HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-10-25 - Orange Coast Pilot• Ill •
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.... ~I.a :,Fiery : Prot~st:. Me.et,:
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to Supreme Sirllan • •
Appeals Cour·t ~
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Stale labor ofllclal1 cbaried "-lay
nlgllt -the HwllioilDo Beach IJDloo lllgb School District Is ncil offorlnl equal
•mPioYmeitf oppor1unllles-IO women .and
l(exican--Clling io lq llit ol allepd lnoquiUes,
ol!icials ol the l!ltle ll'lir .Employment
Pj'aCUCn COmmbiion (FEPC) 'told
11jis-·lo tal:e comcllVe ldlon or face
llio. possibility of state and federal sane·
tliios. .
1li.strict trwitees acceptal the ttrongly·
wonled charges without dispullna any of
them, commenting only that they wanted
lo clear thetr record .,.,... as possible.
. "We'ie going to take action not ~ we're threlloiied with 1181"" ~ns," 1114 Trustee JOhn BenUey, ~but
~~;.-it'stbtrightthingto ·do.11 •
The FEPC report said that :
-AllJf supervio>rs at work not relaled
to teadling are Anglo-Caucasian. --Of.48 admlnlstralon and specialista
in the district, only one b a woman.
-While the local population II 50 pe"
cent Women and five perCeht Mexican-
American, the dlltricl $ff II :rt percent
wo111eil'and thfee percegt minority. Most
of these persons, It , added, wete
employed at lower paying jobs.
-Mexican-American · l!mployes 'who
have received satisfactory work evalua-
tloii.s for 10 years have recelvecl no pro-
tnotlonli and only small pay ralsel.
Truiteeo adopted • fair Olllpiol'!n<nt
policy on their ewn lhis August, but of.
fiCla~"aakl Tuellday It WU "at best I
,.,!e ~tline of a pnJifam that ladtl ~e." I ~.
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"We're interested irl' rellUlts, not mere
~c/' said Jerry Mali&geon. one of
two FEPC offtclals who iinvestJgated the
high school district.
Police Track
Slim Leads
In Ambush "
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
) Of ... o.wr '""' ltnf
Teams of detectives working around
the clock contlnue today to track slim
leads in the ambush shooting of an Irvine
policeman lured lrito a trap at a lonely
crossroads, ~ he was headed to
help an injured man.
Officer Slepben 1'. NaJib, 23, escaped
the bushwhacking try at 11:15 p.m. Mon-
day with only a (I'8Zing scar on his
clleek. ·
So far -besides the lnltial details or
what happened and descriptions of the
parties involved -investigators are
known to have two other elemeJJ.ts:
-A set of indistinguishable footprints
in a muddy cornfield.
-'lbe fact a ruthless man wanted bad·
)y to he a q>p.killer. • ~ 41 an.Old Weot11Yle 'hil!>way '9i>IJery :all.f"'pl ie!lllnllcenl ·of Pioneer
-boy day1 Ol)llrvtne Randi land have
vlrtilally been niled out. ·
Nor do pOllce l>e!iete tJ1e, plot at the
crossroads 1 of Jeffrey and Barranca
roads ~· have ,been , engineered ·
speclfically-tO get Officer Nash, perhaps
by soneome ·wltb a grudge against tum .
Weatller Tia! lnlerlinklng facts support neither
Momtng low clouda and tog will ~~as.an ambush, pure and simple,"
clear to aunny,..aklet on Tburlday, declares Costa Mesa PoiJce Detective wl\h highs at the heaches aft>und Capl. Ed Glasgow. . '!! \illllg lo II 1ruan<1-Lo>f• tonight Cl\l<f -tile quptlons 'lo be ~ answ.,ed 'now II wt\etl1er the woold·he
.INS.IDE· T8DA:it' _ , ~In -delcril!ed " a motorcyeie
Ttmltut< Willlam.t'"~'· , . ~;type due lo.his apP</lrance -acted
4rmfte1 "Suhlf"er. and; ~JnOlu" " ~~sti,ators are atsO seeking ~ two
off llJ!I , ne.w . arrif1'111 \' ., , ·ti-young men In • bat1't'i!I 1116 uni tr"""""' UIJi ..... k ~!, . • a..+..iet who stopped to leil, Officer
,I,aflUllO Mo)llton PIO!ll.?.... . N•"'' it appeared a man IY1111 .. the s.• £'ntcrtainment, Pagel •8·29, ' pa"J',;,,ent boclt down Iha road wu W or
LM. ..,, 1t ....... .... tnj\µ'ed . F '~ :::.=:..~=· ~ One poss!bHity due to .. their military
c,.... ,. :t'.:"" c...w : haircuts, Soulhem accentl, and haan old
• , c.::::" •1-: tYt¥" """" tl·= car wilh out-of·state plates, Is t t the ~ ::""' ...,_. ~ ..,.. ._,.. •1 men clad in civiUan clothel are military
.............. ,..,, :..... "\:::: ...,,. penonnel. =::' , ... aw' ~ .,:, • A·' teletype alert and radto broadcast
,., ... tee"' u, 1•' ....... • ·are out fOll the gret1Mi1d·whtte ledan,
..... ,,., 14 ......,.. ,.... 11·•· minus It• front bumper, w..1us any oc· 4-~ 1'• .......... .... Lo .. --' , cupants aa vu~enUa1 ·m1terl1I 1'1tncNel
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Peering oui of Peter's Pumplµn Patdl on Bristol,
picking out a particu!::;:f plump prize, was Jeff
.• Hatch, A,•SOn of Mr. •Mrs~ Richard Stiefel of
" Cos'\a Mesa: I{ he was Waitjng fpr the Great;lliunp-,
_,,,T .......
kin,. he wouldn't admit it. Perhaps the Grand Spirit
of ttalloween was helping young Mr. llatdl choose
i!IS! the right one for the pedect iack..,.lantern. ...
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•· • 1 " • r • · DeSplte · Prot~ts
' t j • Gouneil ·Backs Police
Copwrs in· Fiery Meet . .
. By L. Plm!ll KlUEG
·Of•tti C»lfr ,... tt-tt .
· ' Glavas falsified his rePort on ways, to
In a tense Controoletlqn punttua!M b)I
. )D~lvea, Ne~ Beach> ~llmen
~· nl&h\ ~·lold a citizen Sl;OUP ~•ting po)iee bellcopten 11!81 they
are not about lo Ol'der them out ol the
air.
The council'• roallirmation of support ., for l!"li")' ,hellC(!pltrs came after fopner
l';lewport·!,leU · oCbool, t'rustee noOald
Strauss threa~ to start a recall aC'
tlon against lhe council .unlesa · the
wblrlyblrd• were ~ "
. Long·lime NeW]JOri retldent Allan B<ok
also alleged that Police Chief ll. James
I
reduce .helk:optel~iae. , 1' •• ,.. l , Glavas was ala ~ bral4ed a 1,
''.eaoUaUcal" and wu 1« ... 8 of
"building up hll eco 'Wljl! I ~ poltCO •
fo«e lovading my prtvoey," by Paul
Cni.wfl td, 120 Emerakl1 Ave.., Balboa
Island.
SlraUJ, wbo rt1lgned blJ ocbool board
seat earlier thla year. represented lhe
cltlzena group called .llellcopten .Umlted
formed two monlbi l(!O to demand Ille
bellcoplen be 11.ed ooly for On\el'ltn<Y
call1, llOI for routine patrol.
"JnlUatlve "' and , recall are t w o
alternatl""' U llOU doh't follow the wishes
(S.e COPT&RS, Pase II
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2 Dead, Several
W oimded in Bank
Holdup Battle
ARLINGTON, Va. (UPI) -Al least
two pe1110ns -a police officer and a
branch bank manager :-were reported
killed and several othert wounded tbday
wheq a tddup In a ,hl&h rise business
c:omllfx just outside Washington erupted
Into ~ .... ballle. . '
''f!oi 'Urie robbtrf OJCaped with an
undetermined amount or money.
The men, masquerading 11 telephone
company repairmen, entered a branch of
the Arlington Trust Bank al the Ctyotal
City blilineu complex 1bortly belore 10
a.m. Thq !old the brooch manager the
telephone service was out and Oley
wanted to check it.
Police 1ald tbe men had opened · a
manhOlo oulllde the building and cut
telephone wires Jn an apparent attempt cs.. uotour. Page t1
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Claims He
Didn't Fire
Fatal Shot
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sirhan Bishara
Sirbsn appealed today lo the U.S.
Supreme Court to review his conviction
of murdering Robert F. Kennedy.
Lawyers for the Arab immigrant Uid a
teath or psychiatrists, p h y S i CJ I D S ,
ph.ys.ici!t.s a n d others have WJCOt'ered
"significant physical evidence" that
Sirhan did not fire the bullet on June 5,
1968, at the Hotel Ambassador in IM
A!Jgeles that killed the New York
senator.
But the nature of th.is evidence was ool
immediately disclosed.
Sirhan was convicted In April 1969 or
murder and five counts of assault to
corDmit murder in the KeMedy sbootln&.
His death sentence was ~ la.st year
to life in prison after the California
Supreme Court declared capital punish-
ment to be unconstitutional.
Sirhan's appeal was prepared by two
Los Angeles lawyers, Roger S. Hanson
and George R. Miiman.
'Ibey suggesied Callfomla appellate
judges strained the laws or search and
seixurt to uphold the conviction because
of Kennedy's national imPortance.
"It is evident," said the petition," that
few members of any appellate tribunal
would care to be on record in reversing
the conviction of 1 noodelcript Arab lrri·
migrant who was convicted o f
assassinating Sea. Robert F. Kennedy.
who undoubtedly was at the threshold of
his pinnacle or J?Olitical achievement -~ DemottaUc nomlnatJon for preaident 1
Of tbe United States, and with an ex-
cellent chance to become the-nation 's
cbJef e1eCutive. ·
"ln View of this, it is recogniiat1't that .
appellate review strains to alter the laws
of search and seizure to preaerve the
conviction." , .·
Kennedy was shoL just after winning
the California Democratic presidential
primary.
1 BIKE, I A.D:
3 CA LLS, l SALE
t. 2, 3,.1blt'1· jUst how It went wben
tbe Wes~ter man ottered to aell' his
motorcycle lo DAILY PILOT .. ac1en .
'Olis i• the ad thlft 'aold tt -In one nl&ht
I ~ after )Ill tlu'oe phone Cillo: ·
HONDA 1!0, ltm, !U.
Bargain buy. Only I mo.
old. UOO ml. Macy xtras.
Falrlna. rack, back rea~
crash bar, t\C. OWner mu.st ..U, oruy 11~ or ol!er. .
lU·lXXl. I
That'• the kind of a<tlon you could pt,
too. Try it with an Id o( your own . .Dial
tbe direct line lo cl med adftrtlltn.I
rtluill al the DAILY PILOT, MWl?i
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% DAILY PILOT s Wtdnndl1 O<toW. 25, 19n
l ' raelis Def use Nixo
• • ' ' J~l!IW-EM: (AP) -Israeli exploslve
experts ~ delbs<d thret letW' bombs a-Ill l'l'ealdeol Nbo .. Secrel.lry
of llWI WUU.m P. Rotlen Ind Del.-
Sec:reWy MoMn R. Laird. pol'Jce
reported.
Earller In the d'I)', two letter bombs
exploded In Bolrul, Lel>anoo. Another
blo1< up In Algiers oo Tueoday nlllll and
still another was found in the mall in
Cairo.
Eight persons were wounded.
The letter bombs addressed to Nixon,
Rogers and Laird w e r e found in the
sorting room of a post office in fair:
northern Israeli frontier town oJ IOrnf
Nixon Vows
Nonpublic
School Aid
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Prcs;dent Nix·
on today pledged his help to maintain
nonpublic schools in America, saying he
is "irrevocably committed" to seek tax
credits for them.
Nixon &180 said he will press the next
session of Congres! to end court~rdered
busing of school children.
In the fifth of a series of paid political
radio broadcasts, the President discussed
his view of the federal government's
responsibility to education.
He said under his administration, the
federal contribution to education in-
creased "by over 70 percent, from $9
biDion in fiscal year 1969 to $15.7 billion
in fiscal year 1973."
Nixon said he vetoed education legisla-
tion three times "because I believed the
added tax burden would have far
outweighed the benefits to be derived."
In each case, he said, the amount
Congress proposed was "more than the
public could afford to pay."
Sh'mona, near the Lebanese oorder.
Pollet said the postal bombs were the
IUDe type as the flood of czpk>live
envelopes mailt!d lasl month from
Amsterdam lo Israeli officials ind em-
bassies in variou~ parts of Ute world.
A l9-year-old postal employe 1fJI rush-
ed to a hospital after an explosion at the
Belrut post office as the mom!ni'a man
wu being sorted.
About the same time, another bomb
went off in a 22-story office building half
a block from the American University,
and a wt1man secretary ~·as hospltallied.
FM! other persons suffered slight Jn.
jur1es in the explosions, offlclah said.
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AulllorlU., llld tllef di~ llOt -
where Ille letW'-borDl>I bad bee• 1111lled
from.
The P1leltlne LibenUon OrpnltaUoo
in Algiers 1&1d one or lb lllalf -lltot
Tueoday Dipl by I _,.....l'1"4 lttlar
pootmarbd -BelCr*le-. Spoktlmao 11kl the vlctbJt'~ llljur1u
,..... allgbl.
The Palestine News /\i<JtCY llld a
bomb addreaed to a Palest!oe guerrilla
leader was Intercepted Tuesday al the
Cairo alrpozt. It said the bomb wu In a
holloWed-Gal book which allO bad -ma1ltd lrom Bolgradl.
A New Father at 69
Letter Bomh·s
' Leiter bomllo In July blinded and
maimed t)'O a-Ula leldort In Bolrul,
1od the pqot oltice lnllalled an thcb-
devl<e to llC8JI mail. ,,,.... WU DO &
dicallon why lt did nol lnlmepl !bl
bombo 'today.
In llondoo. 8"111..., 'Vorel wamed the ~=yw~'L.~
would be mailed.lo 1-11 dtpkmats In Londoo. •
The spokepmln .. id tbere ..... ..
evidence ol aey new pJor and no special
BeCUrlty alert.
Other police oourte1 said. howover,
then w... •i&U thel• Arab let!orlall
,....Pagel.·
HOLDUP •..
lo prevtnl the bUk from using Its alarm.
Bui the inanNer was S111Picious and
bipped the'~. which bad not been -
allected !'!' ~i,lepbone dlsrup,tkln. '
Tloo p,u.,...~officen; r.sponded and
. when one ~ the bank, shooting
Jtm1ed.:~...of(lcer was reported killed, alone wUli 'the bank manager. · f • • • ~ 1m-fied woman was reported
~~ed and at leaal one other
penon, a wmnan bank teller, aligbUy
-"'!\. Robert) Smith, manager of a nearby
tranl ~. said:
"All &bl phones went dead about 9:45
eel WI bad no servlCe whaboever. At
that p(lint, we. bad no reason to believe it
'!U lnyihlnC other than a normal
telephone dlsruptlon.
.. ~ When I went upstairs, I found one
of the -'• clerks In my office bleedlni from the bead. She wuni seriously
wounded but the bank manager, wbom I
bad known for a long Umt, was killed.''
Polk:e said a telephone company repair
truck w.u found outside tbe bank and a
cover was ofi a manhole.
The Olesapeake and P o t o m a c
Tele.phone Company said tbe truck was
stolen Tuesday and that a two-foot sec-
tion of cable was cut in the manhole~
,.,....r.,111
AMBUSH •..
In Iba-.
They Aid -tlley pulled Up II 0(-
ficer Nash """' a toe r.port under bis.
<Wbboard lamp that they were headed
tor a lolepbone lo notlf)' police eboq\
a~ed -• v1ctlm. No lalejilJooel m locole<flvlrtlJallJ for
niil" around wllhln the undevtioped
sprawl~ corn and asperqua: tielda aod
11 woilld seem Uktly they "'*'Id have
s~ first \O tnvesllpta thenuetv ... Officer Nash left wltllo\11 of!lalnlng
their names end found the mah
face down ill the road...r, 1!11 bUdo bid-
dea benelth lllin. I
He wddon\y leaped up,~ com-
bal-slyie with both hands !raining a long-
nosed revolver at the patrolman's head,
leading hlm to lunge slde~ays aod gun
the engine ln a futUe attempt to nm the
man down.
A slug -possibly from a .3& ~bet ~pon -smashed throua:b t b e
wind.shield glass, graJ.ing Nash's lefi · •
cheek as be swerved the squad car
around to obtain a defensive po1ltkln. ·
behind the driver's door. • ,
He Was unable ID get his shotgun ~ ol •
its brlCkel qitlckly enoup while crouched · over the ~t seat before the fleeing '
gunman was q!lt of range In the adjacent.
dark, fog-shrollded field Uned wilb stalks
of corn.
Of fleer Nash toot· cover after radio~
for help, bringing fellow patrolmen abd .
ultimately an army of 150 lawmen from_
numerous agencies, including four scent-
tracking dogs.
The victim also chose not to trail his
attacker into the field after he ran from
a windbreak of eucalyptus trees, a creek'
ra\tine cutting through the far tide of the
area or any other cover. ~-
He feared he might be &et up for •
secondary ambush by the long-haired.':
, bearded gunman ~even possible ~:
complices waiting in the m u d d yr9.: ..
recenUy-irrigated farmland. .. ·~
"There are a millon places to hide out
there," Detective Sit· Keith Carpent~ ;
remarked. The major manhunt was disbanded al'
10 a.m., after a long, sleepless night fOr ,
shotgun-carrying lawmen poking through +
the field ?fith one..ofiicer for ev..ery .. fiv_e .
rows of corn. . • :
On aid to nonpublic schools, the Presi-
dent said he believed parents should have
the freedom lo choose a religious-cen-
tered education for their children, "and I
am determined to help guarantee that
freedom of choice.
Sen. Strom Thurmond (0-S.C.) bolds new son, J.
Strom Thurmond Jr., as he takes wife Nancy, home
from hospital in Greenwood, S.C. Mrs. Thurmond
bolds daughter, Nancy Moore, age 18 months.
Tlie suspects were described as white
men wearing yellow hardhats, orange
fluorescent jackets and green pants.
Each tras armed with a pistol, according
to witneues.
They put the money in a plastic zipper
bag af¥I, Oed in a late model green
OlolmioMe.
Patrolmen still covering the scene later.··
in the day, however, captured four ,
youths, two juveniles and two 18 year '
olds, driving h1ro cars around the area.
One fit the description of the vehicle ..
which -1 purpo9elY or by near·lragic •
coincidence -lured Officer Na sh into ,
the murderous trap the night before.
"In my judgment," Nixon continued,
"the Constitution does DOI prohibit Ill in-
ducements to encourage and main-
tain diversity in American education -
and we are prepared. to fight to
guarantee that thal diversity remains."
On the queatlon of 1"'51ng, Nixon praJs.
ed Ille neighbor-school .. fun.
damental to American education.
"Whole school systems are disrupted
by the f~ bualn« ~ !11!Jool childj<•
away'f1'om lhelr nelfJ>bor!ioods," bj! lil<!.
"The an!Wt!T to tnequJtles fn our educa-
tional system ls to spend more money on
lt:arning and le.as money on busing." More mr··-.
Student,s Fined
For Protest Act
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Two UC San
' Diego students have been placed on
three-year probation and filled $200
apiece alter pleading guUty to obstruct·
ing railroad tracks during an antiwar
demonstration.
The students, Gerard Lopez, Z2, of San
Diego, and Dattd Katienstein, 20, of
Solana Beacfl, ..... 'aJ90 ordered by
Superiol' Court Judge Franklin B. Orfleld
TueodaY lo :g4y 1$7_,1 to the Santa Fe
railroad for damage to the .tracks In the
demoltstration May '12 near~ the Del Mar
railrilad station.
• Offtcert ·Rid wooden ties were placed
across tbe tracks and burned during the
demonstration. The protesters aaid they
were symbolically "bloctlng" the move-
ment of war materials.
DAILY PILOT
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1'M ll'lrM:IMI DllD!ltfllnl plant M .t I» '#ttl
l•Y Slrttt, tot11 M.._ C.M~ f)l)L
Rol.1rt N. yi,.4
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lllo"''' K11¥ll ·-TliroMlf A. Mu,,1ri;,..
Mffol'llllg f.fl!Ot
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''"'""-' ~~ ~"""' "-~·-. . ;;.:= "::= ...... ,. ~· -~ -·
Leary Seeking Swiss
Refuge-With No tuck
li'nlm Wire S<rvlce1
BASEL, S"11zorland -COnvlcted drug
advocate and U.S. prison escapee Dr.
Timothy Ltary is shopping around for a
Swiss hideaway but having very little
luck here, just as he did in Bern.
Canton officials today turned down the
onetime Laguna Beach psychedelic
guru's request for a residence pennit
with what might be called a classic
understatement.
"Leary is a eontrovtf!ial figure ," said
a police review of the former Harvard
psychology professor's activities during
the past decade.
The report further noted Leary and hi.!
wife Rosemary, also with b1m in exile,
Hitchhiking Pair
Run Frolil Bullets
That Never Came
MOJAVE (UPI) -"Start running or
you'U be shot like dogs."
The two young hitchhikers didn't
hesitate -they ran as fast as they could
int~ the desolate Mojave Desert, neeing
froin shots that never came.
Charles Ferber, 20, and Mark Pierce,
17, both of Rosamond, told police the
threat came from two men who picked
them up while they were liltcbin& a ride
on IIlghwa y 14, north of Mojave.
They aaid the men drove.them a short
way in £heir pickup truck, theo baited
and pulled out a gun. The hitchhikers
said they were ordered to put thelr hands
behind their beads and run or be shot.
No bullets were fired , but Uls Angeles
County authorities Liter aJTested Joseph
Sargent, 23, of Ontario, and Thomas
O'Brien, 24. of Pomona, in the lAlncaster
area and held them for Kem C-ounty
authorities.
3 Teens
' have no true lll>b to the euton of lla!d
and Jll'antblg of Ills requeoi"'111"11d lllr fwtlier ..,_......,._
"it would be dlfficult ~ residents to . . see why aulborlUes sbould admit a drug
advocate at a time when drugs have
becoine a problem lD their town," the
report continued.
Orange county Grand Jury members
recently indicted Dr. Lury and ....., of
other alleged drug smugglers operating a
global networl; of naroollcl dealenblp.
The ~ --of Eternal Love, an outgrowth. of the League for
Spiritual DIJcovery (I.SD) founded by
Leary 1n Lac -1n 1988 allegedly deall in mOI of dollan worth of dope.
He also fa<ea cbarpl of ""'8pe from
the Loe Padres Men'• c.1ooy at San Luis
Obispo all<r his lJlll Laguoa Bead> drug
arresl led to I ow!juana COllVicl1on and
i ohe lo U.yolill aei\lace. ·~ .. '
Oranp Cociill;' 8nportot Coilrt •iJudge
Byron K. MacMillan branded Lury a
menace to IOCiety, while I~· Com-
ments have Included -"'!etioos t\>!t be
ls the •lnil• most cle9trud.lve force
unleashed on lbll generallon of young
people.
sw;ss aulborltlea did, bowo..r, dlcllne
to extradite Leary to the U.S., aft61'. bts•
1971 arrest on an lntetnaUonal f\lg!Uve
warrant, i:.rt also turned down his own
plea for political asylum.
Mateo Disaster Area
WASHINGTON (AP) -San Mateo
County bas been declared 1 disa!ter area
by the Small Business Administration
because of flood! that caUJed heavy
damage to homes and buaineuea this
month. The SBA said Tuesday the statua
means Ill San Francisco office will begin
accepting appllcatioos for long-tenn
loans to repair or replace property
damaged during a week of locessant
rains.
Seized
Horses Killett-'Just Having Fun'
Pll!LADELPHlA (AP) -Police say
three tetn-agen arresled In the deaths of
two horses pelted with chunks of con-
crete and hit with a nail-1tudded board
etplained Ibey...,.. "just having f\ln."
Police LL KenMth Schwartl aald the
yoolha told officers afltt their arrest
TutJday tloly "JU!t wonted to ,.. the
hones run."
The bor1e1 killed Saturday night W@:N!:
found entangled with one another. They
apparently collapsed In terror.
.. A1.1tboritJes said 25 horte• In a
ran\lhaclde stable In the Port Richmond
aectlon of Philadelphia 1 were beaten.
Tbret horses were lnjurea seriously.
wn11am n. R•yneo, d;rector of opera•
tl "" tor the •lita Society for lbe Prev ....
!Ion of Curel<y to Anlm•l1.,...1d It wu
the ••>r!I instance of brutality he had
ever seen.
''This Is a crime. l'Ve nenr teen
any1l1ln( lib I~" na,... llld alta-the
two ponl .. , a .,,... and I atud, both o ..
years old, were loond dead.
Schwartz said the -In the stable
bod been atoned for twv bwn. He uld
tilt dead pont11 apparonll)' died of U·
haustlon In fnnUc aflorta to .... po ·~
tlcken.
Arrnted by police were Carl Hmly,
17, Jerry Kllrell, It and Rtcinald
Potenoo, It all of Pll11adolpltla.
'l'hty ...... d>trpil wtih malldoat
milchlet;. •l!ldallml, cluitty to anlmlla
and wwful )tllll,. ud malmhli of
animals.
FromP .. el
COPTERS ••.
of the people," Strauss Ald.
Earlier, Beek. another HeliaJpten
Umlled spotesman, bad charged there
are "two glaring, evidently deliberate
errors" in Glavas' ftport.
Beet thargeil lbal the •report Aid
helicopters llythg al a lower rfln ....,.
six dedbels quleta-In a recent lesl when
In fact they were only too declbela
quleltt.
Glava1 had been promlsing to lower
rp11UJ to quiet the belicopten as soon u
the Federal Aviation Agency allows it.
Glavas' report also said the depart-
ment bas received only seven oolse com-
plaints since the Sept. 11 be1icoptar bear-
ing -when councilmen gave a 7 to 0
vote of confidence to the air peln>la -
while Beek claimed "I know one pel"Mlll
wbo penonally baa complained olDe
Hanrahan Free
' Official. Acquitted
m.
• in Slayings '
I '
'
ClllCAGO (AP) -Stale'• Atty. Edward v. 'Hanrahan w.·i ·leqwtled tb<la~
of chargea stemming lrom•tbe Jlell slaying of two Black Panther party mem.' ., hers. •
Judge Pblllp J. l!omld of Clttult Court, who heard the !~week trial with-
out a J~, freed Hanrahan and 13 co-defeQdants upon tbe defense motion for a
dlrected wrdict of acquittal. They were charged with conspiracy to obstruct
justice In the aftermath of a police raid in which the Panthers were slain.
Fred Hampton, 20, deputy chairman of the' Ollnois Panther party, and Mark
Clark, a Pantht!' leader from Peoria, were killed in the raid conducted by a
racially mlled detail of 14 policemen assigned to Hanrahan's office.
Hanrahan ls a protege of Mayor Richard J. Daley but was dumped by the
Democratic party in his bid for renomination ln the March 21 primary.
BUt on his own be defeated a substitute regular organization candidate
and an lnde}\elldenl Democral
He faces Republican Bernard C. Crey in the Nov. 7 general election and U
be wins would be considered a powerhouse In the 'Cook County party structure.
·.
..
'
..:::.tlmes:::::~b=lm=~=l=L'_'~~~~~~~-'=============================================::::!"
GEM TALK .. ---------~··'' .:
TODAY
by
J, c. HUMPHRllS
QUART CRYSTAL WATCHES
Many w a t c b manufacturers
alress the extreme accuracy •I the
new quartz crystal watches. Al-
though these claims are ju!lified
as _the watch leaves the factory,
m1.1ntenance of this accuracy ia un-
predlct.hle.
Continued quartz watch 1ceuracy
depend8 upon the quartz cryalal'1
ablllty to keep vibnttng 11 a con-
1tant frequency when subjected to
normal use alter you bll)1 IL
The natural frequency of iny
quarti crystal Is subject to changes
due to aging, shock and slight tem-
perature variaUons, alt beyond the
control of the manufacturer ·be-
cause reactions vary from one cry.
W to another regardless of qulllty
or IOllm!. Further, ratea of quartz
watches are not rud1l7 811jus!ablt
by the dealer .
AJ an Independent Jnel.,, ,..
... partlculorly free to llate all tht
fads •bout anything we aelL We
want you to know that extreme 1c-
cura<y clolms by m1111 manulac-
turera may not be fullfllled in· IClu.
al use until guartz crystal watch11 •
have prove\i their depend1blllly,
your ~ bey~ a.re still the blgbly
accurate cbronometon, tunlna fork
and <onvenuonal walches.
A reminder from
OMEGAO
STANDARD Bes.tire to
TIME set your
RETURNS watch BACK
OCTOBER one hour
29th this Sunday
When you stlyovrwotch bad, toke o close look ot it, II may
be occurote bvt le It modem. ielf-wlndlng? Does If tell the
date? Or the day ond the dale? PerOOPS now Is the time to
chocte on up-to-th&-1ecorid Om ego. CO!'lll In and see the
Ocnigo 1cmUy of fine timepieces, $65 to over $15,000.
JloW......, ... f.wt!lldl!llf s-ti.r OIVIH., Doi.-1111111; llllol, SIU.DO
Mt-ol lhl 0.., follllly of s....,..,.,..
112l l'IEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENllNT TE~ll4S
!7 VIARS IN THI JAMI LOCATION l1nV....1tle1'4 -M••l1r i::h•rt•
'HONE 141·1401
• I
. .
. •
'
-·
• " ' •
' "
I
·I
..
' ' • . '.
. ' :•
•• •.
,. • .• ..
' I
G
Pat
You
Dail
Mes
tete
Cre
contact
havenl
Your
cash,
i:redils
~yon
_1ult ba
twner
... lier
E:1te
DE
for a
localed .....
dwellin
sta·te.
reveal
dedslv with .
occupy
know i
C<lSIOf
Tiie
Not
DE
lhan
wide
but I
label
or
You
buyen
Beads
Ga
D
pu\ t tem
~;
&:
lliL
If
.. ...
At Your
se·rvice
A Saada1.,ud w~ FHlon
Of the DAIL V PILOT
Got a probltm1 Thtn write
Pot Dun1~. !*at wUt cut red
tapt. oet tht
onawtr1 and
action u o u
need to
Jolvc inequi-
ties in g~
emment and
bu.ttness. Mail
ti our quea-
tlo-ns to Pat
Dunn/: At
Your Senrict, Orange ow:i
lJa illJ Pilot, P.O. Bo:t 1560, Costa
Mesa, Ca., 92626. lnclucU uour
telephone number.
Credit SHp
DEAR PAT: I exchanged ooe of the
pants suits my husband bought roe last
Christmas for a $38 credit alip at Johna's
in Fountain Valley. After shopping lbere
several times and not deciding on a
purchase, I waited until summer. In the
meantime I lost the credit slip and the
clerk couldn't find a record of it. She said
the owner would cbec.k his receipts and
eontact me. That wu tn July and I still
bavent heard from the owner.
B. M., Fountain Valley
Your credit 1Up W•• glvea In lieu of
cull, llld records of p11t -Cbrlstma1
eredlts are no longer available. However,
If yoa bring yOlll' c•nteled check for the
trlglul pudlU< and the other pula
salt back lo Johna's for comparison,
·1wner Glen Cook says he wlU settle the
matter to your satlslactlon.
Excllongiltg Homes
DEAR PAT: I sa w an advertisement
for a Home Exchant:e Club of California
located in San Leandro. This club offers
-an exchange· guide which lists member!'
dwellings by code numbers, city and
state. Names and street addresses-aren't
revealed until a member makes a
decisive choice and then he dedls direcUy
with the owner ol the home be wants to ·
occupy on a temporary basts. I want to
know if this club is legitimate and the
cost of mernber!hip.
D. V., El Toro
The Oakland Better Bual.oes1 Bureau
received a prompt reply from Ibis firm
answering tbe "At Ytur Senice" 1.a-
qulry. No complaints or olllel lnqalrles
have been received by tllle BBB 1boal tbe
Hame EJ:chuge C I u b of Califorala.
Ettabllsbed t. September, U7Z, &be club
ebarges I fl$ membtnfdp fee, wtUI an
SUI IUUIUaJ renewal. lb:cbaqe ltomes
m avallable la Califomll, Nevada ud Colorado. •
Note 01t Ms.
DEAR PAT: The use of M!., rather
than Miss or Mrs., seems to be gaining
wide acceptance. This ls ell just dandy,
but I want to know why a woman has to
label herself Mrs. or Miss when buying
or cashing a U.S. Savings Bond.
P.K., Sao Cleemellte
You are a mlslnformed ~11. Women
buyers and beoeflclarl" of U.S. Savings
Bonds (Serles E and Serles H) no longer
bave to ase a "Miss" or "l\1rs." or IAY
other U&le. before their umes. Tbe
Treasary Department 18)'1 I tt a t one's
Social Security number ntw must be a.
ed lnstUd. But you 1tm have one gripe
comlag. Altbougb both men and women
are reqalred to provide SoclaJ Security
numben for Serles B Bonds, t be
TrOasary does Dfl( yet require men to U1t
tbdr Social Security numbe.rt for Serles
E wblle women mut.
Garbage Rt1les
DEAR PAT: I wouta like to know if
there are any required specifications for
garbage. and refuse containers collected
by the city of Newport Beech. Are there
any types or containers that are pro-
hibited? I've also noticed red lags pieced
on some containeni and wonder what this
means. T.C., Nwport Beach
Auy one container malt not exceed CS
gallons In capacity and SI pollDda in
welgbt, IDcludlq contea11. Coatallerl
sboald be made of metal. plullc er odlor
watertight material and be .,..i,...i wtt•
baDdle1 and a mag mu.& eover. Neo-
r<tlirnable disposable hq• are oo-
cep<ahle H they ore t pedllcaUY ddfped
for garba&e ud nfne dl1poul and .,e
securely tied to pr.,,nl 1plllqe. 00
dnlm.1 c.ardboard b a r r e 1 1 and
wllllebmela .,. prohibited. The 1W
pieced by clly re.faee erewmen oa ~
UtOb 'contatom Indicate ....,.mplldt>t
wtlt refute regulationt, 1ucb at ••~ ed f coatal....,, welglll llmllatlolll ni preper ~tlon of dlacardell·
~rtals.
f
ltftufe Rf911U
DEAR PAT: OUr clllrch la planning to
put together a col lection of m..Uy con-
temporary mualc In book form for our owp use, not to sell. 'l{e want to Include
thll musk: as well aa the -for ellCb p1ece and would like to know lf we mml
-permlulon of the publisher to do
thil. v .R., eo.-del Mar
If ,.. want to be ablolulely corr<CI
aboat not hdriagtal oa the ontr'a
COf>llrlpt, wrtte to tbe poblltller of eacb
piece (addfta• on tbe sheet music) and
re(raetrt pennl1Pon to reprodlltti Ute
mu1k: for a no11'1'9flt purpolfl. Roweftt,
1everal cburcb and barber 1bop llqhlC
l""'P" 111d this formaUly Ii not
Httnary If you Intend to OM the music
erclastvelf fer your & r • • P ' 1 eG-
ttrtalnmeat. Any performance for pront
'A"GUld reqalrt CODHnt of Ute publlabtr.
DAILY ,ILO'f Sllfl' '""°'°' WALK FOR HEALTH -UC Irvine computer science graduate Steve
Guyon, 22. of Newport Beach demonstrates cardiac care unit equip-
ment to measure the effects of-exercise on -the~heart.-Blood pressure.
data is carried from Guyon's arm to computer and wires taped to his
chest relay heart contraction frequency to cathode ray tube a~d elec-
trocardiogram machines on his left. During 30-minute exercise rou-
tine, patients walk on inclined ramp which hastens pace of exercise
while co mputers record heart -beat, b[eathing and blood pre~e
data. U exercise exceeds safe limits, bells ring to warn medical super-
ViSOrs. New recording methods safeguard lieart attack p1rtients be-
ginning Orarige County Medical Center and UC Irvine medical school
cardiac care program.
Galvanized Pipe Banned
For Coµnty Constru~ti~n
A ban on the use of galvanized pipe ln
residential constrnctioo has been made
permanent by the 0Nltfl• .County Board
of Supervisors. ,~
A report by Floyd McLellan, county
dJteclor of bWlding ancha&ly. ,bolstered
the board's determloatkm to prolect
borne and apartment buyers by banning
the pipe.
McLellao ezp!aloed that. as be bad tdld
the board previously, galvanized pipe has
been responsible for many p~bing
failures in the county.
He attributed the problem to Colorado .
River water which rontatn.s a high
mine.ral content, aM to the heavy use of
hot water by residents.
Both contribute to the fail ure of
galvanized pipe, the building director
said.
McLellan said there was some hope
that the delivery of Northern California
water to ~aage County next y~ might
1 ilnproYe the corrosion problem, but be
cautioned that it was unlikely that the
county water agencies would be allot~
more than 10 to 20 percent Feather River
water, whlch has a much lower mineral
content.
920-pouiul Man
Nearly Realizes
Goal: Suicide
.. •
" .
Join the Cardiae Club
l)Cl Medical School Has Plan for Heart Patients
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of tM Olllfr l"ht Shill
vtous, he ooted. They contribute to aocie-produces more accurate understanding of
ty rather than remain on welfare. the potential for heart disease than do
Woodrow H. Jackman's 54--year old Dr. Alan R. Bu~1 us:istant proreuor ordinary EKG tests perfonned when the
heart is working fine, thank you, and so of medicine at OCMC, poiota out the patient is lying down or at rest.
is Woodrow, bis fellow employes at rombination of known beBI1: activity One final aspect of the cardiac care
Beckman Ina~ments Inc., Fullerton, measuring devices with the computer program is related to the need to assure
need to be reminded almost daily. recording process hes broader tm-heart attack patients they are well enough to work.
Last May 19, Woodrow . Jeclanan's plicetions. A small tape recorder-transmitter the
heart wasn't set. jOQd._ In ~ J.atkman__ The equipment at OCMC allows doctors size of a transis_tor radio may be strap-
spent eigh~ daYI iii.intensive care follow-to know. preci'..se1y the level of acUv ty a ped to the patient. It records on 8 24-hour
ing a btari· lttaci: at his Garden Grove cardiac patient may endure, slnct com-tai.-each beat of the heart for tater tn-
home. · pluters in moments baJance blood · stant replay study by the computer.
Thanks to a i.rt patient rehabilitation pressure, oxygen usage, breathing levels.. Further, the electronic tones may be
program _develoi!e<[ by _the U~ ~ wJSe rates ]Ind el~ardiogram ~ta
medical schOol at Orange Coonty M~icilt as tpe patient treads 8n uphill mlll tiOOer telephoned to lhe cardiac care unit as a
Center, a computer age method of on-the-careful supervision. . . way of keeping track or tlie patient's -heart rate. spot testing of heart and blood pressure In true 1984 fashion, bells and lights
rates during exercise and group therapy warn the examiners of the level at which JC he begins to experience trouble, a
known at OCMC as the "cardiac club," the patient should · cease straining monitoring doctor may phone him to tell
Jackman end more then a dozen others himself. him to ease up a bit.
not only can go back to work,, but do so "Heart disease is the one disease that Not all who participate in the Monday
without worry of a repeat attack. is most likely to kill any of us." Dr. evening cardiac club require such con-
Six weeks after his attack, Jackman Bures said. "It accounts for 60 percent of tinuoos monitoring, Dr. Buerger said.
enrolled In OCMC's ''cardiac club." Ten the deaths in the U.S. Most members are entrusted to Carl
weeks later he was back at his "high "Frequently, if he has survived an at-Wells. a vocational counselor assigned
pressu re" job in the standards lab, a job tack, an individual's heart may be full time to the rehabilitatM:m unit at
he's held for six of the 14 years he's repairable, if his routine is mana~ OCMC. He , the doctors and otben "lead
worked for Beckman. reasonably ." dl!'.cussions among patients which range
"The main point about our card1&c Tbe complicated mea.surl.ng equlgrnent from .. sex After Your Heart Attack" to
care unil,'\,Dr ~ A,. Bl!j!rger Said ! •"'I ,1ntefPli'llve oomputer ~ hllp "D~: Lm Pquna,.r..eSa Worry.".
Tuesday, "is lhet""tJ!ie prolrarri Helps put tneasure Wh'e( is '4rtasotuible' for afi.y Weekly weigh-im, blood pressure and
heart attack patients back to 'WOl'k." patient. pulse checks, exercise sesskm and con·
The UCI-caJ..lfomla College of Medicine Now that the majority of the "bugs" ferences with "family .and friends round
assistant pro1 ..... • deocribOd the pro-are ool of the system, Dr. Buetser looks oot the "cardla~ ~I!!!" rellnlen "11kh
gram U a.JWHtep procetll. ·• • toward duplication of the ~rd.Jae C8NI JaCtinan sajf .O~ .-.be mefttal
First a romplete physiological work up unit concept at other hospltab. envelop for many patients.
of the state of ~he health of tlte heart J: But fw'ther, Charles L. Ricker, pres!· "I've Jeai:Ped to &~ite more ln life
done using $1051000 9f equIP,ment a dent of the finn which handled the rom-and to Jive better," Jackman contends
computer programming developed by puter programming ta.sk, .said the adding he was one Jf many AmericBDS
Information Concepts Inc. of Santa Ana, me.asuring programs' greatest value may who say to themselves "it will never hap-
e J inn located in the Irvine Industrial lie in determining more pr e cise pen to me.''
Complex. diagnoses of the cond.ltion or hearts of Secondly, a romplete program of those yet to e.1perlence myocardial in-"I'm not worried now about another at-
psychoJogicel counseling and e.1ercise is fraction -a heart attack. tack," the former 230-poUft<f. si.t.-foot.
prescribed to ov~rcome lhe patient's Interest in the system bas been shown one-inch scientis t said. "I wa.s worded.
fears thel he is We> sick to work. by the Los Angeles County police and fire though., when a few doctors told me how
Drewing on the suppl y or poor patients departments which would hope to test tbe 11.0Cky l was to be here after my first at-
at OC~fC, the UCI medical school stress resistance of public servants once tack in Mey,'' Jackman added.
researchers found that "better than SO euch year. Now slimmed to 215 pounds and work-
percerit are back to work," Dr. Buerger Ricker predicts large corporations with ing• to lose another 30, Jackman a.us he 's
said. medical staff.s assigned to protect the thankful for the canliec care program
The advantage to aoeiety of preparing health or key executives might also and would reo:immend it "even to t1lose
Such pipe becclll05 comided and clog-
ged by the river water and the constant
use of bot water, he said
roronary patients to return to WO[k is~ realize benefits from the technique which who don 't have a cardiac problem, yet." SHREVEPORT. La. (UPI) -Doc-I_::::::~~=::..::..:.::=..:..::..:..:.:::..:.:..:..::.._:..:.::=.:_:..:.::..:.:_::_::::..:::.:... _ __:_ _____ -:-:::--::-'-::-;__...:.:._
'nle ban was triggered several months
ago by protests fmm owners of relativeJy
new tract homes in the El Toro and
Uguna Hill areas.
TW AizV>S HABIT
IN RED GAZETTE
MOSCOW (AP) -The humor
page of the Literary Gazette an-
nounced today that P. ShW"8nov, an
engineer, set a record by giving up
smoking 57 times in one year.
"Tile previous record of 50 times
was held by American writer Mark
Twain,'' the paper said.
tors said Mike Walker, 3a, tried to com-
mit suicide over a long period of time by
"eating himself to death." Tuesday, he
nearly accomplished it.
Walker, who weighs 920 poundii, suf· rtred a severe gall bladder attack in a
tractor--trailer truck used to transport
him to state fairs where he is a sideshow
attraction end makes speeches against
the use of drugs.
He appeared to be recovering today.
He suffered a similar attack in Houston
last February. At that time, doctors
needed a crane and fork lift to hoist him
from the truck.
Psychiatrists said Welker became a
·ctrug addict in 19$5 and developed a
dependence which later "triggered a self-
• deatruct'°n drive in Walker's mind whicb
caused him to become obsessed with food
in an effort to eat himself to death."
Candidates Get Special
OK w Land at Airport
lleavywell)lt polltlclans are going to be
.allowed "lO l&nd at Orange County
~·the atrplanes that carry them,
anyway.
Orange COUnty SUpervlson Tuesday
decided to* allow o.verwetgbt political jell
to ~ the county alrslrip be.tween now
and the Nov. 7 presldenllll election.
OJr!<nlly, the je\ limit at county
airport la 115,000 pounds. The pollllcal jets wtJI ....... that ... lglll
Supervbor> vot.d I lo 2 to grant the
ovt.....tehl je\ permit to the U.S. Socrel
Service. Supervlaor lloolld ea_. ol
Newport Beach and wnnam Pbllllpo of
Fullertoo voled no.
Robert B-llhan, county dir<etor of
.aviation, told board member1 he had
received ""l1l<•la from the Socrel
Servlc. on behalf of Vic< President Spiro A.anew, DemocraUc prealdentlal ca•
dlda\e George M e Go • er n IJld
Democntic v1ce presid<nllal candidate
Sergent Shriver.
Bresnahan said 'lie could aee himself
being caught tn the mk:ldle. belwetn two
polltlcal particl II the board did mt act
on. the problem.
Although he asst.Ired lx>ard memben
~ larger planes would not damage the
airport's runways. Beesnaban said he
would like to aet all overweight jets ban--
oed at any time.
He &aid there Is a 3$ percent oafety
factor om the Imped 115,QOO.pound
weight llmlt. "We """"safely take planes
weighing up lo 130.000 poundl without
runway damage,'' Bresnahan sakl.
Cupen urged fr.at the board dittct
Brttnahan to not allow any planes Ovtr
115.0UO poundl to land at the airport al
en.; Ume.
SUpervbor David L. Baker of Garden
Grove disagreed. "ll is only ror a tw<>-
weck perk>d end we are wured that the
helvler je\I wi1t not damage the airport
l 1ee no hann ln appt"Ovlng Ule requests
temporarily," be argued.
Baker goi, the support o! Robert BaUln
of Santa Ana and Ralph Clark ol
Anahtim.
A precedent of 110rts was M!l two yean:
ago when Air Force One. the Prestdent's
jet landed al the airport.
..
ALL THIS FOR ONLY
$ *
Thi• poP4Aor .5 piec. rOOflll grouplrt9 including o J PrlQ
SICTIOHAL, Cl.UI CHAii ancl I.AIOI W'aaO'' COfRI
TAIU it mod• of hl1h quality rotton Ith• moat
durable wood being u1e<t In fine fvmiture manufoduring
today). It will ea1ily adopt lt1•lf '° ony room
r•90rdl•t• of tit• Of' d.c:or.
..
SAYE $170
houtiful sandalwood
fin ish, no-mor
1obl• top and d9COratof
fabric• make thi1 a
ITU• ¥Olu. al ib orlgi~I
pric• of $370.00 . , ,
but ttlk .5 piece
room groupirig'" it '°""
OltS WllK OML Y for tho
•nhelievably $ 199 tow pric• of •••
4 OAIL V PILOT
Thieu Blocking Peace--Cong Minister .I
Politicos 'Zero
In on County
WlUl BWE YONDER DEPT. -
Orange County Alrpon has been tbe
ttnter of local political controversy for
110me yean now but as of today, the
county aintrip bu ,_ blg·tlme on tbe
politico scene.
It dewlaps !hat many ol the lap can-
didates in our curttnt presidenllat elec-
lioa cmnpa.ign would like to land their
airplanes at the place.
The issue came up before the Board of
supervisors yesterday because the big
jets of presidential contenders are
heavier than those flown by the Air
California people or other airlines bert.
So the big jets need a special permil
Well, what did you expect? You've got
to have heavyweight jets for heavyweight
poliUcians.
SENATOR GEORGE McGovern Dies
tbe campaign trail In a jet model called
Dakota Queen II. He wants to bring her
into Orange County Airport !Orne time or
another.
McGovern's earlier model, Dakota
Queen 1, was the bomber be flew during
World· War JI. He WU duly accredited by
the 0.S. Army Air Force to Dy Dakota
Queen I which was one of those old fan·
type aeroplanes. Dakota Queen ll is a
complez, modem jet and good old
.G<ori• -~ hove a ticket to Dy this one. It ·was strongly rumored, however.
thilt he did so anyway on one of his
jaunts across the country. The story of
George taking over the cootroLs was
largely denied later but a lot of folks still
believe it.
Anyway, Dakota Queen II isn't the
only overweight jet !hat tbe politicos
want to set down on our local county
airstrip. McGovern's running mate.
Sa11ent Shriver, would also IJke to Dy in
here as would the second man on the
GOP ticket, Vice President Spiro
Th<cdore A&new.
l MUST CONPESS 1 have no Idea what
name Agnew bu given to bis fa'f'Orite
~. Maybe something I i k e
Blowbard the Finl?
Regardlw, all ol these presidential
and vlc:e pttlidentlal jets weigh more
tbao the 95,000 powid5 nonnally allowed
on our mmty aerodrome. 1bia is what
caUJOCI Aviatim Director Bob BremaJum
10 brloi the question before the
Supervilotl. ,
Bresnaban, it "'Will be recalled, was
under fire m recent times for letting out
a few contracts at tbe terminal without
telling lbe sopervbotlal savants about It.
ApporenUy be decided he wouldn't
make ilat mJJtate this time emi H It
was the United Stites Secret Service re-
questln1 tbe landlng permit.
SOME' PRECEDENT for approval
seemed to prevail 1lnce Prosldent Nlmn
had hll Mc jet, Air Foree One, dropped
in on Orange OOuoty Airport some two
years qo. Apparenily tile President
won't _.... make a toucboand-go landing
Ibis time in coafldeoce tlat the Grand
Old Par\)' boa thlnp ta!« control in1hll
-region. He'll just-' Spiro.
Alttt ....,. debate, tbe supervisors ap-
proved 'Uie overweiillt landings for the
politl<oa in a S to 2 split vote. Jlon
Caspers Ct Newport and Bill Phlllipo of
Fullerton w~ agalnll the Idea.
' MA YBl!i. CASPERS al!d Phillips bad a
mental .plctwe ol McGovern once again
takiol the coatrob of Dakota Queen l1
and swooping low over Newport Beach
.in a blatant Democratic' show of pc>wer
as be buned the Republican .trongbold.
George could draw some flak doing a
thing llke that. Newport people have been
known to throw lhings at jeta with people
on them tbt1 even like.
No wonder Qaspers and Phillips were
net'VOIJI.
PARIS (UPI) -Madame N&UYtn Thi
Bioh, the Viet C011C foreign mlnllter,
dillculSlng the lalest V le I D am
deveJot>meota aald today "oo early-...
lino IJ In afgbt , , • we 111111 •have oo
e.creement with the Americana over the
basic issues."
Looting pole and tired but on occaaion
n~ Imo a faint ...ue, tile '7·}'06l'·
old VletDltmeae olliclal --Prosi-dent Nguyen Van 'lbJeu of South Vietnam
of blocldng the road to peace -and ac·
cyJed President NllU> of refusing ID
force Thieu from office.
In an nclusive interview with UPI,
Pleased Pooch
Madame DIM, opeakJOl In her -
residence at Verrteresl•Bulataa, -~
deny thet P'Otll'tS" bu been made In
pr! vate lalks held bY Htory A. Klaalniler
and the Nodll Vletmmeae.
"Our duire IJ to bave a ......rite put
Into effect a fast as poeslble," she aatd.
"This woold put an encl to the
unspeakable oullerlng ol tho -and allow us to enjoy 1~ and
self-determination."
But, she added, "An early ceue-ilre is
not in sight, and all the rumon &o this ef-
fect ·are not based on fldS."
Madame Dinh aald under quesllonlne
Ul"IT ......
Lady, an ll·monlh-<ild Gi!rman Shepherd, seems proud of the 17
pups she delivered. this week in Berkeley. She was in labor for more
than 18 hours.
Harvard Professor Shares
No~el Prize in Economy:
' ~
From Wire Services
STOCKHOLM -The 1972 Nobel Prize
for Economic Scien<."t was awarded
jointly today to an American and a
British econotill!I w1-theori., helped
improve the standard • of ltving and the
prospeeta !()I' 'lull employmenL
'Jbe $100,000 award
went to Prof. Sir
!oho F. Hieb, 68, of
All Souls College in
Oxford, England and
Prof. Kenneth J.
Arrow, 51, of Har·
van! UbJversity at
Cambridge, Mass.,
for "their pioneer·
ullln'nl "· AIJtOW "" contributions 10
the general ecocxaic,equillbojum tbeolY
and W.Uare tbeoiy," the ~ Swedish
Academy of Sciences said.
The Nobel Memorial Prize r o r
Economic Science is not one of the
origloal Nobel awards. It was set up by
the Bank of Sweden ln 1968 to celebrate
the bank's 300th anhiversary.
Prof. Berti! Otilln, a leading Swedish
economist and former politician who is a
member ol the academy~ com· mlttee, aald the wort slarted Sir John
and continued by Arrow been or
'pracUcat Importance in almost every
sphere or economics.
"Their theories have cootribuled to a
higher standard of llv~ and to a more
even employment altuation," Prof. Ohlin
said.
"Thfl equilibrium theory' ii the basis
for most of tbe ideas applied In practical
eaniomics today. Take examples such as
where to localir.e new indumial plants,
the attempts by govemmenta to control
monetary policies and foreign trade," he
said
The Nobel laureates have served as
economic advisers at home and abroad. 1'11· Arrow was a member of Preslde!lt
Jotm F. Kennedy's council of economic
advisers in 1962.
Hicks, born in 1904, was educated at
Oxford and lhen taught at the London
School or Economics from 1926 to 1935.
He served as a lecturer at Cambridge
until 1938 when be was appointed a pn>-
fmor at the llaivenity ol Manchester.
H9'moved ~to Oxford as a profeDOr
in 1943.
Arrow, born 19!1, took hll masters
degree at Colmnbla llaiversity, New
York, in IMO and his Ph.D. in 1951.
He served l nthe U.S. armed forces
1942 to 1946 then started his scleatlfie
career as a research member of • the
Cowles Commlsskn in Chicago. Atrow
became a professor of economic llclence
of statistlcl at Stanford University in
l!M9 and moved to Harvard in 1968.
Arrow is the third American to win the
prize which has been awarded three
times before. In 1970 Paul A. Samuelson
was awarded and last year Russian-born
U.S. ecooomlst Simon Kuznets won th~
prize.
Much of U.S. Under Cloud
From Mi.ssi.ssippi to Atlantic, It's Overcast
•
. '
!hat lo Ille private lalb the CommuolN
had made I corl1C't1abt -~ to I
prompl -in OllOO then WU I butc •II'-an the political fu1ure ol
South Vlelnam. PreVloualy' tlle Com-
nunuolltl W molrtaltw! • nps J111t
betWOID .. lmplemontalloo .-the two
lssu ...
"In order to lacllltate the necotla-
and -our good will, we bave aald
thal H ~ bas been u ..,_..,,..i In
principle oo -. questions of a
pollUcal oottlomont, "" will diaplay a flexible attitude" oo the ...... fire tmrue,
ahe .ict.
Malame Dinh tlllll <Oollnned a -
meol mad• by --Pna>ler Pham Van Door lo • maptloe
lbat tho COmmunflta -be _..
lo ,.... • -u Ille flloi llep
-endlllg the ooolllct. SIUJng In o· aoft beige velvtt ""1 cllah'
under die blue "'1,pennant ol the Viet
Ooar, Matl•mo Dinh IOld the Com-
mwillts wW not -lo a ceaaHln! 11
-slays In -Cid the coantry'• polltlcal flllure -uomolved. "So loDg as llr. Nixon ts not reoey ID
di-blmael,I from Vietnam and
malDlakw 'l1llaJ In olllce, there ean be
no..tlkmenl,ancllheroforeoo ......
Ore," lbe ald.
Crash Aboard Carrier
Kills Four, Injures . 22
From Wire Servtees
SAIGON -The U.S. Navy said today
four sailors were tilltd and !2 were m.
jured when a U.S. Jet, with a collapoed
landing gear, plowed into a row ol part.
ed planes aboard the 7th Fleet carrier
Midway off tbe coast ol Vlelnam.
The jet !ldmmed over the canier's ar-
resting cables UJOd to halt plaoes and
slid from bow to stem of the 900-foot
ship.
The spokesman said the AB intruder jet
koocked an FC Pbantom jet flghter-
bomber over the side of the carrier, then
plowed into four A7 corsair attack
bombers, another A6 Intruder and
another Pbaotom, all ol which were bad-
ly damaged. The Navy said .another l'C
was slightly damaged.
Ten of the injured seamen were
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
O!llV!ry of the Dally Pilot
Is guaranteed
Mond•y.Frklay: It YoU do not 111;,,_ l'Olll'
pepw llY S:)O p,m., c.11 a"4 )OUr copy wlll
ti. bnouOhf '° V1111-eari. •ni llktn 1111111 1:30 P.fl\.
Sahlrd9Y llftd ~ It '1'1111 ctG "°" rtaN9
YWI' copv by t '·""' ""'"'-"• or • •·"'-Sunday, UH afld a eopy Wiii ba br'Ought to
\'CH.I. C•ll• •re l•ken vnllt lG '·"'"
Telephones
Most C>ranCll C:-,ty ,.,.... .. ••.••• MWnl
Norttnr.tst H~ 8.-dl •nd W.tmlMtw .................. S*tm
a.n C::..,..,,_, C:•&ll•-~t s111 J.,.n c.111...,_, o.na -m.
Soulll ~ Lagl,IM NltUlt ..•• m"4C2t
f I "·
'
I
transfemcl to a hospital al Da~ID(. 'Ibo
others were treated aboard the canier,
which ..m.toed oo 11\ation In the South
China Sea.
Meanwhile, It was reported thal Ibo
11n1tec1 &ates reduced !ta llgbteNJomber
strikes aplnsl North \llelnam qaln
Tuesday and confined them to Ibo
soulben! R8Jlhandl• below the 20th
parallel in, a sort of a partW bombing'
halt aimed at Improving tbe almolphero
for peace negotiations, Informed aources
said today.
The Air Force's big B5l bombers
resumed attacks OD supply caches In the
panhandle after a 24-bour diversion to
targets inJ>o!lth Vietnam. But tile 11.S.
Command aald the smaller filbter·
bombers Dew only about 100 atriUI, all
below the 20tb parallel, which la 75 miles .
south of Hanoi.
The curtailment of the air war began ·
SUnday, wbeD the total ol ftgbter-bomber
strikes dropped from an average of 2»-
300 to about 140, and about 11Al were flown on Monday.
' Although the northeast monsoons
always reduce the air attack on the
North at this time of year, informed
sources say orden from President Niml
have curtailed it even more. It is believ-
ed that Nixon does not want ·to
acknowledge the curtallmeot publicly
becau... that would tend to lnltibit his
freedom to resume heavy strikes on the
Ranpi-Haipbong area should the current
peaee negollatloos collapse.
.,+• ' .
I, ,
' ' She .... bllte.. qaintt 'lbteu, .....
demnllll bla njecllott ol the Commnolll
plan for a tiu<Heiment cabinet ol Na-•
Uonal Concord, Nylng 0 'Ibleu's worda
show what a panic be IJ In and how
i.sol8ted he is from the Vietnamt!H
populatlcn"
But Mme. Blllh directed JWCb of ber
criticlsm at President NiXon.
"l think that actually, It'• the •
American policy that is Ibo. btaeet :
obstacle to a political oettlolilenl. II
Thieu can go through lholO octa. It'•
because tbe Americana keep blm In
power.'' •
Wleks ·
"
• -'
~
Tour Called Off ~.
By Mrs. Onassis ·~·~·
PROVIDENCE, R. L (AP) -Jac-
queline Onassis will oot parttclpste in a '·
wbistlHtop tnUn tour with Sen , '·
Claiborne Pell (l).R.l.), because the trip '
was publicized as her fltSt public cam-1 ·
paign activity since the death of Presi-
dent John F. Kennedy.
Nancy Tudtennan, a spokesman for
Mrs. Onassis, aald Pell had Invited Mrs.
Onassis to join him on a train sweep of
Rhode J.slaod on Saturday in behalf of his
campaign.
Mrs. Onassit was to make the trip with
Pell "just u sort of a friend" am not for
campaign purposes, Miss Tuckerman
said. But then the trip was publicized as
a campaign program and she canceled tt.
. t
THI WOR• P'S OLDEST V#lllSKEY
PRESENTS THI WORLD'S O•DIST MAIL
AH, AUTUMN •. AH, FOOTBALL! I BET
'IOU THINK THE MOST SIGNIFICANT THING
THAT EVER HAPPENED TO FOOTBALL
WAS THE WEAK-SIDE SAFETY BLITZ.? ~-
CLO$E, BUT WRONG. IT WAS THE
TAILGATE ON THE STATION-WAGON.
IT ENABLED PEOPLE TO RELAX FROM
ALL Tl-IAT ACTION WITH A MOUTH-
WATERING SPREAD AND A LIGHT,
SMOOTH BUSNMIU.S !
I WONDER IF THEY !<NEW
BACK IN t6oe THAT BY MAKING
auaMMILLS LIGHT AND
SMOOTH, THEY WOULD BE MAKING
BUllHMILLS THE lOEAL
STADIUM COMA<\NION !
AH, BUSHMILLS.
so'sMOOTH, so LIGHT,
SO I THINK I'LL MOSEY
OVER 10 THE TAILGATE!
McGo
peace
the el lni y
with
Vie
The
aald
Fo
In
Pr •
AN
coatln
wate
.. •
eig
bl
I
J
b
f
g
c
•
1"
Wtd"""''· October 25. 1w2 o•u x PJLOT '
Peace His Issue, Haldeman Singled .9ut .
McGovern Claims Nixon .Key .4ide, 4 Others Tied to Fund :·
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Sen. George
McGovern bu declared that be .,..anta
peace and "I don't give a damn" about
the election-day Impact -but he ta tell· mg vot.n they would be foolWI to side
with Pretldent Nixon for achieving any
Vielnam .. tuement now.
The Democratlc presidential oomlnee
said whether or not Ni.Ion endl the war,
"No matter what be does, it ought to
help me ... " He .aict Nixon should have
ended the war lour yea.rs ago.
McGovern denied that he WU seeking
In advance to blunt the political effect
should Nixon .. tUe the confilct before the
election 13 days hence.
McGOVERN'S STATEMENI' Tuesday
was reminiicent of one by candidate NLI-,
on four years qo when a Democratic
president IUUIOlll1Ced a bombing pause
end broadened peace talks just before
the election. McGovern said be would
applaud Nlxoo JI the President ended the
war but added that Americam shouldn't
forget "he kept it gotng needlessly for
another four years , . "
The South Dakot4 senator said at one
point Tueaday ·that a .....,. accord mw
would not deahvy hll W'tldenUal p-pecta but "Would de>troy Mr. Nixon."
Later, be said It nnlgbt help the President
poUtlcaUy. But he added , ·
"lt would be a very foollsb wter who ,
would vote for Mr. Nixon ln preference to
George McGovern II the Issue II the war.
Mr. Nixoo for many years has supported
American Involvement to Vietnam. Dur·
Ing aU those yeara, I have been. oppoeed
( CAMPAIGN '72 )
to IL So ii, at the eleventh hour, jmt
before we start counting the votes OD
Nov. T, be finaJ1y switcbes his posltfun
and ends the war I don't think the voters are going to say 'Hooray for Mr. N1mnl
I think they're going to say 'We're glad
he finally came around to George
McGovern's position.' "
c1aa.,,es Droptted
The Air Foree bas ruled out
WASJDNGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on's chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman, was
one ot Cive close Nixon associates who
controlled a secret campaign spying and
sabotage fund, The Washington Post
reported today.
The Post said it based the report on in·
fonnation from federal investigators and
accounts of sworn testimony gaven to a
grand jury investigating the JWle 17
break-in at Democratic national bead·
quarters in the Watergate building.
Tbe newspaper said it has been told
that Haldeman, a Nixon aide for 16
years, and the four otben authorized to
make payments from the secret fund
were identified in grand jury testimony
by Hugh W. Sloan Jr., who quit as
treasurer or the Nixon campaign
organization shortly after the Watergate
break-in.
paign, has told the grand jury that one
who received money from the fund was
G. Gordon Liddy, the Post said. Uddy Is
one of seven men under lndictmcqt in
connection with the Watergate break-in,
the incident which set off the disclosures
of an alleged GOP sabotage ring.
The Post quoted federaJ investigators
as saying lhat expenditures of bW>dreds
of thOllsands of dollars -aU approved by
either Haldeman, Stans, M I t c h e J I ,
Magruder or Kalmbach -were made
from the fund to finance an undercover
operaudii" aimed at d I 1.or
0
0..d'1 l f.n t
Democratic candfda(es. • · '
Meantime, Atty. Gen. tuchord Q.
Kleindienst told oewsmen Tuesday
the Justice Department has no "credible
evidence" that Cederal laws were
violated by the ~eged acts of sabotage I
and that be feels no prObe of lHe · allega-
tions is warranted
KJeindienst told newsmen: "Get the
evidence to me that w9U1d indicaie that • I
specific person has violated a specific
criminal law, and my department will in-
vestigate it."
Dav,e~ly Change ·>
•
' ' Beer-stained Bar Becomes Church "
courl·martial charges against DEPUTY Wiii.TE BOUSE press
Maj. Gen. John D. Lavelle, say· secretary Gerald L. WaJTen deelined FORT LAUDERDALE, F1a. (AP) -recollections, but it doesn't boUier the "
tog his firing was puuishment comment on the Post report. He referred The tables down at Sniltt1's Where lbe Rev. Oscar Garcia that IUs oeW church .,
McGOVERN ALSO SAID he thinks his enough for last winter's unau· newsmen to a White House statement old-timers dwelt are on their way out. was once a bar. . 'i
campaign and bJs opposition to the war thorized bombing of N 0 rt h issued to the Post.. saying that "The The beer-stained bar will IOOll.be feJ>lac-''l l!ke the idea,.turning thin4s upside .1 "probably forced Mr. Nixon to do Vietnam. reference to Bob Haldeman is untrue." ed by an altar. . · down,' says the Rev. Mr. Garcia, a Bay J
something that be didn't want to do" in In today's · account and in previous Oo Dec. 1, Smitty's Riverside Bar, of Pigs veteran who was among the ,
t,.Yinf to end the conllict. reports, the Post ruuned these other1! as Jong a favorite haunt of beer. drinkers, prisoners President Kennedy paid ISQ,000 -
Four Sig~tings
11~-Boggs' Hu.nt
Prove Dead-ends
In 'l!ipeecbes, rallles and television ap. controllers of the fund: will .become a haven Of .another sort -to have released from a Fidel Cas&ro.jail. ll
pearances, McGovern aald that Nixon Woman Reports -John N. Mitcbell , former attorney the Jerusalem Baptist Temple. Betty Smith, a Fort Lauderdale widow~ .
can get no setUement terms now that he general and the first director of the Com· '!be transformation might disturb~. who ran tbe bar for 12 years, says it was
coo.Id not have had four years ago. mittee for the Jle..el.ection of tbe Presi· of Smitty's old regulan, now cut off· from "a quiet place where the elderiy could
ANCHORAGE, Alaska CAP) -Hopes
continued to tum into frustrations In the
Search for a ligbt plane missing for nine
days with House Democratic Leader
Hale Boggs and three other persons
aboard.
Four separate sightings• were reported
Tue&<tay, but all turned out to be dead-en4s. as have aU the leads so far In tbe ·
sea'.rch which has covered 148,000 square
miles ol rugged Alaska territory between
Anchorage and Juneau, the path of the
missing plane.
An el~ly equipped HCl30
aircraft was crisscrossing the search
area throughout lbe night WednesdaJ,
and two Coast Guard cutters plied tlle
waters of the Alaska coastline.
McGovern said that is "the tragedy of . Role in 'Plot' denl their place of gossip, solace and famiJiar· come and have• drink o! beer or wine in ,
this whole business of Mr. Kissinger --Maurice H. Stans, former Commerce peace.'' •J
orbiting around the world" in the days Secretary and now director of the Mrs. Smith closed the bar Sept. 1 after ~;
before an election. TAMPA, F1a. (AP) -A 7.6-year~ld Finance Ccxnmlttee to Re-elect the owner Hortensio Delgado refused to •
''Did you make all these sacrifices, Mr. aide to a Republican state legislative President. TWO cat holies renew her lease.
N'txon, to save your own political face candidate sar she infiltrated state head--Jeb Stuart Magruder, onetime White J Delgado's wife said her husband decid·-'
from right-wing criticim.i ?" McGoverp quarters o Democratic presidential House aide and now deputy director of ed to tum the bar into a church after he :1
saJd at a rally on the rainy steps of the hopeful Sen. Edmund s. Muskie during the Nixon campaign committee. Di.e~Reipenge? met the Rev. Mr. Garcia and "the divine ·1
Dayton, Ohio, courthouse. Florida's March primary campaign on lightning" struck him. ~·
"Ending the war is not going to be in-behalf of the GOP. -HERBERT w. KALMBACH of The Rev. Mr. Garcia, 47, says he ·1
terpreted by b).telligent voters as a Patricia "Peg" GriffiQ told the Tampa Newport Beach, described by the-Post as C:!lfc~;'n ~'f:t!&; t!:'a~~jfu discovered religion while in a Cuban jail··,
reason to support Mr. Nixon because it Times Tuesday she was recruited by Nixon's personal .attorney. The White when another prisoner gave hhn a copy ~ would mean that be simply has done Robert Benz,, wbo until last week was House disputes that descn"ption, but says pltebfOrb near the--IriBh Republic of the .,.New Testamenl •· some~'ve been advocating for many campaign manager for GOP Florida Kalmbach bas handled some personal ~ rnay have been • ld.ll~ in Now, every evening, members of the '
years," M¢Govem said later. , House candidate Conway Brock. She said legal matters for Nixon. revenge for the shooting of a part·· new church's ~gatl~nct their i
H al d h hl_, b Be to time Protestant soldier two days ._ .. r. .... e so saJ that South Vietnamese s e was 1.:u Y nz .pose as a pro.-The sabotage fund, according 'to the .. h spok free time at Smitty's, ling pews > President Nguyen Van Thieu apparently Muskie tolunteer. ago, a Bntts army e.sman whe eronce the juke box and pool table ! •--veto power over current effo~-at a uaJI rel! ed lo d ., Post, was a cache of as much as $700,000 said today. stood. , ,...,, '"' "I'm act y ev you un me, held in Stans' off sat ~ • cease-f1te. she told a newsman Tuesday. "This has ice e. The army said one victim was a The tranfonnation of tty's Into a
"We ought to terminate any further been an awful weight 00 my conscience. The J!ost said it has learned that all member of the Irish Republican church is not yet complete. windows l
relationship with this dictator instead of I'd been waiting for that knock on the five men have been questioned b.,)t the Anny and the other also apparently still bear the brand names of popular '
letting him dictate American foreign door, and now 1'ril glad it's finally F.BI about disbursements from the fund. was connected with the tRA. beers and abo~ the door printed in thick
policy," McGovemAld.~~~~~~~~co~m~e~.'-'~~~~~~~~~~~~~S:loan~,__'.:the~e~x~·tt:e~as:u:n~r'.....'.o~f-:t:be:_:cam-:::'.'.:::_~========================='-...:'..W:a~clt'...'.'.le:tte~rs~is"...".the"'....'.w:o:nl"...."B:•:r~.'-'~~-
Pergn Reportedly
To Try Comeback
..
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)· -
Former Argentine dl~to.r
Juan D. Peron, 7,1, wUI return
to Arg'8tina No•• 17 to try to
make a political Comeback,
the newspaper Cronlca ~aid
'I\iesday.
Cronica said Peron would fiy
from Madrid Nov. 16 with bis
present wife, Isabel, and ar·
rive in Buenos Aires the next
day aboard a chartered
airliner.
The newspaper said the
(IN SHORT ... )
preserved body of his former
wife , Eva also would be
brought aboard the same
flight,
Eva, a blonde former ac·
tress,, helped Peron launch his
dictatorship in Argentina in
1945, and married him the
same: year.
e 8u11op ·qu1ts
NEW YORK (AP) -Aller
eight years as presiding
bishop of the 3.5 million-
rnember Episcopal Church,
the lit. Rev. John E. Hines
haa announced plans to resign
laterithis month at the age of
62. I
Bishop Hines, whose term
extends until 1971, said Tue>
day be will tender blx ~igna
tion •t a meeling ol the
Uri Te._....
'-tie• 1•11 .
Newsman Peter Bridge
Jeav .. Es• ex County
Jail In Newark where
be had 1pent 21 days
tor refwing to answer
grand j u r y quesUons
concerning en~.
'
church's l_louse of .Bishops In
Nb. Orleans, effective May,
1974. •. -~ •
·• VnderFi~
BALTIMORE (AP) -The
former security director of the
Atomic Energy Commlss:ion
faces arraignment in federal
court here next week on
charges of attempting to
defraud lhe AEC credit union
out of more than $33,000 in an
alle~ed. shakedown scheme.
William T. Riley also is
charged with filing false fman-
cial statements concerning
money borrowed from other
employes.
• KKK Foe De.ad
ST. MARTINVILLE, La.
(AP) -Former Congressman
Edwin Willis, who a s
chalrman of the former House
Committee OD Un-American
Activities batUed the Ka Klux
Klan, is dead at the age of 68.
Willis died Thursday night.
Services will be held today
at St. Martin of Tours Roman
Catholic Cburch in .this tiny
south Louisiana community
where WUUs was bom.
He bad been in ill health sin~ bis last term. suffering from various ailments.
e lall UprisilllJ
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI)
Police firin8 teargas have
charged 11\e fifth Door of the
Travis County Jail and rescued
three bostag.. held b y
prisoners in an UllSUCCeSSful
escape attempt.
No one was injured. Order
WBI restored abolll an hour
after two jallers and a nurse
were captured by Io u r
prlsonen who tried to trilde
th6 bostagea' lives !or their
freedom lite Tuesday.
Yule Fete
Sehe41tled
. A Orlstmu be.....-wUI be
beld ~~· M al thi!'O!urcb o!
RellgliJus Sclence at Laguna li:::r1 Roid end El Toro
The pij>lle i. Invited . to
brvwR In the boUUque of
handmade Items, m I iil ·a r t
gallery and homemade baked
goods from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The'!' will aloo be a·drawing
tor a flandmode, U.in<b doll.
Sandwl<hes and ·coffee wlll be
served. ·
For more lnlonnatlon, call
Mra. Shirley Mcintyre at
!37·2832 or the diuroh.
_ FISK
SAFTl·FLIGHT
95
e.1f.1S r7llll
W-W~
Pl115 Ftod. Ell.
T• of $1.9f
DUAL WMITEWAU.S WIDE 71 SERIES.TREAD
4 Pol.,.ster Cord 'Ii•• ''"' 2 Fih.191-l•lh
n........n... WM......e II••· ,.....,. ~rtw c .... ,,. ·-:-..;.c~
...... ·1--'i'="-'""'
FISK
AIR
BUENA PARK BUENA PARK .
leach llYcL at Laltwehr •
5301 leach lllvd.
523-3040
UllCOlll at 'lalrl View saas Uiko111 A ....
--1816-5800
' .
FISK
PREMIER
•PLYPOLYUTEACOAD> un:l"TREADDIP'IMI
W1Df71WIEITR1AD'·
WHITEWALL lUI -· ,..,_
~-~-
$16.95 $18.95
17.95 19.95
19.95 21.95
:Z0.95 22.95
21.95 23.95
22.95 ZU5
COSTA MESA e Hclltlor llYd. at Wllsoll
2200 Hao bor lllYd.
548-2082
•
FISK
SAm-Q.ASSIC Xllml .
fOt.YErrtfl COAD/llt8EAOU.. •TID
W10!71 SERIES TREAD 1tlar"' TREAD Dunt
SANTA ANA
Edlngef St. at lrlstol
14001 .... r
546-7832
•
•.
. •
' '
•
"
•
I
I • I
I
DARY PILOT ED ITORIAL PAGE
Good Development Plan·
California's state Parks Department has won ap.
proval for extensive development of the canyon and
coastline taken from Camp Pendleton control last year
at the request of President Nixon.
While the scenic coastline and inland acreage is a
te mpting spot for total exploitation, general plans com·
pleted recently by the state officials show a rare sensi·
tivity for the land. .-....
Except for some intensive development deep ln Ule
canyon \vhere many campgrounds and other facilities
'viii be J>laced, the remainder of San Mateo Canyon will
remain as it is today. The farmlands will continue to
be tilled.
Farther to\vard the coast, the old surfing club area
\\'ill change little, except that all surfers will be welcome
to sample the Onofre break, not a select few.
~1oney is expected to be forthcoming in next year's
budget and construction will begin soon after the cash
is in hand.
U construction indeed follows the master plan, San
Onofre State Park, is destined to be the showpiece that
President Nixon intended when he issued the order last
year opening the federal property.
Zoning for Arts, Crafts
City zoning ordinances usually are quite strict about
separating residential from commercial and manufac-
turing uses, but Laguna Beach city councilmen have
learned that an Art Colony may have special needs in
this regard.
mercial property in addition to their homes. And.. "hile
there's no law against painting at hon1e, finding ade-
quate space can be another problem.
So Laguna soon will have a zone c·alled }f·lB, art.I
and crafts manufacturing, probably located in Laguna
Canyon, where there's still enough room t.o put a good·
sized studio -or maybe a traditional loft or garret -
along with a house. •
And the resident artist or craftsman will have the
added convenience and financial benefit of being able
to step into his nearby kitchen for nourishment between
bursts of creativity.
Co tmt y . Sl1ould Hold Off
A busy group of outraged Palisades residents in
Capistrano Beach is heading toward a showdown battle
over a condominium project planned for 16 acres of land
once intended to be a public park.
And the residents have scored some strong points
in the ~ttle to seek clarification of the chain of title to
valuable properties overlooking Dana Harbor.
So far they have been able to secure Grand Jury
curiosity into land transactions that took place many
years ago.
The issue is a complex web of curious land exchange!;,
and residents have found enough legal docurrients in
county files to justify a deeper probe into ownership
of many parcels of view land which early developers bad
dedicated as parks.
There is the problem, for example, of the artist who
reels the urge to apply brush to canvas at three o'clock
in the morning. I! his studio is not reasonably accessible,
the creative urge may have to be stifled, unless it1s pow-
erful enough to. propel him to his car for a trip to his
\\:orking quarters in the approved commercial zone.
But many artists are not rich enough to rent rom-
Unfortunately, time is running out. Co unty officials
seem in a hurry to approve the condominium proposed
by the Balboa Pacific Company. Action is scheduled for
election day.
Nothing should be decided at the county level until
the well-based concern of hundreds of Palisades resi·
dents is thoroughly explored.
7t's the ultima~ in womens shoe styles ... rnndified
army combat boots!'
Wlwt Adults
Don't Bother
To Consider
FNEY J.HARRI~
Thoughts at Large:
Too few adults bother to consider
whether so many of the attitudes and ac-
tions of young people have arisen
because of "the times" -which is a
vague cop-out -or because we, in-
dividually and coUectively, have lost our
set of values, and retain DO clear un-
derstanding of the proper relationship
between the individ-
ual and society. • • •
Is there no way to
get people to stop
saying "No way ''
with such nauseating
repetitiveness? • • •
The most ineffec.
tual ad I can ever
recall seeing ls one from Ille American
Lamb Council, depicting a buslnessrpan
saying to his colleague: "He's important
to us. Let's take him to a restaurant that
serves lamb." • • •
A parent who breaks his promise to
punish docs as much to violate the child's
trust as 8 parent who breaks his promise
to reward. • • •
Man cannot become an animal without
beccming worse than any ; when he relin-
quishes his hwnanhood be does not sink
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
When. oh when, are the young
girls of Laguna Beach and envir-
ons going to stop taking the risks
of hitchhiking. Two kidnaping and
rape cases and a near-miss re-
cently should be enough warning.
Where's the parental control?
-R.D.G.
TM• ,..,.,,.. ~ ,.....,.. ~ not
~ ........... -~·~·f. s...
y_. "' ,...,. .. ......_ ... o.lly """'·
' to the natural level, at he Imagines, but
to the sub-natural. • • •
""-1>da" fl what our enemies
do; "indoctrination" ii what our friends
do; "enlightenment" is what we do. • • •
~ experienced orator can tell when an
audience turns into a crowd. by the way
it begins to "smell'' of its dominant
passion. • • •
The worst drama critics att those who
either hate or love the theatre; the
former, of course; are bleapacitated by
their-avenilon1. but the latter are oo less
paralyzed by weir adoration. • • •
Should a representative follow the
wishes of his constituency or his own
personal feelings when an issue comes to
a vote? My own view is on the side of
Burke, who said, "Your representative
owes you , not his Industry on1y, but his
judgment; and be betray• it instead of
serving . you if be sacrifices it to your
opinion."
Joe Demands a Fight
Dear President : I. Joe Slkspak .
American, take pen In hand to slick a
bug (excuse the expression) in your ear.
You're In trouble. .
How I know Is I dropPCd by Pl'ldrly's
Place the other nlght. "Give me a Seven
Higb, Paddy," J says . "and your expert
opinion on how the
campajgn'a going."
"What campaign?'·
.. ,.. Paddy.
'iWhy the presi-
dentlal campaign.
Paddy." says I ,
"Don't tell me you
forgot?"
"Not euctly, Joe,"
says Plddy. "But
11'1 ttnd ol. like Montreal playing Texas
in the World Serles. You know there's a
World Seriel going on, but you tune tn
the RoU.r Derby tnmad."
"llOW DO YOU FIGUIUI I~ Paddy!"
1171 L 11·1 mun k's a good, clean,
sllt-•t -~ tbey'n wagln&
'"' tbe ...... ri,111 ! " ""'lbart ri,;: Joe," 118.)'I Paddy.
"Mello"""'' -nmnlng IU'Oltlld the oountry IOCUling the President ol «Ir·
ruptloo, IP)'ina, 1elll111 favon and lleal-
lng the breod out of the moulhl of poor,
h"'!Pl' boblel -nolhln( out of tbe
onliJlary. And the President'• -•fl· tlna In IQ oftlce keeping mum. You can1t
get more ttatamansh.ip than that."
•r1:1ow come he's be l tt g IO
st•telmanJtb!" 111~ I. "A ttalesrnanllke campaign, Joe ," aays
Paddy, polllhln,g a aJua, "11 'what a
polllldali nan. wlien be flcurel he got the
eloction In tbe bolo"
"YOU THINJ tbe President's doing
the r1a11! thlnr.P1cldy!" llYI I.
"Acoordlna lo tbo Polls "" 11," .. y.
P1dd7, "A montll :t&O be'I leading 57-M.
Se ·he k-1111 ~ lbtJt while
McQo...,, -· bll oll .... -be'•
t
( ART HOPPE )
ahead M-29. At that rate, If he doesn't
say a word between now and November,
he'll win ~7. lie will, that b, lf anybody
remembers to vote."
"You don't think they will, Paddy?"
"What you got here, Joe, la a nJce guy
running against tt dlgnlfled statemian
and who c:ires? What the public wants is
a wham-barn slugging match with lots of
blood."
"l !ltt. what they want'• a good clean
fight, right, Paddy?"
"WRONG, JOE. Whal they want'& a
good dirty fight. Why do you think pro-
fessional wrestling outdraws amateur
wrestling! What makOI the Roller Derby
IO popular! Ho" come Bobby Fllcber got
all t-headlines? Thm'1 nothing like
a 1ood dirty ftlht to tum people on."
'"l'beo the Preatdent. •.. "
"The fin! thlna he ou1ht lo do ts '°'
cuse McGovern or belna a textual devlate
who 11 aofl on Communism and practk:ei
verbal lntercour9e In public. Olberwise,
JOf, AmerlCUJ are going to lose Interest
In the d<rnocntU. procw."
"'nlat'a a tough order, Paddy."
"It ts, Joe. But !be President'• 1ot to
put penonal 1JDbltlon aside. For the
rood of the country, he'11ot to 1dhere to
our cherlabed American pollllcal tradl·
uoos and start fi&btlJ>i dirt)'."
TO TELL THE TRUTH. Prtaldent,
Paddy don't tlUnk you 'll do It. He thlnll
you're going to put winning above
everything and ,..ruse lo fight dirty.
Not me, though. I got faith In you,
Hont1t.
Truly Yours,
J .. S!Upot, "'-tcan ·
\
s
Identify Sot1rce of Treats to Foil Sadists
Halloween ·Protection for Children.
To the Editor:
We are now at a time of the year when
our children should be having a fun time.
Halloween is a holiday for our children
and part of the fun is going out all
dressed up and receiving their candy
(treats) and such. But unfortunately
there are a few misle<l or sick people
\\'ho make their treats unsafe.
I as a p1:t.rent don't know these people.
so what can I do? We (parents) end up
throwing the children's treats away
simply because we don't know what is
safe and what isn't.
I HAVE COME UP wllh a aolution 1
feel couJ(J berie!Jt both kids and parents.
I'm goiltg to pu~ "This ~ ~ from
'the llooro Wnily," Oil an my hais for
children. This takes a few minutes and
t1* pamrts will know wbert ft came from
arid It is safe to eat. ,
l do feel It is an idea to benefit every-
one.
RUIB MOORE
JtleGot>el'll Oii War
To the Editor:
1 read with dismay McGovern's pro-
posal for ending the Vietnam war. This
dangerous presentation is notable for
what It leaves undone, rather than what
ii purports to do. In this respect, it is also
dangerously misleading to the public in
seeking ball-soluUona and netting half-
results.
In seeking virtually nothing in return
from our enemy, be gives them false
courage to further aggression by:
(I I IGNORING THE role of Rllssla and
China as supplier of war material to the
North Viets. Our tmilateral withdrawal of
all support would deprive South Vietnam
of the material wherewi thal to defend
themselves unless the Uo.iled Nations ac-
cepts the respansibillty -very unlikely.
(2) Ignoring the POW'1 as one of the
prerequisites to total wilhdrawal and
bombing cessation.
(3) Ignoring the welfare of South Viet-
namese citizens and officials who are
anti· Viet Cong. Remember what happen-
ed to several thousand of them in. the
massacre at Hue!
(4) Ignoring the preaence of 70,000
North Viet troops tn Laos and 60,000 In
Cambodia. Why volUDteer to withdraw
our air force from Tballand without
Isn't It the Truth!
By CARL RIBLET .JR.
The body politic has acquired another
minority . the farmers who have seen
their neighbors sell out to the combines
and take their aching backs and the
certl1ied chc-cks to 1.hl!l city where they
rise with the sun In order to get an early
at.art at lhe pastime they always dream-
ed about -loafing.
"Loafino tm't au iC't cracked
up to be -iC,1 better."
-Dictlonart1 of Opfnion.1
This Is what animal• are loo<t f~r: a
pig Is good tor ham, a eow is good for
milk. a chicken gOOL for atuffin&, a horse
ii 1ood for pllo~~. a do1 hark• and
man la good for woman.
" ••. We aft tolking of iporta and
poliUCI, and aU the wh.Ue our heart.'
are /~t~d with memorle1 Of wome11
Clnd th• capWtc of wom1n."
-Ctmft!.W.. Of A Young Man
1be tmhappiest of voter1 ln this pre-
eloctlon !trtlch has 1ot to be •-who are undecided to vote Republlcatr or
Democratic. They can but expe.rience !eel·
Inga of awmrne lontllt\eu wherever
the)' go, and not even th1 poll-takers rush
to dial lbelr numben any mOre.
"It 11 better to be alont than in ill
COl!lpcmy." -PrOW!'b
\
( MAILBOX )
Letters from readers are welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
niessoges in 300 words or less. Th.e
right to co11.de11.se letters to /it apace
or eliminate libel U resertf'ed. All
letters must include signature and
mailing address, but namts may be
withheld on request if IUffident.
reason U apparent. Poetry will flat be
publilhed.
reciprocal withdrawals or enemy troops?
We have only 700 troops in Laos and none
In Cambodia as of Oct. J, despite in-
ferences to the contrary.
McGOVERN DOES NOT address
himself to consequences beyond this elec-
tion. He obviously places more credence
in the enemy than he does in his own
govemmenl His naivete in relying on the
questionable compassions of lbe North
Vietnamese reminds me of the postman
and the vicious dog in the yard: when the
owner assured the postman that the dog
would not bite, he replied, "Lady, you
might know it and I might know it, but
does the dog know if?".
Assumptions are dangerous anytime,
but in the business of war and peace.
they can be deadly. It's not too smart lo
leave our enemy in better shape than our
allies. The so-ca.Ued peace proposal is
really a temporary disposal typifying the
short-sighted ineptness of all too many
McGovern campaign utterances.
CALVIN G. SIEGLE
ltl<'!Govel'll J111presses
To the Editor:
When I moved to California over 30
years ago. expensive surveys on mass
transit were being made. They've been
making them ever since -spending
fortunes .
L wonder how many of the Seattle -or
Disneyland-type elevated can could have
been built down the center of freeways,
and on other routes too, for the money
spent on these surveys.
One hindrance is the vast lobbies
spent by on . construction, auto manufac-
turers, auto clubs, etc. Another is the
fact that the people in position to do
something are comfortable in their
autos.
WREN GEORGE MCGOVERN .,;d he
would convert some of the defense plMIS
and pt op I e , (including retraining
them) kilo mass tranSit systems, it im-
pressed me.
He also impressed me when he recom-
mended 8 minimum income tax. There
are !="shelters" that att Justified, but
anyone living well should pay some tax.
Yesterday, incidentally, he impressed
me again when he said we should con-
centrate on saving lives instead of saving
face .
JOHN ADAMS
D01ahle Agents\'
To the Editor :
Along with everything else, McGovern
has changed his stand on Richard Nixon .
Nixon was cunning, tricky and sly. No'v
~fcGovern bas decided that he is dull and
stupid . That he is so dumb he hires an
ex-F.B.I. agent who isn't smart enough
to do a simple bugging job without being
caught. He then hires a lawyer who ian't
even intelligent enough to get on the
McGovern campaign team. The three
stooges could make that team.
These guys lfOund just dumb enough to
be working for McGovern instead of NiJ·
on. Could they be double agents?
JIM BOLDING
J>ropa1ltlon1 1 and 14
To the Editor :
On Friday, Oct. 13, S.ddleback
Cc-llege's ataff voted unanimously to sup-
port Propo$ltion 1 and to reject
Proposition J4 on the Nov. 7 ballot.
A "yea'' vote for Proposition I means
We're Burying Ourselves
Things a columnist ml:;ht never know
U he didn't open hls mall :
Civilization is now threatening to bury
ltselI in Its own debris. Each American
generates a Ion of solid waste, or
garbage, a year. The total would cover
Manhattan Island 13 feet deep. Ir you had a headache ln ancient
Greece, the physician might try to cure It
by drawing blood
from your head.
In the !Ith ~
tury two miners In
Nevada built a house
made of stones en-
crusted with "black
11tulf." The next year
they learned that thr
black stuif w.u o
rtclr silver ore, and
they mined their borne for m.ooo. Which
proves I.ht adage that you don't have to
t.r1vcl far to find opportunity.
IF YOU RECEIVED an lnvllatlon ln a
mesu.ge siped "-Pot us," would you ~c.
ce pt It? You'd probably be sorry later II
you didn 't In the ~iorsc Code, "Potw"
stands for "The Prealdent of the Unlttd
StatH."
Anlnmls don't seem to be alfccled by
poison ivy, bul people can get 11 r11sh
from touching the fur of a dog th'at h11s
wandC!rt-d through H patch of thlll thrt-e-
lured plant
Wh<, reaUy runs your household? In old
8ulgari1, after their marrtqe, the bride
(..__H_AL __ n_oYLE ___ )
and bridegroom ea=h took hold of a piece
of Wedding bread and tugged hard.
Whoever broke off the bigger plece was
•upposed to be the boa In tho family.
QUOTABLE NOTABLES: "An op-
Umlst Is aomeone who tells you to cheer
up when things are going hla way." -
Edward R. Murrow.
Sweet labor: It takes a lot of work to
make honey. One study indicated that
40,000 bee-load• or nectar were requlrcd
to produce a Pound of finished honey.
Anoth.:r study by the U.S. Department or
Agrleulture, In which the bees had to
make a lf.mUe round trip for each load
of nectar, estimated they new 840,000
milea to create a pound of honey.
Shape of what's to come: Wlll the
American women of the future be 11haped
more like ll giraffe? Probably not, but if
present trends continue, as ltudled by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture, sbe
wtll be taller and. In proportion to her
btlght, she'll have A smaller bust.line,
waist and hips. "·
WOR111 REMF:MBERING : "Thia you
can believe: when a younglter today
hears a bad word, It goes in one e11r -
and comes out hi.I mouth."
FICl file : A t,... llOAis up about 1,111/f
that S160 million will be raised for coin-
munlty college construction statewide:.
Monies for this purpose will accrue Iron\
the inlerest on general obligation bonds
oJ the state, the least expensive way or
financing .
Enrollments in Califofnia community
colleges will increase to one million
students by 1975 and this creates an
urgent need ror more claS!f'OOms.
laboratories, libraries and vocational
education facilit ies.
SHOULD TIUS proposi tion fail, local
property taxes will be lbe sole sourct o[
revenue for conJtructillg community co&.-
lege buildings.
Proposition 14 purports to reduce tax·
es, but It would actually raise them for
nearly everyone. Proposition 14 will not
generate sufficient revenues for stale
and local school districts. Proposition 14
would cripple local government, and
severely damage the public schools. Both
Govemor Reagan and former Governor
Brown are vehemently opposed to the
passage of Proposition 14.
ANDREW KISH
Bond Committee Cbairman
Saddleback College
Dealh J>e11alt11
To the Editor:
Regarding the letter from Roger Wtst
(DAILY PILOT, Oct. l8J about the dealb
penalty.
Mr. We11t concludes his letter with
"How many executions has Mr. Barley
witnessed?" Well, I might ask him,
"How many eold-blooded murderi have
you witnessed?"
Perhaps you would be sickened by the
innocent victims of these murders U you
were there. But you see, the victim bas
no voice to protest his death. We can't
ask him what be would consider ap-
propriate punishment for the person who
killed him .
One thing is for sure, wilh capital
punishment , you don't have to worry
about second offenders.
MRS. LINDA BAKER
in Garbage
tons of water to make a ton of wood •••
Football'!! first mascot was Handlome
Dan. a bulldog adopted by Yale un-
dergraduates in 1890 ... Some kinds of
goldfish are gray, and aome oriental
varieties have been known \o live 70
yer.rs ... Fish, like people, catch colds
and get upset stomachs.
It was Jule& Podell, owner of the
Copacabana nia:bt club, who obl!erved,
"A genlt11 ii someone who can ett his
name off a malling list for jW\k mail.•
ORA.NOi COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robfrt N. Weed, PublUlltr
T"°'"41 Ketoll, Editor
Albert W. Bout
Edltorlol ~ Bdilor
The tdltortai pA1te of ~he Dall)' Pilot leeM to lnlonn and 1Um1f•
l11c reeidtrt by itttcnlln1r: thh
ne¥.>tNIJJCr't oplnlnnt •nd com-
mentary on t°'HCI or lnl(rtsl 111,t 1l3nlr1~. b)' pnwtd.Jnf & ~
for the cllpi:~n tll OW' n!lden'
oDlnlon., and by ..-t!M!nUl'llf -Ow dlvrno vt~polnt1 ot lnfojme« .._
1crvM"t &l\d spokHmen on &aplica of lhc day.
Wednesday, October 26, 1972
• c
a
1f.....to
lean
:held 1
125 far
A
1lawye •
tum
,last F
Judge
is pr
Ha
• 1file
on c
custo
SA
state
has
decei
and • VI
man
kidn
due ti
Visa!
$300,
rel
was
Mun
onle
bail.
preli • SA
Mod
has
days
De
an a
A
8.
that
had
bis
dus
15
cide
Sept
•
Corona
Will Seek
' .
' I
1Freedom
I
I FAIRFIELD (AP) -Juan
Corona'• attorney says he will
j appeal In an attempt lo win
lfreedom on bill for the Mex·
ican defendant who has been
\~'1a~~ m:~:~.the tilling of
A bail requ~t by defense
lawyer Richard Hawk was
c-_-~B~RI~E~F='S==) UPITt~
Still Stlft!k
, turned down without comment ,last Friday by superior Court Salvage crews planned to tug at a stranded freighter at high tide again today
Judge Ricllard E. Patton, who to free the 500-foot vessel from rocks near Los Angeles Harbor. Efforts failed
is presidln& at COrona's trial. Tuesday to break the S.S. Liberty ManUfacturer loose because of anchor slip-
Hawk said Tuesday be will page, according to the coast Guard. Part of the cargo has been unloaded. · 1flle an appeal at an -----~-"-----------'--'-'-'--'-'--.:'.::...:C:::..=:=...=:.::::=::_-
unspecllled data with the Slate
Court of Appeal.
· • Firm I n d icted
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
federal grand jury here has in-
dicted a swimming pool sales
firm and three of Its officers
on charges of failing to notify
customers of the right to
cancel contracts within three
business day• of signing ..
Nanled In the tlkxiwlt In·
dlctmeot announced Tueaday
were Sunsef Pools East Inc., a
franchised dealer that sells
'and Installs pools, and tis of-
ficers In Upland. e Bridge Prohe
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
state public works director
has stepped up the in-
'vestigatlon of what went
wrong and caused the collapse
or an uncompleted bridge In
Pilsadena last Wednesday.
James A. Moe said Tuesday
that be bad beefed up the in-
vestigation team in Pasadena,
adding four add!Uonal experts,
blcludlng Dr. George Housner,
·a prpJ._ of structural
engineering at Ca 11 ro rn I a
Institute of Technology In
Pasadena. Moede s c r I bed
Housner at "a world-renowned
expert In selsmlc and dynsmlc
forcea.'' e Deceit Charged
LONG BEACH (AP) -Mid-
dle-claaa Americans a r e
"ignored and brushed aside .. . ' while special Interest groups
compete for influence in an
''elitist· power st,ructure,"
American party presidential
candidate John G. SChm.Jtz of
Tustin said here.
Schmitz aaid tbe "forgotten
Amerlcana1' are or d l n 1 r y
workers and young Americans
''who will not play the 1ame of
political action according to
the present rules."
In remarks to students at
Cal State Long Beach, the
lame duck Orange County con-
g re 111 man said suc h
Americans are "asked for
trust, but rewarded with
deceit -taken for granted,
and soomed." e Man Arraigne d
VISALIA (AP) -A Tulsre
man hu been amtlgned on a
kidnaplng charge In the al>
duction of Michelle Wlebea of
Visalia. held last March for
$300,000 ransom. She was
released unbanned.
Charles Ronald Wilhelm, 25,
was arraigned 1n Visalia
Municipal court Tueoday and
ordered held tn lieu of $50,000
ball. He was scheduled for a
preliminary hearing Dec. 4. e Poison Sprage d
SACRAMENTO (AP) - A
Modesto crop dusting service
has been shut down for 15
days by the state Agriculture
Department for spraying
poi9oDOUS materials on three
people and for fl y I n g
dangerously low while dusting
an alfalfa field.
Agriculture Director Charles
B. Christensen said Tuesday
that Walter M. Fountaln Jr.
had both his pilot's license and
hls license to operate a crop
dustlftl service mspended for
15 days because of the in-
cident. The suspension began
Sept. 24, Christensen said .
'Actress Claire Windsor Dies '
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
Claire Wind.!or, who came
here as a star-struck girl from
Seatile and became an actress
in 45 silent movies and seven
talkies in a 30-year career, ls
dead of an apperen1 heart at·
tack. She was 'TS.
Miss Windsor died Tuesday
at Good Samaritan Hospital a
few hours after she collapsed
at her Los Angeles home.
After studying voice and
piano at a Seattle con-
servatory, Miss Windsor came
to Hollywood to work as an ex-
Milk Slogan Altered
MODESTO (UPJ) -The endorsed milk in the electronic
California dairy industry's edla
sprightly campaign to give m The . campaign was so suc-
milk sex appeal bas an allergy cessf\.il that a recent survey ~em. that bod showed 88 percent o r
does ::m'need mn:_very Y r.alifcrnla's COMUlllers could
Fer montm, the California remember the motto.
Mllk Advisory Board has run a But some doctors,
radio, television and blllbnard particularly e I I er i I s t s ,
lid..rtlslng campaJgn built cllallenged the claim that
around the alogan, 0 Every "every body needs milk." The
body needs milk." · Federal Trade Commission
'!be bodies on ttie billboards aJao began asking questions.
provided oome of Ille finest So the milk board annoonoed
dleelecake tnd: bee f cake Tuesday that Its slogan has
along the state's highways, been changed lo: "Milk Has
while athletaa and enlerlelners Something for Every Body."
3ea
' \
tra. She was "discovered" by
director Allan Dwan and ap-
peared in "To Please One
Woman" with Edmund Burns
In 1921.
In addition to films, she
loured in Al Jolson's road
show "Wonder Bar" in 1933.
Her last rum appearance
was in "The Last Act" in 1952.
Miss W'mdsor was married
to actor Bert Lytell from 1925
to 19'Z7. Lytell d1ed in 1954 at
69.
The actress was born in
Olathe, Kan., the same home
town as Buddy Rogers, hus-
band of actress M a r y
Pickford. A personal friend,
Rogers said Tuesday the ac-
tress "was considered one of
the most beautiful" of the
silent screen era.
He said MGM $0lected the
name Windsor to replace her
real name, Olga Cronk,
because "they thought she
looked like · royalty." Her
name later was legally
changed to. Claire Windsor .
Hie favortte h•no-up. You. For • mere 3.88 Tum your
favorite picture Into a big 2' x 3' poster-just bring In any
black-and-white or color print (no negatives, please) and
you'll have your black-and-white poster beck In 2 weeks.
(Your print will be returned unharmed) Tum yourself
tn.to somebod)'.'1 favorite hang-up now.
..
Thi• ••rv6c• I• OnlJ •Y•ll8ble •t:
Winds
Spread
Blazes
Powerful, dry winds have
turned "controlled burns" into
fast moving forest fires In the
Six Rivers National Forest. A
Wien power line bas srtrked
another blaze in Plumas Na-
tional Forest, the U.S. Forest
Service reported today.
The Six Rivers C I r e s
scorched between 175 and 200
acres Tuesday night as 300'.le
Z50 men worked toward con-
tainment. Gt"ound crews and
aerial tankers worked on a 46-
acre blaze near Orleans in
Humboldt County, and IOO
men fought several rires of
five to 10 acres in the Gasquet
region of Del Norte COunty.
The forest service also
reported fires of 15 acres and
three acres on the Mad RJver.
Aboot SO acres w e r e
blackened by a stubborn forest
ttre wtUch burned out of con·
trol ln the Feather River Can-
yon near Oroville.
Jaoet Lambert or the
Oroville Ranger station said
200 fire fighters were ham-
pered by high winds and steep
terrain.
DAILY PILOT WrdnHday, Octobrr 25, 1972 . .--~------~---~------'
Jurors Sequestered
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The just to the 5eqUeWat1on. of Calmtlat'a ahootl.ng through
judge presiding over the Lrlal The sequestration followed news coverage.
of lhree men charged with at· 1t1urphy's denial of a mistrial The 'l1ntary brothers ant1
tempting to b I a c k m a I l motion made by defense at-Bffi:eda were named In an
suburban Irwindale Mayor toroey Martin Z In ma n, April 28 Lai Angeles County
Richard Diaz has sequestered representing Joseph an d Grand Jury indictment , dlarg·
the jury in the wake or the Perlee Tinlary, and attorney ing them with conspiracy to
shooting of a key pr~Uon Joseph Reichman, repre21en-commit criminal libel, ex-
witness. ting Irwindale otty Coon· tortldn, admlnl!tratkln of a
Superior c:ourt J u d g e cilman Richard Breceda . restrieled dangerous drug, ad-
Thomas Murphy took the ac-DeniaJ of the motion came ministration of ch~orm
uon Tuesday. R i c h a r d after Murphy q u e s t i o n e d with intent lo assist a f .
Calmelat, an u n i 0 d i ct e d jurors for more than an hour false imprisonment and al
coconspirator in the case, was 1_a_bou_<_w_ha_t _t_he_y_ha_d_le_am_ed __ Cil...cpu_la_tio_n_. _____ _
shot in the eye Saturday night
when he answered the door at
his La Puente h o m e .
Calmelat, who is hospitalized
in Los Angeles, was scheduled
to testify this week.
IM~ .. ·li"rMlll)
What do doctors recommend
forpatients in pain?
MURPHY sent •.he seven-Doctors all over the country dispense over 50,000,000
woman, five-man Jury lo a f th lab! ! ! th . . h downtowo hotel and Ofdered 0 ese e s 0 e1r patients eac year.
the trial rece53ed.untJI Thurs· There arc many medications a tors r('C(lmmend tno1t than any
day to allow the Jurors to ad-phy1ician or denli11t can pre-oth"r lending tablet.
acrihe for pain. Some a rt' na r· Headache and dental pain i.'I
cotic, many are availab](• only relieved incredibly fast; minor Plane Repair on pretieription. But then• i11 one pains of a rthriti8 ore depend-1w.in reliever, available without ahly eaill...:I for houn1 ; evvn the
µre.cription, doc!Or-1' dis1wnse 11ches and pains o{ colds and tlu
JOHANNESBURG, S 0 U th again and again ... Anaci n. rr'8pond tu Anacin. So tJie tl.'n·
Africa {AP) -South African Each year, doctors gi\'e over sion and depression Utat can be
Airways has budgeted $530,000 50.l_>00.~0 A!1ac i~ tablets to caused hy sucb pain will be w ·
to repair a Boeing 727 airliner th~1r pahents 1n pain. If d~tors lievrd too. And millions take
hijacked lo Malawi ln May. t~mk enough about Anacin to Anacin without stomach up&et. The pl dispense all these tablet.a, what When you're in pain, why . ane ~as raked b~ better recommendation can you don't you follow the practice of
machine gun fire from Malawi ask when you are in pain? so many doctors and take the
soldiers before the two hi-You see, Anacin contains tablet a doctor might give you.
jackers surrendered. more of the pain relie}i' doc· in hi.a own office. 'Thke Anacin•.
Our 'Tique' draperies are
machine washable,
tumble drya~le,
non-fadeable*
and unbeatable!
Naturally; there's
cotton in the blend.
10~~-
In addition to all this, '11que' draperies have an inaul•Ung acryllo
roam back. And they come in lots of terrific colors 11iat'll mill:
or match your decor. Valances and tiebacks are available too.
And, If we don't have your size In stock (which isn't likely)
1
w1'U
ru1h..order it. Cott>n/rayon Ja~u11rd blend.
50ll:63" ................. -..• _.,, 9.55 100•0 '" 27 41 ·-.......................... '
75,53· ........................... 17 .84 125,53• ........................... 28.42
75x84" ........................... 21.73 125ll:84" ........................... 33.77
100x63• ........................ -. 23.11 150ll:84" ........................... 39.94
•w11hln three years of purchase, we will r~place lhese draperies~
dr1perlu of lhe aarna or equivalent qu11ity ii notlceablt ladlng OCCl.ltl. contact u1 for Mrvk:t.
JCPenney
The values are here every day.
Hunth19ton ... ch end Newport Beech.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following stores:
HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntlr19ton Beach, (714) B'll.mt FASHION ISLAND, Newport Be~ch, (71 4) 644-2313
·• •!
'·
HARBOR .CENTER, Costa M111, (71<1j ~I
"
..
Emotional
filnesses
Not Myth
By OR. STEINCROHN
• Dear Dr. Steincrohn: It's
just a fancy name concoc ted
by doctors -psychosomatics.
Now, don't you think it's
overdone ? -~1r. L.
COMMENT: Underdone. not
overdone. Honestly, frankly, I
believe so. f\.1any so-called
··physical" complaints are Wl·
diagnosed or misdiagnosed
simply tiecause the patient's
emotions are overlooked as a
possible cause.
How can 1 con~·ince you, !\tr.
L., that emotions affect the
organs of our body? Here, I
think. arc some simple ex·
amples.
\Vhen you '>'·ere a youngster,
did you ever blush when
b a sh f u I ? Psychosomatics:
DOCTOR IN
THE HOUSE
your emotions and mind ac-
ting on the blood vessels in
your skin.
In high school or college
before taking a final ex3m. did
you suddenly develop the urge
to .go to the bathroom?
Answer : Psychosomatics.
. Were you ever "scared out
of your wits" in some sudden
situation that endangered your
lite? What happened? Did
your heart pound? Did your
mouth go lky? Did your h:inds
sweat? 11( y_ou could h:sve
looked in a mirror at the time
you would have seen that your
pupils were much larger than
normal.) Heart. mouth, hands,
eyes -all affected by cme>
tion s. An s wer:
P15Ychosomatics.
Now. how does all this In-
volve the probability that
nerves and exaggerated emo-
tions can affect the stomach
and cause gas and discomfort?
That they can disturb the i~
te.stines so that diarrhea and
cramps result? And produce
headaches day after day? And
scores of other compla ints?
Better believe it :
Psychosomatics isn 't just a
fancy word. The doctor who
overlooks emotions in his pa-
tient may be missing the
diagnostic boat.
For r.trs. I.: I believe in
periodic self-examination o{
breasts by women. Early
discovery of a small lump has
saved many lives. Your own
family doctor or gynecologist
will give you specific direc-
tions on how to gc> about it.
For Mr. and Mrs. D.: I
won't go into the moral con-
sideration c>f "who gave it to
whom." What I am especially
gratified to hear is that both
vou and your husband have ihe courage to go to your own
family doctor for treatment of
gonorrhea.
These days when so many
still look upon VD as a
"shameful disease" rathtr
than as simply 1 "disem". lt
is reassuring to knOW that lhe
barriers are gradually being
broken . Only In this way will It
be possible to make any in-
roadi; against the vast and
tenacious problem t b I t
venereal disease poses today.
Dear Dr. Ste.lhcrohn: l am
11. I reall:ied I probably hod
gonorrhea. 1 have t w o
.,..onderful l)Brents. 1 told them
about It. They took me to our
doctor who truted me ~nd
cleared II up qulckly. My
parents gave me a good talk·
ing to, but not once was there
evt.n any hint of any kind of
punishment. I've ltame4 my
lesson. I wish all kids coold
confess to their pareuts llko I
did .'' -Mr. X.
Experience has proved that
10 bo lel Is to Invite trouble
healthWl1e M:va Dr. Steincrnhn
In hla boo kilt, ·"Watch Your
~t Becau'° Fal Can Kiil Voul .. .For a copy, write blm
'
Wfdntsda)' Octobtr 2~. 1972 Wldnt!doy, October 25, 1972 s PILOT -ADVERTISER ,f 3
Fashion Island, Ne Beach
I
• • •
STARTS THURS 10:00 ~.M ••.• s~rry • • .NO PHONE Oft MAIL: ORDERS!
MAIN LEVEL
MEN'S CLOTHINIO-NEWPOIT IEACH
427 C•su•l Slacks. Group I. Orig. 4.98.7.98 .... NOW 1.88
360 C.su•I Sleck1 . Group 11. Orig. 5.98-9.98 .... NOW l.88
42 Oron Slocks ............................................ _ ... NOW l.n
30 Double Knit Sporl Co•ts ............................. NOW 27.88
14 Me n's Suits. (wool & part wool)
Ori9. 60.00-70.00 ........................................ NOW 24.00
33 Better Suit1. !double knits &wool blends !.
Ori9. 80.00·90.00 ..... ." ...... ··-················-· .... NOW 44.00
MEN'$ FURNISHINGS-NEWPORT llACH
47 Fa shion Width Ties. Orig. l .50 ........... _ ....... NOW 1.88
20 Stripe Ties. Orig. 3.50 ................................ NOW .88
60 Sun Viso"-Orig. 1.00 ......................... _ ....... NOW .44
200 "Over The Celf" Socks. Orig. 1.22 .... _ ........ NOW .18
60 ''Frasier''Ties. Orig. 2.50 ........................ -.. NOW .88
lS Long Sleeve Knit Shirts. Orig. 6.98 .............. NOW ·4,99
51 Red/White/Blue Tenk Tops. Orig. 3.98 ........ NOW 2.88
20 Dress Shirts , L/S. Orig. S.98 ........................ NOW 1.18
40 Seersucker Strip•s Sport Shirts. Orig. 5.98 .... NOW .88
26 Crepe Sporl Sh irts, Solid Color, Orig. 5.98 .... NOW 1.88
20 S/S Well•c• Beery Knits. Orig. 3.98 ............ NOW 1.88
50 Arch ie Bunker T-Shirls. Orig. 2.98 ....... _ ...... NOW .88
18 P.ijemes-Size Smell. Orig. 5.00 ..... _ ........... NOW 1.88
FAMIL 'I' SHOEs-NIWPORT IEACH
20 Girls ' Dress & C:asuel. Orig. 4.99-8.99 .... NOW 2.IM.88
30 Boys' Dress & Casual. Orig. 7.99-9.99 ...... NOW 3.U-4.18
29 Women's Dress. Orig. 9.99.14.99 ............ NOW 6.88-8.88
26 Women's C•sual. Orig. 11 .99 .................. NOW 8.88
45 Men's Dress & Cesui1I. Orig. 10.99-12 .99 NOW 4.88-6.88 ·
10 Men's Golf Shoes . Orig. 12.99 ................ NOW 9.88
\ WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR-NEWPORT llACH
400 Stre~ch Denim Pents ............................ NOW
100 Long Sleev•.Shirts ............................. NOW
18 Pi1nt Tops, Prints. Orig. 9.00-11 .00 .... NOW
21 Long Sleeve Cesuel Long Dr•sses.
Ori9. 11.00 -........................................ NOW
JUNIOR SHOP-NEWPORT HACH
78 Pcs. Coordini1te Cleerence.
Ori9. b.00-10.00 ................................ NOW
10 Pcs. Applique 'Tops. Ori9. 6.00 ... ,._.NOW
20 Pcs. Oolm•n Sleeve Sweaters.
Oti9. 7.00 ....................................... -... NOW
25 Prs. Feshion Je•ns. Orig. 7.00-8.00 .. NOW
47 Pcs. Swimweer I Bikinis) • t
Oc;9. 10.00-IJ.OO .............................. NOW
20 Pcs. Basebell Jaclc:ets.
Ori9. I 5.00-25.00 ·--···························NOW
2J Pcs. Short Sleev• Bodyshirls. '
Ori9. 9.00 ............................................ NOW
40 Pcs. Cotton Tenlc Tops.
Ori9. 4.00-4.50 ···--····················-··-···NOW
-" 1-" 6-18-1.11
8.88
4.81°7.88
4.88
4.11
4.88-5.11
2.n.7.ft
11.118-20.Q
6.88
2.11
IRIDAL GOWN5-NEWPORT WCH
20 Brid•I & Formal Weer ............. NOW 20°/o to l0•/0 Off
1 Bridel Gown. Siz• I 0. Orig. 180.00 ----·--···----NOW 79.81
1 Brid•I Gown. Size I . Orig. 200.00 ................ NOW 69.88
WOMEN'S llESSls-fllWPOIT IEACH
Gr°"p I. Orig • .12.00-14.00 ·········-·---NOW 9.11
G•oup II. Orig. 15.00-18.00 ............. _NOW 12.81
Group Ill. Ori9. 19.00°20.00 ................. .NOW 14.81
JO Better Dr•sses & Pant Dresse1 ........ NOW 20•/o.JO•/e Off
35 Wom•n's Uniforms .................... .,.. ............ NOW 6.ff.7.99
WOMEN'S COATS Ir JACKETS-NIWPOIT llACH
20 Group I. Coats, Jeclc:•ts, Capes ......... NOW S.11-14.11
30 Group II. Cotti, Ji1cket,11 Ce,,-s. --.. NOW 18.18-22.11
18 Wiodbr .. ko•J•ck•ts. o;19. 1.00.1 0;/)0 NOW S.118-7.111
24 Plush Pile Jackets. ----··-·-·····-----·--··NOW 24.11
JO S•e-Thru Vin'yl Re incoth (final Pric•l NOW 1.44
WOMEN'S ACCISSOllU-NIWPOIT IEACH •
51 lodie1' H•odb•gs. Orig. 4.00-1 l.00 .... NOW Z.ll·t.11
242 L•di•s' Wi9s. Orig. 19.00-25.00 ....•..• NOW 1.n-10.11
41 Lodios' Umbnllos. Orig. 4.00-6.50 ·-·-·NOW ,lt-J.11
29 Ledie1' Gloves. Orig. 2.00.J.00 ____ NOW • .44
169 L•dies' Jewelry. Orig. 2.00-l.OO .... -.:.NOW M
HOSIERY DIPT.-111\woaT llACH
Stretch Pentle Hose ...................... -...... -.NOW .77
240 ladies' Penti• Host ................... ------~OW lf1,n
200 Knee HI Socks. Ori9. 1.00 -1.25 ............ f1"N .U
15 Geymode Ribbed Tl9hh. Orig. ),00·--·--NOW 1.11
LINGE~ll Ir SLEEl'WIAI om .-lllWPOIT lllACH
138 Ledles' loungew1•r. Orig. 7.00-11.00 NOW l .11-14.81
34 L•dios' Body Shirts. Orig. 6.00-9.60 •... NOW 1.88·3.lt
60 L•dies' Nylon Briefs ............................. NOW , 050
54 'l•dlos' Nyloo Bri•fs ............................. NOW 3/1.25
UPPER LEVEL
DRAPERY DIPT~NEWPORT IEACH
150 Pr. Asst. Tier Curt•ins. Orig. 1.12· I .88 .... NOW .44
100 Pr. A1st. Ti•r Curtain1. Orig. l .99 ............ NOW 1.44
100 Pr. Asst. Pinch Pl••t Curl•ins.
Ori9 .. 5.~9-6.99 .............. -........................ NOW 2M
61 Pr. Feshion Rite Drepes, Orig. ).50°8.00 NOW .44-1.44
GIRLS' DEPT.-llfWPORT IEACH . -
21 T ~rry Pf•ysuits. 4-6x. Orig. 5.00 _ .......... -NOW .. ··-~-2.88
43 Dresses. 4-6x. Orig. 6.00-7.00 ................ NOW 3.81 4.U
14 Dresses. 4-6x. (Final Cle•nup l .............. NOW 1.88
30 Short Shorls. 3-6x. I Fine I Cleenup I ........ NOW .44
16 Dr•sses. 7-14. Orig. 8.00 ..................... _.NOW •5.U
69 Dresses. 7-14. Orig. 6.00-7.00 ................ NOW J,la.4.88
26 Dresses. 7-14. (Final Cleenupl ................ NOW 1.88
46 Knit T°/s. 7-14. Orig. l .59-5.00 ............ NOW 1.88
21 Hoode Sweatshirls. Orig. 2.59 ................ NOW 1.11
24 Feshion Ankle P•nts. 7-14. Orig. 4.00-6.00 NOW 2.88
86 Bikini Swimsuits. 7-14. (Final Cl••nupl .... NOW .88
73 See-Thru Vinyl R•incoets. 7-14 ............... NOW 1.44
85 ~lips & P•tti-pents. 7-1'4. Orig. 1.00-2.98 NOW .44
21 Jr. High Chembr•y Je•ns. Orig. 7.00 .... NOW 4.11
JO Jr. High Fashion Jeens. Orig. 6.00 ........ NOW 3.11
12 Jr. High Long Dresses. Orig. 15.00 ........ NOW 8.81
INFANTS' DEl'T.-NEWPOIT llACH
18 Gift Boxed Playsuits. Orig. ).00 .................... NOW 1.88
14 Sift Boxed Pleysuits. Orig. 4.00 .................... NOW 2.88
60 Infants' Wet•rproof P•nts ............................. NOW 6/.88
' ~'~~~-·-o_v_s_·_o_EPT~-~-IWP~-0-RT~llEA~C-H~~~.......J
140 Socks. Ori9 •. 50-1.00 ............................ NOW -33-.77
11 Koll Sport Shilts. Ori9. 5.00-J.OO ........ NOW 1..88-5.88
8 Pejemes. Orig. 2.29-2.49 ........................ NOW .88
11 Boys' Suits. Orig. 15.98 ........................ NOW 4.88
15 Boys' Western Jackets. Orig. 7.98 .... _ .. NOW 3.18
18 .Corduroy Ji1ckets. Orig. 9,98-15.98 .... NOW 3.88-7.88
18 Belts. Ori9. 2.50-l.98 ............................ NOW 44-.88
54 Boys' Ti•s. Orig. 1.25.2.25 .................... NOW .44
TOWEL AND IEDDING om~NEWPORT IEACH
3 Bl•nlc:ets Twin or Full. Ori9. ).66 ............... _ ... NOW 1.11
10 Electric Bl1nlc:ets Queen Size. Orig. 31.00 •... NOW 13.88
1 King Size Spreed-red. Ori9. 27.00 .............. NOW 14.18
2 Queen Size Spreeds, Gold, Orange.
Orig. 25.00 -·······-···-··---·-·--·······-··············NO'fl 14 ... 4 Twln Size Spre•ds. Green end White.
Ori9. 22.00 ··························-·······-················-NOW 11.U
12 Terrycloth Beech Coverups. Ori9. 12.00 ........ NOW 3.U
15 Terrycloth Beech Begs. Orig. 5.00 ................ NOW 1.88
FASHION FAlllCs-NEWl'ORT IEACH I
100 yds. Asst. Cottons. 36" Wide. Orig .. 59-1 .59 NOW .48
140 yds. Brushed Cotton Solids. Orig. 1.98 .......... NOW 1.22
50 yds. Polyester Knits. Orig. 4.99-5.44 ............ NOW 1.88
150 yds. Wild Bergicene Prints. All Cotton.
so ~J!~·P!i!:st~~··o·~·~·.;·1;··K~it--P~i~t~·:·o~;g·.--s:99 ·~g~ ~:::
20 "Bembi'' Stitchery Kits. Orig. 4.99 ................ NOW l .88
15 Summer Scene Stitchery Kits. Orig. 8.99 ...... NOW 6.88
12 lnstnJction Books for Knit F•shions. Ori4 1.50 NOW .99
HOME DECOUTOI SHOP-NEWPORT IEACH
l 6 Ft. Gr1ndfathor Clock. Ori9. 425.00 ........ NOW 2n.oo
1S Herb Plequ•s. Ori9. 2.89 ............................ NOW 1.22
l Ti1ble Lamps. Orig. 29.98-39.98 ................ NOW 11.81
2 T•ble L•mps. Orig .. 21.98 ............................ NOW 14.118
4 Psyeh1d•lic Light Boxes. Orig. 1<4.98 ............ NOW 4.88
1 ~rought Iron Table Lemp. Orig. 59.98 ...... NOW 29.88
1 ~?ke''. Swi1g Lemp. "As Is:!' Orig. 3<4.98 .... NOW 14.88
2 2~ .. x6o.: French River Scenes. Ori9. 29.98 .. NOW 12.88
4 2~ x'48 Mountain Scenes. Orig. 21.98 ·-·---·NOW · 8.88
1 W•terfell Sc•ne. Orig. 45.00 ................ _ ..... NOW 29.18
7 Asst. Prints-Modern & Treditionel.
1 o ~;:?: ~~~r ci~~k;:··o;19:· i2:ss~2s:ao··::::::::~g~ ;:::
120 ~rthr_o1!"• Pl1ted Serving Trays. Orig. 5.00 .... NOW 3.88
,... 1 1ciel Tre•s. Orig. 35.00-38.00 ................ NOW 24,88
4 Matador Stetues. 1<4" High. Orig. 9.97 ........ NOW 4.11
2 Don Quixote St•tues. <42" High. Orig. 65.00 NOW 44.81
GARDEN SHOP-"IEWPORT BEACH
1 Custom Concrete Lift-A-Fire B-B-Q.
Comploto. Ori9. 2l6.9S ............................ NOW 133.00
4 Aluminum Smokers. Orig. )4.99 ................ NOW .26.11
4 BBQ Br•zier w/oven. Orig. 19.99 ............ NOW 16.11
I BBQ Bri1zier. Orig. 10.69 ................... -..... NOW 7.88
6 Blitz Insect Fo9ger. Orig. 29.99 ................ NOW 22.18
2 Mod•rn Wood Plenfers. Orig. 15.99-19.99 NOW I.II
36 Asst. Wind Bells. Orig. 2.99-l.<49 ................ NOW .99
HOUSEWARES DIPT:-NIWl'OIT lllACH
30 Asst. Shoffeitt Spices. Ori9 .• 98 ...... _ ............ NOW .22
15 Wood S•lt & Poppor Combo. Orig. 3.99 ........ NOW .44
I P1nncre1t ll9hted Mirrors, Orig. 7.88 ......•. NOW 1.18
100 Libby Beer 6lesses. Pk9. of 4. Ori9. 1.l3 .... NOW .l4
11 Cookie Prod'. Orig. 3.99 ...........•................... NOW 1-81
I
AUTO CINTElt-N!WPORT BEACH
• t Port•blo Tap• Pl•y•r-Orl9. 79.95 .......... _NOW 25.00
2 Truck TirH, 670xl5. Orl9. )1.18 •...•..•....... NOW 7.00
1 65 C.C. Tr•ll Cycle. Otlg. 299.00 -·-··-·NOW 115.00
12 Fancy Wheels, Steel Dish Rev. Chroln1,M19.
Orig. 43.00 -········-·-·················-··---···ltOW $10 i. $20
20 V.W. lug Meh & Smile M•h. Ori9. 6.91 NOW 4.00
20 Cens Tept Dec• Hetd Cleaner. Orig. 1.91 NOW .25
1"8 Twin Front Rubb•r Flocir Mets .................... NOW 1.ff
Lown LEVEL
HOME ELECTRONICS DIPT .-NEWPORT HACH
6 AM /FM Port•blo R•dlo. Orig. 29.95 ....... NOW 19.11
32 AM C.sstttt Recorder: Orig. 2l.81 ............ NOW 19~18
2 Qui1d 8 Treck Pleyer W/4 Spetk•"·
Orig. 249.95 .............................................. NOW 1'6.00
1 3 Pc. M•d. Ster•o CoMol•. Orig. ll9.95 .... NOW %44.00
J 2)" Color Console TV. Orj9• 4•9.95 .......... NOW 344.00
1 25" Color Console TV. Orig. 569.95 ......... NOW ~00
5-18" Color Port•blo TV. Orig. JJ9.95 ......... NQW zn.oo
3 24 Cord C,onsolett• Orgtn. Ori9. 79.88 ...... NOW 69.00
4 40 Cord Double Menuel Con.sole Organ.
Ori9. 199.95 ·····································-· ...... NOW Ut.00
2 Opti9en Moneuri1I Console Orgtn.
Ori9. 322.00 ·················-··-········ ·····-······ ..... NOW 2n.oo
5 Air Susp•nsion Speelcer. Orig. 3<4.95 ........ NOW 29.00
4 Air Susp•nsion Sp••lc:er. 0,rig. 69.95 ........ NOW 59.00
MA.JOI APPLIANCES DEl'T .-llEWPOIT IEACH
2 16 Lb. Wesher-Avocedo. Orig. 249.95 ...... NOW 219.00
2 )0 Gel, Elec. Water Heeter. Orig. 49.95 .... NOW 19.00
1 40 Gel. Elec.~Weter H•tter. Orig. 74.9& .... NOW 19.00
2 19 Cu. Ft. Refrigeri1tor. Whit.--Copper.
Orig. 382.00 ····--······-·-·····-··-·········;···············NOW 344.00
2 Li9ht W•ight Zig-Zeg Sewing Machine.
Ori9. 159.95 .................................................. NOW 77.00
1 Walnut Sew Mi1chine Ci1binet. Orig. 120.00 NOW 69.11
4 Canister Vacuum Cleaner. Orig. 44.95 ........ NOW 34.81
FURNITURE DEl'T~NIWPOIT IEACH
1 Low Chest. Ori9: 79.00 ................................ NOW ::-::
1 Corner D•sk. Ong. 59.00 .............................. NOW •
2 Night St•nd. Orig. JS.00 -···-··-··················-·NOW 26.00
l M•gic led. Orig •. 399.00 .......... ~ ............... _.NOW 166-::
1 D•y Bod. Ori9. 249.00 .............................. -.. NOW 166.
2 Swivel Chtir-Whit•. Orig. 229.00 .............. NOW 166.00
1 5 Pc. Porty Sot. Ori9. 199.00 ........................ NOW 122.00
3 Cube C.bioot. Ori9. 89.f5 •........................ ~-NOW 59.00
4 Record Cebin•t. Ori9. 33.00 ........................ NOW 29.00
1 Heeter Vibrator R•clin•r, Gold. Orig. 129.00 NOW 109.00
1 Spi1nish Recliner, Green. Orig. 149.00 ........ NQW 129.00
l Swivel Chi1ir-Whit•. Orig. 129.00 ............ NOW 109.00
2 Swivel Rocker, Vinyl. Bleck, Gr•en.
Ori9. 99.00 .................................................... NOW 79.00
CARPEY DEPARTMENT-NEWPORT BEACH
3 8 1/2x11 1/2 ft. Room Size Rug -Green
Ori9. J9.99 ·································-······--·-··NOW 19.88
285 Sheg Cerpet Tile -Multi colors. Ori9 •• 59 NOW .13
7 4.6 ft. "Lido" Ru9. Ori9. J6.00 ............ -.. NOW , 19,11
10 31/1x6V1 ft. ''Cadiz" Rug. Orig. 19.00 .... _.NOW 9.88
5 11/1 x6Y1 ft. "Aeur" Rug. Ori9. l•.oo ........ NOW 19.11
440 Oesignir Carpet Tile, 11st. colon. Orig .. 59 NOW t .10
3 6x9 ft. "Gramercy" Rug -RoY•l -Avecedo
Ori9. 34.00 .............. o ....••.....•.•...••......•....... NOW It.II
J 9xl 2 ft. "Supreme" Rug-Gold.
Ori9. 44.88 .............................................. NOW 29.18
18 Bound Edg• Remnent Rugs -esst. colors
Velues to 19.95 ......................................... NOW 11.11
CAMERA DUT.-llEWPORT IEACH
1 Penncrest Movie Cemere. Orig. 169.95 ........ NOW 88.00
1 Pol•roid )60 Cemere. Ori9. 189.95 ............ NOW 109.00
7 Bell & Howell Projector. Ori9. 59.95 ............ NOW 44.00
2 J.C.P. Movie Outfit. Orig. 119.95 ................ NOW 99.00
1 Bell & Howell Movi• Outfit. Orig. 199.95 .... NOW ff.00
TOY DIPT.-lllWPOIT IUCH
12 Whirl Out Gem•. Orig. J.88 ........................ NOW .aa
7 Sesem• Street W•lking Letters. Orig. 8.88 NOW 4.88
117 Wobblo W•lker. Ori9. 1.77 ·-··············-······NOW .66
80 Mtttel Slc.y Riders. Orig .. 92 ........................ NOW .66
3 H•rcules Power Crene. Orig. 7 .21 ................ NOW 4.81
21 Doll Boutique. Orig. I. 99 ....................... -... NOW .66
11 Oepp•r Oen. Ori9. 3.88 ................................ NOW 1.18
17 Loqus Sr. Orig. l.66 ...................................... NOW 1.88
26 Spirotot. Orig. 2.22 ...................................... NOW .66
10 Swing Sweng by Maten Bradley. Orig. 6.88 NOW 1.88
6 Count•r•cf Geme. Orig. 7.99 ........................ NOW 1.88
8 Mettels Picture Male.er. Orig. 2.99 ................ NOW .66
J T ow•r Climb. Ori9. 4.44 ................................ NOW .66
6 Play-Ooh Tim• 'N Chim•. Orig. 6.4-C ............ NOW 2.88
SPORTING GOODS-NEWPORT IEACH
6 Vita Mester Belt Messi19er. Orig. 79.99 ........ NOW 29.U
6 Slim & Trim. Orig. 29.88 ................................ NOW t .11
l Bicycle bercis•r. Orig. 19.88 .......... _ ............ NOW 4.U
I lsom•tric Extrciser Kit. Ori9. 5.49 .................... NOW 1.U
2 g~:1'~~i0~~9d9i~-~-~-~-~~~:.i.~-~-~--~-~.1-~.~-~~.~.~: ........ NOW 59.~
6 Wilson-Billy Cesptr Aluminum Golf Set. \
Orig. 69.H -·-···-······-··-·········-··········-··················NOW 5f.76
6 Puttiog Disk Ir Goll Boll Set. Or;9. 7.49 ···--.NOW 2M t Besebtll Glov• & Aluminum Bet Combo ___ , __ NOW t.tt
t 30/JO Model 94 Wiochoslers. Orig. 79.88 ...... NOW st.ta
HARDWARE DEPARTMENT-NEWPORT BEACH,:
14 16 ft. Ext. L•ddor. Oti9. 19.88 ----·····-·NOW 6.11
3 20 ft. Ext. L•ddor. Ori9. J2 .99 ·····-···---NOW t.H
J 3xl8 Bo~ S•nder, Ori9. 39.99 -····-······-··-·NOW 21.R
5 ~ Lighl Gron Yoke. Ori9. 49.00 ........•... N<YN J6.7i
6 Electrlc1Sofclerin9 Gun. Orlg,.14.99 ............ NOW ti
I Lotho 5"•4· Orig. 69.SO -····--·---·--·····---.NOW Zf
1 Counter Sh•ft. Orig. 39.50 -----·-----·---·NOW 21
35 I Sh•lf Units. Orig. 9.99 ·-····-···---·--··--NOW J.81
:ZO 6 Sh•lf Uoih. Ori9. 6.99 -···--····----HOW 2-22
11 Sw19 liglit Fixtures. Red, Gretn,.Amber.
Orig. I 0.99 ··-·----······-···········------····NOW Ui
7 Flrepleco Sols, 7 pc. Orig. 54.00 --·---·-·--·-NOW 44.00
10 Fire Set Tools. Ori9. 24.99 ·-·----·-·-·-···-NOW It.II
10 Fir• Sot ScrHo. Orlg. 32.99 -·---····--···NOW 24.11
S Wood a .. k.t. Orig. 9.99 -···----·---·---·····NOW 1M
7 S1nd•r0 Poll1h•r. Orig. 29.99 -··-···--·-···NOW 14.Q
7 S•bor S•w. Orig. 14.99 ··-··-···--·--·--···NOW 4M
1 R•dl•I IMll Pr•n. Ori9. 149.50 .. _____ NOW 11.00
1 55 G•I. Wot-Dry V•c. Orlg. 74.99 _____ ,NOW 15,00
1 JO Gil. Wet-Dry V•c. Orig. 59.99 -····---··NOW U.00
~.:l:.!":'.J':~iJ. Shop Penneys Newport Beach-Monday & Fri. 10-9:30-Tues.-Wed.-Thurs. 10-9 -Sat. 10-6 -Sun. 12 to 5 ..U-addr.....i ..... ~~. 1r..--;... ............ ..;.. ............ ~ ........................................ ;... ................................................................................................ __________________ ~
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II PIUIT-ADVERTl$U
• w~-25.19ll DAILY PILOT 9
NewBort Bicycle Trail to Be Dedica~ed
I
I
i
-.... -. '."") . ...
I
The flrat complete oegment
of the )'ltwJIOrt Beach bicycle
tnoll ,ystem •W be officially
dedicated during a specfal
1am1tx ~teycleday Nov. s. 1 ·~e'wport Cycllmpfcs "ft
' • wl , a famUY-<irltnted pro-~
'' gr ~Including novelty bike
races, timed events f o r
novices ll>r""1' experts ~
an on-blke treasure hunt for
cycling 1ccesaoriet," s a i d
~le Parker, chairman of the
Citizens Advi90ry B 1 c y c I e
'J!rails Committee.
The htihllgbl of the event ,
which will beCln al I p.m. at
the Park Newport
Apartmeqta, 19'0 San Joaquin
llilll Rood, will be the dedlca-
t;on of the to.mile trail ~
m<11l lo \llf New]lCll'I ljarbor -Olrl ~ Parkeqald. ·
The Girl Scout.a were in-
strumental In campaigning to
win City Council support in the planning and . fwlding of the
trail system.
EVENTUAL PLANS call for
a 50-mlle l)'ltem d intercon-
nected lanes ood pa>ed paths
all over,lbe city.
Parker pld the aectlon to be
dedicated• al the Cycllmplca
rufUI dowtt Jamboree Road
fmn ~oll>lulf Drive I o
P~••' Cqlst HlglJwa.Y and th-;;;""~ the eql aide of
Upper Newport Bay.
A plaque will be given to
Judge. Calvin Sdujlldl, preai-
denl of the Girl scoots ol
Orange ~oty, by actress
Sandy Duncan, a P a r k
Newport resident.
A group ol Senior Girl
SCOOta will alao model bicycle
fashions, Parter said.
"MANY MEMBERB of local
ICOOI ;ttvop1, both tlirta aod
boya, are helping to llai• the
Cyctt.m,pl~a and , will
participate," Parker illd.
The Cycllmpl"" are <>Pen lo
anyone, but children under 12
must be aceompanled by an
adult.
An entry fee of $1 for adults
and 50 centi for children
under 18 will be char&ed 10<
sU participants ln the cycllng
evenll.
"Posten announctng the
Cyclimplcs aloog with waiver
forms and IChedUle fj)r the
day hove ....,_ pesled at
..;hools, publlc bulidlot!• aod
in at.ores," Parker said.
THE M'ONEY raJsed will
help cover expenses and the
rtmalndt.r will go into the
Newport Beach Bicycle Safety
Fund.
"The bike trails are· desig~
ed . to make cycling safer for
all ..... llUI -they ..... onlT 1'9CalUY lnllalled, many riders are not even inn o(
them." Perter saki.
"With the carnlv1l 1t-
moophere of Ne1')IOl'I Cydlm-
pics, we bOpe to get u many
riders as possible GUt onto the
trails to experie.nc. tbem first
hand ," be said.
Parker laid the e v e n t
hopefully will Inform pom1ts
and children ol bleyole aal<ty
precautions and tbe fact
bicycles are subject to the
same laws aa ears.
I SALE DAYS THURS.-SAT. OCT. 26-28
~ "Mommy! Daddy's touchi"9 the litt'9 Krewdriver that
goes with your ·s.Wing machiner'
•
l
'rreasury Store
Op ens in Coll:llty
< l' '
By JAN EDWARDS
Of .. ~, .... , ....
A JC Penney store was a
>. workingman's store years ago
and had • conse.ravative Im-~ age. i Today, Its eight-year-old
division called the Treasury,
~.-the name for 19 d~· nt, one.
step shopping s five states. .ls continuing im·
• ag& but is geared re to t' sef.viog virtually everyone.
• ·Aller a brief rlbbon<:utllng
"Their groceries stay in lit·
Ue, plastic tuba, .the customen
are given t.be number, the
bags are put on a conveyor
bell system and 8'1' left unW
the customers are finlsbed
shopping aod drive 1'> the
store entrance," he related.
"It 90fves the irrltaUon ol
pushing the oar! 1'> the park-
ing lot. . .and It keeps carts
free from the lot ... customers
really like the idea," be ~·
• ceremon,y Oct. 18, the THE STOl\E bas both r TrePuJy, at the comer of prtvate and national brands on i Bil'itol .Street end Sunflower many items. .
l, Aven\ie, opened without movie "There is more emphasis on
. sti.n, door prizes or other at· fashlon -you will tetJ,.more
t tractions. Errlployes simply of a fashion impact. h you
£. blew up free balloons for would expect to find: this ~ children and u(ged customers kind of a store," ~ ed
. • to-pen a charge account. ·-•Selbert; empbas' · ,• he
t women's apparel de t.
CUSTOMERS MAY chart!• Florence . Kelce, . ·,. ta
all but i'Oct'Y ti.ms undet' Mesa woman brows!Zi in the ~ new, JqUlggly roof which women's sportswearS cfepart.
covets 191,IS&. squa:e feet of menl 00 opemng.j: d a y ,
departments. 111Cludmg .. !ood olunteeredo •'.);m v<i'y fuS3}'
I market, restaurant, spor~mg !_ but they dO have a nice goods, hardware, dry cleaning. selection. ..
ready·t~wear 1 clothes f o r . vlrioua ages and a steno and . JC Penney acquired its fir.st • ' eleClronf.,. ..... ,. di!counl llore, • then .called
ta"1lte-'btggesi• s1ng1.-'-~ bland, ~~t~ ·"
i •-'-lbe "~·-' R~ . ~al M~'!~ d o~u115:. in ·~ :1 CorriPan1-·of' MUwall~ th " of Penney1Compaoy, said • 1_ • "1 • • C •
Donald V. Selbert, Pennoy'a -· . ·
l t :
nationll dlrector ol catalog,
who chose to attend the Santa
Ahl store ,opening rather than
o p en i n g s in Riverside,
Granada Hills and Woodland
Hill~.
All four new Treasury stores
are the same size and
arcti!tecture aod hl!ve the
same facilities. Unlike Penney "*" In mopplhg malls, they
are free.standing and have
tbelr own parking lo13 and a
~ separate auto service ceriter
oa the aame property.
Surveying tile women porif-€ f over tables of men's pants,
1 ~ and tennis shoes,
• SeJi><rt aald the ''°''" were
I
I <fe!'tgned bY people "dedicated
to }atiog the customers' point
• of view."
• t
t
'
L
I
! •
l
·80 THAT customers "do not hi•• to fl&ht their way
thfo11t1b • lot ol copy," Selbert
said ln1lde signs contain only
infprm1Uon necessary to lden-
"'1 tbe products. And there is nwn lnformati o n on
~1<a1es.
1• pick-up service for food
n\artet bags is another
feature Seibert claims Is uni·
que to Treasury stores.
I
G E N E R AL Merehandl!e
had been a catalog outlet with
one store in ApPleton, Wis.
and Penney used It as a retail
testing ground for private
braoda and new packaging
oonceyts.
Nine more Treasure Island
at.ores were .opened 1 n
Wiaoonsln and Ge«gla, 4od In
1918 Penney's ohanged .the
name to ·~ Treasury" and made the chain a corpcrate ~
c:Hvtslon.
The original Treasure Island
stort in Wisconsin included
Interstate SUpennarkets, Inc.
and Thrift Drug Stores Oft a
leased basis. They eventually
were a!So absorbed by Pen-
ney. The idea ol. bavi~ a
supermarket inside ·Penney
siores evolved from that, .and
Selbert said 80IJ;:le ~enneya
now have ·them.
Four Treasury a t o r e s
similar to the Santa Ana store
have been opened in Belgium
undef' the · name of Sanha,
S.A., the company which
already bad 85 stores when
Penney booghl ii. Aod two
Treasury stores are in opera·
tiOll In Milan, Italy.
.
DAll.Y Ptl.OT lfeff "-ft
• STOl!E OPINI NG -Customer chats with 'l!reasury
l , SIO<e Manager B. Dale Smith Oelt) and Donald V.
Seiber\, JC Penny vice president at opening of
•to~ . •
"
SPECIAL PURCHASE
DA IN· RI v ER. prlnt•cl
no·lron fashion
sheets
A nostalgic ga rde n of brilliant spring flowers.J:>looming
in a colorful abundance of reds, yellows, bruits, laven· ders and greens. 50% fortrel polyester -50% cotton .
ls! quality.
FUllflAT
OR FITTED
REG. 3.99
'2" x 36"
STANDARD , .7
CASES Pl.
R~G. 2.6!J PR,
TWIN FLAT
ORFITIED
REG. 2.99 EA. -eeAcon··,polyetter o;,;
llceyllc blencl ' ·0
blankets
72"x90'' fits twin or full size
bed . 100% nylon binding.
Asst. decorator colors. 1st
• quality. 77
SPECIAL PURC ASE
MANUfA TURERS
CLOSE-OU't
"le .. n grove'' flannel·
ltacked taltle cloths
1st Q':'ality. Heavy 1u.1e vki)'I. Two cOlor 77 ,..,,...,,..,. ~
SIZE Rq. hi• .SIZE R!ii. hi•
52"170" 4.99 2.77 ~ ......... 7.99 3.77 5~'X52"
52"190" 6.99 3.27 REG.3.99
SPECIAL PURCHASE
cone® 1st quality
sheared lacquarcl
/ towels
MIX OR MATCH ENSEMBLES
qvllted·flHed
maHre11 p .. ~I
1st qUality, 2" cotton filled,
washab1e. , ~ TWIN
. FITTED
Two handsome patterns -"cascade" and "New Orleans".
Gold, 0111np, 1reen, purple, pink • .,
BATH SIZE
HAND Rei, !.39 it•
WASH R•i· 69c St•
e
REG.
1.97 ' ..
lon1 lt••eh
1 270 be91rlower ltlwd,
norw•lk
11 800 •· alondr• blvd.
(.:1 ., ., [~4 t'!·~ j ~1
3 t' FITTED
27'' x 45" lllCll
scatter ngs
1st qu1llty beautiful striped de·
sl1n 1re1 rue. Heavy fnn1e on
ends. Colors: Avoc1do, &Old,
~ue. red, rust. 1••
.... ..., ..
1 110 ......... , •• , .... ... ........ .
ltOO o. wtitttlor .avd.
hu11ta.t9to11 It•••" • ••• •d•111 • •• , •• , .. ,, ... ,,.,, .
11100 harbor blvd.
.,
Wodftttdor OctaW 25, 1'172 • . * pA!LV PILOT
Brief Tragedy:
Actor, 30, ·nies
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .... °"'" ..... ,..,.
RE WAS A FINE actor, a iact that need> to be 11ld
right here at the first, just as this story need• to be told
for those who can understand,
Hl.s lines> role -played before It lured him to that
ruthless, ruin®' ratrace for Hollywood Fame and Fortune
-turned out to be the st«y of bis IUe.
''11be Death ol\he Hired Man," by
· poel Robert Frost, l.s 1 tragic treasure
of Alnerlc.an Uwature, about a little
~ named Silas who wu very good
at what he did in life, tiut just never
made It big. My friend perhaps play-
ed the role too well.
He really was Silas.
JUDGES AT THE venerated Pas-
v11tt1~ adena Playhouse competition in 1959
nam"'1 him the best among hundred! of Southland high
school drama students, equal to an Oscar, for hia portrayal
in 'that pert.
Silas tn FftlSt's poem adapted as a one-avt play was
a footloose farmhand expert at &tacking hay, a bumble
calling but the lhln( he did the best
"You nt1'tr n:e him standing on the hat1 he's
"Vi•g to lift.
"Straining to lift himself," the poet wrote.
But Silas never found much penonal wcces,, ln the
system that produces profil.!I for fann owners and grain
brokers.
Realizing fallure finally, the fictional Silas and -event..
ually, the factual Sila5 we knew, whose drama career
reached its zenith at age 17, playing tbe same part, gave
up and went back borne to die.
SILAS WAS A PROUD character, however, always
claiming vague, new accomplishments were just around
tlle-<OrDtt .
• 'Ibo pmid. ~ kid who came home from Pao-
adena -bis tn>phy ll i=> ago played Silas again r«
m at a special sdtool assembly. A tired old beata:i man
r.tS f'!2lty • ~ C1G ~ not him. .-t pw a y•4rexli sranctmg O'i'3tiaa..
HE DESE&\"ED thr .mxifs aaaaat outst••tirrg drarm-e. nard... be C. ~ to a hesp«sadrd kid tritb a lisp,
Uo ~ a '' at CW'.lbfy ri:h m oldrr CU1 and
p•• " I rill t.., -iaion. 0. is """ malling
it bi!! ;,, !ieo Ycrl. tbor "'Y·
Silas .. ...,i tlnagb 1959. got • di!lloma and -for_,__
Be lmded a minor role in a road show of "OUr 1Vwn"
starring the late character actor 'lbomas Mitchell, getting
three studio pholos and a lengthy feature story In the
hometown paper. And tbefl nobody heard anything mott.
Silas finalif came home from Hollywood.
He got.Al job driving a cab.
You'll be rurprised at him -how much he's
broken," saya tht kindly farmer's wife in the
poet's touchtng portro:it of a talented man.
A Los Angeles anignment last week led to a visit with
Jane Hodel, Cast as the kindly farmer's wile in that 1959
show that earn.~ our friend his highest honor.
"THE THING~ I REMEMBER most Is how he could
project a role and emote so well~' says Mrs. Hodel. who
now works in the busy emergency rooin of. a big hospital,
where true life dramas bappeh every day.
I'm atiII not old enough not to be shocked when aome-
body our age di~.~ she added, during a hmch date made
coineiden~ly to deliver her 3l!t birthday present.
"At least b& baa a moment 'ol fame, no matter how brief
It was,11 Jane ~se~ed. ,
Aod then ~ found his final hometown newspaper cov-
erage, malled by her mother, four forlorn paragraphs Jn
the Funeral Notices column that didn't say enough but
~.~ .
11IE STORY GAVE his name, the fact he W8.! 30 years
old; active in the locaJ litUe the4ter group and that he was
an ooemployed dSe'd car salesman found dead in a motel
room.
One can still re:ad between the lioes in the script for
Silas' last act.
Bike Rider Pedals
For Hospital Fund
"There's nothing to It. Tl's
jutl like sitting down eating an
ice cream cone," Lei.sure
World resident Ed Kunka says
of pedalilJll .,,00 miles -the
equivalent or seven round·trlp1
to San Franclsco -on his .
fivHjleed bicycJe.
The Llaui>a Hills man
received bla ,l>fj:):clo from his
wlle, Roae, farbla llSlh birth-
day lut October.
Kunka dtcldecf to 'fll!ke.Jlls
tripe around the billy Sad-
dleblck area pedallinl with a
JMJl"P* and dropped I penny
in 1 Jar for eachilllAe recorded
11 a contributiotl to the Sad-
dleback Hosplt,al h u II d I n g
fund . ' ' •
A YEAR LATER. he ama11-
ed 4, 700 mlltt and 147. The
amount of money, may not be
enormOUI bu~ g'.unlta explains,
"I IJgurod I'd lin from l)le bearf. II likes • lot to do tbal <blc7cle tbll far )."
The money wacm •t all co~
1ectea1o penntei. Afttr flllinJ
1Jaroroo.1Cuftka11Sed1 mo1e prac11c>1 mtlhod.
Wilen 1)e recorded 100 mlleo.
be would 41pay a dollar Instead
of foolina around with pen-
nl "' ... ' . Kunka wa1 born In Chica go.'
...tien ho once worked as •
1 mlltmln. mailman and ta.xi
Rose Kulika doesn 't join her
hll.!band In bicycliug. although
she gives hlm moral support.
She' concentrates on a quieter
hobby, chin11 painting.
dr!m llmllltaneously. In JIGS, u-u.i
'fle" nlJncl from Ucilfed h Alrllneo Ill Clricqo and moved · ED KUNKA
to IAguna Hills. Will Pedal 4,100 Mii•
1 I
•
Pllllf-40~ITISH if
County Increase 6.1 % Taxable Sales • Ill
J.
I· ,_,C>p~R ' ~ ' D I 1 t .. '
BATHROOM CA
Pttal Puff
LAWNSCAPE Synthetic Turf
5 YEAR NQN.•fADI GUARANTEE YOU9' CHOICE
• Natural · green synthetic turf designed for patios, pools,
putting greens, and sundecks. Resists water, mildew, and
ch~icols.
New ''Sunny Side, Up'' Dec;:;hr•
New. exciting, -colorfula stripes for indoor outdoor use to
brighten patios, porches and family room s. This carpet re-.
sisfs suns hine, weather and comes in three beautiful color
combinations.
• ou·,ONT NYLON
• POl'CORN•DESIGN
• NIRCULON
I
IASID ON 60 SQUAii Y AIDS
COMt»LETEL Y INSTALLED OVER
LUXURIOUS FOAM PADDING
" 99 ...
YD.
Plush 100% nylon.deep pile carpet odds wonnth ond
color to your both •~ bedroom decorating. ·Built-in
cushion bock construction, plus dirt ond stain-resis-
tont quality mokes this on ideal carpet forony hQme.
-
I -sAVE
$3.00 NOW SALE PRICED AT •• 1 ••
COMPARABLE RETAIL ••• 10.99 SQ. Y,D.
HERCULON Hl·LO
100% HERCULON OLEFIN PILE, NEW
. MIRACLE FIBER, STAIN AND WEAR RESIS-
TANT. BEAUTlfUL DECORATOR COLORS.
..' . NOW ;.5A~J PRICEp . .
COMPARABL.E RETAIL ••.••••.••••• $4.99 -. -. --' "
100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. DEEP, RIC.H,
DURABLE SHAG. BEAUTIFUL, NEW THREE
COLOR DESIGNS.
NOW SALE PRICED
COMPARABLE REATIL ............ $4.99
DACRON® . SHAG
100% Dft.,CRON POLYESTER PILE. BEAU·
TIFUL NEW DEEP SHAG WITH A FULL DEEP
PILE. MANY NEW DECORATOR COLORS TO
CHOOSE FROM.
NOW SALE PRICED
COMPARABLE RETAIL .......... $7.99
KODEL TRl·COLOR S
1 00% KODEL POL VESTER PILE. RICH, DEEP, LUX-
URIOUSLY THICK PILE. MANY NEW HI STYLE
DECORATOR THREE COLOR SHAG TO SELECT
FROM. RESISTS'DIRT AND SOIL STAINS.
' NOW SALE PRIC.ED
COMPARABLE RfTAIL ••••••••••• $8.99
ALLIED NYLON SHAG ·DUPONT.9'ACION ® ALUD llYl:OI S
,:1,~;~ ... TRI-COLOR SHAG a~· 100% KODtl POt.Yf.STER PllE. 99 "'"""#" _99 99 ,, . "
t\VO •COLOR TWEED. THREE· AZJ%~tc:..t~· 100':4 DACRON POLYESTER AZ)%~~ l~El RANDOM .SHEARED , Pill BEAUTIFUL, NEW •DEEP
S lf ACCENTS ANY HOML SQ. YD. SQ, YD. SHAG. EASY TO WJNTAIN. SQ. YD.-
CttOOsE fllOM MNtY DECOl· SAYE NEW, BlAUTtFUL SHAG. STYlED SAVI MANY NEW Df.tURATOR SAVI NEW, HEAVY. OEEP SHAG.
AlOICOlORS. $LOO TO ADD BEAUTY TO ANY $3-00 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. $3-00 STYUO TO ADO BEAUTY TO • HOME. D£CORATOR COi.ORS. ANY HOME. OtCOll.ATOt
flOtl! S~ll rtibD COl.ORS NOW SALE PaKED AT NOW SAU PllCIO I •iowW.f PIKI COMPAHlll IETAIL ......... , ... .$7.99 COl!!,AIAILE llTAIL ............ $7.99 COMPAHlll IETAtl ............. " C-AIAlll mAll ..... .$19.
KODEL SCULPTURED • ALLIED llYL ALUID NYLON SHAG KO~EL RI-COLOR SHAG
99 '7-~"""" ;(.6.i ~-I 00% KODEL POLVESlER 99 100" ICOOQ. POl'l'fSTtR Ptll ·99 PILL RICH. LUXURIOUSLY "[t;]" A lUXUll.IOUS HEAVY PILE Giff!.• THICK P.llt NEW'.DECORA-IQ. 'fD. ~~rAfa• -.so. TO. WITH MAKV NEW EXCITING, SQ, YD, ' TOR COLOlll.. DtCOll.ATOR COLORS AVAIL·
SAVI SAVI ABLE. THIS IS THE ULTIMATE SAYE NEW, HEJiVYSHAG Sm.EDfOR.
llOW SAU PllCIO AT .... $3.00 NEW, HEAVY SHAG smeo . s~.oo IN BEAUTY. QUALITY ANO $4.00 TODAY WfTH MNff DICCJM. FOR TODAY WITH /MHV DURABILITY. TOCt COi.ORS-DECORATOll COi.OR~ NOW SAU PlllCIO -WIPllCID COMPAfl41U: ~ETAIL •....• $8.99" • COMPAHlll IETAIL .................... .$11,99 C-A-E IETAll .........
30·60-90 DAYS Millbrae SAN CAllOS w. Los Angtfes Anaheim , ·West Covina HO INTEREST 320 El t1111l11 teat 920 II CoMlfl6 W.ol 11141 Wfli•i11 II,~. "' N. lllli. SL 2511 £. Wtr,11111 A¥t. 141ll 112-155! {415) .5'1.$621 411-5525 I 135.7114 Hl·4411 CONYINIENT CllOIT Pl~$ SAN FRANCISCO AREA SAN FRANCISCO AREA San 01!(JO FrHWfJY to 2 blocks North of Son Bernardino Frwy I I.IN! TUMS l!lll.ULI Wrlsh1re West Turn· Sonto Am Freewov on 10 (tin.is St. 3 Blks. YISIT lltlR CUSTOM off 6 blocks Wtsl on Euchd. Across from No on Cilrus to Worlt· DWlll Dllll!MINT Wilshire. Col1f F&d. I men . • .. . . . ... • ' • .
'
I
w.-.r °"""' 25, 1m
•tal Statisties . for t.lae Ora 11 ge Coas t Area
•
' . .
' i;. :~· ,~,,~;$. $
•.. ·Y'4HsELF
fWS UK(, YllYIT
, ~-OTHH CAIPIT '~--. :t_::i ~l&SY ~TO llSTALL.
t:;:; • l 00%..llYLON PILE
. • STAIN .RfSISTAfjT
·:.open
·SUNDAYS
' AND
EVENINGS
• BUY ,
now!
••
Bl~EST
SA lllGS
EYER
BKAlURE ®..··11 ,.
thi• 1 ~ -;,ylon pil~ ~ · ,
carpet is a long wear· 99 ing, easy caring, static
control product that
comes in many -beauti -
ful decorator colors.
NOW SALi PRICED •••
SQ. YD.
SAVE
$3.00
COMPAIAll.E° .RETAll •••• $11.99 . ' ' ' A•TRON II •
A'lllflt®'ll •
Tiii •I FMC Cet•-
" l 00% Antro n nylon
pile. Luxurious resilient ·
dense pile carpet is
easy to core for with
rich, new patterns in
exciting color combina~
tions.
