,Sler. American aiid · time like this) .. and '
some fOreign distributors. It wouldlbe in-He went on to say
teftlf.ing to tMW (llut It ls unP,ublici.r.ed) ·that ~the marriige.
w}Jat percentap: of OW?tera see or heed had bwi rocky .for
such warnings. several Yea.rs. but
Probably not had dragged ,a.Jong
many. It is no barrel for one reason or &11olher.
of la~bs: to visit Mi autooriU<I-dealer;
partica1arly the big
ones With their shops
to computeri>e you. I'_ ).
If theettimate Is ooe ,1 ,.f.L ...
how', Y9U spend· · -~
three houri, readini
1989 copi.S Of M-·
lind in the Showroom. I! it's a day, yau'r'e
stuck with a bus, « 15CCletl\ini equally
droadful.
ANOl'llE!t ASPECT of this
"THE FUNNY THING is,'' be
renected, "although it :was anJntolerable
situation at home. wi gt.ayed together
'month after morlth for what seems like
the most trivial of reasons."
"How do you.mean?" 1 :jiSked.
Reisman'1 phrase, than "inner-oriented.''
Appearances become •more Limportant
than reality; the thought of other pecplela
reactions can· cklminate our own. reac·
lions; and unwillingness to make a clean
statement of what · many consider ·
"failure'' (the. sense of shame ) controls
our rational knowledge thal the sooner
·a break is made, the better.
We like to Imagine that we are guided
by principles, by logic, by a nice
hierarchy of values, ranging down from
the significant to the trivial -but,
In actual practice, what seems to be -
trivial may take priority over the e.ssen·
Ual. (More men, I imagine, have quit
their jobs in a fit oL pique, over &Orne
re.al or fancied slight, than !or 1ome
jmmutable principle of social behavior.)
"RESPECTABUJTY" began as an ad·
junct or morality, but in many cases
becomes 11 substitute for it; what the
neighbors will think c:i. us becomes more
important than what we really are,
or do ; how people will view us
determines our actions fully as much
as what we want and need for ourselves.
C:all It the · Divine Distress ~ rite, in genuflection to
Ralph Nader. is that )'OU rarely see news
of a car mishap dut to these suppostd
deftets. Cars~rarely veer off a higbWay
unJe11 · they are lmQtked oU. and almost
nobody die! of carbon monoJ:ide p:.ison·
Ing wilhoot pl>bntng_ II.
"Well. we'd decide to separate and
then there'd be some activities going
on the coming weekend that we wanted
to take part in -so we'd postpone
il The nex:l week, we had invited people
to dinner, or some relatives were coming
to town; or one of the kids was in
a school play. These weren't just excuses
we gave eacb other -we both really
wanted out -but somehow the tini.ing
ne.ve.r .seemed quite rigb~ socially."
We desire. the good opinion of others,__, __
even at the expenSe of sincerity.
Most bad marriages go on longer than
they should, partly because Ute .couples
genuinely, want to make it work. but
also because they have. a 60Cial engage-
ment on the 14th they'd both bate to
miss, or be missed at.
. .
, 'Ille greaf t8th century_ French painter
and dilirist, Eugene Delacroix. once cried
to a friend,"'! am miserable, I am not in
Jove with anyone.."
••1 was so happy," he continued, ••when
I was unhappily in love! There w11
gomething exciting even in ~ jeaJou". ·
In order to •live truly, in My ~ ~iy.
that is · to say through my feelings and
pa.ssions,-I am obliged to seek tl?* Jof•
from painting. to
wre.st them from. my
art by force .
"Bot thig is not N •
blre's w1y, .and when
I rau beck Oft !JlY
empty .heart, Wtigl>
ed down by ennuJ ·
that I've beguiled
and distracted by ar·
tilicf1f•means. I rtel only too ~-en that my name needs su ...
lf'/l•nce and that I should palnt very JUI~
ferenUy' if I were kept consunUy in IUI·
ptnM by the l'Weet acitemettt.-Of Jove."
NOWllEBE DAVE I read happier
words aboutthe curious state of bting out at iove,1wbicb could be called with IOlftl
llicht atrav1g1nct the divine distnu!.
oaAJIGE COAlf
DAILY PILOT
, . ,
··, toward5 unity. Ule is • creat healer.
and even heal& delusions. You aft
reminde;d,-in·remarkable ••Y•~ tbal'your
passage of i:~'Wl&n't worth all that
trooble. all t!lit pain, and qutti oa.n ill
Being in':Jeve ia Ol'MI of. the 'Ullnt:• which tbat loot. ' '
distlngui&h us.'fr<m the. animaJa. Animals When the true 11.aUi of beiJlt'OUt of klve
·can be .fond of e.cb other,"bbt they are aimes. you ftnd yoUrae.Ir in'a ~rvelously ~pable · of · tblt titanic clash of peaceful statl.1. At fir1t: that is.· It's
delus.klfta whi.cb·is modern romantic love. rather like beliig ·on 'the waaOn. You do ·
Beir!a .in._ kwe' Is 1 surging, ria:inl ewrythin1 · better, ymfre _ beautllully
drari\a.,with the gcrtpt'.bting wflttea by coorcl.iMted;.your physical be.altb re1cbe1
the )o~er1. Two amdousnesses wed-for • delicious peek. And you· ire• pain ln
1)t.ime, ·and •re raiiid to 1 higher con-the arst, to yourRlf and eve:ybody
ISciousn.e&.i. 'I\e operative lnd niQ:kal about. . ,
word 1, .. cilam<nL Tbe "°'td culslle is SJ;O'tn.v IT,DA~ .. ~· ""t·you hel~,enricbedby0 the1lit "tlie '' """~,--~ Jovtrr.baft-~ cm tbemeeJves. A Mve11Uffer.ed,ia'Ji1Ue deirt,h •. Your 1kin
So the·aver11e..motorut. seeing bis own
model namtd, thinks, well, the· old clunk
runa all right,,so ·wby suffer?
The aincept of ulety in transport goes
back to the old railroad wrecks, wbich
were many and bad. A Civil War
brigadier whq bid stood in the cornfield
at Antietam while aeven thousanl:I men
were mowed down about him ill an hour .
got into a railro~ wreck in 1870. and
-flinted dead aw1y at the horror of it.
But~tbose horrors only involved a 'few
of our grandpappita. Now, when 175
million people a day. occupy rapidly
moving vehicles, lifety -avoiding
riWming •or dealb -becorhes a mys-
tique. +; .... n-... ..i~ .. n. the~---ill lsn'l •atrtlCMiF 'Mf.h passktn anv, more. _..., -•~·""""''" .....,.. '111--!!. -That uoend!R-tensil>n of-thefl/lit1~.1,..,_, _,....,mo II< dlsco""'ll and car.tied· by the bilOI· well, wbicb Ji tbe hallmark of ·the UES"O~ super<tl·
ted Joyer, People in aubwar. tr1inl will ID)Q(OUI coQdftlon.•il wholly aliUnl Tbe-f.kin,.t or at least, obsession . Everybody look~ble. A pretzel 11 a ucra· nlust ·get-into.tbe_ ~t of saving us from men\'.. Rain cm the pevement 11 an .ir· ucite{ii't, in ·• word his gone out of ouraelves, usually bY nru I t i f a r i o u s
ridelctnt titoxlcaUon. The world 1s Ill your e. • ' acheme.s to ma.ke motor v e b i c I e. s
brigbt\and r:tpt. for that ia the w1y the Now, of·cour.se,·yoU art a· sitting.duck. foolprool.
Jover woukt •have it -the lover'• last .. You bow wtlll·)'OU are on the·brtnk ·of These obsessions bed e v i I the
delusion. lf.1llni Into; aM.of ita deep peril, and you lawmakers, spreading over the Congress
y,eam .for It ·as a.child alter a toy. And and legialatures. 'Mte lawmakers. who are BUT 'SINCE LOVE is I delusiooal
aystem. Jn which two people agrfle to tc-
cept for· a · tbne prtrftiaes that ar.
buically '.'•blunl. there Is bound' to bl tt6obl•. Eicept in it.a p I a c i d • domeltlCatid marital form, the divine
deluolon ta not maile to 1111. People are
fools,:but not ~•I t fool•.
Alftr lbe ftnaJ IQ U·thnlwn 11aillat
the w.U;IM Iii< ully aocuiilloo pened,
llll lallbllter frlollod coupling doot. we
!1iii mmly f<Jll1lled Jovm. Tbla ta not
bo1nJ out ol tovo. Par '""" lt. 'Ille delualolll wticll bfollght.tht ll!tng
al>out •till pmltt. u In -lllld °""' lnvaied form. Tllo • AlM llecomn a
bitch. when all that ihe ever w11 or wlll
·bl. I• 1 womao. ad! the bllc~ 11 atru
formidably allractiVt, lloce allt ta atill •·
deluaion, Unfortunllllf, abe ta abtenL ..
This causea a lot o( mumuy feelln&1 on
bot1I aldea. But It II nol!llnl lib bllni out
of loY.. • •
THAT OOM!S LITER. 'lbere ~ 1 lqi1 convaltactn&e, a tortured .pro 1 r e 11
then you.meet~btr •. and anbrace her and only inten:sted in b.arvesUng votes. listen all~ old delu6ion1 too, and you.. know to-Ute obsessed. and buy the mo&t you are damned.· Bui damned la llttter • YOciferoua ond menacing ..
tban ,dea<L ' Tliey reqult< ... t bolts. and few bul ~ the-~. like Thny Randall in "The
Dear . ~
Cloomy
Gus
"If ,.. <lon't han( tocether we
ahalJ hln& Mparately." L4t!1 quit
trytna to unload oor fret\V&Y and
airport problems on our netgbbon
ond -1 • unilOd front Ill· sol·· tnc problems that ars blsic to ua
oil.
._,, .. -J.E. T.
,.... ...... ........ ,.....,.. w.wt. ...
~·, ..... "' fllt _.,,,,, ....
,... Jiit ...... ,. • ..._ .... ~ ,Olf.
,.
Odd QMJpie.,'' use•them . Four years hence
tboy'JI require thooe lntertor bag1 that In·
nate ln your face on C'Ollislon aintaet. If
_ )"!Ul. battery bas a looa.connection. your
w is deld. So. atmHobtr, tooling a
hlehway at modtrate speed without 1
problem, if your big has 1 loose con·
-nection, you're. dNd.
It works with dummies. say the
obte1Hd. Sure. but dummies aren't driv·
Ing, except the small segment of real live
one.1 ·~the wheel. We haven't yet found
1 way to foolproof tbe. irtoned, the con·
&enltally Wllfttt, Of the downri&hL
atuptd. • You can't doc:wntnl it, but lt's 1 gue1s
the vtJ')' bird driver, whatevtr the cause.
ls reaponsible for haU the c11u1llles on
the .U..11 Ind bigbwaya. The otbtr hll
ars bis Victims.
EVEN IN MAKING grave decisioi:is.
for our own basic welfare . we te.nd
to be more "outer-oriented," .j n
. j ~ • • -Protec ti ng Prz12acy
The telephone is such an e.sse.ntial and
commonly used me.ans of commllft.ication
that 1pecial Jaws are often eaacted to
prevent abllslve. use.
Recently the. atate Legislature passed
the Invasion of Privacy Law, limiting
unauthoriUd witetapping. Use of any ln·
strument to t.ap telephone lines is a
crime. Il •is also i crime to read or at·
tempt to leam the contents of a com·
municat.lon in transit, pa r t 1 c u I a r t y
telegrams.~ U58-4-of ...the intercept~-~
municalion is a crime.
Evi~e.nce obtained by wiretap ls barred
in court. If the evidence is erroneously
aiitrutted, the court decision may be
revem!d. Wiret.aps for criminal in·
vestigati9ns require cburt approval.
ANOTHER LAW makes It a crime to
eavesdrop on a confidential com·
munlcation. Specifically barred I s
eavesdropping by means of an electronlc
amplifying or recording device. Jt is·not a
crime: to overhear a conversation or even
to tell about lt in aiurt. It Is the elec-
tronic amplification that is unlawful.
It is a crime to trespan on another's
properly ..!or the purpose._ ol eave.sdrop-
pillg .o!'t making a wiretap. It is 4!50 a
crime to possess. sell. manufacture or
transport eavesdropping deVices.
It is permitted to record a conversation
you m1y have had with another person.
However, that re.<:0rding--. m_, not be
made for any "injurious act.."
' IN A RECENT CASE an insurance
claims manager rtc0rded 1 telephon~
conversaUon ht had with a claimant. Tbe
cl1iina min uld he ta~ all con·
versatlons In the office so he would know
exactly · what commitmuts ban" been
made. The claimant received a 11T1alf
1war9 from his in5W'ance company based
on sOme incriminating re.marks he made
that were recorded.
The claimant stied the claims adjuster
for secreUy recording the conversaUon.
The court said there was no right to
_recovery. Any person can testify to what'
he n"laYdll'r spok'r.An·d he can~reoord i
But he cannot record the conversations
for purposes of blaclunail, th'eft or otber
injur.ioos acts .
Note: California law11ers ojjn thil
column so 11ou may know about our
laws.
B11 George -.--.
Dear Gl'Ol"ge:
I've ~Tilten 1 love song tilled,
"You Caught My Glance With Yeur
Toreador .Pant.s and Now I'm
Gro"'ing Sentimental Over You." ~'hat can 1 do next? _
-~-:-ROl'£P'UL LYRICIST
O.ar Hopelut :
I'm sending you the 1ddresa: «
another client. He wrote, "l Got
a Red Nose What Looks Like a Ro5e
From Cryin.g1 My Heart Out and
Drying My Tears With My Sleeve.."
Leave me alooe and write to him·
that's whal you con do ntxt. '
(The ·Secret.Ji of Sideways Think·
Ing are available to you for t"le
price of a t nt st.amp. That
will be e.fg ctnf.a, ple1se. ·ln adi-
Vanct.)
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Monday, NOVtm,;.. 29 •. 197! DAILY PILOT f ----;-. -....
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• ,. • • • • "I' • ' e " ... PflUIONAl.IZEll.GOLD~ l!EY-Brfno,Your'.llo1!1!0tT1>car key In and Prl!a' ·we.wn~m.ake you• beautltul gol(t, mo~og"-rnm9d<lu_ollcate. lfy0u driYe .
:•·foreign car. we .flave an equally dtatinctlve monogrammed gold key
·ring for yo.u. -~ ~ ,_._~, ....... ~
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,-account
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drawing EXTRA· H.OUR/··· -·.gifts .
OPEN 9:00 A .M. TO e:OO P.M. '' 'Chooseaplaceset.tlnmfrom'.~nheron.eof
' '.
24" Color Console Televlslon
In a-magnificent designer cabinet pius 12 other
exceptional prizes all to be given ·away
.on December 1oth at3 p.m.
-MOND.i/4.'M-.-THRU 'THD_R.SD~~-" ..... ·· ::: ~ -. .······ ·. ·~: .:.:.· .. · :.:··:/· lnternational's elegant Gold Qr Stainless tableware
FRIDAY,9:00·A..M,.tO 8100 RM. , .· ciesignswtieny~u~i>eo'ane~accoun1.c11ree
, . . · · SATURDAY ~ , , "place setting per family): ·· "
You need not be presen! to win.
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......
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· 1,; eOPxE"TiA ~1.·.·,l .. E.3.· 'i. _.o·I . ·RP~.· .. ,~ __ '·.'.·'. Op~ a~ecking-~(~~vi~~s.accoont$25 or more. Visit us ilurlng.our Grand op~ning 1estlvllles,.. .. . 1 ~o~,e~ ,a:~% Sup~r'.~f~~ook acc~tmt $500 or more.
let'~ get acquainted. .. -. . .. .. ... " . .. '.. -All.~i.tlon.aJ place ~t)jn~$cai~}tvailable, Ask for details.
--~------~~-~ ---";,';:::::::;;::.::. :;;;;;;:;;:-c:;--==-. _, ~ ~--·""'· -~-~·.L----=• I -"": ... ,....,~ .. ---·-,...:. -....:---.. , ·:· ~ • ,. •· .• ·.1 •• • •• ••• ••• ~~ •••
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' . •• J.
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I ••• .. . . : ' ., .... · 800Glennlyre,Llgunalleach,C1llfornla-928'1· -.: ._,, ·< .., . ' ,,~~ .~ ' . ~i ~~.· --~ .. .,.--_ .. __ ,~·-.. -··-.... :.~.~.-:-··~-· .. ·-·~.-.-.. ·~'~.~·:-.~.!.~·~-... ,_·~·~·-· -----c--,-----.,,-,.·~·~·'_·_~.
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Cheer up a ·tired Santa.. Ou t loW
. . ·. . '. ., ' .
p'1Ces will -cl1ee t you lip, too. ·~
.,
699
Special I'
Misses' po lyester knit f1are leg a:!ac ks
with st itched creases. So lid colors,
tweed arid herringbone patterns.
Sizes 1 Oto 20.
299
Men's dress shirts. Polyester/
cotton permanent press with
long point collar styling,
long sleeves, in pastel solid
colors or stripes.
Sh.Ort~ 2.50
Got th-decoratlYO percale ah-· at pnces you'd expect to P.IY for IT!Utiin.
Choose from• wide r1nge of bold,
bright aolid colors o·r beautiful
·s~mer Frolic' flor&I print in pretty
pastels. Solids and prints are
color coordinated. PaM·Prest for no
Ironing. Flat or fitteCJ.
Rumod and tucked
Dacro~ polyester/cotton
broadcloth blouse.
While only. 32-38.
.
". ·297 twtn 11 ..
plllow-2 for 2 47
lull tin S.t7
Acetate/nylon kTilt In OIOOrted
stripes. Zipper front with nov81ty
button treatment Sizes 32'<18,
•·'
Special! Boys'
acrylic knit shirt.
Crewneck, short
sleeves, stripes.
Long 11-11, 3/$4.
299
Speolall Boy•' corduroy
1l1ck1 of Penn Preste
polytelor/cotton. Flare
leg1 yoko bock. Regular
ana ellm &-1·8.
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,.JCPenney
Shop from Su..,iay naon at thew stores. ·
HUNTINGTON BEACH , Huntington Conlor COSTA MESA, Horbor C.ntor
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2 1or $5 ,
Girls' d!'MIY blou-.&iil! boxed l!lr
tho holidays. Throe stylos to
choose from in a variety of colors.
All polyester/ cotton. Sizes 7 to 14.
Also Jl'\.,llttle girls' sizes;-4"'ex.
Special
599
Women 's acrylic
knit cardigana
in single and
double breaated
and shawl atylei.
White, red, naV'f,
beige. 8-M-L.
Like it , .• charge it! •
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Reagan to Sign ·colleges Bill
'Move to End Bitter Baule Betwee1i Factions
Fnm llln S.rvlct1
SACRAMENTO -Gov. lloiWd Reagan
planned today to 1lgn landmark. JegJ.sla-·
tion enabling some Califomii · state
Colleges' to rename themselves state
universities.
Reagan's intentions to approve the bill
-announced last week -1pptared to
climax a bitter, Jean-long · tue-of.war
between the-University of Call!ornlii and
the slate colleges.
He said the bill b~ Assemblyman E.
Richard• Barnes (Man DiegQ), would
enable "California's well·known and
blghly respected 1tate colleges to take
their ripltlu! place among acodtmlc in-
1titutioDS 1cross the nation."
'lb~ governor denJed that such a·
, designation would change 11thelr fwictlon
or resPoMiblllUe1 as te.cblng in·
1titutioos. ·
"The fact ls," Re·agan "said, "the
greatness they have achieved arid the
• prestige they have earned 11 due 1n large
part to the continued emphasls they have
placed on their rival teaching role."
'!bi~ bill dlrttls. U!e stata eollege
trustees and the O>ordinating COuncil for
Solons Shoot.to Clos e
Session on Thursday
From Wire ServleH parties in the Senate want to separate the
SACRAMENTO _ Legialators hope to ndlstrictl.ng plans or the Assembly and
d. th · d 1 gth . 1 t Senate, now combined in one bill. a ,iourn e1r reeor . en session .a e The S!'!nate proposal has bipartisan
this week after drawing up new .disb'1cts-5upport but the Assembly plan is bitterly
Higher Education to develop stanclards
• wlllch the colleges must meet befoie 'they
can change their names. The lnlstees
would conter~the new t!Ue.
Reagan has urged state colleges
Chancellor Glenn Dumke, t b e lnL!tees
and"the council to ''move to bestow on
each campus the dlsUnction of 'state
wilversity' a~ soon as p>Ssible." ,
<Jpponenls, wll2.Jncluded the UnlvetsltY
of Cf,lifornia,. warned that aCcompanying th~ ]name ch.ange would go. a subUe
chana:e of mission from direct teacblng of
students to a nsea.rch-Oriented activity
by the faculty. They said this could put
the nine-campuS UC system in com-
petition with the new "state universities"
for research grants. •
But proponents denied this and sail the
bill merely recognized in name \w~at
many of the colleges already are "in
· fa ct." They said it WouJd improve
recruitment of farully members a n d
prestige of degrees .
The name change bill, similar versions
of which were offered by Sames for four
11lra1ght years, previously failed in one
house or the other. Tills. lime the bill in·
cluded 44. Assembly and 19 'senale
coauthors.
•
Mondai, NOv!mbfr 2',.i9".---"DAILY Pn.W 8 _,I
Police Probe Cr asll
Fatal to 7 Persons
SA 9'1! AMENT 0 (AP )-
Seven persons, includt11g six
from a family heafied borne
after a Thl'.l1lsgiving weekend
vlsif with relatives. died in a
two-air pileup when cn"e auto
jumped a free\vay divider, or~
!lcials say.
Three others were Injured,
one critically. in lhe head-0n
collision late Saturday on US
99, the California Highway
JJatrol. said.
Officers Jr.ited -the dead as
Samuel F o n g , 29. of
Sacra1nenta. and six members
of a Seaule. Wash., familv:
Bernice Dick.son. 48: her sOn
1'1erritt. 27: his wife. Lulu, 26 ;
their children. htondo, l;
Alone;2. and Daphne, 5.
htrs. Qickson's son James.
19. remained in crit1cal con·
dition at the Sacramento
P.fedical Center. P.f ad Ii on
Allen, 16, of Seattle, a
passenger in the Dickson car,
\Ya.$ in satisfactcry condition,
Fong's Wife. SUJzin, 21, was
treated for minor lnjurit.t &nlj
released.
Y orty's Goal
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Mayor Sam Yorty says he
thinks he can win Callfornla'1
Democratic Presidential
primary ne1t June "if I can
get a million voles." Yorty,
who aMounced earJler thil 1 · month that he was enterlnl ·
Democratic primaries in New ,
Hampshire and California. ,
said Sunday he might enter
primaries in Nebraska and
-Other states
' I ' 1-
1 fo~ . them selves . and enacting a fMO opposed by the Republicans. Gov. Ronald
million payroll withholding tu bill Reagan has threatened to veto it, and It
L&ll-'mak.ers ret.urned today frol!' a long alinost certainly faces a court test if
Amon g the changes that would eome
about would be San Diego State College
as "California Stale University, San L nugL "Jt t tL E d Diego." and San Francisco State College ••l 9 0 ~~e ff
' • ' ' l as "California State University, San 0 t · Fran,cisco." .u going 1'1ayor Fran~ Curi.an of San Diego retains
But there was no doubt over how Ulany his sense of hu~or \~11th a 'Room for Rent" sign as
Thanks~v1ng holiday after shuttling both passed in its present form.
r.eapport1on_ment and the~ mell®l"t off The...lower house p!an is aimed at In·
state colleges wouJd actually change he cleans out his office. He will be succeeded in of·
names soon. . fice by Pete \Vilson. it
to conference conunlttets. . creasing"'t!te QemocraUc majority in the
The panels will work out differences AMemblY ~ C-38 'to 44-36. Jn the
between the Senate and Auembly Senate the Democratic majority of 21-19
veraions or the proposals. . would be maintained. That's because the COOTdinating.-Counr-.~--'-------------------_::..._ ____ _:~~'----------
The tax bill wQl4ld close a $310 million Both bouseS intend to adjourn Thursday
revenue gap ln the at.ate'1 $6.1 billion •fter 331 calendar days in session the
budget, raising a total of '550 million. longest In state history. '
About $200 mJllion would be used for Reagan has attacked the legislature as
building .constr_ycUon with $23 million 11disgracefu1" because of the length of its
going for busi ness inventory tu relief. 1eSsioitlle said if cOuld have finished Its
Assembly Republican leader Robert T. work much 'earlier.
Monagan of Tracy said "this program is But Democratic Assembly Speaker Bob
only a pale eha~w of th~, .sw~eping Moretti of Van Nuys said the legislature
reform packages discussed earlier m the has "accomplis~ a great deal almost in
year, but it does promise some needed spite of: Ronald Re.agan." He said the
relief while balancing th,e budget, and I'm tight control the governor has maintained
afraid ·that is the best we can hape for over Republican legislators was one
this year." reason it look so long for the legi.slaturt
cil for_ Higher F..ducation has lipelled out
criteria for the switch that would leave
most state colleges with~ their current
lilies.
To qualify as a state un iversity, the
council says-; ·tne institution must dfer
graduate \li'Ork "at the doctoral level in
three distinct academic areas."
But Dumke says' eJl but the ne\li1!'5l
schools qualify because they meet the
traditional test of being a group of :schools
-in liberal arts, science and tiu.siness
for example -on ooe campus._
Assembly Democrats are pressing for to conclude its business. · ·
jt to contain more property tax relief for Adjournment on Thunday would leave Who Cares?
senior citizens but the bill's author, barely a month before tht st.art of the No other newspaper in tht
Republlcafi Assemblyman William T. electiorryear 1972 session. world carC!S about yoUr corn·
Bagley of San Rafael Is opposed to that And it hu been costly, running nearlr munity like your communit:7
change. ..$25 million to operate the legislature th.ii: da ily newspaper does. It's
On reapportionment, leader1. _:o:l~;.:bo=th:..:::""'::;:·on.=---------..,.------'==th=•=D=AIL=="=PILO==T=. ===::!...-
4 Victims
' . Of Slayer
Due Burial
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Shag carpet sale.
Order now. Save now~
We'll install it before
. Christmas. ' --
~Sale5$9
' . sq. yd.
Rog. 6.99. s .. e sso on SO oq. Jdo.
reg. 349.50; Now 211.!0
Treat you r feet to the thick shaggy
·_u extu're of ~Spring Breeze'. Adda
: ' a tl istinctive look to any mom
· · multi p~nle<I '
surface. le Per ntJy-
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I LANCASTER (UPI) -Fou.r
of five persons slain in a
bloody, one-man shoot l n g
1pree ·will be buried Tuesday
while the results of an autopsy
are pending to determine il -
the last victim, the killer. in-
gested drugs or liquor before
Custom draperies at
·uncustomary prices.
Save up to 1 /3. . twisted to stay new-loo
8 lwo-tone-;;:--~-..1-
the attick.
Gary Logan. 18, t he
assailant,_ who took his own
life with a sOOtgun seconds
after killing his fourth victim, .
will be buried sometime this
week. Services are pending.
Combined services will be
held for three members of the
Jack Welch family, including a
atepdaug~er. Laurie, 1 S ,
\\'hooe 'broken romance w Ith
Logan apparently triggered
the attacks Fr:iday.
Services for another of
Logan's victims, Ro c c o Kim
"Rocky" Nolfo, 16, will be
held Tuesday, also in Lan-
caster. Nolfo, Miss Welch's
new boyfriend, a t t e n d e d
Antelope Valley Union High
wilb her ..
Police ·said J.ogan burst into
the Welch home, shot the man
and his wlfe. Doris, 37. then
sat back, waiting until Welch's
three stepdaughters arrived
home with Nolfo. When the se-
cond assault began, one girl
dived through a closed window
to safety while the other sister
fled out the front door to a
neighbor's home. Logan, in a
fit of jealousy, caught and kill·
ed. Laurie Roskam on the
driveway of her home.
Homicide detect I v,e 1
reported that the former
boyfriend had stolen the cuns
used in the mass murd ers -a
.22~aliber rifle and a .16-
gauge shotgu~ 1od purchat-
ed boxes of ammunition ealler
'
In the -.·eek. t
Logan reportedly told • ·
fr iend he intendtd to go "rab-
bit hunting."
Massagers
Li nked fo Vice
SACRAMENTO CAP) ·-
Ninety-nine percent of
masSage parlors in an un·
named major California city
are "virtual houses or pro-
stitution." Atty. Gen. Evelle
Younger has said.
Younger said Sunday that
although mo."lt cities. control
~uch parlori through licensing,
"in one large metropolitan
area of .the state less than 1
percent ol the m&MIB• PIJ'·
Ion Mt 1eg1umata open·
ttons."
I
Still in time
for Christmas.-
CllDOMfromapen w.,.cn11 .....
....... llllnt,hOITJIO-,lllln
---Al·~ we'JJI R1saaWIOwP ., ......
-&Ill_ ... _
I
(714) 523-6511 for
-home seMce, free.
JCPenne'y\
.l t-llome decclc1•111 . '
Otc:orlle ... u. •••• ,. ... PIJlllllll"• .. -..
• • ...
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Expert carpel lnStallotlon
service 11\18.Uable. PanMYS
has a oomplele selection of
value-priced carpet peddlng.
)Sale7~~ f Reg, a.~. Save '50 on 50 oq. ;.ta.
, reg. 44 9.Sd, Now 399.50
'Trident' shag carpeting in
14 dramatic three-tone colors.
You get more carpet to the yard
because it's made of Kodel•
polyester pile .•. heat set ao It
keeps its crisp a?Pearance.
A.,ccent rug
s35
3'6"x5'&"
'Fleur' nylon pile hooked ef
_are~ug. ~old color '
floral design, A 'now' look /
for modern decor. /
Blue/green. Copper/gold
• JC.Penney
The Christmas ~G~
Shop from Sundoy nocin at !Ji<following stores:
Av•il•ble ti: N 1WP('~.JeACH1 fuhfori ldend •
HUNTINGfON-BtA<;H,. Huntington Cont.r
Us1 P1nn1ys Timi Payment Pl•n.
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JI DAILY PILOT
~ath Notlees
lltADSHAW
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""""· "'"'' .... .Mtlvol ,.,, ~, .. ,, ,,,_,. 1tt111l.I a.11. ,._.,. tNll ~rtM
Jt 1...--1 ~. C"*riK 8rad1hlw. E1 Ct lonl OM ••Mtt>llll. ,........ wm
'-,....., W.....,...,, [JloomllU 1, II
AM M... \19fd9 ~st Ctlllrcfl, c..f, ~. '"~' P•cltlc vi-~tl Ptrlr. l'-11'1 ltn-11 ~
......... hi ...... roMmOrlel "CJM!•lbo.rl'loM·
!MMM ClOll'frlta<Jtt '8 .,.,,. Llv'""'ton l"llftll,
Un.IVl'!"lll'I' •I S." DI"°' 2"1 hi Aw., h1I ~ Ct~ll. fllfl, ol !tot Mfll
\IM'de Mil!'lod'lll Cllurdl. lPlll , ... ,, )I.,
ces1.t Mflf, h ll lr(l.clwt• Mottu1rv,
OlrKlorJ, IROClllLMANN
·EllMr H. arodlellNr>r>. 111'9 '1¥1M Cloucl Orl111, LtllU... NI-I, Dtlt ol
Mtlll, Na~ 16, n il. ~wrylwff b'f ~ OoroMwt M. l(Odltl(NM.l 0-U•~
'""' "'"'· Oof'Cl"'1' G•""'· Altxt..cie•, V!rtlnM; #11"1 WillW.M CJ111kt) Wtl\I .. ,
...... .,...., t rtlldJO'I. D Brodr G,..,..,I
«tnc!Gt....,,ler. 1ri1or1. G.E. (Ptntl-l
-J°"""°"/ .... ~ Dtll'ld' Wt4T111: ..........
6-u...,ter. IC.om..., Wrilltl1 ,,."'..,.'""" '°" C,,.rlft Jol'wllo'l • .servk-. T ........ v,
12 •NDM. J'ICl!k vi.. °""'· ,..,.,il'I'
-'"" -wknw. "" ....... ......,.,.,.., (ll!WrltluflDM. plffM «ll'ltnii.IM I'll !Mir ~ dlffifY. l~~c VIN ~ti ... rt!. P..:lfle ""';11-Marfw,,.,
Olrl'C'forl, -....._ . , ""'\.CA\.DI!•
Allct Ethllt C-"'*'. nUJ Sfonl.......,, Rotd.
!ooulll L._ O." of delttl. No>r_.
ber ,., 1f11. Sutvf\lil! ""' lwlbencl • ..ld>ll
A. C11-. o1 tt>4I f>omtl ..,,.., ,Jat>11 L.
C1ldtr, V111 Nutt1 °"""A. C.1r111>r. Colo-
r-r d-1-o!ff'. A~" 11.tndltl. L11lU.,. •
Bt•<ftt four vrtl!CllO<'•· P1!rlct H "'""
d11I. J• of M1•lco1 °"'"'tll• W c,•111>;, J~ff"'"' L. C11M• t"CI °"" A Ctldt• t i!
of ColOr-Gr,un~ setv!tl:I wtrt
fl•ld !~Y,. MofwNY· 1·311 P~ Po<llTC
'VJ"" MM>Of'itl P~rlr. Ftrnl!Y w-s·•
,..._111 cOl'l!flbulle•• ta -A.metlc1~
C1...:tr SO<"lffl. 5~t'lle<" L•911'11 Bttctl
Morfu.lry. Ol•KTn" co•• wrni-. •o<t clllllt. 211 vta EllolL .. ...,. ~ B•ch. Dltl of -th. Nti'>'ft"ber 25.
,.,,, Sutvh..t bl'i w'lli!. ?»!flt ·-·
R!cNnl C. SM! 1~IM", 'VtleN
$lmt, L..-Hl"t' lhtfr, M,.., PMrl
H1r,,i119, .L-8ft(:tl; t•tNkli!lll,,.,, 9rt0fonl c. S""9, N .. _, ancr-1 M ......
Ll•'<fll l'MfM, 5"1t1t, W .... ~: M.,,_
Jtnlt U!*r ~Ill 1"¥11. ~ .. -t f\lld tadW, Mondl'Yo 1 "ii, Ptc:Jfk V'-
C"-otf. 1-........i. Pt~lc 'V~• ,,,........
rlt l P1'1t. Pl'('lflc ........ Htor'u91'1'. DIN(· .....
OAV11
.t;>dff 1C1rl Lv"" 01vl1. 1M77 Mt,_
\11..,. 0.. , eo-M1 Olll "'-" Dl't cl _..._ H-• 2i. 1'11 5,,.......,lld II'< wii..
C....tldll}I 0 . DIV"lt ; ...... 1(1'1 LY""
0.Y\d Jr ; bl• Ol'tnddl!ld,reru b""'"-"· RtlDll 0.Yll, Hll'W J.,s.ey: ... roid OeYll. p1~1 ; "'"''· Mtrlof"~ ""'*" mn. N it . Htw Yew'<; Mf!Oted MIJoW, P1s...
0ma1. ~kn, Tuti"9'1, 2 PM. Ptclf'i<
'VIN C~wf!. Ol'l~I, hdflC vi..
Mem.,....I Pi.ti. Ptcifk vi-~ry,
Dir..:!~. .
HA-ElllEN
• E rnnl E. H1"""1el'Mll. JCl'I Grand C1rw1!.
81lb:Mo hlaf'l!I. °"" of -tll. Nowtnbt•
27. lt1! Prlv1i1 Hf'Olcn wtr• hlld ti
• atltl CO<OrW dll JJ.1r Mortu.rv.
l MAll•ISON
l e!'O"t 8tr'tllr• H1trl10n. '1S S. C081!
Hi9 ..... tv, l ttu ... 8•C'l. Dlt• of dffth,
Nov-'11.' lt71. 5'1n'lved b'f' dau""·
,,,,Mrs J•mn Hojllnd, "' L-8Mclll
..:rece, Mlrl...,, Me•M•l't Ind Doroltl'f'
H1.,,ln, Of 0<-11-. Ftor'l.S.. Sff'vlce1
-• l>tld -.... ~ .... II AM, P1c!l!t: ~:.,..f.~.;..'~~ci:k'v.!il('Zn':.1~·
Dl•K'Orl. MAINZ
~rv Me!n1. 31?tl Mtcltkt St., (O\tl
MM•. Otl1 of -t~. "'""°"""'' 71. 191), Survlvt.S 1W dtvtMe<", Flor....ct M. llf1t · """'; br""'~· lulo;I Wtlla, Ouruth, Ml ... l'oll0t1; J... Wall1, V111couv1r. 11.C.: i ii·
t1r•-. ...... Peltl'10tl; 11r11'\Ck11utl\ltr.
DD!r>•ft M. Belnk•. COllt Mew:. ""· "lc:ei. T~v. I PM, P1c!tk View
Ch-I. Ell!~!. P1c1llc 'VI-M-.
rlill hrti. P..:flic YI-Morlutrv. Dl<K· .....
MASON
(l&ttN:I E. M.HOfl ... .i, It 411 C~I. Hullli-llMCh. 0.lt of dff.lh, N .... _
btr 25, 1'71. Survived by ""'' M1•rlt11
_,, Eowl11 Mii.on,"' LM v-·· """;,.,.
tutttftl -wJ"'I"' to lnl~I mtmoritl Clllf'lfrlbu11ons. PIHSI contrlDut1 to A ......
k111 Ctncor loclety or First M9't!llOi.1t
Oturcfl, Hu11t"""°" 8HCti. s ..... 1c: ... Tut1-
dlY, 10 /\M, Jl'lr1t M.ttlod1SI Chvtcll,
Hunt!~ 8111dl. Smlfh1 Mortut,.,, o;.
hCl(>t"'I,
, McMAHON
Conlotl F. MtMthOll. 23561 V1rr111t1no
atv, LttU<lll Hltvtl. Otlt of -Ill. N0o ·
wmll9r 16, 1911. Survived by wilt, Edllh1
Min. Gordotl F. Jr.1 diluthltri, Ol~nt
1111!1 k lndr1 McMt'-: trandM>n. Gavl11
a. F.-.•kt; brolller. Edmolld McM-hon1
111•••~, M1•H S•ucker end Pt!iY (O\lrh.
~rvlc••· lund•Y, lD AM. P~c!llc View
(h•~. EM""'t>"""'· P1clllc Vlirw M~
rltl P1rk. Ptclflc Vltw Moo1u1ry, D!rec. .....
McNAMAltA
MtlCI G McN...,..1•1. •• (olll111 111•1\d,
N ... POr'I llffCh. Otlt ol dNlll, Novt....i..r
211. nn. 5urviv"' bY l'lvsblnd. Geot9t C.
McN1,.,.r1, of in. "°""! cousin, Edw1rd
M. o. CtmP, N_.., ~-5orvk n,
Wtdnedly, DKtmbe(;i. 1, P1dllc Vltw
0-1. t:ntornbtnefll, f"liclflc View Mtmo-
ritl Pi.ti. kt111 c,,,_ ftl JN.r 1-1·
"' rv' D! l"Klll<'I . IENTt:lllE
\..11li1 c . !>1nteu .. 1tl CtnYOn VI-OriPe,
Lt9Unil Brach. °"'' of -"'· Nov-. :U, 1'11. Survived bY dauthll!f', Mrs. N.tr·
....., NewcOO'l>t>. Lt11un1 lr•ch: "'"' 9r1nocnlldrtn; rhrH 9rt1t..,r1,,.,dlllt1rff1 1
llltff brolfl"", L1wl1 Fltld, Vl1!1; f <>•
llellf Flcld, E1c-ldo: M ....... u Fitld,
l• .lollo Sttvlc11, T~1d1y, 10 AM. Mt·
C<>rm•c~ l•V<>nt llt•ch (l\tPtl wlln Dr.
Pl\111• E Grt!l<>f\I, Ptl!<>r Ernerlt111. Fi.,I
Con<1rt<1~llon11 (hurOI of L19un• lle1en.
olllt1A1\.n;
VAt.I t.10011,0EN
H1..,,.l<1 Mo-;t V•~ Noorelln. ""~' '1, o!
211fi1 Ptcll« Coa1• Hlt hw1y, Munt1n91011
8Htl\ 011t "' """'· Nov-~· ?I, 191\. Survlvfll bV w!!t, M,. Do"I Mt·
Cr1c~en Vtn Noot<!ttl; IOI', Mlcl'l;otl O.n·
flll V1n Noorlle<i, of HA•lcrl<, (1111.I
mo!Nr, Mrs. 811"°"1 Vtfl Hoorden,
Cl1•tm11111:. Slr'Yktt, T1,1n.oty, 10 AM,
P eek Famll• (Olonltl Fu ...... r Homt.
\lll!tt!ioll, toolllhl, Mol'!dl~, N,,,....,bl!f' ?t.
ln1tr"'"''· "'-c-1.,.y, with Com·
m 11t11 ~rvkn, T!Jftd1y, \2 NOOt!. F1mHV -.nts mtmorltl eort!rlbuli<>M lo tti. io. A"9.in Coul'>IV Hurt A1101;l11IQll, 7ll•
I!. Art-Hl11hw1v, G!~t. Colll, tlNO.
WILSON
,\mtndot E. WilM;W1. J17·A Mt•tuf'"'' St , cor ..... de! Mir. Dttt of llU1h, Nov...,tier
'211. 1•n. SU!YIYed ti.. frt,,.,dllld•~. A~.
WlllOft lit' Pemtll F. Wll'IOll: Jtm"' O
W!l10n; """-1r~lldd>lld(..,, A.5. Wiison
IV; oauvt>•••·l ... 11 ... Mt r• F Will"";
elflrr r11111vn tnrou.,_, 1n1 ,,,1 ~e"
"i<fl, WtClnf.o.tY, lt AM. Wn•clill
(l'l;o1>1\, will! "'"" llru<t ICuotlt otlltl1T-
1 ... '"'"'"""''· Ftl"""v"' Men>odt l "•rt . Wetlellfl cn-1 Mortu1ry, .-.~ .... O"K · .....
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY m E. 11th s~. Costa M ... -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
&rona d&I r.1ar OR l·MSG
E:osta Mesa P.11 f.%W • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
lll Broadway, Costs Meu
LI 8-3433 •• McCOR~1ICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1715 Lapn1 Canycm Rd.
DI-MU • Plt:IF'IO\IJEW
MEMORIAL PAll
IAllwlerJ M-.,. -.oc:·~ Dtlff Newpott lludo, e.llfondo -• • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7811 Botu A\le.
Weltmlnstt.r ltWS%1 • SMITHS' MORTUARY
. In Moll St.
Dullllgloe lkodl
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County May ~ave ·uuge Medical Complex by '7
Water Cost
Boost OK'd
JJy Panel
LOS ANGELES -The
California. Public U ti 1 i t I e 5
Commission has granted the
Southern California Water
Company authority to increase
rates -1.! percent for-aome
27,000 custom"ers in Its Orange
County District.
• The utility was ~eking an
18.8 percent increase. .
The-commission said the
rate increase is consistent ln
pur~ with the fetieral
goveiniiltnt's ec onomi c
stabilization program.
The Orange County District
serves portions of Anaheim,
Cypress, Garden Grove, La
Palma. Los Alarti.itos, Placen-
tia, Santa Ana. Seal Beach,
Stanton. \Vestminster, and
Yorba Linda.
Rates were last increased in
July 1968.
The Commission said the
ne'w rates should give the uUU·
ty an average 7 .S percent
return on tts investment over
the next three years and a
return On common equity of
11.79 eprce.nt.
Dollar amount · of the in-
crease 1£.1187 ,950.
At a public hearing on the
matlel in Los Alamitos last
July. seven af thf company's
customers appeared to com·
plain of dirty wal.l!r and tow
preSsure.
The PUC said the company
"'·as Installing new equipment
to obviate the problem by
year-end.
!11 response to a petition of
34 Santa Ana residents. thl!
PUC said the utility would
replace a 5().year-old water
main before Deceber 31.
Quantity rates will rise from
18.1 cents per 100 .~ubic feet
for the first 100.000 cubic feet
to 19.S cents. Quanlities over
100.000 cubic feel will go from
13.1 cents to 14 cents per 100
cubic feet.
The ne\\' r<ite! may become
effective next month .
Defendant
Gets Study
SANTA ANA -A woman
found by en Orangl! County
Superior Court jury to be. In·
11ane after the panel heard
allegations that she ad-
ministered-what uif' have
been a fatal dose of
barbituates to her retuded
son has Been ordered to
underg_g <'-90-day diagno&ic
sludy at Patton ~late Hospital.
Judge Samuel Drel ien
ordered lluby t.1ae Jefferson,
39, Anaheim. lo return to his
courtroom Jan. 31 for disposi-
tion oo the"-sanity ruling and
tddilional charges. ·
Mrs. Jeffenoo wu arrested
J une 4 alter !be administered
1 heavy dose of barbiturates
to Mkhat!I AndrN' Ba-genon,
12, her son by a fonner
marriage.-She rushed lhe boy
to a hospital when he lasptd
lnlo a coma and doctors work·
ed throughout the night to
save hill life.
•
Sale$-f78
pott ___ ..... IOledmapl&
cutting board q,, 3qd99elecllOl'I, lll l!Mil
wash acllon for hygienically cleaner
dis_hes. Soft food waste disposer ••• dishes
can be IOaded without pre-rinsing. Rinse
agent dispenser gives spotless dishwashing
even in hard water. White qr avocado
••• color costs no tnore at JCPQnney.
Big :
sale!
15%off
-all our-
aids .
Sale~IS
11og.m• 11-.....,. .... ~ emzlllll1llrle 11111 a 11112 .. ec•1d-
c1e-..ing ptMlo. cabinet and tub haM
asbestos lllld fiber glass paddings to
minimize noise. 3 wash cycle, maple
cutting board !Op, dual detergent
dispenser. Automatic wetting agent
dispenser for spotless -"'9 _,
1n tad_.. Wiiie. 01'«: e 11os-.
8'Wl(8b or I• saet 9*1 . .,, • .cxmrG:llls
ao men etJCI •4
17'-1 R Jllil:UAIC 2
... 111-.11 I 1111
DI I IC .. ... __...
Al ctnl11&JL An nc-pol1lhen.
Everything!
No matter what kind of help
you need foryaut flOOfS, this
sale has what you're looking
fQt.And 15% savings \Oat
Hurry In for upright-
canisler vacuun. dommn:. =·'l)OC II~ loor
7
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~· JC~enney .
The values ar~ here-every day.
86 STORES BRIM-FULL
Of Christmas · Goodies •
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It was testified at lht trial
that Mr.!1. Jtfferson'dnct was
an atte mpted "mercy k1Uin)t",
decided upon by htr undu the _ Shop from Sunday noon at tht follawlni;i 1tan1: ' .. ... ,. prtuUre of ptrl0na1 and rinanclal problems. -NEWPORT BEACH, Fuhion l•l•ncl HuNTINGTON BEA(;;l:I, Huntington -
;
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Use Penneys time p1yi\i1nt pl10 ''
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• . ' Mond.11, Nov.mbtr 29, 1971 DAIL V PILOT J l
Mexico: Problem~ ~tay
,
Nation De ve lops Rapidly-But Unevenly
By CHARLES GREEN
Aasoclaled Prt.11 Writer
MEXICO CITY -• President Luis
Echeverria, entering hia second year as
leader of the Mexica n people, Is beset on
all &ides by problems so huge they
forecast basic structural changes in
every pha se of Ure. 1
Many ol the problems the 49-yeaMld
preaidenrfates are rfatural in any rapidly
developing· nation. Some are especially
Mel.ican ; these are giving him the most
trouble.
If Echeverria can find solutions lo even
half of th03'e" problems bef&re hia-six~year
term ends, he will become one of the
greatest' leaders in Mexican history.
Otherwise, his countrymen.will write him
off1 as anottt~r politician who made a lot
of fancy talk.
The problems include high unemploy-
ment and a widening gap between the
wealth of few and . \he poverty of many,
as well as corrliption, fear and ~
pression.
The president, who finishes hi s first
year Tuesday, brought so me of his dif·
ficulties on himself by facing 1things
previous presidents ignored or fostered.
He has created e~mies within his own
party, alienated some businessmen.
scared foreign investors and increased
distrust from extremists while moving
the Mexican govrrnment steadily to the
left of center.
As many see it, the president f ha s a
solid foundation on which to stand while
he tries to push Mexico toward the social,
political and economic balance he see.ks.
For almost half a century f.1exico has
EDITOR'S NOTE -South of the
border, there's a sayi11g: "Poor ~fexi
co-so for from God a11d so near the
'i"United States !" Yankee mone11 has
built up the tconamy of our ?1eighbor.
but Afeiico is full of anomalies-and
poverty. The breadtl~ of this situa-
!ion is iletailed in this prtieie. •
looked like a !table, growing beacon for
tile UQderdeveloped Yr'Orld. The growfh ol
its gross national product over the past
four decades has been surpa ssed by only
two or three nations in the world.
For 15 consecutive years, that rate of
increase has been at least 6 percent.
U.S. investment has poured into the
country. The Bank of 1'.1exico estimates
there is $2.IH million in direct. private
U.S. investment in Mexico. The U.S.
Embassy believes 75,000 Americans live
in the country. ·
11illiions 'more .cross the ~ile
border each year to sarf'lple the ta!Pllnd
culture o! Mexico.
But there-is a different Mexico, where
poverty is a way of life, where the only
hope is less hope lessness. Jn some wa ys,
it is a 1'.1exico unchanged since the
Spaniards arrived to conquer an outstan·
ding civilization four centuries ag o.
lt is a Mexico wh ere 40 percent of the
homes have one room.
As Mexico emphasized its industrial
gro,vth, the government gave special ad·
vantage to the captains of commerce. No
other Latin-American nation rewarded
them so well.
~NIMAlogic .,, ....
Conic to this Christian Science Lecture
"ARE YOU RESOURCEFUL?"
<i::l ~~ ll•r J. Liii""' c.1.1, Your Hometown Tutsday, No.,tmMr lo
1:00 '·"'·
Peppen()ine UniveR~itN --.
OllAllGE COUNTY RESIDENT CENTER
UlOtSlJ Park BIYd., lrYille Industrial Complex
EVENINC. CLASSES-BEGIN JAN .• 3
Busineu, sOciology, P1ycholo9y,
Polle• M1n1~ent.
EVENING GRADUATE CLASSES -
BEGIN FEB. 7
Educ1tion.
ALL COURSES MAY BE ~PPLIED TO
DEGREES.
Adv1nce Rttittrition; Dec. 6, 7, I.
~
Lee.ti•: Betw een Newport ~nd Sin Die90 Freew1y1,
ju1_t off M1cArthur,Blvd, ,
INFOlM.lTION: 17141 546-l!ll ot P"I luckl•y, •
17141 737-6551 '
' . Fully Accr.c!ited by +he We1t1rn A11oc ietion of
Schools i nd Coll eg11
P G . ' 'K. k' rogram · rows as ic s Newsnaner Is SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST .1_~T~h~e~~D~>.~'~1[~-r-!·~~P~l~L~()~T!_~::::=:=:~~~"·~·~··~'"~"~··~,,~,,~·~'~·~~~~ .. ~··~·~·~~=:=;=:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Drop, Director Reports
Phenomenal growth h ft~s formerly with the Outreach of youths still living at home and
m1rked the first six monttiS of Santa Ana. their parents, under the di.rec·
oper1tion of Laguna Outreach, "Billy soon became the pied tion of Barbara Trear at the Mrs. Dorothy Joyce, executive director of the drug prevention piper of-Laguna Beach since Boys' Club.
and youth enrichment project J une" .Mrs. Joyce said. "He is "The biggest problem facing
told fellow directors .this week. equally at ease wit h establish-Outreach today,'' Mrs. Joyce
•·we have been observing a ~ment people and street people noted, "is money." She added
strange reversal in the drug and actively ~oi-ks w i t h all contributions are tax
scene in Laguna recently," goverrunent, churches, clubs, deductible. A main soufce of
she told directors. "There ap-the' police, courts and jails. income nov,., she said, is the
pears to have been a dramatic "One might see him at -3 "Second Tirne Around Shop-
drop in the need for crisis in· a.m. rapping with some young pe" localed at 235 S. Coast
ttrvention ; that is, people on people, strolling on the beach, Highway.
'trips' or nee.ding a place to appearing in cburl or literally Future plans for Outreach
'kick.' _ chasing a runaway around the include a giant auction to raise
"We like to think it is due to downtown area-or down the funds, organizat.ion of a youth beach." chapel and coordination of the all-out thrust against this Comp-limen11·ng the "street . of th 1·1 ' F. e lement by Laguna screenings e 1m 'or
Outreach," she remarked. people" program, Outreach Pete's Sake," released by
has a project for troubled Billy Graham Productions. The Outreach program , shei---~------------------1
1aid. has gone far beyond
handling you ng people with
drug problems with spiritual
counseling.
A young men's residential
home, job placement. a thrift
shop and hotline t494-TALK)
ha ve become important parts
of the Outr,each program, Mrs.-
Joyce corfimeqted,.
Mrs. Joyce noted that the
Outreach program would have
been severely limited without
help from the city govern-
ment. the Laguna Beach
Coordinating Council from
which the program started,
and county community mentz.I
health and probation agencies.
Outreach, she said, operates
"The Net," a coffee house, on
Laguna's Main Beach. The
Net is under the dierctlon of
Billy Wade, a min ister
20 Officers
.Graduated
At Academy
Twenty police from 10 city
and county law enforcement
1gencies have graduated from
the Orange County Peace Of·
ficer's Academy at Golden
West College. .
The diplomas were awarded
Nov. 19 in ·ceremonies featur·
Ing keynole speaker Joseph J.
Kelley, Laguna Beach police
chief, and remarks by Stephen
M. Brinkerhoff, Hwitlngton
Beach Police Department,
class president.
Graduates frOm lbe Orange
Coa1t are:
Co1ta Meaa Police Depart·
ment -Richard C. Rouer,
Jr.
Huntin gton Beach Police
Department -Stephen M.
Brinkerhoff, Kieran J. Chuba .
Keith A. Nale, Jerry D. Webb
and John G. Winters.
Laguna Beach Po Ii c e
Department -Terry L . !'"
Temple.
Orange County H 1 r b o r
Depil'lment -James T.
Bertolino, -George r.t.... Pat-
tert0n.
San Clemente Police Depart.
ment -Paul A. Falk,
Thomas E. Haight, Glenn E .
Holllsler.
Stal Beach. Police Depart-
ment -Mich'ael J . Wh ite.
Uni(ed States Marine Corps
-, Brent A. ·Fox.
1 Wt1tmin1ter IJ.olice
Departm .. t -Edw•1 r
Hunt, Jr . .. .
)
-'Balsam Plus' perm sale .
Just 8.88
buys the works.
For one week on ly,
our ,s'ue Ccrry 'Balsam Plus'
··perm is reduce d from 12.50
to 8.88 . Shampoo, cut, and
set included.
-JGPenney
beauty salon =ME=~=;.~=!:c~.~=,!.:-::AC"'"H I HU~~~!~~~.~CH
2nd Floo1 6'44-2.1\S 2rid ifoor192.ml • "
Give \your :Sant~ a rock_er
fhat 1 reclines,1warms 1 and ~viorates~
Sale
$109
vibrator helps ease
streb and tension
Reg . $139. Early Ama ri·
can style swivel ro cker
,.... with maple finished hard·
wood arms and trim.
Upholstered In patch·
work quilt. tave•
Sale
s159
"'""° sale s1-29
Rog. $11511. Vlt'lltile rocker/-
warrM and ,vibrates. Covered with
carefrM Herculon• olefin In
O-.looidotnutmog. ................... ......,
ttlor ""'"",.,.. . Ughl-wflh i
deop hottl
I
Sale.,$109 ·
Reg. $139.' Modern •
llyle recliner with ad·
fustable heod rest.
Available In salt.and
pepper Herculon• ol•
fin.
Reg. $199. Extra large iii T91dltlonal atyle re<:ll·
· ner, me11ur11 38"
acroH. Vinyl uphpl·
story la In mahogany.
Metal cutera •.
Pennoro furniture prlo~1 1Ml1J~
dolMly within _, delln11-.
JC Penney
The Christmas Place
Shop from Sunday noon at the following stores:
A••ilab/1 et : NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion lslana HUNTINGTON .BE~CH, Huntington Contor. . ~
UH Penney• time payment pion.
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,J! DAllY PILOT
• QUEENIE -ey Phil·.lnterland i ' ~~~~~~~-----.......
··1 ·111 t>eal. \fhy do'n 'l "·e jusl recycle one of last \reek ;;
1nemos. .,
Said No 'Glv eaawa:y'
U.S.OffersAnticrime
Guards ; Fe w Takers
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Iowa A · Ga111hler
" '(' . ·,,;:. Far1ner:
-~ ' Stak~~ Are High , B.ut Return~ Often Lbw in 'Corn.bek_
,/\, __;,' ,,
BOONE ... lo\~a . f AP l ~ It's a paradoxical world the fittest" • ror fa mi I y 'ment age .. ~hey're getting by
r.1a:shall K1.ng 1s involved tn 1King lives in. He want! corn farmers. because Uleil: ~land anl;t . pro.
one or the biggest gambles on 1-prices low so he can feed his Infiatlon is the fly In tile p:er1y are paid for, and they're
"rrthh , odd . ~ . t h·ini. caUle at a profitable retun1. agricultural ointment todlU'. ptobably not inve!lting in new e s are aga1ns 11 1 . h. h · hin Yet for niore , than two ea so wants corn prices 1g King says. (Dae ery. .
