HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-12-10 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa'
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. ' 1 . ' . \ ' . THURSDAY ·AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 10, 19~0
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~~AS~G:rlJ* ! (.\Pi -SI r i kl-l' I ; A !lrSl'l1181eot~f_~;;tlle' ~'it ..:... ~.··,•tor' ney ~men paralyzed the .rail system na-seqoeoce1 -of:.tbe "",_. ftl · , :t.I: f.. t~wide today although ·~ ranks of the . Vir~ wbere llO ®81. ~n . were,. , .
w&lkout showed signs of breaking in the ~ awa>:" beca~ of . ~ coal c.ar flrit few boors. shortage. SpOl<,.m<n for the Industry Iii FT; BENNING, Ga. (UPI) -Lt.
.. Sun hundreds id' thousands of the state aaid all 1•350 mines would Ile' William L. Calley's defense attorney told • ' . d otbe shut down · by midnight Friday H the suburban commuters bad to fin r strike Unuel OW 11 klel ·ror beat and· a slx«fktt nlllitary ·court today that ~· to work and fI:eight was stalled lectri~ty in ~ naUnn's urban ~tm: ea. lley tOOii: bis'. Pia~· 111to the Vlei-. while three of four uruons in the 500,00G-e · ,-· · ta · . man strike said they were canceling their ·At ~ Wh~te House.-.Press ~. ry nameae hamlet of My Lat under orders
trlk de Ronald L. ZM!gler expresaed optinusm that Veverv• living n .. i .... in that area be 1 e or rs. the clerksw would -join' tbe thl'ft -Other ·· w ;, • ., ..... 16
The mo,000:member Bro~er~ of uhlOns ~ur orderlng tbelr1Vleil ~di to ~killed. .
Railway .ClerkS•held out, saying .nothing Work: . . . . J .r · ·' 1~ In a brief opening statement, Def~
despite congressional and court bans on 1 "We expect that the ·fourth union also · ~AttC1rney George'W. 4.thper said Calley
th.e· strike, and • p~ea from President will comply with the law,'!(aald Ziqler. '"'oold take the stand in his own d'efeme
Nixon to stay on the Job. Rescinding strike orders were th.e d .. ·Spot check.! showed members o( the U 'led Tr -·ti U • · 1 b ,· an give a full account of his actions, . 01 an.,...,.... on ruon, nd '--,. other three unions were honoring the (Set ·S'l'RIKE Pace I ) co uct and beuavlor. ,
clerks' picket ilnes. ' Calley, 27, is accused of killing, qi;
Penii-central· spOkesmen said ther ,. ordertng killed. 102 South Vletnames,e
doubted anyone would come back until Chotin· er's w.· f'e cl•lllans March 16 1963 the da h 1-" picket hnes dissolved. • • Y e ~
Overland passenger trains sat in Los · · bts platoon on a search-and-destroy
Angeles terminals, noUtlng was hap-T T lJ H .,1. d' mission through My Lal. •
penlng wilh the . Soulhem Pacific in 0 e USU8ll S La~lmer said the cluster of· vlliages Ill
Arizona and in Oucago 140,000 oommut-whlclv-Mjit.al wai·sttuated._a's lhoWn' Ii ~s:;~chcd to cars and buses for a way 'Pull' on Nixon Viet Cong country and a death trap f~
AB fof the clerks, their headquarters American soldiers.
said an anllQUnceinent of some sort would By TOM BARLEY Many of the memben .of Calley's pla-
be made sometime later in the day. In or .. °"",. .... 11.., , toon had been killed or had arms and legs
Philadelphia a clerks leader said: "We 're White House aide Murray ·Cbotiner and blown-off and had ·been·''fulned for life"
sUll on strike." In Cleveland some clerks his estranged wife toot their marital dl.f· in preceding weeks by mines booby traps:
!fre working under a court injunction, ferences to l Orange Coanty Superior and ambushes set by "civilians or all
~m' were out. 4
-l£our.t todl~y l!I'~•• .. ~. ~·.Mrs. ages" of the area, Latimer said. 1
• Amalia, " .,.~~· ~. aee The day before the attack, he said,
tlie"'"'1h ol · · • ·' -ahcl !wieral services had been held !or lhrtll!
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, ·~. · ..... , J '.~t tjie~li'!lt',ji!' i\ ~. · · ~~,. ·'' !Oldlen who bad'been killed. He said th!> ~r e · ~ ~-., · f!, · 1\1 feeling iil' the ·aervices was a genei;t ' ' '• I l.,..;i!'.,'!XJ.::'i ~ '*"'' ''l;'.',"',i: • ' mood of reprisaJ. t
' f .,.,-..·~· ' ~.f ' '{, " "1 Then, the company commander, Cap'l
--~e~ri'~BO' '.~~ · J~ Ernest Medina, called a meeting, --.:•Ler 'Mriea,ot • ...-»;'.# Latlmer continued , . I .... --· '.·, U)e ~k wh bor'a Uy ' · · "He-told.bla men Iha! at long last they
I ',_ ·_,,_,;., 1 · · nl , '•,liiJshapd·1~· ~ .. >a -..... going to c1 ... 1111b the ... my•"" • • .,. .. YOll' 1~ Pfi some • ~ ~ · I' f ' · Jrps • ~ 11 '·-..1 be gtven the opPort!lfl1ty to IC!t ,qen~if, W~' $in~a,~· W~Sh?,Tbei!U-l • ~lr~lJ'...-\to ,' ~I ~ ·)iilt:~J the ltJa of 'their'~," l.atimel's'aid.,
""'be al0t1g Friday,, pus ng Tut I am:fi'kom ri of.~ asiocl "He said the area was defended by~
i 111ercury .up to 70 degrees under ~wlfh~=,bea~uN;: 481h Y1et;~'.Battaliu,·.one~0(;4bilf ~ l~Y skies. On's hatchet hlan," lbe•llld. "We· went fine~,-~and ~ llilsSion:w11 1 nO~olitY~
INSmE TODAY everywhere together, coolennce!. con-searebanddeatroyMyLal l,butMyyt
venue. and 1top level metttngs and mJ. 5 an~ .. I ... -·-,. ~-.......... :1. I ~ Need some ideru about wliaf1
good to get for your lovtd ones
at Cl1ristma&? See special Gift ·
Section in today's D A. l L Y
, PILOT.
Day• Tll
CHRISTMAS
•lrtltl 1• C•llflf"lli. I
CllKklff "' 1 CIMll,... 17.J:I C-ln It
Cm--' " DH!tl ••Oc• It -" ::=!n2r .,:~ ,l_I 1 .. U.
Mlf"ffc-u A• Ltlllltn 11
Mllrri. .. L"""'9 It
boot ii gotncito tell the world just what "He said.the infonnaUon was that~· went on behind tbe tcene1." ciVlliW had left the area and it any we ·
·She said bl;' -whlclt she will call remaining ·they ·would lie Viet Cong ot'
"In Care of Ille Wblte H°""'" will e-Viet Cong sympathlws. •
Nl10011,. "lea'lt maneuveri" in naUOnal "He ordered the village burned, Uie1 and Ca!Homla polltl"' and spell out animal> -. the ...U1-contam1nat..i aa,l
CbotJDer'a roie ln "all that wheeUnc aid every llvJna: thing in that area killed." ~
deaUnj." He said ,,lgher '°mmanOers were 'ii
Chotiner, St, headed for •.Jqdge Samuel '!le area that day, itlcludlng on th'e 1
Drelzen'1 courtroom and !lie opening ol ground, "and nolhll\g WU '8ld abooj ~f
what Is expected to be a 'Ufte.day trial tilling of civilians unW a lunch break." i t.
with the comment that be does not know Other commanden wtre flying ov'3:~
.. what my wife can poalbly write aboul µte action ~ shoµ.ld hive known whJl '
"I' never aUowed her to ate any wa1 happening, Latimer uld. ~
prlvilqed material, I kept no dlarles and ~ Viet Cong al military age we~
I never told her of 1nything tll1t wu at killed (~bly by ,artUlery or aerlil
all vllal in my Z.year relalk¢Up with fire) bdnre the ·~ ll!>Opo , •.
Rlcharci'Nlx"'," ~Iner ~ii'. · . there'..Ht·laJ!l~J!i!lnl' "'.f.!ll!e'"rtiht ·
"All she ever had acct11 .to wu at the edge of a ' a&Cfi lrhlch the
lelevlslon, the newaJ)IPen and magazines government cont.enda Calley ltilled at
and il she can wrlle a book from that. least '1i> screaming women, children and
(S.. CHOTINEll, Pase I) old men."
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1 . \ 1 ' ' , • . • ' • DAILY ,ILOT Stiff I'...,_ l., . CORO,N,ER 'S.MEN RJ!M,OVE BOOY FROM M!JRDER SCENE ..
Co1t1 Me w Bu11Mlsr:n1n Killed In H11 Store
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Oerk Fires ,::
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: '.Jt~lclrip: M~n
Ba'ndlts held up · a Founti'in VaDq
li}arket Wednesday nigbt, . makin& oil
With $200 as the angry store clerk ~
ed them into the street, firing four ~
a,t tpejr fleeing auto. ~:
Minufes after ll)e anned robbery ,of ~
7-11 'Market at 10545 Slater Ave., polic9:,
captured three suspects without ·.a stru;:.:
gle after surrounding their car with seveG~
poUce units on Ole San Diego Freeway. ::
Ronald Lee Sandefs, 19; Rudy Pertzi
18, and Jesus Miguel Casanova, 19, all ol1
Santa Ana, were booked in\o Orangi:
County Jail on suspicion of armed robi-}
bery. . .
Store clerk Tommy W. Cooper, 2.'J; told~
police two men entered his store abou,,
7:50 p.m., fiuhed a pistol and isked lo(.
the money frOm the easb registef. '-
Cooper said they left, entered a waitlnt
c.ar. and started-to1 leave. At that pointy
Cooper told police, he· too k out hJt'
r'evolver and fired rOur . shols• at••f.bi., · •
fleeing car. ·
Police said three bullet holes , were-
found in the left rear feqder of the
Buspecls' ca r. . .;
After firing at the car, Cooper said, bit
ran back into the. store and phoned a•
description of the getaway,car to-Fouzr.
··tain·Vattey·police.· · .. -· · · -· ·-· I
Moments later, DetecUve Sgt .. Freel
Nourse and Investigator Jim Worrelf
spotted the suspects' car entering the San
Diego Freeway from Magnolia street,, 1
Ndurse and Worrell, in an unmaritel
police car, followed the other car onto ~
freeway. · · ' j
"We radioed for help," Nourse related.
• Black and white pa'trol. c:O.rs -t)'q
each from Fountain Valley,. Huntington'
Beach and Westminster -puJle4
alongside Nourse's car. · . l M€sa-Me:r,chant Beaten · · ,;;~~~~;;1~·;::~.~~-::~
· • • • • -• • · • • 1 On a slgi,al from· Nourse, 'ofni:ers in atif
. , . . . , . , cars flipped on lljelr · re<! :tlibi... .~ T~:De~ili·~in .. $~75itobbe~: ,·' ·~~~:~~:.~1l~;~~~~~
. . ... . ·.. '· . . . ' . --· --.:.: . . . -' c ,, •. _ y .. '!'~Jti.~~.t:.i1id~ = woJ
·By ARTHUR IL VINSEL came to the store with .a key, convinced · be questioned about a number of ~ ·
or"" Dell't ""' '"" something was wrong. armed robberies in Orange County. I
~A U.yea:r-old merchant without a Biales, a longtime Costa M e 11 a : \Down eoemy in the world was beaten to J T h ' u i1an clothin 00 merchant and rentat property owner, iaY ess to eac . Cla8!1 • jli!alh in ·bb·lit, • /!!'!'• · g' P In a pool or·.blood in .th<""" •"lee area '1'· ~llY .do~to;;ir\l Cai5.ta 1 Me~. Wed-.... ., t• :: ~lSfiay, his pockelx torn Inside out and al uie' ;,ar ,oi "lhe coior(ul Polynesian· For Valley State \:
efupty.. style store.· , :
;someone ha4 1mashed in the-~ck of A blood-sheiuner cla'w hammer he ha(( NORntRtDGE, ·Call!. (AP) -J~s'. '.
'Slmuel J. Biales' head with a blunt ob-used to taclC Otristmas lights across Unruh, onetime' uhdlsj>uted naler of t • ~ .1~. before looklng wp Hawaiian Jsle Ap-' c llf · '-I I t d ·-·-•
pare'• 1793 Newport Boulevard, and bam~mat · storefr,oot ' was confiscated a omia u::g a a ure an ............. es • ' d De.mocrath: gubernatorial candidate, • flttiog. · as ev.I ence. , tea h llti oext nrtng t s t a t W: •
.No more than '75 coUld have been Crowd! of the curious gathered l! · co•~gei:° . cs Sr.· . 8 . 8 .. ~;
\aken. police · rriarked off the scene for clues. A spokesman 19f San f~~~ ; m:~~ ·;rJt:\~.~~~t~t1rl1. · '.t~~}'~~~i:;~,:~! ~'J~~l,.~v~·
McBride fl the Investigation lntensilied "Why couldn't It have been somebody and senior students. Hia aalary war not
toda)':. • . younger -somebody who could hav e put disclosed. Unruh was defeated by ~
The \tlctlm was dlJC<1veree1 about 2:15 up a flgbt,'' asked businessman John RUbllcan Gov. Rot;1ald'Re~ in.the.J!ll)
p.m., when his wife Zada and son James tSe• BRuTAL SLAYING, 'Pile I) eral elett.lon Nov. S. 1
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Prot!t P .. e 1
CHOTI NER ••• ..
more power to her.''
And be qulcily rejected Mn. Cbotlnor'•
statement tb1t "inany, many doors bid
been closed" to her as the result of her
feud with Chotiner with the ct1mment: "I
don't know what she means. Certainly. no
one at any level in Orange County or
.1 anywhere else including mysell has ever
attempted ~·close any kind of door ."
CAIL Y ,-IL Of P"'9 llt •ldl•r11 KHfller
'THUNDER' SNIPPI FOR MURDER SUSPECT'$ SCENT
O.rdon Oro"" Offlnr 1111 c;ompton Lond1 Dog to Searth
Prom Pqe J
BRUTAL SLAYING ••.
Dav~. tears stainlng his cheek&.
"My God. Somebody would have to bt
crazy lo Jl'urder olcl lanuny," added hll
clOM fritlld.
Davit was absent from hlf 1dJacent
'"'"' during the per!oct beflnnlna before and after 11 :45•a.m., tbe Jut time the
aliihUy built victim was seen alive.
No one die in the immediate area -
including a busy beer bar, employment
agency and coffee shop -noticed
eo)'lbln& -~ ncept that Sommy
was c10Md.
A qUJck ca11 for aasistance brought
Garden Grove Police Officer WUli1m
Compton end his traioed Gemwi
SMpberd, n..-, who on.. geu llU<h
•pedal 11111nmenu. ~ .,,,..,.r the blood·s .. Uerod o/.
fice, 1bunder Jed detecUve.s, in suspense,
down a rear alley and ~d the cam1r
toward !ftllll)clpel court, whm be !lop-
ped el a parklnf pip.
lnvestlgat.ors ·belttve the killer left his
car in J stall alongside Costa Mesa Park.
f'lnltrprinU of all ki!><!J W8(0 found In·
aide tht: UtU1 1hop, where Bl1lu welcom·
ed browHr1 and fellC1W qi.erchantl for •
chat when bu.tlneu w11 alow.
Tliey concoc\ed that wu otun. n. finaerprifits, howevtt,•won't m .. n mu~ wi!haUt e speelllc IUlpecl lllJlled
by ..Uce. '"ll1t FBI WO!l't loljch a ,.1 o/ print.
anJeu you have a swrpect In mind," uld
Dettetlve Sor1aeot Jo!in Re1an today.
''Then: ire ., mlllloq people in lhll
country and U every department aent one
at of r;tnta they'd be out of butlne11 in a
week,' be oonUnued.
Bialq may hav• been 5b'uck. the fat.al
blow to th• back Clf the head by su.rpMse,
accordin1 to PttecUve ~eraeant Clllf
McBride, who emphaslad he doesn't
know.
No lltn1 of a 1trupl~ could t>e f09?1d In
the lhop1 where the vl cUm kept about $50
in a cun drawer apd c•rrled po in hill
pocket.
Hi1 son w11 acrOJs the street on an er·
rand, dropped by I<> find Ille door looked,
so tie called Mr1. Biales at home, s1•
<>lie St., to bring a key.
9gt. McBride marveled at !hair htlpflil
eon:ipotUrt wuter the clr~mat&ncu.
DAILY PILOT
tt..,ett """ "...._ -Loeil•M leull ........ Ylley
CMtll ,..,. ._ C1rs r•te
OIAHIJE COMT PUILISHING COMPAMY
R•'tttt N. Wtt4 rr.1M11t ..-,111 hllli.Mr
J••k II, Curl..,
VIM Prlllflfll tf"AI 0-t l MtlllfW
1\t1t1t• IC..-AI
··"" n•111•• A. Mur .. 1'1111
Mllltl ... l•Utr
Ki1.1'1r4 P. tt1I tevll Or•llfl ~l'I' llll!IW -Cel'-M•: UI Wnt lllY l tnll .......... ,Ill 11'11 W•I l•Mt.1 ...,IM.., l,l>f'llll lltt~l Jn ...... I AV91111t
H111111ll"*"'9 1t11~1 fll71 IHCll lt\llfvt ... a.in eielMtllel a5 Htrlll I I C11111nt ~Ml
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Technicians from the Orange C:Ounty
Sherlff'1 crime lab combed the premises
as puser1by paused and Christmas shop-
pers driving by slowed to gawk.
''Mele Kallklmaka ," pidgin En1lleh for
Merry Chrlatmas in the Island.I the
Bl1lu -were lo make thei r annual vlalt to
next month, offered season's greetings.
A barmaid in tight capris leaned
against the doorway of Vikki's, weeping
softly u the watched police.
Grime-stained, a man in green Texaco
service station clothing stepped toward
thl shop door, where Patrol Sgt. Bob
Gtode and other olficer1 stood guard. ~Hold it fir," 1aid one. ~I wu jut going to buy something,"
said the would-be cwtomer. , • ...._, llF'I ~· for the day," ona repiitd'.' •
President Calls
National News
Session Today
WASIDNGTON (AP) ~ President
Nilan has called a news conference for
today at t o'clock PST.
With the rail strike sure to top the llf'
of 1Ubject1 he'll d!1cu11, the President
may alJo face questlon1 about the
scarcity of opportunity for newsmen to
question him on national l11ues.
Press 1ecretary Ronald L. Ziegler re-·
spooded to newsmen '• questions about
the lapse between Nixon news confe r4
ence1 by saying the President still holds
the -view he (Nixon) stated a :year a10.
that hia news conferences should he
scheduled when they benefit the public
intereat r1ther than the interests of the
preu or the President.
The President, Ziegler said, "has a
respoNibility to communicate We feel
he ha1 done that." The press secretary
point~ to several Nixon radio and tele·
. vltlon addre1ge1 and speeches in pub Uc
foruma during the l11t year.
The three major radio-televl1\cn net.-
wor:k• and the Mutual Broadcasting
System plan to air tonight's n ews con4
ference·. ?\1utual and ABC plan no posf·
conference commentary, through C BS
said it would present some, and N BC
~ it planned a "brief summary."
Yule Decoration
Contes t Slated
In San Clemente
Six, hand-wrought copper trays from a
San Clemente manufacturer \Vt\I be the
awards to three homeonwers and three
businessmen who h11ve the season'11 bt.!t
Christmas derorations.
J udges fro mthe San Clemente Junior
Women's Club will tour the city Tuesd11:y
evening to find the three residenlial 11nd
three business winner1. Only residential
entriu phoned in advance to the loca l
chamber office will be judged In the com·
petition, chamber spokesmen s a Id •
Bwine1se1 will not have to register,
however.
The winners will receive disllncUvt,
uiable. aerv ina trays oUered by
Qfegori1n Copper.
Tht judges tor the compell!lon \Vlll be
Mra. Chris Bell, h1rs. Pat Cle1vtr, htrs.
Terry Orr and ~lrs. Linda Kennedy.
The winners will receive their Jwarda
bf.fore Chrl1tmaa, 11lowln11 lhe public In
view the winnln& decor11ion1 before lh ey
are lake:n down.
R.ea:lstr1tlon csn bt 11coomplished by
calling the chamber at 492-1131.
Mrs. Chotiner, who is represented by
Los Angeles attorney Bernard ,A. Leckj1,
11y1 her book 11 at the halfway stage of
prepar~tloq and her tape recordln&••
documents and manuscripts a r e
••c1refully locked away in a ufety
deposit vault." She refused to disclose the
percent whereabouts of her half finished.
eir.:~.,
The; Chotiners married on Christma1
day 19&1 and 5eparated last June. The~
former California campaign manager for
-Nixon pays hi• wife a total of more than
Sl ,000 a month in houae payments and
personal support.
His income is listed in the trial brief as
$36,000 a year from the Preaident and'
$45,000 annually from his privat.e la W
prictice. Juctae Dreiun will be 1sked
durln1 the tri•I to give Mrs. Chotiner at
least half the value of the $70,000 home,
most of the furnishings and a monthly·
liUpport payrnen~ of at least $1,200.
Mrs. Chotlner, who states 1he baa no
other ircome, continues to li ve at the Lin.
coln Lane home with two children by a
former marrlag·e. Marta Mueller, te , and
Edward Charles Mueller, 15.
Mrs. Chotiner said she has no marriage
pllRS. Chottner went to 'the courtroOm On
the arm of an attractive blonde but refus-
ed to identify his companion.
·~It was always my understanding that
ladies and gentlemen did not expose their
personal differences in public," he rom-
mented. "I don't kriow why my fo rmer
wife took this action (the book) and J
don't particularly care.
"Another thing," Chotiner added with
his first smile of the morning, "I don't
think anybody else will care when lhey
see whatever she intends to put tn It."
Fron• POfJe I
STRIKE ...
Brotherhood of Maintenance Way and the
Jiotel, Restaurant and B a r t e n d e r s
International, which represents dining
car employes.
Said the din!~ car, WQfkers' president,
Ed Miiier: "It Is the pol!cy of tbls ln-
ternalional union to obey th e law."
The UTU withdrawal was announced in
Cleveland by W. \V. Carson, au istant to
Charles Luna, the union'• president.
In telegrams to all general cha irmen
and international officers, Carson advised
that becau1e Congress passed -and
Pre1id•nt Ni•on slaned -Jeaillatlon pr~
hlblUn1 a strike and guarant.eeina a waae
Increase that UTO waa· cancelirig ib part
In the atrike.
The strike, which began at 12:01 a.m.
waa the nation'• third in the last 50 years.
The emer1e ncy law paue:d by Congress
early toda y ord ered the strikers back to
work with a partial pay increase.
"They are increasingly angry and bit·
!er," said strike leader C. L. Dennis of
the nearly 500,000 worker• who wa1ked
out at 12:01 a.m. and showed no Im·
mediate inclination to return In com-
pliance with the new l•w, a plea from
Preaident Nilon and a federal court
<1rder.
"The men ind women who work for the
railwaya have had a bum rap for a long
time," Denni• said. They will remain off
the job until they win their dem1nd1 for
substantial pay boosts above current
wages rangfng from $.1.45 to $.1.60 an
hour, he said .
Trains bearing pai1ienger1 and goods,
Including Christmas mail, ground to a
halt and government official• predicted
disastrous effects on the nation's already
troubled econom,y if the strike lasta Iona.
President Nixon stayed up through the
night 11 Congress labored past the
mlnute,after·mldnighl strike deadline to
produce an emergency law.
At 2:10 a.m. (EST) he signed the
special legialatlon ordering the workers
back until fi.1arch 1, but complained the
immediate 13.5 percent pay hike included
In the measure would worsen the nation's
steepest inflationary wage-price spiral in
more than 20 years.
He said any pay raise 1hould be ac·
companied by modification in union work
rules in order to increase productivity.
He then urged the strikers to return to
lh11ir jobs.
Just over an hour later -at 3: IT a.m.
-US. District Judge John H. Pratt of
\Vashington. D. C .• issued a temporary
order restraining a strike until Dec. 20.
In issuing the injunction at the industry's
request. Judge Pratt set a hearing for the
morning of Dec. 18.
But the strike "·ent nn.
"They don't care what the Senate or
the President aay," said 11: union official
in West Virginia of the rail workers.
"\\It'll slay out until our intcrnation-.it
officers tell us !<1 go back," 48-year·
old Jim Leach. donning a picket sign at
\Vashinglon 's Union Station a few blocks
from the floodlit U.S. Capitol where
Congresg enacted the law ordering a
strike delay until ~1arch 1.
"They are prepared to withhold thelr
l~~r until the~. achieve equltable con·
dll1ons of work, Mid Dennls. president
nf !he Brotherhood of RajJway Clerb.
largest of four AFL-C?O unJons in the.
dl~nute.
The sl ri'kers. who haven't had 1 pay
raise aince mid-1!169, hid txhau1ted
rle\aying provisions of the Railway Labor
Act over mnre than 1 ye1r of prl'ltracted
ncJ1t1tiatinns before ~·alkina off their jOba.
"The only thing that could kttp us
from golne nul Wt'IU!d be Maring from the
Preslde:nt himself that the sttike had
hetn settled,'' said a union official 1etlin1
llfl picket lines in Salt Lake City.
DA1LY PILOT ll•ff P~1le
MIMI TALKS AS MURRAY PACES AT COUNTY COURTHOUSE
Nixon Aide Chot iner, Estranged Wife Mil• Apart
Cln·istmas Mail. togjam
Worsened hri Rail Strike
Postmasters along the Orange Coast,
are bracing their staffs for the Christmas
m•il glut which has been complic1ted
this :year by the mail embargo broughi on
by a nati onal rail strike.
The embargo , insti tuted Wednesday by
Post master General Winton Blount, af.
feels serond, third and fourth class mail
to be delivered more than 300 miles.
Laguna Beach Postmaste r Charles
Covault said the types of mail covered by
the embargo include parcel post, publica·
lions and catalogues.
Most Christmas packages are mailed
by parcel post but Christmas cards travel
by first clasa m1il.
"The onl:y thin& I can 1ugge1t for peo-
ple who want to mail Christmal!l packages
is lo send them first class or airmail.
even though it Is rather cos~." 1aid
John 8. KJu giewtc1, Costa M e f I
postmaster.
Newport Beach Postmaster Payne
Thayer suggested rcsidenUI get all their
mail in as early as possible. ''I hate to
alarm anyone at this time,'' he said. "I
would suggest that Christmas Ill getting
closer than most of us realize, and this
embargo isn 't going to help."
Thayer aai d the 300.mile limit in wh.ich
the second, third and fourth class mail
will be delivered Includes the southern
hall of the San J~quin Valley and Laa
Vegas. but does not include San Fran·
clsco. "So if you want to send packages
to places outaide this are•. plan on u&ing
airmail or first class," he added.
The Costa Meaa. postmaster also sug-
gested sorting the first class mail into
... 1nd Amulngl
Extrao rdln1ryl
Coloa11ll
' . group• ol 1111ll I<> bl deU\'Ved w\lhln tha
city an( mail to }>e ~tUvered outsicte the
city. 'f'f'tils meana that .if you live in
Costa Mi.a you'll hive maU golng to
Costa Mesa addresses onlt, and mail
going to all other addresses. '
He said this will help post office
employes clear their dccka in preparation
for the settlement of the rail dispute
which is bound to bring a deluge of parcel
post and other embargoed classes of
mail.
No post office in the area will accept
any parcel post ma il. "We can't stack it
up here and wait for the end of th e em-
bargo. because we'd run out of space In
about half a day ," Covault said.
All the Orange Coast postmasters said
they will see to it that all mail received
in their offices on Chri1 tmas Eve is
delivered by Chrl1tm1s Day.
"I'm really hopln1 that this will get
straightened out before too long,"
C.Ovault said. "At this juncture, it would
probably be best lo wait a couple of days
and see what h~ppens.
"But one thing, we will do, and that is
deliver all ~e mail that comes in he re,
no ma tter how late we have to work."
Reagan Kickoff Set
SACRAMENTAL (AP) -John Wayne,
Frank Si n atr1, Dean 1t1.1 rt i n
Jimmy Stewart and Jack BeMy wiU per-
form at an inaugural gala Jan, 4. cele·
bra ting the start of Gov. Ronald Rea-
gan's iecond tenn.
Why? Boo1uao In !hit brilliant nylon
face shag Karastan'scolorwlzards have
dreamed up auc;h sparkl ing mlxtl asln.credlbfs
Bluo, Amazing Wh itt, Extraordinary Gold and avan
Coloss1f Copper, Fabulous ha• 00 of the1e col ors.
They're &11 lncrodlble, really,
( F.Mlen um• f" e1clth•1111 °'" JMs w~ Mt&liit,.. hlttt•·
At' r IZ' for •aly $114.H l
Planning
Concerns
;1 •
• . •• '•
· . • • ..
:=
Grand Jury
By JACK lllOJACK
Of fM OllW ,UM "tff
Popul11tlon growth, lnterP,V~t-'.
al planning, low Income houllna I .,d :
overlapping special dtstrictl are t ~ e ·
concern of the Orqe CoUnty Grlpd
Jury in a report Llaued today.
Tbe jury also re.leaaed brief NpOrts
on the Dtpartment of Real Property
Services and the county clerk and rec·
l.ltr1r of votera.
"The county i.s handicapped by n:ot
bavlni a clear policy on growth,'' tbe
rtport 11Jned by fortn\&D G e o r g e
Honold IUi(tlU.
"To be effective. the jury belie.v,s:
this policy should be developed not only
by the board of supervisors but 1 I s' o
wltb iJlput from citie1 and 1pecial di&-
trlcll."
The supervisors. planning commission
and plann.in( department are prailtd ·
for lnitl•tina ths general planning pro.
grim. , ,,,.,"I
"The program activity this year of
necessity hall 'been foc~d on the pro-
posed city of Irvine," the jury report
conlines. •
''The lrvine Company plans ere bolh
superior and comprehensive. However,
It wouli be n1lve to believe lhat thlil
plans· will neceaa.rily result in the ac.
dli1Vement of the goah of the ~
Company: nor ii it certain that 11! WU..
able goals have as yet been identiHed."
The jW')' conunendll the company f9f .
forming a citizens group to give input
to tbt P,lan. "Tltere 1eem1 to be a ti of inpti~ bewevtr from elecUv1 re.-.
gentativet."
"The iJ"?pact of 1 new city will be
felt by all the cit!uns of the c:ouoly.
It la bound to bring more cooguUoft
more smog, more water pollution an~
It is estimated each new clUu n rt o "
requires over $13.000 ca pital expend!·
lure by government."
The jury note1 that cities adjoining
the proposed community are holding
meetings but feels that all cities, school
district& and, special diatricll in the
county shoula be involved. '
The subject of intergovernmental rev·
enue sharing is briefly touched upon.
"A task foret: to 1tudy thl• ls ur&enUy
needed."
A need for income housing Is rttag·
nized and additional federal funds are
needed. the jury said. "Some thought
should be given to recycling with money
spent on exi1tin1 housing rather thaa
new howling."
The jury mildly attacks the assusor'1
office bul offers no solution to the p~
!em of "the law which taxes property
on potential in!tead of actual uae. Tax·
ing at potential uae yielda the gr11tes\
revenue gain but may have unde1lr1bll ·
social effecl.l'I. '
"Taxing at actual use, while 1lowinJ
down helter skelter development, en-
courages speculation. Thia 111 allO de-
trimentf,I to plannin1," the report
6tates.
Eliminalion of coonty hlandll between
cities and consolidation o( aome of the
133 special di.strict& bec1UH of duplica·
tion and fraa:menllUon of 1ervlce1 ii
ur&ed. ·
Fabulous Color!
Fabulous Sh.ag!
FABULOUS PRICEI
IF YOU CAN'T
COME IN-CAIL
64,6.(1275
for an expert ..,.,,.,
consultant
"':ho will
come to
your hem•
with aampl1a
without an.y
obU1at1cn
to YoUI
. ., •. ,,,~ .J . GAR. R. ETf f UR. N rp1 ~ ~ "'"" • .,
OpH MOft,, Tllun. & l'rl. lwn. COST ,I\ MUA, C,l\LIF.
INTERIOR DESIGNE RS 446.0271 646.0216
~
I
I
i ·:·~~
I ,.
•'
!
Uontingion Beaeh
·' EDITI O N
::. * * *· --
'iQI.:. 63, NO. 295, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, -cALIFORNIA _THURSDAY" DECEMBER 10, 1970 -TEN CENTS I . : . . . I f 4 , • Ill Friend Big Battle for Detective
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of 1"t Dall¥' Pli.t Steff
A Huntlngtm Beach detec:Uve. said
Wedne9day that he battled with his own
~~pce•in a se<:luded room !oi' some
time before taking the step which Jed to Jl!e dismissal of hill friend. Offie<r
Gllbert COerPer, on a charge of misap-
1 proprlating merchandise. ·
1 ·''It-was-a hard decision for me to I· i ll)ake,'' teslilled Del. Sgt. Mooty Mellen-
non during a city personnel comrnlssion
hearing which IJ l'OOlidering the re-in-
statement of Coerper.
111 bad a real warm friendship !or
Coerper, but I am• al8') • professional
police offi~. So·I toot the only recoorae
I had open to me,'". the homicide in-
.vestigator said. Ht said he sought advfce
from a)tlgher officer. . _ . c.oerper ... 36; Was dismissed from the
fon:e last August alter J>e allqedly kept
donated Montgomery Ward s to r e
merchandise for himsel! rather than g1v~
ing it to the cbarlty-orlented Police Wives
Guild.
McKennon, a friend of the motorcycle
patrolman since 1964, said he "!IS In-
formed that oo "mank you '' letters had
been sent by the Guild !or the merchan-
dise.
"Mr. Ricketts (the store's security
manager) asked me to !ook into this mat~
DAIL 'r PILOT .lllf'I '°'""'
PLANES AT LOS ALAMITOS NAVAL A IR STATION'TO BE REPLAC .. D BY PEOPLE
foder1I Officills Outtino Pl1ns for Mlllt1ry Dopondent liolninl
Us Alamitos
Hears Plans
, Of New City
\ A ne~ city of 10,000 persons will be
created within the city lim.ils of Los
Al8m!tos ..
: 'That,was lhe p~~t outlined Wednes-
day to ·city and school officials. It will
rOUow the cessation or !light operations
ne.xt July at the Naval Air Station.
The information was oUered by a brief·
log -team from the U.S. Navy, the Navy
!;ngineers and the Secretary of Defense.
They were telling Los Alamitos of-' fl~lals what is going to happen in the
eight years alter flight operations are
1fupl>'!l.
!J'he Navy plans to construct 2,600 new
hdusing units to house dependent families
ofl Navy personnel in the Los Angeles,
Uing Beach and Orange Co~nty areas.
J~luded,will be a limited number of Air
Force •and Army families .
t:ounty Supervisor Davld L. Baker, who a~ended the briefing, said . city officials
"lilant to cooperate with the federal pro-
gram. but ·!eel they should have been
brought Into the planning at a much
Mr lier date.'' :The 1,337 acre air station, used largely
fdr training Navy Reserve flyers and
ground personnel. Is entirely within the
city of Los Alamitos.
-~ost buildings on the base now will be
uUUttzed for ·ground aviation traini.ng
vMch is to· continue. The present
r.::ililles have an estimated replacement ~t of $41.2 million.
'Or~re{l, to Destroy All'
Says Calley Attorney
'
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) -Lt.
Will iam L. Calley's defense attorney told
a six-officer military court today that
Calley took his platoon irito the Viet-
namese hamlet of My Lai under orders
that "every living thlng in that area be
killed."
In a brief opening stat~t. Defense
Attorney George W. Latimer said Calley
would take the stand in his own defense
and give a full account "of bis actions,
conduct and behavior."
Calley, 71, is accused of killing, or
aTilering killed, 102 South Vietnamese
civilians March 16, 1968, the day he led
his platoon on a search-and-destroy
mission through My Lai.
Latimer sakl the cluater of villages in
which My Lai was situated was koown as
Viet Cong country and a deal.h trap for
American soldiers.
Many ,of the members of Calley's pla·
toon had been killed or had anns and legs
blown off and had been "ruined for life''
in preceding weeb by mines, booby traps
and ambushes set by "civilians of all
ages" of the area, Latimer said.
The day berol-e the attack, he said,
funeral services had been held for three
soldiers who had been killed. He said the
feeling at the services was a general
mOod of reprisal.
Then, iM company commander, Capt.
Ernest Medina, called a rpeeting,
Latimer continued. ·
"He told his men t!lat at loog last they
wue going to close with the enemy and
be glveil I.he opportunity to get even for
the Joss of their buddies," Latimer said,
''He said the area was defer'lded by the
48th Viet Cong Battalion, one of their
finest, and the m~ion was not only to
search and destroy My Lal 4, but My Lai
5 and 6.
"He said the information was that all
c,ivilians had left the area and if any were
remaining they would be Viet Qmg or
Viel Cong sympathizers.
"He ordered the village burned. the
anima ls shot, the wells contaminated alKI
every living thing in that area killed."
J{e said higher commanders were In
the area that day, including on the
ground, "and nothing was said about the
killing of civilians until a lunch break."
Other commanders were flying over
the action and should have known what
was happening, Latimer said.
Some Viet Cong of military age were
killed (presumably by artillery or aerial
fire) before the groW'ld troops got
there. He said this killing was done "right
at the edge of a ditch in which the
government contends CaJley killed at
least 711 screaming women , children and
old men." • J
Latimer said Calley and his platoon
had been inadequately trained and irr
structed (or this kind of combal Some of
the platoon members had not been in
combat before, be sa id, all believed their
sweep would be "bitterly contested," and
some were frightened.
ter and straighten it out aotne way. He
didn't want to create any problem·,". the
burly detecUve said.
McKennon said he subsequenUy told
Coerper that the store wanted the· not.ea
of appreciation !or the merchandi!e and
that Coerper replied that "a Jetter should
be coming In at any" time."
When the letters still did not arrive,
P..!cKennon, who was employed as a part-
t.ime security &uard at lbe store, went to
Capt. Michael Burkenfield wltb the pro-
blem.
"I felt it was an internaJ m1Uer for the
admlnlatrative division to blndlt, not a
criminl1 one. l wu praying thlt it
wam'L"
An !n-bouae lnveatlgaUoo then formally
concluded tbat OJerper bad mlahlndled
the merchancllae and that be had Ued to
. officers c:onducUng the Inquiry. HIJ
dlsmlaaal followed lmmedlalely bJ Police
OUef Earle RobttaWe.
DUrlng ~lion, McX.nnon
testified that be never bad any doubt&
about Coerper's lntqrlty or ~up to
the Ume of tbe allqed cborlo.
"It would be real bird not to lilc•
Coerper ,'' he added. "~ bu the kind of
peraooallty tbal moot people would lilce."
During tbe aame -· p-.UOO r••...,rney Michael Miller called Mrs. Jack
(See COERPBR, P1&1 I)
Bandits Surrender
Police Arrest 3 in Valley Robbery
Bandits held up A Fountain Valley
marllet Wednesday nlgb~ making oil
w:ilh $200 as the angry store clerk follow-
ed them into the slreet, firing !our"abots
al their fleeing auto.
Minutes after the armed robbery of the
'1-11 Market at 10545 Slater Ave., police
captured three suspects without a stnil·
gle after surrounding their car wilh seven
police units on the San Diego Freeway.
Ronald Lee Sanders, 19; Rudy Perez,
18, and Jesus Miguel Casanova, 19, all of'
Santa Ana, were booked into Orange
County Jail on suspicion of ,armed rob-
bery.
Store clerk Tommy W. Cooper, 23, told
police two men entered his store about
7:50 p.m., flashed a pistol and asked !or
the money from the cash register.
C:OOper said they left, entered a wailing
car and 11tarted to leave. :At rthat point,
Cooper told .police, ho took out hia
revolver and fired four lbotl •t tbl
Qeelpf car. • . . .
Police aald !brae bullet Jiolel ...,.
found In the !di rear f<Dder of tbl suspect,' car. ,. .....
Aller an.,. 11 Ille c.r, Cooi>el''lald. bo
ran back ·tnio tbl 11tort and pboald a
description of tbl .. towl)' car to '""" taln Valley poUce.
Moments lat!r, DetecUye set. Fred
Nourse and Investigator Jim Worrell
spotted the 1uspects' car entering .the San
Diego Freeway from Magnolia Street.
Nourse and Worrell, in an unmarked
Student Voting
Status on Park
Board Weighed
Should a student be appointed with fun
statu1 to the Huntington Beach Parks and
Ri:crtation Commission?
Councilman ~o~a Gibbs. mentiooed
the Idea when ~city council wa.s in·
formed this week commissioner Tom
Cooper has moved out of the city and is
resigning.
Mrs. Gibbs pointed out that several
cities in the state had appointed youths to
parl; boards, to serve as voting members
and not just advisers. She recommended
that the city consider appointing a young
person to fill Cooper's vacancy.
Councilman Jack Green said that col·
lege-age students might be considered
but felt that high school youths might be
too young.
Mayor Donald Shipley said that all ap-
plicants for the post would be given equal
consideration after Counctlman Ted
Bartlett pointed out that the city already
had received several applications from
competent citizens.
police car, followed the other car onto the
freeway.
"We radioed !or help;" Nourse related.
Black and while patrol can ~ ·two
each from Founta.ln Valley, Huntington
Beach . and . Weatmlnster -pulled
alongside Nourse'• (:&r.
1be suapects didn't notice the aeven-car
motorcade trailing them, Nourse said.
On a signal from Nourse, olllcen In all
cars Dipped on lbelr r!d lljibta llld
sirens.
Tbe mapects pulled off the freeway
near Valley View-Street ·and pvt up
without a struggle, police related.
Detectives indicated the ~ -id
be questioned about a nurnbe"r of dbu
armed robberies In Oranae County.
Christmas Mail Logjam
Worsened by Rail Strike
. . .
. P,..-.r. alooC. tho Qr9 are l><adnl ·tbelr ~ for tho . · ~Jl&by1.dl..r~ ..:
by a n.IUondJrall iirtke1 I ''I I I ' '
Tbe emiltlrp, lnitJtulad W•I 1111 a,·
........fer '~"--· , • ...,..,.,, third and 1;; clua-mall
to.lie' dell...:.. inon uw, m11..:. 'Lqun•l~h.ci, ·-aial1ii cmu!l 'said the typtl of mall cov9red b1
tbe irh&IJ1o Include pan!el Pool, ·pubUC.
tiol'll ind cttaloguet. . .
. Most Chrlatmas packageo ~ malled
by.parcel post bu.t Chrhltmu cards travel
by first cliis mall.
· ''.'nie only thing I c.n SUQeal for peo.
pie who want to mall Chriitmaa packages
i.9 to tend "them flrlt class or airmail,
even though It ls rather cosUy," said
John B. Kluglewicz, Costa Me s a
postmaater.
Newport Beach Poelz\1asler Pa}'DO
Thayer suggested resldenta get all their
mall in as early as possible. "I bate to
altrm aoyooe at thia Ume,~ i. saltl. "I
wou!tl auggesl tbat Chr-• ~
-..... moil a{ )IS• """"" ... thia anbuio isn'I gqing to belp."
Tbayer Bald the lOk>lle )lmlt la w1lkll
tbe _.i. f/llrJ! ...i f---.A .,qi be dtlf~ __ a. -
llall of tbe Saa Joaquin Val!e7 ad .Lu v., ... ~ul .... nol lncluclt ........... •··"So tt .,.. 1!':ul to -.....,.. to 1iJ1!<oo .oolafde ,.. .,.., plln ta OllnC
alrliiall or firtl class," he.-.
'nie Casto Meaa poolmalter alao -.
gesled IOl'Uog the flrat claaa mail Into
groups: of mall to be delivered within the
city and mail to be deliV!ftd outside the
c\ty. "This means tbat U )'OU llve In
Costa Mesa you 'll have mail ..... to
Cosio Mesa adtlrmes ·only· and mail
eoing to a1J other addresses."
He said thia will help pool oll!co
employes clear their decka: in preparation
for the settlement of the rail dlspilto
which Is bound to bring a delup of paroel
(See MAIL, P.,. I)
-tr -tr-tr -tr-tr -tr
Rail Syswm Paralyzed
In First Day of Strike
WASHINGTON (AP) -Slrlklng
trainmen paralyzed the rail system na-
tionWlde today art.hough the ranks of the
walkout showed signs of breaking in tbe
first few hours.
Still, hundreds of thousands o f
suburban commuters bad to find other
ways to work and freight was 11talled
while three of four unlonl ln the 500,000-
man strike said they were cancellh& their
st.pke onlen."
unions in ordering the!r m~n back to
work.
"We expect that the fourth union allo
will comply with the law," sald Ziegler.
Rescinding strike orders were the
United Transportation Union, th t
Brotherhood of Maintenance Way and the
Hotel, Restaurant and B a r t e n d e r 1
fSee STRIKE, Pa1e I)
Oru1e.
The school districts ' affected. -
Arlaheim Union High School and to,,
Alamitos Elementary -will be presented. a~e problems.· · ·
Dr~g Gap Seen Closing
The 200,000-member · Brotherhood of
Railway Clerk.s held OCJI, saying nothing
despite coDCrtfSkmal anc:: cOOrt bans on
the strike, and a plea from President
Nixon to stay on the job.
Spot. cbecJla; showed members of the
other -three unions were honoring the
clerks' picket lines.
Penn-central spokesmen said they
doubled anyo(le woµld come back until
picket lines dissolved.
Are you ready for some ntce,
warm Santa Ana wlrnb?' They'll
be along Friday, pu>hlng the
mercury up to 70 degrees under
sunny skies.
Baker said the .military men told the /
group that land would be provided for
three elementary, one junior high and
ooe senior high school. Some federal
fupds are avaUable to aid the districts in
ballding.
There will be three park sites ln the
fqture planning and they will probably be
~eloped jointly by the federal, city aod
county governments, Baker said.
pbe Department of Defense estimates
tt.t $59.1 million will be spent at lM: base uWr the next eight years to complete the
p(tiject. This should' provide some
•ptoyment, departm'ent officials said. '
All o(fslte improvements, street widen-
bW. traffic signals, sewer systems, traSb
diiposal and similar services will be pro-
'lided by Los Alamitos or Orange County.
Baker said he s~gested one partial
90lutlon to the financial problem.-sale of
ZIG acres of property not yet classUied
fOf use in the federal project and
development of an Industrial park.
One ctrtain result of tbe plM -there
wlll be .no private plane a\rport there as
auca;estcd,in lhe·Parsons Air Plan for the
cooinl( • .
'
Y outli 'Turning O f f' A,f ter Performers' Deatlis
Death Is beginning to reduce the
credibility gap about hard drugs among
teen-agers.
~t is the opinion or Huntington Beach
Higb School Principal Woodrow' Sonith
who belicm tbat the puslng of bfues
belter Jania Joplin and super star Jlmi
Hendrix turned more people o(f than
campus "dnlg assemblies" with their big
pitches,
''The kids aren't willing to follow the
advice of authority figures any more.
They're not buying the marijuana threat,
And they ttUnk. movies of Sonny and Cher
putUng down dope is a abJoe on or put-
on:• be. Aki.
"They're listening to the Information
wamlng of IM dangers or uppers tnd
downert tK!cau9t of Ult death! Of Jania
Jolpin and Jimi Hendrix. They're getting
tihy of the hard 1tuff and moving Dlott
Jnto marijuana and alcohol." ..
Smith believes the heavy emphasis
newspapers and television placed on the
involvement of both rock stars With hard
narcotics bit home. Tbeir death did more
talking than a stack of pamphlets by
~f~f~:t a mearch lhalyst, I
would say tbat on our ClibppS there Is
more partying of the wcekerid type wl tb
alcohol and pulls of marijuJna," he con-
tinued. ·-nus semnttr we on!:9 had lh1'ff kids
who had to bt laken away from school by
ambulance or by their parents for trtat--
ment. Out of a total o( ~200 kids, tbat'a
not too tough.
"Actually, by lt'e tlme they're In the ·
tth grade they 've pretty much made up
their minds on how much they 're going to
play around with narcoti cs. But Jn looking
out my window everyday and seeing the
kids. I would say that a good 90 cent
wouldn't touch the 1turr with • JO-foot
pole on a continulng baall."
Smith said marijuana usage Is definite-
ly present among stUdents, but the jn..
creasing usage or harder drugs such as
heroin, speed, LSD . and c:ocaine bas not
manifested Jtsdf. 1
."lt'1 not as much as you :would think.
Tbe kids are turning back to 'liquor .aod
the occasional use of mariJ~." said
Smith.
Tbe principal aaid he personally
belleves bol.h are dan«ierout a n d
detrlmentol but that medkial 1utboriUea
are still divided on whether marijuana
causet h1rmful psychologJcal a n d
pl!Yllcal effects. »• 11id that although he does not Uei>
records of how many Huntington Buch
High SCho0l students are taken Into
custody, ha 1' l!OlUied by the police about
all off-campus arrests.
And among those, lbt eipecled switch
to harder drugs In mass numbers simply
hasn't iutn place, be Hid.
1
J '· I
Overland passenger trains sat· in Los
Angeles terminal&, nothing was hap·
penlng with the Southern Paclne In
Arizona and In Chk:ago 1401000-commut-
ers switched to cars and buses for a way
to -worll:. \ '
As for tho clerb, their beadqual1ers
said.~ or tome ttrt wou1d
be made llOplOllme later In the day. In
Philadelphta a clerks luder Aid: "We're
stQJ. on itri&a." ID Clevel1nd tome elerkl
were wor~g under a court Injunction,
aome were ouL
A first indicator of the tc000mlc con-ae.qutDCtS of the atr1ke wu lttD in-West
Vlrglnla where MO "'Oil miners were
turned 1 •fay because of a coal car
lbortqe. l!pokesmen for the Industry In
the >late 11ld oil l,3IO mines wvuld be
abut clown by midnight Friday U the
strll e contJnues. O>al ts fuel for heat and
electricity In tht nation'' urban cenlera.
Ai \he White Hou,., pren Kmtlry.
Ronald L. Ziegler expresaetl ·opUm\am
tbe clllU ... 1d join Ibo Ihm other
•
I I
INSIDE TODAY
Need scmwi ideas abou' t0hj2&'1
Qood to get for ~OUT lomd OMI
at Christmaa? Ste 1p<cial Gill
Section in toda~11 DA I L Y
PILOT.
·~ 1• C.-!ltllnM I
Cllff~llll U' 1 ClfttlllM :Uolt
(tMlc1 It
c~ 1• ON '-Hetlcft 11 -" lct:Miei ,... •
ll'lltmlrl""'" ,.
''-ff,.U -" ... ~ .. I.I'.... ,.
MlmtM Ltafl• lt
• •
I I•
,
I
DAILY ,ILOT Stiff .....
CORONER'S MEN REMOVE BoDY FROM MURDER SCEN E
Cost• Mew Bu1ln111man Killed in His Store
Traffi~ Heavy
Strike Shows Effect'Nationwide
B7 ·Ualtod Preti llltena-
The big cities were flnt to show the ef-
fects of the nationwide rail strike today.
Auw parldnJ Iota built up quickly to'
capacity. Roads were jammed. Buses
were packed.
In metropolitan Chicago, where 131,000
riders crowd the trains on a normal day,
long lines built up outakie of city and
private parking garages as car pools
emptied tbeir buman Jtads. Tbe Olicago
Park Diatrict opened Iota oo the fringe ol
the do.,.ntown business section to take
care of extra automobiles, e!Umated to
total 17,000.
Trilfic """1111 to the city from the
oublJl!!I crawled.
N ... \ Yarbn jammed !Jibllr lnlo
subways which on normal days are i-cfit-
ed to the doors. About 150,000 commuters
who ordfnorlly ride the Penn Cmlnl lito
the ell¥ "'""' forced toto the bwl or qr poolJ • -
Delrtll ... ldenll, -Imel u.u.n, 111' auto ·rather than train, worried men ·
about what wu to come ra\ber tbft the
first-day ef!ectl. A General Motors
spobsman ,.Id aulo pn>ductlon would be
throttled within a week tf tbe strike COD·
llnued,
But few asped.e of the nation's
economic life were not, or would not be,
affected by the walkwl
Sookt&man for the big three auto
mai:en in Detroit said a railroad strike
wwld shut down the industry within a
weelt.
Ford "II Ila UHmbly plant at AUanta,
Ga., back to two four-bow' shift& -from
two eight-hour shifts. 1bis affected about
3, 700 workeni.
Genera] Motors and Q'lrysler cut shill!
.In their Delaware operations. At Newark.
N.J., 4,000 Chryaler empolye& will be laid
off if the atrike lasts four days, an official
oI lhe assembly plant there indicated.
'I'hou!anda of workers in Pennsylv1nia
steel miUs wiU .be off the job within a few
days U rail traffic does not resume
because of inabWty either to move finish-
ed products or to receive raw material, a
ateel executive said.
A rall shutdown would be fel t quickly
alone the oceanfront. an official of the
Maryland port authority said. Jt won't
take Jong, he said, for merchandise to
pile up at the porL
In Chicago, the naUon's rail hub,
•
DAILY PILOT
OltANc;• COAST ,.UlllSHINO COMl"dY
Rol>•rt N. Wtt4
...... 111..,1 W P'llMIMW
J1c1r R. Cvrl..y
~· l"mldlfll .,,. CMMral MMfflf"
Thom•• Kenil .. , ...
TI!."'" A. M.,.,.lN
M-,1111 M!;w
Alt n Dirlil"
Wiit °'"'* c.,,.ty MW Albttt W. l •tn
.... i. • .,... ----1717$ ltt ch l tul"'"'
M1lti111 Adlr1u: P.O. k'l 790, !JMI
Otller om.. u.ur. IMcll: tn ,._,A-C:..11 ~: J.10 Wal .. ., Slrftl
N...ort l•K111 :171 I W•t ... IMui.vtrt .stll ~: ao.I Nori!! El C........ be!.
railroads were not moving their dally
200,000 tons of Creight -hal! the total -
into the nation's second-largest city. The
137,000 daily train riders -110,000 of
lhem commuters -had to find other
me.ans of travel.
A spokesman for the association of
aimmerce and industry fea red the strike
would "snowball in tremendous JayoUs
and shutdowns" because nothing has
.. greater impact than a rail strike:, un1ess
It was some disaster such as loss or elec-
tricity or cur water supply."
While the strike began snarling the
hauling of !uel, food IJ1d freight 14 IJ1d
from farm and uctory !ta fkst impact
was on train trave\en -in 50IIle cases
before the strike began at 12:01 a.m. to-
day.
hi man; .,..., tfalna 1 whose runs
weuld ba~e ended after the strike
deadline were canceled earlier Wed.
nesday. In aome cases, the runs were
begun but not finished -leaving
passengen: stranded between starting
point and destination.
"It' just stopped and left us here in
Philadelphia," said Mrs. HaMah Hayes,
56, Latta, S.C., who had boarded a New
York-to-Florida PeM Ce n tr a 1 train.
''They sold us tickets to 10 to Latta.
"If they knew this was going to happen
they shouldn't have sold us the Uckets.
My medicine's about to run out and I
need my money back."
From Page 1
STRIKE ..•
International. \\'hich represents dining
car employes.
Said the dining car workerg• president.
Ed Miller: "It is tbe policy of this in·
ternational union to obey the Jaw." r
The UTU withdrawal was announced in
Cleveland by W. W. Carson, assistant to
Charles lA.lna, the union's president.
In telegrams to all general chairmen
and international o£ficers, Carson advised
that be<:ause Congress passed -and
President Nixon signed -legislation pro-
hibiting a strike and guaranteeing a wage
increase that UTU was canceling its part
in the strike.
The strike, which began at 12 :01 a.m.
was the nation's third in the last $0 years.
The emergency law passed by Congress:
early today ordered the striker.11 back to
work with a partial pay increase.
''They are increasingly angry and bit-
ter," said strike leader C. L. DeMIS of
the nearly 500,000 workers who walked
out at 12:01 a.m. and showed no Im·
mediate inclination to ntum in com·
plianct with the new law, a plea frem
President Nixon and a federal court
order .
F rom Page 1
MAIL ••.
post and other embargoed classes of
mail.
No post office la thfl area will acctpt
lllY parcel posL mall. "We can't stack It
up here and walL for the eod or the em.
bargo, because we'd run out of spaet In
about half a day," COv1uJt said.
All the Orange Coast poslm11ters uid
they will see to il that all mill received
in their offlcts on Oirlstm1s Eve Is
dellvertd by Christmas Day.
"I'm r<ally hoping thaL thla will pt
ttralahtened out before too lon1."
Covault said. ••At thl5 junclutt. ft wot.(d
probably be bl!~t to walt a couple of days
and see what happen11.
"But one thing, we will do. and that is
deliver all the mall that comes In here,
no matter bow late we have to work."
'
Bludgeoned to Death
Merchan t S lain in Robbery; 'Didn't 8ave an Enemy'
By AllTBUlt JI, VINSEL
Of .. Otl~ Plitt , .. "
A ea.year-old merchant without a
Jmawn enemy in the world was btateo to
death in his little Hawaiian clothing shop
In busy downtown Costa Mesa Wed·
nesday, bis pockets tom inside out and
empty.
Sameone bad smasbed in the back of
Samuel J. Blales' bead with a blunt ob-
ject, before locking up Hawaiian Isle Ap.
pare!, 1793 Newport Boulevard, and
fleeing.
No more lhaD $75 could have been
taken.
"He w1s just a well·llked little old
man," said Detective Sergeant C l l f f
McBride as the investigation intensified
today.
The victim was discovered about 2:15
p.m., when his wife Zada and son Jamea
came to tbe store with a key. coavinced
aomelbJ.n& was wrq.
Bl1le1, a looitlpie Costa Me a a
morcbant and renlal property ..... ,, uy
In a pool ol blood In !be tiny office .,.,
1t the rear of tbe colorful Polynealao.
style store.
A blood4meared claw hamme: he had
used to tack Cbrlstmas lights across
bamboo-mat storefront was ~nfisuted
as evidence. .
Crowds of the curious gathered u
pollce marked off I.be scene for clues:
assigning DetecUve Jim Blaylock to bead
a probe of the senseless homicide.
"Why couldn't it have bee.n somebody
younger -somebody wbo could have put
up a fight," asked businessman John
D1vls, tears staining his chtek!.
"My God. Somebody would have to be
crazy to murder old Sammy," added bb:
close friend.
Davis was absent from his adjacent
store during the period beginning before
and after 11:45 a.m., tbe Jut tune the
.u,btly bulit victim "" -all••· No one elise in tbe immediate area -
Including a buay. beer bar, employmet
•1ency and coffee shop , -DOl!Cld •
aoyth!q unusual, e1cept that Sao.uriY
WN cltiled. f'.. quick calf for a11taW>ce brouaht
Garac11 Grove Police Officer William
Compton and hia trained German
Shepherd, Thunder, who often 1eta such special aaatgnment..
Sl\ilfing around the blood·spattered of·
flee, Thunder led detectives, tn suspense,
down a rear alley and around the comer
toward municipal court, where he stop-
ped at a parking place.
Investigators believe the killer left his
car In a stall along:side Cost.a Mesa Park.
Firlgerprints of all kinda were found in·
side the little shop, where Biales welcom-
ed browsers and fellow merchants for a
chat when business waa slow.
They conceded that wu often.
The flngerpriDb, however, won't mean
much without a •pectftc suspect nan;t
by pollce.
"The FBI won't t.ouch a set of pr.lnb
un1eu you have a suapect in JD.i'nd.'' Aid
Det..Uv• Sergeant John Rogan IoclaY.
"There are 200 million people in thll
country and if every department aent obi
set of prints they'd be out of busines1 ln J
week," he continued. · .
Slates may have been struck the fatal
blow to the back of the hud by surprise
according to Detecttve Sergeant Clifi
McBride, who emphasized he doetn'I
know. ·
tSee BRUTAL SLAYING, Page Z)
No signs of a struggle could be found in
the shop. where the vlctim kept about S50
in a cash drawer and carried $20 in hi.I
pocket.
His son was across the street on an er·
rand, dropped by Io find !he door locked
so be called Mrs. Blales at home, 11~
Ogle st.. to bring a key.
Mrs. Chotiner Promises
To Tell All in New Book
By TOM BARLEY
Of th Dtll't' Pll1t Sl•ff
White House aide Murray Chotiner and
his estranged wife tCJok their marital dif.
Fountain Valley
QKs I Complex,
l)enies Another
One apartment complex of 170 units
was turned down while another with 484
units was approved by the Fauntaln
Valley PlaMing Commission Wednesday
night.
Both proposals exceed the city 's new
limit on the number of apartmenb per
acre, but the 1pproved project slipped ln
under the deadline.
The 484 approved apartmenb are a
continuation of a ~unit project under
construction along Warner Avenue near
San Mateo Street.
"Sinc.e the project was st.arttd before
our new Jaws were adopted we felt the
precise plan had to be approved,'' Clinton
Sherrod, plannint director, eq>l•fned.
The 484 apartment. will aiver 18 acres,
an average of 26 apartmenb per acre.
Under new city laws the maximum allow·
ed for R-4 (high density) zoning is 20
units per acre.
The plan that was turned down wauld
hsve put 170 apartments on 9.8 acres, an
average of 17 .35 apartments per acre. It
ls in an R..3 zone (medium density) wh!cb
now allows no more than 15 per acre.
Green Valley developers were the IOS·
ers on their p!an to build apartments on
the southeast corner of Slater Avenue
and Ward Street.
Commissioners also den ied a request
for more time made by developer George
Holstein to complete his tract maps on
229 single family homes also in the Green
Valley area .
"He didn't fmish them in the required
18 months and the commission felt a few
changes are necessary in design, ao his
request for more time was denied," Sher-
rod said.
Holstein's homes are planned for con-
struction in the area bounded by Warner
and Slater Avenues and Ward and Euclid
6treets.
From Page 1
COERPER ...
Reinholtz, a director of the Guild to the
stand.
She told the five-man commission that
Coerper had scted as a collection agent
for the Guild, but that it bad receiv~ no
merchandise from him except for a
toaster and an iron during 1969 and 1970.
Mrs . Reinholtz said it was the GuUd's
practice to give toys and other items to
needy children around Christmas time
but said that the goods were not needed
in Derember 1969 because the Guild de.
clded to have a Christmas party for
poli cemen's children instead.
Also testifying at the same session,
Jack Whittaker, a former security
manager at the store. said he was ah•tays
under the Impression that Coerper col·
lected the merchandise for the Guild and
that "thsnk you" letters had been receiv·
ed wh ile he was working for Montgomery
Ward.
Under cross-examination by Coerper's
attorney, Cecil Ricks. he said, however,
that it was not against store pollcy to
give merchandise to other char!Ues. such
as churches. hospitals and arphanages.
Ricks may be trying to prove Coerper
did just th1t. The ne1t hl!arlng bas betn
!flt for 8 1.m. this Saturday. He repeated·
ly asked for clarification on that point
from Whittaker.
Before that gets under way, City At.
torney Don P. Bonfa. who has been ap-
pointed hearing offictr by the aim·
mlalon. Will hear arguments from both
attorneys on a sticky legal quesUon.
It involvl!s the Huntington Beach
Policeman 's P.1anual. complll!d by capt.
Burkenfleld. which contains the clause
under which Coerper was fired.
Rieb' contention is that Coerper was
flrt!d illegally sin~ the portion of the
manual containing the bas is for the of·
ficer's dismissal was never ratified by
the Huntlniilon Beach Cily Council.
"" ferencts to Orange County Superior
Court today for a trial tbat will, Mrs.
Amalia "Miml'' ChoUner predicta, see
the death of their five year marriaae and
the birth of a boot that will ''apose
Chotlner's evil influence" on President
Richard Nixon.
Mrs. Cbotlner, 44, of 1837 Llna>ln Lane,
Newport Beach, promiled newsmen a
series of spicy releues on the contents af
the book while her apparenlly tmrUffled
husband paced the aiurtbouae corridor a
few yards from her.
"I plan to tell the public just what I
learned from five years of close associa-
tion with Chotiner while he acted as Niz:·
on's hatchet man," she said. "We went
everywhere together, conferences, cono
ventions and top level meetings and my
book ls going to tell the world just what
went on behind the scenes."
She said her boot which she will call
''In Care of the White House" will expose
Nixon's "secret maneuvers" in national
and California politics and spell out
Chotiner's role ln "all that wheeling and
dealing."
Chotiner, 59, headed for Judge Samuel
Dreizen's courtroom and the opening of
what is erpected to be a three-day trial
with the aimment that he does not tnaw
"what my wife can possibly wrltt about. ·•r never allowed her to see any
privileged material, I kept no diaries and
l never told her of anything tba.t wu at
all vilal in my 25-year relationshlp with
Richard Nixon," Chotiner said.
Dl.lt.Y PILOT SI..,,,_... MIMI TALKS AS MURRAY PACES AT COUNTY COURTHOUSE
Nixon Aidt ChOtlner, Estranged Wife Mil es Apart
"All she evu had access to was
television, the newspapers and magazines
and if she can write a book from that,
more power to her."
Huntington Man Attends. Meeting
And he qulck1y rejected Mrs. Chot.irler's
statement that "many, many doors had
been closed" to her as the result of her
feud with Chotiner with the comment: "I
don't know what she means. Cettain1y, no
one at any level in Orange County or
anywhere else Including myself has ever
attempted to close any kind of door."
... ind Amulngl
Extrao rdln1ry1
Colosaall
Anthony Q. Sarinana, of Huntington
Beach, ls one of 150 Southern Calllornlans
to participate this month In the White
House Conference on Children.
Sarinana. 47, the Equal OpportwUUes
DI.rector at Harbor College, Wilmington,
will be in Washington, D.C. Dec. 13 to 18
to take part in the session, called by
President Nixon.
Why? Bee•uso In !his brllUant nylon
face shag Karulln'a color wizard• Ii ave
dreamed up 1uch aparkllng mixes u lncrtdlblo
Blue, Amazing Whit•, Eld,.ordlnl!Y Gold and even
Coloaall Copper. FabUlous has 00 of lhasa colors.
They're Ill lnc:redlble, raally,
1-!om -1• ncltfot -..... wftll -lot Mot•· A f ' 1 12' ,_ oofy $1J4.HI
He and 4,090 other delegatea from all
parts of the nation will frame programs
for improving health standards, educa·
lion and general welfare for chlldreri
through the age or 13.
Findings of the conference will be .
published in a report to the President and.
transmitted lo state and local levels for
action. ·
Fabuloos Color!
Fabulous Sh'ag!
FABULOUS PRICE!
IF YOU CAN'T
COME IN-CALL
MU27>
for e exput
carpet
COl'llult&nt
who will
come to
your home
"'1th wnplet
without any
obllpticn
to )'Olll
PROFESSION~.J. GARRETT f U RNlllJ ~~HARBOR BLVD.
OplO Moo, Tllm. " Jlfl, If• COSTA MESA, CALIF.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS 646.0275 646·0276
• \
! •
l
. •.-..-·-
Another First
Senator Jacob Javits (R-New York) appears on television with 16-
. year-old Paulette Marie Desell of Fairfax County, Va., who he plans
·) tO appoint as the first girl page in U.S. Senate. Javits announced
.-; today he will b'reak the time-honored male stranglehold on page
;. pos1tions during an appearance on NBC's "Today Show."
·' • ·~rand Jury Releases New
:tou~ty Planning Report .• .
By JACK BROBACK
01 tM C>allY Plitt Sl•fl
~ Population growth, lntergovernment·
al plaMlng, low Income housing and
overlapping special districts are t h e
concern .of the Orange County Grand
Jury in a report Issued today.
The jury also released brief reports
on the Department of Real Property
Services and the county clerk and reg.
lstrar of voters.
"'"The county is handicapped by not
ftaving a clear policy on growth," t.he
report signed by foreman G e o r g e
Honold suggests.
: "To be effective, the jury believes
this policy should be develope,d not only
by the board or supervisors but a 1 s o
ia-ith Input from cities and special dis-
t;iicts." : "The supervisors, planning commission
4nd plann ing department are praised •
$25 ,000 Fire ,
Burns BuiUling"" •·.
At Pepperdine
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
01 lhtl D1U1 P'lt.I Sffll
Fire or suspicious origin did $25,000
damage to the auditorium facilities at
Pepperdlne College in South Central Los
Angeles this morning at the height of a
confrontation between black students and
t~e administration over firing of a black
public relations man.
Arson is suspected in the blaze which
Was detected at about 9 a.m. by twa
students. It waS apparently started
among the drama department stage
props and by the time fire units reached
the scene. the stage area was "a sheet of
flame". acco rding to campus witnesses.
"Ten city fire units took about two hours
to put out the fire .
In another de velopment. students ar·
riving for morning classes were greeted
by doors which had bee.n cha ined shut
from the inside and guarded by member! of the school's Black Students Union
(BSUJ.
One campus observer suggested that
''at least 50 percent" of those involved
appeared to be non·students.
Security officers were turned away
when they attempted to cut the chains on
the doors.
There were no uniformed policemen on
campus other than the campus security
officers, but plainclothesmen were 1ttn
getting out of city police units. and
mingling "'ith the crowd.
1'1eetings were reported In progress
between the administration and represen-
taUves of the BSU to consider a list of
dem ands by the group.
for initiating the general planning pro-
gram.
"The program activity this year of
necessity has been focused on the pro-
po!ed city of Irvine," the jury report
con tines.
"The Irvine Company plans are both
superior and comprehensive. However,
it would be naive to believe that these
plans will necessarily result in the ac·
chievement of lhe goals of the Irvine
Company, nor Is it certain that all suit·
able goals have as yet been identified."
The jury commends the company for
forming a citizens group tG give input
lo the plan. "There seems to be a lack
of input, however from elective repre-
sentatives.''
"The impact or a new city will be
felt by all the citiiens of the county.
It .is bound to bring more congestion,
more smog. more water pollution and
it is estimated each new citizen n o w
requires over $13;000 capital expendi·
tu re by government."
._ Tie jury notes that cities adjoining
'Ille ,!IJ"l"?'!<d ~-.11(9 holding meetings~bUt· ie.tt that In cities, 1ehb01
districts and special districts in the
cOW1ty should be Involved.
The subject of intergovernmental rev·
enue sharing is briefly touched upon.
"A task force to study thia is urgenUy
needed."
A need for Income housing Is rerog·
nized and additional federal funds are
needed . the jury said. "Some thought
should be given to recycling with money
spent on existing housing rather than
new housing."
The jury mildly attacks the asses.90r's
office but offers no solution to the prob-
lem or "the law which taxes property
on potential instead of actual use . Tax-
ing at potential use yields the greatest
revenue gain but may ha ve undesirable
social effects.
"Taxing at actual use, while slowing
down helter skelter development, en·
courages speculation. This Is also de-
trimental to planning," the report
states.
Elimination of county lslands between
cities and consolidation of eome of the
133 special districts because of duplica-
tion and fragmentation ot services Is
urged. ,
On the Real Properly Services De-
partment the jury report states, "It Is
felt that this department could be op-
erated in a more economfcal maMer
if more responsibility were given to
(other) department heads. There seems
to be a duplication between this de-
partment and related departments."
It is suggested that the supervisors
order a review or all real properties in
the county's ~session and that sur-
plus lands be sold in order U!at they
may return to the tax rolls.
ThUf'Sday, Dectmbtr 10, ~970 H DAILY PILOT ;J
UCI, Cal State Signup·s: Ended
No New Freshmen Applications for Fall to Be Accepted
By JOANNE REYNOLDS kept at UCl and 182 will be redirecied. -Santa Crui: Not acceptina frubman the College of Letten and Sciences (arts
011t1tqt11Yl'11ttst•H "We figure. on havln& about~ per-or advanced standlna: appllcaUODI. biojogical sclence.s and aocla1·1Clencea)
Or.•-Coast high tchool sMlon are cent of those who apply eMlll. We have -San Diego: Not aeceptlna trtlhmln the College of Envtronmental o ·e 1i11
...... room for 1,= new freshme.n and 5SO 1pplic1Uons. ,11ind t,he Sdwlbl ol Criminology.
out of luck lf they h1ven't applied tor advanced standing students in the rail," a -Davis: Only accepting upper diVllJon -S8n!4 Jlarbara: AccepUng fre1hma1
11dmlssion in fali of 1971 to Cal State campua spokesman said. applicatioi\s for the College of Enalneer· and. 'advanctd 'tandtn1 appllcatlo111 ,.
Fullerton and UC Irviue. The current enrollment at UCl ls 6.3&0 lng and the College of A&rlculture and En-cept in Studio AJ;t.