99
\
.:~
~
r
;.
i~ " • 'I ~ ~· •
99
~SQ. YD.
SAVI
$3.DD NOW SALE PRICED •••
SQ. YD.
SAVE
$3.00
C!)MPARABLE RETAll •••• $11 .99
ANTRON II
l 00% Antron II pile
is a rich, resilient
dense pile carpet
that resis ts wear
.and retains its new
look -even under
heavy usage.
S!PEOAL. SAtE ·
99
CUSTOM DRAPERIES
• . ' . ' ~1 .. Pr,ofossionolly Mode Custom
Drot>eries. You r Choice of fabrics.
! ·SPECIALS •
$3.50-$4.SQ•FAIRICS' 77
• SU PERI
WORKMANSHIP
ONLY ~ ••
llDUCED F•OM OUR RIGUlAI lOW PllCI!
l••t Beach
... ltlllilnt 11••· •21-1114
ClOS!ll DUE Ta FIRt
LOOK fOR CWID '
I UPElt.NG SOON
Vt •tura
?W1l1111 IL -t J 81oc:ks Wes1 ot
fivt Points on MGWI.
11
N•. Hellyw6ad
!1111.nnt-tht
M!·!ltt
~ Freewoy 10
Shtrmcu' Woy. Eost ro
Lowe! Con.von 8Wd.
, . . '
YD.
Pasatl tM ·
ltll L C11t11• ""-
' 511-19"
I. ColO<Odo Blvd. ot
Seo Gobrifl Blvd.
.
KITCHEN
CARPETS
NAME BRANDS -
FINEST QUALITY
NAME BRANDS. NEW DE-
51.GNER DESl GNS. HI ·
DENSITY FOAM .BACK.
GREAT FOR KITCHENS,
PA TICS, POOL DECKS, ETC.
99
SQ. YD.
SAVE
$400
l 00 % CON TINU OUS FILAMENT
NYLON PILE. POPULAR NYLON Hl·
LOW THAT COMBINiS BEAUTY
AND DURABILITY. MANY COLORS
TO CHOOSE FROM.
NOW SALE PRICED
COMPARABLE RETAIL ••• $4.99
Otlte ®
INDOOR·
OUTDOOR -
CARPETS :
IDEAL FOR .FAMILY
ROOMS, PLAY ROOMS,
DENS
99
SQ. YD •
SAVE
'$~.00
.toMP•USLI • ··s4 99
. ~'··~· ··i.!··:f~.,,. '. •
1000s OF REMNANTS
LARGE 01 SMALL
SAVINGS /o SAVl~GS
UP TO • • •. UP TO •••
Living Room . Dining Room, Bedrooms. Hallways, Borhs. Cars . Ere.
BRING YOUR ROOM MEASUREMENTS ,
BRAIDED RU.G
41 6 cor::aLE $. ,. :95'
$20.00
BRAIDED RUG . 9x 12 CO~~~~B~ s299s
'89.95' .
Hollywood
lllS M VtrN•l l•t.
Ml1'!1
2 BikL llOMh al Hol~
wood &lvd, on Vtr
moot.
Canoga Por~
!lnl Sht•H WIJ
lll·!ll'
Vtnfuro f r.eewov 10
Conoqo Av~. o~~ to
Shtrmnn Wov. 1h@n
!~~·:C· ~·iii nghl 2 b~kfi •
'
I '
C.ste Me ..
111C"""" ..... I
(11l) 615-1111
~lhid.otT7tfri~
losA111tlH
!Ill """' .,.., ..... ,, ~
I t»otll Wnl of roli'to-
Wldnftdly, Dctobtf 2', 1912 DAltY l'IUJr lf.l
•
Irvine November
Oasses Listed
For Sports
11>e DAi\. 'I" PJWr II the ,,..,.....,.. !6ii ipcll1I ,, .. ,
the Oranp eout .•. oompltlt
otatlatlet ... """' bomt ml ....,_.11 .........
ln01'e .......... llorl• ..
Orangi Coul oport.1 lho n any.
other I o c a II y dlllrlb<Jl<d ..............
''Ttw Cl'ltlt.,. flf 111"1 SI•/•
"'i<':::i,!rlt I Ectwardt, M.A., (lln!QI ps It, 8lld .tfllff. A _ ... ,~
IJC lr\lne ~"" pro1••"'· ... Mdetf: t ::m a.lft.-6 p.m.1 Sl.lllcl•y:
9:30 •.m."" p.m., M•th Rrm. a , 40J, L.,. Alamlhll High Jdw)DI, Uf'I C.,-r!flll
A~•.. LD5 Alaml!OI, P'M: PO. Orel
eamfoftllbty Ind brlflt N(k l\llldltli,
SllM•y, N .... U "ffllm: Grind lll111lon 111d O.y In ~
Country. Ltef...rt; ~ Jt..olr and Tiie °"*' lillmanl$llc• ~... P'aul F"r!llw, l'h.D .. Ktltt.,.t prolnsor ol
E110ll1h, C~ COO.. hrt flf t
UC l,...,lne ExMM/orl led\lr.-fl1m HrlH,
...,.,... Gl'Mt Dlrwfort." 1·10 """·· 5ci.nc. L.ectur• Hell, UC lrvlnt \:Am-pu.. Slnvl• adn\lhlon. u .n .
MOMl•y, NW. 1S "LSD 9l'ld DMth: TM C.mlc: C..f!W.
St•nlsl•v Grof, M.O.. ai1r1tant pro-teuor, ~1Ydllatry, JdlM "°1*1!11
Unl.....-.lty. ~•rt 9f t IJC trvl,.. Eli·
ten&lofl ttctur. _,... ''06onily "' Oe•ltl," 1-10 p.tl'I .. Jlm. 101, f'tlyslc.I Sci-lkla.. UC ll'Yllle umprn. Sllle•• edrnluion. u~. -
Math Talk
Set at OCC
"The Usts and Abulel ol
Matbeml.Ucs ln Soclolop"
will be di>cuMed al u a.m.
Oct SI In the Ceotet for Ap-
plied -LoclW'e Hall I at
Ortni• Coul Cottece. Dr. -liq, ... pro1.,. __
cl aoclolap at Cl! lllalO
l"llllerton, will .-II lo lllP
ocbool -ll 11bo -...... pleled lnletmodlalt Algeln
and will condud a -lo
Room 102 ol Ibo -..... mediately lolloWI ...
Tba eveol will be -•-..tad
by tbe occ -ol Phyllall 8<1 I o a c o Md
MlltbemaUCL For _.. ~
fonnitlon, -Qie ~ at DMl79. 1 ,
' l
\
l-
1
-
DAILY PILOT
L Jtl. Boyd
9 State Capitols
Without Domes
One mammal, only one, possesses a backbone partly
oulside its body. This beast is called a potto. Something
like a monkey . Llves ln Africa. Sharp spikes stick out from
the aforementioned spine. To diacourage backbiters. Fas-
cinaling liUle rascal. And extremely cautious. Has to be
careful about what it leaIJs back against.
WAS REPORTED that the average woman 's waist
measurement is greatest at age 52.
This data has saddened.. some ladies.
1bey've complained. For their sake,
let it be told al!O here that the waist
measurement of ~ most renowned
female figure in North America, the
Stature of Llberty, is 35 feet
TO CONVERT l<ilometers to miles,
hear thia : Multiply the kilometers by
six, then drop the last digil Got it?
Say the sign post shows it's 100 kilo-
meters to wherever. You can figure it's 60 miles. Or 111y
the speedometer shows you're :tipping along at 80 ~
meters per hour. That's just t8 m.p.h. ApproiimateJy , ap-
proximately.
QUERIES -Q. "Do seeing-eye dogs watch the traffic
lights?"
A. No, sir, they watch the traffic.
Q. "WHAT are the odcb against snow In Les Angeles
for Christmas~"
A. About 60 to one, in fact.
Q. "HOW many o! the state capitol buildings have
domes?''
A. Just 41. And if you can name five of the nb1e with-
out same, your old geograph)r teacher would be proud of
you.
THE MAJORITY o! husbands, Ir asked at the hospitals
whether they'd prefer to '11-'itness the birth of their off.
spring, decline the invitations. Moot, latest surveys reveal,
still prefer to pace outside the delivery room.
QUOTATION No. 4672·8 in our Love and War man's
file or simple matrimonial facts is by nooe other than
Lyndon B. Johnson. As follows: "Just bef<n the wedding,
I realized I didn 't have a ring, so I went across the street
to Sears and bought one."
AFTER AGE 6, fewer glrls than boys drink milk t!Very
day. That's a statistical facl
CAN YOU name that profession worldwide with the
most practitioners? Too simple, no? It's teaching.
Address mail to L. M. Bo¢, P. 0 . Box 1875, New-
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
Nine Make Dean's List
Nine Orange Coast ruidents
have been named to the dean's
list at Chapman College for
achlevlng a 3.S grade point
average or better during tbe
1972 spring semester.
The Huntington Beach resi-
dent named ls Thomas Ru-
nyen, 6461 Larkspur Circle, a
junior majoring in govern-
ment.
Loge of 62S Mystic Way, a
junioc majoring in poijUcal
science; and Patrick Sparkuhl,
a junior and an art major, of
334 Bluebird Canyoo Drive.
Honor students f r o m
Newport Beacli are: Karen
Dilullo of 24.15 Francisco
Drive, a jun.ldr majoring in
anthropology ; Barbara DuBois
of 1829 Glenwood Lane, 11
junJor majoring i ri ~
temaUonal sb.idles; Colette
Fleurldas of 74 Linda Isle, a
64 01. KING SIZE
Downy ~~ FABRIC SOFnNER
Miii Stll1tu 111 wlltnm h
111rwl•i••n~!
1.19
M•ll Jltl'. 111ts "· ""· 11tU,11 Cl<istmH
"Kraft" W1'311Piag
Paper •.. LEPAGE -Heavy 33c ~brown pal'fformailing. 24' will<.
~ Tbriftllle LePAGE
VJ1¥J t:~~~:~::k 33c i .,,:;;;:!~~
. ' Sealing Tape .
' .i,t ·.. class requirements • . . C =1
LEPAUS -Meets third 49 E
l Yz"x400'. R11. lk
Twine LtrAGl 39c 8 231 feel ~· 41• . .
· • · · GIFT Boxes
· Choose from 6
•
year n>!Jnd boxes 1 09 • or 7 boxes. for .
ttle holidays. ·•
EACH
•lM•NGTo• Mark 111
ELECTRIC SHAVER -Six sba~ shaving tracks
with ulta ttlil'I outer head and 79 micro slots
per track for clos~ clean, 23 44 comfortable sbave.
R11.2U5 a
su••UM Shavemaster
· Siii -c.ro/~or~O!I sb>ver. Contoored It ,
''" face;Sii'~iJ-oarbof steel bl1des,
p;,tlsion &iOU1ld ind sew-. 29 BB .sbarJemng. .
•11. 3U5 •
llMINGTON''SUPEI"
, Hand Held Dryer
1For Ille whole family! Two
iombs and a styling brush. 16 BB Hi/low speed switch.
111.11.15 #PD-ill •
Butterfi11ger .
or BABY RUTH JRS.
JO Jr. bars of delicious 77c cllocolate rovered chewy
centers.
Chocolate Chips
HERSHEY'S -Good ·for eating and
al5' ba~ng. Mil.k 5 , $1 5~ oz. or semi-o
sweet 6 oz. 1
"Life Savers"
IEECH·NUT -Or 49c 8"'hies Pak of 50.
II(. 5k la& 1121 11.
M&M
F11n sizes bars! lndiv-7gc Woally wrapped. lll.
Jelly Beaas
HACH' -llelidOIS 37c flav"' with "chew!" _
centf:rs. 14Yz IL
Asst. "POPS"
BRACHS -Bagof85-77 separately wra,ped C
pieces in various flavors:
Jr. C..I Rolls
IUCIS -100 lndivi-67" dual~ W!IPl'ed pieces. ,.
Party Pack Satchel
llACHS -10 kidi-1 09 vidual packages for
trick or1featers. •
81111111 Gui candies
TOPP -"Mr. Jlmip~o· B~ . . 1.-cK$-Chocola\e BBC nitild bubOle gwn baJ. • ' i.& 11 ·ot oc Camlr hi ., 121 Com 20 oz. . • ...
IOTS & GlllS
PJU)T ·ADVERTISER J<( . ~ --
: . ~.
' . ~· •
'iiiiil ..... ~~~Jl:.I ·~ .
" GREAT Place To .Shopl ~
::
FDR ca1LDR!N-Histwiell ~
lei•, Helli~ Ghosts,
Princesses. etc. All 1 B9 witlo full-loct masks.
Sizes S-M-L • • •.
DtlUI REflECTD -CMdr<t!'s
c.stumes "" be "" 1p ID 200 yards! Popular Hallo-
ween cllaractets •.•
Devils, Clowns, etc. 2 29 with masks. Sizes
S-M-L • ti.
"Make-Up"
m -Colored sticks of
makHI that was! olf
easily. ·
Clevlf rlecG!ation for p1rties,
school, etc. 99c
• Toys• Bklwovts
• Homs• Hats
•11-lk
59c •,'
Pit
rabler Needs
C. A. REEP -"Black cat" Ensemble. Laguna Be a c h residents
are: Robin Andrews of 431
Holly St ., a freshman and pre-
dentistry major; Margot
Cather, a freshman, nf 547
Virginia Park Drive; Michael
freshman and religion major: L::::o:=~
and Deborah Reed o! 15 Linda
Coats & Jackets al View-Master
'"DISNEY" Theater
Pit.tu lBc r1tt111 59c I" Plltll . lHCIHt N11kln Isle, a junior.
l
I \
6.2 01. SIZE
Close·Up
TOOTHPASB
Witll M11tlnrask
Close· Up
TOOTHBRUSHES
Hu., Me•i•m & Soft
.With 8 Track Tape Pltyer.
Stparatt tont, balance
11d vol11me controls.
Dritt-frae FM perform>
a1ce1 handsom.t wood
allin fitlisl<d Clbinet.
••. in the Round! 70 Characte~ .•• Pak ell 3'9 54111" '"· c Tall• Mickey Moos~
Peter Pan, Bam-
bi, etc: in stor-
qe ca1t
lttt CQi Cmr
Re1. lU! . . 11.BB ~
L!mlnated cor®nly lioed with pile for
gins. Belted with 24J0Ckets and shoul-
der tabs. Blue or 11ri'lber. Sizes 4-SX &
7-14. Boys quilted nylon or corduroy
jacket with zip front & hood. fall colors.
Sizes 4-7.111. Prlcos to 11.19
B.97 ID 14.97
Talkina v1iw-MAsu1
Stereo-viewer witb
sound, plus 6 talking
reels & 42 3-D
full.color pictures
that tall Batteries
not iocluded.
•• ,. 14.11
12.BB
BOXOf 30
Stayfrt.e
MAXI-PADS
Robitussin-bM
22·01. GIANT SIZE
LEMON i 'Joy''
UlllllD llllHWASIHNG
' l'IEllRGBIT
Sleep-Eze
TAIU11
litt1e cnra .. .
t ia ~c1i1111. F~sh
pict"u without
f~sh illtterlls. Dnlp-21 la loltlln1.
IOl.21J5 I
" i . .
I
\.I
(:.
·~· . ... ,_,
j
I • • . • • • •
• • • ' • • ' • • • . •
'
. . • .
·~ ;r
" . : '• '· •• •• " " " •• •• :, " • I " '. ~ ,.
d :1 I:
11
M '\
•
' •
~'. '-H PILOT ·AOVUTISER
11 1/2" Doll
ljijh tas11"'1 i.111 doll with
twist and tiirn ~a)lt, be11dahl
arms a11d le1~ 59c ~oted ha• and
real eyelashes.
.Doll OUtf its
Sav-on
BRAND LIQUOR .specials ·
. Count Vasya wu i.49
. !!~K 4 1> h1. 6. 79
~~ Old Barstow
,y AAti·
P1rSJ1irnts
1J.4L
DtSTIUID LONDON DRY WIS l .19 ~O pr.of Gi1>Nw. 7~59
MacKinnon's
SCOTCH
WIS I.II
8.59 80 Proo!
1.59
'"· 4.00
····················••o+ NESTll
Streaks 'n Tips
Instant Hair Coloring. S~aY, on, shampoos
"'1! Ideal tor touch-
up and gala contrasts.
Conceals new arowtll
and blends in aray.
~ ~·"· 79 < loM!H4tL C
CrllM2 IL. -.
411.1.09
• .+~e11111100110111111111111t1~1111011101111
: !c· • • • •
1 ~ . " I '. • • • . ,:.' ! .,. •
;.,.;;
. Hou•t&A•T Musk Oil
'. The scent tllat captur,. "eryone! It's known ·~·tor its ton& ~stin(and •1pluodisiac powe~. · · 3 50
. • and Is now C191Ured in "' appealln1 and con-
• tempoqry COl!Ctpl. • .lhL •
I
'
3 LB. 1 OZ. GIANT SIZE
i;;:::::i~ "Gain"
FREE for a limited time .•• a gift
of leJturizer-Plus to keep )'(Jllr hair
manageable.
Rt11111
fftrRI Pem111t 2.50
H1•1 Ptr91111t for 2 75-Extra Body and Set witil
Post-Pemi tonditioner. •
NEW "OGILVIE"
PIE.COIOI
COllDITIOllll
u .. bolort cotoriog
... tor sott. mao·
·11e1ble hair, tnrt
cola> •
.... 2.00
· St.. Joseph
(HllDRIH'S
' DlCOHGlST ANT
C~wable orange flavored
cold tablet. 77c
111.llc 24'1
Waste Basket
Solid top p~stic. 44
~:1rssizt. 1. 99
Laundry Basket
· Floral plastic.
1¥• bu she l " II' size. Snog rc ,11..99
"DEP" FOR YOUR
HAIR
llew11 .. tt1
Balsam Herbal
SHAMPOO
Nmral
r,~;~. 77c
lt1.lkloL
Balm Mist
.... tolo HAii
CONDITIOllll
:~:~· 1.19
Styling GEL
Contains textutizers to
mako l!llr look tlllcker. 77c
''Snooz''
DRUGSTORES
OPlll t AM te 1.-rM
70AYSAWUll
N•#Pol:T a1ACM -Int ll'YIM. W•tclltf ,._it MUN't ... 9TON •CA.Cfl -~ a. t•Jluf9t HUltTINnoM lllAC .. -,.,....._It I. IE ....... ll TOltO -M111 bO:fttkl M,
...,.,:
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ZH
BATHROOM
Tissue
Decorator Colors
& White
1.77 .•.
Y2 GALLON TREE TOP
Apple Juice ~~~-~
N1 presenatives or
su1ar ad~ed!
BATH SIZE
Lifebuoy
DEODORANT SOAP
24 OI,
SUPER SIZE
''Scope''
MOUTHWASH &
GARGLE
25 LI. BAG
Fri skies
" •.. And when P J finally goes _to school, you11
be the only one home to toke
core of the frog."
Reinecke Proble1n
-He Likes People
By PHIL JORDAN
Ca.Ii.I N.w1 S•"'ie.
SACRAMENTO -It is ~
viou:s that Lt. Gov . Ed
Reinecke badly wants to be
lhe nezt governor of the
Golden State.
He's already off and run-
ning. albeit 'vlth a staff that,
at times, is surprisingly. inept ;
even more unfortunately for
his plans -and dreams -be
is not alone.
Including horses of varying
degrees of darknes-t, the list of
Californians who'd like; come
1975, to become governor is a
relatively long one. Nailing
down the Republican nomina·
lion will be no cinch: if that
hurdle is passed, the o-p-
position will be the winner
from among a fai .r\y
formidable sel ection of
California's Democrats.
The Democratic v i c to r •
v:hoever be is, will be helped
by the state's traditionally
, heavy Democratic registra-
tion, five to three a n d
reportedly increasing. The
Republican nominee, Reinceke
or whoever, may or may not
be aided by the traditional in-
dependence of the California
voter , Democrat or
Republican.
ACCORDING TO some who
know him , Reinecke has
another handicap -his good'
nature.
"He likes people." a former
member of Reinecke's staff
said. "He likes eVerybody and
wants everybody to like him in
return. The funny thing is. I
think even some of his bit-
tereSt political entemi-es really
do like hlm -as a person."
Com mented another
oMever, "He findl it almost
impossible to tum down a re-
quest. not for any political
benefit but because he likes to
do things for people."
F'or a man who has a cer-
tain air of natural dignity
aboul him, Reinecke has' gone
along with a few stunts.
HE TOOH.1 PART for in-
stance. in a mock television
newscast produced by the
Sacramento chapter of a
journalistic a o c i et y . In
segments purportedly showing
"a typical busy day In the life
of the lieutenant governor," he
appeared variously at h is
desk, running a state capitol
building elevator, and busily
Ford Gives
Filmstrips
To Harbor
Newport Harbor High SChool
11 one of 29 schoola in Orange
County to r e c e l v e driver
education filmstrip librlrtes
from the Ford Motor Com-
,J>Ony.
• The library conslJts of 28
Wmttlipl. re co rd 1 and
-'<boolrl for lludenll and
ltachero, Jl'ocd Is donating
'60,000 worth of Ille (11Ckagt1
to 100 high IOhoola tn tbe
state.
Newp>r1 Harbor WIS chosen
to .....ive the donallon on tbe
basl1 of tta ohowlna at a
c.utomla Driver Mlbllon
Aaooc:taUoo -l<lboP eortkt
thlJ ym. ,
Aoc:ordlng to a F or d
IJIOktrnnan, tJie dGnalkm to
California 1<hoob ii t h •
largett of Ill kind by tbe auto
manu!acturer.
operating a shoestring starxi
just outside the Assembly
chamber of the building.
Perhaps, then, given the
problems he faces, h i s
"radical" approach to the job
of becoming governor has
merit. even If he isn't a
president's relative.
Reinecke is out to show he
can do more for California.
Win or lose, the s1Bi.te's No. Z
is doing a lot for the state in
the process though, too bad for
him, the actual and potential
.good results for California and
Californians far outweigh the
rieelled publlclty he b likely to
gain.
Thanks to lhe state Constitu-
tion. Reinecke hall gained on--
lhe-job experience :l.!1 acting
govemor1 a post he bolds
whenever the governor ts
absent, even brieny, from the
state -and this national elec-
Hon year, Ronald Reagan is
often away campaigning for
the re-election of President
Nixon.
ONE RECENT morning was
untypical only in that it was
even busier than u s u a l .
Reinecke had t W o major
meetings and two press con-
ferences berorc he was able to
break for lunch.
Early in the day, he met
with representatives of 17
Ca Ii for n I a governmental
bodies -cities, counties end
service districts -to outline
the $2.2 million in federal
economic development grants
for areas with unemployment
rates of 8.5 percent or more.
Then, he and Thomas P.
Dunn. deputy assistant
secrelary ol commerce for
ec;onomic development. plus
the local folk.!, met the press.
But that \\'as only the start
of the morning for the. es it
happened, acting governor.
Within minutes. he wa.s in
another meeting. this time
with representatives or the
state's labor, construction, in-
dustry, agriculture and real
estate fields.
THE SUBJECT up for
discussion was what to do
abou t a recent state Supreme
C.ourt decision r e q u I r i n g
pri vate firms as well as public
organizations to submit en--
vlronmental impact reports
before going ahead with con-
slruction and other projects.
As acting governor ,
Reinecke could have called the
Legislaure back into seasion to
deal wit.h the problem -but,
this close to an election af-
fecting all assemb\ymen and
half lhe senators, would be
likely to produce unwelcome
fire"·orks.
He has also. quietly taken
the lead in efforts to improve
trade between the state and
superpower (not to rhention
supm1ch) Japan, woiking on
Pf'Oil'IMs to l n ere as e
Japanese tourism here;: to in-
crease Japanue investments
here. and to lncrea.te the sales
of Callfomla products on
Japanese matktts. AU ol these
programt COllld mean more
jobo (or ea11rom1anas.
DESPITE AU. of which, for
some reuon .Reinecke still
hasn't rteelved lbe exposure
at vottt ltvtl that m1ny othtr
COOLendtl'I for the I 9 7 4
gov rnor's rtce Menl to be
gotllnJ, ...,, lllou&h ht bas, ••
orticlo, more than two dozen
distlnd rnponslbllltlts In the
running of the state.
Maybe ll Is tho pnce t No. 2
man has to J>IY.
But lt'Tt ls ttlU more than 1
y .... lo the tutute, .. any·
thing Clll happen.
SoRclnecklln'tdlO-
couragtd. Uc c-o n t t nu e 1
runnlng -pethapt '1ploddlna"
would be • belltt --I•
his quest "" the IQVtl'TIOl'lhlp,
DAILY PILOT WfdM$dly Ottobtr 2.5, 1972
She ~s Proteeted
Detective a Decoy in -Sex-crime Areas
KANSAS CITY iAP I -
lnslead of the typltal "Out lo
Lunch '' sign, !he one in Susan
Johnston's office reads: "Out
to Sex "
That's because when the 26-
yeaN>ld woman is not in her
office at the police depart-
ment, she may be acting as a
de<.-oy In one of the city's high
sex-crime a r e a s. walking
lkrough 3 park or along a
street , .,.,·a1ting for someone to
try to abduct or rape her.
She works with eight other
officers, all men, in the sex
crime unit of the crimes
against persans-dlvisions . . .
"I REALIZE -there ls a
potential danger ln n1y job hut
Long Flight
ED!\10NTON. Alta. fAP I -
Wardair, Ltd .. reportedly flew
a load of pineapp les from
Hawaii 7.760 miles nonstop to
an orphanage in England .
Men 's 7 diamond
cluster ring
Reg.$749
Now
599.20
2 carats·
5 diamond
wedding ring
Reg.$169
Now
135.20
1 2 carat'
Men's solitaire
ring
Reg. $190
Now
$152
V11 carat. 14K
·total weight
•
I'm well protected,'' the pet ile
mother of a 3-year~ld girl
said. "There are always about
8 to 10 men nearby who assist
in the capture."
For her work detective
~ohnstoo bad lunch Tuesday
whh President Nixon i n
"ltf!J mother calls
nae ihe hired gtu1.''
Washington and met with
Justice Department orflcials.
She shares the honor with
nine o[ficers who recently
we.re presented awards at the
Police Service Program at
Salt Lake City, spon>Qred by
Parade magazine and the
International Association of
Chiefs of Police.
She is the only woman to
rece ive the award.
Classic
bridal set
Reg. $349
Now
'279.20
1 carat•
Diamond
bridal set
Reg. $240 set
Now
$ 9 · l 2 set
. 38 carat. 14K
Through Saturday
only, we will clean
your diamond rings
for you. lrep ol charge.
Charge lt or use our
Time Pay Plan.
• •UNIOA NILLl 19000 Cho11..erttri $1.
•WOODLAND NIUI 21900VkfOIY INO.
• •1w1a1101 is20 ''l'I"' s1.
• IANTI ANA 2900 So\llh Mtltll St.
• TOlUNCI s.p.,t..,.do ol!d HowttlerM • LA•1wooe C:ol'Hl'I St ond ,0..,...,111 N .
• IUINA , ••• S.OCll ol'ld Ororlt«~• ·-• OUJrfel Gonion Grow. M ttnd M•MfM•*
I• 0'" w"IUlftl tt10.•• •1)0, lvniley• 10 .. 1,
......... 9\ .. l lf,......, .... ,...-""" ......... --~ ........................... ,... __ _,,,_.,.. ....... . ..... _wi.....1-.-
'"' ,,
IOAllll Of
THIYIAI
AWARD WINNll
IAUNICll uncnYI on.a•11ww
NOV.1,.191S
ROAD
FLARES ~·~~1n~ --~ ..... ouano.w EA.
AUTO S'
JACkSTAND ~14!1
110. i .H lACH
~ _______ :.r
Landin rd Orders Families Dancer Named
Paul Grant ol Irvine hu
boon cbolen 1 m<mber of the
To Leave Low-rent Houses . ~
ValbaU. °""°'" of Ill Oc!Ut&• at noiburg, 'n\e lnlllP will repotiotll
at clvk: aod cbuich ~
tlu'oughout Idaho.
~ . ~~ ·11~ 1,. IA.
·JUM•OllD
TY·D·BOL CLIANIR
!!I~.
mainly u servant.I to LI
Jolla's wealthy. SlmiJar.prlctd
homes are tmpoulble to find
In the ...... he aald.
The Rev. Lonnie Wormdy
said that the Legal Aid Society
will work: with the families to
fight e\llctlon.
"The falllllles have decided
to •ta¥ In their bomea for uow
and nght In the oourt.s to stay.
if necessary," said Mr.
Wormley. "'Ibey doo't have
any other choice. 'Ibey don't
bave any funds to move."
60.U.•AG CO NCR DI MIX
~~~4':
• • =c.r;:,,. ·--GlEAT IUJ'I
OUI !l!I!. no. ""
""" 111 ....
2.11 IACM
To date, Wormley said, 14
0
__ ;:_ ____ ~-f
ptreoM have promlied to help ~·
his -with monthly dona-Do Y-
U.... He uld .. corcmltt« of F.'ALSE TEET ~leen 11 tryinJ to find to tublllM• for u-Drop, Sllp, or F
which McKinnon hu been ren· Do•'' 11-..P worrrtni aboQI
r•1 .... for •~ Jo $'~ monthly. fats. teeth droppl~.t ~t the waig ..., ""' Umt. A de11t1U1 Mlhearlt 4iaD The cbeapest found ao far FASTEET-a• v•de11cw-•
renta for $375, he said. !I'• ftraW, hold. )lak• lDf l1IOf'9 ble. For IJIOlt M<Klnoon recently sold a ..,. "'"""" ""rASTESTH ~•p of suburban news, rui..-ra lure Adhwlve Powdu, »•.it~ r--..-"" Ula\ !t r.r. -ntial W 1-lwa. !fl whlcb he owned for $3.1 rour deDtW rerulatlJ, r:,;
million. He served ln Congress , ----------l-1""1> 11H8 to 1952. "
~~
llUCT •lOU' OP Glm
RED TAG SALE -50°/o OFF
~!I! "'" l(G.
·~
ALL201NCH BICYCLU
•n!~. IOWPllCIS ---
LIGHT '' ......
11!
-
1!1~ . "' IHCM
"'"
AU PU•POll
HOUA PAINT
-m 1111:
GA~
• Ul\Olln WOO DIA MD •SAN • "!ANIA • ~OMONA " RIVllllDI
· ·-Milli lllllHDlllO L.,_.., , .... "'-lllOCSll .... I vw:ron" MW, -... ~·----:::.. .. ~ --
• NOIWAll 'GARDINA "IAIDIM . GIOVI MIST~aYO. 1"'"'°· ,,..,
•1 SNOllMI• w•-'"Se:.:.~ ::tMU• _,._ -· --. ........
ANA , ...
to.MttlOL ,, ......... ----'WHlnJIR ,,,,,
fUCl4'"IO. ......... ·-
...
HO.Mais .. ... _, --
'IWNllNGTON
llACH
7100 -· ...... wtlll ·-·"'·
103>1 ·-..__ ·--
tONd llACH
1J17
t .SOU1H Sl.
"== "'"'°'*'"'
•• .
.. (
f
JYemey
1Z3 451 719 0 9
II
. ,
•
t •
•
GRANADA HILLS 19000 Chollwonh 51.
' WOODLAND HILi.i 21500 Vi<tory BIYd.
lllYlllllDI il52o ~r St.
SANT A AHA 3800 South Brio to I St. ·
DAILY PILOT
The Trea5ury is here
to save you
20%off
on all our quilted
bedspreads.
Prove it yourself.
4 days only, Wednesday
through Satufday.
Light and airy rose floral
In gold, pink Of blue Orf•..,... bodoground.
100%ocota1e--~ -IQO
one! llCerlHI. Ful~ quillod, lhroW llylo.
Reg.10.99 lWinOll\JI
8.79
Queen or king Reg. 17.99
NOW14.39
A fresh floral
ln-orbluo
100%polllhodootlm-= .......
•. ~lop bodlpwod. --Reg. 9.99Twln orM
7.99
Bad ftoral prtnt
in gold Of blue 100% 8Cltlll wfth I oaarw.
bodtond-tlL Tl'l'owllylo, lully~
Reg.14.99._
11.99
Full Reg. 16.99 NOW 1359
Bright daisy print
In )'Ollow, -"' oink. -lop In !D'JI. . cotlonJ'!i0% Nrl' rwyon with a conon bKk n
-flll. Ful~ quittod. lhRIW llylo, Moclft wd\ no Iron.
Reg. 21 .99 ,....,
17.59
Full Reg. 23.99 au-. Reg. 29.99
King Reg. 34.lS
Fashion-right solid
NOW19.19
NOW23.99
NOW 'ZT.!19
blue or gold color IPl9ld ol t00% "-"'" aoetlte with 1 ootton t.:k Ind potya llt r ta'lg.
FuA •alaooonaln-QIWl. F\Aly
quilled. """"' lllylo. Reg. 14.99 1\W1
11.99
NOW1359
NOW19.99
NOW2239
I 'rOftl!AltC• S.pulllld• lfld Hawthor"
LAK.-000 C1r10n St. ond Poromoun1 BM!.
IUlllA '* B11cll llld Orongathofp9
OllAHCll Gonion Grow Blvd. Ind-I
{
. . .
. . . . . . .
. .
.
•
I
~\ . . If DAILV PILOT
Pepsi Takes Havasu
Ninth Annual Race Set for November
LAKE HAVASU CITY, Ariz.
~ A change in name to the
Pepsi-Cola Outboard World
Championship was aMOUDCed
today by Robert P. McCulloch
Jr., race dittctor of the
!60,000 Lake eav... clasak,
sclleduled for its ninth nmnlng
various sports," McCulloch
said, "and this year is,jolnlng
with McCulloch Properties,
Inc. in making the world's No.
l t>oat race even better."
Corporation, Waukegan, 111.
Evinrude has made this dona-
tion for several years.
McCulloch said be I! happy
with the Pepsi-Cola decision.
"The Outboard World
Championship has become In·
creafiilgly expensive aOO the
financial participation o f
BOATING
Hobie Cat
Title Won
By Naish
•
Sailboat Show's
Crowds Increase
~~a, wiUl Pete Ebetllll'~
0th• lea!.,..°'-~~ Include an hourtY 1..,..,..,:....
claaa run by !he calllornia
Sailing Acodemy, ~~ In how to handle a
on Nov. IS-28. '
McCulloch sBld the Pepsi-
Cola Compa111" wltb bead-quarws at Pun:base, N.Y. iB
cootrlbutiDg a substantial swn
to aaollt wllb the ""'1 .of
racesite f~UWet and wilh
promotion al the .....
.. As a result of thi! assoc la~
I.Ion, lhll'e will be oo admlsaion
charge for lhe 1972 race. All
&pectaton will attend as
guests of l'epsl-O>la."
MCCUJlocb Properties, Inc. Is
the race spomor and again
wUi cootrlbute 135,000 to tbe
pri&e f u n d, with anc;ither
$2:5,tm as a personal con-
tribution beiQg po.fled d>y
Ralph Evinrude, chairman of
tbe board, Outboard Marine
Pepsi.COia enables WI to im-'--------""' prove even more the bigh
aau. a movie theater 4 ' ' a ~
loom actually turning out'~s •
. 00 the lloor of the Anna. ' •
'lbere are more big boa!l In
the 40-looliJ!us range ' lliin have been previo•~1iy
disp!iqed at the obow. ono•L.
the f8.foot CJialleoger mot.r ·
sailer -WU IO large It ball~
be i>ooltioned -the;-"In l'ecellt Y•8"' Pepsi·
Cola hal usoclated itseU with
standards of the race," he
dee~ "ln recent years, Pepsi-Cola
has participated financially in
tennis, golf, auto racing, waler
skiing and bowling, and other
top.rated sports."
Power ·Racing for Wealthy
By JACK WOUSTON
NEW YORK (UPI)
Offshore power boat racing I!
one of the most thrilling com-
petitive sports b! the world,
but it's not a pastime for the
man with limited resources.
.. You have to say that
offshore racing ill the last
stronghold of the adventurous,
wealthy International
sportsmM,., says Bob Penrod,
race committee chairman of
the recent Eighth an11ual Long
Beach Hennessy Cup World
Championship.
Just getting a boat.ready for
competlton cost.. more than
$50,CMXI -and that doesn't in-
clude travel, hotel and fuel ex-
penses to campaign the craft
in the dozen or more races
that art held each year .
"A bare bull costs up to
$40,000, engines ""'1 up to
$10,CMXI each by the time
owners modify them for peak power, and accessories like
safety nares. radios, naviga.
Coast Sailing Unit
Sets '14-mile' Race
Newport Ocean S a i I i n g
Associ.etion has scheduled its
24th annual 14-Mile Bank Race
for Nov. 4.
'Ihe race is open to all
yachts with Ocean Racing,
P HRF, MORF and Ocean
Racing Catamaran measure-
ment certificates. All yachts
entering must be capable ot
meeting the s a f e t y re-
quirements of the El'l!enada
Race. NOSA is also the
sponsor of. the Ensenada race.
Entries fur the race must be
postmarlt<d not later than Frt-
day, Oct. %7. FA!trles must be
malled to Preston Zillg!tt,
NOSA race commit tee
chairman, 1 2 O 0 Sandcastle
Drive, C.Orona del Mar, 92625.
'M'le race starts . midWay
between the Balboa Pier and
the Newport Jetty entrance
buoy. The course is around the
No. 4 red buoy 1 '12 miles off
lhe Newport Pier and thence to
a stake boat anchored on the
14-mile Bank and then to the
finish at the Newport Harbor
entrance.
In the event the leading
yacht of any dasa has not
roonded the mark on the 14-
Mile Bank before-5 p.m. The
race may be terminated at
that point.
tion equipment and other
items can run the cost up
another $5,CMXI," Penrod says.
The Treasury is
hereto save
you plenty
before the
Christmas
rush starts.
Prove it
yourself.
11
GRANADA HILLS 1 eooo Cna11wortn St.
WOODLAND HU.LS 21500 Victory Blvd.
RIVERSIDE 3520 Tyler SI.
SANTA ANA 3ll00 Souln Bfistot St.
Breakwater
Ocean Race
Fete Slated
NOW . . .
entrance. ::rt•!
STARS ... 1
Sydney 0m&rT Is oM' .Of
the world'• great astral~ 1
gen. His column la on&-'•
the DAILY PILOT"S sre&t features.
.. '
l
• 'f I ~. I • ., l
!
I • I
I
ON FRESH, NEW 1972
4 DAYS ONLY, WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY.
REG. l.17 REG. l.50 REG. 2.00
~·
All in solid packs of 25 alike.~ gala selection of every
style of card Including the holiday greeting just right for you.
I TORRANCE Sepulveda and Hawlhorne
LAKEWOOD Carson St. and Paramounl Blvd
BUENA PARK Beach 1na Or1ngelhorpe
ORANGE Garden Grove Blvd. and Manchesler
HUGE PRE-SEASON SAVINGS
ON CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAPS
As~orted bows. Bag of 25 39 c .
216 feet of ribbon ag e
Beautiful assortmenl of colors and widths
6 rolls of wrapping paper or foil 1 79
100 sq. ft. of paper or 45 sq. ft. of foll a
Listed are only a few from our great
selection at big savings.
Open WHkdoyo t ::io to'"° lund1y. 10 io 7.
TheN ¥tluet •I 1111 T,.11t.try tlOffL
The compar1\l'le s•l• prlc11 lltlt4'
art in1r0duc1ory 1pecl11 011111 lor lhe
_.new T11atul)' t lOfea and price 111·
ducUona IOf !ht 4 1S111>Haht<I Trt11ury
'atoras. '
I
I
I
I
!
'
:.<;I
~~ i
' ' : I ! I
I
' • •
i
t I
: I : • • •
\ j
' ' 1 I ~
..
t • • ' I ,
"
....... -
Y~ung •Pupil~
Dean Takes Along Tot
. • CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) -Dr. Hendrik Gideome, a
~ at the Unlverail)' ol ClnclnnaU, lakes bla !fl.week-old
v@!.to -t with him <ind his wile drops ln the office reg. 1~1Y to hreaat-leec! the baby.
11'""1"1 JlJST LOOKED at my schedule and aaw I'd be out
't ,-., or four or five nights a week and said, 'Nub!. I'm
s' :going to see my son only while he's sleeping ln a dark
i '," said the 36-year-old Gideonse, dean of th& College
~ducalioo,
1,1 .i~ldeoose, a !armer researcher !or the U.S. DepiTh
o!Jl'lll o1 Health; EducaUoo and Weilare, aald bil wife ™ab slops In on schedule th~ two days a week he takes
Infant to the ofllce to !eed the baby.
. .,Gldeonse said a dominant theme in hls studies has been
~'need to "'hwnanize work so that It does not require rllCh a complete separation from the values, needs and ac-
tivities which fulfill people emotionally and estheUcally."
~ ' .
COMPLAINl'S RAVE bee!) minimal, and UC Pres~!
Warren Bennis said his only concern is that Gldeonse
t~ves the taxpayers tbeir money's worth." •
•
:41_ ombing Suspe.c~
e.iven Senwnce
3.99
MEN'S WE STERN
FlAREJEANS
Machine washable 100'!~
brushed cotton. Navy.
elk. brown. waist sizes
29 to 36. Inseam :29
!033.
1.88
BOYS' NO-IRON
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JEANS
100"/o cotton and cotton/
polyester blends. Styles
in solids and patterns.
Sizes 6 to 18R, 6 to 165. •
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with similar backgrounds ~
going to pull Ibis country up
by the bootstraps," Yakopec
was quoted in the probation
report.
NO ONE WAS injured In the
explosion at, the Gu,ild 'lbea~r.
!or adults •ll!J"ln ~ Dlec'o's
mUCrest areal but the 5U1!!•
wui torn apar .
Yalropec was olle o! nine
persons Indicted by lbe coiln!y
grand jury In connectioll with
lhe group. • .
George MitcheD ·Hoover, 36,
goes 1o· trial today on charges
of shooting Into the home of a
sell-desctibed radical pro-
fessor who has since left the
faculty of San Diego State
-11Diversity.
Bank Booms
. LISBON, Portugal (AP) -
Hunctred.s of people lined up
~utside a bank here, waitin~ to
buy tJie 1 ,000 ~nk ~res just
'PUt up, tor sale. i;~ •. ~.
Open-kdara 1:ao to l:aG Sundap 10 to 7.
"
DAILY PILOT J7
•
'
I The Treasu riy is here
1 Prove it yourse~.
tosaveyou.
•
•
•
,Save33%
on women's
nylon triqot
gowns.
4DAYSONLY, . .
"tHURSb"'V THROUGH SUND'AY. .· ... $ ·3 FOR 5REG.2FOR$5
Our best-selling waltz gowns in soft paslal colors. So"8
with lace trim, sheaf oversklrts. SizesS,M,L
B.
GjRLS' lWO-TONE
SHORT SLEEVE TOP
100% cotton knit
Various colors. Siles
S.M,L 1.66
GIRLS' CORDUROY -
FLARE JEANS
100'k cotton CQlduroy .
Elasticized waist. Brown .
"""f, purple or berry .
2FoR2.99
SIZES 4 TO 6X.·
2FOR4A9
SIZE5'7 TO 12. '
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5.99
WOMEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
BOUCLE KNIT TOP
Acrylic/wool. Assorted designs.
SizesS,M,L
WOMEN 'S
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v-Jomen 's sizes 5 to 10 in
white, laded blue or
black. Glrrs· sizes 81iii
to 3 in white, faded blue.
navy, red.
1.88PAIR
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5.99
WOMEN'S FLARE LEG
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100°/o polyester. Assorted colors.
Sizes 8to18.
WOMEN'S
PENDANTS
An essential style accessory
at a sensational low price.
Wide selection from
medieval to mod .
QRAHADA lllU.S 18000 Chai.worth St. I WOOOl.MID HIUI Z1500 Vlclory Blvd.··'
IHVEAllDI 3520 Trier St.
SANl'AAHA 3t00Solrth e~1101 st
. ' TOlllWIC! 9'!1vMda and Hawfhorna
LAK!WOOD Carson $1, and Paramount Bl"°'
IUINA PAllK Beach end Or1ngt1horpe
OllAlfCll Gard n Grova Blvd. and Mancht1ter
1 I
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DAILY PILOT
SURRENDER -Benton D. Burt. 30 and Andrea ~loJnan, 18, both wanted in connection with the es-
cape or Chino Prison inma~e RDnald ~aty~ gi~e
clenched fist salutes in therr attorneys office 1n
?ttenlo Park prior to surrendering to FBI agents. A
guard in the escape-ambush was killed.
Rockefeller Back
Home in Arkansas
Former Arkansas G o v .
Wlathrop RockefeUer looked
pale and gaunt on h.is return to
his adopted state.
Hi~ \'Oic-e was barely audible
and the only words he spoke
were. "\.ood to be home."
Rockefeller. 60. came back
10 A .. kansas after a month of
medica l tests· in a New York
h"spital for an undisclosed ail-
ment.
fie ~1lre a full beard and
long hair at the brief stopover
nominee George lt1cGovem
anoounced that his wife would
be malting her first campaign
appearance after recuperating
from what he called "total u ·
haustion."
Mrs. McGovern has been
relaxing for the past few day.s
in the Virgin Islands at the
estate of McGovern's finance
chairman, Henry Kimmelman. * . Dame Sy bil Tborndlke, first
lady of the British stage and a
living history ol the 20th cen·
( J tury theater, celebrated Iler
P'"'OP'LE 90th birthday, showered with .1:1 bouquets and greetings from
around the world. .._ _______ _. Dame Sybil, slowed by
at Adams Field in Little Rock.
Afterward, he flew to his
home, Winrock Farm on Petit
Jean Mounta in.
* Raymond R. Farnsworth,
San Deigo bachelor. gave up
shoemaking as a profession
because of traffic iniUJi.es in
194.3. He found a job -gueg
what -dr\Vlng a taxi.
The lMenu.tional Tu.icab
A&toclatl o n honored
Farnsworth at Its 1971 oo~
vention for having driven one
million miles since 1 9 4 3
without an accident.
Farnsworth, 62, is senior
driver for the San Diego
Yellow Cab Co.
* Lawre.Det Welk and Ml11.nie
Pearl were named national ~
chairmen of the American
Cancer Society's 1973 crusade
at the society's armual dinner
in New .York.
Both entertainers will make
appearances across the nation
to raise funds for the fight on
cancer.
* Eleaoor ~1cGovern w 111
stage a romeback on the cam-
paign !rail Friday when she
appe:irs a' lhe star altraction
at a poli~·<·al really at New
'fork';; \ldd ison Sq u are
G<irdcn
U e r-1 o 1·ratic presidential
Effects Told
arthritis and sciatica, marked
the day by spending a few ex·
tr11 hours in bed.
The actress, who began ac·
ting in 1904 and became a star
by playing tbe lead In George
Bernard Shaw'a "Saint Joan"
20 years later, railed m-.
dignaMly against her !J>.
fmnities.
"l don't feel 90 In my head,
but I feel llO in my body," she
told an intentewer. "Its such
a nulsance."
* Edd Honea, whose wife died
six weeks ago after 83 yean of
marriage, was buried tn the
family plot near Bear Branch,
Ky., the family reported.
Hollen, 106, and his wife, the
former Margaret Gray, who
was 100, left 148 descendants.
'Ille family said the couple
never stparated for even a
week of. their mapiage.
* Mn. Abu Stocker Reuther,
90, mother of the Reuther
bnlthen wbo helped fO<Jll and
run the United Auto Workers
union. in Wake!ield, Mass.,
died.
One son, Walter. was presi·
dent of the union from 194& to
1970, when he died in an
airplane crash.
Another, Victor, retired last
May as director of foreign af·
fairs.
Temblor Warning
Outlined in SF
SAN F11ANCISCO (AP ) -
Pi-fore than 10.000 persons
might be killed if the San
Francisco Bay atea were
struck by an earthquake as
llf~re a:; the 1906 quake along
the San Andrea& fauJt. lhe
chairman or the s t a le
legislature's .Joint Committee
'
Guidebook
Dead End
WASHINGTON CAP ! -
Zvtr)' )'ear, the U.S.
General S e r v i ces
AdmlnlltraUon publiMe1
the. olfkial Gove.mmtnt
Orpnhallon Manual, • ,--Jlttlna federal
11treMI, their locaUon, -and--· ,,,...,. ...... th~
,_,.,, .-ftilun feeturea •
hllad .,..._ 'l1>e IabJrinth
Uo1D ......... batllOU•
II.
on Seismic Safety has warned.
"One half of our hospitals
wouki be out of commission
and unable to care for
ca.sualtie1. Shou kl one of the
many dams above populated
areas fall tmder this atrong
Iha.king, that number of deaths
c00ld increase by two or three
times ," State Sen. AU red E.
Alqulst, said Tuesday.
AJqulst'1 committee began a
publlc heaMng on the effects
of earthquakes on high rise
structures in San FranclJCO.
He sgld he hoped t h e
Legislature wouJd set stan--
dards for all public bulldlnga,
making them sefer In the
event of 1 temblor.
"Hopefully, the« guldellnea
will be accepted by private !J>.
dumy aa well." he odd<d.
Alqulsl 11ld that tncreaalng
urbaniutloo hu m ad e
Cllllornla mort wlnerable to
earthquake damage.
He said the San Femando
earthquake In 1971 aha-'
Iba! tbe 1t1te'1 complex
fl"'MWIY 111ttma were not
deslped ... 1<1111 •lnlnll lhak-lng. .
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
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43.99
REMINGTON
.22 CAL.
AUTOMATIC
RIFLE
Removable S·shol
clip magazine,
(Model •10C) 99c ... 99c ...
LARGE
RHAPSODY
VIUU 3.4415• TilOL 7. 99 SV.-OT. ' :. '
SPANISH INSPIRED
WOOD CANDLEHOLDERS
Choice of slx stylea.
Each 8'" tall.
SERVING TRAYS,
LACQUERED FINISH
Bright mushroom
pattern, 131f.i:• diameter.
Eo'y growing, eoiy
blooming new hybrid•.
Many lovely color1.
BOX WITH LIFT OUT
TRAY
Handy organizer tor
tools, acces&ories.
COOKER-DEEP FRYER,.
CONTROLLED HEAT Wi!h dry basket, algnal
light. thermostat control.
(Model 11110)
The Treasury is here to save you. . ' '
Plenty. 1Prove it yourself. "
.. ·'
4 DAYS ONLY, WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY.
8.88set
Set of 3 bamboo hampers
Largest size is 19 .. x 2s· .
·-
· 1~123 456 789 0 9
Reg.19.95
.Save3.96
15.99
Lloyd's AM/FM
2-band
portable radio
Telescoping
antenna, operates
on batteries or
AC /DC current.
(Model #N610)
Decorator table lamps
were 12.97save $6 on a pair.
Choose from traditional, modern.
EarJy American or Mediterranean
styles, from 33· to 37• 1a11. Crystal,
ceramic, Bristol glass, metal and
wood /wrought iron bases with
coordinated shades. All U.L listed.
.. . . '
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' ! ' • ', ••• I ·(' . . . . , r • • •• 't· 'i'···.'.," • I ' • ' • I . I • I
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4.99
G.E. clock
snooze alann,
walnut-tone
cabinet
Remarkable low
price. With handy
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(model l/7357WA)
" ' I ' ' •
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Th••• ••luet al ell I
Tr•1tur1 •lorn.
The comparative sate
prices listed are intro-
ductory special oilers !or
lhe 4 neW Treasury stores
and price reductions tor
lhe 4 eatablllhed T reaaury •
&torea.
GRANADA HILLS 18000 Chalswonh SI.
WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd.
RIVERSIDE 3.120 Tyler SI.
SANTA ANA 3900 Soulh Bristol St. I TORRANCE Sepulveda and H1wlhornt
UKEWOOO C1rson St. ind Paramount Blvd.
BUENA PARK Beach and Oranoathorpto
Oft.ANGE G1rdtn Qrov. Blvd. end Manche1ttr I
Open ltffkd1p 1:30 to l:IO
lund•ts 1010 7.: · ·
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•
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,For The Carp~nter Chafed
By Battin's Pitch
,
' ' I ecord
I Bl,rth•. . By o.c. HUSTINGS El Portal, San Clemente. 110U11c<d their support for °' .._ Dflllr f'&Mt lttff Panellsta wW be Kay Walton State Aaaemblyman Robert
.1. ".°:~:~tl~:~~ State Senator Denn J • ~tee:;. Ot ~~~~ B;:c~ !~ra :!t8:;~f~~rt~~ ~tr~ Mrt.,lf,~d~i~ ~. ••IH, Carpenter (R-Newport Btach) and M~ry Beltran of Laguna in tbe 70th Assembly District. -~~-s:.· ~1ri.ttQt111n,1 1311 Ls perturbed about sohei:ne of the Nlauel. • Supporting Burke's re-elec-~~AU'ii N • ,.n~~1.S•n campaign tactics mg used * * * Uon campaign are: Mary ~~ffej=~~ .... :~~N:~.itJf1~/~~~: ~~:.=:~A'~ ~be~o~~~me~up~a~~ ~~~~ct; Sa:!8ge~~n!:~
.. .... tin. a "Mer:t the Press" panel Orange County Board of
r.lr... '" ~lc!-..;..,noy. Nov. 2. with local newsmen Education,· W i 11 i am T. Battin, carpenter s a I d , . ~,:r·~ W..:~ ~ recently circulated a mailer, qdlu::E.' congress1onal can. Anderson, Los Alamitos School
"'nle orange County Voter," ~ District; Robert Bark , ~·-J= 98!'· °"r:r.~1':r,' 1"° The event will lake place at Anaheim Union High School 11;,. '"llm 1 ry 2i1m in which appears a picture of th 015· tri·ct. ·" .,. 1 ... 1onli1eo.~r .' Assemblvm•n Robert Burke a noon luncheon at e
Nfl, ""' M .... c.n.r H """' 1'31 ~·-· Disneyland Hotel's new con-Also, Jack T. Calms, Seel
J:.rvlM Aw.., ~f:~~Jo'i!':· 11 n. (R-Huntlngton Buch) and Beach School District; Melvin wt.=.~~:i:;to;J;:~°=f"t:ov~2 Ca"""'terwith 'D .. ttin. vetttJon hall. Chamber director 1 n. •11 • ..,...... up Jira. Beam, who will moderate R Collings, Garden Grove
ORANGE COUNTY
Fire Crews
Get Ready
For Winds
~ •• T~. r~:. t::*~ .. ~: )'3(1 "1be capttoo beneath the the news conference, said it Is Unified School D i s t r i ct ; '1ti~!\'i~· i•~ N~t"'":!'!c~: picture implied that boCh of 113 open to the: publlc. Luncheon Orville Hanson, Huntington ORANGE-Ca 1 if or n I a
,:.riftd M .... P•i« J. J~, .. , support the candidate in his tlcketsat$6pergersoncenbe Beach City (elementary) Division of Forestry
orl• Ao1. 1. G~;.i:e,; Grow., 11oy. bid for a second tenQ.." said ~ .... -ID~ from c•·-her offices School District·, Worth Keene, firefighters and thei.r equip-•1111 Mr.. John M. Stio.I, :J73 Carpe ~ ~ ~ IQl.UI '!r~~i:·.~;~.~.~.·,~~L.'!?L2. ner. In The City's Bank oj. America Coast Community C o 11 e g e ment are being . moved from
,,._,,, ...... ~ .... ,..,, ... , IJ ~" ''Sp ea k..f. n i for both Tower in Orange through Oct. District. Northern California to bolster
1., · ect-... n. "" Assemblyman Burke an d 30 , And, George Logan, Hun· fire control strength i n
Mel Mr,. Jtffl' .... L. Nlchol!f 1'791 If I ould lik to tat . . h lba~~......ood Ln.. Hun11n111on .,,tch. myse , w e s e Candidales to be queried by tington Beach Union H1g Southern California in an·
Mr. •nd M,.. '"t••d F. ~•rd1, that such is not the case and, the panel of newsmen include School District; Clay Mitchell, ticipatlon of dry, hot Santa 0'2766 hl•m•re S .. El Toro · tt f f I J MT. •nd M,..,.. ~1c •rd H. c,, "'· 3110 as a ma er o ac , v..-.ubllcan. Del Clawson (in· State Board of Education; Ana winds.
<Co••• "pt ...... .,.,. M••~ 11lrl. II d not support ·-· Ra Schmitt H 1 · t ~ •nd Mr•. c 1rt .. "· ,..M1ero, 1s.u persona Y o cumbeht) and Democrat y , u n 1 n g on Michael o. Schori, chief of ~ Ln .. An•IMlm, 11tr1. Supervisor BatUn for rHlec-Co d Tu he 23rd district 0 -ach Union High ~hoot ta-•nd Mn. 11;_, e. Moor•, n1 e. nra o y, : PC -....,.. the Southern Ca JI for n i a
Flr. aru. 01r1. u·on.. Dern t Ri h d H (. Dtstn·ct and Ro••~ Zin ..... ~nc1 Mr1. Ft11~ A. TDtdttr, i43C • ocra c ar anna in-• """• • di trlct id that ltbougb the ..:'.''!:.C-J' ... ~·:.~'":: 'f~un. 1,. .u1~ "Additionally, Mr. Burke cumbent) and Republlcan ngrabe, Ocean View School w!a~ ~or the a past two :S'"' N~~;.0\~n and 1 are somewhat dismayed John Ratterree, 34th district, District. weekJ bas he1d fire danger to ""~o:l' • .::1'Ji .. ~1~1~f:' A~i. ~r.r.'d· :l50f that a photograph taken over and Republican A n d r e w . THE HUNTl* *NGTO* Bea..1. a minimum, It i& not UllJSual "'t!'~f,no:1s.~· tn~r·~~.~~=~: a year ago was med withoot Hinshaw and Democrat John >N 1.ai-for lllgh velocity Santa Ana ~-securing our permission, or Black, 39th district. Fountain Valley Board of winds to ,_._ up overni·gbt.
>Ar. •nd Mr1. curtl1 V, H1wn1, !U 'ther bef •-·11 """'to Is-•••• I t 1""'6 '"'ln11 s1 .. H1,11111M1°" P.-fo':• 11lrl. consulting e1 of us ore-Popping tu~ questions w1 ,..M;CLI rs ........... 16 vo un eers fi hazard ::'.s:'.':'!·os~.,Me& It..~ "° w. hand." be newsmen Howard Seelye of to belp stall its campaign for creating extreme ire
nnd M~. Q<o<inlt--M~IM(l'I•, * * * t•-' --A !es T·m Al Pro~"lon t• the Watson tax condltiOM. 1 :n V!rcilnl• w..,1 s. ~-· olrt. 1ic u.>-> nge I es, r""'n ,, fltr. 1nc1 M~;,,.:;., 1 o. Rich, 1200 THE CAPlSTRANO Bay Hewitt of the Fullerton Daily inJtlative, The Santa Ana winds, which :•rv1nerr~~,."1'T.t.L Area League of Women Voters News Tribune, Thomas Keevii Kent Pierce, chairman of originate in the great basin ~· •nd Mri. 0T.,." J~ aiefeld mn will present the pros and cons of the DAILY PILOT and Stan the West Orange County drive, area of the Western U.S., are
,co1rinr11 c1re11, HVl'lll11111on 'anc11, of all 22 propositioos on the Oftelle of the Santa Ana SIYS volunteers who can given of very low humidity and of ~~and M ... EhHn w. 8Rln11rrno.. N 7 ball t d · g a public R-io::ter. an hour or two a week are high intensity making the oon-
,01r1. sesstoo scheduled for Nov. lat needed to file, answer phones trol of brush and ,grass fires ,115-.0 W•ln.u1 Sfl'HI. F°""t1ln v111<1v. OV. 0 urm ~&""' ~ * *
..J,. and Mr~r«11a Arnold. 1n1 offices of the!San DI.ego Gas TWEL E members of and stuff mailers. Contact difficult and dangerous, Schori
iror.tell, w""1"'1"'"'"· Mv. and El Irie Go 101 w . h I boa d ha ~-at ... ~0• pointed oot Mr. and M.,.. Oudlev H. C•rr, 3162 _..=::..:::ec=:.:::.:.:::.m::.:cpan:::.:yc:,.:.:.:...__·_v_a_n_:ou_s_:os~-'.oo.C:..C...'.:.:.' __ ve_an_-_·,_~_~ __ ~ ___ . _____ .o_ ___ • _______ 1 •l!s•ver ''""'· 1rv1nt. boy.
1 ~ Odo1Mr14 ..................................................................................... .,
l
. 1nd Mrs. Mleh•I'\ Oel~•lo. :t'l"IO W11lllnoton A-• .... COJla M ....... ,.I.
• • ~nt! Mr~ °"'"nl• r-V•n M""'" JAS1 Ytlt Clf'dt. Hunf1110ton 8~11<11. .. , ..
r. ·and Mr1. Rtnt NuneI. 4]\ E.
Avenldt COi""~"· ~·~ ~11me~11. "''1. Cklll!Nf" ,.
• ~M M .. R•~"'~ 1=. ,_....,l•'~"•"I nn Llbwtv S!rHI, HunllrKlton ~·~ach. bclV.
I' Marriage
LicensPs
I
!f.DHAM lll-8ALL·LLOVERA I Y•on J.O:.. ol!i, nao Cll'f St.,
:N-pOrl e+odl and Ju\!~ 01 .. 11•, 39.
tsS7 foxbury W•'f• Plc;a River•. SNI DER-GOA.SKI -Osle "(", It. •S A
• C•Ulornl• SI,. Art;Mill Ind N'1K'/'• 11,
.i~ F-l•ln W•v Ent, Cos1• ,,..__ '1"'NLEY~DEN -Tlmolh'f R.id,
,2:1, 6U Syly'fl PIK9, H•WMlll, N..,..
1Jeoe., Mid 0.Wfl Marl•, 21, 6001
I ROffln(ll'll Qr1w. Huntlngt"" 8"cl'I.
lllNKLli"l"~llEEN -OIVld Thllmu, I 20, 110 QUten L.....,, S.ni. Anl and l ~ry Kil"*''"'• 11, 6901 A.lo Vis!•, • Hunt!~ 8Mdl. q1LLESPl£·PACANA -0.11 frldrlck.
32, 15'1 Glorla SI .. G•rMn G'""' •nd ! Ctw1JifM Ann. ». I032 Drd SI., 1W:d~-MeGAW.JENNll+GS -~'" NeHll '2•,•S1t Vlcl11r'f SI., Co.j1 MeY •nd 'M•I-A.~. n. 37• Vlclory St ..
'COl1• MtM. dtt ... 'IG. ,Ul:-KOLLM"NN -A.Im.rd
IGl:fdoll,. 22, m 0911 St., Apt. A, Coal•
i ~ Sherr,, 20, 165 C1nyon ! V Drlwo, L•guna &ncn. liA INIWHDWAL TEA. -T r • n I
+ ne, :u, 100l Posl ROlod, Co11a
+
,.... •nd Su. Ann, 19, 1003 PDSI 1tbad, (Diii Mtu. ~T-61.AIR -Jotl!I Htttd\11, 32, h ~In SI., Hur11ong10t1 ikl•tfl •r.u
ldd LM, 2l, l07\'t Main SI., Hun· 1)11/on llncn.
~IA.VINE -Rlo;twird Htrry, ll, ;~:12G' lllcigeYI-Ttrrtco, Fulle<-tcn ~ L.nlll, .)0, .u.'.11 Ch<l(ltvlll• ._1rcl1. ITrllM.
: Deatl1 ~olices •
. . .
Genuine Cashmere
at the price of
ordinary sweaters!
BY THANE
Nofhlng quite matches the opulent feel of 100% pure
cashmere. Nothing matche9 lhls value, esP8C:iall)' wilh
cosily fully fashioned detail. You'll want both styles at
~outstanding Anniversary savings. Navy.
burgundy, barley tan, Cambridge grey.
V-neck Punowe;, reg. 37.50
22.49
Turtleneck sweater, reg. 40.00
24.99
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ANNIVERSARY jSALE
silverwoods
•
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J •••
\ ~ l ., \ " ~ ., • ,,
' '
_,...,. •• IJNWW C*W
Wl'U QWMI,~
Oft AMPICM 'UPAUe
45 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CENTER e NEWPORT BEACH
I '
Wfdntsday, Octobtr 25, 1972 DAILY PILOT 9
Pay Hiked 34,000 II•
Veterinary Post Okayed
SANTA ANA -Orange
County supervisors Tuesday
voted 3--2 to bl.re a Veterinary
Public Health Director to head
up the county's Veterinary
Public Health Division at a
salary $4,001 a year higher
than that recommended by
county personnel.
Dr. John R. Philp, county
health of fl ctr, said his depart-
ment wanted to hlre a
veterinary director who held
masters degrees in b o t h
veterinary medicine a n d
public health. He said the
$20,400 per year salary sug-
gested by William Hart, coun-
ty peraonnel director was not
hlgh enough to attract the kind
of man he wantt'd.
Philp suggested S24.4M a
year and got the support of
Supervisors Ron a Id W.
Caspers, William J. Phillips
and Ralph Clark.
Supervisor David L. Baker
oald he thought the ll0.400
y!3fly &Rlary wao h l g h
enougb. He oa1<l ho bad beeo
hllormed tbot Hart h a d
reseMched oalarles paid loo
similar poets ln other counties
and in ckies and he wu
soU.fied that a compotenl
vetl(il!IO' ~lb d Ire c Io r
could lie fowld at tho lower
rtgure .
ln the final vote he waa join-
ed by S..pervlscw -Ba~ tin.
111e new director, when
blred, Will supplant Dr. R. II.
Marywoocl Fete
ORANGE -Open house will
be held for eighth graders of
Marywood High School and
their parents from 2-5 p.m.
Oct. 29 at 2811 Villa Real
Drive.
·The Treasury
is here
to save you.
Prove it yourself.
Save1/2
on quality portraits.
LAST3 DAYS.
74c reg. 1.49
Halgbt who hso headed the
VMerinary 'Public Health
Olvtsloll Of Ille ""'DlY fur
many yetrs. Haight, ho'llfever
wilJ remaln on the staff as a
veterinarian. If he IO dlooles.
City of Hope -Auction Set
BUENA PARK -An auc-
tion will be held by the Louis
J. Krugly Chapter of tho Clty
of Hope at 8 p.m. Nov . 4 at the
Retail Clerks Union
Auditorium, 8.530 stanton Ave.
A $1 donalion will include
ad mission, door prizes and
refreshments. The event will
be open to the public.
For more information , call
Mrs. Morris Malalon at 598-
3686.
LAO 1'-IE
a..oooe one 5• x r "'four waliet-sizs portrails, same pose.
A-..lsxTsor4walotlize, 1A9 each
• Save oo· klrgef quantities
• No appointment necessary
• NeYer a film, hr<ldllng, or delM>iy charye
• Color enlargements and large black & whita posters
available by redfder.
Group pholDs If! natuj.iic:clor, 744 each
oulljoc:Un plcbn. Unil4people to group. NOW TliRU
HOURS• DAILY 9,30 to 1-210 6
• 011d7to9 OCT.29th
T~1• ••l1re1 ••ell I Tr..11,iry ,......_The cornpciroli\4 tolt Pf(cM
li11ed or" lnttoduciory 1peclol off•,. fOf' rt.. A new Treoi.ury 110fe11
ond price !"1'ductlonl fOf' •he <I e11obl~ Tr1<1wry 1lore$.
GllANADA tttLLS 111DDO Ch•lswonh 51.
WOODLAND HILLS 21500 VlclofY Blvd.
lllY!lllllDI! 3520 Tyler 51.
SANTA ANA 0000 Soulh Bristol 51.
' I TOAAANCE Sepulveda Ind Hawthorne
LAKEWOOD Carson SI. and Paramounl Btvd.
8UENA PAAK Beach and Orangethorpe
ORANGE Garden Grove Blvd. and Manoheslat
o..._ .. •••ktf•y• 9130 •• 9t30, lvndoy• 10 t• 7.
I
O~LY PILOT
PILOT-AIMRllSU 8
~ ·Compton Junior Jury Takes Part • Ill Legal System r
Chtiltimi Sdtm• Mon itor Stn>k•
COMPTON -'llllrty-live block high
ICbool students swarm into t b e
-bvoon, 11· g qulckly 1,... the gallery towa the Jodi•'• chambers.
Judge Harry . Shaler la roedy for them
-they 're parl of hll uperimental
"junior jury" program.
That's one of Judge Shafer's in-
novations.
"rm game for any tdeas on improving
our system of justice," he Slly&. '1My
court is a guinea pig."
Judge Shafer -a Compton municipal
judge -doesn't like to talk about his
young jurists ; he likes to show them of(
in action. In so doing, he sOOw1 oH his
system of juslice as well.
Judge Shaler greets the students.
"Come in, sit down. Be careful of
Fields there." A girl gingerly seats herself on the
leather couch next to a 3-by 4-foot poster
of W. C. Fields.
gel ohoved down !he ball lo Bob, Judg•
mu. You'U mttt him later.
''Here you'll aee a lot of movlna; viola·
lions, traffic Uckets, or FTAI. That's
'failure to appear.' Let me tell you about
FT Al. The,. ate the people who thought
il they would Just forget their Ucket, It
would forget them. Doesn't happen I.Mt
way.
begin. You IO on out there nd toll
them : Here come da judge."
"Remain seated," the baJllff calla.
"Judge Harry T. Sb>ler, Compton
Municipal Court."
The judge climbs, !he steps and tallea
his place on the beDch.
"Lel1s start off all understanding me
thing,'' he addreued the courtroom at
large. ''The law doesn't say you are en.
The nnt case It called. A policeman
and I young man walk tq the front of !he
cooritoom. The tud.t llarta to •* the ddMdant a queo\ioci' when the oUicer tn-
temJpta. ~ • •
"Judge, I talked with Mr. David a few
mtnutes oa<>. beloro court ~ He ·~ he' was speedtng, thjMJgh be
doem;i't ,belleve he was going as fast asl
say. He w114 Ol)O of lhO teast di!Ocult
•
'l' 011're going to lae•r • e••e, hatie to go ·out •ntl
decide II, j11•t like n regul•r f11r11. Call it as 11011 see
it.' .
&olnC up. OK!"
"Vea, alrl"
The nelt call tnvolvu taltotlng. '!'ht
deleodant waivel hll rflbt to a jwy trial
and aalul to have !he mattor heard by the
court. Wltb the defendant's pmnlalon,
the Junior Jwy ls lm(lADele<I to bear the
caoo. ' I . ' :J'he oflloer and the delendan\ eac~
glyes bls.....ion. "'"'"'""t to the l~'· small<:loim• 'IPP<Vl<it, !he ol!tctr is
allowed lo que1tlon the deltndant ~alter
all,-there'a no proeecutllt.
Al the end or the lelllmony, lhO judge
tnstructs tile jury on tile presumption
' of Innocence and cau.tkHls them not to be
"And you know when that ticket's
going to catch up with you! You're on
the way to the stadium, there's s good
game -the home team. It's Friday
night, and you've got your best girl
friend with you . Your rear tail Ught goes
out and a cop stop!J you. He radios in and
finds two outstanding citations against
you. ~-_._..,_,,_,._.,,,._..,_,,.-• .,_,,._..,_,, ___ ,,_..,_,,.-• ., _ _._..,_,.-.,._,,._.,_,.-.. .,_,,._.,_,.-.. ,._,,._,._.,.,_..,_,,._,._.,_._,._,,._,..,..,. affected' by the olO~r's uniform. As the
•ludents are led liito the dellberatio!I
room, the Jud&• shows us b1l> note pad
W'ltb "guilty" acribbled 1n the comer. .
"Next thing you know, your parents
are down at the jail balling you out, and tiUed to a perfect judge or a perfect peraons 1 have ever encountered.
Pleasant. A nice young man. Maybe we angry as blazes -and you didn't make jwy, just a fair trial. The jwy's tile
time with your girl. Don't Jet It happen. judge of facts. I'm the judge of the law , ~
Wben you get that Ucket -and you will, and you're !he judge of !he judge. "Were you speeding, Mr. David?" !he WIIlLE THE JUNIOR jury Is out,
"
we all do -lake care of it, before it Judge queries. Judge Shafer mcwes on \o other business.
takes care of you." "I RAVE MY own special approach to u_Yes, Your Honor. But not that 'fasl" He hears pleu -setting the trial da~
the same verdict he had. and -~
there were ••Y problems tn deddlDr the cue. A wave of !liMbl goeo up lroai the
bol.
''Man!" fomnln Gordan Piisce
says, shakl!li ~head. "You reelly have
to undentand people. Some ol 01,"4a't .'
drive yet, and It'• hard llYinl a fair '
decision if you've. never betll In ihe Mme
situaUon once. It's aort of .,.d. ha"°t &c
judge aeother ptrSOn. Besllhlni Ii, now
that :f· know what it's about. 1 'Waldd.oft
mind serving on a real Jwy. Tht fYll'ml• OK. II •
With compliments on their effort and
sincerity, Judge Shafer dlsmi8l6I hlt
junior jury, hoping they have prollted
from the eaparience. Then he ~
with his task of adminlsterinll jUIUce. 1
For Sports
misdemeanor matters. Now, you can for those who eay "not gullb''' Md
"OK. HERE it comes -the lecture," "NOW, HERE'S where you get into have a lawyer -and oo one will be 11EVER BEEN TO traffic school? No? meUng out th& ~Ues Cor those
he begins. "You're here to learn about the action. You 're going to hear a case. angry if you do. You can have a jury if OK, here's what we'll do. Yoi.J. go to traC· pleading "guilty.~·
The DAILY Pll.ar Is the
newspaper fo r sports atonr the
Orange Coast ••. oomp1ete atalistk::I
on local home And away games,
staff coverage, more exclusive
stories on Orange Coast sports thab
any other locally distri b~t e d
newspaper.
law, the courts, and jusUce. That's what have to go out and decide it, 'just like a you \\'ant -and no one will be angry if fie school one night a week for six weeks. From th& ante J"OOQ), a deputy an.
it's all about: justitt. The cases you1ll regular jury. Call it as you see it. Your you · do. But 1 like to use the 'small Mail the certificate they· give you to lhe h6unces. the fun' Is ready to retqf'{I.
see here and the ones you'll have to decision won't be final. I'll have already claims' approach to misdemeanors. Just court, and ·We'll dismiss the charge. It -591emnly; the t'een-qers file back intd"
decide on are mosl\y misdemeanors -made mine and written It down. But you. me and the other guy. Three in-won 't be on your record, you'.ll get your the jury box. Their cho~ /o{eman
the kind of thing a lot of people get in-you'll get to know what I eo through. telligent people. Surely we can work out bail money back, and your folks won't stands: and delivers the verdict: Guilty.
volved with. The big ones, the fe~lo"':nticies~,:__~",!;;E~oou~gb~lect~u".'.re':_· ~T'.iJimrll:e~lo"':r~cou~rt-to~~an~eq~mi!''ta~b~le~so~llll_utticioo~."~-------~ha~ve~to~w~o~rry~~abou~t~iyour~0ino~ur~an~ce'_~T~h~e~jUd~ge~oo~te~s~th~a£t ~lhe~y~bad§~rea~c~hed~. ~!:::==========::::!
Gentlemen,
Start Yo1u·
Tricycles •
By \\'JLLIAM SCHREIBER
Of IM O.llJ ,.li.t Sllft
The free-wheeling three-
wheelers are ready to roll
-again in Newport Beach.
The first annual Balboa
Island Rollers and Doers Club
(BIRD club) tricycle races
will be held Sunday starting
with a parade at noon on \he
lower parking lot or the New-
porter Inn.
"We're expecting a big
turnout ror all the events this
year," said trike race
coordinator Randy ?\1ueller.
"Last year, there were about
2,000 there to watch and we're
hoplng for about 3,000 this
year."
The BmD club and its an-
nual trlU: nee were born in
the bon 81111 nightspots of
Newponl!ooch.
"A. LOT OP ua uaed to get
together and drink so we just
decided to form a club,"
MueU...aa!d.
'Ibe BIRD trike races began
u a tart but since the fll"St
one, they have really caught
on among the more inventive
segments of local cycling
society, Mueller said. .
"We have had cab le
television coverage a n d
everything," he said.
'1'1is year's event will be
hlgh1Jg1lled by a parade of aU
the trikes around the
Newporter Inn and then com-
petition Including drag races,
grand prix and a QIDkbana
for all the entrants.
Anybody with a trike who
shows up before 11 a.m. can
enter. Mueller said.
"WE ROPE to see 35 or 40
trikes of the 'fuMY' variety
and aOOut five to 10 of the
really good racers," Mueller
said.
Mueller .!laid the fuMy
trike! are usually oversl!ed or
undersized or decorated in an
unusuaJ manner.
"Last year we had two guys
who built trikes that looked
like old biplane fighters," he
said. "They had a dogfight
and then burned the trikes."
Mueller said !IOffie entrants
have bffn work.108 all year on
their trikes.
"TIIERE IS one guy who
has been buJldlng a JG-foot
wheelle trike that looks like a
rail drapter," he sald.
Same contestant! even come
to the races with trucks and
pit crews, Mueller added .
.. Another big event " the
day, of course, will be Evil
McEvll't attempt to jump
three ttlke.s using a ramp," he
said.
The races start at "about t
p.m.'•
"They are real grueling and
by the end everyone Is pretty
drunk JO it is real runny/'
Mueller aald.
THIS YEAR'S races will be
capped off by a rock dan<e.
''We aren't out to make any
prollt for !he BIRDs, just to
htve a good time," be aakl.
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screen,
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brlish.
with ·nylon 2·· binding.,
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NCAA May
Remove Ban
On Women
KNOXV!LtE, Tenn. -The lkleft\ber
cooncll ol the NaUonal COll•Jllato Athletic"
Aaooclotlon has votod to racommtnd to
the NCAA conveoUon that a ban be·llfted
1g1lnst women athletn.
The polley-maklnJ body votod Tu.eaday
to propose that -,.... .... athletea he
permitted to competo In NCAA meell
lllHI tournamen~, providing they qua!Uy
!or the evepts. ,
J,feanwblle, a 1poteoman !or the COlll>
cU· said IODle announoelllents may be
made today regarding alleged rule$
vlolallons by four member iDltltutloM.
The council lpeDI moot ol Ill meeting
'l'lieaday reviewing the alleged ln-
fracUoos, but ,orllclals declined to
dlscloae Ille schoob Involved,
"Airy action that·l! taken by the coun·
cil will not be announced µntil the
member school has been notified," Tom
Hansen, NCAA assi!tant executive direc-
tor, aaid.
' "' NEW YQM .. -G~rge "Sparky"
Anderson, molder or the Cincinnati Reds, ·
today was named Manager of the Year in
the NaUor!al league_ _
" ~ :
• t • • •
A Rough 'life
Andenion',1 Reds won their second pen •. nant in· ,three seasons apd ... • he beat
Pittsburgh sl<lpper Bill Vinion In ..
Associated Press poll of sports writers
and broadcasters for tbe Manager ol the
Year awll'd. '!lie marglil was 171-179 !or Anderaon,
In ballotlog conducted prior to the Na·
tional League playoll1 and World Serles.
Monlreal's Gene Mauch wa.s a distant
third with aeven votes.
Ralph Liquirl of Tampa, Fla. (above) totals his Grant King ,Print car
at USAC sprint races·at Eldora Speedway 'Sunday, And-Pittsburgh's
Terry Hanratty suffers a ham&ring inj~ on a keeper ploy In Pit!S-
burgh's vietory over NeW' E!igland SUnday, '
.,,,
~N, Germany -N~rt Beacfl's
Roy Emerson defeated SOutb .Afl'lca's
Bob Maud, · M, M, H In the· seconCr
round ol an International tennis tourna-
met)l Tudday.
Olarl .. <PasnJ heat Frank Froehllng
ol Miami; "3, .6-2 and Jeff , Borowiak ol -
Tiburon, CS.Hf., who reached the fiD:al
round of ·..this l tourney last year, was
eliminated by England's Mark cox 7-f, 1-
61 ~l.
Other results Tuesday Included: Nikki
Pille of Ytplavia. a.f.3,,7-6 winner over
Brian FaliUo ol New Zealand, and Tom
Okler ol '.tlle Netberlands, who ousted
Graham SUtwelL
"' SAN DIEGO -Running ba!:k Duane
Tbomu may qot play for tbe .san. ~ <llargen~-........ but he dellJUl,ly
will not --else. -The N l l'oothan League's -
deadline lllSl"ll '1"""""1 wttb 'lbomal ~!':~~~~~ =-bim{jflof"fl flllO -~
'lbomaa <l ll'llh coach Harland 5vara .
Monday Jailed to sbai lip f« ·aniltber
meeting 'l'aeoday, a team ~
said. -have saJd they are · willing te Thomu' contract
but bave'.not 0 able Ii> get him Jo
agree to nDS,I . "' -UNCOl)\I, Nth--Nebraska lootball J,llayer of Week
' -
star Jolt!W Rofgen was found gµilty In
LancasleDOounty District Court 1'1esday
ol operai!M a motor veblcle wblle 111'
driver's ~~as revoked.
Rodgers nquested I pnM!lleooe ln-
vestlgatk[n by the adult probo6m\ office,
and J ndgo Herbert Ronin grantod the ...
UCLA's Johnson Lives
quest. ~
No date -was set lor sentencing.
The ~e <,vnes a mandatory
sentence cil 30 days ln-jall and a.one-year
suspension. Cl !be c19ver'• u..,,_,., but
Rodgera couljl be plaCed_ on ~lion il
For th~ Long Gainer
the adult. J>follatlon olllcu and Judge Lt'ls ANGELEs (AP) -"I've never
Ronin concur. rea11f been number one," says Kermit
. II" JohnSon, UCLA halfback tiho this year is
LOS ANGELES -Bob Berry drtlled breaking out all over witb firsts lhi• and
his eighth joal in h11 last seven games bests that.
and goalie 1logle Vachon posted his lint "Pve always wanted ..netl!!ng di!·
shut.out Jn two seuons with the Kings as ferent," the junior from Pasadena said
Los Anaeles turned back tbe caIUornla Tues<lay art.. being named Pacmc-1
Seals, 5-G, 1'Ue9:tay night. CoilfUeoce ofrensive player of the week
1be win moved Los Angel.es into a Ue -for lbe secodd time in three weeks.
for fourth place In the .NHL West with a "I'v:e ·aiways wanted to be number
U-0 reCl!fd and •Ix , polnll wbiie· one," said Johnson, who ~t been In
caIUomle dropped deeper lnlo the the pUI because ol his ciOSIO rrlend
division collar With. 1-,r.-t mark and only Jaine5 MCADster; the more heral~ oi
two points. . the "Blair Pair" from Blair Hlilt.SchooL
Vachon, who mlBseif mncti at' last Jobn!on, who gained U9 y~ 1n 10
season. w1tb a knee Injury after joining cames, scored twice oo rum o( 45 and 55
the KlDp, ...Or\led his Htb. career yards In UCLA'a 6-13 vldory over
sbutouL Calilllmla Saturday. He 11 tbe No. l -' O·~ ·~ ~ r.:.._ wttb, .,_ World ner on the naUon's ·No. 1 l)llllliQg team. ~·u -.. ~ Hehasmyahloln87Yarcls)><rcarry.
Ser!ea cash, oakland Atb141lcs ~ger In "'•b scbool, Kermit averaged 12 Dick Wllllams now baa' 'iill third ~pay '"" raise In 10 weeks and he -bal the' dlltln<> yards a carry but was No., S to Mc;Allster, who gained more yarda and
tlon ol beitll the only tllMlgor.owner .. ~-said, "He didn~ really get more
Ciarlle Finfey . has kept.' ~'lwq , c;oo-notice, •·~more yards." secuUve ... .,.. since hi , bou&fil Ifie ,_.
Amertcon League basebalJ,chib lri: 1980. McAllsteF is ave:raging 5.1 yards a car-' ry but ~yet to break away for.a lqng ·
3,000 :Orave Rain
To Greet Hunter
tOuchclown run, whlcl\ l(ennlt has done
almoot weekly, Jobnaon tries to cheer
him up.
Hffe came over to my house Sunday,,''
said Kermit "! tell bim that In evory
game we have j>layed, .be1a almost done
it. Jt'a been a" ~ tackle or
something like that . 1 tmow~be·s goiDtto
get away.
0 J tell him , 'You:'ie running hard. It's
just a matter-· of · Uriie-and it'll com~.
The<e will he· that day whl!n everything _
goes right ."
Johnsqn and all· Ute oilier UCLA ball
carriers seem to gain ,five yards or 1so
with each attempt, w"hich would be satts--
fying,to most running backs.
Not td Johnsqn, who lives for the long
run.
"I like breaking off time-long ones. It
takes tlie pressure off ol·our defense and
our offense. When l go in, I say to
myself, '&re, tbe''U·get me a couple of
limea, but ooe of thole times I'm going
tO get away. I justdQJl:t .aee ·~ getli(lg
ine all tbe Ume."
· He can become UCLA's all..fune slngle--
seasoo rushing leader by averaging 55
· yards a game tharest ol the season. The
.cbool mark ol ·192 yards was set In 1954
by Sani Brown.
"I think about it a lot now," says
Kernrlt/ "That mllch yardage wiU he
tiard to ·plck up but 1 tnoW I can do it. I
really don't see how I can't with all the
blocking I get."
Johnson has lost sleep lately, but not
becauae be'a thinking ol rusblng rnc:orda.
"l w8te up aboUt 3 a.m. every morn-
ing," he said .. thll\'• the feeding time
!or his 2--1<-old daughlef,
D.411.Y PILOT JeJ
McKay Predicts Loss
-For Troy--hut When?
LOS ANGELES (APl -Coach John
Mcj{ay of the Uplyenlty of Southern
Ca!Uornla pl'!dlcu defeat !or hiJ top-
ranked lootball TroJtnl'
However, he won't aay which team will
pull the upoet, merely stating Tuesday :
"I've said It before and I'll aay It again:
Everybody's going to lose at least one
game."
All th1' could-he reverse psycbology as
he referred to the Pacific4 Conlerence
race to the Role Bowl. USC leads with a
4-0 mark, followed by UCLA, U .
Washington Stale 1' :t-1 and tbe other
teama have at lea.st two dereats.
USC plays <mgoo SatW'day in Eugene,
Washington Stale at Seattle and UCL\ In
Los Angeles, then winda up the regular
season Dec. 2 against nonconferenoe foe
Notre 'Dame. "I guatant.ee you,'' MeKay
said, 0 lhis team (Oregon) can beat you,''
He said he was Oot surprl.sed by the
Ducks' upset of defending conference
champion Stanford last "Saturday.
"They look-It-lo Stanford pret!y' good,"
said McKay, adding that Oregon, Using a
wishbone-like option offense, gained more fi';c~ge' ~g on S~or~ than: .did
Wastikigton: state, which has won five
of .seven games, can. beat. Ut!LA Satur-
day unless "they come down here and
fold."
McKay said his assiJtant coach, John
Robinson, who was at Oregon last year,
"told us all year he couldn't understand
why they didn't do better. He's very high
West Arrives
At .Another
Milestone
SAN ANTONIO ~AP ) __ Jerry West
wb~tled In 29 polnlS Jo ~etl)e third
leading career scorer ,tn, NBA hlitOrj as
the Los Angeles Laken' waltzed past the
outclassed Kansas City-Omaha King>,
U444.
. The ... Laken meet Houston in San
,Antonio tonlght.
. West's 29 points In Kansas ctty Tues-
day night brought his • cart<r total to
23,159. eclipsing the •U,llll points totaled
by Laker teammate Elgin Baylor before
he retired Jut 1euon..
The Laken' Wilt ,Cbamberlaln, tile
league's all-title 9COI'~ ~der, dropped
In 15 polnll and lrilJtlo.d I& rebounda.
Guard Gall Goodrich ad.led 19 and Jim
McMillian 14 !or tbe woiid champions.
But the goUia: wu not as euy for the
Laken 81 tlie ICoriiw llllillt lndicate.
let ........ Cft4) •..-C""'°""IMI CM>
Ctwf'PlblNln ....... .._Inion
McMllllln
WMI
Elllf eockion Gr1nt
PPlc• Tripp
.,,T .,,T
6 t-J IS !Ult\' l ).• t
t l·t It V"""""lt t .... :H
,) "' 11 UceY • .. • 7 H 1• Attfllbeld 14 M ~ I0 ,_102'~M IM 2
IMtOP-00.01 J u 10 Klfllll911 1 0.0 2
1 0.0 t Kollt o 0.0 I •M IM"'ffft JN 4 tH •tlt•tllfl lN4
Wllll•m1 • 1M1 f Tot•lt .. 21'* 114 TOl•lt. 4111-17, f.I
Lf' ~ 2ll 21 tt U -114 •
K•-C1ty-omtll1 10 2J :tt • -,,. ... i.i wt -NoM.
Tol1I fouls -Los Arlttlla 21, IC•-City. O!Nll• ,.,
Ttdwllctl folllf ..... KINf.1 Cl~, Co«ll ClluM'r. ~. ,..,......,
~f*ldinc• -uU.
on quartorback Dan Fouta and his
receivers. Their backl are mct'e than ac-
ceplable.
"Oregon ls rurming from a fcrmation
with two split ends, but tt has all the
blocking the wl!hbone has beca ... they
use .. a man in motion to create the
wishbone."
Oregon defeatod USC the past two
yean by ..,.... of 33-21 and t~7 but
McKay said those losses to his alma
mater have no ~n with this
season.
"They heat some people the last two
yean. 'nley haven't beat this team. Most
of t.heee guy1 weren't there."
McKay said Lynn Swann, versatile
Danker who ruUered a strained knee
against California two weeks ago, is
aldelined indefinitely.''
He also listed as very doubtful be.cause
of injuries tailback Allen Carter and
defensive tackle Jeff Winans, both hurt
against Washington last Saturday. Carter
pulled a hamstring mll!Cle on his &&-yard
run near tbe end of the game.
Starting tailback Rod McNelll bas a
charley horse but probably will ploy,
McKay said.
Life Reviewed
I Never Had It
Made--Rohinson
STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) -"I cannot
stand and sing the anthem. 1 cannot
salute the flag ; I know that I am a black
man in a white world. In 1972, in 1947, at
my birth in 1919, 1 know that I never had
it made."
In bit autobiography, "I Never Had It
Made." to be published next month,
Jackie Robinson described his ex·
periences as the first black in major
league baseball, and as "a black man in
a white world." Robinson, 53, died of
heart disease here Tuesday.
"I-guess If l <OOld choose one ol the
most important moment!: of my life, '
would go back to 1947, in Yankee
Stadium in New York," Robinson begins.
"Jt was the opening day of the World
Series, and I was for the first time
playing in the series as a member of the
Brooklyn Dodgers team. It was a history·
making day. It would be the first time
that a black man would be allowed to
participate in the World Series. l had
bemme the first black player in the ma-
jor leagues.''
Like any pioneer, Robinson suffered his
hardships. But &ince he was pioneering in
a field of bwnan relations, Rob\nsoQ was
subjected to an tnontinate amount of
abuoe. lloblnann recalled tome ol the
)aUDll he beard durinl that lint year
In the National LeJiye.· -
"Hey;ntaer, wflJ 11,in•(you go beck to
the colto11 lields ..-you helongt" and
"They're wallli,1¥. ·r.,. you In the jwlgles,
black ·boy" and 'We don't want you here,
nigger." Those were some of the epithets
hurled at Robinson -by opposing
players. The abuse from the fans was
even worse.
It took a special kind of man to stand
up to such badgering, and Robinson was
just that kind of man.
Allan BamXI, publisher ol Black Sports
Magazine, ooted that Robinson was
"strong enough to overcome t h e
social, business and cultural barrien
that -• unjustly placed In Ille potbs ol
black Americaml," adding that Robio9on
"will stand out as a symbol ol majestic,
black, human dignity."
How did Branch Rickey, majo< domo
or the Brooklyn Dodgen, come to choose
Robinson for breaking the color barrier?
Jack.ie describes an encounter with
RJckey in his autobiography :
"'Mr. Rickey,' I aaked, 'are you look-
ing for a Negro who is afraid to fight
back?'
"I never will forget the way he e.t·
ploded.
.. 'Robinson ' be said "I'm lootlna' for
a ballplayer ~ith guts enough not to light
back.' "
How could he manage to do It?
Robinson writes about one incident which
helped ease tbe pain :
"Oilldren from all racea came to the
stands. The very young seemed to have
no hangup at all about my being black.
They. just wanted me to he good, to
deliver, to win. The WpiraUon of their
inrvwnce is amazlng. I doo 't think I '11
ever foraet the small, sbrtll voice of a
Uny wiJlte kid wbo, in tbe midst ol I
ract1lly-tense atmosphere durlnl an ear-
ly pme In a Ollie town cried ou~ "Alla·
boy, Jackie.'
"The black and the young were my
cheering aquads. But alao there .....
pqle -neither black nor YoUlll -peo-pie ol all race• and faiths and ln all parts
of the country, people who couldn't cart
less about my race.''
Roblnsoo was born Jan. 31, 1911 ln the
solltb Georgia farm town of Cairo. His
lather deserted the rtve chlldren and
Jackie'• mother a year later, and the
family moved to Pasadena.
Jackie always was a standout athlete,
even on the sandlota of Pasadena. He
wu ao talentod, other kldl used to buy
him drinks and sandwiches just to be OD
his team.
"You might say," Robinson once quip-
ped, "that I turned pro at a very early
age."
Robinson was a star athlete at
Pasadena Junior C.Ollege, then became a
standout in foolball, baseball and track
at UCLA.
But baseball was to be his sport.
President Ni.J:on joined with baseball
figures Tuesday in mourning the death
of Jackie Robinson.
The President, who last summer chose
Robinson as a member or his all-time
bueball team and called bim the great-
est athlete he ever saw, said in Wash-
ington he was d<eply saddened by Rob-
inson's death.
JACKIE ROBINSON
Broken Neck
Mends, Ex-pro
Going Honie
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two months :
after his hopes for a pro football career '
were snapped with a broken neck, Ray
Jamieson goes home today. In 1
wheelchair.
Jamieson, a Memphis State n.mnlng
back who was the Oakland Raiders' 7th I
round draft pick, was hurt Aug. 19 mak·
ing a tackle against the Los Angeles 1 Rams on a punt return.
He remembers telling the man ~ I
tackled not to move, that something was
wrong,
"My whole body """' completely I numb, but I was oonsciom." he recalled.
Now Jamieson says, "I rully ablolute-I
ly feel good. Then> are lllll problemJ. ·
but I'm doing line." ,
"I'm still pretty weak and wobbly. l
have feeling but no floe touch. It's all
coming along slow."
"I'm still kind of wobbly. I have to
learn to walk all over again, I'm like • 1
three-year-old leamllll for the lint Ume. I
It might Lake 30me ume."
The night after the accldenl Jamleoon 1
had to undergo lllf8"'Y and ha.. tho I
bn>ken vertebrae !ulOd. Then he uld ho
had blood clota In his lungs, which <OOid
have taken bis Ule.
"The doctors uld I &bould have • full
recovery,'' be said. llERTroRD, N.C. (AP) ~ Nearly
3,000 people l8DO"ed a 1IeaclY downpour
to "'lcome Jim "Dotlllh" lluoter \>'Ck
to hla bomelown Tueaday.
The pitcher f.,. tile warid champion
Olkiand AthlelJ<» n>eelved a hero's
welcome cunp!Ote wt!h porade, lllh try
and an a""'1i -at Porqulmans
COunl)' llt;h Sdlool wllere he once -a
star pltcber oo tbe bueball team.
Proihro Says Ral11s Will Be Better
'~atght now It's only been 1 lltUe leu
than SI> monthl and the doctors AY they
are amued and IO Im I. God WU on mt
llde when tt happened..
The tin oft the at.ore• nad "Welcome
Home Jfmmy."
Bolore liii triumphant ride tbn1uaJt
lown In ~ pande, Hunler Ungtred on
bi1 father .. farm, dressed kt old ciod>ol
and boots, greeting old Ir-and talk-il'ft boseball. Wlnnlnc the Sertea w11 the best eel· ~ I've tver had In my life," admitted
Hunter. 11Yes, It ineant more tban the
perfect cam• 01161J."
LO~G BEACH (AP) -"We'llJ::.:t ter by' •two or three! touc II
dot:lsw cooch Tommy frolhn>, who.
Loa ~ Rams lead the Watern
Dlvlllon of the National Football Con-1......,.,
"Bu~" he adda, .... will the other
teams.
"ll you tqok the bell l<lilm on opening
day, and !hat team didn't Improve but
stayed rlflht where t! was on openll)g .
daY, I don't thlnlt It "®id be amonc the
llrlt 15 on cl-Ool11i day,"
Prolhro's Rams, with a 4-1·1 record
and third best In the NFL, travel to
Oeldand on SUnday to ineet I Roider
oquad which bas whipped Los Angeloa In
the~ q1both197). and lm.
"O.ltla1c! pr1>bobly lln't aa quick u
ClllCY Wll, but a lllOto ~ team," l'l<thro aaid 'l'lleoday.
/IJhd ti he thoo&ht Daryle Lamonica
or Ken Stabler would go et quarterback
for Oakland, Prothro replle<I, "Wo just
heard thet Lamonica took a helmet In lbe
bedt Sllllday and ("terally ~ get
over that pretty quldt. Stabler hes been
lmpl'tlltve."
A!ked abotJt the ·~ .. t Inconsistency
• I
bt bis dub, -said '1ICb bas .,..,
true of all ottbo NFL teams tbWseason.
·1t.-..11u ... -...,,,. OOllld ge1 up
Iwo 11oun H u--• ,.., and tdlege
i.mt could pt up kJf two bounlO CIC U t-. yur. But !boy juat cltib't," said
-rrlatlt:c to--pll1lnc better one weel: than the next.
"II 1. tll!ID ~ to equal a poll
performance, It ue0aUY !alls lllr ahol1.
\' Otl !lave to try to helter Ii!' -
NoUnc tba1 Loo Mlolea and OUland are the only NFL dlilalan leaden to tta ..
beaten othor dMolon loaden (OttdmmU
and Green Bay), !he llan1' coach .-V·
ed. "Tbls ...,_ ...... has been
more lm&ullr than normal." iw.m., to the ...ailed trend ol
upoets, he IOid "Juat maybe It's heclUle ol bettfr balanced teaJnl. 1 didn't think
-before Iha jlOot --tbat lt WU
more lmlttlit tbls ,.r, but -I do. You muat thlnlt the draft !J -kin.I."
Pro tM.11'1 llnlsltlh8 -In !he seuon atDd!np pt the ~ plcka of tha
cumnt ....... stm In the draft. r... !be ""1'll!f pmo at oakiand,
Prothro said llntbocker Kan Geddel WU doubtful dlte to an ankle Injury.
•
-'
Alter bis diacbarge lrorn Mt Sinai
Hospital, Jam'-1 aald he'a going home
to Memphis !or •bllltatlon.
Al he pttpOl<d to leave the hoopltal,
Jamlet00 said Tuetday nllht that "tt I
keep lm ... vlni I hope to catdl a Raltllr
game In pe!Ul laler thla _.... .. u. ... ld "after I pt bun I just couldn't
loct at a aame, Jt made me sJdc. After a
whl!e I IW'Dld to live.with I~~
blppen. NOl' 11-'t bother me." •
Jamlem addtd, "I'd Oka to play llll!tJi
but I thlnlt the dodon and my wild
would 1n1t my 1'1· I !hlnlt tbo -~ ""'1lact my wtto will let me haV. ta wttb btr:·
•
•
I !
' . •
President's C11p Winner
Corona del Mar's Ted Finster (center) is presented the Thomas W. Henderson
Memorial Trophy from Irvine Coast Country Cl u b president \Voody Smith
(left). Runnerup Glenn Pugbe (right) of Irvine lost out two and one in the !inal
match of the 120-contest ant tournament.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
i Tough BishopAmatBwcks
Monarchs' Way to Playoffs
LA PUEf\'TE -It's an al!
100 often fan1i!iar scene for
i\farer Dci lligh's Monarc:hs
: football team in rcccn! years
as they pr{'pare for Ancglus
League rival Bishop Amat at
Mt. San Antonio College Fri-
day night.
A loss will in all probability
: knock the Monarchs out of
contention for a Cl F AAAA
playoff spot -something that
, bu happened on three straight
-occaslons..
• Each of the preceding years
r ha.! found Mater Dei finishing
• wtth 7-2 records but watching
• from the staod.s when the
: playoffs begin due to St.
: Paul's and Bishop Amat's
: dominance of Angeles League
~ activity.
Now St. Paul has a 7-&
triumph in its pocket over
. Mater Dei and Amat stands
ready next to put the skids to
: the Monarchs again.
• But it's a different type of
. offensive problem for Mater
. Dei against Amat. There is no
Pat Haden-John M c K a y
· tandem at Amat, nor is there
: another John Sciarra.
. Instead it's a foe possessing
· some of ~1ater Oei's past
qualities -a ground orlented
offense geared around ball
control.
Three junior running backs
are the big items for coach
Dennis McLaughlin.
Chris Griffin (6-2, 185), Dave
Amador (5-11, 160) and Terry
Carrigan (&-0, 160 ) hive been
doing the work for the
Lancers.
Senior Mlke Carcia is the
Lancers quarterback. but he's
ytl to throw a touchdown
pass.
In the line it's mammoth
Steve Javert leading the way.
The M:. 242-pounder was a
· first team all-league selection
as a junior and ope.rates at of-
fensive tackle,, Chris Johnson
has been one or Amat's key
defenders. He's a S.-11, 165--
pound defensive end.
Lost for the campaign is
linebacker Larry Carter 16-0,
200 sr.), who suffered torn
knee ligaments in practice
prior to Lancers' 14-7 win over
Pasadena.
Bishop Amal is 4-1 with the
only setback a 13-0 dectsion to
burly Arcadia in non-league
action.
McLaughlin wasn't happy
with his team's play against
St. Anthony in loop battle
last week. The Lancers
edged by St. Anthony, 21·16.
"We didn't play a very good
ball game and St. Anthony
probably played their besl
game in years. We've got a
funny group of kids this year
. . . a little unpredictable,"
says McLaughlin.
Dedication Paying Off
Fo,r Lions' Top Taclde
One of lhe big reasons lhe
\Vestminster High Lions foot·
ball team is undefeated after
five games this season is an
WlSung hero of the front line.
When the Lions journey to
Huntington Beach F r i d a y
night for a Sunset League en-
counter with the Oilers, this
same behemoth of the str-
ingent forward wall will again
be in evidence.
Larry Grady stands fi..2 and
weighs in at 195 and is a
starter on both offense and
defense, a position few
linemen will have on the
d e p t h -laden Westminster
team.
"He's worked real hard to
develop himself in quickness
and he's a very dedicated
athlete/" coach Bill Boswell
says o the senior tackle.
"He has not had a bad ball
game this year and he's our
leading tackler," Bos we 11
says.
"He has devloped into one of
the finest linemen we have
ever had at Westminster. But
don't forget. he's onJy one of
the front line that has done a
pretty good job [or us this
year."
Boswell is so right.
Quarterback D a n Ac-
comando had a wealth or lime
to pass the · football in last
week's game against Marina
and it was this front line,
anchored by Grady, that did
the job so well.
While Grady's importance to
the Lions on offense is ap-
preciated by his coach and the
players on the Westminster
team, it was on defense that
he stood out even more
brilliantly for Lions fans to
savor and appreciate.
Grady repeatedly rushed
Marina quarterback G r e g
Foster and blocked four pass
attempts behind the line or
scrimmage.
"He does a good job both
ways," B o s we 11 continues.
"But I think he prefers to play
defense.
Mesa's 112-pounder
Overcomes In juries
"It's more fun than offense
and most linemen reel that
way about It. I always tell
them to play defense for fun
and offense for pride and
that's exactly what he is
doing."
Boswell doesn't hesitate to
give line coach Don Davis a
great deal of be credit lor the
improvement of Grady and his
front line teammates. • ~ Perseverance pays off for
: those that won't quit and •
: Costa Mesa lllgh's Dave
; Newstead l.s a living example.
; Although he and b I s
• Mustang mate; fell for the
fifth straight lime in the 1972
football campaign, Newstead earned personaJ honors while
cavorting In the dcfcMlvc
, lleCOndery .
Being named def ens Ive
player of a game lsn·t exactly
-like being tabbed as an All·
.. Oranae County athlete. But for
' Newstead It's surely a
\ ~ne ln his rttlcy career
; at Costa Mesa.
' AJ a eophomore ~ suffered ~a brokeo ankh1 early in the 1 Muatanes' season and was lost
f ror the bl.la~ of the ~c .. m-
: palgn. ~ Al 1 junior he was lost for ~ lhe yur when he was sidelh\-
$ <Cl with broken ribs In the
~MeAns'openu.
his mates will tack.le Orange
County's No. 6 rated team
Estancia Friday night at
Newport lJarbor.
An addiUooal item o n
Newstead is th:tt he checks in
nt only 112 pounda on a 5-8
rramo.
•·fta plays with (l lot or
courage," says coach John
Sweazy. He works hard at It
and has proved an awfu1
tough kid.
"Oa•e doesn't have bln7.in~
speed but he's re;.lly scrap-
py." adds S...uy.
Ht'• abo a tailback. but he's
carried ooly once for three
yards.
Sweaey'1 major problem In
preparing tbe Mustangs for
Estancia Is getting hlJ team's
mental attltude beck in proper
perspective.
"We have had good pr~
tectlon this year and our line
coach has done an outstanding
job In brlnglng our line I<> it>
present status," he says.
Boswell is also beaming
over the return of the LJons'
oul:!ltandlng ball carrier this
week, Tony Accomando. Tony
will at.art again at tailback
alter mJsslng lhe last two
Westminster games.
JC Ratings
'7 2 Sea Kings--Riches to Rags
Riches to rags might be the
easiest way to de1crlbe
Corona del Mar Hlgb and Us
Sea Kings football fam u It
girds for game No. 4 ln Irvine
League hostilities.
Coach Dave Jlolland's 1971
loop champions are out of tille
contention a!ter three winless
starts in circuit competition
and possibly the blagest lhorn
in the Sea Kings' side has been
the lack of a consistent ofiense
. . . one which can take the
ball and control the tempo of
the game.
Tars Must
Be Perfect
To Win
Newport Harbor must play
the perfect football game this
week if the Tars are to stay in
the ball park with the potent
Western High Pionrers.
'That's the feeling of coach
Don Lent as he prepares the
Tars for a Thursday night con-
frontation with Orange Coun-
ty's No. 1 eleven and second
ranked in the ClF AAAA pair-
ings.
How does the Newport
mentor look at the game and
how is he preparing his team
for the outing!
"Well, it's just like playing
USC on the college level. We
reali1.e they are the best team
around, well balanced on both
offense and defense.
"One thing about it, we
don't have to work too hard to
get the kids up for this one.
"We will just have to try
and play good footba ll and run
and throw effectively on of-
fense.
"But lhe big thing, as I see
it, is· that we will have to
eliminate our errors to stay in
the game with them.
"We've been up and down
but the kids were a little more
COMistent last game. But the
improvement hasn't been a
consistent thing."
Looking back, Lent feels the
13-12 loss to Anlbelro was the
bitterest pill the Tirs have
had to swallow this season..
''That game was probably
the turning point 4ar ua. Tbe
kids let down the hext week
(13-6 loss to Loara) but came
back against Hun t ington
Beach (21-7 win}.
"We're hoping our kids will
look at this game a little
stronger. If not, they'll get
beat 40--0. Western is too good
a team to let down."
Steve Bukich may be the
key to suceess for the Tars.
He is the team quarterback
and does most or the throwing
all.hough the Sailors haven't
been overly successful .
In f1ct, the -yard> • .,.
cumula1"d pusJoa end 1'1111-
runc In 411Y one pme bu been
l~ and lhal .... In. ~ ....
to Sonia ADI.
Now, looming ahead Friday
niflhl at Orange Coast Colloge,
Is Orange County'• No: 4 111<1
the ClF's No. I rated
Cbargen of EdllOn.
...;we've got to get our
grciund game woning. That's
the key," says Holland.
"Without the ground game It
makts It pretty tough on Joe
Tosti and the pw1ng gamo."
Tuoll has been -""'
palllnC -ol tho op-posltloo4 ability l o con-cen~te It> ilel'eme on bis
lhrowlng ann.
Through nve , • ..,. hols
cmupleted 30 al 118 pesolf and
bad six lni.tePle\I.
In Corona.. ju tnis to
undelea1"d Santa Ana Valley,
Holland's eleven did o o t
fumble and was penalired only
lwJce..
"Wc'Ml just not moving the
• ball," suma up Holland.
As !or •lnt>Pini F.clison
Holland Ucb oil the names of
rtee.lver Bob G r a n a l h ,
tailback Frtd llemandez and
quarterboet cnig Way In ~t ....
''!be olf ~ N!Qlng pl~y
11111 Ibo -Ion pass .,.. two of EdilOn·~ big lteml,"
says Rollind.
•"11ley pm off the play ac-
tloo for 10 yards at a time. It's
bard to cover. We consider it a
three yanll and a cloud of
Hornets Pin Hopes
. .
On Sophomore· -QB
Mike Churchward may be
the key figure in a key football
game Saturday night a t
Orange Coast College.
Churchward is the
quarterback of F u 11 e r t o n
College and Fullerton's suc-
cess against Orange Coast will
probably hinge on
Cburchward's SUcces!I.
GQme time is 7:30, and the
loser can just about kiss any
South Coast Conference title
goodbye. Both teams suffered
losses last week i)l conference
openers and two losses in a
si.x..team conference might be
impossible to overcome. '
Churchwanl, a sopi>olnor<
who saw limited playing time
last year, bas a reputation as
a fme runner but his passing
ebillty bas been questioned.
His ability I<> pass agalnst
OCC's tight deiensive ~
dary ll,kely will be the key to
the ball game as far as
Fullerton is: concerned.
"He's improved in every
ball game," says Fullerton
coach Ital Sberbeck. "We just
hope we can get a good
perfonnaoce out of b i m
agalml Orange Coast."
So far t b l s season,
Oiurdiward bas completed 43
ol 'us -for 763 yards and five touchdowns. He's run for
116 yards on 54 carries, but
most of lhal yardage bas
oomo when his pass protectioo blocldns has broken down.
Most of his completkm go
oc=~ s.ri.
Iii!'• = ~"~' '1"~1~ : If -1 , F\lli.orton lt (IS.I
-20, FutttrtOI! i -14 FuUl'l'1on 2 !Ill = :: ~ ii: %<>, ,m -~,,;.;;; ~ lSCb -)5,F wton7 m -~I, F11 lerton 7 ~95& -~ 6, FIJllt!Mon 6 Oltl ,,st _ 1111...,on ,,. ~s: t
IMO -F~l"1oo! 20, QC~ IW = f.}!.!~F~~ 1"3 -& 13, Full•rton 6 l~ -Ful ... ton :M, ~CO 19'65 -F11llirrt<;tn O , C 0 1"6 -Fuller1on 35, c n lff1 -Fulltrton 3t. OCC 7
19611 -Fllll,rton 20, OCC 11 \Mt -OCC 20. Fullerton lt 1•70 -~ ...... ..,,.. 21, occ 7 '"J -occ 30. FullWfOI'! 26 Fut 1rtor> S.edl ...sn lU.2.
to split end Rob Conrad, a
sophomore lettermen who bas
caught 22. for 535 yards and
three touchdowns, although
freshman Crnig Caldwell oot
of Valencia High School has
Iool<<d good In his two starting
assignments.
Despite ~e Coast's 3-2
mark Sberbeck noteai "I said
they were the favorite before
the season started and I
haven't changed my opinion.
"I think they have one or the
finest ball clubs they've ever
had and they have super in-
div id u al s, Ute their
quarter ltack and pass
receivers.u ~
Fullerton's Jack or success
-the Hornets ·a~ 2·3 -can
be partially attriliuted to an
lnexperlenoed olfensi"-line.
SopboPJore tactJe W a'y.,p e
Bootaw, a 230-pounder, ls the
only one with experience.
'·' T'h'e y ' r e galniog ex-
perieooe," s a y s Sberbeck.
"We b:>pe the more they play
the better they'll gel. We have
a lot of second year men who
had never played before this S'easori and they don't have
any more experience than the
freshmen."
Chargers Rely Heavily
On Dapper's Running
'Bobby Dapper is tho toost of
tbe Cypress College football
team and his presence in the
Olargers lineup S a t u r d a y
nJght agillmt Golden West is
of concern to the Rustlers
roaching stall.
The game will be played at
Buena Park Hlgll with kickoll
at 7:30.
Dapper is a freshman stu-
dent at Cypress -aiding
the Westau High Pioneers to
Steigner .
Surprises
Valencia
•
Dick Steigner has found his
niche at Valencia High School,
and that's bad nel7S for the
Laguna Beach football le.am.
reach the finals or the CIF
AAA.A playoH,a a year 8go. He
subaequeptly was named I<> tho
"""""1 team AU-CIF.
Cypress coach Bill Price
can't find enough adjectives to
praise bis l1l11Jling back.
"He won the game for us
last week <•ta over LA
Hazf>or).
"We were down. 18-0, and be
cam< jhroogh like a cham-
ploo. ilo bod" ooe toodldown
nm <if 18 yards and theu look
a Uttle dieclwll pass behind
the 1h1e of scrinimage and nn
31 y.rds tor • 300ft.
·~e's deflnitely -a college
prospect but the larger schools
may not feel he's big enough.
He bas good speed and ex-
<:i!llent quickness," Price says.
Dapper starxls 5-3 and
weighs in at 170 pounds ac-
cording to his coach.
Statistically be has rushed
for 508 yards in 99 carries this
season. comparing favorably
to Golden West's leading
rusher Rick Rice who has 733
yards in 130 carries.
dust through lbe alr and
EdUon does a good job with
It," adds Holland.
Penonnel adjustments in
the offensive game for Corona
del Mar appear Imminent at
right tackle and tailback.
Taking over for Kent Merrill
at tackle la Gordon Stewart.
At taUback It'll be Steve
Beb'rens for Skip L3uder-
b.'lugh. Behrens accounted for
42. yards in 13 cllrrles last
week which ls 15 more than
Corona's net running yardage
Jor the game.
Gauchos
Foe Having
Problems
RIVERSIDE -Riverside
City College coach Al Fages
doe571't mince words when
describing the problems that
have beset his team this
season.
Fages, whose Tigers face
Saddleback Saturday, says·
that lnezperience and lack or
talent have be.ell the big fac-
tors as the Tigers beve
managed one on-tlJe..field win
in six games this season. One
<i those losses became a vic-
tory, however, on a forfeit by
San Bernardino.
"We're not too bad
defensively, and our specialty
teams have helped us, but we
just can't move the ball on of-
fense," Fages says.
The 1'gers have only nine
sophomores on their roster
this season, seven of wOOm
are either offensive or
defensive starters. The team's
inexperience is especially evi-
dent at the se>ealled skilled
positioM, especially on offense
and the Tigers have averaged
only 8.5 points per game.
Mike Walsh, a 6-2, 200 pound
freshman has taken over the
starting quarterback s po t
after injuries s i d e l i n e d
sophomores Larry Thompoon
and Brace Berg. With Walsh
starting ror the first time last
week, Riverside aUempted 39
passes, and completed 12 in a
21-7 loss to Pak>mar.
"We don't like I<> tllrow that
mud! but we ba~n'l been
able to run et all, so we1l be
passing the rest of the
season," Fages says.
A pair of small-but-fast
receivers, Jim Ball and Steve
Dahl, plus tight end David
Daniels are the primary
targets for Walsh.
Ball, a 5-6, lSG-pounder, has
four of them for tooc:hdown.!.
Dahl, who is the same stature
as Ball, has two touchdown
receptiom.
Junior Quarterback
Paces Saint,s Atttack
Steigner is a hard-running
fullback on ValeNfia's first
place (3-0) Orange League
team, but it hasn't been until
the . past two games that
$elgner has come into his
""1'·
Reid Gottsche began the
season at fullback but has
been playing defense only for
the past two games.
He is also a threat when the
Chargers go to a passing
game. Dapper has caught 13
passes for 236 yards, the
leading pass receiver oo the
Cypn!6S team.
When the Chargers go to the
air, the passing has been
divided equally b e t w e e n
£resbman Brad Hillman and
soph>more Ben Cardarelli.
Hillman has complet<!d 26 of
71 aUempts and Cardarelli 2S
of 70.
What there is of the
Riverside running g a m e
centers around mini-backs
David Chandler (150), Steve
Perales (160) and Eddie
Talbert (175). Fages says that
al!houg)! tbe trio Is fast end
shifty, line p-oblems have
made the ~ game "em-
barrassing" this -
The offense bas been such
that punter J. D. Jones, wOO
has averaged 39 a kick, was
named one of tbe top players
by !''ages.
The perfonnance or Santa
Ana High School's football
team has improved at about
the same rate that quarterback
Ed Molina has shaken of! his
physical problems.
And after Molina's per-.
fonnance egalnst Anaheim
last week, Marina may be in
for a rough game when the
Vikings play Santa Ana Friday
et 8 p.m. at Westmimter H1gh
S<)tool.
Molina threw for o n e
touchdown and ran for another
as the Saints bimmOO. former-
ly unbeaten Anaheim, 14-7. to
pu t their Sunset Le a g u e
record at 1·2.
It was Molina's pe!Sing that
pleased Santa Ano coach Tom
Baldwin the most.
"He bad a shoulder Injury
earller this year and it really
threw his timing oer, even
when the Jnjury began to
heal." explains Baldwin.
"It hurt every Ume he
threw, but the injury Is heeled
now and he threw very well
against Anaheim. Even though
we run the wishbone, we have
to throw $OMe to keep the
derense honest, but we weren't
able to even do that earlier."
Molina, a Junior who ranked
--In tho oounly In total ou.... .. • IOpbomoTe 1asl
year, has .also licked an early
season weight problem.
"He came in at about 205
pounds," say, Baldwin of his
siJ.-(oot quarterback, "He's
down to about 190 or 187 now
and he really looks a lot
quicker.
"He runs the 40 in 4.7 and he
has a kt of poise to go along
with his speed and passing.
And I think that the resl of
this year you'll see him throw
really well."
In Marina , Santa Ana will be
playing its nrst foe this year
not rated In the coonty'! top
10.
"Marina will be the first
team we've played that hasn't
been unbeaten," says Baldwin.
"It was brutal, but we could
still he In the Sunset League
race If we'd beaten Western,
and we should have."
Baldwin still has his eyes on
second place and a possible
playoff berth, although his
hopes are slim. "Westminster
still has to play Anaheim,
Newport Harbor and West.em,
and Anahtlm still has I<> play
Loara and Western," be says.
"It will be dllncult, but
11tranger things have hap-
penod. We jusl want I<> win the
rest of our games and let the
rest of the teams take care of
them8elves."
"He's our middJe linebacker
and has his hands full calling
defensive signals and playing
like J?ick Butkus," explains
Valencia coach Dave
Pinckney.
So it will be the 5-11, 185-
pound Steigner who will be in
against Laguna Beach when
tbe Artlst3 host Valencia Fri-
day at a p.TIL
MD, Tritons Favored;
Bucs Tabbed by Three
Against University last week San Clemente .is favored by A11.,.1• over '-" Frllft(ll(o b'I' 1
Steigner carried the ball 14 one point to defeat Mission a,..... ••v _, M1-1• by' Kanan City -San Olt90 Dy ) times for 144 yards. "He's Viejo In an Orange League Ml•ml over ••ltlmor• o,. '
s u r p is e d us," adrhits football outing Friday night ~i~o!:" °"w.::,1i:,~ 111'-11'1 11
Pinckney, "and he'll probably while Mater De:i is a four point w1tfllng1°" -c111om11 °' s
play a bigger part in our of-choice over Bishop Amat in =:1~110::' rl~·: ~I 5
tense from now on." Angelus League action. ~••k• ...... oi.111tom1 s11•• °' 1s Pvrd111 -U1ll'IOl1 by ' Stelgner played football at These are the closest prep syrlCVH over P1111D11rv11 0y 1
V_, ___ , pbo nd t bu! ted b the DAI ,...,,. 31119 OYef' Wftl Vl"9ifll•.,.,., ~a as a .so more a fames a a Y -Arlrone s1111 _. Air Frrc• 0y ,
tbm dropped out last year. Y PILOT sports staff weekly :;i~;: ro=, ~::::"~ nvii:,
He's regained his Interest, pigskin prognosticatkms. hddleN(k °"""' 11:1,,.,.1,,. by s
tho gh, -• Pl "-co ldn't On the cooununity college Gol<Mn w"' • .....,. Cyprn1 by 1 u 8uu ncr..uey u Fwn1t1" v111..,. fWt!° ,..,..no111 by 1 be happier. front, Orange Coast is a three-w111er11 ovtt tttwWt H•<Wr 0y ''
"He has good m 0 v es polnt choice over Fullerton, ~:!:"'-~~,:a;:~,~0y"1~' 0y • although he isn't really fast," SaddJeback is picked by five v11enc11 • .,,... L•11o,m1 li11c11"' 1
Pinckney says. "lle's strong, over Riverside and Golden ':!:. 0:.,~1~~ :.,m;; by•
tho gh d be h West is a se~n point pick e11111C11 oovtf' coa11 .v..... b'I' 1~
u 1 an can nc press ov-Cyp-"". wn1mt111t1r OYtf' Hunt1tt0tor1 ... c11 nearly 300 pounds.'' ... '"""" ttv •• Stnll Anl -/qrlne by I
Steigner lan't the only of--;;;;;;;"·.,~---•°"•'•''•"'•"';.';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;"ii";i'i;i""";;i;"i;i";i~;ii'~' iiMlii"ii'~;;;iv~"1~'~";,i' rensJve weapon Valencia h;i.a. 11
End Richard Hernandez, BOOK XMAS ORDERS NOW SAVE 50'1'.-60'1.
probably the best In the SEE A UNIQUE FRE' •1rn ON EACH PURCHASE
Orange League, hu caught aix MARTrl
~~~~~1:~ HONG KONG TAILOR
team. SALE 3 DAYS ONLY, OC T. 26, 27 & 28
MEH1 R19. NOW WOMEN c R•t· NOW
llflp,Cbl.K11itS11ll $120 SIS l Pc. Wool IC11it Stilt 71 $JS
En9ll1h Wool S11it S 110 116 l Pc. P111t S11it1 $10 Ill
Sil• Wool S11ltt SllO I ll le1dff Go-111 $110 U S
S•offl1h lwo.d $15 141 E111D/a.1d Dr111 $15 14S GRAND PRIX
C1th1111r1/Vic11111 $I )0 161 Vle11n1 /C11h1111r1 Co1tt $210 11 IJ
Dbl. knit Shirt• Sii SI AU Wool S11it 1120 $61
l>rip Dry Shirts $1 r II.SO Silk llo111t1 $11 t 7
"""' M111y MOt9 JO ~ jlllrorn lrellllllt'IO Pt1tt91/Dvty ~13~!. MO. ! And tbll , .. he ml.u<d the
~ flrat three games when an $ankle llg~t Injury In Uie
~ MU1Lang1J ICl'immage with ! UnlVMl11 pol him oul al ac-~~Ow be'• back ind he and
"Three straight .wt>eta we
feel we 've outplayed people at
the start of the game and then
they just wear us down,"
surmises Sweazy.
"I think we have more 11bl.ll·
ty this year lheD last, but we
haven·l done the Job dcfens~ely. We've come clost,
then let 1t get away," ht adds.
• ANTHONY SCHOOLS
HARIOI CIHTll
m
._.. -••-,_ DAVI ROSS PONTIAC '
t:'··.I l, ....... "'iiilhm•m~iil·m'j''i"""'iiiiill•llL..~~~~·· ... ~""""'.,,;.;;;;~"'4;,;.;at;;;;r.i.;;;;o.;.;c:.o~'"~M· .. ~~~~~ "-f114J tlt..Ul l LIASI DtllCT -•ACTOlY AUTHOllZI D DULl l
\'11 '· .,....'"'"' ''· AMMIM. CM. ,... M9ft,.l'rl •1M .. StM • Slf, • •-llpfl ar ""'-
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Ctll'ltltttt'I Nlflf T""""· Afl't' 1tyl1 -"""f 1111 -l•Htl~IM ONrM· ..... a .......... .,,. -,llf'tlolw .... .. I S,.rt JKkft ,,... -Try
lllt IHClll llflrl 51110 lw MM ...i wt--fllty ltt Ill ... NJ.I.
MR. MIKE BALANI
A-1'oo Hoitt
1 t700 .... ArfW .....
Tef.1 IJJ•l171
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MV Star
Gets Stiff
Challenge
When the football goes up In
the air Friday night at the
Mission Viejo.San Clemente
fl)Qtball game, there's a good
chance No. 2G of Mluton Viejo
will )>e around It when It com-
es down.
Scott Eaton, the Dtabloo'
junior defensive safety aod ol·
tensive end who wean Jeney
No. 26, has estahllJhed hlnueU
for oonalatency both way1
as tbe Dlablos have moved in-
to a lie for the top spot lD the
Crestview League with a 1-1 ,...,rd.
And :Misslon Viejo coach
Bob Hivner espects that one of
the key aspect& of Frt4ay'o
game might he the play of
Eaton and bis defensive
backfield teammates against
the passing of San Clemente's
BUI Kenney.
"He has been probably our
most con.ststent de f e n., I v e
player, one of the few people
who have been consistent in
our de f e n s iv e backfie.ld,''
Hivne1 says.
"W~~ve lo get a good came Scott and' everyone
else 0< Kenney will ptek' us
apart Ibis week," Hlvner .ads.
Eaton, a f.2, 171).pound,
junior, ls the Dlablo leader on
the defenaive point system
kept by mvner and his
coacbq staff, and Is among
tM team 's leading receivers
when be switches over to the
o£feosive side.
Eaton rank! second in
tack.Jes oa the team, and has
also picked up points for an in-
terception #·in last week'a
game. ,
lUvner calls Eatod one of the tiardest hil!Ors -on lhe team,
and baa been an especially
·pleasant SUIJlfise · for the
Diablos sine< he didn't play
football last sea900.
When the ball goes over to
the Diablos, Eaton goes with
it, operating out or a split
receiver spot.
Prep Def ensi'Ve ~layers
JON TERRY
Corono dol Mor
bENNY SNYDIR
Elf1t1cta
JEFF WINSHIP
Usliin• a..ch
DAVE NEWSTEAD
·Cool• Moaa
BOii DUDREY
Founttln Volley
BILL WATSON
Marini
BILL FORD
Edison
WALLY NICOLSON
Hunllft9fon 8"ch
HECTOR DELGADILLO
Motor Dei
"We alternate him quite a
bit, and he has done a good
job for us there too," Hivner §%. ....,...
Through the Diablos' first
four games, Eaton had done
well enough to lead the team
in receptions, with seven and
yards gained with 70.
"He doesn't have real great.
speed, aboul 4.9 for lhe 40, but
he worts hard at it, and it has
paid off," Hivner says.
Sonora's
?eterson
Unique
The coaches at Sonora High
School figure Jim Peterson lo
be a unique 'athlete and it's
tough to question their judg-
ment.
After all, there aren't too
many quarterbacks who are
alternately used as a tight
end.
And outside 'O( former New
York Yankees pitcher Ryne
~. there aren't too many
winning baseball pitchers with
bad eyesight.
But Peterson fits the bill In
both cases, and in addition
ranks as the team leader for
the Raiders.
He'll be one of UnJversity's
big worries when the Trojans
take on Sonora Friday at 7:30
at La Habra High School.
Football b actually
Peterson's No. 2 sport, He was
a good enough pitcher fM lhe
Raiders baseball team last
se390D to be named the AA
CIF player of the year. AU he
did to eam that honor was to
post a 16-1 won-lost record and
an 0.57 earned run average.
His ba!eball prowess doesn't
carry over as a batter, ac-
cording to the Sonora coaches.
because he sc:wnetimes has
trouble aeelllg the plate, let
alone the baseball.
But comes football season,
and he pUt.s his customary
spectacles aside to take the
field.
A broken leg, suffered In a
motorcycle accklent. k e p l
~tenon out all of last se.ason
In foo<hall and he wu
relegatad to oecond string du-
ty le< tlie first tw<> gama tills ........
Given a start ogalnn Sad'
~eback, however, Petenen
promptly lad the Raiden to
their nm win of the yeor.
'!be Sonono sWf doesn't
rate Petenon as outstandJng u either 1 passer or runner,
but be hu 1tlll manaaed to 11:et
the desired Job done 10< the
Raiders.
M I pauer llllt Wfflc ha
conlplllad ontv threa PA""'
&Rilmt Dana Hilts -but two
or them were for touchdown•.
M a runner, he l)a1 onlv
average apeed, but has •till
managed to average four
ysrds per cqrry .this 1euon.
y.,
RICK CURTIS
Mission Viejo
Boes Post
17-4 Polo
·Victory
Orange Coast College zipped
to another easy water polo
victory Tuesday night.
Coach Jack Fullerton's
Pirates, rated the state's No. 1
JIM SWICK
Newport H1rbor
junior college team, toyed "'
with Mt. San Antonio In JOHN D'ANNUNZIO
posting e 17-4 victory in lhe Unl .. n1lty
'
LANCE SWIGART
San Clemente
LARRY GRADY
Westminster occ pool. -------------------
It was the Bucs' 17th win of
the aeason in ta attempts (the
only loss was to powerflil Cal)
and It ran OCC's mark against
JC opponents to 14--0.
Ski Slww Scheduled
And '"""' Importantly. It uJlll<d the Pirates' South O>ast
Conference record to 5--0.
OCC nert faces the state'•
second ranked chib
Fullerton-Friday with
a victory just about insurillg
the Dues the cir<ult cham·
pion.ohlp. That's a 3:30 Wt at acc.
TJ>e Pint.. led from the
start but held only e slim :1-2
lead early In the 8'ICond
quarte<, be!""' ramm111g In
IOU!' straJirht goall le< a 7·1
halftime ••. And Ibey
promptly hit ilne In a row to
start the NIOOnd half to enm
a I~ advaritage.
Hoo Mlllolel< paced lhe Bqcs
with five pla while BUI
McAneooy bad three.
Ooolle Doug Weller olao
lool<ad lm(lrelllive for lhe
Pirates.
' J;>r o Results
For Newporter ln.n
\ Siders in the Orange Coast
area hoping for an early start
to the snow country, can wax
enthuslastk: about t he I r
favorite sport at the second
aonual Oronge County ski
tllow lo he staged at the
Newporter Inn ~nday, Nov. 5
under till!plet.:1 of the balboa
Sid Club.
1be Abow lJ centered around
display booth! presented by
•kl clllba, ahopo, retOrlJ,
travel agenclos and alrlln ...
It gtves the ski enthusiast an
opportunity W tee, under one
roof, whit ls avaU.ble in the
form of IP>l'll attire, equlJ>
ment, trip pad<ageo and club
actlvtU,. for the ccxnlng -In addlUon to dilplay booths,
alternooo and •venlna fashion
-will preaant tl>o lateat fuhlons In ski clotheo and ac-
ceaorles. Ski moves ,.-1u 118o
be llhown on a contlnu Ing bosls
with door prbes and a roc:k
hand pnwkllns music '""" 7 to 10.
A donation of JI for perlOllS
over 12 •nd 50 ct.nta for those
lJ and under entitles the Uctet
holder to the full program.
The show will open at JO a.m.
and close at 10 p.m.
Advance tickets may be ob-
talned from Balboa Ski Club,
P.O. Box 155, Balboa Island or
.at lhe Boxolllce, 1650 SOuth
Hart>or Blvd., AnsJieim.
For further information,
contact Doria Shuler at 646-
5141.
SoCal Wins
Soccer Tilt
Southetn Cllilornla Colleot•'• eocoer teem abut out Califor-
nia Baptllt Collep pf Rt..,..
aide M 'lllesday to booot Ill
aeuon's record to f.t
Jan Heathcock picked up hll
17th goal at the aaaoon In tile
lint hall to start the SoCal
ocorillg, and Randy BaclcmM
and DOnnls Shelton added aec-ond half IOI!>.
Hethcocl. now ranb I I the
leadlng oeottr In the NAIA
Welltrn .... Ion with ~ l(Olls.
'
• ,
DAILY l'ILOT> J.'.J
$.3 Average
Sentinels' Mi ller Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO Gears Attack
Mognolla High'• tough of.
fenslve ground 1eame appears
to be attaining high gear these
daya. after a slow start and
next In line to test the Sen-
tlnell Is FOU11taln Valley
Hlgh's Barona Saturday night
at Huntington Beach High.
Coach Glenn Thom as'
Magnolia eleven s t um b I e d
through four losses but caught
on la.st week ln a 23-12 victory
over c.osta Mesa.
And tbe running of tailback
Mark M i ller p rove d
Manoglla 'a No. l asset as the
$-10, 18()..plund senior crashed
through Qie Mesa derense for
149 net yards in 25 carries.
That errort upped h i s
seasonal total to 433 yards in
78 carries for a flossy 5.3
average.
"He's our leading ground
gainer and he seems to run to
daylight pretty darn well ,"
says Thomas.
"And when he's challenged
by people he can run right at
them with authority and get
the job done," adds the Sen-
tinels boss.
Miller's longest run of tbe
sea.son is a fG.yard burst
against speedy Santa Ana
Valley. Of bis two touchdown
runs, his longest bas been a
19--yarder.
The tough Sentinels back
runs out of the power I-forma-
tion and is also considered a
potential pass receiver in key
situations.
But the pass hasn't been us:
ed all that much by Magnolia
this year.
"We were flve-ror-six in
passing against Costa Mesa ,"
says Thomas, "but two or
those were to the bad guys."
Miller and the rest of bis run-
ning mates figure to be in a
rugged test against Fountain
Valley and Thomas says"one
of the key problems his backs
face is getting a bole to run
through.
"Fountain Valley has a real
Dana Hills
To Face
Top QB
It's a rare football team that
does well without a good
quarterback, and unbeaten
Brea High School may have
lhe Orange League 's best in
Corey Leyton.
Leyton and a1 flock of other
skilled personnel will confront
winless Dana Rills Friday
night when Brea hosts the
Dolphins at 8 o'ck>ek.
Leyton, a starter for the
Wildcats since his sophomore
season, has passed 58 times
this season, co mpleting 28 for
397 yards and five touchdowns.
"We lbink he's done an
outstanding job as our field
general and quarterback,"
says Brea coach Doug Kechter
of the slender, 6-0, 155-
pounder.
"He has e fine ann and
good coordination throwing the
ball, and I think he'll make a
good quarterback on the small
college level.
"We had him run more last
year but th.is season he'.s been
primarily a drop-back passer
because our backs have been
running better."
Leyton's primary target has
been split end Dan Carpenter,
who has ca ught 13 for 185
yards and four touchdowns.
"He's a n outstanding
athl ete," says Kechter of
carpenter. who long jumped
24 feet for the Brea track
team last year.
"He has n!al good speed and
the way he jumps Is amazing.
He's a fine end." •
Primary ball carriers in
Brea's balanced offense are
running backs Steve Seeba and
Keith Redhan.
Fullback Seeba has run for
320 yards on 64 carries for six
touchdowns while Redman, a
tailback. hall carried 49 times
for 26C yards and three
touchdowns.
Best of the offensive
lln'eman has been ceoiter Milch
Wardman, a 6-0, 195 pound
aealor.
"We're bigger than we have
been ln the peat.'' says
Keebler, wllo ha.s IOtne top
junior and sophomore talent
on hll varsity team.
"We ami't huge by any
means. but we're blager than
tut 111r. 'nte kids have an
awlul lot of 1plrtt and they've
Ill worked hard."
With pn ce ·bea ten Sad-
dleback I~ up nut -k,
Kechter lo ooacerntd that hll
team wUI tend to loot post
Dana iUll1. "We'vt ial~
a bout not doing that.'' he soys.
"We lry to play oacb game
wlthoot looking at the nut
one, and t.bat'• one of the real
-ol footbaJI ...
advantage tn elze. It's the big-
gest team phy sically in the
Irvine League, It's not even
close.
"So our problem is io the
offensive blocking. ]l's a real
question mark," says 1bomaa.
If the offensive wall can get
off" tbe Une quickly and mike
the necessary blocks, it's cer-
tain that the end result will be
another punishing style of at--
tacit wllb Miller leading the
way with his bursts.
Boes Duo,
Rice Top
JC Stats
Golden West College's Rick
Rice and Orange Coast's Alvin
White and Steve Monahan are
the area junior college football
statistical leaders midway
through the 1972 campaign,
according to stats compiled by
the DAILY PILOT.
Rice. the RusUers' running
back. bas rushed for 701 yards
in 130 carries (5.4 average )
and six touchdowns.
White has completed 92 of
165 passes (56 percent) for
1,209 yards and s e v e n
touchdowns. Monahan h a s
been on the receiving end of 30
of White's throws, gaining 436
yards and three touchdowns.
orar.... Ctnl (J..1J .......
lcb YI r. Ml I< '2 m a m J
Uf1l~tt!l ~ 1~ J 'U ~ ~,'3).ji ,,.,_j,
l 0 ' .1 0 222 900 10.J 7t7 11 P11slM
N ~ f' ty Id JICI. 145 92 2 1.?09 7 .SSS J OO 0 0.00!t
1'7 " 1? !,:!Of 1 .S.Sl
11.Kll'lf""
K JI " l'l m ! l1 1l 1 ~ 11~ t
' " ' POWff l · , " I 1'0!1~ " 1,,J 5cof1no -OIKOfl JOl llk1rda U (16 PAT1, l FG1l1 Ntol'lullltl 2'; Mont"-11 11: H1rtslltlcf 121 '"-• Wllltt, L.acV, FkNr 6. s1•11u= 14-1-11 . ·~ le "" yl Jlll1 M 141/1113137••
" :JOI t7 lll 5 S.1 11t 10 lJ ' 1t137! ' 17 ,, 1
•160 1'0 1 M o M 0 , , • I ' 1 1 !) 1 Jl020 ·100 ~~ 1.195 16.1 !,079 u P111ln1
... llr. ... ,,, '" ..-;t. Uf6'7'30•.'ff
1•70710 •. ~ tOl00 .000
IOIO t .000
100 00 .0l'll 147 711 ' 10D7 ' ...,, ll9Cel\'f119
Coast .i\rea
Water Polo
Summaries
V1"'ty CMllMffl 1 ) I f -f
Etltnc:l,1 I t I 1 -J
Coslt M-M:Of'll!CI': w"'""°"' !•I, Hom1i.r (1), Lllfld Ill. L11.io1•11n (I),
EtflllC!t llmf'l"9: l.. fl), Wt()tltf' 11 ). Mcetrtl11 CO. J..., V1rWty
ColltMtN 7Jf7 -1t 1!111~1 o a o t -t
C.lt M<Kf K'trfno; ~19>' UJ.
Ctlt ()), ll'alt1rd 17). M1otLA1111 tt l,
MttMC.Oll ltl, sr1., !U. 1(-!tl.
Grwlol Ill. l1l1Mlt KOrl"9: ltldtell
121. ·-COll•MM.t >ltl -7
EtfllfKlt 0 4 t I -' Ctt11 MtM -1 .. : C'hlafl 131. WIWd 11), S..,._ 111, Clll...,_ 11), o,_ (1), l1tllfll:f• _.1111: WV11t 121 • Mtddott (I), • .,.., {1). ....... c ..... ~ ' I J t-f lei-ltlt-•
C--9't MW ...... r IC"""""*t Ill, '--• (0. W,._ ltl. ldl-
JCllWlt'lf: .....,.,_ (II. Hl-lblt'9ft 111.
Co-Sponsored this week by
UNIVERSITY PARK
Shopping Center
Culver & Michelson, Irvine
An d The
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT
Top Weekly Prize in
Merchandise Certificates
For Weekly Second
Place Winner
Each for Third, Fourth
and Fifth Place Winners
Plus BONUS PRIZE
A '°'' of rid:ets to the .,.._ of tN ,..,.. I USC w. Motre ~I to-· wM's w~. CowrNsy of tlle DAILY PILOT.
Be a pi9skin prophet for profit. Play the Pilot Pigskin
PlCKEROO game for weekly prizes. Top winn er eech
week receives $25 gift certificate from the sponsoring
shoppin g center. Second place winner CJefs $10 cer.
tifjce+t end +hkd1~fourth •lid fifth piece winners each
get $5 certific ate. Each certific ate is spendable, just
like mon ey, et" any store in the sponsoring shopping
center.
Sponsorship rotates with a different center sponsor·
ing eech week's contest. Participating centers a re:
Westcliff Plaza, 17th and Irvine, Newport Bea ch:
Harbor View Center, San Joaquin Hills Road and
MacArthur Boulevard, Newport Beach; Eastbluff
Villaqe Center, Eestbluff Drive, Newport Beech; 8ey-
side Center, Beyside Drive and J a mboree Road, New·
port Beach; end University Pa rk Shoppinq Canter,
Culver and Michelson, Irvine.
Watch for this player's form aech week in +ha DAI LY
Pl~OT Sports Section. C ircle the tea m you think will
win in each pairi119 in the list of 10 9a me1 a nd se nd in
+,he player's form antry blank or a rea sonable fa c1imil a.
'11ien watch t he DAILY PILOT sports pages for each
week's list of five winners.
RULES
I. Svlmllf fllt ttff'y 111111111 flt_few '' • l'HMN•lf 1.nlmllt ~ It to .,.l1r
"" contnt. "llttton1blot' l.almll.,. It Hf'"-' n 1n "•ll'Kf lllllll'lk•lt ." e .. tl"in mail bt Vlllfol'fl'I ht •ti. .... illltjlf to ll<IHl•lt lvcltt1111. TIMM wtll(tt ...... W11,.r1r1 •111 ltil lllli.,.MIHMI.
t ltnt rt ,., ,.ILOT PIOUl:IN PKKeltOO CONTllST, Sl*f .,._rtmtnt, ,,o .... '* c.ttt ~. CA. mu.
4. 111trtft "'"' .. ~ ... Ml i.tw ~ ,........, ., _, .. *llY•,. tllll,. Hiie DA ILY l"ILOT tlflc• lly I ,.m. Tllll ...... y.
S. P1rtl<lptllflf -rdlallb.Hll DAILY 'llOT ....,,..,.._ Miii llltlr t-.
lllllfto ltmlU. "" ...... ,. e!!ltr.
" Tia aR.IAKllt IU.NK MOST IE Flll•D IN Olt •NTllV II VOID.
•••••••••••••••••••• • ENTRY BLANK • • Clrcte ..-,.. !MM win n ""weft's,._. • • f~ ..... kMC-4 ... U.tMI • • Rams vs Oakland • e San Francisco vs Atlanta • • • • Minnesota vs Green Bay • • Kansas City vs San Diego • • -Miami vs Baltimore • • Washington State vs UCLA • e • e USC vs Oregon • • Cal vs Washington • • Tulane vs Georgia Tech • • TCU vs Notre Dame • • Oklahoma State vs Nebraska • • Illinois vs Purdue • • • • Pittsburgh vs Syracuse • • Penn State vs W. Virginia • • Air Force vs Arizona State • • Indiana vs Northwestem • • Fullerton vs Orange Coast • • • • Riverside vs Saddleback • • Golden West vs Cypress • • Magnolia vs Fountain Valley • • Newport vs Western • • Edison vs Corona del Mar • • • • Dana Hills vs Brea • • Valencia vs Laguna • • Mater Del vs Bishop Amat • • Univers ity vs Sonora • • Costa Mesa vs Estancia • • • • Westminster vs Hunti11gton • • Santa Ana vs Marina • • Mission Viejo vs Son Clemente • • • • fll l •IAJCllt -Mf ,.._ • .. tr.bl ~ If ""'h te9'W • • •11 ... -...... ~-• ·-. ~--y"""' 'Ol"Wlt ... Mlif • , , , -,, • • '"'* t•t•-1 ........... e ..... .i M..-tCOl'lflfl Mt!1!1o ftl, • --• T..,...,.... 111, 11'111,.,... CO, lftnmlfl OJ, • e ~ ft), !""-tW'llle! ""'-' (2). Pkktonf 11). • c:!ff zr,· •
c.... .. :..~! f I J -t • -II
··-, • ,_, • -In • c..... ... ¥t1' ICl'!tlt: °" 111. """ IU. ldlWI '*'1111 "· Mlllll• •••••••••••••••••••• """"" 111, °""' {fl, • .,..,,,. (41 •• ._ _____________________ __
u...nttd ft),
I
t
I
!
'·
4 DAILY PILOT
Man, 45.
Begins
New Life
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: I am 44, mar-
ried, the father of three
children, and stuck. I dropped
out of college in my junior
year. Since then I have held
moderately well-paying jobs in
L h e industrial advertising
neld. To say I am not happy
is an understatement.
F. Scott Fitzgerald meant
me when he wrote "His once
bright ambitions creep past
like beaten soldiers." l see
now J will never reach the top
or the antheap, write the great
novel or make that million.
The kicker is. I'm not sure I
ever wanted to -at least in
my present f)eld .
1 now rea.Ur.e I always have
been strongly attracted to the
legal profession. So with that
(Career CorMr J
insight and 10 cents, I can -
you know what . Please omil
any reference to my identity ii
you have any practical sug-
gestions. -:P.f.ISERABLE AT
MIO.COURSE
IF EXAMPLE is the school
of mankind, here's a lesson
based on the true story of Hal
Lister. assistant professor at
the University of Missouri's
school of journalism.
Five years ago, Lister also
feared that the d r e a m s
chapters in his life story had
gathered too much dust. Al 45,
it seemed a litUe late to cor·
reel the proofs for a second
edition. At least, that was
Lister's first reaction as he
sat reviewing the situation
with his wire, Nana, one even-
ing in 1967.
Li ster had lcrt college in hi s
sophomore year to support his
growing family, which would
eventually include f i v e
children. Hitting the. job.
market, he alternated between
editing small newspapers (for
love), and selling insuranct
and other items (for money).
'Ibat is, Lister would sell for
several years until he built a
nestegg big enough to cushion
the lower-paying journalism
jobs he pttlerr<d. When the
editing job money nn \ow. he
returned to sales, and so on
until ...
I
)
THE SWlTCH.artTING
career pattern be c a m e
pointless. At the ~ of the
fateful f a mi I y -cence,
Uster was spending 70 ·~
hours a weet editing a .om;.
tlfic journal in Milwaukee.jut
not making f80Uib mouef" or
seetng prospecb f o r ad-
vancement. Adding to his
frustration was his belated
discovery, through a variety of
volunteer activities, that he
liked to teach. Specifically, he
liked to teach journalism.
"But whoever heard of such
a thing? I was 45 years old, 21
years away from a clauroom,
not even a bachelor's degree.
and a family to support."
Lister says, recalling the
seeming futility of the situa-
tion. 11len It happened. A new
ouUook. A new determinaUon.
A new appraisal.
Lister credits his wife as
being the first to realize that
hl1 returning to school might
not be fantasy after Bil. Mrs.
Lister pointed out that only
two of their children were still
dependent on them rmanclally,
and that she, who taught
piano, could take on a few
more students.
AcnON BEGAN the nen
momlng when Lister enrolled
at the University of Wiaconsin,
Milwaukee. He quit hls 70-hour
week editing job and became a
star salesman of carpeting at
a department store. His new
sales job allowed him to ar-
range his working 00\11"$
around bis school schidule,
and paid him about $12,000 a
year.
For approximately the nut
two yean, Lister moved like a
Jornado, carrying 18 credit
houri per semester, working
44 bouts a week aell!Jli
carpeting, directing a eom-
DlWllty lheal<r Uu'eo nig)lts a
week (which paid him another
$2400/yeat), and bro a cl-
casting a daily radio newscast
on the school slatlm. He
graduated with a 3.5 grade
average (scale of 4).
In the fall of 1989, Llster
wu hired as an lnstructo.r of
joumalilm at MtssoiJrl, a top-
raled 1chool. He talJl)tt lull
t1me wlllle warltlng on hll muter'• degrte wblcb be had
boped to pl In Detemhtt
1'71. But tn October or lhlt
)'elr, lJltu was felled "1th •
heart attack. By Ja11Jlry 1172,
be WU back on bla feet. In
May, Hal Llster wu awarded
a master'• degrne I n
joumallsm. Last month, he w•• promoted lo aislstant pror ....... :ilAI Uster ii not 1 m•n lo whom one can comfortably
~: "IVI ton !&le to thanie
1be copy."
Wtd,,.,.i.y October 25, 1W2
cona MIU -'" .. ,,,. It. CO$t• MIU -'91 M•lr-aM1, •I Wlilmll St.
U.NTA AMA -1• W. 1-.. -&rutlll 11.
•
WfdnHd.tiy, Octobet' 25, 1972 PILOT·AO\'!RTISER 3
wa1TMIHtTI• -m1 ......... It ...... ...
"UNTINMON au.CM -•1 M6llll • .,_,.
All Stores Celebrate Grand 01»eninCJ -of Our New Store, 3325 Bristol, at MacArthur Blvd. Santa Ana
'
$215 Value! Breck
"FaEsH HAIR" Instant
!~~!!.~ 88' ~ ha.Ir 9'VQY bul~ No woa
t9'.....W. l4~.
Box of 200
2 PIJ
$ -· 5;4!1, Full Color
3-D Pictures
Allorted Scenes •2•7
Beautiful pitturn wfth sensotionol
3-D effett! Choosti fran a great col~
'-ction of Kenn; Including New
Testament, onilT'IOls DN1 more.
Reg. $1 29 @!...,
Vitamin C
~MClf1111 99c
Clwnllil Drup nn ...
Re9. '24' @l1>
ftJ:.Q Vitamin 112
... 87' .. ,.
One detlgn to 0 bol(.
.S.wral 1tyl•1 to choot. fltlM.
s391 Beacon
Blankets
Solids, Stripes & Plaids
r;,~ .. •2''
First quality full & twin.size bids.
I non ossortmentof fine fabrics
end in a Wide range of colorJ. &
designs. A 11 1 rt. qua\ I ty• •ny •r•
ow1r-run ol M•tlon1I Fanu• 1r1nd1.
!Jq1ir D1,1,
sun1
SPECIAi.
· ··and much, much more\
hie lhnla Toolq • • • Ptl11a OoH ftmt ~
•Floral Pi-
• Decorator Ships G A • reat ccent
0.COl'Oted porcelain
stefi cookworti with
cool bokellte hor\-
. In ond knobs.
~" Porcelain
3 Pc. Sauce Pon Set
Pi-
B.outtful decoiatof plec:e1
that wt II wftanc:e tht dtcOr
of ony nome. 0'°°99 from 1i
·, different styles, each burn-
ished in gold-tones. Metol
art soiling lhlJS al'll a NU
10" high. -··
~-PRICES SLASHED
'S" ValH 3 Qt. Corn
Popper & WanHr
97'Bmooka
Bubble G"m
Halloween
Costumes
Boxof 79' 120
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. Mrtiel C.dy Rolls~o179'
..... _ ....... 170•"'9 Tootsie Pops ............ . 79'
o-tl)t ... .Ii 11$
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Thickly tuft.I pile rtJCll
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~ extra beauty & dur-
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with non-lkid bar:king.
In Avocodo, Gold, BM &
Condy Strlpti coloi-s.
Baked enamel sauce 3-qucu1' copodtywtth ~ "°"' In Y,-qt,. I-qt. & $)19 '"""""'''bowl. H,.._ SJ33 ~:..I ...:::: $777 1 Y.l.qt. &Ins. Choice of Ing U'lit con be used f ng m WhiN, Blue, Yellow or -.panrtefyoshot~ rlnge. Non-skid '-~A~,=~=.od~~.ll:::~~!l!!o~~~~~.:,,.&~l:;if!.,~~ .. "!!';.""!~l 'otex bodl)n;. .,. "'"ieg. $1 '' ea:-aoys' Knit ~,,~;.:~h-
1-4: Sport Shirts
"""doon """"' """' In 4 F 500 fashion colors. Choose from
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choice of allor ftyles & I
cdOl'L SI~ 6-18. ........ ta.a •s• Value Boys' Jeans
Gr.at loob Jn IDlkl end fancy colon
"' o variety of hew dloms fQbrk:s.. $3 indudlng bnahod ""'°" and po1'-esttr bltnds and 100 % cotton cMnlM '
ond cordwoy. Si&tl 8-14.
''"Ill Lew Prtt1I
Women's
Body Suits $248
The slinky, cllno-J~ foshlon look of
• today in 4 popUlor
collor styln. In
your cholc• of
nh' foshlon colors. wnu. tti-v Jost.
Girls' 2 Pleett
. Pant sell
$2!''
· GI.&' I 00% nyJ;n
pant uts .with flor9·
leg 1tyUng, lt9P In
wolltbondl61titm
down er-.. Color-
ful coordln11tlng
fOpl. 5'm3~
• J rite• ,. Seta
llm Jo4 ~ .••. PM
*24':·111 Ainerlcan
Hair lrushe•
Quohty A 11 ""'°'k~ $1•• ...,,r bnnhn wit" Sfyllth
wood bock&. Your
c~•. "" 1ftd'1t11111 •twl••·
Women's
lrvlhed
Sleepwear .... ~ ...
•Or Pd C. P.J.'1
'2''
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tote, 20" nylo,n
bnahod ..... " ... fomos, Full I• n gt h
I gownl lrt 3 ttylts, po..
~ ·lomot In 2 •tyln..
·'.I" Value . Pinn & Sha,.
'Control Top'
Ponty HOH . . '
9tr
Fll'llt• quoll'l 'O'ftly hos. with ye r9
SpondeK Control
ponty. Provi de s
-log ......... 6 gentle controj.
Lated Styles la
Hair. Barrettes
A Jo¥e~ 0ncy of b«-
mttt ond ""'""' 68 T•l lor•d l•••~J r•t• C
tttlll ft'1Wllll1t0
Sln1lt rnd t•lft tlyl11;
'1 '' Reversible
Braided Rugs
24x15 inch size col-
om.1 rwverlible rugs $127 Ideal fof your home.
Machine wo$hoble &
dryablti. Color thoice ,
Reg. 6 ~ $] 00 Deluxe
Gold Color Honeycomb Style
11 V2 01. Tumblers
:~.':4t 10 i s1°0
Btoutlfully designed tunblera In o rich 6
lustrous gold color. Periect tot tnterto.in· Jng Of eY•ryday UM.
• $1.11 lllk•Jtr IO or. Pl1'1tr ......... lk
$9'1 Soft Side
luggage Sale
$J97
• M H SIM $11.91 • 19•• Sise $11.91
Stnort plold dHlgn soft llde lugoog11
with brown trim. Features 11lf rtPQir•
Ing ZIPpff fOJ 901Y paciUng 6' ~
ing. Buv one Of 0 NI I
'4'' Value Uneeda
'Pampered .Baby'
IS Inc~ Doll
Uo Drl1h I Wm l
111'1 LIHMll $1''
Doll wlll dellght the little mottwf. F.-1
lwr 1 drink. , • the'll hov1 to b. ctwinoed
btoouu lhl! Wetl I f1Ghlra movable oinw
& ,... Q htod thllt·turns ord 1lteplng -
con wh
Lan
or
ter
big
l\. trea
ofle
•tton'
and
I
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New Bot A
' -. . . ... ..
Wf'dMid1y, October 25, )CJ72 DAILY PILDT t 2lf
ltl~•-Worth Club Fun di PUBLIC NOTICE P\JBUc ~· -M~U~.~~~ .. -.,-, .. -..,,--.-.-,-.. -, ... =-.-, .. -1--, .. =.=-=~.~.~.~ .. ~..., ... ,..,. .. ~.=--
COUWTY Of' M:A#fl JTATI .. U.Ul'Cla.MIA ,._
1Ut .,.._ Aa11M6"' 111"111 .. ,...,'*"'· C.tllt. TMI «WNTY 0-09.Allt91 ttOaTM OLUMI COUWTY MO. ...,..,.
JUOICIAL DllTIKT hi• .. Of EVEl..Vfrt I WA$H9UIH.
Cl.II MUIMCR mM o...Mld. IUMMOtlS NOTICI IS "llllOY GIVIN '9 IJw Nutrition Labels '
Use Suit
Ott Food Expected Dismissed
l"t-.lllllffl: CAIL 0. SMITH ..-1 ~ of "" Melle ,...,,_ .....,, ll.AN(HI wnw. YI ~ta: EO ft'•! Ill w.-llHlllll dailmt -1 .. 1 IN TOUCHST~I. ltft 1•~1 61111 AU. ..W ....... -,....,.. M fMe !Ml'll, UNKNOWtl 1"£1lSONS f LAIMING ANV wh'll ltlt l'lflCttWl'I' WYCl!er•. 111 IN offlo
ltlO"fT, TIT\.I!, Oil tfrllTellEST IN THE ol ltlt dtr' """ No¥1 """-'court. or l"EltSOfrllAL l"ltOl"EllTY OlilCRllEO IN lo pr-I ttitm, wft!I 1"9 llKftWrf
THI!! COMl"lAIHT ADV£1;SI!! TO l"lAIN· VOUCM1'1, to th9 lll"!IMnltned •I ltM Dftlce LDS ANGELES (AP) A Tllll,.S' OWNEJISHll". of JllcMrd • lllore. Mt S1t11 MllWI Drive. -To ll'lt ...........,,,_; A d~ll com01•lt1I WI• :aG0. .....,_, -..C:ll, C..lllorlllo
Dy SYLVIA PORTER translated tnto tenns of per
pound, plnf.t number or a.oy
meaiute IO that you can co~
pare the !rue unit prlc:e of
each product.