. ·~ades, he has asked to be-when be sells to warrant plan-;'Expens~ are probably· up King described it ¥s "kind of
dell\ \!'I ,on an annual game ting the crop. Finding that four or five times whatt they. coasting along," adding that wJt~re the returns are .so low middle ground is tre1cherous were· IO years ago," he says, only a fe.w young i)eople are
that it hardly make.•.h•s huge in today:s economv., Kino ··and this is what is driving becoming. farmers to d a.,
h tt d "'O farmers to more volume ." u investment wort s1 1ng own feel s. because or the~ almost pro-
l
What Do MaJ1.Y Doctors~
. Wh~n-They Suffer · Pain .
-<:>-"flleJnorrhoiaaI Tissues?
· ExclUaive Formula Givea Prompt, Tem~·rary Relief
In Many Ca1e1 from Such Pain. Also Htlpt Shrink
Swelling ol Such Tistuts Due to Infection.
I n a survey, docto_!t v.-ere uked
what they ·Use tO relieve auch
painful symptoms. Many of the
doctors reporting 1aid they either use Preparation H therii·
seh·ea or in their office practi~.
Pr'eparation H 1ive1 prompt,
te1nporary relief for houri in
many ca1ee rront pain, i~ in hmiorr.ho\d&t lii:!~ ~ it
actuallY helps 1hr1nt pa1nful
1wellin1 of 1uc:h tia !Jell wMn.
infected •rid inft•tned. JUlt _.
if d octor·tetted. PttiparatiOa R•
doesn'l help you. Oi•bMet 4t
'uppoailorie1.
at the table.· The plight of the American He said !hat.in 1948 he could hibitive expense of starling.
King is an.. Io·wa cornbelt farmer~ again r~eiving n·a-buy a new tractor for $2.000. -"When I started, I sharedl:=================:::':::::::::
rarmer. tional attention as the Nix.on That was the -year he started 4ll.achinery wit1i mY Dad and I li-
i\1any cornbelt farmers have administration attempts ·lo farmin~. laking over the fanned 80 acres," he said.
investments in land, livestock have .Earl Butz confirmed as operation from his father. King's son, Jon, 18, is tak·
and machinery that go into six the ne\Y U.S, secretary of "You can almost counl oh ing a~fann oj)eratrons crass at
figures. Thej've gi t to put agriculture. . my hand the farm items you nearby Iowa State University
that much into the\r opera-Buti has been d~scr.1bed as can buy for Sl,000 or less to-and wants soi;ne day_ to
tions, King feels. if they're an advocate of agr1bus1ness -day," he-says. as.~ume the, farm s operaijon.
going to survive. the large. cor~rate fa~ms -He feels most of those leav· We. cant hope 1~0 ~tart ~
·But they don't all have and a believer tn survival of ing their farms are of retire-day with 80 acres, King said.
ready cash, ail<! King says in·
· No. 1-on the Coast .
Your l!lometown N•Y.f•p•p•r It
The DAILY PILOT ·.
ter.est payments can be as
much as ·net Income.
And the small operator .:.-
the farmer with just a couple
of hu~ed acres -,is having
the toughest time, King says.
King has more thail 800
acres or lush cropland four
miles north or this central
Iowa town-of 13,000. He an·
nually sells about 1,000 head of
cattle, and he's feeding nearly
400 hogs for market now.
He has a starburst of in-
vestments pitted against an
unguaranteed return. N o t
many thi ngs see,m ln his favor
Sale., lmpres~ye savings
on some of our most ~
impressive gifts.
WASHINGTON (AP J -The brokers have oot promoted the 1_•_x_ce_.;p_t_d_e_te_rm_in_a_ti_on_. __ _ Sale prices effective th rough Saturday.
federal government's new plan insurance because they fear if
to make -crime insurance they start selling policies in
available to residents and the ghetto they 'll be farted to
businesses in high-crime are;is sell £ire insurance which is nol
is off to a slow start. -fede rally guaranteed.
Three and-a-haU months ··If the· agents and ,brokers
after the program's inception, don't. want to serve on a 15
#lidV•rTltlmt~t
You're never
too-old--
t;l~ciesl. ha~~y ~~~~Id 2,: :r;:~tc~~;;1i~~~;,;h~c:d;~ ·10 he-ar better
tionwide. the FAIR pl ans, ihen-we--w11\
George K..Bernstein, federal find someone else who will sell
insurance a(h~inislrator. said the!ie policie·s." said Berns· Chical!'.o, llJ:-A free offer of ,
he believes ~people expect tcin. ~peeial interest to those "Pi'ho I
"
something for nothing, and Bernstein Jiad estimated hear but do not unde.rsta nd
we're not going to give it that more than 10,000 policieS '\\'Ortis hag been announced by '
-away." would be sold during the four Bcltone.A non-operatinglnodeJ I'
But, to counter the apathy. months the program \Vl'IS in ofthei;mal\estBeltone aidever
the_ Federal I n s u ran c.e effect. As of Nov. 18. the_ J;.'.estl n1ade \\'iii ~ uiven absolutely
Adm inistration is e.a si n g date for which fif!ures are free to anyone answering this 1
regulations for obtaining in-available. only 2.£106 policies ad\·ertisement. ~
I •
surance. _have bee_!'I purchased . : 'l'ry it t o aee how it is worn
~ffettlve Jan. 1. -buyers The insurance plan \V3S -lnille ]fri\•acy o[ yOUt Own
may purchase the amounts of c 1 t hom ·tho t t br ti burglary or robbery coverage authorized by ongress _as e wi. u ~ or o 11~ on year fur states ''which have a ot auy kuid, I t a,youra to keep.
they believe they need instead critical problem of availability free, It weia:hl leM tban a third
of having to take t he of crime insurance at an sf-cf an OUDtt, and it'a all at ear
a:ovemment't package. forda ble rate." level, in_oneunit. No wirea lttd
For insfanc!, if the ghelt() t bod t h d businessman thinks he needs Thejiirle States found by the rom Y 0 ea •
ss,000 worth or 'robbery in-government to have such a TbMe model# ~re free, ao we
surance aO(I no burglary in-proble~ were Connecticut. suggest ~ou write for you~s I J l l i no i s . · ·air y I a nd . no\v,Ai am.we re.pe"t. ther.e>• su rahce, he can purchase it. t d. t t bl Under present regulations, he Massac;~usett.s, ~issourj. New n_oeoB ;~n cer a1n ynoo iga· 1 York. etiio, PeMsylvania and t10~ Write t~ Dept 9084, Be!·
would be required to buy Rhode Island. IL.is also sold in toneEleetronica Corp.,4201 ""
$5,000 in burglary insurance if the District of Columbia:" Victor~. Chica10, Ill. 6064.6.
he got $5.000 in robbe r;.rl----------------------
coverage.
The i nsu rance ad-
ministration also will lo\\'er
the deductible figure for the
small bysinessman aQd clar!fy
technical language on the need
and use of ptotective devices.
Bernstein said more changes
will be made if the insurance
still fails to sell, including get-
ting persons other l h a n
brokers and agents to act as
salesmen.
He said many age nts and
Y ouths Tr y .
To Preserve
Sala1nande rs
SANTA CRUZ (APl -A
group of students is mobilizing
to save the rare Santa Cruz
Jong-toed salamander's last
breeding pond. whi ch they
lear will be turned into a
parking lot and drive the
creature into extinction.
• For J0,000 years, they say,
the lizard-JUce amphibians liv·
ed and bred excliisively in two
small ponds in Santa Cruz
County.
Recently, one pond was
drained so a free,vay could be
built on I.he land. COunty
supervisors are being asked to
rezone the seeond for a trailer
court parkini lot.
''We hope to persuade the
supefvisors that a fragile
animal so close to exti nction
deserves to be protected by
man." Stephen ?.1atthews .. an
organizer of the campaign to
save the pond. said.
~fatthews. a Cabrillo College
sludent and membe.r of lhe
count)f S Youth Commission.
elected from high schools and
colleges to advise t h e
supervisors. I s 1nobilizing
students 1s well as older
citizens to attend I h e
supervisors' meeting Tuesday
when the rezoning will be con·
"81dered. ·
The loved ones. ----
Give Christmas
portraits of
you. and your
children.
7to r5
•
• ONE LARGE 8x10 FOR THE FAMILY
• SIX WALLET·SIZE FOR GlFT·GIVlNG
A g1!1 to be cnerished !his year, and for yea is to
--C.,Q me. Al a marvelous price for such
prOfessional quali'ty. Our photographers ranl(
among !he n1os! skilled rn !heir profession
and can achieve 1he inlo1mal. natural look yo u
wa nt. This offer applies to any family /
groupin g up lo, and including to:.i r.
.ltrid remember, you can charge ii al Penneys . ~,1 -. JCP~nney .
The values are here every day.
NEWPORUUCH ,........,1 .....
, ... ,... ... ,:M.I I HUNTINGTON BEACH
~, .. ,_c_ '""' "'-.. ,.,,,,
•
Sale$319
Reg. 359,9·5, Penner est• portllble colorTV 1'ilh 1r 9Cf'Mft..-.t9CI diegoMiy.
Aulomatic tine tuning {AFT), -Chf'oma·loc" color/lint control, ligtite d VHF and
sl1de-.Nle UHF dials. Ftont mounted speaker for better sound. Walnut grain 1itM.sh.
Includes earphone tor priva$e listening. PklS 17.80 supptemental duly.
Sale$269
Reg. 299.95. Pennc1est • portable
co~r TV with 16~ screen meaaured
diagonally. Automatic; line tooing
(AFT }, "Chroma-Loe'' color/tint
c:onl10!, ''Qui ck-Pie." for instant
p icture and sound. Hi~h impact
Sale 22995
Reg. 259.95. Penncre1t• po11t1111
.._eolor TV with 12" acrHn me1nre4
Cffagaonally. All solid state challis.
11utomatic fine t uning (.A.FT}, pr94et
V HF fir.e tuning. Walnut graiA:
fi nish on high impact plastic cabinet.
plas& cabinet with walnut grain linish.
' PTus 15.S8 supplemental duty.
PltJS 13.65 supplementt1J c19W,
•
Special!
$.188
Penncrest• 3.pi&ee radio-phono comporMnt
s ystem. Features individual beM end tre~
controls, FM background button for keeptng
the body Cl f music in1aet at Jow 'fOftWIM.
JCPenn-ey · -
The values are here every day.
•
Shop from ~u11d ~y noon at the following st9res :. -
'I •
•
• NE'yVPORT BEACH. ~oshion l•l•nd f:!UNTINGTON BEACH , Hunti~lon Center U11 Pe n•y• limo poymonl_flltn.
() I '
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·~
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1·'
·'
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Monday, November 2', l(J71 DAILY PILOT J:J
l(iboshPuton.Dangerous Toys f~r Christ~cis
FLINT, Mich. (UPll -
--orho'Usaiids of~dangerous toy&
were removed frpm 'tbis 5tore
shelves in the past week
because of 60 young volunteer
investigators\ Genesee County
Prosecutor Robert F. Leonltl'd
1 reports.
that could oome off and choke '
a child) he Eald. Othet~ had
sharp prongs, pins, ind stuffed
animals had eyes that could
come off and be swallowed, he
said.
The 6o investiga tors -stu-
dc>.ts trom th e University of
t.tichigan Flint. branch, Gen-
ertJ Motors Ins titute and
Genessee County Community
College serJing on a special
consumers pro tection council
the county in seath oJ dan-
gerous toy,, Leonard said.
"In evecy case we meL•
with quick cooperation and in
most caset amaz~er_il that
such ao 'Order • ·• IT I e d , ' '
Leonard salil. "11>e main p~
blem ii! the dangerous toY,
situation is the IJ,ck oI como
tnunlcaUon .... betweer · t h 1
federal goveinment and the
re tailers."
T~E fA:RM'·,··cozY,PUCE:
) . ~ .
AU THOR·ARTIST. RAY OVINGTON PAIN'l"S GREAT OUTOOORS
One-man ShoW of Laguna Hills Painter ~o Open Dec. 1
Nati~nal Pictaire.r ,f';_ood
Power Crisis Possible
'
In North\vest, U.S. Says . .
WASHINGTON (UPI) excluding Ala ska :and Hawaii,
The Federal Power Co.m-v.·as 27.2 percent ·
mission has reported there is lndividual power systems
an adequate reserve of elec-within these regions may have
tric pvwer for \.l'inter's peak inarlequate reserves, but, most
loads in most sections of the systems are hooked into power
country, bu l some plants are ~gl'ids that allow-them to
low on fuel, and a severe • automatical ty draw current
winter could cause a crisis in·. from other nearby systelT\,'l.
the Pacific Northwest. ·.The ·commissio n said . it is
The commission noted Bi not likely there would be a
genera l improvement in 1 re~at of the: 1965 power
gener~-Hng capacity in all of .. blackout in the East.
the six general regions of the ·, The NEiW York power pool
country except the east-cen-.has a res~rve of 28.8 percent,
tral. which nonelhe\ess main-; "a more than ade quate
tained an adequate winte r r~erve for the 1971-72 winter.
reserve. 'ilea~ {kspite the limited in-
Outdoor
·Paintings
Will Open
A' one-man show of game
bird and >vildlife painting$ by
·author·artist Ray Qvington
opens Dec. t at the James
Gallery, 276 N. Co a s ~
,Highway, Lagµna Beach.
O.vington. ot.2J423-V.ia _San
Gabriel, Laguna Hills, believes
paintings of birds and animals
in c;>utdoor settiilgs' are
reminders that · ''actiVt"' can· ·
se rvatjon of our wildlife and
the appreciation of our ecology
begins at home."
A veter2n '0£ 30 years
writing and 1lluStrating nature"
and outdoor recreation. books1 Ovington has -~prOdU~ed-:20
books and numerous m{gaf,ine·
articles.
All the toys had been ban ned
by the Bureau of ProchJct
Safety of the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration, Leonard
said.
... -,.-. ... , ...... fo Shop ... ·'..;
~-~fOUt'-· ~---.. ,.. -Some-toys included.Jharp
wire's, other fauity squeake rs .entered •stores throughout ,
• .)
~: . , • •
" .. •
"
. ,. ~ worki ng · ·. ,J
on · new s to ·make
eledrici .fo r.you .
)
Ever since Thomas Edison
invented the electric light,
the elec;tric industry hits .
been developing new and
better ways to generate
electricity. ..
Why? As the population
grows, SQ will the need for
more electricity. Moreover.
-increasing amounts of
electricity will be needed
by fuel cells lar.ge enough to
serve entire commun ities.
Or by harnessing steam from
the earth. Or by. breeder
reactors that conserve vital
nuclear fuel. Or by nuclear
fusion tnat forces a.toms
together instead of splitting
them apart.
Or MHD. That's short for
magnetohydrodynamics .
And possibly high-density.
batterjeii"can be developed
to store needed energy.
Edison is supporting
research and development
of all these methods and
others, including a
$10 million pledge toward a
joint government-industry.
research project to build
a nuclear breeder rea-ctor
\V i11ter 1vcather produces the ...Jt{Jonnection facillties with·
greatest demand on po1ver : J-.a'draCent systems and the
companies in most of the ,'.£ompany's, inability to bring
country when heating system~' new base load generating
are-in constant operation.. , ~caPacity--i$-service," the
The commission measu res•.' commission ·said. ·
res erves in terms of the. The pictllre is no~ so bright
amount of genetating capacity ;llt 'the f'aCific ~orthwest. The
compai"ed with the eslimated· com rrl i ~Si o n said the
peak winter load. T he 'Northwe~t:1•iS: considered a
northeast regio . for exam ple,1 >cHtical , ar~a!~ during the
has a reserve 29.5 percent.: Win,teJ;.'.:iJ( ~atd', the. Boonevi lle
meaning it coul generate 29.S; Powci'._Admi~(l.ratlon would
percent more el tricity tha n, _ ot ',have e~ ~pa~i.Y..i. ~
its expected peak eed. The , .... frieet pea . ff)adS· ;a.fie!· would ·
extra reserve is eeded to have to borro1w power from
A nalive---o f New-Yorl4-'he ....,,,....._..
was o u t d o o r conservation _.
editor f o r Scripps-Howard
Newspapers and a daily col·
tp-clean up the ------------
environment.
µowe r·plant.
Below are more
details on three of
the methods
we're exploring,
umnist for the New York
World T~legram and Sun.
'M • h' ·~~~~Sia , .. "
compensate for ui prif~nt ot.her..systems.
breakdowns ana rrol's in The commission also said
Scheduled
computing demand. the shortage of reserves The Golden West College
Reserves for othe r regions "could precipitate a serious Community Choral w i 11
are : East-central, 21.l per-electric power :emergency it perform Handel's "Messiah"
cent; southea_st. 18Ji percent; ~ere winter con dit i on s twice on Dec. 12. ·
west-central. 27.8 percent; should be experienced or ma~ -The fir st is at ·4·p.m. in the
south-central. 64.8 percent, jor interconnectioas ,to the .Community Coll~ge._ ''.I'h~Jt~r
and west, 19.2 percent. The Pacific Southwe·st shou.ltf b& and the second at 8 p.m. in st
overall figure for the country, disrupted at a tim~ or need." Bonaventure Catholic Ch urch,
""'. , . ..,.... -·· ·· · · -l Huntington Beach. 11\'-""" I,,.,/', , ' ,. lncrea:.~f...~e;r,;;: .. ·.P.,.' ;ed;Cte ... ·d . , ... Both per~o ances are open .., to the public hout charge.
Chief ,5(1"1 1 will be British-
, born P3t Hawley, an alto who
F S · '·"' ' • z·· • has sung with England's or le'rJJ izat . R ' Bristol Sa'°y O p era t ic Association for ten years.
WASHINGTON CCP!l
The government's; trip family
planning official ·te;Jl~yea ·i11e
husband or wife irJ 20,~c~n,t
of the .nation's ~ihiR~ Will
have been sterilizell for birth
control reasons by li?'S.
The prediction was niad by
Dr. Louis B. Hell ma n, De uty ·~Assistant Secretery'"Of 1-1 alth.
Education ..thd' Welfa for
population and fa ·plan-
ning. .... . _
Current s · _tiaJloo , figures
are not .up Q .ute~bul a 1965
sludy revealed~ppl)I: 8 per .cent
of married .WOO'len -bet~een
the ages of 18 ~d:~ had been
sterilized. t· ·& ....... ~
"Sterilization is a legitimate
. Ot her soloists i n c I u d e to a vas{ number of illeg~l,. thea Worgull, Lorraine
abortions. Stiles. Ca rlson.· Helene
"Th.ere is a growing body of . Moudy, Ch rles Maynard and
both professional and lay opi-''" James Jay
nion in favor of a change in
the antiqu ated and .restrictive
abortion Jaws that are com·
mon lo the majority of
stales," HE\V Undersecretary
John G. Venerrian wrote in the
policy letter to Sen. Robert W.
Pac1<wood, CR-Ore.) "These
laws are often vague. and
perhaps unconstitutional."
A majority of states a\lov,•s
abortions only to protect the
life uf pregnant women.
Spee Reading
Oass lanned
A new coe cational class in
speed readin will be offered
b.v the H · gton Beach YM-
CA in m -Decen1ber.
Enroll ents are now being
accepted morning. af.
ternoon and ev ing classes to
be taught by re ding specialist
Dan Rosenwas er, ·
,. .. Today power is pro-·
... £ :· duced by water, fossil ' . . fuels and the atom.
Tom orrow electricity
may be generated
in,Southern California
1. Fuel Cell tt..;,••f1Sc]'iemical ene•gy
di<eotly to eleclri city-sqmewhat llke a
battery. A fuel cell system·~ nearly Poll ution
free because there is no flame. Experimental
home-sized units are now being_ tested by
some companies. These fuel cells operate on
hydrogen which is extracted from natural gas.
But a major problef"T\WOuld be the cost of a
home·sized unit-about $6,000each. H used in
your home, you would have to buy or lease it.
Status: The most prac tical application of the
fuel cell may be a single unit large enough
to serve an enti re community. This would no ·
doubt provid~ electricity at a much loWer
cost than a home-sized unit.
To conserve'our na1ion's natural resou rces.
the comm unity-sized fuel cell might use
hydrogen from sources other than natural
gas. Seawater is a possibility.
c;*NE
Southern CB/ifornia Edison ·
.Cr
be ing researched. Edison has also.leased land \
near Mono Lake, east of Yosemite National Park.
for exp.lo ration and development. .Drilling is
expected to start this year.
2. Geothermal In some aceas s1eam ~~Breeder Reactor Ura nium is
from the earth is being used 10 generate
a smalf amount of electricity.
In Southern California, underground sources
or hot water and steam have also been found,
prima rily1 n the Imperial Valley. Although
lhis s1eam m;iy bEt'of help in meeting some
of the growing need lor electric ity here. it
contains excessive amounts 91 sa!_ts ...
Status: Ways to remove the impu rities are
now used in nuclea r reactors, but uranium is a
limited n~tural resource. A breeder reactor
provides a, vastly more efficient use of ura niu m.
Status : Edison is contributing fun ds to
support research at a small breeder r~actor
which is now producing commercial power.
In addition, Ed ison_is also cont ributing
to a government-industry project to build a
fu ll-seale breeder reactor.
l'-.m,ethod: of fami!Y planning,''
He llman said in a speech.
''There is evidence th a t
ste rilization is becoming more
popular now." __
lnformatio about t h e
course is available from the
YMCA, 847·9622 or f ro m
Rosenwasser, (213) 272-3722. \
The letter was written in
1970 but never relea~ed either
by Packwood or HEW. 1 •
"Abortion laws h s v e n ' t
worked v,.'ell," Hellman said. ·He said e·ven th·e· ·re-p;e·aHn ·--;,,·~--"'-.,'""-"·'"· "-"-"· "~"'"-"-"-""-"-_-"., __ _. ________ ':"" ____________________________________ ..,.,,.
One reason for m o r e
sterilizat19ns. he said, is that
many:-wornejl· do not want Ip
take ·b)rt,}\ cQ{ltrols. •
"Wb,.v .stio.uld 1 she be
restriCted to-tile small or real
risks oL daily. ~aking a pill?''
he as kid, ·· · <-Helln1an's·~ comments' in-
cluded., 41.sclo®re that HE\V
issued a policy statement to
Congre.ss ~ayin~ m~s~ stflte
l'lbortiofJ raws· are a111lqu11ted
find reSfMctiv€ ind only " lead
New York state of all restric-
tions on .abortions resulted In
such a heavy dema nd for legal
aborlio n:1 that "this ~ituation
will not be cured until abortion
lav,1s throughout the United
States are changed."
Bui Hellman added , "There
is no government push for a
change of abort.ion laws in the
United Statelii Quite the con-
trary. the pusJi is coming from
the people."
Come to !his Chri stian Science Lectllre--. '
"ARE YOU RESOURCEFUL?"
~1 1t., J, Llnillt, c.s.•.
TufSdev, H•Y11111kt JO
1100 p.1111.
1 SECOND CHUl"4-0• .CHRIST,· SCllNTIST ' fnt · • . .,7 · lift ,iefflc t 1nr Or1wt, Ctre11• •t1 ,,.,.,
-.
I
) •
Only Coast & Southern offers savers all three:
• &% tw~ lo five year guaranteed certificates.
• Saturday Service •. • The Insiders Club.
' Effect ive 5.00°/o-5.13%· Passbook. No minimum.
Annua l 5.75%·5 .92% On~ Y..e.ar Certificate $1.000 lvlinimum.
Earnings 6.00o/o·6.18% TwO fo five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum ,
Up to 90 days loss of il)tert::sron amoUrlts withdrawn
before maturity on all cert ificateaCcount,s. .
~The lriildtfs Club: A hi'~ w y to beat infl~ii-. fsf fmbei"ship card
permits you to buy nearly everythiri&.You need fro he finest c!osed-
door showrooms at sUbstGntial savings-appliances, urniture, stereo
equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more.
MAIN OFftC[: 9rh "Hill, Lo• Ana•!••• 623-13~1
01ht r olflc••
WILSHI RE •I liiRAMMt:RCY .. LACE:
3933 Wit•hlr• Blvd., LA.• ltl·1265
'L A. C1v1c CENT£11:
2nd a. erotdw1y • 626-1102
HUNTINGTON 9CACH: '
-91Hul\llq ton.C•nt•r •171•)·1117·104.7-
'9ANTA, ANA LOAN llllVICt AGINCY: lfOl!i N. M1ln SI. • (714) &47·92 1
IANTA.MO~ICA1 118 Wli•hl,. Blwd. • 393·07jf
's.t.N 'WltO: IOlh "'•clflc • U 1·2J41
Wt:ST COVINA:
E••ll1nd Sl'loppln1 Ctr.•331-2:101
.. ANOllAMA CITT: ' 1516 Yin Nuy1 Btvd. • lf2·117l
TAAU.NA: 111151 Y•nh.1r• "llYd. • l •S-161•
LONli aEACH:
3td • Locuu • 431·7411
(AST LOI ANGlLll:
l tl'I & Soto • 266-4510 ' OIAM~O IAll: ' ' ' . t
321 Of1moN1 Bir Blvd.• (7 1'4) S9S-7US
Dilly Hours-9 AM to 4 PM Open S.tu(Mya-t Ali to I ~M
-•Not Ope:n lltlll'd1fi
You can even buy cars at the "fleet" pi-ice and.mobile homes and
motorcyc les at substantial savings. The Insiders Club also prov ides
big discounts on tickets to sporting and entertainment events ..•
plus a whole list of frJ~:;ervie.es: safe deposit Dbxes, money orders, ~~ • trave lers checks, notafy services and the use of document ~. , : ,.1 duplicating equipment. ·' "
Membership requ irement for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. 1 1
Coast borrowers now receive associ ate memberships. entiUina them
to all outside referral services. Ask about joining at any Coast office. • ~
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AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAViNGS
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14 DAILY PILO,T Monday, Nq>"tmber 29, 1q71
I,.ltl.. Boyd ll .
. W oiiifilJ Forgives
· Always.:...Herself
' ' ...... A woman forgjves only when she ls jn the \mXlg." ..
' · Arltae Hoa11aye
The foregoing complaint about the femalt of the species
has been ?" ilie books for a long time. The lady, it's said
f_urlher..dQrgives .. otbersJIU'cix, her~ll alwaykAnd_f~l
ly, it's claimed she's apt to find it far easier ,o~for.give an
enemy than a friend. These contentions ab9u.t the girl re-
.. main open to .sQ1ne-dispute. t:el'.lainly. A little bit, qpyw11y . -· '
110\\' OFTEN do you ~o to the gro.
cery sture. madam'? Average \Voman
makes two aOd a half such trips a
'''eek. it's said .
THAT Getirge W3shington was a ~,
pretty good president, I guess, but
he didn't have much · of a way with
v+ords. He named his favorite horse
"Blue Skin:·
010 J TELL you 89 percent Or a swan's .feathers are
on its head and neck? Ought noyorget that. •
,. . ' .. ~ 'WIGGLE -\Vhy some girls wiggle v.·hen they walk
is now explained . A Dallas doctor named Louis H. Para·
dies ·is quoted as saying these ladieS keep their knees stiff.
Thus. the strain in the knee forces the hip to pivot, weave,
quiver. That girl who v.•ant.s to eliminat_e this peculiarity ~
her gait, it's said, can do so by rel~mg her knees. 'fl:llS r·
has been a public service message without the sponsorship.
oooS ARE you \\'OR 't find one grownup amon~ 100,000
Americans v"ho can tell you the name"llf the president of
Switzerland. ln fact. you probably 1von 't find one Swiss o~t
of {y,·o.v.1ho can do likewise. Odd. He's Hans Peter Tschud1.
Does that ring a bell? Thougtit not.
QUERY "--Q. "I can 't get a birth certificate because
the original r~ord of mY birth was 1vii}ed out in a fire
years ago. \\lhat do J do now. coach?"
A. ~light try .writing to bureau of Census. P.ittsburg.
Kan .. 66762. -operators there can check the earl.iest census
records that list your name and age, then send you some
sort of fancy doeument, stipulating Same. The regular serv-
ice costs $4. If you want hurry-up treatment, that's $5.
COl\'"VERSATION about Napo)eon has been too loilg
neglected here. All I want to say is the science .boys have · .
proved that somebody or. other fed him arsenic some 49'
times 4_uring the two years immediately prior to his deatti.
WHY THE l\10TllER v.•ith three or more children tends
fi>live longer-than the-mother with the only Child rema ins
unclear. but statistics sho1v such to be the case.
1~~----l--IF-A-PUERTO-Rl€-AN-girl-in-New-York-€ity-\vere to-
tell you 5'1_~ -~vas living with a fellow named \Vil!redo, she
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is supported by the \Velf<jre Depa-rtmenl. That's the jar·
gon now among abandoned Latin wives thereabouts. .
Address mail to L. ~1. Boyd, P. 0 . Box l~, New-
•port Beach, l'afif. 92660. ~
act 110,v! beautiful
christmas p~rtraits
<Jl bcautif ul values!
• 9
for just
1295
. Say "Merry Christmas" 365 days of the
year to nine people who are special:
three 8 x I 0 connoisseur portraits plus
six charming wallet-size of any two
members of your family . lncidentially,
we stress "con noisseur" because
our photographer is another name
it's at tl1e broad'¥ay
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pho11e tt2•l3JI, e1ttt11lo11 213
'P.Orit•it 1h1d lo ... 1,1 !loo•
Nearly Ev eryou'e
Listens to Landei·s
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44'4 N. E11clicr ..
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(7141 644·1212
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' sweater savings
for· holiday
.•. • d g1-VIDe
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8.99.10.99
·A. te .. Hic ·selection to
choose from. We ha've ·the
latest styles for the man who
always wears tha newest fash'ion.
Bold exciting colors and great .
fabrics . Excell ent gift for any 1
man on your Christ.mas ·shp pping
list. Buy now and s,ave!
Me·n's Sportswear
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CR:QISTMAS!
at the~· hroadway
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HLINTINGTON BEACH
'1111 Edingtr Aven\l t
117141 192-llll
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. CERRITOS
500 Los C1rrito1 Mtll
121)) 860-0411
ORANGE:
M611 of Ot•n9 1
2l00 No. l u1l in Sheet 1'114)
SMOP 9:JO ,t.,M. to I~ P..M.
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, ·Debuta 'ntes
• &s~ lm,fo Rosy
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Red roses, pink carnations and crystal
accented the rosy optimism as 15 Na-
tiOnal Charity League debutantes made
their symbolic bow to society Saturday
night in the Newporter Jnn. ·
Dressed in the traditional white gown,
each debutante carried a satin muff trim-
med with pink and white· glamelias as she
was presented by John Hallam Hiestand ..
Special jewelry fot the occasion were
gold and pearl medallions, signifying the
COUlPliiUon of six years of community
service, cultural and social endeavor irv
the Ticktocker program.
F AVOIUTE .MUSIC
:RaY, Moshay's orchestra p I aye d
favorite musical selcctlcins as the
debutantes individually performed the St.
' ' James curtsy, descended to the ballroom
floor on their fathers' arms and pro..
menaded past tables o! admiring family
and friends.
After the father-daughter waltz. escorts
intervened, a toast was proposed and
everyone. joined in dancing. ,
Those introduced before the-presen-
tation were ·Mrs.· Richard -Lansing
I.:awrence. Newport chapter president;
¥ts. Melvin Daniel Kilmer III, ball
dJrector and Mrs. Arthur Richard Kim-
brough, national board president.
Oebut3.ntes, their parents and ~scoriS
were li1iss Joyce Lou ise Caldwell, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Linden Caldwell, \Villia~
Stewar.t Jacobsen: Miss Carol Chapman
Connally, Mr. and Mrs. Reaglln Paul
Connally Jr,_, J0h'n Karl Long: Miss
Pamela Puniwai Conover , Dr. and Mrs.
William Arthur Conover and Terrence
James ~1oran.
Others included Miss Jana Granzella,
Dr. and Mrs. John DaPrato Granzella,
Robert Howard Crofts; ~iss Karen Irene
Hodges, Mr. and Mrs. Rulon Kimball
J Hp0gfs, David Pri~iss Kathleen~. -
Marie LangenbecK,. Dr. and Mrs. Russell
Reed Langenbeek, Michael Terence
Betg; Miss Anne Aileen Lawrence, Mr.
lfild Mr_s.' Richard Lansing Lawrence and
Clyde Williams. -
HONOREES INTRODUCED
Also boWing were Miss-:Jolie Jarlerie Le
Boeuf, Mr. and Mrs. Richar(i Blanton
Newcom, Brandon Edmond Beatty : Miss
Chloe Mcintyre,· Mr. and Mrs. William
Charles Mcintyre, Michael James Jesch; ' J..
Miss l>eborah Elaine Meany, Mr.fJfnd ~
tfrs. ~erbert John Meany, RiChard
Holderness; Miss Candace Penelope
Moses, Mr. and Mrs. William Armstrong
Moses II. and Richard Mark Matics.
More of the hopo~s were Miss Tria
Newcom, Mr. and -Mr$. Newcom, Daniel
Thomas Rossier; Miss Mary Loraine
Steen, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin French Steen
Jr., Joseph Patrick Paul Rageo; Miss
Jamie Lou Styli, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
James . Styli, Richard Stewart Kredel;
Miss Patricia Ann Tucker, Dr. and Mrs.
Royal Duane tucker and Stephan Graig
Lang.
-Attending as --stags were ~lµlrles
Lawrence Bing-, Brian Payne Chase, John
Payton Cotton, John Michael Granzella,
Donald \Villiam Killian Ill, Steven Ernst
Amling and Carl Henry Turve.
Festivities came to a close at a post
ball br.e;;!,kfast in •the Steens' Bayside
home. '
-6-men~
f BEA ANDERSON, Editor
MontJflr, Hawmbtr 2J, 'lt7l 1"191 11
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1971 NATIO..!'.IAL CHARITY LEAGl;IE ·DEBUTANTES -'Presented to
society Siltur'daY niil;bt are.' (seated; left to right) 'the Misses Pamela
Puniwai.Conover, .\yce Louise ~aldwelf and Patricia Ann Tucker-. and
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Thanks
Thanksgiving weekend had jammed
• calendar squaru . and «volving social
circles for the nine HarJxlr Area coeds
wllo were presented at the National
Charit'y League debutante ball.
1bt busy 96 hours start or most of
them with their first· horn ming from
college and family feasti g . ..._._,--.,
Miss Pamela Conove r
(by gate)
was welcomed hom e
from college by
fellow-debutantes,
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the Misses Jamie Styli
(left) and Carol
Connally and young er
friends. ·
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(standing, left to right) the Misses Anne Aileen Lawrence, Jamie Lou
Styll, Carol Chapman Connally, Jana Granzella , Deborah Elaine ?.1eany
and Mary Loraine Steen. · · .,
for
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M .emories::
glamor of Venice at a preball, dinner par·
ty, rehearsals and formal portraits, the
elegant ball itself winding up with a
sleepy.eyed break'fast buffet.
Some~ow they managed the Mair ap-
pointments, telephone conversations,
boutique shopping and sailing jaunts that
college breaks are meant for.
Miss Patricia Tucker added her round
trip from Virginia to that demanding
schedule. She is studying biology at Sweet
Briar College.
Having grown up on the California
coast, taught sailing for the recreation
department in summers and traveled to
Hawaii, she chose her campus/''to try a
completely un-Western atmosphere." The
change suits her well, e s p e c i a 11 y
horseback riding in the Eastern coun-
tryside.
The Misses Carol Chapman Connally
and Jana Granzella took time out from
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ly like Corona del Mar High School.
Ready to welcome -fellow debutantes
home were the M'.is$es Anne Aileen
Lawrence, who is majoring in English at
UCI and Jamie Lou Styli, who combines
commercial art studies ·at Orange Coast
College with her job-' at Master Produc·
tions.
Miss Joyce Loui.se Caldwell, who
_graduated in January, had plenty to'.tclt
friends about working in public relatiQnj.
vpcationing in Europe and findifig
familiar faces in the 25,000 student body
at San Diego State. <
Marine biolo gy studies.~t
Northern Arizona University ;ren't sa
unusual when you consider that Miss
Pamela Puniwai Conover's family 'has
resided on Guam and her middle name: is
Hawaiian for "water pixie."
Miss Deborah Elaine Meany came ba~
from University of California at Davis
where she is studying Special Education.
business and speech therapy majors at Debutantes and their escorts got re-ac--Cal·Westem in San Diego. 1 quainted ?Od practiced waltzing at a din-
Seven of the debutantes graduated ncr party -compl~te with authentic go~
from Newport Harbor High School. Miss dola and romantic Italian music -hosted
Granzella attended Estancia High School on the eve of the ball by Mr. and Mrl~
and Miss Mary Loraine {Lori ) Steen Jack Linden . Caldwell of Dover Sh0res.
remarked how her University of Pacific The menu of antipasto and pasta carried
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Fampus·in7Stockton was sn:iaJJ· and-frjend .. -~ out-.the-Roman-theme;-··-·-·--·
Tuning
DEAR ANr~ LANDERS: "'I was in-
terested in the letter from the "girl who
said her father's snoring was music to
her ears because Y>'hen she heard him
6nore she..kne"' lie was sale at home and
llis presence always gave her security.
I am surprised you didn 't go into a lit-
tle more d"!!f3il 1n yOUi' an!wer. You
should have told tfie girl that not all snor·
ing is offensive -and that her.father 's
snoring must have had a pleasant sound.
I have ~ m.11rried four times so rm
some thing of an authority on the subject.
And. to keep this letter · compkf._e_ly
honest. I confess J've heard some snor-
ing betVt·een marriages, too.
From e wealt~ of experience ( carnll
you lhe sound of snoring can be as varied
as speaking votces. My first husband had
• Ear for · Music Becomes a Relati~e 1n ~atter
a truly melodic-snore..dt.sort ol ran up:_
ci.nd down the scale . I loved it.
1'-1y second husb3nd had a buzz-saw
snore with a whistle in it. It drove me
crazy. (t t~ink "that's why I divorced
him.) Husband number three didn 't
snore, but he talked all night -which
was worse. That marriage lasted three
months. My present ,husband bas a:sort,.
pleasant snore, sort or like a cat purring,
It doeSn't bother mli! at all. '
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1--haVe as~_cd all-rnY.Jt~•nds if I snore
and they said yes. The only one Who
disliked my snoring was the third
husband whose snoring I loathed. So t
tltink tlla perhaps' whether snoring-
bothers a mate Is in sorne way r•Jated to
one's feeling! about . that person
generally. Am I right?-TALLAHASSEE
DEAR TAL: You au rtgbt !Ddeed. The
·wboje: story Ii 11 your licoDa te tbe Jut
1entellce. 1
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Am I losing
my mind? here are the faCts? My hus-
band is impossible, yet I pretend to love
that he is not like other fathers.
What do you suggest? -
MACBETH JN LEXINGTON
LADY
hhn'. Ke is cheating on me left and right, DEAR LADY: I sugge1t you separate
yet J pretend everything IS just fine . He fro m this man before you end up •at the FD.lllly Farm. See a lawyer and ask him
is ' 1ousy.4ather. I .J>reten<Lno~.to notice. -to-ovtllne a ~husband's 'I e g a I
He says cruel and insulting things lo me re&ponslbillUes then perhaps you'll be
in the presence of family and.friends. I less fttX:btened'. •
pretend not to hear. To be perfectly
honest, I hate him.
I work but I caMot support myself and
mr -two children-on· my-salary. Must I
spend the rest of my Ute pretending -
with a man who turns me o[f the minute
he steps into the house~ It is impossible to
talk to him. He knows everything. Also,
he Lt a terrific liar. Am I crazy to go on
like thir? Even the children are aware
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DEAR 'ANN LANDERS: Friday, one of
the regujar members of our brldge~club
was sick so t invited a substitute.
Just as I was serving the dessert the
_ Sl!,bstitute shrieked . "MY GOO, A RAT!"
She pointed to the ba~eboard• and got up
on her-chair yelling, "frh going to faint."
I( was no.rat, Ann, it was a tiny mouse . I ,
was stunned and humiliated. That Jn·
cident spQilcd my day. My husband says
she is nuts and to forget it. Do you think
she intentionally tried to embarrass me?
--UNSTRUNG IN UPPER MICH .
DEAR. UN: The woman probably bl\s a
p~thologi~ fear of'mice and weut_lem~
porarily banana s. For1tet it. &\lea th&
best of house.keepe_i's_has a wee mouse
now and then.
If, you have trouble getting along wltft
your parents , y. if you can't get them tg
let yoo live ypur. own life, send for Ann
Landers' booklet, "Bugged by Parents?
}low to Get More Freedom." Send 50 •
cents in --coin with your request and a
long. stamped, self·addressed. envelope ·in
care of the DAILY PILOT. • " . -
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_Your Horoscope Tomorrow l
··.-._Sagittarius·: Cut Expenses
TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 30
By SYDNEY OMARR
Gemini individuals
gesticulate, use their hands
more so· than the average
pers9n. These natives are ac-
tive, d is p I a y intellectual
curiosity and ofte n beCo me In-
volved v.·lth those bor_n under
CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): travel. variety. Lunar aspect
Be receptive lo gesture of encourage! creatiye ..eo·
goodwill. You can spread in· deavors. Imprint your own
fiuence {or good. One who style. Highlight Individuality.
attem_pts to restrict you will Young person aids.
relent. Aries individual can AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).Feb.
help you obtain what mlght 18)~ Build toward security.
be missing. Household • prciducts demand
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22l: attention. Staples should not
IF TODAY IS Y OUll
BffiTHDAY you have &enH
of ·humor, you have m'de~
significant changes -a~d now
you are gnawed at by sell·
doUbt. Realize I.hat ~hat yoll
have planted will blossom. A
Piscean will be in picture.
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.,... ~en, Tjacher,!!, reporters and
photographers appear to be
predominant ccupatlons of tbe
Gemini-born.
ARIES (March 21·April 19 ):
Spotlight on Wh4t you earn,
pay and collect. You draw
persons lo you now who can
aid in near future. But don't
press, push, force or cajole.
A receptive attitude will· gain
you what is required .
TAURUS (April 2iJ.M(y 201:
This could be the · start' of
something, big. Means, you
make contacts, receive offers,
lest ideas. And you attract
favorable attention. Those who
may h2.ve opj>osed yqu noW put
out welcome mat.
Gumdrops· lnclu,ded in Bazaar Fare GEMINI (May 21·June 20):
Some may attempt to apply
heavy-handed methods. I n
most cases, this is a coverup
for actual knowledge, ability.
Realiie those in positions of
authority ultimately intend to
back you. Be confident.
Gumdrops will be b.rought t o the Saturday, Dec. 4,
bazaar pl anned by. the Huntington Beach Branch,
Americl}l Association of University Women, but it
will be Gumdrops the Clown and his magic show.
The fund-raising event will take place in Murdy Park
·::-Area Groups
Clubhouse from 9:30 to U :30 ·a.m. and feature gilt
items, books, paint& and brunch. Eager to meet Gum-
drops are Qeft to r ight) Mrs. Albert D. Nuseno\Y
and her sons, Teddy and Craig.
Round Out Agendas ..
Spotlight on career1 1 added be neglected. Don't take, .. 'iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiO;;;;;~
prestlge •and standing in com· details for granted. Closell
munlty. Stress independence, obser,yation now is a necessity. D'l'ER? originality and innate creative Avoid wishrul thlnking.
·fOrce. Taurus person may ap-• pear as formidable opposition . PISCES {Feb. 19·fo.1arch 20l : •1•st£P _ 11E•NA1tDO
It will be mostly bluff. You gain by dong what gi~·es _ ic.w.EL EDWARD!
VIRGO (Aug. 2l-Sept. 22 ): you pleasure. Be versatile. but PF ;L~i::~·~~~ ;105 Good chance now to impress don't spread efforts too thin. D•rn:• W••r .,., o.111~1" Relative who does much talk· C•1H111o D•tM:• Sl>.-with writing, special causes . . ll be . <•ntdl¥• ¥*" ''' c1111111r-.. Jde·alism floals_hig~. Get solid mg may not rta Y serious. 225 r. I 7fh Sf.
base. One at a distance can Know this and rtspond ac· .Celfa MeM • 141·2771
be valuable ally. You tea ch· ~co~rd~in~g~IY~·-~----~~===~==~=~~ and' learn. You ga in now by Ii
sharing asset~.
LIBRA (Sept. 2:\-0ct. 221 :
Study investment potential .
Your collateral inay be worth
more than you imagine. Check
with oeye who seems happy-go-
lucky. There is more to situa-
tion than surface appearances
would indicate.
. SCORPIO· (Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ):
Accent on how. you relate to
public opinion. Plug loopholes.
Be positive 1about l"e g a I
maneuvers. Mate or partner
takes initiative. Don't fight
progress. Status quo is due
to become a memory.
SAGITTARIUS ~Nov. 22-
Dtc. 21 1: Work methods sub-
ject to change. Obtain hint
from Scorpio message .
Streamline procedures. · Do
what comes naturally-but cut
ex~nses. Diet, he a 1th .
THE BEST GIFT •.•
creating something
hands.
joy of the Share
Give a
ce rtifi·
beau tiful with your own
jebba design for Christmas.
cates from $7.50.
Gift
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Oranfe Coast club! will
usher 1n the holiday .!ieason
with festive Christmas dinner
dances, fund-raising boutiques
and meetings themed to the
. season this weekend.
benefit dinner dance scheduled candles, holiday decorations , munication sessiorui on CIU'rent ESA. medical appointments also
by Chimes, Women 's Auxiliary macrame, mosaics, do 11 s topics. · figure prominently.
.e
NEEDLEPOINT DESIGN
'-Newcomers
Dining and dancing to the
music of the Tom Kubis Trio
in the Oreenbrook Club, Foun.
tain Valley have beep planned
by the Fountain V a I I e y
Newcomers Club for Friday,
Dec. 3. , '
Dancing will follow a buffet
· dinner at the second annUa1
Christmas dinner dance of the
group.
Chimes
SoUnds of the Ho!id8ys will
theme the Friday, Dec. 3,
to the Oralingua Foundation in aprons and other item 6. r . N ' ' u . Rummage will be sold by the c~~ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
General Lee's restaurant. Tickets to the Mission Viejo ewport · n1ty Delta Iota Olapter, Epsilon :;;19;1~:~i~e~m;San;y~,;Y;0"~·~t~oo~,~w~i~ll~::;;::=:=:=:=:::i:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~~~ Tree ornaments and "lighted Associatio n of Arti&ts and _An.-E.'iening-ill.--Ear.fs wiU Sigma. AlphJWntl. from 5 tj be caug!!!Jn whirl of change,
menorahs. will be display&i .. ·Craftsmen Home Tour also theme the annual Christmas 10 p.m. Flliday, Dec. 3, and
representing donations ma~e will be sQ.ld. fund·raiser of 'Ne.wport.'Unity from · 10 a:tn. to 3 p.m. Sat.ur-
to philanthropic projects. The.. N . I N I Women's Group, Saturday, day, Dec. 4, in the MOQE;e
tree ornaments will be aut1ca oe De~.' 4, in the Senior Citizen1s Lodge, Santa Ana.
displayed also at the Oral-LagunaNiguclWomeo's buildiog,NewportBcach. Proceeds will go to the SHEETS TWIN FULL ingua School for De a f Club has chosen a Nautical -The evenl is scheduled for 4 chapter's philanthropies. _, OR
Children. Noel theme for !heir second p.m. ·wllh a French dinner to _ MY Wom en annu.-1 Christmas d a·n c e -follow' from 5 to 7 p.1n. Dan-Boostere.ttes
Saturday, ~c. 4. is the San cing, entertatnmcnl by can NO IRON FAMOUS, MAKER 5 91!1=
Boutique article s ap-
propr1aterotChristmas gifts
will be o[fe red for sale Friday,
Dec. 3, and Saturday, Dec. 4.
from 11 a.m. to S p.m . in the
Mission Viejo .Swim and Rac-
quet Club. ·
Mission Viejo \Vomen's Club
is sponsoring the sale of pain·
ti11gs, jewelry, ceramics,
• •
Clemente Elks Lodfie. can girls and sale of boutique An aura of rbyslery will
II ors d'oeuvre! WI r-be-,-e-rv-.~j·tcrns and handcrafted gifts -·-Jr h -th u c l FLAT 0 R FITIEO pre" w en e ~ •.• -~ PER-ed from 7:30. p.m. Wilh dan-and special prizes are planned. Boosferettrs stlige 8 _ no-hOst With matching cases at $2.97 a pair
·1·n" to tl1e Motet Combo to R S I Without Matc.hing Pillow case"---$6.97
... 0 • ummage a e cocktail party from 5:30 to 8 --SET follow at 9 p.nt. Funds realized v.•ill benefit Crime Clothing, toys and small and p.m. Saturday,' "Dec. 4, in the • R1191 · • hchpr"ds
Preventioo.. annual rabies major appliances v.·ill be sold Park Newport spa.
e ChrhfmCIS Layaw•Y' I /3 dow11
clinic, ecology inforlnfilion and Quring Temi:ile II i 11 e I ' s · Gypsy fourt une t c 11 er s.
UNICEF'. 1 ·siSterhood"s rummage sale cigarette girls. · handwriting
from .9. a.m. to 3 p.m. Salur-analysts and a white elephant
Pet it e s Fleurs day, Dec. 4, at the Orld booth will all help raise funds
fo.1iss ion Viejo Country Club Fcllov.·s llall. Hunt in gt o n for the UCI Athletic Dept.
will be .the selling for the an-Beach. Mrs. Al Irwin and Tom Cash
nual formal Christmas dance It is open to the public. are c<rehairmen of the event.
of Les Petites Fleurs Aux-1----'----'----------'--"'-'--.C..
iliary to Children's Home
Society set for Saturday; Dec.
4, starting ilt 7:30 p.m.
_Jed Iii Bath FashlOQu1~009rrs
iBuuA1iu~ictRD! 18591 M1in St., Huntington Beach
r Main at a,ach-(5 Points Center)
Decorations of red and gold
Christmas ornaments will be
sold. 1-~unds rilised -will as sist ~
the Children's Home Society.
J unio r Women
Doord 1nembers \Vil! be ·
rewarded for a year of·servicC
Saturday. Dec. 4, \.\'hen the ex-
ecutive officers of Ire South
Co;:isl .Junior Women 's Club
gather in a ca bin in th.e Big
Bear fi.1ounlains for the
n1onlh 0s board meeting.
1'he 1neeting \1•ill climax
\\•ith a holida y party.
OSE 2
'DRESS SIZES
by C/iriJtmaJ
· (la,.d on octuol
.Juni ors \.\'ill :issist Teen
Service <.:eater of Teen Help in
weekly adult -you th com·
0
OMEGA
lor a 1iletimo o! proud posscssiori
Self-winding
accuracy
r
l
' . . :• .
'
• •• you
will be amazed
how quickly the
exciting ·results will
happen.
How wi ll you look at
Christmos , •• too Jot , •• too lumpy •.••
too mony bulges in this year's folhions.
Gloria Marshall cal\ da something obout it and
give you a new.figure for Christmas. Not a Spa 0
a Gym. No strenuous exerci• or disrobing
•w, guotontet results ••• tell us the dr11u size you
wont to weor , •• we will tell you how mony visits it
takes,·ond guoronfee in writing .you "will r11och you r goal
or let you hove FREE ony ond all furthe r visits until you d~.
SnCIAL THIS WEEK ... 0.1 1.50 er treatment
Auction Colored Arty
Lake Forest Art Association has circl ed Sunday. Der.
5, in red £or that is lhe day memOeu-llave selected
ror an art auction and wine tasting. The event \Vilt
begin at 3 p.m. in the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis
Club. and proceeds are tentalively earmarked for
scholarships. l\1 rs. Bernard Brown {left) and l\·lrs. '-'
Richard Steed previe1v some \rorks.
YOU?
Call
LLOYD
..-iST CONTROL
642·5922
·Who Ca ru ?
r.•o oth,.r nt>~1r)aper In the
world cares. •bout your com-munity If.kl' yf'/u r community
dolly "'"'"'"""" dou. lt'I '~ DAILY PlLOT.
'
Uniqu e .. ~ ....
. Costume · 1 'J
' 11 ~~>< ~. If :. .,;,.. fl \\ i! Makes
~ Great
• Chriltmas
Preients!
SINlllLY PllCID AT
• ~'3.% saoma's
C.t.•Dl-Gl"S-CAN"DllS
H., 1Ult~I• -Huntlntlln ltl<ll
I ttl-tlll -''" OH1 Wi'l•olnt I t1nV.111trlc1r~ & MUltr Cl11r11,
'
• r~· tt~ ..,.~ v.~(I !"!~~ lnd.vid•11t••1 . r • ,.. . -·~ '-'"'~ry \'lwt'd-
,,. <'J• !• '·" P>C •·Q 0~,t~1 n•·;~.
1 ~: ".,~, I"< P \·.,,/~Ii~ "·:·n. s·,·1,.1 ··••I c•~·. z,,etp.1~-· O' "j ~1rd. O••c·:t ll ng tloll •• 51())
HARBOR SHOPPING
CENTER
2300 Marbor ll11tl.
Cotta MIN
S45~t41S
HUNTINGTON CENTH
l 1ech & (ding•{ ..
Hunflngton l ••c.t
lt2·S501, .....
•
"Whot a difference in
the "'!OY I look and fffll
Gone lS that pudQy,
thlck·through·the·m lddle
feeling.
Af1er twe~ty·fiv" jear1
of morrioge, fi~e ch i1·
dren a nd three grond-
childr11n, my husband is .
whlstling at me ogairr."
WORLD'S LAlGIST OWNED..AND OPEltATED SYSTEM, Do ily 9. 9; Sot. 9 • 5
"Aff1r nu1111rou1 1)'1111.. I
CGlll• fe Glori. M .. nlt.ll'•
pn1i lo~ ~ l11cli11 I~ .. Y'
f1nt' 10 vi1i!1." l/Ni~1/k1 "'""
''Afltr •nly. 10 Yi11l1 J
1011 I~ Jncht1. I wo1 Uk•
o ntw pt non. All 111y
.,..l1ht ca111t oH ln tht
right .p)11ct1."
430 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH , 642-363 0
12 Bl;ckt Ee't of 81lboe 81y Club I
11840 WEST 17 th ST., SANTA ANA , 543 .945 7 ~ • ,ILlO IN1 ·~11\tfl'll, (tvl~1, Crt11,lllW, tMwlllfo 8~1H111f, l..1•1....,., ltJ Vtttl, l9111 I MCll , N1w111rf' l llCI\, H'trtll IO ll"f'#ftll, Onttfll>
, .... .,,., II~ Otttl."ltnftl Aftl, ••ntl 11rltr1',..lynt1M, Tt ritnt, Ttrrlntt •"• Wlllnl1r, fc l Coo~rlOftl, 1tll, Ci1orlt Mtfllllll Mft, Cf!. Inc,
..
l
•
t l
Coed's' Calorie Countdown
" '
Prom ~reparations Waisted
•
By ERMA BOMBECK AND Bil KE,ANE
' •
Jill.IL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE • -' LEGAL NOTICE
CAIL Y PILOT J1
LEGAL NOTICE
P 1<Mtt ,_,... "OTICI TO CllSDll'Oll
-' •·14'ts Pl(TfTIOUI IUSl"ISt fllCtltlOut IUSINl!.IS SUl"SlllOll COUlT °' TH•
IUctlTK)US IUSUllSI NAMI ITATIMl"T "AMI-STATl~_l"T ST•TI! 0,. CALIFOtll'UA 'Oil 0:
MAMI ITATl-Ml"T Jlll to!kl'lll'h'lf Pf<MIW 1r1 dolr!t The tollow1119 ,.._ It Wlll'll lio.IVMu THI COUNTY 011 oAolJIOI "'-:.
TM .....-1111 .-., dolne """""' MIMS• ••; ... ' "'· "'*"' -. ll!RICORD ..J.Rl.D. ,· ... "·-t.\l,.ESMAH-4Hlil' OI' CALI P,. »91 Urdll-. llUI V911 lt:•""-M. lrvfM, (1!111 of Jt!HNI~ lfi.IZ,.lt!)}t
...., '-""' 11;~1 Ln~ Cotlt MeU, Cl. ntiol. ""'°· ~ CAllMICHAfL, 0.CHMd. -·· '°"'""' .. Chi• ~. Clll'-11 L011!1 s1i.1.,, "" llOl<'IOlol L•.... ~I• ... Jll"IM. 'l • HOltCI IS HfJt.UT GIVEJf lo· 1:::
MUSIC IAlllN, IMC .. 1141 O.lm11< C O ••--C -·-~-SO ' .... C•OI•··· Sir ... , s..111~·-cilllornli "'°' °' 1 ,._, 1• ..... ,.., -• 1 ' "" 1 lflal Ill .,.,..,,,,'"Vint c1~1ml -Ind I I I .W.r .. rtl S.t111r, WI lllOlllOICI LIM, H'27. trl'dl~• 01 lfle '°""' ntMtG ~I ll'lll 11\11 I ~1111 Irr I (Mii MMI, Cl. t2Ut ~ 1'11!1 lloillll)IU It belflt (ond\ll:ltcl IW I~ Mill dtcl<ltnl 1r1 rt1111lrld to lilt Ill""' CIW-·~!"u•c , ••• ,..... Nll50l'I $-' Htf'IWflOll, U37 51. 1ndlvld111I, • wlrl'I !Ill 114qt.Mf"I' ~ In lfl' oflk• -•• ""'~ """' -1 , ... .,.~·AN. (I. HJM --~11-l.41 ot 1M clerlt OI -1bew11 ~ _,-., iW
,r111Mnt S1nt1 ANO. C1. HJ'Ool Clwt of Ollfltt Coul'lty on Mov. 11, ltll. llweheri. lo 1111 ~Jltntd II llW of •
Prom Fat is not a disease for all seasons. It
manifests itself in teenage girls two weeks before
-·the Prom. Not three, not Orie, but two weeks.