Both achoola have . stopped acceptlng and. campus officials are planning on an vlronmenta1 Sciences. -Les Angele!: AcctP.Ung freshman ap
-enrollment next ran of 7,100. -Berkeley: Accepting tres:hman appll· plications ex.ccpt in Theater Arts a \.i ~
applications. Here's the way the application situation caUoos except for the Co1le1e of Letters advanced standing appUcatklos fro n
A UCI spokesman u ld officials there stands on the other seven UC campuses : and Sclerice and the Colle1e of Environ· juniors only. Theater 1ru, music anci
would ae<:ept only appllca&os from -Riverside : Accepting all freshmu mental Design. Adv1nced '1t1ndin1 •P. dance departments, however, art cl06d
_ returning Vietnam veter&n1 who meet 1_an_d_1_d_v1_n_ced_1_1a_n_dln-""l-•'-PP_li_c_au_·o_n.s_. __ -'-Pllc_•tlons __ .,_,_no_t_b<ln_~l-&c0e __ P_ta_d_f_o_r __ to_a_d_v_ .... _d_atan_dln_g_1_tu_c1en_tt_. __ _
admilslon standard-!, upper dlvlalon ap-
plications for the SChool of En&lnwing
and graduate appiiCaUons on a depart-
mental basis. No other applications will
be accepted.
At Cal State Fullerton, the 11tuaUon
ts a lltUe better.
A campus reptt:sentative said appll·
catlona from junior and ttnior trans-
f ers and graduate students with a de·
sree or credential objective are atlll
belng accepted.
"We are not accepting applications
from freshmen or sophomores or grad-
uate students who just want to take
some classes with no degree objective
in mind.'' he said.
Cal Slate Long Beach Is the only state
school still accepting applications at all
levels although an admissions spokes-
man ~ged students to get their app\i·
cations in immediately.
The closure announcements came after
the regular application period which ran
from Nov. l to Nov. 30 at all SI.Ile:
&ehools.
Jn that time, Cal State Fullerton re-
e<:ived more than 6,000 applications for
5,lOO openings. The spokesmen for ~at
campus said that all those who applied
during that period, and who are schola~
tically qualified will be admitted. Appli-
cations that came in after Nov. 30 are
being taken on a first come , first served
basis.
At UCI 2,272 freshman applications
have been received and 7S7 applications
for advanced .standing (all -0ther under-
graduate classifications) have been
received.
Of the freshman applications, 2,100 will
be kept and 172 will be redirected to othtr
UC campuses on the basis of the appli-
cant's second choice listing and scholas-
tic program requirements. In the ad·
vanced standing applications, 57S will be
President Calls
National News
Session Today
WASHINGTON (AP) -President
Nixon has called a news conference for
today at ( o'clock PST.
With the rail strike sure to top the li5'
of subjects he'll discuss, the President
may also face questions about the
scarcity of opportunity . for newsmen to
question him on national issues.
Press secretary Ronald L. ZJeglcr re-
sponded to newsmen's questions about
the lapse between Nixon news confer-
ences by saying the President still holds
the view he (Nixon) stated a year ago,
that his news conferences should be
6Cheduled when they benefit the publlc
interest rather than the interests of the
press or the President.
The President, Ziegler said, "has a
responsibility to communicate. We feel
he has done that." The press secretary
pointed to several Nixon radio and tele-
vision addresses and speeches In public
forums during the last year.
The three major radio-television net-
works and the Mutual Broadcasting
System plan to air tonight's news con·
ference. Mutual and ABC plan no post-
conference commentary, through C B S
sai d it would present some, and NBC
11aH it planned a ''brief summary."
Progress -Of a Sort
ROANOKE, Va. (AP) -Henry L.
Jones, 35. was fined $50 and sentenced
to 30 days in jail Wednesday in ~lunici
pal Court for stealing two chickens. Talk -
ing to the judge, Jones expressed t h e
thought he was making progress of a
sort. Last year, he explained. he had been
fined SIOO for stealing just one chicken.
Freshly cut trees,
Merry Christmas
prices.
If you'le looklng for a big
beautiful tree this season,
come see ua. You'll find
Scotch Pine and Western
Douglas Fir Christmas
trees In various sizes
and shapes to hold
all your favorite
omarnents.
Scotch Pine
-4 to 5 II. S.99
7 lo 811., 9.99
S-1~2 lo 7 ft. 799
Wiiiem Douala Fir
210311.1.19
3 to 411., 2.49
Sto&ft.349
7 to a IL, 4.49
9to10IL,1.99
Cycl1men in Christmas
bloom to enjoy during
this holiday and for
many to come. Growing
in 4 Inch pols.
1.29
Gray Whales on Way Bonul Juniper growing In a
ceramic planter, already gilt
Now ls Ti ~e for Watchers on Coast
South Orange County's whale-watching
11!a!on is drawing nigh and the winter of
Ut7(). 71 is expected to be lhe biggest yet
_;at least for the "watchers."
)he first California gray whales, along
with a few l<lller whales , have been spOt.--
ted off the coast en route from the chlll
Bering Sea to Lbe warmer waters of the
.... th.
The migration will be ln full awing
frOm the end of December throua;b
February. according to ~hlllp Grignon,
resident whale expert and oceaoography
inflructor for the Capistrano Unified
School District.
'l'he peak Is around the end of January,
11y11 Grignon, when "it looks like a
steamer lane out lhere ."
Grignon will kick off lhti whale mlgrl'I·
Uon stBson with a lecture and slide
presentation I'll 7:30 tonight In San
Clemente High School auditorium, The
program is open to the public without
charge.
Many or the slides he will project were
made> during wbale-watchlng crulae11 out
of San Clemente, sponsored by the school
district in cooperation with the American
Cetation Society and San Clemente
1portftahlng enterprises.
Last year Grignon and his stude.nt teac.hine assistants took mort than S,000
students from throu.hout the county out
to see the whales, with three boats ml.k-
in& four-hour 1'UOI twice a day.
"There seems to be even more lntertlt
this year," Grignon said th.ii wee.k. "Wt
have been asked to lead a l"OOP from the
Sierra Club and there have been reque1ta
for cruises from San Bernardino, Palos
Verdes, Garden Grove and all sorts of
places."
Weekda y cruises are arranged for 1l11·
dent groups , but there al30 ire weekend
cn1ises for the public, he said.
The cruises will start Dec. 23 and con·
tinue through January and February.
There·s no guarantee that gray whales
w\11 be spotted, th• te1cher added, "but
last year we lucked out and 5potted lhem
on every trip -along with dolphinJ, pilot
whales and killer whales."
Last year Grignon and his students also
manned a "whale census" tower from a
vantage point above Dana Point Harbor
and Jogged and estim~ted whale migra·
tion of S,000 to 1,000 of the liant mam-
mals.
The gray whales, which aometimes at-
tain a length of 50 feet and a weight of
35,000 pounds, stay in sight of land
through most of their 8,500-mile joumey
from the Arctic C>cttn to Scam.mon 's
lagoo n in Baja California, where the
females bear their calves, then befin the
long journey north.
Twice in the past 200 yr!ars the species
have been slaughtered ialmosl Into er·
Unction, but the governments of Cain11dA.
the United States, Mexico and the Soviet
Union now have joined in a atrlct pro·
gram <if protection which Is restoring the
gray whale population.
Bo1111I Juniper growing
In a tub for Christmas.
13.99
boxed. 1 0. 99
Bonul Pynconlh• growing In
a ceramic planter •.•
Christmas colors all year.
10.99
BO!llll Bleck Pine growing In
a ceramic planter. 10.99
Cemnlc~alrMdy
Chrlllma gift WTllppecl.
Bona! Tree Kll lncluder.
planting dish, Bonsal plant,
special son, wlra and
how·to Instructions.
4.99
Ch•r9e it et th••• P1nn1y stor11: FASHION ISLAND , Newport Center. Shop Suncleyt, too, 12 to I P.M.
·.
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• ' . •
• ,
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•
iL' •
4 ~LV PILOT
': B.ilge Oil .
'
And Beauty
--By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON -Now that Navy
etary John It Cha(ee has graclousl1
red a halt to lhe dumping of bilge oil
•
Ul'I Ttr.phqlt
Reagan Goes Academic
'
Bot• Side• l!n1leldlftfl
Reds Reject Ne~
'
POW Swap Off e~
PARIS (AP) -Soulb Vlelnam and the
United States offered today to release
North Vietnamese prisoners in return for
freedom of American and A 11 i e.d
priSonen. 'Ibe VJet Cong proposed a
cease-fire under conditions that have
been unacceptable to the allies.
Both pioposals were rejected, said
spokesmen for the deleg.aUons of the two
sides.
The session opened with the South Viet·
namese prisoner 1wap proposal, whl'ch
was immediately backed by the Uniteft
States. South Vietnamese Ambassador
Pham Dang Lam told newsmen the Com·
muni.sts refused to discuss the questiol.
The cease-fire proposed by the Viet
Cong would go into effect when the
United States agreed to withdraw all Ila:
forces from South Vietnam by Jwie 30,
1~71 if South V.ielnam accepted a p~
visional coalition government. Mrs.
Nguyen Thi Dinh. the chief Viet Cong
delegate, said the allied side rejected
this.
Tbe ve dong statement ·<lld}l'!l •UOJI·
ttally vary from~ ~pl. 17 doctar•tlan. It
&t.rts!led thJ.t diScuaaions on release of
prisoners could Like Place ''a.t oiice."
There was no specific meofi~ of the
ne"· South Vietnamese·American pro-
posal today on prisoner release. But the
timing. of the Viet Q:ing statement in·
dicated it came as a· res~nse.
South Vietnam's proposal wu to
release all foreign prisoners held in U·
change for all U.S. IDd other foreign
prisoners held by the Comrnunlsb in
North Vietnam, Laos or ('.amhndia.
Nixon Backs
Ban on Funds
For Cambodia
the ocean, we should all show our ap-
iation by helping the Navy find other
~ays to dispose of 11.5 petroleum wastes. ,
i The most practical soluUon to the pro
blem appears to lie in the development of "\
neW uses for bilge oil. Concerning which I
am prepared to ad"'.anct a few ldeaa.
Gov. Ronald Reagan marches In academic proces·
sion during dedi cation ceremonies for the Reagan
Physical Education Center on the Eureka College
campus in Eureka. Ill. He and brother. Neil, were
honored a s center bearing their name was officially
opened. Bolb are graduates of the college.
The Viet Cong said it was prepared to
discuss the release of American prisoner•
only if the United States was ready to
withdraw Its troops by the 1971 deadline.
The United States previously has rejected
any deadline.
WASHINGTON !AP) -Secretary_ o1
State William P. Rogers gave the Ni1.on
administration's endorsement today to a
ban on funds for American ground com-
bat troops in Cambodia voted by t.bt
Senate.
·-'th•· rir.f iiep lhould. lie a cheii\ic.I
analysis to 'determine whether bilge oil
-TM ~. ~~
. ,1L11~1J{!{rrrm·
r
has· anY C(llJDeUc properties. Whether,
for· eump!e, It tnlght be he1pful In the
prevention of wrinkles. Your incllnatlon, I'm sure, is lo dismiSl!I
that possibility as bopeleasly far-fetched.
,A few years ago. however, you probably
.'WO!Jld have felt the same way about tur-
'ue oil.
YET TODAY. a Jarge number and
variety of beauty prtparations have a
turtle oil but. Turtle oll treatmenta have
in fact become IO popular that giant sea
turtles, which 11.1pply the maln ingredient,
are threatened with extlndion.
'lblnk what an environmental triumph.
Jt •'OUld be ii bilge oil were found to be
1n adeqU1te aubsUlute for, or '!lif:be
even an improvement over , turtle 011.
Both a polluUon ind conservaUon pro-
blem would be erased with e ecolo1Ical
·IWO<JP. "Ladies, are you getting unsightly
....rinklel all over your adorable body?
~try bilge oil, the new miracle
beauty b1th JoUon. "Just sprinkle a few drops in the
bathtub and a to0lhln1 oil slick quickly
spreadi over the surface. Penetrates
your pores and goes to work Instantly
toning up flaccid skin. L e a v e 1 your
adCl'able body feeling vibrant, alive. And
wrinkles vanlsh overnight.
AN0111ER POSSIBILITY that should
be investigated ts the use of bilge oil as a
hair dressing. Closing my eyes and turn·
ing the pupils into Uny television sets, I
can see a handsome sailor, barefooted
and stripped to the waist, standing on the
deck of a schooner during a hurricane.
Not a hair is out of place.
"Bilge oil , the new 24-hour hair dress·
Ing that keeps your hair In place all day
without oombing even in the roughest
weather while it fights infectioua dan·
druff and stops Itchy &calp.
"Just sprinkle a few drops in the plam
of your hand and rub into hair and scalp.
A stimulating oil slick quickly spreads
over your entire head."
Properly handled. bilge oil clklld
become so valuable the Navy would sooi
be stockpiling lbe stuff.
-UPI
Strong Quake
Rocks Peru,
Ecuador Area
LIMA, Peru (UPI) -An earthquake of
potenUal "disastrous" proporUons rocked
the jungled Peru-Ecuador border area
late Wednesday. It appeff.red cente red in
the upper northwest corner of Peru, sev·
eral hundred miles from the killer earth·
quake of Mey 31.
The Uppsala Seismclogical Institute in
Sweden said the energy released by the
quake was about one-fifth of that of the
May temblor, "but is despite this an
earthquake of disastrous measures."
First report& were that 13 persons
were known dead in this earthquake and
that many others were injurtd.
The Peruvian National Institute of Geo-
physics said the quake had a force or y.5
on the Richter Scale of 10 and was cen·
tered In the Ecudadorlan Bay of Guaya.
quU about SO miles north ol the Peruvian
city of TUm~s. , · , ,
Report! from me WeruYlan city "of
Sullana said at least 12 persons w e r e
killed there and "a great number of per-
sons" were injured. (Earlier in Quito,
Ecuadorian authorities said at I e a s t
one person was killed In a border village
and several persons w~ hurt.)
The quake was recorded at 11 :35 p.m.
EST by the University of California
Seismological Station in Berkeley where
technicians said it had a force of bf:..
tween 7.2 and 7.t M the Richter Scale.
Vietnam Student
Slain in Protest
SAIGON (AP ) -A Vietnamese student
protesting the fatal shooti ng of a young
girl by a South Korean soldier was
himself shot to death. on South. Vietnam·s
central coast today . And anti-American
demonstrators in Saigon burned an egglfy
of President Nixon.
Associated Press co r r es pon dent
?\-lichael Putzel reported from Qui Nhon
that South Vietnamese police blamed
Korean troops for the two latest shooting
dealhs. They followed two days of anti·
American rioting in the coastal prov ince
capital sparked by the shooting of a 14-
year-0ld Buddhist by an America n
soldier.
Settlement Seen Near
The Viet Cong statement, issul?d during
a closed-door session of the talks, said:
"On the subject of captured American
military men, .if the American govern·
ment is really .concerned with their fate.
let it declare that it will withdraw an of
Its troops and those of foreign countriei!I
in the American camp out of South Viet-
nam unconditionally before June 30, 1971. In Hughes Empire Case
"In suclt a case our delegation is ready
to enter Into discussio ns on the problem
cf the liberation of the captured military
men, even today, without waiting." LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -A slate
official attempting to settle the battle
over Howard Hughes' million dollar Las
Vegas interests says "reasonable pro-
gress" has been nlade and a secret meet·
ing today "hopefully •. , will result in
a final settlement."
Following a six-hour closed-door meet·
Ing called for by Gov. Paul Laxalt Wed·
nesday, State Gaming Control Chainnan
Vietnam Peace
First Priority,
Finch Declares
Frank Johnson said a settlement was In
sight.
1l'1e behind-the-scenes dealings began
after a state judge adjourned hearings
so that the two rival fa ctions could con·
fer privately. Another court session wa!
scheduled this morning but it was ex·
peeled to be only a prelude to the closed·
door session .
Both sides in the di spute -Robert P.
1.taheu, Hughes' number one man in Ne-
vada for the past four years, and e.xe·
cutlves of the parent Hughes Tool Co.
S. Viet Doctor
Stages Protest
With Grenade
who are trying to ()list Maheu, success· SAIGON (AP) -A South Vietnamese
fully avoided newsmen following the mar· army doctor holding a hand grenade
athon sessiOri. staged a one-man protest against govern.
Johnson Issued i statement saying ment corruption on the steps of the Na-
"reasonable progress has been made'' tional ~mbly building today , lben later
And said he was speaking for both ~ides. was allowed to see President Nguyen
He added that the next session could "re-Thieu.
suit Jn a final settlement." Newllmen were barred from the meet.
STOCKTON (UPI) -Presidential Laxalt . who attended the session, said In& in Independencf Palace. A spokeaman
Counstlor Robert Finch said Wednesday earlier 'this week he talked to Hughes for Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky, who
Rogers emphasized to the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee that the on-
ly commitment the Nixon administration
has to ·Cambodia is to provide aid , ad-
ding, "We are not guarantet.ing tht
defense of Cambodia nor have we ~
rnised to continue our aid indefinitely."
Rogers was asked about the Senile
decision to add a ban on U.S. ground
combat forces for Cambodia to one
enacted a year earlier covering Laoa and
Thailand. While the administration oir
poses aTif congressional moves to tie
President Nixon's hands, he replied, "I
certainly have no opposition to that pro-
posal,
"It carries out the President's In·
tention," he added. ''We have no intention
of using ground forces in Cambodia ."
But Rogers told the committee that it
!s likely "we will request additional
funds'' next year beyond the Initial $2lS
mill ion for Cambodia unless major pro-
gress is made toward a negotiated set·
Uement in Southeast Asia.
lacocca Named .
Ford President
night peace in Vietnam is the naticn 's No. by telephone and the billionaire said the attended he conference. said he dld not
I priority, and "I can hope. for this Hughes Tool executives had his backing know the details of the discussion. DETROIT (AP) -Lee A. Iacocca,
(peace ) in the next 14 months ." in the firing of Maheu. The spokesma n reported the doctor, credited with being the man behind the
Finch, speaking at a Conference of Na-However, Johnson said that Hughes Maj. Pham van Luong, left four Mustang and the Maverick, today was
tional Priorities at the University of the had not been contacted during the six. fragmentation grenades at a guard post named president of Ford Motor Com.
Pacific, said that 265,000 U.S. servicemen hour meeting nor was that action con· before going in to see Thieu. pany.
had already been withdrawn from lemplated. Luong clutched a grenade in one hand lacocca moved irito a post whlch had
Southeast Asia, though "the disengage· The billionaire recluse, who has not and had three others in the pockets of his been occupied by a thrtt·man team since
ment is not as fast as I or anyone would beef n seen Jn publidc siartencedhe arrhe iv~. here paratrooper's uniform during his day-Semon E. Knudsen was fired 15 month!
personally like." our years ago, ep t city two 1 .. 1 H 'd lh d ago wetks ago and left the two factions lock· ong v1g1 . e sa1 e grena es were to .
The former Health, Education, and ed in a power struggle for control, each prevent any interference by police. He IacOcca's prun;clion was announced by
Welfare. Secretary called the ne1.t 14 claiming his endorseme nt. Hughes re-declared he was staging a hunger strike Henry Ford II, board chairman of the nl·
montha for withdrawal a "workable portedly is in the Bahamas. against corruption. lion's No. 2 automaker, following a
figure," though not an official one. During the court session, Hughes Tool Still clutching the grenade, Luong, 36, meeting of the oompany 's board -Of direc-
Questioned on the impact of the seniori· Co. sought to quash a temporary restrain· climbed into an official car se nt for him tors.
ty system ill Congress on national ina-order obtained by Maheu preventing by Ky to take him from the National lacocca has been president for Ford'•
prioritie5, Finch termed il a "gcritol a .takeover by the Houston.based corpor· Assembly building to Independence North American operations, one of three
system" unrepresentative of the mood 1'=a=ll=o=n·===============P=a=l'=°'=· =============~pr~e~s~id~e~nt~s=w~h~o=r~epo~rt~ed~to~H~e~nry~~F~or~d~.;
1 and will of the public. 1r
He said committee chairmanships in
Congress were slow to change harKts,
noting that in the November election 60
Congressmen were reelected without op-
position.
He said committee chairmanships
should be seJected with fiecret balloting
"at the very least" and candidates should
be chosen only after consultation with the
entire party caucus.
A TERRIFIC BUY • • •
Finch said the second national priority
should be "basic education for all to
remove adult illiteracy." He said th is
could be done for nine million people over
a 10..year period.
GET ·THAT HOtlDAY LOOK IN A .
DASHING NEW DOUBLE BREASTED
SUIT OR SPORT COAT!
Big Snow Warning Issued
HAllOl SHOPPINCO CENTU ON THE MALL
HAllOl ILVD. AT WILSON ST., COSTA MESA
540.1500
Large Storm Builds Vp Over Western Mountains
Callfol'ltt.
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$10 VALUES
DOUBLE BREASTED
SPORT
COATS
$140 VALUES
~,. N1tlH11 M1nuf1th1ren
DOUBLE BREASTED
SUITS
OPEN DAILY 9,30.9..P.M.
SUNDAY I 1,00.5 P.M. lankAmarlcard Master Char9•
' '
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•
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Teday'I Flul
N.Y. Steeb
'* . ORANGE C;:lUNr.(; CAtlFORt\llA THlJ RSDA Y, DECEMBElt 10, 1970· TEN CENTS
T urning • Ill Friend Big Battle for :DetCctive
••
r: By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
, • 01 .. Dtlrr 'rift st•H
· .A JHuntington Beach detective said
WeddeS<iiy that he battled with his own
~~nee in a secluded room for some
·Uibe,J>:e(ore. taking the step which led to
the dismissal of his friend, ·Officer
Gilbek Coe'rj>er, on a charge of misap-
propriating merchandise.
· '(It · was-a bard decis!On for me to ~ei~ tesWied Det .. Sgt. Monty McKen-
...
non during a city personnel commission,
hearing Which is considering µte r.e-in-
:itatement of Coerper.
"I had a real wann friendshiR l9f'
c.oerper, bill I , am also a professional
police offietir. SO l ·took the only recourse
I had open to. me." tbe honUcide I fn..
.vesUgator said. He said be sought advice
from a higl>Elr officer. _ .
Coerper, 36~ was dismi,ssed from the
force last A~t after be allegedly kept
donated Montgomery Ward store
merchandise for himself rather than gfv-
ing it to the cb!rity-oriented Police Wives
Guild.
McKennon, a friend Qf the. motorcycle
patrolman 'since 1964. said he was in-
formed that no "thank you" .letters had
heen, sent by the Guild for the merchan-
dise. ·
"Mr. Ricketts (the store's security
manager) asked.me to look into thiJ mat•
PLANES AT LOS ALAMITOS NAVAL AIR STATION TO BE. REPLACED BY PEOPLE
F-.leral Officials OutliM Plj ns for Military DeP9Nl•'9t :H'oU~ing
•
Los Alamitos ,
~ears fla~s
Of Ne~ City
' A new .city of 10,poo persons will be
c:reated within the )City limits. of Los
Al!lmiros. · i
that., was the prospei:t outlined Wecines-
t\ay to city and scoo;1 officials. ll will
(ollow uie ctsSation of flight operations
ne;xt July at the NaVal ~r Station.
· The information was ~ffered by a brief-
ing': team from the U.S.:: Navy. the Navy
~~ineers ·and the Secrepry of Defense.
They~ were telling Los Alamitos of·
ficials what is going to' happen in the
eight years after flight operations are
11bpped.
The 'Navy plans to construct 2,600 new
hotisin'g units to house dependent families
o( Navy personnel in the Los Angeles,
~g Beach and Orange County areas.
!flclwb!:d will 'be a limited $Urilber of Air
Fert"e ,and Army families ..
C.OUOty Supervisor David L. Baker, who
atitended the briefing. said •city officials
"6.·ant to cooperate with the federal pr~
gfam •• but feel they should have been
brought .:into the planning at a much
ed:rllet date."
'The 1,337 acre air station, used largely
for training Navy Reserve flyers and
ground personnel, is entirely within the
city of Los Alamitos.
·Most buildings on the base now will be
utiliUzed for ground. aviati'1 training
Which is to· continue. Th~ present
ficlllties have ·an esUmated r~lacement c9st or $41.2 million.
'~rder.ed .10 Destroy All'·
Sa ys Galley. Attor_ney
FT. BEN111NG, Ga . (uPI) -Lt.
William L. Calley's defeMe attorney told
a $ix-officer .militarY. court ,today that
Calley took his ·Platoon lrito the Viet-
namese hamJet of My LaJ under orders
that "every Jiving thing in that area be
killed."
In ,a brief opening statement, Defense
Attorney George W. Latimer, Said Calley·
Would 'take the stand in his owri delerute.
alid give ·a full iCcount "of .his actions,
condUct and 'behav!Or."
(411ey, 'rl, is accused· of killing, or
ordering killed, 102 South Vietnamese
civilians March 16, 1968, the day he led
his platoon on a search-and-destroy
mission through My Lai.
,Latimer said the cluster of villages in
which My Lai was situated was known as
'Viet Cong country and a death trap for
American soldiers.
Many of the meynbers of Calley's pla·
toon had been killed or had aJnnS and legs
blown off and bad been "ruined for life"
in preceding weeks by mines, booby traps
arid ambushes set by 0 civillans ol all
ages" of the a:re8, Latimer saiCI.
The day be.fore lfte attack, he said,
funeral services· had been held for three
soldiers who bad been killed. He said the
feeling at the seniices was a geiieral
mood of reprisaL
Then, the company commande:r, Capt.
Erriest Medina, called a meeting,
Latimer .conUnued.
••He told his1men that at long last they
were going to ,cloee with the enemy and .
be given the opportunity to get even for
the loss of lhelr buddies," Latimer said.
·"He said·the area ~as defended by the
48th Viet Cong Bat~ion, one ,of their
finest, and \be mission was not only to
search and destroy · My Lai 4, but fay Lai
Sand 6.
'"He said the information was that all
c!vilial}! F 'd left the 8rea and if any·wef.e
renialning they would be Viet Cong or
Viet COng sympathizers.
"He orde'red the village burned, the
animals shot, the wells contaminated and
every Jiving thing in that area killed."
He said higher commanders were in
the area that day, including on the
ground, "and nothing was said about the
killing of civilians until a lunch break."
Other commanders were flying over
the action anJI should have known what
was happening, Latimer said.
Some Viet Cong of military age were
killed (presumably by arUllery or aerial
fire) before the ground troops got
there. He said this killing was done "right
at the edge of a ditch in which the
go\'ernment contends Calley killed at
least 7U screaming women, children and
old men." "
Latimer said Calley and his platoon
had been inadequateJy trained and in-
structed for this kind of combat. Some of
the· platoon members had not been in
combat before, he said, all believed their
sweep would be "bitterly contested," and
some were frightened .
ter and ,straighten It out some way. He
didn't .want to create any problem, .. the
burly detective •!lid.
McKennon said be subaequenUy told
Coerper that the store wanted u,e notes
of appreciation for the met-Chandise and
that Coerper replied that "a letter !bould
be coming in at any tlme." 1
When the letters still did not arrive,
McKennon, who was employed a!j; a part-
time security guard at the store, went to
capt. Mlcbaef Burkenlleld with lhe' pro-
blem.
"I leU It was an lnlernal.~ 10< lhe
adminlatrative divlaion to ~e, not a
crinUnal ooe. I WU praying that ll
wasn't." ·
An ln-boule lnv.,UgaUcm h n formally
concluded that Coerper "84 'mi6handled
the -and that "' had lied )o officers condudlng the Inquiry. His
d!1miaaal followed lmmedlalely by Police . '
Chief ~rle Robltame.
DurinC cross-examination,. MclCennon
tesUfled that he neva:. bid 1111)' doubts
about Coerper's lnlepity·or honesty up to
the time of the alleged char&e.
"It would be real bard not to like
Coerper,'' he added. ''.He bu the kind of
personality that moot people would Uk•."
During the aame -loo, prosecuUon
1ttorn<y Michael Miller called Mrs. Jack
(Set COEllPZll; Pqo 11
Bandits Surr.ender
' .
'
Police Arrest 3 in Valley Robbery
Bandits held up 11. Fountain Valley
market Wednesday night, making off
with '200 as the ·angry store clerk folloW·
ed them into the street, firing four shots
at their fleeing auto. .
Minutes after the armed robbery of the
7-11 Market at 10545 Slater Ave., police
captured three suspects wilJloot a struS:·
gle after surroundJng their car with seven
police wilts on the San Diego Freeway.
Ron-aid Lee Sanders, 19; Rudy Perez,
18, arid Jesus Miguel Casanova, 19, all of
Santa Ana, were booked into Orange
County Jail on suspicion of armed rob-
bery.
Store cletk Tommy W. Cooper, 23, told
police two men entered his store about
7:50 p.m., flashed a pistol and asked for
the money from the cash register.
Cooper said they left, entered a waiting
car· and started to leave. At that point, ,
Cooper told police, he t o ot out his
revolver and fired foU, shots at (be
flee~·car. . 1fo!ioe said -bullet ,~.· ..... found·· In ' tbe Ieli 'rear leader-, ·o1. tllo . ~'car. ·
Aftfr lirilJI II tl!•·car, c-'""" [le ran back "Jmo the Jlon! and ,phoned a dtscrip~ o1·u.e gfta'way car to Fouo-
tain ValleJ po!k:e. ,
Moments lit,r. Detective set. Fred
Nourse and lmestJgator Jim Worrell
spotted the SUli~ts· car eritertng the San -
Diego Frffway from Magnolia Street.
NOurse and Worrell, in .an unmarked
Student Voting
Status on Park
Board Weighed
Should a student be appcinted with full
status to tilt Huntington Beach Parks and
Recreation Commission?
Councilman Norma Gibbs mentioned
the idea when the city council was in·
formed this week commissioner Tom
Cooper bas moved out of the city and Is
resigning.
Mrs. Gibbs pointed out that several
cities in the state had ap~inted youths to
par!; boards, to serve as voting members
and not just advisers. She recommended
that the city consid~r appointing a young
person to fill Cooper's vacancy.
Councilman Jack Green said that col·
lege-age students might be considered
but felt that high school youths might be
too young.
Mayor Donald Shipley said that all ap.-
plicants for the post would be given equal'
consideration after Councilman Ted
Bartlett pointed out that the city already
had received se~ral applications from
competent citizens.
pollef!·car, followed-the clber car onto the
freeway.
"We radioed for help," Noursf: related.
Black and white patrol cars ...... two
each from Fountain Villey, Huntington
Beach and West.minller -pulled
alorigside Nourse's Cari
T8e suspects didn't notice the 1even-car
motorcade trailing ~. Nourse said.
On a signal from Nourse, ofneen Ii all
cars flipped on their red ligbtl. and
sirens.
The •••peel• pulled oll the rr-11
near Valley View Street and gave ap
without a struule, pollce related.
DeteeUves indicated the suspeda wauJd
be questioned aboqt a number of G1her
armed robberies in Orange County.
Christmas Mail Logjam
Worsened by Rail Strike
.
Poslmastert alonl the Orange .eoast alarm. any.one at this ,ti~," be l8ld. "?
are hr~ tlielr stall. lor the ChrlstnW . would suggest that Chriltmu Is ,IOltiac nlall~t w~lch ..... been ~pl~l<d cloetr than l1IOll of ua realize, and-lbia tlils · "-lho ma' flilllor ~'• •II!"""' isn't oln1 to llelp.t' ': '!
bi' • neuh'.t.i nil·.u;::~, '" ;~., Ttiityei said ~e IOO-mlle limit In "'1icb
'11te•tl!)berao. inaPlulod Wednelcloy bJ the HCOOd, third and· looir!h daa mill
Poslmlllllr General WlnlDa Bloanl, fJ•.; will i., delivln!d tocludes ·the ~
,_ .-•. third """ar .... ~ lllJf of the San Joaquin vaney and tu lei be"del!vered .more ll*! · II. ;,c V-, but f1.oet oot bJdude §an FraJ>. ~. -. Chor... ~-"So ti ,.,. ... 1, lo oeixl· ......,. .. Cavafil l iald'lhl types· ol 11!111 covited bJ to ,.....,.,.tiJdl,tbia 1Ho, plan on lllillC
lho emborp Include .,.....1 poll, l>uJ>b a&Wil fl" lira! clus." he. added.
lions I ncl catal-. . The CO.ta Meoa . poojmaster alto sug.
Most Chrlslmu .. packigts ·are ·malled gesl<d sorting the lint c.lass ll)lll Into
by parcel, post but ~l.stmal cards tra~ , groups of mail to be delivered within the
bf fint class mall. city and mail to be, delivered ouls~ the ~'The only thinl ·l can suggeal for peo-city. "This means that if you live in
pie who want to mail Christmu .packages COsta Mesa you'll. have mall going to
is · to aend them first class or airmail, Costa Mesa addresses only and mail
even though 'it (15 rather cosily," said going to all other addresses."
John B. Kluglewicz, Costa M e s a He, said lh1I will help post oftb
pOStmarter. employes clear their decks in preparation
Newport Beech Postmaster P,ayne for the settlement of the rail diipllte
Thayer sugges4ed residents · get all their which is bound to bring a deluge of pan:e1
mall In as earlY as posaible. "I hate to IS.. MAIL,. P•I• 1) .
* * * * * * Rail Syste1n Paralyzed
In First Day of Strike
• WASHIN9TON (AP) -Striking
trainmen paralyzed the rail system na·
tionwide t<ilay atthough the ranks of the
walkout showed signs of brtak.ing in the
first few hours.
Still, hundreds of thousands o f
suburban commuters bad to flnd other
ways to .work and freight was stalled
while three of four unions in the 500,000-
ma:n strike said they wert canceling their
strike orders.
unions in ordering their men back tt
work.
"We expect that the fourth union allt
will comply with the law," said Ziegler.
Rescinding strike orders were the
United TransPortatlon Union, t b •
Brotherhood of Maintenance Way and the
Hotel, Restaurant and B a r t e n d e r 1
1See STRIKE, Pqe 11
Oruge
'The school districts ' affected
Atiaheim Union High -Schoo\ •. and Los
AJanUtos Elementary -will be presented
some problems.• ·
Drug Gap Se~n . Closing
ne 200,000-member Brotherhood of
Railway Clerks held out, saying nothing
despite coniresslonai ancl. court bans on
the strfke,1 a~ ·a plea irom President
Nixon to stay on ttte job.
Spot,.checks showed members of the
olher , three unions · were honoring the
clerks' picket ilnes.
Weatllier
Are you ready for some 'nice,
warm Santa Ana· winds?· They'll
be along Friday, pusblrtg the
mercury up to 70 degrees under
flUMY skies.
,Baker said the military men told the
lfOUP that land would be provided for
three elementary, one junior high and
one· .aenior high school. Some federal
fwxls are available to aid the dis,.tricts in building. • ..
There will be.three park sites in the
future planning and they wilt pro6ably be
devekiped jointly by the federal ; city and
cdbnty governments, Baker said.
.The Department of Defense estimates
ti.it t$.8 million will be spent at the base
om ·the next eight years to complete the
preject. This should provide some
*loyment, department offtcials. said.
lU off site impro\iements, street ·widen-~. traffic signils, sewee systens1 trash
dlljpotal and simUar scniices wilL be pro..
\'kfed by Los Alamitos or Orange COUnty.
Baker sald be suggested one partial
solution to the financial problem, sale of 200 acres of properly not yet clas.sified
fo~ \1$e in the fed.:!ral project and
dcyelopment of an Industrial park.
10ne certain result of the plan -.there
wW be no private plane airport there as
aunested in the Parsons Air Plan !or the
C<NDQ>.
'
Youth 'Turni1ig Off' Af ter P erformers' Deaths
Pean-Central spokesmen said they
doubted anyone would come hp.ck until
picket lines dJssolved.
Overland passenger trains sat in Los
Angeles terminals, nothing was hap-
Death Is begiMing to reduce the newspapers and television placed on the
credibility gap about hard drugs among involvement of both rock stars with hard
teen-agers. . narcotio hit home. Their death did more
That is the opinion of Huntin~n Beach talking than a stack of pamphlets by
High SChool Principal WoodroW Smith medJcal authoriUes.
who believes that the passipg .of blues "Although l'm not a resear analyst, 1
helter Janis Joplin and super star Jimi would say that on our cam thert is
Hendrix turned more people off than more· pattfjng or the Wctke I tyPe with
campus "drug assemblies" with their big alcohol and puff a of mari · a," be con;.
pitches. tinued. . . . . "The kids. ar<n '• willlnl to !oll~'!~lhe • ·•:Th~ 11meater "<· had three kids'
advice 'of• aulh<>rtty fil\U" .... Y mart. . wfio had lo be taken away !tom ochool by
'llley're not buying the fi\ar1Juan' threat. · amOOlanoo or by their parents for lreat·
And they thin~ movies of Sonny and Cher ment. Out of a lotal of 2,200 kids, that's
putting down dope is a.shine on or put· not too tough.
on," be said. "Actually, by the time they're tn the
"They're listening to the information 9th grade they've pretty much made up
warning of the danger• of uppers and their minds on how much they're going to
downers because of the deaths of Janis play around with narcotics. But in looking
Jolpin and Jlmi Heodrtx. They 're getting out my window ever,.day and ·seeing the
shy of the hard stuff and moving more kids, I would say that a good fo cent
into marijuana and alcohol." wouldn 't touch the stuff wllh , a !10-foot
Smltb belleves the heavy emphasis pole on a conUnui111 basis."
' .
Smith said marijuana usage ,Is definite-penJiig with the Southern Pacific in
ly present among ·students, but the in· Arilona and In Chicago 140,000 commut..
creasing usage of harder drugs such as era switched to cars and buses for a way
heroin, speed, LSD and cocaine has not to Work. , -
manifested Itself. ~s for the clerks, their headquarters
"It's not as much as you would think. said an announcement of some sort would
The kids are turning back to liquor and ~~made aometjme1 la~ in'. the day. In
the occasional use of marijuan.," said ~ula~IMlaade,ks l~r~:.-'iW.'rt
Smtih. ' · · ' au) on •trlk!:". I~ Clev~and '°"'" •l<Fks . ' The prjncipal . said be,. ,pe!ID~· ·were worllnJ··Wder • c;ourt lnj1"1cUC111,•;, J>elleves bt>th , are , dangerou. a n 4 , ~ ~tre .OU:~ ~ · • · • , ' . ; , , 1r
delt-imental but that tnedlcal' atithorititl .• A first indicator of the economic COfto
are sUU divided on whether-Ol8rij\llna 18eQUt~ Oltbe ~lke w.:S.1een JP'~est
causes harmf¥1 psycbologic'al a nd ~ VirSlnLI wbert IOO ~'081 ·mloers · wer.e ,
physical effects. · ~ed ,away beta~ of a , coal, t~ ,
He said that although he ...., not k,.p , ·~•-SpOkesmen for lhe lnduotry in .
reCords of how many Huntingtqn Beach tbe ,~tate aald1all 1~ mfn~ .,ouki 'bt
High School 1tudenl1 are taken Into shut clown by mklnlgbl Friday II the
custody, he Is notified by.the police 1bou~ strike collllnues. O>ol ls fuel lot heat Incl
all Off-campus arrests. · electricity in the na~'• urban centeri. ,
And among_ \hOOO\ the upeded switch At tbe · Whlto l!Oii,., press O<Crelary
to har<Jer drugs ln mass numbers simply Ron1ld L. ZieRler expressed optimism
ftasn't taken place, be llid. tbe clbru would join .Jhe thrtt other
,1
' J
•
'
m smE TODAY
Need some fdeai about what'1
good to get for 11our lOved On.ti
at Christmas? See ipecia! Gift
Stction in todoy11 DA IL Y
PILOT.
~~,·-14 ,.;:,s
' . ' C~9.ISTMAS
llrtll• •• ca lfOl'llla • C~Cckillt U•· 1
Cltttllltl ff·J:t C-k• ,.
Crou~ '' 11 1 111ttnc .. 11 Dlwll'Cft It
••:krill l'•t• ' •~ttrt••"-' u flln.1111c• \ .. ,, tfOtttttM 14 Allll L,f!Mn IJ ........ uc.-1•
•
' • I ' !
,
I
1!19 ... ----.... -~------------------.....,.-~~~-:-~~--..
I
H Tllul1d<i, Otcombtt 10. 1970
CAILY PILOT stiff not.
CORONER'S MEN REMOVE BODY FROM MURDER SCENE
Costa Mesa Bu1ine11man Killed in His Store
Traffi~ Heavy
Stril:oo Shows Effect Nationwide
IJ Ualte4 l'ml llterutloUI
The 6Jg dUes were first to show the ef·
fecta of the naUonwide rail strike today.
AuU> parking lot. built up qulci<ly U>
capacity. Roeds were jamme.d. Buses
were packed.
railroads were not moving their dally
200,000 tons of freight -half the total -
into the· nation's second-largest city. The
137,000 daily train riders -110,000 of
them commuters -had to find other
In metropolitan Chicago, where 137,000 means o{ traveL
riders crowd the traJns on a normal day, A spokesman for the usociation of
Jong lines built up out&ide of city and rommerce and industry reared the strike
private parking garages as ~car pools would "snowball in tremendous layoffs
emptied their human loads. The Chic:ago and .lhutdowns" because nothing has Park District opened Iota on the fringe of the downtcwn buainess section to take. . "greater impact than a rail strike, unle1s
care of extra automobiles, estimated to it was some dlsa!ter auc:h as loss of elec-
total 17,000. triCity or our water supply."
Ttatflc coniina: to the city from the While the strike t>egan snarling the
suburbt crawled. hauling of f""1, food and freight to and
New Yorkerl ·jammed tighter Into !rpm farm and factoey it. first impact
aubwlys 'Wblcb on Donml days are pack· ' wu on train vav ..... -ih aome c:ases eel to the doors. About 150,000 commuters who ordlnarlfy ride the Penn Central Uto before the •trike began at 12,01 a.m. to-
the cfl3' were forced Into· the bus or cor day. . ,
pooll. ~ In many 11t11, t.rains whole runs Delrci!t realdeJlta, wilo trOfti a"llfJy \>r ; -1d baVe ended ~ alter the . 1trike
auto rilher then tral!!, ,!1Prrf'4 ',11111!!;. deadline were canc:tled earlier Wed· about wblt wu to come td>er ttaD lbll first-day effects. A General MotorJ nesday. In some c~s. the runs ~re
spokesman iaid auto production would be begun but n~t flDlllhed -leav~g
throttled within a week H the strike con. paasengers stranded between starting titmed. point and destination.
But few aspects of the nation's ·:it just . s~p~ and left us here in
economic llfe were not, or wotild not be, Philadelphia, said Mrs. HaMah Hayes, aff-~-• by the allc t 56, Latta, S.C., who had hoarded a New
C\;ie\I w ou · York-~Florida Penn Central train.
S kes_man for the big . three a~ "'They !Old us tickets to go to LaUa.
m m Detroit said a ratlroad a~rike ''If they -knew this was going to happen
w . shut down the industry within a they shoUJdn't have sold us the tickets.
weeFknl. t 1,. hly 1 t t AU nta My medic:ine's about to run out and I a cu w. uaem p an a a , need my money back " Ga., ~ to two four-hour ahifta -from ·
two eight-hour shiftg. This affected •bout -tJ: -tJ:
3, 700 workers~
General Motors and Cbrysler cut shifts
Jn their Delaware operations. At Newark.
N.J ., 4,000 Chrysler empolyea will he laid
<>ff if the strike lasts four days, an official
of the assembly plant there indicated.
Thousands of workers in Pennsylvania
steel mills will be off the job within a few
days if rail traffic does not resume
because of inability either to move finish-
ed products or to receive raw material, a
liteel executive said .
A r.U shutdown would be felt qulci<ly
along the oceanfront, an official of the
Maryland Port authority said. It won't
take long, he said, for merchandise to
pile up at the port.
In Chicago, the nation's rail hub.
DAILY PILOT
OltAN0£ GOAST ,.U.1.ISHlNG COMPAJCV
Robert N. W11d
P..-ldeit tlllll ~111w..r
J1c:k R. Curl1y
Vitt P~Jd'1ll trA CMl!fr1I M.tM0tr
Thon111 k11¥il
E4110t'
Tho11111 A. Mirr,hiH
MIMGlnl ltliw
Al111' Dirk!"
WW°"* c-tr..., Allttrf W. l1t11
Mllclete l:dl•
Mntl ...... OM..
11e1s le1dt loul1•1r4
M11li111 AdcJr11•: P.O. a.x 7t0, 92641
otNr OMc.
LllUM tlll("l'I: m "°"''t .a~ C..11 M•t: IJO Wat hy i!rttl N-..n a.u~i %211 W•I a.lbff 16ultYlrt atn C""""": au HMh II c-r .. ltM.I
From Page 1
STRIKE •••
International, which represen ts dining
c:ar employes.
Said the dining car workers' president,
Ed Miller : "It is the policy of this in·
ternatlonal union to obey the law."
The UTU withdrawal was announced in
Cleveland by W.W. Carson, assistant to
Charles Luna, the union's president.
In telegrams to all general chairmen
and international officers, Carson advlged
that because Congress passed -and
President Nixon signed -legislation pro-
hibiting a strike and guaranteeing a wage
increase that UTU was canceling Its part
in the atrlke .
The strike. which began at 12 :oi a.m.
was the nation's third in the last 50 years.
The emergency law passed by Congress
early today ordered the strikers b&ck to
work with a partial p&y increase.
"They are lncrea3ingly angry and bit-
ter," said strike leader c . L. Dennis of
the nearly 500,000 workers who walked
aut at 12:01 a.m. and showed no lm·
mediate tncllnatlon to return in com-
pUance with the new law, a plea frem
President Nixon and a federal cowt
order.
From Page 1
MAIL ...
post and other embargoed classes of
mail.
No post offlc:e In the a.rea will accept ,
any parcel poat mall . "We cAn't stack it
up here and wait for the end of the em·
bargo, because we'd run out of space in
about hslf a day," Covault said.
AU the orange Coast postmasters said
they will see to It that all m•ll rtt<lved
in their offices on Christmas Eve ls
delivered by Christmas Day.
"I'm really hoping that this will get
str&Jghtened out before too Ion~."
Covault said. "At this juncture, It wot.(d
probably be best to wait a couple of days
and ste what happens.
"But one thing, we wilt do, ind that ia
deliver all the mail that comes in here.
no matter how late we have to work." •
Mesa Man Bludgeoned to Deatll
Merchant Slain in R()bbery; 'Didn't Havei an Enemy'
"" . IJ AllTIMI 11. VINS!L If .... llllY Jllef •t•ft
A a.year-old merchant without a
bown enemy in the world was beaten to
death in his lltUe Hawaiian clothing sbop
ln bu1y downtown C:OSta Mesa Wed·
netday, his poc:kets torn inside out and
empty.
Someone had smaailed In the back of
Samutl J. Biale1' head with a blunt ob-
ject, before locking up Hawaiian Isle Ap-
parel, 1793 Newport Boulevard, aod
fleeing.
No more than $75 could have been
taken.
"He was just a well·liked little old
man," said Detective Sergeant Cl if r
McBride as the investigation intensified
toc!Jy.
Tbe victim was discovered about 2: 15
p.m., when bis wife Zada and son James
came to the store with a key, convinc:ed
ooinothli>c ,.., Wl'OllC·
•lll-181, a ioUIJJnt Costa Me I I l!lllfciwlt and nofal property o.._, lay Iii a pool of blood In the Uny ortic:e .,.a
at tbe rear of the colorful PoiyJ!esian·
style store.
A blood-4imeared claw hammer he bad
used to tack Olrlstmas lights across
i>amboo-mat storefront was confiscated
as evidence.
Crowds of the curious g1tbered u
police marked orf the scene for clues,
assigning: Detective Jim .Blaylock to bead
a probe of the senseleN homicide.
"Why couldn't it have been somebody
younger -somebody wbo could have put
up a fight," asked businessman John
Davis, tears staining bis cheeks.
"My God. Somebody would havt to be
crazy to murder old Sammy," added bis
close friend.
Davis was absent from bis adjacent
store during the period beginning before
and after 11:45 a.m., the last Ume th• .
Mrs. Chotiner Promises
To Tell All in New Book
By TOM BARLEY
Of t~e Dally Prtet S"fl
Whii,t House aide Murray Chotiner and
bis estranged wife took their marital dif.
Fountain Valley
OKs 1 Complex,
Denies Another
...
ferenc:ts to Orange County Superior
Court today for a trial that will, Mrs.
Amalia "Mimi'' Chotiner predic:ta, see
the death of the.Ir five year marriage and
the birth of a book that will "ezpose
Chotiner'a evil influence" on President
Ricllard Nixon.
Mrs. Chotlner, «. of 1637 Lincoln Lane,
Newport Beach, promlaed newsmen a
series of spicy releases on the contents of
the book while her apparently unruffled
husband pa~ the courthouae corridor a
few yards from her.
One apartment complex of 170 unit. .. 1 plan to tell the public Just what I was turned down while another with 484
unila was approved by the Fountain learned from five years of cloae aaaocia-
Valley Planning Commission Wednesday lion with Chotiner while be acted as Ni:r·
night. on's hatcllet man," she said. "We went
Both proposals 'e1ceed thf! c:ity's new everywhere together, conferenc:es, con.
limit on the number of apartments per ventions and top level meetings and my
acre, but the approved project slipped in book Is going to tell the world just what
under the deadline. went on behind the scenes."
The 484 approved apartments art a She said her book whic:h she will call
continuation of a 9()0.unit project under "In Care of the White House" will expose
coostruction along Warner Avenue near Nixon's "secret maneuvers" in national
San Mateo Street. and California politics and spell out
"Since the project was started before Chotiner 's role In "all that wheeling· and
our new laws were adopted we felt the dealing."
precise plan had to be approved," Clinton Chotiner, 59, beaded for Judge Samuel
Sherrod, planning director, e:zplained. Dreiien's courtroom and the opening of
The 484 apartment.I will cover 18 acres, what is erpected to be a three-day trlaJ
an average of 26 apartments per acre. with the comment that he does not know
Under new city Jaws the ma:zimum allow· "what my wife cari pauibly write about.
ed for R·4 (high density) zoning ii 2Q "I never allowed her to see any
units per acre. privileged material, 1 kept no dlariea and
The plan that was turned down would I never told her of anything thit was at
have put 170 apartments on 9.8 acres, an all vital in my 25-year relationship with
average of 17.35 apartments per acre. It Richard Nixon," Chotiner Wd.
Is Jn an R-3 zont (medium density) whic:b "All she ever had access to was
" . llilhtly hull! vJCtlm WU .... alin. ~o one else in tbt immediate area -
Including a bu!y beer bar, employm .. t
agency and coffee &hop . ~ ootie'ed •
anything unusual, except that sammy waa cloeecl.
A quick call for 115sistance brought
Garden Grove Police Officer William
Compton and his trained German
Shepherd, 'lltund<r, who often get. such
special uslgnments.
Sniffing around the blood.spattered of·
lice. Thunder led detectives, in suspense,
down a rear alley and around the corner
toward municipal COW't, where he stop-
ped at a parking place.
Investigators believe the killer left his
car in a stall alongside CO!lta Mesa Park.
Fingerprints or all kind! wtre: foWld in·
aide the little shop, where Biales welcom-
ed brow!ers and fellow merchanta for a
chat when business waa 1low.
They conceded that was often.
The fingerprlntl!I , however, won't mean
much without a tpeclflc suspect nuqec
by Police. I
"The FBI won't toti:ch a set of ~b
unleaa you ~ve a awpect in mind,' .-id
0.toctiva SUgeant JoiuJ Regan today.
"There are 200 million people in Urn
country and if every department &enl Olll
se~ of prints they'd be out of buslnw in 1
, yeek," he continued. .
Biales maY. have been struck the fatal
blow to the ~aclc of the head by •urpri"/ accordJng to Detective Sergeant Cli.f
McBride, who emphasized he doesh:I
know.
1See BRUTAL SLAYING, Page I)
No signs of a struggle could be found ID
the shop, where the victim kept about $50
in a cub drawer and carried $20 in bit
pocket. I • His son was across the street on an er·
rand, dropped by to find the door lock!d,
so ht c:alled Mrs. Blales at home, 314
Ogle SI., to bring a key.
" J iu.1 ~ PILOT l"ft , .... MIMI TALKS AS MURRAY PACES AT COUNTY COURTHOUSE
Nixon Aide Chotln1r, Estranged Wife Mil•• Apart
Huntington Man Attends. Meeting now allows no more than 15 per acre. television, the newspapers and magazines
Green Valley developers were the los-and if &he can write a book from that, Anthony Q. Sarinana, of Huntington He and 4,090 other delegates from all ·
ers on their plan to build apartments on more power to her." Beach, ii one of 150 Southern Callforru'••• •· f th u· ill f i the southeast corner o~ Sfater Avenue And he quic:kly rejected Mrs. Chotiner's ........ pari.o o e na on w rame program '
and Ward Street. statement that "many, many doors had to participate this month in the White for improving health standards, educ:a:
Commisaioners also denied a request been closed'' to her as the result of her House Conferenc:e on Children. lion and general wellare for childre'n
for more time made by developer George feud with Chotiner with the comment: "I Sarinana, 47, the Equal Opportunities through the age of 13.
Hol6tein to complete his tract maps on don't know wha t she means. Certainly, no Director at Harbor College, Wilmington, Findings of the conference Will be
229 single family homes also in the Green ont at any level in Orange C.Ounty or will be in Washington, D.C. Dec. 13 to 18 published in 1 report to the President and
Valley area. anywhere elst including myself has ever to take part in the session, called by transmitted to state and loc:al levels for,
"He didn't finl&h them in the required attempted to close any kind of door ." President Nixon . action.
18 months and the commission felt a few 11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. changes are necessary in design, so his
request for more time was denied," Sher-
rod said.
Holstein's homes are plaMtd for con-
&truc:tlon in the area bounded by Warner
and Slater Avenues and Ward and Euclid
streets. •
From Page 1
COERPER .•.
Reinholtz. a director of the Guild to the
stand.
She told the five.man commission that
Coerper had ac:ted as a collection agent
for the Guild. but that it had received no
merchandise from him except for a
toaster and an iron during 1969 and 1970.
Mrs . Reinholtz said it was the Guild's
practict to give toys and other items to
needy children around Christmas time
but said that the goods were not needed
in Dectmber 1969 because the Guild de-
cided lo have a Christmas party for
policemen's children instead.
Also tes.tifylng at the same session,
Jac:k Wh1tt.aker, a former security
manager at the store. said he was always
under the impression that Coerper col·
lected the merc:handise for the Guild and
that "tha nk you" letters had been rece iv-
ed while he was working for Montgomery
Ward.
Under cross-examination by Coerper's
attorney. Cecil Rieb, he said, however.
that it was not against store policy to
give merchandise to other charities. sucll
as churches. hospitals and orphanages.
Ricks may be. lrying to prove Coerper
did just that. The next hearing has been
set for a a.m. this Saturday. He repeated·
Jy 1sked for clarific:ation on that point
from Whittaker.
Before that geb under way, City At·
torney Don P. Bonfa, who lw been ap-
polnted hearing offic:er by the com·
mission, wlll hear arguments from both
•ttomeys on a stJcky legal question.
It involvea the Huntington Be1c:h
Policeman's Manual, romplle:d by Capt.
Burkenfield, which contains the clause
under which Coerper was fired.
Ric:k!' c:ontenlion is that Coerper was
flrtd Illegall y since the portion of the
ma nual cont1lnlng tht basis for the of·
ficer's dismissal was never ratified by
the Huntington Beach City Council •
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H.J.GARRFff fURNllURE
PROFESSIONAL O M --& ~ I 2215 HARBOR IL VD, PM ... •~ "" ,., COSTA MESA, CALIF.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS 646-0275 646.0 276
. •
'
•
'
'\
I
. .. ...
•
Newport Beaeh
·EDIT I ON
'
Today's 'Fiiiai
N.Y. Steeb •
~OL 63.;NO . 295 , 4 SECTION S, 5~ p~_s;es ORANGE CO,UNTY, CALIFORNIA TH!JRSDAY, DEcEMBER 10, 1970, TEN C~NTS . .
Balboa Bay Club Concedes ·Apartment Def eat
By L. PETER KRIEG
Ot llM 0.llJ Plttt St11t
Balboa Bay Club officials today con--
ceded defeat in their battle for high-rise
apartments arid diSclo&ed instead plans
to coMtruct a $4 million 71-unJt complex
the same height as their now · famo\13
Chinese Wall.
Richard Stevens,· exeoi.tive vice presi-
dent or the BaY Club, said plans are be·
ing drawn for a five-story. L-ahaped
itructure along lhe waterfront at tbe
southeast end of the· club property. 11ie' club leases the land along Pacific
Coast Hlgbway, just west of Dover Drive,
from the city on a lease expiring in
1998.
On the property.la a.145-unlt apartmen't
stretching laterally along . the shoreline
that residents have termed the Chinese
Wall.
In ,gt they claimed "as an effort to
· av.old duplication of that kind of project.
c officials had applied fw a zone
chal!ge to allow construction or twin
towers, 100 reet high, that would oot block
nearly as much harbor view.
The reqliest wu rejected by the Plan·
ning Commission and a subsequent ap-
peal to the city counclt was denied. ·
Stevens called the-71-unlt · project
•'Phase 1" ot the club's building plans
for the rtmainder of'their property, but•
declined to elaborate about what future
construction mi~ take place.
· He said t.be new apartmenls will re·
Mesan Beaten to
•
quire the club to move two Ws&g mo-
tel units, one a thret-etory, JI.unit 111'Uo-
llft tnd Ibo -• hn>ll\O<Y. 16'wllt
elructu.,,,
They will l>O. moved about 300 feet
cloeer to Ute Coast "!lhw•Y. to-make
room 'for the riew bullding, Stevens said.
All or the new Wlits will have Views of
the harbor. lie said, and will be between
1808 and DIG square feel
ConslnJction ii scheduled to begin -fall and be complet.d by lbe Mlmmer of
Death
Popular •Merchant, 68, Slain in $75 Robbery
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 00I n. O.lly l'lllt Stiff .
· A .-Year~ld m.ercbant without a
known eneqiy in the worlci was beaten to
death· in his UtUe Hawaiian clothing shop
iD busy downtown Costa Mesa Wed·
nesday, his pockets torn inside out and
empty.
Someone had smashed in the back of
Samuel J. Biales' head with a blunt ob-
ject, before locking up Hawaiian Isle Ap-
parel, 1793 Newport Boulevard, and
fleeini.
Postmasters
Gird .Staffs . -
Eor Deluge
Pol!InasteTS alonl tlie Orll>ge Coast
1.re bra·cing thelr stalfa for tbt Christmas
mail g111t which has been complicated
thiJ year by the mail embargo brought on
I by.a national rail strike. ·
1 The embargo, in!tituted \Vednesday by I PostmaSt.er General Winton Blount, af·
feej..s seC9nd, third and fourth class mail
to be delive.red more than 300 miles.
Laguna Beach Postmaster Charles
Covau1t said the types of mail covered by the embargo include parcel post, publica-
tions and catalogues.
. MoSt Christmas packages are mailed
by parcel post but Christmas cards travel
tty first class mail.
· "The only thing I can suggest for peo-
ple who want to mail Christmas packages
is to send 'them first class or airmail,
even though it is rather costly," said
,John B. K1ugiewicz:, Costa Me s a
j>ostma~ter.
j Newport Beach Postmaster Payne
1 'rhayer su~gested residents get all their
•mail in as early as possible. "I hate to
1 alarm anyone at this lime," he said. "[
would suggest that Christmas is getting
closer than most of us realize, and this
embargo isn't going to help."
Thayer said the :JOO.mile limit in which
the second, third and fourth class mail
will be delivered includes the southern
half of the San Joaquin Valley and Las
Vegas, but does not include San Fran.
~~e MAIL, Page %)
* * * Trainnien Strike
Paralyzes Rails
Across Nation
WASIDNGTON (AP) -Slrlkln1
trainmen paralyzed the rail system na-
tionwide today atthough the ranks of the
walkout showed signs of breaking in tbe
first few hours.
Still, hundreds of thousa nds o f
1uburban commuters had to find other
ways to work and freight was stalled
while three of four unions instbe 500,000-
man strike said tbey were caocelina: their
atrike orders.
The 200,000-member Brotherhood of
Railway C1erks held out, saying nothing
despite congressional anci court bans on
the strike, and a plea from President
Nixon to stay on the job.
Spot checks showed members of the
other three unions were honoring the
clerks' picket iloes.
Penn-central spokesmen said they
doubted anyone would come back until
picket lines dissolved.
Overland passenger trains sat In Los
Angeles terminals, nolhing was bap..
petting with the Southern Pacific ln
Ariuma and tn Chicago 140,000 commu~
en switched to cars and buses lor a way
to "'Ork. •
As for the clerk.!, their headquarters
said an annouocemtnt of some sort would
(Set STRIKE, P11t 1)
No' more lhan $75 could have been
taken. ~·J;Je ~as . jl1$t ,a , .well-liked. ljttle old.
man," said Detective Sergaant .c.1 i f.r.
McBride as the invesUgaUon illtemified
today •.
The vlcUm was di.sewered about 2:15
p.m., when bJa wife Zada and son James
came to the stcre with a ltey, conVinccd
something was wrong.
Blales, a longtime Costa M e s a
mercq&nt and rental property owner, lay
In a poolol blood in the tiny olUce area
at the rear or the colorful Polynesian-
·-
style sloN!.
A· blood-smeared claw hammer We had
~ to ,tack Clµistmas . lights ac~
bam'oo<>-mat storefront was confiscated
as evidence.
Crowds of the curious gathered as
police marked off the scene for clues,
assignlng i;>etective Jim Blaylock to head
a probe of the senseless homicide: .
1'Why couldn't it have been someb®Y
younger -somebody who could have put
up a fight," asked businessman Joba
Davis; tears stainlng. bis cheeks.
"My God. Somebody· would have to be ·
'
' OotillY ,llOT 119'1 1>11119
MIMI TALKS AS MURRAY PACES AT COUNTY COURTHOUSE
Nixon Aldo Chotlnor, E1lrongod Wifo MUOI Aport
Mrs. Cliotiner Promises
1To .Tell Al·l in New Book
By TOM BARLEY
Of Ille DellY '"'" Sii "
White House aide Murray Q)otiner and
his eStranged wife took their marital dif·
ferences to Orange County Superior
Court today fdr a trial that will, Mrs.
Amalia "Mimi" tbotiner predicts, see
the death of their nve year marriage and
the birth of a book thal will "expose
OKltiner'• evil lnOuenoe" on President Richard Nixon.
Mrs. Cbotlner, ft, of 1637 Lincoln Laoe,
Newport Beech, promi!ed newsmen a
aeries of spicy releases on the contents of
the book while her apparenUy unruffled
hlllbend paced the courthoUBe corridor a
few yards from her.
"I plan to tell lbe public just what I
learned 'from five years of close aS10Cla.
ll~n wlUt Qiolintt "bile lie acted •• Nix·
on's hatchet m11n,1• she said. "We went
everywhere together. conferencea, con-
ventions and top level meetings and mJ
book b going to tell the world Jusl what
~·ent on behind the scenes."
She said her book which slle will call
••tn Care of tbe White HOU!t" will e1pose
NJJ:on11 "aecret maneuvers" in nattonal
a~ Calif91'1lla politics and !pell out
Chcillntr'• role '!' "all lhat wheeling and
dealing."
Ow>Uner, S9, headed for Judge Sam11el
Dreizen's courtroom and the opening of
what is expected to be a three-dsiy trial
with lhe comment that he does not know
.. what my wife can possibly write abo•.1t.
"I never allowed her tc see any
privileged material, I kept no diaries and
1 never tcld her of anything that was at
all vital ln my 25--year .relationship wilb
Richard Nixon," Cbotine:r said.
0 AD lhe ever had access to was
television, the newspaper! and magazlnes
and If she can write .a book from that.
more power to 'her."
And he qulckly rejected Mrs. Choliner'•
statement that "many, many doors had
been.closed'' to her u the rtSUlt of ber
feud with ChoUner with the comment: "[
don1l krioW what she means. Certainly, no
one at any level in Orange County or
anywhere else including myself has ever
attempted to clo.e any kind of door."
Mrt. ChoUner, who Is represented bf
Los Angeles attcrney Bernard A. Leckie,
says her book is at the halfway stage o(
preparation and her tape recordi~,
document.I and manuscrtptl • re
•icarefully. locked away In_ a llfet.7
(IM CllOTINER, f111 J) •
' '
~
crazy to murder ald Sammy," added hil
close frlehd.
Davis was abeeot from Illa adjacent
store during the period beginning before
and after 11:"5 Lm., the last Ume the
slightly built victim was seen alive.
No one t1.se in lhe Immediate area -
including a buzy beer bar, emplOyment
agency and cat'fee shop -noticed
anything unusual, except that Sammy
was closed.
A quick_ call for assistance brmght
Gard en Grove Police Officer William
(Set BRUTAL SLAYING, Pace %)
Traffic Plan ·
Will '~ ... "' ,_,_e. ' .,. ,,."~
I~s~S!!Jdy .
'Ille~ study ii !refile In New.
port Beiclj will proboblJ tali -)y ·I ,
yut to complet<, once a ~tut rlttn
ts hired 19 do the ""rk, CllY Traffic Ehll-
neer Robert Joffe aeld today.
The. 'disclosure by Jaffe that It will l>e
close' to the ·end of 1971 bf:fore the stU;~):
Is completed means ther'e Is little \f
any chance that any information com-
piled , by it . will be avaUable fi'.efc:n .a
referendum an the proposed · Pacific Coast Freeway lake• place In March.
The referendum, forced by the Citizens
Coordinating Committee, seeks to re·
!cind an existing agreement with the
State Division of, Highway•. ~ a ~on
of the route through the city.
In addition, tt seeks a charter amend-
ment that wou1d ... force fUlure eteclions
to detmn ine If the city council c:an .algn
agreements with p!e state ~n any .addi.
tk>na l freeway routes proposed within
city limits. ~
. Jaffe said a progrtsa repart on ·staff
efforts tcward securing a consultant for the comprehensive study will be dellv.
ered to the city council Mondiy by Pub-
lic Works Director Joseph T. Devlin.
More than half a dozen consultants
were Interviewed, Jaffe sald, and the
number under canslderalion has now
been narrowed to the two or three who
Devlin will recommend . be allowed tc
deliver fonnal presentatlons to the coon.
di next month.
Jaffe saJd Devlin will ask the council
how It wants those presentations made.
Jaffe said the estimated time needed
to camplete the study, was consensus
of the esUmates of the various consul~
ants intervtewed.
Some did indicate the ltUdy could be
fin~hed in as little as elgbt manths, he
~aid, but Jt likely wUI take • few months
lon.iter. He said the matte r of price ha1 not been
discussed with any af the consu'.ltant.s. '
It's just something you don't do,11"Jaffe
1ald.
"Just like you don't go around getting
prices from surgeons for an operatian,"
he said.
He said. however. the PT1ce offered by
(Ste TRAFnc, Pqe t )
Laborer's Death
Kept From Wife
A young carpenter, whole wife Is ex·
peeling a baby today, coilapoed this
niomtog wbile working on the Parlr: ·
Newport Apartments. He . was declared
dead on · arrival at HOii Memorial
Hoopllal. , .
ldeollflcallon of lhe man Is being
withheld pending notification of his wife.
Police saJd the vlcllm'1 famUy 11
withholding the informaUon from ber un-
til Ute birth of Ute child.
Pulice reported the 27-year-old man, 1
mident of Paramount, was working wtth
ceiling jolsu on the aecond noor ol 1
buUdln1 •-construction wlleD lie col· Jap!ed at I a.m.
An autope}' h11 been ICbedWtd to
clet.rmino U., ....,. of 4talb.
•
1972.
"We 'fill stek no vlriances what.so-
ever," Stevens said, u he again critJched
the city for rejecting lbe hlg!o.rise plans.
''But we~re not Fotng to beat our heads
11oJmt the wall.' he aeld, ~f think It Is
a ~-l!O!ortunai. th1D& .but that's lb&
Wlf tbtQp 10."
Slev.,.,hacf told Ute coanclJ when It
WU--~Ing the appeal that the
twin to:ftrf woul4 be far _. estheti-
cailJ' pleasln( than the Jonler, Io w c r
strucllft allawt<I In the pmenl -.
He said the prellminary· p1aqs for.
the new apartment show it extendint
about 200 f~t alone the waterfront and
at least the · aame distance along tbl
southeasterly ~y 'lice..
The Bay CJ9b aqjoPui· the . ~ltlulive
Bayshbres tesldenUal area at .that .. encf.
Residents there bad ... pcoteated loud and
long agalnst'the toWen'plan at varloua
p116lic bearings earliar· lhil year. -
, • J , IWLT PILOT ..,..l'lllllt ' ' CORONER'S .MEN REMOVE llOJ:!Y FROM MURDE~ SCENE
· · Ca1t1 ·M111 Bu1ine11men1 KOIH 'II'! Hlf Stor•
,
'Ordered to Destroy Al~'
Says Calley ·Attorney
Fl'. BENNING, Ga. !UPO -Lt
William L. Calley's defense attorney told
a slx.afficer military court today that
Calley took his .platoon. into .tbe. Viel·
namese hamlet of My Lai under orders .
that "every Jiving thing in that area be
killed."
. In a brief opening statement, .Defense
Attorney George W. Latimer ,aaid Calley ,
would ·take the stand ln hi& own defense
and 'give a full account ''of bis actions,
condu'ct and behavior."
Calley, rJ, Is accused af killing, or
ordering killed, 102 South Vielllamese
civilians March 16, 19611, the day he led
his platoon on a · search--and-destroy
mlsskln through My Lal.
Latimer said the cluster of villages 1n
which My Lai was situated was known as
Viet Cong country and a death trap for
American soldiers.
Many of the members of Calley's pla·
toon had been killed or bad arms and legs
blown off and had been "ruined for life"
in preceding Weeks by mines, booby traps
and ambushes set by "civilians af all
ages"·of the area,·t:.aumer said. , ·
The clay be!,,.,,,, the 11tack, be aald,.
funeral services had been held for three
soldiers wbo bad been tilled. He· aaid the
feellng ·at ,the 'services was a ge.iteral
mood Of reprisal.
Then, the company commander, Capt.·
Ernest Medin/I, called a meeting,.
Latimer canilnued'.
"He told his ·men· Utat el lo111 laal lhey
were going to. cloite with the enemy and
be given the apportuntty to get even for
the Jou of ~Ir. buddies," ~timer said.
"He did the area was defended by the
~th· Viet COng. BatlalloD, One of their
finest. and the mission was not anly to
""1'Ch and. deslnly My Lal 4, bul M)I Lal
I and 6.
"He cald the lnfon'ilaUon w2s that all
civilians bad left the area and lf any were ·
Services · Conducted.
For l\l anager's IGn
Funeral aervicel were held today In
Ven.Ice, Fla., for Wiiiiam L. · S!Gan, the
falher·in--law of Newport Be.acb clty
mana1er HatveY Hurlburt.
,Mr. Sloan died In .Florida Monday
dutinl-sur1ery. lie wu U )'tan old.
remaining they would he Viet Cong or
Viet Cong sympathizers.
,"He ordered , the V~ge burned, th"'
aDimals shot, the wells,contaminatecf and.
everY uvmg thin£:· ln that.~rea killed:'' -' • ~
Jfe .$8Jd higher .ca~ "'-ere .. tn .·.
the area that
1
day, includlf.lg . on . the . •
ground, "and nothing -,va.f .said about· the •
killing of civilians untU 8. lunch break.'' O\!ler commapders were flying ov~
th,e action and should have known What
was happening, Latimer said. .
'Some Viet Cong of military a1e were
kiUed (presumably by artillery or aerial
fire) before the ground troops got
there. He said thi11 ldlling was dooe "right
at the edge of a ditch in which the ,
government cantends CAiiey killed at
leost 70 screaming women, children and
old men."
Oruge
Weatfaer
. Are you ready · for. some nice,
warm Santa Ana winds? They'll
be along Friday, pushing the
mercwry up to 70 degrees .under
s~ si.tes .
INSmE TODAY
Need 1ome ideaa about what'r
good to get for your loved ont1
at Chri.stmo17'1See aptcial Gift
Sectio n in toda11'1 DA 1 LY
PILOT ••
l 'rtlt• c~ •!111'111• Cl!~C~lllt U11
Clln;fl .. con1:c1 Cttt~
D:.. ~ "'91'"9 ·-Ed.ttr.11 , ...
l r:tttt•lllllltlll ~·-· -
" • ' n"' " " " " • .. '"·:! A"-! lllldtrt 11 ~LkMMtlt
•
•
t DAILY PILOT N
,.,.._P .. el
STRIKE .• .'
bt llllde IOlll•tlllle liter In the day. In
Pblladelpbia a clerlll lelder nld: "We're
1Ull on strike." -In Cleveland some clerks
were •Oltinl under a C(IUl'I lnjWJ<lloo,
IOIDt .,.... <XJt.
A !int Indicator of the .economic con-
sequences of the strike was seen in West
Virginia where 800 i..'Oal miners were
turned away because of a coal car
shortqe. S)>olt.,m•n for Ille Industry In
the state nld all t,!50 mines would be
ghut down by midnight Friday if tbe
strike continues. Coal is fuel for beat and
electricity in the nation's urban centers.