A joint ltUdy by the U.S
Depertrr.ent of Agrt<:ulture
and the Food & Drug
Adminlatratlon, for instance,
t.estlng consumer reaction to
private-label items carrylng
nutritional Information and
conducted two months after
the introduction or the: nutri-
tional labels, --lbete disheartening fmdinga:
Superior Court Judge haa ""' .... lllfd It's' 1111 pl•ll'lllfh ~'"" ~. wi.1(11 I• ""' OIK• gt M l-of
d···-··--· a ---· I yw, II YfN with lo Offend lllh l•-'-'if "" lill'IOtr.i,,,.,, In all melttr"t p.1r1olnl119 ~ lllCQVlN C ass-&C• vou ""'" !Ill 111 fhti ,Ol.!1'1 • wrhte~ 10 ll'lt Ht•!• of uld ~. wlllll11 ~ tlon law suit by Automobile plH.cllf19 In mpot1M 1o n. ~ern1 ,., monni. •'1« 111e ''"' ...-1ui11M OI 11111
CJ b of •-·~-r-llf . • wrlttM w wel ~I,,.. II • Ju"lto notlct. u OJIQUUK:lll """' orn1a C-1) wllllll'I ... .,.. •• ..,. ltllt """'"'°"' O.ltd Ot!QOef •• 1'12 members O'/let use of club II ....... Oii "!"W. Olllt,....... VOii' "'""' MAAOAJIET c. WASHBURN Wiii lie ......... Oft #pplic.tion by Ille f.•K .... rl• fll th9 WIU ol funds ln the successful cam-p1.11n11tt1 _. t11e ~ iney .,_.. • 1~ 111e ~ 1111rM11 c1K9det!f
pai ...... to defeat e 1970 state ment ...i1111t.,. fw '"--v or 01,..,. lltCHJ.itD s. "10l:1
'6.. r .. lel ,.....,.. Iii tile ttn\Plelnt AlftntY tt Uw ballot ----Itkin It .,. ....... IMll "" ....... " ., w , ... Ml9¥ti Dr., ..... -rvr-· .__ M ... -· ' N_,.,i •Nd!, CtlU.,.,... Judge Jack A. Crickard ahlo ·--• ""· .,.. .._._ " Ml r .. i 1114r ...-om •y--'ed •t t -~-l.-::"':'tJ:. tMtH ,._-,......... II tft'f', All°'"' .... l•-.Clll/tll ~-';I~ a 9t~ WOJ b' "~ ~ ... s.,...:..,,_ WO:: 1'11. PUl>JI•'*' Or•t>Oe (Mii 0.11'1' l"llol. ~ OVet' t1111: CU S role ltooert It.. Rm, Chl•k Oc!Otler ll Mii Navitmbtr 1, I, U,
on•inst D--. 18 which would By AnlolMllt T. I.ck, O&pvty 1•n 2110·n
_.. • 0 ">'' . !$EALJ PUBLIC NOTICE have allowed gaaoline taxes to OOOOMAN, NllSCH•Eltl) .. KIHCf,
oe used for antilmog research *' WM"'"" 1e111ov1n1, 1111 .. ..._ Jf], SUl'l!ltlOll CDUltT 0111 THI and rapid transit. U. ........... Clillfitnll1 91111 STATI! Of' CALIFOltNIA l'Qa The second suit was (Hed In T...,,._.: ffUI .... 111( THI COUMTY 0111 O«AMOI A"-'tl '9r """'1H1 MO, A·l4C1'7 the .name of Louise M. ,ti111111Md 0r.,.. cot1• o.uy .. 11o1, HOT•ce: o• wu.111 .. 0 .,.. 'llTITtoM Nern~• and cont-•·• club Oc._.,, II, II, ll -N&oeml>I<" 1, "Ofl l"lt09Atl 01' WILL AND .. Olt ~ c:JIQQI "12 11).1.n Ll!TTlltS Tl!STAMINTARY -ONLY ABOl1T four out of officers and d1rectors wasted £111i. Cl'! MYRTLE K. KELLOGG.
10 consumers who bought the !!ncl rniNpP:ropriated the PUBLIC NOTICE o.c~~e 1s HEREav 01v1EN tMt ---...... were even aware cl b' ~-they w.,..... s. Pe1 ... n1 ,.., ni.o ....... ,. • Y' ........... ~ u If money wuic:n ~ STATIMllft M MANOONMl!Ht 0.. pttll1on tor l"n>bfil• of Wiii .,.. lar II• that the label.I were on the ~""~-to the anti D--. 18 Ull CM' .. IC'TITtOUS IUSIHISI NAME _. of lei~ TMl--ffY to ,...
Artist's· ~nd~ring sho~ how the new J3ank of America office, now under
constructiou in the Irvine lndustrial Park area of Newport Beach, \Vill look
wbe)I completed in April, 1978.' The $575,000 office was dli<igned by architects
Langdon and Wilson of Los Angeles.
Q. W h a t commonplace
supermarket product Is W.:
water, com JYrup, shortening,
sugar. whey solids, food starch
modified, demose~ sodlwn
caseinate, Davorlng, gelatin,
whole milk solids,
monosodium and di-glycerides,
salt, vinegar, polysorbate No.
60, vanilla, monosodium
pOOsphate, sugar g u m ,
led.thin. artificial color, wheat
Oou11 crust, sorghwn grain
flour, sodium bicarbonate,
a m m o n l u m bicarbonate,
artiflcial flavoring and col·
oring?
A. Lemon cream p)e. ,
How useless many f today's
food labels ·
are to you
packanes; w:~ -. '"'Y·· Tiie followlllf '*"-1111•MlldoNd•mo1r!lorlH', rfltfetict "'~11 11 mec11 for • campaign. .,.. ol IN llcHtlous butlllllU ..._ f\K!Nr par!lclllar1 tnd In.I tlle time -Less than two out of 10 -lt04HIEL ENTERl"RISES, 7 3' s •nd o!Kt of lle1r1f.o Ille ... ,,... tw.1 blon
15.6 percent Or all --'en•• • Stop Ar'-ed Fr•flklfn, luene I"•••· c1111orn11 w1 tor NO'o'tmlltr 14, 1tn. 11 ,.00 •. ,., ''='t"""' 1-e ft' TM ftC1111-MineN ,,..,,. rtlerr..:I lo In in. courtroom ol O•parlmet11 No. l
-understood the nutritional llOISE Id ho (AP) •bov• "''1 111'11 111 Or1119• County oro of wlo cwrt, 11 100 CIYlc c111tw orlYt
I I , a -A.llo'-'d 24, lfn W~t. In !tlt City o1 S•lll1 A11o1, C1!!!-l1 a~ s; Idaho's ~ttorney general hes s11e1<ton 1. M1rih•H. 11130 Apr1<ot 011e<1 Ckt00et-2 •• i•n ·
and me, typ-Le ha f
Clrtle .. ounl1ln '111t1y, C1U tornl1 WILLIAM E Sl JOHN.
-!St n one out o 10 -asked for a restraining order Aobtf"I• K•w M1r111111, 111:io A~1~01 county ci.r11
Being No. I Counts ical consum-
ers, cou1dri't
be more dra~
matically ii·
lustrated
than by the
above. Nor
9.2 percent -actually con-to prohibit a California ......... _ Clrdt, FOl.lnllll'I Vtlley, Ctlltornl1. o.t.aLINO, HALL, ltA• & OUTE '""'" Thh butlMM Wtl cO<ldlKlfll by • Allomt't'S ti Uw sidered the nutritional labels pany, Bestltne Products, Inc., per1,,.,....11.!!':~-, ··-'u w. "11 ,.,.., In ·-!ding to bu f all edJ IA ~--· ...... 1"111111 Lw ......... c..tlf 9001( ~ y. or eg y ViOU11ting the "·1"11 T .. ! 1111) w .. , .. "Even the most dedlcated state's Consumer Protection PVblllMd ~ coa11 01ny Piiot. A11__, • .., '"•11"-
and nutrttlo-nsctous con A Od"'*' 4, 11, 11, "· 1tn 2661.n ,......, ''""" -ct. Pllblf.ned 0..ln(lll Coa1I [)ally 'llot, sumer may be hampered by In a complaint flled ln 4th PUBLIC NOTICE 0c1ot11r :is. 26 ¥1d No••~ 1,
Bigges~Also-Best Syndrome Still Holds
I
cou1d y 0 U l"OftTI•
reed more g r·a p h I c h·
amples than this of the extent
the ve~ complexity of daily District Court, Atty. Gen. w l'tcTITIOUS IUSINISS
1
'
12 2111
•
12
and long-term nutritional re-Anlbony Park alleged the M..1.111• STATeM••t PUBLIC N011CE
qWrements," say Prof. Dan I. _:_cogipany is engaging in acts ,,;"-to1io....t.,. --11
c1o1ng 11us1MM •1cr1Tiou1 1us1H11• . Padberg and Debbie Taylor, of ~FFRON ETCETERA, ,..., $. C....11 ......... STATIMIHT
By JOHN CUNNIFF .. "' •WMll A1111Y1t
· NEW YORK -It setms
that the ad'lantages of being
No. I in the industrial world
clearly outweigh the
drawbacks. Otherwise, why
the batUes and claims and
charges? And when the SJXlt is
lost, why the desperate fight
. to regain it.f
Whether the position is
desired because of the as-
sumptk>n that the biggest is
FINA.NCE
resigned as president, and it to which chemiab, 'additives, l h • D e P a r l m e n l 0 f HW., .. L..gl!NI BHCll TI'll toflowl11g ptrtoM ... dol"
Agricultural Economics at CONSUMER Tuttln • JEA.ltY 011EE1t ASSOCIATES _
( )
Pltlltlp A. klllH, 1$74 Wllll•1m SI .. towi""' 1&:
Cornell Unive,.itv.' in an al· Tiii• bu1J11111 I• bt!ng (ot1ducte-d b'f •n JGA. llOD E. c-1 HIP•Y· '"· o. Box ll'ld!YIG\111. m . cor-dtl ~r, c.iuornl• '262,. tempt tq explain the ex· Ptolllp A. ScN11 J,,,,..., Greff a Klt10t PIK•, N-port
\V.'.IS made common knowledge food substitutes and the like
that Chase's lagging position ha"e taken over a w~de sampl-
edi I Tllhl1 1!1temenl tll«t ""'''" '"" Counly 8HCh, C•lllonll1 '2.W.O. ce ng y poor responses. . . . c'""11. .. Or•llV9 coi.mv ot1: 0c1. ,, 1tn. e~ R. Kl•• Jr .. 2615 ~yno-r. which its representatives know By Bt-1y J , MaOckl)(. DerHif\' COUl'lf\' .11.rc..:111, c111torn11 tioo..
had n1uch to do with it. ~ ing of our food products.
In the opinion of the Justice ALL OF THIS underlines to
Department, and many other me how much more 1 would AND THEY suggest that
critics aS well, big is often like to know than 1 do know you approve of nutritional
bad. International Business about the food that comes lnto 'labeling .l;Jecause you believe
Machines, which in &Orne my home. it's in your interest -even
years had as much as 70 Most tmportap.t, is the food though you don't .use it. You
percent of the electronic coin· safe'? ·After what date should 1 feel that the mere fact ot
put er industry, learned this. Dot 6uy it t1or iat lt? • mandatory disclosure o f Government lawyers . an-wJiat's In a package may 111·
(l()ijnced this week their in· Is it nutrltiOus? And just fluence indwtry "to improve
lention of breaking IBM lnto a what amowilS of vita 1 the nutritional content of food
are false and m'•lead'•g to c1«~ Tiii• 111it1t1et1 11 tot111g conciucte-d b\I 1 · .., "' l'HU4i Gf:Mrtl P1rl11«1nlp. consumers. l"llbllthld 0r...-cout o.1iv P!lol. J11rrv Gr-
The f. ff I I OdoD« n, 11, u and Nowm!H'r 1, 1'72 Tiii• i11111men1 flltd wtltl ttw CWllf\' irm o ers or sa e m1-n c1m °' °"""" c-1y on Octobff u. =!~-~· :;.10-PUBUC NOTlCE ~reA.~'&!:,~ ~~ ~~:.. ~ •-'··~-the Jalnt saidDg •-Ir--••-.. •11 l"llOllllMd ontioe COltt Deny 'lllflf .,...,........,"'• COIDP . -· ...,... _,, OctobltJI 11, ts et1C1 ~-1, 1U n.-.u c s and fllAMI rtATll"41flllT 1'12 ., n n.ui:ldl\I • · weeney tilt 1o11oM111 .,.,,.... " f01119 bull""' ~ • -:
James Kling, both Boise ••: ' PUBUC NOTICE
rep-···tatives of the !Inn, JEWEutY CltAFTS P.U:TS .. ARTS,, ___________ _ ,.....,.., *' 11119 Sl•r, A11tlleht1, C'1Uforft.Je 1-Were 'listed as defendants. THli Jl!Wl!!l THIEF·, lrrrte .• (C•lllOI"· NOTIC• INVITING •1os 11111 2116 Bfw Sttr AMl!tfm c.llloml• Nollu 11 ,....., 111-ttwot tilt Boa.rd ef
Th11 bull,_. II bell'lf C'Ol'lduct.d by ~ Tnn.t-ol' , .... C:ou! Community Col119e
corporetlcon. • Oltlrkt of Or•• County, C.lllomlt, wlll
JEWEL THIEF l"AOPERTIES rl!'Ctlll'I uale-d bkl1 up lo 11 :00 t.m., LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The 1Nc, • w..,,._,.y, N.....,.,. 1, ""· 11 111e
eBelp Cited also the best and thus should
deserve the customer's order
or whether it is mainly a n1at·
ter of pride is debatable. But '---------.-/
nun1ber of separate • com-minerals and vitamins are products.'' You just can't con-
p:inies. the intent being to pro-contained in each package? sider everything -and you're
rt1(1te price and product com-How many and w h i c h already b o m b a r d e d by
petition. IBM will fight back, chemicals, additive1, artilicla1 messages when you are shop-
of course. and w1th an in-colorings and the like does the ping.
· f l"llJllll Whl._ P!'ftldeolt Purc:Nslng ~-ol uld td.ool Gl1trlcl City Bureau 0 Consumer Af· Thi• •t•t-t flied' ...,1111 rhe county local«! 11 IUO A.dtlM A,.._, Cosl1
fairs hits saved Los Angeles ci... of o...,.. COUl'lt\' oro: 0i;1." 1tn. =r'i.''=:t ~kh .'.:...,,.r::' ';!:~
res.ident.s $360 000 in eash and ~r,,,e--'Y J , MMdo•, DIJIU!Y C-.ty PltlNttNG OF EVENING COLLEGE big appears to be beautiful.
Q.S. STEEL cer,tainly
treasures the label that so
often identiltes it as "the na-
tiOb's No. 1 steel producer,"
and you may be sure bead!
would roll if the tag were lost
to Bethlehem, the No. 2 pro-
\(lucer .
t' Jntbe vehicle-renta
:business, Hertz is still in the
Je9d '8111 racing hard to stay
ibtre. But Avis, fussing in se-
cond place with about 110,000
vehicles to Hertz' 155,000, hwl
been saying lately that it will
be No. 1. When, it doesn't say.
1n food retailing, the Great
Atllnttc & Pacific Tea Com·
Investment
Lecture •
Set Tonight
Second in a series of four Jedures on real estate in·
veStment presented jointly by
the Huntington Beacb-Foun-
tain Valley Board of Realtors,
Golden West College and the
DAlLY PlLOT will be
presented tonight.
Fred Becker of Burb:&nk
will speak on the topic. "Max-
imum Return on a Minimum
Investment."
Active in real estate sales
since 1947, Becker received his
real estate certificate from
UCLA. He is an active
member of several di.fferent
committees of the National
IMtitute of Real E s ta t e
Brokers and ls currently a
director of the Galifomla Real
Estate Association.
'lbe Real ~te Investment
Series consists of four sessiona
held on consecutive Wed-
nesdays at lhe College Center
on Golden West College cam-
pus In Huntington Beach.
Sessions last from 7:30 to
9:30 p.m. Tickets required for
the sessions are available at
the door a lew minutes before
elch seuion begins.
SERIES SPEAKER.
Frod llKk•r
'
pany, the top food chain since
records were kept, now is
carrying on what smaller
retailen <;!aim is the most
savage price war they've ever
seen.
triguing argument. food contain? In short, you look at these
The blg computer maker, JUSI' WHAT is in tile food tolabelsc·~ alns atheDOthe_:~~~
while conceding the obvious, how ucb fl~ ch -..-~ that it is No. I, is .. __._. to -i.e., m e.a. in-dedaloil. but tnstead as a fonn ~..,...-gredlcnt and, especially, bow f tablll~ f lbe food
argue that It ~·t so >Olidly .much of the key adverliiJed In-::..i~." --: -~ft• ,_ ent~ . t~e u t 0 · grt(lienta. does the Pl'Oduie ac-_ _. -mo~polize the 1ndus\ry. tuallycontaiJ\?. · \~. eluded.. ·
FOR SEVERAL years,-A&:P Were No. t, they ar_e • Nu:triU(,..at .. Ja.b<.'Jlng ·~· ttie U tl\el&"findinga are accur-hasbeenlosingitsshareof the Jll'eparedtosay,·butnotso,N . ·~ . pr!. ate,Jt.,wUl be your loss.
,market, and it.s profi!J tlave-~ 1-'ish as we We(,. .. i nexJstepafterurut c f. In 1he fitce of. the~,
been skimpy. Stib. it didn't go It is coming, evep \tjough however, nutritional Jabels are
on a prfce-cutting rampage IT CLAIMS THAT its own there ls disturbing evidence on the way and a stimulating
until Safeway Stores began census of the industry shows that you may Use nutritlo,f14) variety of changes, will be
telllng people it had taken its share of various market labels even le:;s effectively reaching you soon, When you
over the top spot. segments dropped to between than you are now using the become aware of them, I
38 and 57 percent In 1970 from great money-saving tool of choose to believe your in-
That claim is still open to 70 pt1.rcent in 1952. unit pricing pr 1 c e s difference won't last.
dispute, but there is no ques-1--''----~---~i-----'---"...--.'.....-~--"-"'---""-::;:.:.___~
, • · lltOCHUJU! fOlt: Sl"ltlHO, 1f7S.
services since April, the l'vMllhM 0r.,.. t.Ht Dlllll' ':ri:: "" ""'-.,.. 1o toe ~ _,,,_. ""'"'
bureau's manager says. oetobw 11. 11. is. 9nd JllCIW!Tlbel' 1'. ~'tt:!'°"'wflletl-:• ~-~":: Fem Jellison said the sav-1m m .. n ,...., toe _......... 111 "" o111a o1 iM • Jn the f • k l"\lrCMslng Aeltftl of Mid IClmo4 dl•IT\tl. 1ngs were all' mar et PUBUC NOTICE Etdl blddtf _, Wbrnl• w'lth 1111 bid a
value of merchandise returned ~ ..... ..-. c111<.k, CM11fltd dllM:ll.. or w..--• --""'armed •-cts' lllCTIT.OUS IUSlttUS der"I bMd mldt ,.., ..... to 11'11 "'*' ol SC1 "~ ..,....., , CORi..i.• NAM• ITA1'..uT tM Cot1t Cor.,mvnltV Ctllleet Olttrld
C'escinded or money ref\lllded. The tol'~ ,...._ .,. IW!lll =:'n:! !::':!:'c ~~".,,~Wfl'I ~":
"Most busnessmen adopted """~:&.. £Nt<••••$f• 11110 • ~r.ni.. !hit ttwo llidcltf" ""'" "'"'" 1n10 . -• . d he .,_., ~ "'-Pl"CIPOMd COrllTKt fl Ille .. ,.,. 11 a wad-anu·see atbtu e w n ,..... .cvr Cl rel•, Foun11111 v • 1 1 • T • •w••decl to him. 1n ttwo _, o1 11Hvr• to
the bur ned '-~ A ·1 " CtUPort1le. ..,,.. l11to wch c:onlrtd Ille tcM!d5 ot eau ope ci.:1• pr1 , SMldon 1,.. Mtrv..11. 111311 Apf'l(ot '"' dltdl YJ!ll w tori.itfd P.! t11e
she said. "Since tllen tbey cim., """""" Vttteor. c~. n1'DI. of • bond. 111e 11111 111n1 ·,,:;...:, wi1f•: • RllO/tlll• 1!1y M•nlwoll, 111111 Apricot forfel!H to Mid llCl'IOof dlttrlcl. haV~ Jeamed th@t we are com· Clrd1, jrllllftlaf11 v.....,, Cll!fol'lll• mo11. No blddef" ,,,.., wttlldr•w nr1 bid tor •
Pletely impartial in our in-~1• ~-11 ..... toMue1«1 by • ,.,,,lod of f/tlltv-fl~ c.u1 o..,. 11tw 111e pe llfl' .,.. 611• NI for tllt ....... llleNof vestlgaUons, end we've bad a S'-klOn L. Mtrlhlll' Tllo a....n1 of Tnntns rn9rvw 111o number of businessmen com-c~~· 0;1•~ ~'" w:=. ~~' pr1Y11t01 of r•IKllflill • ..,. end 111 bkll ..,.
'
-WI , . .,.. """1Y ' lo w.ill'I llnY lr~rllltl or In-mend US on OW" operation." u., LLIA"4 E. Sf JOHN. C-'V form.lilt! .. ~ any bid or In l!w blcld~. CllR. ~ kwrt'I' J, Modctimlr Olputy. SJgntd: NOJIJMN E. WATSON
l"lAllllMd Or~ o.lly ,Ito!, Ooe111'::.' I~;;.~;~;-:: OctOlllr <I, JI, If, 2S. lm7 ~-12 PUlllllllm Or.,,.,. Coell Delly Piiot.
October 11, 15, 1m 211s.n
tion that Safeway sales were •
growing while A&P's. until • RefallNb Oat
recently. were slipping. A&P LOS ANGELES (AP ) closed 1971 with volume of .,,.,11...,,_~,~ .. .._~._._,,.,, ... ..,.. •• ..._.c~ .... -Strperfor Court Judge PUBUC NOTICE
$5.48 billion; Safeway, with · r.i 6-., .. _ r'-~i"'f---"""' -""""'.,.,. ... ..., " -,w ,,w,. • ..... • C!ampbell M. Lucas has "ICTITICXIS M111•s1s
JouBuc NOTICE
•• 36 b' N,U"•'""' ---..... _ ... , ..... l'Mo ....,. -1 .i..a ... _... ... , ............ ~ d1s-·-~ 11•mlJll I HAM• rtA1'9MSWT ..,, tlllon. -1 -., ... H1 .... ''"" ,,,,. .... , .-• ., -'--"'""" ~-llafo olt -..JM ..... ,... ~ • 1~ a ,.... on c ass T11o 1etlowklil 1 • JMM • -the ga• n·-wed early -. -.w .. --'-'"' ,.i. ., """""°9 • ,..u,_._ .......... ......_. -. • -.... •-· actlon suit seeking state sales •a: ,.,_ ' ...,. l!vll-. 1UP11uCH1 coun °" '""'~•1A. tu r-"'• v TOY WOfl:lO :m COUNTY D .. DltANO•
this )'ear' A~P furiously ac-tax ~ for JOroe 500,000 Cott• MM. c.t'lfoNM ~1'11 5'""1, "' cMc cfs~u":;:lt"":;,.~· .....,
celerated Q program of con-PROPOSED NEW ISSlfl new car buyers. . ....... J, ltictl. ..... lllf'I SlrM!, SUMMOWI (M,Al;l;IAD•>
verting more than 4,000 outlets 'lbe. suit was filed last f::• :_ C.::~ .,. 1 • In •• 111e men-r"' o1 Mii'-; LIN-
to discount slat\1$, fully an-spring by George Javor who""~·-,•-,, ~~1~NEP1.4'1t~c~~~11~':.A~~
0 SL----,_,___. the state " ' AHOEltSOH ticipat:ihf the losses tbat foJ.. 4 000 00 ~ Cwuun:u. WU ~ m: ... ....,.. ... ftlld .._""' c-To '"" 11:~· lowed. Since February, those ' ' justly enridled" by sales taxes \ln.°""" "'-<-• ., ,,,_ • ,,. ,.._ ,.;, """ • "''""' -
losses total more than $40 mil.-collected durtog it he 1971 J»OC :;n.;: ,;.... mer;:: ,i:m, =. ~1•,,.:
lion. wage-price' free:.e on federal """*"-Or-.. eoett o.riv ~ ~':...., ffll;.,ti• .. ~ ~~..:,.::;
F 0 r many ye 8 rs. Transamerica Income Sharea-Inc. uclJeJ·····~.~~W'saldr<fundedcar '-•.:.... cmr--u. IS. 2S, ... ...,, .... moli ~ ~ ~ ,,:::,. n:r.: f.fetropolitan Li:le Insurance ~ ~ ~ · r.N.1--"""' con101,.ffl!r ll'lllll!Cltw,, "'""'".....,.. · etl j ed the prest• seeking refunds could appeal PUBUC NO'l'ICE ~ d1Yi'11ot1 of ~ • .,_..1
qui y en oy 1ge to the state Board of ""'"uallt,a. l'KTITIOUI 1vs1w•ss M>POf'I, dll6d a.tod)', Cf\16' MIPll'Ol'1· •1• that came with being the giant ""'t ftAMll ITATIM•MT """'"'' ..... co.fl. tlld IU(fl ottw" All ..
or its industry. An agent didn't Common Stock UoEn. . Sobel l .. ~· fllltlWfnt ,..,.. .. ......_ _,,,...
111;;'. ":J.:"•.;t:.t::: • ... •'" need to brag aOOut lt; rwm • attorney or ' THI a11:At>H1c T1tE1 ,..... s.nt1 ,_., 111 11111 -'1••.:::; .._.,.. • •
widespread knowledge of the Javor, said he intends lo a~ ·~· c.11 MtM, c:.11,W,.1e, nm ~ ':. ':'.!.":"nme. • ,...,._," peal the decision •rv l'llH!p MHlltr, JM\\ kn!• ~led J-lS. Im.
Mel's lofty status served that The Fund i• • new, c.loaod ~.a dift'l'li&ed man•-,.. r-,.1 -•ur ~··h · tubtl, eott• MIN. call~ "'11 WILLIAM e ST JOHN end. ~ .. -·-u.-_.... WllJC • ,., p I'-• .n!i~i:..:;·•-11 bel119 col'ld!Kltd DY '" c•w-· · in1end110 in'e&t primarily in debt 10CuritieL 111 objcctiq J1 to protkM e.& hlah a lo"1 • a.o¥ 0 -'H Urrv '· NJIW ~...,. J. ,, • .,., our THEN CAME Pruden-ol curtenl in~ for dilllribution ~· 11 eon1btent •illl prvdCDt ln'f.lltment. witla SACRAMENTO (AP) -At-Tllll, ., ........ , ..... Witt! "" c_,., flEALJ . I . . --1 .I--.L' • "'---------1--b a.11 el Or ..... '-"' Ot'I OCt. 1•, lfn. tial Lile with aggressive sel-. cap1U •pprectitiOD u ...... ., • leOOn .... , ouJecli'6. ,.,_..__ "feltment M.. ty. Gen. Evelle Younger has WILLIAM I . ST.JQtlN, COVNTV c;L.Ell:tc.. ~~~ "" Mil
ling aod advertising. Late in •&cmertt Compmy,. M1bticliary of Tranumeriel9 Corpor•tion.. g tbe runcr •• d .... r. "aald frost-damaged ftult and • .,._,.., J. Mticldolo. ~. Cltt• ..... c. .. ::.. •.
the decade of the 1960s, The Fund is •llO offerin1to~cbugeit.1haret for the debt~ deslp&loil nut trees may be reassessed , ... ,.,... Or-oe c.st [)ally··=
1•,.:::J: °"..,.. CO.I DeltV l"llof,
Prudential moved into first under .. Ult of Accepu..bll ~U." ill the Prot~ for tax porpoees only when 0c1o111r
1
1.
15
_. Now"""' 1
• '~"?; °"*' 11, " _, N••••ioer 1, 1,
• • . thet ---place by ooe l m po r t a n t damage 11 to reel PUBUC NOTICE
measure: assets. It showed _pr:xl.uctkln . capablllty • n d l'tc'TrTIOUI •ustN•s•
assets of $31'.2 billian to the n. . "" . 125 S'-~ when they are more than four MM• STATSM&:ifT
PUBLIC NonCE
Mel's $29 billion last year. · vy.enng l"rice , Pef um;rw years old. ..~ 1o11oot11.,. ...,.._.
11 "°"" 11u11,_ :¥:::':: c~:J.r."a ~
-. "et still cla1·ms the lop -.............. up."_ ............... ...,.." -.. 'l1le opinion WU issued on a OOl.O It' GAAIH, 1101 ........ A...... TM• COUfllTY 011 OflAWO• IU l'I 0 lo,,.,_.Oi"-ilot411'*"tP,...._,,...._ ff J GofJ J No. l'UO, HUMl1'19tot1 loM(to. C•lll. '26'11 AD, ... spot in ~ m .a j 0 r UtWio-,.............. query by enry . r .. .,_ .._""'· not ......... All'I.. CITATION It• ,,.......
C.Jegory.
''
·re
1
·nsura-e
1
.. Tehama County district. at-""'· ir1w Hvnttn111ion IMdt.. C•Mt • .,..., 1n ~M•"" of ..... A4'ofton P1t1•1ioi't "" .. , P Chu "-llffM, 1101 Wt""' ""'~ flf ROIEltt Y-'H lYlL ONONO, MOO!· force. but there too the gap tomey. No.,~,... Bw.1'I. c1111. mo,.,. ,_,,
has narrowed. As 1971 closed, ,.. The law provides for a ,.!,.~11. " '*'"' CCINlucMd by • !~~1 ":;:~:-;e: OF THE STATE
0
"
the Mel had
"77 billion Jn reusessment of "property .,,.., ~!Int TO: l"HILLll" JUCHAltD HUTTO
.._ f11s -~ • -•/ IA. ..__,,_,,__ ,..,._., • r.... Tiii• .,.._, n1to11 ••111'1 ""' COlll'll? ly or<* ot It.It C-1 yov .,, Wtelf Corce to the Pnl's ;168 billion. .._,, 1 ,..~_, • ·~ ....... ~ ..,. .,.., d 1 ma a: ed by a ma.JV' c..,.., .i or.... Counl'I' on;~'· clled _, ,_1,.,. •o *'"' ...,._1ry w. ~ •..., 1qa11, h •111'4. fre• ,.., HOlridM lirMd w Jr.-misfortune in an am decla~ 1m. WILLI~ •· 11' JOHN , couNTY tottore "" JU1111e o1 11111 court 1n tM There Is no qUestion .at· all di ~-b cLl!1tK. by a.--ty J, ~. Oeco\llY. Ceunty o1 0r.,.... s11i. of e.111or111e • .,. who Is numbet one In com-to be in a state ol sa""'' Y ,..... ...., O.O.rtMtfll •· on J-rv it. 1m. et t tis me~ial banking. Tlie 'Bank the governor," the opinion OCtoW .. n~r.f:. ,'i'/r' Oelfl' ,!;!,~ ~.':1":.k.~"':Jl'ld_.:'°.=
America Corp. in Sin Fran-&aid . PUBIJC NO'nCE :' ntr: C 11. -.ccen1i,.. • "'-~
c1sco had ,,..,. ol ~· bllllon Loeb, Rhoades & Co. -~uc NOTICE •OCTtToov• '"'"'"
0
•--"" ""' ... "" " "" ~"-Tll.IU HAM• ITATIMIHT Sv(lw1or C-1 ot Ille CNlly of Or•"""
at the c)()se Of. the ' uui fUU. Tiit toltowltlf ""''°"' II llOlng IMI-Stelo ef CeHtonll•, on Otleblt II, 1f7L
I nd nd the
.i , lllCTITK>UI •UllHIU ... WILLIAM E. IT JOHN
ca e a.r ;Yef(, 8 ultJre """'' ITAT•M•WT . AQUA •ov WAT6JI t•UCK ltEN c::r.,,c~ _, C""11 of !ht
llu grown Substantially sinc.e , Mitchum,· Jones &. Templeton toJ.i':... ':':£1111 ,.._ '" OOlnt tM.. .a ,It'll "~· ~; :,.ie • ~:r~ .. "':.r then. CONSOltTIUM ,.Oil IN• B..,:ll. llltCM!lyolOr ..... .. &a.&W TEllNATIO~L EOVCA'tl()N, 4 5 0 0 TllNllllV ........... Mtet..O•ft, 4730 fly, Wtll« t . ICI.,., Oepu1v
But there waa until a coup\e c...,. °""'' sufie •· NeWport kadl. '"T'~, ~· ~ .. Ktl. ••011t•• o . 1to.••n
f cl f
C~"°""' ftiwG II• bu .. 11111 11 lltll'IQ COl'ld>llC'ltd 11¥ Ill A......,. et \Aw
o years ago a o,e race or Jtlaildt.ecou~..._t-for•con<tftbt.,_u_,_____ ~ lnt«Mllotlll Srllc ... inc. IA 1r.c11Vkf1Nr, s.....1•u.._ .........
second place between First -r • •;-• ··-°"...,.. c ... 1. ""° c.,,.,.,. Orfw, \ T. '"· MteTl9ftr'I •t•,.....,.,. c..-r Df'lw
N.Uonal
"ty Ba.•• and ~-,. ui. wo. ~ • ..._ C.tM111'111a TM• "''..,....,' mM *"" ttoe c-1y '"'""" ~ c........_.,,... ...... ~ WMS _________________ .....,______ nMO cw11. of°''"" CCIO.llltv .. ; Od. '· 1m. r-.-1n4J.....,
Manhattan. And, wblle both TM• ...,.,. 11 aind..ictM " • _.. '' ..._,f '· Mecldo~ o..vtv ,_"' ,.__, ,.. ...........
MITCH,yM 'JONiS & '-u.. ""'ON poriHori. o.r11 ~ 0r.._ co.tt oanv 1111ot. ·are International, the1· ,,.,. ~ • . • u:.--· ..-•. ....... ---........... _ '· •
k nl
' UfCM"°"'T•D 1!1t.orl"' VIA I"~ ,._.,.tlfltd ~ C.... D.it'f .. .._, 1f7I llDl't ee y 1were or bemg tn a Tiii• tt~ ... 111td wtlft ""'°""' OCIOllfl" 11. -. 21 .,,. "'''"*" 1, "72,1------------
flgbt fer first place in New 29SFqr.nAvenue,Lllgunea..ch,Celff.92651 or IY Ctert"" 0-.. Ce1tnl'I' .. zmn PUBUCN011CE
y k 620 No-' C..,lor Dri .. , No-.... h, Calif.-•~ -"· ,,,,. PIJBUC N-~ or • ... ...... ' ,..--• .. ~ -...... V&l"'D l'tctnlOUI •VllMbl
.,.,____ J I ..... c ~ l'ICTift&ii llJllNnS ...... ITAt-.awr TDAT RACE IS over for the r_.,.Oil me• Prt1im&rJ P.r1 '11 '•~Tm r 1rr. z-a....,&e. 1taLntlt.1 1CM1t•••••· a:••••L. llAMI ITATIMIWT n. ..,....,.,.. ,..._ 1t """' ••-
Ume be.Ing, althoug~ ts pro-f1~1:,•:.:,.,•1:!~41t "~...,.......,...1,ao;"'~•:,,.,..••ooN 1LtCT1ticAL.
bab)y Isn't e~. Flrst Cit$' N.me'------------------''------------~ """'~ ..,,, SYfTICN COMl"ANY, JOn ~ 1sT1MA11N01 e1n ........_ ortw.""""' ha• moved well 1htad In both T ..... UIJI ..,..,11 " It. Ori"*-YwM Llt!N. CMlfot1191; .,..... le«lt; , ........ fMT. --------~~--dePQtltl and asseta. with A~~~-,-------------~---------------Odoolr"' 11, 11, u. im ws.n Jllfll'I WtrN wwr.11, to11 l4ln'ltt °""' Hvfttlfltfllll'I -..... c.i11orftt1
f b
~ Jtldtf Ofl .. , 'l'orlll llflff, Ctllftr'lllt nau.
ig\lreJ of $24 illiop And $29 ,,.... TM1 ~ I• ....... COftllVctld .... M • billion, re Ip e ct 11 e. I y' to STARS t111, DVtl"'tM I• Ml119 clllldur.tld w .,, 111c11 ... 1d>u ... ..., a., _ _,.----------'5"'"----------..%10------1!1111..,.._., wi1ti.m .... ..-. Chase's ,_, billion aod $24.S Jllfll'I w. "'9rt.n t1111 •'•'""""' fllld w11t1 ttw c,-w
bllllo
S)'dne)' Oman ta one ot r1111 1111lll'f'IMt 111111 w1t11 111t towntY ci.r11 of 0r-. C-IY .. ~ "·
0 . lhfo 'l'JOrld'I ,,.t t.rtro.10-C..nt el 0r'"91 C-1"1' "'! OCtOMI'" I. ltrt, WILLl-'M I , ST JOHN, (lOUNT;r
A6 Ille dlsp.-ily lfeW, I &erl. ffla column .. Olle of lYl'll, WlLLtAM I . IT JOHfll, COUNTV CllltK. •v ......W J. ~ °""1f'I',
sudden peraorinel change Wll the OA.ll.t PIJ.OT'S crttt CLlltlC, bot ~Mll'dclll. Dtpvty. fl\IWI ... Or .... '°"' CH~~=
m•dt .. Herbert P. PattttSODl------------------------------------·L': .. ::W-:=:_ ________ ll h«lf"'*' Or•• °""" Dlltr ·''"'' ~ u. " •!Id H........-r '· L 0c1o11tr " 11, is. e. "" ~ ,,,, m..n
' ' ...... ""' " I
/
...
,
.. . . .
!f DAILY PILOT :i w .. ...., °'""' 25, 1'172
Exchange Probing. OVER ·rnE C(ll~R
'
Don't Miss These
Free Lectures
Nov. 1st
"Ailvantage of Real Estate Syndication for the
S111Jll Investor"
· Lecturers -Phil McNamee and 11Ca'p11 Blackburn
Nov. 8th
"CaplW Conservalion Through Exchanging
Minlmlzlng Taxes"
Lecturer -Bruce Howey
"Tailoring Your '73 lnveslment"
Lecturer -Randy McCardle
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR
EACH SESSION MEETS 7:30! 9:30 P.M.
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE
S.rln C01ponsored lly Or••· COMI Goldtn WMI DAILY PILOT e Coll ...
•
H'"111""°" 11 .. ch • f..,nl•ln Volloy
lloonl of RN!ton
NASO Uttlnp fw Tu11i1..,,.0etokw 24"1972 '
•
•
COMPIEl'E NEW YORK STOCK UST
I , .
• I •
•
.· . " •
' •
• • •
l
..
• " . •
"
'.
"·
Oct-nn 5
·?.Market Recovers
.. Fr om Early Loss
' .. ,,
Co1nplete Closing Prices-A 'nerican Stock Exchange List
I
I
DAILY P!lDT
..... ,...
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' 12 ''"' 31'4-" 11 I' 1 IV. I~ l ,,,"' l?t~ 11n.:.+1v. s ,,,, ,,,, '"' -XY2-lSI IU'-1.0111 llT~+l'~
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%8 DAIL V PILOT
PUBLIC NO'l'ICE
•
Wtdnosd.w October 25, 1972
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE
TONIGHT'S
TV ffiGHLIGHTS •
NBC O 8:00 -"Adam-12.'' Officer Reed (Kent
?i-1cCord) pule; himself on the spot \\1hen he accuses
a reUow officer of unnecessary cruelty to suspects.
Martin Milner.
ABC O 8:30 -"Family Flight." A squabbling
family on a vacation trip to ~Texico find the1TI,
selves struggling for survival af_ter a . eras~ land· J
ing in an isolated section of Ba1a. Cali!ornta. Rod II
Taylor, Dina f\.1crrill , Janet ?l-1argol1n.
KTLA 9 8:30 -The Magic of Sammy. An hour-
long musical special starring Sammy Davis Jr. with
guest artist Lola Falana.
CBS 1J 10:00 -"Cannon." Broad\vay actress
Rosemary Murphy guests as a supervising nurse
who is a key figure in a drug theft case.
TV DAILY LOG
'
Orchestra ..
Perforn1s
For Kids
'T'he 70-plcce Ct1lden West
College Symphony, now in Its
second year nnd pointing
toward a rncmbership of 80,
will launch Its 19'72·1973 season
with two children's concerts
Sunday. Nov. 5.
Identical perfonnances will
be given at 2 and 4 p.m. in the
college communil.v theater,
featuring the finale to
Dvorak's ''New World
Symphony," sele<:Uons from
"The Sound of Music," and
Strauss' "Perpetual Motion."
All adults attending must be
accompanied by a child,
Admission is $.50.
The children's program is
one of three cone er t
performances scheduled th is
year. Other dates are Jan. 21,
and "1arch 25. Included will be
works by Borodin,
Tchaikovsky, Copland,
Schubert, and other com-
posers.
David Anthony, symphony
director. has announced open-
ings for additional players,
particularly strings. A d u I t
players of orchestral in·
struments currently compri se
30 percent of the membership.
••
OAILY' PILOT Staff"""'
P1·ieeless ltle11aories •
Cherie Patch (left) shows her theater scrapbok to fello\v thespians Ronald
Boussom, 1-1. J. Parks and Ann Sienna..SCh,1,iartz !from left) in a scene from
''The Torchbearers," playing tonight through closing performance Saturday
at South Coast Re1>ertory in Costa Me!:;1.
--------------~-
Classic Movies in Anaheim
Rehearsals are held Mon-Black and white cartoons \\1illiam Holden.
Wednesday
Evening
OCTOBER 25
days, 7 to 10 p.m., in the from the 1920s converted to -Nov. 1-4: "You'll Never
IJllJICl[lLITtlt M1rtt"' SI• music buHding, and all in-color by computer will be or-Get Rich'' (1941 ) with Fred
•YA ooe·llour mu!ieJI sptei1I 5111· terested players are welcome. Astaire, Rita I Hayv.·orth and
and Richard Arlen. Gary
Cooper, P.1ac ~1arsh and Jack
Oakie.
flnt Sammy Divi! Ji. U!li Fi!ini Recently the symphony fered ttirough November as an Robert Benchley.
gutSts with SammJ. de\'eloped cooperative extra added attraction at the -Nov. 5-7: "Dar!< Victory "
0 (j)@ (f) AIC W1d111sd11 agreements with recreation "1otion Picture tlali of F'ame (1939) with Humphrey Bogart.
Morie: (Cl t'OI "f1111ily Fll11tt"' and park staffs in Huntington in Anaheinl. &tie Davis and George Bren!.
NOTICE •:o• ~~1:01TM:S &:OOU D 0 mm m Ntw:s (dra) '72-Rod 11110!', Dina Merrlll, Beach and Westminster to The November program will -Nov. 8-11 : ''11\e sea
su1"E•io11: cou•T OF THE (3) ®l Nlft Ktisloffr Tabori, JaMt M1raolln. A promote programs and recruit _ Hawk " ( 1940) with Errol
Each week the Anaheim
theater will show a new
chapter of its current old·time
serial. "Zorro's righting
Legion," along with the ~azy
Kat computerized color car -
toons.
STATE OF CALIFOlNtA FOR _, .L.,, ,.,.,.,., L• , ·kert fl)'ini ~acatlon to Mexico for 111 players. Discussion also is feature a variety of classic Fl THE COllNTV Of" OA:ANOE om:.111 ........ ... • ynn N•. A-J..u vs. Houston Rockets 11 Sin Ant. it.odds f1mil)' turns into • neat· un<ler way with Fountain oldies from Valentino in the ·
Py~lis!led
O<•ot>er 1s.
1~11
,.._3 e-11111 of UNA e. FtELDS, 11ho known nio (tipe dt!IJ), hopeless Nttlt for survive! after 1 Valley. l9'l0s through Bogart in the Sh-Nov. 12-14: "Son of the ~,:inqrNo~:'.:~r O•i~Y •·Pllf~: ~N~NE"o,~·H P:~;i~mt. ·~:::':' •1 @J Cri Sm1rt msh-lln.din1 in •n l5ol1ttd stc-Anthony, well k n o w n 30s, Fred Astaire in the 40s eik'' ( 1927) with Rudolph
:n1'·n NOTICE is HEAEBV GIVEN ro the 0 Wiid Wiid W•st tion ol 81J1, Clliforni1. throughout the state for his and Judy Hollida.v in her Os-Va lentino.
The Hall of Fame movie
house is located at the retu' of
the Saga Motel, 1650 S. Harbor
Blvd., Anaheim, across the
st re t t rrom Disneyland.
Information is available by
----------------1cr..i1tor1 01 the •b<N~ ~•med creced""' m "'" Cfifflft SMw N 10.18 Cart d PUBLIC NOTIL'E rtia1 111 ,,.rJDn• ha~1ng c111mt 39alns1 111e tD Thi Flintstones leadership in o r c h e s t r a I car-winning role in the 50s. -ov · : oon an
laid cr..:.o'lin1 .... r.ciulrl!d 10 iue ll'lem, (Et Gotntr 1'Jlt USMC 1ll>l0_-"',,,"',.~CI•~" '1"',1. "New Ac· music, is vit:e president (If the The nionth's s c h e d u I e comedy festival. -----~-c~=~----l w!ll'I tl>e M"Ceu.ry vowllers, In !hi ofllc1 ·~ .,., »'
PUBLIC HOTICI! "' ri.e clerk o• ,,,. 100~ ""1111..i court, or &llf~ "'.,·.,·-., ""'.,~''"' ~, ''''''' i Mori]•"• 1,IA>......._ Soulhern California Band and follows: -Nov. 19-20: "All Quiet on NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lh1I B to prtlllnl tllem, wflh ll'le MC:Ulllry vn• IU:I ----~-• ,..., .......
Put>llc l'eild"lf will be ~fld oelore the VOUCl'lerJ, to,,.,,, undtrslg"fd 11 ll>e otllce m ..... ~ .. '""" An examination ol Proposition 19 Orchestra Association and -Oct. 29-30: "Born \1esler-lhe Westitrn Front" (1930) the
Pldnnlng Commlulon ot In~ City of Irvine •• "'' ·····-···· "l""<D"E ..... ,, • ~ ca11·1orn1·a M"0 1·c Educators day I 19501 w·1h Judy Hol l1·da\• ---------------on rnurt<l&y, Novemt>er 1. 1912, ., 7·JO GLENN. ~~ ,..,.,;; 'S'.;',. A,~tonl;'°'A"'~.,...,. oliiil on Nov. Gener1I [lectlon b1llol ...., 1 ·' A d A d · · · I
"M. In ti.e CHY Council Chnmoers. ~'°' 0 .,1 .. rio. c .. 111ornla 91162, wl'llch 11 tne ""!l Miy!Mny RFD which would de-crimln1liz1 lh1 use Associalion. southern section. Broderick Crawford ;i n d ca emy war Y.'lnning pie-~ ... Pll'l'"".lll"!~""~~r.i,.
calling 956-4070.
c-"'."P<.11 Od~e. trvlno Town ~enrer. ol.Jce of Dus•ness of the unae,.!gned In .. 11 a!)'L1 S.rundl Esposa ind posseuion of m11i1'u1na. lj ................... .,. .................................. iij ture of 1929-30. 1·Ll .. 'J,1A4~!f:*~~~U."'"11 Jrv•ne, Cahlornla 92~. to con1ocrer a mi!le•s per1alning In !ht! e•l~ll of ..i!d '1) Thrtl Stocrps tr••"9• "' 1on~. t•~• No. zc 11·3 i<ic••tti , ,,,. , '" ,, , -Nov. 22-25 : "Alice in r onlMn<lf'lflwOHllndMll'lhl••lcorner101"ete<lefl.,•,•n ou,•.mon.••er ~·.,.,., •• "' ·-olll • ... ,._., G -N-c t M c·. Pl h ltt Slrttl •nd C1mws D•!ve at 1111· l!rst l!Ubl(alon of ""not.cl. : 1.,U.) 011"' roes :-rat ....... r ut... ..... OS a esa IVI C ay ouse \Vonderland'' 11933) v.·ith \\1.1
proxl1n11t~y 12 ilCl'es lt'om thl P"eM<\I A.·I D1led oc1_, 2, 19n. 0 Tht l'lrtnt "'" nl Muld1111 Ind Paul Burke pl1y I C F. Ids 11 D
"Gentr•I A.grk:utlur•" D111rkl IO lt>t-R08ERT s. PRITCHETT (j) cu" ... Wllllf Cronkll• brilllant WOll'llft resident Ind Mr l'RISlNTS I • IC as un1ply umpty ~~~~1;111on of c-1 "Loe.al B111lnn1" ~ec;,~o:,;::..,w~, (ig)Mel'f Criffill unemployed, 1ilin1 husband whosl ''ME ANO THEE " 1---------
Fvrt!Mr lnformallon regeroln; ZC n.3 \llJllNEOOE, U.NCE & Gl..EMN m Mdy Sritfttll m1rriltt Is thr11ttntd by tht 11' c•" be otol•lned trom 11>e Clly 111 lrvh"' -Nwtll S111 ""''""• A-I ~ Hori Pt.nnlng ~nmeni, UJ.JMI where 1 Olllarlil, Call ...... tl142 m Cillip11'1 ltltM ift their Clfters. f • ~ffl
capy of ""' 1tg'1! dHCrlplllln •nd pl11 ol T-': (Tl4l m-tl14 OJ} CAE; lhiAI Ttlb 11'911~ (D l'tly Ttl9h1 ""-t, 19-20, 26-27, N-. 2.1 the Wblllel pr~y 11 'lf\ Ole. A~ !or IEK9ClllW n!! .,....,_,_ W-...... "Do-' -••
JEAI i... Wll..WN, Pllbtlilled Orange COii~ Dillty Pllol, U:.I _. ,.,. !.a;)• ~_ ....... _ .... -· l 0 .t.lll1lM1t s.c.r111rv Ck-11, 11, u. 1nd No•...,-i. opin1 Class Meetlfl'I Topics" llt:!I •• WUT GATE-OUNGI COUHTT FAllGROUNDS
Cltv .,. 1rv1111 197'2 1'7'J1.n -., loo •--Pllnnlng Commlsilon u:i llM --1::11 II·'"· Adml1MMI, $2.•. For ret..-.otlMt CIU l)M.)111, -ttw J clll IJ+.Ut1
Publhhed <><•noe COl•I Delly PU01, PUBLIC NOTICE CltClffll k.nll <l<:::::-::...:"~·,::"n'.'..-o,...,..,==-'3::'::"n:1-----,,.,.,;;;;----1 ~::":;';;,"" ... _ "'°S';ii:.. _,, -"AH E-1C-T-RA-Olt--DfN-:A-Rl1Y' Pusuc NOTICE NOTICI! To c•l!olTOtls m uw. lltatah. (ij) ldlf'• ewe. <R>
l"UBLIC MOTICI! (~. ·.~.~k-T!1~~s.r.~.~) 1:ID D --.. """' m Les ~ C'AllKtit9 Ton1st1r1 JO Y,U, AOAl"I A DOii 0,
NOTICE MERE9'1' IS GIVEN ltMI tilt Nolle• 11 ~ri>Y t lYffi kl the Cndl!on g ~ hlgfllithb indude 1 loot 11 Pro,-
Publlc Hearing wltl be held bef«I !tie of Saul IJlfl and Sylvll G. IJefl, d lb/1 rn D!'lplt IOH• ICllO ... US' 8RIWAllf Planning Commls1lon of Ille City of trvlM Hamburger Hamiel or A.rcra COtllOl'•tlon. fTI fnttll Oii' C:.'"1-OSition #21, Which WOUid lffld .., ,
on Tl>ur1'!11y. Nov•mber 2. 1•n. II 7 ~30 ii C11llfoml11 Carp0t1llon, (Siii! I!"", \..!!) !ht right of fann worlters to att1lil' NO"'"'"! BOU' .. D ro P.M. in n.. City Covncll Ch1mber1, no1 PrHlcllnr Ind Sytvl1 T. ltt11, SK,. 0 Lfl'a Mike • hel ' W' sa, ft, c1mw1 Drlw, lrvlne TllWn (O'ntir, t•rvl Tr1nlferor1, whole bullNlll Id· (I) Untllftd W.W I looli: 11 talllornil'l inltlativt pro-
lrvl111, C11Hlornl1 ~. 10 con1I04tt the drHS Is 15"15 Adami AYenue, Cosl1 Mes•. o--r ••• ,,.,., cess; and satire bJ th4I cr.cllblllty sn·-u· ••R ..... D MOV'"'·'" acl011t!on Ill a Polley Plan whlc~ pr1wnl1 County cf Ora"", Sii!• of C1llfoml11, lhll n1t1 .wl .... tli An, tli
aoal1, abltcllYll ind porkies of tM City 1 blllk lr1nst•r 11 •bout 10 be mMlt le m I Lew lllCJ' Gip, -J.f G.o.iU lo,-_ Wolfs-J--1
of Irvin• lo be u!lllled Ill I bll1ls fol' Ollvllew Corporation, • c 11 11 I 0 r n I • m I ..... .i ... _. m Nodl9I T1P1ill• deVllOPmefll gl 4 ~·I pion •nd CorPQl'ttlon {Herry i..orwlt, Prnkte111 •na ,..
1v1l111tlon of lend uH prOP(l1el1. GIN H. lllgeklw, Sacr•llrv). Tr•ri.ler8", !HJ Ballot 72 10:00 tJ (j)CenllH BIOldWIJ ktrm
A CCIPV of t'lle Pf'OPOsed POiiey pl1n 11 on whoH busln .. i addresi Is 312 Norin &'!:'! f INobtH• h • Ill• •t 111e City of Irvine Pl1nnlng De1>1rt· Foottill AOllCI, Beve-rly Hlll1, COllflly nf -.u flY Rosemary Murp Y 1ue S ll I SU·
.... nt. Fllrther lnlorm1!11111 rf'llilrcllng ti.II Los Anglln, Stele of C1lllornl1. Eli) '#Mtb, lilM and Clay "~nl pttvislfll fllll'll who it I key fit·
Polley Pl•n can be obl•ll"'d """'Ille cuv The Pf'OPl'!'IY to tlll' tr•n1tertd 11 loc1led Techniques In Ctiy" ur. in 1 ...._,,.til dru& thtft case ot Irvine P1aronlng 0..,.rlmen!. 133-lNG 11 IStS A.cl11m1 AYe<lue. Coita MK.I, Coun· '"""' _,, 1 COl'.IY of 11ld pf•n 11 on Ille. IV of Or1nge, Slillll ol C1Utornlil. (El E Mo!" Tlt111 Clrt • ..... in whldi Cannon btoomes llM:llwd.
JEll:t L. WILSON, kl4 IN'-r!Y 11 Oescrlbed In gtf'lfr•I 9 Motif: (C) "Cirtl If Plinln ... G;1 n.. SEARCH "n....ritlon let· ·Astlll~nl Se<r1!1ry 11 : -\l!l'I u:i vr
C!ly ot Irvine All stock In !ride, and "-'''"' In· hl1nd" man .. The mysterious Iceman's !If·
P11nnlng CO<rlmlnlon 1ffH1 In •nd "' flxlurll'5, IQUl-1 of {i) 5'llolf llUI' .i:els 1re VIP's fOf 1 prior!, 1nd tht PubHsllod 0r_. C011t Dally Piiot, ttwot !'ft!1uront DullMS$ iu-,, 11 I
O<!ot>er ». Hn 2110-n Hamb\l<"Off H1rn1.i •nd 1oc.at911 41 lStS 7:30 II Polltlcat An~ Mc:Gov· price ii a million doll1rs lo 60 111
Adilm1 -'--· cos11 Mn1, CDVnty em for Pruid1n1 , 1 U.S. 1mbau.clor.
of Dr11nae, Sl•le of C1llloml1, rn flkGOWlfll IOI' l'nsidllrt I ~ m .... The bult lt'-ter wm bf cOllMH'Nflafed -NOTICI: 01' OISSOLVTION ""'or lflff' t'lle l.tth dily.,. Nowmbff, QWlltTIWYNf.U.'-8...... 0 aJ(j)EDJ111ie AaiiltWI ......
OF l"AlTNt:lSHll" itn, m Nomi c._ °"'"'· La Cienega "The Vklim" A muUfl 11ti H11· Diah1n11 ClmiU 1nd Phyllis D11l1r Public nollc1 II .,.,.""' ;!....,, fllll EKr-CompMly, kftrly MUii,. County
J 1mn G. 11:1<11mll'9. onc1 L•rrv Morvon, of La Angel& Stale Of C1111om11. rf• Wllltt, ind wtlt'n lilrry idtnti· lllfll:.
•nd ,..urello S.l1ur. """"ofvr1 doing So !Ir 11 ltflOWn kl lht Tr•nlllrMs, •ti Ii• !M ttrltl his d'lildrtll 1r. dis· O llrk brWI' ,,_. 1'1911' buolnHS 11.-tlw lk:thio.11 llrm nerM bualnftl ,._ Ind addreun used .,,.. llMI
1no •!Vie nf l"J l"roculi 11 1253 t.ovtn Tr1n1~ tor the thtM l'tlll'I IHI p.111, turtled lhet ti. -.iuld lttu1lly Its· Qt Ski kllll
Av• .. Unll I!, CllV of Cot.ii o\MSI, CWlllV 1';i_,;'0clol:Mr 11 1m tlfy 1p!nll • poor, ltltderprlvi !lJ Soul!:
o! Or•no;,e, Sl1te of C1lllornl1, did on !he Q.yllew Corliorarior. IWill nl, @) Cose JllZ(ICll
JOI" d1y ol Sep-. 1'72, bV mlltiHot a C11lllon!l1 CClrPOrallon rri fl Ttll tM T!Vttl al llldl $Hibr1 conwn.I, dlstolY9 rt.. wld 111rlnenlllp Ind bV Gent H Bigelow s.cy 1.11 lermln•lto !Mir r1l1tlons 11 par1n1r1 Tr-terOI • ' • O l'olltkal Mnaune.IMllt McGov· a;} Dnnu
therein. LI c-•'"'°"' C_,.a"' 0-W ll........._ .r the 511 51ld buSIMP In ,,,. "''"'• will be con-m Nertt. c-Or1WI '" ... -
dueled 11v l..ll'T'Y MOra•n. •nd Aurel lg • ..,.,,., NHb. ce1lfl:lnl11 tnll (])You hMod hr II 1 ..... -ra111: IKll 5•1~1•r, who Wiit I'll' ilnd cll1Cr..ro1 •II IKf'OW ..... llnJ.$ 0 Mllllo11 $ Mowll: (%hr) ·Attlcl" --m , ... --U1brt1tll'll Ind debh ot !tie llrm Ind Pllllllllhed 0..•nQSi C1W11I OaUy Piiot, rectlV9 •II monlft l>ll'lbll kl !ht llrm. Oct-r 2', 1972 2132.71 (dfl) '56--J1c* P1l1not, """J-.l CtMl'ltfo9
F11rttior no11c. 11 i..reir, 9lve11 ""' .,,. ~ I' c11 s.cm u:i
11nc11n10MC1 w111 not 119 rHPOMJtHe. trO<rl PUBUC NOTICE l.lWl " 1 9 McMt· (C) "Liii al tM C.M&it-
'"'' dty on tor 1ny oto1l0tll0M Inc""'° m Tklt lht chis" • by Wrv Margan, ond Alrf'lllo S.t1a~ m Dnrpet In tiltlr-. nernes or In rt.. lllfM ol llW lfOTIC• 01' INTENTION TO l!MOAGI &)4% l'tus
l!rm. IN TNli SALE Ofl Al..COHOLIC fDCttnphttl (E htdow Spara..
OATED AT COlll Mest, C .. ltornl1, t1111 lll\llllAOIS EE: i ltlCIA I Story If £J1c. (R)
20lll cl•l' ... October. lln. TO w~ .. IT MA'I' CONC~~~ u. lm m Y111n1 Dr. Rlldart 11:00 II D 0 CE mm ..... J1nws H. Rlchml,,. """'" ~ llJ ~ H Pvt>ll.,_ 0..-Ce>11I 011ty P!lol Sublect lo l11uanc~ ol the II~ •o· Q) Tiiis It Tour Ult 1.;1.J 11!11 IWI
PUBLIC NOTICE
''I UKI FHIS ''1M VfRY' MUCH.~
BRIWAllF, HURFWARMING,
fNGROSSING!" _ ................. " ....... ......
"Offa M THE 801 R&lllS
S ••D!f!:r .. ~!.!.~~,. .. ·,~
J...l'"-4C-.....i.t ,.-lffiCMIUTlt
:_· 0-· _ "IOHN KNOWUS' 1m ~ CU.SSKUJf .. UlUa wm:RU
UCOMU A CUSSfC rurw11.
MOnOtf PKTVR•" :,;;:""..!:,.::,.._..n,A SPA.aAn HAC ..
··--, ,,_.... .. , ... o.oi,_
PH\OM:'AM P'CfUl£S ~lS
AR)fl'ffl' A ~ -0T10 ~ "91CO..C1!0'< //< <Nffr 'fll'O; H.A1
ASEFARAfE FfPCE --.. -.... -... _ .. FRED SEGAL ..01-1N KNOM..ES ROBERT A GOLDSTON -.. ----~-L.ARRV PEEACE ()WUB FOi{ NCCLOR A PllolWiO.M ,
tPGlzs==J ITARTlfRIDAY
OCTOBIR 27 •AT BOTH THIATRll IN HAllBOft SHOPf"HfO C(NT(ft
EDWARDS
HARBOR o'll':.2
Oct-25, itn 2Mt.ri pl!.., tor, "°"ce 11 Mrllrf 11...., that th• W Md1m fl•Hy -OM Step ...---------------f""°''sl"Md Pl'<lllO'IS lo 11111 akoncllc ~
PUBLIC NOTICE :'r' 11 tilt priml~•. llnalbod as 1:00 I) Cl) c.r.i l11Mtt P11l1 B1l1!y @0 _ ...... ,""!'.... Ille ... f /_~~~~~~~~~!!!b~~;;~;~;;~:!_\ ______________ , 112:$ w. \fk!Orll SI .. 91dg. I( & L. •Ml nm r.trn ... ., llJISI ' ( ) ·-"'" I lS $0\/TH Of
9 _.,, Cosll Me11. c1111tornl1. 0 tit m ftdlll-ll "iiidp HN¥y" Q ...... (1'1$) '56-Cl11\ ;.bit,
HOTI C• TO ca•OITO.S P111"W1nl 10 9Udl '"ltn!lon, Ille ....,.. m ff1ldl ... c..i-
SUl"lll:IO• COUllT °"TM• dWllQned !1 ~ylng IO '"" Oepi11rnent Officer AMII lltlb himself Oii: !tit ITATli Of' CALll'OINIA 1'011: of Akonollc a-.oe Control tor luuence spot wtlill 111 accuses fellow oftl· 6) M11i9: "'tit flcr',MJ'" (drl)
TN E COUltf'I' OP OaANG• Of '" ·~le lleftf'O'Qt 1ktnM (or Clf Ch1111e Burnside of UMICH· '51~rit "9f11M11, Ced! P1rMr. N._ A·14111 lktn.1111 ) !or ll>eH premilll'I IS !ollOW'I; (jJ).....,... ~g~~Eof1s'":';:E:~L~·1v~",!'°tt,. ~lefts~~ :",;.rv L M1n1 f;riJWJD 1~.:.-i.,.. fi)l«W T ... AowtlNi ~·~ :..,:. '.='na ~' ~~ <>c~~ ,';;,,.,.. C01ir OtllV :,~~ SM "Polluliofl Solution" P1ul'1 EEi I ISCW I la flMdtlll9 J "
"ld IHCNlfll •~ required ID 1111 ltlem, honlt Is luH of d1monstfll Hi191H DisalSllofl d lfomntlc ti.•
with n. -wry 'tOllCllel't. In tlof p1. PUBLIC NOTICE iialnil 1 ....a1utinr oil -ny SIJIS whidl dlr.dl)' 1tl1'9 lo ttlt
fk • of ""' c11r1t o1 "" •OO•e ... 1111.., l"" _. .. ,.. ~~-l-lh •1., c.mmunllltt court, or to ~t '"'"'· with 1111 nee· l"t1•L1c MOTICll when ttta prt1ld1nt of !tit comp• -n IPI• ·
nwry _..., .. to llle o,mdlrslpned 11 AN APPLICATION HAS llEEN FILED try, P111r1 clllflt, 1rrtves lor I con· ll:lSlmCI-M ,,,. Gff!CI,,, hh ltlvrMy. ICHUM.ACHl!ll IY ~-s Oev1topmen! Inc CFGfrM•I~
& MINYAllD, Jlll TMn a. Countrr lloed. Wltllam Lyon o.....+oprnent Co.I, tor 1 Sllltat.lon, [lfwlnl Anclrwt llMI Jet. ll:JOIJ(l)CIS Lala .... : (C) .....
Or.,..., C..lfornll t'JiM41, Wflkl'I Is !toe UH Permit UP n .4 lo Pffml! !ht ton· rJ fOllll lllftt. Ill I -(d~l '71-Ch-< pl.Ce of bWiltM• '111 !I'll "'"""'slpned ltt 1!rudl011 .,.., ..,..lllon ... I model l\ornt m--.,,_ 111 1111tten Plf'fllnl"ll to ttll nl•te o1 compll~ lor ttll W•lnut v1111oe Trtcl I GIOl'p,
MIO clloctdlfll, ....in.in lolt month• afltor loc•ltd 11 ,,,. CPrntt cl Scoll$cl1I• •nd m Ptrry ...... D 0 mi ..... .., c... Sc:htd·
the fin! jlOlbllcilllCHI of lhll notice. Cut~r Drive In Ille Norttwrn lrv\nt A.r••· rr~ Artec ffllitll Hllltllihh of ttre '''' 1, •• " O<O ""-M~" 0"4 O•Md Oclobtl" :IO, 1t72, Tnh milter wltl bl hurd llY 11>9 CllV of I.Pl ...., ....,,, .. , ""'" HAllll'I' JllllOMf DILLON ltvlne Plarmlno Cornm1in1on on TnurMlily, AlllC=;BOWll I Qr1en IOOl.b1ll 111111. IC!or Brue. °"11,
e111tc\llOr Ill tlM Wiii NOYotmW 2. 1'72 1t 7;3' l".M. ln ,,.,,, City fEI • Conl• 0 ~ rri -...... ,,_ ,.. __
of ll'le ollOV'e flamed cllcedefll gf lrvlnt Council CtlamMt1, A«->1 1(11), ~ \.!U ~ --.. _...,.
K NUMACNlll • MINTAllD ' "°' Caonw• 0r1 ..... lrvlM, C•llloml1. ~ ED [ltcti9ll n C.t1l11 Is: aubstltut• floll.. * Tftl .. c_..,,. ...... turlflel' '"fot'rnatlon l!IHH tonltcl "" Cl· Em Lltdll Ubn GI Tl Tiii .. Trd Ofa• Cell...,... fMM ly of lrYlM l"lftlrolng 0.0.rl!fWnl, •701 m l,a jllhWfblt
T ... c:iiu l•lltl C•mPVf 0<1.,_, lrl'lnl T-Ctnlfr, ft:'I -· 1_1 ...,,, _ .. 1%:001) ...... : (C) "1111 c..n..t ..... All~ fw ••tntw 1 ..... 1ne, c:.lllornl•, 9'H+I. lll~ UI ' ' •~ •~ 1-1 '54--Rtl HllfllOll, '""'"!Nd Otenoe Cent 01l1y Piiot, lll-lMI. (d ) J9 ROlllld R., 1n _,,. _. .. Oct..., H, end HOftft-l, I, l,, ttn JEltl l-WILSON, II -I ' m Mwlt: "MlllMI" (dra) '42--------~=--"'-'_·n-] ~~s:r:rv1S.:.,.'"" l:JO 0 fit ID MK WM"""7 Mp-Jt•11 Qatll', Ida Lupino.
Lie N-CE l"l•rtnlng carnmlulon "'1 -CMI MUlllll "tlunt lor I l?:3l f11 •~ -PUB v•• l"lllli!INll °'"* C011I o.uv P!IQI, LOMIJ 6111" Jetftr1IOll ~(.limes __.., ------------]~lotll<' 25. "" 71n.n f•rentll'IO) -to Ca111dl to ""di l:tO CI)QOCI) ... 9A11:"'1tf
l'KT1T1ovs au11N•s1 PUBLIC NOTICE r0t ~l'ICI ttt11 .. m ,, .. • we11ttry l :JO G llftlt: ......., •• et •
NAMI STAT9MIWT binlnt:SWl!lft ll'Olll I lllUt"dtf t hlllf. WJ.t." (ODll'I) °51-ftOUlllNI ht-.'~ .... followlng """' I• *"rllll bvtlntM . l'ICTTTtOUI BllllMllS R., Miiiand 1~ IUlll DI-fUlst. stN, 1'•114 Dlqln. NAMI! STATllM•NT '"'I $1E'l'MOOll CIU.tfoll l.TO., I~ k The ~ CCl'llQl"lllotl 11 doing
EllPl:lhl. AlllM!m, Cal1'°'111• f7I07 111111...., n : 1----------------------------Jotwi f """'°"' Jr., 00-11 AO\IANCED STll:l.ICTUA:ES AN 0 P1r,.,., 121H k. lllPl:tlll, Ane/'lotm, T•t.HNOL.00'1' co ..... kllJlh ..... 11111
Ctllfofnll nan ... _. Santa Ana, C1llfoml1 f'21'M
Tlllt l:IWIMIS It MlllO COl'l<lllcted llY • Tool 11: .... fCll ...0 •flll_.1111
l.lrnlted Pi,,_...,, Corpor1!klfl, • Dt11wtl'9 C«11111"1llon, JtlWI ... kymollf, Jr. ,..., WUINre kllllVlf'd. ··-1~ HUii.
o.ntrtl l'ar1Mr Celllorllll fOt\2
Tlllt tl•fetfttllt ntw w!ltl ""' C:lllJfli'/ Thi' llutf-II COflduclecl Dy I COi'· (j'9rt1 of °'tflfl C-fV Oii'; Oc: .... J. portllClft. ~~Br h"T J. hr9&1tot'tt ONlliY Cwntv Thlt 1~tHW.~T'.: Wllh 'lie CWll· tM m (C) "'Midi nllM" (Id\') '5$--
llOlelTJON, NOW'lll!I • •••v.NO ty Cler-of Oo•rllllt c-1v""' Ocloller )4, R11 Mltl1nd, A"'tiony fttwllJ.
c•y1 llJCMAao,.. ••OW•. , •• 1 ''"· t:lOO (C) "ttlrh Tllllf" (com) '60 -~"'Cc.':T11tt. t'WI ~::r:1.!i..":'~~~i. «11 Bln1 Crosby, f1bl1R, TuddlJ Weld.
TtlJ tn•J ........ .......,, Mlltt. Giff..,... •11 10:00 Cl) '"Tiie lllCf'ldibll Sllri1M111 M1t"
..,.....,. ,., P•tfMnllt ,...,. m« '""' (td·tll '57 -R1114fJ Stu1rt.
c-t OtlfV l"I~, l'\lflollftllll Or~ Cotti O.llv Pllof, 0 Trllll ti T•ilt11111" (wti) 'SO
arod .,..,.,.,,.... I, Octoeer » •l'ICI Nowerni. I, t U, -Rid 8Mnl Totn Nul
f7>6.1'} 1'1t ""'" -··· .
Thursday
DAYTIME MOVIES
•
11.11D Q ., .. U.'" (dtl) '!5Z -l'lul
Henrtld. Kathleefl H11111t11.
1:00 m ... ~ fllf bdl OtMr" (dr•) '54
-GMt1ton Hu!Oll, Ur•btt~ Scott.
l :XI 0 '°SICHtl nMI .. (rom) 'SI -
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Si xon, Robtrt Rtdlord.
);G) ([) {C) .,..,.,.., txc.h11p'" (th)
'6!-Robert Horton.
illl "Y"'-..... "" I ("'9)
'64 -.llmu fr1ncbc:111.
It's time someone
blew the whisde on the
Nh:on Adminiltration
Now George McGovern
is going to
TONIGHT-7:30 P.M.
On your A.BC: and other major
television network stations
A~111orl11d end o•ld for bl" McQfh11rll·$11ri¥t• C1rnP•ltn COlltl!llllN
1110 I( 61ttel, N w .• W1•nl11Q!On, 0 c 1000/I • Mlrtllft '''"'"•'!, f'lllUNI
THI GJllAT COMEDY
COM II NATION
WOODY ALLIN
"PLAY IT AGAIN
SAM"
ALSO PG
"'THE LAST OF THE
RED HOT LOVERS'."
Cut. S••· fro111 1 p,fl'I,
ALSO R
"M* A *S*H"
JOE DALLESANDRO
AND SYl VIA MILES
IN ''HEAT''
RATED X
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laecter Note
~'Summer,': ~ ~
Smoke' Staged
., By TOM TITUS
Of fht IMll'I< ~Uet S!tff
A play described by Us
director as "a poignant and
movin;: drama that. is des f.lned
tq take a permanent place in
lbe classic reptlrtory o f
Amerlcsn thealrical works"
.trAeads the lbt of new pro-
tons on Orange C.Ounty
c th.ls week.
m>e Words are tho!le of Hap
ham, meng.lng director of
' • Laguna Moulton Playhouse
..... · "Tennessee Wllliams' ~ i' and Smoke" opened
~ three-week run Tuesday
""evening. The play Is a highly
·regarded but rarely produced
work by one of America 's
foremost dramatists.
• 'Ibe Williams drama ls one
•Of three new shows being
. ~veiled on local stages this
wfek. Golden West College Jn
Huntington Beach has a pai r
of Halloween-navored one-act !!
on Jts agenda, while the
Westminster C om m u n i l y
Theater's yo uth group is
reviving Thornton \VUder 's
"The Skin of Our 'feeth ."
Another play scheduled to
open this weekend -the San-
ta Ana Community Players'
;•Sunrise at Campobello" -
!)as been canceled because of
'technical problems, according
to director Herman Boodman.
·,.,'While three newcomers join
, tbe local lineup, three others
. , prepare for final curtain calls
· !his weekend -South Coast
··-R'epe rt ory 's . ''The
Torchbean!rs," City Ensemble
·' 'Theater's ''The Rivalry" and
· · 'ltie loog Beach Community
•./ 'l»layhouse's "January Thaw." ~.;• Still in the midst of their
·lt!:i cheduJes are "Light Up the
' ~ Sky" for the Irvine Com-
munJty Theater, "Me and ·
'I'ftee" at the Co.sla Mesa Civic
.$Pfayhouse and "The Legend ~.bf.Sleepy Hollow" at the Foun-~ tain Valley Commu n ity
·Theater.
ENTERTAIHMENT
•
Williams drama are Richard
Stepp, stan1ey W 1 a s l ck ,
Michael Gibson, Lou Is e
Maroc, John Corona, Jac-
queline Roosett, Mary Mo-
dlano, Sharon Harwood and
Bill Harris.
Performances are be 1 n g
~iven Tuesdays throu gh
Saturdays through Nov, 11 at
the playhouse, 606 Laguna
Cayon Road, Laguna Beach,
with an 8:30 curtain. Reserva-
tions 494-00'43.
A PAIR OF spine lifiglers hy
Robert Louis.. Stevenson and
Edgar Allen Poe will creep hr
to the Actor's Playbox 1tt
Golden Weal College Friday
night £or two wtdends, also
with an 8 o'clock curta.lu. The
horror menu ii Stewt\IOll,'s
"Markheim," ~eal!ng !lltb ,a
conscience-stMck~n rnurdeirtr.
and Poe's "Ma~ of UJe ~
Death," detailing even ta 4ur-
lng the rod plague In \he
medieval period .
The playa are b e I n g
presented by alumni of GWC
who have fgrmed a group can-
ed the Sheherazade Players,
tleaded by Don Hayes. Among
the cast members are candy
Cara , Dian e Fitzgerald, Don
Shagan, Andria Allen, Beverly
Nash and Kimberly Coe.
, Performancea will be given
Fridays and Saturdaya for two
weekends, with t I c k e t a
available In the G WC
booustore. The Golden West
'campus ia located al 15.744
Golden West Ave., Huntinglon
Beach.
SOUTU COAST Repertory
heads into Its final week with
George Kelly's "The
T o r ch be a r ers" tonight,
playing tbrough Saturday ~t
the Third Step Theater m
downtown Costa Mesa.
William ·Black directs the
1922 comedy with a cast head-
ed by Cherie Patch, William
-s.iw.-..
.. ~ .... 111-c-"WHERE DOES
IT HURT?"
;a ... ~,ro• hn"/Dftld N
"PRUDENCE AND
THE PILL"
Brady , Ellen Eliott, Ronald
Boussom, Ann S i e n n a •
Schwartz and II. J, Parka.
The farclal comedy about
amateur theater when
everything goes wrong , 11
being staged at 8 o'clock at lhe SCR theater, 11127 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reserva-
tions 646-1363.
CONTINUING THEIR
engagements on the stages of
the Irvine community Theater
and the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse, respecti\rely, are
the old cor')'dy "Light Up the
Sky" and . the new comedy
"Me and Thee."
Irvine's "Llght Up the Sky"
heads into its third weekend
under the direction of Tom
Titus with Alan Levy, Beth
Tl.tus Frances McCann and
wuu3m Cullen heading the
ensemble cast. Others in the
production are An~ Lapp,
Erskine Morden, Daniel Ford,
Jack Ogborn, Suzanne Park,
Paul Steele and Ch uck Ben-
FRUSTRATED -Denise Clements and Paul \Vilson
are the potential lovers who can never get together
in "Summer and Smoke," now on stage at the La-
guna Moulton Playhouse.
ton . of three weekends at the Friday and Saturday at 8:30
PaU Tambellinl is staging Fountain Valley Community by the City Ensemble Theater
"Me and Thee" for the Costa Theater under David in Orange's City shopping
Mesa group with Joarme Maiville's direction, w it h center. Art Winslow directs
Wolcott and Don Rhoades in performances al 7:30 Friday the historical drama which
the principal roles. Ciompleting evenillg and 2 o'clock Saturday stars Tom Ttiman and Ray-
the cast are U:iri Furtner. and Sunday afternoons. mond Nasser. Reservations
William Spencer, Mark Miller A large, doubled cast of 28 544-7124.
and Evelyn Bertolet. chikfren-and-two-a d-u--1-t-5. lse~nding-up its lengthy
Both shows play Saturday perform the Washington Irv-engagement is '' J a n u a r Y
and Sunday at 8:30, with ing legend at the group's new Thaw" at the Long Beach
''Light Up the Sky" at the theater, 18280 Mt. Baldy Cir-Community Playhouse, 5021 F. .
Humanities Hall Playhouse on cle, Fountain Valley. Reserva-Anaheim St., U:ing Beach.
the UC Irvine campus and tions 962-5l9B. Performances are slated Fri-
"Me and Thee'' in the Com-Closing performances of day and Saturday at 8:30.
munily Center auclitoriwn on "The Rivalry" will be given Reservations (213) 438--0536. the 0 r a n g e C o u n t y1 _ __'.'.~.'.'.'._'.:::.'___:::::__.::~__:::_:_:_ ____ -".-. __ _
Fairgrounds. Reservations are
646-3178 for Irvine and 834-5300
during the \UIY for Coota
Mesa.
• "TllE LEGEND of Sleepy
Hollow'' swings into its second
FIOfl M IWTtl Of stt0er J ~) "FRENZY".
~
7:00 .. 10:40
AUO
CUNTWTWOOD
"PLAT MISTY fOR Ml"
-Mbtrl,.tm•lmW-'
111 -·-·----·-,:00
Coer. s ... Met. 2:00
2NDATCINEMA WIST #2
HARO!Dand , ...
o MAUDE l&i'i
RUTH GORDON
BLOCORT '='°
1<en Russells Film
~vqge
me11
Every man
oosadream
' that must bq
reaf122ct...
WINNE"!
3ACADEMY
AWARDS
" l
WtdllHda~, Octoblr 25, 1972 DAil V PILOT •
Super Musical
'Pippin' Debuts
By WILLIAM GLOVER
NEW YORK (AP) -A
super musical, "Pippin," surg-
ed into Broadway's hit lineup
Monday night at the Imperial
Theater, an SRO cinch.
It Is one of u.o.,e rare,
rewarding pips that combines
visual splendor, brilliant dan·
cing superior music and a storY of univenal appeal in
precise, suave fashion . T~
adds j~ enough aardontc
eda:e to turn showbiz finesse
into artiJllc eclat.
The story, done as a play
within the play. takes pla~ in
the eighth cenlury A.O. re1gn
ol Charlemagne with lots or
remind.en that what hap-
pened then is happening right
now too.
Pippin, the emperor's son
who turns out to be a hippie
youth ·for ail generations, sets
out to dig tome me1nln1 out
of life bey°"" hundrum con-
fonnity. He rtUU'Chea olf to
war. frolics wlth Upl'OW'ious
glee among the fleshpots, and
leads a revolution.
Everything he tries turns
wry, but not before the
muslcal's brain squad h_as
shrewdly presented an 1n-
v en ti v e, fa s t -pac ed
keleidoJCOpe or pungent song
and dance.
Ma jor credits: go to Bob
Fosse, whose direction and
choreography rank at the very
top of a career of no mean
achievement ; to Tony Walton
and PatMcia Zipprodl, for
r e s p e c tively eye-popplng
scenery and costumes or
mocking chicness ; and to
Stephen Schwartz., w h o s e
•·God.spell" just hinted at his
music-lyrics versatility th ts
time.
"IUTil!llFLIES AaE ~•I:•" !POI Goklle H•Wft I. l!ft•rtl Albe"
elM "~LAY IT AOA IN, SAM"
E•ckKlve Ent'91ITM'!ll New Nt ._,... ... leall
WiflMf el J AcN1111y Awem
"l"IDOLl!a ON THI! aOOP"
»... ........ _" "THE GODl'ATHEI" (I) • "POINT ILANK" l!ll
"l"llT? THE CAT" lX) • "THI! SEC•l!TARV11 (RI
"'THE NU CENTURU)NS" cal
W\fll ~ c. SC.rt ...
"PLAY MISTY 1'01 Ml" 1a1
DIANA ROSS
IS BIWE HOLIDAY
DY SINGS THE
BLUES
"ir:·s BUENA PARK DRIVE -IN
L•cCM.H· AYE •• 1 •Loe•• WEST Of •EACH •LVO. tAdtOIMtt h LWCOUI ORfVIANI
QftU>RIN UNDfl 12 11tfll TIU"l"HOHf 714/12 1~1170
~:~=~~~iiililiiiiiiiitimmliiiiiiiiil .. ·: •
• .-. .. ' . " ' '• . X LU VI
OIANGI COUNfT ~··· ~ ' . . -, ..
i .. ' ' ' .
! ... .. ., ., . '• •• ' . .. ... ::
• ., . . . . ~\. •J •• H Q
-o"LAN"A
N8E
HOLIDAY
• ltARl(lll ...,..... ''"'''
&DWA .. 08
HARBOR,:.T:.1
in Theatre
II & #3
OEORGEC.IC
· ITACYJU:ACll •
•
• 0 DAILY PILOT WtdtltJday October 25. 19'2
I
'73FOR DS
• I/ AT
____ .,.. _____________ .
NO MO NEY DO WN NO MONEY.DOWN. .NO MONEY DOWN .,.
BRAND NEW 1913 _ . On Approved Credit BRAND NEW 1913 On Approved Credit BRAND NEW 1913
MAVERICK F2S0 .. 3/4 TON
On Approved Credit
PINTO WAGON
SQUIRE OPTION $
Radio.~ speed lronsn'l ission, Calif.
Emission Sys 1em, 2000 cc Eng ine ,
Freigh t & Deal er Prep. Cha rge.
A7Sx13 Tires, FR. Dis.c Brakes, lug-
15
PER
MONTH
~·~~;~.·· ;·:R."•~~.'~~~·~::: $ !3 Ra~~r CamperSpetjal $.
(AMPll SPECIAL
1io" Sy1tem. MONTH V-8, Rtg. Dix TulOM, CoQ. &niss.ion Sys-
gage Rock
Order Yours Tod•J'
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f•r ••ly 41 "''"th" f1dl C••lt Prie1 i1 $2'31.26 iittl. l•• & lie. Dtf•rTttl J•ymt11t priet
ii $3271.20 i.cl. f ll, l11t-Jt •Iii lictllH, A11,..11l ,...C111fett ••tt j1 JO.fl
fer 011ly 4' lfteitths., fvll Ce sh Pric e h·S2t1,.30 i11el. l •• & l ie, Dtf•n'ttl ,..,..., priet
Is $3615.14 i11el. T11 a, l11t1rfft 111111 l k Hll. A11111t11I r1rcn htl l•t• It 11.tl.
forealy 41MMt•t. f•ll C11h Prk1 i1$JIJl.70 iHI. Te• & lk. D1hrn4 ••fMHf ,rk e i• 14759.61 hKI. Tint, .. ,.,.,1t1tMllc-.11. a ... ,1,~-,. ... • lete ls 10.tl
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'
...-.,O®D ·1 GOBBLIN'·
Trick MakeiS Treat , Ta sty
It's bl.I* u a Halloween cat Inside
and brlPl u 1 pump:C:tn outside, with an
approprillt deoor of candy com ... a
perfect -for the bewitching 1eason,
A ~I feature of the cake ii Iba! no
-are·ne<ded. So it ii a good ·reqp. !or the !'OUlli or the novice cook to
'Pf'lpare:~
·stllrl tlttb a devil'• food cake mis and
'1lle I eil*'tlaat the oacb<e dlrectfOOs re-q"*-;Jlut Instead ol tho measure o!
wattt, ~a one-pound can or jar of a~
]lleisa~ qd then beat up the cake a.s
the> Pld!lic> .. ,... .
· .. 'lbe Qbae aauce bas advantages in ad-
i!lticm tGil&DJnatlng the water measuring
step. ..~ \
, t addlf · llP lllSQltment of vitamins and
minefa)!\ tlaat would not ordlnarily be in
the ..... , And 4t ' ad<b a Oavor and
molltneim that gives the cake a real
'!boilemade" quality and also keeps it
.~ =. may be stralght !ro~ a'
can,. or,~ e1n make your own. Theo a
few tt..i each 9f red and yellow !OOll
coloriail&t.fe the ruce orange color. !lake
It~ ~ .. you plea!e. ne '"1'11"1't ~ coloring' suggested in
the recl!!f'l!Vtl ~ llg!ltj)l1111ge c;olor, but
there'• ~-no limit . . . . whatever the
~·creator" finds -appealing. • ; c:,\T 'N ftJMnIN CAKE
' t pacb&e Cl-ifyer slJe) devil's !ood
cakNDix . . , •-4'~
I can Jw . ) !'PPlt sauce
lean~~ . i.~d s::~ ~~ ,
u dnl!il 1dlo !ood toloring
I CUJ>'-lOO ·: Prei>ail.•). mlr · ~ dlre¢ed on
package, ~ing t eggs and substituting
the apPte:aauce for the water. Bake in 9-
igcb -Mix fmsting with red and yellow food
coloring,-addb)g more coloring if desired.
Spread..,. coolecf cake. Press candy·c:om
in\O ~ oo fldea of cake. Here'•,~• great idta that will help,
>'oil get' JOU? young "trick or treaters '
home oliltY Halloween night. Pl"° a
"Goblin J'eaS'' and serve inexpedsive,
euy·l<>llllke p\neapple mini-pies and bot
cboc:olale. I
Tbe prl>mlse o! their own individual
plea when ti\'\ pening;a !un ii over will
help ~&)>OSts, witches and demolls
from ... geoeroosly Into "trick
or -bags as tbey make the ,,.J~ropnds. Tbe apple pulries .,... be baked
Yoqi: pineapple mini-pies, terved with
cofree,1 -Mn ~ be popular with the adult
chaperon<Saawdl.
The recipe, incidentally, won a fl0,000
cash award !OC' J\ll'S, Jan Petrlng of·Jled.
mood, . Wasb., In the recent NatJonal
Pineapple Cooking Clamc.
PINEAPPLE
HAPPY F CE8
1 (15\1< ounce) can sliced pineapple
211 cups silted all-purpose Dour
I teaspoon aalt' I
\I teaJpoon grated lemon peel
I cup shortening
6 tablespoons reserved p apple syrup
y, cup brown sugar (packed)
v, ·teaspoon cinnamon ' \
% cup sifted powdered sugar
3 teaspoom lemon juice ~
Preheat oven to 400 de . Drain
pineapPle, reservbtg syrup. '
Resift flour with J8)t~~d lemm peel.
CUt in shortening as !or pastry. Add
reserved pineapple syrup, one tablespoon
at a Ume, to moisten mixture. Shape into
a ball.
Roll out on lightly floured board lo \I
inch thickness. Olt into 16 clrdei, about
1h inch larger than pineapple 1llce. OJt
small boles in center of I pastrt circles,
resembling doughnuts.
Place one pineapple slice on each re-
maining whole pastry circle; sprinkle
each with brown sugar and cbmamoo.
_ Top each with remaining pa*>' \Cit'Cles
. with hples. Seal · edgea of pas"'' with IOr'.k. . l • .... •
,~e oo ungreased cooky fb<\els. llake1rt~prebeated oven about 12 minutes,
untij'j,astry is crisp andrgolden 1broWP1 · ·Reipo~e from oven and cool on ~ rack. SUr together powdered sugar )and
lemon juice; drizz1e over pastries: Makes
8 mini-pies.
early ... Dar,, Y~. will &el bowll
of lleo !I· you ~ • .,....., 111 eoch pie
with a l.lllck j,bwder@O! qar "IWJstlllg "
!jnted dooP orange l'itb ,food coloril!g aad
pteaaed,slliougb a pastry tube. ···"\ •5' ,.(
;~ j
•
' I
l
'For/ Halloween treats
with a haunting
taste, add fruit
sauces end slices
t t provide nutrition
when youngsters ,e collecting sweets.
,
...
•
'
Orange end black
beverages -juices
or hot chocolate -
ere healthy
ways to give
pranksters even
more energy.
•
Ewery .Little ·.Bit ' Helps Health
..-isy c.JoL MOORE natural a state as possible~ to eat °' ,.. i»1tr ,... '""' regularly and wisely.
. Meuin minera!J In terma of peu and "Mineral supplement taJl/els would
Olltcb h$dl but i., sure you get tbem. give good prntecllon for ~pie who eat
Otbe?wiie def 1 cl enc I es cause mosUy processed foods. But ~DI the cle!ormll!ii's ud ~ abeeDCtll can cause tablets may be baphuard at hen; some
death ~"1n wee , Dr. George Briggs, women don't even take the~ regularly peofesaor ·~, nut tlon at University of enough." · •
CaJUomiO; ·:· to14 a UC! Ex-Dr.•Brlggs llsted.p~ calcium, tension tjUI an N Jril!oij fnd Health. · llOdWm, · J>Qlmium, mqDeslUm snd
· }le ~bed m · m1f 11 .. the ~xclting · chlorine 8J umacro-nllnerals," meaning part~ \11'.nutrlt!on sinfrn~w re1ea~ is the daily requirement of each !or allow~ ..,,. -ana um, Uri, !luoHne, bum= is abcnd the sh:e·o! a pea,
·ilkon Mc:l'nJcke1 -re eaen.Ual while ,.,Trace mloerals -mlribr only in pnr
Others-~ , cadmlum -are pqrtion because their p~ce II atill..ex-
dange1'"'°'whiit ed In eiceaa. · tiemely Important" h\clUQi ~:..':':pper,
· Anl lt·ldn ~once to get lcdine, manganese, lloc, mol7"""num,
all the 'MdJll'J ml.net~' considering lelenium, ehromlum •net UW newer
n.. ,.,,~ -• much the dll<overtes. l.'eo~ oliOaW eot , eadl of ~ w~ · 00 "':Im fon ol ;! llM!ae In amounil equivalent to a match
~ hodl n1sli>c -," Jio. bead per day.
Aid. : .-> •-•Mlofnla are moat ~ In fruit• -"Wt _., an the people in Loa ud -bles• while ll..,. It a rich
Angel" .'1ttliou procelltJjc. BUt we 1oso IOUrce ol 'itoa lllll milk~ calcium.
minenll loodl are not -AQd there are a !ew ourpclles. Ground
tor -' poll tncl cows loci pigs eci shells, hall a cup of unhulled seaame "t food on c crete lnotead of chewln& aeects or two CUIMI of collarda aupply the oo the ilOn a pl pea." / • 11<1'• calcium at milk ..
!n 8~' opinion. .so-called ot;Pnic • "Even older ~pie tbould d!lnk milk,
looda are t the ""8'••: suJi>lemenil though, !or -1lrtnJPb .1nd dtveloJ>'
come ~me ·anc1 a wel~balan<ed diel is ment. That'• "Why lij•nd-<rumpeters
bell. ' become .. 1 .. ~" 1!r1ps addod.
"llon'i l"'1 dlilch ;..ti for 'health i Mlneralt ate vital .~ they Jn.
fooda' arw lnost1Y tada On<! ~ve no teraet wtth -· .adlva!A> Vl\alh~ l<gal con ,"he aald. ''YcNr money Ii and are required by nveryteaatloll li1 till
better !!pent buying frtth food s, In •• body. Some may be stored In bonea tern ·
porarUy but most are constantly lost
through energy or ellmlnattoo and need
to be repl"'1sbed.
They sliouid be used sparingly.
especially salt, because eX~s result
in counter effects, stiff joints or toxicity.
'lbelr relationship, to water is very Im-
portant. Residents of hard water regk>ns
have slgnifi£~ntly less heart disease, and
&ca water &¥.t and sea food are excel1ent
sources of minerals, he said.
Commenting on particular minerals,
Dr. Brlgga rienltoned:
-Pboo lntal<e should be balanc-
, ed with c lum which la (FoquenUy
Jeollal:dbod• hiP ptolelo dje!&.
-M . llOll ofl<n lost Ulrolll!i
pn>et11 ,pain, Its abstllce ii moot
noticeable fit!Ul ~ .,.,._
adlJlll.
-Iron. Uni a perDt eata llvnr once
a -k. the et should bl•IUPPlemented to meet llie ReoommonclOd Dally
Allowance, "haps by fortified bttada
and breal!lut' !oOdl, .... under ~
lion. t , -Copper. tllel and coollinli opoons u..d to give 1 lot. Now perblps peo.,
pl .. ai.>rb It )rom braceleil and lnlrt-
uterlne devlctf. There'• enough Jn • pen-
ny to la.st a person three years. ~ \ -rodine, mMganese, telenium. Deft·
ctencte1 cou~ter, weak Jolnil and hvtNlluaclt 1om1. . '
-..zinc. !co skin, slow !ltsllng and
poor luting 1blUUes, delayed sexual
•
•
•
matuflt.1 •rt slans that tine iJ mtulng
!rom the diet.
' --.Fhiortne. Laboratory-rata fed diels
wltho\11 !hla mlnerol, f•lled to produce
)'oung after th'i;ee g(!fle.ratlons. '
-81llcon and,}llckel. These art two of
the n.,..,.i breakthroughs. The li>nn '
-from ll4nd and ,1 ... while the lat·
ter detennlnea bone structure.
•
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
WMl!tftd•r, 0c;,...,. u. 1rn ,._ n
Too Much Salting
Pepp,ers Argument
By DOROTHY WENCK Or-Celilntr ..._ ... ._._
Most poople don't think of salt as hav-
ing any nutritional value. To them, salt is
just something we add lo food to make It
taste better.
But salt does contain two necessary
nutrients -sodium and chlorine.
There is considerable concern among
nutritionists and physicians that the
average American eats too much salt,
and therefore is getting too much
s<Klium .
We need about 200 milligrams per day
of sodium, but our actual intake may be
20 times this.
Our eaUng of sally !oo<b has become
a national habit.
Salt is usually added In food during
cooking, and then many p e o p 1 e
automatlcall)' salt it some more when
they eat it -not because they need the
salt but bfruse of an acquired taste
. habit .
Jn addition, many of our favorite snack
foods are loaded with saJt: potato and
corn chJps, pretzels, salted nuta, and so
on. We alMI get sodium from additives
such as monosodium glutamate.
The reason we ore concerned about e:<-
cess salt Intake ls because It'll thought to
be a contributing cause ol bypertensjon
(high blood p!'<!lll!'e). .
1bere 13 n o t sufficient research
evidence to 2f0Ve this conclusively, but
prnlonged fetding of hJch-aalt dlell to
laborator)' IJlimail bas reaU1le4 Jn
hyperteoaJon In theoe anlmall. ·we do know that _.,. with high
blood pr...,.. and bOaft dileaae must
cut bock on their salt Wake. This ~ to
help reduce or ellmlDalO the ac>.
cumulallon ol fluldl In the body •hlch
'Dccur1 when the heart ill DO fundlooloc
well.
Other individuals who have probltm1
with wattt retention also must carefully
watch their II.It Intake.
Both the IOdlum and chlortne tn aalt
function In the body as electrolytes. They
help maintain the p~ J)l'tl&Ul'I of
fiutds wlth.111 and wlthout celft.
Jn 1ttu11tlonr whe~ abnonnal amounb
. of nuld! Mre Jolt -for e1ample, throu~h
ht!Avy 1wenUna -extrs aaJt Jn11 ~
needed, •lMC with eitra water.
Foolball player•. for example, working
oul In hot weather nlay be given waler lo
drink which has a small amount al salt
added.
But the average person leading a
nonnal life does not need extra salt aQd
would probably be better off if he lea~
to eat foods with Jess salt.
QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED: .
Q. Someone told me that the lmitaU..
bacon bits were hi&b in iodl.um. Is Uii
true? ;
A. Yes indeed. Imitation bacon. b;ltp
have about 10 percent salt AnyoM
watching sodium intake shouJd a~
Home News ;
And Views ·~
these prnducta. Srooked meat ~
such as bacon and ham also are blgb In
sodium, although Ibey don't bava 11Mtljo
as much salt as the tmltatlon ba4*
products.
Q. My bulband ii on a low ll!dlma dljt
and I am not auppoMd to .. any eall In -{_ ~u:-ital:f ..
11~=~; v
tlrM as nothing tastg,(OOd to him. WW
could I do to-impl'OYe the flavor ol ~
without addh1f aalt! ;i
A. A penon oo a low ll!dlom diet niuil
reeducate his -budo .. that hi""" e~oo<b with na...,. other than l!'IH
staadof := i:~ ~.~ 1artlc (!rah or ..,..der, DOI 1arllc ,
panley, c:oltry leavea, ,,_ .,._,
,14!avts, oregano, glnger1 mustard
cinnamon, c1rdamon, carnway, Pl
ltmoo Jul .. and vinegar.
Q. Somelimea It _.. uke some of ti;.
tin trom the Un can bu been dllSOI
in food! that am tomewhat .:Id,
tomato juice. ls this harmrul!
A. No, II IOl'lle of the tlo &om
can ii dlllQlved In the -wW not harm you. In !let, [l'a
since tin ls • 'mineral which our ...:...o:r-
netd.
'
3% DAILY PILOT
l
Mrs. Virglnta
Wodo•well.,. (right)
readies 1tems
for the
Holiday Boutique,
while Mrs. Edward
Boncl •nd M,..
Beatrice Howland
(far right, left to
right) dl'!'l•y
wires to be sold by
Los Ninos Guild.
w .. ....., -25, 1972
Boutiques Unique?
Popularity Grows
•
St uffed toys a re featured
at Women's Service
Organ'ization sale. Mrs .
Lyle Ferry (left ) end Mrs.
J . D. Berry help.
When it comes to popularity polls, boll·
day boutlquea and bu.aars win lt hands
down.
After spending month! 1n workshops
handcralting decorations and gUts,
coastal organizations now are enticing
early-bird shoppers to their ways and
means sales.
Here is a rundown on ~e being
presented soon.
Huntington Harbour, Beach Club -
Little Mermaid Guild of Orange County
Children's Hospital will .. u han<lcrafted
holiday gilts from 10 a.m. to 1 p.ili. Sun-
day, Nov. 19.
Huntington Bead!, Christ Pmbyf<rian
Church -Women's Service Organization
will present a Fall Festival from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m.. Saturday, Nov . 11, to raise
fwtds for the church and community.
Costs. Mesa, First . Uritted Methodist
Church -Women's Society of Christian
Service will have a Holiday Botique
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 10,
for the benefit of rn.l.slion work at home
and overseas.
San C l emen t e, Rwnplestiltskln'1
restaurant -Loo Ninos Guild of Otang<
County Chlldre!i's Hoopltal Is planning a
Boutique Luncheon at 10 a:m. Monday,
Nov. 6, with lunch being served at 11:30.
Funds will benefit the hospital.
Laguna Beach, "SL Mary's Episcopal
Church i... A Christmas Bazaar from 10
a.m. -4 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 8, is being
planned by the Episcopal Churchwomen.
Newport Beach, Island House, Fashion
Island -A tw<><fay Fun and Fancy
Bazaar, featuring holldB.y \decorations
and gilts, will be conducted by the
Newport Harbor B u s 1 n es s and
Professiooal Women. Hours are 10 a.m. to
9 p.m. Friday, Nov. 3, and frooi 10 a.m..
to 5 p.IrL Saturday, Nov. 4. Scholarships,
Outreach and -~. nursing home will
benefil -
SI. Mary's Bazaar items are being displayed by (below, left to right)
Mrs. Paul Zehner and Mrs. Samuel W. Stockton. Santa's helper, Mrs.
A. E. Naegeli confers with Santa on what the coming season will bring.
' "
...
•
\ •
I n· Grows .
Boutique items ere
readied for sale by Mrs. Charles
Grosenbaugh (left.) end_ Mrs.
Tom Harmen.
i I ..
•
,
Season-opener · ,
Tua!Js in the Children's Theater Guild-sponsored tennis tourna\nent will take
place at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Ocl 28, at Lido Isle's San Remo~-Larry Car-
ler, tennis pro, will be tournament official. Awards will be presiloted after the
finals in the Lido Isle home of Mrs. Ladislaw Reday. Preparing prizes are Mrs.
Diane Kirby (left) and Mrs. Richard Halderman.
Ashes to Ashes
: Slow Burn Doused
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I buried my
husband three days ago. Everyone has
been telling me what a wonderful person
be wu -such a perfect gentleman, so
kind and considerate, how lucky I was to
have had him for so many years, and
how I must now pick up the p;eces and
carry on wkhout my beautiful helpmate.
What they don't know ls that be was a
vicious drunk. I spent tbe last 15 years
covering up for him. Just once I'd like to
tell somebody what my life was really
like. In a wo~ it was HELL.
I thtnk I'd feel better. I know this is
not normal yet the urge Is overwhelming.
Now that he ls gone and I am free, you'd
think I'd W<'!'lll to keep my mouth shut,
but I don 't. Can you help me? I'm on the
-~GGED EDGE
DEAR EDGE: You've told me. That's
enoagb. If yoa feel the need to unload, ln
detail, wrl&e again -say anything that
--,...., mind. It will be good ... therapy for yoa and I WOD't mind. I've
beard evsytllill(.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: When I read
that letter about the college kid who in·
formed his parents that he wanted a do~
ble bed put in his room so he and his girl ' ·"'-could '-leep tcgether during vacation, I
"" got so mad I almost wigged out. And that
."'
idiot mother has to write to Ann Landers
yet to ask What she should do!! l !
Two of our friends have college-age
kids who pulled the same stunt and got
away with it. (One is a glrll) 1be mother
ovember
'· s . · •1tes et
.:;J1r. and Mn. Philip Rosso
~ta Mesa have announced Jaf engagement of t h· e i r
.dllughter, Alexis Ross to G.
:r;i1r1ck Phillips, also of Costa
~
of this so-called liberated female aaid ·
they had no ·choice.
The girl announced that if they didn't
say It was OK for her and the fellow to
sleep in her room they would pitch a,'tent
on the front lawn and sleep there so, all
the neillilbcirs could see.
,.Another mother who ..... llHIUJle.lrai>-
~:into a similar situation told my hus-
band and me that she wu raised by a
strict Methodist minister father and an
out-of-this wcrld prudish mother and that
she was glad her children were honest
and open about sex and that sbe was all
!or It.
What will these kids he like IO years
from now? Will they be better off or
worse ciffthan we were? Can you tell us?
-MIND BOGGLED IN BENTON
HARBOR '
DEAR BOGGLED: No -and atltber
can anyoee ebe. Extreme rigidity 11 as
damaging to cblldml 11 permilllveneu .
The most dllflc11It port of poreotliood fl
to find the mlddl• .....,.i.
U parents cu~ decide wlletber to say
yes er no, my advice ls to say "NO." I
firmly believe tllat less damqe 11 done
by belog too slrtcl thu too permls~ ...
Besides, kids don~ alway• w a • t
everything tbey .,k for.
OF COSTA MESA ·..rme bride-to.be is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and
!Ww attends Orange Coast
.~liege.
·11er fiance is a graduate of
l<ewood High, School, OCC
ldd. California State Unlversi· t. Fullerton. '
a delightf11l b11dget salon
where bea11tif11l hair styles begin.
•A Nov. 18 cenimony Is being i>J.amed in the U n I t e d
-Methodist Church, C o s t a
'Mesa. ·.
•
Hallowffll
Costulle Parade '!Ml~ .... 7 to l :JO
1'0 Jt. WomJ/.'o Club of H.8~
lnvit .. all !he llttla •poo••
•ftd 9obllns to 9•+ into 1*'•1r J,est scartn' gear.
, • p;ltes for being th•
spookiest, fun nlett, most
ori91n•I, prettiest .•. Jn •9e
c.ttegorles up to 10 y••"·
• Bring them, to
Huntington Center's
uclot•d mtll for th• fun.
lttch & Eding•r at
San Ole90 Fwy., H,8,
PRICE LIST
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY PRICE4..SLl6HTLY Hl6HEA
Sl-iempoo and Set ·····-··-···················----··-········ $J.50
Permanent Weve ·················-·····----·--········ 7.50
Tint ·············-·····--·········-····-·-····-··················· S.SO
Bl .. ch Touch-up ·····-~····--···-·-·-····-···-··-·-10,50
Fro1tin9 ·········--···-················ ....... ····-··-····-··-·· 14.00
Semi Perm•ntnt l•shts ····-··-········-·-·····-·--J0.00
haircuts
'I.SO
1695 lrvln• A ... -Costa Mesa
c...-of Eaot 17tft sr.~ La C.vo RHl••••nt
645-1050 548-9986
Opon 7 Days • WMk and Most. Ev011\nt•
• ''Tab tlle '·. !J!!!!
, ·t:lel!tlt•"" ' iiiiiiiil
•
Wtd~J. Octbber 25, 1~'72 DAILY PILOT
•
Sales, Speakers Favored i • ,
•
'
Alumni Club
Orange County'• Cathollc
Alumni Club wlll sponsor a
dance at 8 p.m. Saturday,
Nov. 4, in the Alrporter Inn.
~ Single C:a.tbolics who are col·
Jege graduates or registered
JUU'9eS are invited and pro-
ceeda will benefit Rancho
Nauretb orphanage in Mex-
ico.
Holiday Boutique
Persons with cloth children's
books, plaques, terrariums,
tennis racket covers, puppets,
decorated school desks and
knitted pillows on t h e i r
Christmas lists will find a
selection at the Holiday Bou.ti·
qut! lo be presented by the
Mano Coo Amor auxiliary of
Cbildrer.'s Home Society.
The 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. event
in the . University Community
Association clubhouse, Irvine,
is ~led for Saturday,
Nov. 4; Mrs. Donald MacLean,
chairtJu.11, also is planning
baked gocds, white elephant
sale and refreshntents for
browsers.
City of Hope
A Thanksgiving dinner will
be pi'ovlded for prospective
members by the Maxine
Caverley Memorial Chapter of
City of Hope at S:SO p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 4, in the
Women's Club, San Juan
Capistrano.
Jerry Gaffney is taking
reservations for the evening
which will include introductory
rem.arks and filmstrip about
the Pilot Medical Center's
research, treatment a n d
education.
Beta Sigm" Phi
Five Be~ Sigma P h i
chapters are pr eparing
Christmas o rn aments,
package trims, stocking stuf·
fers and holiday foods for Ule
Kris Kringle Boutique from 11
a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. Nov.
4, at 409 C.Ortes Circle, Corona
de! Mar.
Hearing
A series of panel discussion
on various upects of dJagrmis
and treatment of the hearing
impaired child will begin Mon-
day, Nov. 6, at 7 p.m. in the
Hoag H o s pi t a I Conference
Center, adjacent to the
hospital.
Speal<ers will Include Jullns
Spiziri, California coosultant
for Hearing Impa ired
Programs; and area school
district directors of special
education Cecil Berry, Santa
Ana ; Matk Hansen, Newport~
Mesa. and Norman Ginsbergy,
Ocean View.
Alpha Xi Delta
The hostess's g I o b a l
g~~
:·
itinerary will be the topic
when Alpha XI Delta alumnae
of Orange County meet at the
Richard Couden'• Santa Ana
home at 7 :30 p.m. Saturd~y,
Nov. 4.
HB Juniors
The Junior Women's tiub of
Huntington Beach has schedul-
ed its first &Mual huabaod and
wife sport nlght from I to 9
p.m. Saturday, Nov. 4, at the
city gym and pool.
meeting of Laguna Beach
Pwthellenic.
Beaeh Ebell Club dumi a,
meeting 'lbutlday. Nov. t . ~
Twins' Moms ..
'
Art League
Huntington Beach A r t
League will benefit when one
of lts founders, Darwin Dun-
can, paints and donates a
landscape at the group's
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday,
Nov. 6 in the Huntington
Beach Recreation Center.
For the second year, club
members will be presenting
Polly and Pete safety puppet
shows for the primary grades
of neighboring !IChool dtstricl&.
Bicycle riding, talking lo
strangers, pol.Jons, fire and
seat belts are covered ln the
skits.
Mrs. Clyde W. Phelps will
host the seukm in her home
at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 1.
Busineu Women
Newport Beach Olapter,
Americar1 Business Women's
Association will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 2, in Richard's
Coffee Shop.
Saddlcback Mothers o f
Twins Club will present a wtne•
and cheese tasting party at 15
p.m. Saturday, Nov. 4, in the
fo.1ontonoso Recreation Center,
Mission Viejo.
Pi Beta Phi Panhellenie
Members' hobbies will be on
display during the n e x t
The group will have a
Christmas bazaar on
Richard 's patio from IO a.m.
to 4 p.m. Satuniay, Dec. 2.
Ebell Club
The Martinos, a mother and
son team, will entertain
members of the Newport
Pi Beta Phi alumnae wilt
team about the Toun,uunent of
Ro!es from Ralph Helpbr-
inger, executive committee
member, when they meet1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,----------
!Jlhe ~lei@A
HUNTINGTON HAUOUl
BRETT 'I1wrsday, Nov. 9, for a 1011 I
•. m. meeting and 1uncbeon in We ·"Ready" Rentals I -lhe home of Mrs. Peter CHllSTMAS
Madigan, Newport Beach. : ~~~,::i:,O "t,.• vC::~;.~ CADS
d P t e l'lUMllN• ~ 'p J '""""" .,..:lal ..,._, u• A optive aren s•. ~:~~ev:·.·."~C:001N• y ~ tJI cult!! Ill Jlqlililf'f T•"''"" -•I mlrtlelllrt tll Plllatillft 6 •lllM
Sneezy the Clown will re-• WINDOW WASHING ··eol"'a,::~.~~:.· tr•me ...... -tt*n •cc ..... mind children bow to trick-or· "' W• a.. ' ""'111
,....., ist. treat safely when the Orange .... H..... THR UNUlUAl. IN CHRISTMAS
County Adoptive p a r e n t s ,! =· ONl y " DAYS UNTIL. • • •
Association hosts a Halloween " t11,. "" c,,, LMIN ""' ... ,.....
party Sunday, Oct. 29, in the RENTAL READIER "' •· '"' "· -.....,. ""'" Co t• 64• ••2Q "'"',_ 54. '-d·IU' KUffTINlll-ON laACM Westln&' .... use rp. mee mg -Ctlta M.-,, .. ti ALOONOUIN .. WMlNI•
room, Oran ge. Games,ll~";'~w:;;;_.~1tth;;;:.~s~~~C~ott;;•~M~ .. :;.JL_~~'.'.'.::'.:'.:=~~~~~~~! .... ;nn;;~~~~ refreshments and pri?.es for •
costumes will be provided.
Juniorettes
Juniorettes of Irvine will
collect candy in their area
Halloween night. All candy
donated will be delivered to
the orphans in Tijuana by
n1embeI'S of Irvine Juniors.
SC Auxiliary
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Wago.'lSeller's Newport Beach
home will be the setting for an
Election Party at 7:30 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 3 for Town and
Gown Junior Auxiliary or the
University of S o u t h e r n
California. Boys on the Ba!lot
will play music w h i I e
members and guests enjoy a
bufiet.
Potluck
Hilltop Nursery School will
stage a potluck dinner and
auction Saturday, Nov. 4. Aue·
tioneer will be David DeSurra.
BSP
Xi Eta Xi Chapter, Beta
Sig.ma Phi will sponsor the
Wednesday, Nov. l, OJ)ening of
the HEAR Fou nd ation,
Anaheim a non-profit group
which t es t s infants and
children for speech and hear-
ing defects. To support their
efforts, the chapter members
will he selling candles during
the OOC Breakfast, Saturday,
Nov. Jl, in the Santa Ana Elles
Club.
Our entire stock of
fine diamond jewelry
reduced 20%.
24000
Reg. $300. Ma1ching
brkfal $et with .33 cl
center stone. 14K gold.
15600
Reg. S 185overlap bridal
set In 1-41< gold, .19 ct. '
pear shape diamond.
2lr000
Reg. S300"Nlne diamond
bridal set In 14K golef
Men's, reg.31.50,
now25.20
LANE BRYANT
120°0
'
20000 55600
South Coast Plaza
special sizes 38 to 52
soft culotte
lounger
i 6.99
A~awtifut w•y to look
•t 11ight! Shimm•ri119
A11!ro11* Ill 11ylo11 with
•l•rtic·hu99td •IY!pire
w•l1t •rtd 1Ut b•ck.
N•vy, orient•I 0t•n1J• or pl11m.
\
I ""
l South' Coast "-" •
\ ... ,,., ..... _ ................ .......,
--mt 'st_.. HHnt MM. te M., 10.t-a. .. 1M -ha., 12·1
Reg. S 150 SoUtaire with
.20 ct. diamond, 14K gold
band . Men's band to
match, Reg. 133,
now21.ao
11000
Reg.137.50Men's 14K gold
ring wlth seven diamonds.
3400
Rog, 42.50 Single
diamond CTOll Ht in
14K 901<1.
Rog, S250 Thirteen
diamond cocktail ring in
141< gold swir1 setting.
I
200°0
Rog. S250M en's rfn9 In
14K gold with seven
diamond1.
231 00
R19, 218.50 Double row
wedding ring whh ten
diamonds, 14K gold
setting.
81!0 prlco1 olloollw• lhru
S•Nrd1y, September 21.
Rog. 1895Heartahapod
cocktalt ring with thirty-
two diamonds, 14K white
gold setting.
49 00
Rog. $2,50 Diamond
·earrings In 14Kgold
setting for pierced ears.
13500
Rog. 191.50 .25 ct. diamond
in 14K gold aettlng •
.50 ct., Rog, ~SO. now '2tO
1,00 ct.Rog, Miii, now S71f
·· JCPenney
• , The values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M.111 thefollowlng atorea:
FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644-2313,
HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Ba.Ch (714j 192-ml.
I\
OAllV PILOT
':k.rt Festive I • Your Horoscope Tomorrow \
Scholarships Funded
Entri,. In lhe Siith Annual
F~ Art.! FtsUval, IPoOIOred
by the Orange District Jwtlor
~1embetshlp, C a 11 ( o r n la
Feamuon of Womeo'1 Clubs
wjll be Judgtld WedneJday, :~Ov. l, in the Garden Grove
Women's Clvic C1ubbouse.
dlsP!ay from i :lO 1.0 IO:lO a.m.
Dlu-ina the ntxl hour, Ju'ruon
wiU model handmade artlclrs
and ball from Bullock's, La
Habro.
Taurus: Spread Influence
'!be art v.-orks w\11 be on
Award! will be announced
during a salad lWlCheon 3trV·
cd by the Garden Grov~ mem-
berl.
"' O•
" ~,
. . •
presents:
..... .... .
"" . ·>n FRIGHT WIGS .
•'')\LL COLORS -ALL STYLES
;~. 295 • 3ss • 4ss
• :'.~'\.ook A Fright On
.:, , HALLOWEEN NIGHT!"
•
WIG and
CEAUTY SALON
250-0 East 17th St. -Hillgren Square
Costa Mew 548-3«6
Basic Crepe Dressed
Sandra Krogh gets her basic crepe ready to demon·
strate at the first session of the 1972 Orange Coast
College Cookin g School at 9:30 a.m. t omorrow in
l'\lesa Theater. Costa Mesa. A1mes. Krogh and Gerry
Gerken, in structors, \vill start the series on its 21st
yc:i r .
THURSDAY
OCTOBER 26
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARCU (March 21-April 11):
Duller al home tend lo
domlnate. Take long-range
view. Shortcut methods are
not likely to ll'Uflice. Cancer
person plays key role .
TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20):
Spread efforts and influence.
Refuse to be painted inlo cor·
ner. Key Is to be versatile and
to maintain sense of humor.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20 \:
Review m e n e y quesUons.
Oteck obligations. Thorough
approach is necessary where
profit ia concerned. You can
·. do better In financial area.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
You find that many of your
idols have feet of clay. This
u•ill work to you r ultimate
benefit .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Con·
dition at home, \\'hich had
been neglected , 00\V demands
attention. Talll'Us, L I b r a
persons are in picture.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
You may be in line for_ Ilnan.
cial windfall. Key Is to
sharpen sense of timing. lf
you wait, you get what is
needed.
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Assume responsibil ity. Obtain
valid hint from V t r go
message. What you require is
close at hand. Don't go too far
afield.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):
Finish y,·hat you start. Don't
October Ceremonies
• : • !
•
TREMENDOUS SAVINGS I
Select Group
FALL DRESSES · SPOR'fSWEAR
BLOUSES·SKIRTS
ReJU]arfroniSl6toSS2 $1085 $3385 Now reduced to
Our own Designer Samples
1/2
off
and
Slig·htly imperfect
'Fall Fashions
1/2
off
Newport Be(tch, Fashion Island
open Monday and Friday nights Ill 9:30, Sunday 12-S.
Coast Couples Wed
BROWN-HOWEY
Bonn ie Lynette H o w e y ,
ri.1u~hler of Mr. and ~1rs.
Bruce Bigelow Howey of Costa
Mesa. became the bride of
Charles Richard Brown Jr. or
Huntington Beach d u r i n g
ceremonies conducted by the
Rev. Richard Dunlap in the
Fisrt United Meth odi s t
Chu rch. Costa Mesa.
Bridal attendants were the
!\1 isses Karen Goodman. Nan-
c.v ~1urphy. Darbara Howey
and Jolie Brown. Serving the
bridegroom were S t e v e n
Glascock . Terry Howey. David
Brown and Oougla,s Brown.
The bride attended Costa
Mesa High School and now is
studying at Orange Coast
College. Her hll.!band is a
graduate of Corona de\ Mar
High School, attended OCC
an•I now is serving in the Air
Force at Riverside.
They will make their home
in Costa ~·lesa .
ADACHI-WOOD
Jn an outdoo r setting in the
UCJ Campus Park , Julie Ann
Wood became the bride of
Naohisa Adachi.
The Rev. Edward P. Allen
directed the vow::i for the
daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Elton "1ood of lrvine and the
son of Mrs. Yukie Adachi or
Osaka. Japan.
Miss Kyoko Adachi was lhe
maid of honor: bridesmaids
were hfiss Amy Wood and
Miss Ra chel fl.1orales, and best
man v.·as Shuzo Ueda.
The bride is a graduate of
Unitersity High School, Irvine
and her husband la a graduate
of Osaka Architectural High
School. They will reside In
Santa Ana .\
HOLTZ· SOWINSKI
Ramona Therese Sowinski
became the bride of Stephen
Joseph floltr: of HuntlnRton
Beach d u r I n g wedding
ceremonies conducted in St.
Edward's Catholic Church,
Dana Polnt.
Their parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley J.. SOwlnskJ of
Fountain Valley and, Mr. and
Mrs. Andrew Holtz of Dana
MRS. BROWN JR.
Point.
Attendants were the t.11sses
Janet and Kitt Holtz and Con-
nie and Renee Sowinski,
Joseph, Dennis and Drew
Holtz, Casimir Sowill!ki. June
Sowinski and Cyndi Holtz.
The bride attended Penn
Valley College, Kansas City,
Mo. and her husband is a
graduate of Ca.I Poly. They
will reside in Huntington
Beach.
KRISEL ·BENTLEY
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Chapel , Newport Beach was
the setting for the weddlng of
Jane Baldwin Bentley and
Gary Randolph Krisel.
The Rev. Dr. Charles
Dierenfield directed tbe vow
exchange for the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Bentley
of Huntington Beach and the
son of Capt. and Mrs. Llonel
Krisel of Washington. D. C.
Mrs. Douglass Lundman
was the matron of honor; Ron
Krlsel served as best man,
and ushers were John J .
Bentley Ill, Patrick Bentley
and David Thursdale.
The newlyweds, who will
reside in Los Angeles, are
graduates of Principia
College. He also attended
UCLA.
Grooming·
Series Due
Convenatlon techniques and
social 1UuaUoD1, make-up,
hair 1tyltng, es.ercile and
luhlon all will be di11CUssed
durlng a four-week series on
groomlrlg for women btgin-
nlng Monday, Oct. 30.
The orange Coast Evening
College lecturt stria will llk
ploce fJom 7:l0 1.0 l :lO
Monday eventnp ln the Estan-
cia High School Forum. Thcr.
11 no i:barge and women ma1
rqistt.r at the lecture.
CoordlntUng the 1erles b
Marjorie Lte, a fashion show
®mmentator and lecturer.
Speakm will be M • r y
Clllahan, ooordlnal.Or o /
cosmetolo11 at Golden Wt!!
College, and Laur<I Wrlgit,
director ol. the John Powert
School, ijanta Ana. -
play gamn with aecurlly.
Avoid premalllre 1larts. Ari<&
Individual could be In picture •.
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov 22-
Dec. 11): One who appeara lo
made lltll year la due to bear
frull. Even! that OCClll'1'<d lo
July {could result In greater
!lna'l"lal "our!ly. '
wish you well may Mt be,i------------~~----
siocere. Know It and protect • ../-----------------; y...,..u In clinches. Checlt
assets. Revise budget.
CAPRICOl\l.I. (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Opposition will
boomerang in your favor.
Public relations Ls due to im-
prove. Legal problem can be
resolved. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb. I
18}: Prepare to show wareJ.
Means dress up home, prod-
uct, appliances. Do some
entertaining.
PISCES (Feb. lS.Mareh 20)!
Check tendency 1.0 spend Ip<>
much for too litUe. Make tome
economic adjustments. ·
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTBDAY )'QU are persis-
tent, dynamic, po 1 s e s s
business acumen and natural
creative ability. New start
WBAT CAUSES LINES OVER THE!u..s!
MiUm ..wJ rnilllcN o1-don't'--n.'-thoir•
'tips. MiMions ft ·milliON. ol women do. Oaity -, .
,i-;,g -i!oo dry iayw of tlrin 00 0 .... I'-· Nf4
,_ gioolo Pool 0 MofWjuo doos ff lot -lo O ...
minutes, mUing tt. living, he-of..fine..hl ..,
~. ,.. obout ~ ·arllufMno'. l c.-m.a1.-l
NEWPORT e #1 FASHION ISL.ANO e NEWPORT CENTllt • U.-2200
MONOAY a. FRIOAY, 10-00-t;lO e SUNOAY, 12:00.5:00 . OTHER OAYS, 10;00..J:)O
COSTA MESA
GRAND OPENING
DONNA MACCARONE
Y2 OFF ON All • • •
Carpets and furniture cleaned
June Date
Selected
'
' Donna A!'ft Maccarone and
Gary M. $iutzrnan are plan-
ning a June 9 wedding.
Their iiBrents are Mr. and
hfrs. Joseph Maccarone and
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stuzman,
all of Huntington Beach.
The b~t4>-be is a graduate
of Mo side High School,
Joglew and now is at.
tending/ Whittier College. Her
fiance, also a graduate or
MHS, i! a student at LaVeme
College.
WALl .
TO •
WALL
CARPET CLEANIN~ * NEW CARPET SHOWROOM * CUJTOM INSTALLATIONS & REPAIRS * Fllfl: UPHOLSTERY CLEANING * COMMERCIAL & INSURANCE WORK
1714) 645-3708
King's Carpet Co.
Cotto Mesa, Calif. 92626
Marcy and Little Marcy ,
Award Winning Children's Recording Artist
Huntington Center Mall
.
'November 4th 12 am-1 pni-3 pm
Some Favorite
Marcy Albums
* LITTLE MARCY TALKS WITH
THE ANIMALS * LITTLE MARCY VISITS
SMOKIE THE BEAR * MARCY SINGS
JESUS LOVES ME * MARCY SINGS • NURSEY RHYMES * MARCY SINGS SUNDAY SCHOOL SONGS * CHRISTMAS IS ON IT'S
WAY WITH MARCY
I 11
• , ••
3 Autograpl1ed Albums
5.00 REGULAR PRICE
$1.91'EAQH Sat. .my
ALL MAlCY ALBUMS AVAILABLE AT
amlQg BOOK STORE
••• Jud aoocl boob
' '
In Tho MALL
'J7 Huntington C1nter
Hunllntfon Booth
• • •
-.
Green Thumbs · Up
A Green Thumb -will spi:ing up at Newport Elementary Sl:h o o I PTA 's ,.
carnlva1 Sat~day, Nov. 4, at the school. Games and fOOd ,also will -be available ¥ the 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.,event. In !\le gardening mood are•Jill Sb ardson ~eft), _
a,nd Cindy Stewart. · , . i· ' • ' • I
. I '
Hp rVest of Fun
o/iege Park PTA will celebrate the end of harvest season with a Country Har·
ve.t W'Dival at 10 t:.m. Saturday, .No•. 4, at the school. Ready for some fun
after reaping·~ bountiful hal:vest m Denise Hess and Matthew McAllistu. I , , .
Sh oppin g c;it C:ountr y Store
WJille parenbr shop at the Wll9on PTA's Country Store Saturday. pct. 28, chili
dren wlll have their races made up as clown1, dlp Into e treasure cheat or vi.&' i\ Spook Hoose. Tb• 10..,... 8"111 '"111 lliclude a il!PJlllc rumag• Iii• and
a oil. ll'bldlng trelsuroe are11~'Arndt Jr. and KatJtfeen Widoo.
•r
• •
s DAILY PILOT
Fund-raising Fun
Bewitching Ahead Event·s
'c
EDITOR'S NOTI!: A column
devot.4 10 N<tDpMI Beach,
Costa Mesa, Laguna Stach
and Mission Viejo partT1.£..
leader organioztioru will
appear In th< DAILY Pl·
WT each week. lnforma-
ticm mutt be rtcrivtd by
the toomn't department or
Mr1. Gored Smllll, 1748
CenleUo Ploce, N<tDpMI
Beach by 5 p.m. Thursda11
for publication We<tnesday.
Bay Vi ew PTA
Mn. Donald McDowell
President
COMING UP: Halloween
carnival from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. Saturday, Oct. 28. Mala
attractions will be Milnlck
the Magician and a spoo"k
house.
CdM Hi gh PTA ~ -Mn. Tbeo Tale
Pftsklent
COMING UP: Parents ·qi
juniors and seniors are -urg-
ed to attend the meeUng on
c o 11 e g e admissions~ pro-
cedures and dat.es at 7:30
tonight in the little theater.
Parents also will meet Den-
nis Evans, principal and
visit ~ms. During the
refreshment hour in the
cafeteria a fund.raising Gold
Elephant sale will lake
place. Proceeds wfl1 be used
for school and student equip-
ment.
CM High PTSA
Mrs. Carl Rotman
President
COMING UP: Baclt-to-school
!tight from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
tomorrow will feature cam-
pus tOW'S by the Girls'
League. Refreshments of
coffee, punch and cookies
will be served Jn the
cafeteria. Exhibits will jn-·
elude band, girls' gym-
nastics and boys' wrestl-
ing ... Third annual school
carnival, Marty's Q:irral will
Nicoll, superlnt.endelll ol the
Newport.M-U n I r l e d
School District. Quesllon and
angwer sesston will follow
and the public II illviled to
attend.
Linda Vista PTO
Mn. lllcloaN Nlederlumw
Presidet4
OOMJNG UP : Annual
Halloween carnival from 10
a.m.. to 4 p.m. Satw-day,
Oct. 18, at school. A~
tractions will Include games,
food and a country store
lealuring ~· gilts rrori\ fl IO fZ5,,"°"'kJn Viejo
Hlgh Scbool· bind will pro-
•Jde music and cba!'col
portralls 'may be/.U!'Chased rrom artist J""!' ennings.
Mesa Verde PT A .. '
Mn. O.\>ld ~
President
COING UP: Annual Halloween .
carnival featuring t h e
famous haunted ho u s e
Salill'day, Oct 28 from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. Mrs. David
Cbamberlaln and Mi's Ray-
mond ·Henka, chairmen, an-
nounce that game booths,
continuous showing o f
• • Road-Runner" cartoons
and food will be reatured .
Mont e Vista PT A
Mrs. Thomas E. Herndon
President
COMING UP: A Haunted Hap;
penlng will theme the annual
carnival Saturday, Oct. 28,
from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Newport Hts. PT A
Mn. Jame• G.'Blala
President
COMING UP: ·Ann u al
Halloweeen carnival from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdo.y,
Oct. 28 Featured will he
food , drink, games, plants,
flower and wtllte elephant
booth.$ and a walking.toy
lady. • .Aluminum can drive
each _ Wednesday morning.
Proceeds wUl be used for
playground equipment.
REPORTS: Mrs. Robert D.
B e auchamp, membership
chairman reported that llO'I
joined the PTA , Winning
classes were Mrs. Frank
Rose's and Mn , Don IC.
DeMarini's. Flannel toys
made by board members
were dispensed at unit
meeting to symbolize good
will and warm reelings. To
insure that parents receive
the various Dyers that are
sent home a contest is
underway,,
·Paularin o PTA
Mn. Paal O.malo
Presiilont -
COMING UP: fig T9P"fl the
theme ot the carnl•at to ta~• place from, 1o:IO' 1.n\.
to 3:30 PJA. SatuNloy, ~o•.
4. Features will include the
Christmas boutique, general
store, (oi>d and gam<!S.
Volunteers may contact Mn.
Gary Rho!lus at -· Mrs . William Brannick, Sf9:.
0018 is collecting items for
the boutique •.. Guest-lee·
lurer from the Rayell Co.
will speak to students on
Wednesday, Nov. a, cm
ecology and the recyclil)g or
alumimun. Drive is planned
in the near future.
REPORTS : Profit realized
Crom the paper drive was
$88. PrizeS were awarded to
the classes of Mrs. Marvel
Carlson and G e o r g e
Robertson.
Presi dio PTA-
Mn. . J!'!lh TbomptOD
President
COMING UP: Deco u pa g'e
workshop at 9:30 ·a. rrf.
tomorrow; in the' home Ct
Mrs. John Cavin, ways and
c h a l r .s:n an .. .Bewitching
breal!fast Saturday, Qct. U ,
[rom 8 to 11 a.m. in the
multipurpose room. Adults
$1.25 and children 85 cents.
Cotume parade with prizes
will be featured.
• Prince of Peace PTF
Mn. I\. M. HoHIDgto•
President
COMING UP: Filth annual
candy aale ends Tuesday,
Oct. 31. Mn. Walter Dixon,
chairman annouuces that
the candy is individually
wrapped and perfect for
trick-0r-tteaters.
Rancho
San Joa qu in PT A
· .. ~ Roberti'bley
•-T l'Josid<ll! .
co~t!Jl;~aclt~ ni&bt 18t<7: 15 p:m. OOllljllTOW.
Parents will rollow an ab-
\ brevia~ schedule of their
child's daily pr OJI r a:.m .
Refreshments Will be served
in the qoad area and
membership dues will be ac-
cepted,
St. Joachim PF
Mn. Jobn E. S&oneman
President
\X!MING 'UP : Annual carn;•aJ
from nooD'll··to 4 p . m .
Satµl11ay, Oct. 28, on the
sd!OOI yanl.' Parents wm
ass;st In tBe lood, drink,
game, cake walk, pa.int·a-
f a e e and boutiqu.e
boo tbs ... An eight-week
, Toastmaster International
Youth Leadership • program
will be · this week in the parlsh"~U.
Sonora PTA,
""· :F""" <COMING UP: La Fie$ de
Sonora, aimua1 ., c h o o I
·caritival · Will ~·"place
Saturday, Oct. 28. at 2:30
p.m. A home<o0ked Mei-
ican dinnet will be served in ...
·.
the multipurpose room
from 5 to 7 p.m.
REPORTS : A total or ii$
members were enrolled dur-
ing the memberahip drivt.
Winning claael were thole
of Mrs. Jack Parham, Mn.
Jack: Thomas and Mrs.
Edward Urich.
Thurston PT A
Mn. Jack RaadaU
Prresldent
......
COMING UP: Penonal in·
vitatiom are being exteD
to parents of first year;
students to tour t b e
school. • . Handbook co
taining information o n
school activities, teachers
names and phone numbers
and school regulationt l
beb)g published by tJleiPTA
board. ~-
REPORTS: A Ghoul Gather
ing took place for teaebers.
aides, administrators a~
new board members ~:) eluding the Mmes. Jacte•
Randall, president; Robf!rt)
Josephson and Clayton Gar{
rison, vice pres Id en ts ;
Theodore Ginsberg
recording secretary; <'.onnie
Walquist, treasurer;
French, David Clement:r'a
Douglas De Vol~ hospitality ,
C.Cil Lewis, pub II cl t y ·
Richard Stott, historian;
Robert P.Qrter, au d Ito r ·
Jobn l'ltnCUSO, membership
along with David Lloyd a
parliamentarian.
Victoria PTA
MrL 'l\)m Lutcavlsll --
President
COMING UP: Halloween
spoot nlgbt·wjli start a -
p.m. ·Tueldly, Oct;:-S ·
t!Chool. OJotyme,)111'~
be judged ud •. spook
may be enjoyed by oD
Entertal.Mleot wW
Norman Way, •
and Jock LlUleton llli4
Kist.Ian. magicians.
'
take place Friday through Ji"';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"i!i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
SUnday, Nov. 3-5. Proceeds
from the ev~ will benefit
campus booster clubs and
the associate.d student body.
Del Cerro PT A
Ml'. aad Mn. -Dlllfy JJrosidents
REPORTS: lipeclal mm was
produced by-the students to
introduce the teachers at
back·to·school n ig h t.
Parents visited clEl!Sl"OOms
where teachers explained
their objectives and methods
for the year. Membership
drive was launched.
Eastbluff PFO
Mrs. Eugene Kovach
President
COMING UP : Membenhlp
drivt ends Friday Oct. rT.
First class to reach 100 per.
cent will receive a $10
award for the purchase of
e quipment or a
party ... Paul Bunyan pan-
cake breakfast Saturday,
Oct 28, at school.
El Mo rro PTA
Mn. Robert Anderson
President
COMING UP : Coffee and
orientation for parents of
new students tomorrow at 9
a.m. in the library. Tour of
classrooms will
follow .• .Boo Blast, annual
Halloween carniva1. from 1 t
a.m. to 3 p.m Saturday,
Oct 2.8, on the school
grounds.
Estancia PTSA
Mn. RobenlD«I
President
'coMING UP: Baclt-lc>«bool
nlght and Ice cresm llOClal
tomorrow. Miss S h e r r y
Angel, second •Ice president
and membership chalnnan
will be available to accept
dues from students and
parents.
REPORTS: Mrs. Alfred Van
Hoosen chaired a meetlng
on drug problems.
Harbor View PFO Mn. _ ... Card
President
COMING UP: Halloween
carnival and C 0 S t U ril e
parade at 11 a.m. Staurday,
Oc~ 28. Attra~ will in-
clude a moon bounce, rum·
mage and bake aale. bart>e--
qued hot clogs and chm.
~aiser PTA
I Mn.OiarlttMcGavru
President
COMINO UP: .._iu.n 14
will be dllcusaed at 7:1111
p.m. MondaJ, Oct. IO, In Ibo
aucUtortum. Speokll'I will be
-blyuiln Robert E •
. ~ and 'Dr. ,Jobn
Now In Its 2.1 st Gr~at Year
• FREE
COOKING SCHOOL
•
Mesa Theater
1884 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa
Every Thursday, Oct. 26 thru Nov. 16-9:30.11:30 A.M.
HELPFUL HOLIDAY HINTS
MORE THAN $1 ,000 IN
, FAEE PRIZES e SURPRISES e GIFTS
Charmglow and Caloric Gas Barbecues and
other prizes given each week
Second printin g of one of the most
popular cook books ever sold in t he
Orange Coaat a ~ea ••• 247 of the
best recipes se lected from the cook-
in g 1c.hool'1 f int, 19 ye a rs for just
$1 . Pre pa red last year t o ma rk the
~0th anniversa ry of t he sc hool , the
book was _}~ sellout. Here't your
sltcond ch'fnce.
Sold only at the. CookincJ School
Alpll• hto Mullets
Cnl•lc:.~
DaYll • llrown <
'
Co c~ _.. I ·-, • ..pull!Olwu by -. ,
' So1111;111 c••· Gas eo . .........
Ora1199 Ca.t DAILY PG.QT
• Co •t C1 mn •1 ~011191 Dltt1 lct COi •'!'* C... _.tldstt Wilt Csl1111)
-
/.
..
• •
3 DAil Y PILOT Wfd"""'Y Ouobtt 2S, 1972
Ovens Warmed for Special Holiday Cookies
.
BecaUle 1 know I will be
asked ror this f a vorite
Olri.stmas cookie, tile fU'St ol
ruany, I hope to get this Ol\t'
jjto my new cookie: booklet
features. eres. paste coloring to ma~e a pret-Spread confectioner's suger clear plastic wrap. Tie with These aod other great Dally Pilot. You may have the
Slay a\li•ay from 1he Nlgl•S · liRke in a 350 oven untll a ty red. icing on Sunta's btard. cnp red )'41.l'd or ribbon so they can reciples wlll ~ In my new bootlet for 30 cents. Pleue
about '• inch or t'OOkl<'~ \ro n 1 pre\!~ golden tone . Do not Using din'e slore 11 n e band and mustache. Let sland be hunG on the Christmas tree.. lleDd a long, stamped, aeU-ed-
C{lnle out clean Slam do11 n ,1,·erbakc l"o"' n11x you red \\'atercolor brushes pa int Sa n-about three minutes. Press on if you like. I do that even for a cookie booklet . Send your ~ dressed envelope with your re.
again. a.it raisins 111 half coloring by beating I egg ta's underlip, nose. cap and fine coconut lhickly. Let dry. cookie tray. 'Ibey also make quest for "Cookies Anyone?'' QLlest. Allow three weeks for
press into tops of cheeks f,•r white slightly v.•1th enough red cheeks. I wrap mine individually in darllng favors. to Nan Wiley ln care ol t~ delivery. ~~~"-'---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'.~~~~----'~~~-"-~~~~~~~~~~=--~~~.'-~~-'--~~~~~-This ooe is Flor£ntines. just
one version of this "old world"
favorite, so rich and elegant
they are definitely not the: It.ind
tq let the kids scoop up by
hindfuls.
F\rst thing, llne a cookie
sbett (with rims) V.'ith greas-
ed foil. It's much easier to
remove cookies than if you
grease-and-flour, although this
may be done .
One reader says she UM!S
TeOo~lined pan!. l don't ha\"t!
any of tborst but I will get at
least three so I can have one
;e< \n the oven while I am
~g another. donate my
s>kl ones to some worthy ehari-
IY· ~ Remember. cookie sheets that are dark on the bottom
Will result in burned cookies
ltnles.1 you keep an eagle eye
1>n the process.
! No, the crea1n in the recipe
t,, oot whipped. That's the first
Jhlng everyone asks.
: You \\'ill need 34 cup
xranulated sugar. 1i cup whii>-
ping cream (not whipped l 4
Jevel table:!poons of butter· ( ~ ·
,tick), I slightly beaten egg
:LETS ASK
THE COOK
by
Nm WRey
~·:hite. "' cup slivered. blanch-:ed almonds, 5 to 6 tablespoons
.Candled orange peel or can-
4ed cherries (diced) and 1'.i. :cup sifted flour. No more than
:that, be: sure to sift.
: Bake: at 300 degrees for 10 to
:U minutes until rich, lacy
brown around Ibo edges. \he .
-!tit of the: cookie (center ) will
be a very pale gold. maybe
even lighter. still S<Jft in the
center.
Watch carefully, these bum
easily. Do not leave the
kitchen or you may regret it.
Cool on wire racks until the
cookies can be peeled from the
foil easily, e'bout 3 minutes. {lf
you use a fOHtick pan, you
may be able lo slide a spatula
or pan cake turner under
them.)
When cookies are cmn·
pletely cool tum them over,
frost bottoms with German's
sweet chocolate melted in the
top of a double boiler ove r hot,
not bolling water.
If cookies firm up too much
before you get them off. the
sheet, pop them back into the
oven for a minute or so
I found it eas.er to loosen
them from greased·noured
sheets by lifting cookie edges
gently, all the way around
with my curved serrated fruit
knife, then sliding a broad
I
I
spatu1a or pancake turner
under them the rest of the
way when they were easy to
handle.
And still more cookies~ This
one: .is for a three-dimensional
Santa Claus head. It i.s a cul·
out
I seldom make more than
one batch, because, if you go
all~t. they are a lot of work
but they are: so darling that
the little ones <and some a lot
bigger) love them . They are
lots of fun to make.
They are a soft. thick cookie
with definite facial charac·
terisUcs. lf you intend to bu y
such cutters better start hun-
ting right now, there will be a
run of them when this hits
print.
You should find them in
h o u s e: wares departments.
possibly some hardware stores
or di5COUnt houses. This one
will be in my new cookie
booklet but please clip and
aave.
Here is the dough part. Sif1
together 41h cup.s alt purpose
flour, YI teaspoon salt, and l
teaspoon baking soda. Cream
together l 1h: Cllps supar, I cup
any kind ol ohortenlng (I use
hydrogenated v e g e t a b I e:
lhorienlng) , 3 medium sized eus -not too arnall or too
large -and whatever flavor-
ing you like; either l teaspoon
vanilla end YI teaspoon lemon
uttact or 1 teupoon vanilla
and 1/• teaspoon almond ex·
tract.
Combine the two mixtures.
If you like, 1hape Into a roll 3
lncbes in diamenter. Wrap in
waxed paperl chill but do not
!teeze. I repeat -do not r-.. .
. U you ere in • hurry use "'"81> w1tbout'=hllliz111, but It's
..... to -chilled dough. cut In .UC. 1 Utile lea than
II 1ndi thlclt. CUt with <the
flotnd cult«. Work with
about -al a tlml. Cleon off edfl• wtlll Up of
I Fresh Cut Up Fryers 00~"''°33~ j
-~~ BEEF ROASTS'
' ' '
Center Cut
Chuck
or 7·Bont
Boneless Roasts :."'.::·. ,, 1E:
Center Cut Chuck Steaks '.:::' 79:
Boneless Round ~o:f.:: 'I~
~~l~ED BACD~ 7 9.~
Fanner Jahn Ham ~:=..~
Part Sausar• ":"'IC>~~
~~
~!ffe]!35~
Cut Up F1Ytn ~!"'..::' 3k
Whole Leis .. ::"-"'"'=' _, 65:.
Fl'Jtr Tlllps '",=." ..,,""' 61:
FIJtr Breasts :.'!"..:: 6k
Fresh Win rs "'~'" 39:.
FR~SHHENTURKEYS 49~
Ground Turkey M11t ::::;: 69:
Sell, Bastlnr Turkeys ·~-47:
. FA.NCY WHITING 7 9.?
Jumbo Shrlm'
Cookttl Sbrllll'
-aua. .. a ---!OlA1
HJiowUlt ~pt. H""'1 tMllM-
p\lMfl\ftS
SLICED I olouna'
Vons Salt ~~~ ................ 12-
lrlih Sprinc D•odorant Solfl ::l'.'24•
FRESH BUTTER 81 c
P•pers Onrnlte Diapers hla'.: .. 95'
1 U B ''Tll! l><a. ... -• p IYtra&:• l10l.CAHl .... 6P,\0: •... 89•
Italian Salam• ~P'K~a~ J.o.z. l'Ku.49'
Mollll'tlla rRi~~n~~~,~~~--.~~. 1&•
. POTATO SALAD 37c
llstlll R1u Wint :::'.'.".'.~. '2•
Relska YoAI ~.~.':1.~~~ .......... 'I"
STRAIGHT KY.
ourbon
MARS BARS
,, .. i. •• 11<>9. 73' 111.0t. a..,i ••••.•••
POPCORN
.... --35' j, Y ...... 32-0D.. •
SLIM PRICE Bread @WHITE-Wl-EAT-SAN)W!Oi
APPLE CITY
Appia Sauce
WESTWOOD SKIPPY Ice Cream Dou Food
Ylra Towels ~~~.~ .... 37•
Zit ,.,.. lllpkla ~ .......... ti'
TV TRAYS ggc ENRICHED
Vons Flour
81-II Toot~1te ~~ ....... 63'
Jercen1 Skin Lotton ~'. ....... 81' n--1.1' L c Cl.W fl:Ol:E,.. 89' innrvo11 orn DOJOOU5,IEAA.5 •••••••••••
Fancr F1n11 Corn ~~e':1.oz.2f'
GINOS PIZZA 59 c
¥111 Elllltllllu ::Jr;;.. ...... 85'
Ptt • Q.m To,,iac ~ ........ a!I'
FABRIC I . TOILET
Softener Tissue
DOUBLE
BLUE CHI I STAMPS
· ON YOUR PURCHASE
Exdm. Liquor, Tolwt:o 111111 -6
o./tyl'rDdllcls
TABLETS
60-CT.BTI.
We f!ht!()ld 811,l
Cucumbers ... ""'
Spinach .....,....,,
EaPlant,,..,,....,,
Lemons ... ..,, ......
Fresh Cut Flowen
~.=n.""'I!:' -19c flOWBS Km YCX. UC11 -'""'•
SWEET
c
Appia CidaP
STEWED TOMATOES 23 c
Batllroo• Cit-~ .. oi:-.19'
Sp1"1tfll Saact Ml1 ~ ....... 2f
DETERGEN'I'
Drive ~WA.Ste
• I
i
•
f •
j -· 511111 Clown (not too 1-rd) on 1 pulry cloth or
UlhllY Dollred boanl. Pick up I 0111 and culler wlth a
l!l&tula. 'l\irn 0vtr In hand, 34011 ~ &en\IY P«U dough Into t' . 0
Adams Ave., at Brookhurs~ Huntington Beach
Doheny Park D · e, Capistrano Beach
5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beach
Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro ' .
21082 Beach Blvd., Huntingtori &eac-l
17950 Magnolia, Fountain Va_,
I • -
Wfdittsd.ly, October 25, 1972 DAILY PILOT 37
Puddings Paired
CHOCOLATE PUFF
2 squarH (2 ounce s)
whites untU stiff; fold Into
chocolate mixture.
double-boil<r top over bolling
water.
Amazi ng
Absorbent
UIE unsweetened chocolate
l cup milk
I tablespoon butter
I cup rtne soft bread crumbs
\.i cup sugar
Tum inlo a buttered 1-quart
round glass cauerole (61h by
2~ inches) or similar utensil.
Bake in a preheated 350-
degree oven until cracked and
slightly crusty on top -40
minutes.
Meanwhile stir t o g et h e r
cocoa, 2 tablespoons sugar,
cornslarth and salt ; blend n
remaining 1/4 cup cold mJlk,
t.b<n stir Into scalded milk.
JONNY CAT~·
ROASTED BONUS: BASTED VEGETABL ES -
Lamb Flavored Tradi tionally
Summer Menu Moves Inside
lf we a t her permits,
Rotisserie Lamb lakes to the
outdoor grill in fine style.
There's no J¥e(I., however, to
end the rotisserie se&SOl'l just
because fall has aITi ved.
Some of our newest ap-
pliances now a llow us to bring
summer cookery right in-
doors!
Peppe!° Form rectangular pan to 2 hours, basting with COOi·
2 cloves garlic, minced catch dripp~ by turning up bined olive oil, lemon juice,
1 teaspoon oregano edges of double thickness of and honey mixture.
1 M':8~1espoon grated lemon heavy duty aluminum foil !if.a At end of I hour, place
1M tomaloes, onions and green
y, cup olive oil inches all around; miter corn-pepper in dripping pan with v .. cup lemoo juice ers to make finn. Place pan lamb juices.
2 tablespoons honey at rear ol grill. Test lamb for doneness by
4 tomatoes, peeled and chop-Insert spit through lamb and stopping the spit and iMerting
ped secure at ends with prongs. a meat thermometer. Lamb is
v, teaspoon salt
3 eggs, separated
In a 11,1..quart heavy
saucepan over low heat, beat
the chocolate and milt until
chocolate melts; remove from
heat and whhl< to blend any
choco1&10 nec:U.
Add bullet, crumbs, sugar
and salt and stir to blend. In a
small miDng bowl, beat egg
yolks slightly; stir In a litUe of
the hot chocolate mixture,
then stir back Into pon.
C.001. In the clean small
mixing bowl beat the egg
JOE'S
Serve at once (before puff
sinks) with whipped cream.
Makes 4 to 8 .servings.
HOMEMADE CHOCOLATE
PUDDING
2 cups milk
2 tablespoons cocoa
4 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1/4 teaspoon salt
I egg
~ teaspoon vanilla
Scald 1~ cups of the milk in
Cook over boiling water,
stirring constantly, until mix-
ture has thickened 1ligbtly.
Beat egg well; mix in the
remaining 2 tab1e1 po o ns
sugar. Slowly stir bot mixture
into egg and eugar, then stir
back Into doubl .. bolier top.
Cook over bolling water.
stirring constantly, u n ti I
smooth aM thkkened -about
2 minutes. Remove from heat.
Mix in vanilla. Cool.
Pour into lndividual dessert
dishes; chill. Makes 4 serv·
iogs.
_. -----Garage l'loo ra
,
Drivew a ys
Sprinkle Jonnr, Cit Cit llttlH'
on oil spots, et absorb •nd
sweep up. For old oH UM tof.I
vtnt, then sweep with Jon.,,,
C.t ctt litttr. ,.. •. , ... ,_ ....
-,
608 EAST BALBOA BLVD., BAL BOA
REFRIGE RATED DELIVERY SERVICE: PHONE 67U310
SPECIAU THUU DAY, RIDAY, UtUlDAY, OCTOlll 2•, 27, JI
100°/o PURE, FRESH MRS. CUBBISON'S
PURE PORK
SAUSAGE
ORANGE ·
JUICE
TURKEY
DRESSING
SQUEEZED DAILY REG. or CORNBREAD . -59c $115 ( A
BOX c • Quart Half Gal.
OPfll f •·"'· to •:JO p.1111. -1 .,_,. • WHt W• ...-w• tM rltht to llmlt llJ .. ltltt... o,.. t •·"'·to 6:30 p.m. -1 0.,. e W ...
The often neglected. but ex-
tremely tasty, shoulder of
lamb has been boned and lied
into a roast. It is marinated in
the traditional lamb navorings
-garlic, lemon and oregano
2 medium onions, chopped Set spit in motion and grill done when it registers 170 de-
2 mediwn green peppers, _'.m~e~a:_t o~v":er~m~ed'.lliu~m~he~a:_t a~bo~ut~g~r_:<ees=·~M:"'ak~es=..."8..'se~rv~in'!g=•·-~=====================================~ chopped '·
-and placed on the rotisserie
spit.
Perhaps ooe of the most
pleasant bemuses ol. rotisserie
cookery is the flavorful drip-
pings co ll ected in an
aluminum Coil drip pan. Don't
let the drl~ go to waste!
Add a s11 o r t a d vegetables
about l hour before the lamb
is completed and cook until
fork tender. It's a great
Greek-like menu!
ROTISSERIE LAMB
6 pounds shoulder of lamb,
boned and rolled
2 teaspoons salt
Pas ta's
Perfect
From Italian cuisine -a
Geona specialty.
SP AGHETl'I WTTD PESTO
SAUCE
1/3 cup olive on
1/4 cup grated Pannesa&
cheese
2 large cloves garlic, peeled v .. teaspoon salt
2 tablespoom pine nuts
I cup {generous) fairly
loosely packed fresh basil
leaves
·~ pound thin spaghetti
Tum all the ingredients ex-
cept the spaghetti, in order
listed, into an eJectric blender;
blend unUI a smooth paste
forms; stir down a few times
with a rubber spatula U
necessary. (Makes about two
thirds cup.)
Boil spaghetti according to
package directions; drain in a
colander.
Add the basU paste to the
saucepot and spread over bot.-
tom ; add spaghetli and (over
low heat) mix well to coat all
strands with the sauce. (Add
more salt if desired.)
~e at mce. Makes 4 first·
coune or 3 main-course serv-
ings.
Place lamb on large sheet of
heavy dutv aluminum foil.
Combine s31t, pepper. garlic,
oregano, and lemoo rind. Rub
lamb with a little of the olive
oU, then with salt mixture.
Close foil over lamb and let
stand t OOur at room tem-
perature-, ... or several hours in
refrigerator.
Fancy
Finish
An absolutely delicious par·
ty dessert.
HELEN ~1cCULL Y'S
SOUR CREAM TORTE
3 cups sifted flour
314 cup sugar
1 cup butter. cut up
I egg
Filling and Assembling, see
below
Mix the flour and sugar
together in a bowl. Work in
the butter with a pastry
blender until the mii:ture looks
mealy
Stir in the unbeaten egg and
mix with your bands until the
dough holds together. Divide
into 7 equal parts.
Roll each part into a 9-inch
circle on a lightly floured
cookie sheet (use a 9-inch cake
pan as your guide). Bake 10 to
12 minutes In a preheated 350-
degree oven until the edges
begin to brown lightly.
You'll undoubtedly have to
bake the layers in 2 or 3
batches. Cool and lift Crom the
cookie sheet with a spatula.
Filling a n d Assembling :
Chop 2 cups walnuts very fine
(t ot in blender) and mix with
two s-ounce cartons com-
mercial sour cream. l lh: cups
confectioners' sugar and l
Jeaspoon vanilla.
Spread between the baked
layers, arranging them on top
of one another. Sift con-
fectioners' sugar over the top
layer.
Mellow in the refrigerator
for about 5 hours or longer.
fl . '7' /J. ITALI AN DELI e BAKERY
ol..ucc1 el.J11li RESTAU RANT
891 1 Adams at JMgnolla, Huntington Beach,
OM llf IM ttrtttl Dell ~ Ill c•~ l llP 11111 °",... ...... 21 rot'n
o.11¥ IM;"'· It-ft S-. IM: a.MM-.: t61-446' Jm )t i'! ....... ntn MtW!*1 hlcll-CMtl MIM , ..... Ill VJt119Y
;ulii!"Kiiii -fl' .... 11.Jf PIE NO LIMIT IX!". 1111 99•
6'f' OWii HMNIMtii illlllfl MIW ... Mel SAUSAGE .. , "" u.11 ........... 1..,.....Jt1'. 11'1 MORTADELLA s1,09 ...
•
•
A free coup9n worth toe off on
Weber's Roman Meal®English Muffins is just
one of the many good things we put into
every loaf of Webers Roman Meal® Bread.
Oh, do we put a lot of good
things into every loaf of Weber 's
Roman Meale Bread.
Like 20 % more protein than
standard white bread.
And a unique blend of
whole grain wheat, whole grain
rye, and other ingredient s
including pure golden honey.
All of which gives it a tasty
nutty-crunchy flavor.
And now we've added
something else.
Inside every loaf, you'll also find a free coupon
good for 10¢ off on our Roman Meal. English Muffins.
And m-m-m-m what muffins. Deliciously
different. With a hearty nutty flavor that comes from
making them with the fin est
whole grain ingredients and the
purest of honey.
So pick up ;t loaf of Weber's
Roman Meal. Bread today. And
enjoy Weber's Roman Meal.
English Muffins at breakfast
tomorrow.
They just might make getting
out of bed a little bit easier.
Im
nllEl'81Rl2 emnos CIJl'POlillDl
'
•
•
...
...
I ' •"
Boxty-o.n-the-griddle Predicts
By CECILY BROWNSTONE
............. "9111 .......
There's a charming
tlallowetn custom in lreland.
We came upon a description
ot tt tn .. Feasting Galore-
Reclpea and Food Lote from
lreland" by Maura Laverty.
liere is what the author
says:
''In the North end West of
lrtland, boxty some t i mes
takes the place ot t h e
Halloween barmbrack as a
prognosticator of tile year's
weddings. A ring wrapped In
wax paper is mlxed In with
the \)atler. And the girls ar•
waroed:
"Boxty-oo--the-griddle boxty·
in-the-pan,
If you don't eat boxly, you'll
never get your man."
But Boxty-in-lhe-Pan is too
good to serve only o o
Halloween. If you try the
following recipe, we think
you'll agree.
BOXTY-IN-THE-PAN
IV. cups water
S medium Potatoes
11> cups sifted floor
I teaspoons blllnc powder
1 teaspoon salt
3 eggs
I cup mUt
1/4 cup butter, melted
1 tablespoon bacon fat
In a l 'n:.q u a r t saucepan
bring water to a boll. Peel 2 of
the potatoes: cut into 8ths;
add to bolling water.
Cover and boll over medium
beat until potatoes are BOft.
and water h8' cooked
away-12 to 15 m.Inule1; check
often to avoid acorchl111.
Mash potato.. through food
mill ; meaaure o/4 cup firmly
packed. If there la any lell-
over, use 1n another dlah.