· 1Jt is only then that the female s·pecies ·drops
I r: i'4tl'Mo'I N. S111d1I, M1Wko Hlnwood, W7 k. POPllt, Tl'llt 1ltl-I Hl'ld will! lh1 CllUftlV to ortwnt I"-"' wllh ffte ntttl~'
Tiii• 1111-1 wa. Iliff wltll rtll Tl'llt OUi.IMH 1, 111111'11 cl!ICIVCtld llJ I ,, ··-iv J. M~. OIPutv CounlV ol "" Al'IG•,,.,t. W•llttt. lrown ..,. CounlY Clttll OI Or""" GeunlY. N r•n1u1111. c1 .. t . crill'I. $1.ollt NllmW n. Oovtr 11111c11,....,
"AlllOLO IASJOM, Alty. \ Nelson S. 1-4,nwood 1"1.111111/Md Or•llM CO.II OlllV '"°'· IJJ ~ Orlvt Nirw-t BttKl'I i ' 42fl Wltllll,.. l•ltlltnl, Sllflt 4• Tlllt 111~ llled wllll ift1 Cl)Un!Y Novtmbtf' 22, 2' 1!'1d Declmblf 6, 13. fofn 460, Wh((,. 11 t~I pllCI oi r.
L•• Al!Mlt1,.Ctlltol'~I• ttt11. ci.r~ OI Or..,... Counh on: /fOv. 1~. i.11. 1t'1 31~11 _, ot tht. ul'CMlniJll!ld In •It ,.,., 1
Nll.OC 81 11...-trlV J, MlddOlh Otll'UIY COi.iniy 1 lllln I 1M · I I I Id d Publbf,.,. Ort1111 eo..i CtllY ''IOI Clerk 1 'l>"GAL NOTICE .., • 1 0 ·•1 1 • 0 w tc '
.·.
her elastic jeans, shinnies out of her bulky sweater,
stands in front of the mirror and cries, ''What hap·•'
pened?"
Her coilcern -turns to hysteria ·in 4.Pe· fitting
room as she shops for her prom gown. "It's no use,"
said my daughter, slumping to the ilOQI'\ "I've !Qok·
ed everywhere and I can't find it."
"Find what?" I asked .
''My waist. It's gone. It was there ·1ast fall \\'hen
I marched with th_e drill team. I remember. I tucked
my blouse in it at that spot and my skirt had a
Wai.Stband on it."
''It's here somewhere.''. . I said, turning her
around slowly. "\Ve just have to find it. Try sucking
in ."
"I am sue.king in ," she said.
.. This is ridiculous. All we do is look for the
narrowest part of your body."
"That's my bust."
"Oh. Well then, bend over and I'll mark the
crease."
"It's no use," she said, pulling on the jeans. I
have a clear-cut case of Prom Fat. Let's.buy the size
7 and I'll diet down to it.-"
In the two weeks that ensued she was to try
the following "local" diets.
CINDY'S MIRACLE DIET ·'
A soft pretzel every three hours {mus~rd optional)
No water. Repeat. No water. •
("\Vhat happens wherr you drink water?"-,1 asked.
''You float around the world in eigbty days.")
LUC ILLE'S EAT,LIK E-A Fl Y DIEf
Sugared doughnuts (all you can eat)
Jelly buns (all you can eat) -
Cakes and cookies ·
0
0 •
pounds. She looked like Vincent Price, but she had
indeed conquered Prom Fat.
On the night of the dance, she ate only her
eight bananas and drank eight glasses of water. It
worked. The ball gown slid over her hips with ease .
The waist. bad returned".""Tfie je._Weled belt.encircled
it like slim fingers.
The next morning I went to her room for the
detail..".. .
Nov..,..btf" •• 15, 22, "· ltll '°, .. ,, .. b·n·~-' .,.-, •• ,, .. UV ,!IOI Ut;.< Wllllln '°"'' lnO"tn• .u .. ·~· llr•I pij • C-'.._.. _ _::_:::_:c.; ___ _cc;..c;1 11 .. _. . .,.., "" • ,,11on ol tl'lli no11t•. • .. • 1~ Hovtm!Nr :If, 1..cl Dl'rmbtr '· ll, ?O, Oi!t-d Novfmbe~ 19, 1111 ~·
I ___ :L:E:G:AL::~N~OT::.::IC~E:_ __ _i'-'-"-"";::;;:r.;:J:"N,win•-'-',,__,_1
1 ,,CTITl:u~"':uilNl!.SI • • G1111v11v1 Had91on "·: I· .NAMI STATIMfNT Ad!T'ln!llr~!rht ~·
1·1 .. • LEGAL NOTICE ,,.. 1a11ow1no .,.,_ b dolnil b11•1,_,, ot 11'11 E11111 "' '"' ,
llTCTIT10US •USINl:SI 11: "'" • • ..-. . ::~~:~j1f1==lll ... "AMI STATIMINT -PJ_.... ...,JITH UGI.IN• SH.,.,_L~SEAVIGli, WAl:LACE". OROWN AND CllAIN--
Tllt lotlOwl"' "'toll 11 dol"' bYllMU PICTITIOUI IUSINISS 1142 H. C"I~ Hlvy., LMlllQI ll11ai. S II N IN I• ... I l•I ' 11: NAMI STATIMINT D9Vlll Mldi••I t-1111M1. 117 51nt1 11191. II • llm r .. ... II "'
THE TUNl!'.UP S...OP. 2020 Ntwll0<1 Tiie tollowlnt peftonl 1r1 dolnt Sin Cltmt'nlr. Ill Dovtr Ori,.. " .1 ....... co111-Mt11, O!llotGI• t;H21. b\lllM51 • ., . Tlll1 bu1lneH JI btll'lt eOl'lducted II'(·~ "-'.Of' INCfl. Ctlllornl• """' ..
H1rrv -L. 0.111dcllt, fl . O. lloic 2S, 11&1 S'TIP'ldlfr-° l!lftlfflfllU. 51!1 1nlfl~dYi1 -·Tlll'->Ololl '*'°311 W-1'" C...!1 Mni, C1Hkwnle '1617. lt:lnosbrl1r. Yorl>I 1,.1..,,, C1Utornl1. Dlvkl M. lf\iet>el Anor11t11 r.r Ad..,h1h1T.11flr
Tllll' llullMH 11 lllifll COl\ltUC1ed by 1n R~rt H. Je<kton, 1no llr11 1 1\'d., TM1 1t1t«nrnt flltd wl!11 1111 {l)Unty wllll·rlll-wlli-tnlllxM ! I"
IN1l¥ldl.l1/. -Fut1-n, C1llkwnl1 Cltrk ot Or1ng1 County on: Nov. 1-. ltll. Publllhtd °''"" COii! Dt IY P •
Hlfl"I' L. De91dcllr Al)l)trt A. Waocl. '"' S.n lilff!IO W1v, llY ··~·"' J, MIC!Om DePUly Coul'lty ~~""' 22, " .... Dtc4'mbtf' :j,;:;.
T'll!1 1111-1 n11c1 wllh 11\e county ,....,. P1r11, C1Jl lornll. Cltfk. •
Cltr11 ti' Orinw CounfY on No~br• H, 1'1111 bu11MH !1 tonduclf!I DY I tenerll Publli.l\tod Dr1nee COl!.t D•llv Piiot,
1t11 by ••-II' J. Mldda.-. ~PUIY Nrlntrsh!o NO\l...,ber n. ind .O.Ctmblf I. 1), lJI,
c°"""v cltr•. -Potltf1 M, Jec\son. I ''~'"'.'.----------"''~'""'.':'."'.l--;-----:---;;;;------.--l"OJllll~ OrtnH Cffll Dilly PllOI, Ill-ti A, Wooi:I • ' I· ""
NovtmW 22, n 1nd ~...,Dtr '· 13, Tiil$ stetflmtftl w11 flll'd Wiii! 111~ LEGAL NOTICE "' NOT1CI! TO CltlOITOllll
1t 71 113'-71 toontv Cieri!; DI D•11>111 CaunlV on SUPEltlOlt COUlllT OF THa F-------------'=-"I Novirmto;';~cnn. , '"" STATll OP CALt,OltNIA
LEGAL NOTICE Published orini• ce.1,1 DilJJ fl llal, PICTITIOUI IUSLNl!SS FOii: THE COUNTY OF OlllANOI
Nov..mDtr 22. 2t incl De<:..,,Dtr •· U, "AMl'ST•TIMl!NT Hi. A·'IMU
,., ... 1 1'11 314·11 Tl'll lollowl"' pen.ans 1,1 dOlnf E1t1!1 ol JAMES DWIGHT HUTTl!lll,
-'--~----------l bu1l11111 u · Oete1~d. '1c11T1ous 1us1"1ss •-·.:...o.. LEGAL NOTICE AllsoLUTe c LE A N 1 NG AHD NOTICE rs HeAe1Y GIVl!N tit '!19 ~ ".utl STATIMINT -..:--., ctedltorl of I~ 1bov1 n1med dlKedll't Tiie lollowllll .,.,MM'I, 1,1 6oine .. AOTl!CTtVE SElllVIC~, 14U Terr.ct tl'let 111 ... ~10,,. l'l•vl~e clilmi iiil1>1t !I'll
butln.u 11: ,.'904Sil Wiv, L•OUnl lltatll. ' 11ld dtcldtnl 1r1 re11ulred IO tll1 llllf'\o
All St1t1 C1rpet sr .... ke. lU E. ITtll STATl!MllNT OF WITHDllAWAL PlllOM !vi Grovi. 1'2!1 Ttrrl(I Wiv. LlllUnl wl!ll ,,,. llltlll~rv Vl)Udllfl, I~ '"' olllu
st •• Suite c. COii. M•••· C11lfor~l1. PARTNllltSHI,. OPl!lllAT1NG UNOIR ·~·:· ,. II U2J Tl w ol mt tltrl< or'"' 1bov1 tnlllled (Ol/rl. ·o.-A.lldv J. Lv•lns, "' w. WlllOfl, CO.Ill F-ICTITIOUS IUSINISS NAMI LI ,, 1"'111• rrl(I ev. to orewnt !him, with ,,.,, nl<ISlarY
M111. Cllllornl1. Tiii fallowing peflon hll w!tl'ldraw~ '' Tlll~u: T''~h ·1 btlnll conducted bY v011C"Pr1, to the undPr1lgned It Iha ol'llct
WIU11m LY1i;ln1, 611 W, WllllOft, COtll a ,111er•I Plf!Mr ffllm t~o 01rtnulhlP p rln Ill~ n•i ' 1 of t.er 11torn1y, SEN, WAXMAN, 152JI
M1M. C1ll!ornl1. Jlll'10llt!t und'r tl!•_!ltlllll)UI bulll'llH 1 t r 5 i"G Ventur• lloulfvard. 5htrl'ftl~ 0 1k1. T~l1 bu1lnt11 1, beln• cqnijVcled-bv I n•m• Oi G-A~-FICO-TYPE . ", w. 11!1'1 SI.. Tl'llt : I rov~ flied With 11'1 c nl ·c111111rnl1 f1 '63. "1111cl'I t1 11\T -iacrillf t"'1tr1l 01rl111•1hlP. Cml• Mt••· C1IUornl1 t'/621. 11 l!'me<I ,-e ou v buslnru al ltlt urldl!f'll9rird In 11 m1Ut•1 Andy J , Lykln1 The UctllJl)UI IKJslntH n1me 1!1ttm1nt ~Irr~ ol Di''"f ;,.ouzy:,,_onb:!o-;· 2~ 191." 01rt1lnlng to lllt n!•t1 of 11!d 1Clld1<1t.
WIUl1m Lvkln1 far 11\I parll'!lrllllp w11 tiled on Julv 16, ci rk eve• 1 • 1 0 u V oun v wllhln lour monll'l1 1U1r the -tlrst
Tlll1 1t11...,1nt llled wltll l!lf County 1911 In tl'le C011ntv ot D••ngt. ' • pYbllca!lan of thl1 not!et.
Cllrll ol Or1-Ceunly on Nav. 1t, 1971 Full Him• ind A~rtu o! lllt P1r1an N ".::l::rfd 2t Dr•:• ~astbl Da~v l Jp)I~, D1ted Nav~l'ftbt!r \9, 1tl1,
bY ltvtrlv J. M1ddo•, Dtlllllv Counl'I Wllhdrawlno: l:ll ' 1 tm r JJ,,.,; SALLY CLACI(
Cltf• Dll"' A. llled-. t /O 1"l11t"'low 11111, A!lmlnf1tr1!rl•
Publ!lhfd Or1nte c""'' D<tily P11111, Alli, u1111. Ml'.ll't. LEGAL NOTICE:' ot !"-11111• vi 1111'. NO\'*Tltllt J'l, l't 11\11 Orc«nber 6, lJ, slontd: o!•n• Bledsoe JU 1bltv1 r\l!TOed ~tdtnl
1911 J\4.1·11 Publllhed Dr1nge COllll Dally Pilat, IEH WAXMAN
Novtmbtf' 21, H 1nd OKtmbtr 6, 1l. F·IUH IUll V1n1ur41 ll111111Y1rll LEGAL "NOTICE 1'11 l1ll·7l PICTITIOUS sUSINIESS Shtm"n 01kt, C1lltornl1 t141J I ___ .::::::.:::.::::. __ J--1::;;:r.Ai HAMI STAT&MllNT T11: (JUI Hl-(100 . I· LEGAL NOTICE T1141 fflllowlnt per11on 11 doi,.,. bll'iMSI Allom•v r.r Alfmf"ltlrllt•• ' Ht 11: l>ubtril'll'd Drang.e COit! D1Jly l'llo!,
,.ICTITIOUS IUSINESS ,. 141)1 H1ldon'1 51mP1V El1111nl Boullout, Nov1m!)er n , 1' Ind DKtmbtl' •• 11.
NAMI ST•TIMENT PICTITIOUS IUSINESS P.O. llox lUI. Or1Me, C11ltornl1 92669. Ull ~U7·1l
TI\t lollowlnt per!IOfl 11 dolnl bu'IMH "AMI ITAT&Ml"T Ill Town I. Cl)Untrv, Or11>9t, C1Ulorni1
11> TM *°'lowing perton 11 dolll'll bu'lne11 fll!U. 9Alll -MAit ENGINEEltlNG CO .. ,,. 11 : Donne NM'll!Z. 11SIV :loull'I H1rtxir,l-------------
Terml111I W11, COlll MQa, Cill1. 92621 AAAON CHARLES FDllM•L WEAA. No. '°"' Cc11t1 M111. Call,.,,.nll NOTICI TO Cltl!OtTOlllS ltrn(lf'~ H, Grrlltr, 16" S1m1r tlrlvt. -1t'/7 Hutoor lllvd., Cosll Mn•• C1!!4, H1r.id H-llr 1~\/ Sowl~ Hlrtor. SUl"ElttOlt COUtltT GI" TH•
Cotti Mtu, c1111. mH Cl'l1rles Monlrl Jord .... lt.17 H1rbor No. IOI, (9111 M.11.1, C1IHarnl1. STATE 01' CALIJOANIA ,.Olt
Tl\11 builntll ll btlni conllu(lrd llV 1n l lWI .• Cotl1 M1,1, C111!. ll'll• blJSIMll llbffn11 tanducled by I n -THE COUNTY 6P OlllAHG•
lndlvldll1I. Tlll1 bullnt11 II btlnt conduc1td by 1n IM!vld111I, No. A-47211
llt•Mrd H. Gtrtter . lfldlvid1111. Oonn1 J. N1met1 Ellett of HELEN DETERMAN
Tllll 111ttmtnl Hlad wlll'I 11\e Coun!Y Ch1rle1 M. Jo•lf•n H1rold N..,,tlJ OectaU!d,
LEGAL NOTICE •
LEGAL NOTICE
.. Any leftovers you ca n pick upJ "Ho\v did it go?'' I as~ed excitedly.
Cler~ 01 Orin" County on: J1n. 1), 1911, Thli sl•)tme"t flltd with the Coi;~ly lh!1 .-'/•ltment flltd wltl'I !tit COllnlV NOTttE IS HEAEllY Gl\/EN lo ·1111
lly J1111t L. k"'•ln1r, 0.PUIV (l)Un\y Clerk ot Or1n111 Counlv 011; Novtmlllr 4. clerk' ol l>r1n111 CounlY-on Nov. II, 1911 crtdl!ors ol !hi ibovl ntmlld ~ill~t ci.r~. 1'11.• IY W1ll•r T. IC.Ing, 01pu1v Cl)Unfy by llever1v J. M1doo~, DrQUtv C011nlv tt>1t 111 oer.i.0111 hlYlns cJ1Jm.11gtJ1111.1h1
Publllt.rd Or•Mt C.ot•I CM11Y Pllcf. ·c1fi1r:----Cl1rk. 11111 dtcti;lfnt are reiwrrfd 10 1111 fllcm, ("Flies exist on this," said Lucille, "and you never
saw a fat fly, did yo u?")
ELSIE'S EAT-AT-SCHOOL Pl AN
• "It · }Vas the most wonderful prom 1 have ever Novlf'll>tr 1' tr\d Orctmbtr 6. 13. 20, flubll1htd 0••~•• Co11t D11lv fll!et. l>ubllslled Dr1n11e Co~s! D1Hv Pilot, woll> lh~ ne(Hlerv vouther1. Jn t114! onlt1 lj'~";';;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';' ";;·;";;;;";;~;;-;;;"";;';;';· ;";;· ;;";;· ;;;";;;·;;';;!';' ;;;;;;;;;~;";·',' 1 ~-~~~--"_' __ '~'·_"_'~_c'c"c-.,,."~'...".'·~13, ot th• cterk or _the 1bov1 1ntllled courL or · 1911 • 3145·11 to creserl tf\em. with tM neceu••v
vooche,,. lo the und~rsltntd 11 41f Eid tt'GAL NOTICE 171h S!rHt. Costa MPs~. C11lfOl'nla, wt.lcll
Is the 11l1ct o! bu•lneit al 1hl 11flder1J1ned
In ell mett~r\ 1"'•1•1~1"11 to !hr e1t11e al .·. Eat in the sChool cafeteria for five days. This not
only eliminates your . consumption of lunch at
noOn, it destroys· the t~ste buds for the other two
meals.
seen," she said. "There 'fere little jars of soaps and
perfumes around the table. There was an attendant
who gave you a towel when you washed your hands
and when the door opened the mu sic was fabulous." THE ,..11405 ,aid decMrnt, within lour !T'Onlh• 1flH' f'ICTITIOUS llUllNESS lh~ llr$t ooollt1llcn cl IM1 notlct .
.. . :
!RENE'S DESl>ERATIOl'LD(ET P~CKET
1 breath mint every three hours
An 8 x 1n glossy of Mama Cass pasted on the
refrigerator door .
BARBARA'S BANANA DIET
8 bananas a day
8 glasses of water _ _ ,
"What do you mean when the door· opened ?"
I asked cautiously. 11You sound like y.ou're describ-
ing a rest'room."
"I am, she said, "I-was t h e r· e most Or-the
evening. What with the water and all . Besides, I
felt faint."
"You mean you spent your entire senior prom
in ... the john?" .
"W.ould it make you feel better," she said, "if
I t6ld you t had the smallest waist in the room?" ' (Excerptedjrom the book , "Just Walt Till You· ... (A spare tire hanging from a tree in the back yard
to swing from.) Have Children of Your Own!' Co{>yright 1971 .by
Erma Bambeck· and Bil Keane. Published by Double-
day & Co., Inc.) It was two days before the prom. True to her
promise to herself, my daughter had she ... d eight
Earl'y Holiday Nuptials
Unite~ C0astal Couples
FEHRING-ERVIN
The wedding ceremony for
S h e J I e y Hutchinson Ervin
and Richard Henry Fehring
was personalized with
Renaissance bridal costumes.
a vocal octet and vows the
couple wrote.
The Rev. Dominick Tomietti
officiated in Geneva
Presby terian Church, Laguna
Hills, for the rites uniting the
daughter of Dr. John Ervin of
Sherman Oaks and 11rs. tlar-
riet Ervin, Balboa, and the son·
of Mr . and Mrs. JaJl]es H.
Fehring. Mi ssion Viejo.
Mrs. Brian Kleeman was
her sister's matron of horior
and the Misses Ka(hlecn
RI CHARD FE HRING MRS. PLESE K
Herric~
Tell News
Wedding vows will be ex-
changed by Leslie Herrick and
Bob Greatorex Feb. 12 in
Ferndale Wedding Chapel,
Santa Ana.
Their engagement has betn
announced by her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Francis Herrick of
Costa Mesa, He •is· the son of
Mr. Md Mrs. Steve
Greatorex, also ·o[ Costa Mesa.
Mis.! Herrick will graduate
from C.Osta Mesa High School
in January and her fiance, an
alumnus or CMHS, attends
Orange Coast College.
Hearn and Joni Fehrinp; also '
attended the bride. Charles MRS
Brown was best mAn and ·
ushers were 1t1ichael retiring at Randolph Air Force
San Ailtonio, Tex. and John Ervin.
The new Mrs. Fehring is a
senior al tJc.L and attended
Universily of S o u t h e r n
California . The brii:legroom at-
tended USC and Pasadena Ci··
ty College.
PARKER-SMITH
Base, tlals linking Barbara
and Neil Grant.
Rosas DECEM BER'S BIRTHSTONES
1ht 1v.ttv."i~_t Parents of the bfidal couple
are Mr. and' Mrs. Henry C.
Rosas and Mr. and Mrs. Har-
PLESEK·AR~STRONG
The Peek Fa,inily Wedding ry P. Grant, all of Cosla
Chapel was the setting for the M~:id of honor was Miss
wedding of Patricia Lucinda Laura Ronquillo, bridesmaid
Smith and Ronald D a I e was Miss Cathy Cheesman
Parker, students at Costa and flower girl was Belinda
Mesa High School. Brenneman. Henry Rllsas Jr.
Reading the rites for the served as best man. The newlyweds, ti o t h daughter and son of Mr. and graduates o( E:itancia High
Mrs. Doylei:E. Smith and ~1r. School, will reside In Costa
' FIGRTER
•
He is ROBERT • ALLEN
He is the newspaperman's newspaperman.
He is a slllgger wnh his typewriter •. " Allen carries a 15unch in his columns. Once he gets
in th e rin9 with .an issue he swarms all over it. He's
a re al investi9ative reporter with the inside word
in ma ny high places.
H• males hi• jabs quicl, but full of im pact. On
the CBS contr oversy surrounding "The Selling of
the Penta go n'' Allen said:
"CBS eacaped pro1ecutlon for
conte mpt, but t hat'• all"
Simple statem•nt. Full of im pact.
Whon .th• trouble •rose in Panama Allen deliver·
•d his blows with deadl y direciness.
• "Tiny,· hut crucially 1trate glc Nancy Armstrong became
the bride of Frank Ray Plesek
during rites read in the First
Pres by le r la n Church.
Westminster by the Rev.
Frederic Bearss and the Rev.
Esmond Ferris.
Parents of the couple are
:r.tr. and ~1rs. Robert J.
Armstrong and f.fr . and t.irs.
Jack R Plesek, all of
Weslminster.
and Mrs. Robert ~1. Parker, Mesa . The Turquolae I• one·ot tii,: . ..101t
all of Costa ~1esa. was the ;:===========;I ancient 1tone1 priud .. by roJ.ttf. :-.
Re v. William Powell. Jt h!cam• 1ynooymou1 witb
Panama, wfth a long history of
; t ur bulence and military power
1el:ure1, appears headed for
thfl uraenvlable r ple of being
Mni. Harold A. Andrews
was matron of honor and the
Misses Lynl Gorham,..f: Pal
Green and Bertha Plesek were
bridesmaid.If.
Rlj:hard Plestk served as
best man 11nd ushers were
Rllbert Cowdrey, Tim Smith
and Ste,-e Gilpin.
The newlyweds both are
graduates of Westmin!!ttr
High School. She Is a gradu.ate
nf Orange. Coast Colltie and
he attended Goldf!n West
Collf!ge and ii S(':rving tn the
Air Foret. They wlll make their ho1ne
'
Miss Shirley Baker ~'as HOT PANTS fortune when an·ueii'nt Pirtl1
FROM THE k.inr dilCOftJ°ed a Tdi:QUolte m maid o f honor ·and ontheneiifa'Yldorlou1kttJ..
bridesmaids were-~frs. Ronald NORTH POLE 1\'ocke, · Miss W•nda Smllll T~t ·O.C.mb" boro h•-.,. onolh"
and Miss Kitty Smith. Flower 11 .... .....,. i..c,..."'-· "' """' ·birlbatone, the Blue ZifC9n. T1111
girls were Vanessa Smith and •111111+t ""IT w1T II••"" -.n ._ ·1tont i• u id to~tha Mart
nd f}Hlfll .,_......,.-.!II. An _.... __ .. ... ,.. ·~ Juliann Parker, a ring ewt 111 1 ,~ 11,.m .. ..,_, ..... m ,, '"·rer was Ev1"e Smith. Jn all ct.t_rprl 't::. UWI "'".. .... KC.OUIM utr...,.ec1111 • Edward Webster served as DNf. 111 tw ltM tn1tt111t 11111rwr1M1M. ~iplht •~ or -_.P1r1t:J.
best man and guests we.re
seated by Frank rreaosi and
l\1ark Schrupp. ·
The newl)'¥.'eds Wll tl'eside In
Costa 1'-ltsa.
. GRANT-ROSAS
The
KN IT WIT
the 11e.rt co11ntru t o
coup atump t."
Anothor straight forward punch. •
Afl•n is colorful, f?rthright and indef~tigable.
Look for his column , a frequent featuro of th•
editoriil pagt in your
'
"AME STATEMENT D1ted November 4. 1971
Tht Pbilnwinl °'"on1 I•• llolfl9 JOHH lHOMA5 CHPISTENS!fl
bu1hlf!ll 11: E E
GOLD COAST I H V E °s T 0 ll S ' lh!'C:i:!!, °',,;~~ =:~I
COMPANY. ~ Cam11<J1 Dr Iv t , il'AUL A. NANNA
N....-t Bfftll. C1!1l_or11l1. ----AllWMY It L•w
OoMld (hrW,)1, 370 E111 S..cral'fttnlo. H•rDor L•w lu\.ldl;;I
A1t101111. C1lllornl1. e1t 1!111 1111'1 Sl•rll
Sle!llle-n E. Le\dner, 100 Lido Park C"'ll M•11, (1lltornl• '101
DrlYI No. 11, N---1 II I I th. Tel• (11(1 }4 .. 1'01 -'41·•7'7
Call!ornl•. fl660 A!lornev t.r E•e<:ulor
Dovld It. SclltU. ?1161 C•sll~ llloc• Publhohed Or1f>91 Coe•! 01/lv l"Hot,
Aold, L111<1n1 Bt1ch, C1lllornl1 ms1 , Nll'ltmD!r 1. u. 71." lt11 3011.n
l1'111 bu'lness ls btlno ~ucted tiv • -•
Gene••I 1>1r111erlhlP.
SIHll'len E. LtldM< LEGAL NOTICE
lll!' 1lllff'l!'nl Hird w111'1 ll>t! Countvl-------------
Clffk otl 0~1n" Countv on Nov1mbtr n ,
1911 bV BtVfflY J. MldOOk. Ot..UIV
Coun!Y Cl••k.
Publl1htd Or1r19e CoaJI 0..11~ P!IOI.
Novl<T'lbtr n. 79 .t nd Otte.n!Jtr 6, !J. un 1131.71
...
HOTICE TO ClllEDITOllS SUPElllOtl: COUltT Ofl TH•
'TATE 0,. CALIFOlllHIA FOii:
THE COUNTY OJ OAANOI
ND. A·10UO
E1lalt of JOHN 0 HILLS, Dttllltd. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREflV GIVEN lo lhl 11----=:::::::__:.:_:.:._c.. __ tredflorl of the 1bov1 nuntll ~edenl
_ m11 111 per1on1 h•vlnt,&!1lm1 •~•l#•
LEGAL NOTICE ••Id dlctlltnf 1rt re11ul•ed ff> 1111 •
l<:OT1CE 15 HEAEll~ GIVEN tl'l•t !ht wllh !ht net:f,.lfY VOUChfrl, In ll'lt· •
follow!ne 1tem1 o• round or 11vfd prQOtr!Y af !he tlltk of the lllO'll .,,!Uled eo11ttliol
h1v1 beell hitd bY tht Pollt• OHaf!mrnt to P•ti.ent Jh..m. ~111'1 !he_ nec~v
of th• Cllv of cosll ~"' lor ,. voue111r1, !D th} undlrtfenlld 11 11'11 ~· period In t•Clll of ninety (90\ (lay" of hl1 alldrntvs, Hl!lllll!lllT GAl.b.:&.
Or>t purplt bike, 0,.,. brown bl~e. JOHN ll. GALL Sult1 «ID Qvl1tl llLllM~•
on• gold blkf, -thrOl'ftf blkf, -611 South DllYI 5!r~. LOI 1"ntll!lt1. blu• iul!.ca•e C1lltnrnl1 90014. Whkl'I II IM p!t!W .• (II
NDTICE I!> FURTHE R GIVEN ll'lll blJ$1nM~ Ol lhr Undfrll~ned In 1i11Tf'1ltrl
II no own'' aPPt•" Jlnd DrDves l'lls ptr11lnl110 fO 1111 t.it11 ol ••ID d~nt,
OWMrlt.lp of ffll orl)lllrly wltl'lln wven within lour montn1 1lttr 1~1 ,llfll
"' " YI ro11owlll'll th' oubllcitlon ol oubl!t•!lon DI th'11 notlcr. .. " D1tect NovemDtr " 1111 ll'llf NOllce. 11'11 llllt lhtrl!o 11'14111 \'111 CHAALI!!> E SOPER
In tllf finder, If 11\IQ be -· O• · " " CU I Cost& Melf I wlllcl'I EtKUIOr OI 1ht Wiii • • v o • 0 ' n of thl tbove 111mta dlcedtM • U•~ 11'1~ Ptoot'1• •n• I ti!! IOld lit HEll:llEAT GALL & JOHN U. GALL .".
PUb!lt 1utllon II I 1lm1 Ind d1!f "' Soull'I Oii•• Slrffl lull• 4111 • lo tHI 1nr1t111nc:ed. ' DATED: No~embrt :it, l9n LOI A""ltl, Callr.rnl1 fllD1•
11 E NETH Ttl: 11\JJ 6:11·72''
Crilel' o1 Politi Al!OnllVI for E>ttUllr .:t:'
PublllMll 0fll'llll Cotill 01llv P11ol l'11bllJ.l'lecl Orpng.e COiii! OtllY ,
NOYl!mbtr "· 1t11 3111.11 Novff'!Wr 1. t5, n. "· 1t11 n
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE .•. .....
NOTICE TO CltlDITOltS '~ ......
II' H4t7 SUP!llllOlt COUltT OF T'!~'
'ICTITIOUI llUllNESS STATE OF CALll"ORNIA P~::
MAME STATEMENT THE COUNTY OF OlllA"G&..,~.
Tll1 foHowlne persons ire do;ng No. A·7Glll ,r •
bu1lllln is: E~11t11 ol CLARENCE WH~ .. AAT CAAFT DECOltATOAS. l!QlJ HUL(E, 1 110 •r.own 11 WH ~l>N
Ml. ll•ldv (;(c1e, Fount&ln llll(!ly. C1I, HULCI!. l llO know'YI 11 W. H CE,
Alch1rd All•n 111rkrr. 11791 Almelo Ott..,.. \'/ Line. Honlln~ton S,.e11. Cll. NOTICE 1$ 11EllE9Y GIVEN 1~·11>9
Edw•rd Paul Lem1nsld, I I' Q 5 crectl!ON or ine 1?10v1 nllmtd d~nt T1m11rlr.o. Founltln v.1111v. c11 1n1t •11 perions n1.1n11c!a!m11111lf\lf .th1
Rollo Edw1rd l'lrown, 11812 Old 11ld dtced,nt 1r1 rtaulrld lo 1111 ~•m•
""1Mon Wey, G1rden G•nve, Cal. wit~ lhe neceuarY Yo~'hert, In tt>l o fl'•
Thl' bull~eH Is being cond~ctl'd ~' 1 of 1~1 ~(Irk of th1 1bavt 1ntl!led Cllll!' , or
Gtntrll P&r!nerlt.!p to prestn! !hrm. Wiii! lh• ,,...arv =~'!:~: :.· L~:~kl :~~,~~\o~~~:. 'e~~:g= :~ Hie ~1~
Rollo E. llrown C1mPUf Drive, Sul!-Num~::~o.
Thl1 t!81em.tnl 11!11(1 wlll'I !ht County Newp.,,I lleacll, C1!lfarnl1 IM60,~~ I•
Cltrk or 0.1no1 Counrv on: Nov . u . !911. rM "'''' 011>u1llli!11 al 1111 undtr1lo(llcl ht
llv lltverlv J. M1ddcl• Otputy Ceuntv 1lt l'ftllttrt IM'rt1lnln1 10 1111 111111. of
Clrrk. 1•!d llKO!'t!eru, wl!h!n lour m<'lrllhi .llltr
PUbllll'ltd Or•nll'f COiis! O.ilv Pll~I. 1111 fi"t Pllb•lt•llcon ol 11\b nolltl~ • •
Novf'l'\IM'• 1', 1t>d 0ecembtr 6, JJ. 2ft, D•!ed NovemDer 1. 1911.
101 )119·71 ltanald C. H~ll:e
LEGAL NOTICE
Admlnl11r1tor Of !1'11 E&t1t1
ol ll'lt 1bow MrntCI dtcAOtnl llroXOfl IMI •f9XOl'I,
11-------------l •SM C1mPU1Orlv1,1111!1 NumMI' UI,
Hcwpeort INdl, C1H(prnl1 '2Nt
Tll! (714) 540-1101
Altornl't'I tor Admtnl,tr1t.r •
PublllhlG Or1,,g.e COllll 01/lv. il'l!ot,
cl,0!111 Novtmber 1. IS, n, '19, 1•11 .)Olf·ll
LOCAL
ED ITORIALS
LEGAL NOTICE
••
•
I
I
..
I
'
•
·--·
Jf DAILY •ILOT
San Clemente Drama
, • ,
' •
'Glass Menagerie' _Stiperh
15 Opera
Excerpts
At Laguna •
ly TOM TITUS Glass f.tenaaerie" into one of
~ Oft111De11,,r1t1ll•tt th! finest 1ttraction1
''Tbl!: Qlaaa ll1tn11erie" ts a 1presented on an Orange Coun-
eod dtal mort than the first lY sage during 1971.
affU111i from one of the Andersen has · not onJy
.Arri!rlcan theater'• 1ll·time overcome the difficulties of ' 1
f.. tat playwrights: It is a dtinanding play. he haa hurdl·
elle1te work of theatrical art ed additional obstacles whic~
Wfiich demands lovlng and he. himself, has laid out in the
meticulous care from any c11t form of some of the most ln·
ind director dedicated enough tricate lighting and 90Und tf·
tb attempt ill production. ftclS ever aftempted by a
This it precltely what this community theater group. As
3-0. y e i r • o t d Tenneslee a technical achievement . "--The
WUliams classic reeelvts at Glass f.1enagerie " ranks in the
the hand! of Richard And ersen year's upper echelon alongside Clemente production is mood,
aod, for the most part. an ex· Hunt Ing ton Beach's and Andersen has ta k ern
C-•"-nal ca•I ot the •-n "Rashomon" and Irvine's "A vwv .,. special pains to underscore it
Cltmentr CommunJty Thtattr. View From the Bridge." at every turn. Tableau staging
TJ:ley hive fashioned "The T~be .key word in the San with taped dialogue opens -;;.':,;;-:_:::::=;;;~;::;::~;:;-::;-~-;:--::;;-,,.--:-:-cc--~, each scene introduced by the
'.l \ , narrator, Tont. representing n DAily. tOG images!roze.nintohismind. It
'-
',·. ••• ' ls an Ingenious and eflecti'O device ,. par tic u 1 a r I y as
employed at the mov ing
climax of the play. --.....;.. """ ·---·~'-'--w~-....-·, -.., -' Monday utks to hi11 • Mbabysitter" who
will st• lo It lh1t he Is 1ll~ed Evening to •l•P und.lslulfllfl dudnf 1111 trt.
i!UtM tr1111·At!1ntlc l!ltfth. tnd h•
HOVIMIU 21 '"!••· ...
winds UJt with ·llltl!l1 C11hr, no
1!11p •nd 1 scalld1I.
" "J"' ... , IJt "" -·
·fJ CtHIJ Ol NI\ """' ~'"' ;·. ,_.., Ctiltlio lltrs ~ Mltm i
(JJ Movie: {CJ •,l SIUl'Jllllf Plfct•
(dr1m1) '59-Ridllrd E,:111, DorothJ
McGuha.
Ci&l Jilt ""'" "'"" (C) (I hr) "MUllltf tt tit Fir Sidi ef ttl• ~ Delphlfll 11 Mltl!ll.
.. D WIN ""' Wut ; m TM mllb:tMu
,-• I Dru• If .IM111J1
Scti1cq1a....i, Ill-"'·· 111-.. ·--lit-•• .,. ...............
(11111"'"
-m..., '""'' -..... ...,_
....... tit ..... ····"'· • .,.. Acri•
SU•'" (td·IJ) '69--«oy ThlnntJ. 1111
Hendy, Lynn t..orini. S111r.1 upl01"1·
liofl dt1r111 tonctrnln1 th1 disto'luy
1nd upJoratlon cf 111 unknown
pl1n1t behllld tht 11111.
(I) Wiid Wild West
D .. .., Mtrll: (C) (2111) ••
Mttttr Ill' l11111etne1" (dr1m1) '6S-
H1)'1ty Miiis, TrMr Ko'lnrd, Sh1shl
Klpoo1, Bretrdl d1 Biflllt. .l p!1l11
---mMY-J"O'J•1~r!fl-KC0111panles--htr
ILlfll on 1 ctulM to Sln11po11 w_h111
111 Eur1sl11 &!ll--19 helps to trans-
fcrm henelf Into 1 1ov1ly younr
wom1n.
([} llllr Cr1M• Crlll!d•
All this serves to enhance
the poetic beauty of the play
itself, a tale grounded In not·
too-distant memory by a
young and, at that time 11940),
unknown playwright f r o m
whom would come such sea,.
ing and violent works as ''A
Streetcar Named Desire" and.
''Cat on a 'Hot 'I'in Roof.-"
f.1easured against Williams'
later works , ;'Menagerie"
seems a world apart, Hk,e the
theme of the play itsell, a past
to whic h there is no returning.
It abounds in suffocating love
and frustrated amb ition. Its
characters a r e poif;nautly
real, their feilings genuine
and devoid of malice.
..
insecurity whlch 1ives htr
character full dimension .
As ·the long-awaited "gentlem~n .caller ·" ·Jim l
Speirs ls excellent. t\iough his
performance as the emissary
frotn tbe' world outside the ~
Wingfleld's St. Louis tenement
does r~uire,.eQme gelling us··
ed 1o. SP:fJIJ adopt.i some ·
~-....
•
jerky and nervous man·
nerisms which contradict his .__...,~ I
•
buildup 1s a self-assured DELICATE TOUCH -Jim Speirs admires Sharon
young man -however, his . Heusinkveld's glass unicorn in-a scene from th e San
behavior is qqite correct for Clemente . Comrnuility Theater-production of Ten·
the sort of pe1sonallty he haa nessee Williams' "The Glass Menagerie." , • become. His candlelight scene ___________ .c..:.::...c...::...=c..-.c.._.c_ __ _
with Laura is a moment or
beautifully structuted honesty
and 'his subsequent realization
of his role in the evening's
drama is superbly presented.
Good Week Coming
For Video Watchers
Fiflet'nflngers will be heard
In featur roles ln excerp~
from fou works by PuccJnl,
1MOzart ~a Verdi at a ·
1Christmas Opera Gala in the
Laguna Moulton PlaJhouse i
December. 1
Sponsored by Lyric Opera
Association of Orange County,
tbe show will be presefiied
four times -at 8 p.m. on
Saturday, Dec. 4.. and 11._Y.jth
matinees at 2:30 p.m. on Sun·
day, Dec: 5 and 12. Tickets are
$3.50 for Saturday evenings
and $3 for· Sunda y matinees.
Hall·price tic k et~ are
available for c h~d re n .
students and mililar r.son·
nel for all performan s.
Dr.' Lester Ludlow, Lyric
Opera president, said that the 1
programs will consist of
Mozart's "Casi Fan Tutte,"
Puccini 'S "La Boheme" and
"Mmes. Butterfly," and
Verdi 's "La Forza de I
Destine." Except for the
Verdi1 all will be sun
English.
Robert Rogers is stage
director; James Low is music
director, costumes have been
designed by Burt Pettey;
teclinical director is Carl
Callaway.
Like the production, the set·
ting at the Cabrlllo Playhouse
is a mark of l!:xcellence.
Andersen's techn ical acumen
is brought into play here 11
well, and his choice of a dining
room masked by a scrim is
very good. Musical transitions
are interwoven into the action
skilfully and unobtrusively.
'By RICK DU BR,O\V intrigued to hear whal f.tis:s An added attraction v.·ill be
HOLLYWOOD (UPIJ f..1acU.ine ha~ to say about her the serving or wassail on stage
.. The Glass Menagerie" is
scheduled for. (lnJy three more
performances, T h u r 1 d a yM
through Saturday, but an ex·
t~iQ!!._ ~f ,al __!!:ast one extra
weekend rr-demand~ Dy the
quality craftsmanship of the
. prOOuction.lt plays at the
Cabrillo Playhouse, 2 O 2
Avenida Ca bri I lo, San
Clemente.
This may be a pretty good after each performance, ac-
wetk to watch television selec-television e i: Perie n c e • if cording to Lyric Opera 's ex-
tively, for the networks are of-anything. ecutive director, Velma Sun.
fering a provocative mixture On Wednesday, NBC' s Featured artists are
of specials and offbeat talk "Hallmark Hall or Fame," members of Lyric Opera's
shows, and even some iJJl.lque which recenUy began Its Repertory Company. They are
segments of-regular series. season with a superb pro-Judy Loehr, soprano; Paul
ll!J 0 ""· "''"'" , ..... ... Ill Mwt1: (C) "TM• am,. Lind"
(tdvenh1re) '63 -!1r11 sumv1n,
Katl11yn HtyL
mu catt
In U'!;e San Clemente pro-
duction, the o u t!il n ding
pe.rformer onstage is Carol
Dahl as the mothe!J Aman~da--'-
1.,.ho captures vdth incredible
clarity the soul of this
transplanted patrician
Southerner clinging. to her
more glAmorous youth in the
harsh light of Depression
realily. A flawless accent and Rawls Conc.ert
full command of the stage
O!T"Tuesday, .ABC's ••Movie duction of Paul Galileo's "The !!arms, tenor ; f.1 i ch a et
of the Week" presenl.8 a much-Snow Goose," will b r i n g McCormack,,. _bar it on e ;
talked·about 90·minute original another notable story to the Constatfcii -Crane, sopranb:
drama based on the deep and home screen, Tad Mosel's Joe Gole, tenor; Rose Kane,
touching friendship of two Pulitzer Prize·wtn·nlng play, soprano; Louis Leblferz, bass; -
members of the Chicago Bears "All the Way Home," starring Genevieve McDonald, mezzo
football team _ Gale Sayer!, Joanne Woodward, Richard soprano ; Enoch Sherm a n ,
black, and Brian Piccolo. Kifey, Pat Hingle and Eileen tenor : Ruth sher man,
white, who died of cancer at Heckart. · soprano; Vincent Russo ,
the age of 26 . Mosel's play Is based on the , baritone ; James Chapman,
The name of the production late James Agee's book, "A bass baritone and Susan
is "Brian's Song," and it tells Death in the Family," which Stewart, mezzo soprano. ll!> hln Piii Y11111lt1 how the two young men . rivals also \YOO a Pulitzer Prize. And Tickets may be purchased 8 llltr ltllU• Cr-" f19111 Dtl·
ll .. n. Worth, ltl1 lint la 1 Mrill •------er-tfirN cruuiB °'Wifth Cliff
llrratB dll'ICtln1 ·tM.-5.000 wiltt
Crusldi Cllolr.
~,.._.., ___ _,,_
n Dr. Ptt•r UwttllCI, • physkllft
¥tllcm Doris M1rt111'1 1ditor·bw. Cy
B11111ttl erdert htr to lnvutl1111
fc1 th• purpost af writin1 an 1rtit!1
en th1 ·uorilittnt con of medical
tru tllWll.
heighten a most memorable A Cl characterization, l 1apu1an
· If there. is any noticeable • . . weakness 1n the product ion, it Soul lilnger Lou Rawls will
resls with the character of appear in concert Friday al 8
Tom, play\vright \Y i 11 i am s p.m. in Memorial H a I J
himself. as portrayed by Tom Auditorium. at Ch a pm an
Taliaferro. \Vh ile Taliaferro College. Also on the program
instills his role with the proper wlll be "Rede)'.e." a rock
flashes or fire and moodiness group characterized ss "up
he lacks the depth to fullY and coming'' by D a v e
round out his performance as Lathrop, president of the
·well as the necessary in'· s p o n s o r i n g Chapman
vo!vement when taken out of Associated Student Body.
al-flrlit.--gr.e.w---to-love-e.ach-1he _lJO-minute b r o a d c a s t by mail from L)Tic Q~ra ~
other as brothers. The cast i . depicl3 the struggle of a fam1· ·Box 514, Laguna Beach, 92652
eludes James Caan. Billy Dee ly to survive a tragedy from or the Lz.guna Mou Ito n
Williams and Jack Warden. within. .. Playhouse , 606 Laguna Canyon (D -
D Wlltt'1 MJ UMr
8AU•l2 mo""...,
• I ..... ., JMllllt 9.,...,......, ... ._ .......
IDLI t-
8 .,.. Vllll•ll•
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CD It T1k• 1 Tllltl
I!) aJl Iott lut ''Up Ind Oewn
111d Around"
11!11.oo ·-10:00. ([)My 111111 ... Polly ,,.,,
7:11..... 1111 •Ill e...
·Tue.Mr sv•b.
'errut • Chip Is lesln1 lnttml In hu 11 1
wom1n •Ml flkes ·dr1m1tlc sltp1 ti
remtdy tilt 1pp1r111t 11tu1tion. 8 Dt1 II ... Lieb "Two Polnb of
• Pltdtl&rr' ''"' I. Diian Miiia ls
thrttltllld bf 1n 1pfM111le.
([11 IHM•., •••It a•nw..1 _,en~ ....
hlr ,.,.... .. ..., Jtfll.r' (1nJS-
h17) '12-lttte Dtvia, Join Cr••·
ford.
fl l.11'1MNt1 Diii
(J) Tl Ttl 11141 TIVUI
D Movie: "'Min Mont'" (tdventure)
''I-Willer Pldreon, Gtorl' Sin· ....
m .... Pllln1m. rwiman
l1J flrta1 lint
In Soun
m Lt Crltd• llen Cfl1d1
Q9 D Tor1111i. m-··-•-91>1_ ... E ~ A Ylllt 111 down· 10:15 CJ) Motil a. .. .... u.
ID"'b-Mt . """ II Mia-lltl Y11Hz ""'-
l:GO. ([) lllltllMkt Matt DlllOll b
b111hw1tk1d tMI ttlt tlrftb et Dodt•
City t nd wm 1!thlr dlt or bam•
PtfllYJtd unite 1 bul1tt Is rtmov1d
lrom tn 1r11 n11r hls sp!nt In Put
I ef !he thrt1·p1rt "Gold Tr1l11 ..
1pl&Od1. a am 1.1111h·IR 111, Thr11• Doi
Nl(ht, Mii 11dr ccmbo, 111 r unta,
ind 1 lln•·UP Ill ttrtlll vHl1lnt-
111:30 8 (I) .lnrl1 When H1mll\011 M1tcn
Jr. puts •rusi.rre en Arnf1'1 fritrid,
Vlto Col1rru10, to s1l1 hl1 prop1rty
to rn.1-• wty for C11nllnen1 1I
F11n11·1 ntw reseuc~ wlnf, Vite
pulls 111 ttt·ln·lht·hol1 out cl h\1
'1J11v1.
811J Newt
(I] M11Vlt: · "Htrrei Hotel" (homir)
'63 -lttt• st. .lohR, Cflrlstcph1r
let.
UI 0 lt1!11ll di DolllR Crlf
9 Movie: "llrt hMlllll Dtn't Cr('
Vlnt1nt Pritt, Shtldon Leon1rd. Jtck 111:45 f!J ,._
So!!, M1•1 M1lurkl, 1nd .l.lfttt ~ll(ltlhtld llltkt U llllO tu•t IP-11:00 .. ())Ill NM
pauanw. 0 gm Nnu
8 Mft11: "tn" (drtml)
.1t1nn1 MDre111, Vim• Ust
O CIJ l!l•m m T1 TtH IN TrllUI
8 MMll: (C) (2:\'iltr) "11le llcrtt
Uf1 .t Wtlttf Mltlr" (f111t•1¥) ''7
-Oinnr KIJI, Vi11lnl. Mt:ro. loris
ltnotf, Ann RlllhlrfOfd. A f!lffk
littlt m•n.' b11td1nd wilt. 6olnallc
1tt1thm1nts, d1J'(l111nu hhn•ll Ill·
to wond1tt11lly Mrtk: 1ltu1UW. C!J N111r1,
II T,_ ., C.•111ca& l1JI The C.rptnlt Vlt•
• n.i V1r1•1a• . m ~ ., rtl ltldll " u. Wttt ·~:t.t· R1I~ RltNrfttMI, Jefin Gitl[Lld. 11:15 aJ ....... I•••
Nt111 W1tltMurM, 1U DIJ\dJ Nlth·
'65 -
611 •tu lfl DrM Stottft J!ty akvt 11:111 8 IJ). MM Criff111
tl'lt lnttmlt~ 11 twl IU"I CJ) Me.h: "WllJ ltthn ti ll:nKt'"
•Mi.""* It 1 ~ llltJla. ('°'"ttlfl '6r.-£lb Sommer, Rltll·
tie& Nd Todd.
.,... 0 9kllta117 C.!Mfl
Cl Ma I O MMll: (t) "Wlndttltlf 101 Hirt'"
lite I""' ,.. ... (•tsttrn) '17-GllY M1ail:6n.
: ...... tQ ..._ ftl ...,..., m Mftlt: (t) "flbt•lll Dru1111'"
(wu!t111) '!1-G111 Cooper, M111
.lld~n. a:u•Jlf\ ............ : e1 n.r_......
Tue&cley
1• ••I ' o ' j ·-... ___ CO•.,J 'M-
NJfcM.,.,.0..._1l ........ ""'--(4'1· 'ft -~ ln!.Wr. Lt• ........... ~,.., •.
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r
m Nmt: "ltrrktdt" (1d't'llnt~re)
'n-Alkf Ft1'. Wlrflll l11!tr.
Later the same night Dic~day morning , on NBC's Road. Laguna Beach.
Cavett, also on ABC, is ''Today" show, there will be a
scheduled to have as his sole one·bour report on the \Vhite
guest, for 90 minutes, Shirley House confe rence on aging.
MacLaine. And that is • This will include a look at ex·
'King' Roles
particularly provocative about , i,sting attitudes toward aging HOLLYWOOD (UPI/
this scheduling is that Miss in England, France, Germany Gina Lollobrigida and John
MacLalne's new come d Y and~ Japan. flitoulder Brown will fill out the
the spotli~hl. A!lmission is $4 for adults
Sharon Heusin kveld presents and $3 for non·Chapman
a compelling and pitifully students. Tickets are availabfe
beautiful Laura. the crippled at 633·8821, Ext. 309.
series on ABC _ .ha~ .been On Friday e v e n in g. cast of "King. Queen, Knave ."
canceled after hn1sh1ng last meanwhile ABC's • · R 0 0 m starring David Niven and
quite regularly in the r~tings. 222" serie~. whlch Is set in a filming in Munich.
Viewers undoubtedly will be contemporary high schoo1 ,l,:;:=;;;;;===::::::::::::::::::;I
daughter 1\'hose excruciating
shy;ness ha s seemingly destin·
ed her for spinsterhood. Miss
Heusinkve ld conveys, often by
expression or manne r ism
Musical From Israel
•lone. lh: achi:_•mplin_ .. , of ~Wobbles on Broadway
!l~TilJ)l>!olit . By WILLIAM GLOVER Russia 200 years ago by l&ratl
fH(W,OllTll[ACH • Olt3·13!>0 f\1E\V YORK IAP) -"Only ben Eliezer.
HELD OVER Fools Are Sad," a prize·win· Dan Almagor arranged the
IN THI Gltl!AT TRADITION ning Israel musical. arrived traditional material, Yohanan
OF AMERICAN THRILLER~. from Tel Aviv at Broadway's Zarai and Gil Aldema pr()<
-
Ntkl Ovtr
"AMelltl(AN WILDERN!SS"
Edison Theater. It's no "Fid· vlded music which the pro-
dler on the Roof." gram noles Is derived from
Probably 11.rou~d a kibbutz Hassldic songs, although a few
campfire, the mtlange of Tin Pan Alley flourishes have
songs, proverbs and shaggy somehow snuck in. Three translaters have put most of rabbi stories done with en· the lyrics, all the dialogue into
thusiasm though no. great English.
talent by six y o u n g i s h Several aisle colleagues who
participants would be ef· departed at the mldpause
fective. Ethni~ indulgence 50 missed most of wha.t there
waa of better entertainment. insistent is self·defeallng. Worth waiting for was a
Called in the homeland plrable of why there is no ''Once There Was a Hassid," the 28 numbers salute the short road lo Jerusalem an y
smile·lhrough-tears philosophy more. and a • touching fable
of the Jewish sect founded in ~=~~;~ilve;~~~~~~ ;:~t i~
,, .... .,,.. ,,
"SKIN GAME"
ALSO -l•PI
Ywl 11")"1111.,.
t• "CATLOW"
presentations is employed by
Director Yossi Ysraely with
less success.
!WINNER OP 6 ACADEMY AWARDS!
' ~YB!A()l.RO PCMl ~
DAVID LEAN'S flLM
·-
Ofl!ORtS-.
DOCJOR ZHMGO
concerns itself with a sensitive
student who is accused of
being a homo.sexual when he
BALBOA
673-4048
plays a female lead In a o,. ..
Shakespearean production. 6 :4~
d • 7ff r. lalNa Alos on Fri a y, Cavett s lalka P•nlnaul•
show hu baseball great Willie' I'--"-----=
ti.1ays as its guest 'host, and
among those expccll'd to ap·
pear with him are his first
major league manager, Leo
Durocher. and the top Pitcher
of the Oakland Athletics, Vida
Blue .
Saturday n i g h t , CBS
· enormously popular "All in
the Family" series will find ils
.bigoted cent r a I character,
Archie Bunker, telling the na·
tion his views on President
Nixon's economic policy when
he is Interviewed by a network
television reporter. Accordi ng
to a network summary of the
plot, Archil!: Is thrilled over his
impending video debut, ''but a
broken television set takes the
wind out of his sails."
ALS0-111 Cal•r -Rated !GI"'
"THE REO TENT"
e STARTS WlDNlSDAY e
Now -10 Y•ltl later -Th•
trua 1t1ry •f tha blac~ht day
111 hl1t11ryl 20th C•11tury Far'•
111011w1M11tal praductlo11 -
~~-~.-... ~ ..............
~ . . , ..
Sunday night, CBS 'has an
hour documentary tribute to
the great Amer ican mo
director. John Ford. It is call·
ed "The American West ofl
John Ford." and those ap-
pearing on. the show include
J ohn \Vayne, Jimmy Slewarll Th• flt111 .... ry 1taw11ch, trw•
and Henry Fonda. The same ArMrlcan cltli111 mw1t ••• !
night , ABC's movie will be the
ad_aptatlon of M u r r a y
Schisgal's broadway comedy
hit. "Luv," starring Jack
Lemmon. Peter Falk and
Elaine May.
TIM y1or'1 m•st upr11arlou1
COMEDY SlNSATIC'>N
"THE 12 CHAIRS"
All Cotr -lt•tN !GI
• :
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
~~ .~auuru
~
-
2od 'fEAT\lRE
-CHARLETON HESTON IN
"THE OMEGA MAN"
•
-
•
WALT DISNEY'S
TH It.I . LIVING ~ vantsh ln ~~!!!''l .. ~,ratr~{!1
LAST WEEK· ENDS TUES.
CANOICE llfRG!t< · PflfR 60YLE
T.R..BASKIN
JM CUTITAMOlllG ArfRtCTICI
flJ Nriv HOW lOVfRS START AS ..•
"f' d" ~ nen s
·IR ll: ~~If, Oil' It ·o·A~D~ er
l ij;\·&;J.
TH•&T"ll "''°""',. ..... ret<•• _,,. ........ '•• I --1 .. ... -.... _,_,, .. ~ ... -·······
PU•· P!IC• londn r..