At the Wbit.e House. press secretary
Ronald L. Zie&ler expressed optimiam
the clerks would join the three other
unions in orde-ring their men back to
.work.
"We expect that the fourth union alao
will comply with the law," said Ziegler.
Rescinding strike orders were Ute
United Transportation Union. t b e
Brotherhood of Maintenance Way and the
Hotel, Restaurant and Bartender 1
International, wbicb npresents dlnlna
car employes.
Said the dining car workers' preeident,
Ed Miller: "It is the policy of t1>i1 JD.
ternational union to obey the law ...
The UTU withdrawal was announced ln
Cleveland by W. W. Carson, assistant to
Charles Luna, the union's president.
In telegrams to all general dla~
and international officers, Canon adviled
that because Congress paned -and
President Nixon signed -legfllatlon pro-
hibiting a strike and guarantef:ing a wage
increase that UTU was caoceling ita part
ln the strike.
The strike, wbich began at 12:01 1.m.
was the natiOn's third in the last 50 yeara.
The emergency Jaw; palHd by Congrees
early today ordered the strikers back to
work with e partial pay Jncreaae, • DAILY l"ILOT l"llots llY •ki..rd ICMflltr "They are increaslngly angry and bit-
ter," said strike leader C. L. Dermis of
Ille nearly !I00,000 ..,.km who walke\f
out at 12:01 a.m. and abowed no im-
mediate incllnalioD to return 1n eoms
pli~ with the new law, a plea from
PrUldenl Nixon and a federal courl
order.
'THUNDER' SNIFFS FOR MURDER SUSPECT'$ SCENT
Gordon Grovo Offlcor Biii Compton Lends Dog to Search
From Page 1
••The men and women wbo work for the
railways have bad a bum rap fOr a ~ng
time," Dennis said. 'Ibey will remain off
the job until tbey win their demands for
substanUal pay -ta above cumnt
wagei ranging from .13.'5 to $3.!0 an
hour, be l!ald. .
BRUTAL SLAYING ..•
Trains bearing _.,. and goods,
Including Christmas mall, ground to a
hall and government officiala predicted
dilal1:roUi elfecta on the natlOn'a already,
Jroubled economy H Ille strike 1uta loll(.
Pmldenl NI•on stayed ap lhroll&h the
night · u Congress labored p11t the
mlnu~·mldnlghl strike deadline to trod"";•-Jaw.
~ ~ ~
Compton and bis trained German
Shepherd, Thunder. who often gets such
special aulgnmenta.
Sniffing around the blood·spattered of·
flee, TbWlder led detectives, in suspense,
down a rear alley and around the corner
Joward municipal c:our!, where he slop-
ped at a parking place.
Investigators believe the killer left bis
car lD a stall alongside C'.ollta Mt.\l Park.
Fingerprints of all kinda were found In·
aide the UWe shop, whtre Bialea welcom.
~b-and !eJ!ow,merchanta !or 1
-·-........ wualow. They conceded that wu often.
The finlerprints, however, won't mean
1 Pro• P•e i much without • apecilic 1u1pect named
M i~ · I . ~ ! ~.fl1rnr ""'l~• lit o1 prlnis AID • • • , . -~1 ' I ~~ hrie I infinind, ., 11ld
:;,_ ,L VO l!ergoanl J Jlef&J! ~·
ciseo. "So It you want to 1111 pa~ ...... ere ar~ 200 million peopll-lD this
to placea· outside tbJs area. plan on Olin.I country ~nd if e~ department sent .one
airmail er first clua," h6 added. · \ · ~t of pript.s they dbe out of butlnes& in a
'lbe Costa M.,.. poetmaster aloo ..,.. -k," he =Unued. ·
gested sorting tbii first clua mall into !Hales may bave been struck the ~~tat ,
groups of mail to be delivered within the blow ~ the back of ~ head by surp~.
city and mail to be delivered outside the according to Detective Sergeant Cliff
city. "This means that if you live in McBride, who emphasized be doesn't
Costa Mesa you'll have mail going to know.
Costa Mesa addres&es only and mail
No signs of a struggle could be found ln
the sh.Op, where the victim kept about $50
in a casb drawer and carried $20 in his
pocket.
His son was across the street on an er4
rand, dropped by to find the door locked,
so he called Mrs. Biales at home, 31t
Ogle St.. to bring a key.
Sgt. McBride marveled at their helpful
composure under the circumstan~.
Technicians from the Orange County
Sheriff's crime lab combed tbe premises
as passersby paused and Christmas shop-
pers driving by slowed to gawk.
"Mele Kalikimaka,0 pidgin English for
Merry Christmas in the islands the
Biales were to make their annual visit to
next month, offered &ta.son's ereetings.
A barmaid in tight capris leaned
against the doorway of Vikki's, weeping
aofUy as she watched police.
Grime-stained, a man in gretn Texaco
suvlce station clothing stepped toward
the shop door, where Patrol Sit. Bob
Goode and other officers stood guard.
"Ho.Id it sir," said one.
"I was just going to buy something."
said the would-be customer,
"Sorry. He'1 closed for the day," one
replied. .
going to· all other addresses."
He said this will help post office
employes clear their decks in preparatiori
lor the settlement of the rail dispute
which is bound to bring a deluge of parcel
post and other e'mbargoed classes of
mail.
No post office In the area will accept
any parcel post mail. "We can't stack it
up here and wait for the end of the em-
bargo, because we'd run out of space in
about half a day," Covault said.
Four School Districts Eye
Unification Move hY, 1972
All the Orange Coast po15tmasters said
they will see to it that all mall received
In their offices on Christmas Eve is
delivered by Christmas Day.
''I'm really hoping that this will get
stralghtened out before too long,"
C:Ovault said. ''At this juncture. it would
probably be best to wait a couple of days
and see what happens.
DAILY "PILOT
ORANGE COAST PU9LtSHIHG COMPAHV
Rob•rt N. w,,d
J•ek R. Curl.y
VICe Pruidtnl •nd Gtntr•I Mtn11er
Thom11 K11vil
EClllOt
Thora•• A. Murphi11•
Mt!'lt9l119 l!dll'Or
L. P•kr 1Crl•9
NtwJIOrt tffcn (lly l!dllw __ .,,...
2211 w,,t l•lbo1 loul1v1rd
M1ilir19 Addr1111 P.O. lox 1175, 92661 .,_.,,._
Gott• Mt11: JlCI Wftl l•Y Strett
l.tOUIM Btlot": 2tt l"Offtl AYtnllt M1,111tl"'l'Ol'I a.tel'll 171,5 IMd'I IOUlt'flrd
.. ,. C""*'111: SIS Norlfl IEI c.mw. ....
f)ATLV lllLOT, """" Wflldt 15 CIOl'l'lbl""' "" N_ll,,_, 15 Ml..,,. lhll't' 0<-..f ~
Hy lfl ...,_,..19 tlllllOllt Mr C..NUNI lllkti.
Ht'#JION hK!I, Cwll MIN, H1111!/llfl'Olil
&etc" •lllf llounttfrt VltltY, ''°"' Wlft! 1\00 rt11111MI ldlltol'*. °'...... CMil,f lli!allf!'llnt
CMnpeny "''"'"" ,i11'11l ,,.. 11 nn w .. 8411&iol DIVCI .. NIW'OOl'1 lllCPI. .... "° wm II>' Jtrtl1, C..tl Mtll,
T1l1p'11• 1714) '42 .. J ll
Cl..tflM A"'-rtilJI.. '41·56 71
c.wrrtt~t. 1t10. Or•rot Cotll ,._..ltll"'9
Ol<Pl ... ny. No -tlorltt. ltlutlf'•llotW.
edl!'llrlll ""'""' or IClwtrlh.•lftflltt frlrf1'1 ""'Y bit r111!'0d\ICM wllltovf •PKltl ..,..
"''"ion fll eowrft'I• -· S«ollCI effh potT•ft N ld It N.....,,, hltdt
lfl(I ces11 M.,, (fllf0{1111. ~rlofkwl err ft•rltr U.U "*'"'1'1'1 11Y fNll U.1f '""'11'11)<1 mll!llN dft,!ll\llloM, .,,b tPltl'rtl'ltf.
Administrators of the four districts that
would make up the geographically largest
unUied 1ebool district in Orange County
plan to meet next week to set up timing
leading to the required June, 1972 unifica·
lion election.
Ralph Gates, superintend ent of San
Joaquin Elementary District, said hls
board bad received inst.ructions from the
Orange County Committee on School
District Organization calling for unifica.
tion plaMing.
In 1965. voters of the Tustin Union High
School District, Tustin E I e me n ta r y
District and San Joa quin turned down a
unification plan that was acceptable to
voters in the tiny, but geographically
large Trabuco Elementary district.
Because unification failed then, a $20
per pupil state aid incentive was lost to
the proposed TusUn unified district.
$20,000 'Saved'
On Parking Lot
For Balboa Pier
An apparent low bid of $249,6$, or
$20,000 leu than budgeted. was received
Tuesd1y Newport Beach officials for re.
construction of the Balboa Pier parking lot.
The Aattc: LolJl)lran Co. of Santa Ana
was the lowttl of• nine bidder• oftertna to
rebuild the entire MO-space parkitlg
laeility.
Ed McDonald, project enfineor. uld he
expects to forward the contract to the ci-
ty council Monday night for .acUon.
A&tec Loughran's bid was SIO,Ooo btlow
Ult se<:ond loweJt bid received from the
Sully Miller Construction Co. of Orange.
The high bid WIS made by the Griffith
Co. of Santa Ana. 1341.956.
McDonald said th6 sptcilications call
for the work Jo be completed by March
19.
The reconstructed lot will have M
metered spact1 while the rest will be
desicne<J within a regul1ted all-day paid
parking area.
I •
While state law no longer mandates
unification along high school district
boundaries. is ls poaibJe such a plan
could be submitted once more to the
voters.
Gates said It was "too early to tell"
what kind of unification proposal will
result, but that the districts probably
would formulate a plan.
The County Committee has the authori·
ty to submit a plan -probably calling
for unification along high school district
boundaries -in the event a district fails
to submit its own plan. according to
Robert Matthew, secretary to the C:Ounty
Committee.
The school organization approval body
will hold hearings <>ct. 8, 1971 on unifica-
tion plans for Orange C.ounty. There are
three otber major high school districts
that have yet to unlly.
On Nov. a. 1971 unification plans would
be presented for evaluation to the State
Board of EducaUon. Following their ap-
proval, voters get final say at the polls on
June 6. 1972.
Another alternative to unific.1.1tion along
higb school boundaries that may be con·
sldered would involve splitting the high
school district and the elementary
districts whose students continue on in
the Tustin high schools .
As many as three unified district&
might be carved out or tbe land area now
included in the Tustin high district.
Residents of Irvine may garner some
(If the area of the, Tustin high and San
Joaquin districts.
Tustin elementary and a portion of the
hll!> achoo! dlslrict might combine as a
unJfied di1trict.
And flnllly, Ille southern portlons of tile
Tustin high and San Joaquin districts In·
eluding El Toro and Mission Viejo and
Trabuco elementary mi&ht form a third
unified district.
Limiting such a three.way split ls the
recnmmended 10,000 pupil minimum call·
ed for ln U1e education code for unifitd
distri cts. A total of 24, 763 students attend
schools of the four districts. Of these:,
10,086 attend Tustin £lement1ry schools,
7.591 are enrolled In San Joaquin schools,
48 in Trabuco and 7 ,038 are In the hi&h
schools of the Tustin district.
'
I Charges Dropped Against r ocal Student .;:
S-.!nlle Im~ quite aa """'Clll Tiie ~ him. ber~and admlnlalralloo otflclala ~
System u be wu a few week! a10. The campus blacl st!Jdei:it JeadU tree. r~ with Smlth at the office of John" C:·
CrlmlnaJ ma,,.. qa!nst tile 30-yeal' ly admitted Ulina a liberal dooe of 1..,,... H2y, UC! vice chanc:ellor of student at;
old UC ·Irvine black graduate student lettor words Jn llOlll the fiist speec!t; fatra. :·
and campua ditc Jockey are to be drop-against white radical student&, and the ''Smith did admit he violated a ~
ped, contingtllt upon two .Upl.llations by second, against administrators aztd Jaw. Lion of the UCI standard of conduct,''!
the Orange COODty Oi&trict Attorney's men. His defense was tbal they aren't Serber explained, potriting ·out if pro!:
Office. ob&cene. blbit.s lewd or obscene commenta ar
He was tried in Harbor Judicial Di> He will not be tried a second time, conduct on university property. :
trict Court a few weeks ago on two If he Meets campus disciplinary prober 'Ibe prosecutor in Sweet Ernie'• fiy.;..
counts of lewd and obacene language be-tion requirements imposed until next day trial sai d Smith's admisllon of,·
' fcre women and children. 1be trial end· June 15 and makes no more Gateway guilt makes the point he argued in tbt .
ed in a hung jury. Plaza speeches. _ coortroom. ·
A new complaint· involving a second Sweet Ernie's arraignment on the 1ec· "If I aay ln public, I know
speech in UCJ's Gateway Plau was is· ond two counts was ftt for today, but ('ve broken the Jaw,'' the young D.\
5Ued, charging Ernie Adolphus Smith was eliminated by on<:ampus handling said. ~
with the same offenses. The speech was of the csse. No women or children were ln e~
IUa analysis of the power atructure that Deputy Dlstrlct Attorney R'ussell Su· shot. .. . .
From P .. e l
CHOTINER .•. Suspect.ed Burgl.ar :Tea~:
ilepoelt vault." She refused to diaclooe lhe
pel'Ce!lt whereohouta of her hall flnlshed
erpo<e.
The Chotiners married on Christmas
day 1965 and separated last June.' The
forme r California campaign manager for
Nixon pays his wife a total of more than
$1 ,000 a month in house payments and
personal support.
Booked by MesaPolice
His income is listed in the trial brief as
$36,000 a year from the President and
$45,000 annually from his private law
practice. Judge Dreizen will be asked
during the trial to give Mrs. ChoUner at
le.a.st half the value of the $70,000 home,
most of the furnisbJngs and a monthly
support payment of at least $1,200.
Mrs. Chotiner, who states she has no
other irEome, continues to live at the LJ.n..
coin Lane home with two children by a
former marriage, Marta Mueller, lll, and
Edward Charles Mueller, 15. ,
Mrs. Chotiner aaJd she has no marri.age
plans. ChoUner went to the courtroom oa
the arm of an attractive blonde but refuJ.
ed to idenUly his companion.
"It was always my understanding that
ladies and gentlemen did not eipose their
personal differences in public," he com·
mented. "I don't know why my former
wife took this action (the book) and I
don't particularly care.
"Another thing," Chotiner added with
his fint smile of the morning, "I don't
think anybody else will ca.re when they
see whatever ahe intend! to put in it."
f'rorn P .. e l
TRAFFIC •••
any one of the two or tbree recommended
flrins would be relaUvely the same.
"'Ibese are prl?fesalonal people," he
said, "they are ethical, the value of their
time is equal and thty would cba.r&e an
equal amount ~1"' equal time spent."
Jaffe said H one of the !inns were lo
offu a "cheap price," it would undoub~
edly mean they would do less work on
the project.
1be traffic study was ordered by the
coundl In Septemb« and Devlin and
Jaffe immediately prepared an at.en.
stve llst of spec:UicaUons, eublequently
approved by the council for consideration
by the conoultant firna contacted.
At the aame time, the council dncted
that a Citizens Advisory Committee on
Traniportation be appointed tn work with
the consultants and city staff in prepar·
ing the survey.
Seven of the nine members were ap.
Pointed by the council and the other twG
were to be selected by the two chambetl
of commerce in the city.
• .. 1nd Amazing I
Extraontln1ryl
Colo11111
Carrying sophisticated looll designed
for rooftop quick entry, a IUSpected bur-
glar team was captured Wednesday nigbt
at a Costa Mesa camera shop w h e re
police killed a similar suspect 15 months
ago.
Jack A. McCollom, 27, or 210 W. Wil·
son St., Costa Mesa, and Terry E. An·
derson, 23, of Inglewood, were booked
on charges of attempted burglary and
possession of burglary tools.
Delective Roscoe Broad said today the
men bad a homemade drill and auger·
type instrument capable of cutting f. 19-
lndl wide circle in a roof with a ruor·
sharp blade on the end.
"We're geologists," one of the p a I r
reportedly told arresting offic.ers Gene
Norden and Dave Hayes.
Police said a passerbr noticed two
men on the roof of Corr1gan's Cameras,
530 W. ltth St., about 11 p.m., and went
to call police, attracting their attention.
Insurance F onn
'Way Off Base'
In Description
The Balboa Peninsula Point Associa.
tion leases a aection of the N Street
Beach for. uae1 by area re!idents.
Accordingly, it must provide its own IMurance.
The association's insurance company
forwarded a routine renewal of the pcl-
Jcy to City Hall fo r approval recently.
It came across tile desk of Phil Be~
tencourt, assistant city manater.
"I can't read those things," Bette.n·
court confessed, "but J. knew something
waa lm)ftg When, among 50 fett plus or
minus aouthwesterly by north 'southeast
I spotted Washington Street."
Washington Street is aboot a mile and
a half from tho N Street Beacb.
"So I sent it ov!r to Irwin Miller, the
chief draftsman in the Public Work! J)e..
partment," he said.
"He called me back a: little while later.
"You're not going to believe this, but
tile description iniot that of Ille N Street
Beach," Miller related.
"lt'1 the e1act legal de$crlpUon of the
public toilet at Washington and Bay
Street."
Why? Because In thl1 brllllant nylon
face a hag Karaatan'a color wizards have
dreamed up ouch eparkll ng mixes u fncredlblt
Bfu1, Aln1zln11 White, Eldrrorrfln1ry Gold and oven
COloall COp,,.r. Fabuloua hu 00 of thaooolors,
They•,. all lnct'lldlble, roaily.
fl'olMoi.... ...... Ill ncf~ .. -..... wllfl _, .. lrl•t•·
A f' a 12' fw ooly $1J4.HI
By the time the police helicopter J'eGSdi..
ed the scene within two minutes an d
Norden and Hayes arrived in their un.
marked felony car, no one was on the
roof. ;
McColiom and Anderson, however;.
were located nearby and questioned about
their presence in the area with l h e al-
leged burglary tool,
"And I mean 'burglary tool','' remark;.·
ed Detective Broad, saying the instru!'
ment could quickly cut a hole just large
enough for a man to drop through into
a building. 1
Basically the same lYPe of entry wa1
made to Corrigan's Cameras in Man:h.
1969, but an interior alarm was triUer •.•
ed, bringing several police cars to ti.~
scene.
One shadowy figure seen inside escaped
from the building -clad· a11 in black
and wearing gloves -refusing to halt.
at police orders.
Steven "Stubby" Stubblefield, 14, wal .
fatall y wounded witti a slug throuth the· -
heart as several offieers fired down the
alley in which he ran to his death. ' •
Detective Broad said he planned tD·
question McCollom and Anderson t.hi1 -
morning before requesting criminal eom·
plaints for the District Attorney's office. '
Girl, 10, Struck
By Car; Injured
A IO-year-01d' Corona del Mar girt ta u;· ·
satisfactory condition today at Hoag t
Memorial Hospita) after she was stru~·:
by a car w bi I e crossing East Coas&t:
Highway on her bike Wednesday.
Police said Lori White, of ill 1J
Jasmine Ave .. was riding across the _
highway at Jasmine at about 5:30 p.m.
"'hen she was struck by a car driven by
John Murry, 16, of 429 Isabella Terrace.
He was not cited. Officers said the
mishap Is under investigation.
Wee Shur Spel Gud! · .
GALESBURG. Ill. fAP) -There's go-.···
Ing to be a spelling contest in March for
some 80,000 children from about 700 pr._, ,.·
vate and public schools in central Illi-·
nois. A news release announcing th • .
contest called it a "speeling·• bee.
Fabulous Color!
Fabulous Sh.ag!
FABULOUS PRJCE!
IF YOU CAN'T
COME IN-CALL
646.0275
tor an expert ..,..,
contult&nt
who wUl
'''"" .. your home
with aatnples
Wf!Mt1t M::I
obllption
to YOU!
H.J. GARRtfT fURNlllJ~~ HARBOR BLVD
PROFESSIONA~ Opoo Moo. Tinn. & frL Iv-. COSTA MESA, CAl!F.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS 6~6-0275 646.0276
..
·.
• •
•
'
vqi:. 6.3,.NO. 295, 4 SECTIONS, so' PA~es--
e-sa:··
.POs Br(lce
For Yule
Mail Surge
J>.oslmasters along the Orange Coas t
are bracing their staffs for the Christmas
mail glut which has been complicated
thla year bY the mail embargo brought on
by a national rail strike.
· The em~go, insUtuted Wednesday by
Pqstmaster Ge~ral Winton Blount, af ..
fecb aecood, third and fourth class mail
to be'detivered more than 300 miles.
Laguna Beach Postmaster Charles
Covault said the types of mail covered by
the embargo include parcel post, pubJica ..
tions and catalogues.
Most· Christ'mas packages are mailed
by J>;&rcel post but Christmas cards travel
by first class mail.
"The only thing I can suggest for peo-
ple who want to mail Chtistma.s packages
~ 'to send them first class or airmail,
even: though it is rather cosUy," said
John B.· Klugiewicz, Costa M e s· a
postrriaster.
Newport Beach Postmaster Payne
'Ibaytt suggested residents get all their
mair in as·early aa possible. "l hate to ~·auyone at this thne.'' ht said. 4'1 w0u!4 wgg<sl that dirfstmu ·;. ptting
closer than. most of us realize, and thi!I:
embargo ifn't going to help,"
... ,.,....., .... "''
-· •
•
-
' Today'1 Flal
l
N.V: Stoeb
• A.-' I " ORANGE COU TY, CALIF.ORNIA . ' THURSDAY, D.ECEMBER 10, 1970 TEN CENTS
an
Storekeeper,
68,Kiµed
In Robbery
By ARTlllJll R. VINSBL
Of Ille DlllF P'li.t I r.ff
A 68·year-old merchant without •
known enemy In the world was beaten to
death in his little Hawaiian clothing shop
in busy downtown Costa Mesa Wed·
nesday, his pockets· lorn inside out and
empty.
Someone had smashed in the back or
&amuel J. Biales' bead with a blunt ob-
ject. before lockinJ: up Hawallan Isle Ap-
parel, 1796 Newport Boulevard, a n d
fleeing.
No more than $75 could have been
taken.
"He was just a well·Uked little old
man," said Detective Sergeant C 11 f t
McBride as the investigation Intensified
today.
The victim was discovered about 2:15
p.m., when his wife Zada and son James
came to tbe store with a key, convinced
something was wrong. ,
Biales, a longtime. Cosla , .Me 11
merch4nt and rental property owm:r, lay
it\ a pool of blood in the tiny office· area
at the rear of the .colorful . Polynesian--
style store.
A b-t<I claw~ be bid
. -to -Qlrlotm.. lltllll. -i>amboo-mat llortfront wu COl)flacated:
as evidence. .
. Crowds "' 1be-ClftiOul -..-... police-tmarii!d olf the scene ~ cJUel,
.,i,Ainl Detective Jim'lUayJoct-'to bead
• """" of the senstle8S bomlcld!. "Wbi i:ouldn\ lt have be<o lamebod)I
younger -somebody who could have pvt
up 'a fight," asked businessmlll John
Davis, tears staining bi.t·cbeeks.
• •
•
_e.one. -. . -~ ..... .. ·-
• • •• '. l :\.. .l tlit-" , .........
CORONEll'S M!it°lllliMlivl BODY PROM MURDEll SCENI"
Cute MoN llullileiamon Kiiied In His Stwe
,· ' _._ -. .~ .. , ..
~fell!! ·ae11!8
· 'Orde~ed to Kill Al~'
·-Thayer said the 300-mile limit In ,.tlc;h
the il<oad..tbUd .... r.urih daD mall
will 'Ii 'dellv.-ed indudeO the -"em
)\all 0( the Son Jooquin VllllJ ml Las
Vegas, but does not include San Fran·
cisco.· "So U you want to stnd packages
to places outside this area, plan on using
airmail or fU'st class," he added.
The ~ta Mesa postmaster also sug·
gested sorting the first class mall into
groups of mall to be delivertd within the
city and mall to be delivered outside the
city. "This means that if you live in
Costa Mesa. you'll have mail going to
eoSta Mesa addresses only and mail
eolng to all other addresses ...
Case Dropped Against
VC Irvine 's Sweet Ernie
"My God. Somebody would have to be
crazy to murder old Sammy,'.' added bis
close friend.
Davis was absent from his adjamit
store during the period beginning before
and after 11:45 a.m .. the last time the
slightly built victim was seen alive.
No one else in the immediate area -
(See BRUTAL SLAYING, Pap %)
Says Calley Attorney
FT. BENNING, Ga .· (UP-I) -Lt.
Wiiiiam L. Calley's defense attorney told
a 1i1~ficer military court today thit
Calley took his platoon into the Viet.
rlamese . haml~l of ~fy Lai ~nder orders
that "every Jiving thing In that area be
killed."
remaining they would be Viet COD& °"
Viet Cong Sympathizers.
He said this will help post office
empl0yes clear their decks in preparation
for the seUlement of the rail dispute
vohich is bound to bring a deluge of parcel
post and other embargoed classes of
mail.
No post office In the area will accept
any parcel post mail, "We can't stack it
up here and wait for the end of the em·
bargo, because we 'd run out of space in
about half a day," Covault said.
· All the Orange Coast postmasters said
they will see to it that all mail received
Jn their offi~s on Christmas Eve is
delivered by Christmas Day. '
"I'm really hoping that this will get
11tralghtened out before too long,"
Covaull said. "At this juncture. it would
probably be best lo wait a couple of days
and see what happens.
Signal Light
Prompts Suit
Against Mes a
Joinl claims of $206,358. IS for physical
injuries and compensatory damages has
been filed against the city· of Costa Ptfesa
for a brother and sister struck by a car
while crossing a street last August.
The children were hit Aug. 30 on
Harbor Boulevard al Gisler Avenue,
while crossing the intersection controlled
by a signal that was allegedly in·
qperative.
Kalberln Hughes. l2, and Darren
Hughes, 10, of 10092 Constitution Lane,
Huntington Beach, were hospitlllzed with
~ total of $6,358.15 ln medical expenses.
.Nursing and convalescent care ran the
medical bill up lo $5,344.05 In the case of
tbe girl, the claim filed by Newport
Beach altomey Robert W. Peinado <Nr.-l . The childrtn were crossing, the claim
maintains, because of a malfunction ii
the east·west Walk and Don't Walk
pedestrian control.
..
Wee Shur Spel Gud!
' GALESBURG , IU . (AP) -Thtre'1 go-
ing to be a spelling contest in March for
t0me 80,000 children from about 700 prl·
\'ate and publ!c schools in centra~ 1111·
nois. A new1 release afl!lOUnclng th e contest called ft a ••speeling'' bee.
Sweet Ernie isn't quite as sour on The
System as he was a few weE!:'.:!c ago.
Crimiaal chafges against the 3().yea~
old UC Irvine black graduate student
and campus disc jockey are to be drop-
ped, continient upon two stipulations by
the Orange County District Attorney's
Office.
He was tried in Harbor Judicial Dis·
trict Court a few weeks ago on two
counts of lewd and obsctne language be·
fore women and chlldren. The trial end·
ed in a hung jury.
A new complaint involving a second
!ipeecb in OO •s Gateway Plata was is·
sued, charging Ernie Adolphus Smith
with the same offenses. The speech was
his analysis of the power structure that
prosecuted him. -
The campus black student leader free-
ly admitted using a liberal dose of four·
letter words in bolh the first speech,
against white radical studentJ, and the
second, agalnat administraton 'and law·
men. Hls defense wu that they aren't
obscene. • ••
Re wtn' not tie tried a sewnd time,
If he meets carrrpus disciplinary proba·
tion requiJ:ements irrµx>Sed untif next
June 15-and ·m•ltu no more Gateway
Plaza speeches. ~
Sweet Ernie's anaignment on the sec+
ond two counts was tet for today, 6ut
was. ellnUnaled by <Jn.<:ampus handling
Ban .on, Parkiiig
Alwred in Mesa
I
Glvina late.risers a bruk tpe Costa
Mesa Clt1 eouncp has silghtfy alt.red a
proposed parking ban weekdays on
PlacenUa Avenue between 19th and Vlc--
torla street..
No parking. will be allowedJrom 7 a.m.
to 6 p.rn. weekdays, While Uae cit)"\rafflc
commission's original recommendation
was to have the thoroughfare clear of
pafke.d; vehicles OOtt hour earlier.
·~Peop~ who aren't motivated to move
their-cm at I might be by 7 a.m.,"
ob>uved Waller Beale, of 247 Ocean
View Ave., Newport Beath.
He owns rental properties among land
holdings along both Victoria Street and
Placentia Avenue, the latter of which will
be widened to accommodate parking
11aln Within two years.
. .
of the case.
Deputy District Attorney Russell Ser·
· ber and administration officials confer·
red with Smith at the office of John C.
Hoy, UCJ vice chancellor of ~tudent af.,
fair s.
"S mith did admit he violated a sc::·
Uon of the UCI standard of conduct,''
Serber explained, pointing out it pro-
hibits lewd or obscene comments or
conduct on university property.
'.J'he prosecutor in Sweet Ernie's five·
day trial said Smith'!i admission of
gutlt makes the point he argued in the
court.room.
"If I say in public, I know
I've broken the law," the young DA
laid.
No women or children were in ear· mot.
Servi ces Slate d
For Mesa Glide r
Crash Victim
Graveside funeral services will be held
Monday . for a Costa Mesa glider en-
thusiast killed four days a10 with a friend
when their glider went into a tailspin,
crashing into Lake Elsinore.
Rites ror Raymond J . Bouchard, 24, of
207 E. 16th St., will be at 2 p.m. in Pacific
View ,.femorlal Park.
The body«lC David W. Jeffers, 26, will
bt returned to Nashport, Ohio, where the
young unemployed .aerospace engineer
was preparing to return to find work.
.Elforts by Jeffers' family to learn
where he had been Uvlng led COsta Men.
pi>Y11cian 'Dr, David GlbsOn, of 3IO E.
17th St., to provide the address today.
Jeffers was staying with F.d Young, of
: 18311 Grand Ave., Elsinore, while se.llin1
aome of bis personal property including
two cars.. to finance the returt\, to Ohio.
Dr. Gibson had treated Jeffers earlier
on the day of his· fatal sailplane flight.
Bollchard, who was a j u n I or
m•themallts major at UC 1rvtne, leaves
two brother•, Navy pilot W 11 f red
Bouchard, of Santee and Brian Ken.
nebeck of lllinois : his pater n a I
grandmother, and an aunt, also living in
lllinols. '
Mr. Bouchard wu <ng11ed to many
Mia Ma,, Root at the Ume of Ills doatll. '
'
Police iii Mesa
Nab Pair With
Burglar y Tools
Carrying S(lphlsUcated tools designed
for quick roofto p entry, a suspected bur-
glar team was captured Wednesday night
at a Costa ~fesa camera shop w h e r e
police killed a slmllar suspect 15 months
ago.
.Jack A. ~fcCollom, 27, or 210 w. wn.
son St., Costa Mesa, and Terry E. An·
de.rson, Z3, of Inglewood, were booked
on charges of attempted burglary and
posseMion of burglary tools.
Detective Roscoe Broad said today the
men had a homemade drill and auger-
lype instrument capable of cutting a HJ·
Inch wide circle in a roof with a razor.
sharp blade on the end.
'1We.'re geolo1lsts," one of ·the pa Jr
reportedly told arresting officers Gene
Norden and Dave Hayes .
Police said a paaaerby noticed two
men on the roof of Corri.gan's Cameras,
530 W. 19th St., about 11 p.m., and went
to call police, a.ttractlng their attention.
By the lime the police helicopter reach.
ed the scene within two minutes a n d
Norden and Hayes anived in their un·
marked felony car, no one was on the
roof.
Mt'Collom and Anderson, however,
were located nearby and questioned about
their presence in the area with th e •I·
leged burglary tool.
"And I mean 'burglary tool','' remark·
ed Detective Broad, saying the inJtru.
ment could quickly cut a hole just large
enoup:h for a man to drop through Jnto
a bulkllng.
In a brlef opening statement, Defense
Attor'ney George W. Latimer said Calley
would tak:e the stand ip his own dete.ose
and give · a full account "of his actions,
conduct and behavior."
Calley, '/I, Is accused of killing, or
ordering killed, 102 South Vietnamese
civilians March 16, 1968, the day he led
his platoon on a search-and-destroy
mission through My Lal.
Latimer said the cluster of villages tn
which My Lal was situated was k'nown as
\'let Cong country and a death trap for
American soldiers.
Many of the membera of Calley's pla·
toon had been kUied or had arms and legs
blown off and had been "ruined for lite"
in preceding Weeks by mines, booby trap!
and ambushes set by "civilians of all
ages" of the area, Latimer saJd.
The day befo~.the .attack, he sald,
fune ral aervlcts had been held. for three
soldien who had been killed. He said the
feeling· ai the lervices· Was a general
mood of reprisal.1 ' .
Then, the company cqmmapder, ·Capt.
Ernest Medina,' called a meetlng,
Latimer continued. , ' .
"He told his men.that at long last tbet
were going to close with the enemy and
be given the opportunity to get even for
the loss of their buddies," Latimer said.'
"He,said lhe area ·was deleoded., by the
48th Viet Cong eattallon', one of their
finest, and the ' mission ... was 'ndt only to
search and destroy My Lai 4; but My Lal
5 and 8.
"He sail! the lnf~on ,.... that all
civilians bad Jett the area and H any were . '
• • • '. 1
Mistrial ,Declar!)d
For ~eattle. Seven'
Basically the same type of entry wa!I
·made rto Corrtgan's Cameras in March,
1969, but an lnteriOr alarm We! trigger-
ed, brtnitng several police cars to the
acene. TACOMA, Wult. (UPI) -A mktri&l one shadowy figure seen inside escaped was declared today in the SUttle Sevtn
from the buJlding -clad all in black conspiracy trial following a morning or
and wearing gloves -refusing to halt dell)'t culminated ,deftndai'lt,' Charles
"Chip" Marshall'• addrtu to Uie Ju~ at police orden. .,
Stevtn "Stubby" Stubblerteld, 14, was 1boat the condi.tel of tbe court.
fatal\y wounded with a tl"I throuflh tho Federal rJud .. Georp. H.• Boldt ~llo
heart as several offlcen: fired down~ cited aix of the teven..deftndanta •rtrial
alley In which he ran to his death. for COlll<t!\pt lo\lowing their .. r/Ul/ to
Detective Broad .aid he planned to 1ppear in the courtroom because some of
question Mt'C911om and Andenon thl1 1 their l\lppOrterl Wtre forced to st.and
morning before requuURf crimlllJ) com· outakle In lllt rain ol~ the courtroom
plaintl I~ the Dlslrlct Attorney'• ollkt. WU IWed.
f
·1
"He ordered the village burned, ~
animals shot, the wells contaminated and.
every living lhing in that area killed."
He said higher commanders were bl
the area that • day. including on the
ground, "and nothing •was said aliolit the
killing of civilians until a lunch break."
.Other commander' were flyilji .. oy~r
t!Je action ' and shonld 'baye ~ w~t
was happening , Latimer said.
Some Viet Cong of military age wre
·kllled (presumably by artillery or aerial
fire). before the grOWJd · troops got
there. He said this killing was done ''right
at the edge of a ditch in which lhct
government contends Calley killed ' at
least 7~ screaming women, childrei:i and
old men."
Latimer said Calley and his pla'loon
had been inadequately trained and in-
structed for this kind of combat. Some of
the platoon members had oot been in
combat before, he said, all believ~ their
sweep would be "bitterly contested," and
som~ were .frightened.
Welitlier
Are you ready for some nice,
warm Santa Ana wtnds? They'll
be along Friday, .• pjsliing the
mercury up to 10 degrees under
sunny skies.
· .INSmE TODAY
Nttd 1ome ideas about what·'•
good to get for vour loved one1
at Christma.s1 Stt tpecfo.l Gift
Section ill, todot1'a. DA. l LY
PILO'I'.
' O.~, 14 f:'
ca.:n1s1rAAs ·
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II
c
Valley, Ne,1,s -' .
3 Smpect,s
In Robbery
Bandits held up " Fountain Valley
marl<el Wednesday nlgbt, mUinC off
with '200 as the angry store c1erk follow·
ed them into lbe street, firin& four shots
at 1btir fleeing auto.
Minutes aftrr tbe armed robbery of the
1-11 MA!l<et .at 10545 $1altt Ave., police
capturo<;I three .au•pecls without a strul·
1te after surrounding their CfJ' witb«Ven
polioe units on the San Diego Fmway.
Ronald Lee. Sanden, 19: Rudy Peret,
18, and jesus Miguel Casanova, 19. all of
Santa Ana, were booked into Orange
CowrtY Jail on suspicion of armed rob-
bery.
Store clerk Tommy W. ~r~ is, told
police two men entered bis ttore, about
7,50 p.m., flashed a pislol and ~for
the money from the cub reglater.
Cooper said Ibey lei~ entered a 'lflill!!C
car and staNd to leave. At U!at point,
Cooper told police, he Io o k out his
rtvolver and fired four &bots at the
fleeing car. Police said three llillet holes were
found in the left rtar ftnder of tbe
suspects' ear. After firing at the car, (.ooper Aid. be'
ran back into 1be store and phorled •
description of the getaway car to foun-
tain Valley police.
Moments laltt, !let.dive 51t, Fl'.'d
Nourse and Iovestiptor Jim Womll
spotted the ""'l"'d5' car entorlni the Siii
l>iego Freeway from MOIJlolla.StreeL
Nourse and Worrell, in an unmarked
pqli<e car, followed the -car ooto Ibo
freeway. "We radioed far help." Noune related.
Black and white patrol cars -1'fo
each from Fountain Valley, Huntington
Buch and Westminster -pulled
alonpide Nourse'• car. The su.pecls dldn't notice Ibo .......,.,
motorcade trailine them, Noune said.
On a sfift8l from Nouno, officers In all
Cars flipped on their red lllbts and
&lret>s.
The llllPtCll pulled· off Ibo freeway
neai Va1ley View Stmt and Pvt: up
without.a struuJe, potlce ro!ated, De-iodicated the suspects would ho queolloned about a number cl oilier
lfll\"l'robberies In Oraqe County. .
Pioneer Oilman
Succumbs at 75
' ~ L9§ i1N9ELES (Upll -CM,rles S.
Jon!iil ~r C.U~l'.(lil ~Ill!
and eMC Joader, dlad W~•Y.'~ ...
• Good Samuttan Hospital lt'the .... ,,., ..
Jones, wbo wa1.cbalnril.D of Ult board
of lllchfield Oil corp., when Ibo Los
Angeles • hued company merged with
AUaniic Refining Co. in 1966 to form
AUantic·Richfield Co.. remained u a
director , in the new company until hill
deatl>. Jones, a close friend and golfin1 com·
panion of the late President Dwight O.
Eisenhower, was one of California'& early
advoclt.es of conservation . He cam·
paigoed for conservaUon laws and was
toundei and first president of the Men's
Gariien Club of Los Angeles. He was a
direCtor of "Keep America Beautiful"
and served as co-chairman of the
Governor's Conference of Beautification
In 1966.
5 From Coast Cited
Five Orange Coast residents have been
honored by tM Board of Supervisors. for
a decade Of service to the county. Em·
ployes receiving 10..yea.r pins are Kendra
M. Barker, welfare, Newport Beach;
Julian Cimbaluk. superior courts,
Costa Mesa; Alida S. Croker, ctntra1
municipal court, Mission Viejo; Eugene
Miller. coroner, Laguna Beach. and Carl
R. Nelson, flood control. Mission Viejo.
-. DAILY PILOT
OlANl)E UIAST PUILllMl)ll) (CMPAJn'
Robert N. W_,
PresldMf 1nd l'ubl!lllW
J11!t It. C11rliry
Vic.I Pfllllllllt Ind <>-8t ~
ThOM" K~l
Ei"*"
'T\0111•1 A. ,._,.,,., .._ .. _
c.... .... .Offlle
3JO W•1t ley Str.•t
M1ilillf AJ~r111: P.O. In: 1160, tl626 ...... _
~ ••ac111 nn W•t """ ~ Utun. "tcto: m .._, .. _
H_.,.111..,. lfM'I!: nws lf9Cfl """-""
SM ellmM'9: JIU N..-111 IE.I """"' ...
•
OAll. V P11.0T Itel! Photo
MIMI TALKS¥ MURRAY PACES AT COUNTY COURTHOUSE
Nixon Aide Chotlntr, Estr•nged Wlft Miles Ap•rt
Mrs. Chotiner Promises
To Tell All in New Book
By TOM BARLEY
OI tM o.!lr Pllet Sltff
White Howle aide Murray Chotiner and
bl3 estrallied wife took their marital dil·
ference" to Orange County Superior
Cowt today tor a trial that will, Mrs.
Amalia .. Mimi" Chotiner predicts, see
the death of thtir five year marriage and
the birth of ·a book that will "expose
Chotiner's evil influence" on President
lllchard Nixon.
Mrs. Olotiner, ff, of 16.17 Lincoln Lane,
?iewport Beach, Promised newsrften a
~ea~ spicy releuu on the contents of
the book while bet· 1pparenUy unruffled
husband pacm the courthouse corridor a
few yards from her.
"I plan to tell the public just what I
Jeame<j flOm live 1'>1" cl clOle allOCla· ~ "1lb ~-'!II!!• Ii<\ acted 11 Nix· ~·a batcliet man:• llhe said. "We went
everywhere together; conferences, con·
ve.ntiona and top level meetings and my
book is going to tell the world just what
went on behind the &cenes."
She said her book which she will call
.. Tn'Care of the White House" will eXPQse
Nlion's "secret maneuvers11 in national
and CBlifomia politics and spell out
ChOtiner 's role in "all that wheeling and
dealifli."
Cllotiner. a9, headed for Judge s8mue1
Dreizen's courtroom and the .opening of
w~at is eJPected to. be a thr~ay trial
with the comment that he does not know
"'what ~ wife can possibly write about.
'1 never allowed her to see any
privileged material, T kept no diaries and
I never told her of anything that was at
all vital in my 25-year relationship witb
Richard Nixon," Chotiner said.
"All she ever had acces.s to was
television, the newspapers and magazines
Funeral Pending
For Murdered
Mesa Merchant
No funeral service had been set yet to-
day for Samuel J. Biales, Costa Mesa
merchant murdered in his litUe men 's
and women's tropical clothing store Wed·
nesday. .
A spokem'lan for Bell·Brnadway
Mortuary said bis wife Zada and son
James were scheduled for an ap-
pointment later in the day.
Mr. Blales ha.d operated Hawaiian Isle
Apparel, 1793 Newport Blvd .• for about 10
years. moVing to the present location
from two priar locations.
He was a member of the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerct and also the
Downtown Businessmen's Association.
"He was just a great little guy ... so
darn easy to get along with,·• OBA
Secretary Billie Golden remarked today.
From Page l
SLAYING .•.
Including a butY beer bar. employment
agency and coffee shop -noticed
anytbin& unusual, except that Sammy
was closed.
A quick call ror auistance brought
Garden Grove Police Officer Willi•m
Compton and his trained Germao
Shephtrd, Thunder. who often geu such
spttla1 asslgnmenta.
Sniffing around the blood·$pattered of·
flee, Thunder led detectives. in suspenst.
down a rear alley ind .around the corner
toward municipal court, where he atop.
ped at a parking place.
Inveatij:ators believe the killer left his
car In • slall alongalde CO..ts Mesa Park. ,
and If she can write a book from that,
more power to her."
And he quickly rejected Mrs. Chotiner's
statement that "many. many doors had
been closed'' to her as the result of her
feud with Chotiner with the comment: "I
don't know what she means. Certainly. no
one at any level in Orange County or
anywhere else including myself has ever
attempted to close any kind of door."
Mrs. Chotiner, who is represented by
Los Angeles attorney Bernard A. Leckie,
says her book is at the halfway stage of
preparation and her tape recordings,
documents and manuscripts a r e
"carefully locked away in a safety
deposit vault" She refused to disclose the
percent whereabouts of her half finished
expose.
The Cbotiners married on Christmas
day 1965 and separated last June. The
former California campaign manager for
Nixon pays bis wife a total of more than
$1,000 a month in house payments and
personal support.
His income is listed in the trial brief as
$36,000 a year from the President and
$45,000 annua1ly from his private law
practice. Judge Dreiien will be asked
during the trial to give Mrs. Chotiner at
least half the value of the $70,000 home,
most of ·the furnishings and a monthly
&upport payment of at least $1,200.
Mrs. Chotiner, whG stales she has nG
other iocome, continues to live at the Lin.
coin Lane home with twG children by a
former marriage. Marta Mueller, 18, and
Edward Charles Mueller, 15.
Mrs. Chotiner said she has no marriage
plans. Chotiner went to the courtroom <1n
the arm of an attractive blonde but refus-
ed to identify his companion.
"ft was always my understanding that
ladies and gentlemen did not expose their
personal differences in public," he rom·
mented. "I don't. know why my former
wife took this action (the book) and I
don 't particularly care.
"Another thing," Chotiner added with
his first smile of the morning, "l don·t
think anybody else will care when they
see whatever she intends to put in it."
Laborer's Death
Kept From Wife
A young carpenfer. whose wife is ex-
pecting a baby today, collapsed this
morning while working on the Park
Newport Apartments . He was declared
dead on arrival at Hoag Memorial
Hospital .
Identification of the man ls being
withheld pending notification of his wife.
Police gaid the victim's family is
withholding the information from her un-
til the birth of the child .
Police. reported the 27·year..old man , a
resident of Paramount, was working with
celli ng joists on the second floor of a
building under construction when he col-
lapsed at 8 a.m .
An autopsy has been scheduled to
determine the cause of death.
Irvine Drainage
Plan Approved
A master drainage plan of 3.800 acres
of Irvine Ranch la nd north (If the Santa
Ana Frttway 1nd east of Myrord Road
bas been approved by the Board of
Supervisors.
The plan calls for a $3,6 million
drainage project with a"':!IAment at $950
per acre as it Is developtd.
Cltl Nelson, C<'lUnty flood COntrol
District operations engineer. told board
members that 16 plans for the
i;outheastern part of the county are under
\~1a.,y or adopted. Seven will be before the
supervisors for approv1J In the nert three
months.
'
,: .• ,• ,. Appliance
Theft Ring
Broken Vp ·
Rails Paralyzed ~t
• By u .s.· Strike · "
.. -· •' .· A refrigerator operation 1n which p01iee
allege stolen appliances were sold
through a mass.mailed ad magazine was
broken by Costa M&Sa police Wednesday
night, with two suspecU locked in the
cooler today.
A third man, po&&ibly an unwitting ac·
c~mplice, was being Questioned about the
case.
Ronald C. Miller. 30. of 163 E. 18th St..
and James H. Rayburn. 29. of ~"h
Newport Boulevard. were booked on
charges of grand theft.
Officer Dennis Hossfeld took them into
custody at Ray's Refrigeration. where
Rayburn's father found them loading up
a used ri!:Jrigerator at 6:00 p.m. and call·
ed police>.
Detective Roscoe Broad said the
yOunger Rayburn has been staying at the
Newport Boulevard warehouse and his
father showed up to find a refrigerator
being loaded into a trailer.
He asked what was going on , and
Miller. a used refrigerator repairman
and dealer, reportedly said he had just
bought it.
Detective Sgt. Cliff McBride said he
and his wife called separately about one
refrigerator Miller advertised at a tan.
talizing price last week.
He said the different stories each was
told about the item's origin aroused his
own suspicions at that time.
Administrator
Auction ·Slated
In Santa Ana
ThOUWlds of items from clothing to
furniture to automobiles will be auctioned
off Saturday at the Orange County Public
Administratpr's warehouse, 1300 S. Grand
Ave., Santa Ana.
ltems for sale will be on display begin·
ning at 9 a.m. with the auction scheduled
for 10 a.m. A special auction of objects of
"peculiar value" such as jewelry, coin
collectiorui: and antiques will start at 1
p.m.
All items are personal possessions
which have been acquired by the county
from the estates of deceased persons.
In past years as many as 600 people
have attended the auctions paying
several thousand dollars for merchandise
offered.
Items may range from 25 cents for ug..
ed dothing to as much as fl,000 for a
grand piano. The hiibest price ever paid
was Sl.700 for~a rare antique.
A deposit of SS "earnest money" is re--
quired of all those attending the auction.
The deposi t may be applied to purchase
or will be refunded at the et1nclusiDn.
Queen to Sail Again
In American Waters
ENGENE. Ore. (AP) -The steam.
powered river boat African Queen, which
took Humphrey Bogart and Katharine
Hepburn up the Nile in the movie named
for Ule vessel. is going to carry pasUn·
gers next spring on the Deschutes River.
.. • and Amazing I
Extraordinary I
Coloasall
WASHINGTON (AP) -Striking
trainmen paralyzed the rail system na~
tionwide today although the ranks of the
walkout showed signs of breaking in the
first few hours.
Still. hundreds of thousands o f
suburban commuters bad to find other
ways to work and freight was stalled
while three of four unions ln the 500,()()0..
m&n strike said they were canceling their
strike orders.
The 200,00().membtr Brotherhood of
Railway Clerks held out, saying nothing
despite congressional anC: court bans on
the strike, and a plea ·from President
Nixon to stay <1n the job.
Spot checks showed members of the
other three unions were honoring the
clerks' picket ilnes.
Pena.Central spokesmen said they
doubted anyone would come back until
picket lines dissolved.
Overland passenger trains sat in Los
Angeles terminals, nothing was hap-
pening with the Southern Pacific· in
Arizona and in Chicago 140,000 commut·
ers switched to cars and buses for a way
to work.
As for the clerks, their headquarters
said an announcemeot of some sort would
be ·made sometime later in the day. ln
Philadelphia a clerks leader said: "We're
still OD strike." In Cleveland some clerks
were working under a court injunction,
·some were out.
A first indicator <1f the economic con·
sequences of the strike was seen in West
Virginia where 800 ct1al miners were
turned away because of a coal car
shortage. Spokesmen for the industry in
the state said all 1,350 mines would be
shut down by midnight Friday if the
&trike continues. Coal is fuel for beat and
electricity in the nation 's urban centers.
At t.he White House, press secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler expressed optimism
the clerks would join the three other
unions in ordering their men back to
work.
"We expect that the fourth union also
will comply with the law," said Ziegler.
Rescinding strike orders were the
United Transportation Union, . th e
Brotherhood of Maintenance Way and the
Hotel, Restaurant and B a r t e n d e r s
llltemational, which represents ~g
Rivers Scheduled
For Operation
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -Rep. L.
Mendel Rivers (0-S.C), will undergo
heart surgery Friday at the University of
Alabama Hospital in Birmingham, his of.
fice announced Thursday.
The 6f>.year-old legislator who was
elected to his 16th consecutive term in
the House last month, checked into the
hospital early Thursday for a series of
tests and evaluations.
Rivers, chairman of the House Armed
Services Committee, is under the care of
Dr. David Kirklin, a well known heart
specialist and chairman of the departr
ment of surgery at t he Urtiversity
Medical Center.
"Extensive tests indicate surgery ·is
necessary," a Rivers aide said, ''surgery
will be done tomorrow."
Why'/ BecauS& In this brilliant nylon
face shag Karaatan'a color wizards hava
dreamed up au ch sparkling mixes as lnc(ld/ble
Blue, Amazing White, Extraordinary Gold and even
Col.,.a/ Copper. Fabulous has 00 ol theae colors.
Thoy're all lncredlblo, really.
(,.Hlous com11 In 1xcltt11,.,.. l'Vt, wfth n'Nltdlnt frlnt•·
A 9' x 12' for .. 1y $1J4.tll
car employes. . E.
Said the dining car workers' presidciiL
Ed Miller: '.'It is the policy of this ~
ternational union to obey the law." :
The UTU withdrawal was announced Jn
Cleveland by W. W. Carson, assistant to
Charles Luna, the union's president. •
In telegrams to all general chairmen
and international office.rs, Carson advlaed
that becau1e Congress passed -Qd
President Nixon signed -legislation p"°
~ibiting a strike and guaranteeing a Wace
mcrease that UTU was canceling ils p!Q1 in the strike.
The strike, '"'hich began at 12:01 a.~.
was the nation1s third ln the last 50 yeat1.
The emergency law passed by Congreis
early today ordered the strikers back. (o
work with a partial pay increase. '* -ti '-ti
Cities Sh'ow
Bad Effects
Of Rail StoP,
By United Press International
.
" .•
The big cities were first to show the d··
feels of the nationwide rall strike today.
Auto parking lots built up quickly t,;,
capacity. Roads were jammed. Buses
were packed.
In metropolitan Chicago, wbere 137,00Q
riders crowd the trains on a normal day,
long lines built up outside o( city aqd
private parking garages as car poolt,
emptied their human loads. The Chica.lo.
Park District opened lots on the fringe el
the downtown business section to tUe
care of extra automobiles, estimated te
total 17,000. · ·
Traffic coming to the city from Uie·
suburbs crawled. ' ·
New Yorkers jammed tighter into
subways which on normal days are pack·"
ed to the doors. About 150,000 commuten·
who ordinarily ride the Penn Central tito'
the city were forced into the bus or car
pools.
Detroit residents, who travel usually by:
auto rather than train, worried more:
about what was to come rather than the·
first-Oay effects. A General Motor1
5pokesman said auto production would bi
throttled within a week if the strike con·
tinued.
But few aspects of the nation:.
economic lif.e were not. Cir would not· ~·
affected by the walkout.
Spokesman for the big three a~•.
makers m Detroit said a railroad 'slrikt
would ~shut down the industry within a
week. ;,
Ford cut its assembly plant at AUanta',
Ga., back to two four.hour shifts -from
t~·o eight·hour shifts. This affected aboUI
3, 700 workers .
General Motors and Chrysler cut gblft.t
in their Delaware operatlons. At Newarkt
N.J .• 4,000 Chrysler empolyes will be taut
off if the strike lasts four days, an official
of the assembly plant there indicated.
Thousands of workers in Pennsylvania
steel mills will be off Ule job within a fe\t
days if rail traffic doe!! not resume
because of inability either to move finish~
ed products or to receive raw material, 1
steel executive said.
Fabulous Color!
Fabulous Sh.ag!
FABULOUS PRICE!
IF YOU CAN'T
COME IN-CALL
646.()275
tor an expert
carpet
consultant
\l.'bO will
'''"" to your home
with sa.tnplN
without any
cbllption
to you!
.. ,~.~ .J. GARRtfT f URN ffU ~~ "''~""' o,.. M.,.,, 1'flun. & Fri. has. COSTA MESA, CAL IF.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS 646-0275 646-0216
-
•
•
• CHECKING
•UP•
•
I
. . Phqne Nixon Status ·Syl11tioI·1
wASHlNGTON '~AP)•-~e are provided IIft o! charge aad Doniel . P. MOynihan, A block IWllcb al tbe bue
lalell llalui 1~'-!Ji Pt.•!-"as an uperim<nt." • ml!lta\O J'!'1G D,Ehrll<!unaa .,.. ~a """"TV leM
clanl H-•1 WbHe """9< ls a One can Ollly imqlne ·the . and Hwy A. Kllsinger, aod. eo, 11,... • .,. ol lllCh r.mlod,
"l'iir box" that p<l'Dllts a use rormer·Presldeot ·I.yndon dlmtor "Gecige 1'. Shultz or you can cletennlne -
• ~ldentlal aide to telephone B. JobMon, a ran ot trlplo-tbe OO!ce ol Man11ement and the man you're calllnl neecla •
• telleap and look him In screen TV receivers and other ' Buqet. · , . . shave. Th • G ' H d the, eye. electronic devices, would have That ieaves two S$ unac-• U a N"Wlll auiltant ~ I S uy S ~a , eowtesy or the 1e1epbooe madeotthene•·pictur.P!Jone.· cow\led ,.1 _.. •lil•h <ould .: .. u wants"' mate~
• • 'campany, 1.0 1'plctuJ:ephone1" 1be possilJDities ·seem • ~-' keep· Wash~ gossips busy· -~~ ~~ i::'1!!,~~=
. • -1". - -~ve been 1nstal~ U1 ~.of. toundlng, .. ~for weeks. ' ' . ' .. CU6'-'.
R ~' ' D'j,· . /, f1~es ot , Nixoz:i s prinqpal ~1.a measure ol. the current Housed in• "ctay plasUc bo11: cprilbed properly, be an nip•• e Y: I 'I -..iy ,ai~,. peCking order at the White atop 1 gl~ circular base ~ nriJ:tm:: e;e~
. 1 Ii. ~~ress ·aecrttary Ronald L. House, the 'vldeo-teleP,bone that seems· deiigned for .a before pla'cing his call
, Ziegler. 'W"bo bas one of the set.I have been iQ.stalled iD l!)e moan launching the gadgets -;:==========:::::;! I ~-. · 11,ad&ets behind his desk, said orllces o! Ziegler, cbiel .o( 'permjt their .iaels to call r
By L M, BOYD jhom the govo:rnment ... AP· "'""· Jo, Jnatalled '"· the staU H .. R. H• Ide.man., · o~ with simllar equipment Buy The DAILY PILOT
Was
\l<.l\J\{/>. st>-'-'~
\/'l (;/>.\. sn.i\i\
Kain·cha(ka
ilN SANTA MON r CA ' lP:ROlIMATE(;Y 1IALF the -Prest~&. off~~-He said the presu~ntiaJ counselors Robert and-look Jn.to . their eyes arid Jµst for iPeanuts'
' "· I ol ..,,. d-....... · 1_t_elephon-'---e-<e--le-V1S_lo_n __ boo_k_u;_ps __ H_. __ F_inch_..;'_._B_;ry;_ce __ N_._H_a~r-lo~w--oH_icesc.:.;~U::_the::::y~ta=lk:::. ___ ·_·..==·,,·=·=======:!2=0;="="'="'="="'=""="::'::N::'::"::'"::o::'="="::nv=·=°'=·=-==·=•°'="=-=·=·=w='="="=""="'~ CAUF., laat'Srping, I met a W1l'e5 nv v"'41m lvvrccs now 1 disconsolate youlh who shaved • f'ere married before they
his bead, got a needle artist to ffere 20.
t11-ttoo an obaceoe two-word
Imperative on his scalp, then
let his hiir grow bact out. ·Hi~
CONVINCED that obesity is
a siln of a ?OOr romantic life,
a Seattle physician told me .
over lunch this week, "I never li\Ue secret, ho ho. What (~ight! He couldiirt have
been more than l~· And if.lie
f*ls bald? That young feUOw
cduld wind up Wearing •
toupee with• chln·st.rap.
.'NoTE A THEORlST writes:
1;Row wonde~ful it Would ,be p
all or these United(States ware.
equal!" l11teres\inl notkJn. Not
so certain, however, it would t>e wonderful. Ir such wire the
else, Hawaii would wind up
with about 5,000. square miles
of permafrost and Florida
could only claim 150 miles of
coastline , . . NOW HA VE A
feminine reader named Nevele
-pronoanced Neb'-vab-lee -
which is "eleven" spelled
backwards. She was born an
the eleventh day of the
eleventh month of the year.
whatever. A most mu sical
monicker, what?
WHQ Fffl,ST SAID, "It's a
great life, if you don 't
wealren"? None other than
Mr. Gene Byrnes, creator of
that recen( work af art, "Tile
How 19 Doodle Book." Mr,
Byrnes, retired now, is the
cartoonist who drew t h e
famous comic:! or yesteryear.
.. Reg'lar ' Fellas." Recall his
quaint kid c·ha racter ,
Pinhead? I do. Back in the
World War I days the record
shows he started still another
strjJ, ... It's a Great Life, If
' tre& a ·')>lump woman for
OYetweight. 'l treat her lot '
lack of love." Unfortunately,
he did not describe the treat-
ment.• Will check that out over .
the next lunch and report it ifi
detail .
' CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
"That disease which kills the
most people · is ... 1" A.
Malarja •.. Q. "Do you have
to declare your racetrack win·
niogs to ·the IRS!" A. If you
cash out over $600, Y'?U do i ••
Q. "How many or our states
have oil wells?" A. Just 27, so
far.
IT'S ONE TIDNG to cal1 a
woman a vision, says our
Language man, but·another'tO
call her a sight. Lot of words
like that. Fairly similar, but.
dangerous to switch. You can·
call a woman ·a kitten too, but
not a cat.-A chicken, but not a
hen. A mouse, but certainly
not a rat. Maybe even a duck,
but derinitely not a goose. Got
to be careful.
Your questiom and com-
ments are welcomed and
wiU be-ustd m CHECKING
UP wMreve-r possible. Acf..
dress ltttt'f's to L. M. Boyd,
P.O. Bo< 1875, Ntwporl
Beach, Calif., 92660.
You.Don 't Weaken" was its ti-;:;:==========;
tie. And that title oullived
twenty-three-sk.idoo. CBD.DBEN
' TIIAT MONTH wben yoo•,. LWWTE
le• apt J!l get killed in some . . • ....
aei::i~t •JS February •.. AM, . ,.,, . u , ··:.r.
~ Swis,s students. in their · ·~CLE
las! two years or. bigb scbool 11.J l ..
~ •) $t5 a month allowance--
~oming Dec. 12
Family ~rJkly
Party Looks for
Every Lile Style
This wHk's cover story shows jewel-buckled
belts and bands of velvet on . sof!ly draped
fabric• for holiday wear.
• RACI NG C H~P -Jackie Stewart. a race car
ilriver since his early teens, considered by piany
to be the world's best competition driver tbday,
talks about racing and life.
e NEW MAR IC TWAl!I? -Woody Allen (.today's
Mark Twain or W.Q\ Rpgers ?) sharpens his •
tongue and comments on some of today's vital
Issues.
' e HOLIDAY DINNER -Fall)ily Weekly Cook-
book goe1 completely lraditlonal arid details
complete menu for turfey or capon dinner for
the holidays. • . .
!All Comillg Sattttday in 1he
'
• I DAiLY PiLOT I
.. -·-·-· . ~·
,. , ' ' 2666 .HARBOR BLVD. . -'
546-7080 COSTA MESA
WHDAYS · 9-to 9
SATUQAY SUNDAY · '10 .,
-.
•
MALIBU OUTDOOR
,~-~--6 LIGHT SET
D Spotligllt •ttr•c1i••
portion• of your lio 1111 ,
l ik• wli•r• M1bl1 ••·.lid
·•th1 f1t1g• door wi th
th• c•r.
A11tom1tic tirn•r t1ke1 tfi• both•r out of flipp ln,
~swjtch, • s9·~1TH
G.E. STEAM· IRON
0 I 5 V•nh for compl•I•
f•bric sl1•min9 m••t1
iro11i119 i pl•1111r1.
0 C111't yoii toll th1t
" lin• of copy ~.,
"'ritt1n by I m1 n7
9••
' : G.E. BLENDER .
0 Jiu+ f" +im• le wliip
1tp • l:i1h:h of •9t 1109
Of' ~crlW~y cliMr 111
tltit bit ]2 ou11c•
il•c•l\f•f· Evo n "'•ktt 1aow
COR•t ~ cru1li1d ic•,
.. ... ·;· .. ... , .. ... _' -. . . ~ .. ... . .. ••
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RAIN G.UnlR
Wet S~rface· Roof' FWCh .·
' ' ' . .
5~1lt up tiny Cr•Cks ,n,j
hol11'lhot c•n b•com•
co1tly rv•ir1 if lilt 110111,
us• •\19 n on wit surfoc11.
.. WIG HEAD
Siyr ofor11. wig h11d holds
your,•lhe r h•irsff111tly
: .)
. .
29'
·I Pll~l GLASSWARE
'Sn
Finey •rnbou•d0oles19n •ntl
cJ•11ic.1tyl• m•k• ffi•s• !il..O
. ri9ht for compl"Y· ,
: D.,' 01. ritck•t !•s•1· 12 01. b•••••t:• f'I••••• or th•· , big I 6 01. c•el•r si11.
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collf:•cf -•per wHI Mh
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0 M1k• yo11r hows• th• b•st. l,01!.i11t •ti• iii th • .
block by 011flinin9 th• roof or k 1m1. ·
0 Do11't fo•t•f outd•or clips f• h•119 tf., lit hh ..
.• '
THE
LOWIST;l. '
·9995 - .
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BLACK &!DICKER
JIG SAW
•
M11i.1DH • r-.il cuf
11p1,.Jf,k•• 1tr•ith.t,
Cunoff •1141 1,~fO~ :c1fl
in._:.d, i.i•t"•I, pl•lticJ
•'"' •t+i•r m•teri•I•
1288
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INSINKERATOR GARIAGI '·
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•cfio11 ,9ob~lt1 f••b•t• witli ~Ito. . -· D C•11'.f •lit••t ,;1,.,, er
9l11s •nd t•tl1 'fOY •••
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a £~ii with~ .. 4'ut•1111tlc 41ehwffit.r vo11'll ' r '.;:
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I
I
I DAILY PILOT * Tlluroday, Dtcembtr 10, 1'1111
Ne Ltcck Yet
New Leads Found ..
' I ,_, In Lawyer Search .· • . • , "· .
• LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sha,
f roo Tate murcter trial ,attar·
ney Ronald Hughea has been
missing !or 12 days, but de-
tectives near I.ht remote wil-
derness where he vanished
before torrtntiaJ raloa sent
nwd and wattt ca1ead1ng
Urouih mountain canyons.
Friends of Hughes ti a v e
said they fear he may be dead
-buried under debris f r o m Commission say they're following n e w the storm. But a new search
leads. Tuesday turned up nothing,
Bad weather, however, has and new rain storms for ced
halted tile search In Ventura a temporary halt on Wednes-
County, where dozens of sher· day.
Orders Bail
On Suspects lff"s deputies have s wept "Since more rain is fore·
tbtoolb the Sespe Hot Spi'inp cUt," a deputy .tald I at•
ar•a.lootinc lot HuPes. W"""8day, "w• Pl'IJ\>ably
The bk>nd bearded attorney won't resume the s e 1 r ch LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bail
wu lut meen in that-.._.,ea Thursday. Bu& we ere ~now o( tI00,000 each bas been lie'. Thanbgi~lng weekend ju ~ t , re-i(lterview!n~ ~l~es.ses whc:J for two ·janitors accused of ab-'1;iiiii;;;;;;;iioi;;;ii;-;;;;;i;;;;:,;i;;;;;ij;1 ·saw Mr. Hughes 1n the area.
APPRAISALS
DIAMONDS
GEMSTONES
ESTATE JEWELRY
Soull! Cotlt />!tit
And we are talking to new dueling a Glendalt' banker's
witnesses we didn't have be-so11. for ransom.
fore." U.S. Commissioner Marvin
One of the new witnesses, G. Weeks aet the bail Wednes-
not identified by officials, was day at the arraignment of
a young man who encountered George 1o·oorens, 35, and Thom-
Hughes on a trail in the rugged mas Leroy Coleman, 20. on wlldemess 100 miles north of Los Angeles Noy. 'J!I and had charges of violating fedefal
a convers~tion with him . . bank robbery laws.
"We are following up new Authorities said Foorens and
leads he gave.us," Said Capt. Coleman took Lee Sj:iath, 20,
Jim Richards; commander of as a hGStage late Sunday to
the Ventura County sheriff 's gain deposit funds from his
detective division . "We father, Wiiiiam J. Spath,
haven 't given Y.P· We're going manager of the Glendale
to come up with something," branch of the Bank of Amer.
he•~: ica .
· In LA Schools
Critn·inal Damage
.
Hits $2 Million . ..
SACRA~NTO (AP) r-. suspect '1~Uslden:."
CHANGE O~ OWNERSHIP
FORMEllLY MY WILSON$ .
1101 ·JAMIOREE: ROAD
'NOW
'HONE 4•4·0ll0
SHOP Bw-glary, theft 9nd anon Another wltn(U in the hell·
caused 2. t million darbage in Ing on school behavioral Pl'.0-1 ;-· --------------,
Ca!Uornia'• largest school blem.. which concluded I Inventory Reduct"1on ,. district in fiscal 1570, Wednesda~, Tbomf. Shannon
This is the damage estimate of San Dteg,, «;al ed on the
!or the 400 ~student Los legiJlature to enact l~gtalation HAND TAILORED Angeles Cu~· Unmed 'Scbopl re(lllatlng and .. defi~lng 'Fir,~!
District given by a~ A:~endment fret . speecli SPORT COATS
mini!trative c o n s u I t a.n t · r1ghb for studt;nts. · ·
Gordon Trigg to a 'Sena}e REG. 10.00 TO 90.00
educatiun subcommittee hear· NOW
ing in the eap1101. _Heat-see, king 4000 To 4500 Trigg said the district has •
Increased. Its .security staff
rrom 1s to 104. but sun neec1s D · u.:.-.i
another 100 agent. and more • evice eeu FINE TAILOliD SLACKS burglar allnN to thwart
night-time }>"'•kins of schools,: In Searcl1 REii. 24.00 "fO 45.00 Only 57 students were U:ti · NOW ·
pelled by the district in fiscal 1 ~
1969-70 with most erput.lona REDDING (AP) :rt-
coming !or narcotics o t S..rchers probing the snow
awult!. bound Trinity Alps near Red-
Trigg and other Los Angelet ding with sophlsticated heat
spokesmen said ~acial conOic\ sensing gear .. re going "all
was not the maJOr source of · out" to find <\ couple missing
campus vio!ence. They wer• for two wee.s before . fresh
unable to single out a caust snow .storms hit the rugged
for some fl1htJ at high school area.
football games ·except ta Herbert Herrin, SI , and his
Trial Set
l n San Diego
Bribe Cas e
\Yife Ann . 49. of Granada Hills,
Calif., disappeared amid howl-
ing blizzards last Thanlsgiv-
ing weekend . in the same area
where a mother and daughter
survived for 59 days before
perishing three years ago.
''It's very possible the Her-
rins are alive. We're making
an all-out effort ••• whatever
DUIGNER .. l<;KWEAR
NIW ·Sl4APES
TO 7150
NOW
3''.
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INVENTORY ¢LEARANCE
SWEATERS
Alpaca CardlCJan
Alpaca Pullovers
1/2 PllCE
DAILY: t TO 5-SUNDAY 10 lO J
'
SPORT SHIRTS
DON LOPER AND
LILY DACHE
Y2
NEW/>OllT I EACH
LOCATED AT THE NEW,OR.lER INN
Now thru
SUNDAY
DEC. 13th
SAN DIEGO (UPI) _ Tbt the weather will let us do,"
proaecution's cue 8 g a i n s \ Shasta County Sheriff's Capt.
Mayor Frank CUrrao, on trial ICh~ar:l•:s~Do:wn:in~g~s:•l:d~W:•:dn:•s-:g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ on bribery and conspiraq _day .
charges, was expected to bji
•
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East Arnlheim C.,.._
Lincoln at State College
ANAHEIM
read to a jury or nine men and
three women· today.
Jury selectlou was to pre-
ceed in the , trial ' o t
assemblyman Tom Hom {I\•
San Diego ), also accused ol
bribery and conspiracy.
Four alternates, two mtft
and two women, were agreed
upon by Deputy District Al·
tomey John Hewicker and
George R! McClenahan, ·cur-
ran's defense counsel, at the
close of proceedings W!!dt
Desday.
• ' Normal procedure would
call for Hewicker le make the
proeecution'a opening state-
ment as the next major step tn
U.,.CUrran matter. The firat ~ p+Cution witness was JEX•
pected to be City Clerk J'ohn
t ~woOd, who was present tn
the courtroom of Superior
Court Judge Robert Conyers
Wednesday .
Three days were consumed
by jury selection In the Curran
trial, and the final alternate
Chosen was the last member
of a 36-person panel of pr~
spective jurors called.
'Ch'.arisma'
Played Role
In Election
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Pollster Mervin Field said to-
day charisma played a majOr
Tole in the suceeas of both
-Gov. Reagan and Sen. eled
John V. Tunn ey in the Nov. 3
elections.
Youth helped the 36-year-old
Tunney, a Democrat. in his
defeat of in c umbent
Republican Sen. George
Murphy , 68, Field reported.
Field's California P 11 I J
surveyed 892 persons after the
election to determine why peo-
ple voted as they did .
Field s a id "charismatic
leadership" was a key factor
in the broad support of Rea-
gan, a Republican who won
a second term b/ 500,000 votes
even though 'Democrats out·
number the GOP in registr.ii-
lion in Californla .
He said the poll Indicated
that Regan's 0 em o c rat i c
challenger Jess Unruh "came
across in the 11170 eatnpjl.ign aa
the antithesis of the charisma-
tic leader.''
When asked why they voted
for Regan. 42 percent or those
sampled salJ because he '"has
done a good job. has good
record. more capable, ex·
perienced" and the lllct.