On wax paper sift together
the !lour, baking powder and
salt; set aside. Beal eggs
well; add milk and butter.
Peel remaining potatq and
Future
llnely ahred; -l 0 ftO)()Ve water. 'Ibtre sboukt
be about v. cup Wedded
potato allf.r ~-
In a large mbdn( bewl,
t11orougli}y mix s h r e d d e d
potato with maolled potato.
With a pastry blender mix In
1ifted flour mixture until fine
crumbs are formed.
Stir In mllk mixture until
flour Is completely dampened.
Spoon bacon fat into a 9-inch
cut-iron aklllet. Place in ti
Brides
pr<beated 425-<leirte own for
about I mlnulel to -blCon
!al and pan.
Removt pan from own and
swirl becon fat over bottom of
pan: Add better.
Return pen to oven and bake
until top ts browned ind edges
are crllp and -to IO minutes.·
Serve rrom paJJ; or turn out
of pan, tum right aide up. Cut
Into wedges. Serve ho! with
!>Utter. Makes 6 oervtnp.
NOW OUR AD PRICES ARE GOOD MONDlt.Y thru SATURDAY
Mayonnaise Laura S<udd•" aT.
Crisco Oil
Cake Mixes Betty crocker
24 oz.
3FOR $)
69¢
83¢
Giant
1 LB.
Gain Detergent
Folgers Coffee
Folger~ Coffee 2 lb. 1.65 Folgers Coffee 3. lb. 2.39
Sunshine Kri spy Crackers , LB 35c
Jif Peanut Butter c ... m, •• ""''' " oz. 59c
Knudsen First Quality Butter , LB. 86c
MJB Brown Rice
B&M Baked Beans
Bttf or Chicken Flevor 6 OZ. 4 fQf $1
B&M Brown Bread
Mug Root Beer " ...
21 oz.
16 oz.
.
6 PK.
37c
33c
59c
Shop anytime, these prices good 1hru Oct. 28
FREE PUMPKINS
THURS .• FRl.-SAT. ONLY
Apple Taffy
Pu\\s in Fans
Ch6-o1t r19ul111r or tugtr-fret
Italian Dressing
Royale Towel s
Wi1hbon•
Big roll
, oz. 3 for $1
4 for $1
,r::;;;;;2_
ONE OF THE EXTRAS YOU GET WHEN
YOU SHOP AT RICHARD'S! YOU GET
A PUMPKIN FREE WITH A $.5 OR MORE
PURCHASE. MAKE A PIE, C A RV E A
JACK-0-LANTERN -HAVE FUN!
AS ALWAYS. THE FINEST MEATS ARE FROM RICHARD'S
Don't look now, but it will
soon be time to start trunking
about tbe candies and cookies
that you'll y,·ant to p:epare for
Ha\loy,·een trick or treaters.
Here are two comp letely
new recipes -a mouth-water-
ing appte flavo r brittle. and
a cookie topped with a thick,
tangy-rich mixture of spices
blended in canned apple sauce.
For Poppy Apple Cookies, a
-rich butter cookie is the base
for a most unusual com·
bination of seasoned apple
sauce and whole poppy seeds.
Throughout the baking and
storing. the poppv seeds retain
their ·•crunch," giving a
cookie with a nice blend or
texb.res of the butter cookie,
apple sauce and poppy seeds.
Both recipes are a special
treat for the holiday.
APPLE TAFFY
BRmLE
4 cups sugar
2 cups dark or light com
syrup
l cup canned apple guce
2 cups aalted peanuts
2 teaspoons butter
in teaspoon baking soda
Combine sugar. corn syrup
and apple !&uce in large heavy
pot. Cook slowly, stirring until
sugar diS.90lves. Cook to soft
boll stage, about 15 minutes.
Test a few drops in ice water.
Rub aome of salt off peanuts
with paper towel. A d d
peanuts.
Cook to hard-crack stage.
about 5 minutes longer. Test a
few drops in ice water again.
Jtemove candy from heat
while testing. Add butter and
baking aoda . S!ir to blend.
(Mixturt will bubble.)
Pour onto two buttered jelly
roll pans. Cool partially by lif-
ting around edges w I t h
spatula. Keep spatula moving
under mixture to prevent
sticking. When firm but still
warm, tum over. Break into
pieces when <>c>led.
POPPY APi'LE
t'OOKIES
1 e&1n (18 ouncesl apple
sau«
2 teaspoons lemon juice
l'• teaspoon nutmeg
1.~ teaspoop cloves
z tab!-poppy -3 paclula,. (3 ounoet each)
cmmcbeelo
t cup marprlne or ahorte1>-
U.
I --grated lemon rloil • .
iv. cupo llltod al~pu.,,,..
flour
'I• cup sugar
Z teupoons hoking powder
Yt teupoon Nit
2 egg1, beaten
In taucepan, ·combine apple
1auce, lemon Juice, nutmeg
and -Brlot 1.0 • boll; thtn rtduce htat and slmIMr
untll apple aauce lJ thickened.
about 30 minutes. Cool. Stir in
poppy seeds. Makes l cup.
Cream the cream cheese,
margarine and lemon rind
together until fluffy. Sift
together flolD', sugar, baking
powder and salt; gradually
blend into cheese mixture. Stir
in eggs; blend well. Chill at
least 2 hours or until firm
enough to handle.
Divide dough intp 3 parts.
Roll out each part on floured
board to lf.&-inch thickness. Cut
into circles, using a 2-inch
cookie cutter. Place on
ungreased baking s h e et s .
Make a small indentation in
center of each cookie and fill
wilh a scant' teaspoon of apple-
poppy seed ~ture. Bake et
350 degrees for about 15
minutes, or until golden.
Makes about 3 dozen cookies.
Pair Have
Nutty Top
Ingenious cooks t e a m
chicken salad with fruit.
Diced Bartlett pears are ad-
ded lo the chicken mixtire
and it is moi stened, most ap-
propriately. with c urried
mayonr.aise and served on
pear halves.
Salted peanuts make the
topping.
The amount of curry powder
called fc.r in the recipe gives
distinct flavor; if you want a
milder combination, add less
of the curry.
CURRIED CHICKEN
AND PEAR SALAD'
7 Bartlett pears
2 cups diced cooked chicken
I/, cup diced green pepper
1i'i cup thiny sliced celery
213 cup mayonnaise
1 teaspoon curry powder
~ teaspoon salt
Dash of white pepper
Lemor1 juice
Salad greens
Ya cup 59lted peanuts
Halve, core and dice one of
lhe pears; mix with chick~n.
green pepper and celery.
In a 5IDlll mixing bowl, with
a spoon or fork, blend the
mayonoalJe, curry powder,
.. tt and pepper; to.. with
chicken-pear -mixture. Cover
and chill. ,
Sl>ottl1 before eervlog time,
halve and cort the remaining
six pean. Bruah cut ourl...,.
with lemon Juice to prevent
dartenlni. Cover and cblll
At aervlng time, line In-
dividual salad paltes with
aalod IP'fflll; place two pear
halves oo each plate. Top with
chicken-pear '41a'd. Sprinkle
with ptanuts. Serve at once Jn
I servtnas.
OUR FINEST PRODUCE AT SPECIAL EVERYDAY PRICES
Delicious Apples 3 LBS. 87¢
Cantaloupe Large, Ripe LB. 12¢
Cauliflower grea• raw with dips
Corn Golden Jubilee, partly husked I
T~• H••llhy Trick or Tr•1I!
Funky Granola Snacks I OZ. PKb.
~~~m
FRENCH CHEESE SALE
Bonbel I OZ.
Laugh ing Cow Cubes • oz.
Laughing Cow Wheels • oz.
Fondine • oz.
T e1t• the'" -Demo Fri. I Set.
Ameri ca n Singl es ICreH 12 OZ..
Rtat• Exlr• ler9t
White Asparagus 211/• oz.
.,~
39ceA.
llceA.
lOc
69c
69c
69c
69c
75c
1.79
OUR ATTRACTIVE EVERYDAY PRICES
Jewish Moon Bread w1" ,.,,., ..... , .. , •• 55c
Potato Dinner Rolls ~ DOZ. 39c
Raised Sugar Donuts l•••r'• do11n 1.29
Sour Cream Cake 99c
California Fryors Whole Body
Spareribs -Your choice -regulor or country style
These •re extra lean, from Iowa co rn -fed pork!
Cut ·UP Frye rs F•mily. Si1• 49c lb. Split Broilers 2 'ii lb. 11v9, 45c lb.
Chicken Breasts 89c lb. Whole Legs 69c lb.
Rib C•g• R•mo .... d -11'1 •xtr1 v1lu•! H•nd cut, 10 no b•ckbone intlud•d
Fresh Chicken Livers 69c lb. Gizzards 39c lb.
Necks and Backs lOc lb. Boneless Rump Roast . 1.39 lb.
CANDLELIGHT MEATS FAVORITE SEAFOOD
Yi Cornish Game Hens 59c ea. Turbot Fillets
Ov•n r••dy.
Stuffed Pork Chops 98c lb. Butterfish
79c lb.
79c lb.
Tltlek ehop1, 1p•ci11I 1tuffin2
DO NOT HESITATE TO ASK FOR PERSONAL SERVICE
White -16 OZ.
Sheepherder's Bread 39c
s.rv. it hot with h••riv 1oup1.
Enchiladas v,. •·••mp• "h oz. 3 for $1
Choo1t b••f, ch•••• or chick•n
Baby Limas ,;,,,, ,,, " oz 4 for $1
Zucchini Squash ,;,,,, ,,, "oz. 6 for $1
~~ marKeIS
Turnovers Pepperidge farm
AU 5 l(ind1, 12 1( OZ.
39c
Orange Juice ,;,,,.,, •oz. 5 for $1
H•¥• pl•ntv on h•nd for 9111•1, 11uc•1
Fordhook Limas a;,,,,,. "oz. 4 for $1
Ice Cream Ard•ll 1i-C•nt•1111i•1 11i GAL 1.29
TREATED
Eucalyptus
Brown's; golds, plums end 9re•ns,
tre•ted 1o last for x••rs.
'/, GALLON SPECIAL
Boord' s Gin R.9. 9.86 $8.88
~ ... -~---
"'£.~ LIDO CENTER 3433 Via Lido, Newport Beach "'£.~ HARBOR VIEW 1660 Mac Arthur, Newport Beach
OPEN DAILY9 -7, SUN. 9 -6 673-6360 OPEN DAILY9 -8, SUN. 9 -6 673-2155 ,.
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PILOT./.OVERTISER
-· Octar 25, 1912 o.l!LV PILOV9
&>ilemmas Don't Bother Lee .. •
MALIBU BEACH -"My
old man gets more htrned on
by food than wom:!t\. For e1.
ample, when he sea eggplant
Pannesan or artlthokes
vlnal&rette 10 by, his eyea
glaze over, and hil pu1,.
quickens in the Nme'way I've
seen men look tl beautiful
women," actress Lee Grant
said 1n her old barn·red,
ramblJn& farmhouse.
Lee and bu produw h"'" ba!>I Joe Feury and da~hter
Dfunh shar& a wonderful house
nestled on a hill over loo)dng
the ocean.
"Llsten, when Joey puts
something into his mouth, and
the food is really the way it
sbould be, well ... He really
shouldn't ·be at the table at
all," Lee shrieked I gunning
bu rocking chair.
"J must say Joey Pas a rela·
tionshlp to food. He's always
worried, no matter how much
J cook, there won't be enough!
He was brought up by an
Italian mother \\'ho made like
2• pork chops for breakfast.
"It's astounding Joe is not
as wide as he ls tall. I re!llly
don 't know why. but I love
that bees.use it's not a threat
to me. I can always send out
for more chicken!"
Lee Grant would do well to
think of becoming a com.
edienn e. She's a crazy lady in
person, as delightful as the
artlstocratic woman in "The
Landlord" who drinks tea
(spiked with booze) with PearJ
Bailey.
She w11s spreading cheese on
crackers for her guests, chat·
ting quickly.'perfectly relued
eo,en though the bOuse '1"85
being redep>rated.
"I didn'ireeJize how starved
I was for my own things, my
own place. I haven't stopped
since l got back, polishing
silver, learning how to run
bottl w:t.11hinR: machines. I have
been insane in this house."
Lee treasures the paintings
that adorn the walls, some
done by her daughter ; her
newest acquisition by Gregroy
Gillespie she caUs "Orange
with Pumice Box."
Even more highly s h e
treasures her family and
friends.
"I want my friends to be
with me. My mainstream is
here, my root,., 'an! here in this
house, With my family. My
very closest friends are like
famil~ ~ I di>n't think a
week fOGI by when we don't
see ea~ oilier -somewhat
the way it must have been in
the past down on Mulberry
Street.
DiMers in the F e u r y
menage fre informal, ultra
casual like their hostess. "I
made chicl.en for tonight. Joey
and I did a chicken number
together because It saves me
so muc}\ tbne. He chopped the
vegetables and . I sauteed lhe
chicken Sol won't have to cook
all day long."
Lee reeled orf the recipe as
she walked into her country
kitchen. The work area was U·
shaped, with clnpboard wall
cupboerd and Ci!ntral wooden
table. Nearby one of many
cats snoozed peacefully.
''I'm a great pretender. I'll
only go so far. I toss In things.
Many times I'm cooking for a
lot of people who think I know
all about these things.
"Wbat they don't know is I
often wonder if I'm going to
get through this time! I just
cut my finger chopping up the
mushrooms! These are the lit·
tie realities of my dinners."
SomeUting always happens
to help Lee in her cooking
dilemmas.
"When I hav e a large group.
I make the rice (for the
chlcken malibu) and measure
out the water I'm supposed to
use . And that's fine until I see
the rice is getting loo mushy
and is going to be"a problem.
'·J call over one or two et·
perts who are really good
cooks. They always come to
my rescue. They go wash off
the rice or throw in some cold
water. Soinebow lt always
turns out all right."
The Grant-Feury production
for that night also included a
green salad, Chinese kum.
quats 11nd an enormous fruit
sala.d, "J mixed applesauce
and raisiM yesterd3y just
because I felt like it!'' ahe
sald.
Her approach to cooking is
typical of her l\lP1'03Ch to life.
tor Lee Grant has very few
pat answen on "how to get It
together." Though she rtject:i
everybody else's formula , she
ha1 a wonderful curiosity
about lire. and a sentiitivity to
other1.
LEE GRANT'S C 111 CKE N
MALIBU
2 broUer·frytr ch I ck en s
Willghing 211·3 Ibo. each
• II' s Pouring
Combine cranberry julce
and apple juice and ::bcat with
• ~ .UU. .fr!"' !or • Ai., ayl
cut in pieces.
a chic ken wings
i,, cup olive oil
stock muahrooms ln butter, adding
I bay leaf salt, whllt pepper and curry,
Pinch thyme unlil mushrooms are brown
refr igerator until fat eongeals
on top. Remove. discard lat. :~ •• 2 yeJlow onions, chopped
2 green peppers, chopped
l clove garlic, pressed
Hot cooked brown and wild and seasonings are well blend-
rice ed
Wasl> chtcl<en paru, pat Add musllroom-eurry mJx.
Make gravy usi ng nour
dissolved in a little chicken
stock to form smooth past11
before add!ng lO main pot.
Reheal chicken, stirring to
smooth and Ullcken grl'vy.
Taste to correct seuoning.
~ measures her ~
S small carrots,.graied
\! pound mushroor.is, sliced
1/4 stick sweet butter
pieces dry with paper towels. ture to Dutch oven (or stock
Heat olive oil In large Dutch pot) along with chicken. Add
oven (or deep stew pot); panley and chicken stock
qui<."kly brown chicken on both (enough liquid to cover
sides ; remove to paper towel vegetables and chicken pieces,
to drain off excessive fat. Add adding water it necessary).
onions, pep~r. garlic and car-. Cover. cook in preheated 350
rots to pan drippings, saute degree oven about .tO minutes
vegeta bles until limp, stirring (or until chicken ls tender.
over low heat. Remove from oven, cool to
.. .
cooking results '< ::
2 tea'tpoons salt
Y.i: teasporui white pepper
2-2/3 teaspoon curry powder
(musl be freshly opened
can)
S Tablespoon.!! parsley
Flour to thicken
3 cans undiluted chicken On other burner. cook slowly · room temperature. chill in
Serve in 12 portions over
cooked brown and wild rice.
Butter-browned s 11 v e r e d
almonds and candled kum-
quats make colorful, tasteful
garnish. ExceJlent aerved with ,.
a well chilled white or I'06e
wine.
W IM ·ES
in manpower.
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SU Ill LOW PRICES .SUPER?~
1. Determina,tion. -Ralphs is determined
to give you the best price possible on everything you
buy.
the first and' most important reason your total food
bill is low at Ralphs.
you extra savings.
4. Shop with confidence. We check
our prices every week against other supermarkets In
town. When you compare prices, you'll know why
over 80,000 families switched to Ralphs last year.
2. Check our everyday prices. Ralphs
everyday prices are low. Super low. Every day. That's
3. Check our "Super Buys." Ralphs
always has hundreds of "Super Buys" (manufac-
turers specials-temporarily reduced prices) to give
USDA GRADE A-SOUTHERN
WHOLE .__
FRYERS
U l.IM. CHOICE-AMElllCAll
FRESH
LAMB LEG ... 98
MORRELL-FULLY COOKED-
SPICES & WATER ADDED
Avg. Wt.
2-21/z lbs.
LB.•
BEIF IHOUUIER
BONRESS
ROAST
BEEF SHOULDER
BONELESS 1 29 7·BONE
HAM ,._ • STEAK ... 84
MEAT MASJBI MEATS
U.S.O.A. Chott• -Fr9-1! Sm1n Loin ~~~!;~?~
LARGE LOIN CHOPS
U.8.0.A. Chok:t
Lamb Shoulder Chops
~.1.79
~.1.39
lb. 1.19
Ctllf.GradlAooOey_s~ "holl 38 FRYERS ,_,lit.,... Rt. ,
C•Uf.-Grlld• A-r>tya ff'MllW 75 FRYER LEGS & TlilGHS" •
fcMOmlcal-N11ltllloU1
GROUND TURKEY ·~ .89
G•1Mr1-8lr11ntd-41'1 or. j1r
BABY FOOD oldp~ .08
Coffn-All G"l'd1-t lb. ~ft
Maxwell House ... ~.87
lA119Gr11n -21or. oldprtce 84
MINUTE RICE ·" , WHEATIES °CEAEAL old prle~ .55
Atg.orMlnt-7oz.Nbe ptloe 74 Crest Tooth Paste "' .11 •
Arrld-Spf1y-I oz. uin
DEODORANT
Bltt'I' Croel\tr -22Y, OL pll;g.
BROWMEMIX
~··"'· 93 ....
oldprice 59 ·'' . "",..,. 93 .tr •
Fr•1h -Ottlclout
Stuffed Lamb Breast .... 89
.... 88
lb .• 98
.... 98
"-.98
Voung-Or10. A
TURKEY THIGHS
~ .• 49 _______ __.
8111-lltffCut
CHUCK STEAK
8olttl111 0-Bone ClliM:k
SWISS STEAK
L1111 BMfC~I
STEWING BEEF
8"flolll
BRAISING STRIPS
Tll'ldlf-BMI
Bottom Sir1oin Steak e .. 1-eontl•••
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
S.tl Slto1.1ld1r
FAMILY STEAK
lb. 1.89
·~ 1.78
·~ 1.19
BEEFOR'VEAt. PAT11E$1b. .79 LIQUOR DEPARTMENT
,.,...., Joh11 1 • 37 LINK SAUSAGE oz.'.! • EfffJd.,. low Nee
R•d I Grein
BURRITOS
Sllced-1 lb. pllg.
RALPHS BACON
~ .• 49 SANDRA
•L .88 VODKA . ,..
SEAFOOD DEPARTMENT ti.KESHIRE
0
GIN
Dtllcloin Ftlltt
FRESH SEA BASS
Klro1 -H11t 'n Eat
BREADED SHRIMP
... 1.49
~.1.99
Old Gltnwood-S••• .30
BOURBON
Sindy MacAMl1l11-S1'f1 ,IO
SCOTCH
3.39
q111rt
'""
3.59
4.39
'"" 3.99
Large Size
Finest Crop In Year•
SUPBI
HALLIMEEN Llmlt 4 While Supply Lula
PUMPKINS LB.
DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT PRODUCE DEPARTMENT
Swift-PrM1111m
AllMEAT
FRANKS ,,, .. 53
N•wCrop
D'ANJOU
PEARS
R11pf'lt -41'11C41'1 .• 55
SLICED HAM · · .,. , wlEllU"'"" '""c"E
Kr1tt-Shrtddtd 89 Moz2an!lla Cheese • OL •
L1a'1 Comed 8Hl·Ptttf•ml-Dar\TUl'kt:y 39 lwR'ANG Vtle~ Sliced Beel & Ham , = , 0 ES
L90'1 lmporttd 41C7-Slic.d Fr9UI Ploklld v.l•llff
COOKED HAM •= .59 l'IED YAMS
lb •• 19
"' .• 25 .. ~ 49 c.nori., •
.... 25
~Styli or Buhtrfllllt R~for ••ftiM-f"""'
PIU.SBURY BISCUITS •= .10 ROASTED PEANUTS ... 29 ....
ll'lllU,-4111ct 31 Regular.Margarine 1 lb. •
Rod'• Btcon a Onion, or
FRENCH ONION DIP IOL .43
DAIRY DEPARTMENT
j0HNS10NsYOOURT~·~~ .28
Ak:h 6 8uH1ry 37 Ralphs Buttennilk ",,, •
811utll'llf
CARNATIONS
C.lortul M•'Vffl'ltit
DAISIES
bul!Cft .98
...... 79
W.tr·'"'· S1111'•r Cf'l-1 BAKERY DEPARTMENT
Awoctdo or Gold 111•1Ph•-,,."' .. _ .. Tm.ON 1.98 PUWKIN .~.79 FRY PAN r PIES ••• ""'••·E'flf, Super Ch•I-
Avoc•do 01 Oold-TtUon !.:~ 4.88 Atlpf'lt -VMltfy ,Kk ~ .41 Covered Sauce Pan ICED DONUTS
Viti S••.,-St•lnl••• s1111 ""' 2.99 Rtlph1-~l1l-l L•,.r r 1 79
FOOD STEAMER HALL WEEN CAKES -•
CtrttR Drtw .. A·lot-.t• V1lu1 ··~ 49 8111t-'ll, HMI.,. 01 Cn'llM WltHI 39 Water Color Marker ol i • RALPHS BREAD -.. .....
Ralphs combination of SUPER BUYS and EVERYDAY LOW PRICES is the best way we know to keep your grocery bill down.
Ralphs c:. .. ,,,. Jollytlme w•••orYenow 35 lllaltl Chicken Skfllel ....• 79 DelMonte :;~.28 Ice Cream "''"69 POPCORN t:"; • DINNERS CAT SUP carton •
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS FROZEN FOODS PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS .
N111I Sprey l'OL 78 R1lph1-l'tor1ct. ••• 22 91Kl'lll!oll-Slrtlned '"'" 07 Ftc"'9 Jlop .. -AtlOltltd CMDn "'.:l .30 4-Way-Decongestant pkg .• ORANGE JUICE c1n • BABY FOOD jlf • PAPER TOWELS
Liquid Mo11mw1th ., ... 129 Ctrtl F,.11t-8r•l'dtcf ,. •• 87 H11n11-Tom_,o .,,. 47 20 Mull Tttnl ..... 89 SCOPE bottl• • ASH STICKS pkf •• KETCHUP 11oni. • BORAX .....
Sl!owtr to Sf'lo•1r
7l'OL 88 J1no'1-Sn1ell; Tr1y 7~0L 85 A~CIDER .. ~ 1.29 DmRGOO"' IOOL 78 BODY POWDER pllf .• PIZZAS pko. • . ....
H•td a SIM!uldtft
UoL 129 With CtlHle ot 90llf c,. ..
1'oL 33 Hu Mt 1c: .16 f~1llo -A111Hted Coetrt ""'-'£1 SHAMPOO tube • BAKE-A-TATA ptlf.. TOMATO PASTE FA TISSUES .....
Nlct N E11, •••. 1.88 Gorton'• 1IOL 83 For Coolll':O • ls!tdt .. ,. 58 OltnMsPot 10= 48 HAIR COLOR ASH &CHIPS pkg. • CRISC OIL bollhl • Dish Remover ,11,_.
P1fn R•ll1~1r '"" 1 28 M11. Srnllh'I -'40L 89 laM8r•~ ,... 31 C•tgon-aouq11.t tlOL 49 Excedrin Tablets pkg. • PUMPKIN PIES pk; •• BROWN BREAD can • BUBBLE BATH . ....
Ft1111-Ft111lnln1 "" 8V Sunlllll-C9'1fomla "''-49 Tffttporary Reduced Prict. WMcf'I'• "" 49 ~1Spr17 70L 81 SANITARY NAPKINS "" ORANGE JUICE c1n • Cranbeny Juice llottl• • FumitureWex <M 0
Sut'ft -Aln••or "~ 53 Ctrtl Ftttf'I "••2 55 M1nuf1cturer1 Special Allewnc1. Hu1111 -Wiltl O!lloflt ot M11tNOOM ... 15 AlfWkk•UquW '""OI, 65 SHAMPOO ""'. Breeded Shrimp pkg. I TOMATO SAUCE C:lll • Room Deodorizer pkg..
Prices effective Oct. 28 through Nov. 1 @t·h EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS FROZEN FOODS PANTRY FILLERS PANTRY FILLERS
-·r ..................... ~ .11 ··--M~.tl-O '~ 2.52 ........ ·-:: ·" DEODORANT ·~~~ JIB MEAT PIES GROUND COFFEE •• TEABAGS """""'"-""'"''"' ·.: .zr cw... .i - --UIJlll 11 .... -.: .71 u-~ .98 Cr11t Tooth P11t1 ~ .55 GRAPEFRUIT JUICE CHUNK TUNA CRISCO SHORTENINQ ~----~ ...... -·· •,;. ... ira!F'Snw ·---·-YO•S HAIR SPRAY •.: .91 MINCE PIES •H 1.05 INSTANT COFr:EI .. 1.48 ..... .,...,_ ___ ........ ··-"~ ...... ,,,; .• , clili1•M'ON '".:; '.31 COANED BEEF HASH •.::; .58 PLAYTEX TAMPONS ·-1.31 HAM DINNERS -......... ~~ ti ... •w•l.lo-~ .... .. , •. ~rl"""' ·.; ... :a ._ .... u .... ...C.3• ANTACID .... 1.49 Buttermilk W1ff111 WHIT RICE CORN SYRUP
lltli~ ·-.... i...--. '".:.a1
., __ ·---•,;At OILOF OLAY .... 2.51 Cl<EESE CAKES INSTANT COFRE .. t.ot WHEATI!S CEREAL
THESUPIR
PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS ,.,._ .. ~ .....
WHITEBYAUP
~·-CATSUP . ..-.... -ROYAL PUDDINGS
~·-TOMATO JUICE ._. ...
CHEERIOS CEREAL -INSTANT COFFEE
::::.aa ---':: .34 SANDWICH IAQI
:;; .41 -:.: ... JOY D!Tl!'ROENT
!::: .t2 --~-7• SOWL CLl!ANER
•.: .32 lff ··-~ -.: ..2f TOILET TlllUI!
·..:.42 u-BOLD Ol!T(RGIHT ·.::.11 ·-.. 1.38 ......,._,._.°"""" -:: .23 FACIAL TISSUES
GOODIS Ftll _.
fl't 1 treat ta llllop •2R•I ht tor your THck or ~ti u.
Com• In 1nd choo11 m our
complete HlecUon ol quellty
c1ndy1 cookie•, popcorn,
mui.. a dl1gulH1.
•
-\
( . ••• :··
''HALLOWEEN MUST''
PUMPKINS
ALL
SIZES ~
CABBAGE
CllDEI FRESH.--·--·-···-····-···-····· .. •••••··············• .. •• .. LI.
SQUASH
111(1 Mil TED IAlllA.--···-,.•·•••••••••••••·-···········-·········· LI • . . . . .
p ,ERSIMMONS
SWEET AID .JlllCT .................. -...................... -................ 11.
, , I ) C I , • (
fOR
ICE CREAM
ARDIN NIGH QUALITY
MALFGALLON •
"
NATIONAL APPLE VIEEil
AIPP~LE SA·LI·!.
RED; OR GOLDEN MIX I OR MATCH" 'EM DELICIOUS
FROM WASHINGTON STATE · $
ROME BEAUTIES
NORTHWEST IAlllNG SIZE
PIPPINS'
NORTHWEST ALL PURPOSE
MACINTOSH
BRITISH COLUMBIA ALL PURPOSE
, 1fl\R 10UR. "TRlCK MlK~::l" HllDQUlRllRS
OR wt 11avt A co~:~~:Ks costUMlS,
ASSOITMlHT Of llAll~:ll GllOSTS AND GOILlllS.
CAllDllS &. lTC. FOR
ROYALi
TOWELS
JUMIO ROLLS ••••••••••••••••••••••••
DEL MONTE · 1 5 ~14 4 $1 ?1!ftEA~?~A' JU~~ •• ~.~.~... FOi
MAYFRESH 2, •• 5 $1 BEVERAGES ITL.. FOi
ASSTI. FLAYOIS & MIXEIS ••••••
CERTIFIED . 2 s· ~ ?!ro~9l~~w 2-1b ........... .
MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE '·" "" .............. 83c
MAXWELLHOUSECOFFU••·"" .. _ ...... $2.43
I
LBS.
Build a complete set an item each Week
STAINLESS STEEL
FLATWARE
HARVEST PA1:JERN ,BY PAGENT
C-.nlPIKllUIWD
ICE TEA ,1 S9 SPOOi -•
TEASPOOll
33e·
WITHJ.00 ... °"'"
Build •complete set an ititm each week r----~
STONEWARE
VALENCIA PATTERN c-m•ma 1Un11a
~::~11
......... •1. 99
I
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. CHUC·K
ROA·SIS·
I •'
BLADE CUT POT ROA'STS
. . .
FAM.ILY PAK -.5 ·Las.
• ·BEEF
S'HORTRIB-S ·'.
lllE OR BRAISE .. -······--···---._:
7·BONE
ROASTS
ClllTtR -CUT-POT' ROASTS .............. " .... 111.
BEEF STEW ME'ATi· ..
IOllELESS.LEAJI IHF CUllS .. --••••• n..
•
MA YF91ESH BEEF SIEAKS ' 65C (V~AL STEAKS 12 01. 69c ea.) 12 111. PRG: FJIOZEN .............. EA.
. . ~ j
!c~0~~'2~1.'!'6~! .. !.~~!.~ ... ~: ........ ; ....... : ............ EA.86 C
· ~"~:115'~~!~i1~!~~~:~ .... ~.:'.~~~~.~ ...... ~.s9c ' . .
.. ' . . . .. ~
PORK
ROASTS
FRESH, PICNIC SHOULVnti.,c>Jtl IN !}l!~AN~!o!~.~ .. ~ ............... : .. "98~
•oR:K ·ROAS.TS · BBC IOllEUSS-l~STON IUTT-LEAll & FLAVORFUL .............. -.... . Iii~
' ' . SLICED BACON ARMOUR PAN SIZE 12 ••. PKG .................................... 79« ~ LINK SAUSAGE HOFFMAN BRAND-SKINLESS LINKSIOZ ........ 2 FOR 69C ~ ' )
'
' ' •
l • • ~ • '
i'PPLE,, PUMPKlllf : ..
QR MINCE ·.
mag : DELICATESSEN
' LUNCHEON MEATS ' . ~o:.~~~~~·~LL:~~~E s~:~::1:~~~~~-
ALL MUT IOL!IGllA· lilAD CHHSl-SAIDWICll,
DUTCll1 COMlllATIOll, IAR'l.Q: LOAF
· f~t&!~~-'!.!!~.~ .. ~!~~~.4i88c
• .. t . •
ft!!s 'fAf °ti,~~~.~.~"~ .. ~.~.~~.~ ............. J9C t:~~.-:.~~~~~ft:i~l a !.!_~~!_l-~~~~ ..... ~-... -_..u.49'
M~C.•. JUICE DRINKS " 10~$) LAKE .TO LA.KE JACK CllllSI t 01 ...... " ..... ~."S·t:
... 1. s1zl ................. -...... _ ........... -······-,.. . . DANO·LA COOKED HAii.• .L .................. r·· ........ If:.
' .,
I
· APPLE CIDER .JUICE
. MA YFRESH~ULL GALLON
UM/TONE
COUl'ON '!II
. MXJlTC14STOMER
• OCT. 2HotO"I. \. · as~
I •
SAYI U. WITH TllS COUOON
1. 11150 DOERGEIT
-14 OZ. ICING SIZI -
mauliilll ! r.111.1;Ji:11 ti fl
FILTEIEO ao PIOOF QUART
!!!!!l!"~A~~!.CP, ....... O, 4 99
'!~o~~~G9rc.f ~~~ ... ~!~H$3 39
......... _ ~~~~~~!~ ~~!FTH$359
' ' !o~J~.!·~~!! ............. FIFTH$359 .,
!~r'!!!!AI~!: Y!.~~*'~~.~~:l~H$359 •
~~~~~~~ ........ -... 69C .
~·::~::::1c 1 ....................... 68c '
TRAC H CARTRIDGl s· ............ , .. 9,c.
KOTIX TAMPONS ~ CM~ REG •• SUPE•' 1.49'
MIN'S DIP HAIR CONTROL 13or ......... •1.29 '
DRIST AN NASAL MllT 1s cc .......... -.... • I .11
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l)AJL V PILOT PILOT-AOVERTISER f
-
Meats ... produce ... grocery ... frazen foods ... ALL El Rancho sale prices are
good for 7 fu~ days ... Thursday through Wednesday, Octob er 27 through November 1!
BEWITCHING VALUES· ••• all through the store!
Hallowe'en is just ahead ••. and youtJ:l be shopping with the goblins
in mind. Look to El Rancho for all those' treata that keep the
tricksters happy! From apples to Zonkera.,. our abelves and stacks
are laden with fare to tickle the fancy of every witch, ghost or elf
that comes to your door! ·
Rump Roast ..... 98e.
Hearty satisfaction m this U.S.D.A. Choice been
Omaha .Roast ... ~1 1 !
Thick and tender .•. rounds of U .S.D.A. Choice bee fl
Swiss Steak ..... 89~b
Cut from U.S.D.A. Choice beef rounds, for you!
Split Broilers ... 49~b
Halves of young and tender king-sized fryer chicken
Beef Roast poNnEs:>5 I 1? Stew Beef BONELEss51 °!
Triangle tip from U.S.D.A. Choice beef loin! Lean and tender for a memorable dish! Choice grade!
Rex Sole . . . . . . • • • ggc •. Rock Cod nu.m • • • • • 99~.
Large size, for more good eating! Fresh, for that mild flavor you'll lovet
Super Shopper Grocery Specials!
' I rple C/der .. HALF-GALLON 511
Tree Top ••• Washington's finHtjuice! Quart ••• 33' Gallon .•. $~.17
KIBBRBX 200 CT; PKG .•••••••••••• 23°
The name that's come to stand for Facial Tissue-at a price that stands for savings!
Di& Rif B SIX PACK ••••••••••• 51'
The low cal cola ••• the soft drink that's led the way for calorie counten! 12oz btles, plus dep.
Margarine ................ -. 3 9e
1lmperial-with the regal touch! 1 lb. ctn Compare ... see that there really ia a difference
Italian Dressing ........ 2 9c
Famous Wishbone, in 8 ounce bottle! Your kind of quality ••• and El Rancho value I
Rice Mixes .... 4 ,J 1
M.J.B •••. regular 37~ varieties!
Orange Juice ..... 19'
Cal Fame, (rozen ••• 6oz. can
Nabisco Cookies 53' Meat Pies sruffm ... 49'
Oreoain 16oz-ChipsAboy in 14.1/J: oz. Van de Kamp'afrozen .•. 10~ oz. big!
KrispyCrackers 29'
Sunahine saltines in 16 oz. ctn.
G01no's p· · 79' Illa ......
SaUBage, Pepperoni, Combination!
Wheaties .. .-........ 39' Dog Food ....... 8, .. s1
Brea.klut ot Champions -12 oz. pkg. Dr. Rose.,. all flavon1,., 15 oz.
Grape Juice ....... 59' Royale Tissue 4 ,,!1
Welch'• •.. oi• 5\'I oz. bottles! Two roll packa ••• oolorw or white
Pop· Corn ........... 29'
~oily Time-2 lb ..•• white or yellow
Dash Detergent 69'
Low1uds. bi1vohal 49ouncepkg.
CENTER
CUT!
• • • • • lb.
Center Cut! , •• you get the best part of the U.S.D.A: Choice beef round. at El Rancho's sPecial price.
There ~eally is-a difference in El Rancho quality, •• and El Rancho value!
)
Top round of U.S.D.A. Choice beef, cut expres.sly for this oriental style treat!
--
SU CED IT AUAN STYLE EXTRA .LEAN
Bacon • • • • • Sausage ... Ground Beef .. 99c.
El Rancho's ranch style slices! We makeitfreshforyou? Always fresh-bulk or patties!
Super Fresh ProJuce -1 Day Specials!
. IJi ,,.& rH-TEXAS 6 ~ J dPl1a11f/1u .. ~~~Y.~~P. "'81
With that special flavor &/makes them such a delightful breakfast t.reat!
Solid Banana Squash . . . . . . . . . . . 5~
Thick meated ... for that golden goodness you'll enjoy baking ... and serving!
Egg Plant . . . . . . . • . . . . . . 19 ~ Pitted Dates . . . . . . . . . . . 39'
Large size for bigger servings! Sweet Deg let Noor .•. 10 oz. plastic tub
Delicious Apples ............... 4 ~ s 1
Ruby red and crisp ••• Extra Fancy quality, from Washington State! A fabulous treat for tricksters!
French Cheese Festival!
Banbel OR BABYBEL a"· pkg .•••• 611
Mild semi-soft cheese in a new zip open package ••• great with crackers and a glass of Mat.eus Rose!
Boursin, •ithherbs •••••••• 99 c Six de Savoie . . . • . . . 59c
Plain, or with raisins or walnut&! New-4 o:i.
Laughing Cow stREAO. 65C
Favored, 'cause it's mild! 6oz.
Camembert ..... · s1z9
Creamy, rich flavor. , • Tholy, 8 oz.
Laughing Cow cueEs 69c Fondine .. . . . . . . 59c
Plain or Onion flavored! 4 oz. pkg. New spread from Bonbel! 4 oz. pkg.
Assorted ·cubes . 99c Port Salut . . . . . . 39c
Laughing Cow-4 flavors .•. 6 oz. Abbey, 8oz. Semi-soft ••• &uperbl
1 Day Liquor Values#
Vodka HOLIDAYTIM ES-HALF-GALLON ....... ~7 77
El Rancho'• own •.• your assurance of quality and satisfaction!
Wh • k ss•• 1s ey EL RANC HO'S-BLENDED ........ .
Save 81• on this smooth 86 proof whiskey-you'll be glad you did! 'h gal.
Mixed Nuts ....... 79' Hills Bros Coffee 83' Price.• in effect Thur. through Wed.
Oct. 26 throu~h Nou. l ... No 1ales to dealer.'f Scotch HOLIDAYTIMES·HALF-GALLON .... ~.9''
Planter's party favorite! 13 oo. One pound can (3 lb. can •.. 2.39) Optn daily 9 to 9 ... Sunday 10 to 7 El Rancho'• ownl Imported scotch, to give you quality at a budget price! ••
A~CAOIA. " · ,· : · '' · PASA Df NA ·,: · SOUTH PASADENA : :1/i'i/ HUNTINGTON BEACH : ,r:/ii/ NEWPORT BEACH : nn Nr •D''' B11u anu
t1 rlJil '10 l. .. lllt ·.C h •.''.__,.,~~ ,•1 frf:non! .1no Hun11ngton Or · Warner an d Algonquin BoJrd w JI~ Center 25j5 [;istblull 01 [J~thlull Villa~e Ceilte1
. ' . ~. . . •
•
W ... tsday, Oct'°" 25, 1912 01.JL V PILOf 43
Stop Floundering: Serve · Fish
Compony'1 oornlng • n d
you'J'E wondering what to
aerve? Well, dolJ~ wonder any
longer -u.se your Im·
aginatlon. and your
creailv-.rill show.
Compruty .,...is d o n ' t
necessarily hivt to be e.1·
pensive in otder to please.
FWiery product.o provide ex-
cellent nutrtUon and great
taste, are easily prepared and
quickly cooked -·so you wiJI
have mote time to be with
your guests.
SWEET 'N' SOUR
SAUCY FLOUNDER
2 pounds llDuoder fillets,
fresh or lfozen
1,-. cup butter or margarine
1 teaspoon grated lemon
rind
I teaapoonult
V.. cup sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
l cup pineapple juiet:
h cup lemon juice or cider
vinegar
1 can (8 ounce) crushed
pineapple, drained
I cup thin tomato wedges
\\ cdp diced green pepper
Pineapple 1Uces for garni.sti
(optional)
Llme slices for garnish (op.
tionll)
Thaw frozen fish. Place 2
tablespocns b II t t e r or
margarine in shallow ~uart
baling dish. Pljlce in 350
degNe oven, to meU.
Arrange fl!b fillets, flat or
rolled, in baking dilh ; tum to
coat skies with melted butter
or margarine. Sprinkle with
lemon rind and 'ii teaspoon
salt.
Bake in S50 degree oven, 2S
to 30 minute., or until fish
llakel .. lily when tested with
a rork.
While f111b is co ok i ng
prepare aauce.
Combine a1gar, cornstarch,
and remainlng \\ teaspoon
salt : mix well, Add pineapple
juice and 'lemon ju.ice or
vinegar; 1tir. Cook stirring
constantly until sauce is clear
and thickened.
Fold in drained pineapple.
tomato wedges, green pepper,
and remaining 2 table.spoons
bptter or margarine; heat.
Serve over fish. Makes 6 serv·
irlgs.
SERVE INDIAN STEW WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
1lndian Food
Gift From Sky
Navajo legend has it that a
gigantic turkey hen i s
responsible for North
America's very first ear of
com -sbe dropped it from
under her wing.
Or did com rea1ly fmd Its
way north from Pre-lncan
Peru, as the archaeologists
claim'! Either way, it took the
American Indian to cultivate
it, eventually opening up a
whole new gastronomic era
for Euroj>eans.
Until exp&orers r e·t urned
from the New World, no one in
Europe bad ever tasted com ..
.. or tW'key, or lima beans, or
tomatoes, or pum lbf, ."'. .ot
an endless li.1t of now-lamiliar
foods first discovered via trial
and error by Ainerican 1n-
diaM.
Geoerations or I n d i a n
homemakers worked q u t
methods of grinding, soaking,
baking, and stewing that
enhanced the flavors of these
bountiful harvests , and the
result is a Cillorful and im-
aginative cuisine -o u r
original American f o o d
heritage.
Fortunat e l y, today's
Americans can enjoy classic
~tyle fare without the
complex preparations. Suc-
culent stews similar lo the old
Cherokee and ,Pueblo
specialties take to the table
witb ease, thanks to con-
v~e foods.
'l1W: SUMy Planters' stew
features beef cubes. com-on-
tho<:ob, ltma beans aod sliced
mushrooms simmered
together wilh canl'H!d beef
gravy and sage. 'The gravy
unites the t1avOrs and imparts
a robust. h>memad,e touch.
Consistently smooth a n d
perfectly seasoned, canned
gravy makes a fine sauce as
well as a time-saving cooking
ingredient f o r casseroles,
skillet dishes, and stews such
as this one.
carry throogb the American
Indian theme with an ac-
companiment of -bot cOm
bread -again, compliments
of the Cherokee tribe.
_J'~AN:\'ERS' STE~
2\\ pOcnds beef' cdbes (l i>.
inch)
2 tablespoons shortening
1 con (1011 oqnces) beef
gravy
If• teaspoon ground sage
lf4 tea.spoon salt
Genet0ll3 dash Jiepper
1 package (10 ounces) frozen
Fordbook lima beans
f medium ears sweet com,
cut in thirds
% cups sliced fresh
mushrooms (about ·"h
pound)
In large heavy pan, brown
meat in shortening; pour off
fat. Add gravy and seasonings.
Cover; cook over Jow beat 2
hours 15 minutes. Stir now and
then. Add beans, com, and
mushrooms. Cover; bring to
boil : stir to break up beans.
Cook over low heat 15 minutes
or until done; stir now and
then. Makes about & servings.
Modern Phenomenon
Brunches Booming
On the social scene only
since tbe turn of the century,
trunmes are turning u p
evel'TfWhere -in restaurants
from pub to plush, in private
homes and clubs.
Brunch is an easy and
pleasant way to entertain. Set
up buffet-style, guests serTe
themrelves. The menu should
be simple and inviting.
What could be more
American, more appropriate
than saUMge and eggs? Not
the onlinary kind, but a
lndted oausage ring.
'Ib(s sausage Mng not only
ha,o the intriguing fiaVOI' ad-
dition ol apricots and apples,
but U also tealtllls the subtle oot diBtiDcllve taste ol bees.
To complete the menu: corn-
bread, butter, hone y, and
hour.glass shaped mugs or
light, sparkling be..-.
BEER BRUNCH SAUSAGE
RING
2 pounds pock sausage
.Ii cup unoooked oat.qieal
1 \\ cups chopped unpeeled
apple
\\ cup chopped d r le d
apricols
1 ea (slightly beateo)
~cup beer
'1• teaspoon salt
Ii\ tee.spoon dry mwitard
'I• teespoon garlic powder
11 eggs
Salt
Pepper
\lllgreased kup rlng mold aod
pack firmly.
Balce in moderate 350 degree
oven for :x> minutes. Drain fat.
Invert mold Into baking pan
and return to oven. Bake 20
minutes longer or unUl lightly
browned.
Prepare scrambled eggs.
Season with salt and pepper.
Transfer rt~ to serving plate.
FUI center with eggs. Garnl.sh
with peadi sli<es, ll desired.
Ylelda I to 8 aervlnga.
Apricots Ring
Coffeecakes
CINN~ON APRICOT RING
1 package (13~ ounces) hot
roll mix
~ cup apricot pre!enes
6 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon cinnamon
Prepare hol roll mix as
label directl: let rise; roll to a
rectangle (16 by 10 indles).
Spread Willi ptt5ervea; do
willl butter and IJ)rinkle willl
cinnamon.
Starting from long eod, roll
up In jelly-rolt llllhlon. Pla<e
seamslde down In circle on a
greased cookie sheet. .Let n...
In a warm piece until doubeld
--
INSIDE SPECIALLY-MARKED MILLBROOK BREADS
'
-AN ·OLD·TIME PRESIDENTIAL
•
. We think you11 like our
handsome campaign rib-
bon replicas..From Wil·
liamHenry"Tippecanoe" Hai'rison to
Teddy Roosevelt, there are 6 in alL
Each is a likeness of an actual early
camQ&i_gn ribbon; each is woven in
cloth with an adhesive baclcirig; and
each one blazes with Patri6tio colors. .
But we also think you'll enjoy The
Millbrook Breads. Webalt:ethem with
old-fashioned care, and 'We use only
fine ingredient& Sodo tryoneot'more.
And collect the whole set o£ old-time
camj)Q!gn ribbons. Y mill find one in·
aide each of those specially•IIllll'kecl
Millbrook Breads:
*********
Enrlcllod Brood
made with Buttermilk
The premium buttel'-
milk tolids we add
:malce a rich. deliciowi
d.itferenoel
DOWN WITH
REBELLION
LINCOLN
Bn1rlan
Pumpemlckel
Thia one boast.a rye
ffour, rye meal, eround
caraway seeda, select
apicn and a hearty
1lavot.
Cracked Wheat
Here you'll find
cr&.cked whole wheat
grits, pure honey,
5l!SaftJe seeds and a full
whrat&vor.
BWESEAL
'
Dutch Dill
TBinl)" chopped onions
and pungent dill seeds
give this loaf a z.nty
iye .flavOI"!
QUALITY BREADS
Holf1nd Krunch
A soldeo-crac:ked top
is the main taste
ottraction of thil fin•
textured Joa!.
Ccm>tne oausage, oatmeal,
apple, aptlootl, egg, beer,
silt, mmlard and a:arUC; blirid won. Spoon mlx\ore Into
-1 hour. G 11w"StRtelY'Rf'08m'flO''Hlll1
Bolte In a .preheated lllO-L.::::::'.:::~::::~:;::~;:::;:::;:;:::::'.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;~~::::::::::::::::~~;::::::::::::~~;:~t;.J ~ oven lot IS to 30
mllllllel. M>lleo abciUt U "°"' • tlou, .
II
I
,.
• •
. .
•
\ -SL-.:0:.::All:.:.V.:..:Pl:::lDc_T ____ .::_Wl<l:::..nndl=y-'Ot.-=.:..:25::;'c_:_l 972 Wtdfttlday, Octobtr 2S, 1~72 s PILOT-ADVERTISER I O
ALL-AT
WIENERS IAl..M·• IULlt
69!
LlQ'S SlJCE0..._7
COOKED HAM ....._ ....
RATaUOI.
Ml&W •ACK GUAIUUITll
•Cl9ALllY MIAO
RWTPec:IOf MIAT IS LB.
CHUCK ROAST
STATml ..OS .. cmtTIFIB>
IE'•mADIOIT
59~
' tr.111RIB . ROAST
STATml ..OS. CIRTillB>
IE'•GUAUNTB
RIB
STEAKS
WILL TllMMID •LIAN
TINO•• GUARANTllD
9 c
LI.
ROUND
STEAK
STATml ..OS. can11m
•••IOtmlN
c
~• ... llQliAUY GUAIAlfT9 10IUIJI TOU ... 09'f'OW' ~
WILL•O WY~ MMINlll'IOTllN•LOW .. ,AT ·~ 9 ti .
. ·.g~DBACON~·-···w79c 6~~~e;e;~~~~~~:;:::,:::,ar:t . f=ri_ ................. Ll.69c lSTTHRUSTHRIB ~11.11.0I BONELESS 11.•1.ea
l!!'.!!''os ____ .. ,_59: BEEF RST•Tlou•IROS·:c·a"o·GUAIANTINEID•oAn LI. 75c STATlllROS.CRnfllD-·ION•.. 93, ..
ICORNDOGS 59 ...., RUMP ROAST ..................... LI.
I 1•-.WAlllB•OIAU.MiAr-· 10.S.OL 79 PA n1u -CHICK-·GUAIWllllD 99c CU9STIAICISSMAU-· .. QIT s 12•
. :~~l'OLOGNA .. u.7~ LAllY'S-11>' ROLLED ROAST ----La STEAKS :t'ao::. ................ LI. .
iAU'iU.a1ua ___ ... 59< 7-BONE ROASI'. .. -----LI. SLICED BACON .............. i.a .
. ' D•rRPFRAIMll ._ .. _w ..,-.,~ n•n•-·-•"•-··-CHICIC 79c __,., •. ..,.,..u.PACK-75c
-......... -5nc ~-.......... _,__ • 1 •• ---·NO•AU·-. 'I ss ···---·--a '179 SAU_. GIUB ·-··--···· ,,.OL 7 T BONI ITIAK--w. NRIER•IOUR lllt.J( ia. TOlt ~LO· I~ ........... ia.
•
ALLRAVOllS EXCEPT WILD& .OWN& WllTli PIE CRUST STICKS ~~ ... ·-· 22-0Z 57'
RICE A. RONI 29c GOLDMEOALFLOUR __ ,0-, .. 11.22 • • REG. FROSTINGS :m,v,~:::..,, . 10.•oz 59' '
-·-PKG. SUGAR TWIN BROWN .............. 11-oz 43'
KHllNZETOMTATOCHUP 26C BIGGKIXCEREAL . _____ ,,.oz 43' 14-0Z BIGG COUNT CHOCULA •oz 43'
PKERNsRsTIAEWlmSY E • VE-S·-·························-· so::L 5 9c a1:?:':?;~RRv .. ~_5!o
'AR PARKAY MARGARINE ---LI. 34' ........................ • NESnE HOT COCOA MIX .. , .. oz 65'
FIRISIDEASSORTEDRAVORS 45 WELCHSGRAPEJUICE _4 ,._oz 67' COOKl·ES CRIAEM•llWICH 1%LB. C BISCUIT$~1;'.,'~l~~flf~"---3 ,,_oz 29'
. ····-·-----· PKG. BROWN CROCK BEANS __ , ... L 33' 1
GRAPEF
LARGE FANCY COAoelA VALUY
8
LB. BAG
NUTS
CIONTADINAASSOllTB>RAVORS 29c FUllCllll..... 45c SA u c Es ~=-··· .............................. c: MA~:::;.~;;.,.~----LI. 4f
LAllGE FANCY .. w QOP
2 SMOllWITHSTATERUOS.LOW-LOWPRICES 5 5 MIJSHROOMS o•CH0•"'0 ····-.. --s-oL47'
'A PUF
FABRIC C CONFIDETNAPKINS ·---_,.,14'
POUNDS • 10-Na HALF . BATH TISSUE •OFT-wrv• ..... 2 ""'" 25'
-r u• ················GAL AEROWAX FLOOR FINISH _ 21-ot 85'
DiUaoUi°APPUI ······ ' LHEFTYA6-IUWSHEL SIZENIAGSB AG s 10 9 9 c roo=~~Milofiii'~~:.'.'.'.:~1~ "
""·"°·'-ya-•":_ ~ .. ~39 ........... COUNT SPANISHRICE v••CAM~ .. ---~ 25', va.vn -................. 2 ftc M -•AllCT~·-IJIUQOUJ 2 7 .FORWOOD PAteiUNG • 14-0UNa VEG-ALL v1~& .. li """ __ .. ___ m 28'
APPLES ........... ········ .... LBS. REGARD POLISH' I 4 6 =:~~H!L;,~~·::~:
un.a•ANCT ..,...,aoo 3 ~ ZIE ASPARA®.S_ cur.,... ........... _ "·••• 43'
GRAPES ........................................ LB. 1ROLL 11ssu1~2~~ ....................... 35'· ~=v~:: .. :M:~7ic21
~it.~&'"'~~~ HUNTS TOMATO ~UICE ------··-·-... o.oz. 15' ,t-,t-~--·-?-t ;r:1,au. CWHHEEAESTEIE!,~,~2,LM ······· -~·-0:1004 -MAGIC SPRAY SIZING 59' -·· ... -TM?-73 •ULLMOON LONGHORN .... 14-0L • • CLOSE-UP PROTEIN PURL BRUCE 5 MIN. WAX REMOVER =II' CHOW !!.N DDD S ........ 11.0I . C CHALLENGEMl~~ ... ::X~:'.~.'.: ••av 12.45 '
TOOTH 21 DROPS DA"" EASEBOWLCLEANER Ml•--37c CHEESEPIZZA w•'--------·-•u-0z 55' ' PASTE SHAM TOOTH POUSH ..... -----·-I-OZ. 7' MORTON D•••• ·-· 11.0Z. ' SLICED BEETS DI~!'~ .• --.... , 2f '
-·I.I 22111 -11 am l.S I Ill v"mUNTSETABBALKEE'DUICCHEIC,!<c~~!~~JRS -_PK<t 389'3' t'.iiD!m111rus __ ..... ~ A'WLEc1DE1 , .... 53' PIC~ifD BEm SUClO ............... 32' -
5 •1 •1•• 17c • O>CKTAIL ........................... ~ _,,. 25' ..__.,.... 89' ••-•••Y.,..,LA, 3~ ~ VEGETABLEJUICE ~~~'l:.l"~.,.._. _____ &e.oz 49' ~1&cHmE .... M< ~~ 2_., .. 89' SHCAllOES•TR•lm v.n .. _,::;°". . '
• ' CAMPANIATOMATOPASTE _____ 21-oz.33' ~1us ____ .... w ~..!l.!!.\?k'-:o~-, • .._ NGBEm 11•ozc..oi.•_ 23' 1-""u=1•• M90l lllMZ• PEAR HALVES O>CKO"THEWAL< .. ----··· ""31 ' ICEMILlllUllDW __ .,.,63' OIAllGE,UICE _ , .,.,_2f WHOLE CARROTS "'-"'""•-•.••oz 33'
•-IT·' . CAlllllS LOlllOlll FRUIT CUPS 49' -m--, 3 • • SLICED CARROTS 01AMON0-• . , ... , 29' .,:;,. •t .07 =~ 78« .::-.:. • t .35 FRUITCOCKTAiL ~~~~~~-WALK ·--·--······· 41 ' COOL WHIP .. ································· ·~:t· ANOELFOOD.,~~J'JM~ ..... , .. , .... , 61' " •1••w m•nY.eo ......,.. RICE •RONI •o••~ .... ~..;;~"'·· .. --.. --.. 2•CA• &9' .......... -...... •·._ ............... 11tn FROSTINGS .. ..., ........................ M:~g
-IAll -niil•-. VIT•M•• ..,... "°':"".,,,."'•wiw _____ e.o~ ~'!!$!!!fD ---:~ !!".!!!l.!'.!t""-•-;£" CARNATIONBREAKFAST --~"<69' .Sc _._ 98« . •1••-i•• ACCENT 1-0Z. 31 .................... oz.85' ______ 10.oz.1.79 UllKUlllAllE._. __ .;. 1 lllUDEDlllllW ___ ..._ 1 HOT COCOA MIX CAA••"°"·--12.oz 67'
1m' Uilll' -.. -· MUOROOTBEER 6 75' ........ " ...... ' -....... ,.,_, $151 HUNTSWHOLEPOT'•ToES· ·_, .. .. -REG.ORLO-CAL .--...... 11-0Z. FANTAILSllllW __ ...,-c--IOUllDlllllMP -·-R Zl·OZ.K
••n••• .IAllA•IY
' .539
•lltll'nAI DAn C-A 8 1 :tffl •AllCAKI MIX .,...,_ 66 IAMDWICH \llJJ
.,......,_ C NAllSCO WE
l·POUND 53 C =":"..;,;· ... ··-· 49c 51 C ·~~
PACICAGI ....,.WAT __ IS.OZ.
PRICES EFFEC. 7-FULL DAYS• THURS. lhru WED., OCT. 2&1h·NOV. 111
t4't1 ..,•1slt lf A.._w ........ .
707 W ... II : * ltfMt, C... .. .. &NZ ..... .,,....M ........... 111 z•u W• kNl•••lfll """'· ._..,.. ····a.-• .............. 1160 N.m T.t&I A,__ s.t. A•
1IOllANtC..A..-.O,...
11nw .... w .. ~w ... 1 ....
14JD W• IJIMI• A~ AMM'a
l &JO 11111a.,., AW!ttlWo ._.. AH
1UOM.,..._A....., .... AM
JH4W••_.1111.,,~
1111,...,.,. ..... c.... .. . 1171 1 ..... ..,..,, c... .. ..
14171 hll Hin ANllM, T ....
1 ~2MIMI A,..........,.
(f
Plentiful
Foods
NOVEMBER 1972
Ffftur••
TURKEYS
RICE
~ r • " " ,• , ...-,. t' ~-, ,. ,• .... ~ ' i' . .
' ' " " ',.. '•< "' • • • ••I'• IN ------__ ..
U LE .Lu. E I' INSTANT . I PRO DILUXE . . I CREST I I DO B I I MAXWELL HOUSE • I TOOTHBRUiHu I c,.st. TOOTHPASTE I CHIP STAMPS . io o., '••-«111•1 .. $1~9 89~.. I c~st. :,~ t~.=:.-.:= ~·~ ~:'-.,: : COFFEE . , , ·: REG. 19c eAcH ••• 3/Sl I ~~.°:i.t;~i:ys!~'! s • .,.. 69¢ 11
AJcollollc .......... -Cl ....... ). ~ Witt! tfll• coa,ofl, 110 flll 111M11,. p11rch11• r~ttlttd. \trn!t I Witt. ffll , I , tdi I d U It I WJtll +JI.ii coupo11, no 1'11ini111um purch•'• requlrM, Li111it
void after 5.,....a--Oct-Zf 1m I 11 ,., coupofl -o11e.c01po11 ,., c11ttofl'l•r, Vorel • co11pc111, 110 Miii Mlllft pv ·~ ~,.u ro , v"1.. I P'' coupon -on• coo;pon p•r custom•r. Veld I
__,, I • ''"' •.. ,,, ""·to'-'r 2t 1972 • ,., coupo11 -.... Cf¥POfl per CUI '"'· • • •• s ~ ~-. b '' ,,,, --'~ ' · I afft;r ljiM1r,'Oc~r 19, 1972,, '"'' "'"''Y•...,.. o er , •
• 500D ONLY .. , ~MIN WOT I -900D·ONLY AT WaA•N IASUT ~ -M>OD ONLY., 14lerAIM· IASllT I GOOD ONLY AT Mt•AIN U.Sllf • other Plentifuls
BROILER·FRYERS
EGGS
APPLES .
-----------------------p-------~----, .-~ ----...: ---lllQU!!!!l'1---:-----~
I HEAD & SHOULDERS 1.11RGENS LdTIOM I CANDY I I APPLE SAUCE
APPLE JUICE
CRANBERRIES
CRANBERRY SAUCE
CRANBERRY JUICE
COCKTAIL
• Uni .. ,, ...
~ of A;r!Mture
f'lellt\f\i4 Foodl """''"'
SHAMPOO ' MILD . BAR SOAP I ; YOUR CHOICE I BAR . M BULK STYLE . I
I ~':r 2.~;· v!iu':." Tube 9·9¢ I 3;· 2 5¢ I .• MIX OR 3 'B s1 POLISH 7 9 ¢ l . . Ou r Rog. Low Price $1.~ I BATH SIZE BARS I · ~J~~ S I SAUSAGE LB. I
I With tlill co11po1t, no ml1tim um PILI+•• r9e111ir-'. limit I Wltk ffil1 coapoft, 110 .. l11l1nu1n purcli•I• requlrM. U111lt I With tlib COU!HMI, lllO •lllill'llll'I purch•S• r•q11Jrff. Ull\lt I With thii co11po11, 110 mi11ill'lull'I p11rcl.•te r•qui,.d, -One I
I per COllpOft -011• coupolt )et c111t0Mer. Vold l per co11po11 -0111 COii'°" pit c111torn1r, Vold l Ill. Pff coupon _ 011• coup•• per cuitom.,., Vol4 coupon P•r c:111to1111r. Void efler Sund•y, Ocloblr 2,,
I •fter Sul!d•y, October 29, 1972. , 1 •ft•r Sund•y, Oetober 2t , 1972. •fter S11ff•Y Oct.Mr 29, 1972, I 197 2. I
'-------'I GOOD ONLY AT IA.I.AIM IAIUT GOOD ONLY AT U.lllAIN WUT I ~l>ONLY AT Ml•AIN IASm .. GOOD ONLY AT IARGAIN IASIO'
·----~----------------------------------Salmon
..
Spawns ·
\
,,
'
APPLES
EXTRA
FANCY '
DELICIOUS 5~s1
BANANAS
GOLDEN
RIPE
'.
I 1 ,0~B.
ORANGES
SWEET 5 L 49" "N" B p
JUICY S
VALENCIA •
EGG PLANT
EXTRA FANCY 1·0¢ LOCALLY
GROWN . . EA.
USDA
CHOICE
. . .
TOM Scon
'· • -• . i' '
,. 115 13 OZ. CAN
SPRINGF.IELD
APPLE
C~DER .
I
.9.9'
USDA CHOICE
BONELESS
'
SU Aft
10 ··39'
SWIU MISS
PUMPKIN
PIES
FOllMOST
, ICE CREAM
1/1 CiAL. IOUND
HEALTH & BEAUTY hlDS
69'
HAIR SPRAY
1J .......... , c..
CREAM RINSE
SECRET
AEROSOL
LAURA
SCUDDERS
98!'
MAYONNAISE
Full Quart . . . . . . 4 9c:,
PALMOj.IV&
LIQUID
DETERGENT
Rogul Ar 89c FULL QT.
DOWNEY
98 ~AF~~(K1!~~E~~1 .s9 ....... . TOP s129 c •
STEAK'
USDA
CHOICE
BONELESS
$ 49 . .
u. GROUND BEEF
FRESH
LEAN
u.
c
"
,J
' '
Prices Effedive:
Thursclcty thru Sunclcty
OCT. 26, 27, 28, 29
--..i.1ect .. stock .. -· W! GLADLY ACCIPT
U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS
WI ..W
11.UI CM•
STAMPS
CGSTl llSA
PlAID11A
'
Wl9M
ILUI CHIP
STAMPS
19111 aad Plac:lllia
711 W.
'
. . .
__..o~=-u.-'-or ___ ~w'°"..;...c'-., °'...., 2', im
ALL VARIETIES
ALL 1oc SIZE
CANDY BARS
• 1111mtt1111
• lltttrll11er
•IMyM
• S1icl•1
• WHIJl..WlrMk
&Ill IMIJ 8111
e
D POPCORN :.~' •••••••••.•••••• :C:~~lf
D ORANGE JUICE BLEND ~·77:::::::.~o:-~ ::~~ 69<
D KLEENEX TOWELS .............. ';;'. 31'
GIANT SIZE TIDE I REYNOLD'S WRAP
".GI'"~~! 79c : ·:~~~·· 25c I •WMJNUM POil
l!J QAltS -PRIME DOG FOOD ••••••• '!~~ 11"
d TASTERS CHOICE.. H ••••••• ~:·:;;:-::11•
8 llPlOM TEA BAGS ••••••••••••• ::·~, 59<
-swm PEAS \ COOL WlllP lOPPllltl °""' l Sc 1 •1•DSt:T,1: • ~ ~ 16-0L TIN I 'WHIP'10T~ '
• ' 4V,.Ot. ~
a wtllft !$ . D KRAFT MARSllMALLOWS !'.~ ..... ·~23°
D JELLO SOFT SWIRL ............. :~·, 28"
D CllAMBERRY · COCKTAIL. ••••••• ~':fr.''. 82'
FRESH SOUR CREAM i APPLE CIDER
~"~~~s-49c I T•ff ro,. · 60c
l'IHT CAITON J HA.lf G.t.llOf.1 ° \JI~
D .3-COORSE DINNERS ••• ~~::~l~~L .... 69'
D NABISCO SALTINE CRACKERS ••• ::;: 38'
0 MOOESS NAPKINS •••••••••••••• ~: 39'
.Join Me
and My
Buccaneers ...._.... At
Thrlltbnart
KARASOV ·FIFTH
vo4kas2?1 ·
ICOTI MIST •-4-IW Ol.0$3 88 SCotch:0.'!~F. FIFTH
· , IP&DfG NllT •ID PROOF$ 3 SS
Wh AMEllCAN ;;.. isky LIGHT •. ', • • • o FllTH
> J.cHCDON BRIDGB $ 3 $ 7 · Dry Gin .roe, ""H
a8oNDELBJ>:~~=$3 $,
Ulft,DilK • • • FIFTH
0 MATEUS ROSE' WINE ........... "o'.L.1'l"
0 REGAL SELECT BEER ~:~ :·: ••••• .6 •• ., 99' ·
t ' • • • . . .
IRIS • 12-0Z. CANS
(:ANNED
SODA POP
• ~!olOI -• tu.cc oilw
'(HlHY COU.
'C-IOO,I,
e
VUTT PORTION •••• &r.. HAM SLICES :'(:'!: . 111!
••>Fitt•tli:i .. i\if;1j:.X•l•i l I . I . . , I
BREAKFAST TREATS
OJRESH FILLET Of OCEAN PERCH ••••• !IBYo.10 ARMOUR Ml'!ACqRE BACDN -.:.:,u:~7,9'. . OF~SH FILLET OF BUTTERFISH..-•••• .79'... D SWIFT LINK SAUS1GE ........ 'l'~~
0 FllESH f.ILLET OF DOVER SOLE ... ,;.;;$11l : D OSCAR MAYER BACl»l ••••• ~.~~~~971..
D FRESH PACIFIC OYSTERS •••••••• ;-: .119' 1 D·OSCAR MAYER SMOKIE LINKS •••• ~:851..
D FRESH RAINBOW TROUT ••••••••• ~:.11 ~ I D PURE PORK LINKS ~~ •••••••• ~! :;~981..
u.s.D.A. INSPECTED : GOLDBONDSTEERBEEF
FRYER LEGS : RIB ROAST
FRESH CHICKEN 1 ' LARGE END ~ : .
LEG 0, WHOlELEG
SHORT SHA.NI(
4' to 6 LBS.
LA' 'MB NEW ZEALAND ne~.£"
< •••••••
t,,. PILOT·ADVEllT1SU ., .. ......,; 2'. 197.2 --~=-------
Jerry West
LOS ANGELES '
LAKE~ srAR ..
BASKmALl TIPS
L_ AND.
JANE Wis'i''S 1
FAVORITE
RECIPES
EXCLUSM
AT
THRI
WHOLE KERNEL/ CREAM STY.LI
DELMONTE Golden Corn ·
~si 17·0Z.
TIN
. <i!Y
a.oz. FROZEN
BANQUET
MEAT PIES .
MIX OR MATCH
•· C·HICkEN • e . -18
.. TUlKEY """'
• IEEf ~
. D JQlllS~ PUMPKIN PIES ••• :;:.lt: 79' o Ill BOY CUP 01ATOES ·~-: ••••• :~:: 49'
'UllllCV DlllK' --n 371 0 MORTtll'S 'llUIK. I DUn'1 • ~ ~ ••• ::C.
LEO'S SLICED MEATS I Cracker Barrel Cheese
3·0L 'M:UGI 39c I • SHAI' • MEUOW 7ti . -· -· --· I ,1.0-0LSTICJ;$
c.r-1 hM• ~T...., EJ.I (11t.~.1~~ ........... 89c} Q
I ,• ' • • ' Z701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE a · 1308 W. EDINGER. SANTA ANA
l ' NER, HU.NTINGT~N BEACH e 23811 EL TORQ, EL TORO 1 I
I
\
DAILY PILOT
aY·ish
!
Board . . .
' ~prea~
Sunday bre11<1 ... t Is •
memorable e\'IOt In 'New
Orleft, ""'1pinble .to Ille
New York brunch, but MON
elaborate. ' u....ur il ii led off wltll •
-· • local cocklall -olllllW·ol.l'l'• ~ey• a touch ~( Pfion6d, a diah of bittel'!, nne. sugar and a twist of
l~mon. nus regal repast i s
cbarac.lerl,ie\I by spch -... rldl .oyster IO\lp, roast
QUaU bathed in a wine sauce
and e~ed Jn wl\d rice and, aruclloU heart.9.
And If lhia Is not enough,
1..9~.host.s wtll ply ""' With l '<!i'$0 filled with ClUlit ~ Ind OOU1' Cttlm anil
, l>JlnUled with ltlawberrlM
JJamlll In. klrlch.
Then finaJJ¥ yoo are 9el'V<!d
· c!ale brulOI. a -'8cUlar coo-
toction of atrong black coll"" na~ f: with· clo".es, cln-
l!IDIOll iriil O@lllli abd lemon Peel. and set ablase with _..,, __
t,.__,_ "'ar:e other <noie
jfl!ctlltlel,. JIU ~h bis-
que, a thlt!l:·IOUp slUdded with
lirlllht ro.i ~wflslr beads, ~Ired wlfti meat, larllc and
bread crumbs. :r<¥. 'Oi3.e "110 like In· lormilitjl,..._t~re Is )he New
Orlean& ctaD boll. This ao-
, tually cooslst.s of boiled crabs
plus c:rawfilh and ohrlmp.
The guest slt.s down In hia
shlrtlleeves at a plain wooden
ta ble c·overed with
neWIPOpen. Peeling off the
shells of Ibo spleed Bhellfilh. he washes them down with
bottles of beer nestled In a
trough of ice within bandy
naeh.
· N"' York~ who recall the deliPta of New Orlean1
~ can refresh thelr menldnet with a visit to the
GreQjclier, an attractive old
Worta type restaurant on New
York_., East Side.
. n., Grenadier has a woman
chef named Velma James who
comes from New Orleans and
Is well grounded In the
ipeciJl.Ull!l.qf ~J regiOI). _ •
t"' Anibiii~er faWrtte dishe! ts
'lihrllQp Creole and here I! her
recipe:
~CREOLE
2 pound9 shrimp, shelled and
deveioed
I larg'e. onion
1 No. 2 can tomatoes
I medlum can tomato sauce
I blYleal · I teupoon psrsley
I> ~n thyme leaves
l>-nblaetpepi>er
I teupooo salt
4 large green peppers
aq, onlOn and saute In
olive oil till-golden brown. Add
shriibp and saute 10 minutes .
Add tomatoes, tomato
sauee, ,hay lesl, parsley, ~.!t!"lt and cook · 20 tes. CUI up
gfeen pepper! In amall plces
and add, cookire a final 10
dilnui...
' Serles four penom and 1a jood With rice. Qiou.kl be ~
tJompanled by a chilled whl!f
Wine.
Desserts
·Go Fruity
Fruits can be varied to suit
your.,,tute., so )Oag as )'1lu keep
the ume J)l'OPOl'tionl of com
1)'1'11P, .,.._ pnvonts sherbet
,tiorri crystaUzlng.
,. TROPICAL SllERBET
I> cup tligar
. 111 cup Jaht com l)'l'llP
1/3 cup Jlme ... -juice I can (IV• ounces) cruslled
plneappleo, undrained
l'I cup pureed banana, about
t ripe banana z cupa nlllt
In i medium mixing bowl
stir io..,lher the sugar, com
syrup, lime juice, iinclralned
p-le, banana and milk
unm ""'" I! dissolved. """' into a ioaL'8n (I bY 5 by I bl' ~)' Jl'reeie until ..,.Ually
•
!'.,..,., . ,.
R<PlOVo from freew llicJ -
tum Into miJlng liowt. Belt
wllh 1 hind-operated or clec-
)rlc rottry btaler un!U light
And creamy. l!<tum to loaf
I J
I
l'""· ' , Cover UpUy with wu
paper" or trwparenl pllllld
wrap1 F.-· unW nnn.
R......, ftml f,..._ ~bo\lt 11 m~ befoa ....,111c:-
abcllll Iii quril.
1t ~ Im\ aeMd "" • day !Ir 10 tl1fr It lw 1.-
unUI 1ntfrtly "'"1, lufn Into I
or 2 f'retzlr eGDta.tnen, C!Oftl'
llCb!IY and ... In '*-·
I
,,
I
~ . , .
__ _,
MOMlll.10 A.II. TO 9 P.11. •
SAT. Ii SUll. 10 A.II. 10 7 P .IL
)3'
851
·-------------·
.... Giiiett• • ~··
fA N!',1llC DISCOUNTS
l ~fRY DA~
ALIM l[JA '"'""'" "ICC
IAN l~~!IC DISCOu .. rs
[Vlllf OAY
I-Os:. Contoiflw • .Srriall 01N
Ri.111, INTI
COTTAGE CHEESE
6-0E. Miik\! Wtw. Snit"-'O<' 14-0i.. wsruil s1YE'"""'"' "7-3,
CMIDY BARS
l~V,-Oz. IOQ ' BMACH'S Mellow
REME PUMP1UNS
'""!!l""'!'• 8-0r.. Od>
-
&ALLO
' ITALIAN SALAMI
·~·Chi.lb 11Y.i_·O...ce Chl<b
· r.9ciN'iiiliioil·0" , .... ~ comECAKE
25c@ &o'RA'i'-··-...
.... ~ 12-0L c.... """""*""' ~lltlltil HAND S1lAP
141 ~-•!!:"'""' .~. "''" -.. JERGENS LOTION
HAND SOAP
~·6~8ox ~CAL&ON BOUQUET
~ 12-<n. lll.•F«Toli.t BO'llll ~lY·D·BOL CUANER
9-0L Btf, • f,wtOfMtic: !'..'!\C-BtU BOY
h~'°" •• ~ltatlon 394 ~ !12..(k. llltflll ~tti. 1 :SS ou1c~1~!'~E l~E,!1!,K . ~FANTAmK CLEANER CRICKET BUTANE
llSHltR
@ 10HNST'3N'S PIE SltD.l.S 351 "S''1'J.o.."'
------..,-----WE WELCOME FOOD ~J BAITSOAP m (.'.ii:::\ 00-C-O ...
ITRICK CUDAHY
BACON I 18. PKG.
..,IMT QUALITY"
•
231 .. s!~~ .!~~.'!'!!~.. · ~Ill DIAPER ums
Oii: OllNCl COUNTY AlPll4 IOI
1mar1 Plllll
FRESH 3~·~
GROUND BEEF
'
. .
tANTA\itC DISCOUNTS
E~ RY DAY """'"' "''''"" ""'
fANTA SllC DISCOUNTS
EVERY DAY ~ ""'
l-4-0.-.. Locrf R\Plfl l fT.A. Qiut Brtlll
ltlM Im •6
81tt111f11s C1ffH Cakl
HIU.OWEll
PUMPKINS
c
LI.
81 1
291
391
41 1 ...
551
1"
251 ... ...
441
1•1
(.'.ii:;;:\it'Em'n'Aiitiias · 871
~ IS..0. 'WCllte .... •t-Ciiol.51ff 411
@ wciil"-59'
I-Ct. • ll-Golltrl SI ..
WDTWll .IASS
20-0. .lll Gillleft -.. I-Ct, I Mii ......., Wtitht
'651
GOLDU DWCIOUS
APPLES I
c
LI..
CHECK THESE EVER YDAY LOW DISCOUNT PRI CE S
IEDORWHm
GRAPEFRUIT
OIAYOn ·
SQUASH
RUTAIAGAS
YAMS
aLERY
EGG PLANT
5i$1
10~.
10:.
19:.
251
1a:.
VAUHCIA ~GES 10 1':1 994
nlESE. PR00Ua PRICES EFFECTIVE
OCT. 26-NOV. 1, THURS. THA.U wtD,
CRISP
CUCUMBS
SWEET
CORN
CARROTS
SPINACH
~IUJH• OCIAN UIAY 1 u,,
CR ANIERftl U "'·
IOVTK""4 OOl.O • 'Vtf
8RaPlFJIUIT DR
ORA.I E ~UIDE
\t 04UON
10!
10!
10:..
10' ...
29'
...
•
D~LY fllDT
FROZEN FOODS
SHRIMP CREOLE .•••. ,0,\~ 91 '
ORANGE JUICE .•••.•. ':'Jl"J,: 28'
FRENCH TOAST •.•••. ".";:"~ 55'
PET RITZ PIES .......... n::l 37' itntf. Clt:•IT, C~IAIO
.,-. JOHN'S PI ZZ A .....•• .'\.": 69·
rlml<>NI. CHI UI, !.ALl!.l.Gl
...... ,49" GIAl'1f1Uff ~
4tt-OL CAN
. . . . .
BABY LIMA BEANS ..•. ,:'t:'f:: 30'
COOL WHIP TOPPING ... ~~iii. 35'
SHEEPHERDER DOUGH . '."::,":::: 69'
MORTON MACARONI .• :i:'~ 24'
MRS. SMITH'S PIES •••••• ·~95•
MIJQ, f'l.NPllll
PET FOODS
.,-.KAL KAN DOG FOOD . ,..,::;: 25'
.rGAINES PRIME •••• 'll':."::1.67
PURR CAT FOOD ...... ~:,~ 14•'
APPLE CIDEI
lADT Ul
GALI.OM oom1 . . .
f15
CANNED FOODS
.rHARVEST DAY PEARS •. "Ji 39'
..-.FRUIT COCKTAIL .••. ,,,,'g,l 2B'
DOLE PINEAPPLE .•••• ,..,,'!~ 27'
FRUIT COCKTAIL •••.•.• ~!:!:: 20'
CLING PEACHES .•• :"'."':.~.l~ 17'
DEL MONTE PEARS .•. ,.,:~ 28'
.rWHOLE APRICOTS .•. ~i'!;: 33'
a" PINEAPPLE JUICE ...• '~WJ 27'
. -'
... Treat Your Budget to Greater Everyday Saviom
We discount more than just thousands of grocery items, health &..beauty.aids, produce items, housewares,
... We invite you to Compare Our Low Discount Meat Prices-Great r Savings on Top Quality, Every Time/
O<IAI 2.~" SPIAY If'
STIAINfD
Ort WMOLI
16-0Z. CAN -
CANNED FOODS
.,.-MOTT'S CIDER .. ~::~ 69'
.rSTEWEO.TOMATOES .... ~ 22'
VEGETABLES ......•.. ~= 18'
51100 llll!. GO!Dtll OUM mu COUI, l&O.D9I WIQ.t
lflNlt Ca.ii
WHOLE CARROTS •.•. ~;:!; 33'
PICKLED BEETS •••• ,.:",~;:,:; 32 '
LIMA BEANS ...• "·., ,,':,',~ 24'
STEWED TOMA TOES .•.. ~= 20'
VEGETABLES ..•...... ~= 19'
l'IAS, ~QD llll&M llMS ca 5lADIBI 111191 llAl6
.,-.WHOLE POTATOES •• ~~~ 15'
.,.-TOMATO JUICE •••. ~=: 30 '
.,.+TOMATO JUICE ..•.. ~:T.:: 29'
LIGHT MEAT TUNA .8::::,~~~~I:: 78'
CARNATION TUNA . ~:\~!'!:.\ 54'
TOMATO SAUCE ...•.. ~= 10'
.,.+MARSHMALLOW ••• ~·J,'1: 27'
.,.+PLANTERS NUTS •.•. uofc!: 85 • '
PEARSOIS CAllJ
IUll 3gc ... .,,
PACKAGED GOODS
RALSTON CEREAL ..• '."~".:: 44 '
LOMA LINDA CEREAL •. ~;r.:ll 43'
.,.-SNACK CRACKERS ..• ,,'::'.:': 24'
SUNSHINE COOKIES .•. '.",~ 75 '
.,.+CHOCOLATE BITS •.• u':l~l 47'
SLIM JIMS CANDY ."'.'":':m.~~·~-::: 63 '
OUM OUM POPS .. 'CNl"'C.::~~~:63 1
MARS CANDY .......... 'i':~ 73'
9110HS, MIU:Y WAY, l ~-AIMlNO, ru.Nl1f
"""" PETER PAULS BARS . '.".".'\':i:".r. 55' cwvau, ALMOND JJJY, MlUfX,
TOOTSIE CANDY .•... ~~= 54'
DAIRY PRODUCTS
.,-.MARGARINE •...•• '.~;,-g,: 39'
RODS TOPPING ......... :'~ 41'
crDIET IMPERIAL •.•.. ~.;": 42'
COTTAGE CHEESE •.••• ,':f,'<'f: 68'
VMU. MD. lOW H.T
LADY LEE ICE CREAM ..•. ~~ 67'
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
IUIT'S IETCllP TOMAI043" 32-0UNCI ¥
IOTTLI ..
.,-.TRASH CAN LINERS ~"a~~ 99 '
TOP JOB CLEANER ..•••• ~~ 73'
SAFEGUARD BATH SOAP . .'0:: 21 '
IVORY SOAP .••.••.. • ,.: 31'
SPIC & SPAN .•.... "."'."'.'~~\'::: 97'
U.1.D.L fOOG STUii' •
COUPONS
Gladly Accepted
"OUI PRlaPROnCrJoNPOLICY GUAUNTIBTtlSl,.IQS TO Bl fFRCTivt: FROM
WI y o~ 25 11'1ROOOH TUESDAY ocroea 31, ltn". • •
y.9·011E STEAK FRESH FRYERS CHUCK ROAST
,.".... s 14' UNCONDITIOHALL Y
IONDED FOi:
QUALITY AHO 1• l'LAVOlt •
,•;::::.-:. 8 9 UNCONDITIONALLY c
SOHDl!O l"Olt ,
QUALITY It.NO fL
f'LAVOlt •
USDA &lllDE I
WNOLa •ODY
CN ICICIENS
IOMOIOf'Olt
QUALITY AND
f'U.VOlt 29.~ tCAoa<UT 63 UJICONDITIOftALL Y c
IONOl!D f'D•
QUALITY AJIO -...
l"LAVO•
~~!. c9!~.~!NP.TIONALL Y l<HID•D .••• , ..•.••.••••••••••••• U 98 C
.. E!>.~.~.~~~~.~~!~,~~~S. . . ............. 77'
,''@f.~M~t!~u><~~,~~.~~s .......................... T:34'
(j-)!P.~~.~ .. ~~!L!.~!!~!~o .................. 45'
~ !P.~~~ .. 1~!.!Ho~.~,~!~ .................... 39' .t !~.~~~! .. ~.t~9,_q,~~,~~~!~ ................ 33'
~Po!Hc~~D~TI0~~~9o~o•o ............................ l ·L• .. KO 77c
PORK SPARERIBS 89• Fresh ... Discount Priced Deli Items
Guaranteed TO BE THE FINEST DUALITY AVAIL ABLE
and at Low . Low Ever yday Discount Prices ' 111 ~Von de Korn p's w
AN OUTSTANDING VARI ITT
OF FRESH IAlllRY GOODS
l'illtME• STYLE ..................... LI WIEMERS lAOY LEE HAM IWOll:Tm,
PORK RoAsT -:~:88 • 111-0, ... ,,,, ....... ~~"\"~69· "°"' .............. ~o:i::i.s9·
;~l~~~w;;c~'iC'"·~o;;;i~,, ;OLOGNA Wl.,.WllAID SALAMI .:'.':~:=.11•
l'AltMElt ~OHN,WILSOtil ..... 1-L•·:~; c REG OR THIOCSUao ••• ~'~~~93c (ll-OZ IOlOGNA Otllll l.IS) ••••• 100~. CHIQ.UITA
BAllAllAS
, • APPLES GOLDEN DELICIOUS • EXTRA 19<
FANCY · WASHINGTON GROWN...... l8 VI LIR&E PERSIMIOIS ..................... 10~. ARTICHOKES PACKAGE o• • MEDIUM SIZE 00 S9• 2 LARGE SIZE • YOUR CHOICE•••••••••••••••• PkG
... Kly&fl
ORIS
MOUTHWASH
ANDOARGU
,2·0UNa.10nu ~· $ 19 The good tolling -1 mouthwash used i.~!;:.:..!' by mot• dentists
----than any other.
A l ku S+-ltJ:1•r ALIA r SELTZER
For fast effective r•·
lief from gastric dis ·
tress, h.o<loc:hn. 2S'•
--DIAL ANTI·""""""' ~ W-DIOOOttANT _
lleg. or unscented l4-0L --•
Timed release C. 39 .-
formula for long-.,, 1 'fil'
So1tlng protection. • ~
() •... Kly&fl
CARYL RICHARDS
BALSAM 79c ln1tont hotr con·
dltloner. IAVll
TAIE BALSAM
Adds protein bodv I OZ
to Ump holr • make• ~ 1 07
II pl-y, '""'"'gooblo.
liYEll llPlllll
1 QO TABLITS PEPTD llSIDL
I OUNCI IOTILI
lllYLCllEll s 106 WISELllE 701Z./2 56c 4 1 /t-OUNa KINO SIU PITllOLIUM Jill Y • -.. ..... i.iriiiiii ...................... ~
tlJAw•il•bl• .i our II«•• with Van de k1mp'11IJ
BEVERAGE • SPIRITS
COORS BEER ...•••. ""~ 1.69
BURGUNDY WINE ••.• .!~ 1.99
LUCKY VODKA .•.•..• ~:.':: 7 .11
IV'll lTS AYA!l.llU .t.T Ola $f(J!O llirmt llQUOll DU'f,J
OIL PAINT-BY-NUMBER
BYCRAnSMAN
Pre-printed panel, 18
oil colors, 2. brushes,
complete Instructions.
s151
DELUXl
WALIC·R·RIDE POii KISMET
BY LAKHIDI
Fast-action garne IY WONDER
For toddlers; con-
verts to Won~er-S 1498 Pony; "grow. '
with th• child.
of luck and skill
combines die:• and'
poker. Fun for all.
$157
0"·· ...... MIA! CHEESE ............ O<ll ... SLICED BACON MAYH97• MEATS WIUOff. HB.1.0ZCAN$2fS MISSWl!CDH!IN 73•
(WAll'Ell THIN, 1, OZ l'ICGt'l'cl 1-l• "KO ROAST POf« OR SMO«EO PORIC LOIN MED. SHAJtP OIEODAR , , •• ~ , , • .-.
Evarv cut of .,.,, moat '' .• "UN-r••MKS CAllWEO HAM " CONDITIONALLY BONDED". Our ,""" Wll""'79' PATR<CUDAHY ........ 3 CAN.1329
bond Is your mo b k AllBUF .............. 1~1~G ney QC aumRMlK FAllMl..ANl
guaranltt of complete salidoc-BISCUITS ''""'"" I' HAMS FWTCOOKID .5 LI $J2t tion. HAJtVl5TDAY ..••.•••• a-OZTUBE IONEUSS,SHAt«lESS .... OH
TllY·TOllA FIRE
DEPARTIEIT SET
Five-pc. sat; Pumper
Pickup, Hook-and·
ladder, Ambulance, Fl,..
Chief '• cor. lodder $668
raises and swivels.
EJCcltement galor• I
Hand-decorated
vanity set ta d•
llght a llttle girl.
White plostlc.
•
CHILDRE•'S
HALLOW EEi
PAJAMAS
A•D
LEE OIL
FILTER TEXACO OIL PRESTOllE lllASIC SET 4; ·:
Regular cotton flannel( ~~ ~'».
30.WT. • QUART AITI FREEZE
GAL. $ J 99
PJ 's that are also '.• ~
tnstoll It yaur-
1etf and save ..
A clean filter
means better
performance.
flf-1
31' halloween costumes. A I
vorl•ty of styles; all
with masks. Sizes 3 to 7. '
STUD OIL ADDITIVE
$189
GuarontHdlo equall 53 or exceed all other C
Your c:or radiator'•
best friend. A
guaront..ct anti·
freeze thofa also
a i=Oolont that pr•·
vents over·h90tlng.
NOT AVAILAI\.• AT
t AJITA MOJllCA
oll addltfv••· Al 22GA
IM~lftW ·S..~Pry.1tLsr. OIAllOI . H• La.,.. A¥1. there's a . . near you ll ...... · .. ....,......, ''"· , ... '"" .... • .. ..... ' • ' \AlllWOOD • .......... ~ Cllt. SM tllMUDllO • 2S14J ...... St.
MAMllM . ·~ S., s .... CIMll' .... OAo' .. GIOYl • l"1J l"ll So. UWMDAU • 14411 k.,. lht t.tA•G&lllll ·tUl.\stT_,ltM, .\NAHUM 1 W D UNNDI • IHOl "-'• l•1. SAN r10t0 • 162' tSttt St ' ' "-r.-t I••· C.UDIN MOYI • 11012 M ...... It lJlllWOOO • 10721 Alt.tic A••· ""''INA , lllO So. Mn'" AIUSA • 27J I, CW.*9 ltrMt ND ' ..
IAUIWIN rift , 1,_41 lt1111tll9 .... ClG<ll .. llllll : 11UOOIJ • .. ·.•,•,-.... ".",,"', • LONG llACN • 4JJS I. Sr,riiit ff, WITA MONICA , 2•17 U1tcfti ....
CANOGA ,... ,,,. I. LOS IHGRU • ,.., '· ...... "' •••. SOUfM IATI • s:n I nr.m111 lhi. W ' .. M1t ,t,,,, lllGHlAlfO '41l • Ill W. Are. 41 MONIOVIA • 4St W .... llft111tt11 Drf" llDONOO llACK . !Ill Am• W.4 ..::.~~.;~•,:::',_:.~CM. MutfTINOTOJf tl4CN • tDS1 I...,_ "••· MOffTillUD • tJJ -., Wlkt• TOllA#CI , Z1Jt r.ctllt <•tt hr '
' llllNTISJOI lu.at • 1MOO JtilM ewe. It. JfOIWAll • 1 Int ......... ~ TDlll.UICI ............ ""' •
'r
" ............ ...
1WDll • '"" ...,.. a ........ "· WllltMlnll • om u... ...
.. Nim• • 1•1 .... ~ .......
WllTM.,,. .... W1a1-..a
MtrTTI• • IJllJ .... h A-.
WMl1Tla • 11111 I ........ ...
Wll#!JfGrH • 1nt .... ~ woootA• llW .... ""*' ... STOllS Drill Al 10 AM
.. . . . . . . . . ' .. . .
WtdnHd11, OctObtr 25, 1972 DAILY PILOT 49
Countdown: Calories A Slim Example
'
Brull!1st. brunch, 1 corr~ lllld 11111 mythJcoJ ~ .,., demonstraltd 111 will!-mat. II: room t<!mperature. Whip with 1...,uy opreadable . . . n slstency of regular wtter .
bl'Uk 1nd lunch! Tt1ilmt, op. eets ijka a bo'le ind never lo pay ID equal price for hlll 8LJM OOllJIMET DIET Bllf· an eltctrlc mixer until Duffy. looks, tastes and spresda like Your diet wtter won't
petjan, CQCktall hour, dinner, gallll welgl!U the calories in lhelr ipread! I TER Add the salt IDd cootlnue to buti.r ... tt ts butter! It's separall, even at r 0 0 m
,µpper, \nttctJ and n~tcapst ' Are you ~dy for tbl11' Becauae your diet bUtter sOck (C ounces) butter wbipon hJgh Speed, adding the un likely tbat anyone could tell temperature ... unless you ac-
How ~d 1°" fllure f~ butter!" , apreadS !wice as far, it's onlf ;,• c:tl:P cold water water gradually. Make! ooe that you've been COMivlng ddentaUy leave lt near the
ca 1P lolld -1o • dal'I ('Ille dalrJ 1.a. • ,i.t la hall ., oalty, so you'il want' to i plt>Cll of "41l cup, 50 calorics per tables-with the Cllorie oount. heat of your ...,.e or some
'llitt's the _. for "I"" ta.lol 1 cue !roll! the ma'l!arile add a plnd> to make UI> ~ PQI ltie wtter in a mlllnl pooo. Put It In the refrigerator almilar milhop that maw It
days sti'ilght 'wben Ill" •, r.:i:r::kars=. :::!ffit~u=bl;;:l:::c iu,IT.1;::1read=:::f_:d:::lfi:::.....,.=:::':.;',.:R:::er:::•:::'1~how"--'to-i--;1'-;/a:::"ll!O.· ..:.•llow:::......cil-'to:...:::ao:c.ft:::en:...:::to-'-' -'Sol=t·...c·..:Jlgbl~_:•:::nd::.....:::m"'agnil=· ·__:and~:::lt_:wtll.=..:hardea=.::::.::to.:.the::..:...,.::::.~m:::•:::lt.~------_!''-------UOll) -por load ad ltn0' convene to leem 'fl'bat11 new.
The food manulaclllren
l•WJ<;b u..it lll'!I product! at
8l\ i>dlw ~ board or
goodies. '
lt' ChrlstmaS, 'lbarMiv-
lng, ~ o Jtallan--weddhig, bar
mitzvJh and dinoer at ty1'om's
alt rolled Into. one weeklong
diet disaster !
With such occupe.Uonat
hazards you'd expect au food
editors to be fat. Not so! Many
double as fastilon editors and
have the figures to prove it.
Wa'lching how they "eat
everything" and still stay slim
is fascinating research ... run
of ideas to help anyone survive
~;holidays· end -Other
"locid ~gies." Here's how
the~ '4jld it: . • (1~ M7iast in llne: If yoo're
first· for the ·load you'll be
finished whi~ everyone e~ is
... still eating .•. an4 on .. your
wq ... ct. IOI' seconda. The
11lihi '~ton: took their own sweet ttmi quetierg up at the
bUllrt tables,·
•t2}. ,Be ;adventuresome! The
11.!~t editors were the
One9-'InOBt willing to teat their
taste buds with "weird" com;
binations.
(3) Avoid thi;: ordinary. With
·all the nevi fpllds on hand, the
•skinnies didn 't waste their
calories or capacity on bread
ind billter, mashed potatoes
or other ev,eryday stuff. "I
know ~t that tastes like,"
said QDe, spurni~ steak.
(_t} Don't be a plate
ctearier. • . even if a n
overzealous waiter sets down
more than you want. Wasting
food may be a sin, but the
slim editors didn't try to save
:_ the wwld with their forks.
tS) Pay attention! The skin-
nies gave Cood their full con·
centration, commenting on the navOr and tei:t;ure, attempt.ing
to peas the recipe.
Wben the conversation turn-
ed to other topics they stopped
eatifl&, But the overweights
continued to eat un-
consciously, even w bile
d~ hot political issues. ~) ·Don't eat ti if you don'.~
like l~! "This Is yukky," said
OllO. chubby editor' polishing
off a dessert concoction. Her
£1irn:. tablemate took o n e
spoOaful IDd agreed.
At another table one editor
used;ber culinary inventiveness
to i'e&cue a new thaw-.and-
serv~ casserole : she spooned
in.sdtne wine, a plncfl or sugar
and a tquirt ot lemon saved
frbm her salad. "Now it wtes
like .mething/' sh e said !
(7) ee a breakfast·believer.
Differing from the general
J>01>Ulatioo, very few food
edJtors skip breakfast. ac-
cordiag to • ohow-ol.Jlands
survey, Skinnies seemed to
favor protein-rich eggs, meat
end fl!b. di/Jhes. They limil<d
breads, paSlrles and pancakes
1 WJl polite nibble.
(8) Don1 miss a thing. "'Ille
skinniel seem to eat the
most,., commented one Food
ed itor as we watched a trio of
size 9s haul away plateloads of
Oriental lood. But !1Jl11lling
isn't the same as stuffing. 'nle
girls tried everything ... once
• • and left the table with
thein,.cwiOe.ity satisfied.
(9) Outgrow your sweet
toollt. ~ of the slim editors
turned thumbs-down on a
, ~811" pd-<tuff ~')>et, but
' .,;Joted be!Tle1 l4PPOd Wllh '· unsweetened cultured cream.
the piece de resistance dessert
~ at the best meal of the week
I (10) Be nutrition-knowing !
'Ille slim e,ditors wof~ at it,
• throtigb bolanoed ... ung. Most ~ were .oppoled to 'fads and
, crash dieting: Nowhere could I
Salad Tops
" JAVANESE
This dressJng may be used
on chicken, vegetable or
seafood salad .
JAVENESE DRESSING
2 tablespoons com oil
2 UJblespoons finel y chopped
onion
2 tablespoons _finely chopped
green pepper
l tablespoon finely chopped
celery
2 teaspoons curry powder
I dilcken bouillon rube
.If.a cup bolllng water
1 Cup real mayonnaise
In a saucepan heat com oil ;
add onion, green pe pper and
celery; cook a:ently, aUrrlng
5 often. unlll vegetables .are ten-
• der. /lllr In curry powdar.
DISlolve bouillon cu be In
bollin& wat..-: stir Into C111Tled
mtxture. Remove from heat
ind GOD!.
Ot'ldually llir into mayon·
natse, blending wtll. <htll.
MM:es II> CllJ>5.
''
COPYRIGHT .
)'
12 PRICH ~mv
· · WED., OCl •• 15 tHRU -'
TUES., OCJ."31, 1972 , . V r:i-'1~11!'1 B~ , •
J
{
•
:
Compare 'the complete cost of your e.-itire food ·
. order from Market Basket with any other food store.
NOW ALL MARKET BASKET STORES ARE M.B'. DISCOUNT.
HERE A E JUST A ~EW OF THE THOUSANDS OF DISCOUNT PRICES AVAILABLE TO YOU~
" HILLCREST ~~""U.S.D.A. GRADE "AA'"
-LAIGE EGGS
.. --·--••
·'-i
I
DETERGENT
TIDE
HILLCREST
SUGAR·
5
CUT-UP MIXED
Wt llSUVI ntl ltOM1
TO UMITQUANTITIU.
NO SALIS TO DISTtllUTOIS
°'WH"M'S'LNS
/'. FRYER PARTS f' MllllD NIYll,Al1$COHlAlNI MllH9QUAIUllS 'lfllll la.atl,
WIXDIM!IU Wllff tAOIS. ... WINCH, MMMITI
DECORATED
OR ASSORTED
VIVA TOWELS
MARKET BASKET
MEL-0-SOFT
BREAD
~
THERE IS A MARKET BASKET M.8. DISCOUNT FOOD STORE NEAR YOU
r
•
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BEEF
CHUCK ROAST
JACK·O·LANTERN
PUMPKINS •
!
2,.
'
WATCHYOUI
MAIL IOI .. . .... .............. ._ -···--.. .. .. _.,.u ...... ~ wu111,.. .... .....,. .. ......... ,.._.,.
~ .......... ~ .. .. _ .. "" ..
• '
EVERY CUT OF BEEF
SOLD AT SAFEWAY
DISCOUNT
IS · ~~Ar USDA
CHOICE
We ore co•wlncff t•at yot waat to11
Hting qvality h• the "'"' you stne.
Thot'1 why •"'Y cvt of Htf at Sofl'W9y
Dl1cou•t 1 USDA Ct.oice Gni••· Ma•y
food stores w• tehcy Mmes to tluerib•
their btef that Is aot USDA Choice, but •••f of • lesser ttuolity.
EXPERT AGING
lvtn tH fia11t quality meat1 reach
•••k flavor only aher proper ogin9. lo
our wast alr-conclitioattl agint rooms.
Safeway Mtf is htlcl vncltr colltrollecl
,...,,,,. .. ,.., the exact numller of clays
to inwre perfect t111cltrM11.
CLOSE TRIMMING
Ewery cut of Sofewoy Mef Is clos•
trhnMtd to nmovt excess llont and fat
ltefore weighing to give you evtn mart
nlut for your money.
fi~ ~~.~.!.~~~~~. ~!~!!'~~ \ ,,.._,._, ef A1ric•ltv,.. H• •nl,.
'\. Hh4 n •l..tit.1. We He•'"'"" HI•• US OA •• fl .. fM4 .. 1.111
Whole Body
Fryint Cklckffl.
PlumR:& lender
To Borbecue IL Under 2~·1•s. D. ·
0-Bone Roast
USDA Choice 8-f-Should•
Chucli:-Fk:Mlrlul & Julc'f
Fresh Beef Brisket ::~r; .. 98•
Beef Rib Roast ~;.":!'::~:: .. $)"
Bfff Clod Roast ";::;,;"' o. $)"
Fresh Ground Beef R1111lar
USDA ln1pKted
2 & 3-lb. pock• lb.69c
11.98c
11.98c
II. $1 7~
lrwd hiNI•• A•ffic111
Flovorlul And Tender-USDA. Leg of Lamh
Boneless Roasts
Top Sirloin .Steak
Choict Gtod!d Lomb-Short Shani:
l11l1cl & Tied Chuck
USDA Choice Beef-flavor·
ful & Juicy-To Pot Roost ..... , ... ,.,..
USDA Choice Beef
Ideal For Broiling.
@f sA'ucE
Mn. Wright's
Butttrmilk-Homtmod•
T tx1vr1 & floYOl"I
40-1L55c pl(. '
Cragmonl Beverages 1t:; 1oc
Cl I .reties P•11"l•rl"!nds,R11ulararKln1s $320
lbQthllMlll&~'Strit;H Ct1.
· llM•CtJ. I
§iAngel Food Cake ~fe'~39•
'@ BreakfDSt Rolls w%~... ,,. 33•
I Old Fashioned Donuts :~i 39'
Skylcn Bread ~= 3 i:;::, $J
SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS
.. POTATO FLAKES
"Waliaan a·9 So Quick To 2 ·Ill. C
Prepare I Pk&.
.5'1Ptnl O's '-;:~ ·~ 19•
P'tlllo P.aike Mixc=.~35•
.' To•lfo P.ie .J:.'f:.. '::' 29'
eLAYORIS ,
=MOUTHWASH 77c & GARGLE 14-IL Ill.
9j Style Balsam l':;;.~ ~ 77• il Long & Silky Conditionertl!99• ft Bayer Aspirin .::';. 73• fi Allierto Balsam Shampoo':~9·
Lucerne °'11191 Juice ,t.. 49•
Luceme SalDds ~ "" 39•
PlllslMny llolut Puffs ':'l.."35'
USDA Choice
G"'tltd-
FlovorftJtAnd)uicy-
ldeol to Pot Rl>cist It'
Blatlt (llt · ID.
' . .
~~~J.~:'ks1l$109
Center 7-Bone Steaks ".'.'!:a::' ..S4•
Boneless Steab ~~.'!. .. '1"
Sirloin Tip Steaks ~ ... '141
SPENCER STEAKS
le•1l111 Ii• lye
USDA Choice 8et'f
AQed And Trimmed 11_$22a
SMALL LAMB CHOPS
IAI• Cwts-USDA
Choice Grode Loriih
Gtnulne AIMricon
.. .:..
flCream Pies 41 ... L$1
... · • 1ea..1r-T_..'1titJCn11t Pies I Vegetables
ltl-1ir-C1n.Pus. 2 -IL 6 lc
P111 l Clmb pk&. · Ii. Brussels Sprouts :-•:;-27• ~Sausage Pizza = 1::87• l!!lll . &I ............. , ... _ lil Vegela es 1-.•w··~"" ,,., .Jil-
•Morton's Mini Donuts'::-41'
BIG LIQUOR BU YS
fii'o:;",b;,~-
011 C1ll1111 ll·h'ID1 $399
SMtttl & Mtlltw FllUI fl Senorita Tequila ,:, .. '3.."
St. Elllo's Rull ":io;.:"' •'3"
La Mesa Wines ~~ .~•P'
BunER TOP
CORN POPPER
99
. .
Rl•WCtttor ' Part:m.ttstwb
Cut Fnlm Eastem
Graii>fed "1!.rktrs
siloP & COMP~E •••
Prove It Fo Yourselfl'
Just a few Everyday Law Prices
won't satisfy· yoor needs & lower
your food 'budget expense! At Safe-
way Discount you'll find low, low
Everyday Prices throughout the
store ••• PLUS Super Savers!
~i~~!S . . $,1· 29
USOAOto;bGntdldW fl
Canned Hams $479 Sterling FraMcs _ =~"t:::..r··4t:; =t!~. ~69c
Fresh Pork Spareri&s ·s;:: .. as· ~Mn. Paul's Fish fin,; · ~99' ·~
Lll!llt Ri& Chops .. ~:;."'..,. .. $JH Gour9lt Sliilllp =c:= ::"2"
Ri& Eye Lam& Chaps ·~ .. $)57 Cooked Scallops '::'~·~ .. '2"
S•fewaj '·Sliced . Bacon :=:; ;86c
lath's 'Sliced Bacon : a · iJ'16~
' ' .
Grade ·' A' lurkeys-:::=s::a48'
Cooked Flshstlcks-J::~= !:.48c
@f JiiiCE .. .,... __ r,....,
: !Ill Gall! 15 ~~ottlo
lb. •
Delicious Apples~;~,; 59c
Valencia· Oranges"1!~':""8i':i98c
Yellow Onions . u~~ '· 3 :;39~ ..
' Tomatoes '11.29c •14
Dlglect Naor Dates ,_ 3 t!''I Boston Fems ,:~~t:, ~~ •2"
a.tlett Pltn .!'>!~ 3 ... '1 4-inch lndaar Plants ..,, 99•
T1• lf0ccoli '==' o.25' 0..lc Ca11post ':''I"
Olm91 .lllca '7.%..,""l' :.O:aa• Gtc••• Hose "': .. •.;:'S" .
Indoor Plants
=-2~.-.29~ $-Pits
-
• 1000 Bayside Dr., Ne'wport Beach • 211 E. 17Ut St, Costa Mesa . • 24 Monarch Bay Plaza, $0. Laguna • 636 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach e 801 E. e Camino Real, San Clemente e Santa Ana Freeway at I.a Paz, Mission Yieja e e W"~Slll & Fairview, Costa Mesa
1 • I
'
.
'
•
in builclin9 memoriel
:*/Holhe 01 · qout own!·
't ' ~ • ' "It'• ., .... to B'e Nw to Pe9111e''
~w ,meny . of ¥®' childhood memori1>s are centered around .the home
fiu1w up in? j( 'ot of them .•. and the best of the lot! Start build-
in9 lJiose memories today which will be so dear to you in the future ...
in a home of your .own. The Real Estaters would like to help you do
t :iust'that! w~ can h~lp you in ev~iy step of the way. o..,~;,86 trained
. ~·.sal~s~eople in. 6 off1oe1 .to help you. Remember, we are the lar9est
\
\ loeel owned real es~~te firm in the Orange Coast area. We're your
\ nei<1f! ors, we, sincerelY,'\rant to help. RANDY liltcCARDLE
''-'~ANTE ' ' . Jr: . GE FAMILY
'
For thla super Wnlly0ome~ Four bedrooml.,.2 of
these U'e approx. 14 x at~ 3 ~baths + 114
. 00.th, dRun& room,. farnUy room -huge!!!. Walk :ID
closets iyxl a llU'le lot_ with boat gate. All ·of ~
IN' only 1$42,000 with VA and FHA terma •. C8Il
5'6-2ll3.
•
[
OW.N: YO!JR OWN.. FORT
·~NISH VARIETY . . '·
Yot .. ll tove' the seclusion yoo get In this big l bed·
1oom Hacienda -surroun6ed by walls Iw: Jrivacy.
Lushly ~arvfac~ •this red Spa.ntsh tilt! l't'.IOf beauty
o!Cera ·thick ~1."'"W&Jj..t().Wall fireplace, big
l.unily room 'with 'w~ blr. te1>4rilte master bed-
room &00-)'0Qf....wn .. blJta>ling ·brook. Only $43,500.
To see call S0:253S. ·' ..
..
, , A, :JR~/-; . .
Then in•fi'°f thlf'•.,t,iiljjg 4 ~·· Larte
living nXin 4 fireJ?lace. This ~ ~ been
completely rep;Aint~ 1'Skle and out. l't lS vacant
and ready ~mediate occupancy. Priced for
quick &ale at *'4,900. &47-4i010.
...... ~ ... ,.1. -~ ~~ ltMii ......... ... °'""'
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W.IMM. "' ... "" I*• .... ~--111 W~ "'•1~
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J\.f \ '•.. .
Lo<:atecl on a quiet cut-de-sac this large 3 bedroom tdnti featuret an 6".i-erslzedftjt ihd ~. trees
everywbrn:;! You'U love th& sepante den and latg'e. rucy coUntrY kitchen. All .mis 1or only ~.500 '•-and
)'('ti can aasume fop.n will) pa,yments of .$195 ~
month. To see' call 842-2535. j •
. { l ,
You couldn't dupljcate this lovely home today. It
Cltfcrs comfort and charm together wlth all the
modern• con~mence. Located high above Corona
dril Ma, on fee land overlooking beauti(ul Newport
Harbor arid the Blue, Pacific. 4 spacious bedrooms.
3 baths, family ~with wet bar and a lormal
dinln& rOOm. $125,()(.'(), 673-8550. .
·~~· 1m.tl(osl2l:°niE .J,.cw ' . : IT'S LIKE
OPENING A PRESENT
You ~.theJand witter thll" neat and clean
4. ~borne ·witti\n l)ne-b.alf 'mile of till?
beacfi. Ttie---~ haw out OOiie~themR.iv"'es
in perf~ the low 1natntenance landscap.
lng. One of the !ew homa in the Fa with , ~ g-F"\'turtber illlqmja!ioll and
i'.Jltxltfttment to ~. call S02sas. f ' ~
Exetutiv1t home beautifully landscaped.
. Large two story home located In mos! deSlr-
abJe area In Huntington Beach featuring 4
large bedrooms, 2~ baths, formal dining
roo~ modern kitchen with complete built·
ins:.-Family room "-'Ith fireplace and .,,.,et bar.
$14,950. 847.fiOlO.
WANT TO Gl<T AWAY
FROM THE \(IDS? SHIP SHAPE 'N'
' • . SALEABLE You can do ,;;in this..~ -let be close 4t"
hand. Thl.s 4 bedroom'. 3 bath 6ome tea~ 'New carpets, new paint, make this beautiful a secluded master bedroom suue: Bonus~ home a best buy. Beautiti11 cabinets in im-
hrur a»en-addtXI on fDt pool table, parties, eic. maculate kitchen, lo\.'ely patio. This home is
Loca~ ill a~ ncl&h~'jUlt 8~ · located on large corner lot with acoeu for fl"'i' the Pacific. ·Only' 139;1il>-CalMIC·:is.15. com per .Or: ,boot • .l,ppnll!ed a( ~r.oo__. Call ... ) .. -ai~ .. ,.J-, ....... l:IJ~ ., ___ .847-6010. ..... ,. _.f',• -... ~
L' l,_,t. Ti .,-.-~f
A II ~ IFUL lllG HOM "
BUT IN FORECLOSURE SPACE
Over 2800 aqt.1att ~ ln ·this beautiful 4 bed·
• ~· La•Llnda home. Just ri&:ht for the. big tani~~1ct ttlOle fplks wbd like to ·enttt1:ain. '
Manf ~ feal"Ore5, lnclodbi&. rldi shag
carpeting plus large bonus room with, eGS(pm
l.ISed brick wet bar. Fot lnfonnation call '*-~ ...... Iv.,. ... _. __ ... "' .... ....,.. ""'·""'· .
-..
OP&N YOUR DOOR
TO COMPLIMENTS
Thl.s impressive 3 ~m home anilel with
......,ality fn>m the pnt . ~·fh·laldng
_gUmpR, An tmmaculi.te retiderb of truly
I ,:.. ""6hclive detiin, ;.i!ll,,,,......:f'&~ and ,
"' i...uiuiU-!unUslUnp~'l\l see is to • I,~ .t,,,. t.h! l>iice: ll),900. ICall· 847.ro!O., ' . ~ ' . . ' ~ . .. ..: . •-'. . , .ONCE tti.A ,, SETIME
-· · 'FOVON~T $34,950
WUJ. You,~e ,.:n;." ¢ta a ftmctional!bome
with' so mUCh beautY. 1. lari:e bed~! 2
baths! -Larie kitche.n ,t1th bul.l.t-lns.' lAii;alei:I:
"""' schools, -.n;,,A>ar .. and beacb.. tor
more lnfonnatlon -call i47-60lO.
ORIENTED?
Trt this beau~u.Uy decorated home for
$35,500. 3 bedroorruJ and 2 batha <lowhatairs
8hd a huge (27 x )I) family room up. 'Many
new items throughout p]us a lowly land-
scaped yard and patio. 646-TITI.
A SELLERS
SACRIFICE
Spacious 1plit level, Glen-Mar, two story
home located on a quiet street. Has 3 big
bedrooms, a large pool iable, separate
family room and dining room. Apple pje
condition! At $34.500 -call NOW. 646--7171.
MESA VERDE
3 BEDROOM
REDUCED TO $31,900
Ownen: Want offer submitted on this \\-'arm,
charming home in move-in condition, Located
on qu.iet street, JOYely yard with many trees
and covered patio. Detached garage, room for
boat, trailer, camper. Plea.e phone MG-2313
tor lnlormation.
14 •.
w.;,i· ~·· ,,
SUBURB.IA PARK
SPANISH
ONE ·STORY
Live in one of the most desirable neighbor-
hooCs ln 1-luntlngton Beach. Possibly the first
resale of thi.!I model Jn & yrs., featuring 5
bedrooms, lamlly room, fonnal dining and
2~ baths. Very clo8e to elementary school,
park, tennis COUl"ls, beach and shoppir.g. As-
sumable 5% % VA loan. Price $42,900. For
more info and appointment pl.ease phone
546-2313.
HAR!IOR. VIEW
CARMEL
Don't wait to see tttis beautiiul 3 bedroom, 2
bath borne ln Newport BeM:t..•Only one house
from a J>lll'lt: near qotnn1i1Dlity pool and aOon
·to be bWJ.t eleme~ aflo?L Lesa than ~
"""' old .wllh ~ .... yard. _..,
fu ""' qulddy at -Q5;900 :Jiictuding lhe Jand. C&ll NOW. st&-2Sl1 •
"ATLAS FOURPLEX"
IT. SUPPORTS ITSELF
Pric(e of ownership, 2'A )'ear old foorplex that
c~ea itself. What mote could yoo ask? Yes,
!t ~fully leased, haa low maintenance )'8.l'ds,
pr:lvite patkM, great 3 bedroom, 2 bat)i own·
er's unit. All until, are deluxe, large and
modem. many atras. Only $13,000. Call
673-8550 for view1ne-appointment.
YOUNG LOVE
IN LAGUNA
Nine months new -2 bedroom, 2 bath charm-
er on a lovely elevated comer Jot In beautiful
South Laguna.. Perteet starter home for the
yoUng couple •· lota of space to add on as the
need arises -·or a private ~etting fDll the re.
tired couple. View ol Hilla • only $17.SOO. cau 673-8550 .
COMMERCIALL V
ZONED RESIDENCE
Over 40 different buslneues are possible In
this 4 bedroom. 2 bath home in Westside
Costa lrtesa. Ideal tor the aspirin&: Individual
wishing to start hie own bwiness with the
advantage or beinc able to live at the same
location •.•• on!y $28,950. 673.8550.
f"'Y~lt M ......... .., Wlltt ,....,_. .. ~ .. -IHdl ....... ,.. .,,..._ ..... ,.
_... IMdl, Tln't' ... .._ ..
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-ni,. Ne 1111 Ille M!lllM tt.llff ..,. ....,. .... .. ffftt • -·-
i
RoOM TO RATIJ,.£
MESA DEL MAR
Need a large bedroom, like :zo,a1 that ~
hold a pool table, ping pong table .l king ~
bed? µke a large patio, maybe 15 x 49'! Want
a good buy? 'I:,b.b 4 bedroom home has It pl1,15-
•
' •
!
1
a new dish"•asbcr, disposal, some new carpets,
\\-"B.tcr softener nnd more. VACANT & priced at !
~.()90 for fast sale: Hurry! 64.6-7171. .I
... ~1-,;J. :'«~li.o ,_;;i.t
THE· ROOM AT THE jop
La Cuesta, F/ 6b..ali:to -M&ic1 featuPtng 3 bed-
rooms, ratitil,, room "'ith fireplace, and tonnd,
dining area -and 1300 1q. ft. upstaira. ready for
completion ll! hu.&e rumpus room, a.ddltiQnal
bedrooms and batha -or ? Owner tra.ns1erred
and will sell for $45,500. Plcue phone. 546-ZllJ.
.it:
NO INFLATION HERE
JUST YALUEi
It'.1 ,rot 19Q late to accumulate .ometttlng tor ~
IM'U. See thia k>velJ 3 bedroom home with larp
living room. Beautifully decorated thruout. t..arp
kitchen with plcnry or cupboarda: and dining spe.ct. •
. l ocated on larg.e loL Priced at $31;500, 347-6010,
•
NEWNB'Ji B.BACll
• 1100 lk ""' ... ";t w \.
CJOSTA MESA
· 2790 H .... lhd.
~2J1J, ...
U1JNTINGTON BEA()R
1m1 ._. • ...._ 6014 w-An.
CJORONA DEL MAR
JJ2 Ma1p1rtt•
INVESTMENTS
2790 --.. Seit• 201
646-7171 ~· " , M2-2U5 147 ... 10 •n.t''° c:..r ... _ 1546-uoo
•
DAILY PILOT Wtctrwsday Octobtr 2', 1912
TUMBLEWEEDS
\\'!:LL, LOOK WHO'S MCK:MOLE·M, ..--rr,-s-GOOD--FOR-A-MAN--10=--11e=-FR=EE~--, 1
"'/!:TERAN INJUN IRACKER AN' MAN-CLOSE 1'NA1URE'! UNffi'f~EJ19Y 1,
•AOOU'f·™E·Wll.DERNESS! GOSH! I 1\iE OONPS OF SOCIAL. 09l.IGATION ~J
EINY ltJtJ 'IER PRIMflNE: LIFE, M.E'.l 1-~--::"' 1\iAT snFLE 1\iE SPIRIT! ; l •
MUTI AND JEFF
MY FELLOW AMERlcANs. tM llERE
"TO IMPROVE OUR LIVING coNDrnotlS
ANO 1 WAITT R 6UPPOR:TI
FIGMENTS
NII KAl.F SISTElt, LINDA, IS
COtll/h 10 VISIT U6 NEXT llS'K !
NANCY
HAS ANYONE TURNED
IN AN UMBRELLA;>-
I LOST M INE WHILE
SHOPPING
ACROSS
Rncued
:-t Beitlg: Sp.
10 fool1
' l4 Whi1e ...... ,
AbKen
Fellow
I Kind of
I boom
· 8 SuJ)9orter
of Teddy
Roo....,ett
WE MUS'!' RID OURCITY
OF CRIME, AIR POL.L.UTlc»I
AND N016EI WE MUST KEEP
OUR S"TREET'G CL.EAi.Ji
PEANUTS
\)
by Chester Gould
AAS 'n4AT
NURSl!I
? •
by Tom K. Ryan
YOU
SOUNP LIKE MY
SHRINK
by Al Smith
by Emie Busl!miller
PICK
IT OUT
JUDGE PARKER
DOOLEY'S WORLD
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
AU. I: EVER DO IS
EAT AADSLEEP ...
. .. ..
,J, PllESIDENT d'~vi/i'AN AFFAIR?!!
I
/lllO lllHE.ll 'I!til NIJA'te ...
~\CH IS VEll'I t.ElllOlll"'
I: oOST Sir WITH A
P~C.IFIER I~ MQ 11\(X)T~ .
~-..
• I! ~ I ' ,
I. f . '
by Charles M. Schulz ..---------.
'/t--. . .. -
I I
,.....,.
by Gus Arriola
by RCHJer BoDtn
SOll'ETlloles, :r ~1~1< I'M
\ll~~1W"' Mil lllFAllGll ~
0
'
I
' .·
'
THE GIRLS ': I
Cry'•
p111n1f t' Gulf of ••••
Got up
ALL Rl6HT, I WON'T I ANO
AND OON'T I.EAVE I 'M NOT L"llNCJ WHEN I TELL
YOU l HAD NOTHING TO DO
WITH &EVERLY'5 DEATH!
by Harold Le Doux
-~ -IBfLIEVE
YOU, MRS. 60RGSOH! 4 Designated
for specific
UH•
Removed
Nobl•men
Evergreen
"" 1 Aldi'
pertntlf
Atllntic,
P1c1lk,
A1ctlc, et el
Unll of
m111ur1m1nt
7 Wore
Cutting
tool: V1r.
Btgin under
H~e
conditions
2 Spread
1round
ZOdlec 1lgn
S Herdent
'WhHlt, ol
•tort
9 Piie• to
1w1y"
12 Out ol d1t1
13 Move
quickly
i9 Former S.
Afrlc•n
p1kn1
mlnlettf
22 Frtnch
prtposition
2S Ctn&ditn
provlnc•
26 P1rt of
England
27 G1rden of
28 M1chine
p1r11
29 Death
no1ice
30 Grants
32 Hockey
goalie's
st11tis1ic
Otarv
Bov's n1mt
D~•
11am1tr ..
work
'31 One n1mtd
In 1 will
40 Betr1ye11:
Slang
41 Lock
'
42 lm pntued
torciblv
43 Number
4S Holy
per.on: P:r.
ebbr.
46 Torpars
47 Violin
maker
48 Al -·-··:
Correct
path tor
Mu1lim1
49 Ou•""
51 Ruler of old
53 Feminln•
1ull!1
S4 l ooked 11
56 Butterfly
catching
<levlc•
57 Noun
ending
59 l abor
organi1a1ion:
Abbr.
MISS PEACH
• ' Ki;t...1..'/
Sc.1-1oot... ~I-ARION
PERKINS
GAME BIRD
ltES£1lVATtON c
'
fO·lf
GAME 'Bl/lD
RE$6RV~TION
by 'Mell
THANK HEAVEN l
'!l<~ W'lf£
MAl(IN&-
S'~~ A
ltA<.l<l!.T :t
COIJ•W'I"
THINIC,
b John Miies
''Btfore we begta, isn't it 1wfol 1boat Utote mllllonair ' ,
yoa don't coUect any tuts from 1t all." I
I DENNIS THE MENACE ' •
~ _Ji
I
•
..
. • • .
B PILOT·AD'l£RTISER Wedntsd.IY, Octobtr 25, l q12 OAIL Y PILOT 53
Everyone Hea
Somathin9 That
Someone Elae Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It , Trade It
With e Want Ad ..
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642 -5678 for Fast Results
--.. I~ _ .... ,.
J~ l.._-_ ... _ .. _,~I~ I ---I~( _,,,.. I~ 1 ~1 -....._"' .. ;;;;;;'~~ie ! _ ..... l~ I _ ..... J~ I _..... I~
·j;Ge;;;;;;";';'';l;;::;;::;;;;::;;;Ge;;;;ner;;;;;•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j~Ge=n~OT~· •:LJJ~~~~~l;Getlwiiiiiiii•mliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimGe~n·orm•mliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim l 1Goo~-;lll';;;tl;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~~ G1ner1I
BLUFFS CONDO I" ;;;;;;;;;;;;S;:PA;;;;N;;;;l;:;;SH=;:;
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
•.• with view of canyon . . , & at a reduced
price -a lovely 3 bdrm. & family rm. ·home
, ·-where pride of ownership is definitely re-
flected. The well landscaped lot assures you
of ample privacy -new price ...... $67,500.
CAMEO SHORES
This spectacular 4 Bdrm. & family rm. home
has all the features you would expect in a
3,000 sq. ft. home incl. a panoramic ocean
view, also a lovely htd. & filt'd. pool. Excel-
lent value at . $125,000.
WITH SOOOOO MACNAB SPLENDOR
MUCH TO JRVINE FontasOc foW'-le..,I Spooioh
r styl~ Huntington C r e 11 t Ot:FER IRVINE TERRACE home. 28311 "l· ft. of
I NEW LI STING gracious living -4 broroom. &.-! THESE 2!> bath" 1.,.. open lh'in• Oriuinal OWllt'rs offer their ·th i· 1 f al FEATURES &• room w1 1rep ace, orm adult-xcupied 3 BR. Bay dining, separate laundry
I Big 4 bedl"OOm, 2~ bath _. • ~,... s Lll\.u.S: & OceM View homl'. 1111-room, 3'.l'x40' palio p J u s
family home A '1~1...,...,;a. II~ maculate thruout. S57.!i00. 11 pa c i o us basement
./ Extra large family room Tom Queen 6446200. (K.1'1' family/rumpus room wi1h with big patio otf modern AMID THE EUCALYPTUSI HARBOR ISLAND RD. tlft!place. This is a home
kitchen Ever been out on E. 20th Street in the Back &AYFRONT )OU must ~ to belicVf'.
I Beautiful 1 gcparate fin· Bay area? You know where those stall state--2 BR. der> home w/picr le New listing. $53.500.
ished bonus room for pool ly eucalyptus trees sur.round the board and slip. Unbelievable priced at ~ COATS
and specit! ('fltertainlng batten ranch std I e homes. Well anyway, Sl25.<m. Lois Mlller642-8235. & 1 Cllildren's playground · & Unique has liste one of those homes and (K32l WALLACE family pool ,..,. by SUNNY DUPLE X I 2500 sq. ft. of carefree it's super! Three bedrooms, honest to pine Easl.!iide Cost Mesa . walk tn REAL TORI
family living in a prestige paneling, real U1e in the kitchen and baths, 17th· Street shopping. 2-2, 1 Open Evenings
•pi;'"g, an~~~ to T:!:rs a fabulous game room with a big bar and fireplace, dbl garage. 1n1-e 962-4454 e , • .,,, pot belly stove and out back there's an in-niaculate condition. S39.soo.1 ..,~~~-~l"!!'":""' Club, and Corona del Mar . h d d f p d Harriet Perry 642-8235. I High. Call to ,,. 0.1, 0.,, viting eate an iltered pool. resente <Kt.ll VIEW_ POOL
NOW! at $46,500. GOLF-DEN
C. F. Colesworthy ••o•• uNf9U• HoMas. co10•• 011 M•._.,. .. ,,. l~t:,t.;;,::;;: I GOLF couRsE HOME
& Company ~ .._.:i :::::: WITH VIEW? Iron gale and
Gener i i
°A"4till-S~
~ AllDASSOMIS
REALTORS
2828 EAST COllST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR. CAUP.
644·7270
NEW LIST ING ..•...•••
. .•. , .. HARBOR VIEW HOME S
You must see this move-in condition PORTJ-
FINO MODEL t.o believe it. CUSTOM DEC-
ORATED 3 bedroom, 3 bath, panelled family
room, fireplace, built·in kitchen, Deep , deep
shag thruout. On FEE land. $66,400. OPEN
HOUSE Wed., Thurs. & Fri., 1-5. 1701 Port
Barmouth
sbUTH OF THE HIGHWAY .• , .
• Convenient p&rkin&~asy to be
\ a "DROP-IN" at Bay & Beach ReaJl)I
640-0020 U 11111 l()U I: tJ()Mf:i-_._.. -~;~• '~M~hed0";1 N~1:
REAL ESTATE GOLF COURSE GIANT DEN overlooks
.... CORONA DE L MAR
DOLLHOUSE with new STRESSED garage
waiting for a unit! 2 bedroom house com·
pletely remodeled in perfect condition. Easi·
ly expandable. Terrific possibilities for the
"DO.IT-YOURSELFER". . . . . . . . . . $55,000.
r
;
• '
SPYGLASS PLAN 74 SPARKLING JJ' ROMAN
3600 plus sq ft In this 5 bdrm. J + DEN POOL! Extra large bed-
4 ba J bo I rooms. Laundry. Boat 1rail-. P us nus rm OOrne G.nera l Generl A BA N DO N E D GOLF er storage. Call fast .
YOU CAN SEA FOREVER ..•..•
001 a Vnd.J.P.11ocation. Centra11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; COURSE HOME! J•ront 645-0303,
a r co .. ntercom I bulll-patio opens to secluded sla!e I~~====~=====.: '" ••<•><d phlY"-No-wax Excl 11s1"ve Corona del Mar ooveced °"""· Giont liviog I! vinyl, ahag carpettng, wal-~ room hosts crackling white
Genffll G.ner•f nut cabinets In kitchen. pool -Considered one or the best areas 00 the brick comer fireplace. 1''0R-I Ol!ISI I. Ol \O\
•.... WITH THIS VIEW
Enjoy it all from this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home
with 2 fireplaces (1 in living room, 1 in din·
ing room ), builtin kitchen. See harbor lights
at night from your own garden patio $64,950.
1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;' itized lot & breath-taking "d I th Co t H Thi ld MAL DINE! HUGE DEN I• ocean s1 e o e as wy. s o er OVERLOOKS rear patio ~ of ocean A coastline. family home is situated on 2 residential lots. PLUS GREEN, TEE AND VACANT LOTS , •..• Rf!AI.. f;)R~
ofinJa Jj/e
PRESTIGE WAT ERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
· 101 Linda Isle Drive
Lovely 5 BR., 4 ha. home with downstairs
waterfront msti'. suite & lge. game rm. or
study, Mexican tile floors, beam ceilings,
quality construction, slip. . . . ..... $155,000.
For Comp .. te Information
On All Homos & Lots, PIHM Coll :
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boysldo Dr,. Suite 1, N.B. 675-4161
Voi· can celebrate the lx>H· Xlnt appreciation situation. 0 ff ere d at LAKE! 3 kin&" size bed-da..v· in your new home. Call $79 500 rooms. Laundry. J.car gar-
now n45.<m including Janel. • age. ANXIOUS SELLER!
CORBIN-MARTIN 6)redhill
REALTORS 644-7662 H.EALTY
Univ. Park Center. Irvine I""""'""'""'"""""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"" Call Anytime, 833..(l8'2f)
Office hours I• AM to 6 P~f Gener1I General
THE BLUFFS $25,5oo WELCOME TO VACANT FRONT ROW & READY MARLBORO
BA y VIEW SUPER SHARP & CLEAN COUNTRY
Hurry • Call 645-0303.
I 01!1 \I J Ol \O\
,_.C 'I T(!k '.
LARGE FAMILY
WANTED!
$28,750
Corona del Mar
Just north of Coast Hwy •
large 2 bedroom &. pool.
Ideal for y.e couple who
likes to entertain. Large
covered patio with ample
privacy in rear yard. Full
price only $42.500. Call
962-8851.
•.•. ATTENTION BUILDERS
Two R-4 lots. 60' frontage in rapidly appr&-
ciating area, and an ocean view too! In Cos--
ta Mesa ............................ $32,250
A GOOD INVESTMENT •••• , EARLY AREA 3 bedroom home nelll' Bria-and bring your horse to this
to! & Baktt in Costa Mesa. neat 2 bedroom ranch-style General ' GeMr1I Popular TRINA p.lan, split· NEW PAINT inside & out, home on large lot. Perfect
1.-----------------level 3 BR., 21il ba.; aJI NEW SHAG CARPETS, for the family who wants
e\cc. kitch. NEW DRAPES, & LOVELY animals & wide o .p e n
•..•.. TRIPLEX
In Huntington Beach. Always rented because
ol the location. This triplex has 1-2 Bedroom
and 2-1 Bedroom. For the smart investor at ****** TAYLOR CO
WATER FRONT "OWN-YOUR.OWN"
On the water! Fantastic view & pride of
ownershiP. bldg, Piers & slips, pool, jacuzzi
& security guard. Adult occupied. 2 Bed-
rooms, 2 baths. Immaculate ........ $89,950.
''Ou r 27th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
180 DEGREE VIEW -CdM
Beautifully decorated 3 BR., 21» ba. home.
FrmL dining plus co~y den w/lrpl. Court.-
yard entrance. 3 car gar. $87,500. Harriett
Davies
ON THE .BAY
Attractively decorated 1-bdnn., l bath own·
your-own apt. in most desirable area. Shel·
tered pool. Steps to finest stores. $65,000.
Edie Olson
BEAUTI FUL NEW CUSTOM
OPEN 1·5 DAILY. 1215 SOMERSET LANE.
Choice loc. affords great privacy for this
2800 sq. ft. 3 BR., 3 batb. Mast see. Mary
Lou Marion
LIDO-NEAR CLUB & TENNIS
Well located & livable 4 BR. 4 Ba., F. DR ;
beam cell's,, tile floors & beaut. Master
B)l. with sundeck. Summer or family borne.
$16,500. Eugene Vreeland
BAYSHORES-GREAT BUY
Owner must liquidate -leaving area. 4
Lge. BR .. din. rm., den, brklst. rm. Well
located nr. priv. beach. Make offer. Mary
Harvey
SPECTACULAR SPYGLASS
This 5 BR. home has 3 baths, lge. Cam. rm.
& wet bar & 3 car garage. Enjoy your own
gorgeous ocean view! $122,000. LaVera
Qurns
IRVINE COVE -VIEW
!I'hls lmmac. S BR S Ba. & den home over-
looks !inost prlv. surfing beach in the area.
Quality thruout ls shown by !DlllJ fine lea·
turas. $195,000. Kathryn RauJlton.
833.0700 --Coldwell,Bner
~ 644-2430
$$0 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.11.
C:6Q 000 LANDSCAPING• VA, FHA •pace<. Local"' just a few f , or 5% down & ifs yours for blocks from Newport Beach.
New on the mariret. Call ua f~ S25,500. OA S quick. ~) JOa.. C T Call 54&-6880 (Open ..... I 2955 Harbor, "°""' Me,.
TARBELL --. . . . . . . . -. . . .. --. ------.... --. . $38,950.
AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & Associatos
'44-n10
Gener•I 0rSf i~'), J!:J!!f{' ~ R~!t~i~ EASTSIDE
i r ealty --is ... u ... 4141-COSTA MESA
(()pM Evenings) '"""!!I"""""'""'!!'!!"""'!!! Is neat bou3el ·on a huge lot. 1118,,01A•Y 01 rttf cotwnL co.
2414 Vista del Oro i""""'""'""'!!!!!...,~""' Newport. VieW Each home with separate '""iOii~~;;;o;iOiiiiii"""' .!r.'ir~~E REAL CLASS Golf-$36,950 =·~ ~Ja=r · MONEY MAKER
EVERYTHING No Down •I from a 3 """°""'· ._ 'I Ei.ht I-bdrm. wtlu oo 2 101 ..
Via Lldo Soud, with nice beach. 3 Bdrm. low ..
er plus 2 bdrm. upper plus guest room. Just
completely remodeled. ]iew carpet. Mission
tile roof. Immaculate condition! Owner will
include furnishings in the downstairs plus
guest room in the sale price! $197,500. Owner
will consider trade or condominium.
bedrootus or a 1 bel:froom & Xlnt rental area. 1-Blk to A FAMIL y VIEW of new GOU' COURSE rent the others. Hurry and I bay & ocean. Property
site! Winding stone walk-see this new listing -asking shows Wl'll. Call for opp'!. WOULD WANT way to oovered ""'1100 $19,500. to "'· 1160,00().
Call "'~ll51 ~n ~--. Call' 673-3663 6'15-8'86 ev.s. entry. All brick front crack· .,.., Vl"" c.v=
BROKERS INC.
Ung brick fireplace. FOR·
MAL DINE. 3 bedrooms,
Large, secluded park-like
yard, NO OOWN BUYS or
$3695 you choose! Act fast -
Call 645--0303.
I OKI\ I I Ol \O\
' / ( ~
-• , MERITAGE
. . REALTORS
RXER
$17,750
POOL
lachenmyer
Re<tltor
2-SI'ORY BARGAIN! $200
buys FHA! INCLUDES ........................ -.1 WASHER, DRYER, RE-R • l GOVERNMENT
NEWPORT REPOSSESSION-Cff EAPIE Call>""~~=~-U>tha• $1150 DOWN
3 bedroom horn 1 a good location in a very Everyone is eligible to buy
lo Po . e on ar_ge fast developing area Pos· this beautiful 3 bedroom, t.. tential commercial .bl 21 ··-'th · 'bl Costa ME&a home. Great 1.0r11ng on Brookhunt Ave SJ e uru .... w1 poss1 e
FRIGERATOR! Common
SWIMMING POOL! Act
fast. Call 645-0303.
I lllil \l I Ol \0\-
. A. ' c •
Try 5% dow Full pri · view of ocean from a sec· oonditlon with new &ha&
onl n. Ct' ond story. For further in-carpet&, n.;w paint It large -~~~==~-
Y fonnation and olhe• '1tes lot Unbelievahlo price of BEGINNERS $22 500 "" 546-1600. only $22,00(). But hun'" all DREAM HOUSE 9 INVESTMENT DMSION otters must be submitted by
Nowport ®THE REAL
~~~-call us for full $ZS,SOO
•I ESTA:I KRS Call 5'l6-5880 (Open evc1. l This one can't be beat. "'Ith
OPEN 'Tl. 9PM
Felrvlew I.'::::::::::::::::=;~~=
646-llll NEWPORT
• HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
new shag carpet throughout,
comph~tely redecomtM in-
side and out. Enjoy 3
spe.cklUs bedrooms, 2 baths,
double garaae, and a den. !!!!~~~"!'!!!!!'~ .... I Ifs now vac&ht and muat be l•nytlmol DEN-GUEST Private Beach MESA VERDE
,... ------Ma.Wvo crackling ~"'placo. DEN + POOL AiiCOOLED :~ :7i.!t= ,2~ NO DOWN I
WINE CELI.AR ~~1!;~ ~::f sW!ueg1.!! e~:::.
and SAILBOAT INCWDED FORMAL DINING! Seclud·
In LOW, LOWEST PRICE! ed DF.N! Brite kitchen
PRIVATE BEACJl ON opens to SPARKLING
BAY! Act f~. Call &f5-0n1 CRESCENT POOL! BBQ
-
I OHi \I I Ill \II\
• I A '
MOVE IN NOW!!
' '
pit. Dor Run. NO OOWN -
2 story hara:ain! O~ER·
ATE! Call fut . ~303.
• IOlll \I I Ol\O\
' ~ . .; .
DISTRESSED
SALE
4 bednns 2 bath
110ld, located in CDtita Mesa
oll Baker. excellent area
cliW to schools. Call Red
Carpet, Realton 546-8640.
G.I.
REPOSSESSION
In Nt!WpOrt Bead\, of atJ
placei! C.n't heft! this oom-
bim.tton • 3 OOge bedrooms,
2 boths, family room and
best of all . onty tr~ doY.on
pa.vmenl.
ReaJ ton 646-mt ~ Westdlf! Orive
Open 't:W 9 PM
3 Bedroom Dre1m
$30,500
Ownl!'n arr Vf"rY motivated
to tell this fantutic home
located In Colle&• PILJ'k Costa Mote, spot]eu ln.tde
A: aut, mantt"Uftd yards, big
shade trea, comry br1cl"l-
fiftplate. cu.l.de-.. c ~.
Don't mlM it! CaU ~
eu,.... ..Wion, --* BAYFRONT -LIOO PENINSULA t...uxurioo9 :t
SR. 2 bl c.'orQ)mlnlum. 33'
t~ ott the b1y.1
S..ulll\tl *""'""'· pool. 2-~·~~~I , ~ ... -.
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
l02S W Balboa 673°166)
SALISBURY REALTY
673-6900
315 MARINE AVE ,. BALBOA ISLAND
TURTLEROCK
Majestic home located in the most developed section of TurUeroc.k.
Spacious four bedrooms surround an airy atrium lull of lerns. Trees
and landscaping arc mature and manicured. Shag carpets thru-out,
a large formal dining room and a fireplace are included. Stroll 200'
to the olympic size swimming pool and tennis courts. This one is a
winner.
ON THE SAND -DUPLEX
Beautiful oceanfront duplex right on the sand. A delightful quieter
stretch of beach. Large sun deek a neat dwelling ror beach Jiving.
4 UNITS
Deluxe fourplex -spacious and seeluded apartments in an exclu-
sive and essential location. No vacancies. Expand your portfolio with
this one for a very low down.
GREEN-GREEN-GREEN
Large delwte home with 4 bedrooms, famil y room, dlning room, and
kitchen with breakfast area. Plus beautiful covered patio, Atrium
with waterfall and man y other features.
"REALTORS"
SE RVI NG GREATER NEWPORT HAR BOR AREA
MEMBER MULTI PLE LISTING SERVICE
•
DAILY PILOT
Fountain Yaney HuntlngtOft &Mc:h
" w
Newporl -c°""11111111U111• 1 .......
Owntr dt'aperalt, 4 sp&l.'lllua ~ . EWPORT HEIGHTS WHY WAIT? be<l!<>om" 2 ""''" family
I' , TRIPLEX _ MECHANICS.-.. Now's your <'hani.·r 10 lt't room with h!'nds o mt
0\VNER mUlll 111 o V t; ,
dtttrltor'1 d e 11 t e , 4
bt'drooms, 2 b&th1, large
lanu.ly room v.·1lh lowly
cryll&I cha.nMller f.l'ld mo.I
appe&liJI&' fire~. Blllll·ln
k I t c h e n • lnOOor-outdoor
carpeting. Like new cloud
'°lt W111 carpeting. Load1
of decklni:. Pallo, IUJh low
maintenance l~Pin& &: a lwautlJul swim pool with
vncuurn included. Dr k,
$33,Wl. 96l-1373.
Pre-Grand Opening Salel
STOP PAYING IENI!!.
.
' •
\
HOME this 3 BR., 1111 bl. , In con-rtrtph\ce oft ttw deluxe FEE LANO Vf'nltnt °"1• Mesa IOc.; bu\Jt.\n kitchen, di.ahwuher.
H!th Demand Rl'ntal Area. CRAmMEN O'o'mr l'l\Owd out of atat~; Patk>. No wax lln:¥eum. 1~s llOl'TIV cleanina. Uu1 KWROOWI l!ha,g carpethJ¥
Very d<•11trabll' for O\vncr-Ono-1.tHt·mllUon raft' find. °' )'OU tan gct a ~I buy~ thr\aoul . BruutlJul p n t l o
OCC'UJ>l\TIC)' \\'11.lldn&: rllsta~ bedroom, 2 bath, ~ farni· MORGAN REAL TY awaiting your outdoo r
to School• a1xt Shopping. l.Y room with bcamtd ttil· 6J3-664l 675-6459 pleuurea. ! Brk, $ 3 2, 5 0 Q
All 2 Bedroom. 1 Bath. lno, f.ltepl&ct. Do u b l ~ 1:_:,:-,;;:..;=---~""---!162-6566 ~ "· • pl prqe + bonus t)f anolhcr Sale or Lea11/0ptlon QwnC'r anidou11. 3 bedroom,
·-v-• ~..., ..,_ -.•u dt!n, 2 balh IM'lmt•, Elegant r1<0nt unit n.U urc act'. ovtrsiled doublt ltft"""C· BP _,,.._•"--p M-· V·-•e
\\'rod -'1dln1t. Shake Rnnf. shop v.1th 220 poWt'r &. 10111 Ht.~tter 3 bedroom. 1% fircplncc lends added charm
D«.watlve Brick. \\'ell of exlnl.5. All for only bo. frplc, gold lhlt.a; c-a.rpel , to graciou~ living room.
l...andtcaped Y.-ilh Encloaed $32.500 FHA or '1A tcrmio 1'0ve1-ed patio. hCal'y sl11Ju•. Ganie rooni with pool table,
Patk>. Offered !or Jj8 500 aV&l\Jblt. Won't la.st. !iep dog _y11.rd. Possc!lsK111 \.\'l'l bnr. Intercom system.
• · Call !l40--1.151 Opc-n E,·ea. Nov. 5. $(3,500. 28..\'i Ttibago Nenr 1111 !lehools & shoppin&.
c.tl ~. Pl., C.M. 546-27~. Brk. $25,900. 842-2561.
, '* HERITAGE NE\V DUPLE.'\\ ...... $4S.9j() -411nti.,rtaf' 6•ach
1-2BR '-1-3BR apt, 151 E. I;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;:;;;;;;
l"'"'"""~!!!!!~!""""""'"'I·;"':;;-'~· =eo.:::;ta;::M~""=:·~.,~·~_..,::::,~· $25, 900 Coll~• Pork
' • REALTORS
NEWPORT CONDO
VACANT
OCWI your-Imagination on
this horn<' and transform it
to your "'">' or lift'. some
work to be done, Ut0 not
major. This ls an f'nd unll
with 3 Bcdroon1s, 2\t Baths,
SWIM POOL lml Own. A$wn< pyornr'•. 3 BR , 2 BA. dble gar. Close
A 'lovc>ly 3 bedroom, 2 bath to schools 5'-»-£929 aft 6.
home, all electric push bul-
ton bu ilt-in kltctien, light & Corona del Mer
chN'rlul ! DelighHul patk>, Mngl~ bask~A w i t h
Dowen, k>ads ol deckin~.
lush low maintenance yard
and a beautiful s'4im pool ~
Bric, 5-t0-17W.
TARBELL
29.l.".o 1-tnrbor, Co!lta ~fesa
*DUPLEX*
South of Highway
Excell•nt Location
2&Den&2Br.
$71,500
MORGAN REALTY
67~2 675-6459
Coste M•sa
and ,..,., .. ,,.. Qu;o1 "";-Ill' EASTSIDE Dou.hie Ovens, DlshwMhl.'r Ontu
dentlal Area. Close to Pool. "'21 Nit·e tluict art"a. 3 BR &:
OHeroi }~or $32,500. Call ~ family nn., ft.replace. large ~. ~ I I palM'I with BBQ. Dhl gar, * J BDRM near ocean . . . w/allcy access for boat or $26.900. ca.n1per Atorage. $31,500.
PARK THE BOAT
rlght be!ide this Immaculate
2 story 3 bC'droom. 2,,, bath
beauty. \Valk 10 beach and
park. •UU price only $39.950.
NEW LA QUESTA
SAN MIGUEL
Corner lo!, possible boat ac-
cc..\S, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 3 car
garagr, sharp, clean and
upgraded thnlOUt. Only
$43.900 ... 1-IURRY!
CALL "'5-008
•• SAVE TIME
& MONEY
Owllt'r s11.<·ritlce, Allsun1e a11r
VA Joan now on 11roperty. at
5% •/,. Md your monthly in·
stallmen~ are leu than
renl! Generous • i 2 e d
bedrooms, cw.lorn !!butlers,
bu1ll·ln df't'am kitchen, full
dining room, professk>nally
landscaped grounds enjoy
the viE>w lrom the dellghlful
enck>firo patk>. Brk, $27,000.
962-8865.
O\VNER transferred, G.J.
temls · loY:-low down non·
vets! S b!droo~. large
family room with inspiring
fireplace. a:ounuet's pride &
joy buflt·ln kitchen,
dishwasher. Well planned
home. Pool sized grounds!
Brk $.16,950. 8421691.
VICTORIAN CASTLE
4 11Dth& mlle to bellch. Classy
& very stuffy! Chandeliers,
rich l~ts, drapes from
the "Ritz"~ Reminds us
of an C'ra of elegance so un·
U8unl totlllY. Undf'r $50,000.
CAil 1111 TIO'IV 962-5511. Red
CarJl('t Rl'n.ltors.
REPOSSESSIONS
For information 11nd locatlon
of tht-se FHA & VA llolrles,
••• $41,9'5
••c1!11111 c.n ..... i.~~ ,IMllC.lflt
CONDOMINrUMS
Lofly Uv!ng •waits yout,
Act swillly
lo select your OfNfl ,
Newport Beach condominium.
V1s1t the temporary offldes of U'le
Newpon Crest Information Cenler,
conveniently located at
2400 West Coast Highway
Suite 8, Newport Beach.
Open Dally 10 a.m. to Sunset
----·-·-
Tali• AdvollfafJ~~ ~
"NO CLOSING COSTf,~
SPECIAL .':''
EXPIRES OCT. 31d
• Minlmwn $950 Moves You In.
• No Closing Cosio.
• Immediate Possession. ,
IN ADDITION, you get 2 & 3 bedrooms, I~ &
2 baths, built-in range, oven, bood, dish-
washer, cllsposal, tncllvidual laundry area, en-
. closed private garage, private entrances,
choice of c&rpet color, cable TV,,'..,immlng
pool, gas s,.e.q & park-like -ni:reational
area.
All lltls for as littie as '207 ~ pionlh, in-
clu des everything, on our leut· expensive
unit. · '
PRICED FROM
$11,950 TO $23,'50
~~ i. I M >l AC a;c-c<>rul, :1 NEW LISTING
.~ (~Will BJ?RM, ~~~ume $230 PIT!. Near Newport Hght~. 3 BR, 2 I Mission \ 1e}O ...... $38.900 Ba.. & ~p. plityroom. 2
Before bU)'ing your home in
the l-Iuntlngton Beach area,
use our revolutionary visual
programming that sh01vs al
a g-IM<'e the homes for sail'
Indicating size of home &
lot, price, pool homes, !<).
cation & rompares these
v.ith the l'f'ccnt sales. Call
962-8847 or stop by
contact -
S .s.-11<1 "'---KA ABIAN _ _:':::_"":::_""'::__:~___:~-_.::::~·:_ _ _=::~:::::::=__ __
Santa Ana Fwy. to Culver , right about~ mile
to Walnut (Isl road on left). left 1 mile t"
"Walnut Square"; or San Dlt&o Fwy. to
Culver, left about 3 miles to Walnut, right to
"Walnut Square" or call 714/SD-9'70. X: £ L *. 4 BDRM near ocean . . . frplt.'S., kite-hen bltns, & nice . ,;,L_ .,.4.;_, $;)l,900 BBQ. Dhl gar. Conicr Jot. Wl~OIAl'I' Of !H( Cot.Will (0. 1733 \Ve~c_li:k?r .. N.B. $34,500.
R .. I E1toto 962-6644 A~N:o,N"'o~U,7.N;;c=E~MENT I ;L::•!::9";.:;".:;" .::11.::••::<h;:_ ___ L..:•9:...•_n•_Bo_•_<_h __ _
PAINT PORTAFINA
QUICK OCCUPANCY
OWNER MAY
LEASE.OPTION
Spa<'iouS HWllinglon Braeh
Home in tile ,,l:1~1H'.>li11.
Jlamilton An!a. Close to
Schools. Space ft)r Boot or
1'raller Storagl'. 3 Bl'droom.
2 Bafhs. Flreplarr. Offered
fol' $34,950. Call 646-Q.'i.j.5.
tul$IOlAl:T Of ml COlW1ll CO.
,. TRIPLEX Government re~ssions in
ASSUME FHA l 2 BR units in like ~w Ontu Huntingtt)n Beach & Foon·
53/4°1• LOAN cond. Upper unlt has lovely "' fain Valll'y now available at
3 OO!room, 2'2 harh cond~ view of hillA & lights. Good ~"'21 VILLAGE REAL ESTATE
m1n1um \.\'ith prh•ate yarrt. income. Exisllng VA loan 531·5800
douhte l.'ar garagl'. Vit>w of over 80'fr can be BMUtncd Ca.II 110\V for inft)rmation
J::Tl.'f'nbC'Jt & pool. Only at 7'J,-. $49.950. 9608 lfamilton Ave., H:B DESERTED FARM-STYLE
Sts.500. Jmn1t>diatrly avail· CAl.L '="' 646•1414 OPEN 9 AM to 9 PM HOUSE in center of H.B.
abl1· 9: 'i:I" ~ has 3 small BRs. l goodle ci1NNY MORRISON ~ MONEY ROW room, huge living room-ex-
+ •*** -REALTORS-;l:ALTY It takeg 110me p:isition in life Ira-high ceilings creatf' lm-
*.-_u• 15C6 Mesa Nt•r "'ltwporl Po tl orrlct to al.ford this home, but if nge of open space. $28,500. UITI v you qualify, you deserve it. Red carpet, 962-5:>12. ~-: ~;.,~ * F.H.A. REPO * •,H,.~. bdrmil •;:..famil, ·,Y~; 4 BR, 2 BA. By Owner. •*••* S5T-fl30 v.· .... 0 ce · "f' c., 01"""' 20x22' 0Jl('n beam fam rm·.,
BD 'f 2 "-L.R. & dining. 2800 Sq. Ft. r-lc. 11i blk to park&: schls. !Open Eveningsf 4 R" ·· """· "n of luxury living. A steal i\\ SJ" !KXl 7 ·7
EASTSIDE com1•1'.~'· .. !~000. $49,900. Also, have 5 Br. 1-'"''"' =· .::894o:·__,,,1':;c-c_ __ _
""" '"'""" p:iol home at s;)l.000 Call NEW 3 Br home, 'va.lklng SPECIAL Authoriud Broker for dl'tails. <list to ocean. Just $37,llOO. * 548-6570 * CALL 842-1418 Call 963-0407 S,, Owner.
VALUE PRICED SPIFFYll Ml1I • I .
This is a must see! lt s a 3 Ncttt &: clean, 4 BR & fnm. • W-~ rv1n•
bedroom •. 2 hath home rm . Cov'd. patio. --· ATTENTION loca_ll'.'d in a real ~unlr)' \Vorkbe:nch. Sew carpels & 17\TI Beach Blvd., H.B. se~ting, a truly e11JOY8bl(t paint thruout. $32.950. EXECUTIVES·. -' IMMED.
OCCUPANCY!
Turtle Rock Broarlnioor. J
BR., 2 balhs. family rm.
BeaulifuUy upgraded, pro.
fess. landscaPl'd: sprinkler·
Ni front & rl'ar. Steps to
park & pool. Owner transl ..
lt's vacant & ready to nwve
into! Ollered for $48, 750 IN-
CLUDING 111E LAND.
BUILDERS OR neighborhood. IX"W dl'lux M
ESTATE HUNTERS gold multi colored shag cpt. GE~~--Prestige living .is yours in
N h dd 21, throughOut, nev.· dishwash<'r, 160 W. Coast Hwy., NB. th\11 3,000 sq It 4-level borne
' ewport Beac A res11. ii water softlll'r & \Vater REA' •ons •1"~
A · t 13 ,.. ..., v-ro.w high on a hill 4 bedrooms, 3 c~. coruu1 Ao separa " heater, a real charmer see • · homesi!es which you may it now before it goes, call * 4 BEDR~'l. pool ~12e J_ol, baths, lonnal dirrin.g & 2
"1Jo)' entotal tor plf'nty of Retl Carpel R e a l 1 0 r s ovl'r_look1ng pro~pect.1ve. huge family l'OOIIlll. P atio
Pf'ivacy. Localed on a knoll ~ marina / ocean v I e w . parties are a natural Wlth
with a Lake Vil'W. J.lome is · · Al.SO Sl'e Catalina Isl. the custom landscaping &
3 Bedroom, 2 Baths, Fl?'E'-TOWNHOUSES free of. charge. • utmost privacy. The final
plact'. Shake Roof. Offe~ We have> several 2 and 3 lar.w1n realty inc. st('P up. Call 96S-4456. "11 I -, I t II I I' 11 ii. for $225,000. Call 646-0555. bedroom listings in NC'iv· 9684405 (24 !·lours) ••• 1 • port's best area. So_me a.re WVELY LRG 2 sty 4BR.
: ~ o~ i;tory, 80me split ll'vel. home, 21n: ba, trplc, bltin ---.-I l.1111ilu r , Ii~ ~ii Pr1ce11 start $30,500. Cail gas kitch dsh/w.sh. Furn. I "!'l"'~'""'""~~~'!"'!~ t__ _ 675-7225. Huge yard. Sp r 1 n k I er s McCALL MAGAZINE ;· ... " . E ii $43,000. o ....... 976 °'""' KITCHEN : ·r , · -~ I ~ Dr., C.M. 540--2442. Hanging pots, self-cleaning
; w.M01AaYDffff(C0twruco. k! .. 1.' *VACANT* oven, pol.·SC'rubber dish· • +--1'.lf-, l\tUST SEl..L! 4 BR. 2 BA. \l"llShcr. Thick crinkle tile
: • '" Trailer R{'('C'SS. Big yarrl. coun\ers. J.icavy walnut cab-
•
i.
i·
'u&!!Otlll' Of 1111 <otwn~ co. New paint & crpt"g. $25,150. inets \1·ith big cetamll"
HELP -ANXIOUS N•wport Beach S•xyl I Lo"'· dn. SCOTT REALTY , knobs. Rock bubble patio
OWNER! on the bhdl'I above Newport 5J6.Ta33 24 hrs. ~::~~::iu gri:Srs:O·~~~
can make the buy of a Bay, this home y,•ill drive HOME & INCOME -Sparkl· weave shades AND that's
e oc this charming 3 you wild, split levr l 3 \nit new duplex $48,950. just the kitchen! Call us for
:)edroon1 home. Quiet 1tttet, bedroom, 2 bath, big living Beautiful 3 bdrm ownen description of remaining
.. ~ .. ate mllflter· ~m room for entertaining, this unit + 2 bdrm rental unit. 2 000 1 Bk ~~ U . XI I f · 1-1 E u .. ., · square CCL r, ' w.rp-k>t zoned R·2. home o en pr 1 v a c y . n ocat1on. :i • ~ 962-5513. bnitt all t)fferA. Call seclusion and e,)"en has a St., c.r.t. 642-4837.