"T Hf HIRED HAN ''
<451
9't-ll~ t 'Ol-Oll• •llT Ml •01
11 1•11 • •••to• c•e•• • '" '""' •••• NOW THRU TUESDAY
P _J~'"tlll(l)m!!IVI~
"THE RED TENT"
"IHUSTROM" I
"AMfRl(AN WllDlRNISS"
J. }It ''"""'t IDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO
MISSION VIEJO . ll0.6,,0
WALT DISNEY'S .. "' uv1 B ~ v11111sn1n ESfRT:' Prairie llC•ltClll~ l_ , ..:;::-l;.
-~!Mlltil>t'I __ ,..
A..1, -ro1•, c.~ 1 ,.,,,,. tht C•• J"
·-·
·-
·;
;
DICK TRACY
MEET RITSEN.
NES~R,BOYS,
TUMBLEWEflS
By" Cliest•r Gould
ALL RM! l/OLUME$
WHEN YQU lDOK INSIO!! -
Ll'L ABNER
I THAT OOUJT FOR
TV. l'M 001 ~10&
L·L.ONEL'f, NIGHTS-
s.(LLY BANANAS
•
DOJT rnlNK TH&"r'
LIKED IT EITHER!."
TME"'t' FLUNG-M~"
AN' JT OUT TH'
WINDER-
11-1.'f
•
. ~
By Al Capp
; .,
By Tom K. Ryan
.WtL.L.1 l'ORON~1'\llNG-,
1ti1'Rf.'S A AATIIJ:R
ACtm .5\lOll.fl\'1£ OF
'
,. ' ..... ~ ... ,_ .. _,.
. ~OSW!:L.L S.
MUTI AND JEFF GORDO By Gus Arriola
FIGMENTS By Dale Hale
-. •
•
.;; "!GO/
THIS TfllJJG Asour APPJ..1:5/
MOON MULLINS · By Ferd Johnson
l'_LAIN JANE By Frank Baginski ,....,,,=,,,_. ANIMAL CRACKERS By Roger BoU.n
I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R. A POWER I
ACROSS
1 Part or a
basebal!er's
uniform
4 Curtail
sharl)ly
9 S\at1on
14 Miscellaneous
collectlon
IS Characteristic
rate of
activity
lb Actress --
Ryan
17 Canine dlseaS!
19 Russoall
~ssocl~tlon of
laborers
20 Stop up·
21 Bandleaded
--Brown
22 Rcman house-
hold de ity
23 Fal! heavily
24 Yields
26 Popnl~tion
center
211 Business ad·
v1ser; A~br.
31 MiTn in blue:
lnlour~l
32 Sile of the
Taj Mall~!
33 Occurrence
)b Fr iends
38 KOfean sol -
dier: lnfixmal
311 Upsrl
41 Chemk~I
com!J{'und
I ' l
"
17 18
20 .
" "
JJ " "
"
•l
" .,
' "
"
" "
" " '
43 Pi lm cockatoo
44 Separate
4b Wanted
urgently
47 Speak in a
vehement
manntr
49To a·:
Exactly
50 Trinitroto ·
luent : Abbr.
51 Canadian
~11-'lritt: Abbr ••
52 European
54 He died: la\ln
58 Ending: used
wit h t apllal
and soci al
60 "-·Havoc ":
194 3 play by
RlchMd
Kenward
bl Carritd
112 Rlqht-h and
page of a boolc
64 IJ<tul Island
mounlaln
116 Fiskerm<tn
117 Growing
outw~rd
t-8 Organic dtJ(.t
119 Lover~'
meet inq
70 Undergrou nd
tontlui t
71 Be Jn debt
DOWN
SMurd~y's Puzz lt Solved: • • • " ' " '
PEANUTS
3 Adhe;ive• ,m,-j;"t;W~it;hoot~•~lm~hi~----~ 4 1n-:MO) l n•m
ln rhyth 33 A1madillo r-;:;iill!;;i!E::'.":'.':::~':','.~~':;:·.{~'.::.,
5 lttm of m LL TAll:E YOU TO YOUI!:
land ing HA.VUJG ROOM AND l}!EN We'll JOIN e~ul pmtnt: manner Ali?IZIVED lN Mil.. -'PPLETOW roR DINt.IER!
lnfC!fmal 37 British wtarm MOl<ITli!EAL. HE •• ME'S THE PRODUC.E~
II Or adtquatt -40 Trouse1s: JEEP .l.t.ID A6SEV AllE MET AT •mourit Informal THE "IRPOlrr
7 Actelt rate: .tZ Ca~11ed again ~V Ell.IC.
2 words 45 Strlt~ cf .l.N D DRIVEN TO
B Cav a~y ... an related rotk THE MOTEL!
9 Giadu•t~ rormations 11f/,,,,Rr'Jt,,. 'j -pcu< p1att ~B Perso~~I '/ 11-;;&g
IO Piinting preft1tncts
mista,.es 53 Rule of an
11 For mer name
of Leninq1ad
12 Characterized
b~ uni ty
13 -Aviv
18 I.tale feline
24 Edible roots
25 Plrst·a ld
organization
55 "Good1"
Sh Kll'l'I of rtlative
57 Pester
5~ CIYll wrong
61 Former heavy-
MISS PEACH
devic es
I Future olflter '27 Comoosed as
weight tharnp
62 Return: Ahbr.
h3 Sufflt used
with mounta!IT
65 French st3~on
lllA ! TME S<MOO' .;urr
PU"MAS~D 'fMAT Wf
TMIS MOllNIN' ! 2 Mlsttd s0trt t an ~uthor -
' ' • 7 • :~-' " II " "
" "
"
. " "
" " . " " " ' " ' JI " ,. JI " " . •• PERKINS
" " -., ...
" .,
~· " . . .. i,.> "' ' , ,,
" " . ,.,
' " " " " .. " JI. _I_ )
I • " " '
67 ::; .. ''"""''"'" ,. --·~ n
-
• •
1<11>.l-lll EXPERT'S FEEl-
Ti</lr EXPosu~e TO
1'E'€\llSED VIO,EIJCE.
CA~ HME NO Af;NEf?..SE.
! EFFECT OIJ 'THE VIEllJEg.
I
,,.,,.., ·:
~ L'.::::::~~~::::::.J
' T~AT'5 CALLED ANSWERING •
WITHOUT ANSWERING II
By Harold Le Doux
'I • ! I ' I, ,.
THE GJRJ.S
I !
MISS 5PEIJt EI!:, AFTER VOUR TRIP, I n.!OU6MT
Ml ~ (AIZS.QN ., 'i'OU MIGHT &E Tl RED .. SO I \IE
'"'1'''"!1!1
)' •
ARli:AN(,ED FOR U5 "LL _/"'-...I
TO HAYE DINNER IN MY THAT
5lllTE •• WHEli!E WE CAN Will !E
BE MO!i1E !i1ELA'l:ED FINE, MR.
/tND INFOli:M.Al ! APPlETON!
ll~HOl.P,
THE
RAVAG!S
OF
TIME ...
By MeD
7
•
By Jahn Miles
"~.·
11Qh dear ? Tonighc 1o1·e meet in \he ballroom an dance nar
care5 all·ay to sensuous Latin rhythms ."
DENNIS THE MENACE
I
I
l
•
• '!Ts Lll(f AIAGIC.' we eESN EATIN' ON HIM FQR1)1~i\"
M'IS Alf 1l!E.11£~ AS MUCll ~ HIM IOV AS 7U~~
~WAS !'
•
I
'
~
••
\
AILY PllOT s . r.1onday, No~ember 2', 1971
Vour 1tf Ottey_
Qu estions Solved
• On Bu yi11g Stocl{s ;
'
" ' • By SYLVIA PORTER shquld help mod i f y ln-
• • flalionary· p.Sychotogy in the Let 's sas you have just be,en U.S. _ 81\ a~solute essential if
!>· placed in charge of your com-we afe to move back tO\\'ard
! pany's $10 million profit-shar~ •price stabtlity. Of cotirse, this
ing plan. The re t i r i n g "\\'lll take time, but ~·bile this ~nager had switched the en--is occurring. the b a si c
ire fund tQ s_bQt+·~rm,....l!.S. econonli 1orces at work in
. 'J!e~sury . obhgaltons a n d 1 o.ur economy should be lessen-s1m1l~r. h _1 g h c u t · g r a d e ing the· force or inflation itself .
'
..,~ secur1ttes Ul 1969. -="a superb_,. •
policy earning an aver~ge 612 · •• You: But e\.·en though J!H!24
to.7 ~rcent and protect1~g t~e may·~ a ye ar of .impressive
., pnnc.ipal. from the erosion 111 ectlnOmic reeovCry 1n thit U.S ...
,.: stock prices: But no~v Y?Ur wjlJ cor!xirate~~rofits recover
• fellow 'A'or kers are fidgeting as "impressively-too?
and want more action. You're: fli Dli..,,, 0 ' . ti l ;• in charge. . c , "f"· ur ne.'1 es ma. es . on corporate proflls say they
.. . . . --•P
,....
CAPRIC E OFFERS NEW 4-DOOR SEDAN _-Chewrolet's top of the line series,
the Capri~e. Js n~w offered as pilla.r sedan for those who prefer the more· rig-
id construction and lower. price o( th~ .'~ppst" sedan. ·
' ,
7
Financ_e .+i•-FAMr :LES·s Brief~ ~
•
ecopper
DALLA S Earth
Resources Co. Is modlfyin{
the mill at Its Nacimie nto cop-
per mine to r~over ·cop}>er
from oxi~e ores and increase
ore' p,ocessing caP,acity from
3,000·10'41000 to~ .. day.
' e:De~lopera • • . LOS ~N{;E~. -Pacific
.coast J>roperties '\.Jnc., a
developer bf shopping centers,
has announced it will expand
its . activities from Southern
California into-N:_o_~'t fr:e r n
California, Arizona and .New
l\1'.exic;o. "
e Tax Note •· ·
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_In quest of p_rofess1ona!_~elp, \\·ill. \Ve place the rise in pre-
yo u are having. a busiryess • tax corporate profits fro1n
•, JunchC?n meeting "' 1.t h . 1~1 to 1972 at 1514 percent to .... Jff g h G HA RR I S .8 UR G , ·pa . F_reder1c~ Frank, managing a total of $S4 billio n and the Aii . . · e ar -The .commonwealth of
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;, director 111 charge of research rise in arter-tax corporate pro-_,, ~... Pennsylvania Wednesd!y sold
: for Lehman bros., Inc .. and fits at 19 percent to a total of ,, $2511 million worth .of .195-day .• .---------., ,....,,.--------:i
• Robert A. McCabe. also a $5' billion. We also see the n roducti·o Vnd' er' Way notes at.an average 'annual in· partn_e~ or ·~e world famous. -gross national product up 'C ll 1 ~ . ' terest cost of 2.925 Percent to
prest1.g1ous investment ban~-more than 9 percent \Vith con-a syndicate Jed .by Morgan
1ng. firm . Both men ar~sumer.-pi:ices...up abbut~J per-__ ___ _ , -~ __ Guaranty 'Trust ·eo. and
their late 30s. cent. several other group$.
Yo"' Wha t sho uld I do wilh . l'rnnk ' The dep,.cialion On New Cap' rice Model • Postpone d !.' the $10 million? charge against earnings 1vill '--__ t. Frank : Put 90 _ percent in ff be at record levels so that NEW YORK -'Teleprompt-
"· common stocks. NO\\'. cash-1101v totals will be cquqlly er Corp. again p 0 s •p 0 n e d !· · · -·1h r bl By CARL CARSTE NSEN interior courtesy lights, and Interior choices .of the new • ..., .~ impressive -1r1 avora e di d 1 1 ed . 1 d h t t s an.nu&') mee ting You: ln tlii s confusion?· 90 implications for i n1 pro v e d 01 1111 01111 P'llot si.n carpete ower oor pane s. our-door s an inc u e t ree
\ ~· percenl'. "'hi•'. b I h d I Caprice is available in 15 brocade cloth and vinyl com· Wednesday until Nov. 30 to •.' a anee s eets an esser Chevrolet is adding a "post" give shareholders more time .:. Frank: Because the inherent reliance on borro\ving in the 4-door sedan to its Caprice colors. 6 two-tones and 5 col-·binations plus a custom knit to •ons1'der the slate of can-
open nlarkeL Very l·mpoi·lant ors of Chevrolet's new "wet-nylon and vinyl interior in t-' ;. strength of underl yi n g · · • series and production is ·~ ·didStes for the board. A suit economic forces in the U.S. loo. is that many corp&rat ions already under way on the new look" xinyl roof cover, either black or green. has been filed by a dissident
supports the current level of continue committed to curb modeJ. shareholder to po~ae the
. stock prices as very labor costs. Robert Lund, ch e v r o J et R • p · ·J s •n meeting liideflnitely pending
-. reasonable by most standards. You· But ,vhat"abotJt the 10_ general sales manager. said -. uss1an eop e . t1 the formahon of -a rival slate
, And because we think that , in ternahonal monetary !iystern? !he newest ·.Caprice "offers 1 of candidates Jack Kent ' coming months. a much more Th t' h , ton-nf-the-hne luxury to the Cooke the Sl"Wlrts promoter
t ti . tt t d 11 a s 1n c aos now. Y ~ • .-• =----" cons rue ve a 1 u e w 1 • buyer. who -prefers the r1g1d L • • s d d and a large stockholder, is
develop about ou economic Frank. A solution is so Construction and lower price agg1ng ·}fi tan ar S preparing a proty fight. The expa~s:on .. how long the ex-n~cessary that we are con· of a pillar body sed~n." . d1 ss1dent shar:e~older suit
.-pallS!on will last and to what v1nced a workable new system It h 0. t h'""· -~-cha:rg-e<t'trvtn~l<ahlt:w -
degree corporate profits "'111 '"'ll be designed _.In .c_orn ing amfln~~a~~~c~u~~:~; ~~~6 . If YQY were Ivan and Anna goods (8.3 ~rcent) exceeded resigned a·s Teleproffi~er
respond. mont~s and it v.111 finance Lund said are "shoWini one Of in Moscow on ~his, e!he ~4th for ~he first time the o~tput of chairman following his con-
McCabe Beca.use a new in-gro,v1ng trade aUJong all n;i~ fhc st rong'est sales gains in year of the Russian r~olut1~n . ca~1tal goods an~ this ~ew victlon-in a Johnstown, Pa ..
-terval of relative prosperity tlons. . . ' -, the industry -jj 64 .percent ~ow v.·ould our s~andard of hv-policy ha~ cont1nu~ s1n~e cable television scandal , still
-. will be v.•idespread in 1972. The ·-11-lcCabe. Vi e can t.docun1eot 1 1 st J ,, 1ng compare with that of a them. 1971 s economic plan 1s is recei ving hls full pay
: · recessionary forces 1n several this opti mism, adrriittedly , bt1t over sacs a >: • r-. generation ago? And liow directed, among other things, ·
;·. European countries will mar ~he altcrna t1ve to agreement , Lun~ said the Caprice, ~vould it compare with the Jiv-to increasing "the production • Rtibbe p •
;,: the U.S. prosperity 0 n 1 y 1s a prolo nged period of world v.hich in Nove_mber _has passed 1ng standard of. say, John and of consumer goods 1n wide r Cl'V ltlg
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t------. .r.~ irto---te-tully-in'll!sted-1n-pohheally.-unacee-pl.able to any--lLs...19:&5.Jnltoductio.n'.Jlas....do~ ou would ~ ·t;ettetllff tlfan-h6using;-hospitals:-s·c h·o·o I s Uing Isfaffir:Riilroad :::,n'-~e"'w-11-----'-----, · k of the I d' g I · Iha an outsta nding JOb f o r . ., ' _
:4 -modestly. Our general advice def!~tion That"s even 1nore ~he I million sales figure since r-.1ary, in New~ork City? demand, food products .•. . AK R 0 N Ohio _ The
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..___ stoc. s , ca in coun 1 ies n 1n past genera ions in Russia • · · York ·is prepa ·ng t : • compromise and agreement. Chevrolet by keeping O\\'ne r r1 o pave ~ -You . The cross-currents are loyalty al a neiv high for the -but Your s andards would Yet, the usual boasts of about a half-mile of crossings
· hard to understand . I caJll.._r You. If I give y0u the $10 divis ion. "Caprice has he.con~e be much .lo 1er than.,... your 8?v1et leaders on the-a~-with rubber under a federal
help feeling anxious and million to invest. ivhat sor t of a synonym for peak luxury in le~ders claim J:and you would n1versa;1es of the Bolsfiev1k grant. The order for 25 rubber
unsure _ parti.cularly since stocks ivi!J you put !t into? a popularly price car," Lund still be s~ffer~g. from acute revolution are not confirmed crossi ng pavfmen~ is the
price-incomes policies have Frank and J\JcCabe: Com· said. ~horlage.s 1n !ht fields of hous· by the facts. largest single such order ever l
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failed Sooner or later in ever panics ln cohsumcr related "0\'Cr the yc<'lrS. Caprice i_ng, ba sic, food ' popular ~on-Housing for Ivan .. remains obtained by Goodyear Tire &
Atlantic country \\'hich has f1'elds s11ch as reta·11 cl1ai"s has been given gFeater ex-su mer goods~ automobiles, dreadfully cramped and, says Rubber Co. Goodyear has pa v-1 · · · · · " ' 1na1·or applian~s As for the ' · h · · c4 more than 800-crossings tried them tn the past 30 consumer services consuiner terior and in t e r 1 o r in-. . · Nash, Soviet ous1ng 1 s years. And after the policies finance, con$umer' m<'lrketing dividuali ty fron1 our other comparison th John .and "notorious for its ~arcity, with the special material in
have become ineffective, research• 'money se nsitive regul ar ca1·s. Closely. turned to Ma r_y r an a .v er age poor quality of construction, recent years. The rubber,
wages an d prices have soared. CQmpani~S. such as rea.\ estate today's consurner en1phasis u .. s. "'ork~r, en in suc~.a and problems of , main-which lasts about 20 years,
Frank: Phase If controls · inVestmeiit 1rusts. upon maximum Value for his high-cost city as New York:, is tenance." Ivan and Anna greatly reduces jolting and
---.-automotive dollar. Caprice is better off than van and Anna waste enormous amounts or noise for auto traffic.
Adveni,emenr at trac tin g luxury-mi nded in f\1osco w. •time simply standing in
Denture Invention
forms :in cla~tic m<'mhranc l hat
hel[IS ahcnrh 1he Ehoc~s of bil111g
illlfl rhc" mii.
buyers from higher priced car The position or the Soviet queues to buy goods in
lines .. Th is fs a strong factor in consumer is unquestionably Russian stores, and as
its sales increase." improving. To ! illustrate; _in recently aL September 1970,
Operations Cut
NEW YORK Phelps
For Peoplr. with
''Uppers" and •1Lowers''
'The nearest th ing to ha\'i:tl\ your
own tcelh is po.,01hle now with a
; pla~tic cream diso:i'l~'ry th~1 ac1u-
:ally holds both "uppers· 311d
"lowers" as never t-ri•,re !lO!'"hk.
\\"1th F1".,,nra \"T nl·1·1y <lc1\l11rc
v.1·<•f<·rs may c:•l. ,'11r~>l;. l:iu1:h. "ith
li ll lc worry of dtn 1 urc,; ,·nm 11'1: '°' • <'.
One ;ippl1c;;iL1r.r1 rn:1y l;"t Irr
hours. ])t'll\\lrco lh~l f1L ore' -<'T'·
t1al tn hf';1lih. 8cc your r!crl »t
rcp:ulnrly. G~ t ~;1<y,-t•i-u'\Cl • l:\OLJl:'.:O T
Denture Adhc>11e Cream.
The ne11: Ca prlce model 1!123, at the + pre-war of Pravda reported a ste ady
j(lins ' the Caprice cot1pe and \vorktime to buy a weekly sup-stream of complaints from its
Caprice sport seda n, both ·ply of the seven essential readers about the absence in
hardlops. and the Caprite-foods for a family of four stores of glassware and
styled KingS\\'Ood Est.?J.e sta-. persons, <'ICtording to Edmund chinaware, knives and forks,
lion \Vagon a:<> Chevroiet's top-Nash, economist in the blankets, bath towels, etc.
of-the-line models. Division of Foreign Labor If lvan is lucky enough _to
Dodge Corp. announced Mon-
'day it will cut back production
from six days a week tO five
days at its Blsbee, Ariz. cop-
per mines at once. Operations
of the concentrator will be cut
to five and a half days from
six. Phelps Dodge said the
domestic copper s m e 1 t i n g
capacity is pre s e·ntl y in·
adequate lo the country's
needs and is forc ing reductiof!.
in mining of dOmestic copper.
The reduction in smelting
operations results from what
the c ompa ny ca ll e d
"unrealistic air quality regula-
tions" in several copper pro-
ducing states.
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It'' a di&001'C!Y callui 1'1:\nu~ ~,11'
!or "aaily home use tU.S. P;;i t.
~3.003.98.8) and •l has rc,·oit1-
t1onizcd denture "K·canni;. f1~0nl:-'T
HOW TO MAKI
$MONEY $
IN APARTMEN TS
II ~W f 1 i{Jt ~ ~ i I! !Ii ill iJ ~
TAX SHELT ER and
INCOME BEN EFITS
FACT OR FICTION?
• NOV. 30 • 7:30 P.M, MARINA HIGH SCHOOL, H.B.
•DEC. I "7:30 P.M.COSTA M£S4 HIGH SCHOOL
• DEC. 2 ° 7:30 P. M. CORONA DEL MAR H. 5.
" SPARLING INvESTMENT
Corporation
A~~;'-21.92 Dupont Dr ive
... , '-Irvine , Calif, 92664 ~·~~~~~~~~~·~~~~8~3~3~·3~5~A=4~
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Bud Bowen ...
O.t fto• l•a•• lllan"9". ••• ""' ..,. .... '"°' .... c .. te•'•• 'too•• ...... 1., ,.1r• ••(f~ll IM1n:tona• .. \IQ<o ~"'''"'·
0..... ~r oocl 11ltk "' ,.., ••* !lEl
IOOICllT OI tall I•~ •Ma1 el . , •
5'0-5630
2626 HA~IO• I LYD., CO$TA MESA• S40-S630 ~
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lt.s .Caprice features include
e special grille. side n1oldings,
\~heel covers. rea r fender
skirts and a 400 cubic inch V-8
f'ngin e. Turbo Hydra-mat ic
I r ansmission variable-ratio
powe r steering and power
.disc-drum brakes are sta n-
Conditions. U.S. Bureau of get hjs namt:: on a restricted
Labor Statistics. By mid-1970, waiting list for the purchase of
. that required worktime was a car. he'll wait two to four
down Slightly to 20 hours -years before he gets it. Meats
despite the consumcr·s retreat ·and vegetables are scarce.
during the depression 1930s SerVices across the bQard are
and the devastating war years inadequate.
in the 1940s. As for comparisons with us,
dard. Since 1954, Soviet 1vage-price if you were Ivan. you'd have
h polic y has been designed to to work much longer than T e ne\v Caprice sedan in-t F terior includes full -foam front keep prices relatWely stable John for things you wan . or
seat \l'ith fold·dO\\•n center 1\•hile providing for an averr.~e potatoes, twice as long : for
f I annual i11crcase in wages of white bread. 3 times: for beef, armrest, oam-cus iioncd rea r seat, extra sound deadening about 5 percent. 31h times: for eggs, 71h tiJ'!leS;
body insultation. grained ac-ln 1968, according to plan. for clothing, 6 to 10 limes.
cents on instrument panels Soviet annual rate of growth You'd get some offset in free
<1nd doors, electric clock and In thel ou't put of consumer services -but not much. !------------------'------Here's the fascinating tale of
Ivan and John in a simple
comparison of worktime to
buy equivalent things :
•
ITEM WORK TIME
MGlCew H-Y•r1t
llrPld lb. 11 min, l.' min.
PotatDl!s lb. l .t min. 2.1 min.
llMf lb, 12.1 min. 11.7 m!n,
11u111r "· ua min. 16.• min,
Su var " 'i!.3 mi11. 2.5 min.
Miil '" 1' min. l .I mtn,
Eg!IS dclf. n,1 m111. 1N min.
Mln'I 1hlr! 11,• 11r1. 1. nr1.
Man's sul! 151 hfl. 26.8 h.,.
M 1n'1 1hoe1 Jl hn • l'.Q hrt.
Woman's dreH •2 hrs. .S,I hrs.
Wom&n's 11'0e1 :ll nrs. J.J hrs. ..... ""' 2.t ""· 11.l min.
Soa• 16,l m!n. 2.G min.
(l91rette1 IJ,1 min, l .J min.
VDd~I l!tlh ,,, hri. 1.311 hrs.
Bank Head
Appojnted
IHfo Ser ctees
NEW YORK -Western
Union Corp. announced Mon-
da y it is goi ng into in-
formation services for the
w a r_e hou s in g industry~
Western Union has agreed to
buy for Stock Co mputer
Logistics Corp. of Chicago
which is ~ngaged in special
computer s e r' v i c e s 'for
ware houses. . ...
• llJlte•IJ Buy
NEW YORK -· Chairman
M. H. Blinken of Mite Corp .
and his sons, ·non.aid, Robert
and Alan, said they plan to
buy about 75,000 additional
shares or Mite. or · about 1.5
percent of the outstanding
stock on the open market. The
Blinkens presently own Qr con-
trol 15 percent of the com·
pany.
A r•••!I t:o11trn("f
Thomas J. \Vinget, president BRISTOL. Pa. _ Thiokol or Miss ion Bank. has an-
lleRvy T11ba'l
.\n in&pci:tor at the Ilorg·\Varner Cor~oration In r11 .. '''on't ~ct-any bass noleS .out of this rpont!er.
'It's a· cast iron hotlSi ng fo r a single ·stage centr1 fu-
.1tal compressor used in -~_if conditioning systems.
\\'histler ts shO"'ll checking-: lhe inside dia1nctcrs.
·-"
nounced .the appoin tment of Chen1ical Corp. has \von a
Warren F. Morgan. of Leisure $10.7 million ·'i!adition to an
Wol11d as liaison offiCCr for the Army cont ract for oper~t~on ~~ 0 r g "' n will be res-of the L<inghorn Ammun1t1on
pon!!ible for c u s t 0 m e T • -P.laot at Mar§halli T~ •.
public relations in the bank'.'s '
offices in Laguna Beach and in ._No A tten.dant
El Toro, serving as Mission
Bank's personal customer
representative and com·
merclal accoun t contact.
A n1cmber of the Laguna
Jlills Rota't'y Club and Sad-
dleback Coordinating Council,
he also presently serves on the
boaid of directors for the
Services For The "Blind or
Ora,nge Co\lnty iiiid is assisting
in forming-~ Shrine Cllib at
Leisure World.
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LAS VEGAS, Nev . -Xerox
Co. said at a news conference
Tuesday it will introduce al
the fall joint computer con·
ference a device to enable all
Xerox Telecojjicr ta"Csiffii1£
machines to transmit anr
receive do c ument ~ b~
telephone without the help 01
an attendant. T™' device wll t>e on the market some, tlme Ir
th e first quarter or 1972 .
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NATHAN MILLER RALPH C. DEANS "
Think You Don't
.Know Them? .· .
You probaby do n't rec ognize a single name :Or·
face in this group and yet, if you're one of fhlt'
DAILY.PILOT'S very well informed editoria l page
rea ders! it is this talented team of writers wh~c~
helps you le~p informed. They write t he Edito~i
al Resea rch Reports . Though their own names
do n't appear on the articles which are publish~d;
unde r the Ed itorial Research Reports headir:i9;.,
these are the real pros ~ diggers who go aft!r.-·
all the. bachound fact's which put today's top•
iss ues intd perspective -without thought ·Of '
seeki.ng the fame tha t goes with the name wh~n
you're a national columnist.
They;re Your
INFORMERS
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Yes, they coul d be your ''informers." It's featur~s·
like Editorial · Research Reports ·which make t.ha
DAILY PI LQT muc h more than just the mo.if'
importa nt hon1etOwn newspaper ava ilable ··fa .
residents along the Orange Coast. The DAILY,
PILOT is the total package. It makes whate~or .
ha'"ppens in the world "loc~I news" and delive~s
it daily right lo your home . Let this team of dedi: • cited "informers" help you keep inlorme"d ~ Re•d,
Ed itorial Research 'Reporfs on the editorial pa g~·
-and all the other informative special featurei
in other parts of ihe
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--~it~=r.a;c:ir~:iesie:t-=~~m;a:.~~~~~~-'B#/CHIRBB
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'Tis The-Season ..
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r"'"";""""----~------------------... I . I Watch For Special Sections Filled
i . $ I With Early Christmas -Goodies · In
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The
~·" .
Reason
in fact, here are S good reasons for shopping early:
.
· 7. Stretching _qui the Christmas shopping season gives retailers o cha nee
Jo function more efficiently. When clerks ore less harried, shopping
is more pleasant for everyone .
2. Many retailers offer their really special "specials" early in the season
to encourage the public to shop early and to help alleviate the loat-
minute "panic" buying. )·
3. Just in case your favorite Christ mas gift mer ch on t hos underesti-
mated your enthusiasm for the season, a longer period of shopping
gives him a chance to re-order popular items so he doesn't have to
disappoint shoppers later in the season .
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4. When you toke more days to shop you con do . the job more thor~
oughly, visit more stores, compare prices and quality ond1 .be more
satisfied with the gifts you finol ly decide to buy .
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5. And there's no secret about it, the Christmas shopping •season is the
biggest ·sales p~riod of , lhe yeor for most retailers. Su/;! port local
merchants now and you '// hel!J them make enough profit to keep
their prices reasonable all year long. (And prices will never be more .. .
reosonab/e than they are now.)
T hi8mesaage preaented as-a Publicf;ervice on behalf-r1r0Tfffrienil,fand your~,
the' reUiil merchants of the Orange Coast Area., by th~ .
, .. *~~:1.aa:;lJ!!aM~a*a~*a~~aawr.-:J.11::1,1.'iiH!.W!.':Hl.';;:li.'af.a'iHt/:Hl.a*~:*a~M:M:. "" ~-. ~ .... ~
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12 -DAIL'l-PILOT Mondu, Novtmbtr 29, 11)71 \ \_
·--• • ... • ,, • . -... '..,, -'._ ' ·":·t fronl MarllloFW!-~ .. ~:: 1
---'i.;, • ~. ~-~r~-· ~i.! _:__---'------
.1~ Americ,a'S t~;i•~mJt~ smqkers~-
U.S. Roads ...
. Will Get
'New Signs •. -
WASHINGTON (AP) -. L
There's a new look cbming ln llJI
highway and street traffic L
signs and pavement markings
throughouLlhe-Uni~d' States_,.
The natitln is.,thanging over
gradually to an international· ~
type' sfstem of traffic-control 1
deviCes which emphasizes pie·
t!_J.fes and symbolic signs more
than written messages.
The Federal -·Highway
Administration says states
and ioCai communities have
until 1973 to meet the new
standards for pavement mark·
.. ing, until 1975 for signs, and
until 1977 for signals.
· t alJ sjgns,.Willbe_ chang·
...ed., says l?HA Administrator
F. C. Tu~ner. Many' that have
pro ven effective in the past, or
"
· that contun messages difficult -
to symbolize, will be retained. .. /
As-the new·symbol signs are ~ -
introduced, companion ~d·
messages also will be used un-
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LIGHTS l LOWEREO TARl>-NIGOTtN E ., I-"<:!:..-'"\
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customed tO them. \ '1-• " .... ,~ :J.i. til the -publiC beComes ac-\ ?" • t: ~~-1Tlfl'
·"While symbolic signs are '\', ..,iflg;· Jhi,Stlii@li' , _ . y' df11n
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not entirely new -curve and • ."'"'~ smoking Is tn;tr , • -·~:..:~ ... ~o~~~~~~~m~a~~~~1-~~~~;;;;;;~~-;~;;;~~~~~-=~-e~~~~~~~~~~-:::;~!-:~!!:~:··~11~·~;,·;·~;~~·-~·...,._....;~-~-~-~··~ ..... ~..........--~-~~~ -~.~~~:......~~~~-:-_:__~===--~~~~~~~~:__~___c,-,,;~I bols-have several adY~ages 1r ~ ---•
over wor messages, ' mer
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said. :
"They provide almost in-
stant communication with' the
driver, since ,theY,:, can be
... und~rstood at a glance without
having to 'read ... Familiari-
ty with the symbolic signs will
help Americans t r a v e I i n g
-. -abroad, as well as foreign
visitors to the United States." • Turner added that while the
: United States is m o v 1 n g
toward n1ore ·of the 'rfn.
ternational-tYJJe signs, Eiircc
pean nations have agreed to
adopt the familiar U.S. red-
and-white stop !';ign.
Colors are particularly im·
portant in the neW system:
Red indicates stdp or ·a pro-
hibition. Green shows that
movement is permitted (lr
gives directional guidance.
Blue is for signs 'leading to
motorist services, o r a n g e
warns of construction or
maintenance work and brown I
provides public;recreation and
scenic guidance. .
Yellow -indicates a general
warning. Black on white iS us-
ed for regulatory signs, such
as those for speed limits.
Shapes of signs also are
&ignifiC<int. ·
_ __ .. D ~ a m n d -shaped signs
s1gn1fy warning. Vertical
recta ular signs provide a
~ra regula tion, w hi I e
izont!t rectangular signs
contain guidance infonnation.
An octagon means stop, an
Inverted triangle means yield,
a pennant means no passing,
and a pentagon shows the
presence of a school.
Yellow pa•·ement markings
are to be used much m or e
than in the past. _
Yellow lines delineate"· a
separation of traffic flow in
opposing directions. T h e
.1 center line on two-way
roadways will be dashed
yellow to differentiate from
the dashed white liiies used on
multiple one-way roadWftys, to
-warn drivers leaving one-way
roads that traffic will be op-
posing them to the left of the
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-Celts Loom
As Laker~'° _
15th Victims
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jerry West
held scoreless in the f!"St period, keyed ~
second period explosion \\'ilh 19 points·
and helped lift his Los Angeles takers to
their~ 14th consecutive victory Sunday
nigh a l:Ja..121 rout of Seattle Ui a Na·
tiona BasketbaU Association gam,e. •
The takers take tonight and Tuesday
()ff be;Core teslin& the Celtics in Boston on
Wedn!sday. Seattle, which got 29 points
from Haywood, tackJes the Knick! ui
New York Tuesday. •
· The Lakers, st.ill unbeaten in 18 games
in which West has played trailed 40-34
with 9:19 to play in the Second period
when th.e 6-foot-2 guard began his shoW
by making two steals and scoring easy
breakaway baskets.
By the time the period was over, 4$
Angeles had out..scored the SuperSonics
3'-19. ang led 73-59.
Seattle hit the first three baskets of the
Uµr<J, period, then Wert and Happy
H;i,lrston directed the Lakers on a 37-14
shooUng sp~ and with l lri minutes gone
in the fourth · period, the Laker subs
began filtering in. Los Angeles is now 20-
3.
West scored 15 points for Los Angeles
and Wilt Chamberlliin, swatting do w 11
shots at will, added 21. Reserve Pat
Rile'y, filling in for ailing Jim MCMillian.
added 20. McMilllan has the flu and did
not play.
The Sonics, now lf.9, were led by
Spencer Haywood with 29 points.
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.• -• LOS ANGF;LES <~r'> r.•"That's odd,"
said John \Vooden of his UCLA Bruins'
No. 1 preseason ranking among the na· ·
tion's college b;sketball teams.
"They must be loqking ·at._ our '}>ast
record," said Wooden or The Associated
Press ,poll. Because the Bruins arc
rebuilding;-""" W<dlen didn't expect his
team 's lop billing. •
"l'm very surpris~ al that since we
only have one returning starter.'' 'said
Wooden, referring to.Senior guard Henry
Bibby.
UCLA received 11 fir st-place voles and
. 650 pointii from the panel or 36
sportswriters and sportscasters.
Woodfn Is accustomed to the No. l
rating. His teams have won the national
championship seven of the last eight
seasons, including an unprecedented five
'-consecutive titles through last season.
'The Inexperienced but talented Bruins
are rated ahead of North C_arolina,
Southern California, Maiquctte. and Ohio
State.
Wooden said he wouldn't name a No. t
team but if he did "it would be one of
several. J think there's going to be a
Odd
Wood~n said, between Greg Lee, a 6-4\ii
sophomore, and Tomm·y Curtis, a 6-11
junior.
"You ~ever c141 be quite lhal sure th~t
sophomores are going to 'come through.I'
\Vooden .said. ")Ve're soiyoung •••• we
may play wittl moi:e emo~on than nasOll
... we have the pe norinel to at times to
be very good.·•
.SJS Given
Bid Over
Long Beaclt-
San Jose state, with just a 5-5-1 record,
was voted into the Dec. IS Pasadena
Bowl .for a game against Missouri Valley
Conference representative M e mph I s
State. The vole was not unanimous but
nu1nber or good teams. "I certainly feel , as I look down the wasn't announced.
list, that those teams are all very fine." The announcemeot was somew~at .or a
'!be 14 victories in a row tied a club
mark;set 21 years ago in Minneapolis and
brought the Lakers to within six straight
triumphs of the NBA record of 20
established by Milwaukee last year.
GREEN BAY1S· DOUG HART TIPS~ PASS AWAY FROM NEW ORLEANS' DAVE PARKS.
New Orle•n• Went on to Notch • 29-21 ·Victory Over the-P .. ckers.
North Carolina. USC, ?t.1arquette, Ohio surprise because Cal State (Long Beach),
State -the y all have good groups of \\'as the Pacific Coast A4tleJjc Con·
returning players. said Wooden . UCLA and sixth-ranked J\.faryland, he said, are ference -champion with a S.1 mark. San
unproven . Jose's Spartans wound up +1 but held a
Sl!AnLI LOS ANGELES
G,T Ol"T
"fl'{WQOd 1 U·ll 2' "lley 10 0-0 20
Cllment. l 0-0 6 1-!llrtlon S 1-t 11 For OU Cage Tea•
Smlth I 1-t 2• (:h1mbt-rllln t w 21
Snyd1r 1 '-' 11 Coodrltll S 7.7 17 Wllk1n1 6 1·1 lJ W11I 10 $.6 2S -Wlnlllld ( 2·• 10 RObllllOll I ).( lt T
Cron 2 •5 I Ellll J 0-0 JO
Brown ' 1·2 • Cl\f'ID"I t 1·2 J l"ora 1 2·7 ' T••l>P l 1.1 r-.,, Once-mild CdM Whiz . .
Tot1l1 42 l7·"5 111 Tot1l1 $! 7f.37 Ull
SHUii l3 26 20 a -111
LOI All!ltl~ 2t ~ l7 21 -Ill
Foul• ovl -SHtlll, cr .... 1111.
Talll fout1 -$Httlt 24, l.M Afl!lll" 23,
TKtl11lc1!1 -Lot All!ltlft, C!NCll Shrtm1n.
"ltendafl(I -15,J«. ~as Turned-Into Tiger
Collapse-Spms·--...mNORMANbe--' ~--Those or you who College) .. vital lo his career. "Coach ·-re111em . ' ..-ouu Yule-----as-a-Corona ~I-Bloom-didn!t-give-up-on-me-and-h&--
Mar Hi~h basketball player probably helpeil.Duild ·my confidence. He taught
lrwl·n to wm· ... recall him as a tall, good looking me that yoo don't have to be a su~r star youngster who would rather switch than to be a winner." ·
• • fight. There have been bright spots for John
That is, he was simply too nice a guy -, durin~ hi~ tenure al Ol!. Oklahoma won
H 0 la o . to enjoy knocking people on their the Big Eight tourney title one year and erJ ge pen backsides or to return the favor when be· has twice aoae to the National Invitation
got. roughed up in i bruising physical Tournament at Madison Square Garden. match. It wu tbe latter that provided hia most
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) -
"WlnnJng ls everythlna. 'lbat'a what
athletics is all about."
Young Hale Irwin wu -, forth
Sunday after ocorlng his f1nt pn> Tl<tory,
Hi:,.had just beaten a stellar tM!!d that ln--
clu<l.ed Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and
Lee Trevino to take the Herita1e Golf
Classic. _.
"If a person hasn't tasted victory and
defeat, or maybe I should. s•y defeat and
victory in that order, they just doo't
know what it's all about.
"I've been close enough to win before
and didn 't, so I know."
Irwin, a one-time football star at
Colorado and a former national collegiate
gol[ champion, admitted that the
memory of an latb·hole collapse at the
Los Angeles Open al.most two yean ago
haunted him as he came to the final bole
on the tough Harbour Town goll links
wilh a one -stroke lead.
He ·bogeyed the 18th at Los Angeles to
fall into a tie wilh BillY Casper and lost
in a playoff. •·
"I told myself if I ever got in that posi-
tion again, I wouldn't do the same thing
...... again -and 1 didrQ."
Irwin made a cruci al par on tht 458-
yard par fou'r hole and preserved a one·
stroke margin over Bob Lunn for the
$22,000 first prize.
Ffnll 1cor .. Ind A'IDl>IY wlnnfl'lfl' Sllnd1'( In thf H1rlt1r;ie Galt Cl1111c: H•I• 1rwr11, sn.aoo 61-7J..61-70-47'
Bob Lunn. 112,$00 11 .... 11·7~2'0 J ICk Nlcltlll/S• 116511 11 ..... i.70--,.\
Frink llHrCI, USU mi 1-61-n Arnokl '•lmer, M!l:ID 1""'1~2U
DHM ll1m1n, W'i!JJ >·»it,._,,, G-s19 KmlcllOll, S7J ...,._ .. 11-,_1
MIC Mel~. J 7l-47· 11-"WJ
0.ff Mlii!IT t2'1'CI 7 .. lll>J1.10-HI L&rr'( ZI If", OMO 1"46-1•11-211 Homero nc.tt, SUIO 72.-1)., ... 1'0-2"
..
Now, four years later, John Yu1e ls stlll
1 tall, good ·l-OOklng du1p.
B\lt that's where the similarity to the
Yule you remember runs out.
He's a aeniof!:.1tarter on·tbe University
eLllOI WMITa
--"-· WHITE
WASH ·.--.....----
of Oklahoma team and will be earning his
third varsity letter when the 19'11-7% cam-
paign concludes.
At 6-311, 220 pounds, Yule lw the size to handle himself on the hardwoods. ·And
his court disposition has changed,
although he's the same nice guy off,the
field of action .
"I've had a broken hand ~nd got seven
stitches in my nose since I came to OU,"
he says. "But I've dealt out about 30
stitches," he says. ,
Oklahoma -coach John McLeod ill
honest in his ·appraisal for Yule:
"John probably has less potentiatthan
anyone on the team. But he 's a winner
and that counts a lot. We'd like to'lhive
more John Yules on the team.
0 He's not a great offensive threat but
be clears the boards well and jets the
fast break started. He also passes well."
The it-year-old Yule says he probably
has less potenti;l.I than anyone on the
team but he enjOys the game and will
spend at least one more year with it.
He is due to return next season as a
graduate assistant coach with the
freshmen.
"John has made trem~ndous im-
provement or his knowledge of the
game," McLeod points out. "Right nt>\T
he's in a bit of a slump rebounding -
he's not gettiog food position. But that's
bappene<f before. '
Yule cites the coaching of Corona dei
Mar's Bill Bloom (nqw al El Camlno
Cheap Touchdowns?
Bryant, Jordan Clash
. BIRMINGHAM, :-Oa. (AP) .:._ Coaches PauJ. "Bear" Bryant or Ala-
banla and Ralph 'Shug'' Jordan .or Auburp engaged in 1 verbal exchange
Sunday over ''cheap touchdowns." .
Bryant had the first word when he said that 1ie felt that to beat ~Auburn last Saturday Alabama would bave Ill ·keep from giving "!be T!ger'I
"any cheap touchdowns like two they got on Georgia and like tbeygol on
\ us last year.'' •
After the 31-7 Alabama victory, Bryant said: "\Ve took away those
easy things th&y've been getting." _
. . An ho~r aft~r ~ryant's comments Sund8y, Jordan said on h' tele·
vision-show: I don t like the expression 'cheap touchdowns' but the term
.has been used before so I have to say that all but one o(_ Alabama's touch·
,downs were cheap. .
"But any(ime. someone gets a touchdown, S'omeone has been doing
somet~ing vtell and it's not cheap.'' • -~ordan noted that only one of' Alabama's touchdowns CaJTle alter a
long drive arid that the others followed turnovers deep in Auburn-t,rritory.
/ . -
JDemorable moments.
As a aopbomore be took the floor
against Louilville In the NIT opening
J'OW'ld. "NervouJ? The coach pulled me
aside and told.me things woulcfbe e1sJer
if I started breatblng," Yule' recatJs.
-John-hltiwo-free Uirows in tbe·cJ01ing
~nds of that game to win it for the
Sooners. Then LSU •"4, Pete Maravich
put·"OU out of the tourney in the next
round.
Earner in bis sophomore campaign
Yule had the unforgettable experience or
bell)g at OklaboJll;I State to pla)r in the
final game coached by osu·s legeDd8ry
Henry Iba.
"We knew before we ever went up
there l'e wouldn't win that one," Yule
recalls. "We almost slipped and fell going
out. on the court, there were so manY.
lean."
Lilll yeor In die NIT Oldohoma loot to
Hawaii. But it suffered a greater loss
when OU athletic dirtetor Gomer Jonea
died of a heart attack while waiting in
the subway.
Yule watched Jones die.
Asked wtiat basketball has meant to
him, Yule says, "l couldn't put It into
words. But, it has taughl me to compete,
be successful, sacrifice and to win and
lose..."
Yule has three things he 'd like to do
after graduatioa: (1) play basketball in
Europe (2) play baiketball for Athletes in
Aclloo (I) gel ·Into -radil>tdevision pro-
duction.
And knowing tile kind o! hard worker
he ls, J have to believe he'll be 1ucces1ful
in whltuer enduVOfbe can:a to puraue.
,
Chargers, Jladl
·nave Off Day
CINCINNATI -John llldl,bad one ofi
hla ~t cliYs· with. the Sill Diego
Clmgtts here Sunday and as a result,"
the Border City team·was lhutout by the
Clnclnn1U Bengals, 11.0 •
Had! completed only.five of II pass at·
tempts for 49 yards-and had four in·
tercepted before int~im cfiarg:ers coach
Harland Svare called on Marty Dom:re9
to direct the final period.
Domres was also plagued by the
Benr:a1 defense, having two passes in·
tercepted. The sirirrterceptions is a Cin·
cirulati club scored for a 1ingle 1ame.
LinebaCker Al Beauchamp picked off
two of Hadl's aerials, returninc one II
yards for a touChdown.
. Meanwhjle,. qua~ Virgil Carter
, bit 1'-ol :II.Pf• ... !or 111 yaids Ind one
touchdown and rookie~Fred Willis_ rambl·
ed !or 1 pail' ycortl !or Cincinnati.
Carter and fOokje Ken Anderson guided
the Bengalf to another team mark, 21
flnt downs.
San Diego's closest pf:netratlon to a
score came in the !int quarter w h e o
Dennis Partee missed ~ 51-yard field
goal. .,
Cln. -Wll11t, t ti/fl fM'°"'IA111111 klellJ
Clfl, -Tr-hy, 10 H u 1tem-c1r!ff !M""'lo --~·----~~ Cln, -.et1wt11tn11, II 11&11 11111rctplion (Mllhl+ ._M kklc)
(Ill, -'WtlH,, I "'" {Mlolfl11MM kkill Clfl. -l'G, Muhl!N11r1 .0,
Bears Tangle
With Miami ' ' .
"The only ones that might surprise me. victory over L?ng BeaCh, 30-28.
on the basis of freshman -now San Jose scored ~rha(IS the upset oC
sophomore -possibility. art UCLA and Maryland," Wooden said. ~1aryland will the season, hoWever; with a 13-12 defeat
count on big Tom Mc~lillen. a of Rose Bowl-bound Stanford on Nov. 13.
sophomore, and UCLA is building aroUQd 1'he_Sparlan! also scored a Crushing 45-7.~
sophomore Bill \Vallon, who is 6 feet, 101h triumph over fonner powerhouse San
inches. Cal State {Long Beach), ranked No. 8 Diego State, the PCAA'11 top defeMl"u
behind Houston, "should be higher," team.
Wooden said. "I definitely feel . they San Jose had other victories aver
(Long Beach) will be higher than eighth University of Pacific (28-18) and'UC San-
at the end of the season. B 1 "A good big man has the chance · o[ ta arbara, SS.IO. Including in the record
th~~:~t~lie~U:!~y f~~~I~ ~:;n~ doJllin.atin~ and de~nn!ning how good a was a 21·~1 tie with. Ne~ Mexico.
In TV Game
the National Football League's Monday team is going to be, said W.ooden, whose Memphis. Slate, 1ron1cally, also comes
night-telecasts have-just been contests_b_lg men of the past have included Lew to the ~asadena l_klwl without a con--
pitting a pair of also-rans against each -A:ldnd_or;-nov:imoWJras--Rareem---Jabbar • ----ference--t1tle:-The Tigers wound up-,,.1-in
other.__ _ and S1dne~ Wicks. , the conference and only 4-,i in all games.
But tonight at 6 o'clock on .Channel 7, a The Bru!ns, 29-:1 last se.ason; open their
fairly ~ucial confrontation has surfaced s~ason Fnday night against fhe Cltadel
with Miami's Dolphins (8-l-l) hosting the ~llh two -perh~ps three .-sophomores
Cllicago Bears IM) at the Orange Bowl. 1n t~ s.tartmg hneup, said \Vooden, 61,
It' defini·•-d •. ·t " r and rn his 24th season at UCLA. s a u:: 0-0r""'1e st uauon or Besides &-foot-I Bibby at one guard
_ 0.. TV Toftight
Cl!an•el 7 at 6
coach Jiin ' DoOJey's Bears, who have
flashed .occasional brilliance in keeping
cl~ to Minnesota (S.2) and-Detroit-(6-S-
.\ J)_in the Central Division of the NFL's
National 'Conference. -').
However, a week agO Sunday, tlfe once.
fe~ Monsters of the MidWay abSorbed .
a 2.8-l. spanking rrom the Detroit sqund ·
which they trail by just a half game.
At the same time, the Dolphins of Don
Shula, while leading the American
ConferEooe East, still could use a Win
tonlghL They're a lull game oil top of
Bahimore-(8-3), a team which
slaughtered a good Oakland outfit Sunday
by a :17-lf margin.
spot and WaJton 1L center, Wooden plans
lo open with Lan")' Farmer, 6-5 junior,
.and Kelth Wilkes, M aophomore, at the
forward spots.
The other guard spot 11 still wide open,
LOUISVILLE -Joseph "lndian Joe"
Guyorl, professillnal football and basebaU
player and teammate of the famous Jim
Thorpe at Carlisle, Pa., Academy ls dead
at the a·ge of 79.
Guyon, a full-blooded Chippewa died
here Saturday in retirement. '
His athJetic career, following college
football days. at Georgia Tech under
coachJohn 'Helsman, inclilded stints with
the Canton, Ohio Bulldogs and the New
York G_iants.
Guy<t was 'triple threat player In foot.
ball. Opposing pJ.ill:vs who felt the im·
pact of his blocks and tackles acknow·
!edged the appropriateness of bis J11dian
name, 0-Gee-Chidea, which n'l ea n l
"brave man." ,,,
~EXICO CITY -Gary Sanders ot
Buena Park, Sunday won the Mexican
National Amateur Go If Championship,
defeating Mexico's Rafael Fager 3 and Z
in match play over 36 holes.
Kurt Cox cif San Antonio, Tn:., was the
champion in medal play with 139 strokes
over 36 boles. ,,,
MEXICO CITY -Willie Mays the
veteran outfielder for the San Fra~cisco
Giants, was married fOr the third time
Sunday in a civil ceremony.
Mays was married .to 32·year-old Mae
Louise Allen of San Francisco in the
private offices of a local judge. The cou·
pie then left for a honeymoon in
Acapulco.
Mays refuS:Cd an interview with a local
reporter. saying, "nothing about baseball
today, no comment." He did amwer
brieny a question whether he thought
Hank Aaron of the AUanta Braves could
pass Babe Ruth's home run record
saying "Aaron could reach it ••• and
maybe me too." ,,,
SYDNEY. Australia -Shane Gould
lopped seven-tenths of a second off her
own world 200-meter freestyle swimming
record at the suburban Dnunmoyne
Olympic Pool Friday nlght. ·
~iss Gould, 15, was Urned at 2:~.8 in -D mt~ub meeting, to better the mark
of 2.0l.5 set earlier this year In the
Crystal Palace Pool, London. •
¥'
HONOLULU -Gov. John A. BUrns
may only be looking ror Midwest market.<;.
for his state's leading agricultural pro-
ducts. but he's wllllng to bet a case ot
Hawaii pineapples and a case of .papaya1 J 1
on the outcome of next Saturday's
Hawnii·~ebraska football game here.
Nebraska Gov. J , James Elon, who:
wagertng a like amount of cOm and othf:r
Nebraska rarm (oeds on ttie top-ranked
Comhuskers. offered to .apiol Burn11 "1
few po in ls:." Bums declined.
\
•
' UPI Ttl""'-fl
SAN DIEGO'~ MARTY DOMRES IS SACKED BY FLETCHER SMITH.
,,,
BUENOS· AffiES -Zeljko Franulovlo
of Yugoslavia won the fOllrth open ten.DJs
championship of Argentina and SOutd
America Sunday by defeattni; Romania'~ .. 1 Uie Nasli!le 6-3, 7-6; S.1.
St.anSmith of Pasadena, did not reacl
the rtnal--round ot the tournament buf won
the international federation's Grand Pr\j
series.
Helga ~1asthoff of cermaiiy defeattd
Helde Orth , also of Gennany, M i----11'6 il1
the women's final.
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24 DAILY PILOT Mondly, November 29, 1971
'-Namath Alniost D'oes .. It
I
49ers .Hold Off Furious _New York Rally
~-• .-t ' ' . ' '
Bucs Face Golden Wes t
} ..
After ~9-76 Cag-e Loss--.
Joe Namath has returned. Jie's not-a
11ew Joe Namall\. He even has more
-, acars than the last time he trotted from
,. .. the Shea Stadium sidelines onto the foot-
, ball field .
last attempt was intercepted by Johnny
Fuller with 16 seconds rema ining to .snuff
out the Jets' attempt to overcome a 17
point deficit.
San Francisco's victory knocked Los
Angeles one half game behind the 49ers
in the NFC West division raei. . ,
Saddleliack
Still Looking
For Win No.I seven minutes of play and the CardinllJ
converted themin(o a pair of touchdown1 By RON EVANS
and a field goal to start their romp. OCEANSIDE -Sadd.leback C.Ollege's 011111 DfiH' ,, .. , tt•ff
A_T BUFFALO -1'be-Buffa1o Bills basketball team went back to work todey Two bitter rivals that have atarted the
finally won a game after droppln& their trying to figure out a formula for wlnnina' 1171-72 basketball season on a JoSlng note,
first ·10 as Dtn~ Shaw combined wU:h sames. go at eacll olher Tuesday night. when
Allan Hant'OCk.. . JC lraosrer Perry
Hanstad, a &.5 rorward, Pl'ayed steady
throughout the contest ·nnlshing with 2l
points -with most or hl,s nine field goals
coming trom insidC. . ' ~ .. .!_But the 1971 Joe Namath ls a vem, ' \ p>t>Ular model. · -I
N.amath, the New York Jet s'
Uarterback, played ln a regular season
AT OAKLAND ..:...111e--Ba1Umore Colts,
beaten fiy Miami a wtek ago, took U: out
on the Oakllnd Raiden with a crushing·
37·14 victofy.to pull to wllhln one game of
the Miami Dolphins.
J.D. Hill on to~chdown passes of 11 and The Gau~s· oi coach Roy Stevens Golden West College hosts Orange CQast. 47 yards againSt the Patrioll!I. · were wallopedi for the second atralgbt 1 •
The ~W. won, 27-20. "Yoo'd thiJik we nl'11t Solurdal', dnlpplnt a 113-74 decisioo Opening 11tpoll ii I o'clock.
Johnson shouted above the be41am in tbe •The p~i0u1 nia;ht Saddleback was first in its new gymnasium. ~
dressing room. dumped ·by &an Diego Meaa, IM-62. Both -come Into . the -C!~sh -I 0..1
AT MINNESOTA -The Minnesota In Saturday's game, It was a case of markS. Golden West opened w a 9U7
And former \Es~~la High ace Sklp
Williams, who played tor· tile· Cal Poly.
(San Lull! Obispo) frosh te8m iast season,
l!>Oked good in sp<Us, , · -National Football League game Sunday
for the first time since October 1970 when
be broke bis }land against Baltimore.
_He .didn't M"t against the San fran-
~1 clsco 49ers Sunday, and he didn't bring ~liome a Yiclory.
"They are the world champions and
they played like it," Oakland coach John
Madden said after his team suffered its J
first defeat ~Ince operyng day of the NFL
season.
won the Supe( Bowl" coach Harvoy lo host Mira C01ta. Tuesday night's game ls G<>~deb e5!'1
Vikings smothered Atlanta, 24-7. · • ngt enoUgb board •trenatb-and too UWe 1 1 ~-Clint Jones charged through the 1noW' ftring pcwtr -two Important ingredjents oss o ....crrltos Friday night Orange
for one touchdown and Bill Brown ran for that most winning teams· possess. Coast picked up where it left off last.