Unruh's best response came
In the area of "partisanship
and ideology." ·
DOWN TOWN
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OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. • •
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
SW lftlSTOL STREIT • COSTA lliaA. CAllfOlllllA • l'llONI 14MOll
MAIN Ol'l'ICI.: 1411 WHrmlfl 90Ul,IVAJID, LOI ANOEUI, CALIFOflJM
•
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t
t
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..· Saddlehaek
( EDITION
V0,L' 631 NO .. i9S, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES
• •
•
Today's Ft.al
N.Y. Stoeb
ORANGE cou.N.TY. c.(UFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER. 10, 1970 TEN CENTS: ,
~ow Is the Time to Start Watching Whales
..
SOuth ,Orange County's whale.watcbl,ng
·1ei.!ion is drawingi nigh and the winter of
1"8-11 is expected to' be lfie biggest yet
_; at least ' for the .. watche1'3." ·
"the first California gray whales, along
wtthia few kj,Qer whales, ·have been spot-
ted off the coast en ro.ute from the cltj.11
Bering·Sea to the wanner waters of the oduth. . lf1le .migration will be in full sw4tg
flym . ~ end or December through
February, according to Philip Grignon,
• ire
' '
,H•
. l\ARBAlµ.CHEATU.M
I
' ' ~HRI$ ,BERNEY
resident whale expert and oceanography
instructor for the Capistrano Unified
School District.
The peik Is an>Ulld the end of January,
says Grignon, when ''it looks like a
steamer lane out there."
Grignon will kick oU the whale migra-
tion season with a lecture and slide
presentation at 7:30 t.onlght in San.
Clemente High School auditorium. The
program is open to the public without
charge.
-•
• I (
CRICKET BEWSEY
DEBBIE HUNT
Many of the slides he will proje<:t were
made during whale-watching crul!ea out
of San Clemente, sponsored by the school
district in cooperation with the American
Cetation Society and San Clemente
sportfishing enterprises.
Last year Grignon and his student
teaching assistants took more than 5,000
students from throughout the county out
to see the whales, with three boats mak·
ing four-hour runs twice a day,
''Tbere seems to be even more interest
..
this year," Grignon said thls week. 0 We
have been asked to lead a group from the
Sierra Club aitd thert have· been requests
for cruises from San Bernardino, Palos
Verdes, Garden Grove and all sorts of
places."
Weekday crulses are arranged for stu-
dent groups. but there also are weekend
cruises for the public, he said.
The cruises, will start Dec. 23 and con-
tinue through January and February. ·
There's no _guarantee that gray whales
• ·am1
~ Rail Strike
Shows Signs
Of Slowing
KAREN· McLEROY
SHERYL JONES
WASHINGTON (AP) .:.. St r I k Ing
trainmen paralyzed the rail system na·
tionwlde tod•Y atthougb the ranb of the
walkout showed siins of breaking in the
first few hours._ .
Still, hundreds of thousands o I
••lm~an · CC!nlJll\l\en ~ to flpd 'olhu,
•• ,, to -m ·iUll tre~··-"'41!od·
while thni ;o{ (our unlooa. iii Ibo liOll,llllt-
m'an stffte Mld'thty were~ tbttt
11.riR orders.· · · ·n,. •;~ml>Or ~ or•
Raltnr. Cll!b beld out, 1a)'in« DOthlnc
despffo ..,.. d .. t ud cou/t bus OD
the 'llrlb, ll"I· a plea from Proe1denl
Ni><0n to llay Clll'llie job. , · ,
Spot checb sbOwed members of the
other .three wtion8 ~ honoring the'
Clerka' Picket ilila.
Penn~tral spokesmen. said they
doubted anyone would come back until
Picket lines 'diSlol\'ed. '
Overland passenger trains · sat in Los
Angeles terminals, nothlna: was baP.
pening with the Southern ;pacific. in
Arizona and In Chicago 140,000 commut-
ers switched to cars and buses for a way
to work.
As for the clerks, their headquarters
said an announcement of some sort would
be made sometime later in the day. In
Philadelphia a clerks leader said: "We're.
still on strike." Jn Cleveland some clerks
were working under a court Injunction,
some were ouL ,
A first indicator of the economic con-
sequences of the strike was seen in West
Virginia where 800 .. :oal miners were
turned away because of a coal car
shortage. Spokesmen for the industry In
the state said all l,35Cl mines wouJd be
shut down by midnight Friday if the
strike continues. Coal is fuel for heat and
electricity in the nation's urban centers.
At the White House, press secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler expressed optimism
the clerks would join the three other
unions in ordering their men back to
work .
"We expect that the fourth union also
will comply with the law," said Ziegler.
South Coast Beaches
Closed to Canines
1VIE tN PAGEANT -T\velve lovely girls will com-Jaycees begin at 7:30 p.m. at the school's Triton
Dogs will be baMed starting Jan. l
from the two South Coast state park
beaches, officials said, "because <lf the
number of incidents involving health and
safety to beach user!." "_pete Friday night at San Clemente High &hoot in Center. Judging will be on scholastic achievement,
~the area's first Junior ?.1.iss Pageant. Here are six. creative and perfonning arts, fitness, poise and
'rrbe ceremoni~~ spon~ored by the San Clemente appearance.
•'
Dogs -leashed or not -will not be
allowed either on Doheny or San
Clemente State Park beaches.
Youths Aiding
1
80 Tijuana Orphans
' 1A group o( church yaulh from San
Juan Capistrano's Community Christian alurch are scouring the South Coast area ~'l rlhd food, toys, cl<lthing and ptrsonal
~ h!ir the 80 orphans at Tijuana's Rose
PlrkOrphanage. ·
· 'The' Christm as effort, which the youths
~ will be larger in scope than their
u!Ual quarterly trips to the Mexican
~ will end Dec. 19 when a caravan
liaen' with gifts from the South Coast
Jetves (or the border city. ·
l'be orphanage was begun In 19'2 by
Mr. and Mrs. Juan Sandoval, mission-
aries for Proteslant denomination.
' The eoup&e, which depends oo donations
" •
from the United States, care for 70 in-
digent boys and 10 orphaned girls in a
three-room orphanage with a trailer
nearby:
Jn the energetic ~ffort·to colltct. ttem·s
for the orphans, the members of Com-
munity Christian's Teens for Christ and
younger JurUor l~igh Yoolh Group are
M!eking baste staple foods, clothing,
houaehold maintenance and cleaning aup-
plies and fresh toys to brighten up an
otherwise bleak Christmas.
Money abo will be gratefully accepted ,
said the Rev. Richard Reeve, pastor of
the Capistrano church. The funds are us-
ed to purchase nutritious food at
wholesale prices.
"When you stop to think that there. are
dozens of mouths to feed and heaps of
clothes to wash each day, it lakea
anything anyone can find to Jill the
need," he said.
While the JuniO£ high group focuses on
food, basic necessities and an Individual
Olristmas aloe.king for each child, older
members of Teens for Christ are con-
ducting their "Toys for T.J ." drive.
Donations can be made at several
South Coast locations, the minister ex·
plained. 1
New toys and food donated for a child
can be dropped off at DeNeutt'o
•
Hardware in San Clemente. at 717 N. El
Camino Real. A wheelbarrow Is avaHable
there to hold both toys and food dona·
lions.
. Other drop-off areas Ior any usable
dooatlon Include the Lquna Niguel Fire
Station at 3014l Alicia Parkway, of the
church Itself at 31642 E. Camino Real,
San Juan Caplslram. Oropofls are ac·
cepted between I a.m. and 5 p.m. unW
the day before the caravan leaves.
More specUic informaUon in home
pickup of merchandise is avallab~ by
calling Blaine Roberb at 49M8llO (Who
also handles cuh donations); the church
at ff3.4116 or Rev. Reeve at 495-lta •
will be spotted, the -teacher added, "but
last year w.e lucked out an<f SJ?C>tted them
on eve.ry trip -along with dolphins, pilot
whales and klller whalel."
Lut ye.ar Grignon and his students also
manned a "whale censµs" tower from a
vantage ' point abo\re Dina Point Harbor
and logged and estimated whale m.Jcra-
Hon of 5,000 to 15,000 of the giant mam-
mals.
1be gray whalel, which sometimes at-
la!n a lencth ol 50 feet and a weliht of
0
Down tlae
·Mission
Trail
El Toro Scouts •
Set Garage . Sale . .
EL TORO.-Members (!f El Toro Cub
Scouts Den Four .,. ... uy ptUng Into
the iPIJ!I ~ pvihf . I : . . ,' ,.: 1 •
'In order .1n Jlialo\ ~•·,a, Utua,
brigbter' for , ·ch\I~ aj !he, Albert Sitton
lfliaJe, .a OIJWllJ',.J!51~11' Jar,~t
dlfJdren, tbl raDI we bolthii' • rprqri
ak on Friday and Satunlay.
:~ lroin the .. wljl
0 be -to
punbale ioy1 and clothi.I lnr Ille chUd ' . ybo .allo wllJ recelve a nearly now toy
donated by each of the den membe.n.
· The1sale Will take place an day bp bolh.
days starllog at 9 a.m. ai il082 Lan.
dllview1 El Toro, accordinj to Mn.
Beverly 'Kavtgan, Den · mother ls Mrs.
Connie Sanders.
e NN Oftker•
CAPISTRANO HJGllLANDS -Mel
ShoPe has been elected to head the CaplstraOo Highlands Ho m e w n e r 1
Association. for the coming year.
Other officers Include Charles Wydner,
vice president; Pat Fearon, treasurer
and Judy Buss, secretary.
other members of the board of direc·
tors are Richard Warner, Richard Smith,
Loa Young, Paul Raber and Jerry ze.ug.
e Yule Saow Ball
MISSION VIEJO -Tickets are 11lill
available for the Christmas Snow Ball, an
annual event sponsored by lhe Mission
Viejo Activities Ccmmittee. It is schedul-
ed" Friday.
. Tickets are $15 per couple and can be
reserved by calling the Montanoso
Recreation Center, 837-4084.
The price lnlcudes dinoer and dancing.
Dinners will be served Crom 6 to 1:30
p.m. at the Mission Viejo Gclf and Coun-
try Club. The dance· will begin at 9 p.m.
and will feature Bob Cassen's orchestrL
e Dealfln «:anteat
liflSStON VIEJO -Christmas cards
sent out by the Mission Viejo Company
will feature a reproduction or an oll by
Mae O'Neill, first prlz.e winner In the
Christmu Card Detlgn competition.
The contest waa sponsored by the
Mission Viejo Association of Artists and
Crart.smen. 'Ibe winner reee.ived tz50 tor
her efforts while aecond place winner
Mary Gilllam ~ved •$100 and third
place recipient, Lowana Carter, received
$50. Prizes were dQ_nated by the Mission
Viejo Company.
e Tapleal Talk
MJ~ION VIEJO -Topics Unlimited,
a disculalon group for Mission Viejo
residents, will take up questions of en-
vironment at their Sunday meeting.
T. R. DicUc>n, chemlltry lnllruclor at
Orange Coul College wilt atwnpl to
answer the. quesUoo HWbefe are we
going, growing ., full" at the 7 p.m.
meeting at the Mon~ Re<rulloa
~ntet. ' The group wll) delve Into the queatlons.
of preventing further deve.topment ln ·
Orange County, the quality ol aw ud
wit.er, and the problem of pollution.
Tom -walker, architect and project
engineer for Chrysler Really C:Orpor•tion
will be moderator at the dllcusslon.
Recreation Center members are welcome
free, non memben wlll be cllarCed $1.
35,000 pounds, stay In sight of Jand
throu'gh most of their 8,500-mile journey.
from the. Arctic Ocean to Scammon's
lagoon In Baja CaU!oinia, where the
fema1es bear the.Ir calves, then begin the
long journey north.
Twice in the past 200 years the species
have been slaught.ere.d almost into ex.
tlnction, but the governments of Canad•;
the UrUted States, Mexico and the Soviet
Union now have joined in a strict ~
gram of protect.ion which b restoring the
gray whale population.
• IX
Blaze Loss
$19,000
In Oemente
By JOHN VAi.TERZA
Of llM DlllY Plllt llaff
An early·morning fire routed • San
Oemente family cl. 1ix lrom. their beds
today then razed the upptt lev,el of their
home, causing 419LOOO in damage.
Th• fire, which apparently broke· out to,
the kitchen ·of lbe realdence owned. by
Louis Ruelai Iii 1JI TrieR, spread: quick-
ly fr9111 a; ki~n cupJ>oud,.JUl'!N Ibo
open.beam Hying IOOIQ. , paneled iltdlen
and baPway .. The mn.tnder ol t'*
residence auff~ed ~vy· smoke damqe.
--._ilfle'<bot, ~ -*"''le --· pressure ...... hljlsJde hojnt -for JS ·mhlul<S befcn a-disappearecl. .
iluefi. slo!Jd by shirtleu In the chilly momll!f, watching and lalklng with nelgbbon. .
"We were tound asleep,'' be said,
"when we smelled smoke and Mary
(Mrs. Ruelas) went into the kitchen. By
then the fire re.ally took off," he said.
Ruelas phoned for firemen as hi.s wife
roused the couple's four children, Lor ..
ralne, 15; Carolyn, I, and twins Louis and
Cecilia, both 4 years old.
Nineteen members of the city's
volunteer department arrived within five
minutes of the 12:30 a.m. alarm.
The Ruelas home lies direcUy acroa
the steep road from the house of Police
Lt. Ray Hartman, who said the blaze was
so bot, "windows were popplnf out all
over the place."
The fire left little to salvage in the
$25,000 masonry structure. Dama_ge to the
bullding was .!let at 415,000 and loss of
contents was asseMed by fire officials at
fj,000.
The blaze was the second major stnJc..
lural fire to erupt In the city in two
weeks.
Last Nov. 28 a fierce blaze erupted
three separate times, destroying the
home of the Ralph Armstrong family.
severely burning the father and tnructing
lesser burns to 3-year-old T I m
Armstrong. The $45,000 home was a total
loss.
The latest blaze apparently erupted I~
wiring beneath the kitchen sink, firemen.
theorized.
we'atller
Are you ready for some nice,
warm Santa Ana winds? They 'll
be along Friday, pushing the
mercury up to 70 degrees under
sunny aldea.
INSmE TODAY
Need somt ideas about what's
good to get for your Loutd one1
ot Christmaa? Set special Gift
Section in toda11'1 DA l LY
PILOT.
o.~ 14 ~
CHllCSTMAS
1
I
;I OllU PllOI SC Tl\urSdj_Y, Dec:tmbtf 10. 1~70
Calley Ordered to l(·ill?
Defendant Will TeJl Own Story on Stand
PT. BENlllllG. Ga. (UPI) -Lt.
Wtlli1m L. Calley's dtfen.se attorney told
a six~fieer military court today lhat
Cilley took his platoon into the Viet-
namese hamlet of My Lai under orders
Uiat ''every Uvlng thing in that area be
killed... .
In a brief ope:nlng sta~ment, Dtfen1e
Atlom<y C.01'1< W. Latimer "Id Colley
would take tbl stand in bis own deftDlt
Ind sf,. a lull a-.nt "ol bis -.
COQdlact· and ti.havlor."
c.Jley, 11, Is -of ldllln&, ar orderin& killed. 102 South Vietnamese
civillana March 16, 1968, the day he Jed
bls platoon on a search-and-destroy
minion throuah My Lai.
Lltlmer nid the cluster of villages in
which My Lai was situated was knovm as
Vitt Cong oounlr)' and a deltb trap for
Alllltlucl'toldltr .. ·'
Muy ol the rMmbor• "' C&iley'• pJo.
loon had been killed or bad arma and Je11
blown off and bad been "ruined for lift"
in prtCtding weeks by mlne1 , booby traps:
and ambushes aet by "civilians of all
ages" of the area, Latimer said.
Christmas Mail Logjam
Worsened by Rail Strike
The day before the attack. he said,
funeral services had been held for three
sald.iers who had been killed. He said the
feeling at the services was a general
mood of rtprlsaJ.
Then, the company commander. Capt.
Ernest ?i.1edina, called a meeting,
LaUmer continued.
"He told his men that at long Jut they
were going to close with the enemy and
be given the opportunity to get even for
the 1055 of their buddies," LaUmer said.
"He 111id the area was defended by the
~th Viet Cong Battalion. one of their
finest. and the mission was not only to
search and destroy My Lai 4, but My Lal
Postmuten eJong the Orange C:O..t
1re bracing tbelr staffs for tbe Chrlstmu
mall glut which hu been complloated
tlriJ year by the mall mbargo brought on
by a national rail strike.
The embargo. insUtuted Wedntlday by
Postmaster General Winton Blount. af-
fects second.. third and fourth clan mail
to be delivered more than 300 miles.
Laguna Beach Postmaster Charles
Covault said the types of mall covered by
the embargo include parctl post, publica-
tions and catalogues.
Moat Christmu packages are mailed
by parcel post but Christmas cards travel
by rirst clan mall.
"The only thing I can suggest for peo-
ple who want to maD Christmas packages
Is to send them first class or alrma.11,
even though it Is rather cosUy," II.id
John B. KlugJewlci, Costa M e a a
postmaster.
'Newport Beach Postmaster Payne
Thayer guggested residents get all their
mail in as early as poaaible. "I hate to
alarm anyone at thll time,•• be 11id. "I
would suggest that Christmu is 1ettinc
closer than most of us realh:e, and this
embargo im't going to help."
Thayer said the 300-mile Umll In wl!ich
the ......i. third and fourth clAll mall
wilJ be delivered Includes the southern
half of the San Joaquin Valley a.od Las
Vegas, but does not include San Fran-
cisco. "So if you want to send packages
to places outaJde thla area. plan on uaing
a1rmaU or first class," he added.
The Costa Mesa pootmaater alao •Ill·
gested sorting the fll'lt class mall Into
groups of mall to be delivered within the
cil}i and mall to be dellvmd out31de the
dty. '"l'hil means that if you live in
Costa Mesa you11 have mail lolnl to
Cootr; ..... ' * .... only and moll· aotnc to an other ad-..· .
He · wa this wilJ help pool office
employea clear their decks in prepar1tion tor the aettlement ot the rl.IJ dilpUfe
whicbl• bound to bring a delugs ol porcof
poo1 and otber mbarsood -o1.
mall • -' .
Clement.e Auto
Injures Youth
-
A 21-year~ld Monarcb Bay man suf-
fered possible broken tea• before noon w.
day when be rJin into the path of a pus.
tng car in San Clemente's bua1nas
dl5trict.
Grogory Pat:lcl< Chaney, of 419
Monarch Bay, wa1 treated at South Coat
Commuolty Hospital for tbe lnJuri .. lllf·
fered in the 10:4!1 a.m. mi!hap.
Police said Olaney ran i.nto the path of
an auto driven by 71-year-old Jotepb
Francis Calta of 215 Avenida Pelayo. The
incident oc.curred in front of &01 N. El
Camino Roal.
Witnesses told officers they gaw
01.aney dart into traffic in front of
Laguna Fede.ral Savings and Loan, ap-
parently trying lo crou the highway.
He slammed into the side of Calla's
auto, then rolled to the pavement aftd
was narrowly mi&sed by other moving
autos.
Calta was not cited. police said.
DAllY PllOT
C•te M-. S.. Clo ....
C>UHGE COAST PIJBLISHINC> ~MY
aobort N. WoM
Prnkllltt •1111 l"AI"""
Jock a. C•rloy
vie. PAIUlenl or.d Gtnenot """""
1lioMH ICN¥il ......
Jk1111t A. Mo,,111..-
MMtllnl ~licllafit P. Hol ltlllh Oro,,,. c.ount)' IUIMr -a.ti M .. 1 DI w .. t ..,. It!-' tlewport ltlct'I~ 2111 W•t 81111t1 loijlMf'C •
~ aud11 m F-t .-..-Mllnfl...-i 9HC.l'l: ltall ltildl '°""""FC
i.A ~ as HOl1ll "~ lllN
DAll.Y f'ILOT', -wlllch II tllfftW,.., "" Ht.-..J•ron. ii-fll,lttHs"i!f clllly .,..,., hit-~r In MPl ftllt d ll-for UfMt ... 0.
,._, hKll. Collt ~. """'"""" ilffdl .ill ~Min V111e't'. , ... Wint ....
rt0illfMI fll!t-. Or-...... C..t ""*'-""" ~ llWll'ltlflt --~ ..... ,, ltll ..,
.... llW... ,.~ IM<tlo -:m ... .. , .w.1. C.11 #otN.
, .. _Clt41'4MHI
C1•lftM ~ &U>lf11
S.. C: ....... All 0.,•t' hi
T•p•sne 4t2MJI
~ ,.,., °"' ... a.t ,......... ~'(. Ne .., ......... ~ ...
... 1 .. 111 _,,., ., •bll1~ .. -,.,.., .. ,...llCClll ....... ... ,.,..
1111ui. ., """'* ......-.
'-ond cit• •'* IMhil •I 111-' ~ M4 c;otll Mt.-, (•UIOn'llt. twiKrl(llllll W
(trri.r U.U "*'1fll't'I 'Y m.11 N...71 IMl'lfJllYI
mllll1rf ll•tlllalllN, l1JS ll*llfll\'.
No post office in the area will accept
any parcel post mail. ''We can't !!ilaCk it
up here and wait ror the end of the em·
bargo. bec1uae we'd run out of space in
about half a day," Covault said.
All the Orange Coast po!tma&ters said
they will see to it that all mail received
in their offices on Christmas Eve ls
delivered by Christmas Day.
hJ'm really hoping that this will get
strai&htened out before too long,"
Covault said. "At this juncture. it would
probably be best to wait a couple of days
and aee whit happens.
"But one thin&, we will do, and that is
deliver all the mail that comes in here,
no matter bow late we have to work."
Golf Course Set
For Replacement
By Condominium
Sap Clem&nte's foundering Harbor Hills
Golf Courae was earmarked for a huge
condomifltum development by a 3.2 vote
ol ~annin1 commiasioners Wednesday.
The goU course, losing money for
months, originally bad been planned as
a site for mobile homes, but loud J>1'()o
test from residents in nearby Harbor
Estates caused Ole city to turn down
the request by represe11tative of the F onter -Trust.
Wednesday's action, contested by only
two opponents:, resulted In a conditional
u.se permit for the comtruction of about aao coa:tom.inlwn un~in a planned com·
mUDlty devtlbpmeat which will leave
only f. doaen acres Of the links intact.
Dl1senting voters on the panel Roy
Garbarlne Ind Art Holmes pve no re•·
lions, however, the blttle to replace
-!OT their .. vot...
·Dt>plto the .craollJll of Ii eOnllitional
1111 ~t for the ll""J<ct by comm1s-
lime'r1, lxnfever, the batUe o rtplace
the Jinn 'mill!! 11111 have a hurdle re-
m•inln8-
City Councilmen still have the option
to call for a CfJWlCil review and public
hearing on the approval by the pllMing
commission. · It wu auch an action by councilmm
which rtsulted in scrapping of the mobile
borne projtct.
Among conditions for approval of the
pr6ject are submittin& of preci&e plans
for ccmminlo1r scrutiny.
'Ibe applicaUon for the permit wu
granted without ellborate plans for a
project on the goU C6Ul'Se.
Forster Trust spokesmu Reg Wood
told commls1ioners that precise plans
for the development before approval
would btl an unnecesaary eipense.
The thwarted plans for the mobile
home project eost his firm Sl0,000, Woods
explained.
If construction Is consummated on the
condomit'llum development it would link
as a major r!!idential adjunct to the pro.-
posed San Clemente General Hospital,
which will be built nearby. The two proj-
ects are by different developers. how-
ever.
in recent wee.ks Wood has hinted that
still more planned aimmunity develop-
ment miaht be in store for other por-
tions of the Forster property Jn the area.
Beside! dwellings, hillside land In the
area has been Investigated as a possible
1ite for a memorial park.
5 and 6. ·
"He said the infonn1Uon was that all
civilians had left the area and if any were
remaining they would be Viet Cong or
Viet Cong sympathizers.
"He ordered the village burned, the
animals shot, the wells contaminated and
every living thing in that are.a. killed."
He said higher commanders were in
the area that day, including on the
ground, "and nothing was said about tbe
killing of civilians until a lunch break."
Other commanders were nytng over
the action and should have known what
was happening, Latimer said.
Some Viet Cong of military age were
killed (presumably by artillery or aerial
fire) before the ground troops got
there. He said this killing was done ''right
at the edge of a ditch in which the
government contends Calley killed at
least 70 screaming women, children and
old men."
Latimer said Calley and his platoon
had been inadequately trained and in·
slructed for this kind of combat. Some of
the platoon members had not ~n In
combat before, he said, all believed the.Ir
sweep would be "bitterly contested," and
some were frightened.
Saddlehack Sued
Over Eye Injury
A Saddleback High School student has
sued school district trustees and a school
custodian for $9,800 in Orange Coun4
ty Superior Court complaint which states
that his injuries may lead to the loss of
bis left eye.
Monty Lyn Kizer, 17, of Santa Ana,
1ttks those damaaes In an action filed
by his mother. Mrs. Dorothy Kathleen
Kizer. Santa Ana Junior Colleae District
trugtees and custodian Robert Mitchell
an named as defendants.
The lawsuit asserts that Mitchell's
negligence led to a piece of metal from
a broken padlock on the youth's locker
striking him in the left eye on Sept. 9,
1969. Mitchell oupplied Che tool used by
the boy to cut the padlock, the com·
plaint notes.
School district truslff1 recently reject·
ed a Sl00,000 damage claim filed by
Mrs. Kizer.
Trash Contract
Battle Looming
Oranae County will go to court to pro-
tect the trash disposal company fran-
chised by the county to serve the Dana
Point-Capistrano Beach area .
Solag Disposal holds the contract and
objects to the intrusion into the area of
Charles Waltman of El Toro, head of
Toro Disposal.
County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said
Waltman had been told to stop serving
the area but refused .
Supervisor Robert Battin thought Solag
Disposal should pay for an attorney to
fight the Infringement But he lost 4-1 as
other supervisors reasoned that Ole coun-
ty should protect the integrity of its
franchises.
County Supervisors Act
On High Risk Insurance
Action which wW enable pn>perty
owners in high flood risk locations to ob-
ta in Wurance has been taken by the
Board of Supervisors.
The bollrd has d«:lared ii. lnlent to
mett the requirements of the National
Flood Insurance. Act and authorized the
PlaMing Department to study and
present flood plain zoning regulations.
The national nood insurance program
ts under the. Department of Housing and
Urban Development and provides for the
creation of a National Flood Insurers
As:lodaUon, a pool of prl,ate companies
ofrertni ln1ur1nce to homeowners and
small bualnt3Sts al pnmlum rates
subsldized by the federal govemment.
The supervlton Action qua1Ule1 the
county for ruch lnsurll!C1!.
Nell stop. a«Ordln1 to Flood Control
DllCrlct Oper1llonl Englnttr Carl Nelson
Is the. preparaUon and adopUon of land
uae and building rtgulatlonJ a n d
aasurance to the federal government that
auch regul1Uons wilt be enforced.
PrevlOUJly private companies hava
been Unlllble to provide !UCh .. nood ln.-
surance because onJy those homeowners
In obviously high risk locllltlons are wiU·
ing lo purchase the Insurance and
therefore the premium rateg are pn>-
hibilive.
The purpose of Che federol subsidy ts to
limit premium rat.es to 40 cent.I per $100 or
lnsur11nce for structural a>verage. ind
50 cents per Stoo for coverase of contents:
such as furnishing~ and per51mal effects.
Future safe&Uard&. Nelson said. will be
necessary and will go beyond the e1.lsUng
regulations of the county building code.
With.in or adjactnt to a nood plain the
ionlng of property would be limited to
nonpresldentlal uses or buJdding regula·
tlon• might ttqUire d"'lllngs be built
above the highest risk flood level.
Flood plains ,,.. Identified through
studlOI by the U.S. Corps of Englnws.
To date the. Plact.nUa-Yorbit Linda and
tht Laguna Canyon area report& have
been completed.
Near completion ls the San Juan Cretk
area and to be done la the Santa An1 Can·
yon area.
DAILV f'll..OT lltff 'toet.
MIMI TALKS AS MURRAY PACES AT COUNTY COURTHOUSE
Nixon Aide Chotlner, E1tr•nged Wife Mllu Ap1rt
Mrs. Clwtiner Promises
To Tell All in Divorce
By TOM BARLEY
Of .... Dll/f f'llet ••• ,,
White House aide Murray Chotiner and
his estranged wife took their marital dif-
ferences to Orange County Superior
Court today for a trial that will, Mrs.
Amalia "Mimi" Cbotiner predicts, see
the death of their five year marriage and
the birth of a book .that will "erpose
Chotiner's evil influence." on President
Richard Nixon.
Mrs. Chotiner, 44, of 1637 Lincoln Lane,
Newport Beach, promised newsmen a
series of spicy releases on the contents of
the book while her apparenUy unruffled
husband paced the courthouse corridor a
few yards from her. ·
"! plan to tell the public just what I
learned from five years of close asaocia·
lion with Chotiner while he acted as Nii:·
on'a hatchet man," she said. "We went
everywhere togeU,er, conCerences., con.-
ventiot11 and top level meetin&s aM my
book ls going to tell the world just what
went on behind the scenel!i."
She aid her book which she will call
''In Care of the White House" will espose
Nixon's "secret maneuvers" in nationf.I
and California politics and · spell out
Choliner's role in "all that wheeling and
dealing."
Chotiner, 59, headed for Judge Samuel
Dreizen's courtroom and the opening of
what is expected to be a three-day trial
with the ct1mment that he does not know
"what my wife can possibly write a.bout.
''I never allowed her to see any
privileged material, I kept no diaries and
J never told her of anything that was at
all vital in my 25-year relationship with
.. • and Amazing I
Extr1ordln1ry I
Colossal!
Richard Nil.on," Chot~r said.
"All ghe ever had access to was
television. the newspapers and magazines
and if she can write a book from that,
more power to her."
•And he quickly rejected Mrs. Chotlner's
statement that "many, many doors had
been closed" to her as the result of her
feud with Chotiner with the comment: "I
don't know what she means. Certainly, no
one at any level in Orange County or
anywhere else including myseU has ever
attempted to close any kind of door."
Mrs. Chotiner, who is represented by
Los Angeles attorney Berna.rd A. Leckie.
says her book is at the halfway stage of
preparation and her tape recordings,
documents and manuscript.! a r e
"carefully locked away in a safety
deposit vault." She refused to disclose the
percent whereabout& of her half finished
ei:pose.
The Choti.Ders married on Christmas
day 1965 and separated 'last June. The
former Clllfomia campaign manager fur
Nixon payg his wife a total of more than
$1,000 a month in house payments and
personal support.
His income Is listed In the trial brief as
$36,000 a year from the President and
$45,000 annually from his private law
practice. Judge Dreizen will be asked
during the trial to give Mrs. Cbotiner at
least half the value of the $70,000 home,
most of Ole furnis hings and a monthly
support payment of at least $1.200.
Mrs. Chotiner, who states she has no
other in=ome, continues to live at the Lin.
coln Lane home with two children by a
former marriage, Marta Mueller, 111, and
Edward Charles Mueller, IS.
Wiry? al!el!use In this brilliant nylon
face shag Karastan's color wizards have
dreamed up such eparkling mixes aa lncredlbl•
Blue, Amazing White, Extraordinary Gofd end eve A
Cofoss1/Copp1r. Fabulous has 00 of these colors.
They're all lncredlble, realty.
f Fabulottl comes In ncltlnt •• "'fJI with 1Mtel91rit frlnt•·
A,. I !Z' '°' .. ,, $1J4.fSJ
2 Colleges jj:
" ndSignup~ .
or Fall '71 :
By JOANNE llEY!'IOLllS .
Of tM Otll't NIM l•ff
Orang• Coast high ICbooi ... ior. .,,,
out of luck if they haven't applied fir
admiSslon in fall of 1971 to Cal staji
Fullerton and UC lrvtne.
Both schools have stopped '""'""" applications.
A UC! spokesman said ofOclals thtre
would acctpt only applications f r o in
returning Vietnam veterllll who mett
admis&ion gtandards, upper dlviaioa ap.
plication.I for the School of EnglneeriJil
and graduate applications on a depart·
mental basis. No other applications wtiJ
be acc.epted.
At Cal State Fullerton, the 1ltua.Uon ts a litUe better.
A campus representative Aid appU·
cations from junior and sel\ior b'ans-
fers and graduate students with a de·
gree or credflntial objective are 1WJ
being accepted .
"We are not accepting applicatiom
from freshmen or sophomores or arai-
uate students who just want to t I k f!
some classes with no degree objective
in mind," he said.
Cal Stat. Long Beach is the only stat.
school still accepting: applications 1t all
levels, although an admissions spokes-
•man uraed students to get their appli·
cations In immediately.
The closure announcements came alter,
the regular application period which ran
from Nov. 1 to Nov. 30 at all State
5Chooi>.
In that time, Cal State F\l!Jerton ~
ctived more than 6,000 applications ftir
5,100 openings. The SPokeamen for that
campus said ttiat all thMe who applied
during that period, and who are scholag,.
tically qualified will be admitted. Appll·
cations that came in after Nov. 30 are
being taken on a first come, fint swved
basis.
At UC! 2,272 fmllman applicatloos
have been received and 757 appUcatml
for advanced standing (all other unclel'·
graduate classifications) have been
received.
Of the freshman applications, 2,100 will
be kept and 172 will be redirected to other
UC campuses on the basis of the appli·
cant's second choice listing and scholas-
tic program requiremenb, In the ado
vanced standing applications, 575 1'ill he
kept at UCI and 182 will be redirected.
"We figure on having a.bout SO per-
cent of those who apply enroll. We have
room for 1,235 new freshmr.n and 5IO
advanced standing students in the fall," 1
campus spokesman said.
The current enrollment at UCI II l ,3M
and campus officials are plannin& on u
enrollment next fall of 7,100.
Here's the way tht; application 1ltuaUoa
stands on the other seven UC campUlel:
-Rivmide: Accepting all freahm.u
and advanced standing applications.
-Sant. eruz, Not accepting_
or advanced standing applications'.
-San Diego: Not acceptin1 fnlhman
applications. ·
Reagan Kickoff Set
SACRAMENTAL (AP) -John Wayne,
Frank Sinatra, Dean Martili
Jimmy Stewart and Jack Benny will per.
form at an inaugural pla Jan. 4 cele!
braUng the start of Gov. Roaald Rea.
gan's second term.
Fabulolls Color!
Fabulous Shag!
FABULOUS PRICE!
IF YOU CAN'T
COME IN-CAIL
~
for an expttt
cupet
consulta.nt
\\'ho will
come to
)'our home
\\1th umplt1
\\1thout ll'l)'
obllp.Uon
to )'OUI
I
Laguna Beaeh
EDITION N.Y. Steeb
'
* * • • · ~OL 63, NO. 295, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ·CALIFORNIA • THURS~AY" DECEMBER, 10,. 19JO TEN CENTS
•
Rose Seeks Interest in Laguna's Governme.nt
BJ BARBARA KREIBICH
Of .. Dlllr .. , ... ll•ft
uGoverment ls a very personal and
nry !lying thing, especially in a smaJI
town," says Laguna's new City Manag-
er, Lawrence Rose.
· 1be place to Initiate a reeling of per·
sonal involvement In government, Rose
belleve·s, Is City Hall.
Within two weeks of his arrival in La·
guna; the 50-year-old manager has be.. pm his .campaign to gel every city em-
ploye, not just key personnel, involved
and · interested in the workings of local
IOl'mllllenl. ..
"The police officer out alone In h1s
patrol car, the guy sweeping the side.
walk outside the library or the fellow
trimming the shrubs in the part II na-
turally going to feel remote from the
operations ol city ,government unless
something is done to keep him Inform-
ed," says Rose.
It is equally important, Rose feels, for
the heads oC Police, Fire, Recreation
and other more or leas self-sufficient
departments, along with their staffs, to
keep abreast of all the activities of the
City Council, whether directly· related
to their departments or not.
To Insure a sttadr lllterchaoao cl ln-
lormalioo, Roee baa jnltlated a pollcy
of having all department ~ and
memben of tbeir staffs meet~ in City
Hall council chamber! at t o'cloelt: ivery
morning for a 31).minute briefina-
"We just talk brielly about mrythlng
that has come up in the put IC hours,"
he explains, "have a general dlscualon
of current problems and a~ on solu-
tions if possible. This can save ,~ awf1!!
lot of lime.
"For example, the other morning the
public works director noted that the
Boys' Club planned to build a fence ln
. ~
a certain location. 'lbat seemed fine, but
lhe Fire Chitf was right· there to point
ovl· this would bloet a · rout\> uoed by
fire engines to reach a nearby area. It
was an awful rot better to find out that
way than to .have · the. fl.temen · spin
around a corn.er some day and ftnd the
fence themselves."
Rose' hopes that every city employe
eventually will have an opportunity to
sit In on the ·morning bi'iefings,
In another move to keep city employes
••Jn the act.'" tbe manager pians to. dU..
tribute a regular. summary of,City Coun-
cil • aclioos, 'pr<pared by. Ille city clerk.
The llll!UIW'J', lutled 'a11er each_,,,.
cll meellng,and MJMIJ>l ID 11<0 or lbne
pages will 10 .to. ·everyone on ·tl)e city
staff, from nrildlpoai:d . O!>frators • I!>
gardeners, firemen, police offleers aod
Weguan!s -170 employes in winter, 2SO
in summer. , , ·· ' · ..
"We ,hope tbey. will .keep the ~·
.IJW'ies ~·", saY. Rose, •·., eYJ:r)' ~ty emploje Will be in a poaition to
answer questions asked by. any cltlz.en.
4l)ol.Jt rtetnt council actions. .
"Not on1Y will 'the.y hive a bettel;' un-
d~andlug 'of .wllal's going on al cfly
ball,1 but they can 'becOnie aori .ot reli-. . . .
dent ezperll for their nei,hbon wl>t
may be il\terested in 1pecUlc Jtera••
Rose . is firmly opposed to the 1"1*1
the, bu<~" approach ID· &ovmunont and
a proponent of what he calls "one-stop
shopping" al city hall. .
"U -calll up anc1 · w-ID know when Santa ClaUI will be at hllr
home to talk lo chlldren," ~ ~
"I don't Wlnt OW'• switchboard airl to
refer them ID Ille O>amber ol C.U..
mer<e. She should call the Chamber her-
seU and be able ID provlde Ille lnfonna· 1!ot> dittctly. This II oo1J . reaaonable
servi« for our citbens."
a out ara z :es
lolnt. Session
. Glenneyre Plan
. Gets Council OK
The Laguna Beath City Council, in a
Joirlt ltudy seiilton· '!'ith the Plannii:ig·
ComnUaaion Wednesday rugbt, _gaVe the ' ,. ,_, . ~qo an l»f~ green. liW1I ID
pr..,...i .wffh· pies le< a parking-slnK:-
ture OD the Glenneyre IDW1iclpal parking Jot. . .
I ' jr~ for lbe fir.Jact ieinalns ID be t;.oi.Wd1 but' camcUmtQ I e a e r a 11 y
-.reed lbat 'the ·-on the downtown
partJJ., pt<ib1em nlus1 ota1t iomewberi 'l"i!, it th(s polnt, \he city,.wned Gle,j.
nefre property seeau the most JikelJ
lpOt.
pearly removing any doubts the coun-
cil may have had about their diligent ap-
proach to ·Laguna's ·many planning pro-
blems, chairman William Lambourne and
f~ co~ioners gave the c«mf' a
' Laguna Poli<;e
Conduct Auction,
Baby carriages , bicycles and a baseball
bat are only a few of the items that will
go on the block Saturday when the
J4guna Beach Poli« Department holds a
pre-Christmas auction.
1be event Is scheduled for 11 a.m. in
the parking lot behind the Fill' Depart-
ment, 501 Forest Ave., and residents will
have an opportunity to purchase gifts
from "a man who has everything."
Police officer George Pletfs is in
chirge or the auction and will be offering
awfboards, TV sets, a convertible top for
a sports car, jewelry, watches, about 50
bicycles. automobile tires and many
other items.
Pletts said all merchandise must be
paid for In cash and accepted "as is."
The merchandise being auctioned was
turned over to tbe police as lost property
ind has never been claimed by the
owners.
twt>-bour rundown on prQjed.s they. have
tacl<led since the las• joint meeljog.
''We ·Conuriend'·. you,:• .saJd · Ma}'Ol'
~·-·-~ r~,,._. "Y' ' the ~" ~u .~, .. , OU!llbOG. ~.-
track.~
'Ille council IWned GI emral parking·
•lruclur<·pnipooall· Ille commllsion llad
itudied, for ..._ cm GiellneJft,
Merniald streel., -I~ .the ,FOlllHI,
groundl llld oo Bnlodway bact ID Lower
Cliff Drive.
A· propo'sal for a 07-ipace structure on
the GleMeyre lot. would cost $'190,000,
Lambourne sald, and .an a)temate
method of moduJar, pre<ast 1tructure
would cost about '40,000 less.
Land acquisition C<lSts for a Mermaid
Street structure could boost the cost
three-quarters of a million dollars, com-
missioner Robert Hulings told the .roun-
cil. A 70lk:ar faci1Uy opposite the
Festival grounds would run about $1 •
millioo (oa city~wned ground) and a
Broailway faclliiy wouJd cost some $114
million, including land acquisition.
Councilmen were cool about one pro-
posal which would have involved giving
the developer control of several other
city~wned lots for a five-year period in
return for his financing and operation of
a GleMeyre structure.
A lease-pUrchase procedure, such as
used to build the city's two new fire sta-
tions, seemed preferable, it was in-
dicated.
Councilman Charlton Boyd expressed
doubts about proceeding In one location
without a more specific plan for other
parking arrangements, based on the cur-
rent TOPICS lraffic circulation study.
However, the consensus appeared to be
thal the Glenneyre facility would be
needed, regardless of what other loca-
tions are selected.
Hastings said the revenue from the
parking structure and other downtown
parking facilities would pay a substantia,
amount of the cost. City manager Law·
rence Rose was asked to hlvestigate fin·
ancin~ details.
Happening
Announced
In Laguna
' Laguna Beach police have:;1 leamed, to
their di.way, that an i,nvii.tkm to ''Wise
l!ek!J• WJ».~rceive jbe '"'F Light".ta
&•lbor iD i,a.,... on.-.is-Dal" I'
bOlllg' >Widely . ~ ---""" ap.
pamUy the event ia "'quit< -samz.·
td.. ' -·· . '
Pootm ~'1dll!I the c h r i. t m .. I .
'
·_.._. __ " "cefillrate UJJ birth cl lhe ........ 1
If.., Jllo" 'P<>l>l>ed up In 1be Ml Colony a,
few w..b a,IO. ·Slnco then, liollce roport,-
lhey ba~e'appeared In Shiilta, Calli., In
communities in ,the Sdtlthwest and
Midwest' and' In the advertising pages of
the 'Free Preas: t
Adni.tnistrative officer · 1eff Reynolds
said today be has contictell a 14-)iear~ld
Ca.guns youth who is ' dlstrlbo.ting the
Jtterature, but cannot d~rn any fonnal
organization behind the event -what-
ever aid wherever it mat be. ·
The posters., decoratetl with a large
angel, first · appeared in.1 black but now
are printed.in color •. •
The problem, says 1'efnold.!, ts that
rumors are being c~ated among the
"steet people" that there will be free food
and lodging in Laguna on Dec. 25.
"The young man distributing the
literature says he doesn't know of any
such provisions,'' Reynolds said today.
''He says he just wants to have a lot of
people come for a peaceful, loving
celebration of the birth of Otrist.
"This Is fine, and such a gathering
could be peaceful, but If a lot of people
show up expecting food and lodging and
so forth it could c($lte problems."
Reynolds loday;'fssued a public appeal
to the organizers'of the Ouistmaa, "hap-
pening" to C<lnfer with tbe police depart·
ment "for l~ purpose of formally
organizing a plan to assure all residents
and visitors in J.aguna Beach a peaceful
Christmas Day."
The officer s&id he ls continuing bis In·
vestigat.:ion of the plans, if any,-for the
event and added, "I told the young man
that he is not-being very fair to the street
people if he lets them go on believing, as
they stem to, that there will be free food
and all that.
Gray . Whales on Way
Noiv ls Time for Watchers on Coast
South Orange County's whale-watching
1e:uon is drawing nigh and the winter of
1170-71 is expected to be the bigg~t yet
-at least for the "watchers."
'Ibe first California gray whales, along
with a few killer whales, have been spot-
ted off the coast en route from the chill
Berini Sea lo the warmer w1ten. of the
IOlllh.
1'le migration will be In full swing
from the end of December through
February, according to Pbillp Grignon,
resident whale expert and oce.anograpby
instructor for the Capistrano Unified
khool Dblrict.
'Ibe peak Is around the end of January,
1aya Grignon, when "it looks llke a
lt,el!Tl(:r lane out there."
Grtinon will kick off the whale mlgra~'
tton season wilh a lecture and slide:
presentation at ?:30 tonight In San
Clemente High School auditorium. The
program la open to the public without
charp.
Many o( the slides he will project were
made during wha~watching cruises out
of San Clemente, spoMOred by the school
district in cooperation with the American
Cetation Society and San Clemente
sportOshinC enterprises.
Last year Grignon · and his student
tea$ing assistants took more than 5,000
students from throughout the county out
to see the whales, witb three boats ma.k-in& four-hour nms twlce a day.
''There seems to .be even more interest
Urls yea,;" Grignon said this week ... We
have been asked to lead 1· group from the
Sierra Club and there have been requests
for cruises from San Bernardino, Palos
Verdes, Garden Grove and all .90r1.s of
places."
Weekday cru!Jes are arranged for stu·
dent groups, but there also are weekend
cruises for the pubUc, be said.
The cruises will start Dec. 23 and con--
tinue through January and February.
There's no guarantee that ~hales
wW be apolled, Ille lelcher "hut
last year we lucked out and spotted them
on every trip -along with dolphins, pilot
whales and killer whales."
Last year Grignon and his students also
m1nned a "whale census" tower from a
vantqe point abQve Dana Point Harbor
and logged and estimated whaJe mlgra·
tion of 5,0llO ID 6,000 of the' pnt mam-
mal.<.
The gray whales, which sornetunes at..
tain a length of 50 left and a wellbl of
35,ooo· pounds, stay In 11gl1t of land
through most ol their a,soo.mile journey
from the Arctic Octan lo Scammon's
lagoon In Baja CalUomia, where the
females bear their calves, then begin the
long journey north.
Twice in the past 7,(11) years the species
have been slaughtered almost into ex-
tinction, but the gqve.rnments of Canada,
the United States,· Mexico and lhe Soviet
Union now ba.ve joined in a atrlct pro-
gram of protection whlCb ia reatoring the
llJ'I¥ Whale populaliCID.
'.
CORONER'S MEN REMOVE BODY FROM MURDER SCENE
Coata Mesa Bvslne11man Killtd In Hit: Store
Mesa Merchant Beaten
Strikers
May Be
Wavering
WASHINGTON (AP) -Strltln1
1ra1runeo ~ the. rail s;ylllem ..
tlonwjde today allboulh the ranl<a · c~Jho
walton.t abowecl otans GI ~ ID Ibo
ant .f... boura.
•lt111,. buodnda OI tboua•ds e I
t loiharbao colJllDilten had ID find Clther
) "~ Jo .JtOrt, .and ~ •• ~~
wblle lljree O! four ...._ ID the so•
'CHRlSTftW MAIL
• . , . : $TPR·Y, PAC>I 2
man atrtke said they were canceltng their
ltrite orders.
Tlie :ll0,000.iitember Brotherboocf el
Railway Clerks held out, 1ay!D( oothiDg
despite C<lngresajonal anc; court bans on
the strike, and a pita from Pratclenl
Nixon -to stay on the job.
Spot cliec:ks shO'Ned members of the
other three unions were honoring the
clerks' picket lines.
·Penn-Central opol<esmen lald they
dOubted anyone would C<lme back until
picket lloes -
Overland (JllRD(OI' lralDI sat In Los
Angeles lerminala, oolblng WU hap-
pening with the Southern hcific ID
Ari7.ona and tn Chicago lto,000 commut..
era switched to cars and buses for a wa1
to work.
As for the clerks, their headquarters
said an announcement of some sort wOUld
be made sometime later in the dly. In
Philadelphia a clerks leader s&id: ''We're
still on strike." In Cleveland some derb
wi!re . working under a court injUoctlon, .
aoine were out.
To Deatl1 in $75 Ro;bhery ·
A first indicator of the economic con-
sequences of the strike wai Seen in West
Virginia where 800 .1.'041 miners were
turned away because of a coal car
shortage. Spokesmen for Ille Industry In
the state said all 1,350 mines woold be
shut d&lfli by mldnlgbt Friday If the
strike continues. O>a1 is fuel for heat and
electrldty in the nation's urban centers.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tM O.llY l'llet Sii"
A 68-year~ld r'ne'rcbant without a
known enemy In the world wu beaten to
death in his little Hawaiian clothing shop
in busy downtown Costa Mesa Wed·
nesday, bis pockets .torn inside out and
empty. .
Someone bad smashed in the back of
Samuel J. Biales' bead with a blunt ob-
ject, before Jocking up Hawaiian Isle Ap-
pare~ 1793 Newport BoWevard, and
flee.ing.
No more than $75 could have been
taken.
"He was just a well-lilted little old
man/' said Detective Sergeant C 11 l f
McBriCle a5 the invesUgatlon intensified
today.
The victim was discovered about 2: 15
p.m., When his wife Zada and son James
came to the store with a key, convinced
a6methlng was wrong.
Blales, a longtime Costa M e s a
merchant and rental property owner, lay
iri a pool of blood .in the tiny office area
al · tbe nir of the .colorfld Polyneoian-
scyle store. .
·A b~eared claw hammer be had
used JO' tacit ~tmas ligbJa ,acrou
blmbOo-mst storefrtnt was conllscated .
•I etldenc<. . .
· Qvwcb ol the curious &•thered 11
police marted off the scene for clueo.
...,1gn1ng·Dei.ctlve Jim Blaylodt ID head
a probe of the senseless' homicide.
"Why couldn't It have been somebody
younger -somebody who <'0\11d have put
up a fight," asked businessman John
Dav~. tears lllalnl"I his Che<ks.
"My God. Somebody """1d have ID be
cnzy1to ·mUrder old SIDI.my," edded his
close lrttnd. · '
·1
'Davis was absent from .his, adjacent
store duriqg qie\...perlod beginning befo~re
and after 11:45 .a.m., the last· Ume the
slightly built victim was teen alive.
No one else In the immediate area -
Including a busyi beer bar, employffient
agency and ·.COffee' aliop -not.iced
anything unusual, ccept that Sammy
was cl~. • 0 A quick call for ,U!fitance. broaght
Garden Grove Pollce . ot6cer WUllam
Compton and bis trained Oennan
Shepherd, Thupder, l'ho often geu suc:h
special aislgnmenu. • ·
·Snlttlng lll'Ollnd· the blood-apatfefed of-
fice , Thunder ltd detecttvts: in !Ulplnle,
down a rear alley and around the comer
toward municipal court, where he 1top-
ped at a parking place.'
Investigators bt!Jieve the killer left bla
car In a stall albngside Costa Mesa Part.
Flngert>rlnll of ail ldncll ...,. !Ound in-
side the little lflilp, where BIBI°' welcom-
ed b,........ llld felow men:blbtl'far a
dfal wtlen -........... ' 'nle7 conceded O.t. ... an.n. '
'Ille Jinietprlnll; """""" 1 """'t mun rraoch 1'ltllaUt a ~-~ nimed
b1 pollco. ' . ' • • '
"'Ille FBI WIMl'l load! a set of ~
uni ... you -have a Mped Ill lllhld, iald
llotectlva Sar&-John Regan today.
"There are DI· mlllloa people lit lbia
country and ~ ev"'I dtpartmeot senl cme
o<t of prinll they'd be out of~ Ill a
-1<,. be CDllllDued.
Blain may have beer. lllnlc:k the jalal
bl~w to the back ol lhe ,bead by aurprite,
according to Dei.ctlv1 l!oriunl CllU
McBrld" who eml'l>a!lled be doeao'I
know.·
•
·0rufe
1fe•tlaer
Are yoii ready for tome nice,
warm Santa Ana winda? They'll
be .,..,, Friday, pushing the
mercury up to 70 deareu under
aunny · sties.
INSWE TODAY
Need tome idea.1 about what'•
good to get for JIO"r loved ones
at Chriltnw1 Set tptcial Gift
Section in· todar'• DA 1 LY
PILOT,
Olly • .1 .4:~·
•
CHc:llftMAS ·-.. -• ··-I --.. c--."11, "'-' --.. ,_ ...
'"" ==· .. ._ " .. ·-" -... =:..-" Slldl ......... 11 " T-• u :t.ri.1 , ... • -.... • aettrtllPIJl I • -• ·-.... --• -,. ._.. .... , .. ,. .... _ " --.. _,..Lia._ le
'
I
I I
Z DARY l"ILOI ..
Calley· Ordered to l(ill?
Defendant Will Tell Own Story on Stand
~ . ' . ,.
n.· BENNING; Ga. (UPI) -LI.
William L. C.lley's defense attorney told
a air-officer mlllt.ry court today thal
Calley took hta platoon Into the Vie~
name1e hamlet of My Lal undu orden
thal "every living thing In that area be
tilled."
In a brief opening statement. Defense
Attorney George W. LaUmer sald Calley
would take tha lliand In hil OWll def ...
and alYI a Nil aceount uo1 his 1~.
cooducl and, behavior."
Calley, 21, Is lccurced of lcllllng, or
onlering lcllled, 102 South Vielnameae
civilians Much 115, 19118, the day he led
his platoon an a aearch.an<f..deatroy
mission through My Lal.
Latimer said the cluater of villages in
which My Lai was situated was known as
Viel Coos counlr)' and a death trap !or
Amorleaneoldlen.
Muy of tho meml>ors cl Cattey'1 plo-
too11 had been ltllled ar had arms and legs
biown Off and had been "ruined for life ,.
In preceding weeks by mines, booby traps
and ambushes set by "civllltns of all
ages" of the area, LaUmer said.
Christmas Mail Logjam
Worsened by Rail Strike
The day before the attack. he said,
funeral services had been held far three
soldiers who had been killed. He said the
feeling at the services WllS a general
mood of reprisal.
Then, the company commander, Capt.
Ernest Medina, caUed a meeting,
Latimer conUnued.
"He told bis men that at long last. they
were going to cl~ with th~ enemy and
be given the opportunity to get even for
the loss of their buddies," Latimer said.
"He said the area was defended by the
"8th Viet Cang Battalion. one af their
{inest. and the mission was not only to
search and destroy My Lai 4, but My Lai
5 and 6.
Pootmastm aJong tho oranr• eo..t
ere bracing thelr stalls for the Christmas
mall glut which bu been c:omplleated
thla year by the mall emb4r(o l>rouPt oo
by a naUonal rail strike.
The embargo, IMUtuted Wedneedey by
Postmaster General Winton. Blount. af·
!eds ...,..d, third Ind fourth clua mall
to be delivered more than 300 miles.
Lagµna Beach Poslmuler O!arles
Cavau!t said the types of mail covered by
the embargo include parcel post, publ!Q.
tians and catalogues.
Most Christmaa packages are malled
by pareel pool but O!rtatmu cards travel
by first class mail.
"The only thing I can auqest for peo-
ple who want to tn1il Cbrlsbnla packqes
l5 to send them firat class ar ainnail.
even though It ii rather cosily,'' Wd
John B. Klugiewicz, Costa M e a a
postmaster.
Newport Beach Postmlat<I' Payne
Thayer suggested resldenll pt all their
mail in 11 early u pouible. "I hate to
alarm anyone at this time"' be aaid. "I
would suggest that Christmas is getting
closer than most of us realir.e, and thil
embargo isn't going to help."
Thayer said the 300-mUe limit in which
the second, third and fourth clau mail
will be delivered includes the eouthem
hall of the Su Joaquin Valley and Laa
Vegas, but does not include San Fran-
cisco. "So if you want to stnd packages
· to places outside this area, plan on using
airmlil or first clus,'' he added. ThO Coita Mesa poslmut<r also sug· g~ aorting the lint' class mail Into
~'cf mall to be dellv~ within the
dty-mt(llld to be-outside the. ~·1'11 -11111 U youLI!'! ID ... ,..'II ...... mail -to
Costa --only and mill golnc to all either addnaaes."
He Aid thta will help pool olli<e em~clear their-111-alfon .
for ~'il!ll-~ Ibo nil~ whi II 'booii!d lo brfnf J dtlile ....,.. post ...,. Ohr mlia!'pil . cl .... .,
ma~ ·
Crement.e Auto
Injures Youth
A 21·year-o1d Monarch Bay man 5\lf.
fered poalble broken legs before noon to-
day wbep be ran into tbe path of a pau--
ing car in San aemente'1 busineas
district.
Gregory Patrick Clbaoey, of 419
MoMn:h 811)1, wu treated al South Cout
Community Hoapltal for the injuries suf·
fered in the 10:45 a.m. milhap.
Police said Chaney ran into the path of
an auto driven by 71.year-old JOHpb
Francis Calta of 215 Avcnida Pelayo. 'Ibe
incident accurred In front of 6(11 N. El
Camino Real.
Witnesses told officers they saw
Chaney dart into traffic in front of
Laguna Federal Savings and Loan, ap-
parently trying to cross the highway.
He slammed into the side of Calla's
auta, then ralled ta the pavement and
was narrowly missed by atber movin1
autos.
Calta w1s not cited, pOlice u id.
DAILY PILOT •
, ............. ......... ....,
-~
Robtrt N. Wtt4
Praldlflt ar• J>WlllMr
J1ck It, C.rff1' Vkt ,.,....,, lf;d Ofln9'al .........
Tllom•• KH'l'!I '""' Jlo111•t A. Mllf'1JfltM MtMOll'll 1.rtw
l lcht rd P. Htl .._ Oninte c-1y editor -CM!e #tM: SJO Wat ..., llrwf
NtwJIOl"f 8t•Cll: 2211 Wnt 8all01 twlMl'f • "'9llnl INtll; m 1'0!'111 A-lie
Mllfltlllll'-" l t lCft: 17*fS l ft(ll ltuitvtrtl
6111 Ql!ll!lll l al Ntrlll II GNlllM RMI
No post Office in the area will accept
any parcel poe:t mail. ''We can't stack il
up here and wait for the end of the em·
bargo, becat11e we'd nm out of space in
about half a day," COvault said.
All the Orange Coast postmuters sald
they will see to it that all mail received
in their offices on Chrlstmaa Eve is
delivered by Christmas Day.
"I'm really hoping that this wiU get
straightened out before too long,''
Cavault said. "Al this juncture, lt would
probably be beat to wait a couple of days
and see what happens.
"But one thing, we will do. and that ls
ddiver all the mall that comes in here.
, po matter how late we have to wtlfk."
Golf Course Set
For Replacement
By Condominium
san Clemente's foundering Harbor Hills
Golf Caurae was earmarked for a huge
condomfniwn development by a 3-2 vote
of planning connnll&ioners Wednesday.
The galf <:ourSe, losing money for
months, originally had been planned as
a slte for mobile hemes, but loud pro-tea from resideJQ in nearby Harbor
Estates: caused the: city to turn down
the request by representative af the
Fanter Trusl.
Wednadey's action, contested by only
two cwoumta. resulted in a conditional
!Ill 1*!!1f! for the ~"" of .about 3SO CondOriUntum unlti' ht a pl&Med com·
mim.Jty devtlopmellt whlch Will leave
onJy a do:.en acres of the links Intact.
Di11enting voters an the panel Roy -~ llld 4rl_~ pva no rea· lllif; llowever, •i battfi lo replace
""' ,.,. their ... """'· llitplte the granting ol a conditlooa!
•11 permit for lhe project by comml&-
sior)en, however. the battle o replace
the linJn might still have a hurdle re-
nulnlng.
Ot;y Councilmen gti.11 have the option
to call for a council review and public
hearing an the approval by the planning
commtnlon.
It wU such an actian by councllmen
which rtsul.ted in acnpping of the mobile
home project. • AJllOlli conditions !or approval ol the P!'Oiect ara submitting of preciaa ~· (Or~ sauthly.
'Jbe appHcation for the pennit was lfl1lted without elaborate plans for a
project on the golf coune.
Forster Trust apokesma11 Reg Wood
told commissioners that precise plans
for the development before approval
would be an unnecessary expense.
The thwarted plans for the mGbile
home project cost his finn $10,000, Woods
explained .
If construction is con11ummated on the
condominium development it woold link
as a major residtntial adjunct to the pro-
posed San Clemente Gener11J Hospita l,
which will be bu ilt nearby. The two proj·
ects are by different developers. bow-
evu.
In recent weeks Wood ha11 hinttd that
still more plaMed community develop-
ment might be in store for al.her por-
t.ions of the Forster property in the area.
Be11ides dwellings, hillaide l1nd in the
area has been investigated as a poGsible
&ite. for a memorial part.
"He said the infonnat.ion was that all
civilians had )eft the area and If any were
remaining they would be Viet Cang ar
Viet Cang sympathizers.
"He ordered the village burned, the
animals shot, the wells contaminated aad
every living thing in that area killed."
He said higher commanders were In
the area that day, including on the
ground. "and oothing was said about the
killing af civilians until a lunch break."
Other comm.anders were flying over
the action and shauld have koown what
was happening. Latimer said.
Same Viet Cang af military age were
'killed (preswnably by artillery or aerial
fire) belore the ground troops got
there. He said this killing was done ''right .
at the edge or a ditch in which the
government contends Calley killed at
least '1\1 screaming wamen, children and
aid men."
Latimer Aid Calley and his platoon
had been Inadequately trained Ind in·
structed for this kind of combat. Some or
the platoop members had not been in
combat bef<lre, he said, all believed their
sweep Would be "bitterly contested.'' and
some were frightened.
Saddlehack Sued
Over Eye Injury
A Saddleback High School student bu
sued 5Chool district trustees and a achool
CU!l.Odian for $9,IKlD in Orange Coun·
ty Superior Coort complaint which atates
that his injuries may lead to the IOSJ of
bis left eye.
Monty Lyn Kizer, 17. of Santa Ana,
seekJ those damage1 in an action filed
by his mother, Mrs. Doroti\y Kathiffn
Kizer. Santa Ana Junior Callege District
tru11tees and custodian Robert MltchelJ
are named as defendant.a.
The lawsuit asserts that Mitchell's
negligence led to a piece of metal from
a broken padlock on the youth's locker
striking him in the left eye on Sept. 9,
1969. Mitchell supplied the tool used by
the ~ to cut the padlock, the com·
plaint notes.
School district trustees recenUy reject-
ed a $100,000 damage claim filed by
Mrs. Kizer.
Trash Contract
Battle Looming
Orange County will go to court ta pro-
tect the trash disposal company fran-
chised by the county to. serve the Dana
Point-Capistrano Beach area.
Solag Disposal balds the contract and
objects to the intrusion into the area of
Charles Waltm1.n 0£ El Toro, head a(
Toro Disposal.
County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said
Waltman had been told to 11top serving
the area but refused.
Supervisor Robert Battin thought Sot1g
I>isPosal should pay for an attorney to
fight the infringemenl.. But he lost 4-1 as
othe r supervisors reasoned tha t the coun-
ty should protect the integrity of its
fran chises.
County Sitpervisors Act
On High Risk Insurance
Action which Will enable property
owners 1n high flood rl11k locations to ob·
tain Insurance bas been taken by the
Board of Supervisors.
The board has declared its intent to
rntet the requirements of the National
Flood Jnsuranct Art and authorized the
Plannlng Department to 1tudy and
present flood plain zonlftl regulaUons.
The national fklod Insurance program
ls under the Department af Housing and
Urban Development and provldea for the
matiOn ol a Not;onal Flood Insurers
Allodatk:IO. 1 pool of private companies
off~ insurance to homeownen and
small bulinesstl at premium rates
aublktbed by the federal government.
The supervi90rl action quallfle.s the
county for such insurance.
Nett step, according to F1ood Cantrol
District OperaUons Engineer Cir! Nelton
ls the preparation a.nd adoption of land
use and bulldlng regulations t1 n d
asaurance to the federal government that
1uch reaulat.ians will be enfor~.
Previously private companlr:a havt
(
been unable to provide such flood In·
i1urance because only th<lse homeawners
in obviously high riak tocatlon11 are will·
ing to purchase the insurance and
therefore the premium r:ates are pro-
hlbilive.
The purpose of the fedtral subsidy Is to
limit premium rates to 40 ctnta per $100 or
insuraance ror 11tructural coverage. and
50 cents pu $100 for coverage af contenta
such 11 fumisblnga and personal effecta.
Future safegu1rdl, Nelson said, will be
neces.'l&ry and wUI go beyond the exlaUng
regulaUoos of tho county building a>de.
Within or adjacent to a flood plain the
:ioning of property would hi limited to
nonprestdenUat usts or bulddl.nl regula·
Uora might require dwellings be built
above the higheat risk flood levtJ. I
Flood plains are identified through
studies by the U.S. C«ps of Engineers.
To date the Placentia-Yorba Linda and
the Laguna Cany0n area reJ)Orta have
btt:n completed.
Near completion Is the San .Juan Crtek
11rt• and to be done ls the Santa Ana Can·
yon area.
PAILY PILOT llt ll Pltolt
MIMI TALKS AS MURRAY PACES AT COUNTY COURTHOUSE
Nixon Aide Chot lner1 Estr•nttd Wife MllH Ap•rt
Mrs. Chotiner Promises
.To Tell All in Divorce
By TOM BARLEY
Of lllt IHlllY Plltt Iliff
White House aide Murray Chotiner and
his estranged wife took their marital di!·
fe rences to ·Orange Caunty Superior
Caurt today far a trial that will, Mrs.
Am alia "Mimi" Chatiner predicts, see
the death of their fi ve year marriage and
the birth o( a book that will "expose
Ch<ltiner's evil influence" on President
Richard Nixon.
Mrs. Chotiner, 44, of 1637 Lincoln Lane,
Newport Beach. promised newsmen a
suies of spicy releases on the contents of
the book while her apparenUy unruffled
husband Jlac:ed the courthouse corridor a
few yards from her .
"I plan to tell the public just what I
learned from five years of close associa·
tion with Chotiner while he acted as Nix·
en's hatchet man," abe sai.d. "We went
everywhere toeetber. conferences, con--
ventions and top level meetings and my
baok is going to tell the world just what
wtnt on behind the scenes,"
She said her book which she will call
"In Care of the White House" will expose
Nixon's "secret maneuvers'' in national
and California politics and spell out
ChoUner's role in "all that wheeling and
dealing."
Chotiner, 59, beaded for Judge Samuel
Drei:zen's courtroom and the apening of
what ls expected to be a three-day trial
with the comment that be does oot know
"what my wife can po51ibly write about.
"I never allowed her to see any
privileged material. I kept no diarit.S and
I never tald her of anything that was at
all vital in my 25-year relationship with
... ind Amnlngl
Extr1ordln1ryl
Colo1111l
Richard Nixon," Chatintr. said.
"All she evu bad access to was
television, the newspapers and magazines
and if ahe can write a book from that,
more power to her."
And he quickly rejected Mrs. Chatiner's
statement that "many. many doors had
been clased" to her a~ the result of her
feud with Chotiner with the comment: "I
don't knaw what she means. Certainly. no
one at any level In Orange County or
anywhere else including myself has ever
attempted to close any kind of door."
Mrs. Chotiner, who is represented by
Los Angeles attorney Bernard A. Leckie,
11ays her book is at the ha1fway stage of
preparation and her tape recordings,
document& and manuscripts a r e
"carefully locked away in a safety
de posit vault." She refused to disclose the
percent whereabouts of her half finished
eipose.
The Chotiners married an Chri&ma1
day 1965 and separated last June. The
former California campaJgn manager for
Nixon pays his wife a totaJ of more than
$1,000 a month in h<luse payments and
personal Si.fppart.
His income is listed in the trial brief as
$36,000 a year from the President and
$45,000 annually from his private law
practice. Judge Dreizen will be asked
during the trial to give Mrs. Chotiner at
least half the value af the $70,000 home,
most of the furnishings and a monthly
support payment of at least $1,200.
Mrs. ChoUner, who states she has no
other lrEome, contf'n uea to live at the Lin-
coln Lane heme with two children by a
former marriage. Marta Mue.ller, 18, and
Edward Charles Mueller, 15.
W)!y? Because In fhla brilliant nylon
face shag Karastan's color wizards have
dreamed up such aparkllng mixes as ln credlblt
Blut, Amezlno White, Extraordinary Gold and even
Colona/ Copper. Fabulous h~ 00 ol these colors.
They're all lneredlblo, really.
,_.._..,..fa adlltol •ao,... wltli M1dllo1 frloto.
A t 'x 12' fw ooty $1J4.Hl
2 Colleges .:
EndSignup$
'· For Fall '71 .
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of lfll OtllY Plltt lltH
Oranse Coast high school sen.Jon &('9
out of luck if they haven't applied fbJ:'
•dmlssion In fall ol 1971 to Cal stalo
Fullerton and UC Irvine. :
Both schools have stopped acceplilljl
applic.atians.
A UCI spokesman aaid officials there
would accept only appllcatk>ns f r o m
returning Vietnam veterans wbo meet
admission standarda, upper division ap.
piications !or the School of Enilneeriol
and graduate applications on a depaft-
mental basis. No ether applications wJll
be attepted.
At Cal State Fullerton, the sltuauin
ls a litUe better. _
A campus representative said ·~
cations from junlor and senior tram.
fers and graduate student.a with a dt-
gee ar credentlal abjective are aWI
being accepted. •
"We are not accepUng appUcaUona
from freshmen or sopham<1re.s ar ~ ·
uate .students who just want to ta k e
some classes with oo degree abjective
tn mind," he said.
cal State Long Beach is the only state
school still accepting: applications at all
levels, although an adml.ssions spokes-
man urged students to get tbelr appU·
catians in immediately. .
The closure aMouncements came after
the regular application period which raft
from Nov. 1 ta Nov. 30 at all State
5Chools. .
Jn that time, Cal Stale Fullerton r&-
ceived more than 6,000 appllcaUons f~
5,100 opening!. The spokesmen for that
campus: said that all those who applied
during that period, and who are scholaa-
tieally qua1ified wUt be admJtted. AppU ...
cations that came in after Nav. 30 are
being taken on a fir st come, first served
basis.
At UC( 2,272 fre!hman applications
have been received and 757 applicatloo1
for advanced standing (all ether under·
graduate c!assiflcatians) have been
received.
Of the freshman applications, 2.100 wilt
be kept and 172 will be redirected to other
UC campuses on the basis of the appU.
cant's secood choice listing and scholas--
lic program requirements. In the ad-
vanced standing applications, $7S wilJ be
kept at UC I and 182 will be redlreded.
"We figure on having abaut 5& per-
cent of those who apply enroll. We have
room for 1,235 new freshmen and 550
advanced standing students In the fall," a
campus: spokesman said.
The current enrollment at Uct ls l ,351t
and camp.JS officials are iilannlni on an
enrollment next fall af 7,100. .
Here's the way the application sltuaUOf!
stands on the other seven UC campuses:
-Riverside: Accepting all freshmu
and advanced standing applications.
-Santa Cruz: Not accepting fres~
or advanced sta nding applications.
-San Diego : Not accepting freshman
applicatiorui. •
Reagan Kickoff Set
SACRAMENTAL (AP) -John Wayne,
Frank Sinatra , Dean Martin
Jimmy Stewart and Jack Benny will Jlt!I"'
form at an inallfllral pla Jan. 4 eel•
brating the start df Gov. Ronald Rea ..
gan's second tenn.
Fabulous Color!
Fabulous Shag!
FABULOUS PRICE!
IF YOU CAN'T
COME IN-CALL
646-<)27>
for an expert .,..,,..
coruW.t111t
wbo will -· "' YoW'-• 'with umpln
wfthOIUt &nJ'
obltptlon
to ycul
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%'1-... .,..,,. •• 111•~ t
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I ~ • 40 ' ....,1&<nt.',.~e~ and, ocetjlci~y
instructor ; t6r ' tbe .~ 'UnW&t
Sthool 1.E>~c-. , • ,
The .pea~'is.arowid th<;~ 01.r .. ua1y,
s~s Grignon, ,When 'tit . 10o.b1 'like \& ~r 1ane O,ui:UJere~"1 ,· · • '· .·
-Orignbn'Will' ltjct o[f 'lli!o•'!hAI• ~.a
tion)·seuoit1, with a ' lectw'e. am· Blide ~titian ,atit 7:30 toriliht · ln· ~
ckb1;nte Hiih: S¢lool J a,od!U'rium· 't'he pi<lctam i. open•to'.the _i.Ublic wilhqul
cbarg'e. .. . ..
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'S IWl.Y Pl~OI $C
Calley Ordered to l{ill?
l)~fendan~ Will Tell Own Story on Sta nd
• Al!ltliMll fliji!Mr1.