:,.7225 hidden bedroo1n just for fun, BY Oi\·ner 3 BR home on
· h~ll Aide l~at~n wL!h lots of large' lot. h~ Costa Mes8. St. h1~ trees JUSt hkc the moun· Nr St Joachim's SchoOl.
ta1n.'4. Now _VACANT and $26 !KlO. For appt, 839-fil.64.
ready to hvc 1n, prlcel -"=· =~:,..:'°"'7-"::cc"°'°" reduced fro1n $53.000 to BY owner 3 bro, 2 ha, trplc, 2
$47,000 for fast sale. Call car gar. $26.900.
COM DUPLEX
Ol~r propttt.v with a nex.
lble aJTall&ement oo room•
lot aood rmtttl poulb\lltln.
~ painted an<I rood
.Joca.tlon. Call 675-7225.
Rf'd Cal'J)CI R e a I t o r s * '540--5567 * ....-.
DOLL HOUSE
WITH A FUTURE
I
"SINCE 1946"
1.'11 Western Bank Bldg.
University Pl\l'k:, Irvine
Days 552-7000 Nights
QUALITY THRUOUT
\l.'ith all lhe extras: trash
masher, 1vet bar, Sf'lf-clean·
ing oven & ll\undry tub. 3
Bdrms., 2 ba. hame with 3
car garage; on large lot
with a VIC\.\'. $79,500 Jncl.
land.
ired hill
REALTY
Univ. Parle Center. Irvine
Call Anytime, 833..QBW
Office hourg 8 AM to 6 PM
La.gun• B•aCh
"N"
SAVE
LAGUNA
Cust"m building sites le
homes. Left on Nye• Place
to entrance.
Lagw)a Beach
That's the theme, for this
,r;prawling 3 BDRM. ll DEN,
~OR 4 BDRM.) home.
LOCATE.D ON THE RlM
OF THE CA N Y 0 N Sant• Anli L•guna Niguel OVERLOOKING THE EN·
TIRE vALLEY BEww. NEW coNoo oo Eut '· $695 Move in
"It's an awe inspiring vle.w goll coune, 3 Br .. 2 New Condo•. thing." Secluded. courtyard Ba 6~ entry, ENCLOSED WITH -=:.°""-'o"w"-""='·_:.:~='--3 BR, 1~, BA., shag crptina:
\\'ALLS 9 IT. HTGH. lido ls•e thruouL (exr:ept k1t chen)
Entry foyer has floors of Del ---------Dl"'llpel thn.IOUt. Pri patios.
P!St) tiles, & opens to rear * CHOICE * 2 car raraata. From $249
Income p,_rty 1'6
INCOME UNITS
2 houses, ~ acre $51,000
3 BR duplex ~.000
Duplex ' bach unit $41.500 3 house• I: duplex $67 ,500
CALL 642-l'm
9:f21
liv. rm., \\'Ith '"all of" glaa& Nord CorMr Lot per mo. fncl. main. OJ' 1st
that FRAMES A MA-5 Bdmu., Jl;ii be.tlw plu. din op<k>n, 2 parks, 2 nools. 8 .,_._ U Ifs
JESJ'IC VIEW. ORNATE rm. plus l,ite. sundeck. Call John St1v9"1on .,._.9 ft
FIREPLACE, SET IN t>.11R· $85,000 9'&1633 2 Bdrms eacb. All on groUnd
RORED WAU... Up to date LIDO REAL TY Door w/pvt yardl & pr·
kitchen has B I LT . I N 3377 Via Lido, N'p:. Beech ages, Cb o J c e ' location.
RANGE, OVEN, DISH-* 67:1-7300 * ~ $132,000. 132,000 down, D-
WSHR., DISP. ETC. & opens 1 ----"c__:~;_:;:o__,,____ --1--'Ile~ to dining area y.·/GLASS Mes• chi M•r .,.... R~ ~R· e-•~-
\V A L L LOOKING TO 1-----'-----l..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.::· iiiii.; I -, ....... .., .... GREEN COURTYARD. MESA Del l\la.r. 4 Bedroom. I 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M.
Center stairwell, leads PAST' 2 bath. Immaculate. Oo9e Mobile t4om•1 ,.,..,..,.,.5!!4!01!1n!l~l!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!PI v,iAl..J.. OF GLASS to 2nd to schools. Price Mld 30's. For Sal• 125 1·
story with 2 bdrms. nn: By owner. 540--4609. * INVISTORS *
MS'TR. SU1TE ALONE IS _M.,,_.-.-.~v~.-nlt=~'---Conttlmpo-Levuna Hiiis F1n:t Ultl' depreciatklll • 6
APPROX. 25 FT. W1N~. Only 8 BJ)ll.Cel left! Adult new, 2 BR. 2'bath units; tn
Don't misunderstand, th s 13 Mesa Verde Laguna Beach. Spacloua .&: a better quality home y.·\th parlc, adjacent tt) Lei.sure beautilul, with ocean &:
n1any extras. THE EX· Fir.it time adwrtised!!! World, 23301 Ridge Route white water views. Terrific
TERIOR JUSf NEEDS Semttuatom 4 bedn»m, 3 Or., (off Moulton Pkwy.), opportunity.
PAINT & t.UNOR YARD bath, i-titory, ju.st t)ff riott Laguna Hills. n4/830-3900. MORGAN REAL TY
WORl<. It's the "Bh;:gest roune. Plush carpeting, 6 Buy IN THE VILLAGE'", beautifully decorated & leu Z>x.57 Broe.dmoor, 2 BR. 2 73-4642 675-645'
for only than 5 years old. Don't be BA. Screened patio, 5 Star FOR Sale, 7% down, brand
$43,950FULLPRICE last-$65,«Xl.Call545-8424 Adl t prk, in FV. new fourplex. Huntlr!Rton
BRING YOUR PA INT S 0 U T H C 0 A S T ;7l"'H62-~~20l""O'-. -=---; Beaeh, W. of Beach Blvd.
BUCKET! 1 ~REAL __ TO~RS~. -----2-txOO Westerner. llkt new. 2 bltns, crpts, enclosed pr.
MISSION REAL TY Mission Vl.•IO Br., den, wet bar, air cond. $64,950. Call 968-i)407, By
985 So. CclMt Hwy., Lairuna ----"-="-----Across st. from b ch . owner.
Pbono (7141 4~731 2 Bodroom-$22,,50 536-48'1S 0' &12--_152:1. INVESTORS! Bl'alld ""'
SPANISH VILLA Nearly new condominium -2 2 Br .. den, 2 ba. nr bcb.. duplex, fully rented. $48,950, h bedroom. 2 bath, located Driftwood beach club. $7900 $ut;cm down, 1~ % lo6n.
Overlooking city & beac . 2 prime area of Mlssk>n Vie-firm. 531H1321, Good rettQ'11. Quick ap.
Sty. stucco wired tilel~d!l4 ;o. Plugh W/IV carpets &: pl"E!'cla.M. ~ -. m_ E. Ba,y St.,
BR., 3 Ba., 3 frplcs., '6" n custom drape11, central air ~ C -•
& fam nns., beam cell's., cond. Call 837-9400. RMI lit.ta. I 6 Unlt11 • \fblk to beach. Nr.
lots of charm. plus 1 BR KATELLA REALTY ...... . downtown Loni Beach .
guest apt. B e a u I i f u 11 Y SHARP 3 Br i fam rm home 'imimiiiimiiii~~;; Income $565/mo. $35.CXO.
lndscpd, lge. lot $89,500. iv/pool I: view o( Sad-• _:Bo::"'""-' 21::,=3'c.,:::596:::.::"'3'0'.:'.''----* 499-ml * dleba<k Valley. 1 39,S QO _I :~;· ;;;;;;;;;'°';;;;oa;f;o;;;;;;l;;;50 FOUllPLEX 1$2,000. 1'A •~-"' .. --~ l·-Pri ..... ";.."'_ ... _'.;;°"..;
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.;.Y..;· "830--•_1'6_'·_1· heat, DtW dshwshn. 12(1 "lewport Beach --Shallmat, CM, own tr , -·-·
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:!utk.-1 ,,) Unfurn. • Heu-. """""' 115 ~· Ulllwft. at5 1-t. u..tvm. J6S Aft!, Unfvm. MS Apt. um..... J65 ""'· Unlvm.
Ooporfltftlty tlO C"'°"" dll Mir Oononl " " -I Coron. •• Mir Cotla Mooo N twporf -~ ~--ir.tM.sJSoM C\JTl! ........ 2 fr, -/pt. 11:. :_1 ""· • bell. bltno ~~;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;.!;.,;;e~n;;~B;,Jl;;;:U;Z:;lliP~AliuiltNHEWiWP<iittl • ~~: = C~~· l>lo-4 + °'I>· ~ EL CORDOVA Al"TS. n.,C::.,, ~: 2 e.dn>om, t bat11 SlllO APARTMENTS
But-Shop -Neta 11'11< < ~=-~... ;Jf;'; ~'.ldi f!'. ':l'bi lrplc, l :r ~ ~· l = l ::~ :: Oft tfie bay "l
HOLLAND But. Salo• .. ·. ~~i~. -Jiil""" r,;· Dishwasher -Shag carpeting • Walk·ln Cl<>&-ON TEN •CR.!:& -B«uutul new aptL w/l>"t 1.ux..,, • ..,..."" tMna~ tnf °"""'· C.M. f145.{110 ,• l ' .,..,..,..n --· NU. IEW R NTALS els, Forced Air Heat • Extra Large Rooma -Apl •·-"'· .. -, •. patloo, ,....,.,, pool, opa. ertoollfoc the water.
":'111E rACTORY" hu 2 Ba<:h · All •Ill Incl. $34. ~ or -llU Beautiful Game Room • Heated Pool • BBQ's-~· -·-~ ~• Lush prden 1ettm&. Adulta, ""'·"'° .. .,Ill •· l awl ·~ Jn-""' m • ll ALA Ronf1l1 • M5-3too ilL\Jri'S • View ' BR, 2\l EnclO..ed Garag01. Quiet surro'Jf.'!!i~fi• and ' priv. """°'-"' ..... Lit E. ""· C.llt. rulna pooll, T lllhtod tt": ~ from $80/mo. Ide-1 • • ~n~r .3 ·B· -t.',' 'l'Wnhllf! fam arta. cl to h i (N H bo & St) PoolJ Tenn11 O>ntnt'I 8kht. 6f6.8666. nll" a:>W'tl, phu mUC!ll~I ~ -·" taU -~ ·~ u~-• •• I. ~---· I J 9 •. ose s opp ng. r ar r on 900 Sea Lane. aw Mt-2611 P1rk·Llko Surr···-·1-••~d• ...,,. pu~-. ~ . ·-_,._ re M~PI--bead! •uUI '111<1. 1JS9, ~..-.. •-Adult LMnt 'No Poll. MO<ArfhUI' "' eo..t H 1 ~ ··• -• -·-• ... ~· Newport -ALA , .... '4S4MO .;:;;;;;·i'W: 3 20n Chlrlo St.. Costa -642-4470 "' ~~ B~E~ ~'jr;t;,'.~'·.:·.:~ ·; DJSTJUB~~enle N'EAR3 n.. ~~ ~Jaza1. ~~· Blt-lnl!. Lea. BrsJs~ HACIENDA HARBOR O!EERY 2 tr. ~ apt. NPvt~~iosg •*Adffultd;. ~~ and 2-bedroom planl , bleyde a Good ~ ... ~ rm., ~ -~ or :113: rm.-F $1S4 Fully <pld A cbpd. Quiet ' -N• ~ ~·~ ._....,, town ......_ ti .
.......,u1y,.13500. Alt ~ f"'"' ....... biUW. -c o~UXE 1~2 BEDROO"" cmr W/pvt •mr. u.. al Mortlnlqu• Apts. trlc """''"" prlvat• patjos 96&--2832. ~· i295 mo. !st, Wt, onclominJum1 .:..... ""' DW 1ar, Wlhr, dcyer. $215 mo. im Santa An& Ave .. C.M. or balconln, carpetlna:, dfa·
Money to L01n :MO ~ ,.\.~ '68 Sturpon Unfum. 320 Furnlahod & Unfumlahod ~~=· Alt 6 pm Mer. Apt. 113 646-"'42 ..,..,._ SUbt.....,,.anj
• Ntln.• LOVE! 2"' !ncd Costa -Heated Pool -GaragOI -Shag Carpeting ' . * * $1IO * * ... with .......... Op 1st 'TD loans ~ pr. """-$130. . Dishwasher -All Utlllttes Paid. COit• Mou 3 a. .. 111 Ba., newly painted. maid"""""'· JUS1 of ALA Rontils e US-3'00 3 BR, 2 Ba, CJl'h, mpes, Aclult1 Only· ·No Poll Bltns, .,.u-. .,.,1 patlo. Faoblun lalAod al J
S%91> INTEREST , . bitlns, chlltlren °"· sml pet 241 A......io St. Cosio MIN 646-1204 N• 1CWa • -··· O>fldr<n and s.n Joaquin HUia d.
2 d TD l • EASTSU>E 1-ly! 3 "'· .... 12.15 mo. 51&-mo. VIL' • "'RSEILLES HARBOR GDrnK' ok. No ..... 880 ee....-St., T-.. ITI4) Mt-tlliq n Oar,s FWJd for -/pets. m" H t,_._ •--~ ~""' llUIW CM. Call alt l pm.-· ur ..,,tal fnl.,;,,,atton 1 ALA ~t1l1 e US-3'00 -"" ..,.,_, -· SPACIOUS 1 & 2 IEDROOM APT. All daf WlmdL 61>-ll340. i-
' ~BR...,__ R<tri& ~ bllnL Fumlshod & Unfvmlshod Fumlahod & Spoctoculor B1y VloW ~w ... e'"euo.a,..Y TD~S" !In/BR. t2 ::S ~.! ""' -.. Crpts. drpa. pado. Si5simo. Adult Liv~ Unfvmllhocl 'lona ""'"' Pvt "'""'· dock. ' ,,,,,..,, ou ~ """• rs/II Pl Lts ' ... _ Bkr ~ll5L 2 br, 2 turn or unf'l.lm badb-w!brldc BBQ. nr tch1J w. -..r·~ • Dishwasher color coordina ed appliances • F $130 to $2lS NEW luxury <upstairs>, 1 elors. AU with crpts. <!rps. S.ltlor M19. Co. •ld< ht • Jut, reO. $221. ·IMMID. Occ. ae.i. 4 BR. Plush shag carpet • mirrored wardri>be door.. rom mo BR 2 BA. Fa~ vlow ot blins, otov•, .-efrli ....
641-1171 545'0611 _,_ ) I 111 Ba., Nr oCbl •,~. lndlllct lfgbllrig In kitchen -breakfast bar • llcholora e 1 Bdrmt ocean & harloor •nt•. oompJ ,,.,..... 61J.2l62 ' '
Stntng Harbor ""' 21 )ft. Bik• to bcA .. lhall or fam. $260. 842-3884i 96'l-S.585 • huge private fenced patio • pJush landscap-2 Bdrm• • 1 Bdnns =1ki~~~~·~'. wAJ..ic I
mes. $135. 2 Br. Gar. Kids/ Newport 6Mch inf . brick Bar·be-Ques • large heated pools OCEAN . S k1ua 2 l}t Blocks to the be!aeh r•
NEED CASH 11000 Or pets, ' • •-al Air -"tl j 1\IJ or 2 Full B•tht .... 2 ba"'ewd,;, pac b run % block to the bly 2 ! • • up Ront:~19 f7J.8430 ;JIEWPORT w an . couw on ng. ~.. ., .• ,..., fl••. BR apt, W/O-ont tO $.1,l)XI, SID.000 and more: 2 &\. 3101 So. Bristol St., S•nte Ana 557..&200 Muter •ire bedrooms w/ new cpts ..!...:dl1>s. Balcony. AvaU Nov. 15. SlB!l.50.
1 See Avco Thrtlt tor a Real 4 BR._ 1125 "PI e • RMEIA" CONDOS COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. hf&h beam eelllnp, 1"'1<e $190. 837-~": 837-5178. 67>-131l4.
Estate Loan. Uponapprovat; =~J:: \.re~a.1:: 365 Monte Vista • 3 bed· MANAGING A:GINT living room w/~ or E•st Bluff 2 Br., 2% Ba., trplc, Dbl ,
use the money however you 546-1118 or SMl-'lOCS:" rooma, 2% bathl, $295 per ~ -~ l bum! lJ1I "~· pool, &aun.a, Club hfe,
like Abo as.k about our moath·, 358 Santa Isabel • ~"""n"' taun-, area WELL dedgned 2 BR. 2 Ba. Wohr~-. New paint i ~ permna1 loanL: 4 Br, 1%' bL ~t tQ 3 bedrooms, ~ baths, $318 off kitchen. Enclosed pa· 2 Car gar. Avail. lmmed. carpe'~'""'"AduJt. $ 2 9 •
AVCO'THRIFT. • 620 N_,,,,..rt aehoolaCall ....!,.ibnpP!ng., $275. per month (lDcl~ wait-Aptt. Fum. 360 Apb. Furn. 360 tioe. 2 sw1IM1:in11: poo~ SlX) Mo. Yrty le a 1 e , ~2346 or 645-4110. ~~..-u,,_ ...__ & --... tor) aatuJa recreatiOn tacili-644-1423. --- ---Ctr. Dr., Suit• 101, Newport 3 BR OONDO-°""ble-..-, -~· ·-•"" : Ila. 'Security l\lard. No . SEACLIFF Manor Ap~ B.each, Ph. 833-34«), new crptl:/drpll. $22 5 : 339 ·~VIM· f bed-Cott• Moe Huntington IMch pets :·1nt1.,g1cw. &.•ch Br. $164, Pool, Ctpta, ,
I '!J!""!!!!!!!i!!l!!!!!!!lll!!!!!!!!l!!!!!l j ""'--' 540-ll!l. roims, •711 baths $325 per • bltns, garb. displ. I' --• monUI. VILLAGE REAi. C-de 0ro MEN, small ...... mtel. Modol1 Open 10 Ill 7 pm * MOVE IN TO fl A Y * P-Aw. AK • * MONEY to Joan on real 2 BR. unf\lm. Sl6S. No ESI'ATE, 5ll·5800. Au. tmLlTIES PAID Rooms $22.50 week. 8Ptl $96 $139 A MO. our di.scounL 548-2682. • est te Reuona. .. , __ ._ children. no pets. 388 W •-Jua Ca •·t 1 per mo. 5.1&-7t66. 2700 Peterson Wey, CM Spec. 2 & 3 BR in 4-plex. ~ ~ ~ )'OUI' Tj; • .._,er ~SI. •mT. , .. n n pr. r no ~~ ~· * 2 bR. Near Shopping * nr H•rbor Blvd & Se\.·eraJ avail. ALL EX· ApFta., Unfu ;!~
*BROKER 642-1491 * ** 3 Br., t ea..·tncd yd. 21 BR.-1 WBA.pd.~..'.l c:pb •~ .. in. •• kitchen with 1~ Newly deoorated. $115/Mo. Adems TRAS. Pool, rec bldg. Kida um. or rn • ...,,., F·-"y only -mo tr ~lll.t mo ~..... Realonomics ,...._, 675-6700 welcome. From Sl.39. Sl'e · j
MortPee1, ~ m.mi -"t • 979-816.i. 213-4.ll-'rJ82.· · · • ~ti~, area L .,_~: "tgr. 17311 Keelson "B". 1 S.lbo11 Island T-~ ~ 2IO ..... _.. aguna uw~ 546-0370 blk .w. of Beach Blvd. orJ ' l _;,;'=-·o.;;~..;c;.;;;.•;;..._..;;;.;.;. Dena Potnt f)unlexn Furn. 3CS • Home-Uke ·~ Slater. 96Pr'l510 or 847-4260. 2 Br. Ad11lt1 only. No IMP· . ~:~~ ~-$.S.\.due""'3 ~.· 2~~!!-,: .. 2_~, Newpo~ IMch : =e = w/skln,ge ln!_R9 :0~.:. ~~ ~ J::.G 2bl2~ 2poolBA, = ::00~ I08 Ruf" ~~ ·~ ,.. •~• -· ·~ e ll!arbte pu1tman Palm ·-n<: 323-2435 DELUXE -•-· -~ -~. ' = oc:n~~ -Month. 846..3293 ' WATCH the sun aet om-the e fCht«-tZ Blfrma eft. APARTMENTS . f:':Jti' ::-:-~.Florida, 8.oilboa Pen1n1ul• j ~ ~~®%~ ~''"t.1~"'°" Be.ct. ~2~-yournkel)>~ e ~ ~.,,-.i::: ~·~ ~N~ Alr Omd • Frplc'• · .3 Swim-WALK TO-riEACH D~UX ~ ~~a~
• FRESH I Clean! l Br. SUttabJe tor 3 or 4 teac;ben scam.:. Open eves. 675-4.3 67; mtna: Pools .-ffe~th Spa ·New l & 2 BR.. cpt/d:rpl Aaerlt 675-4630. ' '
stove, reflig. Crpta, drps. or ltll(2!.!"'-) ~ .... ~June. Pl> Adult living at Its b8t 49f...2!08 aft 4. Tennfs CburtJ • uaml' and dswlhr. 31616th. 536-746.5 or C ' d 1 Ma Nr heh. $125. mo. ...w 'W.1.--. LARGE 1 BR $180. • Billiard Room. 847-3957. orona " r If Jifil ALA Rent11l1. 6fS.3900 '111..,lexet Urtfurn. 150 2 B~~~~ ~. "1e=tbbe:grt~e'A 1 BR. From $160 *BLOCK TO OCEAN so. of Hwy. Spac. 2 BJt.
---------1365 W. Willon 60-1971 shop North. end. $8 5. 1 BR. A: Den From $185 2 Br S»t. Crpts, drpa, new apll. A pool. 1 Rik. !to
HousM Furnished 300 ~~-2 Kl":;/= ~~:: 3d:::. 2 bath,. WEEKLY-MON,THLY o:OKING °"'an " MEO~~~~EAN ~!'~:13th St. ::::av~tf ,g.!t,'64+..818:
ALA Rentals • 6C>3900 ~~pr~ ~~;::':ivd. =n~cr.oiiliL~ 2400 Harbor Wvd., C.M. 121::: ~~~~-lhas;; ' M•h _.
' upe;ta.ln with private en-Cost• Met• cable; 494-8541. (nfJ !5&1-803l crpta:, dll>S. bltna, dahwshr. • 3 BR, 2% bath. All new in-A~ on ·lot, .pials or 1'-m· trance. $225 pr month. Both '42·2611 RENTAi. omCE ··-· No pets, 846-512'l. ? '-:
tertar. -rental;" :m ~~=-~ uni .. ...,.. " oarll .. -. STUDIOS & 1 BR'S Nowoon lladl OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM BEACHILUFF Apts. * * * NEW *·-I(
Montero. l--8'1'9-59Jl. call Balley 673-8550 Act-e FREE Unens We have Winter ,Renta.ll UPPER LARGE 2 Br encl 2 & 3 BR. Pool, patio I c • ....,. 'dot Ml• 2 BR. Rent Nov. ht, en-. 2 BR. 1 Balli. -"1>le. • FREE UH!ltlea Will Tab Studeotl gar. N•. occ & '""9·g. D-whr. 8231 Ell"-1142-<893. LA COSTA APTS.
Hwrtlngtol( Beaah. $150 pet' elec blt-lns, d 1 b w b r • e FuU Ktt~ Aho ocea.bfnmll avail AdWts, no pets. 2984 Royal 2 BR Duplex Downtown. ! 2~~.~eU ,t:. home. c:h ~~ ~. fee. ~ w'M ~.· e ~ e Heated Pool 4 BR. 2 BA •••••••• $325/350 ~1~/mo. 645-3515 Crpta, drps:~. $145 mo. l & 2 ~room
BOYD REAi.TY 615-5llO -•--· e Laundey F..,Wtla 3 BR. 2 BA ............ $285 e e Sbair
C Mau 3 BR. Totmhouae, Clllb, r:u.~~mcld~ e TV 1: maid seno avail 1BR.,1 BA ••••••• ,.,,, $115 1 BR. 1p9.ckq., FA heat. 3 BR. frplc, nnrly painted, a= e Walk incaz\
qsfl ' = ,:i::_t N:.n.~~ DOWNSTAIRS du-1-"'--'·· e Phone Snvlce 2 BR. I Ba. Penin ••.••• $250 new dishwasher, nilii.g., wuherldryer, pool. $DI. e Swimming: Pool •. 1 -OCEANFRONT 2 Br hlnl.e. 1 , --.-Mi:: ~2276. ....,..., ""'''"V * "'SO WEEK & UP CALL: 673-3663 lhaa: crpt. $130. T2 0 962-142:1 842--lCUI e Sar.b-Ques •
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Balboa. Peninsula
,.. , . d>lld o"-No pets. 3 " T\l --3 BR. 2 BA. frple. -.... Shalimar, ~ 0 r LRG. 2 BR ln qui<t ... 1 ..... Enclooed a.....,
mna.leue.$225.6771849 ~,.;-~\C.~ :nag~~ro· =~""::..~~..1!"Avall D= 2 Br, 1% Ba.~.!';.'."::!,,~-~ All Utilities Paid /
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Laguna a..ctt elusive private residence. Cost• Mesa : ~:er;:;H~I Studk> on dead-end street. NEW 2 tir,vtew apt, l'iW ha. r "~ Ulil pd -ba""" tull $295/rtto. Bia, 962-5511. -N~rt B~!vd,.,,._, CM Crpts, drps. pool, bltns, -4 bUa to heh. No pets. ~ Mature adults., no pets• "kit, pvt patio.... ...,... 3 BR. 2 BA, blt-lnll. l BR, W'1fum $13S/mo. No ·••11~ or ~1 *1iilboa Penln. 3 BR, 2 BA pl"iv. pa&.. $155. 1 child ok. mo. 536-4455 an 6 pm. Walldnil distance to ,
II .. _ Ulil pd. Shll but mce Fenced. Children OK. chUdm, no pets. 388 W. Bay .-rm th & No peta. 548-7154. shoppfuc: toenter.
1 Br. Walle to beach I: town $250/mo. so-cm St. M5-Ul't. ......., mon up. over garage-. On b a Y NEWLY DECURATED l•guna BMc:h 354 Avocado St., C, •~. Util pd, I b< "Pr cot-* 3 Br CONOO, ,..,.,.,. drpg, Huntington 8uch FfOLIDAY PLAZA wfbea<;b. Util paid. $350/mo. 2 Br wt-•. New crpt'g. '42-f70I --•~ 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:;;;,;;;jDEi.VJi>j~' 1 BR :113: 62f>.1233 oollect. •-e VIEW e fG .... w/~L Deconltor tum. pool, wuhttt--. R/0, '-·-~r--"ted '""-' Fncd ,-1 w/patio. Wtr pd. QCEAN-nNT NU-VIEW RENTALS .-etrlg. ~-548'.J.is. ·-"apt., ""!'~.• ~-BACHELOR apt. Winter or Call bt,;;;, I " .. 636--0lO. 2 R 2 n • ;'.':,"'_ M t .....,.. ==~~=,,.-,=-=-= 11'1\MED. OCCUPANCY AmPI• . ~~t" oo yearly ~-Open Sat .. 22'J4.A Placentla Avo. $145 B , ~ ~. a""'
673"4030 or Sl!!, Br.., Ilf.C• ~2~. New 2 I: 3 Br "apt!: peta. SUn. a::n River St, NB. or * SHA.DY ELMS. POOL * Adults, no J:1: Elevatcfr ~~ =. ~uii.:i ~ .. 546-9754 evea: eor D~~~·,=.-HB. 1965 ~ve~~-call wkdap 2:13: llJ...4588, • Adults Pool.ide $1«> up ~ ~· SecuQIJ•
ble older man. $160. No 3 BR, crpta, drpa, bltinll, dbl 536.:'l• : ~ Poo~ .$140 Up * 3 ~ ~":~ ~~ • FCbJJmr next~ipl 31155 eo8st Hwy, s. Laguna
pets. fSf..817!). R'llnige. $225. 5f4..s506 or • Children natl block. River st., NB or call ,... um llft 499-2835
Lido lslo · 83>-1530. Lido lslo p,.. Fumlturo Pion w'""" :113: 330-4588. ~~::"':!· ~ B~ L11un11 ,Nil'!!! l BR. Lp Fam nn. Cpts,. !Tl E. 2'hJ St., CM 642-3645 1 Br, near heh. IUDdk, pr. .....,
-· bftlN. Brand new, Lido lslo B1y#Nnt 2 BR. UTIL ·po $175 Util pd. $165 ;i,,;.;;:_ mo,.,._ apt.. drps, bitna, •""'-' LAGUNA NIGUEL
$275 per mo. 847-IS31. Agt. BeautifUI tipper dupft, 3 Attric. tum. Hid pool. Adlta. ly. Empl,yJ Mature Penon. ~t ?" 968-040'1 Apartments
Irvine ~l'.....~'!· !2!. l650~Ba.~· 64>'91.!Lrg~· ~7!-~~q ~~~·.!.:~ijj~peri.p.Ejj["(itntaniEiEt j("'lif) !:.!:ta.3 r>.>-86'10BR 2 .._· 2 BR apt. Carpet, • drpa. 1:.,~·~ ~: 22Br& ~ .,_......., r """',· • • st~ to $150, w/utll. Older person ~ ·• " ~·~~,h~n~IYO~~ 1[9_ i t u!" ~El:R ,!!=~~~ ~~.Ocean Vu, All:ent, ~~· Stove I: refri&. lncld Gal, TV Cable I: Wtr
your bou&hl&" needs? ~for An . Kitcbma avail. M<UI Tahltl, NEW 2 BR, 2 BA, $285. 15' I: Spac. 2 4: 3 Br apt, $140 u.p ~ ~ ~ ::;:-Rec ,.
SPACIOUS
LA.Drury apt&. "IC
For Adults only
1 Or 2 BedroomJ
Shag ........ bulltlna
Pool. encl pr'q:E!I
Drtve by .zft1 Elden Av can: 646-5780
Fnirn $100 Pl!)r month •
HARBOR
oorner Harbor I: Victoria. ~..:.. %St.Blockt Bto ~ .. :ml Pool. cpt/drp, bltns, kids ck · area. * mJNNING 1 BR. Garden UJUn. ap ui.nu;.Ja 1996 Maple No. 1 6Q..38l3 290U Aloma Ave..
1;A.;.;"';;.•;.:·..;"...;um;.;.;.;·;._ __ ..;"°;;.; Apt. 2 BR. 2 BA uni. Pool. WATERFRONT, ~-2 BR. mi Coll<g• No. 5 642-7035r•;~22;"'v.irii"';---"495-52!;:.::...'oi..-~~!'!!!!!!~~-I a.IL~-1·.1-~ Rec ..... no w. lBth st. PflO winter. $300 yearl,v. *. BEAt1TIFUL 1 & 2BR.1Mo11 V1nto
vt1 llllU9 -CM. SM--2013. Cbntemponry Garden Apa, ----LA MANCHA
' ' I I I: 1 I
'
-----i ""' li11 r
"SINCE l!M6"
lat Weslefn 8a!Jk Bldg,
Unlvenffy ~rtt. Irvine
Days 552.1000 Nlehts
NEARLY new 3 BR, 2 BA, BAOIELOR. 1 il 2 Br. apts. 4 BR, 2 BA on Beach. Avail. Patios, frplc.. pool. $1$. DELUXE 2 .l 3 Br., 2 Ba., Brand New Deluxe
camp! .turn All elect k\tch., Encl. C8.l'IKll1s. htd pooL now thrJ Jane, 19 7 3. $180. Call 54&-5163 encl gar, $160 up. Rental Rent bOW for )'C4lt
.. .,_ .. 645--0'l45 or 547--9'?2S-Bob Ofc l:'.>95 Mace Ave atNcffon aJlowabc:e 1 1 frplC, peUo. BBQ. Leue Adlts/no pe •• .....,. "' up. · A'l"nUCT, New 1 BR. 1 BA. Sf6.'.iaJ4 ., mo's ~ rent. 1 BR, l BR
thTU June . 853CentttSt.6&-8965. 18Rfum.apt.Nochildren Apt. Adults, no ret a. ' & den 2 Bk's Ir 3 BR(a
.. I
195 Bach utu pd. j\45 Bay
front Bal. Utfl pd.
Ront-A'.-HouM 97J.8430
HouM1 Unfum. 305
Gonar1I
63&-M7t>1539--8831. VERY nice 1 BR, dplx. nor peta. 2«15~ E. 16th St. $135/h'IO. 1970 W a I a c e • 2 Br Mesa Verde Villa, From $155. Dshwshr, eftc.i
3 BR. 2 BA, frplc. $295/mo. Quiet. Sep. by ~ NB 64&-46Sf. 54&-0804. crpt/drps. No alnglca. $195 gar, swim'e pool. BBQ'•
Would rent unturn . Adltl ~r 30. No pet& NEW dlx: duplex, "' blk 1 a: 2 BR w/turn. avail. mo. 86.l-4022. Pet1acce~ble .
3 BR. 3 baths S325 $275/mo. llfln Diamond. 548-1021.. . . ocean. 3 Br. lower, Jae. thru Heated pciot $130 I: up. • wport B<tach 642-XI07 Scott Pl., O.M .
4 l!R. 2 ba"" 13.10 6773288. . · Fum. lich. & 1 Br. Ex· June JS. $.'IOOmo. -.. Adults. 853 C<nter St. VIEW 'PARTMENTS LARGE 1 b•. opt. $125. Euin.
RE•...,.,• 3 BR., bonua ""· $400 EX'l'RA-sPECIAL 2 br. up-coptlonll~ nlcol 1110 WINTER. 2 & 3 BR. "'"" -~ 1135. Laund .• pr., qule(, )r
n •-8 red hill ~-.!::.~ ,,,,_ Jun<. f50 u.w__. .J C u rentals Rad to 1251l & leu 2 BR. 2 BA, dbl gar, cpt<, AS llG AS mkt•. Mature atlltJ. J!;l:i-e ....... 'U1~-r ,_ ,..... • ya,, ''"' ABBEY REALTY ~ drps, bltlna, d 1hw1 hr, A HOUSE Wall~. ~. ""'-*Apia. lolbcil Ponlftlule ~.~ = .. ~ BEACHFRONT 1 b< .• patio, l2tl0/mo. A""1. 10 /2 5 · Ocean view, :U hour boua< i' BR tum SU>. 2 BR unttlrn * Ml·Ottt * Elden Aw., See Mar. Apt 6, Wuber, dryer, $150, atlll st5-GXl. aeeurtty, •part m • n t 1 Sl«I. POOi , adults only. 125
iR*llW tftltCOR REALTY . ANNUAL ·or Wlnter Rental. ClL incl. 648--1234, Ron. SPACIOUS 'l'ownlwa, 2 br, 2 deq:ned with a Master's E. 17th~. l '
• AMllA Univ. Park Center, ll"Vlne fA~~Im~. ~'. e TROPICAL POOL e 1 Br. ~·1 b1k to be, vaulted ceUq., pr. ~ ~ c1:,.::: Huntington a..c:h ·'
The« Are JIU! A Few ot Call Any11me, 833-0fm Garage.. $TS· 07 46 or 1 Br. n,m $145. Gu I W1r .......inoie adlL 1145. yrlf. poo\I. 1210. 54<>-4179. and tonnaJ gUdena All
OUr MANY JtENTALS , • , OfQee hol.ll'S 8 AM to 6 PM ~ Pd. l .. E. !8th ~•!168. 6'75-fl900, 64&-~ net. 1 6 2 BR. Adults, no ptll. part of the South ciut•s HUNTINGTON G •rd n 1 .,,.,-.....,.,, ,,..,,. BAY MEADOWS APTS. fine1 Apta. H~U at Bolu. Ollca. * PRIVATE "OUSE ·-on.. &: Up Qn, OeMn. **Nke 1 6 2 BR TrtUen. S.n Ctem.nte 387 W n ••• St CM •• ,, -nest apartment com· M&-U23. Compare • Se!: $ll5 • BEACH PAD: Putty tJNlVERSITY"l'Amc· ARXA i:e.;·~l ftrl.Rooma $85 • UJ>. Mature adult&, , ~ • U'tVV.11.J mwtlty, what )'OU're mlNine ~
flll'tt. Util. pd. I.orig hair ok. 2 bdrm., 2 batht plus den or MaJd SeJ'vb. Pool. UtU pd chlld ~. &Ul.265. 1 BR. apl,, incJ, Untns, n1k SPAC. btichl apt. nr tcW. • 1 :::=/~~m nz. ·n);)..$2fk). . . ' * llbnry. El>cltilod yard and ecaJl fl!WT«Je Hunti--to heh, :162 Vletotta. S.C. ahopptnc. N•J:':· llll mo. Del""° 3 bedroom . DELUXE Apt·pnv paliO
SUS • BRING Kidl/Pet. 2 cowttd patio. All latest 2 BR, l~ BA. pe.tio, a By Owner. 49W835. Util pd. Call ll4.. Models open 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. music. 8 Pooili sauna°,~
Br. -alow. Gar. Vacant. featurn. Ailults preferred. 3lS E Bay, l2!0 mo "" y . ,.,. µ~·m. -· DUPLEX -2 BR. un!Urn. YERSAIWS mo. SC>a•""' p 0 011 l'a. * u-l3lO jer .mon"'-Call ""· tixi . .i Apt c '61S-L.OUINTA HERMOSA ~v -au.,.. Qule~0N:,..."""" or I U FS -$1SO. -· l1SO -HAUNTED Hoote. 2 6THM8 or l;4tHll!ll. or 5411-Tm . Spanilh Cowl.., Estatt LIV' motmeycl ... ~·-· on tM L F
+ den + older home. Fncd L11<1tmo -YEARLY-3 Rooms ·by thl Ina A -AplL -l1lbol Pontnsulo * 2 BR Apt. C.,1>. drps. . 1t NEWPORT
)'rd for kids/pet. 1
• Bay. $170/mo lnchadlna uttt.-raced pool: IUnQn p.1 e OCEANFRQNT T 0 w n . carport, upstaln. SU5/mo. From Newport Blvd. tum at I
.,65 • ~ at beach! 2 $1!0 Victoria lldl., q '""'''" m.-BBQ. Unbt<levable Uvtnc • -tantutlc v1ew 3 BR Older pnt'd. 6T.Mle. Hoepltal Rold ii block
, 8r. Tum. Gar-. S!neles ok. ocean v~. lull kit. · , c0,,,,,_ clef Mlir On1.Y tam i-m., 3 fk"plcs,' 4 Ba'. 3 BR. 2 BA-PATIO. ~~~cg.::wy. at1-'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;-.~1
* 1225. 2 ~· bl!na. crpt/drpa. . 1 IR. FURN. $175 2«fO ... n. $'750/mo, Yrly. 1110 M,.. det M .... tlfl.13J8. 900 Cagney 0 {!.. N ........ 11
1100 · PRIVATE 2 Br. u ..... ~ b<, ~·i:'."i l!i>lct, pr OCEAN V\ew, '2 Bib In ::1. 2 llR.STUFUDRIN0,$$112 ~-~~ ~. e 2 BR Apt·IU>N e Be a eh' Ca .' 92660 -~R;::00t:::,:m,::•;_ ___ ~;::::I
:;ildi' .. [.""""'· Yard "" Nif:vd<Ctc1•W'°'~'ENTALS = 2~~.;:wp...: 1!}1mLlT!ES Pm -----r c:?r'·~:t;.i!!~.~: ;~~ous'/:;:,1 2e:.-', I bitr 2.R<l2..MS.;:::,•hl,yntranof. @ 64$--1624. 2 bedroo1u each. BIUna, car-,, BR 1 -
"M _ BY ."! ~·r 3 Br. stJ..40» ' or 49+-l2411 2 ma to B.11 C4ron&. Bach AduJI• No Ptt1 pets a: dn,pes, dlolae loc•· * * ~ 'i BA. 10 be¥. 1 blk to ocean. men, 2T5 nowr St.
-we -Leavn-N~ S150 uttl pd. Yli!llltt i tton. Ltue SJ» _pr month. 'rownhOUa type. Gv, ~Uo. Yearly. $2'3/mo. Bk r. Meta, 6*-91!6
Fncd. Gu. Kk1I tticome. • 1;a;;.;= Adult. no"Ji!!l!= .. l.Gl. Ct bib I. of San 0Mso FrW)' Call f13.85!iO RLTR. SIBO/rho 645-l21 675-4911. ROOMS $15 wk. up w/ttt. LAffDLOR~I YRLY 1-. Hew 2 BR. 2 Cot1 Moll . .., lladl. I b1k W. oo 11alt 3 BR 6 den -211 bo. E-SIDE 2 IR. $151 2 DORM., l\l Ba .• "1>1e .. $27.111 wk up Al>J>-:t:m
i'R.EE RENTAL SERVICE ba. On Goll Count. $2&'1. I "!Gil Parlmklt Luo.l odllll>. Do.-$325. u.a..,, BllN, w/w, ,.trlc. Pool. patlo, f&o. badr yard, l bl1t N-Blvd; C,11 .
ll!ACON Rl!NTALS mo. Call·-tmLS M,· .... -· -mtl M'l..flMI ltlq. llT lr1a, ... A, CdM. Adults,"' j>!IS. -to ...... $2.ltl. ,...,_ eJS11..:::-=::::.--~--.-·I *' , 'lltfNl ·* Mou Vo!!! • 1 Adult ool'" no pets. $UO. Aftll. -· lo!. M+-'IW $1SO. I &., ullll. l'r!>lc., !Uwr. rlWll06 atta I pm. PRIVATE ....... Own '-t . LANDLORDS' $11 S'l$I SIJ-)41115. 11e -l1A 2 BR. 2 BL --.,. -..... adlb, no pets. NEW -· paint. -l W/latll, -• "'°'I·
NEW q 3 br. 2 ha. lilri nn., 2 BR. utD pold, 11711 mo. oo -A l BR. flllos, ltaliL AttrOct apt. -21>2 Oral!!: All S. !Ht-1114. bfk to~-UtU pd. Y;tv. --43.
YI• -· " Newpurt a "=.t ~ ~ peQ. 2217 llaple St. ~ ~ r'tr: oC "1>1<. 144-46)0 -2 BR. cpl>. drps. bib& Ind Bach. JlSO, 2 Br. l25ll LARGE room, pvt ba .. • 'tMld\ e C'oi'ool dlt Mlt' e ll7 Kl--l4" ' * $tM113 * doetta. Rec hall pool I: m-t111 aft. I p.m. pract. lile9I. Vndt an&. S7l-(l'731 in Mesa Vtrdt. Em a Lacuna. Our Rettal s.... -· · LO& 1 er .• poo1, ,.. -DODI . tables, sauna bothl. 2 BR""' a..it Noo Ill. wa11c 11001mo. -. NEW dbl dtl!tla. 11 bl1t man. Call M>-21122.
vice lo f'REE to Youf 'l'I'> R~ w':;. ~-· ~! Mii>. no pell> Uttla pd. ISM S.. .,. )'OW'IOtn 1!301 to botldt. odUll>. $111. , .. 2 BR.~ -Pool. °"""'· 4 Br • ._,, vrty • Nice Btlnn., klteh
No-VlwL ~I ,,.p,,.,. Avil1'29 Oct. im --x..1 ... Ln. (1 bllr w. ol D-l471or54M431. --U!fl pd.11~ •P. loe.$425.J>t!'mo.MH442. Ilona!. Pvt •tilt NU.VII~ RINTALS , mo. !1SH.. ' 1 Br. $140. Adulll co1y. Beach. I bfk N. al Sitter). 2 BR. 2 Bt. 2 lllJ<S ,_ 334E.211tb111., JMMm. •""1'BW1T DLX 2 BR. 211 all. Eut C.)t ~ ~ .. --•6/Pool, Ideal for --' 80-1141 ........ a I 0 MarJueri... I BR, 2 BA. -..... ..... BA. l!!>k:. -· -pool, Nice """"· °"" Iii .• NEw 3 BR j.Ake J.mrNl'«d Newport INdl 19113 Church 91., MH<l33. t BR. upetaln. Cl'Pll. d..,., m..rf or 81Ml'l3 ...,.... nr. <><:e. \lpstaln. dbl pr, ptlo, -· ldtd>m ...... ~ fl:i ::-.J,.~~"11 home. .Reni or I e • • e • .t BR. 3 M..J't.. • brtcht l BR. tu1b' ~ bltlns, no pem. 1 chi.Id. sma, 2 Bdrm •»t w/frplc a $111/!nO • ...,., YF.A1iLY. a BR. FA' M:el)I . C.M. $98/ma. • Unfum. 111 Ball>-l'rl>lc. ,,_,.,._...... llo. 1111 1111 14&-'133'1 alt 4-._. No Pt1L lllSfoio. loll tdlt I--I CiJl to--. S!llll. 4 I !ti. l!OUSE llunthllt! Woldl ----11 BIUns. QS/mo. trl).f19', WINTON Re tr 61W33L altft' ,._.,, Clualllod Ma , , • ttUm _.alt 5 Jim l4Hl1I -AmY M.UlrY OPEN llOl1llE" «I
7 .
8
-
.
~.
I. OAILV PILOT
• Jh&l &1 -----.!,i1 [ L___ ---1~ I ui.--][SJ 1----I~ 1--...... 1~ I ...... I J[DJ 11 "";I ... ffiJ I ~ ... ,,I ·!Ill
R-.1 400 ;R;.n;t;1l;1;W;•;ntod;;;::;;4IO~l ~,;-;;;1~1-;;od~1;1 ~5;50 Chlld c... P1lntl~ ....,w ....... M .... 110 1!~!'"'\l~.~w~ .. ~n~ .... ~·~"'~'!~"~"~-~~w~ .. ~~~ .... ~M~l~1'~71~·m~p~w~ .. ~·~· ... ~M~l~ll~71~
l·G-ENTU:MAN----,--m-•-,-,-,-r WANT to rent Ga~ In FOUND brown It whlte COfrl'A MESA PRl:SCHOQl., _!ipe · -~~'!!~"---ASSl!MILDS c:..Htr GtRL '1\lDAY. l»c. ... •
bc!4foom ~fri&. TV . Beach Newpon Beath, Calta~ female Spanid type doe· 13th A Motlf'O\l'la. NEW CU1'tvm Ewt.r. Touchup inc aood otnc. ......... .
A Pac. CoUi Hwy. 536-8'11 "' Corona d<I Mu """' '°' Vklnlty South """"' P1&U, HOURS ,,,, ""~'Jl pm. Pal"'lnt Wire & Hamon -lullcllnl EJectroilc ::.~ ::;i.i:;
Gu.st Hom• i4115 storing boal on )'rl.)' bastli. Cott• ~fMll, ln parking lot. ~~· U"':"""d .. ~~ ~~· No job too lrJ, ioo tmall. To 12 _ G-. ,,_ In t C Auemblen IJIOI'=·~•:•:• :om::,..,...,"!"'~~ Days 52)...m,1, e\'es & &42-0575_~"-~--~-..... trs. c . ~· "'"''' F'fte color oonaultlna Ii t:IL , i11 ........ i:w. I•
"'·knds. 673-l?M. ~10/JJ Vic. PnrUlc cat. ;~::=..=c.· ----~-Uc'd, bonded. ins. Won't be NO FEES Newport Centet l!:ltoellenl lone tem't &.empor-Hl!LEN SCHA,flER * Private Room * ,., MATURE ernplo)'('d v1oman Hwy It Npt Blvd. Young tm.l DEPENDABLE Ollld Catt underbid. 64Ui005. Rrcl'a M1l'l. 6 mo'1 1Xf6· ln lll'Y ua1cnmttit on Printed PER.SON.NIL ~·111'1 workB nlg:hts ~ eat: Blk, 81"Y & Lt. Ora~ in my home.p "AJNT-=1N-G-,-1-nt-1Ex'°""1-.,-. -N-ea-t, PC bovd Ull!mbi,y. EMPLoYIEE CtmUt 8ouda. t Mo' to l OINC
Aml>ulatory Lad,y or Man
Good. nutritious Food.
""'•'"" ,.,..m, Wed-Thun-U1t<' str!~.u!/''r' 4to ri Har~/Balt ... •,•IF>2 ~"',,.... cloan, rut. """"°"" -P.P .5. NO RES C',.IT"DI • ,,.. <X[JOI' ,_,_,,,. :...Old *L A1 ••• >.. y lo.,,.
Fri-Sat. WUl ex l' ha n Ce ln cara. ~a t 11!11· uvu• Call MG-41'°4S · vice. Reta on ttq. Uc'd, Pacfffc "' ~ -"' rtad ~tue;iftbi: have •• ~ 1 .,..wo
lt'rvil'f'I tor couple or pay FOUND: 2 pupples, male blk tree eat Eltab, ~ 1S.. Personnel Services 1 knowlf!dat of ~kW codirll. Opplir. w/tll{J ftrm Ni~. cheerful atmosphere.
• Call 548-4'1~ •
SlO wk. Bn-tt67. Lab Retriever le sm fem. CHILD Care ~ My borne. 847..WS. lU No. ~ , • IOld~t.IC!bemat.ICll, etc. ~ 14 e:xptt. R~PONs~ =~ ~:rdek :=_n ~~1e: ~c:~9 r::rsft'. ~ -•,•,•i"'n,;11-.,-:5.-.,..-1.-.... 1-unkm BaJlk ~ ~:":!~ l\W'¥ 1n Pmon *lldcpr e;1c .. $650
""sRm.•,•, .,. ~--· d•·• .. .,. ••.LA<:., n_ .... ,,_, & Adams. 1 BR APT $69.50 Oran&e, Ca llne. K II GI Is ~--"-h ,,_ ..
l wou1d Uke to ca.re for Non-~er:-"''"'~~·ker: ~~· Male dog, vet)' y~;~-s:t School · open 6 Ben9onP;!_i~1tn_. ~~Eat 547-6446• Hoon!Altl-tf .. ,S.days e y r Dl~r~ .. otl-poper~'""+
elderly people or children ~R;o•oo'':.:"'"""=''-' .:c64:.:• .. =·L'ttc:;.__ shllRI)', whl:, w . Br w n da)'ll; 5:45-7:30 PM, 21Ai to 6. * &U-1998 * Aatc for Rachel ?day ........ Pald v.·/hand\caps ln niy own markings, collar. Vic. Java ProfesslolillRl ttacben. $201-----~---a w~ *Secretary $511 ~ home. Good cooking. Happy Mo'sc. Rentals .. ~.. ...,.... ....... kly .,.., 3706 Aue:mbltn ..._._ __ ....... _ ...
I< clesn hcme. Havo old" -,:Rd""-. 55=-7~~"'c..· -c-~~,-., ·-· ~ · Pl .. ter, Pitch, Rep•lr EARN MORE Apply Ill 6" , NO FEE ;-;-;;;,, ~ ,,;;Pfuj
children lo hf!\p w/care. • \Vantl'd· 2 car garage tor FND. -mk Ir white hall Contractor Ull'l'H US I "'"°""'s _1_ ~t Ti.ldnc applicationl Fee Relrnbunied
Please call 89l-n14. ~7ife, :e::r~~ o~ ~ ~· ~~rri~Wim~ JACK TaUlane -Repalr *>.np=.~i:_:_c "'' • PACIFi'C'MtrTUAL 9 AM-12 noon Onb> *Exec. Sec'y $7IO
lbntols "' Share 430 5\"-3751. !ni ne, &!&'nl5. remod., addlt. 20 Y" exp. call '4IMllm ELECTRONIC BUILDING 2961 Bu1lnaH Ctr. Dr. ~a~R.r;;.J:=:
LADY, non smoker to share e WANT£D.dbl car garage FOUND: Vic. Villa Swtden. Llc'd. My Way Co. 547-oo35. Plumbing ASSEMBLY 700 ~ ~ttt Dr., NB Irvine aJ..1441 '1n't pote111 ... 1. Fee Pak!
q . home, Pri room. Coun-!or srnl buainea. Eastslde CdM. lite gray Outty cat Additions • RemodelinC Molt! Oct. 23rd. *Steno/Sec'y $500
try ctub memberahip, util & ~eo.t~a~M~ ... ~. 642-4582~~~·~~: I :"ri':. white Ota collar. Gerwlck &: Son. Uc'd Drains uncloaed -$7.9> Never & Fee c.-L•-r T~-lo UM LE CTRONic ~ 1 Girl olc/<Uven duties food incl Ml.aion Viejo. $50 =------673-6041 • 5&-2110 Sewer line to 100• -115 Interim .,,,. n.. ~ Aannbler fir small plant Fee Spilt
..,-.:o:_""-=..:58&-::::..1.129=:c· ~~~ SCHWINN boy's Stingray G rd I * ·~-* Automatic railel A: a bonw <u•-2 -e--So. ••-Fee~"~--APT. to shr .. m>l• 25-35, p,-; -11...-1 bike foond In 1'v!ne T'"""' I ;:;0::.:;°":;;;:"11~----COLE PLUMBING Penonnel Senrlce -!or IOOlvldual ...... rutd1e1.'.'futi~.;;,.. -· ' .il2 CAMPliSD;h:e '
rm & ba, pool . other . area. Call 675-1149. EXP. Hawaila.rl Gardener. mW 20th M log to~ can!f!r. Call ELDERLY couple wishes '\Jl:e 8-4 Nf!YfOOl't Beach
tacillti es. $95. Eves ';;;;;;;;;;;~;:;~ FND on 10-22, Caineye-& Complete garden serv. 24 hr.service. ~1161 • ,C. ' =·Pe~ne'I~,.!! bome w/private family.1..,.~!!!"l'!S51:!'?i•2nl'!"!1~!'!!""''1. 979--6956. • Fair. approx 5 mo. old gray Kam a I an i. 64 &-4mi, PLtn.IBING REPAIR 642·752~ 546-2592 tnrl 20i2M ·ch );,~-Dr Wm A Marie Ba I ea, r= P'°RO~F=ESS=.-o-,"'....,~;..,.,--.,.-.,-: Legel Notk:es 510 c11.t \\''while collar. 5-tS-0048. ;:64>-~lo;337=. """"===~-No job too •mall lnterv\ewlng 9-U A l-4 ne, 1 e n · 842-(1763. HOLIDAY HELP
sharp home with ponl, In -"------BOB'S GARDENING * 60-31.28 * ASSISI'. MGR TRNE Cqu~~·s.tr" ~lu I~ Escrow Tme to $1000 CASHIER. WRAPPER.
desirable N'pt. Beach loc. I \\'ill not be responsible for :L.:•s::;tc... _____ 555 & LANDSCAPING Sewing/Alteretl'lftl PART .. TIME l?th St., eo.ta u..._' Exciting atmosphere of this "tart NOv. 6th. A~ 3400
$175. Call &tS-l502. aJJy debts other than n1y Irvine Industrial 6-9:30 EVES: ~·· ~.-.. firm will make learn-Via Lido, Newport.
2 Br. house to share. ~~~n'." J1sf ~~~0;~.vd~: ~ed ru~e14?r~.ser!:~f~ Complexes. Alteretlons-642-5145 DMSION ot manuf. co. bu CHARGE NURSE 1;1 a earning run Ir profit· H~. helpful bl,ft"
Year rouod. $185 mo. Co3ta Mesa:. Irish Setter, w/whlte mark· 557-4299 after Spm. Neat, accurate. 20 )'l!&n exJl. bnme:d. openina;1 for )'Otmg RN . 3-11 Shift. Full lime. able. Call Tracy, 833-2100, not nteell.' pver 2i. Ai>ply
Your share, $95. 673-0028 Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lngs.~, name Brian. Vic AMERICAN gardener. Tired Tile men over 21 who need a HStartinl'"91 _~cwB~~·_.... Dennis Ir Dennis Penon,el In perton, Love'.•
CllELO ...,.,... of "Grass Cutters" doln& ., __ d Ullt t9ft -. ~~ of T--'-, 2082 ~-. ta."-1'1.t. Broolthunt A BA R will share apt -------,N::.Bec·c..:o:=-=----penn . .-..vn job to 1Upple--. ~·-# u-v11"" . ...,.. ..... ln Costa Mesa. .-]~ -lde half a job? For e11tim11.re CERAMIC tile new A: ment present income. ConvaMCent Hotpit•I M chelBon Dr. Adami. H.B. :
&\5-2858 Pwlonlk • ~ ~l~N~:e=: it;?~~~~, John ~\·:.~~all $4.75 HR l88U F1orida St .. H.B. EXPER cocktall waltreu, HOUSEKEEPER·Frl'a51'ft.
Office Rental 440 ';;jjj;jjj;jjj;jjjjjjjjjm;;;· ~~ tion. Vic C&li!. Homes, 1.::=::::;~::;..;::;::;~~-For lntervw: 547-0913 CHRIS1"MAS Morwy -Start bus boys, cook, awrenUce Own tranlPOftation, refa
1 livine. REWARD! 544-<354. * LANDSCAPING * e&mlna now f1ill °' p/ttme cook, bertendet'I. 24312 Oel ...... $2.50 por "'· 66-116<
Of:<;J< !pal't' avr 1111.ble S5l1 Personals S30 LOST Laguna Bch Sat. 21. New lawnl'I, Sp rink I er a, 1\1 ~ Automotive ~Olrl.lemu Glttl for Prado, Dana·Pofnt. ews.
mo. WW provldt tumtturt" c.;_.;;c...;;...;..____ Oct. Tel(!)( hearing aid. Call deckl, cleanup. State llc'd. L1 ... ):u•il f A G GR.ESSIVE. ambitioul nat'1 firm. No in-EXPO. s a I e 1 m an foT' HOUSEKEEPER. fot lnva1*I
11 S5 mo. AM\lle'l"'i,g serv\N' *HINDU gpmm.JAUST * collect 213-243-3394 or 536-1225. I ~;i;;;;;;;;;;·;; new car aalespenton far one vest. potentlal eamlnp. furniture atcre. Salary I: woman. Must hll.ve P'I'•
available 178?58eAchBlvrl Let this ad change your 714-586-5842Reward! EXPERT Japanese 11 of the l.aJ1est Ford For inteMew call Grayce, Comm. Steady poaltion, Sleepin.lda)'swkfri3..i1T.
Huntin"°n Bl!aeh SQ...(371 \\'hole outlook on life for ~ MEDIUM si2e black ma1e G a rd e n e r . CompJete ted I 700 Dealeratdpe 1n 0 r a n g e 549-0019. good flltllre, Refs req'd. call HOUSEKEEPER for COJr'
DESK space available $50 better ProfeMional advice cat, {white chest ), Fk"a col· Gardening Service. NB, CM 1-Jo_b_W_•_• __ ._Ma __ •__ ~-~~ ~ atURCH CWtodlan -f/time 64&--7512. valeacent hospital. 14 fJ
mo. Will provide furniture on lile. Lie. Readings dally. lar. Brookhunt I Atlanta area 546-l894. su~ sales oriented , perience pretem!d. see Janltorial/aome re Pat r, SUperlor, Newport BeedL.
at $5 mo. Answering service 10 Ar.f-W P~1. 492-9136. 96U732. AL'S Landscaping, 'fl'ff re· MBA·35, desires pogiHon Don Crevta. Exp. IL Bch. 80-4461, FACTORY ~. p/time.
available. 22'l Forest Ave, 492-9034, 312 No El camino HVY rimmed glasses, mova.l. Yard remodeling. leading kl ownership THEODORE ROBINS 846-tm. Park Udo Conv. Centd'
Laguna Beach, 494-9466 Real, San Clemente. bifocals. black case. Vic Trash hauling, lot cleanup. locally. Write to P. 0. Box FORD CLEANING~. 3-.s eves 60-«>U ·~
BAY VIEW OFFICES EASY DIVORCE SanOct.taSthAna, n~.=~.~::..,St._ Repm •Prinklen. 67$-U66. 513, e/o Daily Pilot, P. O. :mi -Blvd pe• wk. Ole. In Npt °'""'· INSUJWICE Pl exp'd, n.cwiuu ,,...,...,.6<<> GARDENING SERVICE Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. Costa.Mesa '' Send resume to: OUsl.tied Announcing * * * !'Ur' buq ~I of.(!; ~
Deluxe, Air-Conditioned Modem divorce laws are Reaaonable -Reliable 92627. OllUSTMAS Atl No. 4.!3, Daily Pilot, Newport BM& ...-Re~;~ed~ ~ simple. Step.by•step, con-M=· ~h i ~s~: * 64&-QS2 * EXPER. Skipper. Eng. Elec. Ari£~ can help ~ ~ ~19!0, c.o.ta Mesa. INSURANCE: P/tirne u-:
OFFICE-STORE ;:d=lc~~k>:i;h:ti: N.B. l).fHJ45 REWARD! E:J~~!.~~~P~ rri:~L Anywhere. holidays happier for your crm y~ lntelll t ~'eliM_-q,· ,£ er·. CdM ins. agencY.,Cd 'tho 6 mo. old lriah Setter, I t st trim l entire family! Jt'a euy sell-.... ~ _,_._ gen ' lt'J ' ,: lalary. Strid reswne P: O. 525 sq. fl. Utll pelci. c·· .t your own divorce Wl ul a f a.I N , A-• Pan. pe • , c eanup. Job Wanted, Female 702 tng, fine Avon products for e.............. ua.·... to work • Box g Omin& del Mar, ~
park'g. 2052 Ne1>rporl, cor. lawyer. $24.95. 544+2482. em e, 0 • ..._ ... na area. 963-3486. 1---------our lrreslstibl.e Chriatmu w/computer data pro-92625 ' 1 of Bay St. 646-1252. PALM & CARD READINGS Family desperate. 49?-2098. PROFESSIONAL Japanese 0000 TYPIST Catalogue. Call Now 540--700. cesalng. Xlnt co. w/llbera.I .,... ...:_ -----
AT1'R.ACTlVE 3 room ofc Past, present & future. Gardener. Reliable. Free Wiii do your typing •f BABYSl'M"ER. Reliable, ~ ~.ae~ ~hea~~n New U!e lndU.striaI ~ .::::::::::
suite, w/w crpt, drp!f, pvt Advk.oe & help in many mat· ! J~ est. Call 96.1-49'14. her honM, Wiii rlckup fined, Io.vi n g & af· Calta Me'sa. ' Division For Women IR\J1NE r~~C.:
bit. £.«ide CM. S13.'i mo. ters. 213: 694-1350. Fully lie. fnsttvetkm ,_. JAPANESE Gardener. and •·liver loca H B fectlonate. 3 or 5 days wk. >;;;;;;;;; W cm/V"CCMl"'n.-V ~2111 or 963-3358 eves. La Hobra. Call for appt. I :mmmmiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-~·-~; ll""~m:;p!;et~e~Y~anl';""~"'~!iand~ -· '• 7:30-5:30. l'iS yr old girl, 10 \..\A,,.l\.J AJL aitn!SI. Expd, e Many auignrnenta in the """"""""""""7",.....,,.,,.~~ BEAUT office to share. Cleanup. Free est. 642-3102. F. V., W•it, 75c per PSI• yr. old bly. Ute hskps. $1D Fnll le part time. Local Newport Beach, Irvine san-Flft.A l'ee..Post~-· '
Acn>ss from BBC. NB, Resp MATURE man desires G or will work by hour day to start. 362 FAther, re00t..NAJ>.P!l: ~!'!-~~ ... -ta Ana •-,.._ta ••·--',.,_., G-r·•ua~ 'tt'y <12"K
-
••• -"/''"123L """''""'e Oil eruile to Cat· Schools & * EXP. Japanese ardener. II ~7 -.,u,_,,..,.,."' ,,..,. ucau••vuauo:r "".....,. •ac-........... eu 1
• .., T party . ~ ......,.. ~Wand. Gourmet cook ln1trvction1 575 By monthly job. NB, CM, c• -~~. C.M. ~ 3001. E. Cout Hiw • Experienced & tralpee Po-1 Year Work EicpeMnoln'.
PROFESSIONAL Suite ready and all around duties. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;;;;;;;;. Lagunaarea.548-8479. MA1tJR.E man desi r e• BAB'YSII'IER for 2 ctrll Ccronadel.Mar ay ~tiool. Excellent eunings. S.tlelftYn to $11K
to go. Heil at Boba. OUca. Desire sm1 llllary & • H•ullng paaage on cruile to Car-ltle5 3 &: 12. boy 15 • from 5 COMPANION G~ eeldy ~ Exp. w(bot melt adhelMt
H.B. $275/mo. 846-1323. passag~ OI' '!"!' Call 636-3632. AIRLINE rlbean Ialand:. Gourmet cook to 9 pm 5 day& wk my bom to~ I: Secretariff IU',..
8ustMSi itent•I 445 PROBLEM 0.-.. ............ Con-YARD A Garage Cleanup. and all amml dutlel. homl!. ~ble 11 v e • l n • er, my e, i hrs lier d Cft'k Typilt id-~ • --·--, ~ .... 1 days. ca11 Desltt am1 sall1'Y " $1.-3954 """""" ...... ' ...,. day NO .FEE """'pt/T)'pbt "81
900 SQ. FT, BLOG. C·2 ~~u::. ~~~ anytime, 548-SJ3l. pusage or! Call M&--3631. BABYSltlER: 3 ~ Mon-Thura. IO AM-3 PMdaoc-Taking appl1catlons Sr Acctna a.tr $5!il
19th St., CM. Heavy foot tlon & adoptions rel. AP-& GEN. Haullllg. TrM/lbrub NEED help at bomeT We tnQ' ~ Contact Mr. ~hot~. u: 9AM·l2 noon Only b~tO~~ ':;"'"' tramc. 12 car i:rk'g k>L Sep. CARE. 642-M36. trtm. Gar & )Id cleanup. Eat have Aide&, Nu. r I ea, Coleman, ~aft g pm. , 536-5414, 8-5; PBX lo ll
2 1" hoe. Ideal lo• R.E., * EUROPEAN PSYCIIlC * TRAYB. AGENCY Jll9.2303, 567"'904. Houlekeepen, Companlona, ~ 846-5137 alt 8 ~ weeltendl. 2961 Buslnlu Ctr. Dr. F/C --to 119)
photo studk>, adv. agency. $25 SKIPLOADER & dump truck Home~ UP j 0 b n • TELLER Ask for VlrKtDi&. Irvine US.1441 t88 E . nth (at -"-) ~ u
architect, etc. 64S'696t or · work. Cmcrete:, aapbalt. 547-6681. Commercial banking exper. CX>OK -· ~1;:;:.•E -6t6-1246. Appts. avail. thru Oct. & NfN. CAREER aawtna. bre&king. MS-ruo. CHARMING lady Eeks live-CENTINELA BANK (.,.~>. exper not nee. -••v .: 1350,~·°"·=ottl,;,-ce-,/•'"'"'"'-·-..,$95=-.-,-,H~i. (TI4) 52J....m6 TRAINING In boulekeeplng poal.tiori.. Neo.vport Beach Area Dana Point Yacht Club, F/C BOOKKEEPER ~
tnlffic. 2340 Newport Blvd. ALCOHOUCS Anonymous. Hauling " cleanup by exp Drive. For e Ider I y Call Mrs. Fergu90D Wed. thN. Sun., aft 12. Fer CPA firm to worlt on JA.N""rroRU.i::'""" ";rt/ Hme
c .M. 61&-2544, 54M333. Phone 542-721.7 or write A /}_ ~~r ~n~ Ige trk. 534-gentleman. P.O. Box 2325, 646-TUt COUNTER peraonnel tor dry = gen'lc ~ S:· eves. local $2.25 br. ~
lndu1trl•I Rental 450 P.O. Box 1223. Costa Mesa. _,,t.lirline YARD cl Laguna Hills. Equal Oppor. Employer cleaners. exper. Call for open, 213) 1 • 979-3923 • ~.
SWINGING Single1 call Jim ' garage eanups. MEDICAL Aulstant needs *BEAtmCJAN WINEAT appt. betwn 8 I: 9::1> a.m., F~ Paid JUNIOR Salesmen: 10lli5.
JUST COMPLETED 2-8 p.m. Si~ ~ ~~. ~~-~ FDr'T, 0battckl-0~.f.0'17 tion in APPEAR AN c E. FOR =· ~~.!......~~b'. Industrial Engineer $14K ~ ~ ... per wee1r1 a>!-53!J.3122 ..... vurW'I • BUSY SHOP. ~. C.M. ., .. ,....... . A/P Bookkeeper $600 uull' new 1.;ua1omen: Ol'f\&MI 16001Nt~.~A SqAN.AFt. &1 Tl"eabnems at Gloria C 00 d Hou1eclNning Help Wanted, M & F 710 11--t "-u1-~· I Exec. Sec'y.Real E. to $650 DAILY PILOT. 1bil ii IOt• ~· • .n S50 -~• -••r "9 1 Girl Olllce -(650 newapeper IWta &11d -New ttlt-up bldr w/lharp, Ma.rah for only · p. fi JAPANESE lady desirel A Better Temporary Cabinet Assem.blera Expe'r. Day A: Nite Adhesive Sales Rep $llK not include mRectlna•tcr
crptd, p&nel:4!d ottlces & ~..,.::5411-""=7C'405=-=anytime==~~ • • ho u 1 e w or k • Ne e d 1 Position min. 4 yra. Cab 1 n e t General Ledger Aoct $700 ~ 'l'NnlportatlD\D-9 Ito•~· meuan l ne Social Clubs m aci tC "'-;".'l:l'.'i:m. URGENTLY Aaemblers Tms, min. • DISHWASHERS F /C Bl<kpr/See'y $700 ~ We -~ ;;";.,... loodlng dool'I, uo. i .:::=FIND;;....;=Y.::;OURSELF __ ..:.:.: mo . ....,.. Et<)IOI'. Bonden, & BUSBOYS Exec. Seo'y ID PhS to $700 allor ""1ool anc! i !JI
HUNSAKE°R'DEV. CD. IN SOMEONE EL.SE. 610 E. 17th St. • ~~~="8 * NEEDED :...;.O:-" expn. ~=-Manager f: ~~·v~T:t
546-5460 Santa Ana Rels.. Free m . 646-2839 Erick8on Yachts Apply In Person A1Bo Ff'e Po!lltions Hunttnrton Beecll ~u oo-
340 ,._ n olc., _.,,,,.,,.. g,~fg~::v HOUSE DF CLEAN e SECRETARIES 1931 ~ s.A. J.5 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. P NEWflRT ~"" i:"", "',,.'l"' 1°!! "'""'.sf !is U~Mo. to n41835-<l811S 213/387-3393 543-6655 Floo,.., _,, crpt, walll, Bookkeeper orsonno ~ partlclpate. Exi>ericn<eJ ,mo. ; · 6 yrs. In area. 642-6824. • TYPISTS We need one Automotive Coco U3 Dowr Dr~, N.B. boys given prlorltY·.
Stor-455 For Qualification Info Prof. C••'P"f Cieonlng • MCST OPRS Bookkeepe• with OMV ••· '• 6ft.3l70 ,.,..__ ..,,;.:.
I la] Also windows &: floor care. perienoe. Send lftUl'l\f! to ., . KITCHEN btlper for Jtalliin .wa~ --..:.. t':'o~ 1~ t ~-...,-·.,.·---~~~ oo Dutch 537·1S08. 8am-6pm • KEYPUNCH Box 501. c10 Oeil,y P11o1, lSSS W Flbe'11lo11 Tooling 0eu. Ex"!-.... n 18511 '~for boats, trallen, . . 330 Weat Bay Street, Costa • Adams APPRENTICE Beach Bfvd., H.B. ...
beevy equipment, etc. C.M. ~~~~o =:1~::.. WcfoooMAN and~~ i:~ OPRS Mesa, cant m. C~1t• Mesa ,__~ Em '--~CEN~ •v:c a:.!
..... OU-2161. Found '''"ads) 550 13th "''· Anaheim. Phyllb ""•nce=.""Pbone==-="'=--=·c__ • PBX OPRS -F.qual v-·-~ ,_,_, BaJ""'~-•.. a ,. We need one AulOmottw DAYW-Wanled' . -~ uh -
BLJXi. for rent, approx . 16' FND: Blk orange Ir white Harrilon, teacher. Ca 11 By ~.t~~ .. tlon e ASSEMBLERS Bookkeeper with mach1ne Full tltDt.·Nt!llt~ar. FINANCIAL Salon. 64i.oo92. x 18' with cement noor. $30 Nona Hoffman 499-3916. ..,9J vw11 ...... ..._ ....
th 275 Flow St cat. Fm!. Vtc Iowa St., C.M. ~~~!!!!!~' .... ":"~ ... 1;=~*_Jll36-0648~~!..*~~-experience. Serxt JeBUme to , c.utMR'S D 0 , PLANNING LJVE.tn hou9ekee~2 t' mon . er ., 546-0681. ~ NEVER A FEE Box 501 c/o Dally Pilot. 330 l:l,guna Beach. 49'l~. DIRECTOR llenior cttlllens. ,
.M. FOUND: Irish setter on PIANO or voice, my home or LADY wiahes full time day West Bay Street, Costa DELIVERY ot DA IL y N-Beach flnanc!al Irr by appt. only. Balboa ·'
STORAGE Building for rent Rocho 1 St C M yours. 20 Yrs. exp. Master work. Own Trana. Mon., Inte~-.. H-·-Mesa, Calll. 92626. PILOT, SIJ1IDAY ~· ... y, to .:;~tu~t1on"" h a 1 1mm~1a1e area. RefJ. 673-3284. • $30 mo. 275 Flower St, Cotta s er .. . . In music. 833-2320. Thurs., Fri + 673-2918. 9 u"""• 1 -_.0
"'-'·'--Ul'I&;.. BU al 64&-9136 64~. am-am • pm pm ~per new11paper carrien. fte. opening fer director of LJV&.ln NannJe or ~
M.... ~~--AMBER eyed long haired !...•ndacaplng Work when .l where We need one automotive qllires the uae of a Stallon estate &: business pl&.Ni. couple. 5 BR. pool:, aatW
Rent•ls-Wanted 460 cat. Corona del Mar . ~rlanmt! Bookkeeper. Send resume Waaon or Van. Contact Mr. PO box 27f., El Toro, 495.5222 673-5529 COMPLETE laDdscaplng &: ln1 to Box 501, c/o Daily Pilot, Harry See.ley, 330 West Bay Must have Jaw dearet & WANTED • U·-ln ~ ....
RETIRED couple w/small · I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:iiiii lnltallation State liceMed. p __ , . .,_ I 330 West Bay Street. Costa St., Coat& Mesa. heavy ex.per. in tax I: ertitte kee"""· 5 -·· ~ uuu.K-dog want 1 Br. apt. nr FOUND longV-haira:I while 11 ~~. Industrlal., Apt. enGftllWI .-rv ce MH&, Calif. 92626. ..,,~nt•I Rocept. lo *Uft anaiylia 1t>rvice, Previous r~ .~ . Q Catholic church and shop.. young cal. ic. Del Mar It. A ti .......,, ~ ..,... 1 • CLU ~·-pirv Oltr. 5&-17'4 EldenC.M.~. 1;.:•::;CO<lft;.:.:;.:.:;.;"ll::_____ & 771W.20th,C.M. BOOKKEEPER Sink your teeth into thll nsurance c1.• LVNSEXPER. P•lnllng ~.7523 .,, ·-MATURE EXP'D ul ~ Ion baeJ<around pte1' 4 BR, 1 1t.y hie. nr Adams or FOUND: Yng Blk A tan INCOME TAX, oper sttnt I: p rh I _.., __ ..,... s,.s PM DAILY. PHONE J cy ,.....t · tntra·Briaht · ol NU1'5el Aides. 5G3l81 Mesa Verde tc:hl, 1 child. male dog. part Doberman. bal lheet mthly, fin aerv, ape ~"9 "I A Better Temporuy Position 64f-.4600 smile wtl1 get you clo9eup to Salary will be ln accorda.noe .t..a•CHINIST
Call 213 633--1350 Costa Mesa 642 2067 computerized 49'J..8116 u-N ...1-..1' ft.lling this cavity. Call w/exptt. A qualifications. '""' ' . ' . . ' . * w:r~~R * ,.,,....,.,, ··-BUSBOY/MAN Mariont'833-7100; Denni• l Submit ttsWne w/salaey Genenl. 5 yn ....,r. APPIY,
*
Bobyslttlng Wben ~· c.n "Mac" Unskilled & DISHWASHE.R lleMia -..1 Aaency ni "'IUlrernenl 1n conlidence :',!!••~-Kinetics. lne.
* * * * ,_ • c•-..&.5 Must be clean A neaf. Over Irvtne, n2 M1chel.ton Dr. to. Cla.ulfled ad no. 527 clo .1..Wl •K:--:CM. Hhna FO··~ -hool leschc• 5'U-l44C 64&-lnt ....-. •• I In Pilot P 0 Box ·--··' ~ emplo-™ ... .a..o. Appy person, &n1 A DENTAL froc'lt ofc, prlor ex-Dally , • • .liRJ, "'i .... -.-...-. .~ •• 'n'
I.,,....---------------.. I -babysitting. My PAINTING • PAPERING, • Assemblers SUioln, 5930 w. °""Hwy., per Pf'l'd. Appt. making, Cotta M ..... Calif 9'626. MAID. u.-IM -' home. Fenced yd. age 2-6 19 yn.. ln Harbor are&.. Uc Mil Train NB. tllll1£, -~. typing, etc. ~ Oppor. Employer laJD W. B&Jboa Blvd., N.B.T :
67>-83119. CdM. :u-~rxied. Ref's furn. N°@'vel' A Fee BUSBOY, aper. prerd. Ap.. u baekup to ofc. mgr. ===-=,.__~ I/ti --* 6'75-3463 * , i
T d I Pa d• MOTHER. care for 2-5 yr Interim plyinpenotl,AllefWezt, Salary~n!;brly.64&-2-WJ'RY ........... me.-<Nper MANAGER TRAJNEE !1 ra er S ra 1se olds, m.,..., fenced yaro. * PAINTING -PAPERING :no:; W. Oceanlroo4 N.B. dayo. 2'85 alt 8. hr. to •tart. Chance ~ttad· Yourc man bondabl• . ..--
Nwpt 11t11/HelleT p k , Interior Exterior Personnel S."ice DENTAL receptionlft. Exp, vancement. Cotta.I• ...... ee c I e an c u. t w I • o-m • ~7. Lie. Insured Guaranteed m w BUYER mature. Must be able to Shop, 56:1 W. 19th St .. CM. automottve aper. to lftl'I
11' nes PROFESmONAL teacher Call HarN 64)-4568 • 20th, C.M. cope w/people A pr't!11SUfta. Gen'I Office to $$00 to l'lMl.MI'! tire center. •
..UI babyolt nitea ' wkendo PROF. Palntln(, abo "'°"' '4i.752J $46o2592 54H170 -n 9 A IO Of' 4 Enjoy variety • dlvenilled ttonal oo. Start llllO· ofl tn my home. No Wanta. aceou1. Cell. t nter/exter. lntervtewl111 9-ll • l-4 Newport Beach ffnanc:tal m. Is 5. duties ln front deak 9J>Ot "1/ benentt. Call Don .tac~;
t ' •· bl •••-·-1 Uc/Ina Frff -... ._•191 llltuHoo ha1 tmmedtatt Since 1 S4HOOS. C.0.Utal ~-• I mes oc:uona e. _,-.iw • • Cl! .. <>W""U • ACCOUNTING SECY opening ft:lr a -proteulona1 DONUT 'Sbo~ all ntt• lhift. 1st class_ co. re nter-2790 Harbor mvd L ~
DAY Nunery. babla: UI s EXTERO Complete ~ COi.ft, 1 The TM CommunJcaliona w/strong eiperlence. You Woman~ 25--iS. No eJq>tr est I: happy tmlle will nu . ., ...:.__ 11
I '
yn. $18 ptr wk. 646-5788 or atory $2161).. 2 •tor:Y $33J. r.omlJl'LllY pretently bu an will purehue ott1e9 aup. nee. A ln OC'l'IDn. Mt. the bill. CalJ Barbara. MANAGER. OVft' 3.S. Goll!
dollars 6G-4302. Neat work. Roy,~. opening for a llCCl'etary who pllet, auto fleetl 1: ottlee Donut, E. 17th St .. C.M. 833-2700, Dennil I: Derull1 mgmt A: d'l:Ha/sptwr ~¥. j came+ Servlff HOUSE p&intina, lnt/ext. 11 polled, ha.I lhrthnd, xlnt equipment. 0 en ta I Jtf:cepUonitt.Assla-Peraonnel Agency Of Irvine, :P. -r~ 1 ~~ CM tJaK I ' \ ____ _::.._ __________ J'j:;;~=t,;s-c;;;;;!;';;;;;i.; 8ccoua. ceillng1, reas. Free typlni: le recent ~P ln the tant. Exp. P/tlme. El Toro, ~ Michellon Dr. , ze • -,• I' J011N'S Carpc!t ' Uphob1tery till T14/S3&-5857. ll.C(OUTiting field. Apply Mon We will contlder only 11.p-Laguna lUIJs, 113()..UJ). GENERAL omCE. part MATH M4I ~ .• !
Ori-Shampoo fro e Scotch· TIIE Hangman, we seU 100 lhru J;'rt, 8 am to 4:30 pin. plJcanU w/a proven record * DENTAL1eetttary.bkkpr. Ume:..~. to 5, S days week. 0R$ .. ~.~ 1 WANT late Cad or Connie
in part for Newport 30
aux. 1loopl steeps 11 All
bclna:/Crulling Gear Inc.
JOHN~:
PRlME lnd. bid&". AAA N•t. ~"!!'. :I) >" i... Pl.!Xll
JI.fl. ""'-Tr..i. $125.!Xll
for lee aptl, or com·
• llkr. 547-.
N. lake lot. Pl cne
I nt. ~. und, utll ,cm frf'8 A dear. TNde
for -... -"' 11 Brlr. 547-1419.
fj'5M eqt)' on 9'<> acm nr.
Ytldapa. Bal. lG).!Xlll lnL
only 1%. l!'antut.ic v ews.
hUJs, vaJ)tys. For lnc, prop or ' mer. M'f'"68.
* * *
llAVE ni;o ~ool11. Crest
Ioli. $7800 Md S6800 clrar-
want Harbor Area R·l or
n.2. Can add CMh.
Bkr. oz:i.7225
TRADE 5 atn9 CU'1M!f' or
1eetlon. Rofld on 3 aidts,
Near Vktorvlllt, for Ot'ani:e
c..tnty "'=4
Jl:U8.rd !Soll Retfll'd&nlJl1. Ork' slop price A pattern, for Contact Carol Dunle.a.vy. of the hlaheft tntep'lty A: 28M E. Mea Verde Dr., Ph. ~19'15. ''
i:>erreuera I: all color home •PPt. 547•5846. 114: 557-MOJ. TM Commun· honesty Ir....,., eully 2llin a Suite A. CM, M&-nMJ. GENERAL O~:l' Se If ' ~·
brigtltenen .. 10 minute PAINTING Hone I cl lc!l:Uons, 1375 Sunf)ower conndence • l\dmlrt&rt of starter ror )'O\tt'll OtC. Penn ~ ,<:.
b I i! a c h for w h I t e • ... can, Avl'., Colla MeSA. management A wodon. Oent•I •11l1t•nt position f/Ume: Apply Hoff· NEWPO'RT BEACH .. 1!1•
carptta. s.ve your money b)' ~~~ ~-~ F,qual Opportunity Ernp~er .. _~..., " 1 Sal only. MS-7074 man Fabrtea sG. McCor-F1ntncla.I lnltJtutkln ..___ ,
1avin( me extra~ !"lll '"'11~· "'.,"'""'· Accounting Clerk h~ ~ conM!!:. a~ DRUGSTORB -.Jes p1. nrlck Avt.. C.M:. m~tt open I nU:-·1 for
clean lMrw rm., ;nnn. FOR cltan " neat ~ To $500. You CM naure on OuaiDed Id no. m. C/O Must be eueritnced ln GIJt.13 managomrnt trata.. '.
A: hall $15. Arf'J rm. .SO. =-..;,. ~ ratea. IOI> tamlr:ws u wftl u rec--Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 151), dncston work. Good i-,y1 0
""""" llO. Cbalr $5. 15 Y" ' -ognitlon in key opot !or mod· Coat& M-Calli t:1A. beneflll A lioun. .....,. In El.<Y,> f\m job. Imtned. °""" MINIMUM +.
np. ii what counta. not INT a EXT~. p&Pfl' em co. Call Lee, &13-2700. F.qual e>ppw-. Employer ~er1on, Du1bard'•.lno. Full, part time,~ QUAUFJCA110NS t 1
method. ldowarit:~ harw\rc. natural wood Dtnnl.sA:DennllPt.rlOnnll 9!i!i~~~~~'"""" PharmaeY. :M4 Forest , or nlaht. AJIPll in_~n*Cdletel>elrte 1 Good ..t. !1.11.otDL ""lilllng. 54&-MI. AJi<ncy ot 11Vlne, .,.. CARPINTERS l.q\lno Bacll. tutY 41!. ot Eve. at ;JllJl w. * Malh--•I j
Cement, Concrete PROP'. rc:ntet, hoMat work. Mk:htlaon Dr. F'l.nllh ea.rpm.ten w/boat ELECITR.ONIC ASSEMBLY: Cout Hwy, NB. * 1~ Yn. Wort Exprr •... 1
rtu. c/lna. lnt/ut, tree \LTERATION 1nmatnu, buUdin.c eq, prtf'd. Loni" IAcal co. w/txpt.ndltW pro-QIJU. FRIDAY: G~ Ont tllOle -'4th the
CUSTOM CEMENT WORK ett. Refs. 548-21?19. ~· Full or plttme. CdM Mlnge ~. oontinooul anrn providet great eha.noe manutacturlnc co. hu 1 Y I'"' •e
$.200,000 eqty In $500,0'.XI Drives. WALKS! _ Jl'.Btlol. * BENSON PAINTING * m.1381 d&11, &t&-8346 evt1. ffnp!OJ'mt11I. Top wt.ae• A fu earn Whlle )"Oil learn. place fOt ve:ratlle pm0n ~ qu.al1tlcatkp: bMd Qp!J. I
bdK Portland, Ore. AAA pool d<cko. Don. 642-85!4 Inter-Exttt APP!JANCE TWINIClAN ~ BOAT WOIU<S ~ .. : •. p= :;:"~'t;, ~;·~~· ~~-: Submll mume w/~ fill.
Natbnal TWena.nt, on N.~N. PATIOS-PLANTERS M2-1998 Free F.at. Exp ln Frtplalre app1 ·1. 1300 , -n Ave. ~.11 Na-u •• , !WO-li<ri5, lkillt. Uta-•, To-. qu..,1...,.11,!_.t 1!1 .. 00!_ft~~ ~
20yrlte. antprlme•nuPI All Concret• work. Br1ck, Vacandl!tcotftTIOl1e)'I Rent Work horn l'lldk> dlllpatch ....,... ""' .... , -21 91 l o...-""~ Cl -. -.. ,_ -""" cntr or ff Bia. 517-6469. alump!tone wk. 194-3533. your houle, apt., store cruckl. Gd 00. f r I n • e O>ll& Men Coastal Aae~ 2 9 0 Ja.n • "'6.,.• o..u, .,_ p O a.. i. I
* * * PATIOS, walltl, drlva. Saw, bldg., etc. tl)l'U a Daily Pilot bmoOtt. Davia Sn>wn. Cell Doll'! give •r. the ship! Hol'bot' mw., C · "-= m M.<ncy, 2 7 ! O Cotta M"~ c0_' ,--;;;i bnl-. .ttmove • r"l'.lplace Cluallt~ Ad. Sell tdl'e lttm.1 Jack ~'!!»~ Strvke Dept. "Lilt" It ln c aaitled, Ship A &OOcl WI.Ill ad .. A auod in-I.~~~~ .. ~c~·11:·:::~~· !!l~E<Ju=·~· ~O~il:~:~· :=~~1 conertl•. 54Hll88 1or Ht. nowl Call $Oo661$ Nowl Mfr., ~. kl Shcft Rewltl! 64Y.mt. watmtnL 1~ant Id t"tlUltl .•• 5'Ui6TI
•• ~'>
, , . ... ,.. . . . . . ..., . . .. ~··
..
* t
' ' • ' •• ,.
~ .
{3_/,'
Maldawanted.Wlll
Apply l{l person only.
Mesa Inn, 3205 Blvd., Costa Mesa.
PAitmR P"'°' TIME
• ~ pain .... r....ied
, our large apartment
f."'· 13 per hour. Ex· , Interior A finish ex· nee necessary.
; Appty llJ Ptnon:
00AtcwOOO GARDEN
-C-APAllTMENTS
Rt•I Etl•"' Sal"
Fm
TOP QUALITY
EXPERIENCED
P!ISiliow: available in all
&n!U, All shilts, xlnt In ltl'-vlce ptqp'aln. career ad· vancement opportunity, @d·
ucadonal reimbursement.
F\lll fringe benefits. Paid in-
surance progTam.
-.-2S,1972 DAILY PILOT
BICYa.E
REPAIRS
(
I 1
............
CALLUS .. Wll
·••O•lll7·H2e INSTANl;CRIDIT ---1111& IAYl.'IM•ln 1.lf YI" .. MW ift Citif•• -,_I.,... .. Mrw"' .,_. ja
2. " you "' _..,en ...,. ·4, It yev Mi'ft little " M
cs. ""' ut•1'Ytt•··1mw..-w"'-• fUTfll .. T' · • ' ...... ,... ........ ....
2DOOI
HARDTOP
full.foclo"f equipped
IUJQl:l231H1)
IMMEDIATE DELIVEIY
$199 DOWN $71 A MONTH Sl9t l11e11ol ~,.·,y1111f. $71 btei.I ....
pp111t ind. lox,. lie MM & 1U C'")'i"f,
~ .. oppr. CJ.tit"' S6 ...... 0.
ftrrl(lf p)'lllt,rlc1 $27$5 illcl fol I-Ii·
,c_,, AHHU4l'nKINTAll IAll 52188FUL1 ~i~::s ' .PRICE .. J;j:J --
··:::D '73 DOD
-CHALLENGER
'71 TOYOTA
MAIKll ·
' 'Pttd. radio, 1-ttr. (233DUI)
$1 ·488
.MLPIKI
• I
'69.VW BUG
2-DOO~ SEDAN ....... w...(Z5f23l1
$688
fVUPltcl
'71 FORD
IALAXU500
V-1.-. 11W11.. islory air, ......
........ ndil.llllOlll' (IHEIT)
Power disc broket, AM radio,
duol mirror1,eml11lon control
syitem, electric ignition sy•ttm.
· Order Youn Now
'67 '69 PLYM. BARRACUDA WAG.
Y.I. OIJlo, "--,... (Ol3Rfrl) v.1, a~ta, tra111~ powtr •t.....,,
raek. (6ift05)
.$··· $J88 , ' fVUPllCI FULlPllCt
'69 Cortina '71 PINTO
2DOOI, ...... ,.....,.,;(XWt9)
$288 $888
FULLPllCE 'fVLLPllCI
'65 MUSTANG '69 CHEV.
V·I. ftlt. trtn1~ pt-1tttrl111o 5'0RTS VAN (XXM6V)
(OQC2J7)
$1688 $288 $1088
flfLLPIKl ""1PIKI hU.P,llCI
'.72 CHEV. '6l VW CAMPER '70 DODGE
L •MKltlll,:i.Dl. H.T. .
y ........... ~ .... ,, .. -.. ,..,...,.(104" .. ) ......... ,... . ..., ........ (I~, -,.,._ -., ..... oir,,..,. ., ,._q,((UIGCD1016) •,
$2088 $688 $1088
PIUPIKI.
•
OPEN
9Altl lOPM
1DA-YS
AWEEI
'
RfLLPll<I fUU.Pll(I
I WILL PAY OVER
l(tly Blue look
I'• lit. model, cle•n,
low mli..,. dome ..
tics,, lmporta, trucks or
cam.-n.
Call and .... "" Beyer DAYE ROSS
POHTIAC
2480 HarbcN' Blvd.
Costa Mo.. 546.8017
WE ,.AV TOP CASH ..,_..,.A.,....,Jull
can ua u tne eetsmata GROTH CHMDLET . ....... _...._
IJZl1 -Bhd. HUD-Beub IC! .8087 . Kl II.ml .
WE buy all makes of clean
u.ed sporta can. paid for
or DOl Pleue drive In for
.... ftppnlal.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
-!loo W. ,.Caul HW,o.
llewpoli Beacll
642-9405
NEWPORT
DATSUN
Now Open
"' . NEWPORT '
BEACH \
1000 W. Coast Hwy ,
645·6'400
WE HAVE THE
NEWEST OF
DATSUN$ IN
INVENTORY FOR
YOUR SELECTION
FIAT
$AVE
NEWPORT
.DATSUN
100) w. eoUi u..,,
. llwpt B<h ~ . '
'71 MERCii!i>ES 2SOC '
U)eded, Silver, Auto Trans.
AM/FM Radio, Power
Steertna:, ' Power Wlndows.
$7215
NEWPORT
DATSUN
1000 W. Coast Hwy
llwptlkh -MG
'10 MGB-OT, Top shape.
$2425. 6'5-<l827; 2400 w.
O>ut WWII)', SWte 3 Npt
Bcb.
'69 MGB GT. Radlal ·tire.,. new clutch. AM/FM radio.
Excel ooDd. $1.850, 640-1024 .....
PEUGEOT
'64 PEUGEOT
Make otter stS-5031
PORSCHE
LEAVING town. '69 Fiat 850 '71 PORSCHE 911T
Cpe. $700. or best offer. 5 Spd, Radio, Factory Alloy 557~ aft 6:30. Wheels. $6275 HONDA NEWPORT
WE PAY 1UP OOLLAR 'TI Honda car. DATSUN FOR TOP tTSJm CARS GREAT! $900. 1 (:f your car i. extra clea.n, * 675-0f.53 * 1000 W. Coast Hwy.
..... llrlt. JAGUAR Nwpt Bch• 64.5-6400
BAUER BUICK 1911 Porsche 9ll·T. !mmao. """'· . ~ Harbor mvd. •70 JAGUAR XKE ooupe ..,.,.. eo.ta·M~ 9'79:25<MJ ."wt.wire .wbeela. 'Hpeed.1----m.~,.....-·---
IMPORTS w~ 1tegency red. JOnt """'· 10' YOTA ,,...._. eaw.ue. $3899; ~ 54Jo0355. • . .
TOP I BUYER :10 JAGUAJ! ·XI<$ .,, • .._1 ---SA----l'--11
BD...L MAXEY TOYOTA w/wtre wheels, 4-epeecL JIRIW
18881 Beach Blvd. Regency red. Xlnt ~
H Beacb. P,. 847-3!1& $3899. Call 5'3--0355. * Jaguar 1971. red, 'V12 l!hg.
Al Nowr Bafore
On All RemaJ,ning '72 AUTOS BOUGHT :,;;,;~alroood,auto TQYOTAS · We pay top dollars for '66 XKE 4.2; wire .rims, new
late model, clean ca.rs Mich X tlres. Low mi. $2400
MJ.SMO or best offer. Gtfr~. . ' .'ft.•~·b.IDU 443 w. Bay Street
Costa M<sa '66 Jaguar, XKE cpe, new -ll/(.llA
P!relll radials, 53,ooo m1. i TOYOTA · · A-. 'lrnportod ·970 owner, $1995. <96,o9564. · ' · KARMANN ·GHIA' ·i.~.u_,,;·c.M.. ~9,10:\ ALFA ROl«O ' . , "7 rororA'°"" Deluie. . ' ~ '68 . Karmann Ghia ,COM. lo Xlnt .~; rad:-Deatf:r1 '71.,ALFA ROMEO -.... Ext & Int. JOnt °"""'· -, 1'50 <:<>llpe ••• -;ran.mi.. """" $1DSO. !Inn. 6'4-6003. 19n TOYOTA ¥ARK n
-lacl<>ry a1r ooodit1on-MAZDA £xtrU • $1950. ing, AM-FM radio, radial or Best Oller 493-1'784 u.... $39~
NABERS CADILLAC
Dill Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa 540-9100
ALPHA '72 Spider, new,
must sell. Pvt. party. Best
ofr. ~. 548-5978.
BMW
Visit our new home!
& ROY CARVER, Inc.
2U E. 17th St .
0'5ta Mes11 s.6-4444
G
SAL~::.~=G
CREVIER MOTORS
208 W. h1 St, Santa Ana
135-31TI
DATSUN
'70 DATSUN 2401
4 Spd, Radio, Air Cond, Mags
$3695
NEWPORT
DATSUN
1000 W. Co.a.at Hwy
llwpt B<;b ~
'72 DATSUN
PICKUP
4 speed, radio, heater, like
brand new (246F'LZ) $1995
dlr. 836-6536.
Vacancies cost money! Rent
)'Olll' ....,., apt., rtore
bldg., etc, thru a Dally Pilot
CW.Wed Ad. 64H678.
' •
MAZDA
LEASE SPECIAL
New '72 RX3
$57.56
VOLKSWAGEtl
vw -$250. Seats & -in excellent shape. Engine
needs work. Call alt 6,00
pm, wknda, 673-3122.'
l..Daded. ROTARY powered, '70 VW Cam r Weatf.alla
36 mo. + T & L. For resp. Pop Top. bean, n e w
pty. Trades cons. Mldtelln radials. $ 3 0 0 0 • e 497-alGS eves.
'72 ROTARY'S '63 VW Dix van. 1SOO reblt "Demo Sale" eng. Windows, slcy rool, bed, seats. Tape deck. Best
ofter. 536-2307.
10 TO CHOOSE Sundial
"BIGGEST SAVINGS" 1969 ~~per.
"Servlce I! the differ nee" Call ~
HUNTINGTON BEACH '62 vw Bug, """"'· good MAZDA """· 1495. Call att .. & pm. 6'13-7567.
'63 MERCEDES 190 D
Air Cond, AM/FM Radkl, Im·
maculate cond, (JUA649).
$995
NEWPORT
DATSUN
1000 W. Coast Hwy
Nwpt Bch MS-MOD
'64 VW excellent trans
$350. Call alter 6 pm
6'r.HIOll3
'66 vw Bus .....••.••.• •$475.
'50 Plymouth, Runs ..... $35.
673-5689 or ~2'150
'63 VW. SunrooL Great
transportation. •6'1>-3715*
1968 vw Westphalia, cmpr .•
pop-top, tent, stereo, lm·
mac.· $1995. 536-7751 •ew.
'61 vw su.. $350.
Rebuilt engine.
Ugly, but strong. 4•3485
1970 vw
Clean! $1296. 613-42.18
Vacandl!ll cost money! Rent
,.,.,.. houle, apt., stot.
,bldg., etc. thnt a Dally Pilot
Classified Ad. SeH Idle ttema
now! Call M2-5618 Now!
1 ' ·ste. ,'.Up·
'. • . \ ' I
tLuxury • •
Excellent Selection Of Previously
olJiled Mark Ill's and Mark IV's '
1970MARKID
EXQUISITE .
Ebony black'finlsh, blank landau, and burgundy leather Inter!~.
Full power, cruise control, climate control, air cond., individual
power front seats, power door loclu, tilt wheel. (644BIJ) <
$
( p ~ -·:~
I . '
l
J
;' .. ~ .;., . . "''. l
... ~,
' ..
.-
.. .t SA1'E! ' -. "?.r . '~ Outstan~mg G~oup Of Ch~i~.~!
. f , • 1971·~ .. ~. . l97t :~ .. ~j ~ '' ' r -.: '
fAMILY WAGON fLlaTWOOD lltOUllUM -
ly TUYCO li,OOO"'""' Illa,.-•. ~· _ ••
2 tone paint, shag rug, sleeps 4, 12'7" ~ ~~i;: ~table =
whl. base, V8, auto., P.s.. ~ front seat.a, taetory ~m. Alf .. J'M
raised fiberglass root, elec. water stereo, ctU1se ClOntrol. and m
system, dual battery syallpn. elec. much more.' See A ~tcldl.J.~.t:
refrigerator, gas range w/o-kn, porta DZKl.
potti, butane & water tank, like new.
(511DYU)
Sale Priced
1971 Buick
RIVIERA
Like new. Attractive lime frost with
dark green Landau root A: match. in·
terlor. Luxury equJpped. Full power,
fact. air, AM·FM stereo, tilt wheel,
chl'!?me wheels. COOSDBW)
Sale Priced
1970 Ford LTD
COUPI
Gold metallic w/matehlng Interior,
black vtnyJ roof. AutomatJe. radio,
heater, power steerin& A: brakes, (tie.
toey air. (540AEL)
$2475
Sale P.-iced :-
.
1971 ~·
C:ontlnen~I '1
'" COUPI. SALi NlCID .... ~
Beautiful Polar white tlnialr witlf>·
black Landau roof A black lel,_the
interior. Luxury equlJlped ~ Full power, auto. temp. air, AM· C
stereo. tllt wheel, power door l , Drives like new. (809210) "!l ~
$4575•
191,~°"~:r,JsJI
Coupe. Excellent. Berinuda blue ·m~•!
talllc with l..M.ndau roof. 1'Qll ·~· , factory &fr conditioning, lndlVfd 1
adjusting aeats, Low mileage. ( t
649) .. '·l
$3275 . ~l
• : -· 1 • • J ALWAYS A GREAT
SELECTION OF TOP
QUAl,ITY CARS . . •
·H ~. :
,. -· _' l ' . • • "-t
·!'l .. ., -
-!
I
!
"Orana1 Coun11t1 FamU~ of l'IM Can"
ohnson&so
. ,
'• Jk-.: I' I ...:· " ..
2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • ~
' I
-~ • i I
'
W-. O<t""'' ~. 1972 DAILY PILOT
'7·3 OlDSMOBllES -HERE NOW!
'fl '•I
· ·IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
:·
WHAT'S
NEW? • EGA! OLDSMOBILE'S All NEW LOW PRICED COMPACT CAl
•
Final Clearance • Remaining. 1972
I IS
•SERVICE•
PARTS-BODY SHOP
OPEN EVERY
ORANGE
COUNTY'S Number 1 HONDA DLR.
Demonstrators Must Be Cleared Out 1 Now! ·We have The Largest $election of SEDANS and COUPES
Example: 19_72 CUTLASS SUPREME
,., l , r hardtop. Turbo •;ydrtmafic, .,cf•luk~.,~dio,·.he•ter, 1ir conditioning,
pow,'}st:..,ing, b6dy side mouldings, •w"h&j, ~·ti t jres, wheel discs, vinyl
bul'(lp 91U1rds, bucket •••fs. fl6'7)!2;Z1DB64~) .,
SATURDAY
7:30 'TIL 5:30
1972 HONDA CAR
Fully equipped
Including Stereo
AM/FM Radio and
Tape Player. Demo.
#~1051525
$
. -
'67 OLDSMOBILE 98 1968 DODGE
"NEW GLORY" VAN
'67 PLYMOUTH FURY '70 OLDSMOBILE 98 ....... v .......... ....,,. ........... ,... ..
red.le, ......... IU9Wll1J 5995 ·--...., ... ...................
...... 11m1z1 , 5998 4 *· H. T, ,_..,, elr, ,._...
.......... ,..,., dtlc bnilln.
l411WJ 52795
'71 OLDS DELTA 88
Ma9 wheels, he•vy duty 6 cylinder, automatic, cu s·
torn interior, black li9ht inside. '68 CADILLAC: SEDAN DE VILLE '68 BONNEVIL~ l!ROUGHA_M __ •
C-• 4 O.. H.t . YI,.,,_ -$2998 ....... ..,.... .... ........_..,..
Nlie, cnilN cNtnl, wt.rt~·
S.W by a MW. (405CIWJ .
SEE TO
APPRECIATE
.II. wlwwwtk, t.ctety 94,, hR
,......, rodlo, ...,_, wtitt.-U
tltes. IW9161ll 51,795
Autos, lmportMI
14.000 .... ftlll ,......
hc:Nry .... ,..., Ncrtw,
-~~· lecb. , 1 no1JOJ
TOO NICE
TO PRICE!
l§J L-1 ~_ ...... _ .... __,· I~ I ............ l§T [ ........ .._. l§J I ._...... l§l l AutooforS.O. l§i . ~,,;.,;;;lm·po·rt·od~;;!97!0;!A~ut;os;,;u~ .... ;;;;;;~990~1,~A~utos. UMd 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used 990 ~A;u;to;s;, ;u; .... ;;;;~~990~1 1 They' re Hotl ~ -·--_v!:o~L~KS~~:.:A:.:G~E:::N:...1_...i,f::_,::BU:::l,::C:.::,K __ ,.-::::C:-:::ADl_LLA:::-C:--1----C:-A_D_ILLA--C:-_..:,C:..:.O:.;..RV:.;..m.:.._E_ MERCURY
'ff vw BUS $1595 '70 Buick C...•om SJ<.yhuit •73 Cadillac: '71 ELDORADO CORVE'ITE '!2, ""'· A"'•· '70 ~erc:ury
Wh lk vt I P S air, P.W., Tilt whl. Beat of·
10 PaB8 wagon. Excellent t. B ny ~op. . . Cpe De Ville Viz}yl lOp, leather inter., full '''".!'.:.;· &JHW"""~c,· ~-o-:c--Monterey 2-·Dr HT, v.s, Aut
cond Low miles P.B. R&H. fact air. Under power, , factory air, tilt -C:OUG R Trans, PQWU, steer ing, NEWPORT IMPORTS 30M. $425 under book. Full pw-er, Air O>nd., Vinyl ivheel, AM-FM stereo radio, f A Radio, Heater, white walls,
3100 W ~ •• 1 H-Ne..-646-1252, 644-2228. Roof, Dual Comfort Seats, power-«ior Jocks, ou(ltand· wh-I -v.,.., A vo-n•·c• a.each.~"" ~...-· BUICK ELECTRA Beautiful Fi.remist Finish, Ing care. (226CJSJ. 1969 Cougar. Full power. car"fn6CroJ $!895 d~. Call
, 1972 Custom Loaded Coupo. 6-w~y seal..!I, stereo tape $6222 $2195 or consider offer. ,..,,, '""'"
66 VW. Chocolate Brown. cnnse control ** 64Z-42fi8 ** .;:.~::..:=·------Rebuilt en&:ine. Hurst Local owner has new car $176 NABERS CADILLAC
lhitttt• Chgir mags. Pog..a. le~. Desperate to sell. • 2060 Harbor Blvd.,
tracdon !ires. Torqu e m.:6946. 6 pm.g pm . per month Costa Mesa 540-9100 DODGE MUSTANG
Mum-.~. 646-2862. 1969 Buick Skylark. Xlnt 36 mo. O.E .L Ill.'< 1966 Dodge Charger, New '72 Powder blue Mustang,
'61 . VW Bug AM/FM 8 oond. Lo mileage, pri/pty, Immediate De livery CHEVROLET Tires, Brakes Shocks. Ex· Hardtop. Air/cond·Loaded
h'a,cJc at~reo, n°ew call 557-41141979-7517. LEASING cellentC.Ondltlon,6U-9180. w/xt:ru.53&-8769a1t4pm.
tltes/polnt, really clcoo '62 Buick 225 Electra P.S., ALL MODELS 19'10 Chn. conooun Eatai., FORD O'·DSMOBILE
• ~ 1 P.B. Air $200. 6fW859 alter AND MAKES .. 5 Pm 8 Pau. Sta. w ... Pwr.' -----------------8 .. ' 'T '"' Perfect ' '73's ,. , pasL Steering I: brakes, AM-FM '66 Ford Ranchero AT, '71 TORONADO · . 41 ,000 miles: Sun roof, '5.1 Buick. good transp. car. Stereo radk>, till 1teer. whl. Radio. Heater, V~. Runs :r:j::=. ~tt~ mo. ean 494-ma Southern Cafifornia ractol')' Air, luggage ••ck. Good. Good Tires. $895 • ~~~ ,:~~,a~:a~~it 1~:~~
P CAMPER '63 n..< k ru . Cl new tire. & brakes. Panel· '66 El Camino, Radio, "'heel , stereo Altf·FM multi·
1970 vw POP TO owe vtera. enn. 1st National Ina;. Asking $2725. 5.S7-4861. Heater, Auto Trans., Air plex. (050CXU\. Fully equip, Excel oond. Sharp. A/C, fuU pwr. !\.take Cood., V-8. $995: 645-6644. $4777
!!:.,1?,'ble ";;.ad!':"~'Ji.' or •""· 54,,__ alt 5. B k L 'ng '70 MALIBU 1969 FORD Coootry Se<lao, 6 ,........ CADILLAC an eaSI ""''· wagoo, Ai,, PIS, NABERS CADILLAC '69 Camper • Moving, must 2 Door hardtop V-8, auto. P/B, A/T. Clean family 2060 Harbor Blvd.,
sell. Sl.800. Reblt eni.. ,68 FLEETWOOD trans., factory air, power car. $1675. 644-2706; c061a Mesa 540.9100 673-Uh.. !W-7484 nu brake!, . . XKll Michel110n Drive steerin&1 and brakes, radio, 5f!r7594. I~-"'=""'=-""'='--
DO de'n~ \ Brougham. Firem1st paint, (Corner of MacArthw") htr, wbite wall tires. (3ll· ,:'6=,<F"'oro:.c..V~a-n,_g_ood_""8~po-. '69 Olds Cutlass, Excel cond. * ',69 V:W good condition vtnyl top, leather inter., luU Irvine, Calli. 92664 AGF) $2195 dlr ~-Good buy! ~ aft 6; Good tires. air, Pwr, $11:!0.
-"'-" ~ -aft 5'·30: JIO'lloW, faclOry air, tilt n 4/833-86J) 2l3/G27--03G7 '71 ..... ~n•• Carlo. Xlnt cond. 6f8....4838 da .... , uk for 1 -"644-"-'2252=1"'53&-6851~=----•• '"· o..&14 vi~io · ' wheel, power door klck.s, ...... """ ,~ '68 OLDS 442, 4 gpd trans.
Ol' 6G-o&32 AM-FM, 1ow mileage. (WAJ-YOUR ONLY AirPB ~~~ Avu,·'n°yl~r··0".;'?,s. ,,:Rlchanl=·~c::..· -~---R/H. $1000.
VW Bui. Mechanlcally 767l . FACI'ORY ' ~. • ...... · •u '71 LTD ctysq. 10 pass. wag. • Call 642-2486 *
eel. nu tints, plug ex· $ALE PRICED AUTHORIZED i:i~ m~~~rH ~~ ~ full p\vr., nir. rark. lo miles -.-.:-"'":c'.=.:::..::__--~ -~ -~-~~ rit 6*-3105. NABERS CADILLAC CADILLAC: ==::.·~~---~O Fot'd van \I T. Auto, V.,j,
'10 vw per P9P top with ~ Harbor Blvd 1970 Chevy El Camino. l'Ull8 windows, back seat. Gd '72 Pinto Runabout, .stick,
tent. ~ Costa Mesa 5'1)...9100 I_.._ t n,,~~ ot ~011 ~~en!;., Reb!J il !PwroogStrl.: conrl. 493-3229; 830--6404. rli!IC brk!, ~kl, clean (."()fl· * ... * * 1971 Cadillac Cou de ,_."es • ~.....,,, ~ •. u ....... , ""'' cu. in. . . dlUon. 673-, ,....,.
VIII Xlnt ........, _UMJpe ,,_,, la.cl In On.nre County, Auto. $1750. or best olfer. 1958 FORD JJln \11agon. Runs, PLYMOUTH '63 VW VARIANT. e. '""'"'' HO> . ...,..... Sales-Leulng. m-3828 Fullerton. need!! battery, $65., 217 De * $450. • 6'5-201~. Uc La Gndla, San Clc1ncnle.
66-'488 aft 6 pm '68 CADILLAC fi Nabers '':t~~-8~~v.s:,ro2 ~~. 1965 rord Falrtane, powr '72 Plymouth
'60 VW BUS Convertible. Full pow,er, [ac-C:adi'llac: AM/FM orig owner. SlTJO, steering, powr brk.s, good Gran Sport, 2 Dr, llardlop, BEST OFFER tory air, leather interior, ""-1454 oond. $495., 493-074.1. * 54&-Q27 * ·1 · •--1 AM FM w.;i Auto Trans, Factory Air Ii t steenng Wii= • • • • 2600 HARBOR BJ-, 'IJO Stingray Silver 4 SPd. 45f. FORD 'Sf VAN, Body & C.Ond, Power Steering, Pow· 'M VW SUNJWC)F BUG. itereo, power door loeks. COST A MESA AM/FM 1tereo, $ 3 8 O O . efll\ne In 2'00d. condition. er Brakea
1
AM/FM Stereo ~Good condition. $315. (1.97946). 52222 54(}.DlOO Open Sundl.v 645--0'13 aft 6:30 pm. $650. 557-n'tA. Radio. Vmyl Roof, only
10 vw, tac a1t, AM/FM. NABERS CADILLAC '71 COUPE DE VILLE '6;~~ miob,! 'i,!'.; INTERNATIONAL ~ ~.(302FYA> ll""
·Excel ~Sl,'lt/5 or best 3)6() Harbor Blvd, Vlnyl top. leather interior, offer, 846-1049. .61 TrawlaU, 4 whl drlw. '69 Valiant 4 Dr Auto
otter. • . Cl eo.ta Mesa 540-9i00 ~~e~.::f'°iZw~·~: ''86.\ Malibu CJ;. Mq whla, Reblt enc. Runs rd. Trans., $995 e '00 Vallant
'85 Bue. Xl.nt . cond. :..~: '68 EL DORADO, fully locks,· WSW, lth than 19,000 molt eng.;-auto· trans. $560. $500/offer. 297 canyon Wqon Auto Trani, Radk>,
New brakes, tlre1, etc . ..,_,, equjJ., ml.ISt eee to ·~ mil~s. (lJlGBXJ. ,, Alt 6 pm. 963--6140. ~""'1~!:.·..!;L.o!B!:,· ==-=----i';iHoioTittt~, "95.;;;;l;i;_.;;;;;'i;' =
6'1)-3237. pro ate. 54HJS6, $1666 '62 Cl1ovy Impala, e"" xlol JA VEUN i:~~n.R'r~ JOlVO '67 SEDAN DE VILLE NABERS CADILLAC c1 .. n • .:;:, ~ wired __ ...;.......;.......;.... ___ ! otter.
1 _________ 1Full power, factory air, pow. 2l60 Harbor Blvd .~(;:01;:°':..· i""''-' ""'~'7.--,,7 '70 Jawlln. Stl.11 under major ~122
SAYINGS ~ H~~:e~f Cot1a Mesa 540-9100 ·~u~~ .. 'i&'i ~.!' .!~ ~c. ~~.w/xtnu. --P,-JO'-'NTI'=;:A~C~-
.... .•
maze 1apcttry Interior. I.ell FOR Sl'le or trade, '69 Cad good. $550. 848-~. JEEP
Jhan 3?:000 1 OWtta. mlleo. Seclu ~ . Ille, Like nu. I CONTINENTAL (162192). Wiii tolGt '651'61 bJ&
$ALE PRICED . 1o bal&nce. l--,-72-MA_R_K_IV--'68 Jnp
NABERS CADILLAC ORAOO Wllh eloc. IUIU'OOI. Vbtfl 10p, C """'I tlriw, automatic
2l60 -Bl"!!'.t.. Q>nvfttlble. alhor lnterit>r leatJ:ter lnttt., doal -l:""'...:U,,~~!:; 4\. • .., I -!a Colt& Meta 540-uiw Ml llOWft' ~ &Ii' ti.ti leat!t..!Wi power, lad. atr, Inn and low m1leqt.
lllfM UUll '78 CADILLAC """'1 Ai\.f'M "'e"° 'wtlh AM·•M "'"°· --e dlZ' Call , --Hat'dtop Cpe, Faetocy alt, tape·.,,_,.. _.. -lock1 Ind mon. (-). =.') 11.s ·
.,.,.,. fUll ......... AM·FM pl .. rocks. t..tilahl ........ 1. $7999
'61 Pontiac GTO, 4 11pd.
Poll~ ...... 400 cu.
II\. motet. ToP tond. Besl
oHer over $900. ~16-0289.
"11 Sel.r! w-6 -Bttut C!Ond."'"'ll,900 n1lle, ale
Radio, $3295. n4: ..om.
RAMILER
'66 RAMBLER Amerleon .~9303 -extra~ n.1s "' 11 cntl!e,. eottUOI, extremoly NABERS CADILLAc; MERCURY .JWtuP c.M. _,. ~ clean. (475-low nw~.!'t· (40«ll!J8}. ll60 HartiOr Blvd,, .. "° . *~sss SAU PRICl!D eo.tnre• -)(JO
----------fl(IO. ~ ·n M.......,, Cot. "" ...,. 1 VAUANT -Full pwr, Auto -. , __ .;.;_..;.....;... .... _
'nit """. .... am/fin ' •
New Pickup.s
(
and Vans!
~I ~ .. : •.. and lfe ve-gut 'em!
Bra nd New '73 Chevrolet Pickup
'2295
With big 110.8 Cl engine, four speed trans., auxiliary springs,
brake booster, side miri;or. oil fi lter, spare tire, etc.
Brand New '7 3 Chevrolet I-ton Van
~lirrors, llD shocks, HD springs, 350 Cl engine, power steerin.£
8.00 ·16.5/C (6 ply), front disc brake•. brake booster, tinteil ·
gl ass, spare Ure, automatic trans., eu:. ONLY
$3599
CHEVROLE'i
........... I 111• ~ r r-_. ia~
-• . NABlll$ CADILLAC C:ORV .. IR • ... C:I NA811'S CADILLAC 2160,.....,... -.. ,. • •"Harbor Blvd, a.ta;~ M).9100
BUlQ(" 2 door, ruu IOQd. ec.t& Mea H>-9t6o * 'a c.ctlrl;. .4 dr Man.
....,,_. u,ooo m~s. r.et. .. V.WANT • Dr. Auto,._ __ ~!'"
•95 Mona. xiht c 0 n d. rMlntaimea. 5*-239. 'n'anl., $885. • 'IS Vllllhe. 1 ~
tlrtl. la( $6$. takel. A rood w~i AiJ ls a IOOd j,._ fliTI pwr. $7SO. or belt otter.
1859, ve«ment. 644-1638.
··-·-· M h " -.. • __ .__. --.... ·~ -... w..,,.. Aulo 'l'tlNI, Radio, ..... ..-..r. ~. •Oun,. • .a....,. ... ~....... UWft'I .. 1•----
l350t1'ht """' .. tn<k. . .. Dally Pilot a.--·-· -MT-11811 5Gf .. ttf2. Ad. ~ Want ad t'HW4 •. , 64J.6671 "'-~"-'~~~--·
• • •
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. .
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' ''· :.:: . ·-... '=· "• ". ': ...
. ' .-
DAILY PILOT
Ser, •Rl21 ·Cl6-t04l31
FINAL DAYS OF '72 CLOSE-OUT
BRAND NEW '72
CHRYSLER
NEW
YORKER
4 DR. lfDT.
@iscouNT]
$
S•r. # CH4l -T2C-l04\50
OFF MANF. STICKER PRICE
.BRAND NEW '72
PLYMOUTH Surburban
~ATION WAGON
{p 1$COUJ'fil J. Strial ;: PH46-M2D-21I 620
• I
pow•r 1t••ri119, pow•r
br•k•1, buek•t 1••h, ¥inyl roof.
IS53CXV)
$1895
'64 OLDSMOBILE
V.1, •Uf<11'1'11tie, r1dio, h11fer.
IOZW017 1
$395
New York•r 4 Dr. H.T., VI ,
•uto., reclio, h••t.r, pow•r
1tHrln9-br•k•1 • •••h ·windo ws
tilt wht•l, ¥inyl top, 1ir co11d.,
c:ruh cntrl., etc. (OIOASJ)
$2095
'71 Y. W. CAMPER
l'op top, tent, r1dio end heifer,
112tCl11
$2395
500 4 Or. Sed. VI, t uto., re~lo,
lr••f•r, power 1teerin9, power
breke1, WSW, eir conditionin9
IULP712 !
$595
'72 CHRYSLER
MfW YORKU
Bro119h1m 4 Dr. H.T. VI , 1uto.,
AM·FM r1dio, li•ef•r, power
1t••rit19·br1k•1 · wi tido•1 • 1•1t,
1ir eotiditioning, ¥in~ roof.
! SOOELTl
$4995
CATALINA
2 Or. H.T. VI, euto111•tic, r1dio,
heirt•r, pow1r 1teeril'l9, power
breket, WSW, air conditioning,
.. i11yl top. IXNH324J
$1095
'66 CHEV. CAPRICE
VI, 1utom1tic:, r•dio, h••f•r, •ir
coriditionin9, ¥inyl top. (66476-
JI075tl )
$595
PILOT-ADVERTISER 16
' I . t
INT&RNATIONA£
,,
, f
I
BRAND NEW 72 INTERNATIONAL
1010 Yi TON PICK-UP TRUCK
V8, automatic transmission, heavy duty spring s, power
di1c brakes • s
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ••
SEE US NOW!
WE TAKE ORDINARY
CARS IN TRADE!
LEASE
DIRECT
FOR LESS
TEST DRM
PINTO FOR '73
TODAY!
COURIER
MORE FOR YOUR DOI.I.AR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON ALL
5209900
BRAN Dl'J4EW ·AS . OF
'SE". •J?~I ,.-~
OUR A· 1 WARRANTY
IS GOOD AS GOLD FROM
COAST TO COAST !
for f~e 11,-t ,24 .fOntht, your f.Gffl D•1l1r l•ltll'I·
t.11 &. 15 "l cfltt01111t on r1p1Jrs CO'f'tted uml1t th1
111w'A·I vf1rr1l'lty.
' Yau 91t A·l prot.ctio11 wh111 you're ovt of t1Wfl
tool 111 '""' St1t. ot the Ur1i0ft y~111'\I flllll parllcl·
p1th1t,..hrd 0.1fffl who wflf promptly 1n4 court..
o.\ly lleflor th.· 24 mo11th pt0Ylslo11 of yow A·I w.,,.,.ty. ' .
Com• ... ''" ••l-.ctioit .f A-I W•rr•11t"4 '""
c•fl eyl We'M A0 I W1ttHty lte......_1t1r+et1 hi ' 't \ t --,. .tlrtl• .,.. , , ~..,4e1llK'llrllp whtr1 yo1 111 .. 'P'" ·~· .i '"
0
1ur dootttep. , · '
•
73 MODELS
T·BIRD ·SAL.E ·
4 AVAILABLE-'61, '61 & '71 MODELS . '
6, !9 '6, '§I~~f2 696 , e et a. fltJAGI). ..... -. ~~~~~~--·~~~·~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4 cyl. OHC eng., 1800 CC Disp., 4 speed aU
sync. trans, dual hyd. brakes, individual front
coil spring suspension, 1400 lb. pay load .
. 4 TO CHOOSE FROM
'69 & '70 GALAXIE & LTO's
IXAMPLlo "6' LTD $1596 ...... .,. ...... ...... l ........ -. ,._..,
........,, .ir cMdlfhHt.
.... tee4 •ltn. fZSS-
4Jf)
'68 CHEV. CAMARO H.T. '70 V.W. WESTPHALIA . '69 SHELIY ~9BRA GT 500
Foclory O<IV;p~ ' ~ 'l)lj~ ' '1050 °C::amf°' w;th p,•p' lo~, Good s249'5: • ,,_.,,,,. jftth•~C . ..$1950 w k d s 1 'lvYtl91) ' m~'I ""' ifjJ t.ad .. lil. J4!il• • •• \tffrin9 ow pol~I ., . " •n p•c1•~ •I •Ito, ,· B ) • ~, ( '... •.\" AS&J t: ' y.
" ""-I , • f ' • • . f>" ~
71 LTD 2 DR. HARDTOP •.4 ,h .'' scou1.· 4 '.vJ.·D. -; ' ·~.,.,~)11~.0~Y~.O;...'A.~C~· 9 ... R_O_N....;A;,......~
V8, •utom•tic, r•dlo, 'h••+•r, $ MAKE Sed•n. Redio, he•+•r, eutom•· ~
power steering, Ylnyl roof, air 2596 VB, roll bar, W•9on. Hard to tic, •ir conditioning. Good milei. 050 C0Mf;;•n;
1
n9, 9~~d mH•.•· 1120-. f;nd. l210AOXI OFFER IYBU8l01 ,
( \ .. . ' ~
'66MERCURY10 PASSENGER
Commuter. Wegon. 'Y!! power,
air cond., roof daC:k, ~ milts. ISJF536j · \ ·1 • .. .,
-
-
5750
70 ~AVERl~l<,2 D.QqJl . , '139 Fectory equip , Yi ftof, .
good mUos. l2~EIEl 11 6
'69 AUSTIN AMERICAN 1
Gr•en w it h bl1ck . interior. e
2 Or. 4 speed, good miles. ,,,
l672ADYI < • ,
'69 FORD FAIRLANE .
VS, radio, heater, auto., P.S.,
eir cond., good miles. 1223-
DIJ I tl296
'66 PONTIAC WAGON
Catalina 4 Or. VI, ri1dio, hut.
er, automatic, power st••ring,
roof rack. ITEY708}
'66 CHEV. CHEVELLE
5896
b cylinder, •utomatic, r•dio, ?96 heeter, new paint, ISVY47bJ.
Good mil••·
~ ---·--· __ .,. -IUCAlfUUWI -
PAm 1UY1Ct MOlllS ,_ ,,. .....
1 •.• ,., ........
.,
I
I
'
ff DAILY PILOT
OROER TODAY
1 600((4cyl.eng .w /4~pd.trons.HG• ,
high bock all 'liny1 front buckel seals.
Beou1,rully col9r k1ved-imer io1. New sof~y · • .'
stood<lrd bumpers w/lront Bu"°"'er guords.
New one pi~e corro!iive resistant plastic
qrille·Colil. emission control sys1em ..
CLEARANCE PRICED
;72PINTO '
' "
2000 cc engine, Aulo 1rum.,..f!PP,er wimows, radio, heater, vinyl
' 83 DNW ·r -···~ ~ 'c \ ' interior. 8 -· ,,¢,~~·A ~~1 ~.~ • ,
' . l , .?f' ' ~ 1 I 'I'
'"
COMP~nE 'CAMPER. PACKAGE
:~!"D '7~ fOlOl2SJ3/~'tOli PICKUP·
3b0 ·VB ENGl~E QRT: RA.TIO RUK·AiXLE. BOOxl b.5 PLY H'.0.
TIRES , HEATER; ·DURO>TER; 'WES;r 'CcfAST .MIRRORS.
F25YRP82839 ' · '
. . ·w1~·J.. , .· . . . :~!"DB' DELUXf CROSS COUNTRY
CAB OVIR'CAMPER'(SS55)
-'
' ' .•.. : ,I ' '
. . ' ) . , ' .. '
CLEARANCE .PRltlb .
IMMiPtAT·I Dlll:IUllT ' t -•• ••
'·I
!
I
•
35 VCID V8, Eng. w/cruisomotic .tran1.
,, Pov4r 1tfffing.. front power disc brnltes..
Nf# ~'f. OOwbing bump1r1. Beautiful
tolor keyed doth and yinyJ intriors. Mony flf>tt ettroctWe features. Colif.·mis~ '~~ "l"I"" syst OIDIR TODAY • ,, •. ' .
.::~ND '72 ·MINI HOME '
· ford E200 Van With : ·
MINI Home ,Conversion
&•AND, NEW
'7·7·E·CONO VAN 4 speed '1rans.r4!·1 ~ft~r end 39l0. G'!W 6fJ _Amp battery 3.S Arrip
•It ,1 ~00 CC'!tlg: Vinyl~) 66li x.1,f.·6·pr. ,;,.,_ Reorleoflpr'11!s
Ind.Jr. susp. _,SGIAMG·11871 • • r , I • • . ,. . .
' COMPlETE PACKAGE
· FUlt PRl.CE
E-100, 250 C.ID. Engine l>Sp<ed ·1r""H 105" wheel
base. . . · j
$
IMMEDIATE :
DELIVERY ;;..,
(E24.GHP51·937')
IMMEDl.ATE.DELIV.Ell.Y. ·· $438 ...
'• ,
888 ' ' i
. , , '· I , : , -'
ORDER TOUIJS1TO, Dll T '65' ., ;' ·~. 'fo'UST4_NG $s'·a·· :8. ,,t'lli6· 9· · • . PL:YM EURY Iii s~11· u: ' ' ' tl• it~... • I" ... I "' : • "'..:. ... I-• • ,,; • ;[,,;1,or ~ , ' I
, , 1'-ll~db10,t•Oll!. rodio. htaf$-, lti,clm,5e<J!bltttnM ., 1 .. ":'V-t,.ouldl~.tr~ ... ~o•rcOl'ldi1ioniiig.powtr • • r
""No.9atJtil!· , , • • , _. · ... 1tltfin;.ro?i.t..oter.ticen~No.YRH3SO , l
" ' '66 ,, .. $~Ui~E'WJtG,ON ' ' '$6' sa· • I fAlllANE -' .
. v.a, ~Ill, ·,..ortS. o.r tond11ionin9, powtr 1tttrin;.
hM!er1l«.1tnte No. TfV.6'23 .1 ' . . . .. .. . . ' . . ~ . ' . . .
DODGE -· ··c.1 I ' PKIU~f,· I ' ,V" ~' 69 v~t,3tpnd,.lft t .... •tp~;Gt.liceni•no.... ' .
l44S l0 ·
70 ... ,. ,>I . . ' ... 'MAVU CK
Hir:ttltMU!f.littnM.~l(X ;
' '
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CoMPLm.P.ACKA:ciE
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sev
San Clemente
· Ca i5irano · Eo1r10N N.Y. Stoeks
VQL. 65, NO. 299, 8 SECTIONS, 110 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEONESDA Y., OCTOBER 25, lf72 TEN CENTS
. ,I -
Reactor Opponents Cite 3 .'Serious Accidents '
. ' .
By JOUN VALTEl\ZA
Of .. DIUf "" ......
Local opponents ·to the inslallittion of
two new nUclear reactors at San Onofre
have resumed tbeir attack before a oom-
~ of the Atomic Energy Com·
missklo charging that the pre~t reactor
has suUered1Uu:te serious incidents since
it started· operation.
In a· formal ' written petition~ for in-
terveojion ,liied ~Uy with ,the AEC
Licensing and Safety Board. lawyen for
the Coastal Protective Alliance and the
Sad,€1emenfe.bued GUARD group bat·
tied lbe apP11cation for the reaetors from
several posltlOlls. .
Sbortl,y after the reecior oppooenta ftl.
•
ed arguments., lawyen for the two
utilities seeking licenses on the reactors
filed arguments rebuting each allegation.
Howe"vtr ' the lawy~ for Southern
Calilomia Edison Company and 5an
Diego Gas and Electric O>mpany did not
specifically counter the dlarges . of
negligent operation at San ,Obolre Unit
Oce.1 '
In$tead, the utillt~ SRO~ claim
that operatloo of the exlit.lng unit is not
releWUlt to requesta to .operate two-new
ones.
In a sense, they assert that claims of
accidents and as9erted rePrimallds by
the AEC were irrelevant and immaterial
to the en.Ung application .
~ C... cWm. that three Orea erupted
at the plant in February and Mareh of
1968 and that the reactor suffered at
lt:ast s1:1 mechanical or electrical failures
during its f1r1t six'mooUis of operation.
"Other instances of o p e r a t i o n a I
mismangement are reflected in the
public records of operatkm.t, but ''such
records have been withdrawn from. ~tbi
Sml.Clomente Public Lillr"1' '()f~ all
data oil the nuclear Jll'O!iOWs''haS Jieen
O!'derid .oted for pubU. "!<~" S4ld the
lawyer Bruce Sharpe of Slnta Barbara.
Sharpe· further al)egl!d that the AEC
has-Officially dlastized 'tbe ·Utilities ,for
tbe' operational problems. · :
other <:rlUcism lodged ~gaiost the-ap-
IXOD om
Lawman's
Trial Set
In Niguel
Jiil')' selection began today in Laguna
NliluOI Municipal Court in the mfsde.
meaoor muslaugbter · trial of· -Sao
,,_,,... ~ patrobnlll Gary •ojams:
"•:111-'lioe;.....:. -._,.
Jni'ln "8 -ol J9dile H. Wamn
¥i!IM .. '"'" -_. ts·_ .. to -·C' ........ .no-...-..,_ a._"" bdc
co1P-.. -Iii (Mdna Boal -~-DllJw 111,.
Adam. liu ~· lrllOct!ilt ol the
tharg~ ~
Prior to jury otlectloa this 'JllOtniug,
J~ Kni!ht met in cllambera with both de!.,... at1Dmey Gerald Williams and
pj»secutor ,J)oa Qareece. Adams was
Charged iollowlag the dath. of Jeffrey
Britl. 11, of 1-Beadl, who bad been
riding in the rear ol a pidrup truck.
The.youth w., fatally tnjUred when hi>
body was slammed into the pavement
alter Adams' paj l car Collided with the
pickup truck.
Assertedty, the vehicle laden with
qim.p!oi gear Pl!lled Into the path of the s\ti!Uy iooviog police unit from a side
1!rtel
Adams reported that he had been
following another velllcle being drivm in
an erratic manner but that neither his
red Ugbta or siren were in operation at
the lime of the oollislon.
Others riding in the truck were injured
in the accident but recovered.
The cue has been investigated by the
California Highway Patrol as is routine
where matters involved a municipal
'agency. ·
AdaDls bas been serving as a· deck of-
ficer since formal charges were tlled.
Sailboat, Trailer
Taken at Boat Yard
A brand , new, aailboat valued by ii>
owners at 11,750 and the trailer on which
the vessel rested were stolen Monday ·
night from a Daoa Point boat yard,
Orange County Sheriff's officers saki.
Deputies said the boat, owned by Stan
Miller Sallboata, 2508! Del Prndo had
been on display In the pubU. parking tot
adjacent to the boat yord. Officers. aald
the thieves waited until the firm's
employes were ali!ent trom the premlles
ond then drove the boat and trailer away.
1 B1KE, 1 AD:
3 CA LLS,' 1 SALE
l, 2, S. That's jult bow lt·1went when
the W,.untmlter man offered to sell his
motoreyOte to D.W.Y PILOT readera. This Ii the ad that ..,Jd It -1n On. night
-after Juat tbree pholle ..U..: ' llONOA . 7i0, 1971, 1<2.
Bargain buy. Only I mo.
old. l,IOO ml. Many xtraa,
ralrinl, rack, blct rest,
crtsh l>ar, etc. Owner rnust
aeJI, only ''no or oiler. .........
Thal'• the kind or action you i>iiJld "'1 too. Try It with an ad of J'lUr own. lliJ
·the dilect UDO to ClaaUied adverll.llOR
reautta at the DAILY PILOT, SC.Im.
\
'
CarbfJad Sla"ing
Drifter C·harged ·
In Sailor Murder
A drifter from Oklahoma City who was
picked up hitchhiking then assertedly
sbOt Ple' ·man who gave~ bbn a Jlft was .......... -'"""wltlt -today ill ;.:...-z. . •
~~r · The case, which opans at len! three
--. ~ ~lo llPl 'early Tueo-!11?~ lnllli """'!' .. -~ ~ ...... ar.~
lriM II tbi ~ pie and blurted.
out _deiaJlo ~I~'
Absentee Vote
Deadline Near
Only me week remams for voters
to apply for ' absentee ballota,
Orange County Registrar or Voters
David Hltchcock warned today.
Nm Tuesday ls the deadline.
"Pmons who expect to he absent
from their precinct on Nov. 7 may
apply for an absent voter ballot
eltller by mail or in person at the
'Registrar of Voters. office," Hitch-
coclt advlaed.
"U requesting an absent ballot by
mail the voter must include his
name, resldence address, legal
signatuTe and the reason why he
will be unable to vote at the polls
on Nov. 1,11 Hitchcock added.
He said the registra.rts office
located at 1119 E. Chestnut SI.,
Santa Af'la, will be open on Satl.Jr-.
day Iron\ 9 a.m. to 4· p.m. and on
Monday and Tuesday evenings until
9 p.m. for the convenience of those
wishing to apply for absentee
hallota.
Sirhan Ap peals
To Supreme Court
For Case Review
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sirhan Bishara
Slrhlln appealed today to the U.S.
Supreme CoW1 to review his conviction
of murdering Robert F. Kennedy.
Lawyers for the Arab Immigrant said a team of psycb.latrllts, p h 1 1 l c i a n s ,
')lllylld5I! a n d otbera have uncovered
"significant physical evidence" that
Sirhan did not fire the bullet oo June 5,
1968, at the Hotel Ambaaaador In Los
Angeles that killed the New York
senator.
But U>e nature or this evidence was not
Immediately disclosed.
Sirhan waa convicted in April 11169 of
murder and five counll of auauJt to
commit murder in the Kennedy abootlng.
Hit death te0tence was reduced last year w Ille In pr!Jon after the California
Supreme Court declared capitol pwiisl>-
ment to be un<onslltutlonal.
LesS than· two hdura• iatar locaf police
tec1'i>Y !hisus#t'~ uiioo ibf. ll<>\IY. ot l4ftqi;I ~ 22. .,,.,_ F:alls, Sofllh
S.D., .••!l*I ...,.,ll)o IJ.d'> ol ~ ~ DilJo .,, •• ., in;~ f 't
~~ a ~ aaDer •It,..... aboll__'d· the'
ml ... ijilil'IJ':S:S'.~ln"Slit ·ll!egO,
~· ~ In the be8<( """
'SOia • = uaertedly led Jocal
om..; lo ""' "°"'~ San ~ of· fic:iall J10lifted Cartabad authorities, who
Oien 'i'SsUined jurisdict(9n in the case.
Wliile c.,rlsllad officers would not
diS& ;p.cmc motive. in the ~.
tocaf J!'lll~ .. qooted Manning as saying ~ "wdli!d not leave me al~". dur-ing ·a ride from Long Beach to San Diego.
ft was not tmmechately detemilned
wheie thi actuil shooting took ptace,. ·
Queen's' car, a lat&model sedan, was
found ebandoned' on the Basilone Road
ncrlbbound offramp sliorUy ofter Man-
nirig• approached Marine sentries.
In the car officers found bloodstain! on
the passena:er side as . well as one spent
~her cartridge.
Carllbad police allege Queen waa shot
four times with a weapon or the same
caliber.
Preliminary jndications' showed that
Queen apparenUy WIJ propped up on the
front seat of his own car for some time
after his death, then h I s body was
dumped on the freeway shoulder.
After that. police allege Manning drove
northwmii again. The death car ran out
of fuel at Basilone, then Manning set out
on rool
;
Sirhan'• appeal . waa prepared by two "
Los Angeles lawyers, Rot!er S. -
Vlce Ptaaident Spiro Agnew
blew lhe whl.stle on demon·
stratoro agaill-this time at a
rally In UUca, N.Y. When lieck·
lera refuoett to stop Agnew
lllew It loudly and said, "ThaV1
five personal fouls, you're out"
and Cenr&9 R. Milman.
They 111ggesied Caiifomla appellate
judges stralne.t the lalJS of search end
aelzute 16 ophold the convlctloo !Jeea.,.
of Kennedy'• national Importance.
•
pllcatlou for llCtom to bUIJd the billion-
dollar complex include :
-'lbat me new seismic dala gathered
after the San Fernando earthquake
proves that uUUty esperts' assumptions
about eart1'quake safety are .. cynical.
naive. . .dangerous." Utility lawyers
~ that the data cited by the foes is
irrelevant and· rneaauter,enl.9 taken at
San Fmiando are dot oppllcable because ,
the area· II 111 distant from san Onofre.
-That a nuclear accident would cause
widespread panic b e c a u s e of
geographical problems in the area. They
flllther asse~, that no adequate evacua-
tion plan baa been devised. Utility aides
argue that evacuation ls· not a matter to
be brought belore the tioenslng board and
that the argument should be stricken.
-That the emeriency core cooling
system at tbe existing re'actor is ln-
e!ficient and flawed and the utilities
"have made no effort to modify the
system." They charge the system which
is designed to ward orf the IDO\t deadly
or nuclear accidents "Is a proven
failure." Ulilllles insist that the op-
pooents failed to specify tbe asserted
problems in the cooling system, thus the
i.sffile should be quashed.
The next phase in the complei: se-
quence of events leading up ·to fonnal
hearings sponsored by the AEC will be a
ruling by the quasijudicial Reactor Safe-
ty and Licensing Board on the validity of
the arguments as well as their inclusion
in ronnal debates at the bearings
themselves.
AEC spokesman Dale Cook said Tues-
day that a decision on each specific con-
tenHon wiU be made by lhe officials at
month's end.
The board also will rule as to whether
the local foes w.ill be granted the right to
ofricially intervene in the bearings.
The next official meetin& in the licens-
ing process will take pl ace Nov. 21 in
Washi ngton. D.C .. where the board will
continue a prehearing conference laying
the groundwork for the formal bearings
which will be set for late this year or
early nei:t year.
er oun
Bead~' Toflt.Jaer '
Julie Nixon Eisenhower and ·Gov. Ronald 'Reagan chat' at the dedica·
tion of a-new federal 1 information center in Sacramento. The colorful
ceremony included an appe_aiance by a 40.plece high school band.
' . '
Nixon's Campaign to E11d
'
In Clement~ ~e.ports Say
President Nitoo's campaign for reelec-
tloo -an effort which began in. San
Clemente this fall-might end along the
South €oalt as weU, ii various reportl or
r.n impending visit bold true.
Leaders or the reelection ellorl in the
Los Angeles area say the President plans
to spend the last few days of the cam-
paign In ~uthem Callfomia, then vote in
hi>· home prOclnct in Sao Clemente.
Diverse sources also hint that a .. vic--
tory · cele6ration" will be tcheduled f.or
the Chief Executive somewhere ht the
Los Ancelet area aa welt.
The l'Mident aomewhat unofficially
launched bi> campaign from "8 Cua
Pactfica with an unprecedmted publlc
rally at the Western'Whlte Houae, follow-
ed by hi.I f1ral t>Oliticatly·tlnged Presldm-
Ual pre9* conference. ,.
Soon afte.,...arda, mad!lnery bepn mv·
Ing to woo Democrota into the Nixon
camp througb Former Treas u r, y
Se<relary, John , Connally.
lf Iha Prealdent -vilila San Clemente early In 'November It wtll mark
the lealfld time that he bu been in
residence et Las Cua PlcUlca during a
national election'.
Two yee" 9'0 Nlxoh arr!Ved home
alter stumpinl thl'Ollgb the state for
.~~Ii?• .candidates for Cona-!Ooal
seats.
The trlp was marred by a brick·throw·
Ing lncldenl during the campall" In SM
Jost, followed oilly hoora later by •
. ,
._
poteoUalty deadly fire in the Nixon
reaidence.
The fire rolJ!ted the drowsy pmldent
onJ his clomeatic staff from the ,...ldence
and caused thousands of dolian in
damage.
Two daya later the President voted at
hi> polllng place at Cooairdia Elemen-
tory Scboot, then took I qllf<k trip to the
fire ·statloo to personally thank the
\'.l!luntee.r firemen who quelled the blaze.
Development Fee
P roposals Get
Council Delays •
Two controvenial proposals involvlng
development fees for all proJecta In San ·
Juon Capistrano were postponed agoin
'l'uelday 1fter 1 'J)Ojleaman for I008I ol
the developen in the city aaaaUed the ......
Councilmen 8gtted to hold off for at
least t\\.'O weeks more before actlna on
revisions to Ill< devt)o!lment 1 e e
ordinance enacted Jut IUIJl!IM!r. _
One propoN! 1! :lll!CI lnvolv,. a min«
cut In the f'° acbedulod for private howoea. comm..c1a1 butldtnp and other
(Seo PllOJEOn, Poee II
.
Three Notes
Discovered
In Israel
JERUSALEM (AP) -Israeli explosive
experts today defused three letter bombs
addressed lo President Nixon, Secret.ary
of state William P, Rogers and Defense
Secretary . Melvin R. Laird, pol\ct
..parttd.
Earll<r In the day, two l<t~ bomlll
qilodo\! In Beiru~ .Lebanon. -l>lew up in Algiers on Tue!day night and
11111 IJIOtber waa found in the mall in e.rr..
Eight peraom were wounded.
The letter bombs addreS!ed to N'mn,
Borers and Laird w e r e found in the
sorling room of a post office in the
northern Israeli frontier town of Kiryat
Sbmona, near the Lebanese oorder.
Policf: said the postal bombs were the
same type as the flood of explosive
envelopes mailed la.st month from
Amsterdam to Israeli officials and em·
hassles In various parts of the world.
A 11-year-old postaJ employe was rush-
ed to a hospital alter an expk>sjon at the
Beirut post office u the morning's mall
was being sorted.
About the same time. another bomb
went off In a 22-story offiee building half
a block from the American University,
and a woman secretary "'as hospitalized.
Five other persons suffered slight in-
juries in the ei:plosions, officials said.
Authorities said they did not know
where the Jetter-bombs had been malled
from.
The Pa.lefltine Liber1tton Organization
In Algiers said one of its staff was hurt
Tuesday night by a booby-tripped letter
postmarked from Belgrade.
Spokesman said the vlcUm's injuries
were slight.
The Palestine News Aa;eocy said a
bomb addressed to a PalesUne guerrilla
leader was intercepted Tuesday at the
Cairo airport. It said the bomb was in a
hollowed-out book wilich alao had been
malled from Belgr;ade.
Letter 119rolll in July blinded and
maimed two guerrilla feadera In Beirut,
and the post office 'installed an electronic
device to acan mall. There was no ln-
dicatlon why it did not intercept the
bombs ted17.
Ceaat
Weuller
Morning low cloUilJ and fog wiU
clear to IWlDY skies oo 'ftnnday.
with highs at the beacbu around
75 rising to 114-inland. Lowa tonlgllt
55.
INSW E TODAY
TttmtUtt WUUomi' tfftdlr
drama "Sumour and Smoke"
teadl off the """' amool1 in
com.mu11it11 theater lhil week a&
tile Laguna MOUlton Plat1hoM1e.
Ste E<nttrtainm111t, Paoe• 28·29.
....... ---. ti ............. ...
0r ... c..... tf .. ,.. .
lrl'tll ,..,...., • ..... .,.., . .......... ---T-10 n..ttn .... -. ............ ~ ... --..
...
Recycling
Unit Seeks
'
Capo Home
Tb& quest for a permanent home for
San Clto:mente's recycling center moved
to neighboring San Juan Capistrana
Tuesday evening, out city councilmen
there gave no firm comn1itment to a re-
quest to use a patch of city property.
Lionel Burt, who seeks the permanent
spot for the center, told councilmen that
the opera1ion could be compatible Vf'.ilh
1t . ..: public works depart1nent area behind
city hall.
The request, supported somewhat by
the city staff and Mayor Jim Thorpe,
was taken under submission by the coun·
cil.
Councilmen were rectptive to Burt's
ideas, but s.aid they would llt'ed a better
picllllt of the proposed renter before
n1aling a decision.
Burt promised to furnish elaborate
details in a matter of a fey, days.
The center currently is operating
'''ithout a permanent sile a~ trur~s and
volunteers pick up 1nAtenals directly
fron1 donation boxes and ship the paper
directly to the processing mllls.
Burt gave some details Tuesday about
ihc prospects for legal nonprofit status
f1\r the rff'yc!ing operation as weU as the
strong invol\'cn1cn1-1n the cent.er br a
nt:iJOI' environmental Nn.sultation firm
fnlm LaJol!a.
Sen . Strom 'fhurmond (D·S.C.) holds new son, J.
Stron1 Thurmond Jr., as he takes \vi.fe Nancy home
from hospital In Gnoenwood, S.C. Mn. Thurmond
holds daughter, Nancy Moore, age 18 month&
Tite companv ls ready lo enter into an
aµreement to foster the project so that ii
could be used as a model for similar
operations nationwide.
~onetheJess. un til about 3.000 square
feet of land can be found to rent or lease.
the cenler will have to operate v.'ith a
loss of income.
Counc ilmen promised a firm decision
on 1he land request rollo"•lng city staff
study.
Seal Beacl1 Boat
Unl1urt in Storm
Off Fiji Island
Sketchy reports from Suva, Fiji, today
indicated the nfoot yacht Baruna, own-
ed by John Mcintyre of Seal Beach,
received only minor damage from Hur-
ricane Bebe 11'hich raked tile South
Pacific island· wlth winds clock.tel at 100
\not&.
Mclncyno bad just oomp\eltd deUveey
o! Ibo .Yoc:l>I ., a gilt ~.~. caljfornla Manu... Academy Oil ,..,.,.y. ~
bad been ln tbt SoQth Paclf'11C since
departing Lo! Angeles in the 1S71
Honolulu race.
capt. Dick Wakeland of Loog lleJlcb,
who handled the survey or the yacht for
·Mclntyre and the maritime academy, got
a report by short wave radio that the
Baruna had survived the storm with only
minor damage.
The report said at least five other
yachts, all unidentified, had been
destroyed.
Assailant Sets
Teaclier Afire
PATl'ERSON (AP) -A 6rst grade
teacher has Lold pol~e she was set alire
in the school duplicating room by an
unseen a.suilant who hit her, poured
duplicating Oukl ov'-~ ~ and ignited her
hair and cJothllw w,ui matches.
Ann Tanlgucbl, 24. a ~ year ltacber
at Nru1hmead Sdl>ol, wa s in fair .con-
ditkm at Efoarn.ttl· Hospital in Turlock
with first. aDd secohd degree burns cover· Ing. lnore than hall her body, hospital or-
flciafs said. •
Pollce said she ripped off her clothing
and tore out patches of her blazing hair
as she ran Jcreambtg for help. A teacher
in a nearby room took Mi" Taruguchi to the hospital.
~oltce said they knew of no motivt for
the attack.
ObM•I COAST "
DAILY PILOT
,,_Or .... CMitt 0.-.ILV ,ILOT, wflll IOf!~
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r.if .uMM aN JWll ...... M""°f 1'trOll$ll
"'l'rlalY, '~ CHI• MtWI, ........ , B1Kti,
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h~ SlrMI, C..11 M-. C.l!flmlt, m».
lib.rt N, W1ff
P'r"IClt!ll ........... Wlff
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Tll•M•• A. Mwr,hli.• ~ .... "" l:lliltr
'Clitrl•t H. l•o1 ltlch•rJ r. Nill
AulltMll MINJiflf l~lllW1
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"'"''" --ir .,....,,,""""'.. ......... ,.,,, ...... ...._. WlffllWI .,....... ,.,.
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Hanrahan Free
Official Acquitted in Slayings
CHICAGO (AP ) -Stair's Alty. Edward V. Hanrahan was acquitted today
of charges stemming fron1 the 1969 slaying of two Black Pantbtr party mem-
bers.
Judge Philip J. Rom ili of Circuit Court, who heard the 14-weet trial with-
out a jury. freed Hanrahan and 13 co-defendants upon tbe defense motioo for a
directed verdict of acquittal. They were charged with conspiracy to obstruct
justice in the aftermath of a police raid in which the Panthers were sJain.
Fred Hampton, 20. deputy chairman of the Illinois Panther party, and Mart
Clark. a Panther leader from Peoria, were killed in the raid ccoducted by a
raciaJly mlxed detail of 14 policemen assigned to Hanraban's off.ice.
Hanrahan is a protege of Mayor Richard J. Daley but was dumped by the
Democratic party in his bid for renomination in the March 21 primary.
But on his own he defeated a substitute regular organ.DaUon candidate
and an independent Democrat.
He faces Republican Bernard C. Crey in the Nov. 1 general eiecUon and if
he wins would be considered a powerhouse in the Cook County party itructure.
Leary Seeking Swiss
Refuge-With No Luck
From ·wtre Services
BASEL, Switztiland -Convicted drug'
advocate and U.S. prison escapee Dr.
Timothy Leary is shopping around for a
Swiss hideaway but having very little
luck here, just as he did in Bern .
Canton officials today turned down the
onetime Laguna Beach psychedelic
guru's rt(jUest for a res idence permit
with what might be caUed a classic
understatement.
"Leary is a controversial figure," said
a police review of the lormer Harvard
psychology professor's activities during
the past decade.
The report further noted Leary and his
wife Rosemary, also with him in exile,
have no true links to the canton of Basel
and granting of hls request would stir
further controversy.
"It would be difficult for residents to
see why authorities shou1d admit a drug
advocate at a time when drugs have
become a prob fem in their town," the
report eonti nued.
Orange County !Jrand Jury members
recenUy indicted Dr. Leary and scores of
other alleged drug smugglers operating a
global network or narcotics dealership.
The so<alled Brotherhood of Eternal
Love, an outgrowth of the League for
Spiritual Discovery (LSD\ rounded by
Leary in Laguna Beach in 1968 allegedly
deals in millions or dollars worth of dope.
He also faces charges of escape rtom
the Los Padres r..1en's Colony at San Luis
Obispo after hi s 1968 Laguna Beach drug
arrest led to a marijuana conviction and
a one to 10-year sentence.
Orange Collllty Superior Court Judge
Byron K. MacMillan branded Leary a
menace to society. while less· kind com-
ments have included accusations that he
is the single most destructive rorce
unleashed on this generation of young people.
Hitchhiking Pair
R1111 Fron1 B1tllets
That Never Came
MOJAVE <UPI) -"Start running or
yoo11 be shot like dogs ."
The two young hitchhikers didn't
hesitate -they rnn as fast as they could
inlo tile desolate Mojave Desert. fieclng
from shots that ™!ver came.
Charles Ferber , :M. and Mark Pierce
17, both or llownond. told police t!Mi
lbrfat came. from two men who picked
tbe.m up while they were hltchin1 1 ride
on Hlghway J4, oorth ol Mojave.
They said the men drove them a short
way In their pickup truck . 1hrn halted
and pulled out a gun. The hitchhlken
said they wtre ord~ed lo put their handl
behind their head& and run or be •hot.
No blllletl were fired, but Loa Angelea
Strisr autborftlos dfd, bonnr, decline
to extradite Ua:ty lo the lf.8., altel' h1a
1971 arm! on ., JnlematlOOll fugitive
warrant, but also turned down his own
plea for political asylum.
From .... e J
PROJECTS •..
projects.
The other is a related ordinance pro-
pased by Councilman James Weathen
who has suggested the fees be eased for
devel opers who inc«porate "mlaion"
archltecture into their projects. 'lbe
councilman proposed the change In an ef-
fort to effect a control on estbetics ln the
community. ·
Two new el•m""'!L-red the Issue Tuesday -_a peUQDD signed by 13
residenta oppooeci. to ~ f6el bOcaule of
the asserted Joss or tu . base by
developen who choose not to build tn
town plus the protests by Wlllllm Aldrich
of Newport Beach.
Aldrich, who told COWlcilmen be spoke
for most of the developen of the city, in-
sisted that the fees were inflationary and
would cause prices to me to the' pOblt
that buyen of low and middle-Income
1tatm1 could not afford housing.
He added that the tax applies to cer~
tain developers who already have receiv·
ed financing and federal approval of unit
prices.
"For these developers, the cost of the
fees would have to be borne out of
pocket," he said.
Aldrich hinted that the fee was an at·
tempt to ltom population growth In the
city.
"When you try to do that, you open a
box of snakes/' be said.
eounc11m .. agreed to bold off on both
decisions untU they can acan a complete
survey of building fees dlar&ed by each
of the county's rt cities.
The pl'Op(MI r<vlalonl 14 t b e
ordinance would eet an avttage fee of
1125 per dwellblg unit for oonventlonal
residential construction. · The amount ts a smaD cut from tbe eJC·
istlng ordinance enacted late last Auau.st .
Jukebox · Playin'
Okayed at Night
U>S ANGELES (UPI) -A clly In
making It Illegal 14 pla1 col!H>pent..I
jukebox,. -I and S a.m. bal been
ruled unoonatl!utfonal by Superlcit Coult
Judge Roborl A. Wenke.
The Judge llald Tuesday there wu llO
bas!• for tuch a law .when the 11me
onfinance permltl 1111 operltloo during °""' hours or Jukebolel not coin ao-
t.lvated. .
.... ::.~ ............... ., .c.t• MIU.
' ' ~ .,. .,,.. """ ;:i:r"-•a·~-~, Mlfilwyo
Cl>unly aulborltiet Lter amated Jooeph
' Sargent, 13, o(. Ontarlo, •nd ThOmas
orBtien, 24, at. Pomona, ·tn I.be Lancaster
aru a.nd held them for Ktrn County
•u(hoffilea.
The law wu challei!ied by .. the .... ._1 of a HolJ)'wood ~.
the "Onion Too," wbldl •illo bruugbj ·..,lt
against '1>a Jaw boonlbl tlapcms be-
2 and C, a.m.
'
2 Dead, Several
Wounded in Bank
Holdup Battle
ARLINGTON. Va. (UP[) -At least
two persons - a police officer and a
branch bank manager -were reported
killed and several others wounded today
when a holdup In a high rise business
complex just outside Washington erupted
into a gun battle.
The throe robbers escaped with an
undetermined amount of money.
The men, masquerading as telephone
company repairmen, entered a branch of
the Arlington Trost Bank at the Crystal
City business complex shortly before IO
a.m. They told the branch muager the
telephone service was out and they
wanted to check it.