But LivsiY·s chiif Ieir about his cur·
reni clutl,.was quite evident. He ,had opin-
ed a couple of .• w~ks 11go that his club
was juat too slow to slliy with most
teams -especially one as qulc~ as LA
Trade Tech.
•
But the mod-style, swinger, 'Vho has a
fla ir for the dramatic, provided every
thrilling twist in a 24-~l loss lo the 49ers.
AT NEW YORK -The St. Louis
Cardinals topped the New York Giants,
24-7. The Giants gaYe up two in·
terceptions and a fumble in the opening
two more as the Vikings' running baCks And the road ahead doesn't look any season by dropping Its opener Saturday
teamed for 240 yards rushing to bowl rOsier for Stevena• frtshrnan.<fomlnated night to host LA Trade Tech,l!J.76.
. Namat h completed 11 of 27 passes for
258 yards and three touchdowns but hls ··
over the FaJcons. club. For coach Herb Llvsey's OCC Pirates it This Friday niiht SaddJeback ~treks to
·AT 1\-ULWAUKEE -The New Orleans Santa .Apa ~llfge for an 8 o'clock tilt was a case of (1) too mfny turnovers and
Following Tµe sday itlght's. bat t 1 e
Orange Goi:lst will tang!~ with the USC
frosh team Friday night ·at the LA Sports
Arena. That's a 5:45 tilt-.
Saints outlasted the Green Bay Packen, • and'tbefollbwingeveningbatUe1theUSC (2) not being able .to keep up 'with LA
29·21. F h In ' t th LA S rt T d T h I .
Mudd y Field-l\.ey Factor
"You can't blame Bart Starr. 1 thought ros a 5:"5 game a e po s · ra e ec 's ast break attack .
Arena. A rash of turnovers put the Pirates G<Jlden West Will compete ~ .. In the
Moorpark tournament Thursday, facing
the Cal Poly (San tuis Obispo) freshmen
ln a first round ttff at 3·o•c1ock. ·
he played quite well," Packers coach Dan The Gauchos had four players in double behind in the first half and they stayed
Devine said. figure• Saturday night with &-5 forward there lbe rest of the game.
Starr hiL eight of 17 passes for 11& Dan-Krats leading the way with 15 points. When Livsey abandoned his man-to-
yards but four fumbles and lwo in-Pat Gallia aod Steve Ashcraft followed man defense for a i.one in the second hall
IJ11 Bue -Setback-Tucker terceptions, one --Off rookie Scott Hunter With 12 each and Pete Roberts C&Med 10. the Pirates played much better basket-
swho1cam1he ()n In the final period, gave, the IMflllllKlr en) MW• c.1• 1111 ball for the first part of the second 20 Or•n,. c.111 0'1 LA tr•d• Ttch un
a.in s e game. ·11 " ,, '' '' n ,, '' minutes. J• 11 p1 Ip -tg 11 111 '' 4' 4H N1l1on 4 0 l I Mfi liir · 7 4 211 I' -AT PHILADELPHIA-The:..=: ~}-:1~5!::. ,,~11 OrangeCoast,downbylOatthehalf s1r""'ur 24 .a.i T•r1ar !12 11
Washington Redskins stayed cloae to G1111t. , ' 4 12 M<MlhOn ' ' ' u (42-32), cut the deficit to just two (53-Sl) wrn1srm ' s 4 11 Mw•.·,•,,~. • ,', : ', ,! ' ·~. By CRAIG SHEFF
Of ttle'Olltf' ,l .. l ll•lf
"We weren't able to run the ball
against them at all, but Our passing was
okay, except for thOrSe interceptions. Our
wkle rectivers, Steve Monahan and Dollg
·Young, I thought played great despite the
conditions."
ICffR 'J 1 11 &rimer Jla 111 I In h h ( SO..rr.wit.lr; I 1 4 l Dallas in the NFC East with a Z0.-13 vie-CrvmlfY 1 , 1 , Hlpte 1 1 s s ear y t e second al . H1n11•d ' s J n Jo11n100t 1 o z '
tory over the Philadelphia Eagles. ~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~:;m•n ~ ~ ~ 1; But then the turnovers started popping ~~!~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~,d~t~ . : i ~ : A mudd~ field and six pass in-
terceptions were the determining factors
in Orange' Coasl College's 20-22 Joss to
Santa Rosa Friday night in the 'opening
round of the state JC large school football
playoffs.
AT HOUSTON -The Cleveland A1hcr1tt l ' l 12 aonn o o T o up and Trade Tech reele<f off IO points in CClflrov ! o o 10 ~~~1mote ~ g ! 1J
.. Browns gained sole posses.sion of first l'et.r 0 1 5 1 ::::.· : ~ ~ : a row and breezed the rest of the way. J•c~•°" s 1 a 1
place in the AFC Central Divlllion wjth a irorrnou e I 3 T There were a couple of bright &pot& for ,~,,. -'' ,, '' •·,"".,1~ . ,l ,~ ,: .: T01•l1 12 ll is n Tot•b 21 11 » H th B "' -• 37-24 win OYer the Hou.ston Oilen. · H•lfllmt: Mlr• cett• .o. Stddll!Wldl 11, e ucs. H11tt1m1: L~ Trld• Tecll u, or111111: C0111 J:2.
One Of the.key turning p;iints came ear-
ly in the second quarter, according to
Tucker.
-AT PITl'SBURGH -Denver upoe~ the f -_::::::::::;.;:::::-=::.::.::::;;;=.:;;_-----------~~----"---'-----~--
··it rained from ·about 11 to 5 in Santa
Rosa Friday so we played on a v.ery mud-
dy field, w~ich .really hampered our
game," said Tucker t.oday.
"Qf. coUrSe :.it\ was muddy. for both
learns, but for our type of game I think it
hinde_red us more.
"\Ve had a 9-0 lead on them and were
clriving for a score with the ball at mid-
fie ld. But they rushed us pretty hard and
we fumbled ." Santa Rosa recovered at
. the Pirate 40 and marched in for a
score. ·
Pittsburgh Steelers, 22-10.
Lions, Pasadena
Clash in Playoffs "And our li11emen had. a tough time
blocking them. Santa Rosa is a real
physical team~and a IOt Of times our guys
couldn't -get traction. We just couldn't
"Actuaj!y I thought we could have Westminster High will face Pasadena
beaten them. They're a good football in the secon<l round of the CIF A·AAA
bold them off. • team and they were much better than I football playoffs Friday night at Sarita
thought they would be, but I don't think Ana Bowl. "We reaJly had trouble with Santa
Rosa's No. 74 (Bill Strong)_ He was their
conference pliyer of the ye!r and we had
a b\ck of a time blocking him. The ma-
Jority of the rush came from him."
we played up to our game. a11hC11 AIMt v1."'1.~:!::":'1 Mr. a.n A111on11 "We're disapp;iinted that we lost our cc111~ Wntmln1!e1' v1. "f>•Jtdtnt ti S•nl• A'l' llowl last two games. We know we shouldn't El R.ncho v1. e,,,_ P••k '' c.rr11e1 Cell•
have lost to San Diego Mesa. flut that DomlllQuti vs. ~ Mvr~_:·•-s1Mh1•r1.
was one of those thina•. 'ioneer vi. 11:.,,nec1., 11 wnrtrn Mith II>"' Cretpl 11 Hin Hl11h "But we were co-champions or our w,,, c°"1 ... vs. N111oburv P•rll' '' '""" co1111111 -Lt Qulnll v1. Upl1nd Uen!11lv .. V •I Chltttv Hlfh) _leagu e and we won seven games. "" DN1111o1 -An!tl-Vtll9'f ti Ttmol1 -:l!Y Hlth
Although the Pirates' offense had trou-
ble at t~mes 'with th~ mpady·-going,
Tucker was generally pleased with the
way-Jr-play . -
Anytime you win seven you've had a good Sorior• ,, P•lo V•rd• Hloh Mlrtltj!f.vs. North 1tlv.r11dt (1lfe lllld1ttrm1.-1 ear. ---~-s1:-J011~16ROir'tllf111..-0111"""1;11
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Pro Cage,
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Standings
Atlllllk Dlvl11M
w L ••• •• m~ " • :m ... r.i: .. " • .,
" . " ... ' eutt110 • " ••• •
Vanguards
Nab Cage
'Tourney
Southern CalifonUa College
cf Costi Mega defeated Los
Angeles Baptist College Satur·
day night to win a four team
tournament in the winner's
gym and run its season basket-
ball record to 2-1.
Pat Quinn hit for 27 points
and Greg Jacobs had 23 to
pace 6flie SoCal scoring with
Jerry Rinker adding 14. All
three were named to the all-
tournament team.
tn the opener Saturday,
Caliromia Baptist College of
Riverside defeated Pacific
Christian College of Long
Beach, 92-65, for the con-
solution title. WbUe the ·vanguards of
SoCal were gaining the lions'
lhare of plaudits, Jerry Owens
of the losing Los Angeles Bap.
list qulnte~ hit for 34 points
and was named as the
tournament's t valuable
player by e or coaches
partlcipat
Tiie ot
the al\.t team included
former estmimter High star
Brad Young, now playing for
Pacific ChrilUan College and
Joe Morgan of california Bap.
tlsl
Jn Saturday night's final
gune, the Vanguards and
Mustangs played a e e .. 1 aw
basketball unUI the final five
minutes when the host sChool
\,fienl -in Cron! by-a 10.point
margin.
Jacobs and Dick Sivertsen
rouled ourwlth the Score at 81·
'12 and 1:45 left to piay. 'I1le
Baptist! made a cHarge to
narrow the gap t.Ofour with 24
1econd! ten.
•
But a front court stall ran
out the clock and despite a
late .teal by the visitors from
Newhall, no furthtt scoring
ensued.
StC.i c.l)Mre (Ul .. • .. .. ·-" ' • " -· ' • ' • "'"" " ' ' v
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•• DAILY l'ILOT ·-Monday, Novtmbtr<29, 1971 _, ' ;
, Rnstler-
_.._··-,.-l.i--.,.'l'ea-King-Cag ers___Rn':1ners LONG-BEKCH-=-cmr-11tm-iwe~the-nco early to to-grob-the-iast-quali!ylng -W.1~·-~iU:''I• y, "!"n1~~~ ~:" ~~' ~"'\'.° ~.:.."' ,_ ' T w· lf Pl 2 d Mua, Newpo~t Harbor Ind lvoid further injury, ' position with 1132 Pohinll. Ten :i~':: ... -=~~~~"'~nick CCM)1 (U.i11111), t:~,,, l. 2. Jttt .,..ll•h lb
Mesa, Tar, .MV Runners Sparkle --. '
est U emeyer oc·e n I Mluioo Viejo ff;gh ..... ""'"' ....... M>olan, who teaml ,.. ... compr .. t • cham· '1•m U«"' '• °" ........ ~'J· ,.,., ... ""' '· ... KNU .. '"''"'"" o;a, --. ~-·"p finals In f o .. r 5M; 11 Twr•~. ' l. c .. i. M9$.I. : ''"'' 4. !HY• 1.1r1lifl J.WMI C.vlNlo try lulDI qualified for the with the Ollwanc twins to .,_,_., .. •• Lvn-. 111111 S,. ... K~. 1"'' j· c '"'' I divltionlf. lt~-•n,--1U; -1t~..,...tw1, US: • t :U; 5. JDM A.r-•Ult !W•I O'f' • , ·1 ROCKLIN -Goldtn Wft i:Ji~:,·~~~t:1:J::: ~~~er~: =~~~ : Lompoc will enter the AMA r.;;?i ~:~ '·_ 1. ~r.':' :111~: i~t~~~i~1~~1!1:ii-~1jf'i ~ The 1171 prep basketball The Corona dtl Mar-Troy C:Ollege freshman D a "'\! while Marina, Mater Dei And cond to Marc Genet of luta finals as the hea'Q' favorite to :t:=:: .~~':'~'. T!;.,.v C:~/4:L:; f~~ .. G!dd~ CMV!1 w . .' J;i _,.
W t h f pho Lockman !i~ahed1in the No.,I 1 .... Be h r 11 b the An I the ln I S5 win team laurels off -1. •:»; 4. A!v!~ GllfflO•• fLom..oc!. r11m scor••· 1. ~111111. 111 t, b• JMUOn gell under way f Is a mac up o ao more 1 ~ to th R ti -ouna a<: e Y a n . ract· : . &turday'• performanct. Ter-''ul ,, •endv T11w1na 15_. M•~ati. ·~·t•/,w·. ','' ·.",M"! !!'\i 'f.I. '\-~~'f
tuts in every direction in· Troy Versus the . .star.studded ' cross country team to second the same site la.st Saturday. their seasonal aver1ge · time I')' ams ROS e astes ot!W11 "· o.v1 crou CNl-lJ1 tJ. cr1r1 AJ1..,iJOI, 1741 '· TMu•llMI o.-s, "" 1Wtdnesday with · ~n-league .Rnsation Mark Wulfemeyer-of po.st n. pact e" UJ er waJaide tn semifinal action at Newport's Tars fell below Willi led th f t ~~~<H'oic~; ~ll"'~O:::·~::~'P.:rolo~: ).~11~.:... ill: t. ~olf.;;; 1i'ti· I. 41nc.,.,
place ta the state JC small b ed to In 1 rlh Individual mark of the day, c11r1t• INHI: 21. L .. "'-tHH11 .... 11. cr11cent V•ll•Y. 2'21 11. i1 Mt""' volving 10 Orange Coast area alignment. under coach Tandy __ ... 1 h . h' 1 Coach Joe Fisher's Co 1 ta 1i1t manag ga ou l :%6.S ind the Braves finished DtMv c1lftl 1NHJ. -:::'":=· ======::==:::; :fquintet.s. ... · Gillis at C:Orona del. Mar. ~uoo s c ampions Ip 1 Mesa Mustangs qualified third place in the second AAAA . th fir.st f 1 T•--•= 1. ~eoc:. "' ,, ..... ,.
Higblighling the action will WuUemeyer, a si.x·footer Siefl'a College in this Northern in the first race of the AAAA race and • place lo the fin.tis. in e our posit ons. ~";':o..,:s1. .. ~,.,'1~il 'r.1tC.~u.1n~I. :: THE BEST
be the confrontation between with poise, shooting accuracy ~alifornla community Satur· compelition despite Io sing Top1 Newpab horrrunfi .=hedw1u J~-.~ o... _ f"A!,< """'' l'"/1 1~;•,':""t•k~wfi..~~~!~"~edt.':u.~&.y, neadershtp po I I• prove
Irvine. League power C:Otona and floor savvy, was a first-ay. Tom Olswang midway through Ho com ;N 1111s n 10:-. Mti1 t;~l \Oo"" M1tc:Lc1" c~1 R.•c• °"' _ 1. Mini ~1"" "Peanuts'' is one of. th•
dot M .. .ui. ...... I d' W L Santa Ana College won the T b ped r •• h · G G f • ~"1 • '·r:l t'.~~·1 1(Sc1 l~rMn Crovt!. 10:01; 1, JHrv erott world's most pot\lar comic ar .. ..., "'"' nva mg ar· team all· Freeway ea g u ~ the race. om w~s um 9r ~c . ~ . u r u e I • T~':li). i~3'1 'i Tom J"tilii~' H~~i ••r•mol\lf, 1~:0,1 1, cimi roo Mun11r rk>r.s from Troy High, peren-1electlon last year and was small schools citlwn with 48 r.:.n into a pole during the race Mission VleJO ·D1ablo1 finished 1"ud10.1. ,,,., •· l""" °""'-1c,..t. 11;:~:.w,1~'\~h.i. '~ Jot. R.u11 •trips. Read It 1¥ ln the-
nial Freeway League toughies. prominently mentioned 1t the JXJlnl.s while coach Tom N0011 '·s and Jell far behind. Fisher bad fifth in the second AAA race fL-;-~~;'~::.n.7'0 ,~~.}'· ;.~ "1t~ •-1cor_~1: 1. Pill"' v ... 11t •• J1: Ii DAILY PILOT. .
I Rustie-finished with 69. , . ...:::.::::::_:::.:::;:=:.:.::::::.;::::....::::::..:::..;::.:=::::..:::::..:;:::_::::=:::::.:.:::..:.:.:.::.::~:..:=...!'~"'~·~·~·~·1·~N!!:_' ~"~'!·~~··~··~·~'~~~' !'c!!..!:::=========== t starts at 7 o'clock. All·CIF meeting although only , ..
Other 7 o'clock encounters a freshman. Palomar, ·GlendaJ,e and
incfude'Orange at Costa.Mess, -HL! chief t: b a 11 en I er Antelope Valley ~ed third,
Garden Grove at ~<Uson, El Wednesday will be the Sea" fourt~ and fifth. . .
Segundo at. Fountain · Valley • Kings'. classy guard Casey ~ Other ·nni.s'her.s for Golden
and Servite at Huntington Jones. West were Bob Brickner
Beach. · , Jones, a Junior, has (15th), Vic Martin'ez (19th),
A 1 so Santi a g c at displayed tremendous poten·. Jack McQuown (20.th) and
Westminster, Anaheim at San tial and Gil.el says his 11th Steve Lassegard (24th).
Clemente and Santa Ana grader is capable of con· The winner of the race was
Valley at Mater Dei in an 8 taining t~e flashy Wulfemeyer 1'-1ike Martinez or College or
o'clock tiff. one-on.one. ~ the Canyons wRh a time of
Afternoon games include And if that's the prospect 2(1:26.
University at Glenn and fans can count on an outstan· In the large schools division,
Laguna Beach at Fallbrook ding individual batile. El Camino won it with 54
Cbo t 3:15). •_' Says Troy coach Billy Mor· point!, followed by Mt. San
ris: "WuUemeyer is at his Antonio !72), Grossmont, Long
I nd Beach and LA Valley.
T CdM best when we're runn ng a Grossmont's Ed Mendoza ars, we're able to isolate him one-WU the individual Winner in on-one. "He's awfully tough in that 20:07.3, a course record.
Face Rivals 1111111 sctiMb situation . It gives him the op--
portunlty to use his quickness
and jumping ability."
Newport Harbor will travel Morris' warriors do not ap--
to play Palos Verdes in second pear to have the height ad·
round ClF water polo playoff vantage necessary to Control
action Tuesday afternoon with the boards with 6-2 forwards
El <:a_m?no College a!_ a pro-Dave Lingenfelder, Mike Qin·
bable site whlle Corona del non and Jilmie 'Ferguson in
Mar's Sea Kings will journey---the_ starting lineup.
l~l¥1du1! -I, M1rtlMi CC1"~en•)
20:H1 t. W111er tl'•lamlr} 20 :311 1.
Hom !A"lt l-Vt ll•l'l 20:"; •. IM-
ntll 1c.,,v .. 1) "'"' s, s.,..111 1s1n1• A111 ) M:!J; I. LDCkmt" (Golllt~ Wt lll
"l'10:J7; 1. Clitf'mlnt1 fl'tio,,.,1r1 lO:Sl1
I . L-ry tArit•IOl't V1il1vl '1:02; '· Mlccle !Gl9fldll1J 21:10; 10. Ll'"b
C11ntt A111 ) 11 :Ot,
''f'l lrM SchMll
to FOOthill on the same date. He ventures, however, that llldll'k!vl l -I. M"'10011 Gronmllfll
1'0'07,J; 2. etblr•c~l IU V1/lly) 2t;lf1
J, 1>1111 !FrtlflO) 20:1'; '· JOI!-(fl
Cl..,lflO) 20;'1; S. Ptlltr10n CEl.,:1-
mlnol :IO:)I; " Grnr (Lont ... dtl
lO:l'; 1. Schltcller IW"I \11Uty)
20:Wt t. G1rcl1 tDell1I '°''11 t.
5dlmkk"'4h (L!lftf lt1dll ill:4'1 lt.
Newport's Tars ran their he'll insert 6-6 Jim Berbos and
season record to -11-2 with. a &-3% Kurt t.awy,er into the
first round win over Nortb front line should it beeome
(ruverside ) •W bl l e Pa I o..s
Verdes WIJ defeating Santa
Monica, 12·3, and b now 17·3
for the year.
Corona's record ls: currently
tU after • 13-t win over
~guna Beach in opening: ac·
_tion. Fbothlll trampled host
Nogales, 27-1, and has a 16-4
--.at.ason-mar
necessary. l"•l'kltw. ce:r c1m1 .. 1 j(f:'41.
C:Orona'J rebound i h g ;============:::;! 1trength lies in center Mark
Sevier, a 6"5 senior. .
Along with Sevier, a ZOO.
pounder, the Sea Kings rely on
&-5 John SUmner, S.-9 guard
Scott Cameron and junk!r Jeff
Wharton, 1 6-2 forward up
from.the..junior.-Y arAi!Y..____
TAKE THE
NEWS QUIZ
We Dare You ...
Every Saturday
If you've got car troubles,
come tQ Penneys Scientific
Testing Center for
an electronic
examination of your car.
nlygaa
We can p · tout weak spots In aeveratvltal
areas of you ar.
In less than-one our we put your car
through a series o'scientific test.s {212 of
them, to be exact). Steering, engine.
brakes, tr~nsmission, electrical and cooling
systems. You watch the results come out
on an electronic typewriter.
The written report shows the results of the
tests. It indicates what tested parts of-your
car are weak and what parts are strong,
A trained diagnostician will go over the
report wilh you. If you wish, ~e'll give you
an estimate of any necessary repairs. You 'll
be able to take care ol many small
p_robltms before they turn inlo big problems
costing big money. There's no obligation
to have any of the work done. You dec ide
what lo fix and w_here to fix It.
Only 9.66.
Nol bad for a ehetk·up these days,_
,,
:.•1ilal:lfe tt Newport1tach, F•1hion l1l1ncl; Jiunfington l1ac;h, Huntington Center
. I
D""'1...ic 1o, .. op" M'oil49y lflrouth S.turlloy •
•
. -
You can findJots of 1·s11 nylon cord
tires. But:Penneys ·15•• tire
nylon cord and a -wide profile.
has
.
• F-plleo of nylon conl 10<
• atro~g, cool running tire.
• PO!ybtrtadi-rubber tor a
longor-ng lrHd.
• Wide proftlo for axtra mileage
ind traction.
15~!51.d.w
and old tire
C78·13 (ropl-100o'8)
Btackwan tubef•
Ground Gainer_
4 ply nylon cord tira.
~
Blackwan tubelHa
Size Ritplacu Price F.E..T.
E78·14 735-14
F78·14 ns-14
G78·14 825-14
20.11 2.21
'20.11 2-38
' '23.11 2.55
'-·· ,,.1tt t"" G•tr ... I••· You• Fo•-t li1• ,,.,, .. u ion , ....... _ COVI .. "'' F0<e...011 pltlle<'9f>' '"'" l••CIOI OUI •!'Ki•• 1opllc1l.on ..... •i•ll .. .,.,.1. IUll ... lll'IJI •'l•lnSl .i1 IO ld haz1rd ... Clti1CI
r1.:u111. You 111 prot1ti1d lo• Ille M1th1 '11le<I mGnllll ol 9u.,.,. .. ,, II tDUr Hiii J-111 OU•l"11 lht "'"""''' 01nod. teru1n 11 •o "' ..,d ••••II. 11 ou• oplioft, rtp1u yo .. r·ii11, "' '"'~' .., .rlo•11tc1 1>110<1 on 11W
Otoglnal flllt OHCI, l•ChHl•ng IPOlltlbk-r_, .. Eltl .. T1•. IO•lld !ht purth ... o1 1 -1111. 1\1 w~I 11!0 •IXI"• o! '"-01<gi1ul pu1th1"' price. 11Ciuai"~ eppllc11>11 feo11.i £1ci111 Tu. d<triltg 11111
10Q•. 1lln1nc •lod. TMro1t1u, ,., wHL 1110 .. !>O'o or n •o at 1111 01lqin11 pUn;f\aw prlct , 1•tludl"9 IPDhtlbll r-11! Coti10 '''· ,., ....... tnt lllt!t hl lt "'I "'IW llrt, (SM ,,..,, below): F.11 ... 1 C11CN Tl•
H'lllli"'t"f •llo,...,,c1 •iU be'"'"' on 1111 11••1• or lht Pfttt nt of""' 0tigln1I l"IO re1"1Jnln9.
,_,,H~78-~855-14
G78-15 825-15
H78·15 855-15
A78·15 560·15
2T.ll'~"."'7 r· ----~-
23.11 2.64
23.11 2-80
17.11 1.74
Wh""'"'°""n-.,. ...
FOll[MOIT f'ftOTECllOlt CUAllAltTf[ CKAJll
, • Ktrt'• i.w ,_ "'Oflltttt ••••"
f Allll 91111 ... IM ,Mfleil .... ,, •••••.•. 21 -Ill• ff<':. •llew111CI ,.,W, .•.. , , .••.. , .1-lS MO"lll t
1004'1. lllt•tflCt •trilll .......... ....,_ .. 1·1-•111• 21'°' tlleWlllCI ,.,11 ............. 1&.27-llia
f11 H Li11 •11lect...,_ Wt !Nild lnlo l'fflJ rofl-tl lift •1!1 hecllOfl ln<Jlc11or1. Tlitr algnll wlllll )'OUr
"" allOli\d llt r1ot.Ctd. II '""' 1111 •tlfl out !••<•pl ror tncont el 1Uginmenl) ..,1 '"'II "'lkt '" 1llow1nt b11e<I on lht orlglntl 1>U<Cha1e •rfCt , 11cl1>0l'll appUt1blt Ftdttl>I E1cl1t T1•. IOwl<d 1ht Pll"lllM o1 11
,,, ....... W1 wlU •ll<lw •, -.,., ,,,. lir.r 11111 ,, '• dVtlfl9 "'' •KOfld h•!f ol l~I •111111 ....... th• ol
ou•r1nlto. f-111 E•c>N Tu H )ust,...111 1Uo-1tt1t t wi ll IMI '"ad' on 1111 b11i• ol the Pttcet>I ol IM
ori1in1i 1f1•d "'".r"'"'·
'"'" Vl/lf9ftlfl• i• flOI lllfttl•tlblt . II i. Ofll, to< on .... 11 ,_II« ''"' or plHtllll'tf ., ... ) .. WIQOflt..
15~60 led. tax and old tire.
Blackwall tubeless, 600-13. Sale15499
Mileagemaker II
--4.ply-ny.lo.n..cordlire. ~
Blackwall tubel•••
Size F.E.T .. Prlco Slzo F.E.T. Prlco
65tl-13 1.76 16.95 560:15 1.74 17.95
700·13 1.95 17.95 685-15 1.91 19.95
695-14 1.94 17.95 735-15 2.05 19.95
735-14 2.01 18.95 775-15 2.16 21.95
775-1 4 2.14 20.95 815-15 2.37 23.95
825-14 2-32 22.95 1345-15 2.48 25.95
Whtttw1U. only S3 more.
Without trada-tn, •dd S2 per lire.
Service Special
3dayaonly
Mon., Tun., Wed.
' Wheel
alignment
7ss*
Here's what we do: Adjust torsion height,
camber, caster and toe in .
•Mottcara
..
Reg . $159. Golden Pinto CB
transceiver with delta fine tun-
ing.
Aeg.169.99. DuslerChoppernJlni bike.•
-,.he 'easy ride r' look at a.value prir e.
l ots of show here. Hot Detroit purple
frame, high rise handlebars,
3 HP engine, front and rear chrome
lenders, centrifugal clutch, hand brake.
· Mini bikes ere not intended for ricing or for use on highways. sldewalks or streets.
Titan·satety hellnet 15.H
Benelli mini Enduro .t'f~s 65CCt '4 speed
transmission, kno~
by tires. Reaches a
top speed of 45
m.p_h_
Somewhere between the dune
buggy and the mini bike. 5 HF'
Tecumseh engine, tor-que
converter drive. chrome chop·
per for.k, twin front suspen·
sion:'tlels up to 30 M.P.H.
.
.. JCPenney
auto center
•
' at the following Auto Ctnten: Shop from Sunday noon
NEWPORT BEACH., F .. hion l•l•nd HUNTt~GTON BEACH, Huntington Center ., . . ,.
• I -1 '
•
• •
Use Pennoy y ti.mt p~yment pl•n. -·
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;M::":::':::"'.!.' ::":.:":.:••:::M<:::...:2'1c;:..• 1"9._71;_ ______ •• _,_,v_,,_,_oT_,J,.7._ • "I .. ·~
•' -·.-
l' -~· . ·-Area Prep Offe11sive· Star
RON AM§ORGEY
Costa~Mesa
GEORGE PASCOE
Fountain . Valley
.,
JOBNMILES
Conina del Mar
PETE BAKER
Huntington Beach
JACK HAYNES
Edison
BILL ROBERTSON
Laguna Beacb
SA VE .'/i2f' Heavy Duty .Shocks
Guaranteed For As Long You Own Your Car
Regular
$7.99 99
each
Rugged iron pistpn and chrome tod. Heavy duty for
long and smoother ride. Fits most foreign and
.i\merican cars. '
Datsun, Toyota
and
ME;,_TOO!
Sears 12-Volt Battery
Sears
Guarantee
llEAVVDUTV
SHOCK ABSORBER
If Heavy Duty Shock Al>-
sorb'r fails due to faulty
materials and wor\n11n·
'ship or Wl'ars out while
ori1:lnal purchaser owns
the car. It .will be replaced
upon return free or
charge. or the purch.a.ie
price will be refundtd. If
lhe defective shock ab-
sorber was Installed bv
Sears. we will instill neW
shock absorber with no
charge for labor.
$129.99
Mini Bike
S.1 VE'3Q! 9999 lHP
••
' ....
•,
'0
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"'' ~~l
ii '\ ...
' ;\ ., ,.. ... ;3.·
·.• • .. ""' '\,;.,, ... ' '' ., \.
\ . \ ' .. ,._;
•-;,1
" ,. ...
, . . .
. " ..... l' ...
.~ ' '.·
.,;..
RICK SHELDON JOE JONES KEVIN REESER BOB FRYE
Matir •. Del Mission Viejo Newport Harbor San Clemente Low Priced! ~;;;;:rn~-;;;=;;;i;~""'~.-..-~'="=======~="""'-"=-------1 --~----•~Fuitasum,.a"'n~ 12·VOlt.Am.e.rican-li~2 ... ,, 1•;;....,1
... l~il-\. ..
GARV WILJ;ON
Unlver1lty
GIL ROSALES
Westminster
UCI Poloists Trimhph
· LONG )3,EACH -It was a
laugher for the UC Irvi ne
water pol o tealh in the th ird
and final. game of the NCAA
tournament at Belmont Plaza
Olympic pool in Long Beach
Saturday and the Anteaters
handed the University of
Washington an Ul-5 defeat.
UCLA's powerful Bruins
handed San Jose State its first
defeat of the year arter 20
. straight wins. 5-3, to gain its
seconCI water polo cham-
pionship in three ytars.
Coach Ed N ewland's·
Anteaters fini shed the 1971
campaigtl with R 21-6 record
and seventh place in the
NCAA tournament. A pair of
one.goal losses put UCI out of
con lent io n early with
Fullerton dealing the crippling
blow in the opening game. 5-4,
and Stanford winning, 7-6.
In both games. missed
penalty shots by UCI cost the
Anteaters any chance at vic-
tory.
S.ttlflt~ P11Ct
UC lrvi"' t J ' 1-11
u. o! W•1~l,•cllon D I 1 ~ I
UC lrvlM KOl'hWI: D!ckm1nn '·
G1id Scores
Wttt ~Grlmbll,.., ff, C1I Stitt 41'ullllll0fll
Sin Jost .Siil• Sl, UC 1'nlt 9.lrtt.1r1
" Ctl s11re (MIYWtrdl 17, Cl l Poly
(SLOl 15 , L~I 13, .S.n Dt-?I
C•I L~rtieran .).!, M""Tlnl Ttch '
H1w1I! 11. New Mt•ico 11
l!AIT Ar mv ~'· Ntvv 1l ll111ton Collpgt 21. HOI~ Crou 7
11t u111en 27, MOrr1n 5111• I
SOUTH • •1•b1m1 ll. AubUrn 1 C tm~~ 17. Soutto C~roHn• 7 TennnMt lt . V1n<terblll 7 fkrrldt St•to. ll, Pllllburah n ~.SUJ:, Tull~ 1
lor ~· foiG'f~Jt\',1'
lll(t 2J. ~YI« 0 • icu 11. wu i. HOIU>t"" 4 . Ul1h U Tt•I• CEI PtlO) 31, Ctl S1tl1 (Lel!li
lte•cl!J 12 ...,. ROCIUIS ~r""' 5l11t Jl, Arl1on1 G ,.1 C or•ctc Srett 31. New Mt~ico St111
JUNIOlt COLLEGE ~UYOl'l'I 111,.., 11;11oo!tl •10 Mondo ;u, S1n11 B1rblr1,. '"Jmlno •1 C!rru1 U 11n _.,,1.i .. ~tl1 ,, S1n. M1tn I
1lni"111 i<ltoolll M1rlr>VI 37. Rfdwoacll U
lteedttv ,., co11t11 o1 C•,.,.,_ "
Tiit MW person1I 1lr1 ctr w!tto
''" b'lg cir ~. Find Oii! 1H 1111
"'"'"''""" or ltttll'lt 111r.uo11 I fK!Orf' tlirwd dNlll" tlll our
=~ ;i:ge~~ 540-5630 1
2129 HAAIOR BLVD,. COSTA MESA • MO·SUO
-•
I
Pro Grid Standings
NAT.IONAL CONFERENCE W•Ht11 OlvlMon
W L T I'd. I'll' PA
Sin Fr1nc:ll.(a .. 7 • O .634 211 l&o
LOI A1111eln . . • ' • 1 ·'°° n1 110 ar11n11 . . . • . . .. 5 5 1 .JDO :121 no
N....,.. Orlf1n1 • J 2 .M4 201 !$7
C1n1r11 Dlvl1itln
Bull1lo 27, New Er19l1nd 20
Clnclnn1!1 31, s.n Diego o
D-tr ll. Pll11buf'llh 10 ,
Mi-i.ol• l•, A1!1nl1 1
N.w ori.1n1 2t, Grffn llY fl
81IUmdre 37, 01kl111d 1'
C!e>1,l111d JI, Houston 14
Only 11~1 ldtedultd. W L TPct.PF PA
Mlflr'e'IOlt .... ' l O .Ill 17! It Ot!'111! .•..... 1 J 1 ,700 21<1 20:J T1nlthl'1 01m1
Chlc1110 .... 6 • 0 .'® \W tll ChlcellO it Ml1mf
Grnn 111'1' .. . l 1 l .300 221 2d OnlJ 11mt stlleGoled
t 1t11m Olvl11ff ... ,.. s1turd1y' G1m1 WLTl'd.Pll'PA .-D11l1s , . . I l 0 .m 211 116 N.Y. Jt ll I I 011!11
W11hln,1on • 7 l 1 .700 1011:19 Sundlt'I •1111M
NV Gl1n!s . .. .. . 4 7 o .l6ol !79 7V.
St. Louil ........ • , 0 .364 U611J 1 "~ll1dell>l'll• l 1 1 .::ioo 138 l•/
AM!RICAN CONl'EJllENCE
W11ttrn Dlvl1l1n
WLTPt11 PFll'A D1kllftd ....... 7 l 7 .771?9'?15
1(1n111 City ,,., 7 j I .100 238 1&1
Sin OltDO .. . . . . . • 0 .JM 20J Ml Dffl~tr .. . .. .. . J 7 I .:JOO 161 '°'
Ml•ml 11 Ntw E"'ltnd
Ntw York Giants It Wtllllnllon
0.11.land '' Cl11111l111d Phllldflphl• •I Oo"1>11 6ull1lo fl 811\lmor•
Pltt1burgh •t HQU!lon Grun BIJ 11 SI. Louil
(hlClllO •I 0fflvt''
New Orl11ns '' Los .1.,.elM MIMtJOll I t Sin Olevo .
Ot!IJ Dlmtl lctt.dul!id
E11t"n Olvhltn ;============,! W L T ,.ct, Pl' ll'A
Cltvfll nd , , 6 5 O .!.l5 11l 116
Pllhl>llfll~ . , , . • J 6 G .•55 1llS 211
Clrw:.lnnlll . • 7 o .:w.i nl 111
Hou1lon ...... l f I .100 '" 2IO
C1ntr1I Dlvl1lon W L T,.ct,PFPA
Mliml I 1 I -"' 1ll 117
81ll!more , I l 0 .777 :tSl 116
New E1111l•nd . ' 1 o .:l6ol 1n 212 NV Jt11 ...... , i 1 O .36' !S.C m
l ulf•kl •. . 1 10 a .ot1 161 m ·
•
SlllllllV'I G1m11
II. Loul1 ?4. Ntw Ye>rk Gl1n!1 1
11n 1'r1n<:IK0 2,, M!w York Jttl 21
W••hln1flln :io, Phll10rl11hl1 ll
TAKE THE
NEWS QUIZ
We Dare You ...
Every Saturday
1he best,,,
r
• seMee
--in fl1Nn I
caJI.
•
For promp~ olllclont
1nd frlonc\IY-
••
548·5522
ALL AMERICAN
ANSWERING IERVlC~
535 Center Street, Costa Mesa
•
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, . .
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made·cars
•Free Sears battery installation Nos.t.131,4339
Expert
Installation
A'vailable!
Sears Heavy
Duty Mufflers ...,. ......... Sears Reg'ular
Low Prices
. JIEAVY-DUTY ~tUFFLER
Llfo"'Et1ME GUARANTEE!
If muffler fills due lo dt!f(!(ls in fm·
li'nal! ur workmanship or b!ow-0ut. ·rusl-OUl or .,·eir-OUt v.·hil' original
pur~haser owns the ea.r. it will be re-
placed upan return. free of charg!'. If II" *fefllvt muffler WMS Installed bv
Scars. we wlU install the new IT!itffle'r
\11th nOchlrlf! for labor.
Ufttim1Gur111teeFor At Lo11gA1 Yo10wn Yo11r Car
Fit most American cars and VW's.
Large full-length tuning chamber for
better sound-silencing. 22-gauge outer
shell.
SA VE'40 or '50 osPu•rn•sE
OF ANY for J.Cylinder Remanulactured
., ··-·Complete ~•cllil.!.Jl!tallecl
AIJ.SrATE C:.r i nd Truck Engines. Ex-
chlft(et 1vallable for over 950 makes and
_modebiJJJn1n11!1cl11rl!d to more Pxacting
1t.andlrd1 tllln used In new engines. Compare
AU.STATE Rem1n11fact11red Engin' Quality.
More New Par11 la Every Rem.an1fac1urtd
C.pfete E•1h1t:
•All New W.a tuTubel
• •AU New Rocttr Shalla
•All New TimintGara
•All New TiminaQl.iitll
•All New Ml:ln Starlnl1 •All Nt:W Rod Belriqs
•All New lf1drl:u1lc
I.Ulen '
..
•A11 New Bushinp
•All New Seal Gast~ll
•All New E1Nrusl Valvt1
•All New Valve Sprin11
•All New Intale Valves
•All New Pistons
, •AllNt:wCllrome~ Rin&s ·
'
DISC or DRUM?
Stop at Seil rs for a
Complete Brake Jo.b
4988 6988
DRUM TYPE DI SC TYPE
Here's Whal ~an Experts Will Do:
•Flt brand new hnrke shoes or disc pads
• CareJ11lly rebuild bydra)!lic wheel.qlinder1
or front caliphrrs
• Re5urface bi;ake d111ms or reface rotors • ARC11rindall brakrsh~
• Rleed •II linell and 1dtl ftuld
•Hepa ck front whet! bear ings
• !Mpecl ma stereylrnder greilse seals. bosei.
;ind all brake hardware
•Oise brakrs for front ""heel drive1nd some
forei~n and sporlli can C'lcept~
•Under no circumstances 11·1ll Se.a rs do less thlln a --~·Int Quality Brake Job''.
' ' . · Prices Effective Sun., Nov. %8th thru Tues., 'Nov. 30ttt
•
49t All-Weather Oil
?oleet~. ~1eetds an nh car
manufactures warranty re-
quirem~ts.
3 ?,;;99~
Heavy Duty Oil · .
Filter ·· 199
Fits ~1ost Can ••
l': . ! ..
~·
Coolant Recovery
\ :'.!
YJ :1
Helps prevent
overheating. 247
Booster Cables
As
LowA.1 ·99•
Carburetor Air
Ff t":. -'l 99
•. Low As
. , .
. .
;I .. ..
I ' '. I
-.
.,
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"""'"'"\\Hl)l'l!N(.l<OU~~ MONl""'"""'-•uwtiA•~ !•ll "' TOO 'No ~lNOA• I AM 10 61'M ••11rn ...... , , .. ,_, ......... --... -... ----· -. ........ , ..... -__ ., ·--· -· .... -.-" -·-........ ---·-· --· -........ _ .. _,_ _ .. ·-. ....... .,_ ,., ... ",NI""" :::-
•
---""' -· ... ..... ...... .,,_ -••II _ ... --·
. . .
..... _ -.... . -..... ...... ,_,, --· _ .. _ .. , ..... ·-. ....-.. -... ·--··-.... .,; ---...:.-----
---
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I • •f
: •l. 'tl11cW.INNtR ~Bill Sirois of F.t.'i.aiiileraale, Fla.,·
t1'• br~shes ib.r the finish. buoy at more than 100 miles·
1 ·i -' • 1 ptr. Hour ·to wio .his second straight world outboard •
J• "' ~
. '
' . '
"f.
•
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'' W 1' :-~· DAI "t PILOT ll1ft l"M ..
bampionship at Lake Hl'Vasti. Sirois rompleted 165
laps tor a distance of ss·o miles at aii rverage speed
·of 812.5 miles per hour. ..
.. , ··Brazilian
1 -
Wins Title
" . " ;.. In Sailing
~)·"·' .NI'AMI ,(AP) -Brazii's
Joerg Brod.er has won the
, ·North American Star Class
_ sailing chlfupio!lShlp, but it """"~5'iii;~) ·, took a last-leg ef(ort on his
in '• .... pa,rt to mltriage a one-point
• . ' •• .. • r •
-
~ou'b.re'.~liea' -
Bill Sirois Wills . ' -
Big .Havasu Pr~e
~ . ' . By ALMON),,OC~EY bad to circle around · and
DAILY ,P!LqT IHH~ ~ --·r~turn. This helped Slrola to
. LAKE iu{y ~SU 'CIT)'. ~i:l .. ~le1!1Jthen his lead to thre~ Jape ~ Bii~/~·~troli" rJl 1~t.t"; ~J(~uf12-miles) w~ich tie htkl
LaudercJAle, fl~!, 11.whl~ :tj:JI: -~UJ)ln· the finitl gun.
tndic.1.a, 9J ·.a~~r . _ ~·-win ·gave Sirois $18i.OOO
Sunday lf oullnf!\c 91!-l .. c!-~ .h1P'<ha;e of .the 162,500
footed competlJl>tt:'fi.•h!f;·bld "J!l!)'.st.,H~ became the socond
for. a se<:q.nd e0nsec.UUV.:i!ar1d~-ativer n the hl~tory of jfle
outboard racir,g':c~pto'&hi.J••-'eftht-'lfeer-old marathon kl'. wi'Q
Sirois led t&e::--lte~ fr:om '-tbe' title.two weara in a roW.
start to fioish:et,1:¥~.f!!st fti\tr .. ~ T.be oth~ ~w!I:' Harald Eis ot
hours of the enduto ·o.n .sat.ur'"'.• Tope~\. Xansa.s. whO won 'the
day. But when t,he,J_leef~r ."~rst one J~· 1~. and .re~at~
oil from the ~ill: in the ; m. 1965. :El! f1n1sbed t~rd in
LeMans start· S~Y-~ -Sfr'pi5' :~• ye1r's ch~pioneh1p.
twin' Mercury ~r! spat-• • ·tit winning Sirois bett'ered
tered .and failed,•leM:n\i bis-IP record {of last year, With' a
Italian·made Molinari h u·f!--:_new mark of 660 ~µ~ 1( .•n wall~wing in !he fro~ wakes ... ;average spep. of ~:5 :~\es
of his competitors. · ,t• ._-/; ~r ~ur. ·
-• •
,. , •' ' !• , ' UPI Tl~
COOL, BAJl.Y -Tb'e.drinlr. that Is. A little less cool
was. ihe ,gi:eetµig Bill Sirois received .. from. Kam Ne!·
son, ldi.ss Outboard \~arid Champ1onsh1p, ,as ,he
nOsetl his Molinari hull into the dock after Wll1:DlJ:1~
.the. c'h·ampionsh.ip It Lake Havasu. It was StrolJ
second cor]\eentive cbampr&nship ~ith a new elapsed
time of 82.3 miles ,per hour. · -·
races. \he most dramatic :was about 25,000 wer1 presenf Sun-
'the battJ,e for the ·firsl·single day.
engine craft to finish ln which ----------
yOUng Renato · Mo1hiari of
Como,,. Italy, edged Mike · W~lleCe .. Of .VtP~ce'. ca.Hf .. -by TRAVEL
20 oeco.n<ls.--Mohnan was -TRAI LEI fourth overall. '
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• .-·:;;;·~=.I'. 'Vii::tory OV!!:r Miami's Reid ,..-..-~. Ruggles.
• tlruder, Y(ho finished the
-five-race • 5'1'ies Sunday with
231 points, \+u engrossed in a
private duel with James
"Ding" SChoonmaker o f
By the time tht--(~t2oQ..hp-:"•· .; ;~·J ne\l'er dreamed I·'coli!d do
monsters properly re,Vfed' u,p ., it: two years Jn a row,!' ,lli11·
he had lost one of the PficioiJs w rfed Siro~ as he . r'loled ·his
three laps of his Saturday craft to shore to r~elve fhe
lead. B.ut when the--3l:y_eat."'°1L2-P.laudits ot_the s~tatb?s .arid .
pilot got his. chargers roaring numerous busse~. from the
on the straightaways he push· t!lce. queln· wl)1le photogs
ed his boat to -speeds of over recorijed the action with pleas
100 miles an hour to sloWiy of ;•on~ more time."
regain the lead ovet h8rd driv-Besi(le:; the prize money,
ing Reggie· FOU'ritain· o I Sirois was awafded the Cham·
Tarboro, N.C. pionship Trophy by Robert P. ·
Sunday's . four-hour climax SP' •CE
\vas marred by a spectacul2.r ..
spilt in wllich Pon Pruett o1 f 5 00 a dcrr ,. Miami Lakes, Fla., te<:'eived •
•
' Miami whe!lo the pair suddenly
'feilized lllat Ruggles had ~ jumped waY out in front and
· 'w'.is threat~Jiing to take away
the overall CJlampionship.
-Brua--er-aftd~SChoonmaker
~roke out ~r their tussle and
'f .started · charkffig through the
{~ pack.
~\ f -.
: F;i ~~Makes 46-fQot S·l{Jop .. 1~-~ . t ... • .
,., &ricagp.1'acbls·or'Sa.nta Ana speed, tWin-Orum p e d 'e'~ t·a I liible;cari ·be-dismounted and·
hH &nnouncedJpr'odtiction of a winch .. _ · · ... ,. . . stoWed qut 9f the way against '!__
•"\i-•• new ·i4 foot :sloop 'd~igned to ·• A .. -Mofded-in . p I a t.t pr m the fo~ai:d.;bulkhead. Settee
.t'; ' be an "all out' ocean.racer." arauna.· the~ mast provides .seats na'nklng the table can be
J. 'lbt . new Ericsoo-i6 -was horiz.oiltal _ba!es for s i x converted to four s i n g I e
t.. designed by Bruce King who halyard winches and self· berths.
1ay1:qf hi.s brainchild : dra1n1,ng 1:;towage bnis for Rigging is a double-heads'l
. "ln creating the EricsOn-46 halyai"d tails.~ saU ~ plan with ball bellfitll -·
,.::__ ~~··of the usual cruising · ·--'Fbrtt ~d,tclt>...hatches .'<4l~ ol mld.stlip -b'aveler, l a p e r ,-~l'l't-.. .,,
\,,.,---mat. µiat can be made into a · ludte, fratned lh te.ak-wfth the a!JiftiinUn\-s·1»r~aders and i~ .,-··~
J, raclni boat, the approach was foi"Want ,·hatch>:opening on bOard lower shrouds for close .~
· reveraed-we·conceived a rac-stairil~ss ~·steel .'':slides. Four sheeting. Ballast is cast
'ft. in& bbat _that can .. ~ 111-ade into 0or:a<1~j'.y~ ve'ntilators ;1•Je .inernal lead. ~ ) a ait~.n1 boal.~ • molded into· the deck. Ad-· Fr,!!:sh water capacity is 160
I XifJr:!: ~~ he t~ted ,four dif · ditiotlaf· light ·amf' 311"\~r!·pro--gallpns in stainless steel tanks..
. fettrtt• -co~pl! ift t he vided by two deck Pfiiliifi1:an!I AUX~iarJ-'ROwer Is a Perkins
· Davli:t90h Laboratol')'' test'tank two cowl ventit~. • J.··'-diesel ;with 60 gallons fV~
Ii::' a,.t Stevens tostitute, and that ~ccommoda.t1ons beJ9"t1 are capacity-"t,. '
several times before he was 'flwY~J\ctuae ·three ~parl~ Vital ~~islics of t e ya~ t:
I
the final ·version was altered designed ·,for nine ~[tons.. 1-.t.r . · h h
sali.Sfied. . :_. • · compartmeiit! · two enclo1ett--~ng~h ;dYer 11, 45 ft IO 1n.;
1. Measur!Jig 45 feeLIO inch~s · ·hei!dS: · .~ · na Vhfator's stali6ffl leilgth W1itertine, 35 ft (37 ft 3
I overall length, the new and ·an "L"-shaped galley .• · in with rudder); beam, 13 ft. 3
,., medium displacement yacht is The cabin fo'rward has tWci in.: disp lacement, 31 .500 lb.
I '~ the lar~est and most am-single pi~6ei;UU .over sail · ballast, 16,500 Iii.; drart. 7 ft. :Z
1 ~ ... bitious of the boats built by stwage. bins. The mMlships in.; sail area, 1064 square f~t.· t" Erlcsan:-She was designed and
I is being built t9 ~ new
Intemationel Offshore 1 ·Rule
' !lotlr. t ..... Below the· ·waterline, the
I -new yacht displays a fine en-
-i' try, .shalloW swept keel. a
·" "kicker" falreti into the spade ~-:.. rudder, moderate curvatUre of
! the ~llgJ!, long waterline and a
; minimµm of welted surface.
i ! i'.., Topside she boasts a large
~--flush deck, remova ble cen·
l terlinfl,seat In a "Y" shaped
REMEMBER l I
.with l
'1 1Bob Paley 1
And Associates . '
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Sirois had more trouble McCulloch Sr. sponsor of the
after his first pit stop whei'I world 's richest boat race.
the enginl!:s again falle(f 'to~ Fountali)'s sttond p I ace
spond sizfficien-UY 'fO gef his · finish netted him $9;000 and
boatuponthestep. the trophy for the most
This cott him more than a outstanding new driver in the
lap and; put-Fouotain .. slightly race: Eis earned $5.000 for
more than a lap behind. -t~ird-place-in his eight hOurs
Then it was Fountain'a ·tlft'n . •of work:. ·
for trouble. On his ririi pit.. 4
, SPeCf.aton: ~at placid Lake
stop he overshot his ere~ and Havasu actually witnessed two
• ma:mlnated
Channel ,
.-~ ...
• DbltProof
Cartridge
Door
I broken hip. Shorpen your 96llf DOmt-
Th 'd t . ed proctlce on the public e. acc1 en occurr o~ a driving ronge ne11t dOOf'.
turn 1n the .course at which "
Pl'Uett's boat and one .driv,en Palm ·n· r1-1 by Tom ·Wood of Canada Hip-••w
ped at the same time. Wood OGI I ·
was picked up from the water tw.c11i-1 vtihld. .._. unhurt 36 100 Dot• Palm Dt. •
_A · d of · '" 000 Cathedrol City, Collfornle 9'23' crow . . some ....,, <71-4) 328--'113
watched t)le fll'St four hours of A.1oati•i1J-'t1>tu.s.r-w._..
tbs.race On Saturday, but race ,
~icials estimated th2J. only
11.RU)I
USE ""' vou• ·-· CREDIT
CARD
l ~ ..... : .. cockpit, . built-in instrument panel, . a standard w.J;i e e I
.. steerer positioned 'forl"ard in
• • the .cocltpit.
~ .s. _,
474 E. ln'H STREET "' 12' Alllti'INUM aoosmwa
l: ~ .Jn place of Genoa tracks,
: · · · the Ericson-46 will h a v e I ~-full•length aluminum alloy toe·
.. rails wtth machined holes for
1 pogitionlng the sheet blocks.
I ·' Inside the splash shield
--coming forward of tfie "'heel
:-is the main c<lmpanionway t • halch and provision for a tw~ 1' •
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BAFECC COSTA 'MESA
642-6500 -546-3205 INBURANCE
•
REO
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.,....:.., __ ~ ·~··411--
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fe 9T•• .. AIO•a.l ~A · 0AL LA I TI A; l.O•e Al ... O• aot'Olll
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J97
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l~ICI 1X. f.t.X ·~· UCM J!H
1f.97 14.17 ,,,
13.17 19.97 "" . 14.97 17.97 "M • 4 PLY mo1 con
• 12/12 ·11CRlTWD DEPTH 97 7.1 .. 14 19.17 19.17 ....
7.J .. t• 17.17 20.17 ...
WHI& IAL.M!:l 7.7 II ...
US.J4 . 19.97 21.11
ll 2WlllilrJ• J ' . 1.1:1.
u .. 11 1a.111 .. 19.97 11.tT
BU.ENA PARK '
IMI• 11•4. st L11ltw.INf
~ ... -· •"4.
'523-3040
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fai •
4w;:u·•1
o" cu. ....,. ""2,p9 ;:ciu11G1 m.
. BUENA PARK·.
Ll-c•I• trt Y•llt'f ~ ' . " ~ 1111~ Lltct l• A ... '
826-5800
COSTA 'MESA
H~t .d • .tWftMI '
' 1211..HerMt MW.
548-2082
..., .... 1, ........ -. , ....... ..... , . 10.tT 11.11 ...... .......... LU-ll llMI 21.11 4.1 7 .... b91•t•lf!'' JJI,....,...,~~-·
•1111 MOUNTING ;1111 ROT'iTION WITH Tllll PUllCHAlf
• SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER
1....-~it l rltt•I S..h 11,4, st MtPff4e11
1400 -l lAlltet 11440 ...... ''t"'· ' • • 548-7832 892·2081 ,.
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Are _ Y~u . Le~ting Cash
Slip Through Your fingers
st , If You Have Any
, f · These ·Things. A ,"
' . . . ~ . .. , ,-b41~Lt-~,,i .. or
. . . . . .. . . : .
WA.NT-A.D.
~·;·. ,. '~ .. J;; .•• .:"'• .. . ~_ '. . "
..
. WiU: Sell Fast!· .,. '
1. S.tovo
2. o·ullar
3. ·l•by . Crib
·4. ~loctrlC. Saw
' ' S. C1mer1 · ·
6. Washer.
· 1. Outboord Motor
I . Stereo Set
9. Couch · 1
10. Clirlnet
11. Rofl'lproior
12. Plekup truck
13. S.wlnt · Mochlne
14. Surfboord ·"
1 S. Machine .Tools
16. Dt1hwi1h1r
17 •. Puppy
11. Cabin Ct:"ulHr
1'. Goll Cari '
20. B1rorne:t1r
21 . Stemp Col!ectton·,.
22. Dln•lt• S.t
23. Pl•y · P0n
24 ..... 11,,. loll
25. W•tor Sidi
26. FrllJll'
21. su11< ...
2~. Cli>cli'"
~ , ..
29. Blcyclo , . "
30. ' Ty1?9wrlt1r
.,31 . Bir StOols
32. En~ciopodl•
'.33., V1cu~m Cl11n1r
34. Troplcol Fish
35. Hot Rod Equlpm't
36, Filo C1bln1t
37. Golf Clubt
31. $torllnt Sliver
39. Vldori1n Mirror
40. lledroom Sot
41. Slide "Projector
42. L1wn Mb'ftr
43. ~ool T1bl1
«.Tires
·45. Pl•'1o ·,
·46. Fur Coit.,,, ... . ,
47. Dr1p11 ·
41. linens
49. Horn
SO. Alrpl1n1
51. oiv•n
'52. Ex1rcycl1
53. R1r1 Books
st-~· Boeh
55; High .Choir " 56. Colnt l
" $~. ll~frlc Trit~ ·
SI" Kitt...
5.9. Cl~ulc A~
60. Coffee T1bl1
61.. M.io...c.;..19 . ' ~ ,~
62. Accerillon
63. Skit
'4. TV $11 .
65. Worklionch
66,.'Dl•mond W•tch
67.-Go-KOrt 61 .. Ironer
69. Camping Troller
70. Antique Furnlluro
71. T•po Rocor!lor
72. S•llboot
73. Sp0rt1 'C•r
l4.' Mottrou Bex Spt•
75, lnboord S""'""'ot
. · ,76. Sh"91!ft n. S•ddlo · -. • J • -~
71: ·o.rt -'" -~. Punchlftg .lot ·
so; l•lrt Corrlqo
II. Drums· · .,
82. lRlll1 •
u.~:
14. $°CUBA GHr
• 'lliese· or any other extnii thllig• arouliil . the houte '
' .
can be turned _ Into cash with a
D:AILY PILOT WANT·A:D-
so.
'Don't . Just ... ~it '' . l ~
T.here!
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DIAL DIRECT -· . .