Muy al Utt Rlfl!lbt!' el CJ!ltfl II" 191• lltd boon killed or hid Wiii ~ !qi
bloWJ'I off and had been "ruined for lift"
i11 }!receding weeks by mines, booby trap~
aM IMhulhN •t hy 11eJvitia111 ef Ill
ages" of the area, Latimer said.
Christmas Mail .Logjam
Worsened by Rail Strike
Til• HY bJiore the attack. he sajd,
fql'lfral ,ervlces had b@l!P held for t~
•fOldlOff who had been ~U•d· Ht •lid IJ!• •
feelil!f •I the serviOff WH 4 Hn•fli
mood ef n:prisal.
Then, the company commander. Capt.
Erne:st Medina. called a meeting,
1.-til!w ""nlinllftl.
"Rt lt>ld hit m>n lh•t 11111!11 1111 !Mr
WM! f('inl kl <IOH wilh IM •Mm)' t11d ~. 1i•m '"' •PllD~llllily to l•I ••'• for tlte loff ~ tbeit ltuddie•, ~' Lali'8er f~i4.
"He sai4 the area was defended hy t)\e
4'1h Vi~t Co!'1g: Batt41iOfl, ot\! Qf !~tir
li~s11 4PJ~ t~e mjuiart WEJ• i,et t1t1lf ~ ... ,.h an~ !lf•lnw Mf 1-ol !, ~qt Mf W
5 a11d 6.
UAll Y 1'1101
'
llo !'!!II ollioo I!! lllf 1111 wUI _,i
Ill}' Pf'f'!I 11"11 1111iJ , "Wt 'ijn'I 11fi!I! ii
!Ill hfrt 11111 wtll lflf Ille tnd of tllt "'" blJ'IO, ,,....,. we'4 run aut of '11@1! ill
Uoul htll 1 AJ1" C:OVtttll Nici,
A!l lltt ~ lloNI DOOlmHlcrl 1114 tlley will ste to Jt that all mail received
ln ~elr offices on Christ~as Eve il!l
t:ol!V<red by Ouiltinas Day. "'i"'1 rully hoping that th~ will get
llrlillJtenl!<I. out before l9Q 19111 " 'l<Mflll llfd. "i'I this jwiclure. It Wlllld
J>rlNblJ llf Itel! If wait a couple pf tlltY•
11!11 "" wflal !ll;peoa. •1-.n Ofll Qaiq', we will do, and fJlat is
deliver ~I the mail that comes in hero,
no matter bow late we hive to work.''
"tt• !Oid ti.. !J!f ... lllOljpn WO! !Ml ~I
c!vililf!• 1'1tflitt Ml@ ll't• 41!:4 If fl'~ wtre
remabl)l'g they weul«I k Vjet rAn& or
Viet Cong sympathizers.
"He ordered the villa&e burned. the
fl'llfl'ltll ~t. the wells contaminated aad
every Uvlng thing in that area killed."
He Jild hli!J•r ~!Jlmin<l<rs Wfrt in Ill• 111' thal ~If. tn@Jydinl on lh•
1rouf14I,' "~nd 1'011\lri( w11,aid #lieut I!>•
killilll Of civjlifJlS llJitij • lll!!Ch llttok, '' 01!>01 .........,.,. ...,. fly\J!B over
the action and should have known what
was happening, Latimer said.
Some Viet Coag of military age were
kjUt<I (PfHYmsolY ~ i!.'1ill•rY llf lllrifl fire ) before the ground troops 1ot
there. He 11ajd this killing was done "right
at the e~-' of IJ dt1eP \ft ,whieft Ute
go\'OfTll!1MI ~•.Y.ntllt f:al"y klll\!d pt
least 11d aeNIH!.iJl(I weme~, ehihlN!R 11\d
old men."
Latimer said Calley and his plat&on
he¢ !>een i04~qµ~tel:t tra!ned ~d ln-
"111@1«1 for lhll killd DI t!@n!MI· ~me ef
the pl4M memheni had nel bun In
combat hetore, he said, all believed their
sweep would be "bitterly coptest@d," tnd
some wer• f!!ihte~..i. •
Saddleback Sued
Over Eye Injury
A S•ddleback ~igh ~hO@I itydeql has
aued lif!h~I ~ia~ipf tru~tee' 4fKt 4 fC!hBOI
flUlt~jlft fer . "'IM in ~ilfliB Geun,
fY liQ~riar CtliJrt. cernplai11~ which st1lf11
that ftl' jnJurle, may 1,,~ ta p,, 1~1 of
bl1 !~ft eye.
Monty Lf1> Kiz.er. 17, of ianta. Ana.
H'k~ IMM! ~-Rl•I!" in ~" A!lion filed -y Iii! 111111Mr. Mr•· ll•rnlhY KAii!!#• Ki10f, l~nlf AA8 Jq~gr {iJll@p !Ji!lriol
lflllll!'• ang lll'•lflllla• IWl!erl Milth'1!
are named as 4@f@nfi111lf.
'l'hc IAW!Yil i!Krtl 11\;il Miloll@ll'• R!l~l!n~ ltf! ID 8 llifQ! DI mtt81 from e lirtiien padlock •n lh8 'Y!!Ylh'! look@r
strikinl hjpl in !h! 1,n ey@ 1!11 i;.J!!. 9,
111!. Mlte~!I !YPPlied 11\0 ~ 4!f!! by
the bey to eut lhe; p•dlpqk, tj\~ caq\?
plq.int potes.
!!<;]\Qt>I o~tri•l iftlol!'ll reeently r1iect-
~ 1 flllll,1111 ~w•P •l•im filed ay 14r,, Kim·
I
Trculi CtJn.tract
Battle Loomi1ig
llr1n1• Ce\JJlly will &• to (l&UFI u. pr ..
ltct tbe tr•sh d.iapasal CflfftPlll\Y frin-
P-hiK4 by 1111 •@unty u. !MV! th1 !l'll!a !'~i!\t-l'ltl!\'"'llt! !1@1•• •rt•· :;oJ1g lll!P!l'•I !!git!@ th! ll<!fllr4@t 1od 8\iC!Ctf te t~~e il'ltrU~iOft jpte t~p are~ of
Chari~ W1llm•• •f Ill T!lf•, h@!d •f
Tlll'o Pi1~11.
t:!!>•n•Y f.<mn'!!I M1i1P ll•l'JMI• ••i4
WIJl!lllll hid li@on l@ld I~ '"'P "rvi•I II\! 1111 P"I f!flllff. . 3Y)l'rV~ !lgl!efl JMll jp 111ou&ht ~og
lli!J!9f.ll 1hg"ld )MY fill' Aft atlorq,y lo
ti1n1 11\1 infrin11111i111. tyt h• 11111 1-1 11
•11!•1 !YP'!'Vi!Of! fHlll!lf'I th!t lh• PQ\I"' ty should protect the integrity of jli
tr111rnm1. ·
County Supervisors Act
On High Risk Insurance
'
2 Colleges . ' • • . . . .
.
End Signup~j 1
1
For Fall '71~ 1
DAILY!l!L@!.tl•lf '°"O'-MJMI TA~KS ·'5 MUR~AY PAEEI AT COUN~Y courh"C>USE
Nixon Al•• Chotlntr, ltl•l"f~ Wife Milu Ap•rt
Mrs. Chotiner Promises
.To Tell All in Divorce
J\iolllird NiQn," Ch•lin@I Hid.
"AQ !he ,.., ~• IOQ!H lo "" t,l,vi•lnn. t)le n•w1P1Mr@ Afld m1111ht•!I
!Bd U !I!• eAH write 1 book from !1!11.
11\tlf! \!llWOI lg h!r."
~nd ho quiokly ni•elod Mn , Ql\ollnor'•
1t.1~meat thitt 1'm.11ny, mari)' ftl'lflrl! had
bte...n tilOHd" lll her a• the FfiYlt tif her
l•ud wilb l:ill•liner with 111• oommont; "I
fjnn't kl\OW wh8t 1he mfl!!Jl&. C@rtainly, no
onp st a11y l@v@I i!l Qran11@ C{lunty or
anywher@ tiff inllJYclin,c _rnyielf hall @Vf:r
alf@mp l!i!ft to clol{! a11y lUJJd of dogr. 0
Mf!. Ch\llillff, who i• reor@Hnt@d PY
1,oi ~n-@lfl atlorn•1 DernB•ri A, !.@okie,
&8)'1 hel' book is at th@ h11ltwa~ ~tljtl of
pFfDltFatjen 3"d her lllpe: retiorrtl111s.
dotilUTI•fll' and ""'"~r.riot• 11 re
'1earefyl1,v ln@ked away if'· " ~f,ty 4•po111t v1ult.',' ~ho "ly1id ill qi1~1c,. !Oe
ll@roont wll@rt1i!oYla ol ~!t hill flnilh•d
lilffh!'.etiotifl@fP m•rritid @n {!hri@tmi.!I
48Y !Ill! 1!1!4 itJ!(lr•l!ll 11!1 Jufl@. The
fgr111@r t:IUforni• t1mp1i•• lfllPBI•' for Nixon DIYI hi• wife 1 Ntil •I more t)lsn
11,l!Oll • ·m•~ll! !JI l!el!;f paymo"ll and mrio"'' •Uppllrt,
Oraftce· Ceaat hl1h 11eheel a1JdeN 4fe
out of luck if they haven't applied for
admlfflon in fall of 1971 to Cal IUJ.e
¥ullorton and UC lrvlnt.
lloth ocbooll h1vt •ioPl*I ll!'•Plina·
1ppUeaUons.
A UCI spokesman Said officials thf.re
would accept onl y applications f r o m
r@IW'ftlr,1 Vietn.11"' v•tcrw whft ineet
•4mifli"ll •\llldtrt!J, VD!ltt ~ivllil!!I lp-
pli"'°liYlll fCll Ill' i<Jhool gf l':n11!!MrW
and gratlv•lf applic•ll1111• oo a ~~
mental b•1l11. No ether 1pplie1UOl'I Vltll
be aee•ptttl.
4• e,1 ltot• ~uU•l'lcln, Iha •ltulllnn
(1 II tittle betteP.
A ~rnPiJ• repreHn!AUve 11id appli-
c1tian• frorn junjor ant;J sepior t1llt1-
fer1 •l'ld 11adiiale •tudtnta wjt}I a -te-
1ree or (!rtd8"~al obj1e1Uv• ar• •\Ill
beil\I IC(!eptel,
"We are not accepting applications
rrom freshmen or sophomores or crid-
uate studr.nts who J\18\ w111t te \I k e
some cla~ with ftO defl'H objtoUve
in mind." h' liiid..
Cal 81•1@ Loni B•acl! is the ooJr .i.ai.
1ehMI 1till ae@f.J1tin.g applicaUena 1\ all
level!, Jlthoulh an t!ifnissions ~
l1lil1 urged •tYftentl In cet their atJli·
cations in immediately.
The closure announcements came aft.er
the regular application period which ran
frnm l'lov. ) !<> Nov. 30 ot all ~"'
schools.
In ll1el time, Cal s111t Fullerti>n ~
gelv~d more MY!n fi1P(IO ~pptications ftit'
l.lflll cpenin.,, 'flit! •ll'lileaO!en for U..t
campus 5aili that all Owe who appljd
during Olat period, and who are schol#-
li<oll1 G••lifitd will 11@ odmiU~, AJPli· ••lion! 11111 •@mi Ill flit!' Nov, • ire
Min( llilfn Oil I flr!I l!tlmt1 finl llfVeil
bliil·
At VQf 1,171 fmllm'" aPP!lfftlol!t!
h•Vf bton mti•ld arid I!! 111i111C!1'*" for 1dv1Mtd 111ndln1-Ctll oll!tr 111111@r·
@l'OdYll• @l11111i@lllWI l!IV' -Un t@O•i>lfd.
Of lilt fft!lln111111pplill8tloM. 11tll0 will
bo kOll 1nd I 71 will llf ndirtoltd "' n!Mr ll~ itmllll!H •n IN b11l1 of IM 1ppli· ••nl~ -• obol•• ll1lin« •rid 1tl!ol1s-Yo prosrom roquirfm•nll, In Uit 111-
vonl!td •ll•din1 eppllo•lllllll, llJ •Ui \lo
k•l!l 11 \lCI •M 1n will "'rtdir.m<I, "WI filYH on hov i•l 1bolit .. JIO•·
of"t flf ~" whet appl)' @nmll. W1 l\IYe
•f!Om ror 1.»1 ""' ff!"'1!1f!I . olll! l!O odvo..,1111 •l>fllli•I !IUdtnta In 11\o flll," •
t!Jmpy• •1Nie11m1n 11•id.
'111• ourrlQI tlll'Oll J\lfnl 1l l!CI la 1.:iio
ood otm~ offioi11! 11• 1lllMlll• O!\ 111 mrollm•nt ow r111 nf !,tl!O. "'"'! t~o wo \he 1pplio1llt111 tli111\lon '"'"~''" 11\o olllor ,..,. IJQ ·l!llml\lllOI' ~fli•.,•IM 1 ~"!Plin• 111 IHilmlP
end ••••••~ lllndi"-1ppll111Jw, ~•II C1!11 ' Nol Aoot!llilll ll'll!!IMA
Ill' 1d•1nc.d 110ndln1 U11li•111t1!!1, ~ .. lll!IO I /l'ol lllOl!Pllnl '"""""' •ppli14U1n1. ·
Hi1 il\001110 i1 li•l•d in lho tri•I bri•f " 1111,!IOO • YMr fr•rn Ill• rr .. ld•nt ond li!,tlllll ll\l\Ulli,v ffom hi1 privolf !fw practice. Judge Dreiun wiU bt asked
during thti tr!@! to &iv@ Mrs. ~otiner at
least half the value of the 110,000 home. Reagan Kickoff Set
most of the furnishings and a monthly
support payment of at least Sl ,200. SACRAMENTAL (AP) -Jahn w,yne,
Mrs. Chotiner. who states she h~s no frirtk $ i n ii ~ r a , lkan M i r t j a
olhu i"'omo, £onlinuoi lo Ii•• •t th• ·I.in· Ji!llmy ll!wm 1114 JIOk lt1111y wiU !Iii· •oln bijO@ homo with two •hli4r@n 1'¥ a form II •n inlYl\llll 1111 Jan. 4 tillt-Jnrm" mtrriH•. Mlrl• MY•ll@r, 11, ••d br•UnR !!If 111!1 Of !lit•. !loftlld llM·
t:oword ~hAl'IM M"'l!u, 11. 11n'1 "Mild If""· ~~~~~--
... 1nd Amnlngl
Extr11rdln1ry I
Colo1111l
Wfi!y1 Baeau11 l111 t.,1• brillia"t nylen
face sh•g Karastan's color wizards have
dreamed up such IPar~llng .,1xesu l~;rtd/bl•
llut, Nr111lng W~lf•, f '''IPrdlnary Gal~ •nd even
flo/.,.al c.,,.,. '8bulou1has00 or these colors.
They're all Incredible, really.
I llobute.. -I! I~ 1111tl•t -rvt• wltlt ....Ul•t lrl .. 1. •I', U' for 911ly IU4.t ll
\
F1bulao1 Colorl
F1bulou1 Sharl
FABULOUS PRICll
l1 YOU C:AN'T
COME IN-CALL ..._,,,,
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Rapid Transit Arrives LIG4L NOl'ICB LEGAL NOTICB LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICll
Misfortune at Wheels
~ P.--........
C•aTIPtcAT• CNI' IUSIN•U C••Tl"ICAT• CNI' IUllN•ll .o P""'6
"ICTITIOUI' NAM• Plttr!IOU'S WAMa Ntf8 ClltTl".CAT• ~ •\ISINllS. T ( TO ( 1..-fllt llftffnltnt4 ... ar'llfy JM 11 c-Tiit v~l9nttl ._ cetl~t'o' 11t It~ ClllTIPICAT• 0" IUllN9fl lllCTITIOUS NAM• NO I I • I
""""M • _,..,,.. •I ,.II It•• ltvd., fu<fll'le a IMlllMu 11 11ll ""'-' Cl"' .. ICTr!toUt ..... 7"' 11Mf'1'tt*I de OJtllfof thi'o' 1t1 SUP•a101t COUllT °" Tiii •
Mt. (, 11\1...,.._,, (&11 .... ~lf, UN1w tt11 <It, H1111!Jnl!011 lt«fl, C.Ul«fll&, !Mdtf ~llfld!~llOM _,..... IW b-COl'IWdlnt I ~ •' 114 PlK.,.,11•, s;:~·,: .. w1::'~:~· ••• llctlll-tlrm 1111'111 .,·Ml!.ADOWLAKI. tM flctltlow llrl'!I 1111'111 ot IOUTH IN• dUdfflt t bi(slfttU II J4"Ql l'.Clft( CM.i Coal• "'-Ct/ltorftl• w,,,..r tht flt-.... A4H66
By ERMA BOMBl!CK
If there's one th.Ing the
modem family isn't .•. it'I pedestrian .
Thanks to rural living, we
are a thre«ar family. Wilh
all three of them and a Triple
A membership, we can· get
towed to our favorite garage.
The station wagon is going
through its change of life and
cries a lot. The convertible is
a problem gas and oil drinker
and can't seem to pass a
Sweden
Inspires
Gourmets
A Swedish smorgasbord will
lend an intematiaonal flavor to
Christmas as members of the
Laguna Beach Opera League
prepare to enjoy Swedish
delicacies on Sunday, Dee. 13.
Mrs. G. P. Kristensen of
1'hree Arch Bay, a native or
SwOOen, will he.Ip t h e
hospitality committee prepare
a varied smorgasbord .
Adding a final touch to the
Christmas party, four Laguna
Beach High School studenls,
the Misses Marilee Wilson,
Teri Anderson, Lisa Shipkey
and Karen Clark, will present
a Santa Lucia pageant.
The pageant will be directed
by Mrs. Howard Wilson with
narration by Mrs. Norman
Anderson.
league Hears
Holiday Notes
Madrigal singing will be
featured when the Newport
Harbor Woman's Civic League
gathers for its a n n u a I
Chrisltnas luncheon at 11 :30
a .m . Monday, Dec. 14, in the
Ai.rporter lnn.
The traditional h o I i d a y
decorations which will grace
the t ables also will be offered
for sale, according to Mrs.
FTed D u pr e e , decorations
chainnan.
The Madrigal Singers from
Corona de! Mar High School
furnish the entertainment.
AT
WIT'S
END
garage wilhout stopping for •
quick belt. The truck has to be
parked on a hill with , b('lc ks
under the rear wheels.• 1
When they go • • • I.hey go
together.
"We have to tak~ the wagon
In f.o the garage this morn-
ing," said my husband. "lt's
heating u p,'' •
Season
Greeted
The Henry Bowen Society,
Children of the American
Re volu tion will stage a
Christma! party at 4 p.m,
Saturday, Dec. 12, in Ille home
or Bill MacGowan.
The dinner meeting will be
followed by a film on con-
servation. M embers will bring
gifts and canned. goods to be
taken to the Orange County
Indian Center.
The society has collected
1900 glass containers which
have been sold for recycling.
The proceeds will be used to
buy trees for burned acreage
in Orange Coonty.
Workshop
Planned
"It fi " l aid "B t PllOPfllTlll NO. '-... ~I ~'41 ...... VllTMIHT Ollfi>UI' \I• l.fl'l\llH ,. •••• ~ '~"::.~ c~::,:~· c6°.:S"i ltllooil firm' Mmt of. llAlll!" EARTH ,,, ... of CARL D. HA YINS. Dlc!MMI.
liUN!!, 5 , U 11 <.-.-.d of the lo0owfft9 --· _..,.,,, •ftd NI N ld fl'm It <Oft'I-CONTl,(T LEHS CO lftll lf\91 N)d nrM IUltFl().l,RO& ~ ftwll ''" 11rM Is<-NOTICE 11 Hlll:f:l'r GIVl.N tit it.
what am I"' going to do for a ...,._. 111m. 111 tun .,,. tlKt e1 ,.,f. """' " .... ~ tolltwlnv ""°"' """°" 11 ~ of !tit klllowl"' MtWi, =. :: tv": .,!:11:;'"~ ;-',.:"~ wl!ow cttdlto" of 1119 '""°' --~1 "" 0tnc. r, 11 Jollow1. MIM r~ ..,u .,... pllQ t1I rt1ldloftQo 11 w9--1r tuJI tlld pl•t• of rllldeftc• r-•er • · • ••• ""-'ti! H•tot11 ll•¥lftll c111m1 ... ,,,., tM
car. Ot1911 N"""10tf 10. 1tJO .. foll9w1: i..11 to1klws· •• ""'' . ..Id ~ ,,. '""''" 1e:.t11te tlwft, . • (a-•• l'trfftll'J 01ftd Octobow .. Im """"" 'rt °°"""" 1'51S .. J'.clnc ~...r• S"""'ft tcwv-.w. ,,, Ulll SI •• Will\ Ille MCHUltY ~ fi" ~ offlU "Why don't you dnve the ltklllr• M.. wu,1, ,.,o 1,... !G-r•• Ptf'lftlr'I ,,,,_, ... O. eu No. n1. 11111..i """'""'!Oft IN<h.. Ct. P•111 Wlltltl'!I of IN tl•rll ot tiw tboW 11111tt.11 covrt • ..,
convertible our d a u g h t e r tovi.v1rd. NI. c. FulltrJoti. C1111orn11 C.vkl .Ji. • .,.,.._, t111 "'1""111 er,.. '"(rt. C•llflrftr. l'07~2. ~!"''' 111 Utll at .. HvnllMIOft •••di. hi .... 1111 "'-m.. •llfl "" -""" ' l.IMtTEO ~ARTNl!Rg tlt.'Hvnll"'IOll ... di. Ctlll1rnl• "'4l O•ltd N0¥1mW ~7, lf7'. Dtitf OK Ill I. lt?O _,,.,.,lo 1111 """'-"flrlld tl.f111•91'tl(t
drive the wagon and I'll take c ••• o.u .... ,. (ltffOll W1v. ·-LIMITED PAltTNEllS St.llilMft "'· Dow11t. o.o . O.'o'l:'"s~ llCll'tMW ol lhtlr Attor ....... &el/I'll I. FrriNft, .,, the truck on to work Then you P•·-· Clllfwrll'I JOt:KI, f1U) 121.,...71 T1rrv 1 . 1(111-. 7Ht I.• Mallfht M•loJ of C1lll1rftlt, °''""' c-wi . "'"" WHtttM IVlrt E•ll 11'11 ltr"', Co•I• ,.....; C1Ufofftl• • l l .... J. Wlle¥'1. 24110 .,.. ...... "'' c Clrct .... H\11'\llfttlotl IHdl. Ctllhltftl l Oft HovlmM• 27. ltJO.. "'-""" • if•hl of Ctllforlllt 01..,.. c fy • mv. wllftll 11 ..... 1111<1 " i.u.m. ...
can drop her off at school" FvulrfOft, C•l11Wftl1 mJ1 uio nt. fU.41 ~11•1 •"'"'"'-Sff.SHl.M1 nmt1 No11,..,. l'ub11c 1n t<111 "" Mid s1111, Oft o.c..ri"-' t 1,11 O:::. ·,,.. , 1111 vftlltr11tMd '" 111 "'•"-•• .,..-t11t11.,. Nf'41 Chtrllf f . Col/I .... 2UD Slf'>l•r ,,._., &e111Ch1t, llM Slrtnd, M&r>Ntt111 -.orw/.., •-•rid 11-""" ,, Dow,.. NOii.,. Plitllf'!'! I ', ftd 'for Id I' It lo tllit ntmlt ot Nici d«fftM, wltrihl '°"'
"Someone bas to pick up my woocu • .,. Mlltt. C.1111)1111• t1ui uni e"c11, c1u1oml• "* ttn1 ,,......,, ~-10 ,,.. kl '-tti• "~ whoM ""fMlllll'o' ~._: o.v1o1 "st, 1•, ' mot'l1t11 •tiff th• 11ra1 PY1111m1on ti th11
• t " Id "ll' JfWll'Ot1 •ltlttt J, a-, 1100 in......,,41 Ille~•• C, G4N1t11, •11 111mt 11 wk<•lbld lo IM wlthlft l~ .I(.,... 119 ,_ 111 Wlltl 1 k ¥ n llOll<t. projtc , 18 OUr SOD. .!I ltlc1Vn1111 KJ'IOH, 1'11U1r!on, C1Uforft!t Eldlr A"*"'w. SNI euui. Colltorni. 1IP11n'llnl &tlel ock-lldtH M .._K\lfed 11:1 1111 Ila;., ll'tt ~,._ ::....r:-m -Ollld ND\IM\Mr 11, lf10
too big to take on the school 111•1 J1.f.11tt1 "· 0u.,... coat·•~· .w to1• Ul31 ""1'nf, sswo-11•1 OOrlakl ""' ""''· wbKtllltd '° ,.,_ •11~111 .,.,1,,_.;:;,: H•ltfl Hor&1,. •rid ••rt ,,111.., Mtrrlm1< WI¥ NO. 4302, COii• Mtll P•tr'lct l.t1v1V, 1Hn L.Olleftn ltrHI, lllAI.) di~ 1""o' j4d ffw C~E ... t<lllorl bus!' C1f!lorr>I• '2U. (no J.P..,.; Flonf E'. C1fdelt Cro .... C•Hfofftll f'U.11 (110 N•MY E, w.,, (OFFICIAL M'ALI lllt<ll .. -. of Ille E1!11t"
''Then let her drive lhe ~:!;:,:'·c.l= .. w~1':',,:i'":,;;...'-; :~~",;.,':!.~! ,,':,'.11~:"c:W.,v!:. =·(_:~.~~ b111r.. JliAN '-· J!)IST, ~ ... C":u~:;:: .. -...m
truck and I'll drive the wagon lttVfl"llllld H. Mlrw. ltu so. 11•1••··~ Mor, C11lfart1I• t"1S (1Ul 6-U.lOJ.I, fill-M•r 10. lt14 =:c~~(~ ~!11'°"'1' SILIM I . P'•ANl(L'tH
th rtlbl " Df'lw, Whllfltl', C•lllorfll• tOMll ui:u .S..7l101 Ktftn.ttl &;'. 1.1/ldfr ..... 6011 I, Y .. Tu• •'ICN•CIC Orlftllt c rt '" 1 ... 17111 , .....
and you take e conve e. '"''"11 ••wlftf ''"''· ... Mtr•t~• tt•¥11•11cf """""'· w111t11w. et11ta•nl• """""''" u.. M.,. c-°ri~1on E:iitl,.; C•lft MtN. c11lfenlilt nut "I don't drive stick shift" $1rttl, Lq -..c11. C•Hklm1• f*5 f<*ll 121'1 ff+.10M. ~·'"" J1"'" ''u *""'tiff or1 ..... 1111e ,.. M•rtll :a. lfJS Tt11 1110 '4t>ntt • (till JIN-tml J•mn H. Otwt>lrtt, \UI l'MCOC:k. Jr •• '32• l••sllort Wtlll. '--*-' -..c111. Ctllt, n... ~lrllllld OrtflM COltl 0•11~ ltllol .. .,.,..., ..,. c .. t:1"""'1: she sajd. '"' '''"' \11111 or1ve, L• H•bti , •••ell, Ctlltornlt u1n ONrn . .,,...,. T•h 11141 M:&.11M D«l!flbe l!I. 11 ,., " two -xi ...,....,...11 ... -:ii .. • C•llhlml• t'Ol.JI !11Jl .......... 1Uh Gvtloft It. Sl•'t'tloHll, JfOJ IHfard ' T ..... 11 r ' ' •-'"ubllll'IH Ol'•ftle Co.HI DtHr P'lfol,
We all sat 1n silence. STATE OF CALIFOR.HIA A¥tn111, LOI AMtl .... (.llfomlt 90tM 1'11liU11\H OrllWI CO.it Olllr .. u.t. Doctmblr J, 10. 17. M. 1t1\'I nn.70
"l gdt it" 1 .said "I'll drive OltANGE COUNTY : {2131 77":i.t2" "4'11·2•-HS51 Jollft H, Ct~:1""=~~:":::.'~·~'=··~'='~"=':..::"~n:_"·:_": .. ::.:.":1 ____ LEG::::::AL:;;N~OTl:::CE:: __ _ • ' 0.. NoYtmber 10, 1t70 litfort mi 1 bofts. lJtU JO. 8rl1Mw•ll, ,.,,,_, •
the truck and she'll drive the Ha11rr P11t1I< 111 •nd ior Mid sr•i. "w1mo1.in1, Cttllomlti t012J u1J1 .u. • HttOMlly •-tH ltlcllercr M w11..; ntr, Jlll"3·215)1 WIHl•M Howtnl Gib< LEG" NOTICE P4N11
wagon and you drive the con-•"°'*'ft 10 "" hi ._ ,.,. "™"'' """"'' boM. 16ln s.tiot L•,,. No. t, ""'"' 4" C•ltT•"tCA'l'.I OI' •u1111f•11,
vertlble ,, ' ntml i. 1\1111trlbtd lo 1111 wltri1ft ,,... llnt!Oft 8t1cl1, C•tlfoml• ,,..., (11-0 10· JICTIT10•1 NAMI '-·· • 11111,,...,1 •nd acir.-lldlllld h• •~Kllhl<I •J:lol. 5'5*7761 The vno.rtllflld doll «rflfy ~ II <Oft· '"' "That won't work" said my'"' wme. !TA.Tl!' OF CALIFOll;NIA, NOTICI TO Cltlf)ITO•S dll(tl ... ltullllftl •I UOI I(. 1 r11101 !!., Cl•T•l'ICAT• °' IUl•H•••
h b d
"It ' . .' d th (Olfld•! IHI) ORANCE COUHTY; SUP•ll•O• COU•T OIJ TH• S•nl1 An•. C•Hlomlt. 11/l(ltr fflt lldlll~ Pl(.TIT!OUI ....
us an • s ra1rung an e Chester Ferren &tlilbl/ry, II Ori Ot;1oblr :,a. 1f70, Mlor• ,,.., ,• STAT• o" CALIPOIMIA PO• llt!TI .... t'l'le"' TAXCO Ind Iii.I .. Id firm Thi llnd¥1llntd cio..ctrtlfy hi """'
roof leaks and I'm ta.king .... me Nol•rv ...... It. C1llli:irnl1 Nol•,..,. Publle In •rid fat ••kl Sl•I•. TH• COUNTY OP 011:.l~·· •• C11ml'OMd ol Ille tol!OWl"ll Hl'IOft, d\ldlN. bwl-'''""' OIJ'f ll'lnd .,.. PrlnclNI Ottlc:. lft Hr.-..!ty .,_Nd 0t¥lcl A. Kn•PH• .... A.U•n wtlo••·l'IMll lft hill •1'111 Pl•« cl r•tHltN:t Itel •• No. 1, °'"' Ptl!lf, Clllftt~kl. vftdtr
people to lunch." O••nt• CCll.lnlr k-ft to ,,.. ff "' lh• l'lrlOll Wf\oW Etl•I• °' IEOHA MAY 1.lf, ~'f!I. IJ •• lollOWI: ffl1 lletlllou1 """ 'llt"" ,,,. THE ~NA ··well my feet get wet in Mr CornmllJIOn E•l'lr•• MM• 11 wblullied ff .,., wl!ll1ft In· NOlKE •• HEREIY CIV!N 191111 Cf.. • ...... ,d h•Oft, 1'01 H, lrblol &t .. COM,.AN'r •nd 11111 Nld """ II _..
• • ,.. <klobtl' :t. 1t11 '''""'•nl l l'ld •UmwlHttd "' IJ(l(ljlfd dltor. ol ttlt •bove ... .,... ClfCedtftf 11\tl Slnl• ""'· Cl. "'" of lht klTIOwlllt --...
the truck but I'm not com· "vblllJ'ltd or.,... C0t11 o.u., Piiot, 1"' wm•. •II ""°"'' ~1¥11111 c111m1 •••lnll ,,. "kl D•llld Otc•mlllr •, n10 "'"" In fvn •lld •'•" ,,, rnldonc• i.: •• . , N0¥1m .. r lf, H ll'ICI OlclmM l. 10 (Olllcl•I lt•ll ~nt '"' '"111.W 1o 1111 "*'"'· with l!erMrd l1ror1 follow1: plaln1ng. I lfl'O r 21u...O Cll11ter ,,.,,.n S.ll1b\I,,. II lhl llt<IHl rv vouc~.n. lft ""' olllC• of S!alt ., CtUklmlt, O•lftte Couftrtl HtftlY H11U: Ho!frNn. >1311 DI/II
• "Look I 'd '-ke the truck .. Nol•" Pi.tbllt • C•llftltnl• 1111 tl,rl( of Ille tboYe •nll!IH (l)\lrl, OI' lo Ori 01(. '· llll), bllor• mt •• HOllN Slr•nd ltd .. o-Point, (1111.
' ld ' l.EGAL NOTJ P•IMINI Ollle1 lft ,,111111 1111..., wllll 11'>1 llt(HMN Public I" 1nd fer Mid St1i., "'"nilly Oiied Novmililr 24, JtlO,
said my husband "but there CE Or•"'' CCll.lft,.,. Y011dltr1, to 111e v~riltntid •I 111e ottlt• •-•H ll•Mrd 11r0fl k"°""" 10 "'' to H.,.,..,. M. Hof'''"" • ' . Mv Comml111oft e•Plrtt of "'' ""°""'' Tllom•• M. J-•· UOI .. Ille HttOfl Wl\01• n•mt It wbw.rlbed s11i. Ill C•llfoml•. °''"'' Ctunfyf are no hills around the Office NOTIC• OP T•UIT••'S Octobtf l , lt11 Wntc!111 Or/v,, &11111 Humblr ;m, to Ille wltlll" lntlru"""t Ind •tKMWIMIO· No°"••-Hqv,,~.",,' ,,"·, .. lt70'...~!,',·"'s•o' ~',
t k 't Th t f SALi UNJI•• D•l'D 011 T•IJIT l"ubllslled Or•ll9t Co•nl D1llr PUot ~rt INch, Clllhlrftlt t1MO, Wille~ !1 Id M tXKllled Ille tlmt. , • ..., -,.,.
0 par I on. a means Tl' 111111 ......,.,,.,", "· ,. •rid Del:tmblr ), HI, lh• Jllle• of M!llt'll of tht \lllllt"ltllod lft !OFFICIAL SEAL) Nrtllfttll'o' "'"''" ~nry H, lffll'fm•"
couldn't turn off the motor H 11 lOAllf .... MIU ltl'D 2Ut·l'O Ill m•"•'• 111rt1lftfflt to'"" ••1•11 of .. ,. MARY K. HENRY kriown to "" '° -"" Hfl(lr\ '#l'IOll ' . 0 Ct " htt1bv •*-Ille! .WESTljOE --ittcedtftf, -..11111n lov• months •II•• Ille N~t1rv Puouc • C1lllOl'ftl• Mmt II 1utaw.rlblld lo "" Wlltl.ln In• and I don t like to keep the TITLE COMl'ANY, A Llmlltd'N t!Ml'1h1" LEG" NOTICE ttrtt oiA1ne111or1 0,11111 110!lt1. "•\ftclPtl oi11c1 lft 11nimen t •nd KkJ'IOWlt<lttd "' 111tc11tld
k I th " "' 1nn1... or t1JC<1111r ""''"· or ~ O•llCI Nov..,,lllr 11. ltxl 0••1'111• COllftlY lht 11m1. eys n e.car. llll»l lutld lnillH """"'"'fa 1111 •nd ot Mtr1orl1 L• Cr•r My cornmlttlorl EJPlrtt !OFFICIAi. SE'.O.LJ
''Are you suggesting some-lrllJI IMl(llltd by JI.MES w. PORTEii; P.:IMU .L Admll)lllf•lrlJ N~. , .. 1tn Tu .. M. 01 ... 11
Id • 'I" II ANO AOEUI E, POltTE~ HUSBAND c••TliJICATa OP 8USlllf•SS of lh• Etlllt tf "ub11tllld Or•n" C011t 0•11¥ "llof. Nol•,..,. l'ubllc, C1lllornl• One WOU SteaJ Jt. We a AND WIFE tnd rtconltd Oct, 2, IMt lft l'ICTITIOVI MA.Ml' , 1fte ibovl oMmld dl'l;ldenl 0.Umblr 10, 17, 24.41, 1'70 1301·70 Prln<IP•I Oii!« lft
gasped book 11"10 ~-36> of Ollkitl ll1cord1 lft Tiie !lftdtn!1nlld dOl1 Ctr111y "9 11 -wllfl.fh .. wll~•Mtltld O•enoe (W~fy
' , ., Ille tfllt• of 1111 Covnty RKo•d•r of dl>dlnt • b\ltlMH •I P. O. aox. 4'1J, THOMAS M JOMIS EG N Mr '""'"''"lorl E:ulrff "I cant take the truck, I °"'""' County, C•llhlrnl1, •rid "'''"''"1 lrYlfll, C11!lornl1 ,,...., und•• ,.,. lie> ti" w111c11ii Ol'IYI L AL OTICE M•v J. lt71
id "bee th · lo 1111 Notkt ol o.!11111 •nd Eltcllllft hi tll!ol/1 tl•m "lmt or ME.o.OOWl.AKE Slfltt .. _ .. r ,_ l'ublllllld Or11111 Cottt 0.ll'o' PUof,
sa • ause ere IS no 5111 1r19,.t1ftd1r rt(Ol"dH AIOI, 1•, "'° lft Pll;OPERTIEI Ho. , •1111 lh•l H id lltM H.....-:1 a..ctl. Clllfltftl• ,.... C81l.Tll,ICATI' OIJ llJS1NISI NO\lltftMr 2' •net l>t<ltnMr .. to, ''·
back seat and if I put your book tl7' ""' 1'2 OI ••I• Offlcl•I II e""'POlld of Ill• fol-Int 1t1rlOftJ. Tll: oi11 """" PIC1'1TIOOI NA.Ml 1910 221 ... ,.
SOn' proi'ect i'n the back It "1fljT'.~· wru ••"·oft DICftftbtr 11, 1970 wNM n•me1 tn tun •1111 •l1c11 llf r11I• Atltf'MY,... AM!lllhlt•l•hi: Tl'll t1nder,I~ does c,,.11..,. '"'hi CO!'l·l--------------s • ·"" '·"'·• tt !ht' ftOffll ltont 1ntr1nce dfll(I 1r1 ti tollowl: .m..1111-wln-.l'l••H dllCfllllf 1 ttuslnttt 11 '°°"' it111t ""' would get wet I can't take the !'i :!: °',, 1,';!', '°"""'o cou""°"", IKl!H 01tH Nov•mbl• 10, 1•111. ,.llbll\Mcl or.,.,.. ca.11 D•ll~ Piiot, Ave., Senti Afll, c,111om10. uMtr 1111 ti(· LEGAL NOTICE • '"" ¥.,. tftl"' •1¥1 Wt1l fl)rm1r1¥ !G I p rtr> J 0tc bl ' 10 11 24 lt1\'I 22U.l'O llllOYI firm ntmt of P. J.'1 COIFFURES convertible because there's a w111 1111 s""'· ""''A,.., c1i11crn!• ot .o.rblrt w.·~~,..:.. ,.~ o . aox uu, em ' ' ' ' ' •rid 111e1 .. 1c1 firm 11 coml>Mld of IN
load of books for Goodwill in Pll"'blk1•vcfl0ft, to Ille hltr..11 bidder fGi" 1•¥ln•, C•llfOf'r>I• tlf6• lollowlno PltlOfl, who11 n1me rn II.tit •M l-c,c0,o,c,c1-0-,~ .. ~,-.c,c1-.,c0c•-•-,-1c,.-,.,.,=-<• l•'o'•blt •I lllt ll!M of Hit lft LIMITED PAlt'fNERI LEG" NOTICE PllC:t of rnhhN:e 11 •• tellowt: the trunk and tbere is no ••;::1111 mon1y of 111t Unl!H Sl•lf•I 111 Ttrr•1'<1 John l•k••· '20l wirwooc1 ~ P1ullne A. C•KCO. 1im F•rft~•m. NotlC• It lltrltl¥ ''""' 11\tt tt1t 11~
r()()m It's settled l take the ~t·,.',','",",""• l~ltl•"'' co~l!d to 11'111 llotd. L•~ewood. c.nion1li t01u n•l> FO\lflteln v1111v dlrtr.flld wm not bl t1H1or11l1>i. tor • ...., • · ,..,_ ¥ under 111d dNd In lht •re-4H"4t•; L" C..rl 111111, 51$ Tvll!n. Oeltd DKwnbe; • 1'10 d1b11 •• ll1blll!le1 tonlrtctwd W .,,'fOfll
wagon, drop everybody off and "• "', 11tu111 Jn .. Id CCII.Inf¥ 1nc1 st11t HIWllOrt l!ttdl. C•ll!orl'll• t2'6ll (7l•l NOTtc• TO c1t•01TOrl1 "•utlne A G'recco otlllr mtn fl'!'ftlll, Oft or •lltr "''' dlft,
the th t In the tsc:t bed •1 lol'-1: 54..,101 FritOtrltk John P!•rr••· "°' llJJ'IRIO• COU•T 01' TMI Slllt o1 Ctlllorn1e, Or111tt COUlllY! 01IO!d lhlt tlll dlY of Oo<emtitr, ltl'O. put 0 er WO cars Loi" ol l••d No. ,.,, 11'1 lilt div of NlthllnR•I• Avl.. Fount1!n V11!ev, tTATI o" CAllPORNIA PO• On Die ••• 1t70, l>elo,.., ""'' • No!t•'o' 0...nlt o. Tlloml'llOft
g arage." Cost• M111, county,,, Or1no1, 11•1• of C•Uloml• .,,,. tn41 t62"21JI JOln P. TM• COUNTY 01' O•ANOI J'Ub!lt In •nd tor Nld Sl•I•, H.-111¥ 321\.'i £. 2hl
Ctlffoml1, ., """'""" on • '"'' •ecorde<I WllUl!'f\S * MOmll'M C•ft~. CorOftl N•. '"'"' lltllflritd P111lh11 A, Gre<ce ·-" IO Coil• Mftt, C•llf. In book U' l'•ln 3J, 3', 1nd !7 of dll Mar.' Ct!!famll '2625 C714! II.Win; l!'shtt of ""LVIN C. TORCEll:SOH, 1111 kl bt 1111 Hl'$Ol't ..mo1t "''"' 11 Publllhff Of•-CMll 0•1"" l'lklt
LEGAL NOTICE
A Chanukah Gift Workshop1 ImmDiilOillWl:llNlllTBOlllW~ll~
and Boutique, sponsoredlP
mlw.11i.neo111 m•11, r1<0<d1 ot Or1'111• An,,.bel '-" ltethlMOll •1.510 G•b1• Dtc••Hd. Mibsctlbecl to the wlflllR lnt1•""""1 .....i 0Ktmltt• 10, 11, 11, H111 2'°2·70
COlln!r, C1Ulornl• Orlvt Efttlni C•llfornl~ 9ISli UIJl NOTICE IS H!fll!lllV GIVEN lo lhl 1~1 ... tll ,M ••IWhl<l lh• MIM ;.!'llCA: nt2 Arlron• Ltl'M, COll!t Mflll, l"2·1t,"1l; Cille,:,_ R. Sftv!kr. :mf.C VII t•tdllOrl of !tit 1bo¥e n1mO'd dKHlnl (OFl'tCIAI. &Eo\L) • • ..... mom11 Pllltl• LllUftll Hllr. C1Ulornl• f26" lh•t •II ,..._ .... ,,,,. tl•lm1 •••ln1t "" M•rr IC ".,.,,..,
Seki .. 1e will Iii mtdt, bu! wlt+wwt Ol•l ln.:JJ:IOI MM!; J Ur!bo 111,1 "ld dKIOtnt 1r. rt<tulrfd lo lite them, Nolirr Publlt.C•llforr>I•
LEGAL NOTICE
by Temple Hillel Sisterhood •I
will take place at 7:30 p .m .
Monday, Dee. 14, in the
Mercury Savings Bank, Hun-
tington Beach.
Miss Rae Battleman will
provide profes sional
assistance In making projects.
There will be a variety of
items to make as well as buy.
Among them will be cards,
decorations and a cookbook
produced by the sister hood
and temple members.
Admission will be·$1.25,
CO\ltnlftl or w1rr1nrt, 1•1r111 Of lmpllld. Norwood PllH, Tua!lft. (:,lllorftl~ '26«1 wl!h the l'll(ltHrv voutMn . In !!It oflltl Prlnch>ll Otll(I In
l'l!llnllnt title, "°'""~IOft or lfl· f1H) t:Jl.Jl1,1 VlftC.,,t L. Hwneiton, of ltlt clf<'Jo; of 1t1t •tl0¥e 111HtlH c.ourt, or 0ti1>1e c°""'.,. ,..Jtth
cumltr•n<91, lo .. 111tv th• lndtbltdMn t2n H'o'l•llll \lenh.lr• Cllllornll tlOOJ kl ''IHftl 111.,.,, wllll llM llKHl1'' M¥ Commlulon E•1l1n (1flTIPICATI OP llJSUllSS. ucurtd bV 1•ld llffd, lnclllcft,,. llM 1.., ClU) 6.u.nirh Rlctierd £. Rlno, 1Jl3l2 vOlltfltr1, to l!w wftd1r1l•Md ti !!'It Olli~ Ncw. 1,, 1t11 PICTITIOIJI HAMI
Ind ••l1n111 ot "'-lrudtt •nd ol 1111 Notr• Olmt Sl••I, wistmlnllll', of hl1 AllllrM¥1, Col>lll, O.tir •nd Publlsl>td Or•ft9e (011I Ot1.., "llot Tiii \lnd~,,19ftld dOl1 clf'tli...;,. I• -"'111t Cfllled bV Nld dHd.. • .,.,.N':ll C•lllornl• 92613 (n~I H+S4tl Mlll•rd. IY; flobtrt M. o ... ,, ,,. W•ll Otamblr ,,, 11, 2•. 31, 1,70 2)03.1\'I dl>dl .... b\llln111 ti 17111 Gol<Htl Wnt
llllrl\lfldlr, Wllll lftltr11t •• Ptllvldld STATE OF CAl.IFOltNfol, Tt"!h $!reel. S1nl• AIM, C1lllOtft\t '2101, St:, H11nll1t11!on e"dl' C•lllorftll. u...., lllltelft, •nd Ill• un,.fd prlfttll'•I of 11\e olt-.NGE COUNTY· wllfdl 11 lllf PIKt ol 111111,...,, of lh• LEGAL NOTICE ttlt 11c:11116111 11rm ,...m1 of MO•ltlSOlf l'IOl9 Jt(urH by l•ld dud; lo Wit, On HOYlmblr lO. 1t1\'I bfllrl mt 1 llftdtrtltlltd In 11! mtlll rt "rlllnlnt IO IMPOll:TS t. MAltkEltNG CO. 1ftd 1t\tl
m ,111.tt will! lftltrtll lhtroon from Mllv Nollrv l'ubl!c In '•no ior ~Id st~!e. fllt n111e of 11hl dKidlftl, with!" lour ClflTllJICAT• OIJ llJllM•SI Mid llrm 11 cornPOSld of ''" tollowlnt
'"•"•'o •• P••vldld In Nkl nei.. !HlrsGMHy IPPH•td A!bllrt w . Andlf$0ft monlll• ltllf' ,~. 11 .. 1 publlc.llon of !11\1 ••CT,,,... •••• ",...,, Wllol• "'"" In fvll 1nd pltui "
• ed Hcw. If. "'° 11.nown 10 m• to bl lh• ""°" wt>ose nellc.. lcltnct I fol W!STS!OE TITLE COMP-'NY ~--Is s-rlbed lo tho wl!Mn 1.,. 0•1141 Hov-r ,, 1970 Tiit \l,..,_tslt!lld deft ClrllfY hi 11 con-ret 1 fl lows: 11 slJC!'I ln.i•lft ·-""" H 1.11111n M ToroerlOI\ ClllCOftl • bullDlft II 711 ltlYtrtldt Nlw. arv1n Morrbo11, 17111 Gokltft W•,.,
l!Y WESTEllN 0110 11"'"'""' •1111 Kl<newieri.td h• ••Kul E••aitr1l 01 ""wm ot _, auc11. '""'°"''•· und•• ~ tlc:ll· ~i.:l"O:"i.r't:c:'m CORPOR.o.ttOH TM iame. II lllt 1t10vt r>emtd ""Kent 116111 firm ,,...,,. of USE•S SEltVICES o-o• .... ,,.-l;y w1v.., H, ••• ,.., Chu!tr Ferrill S1ll~Y. c-.· .. ~ '" ,.,,.,,, " _ -· • ,.... N1111.-, ,.ublk • C•lllorr>I• ,,... '"' COMPANY t nd !~If •Id fl•m II <Om· SltJt of (1ll10rnl•, Or•-~
AIJfllorrrlld Otllctr Prlnc!pit Ollk• fft l'o'I '"""' M. Olftlr, POM!d of tt>t. tollowlrio ""°"' wl'lcl•• on Ol«l'l'lbtr 1, 1'10 bflor• -· • ,,... O••nt• CO\lflrt IU Wlfl Ttnlll s1,..1, "''"' ,,, fvll •nd PllCt el rH!<tenc1 Ii Not•rr l'ubllc lft •nlf tor NW ,......,
Publl1h.., Orlnt• (Mii DtUr Piiot MY c,,...m111lcin £.icpl••• 1•111• ""'· C•llftrlll• n111 •• IOllOW'll ~ ,...,_nv ....... '"'" Mwrl-N-blr '' tnd 0Kltftittt' S, 10. Oclob9r ,t.. "" Tih l'IO Sol>MU OottlW It, WDOd, U4 VII lldO Nord, liioWn II> 111• lo Ill 11\t Plftoll wtioll '''° 21~1'11 ·--· .... •llHimt• -.... _ ' P11bll1hld Ort"'• COit! 0111., PllOI Putllll/ltd O•lllSll COil! O•ll'o' Piiot, H-rl' lutn, C11, lllmt 11 1ublcrfblld ,kl m• "' 11-H-btr If, M 1ricl OKtmMr S, 10. Nell'lmlilr It 1, Ind Ot<tmbllr ' lO Ollld OC:loblt' )I), 1t7t 1ff\lmlftl •nd tdlnewltdlld M IXtwltd lf70 Jl ... 10 ' ' ' 00!\lld It. Wood lllt Hl'M. lfl'O '"'·lO STATE OF CALIFORH!A, !OFl'tCIAL SIEAL)
NOTICI IN\llTINe 1101 LEGAL NPl'ICE OltANGf COIJNTV: JEAN L. JOIST Hollu It llertb't tf¥1ft ttltl Ille IHrd f11 Oft October 311, lt70, bilorl ,.,., • Nottrv J'ubllc • C1Ufof't111
Tf\l•tffl ol IM COit! Communltv Coll"' llOTIC• TO c•rDITORS LEGAL NOTJC! Nottrr PubUc I" •nd for Mid s11te. PrFMl••I Oflf(• In
Dl1lrlcl ol Or1n11 (OUft!Y, C•lllort1l•, wit! JIJPllUOR COUaT OP THI! ~ P1roc1111U'o' IPHlrtd Oofttlel II:. Wood O•t ... I Cw11tv r~1¥• se1!td bids 11111 11 11:00 AM. 0 C L ,0,.,, ••• It_,, to rm to bl IM Pl•91111 who!;e Mv Commlulon l ulr• Wld11tJd1y, Jin.'· lf11, •I Ill• 'u•d'lll-STAT• I' A I NOTICa TO C•IOITOai--ftllM I• tublcrlbld lo 1111 wlllllft l!>< M1rcM 2. lfn
Int 0.,t. of ••kl school 011trtct 1oc1ltd •I Tiii co~.'! ~~.O•A,..a llJ"•••O• COUltT 01" TM• tlrYmtl'll •nd 1dtnowledeH he •1t1C11ffd P'ubl!ll'lld Or•,.,,. Collt D•H• l'llet,
13111 Ad1m1 A\'ltl<lf, COS!• MtH, Etl•I• ,,, MINNIE MAY aOYO, STATI o" C:Al.ll'ORlllA iJOfl lllt ..,..,.. O.C.mlllf' 1t 10. ''· 24, lf111 .,, ... ,.
C1l!lornl1, •I whl(ll llm. ••Id blCll w!U M OKlllld Tiii COUNTT OP ORAllel' (Oltl,ltl Se•ll
Plltlkl'o' wiellld •l'ld tNd IOI': NOTICE IS MEREIY GJ\IEN lo "" ""· '""" P•l•lcft "w11,..,. f'NGINl!'EltlNG TE CHNOLOGY (redllorl of !ht •be¥• ft•m'l!d dt<tdtnl E1f•ft Ill O!IYt Merl• 11;_,., •!so Hot1N Pvbllc • Ctlllornlt
EQUll'MENT th•! •II .... Oft, ht'o'l111 cl1lm1 •••lnll lh• kftCl'Wn II 011¥41 M. •-v. Ille·-., Prlncl••I Offl« lft .0.11 bid• ,,. lo M 111 •e<ordence wllll s•ld dec:ICl•ftl ,,. rt<tulrtd 10 111, th<!m, O. M. ,._.,., tlso kl\CIWft •1 Mr1 L'°"'rd Or1noe Counl'o'
'"' 1nll•l>dl0ft1 •nd Conditions ..... wlltl Ill• l'MClllt ..... ¥01Kh1n, In Ill• Ol'lle• R-Y. Ille kl\CIWft IS M••le I(. •-r •ftd MY GommlHlorl E•l'l••I ,..,,.. ~lflc•ll0111 wnfcll ••• llCIW 1111 lflt Ind of IM clerk ol tllt ebcw• tft!lfled tour! or 11 Merle ll:on1y, D1<e1Hld. Od. I, 1'17 Cl•Tll"ICATI OP llJllN•ll mtY be ucured Ir> 1111 Ol'llc• of llW 10 Prttenl them wlth fllt neciiit"J' NOTICE IS HEltESY C1\lfll lo Ille P11blfllllld O•en" Cotal Otllr l'llol PICT!TIOUI NAM•
"urcht1rno .o.eent ct 11ld 1elleol dlllrlct. oucMrt 10 n... ~ndf!rtltntd •I 419 E••' cr.1tllor1 of !ht •bctv• ft•mld dtclCl•fll D1c1mber 10, 11. 24, 31. 1910 2)0.5.70 TM \lnlkrt!lllfd clOll c.,tlfy IW 11 _-
Elt ll bidder ""'11 tubrnll wit~ "'' bid I ~71M SI "' Co1t1 Mft• CllllOtftll mu "''' 11! H•IOnl h1vln1 cl•lmt •••lft!I !ht d11tll"' • bullflll• •I P.O. l o• .,, .... <••111••'1 cMKll, cerllltld cht<k, or bid-wh!Cll '11 iM pt tee of' builn•t• ol 1~~ 111d dttldt nf •re •MUltH lo Ill• llltm, LEGAL NOTICE Jv•ft Ctl'ltlt•ne, C.llfornli, llftdtr n.. nc.
ltllf"I b6r\d "''"-Pl'o'Olll1 Ip th• ordtr of ttndtriltned Ir> Ill melltrt perlilnlnt II Wllh !hi ftKISNrY 'IOllCllers, lft 111<1 oll!tt tltlOlll firm 1\911'11 6' PAC f.No
the COiii CornmY"lfy Cell••• Dltlrld !111 e1l1te of ••kl dKl<l•ftl, within tour el IM '1'"' of lht •liDYt l!lllllH an1rt, er MOTICI TO CltlOITORI TEllJ'lllSES, •rid th1I "HI """ II totn-9otrd of Tn.illHI In 1n •mount 11111 leu months tll•r !Ill llfll Pllbtlt•llM llf lhll lo l"hlnt IMm, with I~ n1<111trv tllPIRIOll COUllT OI' THe _.. ot Ill• klllOWfllll per111111, ~
fh•n flVI lll•(enl (Nl of "" '""' bid •• •I ¥04/d\lrJ. IO '"" llndtr110ftlld ., Ille (lfl!(I ,,,,, •• ,,,,, ••• ,. ••• ' •• ,, .. '··· .. '"''··-'' •• • •u•rtntH lhtl ll!e bidder will etlltt lftlO neo:re. Hovtmblr n U111 of Mr Atlo•r>eYI .. tier Torn1Y Ind ll:ob<lrl TMI COUNTY 0 , OltAllfOI r:1::!.:" '" • 1"'..,. •• ..
Ille •NlllOStd COlll••tl II "" 1111'11 It Al1CI l'IYt IC!dm•r>' I.. H11mol1r .... 1 1500 Adlml, S11!11 Humber ,.., A.,,411 C~l•llS Provo1t, Jr. Ulfl JlmOll Lft. •""•rded to him. !~ Jt>t 1v1n1 of llllure kl E•Klltllx of Eitill of 706. Cotll Mt11, C•lllorftlt '2•M, Whit~ 11 !ii•'-of RAYMONO J, &CHlltM, Mlulon Vlefo, C•. fM1S lftl•r Into tucll (Olllr•tt, 1'1• OtiKllds of 1111 '"°"' n•"'" dKedenl tilt DIKI OI bu1ln111 of 1111 11nde11l1...i In 0 l!d Oiltct !1·1•70
tllt (lllck will bt forl1Uld, OI' lft lht Cllt' SILIM s. tJ•ANKl.IM 1H m•ll111 Otlrltlnll'l!I !ti lllt nlll• ol 11Td ~~~'ic!: IS HfltEl'r CIVEH I~ Ille Chtrlt• Pr-t Jr.
of • bond, lllt lull 1um lhtr.ol win be H•,...,. L•• ••111111"9 dtcta.nl, w1thl1 !O\lr mOftll'lt 1111r "'' c•edl!O!'t of Ille ·-• ftlmtd dm(:t(le~I <fl of C.llfol'ftll, or.11111 (oulll't! forftllld to llld tdlorll dltltlC'f, 4\t Ill! 11"1 llf"' 11111 1'\llilk1ttD11 Ill !hit !ICl!lCI-ltltl Ill 1>1r110nt lll¥lllll tltilml llllllntl 1111 Oft N_,blf' JI, 1J10, Mfert 1ft1, •
No bkkl1r m1v wlthdr1w hl1 bid for • Ctttt Mflt CtHltl'AI• n m Oiled NeYll'l'lbl• U. 1'111 10 ._., , '" , ''" Noltry P\lblk lft tnd fGi" uold s111., nrlod of lortv.flY• C.Ul dt'o'& titer tM ' Lindi Gle\11• w ...... ~en ••• r"u r o 11\em, •• ,. NI lor IM _ft, ... lll•rtof. Toi, 1no '41-DM E•1.1<:11lrl• ol IM Wtl1 of wllh ""' ... ( .. UfY \'tllClllrl, In lhl ofll(t H•-•llY lllPHfld Chor ..... , ...... ,, J,.
Th• IOl•d of Tr\lllHI t.Wl'Vll Ill@ Atlw""t .... 1••U1rl• " I T~• l'boYt "''""' dtcld""' of lh• clerk of lh• •boYI Mtllltd CO\lrl .... ·-to .... to bt' 1119 "-W1'olt l'rl¥11tet of reltelln1 •nv 11111 111 bldl M l'i.tbllslled Or•nte CM•I Ollly 1 ot, l"tttr TOt'l\IJ •• II....., 1.. H,,,..,.,...,J. to Prttlftf 11\tm, Wiii! lllt ft•Cllll,..,. ftlm• II wbl<rlblld lo t11t wl"'ln lft.o hi WllYI t ftV lrl'ltlll••llln OI' I!>< Hov..,,btr 2' Ind Dttmeblr l, 10, 17, U• Adl ... t, A¥tfllfO, Slllll Nillfl'IMr lt6 \'OllCh..,.., to 111f Ul\dlll"11tl'lld •I lllt Ol'f'CI 1lrum1nt •nd •ckl'IO'll'ledtH ht ... t<vttf
lermllllltl lf! tnr bid or tn Ille blddl.... 1•70 '22l5-IQ C..lt Mftli, C•lllll'llll "'" of hi• Allorr>tY. H1rrv II;, C••llol!, JOO ""10FrrriAL l!ALI NORMAH !. WATSOH • Ttl; t1UI Mtott• H•-1 C1n1tt OrlYe, Suitt Numbfr "6(1,
Secl<r. lo.rd of Tru•lffS LEGAL NO'l1CE '""'"""' ,.., lx1tt1'11 N1w1o•I l••ch, C1111ornt1, w~lch t1 1111 Mirr 11111 MorlOft
0..ft $1dl 11:00 A.M. w..i...,..... ,.llbllll!ld Or•11111 COit! OlllY P!lol, •llKI of bu1IMU ol lh• 11nde11lo~td 1" Ill Not•7 ~~fC~llforftl•
J1nu1ry '· 1r11 P·MMI N,,.,..,,._r lJ, 21 1nd Ot«mbtr l. 10. m•1t1n Hrl•lnl.,. to 1t11 n1111 ct 11lcl ~'1"" "'c A ' Pt1bU111td Or•ntt Cotll D1llV l'Hol c••TtPICAT8 OP IUllNlll lf10 '1'1·70 dtceot~t. within lout moril~1 tfllf tht rllllll Ollnfy llll
Oetffl'lber S. 10, 1Jl'D H-51·10 ,.ICTITIOUI NA.Ml flrll •ubllcollon of thl1 nollct. My ,com, ,rztu, IOl'I ll'lt
'' .. ' LEG " NOTICE O•lld Nov..,,bllr 13, 1910 "'' r , " TM "'"*'"10,,.. doll ct r! v s COii· lU.o Jtiymond J. Schirm Pulillll'llll Or111t1 C011t 0•11Y ""°' LEGAL NOTICE di.tell"' • &111lnnt el 1111 Pl1rct A'o't., ,,_,,,, o< '"' W"' ~ N~•mlllr JJ, H u1d Otc:fmbl!' t. 10. 1--------------1 C111!1 MIM, C1Hternl•, 11Mtr IM II<-CO O> T .. ( --lt llllolls firm n1mt of EMCO 11'1d tli11 .. 14 SU,.l!lllO• IHl:T HI! "'9 •bl:IYt n•mtd dtcldl"I t111 .,.,.
f'4"N llrll! I•'°"'--' flf Ille follow! ... OtflOll, STA.Tl OP CA\.IPORNIA l'Oll 111,,.., •• (irlllft, ClttTIPICAT• 01" •UllNltl wflott t11mt Ill II/II •lld PflCI of rt1lcltnc• THI COUHTV OP O•ANOI lot H ... ~ Ctflltf Orin,
l"ICTITIOIJS llAMI rs •• IO!low1: c-llfllllllltltr D .an S111i. "'""'""' ... Tiie t1llll1rtlollod deft tll'll,.,. hi 11 Cllft> l•h••m MtftlYt~ 3111 Pltrct A¥t.. SUMMONS CMAa1t .... e•I HtwMrl ... (~. (lllflr~I•
dvctl"' • 1tu11111u 11 "· 0 . l01t •U. COOi MeH, C•lll, t1'H. lft rt lllt ,...,,1"1 Ill P1lltl&r11r: T1!1 01'1 '4'-4m lrvlJ'M, Ct!llo1nl1 '2664, 11ndlr IN fie· O .. $ ,,_ MtLOllEO llATlllCI SMITH, •nd Aflwllff 1w ••Kultr lltlou1 llrm oMmf Ill MEADOWL.AICE tlH.-, • .-,mm ,;,,:,·YI •v Ile~!: WILLIAM lYLEll IMITl1, P11bll1"8d Ort~fl (011! O•ll'o' Piiot, IA• 2'6f
l'll:OPEll;TIES NO. 1 Ind !111! 11ld llrm lt ll•lt of c~'nklrnlt, O••ftff Co•mlY: l e tho ltl&POl'ldtftl: WILLIAM TYl.EJI Ncwtllililr It, 16 Ind Otc.mbtt 3, 10, SU Pl•IOlt COU•T 011 THI
c.omllOll!d er ""' tollowlllll "''°"• wlloM Oft No""'""" "· lf70, bl!Off ,,,,, I IMITM lt711 21•10 ITATI' OIJ CALlf'Oll:NIA .. o .. ftlll'l'lf lft f\111 11\d ~IKt et f't1ld1n« II 11 Noflry l'ubflc ,.rn tnd tor tlld Sl•lt. Thi 1>1lllJ0Mr hl'I 111141 t Mllllon CGn• TKI. COUNTY OP OllANe•
klllowi: ..,,.,.nlh' ,_,.., 11h•fm M1Mvl c1rnll\I VOii• "''"'•••· 'rou ,..,, flit • LEGAL NOTICE Not. A••""o• ROAL ,.. Otltd November 10, 1t10 k,_n 10 ,,,. 10 bl thl H •Mft wMI• wrllltn rtlJIOl'IJtl wll~ln IMriv dl'o'I ol Ille HOTICI °' JAL (c;.,,.r1I P1r'l~tr) nimt 11 ivbl(rlbtd to 1111 within ln· dlhl lh1t lhl!I. 1111IM'IOll1 ll wrv .. Ill'+ YOll. ••RTY AT Pll.IVATI SALi
A!lilr'I w. AMlrllOft, "· 0. In 4'13, 1!n.imonl .,,., Kk.rlowltdt111 •• ••KUllCI II VOii ft!I lo .Ill• • wrlUtn lllPMI• MOTICI TO CRIOITOlll !~ IN Miii•• of Ill• G111rdl•llll'll• • lr¥tlll!, C1llforftlt ""°' 11'11 iirne. wllhlft tlltll time. rovr d1l1ull !NV bl llJ,l!•IOll COUllT 0" THa Acrv H. N•~•ll'lltl'I 111d C1rel .M. lltk ..
1.IMITEO "AlllHEAS IOFl'ICIAl SEAL) tnltrtd tnd 1111 covrl' mt¥ tnlf• t hid•· STATI 01' CALtil'OltNIA !JOit mur1, Mlnor1. llobtrl Myrplly, 1'2 Mou~! Hlllt MlrY-leth MOrtllft mtnl ainl1lftlr>9 lnllll'Kf1¥t or olhtr orcltn THI CO~NT:.,o,,..tJ Oll.ANOI NOTICE IS HEllllY GIVIEH thtl 1111
"l•tt, El C•IOft, C•llfornlt ntnO !714) Notlf'Y Publlt>C•lltornl• (Oft(tmlf\I dl¥1t1111'+ ol "'-""· -••I E , 1 o< ,,•·,,,,,TH OUIH undfrJltfttd will .-ir •I l'rl .... 19 Ml• to 1111 '41"'611 HorMr'I E. ,,.,.,.,., UOI I.I ,.,, lpfl Oftl I 11111P1111. (~llcl C\ll!.,.,.,.. ctllld 111•110f!· .,. ' • • • MC hl111ttt lncf bttl bllld9r. ~1"1 tit -Ctr>ldl OrlYI, a ru, C111tor~I• '2621 Or"' C ,.i: ft tornt,1• 1 .... cnti, tl'ld 1\ICl'I oflltr .. 11.1 OONA.LO, 011<e1Md. fl•m•ll1111 11'1' Nld !\IMl'ltr Court, iil'lil {21S) .. I.SW.; W. J, Wiiey, Sl42 S.Oledld •,,.e O\I , •t ""'"bl trtlllH by lllfuurt NOTICE IS HErtEIY CIVEN Iv 1111 •11tr 11\t ttnd d•r ti OKlll'!Mr, 1f10, 8'
Mir>. ll:d .. Sift Oltte. C•llfoml• tllOf ~y 1fr'l"~;·1on Ex,lrtl II'"" Wllll ,. ... ""9111¥1« ,, "' ••• ertdllD'1 of "'' •tlOYI n1med dec:Mlnl 1200 Hotlh '-·· UftfOft •11'\k S.u•r .. cn•i H2·1'U: Phvll11 s. Geld, H•lll•n ,,, • • ltntl' Ill 11111 --· ., ............. 111•1 •II l>l•IDftS h•YI"• el1lm1 •t•ln1t 1111 Or•"ll•· c1111or111.. """"°"' 1¥l'Oft
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEARN HOW TO MACRAME
SATURDAY, DEC. 12,
H•l1 OrlYt, St1r>lol"d. Conn,1 l.1wr9'\Ct N:~~ 2,~i::·~:-~:,., OtlY10 "\'r -tllr 11 11111 r-wrlllft ,..,._, ff Miid ttctdtftl ••• '9Clulttd 'f '!!.~ """'' H•lvlrlOft, •ttorn1v lor HHI Gu•rdl111, 11! A Prch•I Jl33I Vlctlt °''"'• Stft O!Ho, • • •flll 11t•r .. ION .. 11m1 w1111 the ntc•n~rv Y011chet1. n ,,.. olllc. er !hi rlftl'll, 11111 •nd '"""'' 11111 1tld c~UIOl'nl; tllot 11u1 '7l4'.111 'lord !. lf111 7220-70 oihl<I s.,temblr '· it10: al fflt clerk ct Ille •bctv• tftlllltd court. er G111rdl1ftlh1-ttflll hll •<tUlrH lw Dlwlllfll, 1~5"' w. l'lco •Ivel .. w. L" ISEAl.l kl ,,.,.,., t111m, wllh !hi lll(tll•r¥ -••llOll t1I II'# or otlltrwlM In •"41 It
A<Mttln, C1llfon1!1 tON• (2131 110.•41 J,.EGAL NOTICE w 1 ST JOHN (llr'll VO\ldlen, 10 11'11 Vl'>Cllrti.l\ld 11 "'• tllll« the! ter'ltln Ntl ••-rl'o' 11t1111t lft 11\t J. OtwMril M.O., 'IJ4(1 N, l l1rr1 Viii• e ; J.ftltt M. ~lffl'ltn, ol hll Altotr>t'o'. Dotll" A. MeC•rltft, 15IOO City et Or'•"'t' C-tv tA Ort ... ,, Sttle
O•l'o'I, I.I H•br•· C•H!Olnl• "'31 Ul)J P4MP DIP\liv Ad8m1 AVlftlH, COii• MRI, Cellfornl• "' C11lfor11l1, •trllclll•rl'o' Htcrlbtd •• ffl.o.M ClltTll'ICATI OJ' llJllNltt PAAKlll; • Sll!l.Y JH)I, wlllctl 11 In. lllC• of bull11t11 OI tolloW'!I! 1n Vndlvldtll Oftl ti.alt l~ttrut In
11 :00 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M .
STUMPED ON A KNOT? OR NEED TO
LEARN FROM nlE BEGINNING? BRING
YOUft QUESTIONS, FIND OUT EVERYTHING
YOU NEED TO KNOW TO MAKE BELTS•
WALL HANGINGS, HEAD BANDS. IT1S
EASY WITH INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION
FROM PATIENT KATHY BROOKS,
DES IGNER OF MACRAME KITS,
EXCLUSIVELY AT ROBINSON 15, WOODEN
QUCKLS: FISHERMAN BS:L T . 9.00.
2" CORD BELT• 9.00. 4 n B!.L T.
AT 18,00 . CHOKERS OR HEAD BANDS.
AT 6.00. WALL HANGINGS. 7.00.
FROM OUR ART NEEDL.EWORK.
ROBINSON'S
ENJOY HOLIDAY SHOPPING HOURS, MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, 9,30.9,30.
ClOSED SUNDAYS. NEWP~T CENl!R • FASHION ISLAND '. 64'.2800
STATf: OF CALIFO"HIA, l'ICTITIOUI NAM• ATTO•Nl'l'S AT I.AW !tit "*'l'-"'d lft Ill m11t•ri Nrt•fftff\I tnet II>:
OltANGE COIJNTV: TM llftdttil•ned d-eerllfV flt h COfto. ... Nlf'ftl Mol11 fl .. 111"9... lo 1111n111eof1tld dtted1nt, W!lh!ft tour LOI '2, Tr•t'I H\IMbtr ""' n 1l'>tw!I On Hovemblr 10. 1t10. betor1 ,.,., I lllld!"' • bu11ntn •I I', O. IOll 4'1J, hlll• Aflt, Ctllltl'nl• n111 rnont~1 1ll1r lilt l!t1f l'llDHc1tlon el 11111 erl M•, lll1r1Df, fl!tOfd<ld In Id 15S,
Nolery Pllbllt In •nd for Hid lltlt. 1,..,.11>1, C•llforft!• tl"', \lft(ltt lllt fie-TlltltbMtl IJU) 141-1 llOllCI. P•Ht )1-#.U, Mli«!ll,,_. MUI. H ,._ltl'f •-•rH Alber1 W. AMll'IOll llllou1 firm n1,,,. el Mf:ADOWLAICI!' loltll'Mrlll .... l'lttti.M' 011tc1 NO'llflllllr It, lt10 Rtco0td1 pf 0••1\1• C_ty, ll•lt 11/f 11.llOW~ '• -Ill IN llM nnOft wllo1I PllO,.ERTlES NO. l tnd 11111 Mid t1rm 1, llUllll•llld Or111t1 CNll 01l1r l'llot, ~r1ncl1 W. A«Dol'o•ld, Jr., C•lllOl'ftll.