Police said the men had opened a
n\anhole outside the building and cut
telephone wires ln an apparent attempt
to prevent lhe bank from using its alarm.
But the manager was suspk:ioul and
tripped the alarm, which bad noJ be<n
af!ecltd by the telephone dlsruptlon.
Two police olllcen mponded and
when one entered the bank, shooting
started. The officer WBJ reporled killed,
along with the bank manager. _____ •J _~
An unidentified woman wu reporm1
seriously wounded and at least one other
person, a woman bank teller, slt.gbUy
wounded .
Robert Srrtlth, manager of a nearby
travel agency, said :
"AH the phones went dead about 9:45
and we had no service whatsoever. At
that point~ we had no reason to believe it
was anything other than a normal
telephone disruptlon.
"But when I went upstairs, I found one
of the bank's clerks in my office bleeding
from the head. She wasn\ leriously
wounded but the bank manager, whom I
bad known for a long time, was killed."
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
J, C. HUMPHRIES
QUART CRYSTAL WATCHES
Many w a t c h manufacturera
rtrea the extreme accuracy of ·the
new quartz c:rystal watch... Al·
though these claims ""' justified
u the watch Jeaves the factory,
maintenance of this accuracy Is un·
predictable.
Continued quartz watch accuracy
depe11ds upon the quartz crystal's
ablllty to keep vibrating at a con·
Blan! frequency when subjected to
nonnal use after you buy. IL
The natural frequency of any
quarts crystal Is subject to changes
due to aging, sbocl< and !llght tem-
peratuca variations, all beyond the
con!rol of the manufacturer be-
cause reacUons vary from orie ~
ta! to another regard! ... of quality
or aource. Further, rates ot quartz
watohes ""' not caadily ld,jwta~
by the dealer .
>.. an lndepe11deot jewelat, we
""' partlcul>rly tree to atate all th•
Cacts about anything we sell. Wo
want you to know that extreme aer-
curacy clalm1 by many l!Wlufao-
turen may not be fnllfiUed Jn actu·
al Ule unW quartz Cryttal watohea
have proven their depecidabWty,
your best buys .re atW the hlahty
accurate chronometers, tuning fort
and conventional watches.
lreiKeDr .....
Police See. • 1ng
• • (
Ambush Suspect
Ill' AR'lllUR R. VINSEL
.. -lkMrr ..... Sttft
for a telephone to notlty police about the
suspected accident victim.
No telephones are located virtually for
miles around wlthln \he undeveloped
oprawl of corn ~ aspar8f1W1 fields and
t\ would seem likely tJ!e1 would have
stopped first to investipfe themselves.
. • ! .
,...ml GI dttecUm Ml<klni around
lhe c!Oolt <OOtthUt today to !raclt lflm
INcll Ill tlMI '111bual\ o11oo1Jni or an lrvlne
Poll<wilan !ind Into a lrtp at a lonoly ~oOdl, thtntJna be was headed to
bolj> an lljUn!d man.
omct. st.pllon T. Nnah, ll, escaped
the buallwhktlnf try 1t· 11: 16 p.m. Moo-
doy with Cllll1 • """" ..... Oii hll
c:hetl.
Offlee:r Nub left without obtaining '
their nam.. and found the man lylng
face down ln the roadway, his bands hid-
den bene&tb him.
So tot -""""" tho lllltlal detalla of •IM!t ,.._. and delcrll'!loN "' tho
Porllel Jii..ivtil -luni\J,aton are
knolOn 14 ~lll'O other •ltmontl: --A .. 1 . liidfstmcurshablo rootprlntl In a muctd1 old. •
-'ll>e foct a.ruthleu !""" wonted bad· lr to be • <OHlller. ' '"-ies of .,,-Old weot .. b'11 blahlVIY
.-.,. attell\l>t l'elnlnioconl of p1oneor
cow~"-11 oo lrvlno Ronch land ha"" vlttu beCI ruled out.
Nor iioJJct t;eUeve \he plot at the
...........U GI Jeffloey and Bamooa
roads could ha.. boon englnwed
specifically to get Of!lcer Nash, perhaps
by ..._,,. with a grudge against him.
1be blterUntlng facts support neltber
theory.
_.:'It was an anib<Qb. Pore and ajmple,'.'
.S.CW.. OOsta Mesa Police Delecilve
Copt; Ed mascow. '
Ollel among the questlolls to he
ans""""' now Is whether the woqlMe
assa•sin -described as a motorcycle
gang-type due to his appearance -acted
alone.
Investigators are also seeking the two
c1eancut young men in a battered 1955
Chevrolet who stopped to tell Officer
Nash it appeared a man lying on the
pavement back down the road was ill or
Injured.
One possibility due to their military
haircuts, Southern accents, and an old
car with out-of-etate plates, is that the
men clad lo civilian clothes are mllltary personnel. •
A t.eletype alert and radio broadcast
are out for the green-and-white sedan,
minus its front bumper, plus any oc-
cupants a.s potenUal material witnesses
in the case.
They said when they puDed up as Of.
ficer Nash wrote a log report under his
dasbboanf lamp that they were headed
Hijacked Ship
Not , Sigbwd
' ESBJERG, Denmark (i\P) ,-
Danish maritime ezperll llld ~
day the m.ton trawler Nordkap,
hijacked by the ship's CO<ll, bas
either gone down or is slowly
lumbering ak>ng the North Sea tn
the general :lirection or Denmark.
There were no verified sightings
of the vessel which slipped out of
Aberdeen, Scotland, Sunday night
with Joergen Christlansen, the 23-
year-old coot, at the helm.
He left tbe skipper and the rest of
the Cr<W behind after declaring be
was "going home."
He suddenly leaped up, crouching com-
bat-otyle with both bands training a loog-
nosed revolver at the patrolman 's head,
leactln& b1rn to lunge sideways and gun.
the engine 1n a futUe attempt to nm the
man dOwn.
A alua -possibly from a .31 caliber
weapon -smashed through t b eM
windshield glus. gl'azlng Nash-. left .
cheek as he swerved the squad car'"
around to obtain a defensive position
behind the driver's door. .
Re waa unable lo get hls shotgun out of
Ill bracket quickly enough while crouched
over the front seat before the fleeini
gunman wu out of range in the adjaceril
dark, fog-8hrouded field lined with stalks
of com.
I Board-Orders
Capo Beach
Area Report
A report has been ordered by the
Orange County Board of Supervisors ()[t
the future of 350 feet of Capistrano Beach
oceanfront property which the county
would like to have fa!' a public beach.
Spuring I.he action is a developer'.!'
plans to build homes on the beachfronr
land. ln order to develop the property the
builder must cooperate with the coimty
Flood Control District inasmuch as the
Primar Deschecha Canada drainage
outlet bisects the property.
Flood Cootrol asked the supervisors
Tuesday to determine if the COWlty has
any interest in acquiring the parcel for a
JXJblic beach. U not the district Is reacfY.
to go ahead with negotiations with ~
developer to construct the drainage
outlet to the ocean. .'
nie property 1n question extends from
the presently deyeioped eapistraJ¥1
Beach Club propmteo .; the Sari
Clemente city limits. •
S'evet81 ·Weeks t.go "'Supenisors were
told by representaUves of the State
Parks Department that the slate bas
dropped Interest In acqujting ,tbe beaclf.
Reason eiven was the acce35 to the
beacbiront proptrty compllcated by
ownership being vested ln several bun·
dred".p:roperty owners on the bluffs above
the beach.
On motion of SUpervlsor Ronald W.
Caspers ot Newport Beach, the question
of future acquisiUon by the county was
referred to tbe Harbors, Beaches and
Parks Department and to the Ocean ~
Sbl;>reline Planning Steering Committee.
Caspers' molioo asked for a report back
in two weeks. ' .
A reminder from
OMEGAO
STANDARD
TIME
RETURNS
OCTOBER
29th
Be s.ure to
set your
watch BACK
one hour
this Sunday
When you sef your watch back, toke o close look ot It. It ma(
be occurote btlt ls it modern, self· winding? Does if teU the
dote? Or the dav and TM dole? Perhops now i1 the Ume to
choose on up-to-fhe-s&eond Omega. Come ln1ond see lh1
Omega fomdy of fine fimepi.c8J, $65 to O¥er $15,000,
Sll'llfll1u ttM1 "'"""""ltlfl S-tl•, 01Vlll1, Ool.-f1lll119 dlol. Sl4l00
Nw en.ol tho o...eci folllllr o1 hMo1ftrJ
J. C. .J.Ju mph rieJ Je1up/e,.,,
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA "4ESA
CONYlNUiNT TERMS
J7 YU.IS IN THE SA.Ml LOCATION l4:1tkA111••I""' -Mttl1r Ch•'!•
PHONE 518°1401
'
•
I
• ' t
I
I I
I
NewBotA
Wfdl'lffilay, Octot>tr 2S, im DAILY PILOT 25
Club Fund _~ue_u_c _NOT1_CE __ 1 _~_Pu_B_uc_,l'IOTl..,..,..,""c;&'="'_
MUNICl,,t,L.. rou•T 0, CALI~'""' •iflttP'IO• co&Ht1' °" TM• COUNTY Of' OlAttOI ITATI Of' CALlflOINIA Nit
111' IHI ..,......., 11¥11,, """'"tilm, cain• THI CCMHrTY -OCA#91 NOllTtl OllAlitOI CO\llfl'Y MO • ..,..,.,.
JUDICIAi.. OllTflCT £Jlet• !If l\iltJl,.YN I . WASHaUllM,
CASI NUMl&ll 111" D«ffMd, IU#.MOtt.l J+OTICI'. 11 MEa111't Ol'Vtfril .. W
"1.elntlHI. C.U:L o. IMITH .,. er ..... of ""' ....,. lllflllillf ---
lfloney's Worth
Nutrition Labels Use Suit
D . . d llLANCHt! SMITH, ... Dtfllld.tflttr eo """ Ml ,..,_. lte\tfnt ~ ep1,.1 ,,,.
0 F d E d TOVCHSl()HI, _. lftlilYloultl Mii ALL .. let ~I -,..,,,,.. .. f. ,,...,,
t 'I "mzsse UH.CHOWN PEllSOHS f"LAIMIMG ANY Wll1" llW ~ ........ ~ f,i .... olftccf n 00 Xpec e ~ . ., .. ,. '""· .. ,., ... ., ,. '"' " """" .... -... --· -PEll:SOHAL PllOPElt'TV OEKPllEO IN lo Pn-t flWon, """"" tlle -ry THE COMPLAINT ADVERSE TO PLAIN. WOUCl'ltrl, lo lht lil!ld4'ttltll*I •I ,.,_ offl~ LOS ANGELES (AP) _ A TIFFS' OWHERSHIP. 01 lt1<1Word I, Ill-.-*~ MjglMI Orlwf,
By SYLVIA PORTER lra.rislated .lnto tcnns of per
poun~, pint , number or any
measure ao that you e;an com·
pare the true unit price of
eath product.
A joint study by the U.S.
Departrr.ent ot Agriculture
and the Food & Drug
Administration, for instance,
testing consumer reaction to
private-label items carrying
nutritional iniormation and
conducted two months after
the introduction of the nutri·
tlonal labels, di sc}osed these
disheartening findings ;
lg the detenclMli.• A chill '~'"' Svli. *· NfWllOff ...,., CMtlol'nl• Superior Court judge has "'' bffn n1.o br th. Of•Lnt1Hi ~r"'' t1UO, w111e" It 1M ~ of M r-. of di •--" nd I . YW II you ¥1111 to d•ltfld tt>lt t•wwlt, ,.,. uncNo'1'11ned h1 •II '""n.rs ptrt•l11ln11 Sml3M."1 (I &e00 C aSS aC-you mu•• Ille In tnll (0Urf 1 wrllfen 10 TM Hiiie of WIO ...... ,, wfitlln ~
llon law suit by Automobile ~.tc11119 In ~ 10 thl <ompl11n1 lor monti. •fl.,. 1"9 nr11 putili«otton CM fM•
Cl b r 5o th "·Jlf · I w•lll"" w 111'11 pl..Olf'$, II 1 J"'lke l'IOlke , U 0 U ern \JU orn111 cwr•l w!tl!I!! 10 ·~•II• 11111 iun1moni 011w OCIObtr lO. 1ff2 members over use of club 11 --* t111 you. OtMrwlM. rour "'•••II MAltG.AlilET c. WAS~BVJtM
r nd · will lie .,.,.,.lid on epftlketlon by IM f'•lc.uirlo of thl WUI of u s 10 the succe.sstul cam· p111n11111 ,,_. 111r c.ovrt may .,.1., • ll>OO· .,,. •twv. ......... ~I
paign to defeat a 1970 slate merit ~"" vou 1w the """"' or otner :::;::.•,~,'iJ~0•• . . retllf ritQllftll([ lro ll'lor {ompl1ln1. ballot proposition. II ,._ .... ,, .... IM ~ •I Ill II· lU Mill Ml11111 Or .. llllle ..
Judge Jack A. Crickard also '~ •• W• ""'"•· •"' "-!1 do w ::"~1~:'11. nut
led , '""""ti\' M tMt Y_. ~. II 1111, Atl.,.llft tor R"Q<:•tw ovemJ a suit llfl> weeks m1y 11e "..,..,, 111M. Pllt)lllf>ed °''"" ,_,, 0,1, ,1, , "--he • °''" 54pffl'lol* 1 "" -'I' 0' earu.t:1-over t club s role ttODM •· •iii. ci~r11 oeioe.r " -HoYetl'>bll" 1, 1. ,,,
against Prop. 18 which would a. A.11to1ne111 r . Beet, o.ou1y 1111 21'6-11
ha . (SE.AL) ve allowed gaso!Jne laxes to GOODMAN, Ht•scHeEttG a ICING. PUBUC NO'MCE
be used for antismog research •• W'UWrt ._..•1•111•
nd 'd J · Svlle ,.._ Xf. SUP'ERIOR COUlrT 01" TH• a rap1 ra.ns1 t. Loi ........... C1Nfl9nll1 .. ,. ST.Al~ 0,. rALll'QaMlA ~ The second suit was tiled in T ... plloMI (2UI .,.,,,, THE COUNTY OP OltANG• . All.,llrfl fw l"lelfltllft. NO, &·1'4n the name of Louise M. Puoll.tied Or1nge C<Hil Cally Piiot. NOTICE OF HEillNG OP l'R"TITION
Nemeth and contended club ~~r 11. 11, 1s 1nc1 No~emr>er 1. ~~;,.~:~•:Ers~::".~1~~YANO Foa
officers and directors wasted l----:;:;-;:::-=-:-c===-~V~l>.:.:.:121 E1111t of MYlt'TLE I(. l(ELLOOG.
and mi'l·approprialed the PUBLIC NOTICE ~~;~E 1s• ME1tEev G1vEN 1n1t
Club' he th Werren S. P•Jlttlt "'' r.1.a Mrtln ,.
Artist's rendering sho~s how th~ new Bank of America-office, now under
construction in !lie Irvine industrial Park area of Newport Beach, wilr look
when completed In April, 1973. The is75,000 off!ct! was designed by architects
Langdon and Wilson of l.<>6 Angeles.
Q. W ha t commonplace
supermarket product ls this :
water, con1 syrup, shortening,
sugar. whey soJlds, food starch
mod.Hied, dextrose, sodium
caselnate1 navorlng, g'elatin,
whole m ilk so lid s,
monosodium and di·glycerldcs,
salt, vinegar, polysorbate No.
60, vanilla, monosodium
phosphate, sugar g u m ,
lecithin. artificial color, wheal
Oour crust, sorghum grain
nour. ! 0 d i u m bicarbonate.
a m m o n i u m b.icarbonate,
artificial navoring and col-
oring?
A. Lemon cream pie.
How useless i;nany of today's
food labels > J
are to you
and me, typ-
ical consum-
ers, couldn't
be more dra-
matically ii·
lustrated
than by the
-ONLY ABOUT four out of
10 consumers who bought the
products were even aware
that the labels were on the
packages;
-Less Jban two out of 10 -
15.6 percent of all respondents
-understood the nutritional
labels;
S money W n ey COil--STAT'l'MBNT OF AIANOOfllMR"NT ~ pellllon for Probltt ol' WHI encl lw 11-lribUfed to the anti-Prop. 18 USR" 01' lllC'TIT IOUS •UJINIEIS NAME IM.llllCt ol' Linen T"t1 ...... l.trv lo ....... TPle loffowkll I*"'" "'I abAndoned tM 1111-r, rderenu lo wllldo 11 ,,_ tor Campaign, UM of tilt ltctl!klui bullMIS n1me ltJrttwor J>arl1Cllllrt, •nd Ill.II 1lot lime RO-SHEL ENlElt PIUSES, 7 l 9 S 1~ Pll{t ot htarln11 IM wme 11&1 t-A1!n
• Stop A.ked Fr1nklll\, 11-P'1rli., C1l1Jornl1. ""' tor Hove'l11Mr U lt11 al 9•00 1 m The flcllllou• tlvsl"'"' n•..,. relft'red lo In 11\e courlfoom 01' o....:r1merii No. j
BOISE, Idaho (AP I 1bov• w1J tHW In Ot•l'I09 C01Jnly on ot wld '°'""· it 7IXI Civic ,..,,.,. Orlvos -AUllWI 24. 1971. Wt\I, In Ille Clly of S111!1 Anl, C1lll0<.,l1. Idaho's attorney general has SMl4on •· M1r1nau. 17131'.1 .Apricot 01rec1 oc1_. 24. 1m . . (Ire.le FOllfll1I,, Vall•y, Calllorn!t, WI LLIAM E. ST JOHN, asked for a re.straining order 1toiw..11 oc:ev M•rsn111. 111:10 A11<"ko1 COllfltv c1er~
:,Being No. I C~unts
-Less than one out of 10 -
9.2 percent -actually con-
sidered tbe nutritional labels
in deciding to buy.
"Even the most dedicated
and m.itriUon-conscious con-
sumer may be hampered by
the very complex.ity of daily
and long-term nutritional re-
quirement.s," say Pror. Dan I.
Padberg and Debbie Taylor, of
to prohibit a Califocnia com-Circle. Fount1111 V1Uey. C.Uto..1111. DAJl:LINO, NALL. RAI! .. OUTE Thll bu•lnftl Wll Condl,IC!ed t>'I' I AMllnlrf' 11 LIW pany, Bestline Products, Inc., parr,,ersnlp. 1u w. fth '''"'
r U edJ . I . h Sheldon L. M1rsl11ll LOI &ftltle&. cell! 90114 or a eg y v10 atmg t e 11-1t1u Tet: uu1 1.21 .. 1..i state's Consumer Protectioo PllllllMied Or•• c.,.11 O•llv Piiot. AllM"MY1 1or Pe111to1oer
A O~ober '· 11, II. 25, lffl 2661·71 P'R-6Cl7
Cl. P11bll11led Orlnoti COit! 0.11'( Piiot, In a complaint filed in 4th PUBLIC NOTICE O<:totMr 2S, 26 1nc1 N-mtier 1,
,f;Jliggest-Also-Best Sy1iclrome Still Holds
\;;
above. Nor
could y OU PORTER
read more gra ph ic ex·
am pies than this or. the extent
to which chemicals, additives,
food substitutes and the like
have taken over a wide sampl-
ing of our food products.
District Court, Atty. Gen. W. 111CT1t1ou1 iu11NESS ltn 1111-11
Anthony Park alleged the NAM• STA.lEMENT PUBLIC NOTICE
. . . TM toUow1no;J perMJn Is dol119 bu1l,,..,1 --~=~~~~~---company lS engaging In acts IS: FICllTH>US flUS0••11 SAFFRON ElCETERA, UOO S. (0111 NAM• STATf:MR"NT
• . By JOHN CUNNIFF .j· ... ,. • ..,.. .... ~
;. NEW YORK -It seems
that the advantages of being
No. 1 in the industrial world
clearly outw eig h the
drawbacks. Otherwise, why
the battles and claims and
charges? And when the spot i!
lost, why the desperate fight
to regain it?
FINANCE
resigned flS president, and it
wa5 made common knowledge
that Chase's lagging position
had much to do wit h it.
the Departm en t o r
Agricultural Economics at
Cornell University, in an at-
tempt to explain the ex-
ceedingly poor responses. ~n the opinion ot the Justice ALL OF THIS underlines to
OWarlment, and many other me how much more 1 wou1d AND THEY .suggest that
dilics as well, big is often like to know than 1 do know you approve or nutritional
bid . International Business about the food that comes into labeling because you believe
a
achines, which in some my home. it's in your interest -e.ven
y ars bad as much as 70 Ptiost important, is the food though you don't use it. You
rcent of the eleclronic com--safe'! After what date should ( reel that the mere fact of
ter industry, learned thi s. not buy it nor eat it? mandatory disclosure of
pcvernment lawyers an--what's In a pack.age may in-
nounced this week their in· Is it nutritious? And just nuence industry "tn improve
tention of breaking IBM into a what amounts of v i t a 1 the nutritional content of food n~mber of separate com-minerals and vitamins are product!." You just can't con-
panies. the intent being to pro-contained in each package'? sider everythlng -and you're
Hwy .. L19une lle«h llll loll-Ing Pll"IO'll Ari dof"'l!
( )
fl'flllllp A. Sdlllf, 157,J WHlll<nJ SI .. tluslnt1s Ill
CONSUMER lialln JERRY OJl:l!l!R A!10CIAlE5 -Thl1 bUSllllU b bll!llil <Ol'ldl,l(ltd t>y 1n JGA.. llDG E. CMJt Hit~, P, O. lkur lncllvlchl.11. 61l, ClltOnl det MAr, C1!1tornle PH2S.
PnlUp A, Sdillf Jft"rt G,_ 21111 tr:llODI Pl~e. NtwPO<t Thhll 1111e1111nl fli.d wllh Ille COU!ll'f' Bffcft, Celllornl1 '1660. . . CMr1o. of Ori'""" COo.ir!ly Oft( OCI. '· im. EUOMe It. 1(111 Jr .. 2'\J ...... .,.n-.r, which its representauves know fly .,._1, J. ~ °"""11Y County Arc..:111. c.utornw. 91006.
are false and misleading •-Clotrk. t111s buJlllft• Is 1>111111 C'Dlldl.octtd b'I 1 w 111MU C.-11 Pl•lntnflfp. consumer!. P'utJH•llld Or1nve Colst O•llY Pl1o1, Jerrt Gr..,.
The f. rr r I °''"°"' 11, 11, 1S •ncl Nove<ntllt' I, 19n lN• 1!1leme<1! fli.d wlll! , ... Coun'Y U1l1 o ers or sa e 2ni-n c1en. of Ora"" Courlly 111'1 oc1o1>1r ''· household commercial and in--19n. WILLI.AM E. ST JOHN, COU NTV ' PUBLIC NOTICE CLEltlC, Bv Bwwly J. Maddox. Oepit!v dustrial cleaning and waxing , .. ,...., ..........iucts the complaint said F1crl'T"1ous 1u11NBSI P\lbllsn.d Or•~ Ca.st O•rrv Piiot, t''""' ' . NAM E STATEMENT OctoMr 11, lS and NoVlmt>lt' 1, 1,
Ronald C. Sweeney and Tiii rooow1119 perton 11 doing busln"' 1972 •2·72
James Kling, both Boise ••: PUBLIC NO'MCE -present·at1'ves of the flITII' ' JEWELRY CRAFTS PAltTS &-ARTS; ~,. 21166 8h ... Sl•r, ANhel'", C.lllornl1 1----::==-===-oc~--were listed as defendants. THE JEWEL THIEF, INC .. (C.lllor-NOTtC• INVITING llDS nl•l 2U6 lllU. Sl1r ,,.,,.,_,"' c.tlfornle Notice It_...., tf.,., llWI the llol'rd of Tl'll1 bullllff• 11 Ml!llil ~ b'f' • lrvs'-of llw ,,.,, CommunJ!y CQj~ torpor1tloro. Ol...-.d of Onri,. COunty, Cellfllml1, wlll JEWEL THIEF Pll:OPEllllES recelw -1111 btkh llP ~ lt:OO e.m., eHelp Cited
Whether the po.sition is
desired because of the as-
aumptloo that the blgg .. t Is
oi .. li>e best and thus should
deserve the C'U!tomer's order
or whether It ls mainly a mat-
ter of pride Is debfltable. But '---------~ rriote price and product com-How many and w h l c h already' b o m b a r d e d by
pttition. IBM will fight back, chemicals, additives. artificial messages when you are shop. of course, and with an in· colorings and the like does the ping.
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The INC. · Wldnlldlov. Novemw 1, 1rn. et 11wo ' f Phlllp Whllltler Prffldtnl P'IH'CNll!llil Defl!, of Mid Kl'lool dltlrkt CJty Bureau 0 Consumer Af· ll'll1 11•1-nl flied . wllll ,,. c • loeattd ,, 13111 A.demi A.....w. Cos11 fairs has saved L<>s An.oeles c1.,.t of or1,. County on· Oct , ~9nJ /Ml.I, c1111otn11, 11 w111c11 tlme '''° ll!d• bilJ appears to. be beautiful.
U.S. Sl'EEL ce rta inly
•treasures the label that so
r often identifies it as "the na-
Uon's No. 1 steel producer,"
and you may be SUC! heada
would roll if the tag were lost
lo Bell>lehem, the No. 2 pro-
ducer.
'lntbevehlcle-rental
lwtness, Hertz Is still in tbe
leld and ....... hard lo !toy
there. But Avis, fussing in se-
coocl place with about 110,000
vehlcles to Hertz' 155,000, bas
been saying lately that It will
lie No. 1. When, It doesn't say.
In food retailing, the Great
Atlantic & Pacific Tea COm-
Investment
Lecture
Set Tonight
Second in a series of fJ>ur
lectures on real estate in·
vestment presented jointly by
tbe H1mtlngton Bead>Foun-
tain Valley Board of Realtors,
GoJden We~ College and the
DAD, Y PILOT will b e
presented tonight.
Fred Becker or Burbank
will speak on the topic, "Max-
imum Return on a Minimum
Investment."
Active in real est.ate sales
siq?e 1947, Becker received h1s
real estate certificate from
UCLA. He ls ao active
member of several different
colnmittees of the National
'1nstitute of Real E s ta l e
llf'oken and is currenUy a
dJrector o! the Cali!ornl• Real
Eltate Association.
\
Tbe Real Estate Investment
Series coosl!ta of four seas.Ions
held on consecutive Wed-
neadays at tho college Center
on Golden West College cam·
pus in HunUngton Beach.
6Mslom last from 7t00 to
9:30 p.m. Ttckets required for ibe l8SSions are available et
the door a few minutes be£ore
e8ch ,.,.Ion begins.
.SERIES SPl!AKER
Fred Bocker
ts!igul~ argument. food contain? In short, you look at these ·~ lly &eY111V _J Mlddol< ~., · ' wm bl p,tbllcly -* Incl rud tor· residents $360 000 in cash and Clen . ' -v County Pll1Nl1NG OF EVENING COLLEGE . , ' . · !JtOCHURE FOil SPRING, 19n services SlllCe April, the PUOlilhtd Or COi t "*" AU biol ••• 10 11e In Ktot~• w11n ""reau's manaoer says. -, .. , 1 '"" • •0•11~ Pllol, """ 1rwtrvc11oM •nd Conc1111-•nd
pany, the top food c:hain since ,jt_'he big computer maker. labels "not as another facto r
records were kept, now is ..... 1 ~· h . JUST WHAT is in the (ood to c:Onsider in the purohase
carryina on what smaller wul e con .......... mg t e obvious, -i.e., how much of each in-~ that 1·t '• No t 1·s ··-ted to decision. but instead as a tonn LN & .... 1 • 11, 1S, Ind OYl111ber 1, ~lkM'I-wtilc;il ert ,_ on 11141 ,.,.. Fem Jellison said the sav· ,m 2111-n ~v r. ~ 1n tt. offlao o1 '""'
ings were in the fair market PUBUC NOTICE ue_::.i~~ :::m-r::'~ d~!'~o 1 value of merchandise returned ctlhler's cKeck, c.ertitled th9ck. ... bid·
retailers claim is the most ~ · • '""'r--gredient and, especially, how savage price war they've ever ai'gue that it isn't so solidly much or the key advertised in-of accountability of the food '1trenched there as to industry," these experts con-seen. diono&'olit.e the i n d u s t r y . gredients does the produtc ac-eluded. ' • der"t DOnd .....,. PllY•ble to !tie order of serYl.ces performed, contracts l'ICTJTious 1u11 .. •1s 111e coe11 eom........itv ColleOI' 0111rlci
FOR SEVERAL years, A&P \fe're No. 1, they are tually confain? lf these findings are accur-
bas been k>.Sing its sfiare of the Jftpared to say, but not so No. Nutritional labeling is the ate, it wW be your l08S.
-rescinded or money refunded r111 t,:::: sr~aN~... eo..n1 of Trvtttt• 1n &11 ...._. not In•
" builAftl 11; dol!llil 1hln ""' percent 1$,.) of !tie llVm bid 11
market, and its profits have l·ish as we were. next step after unit pricing. Tn the face of them, "Most busnessmen adopted 11:0-SHEL ENTEJlPll:ISES , 1, J 0 • gu.arlnlM ..... the bldoltr wltl ... ,... Jnlo
a wait-and-see attitude when ~11:,1 1 Circle, F-1• V • 11 , y. '!:.~~°:':::: ~ ... ~ 1~~ :: been skimpy. still, it didn't go It is coming, even though however, nutritional labels are
00 8 price-cut.ting rampage • IT CLAIMS THAT its own there is disturbing evidence on the way and a stimulating the bureau opened last April," tn.r.,:::· L. M•l'dl.lll, '171» AprJQll t(ller klto suc11 tor1trk!, 11w Pi'«Md• of
h Id "S' tbe th Circ:llo Founteln vau..,. ~ltornl t27Dll llW d'iett will '*' '°'1'tllld, w II\ the ,, ..
until Safeway Stores began census of the industry shows that you may use nutritional variety of changes will be S e S3 • mce n, ey Rob.rte 111., M•,..N,ll l1l:t0 ~ ! · of a bonlll, 11'111 .lull 111m thereof wlll be
ha I arned that We are COin Cl t fidlt I y-.-... ..:.:.. pr mt ~!fed ~ wlcl •Clloof dlttrkl.
telling people it had taken its share or various market labels even less effectively reaching you soon. When you ve e • •Ce, 1 n ;...,..., ..... ,1orn11 92799. No bidder nwy wlthdr-hi• '4d for
pletely impartial in our in -~~~~~1~~ 11 b11nt conc1uc1ec1 tJv • "'1od or fortv·fl .... (4SJ d•n 1tter 1..! over the top spot segments dropped to between than you are now using the become aware of them, I
38 and 57 percent in 1970 from great money.saving tool of choose to believe your in-t, Li' nd ' h d S""d ' • I 01,_ Ml for tlw ~Ing 11'11ffo!. ves 1ga ons e we ve a a ''"' °" ... M•l'5n1t TM fl01nl of Tru••"' ,._, ""
number ot businessmen com-c1!~~· 0:111J~Z',:': ~::=:1y w::i. 1g:1~~ pr1w11er;re ot r•lecllnu •nv '"° 111 t>ld• or 1bat claim is still open to 70 parcent in 1952. unit pricing p rices difference won 't last.
dispute, but there is no ques-·1--''------------=-="'---~-'-'---===..:.:.::::.:_:=:.::_ __
lion that Safeway sales were
,, nn wt• LI"" E • r 11) w1/ve 1nv Jrrq11l1rlHn or 1,,.. mend us on our operation. · .. ....,., · sr JOHN. coun1y ,,....,.,,,1111• fn anv bid 0< In 111• Olddlno. Clerk, bV Bevvly J. Maddox, Oep.;ly. Signed; HORMAN E. WAlSOH
II...... Sedy. 11.,._rd of Tru1-Publl.ntd Orenge Co.sf Olfl'f' Piiot. 09tn: HOY. 1, IJ12 · ll :001.m.
OctoDer '· 11, !I, u . 1m 26t'l-n Pvtlllll\ld Or•M• COlll 01/ly Piiot. Ocioblr II, 25, IJ72 UU-11
growing while A&P's, until e Refunds 011t
recently, were slipping. A&P LOS ANGELES (AP) -
closed 1971 with volume of ,,,.,u--. ............ 1~.,.,..,,.--...,k-P4'•,.....,.f_..,•,~c--.....M1•·..., Superior Court Judge PUBLIC NonCE
$S.48 billion; Safeway, with ,.., , .. _ .,.., ...... r•~· _...w .. -'"'' ._ ""' -• ..,. •I-,...,'" _,.~ ,,.-.. "" -,., Campbell M. Lucas h as 111CT1T1ous •tJslNl!ss PUBLIC NOTICE ,.,..,,_ .,.,,_ bocw. ... •/•co ... rA.:. .J • .,,.,_.., ••.U -_,..,,. • •lot ,., .. 11 • llu nlk~ $5.36 billion. " -., ••• 6., ""' ••.U ......... , .. 1. •I dlu• ........... ,. .,., ·-" ~ .......... -Id-., di.smJssed a $JO-million class T fol~&M· ITATSMBNT • .ol A3 the gap narrowed early •· -u H ...i-t"',.....,. ,.,.,....._ ., ,..u1c...., .-. "' _.., z-"•1 ...,. •-action suit seeking state sales 11·.. 119
per)lll'I
1' dolr>11 buai ..... suP•1111oa ccw1tT 011 c.t.Ll,DltNIA.
th! tax refunds for some 500,000 · roY WOrtto, m E. 11tn s1r1t11, ,.. ci...:~ : .. 0:!:,•:.,. AM s year, A&P furiou&ly ac-PROPOSED NEW ISSUE . eo.11 Mew. ,.,!fbrlll• nw t•s• "uM••tt DJtMr ce~ated ~ program of con-newTbecar butyen. filed I t cC:r.-"~."c':fi'~r..!i!5 E. lllh SlrNI, IUMMOlls fMA1ttt1 ao•1
vertlng rnore than 4,000 outlets SW was J1 asho t ri11 1M11Jrm1 I• c~ by '" 1n-0i,, ~e~:e"'r1TN ~ :~r1:0',;' L~:!; to discount status, fully an-spring by George avor w dJwlckiel. Rft-t: PATJl:ICI( MI c HAE L
ticipating the losses that fol· 4,000,000 Shares claimed the state was "un-TN• ,.";::.;;,':.i~lited w1t11 ,,,. c-.. ~~~11~1 . lowed. Since February, those jusUy enriched" by sales taxes l'f' c1w1o; °' o.-. eouni, on O<:!Ober '-l1te 11111tlontf' ~. 1111e1 1 petttllll't r-.
'·--~·-I more than •~mil· collected during t b e 1971 im . ns-oc <ernlng •our rnArrle;•. Yw 1N1 nir • ~ iu... ~ M'f"'" ,....,. .. wtlt!ln lftfr!y de'f" of 11w llon. T wage-price freeze on federal '°""''"*' 0r c--0 11 ....,. 0111 n111 11111 wmrnM• 11 _,,.. "" you. . In Sh In . la f nded .. ...... I 'I Piie!, II you 1•11 ~ .... • written .........
F 0 r man y ye a rs ' ransame~ca come ares, c. excise taxes ter re u . ~oc..r 11, 11. is. •ncl Hovemober I, wltftln IUC1'1 l+me, J'OlW lllie/1ull ""'• 1111 ..I. ..I. Judge Luoas said car buyers mo-12 ....i-.:1 111C1 1111 c-' ""' """" • h1011-Metropolitan Life Insurance . PUBLIC NO'l1CE ~' con111"1"' lnh1ncth• ... o111« or1111n 'et! · ed the ......,.., seeking refunds could appeal ((ln(ernlno c11YM1on of ,.._,.,., _,.... QUI y en]Oy .... ~ .. ge to the state Board of Equallza· llKllTIOUS IUSllt lESI WPPOrl, ct'lllO CV1lolly, child .... _,, ,,,
that crune with being the giant HAMI ITATIM•"T lvrney'I "'"· CO&flo 'end Midi Ollllt' r.i1tt of its industry, An aaont didn't Common Stock tlon. Tiw fllli-1,,. .,.,...., is 11o11111 t1vfl,,... '* mey 119 91'•nlld b'I the court. •• E · Sobel at•·rney for a•· 11 "' ...,"' 19 tte11,... ~ "• ••· need to brag about it; rwm ' w . l ME OltAPHIC TltElt. 2'01-\ S111111 ''"'"' I• ""' 11M1ti.r, ............ M
widespread know'-""e of the Javor, said be intends to ap-IHlM!I, c.11 MIN, c1u1orr11e, nw ~~ ':. '::.':',::!" ... ,...,... .. , ., """' peal the d-'•1'on LIN'Y , Pl'IUlp Nlllllff', 2IO\,', S.lll• D ... ' '' •m . Met 's lofty status served that Th r d cl __ , d d ~-....... · 1 ... bel. Costa""""· c.i1twnw. "'" • ~-' · e un ia • new, OM::U-etl , i~i6ed managemetit tn.emnent eompey whlch l/111 buJlneu 11 btl!llil c.otlduct.a by •n WtLLIM\ E. Sl JOHN, end. · d · · ·1 · >-b .. 1 b' --~> • T p l.t-lndl~lou11 c1er11; IJllen a lo 1n•est pnmUI y 1n m: t eecur1t1e1. tao J!lCti9e ia 10 PIV"Kll ••high• !C"t"el f1% 0 M;'f ~rry P. Mlhw e, e...,. J. ,..,.,.,
BUT THEN C.U.fE Pruden· ()( current income for diatribulioa a1 i1 con1i1tent with pruden~ lnYettment. wttb SACRAMENTO (AP) -At-lhl• •let""*" tiled w1111 tti. ,_.,. <S•ALJ°""fy
I I · ' I d b " ~ 1 h c1 ... k of Orange County on Oct. 16, 1t12 tial Life with aggressive sel· capte apprec.iat1on a1 on1•1eCOn ary o jecu•c. .ranumerica nveetmeal Mm-ty. Gen. Evelle Younger asw1LLIAME.sT.JOHN.COUHlYCLER1C:~~~ ..,..
ling and advertising. Late in •~menl Compan'f, & subsidiary or Transamerica Coqioration, is lhe Fund'• advieer. said frost-damaged fruit and By 9....,1, J. ~. °"""""· c:..11 ~K~~" · Dtll
the decade or the 1960s, The Fuud ia 1\50 offerine 10 exchange it11barea for lhe dobt teeuritiee deaipated nut tree! may be reassessed P\lbll"*I or.,.. CM•I 011ty •·= 1•P=J:: Orllf'Cle '°''' D•llv Piiot,
Prudential moved into first unde.r "List of Aece,Pl&bla Securities" in lhe Proepectua.. for tax purposes only when OC!Ober 11· 25 •ncl ~ 1• 1~"7; OC!Obtr 11, 2.s enc1 No.,,.,..111-r 1, •·
place by one i m p o rt a n t damage is to the trees PUBLIC NOTICE im 211
•11:
measure: 3.S3ef.s. It showed production capability and 111CT1T10u1 IU1tM11s
assets of _$31.2 billion to the Ofl' . Pri 825 Sh when they are more than four NAM• ITAT•MSNT Met's $29 billion last year. ermg ce per ant years old. ..~'-1o1i-11111 per'IOn .. dol,. M lnnt 1u1"1a1oa cou1tf °'TM• __,, .... ,1 ....... ~ .... 1.1.,...,.,. ___ ... The 'I ~ ... • GOLD JI'... STAT•DFCALll"OllNIA FOJt
The Met -"' clauns· the tnn oPin on was 1:J.3u~ on a IN, no1 w1r,,.,. Aw., TH• couNTY op OllANo• M.111 -r Oforlat Pd'" II n<10qof ., ._ ..... Lio th.t ,..........,, "'-t& by H J Goff J No. Fiii, HunllflOIOl'I htch. GAIU. t2'0 AO IMM 1pot in another m a j 0 r (litw..• ................. , query m ry . r.. J-~tlfte. 1701 Warr.< A,,.,, CITATIOll ............ cat..nM-V, life ;.,.,.,•ante i'n Tehama Qnmty district It• trtci. "t!O Huntl1111ton llffcfo. Celll. "6c1 I,, Ille Meller ol' tM Moptlon Pellllon -···, -t Clll1 ~tlM, 7101 W1riwr A,..~ CM ROtlERl VAH ZYll. O.JOHO, Mop!·
force. but there too the gap orney. No. "~ HIA'lllflOICll'I •~. c~r1. mo 11111 P""'"'· has narrowed. A§ zm closed, The law provides tor a .. ~::.,t11111':"" • .,,. CO!ldueled 11v • ~~~IF~~r;e oF THE srArE o""
the Met had 1177 bllllo . reassessment or "property Jaton ~ti-70; PHILLIP' RICHAJl:D HlJTTO
force to the Pru's $168 bullon~n ro11 ,,..., obuM • eopt oJ the Prelim(Mf1 Prospeenu, '" .,., ~MN d •m ag e d by a major c1~' ,J'A.,"::;: c,:::'i., ~~ i!7 ... ~ d~ ::"' ,::.,.,~ ':""' ~ -;:,::;::::
U. wliUA ii...,,. k14'l1 be •4ere4, Jrorn Yo»I HCNt"Uiu 6,.W., /rffl misfortune In an area declared 1m. WILLIAM I!. Sf JOtotN, cov NTY btfor'I !I'll JUdgt of "'Ii covr1 in ,... Tbere Is no question· at all . cLE1tl(, !Iv .. ,,...1v J , MtcktiP. o.oo.rtv. c°"""IY °' or"""', ,, ... or c.111ono11, !ft
ho . ber I to be In a state or disaster by l"1'IQ o.p.11merof 1. on Jenu•..., 11. 1m, .1 •~ts w IS num one n com-the governor .. the opinion PuOlllll\td Ormte c-1 o..11y PUot, A,M .. o1 tt111 !Uly, ......, •no tner• '• "-mercial banking. The· Bank • oc10blr '· 11. 11, u. 1•n 2'11-n '6Uaf, 11 1ny, ..,,., ••"' .ciop11on llhlv•d
America Corp. in San Fran-Mid. PUBUC NOTICE :' 1f:! =~".'° ac:coroi.,. to "" Pttltlon
clsco had assets of $3~ billion Loeb Rh d & C PUBLIC NOTICE P1CT1T1ou1 1u11N1111 0 1-UNler' my tllnd _. -1 of •toe
at "e Close Of the last full ' 0a C8 Q., MA.Ml ITAT•MfEHT ,_!or Co.Ir! OI! the CGu1tfY of Orell(ll, Ul l'ICflTIOUI IUSINlSS •• ~M tollow!"9 --I• dllll(I bvtl ..... Stilt of ~~lm:·e~1r.= ll, ''11.
calendar year, and the figure .,...,..,. STAllMl!NT . A.QUA IOY WAlEJI: TA UCIC lltEN c_,, Ct.rt and CJerll ot "'•
has grown substantially stnce Mitchum, Jones & Templeton ,:~ ~~1,,. Pft'ton• ir• dol"' lAL. •no .... 11 Newi.or1. ~ ::~ ~~~.~ then, CONSOftTIU M FOR IN• lllH>(ft. • IP\e (-lyofO••• lw_.... lE'll:NA.TIDHA.L l!!DUCATION, •soo l lf!ICllllV P1ifnlt' MtCTIOfl'I, "" flfl W•Hw T. 1(11111, ~ But there was untll a couple c.......-0rm. w tt s.o, HIWPll'' 1MC11. rer11. Nt'W'POl'J. Ntwoort a..a.. ••o••• o. 1to.aan
f cl UlllONll1 nMO ll'lh butlneM hi llfll'IO ~ try .,. Al......, at Uw
0 years aco a * race for Mall th1 OOUJIO• btJow for. copr of the P-"-t-·-Proe-u. KA ,,,,.,.,..1ion.t $et'Vl<ff, Inc. fA. lndlvklu1I. ,, .. ,. IS# u ...... lillli.lltf
-
nd ....i .. ce bet•·een F'-t ,.,..........., ,,_... ~ c.r,,.1. 010 ,.,......,. 0r1..... r. P. 111tcr...,.r1 ,., .....,_. c...tw 0t1w
t""' " ua W M NI. Nl'WPOl1 e..m. Qllfemla lhl• """"""' fllM w411'1 IM C.-"f """"" -..Cll. eeti!WMll rua
National City Bank and CJ:iase ------------------------n.wo c1111i of 0r1noe Cfll.lfl"' on: Oct.'· 1m. T...,..... '"'' .....u Manhattan. And, while both r111• bllelflftt 1• CfllldutllMI w • cw-'' ...... 1. J. M<tOOo., OttNIV c_,i., ,1,11....,,.,. .., ht!~
MITCHUM JONES & TEMPLETON Plll"tlllll't, Clet-~ "Wll"'" 0rfl'll[le C-t Ollty P'lklt,
are lnternaUoDOI, they were , .._,. o. """"'· ,_, .._ ''· " ... •-•· 1. "---· ' of •NOOR"'°" 0 E•ec:tlllw YICe Pl'ltldtl\I ,\11111"*1 °'-""' C:tihl billy Plltl, nn tn).12 11.ft'WY aware being In a AH Thll 111""""' w•• n111d .. 11~ 11'11 c-· Oc10111-r 11. 11, zs enc1 ""°""'bll" 1. 1m11------------'"-
figbt Cor first place in ..New 295 l'orest Avenue, Ltguna Bff,ch, C1Uf. 92651 or t7 clw't of 0r.noe c 0 " "'" on tnf.n PUBUC NOTICE
York. 620 Newport Conter Drive, Nowport Beech, 0.111. 92640 .._ "· im. •.,»1--IPPiU'iiBiiLIIicfNNOTJMKCEE =:::.:1 __ :,".~~~~~-.,. llKTfTIOUI 1u11 .. •s1
IE.wt ( ~ l'IC'TITl6Ui luttNIJS · MA.Ml ITAT ... NT THAT RACE IS over for the Pieua ltlftd me• Pre1i.aUwy Prw,eonaa deladhlac 1'ramamcrica i...... Sb.u.,. r-••&.THllr, tcHR•••••· 1t••••1.. •AM• sr•HM•ttr 111t tro1t.Mna perton l• c1o1111 11111lflftl time bei"" aJtbou""' , .. --••1Hft a lllt••• T,.. ftilklw'llO ~ fl °""' Ml-M! "'9• 6" 1"111 t"'_.-IUl.1-1"f'DrMllllll•4U ••· PAllAOON l l lC TltlCAL bably isn1t ended. Ffrst City Nflllfl•------------------""°''----------.. """' Nllh. taltlln!la ta11 svsTECH cOM,.A.NY, '°'' s-11r1MAllNG, ,.,, lfolt4e. orrv.. Hunt.
baa mov·• well ahead m· ~t"' --Tlft9Mll 1nu UMtn "kloe 0r1 ... ., .. .,. Lino.. ca111on111 1111ton 9Mdl, c111"9rrll1 '*'· t:1.1 ""' "' Pllblbhed Or.,.. c-1 01fly ~11t1, "6M. wnu.,., Lntw s.dlft'. '111 ~
depolltl Ind assets, wlth Addlftt•-----------------------------oc,..,., " 11. 11. "· 1n1 vr>-n JofWI W1vnt w.rr-111. 1111 llll'ntc Drl••· Huittlnetan IMdt. c1111Wn£1 ngu-of M• bllllon 8!ld "" ·-•l!tfe 0r1 ... .,...,. Ll"°'· c;1111w1Mt '*'· ·-tNt .,._. --.,..._ TN• !Ml-11 lelnlt aM!Ktld W • bllUon, re I p e ct i v e 1 y ' lo STARS r1111 1111t1-•1 wi1111 toftducttot by ..,. IMIYl!ko •I Cltr•~----------..Su•'----------ZlJ'------It.al•~. Wlllllm I..,._. Chue'a *20 bDUon and $24.S -Syd-,~ • ., •• 0_ 01 Johll w. Wlrr•ll TM• 11ei-111 nled w1111 Ille. '*"'"'
bullo '"'-T Yi" .. ,,.. lh11 111..,.....t IUld wlt1'1 tllt COlll!tv C""9 of Or...,. ,_ry oit Ge .... 1L
Q, • th• World'• grNt u trolo-Clerk el 0r-. COllll!y 111'11 OC!olllf' I, 1972. WILLIA~ •. IT JOHN. COUNTY Al the ~lfparlty 8rnt, 8 gen. flit column 11 ont o( IYU, Wll-LIA,M t ._ $T J()tiN, COUNT'( CLE .. K, IV....,,.,., J, M.eooa. DeolfT\t, -J •eo __ ..._., cha••• wa• the DA.Il.Y rn.ars -1 c:Lnici" '-" J, MMl!m, Defwtt, -...... •llUU. .,......,. .. ""° "0 •• ~.. fl..., '"""lihld Or1t1111 CMlt ~ Pit.It
made. Jlerbert P. Patterson'------------------------------------,_r_••_t_'"""'----------'' Pl.lbl1Jhed Or•""' ca.tt 0111, rflot. October 11, u '"' ,...__, 11 _ .. . Oc.•Olllr "' 11, IL :n. nn ,....,, nn JJM.n
PUBLIC NOTICE
• • I
DAILY PILOT SC --0c.-2'. 1'172
Exchange Probing
Mattel Stock Bid
Hm'1 the Plffed. way to malll
JO.Jr money or MCUftties lllo
"'trlpl1-duty":
If this IOllllds Impossible , • , can
todq tor tl'le: tye-<1P1nln1 story of
Ho11 M1111ori1I Hospit11's "four
Flexible Plans for GMll('. You wtl
be in !Of • plusant surpri:sa!
Telephone:
548-0650
Don't Miss These
Free Lectures
Nov. 8th
•"Caf,ital Conservation Through Exchanging Min ml!lng Tues"
1..ecturer -Bruce Howey
"Tallortng \'our '73 Investment"
Lecturer -Randy Mccardle
TICICliTS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR
EACH SESSION MEETS 7:30 ·9:30 P.M.
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE
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SC DAI~ V PILOT J1
Wednesday's (Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ,r-----------1 ...
Cease-fir~ Hope~
Still Buoy Stock~
NEW YORK (APl -For the second day, stock
market prices firmed Wednesday in lite tradi.Dg,
des{>lte lhe Jac k of ne\v evidence of progress to'Y"d
a Vietnamese settlement ·
Analysts said Investors continued to show •
fa irly high state of upectancy for steps toward a
cease-fire in lndocbma , "1tbough South Vietnam
President Nguy~n Van Thieu and the Viet Cong said
.no settlement had been worked out.
tjl .. i I lOd
NL ll'ilu•I I NLT Co 60l:I N~W> > Er. ...
11 I fU
" " ·~--Q , "5 H a}Pn11 l ·a~ ... , -bt • A~Of lli • t• r ur 11 N tn Ri ll
Nol11Gs LI~ NUG~r 1 to 'N l'lPS jtt ,NONHh to
No pt l oo ·~1'~~~ t,:
N of aao ,Nor llQ&I~ E .Nor rcipC I N!llr-1 .. i N~lrl •S .Nwt1.1nc p, N~t,M U .N""1.f ~Cl ,.,
NMt l'IOI ) N~1a;I •70 .ti.,tlni>/C ) .E-.. ),,.,. • -1511 ,,
.,..,~ 1 ~
N0<1 !ll!n ll •NrtSo J I I llO Nu'tr: Corp •NW' Co 101 . .
~ "' " • HlltPr Ii~
' •d' llll .,~~'!!! ""' ~ • llPI l bl llioEd I ~ -11 £11f•S4 .OE I 71 otNG I 2• 11Cor11 u
"\ ·~ "' > >M " , ~t~o 1 fl ,,.....T•n M
•\.Hr 1 ~
•
•
.... ...,...----------. ~-1.#CllMQc
~omplete Closi1ig Prices-A 1nerican Stock Exchange List
.....
tlllh l
...
Hltfl Ltw tllllt C/lt.
Finance
Briefs
e ChlHn Lond >I
SAN FRAN C IS CO
Twenty.two rugs, hand made
ln Tlensten and valued In ex--
ctAS of '50.000, were unloaded
from \be Jteamshlp Idaho here
rteenUy -the lint Oriental
rugs to arrive In the Unlted
statM from mainland China 1n
mort thon XI years.
'l1lo nip, In lill, IJJO and
119 IOOI Illes and two 1...,.1
styles, have plllng 'Ii-Inch
thick and ""' oll handcraft<d,
11ld • spokesman for Ma, Lee
lndu•lrles, the lmportlnl llnn.
Ile 13ld they W0111d bo ol!fftd
!or Ale In deporlmtnl ll4lret
on the WOii C.Ost.
,~
'
.z8 DAILY PILOT
PUBLIC NOTICK
P111l!I ~l!t'd "" '°'" 1), P~7
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
•
TONIGHT'S
TV IDGlillGIITS
NBC l!J 8:00 -"Adam-12." Officer Reed (Kent
~trl'ordl puts himself on the spot when be accuses
" fello \r officer or unnecessary cruelty to suspects.
tt·larlin f\lilner.
ABC 0 8:30 -"Family Flight." A squabbling
f:i mily on a vacation trip to Mexico find them·
selves struggling for survival alter a crash land·
ing in an isolated section of Baja California. Rod
Taylor. Dina ~fcrrill, Janet Margolin.
KTLA o 8:30 -The Magic of Sammy. An hour-
long musical special starring Sammy Davis Jr. with
guest artist Lola Falana.
CBS O 10:00 -"Cannon ." Broadway actress
Rose1nary ti'lurphy guests as a supervising nurse
\\'ho is a key figure in a drug theft case.
TV DAILY LOG
Wednesday
Evening
OCTOBER 25
111insl a pollutin& oil ~Pi"Y
wl'len tM pr1sid1nt of th1 compa-
IJ I Sf1Cll4 I The Mqic If SI•
., A one-hour musk.II spetlll 5i1r·
rin1 Sammy Divis Jr. l...ola F1l1n1
ruests wittl S1mmy. 0 CIJ @ (D AIC W•il••s••r
Movie: (C) (10) "'f••ltJ flitllt"'
(dr1) '7Z-Rod T1y!Of, Dina Merril~
Kristoftt T1bori, J1nel MarfOlln. A
flyinr v1caUon to Mulco tor 111
at-odds l1mily turns inlo a nea1-
h<Jpelm battle tor survtv1! 1fter 1
crash·landint in 1n isol1ted sec·
lion of Baja, Calilornil. m Mtr1 Griffin Show
(13) Playhouse NIW Ytrt "N1w Ac-
lors for llw! Classics (R).
ED I Sl'l(il\ I M1rij111111 lnlti.tlvt
An examination of P1090sltion 19
on Nov. General Eledlon ballot
whkh would dt·criminalize the uM
ind posaession ."' mariju1n1. .
1 t :IXI II CiJ Medic.II Cent.tr Guests Dia·
na Muld111r 1nd Paul B11fll1 pl1y e
brini1nt WOfl'lln resident •M hlf'
u11employld, ailllll hu!b1r\d wllost
m1rri1g1 is thr11t1ntd by tlll pp
in lhtir t11"11.
ID l'\ay Ttlel'lnl
tE u. Vtfa,. hr• •ec.n111
~ ....... _
a:,) Drl ..
ny, Paut's cU1nt, 1rrfvts tor 1 con-11:15 CD Ci.., M
sutllt"3ft. Edwtrd Andrews alld .ltr· 11:JO IJ(J)CIS L.tt ~ {C) "'MM
J)' ro1el guest en I Stri9c"° (dta) 'JJ-Q11lltopMr m Hl1•1'1 Mtr11i GtOfgw m ,..,., M•Mfl 0 om ,.,., ea,.. Setted·
(1l' Artie tfflltt• Hlrhtl&hts of tt1t u1ed ruestJ 111 Johnl!J Mlthtt 1r\d
Allec/8ow11nr Gretn lootbllt 11me. actor 8fUOI Dltn.
m """'"' "'"" u m rn G>""' --~ ~~72 Carlill Is s11bttftut1 llolt, cm Lt l~~ble tD Tt TtR Che Trd
{fl MM: (2"r) "Htll't IO\ti." ll:OO 0 llkivft: (C) ;"'M c..tllll tfw.
(d11) '39 -Roni Id Rugan IMM"' (com) 54-Ru KlfrllOl'I. ' m McMt: .. .._...,. (dt1) '42-
1:30 Q 0 m NBC WH11tl41P ..,.. .1M11 G1bl11. ld1 lvtlno.
"" -Cool Milli.ti "Hunt for I ". LOM1J Girt~ JttftrlOfl Ktyt1 (Jima ll:JO ID c-trJ Mlllk
r11111tlno) ps to Canada to Ml!'ch 1:00 (}) 0 0 (J) ,.._
lw tvkhnce th1t wlll Ir" 1 we1tthy l:JO 11 MM: .,.._ WM It •
busln1i:tm1n lrom 1 rnurdtl chirp, W.A.C. .. (COfll) '&2.....a ... 11111 ....
RIJ Mltl1nd 1nd Jllll'I Darby ruest. ~. P1ul Douc1•S..
Thursday
DAYTIME MOVIES
l2:00 8 "T1H Lie" (lfr1} '52 -hul
Henrtld, lblhlttn Hu&htL
1:00 m "'" rtr """ .. ,.. (dtt) '54 -tharlton Keaton, Llr1btlh ~
1:30 8 "S.C.O.lll FWM" (tom) ·~ -
MritllM Corri', fhor1" WlltltfL
0 "Wlf H1111t" (ill) '12 -Jotit
Sixon, Robtrt RtdfORI.
J:CXI CJ) (C) "ftrtlp ,[Jch11p" (ICh)
'6~oblrt Horton. f6) "Tovngb'9cMll HHl" htt I (dtl)
'64 -J1ma fr1ncl1e111,
Orchestra
Performs
For Kids
The 70-plcce Golden we.i
Colltge Symphony. now in lts
second year and polntlng
toward a membership of 80,
wtll l11unch its 1972·19'73 season
with two childrtn's concens
Sunday, Nov. 5.
Identical performances wl11
be given at 2 and 4 p.m. ln the
college community theater,
featuring the fin3le t o
Dvorak's "New Wo r Id
Symphony," selections h'om
'"Ibe Sound or Music," and
Strauss' ''Perpetual Motion."
All adults attending must be
accompanied by a child.
Admission is $.50.
Priceless Memories
The children1s program is
one of three concert
performances scheduled this
year. Other dates are Jan. 21 ,
and March 2S. Included will be
w o r ks by B 0 r 0 din , Cherie Patch (left) shows her theater scrapbok to fellow thespians Ronald
Tchaikovsky , Copland. Boussom, H.J. Parks and Ann Sienna-SCbwartz <from left) in a scene from
Schubert, and other com-"The Torchbearers," playing tonight through closing performance Saturday
posers. at South Coast Repertory in Costa ~1esa.
David Anthony, symphony --------~--'---------------------~
diret::tor, has announced open-
ings for additional players,
particularly strings. A d u I t
players of orchestra I in·
struments currently comprise
30 percent or the membership.
Classic Movies in Anaheim
Rehearsals are held Mon-Black and white cartoons
days, 7 to IO p.m., in the f the music building, and all in· rom 1920s converted to
terested players are welcome. color by computer will be of.
Recentl y the s y m phony fered through November as an
developed c o o p e r a t i v e extra added attraction at the
agreements with recreation ~!otion Picture Hall of Fame
and park staffs in Huntington . Anah . Beach and Westminster to in eun .
promote programs and recruit _The November program will
players. Discussion also is feature a variety of classic
under way with Fountain oldies from Valent.mo in the
Valley. 1920s through Bogart in the
Anthony, well known 30s , Fred Astaire in the 40s
throughout the state for his and Judy ffolliday in her Os-
leadership in orchestra I car-vlinning role in the SOs.
music, is vice president of the The month's s c he du I e
Southern California Band and follows :
Orchestra Association and -Oct. 29-30: ''Born Yester-
Ca lifornia Music Educators day (1950) \\'ith Judy J~olliday,
Association. southern section. Broderick Cra\\'ford a n d
Costa Mesa Civic Playhou se
PRnlNTS
"ME AND THEE "
ly a. ... Hori•
Oct. lt-20. 2'·27, "••· 2.J
WIST GATE.-OU.NG! COUNTY FAllGIOUNOS
,,. ,....., ._....._ It.•.,.., ,_...1l;9b c•ll U..s.t, lftw 1 ~11 i*sin\
"Alf EJCJRAORDlllARI' Y
JOYIU' AOAl'f'AnOll 01
JOHii KlfOWIES' 8RIWAllJ
lfOVKI 80UlfD JO
SllMUUJE AlfD MOVEI"
-J.,~1o,..... Wl'll St-,_,..,
''I ,IKE JHIS 111.M VERY MUCH.-
8RIWAllJ, HEJ&llTWARMlllG,
EllGlfOSSllfG!" ......... ..,, ....... _, .. _
"OnOl'nll!IUST-
A80Ul'YOUTHffaMA11.:'
-··· • ..,. "'-• , ... -..;i,-$...._., c:.tw-; ..
ft JOHii «NOWUS'
CLASSIC UST·Al.l..flt
llE_, A CLASSIC
MOnotllf~ft" ~~=-~"'A SINa.an ,._., .. __
~I PC11,A;S Pre'lENIS
AIOBW • O'.ll!ISJCN .ono ~ ~ "I.NP!'~~
STARTS FRIDAY
OCTORIR 27 ·AT ROTH THIAT.IS IN HA"8011 .$HO CIMTER
It's time someone
blew the whistle en the
Mixon Admini•tration
NowGeorgeMtGovern
isgoingto
TOBIGBT ...:..7:JO P.M.
On your .UC and other major
television netwerk stations
A~•horlt•d •l'ld ••1d lo• bf McOMl'l'l·Shtl"91 C1mo110n QonlmlU11
lf lO It 81re11, N.W., W1tl'IU'l~to11, o.c. ~oooe . M11IM1 P1111m111, ,,. •• llfll,
Wllliam Holden .
-Nov. 1-4 : "You'll Never
Get ruch" (1941 ) with Fred
Astaire, Rita Hayworth and
Robert Benchley.
-Nov. &-7: •·oar!I: Victory"
(1939) with Humphrey Bogart,
Bette Davis and George Bren t.
-Nov. 8·11; "The Sea
Hawk'' (1940) with Errol
Flynn.
-Nov . 12-14:
Sheik" ( 1927)
Valentino.
"Son of the
with Rudolph
-Nov . 15-18: Cartoon and
comedy festival.
-Nov. 19'-20: ''All Quiet oo
the Western Front" ( 1930) the
Academy Award winning pi e·
ture of 1929-30.
-Nov. Z2·25 : "Alice in
Wonderland .. (1933) with W.
C. Fields as Humpty Dumpty
lftdo
llMWl'Of:f ~ ...... ·-.. ......_ .~ .......... w»e -THI 4HUf COMDT
COaiiilfNAflON
wooor ALUM
"PLAY IT AGAIN
SAM11
i.UO PG
"THE LAST OF THE
RED HOT LOVERS"
ALSO •
"M*A*S*H"
._.,..._ .... _ ·--·~ •-c--~ trnn~nt"•'· ''••n r.tt a till· l•T..SU.. IPllt h4J, JT.1111 i.... .,
ll ........ ,. )
JOE DALLESANDRO
ANO SYLVIA MILES
IN "HEAT"
RATEDX •... ,, .... ,.
Ut...tllL M+'"ll
and Richard Arlen, Gary
Cooper, t-.1ae lo.1arsh and Jack
Oakie.
Each week the Ana!Jeim
theater will show a .new
chapter of its current old-time
serial, "Zorro's F i g ht) n g
Legion," along with the JO'azy
Kat computerized color car-
toons.
The Hall of Fame movie
house is located at the rear of
the Saga Motel. 1650 S. Harbor
Blvd., Anaheim, aero~'. the
s t re t t from Disneyland.
lnfor1nation is available by
calling 956-4070. -.------·----
l lll<u.., •,,..,.<-It "lllCll• & IOGG$" \PGI e Cel•r
h• v •• u.w. (~ ...
"llfUI• 0' J&IAfAM I'll,
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-·-........ ·--111-tk l
., Tk ,., ..... tf "'''(110H , .......... , .... ,.u .. 1w ,_lll .. n
"'&SYlUMH !'$) e (ellf"
"'Tll( lllTtlll.I " \PS) e (el.,
....... ·--o.-·~ ,)1.11)11 . -"" .. ~ ,,. S £51'. Oltil Ul&IW ~ •• ,s ... \ H••••T•••Htl)•C...., '5••· ••••et. llllllAID
"" ·~ '"fllt A OIAI l•Y I~ _:.TotrCAlllU!IMl'/fl"ill _ ... ,, .. __
''--••o. f-tllll
... ... ~ .... , •11 c.r ••
"toll 1.I SP.I.Cl OOYSSlT" ttl •"••. "hltl W.lfll, WHtfl Ol.lfM"t!1 ---·~· ......
1141..J ... I
.... ..,. frt t t ,._ 1,i. I h i$ s ,,,. ...... lt!til
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Lag11na Bea~h
N.Y. Stocks
' _VOL 65, NO. 299, 7 SECTIONS, 106 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1972 TEN CENTS
• •
• A .First: FBI Gradittltes Laguna Wonaan
By .ISABELLE HALL
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The first two
women FBI agents in history -one is
from Laguna Beach -graduate today
from 11 14-week training course that in-
cluded f~arms use, physical fi\n~
trtliniqg and band-to-hand combat.
"They passed all the requirements,"
an FBI spokesman ~aid of &usan Lynn
Roley, 25, a former Marine lieutenant,
and .loAM PierCe, 31, a fonner nun.
Miss Riley' ls the daughter of Col, and
••
Mrs. William R. Roley ol. Laguna Beach.
. Silt more women are still In training
.and more than 50 others have applied to
be agents since Acting Director L.
Patrick Gray lll relaxed the all-male
policy l.1ay 11. Mis! Roley, a blue-eyed
redhead Crom Laguna , and Miss Pierce,
a tall, slender bninette from Niagara
Falls, N. Y., will gradual< along with 45
male agellts.
There will be no ceremonies lit the FBI
Academy at Quantico, Va. EaCh new
agent iJ simply given 1 coveted bronze
badge and assigned lo hit or her lint job
in the 8,7~member force. ,
Miss Pierce has been 1l!Signed to the
St. Louis field office and Miss Roley to
Omaha , Neb. ·
Gra'y ha! said they will do exaclly the
same job as their male'C'OWlleJ'J)fl.rts. His
predecessor, the late J. F.dgar Hoover,
thought the job too dangerous for women.
Announcing the move just a week. after
'he succeeded Hoover, Gray poil},ted out
•
that it actuaJly was 1 required by an ex-
ecutive order President Nixon issued
Aug. 9, 1969, on nopdi~rJmJnatiQD In jobs
an<! by the 1972 Equal Employment Op-
portunity Act.
The nreanns training for men and
women alike required the agents to
becot;ne gualified Jn the use or a 38-
o.:.liber revolver, shotgun and rifie.
Gray said ·recentlf that the two women
Were hav.ing difficulty doing pusbups and
pullypa aild sai(j an investigation . was
underway to determine if this W8.ll the
cause or a basic difference In the struc~
ture of the male and female pelv\s
Miss Roley was a Marine Corps Isl
lieu tenant, serving at Camp Allen,
Norfolk, Va., until July 14 when she aJ>
plied to become an agent.
After graduating from California State
College at Fullerton in 1968. she was
eommissioned a 2nd lieutenant on June
25, 1969, and served at El Toro Mari{le
IX,Oll om~
Seek New Route
Planners Urging
Alignment Death
The Laguna Beach Planning C<lm-
mission Tuesday night recommended the
city council abandon the propooed align-
ment ol the extension ¢ Alta Laguna
Boulevard between Top of the World and
Arch Beach Heighta.
Open Space Bid
A.t Sycamore '
Propoticil Aireq
'A d~ -1 that would
leave at lout 72 jltl'C<lll pf •h'lln slopes
of Syumoro llll1' 11 permanmt open
space wu pretented before Laguna
Beach Plannillj Commluioners Tuelday
n,lght.
The proposal, prepared by a number of
consultants for NeWJ>Ort Investments
Inc., Calli for development of falbionable
oondomlnlums and single fii mily houses
in the canyon areas of the 52l-acre parcel
at the Intersection ol Laguna Canyon and
El Toro Road!.
Housing and village oriented com-
mercial development, sakl Howard
Miller, a company vice president, would
comprise onJy 28 percent of the acreage.
Steep slopes, ridge topJ and areas of uni·
Que natural value would be ~ed for
use by Ille public, he said.
Protest to the plan. expected by some
to be explosive, was reserved.
• "If you take scenic areas., and mark
tHem for preservation and do likevr~ for
areas valuable for water and air
resources do you have any area left for
development ," asked James Dilley,
president of the Laguna G-helt, Inc.,
a· group which has fought to keep the
Sycamore Hills land as complete open
apace. '
His remarks leadJng up to the question
Indicated the answer'.t.o the query was "no." . ~ .
In his prepared remarks, Miller
asserted the property has been available
f~ yean for public purchase while "the
owners waited patienUy and did not
obstruct ways and means· for the ~
ponents of public acquisition even though
ft meant DOt taking advantage of
numerous private offer1."
Alter listing nine problem• facing
public acquisition, Miller concluded: A'1At
businessmen facing these cold, hard,
facts we bad t.o conclude that U
Sycamore Hills wert ever to be acquired
In the public Interest It could ool
rtasonably occur until tbe year 1995 or
(See SYCAMORE, Pll' I}
1 BIKE, 1 AD: .
3 CALLS,: 1 SALE
1, 2, S. 1nlat's Jost how It went when
the Westminster man offered to sell hts
motorcycle to DAILY Pll.oT readen.
'!llls ts the sd that aold It ~ In ooe nigJlt
-after just three phone caUs: HONDA 7511, 1m, Kl.
Bargain buy. Only I mo.
old. 2,800 ml. Many xtraa,
Fairing, rack, bacl rest!
crash bar, etc. Owner mus
oell, only $1390 or oiler.
ID•UD.
That'• the lincl of action you could g~t, too. Try It with an ad ol your own. Dial
the direct line to cltssWed adv..tlsing
. ,...ulta at !he DAILY Pll.oT, -·
In taking action , the commission ask-
ed the council to order a new route align-
meot-wbich includes hiltina: paths, bicycle
trails and open space buffer zones.
The ·council will consider the com-
mi.sskllen' reco.mmendations when it
~ts ~ov. 1. . .. · •
Co~loner ~Is J,effrey led the bat-.
tie iilaiu!t the preoelih!jg/i.!\':!'t.arl!'llng
tl!al JI· ~ Doi ~ • 'the Open aoac6 e-t.Gfll.I ~i iifMni) plan.
-,,., -requlil!I such amenities as· hiklog ·and "!kltltl l(alll and bufler
strip&. • 1 I , •-
Commllllonon ~ lndlcat<d Ibey
woold.Ute the tftt to qplare annexi!loa
of all ~rtlo oo Whl<h the roa~ mlpl
lie, io lht city II ilot lomd to work wilb
the county,oo the ioute e.tlenslon project.
-Hall of the proposed alignment now
lie>. within the city, wUh the remainder
under courttt jurisdlctloD. '
C<lmmisslooer Roger Lamphear and
commission ·cbainnan John McDowell
voted qaliil!t the motioo requesting the
new alignment.
Lanphear said tbe motion went "too
far" in stating some type of extension
will be cbostructed.
The action of the plannen was pal·
terned after a recommendation by the
(See ROUl'E, Page ZJ
Sirhan Appeals
To Supreme Court
For Case Review
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sirhan Blshara
Sirhrut appealed today to the U.S.
Supreme Court to review Jµs conviction
of murdering Robert F. \(erinedy.
Lawyers for the Arab lmmigradt said a
team of psychiatrists, p h y s i c i a n s ,
physicists a o d otben have uncovered
"significant pbysical evidence" that
Sirhan did not fire the bullet on June 5,
196t, et the Hofe! Ambassador in Los
Angeles that killed the New York
senator.
But the nature af this evidence was not
immediately dlsclosed.
'lbe-'lawyers said they are preparing
to place their new evidence before the
California Supreme Court.
Sirhan was coovicted ln April 1969 of
murder and five counts of assault to
oommilmurdef In the-Kennedy shooting.
Hia death sentence was reduced last year w life in prison after the Callfomia
Supreme Court declared capital punbh-
ment to he WICODStituUooal.
Slrhan'1 appeal was prepared by two
Los Angelea · lawyen, Roger S. Hanson
and George a. Milman. •
They suggested Callfomia appellate
)udgls stralned the laws of sean:h· and
selitlre to uphold the coiivlclion because
of Kennedy'• national Importance.
"It is evldcnt," sald tlie petition/' that
re,. members of any appellate trlbtmal
WOUid care to be on record in reversing
the C0119lctloo Of a nondescript Arab im·
mJgrant who WU convicted o I
•S11SSIJu\Ung Sen. Robert F. Konnedy,
who undolibtedly wu at the threshold oI
hit pinnacle of pouu .. 1 achlevoment -
the l>emoct'atlc Mmlnatlon lo< p"'sldent
of the 'll~ited Slltea. lhd with an ex-
cellent chalice to ~ the naUoo's
chief uecuUve. .. •
Sfrhan's lawyers raised a doRn
chajlenctra to the coovlctloo In tl')'lna to
win • no" trial for U..ir te-1eaMld
cllenL Mainly, they complained aboUt the
way police tlOll'Ched lt1I ltloll!tr'I homo
wllhoul a wa~
Beu,, To Blast ·on ,._.....---'\ . ' Two little witches from El Morro Elementary sters frpm. all schools. A popular PT A fund raiser.
it will• iriclude· spooks, witches, goblins, games, a
treasure hunt, a lJlagic s.bow and a spook house.
The girls .are 1Emilr Brant, lei~ and Kelly Racke-
School north.of Laguna Beach seem in rare good
humor about something. Perhaps it is the approach
ot \he )5th at\llUa) Boo Blast at the school,'The
.event Saturday, Jrom 11 a.m. lo 3 p.m., is for yoµng· mann. · '
Niguel T19ial Winds Up
\ .
Jury td B:eceive ·Biggest Bank :Burglary. C~e ' -'
By FREDERICK SCHOEiMEut.
• Of tM DflUJ "'"" ., ... . ' LOS ANGELES -Final argwnents in
the trial of three Ohio men charged with
the world's Jargest bank burglary -the
$5 million · break-in at Laguna Niguel
branch of United California Bank -were
heard in a U.S. District Court here. t~.
Following argUnients, evidenct in the
five-week long trial was expected to be submitt~ to Qle ' six-man,, six-woman
juty for tlellberation on ·the guilt or in-
nocence of delendanta Charles Mulligan,
Philip Bnice Cbiistopher and Amil
Alfred Dinsio.
Assistant U.S. Attorney J8.ck Walters,
l bsent;ee v ot,e
' .
Deadline Near
~
Oniy one week remaJns ror ~ten
to _ apply for absent<e ballots,
Orano County Registrar of Voters
David Hll<bcock wam!d today .
Next Tuesday 11 the deadline.
"t'Persons who expect Jo be absent
from. their prtci~ on Nov. 7 may •
aP."1Y for on aboent mer ballot either by mall or In ~ at the
Reg~trar of V'oton of9ce," Hitch-
cock advised. ·
"If requesting an absent ballot by
mall the, voter must Inc'""° his
l\8mt, mldence , ~. legal
•ll!Mture def ll)o ....,.... why ho
'!ill he lli•lil• to. -el the polls
Of"!>Nov, 7," ~added:
lk. ..... Ille • i;eatatrar'o 1office
l!?';lted at JUI E. a...tnu1 St.,
Santa Ana, ,.m be 9pen on S.tur·
day f-I a.m. lo 4 p.m. incl on
M-y and 'l'ueodoy OWllioga ,..m
I r.·m• lo< lhe ~of 0-.... 'I' •hlna , to apply for aboent<e
ballota. • •
'
in a le~gthy 'statem'ent lo Jurors, con-but that there was no reo.son for the jury
eluded that the. iovemr,nent had proved to discred.it bis testimony.
without a doubt its allegQUon that the • Defense attorney Anthony Glassman,
three men planned , executed and col-counsel ror Olrlstopher. argued before
lected the proceeds of the massive the jury that the go'f;ermnent has not
burglary. . proved guilt beyond a reasonable doubt
Walters reviewed the testimony of and moral certainty.
more than SO government witnesses call-Arguments . from MW.ligin's attorney,
ed in tbe case. Ronald Minkin, were scheduled late to-
Defense Attorney Victor Shennan. day pr\or to submission ot the case to the
representing Dinsio. did not question lhe jury.
goverrunent's allegations but attempted Walters' statement traced wba,t be al-
to dil<lredit testimony Of two key govern--Jeged was a series of events wtllch began
ment witnesses to whom the crime in February when defendants Mulligan
assertedly wu admitted. and Dlnslo traveled to <Jalifornia to
Sherman was most . upset w i th select a bank for burglary and t.o lay in·
testimony of ab Informant -who earlier illal prepara·t.1oos. .
alieged that Dinslo told him In great After .oelectlon of !he ·Laguna Niguel
detail about the crime. bank, nestled near 100: '(flutqt Mol)al<h
Sherman argued that the informant Bay and 'l'hN:e .Af'dt'Bajr i.t11111 Walters
with some 50 ta 100 burglaries loil:gfld on a'sserted · thlit • ·a bta,ray car was
hit Own criminal record could hardly be purchased and that ;ocaI conlactl were
considered a belleva61e witness. built between Mulligan and certain
Walters caoceded, tn hiJ argument that frienda in the Tustin area.
the Informant waa "a terrible burglar" Walte.-s also alleg~ that the team of
Laguna Music
St~re Burgled
Lagune Beach police are Investigating
a Jl.127 burglary at the Sound Spectrum
music store, 1"64 s: ())ast Highway,
r4P0rted Tuelday morning by owner Jim
Otta, . , •
Poll"' said a but'llar appartnUy en·
tmcl the' 114,.. durlnlt the i\laht, ll!lnj a
scrtwdriver to , Optd a wlndow , aod
removed the money from 1 met.al calh
box. I •
It "'pre,..ted recolpta from sale of
tlckei. to th• Holtywood Palladlwn. ol-
flcers Uhl. The music llOl'O ii ID agency
for a variety ol tidl<t Ul<o.
The buslDHI wu not rarucked and
notlllnt WU taken but thO contanlf Of the
cash box. The bura\lr apparently left throuah the umo window, police aald.
burglars rented a faahionatile Laguna
Niguel townboule u a base of operations
during the burglary attempt.
The presence of the defendants in the
!See NIGUEL, Pqe I}
Patron Cites Fall,
Sues Laguna Stahle
Damages totalin( SlOOjGOO are being
demanded from a ~ Beach riding
stable owner by a woman patron who
claims Che was thrown b7 a "vicious.
gra7 mare."
M,.. Glenda M a e Cain nnmet Joe
Lenco. Redwood stables, :t028I La~un•
Canyon Road and the Orange Coast
Sp<.'Clalty Company as defendanta In her Orance County &lperico' Court actJon.
MI'S. Caln claims ohe recolved oetlotil
lnjurlel Jan. 5 -tl>e wu throw!!
from the mare rent<d lrom the Radwoncl
Stables.
Corps Air Station from November, 1969,
until January, IWl'L
Insisting there will be no difference
between his male and female agents,
Gray refused to permit the women to be
interviewed before they leave for their
new assignments.
Each will earn $12,151 as a starting
salary plus '3.036 for · · v o I u n ta r y
overtime" which is required Of all agents
until they reach the r.ank of Grade 15 •
Tlll'ee Notes
Discovered
h1 Israel
JERUSALEM {AP ) - Israeli explosive
experts today defused three letter bombs
addressed to President Nixon, Secretary
of State William P. Rogers and Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird, poli ce
reported.
Earlier ln the day, two letter bombs
exploded in Beirut, Lebanon. Another
blew up in Alglers on Tuesday night and
still another was found in the mall in
Cairo.
Eight persotis were wo'unded.
The letter bon\bi addressed to Nixon,
Rogers and Laird w e r e found in the
sorting room of a post afftce in the
northern braeli frontier town of Kiryat
Sbmona, near the Lebanese border.
. Police said the postal bombl were the
same type as the fiood of explosive
e.nve~s mailed last month from
Amsterdam t.o Israeli officials and em~
bassiea ln various parts of the world .
A l9-year--0ld postal empk>ye wu rush-
ed to a hospital after an uplosion at the
Beirut post office as the morning's mail
was being sorted.
About the same lime, another bomb
went off in a 22-stary office building half
a block from the American University.
and, a woman secretary .,.·as hospitalized.
Five other persons suffered alight in-
juries in the expkl61ons, officials said.
Authorities said they did not know
where the letter-bombs had been mailed
from.
The Palestine Liberation Organi7.8Uon
in Algiers said ooe of its staff was hurt
'l'uesday night by a booby-trapped letter
po<bnarked from Belgrade.
Spokeunan said the victim 's injuries
wm slight.
The Palestine News Agency aakl a
bomb addreued to a Palestine guerrilla
leader was intercepted Tuesdaf at the
Cairo airport. It aald the bomb was in a
hollowed-out book which also had been
malled from Belgrsde.
Letter bombs in July blinded and
maimed t"'O guerrilla leaders in Beirut,
and the post office installed an electronic
device to scan mall. There was no i~
dication why il did not intetcept 4le
bomba today.
In London, Scotland Yard warned the
Israeli Embassy against the possibility
that a further wave of Jetter bombs
wou.ld be mailed to Israeli dlplamata in
Lomlon.
Weadler
Momlng low ckNds and fog wlll
clear to sunny akiel oo·Thurlday,
with highs at the bcachet •round
75 rising to 84 Inland. Lowa tonl&ht
55 .
INSIDE TODAY
Tttme1sf!t Wiiiiam.!' tttuitr
drcma "S11.mmtr nnd Smoke"
ltadt off the MW arrival.I lta
communit11 thtater thil Wff'k at
the Lagumi MOMlton Pla11hoaut.
Sec Eniertainmetat, Pagt• 28·20.
l..M. ....... '' -""' ... " ........ Ii ,,_._. ...... WI Cat*""' 1 ................. , c....c...... .. ~c...: tt CllllU!Mt ll>ft PTA a
c-kt • lwl'ffll """ • Ct....... tt '-" l1-.D 0.0: Mttia. lt Dr. SltliJlcl'4IM • 1-.1 .... ...,. .,.. ........ -.u
1-...kl hM • T ..... -a t ,...._. ... ~ ....
,.,. .. ~tlCIHI "· ,, ..... • .......... )I ................ ..
,... L.Mlwt » ..,. -.. --.
•
I DAILY PILOT LI Wodnotdar Oclollor 25, 1912 ....... ~c;___;_cc:__~~~~-
Lagunan
In Middle
•
On Prop.14
Admitting be had "mixed £'motions" on
the Watson Tax Initiative, Proposition 14,
Laguna Beach Board of Hcaltors presi-
dent Robert Turner agreed Tuesday that
Laguna's !IC'hool.s would "really be cJotr
bered" if the lniUative passes.
Hls comments were made at the
monthly chamber of ccmmerce board
meeting, following a pre5enlation by Dr.
\\'tlliam Ullom. Lagu.ia superintendent of
schools. urging oppos11ion to lhe in-
11ia1ivt>.
The California Real Estate Association
lCRE:A), of which Turner is a member.
1s tak..ing a strong stand in favor of
Pruposi tlon 14.
Turner, a former membtr of the
Lagu na Beach school board, said he has
1n1x ed feelin gs on the proposed legisla·
11011 because. "·hile he appreciates the
ract that it 1,1•ou ld ··get welfore off the tax
rolls'' and attempt to h3\'e propt>rty
owners pay only for ser\'iei!s to real prop-
t'rty, ht' fee.ls it is "very inclusive" and
\.rould be damaging to the school district.
trllom pointed out that the proposed
stale a!Jocation of 1825 per student under
the \\'atson amendment would mean a
lo~s of $500 per child for Laguna. This. he
said. represenls a los sof S!.6 miJHoll, or
40 percent of the school district's budget.
Spe-cial classes for educationally arxl
physically handicapped children "·ould be
"pretty much wiped out'' if the initiative
pa~sed. Ullom said. since it y.·ould pre-
1·ent local voting for tax increases for
schools and "actually remove local con-
trol "
Turner noted that Gov. Reagan prcr
m1sed the recent CREA convention that
if Proposition 14 is defeated "'! will again
presenc his tax reform program to the
Legislature in January and. if necessary,
call a special election on the tax reform
issue alone.
Ullom commented that ii setmed un-
fortunate to put .!tehool district and
mun icipal financing in jeopardy. ''just to
get some acUon out of the Legislature."
Laguna Canyon's
Beautification
Bid Gets A~g
I
Laguna Canyon properly owners who
are not complying with tandscapinR re-
quirements under their conditional use
permits soon will be hearlng from the
Chamber of C-o m. m er c e beautifica-
tion committee.
Chamber president Larry Hu n t ,
himself the ()wner of a Canyon business,
brought up the l0111Standing problem of
neglected land.'Caplng at the Tuesday
meeting of chamber directors.
Some of the ()wnen, he said, have
never attempted to comply with site im·
provement condltlona set forth in their
use perm,its, while others complied, but
fall 10 mabltain the landscaping. He sug-
gested that beautification chairman Har-
ry Lawrence might contact the owntrs
wilh letters or in peraon lo seek coopera-
tion .
Lawrence agrted it would be a useful
project for thi.s committee.
In response to a .suggestion that the
city attomeJ...migbt be asked to contact
the offend.Ing owners, Mayor Charlton
Boyd said, "J thlnt It would be prefer-
able first to folloW the suggestion that
Mr. Lawrence's .:committee talk with
them, and also with the city manager
regarding the tequirements, before we
llun to the law."
He agreed that le&al steps would be
availabte if the owners proved
unresponsive to beautlficallon sug-
gestions.
DAILY PILOT
..,,_ ar.,.. C.U CMILY PILOT. Wiit! "41Jetli
b ~ tlle ,.......,,_, II pllllOtllH bf"
ffle or-.. c.e..a ~~ c-p..,.,. ~
111t. llllU'lans .,.. pUlllh.1*1,, ~ • ., 11\fllllgll
Frld1y, I'll' tn11 Mui, Newpert ltiKll,.
Hlll'lflfll*-9UCl'l/FD\lnlllfl V1lley, llg11111
•ddl. lrvlllt/Uikl1ti1woc• IN S•11 C""'-"191
SIA J11t11 C.ph lr1111. A 111oD.. r.tlDIMil
llllHlofl b -..r~ $f!ln'd•f' ...., Sllnd.,.._
Ti. JN"ltoclpt/ PllllllW!lflt !llfflf ts •I l)O ""'-''
a.y lfre.t, C.111 /,\ .. , C.IUomll, nt21t..
"ob•rt Pt. 'WeM .,.IQN .,.. "'4111'11«
J1ck "· C11rloy va "'-Id.,, 1ne1 o.n.r.1 "''...,....
Tho111•1 IC•evil
•dl1W
11iofl'l•I A. Mur,hl111
Ml .... lftl h l!W
Chotlot H. t..01 R.ich1r~ r. N,11
AMll'-'f M~ Ed!l9n --....... 2.22 F.rett A¥011t10
Morlf111 "'410111 ,,o. In'"° tl612 --c..19 Mwt -Witt ..,. .,,.., ·::el,. N......-f..,.....,.. HVl\t hid!: 17"1 -..di ........... ""' ... .....,.. •. ~ ....
Tl41•b 6 1114) 64J""4J21
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c.n..111. ,.. ... '"""" llfttrtl/'11 ..... flf!l•i--w ""'""' « .,.~...,...,.. 11oret11
""' .. ·-,,, ... , ... -.s.1 ,.,.. ..... ., ...,,,., .,.....
MttMi. ~ ,._. iiff. . 1tt ·c .. ,. Mtie.
C..ljfrrill,;' ·~~. !! dinier UM
........ , b¥ 'Mlt U.lS. "*""'"' n'lll)rwy .......---· ---
I
•
I
Do\11.'Y PILOT .... ,._
LAND USE MAP SHOWS PROPOSED DEVELOPMENT OF 522 ACRes IN SYCAMORE HILLS
Dark Areas Are Those Earmarked for Development, 145 Acns; Other 377 Acm Would S. Greenbeft
Police Track
Slini Leads
In Ambzis1i
By ARTHUR R. \11:\°SEL
01 lhe D111'1' P,lo! S1111
Teams of detectives ··•orking around
the clock continue today 10 iraC'k slim
leads in the ambush shooting of an Irvine
policeman lured into a !rap at a lonely
C'rossroads, thinking he "'as beaded to
help an inj ured man.
Officer Stephen T. Nash. 23. escaped
the bushwhacking try al 11 :15 p.m. Mon-
day with only a grazing sca r on his
cheek.
So far -besides the initial detail! of
what happened and descriptions of the
parties involved - investigators are
known to have two other elements:
-A set of indistinguishable footprints
ln a muddy cornfield.
-Tbe fact a ruthless man wanted bad-
ly to be a cop-killer.
Theories of an Old West-style highway
robbery attempt reminiscent of pioneer
cowboy days on Irvine Ranch land have
virtually been ruled out.
Nor do police believe the plot at the
CTOSSrOads of Jefftty and Bananca
roads could have be<!ll engjneered
specifically ID get Officer N.W.. perhaps
by soneome with a grudge against him.
The Interlinking lacu supgort neither
tbeory.
. "ll 'Pl ao amh1sh, pure and S\rople," declares Coota Mesa Police · llet<ctlv.
Capt. Ed Glasgow.
Chief among the questions to be
answered now-i!,'wftether the would·be
assassin -desttibed 11 a motorcycle
gang-type due th hlJ appearance -acted
alone.
Jnvestigaton are also seeking the two
cleancut young men ln a battered 1955
Chevrolet who stopped to tell Officer
Nash it appeared a man lying on the
pavement back down the road was ill or
injured.
One possibility due to their milik1ry
haircuts, Southern accents, and an old
car with out.of-state plates, is that the
men clad in civilian clothes are military
personnel.
A teletype alert and radio broadcast
are out for the green-and-white sedan,
minus its front bumper, plus any oc-
cupants as potential material witnesses
in the case.
They said when they pulled up as Of·
ficer Nash wrote a k>g report under his
dashboard lamp that they were headed
for a telep}\ooe.to notify police about the
suspected aCcident v1ctim.
No telephones are located virtually for
miles around within the undeveloped
sprawl or corn and asparagus fields and
lt would seem likely they would have
stopped first to investigate themselves.
From Pagel
NIGUEL ...
Southern Cslifornia area. he stated, was
positi'o"eiy sho~n by airline records which
have been en~red as evider.ce during the
trial.
Following the rompletion of the crime
in which burglars bypassed complex
alarm systems and then blasted !heir
way Into the bank's vault. the team
divided the proceeds and immediately
left for their home state of Ohio, \Viilters
alleged.
The only piece of evidence lhat re·
mained in California whlc::h could in-
criminate the defendants was the
getaw:ry car loaded with burglary tools
including a hammer that was alle2edly
used when the 456 safety deposit boxes
were looted.
The arrest of defendant Mullll{an took
place when he returned to Callfornia in
early June appart>nlly to di spose of lhe
car and its contents.
Walters pointed out that the govern·
ment has shown that fin2erprintJ of
defendant& Ptlulllgan. Oinsio a n d
Christopher were found on djshcs In the
Laguna Niguel townhou!le and th&t
Dlnslo's fingtrprtnts were found on one
Item of evidence taken from the 1etaw1y
car by authorities.
The car. Wlllte~ alleged. ls traced to
the crime 1ince three gold coins stolen
rrom the safety deposit box or Laguna
Niguel re.tldtnt Denni• Farghtr were
found In the vehicle trunk.
Walter11 also 11sarted that Dtruilo and
CIJHatopher were ccnnecttd wit h the bur&J~ry becaute 3toleh propc!fty wa1 !~nd In tbelr -Ion at the time ol lli<lr lndMdual anut•.
I
. .
Art Pay111en1s
Festival Disburses $1'1.-1,952
The Laguna Beach Fe1tival of Arts disbursed a tor.J of $1'1,952 Jn -1
or a variety of community projects in the year ended Sepl 30, director Glenn
Vedder reported to 01.amber of Commerce directors Tuesday.
Final figures of Festival payments -.·ere u follows:
-City of Laguna Beach fo r lease payment $'11,717
14,IM
1i,aoo
10,450
5,000
3,000
3,000
3,000
2,IOO
2.*
l,lOO
-Laguna A1ou1ton Playhouse
--Cily of Laguna Beach for euJtural budget
--Scli>larships
-Laguna Beach Art Museum and Gallery
-Lyric Opera of Orange County !or scholarships
-Laguna Beach Civic Ballet
-Laguna Beach School of Art
-Laguna Beach High School
-Laguna Festival Chorale
-Laguna Beach lllstorical Sociely -Lagima Winter FestivaJ
-AmeMCIJI Field Service
--Ownbe< Music Society
Fire Destroys
Big Motor Home
In Lake Forest
Trame oo Laguna Canyoo Road wu
slowed 'l'u<ldi\7 a!\<mOm as CIM1ly
firemen battled • liio of undetermined
origin wblcb destroyed a luxurious, $1.500
motor home.
The -..hlcle, owned by Diel Rooking,
22IM>5 lslamare Lane,, Lake 1Forest, was
et!gulr.d In na.... 'When thn!e C1M11y
flre1units, manned by 10 firemen arrived
at the scene, two miles south of the San
Dltgo Freeway, minutes after the 2:30
p:tn. a1arm.
They remained on the scene for two
hours, but the camper was reduced to a
metal skeleton by the time the blaze was
doused.
Exact cause of the fire has not been
determined, but firemen said the butane
tank on the motor home was intact when
they arrived and did not uplode.
Elizabeth Elliott
Rites Held Toda y
• A memcrial service was held this
afternoon in the Chapel of Memories,
Norwal k, !or Ellzabelb M. Ellldtt, 184
Ramona Ave., Laguna Beach, who d1cd
Saturday in the City or Hope, Duarte. She
was 53.
Mrs. Elliott was employed u a
medical assistant to Ors. John Poyas and
Robert Woodruff of Newport Beach.
She is survived by two daughters, Mrs.
Judy Blair of Twin Peaks, Calif. and
Miss Robin Ell,iott ()f Laguna Beach; her
mother Mrs. Myrtel Morrison of Laguna
Beach: and a brother, William Richards
of Norwalk.
Quentin's Death
Row Remodeled
SAN QUENTIN (UPI) -Death Row is
getting a facelift -but Lt's still not a
pretty place.
Associate Warden James Perk of San
Quentin Prison said 'l'uesdaJ that the 6()..
cell section for condemned ~n,
emptied after the €.allfornta supreme
Court ruled the death penalty un.
constitutional, was being remodeled aa a
special, short-term segregation unit.'
When finished ln about 1 moatll, It will
house trooblesorr.e cmvict1 awaltlng
disciplinary action, Inmates ee.rvlng short
sentences and prilooera undtr in-
vestigation for crimes within the walla.
Sailboat, Trailer
Taken at Boat Yard ·
A brand ..,. llallboat vallled by lta
owntrs •t St ,750 and the traDtr on which
the vtutl rea\ed were stoleo Monday
night from a D9n1 Point bolt y1rd1
Or•lll!• County Sherllf'1 omcer. oalcl.
DepuUes oald the bolt, owned by Slln
Miller Sellboata, -Del Prndo bad been on ~lay In ti. pilijlk: 1llfklnfl. lol
adja«int:Jo the. boatr-)'.!t;d. Offlcen -,.lei
the thi...o walt<d·-lll !be • -·· emplo~ ,..,. •boea: from tba "'*'
aod then-· !be boot IDll tnlt«· ·-·
U9
300
200
Total $111,952
From Pagel
ROUTE .•.
city plannlng and developmellt depart-
ment staff.
Acting Fi,. Chief Charles Kahn spoke
in favor of the construction of the road.
saying It would allow for greater fire
protection to the Arch Beacb llelgbts .....
Mn. Jefftty responded claiming the
area will need an addltiona.I fire statklo
regardless of whether the e%tension is
bWft. This is true, she exptaiqed, because
of the potential for developmenJ in Arch
Beach RelghtS. ' '
"I am not opposed to the road; per ae,
but [ think more study is needed," ~
meoted Mrs. Jeffrey. "The proposed
alignment Is unacceptable."
The course. as suggested by the
Orange County Road Departmen~ wwld
require extensive cut and flD almg the
ridge between Top of the World and Arch
Beach Heights.
Commissioner Laurence C8mpbell said
the rommlssioo should requeJt any
future alignments follow the hatura1 ter·
rain more clmely, His fellow com·
missioners agreed.
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
J. C. HUMPHRllS
QUART CRYSTAL WATCHES
Many w a t c h inanulactu.ren
stress lhe 'extreme ace~ of Uie
new quartz crystal watches. Al·
though these claims are justified
as .the watch lea_ves the factory,
m11ntenance of th11 accun.cy I! un-
predlcllble.
Continued quartz watch accuracy
depends upon the quartz crystal'•
abWty to keep vibrating at a con-
stant frequency when subjected w
normal use after you buy it
The na turaJ frequency of any
quartz crystal is subject w ehanae.i
due w aging, shock and alight tom·
perature vartatlon1, all beyond the
control of the manulacturer W.
cau.se reactions vary from one CfY9"
ta! to another regardlea of qu.Uty
or source. Further, rat., of quaru
watches are not readily adjustable
by the dealer.
Al an Independent jeweler, wo
~ particularly free to aut. .U Iha
facll about anything we tell We
want you to !mow that utnme ...
curacy clalma by many manufao,
turers may not be fullfllled In IOIU·
al use unw quartz crystal watches
• havo proven their dependabtllty,
your best hurt are tlll1 the hlahly
accurate chronometer11 tunJ.nt fort
and conventional watches.
••
"
Er..,,.,..te Sum1narv
Dev.elope_r · Tells . "'.,
Sycamore Plans
;
'4
'!be foll91"ing la a point-by·point sum·
mary of ~jor topk:' covered during an
elaborate! P<*!llltUn Tuelday nlsht of
a \(evelopmeat plan !or Lquna Beach's s,..,,,.,,.,_ Rlll• .... ,
LAND USE: Architect Roger Koball of
Bru ""1d present plans caJJ !or 2,018
units clllltered in ,...ps ~ the use
ol planned resldenllal development ., ..
tnycoball indicai.d ~ (>Ofoent of the szz.
ac:re aite would remain u pennanent
open space, ,.,lb the poulbl)lty existing
that aome of the land in preserve stttus
could be cletded ID the city.
Development would ocour only on
..iauvely level ai;eas, wllb steep sl-
~ •• ~ devolopment
would be llmlt<d to a "village type of
market place" wltt. an adjacent cultural
center, Kobata said.
Roads to 1ervk:e the development
wCM1ld Join both 4guna Can1on and El
Ton1 Road.I, !be arehitect said.
<IEOL-OGICAL HAZARDS: ConsiilUpg reoloelal f. Bncb Leighton of-Whittler
College told the. planning COQ1111isslon
tba1 the 11geotogy Is suitable for devel-
opment u proposed."
FtOOD CONTROL: Lou Kramer of
Engineering .::.Ofl!Ultants Inc. said the
development of 'the property would not
significantly increase the run-off of water
on the site, nor hinder absorpUon of
storm waters by natural top soil in can-
yod areas.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT: Stev e
Colegrove ot Environmental Jmpact
lleporis of Co.!ta Me!a concluded that all
open space lands are suitably connected
to allow for movement of existing
wildlife.
'''Ibe problems are not with Sycamore
Hills," said Colegrove, "bul with other
developments such as Rossmoor and
Leisure World to the east."
He noted that three archeological sites
Chest Campaign
Now Under Way
Laguna Beach Community Chest is
being boosted by "the bu!lesl people in
town," Al Geiser, chairman of tbe 1972
lund drive, has announced.
Gelaer, a1!o general manag<r of !be
Laguna Beach Southern C a 11 f o r n i a
Edison office, kicked olllhe carju>algn to
raise $'11,too loca~y.
Worklag wilb Geiser are CIPt. David
Brown, Laguna Beach Po 11 c e
Department; Jact McGoey, a a I es
manager of Berksblre International;
Gradon Oliver, of Mltchum. Jones and
Templeton ; George Fowler, Laguna
Beach recreation director: R o b e r t
Krolmleld~ General Telepbooe Co .
manager; Dr. Tom Judyj Dr. Bob
Ral5ton ; Robert 1\irner, T u r n e r
Aaoclates Realtora; Barry Snyder,
Snyder's Cleaners; llarry Blthell and
Joonoe Reddick.
exist on lhe 522-acre site. One ha11 been
excavated and research Is planned on the
Oilier t~o. he !aid.
ECONO!dlC IMPACT: The city ol
Lacuna Beach, said economllt Bob
Dunham, Could gain $1!0,000 y,.r(y In
new revenue from property tu on the
developmtnt. This figufe, he said, wa$
t.be net cost after considering police, fire
and other city performed services.
To allow the land to remain as public
open space wlth no development, said
Dunham, would cost the city $375,000
yearly in acquisition costs. Th.ls is
equivalent, he said to 43-centa on the tax ..
rate.
From Pagel
SYCAMORE. • •
later. We concluded that public ac-
quisiUon was not f~aslble or realistic."
Newport lovestmenl's 16-year develop-
ment peckage would place 2,000 dwelllng
units on the parcel at the rate of 200
units per year.
Intimate de,·elopment would include a:
"cultural center" near the so-called "big
canyon" -the si te of the Christmas 1970
happening thal lured 20,000 rock festival
fans to Laguna.
The cultural CU1ter wou1d include an •.
auditoriwn and an outdoor amphitheater.·.
Adjacent to the center would be a C!ln1!
mercial village for convenience shopping: ~
A network of hiking, bicycling and
equestrian trails would lace the open
space areas, aa.MI Mlller. He stressed the:·
open space land would be for use of all
citizens ()f Laguna Beach.
Miller explained that his plan was con-
tingent on the land, now zoned R·R
(~dential hillside) being rezoned td
PRD (planned residential development)
so that boosing units could be clustered.
He noted that Newport Investments' '
plan would place roughly 1,000 less unit.. ·
on the property than could be allowed un-
der R·R zoning_
Due to the lalenes..'I of the hour, plan..
ning commissioners reserved comment
on tbe extensive proPoS&I.
Jjnk1etter Quote
'Misrepresented'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Promolen ol ..
a Noyem~ ballot initiative to legaflie
person'al use of marijuana have recalled
85.000 pamphlets after entertainer Art
Link.letter said a quote from him abou\
hysteria over m a r I J u a n a wal
misrepresented.
Tim Riley, head of Citizens Opposing .
the MarJjuana Inltlative, made public
Tuesday a letter by Llnkletter ln which he
claims leaders of the inl!iative campaign
misrepresented him in an "obvioUJly
fraudulent attempt to get votes by abus-
ing" Linkletter's name. The entertainer
c.onfinned he wrote the letter.
Proponents of the Nov. 7 ballot ,
measure denied any misrepresentation.
About 50,000 leaflets had been distributed ..
lbrougbout the state, they added.
A reminder from
OMEGAO
STANDARD
TIME
RETURNS
OCTOBER
' 29th
Be sure to
set your
watch BACK
one hour
this Sonday
When you set your watch back, toke o close look at it. It moy
be OCCVl'ott but b if modmn. self-winding? Does It tell the
dote? Or the daf and the dale? Perhopi now 11 the litne to
c;hoos1 on up-to-lhe-1econd Omego. Come in and see the
Otntget fOl'l'l llV of fine timepieces. $65 io Oller $15,(XX).
!foWIM 11MI Nlf.wllldifll; S.-011.., O.Vlllt. Oeilo-t-411119 dlol. $145.00
,.,, _or rt. °"'9110 folflllr.t $lol!!o11 ... 1
J.C. J.J,, mph riej Je1vefer6
1823 NEWPO~T BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TElMS
2r YIARS IN THl SAME LOCATION
(
li'11kAm .... lc1"' .-. M•1ltt Ch•rtt
PHONE 141·1401
l
I
I
t
t
t
\ .
•
Salldlebaek
VOL 65, NO. 299, 7 SECTIONS, 106 PAGES
•
Julie Nixon Eisenhower and Gov. Ronald Reagan chat at the dedica-
tion of a new federal information center in Sacramento. The colorful
ceremony included an appear~ce by a 40-piece high iChool band.
P.lnne Noise Lawsuits
Dt:IQ;y.ed .Again in Court .
• • "!,' • • '~
A further slr:-month delay was~ Beach, Coast Mesa, Corona del Mar and
Tuesday In the trial of jet oobe Intuits Santa Ana ~· Tiiey m b6cked iD
seeking a totafol IU. mllllon~ claffi"ie t h .• i r ~c\IOOI by !lit Oruge O>uqty
despite !lit objections of· lawyers l:IOISO AtiOtemenl Committee.
representing 905 ff a r b o r Area ..
homeorien.
Orange county Superior Co u r t
Presidlns Judge Bruce Sumnet set • new trii.l date of April ·n for the multiple BC"-
tions, three month! earlier than lhe June
date demanded by the: county counsel's
office.
~e are opposed to any delay of any kfud in. these actions," plaintiffa' at-
torney Angele Palmieri said. "OUr
Iawsulta ...... filed mott than three
years ago and we are ni&dy for trial."
Palmieri reprtsenta 905 clients who
argue ln their complaints that property
values in the vicinity of Orange County
Airport. have been drastieally .reduced as
a result of jet flights over thtll' homes.
,All the lawaulta contend ·t.bat ()range
COunty must be held resp0nslble foc the
Jet noise and pollution resultlng frolJl jet
operations since the county authorized
Air West and Air Calitoi'nla to inauguni.te
jet rughts at the county facility.
The plaintiffs are rtsldent5 of Newport
Buses Approved
For Bike Tr~ils
Buses and bicycles 1are the ooly wheel·
ecr Vehicles to be aUowed to roll iri tbe
city of Irvine's painted oo·street bike
trails. City councilmen Tuesday night ap-
proved the first ·reading ol a city law ex-
empting buses -notablftbQle oper1ted
by the Orange County Transit District
-ftom the ban on motor vehicles in bike
tralls. 'I)e: exemptlOn came about at the re-
quest of the bus district which also got
city oouncil approval o( an agreement
proYlding ror city lnslabation 1of signs
and curb painting at bu:i stops. Th& city
wi1l review design of any" bus atop
shell<rs aoilght by tbe district. ,
1 BIKE, 1 A D:
'3 CAiLS, 1 SALE
t, 2. 3. 'Tbat'a just how It went when
the Westminster man offered to sell bis
motorcycle to DAILY P)LOT ,..den.
Tbis Ii tbe ad 111111 IOld It -In ... night
-alter just three phone· Cills'
Road Departme11t
Officials Ur ge
Freewa y Actio11
Early construction of the Corona del
Mar Freeway and the extenaioo or the
Newport Freewty to Pacific Coast
Highway was urged Tuesday night by
Orange County Road Department offici-
als.
Murr1y Storm, assistant road com-
mi_ssioner and William Zaun, division
engineer, also told members of the state
highway commtssion and Division of
Highway officials that the county Is bej.ng
short changed on freeway and highway
construction. "We urge the early construction of the
Corona de! Mar Fretway from tbe San
Diego Freewiy to Jamboree Bo)Jlevard
and the • eXtensiOn of the Newport
Freeway ill the way to the coastal cor-
ridor," Storm said.
The road official listed four priorities
in his talk before ac Orange County
Chambu of Commerce meeting in
Anahelm.
First · priority was the two Orange
Coast area freeways. Second was widen-
ing and improved lntercbanges for. the
(S.. FREEWAYS, Page !)
Council Extends
Irvine Contract
Of Consultant
lrvioe planning consultant E d
Hawotth'J fi,500 a month contract with
the city was extended to Nov, 30 early to-
day followln& a one-hour private person-
nel session of the City Council.
Hawortll, who since sprtng has been
the city's "Planning depart.ment1 will com-
plele projects be lw started and will
also do I SS,700 environmental bnpect
,..port. (EIR) on • city road project.
Councilmen wrangled briefly th~
niornlng over tbe poaibllity of oeeklng
other consultants to preP're the Campus
Drive exten!kln Em.
' Today's Fl•al
N.Y. St.Ge
~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO(tNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1972 TEN CENTS
' I
Rinker Zoning Denied
Irvine Council Delete s R eference w Nois e
By GEORG~ LEIDAL
Of ......... ,.... '
Irvine city cOUncilmen early today
voted to simi>IY. deny" the Har°kiir-Rinlcer
Development Corh.Dant zooing bid and df!le~ any oflict8f> reference to noise in
the council action. • •.
The final action caine after the second
or two secret sessions called to discuss
"pending legal matters'' related to tbe
controversial residential zonlng of 70
acres near El Toro Marine COrpe Air
Station.
Early in the meeling, councilmen con-
ferred ·briefly with City Attorney James
Erickson prior to voting 4 to 1 -Coun·
cilman John Burton opposed -to deny
the zooe change because the Rinker .
parcel is too noisy for those who might
someday live there.
The .second private session resulted ln
a p<>.tt-midni&ht debate that led to strip-
ping the references to noise from the
COl>llcll acUon.
'lbat meastµ"e was approved on a 3 to 2
vot~ wi.J,h Councilmen E. Ray Quigley Jr.
and Burto1r opposed.
Ray Quigley said he couldn't support
the 'denial if it did not make reference to
the noi9e affecting this and possibly other
R&rcels near the Marine Corps facility .
Mayor William Fischbach, however,
Leads Sli1n
noted that noise had not been the "sole
ba.!lis" for bis having voted agalnst the
Rinker zoning.
He suggested that any court which
someday might ~eview the council action
would be required to look at lbe tot.al
hearing record "on which my decision
v·as based" rather than merely con·
sidering the noise question.
Both executive sessions Were requested
by Councilman Henry Quigley who leot
tbe necessary vote to change tbe coun·
cil's earlier approval of the zooe change
which would have placed 500 homes
underneath the mgbt path from the west
Japanese Firm
Plans Irvine
Cassette Pla1.1.t
Detectves Push Probe
A "major transaction" between the
Irvine Industrial Complex and a Tokyo
electronics manufacturer wbo wjll locate
In Policeman's Ambush
a ,$1 million plant in the city of Irvine was announced today. By ARTl,IUR R. VINSEL
TOK Elctronics Company, Ltd., of °' ~net",. ... , •Ntt
Tokyo, said it will set up a cassette tape Teams of detectives NOtkibg around
manufacturing company in Irvine. the clock continue today to track slim
Richard ·Cannon, sales director of the leads ln the ad\bu!h shooting cf'an Irvine
Irvine Industrial Complex confirmed the policeman lured into a trap at a loliely
report this morning. crossroads, thinking he was beaded to
"We have signed an agref;ment with help an injured man.
TDK and we certainly consider thiJ to be Officer Stephen T. Nash, 23, escaped
a ,major transaction. What especially the bushwhacking try at 11 :15 p.m. Mon-
pleases us about it is that It involves a day with onlJ a grazing scar on his
Japanese firm that will be doing il.1 cbeek.
ficer Nash wrote_ a log report under his
dashboard · tamp that they were headed
for a telephone to notify police about the
suspected accident victim. · N'o telepbiones: are l<>cated virtually for
miles around within the undeveloped
sprawl of mm and asparagu.. fields and
it would seem likely they would have
stopped first to investigate-themselves.
Officer Nash left without obtaining
their names and found tbe man lying
(See-AMBUSH, Page Zl . .
runway of the military airporl.
Henry Quigley told the press following
the first closed session that inclusion of
the language regardlng noise in the coun·
cil's denial action "A'Ould likely ease court
reversal of the city action .
Speculation that such coun action
might be contemplated by Rinker waa
strengthened when Walt.er F r o m e ,
secretary of the development firm, aslced:
to borrow city tapes of hearings · and
council deliberations.
Councilmen granted the r«zOOSt pnr
viding Rinker pay any costs incurred lo
the city relative to the tape recording
usage. ·
Caspers Gi ves
Check to Ci ty
"I bring you good tidings
tO!light," said Fifth District County
~.~rvisor Ronald Caspers as he:
ste'pped to the podium of the Irvine
City Council Chambers Tuesday
night
The good tidlngs were In the form
of Ji check for more than $260,000
ccij!Cted by the county for Irvine
p..f·ks.
Caspers, an early opponent or the
incorporation of the city observed
that this was the first time: be'tt
been in the council chambers.
"I guess like a typical in-law, I
gave you a bad enough lime during
the courtship, so I left you a1ooe
during the tmeymoon," ·he quip.
ped.
manuf,cturing here, r'-ther lhan just So far -·belidel the: trtitlal details Qf
,warehousing producls made •broad." , what 11appenec1· and cle8c<tplloos of the B b L N
.Cannon ,saJd ;ivK.w . i.uec1 for 10 . partleo illvi>lved -in-..-are (}fl etfeT" fo ; ""'nn years i 36.000 iii..-. "f<iot induo\rtal tnoWft to bi ... \..., o11>er.-.is' ' ' ' , ' , • . """""
building on Daimler' ~.in tha ·c11y of · · "'-" .,. of Wlllhlp"'-'faolptirlta , , . ,· ., ,
Irvine. The faciilify ·ilO'°"* bf tho , ~· ''~ ::.•, • ·' ' '· • ' • I 1r · ~ iilill · v · -L~ ·.' ~·r,--' ri:twAris!laJM:ikJ~t ., r t.e:a co · , ~,..,... !"YI "·~.~· _J._ P-~
-& Q>n>pany ...... .....,., .. f 1ibe 1 tfiocilil~ .. Oki we11.ay1e • ., • v e 1nltte1JUJ
transaction which ·involves 8 loW 0 "'1r . rolille!Y • pt rtminllcelll or~-• • I '
acreo ol ~mie · property, .a · ~ .. Irvine Ranch '.,_ -. . · coal-llld. " ....._ ftlt.ui dJt I • , J'>D O • "'l'liD 1, for _.,.ion;" nolOd •Nor ~-biilie.i-tbe plol"it !l!e .,..umEM (t.l') -ImeU ,explooive where the letter-bombs had been mailed
Carlni>n "RrrMi inlpiovethenta sucb · ~ • 'iii Mfzey· and< .Birni\oa '• ~ loday delUll!i ~ letter bombs from.
., ~ and maqulacblring facllitlis, · ~ ...... : have · been ~ : ~;ed to'.Prellldlltt Nllron, Seerefa!'Y The Pal .. tine Liberation Orianizatton
are11W!ni .. lnto tbe liullding. . , · sj>eci(lc8fl,fto ·get Off!~ Nufl\ pi\t'l>al" of. State l\'ililaQ\'P.. Rogers and Defense ·in Algiers said one of 11.1 staff wu hurt
TDK will lonn a new subsidiar)', TDK by ...,.....'Wffn ih a grudge agailist tiim. Secretary Melvln R. Laird police Tuesday night by a booby-trapped letter
Colllornii IJic. to operate tbe plant. T!ie ln!hi king facts suppor:t ileilhlr . repcirted ' po:ibnarked from Belgrade.
Production of Cl!lelle tapes ~ expected theory. 1 • E ... : · the ~ to ~iQ,1fu April. . "It WM an.ambush, pure and simpl~" er~ 10 uay, two Jetter bombs Spokesman said the victim's injuries
.lnlllnl capl!Clty ol. lbe Irvine p(anl will declares ~ Mesa Police Detecti~ exploded to Beirut, Lef/antm. Another were slight.
be one million ~ges a month, a TDK Capt. Ed Glasgow. blew up m Algjers M Tuesday night and The Palestine News Agency said •
spok"man In Tolfyo said today. · Clli~ am". the QUeSOOM to lie still aootber was foond in the mall In bomb addressed to a Paleltine guerrilla
1be firm is the first Japanese cassette answered now is whether the would-l;e Calro · leader was intercepted Tuesday at t.be
tape maker to set up a company in the assassin -~bed as, a motorcyde Ei.rl.t .............. we.re wounded tbe U.S.. a move a firm spokesman describ-geog1ype due to b15 appearance-acted 'Ii:' 1&""~b9 addressed . to Nl1on Cairo airport. It said bomb was in a
ed as an effort to reduce Japan's huge alone. ! . . Hogen and Laird w e re found in ~ bollowe<k>ut book wh1cb also had been
trade 19UrPlua to the U.S. Investigators are also seetili:g the .., aorting room of 8 post office in the mailed from Belgrade.
TDK began •marketing CSS!ettes in this cteancut young men in a battered 1955 northern Iaraeli frontier town of Kiryat Letter bombs in July blinded and
country in 1966 and its annual export! Chevrolet who stopped to tell Officer Shmona near the Lebanese oorder maimed two guerrilla leaden tn Beirut.
now total $330,000. Nash it appeared 8 man lying on.ill the Pollce1
said the polltal bombs we're the and· the post office installed an electronic
pavement back down the road was or same type as the fiood of explosive device to scan mall . There was no ln-
Bees Kill Animals ln~P..,ibility due to lbeir military envelopes malled last . month from dication wby it did not inten:epl the
haircuts, Southern accentS, and an okl ~terdam to llraell ~ls and em-bombs today.
RECIFE, Brazil (\11'1) -A bunlng
black clOud of African bees swanned
over the farm of Jose Danilao da Sliva
and killed two horsel, three mules, five
goats and a dog. Sil,va's wife:, five
children and four grandchildren were
stung Tuesday during the attack and a
farmhand was struck in the eye by a
bullet Silva fired into the swarm.
car with out .. f·state pialeti, ill that tbe bllaieo In vorlous parts Of tbe ..... Id. In London, SCotillnd Yard warned tho
· clad in clvillin clothes' are military A 19-ye~ld postal employe was rush-Israeli Embassy agalnllt the possibility ~~1. · ed to a hospital after an uplosk>n
1
~t ~ that a further wave of letter bol;nba
A teletype alert and radio broadcast Beirut pati office a1 the JD(>m1ng 1 mail :V~~ be mailed to Israeli dlpJomati tn
are out for the green-and-white sedan, was being aorted. l.A,llruuu. mintl! its front bumper plus any oc-About the same Ume, another bomb The spokesman said there was no
cupa.nts as potentlal maiertal witnesses went oil ln a 22-story ofi!ce buUd.lng ~lf evidence of any new plot and oo special
in the case a block from the AmerJCan Uruvers1ty, security alert.
They laid when lbey pulled up as Of-~a woman secreLary wu hosp~ta~. Other police sources said, however, Five other pe:noos suffered alight 1n-there were signs that Arab tenwill.s
juries ln the e:iplosions, officials said. planned a new mall bomb campaign over
Aulharitlel said Ibey dJd oot know the Chrilltmu and New Year holidays
' lrvllie Council Action
Here are the major acti<fn.s taken Tuesday night by the Irvlne: City COmlcil:
lllNIIER ZONING: llelcindecl earlier toning approval and voted to deny
residential 1Dlling for 7G-acre parcel near El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
After two executive seuklns, councilmen deleted rea90ning that noise was the
sole con<em '!hoot ~ tODlng from tbe denilll aclion.
LARWIN ZONING: Continued to NO\/. 14 action on the oecond reading o! lbe
zone law to allow 284 homes· to be built on a M-acre parcel in central Irvine. ,
PLANNING CONSULTANT: Voted tb retain Ed Haworth through Nov. 30
at $2,500 a month and granted him 1 '3.700 contract to prepa're. an environ-
mental Impact nporl for the city's Campus Drive extension projecL
CITY COMMrrrEES, Delayed. pending staff study of survey of former
commlttee ril<mbera, _.tlon oo propoeed restructuring of cltlien advloory
bodies.
EDUCATION SURVEY: Voted to pay ll,250 to anolyie portions of the pul>
lle education committee wrvey of lchool chlldl:en In the city.
EDISON UNDERGROUNDING: Reversed planning commilllon nq.W.
meal to under&'rouncl high volfage lines In tbe Irtine industrial Q>mplex ~
age where clly-rppoved 1u1>9taUon will be built by Soulbem Calllornla Edisoo
Company.
BUSES IN TIWUI: Gove inillnl approval to a law exemptil\& Orange
County Transit District bu9es !nim the prohibltloo on vehlcleo otber lhan bl-
eycl using city'• hiu trails.
Irvine Pays Bill
For Mesa Police
Irvine cowx:Ume:n made the first in-
stallment payment oo the city's instant
poltce force Tue!d•y night.
Payment of a 174,1133 bill from lhe
Costa Mesa Police Department was
okayed by a unanlmoua vote.
The: approval covera lhe first three
month& of the two-year contract pro-
viding the new city with lllepped up, 24-
hour protection by a 11).man force of
Colla Mesa tra1ned affk:era and when
needed, that city'• belic:opter patrol
units.
Report on Schools
Slated for Irvine
A retiort . on where and when achool:s
wlll ptobably be noeded in the Irvine
aru wiU bl praented tonisht at 7,11 to
Irvine Unified SChool flfJlrlct 1n111 ... .-1n& In pta Unlvenlty Hiib SChool
lecture room, 4771 campus Drive.
when choked poeta1 oerviceo wiU hamper
security cbecl<a.
Accord1ng to this account, the Israelis
were warned that further boml)o coold
come disguised u ireettng cards or
gifts.
Oraage Cea1t
Weadter
Morning low cloudl and fog will
clear to sunny skies on Thuraday,
with highs at the betehes around
75 rising to 114 inland. LoWI tonl&ht
SS. •
INSIDE TOD"Y
Temie11t• WiUio~' UOO.r
drama "Summtr and Smok1"
lead.I off th1 new orrivoLI fn communtt11 ch1ater thii 10tek at
the L.agt.tno Moulton. Plauhm&H.
See E'nttrtoinment, PaDt• 21-29. ----.. __ .. _ ...... "
f'Ti\ 8
UtN""* 8
-1141 Dr • .....,.... • ---T......... •
HONDA 750, 1'72, KJ.
Borgaln buy. Only I mo.
old. 2,800, ml. Many xtru.
FalrbUI;, rack, blct rest •.
cralh bar, etc. Owner must
sell. ooly 11390 or offer.
J:XX·'.C:UX.
That'! the klnd of action yoU could get ,
too. Try It with an ad of your own1 Dial
the dJrect ltne to 'classltled advenising
results al the DAILY PILOT. MM61f.
Councilman John Burton favort'd the
William Pertlra Architects firm when
llaworth lr.dlcat~ he wasn't sure he
cauld tackle the t1tr1 impact questons
Councilman lleftry Quigley added to tbe
project.
Loter, how""· Howorth agreed that Qulgley.'s request for dlacuulon of ·
alternatlvts to automobile links between
Town Center and lhe 111dustrlal ·complex
would not Increase coall for lhe ElR.
' N()ISE ZOlilNG: Ordered clly !1"'f to prepare ordinance ·~ precloo
levels of aeceptabl4 noioe near reoldential ~-of, tbe cfty, to govern all(>rov·
•alt of both futurt tracb and bflbway loc>llon1.
oa.. Kina. facUltieo planner !or Iha
San Joaquin School District, .\I • 1
-prepored I report 00 IChoof building
needs for lhl entire city baaed on current
how!lng trends.
ni.a..... • .. -. ---. ...,.. .......
I
% DAILY PILOT IS
Com·t Gets
New Appeal
By Sii·han
WASl!INGTON (API -Siriwl Blsllan
Sirhan appealed today 10 the U.S.
Supreme Court to re\!it'4" his C'Ol'l\'lction
al murdering Robert 1''. Kennedy.
Lawyers for the Arab immigrant said a
tea1n of psychlatris\5. p h >' s i c I a n s .
physicists a D d othe:rl hl'"t ll)CO'rtred
.. s1gnlflcant ph)'lk:a1 e\idmc::e'• mat
Sirhan did not fire lbe bullet CID J\me S.
t96&. at the Rote! Ambassador in Lbs
Angeles that blled lhe ~ew \'art
sena1or.
But the n:Hurt of this ,,..,Otlx'.e ~ oot
tmmediate.il' disdo9ed.
'ft)t lawytn said tbe7 are preparing
10 plact their ntw e'rideoce before 1he
California Supreme Q)urt.
Strban was caavicted in April 1969 of
murder and ftvt oounts of ass1u1t to
comm.ii murder tn tbe-~ shooting.
His death sentence wu ftduced last year
'" lile in prlJcn after the: Califofhla
Sup"'""' Court dedored c1pilal punisb-
menl 10 be unconstitutional.
S11ba.D's appeal was prepared by t'A'O
Los Angeles lawyers, Roger S. •Wl5on
and George R. Pt.Ulman.
Thty suggested California appellate
judges strained the laws of 11earcb and
Sf1zure to uphold the conviction because
of Kennedy's national importance.
"It i! evident," said the petitioo," that re~ members of any appellate tribunal
"'OOld can" to be oo record in reversing
1h:-ron\1ctioo of a nondescript Arab im-
migrant v.·bJ was convicted of
aS!a.ssinating Sen. Robert F. Kermedy.
11i·ho undoubtedly was at 1he threshold of
his p1Macle of political achievement -
the Democratic oom.in.atioo for preskleflt
of 1he United States. and with an e1·
cellenc chance to be.."'Ome the nation's
chief e1ecutive.
Sirhan'• lawyers raised a doz.en
challengers to the cooviction in trying to ~·in :: new trial for their J&.year-0ld
client. 1.1ainly. they compla.ined abOut the
way police searched his mother's home
without a warrant.
"In view of this, Jt is recognizable that
appellate review strains to alter the laws
of search and seizure to preserve the
conviction."
KeMedy ll.'as abol just after winning
the Califo rnia Democratic presidential
primary.
Fire Destroys
Big Motor Home
ln Lake Forest
Traffic on Laguna ~ l\.oad was
slowed Tuesda'f att.....Mn u county
firemen battled a fire '31: undetermined
origin which destroyed I lurw1ou1, fr ,500
motor hon".e.
The vehicle, owned by Dick Hosking,
22800 lslamare Lane, Lake Fmst, was
engulfed in flames when three county
fire units, manned by 10 firemen arrived
at the scene, two miles south of the San
Diego Freeway, minutes after the 2: 30
p.m. alann.
They remained on the scene for two
houn, but the camper was reduced to a
meta] skeleton by the lime the blaze was
doused.
Exact cause of the fire ha11 not been
determined, but firemen said the butane
tlnk on lhe motor borne was intact wben
they arrived and did not explode.
Discuss ion Tonight
On Vote Propositions
An lnformaUooat swnmary of the 22
proposltiona on the Nov. 7 ballot wiU be
presented at I o'clock tonltht 1n the
M i· s 1 i o n Viejo Ubrary by the Sad·
dleback Frlendi of the Library.
The public ii invited lo hear lhe swn-
mary, balled on the League or Women
Voters' four-page condensation of the 112-
page information booklet incl uded with
sample ballots. Coples of the .League's
condensation of propasltlon proa and cons
will be available at the meeting.
OU.Mel COAST Is
DAILY PILOT
TIM OfWlll C.1 DAit. Y l"ILOT, whti -.t!idl
k _..... .. ,...,,.,.,_, " ........ w
Ille Or8fltl c. .. '*""-lnl ~ . ..,..
ni. .c111-. M't IUlll!dled, ~ 111fW111
FrldtT; fir Ollle MtM, H"'POrt lffdl.
H""'"""" hKlllF-... ln Vetlly, LMUne
hk!I, lr'llrll'/Stddltbedl ..., San C"""*"'1
S.. Jiii• C•ltl1ltet'IO, A sMo1e ""'"''
lldl!len I. PlllllhlMilll S.till'lltYI Mid SIA:ltrt.
'"'-prlnc:ip.1 Pllllllltflllle plenl II M :ta Wftl
l•r $1 ... t, CM1e .... Ctlllomll, nut.
Ro\trt N:-w,941 Prnlftnt ._ Plilllltllet
Jee• It. C111tlel
Viet "9tlffiot tM 0-. ~
lh•ll'llt w: ••• u ·-1"Mtl A. M11r,hl11e
M•MIM l!ll!or
Clri1rle1 H. Leff ltldtenl P. Nall
AttlMtftt MIMI.._ • .._. --CO.II "'-1 nt Wttl lrf Sin.I .. ..,.,, lttdl1 .......... , ..........
UllWll .,.., nt ... "' ,. ........ HMlll'llllM tetdl1 1111t ._.. ........
"'9 ~I -IMr1" I.I C..IM. ltMI
,....,._ 17Ul '4Mm
a..Hle4 ...... ,, .. '4J..1171
S.. C'lr •fa A• D.,at ITIU
, ......... 4'2.+tff
~ ,.,,. Onllet c..t "''"""" ~ .... -•••• lllltltni1 ..... eff•ltf ......... ... .. .,.,,..._.. !Mnfft
""' • ,..,...... •llllM .... ..,.. ""'*"" .. "llf!tlM ...,.... •
~-:.·~ , ... -....... c--... _ ....,,tf •. w ~ .... .......,, .,, ... fa.'' ......... .......,, ••ur ...,,~.
-·
\,
Absentee Y ote
Deadline Near
Olb---it......Wlorvoltn
lo ...., for ablonlll bollota, OruiO County lltch1ror ol Votert Dl.W HJ-wunod \Qdlf, !lost~ It lhl deadlllil . .......... .... -t to be 1bllot
from their precinct on NO\'. 7 may
apply ror an absent \"ottr b41lot
either by mail or In person at the
Regiitt11r_ of Voters ofhct." Hltcb-
t"O<'k OOv1Sit'd. ..tr rt"'Qut"Sting an abstnt ballot by
nWl the \'Oler mus1 include his
namt. residence .:iddrus, legal
sicliAtutt and tht realOn why he
will be un11ble to vote at the polls
M No\ 1:· Hilchcock added.
He said the registrar's office
located a1 1119 E. Chest.nut St ..
Santa Ana. ~·ill bl' open on Satur·
da\' from 9 a n1 . to 4 p.m. and on
~!Ondav .and Tue.tday evenings until
t p.m. 'tor tht: convenlcnct of ll'.ose
Yti stung to apply for absentee
ballots.
From Page 1
AMBUSH ...
•
face down In the road"'·ay, his hands hid-
den beneath him.
He suddenly leaped up. crouching com-
bat-6tyle with both hand! training a long.
nosed revolver at the palrolman'!!t head,
leading him to lunge sideways and gun
the engine in a futile allempt lo run the
man doY.n.
A slug -possibly from a .38 caliber
~·eapon -smashed through t h e
y,·indshield glass. grazing Nash's left
cheek as he swerved the squad car
around to obtain a defensive po3iUon
behind the driver's door.
He was unable to get his shotgun out of
its bracket quickly enough while crouched
over the front seat fore the Oeeing
gunman was out of nge in the adjacent
dark, log·shrollded eld Uned with stalks
of corn.
'
Ad"eriwy Bit .
Reag ·n Opposes
Coast Initiative •
' SACllAMENTO CAP) -Gov. llon1ld
Req14 coodemned adverliAlng qalnst
the coastline initiative today a s
''misleading," but said he opposes the
measure as a tlareat to California's
economy.
Re1gllll oaid be opposes the coastllne
measure beca~ , be believes it will
throw thousand!!t ·of Californians out of
work and cause .. stagnation" of
Calt!omia's economy.
"I lhink whal bas happened in the
Mammoth ..,. •.• ii nolhiJii co!llpll'ed
to what wW happen U Prop. 20 ......,,•'
he said in reference to a state SUpreme
Court decision on environmental impact
reports whlcb builder:> say b bringing
Bicycle Trails
Group Revived
In Irvine Area
Although Irvine city councilmen Tues·
day night delayed action on restructuring
all their old cltiren commlttees, one
group -the bike trails study committee
-was revived to plan for off-street bicy·
cle trails.
Councilmen approved . an amended
version of Councllman Gabrielle Pryor's
motion to direct the bike trails group to
look at an oil.street trail through
Univenity Regional Park before park
construction precludes possibilities for
such a trail.
.o..t.ilctlon to 1 bait.
Asked ll I MWI coatertnae lboUt
Whltal<er Bad Baxter • 1 • n • Y ad-Verlisements qainat ,,_ Ill wbicb aay
'Don't pAdloCI: the ...;..tr. RM1111 aald,
"Thts II milltodlnl. U bu II-the lm-
prellioo peo~ will IOI bt able lo ... lhe
coaltllne, Whldl ii not -·" . The Rep\lbllcllil governor llllcl be
ftgrets" foes ol Prop. IO hatt taken thet
&IJPl<8ch, tddfn& "I w!ob Ibey "9d
adverti&ing oo the rui faults ol lbe pro-
p&lUon."
Reagan llid lhll aboul olher lniliatlve .
measures on the Nov. 7 ballot:
PROP. 14 -m W•-Inltlall ..
"wiU brlnf liloal ~" 11 .... 0 said.
He criUcioed . i... Anfleles -Philip Watsoo'1 dailn Ibo ,.....,. \I Ill
balance .IJeG!lu.e, ...... llid, lbll'.• ....
ly -u the ·Jl11111fe will ............ ctlll in f,,.is lor looll ldlooll: ,
"You cannot have l<hool ll!Mdcts lib
l.oo •Allgeles Ml! Son I!rllldlJ:o uve
thel:' 11<hool ~ Qlj vlrlllllly' In
helf .. he. uJd.'-; 1, •.
PROP. 15 ... The· ..Werlillnfl , .. lbe
CalUomla State ~·A-•Jaa ln-
itlatlve to take a~ the govtmor's veto
ovu state employe pay nJRs "II the
~ blatantly dl•"'Mt blllot camPlllD
I have ever wltnesaecl" filled · wftb
"outrageous untruths," the governor
said.
The chief executive criticized ad-
vertising which """eots Prop. )&·-1<1
"put a lid on state elllploye R&Y
salaries."
PROP. 18 -The obocenlty measure
should be pa....t, Reagan said, hecall3e
since a similar measure was defeated in
1966 "all tbal has happened ii thet
pornography and ob'scenl.ty hive grown
worse."
DAILY PILOT 11'" "'*'
• ,.
. ..
,·
' • •
Officer Nash took cover after radioing
for help, bringing fellow pattolmen and
ultimately an army of 150 lawmen from
numerous agencies, including four scent-
tracking dogs.
Atayor William Fischbach urged such a
study should al9o include sugg~tions for
provision of a citywide system. He noted
he "can hardly wait" to pedal from
University Park to the open spaces and
eucalyptus windrow1 of north Irvine.
As far the remainder ol the city com·
mittees, the council opted to await staff
recommendations on which should be ap.
pointed depending on citiz.en interest and
specific areas needing study.
PROP. 22 -The Governor qaln en-
dorsed the farm labor lniUaUve, aaylng
that be believes the advertilina qalnst
that m e a s u r e hu been 11fal8e and
misleading." Spooky Time ..
The victim also chose oot to trail his
attacker into the field after he ran from
a wlndbreak of eucalyptus trees, a creek
ravine cutting through the far side of the
area or any other cover. From Page 1
He feared he mlgbt be set up for a
secondary ambush by the long-haired,
bearded gunman or even possible ac-
cottrplices waiting in the mu d d y ,
recently-irrigated fannland.
FREEWAYS. • •
''1'bere are a tnillon places to h\de out
U>ett," Detective Sgt. Keith Carpenter
remarked .
The ma)or manhunt wa!!t disbanded at
10 a.m., after a long, Bleep\ess nigh\ for
sliote:11n-cariy\ng lawmen poking throo.gh
U{e 'field ~ith one officer for every five
""" ol otrn.. q Patrolmen still covering the scene later
In the day, however, captured four
youths, two juveniles and two 18 year
olda, driving two cars around the area.
One flt the description of the vehlcle
which -purposely or by near·traglc
coincidence -lured Officer Nash inlo
the murderous trap the night before.
They were taken to headquarters for
que.tioning, where the four shaken young
men were released after it was
determined they were only curious
sight11een1 who heard of the ambush.
Detective Capt Glasgow said today it
is not likely the gunman lying in wait had
singled out Officer Nash due to any past
lnvolvement with him.
Stationing of patrol cars with.in the
rural area .meant two shills overlapped
during a two-hour period ID 1'hich the In-
cident occurred.
Despite Protests
Santa Ana and San Diego tree.ways, and
third a ooeed1na up ol widening of the
Newport tr.way between the Santa Ana
Free'ffay and the Riverside Freeway.
7.IUD ompl>ui2ed that by 191111 only the
Riveraide Freeway eut of the Newport
Freeway ud the San Diego Freeway
south of its junction with the Santa Ana
Frffwl)' would be adequate to carry an·
Uctpated trafftc laodt. 1
•
"DeleUon of the Pacific CoaSt Freeway
rhay even overload the soUth end of the
San Diego by that time," ziun said.
·A fourth point urged by the county
road officials was the fact that Orange
County bas onJy $8 million allotted to ii
for freeway and highway conslruction in
the 1971-74 state budget.
"In 1969 our allotment was $2.S million
and we feel that budgeting only two per-
cent of the overall state hiahway spend·
ing program for Orange CoWlty when
we have eight percent ol the state's vehi-
cle regi11b'ation total ill unfair," Storm
said.
Attending the Chamber of Commerce
dinner was Winston Fuller of San
Marino, chairman of the State Highway
Commil&lon and Haig Ayanian, chief
englfieer for Dlltrict ~ (Southern
Calilomil) ~[ the Dlvlsim! oj Hl&hways. •
Council Backs Police
Copters in Fiery Meet
By L. PmER KRIEG
OI ,,,. DellY l"lltl llltf
ln a tense confrontation punctuated by
lnvecttves . Newport Beach counci1Jl1cn
Tu e!K1ey night agaln told 8 cltlten group
protesting police helicopters that they
an! not about to order them out of the
air.
The council's reaffirmation of support
for police helicopters came after fonner
Newport·Mesa school trmtee Donald
Strauss threatened to start a recall ac-
tion against the council unle81 the
whirlybirds were grounded.
l.oog·tlme Newport re11ident Allan Beek
alao alleged that Police Chief B. James
Glav11 falsified his report on wayB to
reduce helicopter noi11e.
Glavas was al50 branded a s
"egotlstlcal" and was accum!d of
"bulldlng up him ego with a great police
force invading my privacy." by Paul
Crawford, 120 Emerald Ave.. Balboa
Island.
Straus, who resigned his school boa.rd
seat earlier this year. represented the
citizens group called Helicopters Limited
formed two months ago to demand the
heHcopten be u.sed only for emergency
calls, not for routine P•trol.
"Initiative 'Ind recall al'il t w o
attematlves If you don't (ollow the w\.sbes
of the people," Strauaa !Jlld.
Earner, Betk, another l1ellcopters
Umlted spokesman, had chnrgtd there are "two 1Jating, e\tfdently deliberate
errors" In Olavaa' niport.
. B4ti 'cbil'ged that tho report Nid
hollCoplen llylnl at • lowlil' rpm were
Iii decibels q\ileter In ~ recent lest when
'1
\ .. ..
iu fact !hey were only two decibels
quieter.
Glavas bad been promising to lower
rpms to quiet the heUcopters as soon as
the Federal Aviation Agency allows il.
GlBvas' report also said the depart·
me.nt haa received only seven noise com·
plalnts since the Sept. 11 helicopter hear-
ing -wben councilmen gave a 7 to a
vote of confidence to the air patrols -
while Beek claimed "l kno'w one person
who penonally has complained nine
times himself."
Glaves did not respond to e,ny o( the
charges and Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis
was obv\Oll!:ly bitter aftl'.lr Crftwford's
n1me calling. , t
"l wouldn't dlgn1fy your etatement.B
with an answer," MclMta snarled and
then fell Into a debate wheri he tnformed
Crawford that he had spoken a minute
over the five-minute limit.
11lf you've been looking at the clock
you apparently haven't been listening to
me," Crawford shot back.
"l dqn't have a one-track mind," Mein·
nis retbrted.
"Now I don't want to start a riot or
even hold the counc1I captl" until tbe
M:llcopte.~ art taken out of the air," the
2$-year-old' Crawford said, appamitly
trying to be runny.
Earlier be hod complained about not
being able to walk akJng tbe bayfront on
Balboa Island at nlJht without the
~r flyina ov-.d and ohinin& Its .potµiJll on him.
11The\1t Why God cl'tlited 111.gbt/' he
said, "eo we could hJde ln It If we WJnt
to .. ..
I
Planners Lose
Another Idea
Jackie Butrya contemplates her pumpklh solemnly. Perhaps she's
thinking about the spooky goings-on to be held at Linda Vista School
In Mission Viejo from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Saturday. The PTO has
scheduled a Halloween Carnival for youngsters. The school .I! at 25222
Pericla Drive. McDonald's Restaurant in El Toro is donating the bam·
! burgers for the fund·raiser.
To Irvine Council
Irvine Planning Commis!!tloo, 0 -City
Councils. •
That's the score on council defeetl of
suggestloll! ·lrom the !nine pllnning
commW!lonen to date.
For the third time in a row Tuesdly
night, councilmen flaUy tabled without
explanation a ~luUoo urged by the
commls!!tlon.
Trio Posing as Repairmen
Kill Two During Holdup
The latest defeat Involved. Ttfernl of
pending zoning or tract map .miattera
deemed to require environmental impact
reports back to the commlasion for
revlew.
Nice idea, said oouncllmen, but City
Attorney James Erickson warned the
gesture ls contrary to law. The motion to
table passed unanimOU8ly.
Earlier commission auggestton1 burled
by the council involved two attempll to
rewne lo agricultural use propertlet in
central and norlh Irvlne whlch presenUy
are unplanned.
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
J, C. HUMPHRllS
QUART CRYSTAL WATCHES
~1:any w a t c h manufacturers
stress the extreme accuracy of the
new quartz crystal watches. AJ.
though tbe5e clalms are justified
as the watcll. leaves the factory,
maintenance of this accuracy is UD·
predictable. • Continued quartz witch accuracy
depends upon the quartz cry!!ttars
ability to keep vtbrat1n1 at • con·
slant freqqoncy w)len su~Jected to
normal use after you buy il
The natural ,frequency of any
quartz crystal la •ubjecl to changes
due to 1glng, ohock and 1llght tem·
perature vari1tto111, all beyond the
control of the manufacturer be-
cause reactions vary trom one crys..
tal to another rogardlu1 of quality
or source. Further, ratu of quartz
witches are not rea4i11 ldjtatable
by tbe duler.
Al an independent jeweler, we
ara particularly free to lllato all the
f1cts about anything we aell We
want you to know that extrtme ac-
curacy claim• by many manuta~
turer1 may not be fullfllltd In 1ctu-
al use until qulrlZ crystal watcbea
have proven their dependability,
your beat buys are ·atlll the hlgbly
accurate chronometers, tuntn1 fork
and conventional watches.
ARUNG.JON, Vo. iuPI) -Three
white igunmen rrrmquerading a s
telephone companyi repatnnen shot and
killed a branch bank manager and a
police orficer during a holdup attempt to.-
day at a btgb rise complex just outside
Washington.
hats , Or8/lge jackets and green pants,
entered the bank after.i.Afing telephone
cables ln a nearw-manhole and In-
terrupting telephone service to the
maulve -a:overnment-buslnesa-apartmeot
cornples:.
It ii located In an area known as
"Crystal CJty," near th';. Pentagon.
The men told the manager, Harry J .
The men escaped with no money, and
one was reported possibly wounded dur-
ing the gunbattle ii" the bank branch.
A woman teller sufffftd a bead wound
and was In fair condition at a hospital.
Tbe band.ill. dressed lo yellow hard
Candee, 33, of Vienna, Va., they needed .
to wwk on the bank's phone lines. He:.
tOok them to a back room where be was
shot and killed, poUco said.
• .
A reminder from
OMEGAO
STANDARD
TIME
RETURNS
OCTOBER
29th
Be sure to
set your
watch BACK
one hour
this Sunday
Whtn you Ml yOUt watch bock, lo~• a close loo~ at ii. 11 may
be occvroi. but ls II mc>dtrl'\ sell.wlndlnq? Oots II tell th&
dat1? Or m1 cloy arid tht dote? Per hops now l1 the llm1 to
choose an up.to·lhe-stcond Omega. COn'le ln and 1ee the
Omtga Fomllv of 1111411mepi1cu, $65 to over $15,0IXI.
StolftlMI Ii.el 1elkli!l<lill(t Smo111c11i .. OeVlll•. ~~"' llllol, $14$.00
Ml 01>e ol lfl• Orll900 fo."111~ ol S.0.1ttt1
J.C. .JJ.u m1~hriej Jewelrj
llll NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENl5Nf TERMS' l111kA1r1•rf1•'11 -Mt.tor Chtr9•
21 Y!AkS IN THE SAM& LOCATION PHONE 141•J40t ...,
•" I ( I
-.
•
M
was
on lo
presi
and
the
apj)la
war
forge
ano
area
and
wale
F
J
to
1
I
Peace His Iss u e,
•
McGovern Claims
,.
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Sen. George
MG<Jov.m bu decllnld that he wtntJ
peace and "I don't give 1 damn" about
the el~ Impact -but he.JI iell-hli voters they would he foollab to Bide
with Pr<sident Nbton !or acblevlng any
Vietnam .. ttlement now.
~ potnl 'l'lleldly lbal I peooe accord DOW
would no\ destroy his prdfdeGtW proo-
pec!J but •woo1a c1eau.. Mr. NJXon."
l.atu, he 111<1 II might help the Precideol
pollllcllly. Bui ho tldded :
"It would he a very fooUsh wt.r who
would "'" for Mr. Nixon In prtf.,.... to GeorgeMcGovem Uthe illue 11 the war.
Mr. Nixon for inany years hal supported
American lnvolvemtnl In Vietnam. Dur·
Ing all tbofle yean, I have been.opposed
1he llm>ocratlc presldeollal no,rntnee
..id whether or not Nlson endl the war,
"No matter what he does, 11' ought lO
help me ... " Ha aald NISOll lhollld ha••
ended the war four years ego.
McGovern denied that be wu seeking ( )
In advance to blunl the polllical effect CAMPAIGN '7~
'1lould N-.. ttle the conlllcl before the '-· -----------'-election 13 days hence. -
Charges Dropped
The Air Force has ruled out
Wed0t!dlY, O<tob<f 25, 1912 • DAILY PILOT II
I·
Niron Key Aide, 4, Otlwrs Tied w Fund .
WASIIlNGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on's chief of staff, H. R. Ha1deman, was
ooe of five close Nb:oo usoclates who
controlled a secret campaign spying and
sabotag4) fund, The W ashingtor. Post
reported today.
The Poot said It based the report oo in·
formation tram federal investigators and
aCCOl.Dlts of rwom testimony gaven to a
grand jury tnvesUgating the June 17
break·in at Democratic national head-
quarters tn the Watergate building.
The newspaper said it has been told
that Haldeman, a Nixon aide for 16
yean, and the four others authorized ·to
make payments from the secret fund
were Identified in grand jury testimony
by Hugh W. Sloan Jr., who quit .as
treasurer ot the Nu:m campaign
organization shortly after the Watergate
break-Jn.
paign, has told the grand jury that oae
who received money from the fund was
G. Gordon Liddy, the Post said. Liddy la
one or seven men under indictment in
COMection with tbe Watergate break·in,
the incident which set off the disclosures
of an alleged GOP sabotage ring.
The P .. t quoted federal Investigators
as saying that upenditurea o/ hundreds
of thousands ol dollars -all approved by
either Haldeman, Stans, M l t c b e 11 ,
Magruder or Kalmbach -were made
from the fund to finance an undercover
" operation aimed at d J 1 c r e-d I t 1 JI I
Democratic candidates. •
Meantime, Atty. Gen. Ricbard 0-1
Kleindien!t told newsmen T\letday ~,
the Justice Department hal oo ucredJ~
evidence" that federal laws were ·
violated by the alleged acts of tabotage
and that be feels DO probe o/ the alleg&-
tions ls warranted. f
KleindEnst told newsmen: 4'Get the
evidence to me that would indicate that a
specific person bas violated a specific
criminal Jaw, and my department will in-1
vesUgate it." :
Havenly Change ' '
Beer-stained Bar Beco m es Church
McGOVERN'S STATEMENT Tuelday
was ~t at ooe by candldai. Nix·
on four yeats ago when a DetnocraUc
president aJ1!)0UDOld a bombtng pause
and bJ'Ol\de~ j>eace talks just bo,fore
the e1ec11oo. ·McGovern said be ...Wd
applaud Nixon U the Pr<sldenl ended the
war but lidded that Americans shouldn't
forget "be kept ii going aeedleosly for
another four yeara ...... "
to ll So U, al the eleventh bour, just
before we start counUng the votes on
Nov. 7, be finally twitches bls position
and ends the war I don't think the ·voters
are going to aay 'Hooray for Mr. N'11on.1
I tblnt they~ going to say 'We're glad·
he finally cauie around to George
McGovern's position.• "
coti.rt-martial charges agaihst D~ WBh'E HOUSE pr es s
Maj. Gen. John D. Lavelle, say-secretary Gerald L. Warren declined . FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) recollections, but It doesn't bother the""
ing his firing was punishment comment oo the Post report. He referred 1be tables down at Smitty',a .,.here the Rev. Oscar Garcia that bis new church •
McGOVERN ALSO SAID he thinks his enough for last winter's unau-nelnmeo to a White House stat.emellt old-timers dwelt are on· their .way out. was once a bar. ~
The South oa1w1a senator said a1 one
campaign and hit opposlttoo to the war thorized bombing of North Issued lo the Post, saying that "The The beer-stained bar, wilJ ,IOOO he replac-"I like the idea, turning lhtngs upside ,
0 probably forCed Mr. Nixon to do Vietnam. refe~ to Bob Haldeman is untrue." ed by an altar. dowp," says the Rev. Mr. Garcia, a Bay l
somethirig th.It be didn't wanl to do" in ~ todai7~a a~t and in previous , On Dec. 1, Smitty's R~yerside· Bar, of figs veteran who was among the •.
tryJng to end the cooflicl. reports, the Poot named these othen as long a favorite !Javnl of· beer· drinkers, prisoners President Kennedy paid $50,000 '.;
Four S ig~tings
In Bogg s' Hu.nt
Prove Dead-ends
In 1peecbes, raflleo and ~vision ap-coo~ o/ the fund : will become a haven of another sort -to have released from· a Fidel CaS1ro jail :•
pearances, McGovern said tbal Nixon Woman Reports -';John N. Mitcbell, former attorney the Jerusajem ~~TamPt.-, BeUy Smith, a Fort Laudenlale widow
can get 00 settlement terms now that he g~ aµd the first director of the com-'l'1le transformat1on·might disturl:(9(11De who ran the bar for 12 years, sa)rs it was )I
could not have bad four years ago. infd~~, for the Re-election of the Pres!-of Smitty's 0Id regulafS, now cut Off froJJli .ia quiet place where the elderly could ,
McGovern said that is "the tragedy of Role in 'Plot' .,... their place o/ gossip, solace and familiar oome and have a drink ol beer or wine In "
thla whole buslnesa of Mr. Kis!Jing~ --1.iaiir!.:eJI. Stans, fonner Commerce peace." I
orblllng around the world" tn the days Sectetary and oow director of the Mrs. Smith closed tbe bar Sepl 1 aftet ,
before an election. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -A 26-year-old FiiJance Coounittee to Re-elect the owner Hortensio Delgado refused to r
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -Hopes
a>ntlnued to turn into frustrations in the
search for a light plane missing for nine
days with House Democratic Leader
Hale Boggs and three other persons
~~
"Did you make all these sacrifices, Mr. aide to a Republican stale legislative President. Two Catholics renew her lease. .,
Nixon, to save your own political face candidate sar she infiltrated state head--Jeb Stwtrt Magruder, onetime White Delgado's wife said her husband decid· ,
from rigbt·wlng critlcisn1?" McGovern quarters o Democratic presidential House aide and now deputy director of . ed to tum the bar into a d:wrch after he
said at a rally 00 the rainy steps ol the hopeful Seo. Edonmd s. Muskle during the Nixoo campaign committee. Die-Reveng e? met the Rev. Mr. Garcia and "tbe divine , Dayton, Ohio, courthouse. Florida's Marcb primary campaign on lightning" struck him. "
0 Ending the war is not going to be in· behalf of the GOP. -HERBERT w. KALMBACH of Rom The Rev. Mr. Garcia, 47, says be ,
Four separate sightings were reported
Tuesday, but all turned out to be dead-
enda, u..bai.e all the leads 10 far In tbe
search which hes covered 148,000 square
miles or rugged Alaska territory between
Anchornge and J\Dleau, the path of the
missing plane.
terpreted by intelligent voters as a Patricia "Peg" Griffin told the Tampa Newport Beach, described by the Post as C:~~ ~b1le; J:ath·wt~ discovered rellgim. while in a CUban jail .
reason to support Mr. Nixon because it Times Tuesday she was recruited by Nimn's personal attorney. The White Re Ii when another prisoner gave blm a copy ,
would lll£all that be simply baa done Rober\ Benz, who lmlil last week was House disputes that descrlplioo, but 18ys pitchforks near the Irish pub . c of the New Testament. •
aomelblng rve been advocating for many campaign manager for GOP F!Drida Kalmbach has handled some personal border may have been killed in Now, every evening, members o/ the ,
years," McGovern said later. House candidate Conway Brock. She said legal matters ror N"uon. revenge for the shooting of a~-new church's congregation spend their ~.
He also said that South Vietnamese she was hir:ed by Benz to pose as a ~ The sabotage fuyd, according to the time Pro~~':t soldier ,:;k ays free thne at Smitty's, installing pews .
President Nguyen Van -Thieu apparenUy Muskie volunteer. Post, was a cache of 88 much as f700,000 ag~d· toda t · army esman whe eronce the Juke box and pool table .
has veto power over current efforts at a "I'm actually relieved you found me," held in Stans' office safe. sai ay. stood. •, All electronlcally equipped HC130
aln:raft ..... crisscrossing the search
area throughout the Digbl Wednesday,
aod two Coast Guard cutter> plied the
waters of the Alaska coastline.
cease-fire. she told a newaman Tuesday. "This bas 1be anny said one rictim was a The tranronnation of Smitty's Into • .
"We ought to terminate any further been an awful weight 00 my conscience. 'lbe Post said it has learned that all member of the lri!b Republican cblll'Cb is not yet complete. The windows ·•
relatiomhlp with this dictator Instead or I'd been waiting for that knock on the five men have been questioned by the Anny and tfle other also apparently still bear the brand names of popular
letting him dic~te· American foreign door, and now I'm glad it's finally FBI about disbursements from the fund. was connected with the ffiA. beers and above the door printed in tbict ,
policy," McGovern •-:ld.=-_____ .:.co::m:::::•·_" ____________ s=loo=n:..., .::.the=-:::":..·l::.re=as=u=re::r__.:::ol:....:th:::e-'-' :::ca:::m:..·_.:.============:_:.bl::ac::k:..:l:::et=te::.":..ls::.:the=-wo=rd:.....:"B::.•::r:..·" __ _
Peron Reportedly
To Try Comeback
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -church 's House of Bishops In
Fonner Argentine dictator New Orleans, effective May,
Juan 0. Peron4'1 11@1-~ 17,1. • . ;i ::;
to ArgeoUoa Noll It $0 /i¥ ~ • 'tlnbr l'ff'e •
make 1\,-poliUoal cnmebact,, , _ • . .
the ~ <ironica said • BALTIMORE (. ) ~ Tiie' ' '
Tuesday. former security director or the I
~ said Peron ...Wd ny Atomic Energy Oimmissioli
from ,Madrid Nov. 16 with his faces arraignment in federal
present wife, Isabel, and ar-court here next week on
rive in Buenos Aires the next charges of attempting to
day aboard a c b a r t e r e d defraud the AEC credit union
airliner. out of more than $33,000 ln an
The newspaper said the alle&ed shakedown scheme.
William T. Riley also is ( J charged with filing false flnan-JN SHORT... clal slatemenla c<lncernlng ~ , money borrowed from other employes.
preserved body of bis fonner
wife Eva also would be
brought aboard the same
filgbl.
Eva, a blonde former ac-
tress, helped Peron launcll his
diclalorsblp In ArgenUoa in
IMS, and married bim the
same Year.
e Bishop Quits
NEW YORK (AP) -After
eight years as presiding
bishop of the 3.5 mlllion-
member Episcopal Church,
the tu. Rev. John E. Hines
has announced plans to resign
later this month at the age of
62.
Btshop Hines, whose term
extends until 1971, said Tues-
day tie wlll tender bis "'81gna-
llon al a meeting o1 tbjo
U,I T.._....
U.ees l•H
N1WBman Peter Bridge
leaves E • 1 ex County
Jab In Newark where
be hld spent 21 days
for refusing to answer
grand J u r y quesUons
concerning crime.
• KKK Foe D e ad
ST. MARTINVILLE, La.
(AP) -Former Congressman
Edwin Willis, who a s
chairman of the former House
COmmlttee on Un-American
Activities liat\led the Ku Kha:
Klan, is dead at the age of 68.
Willis died Tbpraday olgbl
Services will he held today
at St. Martin of Tours Roman
calboHc Church 1n thiJ tiny
south LoWsiana comrnwllty
where Willi! was born.
He bad been In lit he~th
since his last term, suffering
from various ailments. •. ,,.u (Jprisl119
' AUSTl!j, Tex. (UPI)
l'lllke firing teargas have
dwged the fifth floor of the
Travis County jail and .....,..i
tt>roo hostages held b y
prbOners in an UDSUCCeuful
escape attempt.
No one ,... tnjured. Order
· was restored about an hour
alter..tw.o jajlers and a nurse ...,. ea~ -by -lour
prtsonera who tried to lrlide
the hottages' UveS for their
freedom !ale Tuesday.
Yule Fete
Schedttled
A <Jrlslmu-buaitt will he
held Nw. M al Ille CJ>urdl o/ Re1liloWl Sdence al t.aguna
C8nyoQ 'ROod 8ftd El Toro Road. '
The publlc; Is Invited lo
brow1o In Ille boutique ol
baJ>dmlde Item., m I n l ·a r t
pllery 8ftd -blbd ,...SS from 10 1.m. lo I p.m.