~·2-5678 '.
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•• 1' I! G.ner•I · ~' · • Gefter•I G_•_n_•_r_•1 _______ 1
' .. · ·J.•DROOMS. '· WHEEL-C-HA-IR-;IT'S TRUE
$185.00'/MPNTH · 3 New Cuat~m Homes .PA"S ·a 11 'J. Tld1 cu1tont built home wa1 $1,385 MOves You In J. ~_,,. ' detllfl(e:d & 'bul!t. by a build· TaJM.~lii~jeet io ixlft_lfta ·el-~ wife wu an invalid Check tht:w d!U1 flj&turet: ~ r ntA loan, ~tte ~Itel. , -.! Located OftJ,ltltb Place t..the and pltrter throu(h·
• , .. ~t lqcatlon, f~· nh:r ·tnil.ne. Jumbo shake ~ • Ceratnlc ti!e • cist
' • ~plng. Vf!tY elMft, ·root, uaed brick fireplact1' .l-uvn sinks and. tubt -Rein·
----1-won nao:t. MS-H. ru'"ifif.ext@iio, is the ttlefne Jorced concrete • Cultom
GRANNIS · doors • Extra large windows
Full pr;.,. • Uwaded cupetJnr -. TV
$35 500 and phone outlet. in all
A
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Amdentil.J
Realtors
'629 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
Macnab-Irvine
• Rla.lty COmpe.ny
FOR XMAS
Cheery. Cl&nnlnc, Warm.
Friendly. end vacarit. 2 BR.,
l!( bath, condomi,niutn on
eul-de-aac. Hurry on thU
buy. ,Call Amy G••tOfl.
6'2;8235.·
nab-Irvine
. 644'6200
FOREC~OSURE
PENDING
Owner. desperate! Must WI
thts ro~ 3 year old •
bedrDom: t bath rahch 1t)ie ~ <'. )Witb built:ths, fire.
place1 lJe•t Costa ~~-... Jfta. 129,3!0: H...,.,,. '*'640 ..
· GRANNIS : ·
I ' room• • Largo 1"" -O>m·
Plettly fenced. They WOQ't
!Ht . Dial Now~rt
•I
F1irvlew
~11
(1nytime)
~=:=
$185 PER MO.
lndudes taxes &: insurun! •
•n.YOne can assume this 6%
GI loan. 3 Bl\ ranch stYle
with aeparate family room.
Heavy ghake root, oversited
living mom, blt-in siep sav-
er. kltc&en. Pn quiet ~t
close to rchool.s. New FHA It
VA terms. Available at only
$26.500. See it today!· ·
SfQ-1151_ {Open Eveg)
f4f .. :"!~J
'45-03D3
2299.Hubor, Oolta Mno
IOHI \I I Ol\O \
1(£,f ,-1.,-i'"
Big Canyon
Fi~ bedroon11, 3 b9thll • fam·
ily room, laundty"' roOm, 3
car·raraP.:-BiiiltlfUI 'eomer
·lot at Herinltqe Lane and
Roya! St. Geotp Road. Thll
home ii befnc ttnbhed now
arld r~ld be .avallallle for
moving in before Chrll'tmar.
Drive by ~· .ee lt, then
· call owner at 6U·llfJ. Price
$92,50Q. l
. Am.NTION · . . ." j-Gl;f I
FOUR BED.ROOM Fo. .,. woo ""'' of • '""" rePort, we can moye you
CHARMER into any one of..,aieviral 3 '
""""""""' • be<boom homes ;,, ", Rooll<>n $25.450 boach uu.,C.U tod'1 *''
-'629 Hartior-Blvd., C.M., Terrffi val ~ for -deWl11 -
· · TEACHERS c "' • m · SHERWeeo RIAL TY boat, pool, etc. Sparkllnc -I LIV!: IN ONE, RENT &n,:. clean _ Owner a.rocioua. _lo_. Proolthunt, · F.V .
. . µt UNIT. p;...._ • . L<wely n<;(hbothood. Clooe SUBMIT TERMS. 646-nn. OWNER, MOVE-I) ..
"' !Tlh St. E"mldo ea.ta NEE.OS ATTENTION
?ot@.sa. t bedrooms. 2'ii baths, eep~
TRI HARBOR ante living plus ·huge 1ain·
REAL TORS · ily room. Largo back yard
· ""' E. 17tl!. c.M. Best Bliy In Town for'"'""";";"" p1u, """" DAY ORN~ MS--3155 F~ SZl ,95Q ·you get .a new!)' ed pool, Wan\' olkr. •
uERE'S YOUR painti!d 3 b@droom hon'ie .. n w;!h bmlt-ln kltc~n. ttmod· ~'DOLL .. HQUJE . .01..i ''"'·Room for"""'°' Ex~P.tionall.Y ""·~u cared ron trailer in C05ta ?oftta. Now
la chenm yer
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Re,illor
3' ~ 2 bath charmer. vacant. Call NOW! Sf6.8640 1860 Newport Blvd., C.M. ·~uble ~. "i<o yarda. ---.GRANN 6<6'39>!-.:Vft. 675-1"1
new ca..rpet · tn all rooms. '
.full pnco m"'" AU """l . """•otial ROOM TO ROAM available. HurtY!, ~8640. Realtol'! A slate entcy leild.1 )'OU into . GRANNIS 2'?.! Harbor Blvd ... c.M. nus compl•tely """'°"'"' horn~. boutlng 5 bdnns. &.
Rtsidential
Re-altars ..
· Zl9 Harbor Bl~ .• C.M .
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.lJME FOR
•\: ' . ' . ' ' '
QUICK CASH
THROUGH· A ' .
$850. family rm.: all b It-I n
MOVES '(OU IN ki"' .. "' "'• burning .,,1c. plu1 new shag carp.: lge.
A ~at 1'!~rt;r ho~e '?.:.~~ feqced lot for tfie kids lo
• )Ollng .....,uuy who 1 th-= U1 play; vacant .l ready.I Low,
paying rent. Jt has a loW'Jy )ow .down to all.
family room~ built-in range MORGA·N REAL TY & ov~n toi-your living en-
joym'"t. · _ 67lo6642 . 67t'4!9
Sparo..; Riiy 842-447.4 TERRIFIC TRlf'LEX
'IA ~st for every bird" i-2 Bdnns.; i.j bdrm1. C&rp., I --"="-=':,;...:="---"=-I dra~. kitchen blt·ins. A-1. , · $11,.950 fatloe:, 1undeck .. .trplc. plus 3 Br. ·+ 2 Baths ' lnd'Y\!. 149,000---·.--
Cul-de-11ac s~t. F'ormal din. Hape ~rrle, ,Rlty. are&, blt-in RIO, lots of cab· $33 Dover .Dr., N.~~ · i~11, breakfast. b&r. FI A 64;)...4400 645-3320
heat. large cov. palio: A LUSK BUIL.T IT
real bargain~ Submit! Call Eastbluff with a view. Fffi
841-122'1 outside, Jnitdi. 3 Bit., ~
SEYMOUR REALTY, 1n•1 quet fin. She'll love t h e
Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bch. k:itc~n~ Priced for quick
sale, Call now!
-GE:1111Mi--*EAST SIDE*
3 BR, 2 BA-; fan)ily l'ln, fin!·
pl,' bit-ins: "huge . walk-in_ 1610 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. REALTORS &U-4623 c)OgetJ. 1800 sq. ft. N~w
erpts/drapes & paint. va. BAYFRONT APTS.
G<L"t. linmed. poss~S!lon. Vista Del Lldo. Pier I: .Up
$29, 950· . &vallablo. F'°m l'!l.000. Sell Ro.f Mccardle R1altar or lease.
· 1810 Newport Blvd;, C.M. George Wllllamson
548-7729 REAL TOR .... ~~ ..... ~~~I 541-6570· 645-1564
DELUXE DUPLEX
Steps to ocean. Newl)' car· $29,500
peted, tre_shly painted. ~w~-4 ~room~ + F1mlly
DAIL.y PlloT 1sh frplcs. 3 Bdrm .. 2 baths· '9wher leavin$'. area A-must
eacit. Ca!I for app't. to see.' sell thia 2 ye~r )'d!J~ home
Cail: 6'n-3002 675-8886 Eves. in better then new condi·
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BROKERS-REAL TORS
202S W Balboa 6>]J.Jl.6J
tion. E¥quisltely landscaped
rround• & delllhtf't.11 patio
add the final touches to this
"Particular Buyer" home .
SHERWeeo REAL TY
C&:EAH-CONDO 18964 ""'°""""" F.V.
2 BR. i:,,.. H;, & H"' cJoo. NEW LISTING .
ell. Dining area. Dshwshr. lolesa Verde Pacesetter. 2
Patio, dbl . gar. Very Charm· story, • bedroom, fainUy · tni-'· Make an Ofttt! room, separate dining roo_m. , ~ ·~GEM · 1 • Owne.t transferred.1S.f3,95o.
' 161 ·w ~-" H N 8-1 ROY J. -WAAD 8LTRS ' 1J ' \..\HIM wy.. . . ~ I REALTORS 642-4623 ~ • I
can 6U-561B Nowt
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• • .·
•. ' :le Dl!LY PU.OT Monday, NMmbtt 29, 1971 -I
•
Everyone Hos
Som eth in g That
Someone El•• Wa nts
DAILY .PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS '· You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trad e It
With 11 Want Ad ·The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial ,642-5678 for F~st Results·
":::===:::::;==~~~·;;:;:::;~-'
I-....... ~ ,~, _....... ,~ 1r-i [
r ·~-~ I ~torU. 1 ~ HoiwtorSait
1 •iiiiiiiiiiiiiij~
_ .... _ ......
General • Gener••~
* * * * * TAYLOR CO. *
. 'PRE-HOLIDAY SPECIAL!
Hurry for this one! Newly painted 3 bdrm.
borne on large corner site. Imagine this:
Your own badminton court! Owner will sell
VA/FHA. Back Bay area. Qujck possession.
~'Our 26th Year''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realt11rs
2111 San Joaquin Hills Ro.d
NEWPORT CENTER 644-49TO
Geperal General
' I
DOVER SHORES
Fabulous Galaxy Drive view home. 2 doors
. from Calaxr. Park. Large indoor entertain·
ing area wit h pool, jacuzzi, wet bar, fire·
place, plus formal living room. $122,000 with
land lease. ·.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.8. 67~161
General·
$26,750
Eastside Cottage
No D!lwn to Vets • or name )'OUr own tenns.
Country tivinf at Its bffi.
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ma5-o
5fve floor ta....ceiling brick
fireplace, built-in kitchll!n.
la'rge comt!r lot. Won•t last.
>16-8640.
GRANNIS
Res.idential
i Realtors
26ll9 Harbor Blvd., C.?tf.
WET NOODLE
NELSON
wOutd really appreciate .this
terrific ?ttll!sa Vtrde lil!iting.
3 ,bedrooms, 2 baths, formal
dining-eating area in the
kitchen and a lovely trtt-
tihtd low traHic Mll!sa
Verde street, and u "\.\·et
noodle" says \.\'hen \t comes
t9.dOV.'n payment, "Boy are
v.<e F-L-E-X·I-B-L-E." 10%
do~'n, lease option,
whatevtr! ! Call us, let's
talk a hoot it !! Only $27,500.
6""550.
LIKE .A
SUNRISE VIEW?
General
•• , .for small hofiie . in +-"°'""na do!ll Mar . 2 Eastside
Cosla 'MeM triplexes.
Bclrms .. 2, 2 & 3 e.ech unit.
A ga,_rage plus parking area
for each unit. Located
within easy walking
dista~ of post office,
banks.&...sbops...xtnl value.
$94,00'.l.
• 675-3000
BAY & BEACJ.t
REALTY ,~,
A Pair Of 4's
In
C11rona · !!el Mar
Check inlD this Bonus Sized
Duplex! Each unit has 4
bedrooms. 21,2 baths, formal
dining area. fireplace and
approximate'ly 2CXXI ,,quatt
feet of living area. It's
located near park, teRni<
~ thU. lri. 4 BR + lam.
rm-+ d in. rm. homE\
Choice location. \Valk
f'verythlng. pool · park -
new &hopping center. -Own·
M' hales to lea\·e. 0 n 1 Y
· courts, •nd bMeball field,
and can be purchased \\i lh
only 10'1'> dov.'n. Liv€' there
for Jess than rent or rent out
and make money. Sound
good?? Is good!! Only
Si9.500. Call 6i3-8550.
l;R: THE REAL
'C E.~!A,I~~~ ~ l iiiiiTiiiREM--EN_D_Oi;O;u""s~
Coldwell.Banker FAMILY ROOM
....:.....__REALTOR~ \\'ITH FIREPLACE-in this
~ rozy rottac-e in f\e\\'PQrt
S33-0700 644-2430 Helght.s. 3 bfAfrooms, dining
room & breakfast area.
Ahout 2 years old -\\'11!11
priced at $39,950.
•
COATS
&
' WALLACE
REALTORS
-5%-4141-
(0ptn Evtnings)
JUST ONE LER'
In 11 delightful area )'OU may
_have newr r;een. Like nev.·.
3 bedroom5. 2 lull b .. th5
v.i th sunken tub & hu;:e
roomfi. P\tnry of room for
hoat ,;torage &. pool ll
r\~si~~ AvaUabillty n f
hoN.e b()arr\in1 only 3 hloclG
a\\oay. For inlormatlon call
&IB-7tn. $46,000.
FHA. VA TERMS
S nk1!'11 nvtng room. all eltc·
trlc: buBl·in kitchen, block
v.·all, ht•vy ahakt rool k
~ment c:lnve are jusl 60me
the quality f~at\ltts of
this rklln; 3 bedl'\'IOm,
J1m1ly . Offtritll
All u•rma 11 ~.~. Call
now. •
st0-1151 IOP'ln £ytt.)
PETE BARRETT
, .. , !~~l;:~. i
HlW,ORT IEACH ti'
.642·5200 '"'
-~-Owner Transferred
,\nd a nxious. Spacious 4
bedroom. 2 hath. 3 year old
in J\tINT condition. J\lodcrn
~ll'p-~ving kitchen. Shag
carJ!E'tin~ & special_ lile.
.Elee. garaite 'door. \\-'Ork
bench & C'O\'ered storage. 5
minutes to lhe beach. No
down G.l. small do\\'n FHA.
$32.500. CALL 61514930
~'co.I ·.-.r~·~~ll·ttlt
BROAOMOOR
WITH V IEWI
p_t\'l llstlnc -scarce S BR ..
~milh built home. Lge, lh ..
ing nn., dining rm .. ocean
& h11rbof ,·i~·. Realistic&lly
prieed Al $7:,?,()I'(!.
CORBIN 7
MARTIN
REAL TORS 644-7662
Mother·in·Law's
Hideaway
Ge ner i i
UNlflUl ti()MlS
Au l 'Emi., e1s.Do
DOVER SHORES
REDUCED
Graciou!'i 4 bedroom, oomfy
fahiily room, formal living
room & dining room. custom
pool :on the sunny side.
View. Only $89,500,
UNlflUl tiVMlS
l'lut E"'111. 17s.eotl0
1.Ul E. (0111 HW~'.
CotOlll 0.1 Mv,c.111.
HOME!
/FOR SALE
$39,500
\
Y0u'll find many houses !or
sale but few homes like this
~rome available and re·
ain on the mark!'!. Bue-
. la-built 1n 1968. 1his home
sparkles inside and out and
pro-chi!nn. "'annth an d
comfort thniout its 2250 sq.
fl. oM-story, features 4
bed.rooms and den or 5
bedrooms plus family room.
Jdeall:t situated near beach
atid Edison Algh Sc.hool.
P hone 54&.231.~ for more in-
fo and SEE IT SOON!
Genera l
r
TOO MUCH TURKEY?
Not In This
NICELY DECORATED 3 bedroom h ome with .
lovely 12 x 30 SOLARIUM. 3 baths. Quality
carpeting & dra pes, kitchen v.•ith built-ins,
COMMUNITY POOL. RECREATION HALL &
PUTTING GREEN. Only ........ .!59,500.
PLEASURE YOUR TREASURE
In This Beauty
PANORAMIC VIEW OF NEWPORT H AR·
BOR. 3 bedrooms. 3 baths, SPANISH "fire:
place. kitchen v.1ith built-ins.· CUST0~1 clet<-
orated carpets & d rape s. BUILT-T N W)NE
CELLAR & \VET BAR. Entertain undeI1 the
Balboa Peninsufe
ON the Point, 4 BR, 3 Ba,
2 frlJIC!I. hltns, by o~·ner,
1'7o-loan avail. $57,500.
675-6666 " r
Coron,1 dtl M•r
3 Bdr m ., 21h bath, 2,500
sq. ft. v itw of oce•n
a nd bay; just • few
steps from Big Corona
Beach, 217 Heliotrope,
$85,000. 675-3539
Costa Me sa
2 BR. large gar, fenced yd ,
close 10 schools & shop-
ping. $16.00J. 272 Costa
Mesa. SI. 6-1&-9136.
BY Q\\'NER 4i9 \Valnut Pl. 3
BR. 2 BA, lge yd w/beaut
trl"es, irplc, hu·d f I r 1 ,
$36.500 642-7892.
East Bluff
Huntington Beo1ch
"ESTATE LIVING" ·
A custom bilt home with many lux ury fea-
tures, such as, 2 fireplaces, wet bar, plus gor·
geo us ca rpets and drapes. Ttu1y beautiful.
Call us for an appointment 847-6010 or
842-2535.
Acr••a• for salt
160 Beaut. grt'l!n rollina: mt.
acres. TAKE for only noo.
do~·n SIOO. mo. 963-0047.
Commercl1I
P r operty Tll
9.7 NET Relurn, S36,000
beloW appraisal, Nll!\\'P(lrt
Beach commercial cornet
with 23 year ltase.
Realonomics, Bkr.· 675-6700
Condominiums
for sale 16CI
Condominium 2 BR, bltn kit.,
pool, m in laundry. By owner.
Costa Mll!sa 673--0412 642-~2
Duplexts/Unlt1
salt 162
DUPLEX. 1 blck lo beach.
\V. Ni!!Y:port, 3 Br, 2 Ba ea
unit, lrplcs, walled patio,
fee simple !and. Gocxl in-
come, $65,000. , 0 w n e r
645-4245.
lncomt Proptrty 166
stars. BE.A.UTIFUL-PATIO. AUTO 11~1E BEAUTIFUL -Lusk 2 atory
LIGHTS. For zh discriminating b~lyer. home on quiet cul-de-sac. Adjacent to orange County
3.32 Acres Comm'I
.... '' ... u .. 'p:: ... N .. D .. ·D"o"w" .N ... $1251000. Pro!. lodKpd .• ,...,,. ""· Pl•"'· Chapman • Brook-tor Pror. decor inier, 2 hurst, Garden Grm·t:. 10101
frplc's. For Sale By 0\\'ner, Chapman. 144,000 sq ft va-
And All A round· ' 64~31. ZlOO Aralia Sr~ NB. H~ntington Btf ch Laguna Btach cant. ground ise or trade for
THE CIRCUL.<\R ST.<\JR\VAY leads yo up BY 011 n<'r Ne"1JOrt"Bch con:; Income pt'Op("rty'. ~Ir. Rog-
the sta irs \vhe"re you will Ci-nd the JiVing do. 3 BR. 2 BA, 1 level. 2 $ S 950 4 Br, 3 ba, tam rm, pool 52 ers, <Z13) 357·1lll. ext 268
room , dining room . kitchen. 1 bedroom . 1 pa11os. nr pool. Lowt>st 1 • • lot. Big valli!y view! S39,500 or (213) 694-1313, eves.
bath, ALL CARPETED. Downstairs. 3 bed· assoc. dues. Only $32.900. 3-bedrooms, 2 baths, eleetric Owner. 494-76Sl. 7 HOUSES
rooms, l bath. Great idea? < ....••. s:rgf500. \r1\I carry 2nd. 2411 Vista hu il1-in R/0 . dininJt area. Lido lilt _ on large 115'X2()3• lot. Five 1 ll1Jgar. 6-14-.,1793. formal living room, FIA 2 bed & · l bed . • '+'-~--------1 . bed WE'VE GOT ITI · rooms t\.\·o room IT'S A KNOW •KNOW F t • Vo1llty -heat, queen SIZC n:19ms , -un1tJ;. Close to shopping.
• oun ain -carpets, draf>("s, 60 x 100 A spacious 4 BR. + d<!n Nev"' a vacancy. ,.,,~: mo. Thi.s Deal .. "" 4 BR. 2 BA. Jge Jq,t, flagstone :fenced & landscaped lot. home with a versatile 2-income. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, fireplace, Do bl · ·1h boal 1 • 1 M t ,·1 s 9 500 patio. BBQ, nr '-tile Sq. u e -Ra.rage w1 s y. oor p an. as er su e 7
:BEACH COTTAGE. front pa tio. A good deal Park. S2S.500 714:83g....3679. door, covered patio. incl. study or sewing. rm. PERRON REALTY 542.1nt for only ........................ S32,500. Payments Jess than renr. 14;e. kitch. & brldst. area. l'-----....,.-----
Huntington Beach 4Cl. l't Jot $86 500
HORSES & FRESH AIR If h~~b 10 .,',,;.,,,J"-*DANA POINY.* 5. BEDROOMS That's A Pair CONVENIENT ' 54Wl J AOOJ.COR · New Deluxe Duplex:
EASTBLUFF TN CHERRY VALLEY. 4.57 acres. LOVELY 4 CA€~~~:l~IA '6~JI (:;::) O 3416 Via Lido · 67;-062 $49,950.
Ulace for ..!verything tn _ b~draom, 31;2 bath, fantastic lands~aping & . Webb Rt alty 642-4905
this 2500 s:n. ft . 2-story 11ome. a VIEW you can't believe. CaretaKers co tfige, -Immaeulate-in-evf!l'Y--Oetail. ·FOR--S-ALE-by owne-r~$l&.000· 1""""BR::'"fil'l\llr,J'rbi~
Formal dining room. car-auto. sprinklers, 120 Cherry Trees . \VILL ~rated superbly. 3 spac· Open house .this Sun. Nov. 100 ti. on ~. '. ... $1of9,500 j .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiij
pE'ted & dral)("d, blt-ln kitch-TRADE FOR BE1\CH PROPERTY .. $85 .000. ious BR .• 2 decorator BA. 281h. 3 BR. 2 B,_, cpts. drps. 5.BR., 6 ba., new, luxurious DANA POI NT
en, 3 baths. Beaulif\ll!y land-cust~~1 made ~ & s~;· bltns, fenc€"d yd w/alley en-P ier & Slip ........ $245.950 12 Unit Apt Project
,;caped. Top location. \'a-lal Con';,~non Area · tr. to garage. ~II 847.-1868 LIDO REAL TY INC. Investors-Builders
canr, fast potlSt'S"ion. #]18. Assume 6'~'" lo;yi. Pay-10 s~. 8W lnd1&napolls. 3317 Via Lido 673-7300 Call 833-8090 for info.
$51.500. Call 675-72'25 J'/"4tbe-Slllid me;ts i~~L~7~7 S~SOO. $14,500 to $19,950 l!'!''""'""~'""!!!"'""'""""i..,!"".,.'""!""'""'""~~I
Hom• & lnvts lment
R'EALTORS
644-7270
· I & ~ Br. HOUSES. You Newport S.ach Industrial Property 168
l.fake the tt-nns. Avail·now. . ....._
DEAN ·REALTY 536-7527 Anyone For Golf? M -1 BLDG. S3o,ooo
lJHrlD S TATlS Ff !Atta TOWNHOUSES . . $34 95 ft-1.250 11q. ft. young ind. bldg.
. \._ ;....,., "'"'". ( , V & old hou~ on 100' x 120' ~ from $16.000 lo $24.000. Low , This is not on a goU course. choice· Cosra l.Tcsa site.
----,.cc:c---::-::-:-:-:=:::-l low down P.AYment. DEAN but it is right on a \pro-Room to hu\ld more.
TRI LEVEL BEAUTY REALTY 536-7527. fe~ionally manicured ptit· Wesley-N. Taylor Co.
$35,900 • 2 BR CONDO, by owner, low ting green in Newport Realtors
· Realty
3535 E. Coast Hwy., Cdfl-1
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
St1nken fo';imily room with do\\•n payment. . Beach's f ine st con· 2111 San Joaquin Hills Rd.
. \\'et bar. 3 BR., 3 BA areas. 557-9-140 or 9611-1629 dominium. There are two Newport Center 644-4910
frplc. formal din room, i;:ar-Irvine swimming pools in this Assumoble 6 °/o
GI Loan
In C111le9e Park
Assume a $20,400
GI Loan And
. Pay Only $187
Total Per• Month
• 3 Bedrooms a.nd Family
Room e Bii;: Yard
• Close to ~hoo\11:
• Clmf' 10 Shopp1ni::
• Close in on 1his one, You·11
be glad ~'OU did, e Call 510.2~1 3
POOL + RUMPUS
. ROOM
General
Hard To Find
Ne~·Jy list(>(!, this super
fan1 11y hom e 11·i!h 4
bedroon1s, 3 baths. has that
hard to find sepa.rale family
roon1, plus an 18x22 ft.
:"\laster Suitt with fireplace.
ba1h, se1~·ing and ollice
area. ThE'rc is also a laun-
dry room, a 50 fl. patio a nd
f"(l\'f'r u1lh f1repit plus many
01her .1:rea! fea'.turf's. Enng
1hC' ffunt!y. $36,954l. Call
5-l&-2313.
SANTA CLAUS
IS ALI-VE
Plus 4 hcd roo1ns1 2 bnthi;, and l''Ork1ng for you on 1his 3
buill-1n kitchen. new P.hag bcr!room, 2 bath charmer
carpeting, 211replacc1. Over \\Ith SEPARATE 20 x 30
600 sq. ft. rumpus room in· rumpus room al'IQ seller
eludes "·et bar. 'No qual1-\\'tlhnc-to pay your costs.
f~·ing. no loan Ices -Jll-"I To11·erini:: trce-shadNI st!'('('\
take ovll!r subject to exisllni:; in brauhful ncighborhoNI.
G1 Loan. O\\'flCr will oon-Al'i;umc VA loan \\"It h $11.i
sid<'r $1.000 do11·n. 1:-.1. total payment s. )to,·e in by
\\I EDIATE OCCUPANCY. Chr1~1mas. $2t500 F t.;LL
Walker & Lee w ~ik~'r & Lee
2790 Harbor BL et Adams
5-l;).().165 Orirn F\r~ .
CORONA D E L ·MAR
S<'aultful fref' !1n!'d street.
Cnzy t hrre brirm . 2 b3th.
ne\\·ly derorated home on
~UTI-1 :¥DE or HIGH-
WAY. P11.t10, ~ar11ge on pa\'-
ed altl'y. l..oc11ttd nea r gram·
mf'r i;.chool. shopptn~ and
CD~I BEACH. Only S39,!lj(}.
'C>rctnge Vista
PROPERTIES
• f rn-rnerly L11.Bordc R 1:.
220 E. 17lh St., C.M.
CALL ·646-0 555
EWMll"'(S 6-12·7 13.~--
ATTENTION VETS
rr you are renting, it's l!mt
to buy. We SflKlallzc in VA
lt f"HA u les. \\'e ca11 ~1,•e
you exaclb v.·hat you \\"ant
for jur;l S-47 ~ tot11 I In·
vestmt'nl and m n n 1 ht y
pA)'mentJ leM lh,,n 1·en!.
CAii ~
Walkeivnee
Rraltors
711/$16-l';';il
CORONA H IGHLANDS
Only S39.!ri0. Con1fl'lrta,i'Jle,
ClJS!l'lm built home \\'i!h min·
imum yaM care, Ct'7;ol pa rio
&. seclurlrrl pool. f r1r n&Y
ll\·inli room \\it.h fir1'pl.1°J.,
l ar~e k11rhen, oversil('rl
hrrtmrimi; !master 11· i th
r!1.,,~s1nc: rooml. f\1·n bath s.
1'111~ \\'O ti'I ]l\S! ]rJl\ll" -Hur·
'" ~range Vista
PROPERTIES . -
F<'lrmerl> Ll'IBt>rrte R E.
220 E. 17lh SI., C.M .
CALL 646-p555
Evenings Ca.II • 6"12·r\l'i3
$24,950
4 BEDROOMS
den kitchen v:i!h all push garden-like community con-Lots .for Sale
hutton ;ippliances, glass at-, sis!ing of 33 homes on s !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~j
r 1um v.1th \\'aterfall. J\fetic-Let 1 Talk Turkty acres ol land. The home is INVEST
u!ous landsca ping. Perron-0~ this 4 bdrm., 2Mi ~·tam-three bedrooms and two AND BUILD
170
General
al problems force sale, Call ily room Park home tn Uni· baths at the lowest price
VA STEAL S.17·1221. yersily Park. Pi~ your-ever. Can be'""' shown
• • SEYr-.l OU'"R REALTY 1n41 self entertaining Y 0 U R
But an honest buy. 4 &>ach Blvd .. Hunt. Bch. famfiy by Christmas in this anytime. Call 646-?lTI.
3 Choict view lots
in Dana Point
$1'1..(00 Each
bedroom. 2 s1ory jr11·el close TROPICAL spacious, tastefully decorat·
to schools & shopping. NO ed home. Owner transferred. \O ' THE REAL
\"'-ESTATERS DO\VN for V.A. buyt>rs. PARADISE Priced at $53,tXNJ. 0 PEN
LO\V DQ\VN FHA buyers at 4 + POOL FRI & SAT. 1-5. l?f92 Cedar ' ' ~· c, ,•
$33.2:~. $25,400 T,.,,. lAM. MONARCH BAY
MESA VERDE 1." X 26 Healed pool. low d .A charm~ 3 br & lg den
. main!. y.1rrl, 2 bath areas, ,. · h·11 custm home w/pool. Ea rm REALTORS
Offers a gre at deal and htre ne1v \\", \V carpet. Bit-in '. . : re I opens to deck w/oceanvu, SlNCE l9-i4
are f\1·0 of the l ine.st a nd R10 . Leaving fur Arizona. SJ00,000. ov.•ner 499.2974 673-4400 Iar.1:e~! split le\'el hom<"!'i nnJSI seli 0011·! Call 847-122'1 REALTY J\M1~0~YEE'iin;;fF~o,;-lbei;;;'~H~oJ~;dfo•~Y'~·~•l!!!!!!!..;;.;.;..,;,,;,;,;;..,...,,j
a vailable. 5 bedroom. 3 SEYl.lOUR REAL TI", 17141 Un iv. Parle Center, Irvine BR ,+ Pool'. Custo~ Home Mountain, Destrt,
bath. Huge lots and set near Beach Bl\'d .. !runt. Sch. Call Anytime, S33-08JJ Be a u t, f urn 1 shed. Resort ,74 bo!hgoll course!'i. ... SELLING 1-;========i l Re'a s onable. Owner.1 _ _, ______ _
BUILDERS r E ? 1• 64&-8398 ., ""'""· YO!ilR HOM . Shut-In Fuling? Here·!! a fan!Asl1c buy. Lar.1:e
ft..3 lo! \\"ith (1 I fine 3
bf>droom home a nd room !or
two morr unlls and in
Nt>\1·port Hc1ghrs. All for
$26.950.
PENDING
FORECLOSURE
0\11'K'r 1vill nn! refui;c any
noa,:ona bl!' nffrr on thts
PRIME MESA VERDE
bomr . 3 lAri;::E> bf.od moms, 2
barhs, AH huilt~ins and 1700
1q, It. of luxur1o~iving
arra.. 2 hu~~ fi are!!,
ia~e irrr1n1l11r lot. M> rate
i<r r\'irP pol'<'h 11nd ('nuntry
sh.e kitr.hen. 1\~kinl>? $33.FiOO.
11r ~uhnli l. Suh.ml! . !'tuhtnll.
C~ll 5 1~~2 1 10prn F.v .. •.l
\outh ".{. oast
. -
$24,250
IMMEDIATE
POSSi $SION
VACANT
Free appraisal -\\'e buy Nol in !hts home! 4 Bdrm., LO\V Cost Home Ownek ~Hies. P('n;onal attention. 2 ha., family room: sel f· fnsuranre. Krumpholz &
25 .,...,.. t X""'ience l\1cKenna. 644-8112.
Yosemi1e. Oakhurst,
Bass Lalre "' •
~ ·-· ,..~ · cleaning ovens & superb Beaut 4 BR. 3 BA. a ir cond. COLLINS & WATT'S ""n't"'"lion ,,, .... _ Iound N t H . ht L~RS -.v .. ,u.. ... " "" ewpor ••a I , Lodge on 21; afres. Pr iced -REA IV -h".-.• , \\'E'll 1'111 n11 ....... ramic -J.~-------1 fl62 5523 '"" •--SPECIALS below market. 75.000. Also • · Yie\V of valley belmv. Nicely 40 acres at .$100,000 smtable
* $26.900 * sltua!ed on cul· de -sac str«"t, short walk 10 e!e-for ranch or mobile park.
4 BR .• 2 BA. stone fireplact, . H' _._ __ ,_ 4 BDRM. 2 Ba. Bright & Colored slidll!s avail for 1 mentary & i g<;11UU~. hke new cpts. & d~. large ChN'ry. Large lot. N ear private sho11·ing.
covered patt0, Assume loan. SJ7.500. Nel''JlOrt Ht.oi ••••·· S29,900 Q\\'N ER ;;.;:;.:;130
S:•ll moothly. 1.· ·. '.· red h·111 3 BDRM. 2 Bo. .Famlly-•m. BIG BEAR LAKE LEADERSHIP R E Qu1et slreci. 0 looks park. .
• • Near Nev,.port Hu •• S29,SOO Burld 11 sno\\·m;in 1n Iron! of
842-4466 3 BDR/\1. 2 Ba. Family rm. this_ cute <'ah1n fo r on I y
$2,000 DOWN REALTY l.ae. rooms. Charming. Near S12·500· Call . R~s (7141
Takes 1h1s l\leadowlark Es· Uruv. Park Center, lrvnic Nl'\\l>Ort His ...... Ul.7::.0 536-!73.~ or \.\~le: Spt"ncer
tare, 3 BR., atr ium model Call Anytime, 83.l0820 2 VIE\V locs in Ne\\l!Ort .Real t.:slate. ~JO. Box 2828,
hon1e. Total price S.~.soo. j .. !!!!!!!!~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!! I H1s · · .. S17.500 And $20.!XlO Big Bear Lakt;. Calif.
Ne"' paint inside & out. Laguna 8t1ch CALL ('i) 646•341ol
Owner-Agent 846-4nS 9 ~~ I I ~ LARGE 5 Br .. 2 Ba, very ,._:SELL OR LEASE * ~.... t1n1nci1I •
,1,,. home in quiet &rll!a. 2200 Sq. Ft. 3 BR., 2~~ Ba. ~~~~·~E~A~L~T~Y~~~1;;.;;;;;;;;;;;~·~; • " d' t 1 N11r Ntwport Po11 Offltt F.V. M:hools & shppng en~. li;::. fam. rm., in. rm., rp .
St>ll VA, FHA. Conv. Under Cpt & drapes, bltin~. \\'e! Ntwport Shorts Buslntsl
curr. 1nkt price. DEAN bar, ~Jc. lmmac. S47.950. s"r-EC=JA-Ll_ST_S_i•---.-.,-Jes Opportunity 200
R EALTY 536-7527. Full pricll! & rentals. Ne.....,..rt Shores. ---------,.;;;::~o.:....:;;~O-==clr.11ss10N REALTY 494-0731 ........ -\\"ALK 1o Ix-a.ch. ~choo!~. ====-=-==--Caywood Rell.lty MS-1290 * Have CllPnt Fofo T
park. library, 4 BR. 2 BA. .,.,CHILDREN San Juan Capistrano lnd'l Sales Tyf)C Rt1s'ns
frplr. lj!r 2 car \f&r.: ptcn1r WANTED!! TO BUY OR
In y1u•4. Estab l 1shed IN :'.TlSSION SCHOOL S ELL A BUSINESS n••i1i-hboth~. S3.5.9.'il By 2600 Sfi. ft. 111mtly homf!. 4 DISTRICT HOLLANO BUS.
O\i nrr. 9!i2-Si6~. Bclrms. l Mths. Pool tnhlt" ..i Bedrooms. 2 bath: upgrad-SALES •
'
1ze fam1l1• room • wi1h $29 = N Goll Co ~-ASKING $23,000.
VACANT! S UBMITI
*OWNER ANXIOUS*
Ln~· do\\11! l.ovtly 2 ~[.-~n·
M! Lush eoonrh;~ ...
HAFF DAL R$A L TY
~2-410.) E1•es. 54!-2«1
$ QUICK $
WE BUY HOMES
J\fP.. KASAftlAN ~li·!I001
KASABIAN
......... 1 ear. un:e, "••"! Bmkt"r "'ith .l::mpa11\y"
hreplace &· \1·et b11.r. Bu\h.ln CAPISTR.d,NO VALLEL 1716 Orange Avr .. c.~1.
kitchen. firepl~ce in livin1 REALTY •~1 '"' .,,,,, _,,... U't "'""°' •0 5-l'}.06f'e C\'f". room. too. LaundtY room. • h s1.ortgt apaet galort. Dou· Sant• AN He1g fl ' PARTNER ACTJ\·E
hie garage. View deckl. On--OWNER SAY.S W/S75.{0) rash for lite
ly $51,900. Call _ manuf. Sh>uld do S&"Jtl.000 in
..AO tan
• REAL ESTATE
UOO Glenrieyre St.
''SELL''!!! '72. l..gt'. aalary + 40•;. of
proftts w/eoninr t. Bo>c
Sharp 3 bedroom on large 1788 Hu'1tinEton Bt>ach !or. As.sume 'P,i% VA Joan. -·
• , Total paymts. $186. month . ES TAURA~T· LA1Una'1
Price ttduct'd ~,0 $25,500. most popular. u n l q u II!
Call now tor deta il!. \ restaurant, C o m p \ t t " 1 y
49-1.9473 M9.()316 l MS lllRITl GE I 11 ~ .. fiUlt • •
Yo11·11 bt tle1ti:::n1~ \1'htn \'flll
!Ifie this 5 bMroomi, f'IMI
homf! f~A111r1 nst formi\l rl1n-
lng Atta., 541~(.l lt nHl1PUS
l"l')O'm, J ~h1 b.oitl'I ArtA~ &
most lmpor1an1, st1»11'iiterl 779o Harbor Rh'rl.·ai ,\d!ms
livin& qu11ners for Dtl'lr Cttrl 545-~131 Opt'n J•:vr~-
Lovely 2 hQth home. fl"f'5.hly
fJ"lntect inslde k OUI. NC\./
fnrm1ca. Like new plm ~,,r.
pe tinJC, Ll:rtft built-in 1A·<1rd·
robN. \Villr t'tlnct'f'le drive.
N'o do'll·n C I. • low rlO\\n all
01hrr~! 5-llJ..1720
J\ttWll! in lo thlli 4 i':it'drmm. 2
M th ho!T!f' t)t'for(' Xntl'I S..
J u.!-t p;u nt!'d ln~LtlP and out.
Grt111 Nltntr locat1on Ov.·n-
f r 11nxloo~. S'~ M · mo\'CS
)'OU in' Cnll 5l6-$til0, i
GRANN IS.;
FUl,LER REAL TY , equ1p1. :Xln1 lot. S2AA.tm,
__ nr:AL ESTATE Gor;t'O\ls ~trnt lot $151lM 5f6.0814 • Anytime g ro$S ln~mt", Sl.~.OC'I "'1•1n
rrom "Chrl~tmas Neckties" TED HUBERT & ASSOC. M"""o.;.b7,ll;-o"H;.,o-m-l-,-~--1Realonomics. Bkr. 1\7>.fiil"(I
Any dq ti lhe Fff.!T DAY 10
ru. an ad' l>f>n 't
f1t'IAJ •• viii ·~.xr M2-6ti7J.
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l\1orn. Full pr1~ SJ..l.('.CO, All
TM"hlS! M(l.t:\t~ The f&ste•I dr11w 1n lh€" '\'e.r;t
SHE RWee D R,EALTY a Da1ly PUol CIModl
1896-1 Brookhurt..t. r v. j ~~~~~---i[I ="-'-:;:;.====~ •
TARBELL
•
RrA~drnu11l
Rt"<'ll1nr:i.
262'J..Harbor Blvd , C ~t.
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it. outgrou·n Levis . you •n J.171 Via Llllt\ 67W500 for Sa lt 125 The fas1e1t rlr.11w In ·th;
turn "lriu h ffl c.i,.h" In A i~i. \\'est · a "-'I p • J
DAILY PILOT classd1td ad/Turn unu~ed Item• 1n~ ~"""' 20X60 DE LUX DOMUS .. ' ...... , 1 ' 0 1
_ call &12-567S i .::';::"'::."::.· .::"::.":....:.";:2-06.:_:.71.;__·:....._l....;Be:::::•::"::111u:::..l-_;•;.*:....:::1.:.'"=l Clauill~ Ad. &42-.56iA.
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lncom• PrO,..rtv' 1661~•-• ProporfY 166 Ho-U•fum. 305 Hou-Unfurl\. 305 Apt F ••• • t F •~Apt Unfurn 365 Apt Unfurl\. -MS Apt. Unlurn. MS ---...... ·="""",.__ . .,...,.. ~"""',..,,.., .. ""',,....,='°'"--s. um. -~P s. um. -• • • • 9 GARJ)EH TYPE BUNGALOW APTS. l-F-.. -n-ta-ln_V_a_ll_•Y ____ S.n Cl•m•nl• Coro-na-d"'.-1 -Ma-,--tl::-""='1"'7-:ton-:-;:llo=•ch=-=l:C:::.:•rona d•l 'Mar Co,t• Masa Huntl"""" load!
4 separate buildin~. Shake roofs. Pirlvate l BR 2 BA dshv.·hr O.v1ew NICELY turn bacb. P'ff * LG 1 a: 1 BR--furn apll, -DELUXE 4 BR, 2 .Ba , Ii• P'immlrt1 aduJ'i. 0 ;. t y, ii:;o. md,· W4Jk to B<-°llcb. $95. Incldd ntrt beam._ cell .• cpll, drpa, patios. No stairs. 1 story bungalows. -1-po6t & yard, s:m. Nei.r Avail Dtc. l. 544-429ol.~ util, No cook(f'll. 67>-45JT. dthws~r dlsp., .pat., pool. Nr ~.. APARTMENTS ON BEACH!
S bedrootps. Some have fireplaces. The....type wamer & Maanolia. Avaj\ Hospi , Utll paid. A.dill, •"'I Air Oond • Frplc'a -s Swim. 1 n Un.furn f'r. $230/mo.
of buildings that attract and hold good' ten-Dec. 10th. For appt call (213) Condominiums GUEST room w/private ent. $185 & sm. 17676 Cameron. mtnc Poo1t • Health Spa · Furniture Available
ants. ~ncome $16,740 yr. $145,000. Excellent 325-2Z10. U,nfurn. 320 ~bt.~~~~~a~h 6 ihopna. 8•2--:>192. '.ennls Crt• .. Game & Bil· Carpeta-drape:i.-dhbwaaber
(inanc_mg. 3 br.._2 ba, dbl aar, bltns, ~--------1:-:B:R.-~o.rn'-~S~1~2~5~/-m-o-I ON 1'J:N ACRES hard Room! BED. n"""··· heated pool..Jaunu-~enni1
''Our 26.th Year1' ~ . orpt/drp" patio. $7l:> mo. Newport ... ch Costa Mesa 'l •I BR.-:'J'ura 1:·uidunl. FROM ':"1ut.ru. rec roora~an vww1 Ovt.rlookinf btaut. carden FlreptaceS I sirfv, patio&. • ....,
WESLEY N . TAYLOR co .. Real rs Call·968-3l3'. . • THE Bluff• Townhouse new Casa del Oro f>'tio. pool, Adult•. nor'"" -. Tennll C91itnt1 Bklst MEDJTeRRANEAN "=.!'· .. ::"'
2l11 S•n Jo•quln Hills Road lrv'•n• 2 BR -!i convert den, 2~ 1035 12th St. Acrosi from """' '·--v ALL UTILmES PAID Lske Park. 530-'692. -Saa~~. Cdll IU-XU VILLAGE HUNTINGTON
NEWPORT CENTER ~910 I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I bl, rug1, drps It. bltns. $360. Compa~ befatt you nnt • ~',?~~~~::i:~~J!i!lllsoArtbi~i"'!!i"'i!i!CoA;!"'ijll~wyi!) 3 -BR., 2 ba.tha, f'llmished :1'-'-"~--m~'"--1_--0"1_-_. ---1CUstom desi&ned. featurlna: $;25.l,RG . Modern· l BR. 24«1 Harbor Blvd.1 C.M. PACIFIC
3 ~~e b~~tri~~;;:::::: CoU~f~~.r~. or 325 • =~~~;en wilh in· ~~~r:~o~~·sn: i'foasn: 2Ps':t'.~:~~~~~~c!. OP~~~6~?PM . ru ~ ~~i H.B.
~BR, 2~ ba .. lam .... $325 • SeJl'.I'afe dln'1 atta -plex. Carpeted £: draped. OtC open 10 arn~ prn Daily ! BR, 2~ ha, tam ...... S350 SUiO a month. 2 bedroom, 2 • Home--like stora.re lagune BNch End. guaee. Comp. b!tns. DELUXE \VI.LJ..LUI WALTERS ro.
4 BR, 2~ ba., tam .... $350 bath, built-iru, carpeting, e Private patios ' Btaut. ~g. '707~ Orchid. APARTMENT$'
\VE HAV.F; OTilERS drapes. Tarbell No t~. e Closed rara.a:e w/slDnge BACHELOR AP?', take ovtr ;250 Per munth, yearly. Ale Ccnd. Frplc'1. 3 ~-BEACHWOOD APTS.
1~1 ~1 -.... , ...... ;;;. I~~
au1fne11
Opportunity
Houses Unfurn. 305
General Townhouse Unfun1, 315 man utili~s. Across from ocean · t ' Tmnls Crts • Game I: Bil· to BEAOI! Cpts, drpl, blln&, NEWSPAPER dealt.rship for
N.B. """· Seourity dopo•lt l--L-O_N_G __ H_A_l_R_S_._
req'd, Write Herald Ex-
aminer, 2662 W. Lincoln,
c-. I I -1 1 I i ' 11 I I' I ii.
-1 I I ----. I'll lur
962--7766. • Full length marbl«. pull-l !NU -$150 mo. incl ··?woiO 0 mine foola • Health Spa • !ln.M new 1~).3 BR. ~ blk
---------· I • King•z Bdrrn.1 &: pa.rlc. 494-3735. -pj' 1 IL.& ll&rd Room. frplc. 125 ' 16th St., HB. Huntington 8e•ch e Pool • Ba.rbequH: • ...r-~'K MO UP •40 •~ Ba h 1 BEDROOM 3t7-3957 •
rounded "'ith P!Js land· •Uti1 pd: Col~ TV~Ora~nt 1 ~R. l&fi liv rm., 1 .bl~ to FROM $l55i e CHEZ ORO API'S. e
'I'OWNHSE for rent 2 BR. scaping Bay Bch •M-2508, 675--067. ocean, clo1e to ahopp1ng, MEDITERRANEAN 82.14 Atlanta. 1-2-3· BR's.
Anaheim.
PUBLIC Steno A: Secretarial
Service. 642--0176
ES'J'BL'D In t. 0 ea I g n
Buiihess. Newport Beach
area. (213) '339-1576 after 6
Incomplete 3 Br, home1n'ihe
canyon on 2 acres. Keep "SINCE 1946,.
~ds, ~ts. horse.s_. tamiJles, 1st Westl!rn ·Bank Bldg.
singles or Jong hall'S. $150.. University Park
776·7330 Agt. ·Days 833-0101 Nights
3 Bedroom in Huntington I ~=====~=::::;~ Beach. near lluntington ! 1
Beach Memorial Hospital. 1 BR. l: den, 1 ba · .... S250
S235 a month. Agent 546.s66CI. 4 BR., 2 ~' baths •.•.•. $350
Washer/dryer, 'bltns, pool Adult living.at Its best f . newly crptd. Ocftn view, Pool
facll. 1165 mo. (1) 892-7818. l...ari:e 1 BR $175 Ntwport'h•ch $195. "73-M.ij, l.'>30 Sf'aview, VILLAGE washer17~~~ ~.car.
2 BEDROOM CON· .lf'I'ILITTESFREE OCEANFONT I Apl.5.· 2400Harbor&vd .. C.M. 2 &JBR"i.S140UP.Patio,
. TINENTAL TOWNHOUSE, 365 \\I, \\lilson 642-1971 v·-.. · .. R' --. lw",n.t ~:.:1·,---.~B-A-Y~PO=RT~--(714) 557-8020
FURNISHED .... ~ ,,... . RENTAL OFFICE pool., childre-n. MORA KAI $180/Mo. Agent 546-0814. COM Adul111 1Jnly, no . pets . e BAYVl.EW OPEN lO A?lt TO 6 P~r Apts, 18881 :fdon. Kai Ln., -lJ
Newport Beach 1 BEDR 613-8088. Announdna: the quiet openin1 blk E. of Beach. 962t8994.
DUPLEX 1 Blk T B h Cl 1 b o! BayPort Apt• .•• tor 1 BEDROO.M APT. WALK TO BEACH! *All Facin9 Pool* $125. Month · . 0 c • can r. Adulu· And the al'-htl ·leu (Upsta1n) Oiild/pet ok. \Vinter $155. . ' . ,. Y Lov..i .. 1 2 & 3 BR' ,.._IJ 3 BR., 21.) bi! .. 2 C.!lr garage Carpets, drapes, 2arace. mo. 64.,0n or 642-995S. quiet opening oC Bayview lfardwood floors, rangt., re· '"V • s. "'I' •
3 BR., 2 ha., 3 car garage HERITAGE .,..... Apts. for familln. frigerator. Gas & water paid. drpa:, bltns, dWhr. 847--3957.
pm. Sl.JARP 4 Br & tam. Qu.iei 3 gR., 2 ba. hrunes • $26()1325
Money to Lo•n 240 cul-de-sac. $255. Avail ]2/1. 2 BR., 11Ai ba. home .. $250
REALTOR 548-6966 REAL ESTATE l BDRM. Fum, Pttll, blk to Call (714> 644-55.SS Sll5. No Children. BEACHBLUFF APTS
FREE to landlords! Let us Townhouse, SU.S880 (Open Eves.) ocean, -single adult. $135. SOU'Ill of hi&hway atiarp 2 3 BEDROOM APT. Spac. 2 Br 2 Ba. Pool. Pa~
_______ .. No fee. Bkr ~ll51. Ired hill SA TILER
MTG. CO.
336 E. lmt STREET
CASH FOR TD'S * 90% LOANS*
'
F U I ... "" 67:>-211:> or 64fr.2696 eft1. BR d 1 s •. h 2 b«thl, RIO. Single rarage, tio. D/W. 8'231 FlllA:. SC.?M4 ~~ vacancies. Agent. urn. or n urn. """" $30 Wk. Up Apt1, $1'70 Furn. 1 Bd. Watertront, frpJc:i':irt ~~1~:.' su:e~~. S170. -STUDIO 2 Br 1% Ba prl
Coron• del M•r REALTY Costa M••• $111425 Wk. Motel Rms amall dock, aundeck,, Yrly. "l'mmac. Private on rear 1,, Roy McC•rdle Reeltor yrd, mcl 1a~: nr Park,
Univ. Parle Center, Irvine . $6 Night & Up 675-6467. of lot over garo1n. S158 + l ;;""iii"541-"""7i;n;i9i;;;;iiiiiiii!;""~~de:.;i&~hi::'~oc~h::ls~.~-;;;;::::;:;;· ~ l BR newly dt't'Or .• c-pts. SUNNY ACRES 1· BRAND NE\V HARBOR Call Anytlnre, drps, nfrig, range, patio & MOTEL Apt. Unfur n. 365 sun. Deposit. 675-06.1.1. e BEAl!l'IFUL GROUNDS• 2 Br l;~ ha studio, encl
VIE\V HO~E. 3 Bedroom, I """""""""!!!""""""" U "· ., "'' Fl SO f H Pr' tlo pr fncd ·-' S150 mo OAN Hunt''ngton n-ach yard. ha pa1 . "" ov•er, -..;. ad wo~• .. on ,.nt. ~--ral • o wy. 1v. pa • SPANISH DECOR. Gu & • J"""' _ • • 1ST T.D. L family room, 2 ha.tbs •• Com-'" · 238 Fl '"'"" •·w ~ "91.. '-t 3 BR. 2 B lo · la.und facil M:l-4549 ----·-----~·Inqwreat O\\'Cr. _76 N•tBl•d.,CM r••.~ , ES/!" ,., ... uyc., a.CUI m v.·ater pd. Gar, pool, · · • 7\l?i. INTER.EST munih• pool, courts, etc.' 1-.> ,. • '"° :r1""' d I .,,. p M '' FOR LEASE 2 BDRM · ard ''GABL " VICTOWN" up e" . ..U... er 1 o. f.ir-.cond, Rec hall, lndf)'. Lido Isle Lov.·est ralts in Orange Co. $395. per month. Broker. Adults q~1~f:s'. rure Y · Unbeliev•bly Be•utiful Lrg % Br w/prl ru. Ad.Its. ffa.l Pineh.in Rltr. 675-4392 1 br-$135 up. 2 Br $155. "."'--------...,._I
642-217l 545-0611 644-7170. OPTION TO BUY ~8-8835 wkdays after 6 VAL D' lSERE Garden Aprs. c pt s, d rp 1 , b 1tn1 , NEAT 2 BR, 1 BA, newly up. 160 w. \Vilson, C.M. ADULTS dbc: 2 br, ~~· ba, 2
Se['\llng Harbor area 21 )'TS. 1 R_U_ST-IC_3_bod_roo_m~&~.,-,~. 2 3 BR, 2 BA, drps, shag crp!g, Adults • no pets. Flo-::er1 10undptu0fl'\i, Fncd y rd dt.c., -·· _aa.r. nr shon. See manager Ant. 1. car'"' bltns. ttfria', frplc,
b lh bit j 'I I ... I Id • -"1 0 t 2 Bdrm. 1~ ba, Gar11ge ,,,.._,.. .... -.. s-am • .......}'..... ,,. L::.::T--crpts/,drps. Nr Udo Sbop'g, Mortgages, a , -ns, r-e P ace , new _.nt ns e .,. vu . u • .... J ~·~·r .,,. w/patio. \Vtr pd. Gardener Pina Sl85.-M&-5003 ,/
Trull ft •• ~1 260 walk to town. Agt. 675-4930. side pa tio wllots of stora ge. CarpeU & Drapes Bltins Wal'erfall, "5' pool Rec. Rm, m•int ...,_,. btwn 1 .l 5 ' -$295. on lsf., 5 4 4-204 5, ~ I $165 "'0 '""' Sa ~ I 2 Furn .. ~ .. ~1:.........,. I BR, •love ~ refrig, wtv.· 67' -1 NICE 3 Br, fam. home. on Cose 10 schools. St6-?'.l68, _._...-... una. '"'5-11 -B<lnn, • """""'uu VILLA CORDOVA 1;·-~--·~-----
FOR SALE: $45,000 2nd TD, corner nr beach. Bil-ins, 645-04fi6. l BR. frplc, beams. patio, =~· from ~..867 SEE IT: 667 Victoria "C.. · $155 crpts, ~rp~. caraze. No • SUPER 2 BR e L11gun• Niguel
JO'/o interest only, 36 mo'1, frplc, ·$235/mo 675--0621 FOR RENT , 2 bedroom, \\'/W, util incl S148. '1 adult, arsons, O. 2437 Oran1e Ave "G'' $155 ~s. &75-49;iZ.