,,,_ 11 wtntrlbtd lo 1111 wl""lft I,,. HmPOHld ot ""' IO!klwl'lf --· wt1oH Ditlll'lllel' J. 1(1, 17, 2•, lr10 l1fJ·l'O E•K!Jlor of IM W~f!~~',.._ lllll;MI OF SALfl CW! 11'1 fra'f\11
""""'"' •1'111 ICll,_,..,. .. 111 lllKllltd "'"" tn full •nd Pl•« of rnldtftC• 11 ,, 1111 •lloYI n~mtd ,,_.,, _., et 111t Ufttt«I Sl•lft tn -IM ••"" falltwt· LEG a 1 NOTICE 0-..ld A, McC•""" flrm111ori o1 Hie, T1n Pfl'Olftl tf •"*"" (Oltk:l1I 1111! 0ttwd N~tmbtr JO, ltlO A'-. '"' Ad-• ,,_, of 111111 lo bf ""91ttd wlltl bid,
Clllltlll' F1rrtll S111tlturr, II (0-••I ... rtr11r) -· C•I• Ill-. C•HflrNI ""' llft or offlf'I .,. " "' lft Wl'fllnt "" Noll,..,. Putlllc. Ct UIOl'ftl• Afbtrt w Aftlllf'l,Oft p 0 lln '"" p ..... I Tth 1no 1•1n1 WU1 bl rtctl'fld ,, "" of'llCI Ill ··-Prl!ICIHI OIT1c1 lft lr¥1ftt, CtUiornl• ,,.U ' ' C••TllJICATI Of' IUllNISI ""'"'"' ftr l'•'GI• H1l"""°"', 1200 Nlll'lll T-. UlllOll 181'11t
Or•l'Mt Counrt LIM/TEO "AltTNi!llS PICTITIOIJI NAMI ,.ubllfl\N Or11ftt CHI! Oe ll'o' Piiot S..111r., Or•Mt. C•llfotnl•, 11 •n¥ U-.
Mv C""'ml1&10ft hpfrn Mlchlll Wi1tt. XW.Vt Gltftclll Wt¥, T"-llftltll'lllllod dotl Clf'llfy Ill• ii CIOft.-N""""bllt' lt, H •nd Dlctrnbtr l. 10. 111111' lllt lfr.. 1111bllctllOll llll'tM ....
0Ctoti.r a. 1f71 ffalf"(wood, C1U,.,..,lt to1171 Ull) 17• 4'1cfll'lt • b\ltl,,.11 •I 2't1 H-1 lt11 21111).70 bftort O.N of wite.
l"ubllsllfd Or•-COlll O•llr J'llol, ,., IClftftllll JOllPI! l.tllf'Nift, 1111 ., ..... , .,,,,,_, llldl. C-tllforftll, """' DA TEO 0Ktfl'lbtr 7, lf70
H-"' ''· H '""' O~r J, 10, MO\lftlll~ ltloM Orlw. L• c-.1nl•, .... llctl!I0\11 11rm 1111m1 et NIEWP,OllT LEG"-L NonCE HAll.11.Y NAKAMURA. ltl'D 21•7·JO C1lllornlt tUI• (7UI 2•1ost1 C1r01 IEACH ltlEALTY •nd ll'ltl Nld fl"'" Tl C\ltl"dl•ft
Lill llCrttJtrt, 79'CI Vl• M"lorlll, Clll'll--4 of Ill• fflkrwlnt ........ '*"'-NOTICI TO c•101tOfll MAlY•llMN a MALVl•ION LEGAL N011CE Dowiwy, Cllllom1• f0241 !21l) .. 1Jj•1 ftlft'll In 11111 .... •'tct ctl l'tllOl(l(t ll SUJ'llltO• COUIT OP TN• ,,.. ........ T ......
lrllr> '""" Slodl:, JI'° E. lumtll •• followt1 T •••• ,. ... Ulllll ..... S-
T•n '''"'' LOlll ••ch. Ctllftlm1• pOIU ••lt'o' llttlllnJ. •It l.,,..,,... Ot., ·~:.1c:c-.. ~'"~11 OllAQI °"""' Cllflwlll ..... tlJPlllOfl <OU•T OP tH• (213) Jt1·"''' Ltw......c1 H•rllnd C,M. W. M"1'I' Tit! Intl Hl.cM, I ST 0 (lr,l.t,ORflll• POfl ,1,,..,,,, t7ll PrlCh•l'lll • , r • 1 I , Dlltd 0.Clfl'ltil• ,, "'° ' ,.ublllhld Of•flfe c...i O•ltr ~ "°'' T:~ICO~NTY OP ff:A,... ltl!llOWtr, C•lffomll fO'°' UU) 1•1· 8tlt'o' ite,.,,..,1 o!~'::, ti JUANtTo\ SUTTON YOUHO, Otctrnbtr lt. ll, 11, lfll """"
If•, ""111' tS.M1 lr¥1,,.. I••~•. l'JO Ma~IO'o'• Slr•t, Stole ct C.tllornl•, O.tn•• C-'r HOT1c.E 11 Mlll:l 8Y 011/l!N 1o !N•I;;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;;;::;;::;::;;::;:;;::;=;
MOT•C• 0' tllA•IMO 0,. Pn'ITIOlll '--"""' Ctll!Mftl• ..,, niu ,,. On Dt<tmb11 ,, lt1'0, bit-mt •• crtdltort el "" •IMW• Nfl"ltl:t dt<..tlftl llOll PllOIAT• OP Wll.l AMO "°" m~; lltlh•~ H. 'rl(OM. ,, .. J'fld'l•rcl NOl•l'I' l"~bllc In ™ for wl• $1tlt. "''' 111 [MtlOlll MY(f!ll cllllm1 ... 11111 ""' LSTT••• nSTAMINTAR'r ,,, .. ,, lttlfloWtt, C•llfornl• f(l1'N (tlJ) NrlOft•llr ·-rlld ltllll lltllMM Mid dtc:ldtftl •r• '""''N 19 flit """' E1111t f1f llOllllT lt.ACKl.C>CK ... 7IDS1 .klllft C. EdlMlfft. HU •-n 11 1111 to bt lht llll'IOft wllot• with tllt nl(llN,..,. ~ fl'I lllt llftl«
G•U••· Deu,1td. TukwOOd ,.I•«· C01t• ~·' c.ttrflrfti. .,. .... It ·~ctlllld to IM Wlllll" 11'1-ef .... t ttrt" ,,. lb!Wt t111i11td cwr'I ... HOllCE IS Hlll;EtV 01'/IN !Ml m.H 11141 $-IN11l; Dotlllll L,. °"i •"'' 1IP1111111t1I t nd tcll-ltdttll tlll lllt<lll«I kl -lfll 11111'!1. wflll flll nec:11,,'.ry
,.... s 4"11'1• fofflltt!Y ,.... $ 1.sm NOi>'• °'"" ""''· wn"" M r, ""' Hme. ' 1111 offl H.wlt.111. 'Nn orvbit hit ll!td M••ln • C•ltforftl• .,.., 1710 "141tt (0,,IC:IAL t(AL) ~·rt::.:::::::'~~ ~.,,lft, l~
.. 1111or> '°' 1robelt or wlM •1'111 tor STATE OF CAl.IFORHIA, "''"" 111!1 Mor!Oll • c I -M c ntor r
lit,,.l'ICI of Lllltll'1 '"'""'1111r'o' 11 the OltANGI COIJHTY: .... """ ,..,,,.,. P'ublk.Ct ll,tmll =~..ti:"/:' i11t'',1itet ':'t1111r,,.1, "J 11"1'1-..... ,.ftC.I lo 'llt\ICll It lftldt f1N' On HO\'lfllblr ,,, I t -· • Prine.IHI Office '" ' I II "' rt 1• l\lf'llltr 11f'llCU'ttr1. 1nd 111.i n.. ""'' U'ld H-Ol•IY "ubllc lft 1nd f0t ttld $1111. Otlflfl Cfllllftl'I Ille llftdf•lltllllll ft • 1'111 fl H • M
•I-of Mt rlM !tit M"'I Nit lltlft Ill ,.,._ .. , ''"''" Albll't W. Andtr!itift Mv Cltl'll'fllllloft 1'1lrft lo 111•"'.,ltlt oi,.w•,1 '!".,."'f.!~,w .. lth~ :~ tor Otc11111Mr lt, lt1f, 11 'ilt ••ll'IH In Ille kftOWft to "'' to .. Ille Hrton ""-' APtll t. 1')1 , "'°" • Ill' r• ,_ cour1tl0ft\ of Ofl••t!Nlll ,.., J ef N ld NIM 11 wkcfl~ If • 11111 wllll111 I~ PtJl>lll~ld °''"" (•II 01111' P11'1 f!Olltt. '*"'• ,, JllO er.le c11111t Orlllt Wftf, 111 11ru....,.,1 •nlll t<l-ltdffd ht exec:Ultd Oo<tMlttr 3, 11, 11, tc. tt10 nu-10 011tct Dtctfll"'r 1. It~
11'11 Cit¥ fl Slnll Aftl, C1IH.,.11!1, ~"J'S. I) i~~,:on Htrt f!ll
OttH OKMl'r'J6H~l'O. 1 1 ~l'll:rter l"Wl'tll 1111""'"', It ~ IN wH1 el ~-.!;., 1,1.,.. ' Nof•,., l't1bllc • (111,.,.nt• LOCAL n. tbovw "·•"'"' d.cldlfll
YtcTOll •. MILLlll "''nd"l Offltt lft II OOlto\LO A, .W CA"TIN nit """"""""' Drl'lt °'"'" (111/~IV Ne 1th1r 11•w1p1p•r •• I you IM ............. _
s., MM'flll, C•M t tltf Mt c.rri ... 1,.~lrtt 1111rt, ••tno ,,.,, 1b1ut w~'t (tell MIQ, C1I.,.,.. fMtl'
••• 1n11 ... t -Otloblf' a. lt11 ', G 0 T1h •"'' ... ,,., ,,.-....., ,:SPflt'llt/lffllt ,lltllti.hed 011-c .. tt )>111'( JUof, t•lnt e11 h1 th• '''''' rt • ... .......,, .., l~l'fvll-h
it..Olltl'IH Or•"fl C:..tt 0.11'1' l'!loll, Ne¥t111W It, )f, t l'lll Dm¥!1"'r J, II, C••1f tl!t11 th• DAil Y ,,~ • Pliblltl!H O•tMt ,,.., 011iy 1"11111 OtctfMtr a. .. 10, 1'111 tlfi.te 1•,. 11•10 Otumlltf .. 10. 11. ,4, ltl'D ,,..,.
FOR. ,t.OVERTISIN&
in the
WEEKENDER.
OUT 'N' ABOUT
SECTION
Phone
NORM STANLEY
6'42-4321
Jf DAILY PILOT SC
Jffoney'• Worth
ShoppiI1g for Rigl1t College
Eases Burden of Education
By SYLVIA PORTER
II you are lln<llll the
mJfHons ol famlllu wtth
children reaching college •1e
by next fill, this coming
Christmas season is just about
your deadline -the latest
Ume to begin shopping
~rlously for the college of
your child's choice.
This too ts the Ume when
you must face the brutal fact
that the AVERAGE cost of
sending one child to a private
college for ~ year is up to
'31000, and to a public college
up to nearly $1 ,500. To these
ba!lc cosll, you must add at
le11t $500 for transportaUoo,
boob. laundry, cleaning, etc.
And if your child is heading
for an Ivy League college or
similar top educational In·
stltutlon, the totals will jump
lo $4,5004:!,000.
This -for four ye.ars! -
can be murder. H e r e •
there.lore, are guidelines to
help you m.inJmi:e these ex·
perue.s.
-Consider a state university
Instead of a private college.
Today, calculates the
Hartford-based Life ln!'urance
Agency Management Assn.,
the median (hall above, half
below thl1 figw-e) oost of tul·
lion, room and board at public
colleges is $1,116 for state
residents, lea than half the
median at private men's col·
Jegu.
It 'll help your youngattr.
tho!Jgh, .il he brids himself
thoroughly on the best pro--
lessors and courses offerf.l:l In
his neld of .interest at the
1tate college. (At som~ col·
leges, students publish annual
auldes and ratings on courses
and professors.)
Over a four year period you
might save H.000 to $&,000 if
your youngster attends a
typical public versus typical
private college.. And, at a few
public colleges, tuition co1tl
are as low as $500-$600.
-Look first at public col·
leges within your home stete.
The averagf: premium charg•
ltate.rs is about $500 a ye.ar. At
ed by state colleges to out~·
some state universities thJ:i:
cost gap comes to $1,000 or
more. Today roughly 500.000
student& are being forced to
pay such premiwns to attend
colleges outside of their own
states -although some states
are now working o u t
reciprocal agreements with
other states under which
students attend oul--Of·state
colleges at regular rates.
-Weigh the fact that
coeducational private collea:es
cosl less a year than one-sex·
only college!. The median CO!t
at 1 private men's college to-
day is $2,545, says the
LI.AMA ; and at a pr iv ale
1,0WS OP OIL PAIHTIN•S
WHOL.llAL I WAllMOUSI
Of'DI TO THI PUILIC
$5 and up
1•11 •· IDl"t••, IA lfTA AJIA l'MOMI UM* DIALl•I WAlfTI O
~ ...... nf119 A..-litt ce, 't'e• _..Mt..,,. .. •II
.. , ... celk.
ULIPHONI
ANSWlllNG IUllAU
835-7777
JUST IRUSHIN•
IS NOT ENOU•H
11rJ ftl lT 61ANT, L"
Jt ata.nds to reason that If a (oul>dlUon U; not secure then what Is built upon It could have future trouble~.
So It Ja wlUt dental hC"alth
•rid hyalt'nt. You must bavf'
hea.llhY 1um1 to ha ve aood
teeth.
Even frequent brushlnit: of your lttlh ls not t'nGU,&h If
It la done Incorrectly. A Cood brushinr 1hould take &round thr~ minutes with • &ood
part of this devottd lo the ruma. Your dentis t wlll ex·
Pl•ln to you th« best meth·
Od ind equTpmf'.nt to Uff'. We
hive 111 the products th1t
be wilt recomml!.nd In our
c:(lmplet• dtntal care 1tctlon. Le>l your dentist d1eck your
"'""" YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US when YoU need a dt.11Vl'r'1· We will de.
llvtr promptty W'lt.hoot t:C• tn cha.rte. A .,-eat many
pNple tt1Y on u1 tor their
heallh .,.&.. \\le welcome
rtqUtlll fM dt.JIVff)' &tt\'lcl
and cha.rp accounts.
PAii LfllO PHAI MACT
Ji1 " .. , .... .,., ~ ...... M1·1111
I --
women's college, $2,f65. At
private co-ed colleges It's
$2,300.
-Also consider the point -
often overlooked by colle1e
shoppers -that college costs
t.nd in be hlabut in the East.
.and West, lowest in the South
and Midwest Your child
might be curious about these
lower<est areas aod the
financial aspect ia important.
-Canvass all suitable col·
leges within commu ti ng
distance of your home. As a
day student, your child might
achieve great uvtngs and the
arrangement is ctrtafnly not
all bad.
4'lleck now into all possible
:sources or flnancla l
Much Repair Needed
In Mortgage Market .
By JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK CAP)
Interest rates throughout most
of the business world are
receding today like an ebbing
flocxl tide but It wtll be months
before the badly damaged
mortgage market can be put
tnto workina: order.
For some obvious reasons,
and some obscure ones alao,
the interest rates oo home
mortages are among the tut
to fall in any rate retreat. And
the pattern never was more
clear thani now.
The discount rate at Federal
Reserve banks bu fallen from
8 percent lo 5.5 percent Jn one
year. Some commercial paper
ratet have been halved. Some
U.S. Treasury issues are down
2.S cent. Some banks loans
cost 7 percent now comp.a.red
with 8.S a year ago.
But, the average interest
rate charged on new home
mortgages in October rose -
not fell -to 8.5 percent, com·
pared with 8.1 percent a year
earlier. In September, the rate
had been down to 8.48 percent.
A relatively few crttJcs of
the banking and savtng11 and
loan structures tend to feel
that a conspiracy e.xl!t:i:, but a
look at tht reasons why tends
to dispel such notions, albeit
without justifying the lltua·
tion. Moreover, most of the wide·
1y published economic
analyses foresee morta:age
rates joining the tide in the
ner.t year, primarily because
of an expected infiux of
money from other areas.
Jn some states, for example,
usury laws shut off the flow of
money Jnto mortgages. With
yields o{ 8 percent or more
available In corporate bonds,
commercial banks he!itated to
Invest In mort1ages which
l1ws limited to yields of 7.5
percent.
Now, however, the returns
on corporate bonds a r e
becoming less altractlve.
Money ls more plentiful and
the demands for it from
buslnt?ls are lowered. Should
yields fall to 7.2! percent,
large investors might be more
tempt4!d to In ve 1 t ln
mortgages.
The now of money Into the
mortg1ge market apparently
alreedy has begun. The
Federal llome Loen Bank
Board rtported thal I n
October some $1.0S bllllOl'I w1s
depo1lttd wll.h s1vln.g1 and
lo11n assod1Uons, a tremen·
dous aaln.
A year earlier, by contrast.
federally Insured savlnp and
loan :it90Ciations erperlenced
an ootnow of $429 mllllon.
Another factor supporting
the high cost of mort11gu ls
the enormous demand rrom
ramlUes that heve been forct!d
for 1everal years to postpone
Ulcir housing plans beCauae
loaf\! wert unoblainable.
ln r11c1, officials of the savp
Jn gs 1nd loin Industry, which
11 the major lender ol ho111lng
funds, malntJin thal Ole
average lnterut rate Oil
mort111e:s would hive been
much higher if the forces of
supply-demand were thesole
determinant.
Saks Execs
•
OVER THE COUNTE R Complete-New York Stock List
~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~--------------------------~--..&.
Thursdo11, Dtctmbtr 10, 1970 SC
I
•
DAILY PILOT 17 ••
'
..... Mtt ..
111111.) Mit h ...... C .. N (ls.
-T·Z-
So1ne Gls to Get .
Nixon Greeting ;
WASHINGTON (AP)
Some GI In Southeast Alla Is •
going to rectlve a personal
fhrlslmJJs card from Prt:sl·
denl Nixon.
The Pr<"Sldent signed the
card Wednesday at a WhJte
House metUng with represeD-
tnllvts ol V1Jl&n0va Univertlll
students who are condnctlna •
"Mal l Call Vietnam" project
(or the fifth year Tht ob-
JtcUve Is lo send hollda,y mad
to more than lOO ,OOf
s~rvlctmen ?!fore than 250.!f
arUs, lt1tters and fl'"Cka~ ,
1lrt1d1 have betn nnL 1
-. " • • :~ --
J' DAILY PILOT Thursday, Otcembtr 10, 1970
• Senate Action May Delp I
Next Hurdle Concorde . Nearing Big
--~ •
LONDON (AP) -Test prolotype of Ole Concorde . design s~gs. RecenUy, a Con-plane into full production. This France and BOAC back out. will be willing to pay up to sf
nights on the British-French went supersonic down ,;boom corde prototype made its decision will depend on how The airlines have major percent more than t h t
supersonic airliner have gone alley" on Britain's west coast, longest flight to date -two many of the planes have bet.a doubts that the Concorde will economy fare for the faster
well, and protests about its nea rly 200 damage claims hours and f4 minutes. ordered by then. be a paying proposition for trip. :
sonic boom have been less were filed with the govern-Frederick Corfield, Britain's To date, 16 airlines have them. Al ,will carry a small Cost of the Concorde proj~
than expected. Its big hurdle ment. But the protests were minister of aviation supplx, is taken options on 74 Concordes, load, 130 , pa~ngE:rs against was esUmated last month 81
comes in the spring, when the less vociferous than the gov. scheduled to meet Dec. 15 in with the first batch of pro-490 for Boeing's jun\bo" 74'7: just under $2 billion, a hug~
Brit Is h and French ernment expected. ,.. Paris with' his French duction models to go to Pan will ne~ more (u_el than cqn· sum for the h{lrd·presse
governmenb: decide whether Experts in Britain's Aviation counterpart, Raymond Mon· American World Airways, Air ventional jets, and at possibly British government and i
lo go into full production. • and Agricultural Ministries don: it is believed they will France and BOAC, the British $52.8 million woWd cost about ally across the Channel.
Supporten of the Concorde are still evaluating the elfecll give the GO-ahead for four Overseas Airways Corp. five times what a subsonicJ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
project expect the U • S , of the tests on the en-more production models, Con· Nonf of the three companies airliner does. • Power·Fkt Mech·
•nism Quiet, gell
dishe1 cleaner Senate's refusal to approve vironment. cordes 7 through 10. bas made a firm commitment Its only se lling point is its
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
o.ttrtHor lhfftt
20% OFF further government spending Technically, the Concorde This will be the last big hur· to buy, however, and Britain speed, which will halve the
on an American superaonic appean to be in the clear. die for the Concorde until next and France have assured the flying time across the Atlantic
transport to open up huge new Test flights In France and Bri· :;ipring, when the governments forejgn lines that they can to 3:\2 hours. But the airlines
markets to tbe 1,451}.mile-an-tain have turned up no major will decide whether to put the tear up their options if Air are not sure enough travelers
••• ,.,., _,...1.1
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495-0245
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Model GGSD 250
been working on joinUy ·since
1962.
Airlines that hesitated to
flrder Coocordes until they
saw what America had to of·
fer may now decide they can
wait no longer for a plane that
now looks as though it may
never get off of the drawing
boards ,
$195 95
Jh APPLIANCE
·Oft Ch•111• C...I Mtd•lt
. Wiier. Wt lttp!9C"I Y .....
l'rtHl!t DIM'lw•lol!tr.
The only other country In
the• SST compeUtion is the
Soviet Union, whose
supersonic Tupolev TU144, is
shrouded in secrecy but is
believed to be well ahead or
the Concorde in . development.
The TU144 was the first to
reach Mach 1, the speed flf
sound, and was also the fJtSt
to fly at twice that speed.
Alexander Kobzarev, t h0e
SfJvlet Union's deputy minister
of aviation, said May 21 that
series production on the TUl44
had started and that foreign
orders for the 121-seat plane
would be accepted In 1971. The
130.passenger Concorde is not
scheduled to go into service
until 1974.
SALES AND SERVICE
888 GLENNEYRE -LAGUNA BEACH
494-0582
FURNITURE
No word has emerged from
Russia ol any argument about
the TU144 's effect on the en-
vironment. When the second
GOLD
LEAFED
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i
with gold trim shades. A fabu lous gift, ~
alone or In pairs. Choose from 28" wall
Spectacular hand gold leafed lamps 2 s
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lamp. Immed iate light-up-your-life ea. •
delivery I
lDS AMCEltS: 61 21 Wilshlre Blvd. Miracle Mile; 11040 W. Pico BIYd.; 8840 S. Western A•e.
AllAllUll 1672 w. Lincoln IMIRSfl[l.D, 3010 M~a AYt. Cl.AlllllOllT /l'Ollllllk 232 L Foothill
COWlllk 945 11. ~... DGWllEY, 9435 L Firestone llllllDALL 333 II. Centr•I 1 ... tt!A~DI HILLS, 10100 Ba~ot Blvd. llUllTlll,1011IEAClk19431 Beach Bl¥d. I.A 11-1720 W. Whittier
LlllK llACJI, 2189 ltkewood BMI. llOllTEAIY PAlll<41 5 $. Alll!llc BM!. PAWIEllk 85 S. Rosemead
IM!SID~ 10.000 M1anoli1 SAllTA AllA/TUST!I, 1703 L 11th SL SAii -MO, 999 S. "E" SL
SOUTil llf, 15533 s. Ctenslww BIYll. 111-IMll$, 244 -Olb lllYd.
ftlfTVlk Jl-09 Ttltar~ lld. WOOOUllll lllllS< 22223 Vt!!llll BIYd.
IHOf' 7 ~YS A WO:K • WUK Y9 Jl UNTn.9 •SATUJIOA't10~SUNOAT1 UNTIL I ;r -. FR[! PA~INO • DfCOftATOft SEIMCE. CONvtitJ!.HftAiHiKiTEiiiRiMisiiiiii.:::I
Got on itch to etch? No penc:it,
no pop«, no talent needed.
Creative fun for everyone!
gown onfl H•y do# poiorrtas
nylon sleepwear
A gih thot':i both glamorous
and practical •.. nylon ~
slupweorl Cltoose her ~-
favorite gowns or baby doll
poiornas from o fabulous
assortment in cOflfoction
colors.. Sizes S·M-l. _.-f1~"'1fJ
from
* • rift.lcnit
tunic pant set
1116
Shoped to A otter every figure (even if
if is o bit on the full side}; button•
trimmed tunic top and matching pull·
on pants of bonded ribbed ocetote.
As~orted c:oiors, sires. 16 to 20.
holiday tablecloths
solids or prl nts
177 ,,. 70 247
60 x90
327
327
52,90 3 27
"opk;,,. 331
SpiOs needn'I spen disaster! Tnese ore heavy-weight, wipe--
c:leon, fl!Jnnel·bocked p~stia 1hot look as lovely osclothl
teffon
frypans
•.• ,,... 2"
, ... .,,... 337
,k~lel .397
No stkky ptoblemsl
Choice of OYOCodo,
hon.st oold, poppy.
.
30 .....
011oc•tlo
er gold
buffet
897 .
Coffee for a crowd • , • witb'
perfect resuits •Yety time!
Eosy to uH, eosy to seNe,
easy to c:leonl Nice gihl
b II h wetting ] 27
solution • 2oi:-·-·· ..
soquette soaking ] 2 7
solution • 4 oi: ....... .
.. ,.,.
lite-brlte 697
tr•lll09""9
doctor or nurse set
. y-cholc• 199
' MiniaeuN inedicos and'""'" co"
safely attend their~; ploy-
1of• iMtruments, supplies; conYplett
with plastic medic bog.
.vr«•
skittle bowl
6"
8cnic as bowling; tokes skill,
yet ewn a ptHChaoJer CGA
excel. A game that appeals to
oll f*>pl•. all oge grouJ)l.
e.s.lowe
scribbage
lntert picti.n and color
gloW peogs. wakh them
light up and creot• a
variety of pidur1s.
206
,,..,,.,
111otll•r
···~·
see-n-say
Point hw wing lo
onyofl2picturn, 667 pull the ring, hear
its nome and a
phrase to match it.
-...,.,.., ] a flip yoor rop, •• _.__ .
tree
ornaments
68~ to 1 14·
All sorts of J,opes, sizes and
colors to choose from;
troditionol to modem styles.
......... _, ... , 391 ,.p1oc .............. .
1 hristmas
'ablecloths
asst'dplasrk
5"x5" 971
5hn ) ST
5• x 90 or 60" rd. 1 97
Choow from an assortment
of colorful Chrlslmos motifs. ...... , .... _ 871 ploc• "'9tl •••• _ .....
...
piec•
set •
melamine set 997
No breaks Mrel Dinnenttor•
to~ MOUQh to groc. a
holiday table, )'el prodicof
enough for e¥ef')'doy "1•·
oven mitt
27~
Why gtt burned up? Wear
on oYen mitt and kttp yovr
cool I 81.iy for yourMlf. for
t1.1ck-in or stockin9 gifh..
T·ll • .,.,;lkiol
pondero
pine tree
997
So notvrol
looki~, you almost
expectfhepine -""-
smelll 'Oense green nffdles,
, removable bronc hes for
spoc.e-saving storog.•. ..... 881 tr-1tonc1 ........... .
electric
holiday
lamps
117
candle, snowmon
or se1nto c:laus
Trodltionol symbols of
Christmas to brighten yoor
indoor holiday decor!
mH,,.U..,. ) 24
dllc-o-dek •.••••...••••
st. mcrr)'s
luJCUray
blankets
'; 497 '.:' 847 '° 108
A worm·vp for oTI seasons;
lightweight, easy to wosh.
M9fcllier 311 •erric• sftltlon.-···
;.,.. .. a.
towel sets _ ..
"··~ 47~
...... ..... 167
que
577
T ok.-olong barbecue is
great for picnics, c:ompif\9,
or backyard cookery.
Hetgftt.odjustabfe grill,
. wind-ond-ipotm shield.
, .. ., Jenr•I• 226 .... "-'-'•····~ .......
7-lighr
indoor
light
set
99~
Stri~ of 7 indoor lights wit la ,
sturdy clips; assorted colors..
Buy yours early; get wveroL
20.r .. •r .] 46 midget .... __ _
72x90. 90x108
5" 997
A lot of wormtf.i, but so little
weight! Col!'pletely ..
washable,-too· ••• ondiiaa
variety of 5cwely cdors1
'"" 3297
::...: 1 so
4-3/4-..
!!::........ 2 .........
+3/4ot. •
The type of ""st'tlnt..;~
g ift o man opprec.iotel •••
with distincti....., lnOIC\lliM
frogronce. 'fwo PIO'*' 1.-.. hr Shwltoo.
,.,.,, "...... ff 3'° ~ ........... !.1 to
small box
fl3JF
lorge boll
tl9M6
3s9
637
A flle ln the hond'1 worth sii
thot you con't find! Metal
compor1mented bo:.i:H keep
'em oU hondy ond ;n order!
·-
\
Beached in San Clenaente
.. 'I'his 25-foot cabin cruiser fetched up near the city's
North Beach Thursday. It was later hoisted aboard
··a large truck by crarle and removed to a Newport
· Beach salva,e:e yard. Damage was minimal, offi·
cials believed. The craft is owned by Richard Mar·
tin of Oceanside. It was being operated by his son1
John when engine trouble developed.
Hotline Unit
Holding Sa le
To Get Fii11ds
Four School Districts Eye
Unification Move by 1972
San Clemente's hotline assistance
group has issued an appeal for donations
for a weekend antique and rummage sale
to help defray expenses of the all-
:yolunteer service which helps individuals
tiy phone.
The sale, including at-cost antique
items donat.ed by local merchants, will be
held all day Saturday and Sunday in the
v·acant furniture store building at El
Gamino Real and Avenida Serra in San
Clemente.
Jane Dial, a volunteer [or lhe hotline
group, said donations of salable items
"A'ill be received each evening from 4 to
JO p.m. at the sale building. Donations
also will be accepted during the h.ours of
the sale.
All proceeds from !ht-event will help
defray expenses incurred by the service
Jaunched about tWo months ago by San
Clemente insurance agent Bud Scheele.
L.aguna Stores
Open Until 9
Several Laguna Beach stores will re-
main open until 9 p.m. Friday to ac·
commodate Christmas shoppers.
Bill Marriner. presidenl of the
Downtown Business Association, said
most of the downtown stores will be open
late Friday, but nol all of them . He said
the decision to remain open would be
made by the individual merchants.
Marriner said the OBA stores would
:Also remain open until 9 p.m. on Dec. 18
:and on Dec. 21·23 to give last-minute
:shoppers an opportunity to purchase
~ifts.
.
Administrators of the four districts that
\1·ou!d make up the geographically largest
unified school district in Orange County
plan to meet next week to sel up liming
leading to the required June, 1972 unifica-
tion election .
Ralph Gates, superintendent or San
Joaquin Elementary District, said his
board had received instructions from the
Orange County Committee on School
Distr ict Organization calling for unifica-
tion planning.
In 1965, voters of the Tuslin Union High
School District Tustin E 1 e m e n t a r y
District and San Joaquin turned down R
unification plan th&t was acceptable to
voters in the tiny. but geographically
large Trabuco Elementary district.
Because unification failed then, a $20
per pupil state aid incentive was lost to
the proposed Tustin unified district.
While state law no longer mandates
unification along high school district
boundaries, is is possible such a plan
could be submitted once more to the
voters.
Gates said it was "too early lo tell ''
what kind or unification proposal will
result. but that the districts probably
would formulate a plan.
The County Committee has the authori-
ty to submit a plan -probably calling
for unification along high school dislrict
boundaries -in the event a district fails
tO submit its own plan, according to
Robert Matthew, secretary to the C-Ounty
Committee.
The school organization approva l body
v.·ill hold hearings Oct. 8, 1971 on unJfica-
tion plans for Orange County. There are
three other major high school district!
that have yet to unify.
On Nov. 8. 1971 unification plans would
be presented for eval uation ID the State
Board of Education. Following their ap-
:Brothe1• lfants • • • .
Lisa earlier steps up to tell Santa Claus in Monarch Bay Plaza what
her brother Michael. 2. wa nts for Christmas. The four-y ear-old
daughter of l\1r. and Mrs. Peler earlier of 33281 ?vlarina Vista, Dana
Polnt, inlcrpreted her brother's wishes. "He doesn't talk very much,"
1he said. Santa can be seen daily lvandering through the plaza shops.
I \ •
proval. voters get final say at the polls on
June 6, 1972.
Another alternative to unification along
high school boundaries that may be con-
sidered would involve splitting the hiah
school district and the elementary
districts whose stud.?nt& continue on In
the Tustin high schools.
As many as three unif ied districts
might be carved out of the land area now
inclu ded In the Tustin high district.
Resident! of Irvine may garner some
of the area or the Tustin high and San
Joaquin districts.
Tustin elementary and a portion or the
hiRh school district might combine as a
unified district.
And finally, the southern portions of the
Tustin high and San Joaquin districts in·
eluding EL Toro and Mission Viejo and
Trabuco elementary might form a third
unified di!trict.
Limiting such a three-way split 11 the
recommended 10,000 pupil minimum call-
ed for in the education code for unified
districts. A total of 24.763 students attend
schools of the four districts. Of theae,
10.086 attend Tustin Elementary achools.
7,591 are enrolled in San Joaquin schools,
411 in Trabuco and 7,038 are in the high
schools of the Tustin district.
X Movies Bring
Vigil.antes Out
In Costa Mesa
The Costa Mesa City Council has risen
to defend the morals and property of
resident.s who maintain both a re
threatened by a drive--in the&ter pro-
jecting super·sexy movies on its giant
&creen.
Respondi ng to a petition ai1ntd by 58
residents of a tract adjacent to the Paulo
Drive-Jn Theater. the councU instructed
city attorney Roy June to investigate
legal actions that might be taken to curb
the projection of X-rated films at the out-
door theater, whose screen is clearly visi·
hie for blocks.
Not only are their children learning
about lhe birds and bees with demonstra·
tions in superhuman size and Jiving color,
the petitioners complain, but outsiders
are invading their property for the free
11how.
One hapless resident reported 17 unin·
v\led guests had climbed his fence one
night to drink beer and enjoy a
particularly racy movie from a vantage
point in his yard, which was thoroughly
trampled.
Services Held
For Capo Beach
'.Accident Victim
Funeral rites were conducted thit1 week
in San Clemente for Victor Dean Bull II.
10, of Capistrano Beach, the victim of a
freak auto mishap last weekend in
Newhall.
The San Juan Elementary School fifth
grader was fatally injured when he was
thrown from a hole ripped in the 1ide of
the family mlcrobus which grazed a
guard rail on a· lreeway.
Highway palrolmen in the Newhall
a rea said the boy was riding with his
family in the van when it hit the rail.
Fatal injuries were suffered in the fall
to the pavement at high speed.
The services were conducted at
Capistrano Valley Baptist Church with
the Rev. Wllll&m Davenport &nd Dr.
Dave Armstrong, 1 member of the boy's
family, officiating.
'>, '
-----~-----....,.~ ~ ~,~------~ -------·-~ --~~--
Thursdiy, December 10, 1q70 s DAILY PILOT ;J
Playhouse Gets -$3, 700
$75,000 Needed to Wipe Out· T1ieater's Debts
Goinl ln!O the third week of a fUnd
drive dOslp>ecl Jo wipe out Ila debts, the ·
Laauna Mou!Jon Playhouse bu received about 13,100. Ji\. pledsea and don•li<>nl,
about five percen! of the 175,000 goal, ac·
tin& pnera1 · DI-Robert Hutlnl• said Wedueedl)'.
"lt's JO.in& 1towly," .. id Hulings, "but
we plan to acceltlr1te the pate in tht next
couple of weeks thrOuah phone cont1ct.s
with members who have not yet respond·
ed to our Jetten."
Pleas for ftnanclal 1ld were mailed to
all of the -2,400 Play~ members laat
month after 1tveral members of the paid
stiff were dilmiued 11 an economy
move and board members took over
manaaement of the theater.
Principal ne«t, according to Ma1tinp ,
is enou&h money to pay off a 11rge loan
made to equip the theater for its oPening
laat year. Proceed! from productions
have been barely sufficient to put on
plays, with nothing left for· ritir'ement of
the debt.
Bura:lary of the theater's entire sound
equipment iyatem added another $10,000
Freshly cut trees,
Merry Christmas
prices.
' '
II y00're lookl1111 fora big
beautiful tree this seuon,
come see 111. You'll find
Scotch Pine and Western
Douglas Fir Chrltlmu
ln!es In various sizes
ancl shapes to hold
all your favorite
omements.
8-Plne
41o511..l.t9 7 lo • ft., •• 99
5-1/21o7ft.799
w-Dollg191 Fir
2to3ft., 1.19
3 lo 4 ft., 2A9
Stolft.349
71011.,4.49
llo101L,l.ft
Cvolamen in Christmas
bloom to enjoy during
this holiday and for
many lo come. GrOWlng
'in 4 Inch Poll.
1.29
Bonul Juniper growing
In a tub for Chrtstmas.
13.99
Bonul Juniper growing in a
ceramic planter, already gift
boxed. 10.99
BonAI Pyrocantha growing in
a ceramic planter ...
Christmas colors all year. 10.99
Bonul Block Pine growing in
a ceramic planter. 1O.99
Ceramic plantare already
Chrlllmot gift wrapped.
lo the financial burden.
Donations hav~ included Ont' $1,000
pledge, Ha stings said, plus two ' $$00. to"n.
tributions and a number of checks for $5,
SIO and $25 from PlayhoUSe supporters.
Some of these came from non-members
who had read about'"the""'theitU·Suniil.
cial plight and said they wanted to help.
A special drive to raise ,2,IXI to pay
royalties necessary for a planned
February prod1.1:tion of "Anything Goes"
is being conducted through local clubs,
Hastings said.
Bonul TrH K~ includes:
planting dish. Bonsal plant,
special soil; wire and
how-lo Instructions.
4.99
Chtr9t it tt fht1e Penney 1fore11 FASHION ISLAND , Ntwport Cenftr. Shop Sundtyi, too, 12 to 5 P.M.
I •
' ' I
f
_,
'Wlelu
• Bot• Sides, 1Jn1lelding
Reds Reject New
POW Swap Offer
••• -PARIS (AP) -Sooth Vietnam and the The Viel Cong statement·J not eaen-
tlally vary tn;im •Sept. 17 declaration. It
stressed lbat discualiOl)8; :on release of
prisonel'S could take placl ~·at Once.1'
... ;~; .• United States offered today to release
. North Vietnamese. prisoners in .return for
freedom of American · and A I 11 e d
Prisoners. 'Ille Viet Cong proposed a
cease-fire under condllions that have
been unacceptable to the allies.
,.~.
,.~, ,..
i.: ... _,..
Both proposals were rejected. said
apokesmen for the delegations or the two
&ides.
There was no specific ~ of ttJe
ne\\' South Vietnamese-American pro-
posal today on prisoner release. But the
timing. of the Viet Cong statement in·
dicated it came as a response.
• .
! • . • • • . .
t .
t • • • ' "
Bilge Oil
And Beauty
By DICK '\\'.EST
WASHINGTON -Now that Navy
Secretary John H. Chafee haa graciously
I.ordered a halt to the dwnping of bilge oil ~In the ocean, we should all show our ap. f preeiation by helping the Navy find other
· ways to di!pose ol it.s petroleum wastes. ~ The most practical solution to the pro
\lem appr:ars to lie In the development of
new uses for bilge oil. Concmting which l
am prepared to advance a few ideas.
•
Reagan Goes . Academic
Gov. Ronald Reagan marches tn academic proces·
sion during dedication cer.emonies fo r the Reagan
Physical Education Center on the Eureka College
campus in Eureka. 111. He and brotiler: Neil , were
honored as center bearing their name was officially
opened. Both are ~raduates of the college.
The session opened with the. South Viet-
name se prisooer swap proposal , which
was immediately• backed by the United
States. South Vletoamese Ambassador
Pham Dang Lam told newsmen the Com·
munisls refused to discuss the que.stioi.
The cease-fire proposed by the Viet
Cong would go into effect when the
United States agreed to withdraw all its
forces from South Vletnam by June 30,
J!i?l if South Vietnam acei!pted a pro-
visional coalition govem.rnent. Mrs.
Nguyen Thi Binh, the chief Viet Cong
delega te, said the allied side rejected
thi s.
The Viel Cong said it wats prepared to
discuss the release of American prisoners
only if the United States was ready to
withdraw its troops by the 1971 deadline .
The United States previously has rejected
any deadline.
The Viet Cong statement. issued during
a closed-door session or the talks, said :
South Vietnam's proposal was to
release all fore ign prisoners hek! in t:l·
change for all U.S. and other foreign
prisoners held by the Communists in
North Vietnam, Laos or Cambodia .
Nixon Backs
Ban on Funds
For Cambodia
WASHINGTON fAP J -Secretary ot
State William P. Rogers gave the Nixon
administration's endorsement today to ~
ban on funds for American ground com-
bat troops in Cambodia voted by tht
Senate.
-±---The first step shouIH be a chemical
a nalysis to determine whether bilge oil
Strong Quake
Rock s Peru,
Ecuador Area ·
Settlement Seen Near "On the subject of captured American
military men, if the American govern-
ment is really concerned with their fate.
)cl it declare !hat it will withdraw all or
its troops and those of foreign countries
in the American camp out of South Viet-
nam unconditionally before June 30, 19.71.
Rogers emph3sized to the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee that the on·
ly commitment the Nixon administration
hall to Cambodi a is to provide aid, ad·
ding, "We are nol guaranteeing the
defense oC Cambodia nor have we pro-
mised lo continue our aid indefinitely."
has any cosmetic properties. Wb.ether,
~or ·example. jt might be helpfu1 m the
prevention of wrinkles. . . .
Your inclination, I'm sure. JS to dismiss
that possibility as hopelesaly far-fetched.
A few years ago, however, you. probably
:-.wou1d have felt the same way about tur·
Ue oil.
YET TODAY, a large number and
variety of beauty preparations have a
turtle oil bale. Turtle oll treatments have
tn fact become so popular that glant sea
turtles which supply the main ingredient,
are ~eate:ned with extinction.
Thillk what an environmental triumph
tt would be lf bilge oil were found to be
an adequate substitute for , or '!lay be
even an improvement over, turUe oil.
Both a polluUon and comervation p~
blem would be erned with one ecological
swoop. "Ladles, are yoo getting unsightly
:wrinkles all over your adorable body?
-:Then try bilge oil, the new m I r a c I e
beauty bath JoUon. . "Just sprinkle a few drops in the
bathtub and a soothing oil slick quickly
spreads over the surface. Penetrates
your pores and goes lo work instantly
toning up flaQ:id skin. L e a v e s your
adorable body feeling vibrant, alive. And
wrinkles vanish overnight.
ANOTIIER POSSIBlLITV that should
be invesUgated is the use of bilge oil as a
ha ir dressing. Closing my eyes and turn-
ing the pupils inlo tiny television sets. t
can see a handsome sailor, barefooted
and stripped to the waist. standing on the
deck of a schooner during a hurricane.
Not a hair is out of place.
·LIM..\, Peru (UPI\ -An earthquake of
potential "disastrous" proportions rocked
the jungled Peru-Ecuador border area
late Wednesday. It appeared centered in
the Ul>per northwest co rner of Peru, sev -
eral hundred miles from the killer ea rt.h-
quake. of M:ay 31 .
The Uppsala•SelsmOlogic.al Institute In
Sweden said the energy released by the
quake was about one-fifth of that of the
May temblor , "but is despite thi~ an
earthquake of disastrous measures."
First reports were that 13 pcrSOll!I
were known dead1in this earthquake and
that many others were Injured.
The Peruvian National Institute of Geo-
physics said the quake had a force of 7.3
on the Richter Scale of 10 and was cen·
tered in the Ecudadorian Bay of Guaya-
quil about fl() miles north of the Peruvian
city ot 1\tmbes.
ReporU trom the Peruvian cily or
Sullana said at least 12 persons were
killed there and "a great number of per-
sons" were injured. (Earlier In Quilo.
Ecuadorian authorities said at I e a s t
one person was killed in a border village
and several persons were hurt.)
The quake was recorded at 11:35 p.m.
EST by the University of California
Seismological Station in Berkeley where
technicians said It had a force of be-
tween 7.2 and 7.6 on the Richter Scale.
Vietnam Student
Slain in Protest
In Hughes Empire Case ''In such a case our delegation is ready
to enler into discussions on the problem
of the liberation of lhe captured military
men, even today, without waiting." LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -A stale
official attempti ng to settle the battle
over Howard Hughes' milllon dollar Las
Vegas interests says "reasonable pro-
gress" has been made and a ~cret mee.t-
ing today "hope/ully .• , will result 1n
a final settlement."
Following a six-hour closed-door mcel-
lng ciilled for by Gov. Paul Lax alt. Wed-
nesday, State Gaming Control Chairman
Vietnam Peace
First Prioritv, " Finch Declares
flrank John son said a settlement was in
sigh t.
The behind-the-scenes dealings began
after a state judge adjourned hearings
so that the two rival fa ctions could CQn-
fer privately. Another court session was
scheduled this morning but It was ex-
pected to be only a prelude to the closed-
door session.
Both sides in the dispute -Robert P.
Maheu, Hughes' number one man in Ne-
vada for lhe past four years, and exe-
cutives of the parent Hughes Tool Co.
S. Viet Doctor
Stages Protest
With Grenade
who are trying to oust Maheu . success-SAIGON (AP) -A South Vietnamese
fully avo ided newsmen following lhe mar-army doctor holding a hand grenade
athon session . staged a one-man protest against govern-
.Johnsen issued a statement saying ment corruption 'on the steps of the Na-
"reasonable progress has been made" tional Assembl y building today, then late r
11nd !'laid he was spea king for both side!'!. v.·as allowed to see President Nguyen
Hf' added that the next session could "re-Thieu.
suit in a final settlement." Newsmen were barred from the meet-
STOCKTON (UPI) -Presidential Laxalt. who attended the session. said ing in Independence Palace. A spokesman
Counselor Robert Finch said Wednesday earlier this week he talked lo Hughes for Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky. who
night peace in Vietnam is the nation 's N.o. by telephone and the billionaire said the attended he conferenct. said he did not
Rogers was asked about the Senate
decision to add a ban on· U.S. ·ground
combat forei!s for Cambodia to one
enacted a year earlier covering LaO! and
Thailand . While the administration op-
poses . any congressional moves to ti~
President Nixon 's hands, he replied, "I
certainly have no opposition to that p~
posal.
"It carries out the President's in·
tention ," he added. "We have no intention
of using ground forces in Ca mbodia.''
But R-Ogers told the committee that jt
Is likely "we will request additional
funds " next year beyond the initial $2.SS
million for Cambodia unless major pro-
gress is made toward a negotiated se:l·
tlemenl in Southeast Asia.
lacocca Named
Ford President
I priority, and "I can hope for this Hughes Tool executives had his backing know the details of the discussion. DETROIT (A P) -Lee A. laeocca,
(peace) in the next 14 months." in the firing of f\.taheu . The spokesman reported the doctor, credited with being the man behind the
Finch , speaking al a Conference of Na-However, Johnson said that Hughes Maj. Pham Van Luong. le£t four Mustang and the Maverick, today Wll!I
lional Priorities at the University of the had not been contacted during the six-fra gmentation grenades at a guard post named president Df Ford Motor Com-
Pacific, said that 265,000 v.s. servicemen hour meeting nor was that action con-before going in to see Thieu. pany.
bad already been withdrawn from tcmp\ated. Luong clutched a grenade in one hand Iacocca moved into a post wh ich had
Southeast Asia, thoUgh "the disengage-The billionaire recluse, who ha s nol and had three others in the pockets of his been occupied by a three-man tea m since
ment is not as fast as I or an yone would been seen in public since he arrived here · ·1 d · h. d Semon E. Knudsen was fired JS months
11 rk ,, four years ago, departed the city two paratrooper s uni orm ur1ng 1s ay-
persona y I e. , werks ago and left lhe two factions lock-long vigil. He said the grenades were to ago.
The former Health. Education, anrt ed in a power struggle for control , eech prevent any interference by police. He lacocca·s pruir.ction was announced by
WeUare Secretary called the next 14 claiming his endorsement. Hu ghes re-declared he was staging a hunger strike Henry Ford 11, board chairman of the na-
months for withdrawal -a "workable portcdly Is in the Bahamas. against corruption. lion's No. 2 automaker, following •
figure," though not an official one . During the court session, Hughes Tool Still clutching the grenade, Luong, 36. meeting of the company's board of direc-
Questioned on the irn~ct of the seniori-Co. sought to quash a temporary restrain-climbed into an officia l car sent for him tors.
ty system in Congress Oil' national ing order obtained by Maheu preventing by Ky to take him from the National Iacocca has been president for Ford'a
priorities. Finch termed it a "geritol a takeover by the Houston-based corpor-Assembly building to Independence North American operations, one of three
system" unrepresenlative of the mood ="='=io="=·'--'==============P;a;la;ce=. ====:;;:::;;:::;;::;;::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;::;;::~p~re~s=id='="=ts=w=ho;;::re=po:.;;;r=te=d=to;;::H=e="='=Y=F=o=rd=.; and will of the public. \r
"Bilge oil. the new 24-hour hair dres.r
Ing that keeps your hair in plaei! all day
without oombing even in the roughest
weather while il fights Infectious dan·
druff and stops itchy scalp.
SAIGON (AP) -A Vietnamese student
protesting the fatal shooting of a young
girl by a South Korea n soldier was
himscH shot to death on South Vietnam 's
central roast today. And anti-America n
demonstrators in Saigon burned an eggify
of President Nixon.
Associated Press co r re !'l r.o n den l
Michael Putzel reported from Qui Nhon
that South Vietnamese police blamed
Korean troops for lhe two latest shooting
deaths. They followed two days of anti·
American rioting in the roast.al province
capital sparked by the shooting of a 14·
year-0\d Buddhist by an American
soldier.
He said committee chairmanships in
Congress were slow to change hands, I
noting that in the November election 60
Congressmen were reelected without ()p-
posi tion.
He said committee chairmanships
should be selected with secret balloting
"at the very least" and candidates should
be chosen only after consultation with the
entire party caucus.
A TERRIFIC BUY • • •
•·Just sprinkle a few drops in the plam
of your hand and rub into hair and scalp.
A stimulating oil slick quickly spreads
over your entire head."
Properly handled. bil ge oil could
become so valuable the Navy would sooi
be stockpiling the stuff.
-UPI
Finch said the second national priority
should be "basic education for all lo
remove adult illiteracy.'' He said this
could be done for nine million people over
a JO-year period.
Big Sno·w Warning Issu~d
Large Storm Builds V p Over W este rn Mountains
Cellfond e Temper~ture~
T-11vf'11 t f'ld P'Klell1llOl'I IM
formerly Gentry ltd.
HARIOR SHOPPIN<i CENTER ON THE MALL
HARIOR ILVD. AT WILSON ST., COSTA MESA
540-t 500
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Mrs. Ann Stewart
Teachers
To Decide
Witch, Case
TUSCON, Ariz. (UP I) -;-The case cf higt\ ichoo1
teacher Ann Stewart, 1ccu11ed
• cf telling her 1tudent1 the ill a
1 witch ' and promotin& witch·
craft. will be decided by a
committee of fellow teacher1.
The Flowing Wella School
• Board Wednesday decided in a
secret hearing that th• com·
mittee should study the case
and recommMd in February
whether Mrs. Stewa r t '•
su1p,e,i1ion 1hould be
permanent.
Mrs. Stewart. v.·ho has
., laught English in the small
school district for t t years,
v.•as advised by her lawyer not
to comment on the charge -
" th at she "laught \l'itchcraft
and claimed lhe was a witch .. ,. in such a wa:ii-11 t rt
psychbloglcall y affect h e r
students."
S c h o c 1 S u perintendent
MJlrlen Yoder auspended Mrs.
Stewart last month after com·
plaints from 1choo1 ad·
mlnh1tr1tor1 and teacher1.
Her attorney, Edward
Morg1n, said the furor atarted
through a mi1understandlng
when some of her students
took her statementa out of
context. He 1aid Mn. Ste\Yart
· · merely wa• talkinc about
pracUtloner1 of black macic in
the past ind ln modern time•.
•. •, ..
tf the board eventually
dtcidea to fire lhe wom1n, she
can tike the declaion to the
court.s on .appeal.
·P ot Burned
In Mexico
TIJUANQ, ~fexlco (UPI) -
Mexican authorities sta1ed
whit they call a "pot roa at"
.Thursday and burned 10 ton s
of mariju ana and d'ngerous
dru11 1eb::ed In the past flve
months.
Narcotics officials from both
aides of the border were
present as ttie contraband was
set ablaze at a Mexican army
rine range four mile.a south or
here.
----------
ThLll'SdlJ, Dtctmbtr 10, 1970 DIJlY Pile!' f
96 Raiders Honore.d We lfare Platt Liberalised
Social Security Increase
Heroisni in P(!W Carnp Strike Cited
Appro ved by Senate Unit FT. BRAGG, N.C. (UPI) -
The soldiers and airmeri w®
penetrated deep int.o North
Vietnam in la~\ month'• valh
attempt . to frM Amer Jean
prisoner1 ol war carr"d
sneaker1 and blby food alone
with. tllom.
Their !llortl were rewa.r<jed
Wtdnelday by D t f • n • e
lecrelary MtMn R. Laird
who dtcorattd N men "for
their 1klU, for Ultlr cour•1•
and for more.'' With four Men
dtoor1ted at thl White House
111\ week and one decorated
elnwhtre Wtdnead1y, it
brou,cbl to 101 tho number of
men who jolntd In the raid on
Son T•r· "They arid Ui.eir families
have earned the respect of the
enUrt clvllllld world because
lhey were wllllna to endure
11tr1ordlnary risk, hardahlp
Environment
Chief Socks
Bi g Cities
ATLANTA , Ga. (AP)
William O. Ruckelshaus; in hit
flr1t major action since lakin1
over th• week -o ld
E n v I ronmental .Protec:Uon
Agency, h•• served-notice on
three major U.S. cities to halt
viol1tion of w1ter quality 1tan·
dards or face possible court
action .
If the violttions do not ceaae
within 180 d1y1. the agency
can ask the Justice Depart·
menl to file suita againat the
cities.
Named b y Ruckelshaus
were All1nti. Detroit and
Cleveland.
Ruckelshaus said in a
speech prepared for the t7th
annual congress of the Na·
tlonal League of Cltlea that
Atl1nt1 is fouli ng the Chat-
tahoochee River in violation of
the federally 1 ppr o v t d
Georcla water quallty sta11·
dards.
Nixon Aide
Quits Post
WASHINGTON !AP)
Pre1ldential counselor Bryce N~ Harlow liq ~1nde<f Preal·
dent Nixon hls elpected
ruignation to return .to work
for Procter & Garnble Co.
At the same Um~ he was
virtually ruled out by the
White House 11 1 possible new
chairman for the Republican
N1tlon1l Committee.
Harlow, M. planned lo
return to Proct~r <& Gamble
today. He had announced his
intention to do 10 three Umes
in the past, but each time
Pre1ldent Nl1on personally ob·
talned an exten!llon o f
Harlow's leave from th e com·
pany, press secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler said.
OUR SHOE'S
AN ANGa •• ,
and even death In an attempt
io uv1 other men," Laird
llld.
Chatting with n ew s men,
Arm)' Lt. Col. Joseph R.
Cataldo, Alexandria, Va., the
chief medical officer for the
Nov. 11 mission, said the men
had carried all sorts of gear in
with t.httn including sneakers,
in CIH the prisoners they had
hoptd to find were without·
1hoe1, and baby fOod , in case
the mtn were too ill to eat
whole food .
Army Lt. Col. Elliot P. Syd·
nor, 43, Auburn, Ky., was in
charge of the men on the
ground and drew up mµch or
the traintns proaram they
underwent In the United
States. He fndicattd the men
did not have 11 detailed a
knowltdl• of the prison com-
pound 11 previously thought.
He sa\d they were nevl!r
certa in where the window•
and doors were on the varloua
prison buildln&s. A, 1uccessive
aerial photo&riphl Were made
what once wa1 lhouaht to be a door turned Out to be a 1hadow
and what bad been tagged as a
window appeared 11 a door. -
The fu ll·scale replica the
men trained in · w11 nQt 11
substantial •• Utt tabletop
.model shown ,In· wi dely
.d i !I t r i b u t td photoraphs.
Instead, the ,••buildln&• • were
just wooden ppsb from which
canvas "waifs" were hung.
When the ml•sion waa
revealed, the Defense Depart·
ment said the lead helicopter
had been "intentionally .cru h·
landed" inside the compound.
Many critics o! the miss.ion
have claimed this was a Pen·
tagon coverup for 1n error.
Killer Gets
398-year
Sentence
WASHmGTON (AP) -... Jut April. Se<:11rtty.
llbtr11i&ed version or Pr<sl· Dl>bato 111 the 3oclel Securl· The Socl1J Security bill
dent Nixon's family 15$lstance ty bill la 1theduled ln the start~ out 11 a measure to
plan will be pushed In the Senate Tuuday, but Congrus ralse beneflta fw ZS millJen is pulhlna tow 1 rd ad-Am1rlcan1. lut t h r o u I h
Senate as an amendment to a journment next wnk and the lttlalaUvi ~euvering, such
bill providing across.the-board meuure's chances of p111qe dlver1t prop:>Nla aa a forti&.,..
incresses in Social Security . are con1idend 1llm because of trade bill and controls on
benefill. several Sntendmcnta which medicart and mtdicaid have
Sen. Abraham A. Rlblcoff have nothln. to do w_llh:;:;lloc:;:;l1;;;l::;;:bet:;:;:n;;;1;;;1l:;;;;;11th;:;ed..,;u,;;am:;:;end:;:;m;;;en;;;ts;;;;.
(O.COnn.), said t})e Nixon "'" ·
Admlnlstrolion has • .,eec1 to PIN SUND.A Y 11 To 5
the revised version of its em· UNTI~ CHRISTMAS
battled welfare reform plan.
WOODSTOCK, lll. (UPl) -Rlbi(Xlff and Sen. W1llac• r. I Btnnett (R·Utah), will 1ponaor A McHenry, Ill., man who the proposal.
unexpectedly pleaded euUty to The Senate Finance Com-
tbrec murders h11 b e e " mittee refused to approve lht
1entenced to 393 ye~a in far-reachil'lg Nixon plan,
prison for two of the kllllng1. voling in1tead for a limited
Mark Smith, 21, made an t\vo-year ~est of the propo1al and two alt-ernativea. 'nit d unscheduled appearance to House passed the Nixon plan 1912 Harbor llv ., Codi Mn•
switch his plea from innocent 1...'.'."".~~iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~=~==~:::=== to aullty In the May 21 rapej
and murder of Jean Ann y
Un&enfelter, 17, el McHenry, SUNDA SHOPPING
(UPI) and later developed sensitivity end the Jan.17 olayln& of Mr1. IS PUN
Pr1aervatlve1 u1ed in some ' to a rubber boot he had Jean Bia nchi, 27. ' ~ '1ua
Cosmetic Ch emicals
'May Cause A llergy'
CHICAGO
During • su bsequent bear· "-out c o s m e t I c 1 and other prescribed to protect 1 1m11L lnr. Smith confuied to the OUID
perishable productl may ulcer on her lee. Bot.h con-o Dec. 2. 11189, klllln1 cf Mr•. · d lrl•ttl •• h• 111• rrwy. C•I• -c1u.ae1eve~.prot ra c t ed i~~'i"'~t=he~sa:m:e:...::pr~u=e~rv=•:tl~ve:,_jO~b~b~ie~F~a~y~A~s~h~,~3l:·~t=n~M:o:u:n·!._ _ _::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~ allergies, a liktn &peciali1t bu~ he said. , taln Home, Ark .
reported.
Or. William Schorr of the
Marshfield, Wis., CI in i c ,
presented hi1 report Wed·
nesday U. the convention of
the American Academy of
Dermatologists.
Schorr 1tr11aed that only a
small minority of peraoni ap-
pe1red affected by t h e
preservatives.
But for these, he said,
swltchln& from one brand to
another provided no relief
because the 1amt preservative
Wll used.
Schorr said it was difficult
ta establish which chemJcal
appeared re~ponsible for the
11lergle1, slnce the formuJ1s
cf such producll are secret.
"They don't eome under the
Food and Dru&• Act, they're
prntected by p1tent1,
1lthou1h m1ny firm• have
been wlllln1 to tell me con-
fidentially whether er not a
cert1tn chemlc1l was included
In their producU, '' Schorr
••id.
The derm1tolo1ist 1trell8d
such pres1rv1tlves were cau1·
Ing no epidemic of alle r1!11,
but the small minority of pa-
tient.a aUact1d often 1ufferad
severely and for a protracted
length of time.
Sometimes, Schorr said, a
doctor might pre.scribe an
ointment fo r the condition, on·
ly to find th1t the medicine
co ntained the 1ame
preae rvatlve that was cau•lni
the allergy.
He told of one woman pa·
tient who became aller&ic to
preservatives in an ointment
IT'S JUST ABOUT PEllEECT
In textured calf, brown. carnet, red,
navy, black, bone & whlto,
$1 5.
• iJ a
And~'lbadc,mor
It's over. Chevy is back In business.
And . those o! you who waited will be
glad you did.
Because Chev y's back with lots of
changes. The kind of changes that mean
something.
For instance, all of pur '71 engines
run efficiently on lead.free gas to help de-·
crease air pollution, increaae enaine ll f1.
But we're not golna to 1et Into all
that here.
Why not see your Ch~vrolet dealer.
He'll show you that
Chevy's back.
In front.
•
OPIN 'TIL
t P.M.
THROUGH
CHRISTMAS
<JJ ts/(!/ittSB.OB S YY! 1111 11TI11~ J.'!nr
WISTCL"I'
P'LAIA
17th a IRVINI
NIWl'ORT
llACH
I
' . --= --------_-_,r .. -~-
•
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\
DAD.Y PILOT EDJ'i'OBJ,U; PAGE
Time for
Talk Is abroad in Orange County that the time may
have come to adopt the charter Corm of county ~overn·
ment In place of the pr,e~ent general law to~.
This may prove to be the case .. but ft wlll take some
proving. It is not ·a simple' .~alter of strengthening
home rule, al thou~h this could be a benefit.
Under the California constitution, general 18\\' con·
t inues to swing a lot or weight even \vhen a county or
city adopts its own charter. Jn general, charter govern·
menl permits a mortl 11customized'' forn\ to meet
special needs in local areas. General law government
means the county operates under constitutional provis·
ions applicable throu,a:hout the state, except where
modifi~ by J~al charter. . ·.Ai. study subcommittee 4)( the £ounty Governmental
Alfairs Commlttee of the Orange County Cha.mber of
Commerce studied the desirability ot .charter adoption
five years ago a nd recommended against a change "at
this time."
A similar committee has just been appointed and
will study the question 'again in the light of changed
conditions since 1966.
One of the prime advantages of a charter \vould be
-if the electorate tan be so persuaded -to apply the
sound practice now widely adopted under the city man·
ager form or government in chartered cities -namely,
to elect policy makers, appoint administrators.
· Administrators so appointed would be responsible
to the policy makers; if they fail , the elected policy
makers are held responsible to the voters. This reco.a:·
nizes that administrators should not be subjected to
political pressures.
a Charter?
So improved administrative organization ls one
potential charter· government could achieve.
Anotjler ls a shortening of the bal)ot. And a l"ethod
for setting salaries of elective o!flCers can be provided
.-something sorely needed in the recent controversy
over county .supervisors' salaries.
A charter can also provide for a merit or civil
service system, set qualifications of elective officers
and elect the Board of Supervisors at large, if desired.
Negatives are present which must be weighed. For
example, once having ob tai ned a charter, bow can
groups \Vith private objectives be prevented from push-
ing sell-interest charter amendments? The overall
county .-overnment could suffer under the impact of
such patchwork legislation.
Any conclusions.on ~charter vs,.general law county
goVernment must await a carelU.I asse·ssment of pros
and cons in tbe Ugbt ·of changes since the 11166.lludy.
The point now is to realize that the issue is not open
and shut. all white or all black. ·
The county Chamber of Commerce task force about
to restudy the 'question· should have one overriding
goal: To suggest hbw best' to keep county· govenunent
a.breast of the demands brought on by rapid urbaniza·
t1on.
Circumstances Alter .Cases
Governor Reagan's cost-cutting moves reducing
payments to doctors and for other serviceSlunder Med.i·
Cal has the medical establishment in rebd.lion.
The irony in Ulla is that Reagan whose speeches
extolling free enterprise launched him Into politics.
now finds himself telling private enterprise ''you can't
charJi!:e that much."
•
.. • J~ c. +411"1• ~t.l>t~'
Opposition to .this is a vestige of an agricultural
America when every voter felt he should have a vote on
every holder of office, no matter ho\v far removed from
the making of governmental policy. Circumstances,. it would again seem, alter cases. tlT~ VE ~Y WELL ~f5 16NE~. IN fA<T, IT'LL lAN~ ON YOUR SACK.'1
A Little T est
On Unusu a l
Adjectives
All right, I &ive Jn. When the letter·
basket labeled "Language" reaches a
certain helght, I know It's time to do
anothtr column on words. Today we ·11
have a little test on unusual ad jeetives:
if you get more than half, you're entitled
to wear an air of linguistic smugness.
1. What b the adjective that ref!!rs lo
the act of "yawnln~"?
2. What is lhe adjective applied to Ille
habit of'using a pet name, like "dearest,"
or a diminutive, llke 0 Dolly"?
3. What is the adjective me aning a J<Jst
will that la given orally to someone, and
not written? •
(. AS t•DWRNAL" is ~he adjcclive lor
day and "noctur-
nal'\ la the adjective
for light, what is the
adjecUve f o r twi-
light?
s. Everyone knowa
that the adjective
"canine" rerers to
dogs, and "feline" to
cats -but what ire
the adjectives refer-
ring 10 bears, moose, deer, badgers, fo:t-
es, squirrel&, and skunk!?
6. Ukewise, we know that "global''
means ah.aped like a globe, and "ovate"
means shaped Uke an egg . buL what are
the adjectives for shaped like a bell, a
heart, a ct'OSI, a 1trap, a cone, a rod, and
a needle?
7. Name the saints from which the
following adjectives are derived -
"tawdry," "maudlin.'' and "chaplain."
Dear
Gloomv •
Gus:
A typical American is one who
h3.s just driven home from an
Italian movie in his Gennan car,
is sitting on Spaniah furniture,
drinking Brazilian coffee. fortified
with Irish whis~ey out of an Eng·
lish bone china cup, and with his
Japanese bill point, pen, writing
his Congreisman protesting that
imports are ruining bjs business.
-E. P.
I. A "POLEMICAL" argument is one
that engages in.disputes a:od cOlltrOVel"IY
(also known as ''erisUc"); but it's anto-
nym has pncllcolly ~ out of the
language -whet ' it the Mjecljve mean-
ing a speech that promotes peace and ,
conciliation among factk>nii'?!
9. Each of these dog'1 names was com-
pounded from what adjectives in the
language in which the dog was named -
"'dachshund,"'' po o d 1 e '', ''spaniel,"
"mast.iff " "schnauzer " 1'basset hound, amf,"~und"? • I
10. What art the adjectives designating
the cilize~ of Liverpool, Cambridge, and
Olford?
ANSWERS:
t. Oscitant.
2. Hypocoristic.
3. Nuneupative.
4. Crepuscular.
5. Ursine, alclne, cervine, melinc,
vulpine, sciurine, and mephitine.
6. Campanulate, cordate, cruciate,
]orate, strobUe, vlrgate, acerose.
7. St. Audrey, St. Mary Magdalene, and
St. t.lartin of Tours.
8. lrenical.
9. Badger-dog, Splash-dog, Spanish-dog,
tamed-dog, growler-dog, very-low-dog,
and dog-dog.
10. Llverpuddlian, Catabrlgian, and
Oxonian.
Shocking , Unprecedented
The case or the Lithuanian sailor who
jumped aboard a U.S. Coast Guard cutter
Nov. 23 and then was rttumed to Soviet
authorities -who bound and beat him -
was shocking because it was un-
precedented. lt was a glaring exception
to the rule that the United States has fe\Y
peers when it comes to generosity in
granting political asylum.
The furor over sailor Simas Kudirka,
35, drew attention from the dramatic
defection three days earlier of four East
Germans who leaped rrom a cruise ship
bound for CUba. The lrnrnigration Service
has said it wtll decide on Dec. 30 whether
the four may stay in this coun U'y. Afte1·
what Happened to the luckless Lithua·
.,Ian, it hardly seems likely that they will
be deported.
~tO'l'HEA OF EXILES Is tht name
Emma Luarua aave to the Statue o(
Liberty In ber famous sonnet. and it fits.
T"""'tll the yws, the United Stot., ha!
welcomtd thouSandl of foreignen neeing
from ~Uon in their native lands.
Large runbert of Jewilh refugen from
Nazism, for eump1e, entered the country
In the llltls.
LeglalaUon enacted art.er World War ll
authorized prk1rtty, under immigration
laws, for "eligible displaced penon.'1 •••
"lho are unable or unwilling lo return to
the countritl ol which they are nationals
betatlle of persecution on account of
n et, religion, or political opinions.~·
American wllllngnesa to take ln political
refugees was demon1lrattd in 1958. when
31,oot H.,..ariln& ...,.. admltt..t, and
1Pin after fidel Castro cam< to power
-· "'-' '
Editorii,d I
·~esearch 1
~ ' ,,
' .
in Cuba in 1959. 1'he flow of CUban
refugees is still continuing.
f\IANY RENOWNED people ha\•e come
to lhe United States at one time 'or
another as political emigrea. Talleyrand,
Joseph Bonaparte and Pierre du Pont de
Nemours sought refuge from I.he French
Revolution: t~y were followed hair a
century later by Carl Schurz, Charles
Steinmetz and Louis Kossuth; and Albert
Einstein· and Thomas Mann v.·ere among
the thousands who ned Hitler's Germ&nl'.
The most celebrated emiare of rtttnt
times ha& been SveUana Alllluyeva,
Stalin's daughter, who married an
Am!!rican last Aprll and tivts In Arizona.
Ai;y\um for polltlcll refucets takta two
basic forms: (I) intim.a.I or diplomatic
asylum in the embaasy, legeUon. con·
isulate or \'tssels of one country within
t.he territory of another; (2) territorial
asylum within lhe borders of the pro-
tecting state. Tbc United State's freely
grants terrltor11l asylum. But, like most
European countrie$, ll hesitate. to extend
diplomatic asylum on the ground thal It
encourages revolutionary activity.
CA RDINAL MINDSZENTY Is the only
person Ji:iven diplomaUc asylum by the
lJnited States In recent years. He bas
been living In the Americln Lqation al
Budapest 1lnce Nov. I, till.
Professor Galbraith's Adv ice Notwi thstanding • • •
Nixon Against Wage, Price Freeze·
WASlflNGTON -pn the basts ol the
l>ow-Jonu a.\lerages anyone who had
taken President Nls:on's &tock market ad--
ylce last April a: wouJd have real ized a
paper proftt by now ol about 1100 for
every $1000 invested. TIW: is not. a bad six
months' gain. .
Ntson told a group
of visitors, on April
28, "Frankly if I had
any mo•ey I y,·ould
be buying stock right
now. '' EvidenUy,
he would have con-
tinued buying be-
cause he bas sinre
been telllng vlsitor.s
that 1111 wru be a
good ye·ar for the economy, and tm will
be VOi}' good.
11te President had oceasion to recall
his stock market advice when he was
preparing his speech to the National
Association of Manufacturers. It con·
firmed his belief that confidepce is nol in·
stilled by merely talbig confidently but
in acUng confidenUy and so he is taking
his own advice by being confident of his
economic "game plan" for beating in-
flation.
THAT PLAN INVOLVED reslricli\'e
.... ~·"'{'1
'Richard .'\V'l80D
"
\
--~~>"
flacal and monetary policies and when in·
flatlon had been slowed sufficiently a
steady relaxation to stimulate the
economy up to a moderate level of
economic growth.
NoW he has gone into the latter phase
or the tw<>-slage plan accompanied by an
increased volume of "jawboning" about
the need to hold ~·ages and prices In line.
This takes a great deal of political
courage and personal confidence because
the President ill under pressure from
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur
Burns to go farther.
Some kind of government restraints on
wages and prices, are talked about but
Nixon is not headed that way. He signall -
ed to the business community his desire
to be Oexlble q he goe.s into Phase ll of
his game plan, and made it plain he will
talk louder about holding down wages and
prlce.s.
BUT BASlCALLY he will beat a
recesslon in the sa me \vay he beat in·
flatlon, so he lhlnk.s, by delicate ad·
justments in fiscal and monetary policy,
inflation alerts and, presumably, common
prayer.