Thero will alao be I dra~
for a handmade, ll·lnch doll. Sandwlclioo 8ftd colfee Will he
-_yeti.
FOr more lnlonnallon, call
Mn. Shlrlq Mclol1re at
8374131 or the c:burdl.
'
• •
ASK
SAFTl-FLIGHT
FISK
PREMIER
95 •ILV POL YPTEft CORD 1Zf.R" TftUD DIPT1f
lnDl 71 IERIES TllfAD'.
~1211'81
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DUAL WHITEWALLS
WIDE 71 SlRIES TREAD
4 Pol.,. ..... Cenl Plies Phn 2 fibe"Jleu .. .._
....
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I
BUENA PAIK
1eu•lhll.•Lllfw1l11 • IJOl leacllllwd.
523°3040
....
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T...._Tn ........
$18.95 $18.95
17.95 19.95
19.96 21.96
HJS.14 1"'1 • 22.95 24.96 HJS.1S ..
All .,.lal 1W1 ,..._ llL T-. NII TIU
MOUMTIMG & •OTATK* Willi Tiil• l'UJl.CHASL '
------------HSl ST ANDA ID DUTY
SHOCKS
2·FOR
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BUENA PARK COSTA MESA u..... .. v:=-i Yin • Hwbot ..... ot WIMll
2200 Hwla•lhd. MIS u.colll ft. ,
826-5800 548·2082 "
I '
•
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SAFTI..0.ASSIC mu;>
.0LYDTE" COfllD/FIBERo&.Allm'l'ED WIDE 71 RRIEI ~EAD
12/lr fflEAD DEJ'TH
SANTA ANA . WESTMINSTER
~St. ot Mstol • 15440 ..........
400 •• , ••• , leacll llwd: ot Mcl'addu
546-7832 892·2088
'
I
" '·
-
• DARY PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE
No Cause for Panic
Disturbing news ('ame last week in ltvine as the U.S.
Ar 1ny Corps of Engineers re \·eaJed its survey of the
f\cx1di n~ haza rd s in the San Diego Cree k and Peters
C'an\'On \1 RSh areas of the ne\\' city.
· \\'h1 le the re port highlights dangers att.endilnt . lo
r;1n1p;1nt unpl anned development of the central Irvine
prtipl'rti<>s \\ hirh 1u1ght be expected _to. be flooded dur·
111" Jn !li.stor1c storm . reason not paruc 1s the byword of th~ en ginee rs' recommendation s.
'iaine n1ay ,1·ave the study a~ut frantic3:1Jy bop.
ini:: lo ~t Jrc r ublic officials and res id~nts to.act ii; haste.
1:u1 ,111\ o;:uch prophets of gloo m will be . ignoring the
f :.ii:t lhJt this studv covers only a small portion of Orange
l·ount\' :i nd 1h:it ileighboring cities -sotne already de-
1 cl opCd -n1ight well suff~r even more fro m a storn1
of 1he m.:ignitude disc ussed 1n the study. .
1'his 1s not to say officials in lrvine should ignore
lhf' ~111 dr Halhr r. 11 is to be expected th e knOY>'ledge of
env1ronrl1 cn talists on the planning commission and
cou nL"il and the vie,vs of th ose \\'h.o are more d~velop-
1ncn1 mu1 rlcd in Irvi ne \\"iJI resuJt 1n a comprom1se.
Banning buil ding u1 f!ood·prone areas is no com·
promise. .
Allo\\·1ng unbridled developm~nt. people v.'lth Ufl?d·
1nagniJyin g roofs. patios and paving 1.s no compromise
ei ther.
Irvine \rith its va st open spaces y~~ to be defi~itive·
Jy planned is in a position fe\v other cities ~av~ enjoyed.
'!'he ans\ver may lie in development districts .. They
<'redit developers \vho are \villing to forego profitabl~
co nstructi on in the most severely threateaed areas of
the citv in favor of increased densities elsewhere. .
Corps' study nay weU provide Irvine officials the basis
for planning opportW1ity, not gloom.
Irvine Will Stay Green
The size of the new city of Irvine was ghphkally
demonstrated with the news last week that 22,582 trees
had been removed, legally, by the Irvine Company.
The large number of trees, rnosUy citrus and a few
eucalyptus, were removed from ranch groves. Most
were diseased or dead.
The t<>tal reflects oruy two percent of the more than
I million trees remainmg on Irvine Ranch property
\vi tbin the new city.
FurtherJ a massive program or replanting lemon
avocado ana grapefruit trees, instead of orange tr~
is under way.
Since incorporation and passage of the city's tree
preservation law, 12,500 new citrus and avocado trees
have been planted. Another 18,700 will go in in spring
and another 42,000 are due for planting in the next thr~
or four years, the company predicts.
. Further, in 1972, 10,000 eucalyptus were planted
1n new windrows or as replacernenls for dead trees. ln t~e ,next five years, ~0,000 more will join them in the
('1ty s shrubbery skyline the city law was designed to protect.
And, all these trees include not one of the tens of ~tousands of plantings the Irvine Company has required
in greenbelts and along new city streets i.n residential.
commercial and industrial areas of the city.
'
nCcognizi ng as they do that concrete channehza-
11on \1ould blight the city's natural \Vatercourses and
the dcs1r£'s of residents to protect open spaces, the
Although carefuJ. examination of tree cutting permit
requests. shouJ.d be maintained, it is apparent the spirit
of the city law I<> keep Irvine green is being observed. 7t's the ultimate in women's shoe styles ... modified
army combat boots!'
• •
What A<lults
Don't Botlier
To Consider
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
Thoughts at Large:
Too few adults bother to consider
"'h.ether so many of the attitud~ and ac-
lions of young people have arisen
beca use ol .. the times" -which is a
"ague cop--Qut -or because we. in·
div idua\ly and collectively, have lost our
M·\ of values. and retain no clear un·
rll1rstanding ol the proper ttlationship
bet\veen the individ·
11:1.l and society. • •
Is there no way to
get people to stop
saying ''No way"
wi th such nauseating
rcpet~tiveness? •
The most ineffe<'·
lual ad r can ever
rl'ca/I seeing is one from the American
Lamb Council. depicting a businessman
saying to his colleague : "He's important
to us. Let's take him to a restaurant that
'-t'rves lamb."
A parent 1.1·ho breaks his promise to
punish does as mu ch to violate the child's
trust as a parent who breaks his promise
to reward.
l\lan cannot become an animal without
becoming .... orse than an y; when he relin·
4u1.shes h.is humanhood he docs not i>ink
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Has the "something for nothing "
syndrome stru ck the city of Jr.
vine? Isn't it peculiar how valu-
able the public education survey
was to the city council and the
board of education when UCI was
footing the bill and how quickl y
it became worthless when they
were asked to share the cost!
-t.B.
Till1 ,.._.. nflK'no ,..,..,,. ...i-. -
nec;nsar'lto, tMH 9f the =•••tiff. Sno1 .,_ ,.. ,..... ,. ~ 0.. Daily l"llet.
to the natural level, as he lmagioes, but
to tile sub-natural. • • •
"'Propaganda" i.11 what our enemies
do; "i"ndoclrination'' is wha\ our friends
do; "enlightenment" is what we do. • • •
An experienced orator can tell when an
audience turns into a crowd, by the way
it begins to "smell" of its dominant
passion.
• •
Tbe worst drama critics are those who
either hate or love the theatre; the
fonner, of course, are incapacitated by
their ave rsion, but the latler are no less
paralyzed by their adoration . • • •
Should & representative follow lhe
wishes of his constituency or his own
personal feelings when an issue comes to
a ~·ote? My own view is on the side of
Burke, who said, "Your representative
owes you. not. his industry only, but his
judgment; and be betrays it instead of
serving you if he sacrifices it to your opinion ...
Jo e Demands a Fight
l>t>ar Pre!lident L ,Joe Slkspak ,
America n, lake pen 1n tiand to stick a
bug (excuse thr expression 1 in vor.:r rllr
You're in troub!t '
How I know is 1 drnonl.'d bv Paddv"s
Place the other night "'Give nle a SeVcn
High. Puddy," I says. '·<Ind your expert
opinion on how tlw·
campaign's going
"What campaign ~··
says Paddy.
"Why the prl'S1·
dentia.I campaign ,
Paddy ." 53YS r
'"Don't tell me ynu rorgot? ..
'"Not exactly , Joe.··
says Paddy. "But
Ifs kind or like \1ontreal playtng Tex.tis
111 the World Series. You kno w lhcre's a
\\forld Series going on. but you tune In
the RollC!r Derby Instead."
"llOW 00 YOU FIGURE it, Pa ddy?"
Says I. "I mean It's a good, clean.
statesmanlike campuign they're wagulg
on the iasues. right?"
"'JluJl 's rl1hl. J'oe." say!I Paddy.
"McGovern's been running around 1he
country BCCU!llng the · Presldtnt of cor·
ruption, spying, ~Ins favors and steal-
ing the bread out of the moulh.1 of poor ,
hungry babies -nothing out or the
ordin1ry. And the President's been sit·
linK In hiJ ofDce k~ping mum. You can·t
!Jet more statesmanship than that ,"
"How come he's bet n g so
statesmanlike?" say!I I.
''A ltatcsmanllke campaign, Joe," says
Padl(y. polillllna 1 alul. "~ what •
poll!to!an """ when be """"' be got the <lectlon In lho bq. •
" OU TlllNX tho Pf<lfdent'1 doing
lbe rilht Wns, Padd7?" HYI t,
"AccordlnJ to tho poU1 IHl b," say•
Paddy. "A moolh :wo he'1 l••dl"l1 17-34.
So he kleps bll moulh abut wbllo
lllcGovem lllootl bit o« and now be'•
,,
I
( ART HOPPE )
3head 63-29. At that rate, if he doesn't
sa~' a word between now and November,
he 'll win 93-7. He y.·ill , that is, if anybody
r('rnember!I to vote."
··vou c!on't think they will. Paddy?"
"What you got here , Joe. is a nice guy
running against H dignified statesman
and who cares? What the pubUc wants is
a ...,·ham-barn slugging match wllh lots of
blood."
"J see. what they want's a good clean
fight. right, Paddy?"
"\VRONG. JOE. What they want's a g~ dirt y fight. Why do you think pro-
fess1onal wre!llling outdraws amateur
wrestling? What makes the Roller Derby
!IO popular? How come Bobby Flscher got
all those headlines? There's nothlng like
a good dirty fight to tum people on."
"Then the President. ... "
"The fir!I~ thing he ought to do Is ac·
cuse McGovern of being a textual deviate
who ls soft on Commun ism and practices
verOOl intercourse in public. Othe.rwl.se,
Joe. Americans are going to loee Interest
in tht democratic process."
"That 's a touRh ordtr Paddy."
"ll is, Joe. But tbe Pr~ide.nt's got to
put persot1al amblUon aside. For the
good of the country, he '1 got to adhere lo
our cherished American political tradi·
tlons and start fighting dirty."
TO TEU. TllE TRUTH, President
Paddy don't think you 'U do It . He think~
you're going to put wlMing above
everyth ing and rtfuae to fight dirty.
Not me. though. I gol faith In you. Honest.
Truly Youn,
Joe Slk!pn.k, A1nertcan
SB
Identify Source of Treats to Foil Sadists
Halloween Protection for Children ' I:
To the Editor:
We are now at a time of the year when
our children should be having a fun time.
Halloween is a holiday for our children
aod part of the hm is going out all
dressed up and receiving their candy
(treats) and such. But unfortunately
there are a few misled or sick people
who make their treats unsafe.
I as a p'1tent don't know these people,
so what can I do? We (parents) end up
throwing the children's treats away
simply because we don't know wbal is
safe and what isn'L
I HA VE COME UP -a IGluttoo I feel could benefit both tads and parent ..
I'm going to put, ·~ ttut.c;ame from
the Moore family," on all ~ bags for
children. This takes a tew minutes and
the parent. wlU know -· fr!>rn
and it ii safe to eat
I do lee! it ~ an idea to·~ ~·
one.
RUTH MOORE
MeGo.,ern Otl 1f-
To the F.ditor:
: read with dismay McGovern's p~
posal for ending the Vietnam war. 'Ibis
dangerous: presentation i.! 'natable for
what it leaves undone , rather than what
it purports to do. In this respect, It is al9o
dangerously misleading to the public in
seeking hall«>lutioos and -ing 6al!.
results.
In seeking virtually nothing in return
from our enemy, he gives them falle
courage to further aggression by:
It l IGNORING THE role of Russia and
China as supplier of war material 10 the
North Viets. Our unilateral withdrawal of
all support would deprive south Vietnam
of the material wherewithal to defend
themselves unless the Unit;ed Nations ac--
cepts the responsibility -very unli.ke1y.
(2) Ignoring the POW's as cine or the
prerequisites to total withdrawal and
bombing cessation.
(3) Ignoring the welfare of SOUlb Vi.t-
namese cltir.ens and oUicials who an
anti-Viet Cong. Remember what bappe,.
eel to several thousand of \hem tn the
massacre at Hue!
(4) Ignoring the presence of '101000
North Viet troops in Laos and 60,000 1n
Ca mbodia . Why volunteer to withdraw
our air force from Thailand without
Isn't It the Truth!
By CARL RIBLET JR,
The body politic has acquired another
minority, the farmers who have 8Cel1
their neighbors sell out to the combines
and lake the ir aching backs and the
certified checks to the city where they
rise with the sun in order to get an early
start at the pastime they always dream-
ed about -loafing.
"loafing itn1t atJ it'• cracked
up to be -ft'r betttr. '1
-Dictionary of Optnion1
This i!I what animals are iiood for : a
pi~ is good for ham, a cow ts good for
milk , a chicken gocx. for stuffina. a horse
I• good for galloping, a dog bub nnd
man Is good for woman.
" ... We sit talking of IJ)01tl and
Politic~. ond aU the wldl. ovr heart.t
ore /IUed with m.emorW1 oJ women
and the captuu of women..'
-Confe11irm.NJ/ A Young Man
The unhappl.,. of votm In lh11 pro-
election 11treteb has &ot to be thole who
are undecided to vote Republican or
Democratic. '?'My can but experience feel ·
lngs of awHOme )ooelfnetl wherever
they go, and not eVM tb1 poll·ltlke.111 rush
lo dial their 11umbto:n any more.
"ft ii bett•r to be alone than in ill company.'' -Prot,;trb
I
( MAILBOX )
Letters from readers are welcome.
Nornuilly writers sliould convey their
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condt'nse letters to flt IPQCI
or elimfnate libel i! f'tserwd. AU
letttf'S must include .tfO'noture and
moiling add?'eu, but namu may be
1Dlthh•ld °" rec1,..rt if ruffident f'eOSOft is apparent. Poetri1 will not be
pubU,,h¢.
reciprocal withdrawals of enemy troops?
We have only 700 troops in Laos and none
in Cambodia as of Oct. I, despite in-
ferences to the CQlltrary.
McGOVERN DO~ NOT address
himself to consequences beyond this elec-
tion. He obviously places more credence
in the enemy than be does in his own
government. His naivete in relying on the
questionable compassions of the North
Vietnamese reminds me of the postman
and the vicious dog in the yard: when the
owner assured the pootman that the dog
would not bite, be replied, "Lady, you
might know It and I might know It, but
does the dog know it?". .
Assumptions are dangerous anytime,
but in the business of war and peace,
they can be deadly. It's not too smart to
leave our enemy in better shape than ~r
allies. The so-called peace proposal is
really a temporary disposal typifying tbe
short-sighted ineptness or au too many
McGovern campaign utterances.
CALVIN G. SIEGLE
MeGo.,ern Impresses
To the Editor:
When I moved to California over 30
yean ago, expensive surveys on mass
transit were being made. They've ~
making them ever since -spending
fortunes.
I wonder how many of the Seattle -or
Disneyland·type elevated cars could have
been built down the center of freeways,
and on Other routes too, ror. the money
spent on these surveys.
One hindrance is the vast lobbies
spent by oil, construction, auto manufac-
turers. auto clubs. etc. Another i!I the
fact that the people in position to do
something are comlortable in tbeir
autos.
WHEN GEORGE MCGOVERN said he
would convert 900\e of the defense plants
and p e op I e, (including retraining
them) ln&o mass transit systems, it im·
pressed me.
,He also impressed me w~ he reCGll).· rrien4ed 1 minimum income tax. Ther'e
are tax "shelters" that are justified, but
anyone Uvtnc well should pay ,...e tu.
Yesterday, inddentally, be impressed
me again wbm be said we !lbould con-
centrate on saying lives ln!ltead of saving lace.
JOHN ADAMS
Doahle A1Jents!
To the Editor:
Along with everything else, McGovern
ba.t changed his stand on Richard Nixon.
Nixm was cunniJlR, tricky and sly. Now
McGovern bas decided that he is dull and
stupid. That he is so dumb he hires an
ex~F.B.l. a1ent who isn't smart enough to do a simple bugging job without being
caugb.L He then hirei a lawyer who isn't
even Intelligent enough to get on the
McGovern campaign team. The three
stooges coy.Id make that team.
These gu)'I sound jull dumb enough to
be working for McGovern instead of Nix-
on. Could they be double agent.a?
Jiii! BOLDING '
Propo1Ulon1lend14
To the Editor :
On Friday, Oct. 13, Saddleback
C<-Uege's staff voted unanlmously to sup-
port ProPoOltlon t and to reject
Proposition 14 on the Nov. 7 ballot.
A "yes" vote ror Proposition l means
'
We're Burying 'Ourselves
I
Things a Columnist mt;;ht never knOw
ft he didn't open his mall:
ctvUlzatlon II now lhreatcnlng to bury
ltseU in tts own debris. Each American
generates a ton of solid waste, or
garbage, a year. The total would cover
Manhattan Island 13 feet deep.
If you had a headache ln ancient
Greece, the physician might try to cure It
by drawing blood
from your heBd.
In the 19th cen·
tury two rnlne.n ln
Nevada bullt a house
medc of stontt en-
crusted with "black
stuff." The next year
they learned that the
b\8Ck stuff WU a
rich sliver ore. and . ther.mln<d their borne for S'/l,000. Wbidl
pron• lha adage that you don't have to
trave.1 far to find opportunity.
IF YOU RECEIVED an invitation in a
m ...... signed "Pohlll," would you ac-
cept tt? You'd probably be sorry later If
you didn't In lhe Morse Code, "Potus"
lliand• for ''Tiie Presldellt of the Vaited
Sl atet.''
Anlmal1 don't aee.m to be affected by
pollen Ivy, but people can get a rash
from touching the fur or 1 dog that baa
wandered through A patch o( thll tbre&
leafed plant
WNi really runs your household? In old
Bulgarta, After thetr m&rrlage, the bride
'
( HAL BOYLE )
and bridegroom ea~h took hold of a piece
of weddlnt bread and lugged bard.
Whoever broke off the bigger piece was
suppased to be th~ boss In the family.
QUM'ABLE NOTABLES: "An OP'
Urnist Is t0rfleon~ who tcllJ you to cheer
up when thlngs are golng his way." -
Ed.ward R. Murrow.
Sweet labor: It taku a lot of work to
make honty. One study Indicated that
40 CXXl bee-loads of nectar were requlred
to' produce 1 SJOUnd or finhhed honey.
Anolh.r study by the u .s. Deparlrnent or
AgricultW'tl, in which the bees had to
make a 1J.mlle: tot1nd trip for each load
of nectar, estimated they flew '40,000
miles to mate a powld of honey.
Shape of wblt'111 to mme: Will lhe
American women of the ruture be shaped
more llke 8 slraffe? Prt.lbably not, but u
present trends continue, u studied by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture, obe
will be U-ller and . ln proportton to her
bf.lghl, she'll have a smaller bustllne,
wabt and hips.
WORTH REMEMBI;:RINO : "Thia you
cnn bellcve: when a )'OUnpte.r today
hears n bad word, It goe:s In one t!ar -
nnd comes out bis mouth."
fact rue: A tree toab up about 1,000
that $160 million will be raised for com-.
munity college construction statewide.
Monies for this purpose will accrue from
the interest on general obligation bonds
of the state. the lea!lt expensive way ol.
financing. .,
Enrollment!! In California community
coUeges will increase to one million
students by 1975 and this creates an
urgent need for more class:roon.
laboratories. libraries and vocational
education facilitit.!.
SHOULD TRIS propo&ition fail, JocaJ
property tu.ea will be the IOl.e source of
rt\'enue for constructlng: community col·
Jege buildings.
Proposltion 14 purports to reduce taz-
es, but it would actually raise them for
nearly everyone. Proposition 14 will not
generate sufficient revenues for l&ate
and local school disltict.. Proposidon 14·
would cripple local government, and
severely damage the public acbools. Bo&h
Governor Reagan and former Goytimor
Brown are vehemently opposed to the
passage of ProposiUon 14 .
ANDREW KISH
Bond Committee Chainnan
Saddleback CoDeg\
Death Penallu
To the Editor:
' " I'
Regarding the letter r:rom Roaer West
(DAILY PtLOT, Oct. 18 ) about ibe death ,
penalty.
Mr. West concludes bis letter with
"How many executions has Mr. Barley
witnessed?" Well, I mi&ht a!lk him, ,
"How many cold-blooded murders have
you witnessed?"
Perhaps you wou1d be sick~ by the
innocent victims of these murders if you $
were there. But you see, the victlm bu
no voice to protest hl!I death. We can't
ask him what he would coosider ap-
propriate punistunent for the person who
killed him.
one thing is for sure, with capita)
punishment, you don't have to worry
about second oCfenders.
MRS. LINDA BAKER
in Garbage
tons of water to make a ton of wood .••
Football's first mascot WIS H~
Dan. a bulldog adopted by Yale Uflo
dergraduates in l890 ... Some kinds of
goldfish are gray, and some oriental
varieties have been known to live 70
yurs ... Fish, Hke people, catch colds
and get u~ stomachs.
Jt was Jules Podell, owner of the
Copacabana nl.ght club, who obelrved,
"A genius ls someone who can get bis
name off a malling U.t !or junk Mfll·"
ORANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT •• •
Robtn N. Weed, Publisher J
Thoma.I KeeviJ, Editor
Albfft W. B4tc1
£dltoriol Page Edil6r
~ «l.ltorW J»f«' of u~ n.117
Pilot ~ to Inform •ncl 1tl!"nU-
lat• Mldt'rt by rlf'Cft'ntlnir thl!t'
f'l('WIPflpet'A ophdON "nd coin-o-
mf!ntAf')' on to1Aca ot Interest anclJ
1lgnlflcance, by fll"OVldln~ a fDf'Wl'r"
for Um ~ion or our retderl'
oDlnlo.., and by ,......,Unr 'llot
diverse v~po1n" of lnCormc.'d ofi>.-
1'1"\'m and 1~Mtmco OQ topWa or the dayf
Wednesday, October 25, llr12
• •
1 V
"
lhe
mi wa
di
lea
yea
I
abo
J
Today's F l•al
• N.Y. Stooks
VOL 65, NO. 2'19, 7 SECtlONS, 106,RAGES ORANYi COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEONESDA Y, OCTOBER 25, 1972 T!N CENTS
What People Thinking-Councilmen Briefed
A 26-page report; ouUinln( the work of
the Huntington Beadl • Cllizem Com-
mittee for GoaJa and ObjOctlves (GO),
was presented to city councilmen Tues-
day night. ·
Thei repmt list~ the J.mpressiom of the
commuruty as . expressed by the public,
and ' sets up a serlel of goals for City
leaders to pursue over the next 20-30
yeara. .
It rep!'<!etlts lnlormaUon culled · from
about" 2,000 residents ·over the --*. n•r-. . ..... .......
aod-a·hall thro<l&h lllll'Yey1, forums and
perSohot tntervlewl.
Some of the community lmpre..-
listed In the report includo:
-Buch BouJevard is viewed wUh
al"I")'. . ' ' . ...:.Bkick wall! are monotonous and ug-
ly. • I • • '
--Cilluns are disgasteil b)"the lack of
4clion. In the tlowoto~ '"10" -Tourisll .are Inadequately, provided
wi!b f~dlitlts ,lo, leave ~~ ln
Huntlngtan Beach. -Tl!e sborellne must. be econoinlcalfy
sell-supporting and stm preserve Its
natuiaJ beauty. .-
-:--Residents art-enthl.';;'iastic about· the
new library and-...JraJ; J!llrk.
, They don't want anymore freeways.
-l;fteajdents are frustrated about in-
dustrial Yonlng bordering the .. celltral
park. .
-Public transporfiiliiju. l5 needi<I
:·A I of l!ie •f!!<14>&, In t)lls report is • ... .~
based on the rapid growth of the city
since l!MKI," Robert Sutake, chairman of
the. GO Committee, told counrilmen .
"A lot of people compared. Huntington
Berch to the environment they left. They
were uneasy because they felt Hun-
tington Beach was heading In the same
direction," Sutake explained .
When Sutake suggested that the people
involved. \D the study expect some results
from tbe guidelines compiled, Qeun~
cilman Jack Green reacted strongly.
"I question the ability of the average
citizen to make an inteligent comment on
things he doesn't even know about,"
Green said.
"We're doing many of the lhings they
already ask." he added.
'·Most people recognize that a lot has
been done," Su take replied. "But they
want more of the same, and faster. And
they keep saying they are willing to pay
for ii."
"I'd like to see a clean city, but
somebody has tp pay for It," interjected
Councilman Ted Bartlett. "I'd like to see
the money talk instead of the mouth ."
"I think the people are 5aylng they art
willing to pay if they can see some
res u I ts . '' interjected. Counlllwoman
Norma Gibbs.
"That's a poor generalization ,·• snap-
ped r..ouncilman Jerry ~fatney.
Sutake reminded councilmen and plan-
ning commissioners that this was only •
(See GOALS. Page ZI
Beach Hiring Hit
State Accuses District
State labor officials charged Tuesday
night that the H40tington beach Union
High School District is not offering equal
employment opportunities to women and
Mexican.Americans.
Citing a long list of alleged inequities,
officials of the state Fair Employment
Practices Commission (FEPC) told
trustees to take corrective action or face
the passibility of state and federal sanc-
tions.
District trustees accepted the strongly·
worded charges without disputing any of
them, commenting only that they wanted
lo clear their record as soon as possible.
"We're going to take action not
because we're threatened with 5anc-
tions," said Trustee John Bentley, "but
because it's the right thing to do."
The FEPC report said that:
-All 34 supervisors at work oot related
(See SCHOOL, Page Zl
'Stag11ation' Cited
Reagan Opposes Coast
lss,µe Bm Criti~~es ,Ads
'
.iltllOllfJ'E• '
. .
, SAC~ENTO AP) -Gov. Ronald Rea&ad ' ' adVertlltog-•aaiJ>tt
the · initiative today a 1
"loisl '• but 'said he -tlie measure U a· threat to Catilomlt's
ecooomy .
Peering out ot Peter's Pumpkin Pilch on Bristpl,
picking out a particularly plump prize, was JeU
Hatch, 4, son ot Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stiefel ot
Costa Mesa. 'll be wu waiting.for the Great Pump-
kin be wouldn't admit it, Pe~haps the Grand Spirit
of Halloween was helpiDg young Mr. Hatch choose
just the right one for the perfect jack-o-lantern.
Reagan said he opposes the coastlipe
measure because he believes it will
throw thousands of Californians out of
work and cause "stagnation" o l
Calitornla't economy.
Jury Selection
In Hunting ton
Case Up in .lli
Final Arguments Given
In Niguel Bank Trial
"I think what has happened in the
Mammoth ~se ... is nothing compared
to what wW happen if Prop. 20 passes,"
he said in reference to a state Supreme
Court decisloo oo environmental impact
reports which builders say is bringing
construction to a halt.
Asked at a news conference about
Whitaker and Baxter a g e n c y ad-
vertisements against Prop. 20 which say
'Don't padlock the coast" Reagan said,
"This Is misleading. It has given the im·
pression people will not be able to use the
coastline, WIUclils not lrue." --
.
A Jmy selected for the •«M!I, Otanae ""llyJ.FllEDl!JUCK sCeOEMEllL County Superior Court murder1 trial of J .; .., . ..,DllW.l'lltf _.._ Muine Poetb of Huntington BeiCll may . -~., . be -4ishaoded today il the trtll judge ,. WS, Af'G~ -Pinal" arguments m
learns that any of Its memben read a te-the trlaJ of tbrie ObK> men charged with
cent newspaper story. . ~ 'tht world's lnest bank buraJ.ary -the
Deputy Public Defender J. Michael $5 •million break-in at Lagtina Niguel
Beecher will ask Judge Walter Charamza brap~ o,f United Calllomia Bfnk -were
tO )Kfividµally interrogate each of the 12 heard ~a U.S. Qlstrict Qourt here today.
jt.m>rs to set if any member of the panel FoHowing arguments, evidence in the rPad a story that ran Oct. 19 in tbe Los five-week long trial wu expected to be
.,\JtJJe1es Tiqw!S. submitted to the . six-man, six-woman
Beecher states in a motion filed late jury for delibera.Uon on the guilt or in-
Tuesday that 8ny juror ttai:ling the nocence ·of' defendants Charles Mulligan.
Times article is almost ,certain to be Philip Bruce Christopher and Amil
biased ~gainst. his client and' should be Alfred Dinslo.
repJaced 'by jurors who have not read the Assistant U.S. Attorney Jact Walters,
offending story. in a lengthy statement to furors, oon-
the Times story objected to by eluded that the government had proved
Beecher contains the oornment ttiat Mn. wttboot .a doubt Its allegation that the
Postb was granted a new trial. after her three men planned, executed and col~
!Int trial ended. with a Jucy deadlocked leciacf the proceeds of the massive
at Jl to 1 in favor of convictiort burglary. ,
Beecher also objects to the ·Times-,waJten reviewed the testimony ~of ..
noting that Mrs. Posth, 51, later pleaded mote than 50 government witnesses i:a~-
gullty to reduced Charges o f ed in the ca.e.
manslaughter, but withdrew~t plea Defense AttomtJ' Victor Sherman,
and Insisted on J>etpg trtecU&ain..:9l[Jhe. ~~t""' Otnslo, did• nOt 1uestion the murder allegation. ·~r--· "<e ..._
.Mrs. Posth, 1352 AJvarado Drive; was government'S> alfeiadons 'bu attempted
mested June 13, 1'71, sbol'tly after she to discredit testlmbny o(two key govem-
allegedly plunged JI ~leak tillfe i{tto her ment witnesses to whom the crime
husband, Robert, 41, In a fracas oVer the assertedly was admitted.
le' Sherman was most upset ·w 1 t h coup 1 Swlday dinner. testimony of lln lnfotmant who earlier
1 BIKE, l ,·AD: .
3 CALLS, 1 SA.f,E
aCeged that Dinak>, told hifn in great
detail about tbe crime.
Sl\erman argued that .'the ln!onnant
with -. 50 to 100 burglaries loped on
hla•own criminal record~ld ba:rdly be .
consldered a believ1ble witness.
1, 1; 1 That'• just 'bow lt went when Walters conceded, to hla argument that
the Westminster man offered to tell hi• the informant wu "a tettible burglar" mototeycle to DAIL y PILOT readers. but lhal there was no reuon lot the jury
'lllJt )I the ad that sold 11-lo one night • to diJcredlt his testimony.
-after iust three phone calls: Defense attorne)' Anthony Glassman,
HONDA 750 1m K2. counoel for Chrlltopher, argued before
Bargain buy'. Only '2 mo. the jury that the government has aot
old. 2,llllO ml. MllJ\Y itras. proved gulk beyond a re8'0!lable doubt
Fairing, rack, back test, and tnOl"l certainty.
crash bar, etc. Oi.mer must Argumenta Mm1 MUiiigan'• attorney,
lelJ, only tI390 or offer. 1 RODlld Minkin, were tcheduled late ~
m·xxn. day prtor to 111bmitolon of the case to lhO
That's the kind of action you could JOI jury. ,
IOO. 1'J)' It with an ad of your own. Dtal Waliers• atatement traced what be al·
the dlf'ect line to claqmed advtrtlaln1 I~ wot 1 oerlel of evtntl wh!Ch hogan
relults 1t the DAILY PILOT, ·MWfll, tn F<bniar7 w!len delondants M\llllpn
--------·-----and Dtnslo travtled to catlfomla to
"
select a bank for burglary and· to lay in-
itial prepa,atiops. . ... :
After selection of•tbe '~ .. ffiauel
bank,· Ji<!!lµe<nllar' ditl ~Offluen1.Monarch
Bay and Three · Arcb Bay areas Walters
asserted that a getaway car was
purchased and that :ocal contacts were
built between Multigan and certain
friends in the Tustin area.
Walte:s also allfiged thal !be team or
burglars rented a fashionable Laguna
Niguel townhouse as a base of operations
during the burglary attem2t.·
The presence of 1he defendants in the
SOuthem California area; he: stated, w~s
posltiVely shown by atrllne rtcOrdS'WhiCb
have ~ entered,!as evWence during. the
trial. "
Following, the completiqo of the c.ill)O
in wbtch bui'glars ~ssecl' tomplex'
alarm ·.Ystems arid theii 'bl~ed their
way into the .bank'a YaU!t', t~ .' ttlim
·llMded' the,-~ •• ~, tmmedf¢ely
left for th<lr horn~ itati n1 Ohio, Walter•
alleged . . <e.r 17 '
The onl y pl,.. of e\,ldence Uiat re-
mairled in Calil'omli. which could ln-
crimlnatt the defendants was the
geta~3Y . car l~ed witll burglary tools
includl"'g a hammer that. was allegedly
used when the 454 safety deposit boxes
were looted: . ' •
• f
The Republican governor said he
regrets,. fOes of Prop. 20 have taken that
approach, adding "I wish they had
advertising on the real faults of the pro-
position."
Reagan said this about other initiative
measu~s on the Nov. 7 ballot:
PROP. 14 -The Watson Initiative
"will bring fiscal chaos." Reagan said.
He criticized Los Angeles Assessor
Philip Watson's claim the measure !.:; in
balance because. Reagan said, that's on·
ly true if the public will accept massive
cuts in funds for local schools.
"You cannot have school districts like
Los Angeles and San Francisco have
thel;, school budgets cut virtually in
half," he said.
PROP. 15 -The advertising for the
Police Nal1 Student
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Police have ar·
rested a second San Diego City College
student who returned to the campus
while under suspension for an anti-war
demonstration. Michael Gibbs, 26, was
arrested Tuesday as he tried to give a
speech. Polke said he was booked in
county jail under a law that enforces
suspensions by college admlnlstrc:tors.
Valley Co'1,ncil Action
Here in capsule fonn are the major actions taken TucJday night by the
FOW1taln Valley City COuncll:
SC800L SITE: Cootlnued hearing on reionlng of Fountain Valley elemen-
tal')/ 1ehool lite to Nov. 21.
PROP. It: Approved a resolution opposing Proposition 14 on the November
ballot.
YOUTH: ApPololed nine high IChool lludentl to the city's flrtl Youth Com-
mlsllon.
DRIV!:-IN: Set Nov. 21 a1 tlje d•t• for a bearing on an appeal lrom the
Syufy Corporallon on Its plans lb build a drlv .. ln theater on Newhope Street
llOUth of Warner Avenue.
. '
C3Jifornia State Emplo)"es Association in-
itiative to take away up· govervor~ Teto
over state employe pq r~ "is the
most blatanUy dl.-st i.nil -"1n;:
J haft. ever witneared'1 fm.d
"outrageous untruths," the govemor
'said.
The dtief executive criticized ad·
vertislng which suggests Prop. 15 would
"put a lid on state employe pay
salaries."
PROP. 18 -The obscenity measure
should be passed, Reagan said, because
since a similar measure was defeated in
1966 "all that has bappened is that
pornography and abscenity have grown
worse."
PROP. 22 -The Governor again en·
dorsed the farm labor initiative, saying
that he believes the advertising against
that m e a s u r e has been "Jalse and
misleading."
Fountain Vallev
School District
Gets R eprieve
With more than 30 concerned parents
looking oo, the Fountain Valley School
District Tuesday night won a round in its
battle to prevent a proposed school site
from becoming a 89-home planned
development .
City councilmen said they would con-
tinue the rezoning hearing on the prop-
erty. bounded by Starfish, La Alameda,
El Portal and La Tierra StreelS, at their
Nov. 21 meeting.
The delay in the hearing will give the
school district a chance to present a
hardship plea to the slate Allocations
Board in mid-November for permission
to purchase the land.
School administrator J&ck Mahnken
told councilmen the district would have
the money lo purchase the site by
J<'ebruary if the state Allocations Board
approves the plea.
Under a quota program adopted by the
state, kno\m as the cohort survival
system, a school district must have a·
eenain ratio of students per square
school footage before it may qualify to
boy a school site,
The 1' .. 0Wltain Valley di.str)ct does not
qualUy presently, but 1ebool officials
believe the slte will be needfd in tht
future .
Property owners, Impatient with the
delays, want the property developed
because of high taxes.
"OUr taxes are going up and t just
can 't Uve with 1 tax of $800 an acre:'
said Wayne Armslnlni, one of lbe pf'OI>'
erty owners.
TOO d11trlct has planned to acqulre tht:
site since 1J68.
Armstrong urged the councilmen to •I>'
prove the planned development bec•"M.
he said, the school diltrtct could repln
the land al .uy Ume under It.a oon-
dtmnat.ion power.
Mahnken pointed aut, thooll>. ~'II! ~
lhe diltrtcl condemned lo alte without
.. ie ._i, tt would loM lllte !8eo8m, ...,.,.
DAtLY PtulT 1...t' ......
'RESULTS, NOT RHETORIC'
St1te Offici1I Mllugeon
Edison Expansion
Pleas Rejected
By Hunting ton
Despite pleas from a half.dozen
Southern California Edison C.Ompany of·
ficials. the city of Huntington Beach
refused to grant building permits Tues·
day night for the $250 million expansion
of the Huntington Beach power plant.
The planning commiMion voted 1-1 to
send the pennit request back to the
board of roning adjustments until Ed1!0ll
files a complete._ environmental impact
report.
Only Commissioner Roger Slates sup-
ported granting a building permit to
Edison.
PaUI Richardson , district manager for
EdisoD. asked the COl1lQ1iSskm to grant •
building pennit with the-dmdiUon that it
wouJdn't become fina l until Edison files •
run impact report with the state Public
Utilities Commisskm <PUC).
He estimated the full report would be
ready in April .
Commissioners. however, stuck by the
ruling of the cily attorney that a full
report is required prior to the granting or
any pennits.
McGo vern Rally O{f
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Sen. George
McGovern bas canceled an appearance
at a rillly Thursday night In Fresno
because. he will be delayed at a campaign
stop in .st. Louis.
or .. ge Coast
Weiialaer
Morning low cJoudl and fog will
clear to st.tnny skies oo Thursday,
witb highs at the beacbel around
75 rising to 14 lnl3"d. Lows tonight
SS.
INSIDE TOD.\. V
Tt1nie3111 Williams• r"'der
drama "Summtr at1d Smoke"
lead.I off tlu: nt1D anivals in
tommu11it11 thtaUr thi1 week at
tht Laguua Moulton. Pla11hou1e.
See Enttrtafnmt11t, Pages 28·29.
l..M. •rt"ll n MWIM .. ,,
tMllfle " ....... ,.... • Catlflwlll• 1 Htlllul flltWI W c ...... c.,.. '4 or-..~ '' ()Htl.... II.ft "TA • c..k:6 JI lrMI ........ • c~ • s..m n.u °""' ......... tt "'" .......... • ................ ,.. ........ ....,
.............. t T ......... . ....... ,,..... ... ..... ....,.,,,,,. ...... ~ ..... ... .............. ..
A9U.... II ........... M -.
I DAILY PILOT ---k
DAILY P'll.OT Sl•ff ......
GETS SCHOOL POST
Former ~ewswom.n Reed
Mrs. Reed Takes
111£ orn1ation Job
111 Huntington
Diane Reed . a Huntington Beach
journalist for eight years. v.•as ~am.ed
Tuesday night lo nin the commun~ty in--
formation program of the Hwitmgtoo
Beach Union High School District.
Mrs. Reed, 31, replaces Warren Veis,
who has taken a teaching position 1D San
Diego.
She is the second member of the Reed
family to wort in the public relations
field in Huntington Beach. Her husband,
\Villiam, also a former journalist1 is in-
formation officer for the city.
''Diane is one of the most distingui!bed
reporters from our community and has a
long history of support for schools. We
are delighted to have her." said Dennis
i\.langers, president of the hlgh school
district's board of trustees.
J\1rs. Reed will assume her duties Oct.
30 v.·ith an annual salary of $14.400.
Mrs. Reed is society editor of the Hun·
tington Beach Independent. Th.is year she
has woo 33 writing and photography
awards, including the Education Writer
of the Year Award from the National
Federation of Press Women.
Despite Protests
Court Gets
New Appeal
By Sirhan
WASHINGTON (AP\ -Sirhan Bishara
Sirhan appealed today to the U.S.
Supreme Court to review his conviction
of murdering Robe rt F. Kennedy.
La~')'ers for the Arab immigrant said a
team of psychiatrist!, p h y s l c i a n 1 ,
physlclsl$ a n d others have un(.'(lvered
"significant physical evidence" that
Sirhan did not fire the bullet on June ~.
J96S, al the Hotel Ambassador in Los
Angele~ that killed the New York
senator.
But the naturt of Ibis evidence was not
immediately disclosed .
The lawyers said they ore preparing
to place their new evidence before the
California Supreme Court.
Sirhan was convicted ln April 1969 of
murder and five counts of aMau1t to
commit murder in tbe Kennedy shooting.
His death 9efltence was reduced last year
te; life in prison after the California
Supreme Court declared capital pWllsh-
ment to be un(.'(lnstitutional.
Sirhan's appeal v;as prepared by two
Los Angeles lawyers. Roger S. Hanson
and George R. Milman.
They suggested California appellate
judges strained the laws of search and
seizure to uphold the ronviction because
of Kennedy's national importance.
''It is evident," said the petition," that
fe~ members of any appellate tribuna l
would care to be on record in reversing
the conviction of a nondescript Arab im-
migrant who was convicted o f
assassinating Sen . Robert F. Kennedy,
who undoubtedly was at the threshold of
his pinnacle of political achievement -
the Democratic nomination for president
of the United States, and with an ex·
cellent chance to become the nation's
chief executive.
Sirhan'& lawyers raised a dozen
challengers to the conviction in trying to
win .. new trial for their 23-year--old
client. Mainly, they complained about the
way police searched his mother's home
without a warrant.
.. Jn view of this. it is recognizable that
tppellate review strains to alter the laws
of search and seizure to preserve the
conviction.''
Kennedy was shot just after winning
the California Democratic presidential
primary.
Council Backs Police
Copters in Fkry Meet
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of !tie o.i" 1'1191 Stiff
In a tense confrontation punctuated by
invectives, Newport Beach councilmen
Tuesday night again told a citizen group
protesting police heli(.'(lpters that they
are not about to order them out or the
air.
The council's reailinnation of support
for police beltcopten came after former
Newport·Mesa school trustee Donald
Strauss threatened to start a recall ac-
tion against the council unless the
whirlybirds were grounded.
Long-time Newport resident Allan Beek
also alleged that Police Chief B. James
Glavas falsified his report on ways to
reduce hellcoptet noise.
G\avas wu alao branded al
"egotistical" and was accused of
"building ap bis qo with a great police
force lnvadiDg my privacy," by Paul
Crawford, 120. Emerald Ave.. Balboa
'~-Straus, who resigned bis school board
seat earlier this year, represented the
citizena group called Helicopters Llmlted
tormcd two months ago to demand the
heUcoplen be used ooly for emergency
calls, not for routine patrol.
I
··initiative and recall are l w o
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a1temaUvea if you don't follow the wishes
of the people,'' Strauss said.
Earlier, Beek, another Helicopters
Limited spokesman, bad charged there
are "two glaring, evidently deliberate
errors" in Glavas' report.
Beek charged thal the report said
helicopters flying at a lower rpm were
six cie(:ibels quieter in a recent tesl when
lu fact they were only two decibels
quieter.
Glavaa had been promising to lower
rpms to quiet the belicopters-as aoon as
the Federal ~viation Agency allows it.
Glavas' report also said the depart-
menl bas received only seven noise CODl-
plail!ll •ill« the Sept ·Ji hellcopt., bear-
ing ..:.. when councilmen lffe' a 7 to O
vote of t'Ot:ifldenCe' to the air patrols -
while Beek claJlned "I know one person
who personally bas Ct>mplalned nine
times himselC. ••
GlaTas did not respond to any of the
charges and Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis
was obvioualy bitter after Crawford's
name calling.
"I wouldn't dignify your statements
with an anrwer," MclnniJ snarled and
lhen fell ioto 1 debate when he informed
Crawford that be bad spoken a minute
uver tbe five-minute limit.
"II ·you've beeo looklng al the clock
ydU. apparently haven't been Uatenin& to
me," Crawford lhot back.
"I don't have a ~track mind " Mc1n-. ' nla NtOrted.
"Now l don 'l waait to 1tart 1 riot or
even hold the council captive until tbe
helicopters are taken out of the air," the
2S-)'tar~ld Crawford said, apparenUy
1ryllig "' be funny.
Earlier he had complained about not
being able to walk along the bayfront on
Balboa Island at night without the
helicopter nying overhead and &hlnln1 Its
spotlight on him.
"That'! why God crented night," he
aald, "so we could hide In It if we want
to."
From Pqe 1
SITE ...
building aid ror one ye.r, a loss the
district could ill afford.
MahnW> said "'hool al1e la 1he last
netded by 1he dll1rlct and warned of !he
COl'lltqutnetS If It la not Acquired.
"We'll have to bus the kids to other
schools and th11t will be an added ex·
penae to the taxpayer," he uld.
"A walk·ln echool Is more lmpcrtant to
perentl. Somethtna ls loet If the ehlldftn
&re buted," Mahnken s1\d.
The parentl In the audience, who at
~ potnt wtre ask~ to 1tand by Mayor
Al , Holllnden, added a toll choer 10
Mabaken'1 ·word!.
Mmi1rollg reacted Indignantly lo their
clwn .
<
•
Absent.ee V ot.e
Deadline Near
Onl1 one week remains ror votn
"' 1pply &It abtenlff balloU, ~ County Reib\lV ot voters imf\\i~ .Int.today.
"P......,. who expoct lo be aboent rrom their precinct on Nov. 7 may
apply for an absent voter ballot
either by mall or in person at the
Registrar of Voters office," Hitch·
cock advised. "If requesting an absent b."lll(ll by
mail the \!Oler must include hl!i
name, residence address, legal
signature and the rea10n why he
will be Wl8ble to vote at the polls
on Nov. 7," Hitchcock added.
He said the registrar's office
located at 1119 E. Chestnut St.,
Santa Ana, will be open on Satur-
day from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and on
Monday and Tuesday evenings un1U
9 p.m. for tbe convenience of those
wlshing to apply for absentee
ballot..
From Pagel
GOALS ...
preliminary report of the GO Committee.
He said thorough , individual reports from
each of the 17 subcommittees would be
presented shortly.
Each subcommittee t a c k l e d a
particular problem, such as: shoreline.
e<>mmunity appearance, parks a n d
recreation. natural resources. schools
and other topics.
Councilmen and Ct>mmissioners seem-
ed split on just bow much faith they
would put ln the GO Committee report.
"I think this is helpful, but it's not the ·
gospel," commented Planning Com·
missioner Roger Slates. "Councilmen are
elected to do a job. 'Ibey don't have to go
out and get a~ of the people."
"I think we 're losing the purpose of the
GO Committee." COUncilman Henry
Duke said. "Nobody wants to work a
year-and·a-halL then have us_ say these
are good Ideas, but we won't follow them .
They want this."
Beach High Rise
Study Prolonge d
By Planning Unit
The status of high rise structures in
Huntington Be&ch remained In lbe fog
Tuesday ni&ht alter an lt>ur-1ong
di11CU1Slon ol the subject by city planning
Ct>mmissl.oners.
Com.miuioDers asked the planning
stall to rewrito portions of 1hij Pl"posed
nwlt~ . alalldards, 1hen , p"""d, a
f<41l!•tionijnf•nninc tho city~ the
ali.i!Y wlll, toke looger thfn e~.
COlnmlssioners and councilmen were to
discuss the high rise guidefu\es Od. 30,
bul commllsioners won't study the pro-
posals again until Nov. 14.
"Some portklos of this ordinance are
too restrictive. We'd have to wail 3040
years for tJle high rise," (.'(lmplained
Commisstonor Robert Braztl, the main complaint with the staff's
standards involved the s e c t I on s
restricting the percentage of a lot which
could be covered by a high rise structure.
Several commissioners said · there
would be a problem in tbe Town Lot
area, near the ocean, because of the
small lots.
H buildings were built very high, they
would not have sufficient room to provide
parking under proposed restrictions.
"By necessity we must look at the
Town Lota dlfferenUI," Bllll propo~.
"~lse we're 1olng to• hamstring
bOlldltlg on.Uie lbareline~ we wan1
for a tax hue."
Top Officials'
Go to School
/11, Huntington
Top administrators In the Huntington
Beach Union High School Dl!trlct are
rotating back into the classroom this fall
in an effort to find out what students
really think about their schoob .
superintendent Jack Roper talked
about the project to trustees Tuesday
night and they enthusiastically agreed It
was a good idea.
"A lot of people ask 'What do ad·
mlnlatrator1 know about lhe schools
anyway?' •• Roper said. "We ask that
questJon too. so we're trying to solve the
problem."
He said that operation C L A S S
(Cl a s sroom Liai90n use of
Adm.lnistr8tors in Subslltute Service )
aims at "total communication of .ad·
ministrators with their di3trict. ''
Under the plan, all top level ad·
ministratora will sptnd four days this
8Chool year as a tubltluite teacher in a
rtgu.lar clusrOom.
Roper told trustees that six ad·
mJnlstrat.ors have already substituted,
and that their e'tpUiences were very
enlightening.
"Adm ini11t.rators often talk to
studenl.'I ," Roper said, "but usually
they're the atudent leader types. They
almost never gtt 8 chance to take on a
typical cl.anroom."
Whllt In the classroom , !he ad·
mlnlstrators wlll ask students W cun·
plete a 6}Question "opinionnaire'' that
seeks to (•tfnd out what students really
think of their achoo\&," Roper explained.
Queltions art ineluded as to whether
telchen aeem lnt•mlf<I tn otudeou "
inclivtduals, wbelher aiudenta think they
are attending a good school, and whether
they feel their needs are bein& met.
I,
l"'itie Dralllfl
Polic Seeking
• A~hus~· Suspect '
B1 ARTHUa 1\. 1l!ISEll
Of .... Dl6.. ..... ·-"''"' Teams of de¥11Vet ~ a"IQnd
the cloct con1111JM! Joday to ll'8c!ll lllm
le&ds In ibf ambitli ahoottn( cil ID trylDe
poll""l""n hued ~o a trap at a i-ty Cl'OOlti>lds, 1h4ti!1 be .... beaded to
belp •• !alured pWi. ; '
Olli= Slepben T. Nash. 13, ~
the bu!hwback\ng try a1 ll,Jll p.m . MDn-
l
Valley Council
Votes to Oppose
Proposition ·14 .
The Fountain Valley etiy Cloun¢1
Tuesday night took a s"1K( ·against .
Proposttlon 14 on the November baltot.
Councilmen voted 3:0 with one. ebste~
tion to oppo~ tbe tnltiattve u ~ wrong
solution . ·1o prope~ to• l>t\>blem In
Callloi'nla":' · ,.
The' naolutiq1 war brouPt: up as a
non-agenGa item by, Mayor Al llollinden.
Coonc:Uman Bernie Svalatad abstained.
lie said he was not prepared to vote on
it. O>ancllman Ed Just was not present.
Tbe conirovental pniposltioll, better
known as the Watson lnltlatlft, would
reduoe and place a ceiling OD property
taxes while lncreuing other tua tO ott.
set the loss of revenue.
Sales tues and taies on cigarettes and
liquor would be 1ncreased aJong with cor-
poration taxes.
The plan would also limit the use of
property taxes ln supparting scboolf. city
and county go\rernments and special
dlstriCUI. -
Property taxes also would not be
permitted for support of community col·
leges and welfare programs. ,
"Thls proposition only offers relief to
land speculators and large property
holders," Hoilinden asserted. "It would
cost the average Fowitain Valley ciU.z.en
an additional $400 in taxes."
Hollinden also said that the college age
children in the commlinll)' ~ be
threatened if 1he funding of community
colleges ts closed off.
"Jn the pa.st we haven't taken a stand
on issues when the people bad a cboice,"
said Councilman George Scott. "But l
1hinlt we shoWd breek wl1b tradltloo
tonight."
"Prcoooltlon II is like trylnJ to cure a
headache with a hammer. But lt does
serve one purpose and that's &o tell the
stale leglslaton something must be acme
about tax rerorm," Soott addea. '
Flu Shots Scheduled
For Senior Citizens
A nu shot clinic for Huntlngt.on Beach
se nior citizens will be held from 3 p.m. to
6 p.m. Nov . 9 in the Lake Park Club
House, Lake and 12th &lreets.
The clinic is co-sponsored by the Hun-
tington Beach Soroptomist Qub and the
Recreation and Parks Department. For
further information phone 847-2581 , or
968-4341 .
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
J. C. HUMPHRIES
QUART CRYSTAL WATCHES
A1any w a t ch manufacturers
stress the extreme accuracy of the
new quartz crystal watches. Al·
though these claims are justified
as the watch leaves the factory,
maintenance ot this accuracy is un·
predictable.
Continued quartz watch accuracy
depends upon the quartz crystal's
ability to keep vibrating at a con-
stant frequency when subjected lo
normal use after you buy It.
The natural frequency of any
quartz crystal is subject to changes
due to aging, shock and slight tern·
perature variations, all beyond the
control of the manufacturer be-
cause reactions vary from one cry~
ta! lo annlher reiiardlus of quality
or source. Further, rates of quartz
wa~hes are not readily adjustable
by the dealer.
As an independent jeweler, we
are parllcularly free to state all lhe
facts about anything we Sell. We
want you to know that extreme ac·
curacy clai ms by many manutac·
turers may not be fullfilled in actu·
al use until quartz crystal watche1
have proven their dependability,
your best buys are still the highly
accurate chronometen, tunine fork
and convenUonaJ watches.
I
day wtlh only a srwng acar on bis
<lieek.
So far -besld., the iol11al detail& of
whit happened and descriptions of lbe
.partlea Involved -love!llgalors are
known to have two other elemeotl:
-~ set of lndlltlngulahable footprints
in a muddy cornfl.eld.
-The fart a rulhless man wanted bad-
ly lo be a OOPoklller.
Theories ol an Old We!l-tlyle biihway
robbery attempt remiDlscenl of pioneer
cowboy daya on Irvine Rancl\ land bave
•irtOally been ruled out. ' .
Nor do pollce believe the plot at the
crossroads of Jeffrey and Barranca
roods cool~ have be<\! ~
apecillcally l<I get Officer Nub, perhall"
by ooneome '01th·• IJ'Wl4t against birn.
The Interlinking facts aupporl neilher
theory ..
"It waa an ambush, pure and simple·,"
.declares Coota Mesa Polite Pe1ecUve
Capt. Ed Gl8'gow.
Chief -the questiolb to be lD!wered l\ow la whether the would-be •"In -described as a motorcycle
"a1 "l{)'Pe due lo bis appearance -a.~ one.
lovestlga1orS .,. also seeking the 1wo
cllll!IClrt Yowi8 IJleD in • battered 11165
Oiovrole1 who atopped lo tell Officer
Nab u appeared a man 1y1ng on the
pavement bl.ct down the road was ill or
!n'ured . b.. posslbili1y due lo their iilllltary
haircuts, Southern acceota, and an old
car with ou1-0f-ttato plates, la tba1 the
men clad in clvllian clothes are military
personnel.
A teletype alert and radio broadcall
are -out tor tbe...green-and-whlte sedan,
minua ft1 front bumper, plus any oc-
cupants as potential material witnesses
in the case.
They said when they pulled up as Of·
fleer Nash wrote 8 log report under hia
dashboard lamp that they were beaded
for a telephone to notify police about the
suspected accident victim.
No telephones are lo<ated virtually for
miles liround within 1he Wldeveloped
sprawl of corn an<rupangua· llelda and
it would aeem l!Uly they would bave
stopped !Int lo Investigate tbemselv•.
Offl<u N8lh left wl1bou1 obtaining
their • ...., and found the man lying
face down in the roadway, b1I banda hid-
den benM!h him.
~reet, ~W,p11n .. ~e
Center No'W bpen
The Westminster High School Educa-
lion-1 and Career Guidance Center is
nov. open Tuesday and Thursday even-
inga for anyone wishing to use its
facilities.
The center offers a wide variety of in-
formation on various careers. college ad·
missions and occupational training.
Aptitude tests and interest inventories
are also available to personl con-
templ1Ung a new career.
The center is located in room G-1 and
will be open frotll. 7 p.m. lo 9 p.m.
DAIL'( Lit LOT Sltll l'tlttt
'YOU HAVE PROBLEMS"
FEPC Commitsioner Sandoval
From Page 1
SOIOOL ...
to teaching are Anglo-Caucasian.
-Of 48 adminlstraton an<t specialists
in the district, only one is a woman.
-While the local population is 60 per·
cent women and five percent Mexican-
American, the district staff is 37 percent
women and three percent minority. Most
. of these persons, It added, were
employed at lower paying jobs.
-Mexican-American employes who
have rteelved satisf.actory work evalua·
Uom far 10 years have received no pro-
motions and only small pay raises.
Trustees Adopted a fair employment
policy on their own thb Auguat, bu1 of.·
ficlals saJd Tuesday it wa.s uat best a
mere outll.ne of a program that lacks
substance."
"We're interested In results, not mere
rehetorlc," said Jerry ~falugeon, one of
two FEPC officials who investigated the
high school district
Malugeon told trustees they musi
prepare an afftnnative action plan that
specifies bow they will eliminate the
district's apparent b1aa against women
and minor!Ues.
To_~mplem~t the pl~. Malu li!t>'"
ed. the biriQg Of a full·time adml ri'
"with the authority lo gel the Job ~
At present, he said the aistrict v.·a:. so
"insensitive" to minorities "that you
don't.even.know how many you have."
Malugeon ~ted 10 a district report
showing tqat M Mexican-Americans were.
em~ liQ Mn-teaching positions..
Closer invesllgallon showed only 18, be
said, ~ Ille <!_l,stri\:l, had ,<OUnted P.'llflle~NUi)la)\!ii,,~P.\'G'lo and Swedtah sutnalnes as being Mexican-Americans ..
The FEPC report also recommended
the hiring of a top level Mexlcar\;
American administrator, a progrlftn of
mandatory human relations training for
supervisors to insure thal women and
minorities are given fair c~deralion
for promotion, and a program to inform.
all women and members of minority
groups of any specific barrier& prevent·
ing their promotion so that they will
know where they stand.
"You have great problems." Mrs.
Stella Sandoval. an FEPC co mmissioner,
told trustees, "bu! if you lake our recom-.
mendations to heart, they are not in·
surmountable."
A reminder from
OMEGAO
STANDARD ·
TIME
RETURNS
OCTOBER
29th
• Be sure lo
set your
watch BACK
one hour
this Sunday
When you Mt your watch bock. toko o close loo~ ot It. It m(ff
be occurot1bvtll11 mod•rn. self·winding? Dots if ttU the
dott? Or the doy ond ttlt dote? Perhaps now la !ht time to
choose on up.to-tht·stCOfld Ome go. Come In ond aee !ht
Omtpo Fomlly of flnt tlmepleces, $65 IO over $15,00J.
St~l~l•it a•HI .. 1~ '-o11111t1o1t Dtlf'~lt. Det.-IOIHllQ dlo\. $14$.CO
Jv11 -,, 11\11 Oillwo fa•lr tf ~"'"
J.C. .JJumphriej Je 111efer11
llU NEWPORT BLVD .. COSTA MESA
C0NV£NtENT TliAM$
27 YfAkS IN TME SAMI LOCATION
l1nkAt11•1it11d -M1tl•r Ch111•
!'HONE 141·1401
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1
At Your
Service
Credit Slip
DEAR PAT: I exchanged one of the
pants suits my husband bought me last
Christmas for a $38 credit slip at Johna 's
In Fountain Valley. After shopping there
several times and not deciding on a
purchase, I waited until summer. In the
:neanUme I lost the credit slip and the
clerk couldn't firftt a record of it. She said
the owner would chect bis receipts: and
contact me. That wa, in July and I still
havent heard from the owner.
B. M., Fountain Valley
Your credit slip wu given ln Heu of
cub, and rtt:ords of pctSt • Christmas
credits are no longer available. However,
If YDU bring yoar canceled clteck for the
trlginaJ purcllase and the other pants
1ait back to Johna's for comparison,
twner Glen Cook says he wW settle the
matter to your satisfaction.
E~eh•llfJlltfl Domes
DEAR PAT : I saw an advertisement
for a Home Exchange Club of California
located in San Leaodro. This club oHen
an exchange guide which lists members'
dwellings by code numben, city and
state. Names and street addresses aren't
revealed until a member makes a
decisive choice and then he deals directly
with the owner of the home he wants to
occupy on a temporary basis. I want to
know If this club is legitimate and the
cost or membership.
D{ V ·.• El Toro
The Oakland Better Business Buttau.
received a prompt niply from this firm
1nsweriag the "At You.r Service" bt-
~uhy. No complaJnts or other IDqairies
~ave bffn received by the BBB abeut &he
li•me Escbange C I a b of Qalifwnla.
Eatablhlled ta September, mz, .... elab
~barges a StS me.m.benhlp let, wftlli an •·so annual renewal. EJ:cb111re ''9mes
•rt available fn California, Nevada and
Colorado. '
Not.e OK Jtls.
DEA~, PAT: The use of ~1s., ntber
th_an M1ss or Mrs., seems to be gain.ins:
Wide acceptance. This i.s aU just dandy,
bt:' I want to know why a woman has to
Isbel herself Mrs. or Miss when buying
iJr cashing a U.S. Savings Bond.
P.K., San Clee.mente
You art a misinformed Ma. Women
buyers and benelldarle1 of U.S. Slvfngs
BoodfJ (Serles E and Serles H) no longer
bave to use a "Miss" or "Mn." or any
1lher Utle before lhelr names. 1be
l'reuary Department says t b a t one's
Social Security number now mn11I be u-
ed instead. But you stUI have one gripe
eomtng. Although both men and women
tre required to prnvkte Socl'a:I St<!urity
oumben for Serltt R Bonds, t Iii e
J'reasaty does not yet require men to Ust
their Social Security numben for Serie•
E while women must
Gnrl>nge Rules
DEAR PAT: I would like to know if
there are any required specifications for
garbage and refuse containers collected
by the city or Newport Beach. Are there
any types or containers that are pro-
hibited? I've also not.iced red tags placed
on some containers and wonder what this
means.
T.C., Newport Beacb
A.Dy one contahler must not exceed CS
gallons In capaclty and 50 poudt in
welg.bt, Including conlull. CoatalDen
sbouJd be made of metal, plutlc or other
watortlgbt matortal and be eqalppod wttll
h1ndles and a 1nug (tttlag cover. Noo-
returnable dls-posable bap are ac-
ceptable H tbey are sptc!Dcally designed
for garbage and refuse disposal and are
securely tied to prevent 1piDage. on
drum1, cardboard b a r r e l 1 and
wutebaskets •rt problbl'ttd. Tbe tli•
plattd. .by clty 'ttfuse crewmen on aeme
truh containers Indicate noD<!OmpUaace
wit.Ill refuse regulaUon1, 1ucb a1 autborb-
ed containers, weight HmJtallGDI aDd
preper prtparatlon of d I 1 c a r d e d
mattrtal1.
Musle Rights
DEAR PAT: Our church Is planning to
put together a collcctlon of mostly con-
temporary music In book form for our
own use, not to sell. We want to Include
the music as well OJ the W<l<ds for each
piece and would like to know it we must
have permlSBlon of the publi.sber to do
this.
V.R., C.nu del Mar
If you want to II< ablolutely eomd
aboal not Infringing on the eWMr'1
copyright, write tO the publisher of each
piece (lddre11 oa the •lied mllll<I and
reqa<tt pennlui.. to .. proda<t the
mask: for a non.profit purpose. How.iver,
several chdrtb 1Dd barber shop al:qtq
groups • oakl thl1 formality II ""
Dteeuary II yoo lottnd to ase lhe mule
t::ircla1lvely for your 1 r o • p ' • en-
lt:rtalnment. Any perform1nce for profit
would require consent of the publl1bt:r.
j •
.,
(
I
DAILY PILOT Slaff .1'"-let COMPUTER SCIENCE GRAD STEVE GUYON SHOWS CARDIAC UNIT
Blood Pressure, Heart <;:ontraction Data Measur~ by Machines
Cardiae Club
UCI Med School Has Patient Plan
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of lllf o.11\' Piiot 11..,
Woodrow H. Jackman's 54-year old
heart is working fine, thank you, and so
is Woodrow, his f~llow employes at
Beckman Instruments Inc,, Fullerton,
need to be reminded almost daily.
Last May 19, Woodrow Jackman's
heart wasn't so good. In fact, Jackman
spent eight days In intensive care follo.
ing a heart attack at his Garden Grove
home.
~ to a lteart QBUent;rehabilitatioo
program devefoped ny Uie UC lltlne
medical school al Orange \Aunty Medical
Center, 1JPOnipU'6r age method of oo-the.l
spot testing of heart and blood p......W.
rates during exercise and group therapy
known al ,OCMC as the "cardiac club,"
Jackman and more than a dozen others
oot only can go back to work, but do so
without worry of a repeat attack.
Sil: weeks after his attack, Jackm.an
enrolled in OCMC's "cardiac club." Ten
weeks later he was back "at his "high
p~" job in the irtandard! lab, a job
he's held for siJ: of tbe 14 years he's
worked 'for Beckman.
"The main point about our cardiac
care unit," Dr. Alfred A·. Buerger said
Tuesday, "is that tbe program helps Jl"t
heart attack paUents back to-work."
The UCI-Oililornta QJll<ge of Medicine
assistant professor described the pro-
gram as a two-step process.
First a complete physiologjcal work up
of the st.ate of the health of the heart is
done U!ing $105,000 ol equipment and
computer programming developed by
Information Concepts Inc. of Santa Ana,
a finn located in the Irvine Industrial
Complex.
Secondly, a complete program of
psychological counseling and exercise is
prescribed to overcome the patient's
lean that he is too sick to work.
Drawing on the supply of poor patients
at OCMC, tbe UC! medical school
researchers found that "better than 50
percent are back to work," Dr. Buerger
said.
The advantage to society of preparing
roronary patients to return to work is ob-
vious, he noted. They contribute to socie-
ty rather than remain on wtlfare.
Dr. Alan R. Bure!t assistant professor
of medicine at OCMC, points out the
combination of known heart activity
measuring devices with the computer
rteordlng process has broader im-
. pllcaUOns. The'. equipment -t OCMC allows doctors
Seal Beacl1 Boat
Unhurt in Storm
Off Fiji .Island
Sketdly reports fn>m &Iva, Fiji, today
Indicated the 72·foot yachl Baruna, own-
ed by John Mcintyre of S.al Beach,
rece\ved only minor damage from Bur-
ri"""" -which rated the South P1clflc lafand with Wind! clocked at 100
knoll.
Mclntyro bad just completed delivery
ol the yacht u a l(dt to the C.Wornla
Maritime Academy on Sonday. Barona
had been In the South Paclllc 11n<e
departing Los Angelos in the 1m
Honolulu' race .
~pl. Dick Wakeland of Long Beach,
who bandied the llW'YOY ol tbe yacht for
Mcintyre and the martume academy, got
a report bt ahort wave radio that the
BanlllO had ourvlved the llorm with only
minor damage.
The report .said at least five other
yRcbl8, all tmktentllied, bad betll
destroyed, ·
to kJ:>ow pr~isely the level of activity a
cardiac patient may endure, since com-
pluters in moments balance blood
pressure, oxygen usage, breathing levels,
pulse rates and electrocardiogram data
as the patient treads an uphill mill under
careful supervision.
In true 1984 fashlon, bells and Ughts
warn the examiners of the level at wbtcb
the patient should cease stnining
hi(llSe)f.
"Heart disease is the one disease that
ts most likely to kill any of us,'' Dr.
Bures~-"It accoonts for 60 percent of •
the deatbs·in the U.S.
"Frequen;tly, if be has survived an at-
tack, an Jndlvidual's heart may be
repairable, if his routine is managed
reuonably "
The com~Ucated measuring equipment
and interpretive computer aids help
measuie what is "reasonable" for any
patient.
Now that the majority or the "bugs"
are out of the system, Or. Buerger looks
toward duplication of the cardiac care
unit concept at other hospitals.
But further, Charles L Ricker, presi-
dent of the firm· which handled the com-
puter programming task, said the
mearnrtng programs' greatest value may
lie ln detennining more p r e c i 11 e
diagnoses of the condition of hearts of
those yet to experience myocardial in-
fraction -a heart attack.
Interest In the system has been sbOwn
by the lDs Angeles County police and fire
departments which would hope to test the
stress resistance of public se"ants once
etich year.
Ricker predicts large corporations with
medical staffs assigned to protect the
health of key executl•es might alto
reaJize benefits from lhe technique which
produces more accurate understaitdlng of
the potential for heart disease than do
ordinary EKG tests performed when tbe
patient Ls lying down or at rest.
One final aspect of the cardiac care
program is related to the need to as.sure
heart attack patients they are well
enough to work.
A sma11 tape recorder-transmitter the
size of a transistor radio may be strap-
ped to the patient. It records on a 24--hour
la;. each beat ol the heart for later in-
stant replay study by the COIDJl"ler.
Further, the electronic tones may be
telephoned to the cardiac care unit as a
way of keeping track of the patient's
·heart rate.
U be begins to experienee trouble, a
monitoring doctor may phone him to tell
hlm to ease up a bit.
Not all who participate In the Monday
evt:ning cardiac club require sue.ti coo-
tlnuous monJtoring, Dr. Buerger said.
Most members are entrusted to earl
Wells, a vocational counselor assigned
full time to the rehabilitation tmit at
OCMC. He, the doctors and others Jead
diGCUSSions amoog petieots which rMge
!rorn "Sex Alter Your lleart Attack" to
"Diettng : Less Pounds, Less Worry."
Weekly wtlgb-ha, blood Pmstln! and
pulse cbecJc,s, exerciae sea&ions and m&
leronoos 'with family and friends round
out the "cardiac club" regtmeo which
lackmall says "cbanil'I the llMllllal
envelop for many pat~la.
"I've leamecl to appreciate more In me
and to llve better," Jackman contends
eddin& be waa one .i many Americans
who uy to themselves "It will never hap-
pen to me.''
"l'm not worried now about another at-
tack,'' the fonner 110-pound, slx·foot,
one-inch oclentbt said. "I wOJ worried,
though , wbeo a fevr doctors told me how
h:dcy I was )0 be here after my Ont et·
tack In May," Jade.man adde'.d.
Now slimmed to %15 pountla and work·
Ing to lose another 30, Jackman saya he'•
thankful for the cardjac care program
and wouJd recommend It "even to time
wlio don't h•ve a cardiac problem, yet."
Wl<lncsdl1, -ZS, 1972 H DAILY Pit.OT 3
Nixon Letter Rigged
Three Bomb Notes · Defused by Israelis
JERUSALEM (AP) -Jsraeli explosive
expertl today defused three ~tler bombs
addrused &o President Nimn, Serrelary
of State William P. Rogers and Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird, police
reported.
Earner ln the day, two letter bombs
exploded tn Beirut, Lebanon. Another
blew up In Algiers on Tuesday night and
stiU another was found in the mail In
Cairo.
Eight persona were wounded.
The letter bombs addres'!~ to Nl:iron,
Rogers and Laird w e r e found in the
sorting room of a post office In the
northern Israeli frontier town of Kiryat
Shmona, near the Lebanes" oorder.
Police said lhe postal bombs were the
same ~ as the flood of erplosive
envelopes mailed last month from
Amsterdam to Israeli officlalJ and em-
bassies in various parts of the world.
A l~year-old postal employe was rush-
ed to a hospital after an explosion at the
Beirut past office as the morning's mail
wa.s being sorted.
About the same time, another bomb
went off in a 22-story office building half
a block from the American University,
and a woman secretary •·as hospitalized .
~ve other persons suffered Slight ln-
1urles in the explosions, officials said.
Authorities said thev dld not know
where the letter-bombs had been malled
from.
The Palestine Liberation Organization
in Algiers said one of its staff was hurt
'l'uesday night by a booby-trapped letter
postmarked from Belgrade.
Spokemlan said the victim's lnjuriea
were slight.
The Palestine News Agency said a
bomb addressed to a Palestine guerriUa
leader was intercepted Tuesday at the
Cairo airpOrt . It said the bomb was ln a
bollow<d-out book which also bad been
mailed from Belgrade.
Letter bombs in July blinded and
maimed two guerrilla leaden in Beirut,
and the post office Installed an electronic
device to scan mail. There was no in·
dication why it did not intercept the
bombo today.
In London, Scotland Yard warned the
Israeli Embassy against the J)06Sibllity
that a further wave of letter bombs
would be mailed to Israeli diplomats in
London.
The spokesman aaid t~ wu no
evklenee ol any new plot and no apedal
security a1ert.
Otber police soun,.1 uid, how<ver,
there ,..,.. signs that Arab temirist.s
planned I< new mall bomb campalp.,...
the Cbl'lill!iu and New Yi!ti' ~
when dioliieC! OOOtal'servl ... 'Will ~
security cHecb. •
AccordJ!ig to tlde account, the lmiOl!s
TWA.IN'S HA.BIT
IN RED GAZETTE
MOSCOW (AP) -1be humor'
page of the Llterary Gazette an-
nounced today that P. Shuranov, an
engineer, set a record by giving up
srrioking 57 times in one' year.
"The prevk>us record of SO times
was held by American wriler Mart
l'wain," the paper said.
9 e warned that further bombs could
c!ffi't....disguised as greetioi cards or
girts.
The warnings came after an Algerian
diplomat was stopped Tuesday by
customs ollic:iab in Am11.fdam w!ttl l•'O
suittuel containlna arms and Jetter
bombs. The material --bu! the mu wu allowed to pn>eoed lo Latin
America. Ile wu not idenUfted. His
destination was not disclosed .
Nixon's Campaign to End
In Clemente, Reports Say
President Nixon's campaign for nH!;Jec-
lion -an effort which began in San
Clemente th;. fall-migbl end along the
South Coast as well, if various reports of
tn impending visit bold true.
Leaden of the re-electJoo effort in the
Los Angeles area say the President plans
to spend the last few daya of the cam-
paign in Soutbem California, then vote in
his home precinct in Sao Clemente.
Diverse sources abo hint that a "vie·
tory celebration" will be scbeduled for
tht: Chief Executive !Omewhere in the
Los Angeles area as well.
The President somewhat unofficially
launched his campaign from La casa
Pacifica with an unprecedented .public
rally at the Western White House, follow-
ed by his first politlcally-tlnged Presiden-
tial press conference.
. Soon afterwards, machinery began mov-
mg to woo Democrats into tbe Nixon
camp through Former T r e a s u r y
Secretary John Connally.
U the President indeed visits San
Clemente early in November it will mark
the second time that he has been in
residence at Las Casa Pacifica during a
natiOnal elect.ion.
Two years ago NiUJl'l arrived home
aft.er stwnping through the state for
Republican candidates. for CongressionaJ
seats.
The trip was marred by a brick-throw·
in& incident during the campaign in San
Jose, foDowed only hours later by a •
potentlaJly deadly fire in the Nixon
rt!sidence .
The fire rousted the drowsy president '
an.I bis domestic staff from the residence
and caused thousands of dollan in
damage.
Two days later the President voted at
his polling place at Concordia Elemen-
tary School, then took a quiet trip to the
fire station to personally thank Uie
volunteer firemen who quelled the blaze.
County Road Officia~
Seek Freeway Action
Early construction of the Corona del
Mar Freeway and the extension of the
Newport Freeway to Pacific Coast
Highway were urged Tuesday night by
~ge County Road Department offici-
Munay Stonn, assistant road com·
misaione r and William Zaun, division
engineer, also told members of the state
highway commission and Division of
Highway o!liclala ll18t the ~ty is ~
short chailged on freeway · and bill*tay
construction.
"We urge the early construction of the
Corona del Mar Fr<eway from the San
Diego Fr<eway to ~borf<l -
end ~ e~ of·· Ille • Nt!"f'O'I
Fretwaf all tht Waj to ~ coestaJ tor-1
ridor," Storm said.
The road official listed four priorities
in his talk before an Orange County
Chamber of Commerce meeting in
Anaheim.
First · priority was the two Orange
Coast area freeways . Second was widen-
ing and improved interchanges for the
Santa Ana and San Diego freeways, and
third a speeding up of widening of the
Newport Freeway between the Santa Ana .
Freeway and the RfversJde Freeway.
Zaun emplwized that by 1980 only the
Riverside Freeway east of the Newport
Freeway and the San Diego Freeway
south of its junct.Jon with the Santa Ana
Freeway would be adequate to carry an-
ticipated traffic lands.
"Deletion of the Pacific Coast Freeway
may even overload the south end of the
San Diego by that time." Zaun said.
A fourth point urged by the county
road officials was the fact that Orange
County bas ooly $8 million alkltted to il for freeway and highway constructlon in 1
tile trl'S-74. state budget.
"In 1969 our allotment was ~ millkln 1
and we feel that budgeting only two per-
cent of \be overall 1tate highway spend-
lng program for OranRe County when ,
we llave eight )ltl'cenl oI the state'• vehi-
cle registration total is unfair " Storm
said. '
Allending the Clamber of Qimmerce = :::it4~4.8:;. Commllsiob and l!aig Ayanlan, chief
engineer for District 7 (Soatbern ·
California) of the Division of Highways.
Penalty Favored
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Most
Californians favor restoring the death
penalty for seriou5 crim... altbouglt
many are not aware that a death peoalty
proposition is oa the Nov. 7 ballot, lhe
California Poll se)d Tuesday. lo a
statewide 1,275.interview ·survey during
the first -k ol October, ooly 20 -
of the sample had beonl of Prop 17, the
mea!ure to restore the dealb l>enaJty.
pollster Mervin Field uld.
ALL THIS FOR ONLY
$ *
n..11 popu\or 5 piece room grouping incl\lding o i PllCI
llCTIOMAL, CWI CHAIR ... d I.AIOI 30"x30'' conn
TAW 11 mod• of hlth quality "'"9n ltfl• mo1t
durabl• wood being used In fin• fvl'T'ltvre mon11foduring
today). It wtll .casily adopt ltstff to ony room
Ngardl ... of iii• or decor.
·.
SAYE 5170
leoutlful 10ndotwood
fini.tl, no-mor
table top ond d.coratof
fobrk1 mok• this o
tTU9 'llOlue OI lb original
.. ... of $370.00 ...
but lllh 5 p;.e.
room grouping• 11 yovn
THIS WllK ON\ Y lo• th
•• i..1i...bt, s 199 low pric• of •••
,
Wed ...... Oc!OW 25, 1972 . 4 0"1LY PILOT
Thieu Blocking Peace--Cong Minister 1
. .
Politicos Zero
In on Co11nty
WILD BWE YONDER DEPT. -
Orange County Airport has been the
center of local political controversy for
some years now but as of today, the
county airstrip has gone big-time on the
politico scene.
lt develops that many or the top can-
didates in our current presidential elec-
tion campaign would like to land their
airplanes at the place.
The issue came up before the Board of
Supervisors yesterday because the big
tets of presidential contenders ai:e
heavier than those flown by the Air:.,
California people or ot ber airlines here.
So the big jets need a special pennil
\\'ell, v.·hat did you expect? You've got
to have heavyweight jets for heavyweight
politicians.
SENATOR GEORGE fi.1cGovem flies
!he campaign trail in a jet model called
Dakota Queen II. He wants to bring her
ir:.to Orange County Airport some lime or
anoth~r.
McGovern's earlier model. Dakota
Queen I. was the bomber he flew during
World War If. 11e was duly accredited by
the U.S. Army Air Force to fly Dakota
Queen I ll-'hich was one of those old fan-
lype aeroplanes. Dakota Queen II is a
complex. modem jet and good old
Goorge doesn't h/jve a ticket to fly this
one. It \Vas strongly rumored, however,
that he did so anyway on one of his
jaunts across the country. The story of
George taking over the controls was
largely denied later but a lot of folks still
believe it
PARIS tUPll -Madame Nguyen Th!
Binh. the Viet COng foreign nUnister,
discussing the latest V I e t n a m
developments said today "no early cease-
fire is in sigflt , . . we stlll have no
agreement with the Americans over the
basic issues."
Looking pale and tired but on occasion
flickering into a faint amlle, the 47·year·
old Vietnamese official accused Presi·
dent Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam
of blocking the road to peace -and ac-
cused President Nixon of refusing to
force Thieu from office.
Jn an exclusive interview with UPI ,
Madame Binh, speaking in her suburban
rtaideoce at Verrieresle-BuWoo, didn't
deny that progress bas been made in
private talks held by Henry A. Kissinger
and the North Vietnamese.
"Our desire is to heve a ceas&fire put
into effect as fast as possible," she aatd.
"This would put an end to the
unspeakable suffering of th& Vietnamese
and allow us to enjoy independence and
sclf-detenninati-On. ''
But, she added, "An early cease-f~ ls
not in sight, and all tbe rumors to this el·
feet are not baSed on facts." . .
Madame Binh said under questioning
U~IT_...
lhal ID Ille ptholo ta1b Ille Communi1t1
hod'"""" •-on-~ to a
prompt -oooe llwe wu a~ ·~ 00 Ibo pollllcol -ol --... Provl«mlf, Ille eo... mmunllta bad -htthlod a rigid link
bot-Ille implemmlalloo ol Ille two
issues. •
"Ill order lo fad1l1ale illl ,,...U.tioos
and lhow oar IOod will, we hove said
thal If lllere bu -an ~ In
princlple OD OOllCl'tla questloot of a
pollUcal -..i, ... ww cllsplar a fie-allllude" oo Ille -nr. llstle, she aold.
Modame Bini> illus ClOllllrmed a mk>
* * '*
Crash Aboard Carrier
•
Kills Four; Injures. 22
Fnm Wire services transfened to a holpital 11 ~ Nanr. The
SAIGON -The U.S. Navy said today others were treated aboard the earrltt,
four sallon were tilled and :ts were Jn. whlclt mnaln<d on llatloo ill lhe Soulh
lured when a .u.s. Jet, with a collapoed China Soa;
landing gear, plowed into a mr ol park· Meanwhile, Ii wu reported lhal the
ed planes aboard the 7th Fleet carrier United Stales reduc<d Ila flabler-bomber
Midway off the coast ol Vietnam. strikes against North Vklnlm again
The jet skimmed over the carrier's ar· Tuesday and confined them to the
resting cables used to halt planes-and -southern panhandle below lhe . Zllib
slid from bow to stem of the 900-foot parallel in a sort of a partial bombing
ship. halt aimed al improving the atmospher<
The spokesman said lhe A6 Intruder jet !01' peace oegotlltlonl, informed ......,..
lrnocked an F4 Phan-jet flghler· said today
bombtl' over the side ol the carrier, then The ~ Force' "" &.. ~-•-plowed Into four A7 Conalr attack ' ... -~~ •
bornben, another A6 Intruder and resumed atlacks on supply caches ID the
another Phantom, all of which ...,.. bad-panhandle after a U hour diversion to
ly damaged. The Navy said another F4 targets in South Vietnam. But the U.S.
was sligblly dam:igecL Command said the mnaller llghter·
Ten or lbe injured seamen were bombers flew oo17 ·-100 atrll:es, all
below the Zllib parallel, which t.. 'Ill miles
'south of Hanoi.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Oellwry er the Dally Pilot . .. ..........
She ..... bltlt!' aga!JIJI '!111eu, -
deinn!JC bla njection of the Comnllmbl •
plan for a throe eogmtnl clblnet of Na·
tlonal Coocml, 18ying '"lbleu'a words
ohow what a panic tie ts In and how "
isolated he Is from the Vietnam.,.
population."
Bui Mme. Binh dlt'8Cted midl of her
criUclsm al Pmldenl Nlxon.
"I lhlnl: lbel-oclually, 11'1 the ,
American policy Iha! ls Ille biggest
obslacle to a ooUtlcal eotllomenl Jr
Thieu can go through -octa. II'• because the Amerlciu keep him In
power."
Wicks
; .
• 1. <
" ..... <...>*'
'Sin T1lia»tl woozy ,_,,. I l
JJllCt-ewesJet, doesn't he?•
J:
Tour Called Off !t:
By Mrs. Onassis
'Any\\'ay. Dakota Queen JI isn't the
only overweight jet that the politicos
want to set down on our local COllllty
airstrip. McGovern's running ma te.
Sargent Shriver, would also like to fly in
here as 'N'OUld the second man on the
GOP ticket, Vice' President Spiro
Theodore Agnew.
Pleased Pooch •
The curtailment or lho air war began
Sunday, when the toial ol llghter-bomber
strikes dropped from an average of ~
300 to about 140, and about 120 were
flown on Monday.
PROVIDENCE, R. J. (AP) -Jao-
quellne Onaalls will not participate In a
wblst!Htop train lour with Sa• .
Clalborne Pell (O.R.l.), be<auae lho irlp
WU publlducl as her first public cam-
paign activity llince lhe dMth ol ~
deot John F. Kennedy. Lady, an II-month-old German Shepherd. seems .proud of the 17
pups she delivered this week m Berkeley. She was in labor for more
than 18 hours.
l MUST CONFESS 1 have no idea wtiat
name Agnew has given to his favorite
airplane. Maybe something l i k e
Blowhard the First~
Harvard Professor Shares -·
Rega rdl ess, all of these presidential
and vice presidential jets we igh more
than the 95,000 pounds nonnally allowed
on ou r COlUlty aerodrome. This is what
caused Avtanon Dlrcctor Bob Bresnahan
to bring ihe question before the
Supervisors.
Nohel ' Prize in Economy
Bresnahan, it will be recalled, was
under fire in recent times for letting out
a few con tracts at the tenninal without
lelling the supervisOrial savants about it.
Apparently he decided he wouldn't
make that mistake this time even if it
was the United States Secret Service re-
questing the landing pennit.
From Wire Servku
STOCKHOLM -The 197ll Nobel Prize
for Economic Science wu awarded
jolnUy today to an American and a
British economlst whose theories helped
Improve the standard o( llviog: and the
prospects ror full emp1~nl
The •100,000 awanl
went to Prof. Sir
John F. mw. 61, o1
All Soula College in
SOJ\fE PRECEDENT for approval Oxford, England and
seemed. to~ prevail since President Nixon Prof. Kenneth J.
had his: big jet. Air Foree One, dropped Arrow, 51, of Hal'-
in on Orange County Airport some two vard University at -
years ago. Apparently the President cambridRe, Mass.,
won't even make a ~and-go landing for "thelr pioneer--
this time in confi dence that the Grand k&MNnH '· u1tow ing contribuUoos to
Old, Party has lbini• 1111i<!r control ID this the general economlc equ11ibriwn u_.,
region. ~'ll just send Spll'O. , and welfare theory," the RoJ8l. SWedish
After some debate, the supervisors ap-AcademJ of Sciences sa1d.
proved the overweight landings for the The Nobel Memorial Prire f o r
political in. a 3 \o 2 split vote. Ron Economic Science I.a not one Of the
'Caspers of Newport and Bi\1 Pblllips of original Nobel awards. Jt Wu aet up by
Fullertcn were against the idea. the Banlt of Sweden in 1969 to celebrate
the bank's 300th' anniversary.
for ol lhe Ideas applied In P,.Ctlcal
economics f/>daY. Tal<e examples oucb u
w~ to 1ocali7.e new induslrlal plants,
tbe attempts by govemm.,.ts to conltol
monetary policies and fo reign trade," he
said.
The Nobel laW'eates have served as
economic advi!ers at home and abroad .
Prof. Arrow was a member of President
Jalm F. Kennedy's c:<JIJllcil of eoooomlc
adviJers in 1961.
Hieb. born in 190(, was educated at
Oxford and then taugj>I at the London
SCllO<>l ol F.c:onomics fmn U2S to IJ35,
He served as a .Jecturer at Cambridge
unlil 1138 when lie was appointed a pro.
!eaaor al tho UmoenitJ ol Manchest<r.
He moved -to Ollonl as a professor • • In 194&.
ArroW, bQn> 1111, -bis mast<ra
degree at Columbia Unlvenlty, New
York, ID llKO ml bis Ph.D. In 11151.
Nancy Tuckerman, a spotemum for
Mrs. Onassis, said Pell had Invited Mn.
Onassis to jOifi him on a traln nee ol
Rhode bland Oil Salunlay in bebalf :r tw.
•
Although lhe northeast l!IOll900llS
alway1 reduce the air attack on the
North at tlJts Ume of year,_ informed
S<l<ll'<6 say orders from Pr<sideot NID>n
have curtailed II evm more. II t.. bellev·
ed lhal Nlsm does DOI wonl to
acknowledge tho c:urtallmenl poblicly
became that -,.Id tend lo lnhlllll bis
'i...iom lo ...... heavy -Oil the ·~.~ .... obwlcl lho current pt..,. "l>o&ollatlms collapoe. '
~WU to make \he trip with
Pell "just es aort of a friend" and not for
campolgn pn-. Mia Tllcbnnm
said. Bui lhon tho trip -pnl>lld"'il ..
a campaign Pl'Oi1*iD ad lhe "IMl'rl IL i
•
IHI WOR•P19 GI.DIST WHISKEY
PRESElfl'S THE WOR'MI OLDIST MAL
AH, AUTUMN. AH, FOOTBALL! I BET.
yOU THINK THE MOST SIGNIFICANT THING
THAT EVER HAPPENED 1t> FOOTBALL
WAS THE WEA~· SIDE SAFETY BLITZ.? ~-
Cl.OSE, BUT WRONG. IT WAS °™E
TAILGATE ON THE STATION·WAGON.
rr ENABLED PEOPLE 10 REL.AX FR0'\11
Al.l. THAT ACTION WITH A MOUTH-
WATERING SPREAD ArilD A LIGHT,
SMOOTH BU•tMl&.1.9 ! ---~~~---:~-::::::---.... I WONDER IF THEY KNEW
BACK IN t6o8 THAT BY MAKING
aU9MMILLS LIGHT AND
SMOOTH, THEY WOULD BE MAKING
BU9HMILLS "™E IDEAL
STADIUM COM~NION !
AH, SUSHMl&.1.9.
SO SMOOTH, SO LIGHT,
SO I THINK rLL MOSEY
OVER 10 THE TAILGATE I
• ,
MAYB& CASPERS and Phllllps had a
mental P.cture of McGovern once again
talting tile ..... tr.ls or Dakota Queen II
and swooping low over Newport Beach
in a blatan t Democratic show of power
as he buzzed the Republican !trooghold.
George could draw some Oak doin g a
thing like ttiat. Newport people have been
known to throw things at jets with people
on them they eyen like.
No v.'Ollder Caspers and Ph.illips v.·cre
nef"V1)US.
Prof, Berti! Oblin,. a leading Swedish
economist aod former. polltlclal\ wbo ls a
member of the academy pril& com-
mittee, said the work started by Sir John
and continued by /<.rroW bad been ol
practical importanoe in almost every
sphere of economics.
"Their tbeorles have contributed to a
higher staodard of lll>inJ and to 1 more
even empk>yment &ttuatlon," Prof. Ohlln
said.
·'The equilibrium theory is the basis
He served I nlbe U.S. armed lon:es
194:1 to 1916 then starled bis odeiill!1r.
career as a """8lth member of tho
Cowles eomm111ioo ln Cblcqo. Azfflw
became a professor of economic a&rice
of atatistlcs 11 Stanford Unlvenlty in
1949 and mcvid to Harvanl in liel.
Arrow ii the-third American to win the
prize which bas been awarded three
times before. In 1970 Paul A. Samuelson
was awarded and last year Russian-born
U.S. economist Simon Kuznets won th\'=
prize.
Much of U.S. Und er Cloud
From Mississippi to Atlantic, It's Overcast
( I 1, I
elec
M
was
on
pres
and
the
appl
war
lorg
ano
F
I
p
wo1 ..... ,, lkt-25, l9n DAILY PILOT " ---"-----'-----------~\
Peace His Issue, Haldeman Single d Out,
McG ove rn Claims Nixon Key Aide, 4 Others Tied w 'Fund •
MILW~UKEE (AP) -Sen. George
McGovern hu declar<d that he wants
peace and "J don't give a damn'' about
the election-<!ay tmpacl -bul he Is ltll·
Jng votera they would be !oolislt to aide
with Prealdent NIIoo !or acblevlni any
VJeblam setUement now.
'!be Democrollc prWdentlal nominee
said whe;ther or not Nlxon ends the war,
"No matter wbal be does, It ouldlt to
help me ••. " He said Nixon sboula have
ended the war four yeua ago.
McGovern denied that be ..., aeeking
In advance to blunt the pollUcal effect
sbould Nixon settle the coOfiict before the
election 13 days hence. •
paint Tue~ that a (>OICt accord now
would oot -Y bis pmldenU•l pro.
peels but "would dellroy Mr. Nixoo."
Latar, he aald ~...i,tit help the Pres!deat
pallllca11y. Bui be added: .
"It would be a veri loolllll votar who
WO\lld vote for-Mr. NIIoo In prelarenco to
George McGovern II the Issue II the war.
Mr. NIIon !or many yean hu wpported
American Involvement lo Vletnlm. Dlir-
ing all tbo8e yeara, I have been opposed
( . CAMPAIGN '72 )
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on's chief of gWf. H. R. Haldeman. was
one ol five cl05e Nixoc associates who
controlled a secret campaign spying and
sabotage fund, The Washington Post
repru1ed lnday.
'lbe Post said it based the report on in-
fonnation from federal investigators and
accounts of sworn testimony gaveo to a
grand jury inveatlgating the June 17
break-in at Democratic national head-
quarters Jn the Watergate building.
'!be newspaper said It has be<n told
that Haldeman, a Nixon aide for 16
years, and the four others authorized to
make payments £rom the secret fund
to ll So If, at the eleventh boor, just were ldenUfled lo grand jury testllll<llly
before we start counting the vote,, 00 by Hugh · W. Sloan Jr., who quit as
Nov. 7, he finally switcMs ·his pbsition u'' ,.,.....,. treasurer of the Nixon campaign
and ends the war I don 't think the voters \ Claarges Dro pped organization shortly after the Watergate
...,, going to Bal' 'Hooray !or Mr. Nixon.' break-in.
paign, has told the grand jury that one
wbo received money from the fund was
G. Gordon Liddy, the Post said. Liddy ii
one of seven men under indictment in
connection with the Watergate break·in,
the incident which set oU the disclosures
of an alleged GOP sabotage ring.
The Post quoted federal investigators
as saying lhat upend.Jtures of buodreds
or thousaods of dollars -all approved by
either Haldeman, Stans, M i t c h e 11 ,
Magruder or Kalmbach -were made
from the fund to finance an undercover
operation aimed at dl1credltlo
Democratic candJdates.
Meantime, Atty. Gen. Rlcbatd d.
Kleindienst told newsmen Tuelday thal
the Justice Department has DO u·rj,,w
evidence" that federal Jaws w
violated by the alleged act. of sabotage
and that he !eela no probe ol the allega·
tlons is warranted. I
Kleindienst told newsmen: "Get the
evidence to me that would lndlcata that a
specific penon bas violated. a l[JOdfie
criminal law. and my department will hr J
vestigate It."
Davenly Change
Beer-stained Bar Becomes Chu rch
McGOVERN'S 8J'ATEMENT Tuelday
was reminiscent or one by candidate Nix-
on four ydlls ago ·when It DemocraUc
p"5idenl ~ a boulbing pauae
aod broadened peace talkJ just before
the election. McGo\'em said he Wpuld
applaud !iixoo If the.Pr.sidenl eoded the
war but added that Americans sbouldn~
lorgel "be kept tt going needlessly !or
another four years ., •• "
I lhinll they're going to aay 'We'" glad The Air Fon:e bas ruled out
he finally came around to ·GeOrge court-martial charges against DEPUTY WllJTE HOUSE p· r e s s ,
McGovern's position.'" Maj. Gen . John D. Lavelle, say-secretarY Gerald L. Warren declined FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) -Rrecoev.ll~~~s,Ga~-lt.a.~t .,'.lnewbothechur ~ ;.
ing his firing was punishment comment on the Post report. He referred The tables down at Smitty's where the ~ 'Uoll u-.<1 ms '\;"
McGOVm:a.N ALSO SAID be thJnks' bis enough for last winter's unau~ newsmen to a White House statement old-Umers dwe1t are on their way out. was oace a bar. t
campaign Ind bis .opposition to -the war 1horized bombing of Nor t b issued to the Poat, saying that ''The The beeMtalned bar will soon be replao-"! like the idea, turning things n[Jlide ,
"pn>bab[y lorced Mr. Nixon to do Vietnam. reference to Bob ll>ldeman is untrue." ed by an altar. down," aays the Rev. Mr. Garcia, a Bay 1 som.eWng that he illdn't want to do" in In today's account and in previous On Dec. 1, Smitty's Riverside Bar, of Pigs veteran wbo was among the ,,
'!be South Dakota aenator said at one
Four S ig~tings trying \o end the conlllcl. reports, the Post named these others ., long a favorite hawrt or beenlrillken, prisooers President Kennedy paid $50,000 ,
In speecbes1 rallies and television ap-controllers oC the fund: will become a haven of another sort -to have released from a Fidel Castro jail.
pemmces, McGovern aaid that Nixon woman Reports -John N. Mitchell, former attorney the Jerusalem Baptist Temple. Betty Smith, a Fort Lauderdale widow
can get no aetUement terms now that he general and the fint director of the Com· The transformation might disturb 30llle who ran 'the bar ror 12 years, says It was , ,
I Bo ' H t could not have had four years ago. mittee for the Re-election of the Presi· of Smitty's old regulars, now cut off from "a quiet place where the elderly could ~ 11 ggs u.n McGovern said that is "the tragedy of -Role in 'Plo.t' dent. their place or gossip, solace and familiar come and have a drink or beer or wine in
------Ulis W hole---OOsintss of Mr:-Kissinger -Maurice H. SUms, fonner Commerce peace."
P OVe Dea. d ds. orbiting arouM: the world" in the days Secretary and now director of the li!rs. Smith closed the bar Sept. 1 after r r ~en · before an election. TAMPA, Fla. (AP ) -A 28-year-old Finance Q:mm.ittee to Re-elect the owner Hortensio Delgado refused to , 1
''Did you make all these sacrifices, Mr. aide to a Republican state legislative President. T WO Catholics renew her lease. 1-'1
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -Hopes
continued to turn into frustrations in the
search for a light plane missing for nine
dlya with House Democratic Leader
Hale Boggs and three other persons
aboard.
Nixon, to save your own political face candidate sar she infiltrated state bead· --Jeb Stuart Magruder, onetime White Delgado's wife said her husband decid· ·
Crom right-wing criticism?" McGovern quarters o Democratic ' presidential House aide and now deputy director of ed to tum the bar into a church after be
said at a rally on the rainy steps of the hopeful Sen. Edmund s. Muskie during the Nixon campaign committee. Die-Revenge? met the Rev. Mr. Garcia and "the divine , Dayton, Ohlo, courtbouse. Florida's March primary campaign on lightning" struck him. ·•
"Ending the war is not going to be in-hehal! of the GOP. --m:IUIERT W, KALMBACH ol BELFAST (UPO Tw Rom The Rev. Mr. Garcia, 47, Ays be
Four separate sightings were reported
Tuead1y, but all turned out ta be dead·
ends, u have all the leads so !ar In the
aeatt:b which has covered 148,000 square I
miles of rugged Alaska territory between
Anchorage and Juneau, the ~tb of the
missing plane.
terpreted by intelligent voters as a Patricia "Peg" Griffin told the Tampa Newport Beachi described. by the. Pos.t as Catholic men stabbed to ~th wi: discovered religion while in a Qiban jail 1
reason to support Mr. Nixon because it Times Tuesday she was recruited by Nixon's personal attorney. 1be White when another prisoner gave him a copy • would mean that he simply bas done Robert Benz, wbo unlil lasl week was House·c!i.>putes thal description, but aays pitcbforks near the Irish Republic o! the New Teslamenl
something I've been advocating for many campaign manager for GOP Florida Kabnbacb has handled some personal border may have been tilled in Now, every evening, members of the :
years," McGovem said later. House candidate Conway Brock. She said legal matters for Nixon. revelige fi:Jr the shooting of a part-new church's congregation spend their .,
He also said that South Vietnamese she was hired by Benz to pose as a prtr The sabotage fund , a~g to the Ume ~~t soldier ~ days free time at Smitty's, lnstalling pews '
President Nguyen Van Thieu apparently Muskie volunteer. Post, was a cache of as much as $700,000 :!~ t!iay. t anny spo sman whe eronce the juke box and pool table ·~
I.rt electronically equipped HC130
aircraft was crisscrossing the search
throughout the night Wednesday,
two Coast Guard cutters plied the
has veto power over current efforts at a "I'm actually relieved you found me," h.o.Jd in Stans' office safe. d . stood. · cease-fire. she told a newsman Tuesday. "This has ""' The army sai one victim was a The tranformation of Smitty's into a 1
i!We ought to terminate any further been an awful weight on my conscience. The Post said It has learned that all member of the Iris)l Republican church is not yet complete. The windows i
relationship with this dictator instead of I'd been waiting for that knock on the five men have been questioned l!Y the Anny and the other a1so apparently still bear the brand names of popular
letting him dictate American foreign door, and now I'm glad it's finally FBI about disbursement..c:; from the fund . was connected with the IRA. beers and above the door printed in thick.
policy," McGovern aUL come." Sloan, the ex-treasurer of tbe cam-black letters is lbe word ''Bar." :'.'..--~~~~~~~~~~~---=='--::....::.::.::::::.::...:::...::::...::::::_~==============----=::::.::::::..:..:...:::-=:__:::~~ ters-of the Alaska coasUine.
J.. '
Peron Reportedly
To Try Comeback
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -
Former Argentine dictator
Juan D. p._ T{! will returo,-
to Argentina Nov: !?'to try to·
make a political 'comeback,
the newspaper Crooica said
Tuesday.
Cronica said Peron would fly
from Madrid Nov. 16 with his
preaellt wtle, habel, and ar-
rive in Buenos Alres the next
~y.aboard a chartered
arrlmer.
1be newspaper said the
(1N SHORT ... )
preserved body of his former
wlfe Eva also would be
brought aboard the same
Bight.
church's House of Bishops In
New Orleans, efiecUve May,
187t.
e llndef" Fire
BALTIMORE (Al') -'!be
!armer security director of the
Atomic Energy Commissloo
laces ari'algrunenl In federal
court her< next -ob charges of attamptlrig to
defraud the AEC ciredlt union
out of more than $33,000 in an
alleged shakedown scheme.
William T. Riley also Is
charged with !illng false finan-
cial statementS concerning
money borrowed from other
employes.
e KKK Foe Dead
ST. MARTINVILLE1 La.
FISK
'SAFTl-FLIGHT
95
C.11-IS CJOOll --PIW f'ed. 1!11,
DUAL WHITEWAUS
WIDE 71 SERIES nuo
Tmc flll A.llJ
FISK
PREMIER
4ft.Y IOLYISTIR CDllD-vn:z-TllllADo.!11
WIDI 71 llRtEI TRfAI>.
FISK
SAm-CLASSIC mJli>
CM., .. ..... T..._ .......... ..
.. 11.N. -
•HTIWM.L D.11
..
Eva, a blonde former ac--
lresl helped Peron launch hl5
dicta!Orihip In Argentina In
1945, and married him the
same year.
(AP) -Fonner Congressman
·Edwin Willis. who a s
cbalnnan of the former llou!e
Committee on Un-American
Activities batUed the Ku KlUJ.'.
Klan. is dead at the age of SB.
.. "°"'""'Cord rlie1 Phn 2 Fibertl•n klh I
• B ishop Quits
NE)V YORK (AP) -Alter
eight years as presiding
bishop of the 3.S millio~
member Episcopal Church,
the Rt. Rev. John E, Hines
bas announced plans to resign
later this month at the age of
112. Bishop Hines, whose term
extends unW 1177, said Tues-
day be Jrill l<nder hl5 resign•
tlon at a meellng ol the
Willis died 'lbur!day nighl
Services will be held today
et St. Martin o[ Tours Roman
Catholic Churcll lo this tiny
south Louisiana commuruty
where Willis was born.
He had been ln ill health
since bis last tenn, suffering
from various ailments.
e 1 au (!prising
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI)
Pollce firing teargas have
chorged the fifth llnor o! the
Travis County jail and ~
three bolfagea held b y pq.onen: ~ an unu:ceutu1
escape attarnpt.
No one was 'Injured. Oider
WU -about an hour . altar two· jallera and a nurae
were captured 'by lour
pri.9ooera who tried to trade
the bostag.,• Uv~ for their
freedom late Tuetday.
Yule Fete --
Sched1tled
• A (hjJlmd<-·will be lleld> Nov. s-4 at j!,. OMlrch ol
. Reliplus -,~ Laguns
C.l\YOll Roacl llfi El Toro ·~· Road. l '
UPIT ........
UtHlf?t J •ll
NeW$11111) Peter Bridge
leavN .Es 1 e z County
Jail In Newark where
be bad spent 21 dlys for musing to answer
grand j u r y questions
co ncernlng crl~.
The plt>llc Is· lnvlled to
blvw1e In the boUtlque or
handmade Items, m l n I • ar I
gallery and -baked aooda !rorn 10 a.m. to! p,m.
'Jba;e wll1 ailo be I draW!nQ
!or a handmade, 41-loob dolf.
SandwicllOI and collte will be
W\'ed.
For more ln!onnaUon, call
Mro. SblrleJ Mclntyro at
137·2832 or the cllureh.
-·-·-.~~"" ... """--.
..... ....
.....
BUENA PAlll
... dt,-.&.at l.•lt .. 11 •
·53011eu• llvd.
523-3040
•
'
... ..... ... .,, ..,
'" ... . ..
. .
BUEIA PARK
--~--$18.95: t!IU&
17.16 19.115
21.96
22.115
23.115
COSTA MESA e H....., ll'ld. at Wlloll e
2200 Hat.or .....
541-ZOIZ
·• " I
SANTA ANA
..._ St. at •1sto1
f400 ••••• ,
146-7132
WESTMINSTER
• 15440 ..... ll¥IL
leocll ...... tit Mdotldell m..zoa
' •
• DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Tree Tragedy Averted
A massi¥e ash tree tragedy was narrowly averted
last week by Huntington Beach City Councilmen. In Its
second bobble in as many months, the public works
department had marked 2,500 1nagnifi~nt ash trees
for death.
The trees' crime was the cracks they cause in city
sidewalks. curbs and gutters. City officials were pre-
pared to spend a staggerjng $1 .4 n1iLiion over the next
eight years to rip out the 30-foot tall ash trees and re-
place them with six-foot evergreens of a variety safer
ror sidewalks.
Councilmen, however. ordered the city staff not to
ki11 the ash trees, but sensibly transfer them for use in
the central park and other green areas.
Councilmen last month had to halt a public works
plan to lay more asphalt along Ma in Street, cutting by
two-thirds the size ot"ihe pretty grass-filled street med-
ians.
Jn a year "'hen ecology and environment are the
besl·knO\\'n "''Ord s. it seems incredible that city officials
would co nsider these kinds of back\vard actions.
Valley's Day of Fun
Fountain Valley bad ils day of fun Saturday as
nearly 2,000 residents turned out for the city's Hallow-
een parade and carnival.
Jt was a hometown affair featuring the city's Scout-
ing organizations, bands and drill learns and floats from
Fountain Valley and other surrounding communities.
prize booths and musical entertainment brought a t<>uch
of si mple fun reminiscent of the small town !alr of years
gone by.
The city and au the community org~Uo11$ wbo
'vorked hard to make the day a success shdUld &e con·
gratulated.
Misuse of Moratorium
Huntingtcn Beach City Councilmen are in danger
of falling into an easy trap: the use ol blanket building
bans to cover slow work procedures.
The current case in point involves planned resi-
dential developments. A 60-day moratorium on all plan·
ned developments expired Friday, but councilmen made
it clear they don't want any approved until they con·
sider re-establishment of the moratorium on Nov. 6.
When the moratorium was first set, councilmen
asked for a staff study on planned developments so
they would have sufficient information 'With which lo
decide their future at tke end of 60 days.
The staff study, however, was termed inadequat~
and there wasn't time for additional study.
Other moratoriums have been continued for simi-
lar reasons. One of two things must be wrong: the staff
i?n't doing its job, or the council is giving poor direc-
tion and_ the moratorium deadlines are arbitrary.
. In e1th~r case, the council should stop placing mora·
t~nums whic~ have to be continually renewed. A set
time upon which builders and residents can rely should
be set and the work done.
•
There were even two local heroes. Olympic gold
medal winner Shirley Babashoff and race car driving
great Tom "the 1t1ongoose" McEwen added glitter to
the event.
The C':lrnival \Vith its children's cos tume contest,
As it stands IlO\Y, city staff members, and council-
men, don't feel enough pressure to get the job done.
because a moratorium can al\vays be extended.
'It's the ultimate in women's shoe styles ... modified
army combat boots!'
What Adults
Don't Bother
To Consider
~YDNEY J. RARIU~
Thoughts at Large:
Too iew adults bother tG consider
whether so many of the atUtudes and ac-
tions ot young people have arisen
because ol "the times" -which is a
vague cup-out -or because we, in-
dividually and collect.\vely, have lost our
set of values, and retain no clear un-
cternanding of the proper nlationship
between lhe individ-
ual and society. • • •
IS there no way to
get people to stop
saying "No way"
with such nauseating
repetitiveness? • • •
The most ineffec·
tual ad I can ever
recall seeing is one from the American
Lamb Council. depicting a businessman
saying to his colleague: "He's import.ant
to us. Let's take him to a restaurant that
serves lamb." • • •
A parent who breaks his promise to
punish does as much to violate the child's
trust as a parent who breaks his promise
to reward. • • •
~1au cannot become an animal without
becoming worse than any ; when be relin-
quishes his humanhood he does not sink
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Airline pilot Nave's naive com-
ments on our pollcopters are like
saying: "No airplanes, children
might be killed in ice cream par-
lors; no autos, we might die of
smog; no nuclear power plants,
people might be radiated." Maybe
we all should just stay in bed.
-DiogeBeS '72
,,., ...,.. ................ ~Mt _....., ...... "" -· ''"'· .... .,_. ........ ,. .......... o.lty ....
to the natural leysl, as he Imagines, but
to the sub-nahl\'Pl. • • •
"Propaganda" is what our enemies
do; "indoctrination" is what our hiend&
do; "enlightenment" ls what we do. • • •
An experienced orator can tell when ao
audience turns into a crowd, by the way
'it begins to "smell" of Its dominant
passion. • • •
The worst drama critics are those who
either hate or love the theatre; the
former, of coune, are incapacitated by
their aversloo, but the latter are no .Jess
paralyzed by their adorailm. • • •
Should a representative follow the
wishes of bis constituency or his own
personal reelinp when an issue comes to
a vote? My own view is on the side of
Burke, who said, "Your representative
owes you, not his lndustry only, but his
judgment; and he betrays It instead of
serving you Jr he sacrif:Jces it to your
opinion.''
Joe Demands a Fight
Dear President: t, Joe Slkspak,
American, take pen in hand to stick a
bug (excuse the expression) in your ear.
You're in trouble.
How I know is I dropped by Paddy's
PIBce the other night. "Give me a Seven
High, Paddy.'· 1 says, "and your expert
opinion on how the
campaign's going."
·'What campaign?''
says Paddy.
"Why the presi·
dential campaign .
Paddy," says I.
"Don't tell me you ~ forgot?"
"Not exactly, Joe," \
$8)'1 Paddy. "Rut
It's kind of lite Montrt al playing Tens
In the World Serirs. You know lbere's a
World Series going on. but you tune In
the Roller Derby instead.''
' "DOW DO YOU FIGURE it, Paddy?"
saya l. "I mean It'~ a good , clean,
statesmanlike campaign they're "'aging
on the Wuea, right?"
"111at'1 rliht. Joe," MY• Paddy.
''lreGOvem's been running around thi!
country accusing the President of cor~
rupdon, spying, 1elllng raven and steal-
ing the breed out o! tho mouthl of poor,
hllllJl'l' babies -nothing out of the
ordloary. And the President's betn ail, Una: Jn bil offJCe keeping mum. You can't
gee more atatesmanship than that."
"How come he't b e I n g so
!l1tesmanllke?" says I.
"A statesmanlike campaign, Joe." says
Padc17, poUshine a 11w, "ts whll 1
politician "'"" when he flgurC1 he got the
cloctlon In the ba1."
"YOU TJUNJt the Prt.sldenl's doing
!ho rflbl thine, Paddy?" llYI I
"Aooon!lnt to Ille polll he Is." soys
Paddy. "A mcmth * ba'1 leadlna 57-34.
So be ._...,. his mouth lbut wblle
M«loYetn abootl 1111 of!· and ,,.,. he'•
I
( ART HOPPE )
ahead 63-29. At that rate, If be doetn't
say a word between now and November,
he'll v.•in 93-7. He will, that is, U anybody
remembers to vote."
"You don't think they will, Paddy?"
"What you got here, Joe, is a nlce guy
ruMing against a dignified statesman
and who cares? What the. public wants is
a wham-barn slugging match with lots or
blood."
"I see. what they want's a good clean
flghl, right, Paddy?"
"WRONG, JOE. What U~y want's a
good dirty fight. Why do you think pro-
fessioMI wrestling outdr11ws amateur
\\TeStllng? Wbat makes the Roller Duby
so popular? How tome Bobby Filcber got
all those headlines"? There's notl\ing like
a good dirty fight to turn people on."
"Then the Pruidenl ... "
"'l'he firs! lhlnR he 01Jiht.-to..do ts ac--
cuse McGovern of being a tertual devl11te
who ls !oft on Communism aod pnctices
verbal intercourse tn public. Otherwise,
Joe, Americans are Roinl to loee interest
In the democratic proceu."
"That'• a tough order, PaddY."
"ll II, Joe. But the Presklent'I got to
put penonal ambition aside. For the
good or lhe "'tmtry, he '1 101 to adhere to
our cherished American pclltlcal tradl·
tiorui and start flihtlng dirty."
TO TgLL TllE TR1JTH, Presidc.nt,
Paddy d6rl't think you'll do II . •le thlnkl
you're going to put winning above
eve rything and reruse to fight dirty.
Not me. thouaJt. t got faith tn jou.
llonest. ·
Truly YOU11,
Joe Slk>pak, American
H
Identify Source of Treats to Foil Sadists
Halloween Protection for Children
To the Editor:
\Ve are now at a lime of the year when
our children should be having a fWl time.
Halloween is a holiday for our children
and part of the" fllll is going out all
dressed up and receiving their cand y
(treats) and such. But unfortllllately
there are a few misled or sick people
who make their treats unsafe.
I as a pdl"ent don't know these people,
so what can I do? We (parents) e.nd up
throwing the children's treats away
simply because we don't know what is
safe .and what isn't.
I HAVE COME UP with a solution I
[eel c:ould benent both -and ~ ...
l"li f!l>iDB to pu~ "Thls treat <81J1t from the 'Moore family," on all my bap for
ch.Udren. Th.ls takes a few natnutes and
the'Parenu will know where i~came from
and it is &ale to eat.
r do feel jt is an idea to benefit every-one. .....
RUTH MOORE
McGo..ern on W•r
To the Editor:
J. read w1tb dismay McGovern's pro-
pc>S&l for ending the Vietnam war. This
d8ngerous presentation is notable for
what it leave! Wldone. rather than what
il purports to do. In this respect, tt Is also
dangerously misleading to the public in
seeking half-solutions and netting half·
results. '
In seeking virtually nothing in return
from our enemy. he gives them false
courage to further aggression by:
(I) IGNORING THE role of Russia and
China as supplier of war material to the
North Viets. Our unilateral withdrawal of
all support would deprive South' Vietnam
of the material wherewithal to defend
them.selves unless the United Nations ac-
cepts. the responsibility-very tmlikely.
(2) JgnoriDg the POW's as one ol the
prerequisites to total withdrawal and
bombing cessation.
(3) Ignoring the weUare of SOUth Viet·
namese clti:r.ens and officials who are
anti-Viet Cong. Remember what tiappen-
ed to several thousand of them in the
massacre at Hue!
(4) Ignoring the presence of '70,000
North Viet troops in Laos and 80,000 in
Cambodia. Why vohmteer to withdraw
our air force from Thailand without
reci procal withdrawals of enemy troops?
We have only 700 troops: in Laos and none
in Cambodia as or Oct. J, despite in·
fercnces to the contrary.
McGOVERN DOES NOT address
himself to consequences beyond this elec-
tion. He obviously p1aces more credence
In the enemy than he doCI In 1111 own
sovemmenl His na1 .. 1e in ,..lying on the
quesUonable compassions of the North
Vietnamese reminds me of the postmen
and the vicious dog In the yanl: when the
owner 111ured the postman that the dog
would not bite, he replied. "Lady. you
might know it and I might know it, but
does the dol know it?".
AalumpUot11 are dangerous anytime,
but tn the bustness of war and peace,
lhey can be deadly. It'• not too smart to
letve our entmY in bett.er abllpe than our
alllea. The »<ailed po..,. propooal Is
n>ally a temporary dl-1 cyplfylng the
llhort.qbted tneptnell of all too maey
Mc:Oovem campalp1 utletlllOel.
CALVIN G. SIEGLE
/lfcGover11 lnapres•e•
To the Editor: When I moved to Calilom la over 3o
~an ago, expensive survtys on mau
tmnslt were being made. They've been
m1kin& tht.m ew.r slnct -apending
fortunes.
I wobder how many ol the Seatllt -or
Dlsneyland>lype •i<v•led can coold ha••
been built down the conter of 1re<w1ys,
[ ..... _MAIL __ B_o_x __ J
Letters from readers are toelcome.
Normally writers should convey the ir
me1sages in 300 WOTdt or lest. The
right to conden.se letter" to Jit . .space
or elimtnate libel is reatroed. AU
letters muit include signature crnd
malling addres... but names ,now bt •
withheld on. requ.eat i/ rifflclens
reoa:on ii apparent. PottJ'V tDU( ftoc be
publi.Th<d.
I
and on other routes too, for tbe money
spent on these surveys.
One hindrance is the vast lobbies
spent by oil, construction, auto manufac-
turers, auto clubs, etc. Another is the
facl that the people ln posiUoo to do
something are comfortable in their
autos.
WHEN GEORGE MCGOVERN said he
would convert aome of the defense plants
and p e o p I e • (including retraining
them} into mass transit systems, it im-
pressed me.
He also impressed me when be ~
mended a minimum income tax. There
are tax "shelters" that are justified, but
anyone living well should pay aome tax.
Yesterday, incidentally, he Impressed
me again when he sak1 we should con-
centrate on saving lives instead of saving
face .
JOHN ADAMS
Double A11enta?
To the Editor:
Along with everything else, McGovern
ha! changed bis stand on Richard Nixon.
Nixon was cunning, tricky and sly. Now
McGovern ha! dectded that he Is dull and
stupid. 1bat he ls llO dumb be hires an
ex-F.B.I. agent who hln't unart enough
to do a simple bugsing job without being
caught. He then h1rel a lawyer who Isn't
even intelligent enough to get on the
McGovern campaign· team. The three
stooges could make lhat team.
These guys sound just dumb enough to
be Y/Orking for McGovern instead of Nix·
on. Could they be double agents!
JIM BOLDING
Propositions I and 14
To the Editor:
Qn Friday, Oct. 13, Saddleback
eo~·s staff voted WJanimously to sup-
pml P,ropoottion I and to reject P~ Hon the Nov. 7 ballol.
A '')'e!" vote for Propolltioo 1 means
that $160 million will be raised ror com-
munity college constructioo statewide.
Monies for this puJ'p0.1e will accrue from
the Interest on general obllgaUOD bonds
of the state, the least expensive way of
financing.
Enrollments in California community
colleges will increase to one million
students by 1975 and this creates an
urgent need for more classrooms,
laboratories, Ubnrles and vocational
education facllitles.
SHOULD THIS proposition foil, local
property tues will be the aole source of
revenue ror comtructinl community col-
lege buildings.
PrllposlUon H purports to reduce lax·
es, but it would actually raise them for
nearly everyone. Proposition lt will not
1enerate sufficient revenues for state
and local school dislricta. Preposition II
would cripple local government, and
severely damage the public schools. Both
Governor Reaa:an and former Governor
Brown are ve"hemently opposed to the
passage of Propo!ition 14.
ANDREW KISH
Bond Committee Chairman
Saddlebac.k College
Death Penalty
To the Editor' Regarding the letter from Roger West
(DAILY PILOT, Oct. 18) about the death
penalty.
Mr. West conclude" his letter with
We're Burying Ourselves
Things a colwnnlst mi;ht never koow
If he didn't open his mail:
Civilization is now threatenina to bury
Itself in Its own debris. Each American
generates a ton of IOlld waste, or
garbage, a year. 'lbe total would cover
Msnhattan Island 13 feet deep.
I! you bad a h<adacbl In anclool Greece, lhe physk:lan mllbltry to cure It
by drawing ~lood
from your head.
1 n the ltth cen-
tury two mlnera in
Nevada built a house
made Of stones en-
crusttd with "black
ltU!f." The next 7<1r
they learned that the
black stuff wu a
deb .Uvu ore, IOd
the1 mined their h<me for '75.000. Wblch
prove1 the act.11 that you doo't have to
travel far to Ond opportunity.
IF YOU RECEIVED an Invitation In a
metulle signed "Pol.us," would you ao-
cept ll~ You'd probably bo sorry later If
you didn't In the Marte Code "Potu..''
starids for "The ""'81dent or U,. United
Stat.et."
Anlmall don't seem to be affected by
poi!on Ivy, but people can get • rash
trom louchlns the fur or a dog that ha!
wandered through .11 patch of this three-
leared planl
WOO roally runs your -hold! In old
sw,arta, after their marrla(e, the bride
( HAL BOYLE )
and ~ each took hold of 1 piece
ol weddlila bread and tugsed hard .
Wboever broke off the blgser piece WU
suppooed to he the bolS In the !amlly.
QUOTABLE NOTABLES ' "An 01"
tlmlst ii eomeone wtiolreUs you to cheer
up when things m going hll way." -
Edward R. Murrow.
Sweet labor: It takee a lot of work to
make booty. One ohldy indicated that
40,000 be9-!0lda of necter-were re;auired
to produce • pound or [inllhed honey.
Another atudy by the U.S. Department ol
A(ricultll..,, hi whlcll the heel had to
make a IS.mile round trip for each load
or nectar, eltlmo\ed tbeJ lle1' ll0,000
miles to creore • ~ ol honq. shape of what 1 to come: wm the
American women of the Mure be lhaped
more Uke a giraffe? Probably not, but If
present trtndl contlnue, u 1tudled by
the U.S. Department of Aplcllltin, she
will he toiler and, In proportion to her
helcht, she'll have a smaller bu1tllne,
waist and hlpa.
WORTH REMEMBERING: .. 'l'llls you
can believe: when a younpter today
hears 1 bad word , It aocs In one ear -
and comes out hi.I mouth."
F1Cl fUo: A ir.e aoelll up about l,000
"How many executions has Mr. Barley
witnes.sed ?" Well, l might ut him,
"How many cold-blooded murders have.
you Yl'itnessed? ..
Perhaps you \vould be sickened by tht
innocent victims of these murdere il Y09
,,·ere there . But you see. the victim has
no voice to protest his death. We can·i
ask him what he \.\'OUld consider ap-
propriate punishment for the person who
kttled him.
One thing Is for sure. with capital
punishment. )'OU don 't have to worry
about second offenders.
MRS. LINDA BAKER
Ralph Bauer'• Report
To the Ee.Hor :
We 1,1•ould llke to commend )'OUT
newspaper for publishing the guest
report by Dr. Ralph Bauer. It pleates u.
tremendously lo know that there are
such conscientious people as Dr. Bauer
on the school board and ii gives us great
confidence in the quality education of our
children. Many people do not realize~\
the school board serves on a vohmtee'r
basis without pay -a vert admirable
commitment. Their only reward b VI
seeing to the competent operation of oor
schools.
TUE CONSIDERABLE amount ol time
Dr. Bauer obviously spent in preparini
his report was probably more than mos&·
cltlzens give to education in their entim
lives ; yet these same citizen,: are the
first to criticize and condemn, U3ually en
hearsay without fuU cognizance of the
facts.
We feel a deep sense of gratitude that
men of such caliber as Dr. Bauer are
devoting so much of their time, talents,
.and energies In developing our country'S
greatest natural resource -its child.ren.
MR. ~1:'1if~y "Ii~~·
hffi. AND MRS. WM. HERNANDEZ
MR. AND MRS. JOHN H. C01'
MR. AND MRS. DAVID H. FAUST.
M. LORENE ADWELL
in Garbage:
toM of water to make a ton of wood ..•
Football's frrst mascot was Handsom;e
Dan, a bulldog adopted by Yale Wh-
dergraduates in 1890 ... Some kinds or
toldflsh are gray, and some oriental
varieties hive been known to live 70
years ... Fish, like poople, catch coldl
and 1et upset stomacbs. •
It was Jules Podell, owner ol the
Oopacabana nl&hl club, wllo ollotrved,
"A 1enJus Is someone who con get hlo
name ofJ.a maUln,( Ust !or Junie mall."
• OIAHOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Wednesday , October 2.S, 19'12 ,
'
'
ut ~ud
H
e a
N
ale
e
of
Pa
J
tha
ve
ad
• eng
ltJs
"' H
ex
'·
'·
l
·corona
I
'Will Seek
I ' l~!=~uan
l::orona'1 attorney II.YI he wln hppeaJ In an attempt to win
~reedom on ball !or tho Mex-
an de!epdant who haa l>lfn
eld 17 l!IOlltba In the lcllling 01
farm workers.
A billl request b): defense
awyer Richard Hawk wa1
BRIEFS
'
Still Stack lumeci down without comment last Friday by &Jperlor Coon Salvage crews planned to tug at a stranded freighter at high tide again today
~udge Richard E. Patton , who to free the 500-foot vessel from rock! near Los Angeles Harbor. Efforts failed
b preoldtng at Corona's trlal. Tuesday to break the S.S. Liberty Manufacturer loose because of anchor slip-
Hawk said Tuesday he will page, according to the coast Guard. Part of. the cargo has been unloaded. e fn appeal at a n -''-'"'---'-:..:C.-:!'..-:.:...=.::....:.:.:.:;....:.:.:.::..:::...:..:::..:....:::....:::...::.::;~_:::::_:=:::_::::::::::.:::_ __
l!_nspecl!ied date Witb"the State
E°':_~t Appeal.
• Firm lndlrted . . ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
tederal grand jury here has in·
ted a swimming pool sales
and three of Its officers
• charges of falling to .noU!y
Customers of the right to fanceI contracts within three
rustness daya of signing.
1 Named in the 16-count ln-
4!ctment announced Tuesday
Eere Sunset Pools East Ioc .. a
ancbised dealer that sells
d installs pools, and its of·
•cers in Upland . * BrWge Probe
• SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
itate public works director
has stepped up the in-
Vtsttgatlon of what went
wrong and caused the collapse
of an uncompleted bridge in
Pasadena last Wedneaday .
James A. MDe said Tueoday
that be bad beefed up the in-
vestigation team ln Pasadena,
adding four addlUonal "'1\0rtl,
including Dr. George Hou.sner,
a professor of structural
engineering at C a Ii f orn i a
Jilstitule of Technology in
Pasadena. Moede scribed
Housner at "a world-renowned
expert in seismic and dynamic
forces.'' e h relt Chct'lfe d
LONG BEACH (l.P) -Mid-
dle-clU! Americans a r e
"'ignored and brushed aside,"
While spectaI Interest groups
compete for lnOuence In an
4elltlit p ow e r structure,"
American party presidet1tlal
~le John G. Sclunitl of
-Aldhen!.
Actress Claire Windsor Dies
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
Claire Windsor, who came
here as a star-struck girl from
SeatUe and became ao actress
in 45 silent movies and seven
talkies in a 30-year career, is
dead of an apparent heart at-
tack. She was 75.
Miss Windsor died ·Tuesday
at Good Samaritan Hospital a
few hours alter she c;,vllapsed
at her Los Ane$kS home.
After studying voice and
piano at a Seattle con-
servatory, Miss Windsor came
to HoUywood to work as an ex-
Mi'lk Slogan Altered
MODESl'O .(UPI! -The
California dairy industry's
sprighUy campaign to give
milk sex appeal bas an allergy
problem.
It 'I"""' that every body
dQes mt need milk.
Fer months, the Calltomia
Milk Advisory Board has nm a
radio, television and billboard
adverUslng campaign built
around the slogan, 0 Every
body needs milk."
The bodies on the billboards
provided some of the finest
cheesecake end b e e f c a k e
along the state's highways,
while athletes and entertainers
endorsed milk in the electronic
media.
'11le campaign was so sue·
cessful that a recent survey
showed 88 percent o I
California's consumers could
rtrnetri>er the motto.
But some doctors ,
particularly allergists,
challenged the claim· that
"every body needs milk," The
Federal Trade Commission
also began asking questlnns.
So the milk boanl announced
Tuesday that its slogan has
been changed to: "MU!t Has
Something for Every Body ."
tra. She was "discovered" by
director Allan Dwan and BP"
peared in "To Please One
Woman" with Edmund Burns
in 1921.
In addition to ftlms, she
toured in Al Jolson's road
show "Wonder Bar" in 1933.
Her last film appearance
was in "The Wt Act" in 1952.
Miss Windsor was married
to actor Bert Lytell from 1925
to 1927. Lytell died in 1954 at
69.
The actress was born in
Olathe, Kan., the same home
town as Buddy Rogers, hus-
band of actress M a r y
Pickford. A personal friend,
Rogers said Tuesday the ac-
tress "was considered one of
the most beautiful" of the
$Hent screen era.
He said MGM selected the
name Windsor to rei>tace her
real name, Olga C r o n k ,
because "they thought she
looked like royalty." Her
name later was legally
changed to Claire Windsor.
Sclunitz said the "forgotten
Amerlcaps'.'*'-P, rd In • r ~. I ... ~~lbl!elll!8rlo' 1 "· .
"wbo Will not play the game of
JKill~ action accordlng to
,,
ilie present rules." ·
In remarks to students at Cal State Long Beacli, the
tlme duck Orange County con--
gr.es s man said such
.,:inertcans are "asked for
ll'ust, but rewanled with deceit -taken for granted,
aQd ICOmed.'' e Man Arraiglled
· VISALIA (AP) -A 'l\llare
man has been arTaigoed on a
kidnaping charge In the ab-
duction ol Michelle Wlebea of
Visalia, held IHI Mardi for
$300,000 ransom. She was
releaaedunbarmed.
Charles Ronald WUbelm, 25,
was arralgnod in Visalia
Municipal Court Tuesday and
ordered held In lieu or IS0,000
bail. He was tcbedu1ed for a
pr<limlnary bearing Dec. 4. e Poi.-Spra11ed
. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
Modest0 crop dusting service
l1as been shut down for 15
dlys b.Y the state Agriculture
Department for spray l n g P.O\IOOOUS materials on three
~Je and for flying
d&njeroltsly low while dusting
an aUaUa field.
Agriculture Director Charles
B. Christensen said Tueoday
tMt Walter M. Fountain Jr.
bad bOtb his pilot's license and
his 11~ to operate a crop
dusting service suspended for
IS days because of the in-
Cldent. The rupenslon began
Sept. 21, Ou1stensen said.
3ee
Hl1 t~vorlte heng-up. You. For • mere 3.88 Tum your
favorite picture Into a big 2' x 3·' poster-just bring In any bla~k-and-white or c61or print (no negatives, pleas8) and
you II have your black-and-white poster back in 2 weeks.
(Your print will be returned unharmed) Tum youreelf
In.to somebod~'a fa~rlte hang·up now. _
11'111 Hr:vk:• I• only av1118~eat:
• I '' _.
Winds
Spread
Blazes
Powerful, dry winds have
turned 11controlled bums" loto
fast moving forest fires in the
Six. Rivers National Forest. A
fallen power line has spa.eked
another blaze in Plumas Na·
tional Forest, the U.S. Forest
Service reported today.
'Ibe Six Rivera f I r e s
scorched between 175 and 200
acres 1'Aesday night as some
250 men worked toward con-
tainment. Ground crews and
aerial tankers worked on a fO..
aae blaze near Orleans in
Humboldt County, and 200
men fought several fires of
five to 10 a<..T~ in the Gasquet
region of Del Norte County.
The ·forest service also
reported fires of 15 acres and
three acres on the Mad River.
About 50 acres w e r e
blackened by a stu~m forest
flre which burned out of 001>-
t.rol ln the Feather River Can~
yon near Oroville.
Janet Lambert of t h e
Oroville Ranger station said
200 flre fighters were ham-
pered by high winds and steep
terrain.
¥~······~····-
Wtdn!sda,y, Octobtr 25, 1972 O.t.ILY PI LOT
Jurors Sequestered
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The JU!t lo the oequesttation. of Ollmelat'1 -Jrc lllrouP
judge prtsldlng over the trial The sequestration followed nt'W1 covenge.
of Lhree men charged with al· Murphy's denial of a mistrial The 'nntary brothers lllJd
tempting to black ma 11 motion made'"by defense at· Breceda were mmed in AD
su burban Ino.•indale Mayor torney Martin Z l n m a n , April 28 Loi Angelel County
Richard Diaz has sequestered representing Joeeph an d Grand Jury lndlctment, cblra·
the jury in the wake of the Pcrlee Tintary, and attorney ~ them with oomplracy to
shooting or a key prosecution Joseph Reldlman, represen-commit criminal Ube!, ex-
witness. ling Jrwindale Olty Coon-tortion, admlnist.nltlon of a
Su · Cou cilman Richard Breceda. restricted ~eroua drug, ad-perur rt J u d g e Denial of the motion came ministration fJ. cblorotonn Thomas Murphy took the ac-tion Tuesday. R 1 c h a r d after Murphy questioned wiUt intent to as:siat a reJony,
Calmelat, an u n i n d 1 c t e d jurors for more than an hour false impri8onment and oral
coconspirator ln the case, was1_a_boo_t_w_ba_t _the~y_ba_d_Iearned ___ copu1a_;__t1on_. _____ _
shot in the eye Saturday night
when he answered the door at
his La Puente h o m e .
Calmelat, who Is hospitaUred
in Los Angeles, was scheduled
to testify this week.
(A4¥.,....__,,
What do doctors recommend
for patients in pain?
MURPHY sent the seven-Doctors all over the country dispense over 50,000,000
woman, five-man jury lo a r th ··bl ts t th . . eh downtown hotel and ordered 0 ese "' e 0 e1r patients ea year.
the trial recessed. until Thurs-T here •re many medicalions a tors l'OCOIDmend m<11t than any
day to allow the Jurors to ad-phy1icia n or dentist can pre-other leading tableL
scribe for pain. Some a re nar. Headache and dental pain is
L>otic, many a re available only TI>lieved incredibly fast: minor
Plane Re • . on prff<:riptlon. But there is one 1Ja ina of a rthritis are depend· patr.... pain reliever, available without ably eased for hours: eve n the
pret1Cription, doctors d ilJ)ense aches and pains of oolda and flu
JOHANNESBURG, SOU th again and again .•. Anacin. respond to Anacin. So the ten·
Africa (AP) -South African , Each year, doctors give over sion a nd depreaaion that can be
Airways bas budgeted $530,000 50,c:>OO·~ A!laci~ tablets to caused by 1uch pain will be re·
to repair a Boeing TtT airliner th~1r patients in pain. If d~tors Jieved too. And milliona take
hijacked to Malawi In May t~1nk enough about Anacin to Anacin without 1tomach upset.
The .Plane ~as raked b~ :!i:::!~!':a'tt~:~nw;:~ do':th;~u~:~:: ~ ~:~ii;hJ ma~ gun fU'e from Malawt aak when you are in pain? so many doctors and take the
soldiers before the two hi· You see, Anacin contains tablet a doctor mi1ht 1ive you
jackers SWTendered. more of the pain reliever doc-in hi.sown office. Take Anacin•.
Our 'Tique' draperies are
machine washable,
tumble dryable,
non-fadeable-
and unbeatable!
Naturally, there's
cotton in the blend.
·f
I ~ I ' • '!
I ! l •
• l
10~~-
In addition to all this, 'Tlqoe' draperies have an insulating acrylic
foam back. And they oome In lots of terrific colors that'll mix
or ma tch your decor. Valances and tiebacks are available, too.
And, lf we don't have your si ze ln stock (which isn't likely) we'll
ru sh·order II. Cotton/rayon jacquard ble nd .
50x63" ... " ....................... 9.55 100x84'"
75x63~ ........................... 17.84 125x63'"
751184'" ........................... 21.73 125x84 '"
100X63" ........................... 23. 11 150x84"
........................... 27.48
........................... 28.42
........................... 33.77
···········-·············· 39.94
•
JC Penney
The values are here every day.
-.
Huntl~ton B••ch end Newport B•ach.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores :
'
HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach, (714) 892-n71 FASHION ,ISLAND, Newport Buch, (714) 644-2313 HARBOR CENTER, Costa MeH, (7141 646-5021
,
I (· • I l '
• OIJLV PILOT H/F
f
'
Emo~onal
IDnesses
Not Myth
Dy DR. STEINCROllN
Dear Dr. Stclncrohn: lt's
just a fancy name conL'OCted
by doctors -psychosomatics .
Now, don't you think it's
overdone? -Mr. L.
COM~1ENT : Underdone. not
ov~rdone . Honestly. frankly . J
believe so. Many so-called
.. physical'' complaints are un-
diagnosed or misdiagnosed
simply because the patient's
emolions are overlooked as a
possible cause.
How can I convinct: vou. Mr.
L .. thal emotions affect the
organs of our body? Here. I
think, are some simple ex-
amples.
When you were a youngster.
did you ever bltish \\•hen
bash f u I? Psychosomatics :
DOCTOR IN
THE HOUSE
.vour emotions and mind ac-
ting on the blood vessels in
your skin.
ln high school or college
before taking a final exam, did
you suddenly develop the urge
to go to the bathroom'!
Answer : Psychosomatics.
Were you ever "scared out
of your wits" in some !lldden
situation that endangered your
life? What happened? Old
you r heart pound? Did your
mouth go dry? Did your hR:nds
sweat ? (fl you could ha ve
looked in a mirror at the time
you would have seen lhat your
pupils were much larger than
normal.) ~reart, mouth, hands.
eyes -all afrected by emo-
t tons . Answer :
psychosomatics.
Now, how does all this in-
volve the probability that
nerves and exaggerated emo-
t ions can affect the stomach
and cause gas and discomfort?
That they can disturb the in-
testines so that diarrhea and
cramps result? And produce
headaches day after day? And
scores of other complaints?
Bett er believe it :
Psychosomatics isn't just a
fancy word. The doctor who
oVerlooks emotions in his pa-
tient may be n1issing 1he
diagnostic boat .
For Mrs. I.: I believe in
periodic seJf. .. examination or
breast11 by y,•omen . Early
discovery of a small lump has
saved many Jives. Your own
family doclOr or gyneco logist
will give you specific dlreC-
tions on how to go about it.
For Mr. and h-1rs. D.: I
won't go into the moral con-
sideration or. "who gave it to
whom." What I am especially
gratified to hear is that both
you and your husband have
the courage to go to your own
family doctor for treatment or
gonorrhea.
'Mlese days when so many
still look upon VD as a
"shameful disease" rather
than as simply a "disease". it
is reassuring to know that the
barriers are gradually being
broken. Only in this way will It
be pru:slble to make any in-
roads .agalnat the vast and
tenacious problem th a t
veoueal d.Lstast poses today.
Dear Ct. ~telncrohn : I am
JS. I rtalJMI I !\'°'>"bly had
gonorrhea. J hive tw o
""'1derful·pol'tl1ts. I lold them
aboUt It. They look me to our
doctor who treated me and
cleared It up quickly. My
J>IWlls gave me a good talk-
l"i to. but not once was there
even any hint of •1111 klnd of
J)Ul1lshment. l'w learned my
leuon. I wlJh oil kids could
confess to their pannta llkt t
did." -Mr. X.
Experience has proved that
to be fat lJ to Invite trouble
heallllwlae say1 Dr. Sttlncrohn
in bk booklet, ·•watch Your
Diel llecllUIO Fal C.o Klll
You!'' For a oopy, write hfm
11 lhla paper enclO&lni IS
c:ent& In c:oln Ind a 1tamped1 .. 11oacldrftaed envelopo.
PILOT-ADVERTISER J3
• • •
STARTS THURS 10:00 A.M. • • . sorry •• .NO PHONE OR MAIL 'ORDERS!
. -_m_ n:::.:: ~,j,WO _.,_,,-GIRL'S DIJ>'AATMOl'f IWHTTN6TOll BEACH (AMIRA ·~~· HU~ll NCYTON B!AOl
3S Junior Jeon1, 510 15 orig. 9.00 10 18.00 NOW.99to12.11
11 backless 1izz.ler dre11 orig. 6.99 ........••• , , , NOW .II
18 Dolman long sleeve 1weoler1 orig. 17.00 ..•. , • NOW 9.11
3 women's stnpe v1t111 orig. 9.00 ............... NOW .II
4 women's 'fJOrl cotton,topl orig. 9.00 lo 11.00 NOW 3.llto 5.11
3 Junior rib·k.nil 1wealer1 orig. 7.00 ... , ...... , . NOW 4.11
12 women's velour lopl orig. 9.00 ...... , •. , ...... NOW 6.11
S' women11velour1op1 orig. 9.00 . , .........•.• , NOW 2.11
7 long sleeve skinny ribs orig. 9.00 .. , , ........ , . NOW 6.81
4 sleeveless crocheled veils orig. 3.99 , . r ...... , •. NOW 2.11
10 con1rost bicycle tops orig. 6.00 ...... , ...• , , , , NOW 2.18
17 long sleeve colton tops orig. 7.00 to 10.00 NOW 2;.11 to 1.il
19 Women'Shoher top• orig. 6.00 . , , .... , ....... NOW , .44
7 wOmen's lank tops orig .. .4.00 .......... , , ..• , , NOW 2.11
7 .:l_vnior pleated coulolles orig. 7.00 ....•....•• , NOW 2.11·
3 wamen'1 po!ko·dot coulottes orig. 7.00 , ....•.• NOW .II
mox1 1kirt'" canon oriQ. 3.99 ..... , •• , , ...••. , • NOW .II
1 O body •hif'f pont 1et1 orig. 25.00 .. . • . . . . • • • .. . . • NOW 12.11
1000 stretch denim pont1 orig. 5.00 •.•• , ...••..•• , NOW .99
96 orion sweoter·knit pontset1 .... , , . , •.•• SPECIAL AT 9.99
24 queen-size coordinotes orig. 12.00 ........... , NOW 5.11
48 queen-siz.e coordinoles orig. 9.00 to 1.4.00 ..... NOW 4.11
24 women's ponts orig. 10.00 .................. NOW 6.18
17 long sleevele5S veils orig. 10.00 ............... NOW 6.11
21 L/S scoop-neck tops orig. 1 0.00 ..... , . .. . . . . . . NOW 6.11
4 ~hort 1leeveles1 vesls orig. 7.00 ............... NOW 3.81
11 women'• skirts orig 7.00 ............. , . , .... , NOW 3.18
7 1leeveless tailored veit orig. 8.00 , . . . ... . . . . . . . .. NOW 4.11
7 long sleeve print top• orig. 8.00 ........ , . . . . . NOW 4 .11
1 long 1leeve gold lurtleneck orig. 7.00 , .....••. NOW 3.11
27 L/S layered look sweater orig. 9.00 , ............ NOW S.11
6 A·Hne 1kirts orig. 10.00 .......••. , .•.... , ... NOW 6.11
31 skirt·coulolle ponl1orig;12.00 , .. , ..•. , ...... NOW Lii mmarmrmn-w111m
134 Costume jewelry orig. 2.00 lo 3.00 ............. NOW .22
250 costume jewelry orig. 2.50 to 3.50 .• •. , .... , .••• NOW .44
30 leather belt• orip. 6.00 .......•..... , . . . . . . . NOW .1 0
7 enamel coclus flOwers orig. 6.00 ........ , .•... NOW ,44
2 gold mirrors orig. 7.00 ............•....... , NOW 1.81
50 women's scaNesorig.1.25103.50 ............. NOW .10
15 women's handbags orig. 7.00 to 10.00 ........... NOW .II
13 women'swolle-norig.3.00to.4.00 ............. NOW .II
23 women's1\eepwearorig .. .4.00to8.00 1 ....... ':' NOW 1.11
12 mi1se1&Jun~robesorig.12.00&13.00 .•.•• NOW 4.11
5 polye1tiardu1ter1orig.12.00 ... ····•·••f•••• NOW 4.11
9 wom9n'1 thiftt orig. 5.00 &. 6.00 ••.•.•. r .... , • • NOW ,,_ 1.U
10 backless halter-top lounger orig. 3.00 ••• , • , ••• NOW 1.22
9 women'• glrdle1 orig. 1.4.00 ... , •.•...• , • , •• , , NOW 9..11
26 women'1pontt..ho1eorlg. l.69 •••••••..•.•• ,, NOW .99
17 white support ho1e orig. 3.98 .. , .•••.• , •••• , • NOW 1..11
8 shoe packets for !ravel orig. 2.00 ...••.• , .. , • , NOW .44
2 iewelry co1e1 orig. 10.00 ...... , , , .. , . . . . • • • • NOW 2.11
10 22" black glove• orig. 3.50 ..................... NOW .44
15 women's choin beh1 orig, 3.00 ......... ; •. , ••• NOW .99
50 swlngerln1tantnoil1=101ish ori~.1 .7S ........... NOW •66
60 pastel brac:ele11 orig. 1.00 ................... NOW .S
7 women'• terry jump1uit1 orig. 6.00 ....•••••.•• NOW 2,11
6 women'• one-size cahan1 orig. 1 3.00 •••••. , • • NOW 6.11
5 women'1polye1terl0Yngerorig. 18.00 ! ....... NOW 13.11
.",DRESS!! WEDDING GQwNS ' .:. '. H(J~TtNGTOW BEACH
2 weddinggown1orig.80.00tol.40.00 ..•.••••• NOW 19.Q
2 bride1maid1 headpieces orig. 6.00 ..•••••• , , • NOW .._44
22 women's uniform• orig. 6.00 ...... , , .... , •. , • , NOW 2.1&
11 women'1unlform1orig.1~.00 .................. NOW 4.11
1 SD Junior & petile dre11e1 oriQ, 1-2.00 lo 30.00NOW S ... to 22.U
3 maternity dre1se1 orig. 15.00 , ..... , ........• NOW 1.81
SD pr. boy'1 & girl;• canvo11hoe1 orig. 5.99
100 pr .. Ws & girl'• 011.fords orig .. 8.99 •.• , .•• , • , ••
SO pr. women'• bootl orig, 6.88 .•••. , , ••. , • , ..•
100 pr. women'11ondols orig. 2.00 •• , , • , , •• , •••••
100 pr. women'• heel• orig. i5.99 , ••• , . , , • , , •••• ,
SO ,..P.!:.wo~'• heels orig. 9..99 , ·.: •..• , ·-, •••• ,.
75 pr,men'ibootsorig.19.99 .....• , ... :-.... ~;\.
NOW 1.11
NOW 3.11
NOW 3.11
NOW n
NOW I.II
NOW 6.11
NO\Y 12.11 -
4 men'1 velour kimono robe orig. 15.98 , ...... , . NOW 9.11
30 men's bike shirts orig. 8.88 ....••...•.... , . . • NOW 4.11
65 men's flare pants orig. 8.98 .. , ... , ....• , , •• , NOW 6.U
2S men's flore ponts oriQ. 7.98 . , •.... 1 • , • , •• , , • NOW 5.11
250 men's tasuot pon11 orig. S.98 ........ , ..... NOW2 for 5.00
40 1elect group of men's f1are1 orig. 1.88 to 3.88 . , , NOW 66 •'•
60 men'1 corduroy iockets ............... Speclcd 8vy ot 16.99
100 men'• double-knit flares, ...• , .•. , .. Spec.Killy Priced 1..99
40 short or long sleeve sport 1hirt1 orig. 3.88 , ... , • NOW 1M
10 men'• knit 1hlrt1 orig. 3.99 .......... , •• , .•••• NOW 2.ff
20 men'• embroidered 1hii1. orig. 5.88 , , , , •••. , • , NOW 2.ft
20 tie1, 11~1 &.1onC:t1'orig.'2.50to3.50 ••.••.•••• NOW 66
20 men'• pullowrsweatera orig. 10.98 ....... , , • , , NOW I.II
30 men'11weat1hlrts orig. 3.98 . , ... , .•••••..••• NOW 2:99
lS m•n'a work clothe• orig. 2.50to 3.98
30 m•n'• work cloth•• orig. 4,88 to 7.49
NOW
NOW
2forJ
2for6
SOY'S DEPARTMENT •. · llUNllNGTON BEACH
3o Boy'1SportShirt1orlg.2.49to5.98 •••••.••••. NOW 1.H
20 Boy'a skirt cleora·nce orig, 1.91to2.50 •••••• , , • NOW 1.22
12-'Boya d~ tocMt1orlg. 9.18 .•••• , • ••• NOW 6.11
I pr...chool dune buggy ta<.kets orig. 6.91 •••• , , NOW 4.11
12 8oy'aaw.cmhlrttorlg.1..59ta1 .. 79 ••••••••••• NOW .tt
12 lov"• V-ttec:kSw.at•r1. or\g. 4.98 •• , ••• , , , , , .. NOW 2.11
. .
12 Glrt'1dr111se.,3to6xorlg.4.00 ............... NOW 2.11
6 Glrl'1 1kirt1 orig. 4.00 , ... , ............. , •• , .. NOW 1.11
20 Girl's short1, 1 to .4 orig. 1.79 ... , , , ..•. , •• , • , NOW .II
I Girr1panf1,10to\4orig.5.00 ................ NOW .II
20 Girl's pins&. necldoce1 orig. 2.00 .... , . , ... : •••• NOW .II
10 Girl's dre,1e1, 3 to 6x orig. 5.00 •..•.. , , , • , , , , NOW 3.11
30 Girl's drease1, 7 to 1.4 orig. 6.00 ............... NOW 4.11
20 Girl's dresse•, 7 to l .4 orig. 7.00 , , .•....•. , .... NOW S.11
14 Girt'1 dresses, 710 14 odg. 5.00 , ............. NOW 3.11
19 loddler'sskir1s.1 to4orig. l.69lo2.19 NOW ...
2S toddler's sun1u it1, I to .4 orig, 1.79 to 2.00 • , •••• NOW .II
15 toddler's 1un1ui11: 110 4 orig. 2.50 lo 3.00 , ••• , • NOW 1.11
11 1!riped ponls, I to 4 orig. 3.00 ........... , •••• NOW 1.11
4 toddler boy1 suils, 2 to 4 orig. 6.00 .......••••• NOW 2.11
4 Electric Adding machine orig. 78.88 .......... NOW 68.11
I Eleclric Adding mochin~ orig. 99.88 .......... NOW II.II
1 Colculotor orig. 119.95 .................... NOW 109.11
100 Pic ture Po1ters, orig. 2.00 ..................... NOW 1.00
35 wax leller sea .. 15 orig .. 88 ........ , ........... NOW .11
1 Copymate II orig. 34.88 ............... , .... NOW 29.81
4 hord hol ho ir dryer orig. 16.88
2 hord hol hair dryer orig. 29.88
t• . : .
NOW 10.11
NOW 16.11
3 1hoe polishing kit orig. 8.88 ...... , ...... , , . . NOW S.11
l solon hairdryer orig. 39.99 .......... , .•.... NOW 24.&I
21 Seat replacement sets orig. 4.88 ........ ,. .... NOW 1.22
; ~ • : j
200 yds. 45" Howoiion printyordoge orig, 3 . .49 . , . NOW 1 .~8 ycl.
150 yds. 44" Ramone printydge. orig .. 98 •..• , , • NOW II ycl.
-100 .yd•. 46" bonded c.oon fobric.orig.-5.99 .-•.••• NOW 2.U ycl.
120 yd1. 36 .. &. 45 .. IPOrtsweor fobric1 orig. 1!J9 to 1.'9 . ~-\'
NOW 2 .,.1. 1.00
20 perpetual calendar kits orig. 3.99 ••..•.•• , , •• NOW 1.11
200 1ewing notion• orig. 25 to 39 ............. NOW 5for1.00
, DRAPES & <URl AIMS %~~~M1111ru 1iiGToN ~EAtK l' . . .
23 ready-mode dropel & volonce orig. 3.88 10 5 . .59
N\'W 2 f•r 5.00
16 reody-madedropesorig.15.00 •.......... NOW 10.00,r.
96 pinch-pleat cafes orig, 3 .. 99 to 6.99 ••..••. , , .• NOW 3.66
96 novelty curtain• & valance1 orig. 3.29 to 3 • .4.C , • • NOW 1.44
44 noveltycurtoin1& valances orig. 3.99 to .C.99 •• , NOW 1.11
·20 nOVitlty curtain• orig. 1.88 to 2..44 ••••.•••• , ••• NOW .SO
20 1heerpon•l1orig. 2.9.5 ••.• , ••..........• , .• NOW 1.11
40 percale prinl sheets orig. 7.88 , .......... , .•. NOW 4.11
60 twin decorator sheets orig. 2.88 lo 3.99 .. , , .... NOW 1.U
20 full decorator 1heet1 orig. 3.88 lo A.99 ...• , . , .• NOW 2.11
60 queen & k.ing 1ize lh11et1 otig. 4.88 to 8.49 •.. , • NOW l.11
10 electric blankets orig. 18.0010 2.5.00 • , , •.. , ... NOW 15,11
41. 30 bath towel1 orig. 3.50 , , , , ... , ..•..... , .•. , . NOW 1.44 ~ 10 hand towels orig. 2.25 • , •. , ••..... , , , .. , .•• NOW .66
40 wo1h cloths orig .. 90 , • , .... , ........ ; . .. . NOW 2 for 1.00
120 Potrioiic bath e"aemble1 orig. 1.00 •.. , •• , , NOW 2 for 1.00
140 Patriotic hand towe11 orig .. 70 , ...• , . , .•. , NOW 3for1.00
90 Patriotic wosh cloth1 orig, .40 •..•..•.. , • . NOW 4 for 1.00
jGPenney
I WattDl1t1eyVlew.r.Cortridge,orlg.7.99 .•••••• NOW 4.&I
1 LoveSeot orig. :!29.00 ....................... NOW 122.00
1 black vinyl chair orig. 13?.00 , , ... , ............. NOW 70.00
1 whitevinytaofaorig.189.00 •....••.•. , ....... NOW 11,00
1 block vinyl recliner orig. 12<1.00 ... 7., ....•... NOW 93.00
1 btuevelvetchcirorig.179.00 •...•..•....... NOW 102.00
2 5drowercheit•orig.100.00 ................. NOW 19.00
1 blue-green sofa orig. 2.49.00 ••.•..•.•...••. NOW lff.00
1 blue-gr11en choir orig .. 129.oo ................. NOW 103.00
1 ICi"g Slz• Matfre11 Set orig. 279.00 •• , •• , , •.. NOW 140.~
1 Sponl1h l iving Room Choir orig. 149.00 ••. , •••• NOW &9.00
2 Quilt.cl living Room chair• orig. 119.00 .••••••• NOW 64.00
1 Quitted Print Sofo orig. 349.00 ••.•.••. , •• , . , NOW 233.00
2 Velvet love Seats orig. 187.00 .... , .•••• , , ••• NOW 122,00
1 Early American Sofa orig. 299.00 ............. NOW 144.00
1 Early American Choir orig. 139.00 .•...•...... NOW 14.00
2 Nii:ih1 Stands oriq. 49.00 ......... , , •••.....• NOW Jt.00
1 Tweed love Seal orig. 179.00 .......••• , , , .• NOW ILOO ,
1 Tweed.Love Seat orig. 299.00 .. , ..• , ..•.... NOW 160.00
1 8orStoolorig.51 .95 ........................ NOW 5.00
1 Velvet Occa•lonol Ckoir orig. 1.49.00 , ........• NbW 11.00
1 Yellow Velvet Occolional Chair 129.00 • NOW99.00
1 Sld•by-Side Refrig•rotor/frffr:erorfg. 599.95 • NOW 4ff.9S
1 Side-by.Side ~efrigerator/fr••1er orig •. .499.9.5 NOW 399.95
~ '. • I ' ' ~
26 Wall Rugs orig. 2.59 .......... ' ........... . NOW ...
20 27Hx.48" 1hog rugs orig, 8.99 ........ , ...•.•. NOW 4.22
lS 31 /2'x6·wovenn.1g10fig.19.00 .• , •.... ~ •..• NOW lOM
4 Electronic Chord Orgon orig. 99.95 •••••. , •••• NOW 11.00
4 Co1sett• Recorder erig. 119.95 • , ..••••.....• NOW 6:4.00
14 Reellopealongplayorig.1.99 ............... NOW .66
6 Melodk:o Harm-onicc1 orig. 12.98 ••..• , •.•••• NOW • J.44
16 600ft.Reellopesorig.1..49 .................. NOW .44
9 3" Rnls, 3 too pltg. orig. 1.69 ............ , , .• NOW .66
2 3 Pc. thin-lin• Radio orig. 69.95 ................. NOW 41.00
12 Red&Wl\itelaminotedSklitorig.15.00 •••• NOW 11.11,r.
6 Aft•r Ski Boots orig .. 13.99 ................ , NOW 4.11 ,,,
4 Women's Bib Worm-up Pants orig. 24.98 , ......... NO,W 1..1&
10 Women's Qultttd Ski Pants orig. 19.98 • , ..... , . NOW I.II
1 Me"'• Acre Ski Ponti orig. 25.98 •.••••• , , . . • . NOW 12.11
5 Women'• Ski Jackets orig. 34.98 .• , ..... , ...... NOW &.I&
• SO Doll outfits a. Bike occes1orie1 orig. 1.19 to 1.88 NOW 2for1,00 .f SO Chil~re"'' tovs It crafts orig. 99 to 2.88 .. , . , NOW l f•r 1.00
20 Gome1,~craf1sorig.3.44to 8.99 ••••.•. NOW~fer3,09 ·
10 Toy Grab 8og orig . .50 y~rchoice .••• , •• , , NOW 4for1.00
. . .,,_, ~,•)'\'.\ ""'' ,, ' ~ .