_ _pa)'able_monti!!r_._~anted to _electric bit. in R ; Q, F ; A no pets! 642-8520. 1 ·BEDROOM APT. ~19 Santa An,,_ Ave "I" SJ.5-f! 2 Br. bltns, .frpl, 2 carports, Month to Month. n7o LAGUNA NIGUEL
buy: $3000 to $5000 2nd TD's. S2lS/~fO. util. pd. 2 BR, nr. heat, cpts, dbl' garage, 60' x l-'.;-1-CMii'o'-nt;,h-·'F"r-,-N"R"•"•"t:-Furni1hed $105 pool, nr. ocean. $200 up. • Gu Heat-Gu Cook:lng1.-APARTMENI'S
LaYton Coats, T14/646-5453, Albertson's MkL Adults on· 100' fenced lot. :f.Iove in Adults, No Ptts· Adlts, no pett. 673-4447. Gr.:,!"ctcElWd tr,AALL CMINCl,;. 1 & 2 ~rooms • from $175
1810 16th St.,_No. G208, N.B. 1:..Y..,.6_7>-89~-"-·-·--~--1 today. $197. per mo. Ask for 3 BR. 2 Ba. sm. S4S.l.309 R M I -en ve., ' Hillside l!IE'l:ting, privacy . = N 1 a. h oy cCardlt Rt• tor 646-0032 TV ~bl•. Water. Gas· NTED Coste Mesi ttntal agenh--1 ewpor ueac 548-7729 $155 NEW ~ TRU~u~~;o;ndw~o ---------·I CALL 962-4471 BRANDnew"Jbdrms2bath. 1 BR F 2 PooLS 3 Bdrm* 2 lath '1~~~:;1oma
•• 67~ "140 • • • Family Needed! 2 Br, 2 BR. 2 BA, mob borne. Go)f • Flreplare, patio &: ,......... • urn, lrg closets, FAIRWAY U·"'"'-room with cathem'a.I !!~~~~~~~~~~I fenced yd, encl gar, kids/ , ~-~ quee n aiz.e ~. prlv. dress· APA ENT ... ,. Open,o-AM to 9 PM pet 5135 cour~ & at heh. No J..ovely qu iet area, No pets. ing room, xtra 1rg rooms, 2311 A C M celling £: frplc. Separate M V de I it! I ALA R•~tals • 645-3900 ohHd~n or "'u . 530-3950. !;.;'.,~. . Lease. AGT enct &ar. Adulll only, no en v•a·o· . . VILLA APJS. laundry 11'¥· Encl patto.1,,.,,,•"'•a=,.•..,•------1 -' .. •~ I 00-~ -n~/ 645•57 S""--'•• "-'"dill ...... DELUXE 2 & 3 BR, 2 •-,, ,...,.. 2 Br jlouse, rugs. quiet, n 35. ,.....0 .. ,,...,., mo. .. ......... ,. .......,. D11 ~=r·1;~::;:;:;~;; ,•-Hear This!-2-Br.: v .. -Rear or ~-~aware s 1, -20lS-l"~ller-ton,...CM-=::*~=::'.!t=~~=I -.playa:round. UXI. ---•ncl-pr-S150.-Up,-"-Rental I frig, encl gar. Kilb/pets. HB. ~ * AVL now-1 BR. NEVER bee U d · 3 bt!d 2 & 3 BR'I HARBOR G~S Ofc. 3095 Mace Ave. -1 "°""'"=::---=-:-:== -'P'rt!!M!nts!Offltnt . . n ve 1!1· ~Private p&tlo pool· lndiv. 546-4353 ~103-4. HoUMI Furnished 300 S150. 3 BR. 2 BA., paneled twnshe, _ Furn. Pool. Rtt. Rm. Gd. room, luxury ap:artment, 1 undry tac.' · "'"--,,-:,--~---I '.•.HI' I----------· I ALA Rentals e 645-3900 trplC, rec, Schls, shops. Joe. No children or pets. aunken living room, 2 story N:U Orange Co A1rpm 6 AU. electric. 2 Br, Crpt:s, Newport Be11ch
B k B S BEDROOMS Ava il. Jan. 1• By ov.'llt'r. 360 646-5824. townhouse, new dduxe rhaa: UC! Adu!" oul.y Drps, t.ncl garage, close tol z--,.,.,,,,o-::-==-o,.--,: 1c IY ' Apts. Furn. . -~~~~~~~~-· 1 carpeting $2'50 / month. • • bu1 I theater. Adltl, no e NOW OPEN e · .i\ 3 BATHS 962-1903. LGE.,niCi'.lyturn.l-BR.ap1. A s4G.ssso 2Jl.22SantaAnaAve. pe:ts. Avail Dec. 1st,$~. BRANDNEWlA:2 BrFrom
:':'. 3 BR .. 1ami.ly rm., 21~ ba. Fireplace, carpets, drapes, 3 BR Condo. l~ BA, pools, G•ner•I S135. Garage, I au n d \. Y. ~i::·month in, Costa Mesa, Mar. Mra. :~~ Apt S.A 645-3515 or 64-HIT~. 1$1•8. Priv patio, billiard
'i I I Huge patio. New carpet & patio, double garage. S300. clubhoust-, patio, garage iiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiil \Vomen on1y, or couple. • ._...._.., rm, heated pool w/ jacuni,
· ... ·~. ~ (!eoor. S350 Mo. No pet!!. ~11'1ia del Mar. w/sforage, nr the beach. ~B Wallace 548-6518 1 bedroom with pool., Ag!'nL P k L 'k S ndlng MESA Verde 2 BR upper huge closets, deep pile cu-,. 1:-7''-''"'-"="=":c":::ow:-~-'-'-Roy McCardle Realtor 962--0986 aft s pm. .A S90 -Now 1 BR Trailer. 54&8660. er 0Urke. ~~ bltns, aaraat', nr aboppinz peting, llllh landscaping.
_ \ B•lboa Penin1ul11 lBlO Ne~~rinB2l9vd., C.l\I. Laguna Beach Bolcl New Concept Very nice 2 BR mobile w~~tmo •ho11f!1im~"'••"t"w1·th2 1.2" s BR APTS ~~7 m pe:ts, $l.f:i AOnedult&. You Must S@e Thlt
!4'BI 01"fCr Home avail 12/1/71, Sl.25: IJCVl\N u., V" Prv patios* Htd Pools l===~·~~----t ! 2:>102 Birch St., New. :··~~J HB~~ !a~~~inp~t~o,& n~ • Doll House, 1 br, fenced e Cozy Cottage 1 hr, nr FURNITURE RENTAL 132 \V. Wilson, C~l 64f>.45.10. :=ii:~~iond= •t,~~ Nr &hop's* Adlllt. only &SIDE 2 BR, crptJ, drps, port Beach. S67-4246, '~: watt.r. Untll 6 /15. ~150rorchild&pet. Util'1tpd. A·-LA 'Rfum, u1W.fn64clas.3'9''°00· SPAC 1 Br, pool, nr 546-•• ::,o: .... =--~~---I Martinique Apts. ~~tsda~~ gar~. e BRAND NEW ""'
' "16 • · · enta s • shops. Adlts, no -ts. $155 ....,. ' • ..,..32 Santa Ana Ave (Acron · , 213:243-"" · ALAR t I e 64'3900 *Month to Month ,..~ FREE to Iandlor&J Let u1 lTn Santa Ana Ave., CM •;.. en a s ' r util pd. 1884 Monrovia. .i..uE 3 Br 2 Ba, new aha& from S.A. Country Club) • , Cost• Me•• • Sparldlng View 1 br, atoVe, * 100% Purchase OJltion fill your vacancies. Aaent. Mar.' Apt 113 6'6-5Sd2 cpt $159/ tre bl · s 1 2 BR nit. ... ~5•
•• • -..1....:. "'lid/ t 1150 * Wo'de •-t•ctoo' ,. . 54l'r0336. ,. • ., ....,,,,. , mo, s y parn· pac ous u , .,. •• ,
4 •·°'.:• e Need More Room? 3 hr, 1..:.u·ig ........ Jlt' . """' ~~~-~~~==! ~-* * * ledNr.OCC.Carpor.t557-6151 FIREPLACES. Priv pa&.,
_,_,I ATI'RACTIVE 1 Br. Single E·slde, fenced yd, kids ok. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 S.r.yJe-Colon: LGR. 1 br. util. pd. $125. Bilek Bey NVi» 1 A 2 Bedrm. gardt.n IMMAC. 2 Br., blU'ns, crptl, load• of clOlfets. Heatid
, 1 Vo'Oman, E-sidt'. Inq. 2645 * 24 Hour Delivery Ad It r 35 :.::"' ·· • $160. OCEAN w walk to bch, mo. U • OYt • ilpartments with pool. drpa, Mam ceiling, rt.frig Pool. Ad •· I t •· Manqer
'' ' ~ Westminster, C.M. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 1rplc, bt'amed ce.i.ling, 2 br, 646-4292, 541-2407. VIEW FROM $175. ADULTS avail. No pe:ts. SlCS. 197,, _979_·_"'8-...·==;;-:=.--·I
c;.'""'..=.."':'."......,,..,--:::-;-:---· -I --. apt. rp' iu. , S170. 673--3690. 645-5780 ace • -'-; Hunti.ngton 6a•ch MESA VEROE 3 BEDROO~t 1 ba. paro.Uy furn, washer, -BACH F l U"' pd 2 br, crpl/drpl, bltna, pool. 2311 Elden Ave., C.M, Wall • WESTCLIFF
.. 4. ! Cu:AN ,&: Chet'rful, $62/mo. .home v.ithin \valking dis· ••"'"' yean easr. ~1ature J1i:: ~ 1 wocking adult. No pets, DELUXE 2 BR. Bltnl. CAPRI r:-; I Incl. Utils. ~'i day week tance to schools. Families adults. Call 525-3254 <n4J w-=~ 1,,·S"IOO=m_o,..-~ ... ,...--="="..,-,.,,,,,....., S.lbo• l•l•nd " ' WE.STBAY ELDEN RdriJ. Drp1 w/w "cpt. Priv. 17(1:..1738 Wettditt Dr
•1 I housev.i>rk ttq: C.11 ._AfL 6 only. Vacant & ready at>$265. =al~l~•-r _6..op_ln_. __ ~~~ FURN, trailer f1'9.50 UtH. pd. * ..... BRAND NEW * * * * bale. Gar. Lndry rm . Adul t Llving • No Pets ! P~t 636-7870. per month. Call agent FOR rent, o«an view 2 br. 517~\V. 19th; Cf\f 548-3481 v.-orking adult only. ~pet1. DELUXE UNIT BAY ME_ADOW APTS. 962-41.M. ~wee 1 &: 2 BR. PooL
' ' 11cl..:.:,B"°R'-d~,-p~l,-.,-s"1'°60,--=mo-:, 546-4141 . Dshwshr, stove, dspsl cpts, 1<{ll6!!!i!!N!!!.!!M!!!i"i!i.n!!I !!!SA!!!!!!!!!"!!!'-0!!!!!31~4 I &t54JJ78 l!:t time' oUered. W/W carp., Be~m c~ilinis. ~r. * TOWNHOUSE * Furn Carport, Avaiia~e1',hw~~·-~
· frpl Call CLEAN 3 BR, 2 Bath, frp\c, dp,a. gardent.r. 2 blk.s to bch.1 ~ LOVELY LGE 1 BR. quleL dr•I"•. bt•-a•~•e, •-,m pnY patioll, recreation fa· ....._,. garage, patio, c, d h hr I •~ 6= l'IZl\o 8albo11 Island u .. ~ --. oo: c!ll" All d··"'"' ._ 1 &: 2 BR. Shag cpt, D/W, . • j,36..9796. blt-ins, s ws ' cpt.!l, rg SW mo. ,....,,......,. Adults. No peb: Garqe. cei1'1 2 bdnn yearly $275 ues. a ""'""• no J'.lela· 1elf clean ovt.n, patio, W•stchff Riviere
305 patio. Nr major shopping. Laguna Hills 2452 Elden, 646-2768. Per Month. ., ' • 2 BR'• FROM As WW 377 \V. Wilaon * 548.~ .... S1>4ck>u1 2 Bdrm. Bltnr, oar-
4 Houses Unfurn. $235 nto. lease. Call 54~1783 WINTER rental, l Br, furn. SOMERS REALTY Ai $159/mo. """"' ... _ h I JI~;;,.;_:.;,;_______ Elec. bltns. SDI Inc. util e LARGE l BR !:135 387 W St CM SHARP a 1,.,. 2 B pets. u.nipes, eated pooi.
<'¢• G•ner•I alt 4:30 pm or wknds. NEW \\IORLD. 3 BR, 2 BA , Winton Real Estate ' ST0>-33.11 e ROOMY 2 BR Sl» 306 Marine, Balboa Jal.and , Ba)'. ., , • 'Bltns. drps~;JW'."btd, ~j Nr shop'g area. Adults.
• •# • New. Vacant .. Custom priv patio, pool prtvil. Adlls. 642-2181, 673-{)507 675-4000 Oill 646-0073 E·side Sl40 64z.9520 Ask About Free Rent '""a l Bach., utils pd , SI40. mo/mo Volleyball crts. Bltns, retrig FURN apt, Balboa Island, CHAR.:.'1ING & spacious 2 SPAC 2 &: 3 ~rapt $140 up. 1*JO WestcliU Dr, 'NB ~~ l RENTAL FINDERS ~=~: ; ~: ; : :: ::; ~9;~wor ~976 $
249
/mo. 721~~~~.m: incl. util.
2r!Rp,~140~7~ ;;~7~~~i ~~~~ ~·;._«;~ ~~t'&:I~:~: ~1~~!·U:~k1~:·o~~t/drpl, N2E~a De~~~ex~pa~:~ 3c:~:1 --;P"A°'R=K"64-.~.-.~"W=P"O"R"T=--I
41s w.1tt11, COSTA MIU.. DEAN REALTY 536-7527 Mes• V•rde B•lboa Peninsul• ~laple, 0.1. $350 Mo., yeirly 22C6 Colle.re No. 5 642-7035. ~!~r.d &-side $225, Rltr. APARTMENTS
•• , Houses .* Apttr 2 Br, garage, patio, crpts, ------------------1 BR $135. New cpts, bltni. Winton, Realror 67>3l31 l9!M Maple No. 3 642-3813 ="'"°'=~-,-~-,.,-1Bachelor, 1 or 2 Bedrooms, -I * "'Olli * '• 1 · qu· t MESA VERDE 3 m•.ier •S25 WK&:Up.-On0cean. Adults. Call after 5 & wk· UNITS 2BR Sl2Smo slove&:ref..!-dTownho s II
' '
: --.r drps, gtove '"' re r ig. ie Lovely Bach -l BR ·Rooms endll. 645-3170. Bilbo• P1nln1ul• 6 ' ' · ... ,. an uses. pe., poo ' " 'll-~-''"e ,., tnndlortU ·tropical setting for adults ·bed..OOms, family room. Maid Ser.vice. PooL Util. ·AU.. ELECI'RIC avail, 204~F Wallace St., anna. From $170. Acrou
• •• 1 II -F°URNISHED-. only. 1 blk to shops. $160. fireplace, plush carpeting SPACIOUS Pvt, s I u d Io. YRLY 2 Br, crpt/drps, rartr. UPSTAIRS $150. C.M. 548-4301. from Fashion Ialand at Jam.
:rM i . SiO. WALK to bch, J>Qrtla,ny I -64~&-=1=76=5:o='"64"&-4-;;4,;3<J;::,=::::-and drapes. Prestige area Pd.• Call 675-8740 • Rl'B.ll. to respectable over 45 dispo1al. 1aragt , 1 blk OOWNSTAiftS $165. LARGE 2 Br.. 1~ bath, boree & San Joaquin Hilla
, turn bach. w/gar. Idea.l or ATIENTION O'VNERS! $300 A month. Bkr. no fee. person. 642--0954. ocean or bt1y. 620 W. Balboa CALL Mana1er aft 6 PM. 1tudl0; apt. Family only, No Roads. (n4) &f.t..1900.
'! studt.nl. \\'e have renlal customers I~-='-'~"~·=--=-=.,-..,-,--,-IBR. Modern. bltins. Adul!s, l Br S125 &: SlJ(). Lrz. ldeai : Blvd. 675-0892. 642·1131 pet!. $145. '126 Joann St. LIDO ISLE 3 BR. 2 BA.
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Slli. furn 1 br nr ocean nl~
yrd for 101 Ir pct.
-UN'FURNJSHED--
$90. includ util. nice 1 br.
stove, re!rli , con~nlent loc.
Vacant. .... •
$1:1:>. NEAT 2 br ho!TI('"' crpb.
drps. R &: 0 fnc<t yrd for
cnildren.
tor1 I-IO~fES. API'~ CON'· L'GE 4 BR. 2 BA. n~ly no pels, $t50, .Yrly. G7J-ti244 for Bachelor. Pool. Adlls Coron• dtl Mer HOLIDAY. PLAZA * Deluxe 2 Br., l'iS Ba, frplc, cpts, drps, patio,
DOS. Call DEAN i'rEALTY, painted, draped & crpld, 2 =~~-67""'4==~~-c--only. 1993 C,hurch. 548-9633. . DELUXE Spacious l bdrm crpt I drp, stv I D/W, gar. &arage. Near 1hoppln1 ,
Reri1al Div. 536-7527. patios, i280. 546--0281 BEACH collaae. l blk to bay 1135 DUPLEX 2 Br, gara1:e, VACANT ; like little horM &: unfum •pt, $120 + util . Children OK. $150. 642-79&1. Adults. $290. be, Shown
&: ocean, single .... rvin, $75 •·ard 1 BR &: lltudy Dtluxe ' Sat su 11 • I .a BR .. 2 B.(, IH'v-: carpel! & Mlsilon Viejo mo. 675-6475. ,........-P11.lio. W-slde. 1 child OK. 1 t •4 f ...... 1 ·t & Heated pool, amplt. prkng. NEW 1, 2" 3 BR. crptg, --; n ..... cw;1Y 01 -via.
lreshly painted. Lease $225. =---..-~----548-3135. r cp • rps, ~,, e, 1 ove Adltll no pe:11. 1965 Pomona drpi, fnOO yard. 2515 Elden Antibes. (7~) 75J..-OTI9.
· r.. dol M :c--=-,-,------relrlg. $225. II)() incl_ utiL CM. ' ' mo. C..U 51,e-_,;Ml'1...JllM IJ....Br_..2...P, ..ne.wly crpld -tr. -°""~ -•r D p 1 Ave., 54~1657. SEACLlFF Manor Apt>-l
Eves. South Coast Realtors. land5C.!I"""', fenced. a 1 r •n• o. nt Adults, no pet.. 642-9890. $210 NEW ""'" MAGNIFICENT View, ~ii blk ----===-0,.,-1,-=-,-,=,,-.,;-;;,=-:=c-:;::::-e LARGE 1 BR. $125 BR, $160 Unf, $175 furn .
3 BR, 2 BA \\1th heated pool. corwl . $300 mo. SJ0-384{1, to oct'lln. l Br, S195/mo. * SINGLE. TV-POOL. ~ts ~ts~'~; 2.~ 2c!.A ~i:;: . DEL~E 2 BR. 'l BA. e R000MY 2 BR. SlfO Cpts, drps, bltru, rarb displ.
$235 month. 646-6697 or Newport 8Nch lncld util. 2500 Seaview, ok. DANA itARINA L~N, •""~/-. ..,3,0 , "'!"•" GARDEN APARTMENT Adlls 64Z-2181. 673--0507 1525 Placentia Ave. Ask
2983 3'lll Coast 1-IW)', D. Bt. •~ ..... .n.... u.... """"" ~ M . bo I di t ~• ~-1213\ 694-· Cd~l 151 E. 21st St., C. , e WILSON GARDENS e a U our sooun, ...,.,...~.
HOUSE for l'f'nt unfurn, $160. • By The Sea.. 1 br, child, Fut results are JU9t a phone Fast results are Just 1 phone Daily Pilot Want Adi have * '46 1666 * 2 BR l ll BA. Cpt/drps, EASTBLUFF luxury 2 Br.,
s1so, SPACIOUS 3 Br wlgar Inquitt, 1626 Santa Ana small Pet ok. Util 'z inrl. S125 ::·"~~;w:•Y:·:64=,._..=7=8 ====o&U=:•:w:•:Y:·:W-::567::':::::::.:bara::•:""'::::~plott::::::::' ;;:;;;;:;:::::.
1
,,,U '''""· $140. 642-68ll.. 2% Ba., bltm:, -1c. 2 car Elsi~ C.M. fncd for kids. ALA Rtnt•ls e 64.S..3900 .. au 2 BR, 2 BA. ·crpta/drpa:, I -• Ave, Costa !\1esa. bltn1, wshr/dl')'f'r, hlcp, 2 BR. Clean, Cpl, drps, !~·.,. . .!°°• ne .area,
Vacant. ___ \YESTCLIFF spacious~ Br.. e Beach Uving, spacious 2 patio, gar. 2 Kids/no pets. Bil's. No Pru. AdultJ. Nr.1 ~-~=~· ===~~=
s:ns SPARKLING 4 Br. 2 aa. 2 ba .• frp)':. drps, n'ar hr, kids " pers. uiil'• 1nc1. $@"'\\.£\}A.-f> £ ~s• s165. o .c .c. $140. 962-3886. • i1~wESTCLIFF 2 BR .
double ga.r, new w/w, kid!! 1e'hool. S275. 675-1849. SlSO. "l1 ~ q• 181-H 0..1 Mar 54!H27S LARGE 3 BR. 2 B.A, aep Adult. only, no pelJ. 1721
& P't welrom<. 1 BR. 2 b& townhouse, pools, ALA R1ntal1•645-3900 The Purzl• with the 'Bui/f./n ChucHe MESA Verde • BR up.,r, ,.Ii, E. 18th St. Clooed 1.8'd1__.._0rd,....Ln_. "-,--s--7533.,.... -r-I
BEACON* 6'4S-01ll c:lbhse. nr O.C.C. $225 mo . $250. 3 BR. 2 BA, crpt11 Newly der.or., bltru, crpt1, garaze, adults $17$. l1ch1lor Ap•rtmtni: HOME FOR RENT ~1-04!!0 11.fl 3. & drp1,·bltns, dshwhr, laund o~::r:!~b::•r!ord's ~~ /"""";"-""". drps. Adlt1, no pe ta. 54Q...4431. $65 ' mo.
AND LEASE OPTION 3 BR. HnuSe in court, gar, rm, 2 car gar, cln~e to low to fo1m four simpl• wotdt. _:wo-_7>6~'~· ~".,.~~==~· ~Sl!o=·~~ 1 D•M Point r 615-2'168
ft'nC'f'd. 2 kids nk. E/1ide . ~chOol!! k $1h:>p~. Aval! Dec. I NEWLY DECORATED • ---------IXLN'T Np!. Hcht. loc. $160. 2
3 Bdrm home, lreihly pai nt· ~160/mo. 64Z-55S3. 4th. 675-4036 i213). Fl 1 OIP Tl I 1 ~ I' I 2 BR wtcar. Dlspl-Wtr pd. LARGE 2 Br., 2 Ba. din ~m., Br .. crpts, (Ups, stove, Pvt • ed. 2 blocks to st'iOf'lplng, .. C•ll btwn l &: 5, 63&-4120. blln cpt drrni ocean view park I: Boys 0 \1b. $215. mo. • "* 3 BR Homr, fncd yrrl. OCEANFRONT-LEASE ' ' ;y ~~· ' pat. & car. 54&-9695.
LSO -d 'bit 1~' 3 b 2 b I t bit 548 Bernard "A" •••••• $LIO bAlcony, IA ml. to D1.111.1,:..="""~c-=tw"'""'~""'•·-· A rrpt!!, rps. ns. ~...,. r, A, 11:ar, e 'c 115' ZJ66 Orange Ave "0" ... $135 Marin•. $190. S 3 7 • 3 9 2 7, 2 BR. ~pt. W . ....,....,.. ~' Bdnn, Mcs111 Vmit'. incl 's util. &37-9317. n"sp. famlly-nof~. req · I
1
J t ~ ... 837-.s178• • ?iwiy painted. Adult• only,
Brand new cpl!! & drps. I ~=~--:--;;-2 -;;Bc:A-:::;:-673-0209 ..or.. 8JS.-8233, T H A -C' P • , * 2 Br, 2 Ba Studio. Ct'pt1. no pets. $150/mo. 5'1-4633..
Latte ho~. s.125. rno. 3 BR + den, ' tpts, · • -1-drpa, pallo. POOL. l child NEW 2 Br. Duplq, ~•n A:
/ALSO drps,~~ly=·~.~~e 3:'YPO~TS~~ 00;:1
• j11 I I' t> f. ok. 646-<M96. lta.rbor view. StO~·. reh1r .• 1,s..;a,,.nf~•~A.,,na,.,..~,,,...,....--
3 Bdrm. N. Coe.st ~1eaa. ga r.. • , ~ JteaJrv ~g.1290 , NR. new Ira 1 BR, bltna, vac furii. i~tmo. ~L S He:ated Poo1t
C1ose to dub It. rte. for CLEAN :J BR hie. tat11.ge , ., I I Ii ,.;,.,,,.. .... ~;;ie;,,,,.. ........ ,, '·= a ·~·----ml 'fncd yard, 1tovr, SI.CO S Br, 2 bl. hoUR. 2 blka lo T R U B S • dahwar, drps, shaf crpt, E•lt Bluff -•• u.._ •tc. ........... childrt'n. UW. mo.•~A 1.1."ll ·-...,_,, Nile Ute \liew, dbl zar .. No Wd Care Center
546-9521 OR ........ mo. "'Vic:torla. ,.,__, boh. -• -~ 'I I · r I Mortey may ·r. buy -..... 1155 mo. 64&-"35 alt NEWPORT BEACH Gl'ftt -1 2 6 3 lldrml N~liols Real Estate Eort Blufl 8<7-3859. h at homo, but 11'1 nogoHm a -"'"'· ,11ma Granada Apt1. Fn>m iio
E N•wport H•IU l•dorn nlc:e-01 ,19 Bl """ h<drooma wllh bat"'"' SOUTH COAST
-SHARP EA5TSID • THE BLUFFS·• I M E P N l 0 I OELUX 2 BR. 2 BA, tno, Its •bov• 6 below. Gncloul VILLAS
COSTA MESA 4 BR.. m bl., famll:y kit~b. SUPER 1harp 2 BR, Ind 1 I' I r I I 'G Comol.!e tM <huck!e tqt.IOl'td Dthwash, s hag crpt•. llvlng • qulet sarroundi;i.a 11D1 MacArthur Blvd,
3 bd.nn wilh 2 barN, dbl ,.,.. 14lt, pri\.t. l)3tio. OOSe by gardf'Mr $2j(I mo. Mike bv fUlin; .fn the m!uir<" ""°'d b'oaUt&I rt'fric. l:lec frplc, for lamlly wtth cttlldrin. 546-8&2.1
a;e, ftnced yerd. pnmplete. pool, 1hoppinc. teboolJ. Va· Steiner, 64>0301, ~3869. · · -• · · \I~ d•ve.lop from ll•P No. 3 b•low. rarue. Nr So. Codi Plaza, Nt ar O:>n>na dtl M•r Hi&hl--:=:..iT--''-:=:-.-.:r-1
ly -pa1nlf'd \flt:idt.. t1l10 new cant. cltan & waitina. $375 It'• alwa:ya the rl.ihl time •. e r:~~:trM8flE.o r I' 1s I' I' I' I' I' I' I "'ll~SS.~"~;:~2s_ii_._.,...-=~ I School. Flrepl&oe, w.et b&r. QUICK CASH ~ :hr:aS:1':1~'210 ~~ P(a=~Co.op Invited) "'always the r11nt place u -· · · · · · · -· 2d8;.,1 iru~s~:r"'6&:~~ :uir!n~~t;'A~p1~~91 THROUGH A
mo. C.11 EASTBLUFF REAL TY C> UNSQA .... IE ro• $139/Mo. 5&7-6151 -ColdW.11, Banker. Co. DAILY PILOT Walker & lee 644-1133 Anytlm• """ """t Risu1,1s1 .eau -~•N::.1~w.;:u;....·_....__._..-L-'-JL,-'-4"--'---', ' """"m· Sharp. c1ou ,. "'"'•'"'Agent WANT AD
ANY Day ll tl'le BEST d•Y to &tzl678 ' plaet tt11t' ·ltd o .c .c . a u .c .t. $13 5 . A COOd want ad ta a IOOd 642 5678 ·R"'""" run .. '" Do•' t SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN 5SIRCA TION 400 , 551-7168. lnv<•!>Tlonl • !M5.!M9l or Ett~S.; rl~AY· .ca ll h:>cf&l'. 64~78 ~tod~RY~'--~.__--~~ --=~~::;:::::::=.:::....:::.:::::.:..::.:;::::_::;_~~=::;:_:::;:_:_:~:_:_:_~.:_-11 .:::...c""--------~::::=::::o.:~;:;.;:.:;"'-:-1 ·-.''--~~l ~'i--"--'-'--' • -
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SL'iGLE STI:>RY
South Sea AltnO!pl\ere
2 BR, -2 BATil
Cup.1s & d'1'S
Air Conditioned
Private Patios
HEATED POOL
Plenty of lawn
CArpon A St01'8.i?t!
IJIDDEN VILLAGE
• 2'00 South Saii.
--
Morldat, NO'lembtr 29, 1.,1 1.
Stnta Ana • MS-1525-PRI. room aV&ll "'/loving
care for ambulatory male
or female. Balanced diet .
Apts.,
Furn.
• 64Z-9862 or 540-2S62 att 6.
or Unfum. 370 Rentals to Share 430
Balbo.t lt la nc.t LAW sutdent desires pro-f,--.,.--'-----tessional man or student to
3.Br, 2 Ba.:.a!Lelect kitchen,._ share furn 2-BR~apt, CdM.
on beach. 30814 S. Bayfront 644-563,1 wkdys Q:etwn 8:30 &
Balboa Island. Call 675--~7 4~30. . •
aft 5. \Vinter or yearly.
Costa Mesa
BRAND NEW
From $145. Dishwasher, shag
carpeting, walk-in closets.
Forced air heat, exfra large
l'OQms, Beautiful game~
_ heated pooJ BBQ's, enclos-
'id ~ .. quiet SUrrotl1l
lngs &: clase to shopph1 .
Adult livintt no tlf't"t.
MMATE needed im·
med, age ~30. no children,
for nice-4 bdrm house. Near
be11,;ch in Huntington Beach,
$110. inCI util. 968-5797.
Garages f~r Rent 435
-~·
•
wanting identity. Excel. LOST: 2 Felnale dogs, blk. [Ill Luxury apt + salary. \Vill 1.fet:banical aptitude. To $3.00 and noon.
1
parking. 60c per month per mix-Ba11.chi, grey poodle-C.CMPLE!E lawn & garden-I £mploy-I i I '!rain if necessary, 6.JG-5~2. Book~eeper hr.' . RE=L-l-E~F'--M-a-id-.-2-,-,-,,.-,-1
I~~~~~~~~~~ I ft. Boots. Vic: Bear &: ~ng service~ . _ f A t p t T • As.$isting Chief Accountant Service Center Agency \\'eek. SZ.OO hour. Hubor
r Wesley N, Taylor Co. Paularino, 11/20. Reward. Jim 548--0-40a. u 0 ar .s rainee Must have some-college ac· 500 Newport Center Dr. NB Inn i\lotet 1800 \V Balb>a
EL CORDOVA APTS.
2077 Charle SI. 642447
Near Harbor & Hamilton St.
HACIENDA
HARBOR •
~ealtors 557-0175. LA\YN Maint. Hauling, To $721Xl. Individual \lilling counting & manufacturing Suite 53..l 644·4981 N.B. ' • ,. '
new Job Wanted, Pemale 702 1o leam I:. able to supemse exper
7111 San Joaquin Hills Rd. RE\VARD: Lost Gib s 0 n --la'>•;ns, clean.up, pruning. Will land secure 4:. prosper. · · • J\.1cn, \\lomen, Childrer•
FAME & FORTUNE
Coold A \\'all y OU
Independent Film Prod. Co.
Needs Ne\V Faces F.oi-1V
241 AVOCADO STREET
Adult livi!!&_ • ?'lo ~ts
De-luxe 1 i 2 ~R. i>Ool
Newport Center 644-4910 Guitar (Johnny Smith Free Est. Call 546-7379. 91Js _future \Vith this up & General Office ·
.DESK space available $50 Custom) Left in parking lot FRONT yard lawn servi<:f:, ~EEO HELP AT H.OME? coming co. Call. Bob 1'1cCoy, Good tYPist. Correspondence.
mo. Will pravtde-turnl~ at-Don "the Be11chcomber $10 mo . .Backyards-also.-F~ Temporary Servi.ce: 833-2700, Denn!!i & Dennis Phones. Fubtic.Cootact.
at $5 mo. Answering service -CdM. 6~1710 ask for Jerry Yard cleanup. 962-$12. • \Ye ilave Convalescent , Personnel Agency ·2082
available. 305 No. E I 1 Aides • NW'!es • B~ Michelson Dr, IrvinP.. • Garage. Di.shwshr: Paid utiL :rnm.1 $150. 646-1204 Camino Real Sa n l BIG long-haired oi:ange Reliable Gardenirtg keepers. Mar~ Baughman
1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l~CJ~o~m~<~n~i.:._. ~~'!::!~~·~~~' tig~r' cat. i\lale. Vic. Ellis. MWnt. Yd Cleanup. 646-1072 HOMEJ..lAKERS/UfJOlL'i AVON PRODUCTS is the I• DESK ~ bJ SSO Birch r·.v. Plea5e call G 1 S 1 \\'orlds largest & most P roduct Mgr. *BRAND N~ * ....::mo.-w~1!...=!.--~1rure 96'2.o658 enera erv ce, .!"or Permanent Service: respected cosmetic com· B.S.E.E. degr~e pref'd.
L
C f A I .,........ SOFA Pillow, btm.\'n & ....., THINGS by Moose~ Lt. elect., • \Ve Have Comn<>nkms' pany. AVON repreMm.tativ~s Heavy marke'ting exper. in a os a p s. at SS mo. Answering aervlce .,... 1 b f il ...-· can take advantage o! !"'< -mputo• -n·~.-a\ o• -·
I • • BR \ · plaid lost 1I/I91n i'n P um • ence, t E', instlns, e Housek"""' e Praoti "'' '"" • ..--I''"• • ' .. • Qt' " , b tns. swlfl1ming avallable. 222 Forest Ave, P~ --..-en · · • fine ,reputation in successful lated field, To $20.000.
pool, lanai. be.r·b<Jue &: gar. Laguna Beach. 494-9466 cess of moving froM C.!1-f. to ~=Y· paint etc , ·ca.1 Nialses etc. A-t ?.1onthly' profitable bw;inesses o I . .
RN'S
commercial,, .,,,,;.,; ALL SHIFTS Advertising.
NO EXPER. f\'EC'ESS.
MGR =~. ':!.!"s~-~· Foontain Valley
~;,;~= .. ~~~" n-. Community Hospital .
lt10LDERS-Fiberglass, ex-17100 E ~clid at Werner
age. All util pd. $150 to $170. Al RPORT CENTER Cdt.I. Reward! £73....4056. • Rates. HEALTH • their ··°'vn. Call now. Application Engineer
Adults. no pets. LOST· Siamese young -' Hauling "'"7"'I · ~ 354 Avocado CM. &12·9708 _I>e.1~ 1, 2. &_],.n>0!J)__.Q!l.ices . mille FA1.11LY CARE AGENCY .,,...,,.. ..... , ~ 3.5 Yl'l! ~nt exper. in cont· ' adJacent Airporter Hotel. W-klnk In tall. Nr. llth St. WANTED' !1-fessy t 18n,:; ·No. Broa'd,vay, BEELINE Fashion stylists men:ial .l military applica·
26: Lowest rates, full services. &. 06_:~1!i:nt, NB. 646-1910 ...,y~s &: ~arages ~ m:;~ ~ Santa Ana 547-6681 N() invest. No mllect. t\o 1ions. Engin~ring degree.
ptT. & trainees, all 3 shifts. 979 .. 1211 1631 Pl~centia, C.M.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-''"''"''"''"'IRN's ll Aides, all ahifta,
MEDICAL
·'I1tE EXGITING .~2$40 or 833·3223 \Vkdays or •.)-· hauling, $7.50 per hr, + deliv. \Viii trrun. Car & To $13,000. l-~--1---:i'4L-l~~~TS. BAY...YLE_W_QEflCES LOST large grey long haired Anyti.me -RN,--.\1asters degree, seeks "11hone_necess.,.._Call fo1 -•
• Deluxe. Air Conditioned, cat w/wht cflest & paws, 548-:;s&3 suitable posh. Allil'd lion' interview 9"'£.0636 or Electronic Tech_.
FURN. OR UNFURN. redecorated, Lido' Area flea collar. Vier 16th St., nursing fields mnsidered. 5J3..,3j74 or 523-9348 Ask for \Vith mechanica·\ aptitude.
RN & OR
TECHNICIANS
xlnt fringe bntt.3. Bewrb-
~fanor Conv. Ho 1 p ••
Capistrano Bch, 4.96-57$6.
ROBINSON'S e NEWPORT e
BEACH
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Unbelievably large apts, huge Realonomics Bkr. 67~700 H.B. Reward! 536-4132. HAUIJNG, clean-up, local \\'ill relocate. (805) lj.JJ...9612. Sharon. Smelt but progrcssi'>·e co.
pool, Jacuzzi. elect bltins. moves, exp'd col,l~ge stu-offers responmbl~ position&:
.6hag crpts, drps, &auna, DESK space available S50 denl. Lrg. truck Reas. NURSE, pvt duty-Ill~J!5, in· BE AU TY 0 per a tor some travel for aggressive
·-etc. Adults. 00 ~ 4 mo. Will 'PfOVide furniture
1
JI I•) _ 534-1846. valid, '""'" ;mmobil•, ;;::~1~;!'.~: ~3' .. Va c. individual. $900Ci.
SINGLES ••••• :t,. From $135 at $5 mo. Answering serilce Instruction , TRASH & Garage ,1, ..... ,, 7 \VIII drive. (213) 752-1451. -
I BEDRM F $140 available, 17875 Beach mvd. "'' .. ••·••• ram Huntington Beach. 642-4321 days. Fm? est. Anytime. DEPENDABLE Nurse/Com· , BOOKKEEPER Please Call Jo·or Appl
l BEDRM ·•• ••• From $100 ~8-500L panion for elderly. Lt. Must be extremely organized. Or Send Resume
You're "fight, ttwy're under· MEDICAL suite er office. Schools & · _ hskpg. Livein 545-0739. Unusual oppor. w/mgmt po.
priced! 1561 Mesa Dr. Air-cond .. 10 rooms. 425 .N. instructions 575 YARD. garage, cleanups. tenlia1. Drafl exempt. Xln't 410 W. Coast Hwy., NB (5 blks from Ne,vport Blvd.) Newport Blvd. $300 Month., Remove trees. dirt, ivy, DAY \\·ork-General, cleaning -.•• _,, . .,·.Apply i'n -·-Suite H 645-2716 . ""' """" Fill sand backhoe 847 2006 reliable care of sick. Trans. '"u ""''"' ,..... .,.,..;iow DAVIS REALTY 64Z..7000 PIANO LESSONS · · . son 1580 ~1onrovia. N.B. [ ... ~~~~~~~!""!!!!'
AMAZING Adul: Livi n g 3VERYnice&eeondfloorof., Your home. CerL Teachers. Houaecleanlng S43-700G. 5-lt-7330· . BOYS l0..l4 Fjl.jE COOKER
BeaUt:-1 ~ -2'"BR !'u.11\ or tint-,-ices. 17817 Beach ~Blvd. ~tr. Hathcoek: 644~~14!1,_,.. DEDICATED, CLEANING Help Wanted, M & F 710 to 'deliver papers in the San Norge Gas Stove
Apts. Self clean. ovens, Owner (213) 394-0015 Days. *-·\Ve Do Everythlng * Oemen!e, San Juan Capis· Good Cond ition
cpts, drps, jacuzzi & sauna Services and R · · Posit'
Experienced 1.c.u .. c.c.u .. & Sub
Acute Areas • • • 3· 1 l
p.m. & 11-7 a.m.
LYN'S
FUp.,TIME
LAB
-TECHNICIANS
12), Exper. l ic'd D/W (In 2 Br) dillphi, shag PRIVATE entrance &: bath. [ • I~ 24 hr. Call 673-4072 A Better Temporary trano and Capistra,oo Beach S20. -s.tS-7881
baths. Jluge pool. , Nea~.?-~I·1C0.0 .. tAn ~" -1p11n '· Mesa Cleaning Service URG. E. N•QnTLY "''o· AILY PILOT FUt.L time man for ENening Merrimac Woods .....,..... ' -"'V""V<JVQ Carpets, WindO\l'S, Floor elc. shift, service station. Apply Licensed. Particularly
Full Time
Opening Fol'
Experienced
FITIER
SEAMSTRESS
Exceptional Benefits
Apply in person 10-5 p.m.
• 2 Fashion 1st, N.B.
Equal opportunity emplO)'tl'
4?5 Merrimac Way, Ctf. 600 sq. ft. $90/mo. Resid. &: Commc'I. S.18-4111 492-4420 ~Carey Chevron. fi04 So. Bacteriology. Ta k e * 2 BEDROOM * CO!tt'A ~!ES"' 646-2130 BaJysittlng Jfousecleaning By Day. NEEDED BUILD 2nd lnrome. Sell C6ast H'l\'Y, Laguna Beach. Nit• Calls. Willing To [!!"!!~~~~~'!"!!""•I
1'h Ba Townhouse concept. Business Rental '4) EXPERIENCED mothe r Chvn Transportation Ba_sic H, Vita-E. Protein, GENER.AL OFFICE: Brain..'> W~rk Waekends, 7-3 SALE~· BOATS
Beam
1
ceillngs, extra lrg SHOWROO..'t mtg. & office available for J1itting. J\ton. Call 836--0648 e ~k~5~arc. Call .968-4203 or & charm with 1op skills p.m . & 3-11 p.m. Growth oriented boat dealff-
bedrms. encl i::1tio. recrea· day thru Friday, days onl,11. Painting & . Secretaries · · 'Ivins this cream puff posi· ship is seeking~ services tion rm,. sauna bath&, ffc, space. Close in Laguna loc. $11.SO per week. ea1J CASJ-llERS: Car wash, part tion v.·ith AA eo. $4j(). Exce llent Working Con-of a career minded W es.
Adults. Our Sonday after-$95 to $155 mo. 494-465.1. 548-7054. • Paperhanging • Rep;o Typists & full time-for Newport Call l.lelen Hayes. 540-6055 d it ions & Fringe Ben• !"~ "'bc:J \\·ouJd enjoy work •
noon B-B-Q's & Frte Art cosrA MESA, 991 w. 19th. Carnmnter No Wasting • Ke un h Oprs Beach & LagUna areas. EX· Coastal Agency fits. • • • ~~n1~!1:e~~~~~!,~
Lessons starting 60Qn. 1Vx90 Corner c.1 or M-1, ·r-* WALLPAPER * e YP C per. req'd Over 18. 644-4460. 2790 Harbor Bl al Adams ... .,_,..., -.ai
HARBOR GREENS ~. mo. 642-3400. ADDIT. & Repair. cab, When you call "M.ac" Typists CASHIER GEL Coater. e:<.per. All 3 MISSION ~~u:i~~:!~. Sals!Z
54(>.S025 , Industrial Rental 450 formica, marlite, flr .tile, 548-1444 64&-IID \\'e will train mature person shifts .•• 1631 PI a ce n t la COMMUN1.TY letter or resume 1o Clall'.i·
$HXJ. MOVE JN Allowance paneling. Antiq. Furn. -HANGMEN, sales &: IruiU., Interviev.ing Houn · to \\'Ork in our bu$y service-Ave. CDsla ~lcsa. HOSPITAL fied ad no. 2-19, Daily PrJot,
Children welcome 1 For Le•se Costa Mesa repair &. refin. 64'4·7598 9am-llam I:. Jjim-4pm Ollflet in Co!ta ?<fess. Call HARD\VEAR stock Inan & P.O. Box 1560, <Uta Mna
NASSAU PA!.J.'\.IS " 1440 SQ. FT. EXP. Remodeling, cabinets, ~=r·00~~~1• t::~ ~::: \Vork \\•hen & \\'heN. r-.fi'. Randolph, 213/944-MSS. delivery. 25-35 yrs. l\Tust 27802 Puerta Real H\ly' Calif. 9M26. '
177 E. 22nd St. 642-3645 Industrial spa.Ce nr Newport-repairs, ma.int. No job too c_... you "'an1! be in good health t. have J\lission Viejo. Cali!. S SHAD~ EU.ts-POOL San D1cgo Frwy. 2930 Grace R ,,.,, ~""' .,... .. wart?., 547-5846. Person'nel Serv·1c:e· Cal d 1· P ALESMEN sm. eas . .,..,,............. Cashier valid if. rivers 1c. re· Need ho :Furn ... Unfurn. l & Ln ISo. of Baker, E. of PROI>~. Painting .ext/int. Ac· d. (E. on San Diego :r ......... ._ &: men w are ttoady t& 2 BR' fro $13" UP F Corpet Service lnter·1m fer man interesie in career • .. ., Jc""" the car .busi·-· -~ s m J abview, 1h mi.) Repre· cous .. ceilings, airless PARKING in hard":ear. will train. Pay Cro\\'n Valley Park\,·ay) "-"" .... .,. .,,..
Huntlngtqn Beach se~tative there from 9 to 11 JOHN'S Carpet&: Upholstery spraying. Refs. 847-1358. 778 W. 20th, C.M. commensurate w/ability & ~ \\illing to train. Mtmt l'-';c...;..;.;:o...;~·;;..:.;..;c;..._ daily. 557-,558a or 8~Tit Cl -E 0. Sh PROF. paintlog-lnt••i••lor. 642-7523 546--2592 ex-Annly in -rson 10 PHONE . a\le good personality, bt !\TOVE JN TODAY COSTA ME ean~..... xtra rl· am· • Seek full & part tim~ cash· · ~~r. ...,. C ~;;, Roch (714) 495-4400 interested in a fut11tt dNtl
Kid'! & pets welcome 2 br 2COO Sq f SA p;x> tree Seotchguard (Soil Honest \\'Ork. Lj c / l n s. iers for parking operation H.lv, \V:,ght o . .uu • (7)4) 830-7700 '>vell, salesminded. &nef'1t1:
$159 All Xlral; PooiJ ' . t. street frontage. Retardants). Degreasers &: 548-2759, 540-1'444. Asst Bkkpr to $600 a.t Ne\\:port Center. Requir· ·';;,'lc;•~r;.C~""'·==,.-;--.:--:;::-: Demo .. group ins., .,.,..,..,.,.,
.' 'I. • , gar,, O'hcad side door. $225 fno all I b · h •-•'OIVI .--:OU KEEPERS ... ,I ti t d -A• .. --· patio. l13S:Z Apt. A Keelson 959 \V, lTth St. 714 : 639-Juo: co or rig teners ex 10 PAINTING/Papering. 18 yn Bkkpr-CPA' f:irrn .,.,..,,, es rtlated exJ)('r. & ability H SE '"" me NEED 5 1''0men this area to ee -..ary pltltl romma.
Ln. ·HB. 008-7510, 84"2-6235 minu!e bleach for whit~ in Harbor area. Lie & bond· Sec'y. Spanish, Frnch $3'15 to d('al eUectively with the exper·d prtfd. ApplY. in aktM. Unlimited incomt. Ap.
mv!NE Ind t
'I • 000 t Sa n. h 11ell Berline Fashions. Big ply · ~-'-UNIVE Laguna Beach ft "',· area ... I. cbarpe s: ve your money ed. Ri!f's furn. 64Z-2356. P.T. Acctng Clerk $3 hr public, Permanent position. person. Huntington 1 ~I88l"l profits, no collections or in .,,-rxin. 1 RSJ.
'-0::--,.,-:-'--.,.---·1 sq. · zone for ight Y. saving m. •. extra I.rips. PAINTING· Hon•·•t. Auto l\Tachinist S4:l0 ConvalesctntHospita, TY OLDSMOBILE, 28MI •~ manuf t . S . kl d \Vil! I I d J II M S lo H B delivery, no Invest. Call for lfarbor Blvd., o·-, "• 1-o. I BR. Ne,,·ly redecorated. 1 ac unng. pnn ere c ean 1v1ng rm, 1ning 1 _ _, · k r. Acct. Attract. S800 Ca rs. moot F rida, · . · 9,_ ""' " ..
b!k m heach. o c EA N R. Fomey ReaJ:tur 540-3862 rm & hall $15. Anfrm $7.50. ~~~~ e""'c 1'1.~6'7r::.· ,,.L7~c0'd Any Acctng Clerk, L.A. SjJIJ &M-31"J8 bctwn 9an1 & 5pm HOME REGISTRARS -'"-1_,..,.._s';:;;~23;,:1-"1'""---I SALES: Career opportunity
VIE\V. :nso. 496-1981. !~~~~~~~~~ couch SIO, chair $5. 15 yrs, 1 • a ,,..,, .. · ' Figure Clerk. L.A. $4l} I """"""""""""""'"'"""'I NURSING & lots or public <.'Olltael .
Lido Isle
1
~ exp Is "·hat oounl!, not PAINTING, prof. All \\'Nk KeypUnch. L.A. $$~ CLEA~ING la~y .z Hrs. in ~~~·:~~le!~~ 0~!~fn: LVN Supervisur for rc.lit::1, 2 a\\•ait you! Company t:ar ~ Perionils I&, method. I do \\'Ork myself. guarn. C.olor s pee i a Ii st Sec'y-Bubbly .i<N ~veni_ng. 4 t~ :J dayi1 .a. week ,\wk. starting Wary S2.00 nites a \\·k., llpm-7:30 am alo11g-\vith great benefits.
LIDO BAYFRONT. apt!. & ~----·:__....J '1 Good r~. 531~101. 962-.61<13. 547.,1441. Si·. Acc-t ., CPA <'Xfl(r. $!2014KK 1n off1c~. \Vrite Ckl.ssi!ied Ad hr plu~ bonus. Rapid ad· shift. Park Lido Con. J..Ocal tl'rrl!ory. Start $8300.
homes. $200 to $1.200 mo. HOLIDAY Special Carpet &: YOU suppy the paint. Rooms Softv.·arc Mgr. No. ~ Daily Pilot P. 0. va~merrt, Exp. unneces· valcscent Cen!er, 4 6 6 Call Don Ben!On, 540-60:>5
Agt. !\lack, ~73-0.wa or Personals
530
Uphol. Cleaning. r r~ e painted $10 ea. Also ex-NEWPORT li6.x 1j6(} Costa i\fesa, Calll. wary, \\'ill train. Cati 10 AM F'lag!\nip. NB. 642-8044. Coas!al Agency
61>2723. Estimates. Call ~Ir. }fester terior. Call 540-7046. Per.sonnel Agency 92626. to 12 Noon. 541·332'i. OPPDRTUNJTY r 0 r J 2i90 Harbor Bl. at Adalnf! N;e:.:w~:;.:.:port:,...Be=-a-c°'h~--\V}IY not surprise he.r for ~1697. FOR clean & neat painting, ll3 0~;r3g~, N.B. COSi\1ETIC Col'IS\lltant help JiC1!nscd Real Est ate Salesman
Chrl.st.mas? 1,l carat Dia.·l c=e-m-'-'e-nt-,-c=o-nc_r_el-•--interior or exterior&: rtas. • others shop for Christmas. saJespeople. Be your ov"n \'oung Co. Gre~-tentlal
OAKWOOD GARDEN mond ring, Tiffany setting. rates, Call Dick, 968-4065. For that item under i50, F.arn· $3 hr u a ... ~~~a boss. Top commissions. Call ~In. m· t---...._
Apartments RetaU value $600. Asking CEl\tENT WOiu<. no job too Dime-A-Line 6«2-0078 ,_, Beauty CounSfllor . ......,..;r,,f,), Ji: Have your 01vn desk~ & \VESTCLIF h i
(Resort Livjng for Single & $285. Surpri&e • (matChlng i;mall, reasonable. Free .. ,.1th! Penny Pincher 847-7413. •-•• phone. PERSONNEL AGENCY'
Married AdllitJll . Lady's & n1an'1 wedding Estim. H. Stufllt k. 548-8615 * * * * Dental Assistant oral • W. E. Lache'nmye.r Realtor 2043 We1teliff Dr., N.B.
Nrwport Bench bands, never \\'Orn • PATIOS. walks, drive, install * * 11urgery & x-ray. Exp'd. '1800 Newport Blvd .. C.M. 64!>-2770
\16th at Irvine 1 FREE!) Call 516-5710 after ne\v lav.:ns, uw, . break, Jmmf!.!1 opening. 548--0373 64&-3928 51a-34&'J SALES Lady, ex p e r . 1
645-0000 or &42·8170 6 pm Ii v.·eekends. • 1:• remove . ...,~for ot, DEPENDABLE lady to se-.v _.._, QNNEL PERSONNEL REC E PT: w o '!"en's v.·~ar. Apply.
VISTA DEL MESA LOOKING for lge Gt!nnan BEAT The Rain! Co~e Trade f p d• ~ custon1 boat canvass. Piece IK.VU"IE PER.5 This posiUon otrers a lot of Jackie's ;·asliions, Hunt.
Ap.rtme Rta Shepherd. brovmith-gold, floors, patios, dr i ves. r S ara I Se \\·ork/pt time> to 111111. \Vlll SERYK:£s.-AGEN(y public contact.. Old Center. H.B.
1 & 2 BR. Furn. & Unf. Dish· \'Jc. Princc1on &. Fordham. :o;!de'>valk1i. Don 642-8514. turn. machine .ti tbl.. your establi~hed firm. Great co. I --S"°A"L~ES~S~ECR=~E~T-A_R_Y __ ,
&sbtr St • Refri Child bitten, T\1e!I. eve. be fit · I d ... . ,... • ove"" g . \\·ant to a\.'Oid scrit"s of QUAlJTY Cement \Vork. Let 1· spare roo~n:. or garage. P /T Gen'I Ofc $2.50 hr ne . s incu e one \\·c., ... For local olc of 11 natl Shae crpt'g.Lrg Rec center. Geen-gt; do it. Llc'd. Bonded. Ines Eves., 548-5061. Girl Frida $500 va.cauon each 6 n1onths. plastlc.11 firn1 in SA. t..ood
RENT Starta $155 shots. ~m. 64~1695. \ DISTRIBUTE Jleallh ~ y $400 ~tttrt $440. ' typing, ' llh ,. JlUmefic1\
Tustin-& Mesa Drive SPIJUTUAL READINGS • ti• mes. Ecology tine .. pt/full time lYJ!ISt, 60 w .p .m . Cali Jean Brov.11, 54()..6(W llkills req. Good Wary 11. * 545 ass... AdvJce..011 all mt.UUS -C.ontractor ---Bob or Bill 646-7056. . Mail Clerk $325 <:cast~ Agency ' beoo.tita. . Send_t't"llume Jo
"iiiiiiiiii Daily 10 AM-10 PM M~Y;;o;;l;o;V;;:;;._____ . --2i90-Hatbot Bl. at-Adam:t saJ~r-NC -P.O. Box *7 I~ -1~ 312 N. El 'cnmlno Real " a,y, quality hotnC! * DOG GROOMERS, 488 E. J7th (at Irvine) C.M. Santa Ana ea 92707
,. San Oem .. i. 1'mod. Walls, «lHng, • dollars Exp'd all br=lo. full..... 642.1470' P-GEE INDUSTRIES • . •
492-9136, 49~!mf . floors, e,tc. roo job too small. • Nwpt Bch & Sant• Ana. N .. da Trainees SERVICE e11tab. J'a l I• r
547..oolG. 2-1 hr ans, !'it!V. • 642.s,<;2',, INVEST IN $.S0&-$650 Per Mo. Brush Cuatomtn. CM. Up A~:o~~217 ~~ ftANDY Man :.Pa l nt l ng. .• ENGINEER YOUR FUTURE . ~~~~ ~·kly to •tut .•
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Po>11t -Ppch -Bunt -Im--AJIMISf!CE Maney may not ~Y pea~
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P O Plumbing, Cardenlng, Pe11t Nc\1-port 20 F..Cla55 ~OOJ) , 32· two enPine R,·,•--•--n R~nf I.E. d~/mfgrng Young mtn, tntchanleal ex·1, ... ;;;1; .................. 1
· ·Box 1223. Costa MC!l<t. Control. 6"" .,..,, .. b•lo-7 ~·11 °· I RI 5 'I • ·~-•-1 • " :x: •"""l~ '" ,. u ..... c ng g, · al "'x~ss cruisier, 1960. ftilly e 'netting po!l.tion I me· per. 11'1: pnll <but not req·d. ,
COuNSELJNG & Info f or" _A-;':;1.:;;;,:::--:-"'""'==c--ICogt $800n, value $5000, For e uipped. ;tt,!m value. chnntca.1-"p1itude:tri4ch. 11hop BE YOUR OWN BOSS ~ l\lust b!o: lO or over. Able to 0S.c r . to $47$ a.bo~on, vasectomy & adop-Addl!Jon5 * Remodeling i\fobllc Ho~. house, or ? fc" seasoned•!t'D't, lc\a or or toollni; related. $800 mo. Men. or Women atart· \\'Ork lmmediatf!l.y, if en I Office MU
don. ApCare. 542-4436. Ccrv.ick & Son. Lie. 673·35?0 Or 642-..3246 '. • ? :f-1..tJi8 Serviee,C.enter J\gt'n¢y a~ted. For into on job Cle rk (mafh) tt $Q3
•·Make Room For Dad-6'73-roll * M9-2ITO Have tret> A cl~ar. 6 '°'"' ~ Newport Center Dr. NB Lease A Ytllow pia"ce:mc.ntt, call .Tutaday Stc'y (SH 90) $476
dy'', .clea11 611\ the
pragt, .)'O\lr trash 111 CASH
with a DAlLY "'Pll.OT
Cla&Sflfd ad.