Jn doing so Nixon Is pitting his own
confidence against contrary advice from
such well·publicized economic wizards as
Nobe.I prize winner Paul Samuelson, Pro(,
John Kenneth Galbraith and the com-
bined Democratic Jeadershjp of the House
and Senate.
Galbraith contends that Nixon bas em-
braced the hallowed economic theories of
John Maynard Keynes just when lhey
have gone out of style. ll won't work
anymore to try to juggle the budget. the
tax level. govern~nL s~ing. bank
rates, and so on, ar GalbraJt.h once
thought.
Unions have becorile too powerful in
setting wages and corporations too
powerful in selling prices. T h e
Keynesians have been outwitted. The only
ans\ver, as Galbraith sees it, is a general
wage and price freeze, and working out
fron1 there toward economically sound
adjustments.
PROFE.SSOR GALBRAITII has a long
record of wasted advice which will not be
marred by President Nixon. A wage and
price freeze aL this time would have
Russia Playing Cat, Mouse
W A$HINGTON -Russia b playing cat
and mouse in a.~y auspiciouS manner
on that sinister submarine base in Cuba.
Despite Moscow's ''Ind ig nant''
disclaimers and ambiguous State Depart-
ment and Pentagon pronouncements that
sh~ little Ught, the im!futable facts are
that all the "makings" for such a base
remain at CJenfuegos, -on Cuba's west
coast about 100 miles from the U.S. and a
direct threat to the Panama Canal.
This grim reality has b e e n
euthoritatively established at a se ries of
closed-door hearings conducted by P.t>p.
Dante FascelJ, D-Fla., chairman or I.he
Houae Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on
Latin America.
The proceedings are highly secret.
Carefully screened versions of the
te&tlmony will be published later. Top
Pentagon and State Department officials
gpeclalizing in Russian and Cuban affairs
are testifying. The se sessions ~·ere
preceded by others last summe r.
ON THE BASIS o[ what Chairman
Fascell has learned at both series, he is
fully convinced that the menace of a
Soviet sub~ine base in Cuba is still
very real.
A World War 11 veteran with 16 years'
11ervice In Congress during which he has
become a recognized upert. on Cubon
and Lalin American affairs, Fa.seed Is
·deliberate and restrained. He is no sensa·
Uoil monger or publfcity seeker. He
weighs his judgments and w o r d 1
cardUlly. .
So when be quleUy says he has "no
doubt.s" Russia still hu lhe "potential"
and ''capability" to quickly establish a
submar ine base al Cienfuegos, Fascell
meam e1acU1 that -and ii not. scare-
mongering or grabbing for headlines.
''The situation is basically unchanged.''
say1 Fascell. ''This menaet sUll prevails
The Soviet has on hand the ships, equi~
.---B11 Geo,..,, --.,
CONFIDENTIAL TO MARTHA
MITCHELL: Don't coll m<. I'll call
you. -
ment and other essentials needed to
develop a base in a very short li1ne. What
their Intentions are remains to be seen.
J\1eanwhlle. their potential continues as
threatening as it has been."
OTHER KNOWLEDGEABLE congress·
Iona\ leaders are more blunt and Olll·
spoke11.
Rep." L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C.,
chairman ot the powerful Armed Services
Committee, says flatly Russia has a su!).
marine base in·CUba,
The JO-year congressional veteran has
acc:ess to all intelligence and other
classified reports. Militarily , he is one of
the most informed members of the
House. Ri\lers is emphatic about the ex-
istence of the Soviers sub base .
"It's there." he say& firmly. "The
evidence is irrefutable, aod the State
Department knows It. The only ones who
don't know it are the American people.
Wlly they are being kept in the dark is a
good question. I don·t have the answer to
that. But J dd know the Russians have a
submarine base in Cuba."
Rep. Louis Wyman, R-N.H., member or
lhe Appropriati,ons sUbCOmmlttee that
handJes the \'ast military. budget, ex·
ceeding $65 billion, is equally positive.
UKE RIVERS, Wyman has complete
elearanee on all intelligence a n d
classified material. He ls also a former
state attorney general and an authority
on constltuUonal law, Not only does the
New Englander believe the Soviet has a
sub base in CUba, but feels strongly this
dirt menRce cannot be tolerated.
"Whl'ltever It takes," says Wyman, ••u
Is the responsibility of the government of
the United States to take immedl,te ac--
Uon to stop the construction or a Russian
na~al bAse In Cuba. The military and
naval tactical comequences of &uch a
developmenL are of, near disaster pro-
portions. The natlon11 set\lfity of oor
country Is dlrecUy thrtllene<I b7 /ht CO!>
I
struction or a relatively Invulnerable co~
crete fortress for Communist missil~
anned nuclear-powered submarines 90
miles off our shores.
''To me. it makes little sense to spend
billions to hold the line against Con1·
munist advances in Indochina and, al the
same time. allow the Communists to
build a missile-carrying submarine base
Jess than 100 miles Crom our mainland."
ALAR~UNG REASONS -Behind these
stark misgivings are a series of
foreboding (actors, as follows :
-Thal 470-Ioot Soviet submarine
tender and tv.·o acco1npanying ocean·
going barges are still in the Cienfuego~
area. The three vessels arrived al the
west coast port last summer. The big
barges, equipped wilh cranes and sub
repair facilities, were towed across the
AU antic by a Ru.ssian freighter. After the
Slate Depar~nt finally publicly raised
the question of the establishment of a sub
base and the Kremlin issued a denial , the
tender took off -apparently headed back
to Russia. But it soon developed it had no
such intention. Several weeks later Navy
reconnaissance spotted the ship at
Mariel , a small harbor some 15 miles
west of Havana. Recently, ll returned to
the Cienfuegos area, docking at Casllda,
35 miles east of that port. Where lt shows
up next remains to be seen.
-THE TENDER obviously Is not
returning lo Russia. And as long as It re-
mains ln CUban waters, the Reds have
the capability or quickly settlng up a sub-
marine ba&e -with tht big barges and
other facllilles. machinery and equipment
already al Cienfuegos. On the hlllsides
overlooking lhc port are large quantities
of construction equipment, material and
other supplies unloaded by the Soviet in
tbe palit six months. All are carefully
protected by heavy tarpaulln1, with s~.,..
tries on guard around the clock. Also. a
number of structures or varioUs sites
have been erected on the watenlde and
on smaller Islands at the entrance of the
harbor.
-It Is also derlnlte1y kno\Yn the
RussiRns have de v@lopcd three lar~e
alrfields In CUba, each equipped with
huge underground fuel tanks. One near
)
paralyzing effects. lt could not be ad-
ministered for the very reasons Galbraith ' says it is needed. The unions and the cor-
porations are too powerful to be forced
by anything except their long-range
pecuniary interests into h1Jlding down
Wages and prices.
No president before Nixon has so
deliberately tried to put the squeeze on
I.he economy. In Phase I he has run the
political rapids: high unemployment with
high prices in an election year. A i;agginl
stock market. Lowering profits.
Now in Phase U there are still rock.1
and swirling waters but the President h33
probably passed through the worst of the
rapids. ~ will continue·to berate him
for trying to block wage increases. He
has· even gone against the interests or the
hard-hats in the construction industry,
though not exercising by any means his
run powers to curb construction costs.
Inflation may get out of control agai n.
But it is a Jot easier on a President's
nerves to try to expand an economy than
to have to contract it.
It would be ironic if Nixon proved that
In spite or Professor Galbraith the
theories of the favorite economic prophet
of the left.wing Democrats, Prolessor-
Keynes. are right if properly put into
practice.
• Ill Cuba
Havana also has underground hangars
with elevators to bring planes to tM
surface. Latest model MIQ.2l fighter·
bombers are stationed on this base.
-SIMILARLY KNOWN is that the
Soviet has built a number of underwater
submarine pens on both Cuban coasts. To
provide the concrete for these and other
military installations, Russia constructed
four large cement plants in Cuba -
which operate virtually around the clock.
They have a combined capacity of 4
million barrels of cement annually, and
most of it has gone for military purposes.
-Tv•o eight-lane superhighways that
go nO\\'here have been built by the Soviet
in Cuba. Their unmista kable purpose is to
serve as landing strips for large military
aircraft. One of these mysterious
roadways originates at Cienfuegos and
runs some 20 miles to a hill mass where
the Reds have sizable underground in.
st.allations. For several years, in-
telligence has reported a secret base
there. The other "landing strip" highway
is in Camaguey Province and abo ex--
tends to hill formations -Escambroy
Mountains. There the Russians have
transformed big caves into military
strongholds.
By Robtrt S Allen
and Jolla A. Gotcbml~
--WWW-
Thursday, December 10, 1970
T1te edlioriat page of t~ Dailu
Pllot sttk$ to inform and stirn.
ulate readers by presenting thia
1ttW$pcptr'1 opini(1n$ <md com-
mentaru on topics of i11tert$C
and significance, by providing a
ft>rum for the expression of
our readers' opinfe>ft.$, and bt1
pre1enU110 the diverse -view-
points of informed. obstrtH!1'1
tind ipokesmtn on topics of th•
clay .
Robert N. Weed. Publisher
• •
• .
,,,,,.,,,,I """""' 19, 1'7D DAllY l'lt.fY ! ---'-'-----"------· ______ _,."'
Pho"e Nixon Stains Symbol 1;:::==::::=::::=::::==:=::i:===========;~
CHECKING · •UP•
This Guy's Head
:Was Really Dirty
WASHINGTON (AP)_: The are provided free el charge and llonlel P. Moynihan, A black awilcb at the bale
latest status a.ymbol 'in' Presi· ''as an experiment.'' asslstant8 Jolin D. Ehrlk:hman ~·even control& a zoom TV1 le.na
dent Nb:on's ·White HNse i! a One can only imagine the and Henry A. Klsainger, and IO, if you are of sucb •mind,
0 gray box" that permits a use former President Lyndon · director Georee P. Shull% of you can .. determine whether
pre.sldenUal aide to telephone B. John.son, a fan of triple-the Office of Management and !: man you're calJinf needs a
a colleague and look him in screen TV receivers and other B•..t .. et ve.
the eye. electronic devices, would have 'ibat ·leaves two M.1S unac. U a Nil:on assistant placing
Courtesy of the telephone made of the new picturephone. counted for -which could a call want& to make certain
company, JO "picturephones" Tbt: .possibilities seem a.5· keep Washlngton gossips busy in advance that be b telegenic
tiave been installed in the of· towlding. 1. for week&: and has his tie straight or balr
fices of Nixon's principal A of th combed properly, be can nip a a a measure e current Housed in a gray plastic box few switches on the multi-but·
aides, pecking order at the White ,atop a gleaming circular base toned set and view hlm.!elf
Press .secretary Ronald L. HousPc. the video-telephorie lhal seems designed for a before placing his call,
ByL. M. BOYD
Ziegler, who has one of the se~'have been installed in the moon launching, the gadgets--==='==='=====;!
gadgets behind his desk, said offtees of Ziegler, chief of permit their users to call '"
from lhe government •. , AP· none ls lnstaUed in the staff H. R. Ha Idem in 1 others with similar equipment Buy The DAILY PILOT
PROXIMATELY HALF the President's office. He said the. presidential counselors Robert and look into their eyea and .Just for 'Peanuts'
Kam·cha(ka
lN SANTA MONICA,
CAUF., lasl Srping, t met a
disconsolate youth who shaved
his head, got a needle artist to
tattoo an obscene two-word
Imperative on his scalp, then
let his hair grow back out. His
little secret, ho ho. What
foresight! •le couldn't have
been more than 19. And if he
gets bald? That young fellow
could wind up wearing a
toupee with a chin strap.
wives involved in aivorees now1_te_l_epbone~-·-te_le_V1S_._io_n __ hoo_ku-'-ps--H-._F_lnc_h,;_B_ry;_ce __ N_._H_ar_lo_w __ olf __ k:oa __ .:•.:•.:the:.:::y..:ta.:l.:k.::_ ___ :::::=========:!...~'=''::"::'~="='='='::'"::"='::'"::.,::"="="=c=o•::•:;:"':::'='="='':;:~:;:':;:•:;:"":;:':;:·'=o="='':;:"°:;:':;:•:;:•:;:-="~
were married before they
NOTE A THEO.RIST writes:
''How wonderful it would be jf
all of these United States ware
equal!" Interesting notion. Not
so certain, howeve r, it would
be wonderful. lf such were the
case, Hawaii would wind up
with about 5,000 square miles
of permafrost and Florida
could only claim 150 miles or
coastline • . . NOW HAVE A
feminine reader named Nevele
-pronounced Neh'-vah-lee -
which is "eleven" spelled
backwards. She was born on
the eleventh day or the
eleventh month of the year.
\\'hatever. A most musical
mo!llc~er, what?
WHO FIRST SAID, ''It's a
great life, if you don't
weaken"? None olher than
Mr. Gene Byrnes, creator of
that l'j!cent work of art, ''The
How to Doodle Book." Mr.
Byrnes, retired now, is the
cartoonist who drew t h e
were 20.
CONVINCED lbal obesity is
a sign of a ;>oor romantic life,
a Seatlle physician told me
over lunch this week, "I never
treat a plwnp woman for
overweight. I treat her for
lack of love." Unfortunately,
he did not describe the treat-
ment. Will check that out over
the next lunch and report it in
detail
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
"That disease which kills the
most people is ... ?" A.
Malaria ..• Q. "Do you have
to declare your racetrack win-
nings to the IRS?" A. If you
cash out over $600. yoo do •..
Q. "How many of our states
have oil wells?" A. Just 27, so
far.
IT'S ONE THING to call a
woman a vision, says our
Language man. but another to
call her a sight. Lot of words
Uke that. Fairly similar, but
dangerous to switch. You can
call a woman a kitten too, but
not a cat. A c&icken, but not a
hen. A mouse, but certainly
not a rat. Maybe even a duck,
but definitely not a .goose . Got
to be careful.
famous comics or yesteryear. Your questions and com-
"Reg'lar Fellas." Re~all his mrnts are welcomed and
quaint kid c h a r a c t e r , will be used in CHECKING
Pinhead? I do. Back in the UP wheTevn possible. Ad·
World War I days the record dress letters to L. M. Boyd,
shows he started still another P.O. Bo~ 1875, Newport
strip. "It's a Great Life, If Beach, Calif .• 92660.
You Don't Weaken" was its ti· ;===========;
tie. And that title ouUived
twenty-three-skidoo.
THAT MONTH when you're
least apt to get killed in some
accident is February , . , AM
TOLD Swiss students in their
last lwo years of high school
get a $45-a-month allowance
C:Hll,DREN
LIKE
UNCLE LEN
Coming Dec. 12
Family ~ekly
Porty Looks for
Every Lile Style
This week's cover story shows jewel-buckled
belts ond bands of velve t on softly draped
fabrics for holiday wear.
• RACING CHAMP -Jaci(Je Stewart, a race car
driver since his early teens, considered by many
to be the worfd's "best competition driver today,
talks about racing and life .
e NEW MARK TWAIN? -Woody Allen (today's
Mark Twain or \Vill Rogers?) sharpens his
tongue an d comments on some of today's vital
issues.
e HOLIDAY DINNER -Family Weekly Cook·
book goes completely traditional and details
complete menu !or turkey or capon dinner for
the holidays.
All Coming Saturday in the
I DAILY PILOT I
l
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
546-7080 COSTA MESA
WEEKDAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY SUNDAY \
9 to 6
OUTDOOR
LITE CLIPS
Don't 9•t •II h..,119 11p •
tflls ., •• ,. witlrn•ilt tfl•t
drop, bend •.nd rvtt
One• •tf•eh.d th••• ,,,.,
up .,,., •ft•' y1lr.
29' PK.
20 LITE MINIATURE
sn
O Tll111 tiny li9ht1 •r• ..,,.,,
s1p1ci1lly for th• tittl•
p•opl•.
Tiny pries t•9 to m•lch.
MALIBU OUTDOOR
6 LIGHT SET
0 Spott;glll 1flr1ctiv1
porlion1 of your hou11.
Li~• wher• M•bl• •e·d;d
th1 9•r191 door wilh
fh• cir,
0 Aulom1l;e tim1r I•~••
th1 bother out of flipp;n9
th1 1witch.
] 598~1TH
G.E. STEAM IRON
'1
0 15 vtnh for compl1I•
f•bric tl11min9 .... ~ ••
ironin9 • pl1111>r1.
[J C1n'I you lilt lh1t
line of copy.,.,,
.,.,itten bv • min?
911 ...
G.E. BLENDER
0 J u1t in tim1 lo ... hip
up s bitch of 199 1109
or holidev ch11r in
lliit bi9 )2 OllllCI
d1c•11l1r. Ev111 m••e• t11ow
con:i• •114' c1u1h•d lc1.
21 88
ILll
PR .ICE BELTER
..... .. ~i.: .• ·;· ...... --'
.,
... .. .• . . .. " •
Do11't lit ffi• 1111111hi111 fool
you, w•'re ilt f•r loh of
w•t 1tuff t~l1 Y••t,
Cb111"'"1 it •II lnt111 •11111
bi9 r•in-b•rr1l •o ths
kidi will ••• whit •II•
loo ... Iii,, ·as'·
10 FT. UNIHH
·Wet Surface Roof Pld,ch
0 S1•l1 up ti11y cr1ck1 111d
liol•1 th•t c111 b•come
co1tly r1p1ir1 if lift •lon1,
11te 1Vel'I •11 wit 1urf1c11,
0 H•d • d'o9 bv th1t n1m•
011c•, l1•1t th•f"I whit 111
11id hi1 ••m• .....
169
. 19.t.L
WIG HEAD
F""'"""'ll"'" o1 • '" .,. .. ':'.· -. -I rt.1 p .. -· .. :_:.:_. "'°"" . . . .. : ...
w1c; ;~ :··::..".•'
I°"'"" ...... , .... :.: HU!. :· .'.'~: ... .. . . . •'
L~~
0 St.,rofom wi9 h••d hold1
vour olh1r h•ir1 11•1lly
i., pl1c1.
8 PIECE GLASSWARE
sn
0 F111cy •mbouerJ d1ti911 •nlll
cl111ic 1tyl1 11'1••• th11• juM
riqht for comp•R"f.
HT
,,~;:--f?.;;i''O 9 01. roe• 9l•1s1, 12 01. • b1v1r•9• 9l•11t1 or I~•
bi9 16 01, cool1r 1l1e,
3''
.
MEDICINE CABINET
,.,..-.... 1!1 0 T~e r1liebl1 •II• th1t will
011tl11t 11101t hou1e1.
D O~r co111pltf• li111 .f
eo11i1ct ,,,., wlll·J11••1
tt.. IR1/d1• brl9ht.
9••
-.,·
(
'
... 25 LITE
. ~. ~ ~Q~.!..;~ -~ .~.~.,. .. ~ET . -. '
0 Mi•• your hou1• th1 bill looking on• in th•
bloe• by oul1ini119 th• roof or b11m1.
0 Oo11'f for91t outdoor clip1 lo h•nt ih1 li9hh ••
THE
LOWEST!
Po.,.1rful 2 HP ron,,.
b•1rift9 motor. Autom11ic
po1it1v• loekin9 po1itio"'
for 0 ..
sncl 45. 1:M ... 1 tttd
"lo• rippi119 p01itiOMo
St.nd, ;, 111.fr• •iddo.
9995
.77 ..
BLACK & DECKER
JIG SAW
' -
.. • 1288
•7511
INSINKERATOR GARBAGE
DISPOSER
F ... U., 9u1r•nf•1d, qul•t
•ctio11 9obbl11 9•rb•9•
with 9u1to.
0 C111't di9•of 1ilv1r or
9l1n 111d tell1 vou 10.
DISHMASTER
0 E~•11 with •11 111IOll'l•l1c d'1thw•1fl1r you"ll
111•d Ollt •' t+l•11 to prims yo11r chi11• •nd 9!e1t•I flrtt.
0 Comet 111 your eholc• •f colored f•cs pl1i•
•nd' fll•lch;119 bnuh. -3388
' .
r •
'
!<.
'"= I OAILV PILOT n 11r1dQ, tltc•mbt, 10, 1970
""!: -r
No Luck Yet In LA Schools ·
New · Leads Found Criminal Damage
Hits $2 Mi'llion In Lawyer Searcl1
LOS ANOELES tAPI -S111-
ron Tate murder tria l attor·
nc-y Ronald Huahe1 has been
tnisslng for 11 days, but de-
teclives near the remote ..-.·U-
dernes.s wher e he van ished
s3y thoy're followlng n e "'
lea<ls.
Bi d wc~ther, ho\\•ever, has
h11lted tfle tearch in Ventura
· County, where dozens of sher-
iH's deputies have s we pt
through the Seipe Hot Springs
1rea Jookin& for ltuahes.
before torrent111 r1 in1 1ent
mud ind water caac1dinc
thnluQ'h mountain canyon1.
F'riends of Hu11:he1 h a v e
&aid they fea r he n1ay be dead
-burled under debrl1 f r o n1
the .tlorm . But a new 11tarch
l!IACRAMENTO (AP) -au1ptct "oulalden."
Burglary, theft ind 1non Another wltn111 In ttw h111r·
caused 2.1 mllllon .daroa1e in Ing on school behavlor1l ~
Clllfornl1'1 J1r1et1t 1 ch o o l bl1m1 Which eon c I u de ·d
di11trlct in llacal lNJ.10. · Wldneld1y, Thoma• Shannon
Thi• It lht d1m111 t1tim1te ol 81n 01010 calted on the
for the f00,000.1tud1nt I.Al · le1illalUr1 to enact lealllaUon Comntlss•on Angelea City Unlfled khool re111lat1n1 and d•flnln1 P'tnt .\ Dl1trlct 1IY1n by ad· . >.mtndment "fret •PMCb" Tuesday turned up nothing, m.inl111tr1tive con• u I I In t rl&bll for itudtntl.
and new rain storms forced 0 d B '} Gordon Trill lo 1 Senate
a temporary ha lt on Wednes-f ers 81 education 1uboommittee hear.
day. lng in the Capllol.
"Since -· rain ~ fore-O'n Su"_ pec•a . Triiq: ia,id Ill• djstrlct h••
OQll." I deputy aaid I I t I p 141 1'1crtllect l Ii, "'°"1'1 IJ.4ff • Wedneaday, •!~e probably from JI to lMr bvt 1 µJ ne.11
CH ANGE OF OW NER.SH"
'°lMflLY lAY WILSONS
11G7 JAMtOlil lOAD
N O W
PHONI ..... OJJI
o/Y~~
MEN'S SHOP
lnvent!ry Reduction J
HAND TAILORED
Sl'ORT COATS
RIG. 10.00 TO 90.00
NOW
40°0 To 45oo
~ ~Jon~ be11rded attorney ~· was \Ut 1een in that a r e a f Thanksgiving weekend j u s I
wo1i't !O•ume Ille "arc lt l,Oll ANO~l.U (AP) -Jail anothtr 100 lffllll and "'fir!
He~t-see~n~
Devi ce Used
'Thursday. But we are n o .,, of StDO,OOft· each has been set burslar 1l1nn1 to l~w1f\
re-interviewing witnesse5 who for two Janitors accused of ab-ni&ht-time break.ins or schoolf, J11 Search PINI TAILORID SLACKS
RlG. 24.00 ,.0 45.00
NOW
•
I
APPRAISALS
DIAMONDS
GEMSTONES
ESTATE JEWELRY
So11ih Co11+ Pl111
l r:11ol 11 Sin Oi190 Fwy,
11aw ll1r. llughes In the area . Only 1'1 1tudent-'I were .,~
And we are talking to nh <lucli ng a Glendale banker's pelled by the district in fiscaJ
witnesses we didn't have be· son for r1naom . 11111·70 with most expulsiol\I ft !l DD 1 NG (AP)
fore." U.S. Commissioner Marvin coming for narcotics o P Seerchers probing the snow
One of the new wil neliell, G. Weeki HI lhe bill Wednefi-auaults. bound Trinity Alps neilr Red·
.not i<le~lie~jl olflcial~was tf.ji.Y at t,be· arraignme~l , · . Tr.!J.g jjfl4,!1)!er ~_gell17 din~· ~hl1tlc1ted heat
a young, ma~lencou i:red £.lo.!. F~ 3-'hd _i spok~e_n , d ~a~ ~1 · aenftil'tl ,:r are aolng "all ·"\c'. . l~rge ns, "· 1 was not t aJor \W'iur.&.· " fn · · fl\jghes on a tra1J.10 the rql!'ged . · nfas Lero~v Colemaitl 20 on , ;.ir1 • ' out/:! a couple m1111ng . wll<lerness lOQ. i,\Ucs north or ·• · "'"·· . . ;. ' · . campus •YI . nee. , r for .. 'Wttk• before fre1h.
)U>s An8ele,;~ov • .z7 and ha<l .. cha raes fif., v1ola!t nl federal, unable to •!l~gle oo~. c "'° ·,lorm hit th• l'\llltd
a conversation wrt~ him .. ·• " bank robl\er~ l1w11: , ' •J for eome f.iCb\I at h1 •r••~ 't.i'. ·~ "We . are fo!ltlline .up ·u,w . Authoritl~' said ~Po/ens an<t_ foo~ll.I f'J'es ex iil'~h ··~ln. lU, and hl1
leads htt geve ue." 111d"Qpt. ·Coleman \Oo'k Lee Spath , 20, ·--· wil'e Ann. i97ofGranada Hilli,
Jim Richardt_ commander or as a. hostage \11;te Sunday to T , l S Ca lif .. disappeared amid howl-
the Ventu_ra Cou_n~y 1he~ff'11 1ain deposit . funda from his Tl,Q et ing bllnards last ThankJ1iv-
d et e c 1 1 v e d1v1slon. We f11th1r, Wll\1am J. Spath, ing. weekend , in the same area
ha ven't ~iven up. We're going man1aer or the Glendale where 1 mother and dauahter
to l:Qme up with somethlna." branch or the Bank of Amer· J 1·1, Sa1·i Diego survived tor 59 day1 before
.l}e .e.<l~ed. lea. perishing three years ago.
B 'b C ''It's very pouibl• the Her· rl e USC rins are alive. We're mtldng
V•
INV EN TORY QLEARANCE ,
SWEAT.RS
Alpaca C:9'rdl9cin
Alpaca P11llovers
1/2 PllCE
DAILY: 9 lO 5-S\INDAY 10 TO l
' .
S~RT SHIRTS
DON LOPl R ANO
.LILY OACH I
1/2
LOCATED AT THE NEWPOlTEl INN
or Mttltr C:~••t•
Now thru
SUNDAY
DEC~ 13th
an all-out effort • , . whatever
SAN DIEGO (UPI) _ ~ the weather wlll let us do,"
proeecuUon'i c11;11e 8 g a ins Shasta County Sheriff 's Capt.
Mayor Frank Curran, on tria CC~h~ar~le:s~Do:w:n:in~g~s:ai~d~W:•:d•:•:•·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ on bribery and conspiraoi :•Y·
charaes, w11 expected to bl
.. , '
STERHEN STILLS
l nch1deii: t...cive The Or'le You· re Wllh. Do For Thn Otl)er•, Church, Old Times Good Times, Go B«.ck
f{omf': Sft Youn elr J>fi"'n. To A Flame, Black Queen. <:her·okPe, Wr Ate No t Hel plua.
ELTON . JOHN
LIST
$5.9C
Include;;; Your Song, Need You To ·ru1·n Tn, Tak~
t.le To Th" Pil'll. No $,hoestrlnss. (I n Louise, F'lr~t Episodl' At lH enton, Bernie Taupin, Sixty Years
On, Border Sonr,t.,The)_Gre.a1e1t Di•q(JJry, The
LIST
$4.98
Cai::c. The King ~Tui\b1e. :'):_, .
SPICIALL Y PRICED
NEIL DIAMOND
TAP IOOT MAN UI Clll'T
ARLO GUTHRIE
WASHINGTON COU NTY
JAMES TAYLOR
...
LIST
$4.91
* * * * * RECOllD ACCESSORY SALE
45 RPM • ' \
CARRYING CA$E llG. 51.11 SALE
l>LI UM
CARRYING CASE RCG. $J.4 .. SALE
•O CAP~CITY, 1
RECORD RACK REG . Sl .lt SALE
I TI A.Cit CARTRI D•I
TAPE CASE ... ,,,, SALE
···• , .
'i6 '
•••
*
$1.44
s2.ss
96'
s2.2s
* Choose From Our Complete Stock of
''TOP 30'' SINGLES .•......................... ·---ONLT 68' ...
NOW TWO GRANT CITY'S TO SllVE YOU
East Anah•im C•nt1r
Lincoln at Stat• Coll•g•
ANAHEIM
I
read to a jury of nine men and
three women today.
Jury 1electio11 was to pro.
ceed In the tria l of
assemblyman Tom Hom (R,
San Diego), also accused Pf
bril>ery and conspiracy.
Four alternates, two. me"
and two women, were atretf
upon by Oeputy Di>trict At1 '°mey Joha J{ewlckert t1!f11
Geerge R. ·v~riahan, Cur-
i ·s defen1e couifsef, 'at~U:ie
,. e ot pi"oceel::ti.ou Well
' ay. ~ '.
I ··Normal procedure would
call for Hewlcker lo make the
pr011Cutlon'1 openin& state-
mert a1 the next major 1tep lrt
the Curran milter. The fir1t
proeecution wltne11 wa1 ex:
bt City Clerk Jo!pi
, whe wu pre1ent In
troom ef Superior 6!Uif Judie Robert Conyef1
Wedntaday.
'.fbrep day• were con1umed
b.Y')!rf,");clecllon In the Curran t~ ~d the fintl altern11te CJiosen was the last member
of a 3i-per10n panel of pro-
spec:tlve jurors called, . ' t ...
'C~arisma'
Played Role
In Election
SACRAMENTO (A.Pl -
, Pollster Mervin Field 1ald to-
. day charisma played a major
role in the aucee11 of both
Gov. Reagan an d Sen. elec t
John V. Tunney in the Nov. 3
elections.
Youth helped the 36-year-old
Tunney, 1 Democrat, in hl1
defeat of Incumbent
Republican Sen. a e or g e
Murphy, 68, Field reported.
Field 's C1Urorni1 P o 11
surveyed 892 per1on1 1fter th e
election lo determine why peo-
plt. voted 11 they did .
Field Ii a I d "charl1matic
leader1h\p" wa1 1 key factor
In the broad 1upport or Rea-
gan. a Republican who won
a HCond term by I00,000 votes
even though Democrats out-
number the GOP in registra-
tion in Ca\lfomla.
He sa id the poll indicated
that Regan's De m o c ra t i c
challenaer Je11 Unruh ''came
aero•• In the 1970 c1mpal1n as
the 1ntlthe1l1 ot lhe charl1ma-
lic leader."
Whe n 11ked why lhey voted
for Regan, 43 percent or those
11mpled 1ald becau1e he "'has
done a 1ood job, ha1 1ood
record, more c1pable, ex·
perienced" and th1 like.
Unruh'• be•I re1pon1e came
tn the area of "part!Jinlhip
and Jdeoloa ."
DOWll TOWN
" •. ..
'
• .av1ngs
••••••• ANP LOA~ ASSOCIATION
for maintaining a $ 50022 balance in any of
our high rate accounts -take your choice. ·
ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS
7.79\ 7.50\ $100,0002,q ONE
6.18\ 6.00\ 5,0009.!! TWO
5.92\ 5.75\ • 1,000P.!! ONE
5.39\ 5.25\ SOOP.!! Y.th
5.13\ 5.00\ 1rui ONE DAY
ANIMPORTANTEXTRA
Your money earns intereet from the day you deposit.
tlll the day you withdraw even If It's just one day.
A&K HOW YOU c:AN MCEIVE, SERVICI CHARGE
FREE •. !'. •
1. Traveler's Chocks 3. Tlckets to Sports and : · ·
2. Collection of Notes ~eatro Attraction• (Tickatron) ~
4. Many othor FREE Sorvlco11
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M . to 9:30 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 •. M. to 6:00 P.M.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
-aRt8TOL ITllUT • COST A 111'°'-CAUl'ORNIA • PHONE 5<1MOM
"
;' )
•
:'
i 1
I . .
' . "
r (
• •
• . .
I '
' ' ~
I
I • • • I • • ' • • ' ~. '· ~· •• ~: ..
• .
' • • • ' " " " " ·:
' " " ::
" ... •,
'· ... •,
.
·~ .(
_,
. • .
. . . . . . .
i " t
' • • ' . •
• .
. . .
' • • . • . •
. . .
. . -·
: FOR T·HE BRIGHEST CHRISTMAS EVER •••
i CHOOSE' GIFTS AT THESE FINE SHOPS •••• .
~ ,
j
J * Sav-on Drug
' ; * Market Baskel
. .
:* ~ Jean Dahl . ,
~ ;; * Dick V ernou • r
~ * La Galleria " .
.~ '· ~. * Hickory Farms
. .
' * Cobblers Bench ·: i! • .. .. ,: * :: ·: . ,• • '•
Paper Unlimited
I
* Riou Hardware
* Westcliff Shoes
* Bank of A.lnerica
\ . :
*' Dr: .Lou Rb.y Elder
*' The Storek'.eeper
* Montgomery Cleaners
* Halliday's Men's
------------------=--cc;---------------------
. '
• .
'one-stop~ shopping
at its finest!
..
* Vela's Intituate Apparel
* Charles ll. Barr Jewelers
·" · ""'* Playboy Hair Stylists
" ' ' l
" ' ;: '* Biker's \Vest cliff Canie't•a
.-.
I • ' * Westcliff Plaza Barbe~.'s
* Humpty Dumpty Children's
. * Darrell's Dedrick Tnx Shop
'
, Th11rsd111,.0tt.l!mbtr 10, 1970 DAILY PILOT 9
AVOID THE
WRAP RACE
SHOP NOW!
FREE GlfT WRAP
At Most of Our Stores
. . VISIT SANTA MONDAY THRU RllD~Y, l TO 4· 'p.t;.., 6:30 TO 8:30 P.M .,-SATURDAYS 10 TO 12 AND l TO 5 P.M •
\ .. I I
""'-=------------~-• ~1
JI DAll.Y "LDT Th11rsday, Dectmbtt 10, 1970
Curio1as Cat
This inmate of Lion Countr~ Safari in Laguna Hills
appears to be more curious than ihe v!§it6rs who
came to see him . The wild animal reserve gives Oran~e County tourists a real ciose-up view of Afri·
ca's ferocious King of Beasts. · , ·
'
Red Cross Countians N,aniell to' Board Law Language
Teachers Learn in Program
By ToM BAIUZY
Of MM Oflll't ,!let .....
SANTA ANA -Two Or1n1e Lagwi1 Beach: Judge llruce r r om the Bo a rd o f
Colst reaidtnta have been Sumner, Lagun1 Bt1eh; Dr. Supuvlsor1.
Civic r.ducttioft Committee, namtd .to the Mental Hullh SldMy Adler, Ana.helm •nd The retlrlna: member• hive
Collecting
Storm Fund
llld crtditl wUI be e:rltndtd Advisory Board by the Board Or. Maurice A. Rite.ling. bun prestnted resolutions or
SANTA ANA ..-AIA!t 900 lo all teachers who iuc--SANTA ANA -The Ot•nae ol Superviaon. Mlukln Viejo. commendation and "Honored
fifth srlde •ludenta In ceutully · complete I.be 10 County Cluipter of the nty ·~ Mrs. Luc 111 e Mr1. Saylor had served as Citizen" cards by t h e
apeclally selected Or 1 n I e eventne lnttruct.Jon •ulorui. Amvlc111 Rtd CrNS 11 col· Kuthn. Corona dtl Mar and chairman of the atlvisory supervisors.
County tchools will soon be "'l'heM cliues ire rtc0t nli-Ject1n1 funds for thl vlctlm1 of Paul Marx, Costa MI! 11 board since Its inctption in Rex Galede o( 9rea has
1tudying the language ef law ed by UC exttnslOJ\ cla:ite1," the cyclone that deva1ll.ted attorney. Others named were 1M4. been elected to 1erve as
in a pilOt program that within he said. !11t Pak.lsll.n. Jama Anderson, Santi Ana Supervisor WIUiam Hirstein, chairman following M r s ·
the next three yiars may be Both teacher1 and l1wyer1 Red Cr011 ofUclals said they p.ycholoa:lst. and Dr. Milton who has also served on the Sayt«'s retirement He is Id·
adopted as part of the regu lar Involved in the pro1ram a1ree are not seeking food or Borenatein, Anihthn phyal· board since It began will M1rve mln lstrator or lhe Brea
curriculum in all counry that the "Civic F..dtJcation Pro-• clothln&, becauae of the high clan. until Jan. 4 when he retires Neuropsychiatric Center.
schools. ject -Understanding the coat of 1hlppln1 the relief • ReUrlna: members lnclude'Jr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;iiii;;;i;;i;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;•;;;;;'-'"J
And their Mor• In• P"' Law" course may have a ma terlal1.The""'neywlllbt MGera. JIOlelllrmaryy NSaye lWor , PANTSUITS 1ram aimed at brlnjing Jaw v1lue far beyond what 11 Health and wel11re inquiries
into the classroom will be hoped will be a regular spot oo about P1k11tanl elUuns In the
their own teachers. The 30 tM school curriculum. di.Niter 1re1 ahould be ad·
teachen who will pioneer the "This is knowledge that can dre•ltd to the Embassy of
program Jn San ta Ana ind be used by the teacher on Plkiltan, 2315 M1a1achusett1
Placentia school" are now many other occasions," com-Ave., N. w .• Wuhlqton, D.C., D UCI m •
enrolling for 10 evenin1 study mented Vick Knight, assistanL JOOOI. Cftll 8 t lallJll!aiuq
sessions oraanii:ed by the superintendent o( the Placeri-lnqutrta •bout U.S. citizeM tJ? iJ.'\. (\(\.~
Oranae County Bar Asaocia-lia Uni.tied ' School Diltrtd. 11Ylnl In lhlt area ahould be IRVINE _ Robert F. Gen-tu',',',. \J ~ ~ UUC! "!:~HIT
tion. '''l"'Mre may be • o m e dlrtcted to SpecliJ COMuJar try h111 been named auociate
Association president Ro~rt discussion on dress code1. lon1 Servlct1, Department of State, AVI. 541·5656
s . "Sam" Barnes in an· hair or scime point on which W111A1nston. D.C .. 20520. dean of students in charae of v. t 1K11 N•. <••.i ....... ,
I ~Yen to the Paki ..... -Red •pecial services al UC Jfvini?. OPIN TUISDAY tilt• 5.t.TUIDAY - 1 D ....... l , ..... nouncing the program. con· the application or Ut! aw ls .. _., l'!o!~~~"'!""'!""'!".;..;..~"'!""'!""'!"~~~~~~~~~~~~ ceded that his organization's immediately questioned. 011 to purCha~ supplies in His responsibilities lnclude F -------
endorse ment ol the plan wa~ "At this stage the teacher illl nwn and neighboring coun· supervision or the office of • • "* • • • • • • * * * * * * * * * *'
•·a significant step forward" can.sitdownwithhis students tries:. placement, development of a ·l'ME, ACUAY S. A. VINGS
for lawyers who traditionally ~ di~~ law rellted l6 '1 • • • .,,.... career. JJtpting~o g r•J?'I"(
have,llept a cloae watch oe;the .tile protilem~· Knight Al~.: ·c : G educahrill pla enl, .~ . .. • •I'd JGI• 1ssoc1at1on
• teachlr1a of law. o . .~!'Many a fracu •or di.le . Ollllly \~to e l time plateine.ti,lf coorditllk ~·~ ......
Ban..,<s11d . "~ ,,. y~a,.,.;o 111,. bten 11\lol •. If we COlll~( "Suh' •Cameras ble studeilJ'; "~t\l«aQs, T1~ '"'-vv u"""'='" r -'1It11 a .sign ot the li~s.:;_· 1~'ve had J11 ~ .ast CQlald .. " •. • ~ 'i lion of sirVic~/°"'draft.nl1g(.
v .-,thla 1program woul dn t M.v• h've used ~lie~· , , approacht •· i, 'Y ternationiY,«.udiftt and the "'"""'""""r:::!'r-=·"''"'"'!"~'!'.JE:l.."'::..-:o::n•••""=••••"""'I •tlad a ctian ce ~t1 today 'It' f a 1.Mo~e . than ·~•,.. in bt' 'sANTA ' 1~~1i.I!';"" Orange physica~ , l\andic~pped • dl!!erent
1
story. . a.uoe1ation .money h.11s go~e County's T ish and Game also C'o 0 rd in 1 t es ·-th~
EVE RY SATURDAY
10A.M.-4 P.M.
For the
Marriage
License•
Death Na~lee•
llALlt•
Samve! J11ll111 lltil11, A• ti, rll lU
~re St .. C01l1 1111.,1, kr'lle11 Pffldlnt1
1t 8 .. 1 BrMdw1'1 Mortv1,..,. IOUCMAJID
ltAY........, J . lo\l(lwrd. AH 2~. Of JGI f ,
14111 SL Cmlt .... 0.11 Of -Ill, 0..
(l.,,btt' J. IUN'IYM by two brothtr1,
Wlll•ed lautlltl•, of S.~tt91 lrttn l(,tlloo
"tl>edl , 1111111111 N ltn11t 11r1ndmo1Mi,,
Mtli. Wlllltf looutll1rll1 1un1, \,W!'I
Cu"'min11, bolfl -ef 11111111111 11.,,...,
Mt'V ltmt!. DI en•• Mt .... G•tvtlllliJ
H'rvkn . Mond1v, OKtmber U, l _.,.,
P..c!fk View M1morl1I "'"'· wlll! ltl'V. l rvct It Kurrie Mlk ltllf>t, l'..:lflc Vltw
Mortu1.-.. Dl•KIO•t.
""HEit
.t.U•ed J ~loller Ate n , ,, Hf·ti
A"tr11d1 5~1111. Ltt..,,.. HUit S11rvl....i
by cMuollter. MrJ. wrn11m Cll"'41rfln.
lllinol1; 1l1l1r. Mrs Petti ID1111, ~
t~n•; tre.ot-"IKt. Cl1fre Gor11u, N.,.
.... 1~. G••Yt•lcN ..... 1c, •• ~•lcltY. 11 "'"'·
E l T11ro c-11.-.. wlll> 0.. E<1w11<1 Ctld·
well olllc11tl"V 1111 l•Otclwtv Morhi•'"' Olreclot1
TllDMl'IDN
W i!ll&m .t,, 'T"°"''™'"· A9t JI, 111 1~ $.
BaY!•ont, B•ltoo. ltl•nd, O•te ot dtt•I>.
~t"'"-' t . Ser,.lctt Plndl"v &I ltll 8 t08dWfY Morlu••Y.
W•JID
Jtn• 08rllngto" W•rd. 1]11.( •11erild1
$tvlllf, l.tvun~ H!!IJ. Dt!t ot dtatll.
O.ttmlw<' f _ 5urv1Yect bY mctl~t•. It•·
~It p..,,...,., Lt9un1 H!!lu son. Wlltl1m
Ptt•M>n. DI 51ntlPOfll lour V••nclt~u~ .....
5trv ice~. Frlcltv. l PM. P1clllc Vltw
Cl>ll•tl l"ltrmtnt. Patllk View Mtmotlt l
•P••~. Olr..cte-ct bY Pttlflc Vl1• Mortutrv,
ARBUCKLE & SON
We.!llcllff Mortuary
'27 E. 17th St, CMta Mesi -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar .. , . OR 3-94H
Co1t1 Mesa ........ ml ~U24 • BELL JlltOAO'll A Y
MORTUAJIV
110 Broadway, Colla Mttl u 8-3433 . " McCORMJC~ LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUAJIY
1795 Laguna CIUlydD Rod.
414-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW
l'tfEMORlAJ, PARK
Cemetery Mortury
Chapel
a50ll Pad.He VW:w Drive
Newpon Beaclt, Callfoni• ...,,,. • PEEK l'AMU.Y '
COLONIAi. l'\JNERAL
UOME
7111 Bolaa Al't ,
Wt1tmla1ler _. _ lt3-3SZS • SllUTHS' MORTUARY
117 Mila St.
ffuntfngton Btaclt
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Record
l lNNlY.fflW.)lll:T. "°*'" J .. 60. fll ''
1•••19e VIII•••· Nt....,.erf IMCh '°"' lh1lfl I(., Je, "' 1711' MlfllllM Ori-..., Verba UrMll. , •
OALltYM•Ll·HAlllll:1$0fll, •teerf l.,
lt. ef 1111 """°"""' If. 11M1 .IMurl 1.M ''· " inn .,...,.... Crf••· HlHl-11,..1en•1Hc11. , .. 1 ,.4Vl:LIC·Mllll!lt., ....... E .. lJ,
UlU Sl!tlr Lint #ilt4 v.,.., J,, ?1, ol
l ln Merit Clrtlt , bolfl ol Huntlnet""
llHcPI.
illV ... RD0-18 ... JIRA . St lvl llllr D., 13. fJf
1J.11 NtWl>Ofl 81Yd. I nd Elhll1 R •• ll,
of 1J.4~ NeWPOrl S iva., l:IOlh Of C01l1
M1111.
GILL-SCHU!TEll:, Rollfrl P,, JJ, of
lllll6 Rondttu, Wts!rnlnster 1nd
M•rlene M .. Jl, of JOit Cry1!tl Line,
S..nl1 An1. HEIN!CK·JAGO. Kl!ltl G .. 19, of 17DO
Pt lr•'°" W1y, Cos!• Mnft AMI lt11tll A .. H , ol lj2 S. Cembrldt •, Orlntt.
CUltHUTTE<LtMIE. Allt n It., H . rll
1"°1 Tr1dewlnd (l•(k°, HuflllntlM 111t.11 1M c111r11~. ll. ol 1261 Pon>_, CDlll Mtlt.
Flllf:NOT·SULLIVAN, lhJCloh>ll J,, )J,
DI 116 1'111 $1., N..,,.PClrt l1Kll t no
C'lnthl1 L.. 20, ol 124 Cort1l st.,
(ltlll Mn.I.
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
Theres an overwhelming Into the P:OJetl It this stage, wardens are 1 et ti n g un-University 's Education Abroad
need for us to talk law lo Bames said. derwater camera equipment. Program at UCI.
students starting at the fifth Barnes looks lo the $30 An agreement ha s been Gentry joined the University
grade," the Newport Beach million in funds administered reached with the Los Angeles staff after serving as assistant
lawyer s&ld. "And we feel that by the California Council on County Fish and Game de1n of students at Cal State
when these teachers ha ve this Criminal Justice for possible Department to share the cost San Bernardino. Earlier he
30 houn of law under thei r financial support of h i s of the equipment. had been associate dean of
Open Moo.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Fri. 9 a.m." p.m..
•UENA PARK ...
Mercury Savings Bldg. :
Va lley View at Lincoln ~. 11 '
Mercury Savings Bldg.
Edinger at Beach
belts they are the ideally association's project and the Orange County's share will students at Elmhurst College • * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
qualHld ''8tJPle to explain to special application of that: ~~bt~l~l~,300~.;;;;;;;;;; ______ ii,~·n~ll~li~no~i~s.~-iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iii;i~~~~ these Y~ters the origins money lo proJTams desianedli
and adnUN1tration al the laws to combat juvenile delin·
that govern us." quency.
Law 1c ho o1 professors. "I think we can truthfully
police, probation and parole say that we'll be doinc euctly
officers, hlchway p1ltolmen that," Barne1 11ld. "Similar
and many other represen.. programs in oper1Uon In other
latives or flaw enforcement p1rts of the natkln and
will delivel'."~ iJtcture11 lo the particul arly in Sag D1.e10
teache rs. att.Omey James 8. County have demon1tr1ted
Bear explained. that such instruction plays a
Be11r, a.!lsist.ant ohalrman of ertat part in reducln1 juvenlll:
the Orange Co~,,.larti1ter1 crime statistics." ·~fl i('~,
Justice Codncµ DeJay.s .. ,
Riot Co~lfol Report
" . -,---' ... -1 The Most Exciti!.111 lleldlche !ii!§ In Yea11I \
, Doctors' Te.,. In hating 1
Nervous Tension Headaches
l NCM Macle ~Public f
' ' .1• \ •
Non·Narcotte Tablet (th1t n.ids no prescription )
Proves Just As Effective As The Expensive •
Leadin g Pain·Rtlie.f,Prescription Of Doctors. .. ..
If yau're one at 11.-=:·, aet lense. nervolll ..-lches,
thne latut lala tty doctors
ahould be or the area1ut im· pon..,.. J.I' Notnt medical IC5ls doc-
tori INV9d: 1 famous tablet that
ne.d1' ftO;prescription gives 1he
Jotrtl« t•fJir1pltlt lrtadaclre rtlit/
11 the expcnsi\'t, lcadin1 pre·
acription of doctors.
Thc.se doc1ors' tests provtd,
beyond 1 doubt, that Anacin is
j1AJt M efitc1ive lo relieve ten-
aion headaches, yet Anaci n.
needs no prescription and is far
more economical.
Wi1h Anacin, headache pai n
and its nervous tension va nish
in minutes. De.!lpite its 5trenath,
Anacin is not narcotic. You ca n
1;ike it wi1hout aenin& diuy or
an U!)!et stomach.
Next lime lake powerful, ful-
:tcting Anacin•. An;icin Tablet~
aive 1he aame complete head-
ache pain rtlief as 1he lei.dins
prtscription product for which
doctors wrote 2 I million pre-
scriptions lut year. ,,.
Treat the Family to
This Week
Dinner
In One of Orange County's
Fine Res tau rants,
•
''40 Miles 01 Christmas Smiles,,
0
can begin at your door
Clip this coupon and send it in as a promise to
help your loc1I sponsor, the Orange Co un ty
Co .. t Auooiotion and th1 DAILY PILOT in this
yur's effort to light up the Orange Co ast for
1 hippy holid1y s11son.
~;~~;.----.,
CHRISTMAS DECORATING CONTEST ENTRY I Yea, J want my home (or buidneu establishment) to be In·
C'luded in Judging for the 1970 "40 Miles or Chrisl~'TUl!I I Smll~" a\vards. My name end address of the decorat1flnll
I want judgel': lo see are lillled belolk. I understand that
"40 Milr~" jud~ini.: will be-done on the night of Dec. 21, I
but that local juda-in~ \•dll be at a different time.
Nim•
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Seven winners will he !elected In the 1970 judrlnt of "40 l\t!le1 o( Christmas Smlles" -the three bes t residence1,
the th ree belit commercial establishments and the one ci ty, aimmunlty or area \vhose decorations convey to the judge1
the most holiday spirit (they'll designal.e that area "Christmasvllle 1970"), \Vatch the DAILY PILOT for lists of loc11.I
winners 11nd for 11. p11ge full of pictures of winners in the "40 r.·l ilc~ of Chri~tma s Smiles'' judging. The Orange County
Coast Association will award a plaque to each of the seven "40 '-'til es" '''inn ers.
For Information, Rules ancl Judging Dates for
Local Contests, Contact These Local Sponsors:
Capistrano Beach
Cllomber of Commerce
Contact President -
J im Elllott, 493-4561
Corona del Mar
Chomber of Commerce
Contact President -
Fountain Volley
Chamber of Commerce
Contest Chairman -
BartHira Gillum, 847·1475
Huntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce
Contact Exec. Mg r. -
Ralph Ki .. r, ·962-6661
Soddleback Volley
Chamber of Commerce
Contact Exec. Diractor -
Al Blais, 937.4753
San Clemente
Chamb•r of Commerce
Contact Exac . Mg r. -
R. W. Evans, 492·1131
CaliforniaColle9e Cad S. Kogloy, 673-4050
' Costa Mesa
Chamber of Comm•rce
Contact Exec. Mgr. -
Nichol11 Zi1n1r, 6-46-0536
Laguna Beach Junior
Chamber of Commerce
Contest Chairman -
Steve Denton, 4f4-399S San Juan Beautiful
I SJC Chamber of
Commerce)
Conte1t Ch1irm1n -
Ellio Dar nold, 493-31 33
I
" lON<i t fACH Of Commerce ... ;,,,, ............. "" ''""
1s1 .1ss "" "'"""' l1111 IHcll, Ctlit.rllie tol1S
CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT
TELEPHONE, 436-9767 or U.S-5367
"DAY OR EVENIN' CLASSES"
TWO. YEAR COUISIS
1411111111 ,, .... ,, •• , ...
M1fltt r A.:(Wlll"'f
A.u ... 11lift' -0.11 ''Kl lflflt
(11tt•lr¥• *'''''"''
SHORT· TERM COUISIS
s, ...... .,hc
(l.,ical
te.,.,~Mh
l•ti11111 M.ch"'•I
0.111.i A11i1tiflt
, I
MHil•I l•MHCrijlt ...
'•"·(~.,, ..... ..., ... ,,,,Jt .• , Cl11t11
Slrltrril•11il .~ f"iftt
(Grllft 1H Ate SIM,.._1114)
L,,..i kc•1 .. tW
Mt•k 1I \ter•i.titl
SK•t ltorO.I
fG1"'t •• Ak ~HJ .
Jw-i.r Atc-"-J
•
Dana Point
Chamber of Comm•rce
Contest Chairman -
lafta 8 1nni1t1r, 496-5420
Laguna Niguel
Homuwners Assoc.
Contact President -
Pat Mancini, 495-4310
Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce
Contact E•1c. Mgr. -
Jack S..rnatt, 675-6300
Seal Beach
Chamber of Comm•rce
Contact Ex~. Mgr. -
P roctor Weir, 596-6491
:JOIN THE ORANGE COAST'S "40 MILES OF CHRISTMAS SMILES" for 1970
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0 OMEGA
FASHIONS BY OMEGA
Omeg1 11 world renowned for its
IJCC1llenc1 In watchmaking. Combine this
with 1od1y'1 f11hion flair and
look what 10. l1dlea get. In yellow
top stainlus steel b1ck. with c.ase
duigned to flow into the strap. Gilt
dial oval, or cushion shape,
your choice_, $105.
c~ • .,.. Att•""'" 111v11•
A"'erltlll fl""' 11nkArn1•fcll"ll .... Mitter CR1r11 .....
SLAVICK'S
Jt\l.'el,.r11 Stnct 1917
11 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -b~~.t llO o, .. M ... thru ht. I 0 '·"'·lo t :IO ,,.,,
. .
DAILY PILOT J J • '
OPIN MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P.M. SATURDAY 9 'TIL . 6 SUNDAY 10 'TIL 4
TOliSTMllSTl!R
'1/lp-Over.· Oven-Broiler
Yoo con BAKE or BROIL right at ttt. table. One-piece
tubular he<it element is thermottotlco11y controlled
for ranges of 200' to '7-'•. TMperature guides or•
on side panel. Removable two•position troy with
chrome rack. "Ste-view" glc11a door MHel 122 I
hos h;ngod handle. Pollshod dlromo $2188
fin ish, block Bakelite trim.
I
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FREE
FANCY
GIFT WRAP
!your ~ $ 99
n
OUTDOOR
RIPLACIMINT
BULBS 17e ea.
OUTDOO•
REPLACEMENT
BULBS 22c ea.
I Each
,_,....:;,.. __ __
BAD Jig 11w cuts scrolls, curves, or straight lines
in \.•.:oodhmetal, pla stic or other materials.
Tilting s oo for bevel cuts. Includes wood
culling blade, wrench, and holder. (# 7515)
Versatile, Only $14.99
l&D
Y• '' varfabla
apeod drill.
Squeeze the speed
lo suil Iha job, 0·2250 RPM.
Drills all materials last and
accurately. Rugged Man ..
Grip handle for greater corn ..
fort and conrrol, 4 lubricant ..
Impregnated bearings for
longer life, (U·205·2)
Now only $14.91
I I I .
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DAILY PILOT Thursdly, DKtmbtr 10, 1~70
ANIMAi.ogie
• • NEVER Bahamas Hop es t or Hugli es Action COLD •
PAR AD 1 S E ISLAND, bridge from Paradise Island. owned by Corrigan. Bahamas (AP) Th• The Emerald Beach u own-At the Britanola, 'F<ed F. SHOPPING IS FUN
defi't10ptts of thiJ Car1bbean ed by ~ Corrigan. Schock. uecullvt vice presl· mort dreamed of creating At least one of the cars that dent of Resorts tnternitldnal, C._ --'I. P.Oasf .. __ _
another Lal Vegas. met the· Hughes plane on his said he could answer no que• CJUlllD \• -1 ~
They buill I big botel. 'Iben, latest trip was ldentlfied as tlocd aboot hott1 4uest.s. lltSTOL • IAN DI KO RWY .. COSTA MUA
U\ey opened 1 gimbllng:==jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~i;ii:iiii~~~~iiiiiiiiiii;iiiii~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ casino. 1-
Currency
Changes
'Vital'
STOCKHOLM (AP) -Dr.
Paul A. Samuelson of the
Massachusetts Institute o f
Technology, winner or this
year's Nobel Prize i n
Economics, today called for
individual responsibility in
dealing with widespread in-
flation and said it could be
curbed If every country pro-
mptly adjusted its own cur-
rency in line with international
developments.
But in hls first news con~
ference since arriving Sunday
with his wife Marian and three
of their six c hildren.
Samuelson said he had no
ready recipe for this country's
over-au economic ills.
Asked if Sweden should
devalue, the winner or the se-
cond Alfred Nobel Prize in
Economic Science said on a
batteri11g note : "I've only been
here 24 hours-give me
another 12."
The bespectacled *year-old
Nobel laureate had this com-
ment on President Nixon's
Vietnam policy : "We are
withdrawing-one indication is
that the percentage or the
Gross National Product used
for defense purposes has been
declining steadily ... for the
last two years."
Samuelson will receive his
prize, worth $80,000 this year,
GD Thursday.
Now, they have billionaire
recluse Howard H u g h e s ,
unseen, but reported to be llv·
ing on the ninth floor of the
Britannia hotel -and in a
mood to buy a chunk of
Paradise.
Jn Las Vegas, Gov. Paul
Laxalt ol Nevada and Disl. At·
ty. George Franklin said
Hughes told !.hem in a thr~
way telephone conversation
Monday that be was here.
They said Hughes planned lo
return at an undetermined
date to Las Vegas, where he
lives in another closely guard-
ed ninth-flloor suite -in the
Desert. Inn, part of his $300
million Nevada holdings.
No one who actually has
seen Hughes at the Britannia
wilt admit it.
A white four.engined jet ar-
rived in the Bahamas from
Albuquerque, N.M., the night
of Nov. 26. Seven men were
met at the airport and wh1sk·
ed off in four automobiles.
One of the seven ill believed
to have been Hughes.
Local resort officials have
long expected the Hughes in·
terests to buy in the Bahamas.
Local developers s a l d
"Hughes people" were looking
at property but declined to say
if Hughes himself was.
'The property considered the
most likely target is now own-
ed by Resorts International. It
includes most of Paradise
Island, its hotels, and the only
gambling casino.
Gambling revenue on this
island 186 miles from Miami is
reported down 15 percent this
year, setting off rumors of
resort property up for sale.
The rumors were intensiried
last February when Bahamian
Prime Minister Lyndon P.
Pindling said in an interview
that he understood Hughes had
been in the Bahamas a week
earlier for a brief visit. But,
said the prime minister, he
hadn 't seen him.
Hughes stayed then at the
Emerald Beach Hotel in
Nassau, across a narrow
Viet Women Prisoners
Reported Tear-gassed
SAIGON (AP) -Two was sentenced to 10 years in
women inmales of a Soulh prison after being arrested in
Vietnamese prison charged to-Saigon in December 1968.
day that riot police beat and Another woman, also badly
tear·gassed more than 100 burned, said she had been
women prisoners and threw sentenced to three years and
lye or acid on the group. had already served more than
Both women are in a that. but that p r I s o n
hospital in Saigon. authorities refused to release
They said they were among her.
416 female political prisoners A Policeman assigned to
at the Tan Hiep Prison near guard the women at the
Bien Hoa, 15 miles north of bospita) said both were Viet
Saigon. Cong.
Some of the women had The warden of the prison at
been transferred r e c e " t I y Tan Hiep refused to talk to
from the Con Son Island newsmen, telling lb.em that
Prison and others from a they must first get clearance
prison at Thu Due. from the lnterior Ministry.
When the women protested Howevfr, a guard at the jail
living conditions at the prison confirmld that the incident
and claimed that some of had taken place a week ago.
them "'ere still confined even and said that at the height of
though they had se rv d their the disturbance "a woman hit
sentences, prisoners aid of-a guard over the bead with a
fie la ls lhreatened to s ip some bottle."
of them to another ison at r-.1embers of an Australian
•lue in northern So h Viet· medical team at lhe nearby
· province hospital said they
had received casualties from
the prison incident.
nam.
The women refus
transferred and s
demonstration, and r
Vi'ere called.
to be
ged a
t police
''The police beat , threw
tear gas grenades a us and
threw some chemical lye or
acid-on us.'' said ... ..._,the
women now In Saigon.
She bad severe bums
face and neck, with la e
chunks of charred flesh pee
Ing from around her mouth,
and had heavy bandages on
her arms and legs. She said
she was from Long An Provin·
ce in the Mekong Della and
"We got in some very badly
burned women," said one
nurse. "The police said they
should be confined in the
prison ward. We said they
were too sick, and the police
took them to Saigon.·•
There have been recent
reports in Saigon of serious
disturbances in at least half a
dozen South Vietnamese.
risons, particularly t b o s e
sing political prisoner!.
e government has denied
m t of lhe reports.
BIBLE
JUDGMINT DAY U. l6:tt.JI 1how1
tt>.•I tho1• who cfi1 o IMMEDIATELY In·
to • 1t•l1 of •l•rn• 1111 or punhh"l•nl.
Th•n WHY will th••• • • JUDGMENT
DAY? f 2 Cor. 5:10. R1. 20:1 2, 2 TI'".
4:11. Judg'"•nl i1 •1 '"u for JUSTlfl.
CATION of• 1111l1nc:• •• pronount•·
'"'"t of it. At tk1 Jud9"11n d1y, 101110
r•w1rd•d will not r•1lito WHY', ind 10111• co..0•'""" will not
know WHY'-tk1 r•. lh•Y will b• tol d th• •••1on. I M1H. 25-]6·
411 . Thi1 •nowl.cf91 of l+i• JUSTICE of th•it •t•tnll 1f1I• will
l11cro••• th• joy1 of tho 11¥.d, ind th• ••1110,.•ful 1ufftrint of
th• contlt111r1ttl. A "''" on 11rih, f1 l11ly cond1mn•d, 1111y ••·
folco lo hi1 i11noco11co inti t•fl'l1in un·ltow.G, l+iciuth p11nilh1cf,
lut ... who KNOWS Ir.Ii 911ih will b,w in ••tr•thil r1c:o9nltlo11
of It et ho lt puni1hM. 111 th• Jucfgmint, 1.-ery tec:ret d11cf 1h1ll
It. ,..¥11l1d, •••tV ,,.a thought will b1 med1 pl1in I Ro111. 2116
H.b."4;1]), E••tV 111111'1 boolr of worlr1 t h•tl b1 optntd ,.,,'.
20:121.
ONLY th11 ~loot! of J11u1 can blot out 1•i1ti119 1wil d19'1 111
YOUR ltook ofworlrt now rtcon~flf itt H11¥1ll I I Pt!. 1111. 19,
H1b. 91141. Hit blood w11 lr•1ly p1ur1d out on th1 cro11 11 •
11• off.,;.,9 for 111111. IYI yo• mw1l ACCEPT thi1 off•ri119. One
coMoc.t. Chri1t'• l,lood /11 Chrltf 1 d•1th. W1 ,,, IAPTIZED Into
Chri1t'1 do1th flltef!I. 6:J.SI . W1 ··put 011 Chrht" in b•pfitP'll
cc;..1. J r271 •'"' '"'•••bv ''' 111 hit body. Chri1t'1 blood i1 111 hit
bffy, tho ch1,.c• IE.ph. 1:12°2)). Vl1!t Church of Chri1I 217 W
V1;Jto11 St., Co1t1 Mt11. C11if. t2t27. ' .
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.-----------------------------
• 1gs Orange Coast
By BARBARA DUARTE
Of IM Dlllr '"" lttff
It seems unlikely that any Egyptian Pharaohs -or their des·
cendants -·have ever walked the streets of Laguna Beach.
That Is, it seemed unlikely until recently.
Now. hQwever. Laguna Beach-is being inhabited by a woman
who just may have ancient EiYJ>tian ro'yalty in her blood line.
She's a petite young anthropologist nam~ Nadia Ramzy.
Egyptian by descent and American by adoption, Nadia bas been
in the Art Colony since mjdsummer when she came west to join a
team studying mental health needs of the South Coast area.
Wearing a string of beads that reaches almost to the top of her
miniskirt, hair in a long braid down the back, and a purple, floppy.
brimmed hat perched atop her head, she looks anything other than a
young woman who was born and reared in Cairo.
ENGLISH INFLUENCE
Daughter of Dr. Ishak Ramzy, a psychoanalyst on the stall ot
the Menninger Clinic in Topeka, Kan., Nadia grew up between times
in Cairo and London where her father was in practice.
She recalls intense schooling with two or three hours of home-
work every day. As to Egyptian family structure, if is one of stability
cemented by honor and respect. Most marriages were pl'frarranged
until three years ago when westernization began to exert an influence.
Ramey ancestry is derived from the Copt (a variation of the
Greek word aegyptos) -a Christian minority tracing its origin to the
pure Egyptian.
"It's part of the myth we're descended from the Pharaohs,"
she added.
This month, Nadia is nearing the end of her part of the team
effort as leader of a survey group for the Orange County Health Sur·
vey Team based in the Art Colony.
DOUBLE VISION
Interviewer and observer, she has a two-fold purpose in the
work which occupies most of her waking hours.
She hopes he r research will glean information to allow anyone
to map his own health program and that she also will have valuable
information for a thesis.
Presently a doctoral candidate at Washington University in St.
Louis , Nadia was graduated from Grinnell College in Iuwa and the
University of Kansas.
(See DIGS COAST, P•s• 14)
TAKING NOTE -Anthropologist Nadia Ramzy, a res,iderit of the
Art Colony since last July, conducts a one-t~ne interview. as
part of her survey team effort. Leader of an interview .. group tak-
ing ';random r~ampli~gs of health nee4s in five areas of the city,
Miss:Ramzy is winding up her contribUtion to the program. Label-
ing µte, beach area.,fantastic, she hope$ to return soon.
6men
BEA ANDERSON , Ed itor
TtlurMl•W• Dt«fnMr 11. 1t711 ''" 11
P,hilharmonic Offers
. ·' . Pi.a hist Previews Program
Salute to Beethoven
An all·Beethoven program commemorating the1 bicentennial anni·
versary of the composer's birth in December, 1770..:w~r.:b~~conducted by
Zubin Mehta at 8:30 p.m. on Sund ay. Dec. 20. ·· ·
The Los Angeles Philharmon ic Orchestra will .opeiJ...1tl'fe second con·
cert in the Orange County Philharmonic Society's l7t.h'season with Sym·
phony No. 2 in D. Opus 36.
Serenity and joy fill the pages of this dynamic wor.k although-despair
at impending deafness already was a cloud on the horizon.
Symphony No. 3 in E Flat, Opus 55 ("Eroica'') will follow intemiis·
sion. The discovery of his deafness brought Beethoven to thoughts of sui·
cide, then ultimately to creation of a new era of music. The first fruit of
this era is this intense "Heroii.:: Symphony.··
The concert will begin promptly at 8:30 p.m. in Orange Coast ·Gollege
auditorium. N6 one will be seated during the opening movement according
to J . Donald Ferguson. society vice president in charge of concert arrange.
men ts.
Season tickets at $25 are still available al the society office, 201 West
Coast 11ighway, Newport Beach, phone 646-6411 . Single tickets. if available,
are $4.50 and student tiCkets are $2.
1970 is a jbint anniversary for the Orange County group. Members
are celebrating the ninth year of bringing the Lo s ,AngeleS Philharmonic
to Orange County and Mehta is in his ninth year as lnusic director.
Mehta has been guest conductor of at least 20 major orchestras out·
side Los Angeles and has conducted opera at the Met in New York, in
Montreal, Salzburg, Los Angeles, Florence and Rome. ·'
The director is credited with building: the Philharmonic Orchestra
to its present stature as one of the world's leading orchestras. Jn 1965, he
took the orchestra on its first west coast tour since the 1920s and in the
spring of 1967, on jts first tour of the eastern states.
,.
Music lovers are invited to
attend an Orange County
Philh armonic Societ)'.
Beethoven preview at 11 a.m
on Wednesday, Dec. 16, i1
Edwards Cinema Theater,
Fashion Island.
Offered as a public service.
previews are free a n d
reservations are not required.
By coincidence, the preview
date will mark the 200th an-
nl verliary or the birth of
Ludwig von Beethoven,
culmination of a year in which
hi s works have been played
and honored in concert halls
around the World.
Coffee will be served at'
10:45 a.m. followed by a leo.
turMecital illustrating themes
of Beethoven's second and
third symphonies which will
be played by the Los Angeles
Phllhannonic Orchestra in
the Orange Coast College
auditorium, on Sunday, Dec.
20.
Preview speaker will be Dr.
Natalie Limonick of the UCLA
music faculty. A concert
pianist as well as lecturer and
teacher, Or. Llrnonick has ap.
peared with the ~er Wagner
Chorale.
A celebrated first world tou·r in 1967 elicited rave notices from Berlin
to Mehta's native Bombay. In the faU of 1969, the orchestra made a three-.
week tour of Japan.
A tour of the eastern states was completed in October of this year
when the orchestra and Mehta were honored by being asked to participate
in the 2.Sth anniversary of the Un~ted Nations on a worldwide telecast.
BEETHOVEN ADMIRERS -Members of the Or-
ange County Philharmonic Society are eagerly an·
ticlpating a concert comm'errorating the birth of
the composer. Looking over a score.of his "Eroica"
symphony are (left to right) the Mmes. Christopher
Kitching, preview chairman, Lars A. Berg and
Joseph S. Pike Jr.
Chairman for the previews
is Mrs. Christopher Kitchin1
assisted by the Mmes .. Paul
Gus{a fson , Allan J oh n son,
Joseph S. Pike Jr., Frank M.
Posch, Lars A. Berg, E.
Morgan Quiiin, E d w a rd
Schumacher and W. S. Lee. Future pre v iew s art
scheduled for March 10. April
14. May 15 and 19.
Same Old Song Sounds Better When Played Sunny-side Up
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My creden·
tials as a daughter-in·law for over 20
years qualify me to submit the £01\owin&
rules for all mothers-ln"law. If followed,
these rules are guaranteed to produce
unlimited misery, isolation and anxiety,
plu.J PQSSible side effects of ulcers.
migraines and other assorted ills. When
your son marries:
DweU on the fact that you have lost
him. Let everyone know he was your
whole life -not your own marriage, your
other children, just HIM .
Talk incessantly about him as a little
boy, hov· he needed you and he always
ran to you with everything. Make hhn
sound dependent for su re -weak. if
poi:sible.
Don't hesitate to make his business
YOUR business. Give adwicc, liUg·
ANN LANDERS ~
gestions, opuuons. After all, you are
older. wiser and more experienced. What
does he know ?
If your daughter·in-law isn't a good
housekeeper, show her hoW things should
be done. If your son isn't aware Of her in-
competence, aJert him . After all , he grew
up in your home aod he should know the
difference.
Remind them both that you will not live
forever and they will have plerty of time
togelher after you are gone. Invite them
everywhere and insist on being included
in a:: their social activities.
Practice making your son feel guilty
for neglecting y'ou. Guil t can be a
J>OWerfuJ weapon. If you can make his
wift: feel guilty, too (or better yet,
responsible), thi s can be a neat ad·
vantage for weighing future decisions in
your favor.
If lhvre are chtldren, remember they
are your grandchildren. lf the paren!Jl l
discipline isn't what it should be (too
strict or not strict enough), straighten
ther.1 around. They may not appreciate it
NOW but they will thank you later.
If you have a daughter (or more than
one daughter·in-iaw) don't fail to
recognize your built·in advantage. Make
sllbtle comparisons. Keep them com-
peting for your approval. If you play it
right, your son will be caught in the mid·
die ..
Remember -you gave your son life.
You raised him . He owes' everything he is
or eve r will be to you. His wife got Into
the act much later. Don't ever let her
lorgel II. -EDICT FROM NASHVILLE
DEAR EDIE : Thank you tor your rule1
on succtsliful molber·ln·law·bood. Jn ad-
dition lo the possible side effects you
outUncd, I'd like lo add another posslblll·
ty -divorce.
'
I do hope lbe ntxt letter will put tbe
subject In Us proper perspective.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Before our son
married J wrote this Jetter to my future
daughter-in-law: Print it if you believe it
r :Id help others.
DEAR JANE: Joe's father and I are so
happy to have you in the family. We feel
he made a wonderful choice. Until now I
have been the Number One woman in
Joe's life. On your wedding day you will
occupy that place. And this is as it should
be. I am not the least bit resentful.