. HARDWARE DEPARTMEN)' )(ii:h~s!J'i HUNTINGTON UEA CH
12 6'x7 Storag• Build ing• orig. 99.99 ............. NOW 69.00
10 9'x8' $toroge Bondings orig. 1.49.99 ••.•••••••. NOW 14.00
t 1/.C"DrilllGtor~.2.4.99 ..... ;,,,,,,, ...••.. NOW 13.11
St MiflerPfumberdroi"openerorig.88 •..•..... NOW J3
121 Self AdhniY• Tope, 2 roll pkg. orig. 99 •....• , • NOW 2t
l4 Swag lights, 7 atylis orig. 10.99 ..•...•. , . , •.. NOW 7.11
250 . Extentlon Cord1, 25 ft. orig .. 1.22 .... , .•.•. , .. . NOW II
226 Extonoion eo..J~ 3 ;n ~ 6'-9'-t 2' o,;g. 1.22 .. • • NOW II ·
2 Du1ter-Minf Bibi. orig. 17.4.99 ........ ' ' .... NOW lJt.00
1 Swing.rMlnl &lite orig. 2«.99 •••..••...•••• NOW lit.OD •
J6 pr.VW-Mohorlg.6.98pr. ............ NOW,, ''•
60 Plno,,..,lngfopo,l/4"o<'l/B"x131/3yd.roll1 .• NOW 65 . '
4 AfXMogWhHlt. l4x7-5"orlg.31.50 ••• NOW 4for11t.00
4AfXMagWheel1,15x7-.5"orlg.3l . .50 ••• NOW 4fGi-111.00
6 ,;,. &tlngul11\er1, reduced , , ..• , ...... , •. , • NOW 7.11
lD .c+fSiii-.aSou"d""Set,reduced •.••••.•••••• ,~.II
I 0.lcoAJr Shocb orig . .ca.9s .•• , ••••••••.•••• NOW H.11
3 Stotk>n wagon ftoor poda orig. 7.81 ••• , , •• , • • • NOW 4.11
4 $totion wagon floor podt, rtduced , ••• , •• , • • • NOW ti.II
1J Tope Codcfyo orlg. 3.95 •••••.•••..••••• • • • • NO# 1.11
2 Cffian11 lartd tto'*~ IHf9. 279.9' • ••• • ." NOW Ml.II
'
The values are here every day.
Shop Penneys . . • Mondaythru Saturday 10:00 A.M. to9 P.M.-Sunday12 Noonto5 P.M.
•
•
I t
I
J
I
I
Decoroting the Great Pumpkin } Jd<>'-lall~ lrafubqr,e)~ l!ie theme .sel~ by Newland•~for the annual c:upival, planned f~m 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct.'· 28. Decorating her
own G!""t _ Pum kin' is SUsie Rawe, assisted by Mrs. Wa4e ~mi on.
-' , .; • ~--:r--_.i.... ~~ • , :,1 q ,I • ··I . ,_ ..
..Customers Rounded Up \
Wild West Round-up Carnival is being planned by the McDowell PTO from 2 to
·.8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 27, at the school. Rounding up Mrs. Arthur Effron as one
of the llrst custo)lleJ'S are Kenny.Linn and Sh"1ly Effron. . I ·
DAILY PILOT
Ghdsts, Goblins Haunt Fiesta
(Editor's Not-: A column
devoted to Fountain Vol·
leJI, HunUnoton 8 e a c h,
Ocean View and S e o I
Beach School Dllt!icl par-
ent-teacher organization.a
will apptqr in \l)t DA/LY
PILOT each Wl<k. "'l!rt mation mw& be rue
He~" ,.ports I h a I memoenmp drive winners
were the cli,... of Miss
Darlene Boma, Mrs. Larry
Bate<llloo. Miss Edna MUler
and ·Mrl. Cecil Johnson.
tertainment will be reatured
and refl'tlbments will be
told . Proc<eds will be used
Wardlow PTO
Mn. C1rl Bode
President
Wednetday, Nov. I, In jho
multlpurpo1a room.
SUJdent&, parent& •• 11
to support the wilt'• tchool
projectl. Public is 'tnvit~
. . . Halloween c o s t u 'm e
parade ls s¢>eduled OI\ the
&ebool grounds 1'11...,,~
Ocl. SI. Hot !log diruter \lf\d
be served. ln charg~ al '!tie
events is Mrs. Ro b er t
Kefsbner, ways and 1Jle8ns
cllairman ,_ .. • Plans are
under way to assist with a
meules clinic for ~hildten
from 1 to 12 years of age.
COMING UP : Fashions on
Cloud Nine Is the theme of a
show scheduled at 7:30 p.m.
teacberl will wve it. models. Tickell are pr
al $1 for adults and SO cih ,•
for children. · ' •
by Mrs. Gilbert Nr11i>vl41 ~611 Mangrum DrfVtJ Bun'h.,
ington Btgch "ii $ p'.m.
Thursday for pvbllcadmj
WednesdOU.J. .,
Huntington
Council PTA
Mn. Lonn 1.amm.n
President
REPORTS: Getting to Know
You bru!ich took place today
in Tbe Fisherman
restaurant. Guest gpeakU
was Dennis Mangers. presi-
dent of the board oJ ttustees
of the HWJllngt<tl !leach
Union High School District.
Unit membership d r 1 v e
posters were exhibited and
will be on disploy tomo110w
at the Fourth District PTA
conventionette. ~ ·:
· ,Edison ,.
High PTSA
·Mn. V, 0. Hla.klo
... ~ldent
COMING \JP: Unit will oerw
refreshmeilts and man a ~r table ·in the
cafeterlo et back·fo.«:hool
night IQmorl'Ol".
REPORTS: Winner of the
membetshtp drtv• was the
class o( r.fiss Gloria ~1ora
fdllowef by ~rt Stolte 's
class. ,
• • Fulton PTO
Mrs. Herbert Yem0gkta
President
COMING UP,.: tTnit will con-
duct a bake sale ln the
teachers' lounge following
back~<>Sebool night at 7:!0
lqni8bt. )n charge Is Mis. Mailiin Slc"'1an, ways ilnd
mefUlS chairman.
· Superintendent Hatbou~ yw. PTO
Parent Council Mn. Nell ~··
Mn. James Ackley ~. Presi~t
President COMINP UP: Ha.I Io w een
COMINQ-. UP: Council wlll canitval is & c h e d u I e d
present a ga\teJ and a U:r-Saturday, Oct. 28, from JO
rariittn to the new Ptaxan a.m. IO 4 p.m. Featured will
Mesa Yiew PTA
Jim Roberti
President
COMING UP>\ Unit w 111
sponsor a Halloween cos-
tume parade Saturday, ·Oct.
28. at 3 .p.m. Ch,lldnn wUI
compete in groups accordirtk
to age,' and prizes will;. be
awarded for the funniest,
scariest and most 1orig.inaJ
costumes. SerYlng n
masters of ceremoples l'ill
be . Jmncl~I P ~ ..... anci A) .sanW.no unit
vij:e pre!lderi~ ~ faul
Rqujline IJ cbalJt!Wt ci!, 111e
evenj. . 4"' ' ; '°J)'
Moiola PTO
Mn. Robert Edwards
President
COMING UP: Sw.eatshlrt and ~
jacket sale will be. launcheo
by the unit Wednesday, Nov.
I.
School .PTA at the school's be a fortune teller and
dedication c e r e m o n i e s Kung-Fu exhibition in ad-1
tomorrow r. e n er a 1 dition to a cake waik, air
meeting Is ~ed at 9::.1 bolJlclng plllow body paint· Plavan PFO
• a.m. Wednesday, Nov. l, In Ing' beoth ;.;J gl!!lles in-'Mn. Robert Steb~hts
Wardlow School and will be eluding a fish bowl toss, President
~hosted by cox a·n d ballooo dart throw and milk COMING UP: Unit will serve
. Wardlow PTO u n i t s . ~e toss. Mrs. Michael ~t.i" du.ring t h e.
Program topic, the Middle eurtrn8mlstl is ways and Marine r.orw band concert
School, Will be_ discussed bv mean•i,cbairman. al the ded'"""On f the new
panelists Miss PitSzakalu'ii\ SCbooITo~~ 0
af .. 'J' p.m .
and Dan Keck, Newland and ' · Land PT A . . .. Plans are under way to p ,. L W 0
Fountain Valley School prin· Mr:. James .Ferguson . a.sfist with a>beirlng cllpk:. ' Ufflng tR& ~ raps n · , ,
cipals. Moderator will he Dr. President Members .a r1'-i..tlng .a • • '· r.;, , . • ' ·' ' •
Robert Sanchis of the Foun-COMING UP: Feliz Fiesta *ries of coffeeS~ to dis-' A atJnted Houp will be the feature •attractloil
ta in Valley School District will take place Saturday, cuss the p:ISSlble adoption the GiSler 'PT.i( Halloween Carnival f~om1 J : tO
... Plans are under way to Oct. za, from noon to 5 p.m. of a year'll'Ound school pro-, p,tn., SJ.t.tirday1 ~· ~.·on the sch Oo l · groun
co-sponsor a project with the on the school grounds. G:'ime gram. Jssue will be voted 00 Putting lb~ wradS Ob . o n e of the-haunts (St
Fountain Valley Po Ii c e booths, boutiques and en-1next month. ·' ~ f Shim) •are Jan oiey: (left) and Tarb.iny Schmalz.'
' .
Department in which et-.. ., .... . " , , • 'ro-.. .. ,.
ching pencils will be loanedjj~~~~~~~iiii~~~~;ii~;:;;;;;;s~iiii~,~~;;i~~~~~iiii~~~~~~~ to cit:izens to mark their " · " '1' ~
• penonal property . ~ .._ I ' • .. .' I • :;.v:,:~ ~p ;:, Nq"' fn -_ 1,ts 2l ~t Grecft ~'Year
President ,,. .... . .
~=~.'!~;:np: FREE at 3:45 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. er ' • ,
31, oo the schoi>I ~.
Children of all ages rnaY
participate, and prlus will ~ .. ~::=!~Pi:~· COOKING SCHOOL
Mrs. Philip Mlgnanelll •
· Preside'nt
COMING UP: Fall Roundup
carnival ~ scheduled Satur-
day , Nov. 4, from 11 a.m. to
S p.m. on the school
grounds. Mrs. Gianni Gen-
tilli is chairman.
Dwyer PTA
Mn. Paul Dugmore
President
C0~1ING UP : Rummage sale
will take place tomorrow
and Friday, Oct. 21, from
10:45 a.m. to 1:45 p.m.,in
the school hmch area. Mrs.
• James Eastman and M.'"!.
Paul Dugmore are in charge
of the event Unit will
host a fall dance for all
Dwyer students tomorrow in
the Huntington B e a c h
Recreation Center.
REPORTS: Mrs. Robert
Mesa Theat.er
1884 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa
.Every Thursday, Oct. 26 thru Nov. 16--9:30-11:30 A.M.
• HELPFUL HOLIDAY HINTS
MORE THAN $1,000 IN
FaEE ,PRIZES e SURPRISES e GIFTS
CharlllCJlow and Caloric Gas Barbecues and
other prizes 9iven each week
!
_.!
•
Second printing of one of the most
popular cook books ever sold in the
Oritnge Coast area ... 247 of the
best recipes selected from the cook-
ing school's first 19 years for just
$1. Prepared last year to mark the
20th anniversary of the 1chool, the
book was 'a sellout. Hera's you~.
second cl\ance.
Sold only at the CocikinCJ School
Co • Sponsored by · '
Alpha Beta Markets Souttwhi Calif. Gas Co.
1 • I , , • ! • ....
.,
! ,..,..
·oealer's Choi~e Would Be a . Full House I
Ing and games starting at 8 p.m. in tho Fountain
Valley Community Center. Mrs. Kip Payne ls cbilr-
man of the lund'1'alser (or Fountain Valley. Youth
Service Center.
• Mrs. Michael Brusseau Qell) pits her luck against
the expertise of Mr. ·and Mrs. Dan Gordon as they
pJ1ICllce Loe Reno Nlllht to be preeented Saturday,
Nov. <t, by the South Coast Junior Woman's Club.
For ff:() donaUon, oodpJes can baV& dinner, dime<'
Caloric Corpofcltlon
Davis • Brown
Mao Theater
Orange Coast DA~Y PfLOT
Coast Community College District
!Or ..... CoM 1n.t Ooldtn Wnl Col~ ' .
.. I
. . ' . . . . . . . . ' . ... . . . . •
• OA.TLY PILOT
Ovens Warmed for Special Holiday Cookie·s
•
isecauare l know 1 will be features. t)'6. paste coloring to make a pret-Spread oonl~'s aucer & .. plast.lc wnip. Tie with 'ntMe and other great Delly PUot. You m&Y have lbe
asied for this 1av 0 rite Stay away from the edges Baltt 1n a 3.50 O\'tn until a ty red. le~ on Santa'• beard., ~ ted )"I.I'd« ribbon IO they can reel.pies wtll be tn. my new booklet few 30 centa. Pleue
1ti he r 1 o( about i,4 inch or cookies "'On't pretty Golden tOM. D.> noc Using dime $l0re r in e bend and mUltache. Le& stand be hung on tbt Cbriltmu tree • ltl1d a }o.wr1 stamped, JelMd.
Christmas coo e, t in; come oot cletin, Slam dO'>''n overbaltc. Now nus }OU rrd watercolor brushes paint San-about three rolwta. Presa oo if )'OU like. I do U.t even for a' cookle booklet. Send fOW' r&-dtes8ed ~'Vt1c;c.:\lh yo<r ,._ many, I hope toltigebookl lllis1,1°"' -•-'•• •· •·· l ,.., underlip, no''" cap and fine coconut tlllcl<IY. 'M •-. -u-tr••. They ·•·· mal:e •UOll 1w "Cookies •··-!" ~ Allow --~ ~ into my new coo e . : again. CU\ raisins In hall. ...._.. .. 'fi by -a1 .. .,. ep 1 -i~ 1__.1,;;:,~,':''i '""""""' ~ &MIU " "4V""""' ~"' ~ ""
This oae is Florentines. JUSl ,_!'P'_'.'""~i'.'.'.nt:'.'.o_'.lo~po'.:.'.'.o'...f ~chee:::ks:..'.'.fo'.'..r_::whi::'::"'~~::ig~h::,:tly:_::.w•:::•h:.:"""""'=:'.::..,..i:.:::.~chee=ks=.---------"'-".:.P_•~-~-•c.;,cN•=-=Y..:"::....=clar=~~.:;1•::vort=.--~--=to~N:::an::_:Wlle:::;Y~ln:_::car::•:_:Q!_:tll:::''--='::er:.'y::.. ------
one version of this "old world '' ·i
favorite so rich and elegant
they ar~ definitely not lhe kind
to let the kids scoop up by
handfuls.
First thing. line a cookie
sheet (with rims) with greas-
ed fo il. It's much easier to
remove cookies than if yw
g,..,.,..and.flour, altllough this
may be done.
,One reader says she uses
Teflon-lined pans. 1 don't have
any of those but I will get at
least three so I can have one
set in the oven \1rhile I am
preparing another. donate my
old ones to some worthy char L-
11'·
. Re1nembe r. cookie sheets
that are dark on the bottom
wtll result in burned cookies
Unless you keep an eagle eye
on the p~ss.
No. the cream in the recipe
il not whlpped. That's the first
thing everyone asks.
• You will need 14 cup
aranulated sugar. I,':! cup whip-
ping cream (not whipped ) 4
le\'el tablespoons of butter· ('fl
stick), t slightly beaten egg
LETS ASK
THE COOK
by
Nan Wiley
111•hite. '' CtJP slivered, blanch·
ed almonds. 5 to 6 tablespoons
candied orange peel or can-
died cherries (diced) and ii,
trup sifted flour. No more than
that. be sure to sift.
Bake at 300 degrees for JO to
12 minutes until rich. lacy
lirown around the edges. The
~est of the cookie (center) \\'ill
k a very pale gold, maybe
even lighter, still soft in the
center.
Watch carefully, these burn
easily. Do not leave the
kitchen oc you may regret i.t.
Cool on wi.re racks until the
cookies can be peeled from the
foil easily, ebout 3 minutes. (lf
you use a non-stick pan, you
may be able to slide a spatula
or pan cake turner under
them.I
When cookies arc rom·
pletely cool !um them over,
frost bottoms with German's
sweet chocolate melted in the
top of a double boiler over hot,
not boiling water.
If cookies firm up too mu ch
before you get them off the
1 sheet. pop them back into the
oven for a minute or so
l foond it easier to loosen
them from greased-floured
sheets by lilting cookie edges
gently, all the way around
wilh my curved senated fruit
knife, then sliding a broad
spatula or pancake turner umer them the rest of the
way when they were easy to
handle .
AOO still more cookies! This
one is for a three-dimensional
Santa Claus head. lt is a cut·
out.
I seldom make more than
one batch, because. if you go
aU-out, they are a lot of work
1 but they are so darling that
the little ones (and some a lot
bigger) love them. 'They are
lots of fun to make.
'nley are a soft, thi ck cookie
with definite facial charac-
teristic!:. If you intend to buy
such cutters better start hun-
ting right now, there will be a
1 run of them rwhen this hits
1 print.
You shoukl find them in
h o u s e wares departments.
possibly some hardware stores
or discount houses. This one
will be in my new cookie
booklet but please clip and .....
Here is the dough part. Sift
togelber 4\1 cupo all puf1>08e
I flour, \I teaspoon sail, and l
lea!pOOD ~ l!Oda. Cream
\
, qethor Ill 01111 IUjlllf, l cup
any kJnd o( ..,.rtening ( l use
bydJopmted vegefable
sbortenina) , 3 medlmn &!zed
egp -not too small or too
large -and whatever flavor-
ing you 11.ke; either I teagpoon
vanilla end "n teaspoon lemon
extract or 1 teaspoon vanilla
and '{4 teaspoon almond ex-
tract.
GRADE "A" SOUTHERN
F~esh Cut Up Fryers 00•~TERBJ 33! j
BEEF ROASTS
•
CHUCK STEAKS 6 gc
Ctnflr Cat ·Chet Sltlkt ':' 79:.
Bontl111 Ro• :..-..::: _ 11~
SLICED BACON 7 9 ~
'flnntr JOIMI Hall ~:::.':
llart Sausap "':-~ ... ~
~~
;~35~
Cit u, Frym "'::="' 39:.
.Wllolt ... , ..... :.....~-~
Fl'Jll' n1c1ts "',':,".;."" 61~
Fryar Brusts = 89:.
Frt,. Wines ·~"' 39:.
FRESH HEN TURKEYS 49~
Broalld Tark•J Mtlt := 69:.
StH llatlle( Tllt1Js ":...-47:
FANCY WHITING J 9.~
Jumbo Shrl11p
Cooked Shrimp -Da$nNlll. ---IOtor
HolkueM ~ Jot.HILllf'! fM~
PUMPl\NS
Vons Salt ~~~ ................ 12'
Irish Sprlnr Deodorant SolJ t.".'24•
FRESH BUTTER 81 c
Pampers Dnrnlt1 Diapers ~: .. 91i•
l·Up Severa&:• ir.&.~· ..• ,AQ[ .... 89'
POTATO SALAD 37c
llllflla Roh Wine ='.'.?.~~. '2•
Rtlak1 Vodka ~.~~-~~ .......... •a•
STRAIGHT KY.
MARS BARS ·~ ...... ' 73• 16-0z. "'9t .....•.
SUM PRICE @lr!g
HIW BROS.
Coffee .
APPLE CITT
WESTWOOD SKIPPY Ice Cream Dou Food
vtr1 Towels =-~~.~ .... 31'
Zit Piper lbpk!lla ~ .......... 15' ENRICHED
Vons Flour . TV TRAYS ggc
lllMll I Tn"'8sf1 ~~ ...... 63'
Jql8S Skll Liiio• ~ ...... ...
D111f.c.ll C.11 ~~"l' .......... : .... 69'
f•r F ... 0.... ='l~E'lr.....21•
GINOS PIZZA 59c
Fl8RIC TOILET Combine the two mixtures.
U YoU like, lhape into a roll 3
inches ln diamenter. Wrap in
wued paper! chllJ lxll do no!
!--. I «peat -do oot
ltt>oze,
ourbon Apple Sauce Sottanar Tissue
l
If you are in t1. bJJTY use dou8l1 wHhout chllllng, oot It's
eulOI' to Ille chilled dough . cut In sll<fJI • llllle i... llum
\I Ind> thick. CUt wllh the
f1ourtd cuU«. Work with
about three at a time.
Clwl orr edge wltll lip or
thumb. Slam down (rot too
!lard) on a pastry cloth or
lightly floured board . Pick up JOl l l dough and cutter with a
IPlllWI· Turn o-In hand, 3406'1 i'ntlrpr.,. dough Into !he
Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach
Dalleny Park Drive, Ca~strano Beach
)
5922 Edinger Ave., al Springdale, Huntington Beach
Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro
DOUBLE
BLUE CHI I STAMPS
· 011 YOUI PURCHASE
Ezolud# l.Jquor, TobM:t:o II/It/ ..
DlliryProtlut:ls
TABUTS
60-CT. BTL.
bolr td14t/(}lf.V~/llll
Cucumbers ... ,,.,.
Spinach .._...,. C
EccPlanf,...,....,.
Lemons ... ..,. . ..,,
Fresh Cilt FIOWll'I
~"'?.!" -19° fl.O'NBS Kiii VOA UOI
""""""' <>KOL
SWEET:·
Apple Cider
STEWED TOMATOES 23 c
DETERGENT
Drive
I
I
I
I
I
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I
I
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t
g
b
Orange Coast
EDITION •
Today's l'hlal
VOu 65, NO. 299, 7 SECTIQNS, 106 PAGES
'
. .
'CO-STA MESA'S DILLER EMOTING IN EARLY SILENT FILM
Beneath a Modest Bed, a Boxful of Early Memories
Me1nories .. '
Fon.nd
Me~a Woman . Sta11red ·iii 'S ilents~ ·I·. ,. ,., . . • .
' ' '. " • "I ' 1 <'r ~ ••I t \. 'BJo'j~' ,, note; ..,..,iiJDes1 ft rinp• -ccle~
' 1 or n1e 111i111W ""1t~ And tbi! aaves .. 1t -this and the cttU•
Somel!mes an old Ill>• filled with.111e-actemations ,and _-mgs,,, .".
mentos can tell •I _.lot about a -~·s 1be cri~ a1sl> coosldered .even cait
Ute. All c.ota ~·J!l<k W.a~ He members. Wlllcb, Included Mill Diller as:
ltnowa. • • -· "others .. '.dellitile In their ,characlerit.a-
W aita<e 'had the dolY of gofi!I· into the tions." ' '
modest ;mobile home of : bis neighbor, All the cllpPings and pbotOgraphs Wa~
Phy}& Dill&, al)d cleaning out a few lace found under her bed were stored in ~al'.effects. • ' · no apparent order, without -dates and
1'IUss , Diller un®ubtedJy ·look some with few identifying marks.
kJddirig over the years. because . sbe had Many were P>rtrait stills of Miss Dil¥'r
Uie1·same• name -aS the tany te\evision alOoe m fashionable dresses apd poses
comedianne of ~f. Actually, there was of the 19'l0s or in scenes from Ion(-for-
no blOOd relatipnShlp. ' · gotten films.
But-as he rummaged tbrough:bis neQ?h· Three film titles were stamptd on the bor's trailer home the Other day at 903 W. 17th St., Wallace found a box beneath back of some photographs, identifying
her bed. 'lt was filled with <1ld phot()B, scenes from "The Very Idea" wfth actor
movie reviews, yellowed neu'Spaper Taylor Holmes and made by Metro Pro-,.. -her ductions, "The Battling Bookworm ," and clippings and memorabli3 of anot "On Mm' le t Go " f'lm de t tJme and place. e u o , a l ma a
Sk>wJy,-the story ol c 0 st a Mesa's Coronado Beach, by Balshofer Produc-
Phyllis Diller unfolded in those yellowed tions of Hollywood about college football and --""tic -·aJrie' s. cli)l!il and old photos. ......... .._,,..
There was more of 8 relationship be-Advance-publicity• for' "One Minute to · h d Go," described Miss Diller as: "formerly tW"een the two Phyllis Dillen than a ' with the F.a!a.n!lv Co. of Chicago, and generally been known. L.-ill be___,, ber For Costa ,Mesa's Phyllis Diller, too, wuu w· remembered by splendid
had been ~ JlBf.-. ,. . performance fu the great Fox drama, A magaitnf, Clipping tn the ,box Yi/ak "9Ver tP.e ,Hill,'.'. ,Plays_ her, first role as
lace tound sfiO\vs her and Nonna Shearer 'lieavy woman' m Fred Balshofer's big
as nameless extras in' a 1918 film and football sensation ...
som·e photographs show her playing oir One photograph shows her sitting in a
· brand-new texington automombile in a p::>Site William Barrymore, -cousin to ac-white wig and a gown of white silk and tors Jack and Lionel. The ·ii.mes reviewed only ione of her lace. performances;· it· was or l•Qver the Hill And a crumbling clipping features a
to the Poor House," producqd by William similar photograph with the caption:
Fox in 1920. She had kept' the yellowed •·. . .Miss Phyllis Diller of the Essanay
cllppm' g. . · Film· Company, dressed as a coloriial dame, deritonstraling one of the cars at The Sept. .. 111, 1920, revie\v said, the show."
"Though Of)e is offended by the suJ)er· Although Miss Diller visited daily with abu,ndance ol its sentimentality, and ill" elided to re«ist its overt e(lort to· be Sue Wallace, she was never told all ·the
btart.rendinj, i\. must be admitted th!~ details of ber career. But she admitted
occ,aSlonaj:JY · it does strike 1 a genuiiie to her she had to pawn her diamonds to
Coa1t
get· thiougb tbe Depression years.
And • once, the Wallacel!i recalJ, "She
told one lady: 'you ahould have seen me
whe'n I was in the follies.' '' Tlle Wallaces think she meant the
Ziegfield Follies but are unsurt beca.use
(See MEMORY, Page !)
N.Y. Stocks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNEsOAY, OCTOBER 25, 1972 N TEN CENTS
Newport Backs Copters
Recall Threaten'!a in Angry Confrontation
By L PETER KRIEG
Of ... Diii~ , ..... , ...
Jn a tense confrontatfun punctuated by
invectives, Newport Beach ~cllmen
Tuesday night again told , a citizerf group
protesting ·police heUCiJpten that they
are not about to order· them out of· the
air.
The council's reaffir.mation of support
for pcllce helicopters came after Conner
Newport·Mesa school trustee OonaJd
St•:auss threat~ to start a recall ac·
Police Track
Slim Leads
In Ambush
Qy ARTIIUR R. VIN~EL
Of lh9 Deity' PH .. ,._,,
Teams of detectiVes Norking around
the clock continue today to track slim
le&ds in tbe ambush shooting of an Irvine
policeman lured into a trap at a lonely
crossroads, thinking he was headed to
help an injured man.
Officer Stephen T. Nash, 2.1, escaped
the bushwhacking try at 11: 15 p.m. Mon-
day with only a grazing scar on his
cheek.
So far -besi~~ the initial details of
what happened and descriptions of ttJ:e
parties . involved -investigators are
known to have two other elements:
-A. set of iJldjstlnguishable footprints
in a muddy cornfield. , ....-The (act a ruthless man wanted bad.
ly to be a cop-kiUer. ·
T~ries of' ap Old West.gtyle bigb,waY ~rx att~pt' ~Ji\inlscent of pmer
<ow\>oY WS. Cl\ '!f•!J!i~"Ranch' ~' ... .
virtUall.v bJ!:eD1~-"-" ~ ... w Nor oo pour·~tlie p1o1.a1
crossroads o Jef!rijr '•and Borr~
rowll!. <OUl4 . have ltieen ~· sP,itlflcally'lo'&et 'Officef Na:.b, Perhaps by ~will·· iNfCe·~ainlt.lilnl,
Tile ·~ 1act1' 111ppoq neither
theory.
"It was .8n'.'amlilSh:. pure and simple,"
declares O>sta Mesa Police Detective
Capt. Ed Glasgow.
Chief among the questions to be
answered now is whether the would-be
assassin -described as a motorcycle
gang-type due to his·appearance -acted
alone.
lnvestigators are also seeking the t\l'O
cleancut young men in a ba_ttered 1953
Chevrolet who stopped to tell Of!iceT
Nash it appeared a man lying on the
pavement back down the road was ill or
injured.
One possibillty due to their military
haircuts, southern accents, and an old
car with out-of--state pl=, is that the
men clad in civilian clo are military
personnel.
A teletype alert and radio broadcnst
are out for the greeo-and-white sedan,
minus its front bumper, plus any oc·
cupants as potential material witnesses
in the case.
They said when they pulled up as Of.
ficer Nash wrote a log report under his
dashboard lamp that they were headed
for a telephone to notify police about the
(See AMBUSH, Page l)
Barber Sees. R ed-
N ot White, Blue
Destructive thieves trimmed a
NeWPOrt Beach barber shop of its red,
white and blue barber pole sometime
over the weekend.
. The tlTIHoot-long pole was bolted to the
wall outside Mt. Ron's Men's Hair StyJ.
·1ng Shop at't4il0 'w, CoaafHlghway,wben
·the shop'S employes Went home for the
weekend. But when they came back Mon·
day all they found were two empty boles
in the wall where the 1100 pole had been.
tion against the council' unless the
wttjrlybirds were grounded. .
lm.tg·tbne Newport resident Allan. Beek
also alleged that Police Chief B. James
Glavas falsified bis report on ways to
reduce helicopter ni>lse. •
GIAvas was also bl1lfldea a s "~oUstical" and was~ a<!CUsed of
"bullding'llp his ego with a great'pollce
force inYading my privacy," by Paul
Crawford, 120 Emerald Ave., Balboa
Island.
. . ' . . , ,. ' I
Among 'Em
Straus, who resigned his school board
seat eiklier this year, represented the
citizens gz;oop called Heliccpters Limited
formed two months ago to demand the
helicopters be used only (or emergency
calls, not for ropt.ine patrol.
"Initiative and recall are t w o
alternatives il you don't follow the wishes
ol' the people," Strauss said,
Earlier, Beek, another Helicopters
Limited spokesman, had charged there
are "two. glaring, evidently deliberate
errors" in Clavas' report.
Beek charged that the report said
helicopters nying at a lower rpm were
six decibels quieter in a recent test when
i11 ract they were only tv.'O decibels
quieter.
Glavas had been promising lo lower
rpms to quiet the helicoplers as soon as
the Federal Aviation Agency allows it,
Glavas' report also said the depart·
ment has received only seven noise com·
(See COP'l'E!ll); Pa'~ t)
P.eering out of Peter's Pumpkin Pa~h on Bristol,
pickin!l, out· a particularly plump prize, was Jeff
Hatch, 4, son of Mr. aiid Mrs. Richard. Stiefel of
Costa Mesa" lf he was waiting for the Great Pump-
kin, be wouldn't admit it. Perhaps the Grand Spirit
of· Halloween was helping young Mr. Hatch cboo~
just the right one for the 1perfect jack-a-lantern.
Final A~gumeuts Given
iJJ .Niguel Ban~· Trial
By FREilllRICK •SCHOEMEHL
Of ftM Oii" Pii.I Stiff
LOS XNGELES -F·inal arguments in.
the trial ·or three Ohio men <.'h8rg00 with
the world's largest bank burglary' -the '
$5 million break-in at : Laguna . Niguel
branch of United California Bank -were
heard in a tJ'..S. District Court here1oday.
Following arguments. evidence in the
five-week loqg t~ia1 was expected to be
submitted to the six-man, six-woman
jury for :deUberation On the guilt or In·
nocence of defendants Charles Mulligan,
Philip Bruce ctu•istopher and Amil
Alfred Dinsio.
Assistapt ·tt.s. Attorney Jac1t ·Walters,
in a Iet1(\Jii s)litement . to jurors, con;
cl\lded th8,t' ilie -govemment had proved
without a,_ doubt I~ allegation that the
three men :,Planned, executed· and col-
lected ll1e ~a of· the massive
burglary.
Walters reviewed the testimony of
more thani 50 go~mment witnesses call·
ed in the case.
Defense Attorney Victor Sherman,
repr.esenting . Din~o, did not question the
government's allegations but attempted
to discredit testimony of two key govern--
meat witnesses to whom the crime
assertedly was admitted.
Sherman was most upset w i t h
testimdny or an informant who earlier
al:eged that Diltsio told him in great
detail about the crime.
Sherman argued that the informant
with some 50 to 100 burglaries logged on
his owtt criminal record" could hardly be
consider.ed a believable witness.
Walters conceded, in bis argument that
the mrormant wu· _.1a ttrtible burglar"
but that there was no 'ret.soD for the jury
to discredit bis testimony.
.Defense attorney Anthony Glassman,
counsel for Christopher, argued before
Jbe jury that the government has not
proved guilt beyond a reasol'table doubt
and moral certainty.
New Six-month
Delay Ordered
In J et Lawsttit
A further six-month delay was ordered
Tuesday in the trial of :jet noise lawsu its
seeking a total of $28 million in damage
despite the objections of lawyers
representing 905 H a r b o r Area
homeowners.
Orange County Superior C o u r t
Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner set a new
trial date of April 23 for the multiple ac-
tions, three months earlier than the June
date demanded by the ccunty counsel's
office.
"We are opposed to any delay or any
kind in these actions," plaintiffs' at·
tomey Angele Palmieri said. "Our
lawsuits were filed more than three
years ago and we are ready for trial."
P11lmieri represent! 905 , client! who
argue in their complaints that propecty
va lues in the vicinity of Orange County
Airport have been drastically reduced as
a result of jet fiights over t~ir txtmes.
Weather
Momin& low cJoud9 and fog will
clear to IUllIIY skies on Thursday,
with hi~ ,at the beaches around
75 rising fo 84 inland. Lows tonight
56. l "
Newport Airs Zone Plan
Arguments from Mulligan's attorney ,
Ronald Minkin, were scheduled late to-
day prior to submission or !be case to the
jury.
Walters ' statement traced whal he al·
\eged was a series of events which began
in February when .Jefendants Mulligan
and Dlnslo traveled to California to
select a bank for IJurglary and lo lay in·
itial preparations.
All tbe lawsuils C'Oflte.nd fll.at Orange-
County must be held responsible (or the
jet noise and pollution resulting from jet
operations since the eounty 1aulhorized
Air \Vest and Air CaUfornla to inauguN1te
jet flights at the county facility ,
1 BIKE, 1 AD:
~~Jb~ TODA 'l' Te"'"A'•'· ,\VIUiams' • teflder drama S1'ft\met and . Smoke".
leads off the new arrival& in
communitv tMdfur' thlt ¢eek •!
the LagU!la Moulton Playhome. ·
See E·iatettaiRmt!nt, Pages 28·29.
1..M. hyd I 1, Mt't... ..,,
loltlltt 16 Mvfltl•I l'llHt M
C.11"'111• ~1 N•tr.tlat N,_. 4-J C.l'fff" Cir-t4 Ol'llftf' C9Vfllt't It
Cll•M.,.. fl·61 'TA U Clf!llri ' Jt Stl•lll ~ ft
C,_J'#11111 st s.ortt._._\ U•»
0t1tfl fioti.t lt Dr. S1911!C.l'otl• • lfthlrtt!MI~ ,..,, ...... Stiel" ...... »tt
f.111""-' ...... ' ~"·~ • ,.,,..lie+ tf..17 ,,...~ 2Mt
P., Ille ltK11f"41 11,.lt 1 W.fNr 4
H-KOlll :M W ...... 'Mm II ..
A• i.....r. n lit;.,. ""'" 4"1 ~·lllU '
"
Newport ljeach may. ,try lo ./otq, !he
Calilomla llivliion or Highways to· .. n
or lease' some of its exctss lreewtrY
right-of-way properties to the -cttY for
partc use.
Whether they can Is unC<lrtaln, lhOu!W.
Councilmen Monday author!7.td tbe
plaMlng star( to prepare a new zonin,
.cfa!illlcotlon ,..: labeled "park and d)Jei)
""'"' wne" -that could be placod '"' any property to prevent any kind of de-
ve~O ment. · 11• ii loglcally woold be applied to
e$t ng parkJ, Jn theoiy It <0uld be ap-
pl1'd to any olhtr property -prjvatelY
or publicly owned.
•
• in. Park Lease Proposal
There tOUld be no development on any
• private property with that toning classl-
,fioation.
Whllo oppljcatlM to prtvate property
·would no doubt require the city to pu,..
.chase the property bcc:auae of Inverse
c:ondemnaUoo, lhis ii txactly what the
city wants 10 rar as the 4tate properties >are coneemed.
The iiate hlls res!Bied mowitlng pres·
.sure to dispose of exceu right-of·way properties sln<e the Legislature deleted
lhe Paclfic Coast Freeway from plan-
ning map1 earlier this year.
8Ut the problem Is that the i!Ate Is
exempt from local zoning controls.
•
. '
While such ioning would preclude de-
velopment of1 say, the Pacific Electric:
right-ot-way ln Wes\ Newport, if Ow
state were to sell It ·to private •lntere.1ts.
the state's eicmptioo may also app1y to
any private interelt which might leai;t'
the lahd.
"Th$t'a 1he,queltlon J'm not clear on,·•
Chy Attomcy ,'Dc!lnls·O'N<ill said this
mom Inf. ''I think tbe le8'ee may veiy 'Woll be
etempt from local ord!nancea, too, but
l'm oot 1urc. ·It's 1 real problem," he
said.
He laid the city hat the same dilen>
(ileo :OONE, P1ge %1
\ I ...
After selection of the Laguna Nlguel
bank, nestled near the affluent Monarch
B'ay and Three Arch Bay lt'tas Walters
asserted that a getaway car was
purchased and that Acal contact.I were
built between Mulligan and certain
fri<'nd5 in the Tusttn area.
Walle:s al!tn alleged that the team of
burglars rented a fashlonable Lagun111
Niguel townhouse u a bate of ope.rattoru
during the burglary .attempt.
The presence of the defendantl in the
Southern CAiifornia area, be stated, was
positively shown by ab'Uoe records whl<:h
have been entered as evider,ce durtng the
trial.
1
3 CALLS, 1 SALE
I. 2, 3. Thal ·s just how it went when
the Westminster m&n ottered to sell his
motorcycle 10 DAILY PILOT readers .
This is the ad that sold it -Jn one rught
-after just thrt!e phone calls: ·
'HONDA 750, 19'12, Kl.
Qargaln blly. Only 2 mo.
old. 2,600 mh MtlJl)' xtras,
Ftdrlng. rack, beck rest.
cra&h bar. etc. Owner must
sell, only tl390 or orfer.
lXll:•IXlX.
Th•t's the kind of action you could golf
too. Try it with an ad of your own. Dia
the direct line to c10 .. med advtrtlslng
results Rt the DAILY PJLOT, 642-M'll.
•
• •
N
Abse1itee Vote
Deadline Near
Only one week remains for voters
to apply for absentee ballots.
Orange County Registrar of Voten
David Hltchc.."OCli: warned today.
Next Tuesday is the deadline.
"Puson.s who e.xpe<:t to be ab.sent
from their precinct on Nov . 7 may
apply for an absent voter ballot
either by mall or in person at the
Registrar of Voters office.'' ltltc~
eock advised.
"f( requesting an absent bal~ by
mail the ''Oler must include his
name. residence address, legal
signature and the rea!On why he
will be unable to vote at the polls
on Nov . 7, '' Hitchcock added.
He said the registrar's offk:e
located at 1119 E. Chestnut St.,
S:inta Ana, will be open on Satur-
day frQm 9 a.m. to 4. p.m. and on_
f\.londay and Tuesday evenings until
9 p.m. for tht: conveni ence of those
"''ishing to apply for absentee
ballots.
Police Site
Plans Give11
Green Light
Newport Beach councilmen Tuesday
night approve<l plot plans and authorlied
the start or working dra1.1.•ings for the
new police station on Jamboree Road
that the city stafr vowed "·ill cost Jess
than $1 mlUion.
It was that price tag that prompted
Councilman John Store to insist that a
professional estimator be hin?d to double
check the figures. Store said the price
was too low.
Store 's repeated..demands for the coir
sultant triggered an outburst from
architect James Robinson, who said he
could bring the project home at $18.48 a
square foot
Robin!On asked Store if he had seen
the detailed estimate that he had fumil!lb-
ed the city and when Store said no,
Robinson exploded.
"ll you haven't seen the estimate. how
in the hell can you make statements like
that. Brine in anyone, I would welcome
it," he said.
The outburst and subsequent apology
by Robinson came during Tuesday 111-
temoon's study aessat and Store at the
time was told if be wanted the city to
spend about $800 for the estimator, he
should bring the matter up during the
evening meeting when formal action can
be taken. He never did.
Approval of the plans, which show a
twHtory structure wi\h •• t \ 1 t -u p ' •
prefabricated walls that markedly cut
construction costs, came without com-
ment as part of the council's consent
calendar.
Robinson explained tbat there will be
no permanent walla tnsfde, only movaj>le
partitions, whic.b also will help cut colts.
The only window in the entire 48,000-
square root building will be ln the lobby,
which will be ()TI the second Ooor with
outdoor steps leading to it.
From Pagel
COPTERS ...
plaints since the Sept. 11 helicopter hear·
ing -when COUDCilmen gave a 7 to 0
vote of confidenCf: to the alr patrols -
v;hile Beek claimed "1 know one person
who personally bas complained nine
times himself."
Glavas did oot respond to aqy of the
charg es and Mayer Dooatd A. Mctrinll
was obviously bitter after Crawford's
name caillna.
"l -wouldn't dignify your statements
with an answer," Mcinnis snarled and
then fell into a debate when he iriformed
Crawford that he had spoken a minute
over tbe five-minute limit.
"ll You've been looking at the clock
you apparenUy haven't been listening to
me," Crawford shot back.
"I ckin't have a one-track mind," Mein·
nis retorted.
OIANal COAST M
DAILY PILOT
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hie pr111c ... ~ ,..,., .. " QI ~
hy Strwt, C-11 ""-'• Clllttnl&t, nul.
ltoNrt N. 'We.ti
Prtildtnl lllf f>WlllMt
J1ek R. Cvrl•Y
Vic• Pf'ft"""'I •nd 0..-11 MMIOlf'
Thorn1i K11••ll
IEO'ilw
lho,..11 /4.. Merphl"'
M""'9!nv Eclt!W
L P•t•r Kri•t """"°" .. llCll City .iw
............. Offl.-
:JJJ) Newport lo4tlew1rtl
M.tl5" AoU,...1 P.O. l o 1171. t2W
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.. '
Nixon Voivs
Nonpublic
School Aid
WASHINGTON (AP) -Prtsident Nix-
on today pledged his help to maintain
11011publlc schools in America, saying he
ts "irrevocably committed'' to seek tax
credits for them. Nixon also said he will press the ne:i1;t
&eSl!lion of Congress to end court-ordered
busing of school children.
Jn the fifth of a series of paid political
radio broadcasts, the President discussed
his view of the federa l government's
responsibility to educution.
He said under hi1 adn1inistration, the
!ederal contribution to education in-
creased "by ()ver 70 percent, from $9
billion in fiscal year 1969 to $15.7 billion
in fiscal year 1973."
Nixon said he vetoed educaUon legisla·
lion thfee times "because 1 believed the
added tax burden would have far
outweighed the benefits to be derived."
In each case, he said. the amount
Congress proposed was "more than the
public could afford to pay."
On aid to nonpublic schools, the Presi-
dent said he believed parents. should have
the freedom to choose a rellgious-cen.
tered education for the ir children, "and I
am determined to help guarantee that
freedom of choice.
"In my judgment," Nixon continued,
"the Constitution does not prohibit tax in-
ducements to encourage and main·
lain diversity in American education -
and -we are prepared to fight to
guarantee that that diversity remains."
On the question of busing, Nixon prais-
ed the neighborhood school as fun-
damental to American education.
"Whole school systems are disrupted
by the forced busing of school children
away from tbelr neighborhoods," be said.
"The ansWer to inequities in our educa-
tjonal system ls to spend more money on
lt:amlng and less money on busing."
From Pagel
AMBUSH ...
suspected accident victim.
No telephones are located virtually for
miles around within the undeveloped
sprawl of com and asparagus fields and
It would seem likely they would have
stopped fll"St to investigate themselves.
Offic.r Nub lefl without obtaining
their names and found the man !yin&
fact down In the roadway , bis hands hid.-
den beneath him.
He suddenly leaped up, crouchlng coma
bat..iyte with both b&nds training a Ion&·
nosed revolver at the patrolman'• bead,
leading him to lwige sideways and gun
the engine in a futile attempt to run the
man OOwn.
A slug -possl:~rom a .38 caliber
weapon -sm through t h. e
windshield glass, grazing Nub's left
cbee.t as be awerved the squad car
around to obtain a defensive position
behind the driver's door.
He wall unable to get his shotgun out of
its bracket quickly enough while crouched
over the front seat before the fieeing
gunman was out of range in the adjacent
dark, fog-shrouded field lined with stalks
or corn.
Officer Nash took cover after radioing
for help, bringing fellow patrolmen and
ultimately an army of l!iO lawmen from
numerous agencies, including four scent·
tracking dogs.
The victim abo chose not to trail hil!I
attacker into the field after he ran from
a windbreak of eucalyptus trees, a creek
ravine cutting through the far side of the
area or any olher cover. l1e feared be might be aet up for a
-..dary ambush by the tong.i.atred,.
belrded gunman or even possible ac-
complices waiting in the m u d d y ,
recently-irrigated farmland.
"'Ibe.re are a millon places to hide out
there," Det«:tive Sgt. Keilb Carpenter
remarked.
The major manhunt waa dhibanded at
10 1.m ., after a Jong, sleepless night for
shotguJH:arrying lawmen poking through
the field with one officer for" every flve
rowt of corn.
PatrOlmen 1Ull covering the seen!' later
in the day, however, captured four
youth.I, two juveniles and two 18 year
olda, drivlnJ two cars around the area.
One flt ~ description of the vehicle
whidl -purposely or by near-tragic
colncldenet -lured Officer Nash Into
the murderous trap the night before.
They were taken to headquarters for
questioning, where the four shaken young
men were released after it was
determined lbey were only curious
sightseers who heard of the ambush.
betecttve Capt. Glugow aald today it
Is not likely the gunman lying In wait bid
1if18led out Officer N uh due to any past
involvement with him.
Corona del Mar
Home Looted
The Cameo Shores home of 1 vaca·
tlooing Corona Jel Mar reUree was
tooled oometlme during the put two
.,..ks, police reported today.
A gardener and a awlmminl pool man
told pollct Tue9day they -• door lo the ruldeoce of AMa A. Ward,
4IOI Gorham Drive, bad oppartlllly been
ptled open durin& b1s aboen<e.
Ward, on vacaUoo at hi• ranch ln Aguanga, waa contacted by pollce and
returned to find burglart hid stolen a
isoo cu&tom rifle, a l300 stereo and an
uncleWmlned llllOUIJt of jeweltf lrom
boul lound tlmm arouad the-·
Police aald the lhfowl •Pl>l""~Y
pt'lld -• alldln( """' door -to tho IWlmmfng pod at iJle ...,.. and took
.. -they oould carry.....,.
'
DAILY PILOT StMf ......
f'lags Ovet; CdM
'Not Enough Ti1ne'
Political Fund
Shuns Reports
'llie man who runs the bl&&eAI polilk:al
war chest In Callforni• says he does not
have the tl01e or the money for the "red
tape" involved in filing campaign
reporll.
Georp ~enl>erger. woo runs the '900.ooo .r,tintted for Calllornla" fund fnim ~Ing room ol his Beverly HJlls
home aa,t he can't afford a'secrttary to
baftdle !be campaign reporting work for
lilm-Amq the candld&tes who receive
doaaUoos trom "United for callfornla" la
Aaaemblyman RA>bcrt Badbam ( R ·
"
Council Eyes
Library Plan
At Center
Newport Besch), wbo fisted $1 ,500 in con-
trlbutlonJ fram the fund .
The fund Is the oNy known major
politlcal fund In the state w~ bas
re/used to tum In the camp>lgn reoeipts
and eXp.ndlture ll.ltemom.to required of
political COIJlll1flle<a and ~dotes by
the 1969 public <lilcfosure law.
Shellenberger, ~ l'<llred Insurance
broker, Mid the mooey had been raised
from bltsfnessmen throughout California
to support conservative candidateS for
the state Legislature.
~lectton roports flied last week .
with the secretary ol atate sbow that
"United for Calllomia" has already
shelled out more than the combined
reported spending of the three biggest
organized labor political conµhittees.
So far thil ye&r , 30 Republicans and
two Democrats have reported receiving
contributions totaling $128,023 from
Sbellenberger's fund.
Newport Be&cb will make plans to f'l'Otll Pflfle J
build a $!.! mlll1on central libra[Y as
part of the proposed pr1vo1e1y sponsored ZONE
cultural center •l Newport Center. • • •
~·tag girls at Corona del Mar High SchOQl Utls year include (from left)
Stefanie Burns, Robin Child, Sue Roberts, Casey Shaw and Linda
.Storer.
City oouncllmen Tuesday afternoon ma with Newport Dunes, the county-
dlrec:ted Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis 10 owned marina and trailer part at the
write the Library Board declaring the south end of Upper Newport !J!ly.
counclJ's support of the concept of a een· O'Neil said the county might very W!:ll
Reagan Opposes Coast
Issue But Criticizes Ads
Reagan said this about other initiative
measures on the Nov. 7 baUot:
tral library -so long as the present be able to lease that to a developer who
braneb libraries are kept open. CQUld put a hi~h rise hotel on it.
Library board members were at the What the city actually intends to do
council study session Tuesday asking ~or with the new zoning classification, when,
the declaration of support and an m· and if It's enacted, is still a matter of
dieatioo the city will spend up to $15,000 speculation, however.
on a feasibility study for the project, Mayor Donald A. Mc:Inni!, who asked-
when the time comes. that it be established, was polnted!y
Library board members said con-evasive when asked why.
struction of the building would cost about "It will be lo the city's benefit, to help
Jl.25 million; $700,000 would be needed solve problems. if they come up," be had
for boob; another S700,000 to select, pro-to!dRtecounc:ilmer In. &nnintervlew he would ••v cess and cata1og the books; aod $150,000 L.a ~ for furnishings an~ equipment. only, "We want to 'et the vehicle ready
They figured it would take as much as so if we find • apeciflc piece of property
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov . Ronald
Reagan condemned advertising against
the coastline initiative today a s
"misleading," but said be opposes the
measure as a threat to California's
economy.
PROP. 14 -The Watson Initiative
"will bring fiscal chaos," Reagan said.
He criticized Los Angele! As:teS90r
Philip \Vat son·s claim the measure is in
balance because, Reagan said. that's on-
ly true ii the public will accept m85.!ive
cuts in funds for local schools.
· · 1 and we can apply IL" $2!i0,000 a year m main enance But he refused to name any speciflc
operatlon costs and would likely requJre properties he ~11uld like to see unde~
a change in the charter to raise the the new zone.
library tax II.mil above tbe present l!i-He said many other cities have s!Jn.
cent ceiling by a few pennies.. ilar zoning tools.
Reagan said be opposes the coastline
measure because he believes it will
throw thousands of Caltfomlans out of
work and cause "stagnation" o f
California's economy.
"! think wbat bas bappened in the
Mammoth case .•• ls nothing compared
to wbat will happen if Prop. 20 passes,"
he aaid In reference to a state supreme
Court decWon oo environmental impact
rePorts which builders aay is bringing
-to a bait.
"You cannot have school districts Ute
Los ·Angetes and San Fran.cisc:o.. have
thei; school budgets cut virtually in
balf," he said.
The cultural center, fostered hy a
coalition of cultural groups in Newport
-.Beacb"woutd,1>oJo_ca\gd.oo ~gf _th~ -N.,.wporter Jnn·· parcels in NeliJ>ont:eilter llDd would ID-.,
elude a music hall, a theater and a
AD:ed at a \ newJ conferen<ie about
Wbltaker and Baxter a g e n c y ad-
vertisements against Prop. 20 whic.b say
'Don't padlock the coast" Reagan said,
"This If mlsleading. II ha.I 'liVell the lm-
prmklo -i. will not be able to use the
coutllne, which ls not true."
PROP. 15 -The advertising for tbe
California Stale Employea As9ociation in-
itiative l!) take away the governor's veto
over state employe pay raises "ls the
• 11l001: blatantly dishonest ballot campaign
I have ever witnessed" filled wltb
"outrageous untruth&," the governor
said.
The Republican governor said he
regrets" foes of Prop. 20 have taken that
approach, adding "I wish they had
advertising on the real faults of the pro-
position."
Frot11 Pqe J
MEMORY ...
ahe never mentioned it llgain.
Her brother, Kenneth Diller of Evans-
ton , Ill., called Miss Diller in Costa Mesa
every week until his death two years
ago, according to Wal.lace.
Afnid,the ~ofmelllOrielt bowever1
-"" ttO explanation of 'why Miss Diller abandantd ·her acting ·career in
the 1930s and eventually l\Ved in reJative
obscurity in Costa Mesa.
Not. long ago, Mlse: Diller 11ppointed
Walltce the executor of her estate. He
was tn her home in that capacity.
Miss Diller dled Oct. 17 after a lengthy
iltnesa. She was 7!i. 1bere were oo flmeral
service.a. There were apparently no rel-
atives. •
Her ashes will be acattered at sea.
Newport CofC
Police Awards
Luncheon Slated
The second annual Newport Harbor
Olamber of Commerce police awar-d!
luncheon will take place Nov. 10 at the
Ballooa Boy Club. Durlni the event. busine.n leader• in
the community will give special recognl·
lion to off1cers on the Newport Beach
force who bave diaUngulsbed themselves
by an unuaual act ·ot valor or achieve-
ment.
The city of Newport Belch "'iii also
dec'8re the d11y PoUce ReCognltion Day
in honor of all city policemen.
Clamber ~ager Jack Barnett so.id
organltaUona can buy a table for 10 at
the luncheon fur $100. He added that
eight tlckell will be available to the r.trehuer and the other t•o wt. y.illt be
aten by a policeman end hl.1 w\fe.
Reserv1Uoa1 rcr the luncheon can be
Dladt by c1Wna: the chamber offiet.
Mateo Disaster Area
WASHINGTON iAPl -san Mateo
COOnty hal been declared a dl...Wr area
by 11\e Small 8ulllleu Actminl>tratton
becaille of f1oodJ thal u uled heavy
damaee io homr.& end bUllllel... lhf•
month..
Tbe chief executive criticized ad-
vertising which suggests Prop. 1$ would
"put a lid on stale empl.,Ye pay
salaries."
PROP. 18 -The obscenlty me8S111'<!
should be passed, Reagan said, because
since a similar measure was defeated in
1966 "all that bas happened ls that
pornography and obscenity have grown
worse."
PROP. 22 -The Governor again en-
dorsed the farm labor lnltlative, saying
that be believes tbe advertising against
that m e a s u r e has beeo "false and
misleading.''
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
J. C. HUMPHRIES
QUART CRYSTAL WATCHES
1\lany watch manufacturers
stress the extreme accuracy of the
new quartz crystal watches. AI·
though these claims are justified
as the watch leaves the factory ,
maintenance of thls accuracy is un·
predictable.
Continued quartz watch accuracy
depends upon the quartz crystal's
ability to keep vibrating at a con-
stant frequency when subjected to
normal use after you buy il
The natural frequency of any
quartz crystal is subject to changes
d4e to aging, shock and slight tem-
perature variations, all beyond the
control or the manufacturer be-
cause reactio ns vary from one cry~
lal to another regardless of quality
or source. Further, rates of quarts
watches are not readily adjUJtlble
by the dealer •
As an Independent Jeweler we
• • are particularly free to state all tho
fact. about anything we sell. We
want you to kn ow that extreme ae>
ruracy claims by many manufac-
turers may not be fu1Uilled tn actu·
al use until quartz crystal watch~•
have proven their dependablllty,
your best buys are stlll tho blihlJ
accurate chronometers, tuntna: fork
and co nventional w11tches.
museum.
It is to ~ built exclusively with fund s
raised br"tbe coalition group, the
Newport Harbor Foundation.
Library ol!iclals said the cooperative
effort will actually save the city money
for the new library since the center wi ll
have many of UJe amenities, like meeting
rooms, tht otbetwise would have been In-
cluded In Ille library.
Tbe Ihm l"'tential sites reportedfy
made available at no cost by the Irvine
Company Include one on Pacific Coast
Highway, one on the fonner civic center
property below lhe new Desigh Pla:z.a aod
a third oo Jamboree Road at the comer
of San Joaquin Hills Road.
Library trustee Jim Gage said the
foundation believes it will need about 16
acres for the entire cultural complex .
The library board proposes . ~
struction of a 50,00l).square-foot bwldrng
that could eventually be doubled in size.
Manager Stricken
Newporter Inn General M a n a g e r.
Douglas Roa is in criUcal conditk>n at '
Hoag Memoria1 Hospital today alter suf-
fering what w:.J believed to be a massive
cerebral hemorrhage Monday afternoon..
RA>ss collapsed In the klldlen of the ..,:
elusive Jamboree Road spa and
employe1 said be struck his bead on a
table as be fell.
He was rushed to the hospital and put
in the intensive care unit where hls con-
dition bas remained unchanged since the
attack, hospital spokesmen said.
Ross, about 60, has been general
manager at the Newporter Inn for at
least nlne yean, employes said. He was
in the post after the the hotel was taken
over by the Del Webb Corporation
several years ago.
A reminder from
OMEGAO
STANDARD
TIME
RETURNS
OCTOBER
29th
Be sure to
set your
watch BACK
one hour
this Sunday
When you 'ol YQVr watch bock, toke oclose loo~ at It. !t moy
be occurcte but Is ii modern, self.winding? Does ii tell Iha
dale? Or thodoy end the dote? P1rhap1 now la fhe time lo
choose on up.to-Th•second Ornego. Come in ond set t~e
Omega fam ily of fine timepi1ce$, $65to over $15,00>.
3!01111 ... '1 ...... ~itldll'ISI ~lllH' o.v.u .. Dote-ttlh"CI dlol.11<45.00
.kill Ol'I• 011111 Omtoo fo"'lly ef $to111o11.,1
J. (!. _J.J,, mph riej Je1v11fer6
I Ill NEWPORT SL VD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TERMS
27 YEARS IN THE SA.Ml LOCATION ''"lrAM•rlc1"' -M11f1r Ch1t91
'HONE 1'41·1401
l
I
I I
1 I
\
F
I
p
con sea
da
Kai
an
wa
Wed,PSday, Ckt-2S, J9n DAILY PILOT l$
Peace His Issue, l!aldeman Singled Out ·
McGovern Claims
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Sen. Geor1e
McGoV(m bu deolaltd tbat be wants
peace and "J don't give 1 damn" about
the electloHay bnpa<t -but ho la tsll-
ing votero Ibey woitld be foolish to tide
with President NiXon for achieving any
Vietnam settlement now.
point Tuesdoy that • ---would DOI destroy bla ~entlal proo-
pe<ll but "would destroy Mr. Nixon."
Later, be said It might help tbe President
poliUcally. But be added:
Nixon Key .4ide, 4 Others Tied to Fund • • '
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presldent Nix·
on's chief of stall, ff. R. Haldeman, was
one of rive close Nlxon associates who
cootrolled a secret campaign 'PYlng and
18botsge fund , '!be Washlngtoo Post
reported today.
palgn, bas told the grand jury that ooe
who received money from the fund Wlll
G. Gordon Liddy , lhe P°'t said. Liddy is
one of seven men under\ indJctment in
connection with the Watergate break·ln,
the incident which set off the disclosures
of an alleged GOP sabotage ring.
operation aimed at dl1credttln1
Democratic amdklates.
Meantime, Atty. Gen. Bldllrd Q ..
Kleindienst wld newsmen 'l\iesday lbat
the Justice Department bas oo "cnodlbl(
evide<l<e" that federal laws ...,.,
violaled by the alleged a<ll of sabotaP
and that be feels no probe of the alleg>
1be llemocl'lltlc presldenUal -said whether or not Nl:ron ends the war,
"No matter what be does, It ouldtt to
help me· ... " lie aald Nlxllll should have
ended the war four years ago.
"It would be a ""17 foollab voter who
would vote for Mr. NWID In pr<fereoce to
George McGovern U tbe iJ8IJe II the war.
Mr. Nlxcxt for many yoars bas IUJ>ported
American lnvolvement in Vietnam. Dur·
ing all ~ yoars, I bave been oppooed
1be POft Jaid it based the report OD in-
formation from federaJ investigators and
accounts of sworn testimony gaven to a
grand jury investigating the June 17
break-In at Democratic national head-
quarters in the Watergate building.
The Po,,t quoted federal investlgaton
as saying that expenditw'es of blmdreds
of thousands of dollars -all approved by
either Haldeman, Stans, M i t c b e 11 •
Magruder or Kalmbach -were made
from tbe £und to rmanoe an Wldercover
lions is warranted. , J
Kleindienst told newsmen: fiGet tbs"
evidence to me t.bat would lndlcate that a
specific penoo bas violated a specific
criminal law, and my department wW io· 1
vestigate it." McGovern denied that be was seeking
in advance to blunt the polltica:I effect
should Nl<oo settle the conllict before the
electloo IS days hence.
( . CAMPfGN '72 )
U~tT ......
Charges Dropped
The Air Force has ruled out
The newspaper said it bas been told
that Haldeman, a Nixon aide for 16
yean, and the four others authorized to
malce payments from the secret fund
were kleotified in grand jury testimony
by Hugh W. Sloan Jr., who quit as
treasurer of the Nixon campaign
organization shortly after the Watergate
break-In.
court-martial charges against DEPUTY WID'l'E BOUSE p r e s s
Da"Venly Change
•
Beer-stained Bar Becomes Church ••
McGOVERN'S STATEMENT Tuesday
was reminiscent of one by candidate Nix·
on four years ago wben a Democratic
president announced a bombing pause
and broadened peace talP just before
the e.lectioo. McGovern said be would
applaud Nixon U the President ended tbe
war but added that Americans shouldn't
forget "be kept it going needlessly for
another four years , ~ . "
to ll So H, at the eleventh hour, just'
btfore we start cowiting the votes on
Nov. 7, he finally switches his position
and ends the war I don 't think the Voters
are going to say 'Hooray for .Mr. Nixon.'
1 think they're going to say 'We're glad
be finally came around to Georgo
McGovern'1 postUon.' " Maj. Gen. John D. Lavelle, say· secretsry Gerald L. Wamon declined FORT L.t.UDERDALE. Fla. (AP) -recollections, but it doem't bother the
ing bis firing was punishment comment on the Post report. He referred The tables doWlf at Smitty's where the Rev. Oscar Garcia that his new dw:rcb '
McGOVERN MAO SAID he thinks his enough for last winter's unau-newsmen to a White House statement old-timers dwelt are on tbefr way out. was ooce a bar. ~
The South Dakota senator said at one
campaign and bla opposiUoo to the war thorized bombing of Nor t b issued to the Post, saying that "1be Tbe beeM!ained bar will soon ba replao-"I like tbe idea , twnlng things upside ,
"probably totted Mr. Nixon to do Vietnam. reference to Bob Haldeman is untrue.'' ed by an altar. down," says the Rev. Mr. Garcia, a Bay '
something that he didn't want to do" in In today's account a11d in previous On Dec. l, Smilty11 Rtvenide Bar, of Pigs veteran woo was among the 1
trying to end the conflict. reports, the Post named these others: as Jong a favorite haunt of. beer drinkers, prisoners President Kennedy paid $50,000 ·'
Jn speeches, ram... and television ap-controllers of tbe ftmd : will bec:ome a baveu of another llOfl -"'bave released from a Fidel Castro jail. Four Sightings
In Boggs' Hu.nt
Prove Dead-ends
pearances, McGovern said that Nixon woman Reports -John N. Mitchell, former attorney the Jerusalem Baptist Temple. Betty Smith, a Fort Laudertlale widow
can get no setUement t.enns now tjla.t he general and the first director of the Com-'l1le transformatioo might disturb some who ran the bar for lZ years, says It was
cou1d not have had four y~ ago. mittee for the Re-election of the Presi-of Smitty's old regulars, now cut oH from "a quiet place where the elderly could ... ,
McGovern said that ;,, "the tragedy of Role 1·n 'Plot' denl their place of gossip, setace aad 1amm1r come and bave a drink of beer or wine in •·
this whole business of Mr. Kissinger peace." · -Maurice H. Stans, former C.Ornmei:ce
orblling aI'QUlld,._ the wor1d" in ~days Secretary and now director of the Mrs. Smith closed the bar Sept. 1 after , , berore an election. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -A 26-year-old . N.=•t • H I r Fmance UXIUill tee lO Re-elect t1ie T . c· h z · owner ortensio De gado re used to I°
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -Hopes
continued to tum into frustrations in the
search for a light plane missing for nine
days wilh House Democratic Leader
Hale Boggs and three other persons
aboard.
"Did you make an these sacrifices, Mr. aide to a Republican state legislative President. WO at 0 ics renew her lease. ~·
Nixon, to save your own political face candidate sars she infiltrated state head--Jeb Stuart Magruder, onetime White Delgado's wife said her husband decld-·'
from right-wing crlUcism'?" McGovern quarters o Democratic pttSidential House aide and now deputy director of ed to tum the bar Into a church after he
said at a rally on lbe rainy stops or lbe hopeful Sen. Edmund s. Muskie during tbe Nixon campaign committee. Die-Revenge? met the Rev. Mr. Garcia and "the divine .
Dayton, Oh.lo, courthouse. Florida's March primary campaign on lightning" struck him. -t
"Ending the war Is not going to be In-behalf or .the GOP. -HERBERT W. KALMBACH of BELFAST UPI) Tw Ro '!be Rev. Mr. Garcia, 47, '">" he
terpreted by intelligent voters as a Patricia "Peg" Griffin told the Tampa Newport Beach, described by the Post as Catholic men ~b~ to d:ath !~ discovered religion while in a Cuban jail
reason to support Mr. Nixon because jt Times Tuesday she was recruited by Nixon's personal attorney. The White pitchforks near the Irish Republic when another prisoner gave him a copy
would mean that he simply bas cb\e Robert Benz, who until last week was HoUse disputes tbat description,. but 18)'3 of the New Tealamenl
sometbirig l've been advocating for many campaign manager for GOP Florida Kalmbach has handled some personal border may have been killed in Now, every evening, membtrs of the
· Four separate sightings were reported
'lllesday, but all turned out to be dead-
ends, as have all the leads so far In the
se&n:b -which ha! covered 148,000 square
miles of rugged AJaska territory between
Anchorage and Juneau, the path of the
years," McGovern said later; Jfouse candidate Conway Brock. She said legal matters for tfu::on. revenge for the shooting of 1 part~ new church's congregation spend their
He also said that South Vietnamese she was hired by Benz to pose as a pr~ time Protestant soldier two days free time at Smitty's, insta.l.ling pews .
President Nguyen Van 'Jbieu anns:i,...nUy Muskie volunteer. 'Jbe sabotage fund, according to the ago, 8 British army spokesman whe eronce the 1..&. ... box a.ad pool table .
miSsing plane. ...._ r"r--1 Post, was a cache of as much as $700,000 said today •-has veto power over current efforts at a "I'm actually relieved you found me," held in Stans' office safe. · stood. cease-fire. she told a newsman Tuesday, "This has 'lbe army said one victim was a The tranfonnation or Smitty's Into a An electronically equipped HCl30
aircraft was crWcrossing the search
area throughout the night Wednesday,
and two C-oast Guard cutters plied the
waters of the Alaska coastline.
"We ought to tenninate any further been an awfUI weight on my conscience. The Post said it has learned that all member ol tbe Irish Republican church is not yet complete. Tbt windows
relationship with this dictator instead of I'd been waiting for that knock on the five men have been questioned by the Anny and the other also apparenlly still bear tbe brand names of popu11r '
letting him dictate American foreign door, and now I'm glad it's finally FBI about disbursements from the fund. was connected with the IRA. beers and above the door printed In thick
policy," McGovern aaid.~ ______ .'.'oo".'m'.'.e::_.'_' ____________ _::S:loan'.'.'.C,~the~_:e•::·:tre:as:::_ur'.'.e.'..r..:o:f..'.'.the'.'....ca::.::m:::·_.':::============'-.'.:b'.'.la".:ck~le~tt.:::ers'.."...'.i~s.'.'th:•_:w:o'.'.rd"__"::_Ba:r'.:..'_' __ _
-Peron· Reportedly
To Try Comeback
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -church's House or Bishops In
Former Argentine dictator New Orleans, effecUve May,
Juan D. Peron, T/1."liP.r<lluJ', lr!l·
w Argentina ~ov.:17 fO tty,tir 9· (Jncler Fire
make a pollUca! oomeback,
the newspaper Croolca ..Ud BALTIMORE (AP) -Tlte
Tuesday. fonner security director of the
Cronica said Peron would Oy Atomic ~rgy Commission
from Madrid Nov. 16 with his faces arraignment in federal
preseot wife, Isabel, and ar· court here next week on
rive in Buenos Aires the next charges of attempting to
day aboard a c b a r t e r e d defraud the AEC credit union
airliner. out of more than $33,000 in an
The newspaper said the alleged shakedown scheme.
William T. Riley also ls
( )
charged with filing false finan.
IN SHORT cial statements concerning
• • • money borrowed from other
-employes.
preserved body of his former
wife Eva also would be
brought aboard tbe same
flight.
Eva, a blonde former ac-
tress, helped Peron launch his
di<lablrsltip In Argentina In
194S, and married him tbe
same year.
e BbJwp Quits
NEW YORK (AP) -After
eight years as pre si ding
bishop of the 3.5 million-
member Episcopal Church.
the Rt. Rev. Jobn E. Hines
has anoounced· pl8Dll to resign
later this month at the age or
62. Bishop Hines, whose term
extends until 19T1, said Tues-
day be will tender his resigna-
tion. at a meeting of tbe
.
UPl11 ......... ,__.1.11·
Newsman Peter Bridge
leaves Es s ex County
Jail in Newark where
he had spent 21 days
for refusing kl answer
grand j u r y questions
concerning crime.
e KKK Foe Dead
ST. MARTINVILLE, La.
(AP ) -Fonner Congressman
Edwin Willis, who a s
chairman of the former House
Committee on Un-American
Activities battled the Ku KJux
Klan, is de&d at the age of 68.
Willis died Tltursday nlgbt.
Services will be held today
at St. Martin of Toon Roman
Catholic Church In this tiny
south Louisiana community
where Willis was born.
He bad been In ill health
since his last term, suffering
from various ailments.
e I all I/prising
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI)
Police firing teargas have
charged the fifth Ooor of the
Travi! County jail and rescued
three hostages held b y
prlsooen In an unsuccesolul
escape attempt.
No one was injured. Order
was restored about an hour
after two jailers and a nurse
were captured by f o u r
prisoners who tried to trade
the hostages' lives for thelr
freedom late Tuesda1.
Yule Fete
Scheduled
A <llrlllmas bezaar will be
hold Nov. H at Ibo 01un:h or Relf&lotll Selene, al Laguna
Can)>on Rood and· El Toro
Road.
1be pJiHc II Invited to
bn>wH In the bout!Que of
handmade lleml, m In l -a r l
gallery and homemade baked
goods rrom 10 a.m. to S p.m.
1bere wlll also be a dTawlnlt
for a handmade, 41·1ndt dol f.
Sandwlcbea and ooffee will be
served.
For more lnfonnetlon, call
Mrs. Sblrley Mcintyre at
&'1'1·2832 or the church.
RSK
SAFTl-FLIGHT
95
DUAL WHITEWALLS
WIDE 71 SERIES nEAD
4 ,....,....., Cord llliM "" 2 Ab."Jl•M lel+a --·-...... .... .... ... ....
..... ....
BUENA PARK
leDCh llvd. at Lllltwa•r
5301 le«ll .....
523-3040
'
.... ... ...
"' .... ... ... . ..
BUENA PARK
e L11ico1i1 11t Valrt Vin
5115 u.c• .. .,..
I 126-5800
FISK
PREMIER
41LYl'DLYert.R CORo. ~TRUDDIPl'I
WIDi: 71 SERIES TRIAD'·
--....
$16.96: $18.96
17.96 ..... , .... 21.95
20."' 22.115
21.95 -22.96 2A."'
COSTA MESA
e Harbor llvd. at WUson
2200 Harbor llYcL
548-2082
• SANTA ANA
Eclin<a« St. at lrlstol
1400 w...,..
546-7832
WESTMINSTER
• 15440 hach .....
leoch llwd. at McFad ..
892·2088
'
. ... . . . . • ...
• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
What Students Think
Educators. Like other businessmen, are constanUy
looking for ways to measure the effectiveness of the
dollars that the taxpayers invest in the educational
sys tern.
Usually this was done through testing and an oc·
casional poll to find out such things as how many grad·
uating high school seniors are going on to college.
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District has tak·
en this assessment of their effectiveness one step furth·
er by asking graduates what they thought about th e
education they received here.
Starting with the 1971 graduating class. the district
will poll a random sampling of 25 percent of the de·
parting seniors for five years. at which time, they will
also resurvey the 1971 class.
The idea, according to district officials, is to find
out from the former students where they beli eve the
district is doing a good job and \Vhere it needs to im-
prove programs.
Based on the results of the first survey -which
v.·as answered by 56 percent of those polled -students
want more individualized instruction and better coun·
seling; more vocational and job-Oriented instruction
a.nd 1nore instruction geared to help them understand
themselves.
The survey results emphasized the theory that
teachers are the most effective tool of education when
36 percent of the respondents said their most signifi·
cant experience in high school was conversation with
teachers. Additionally 28 percent said their most sig·
nificant experience was classroom instruction.
Fifty percent of those answering said they felt the
area of programming most in need of improvement was
counseling because it either failed to help them pre-
pare for a job or for higher education.
W hat. Adults
Do n't Botli er
To Con sider
@YDNEY J.HARRI~
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
A surprising 63 percent said they received liWe
or no training in school which helped them find a job.
Some results of the survey probably came as no
partjcular surprise to N~wport·Mes_a c:ducators, but do
confirm other observat1ons and findings. And all of
the results clearly indicate the need for action on new
approaches to curriculum, scheduling, an~-t~:Ucblng
and counseling manpower, to meet the chw~wg needs
of the communjty and of society as a whole.
Free,¥ay Land Tied. Up
The state Division of Highways had purchased some
S35 million worth of property -$16 million of it in
Newport Beach alone -for the Pacific Coast Freeway
route that was kiUed by legislation this year.
There had been considerable pressure heaped on
the state to divest its holdings, primarily to put the prop.
erty back on local ta." roll s.
Newport Beach officials thought they had an even
more important reason to have the state sell off its bold·
ings. They want to use four of the parcels for parks.
But the state Public Works Department noted that
lhe state still ha s the area designated as a transporta·
t.ion corridor, and therefore the state may yet need some
of the land for transportation uses other than a freeway.
'!'hey asked for more time for study, and the Highway
Commission concurred.
Rather than arguing with that position at this time,
it appears Newport Beach would best push for long·
term leases on the proposed park properties.
It could be years -and maybe years and years -
before Sacramento can come up with the ultimate de-
cision.
N
1t's the ultimate in women~ shoe styles ... modified
army com bat boots!'
l de11tify Source of Treats to Foil Sadists
Halloween Protection for Children
To the Editor :
( ___ MAIL_B_ox __ J but in the business of war and peace,
they can be deadly. It's not too smart to
leave our enemy in better ahape than our
allies. The so-called peace proposal is
really a temporary disposal Iypily!ng the
shcirt·sighted ineptness of all too many
McGovern campaign utterances.
CALVIN G. SIEGLE
that $160 million will be raised for com.
munity college construction statewide.
Montes for this purpose will accrue froni
the Interest on general obli8allcm bcmda
of the state, the least expensive way of
financing. (
Tb.ougbt~ at Large:
Airline pilot Nave 's naive com·
ments on our pollcopters are like
saying: "No airplanes, children
might be killed in ice cream par-
lors; no autos, we might die of
smog; no nuclear power plants,
people might be radiated." Maybe
we all should just stay in bed.
We are now at a time of the year when
our children should be having a fWl time.
Halloween is a holiday for our children
and part of the run is going out all
dressed up and receiv ing their candy
(treats) and such. But unfortunately
there are a few m_isled or sick people
who make their treats unsafe.
Letters }Tom readers are welcome.
Normally write~. should convey their
messages in 300 words or less. The
righ' to condt:nse letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is ,-eserved. AU
letters must include signature and
malling addres1, but namts may bt'
withheld on reqmst ii rufjicMmt
,.eason is apparent. Poetrv tDiU not be
publi.thed.
Enrollments ln California community
colleges will increase to one million
students by 1V75 and this creates an
urient need for more cla.sstoornt,
laboratories, libraries and vocational
education faclLities .
•
1'00 few adults bother lo con.sider
wbetber so many ol the attitudes and BC·
\ions of young people have arisen
because of "the ti.me5" -which is a
vague CO\M)Ut -or because we, m..
dividually and coUectively, have lost our
set of values, and retain no clear un-
derstanding of the proper relationship
between the indivkl·
ual and society. • • •
Is there no way to
~et people to stop
saying "No way"
\\·ith such nauseating
repeUtiveness? • • •
The most ineffec-
tual ad 1 can ever
recall seeing is one from the American
Lamb Council, depicting a busi.nessm311
saying to his colleague: "He's important w us . Let's take him to a restaurant that
serves Iamb.'' • •
A parent who breaks his promise to
punish does as much to violate lhe child's
trust as a parent who breaks his promise
to reward. • • •
~Ian cannot become an animal without
becoming worse than any; ,when be relin·
quishes his humanhood he does not sink
-Diogenes '72
no. ... hire """-_.. 'Mwl. Mt
~ty ........ """ .......... ......
,,_ "' ....... ti 0.-y 0... Dally '1191.
to the natural level, u he imagines, but
"' the sub-natural. • • •
"Propaganda" is what our enemies
do; "indoctrination" is what our friends
do; "enligbttmnent" is what we do. . ' . .
An experienced orator can tell when an
audience turns into a crowd, by the way
it begins to "smell'' -Of its dominant
passion. • • •
The worst drama critics are those who
either hate or love the theatre; the
former, of coune, are incap11citated by
their aversion, but the latter are no less
para1yzed by their adoration. • • •
Should a representative follow lhe
wishes or his constituency or his own
personal feelings when an issue comes to
a vote? My own view is on the side of
Burke, who said, "Your representative
owes you, not his industry only, but his
judgment; and be betrays it instead of
serving you if he aacriticel it to your
opinion."
Joe Demands a Fi ght
Dear President: I. Joe Si kspak,
American. take pen in hand to stick a
bug (excuse the expression) Jn your ear .
You're In trouble.
How I know is I dropped by Paddy's
Place the other night. "Give me a Seven
High, Paddy," I says. "and your expert
opinion on how lhe
campaign's going ...
"What campaign?''
says Paddy.
''Why the presl·
denUal campaign.
Paddy," says I.
"Don't tell me you
forgot?''
"Not exactly1 Jae;·
say1 Paddy. "But
i!'s kind ot Ulte \fontreol playing Texas
ln the World Series. You know there 's a
World Stries going on, but you tune ln
llte Roller Derby lns!ead .·'
"DOW DO YOU FIGURt it. Paddy?"
says I. "l mean il's a good, clean,
statesmanlike campaign they're wagtng
on the issues, right.!"
"'nlat's right, Joe," says Paddy.
"McGovern's been running around the
ctUntry aC(U.Sing the President -0r cor·
ruptJon, •PYifll, 1elllng favors and steal·
Ing the bread out of the mOtltbl of poor,
hungry babi<I -nothing wt of the
ordlnary, And the President's betn sit·
ting in bit office keeptni mum. You can't
gel more statesman&blp than that"
"How comei he's be 1 n g so
statesmanlike?'' AY.!I J.
"A statesmanUke campaign, Jot," says
Paddy. pollshlna a giUI, "lo whit a
PollUclan ruPl when be na:ure.s he got the
election In the bag."
"VOU TDINK the P,...ldonl'• doing
the rliht thina , PaddJ<!" says I.
11.According to the pollJ he ls,'' aa)l1
Plddy. "A month >go be'1 1 .. d!D& ~7.:U.
So he keepo his "'°"tb 1bul while
McGovern aboots his off and now he's
( ART HOPPE J
ahead ~29. At that rate. if he doesn'I
say a word between now and November.
he'U win 93-7. He will. that is. if anybody
remembers to vote."
"Yoo Coo't think they will. Paddy°!"
"What you got here, Joe, is a nice guy
runnirlg against a dignified statesman
and who c3res? What the public ll'ants is
a wham-barn slugging match v.·ith lots of
blood."
"l see , v.·hat !hey want's a 1:ood clean
fight, right. Paddy?"
"WRONG, JOE. What !hey want's a
good dirty light. Why do you think prcr
fessional wrestling outdraws amateur
wrestling? What makes the Roller Derby
so popular? How come Bobby Fischer got
all those headllne1? There's nothing like
a good dirty fight to turn people on.''
"Th<n the """1dent. ... "
"The fltr.. thl.ng be ought to do II 8C·
cuse McGovern of being a textual deviate
who iJ soft on Communism and practlcf:s
vtrbal lntefCQUne in public. Otherw\ae,
Joe . Americans are going to lo,,e lntemt
in th< democratic process."
"That's a tough order, Paddy."
"II I .. Joe . But the Pr"ldent'! got I<>
put penonal ambition 11lde. For the
good of the country, he's got to adhere to
our cherished American polltlcal lrndl·
tlons and start fighting dirty."
TO TELL TllE TRUTII, President,
Paddy don't think you'll do it. lie thinks
you 're golng lo put winning above
everything and refuse to right dirty.
Not me, though. r got fnllh in )'OU .
tlonetl.
Truly Yours.
Joe Slkspak, American
l as a pc.rent don't know these people,
so what can 1 do? We (parents) end up
throwing the children's treats away
simply because we don't lcnow what is
safe and what isn't.
1 RA. VE COME UP wttb a solution l
fetl could benefit both kid! and parents.
I'm 'going to put, ''This treat cmne from
the Moor!! family," on all my bags for
children. This ~akes a few minutes and
I.he parents will know where it came from
aDd it ls safe to eat
I do feol it is an fclea lo benefit every.
one.
RUTH MOORE
Reed Earned HonM-
To the Editor:
It has recently come to my attention
lhat an Olympic size pool has been or is
being constructed at Newport Harbor
High School. I sincerely hope that this
pool will be ~ated to Ralph K. Reed.
Reedie was a member of the first
faculty of the high school when in·
struction was begun in 1931).31 .
DURING BIS MORE than 30 years of
devoted service he was instrumental in
building character and morale tn the
physical education department and was
responsible for the many athletic cham-
pionships won by teams representing the
school.
Perhaps n.> one is more qualified than I
to testify lo the appropriateness of this
dedication, since J was the first employe
and superintendent Cf the school district
ror 29 years.
SIDNEY H. DAVIDSON
Claremont
One Jarring /Vok
To 1he Editor:
\Vhat a delightful experience it was to
auend the sand castle building contest
recently at Corona del Mar beach! So
much so that I'm trying lo think of
something clever for my1elf and fri end!
lti do next year. The exuberant
p11rticlpants were cle\'er. It was quite a
show. One hated to sec the sand reclaim
its own, some were !iuch works of art.
ONLY ONE JARRING note -tha t oC a
little nursery school winner clutching one
or the (all the same) prius -n mounted
~1ichelob beer can. There must be Mme
other Inexpensive fun-type of prize some-
one could donate that would be more
appropriate to such a lovely beach Rccnc.
Since no liquor is allowed on the beach, It
docs seem out of plact.
Anyway, thanks tor a beautiful af·
temoon.
LOIS DUITMAN
1UcGovern OK War
To the Editor :
: read with dismay McGovern 's pro-
posal ror tnding the Vietnam war. This
dangerous ptt:!entatlon is notable tor
wh.ot It leaves undone, r11thcr than wh11l
it purports to do. In this reapect, lt 11 also
dangerously misleading lo the public In
aeektng half«ilut!Ms and nett lna: ha!r-
results.
In see.king virtually nnthing In return
from our enemy, he gives lhem raise
cou rage to further eg~res.!lion by :
{I) JGNOR.ING TJIE role ot Russia and
China as supplier of war material to the
North Viets. Our unilateral withdrawal of
all support would deprive South Vietnam
of lhe material wherewithal to defend
themselves unless lbe United Nations ac-
ce pts the resporuiibUity -very imllkely.
(2) Ignoring the POW's as one of the
prerequisites to total withdrawal and
bombing cessation.
(3) Ignoring the welfare of South Viet·
namese citizens and offidall who are
anti-Viet Cong. Remember what happen.
ed to several thousand of them ln the
mas.<>acre at Hue!
(4) Ignoring the presence ol 70,000
North Viet troops in Laos and I0,000 in
Cambodia. Why volunteer to wttlxlraw
our air force from 1'halland "Wit.bout
reciprocal withdrawab of enemy troops?
We have only 700 troops in Laos and none
in Cambodia 85 of Oct. l , despite in.
ferenccs lo the contrary.
McGOVERN DOES Nin' address
himself to consequences beyond this elec·
tion. He obviously places more credence
in lhe enemy than be does lo hiJ own
government Hi! naivete in relying on the
questionable compassions of the North
Vietnamese reminds me of the postman
and the vicious dog In the yard: when the
owner assured the pamnan that the dog
would not bile, he replied, "Lady, YOU
might know it and I might know it, but
does the dog know it?".
AssumptJons are dangerous anytime,
"JcGotiern Jm~ues
To the F.clitor:
Wbeo I moved to California over 30
years ago, expensive Sln"eys on mass
transit were being made. They've been
matinc them ever since -spending
fortunes.
I wooder how many of the SeatUe -or
Disneyland-type elevated can could have
been built down the center of freeways,
&1.d on other routes too, for the money
spent on these surveys.
One hindrance is the vast lobbies
spent by oil, construction, auto manufac-
turers, auto clubs, etc. Another is the
fact lhal the people In position I<> ·do
llOl1lething .,. comfortable In their
autos.
WREN GEORGE MCGOVERN said be
would convert 10rr:te of the defense plants
and p e o p I e , (including retraining
thtm) into mass transit systems, it im·
pr~me.
He also impressed me when be recotn·
mended a minimum lnoome tax. 'lbere
are tu "shelters" that are justified, but
anyone living well should pay some tax.
Yesterday, Incidentally. he Impressed
me again when be said we should con·
centrate on uving lives instead of. saving
face.
JOUN ADAMS
Propo•ltlon• 1 alMl 14
To the Editor:
On Friday. Oct. 13, Saddlcback
Cc-llege'a atafr voted unanimoualy to sup-
port Propoa!Uon l and I<> reject Proposition lt on the Nov. 7 ballot.
A "yes" vote for PropoeiUon I means
W e're Burying Ourselves
Thlnp a columnl.lt ml;bt never know
If he didn't open h.\a mail :
CivUJ.zatlon Is now thn!atenlng to bury
ltstlf In Its own debris. Each Amerlean
generate& a ton of solid waste, or
garbaee, s year. The total would cover
Manhattan t1tand 13 feet deep.
If you had a headache ln ancient
Greece, the physician might try to cure it
by drawing blood
from your head .
tn the 19th «n·
tury two mlners In
Nevada built a house
m&dc of stonea en--
cn1sted with "blnck
stuff." The next year
they learned tb&t the
black stuff wu a
rich sUvu ore, Md
theJ mined !heir -· for m.ooo. Which proves the adage that YO\I doo'l have to
travel far to find opportwrlt)'.
JF YOU RECEIVED an lnvltaUoa In a
message signed l•J>otus," would you ao-
Ct!pt it? You'd probably be 90rry later if
you didn 't In the Morae Code, "Potua''
st1nd1 for "The Presldcnt of the United
States."
Animals don't iieem to be affected by
pol90n Ivy, but people can get a rash
rrom touching the rur of a dog that has
wandered throu gh a patch of thlt lhree-
\cafcd plant.
Wht; really runs your hoo.seho!d? In old
llulgarla, after their marriage, the bride
( HAL BOYLE )
and bridegroom ea!:h took hold of a piece
of weddln& bread and tugged hard.
Whoever broke ofC the bigger piece was
supposed to he the boss In the family.
QUOTABLE NOO'ABLES: "An op-
U!nl!l ii someone who lell• JOU I<> cheer
up when things are lfOilli hi! way." -
Edward R. Murrow.
S1t1ett labor: tt takes a lot of work to
make honey. One study Indicated that
40 000 bee-loads of nectar were required to produce • pound of fln~hed honey.
Another !ludy by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, In which the bees had I<>
make a II-mile round trip for each load
of nectar, estlmaled they new 640,000
mUes to create a pound of honey.
Shape of what's to come: WUI the
Amtrlcan worn!n of the future be shaped
more like a slraffe? Probably not, but it
present trends continue, 11 studied by
the U.S. Dvpartm•nl of Airlculturo, she
wUI bo l•ller and, tn proporUon to her
height, she'll have a smaller buftllne, ,
waist and hlpa:.
WORTH REMEMBERING : "This you
can believe: when a youngster today
henra: a bad word, It goes in one ear -
And come!' out tils mouth."
Fact Ille: A tree soaks up about 11000
SHOULD THIS proposition fail, local
property taxes will be the sole source or
revenue for constructing community col·
Iege building!.
Proposition 14 purports to red!ICe tu:·
es, but it would actually raise them for
nearly everyone. Proposltk>n 14 will not
generate ruffictent revenues for state
and local school districts. ProposiUOD 14
would cripple k>cal government, and
severely damage the public schools. Both
Governor Reagan and former Govtmor
brown are vehemently opposed to the
passage of Proposition 14.
ANDREW KISH
Bond Convnittee Chairman
Sadd.leback College
De a th Penalt11
To the Editor:
Regarding the letter from Roger West
(DAILY PlLOT, Oct. 18) about the death
penalty.
Mr. West concludes his letter wllb
"How many executions has Mr. Barley
witnessed!" Well. I might ask him,
"How many cold·blooded murders have
you witnessed?"
Perhaps you would be Sickened by the
innocent victims of these murders if you
were there. But you aee, the victim hla
no voice to protest his death. We can't
ask him what he would con.sider ap.
propriate punishment for the person who
killed him.
One lhlng is for sure. with capital
punishment, you don't have to worry
about second offenders.
MRS. LINDA BAKER
in Garbage
tons of water to make a ton of wood •••
Football 's first mascot was Handsome
Dan. a bulldog adopted by Yale un-
dergraduates in ~890 ... Some kinds of
goldfish are gray, and some oriental
varieties have been known lo llve 7t)
yet.rs ... Fish, Hke people, catch colds
aod get upset stomachs.
lt was Jules PodeU, owner of the
Copacabana nigh! club, who oboerved
"A genius la someone who can aet ~
name off a malling ltat fOT Junk mall."
OU.NOi COUT
DAILY PILOT l . • Robert N. w'ee'd, l'ubUaher
Thomo.i Keetnl, Editor
Albert \V, 8a.te1
Edilcrial l'ogc Editor
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Wednesday, Octo ber 25. 1972
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Today's Fl••I
EDITION N.Y. Steeb
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"VOL 65, NO' :z'1'11 7 .SEC'f10NS, 'l'06 PAGES •
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Sirhan S.eetis High Cotirt
• WAsi!INGTON (Al?)~ SirbiurBJsbara ~. $Uggeoted Ollilomi& .appellate
Slrhoo appealed todaf~· jllifies. strained the la'!' .flf seareJi, and
Supreme c.u.t to ,.~,. ,NII • • ~:10 ppj>oJ'd the -on because
al murdering Robert F~ , . J • of· K~'s notional Im~ i La"1UI for the Arab ·immJgtlJlt ~ a i..'ft'i§ evident','' ·said the petition.1,,tbat
~of.psychiatrist., pbyslc-la,ns ., re~'in'l"'i>ps of any appellate tribunal ·Pb;SS~ and, others ba"ve UncOvered would' care to be on record in reversing
•tmpiflcant ,pliysital .evidence'~' that Oµ;C09victiqn of a nondescript Arab irn-
Sl!l!aii cild not fire lhe bullet !"I JI/be 5, nilgi'8nt who w~s convicted o f
l!llS, ·at lhe llol,"/,Ain~. I!!,',~ ~!Slnatipg Sen. ~rt F. Kennedy.
Angeles that; .med the Nt\of • •Or& )VbO midoobtedly was af ~ piresoold of
lel\llor. • · .. « his plliliacle of political' aclnevement -
·)!ul the natllre of tlU evidence m 1'0t the Deinodrat!c' nomlnaU.oo !Pr president bitmedia~y disclmed. . t , of the' United \Stites, and wilb an ex·
The lawyers ·said u.ey are ple(>aring cellelit chance to -the nation's
i. "'ace their, new 'e-!iilo~·. the chid ··•eaiUve.
eaifiom11 Su~' eoUrt. · · · · · siriJD'•s la Wyers · r'aised a dozen
. Sfriian w .. ·eobvicled·iJ> AprU , lj!ll or • cluillengen 'to the·convlclioo!tn trying to
Q1J{rder , and fiv.e , co(mp Of ~8JM~t to ,.,m ;: ·Qew triAI for· their! 21-year--old
_.it !11Urder on \Ill> I{~ shOOtjng. clienl MaJnlY, lh!!Y complalnjod about the
Hll deatta·sen~ was~ la~.~e~r , '!~~police' searched his mother's-home
lo life fn. prison aller'. ~. <;alifllrl)I&., ·•!iill>"lll,. Warran!.. • t .• , ~ ~'1.:..~!~ ~-~. ,, ~ of lhll, u 1s: ~gn;mble tbat Will to.be ......... ~.,....,...1.. . . \ le revin it~·fo alte,r'tht.-laws ~fl'ban!a I~ warm· :l!r;t.,.., . . Jmxt ~·lo' -'oen~ the ..._ ...... !'.....,,. · f$ u_..._.. · ' " : "'.' ' ~· ,a"3-•1 I .. +:~, ,J ••
and r-"'" R. ~· " '. ••. . . .._~·-,. ....... i ~·· .... _.~ ., rffi~~._Anest
1 ... • • y~u,11~ i~ ·;n,:orse
:'" • ..,, .......... ., \· j StP .. ';a. l>eaths
, ~ ,klij cJjluds,iDi! I'll wfn · • .,~tl' , 'dNr to~ atieo,.. 'lllnday, • ,;..,. • , ,, , wttll ~lat~~·-:r,._~IA ,.,.P),-: Police say
, 75 ri,iiii to 84 ~ I.oWs IMloht Uvte leen:agers 1atrelled In the dl!etlui or tSSr'. "•it .... , 1" I, o! -·~· • t•P lior;sei. rlMa"Wttb· Chwia -or ·con-
: 1' !t 1 .4 "111 • .~ .. .,.,~. •''le .abd')Uwif-'iJ.lktudded 'bwd ' , SIDI! !l'GDA",. . ~ ""'" . .-1 ,1,~.::. • • " 1'~at,e , Wlllim,ltll,tmtkr " M!l~.~l\/!:l\IJ,,1~;jlllvln& .tun.
• ijrotll(i •S•ii,•),a1111>,s~;'.·' . ,J>:qJll:O:.L,t ,,JMol)l<IJ.b~ ~d the ',~~off :~.~1"·· amfXJll "' ~ ~otn....:.... ~·~-!Wrest ··111• · iot< ®'!lil~1"1tt ',. ,..,.,,.., '··~,;.,,,-,<;·.'''"f\: ., ......... y ... • . ... ' ~ ., .... , ........ ,.,_.the
·the Laguna M .. rio..·rlav~~<· bpnet nm." •
St• E>!ltrf<li•menl, PllQll ZB·211. The -killed S.twilaY nlglll were
&..M. ..,, ,, ~ "" found entangled wtth one another. They
._.... 1• ,..,_ "..,. • apparflrrtlY. collapeed in tetrw. =-" ~ ~ ;;;::;' c: '1 Au\horillet Aid 25 horses jn a =:-11i: . :e,. ...,.,. : ramshackle stable In the Port Ricbmond
cr.....ni • '""' 11.u 8ei:tion of PhOadelphia were beaten. :=..:::=• .J; f"::~r:= ...J Three horte~ were Injured serlously,
• ..._. .. Pfff • T IN • •"ti • WUliam 1f. lffVhA•, dlJ'ector 0£ opera• ~·... IW1 ,....~ .. ,. "V ....... • ... ~.,.... u, ,, .;.: • • ti ~ ':>r the alate, Soclel,f ror UIC Pnver>-..... ......,. : · =-' ..::"' ~ tion of Outlty to AnlrQAJ1, fAld. It was
... -• · the worst in.slanCe ol bru1Alltf be hod ... ner seen.
• , .
ORANGJ GOUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEONESOA Y., OCTOBER 25, 1972 • TEN aNJS c
U .S·
Policeman's
Assailant
Left Prints
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. o.iir ,..., .....
Tea!DJ of· detecUves .roiklng around
the clock continue today to track slim
leioda Jn the ambush shooting of an Irvine
pollCemDn lured into a trap at a Jonely
cros!roads, thinking be was beaded to
help an injured man. ·
'Officer Stephen T. Nash; 23. escaped·
tile busbwbacking IQ' at 11 ,15 p.m. Mon-
day with Olly a grazing .scar on his
"\1!"'· So far -·besides the initial detail! of
what luippened _an.U~pt..,. o[ ~
parties involved -vestlgators are
known to baVe two elements:
-A set of indistinguishable footprints
in a muddy cornfield.
-'l'he fact a ruthless man wanted bad-
ly to he a cop-killer.
Theories of an Old West-style highway
robbery attempt reminiscent of pioneer
cowboy days on Irvine Ranch land have
virtually been ruled out •
. Nor .d9_29liceJ~e_µ~ye·tbe plot at the
crossroaai of Jeffrey and BarranCa
roads could • ·ba•e -engineered sptcillcally to get ~ Nuh, perhaps
by soneome with a grudge apinst him.
· Tbo•~JnklnC .fl<:la auppert neither to.-. '•. . • 1· . -1'·1 •l. ...
• ·~· ""'"" ~--olmpl$." --~_...,,-..~ Capt. F,d Glaqojr.. ".. .
·Qaef .... u., ....... l.o be _ _,_11......,..lha-,
....... ,;;·.........r,li. ~ ~•tohftilfl,..._._r_
-t.' • ' lnVesuPton'are also oeetlng the two
cleancut ,...,. men in. ~ battered 1955
O>em>ld who stopped to 1<11 Orlicer
Nash It aJll)e8r<Cf a 1 man lying on tile
pavement 'b&ck down the •road was ill or
injured.
One j)osiibillty due to their military
luiln:ub, SOUlborn accent" and ao old
car with out.of..iate plates, Is that the
men clad in clvilian clothes are military
penoruiel
A leletype alert 1'nd radio broadcast
are oµt for the green-and-white aedan,
minus itl rfront bumper, plus any OC•
cuJ>ants. ati poJ;ential . material witnesses
ln ·!he CfSO. ,
They said when ~Y pulled up as 0£.
ficer Nash wrote a log nport under his
dashboard •lamp that they were headed
CSee AMBVSR, Pip l)
Absentee Vote
Deadline Near
Only one week remains for voters
to apply for absentee ballots,
Orange County Registrar of Voters
David Hitchcock warned today.
Next Tuesday is the cleadllne.
"Persons who expect to be absent
from their precinct on Nov. 7 may
apply for an absent voter ballot
either by mail or in person at the
Registrar of Voters Office," Hitch-
cock advised. "If request~ an absent ballot by
mail the voter must include his
name. residence address, Jegal
signature and the r<ason why be
will be uDable t.o vote at the polls
on Nov. 7," IDtcbcock added.
He said the registrar's omce
located at 1111 E. Chestnut st.,
Santa Ana, wW be open on Satur·
day ,lnrm '• a,m, to ·' p.m. and on Monday al'ICl Tuesday evenings until
t p.m. tor tbelcoftvtnience of those
wishing to apply for absentee
ballots.
1 BIKE, 1 A.D:
3 C:4:LLS 1 SA.LE . ' ~ ... -· .. ....
l, J;; 1; 'lll.Co,jult bol' It went when
the Westminster man offered 10 tell bis
moion:Ycle to DAILY PILOT readen .
Thb £i ·the ad that' iold lt -In ..,. nl&ht
-lllor·Jul thn•1>pilone-ealb: ll~P~ . 750; , Pit llJ.
Bitrialn .bur . Only 2 mo .
old. UllO ml. Many ltrH,
Fairing, rack, back rea~ cnsb bar, etc, Owner must
sell, only $1380 or offer.
ixx-nn. 'lliaVs,lhe klnd of action you could get.
too. Try lt with an ad of your own. Plal
lht du;.d Une IO cl..,llied advertising
rellUlU 1t the-DAILY PILOT, MWf?I.
ue·s ..... rac
j!y J,,N ED\v ARDS
' Df llMI O.llY" ~119t SllH
Sometimes an old box, fiVed wltb me-
mentos can tell a lot ~boUt a person's
life.·Aisk Costa Mesan Jack Wallace. He
knows· ..
Wall8ce had the duty of going into the
mQdest · moQile home of his neighbor,
PhyUis Di~. and cleaning out a few
personal effects.
Miss Diller utidoubtediy took some
kidding over the years because she bad
the Same 'name as the ,zany television
com'edianne of OOday. Actually, there ... as
no blood relationship. .
But as he rummagOO through his neiith·
bor's trailer home the other day at 903
W. 17th St., Wallace found a box beneath
her bed. It was filled with old pootos.
movie reviews, yelJo,ved newspaper
clippings and memorab\ia· Of another
time and plilce.
Slowly, the story or Cost a Mesa's
Phyllis Diller unfolded in those yellowed
clips and old photos.
There was more or a relationshlp be-
tween the tWo Phyllis Dillers than had
generally ~n known.
·For Costa Mesa's Phyllis Diller, too,
had been a star.
A magazine clipping In the box Wal-
lace found shows her and Nonna Shearer
as nameless extras. in a 1918 film . and
some photographs show her pl8ying-op-
posite WlUlam Barrymore. cousin to ac-t
tors Jack ·and Lionel .
The Times reviewed only one of her
perlonnances;. It was of "Ofer the HJU
to the Poor Hoo,.," produced byWUliam
Fm: in 1920. She had kept the yellowed ..,_
clipping. .
The, sept. 18, 1920, reView said,
"Though ~e Is offended by ·the super-
Rbundance of its Seritimentality, ilnd tn~
clined to resi!t ils Ovt'rt effort to be r
hea~-rendjng, It must be admitted that
oCcasion811y It docs strike a ' genuine
note, sometimes It rings true clearly.
Arid this saves it -this and the chat·
acterizationll Md settings .. .'' COSTA MISA'S DILLER EMOTING IN EARLY SILENT FILM
Bone1th a Modest Bed, a Boxful of Eorly Memories 'Ibe critic also considered seven cast
members which included MW Diiier as:
•·oµters ... deDnite ln their characttm.
~·" All !he clil'J>lngs al\d phologr~pbs Wal-
l"!'< rqt!'\11 µnder bet: bed were l\Pred In
no apparent orotr: Wi~at6J-and
w111> i1W1 J4e11il£,ying ·l"'rkl, • MaQY ~ portri~ slius oi 'M.isa Piller af.o9e in fashiooable ,d~ and• poaes
ol. the 1920s oi jn scenes from long-for·
gotten films.
Three rltm Utlel wore 1tamptd on lhe
bac~ of oome photographs, id<ntlfylng
scenes from "The Very Idea" with actor
Taylor Holtnes ind made br MteN> J>ro.
ductloll.'I, '"l'he Battling Bookwonn1'' and
"One P.11nute tO Go,'' ·a rnm made at
C<iton•d<,. lleoch, by Bolshofcr Produc-
tions or 11011y<vood about noileg• football
and tomanllc rlvalrles. .
Advance JlllbUclty ror "One Minute to Go.''. dHCTliied Miss Diller as: "fonnerl y
I
wl[h the Essa.nay Co. of Chicago, aod get through the Dtpre11ion years.
who·wlll be remembered by bet splondkl And once, the Wallacea recall. "She
P,'rformince . 1n,, the great Fox dreml'I , told one lady: •yoo stloold tiave 1ee11 me
. Ov•( thcJ!ill..'. .i>lal's.J>etJlnLr<>lc..u.. _~ ~ . •• 1 1.... • .. 'he.(\VY woman' In Fred Bal~bofer's big '!'l'lien 1-wu:-m , l'l'C'-o m:B•~,-r---~
fooUroll -UQn." The WaUacea think ahe riicant ·the ' One pliolOifaph ahows her .sitting In a Zle~!lekl Folliea but are unsure because
braiid-new Wington aulomomblle in a she newr moolJoned tt apin. ·
wflitc wig and a gown ol white 11lk and •Itr brother, Kenneth DlUer of Evant-
lace. ton , Ill .. called Ml• Diller la Colla Meta
And a munbling clipping features a evel")' week untU hla death two years
similar photograph with the caption : ap:o, according to Wallace.
", .. P.Jbs Phyllis Dillfr of .the Essa.nay Amid tht boxful of memorles1 howtver.
Film Company, dressed u '1 colon\81 there Wilt no explanation of why Miss
dame. de1nonstratln1 one of the ca1'1 11 Oi~ler abandol:'lcd her acting career Jn
the !!how."· the J~ end eventuMly !Iv~ in rtlatlve
Although Miss Piller vlaltcd dally with obscurity in CoM• M-.
Sue Wallace. she wae nevor told Ill the Not IDnl! ago, Mlla Diller aPPi)lnted
dctaRs of her weer. Bnt aho admitted Wallatt...lhe esec11tor of her .. 1a1e •. H•
tn htt sbt Md to pawn her diamonds -to (Sff ~1EMORY, Pap tl
,
' ' • . , '
• -.
Jet Noise
Suit Given
•
New Delay
A further six-month delay wu onlerod
Tue!day In the trial of jet bol,. lawoults
seeking a total of $28 milllon in damage
desplt< the objections of lawyers
reptttenting 905 H a r b o r Area -·· orange County SUpmior C o u r l
Presiding Judge Bruce llJmDe< aet a new
trial date of Airil :II for the QlulUple ao-
tinr11, three monlhl wller !ban the JW10
date demanded by the ccunty counsel's
office.
"We are cpp>Sed to any delay of any
kind in these actions," plaintiffs' at·
tomey Angele Palmieri ssld. "Our
laWBUits were filed more than three
yean ago and we •re rtady tor trial."
Palmlerl represents 905 dlents who
argue in their """plainll that pcoperty
valu .. In the vldnlty of Or8Dfl• County
Alrpotf bave been drasUcally reduC'ld 11
a resuJt of jet flights over their homes.
AU the lawoult.t conllnd that Orsnge
County must be held nspomlble for the
jet noise snd P>Uutlon rau!tini from jet
aperallonl lin<e the county ··-Air w .. t and Air Califorltla 1o Jnaugurete
jet ntJl)!ts at the CIJUflly faclll!1.
•
DAIL V ,II.OT Stiff ....
Among 'E•n The plllnllffl are ...-of Nnport
Bea<b, Ccu1 M-. eoi-del Mar and
Santi Ana Hel&ht& They an becked in
t h e I r adloaa by the Oralla• C'.ollnty
Noise Abatement Committee.
Peering out of Peter's Pumpkin Patch ~n Bristol,
picking out a particularly plump prize, was JeH
Hatch 4, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stiefel of
Costa 'Mesa. II he was waiting for the Great Pump-
kin, he wouldD't admit it. Perhaps the Grand Spirit
of Halloween was helping young. Mr. Hatch choose
jwt the right one for the perfect jack-o-lantern.
TREES STAND TALL AT COSTA MESA'S PINE CREEK APARTMENTS
Developer Phillip Lyons Would Rather Hive Them Than Chop Them
Mesa Apartment Builder
Moves !frees to Project
FromPq~J
AMBUSH •..
for a telephone to l!Ollly police about the
suspected acdd<nt vldfm.
No teleplioaes are located Virtually for
miles around wtthfn the Ulldewloped
sprawl of eorn and Upl1'IClll fields and
Big Political Fund Unit
Refuses Spending Report
Mesa Policemen
Urge Caution
On Halloween
Tueoclay w111 be Halloween.
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
ot ... D9llY 1""91 Steff
If you can't move man back into
naUX'e, you must move nature where
man is.
So believes Phillip Lyons, a 36-year4d
apartment developer, who bas found an
equally enllghtening altematlvt: t o
Voltaire's commandment to return to
nature.
Lyons' philosophy is embodied ln a 250-
unit development that brings a little bit
of the San Bernardino Mountains into
downtown Costa Mesa.
It's called Pine Creek, wbere you can
smell the forest and hear the babbling of
streams less than 200 feet from U . .! rush
of Fairv\ew Road.
Upset over recent city plans to uproot
12--year~ld silken ash trees on Indiana
Avenue and filinois Street, Lyons says It
is far better to maintain the trees than --110!l"H'""•--'"" ____ ,. __ '.'if chop them down.
"I think tMy ought to leave them in,"
he argues. "Here we have done jtyJt the
opposite." Mesa
Calendar
TONIGHT
PREPARATION FOR PARENTHOOD
-OCC Lecture Serles, Lecturer : Mar-
jorie Pyle, R.N. Oct. 4 -Nov. 8, Estancia
HS Forum, 7:30-9:30 p.m.
TlllJRSDAY, OCT. 2'
Lyons moved more than SOO trees tnto
his complex, nearly ball or them fully
grown. They surround miniature streams
and waterfalls built by hauling more than
200 tons of granite rocks and boulders on-
to the buildlng site.
1be young developer admits that he
spent the $150,000 in lsndscaping primari-
ly for commercial reasons.
It would aeem likely they would hive The man who run.s the biggest political
stopped first to Jnvertlp.te themleJVM. war chest In California says he doe! not
Officer Nub left without obt.atrUn& have the time or the money for the ''red
their names snd found the man lying tape" involved in filing campaign
hid-reports.
face down in the roadway, b1I bandl George Shellenberger, who runs the
den beneath blJn. $300,000 "United for califomia" fund
He auddelly leaped up, croucblng com-from the living room' of his Beverly Hills
bat..tyle with both bands tnlollll • looi-home ssys he can't afford a secret.sry to
nosed revolver at the patrolman'• head, handle the csmpalgn reporting work 111<
leadini him to lunge _...,. and gun blmMnoog the candidate. wbo recel.,.
the eogtne in a fullle attempt lo ND the donations from "United for californla" 11
man down. Asseml>l)'lll8ll Robert Badbam ( R -
A slug -poisibly flonm a .31 caliber Newport Beach), who lllled $1,IOO in CCI>
weapon -smashed throuab th e tributions from the tund.
wincllbleld glasa, f!l82IDc Naab'• left The fund Is the only known major
cheek u be swerved the' lqWtd car political fund in the state whk:b has
nd -~·· <feL•M I · refused lb turn in the campalgn rocelpta ~ u!: ~1 :00,.. ~ft pos ttoo and exnendlture statements reqairM of
He was unable to get hla lhotCun out of political committees and caMidates by
\t• bracket quickly enouJI)! wblle CloUcbed the 11161 public dtscl08Ufi! law.
over the front see.t befo~ the Oeeing Shellenberger, a retired ~
gunman was out ol. range tn. tbt adjactnt broker, said the money bad been r :r!~og-slrouded neld lined wtth stalks ~u~~~ ~~
Offlctr Nuh took cover· after radioing the state Legislature.
for belp, bringing fellow patrolmen and ~lectlon reports flied last .,..k
I 50 la fro wtth the secretary of state allow that ultimately an army o 1 wmen m "'United for California" bas alrt.ady
numtrous agm:lta, includlng four ICellt· shelled out more than the combined
tracking dogs. ·~ bl ..i The vi<llm alao ,,_ not lo trall hill reported spending of the ""~ gg
ettacter into the field after be ran from organlzed labor political committees.
a windbreak of e ...... n-t. •• tree.a. a creek So far this year, 30 Republicans and
--vy--two Democrats have repc:rted receiving ravine cutting through the far 1lde of the contributions totaling $128,023 from
Shellenberger Jaid he believes the state
hu no authority to make l}im report
details of the fund, although he advisel
candidates accepting hi• contributioM to
report them on thelr individual campalgtt
statements.
But an attorney for the secretary of
state aays the law does require
Sbellenberger to Ille and that the case is
"under ~view'' and "definltely DOt a
shut cue.''
Hijacked Ship
Not Sighted
ESBJERG, !Jenmarlc (AP) -
Danish maritime experts said to-
day the 122·lon trawler Nordkap,
hijacked by the ship's cook, has
either gone down or is slowly
lumbering along the North Sea in
the general :Urection of Denmark .
There were no verified sightings
of the vessel which slipped out of
Aberdeen, Scotland, Sunday night
with Joergen Christiansen, the 28-
year-old cook, at the helm.
He left the skipper and the rest of
the crew behind after declaring he
was "going home."
Some Costa Mesa homes already ·
diJplay orange tlnd black decorations bt
their windows and front yards.
AJJ soon aa the sun goes down Tuesday
evening, costumed children will begin i
trlck-<>1'-treating.
But before the children leave for their
rounds of the neighborhood, parents
sbould take some safety precautions.
Parents should arrange for their
cblldren lo join a smaJJ group Of trick-Or•
treaters who will be supervised by ml adul~ the Costa Mesa poUce departmm' '
has 111ggeated. .
And older dtildren, if not accompanied., 1
!bould be instructed to remain In'
mldential.neigbborhoods and away from •
thei 1major, arterial streets. ·:.
Small, inexpenslve toys, fruit, gum and
candy will be filling their sacks, and
police advise parents look over their eoor-
tents and weed out all unwrapped,
unsanitary items as soon as possible.
If there is foggy weather. the police
advise all Halloween costumes be bright,..·:
ly colored to make the children as visible
as possible to motorists. And costumes
should be made of fire-proofed material.
Mateo Disaster Area
WASHINGTON (APl -San Mate0.
COOKING SCHOOL -OCC Lecture
Serles, Gerry Gerkin and Sandy Krogh,
"Dollan v. Food Sense," Mesa Theater,
9 :~11 :30 a.m.
"We think people are very attuned to a
more e!thetlc type of environment. Even
though it cost us more to develop this, I
think people are more interested ln just
four walls and a bathroom. We also think
they are willing to pay for it," he ei:·
plains.
Lyons may be right, since the
apartments are half.filled already, and
be says this was accomplished without
adverUaing. 1be real II about 10 perceat
area or any other cover.
He feared be might be aet up for • I is~he~Ui;e~nber~g~e;r'~s~fundiii;· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir~ secondary amlwh by the Jong-haired, i 1
bearded gunman or evea possible ao-
cOOlplicta waW!lg in the m u d d y ,
tecentlt-Jrr!Pled farmland-;
.. •
County has been declared a disaster area
by the Sml!lll Business Administratiop •
because of floods that caused heaef
damage to homes and businesses this
moo th.
"WOMEN IN WORLD OF WORK" -
Widentng Worlds of Women, OCCfi Lee> higher !ban in a nonnal apanment com-
ture lerles, Lecturer: Jan Howe , IaJand plex.
Houle, Fuhlon llland, t :•tt:30 a.m. The project wss started by leveling an
ARTHRITJS i'ACI'S FORUM -Film ' old drafUng equipment and helicopter
and panel di!CUSllon presented by 'llte blade pl8!1t whJeh occupied 30,000 feet of
Arthritla Foundation, Orange County the 12.5 acres. '"Ibe rest of it was just
Branch. Speaken: Dr. Sallford H. An~I. weeds," says Lyoru..
Dr. Leon B. Kats.. Te Winkle Jun1or High Trees, some up to 40 feet in height,
School Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. _ were imported from as far away as Sac-
COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE -Semt-ramento. The boulders came from La· Annual Art Show and Sa1e, South Coast a Hills
PW., Oct. 26-28. Pr-.c11 lo scholarship ~We insianed the t)'Jle of boUlden and
fund. trees that are indigenous to the local
FOOTBALL -Newport Harlxlr at mountain•," explained Lyons. '.'It gives
Westtm. I p.m. the residents an environment with whlc;,b
they're familiar, not something ttranae
and artificial.''
).
OIAll•ICOAST
DAILY PILOT
-,,.. ar..... a.f DAIL.Y .. IL.OT, 'llltlll .ti~
le ~ .... , .. ~ If _.llflell IW
,.,_. ar-.. Otltt ....... ""'"' ~ ......
,..,, ........ ,. ....... 11119(. M4nl•' ltlreugJI
P'rtA,, 1W c.11· IMM, frl....-t lfl9dll.
Huftlllllbl -.ov.._,1111 v.11,,, ..........
a.oi. l~i.Mdl aM ·~ c....,..,, 1M JI* C..h'.... A afwtlt ,..-...
' .. " ...... MlllMll .........,. .... -....,.. ,,.. ~ ""*''"""" ....... .,. •t 130 W.1 -.y ......,, a." ..... CllltfWflll, ...
aoffrt H. Woo4
Prwlffnt •nd l'\ol:llllllW
J•cli It. Curto,
Vice ,.,....,., ... o.r.w1 ~
ThoM•• K•••ll
li!dllor norn•• A. Murpll111e
M..,..'"8 f:dltw
Ch1,IM H. l••• ltlellenl r. H•ll ............ MeMllnl lft*9 .,_ __
J)O Wnt 1.,. SfrMt
M•W., lwWr11•1 ,,o. a.. 1s•o, '212• --"...,.,. e.dlt -~ ... , ..... 1AeWll ....,: m ..._.,._,..
HllllllifllfM MM•: 111h MMfl """'' a:• left~ as ""111 II~ ....
T ........ en Cl UJ ... JZ1 ct.-... ....... , .... .., ... ,.. °"""""" 1m. °"""' Cliatt Nllblhl:lll c;M'INrl'(, "" .... ...,. lttv.1,.,..., ......... ""'""' ., .,_,i...-.. ........ ... ., .. .r"M'tlfVUf WF1Mut ...... -"' ....... .,.,..,.._ ......... . .......... -.......... -Cltl.,.... ~11:1 1W ..,,]., UM ~ ...... ~"*"""' ""1il..-_,,--•-" .
The 10 stream,, meandering through
the apartmenb are kept moving with
recirculating pumpe. They ann't cold
enough for trout. but some of the tenanb
have stocked them wtth gold fish.
"1be strearm break up the noise from
apartment to apartment and it takes
away from the noise of the trafflc and
airplanes," says Lyons.
"I gel a lot of satisfaction building this
type of project. lt'a pleating to have the
residents come to you and aay it's ao
J)Mcof\11."
7 ,000 Gallo11s
Of Oil Float
Down NM River
CIMARRON. N. M. (AP) -The 11mell
of diesel fuel was thick ln plclurttque
ctmarron Canyon today as IOme 7 ,000
pOona ol the fuel floated down Cimarron
River, leaving lllouaands of dead fish In
an oily film.
About 30 state off\cte.ls and local
volunteers worked throu1th the nl1ht In
an effort to trap end bum the fuel that
1pllled Into the popular trout 1tream
when a tank tnack ovtrtumed In the can-
yoo .
'lbe fuel slick entered the shallow, fast·
flowing mountain stream about noon
Tuuday oome Utrte mllu ,,..1 of Ute
Pai'I< lo C.Uu County In norlheaot New
Me1ico.
'"llleie u. • mlllon placel ft> hide out
thett," Delacll.. Sgt. Keith Carpenter
remarked. .
'l)le major manhunt ,.., dis-at
10 a.m., after a long, lleepless nlP:t for
shotgun-wrying llwm<ll' pokins tlwough
the field with ooe officer for every five
rows of corn.
Paholme•.-Stlll coverlnl the ocelle later
1n the day, however, captured four
youlhl, two juveniles and two 11 year
olds, driving two cara around the ana.
One flt the descrfptlon of the vehicle
which -purposely or by near-tragic
coincidence -lured Ollle<r Nash into
the murderous trap the nfJl)!I before.
They were tsken to beadquartera for
questioning, where the tout abaken young
men were released after it was
determined they were only curious
•illhtseert wbo heard of the ambush. Dete<Uve C.pl. Glasgow aald today It
is not Ubly the JIWllllSO lying in watt had
slngltd out Offtcer Na.sh due to any past
involvement wltll blm.
Stationing ol petrol em within the
rural aroa Oleaill two lhlftl overlapped
during a two-hour period In whldl the ID>
cldent~. 1'h1I meant even j Patrolman Nash
.... !ht 1pe<lflc latflel, the sunman
would have only • 2& ptrctht chance er
greeting the vtcllm speclllcally In mind.
"He just happen«! to be the first one
who came along," Clpt. Glasgow aald to-
day .
Detective Bob Lennert I! ln chlrie of
the case 11 chief ln•=tor for tbt 10.. man patrol oquad of Meaa offlcen
detalled to...,.. the recently-ln-
corporalld di)'.
HI• 1upemoorr captain llld ~ 11
-ldnfl with Ovo otbor deleQIJveo ft> !wo-
man tearna on tht cue~
, ..,.. • .,.i
MEMORY •.•
wu ft> lltt borne bl that catJICity.
Mist Diiier died Oct. 17 ahtr I ltnl\hY
mn .... Sho -a '""" ...ro no f\Jbenll 1erVi:Ct.I. Tbert wtre apparently no rel·
1Uvu.
lier uli8 will be 1Ca1ttted 11 ....
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
J, C. HUMPHRIES
QUART CRYSTAL WATCHES
Many w ~ t c h manufacturers
stress the extreme accuracy of the
new quartz crystal watches. Al-
though these claims are justified
as the watch leaves the factory,
maintenance of this accuracy is un·
predictable.
Continued quartz watch act11racy
depend.t upon lhe quartz cryBtal's
ability to keep vibrating at a con-
stant frequency when subjected tn
normal use after you buy It.
The natural frequency of any
quartz crystal is subject to change1
due to aging. shock and slight tem-
perature variations, all beyond th•
control or J.be manufacturer ~
cause reactions vary from one cry•
taJ to another regardieu of quality
or source. Further rates of quartz
watches are not rea · y a iustaole
by the dealer.
As an Independent jeweler, we
are particularly free to stale all the
racts about anything we oell. We
want you to know that extreme ac·
curacy claim• by many manulac-
turers may not be lullflllad In actu-
al use until quartz cryttal watches
have proven their dependability,
your best buys are sill! the hllhlY
accurate chronometers, tuning fork
and conventional watches.
A reminder from
OMEGAO
STANDARD
TIME
RETURNS
OCTOBER
29th
Be sure to
set your
watch BACK
one hour
this Sunday
Whtn yoo Jel your wotch bock, toke o close look ol it. ti may
bt occurote but is a.modern, sell-winding? Ooe5 it toll the
dct1?0r the doyond thedoie? Perhaps now lsthtlimeto
choose an UJ>fO.lhe-second Ortllga. Come in and SM lh9
-o!Mga famrty·ot fine ttmepieceto $65 to t¥11t1 $l~.CXX).
51111111-lfMI tolhwlnd1119 s.:,_,,., O.Vlll4i. ~llflg dW. $14$.0I
Ju11 -af Ille °""9o 1-ily of Soa1111»tert
J. (~ . ..J/.umphrie6 Je1vPler&
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
•
CONVENIENT lEltMS
27 YEARS IN THE SAM£ LOCATION
lenlrAmetlcerd -flote1ter Cll•r410
PHONE 14t0l401 ..,. _____ "" ____ .. __________ _
v
"
I
I
I
,
•
WtdntSdaf, October 25, 1m DAILY "LOT /';
Peace His Issue,
McGovern Claims
!.iu.WAUXEE !AP) -Sen. G<Orge
McGovern hu declared that ho wonta
peU. and "! doni lfve a ~· abotlt
the .eJectlCll><lay Impact -but ho la tell·
Ing vot.rs they would be loolilh lo llde
with Preoldent Nixon !or acble'ring any
Vietnam oettlement now.
'!be Democratic pmldentW nomlnee
aald wbtther or not Nlmn ondB the war,
"No mau.r what be does, it OUlhl lo
help me •.. "Ha 1a~Nlxoo ahoula have
ended the war lour yeara ago.
McGovern denied that ho was oeeklng
in advance lo blUJ!I the polftlcal effect
should Nixon aetlle the conlllcl belore the
election Ll days hence.
point Tuesday that a peace accord now
would not destroy bis pretlctentlal p .....
pects but "would destroy Mt. Nixon."
Later, he said ll o>ight l>e!p the President
polltically. But be added;
"It woold be a very foolbb voter who
would -!or Mt. Nixon in preference lo George McGovem ii the laoue la the war.
Mr. Nlxoo loi-many years haa supported
American lnvolvem•nt In Vietnam. Dur·
Ing all those years, I bave been oppoeed
( CAMPAIGN '72 )
UPtT.....-
Haldeman Singled Out
•
·Nixon Key Aide, 4 Others Tied to Fund •
WASHINGTON (AP) -PN!sldeot Nix·
on's chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman, was
one ot five close Nixon associates who
controlled a secret campaign spying and
sabotage fund, The Washbtgton Post
reported loday.
'!be l'<lot said It baaed the report on io-
f ormatioo from federal investigaton and
acoouots ot sworn testimony gaven to a
grand jury btvelligating the June 17
broak-bt at Democratic national bead-
quartenr bt the Watergate buildbtg.
'Ille newspaper said it bas been told
that Haldeman, ·a Nixon aide for 16
years, and the four others authorized to
make payments from the secret lund
were identified in grand jury testimony
by Hugh W. Sloan Jr., who quit as
treasurer ot the Njxm campaign
paign, has told the grand Jury that one
who received money from the fund was
G. Gordon Liddy, the l'<lot said. Liddy ;.,
one or seven mt n under Indictment In
connection wllh the Watergate brtak·ln,
the Incident whlch ,.t oll the dlxctosures
of an alleged GOP sabotage ring.
1be Post quoted federal tnvesUgators
.. saying tbat expenditure& ol lnmdreds
of thousands ol doltara -alt approved bY
either Haldeman, Stana, M I t c b e 11 ,
Magruder or Kalmbach -were made
from tbe fund to finance an undercover
operation aimed at di1credltln
Democratic candJdates.
Meantime. Atty, C... Ricbanl 0.
Klebtdlenst !old new1111en Tuaday tho
the Justice Department has no "credlblt':
evidence'' that federal laws werf
violated by the alleged acts of sabotage
and that he feels no probe of the altega·
lions i.. warranted. f
Klebtdiensl !old newamen: "Gel the
evidence to me that would lodicate tbal a
specific penoo bas violated a opedJlc
criminal law, and my department wW in· {
vestigate it." {
Davenly Change
Charges Dropped organlllation shortly alter the Watergate
break-ht. Beer-stained Bar Becomes Cliurch The Air Force bas ruled out •
McGOVERN'S STATEMENT Tuetday
was rembtisc:enl ol one by candidate Nix·
on four ~ ago when a Democratic
president announced a bombing pause
and broaaeoed peace talks just belore
the election. McGovem said be would
•pplaud Nlioo II the. President ended the
war but added that Americans sbouldn 't
forget "he kepi ii going needlessly !or
aaotber four years .•. "
lo IL So II, at the eleventh hour, just
before we start counting the votes on
NoV. 7, he finally switches hi> position
and eods tbe war I don't think the voters
are going to say 'Hooray for Mr. Nil'.on.'
J lhint they're going to aay 'We're glad
he finally • came around lo George
McGovern's position.' "
court-martial charges against DEPUTY WHITE HOUSE pres s
Maj. Gen. John D. Lavelle, say-, secretary Gerald L. Warren declined FORT LAUDERDALE; Fla. (AP) -recollections, bot it doean't bother the '·
ing his· firing was punishment 'comment on the Post report. He referred The tables down at Smitty'• where the Rev. Oscar Garcia that his new church
McGOVERN. ALSO SAID be thinks his enough for last winters unau-newsmen to a White House statement old-timers dwelt are on lbe1r way out. was once a bar.
The South Dakota senator said at one campaign and hl.a opposlUon to the war thori.zed bombing of Nor t b issued to the Post, saying that "The 1be beer-stained bar will soon be replac-"I like the idea , turning things upside
"probably forced Mr. Nixon to do Vietnam. reference to Bob Haldeman is untrue." ed by an aJtar. down," says the Rev. Mr. Garcia, a Bay 1
something that he didn't want to do" in In today.'s account and in previous On Dec. 1, Smitty's Riverside Bar, of Pigs veteran who was among tho ~
Four Sightings
In Boggs' Hunt ·
Prove Dead-ends
trying lo end the cnnf]{c1. reports, the l'<lot named these otbeni as long a favnrtte ba1mt ol beer drinkers, prisoners President Kennedy paid $50,000
In speeches, rallies and television a~ controllers ol. the fund: will become a haven of another sort -to have released from a Fidel castro jail. '
pearancea, McGovern said that Nixon Woman Reports -Jobn N. Mitdlell, !ormer atlorney the Jerusai<m Baptlst Temple. Betty Smitb, a Fort Lauderdale widow
can get no settlement terms now that be general and the first directoc of the Com-1be transfonnatloo mJgbt disturb 90IDe who ran the bar for 12 years, says It was ,
could not have had four years ago. mittee for the Re-election of the Presi-of Smitty's old regulars, now cut off from "a quiet place where the elderly could
McGovern said that is "the tragedy ol Role in 'Plot' dent their place o1 gossip, solace and lamillar oome and bave a drink of beer or wbte in •
this whole business of Mr. Kissinger -Maurice R st.ans, former Commerce peace.''
orbiting around the world" bt the days Secretary Md now director of the Mn. Smith closed the bar Sept. 1 alter
before an election. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -A 2&-year-old Finance Committee to Re-elect the owner Hortensio Delgado refused to ·
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -Hopes
ciontinued to tum into frustrations in the
search for a light plane missing for nine
days with House Democratic Leader
Kale Boggs and three other persons
•boon!,
"Did you make all these sacrifices, Mr. aide lo a Republican state legislative President. TWO cat holies renew her lease. ,I
Nixon, to save your own political face candidate says she infiltrated state bead--Jeb Stuart Magruder, onetime White Delgado's wife said her husband decid-
from right-wing criticism?" McGovern quarters of Democratic pnsidential House aide and now deputy director of ed to tum the bar into a church after he
said at a rally nn the rabty steps of the hopelul Sen. Edmund s. Muskie during the Nixon campaign committee. Die-Revenge? me< the Rev. Mr. Gan:ia and "the divine Dayton, Ohio, coorthouse. Florida's Marcb primary campaign on lightning" struck him.
"Ending the war is not going to be1n-behalf of the GOP. -HERBERT w. KALMBACH of The Rev. Mr. Garcia, f7, says he
1 Four separate sightings were reported •
'fuesday, but all tumed out lo be dead·
ends, aa ~ve all the leada an far bt the
search which has covered 148,000 square
miles of rugged Alaska territory between
Anchorage and Juneau, the path of the
missing plane.
terpreted by intelligent voters as a Patricia "Peg" Griffin told the Tampa Newport Beach, described by the Post as ·C:~~ C:i!led J:a~ discovered religion while in a Cuban jail
reason to support Mr. Nixon because it Times Tuesday she was recruited by Nixon's personal attorney. The White li when another prisoner gave him a copy
would mean that he simply bas done Rebert Benz, who 1mtil laJt week was HOOle disputes that description, but says pitchforks near the Irish Replb 'c ol the New Testament.
something rve been advocating for many campaign manager for GOP F1orida Kalmbach has handled some personal border may have been tilled in Now, every evening, members of the .
years,'' McCovbm said later. House candidate Conway Brock. She sajd legal matters for Nixon. ~i::°~:S:t 5~-~ =; new church's congregation spend their
He also said that South Vietnamese she was hired by Benz to pose as a pro-1be sabotage fund, according to the British spokesrhan free time at Smitty's, installing Jle"'I ,
President Nguyen Van 'lbieu apparently Muskie volunteer. Post, was 8 cache of as much as $700,<XM)' ag~ t!ta army whe eronce the juke box and pool table
has veto power over: current efforts at a "I'm actually relieved you found me," held in Stans' office safe. sat Y· stood. An electronically equipped HC130
aircraft was crisscrossing the search
area throughout the night Wednesday,
and two Coast Guard cutters plied the
waters of the Alaska coastline.
cease-fire. she told a newsman Tuesday. "This has The army said one victim was a The tranfonnation of Smitty's Into a
"We ought to terminate any further been an awfu1 weight 00 my conscience. The Post said it bas learned that all member of the Irish Republican church is not yet complete. The windows
relationship with this dictator instead of l'd been waiting for that knock on the five men have been questioned by tbe Anny and the other also apparently still bear the brand names of popular
letting him dictate American foreign door, and now I'm glad it's finally FBI about disbursements from the fund. was connected with the mA. beers and above the door printed in thick
policy," McGovern aalcl."':_ _____ ~co".'m".'e::_.'_' ___________ _'.s".'Joa'.'.'.'.'.'.n'....'.'.:the'."....:e~x'.'.·tre~asu'.'.'.'._'re"_r_:of".'_t".'he'.'_.'.ca::m-'.'.'.:..~============'--b".'1'.:ac::k..'.le:'.t:'te'..:rs~ls~the:._:w:o:'.rd'...'..'.'B:a:_:r._" __ _
Peron Reportedly
To Try Comeback
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -
Former Argentine dictator
Juan D. Peron, Tj1 wID retµrn
to Argentina Noi '17 lo try' lo
make a political comeback,
the nt W!pftP:tV Cronies s~id·
Tuesda)''..
Cronica said Peron would fiy
from Madrid Nov. 16 with his
present wife, Isabel, a~ ar-
rive in Buenos Aires Ute next
day aboard a chartered
airliner.
1be newspaper said the
(1N SHORT ... )
preserved body of his former
wife Eva also wouJd be
brought aboard the same
!light.
Eva, a blonde former ac--tress; helped Peron launch his
dictator1hip in ArgenUna in
I.HS. aild married him the
same year.
e Bbfaop Quits
NEW YORK (AP) -Alter
eight years as pre si ding
bishop of the 3.5 million-
member Episcopel Church,
the Rt. Rev . John E. Hines
has announced plans to resign
later this month at the age of
62.
Bl!bop Hines. whose term
extend!: until 1977, said Tues-
day be will tender bis realgna-
tioo at a meeting of the
.te•ee•l•fl
Newsman Peter Bridge
leave<i E ssex County
Jall In Newark where
he h•d spent 21 days
for refusing to answer
grand J u r y que stions
concerning crime.
church's Housi o! BishoJlOI bt
New Orleans, effective May,
l~•.. . e llt11fer Fire
• BALTIMORE (AP) ~ 'Ille
former security director of the
Atomic Energy Commission
faces arraignment in federal
court here next week on
charges of attempting to
defraud the AEC credit union
out of more than $33,000 in an
alleged shakedown scheme.
William T. Riley also is
charged with filing false fman-
cial statements concerning
money borrowed from other
employes.
• KKK Foe Dead
ST. MARTJNVILLE. La.
(AP) -Former Congressman
Edwin Willis, who a s
chairman of tbe former House
Committee on Un-American
Activities betUed the Ku Klux
Klan, is dead at the age of 68.
Willis died Thursday night.
Services will be held today
at St. Martbt of Tours Roman
Catholic Church in this tiny
south Louisiana community
where Willis was born.
He bad been in ill health
since bis last tenn, suffering
from various ailments.
• l•ll llprblllfl
AUSTIN, Tex. (UP!)
Police !iring teargas bave
cltarged the llfth fioor of the
Travis County Jail and rescued
three ltostages held b y
prJsooers in an unsucces.sful
escape attempt.
No one was injured. Order
was restored about an hour
after two jailers and a nurse
wre captured by f o u r
prisoners who tried lo trade
the hostages' lives for their
freedom late Tuesday.
Yule Fete
Sched1tled
f amtmu bazaar will be
held Nov. M at tile Otureh of
RelJiloas Sc:lonce •I .,Laguna
C.ll)'Oll Road liliil It! Toro
Road.
'!!>e pubUc la Invited to
broWIO bt the bou1lque of
handmade Jtems, m i n J • a r t
gallery and homemade baked
goods !n>m 10 Lm. lo S p.m.
'!!>ere will abo be 1 drawl~
for a handmade, 4J.Jnch doJ[.
sandwiches and oo!lee will be
11ervai.
For more lnfonnatton, call
Mrs. Shlrley Mdntyre at
&17-:1832 or the church.
-""" ·-""" . ,.
M (77S) ....
••• 14 ll:UI .....
..... ....
BUENA PARK
lleoc:h ...... at Lallw•lltr •
5301 leach ll¥d.
523-3040
.. .... ...
1U .,. ..., ... ...
LM
BUENA PARK
Llocohi at Yaley ¥1-
5885 U.Colo J..,..
826-5800
FISK
PREMIER
COSTA MESA e H ...... llwd. at WU-
2200 .........
548.2082
•
FISK
SAF114ASSIC mJl1I
SANTA ANA
Edinger St. at lrlstol
1400 l!dlngtr
546-7832
WESTMINSTER
• 15440 leacll llwd.
lleoc:h llvd. at McFdd••
892-2088
I
---
• DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
What Students Think
Educators, like other business1nen. are constantly
looking for ways to measure the effectiveness of the
dollars that the taxpayers invest in the educational
system.
Usually tl1is wa s done through testing and an oc-
casional poll to find ou t such things ~s bow many grad·
uating high school seniors are going on to college.
The Newport-Mesa Uni!ied School District has tak-
en this assessment of their effectiveness one step furtb~
er by asking graduates what they thought about the
education they received here.
Starting with the 1971 graduating class, the district
will poll a random sampling of 25 percent of thEt de.
parting seniors for Cive years, at which tin1e, they will
also r esurvey the 1971 class.
The idea, according to district officials, is to find
out from the former students where they believe the
district is doing a good job and where it needs to im-
prove programs.
Based on the results of the first survey -which
\vas answered by 56 percent of those polled -students
\vant 1nore individualized instruction and better coun·
seling; more vocational and job-Oriented instruction
a nd more instruction geared to help them understand
themselves.
'fhe survey results emphasized the theory that
teachers are the most effective tool of education when
36 percent of the respondents said their most signifi-
cc1nt experience in .high school was conversation with
teachers. Additionally 28 percent said their most sig-
nificant experience was classroom instruction.
• or no training in school which helped them !ind a job.
Some results ot the survey probably came u ~o
pllrlicu!ar surprise tO"'Newport·Mesa educators, but do
c-o nfirm oUJer observations and findings. And all of
the results clearly indicate the need for aCltloo on new
approaches to curriculum, scbecluling, and to teaching
and counseling manpower, to meet the changing needs
of the community and of society as a whole.
Pre-school's Problems
Jn a demonstration of citizen solidarity, (2 Costa
l\lcsa residents \Vere successful last week in persuading
the city council to boot a pre-school out of their neigh-
borhood.
The council's decision to revoke the Carden-4 School
zoning variance is understandable. \Vhen 100 percent
of all neighbors turn out to complain, presumably it is
lhe council's duty to act. But it \Vas a shame it had to.
Charges by neigh bars that screaming children dis·
turb the tranquility of the neighborhood are as open to
question as those asserting that the barnyard animals
being kept for their edification pollute the air.
The 1.5-acr e lot on which the school is situated tends
to swallow up any noise that might be generated during
the 10-rrtinute play periods. 'l'all fences abound, re-
ducing noise even further.
lt is significant that the neighbors complaine<l to
the council that night only and did not complain all
year long, even though they were invited to make their
dissatisfactions known at city hall.
Fifty percent of those answering said they felt the
area of programming most in need of improvement was
counseling because it either failed to help them pre--
pare for a job or for higher education.
A surprising 63 percent said they received little
The school has been given until June to s hut down
its operation. Perhaps this will give the operators time
to solve their neighborhood public relations problem.
7t's the ultiDJate in women's shoe styles _ . _ modified
army combat boots!'
What Adults
Don't Bother
To Consider
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
Tboug.hts al Largt:
Too few adults bother to consider
v.·helher so many of the attitudes and ac.
lions ol young people havt arisen
because of "the times" -which is a
vague cop-aut -or because we, in-
dividually and coUectiveJy, have lost our
set of values, and retain m e'k!ar un-
derstanding of the proper relationship
between the individ-
un I and society. . '
Is rhere no way Lo
get people to stop
saying "No way"
\\'ilh such nauseating
repetitiveness ? • • •
The most inclfec-
tual ad I can ever
recall seeing is one from the American
Lamb Council, depicting a busines.sman
saying to his colleague: "He's important
lo us. Let's take him to a restaurant that
serves lamb ."
A parent \\'ho breaks his promise lo
punish does as muc.h to violate the c.hild's
trust as a parent who break3 his promise
to reward.
• •
1a1an cannot become an animal without
becoming worse than any; when he relin·
quishes his humanhood he does nol sink
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Airline pilot Nave's naive com-
ments on our policopters are like
saying: "No airplanes, children
might be killed in ice cream par-
lors; no autos, we might die of
smog; no nuclear power plants,
people might be radiated." Maybe
we: all should just stay in bed.
-Diogenes '72
T~ ...._ ~ ,._..,-vteon. -~ "--el "" ••••• ,.. SeM ,._ ... ,..... flt ~ 0-. DllUY 1'1tff,
to the natural level, as he lmagines, but
to the sul>natoral. • • •
"Propaganda" i.s what our enemies
do; "indoctrination" is what our friends
do; "enlightenment" is what we do., • • •
An e;xperlenced orator can teU when an
audience turns into a crowd. by the way
it begins to "smell" of its dominant
passion. • • •
The worst dram.a critics are those who
either hate or iove the theatre : the
fonner, of course, are incapacitated by
their aversion, but the latter are no less
paralyzed by their adoration. • • •
Should a representative follow the
wishes of his constituency or hi.s own
personal feelings when an issue comes to
a vote? My own view ls on the side of
Burke, who said, "Your representative
owes you, not bis indll!try only, but his
judgment; and he betrays it instead af
serving you if he sacrifices It lo yaur
opinion."
Joe Demands a Fight
Dear President: I. Joe Sikspak.
American, take pen in hand to stick a
bug (excuse the expression! in your cflr
You're in trouble
How I know 1s l dropoed by Paddy's
Place the other night. "Give me a Seven
High, Paddy," I says. "and your expert
opinion on how the
campaign's going:·
''Wha t campaign'··
says Paddy.
"Why lhe presi·
rlcntial campaign ,
Paddy," says I.
"Don't tell me you
forgot?"
"Not exaclly, Joe :·
says Pllddy . "But
it's kind of like Montreal playing Te1as
in the World Serles. You know there's a
World Series going on, but you tune In
the Roller Derby instead."
"HOW DO YOU FIGURE ii, Paddy'"
says I. "I mean it's n good, clean,
statesmanlike campaign they're waging
on the issues, rl&ht?''
"That's right, Joe," says Paddy.
··f\1cGovem'1 been running around the
country accusing the President or cor·
ruptian, spying, selllng favors and steal-
ing the bread out or the mouths af poor.
hun~f)' babies -nothing out of the
ordinary. And th!! President's been sit·
tJng in bl.J ofilce Ueplng mum. You can't
get more atattsm.anShlp than that."
"lknf come ~·a bf Ing .so
sLatesmanllke?" says I.
"A JtatesmanJlltc campaign, Jot,'' says
Paddy, pollsblf1f a glass, "Is what a
poUUelsn TUnlii when he flgur~ he got the
election in the baa.•·
"YOU nnNK the President's doing
the riflbt thllJi, Pad<ly?" "Y' J.
''Aocordlng to lhe po1l1 he ls," says
Paddy. "A month !tlO he'• leading ~7-34.
So be t .. po bis mouth abut whll•
f.fcGovem shootJ his oil anti now he's
( ART HOPPE J
ahead 63-29. Al that rate. if he doesn 't
say a word between now and November,
he 'll win 93-7. He will, that is, if anybody
remembera to vote."
"You c!on't think they will. Paddy?"
"What you got here, Joe. is a nice guy
running against a dignified statesman
and who ca res? What the public wants is
a wham·bam slugging match with lot.s of
blood."
"l see. what they wanl's a good clean
fight, right, Paddy?"
"WRONG, JOE. What they want's a
good dll1y flght. Why do you think pr ..
fessional wrestling outdraws amateur
wrestling? What make.s tbe Roller Derby
so popular? How come Bobby Fischer got
all those headlines? There's nothing like
a good dirty fight to tum people on."
"Then the President. ... "
"The fur. thing he ought to do is ac-
cuse McGovern of being 8 tertual devh•te
who is IOft on Cammunlsm and practices
verbal intereourse In public. Otherwise.
Joe, Americana are going to lose Interest
in the democratic ~·"
.. That's a tough order, Peddy:·
"It ii, Joe. But the Presiden t'• got to
put personal ambition Rside. For the
good of the country, he's got to adhere to
our cherished American political tradi-
tions and start lighting dirty."
TO TELL 111E TRU11l . Prosident,
Paddy don't think you 'll do it. He thinks
you·re going to put winning above
everything and refuse to fight dirty.
Not mt, though. I got faith In you.
lle>nest.
Truly Youn,
J,,. Slkspat, Am•ricAn
c
Identify Source of Treats to Foil Sadists
Halloween ·Protection for Children
To the Editor :
We are now at a time or the year when
our c.hildren should be having a fun time.
Halloween is a holiday for our children
and part of the run is going out all
dressed up and receiving their candy
(treats) and such. But unfortunatelv
there are a few misled or sick people
who make their treats unsafe.
I as a phl'ent don't know these people.
so wbat can I do? We (parents) end up
throwing the children's treats away
simply because we clon't toow what is
safe and wbat isn't.
1 BA VE COME UP with a so1utioo l ree1 could benefit both kids and parents.
I'm going to put, "This treat came from
the Moore family," on all my bags for
children. This takes a fe\• minutes and
the parents wtU know where)t came from
and it ia safe to eat. t ,. __ _ 1 J do feel it is an idea to benefit every-
Olle.
RUTH MOORE
/\ludie Bnr Probletn
To the Editor :
For the past five years, Costa Mm has
diligentry rought the activities of nudle
bars within the city. The criticism level-
e<.i against our municipality for the eon·
1inued existence of nude dancing bars
(e.g. Fi.relwse, Papa Joe's) seems to be
somewhat unfounded since we are
handcuffed by decisions, of the Supreme
Court oJ both the United States and the
Slate af California which have in a
number of cases iodJcated that nude danc·
ing is a form of expressim protected by
the First Amendment of the Unlled
States Constitution.
To document the city's eUort to
regulate, if not eradicate, the activities
or nudie bars in Costa Mesa, J submit the
ronowing:
IN 1968 OUR entertainmont ordinance
(regulating bottomless and nude danc·
ing) was declared uncon.stitutional by
Judge Hcrlands of the Superior <=ourt.
Buena Park has attempted to develop an
entertainment ordinance and bas at last
count had it held unconstitutional in six
sepa rate hearings in superior Coo.rt .
Buena Park has finally decided to
regulate \hese bar.1 by conditional US(!
pennit only. The city of Garden Grove
has fin ally given up after losing five
entertainment ordinances on their nudle
bar which reci!n Uy opened, and ac-
cording to one councilman of that city,
they intend to encourage church and PTA
J{roups to picket the premises each even-
ing. However. such picket · programs
might only serve to advertise and dr aw
attention to these establishments and in-
crease their trade.
There Is now in force a wrl~ of pro-
hibition issued by Judge Jterlands ngainst
the Costa Mesa City Council, chief ol
Police and particularly against the city
attorney ngainst prosecution of any
further arrests under the entertainment
artlinance.
COSTA MESA £1AS TRIED 26 cases
agalnst the Flrchouse for lewd conduct
and af the 26. 22 were lost when lhe Judge
found that no lewdness existed In the
perfonnanoes of the dancing girls. Four
ot our convictioos were upheld and "°" are tn tbe United Slates Supreme Court.
The dlstt1ct attomey's office. with the
help of our city attorney and our police
department. attempted to get an 'In·
junction ond<r the R<d Ught District
Abatement Act and no injunction was
issued. Inasmuch as insuffi cient proof cx·
hltcd to support the canlcntion lhat the
Firehouse was Likely lo be a pince where
prostitution was practiced.
C>ur city a1tamcy'5 ofriec has nlMi nt-
lemptcd to obtain changes in the rules or
t~ Alcohollc Bewir.age Control Board.
( ____ MAIL_B_ox ___ )
LetteTs from readers are welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condense l.etten to fit space
or , elimtnate libel is T"essn>td. All
letters must include signotu7'e and
mailing addTess, but names mav be
withheld on request if sufficient
reason is apparent. Poet-rv wW not be
published.
11nd the city attorney testified at length
before this board, at lbe request of
Director Ed Kirby, attempted to get
regulations which would prohibit the
issuance of licenses or those places
having nudie entertainment. The most we
were able to get from these extended
hearings was a rule that the dancing
must take place a specified. distance
away from the area where the beverages
were dispensed.
mE CITY OF COSTA MESA onacted
a parking ordinance doubling tbe re-
quirement& for parking at places: ~
ducing live entertainment. Both the
Flrehouse and Papa Joe's meet the re-
quirements of this ()rdinance.
The sign ordinance enforcement for the
city is now being stepped up. A 17~t
misdemeanor complaint bas been filed
against Papa Joe's for sign code viola-
tions and the Firehouse is under in-
vestigation on these same charges.
The city council has autborir.ed the city
attorney's office to attempt to have
legislation entered and passed which
v.:ould allow local agencies such as the
ctly of Costa Mesa to exercise jurisdic-
tion aver nudie bars. In e:ach instance,
the San Francisco contingent in the
Assembly and the Senate have managed
to defeat each bill lntroduced .
No city in Orange County baving a
nudle bar has yet been able lo fully
eradicate these places. Some close up,
but others open. At least we in the city af
Costa Mesa have doggedly attempted to
lake positive action against nude en-
tertainment.
JACK HAMMETT
Maror
Reed Earned H0taor
To the Editor:
It has recently come to my attention
that an Olympic size pool has been or is
being constructed at Newport Harbar
High School. l sincerely bopo that this
pool will be dedicated to Ralph K. Reed.
Reedle wu a member of the first
raculty or \be high achool when lJ>.
structlon was begun in 1930-31 .
DURING ms MORE than 30 years or
devoted se rvice he was instrumental in
building character and morale in the
physical education department and wu
respons ible for the many athletlc cham-
pionsh11>$ won by teama representing the
achoo I.
Perhaps nJ ane ls more qualified than J
to t..tl(y to lbe lptll'()prtatcness or this
dcdlcallon , since J was Ute first employe
and superintendent d the school district
ror 29 years.
SrDNEY H. DAV!llSON
Claremont
1UcGovern on War
To the Editor :
: read with dismay McGovern's pro-
po11al for endJng the Vletnsm Wllr. This
dangerous presentation Is notable ror
what It leaves undone, rather than what
it purports to do. ln this respect, it is also
dangerously misleading to the public in
seeking half-soJuUons and netttna baH-
results.
In seeking vlrtually nothing in return
rrom aur enemy, he gives them raise
courage lo furth er aggression by :
(I) IGNORING THE role of Ruasia and
China as supplier of war material to the
North Viets. Our unilateral withdrawal of
all support would deprive South Vietnam
of. the material wherewithal to defend
themselves unleu the United Nations ac-
cepll tho responsibility -very onlikely.
(2) Ignoring the POW's u ooe of the
pre~ to total withdrawal and
bombing cessation.
(3) Ignoring the "'elfatt of South Viel·
namese citb:ens and offlciab who are
anti-Viet Coog. Remember what happen·
eel to several thousand of them in the
massacre at Hue!
( 4) ignoring !he presence of 70,<XXI
North Viet troops in Laoa and 60,000 in
Cambodia. Why volunteer to withdraw
our air force from 1bo.iland without
reclprocal withdrawal!! of enemy troops?
We have only 700 troops in Laos and none
in Cambodia as of Oct. l, despite in-
ferences to the contrary.
McGOVERN DOES NOT <>ddress
himself to consequences beyand this elec-
tion. He obviously places more credence
in the enemy than he does ln hb: own
government. His naivete in relying on lhe
questionable compassJons of the North
Vietnamese reminds me of the postman
and the vicious dog in the yard: when the
owner assured the postman that the dog
would not bite, he replied, "Lady, you
might know it and 1 might know It, but
does the dog know it?".
Assumptions are dangerous anytime,
but in the business of war and peace.
they can be deadly. It's not too smart to
leave our enemy in better shape than our
allies. The so-called peace proposal is
really a temporary disposal typifying the
short-sighted ineptness of all too many
McGovern campaign utterances.
CALVIN G. SIEGLE
McGetlern lmpre••e•
To the Editor:
When I moved to California aver 30
years ago, upenslve surveys on mass
transit were being made. Tbey'Ve been
making tbem ever since -spending
fortunes.
1 wonder how many of the Seattle -or
DiS11eyland-type elevated can could have
been built down the center of rreeways,
tind on other routes too, for the money
spent on these surveys.
One hindrance ls the vast Jabbles
spent by oil, constructlon, auto manufac-
turers, auto clubs, etc. Another ls the
ract that the poople ln pooltlon to do
something are comfortable Ill t.belr
autos.
WHEN OEORGE MCGOVERN said he
would convert some of the defense plants
and p e o p I e , (lneludlne retraining
them) Into mass transit 111tcms, It im·
pressed me.
lte. also impressed mt when he rccom·
mended a minimum income tu. There
are tax "sheltera" that If! jusU!led. but
411yone Hvlng well &hould pay tome tax.
Yesterday, incidentally. be impm!ed
me 1g1!n when be said we ahottld con-
centrate on saving lives instead of snving
race.
JOl!N ADAMS
Do11bfe Agents?
To the Editor:
Along with everything else, ~1c.Govun
has changed h1I stand on Richard Nixon.
Nixon wrui cunning, tricky and 1ly. Now
McGovern hBS decid•d th•I be is dull and
stupid. That be is so dumb he hires an
ex-F .B.I. agent who isn't smart enough r
to do a simple bugging job without being
caught. He then hires a lawyer wbo isn't I
even intelligent enough to get on the
McGovern campaign team. The three
stooges could make that team.
These guys sound just dumb enough to
be working for McGovern instead of Nix-
on. Could they be double agenta?
.JUl'BOLDING
Proposltion• l and 14
To the Editor:
On • Friday. Ocl 13, Saddlebocit
Ctillege's staff voted unanimOusly to sup-
port Proposition I and to reject
Proposition 14 oa tbe .Nov. 7 ballot.
A "yes" vale for PropoglUon 1 meam
that $160 million will be raised for com-
munity college construction statewide.
Monies for this purpose will accrue from
the interest on general obligaUoo bonds
of tbe state, the least expensive way af
financing.
Enrollments In California community
colleges will increase to one million
students by 1975 and this creates an
urgent need for more classrooms,
laborat.ories. Hbra.ries and voc1tlcmat
education facilities. ~'
SHOULD THIS proposillOn fail , local
property taxes will be the sole source of
revenue for constructing community col·
Jege buildings.
Proposition 14 purports to reduce la1.·
es, but it wou1d actually raise lhem for
nearly everyone. Propasilion 14 will not
generate sufficlent revenues for state
and local school dinricts. Propoaitioo lt
would cripple local government. and
severely damage the public schools. Both
Governor Reagan and former Gavemor
Brown are vehemently opposed to the
passage of Proposition 14. •
ANDREW KISR
Bond Committee Chairman
Saddlebac.k College
Death Penalt11
To the Editar:
Regarding the letter from Roger West
(DAILY PILOT, Oct. 18) aboo\ the death
penally.
Mr. West concludes his letter with
"How many executions has Mr. Barley
witnessed?" Well. 1 might uk blin.
••ffow many cold-blooded murdera have
you witnessed?"
Perhaps yoo would be sickened by the
lnnoctnt victims of the8e murder! lf you
were there. But you see, lhe victim ha!I
no voice to protest his death. We can't
ask him what he would consider ap-
proprtate punishment for the person who
klll<d him.
One thing ls for sure, With capital
punishment, you don't hive to WOITY
about second offenders.
MRS. IJNDA BAKER
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wted, PUbli.lhl1'
Thomcu Kem!, Editor
Atbm \V, Botta
EdiWria! Page Edil<>f
'"" '"'tortal -of I.ho lloltt Pilot lffkt to lnconn and 1tlrnu· lnle rndert b)' ptttl!ntt.ug this ~~per'a oplniona aM com-
mentary on topiCJ of lnl('rett .:nd
ahrnlflcant.-e. by provkfin~ • forum
tor th1' nprnslon of our ..,...~
opinions, AM by r>f'tSl!nlln1 ibe
dlvt'rv viewpo{ntt of W ormf!CI ob-
M.'TV<'-MI and apoknm<!:n on topics
of thew.
Wednesday, October 25, 1073
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