Elect rlC41 I , ren1:&1 unttw. Room for 4 ~ do you Move to trade?, Sulte 535 644-4981 • T axi Cab 9am-lpm onli. ·_ Steno Sec'y $43'
mom. val. SGl.000. Tnde up l.lrt it here -in Orange From "OlNtma• Netktles" 1 776-8551 Cle rk ~
.ELECTRICAL ""tit at n.-a.s
ralt!s. Dryers:, out 11 I d e
11£hlhia;. Reaid., G:>mmc'l A
lnd'l wlr!Oi· 837-9241,
•
tor eomm, int'011'1t. Sf.4-llll'\ County'11 largr!t ttad trad~ to outgrown Levis-Ymt can CAil tor Appt free/Fee ~lt!Clnt
The ll'win Oo., Re .. ton ~ma JX"it. 6<2·5618. rum ..... ,, to euh" In • 54&-1311 ' RUTH RYAN AGENCY
* * * * "k * DAILY PILOT dua!Jlod ad Tllrn WnHo<d """'into qu!clc 1793 N""'°", Cll 616-'81>1 u ~ call &U-5678' Ask tor rtmnan cash, (all 64m lTB.ll Btach, HB M7.91Jll
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._ Help W•nJ•d, ~ & F 710 Appliance• 802 ft'l1celianoou1 111 Mu1i"l ln1trument1822 rV, Radio, HiFt Boatt, Power 906 Autos W.nt!d ;a Autoj ,"fmpor(lief 970 Autos, ~mported'
...:.;:..-------Stereo ' 836 .::::~::,;,~;.;..,,,,...,-j!· ...;,;~~=o:r;;;:;;;:;~~:---1 '.::;~.:;.;;:::;.;;:.::.......:..:.:: , c Secrefor-tot+OO i;J.JLAN ta r. model * AUCTION * >'lNE cHR!S'l:MAS --...... ,....,--... ....... --1-JOll!'ISON""Revclii' 16\ 120 I PAY TOP JAGUAR MG •,. gr 80-100_. I~ 65, Bae: her I dryers I mtcb seu, __ _;RESENT! FISHER ...O.i\1.C. Tor> oond. Trlr-• CASH
-g~ Jn Real Estate, land Del-,;i day gu&r. 531-8637; Fine F\Jrniture • Ne<U"ly new O'own electric 1968 10(.9() stcrtO amp 4.D . .xtras. ~.Pvt Pl.Y~ lil!U'Y. BAU"D l''ICK
,.. • dev. or Es.c:row. 83!}..1778 & ApPllanecs guitar & anipliflcr. Less wat~ (:rl/~). phono, tipe, Andt°tllen1 645-3200days. · -~ U
\,w Service Ct.nter Agency Auctio9s:Frlday, 7:00 p.m. than ball lhe original price, tuner, aux inp, Ldns.~ oont. 28' UniRlle 1960, S6500 Tho Hertior 'Areas
:""' 500 Newport Center Dr., NB U~ED Appliances & TV's. Windy's Auction 8 5rn ,only $51). 97s.-OS95 aft 6. hi filter, concentric vol. or tor used can 6 trucks, Ju.£ Only Authorized
Su.,,..,,. ,.,. · We guar & de l iver. \Val ..,-" !ta.de for tr&Jler boat+ c&U"·f·-~-.,um·atee. JAGUAD DEALER 1 e ........, 644-4981 _, 18 W75'At. Newport, CM "'86SG . ca~ . .-.00 or otter. h Ow o•" , • ..,,, -.,,. ... .,., "'
• • S , R Dumap'•, 15 Newport Bl., B hi ~~ Office Furniture/ · I ~P!>i'i""iij'779ijil jjalijt.iSi. i.iii [ ~c~a~s ~· ~"'~'·=~~. =-~~·~i9[ GROTH CHEVROLET Alway, h" an excellent ,.. l> , ec Y· eceptlonl1t C.f\f. 548-T180. e nd Tony's Bldg f\ta t'l Equip. 124 ti Boats, Sail 909 . tection ol both New &: Used
Kln't co. Gd Potential F If 810 TABLE, octagonal ca r d -,,=,..,,,......,.,.--..,..-,.:; Jaauars -; • Call Lorraine urn urt gatne, hardWOOd with ereen fil:vERAL elfice desks & [I CORONAD9 30, '"St a r Aile for; Salta ?Qnager • --t
WESTCLIFF felt top. &!ats 8 Foldipg swJvel chairs conference free to You I S Shine" 19n En.senada.. win-. l82U Beach Bl"vd.. "Speclalizln ... in Qualily" ~.~ PERSONNEL AGENCY BEAUTIFUL ;velv.et loveseat J ! ' ' ~------' ""'· Read-y to ra-. Sa-"'. Hun"·-Oll •.-"' cb' ·~ egs, .recesses or glasses table & cbairs & misc. Qf-· ~·'" '"" .... u ..... ~ IA"ER
.._ :• 7132 Westcliff Dr., NB & sofa, blJc na,Ugahyde sofa and chips s25. .2 stereo fire furn. Call .S4>S427• 3 Lines, , Times, c2,oo 644--5492. 847·6081 Kt t.\3331 ,.
• ~l170 also, both less than 3 mo. S""ake-. '2" E. "-· · . • VENTURE 22 1 Bulck ... Onal-Jaguar Id 557--021 .... ~ ~" <t v_ _ '!a. ess than.J yr WE DESPERATELY... .--' TERMITE ttewman, exper. 0 • 4. "\Volverine tr!a.xials in -Pianos/Organs 126 eld. Compass, o/b, life-..line, NEED 1 ·f'"E. 11ttt--St.-;-
person,el, lic:'d or unlic'd. 2 Stuffed chairs.Weber BBQ, enclosures on nylon caSters. ----, ........ _ AFFECTIONATE z y r head & trlr, 4M2:in. Clean used C!ll'5 Costa Mesa 548-776.i
\Ve ot(er lire ins, &TOUP Queen size bed with · Omni directiooal Ctme tips C9NN ALLEN blkJaray rema1e ki.t ty , KITE No. 154,. c:over.. trailer ..-FANTASTIC P,RICES JENSEN
'?l <tlealfh insur, pd vac. profit springs $50 each. 24" x 24" paper ORGAN DEMO SALE spayed, shots, box trained, & dolly. Perfect corl(I, $650., DEAN LEWIS
. .,.... shar ng, 5 day work wk. & mattress. * 840-4084 * cutter · $25. Golt clubs, ~139. · JENSEN
., , ~all .ror .appt. .Barden's Ex-Mt. Airy breakfront Northwestern I am in a 1 e d Save up to Sl.200 on s~lected -F~RE~.-E-lil~l-di-ri-.-Y-0-,-b-'"-1. 644--0263· TOYOT·A e VOLVO AUTilORIZEO
.,-;..,, crmmatwg C.O. ask for Joe fruitwood finish perltct oond. woods, 1. 2, 3 & 4. Ebony console floor dt!mo's: Cn?-at Good soil from' our .front COL-26 sloop Mark ll, com· 1946 HARBOR BLVD. SALES !: SERVICE
.. , Laux or Dave Barden; 696 *•* "'lO" ••* . black, like new. Swing buyS on epr demo spintts · plcte equip'd, priced riaht. Costa Mesa &1&9303
A Ra d I h ' C 'I ~~ ~ I All ~-nd· Id yard. 540-2279 aft SP~1. A "-"1 "107 ..... n op eve., .J.}. or \Veight ~· Regµ,Ja r sl1alt aso. me1-..;11a ise so ;';;-;;;;;o;;;;--:;:oc=::::--.:=:-;l..'.~":-ry'.."...:~~·::_~:::~~::_·__ WE 'PAY TOP DOLLAR
.r, call ;,46.-5570. GOLJ? diVaff . 8' •. ~.i!ted, 2 $30. Goll clubs, &n Hogan Vlith new warraotles, pri vate 10 WEEK old pups. J male. 3 40• Diesel cutter, dinette, big FOR TOP USED CARs
··:i?. TRAI NE'E WAREHOUSE cushion, good cond. 1st $50 woods, 1, 3, 4 & 5, S\ving -lessons & delivery. WHILE female. Shecp/"Daisey" gnlle-y, Trans Pac Vet. <fry U ~ur car ts extra clean, takes it! S48-i607. THEY LAST! · breed 546--0729 "v
NEWPORT
IMPORTS .J.!1 This nationally ~sr>tc:ted weight D-1, Reg, $25. Ax-GOULD Ml.lsrc . · -· SlSM Avery Vo. S36-9129. ftf". u9 t.nt. -~· co. promotes.to all positiOns MAPLE bunk bed w/mat· aline putter $7.!lO All' brush. Since l9t'l "HARirf.'', lovable Beag· Boats Slips/Dock• 910 -BAUER BUICK
from this en!ry level job tresses. Good cond, $50. Paasche type AB lor extra 2045 N r.f.ai A shund, hou~broke.n. ' 234 E. 17th St.
"• only. A real New Year Send-642-8620 line \\'Ork, cost new $107, *, ~7~· ! ' 642-2898 NEARLY new cement deck CMta ?ttesa 548-'1765
3J~ W. Coo,st Hwy. '
Newport Beach
oll. SWlO. CRUSHED Velvet, Gold olive sell for $50. 646--0191. Even. 1'"'REE Female All \Vhite slip floa t 12x33. 13 ' IMPORTS WANTED
Call "Bob Wilson. 540-6055 · sofa & lO\'e seat, Med, cof· ings after 6 and 1-veekends. * SALE SALE * Persian Kitlen. Clearwater. Call Croft & Orange Counties
, Coastal Agency fee &: end tables 675-3343 STEREO, 1972 Garrard, has PIANOS ** ORGANS 673-4.ai& Neville 675-8222. TOP $ BUYER
1 2790 Harbor BL at Adanis 8' FLORAL Print sofa. $35 .. full slereo changer, Bir ~tcin\.\-·ay. Ka\\'ai, J-tammond, la' x Jl'6" Sailboat Sli p BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
. TRAVEL Agent, min, 5 yrs 968 Valencia, Apt. No. 4 . .sus p ens io n speakers. Allen. Baldwin, e!e. From l ~ North Lido Chanl'l<'l $100. 1 18881 Beach Blvd. ·:=~ do mes t ic:, lnternational, CM 54&-6410. AM /FM stereo r ad Io $2!l:;). RENTALS $10 up, Pets ~nd Supplies j L Water & elec. 673-3573 H. Sea"tb. P.1'11 847-8555
, v-commercial, lollts, Cl'lliscs. G 8l w/FET + tape deck, still "Nlon & Fri eves 'tit 9 . ~ 40· slip, Ne"'JlOr~ harbor, sail TOP DOLLAR
'
,,. Send resum--& --•-ry· -. a rage Sale brand ne\.\' \\'as I e f t ·· Sunday 12.5 $110 N "' ........ '" • FIELD'S PIANO co· or power, pE'r mo. 0 IN CASH
LOTUS
LOTUS
AUTHORIZED
SALES & SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS :,, .,.,~ ·quirements trl Clas.1. !ified ad unclaimed on layaway. Sold • charg" overha.1.., 67~ °""", GARAGE Sale. 4' bar, nauti-1833 N ~ BJ d Pets Ge •eral BSD ' "' ~,~ '.~>.' No. 300, D y Pi)ot, P.O. • {Qr.$320. P•Y oil balance of ' ewpo., v · • " P id to ~ur clean used car c:aJ coffee table, book case, .,, ~1 M 7J4/"'" 3~" 36' BOAT Slip for rent a. r ~-3100 W "~--H • ,"!I l Box 1500, sta Mesa 926261 .Jtt5 or take over small ~..,,,a esa u-oJ· '>N ' -1d for or not. · ......ut wy. new wall plaques, ~ m01or EXOTI,..._ P<'ls· T a I k ,. n c Newport Bea•h "" N wport Be _, ·
1
___ • VIET M VETERAN ......, payments. Collection Dept. WOULD YOU " . .... ' SANTA ANA DODGE e a., ..
•
• t.\G
Atrnrolll1:EI>
•SALES .l SERVJCZ .
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 w. Opst a.,..
Newport Beach _
'57 hfGA ~dsler, aood
cond, $000, * ·968-!1696 * * EXc;:EPT19 NAL_ CAR '* '63 f.fG 1100 Secf.,. lo mi.
One Owner *' 492--8931
OPEL -
'68 OPEL WAGON
19.000 miles. Radio, :Heater,
lXHNOS7)
' $1299
~w.le.uJi& W TOYOTA
646-9303
J.946 Harbor, epsta.Mesa
'69 OPEL
RALLYE COUPE
4 Speed Transmission (41S.
. CKY),.
-$1299 ~ cycle. Now throw pWoWs. n 41893-050l. BELi EVE AmJ.:m ri P an-ot, R eg . 645-1404 140l N. Tustin I-:-=='='===~'°==
k .\ Once · a lifetime oppor. to Lost ot misc. Sat: only, Angora r:.ve Rabbit, \Vhl!e MER CE. DEi_IENZ ~ star a mgmt. career in a 22'18 Meyer Place, Costa SACRIFICE! FREE ORGAN LESSONS doves. tiny toy poodles. BOATslips avaiJ .Z5'~· .. Xlnt'1 __ .:_~8!'3~l-:'3~6'!__91!.,._=~';';:'.':":':~;'-;::'.'."".:::---:---DAVE ROSS PONTIAC "' li -accommod!l.tions i.11 n e wl· H I I I I t: • local branch of one of coun. :P..lesa '1' Carat diamond ring, Tif-as long 4ll you Ice! No reg-AKC reg. Bird cage~, Marina. 67l-6606. Autos, l~~rted 970 ouse O mpor I, nc. 2480 Harbor Blvd.,
tries biggest companies. FREE stalidlng adjuslable !any setting. Retail value istrati0:i1. No obligation. Just a nimal·cages-. Tep qu111. Sat. Authol'ized Mttcedes Bern: Costa Mesa -~ Planned training program sheU system. 9 shelves, $600. Asking $285. (Matching Ccme. Mondays 7:30 pm ·a. ... v.'f'£-1cdys. on sale 'ti! sold. SUP avail. up to 38", $80. Dl.STINCTIVE · d,ealer '71 OPEL GT, green, stick.
lets yoµ. leirn while you desk, 2 stereo component Lady's & Man's \.\'cdding COAST MUSIC 673-9357. mo. 962-1267 or 547-9561, ext SPORTS CARS NOW ON DISPLAY low mileage. in warranty,
earn. Fine . benefits pkg., cabinets, walnut, 6' x 8'. band!, never worn, FREE!) 642-2851 GUINEA PIGS 231. 'AA Lamborghini 2+2 • "68 1972 3SO·SL pri party. 83~3007.
car, fxperises paid. This is Perfeclcondition. 644--4015. Call 546-5710 after 6 P\fl & ORGAN SALE Porsche 912, air • '69 r.m Al ectio
" ·not a sales job. Start S600J. 'Weekeilds. ~ '"'-nn ·Organ Annual F all 25c Wh~':;-'1'_7';:.Y bast! ~280.SL • ·"71 TR-6 • -'71 so Jarge sel n or PEUGEOT
el Din, set,. :Baker br set, 1 t, almost n ew Clearance. ve up to $1000 .tats 852 T111nsport1tion -_ MANY MORE. Manchester, Buena Park. .;..; __ P_E_U_G_E_O.,....T--• I
"
..
l Call Don. Bcn!J:ln, !l4Q--605S LOVELY custom furn• Drl:'X· IDEAL G'I ~ Sa ~ o~ lllfll MGB e '70 240-Z cars. e O\Vned m~els lri stock. 6862
. Coasla! ·Agenc:y . Chenille divan. Misc. items. Kings;: bedspread, Custom en selected console floor Authorized MBZ Dealer (San!a Ana Fwy a t Beach ~ 2790 1farbor Bl. a t Adams '-64~549• __made, auJ.umn'_i= oJ.c.r..s~ d~os. 1-lUKe· discounts on s rAMESE--Xittens, ma , I) 523-'125o Blvd.) Demo Sale Now In •---1-.~.~-~.-.P.-f."6gres·s·t1---ll---I
Sales. Service, P.1.rt11 ~ WAITRESS.& Hostess, Exper GARAGE SALE 548-1295. alJ models. Campers, Sale/Rent 920
p preferred over ?1, Love's · · NE\VPORT y · ht c 1 b COAST MUSIC J3h,Jc_I!Qint, ~ mo. 01 d · r !•' .Bro ok h. u r s lj & Adams. Sat & Sun. 128~ 35th -St., ac u N:E:\VPORT •-HARBOR Registered. 54S-3370 after 3, NEW 1·971 8 FT, ALFA ROMEO Ot<in!Je County's
Lil rgest 51.'lection
New & Used
M.:-r<ed"S Ben?
! ' N.B. 67"-3'''"'. Membenhip 'for sal~ at ,a " .
f
.. ~ · 962·1341 . " £vo Costa :rifcsa * 642-2851 Siamese Kittens! Pair '67 Alfa Spider Conv. Lo
M • II 818 very substantial savings, I=:::;,:::...:::.:=,,.,....:::.._.;:;::::: I mi's. very ..,d cond. $1~.
1 .,,,.' WAlTJ)ESS exptr. Not under isce aneous . 548-2381. , _ Organ Storage Sale Reg. B u. Pt Show qua!. Cab over cam;.r .for Chevy "'
' 21. N()" Sun or liolidays.' My Lass. Your G8t11f P OOL TABLES Warehouse Alie'll 75 pedals Alleti 32 ~l/F. 6"2--32-46 67J-357o or Ford truck, Heavy Duty l.:.
4'4-::::3
:::
786
'.'.'.'...' .:_4'"":::7'.:'.~~9:,· ---1 J im Slemons Imps.
\\larnc r & flia1n St.
FRITZ WARREN'S
SPORT CAR CENTER ,
710 E. 1st., SIA. 547-0764
Open daily 9-9;·c;losed.Sunday ,
PORSCHE I v~. Apply ing.lierson, Kramer's-~~ s.arat diamond ring, Til-Sal~ F reight damaged $49 pedals. Artisan ciiapel mod., Dogs 854 ,Constniction, sink, lee box, AUSTIN
,-: ... 512 'Y· l m_St., Costa Mesa. rany setting. Value $600. to $199, New slate factory Baldwin SA, Wurl 4602, \Vurl sleeps 4. f---------! .':~ ·Asking $285. (FREE • never crated, S195 to s 39 5 . 4-160. Antique Recd organ. STUD Sel'Vlce·AKC male tea-646·2698 or 557-4540 '69 Austin Healey '66 PORSCHE 912 5 gpd. ' . ll§l' worn, lady's & man's wed· 639-8623, 5~466. !.. Newp:irtOrgan~ * 645-1530 cup Poodle.Grcy.$8'5orpick Cycles, Bike's, SPRITE ROAt>STER MG Red \\'/blk tnter. Good \.:.:::I Merdlnfts• ~ ding bands.) Call 546-5710 POOL table & balls, ne"\v LO\VREY Pianos & Organs; ~9~~~'r~i=n~~range), Scc:A:tter1 925 Very Clean CHA.N9U84955Gl ....... cond. Priced to Jell. ii:··-~'~iiiiio;;;iiiiii;;,:.~ , after 6 p.m. & weekends~ cover, gOQd corid. Com-Yamaha Plano & Organs; & · $1099 MGr .. F-tJW;·-d· ·3:1;, 64&-1136 .UNICEF Christmas cards. position. Sl40.J!46--2482. Steinway Pianos. BC'St buys CARDIGAN \Vrlch Corgi 125 Yamaha MX fil!ron, 'Ne~ o~r :sed, ;,art: & "'6.5---SC, am/lm, radlal 1,
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; ... ~ ... , :,;;:.
A -800 Adolo lp-o 1271 ci·rr r...... in nc\v & used. Schmidt puppies. Al>i:C Reg. Prr1n Webror + many extras. . H b ,,. Ch • ht k Hd t ntique.~ '-... = ' L iur.; FJRE\\'000 FOR sALE h Xlnt cond. $375. / oiler DAVE ROSS PONTIAC service. er ~,.ie<Uander, rm "' s,...nc: • res ' ------~----------, -guna B-,-h.· 494 ,320. ·J\fusic Co., Est. 1914, 1907 N. s ots, exceptionally healthy, 537 ,,21 _ ma>" s-"' ~·L OLD Press Back R<}Ck~ ....., " '-..., Orange &. Eucalyptus l\-tain, Santa Ana. hcau1iru[ markings. 497-1276 673-1922. 2480 tlarbor Blvd., • -= '· ""'"" "• ''""· .nu·DQQ .
... 1~ •·ood, xlo't -"•d. Call DIAMONDARE r ing, 6 carat 544-7653 JUST . 1. I Ch . e US" H d Co.!ittt. MeM Dally Pilot WMt Ads have Fast results ire just·a phone ...., iu ., p.i.. solitaire. cost $3{l(), sell $200; ~-~~~~~~-BABY .Crand Ba I d win , rn tme or ristma!, "'our on a Christmas M a.ins ga.!Ore. call away . 642-5678
647-3703. Great at Christmas gift. FOR SALE: Girl's skates, \\'alnut. Paid over Sl200. sn1all toy champagne poo-lay-away plan. Her b BMW
A•plianees 802 5464478 size R, & a unicycle. Best oHC'r 673--3345". d!t>, n1ale, 2 mo's old. T rlcdlander, 5 3 7-6 8 2 4 , .; • , . r' . • . ....... AUtos, Imported .._ 970 Autos, Imported
!'!' 646--4740. "646-4665. · 893-7566. -·• A'titomotSte E'xcellenc.t-· RO'PiR ""'r~r:ge,· 4 bu:'ners 2 Lrg lighted display cues .:_:::_c_::: ______ .1 STEINWAY CONSOLE ,
970
• w/oven & liroiler above & $145 &_ $100. Old trunk $~ MAC'HINIS'l"S I Inspector's w/bcnch. Beaut. Italian style· GERM SHEP pups, AKC, * '69 Yamaha 250cc El"ICluro. , · & ,. c "" "210 Wood tool box, 10 drawers. al 1 -••·3 0173 Be.ul, healthy, chan1p line. Xlnt cond. 3000 rrii. $525, or · . .cab space below. $ll5. amping gear . .....,,....., , w nu .,,.,.,, nu...,, , \1.f*e new, 64;>.3826 ev£$. Bred for tempCra1J1ent. best offer. 546-~710 ·after 6
642·9129. We'll help you sell !.6'!2-5678 DECbR-ATORS items: Carv-';.~~t~PI~~~T~:'O~~~;.~ 644--0263. P.M. & wknd11~ , . CHECK THESE
"'ucfion 804 Auction ~ ~04 ed mirrors, Austrian· shade, 83.'i-im J\.11N Schnau1.er. AKC. male. 19!19~ CZ, vei:y good· cond. RQJ ,CARVER Inc.
drapes, chimes. 54S-6961. 9 \vks, \vormed & shots. S:i9;i. Please call alter 5 'J 25
1
. d A d A Miscellaneous "!V. R5dio, Hi Fi, Champ stock. s a It IP c P pm. 962-4356. ""·sta29M .. !!,arbor B54lv~. •4"
'i'Qu A(e C. ordialfy fnvife To tten n Wanted Stereo 836 847_5460, ....., .. -. .,... '"' 1970 D.T. l ·IT Yamaha 250, . -ANTIQUE ESTATE AUCTION ALL lll72 Z.niths are on"''' 6. Mos. ae.,,1, P"P· m•le mus!""· $550. C.11 aft6o3" ,CO.RTINA . , now. Freeze prices remain tri--color, AKC, shots, good pm 644-1340 ,,_..;.. ___ ....,. ___ II '61 FRIDAYN~~ ~~~~~~5 7 :00 P.M. . 'cASH PAID-FOR in . eH'Ot while Inventory with childroo. 536-7725. 1 ~7~ Yama.ha 250 MX '68 C.ORTINA GT
SUNDAY AFTERNOON No'f:. '21~' 1100 P.M. ,, ' lasts. Prices ·1ess •. than the AIREDALE Puppies. AKC. , Good cond. $500. 546-0357 Deluxe 2 ~ fYPV145)
VALUES
VW SEO •
R11~1 gc:od. 100~1 good.
Lic:1 UOU.6;ll
Ex.lie Collection of Fini EurOpeln Period Plece1 fine furniture. appliances; di! ."°""tu!~rsl. Free 3 yr.lpic-Ch. siN?d. \Viii hold until ** '66 Puch 250 cc. run. $799 "°' antiques. One plece er ure ""'· yr parts, yr Ch · tn S2J -4l!li ------------------
{from the holdings of} house.fill. Call day er nl2Jlt; service, delivery &. sct up. ris 185• •• · great? $150 or bc!t offer . f. A. HOHENECKER (VIENNA) 549-224l or 547•7733.. ABC Color TV, Orange .~i\10YED pup, 11 "'ks , Ca1!_ Ji!" Carr, 847-2684. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
(Ro"dom Solflpt•• follow) • County's largest z e ni t h AKC, shots, male. Champ •70 YAMAHA 1'S MX, load..., 2480 HaTix>r Blvd.,
51"'" 0 ;1, (MO<l•"•o),.l l•do• ... I• 1erlod t\t(OOt, s:1ntd <;.otl• ''-t:""· r· R bl ""7 250-1 "" "-M 1o,.01hol c~1.0, r...~I••, f•~vl•T•• Vldorloo, ••""""· •'d Hu"'"""" Oea!t'r. 9021 Atlanta at 1n•. casona e. "" -· with extras. $400. Call ....,sta csa
Pu••"•'"· f Pl•'-1 Mcho-;0"1 0101"1 ..... (;•••~, 1 9•~ "'"'"'"' t.d"'0"' Wll.1. take good care of your I' H »• • ._,1 N••-• hd"'o"' s.i, c......i Hunt•" c.1t1no11, ••••••, Arf l\1agno 1a. u n ting ton MIN DoX':es, red, females, 642-2149. DA JSUN
G • grand piano \\'hi!e you Be h ~•u29 9 k hol R~ d
'63
VW SEO.
lir: .
OKL<46 1
I ·•~t '
f ,, .... ~,
10"' K. • • • 'SPECIAL CONSIGNMENT: travel or rent your home. ac'"""'" ' }·cg, ch~! s, 5
, 8~7;;8uce BMW R-50. Mint Cond. \Vind ._.... ............. --:-----11 '69
40 ft. VAN LOAD Of EARLY AMERICAN ANTIQUES No childttn. 54~2279 aft SANSUI -A~l/FM -'·stereo or r1s mas. . ~;t',o2~l. H.D. bags, i795. '69 200.0 ROADSTER ' receiver, 12 "'ay air OLD English Sheep Dog puri· ......... ""'
TRIUMPH TRG
l ie.
WJ P9ll i· •• \·~ .
I'
...
(Partial Uding• FaTlowJ 5Pi'.1. suspc!nsion speakers. Gar-pies, 3 mos. Wonned, 163.21
-OVER400 ITEMS-BLUE CHIP STAMPS rard 408 comp! Anita, H.B.
10,,. ,.,.0,1.,,001 ol ..,,,,.,.,,,, Oot n ... ,. (1iono S•oo11, 1 .. H ... eo... \Viii pay CASH! 968-1729 \V/Picke-r!ng cartridge & H'~o-rs"'e~,------,8=l6
od , ft< 1 Cl-Joo! C~i•• C..bl"•"· l•lold '•'I"' ~tt•• S..•.
'71 CB 1-Jonda 750 5 spd. d!r. Exrellent rondi-
Good Cond. SUOO. Hen, flamingo red. (\\'JR·
hcfore 5 pm. 645--4663 203). Smalt down. \Vilt fln-CHEV. IMP. c~.,~; ..... d· ti1,,"1"f Roo"' (;'""'· ~.11 T•o o •• ~ •. c~;, ... MO•dorl• ·~·· Mu1ical ln1trument1 8l2 dlx headphones. RE.'TAJL ------~--
'1 ·~ o. •• ~o ,1 .... of Wl<k•• l,¥.IMI], OVt' •OO ITE,¥.Slllll $414.3Z> -NO\V $289.95 8 YEAR old Bay Gelding,
~•l LOCATION! FENDER. Deluxe am P • Pymnls avail. \\'e carry all jumper. NC'cds cxp.'d rider .
'JO SPORTSTER ance P\"! ply. Call 5-16-8736
Chopricr 548·3306 or 494 -6811. '68 Full pow1r, tir,
l ie. V.Af7l2
, NE\V '72 PI CKUP Trailers, Travel 94& 4 ,pd: dlr. dlx. Bumper. R.a-11-------------------J !11 ANTIQUE GALLERY BLDG. custom covered $125. Steel Sansui. U.S.A. Sl<'rCo Equip. $800. \\'ill consider lease.
( "!!'-} 204 W . CHAPMAN AVE., ORANGE guitar $10. 646-1287. \Varehouse, 179 E. 171h St., &12--09?.6.
i .;1~ INSPECTION: FOR SALE C.:\1. !H~2442 opc..n 7 days.
; ·•~:<., FRIDAY, NOV. 26, 10:00 A.M. (ALL DAY) GETZEN gold trombone S\VL Recf'lver Heath GR 54.
1 t i< TERMS: CHECK OR CASH Excellent Condition 5 Barnt 180. K cycles to 30 M
1 -~l:'r GARY l . GARDNER , AUCTIONEER. ... ** 492---0963 ** cycles $45. 5'16-STIO after 6
.;:•\Jj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1 :Selo::l_.:idl""-e.:it:::'m""-s:;no::w::c!c....__ cp:.:·.::M::·:;&;_:;w::k".::'::";_--=
_:.:.Furniture 810Furniture 810 Furniture 810 Furniture 810
"-''~jii;iiiiii~iiiiiiliiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiWiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiidiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
-.
'
THE USED FUR" ITURE OUTLET
ANNOUNCES GRAND OPENING SALE
Commencing Nov. 29th, '3oth, & Dec. 1st
We have used furniture under We have factory seconds
1 yr. old W h f . h d We have factory closeouts • ave reig t amage
ALL STYLES & PRICES ~RE LOW LOW LOW
All bedding & upholstered · fu~rnlturt -
are s terilized to~ excffd State Furniture & Bedding law•! s99s AH sryles & ,.,,.. .;, r.cll"'" '49''
Oecnlo11ol toible 1rc1tp1 fro111 !''"'.'.:C=:•:::•'~"~·~•'._ ______ _:.f•:.:•:::•---.-~~ ===.:;=-''-=-----=·12" '49"
Dec:oretor plo11ts from S pC:.• Spa11lsti stylt dinette «"t.,,_ _____ :_.:,__
OuntlaJtal choirs s199s 7 p-r-Wo11111t bdr111. trp. l11c:.lud. 189''
(oil 1ltit1, c:.olors, 1f111pff & stylfSI from ldl'ftHr, 111lrror, fuQ 1r bed complete & sto!Mll •
~Wood Dl11lrtt Choln s4 t,S 'ro•inclal S drewtr dfllc $6995 :
;';,''::.:':,.:.:''';"i-l :;:-:;:::---~----'•~•c..•---.-...., {foc:.tocr soc:.011d) ori,11ally 1229.00 now
CMilh of ol sires '14'' Lem• c:.edor cllfffS
(wal1111t, drt ook, !H«llll fT0111 . '"~"" l Spo11lsh froM :.,~11~.~,.~ .. ~ • ..:.::::...:;;~'----"'--"'"-.-s2;;-;4"'••
'44"
'99" J -rt. ftOW'I
Jtoom dlvidero dtH., Mobhelf
t111oder111 woh111tl
Jtocktl' rwc:.ll11er ,
(witfl '1111retor &-Hater) foctory teeoff •at" q-.... ,..,... '149" frtd, ..... & laf .. ) MW f9c..;ry Clote .. ,
'39" Doc.or-'•' ty,. l11111ps
(ao-•wJ fro• '2" ......,=-.. _,
-· ~ · 27$6 N. Mqin Street, Santa Ana _ 547-,906 ·
(On F11hlon l:.•ne, formerly Angelus Fur"ltu,.. ta~ Adj•cent to Fa1hlon Squire: S•nht An•
frHW•Y to M•ln Strnt, No. on M1in Str fff,) •
PONY blk & \Vht Pin1o Mare
Good disposHion, b rid I e
incld. $1 25". 96~5127 aft 4.
CHEAP for Quick Sale! 8 x dlo. Mirrors. PL7Z1120. Take
35 trailer. Good condition. small down or trade. 494-6811
32'7 \Vo1 Wilson, No. 46. afl:t 10 546-8735. ~64 RAMBLER SEO.
Auto., R/M,
Lir:. OYS064
2 Sbf'Uand ponies. 6 yr old
milre· & 7 n1os. old Gelding.
Saddle & briddlc. $115.
548-5°'19 after 5 Pi\1.
64&-4761. .. 240-Z •m .. Fully loaded, air, ~~~~~~I ;;:;· Xlnt cond. Priv.11 -,6-9--,--PO_N_T_IA_C_G_T_0 ___ $_1_7_9_9_
AutosforS;ile I I ~ J 642-6772 64~33 va. "·•pee.I, mtgs, R./H,
'--------' Z.10 Z nr new only 1400 mi lie, YXW8J'J ••••••••••I fulll( equipprl, . incld air
Boats 1nd
M1tine Equipment
~ 953 cond. $4775. oHer/tradc. ~ ntiques/Classics, .::6_:;7,_~15.::70::,· _____ _
'-;••·--~~~j l940 FORD Pick Up $200. *'68 01\TSUNPLSIOWagon I Can bf. se<rn Sun. Nov. 28th New riadials, $995".
General 900 at !illll Indianapolis, H.B. Call Bob . 838i-11RG
---------847-1868. --USED & NEW
Boat Show & Swap J\.1er.t
Orange Courtty Fairgrounds
Dec. 11 & 12, 10 am to 9 pm
Admission $1.00. Childreli un-
der '12 !rel. Space reserva·
lion.
Trucks 962 -. HI.
Inttrnational Harvell'ter
645-57;,B. R.ECREA TION CENTER
Marine Consultant ROY CARVER, Inc: •
INDEPENDENT 2925 Harbol' Blvd.
FER""RI
FERRARI
AUTHORIZED
SA~ & SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
'68. VW SQUAREBACK Cit•!}·
lie:.. 941CXV
t
'68
FORD MUSTANG
VB; '4·1p•1d.
l ie. UZW157
vw
Aulo'. Eirfr~1 . Shtrp.
lie. l EV122
e Purchasing.:... Co.st.a ~fcsa 546-4444 3100 \v, Coast Hwy.
"-1. h Newport Beach '70 ...... unse ing on pure as-Auto Leasing 964
lng hOats & equipment. F~A T
• Marine Survtyor LEASING!
DATSUN P ICKUP
l ie.
7398HK I
646-2977 SAVE on Immaculate Ptt'· ... .. "~
NO Do\.\'11, nu ~!iJI rent, no driver. vt'hlcl<"s. ~ .. 'fW~ ,
70
t:1xes. no malnlcnan~. Uae '71 MAV~RICK .... w ..
28' Luhn Cruiser or 27' -~Ldoot-Automauc. air cond.,--""'""""~""==
Coronado ~t as olten as power s1~ring, rad.io. heal· I.ARCE SELECTION SEE
l~-:' POPTOP CAMP ~~~3295
60G0t l'f --.
yoo like. 64;)-5500, 'er: Prednven appx. 9,000 • 8 . J. '
E~ip. 904 24 mo. opt'n .emd~
VW CAMPER
Uc:..
VEJ52t
Boats/ Marine m>l"$7S..MONYH SPORTSCAR CENTER '61
12 Voe t U1 \VE LEASE ALL ~.t11,.AR 2833 Harbor, C.M. 541H491
o vac lnvertt.r 1972 MAKES AT COt-.fPEt'J.l-:0::..:~,,7...;FtATi""7"'\l_,.---------------Hea.th ~lP l~-_ 400 Watt.t TIVE RATES; I' continuou~. Jrequency eon· CB.1J f\1olcolm Reld for 850 COUPE
trot 00 cyc:lt'!s. polarity pro-TfoHrlEh'o' Ddeo"RilE11. (VV$5T9•~1; lt ctlon, lnput c:: I r cu i t
breakrr. NE\\'-<"l1cckcd out. ROBINS FORD
Ne\'et \ISC<I $100. 5*6-!710
aha 6 P.:.t. & wknds. . 2060 Ho..rbOr Blvtt. DAVE ROSS TIAC
20' Boat .. Whl Trlr c.osta Me-sa &li.Qllt,P llSO Harbor s ·vd ·
Chyrslfor Imp. Best over $500. Auto1 WantMI 96" C-"°"ta il-l~a "
HARBOUR VW ~
HARBOR AREAS ONLY EXCLUSIVE
AUTHORIZED VOLKSWAGEN DEALER
187f!-=a.leh Blvd., Huntington Beach --' 842-443'~5--
HOUll: M011.-tht11 frt. t 0.1111.4 ''"'' -llfl, tft t, Sot 10 e.m.'4 '·"'• -Su-111. 12 no111 t• 4_p 111.
343-7649 i pt flci.11hl~. WlLL Buy ~ur c:aTpald fOr f'tAT, ''For II beiter deal''.
The Wiest dta\V in ttie West er not. Call Ralph Gordon New •or used, Ptlrl'I &
• , a PkllY Pilot Clusltied 673--0900 ... S4(h.3031 , 1970 service. Herb Friedlander, ----~I Ad. 61U>618 Harbor Blvd. C..la Me... ;:.~:i.:=·-~ _ _., __ , .. _______ ._ _______ .. ,
~ I --.' .. \
t ,
I
-I
I
I
.• '
--
• -' ' • • "-• .,.
~ .. 07\tq Pl\01 L.~. 1 . . .. ...
r' 1.-. 1 ,~i~·;;-~"'-;;;;;:l§l~ -! .. ""'"''!~ .l ..... J..... A&llol; ....... ~~I ;-;;i"'iii .. ii-.:il§J;;· l -:~~-lijl .... _-_-_ ... __.JI~ I -.,, ........
':!1u1o1. Imported 970 Autos, Imported·.--;10 Autos, UMd t90 Autos, Uied t90 Autos, UMd t90 Aum, ·uMf -~990 AulM, UM 990 'Au .... ; Uied · · t90 Autoa, UM
·------~~--·-~~1 1 --'-----...;.--~· -· PONTIAC PONTIAC
I~
"' I, ,,
' ij PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN ,69 vi~~;,,~~.'!~• ,67 CADILLAC . . DODG.E MERCURY OLDSMQlU, .
:-T-Bird. l~~a~ e '70 Ce.~il~ '67°Cad°C~ri.~. Blk1A Blk. Alf, '69 llOQGE 'fr9di?aman Van, ~--==----RSOiE 'C la.ssic '37
sPttdJ;ter, atrona: lSOOoc 912
r.na .. :.over $3000 in\'ested.
~t 11acr!!ice, askinz $1695.
~ or 494-9314. ·
81•11 YaleS tac Sedan de vm. • " "flllt P""" $2500. can • ·• t -ooo _, xtnL ·10 --""" ONTEtuUREY .H.T.,. mt '65-0l;DSMOlllE
·~ ,;_ """' ~ .. '68 PONTIAC
LE MANS COUPE .
F\lll Power ... Factory Air.
' '62 'l'EMPf.8'1'; Sharp con-tJ Wrtilil~. GciDd condltloif. .
Impala hrdtp e '71 Chevy 96h1l39• \ q ... au~---· uu, -. co • power, · A/C,
P.U., air, etc. e· MANY , 1 $2500/offer. 4~3039. :M>,000 mi., fac. WUT., $400. CUTLASS COUPE
f.IORE. * 66 CAD ~V-**. · •m DODGE_38l_C.Ofuner & T.0.P. or Sl<IO. dn A BttutlfuL;IU:t. -fuU pwr &: fact all' sacrifice · 'fH · . "'""""' 962-4133' <RRYml>
1Rblt. eng. 673-5n9, Jf
I -RAMBLER (VHA187)
WE Need Your PorKhe. 11.nd
will pay lop dollar. ·cau BW
or Chuck 5.';J.0812.
Aulhorlzed J\tBZ Dealu t-1164•. 11 6 "A• ,,,,., .. Auto., PS/P~ 1tett0 ll:!M!i , !:!;-;;,!;;'... • . • 0 r 99 (1 ) 523-7250 . • a a, a . pm, V"M~· landau top. $095. 67a-5258. __._ • $3 1910. DELUXE Station Wgn,
'68 Nova,· Xlnt cond, itick, ·~ DeVille outstan-iiiiif Dodge van axed cond ' 1971 MERCURY chrome rack, P/S, PIB,
$1599
t>Jea n. S900. Also '63 Ford ding'-tOnd throughout full New tires s ira k ~ ' STATION W,4.GONS DAVE ROSS PONTIAC DAVE ROSS PONTIAC air, immac. Pri. pai-ty.
Van. clean S750. 548-4553. JlY.'r,. air, Al\1/FM sterm mahog ~ pa~led i:i HERTZ COR'P • , . ~ Harbor Blvd., z.181) Harbor Blvd., 830-7587 , '69 PORSCHE 912
1 -?Ont ~ncl. Must sell! * 64~2.187 * --------~· 1 nCMtly detailed. $459C1. Call table i,. cabinet, Sl.800. Call -~=,::Cost;::;::•:,,M;::::esa=·~-' "'""""°"'~!>.~M::"":;,.--'64 Rambler, 4-dt, alt, new BUICK Stan 7'16-88SO 221 W. Katella, Anaheim ~ PO -· · @4:9332 early evening. (7t4) 77a.40SO 1971 MUSTANGS 1969 NTIAC Le Mans, air brakes, S3•.i·
SUBARU Autporized Sales & Service
32852 Valle Rd., '67 Sedan DeVRle full pwr '68 CORONET 4 dt ( V-8, HER"""' CORP. cond, P/S, PIS, steel * 846-6413 **
'67 Buie!( LaSabre 4 dr R.T. new pa:trit, steam clean, xlnt R/H P.iS new paint' ~ 1964 MERCURY-4 dr h.t., lo ·IA. • belted radial ~•. xint· ---cT~B"l"'R"D:---
'70 SUBARU_ 4 near ne\v radial ply tires. cond througho:~t $1800, Call tires: ·1 'oWner, $ i 12 5 am/fm, Call alter 6 pm, 221 \V. Katella, Anaheim cond. $2IXXI. 968--7744 •. , •
ExceJJentcondi.t i on Stan77~. 646-6759. I 6#-5511. (714) 778-4050 ** '66 GTQ ·big erig.,•auto, ··,.1 T-BIRO ·\:t
San Juan Capistrano
, 8374800/493-4511/ 499-2261
Best bargilin Yci ! '(526llsI).
$199 '68 VW CAMPER throughout. Priced to sell CAMARO • 'fill Mercury C.Olony Park, 0'66 Mustang, ti-uto, r/h, nu ps, ~landau, 67M actual • 95 1·1 " ~5-5485. , * '66 ~~;~~GER * every extra, Jike new. Orig tire1, $89$, C.all aft 6 pm, miles. $To0. 673-8735. ~~R~~kl~ 'No :;i F=
Pop top, 4 spd, dlr. Fully 1·'0£90,og;;,,;;;ckC:-· 'R"-tv;;;,;;,..-;;,-a:i_1>1 -;;.,;;;.,,;, l-.,-7-R .. E_.D..:Be_a-,ty-,,G~,-,,,.-.,,327'°,"'31 646-1568 ··. ownr. Leaving are a. _m-:.:.:..:::2969=. ------. LeMans '68 2 dr ~tp, Ch'orges Here. ..
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC.
• 241Jl Harbor 'Blvd.,
Cost,a !lfesa
camper\ equipped Take oJC!-tape.._j!layer:, l\{1che~m tires, speed with plush black int., 673-7436. -p·LvMOUTH . air cond, xln't coQCI. • SYRFSIOE MOTORS
er foreign car or small ·~~24 C?riB ownr.. 714: luggage racks & good ru\t FOl.D OLDSMOBILE _____ • _____ 1 $1295 5'f8.-0 147-3840 -
down. Can fina~ce. 546'8736 · · her. Try it, you'll like It! · ---------~A::u::to~s~U7HC1-~--'~990;;: Autos, Used '90 or 49j.6JIU~ (WJ8066) '70 SKYLARK GS. 455, stag 642-oosl & m"'• oUe~ '" G1tAX1E Cpe, xl"t ''""'· '69 Olds Delta 11· '66 PLYMOUTH ' TRIJJMPH 1968 vw built one. 4 spd. M/T headerii. -~va.te· party, must sell, ROYAL.· Full power, YCR985 WAGON · · camper." eng. ps: Never ,....,._ Xfi\f CHEVROLET _ PIS, P/B, lac. air, sill! W>
w/\rarranty, new lit.ell, &l5-l6BS. _.., der warr., will sacrifire for $l499 BELVEDERE II ~ TRIUMPH I ~~~~h& ~=~ ~~:~~i oooO SOUD TRANS '61 '69 EL CAMINO immed sale. 962-4133 or Real!~~ain. lXl . oJier. 494-7632 . * Le. Sabre 2 dr, $425~~0 CUSTOM 396 , 1--~5650~·~==~~-$599 VS STAG • •s; VIV ""I· 5"0roo( & '"" 557--4097. V-8. F,Ou Power, Factory A~. * '71 .FORDS * . windo~-., tecent major '64 Bnkk Special .\Vag. Xln't Viny! Landau rop, Very GALAXIES e MUSTANGS. '67 MUSTANG 390 coovert.,
IMMEOlANTOE wD'1.IVERY! tuneup, Reil.( flh!l.J'P, must .shai:>E". Good Transp. Asking sharp?· (44885Zl . TOP.INQS -overh. eng., new tire11,
see. $1000. 833-2190. $450. Cafl 962-7851. • DAVE ROSS· PONTIAC HERTZ CORP; brake., ye~ow/wht. top. H'~RY & BEAT THE 10% •67 VW r-2480 Harbor Blvd., full power. 'Xlnt cond. Can. -'-'{). - ---mper, Pmect '7tl Buick Riv, full pwr, xlnt Costa Mesa --221 w. Ka.fella, Anaheim be seen. 4220 Park Newport
PRICE INCREASE!! cond, New tires, New paint, condition. '$3300. Private (714) 778-4050
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
2480 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Afesa
'66 -SI'ANDARD-6~ 2 dr, good
cond., clean. 1 owner. ;650. FRITZ WARREN'S Clean inside & out. $2500. wty. 644-8210'. * '71 CHEVY's *. '61 FORD 2 DR. Apts. Call 644-6127. SPORT CAR .CENTER s= ·~· ., IMPALAS e CHEVELLES 'IWO 1968 Olds Cutlass, 2 Dr. _,_,.._2335 __ . __ · __ _
.. r .....-1963 BUICK Special Sta. · Runs like -w 710 E. 1st St., S.A. 547-0764 "Vl~V~S~-~, -~s~-~ CA.'-lARO'S • .., • See to Ap· hl"dtp. · p/s, auto trans.,
r/h,_ail' cond. $1450. Ask for PONTIAC Open daily g.9: clq;sed Sunday uper ·c ean, uper Bug. !~~.· !2;.1:.pam7,_· t, good cond. HE_RTZ CORP. preciate, (0HL281) $175.~ 1970. l.Qw, 101v mileage .-o;u-,,.. _ Price, Terms to Suire. '6T TRIUMPH 114.000). Xlnt eo"d. Llgbt CADILLAC 221 W. KafeDa, Anaheim SURFSIDE MOTORS Mt. Mar~. 673-3130, !'am-4 ·--"-------
pm. 'vkdayi. '69 PONTIAC
CATALINA COUPE
Full Pov.'er, Factory Air •.
TR4A ROADSTER bloew/black '""" $1750. (714) 778-1050 147.3840
S......A • Ptivate party. Cali 644-5123. '66 F--Sa, 81,CW miles, iood
cond. Radio, air'. New tire:s.
$400, 644-4307.
4 t""""u transm1s:skln. LARGEST '69 OIEVY Nova, R&H, 1967 Ford Ga!axie, white w/
(UNB517) '65 V\V Squareback, Xlnt SELECTION OF PIS, 2 dr, )'ellow, 16,000 black . interior. AC, auto. $1299 rond $750/bst oUer Must CADILLACS IN orig ,mi, 5 Yr: I 50,000 mi. t.ram., Good condition. $775.
Sell 728-7607. ORANGE COUNTY waq. Best otr over $1400. 644--7201 . -1970 Olds, Delta 88, 4::6 cii.
DAV& ROSS PONTIAC
24SO Harbor Blvd.,
C.osta Me!!a
Co Bl". Bk W•·-'e Pri pt · in. engine. Two dr., vi••! 'TI VW ntempo Camper, SALES-LEASING_ ,-°""...,,,,., ·~. • y, '67 FPRD Wagon Fairlane ._,,, · d " I · -o.JO.rOUUJ top, AC, power ewrything. all' con , tt. r e r lg, AuntORIZED / · ~· R&H, au!o, good cond. $2.400 or best offer. 644-7201
b"tane. $4"'1>..8~.1822 ev". • SERVICE. 63 CHEVY WA_GON Fri. party. $800.-548-0851. • -'70 OL-05· CUT(ASS-
TOYOTA F-OR Sale! ~65 V\V Bug reblt N b rs c d"Dac Excellent Cond Inside and '64 FALCON 4-d d . $ a e G I out, V~. A"'o ~-$495 R/H Lo I' $57r5 se ~ Supreme. Air ·.P(S • P/B. . '"•· nu tire11. T;iO. Call ''""Qi• m , v 1 2600 HARBOR BL., Full Price (RVK663l · • · inyl roo, Ex. cond. Priced
(YLITT!6JJ
$1899
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC ~ Harbor BlVd., :..i__
Costa Mesa ~ ,
'69 GRAND PRIX
'71 240Z' .. ,.,. ..... -•• t'JIMIJ; tWMI., 4 ,,..,, Ptrfal ~"'"-0<-NV-~)11Mll ill & Nf, {Ht .
'70 DODGE ~:;;,:::~ ..... -::::-$329&
. . . .,., ....... """ "''"""' '70 BUICK ....... ""· ..... AMl•M !~3695 . ...,._, Ch ... nll wti..is •• T.._, • .,.M-----
Alr, '·"'""'· o n AFVI 'JO CHEV c., ......... "' VI, ""· $299& I P,SM p,J ., Air, Tl,_ (J*
AGE) .
'69 CHRYSLER :-:; ;~~; ~-$269& ll!Klll• Mi ll. .. r. '69 CAD 'S ..... M, .... " • ••• tA295 I 811'11 111¥1 t lti .. rHi., ..
, Tops,. F~ll PIWll', LNtfllr, I\ '
• a Alr c11111.
'71 FIREBIRD "'"" '"" ,,_, ~"JAai:: Sietrl"I, "° v.a, Air ~ ~ -CMlll., 4 Spd, Tr..i1.;
1'1ct1ry W1r r1111y,
'71 VW CAMPER .• :;;;;~~. $3395
lc-.X. (7'6 CUC)
-'67 vw "" -· "' ............. $1295 CVll. ftMtr, IMf WllMll. •
·10 ·roR· 1110 ,,._, .... • .... ~· $2595 ft C9".. P'1w1r Sletrlflt, ']• TOVft'f'I ~5-2659· _ CX>STA MESA ..S.URESJD.JLMOT.ORL ** 546-6946 ** to sell now! 494-5324 eves. ____ _, ___ -£-----f ·I-tr It----.-6rBiii""'ffiilteng~· 540-9100 Open ay . 847.314o . l66 -FOid l•:agon, -COuntry -,65~STirnG, 6 cly. R/H
}Vide ~•-JllL.J!aint, '®t Scniire ps pb air xlnt -·.:. ( u ) '
Full Power. Fa.ctorY Air. (XSE410) __
$2399
..... , ''""· ,, .... tnllet. • (fJt AKUI
"
f
..
..
La'rge Selection For-nd -54•15-'67 CADILLAC · 'n ChE'Velle S.S. A'uto, p/s, -.. ' ' • , new pa!'" ye ow • new co ...,.,,,. .... '"· cond. Many xtras. 64z..o584. brakes, gooa cond. $650.
Immediate 1 '•~65~Vl=v~B~ug-,-,-,-"""~ •. -.,~.~ooo SEDAN DE VILLE :t~';·t~..:::-i;~,~·~:: LINCOLN 847--0575. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 'Delivery. ! mi 1e1'· 1 owner, $650,. Full Pov.·er, 1-~actory Air. Lo ml's, ~~95. Alt 6. •. W h I te Elephant&" over. 2480 H&rbor Blvd., -675 3335 -( Z\1!0538 l _, ,,.. _ _._ . OR Big Savings On :>-• $2199 644-5018. '68 CONTINENTAL f u 11 rtmn1ni )'(IUr "bi>UseT '1'1771 ....u?il.il. Mesa
Rem-aining . * 1970 BUG * · · 1970 KINGSWOOD Chevy Sta pwr., ·Jthr~ air immac., pri. the~ into "CASH" • meD SEU.tNG Your boat! "Lilt"
'71 TOYOTAS Good COndition Wgn. Owner· must sell Good P~· $2495. Newport Bch. them thru Dail.Y. Pll!)t-, ·witb us • .ae1l H Wt. Dalli
Co,rne;t, 1•t & H•rbor
S•rit• An•
ll"10 * * <96-9115 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC eond. 12850. 54&-'366; 645-5500. ct ... llied. 64>-1678. Pllol.ctassllied. 642,M7I
"
eDJt. leAJJU '60 VW Camper, rebuilt eng. 2480 H=-~~:.·· ,64 Ctiewlle Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 AutOt, New 9IO
New crank. valve springs, v.s *-Convertible TOYOTA oil pemp. etc. 646-7'197. j-1 , '67 CADl~l-AC 1375 * 6'5-0668 VOLVO CPE DE VILLE . • 646-9303
~ Harbor, Costa ?i.Iei;a
SANTA ANA
TOYOTA -
Fllfl Po..,. Ah-Cond. (MVB-CHRYSLER
'72 VOLVO ~'lli/:'rr'DE MOTORS i-,6-a~Ctfi~"":y-S-LE_R_ ...
-~=-84'-7-·3,-840=~~1 NEWPORT CUSTOM 'Zo F1eet\\'00d El Dorado COUPE "
'· ·~ •
, Service dept. open 1:30
'ti: 9 pm· Mo00i1 thru .f'rl.
'day.
. PHONE 540-2512
f11 w. warner. Santa Ana
SAVE the SUr.-Oiatte: en
new •n Toyobl P .U, 9500
mj.'g. 833-2833.
Large Se~ian For
Immediate_
Delivery
· 'ig S•vln91 On
Remil'lning
'71 VOLVOS
YuUy equip'd, Xlnt care, Full' Power, Factofy Air.
23,000 mi, S,ja>. Ji7S.7545 (VT0835) .,..,_,m. $1599
'65 Cad de Ville, Lo mi.
Sharl>. $1695. Pri. Pty. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
Step Up To CONTINENTAL Luxury!
. ~3928. · -... 2480 :1larbor BIVd.,
QUICK C:ASH Costa Mosa
VOLKSWAGEN
M)e.,lemi&
• -VOLVO ·
. -· SHARP 1967 Chry. 300 56.000 ' THROUGH A mUes. Needs ROO Bftring, .
'63 VOLKS BAJ.IA rear end,
gates tires on rear, good
cond ition. $600.
. '&g V\V, new valves, brakes
& tires, low· miles. Super
clean. $UOO. 645-1982 •
557·3683.
646·9303
1946 Harbor, Co~ta Mesa. -
VOLVO, "For a better deal",
Ne\\: or used, Parts &
service. Herb Friedlander,
537-6824.
DAll:Y PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
Make otter. ·541)..3058.
CONTINENTAL
1970 MAJtK m, llke ne~.'
fully equ.ip'd, low milea,e,
1
:
flexible on price and terms.
Phone 546-1600 before 5 p.m.
----~--~~ 970 Autos, Imported 970Aulos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970
'
At last we've got n lot of-the workin9 machine that.:.
• Delivers Up to 25 money-savinq miles.per gall~.~
• Hauls up to half-ton of most enythinQ 1n a steel bed.
• Rides you 'firsl class in a vinyl upholstered cab.
Drive it for size, for economy, 6nd because it gets the
job done. Dri"" a Datsun ••• then cltcifl..
• • DATSUN FROM NISSAN WITH PRIDE
SEE OUR COMPLETI LINE OF '72 DATSUNS
COSTA MESA
• ·DATSUN
'-845 HARBOR BLVD. 540·6410
0 . '
' ··{
,.
1970 Coupe
Exquisite. Satii:;i ~l~ck finish
with white leather & white
Landau roof. Luxury equip.
peel throughout. Full pov.'er,
Tilt strg. wheel, AM·FM
stereo radio, Climate Con-
trol Air Cond., 4 Brand new
tires & much more, See Ii:
drive this beautiful car ao
appreciate. (815AGB)
$4575
, 1970 Mar~ll
4;trac~tive light yellow aold with b leather interior
& m bing Landau roof.
fully luxury equipJ)(!d includ·
Ing climate control air cond.,
'Wt steer!Jlg wheel,. M1/F,M
stereo radio, ?>.Uchelln radial
plyl tires. etc. Th\1 beautiful
car reflects the best of cart.
(090ACK)
$6675
1969 MARK III ' . • • .. $4875
Immaculate. Beautitul Silver Mink finish with black leath-
er Interior & matching landau roof. Equipped wllb... full
po\\'Cr including 6·1vay seat, Climate Control Air Colid.,
Tilt strg. v.·heel, Automatic Cruise Control, etc. This fine
Automobile obviously has had the best of care. (\VXF534).
•
-.MANY
j
MORE
TO
CHOOSE
FROM
•
-Orange County'1 'Family of Fine C-ara'
2829 HAl;IBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 54o.&830
' ---
I • ..
,
19704.Dr. Sedan
Beautiful glamor gold metal-
lic finish \11lth leather inter·
!or and matching landau
roo f,.. Luxury cquippe!'.I of
coune. F'ull power & 6-iv.'ay
power seals, climate control
all' conditioning, tilt . steer-
ing wheel, stereo tape sys-
tert)s, etc. Immacu late
throughout C838AGA)
$4575
1969 Coupe
Clean attractive p<1l8l' wbite
finish with black Leather in·
terior and matching Landau
, roof. Luxury equipped of
• C()Ursc. Full power, s. ..... '-ay
seat,. Ult stg, whJ;, ~mp.
~nt'rol air cond., etc. Shows
meticulous care. CYXC418)
$3375
-I ,
,