Love for a ·mother Is different Crom
love for a wile. There is plenty of room ln
his heart for both of us. If you ever feel I
am interfering, please tell me to mind
I
my own business. I have made my share
of mistakes and you will undoubtedly
make yours. This ls how people learn. ll
you want any advice from me, juat a.st
and 1 will help you if I can. And ooe last
thing -call me Mother or Mom if you
want to. If not, my given name will do.
We love you and welcome you to the
£amily. -EVERY DAY JS MOTHER'S
DAY FOR ME.
' How far should a teenage couple go!
Can necklng be safe? When does It
become (oo bot to handle? Send for Au
l.ander11 booklet 1•Necktag and Petting -
\1bat Are the Limits!" Mall your reqaeat
to Ann Landers In care or ibe DAILY
PILOT enclosing 50 «nit lo coin aad • Jona, stamped, Kif.addressed eave.lope.
'
OAILY PILOT
..
. ... Hostesses Make Progress
·.:~Preparilig the honorable bird loi a h'oli day least are {left to right) the Mmes.
:;~: ... Walter L. Winters. Edw in Anderson and Alvin Geier who will host a progr~s
• ' 15ive dinner for the Huntin~ton Beach High School Faculty Wives. The affair,
... also to be hosted by the \Voodrow Smiths, will begin at 6:30 p.m. Sunda,y, Dec.
13. Mrs. Dar.rell ·S.tjlJ \vagon js. chairman.
.::'·Horoscope ·-· .-~-·-''------.
·-:~:Paper Tiger for Gemini
,~. • . ,
r
FRIDAY
DECEMBER 11
•"'t ARIES fMarch 21 -April 19): :·_~ sure directions are clear.
•·, : Tendency is to confuse signals
--while in transit. Be receptive,
_,--•lert.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
·-Guard valuables. Associate .1'::'~ho advocates get-rlch.qulck
~.:t1cheme is nol well informed.
"·""1· GEMTM (May 21-June 20):
;..~ ;pycle high : opposi tion is ac-
'
' ' .. ·,. ',., ...
··~" •
lually paper tiger. Know thla:
and proceed with confidence.
CANCER !June 21.July 22):
You may be restricted to cer-
tain areas. Key is to quietly .
amass needed material. in-
formation.
LEO tJuly 2.1-Aug. 22 ):
Friends may not act in usual
manner. Be ready for
surprises. Special relationship
is pul to lest.
VIRGO 1Aug. 23-SepL 22 ):.
Property values could be
misrepresented. Do you r own
checking, Gemini individual is
apt to guide y o u con·
struclively.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22):
Trust hunch. Heed inner voice.
Gain shown if you write. call .
c ommunicate . Express
yourself. There is no need to
hold back.
SCORPIO !Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):
Social commitment might in·
terfere wi th basic chores. Key
Is to find lime for work and
play. Relative ca n help solve
dilemma .
SAG ITrARIUS <Nov. 22·
Dec. 21J : Whal you see could
be part of distorted picture.
Otteplion -. intentional or
otherw ise -is present.
Holiday BaUel' in · ·NewporJ
'Nutcracker' Opens Run
When lhe t.asun• Beach
Qvlc Ballet Company prtaenta
Ill l)rtholld1y pn>dtl<lloo ot
'"nte Nutcracker," p e o p It
throu1hout Orange county
become involved.
Behind the 1cenea or thl.t
year'• pruent.atlon on Sundly,
Dec. 13, at 7:30 p.m, ln
Newport Harbor High School
auditorium and StJnday, Dec. 20, at 2:30 p.m. in Santi Ana
High School 1Udltonum ts •
atarrirJJ c11t of c o u n t y
reaidents.
Dancers from 14 com·
rrtunltlea In the coastal and
Loi An.cetea artu will jOtn
doiena of wotkers behind the
1eenes who handle costumet,
1cenery and diftrlbuUon of
promotional material.
The 1970 production require•·
12.1' costumes, all ol which
have been created under the
supervision of Miu Lila Zall,
artistic director a! the troupe.
Many coatumes have bef!:l1
made by · Miss Zali herself;
others by Bert Pettey, Mrs.
Zachary Malaby, G to r g e
Sogawa and members or
Lltuna Ballet Guild who have
l'111hioned wings and halos for
Christmas 1ngel1.
Members of the guild lrt-
volved in this year'1 "Nut·
cracker'' lnclude thf!:. Mmes.
Wlllilam Meyer, president and
El-Wanda Francis of San
Clemente ; Hirokt Toliver,
Bernard Barton . W 111i1 m
Howel:. Tom Hance a n d
Eugene Valel'lraeh of Laguna
Beach and Charles Meadow•
and Gary Rasmussen of
Laguna Niguel.
Also auisting are the Mmes.
Mike Kneubuhl and Frank
Lynch of Corona d~l Mar;
Thomas Spratt of Mission Vie-
jo, and Robert Mason of Villa
Park.
From Page 13
Digs Coast A GUILD PRODUCTION-Members of lhe La~u na
Ballet Guild have been busy behind the scenes
workin~ on the troupe's presentation of ''The Nu t-
"1 love the process or I.each-cracker." .Mrs. Thomas Spratt adjusts a costume
ing and learning," she says for dancer Miss Odile de \Vitte.
of her conlinuing education. ---------------------
"One know! one doesn't have
fina l answers so dialngue with I Vo1'ces' young people and _classroom
discuMion is essential. FV Herald
The Tee
Founders
Honored
Three chapters of Ph1 Delta
Gamma, a graduate women'•
fraternity wlll gather for a
Founders Day luncheon Satur·
da y, Dec. 12, Jn the Alta Vista
Country Club, PlacenUa.
The Callfoml" Stptt <;ollege
at Fullerton chapter wlll host
the chapters from Californ ia
Slate College at Long Beach
and the Unive rsity of Southern
Califom\a.
Mrs. Miriam Cos, associate
professor of English at CSCF
will disc'uss Fun and Fan cy in
American Lore. She Is_ the
autho r of two books ln
mythoto1y Including "Magic
and the Sword."
Braids
Wrapped
NEW YORK (U Pll -Hair
braids including the coronet
whic h wraps peasanl·lashion .
around the head make the
style scene in the new fall and
winter coUfures .
The National Hairdressers
and Cosmetologists As.socia·
tlon says that braids of all
sizes are back.
Siii! around are tendril curls.
falling softly around the ears
and cheekbones.
=~~~~=~-----• • • • • • • •
;W¢al :
hJ.elil.•
I ---· I
Tattler
feminine
fine"'!
from Sandy's * 10115
Nyloo -4 Cotteo 9•11 .... , ,,.,..11e4 ..,. .. * HOST.SI GOWNI Nt1
COULOnls-t ttt,. JO * IAIY DOLLS.,llNOll Sm
Shrt •"1 l••t * IASIC •1111 FANCY lllllNll
• FLANNIL •OWNS
Sh•rt •nd I ... IH111hH ltYt••
• IUNNV HOPPlll
• DIAll'OAM SLIPPlll
all beautifully
gift wrapped.
I we Welcome layaways.
=--....... ~-... •1' )o J~'fa Y'~
•
1
Soe<:f.1!111111 Ill I D f nd DD,._
"" "It ...
I ·'
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan .
19): Some who share interests
express desire for change. Be
flex ible. One who passes
rufTlors Is not helping mailers.
I I t l,jf I '~~·:;::::.
I C•l"lf••l•lrill
Ill YIMlr Cu "Yoong j>e9ple today. I I
lhlnk.· 8'e looking for wh•l Chr1'stmas 1'n Song •• I ~· .. . ••
'i .•.
' --:~··· .. .. ,.,
.. '411 .. ..... ..
•• ·t . , ....
'• .·,
' . ·~-. , ..
" , .
kind of, a world it could be."
While young people are ;Jf.OJr) tnhQ very much in everyone's I mind , people in general are Voices of Fountain Valley Associa tinn and directed by I
25Q E. '7th Street ·
C.tt• .Mes-Hilltr" S~...-
-642·S430 -
.,., .. ""'"
AQUARtUS fJan. 20-Feb.
18): Romantie Interests cnuld
hit some bumps in road . Key
is lo know difference betw~n
major dispute and minor
disagreement .
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 1:
what the anthropologisl is in· will be raised in trad itional 1 Gordon \Vheatley . I W•tcllff 1111011 terested in. Christmas· music arranged by WhC'atlC'y. a graduate of L N• ... portw 11111 J ,
Are 11oclal structures crest· Harry Simeone when Lhe · UCl,A, has been a professiona l~,.!•!!_,,!•~·~)·~~·~·~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ed b"y personalities or do per· Fount..aln Valley WO m 8 n' I musioiiln sinl'e he was 17; He ,._.llltl,....M•:DIMM:Ji:aMM~:ei!iM:l:liM•~
Mt!!. ll!ru l'rl.--'111 I '·'"·
Go slow. Play waiting game.
Some significant facts are yet
lo be revealed. Know this -
and exercise caulion. Applies
especially te purchases, sales.
sonallUes adapt to lhe social Club ho11ts e party et 11:30 p.m. headed the rnusic department II'.! • , I
structure? Monday, Dec. 14, in the Faun-at Santa Ana College'.foi:.five ~ OLGA •
Whal makes people differ-taln Valley Civic Center. years. served ;is music d1rcc-~ ~
ent and similar in different The Voices, a choral group tor al First Chri st Church of ~ JA
Twins Club
Fetes Dads
cuilun!s! comprised or more lhan SO H""ti ogtoo Beach for II years ~ MAKES IT AN EXOTIC
With these questions ever residents. Is associated 'A'ith and presently is invol ved in li'!
present, she finds htr current the Fountain Valley Arts his fo urth season as special u CHRISTMAS!
work something akin lo a cve nls directo r for the Na-I
miner &triking 1oki, d tional Orange Show, San i .. Peoplt here are sllmut•t· Spouses Bi B d ~ ed and stimulating,'\ she ob-ernar ino. «
served. ''Perhaps it's because T y I p t Also on the Chrislma~ I
Members of the Saddlebaek many a~ world-traveled as 0 u e a r y meeling agenda will be final I
Mothers o[ Twins Club will eompired to the staid· life or plans for Santa's visits tn II! Husbands will be invited me m b e r s ' homes anrl lil conduct a bake sale beginning mldweatemers. h · when members nf Alpha d isct•s~ion or hnl t'd•y cn t· ~ al 10 1.m. nn Saturday, Dec. "I'm not. used 10 aving 0 I p· Al Ch 1 §"
V c:op\e smile at me or smile m cron 1 umnae aper leclions for needy h1milles. 12, In the, Mission \ejo shorr h l th · J .ck," she adm itted, "but os e groups a n nu a Clu b members ··~•ill c11changc • ping center.· Ch I t t S d De " C[R' I.~~ !hit's what impresses me rs ma s par Y un ay. c. girts. !i.? arnD.\ Proceeds will be used to 3 H
OOl purchast a· record playe r and a~~:e,.~e~u~stb-ylng to
1 An members of lhe county m~~~svi~.f11 b;~~:~me,'.c~~~~ ii ~--i.-~' -ho'-u_.,--~ "--·'-----" -'-'-~~.... other Chrlstma1 gift• for · · " h 1 · ·1ed t t d t.NIUl:I aou .. ronaw ,.,co ,... ....... Dli:roum--.~... understand why 1ls so. caper are 1nv1 , oaten Hakell. Terry Harnev. W;ir--1,..i. ____ _,. •'--holl'--•-From a--1 _ _.,_ -"'-1 . .-and Fairvie w State Hospital. th th · •·1 6 d 8 · W
....--aJV\lllU, uw -J•.... ~.,. l""'T"'""""' e ga. er1ng ~ ween an ren Hartung, Dave Heffner, cttPfl!I ud chl!om: and bonded or-. All deo:nted With a ' On Wednesday, Dec. 1«. n th H ti t B h
I . •· AlJ L db tho'-·--'·"''i--•--'-"nl-'··prlO<d' mem•·rs and !heir h"sbands . p.m. I f!: un ngon e;ic Or,·ie Highum , 1erry }ioymc W t:!:fi6.~ to $3~.:,.1 ..... ~ ..... .anv.l\IU~ UA&T will e';joy a potluck dinner at Mrs. Jaycees home of Mrs. Jam~_Fe_rre~. _and Tho~-' _H_timph~}~-i
•• '
"
,. . ·:
··~
llollday!inpmadobylovinibandic:u.bt!om:dal1Qllf..rest: 1 p.m. in the Mission Viejo HunUf(gton Beach Mrs .~ -In
l.iot!ierboodahop: home of Mrs. Roy Hall. Jaycees meet lhe sec611d Mon· ~-Vfll,\~., ~1 ~
WeOOC171iB..MAmnkm'dandJl.-.C"°"' ~ The evening program will be day or the month at 8 p.m. . · .I q_y.n~ ..... h .... ~ ! '• . ;;!j!f,S2,:·:;~~E~:~;i:s~~Z'.~~ ... ,c:-=. er.v• J~ ~h:r~~~ay Wl~lg c~~;~~g :~ ~~~= ~1°~:~:~i~1L~ ' ·: ~~""'··~~., __ OvEr'fO~-~~ \ ,i a
~-~::".".'".".'".".'".".'".".'".".'".:'.'::".::'.':'.'::'.:::'.:'."""'"""'"""'~_..1'.L~ag~u~o~a ~B~a~ac~h~.------M~ic~h~a•~i~B~roo~k~s,~M&-~~7022~.~ · .~~ ~
·~··-------------, 1ppers ~
::; ~ OUR SLIPPER BAR I ... .. •
i' .· ...
,.
' ,.
. ' • •
• • • t . .. . • ..
Silver jewtlry, prttious ds d wh1ltf }fuwtr
.,.dtsi§tttd by a ~rowp of ?iorl&trn
Cal ifor"ia •rtisanr . .A gift of lovt.
'1tckl11ct $ts.oo ~i~g $6.00
'Barrtltt $9.00
'Bractltls 18.00 Cboktr fll.00
@
PLUMMER'S
160 S. Cakt .Aut., ,,..,.;,.,
FOR THE F.AMIL Y
SELECT FROM FAMOUS MAKES
• DANIEL GREEN
• EVANS
• WELLCO
• GROSVENOR
• O'OMPHIES
ALL SIZES-COLORS -STYLES
~
I
i a ~
I
w
!I
I ~
'W
$36.
Butterfly Print. Long Kimona. Cover·up.
Nylon Crepe Tricot. ritakeli A Care-free
Travel Co mpanion and Ideal Gift. Medium
and Large.
Veta's
lllTlllATt APPAUL ..... ,.. .. ~, ...... ---
PHONE
642 ·1197
•
'
54 FASHION ISLAND Ii
Newport Center • Opp. Broadway I ;·I===========================-644 ·42 23 1~ " -'"-~--~~~.~~~~~~~~-~ ............ ..............,.......,..,,...,.,,..,, ..... v
• • / ! ·~ • ,,
J
'
'
Rapid Transit Arrives
J I
By ERMA BOMBECK
U tbtre's one th1llg the
modem family Isn't •. .It's
pedeatria.n.
Thanks to rural living, we
are a three-car famUy. With
au three or them and a Triple
A membership, we can get
towed to our favorite garagt.
The station wagon is going
through Its change of lilt and
cries a lot. The convertible is
a. problem gas and oll drinker
and can 't aeem to pass a
Sweden
Inspires
Gourmets
A Swedish smorgasbord will
lend an intematiaonal flavor to
Christmas as members of the
Laguna Beach Opera League
prepare to enjoy Swedisll
delicacie! on Sunday, Dec. 13.
Mrs. G. P. Kristensen of
Three Arch Bay, a native of
Sweden. will help the
hospitality committee prepare
• varied smorgasbord.
Addi.Ilg a final touch to the
Christma!l party, four Laguna
Beach High School students,
the Misses l\1arilee Wilson,
Teri Anderson, Llsa Shipke:y
and Karen Clark, will present
• Santa Lucia pageant.
The pagean,t will be directed
by Mrs. Howard Wilson with
narration by Mrs. Nornian
And'erson.
League Hears
Holiday Notes
11.fadrigaJ singing will be
reatured when the Newport
Harbor Woman's Civic League
gathers for it.s a n n u a I
Christmas luncheQn at 11 :30
a.m. Monday, Dec. 14, in the
Airporter Inn.
The traditional ho Iida y
decorations which will grace
the tables also will be offered
for sale, according to 1.trs.
Fred D u p r e e , decorations
chairman.
The Madrigal Singers from
Corona del Mar High School
furnish the entertalnmenl
A'r
WIT'S
END
111rage without stopping for a
quick belt. The truck has to be
parked on a bill with bricks
under the rear wheel!.
When they go . . • they go
together. •·we have lo take the wagon
in to the garage thll morn-
ing," said my husband, "It's
heating up."
Season
Greeted
The Henry Bowen Society,
Children of the American
Revolution will stage a
Christmas party at 4 p.m.
Saturday, Dee. 12, in the home
or Bill MacGowan.
The dinner meeting will be
followed by a film on con.
servation. Members will bring
glfta and canned goods to be
taken to the Orange County
Indian Center.
The sociely has e-01lected
1900 glass containen which
have been sold for recycling.
Th! proceeds will be used to
buy trees for burned acreage
in Orange County.
Workshop
Planned
A Chanukah Gilt WorkshopllCllllDllOllW!li.!N~ITllO!!W~N and Boutique, spo n sored
by Temple Hillel Sisterhood •I
will take place at 7:30 p.m.
Monday, Dec. 14. in the
Mercury Savings Bank, Hun-
tington Beach.
Miss Rae Battlema n will
provide prof essional
assistance in making projects.
There will be a variety of
Items to make as well as buy.
Among them will be cards,
decorations and a cookbook
produced by the sisterhood
and temple members.
Admissk>n will be $1.25.
LEARN HOW TO MACRAME
SATURDAY, DEC. 12,
11 :00 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M .
STUMPED ON A KNOT? OR NEED TO
LEARN FROM THE BEGINNING? BRING
YOUR QUESTIONS 1 F IND OUT EVERYTHl ~G
YOU NEED TO KNOW TO MAKE BEL TS•
WAL.L HANGINGS, HEAD BANDS. IT1S
EASY Wint INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION
FROM PATI EN'r KA'nlY BROOKS,
DESIGNER OF MACRAME KITS,
EXCUJSIVEl-Y AT ROBINSON'S, WOODEN
BUCKLE FISHERMAN BELT• 9.00.
2" CORD BELT. 9.00. 4 11 8ELT,
AT 18.00. CHOKERS OR HEAD BANDS.
AT 6.00. WAL.L HANGINGS, 7.00.
FROM OUR ART NEEDLl!:WOllK,
ROBINSON'S
ENJOY HOLIDAY SHOPPING HOU'llS, MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, 9,30.9,JO.
ClOSE_D SUNDAYS. NEWPORT CfNTEI . FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800
LECAL NOTICJ: UGAL NOTlt'E
~bYmtT JIS
LEGAL NOTICll
LEGAL NOTICE
FOR ADVERTISING
in tho
WEEKENDER
OUT 'N' ABOUT
SECTION
Phone
NORM STANLEY
1>42-4321
•I"'··~·~•~•~•~' -------::"'-~-~.-------~--------------'":'---:-~---:--:--:~-:----,,,..----,:-~"::::::;':",-,;-c,O-.=~·--=~r"'°~,,.-,,--,~"'1'==~-~~-~-~~ , __ __, .. ':' ..-1•"-•
If DAILY ,II.OT lllwldfJ, Deel Ill 10, 1970
Shopping for Right College
Eases Burden of Education
17 SYLVIA PORTEii
U you are amon1 the
miDlool ol lamlljel wltb
cl!Udren reachlna collec:e 111
by Mlt f11l, this coming
Chriltm.1 teuon ii just about
your deodllne -the lai.st
Ume to bt1ln 1boppio1
seriously for the coUttt of
your child'• choice.
TbJJ too ii the tbne when
you mutt f1ce the brutil fact
tbal the AVERAGE coot ol
aendina one child to a private
college for «>e year is up to
"1.000, and to a public collece
up to nearly 11,$00. To these
basic eo1ll, you must add at
)Mat '500 for traMportation, booU, laundry, clunlng, etc.
And U your child is he1dlng
for an Jvy League collefe or
aimilar top educationa In·
stitu~on. the totals will jump
to $4,50().fS,000.
1'hll -for four yeart! -
ean be murder. Here,
therefore, are guldellnea to
help you minimize theH ex-
pense1.
--C.onsider 1 state univmlty
instead of 1 private college.
Today, calculates the
Hartford-hued Ufe Insurance
Agency Management A,s&n.,
the median (half above, half
btlow thiJ fliure ) ""' of 1uJ·
Uon, room and board at public
college• ls $1 ,11& for state
residents, leu than hllf the
median at ·private men's col·
legu.
It'll help your Youn&ller,
though, U he brld1 hlmaelf
thoroughly on the beat Jllo-
fuaors and courses offered In hil field of lni.reat 11 U)e
1tate colle1e. (At some col·
Ieges, 1tudents pub1ilh annu.tl
p.ides and ratlnp on course.5
and proresaora.)
Over a four year period you miiht oave 14.ooo to ie.ooo u
your younglter attendl 1
typical public venu1 typical
private colle1t.. And, at a rew
public colltgtl, tuJllon coeil
are as low u $S(l()4IOO.
-Look first 'at pubUc col-
leges within your home state.
Tbe arnase premium char&·
1tater1 is about AGO a year. At
ed by atate college1 to out-of·
aome 1tate unlveralttes this
d>st sap come• to Sl,000 or
more. 'llodly rougbly ll00,000
lludentl are beinl forced to
pe y such premiwna to 1ttend
collesa out.tide of their own itatea -illhough some mt.es
are now working o u t
reciprocal a1reernentl with
other states wxter which
lludenls attend out-of-state
colleges at rqular rate•.
-Wtl1h the lacl t h a t
coeduc.Uonal private colle1e1
COit leu a year than ORHH·
only colleges. The median coat
at a private men's colleae to-
day ts $2,~5. aays the
LIAMA ; and at a private
1,0WS Of OIL PAINTIN•I
WHOLllAU WAllHOUll
OPDI TO THI PUIUC
$5 and up
1•1t 1. 101••••· u•'T,t. AMA ...............
DIALl•I WAlfTID
tt,.. ....... ,. ........
...._, ....... pit!., .. ........... TtLIPHONI
AMIWlllN6 IUIUU
935.7777
JUST llUSHINQ.
15 NOT INOU•H
'7 1111T •U.HT, I .,.
Jt standl lo re uon that it a foundation ii not tecure
then what IA built upon It : could have future trouble1. So tt ii wU.h dtntal health and hya1ene. You mull have
bt<hy auma to have 1ood
teelh.
Even trequt>nt brushinr of
your tetth 11 no t enoua:h If
It Is done lnco?T«Uy. A rood
bru1hln1 should lake a.round thr~ minute• with a r()Od
pa.rt of thl1 devoted to the
rums. Your dr:nUst will ex·
plain to you the bnt meth·
04 and ~ulpment to use. We have all the producU tilat he Wiii rtt0mmt-nd In our
complete dental cart t@Ctlon.
Let your dentist cheek your ......
YOU OJI roun !lOCTOll
CAN PJK>HE US when you nff4 a dell:ftry. We will dt·
JJver prompUy v..ithoul e•·
tra chargt. A f?'CAt many
l!IKIOle ttt1 on u1 faf' tht>lr hftllb nHdL We welcom4'
Nqtiet:h: for dellVtt)' 1ervlc.-
and charre account.I.
PAD U90 PHAIMACT "'--... ..,........ '41·11H --
r
v.'omen's colle1e. $2,68$. At
private C»-td coll•ru lt'a
$2,300.
-Also con1ider the point -
often overlooked by collq:e
shopper• -that college cotta
t<nd to bt hJibe!t tn tbe East
and West, lowest in the South
and Mlctwe1t. Your cblld
might be, curious about these
lower-coat arw and the
financial aspect ls lmportJnl.
-Canvus all rultable col-
leges within commuting
diltance of your home. AJ a
day student, your child mlaht
achieve areat savings aod the
arrangement ii certainly not
all bad.
~ now into all po11Ible
eources of fin ancial
By JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK (AP)
Interest ratee throughout molt
of the busloesl world an
receding loday like an ebbing
flood 114< but II w1ll be monU...
btfwe the badly dam•aed
mortgage market can be put
Jnto working order.
For some obvious rtuon1,
and some obecure ones allo.
the interest ratea on home
mortages art amon1 the lut
to ra11 in any rate retreat. And
the pattern never wu more
clear than now.
The dltcount rate at Federal
Reserve banks hu fallen from
8 percent to S.S percent in one
year. Some commercial paper
rates have been halved. Some
U.S. Treasury llsues art down
2.5 cent. Some bankJ loam
cost 7 percent now compared
with t .5 a year ago.
But, the averqe interest
rate charg«i on new home
mortgages in October roet -
not fell -to I.$ percent, com-
pared with 8.1 percent • year
earlier. In sept.ember, the rate
had be<!1 down to 1.18 perc<nt.
A relatively few cr!Uca of
the bankl.llg and saving• and
loan atructures tend to fttl
that a contplraey etl1ts, but a
look at the reasons why tends
lo dispel such noUont, albeit
wilhou1 juaUlyln& the llllu•·
t ion .
Moreover, most ti the wldei-
ly published economic
an1lyses foresee mortgage
rates joining the tide ln the
next ye.ar, primarily because
of an expected lnDu.1 of
money from other arus.
Jn 10me at.ates, for example,
tuUry laws shut oU the now of
money Into morta:ages. With
yields «. I percent or more
available Jn corporate bonds,
cocnmercliJ banka hesitated to
lnV8t In mortt:age1 which
Jaws llmlt.ed to yleld1 of 7.5
percent.
Now, however, the returns
on corporate bonds • r e
becomlnt 1 et 1 1ttr1cUve.
Money lJ more plenutul and
the demands for it from
busintss are lowered. Should
yielda fall to 7.15 percent,
largt inveators might be more
tempted to lnve1t in
mortga1e1.
The flow of money Into the
mof'1&11e market 1pparenUy
already hllJ berun. T h e
Federal Home Loan Bank
Soard reported th1t i n
Octobtr IGfne $1.0& billion was
depoalle<I with n vin&J ond
loan a.s.sociations, a tremen·
dOUI gain.
A year earlier, by contr1st,
federllly Insured uvtnp ond
loon ISIOCllHona uperl enced
ao outllow ol 1421 million.
Mother faCIOr 1UPl'Orttn1
the hllh cost of mortgqe1 Is
the tnormous dtmand from
famWts that have betn forced
tor teVtrtl yean: to portpone
their hoUllnl plans becluoe
loans were unobtaln1ble.
. In fact, offJd ala ol the sa\'·
In.gs and loan industry, which
Is the mo)or lendtr ol houlln&
funds, maintain that tht
av1ra1e lntemt rate an
mortaaaea "·oold have been
much hllher U lhe forces of
supply-demand were thelole
determinant.
bVER ,THE COUNTE}{. Coinp~ete-New York Stock List
llMl-IAIW lllb&*7 ......... " Milllt ....... t t.M. tiM WD. , .......... ,..... ., ................... et, ___ ......
t '
DAILY ,ILIT " Wednesday~s ·Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List •
I • .. I .
I I
•
Thw'sdiJ, Deeembtr 10, 1970
Model GGSD 2~0
• Power-Flo Mech·
uiem Quiel, zet1
dishes cleaner
• Z·Level Thoro-
Walh Power-
Arm, Power·
·rower
• s·uilt-in Soft
Food Disposer
• Automttic Deter-
gent Dispenser
0~ Clll "ff O~t Modtll
W~t•I We llPlllM:• 'I'll'!"
,.,..1-tt!I 0 •111,.•loMr. $195 95
J~ APPLIANCE
SALES AND SERVICE
BBB GLENNEYRE -LAGUNA BEACH
494-0582
•
Senate '.Actloa lfla1 Delp
'
Conco·rde Big Nearing Next Hurdle . , ~
LONOON (AP) -Test prototype of the Concorde design snags. Recently, a Con-plane into full productlon. This France and BOAC back out. will be willin g lo pay up to 3'
flights oo the Britlsb-Frtncb went supersonic down "boom corde prototype made its decision wlll depend on how The airlines have major percent more than th.~
supertOnic airliner have 1ooe alley" on Britain's west coast, longest flight to date -two many of the planes have beeJI doubts that the Conco rde will ec:onomy rare for the fasttf
well, and protest! about Jls nearly 200 damage claims hours and 4\minute.s. ordered by then. be a paying proposition for trip. '"
sonic boom have been•Jeu were filed with the govern-Frederick Corfleld, Britain's fro date, 16 airlines have them. It will carry a small Cost of the Concorde projed
than expected.. Its big hurdle ment. But the protests were minister of aviation supply, is _4ken option! on '74 Concordes, load, 130 passengers against was estimated 1.a~t month ~
comes in the spring, when the less vociferous •than the gov-scheduled to meet Dec. ts in with the fjrst batCh of pro-490 for Boeing's jumbo 747; just under $2 billion, a hug!
B r I t I s b a n d F r e n c h , emmerit expected. Paris with his F r e n c h duction models to go to Pan will need more fuel than con· sum for the hard-pre~
governments decide whether Experts in Brit.ain'a Aviation counterpart, Raymond Mon-/American World Airways, Air ventional jets, and at possibly British government and i~
to go into full production. and AgricuJtural Ministries dop; it is be!Jeved they will !"ranee and BOAC, the British $52.8 million would cost about ally across the .CbanneJ. ,,
Supporten of the Concorde are still evaluating the effects give the go-ahead for four Overseas Airways Corp. five times what a subsonicl.i'ii-i;;o;iiiiiiiiiiii;il;;iiiiiiiiiiii~
project expect the U . S, of the tes& on the en-more production models, Con-. None of the three companies airliner does. cH'•1'stMAS SP.UIA.L
Senate's refusal to approve vironment. cordes 7 through 10. has made a firm commitment Its only selling point is its r>ec.'* ~
further government spending Technically, the Concorde This will be the last big hur. to bu y, however, and Britain speed. which will halve the 2.0°/o OFF
on an ~merican supersonic appears to be in the clear. dle for the Concorde until next and France have assured tbe flying time acros.s the Atlantic .,,_., 1n11«~1
transport to open up huge new 'n!st Oighls in France and Bri-spring, when the governments foreign lines that they can to 3'n hours. But the airlines Sl per Y•rd
markets to the 1,450-mile-an-tain have turned up no major 'will decide whether to put the tear up theh; options if Air are not sure enough travelers ·49S-02:45
hour Concorde, whlch the·:::=:=:=:=:=::::=:=::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::=:::::::=::::::=:=::::::=:=:=~~~~~~~~~~ British and the French have I ·
been working on jolnUy since
I~
Airlines that hesitated to
order Concordes until they
saw what America had to of-
fer may now decide they can
wait no longer for a plane that
now looks as though It may
never get off of the drawing
boards.
The onJy other country in
the SST competition ls the
Soviet Union, whose
supersonic Tupolev TUl44, is
shrouded in secrecy but is
believed to be well ahead of
the Concorde in development.
The TU144 was the first to
reach Mach 1, the speed of
sound, and was also the first
to fly at twice that speed.
Alexander Kobiarev, t h e
Soviet Union's deputy minister
or aviation, said May 21 that
series production on the 'l'Ul44
had started and that foreign
orders for the 121-seat plane
would be accepted in 1971. The
130--passenger Concorde Is not
scheduled to go into service
until 1974. -
No word has emerged from
Russia of any argument about
the TUI44's effect on the en·
vironmenL When the second
0 t • ;;
0 • •
Gofoni!chtoelch? Nopencit,
no poper, no talent needed.
Creative fun for everyone,!
gown and •••Y doll poilmHIS
:il nylon sleepweor
A gi~ thot'i. both glomorous
ond prodicol ••. nylon "1_
$leepweor! Chome her ~
fovorite gowns or baby doll
poiomos from o fobulous
, ' J . , ossortme_nt in confection
• . \ colon. Sizes 5-M·L • ...--::-J:~
! ! 'I \1 . .. .... Y,'\~ J86
·~.J'. *
tunic pont set
1186
Shaped to flatter every figure (even if
it is o bit on the full side): button-·
trimmed tunic top and matching puU·
on pents of bonded ribbed ocetote.
Assorted colors. sizes. 16 to 20.
321
·321
• • •
napkins 33~
Spills needn't spell di soster! These ore heovy·weight, wipe·
r.leon, fl9nnel ·back.ed ploslics thot look os lovely os clolh!
teffon
30-cup
avocado
or gold
buffet
ba:i&ro
lite-brite 697
tran109r.m
doctor or nurse set
y-chok• 199
Minioture medicos ond l9ut'SeS ~n
safely attend their patients; play!
sofe imtniments, wppfies;complete
<With plmtic medic bog.
ovrora
skittle bowl
699 •
Basic os bowling; to\es s.lti1f,
yet even o pre-schooler COit
excel. A gomfl that appeals to
011 people, all age groups.
•·••low•
scrlbboge
~-I Insert picture ond color
· glow pegs, wakh them
light up ond create a
'l'Or iety of pictu~es.
206
,,..,,.,
mother
900~·
see-n-say
'Point her wing to
any of 12 pictures,
667 pull the ring, hear
its name and o
phr0$e lo match if.
··entter ] 17
flip yoor fop_ •••• --
tree
ornaments
68> 114· • to
All sorts of shopes, sizes ond
colors to choose from;
troditionol to modem styles.
5-polrind-fight 91 replacernents •.••••• 3
a.sst'rl pla1tk
54xS4 971
s..n 1 •7
54x90or6fY'rcl. 197
Choose from on assortment
of colorful Chr istmoi motifs.
lf.polcChrisltMr 871
ploc• lnCl'fs: ••••••••• -
45
piece ...
·7 .. fr. mirwcial
ponderos
pine tree
997
So notu«J
looking, you olrno!J
expect the pine
smell! 'O.iue green needles,
removable bfonches for
spoce-saving storage. _,., . 881 tr•••tand ......... .
• electrk
holiday
lomps
117
candle, snowman
or sonto dausc
Traditfonol symbols of
Christmas lo brighten your
indoor holidoy de<orl
child gvido111:• 124 dltc-•d•k .........•...
st. marys
lvxuroy
blankets
1
: 497 ": 847
90 108
A warm-up for on secs.ens;
lightweight, easy to wash.
motch•ox 317 service 1'9tlon ....... .
T..foght
indoor
light
set
99~
Striftg of 7 indoor lighh with
sturdy clips; ossorM<i colors.
Bc.ry yours eorlt; get severoL
20.r.,,. ] 46 ftlidtlet ....... ____ _
'
taptvt•
72x90 90J: 108 577 997
A lot of wcmnth, bltf sb little
weight! Completely _
was~ble, too· ••• Ona hi D
"'ariety of JowWy mk:irs!
''·,,,.,,, wi11ter1ong
!tlectric
blonkets
d ..... 1397 ... 1297
dool 1697 q-o l 9 97
""' 3297
GOLD
LEAFED
GIFTS
·frypons
a~frypoa 2'1
10"ffypo11 337
sUlo! 397
No sticky problems!
Choice of oW»Codo,
harvest gold, poppy.
897
Coffee for a crowd .•. witb'
perfect results every time!
Eosy to uSe, eosy to $efVt,
eosy to cleon! Nice gift!
melamine set 997
No breoks here! Oinnel')ll01e
lo~ly enoooh 10 grace a
holiday toble, yet practical
encxigh for everydoy vH:.
j1111enil•
towel sets _ ....
dot~
47~
.....
167
Whimsical juttgfe figtires in
terrific color combinations.
2.
The type of "Kenl·imenlaf""
gift omen opJX9CiotM •••
with distinctively masculiM
ffogronc-.. ! wo prowin
faYOrites by Shulton. d.,.,,,,._
glfttots .•••••••. 1'0 .. 3'° FURNITURE
Spectacular hand go ld leafed lamps 2 s with gold trim shades. A fabulous gift, $
alone or in pairs. Choose from 28" wall
lamp, 28" hanging lamp, or 39" table
lamp. Immediate l ight-up-your-life ea. •
'delivery!
LOS ANGELES: 6121 WUshire Blvd. MlrKle Mile: 11040 W. Pico Blvd.; 8840 S. Western Ave.
ANAHEIM, 1672 W. lincoln IAK!RSFl!LD, 3010 Ming Ave. CLA!!MOllT /POMO!lk 232 ( fool Ml
COVINA, 945 N. A.!USI DDWNm 9435 ( Firestone Gl!NDAL~ 333 N. Central A~ •.
0&!ANADA HILLS, IOlllO Balboa Blvd. HUlfltNGTON l!ACH, 19431 Btll<h lltvd. LA HAll!k 1720 W. Whittier
• LDHG l!ACff , 2189 Lakewood Blvd. MOHIT!!Y PARK: 415 ~ Atlantic Blvd. PASADE!lk 85 ~ Rosemead
RIV!RSIDC, 10,000 Maanolil SAllTA AllA/TUSTifl, 1703 ( 17tl St $.Ill IOWDIMO: 999 s. "["St
SOUTH BAT, 15533 S. Cr..,llow Blvd. THOUSAlll ow, 2A4 -tlalcs lltvd.
Y!NTUl!k 34-09 T•l•ar•Ph Rd. WOOOUM H1ll.$< 22223 Ventura Blvd.
SHOP 7 DAY'S A WEEK• WEEKDAYS 11 UHTIL I• SATURDl\Y 10 UNTil 1 •SUNDAY l UHTILI
,REE PARKING • FR[f.: DECORATOR SEIMC£ • CONV£NIE:NT IANK TtRMS
b II h wetting ] l7
solution -2ox ....... ..
tenon
oven mitt
27~
Why get burned up? Weor
on O'l'en mitt ond kffp your
cool! Buy for yourielf, for
tud-in or stocking gifts.
'
que
511
T ok.e-olong barbecue ii
great for picnics, comping ,
or backyard cookery.
Height·odjustoble grill,
wind·ond·spotter 1hield.
f -o• . .toc•nlw 226 helk ............... ..
' '
smoll box
1IJIF J59
637
A filo in the hand's worth six
thot you can't find! Metal
comportmented boxes keep
'ttn oU hondy ood in ardor!
'
----------
Thor sd<lf, Dtctmbw 10, 1Cf70
Poverty · Pro·hlem .Not Eliminated
' ' '
By AllN!JLll, 8. S.!.~ Who ls poor In , the United
WASilJNGTON (UPI) . -states? Ar, the poor thooe who Uon called the"'lower standard ,·
budget." In 1969, that" showed
1 family "' four needed '5,500,
not counting medical care. ·
haven't got tbe money to buy
' . ;· ''Artistry in Movin g'' fefr the
'EST MOY~
of
YOUR LIF E
Call: •,
•
~ .~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ... ;, ~ i ~ ~ r-~ ~ ~ ~ I ~ ~;: ' ' ~ ~. ,:1' .. .,,.
t/:· GIOUND53 ~~· Bllf . •~-~r '·' ~· ~ CROSS RiB ROAST ·~~~~~ ...... ,87~. ~ CHUCK ROAST ".'.'''.~~'. ......... ·57,i.
., SPARE RIBS :8~~?i'~ ............. 69~ §. RIB RQA$T ::, ............... 98f •.
~ ml~ lfAlt 5t0Vlt0 ...;3,
ri.; lllf-IO•a ffWn . • • ••• • • •• •• • • . . . 0 lk, ,..
~ . . MffAID.iflJDI .r
~.i:; o-< SNACK CRACKERS ".'.~.~~~ 42' .. ~ •WK• 11tci.w... a.c.. n -. l.twt. wi.-1 n.1 • ., c•ic11 .. ~ ........ ltl_H.~•-•o..l'til.o ~ .,.-IAKERS COCONUT ::.~ ... '33'
~: .CHOCOLA n CHIPS :::n ... " 39'
~ 0.-CHOCOLATE ~~r:::.m~ ..... 39• ~ c1icus PEANUTS ::~·::-•..... 31 '
.; .,.-COOKIES ::I: .................. 25'
~. ....,. '!Mo fhit o If• H '••lt'-1 ~ PUDDINGS ~rri_~:=•.1.~~~~~~! .. 33< ~ ~. :-· ,.
~-tlli~ f ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ :::: ~ ,,, ,;.:,
~
... K&tfkt!---.
NESTLES' QUIK
COCOA MIX
11-0UllCl IOX 77c
o-<CROUTITTES ~..",: ..... :. 36'
BREAD /::,L .......................... 37' ..,_,...,.°"'"" ...... "'""""" .....
rCASHEW NUTS r:::. ..... 55'
, rBREAD MIXES l~~~L ......... 53'
r1U.a..ryr-a..,-.~.,,..,1t.i 1lfl
... PIE CRUST MIX :\~:::·:L ... 18'
rMARSHMAllOWS ~::'~ ... 21 '
l 0 l lU.TII DUI.Ill 18' 0"'4 JEL • MIL IOl ............... ..
VEGETABLES . :::~...... ...... .. .. 41' ~ lrtff l lool ((oollllowtr W/(ilou o lou 1, h loo or ''"
~ DMUD CRAB :.O't\\:'.' _ .. , ... 67' i' COOL WHIP ~J:. ...... ! ........ 59'
i, VEGETABLES :::.~ ................. 21 '
....... I.-' lplloM• .. a..,,..1,1 ... ~
I
J
494-1025
580 Broadway
PORTERHOUSE :::~". .......... '1 '.!.
CUBE STEAK t:, ................... 98f,.
HAM IUlL SM•Hlli'olf 58' IUlLl<OO•P.MOClllMOYID ........ !•,
HAM SLICES ~~~':OU. ............. s 1 J~
TURKEY 10.t.Sf0 WlllTIMl.&T SJ " SWf._PI'--. S.llo Pll , , ... , ••• , •
'
ONION RINGS ~::.':~t ..... '. ..... 41 1
TATIR TOTS ~:.~~~~., ............. 47c
BUFFn SUPPERS ~::::.i~i.or. ... 5 111
PET RITZ PIES ~~~,;'~ ...... 33<
MEXICAN FOODS ::".'.~· .......... 52' ........ ''"''""It(!.~ •• ~1, .... <•111 1 .... h ..
COFFEE RICH ~~~CTI ........... ..
EGGO WAFFLES ;;:~.',,,_ ....... .
ISLAND INN h'r" -~ ........ . Ml u.11 ............. ..
ORANGE JU.ICE r:.~:~~~ ........ .
FISHSTICKS ~~'i':::~ ............ .
OCEAN PERCH ~~'i'::' ........ .
SIRLOIN TIPS !O:~:~: ........... ..
BAGGED STtAKS ~:'o°L1:~~.<1 ~'.~ ...
28'
46'
28'
43 '
70'
69'
4S'
93'
BABY MEATS \~~ .............. 26'
sw1n DINNERS "!:.'~: ........ 18'
.,.... PINEAPPLE~~·:::::~·~. 24'
HILLS BROS, :l'i!.'U. .. : 89'
HILLS BIOS.: ...... '2"
HIUS 11os.'\':'l."Jl.~.~·1"
FOLGER$ :'il~~ ...... '1"
. P~CHJS :.."':'::r.Ull · 33c
I
PRICED FROM &gc .. $199
. ·-·
Anthony Dowqs, a leading
private, expert, points out in a
new 5tudy of urban poverty· '
for the cOmmlllee f o r
economjc dev,elopment that ·
the Labor Oepar\ment also
Rrovides a ·definition of a
;'moderate" S;tandard of liv-
ing. In 1968 prices, that came ·
to S9.S61 (or the urban family
of fou r.
MRS. LENTSCH SHOPPED AND
,COMPARED HERO~SHOPP.tN,G LIST
She spent $51 .37 ·at Lucky ... The same items
cost her $57.58 at the other market,· Mrs.
LEl!ltsch compared, she shopped Lucky and ...
· .SHE REDUCED ·
HER FOOD' COSTS 1·2.1o/o
You Can Pr ove it. Too ... Compare! Shop Lucky and ~·ave
TURKEY I OAU ·ftl1t&hrtM.t 12" SWT.Pl lM.t.t•Pll ......... , ••
AGir llOWI .• u•n 67' SAUS ~ SWllT't~llMlllM.t-Ol ....... .
S USAGE lllDJAllll·•Ull POll 79' A t-1•••• ............. , .... .
S SAGE '""'"' "'0 29' AU JAllMlllOllll M LPIL ..... .
LUCKY BACON ~~'!u ........... 49'
AB MEAT·--···· 89' .... CR ... L ... ""'" ~ JUICE~i::J•::~~~~.~~.':.~...... 59c
GREEN BEANS f:1,r.~~~ ........ 2.sc
LADY LEE CORN m'L•.., ........ 20 '
SPAM llOIMlllMC-lllAT 56' ~ 1UILUI ................ .
.,...RAVIOLI :::~ .................. 35' ,._ ... _... •• JC ......
STEWED TOMATOES \':,:';'Lu• 25'
.,.... APPLESAUCE ;',".:]\., ....... 31'
~· , .. Klitfkti BR~1~.~~~.1.~. 57c
23\"1•01HICI Pk1.
CH NK TUNA ClllCl lllO,IU. • 37' .U •l'lOL U ll ...•••••••
LAWRY SALT HJ.10111111 44c· ~ 101.lo'I ....... .
CHICKEN BROTH :r:~'f.." ... ~ ... 19'
.,.... DRESSING :~ ................ 33'.
W11•"•• ,,... t9".o1 tr lto11r-•.,.
MA.ZOLA OIL !:~"z°,ri. ............. s111
' ISCO SllOITlllllll 96' CR ,.OJ.(All .................. ..
.... GRAPE JELL y ':.~'t: .. """' 55'
SHASTA 11\tllAtU 21 ' ~ H OJ.tom l ''"""'''
ARGARINE RlllCllMAN9MITT 43' O"""M U OZ.<IL ... , •• ,
0 'S IMO <•LtUl lOOllHlllt 37' R D l•OT.(lll .............. .
WHIP 0 TOPPING :::;'L.., .... 41 '
.,.... KRln CHEESE :'.:~ ...... 29'
i-i-. '"" ,.....,,. ......... "-~,,_
EGG NOG "'"" · ' . 47' . H-OLUl l'M ,. •• :: ••••••• ;·•
FINEST QUALITY
FRESlf CUT
lUSll GREEN
CHRISTMAS
TRE.ES
AT lOW EVERYDAY
DISCOUNT PRlcts
~::':tt!!t.• ... ~J 18
01Hll SIUCTfD YAlllTllS
flOM WHICH TO CHODSL
RUSSET POTATOES
BACON ~.:--....... 58'
BACON :!~1~~~:1.ui• ....... 691
. OSCAl MAYI• Tllltl lllc..il h cM 1:a. <
Oa.Pllt ............ , , •••.••. •• 79
LUNCH PLAn :.'1;:;'0:.~~ ........ 7S'
.,.,. SARAN WRAP :l'W".,., ..... 23'
CHEER DmRGfllT ~~ ........ 82'
ORE" DETEIG!,~ l:I~ ........ 82'
o-<LYSOL ::::. .................... 39' ()i' .... 4fkti--.
POTATO BUDS 67c · amt CIOCl ll
t•~·OU•CI 101
BOLD DETERGENT:::•: ......... '1"
DASH LOW SUDS: ~8'~'t~~ •.... 52'4
DIUN,U•HflHllfl 49' .,..DISH All HOLOO• """"""
IVORY LIQUID ::W.~'!:' .......... 82'
IVORY SNOW ~~{':O~........ .. 82'
.... voGUE DETERGENT :::·· .. 36'
ASCA E "'""'"'• onu t 11• 68, c D llOL IOI' ................ .
GAIN omRGENl'. :::L'""""' '1"·: •
FABRIC FINISH :'.".~:: .......... 59'
-.
.,.... Friskles CAT FOGO ~.":.. 131. • ....,..c~1c-. .. ,.....,, .....
THOROFED HORSEMEAT';~:: 2S' rY'lllSCUITS'~:O~~·~ ... 35c
O""" KIBBLED S's :::..~: .... 52"
,ril:t l ert Olst11n1N ~""''Oft
foir.f ....... ~ c.. ..... _
'-" .... 1'10 ., "'""" ... lie. • Ml ... -DISCOUNT PRICED
l'RBSlf DEU ITEMS/
.-Our LOW Everyday Price!~
· WILSON BOLOGNA .
Cei11ft ... All Me.t . 67( 1 ... i.rwTlllc• •
111c..i 1 1~ pk,. •
~fY0",1~.... , ..... 67c
~~:~.~~~K.E~.~~.~ '-"• 59c
· MDi ZARELLA CHEESE · 76c
(IH&. ..... IJol•--~ IWL""'
' . !!TI~£H.E~~.~ .... """ 63c
!~~~ •11-,~-:~: ...... 73c
~~.~A AH .... ~:!.':!t ..... 73c
BRAUNSCHWEIGER CHUB
OK.&llUTtt .............. , J.,.,rt1
LUNCH MEATS .,._,,.,.., ... .....,. '"k .... , ..... ""'
COMPARE THE SA YINGSI
,.
''' 12 flftl11 • 1-2 •••rl1 1f 6 M•lf G1ll1•1 l11 .1,;c•111•i•1ti11 •f •r111111,
and 1av1 th1 lll lfft r111c1 h twttft tht •ottlt 'rlc1 "ch 111111 tt.e kttl
prlct ''' 11101111. Choo11 froM this ll1t or 11l1ct Y••r ••• f1v1rlt: ~ ...... ' .. t ...... """-""""'"
,. '. · ~~JRNOFF VODKA :..."'"'.~ ...... :. :_ .. .' ....... ~4" $4; • """GRAMS V 0 WHISKEY ... _ .... ,. •6'" ·~6· "· LUCKY VODKA ~ .......... -....... / ............ $ 11 . .... """'""'""'""""""""" 7 '6 .. . -~'M~~~osi~~~~ ~:'.: .................. :5:: $4" , -.................. _.. 7 $614
""""; LUCKl BOURBON _,.....,.,_,,.,.,... $511 · $4'° SEAGRAMS 7 CROWN':"..;;;;.;; .................. $ •• $4" BEEF(AT(R GIN .. _,;'" ...... _.,_ ........... $ 5 .. ..... "'""""""""""'"""" 6 . $5'5 GOLDfiEAL GIN ::.=:".~~ ........................ $711 · $6~ BAC~ DI RUM :::::-.:..'"'::.'.'.'.'.'.'.' .................... $4" $4"
CftltAS REGAL SCOTCH ::.:..'"'.'.~ .............. ~75 $8"
BRANDY ~".'::..-.'.'.'.'.'.'.'. ............................... '5.. $4•i
•GOLO SEAL RUM =....:.:~.'.'.'.'.': ................ $4" s311 p0RuLTHY TRIMNEs BOURBON ~'.~ ............. $5.. $4 ..
·» E COMRQRT l:i::::"-'5" $5" 10~h·39c
TDD % CHIQUITA HAND I ~~ CANADIAN CLUB --"'::.;:;; ......... _ ... $ n
GOLD SEAL SCOTCH':';.;;;~ .................. $ 6 .. ' '616
I. W. HARPER BOURBOif"-;;;;;;;;;.;; .......... • 4" '4 .. BANANAS CREME DE COCOA -:'!.i .............. ,6.. '5 .. ·
CREME DE MENTHE=:-z.:.:·~;;;;; ............. '4,; . '4" ... _ ....... -..... _ . .,... ~ ''3"
~---(A~iUlilt•lflllUJCKYtToJ.Mrr11•Llf-,...lhJ1<1n~-----..
I .. ', ! I " ,
MONARCH BAY
DR,UGS
Whe elcha ir
Rental Service
EYES RIGHT
: i
!
.br f .oa. LOUIS J. HASILflLD r
Ollffmtltlll I Heva vou been giYtn 1 Sn1ll1n
letf !etely? ArP. you 1ure ti.et it
h11 sl!own up tY e1ylliin91 Whtl
it do11 n't 1how mty coil Vo u
yowt lift! Tltert 1r1 11ver1I f1 il·
t fool 1v1 11•!. Ont of th111 ;, !
• • pr11byopi1. or ''midd le · 191
1y11." Tlii1 i1 • common dilfi.
culty of focu1in9 1h1rply et 't
1rm .. l1ngll!,
YM mey b1 1bl1 lo re1d 1 i • road '"•Pat 16 i n ch •• end -.
I cla arly 1 1 a 1 ,l
~ . w1rnin9 1i9n et t:" >' .280 feat, b 11• t •1· when y o 11 look ~
·at t ti 1 in1tr11 -~ m1°nt penal on ,:
1' da.fiboard, t h • ~
_l..in1trum1nh may '1. ...... X .._1pp11r blurred,
even when yo11 1r1 w111in9
bif1cal1. Yo11 probably 1lr1in to
read the in1lru'"1nti or 11•1• et
them too lon9 ••. and what
eboul lht ro1cl ahead du•inq f
!hos prolon91d p1 riod or 1di111t-~
mint? W I I h contin11011•·•i1ion
l1n1 er trifoc1l1 ef three dif.
f1 r1nl 1l1'"1nh • , , n11r, mid·
die, and fer di.tent , •• 'f'Oll
cen 1dj111 t q11ickly and 1a1ily to
thi1 chan91 in vi1ion, Accord.
inlf I• 1orn1 p1opl1, vo11 can ed.
j111•-f11 111i1r to friloc1h lt!1A
to bifocal1,
Den't p11t off h1vi119 v111r
1y11 ch1c ~1d. It could ba d1n-
91rou1. P1 rhap1 you m1y not
1111d~ corrective 9la1111, but if r!
y111 do, th1r1 i1 9 r1 1t 11tl1f1c· t
tlen ir1 knowi119 YDll h1v1 j111t
the ri9ht correction for yo 11 r
p1rticvl1r 1111d. Wa 1r1 locat.G
In !tie ,.1 .. , Poinh C1nt1r. M1 r11
St. 11 l1a1il 11•.I., Phone 14'1.
'211. ..
-------------------------------..-~-------------..-~--·""T---·------· ------------~ .-----______ _, ---
~ lU DAIL V PllOf ThurSdl>'1 Dtctmbtr 10, 1970
' .
! , .,
'
. ·:
Mom and Pop Mamula Love Store-Despite Long Boors .
RIVER8IDI:, c.lll. (AP) -
Nldt and Sciola Mamula work
from 7 a.m. lo f p.m. sill dlyo
s.o.i.yo. Their ilays off an
Tbanlls1lvtiif, Chrlltmu and
Eater.
' I P I ,..,,i rt1-UOnahlps,
tblt'1 wbat Uill 1tore 11," uys
Soni11 wbo wu once a
CUllomer btneU. Siie met
Nick. wbo now ll ff, art.er be
built Nick'• Marilot In 1116
and married him I f t '1 montbl lat.er: Both are. of
Y1111oalovlan lllCeltri'.
meat eounter If yo\l're 1
rqular! Do they l>ave time to
tell the new mother bow to
prepare the baby fonnull?
alaUlhtorbollle or a food cbaln
11tnt ID Gary, Ind. He came to
c.IUornla and became bis owa
bou.
Thlrt'• rtliUvaly 11 i tie One CUllomer, E • e I 1 n -fl'om the Marnlllu. ~ another pmon lo lballl. Tbty
crime at Nick.11 ~ It's Levin, wu empbaUe1Uy in "I hope the small storts don't know r.ou. ftty koow
been .. 11arbed tour ume1 favor of thlt. She f'tfttl a neter 10," Mn. Uvln aald. you bere. NlC:k and Soala .,e
and firtbOmbed ..,.., with Ill· """'" oat -lo tllo manot ''Tbe blr ltmt, you're JU11 1111 friends and I'm theirl."
"We really enjoy thl1," says
SOnla. "We really love people.
'11111 ii almooto like villllng,
enlertalnlng peoplt.'' They
have two aom in college, talk
vaguely of their hope that one
wW take an interest In the
buslnes1. But for now they
have no intention of doing
anything et1e.
Over the years, t b e
nelChborbood bas c h a h 1 e d
somewhat-fewer residential
homes an.d more apartments
-and there m few lon&-term
rtsliltnll now.
Uo ~·· durlnt a r•clal :;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;,ji;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; dlslutbaftCe !alt ytar. .1
No vac1Uon1. Little soclll
llfe. Few of llte's small
pleasure1, l\lcb 11 sleepinl
late on Sunday, 1lghtseein1 on
1 weekend.
That's been their routine for
23 yeara and they say they
couldn't be happier.
'Their occupation? RUMing a
"Ma and Pa" grocery 1tore.
'l'hey're members of a slowly
declining breed that suc-
ceuluUy battles the big chain
IUpermarkels by o f I e r J n g
n e i ghborbood convenience,
personal 1 e r v I c e and
(rlendship.
Their. atore, a llntl• room,
bu a little ol utr)'\hlnC, ex·
cept hl/ed help. Nick II the
meat cutter and' boa. Sonia
doe• orderth(, b u y In g ,
bookwork and· cllrlcillll. They
live two blocb away.
True, moat of the warea cost
more -perb1p1 I to 10 per-
cent more -than in lbe big
chain food ttorta.
But do the clerks it the big
stares call you by name? Do
they give better cuts at the
1•1 feel kinda nervow when
we shut down," the hoes ex-
plained, pausing as a small
urchin dashed In from the
tree-lined reaidential streets,
dipped a hand into the candy
jars beblhd the counter, paid
Nick and dashed out.
Nick Mamula lea.med th•
meat-<:UUing trade in the
..
lml. DAN • moN NNllY
Flfteen years qo a
supermarket was built about a
mlle from Nick's Market. Now
there are four, but neitber
Nick nor Sonia wonie:s about
them. 1be neighborhood trade
rernaln! fairly constant Why?
"I think n's mainly
friendship,'' Sonia said.
"And they get waited on
quick," said Nick, w h o
estimates that 300 customers
come in his store each week.
Al Wt: count, there were
l,!80 amall rro<try 11ort1 In
!louthern Clilfo!'ll1-and the
number ls slowly dtopplnC, ac-
contlrta to the Southern
C&lllornla Grocer's AuoeJa·
tlon. It's the 1ame nauona1ly.
"I thlnlt It'll bo a loq Ume
before that bappens here U
you n1n a halfw1y decent
store, •1 Nk:k uld. He taid b1I
chlef worry was whether a
frteway would come in.
"It depe114a a lo! tile way
freeways move," be said. "II
nothing changes I can stay
bere another 20 years."
For the Record
1Hssolutl0tts
Ot Marriage
· Jt11$tn, J .. n O. encr Norm111 C.
Lt Mair, Maott•m Smith 11111 Jtlln ..,_,
W•ll-, ll#hln JOHMrl 11111 Dl-LoulM C•P•looto, ArltM Gtll ... Peul ,.,.,.,
G•..,..lllld, G1Prl1 Mwl.,.. '"" Arll'IVI'
INTlllLOCtnOllT DIClllll H!::~dc!lllft, D111!tl •lld ttl'Nre A.
11""'911 DMMIMr 1 1U11tlul, •••MA tlld 0-1. k1rmlnlll
l!rtstoM, ltrnfc• AM 1.W Wltllur AUtn Clmmt"' Clrtl AM t l!CI Cl•r'll t'1Ke Kl!nM, Ctltierlne C. •nd Everttt HuM1, Gertr\Hlll t . 111111 ll:n I ,
OPIN ,.l.MTlY &t4i P.M.
.................. 1141p ...
Ac.ti .................. .......... -
JEAN-PAUL
llLMONDO
"80RSAl.INO"
COLOl-U.liD .,
o,_ N.....,, 1141 P·•·
............. 1141,. ..
MYanaY • 1utnN11
CAlllUI SNODORISS
JAMIS CMN
"RABBIT RUN"
COLOI -IATID I
THE ROARiNG FG~iK
SKI .SHOP
Seuilaera ......_e Co11•t•'•
8-S,_,..,lt. Shep ··········-• FllEI RENTALS ..
1 THIS WEEKEND 9 : s500 :;
I . a
•
Ml11lfll11111 P11rch111 .. ••••••••• • UllD .. Ull'MINT
SOLD ON CONSl•NMINT
FllDAY Nm RAI'
SUSION-HOT WINE
ON THE HOUSE
SALES e RINTAL e REPAIR
o,.. , .. , ... 7...,.
14141 c... Hwy ...... ,.,
Wt'll Nlr• " MY , ftw weN1 llii!Jt
•• lrl•11r_., MewMt "'" wtll tllll .... ....,. _,._ ef fllaf Mlllltrt n11r
""'-.,.. '"'*lk. a1tM ,,. CNl-ltMI.., """'' It }'tll Cll HIH1
dllc• ~ ~rllt )'Mt ,._,
llNflll•m wllll .,,.., rw ,.i. t''' •
ftw YMl't .... ..... Y.., ,_., llltt H _ ...
ltwood • C-, LMllM M. •"" C1¥1d' tt. =~:,::;,~~:C::1rH.; :'."!~~rii},;, M. Jr, '':.'Iii., ll:ld!INI Gordon tl'Mll, ,1t>rrl111
G•mblll, M.9,,, If. l!'ld Ptul I , KolOM, Mlwl'ttfl If. •net-*""' l:i~~~~~~~~ Grtt .... Cllt•le• w .... \/lo!• TllOmil, Vl111tnl1 c, •nd J1ma ••
MorltY, G.or•t It Ind M1ry T. Luce ... CMl!lnt •nd 1t•rt Polllr, Jud1 C. •I'd Ridel' o. Levlnf, ll:on A. ind tt1r.ii An11 Nftll, Jtnlct l!I. 11'111 ltobttl G. Hol'fm-n, VllTIClll '·end Jlttplllnt
4tMHI
357 So. Coaot Hwy. 494-1940 L'I••• ... ch
WE WISH ALL OUR FRIENDS
A VERY HAPPY
HOLIDAY SEASON
..... .. ,.llMll ... fw ...... -rilll
rltw, 111~ w.11, ..... tn. Tl\9 lltM<"-• .. """"... lrt Ml ... """"' 111 f9't, fl'INI n-..11i. 11'9 Mtte!IY ...................... ..
Wrttl!ll Hilt ff IM .......... t ltllOtlgll
..., try .. "' .............. In ....... .....
Wt. tlle Mlle, ... llt • MyJlle IMrt
llllWtl'fwC. ,,..., ,.,. Wllldrl ltt ...
....,.. .. """' _," tccllttllh. A,.,,
...... """"" .. IW'I-. .. I WllW
ltlttttllc •-" ft ......,. lnlurM
Ill acc....._, All "''" ,.~ 1w11111
_., -lnm ttlt pnml'"" ,..
t U ,.,-,
Vtll•t. C•lll<vn R11 tlld LOUii J. 0111, Lindi G, •11111 Wt rMf C.
Ancllet1, Laur• J. •l'ICI Antonio c. Wiison, OP111l•1 Ptul " M1rt1rtt
TOUQIU, Sltl>ivn!t 0 , ll'ICI Mkll•tl J. Norm111
Sl11Phtn.1on. K1r1n Rte •IW A11lhorl'I' S!ette, FtllClTIS PftfftnMrver •nd · LIO Clltlfonl E •
M1rt!~, Vldtll' ~. •11111 Vlf'hn D. COit. Whtllw •IW l~llie't' M.
M1cGrtttr, Joen Ninette 11111 Ktllntlll 81'\Mn, Sus1n L. •1111 ll:odf•!dl s.
Wllll1m SklPWOrlh, Judy I! .... DIUld It.
M.1111e1, Jl:utlt Lindt •nd Frtdtrltk P-t. Ottltrth L'l'lll'I end Rlcht,_ Jolin Tobt11, 7err111ce Aliff! tnd Miry Aflll
leekle, Kr11l11111 l . •nd E1r1 R, Collmtn, Lindi S. 11\d ROI' Olli
llltlrM O.O::tm-J Hamlllon, M1r90 L1n11 •nd Ptut Lt111Khled, Robtrl JC$tpll 1nd T ... !mt ld'or!•1'11
Loul... Jl.ldby, Kt nfltlll J•-..., ''*"" LY11n e r111111, !'le1nor ind Sldntl' Bl1hoff, L11111 c. •hCI W•lttr A. Jr,
lrvlnt, Cltlr Mll'91rll Ind Jtotw Ct-S. Mlcfl•tl A .... H•llCY e .
Frtne!1 Edw1rd1, N•llC'I' O. 1"4 1111"""' J,
·-·· Mlr1tret A. ... "*" H. Wt!Jon, JIC,ll'I! J, Ind T,..,..,.. Hulctllion, Jt1n K•v •1111 w11111m Wllltt, ltobert Lortn •1'(41 k•l'tft SI.It
Edw1•d F1r1ey, Je1ntlle Edn• •nd Jtrvl•
Prlet, C•rol E. tnd Me!Vtll J. EdwU"CI Codromac, Ofl'llM L. 1nd Otuld G, C-. Jt~llM I.. 1"4 l..wrwnc:t T.
sn.ttltY, Lor•n· A. •nd ltPberl D. Slmmondl, ••r•ll '"' Mldlltl ltnUlfl, M•rvlfl G. Ind ltlllll Ann l1rtln, Thomtt E. •IW Cllrl1!1111 Anlll!lgue, Rot1r t . end llabert• •· Potdlfti.kl, CMtl JMn 11'141 llleri•ld
Hl11f, John w, tnd BtrtJ\I s . flr•nlr.
Hff'lld, T.,.tsa A-•nll Mlclltll LIOll e-. AMII Mll'lt Md Mlf'lt.W Mix Ctr ..... NlftC'I' •nd Rlcll•rd F. Estep, N1t1n1 M, •Ml J1Mts G. Zolman, Sandri Eltlne I nd OYIM MlloneY, R .... 11 Elltn •nll Edw1nl
......... Allan Jltkton , .. WI M ii MYI Y" I hw .. WINI, ltoblrf Altltrt •nd ElluMftt Allllr, Uilloml T, t ftd Wlllllm. H,
11,.. Ill ""'' ..,. 1111,rHCe at JOJtJlll,.. 51udl-..., 0Prl1 Ann •1'111 Jtm• fill'
t YltOll fllNLIY INIVltANCI, • 1111"':""':::'~"~""';::"::'::' ';;:'";;;'::'•:u::;;;'';:;::;~"';;';~=:"="'="=·=''"=:w:::""=-~·=· ~ Miii! Ill N-.itillflM t11e~. Wby 1111
uN .,.. ... llM "'' MAl1'111 CMAltll
EVERYTHING IN MUSIC
FOR CHRISTMAS
Pt1no1, Org1n1, P11no lenche1, &.nch
P1d1, Pllf'O "'amps, Gujt1r1, Ampllfl1r1,
Drums, Plano Roll1, R1cordl, Mutlc,
Band Instruments, Ion Io 1, Con901,
Everything In mu1lc 1cc1Qorle1.
BEACH
MUSIC CENTER
17404 BEACH BOULEVARD
(betwHn Warner & Sl1t•r)
Opan Dally 12 noon to 9 p.m.
S1turdtiy -9 1.m. to 5 p.m.
Sund1y -12 """ to 4 p.m.
847-8536
tAHkAMIRIUllD
Oii• ... 1rMI Gift Pack•
GRABER NUT
OIPT PACKI
NUTVll.IE 11.1.S.~'
J7J I. COAST t'.WY.
lfffnr 1• It .. 1 0.'t' Dtwllftwll ......, m.1•
Read the DAILY PILOT
onarch ay
UNITID CALIFORNIA IANK n., b11t t1ll1r1 in t1w11
or Your money bttk.
SAFEWAY SUPERMARKET
W1h1k fo• owr 1up1r , • .,,,.
NIGUEL MOTION PICTURE
THIATRE
OPEN Nl~HTLY 6:4$ P.M,
MONARCH BAY BARllRS
Fetfurlnt M1n'1 k1ir styling ,A cOle,int
IL ICO SHOP OF
DICORATIVI ACCESSOIUIS
Un11tu1I t lfh fr1111 t1ounlll the werllll
NIGUIL SHOP FOR GIRLS
l•ck I• tlhMI f11hl1111
NIGUEL HAIR FASHIONS
C1111pl1t1 li••ufy c•r•
IN LAGUNA NIGUEL
PLINTY OF MD PAlKIN•
MONARCH BAY OllUOS
"Sp1cl1lf1h In tht lost 111 of ,,,,.rce•
LAGVN.. tLLt
MURllLS FASHIONS
FOR M'LAOY
"W• t• t• 111 l•fltffit te ,1,,,, ..
-·DlllLI( (""ft .. .. ..... 1 ....... __
. " ~-~---
MARINE HARDWARE
Y ACHTIN6 ACCESSORIES
e IUCTRONICS
! ~.:.'I NICE:SIMSON llNDIX
e COMPASSis
HAND llAI• & MDUNTIO MODELS
RITCH• llANFOUIT!f Alt •UJDE
A9UA-Mllllt
e 111 .. NJS
SIA •ULL ADO
e lfOlll CATS
PINANCING AYAJLAILI
MUIDIAN SAIOTS
YO.VI WATER SK(S
DO!!~
,..., MMltflM mm .......... .,,, ..
11111 .... lfH ........
I
laza
MICHEL'S CLIANIU
Wh.,. ~1t•llty ceunh
Nf P 'N TUCK IN FANTI
& CHtLDRIN'S WEAR
for lk• little pl•••ur•s In ytur lif•.
FAllllQUI & BOUTIQUE
M11i1 . Millli1. Mini ). M1•11tll
SOUTH LAGUN!! HARDWARI
Mor• th•n l111t '" 1Nl11•ty h•N••r• 1ter•
H. GLADSTOHI SHOP POR MIN
Qul1t •111111111· I• ffllli.._., t...I f11t..
LAGUNA FEOEllAL
SAVINGS & LOAN
l1rg11t, first •'"' tfr1 .. 11t h1 Ortrtt• C.ufttw
APlllTURI CAMIRA AND
HI Pl
F1111ou• 11t11111 ••m•t•t 1114 1t1r1•
LAGUNA TRAVIL SlllVICI
Air • ht • l•il • T 111n
MONARCH BAY PLAZA • • t ' t t I I I • t • t I t • • t t SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY AT CROWN VALLEY PARKWAY
• ' • r ) r
'
. ·~
•
DICK TRACY
I SAID
I NEED
'FIFTY
DOLLARS
GOOP EVENING, t>OM'T PA.RK TME
CA.It ! rtL SE OUT IN
A. FEW MINUTES!
..
I CAN'T HEAR GET
By 'Tom K.' llyan ' 1
SOMETIMES SHE HAS fO &/VE
'.llllNG5 A L.lffl.£ NUPGE!
ly Al Smith
YoU! ··GET CLOSl!ltl CANYA~EAR
MENOW ? CL~ER"Tt1111E CLOSER!
MOUTHPIECE' ,.-,...__
~WELl •• SUlPRIS;:: TME MAlTRE D'
ALLEP ELMO TO TELL MIM THAT
SOMEOM~ w"s A.SK IN() QUESTIONS ASOUT LARR~ ROCKET!
-.-v-
By Harold La DlNlll
r.=.=;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;-~ c-
Ll'L AINER
GORDO
ANIMAL CRACKERS
i. I ~ ~ . ,
·~ ~...,....,..,,,..,,.,.....,,..,,....,~"""""""==-~~~~~~, ~ ~'~~~ c,~~~.~WORv~ .. :.;.;.~y.:;.~; :~::.·I
.~ S' Undt 1don!
f"'l -·-tub! SS Elaborate
Bid 9o lf t ndings
shot: Colloq, of alias ~ ··-· Wl1te1: 59 Pleet of t US no~t!ls t ra!lro ftd
T.' l1h rg1rtl track J Landon Ii) Rtglon g htroine 114 A!I squ ire:
Bird 2 words
Young bb Unpl eas1 nl
'&··~~~~~!~t ~r!~~n;
.W ork units b7 Fl1xlike
lllgh voitt fiber liive: b8 Frm lnlne ·.,'"'l words name 12 Cakt 40 Pincers for
2'.:r' ••••• go!" bq Not difficult in11rrdirnls pluckln lil
21\.111 70 Garmen!s 13 Structu1e htlrs
Zi·'j)tad 71 Run easily ol lw l11s 41--·· de corp ~.Sugar 18 G11m rnt 44 Unrvrn Jn
., ~roducts DOW N feature 4V1l llY"
34. aul!c•I 22 lndl1n 47 ltll1v1ng
!:f:onimand 1 Br !tish 24 F1thtr 49. ll&l)'l
lj.Chtck title: Abbr. JuniPrro ···-lfl~knll!lt
34'.Stglnner 2 Ur1usual ?& Con lln r: 51 The
.3J)1rad ol hair blow : S11ng 2 wo1d s e_op1tl1c:t ,Jl~nusual J Al one Umt 27 Draw fo1\h 5l!frtneh
1.it°l.'•llt bird 4 Trln ktls 28 Breton cir1111!1r
4'iiln1truments: 5 Lintn Items , and Ann 55 Ealing ~110
;1nlorm al 6 Posstsslve 29 Thr end 5b O~ra tlc
•
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
'fu1v~E
f'SiiR...Nc.ti
~fN
, Cf '
!AMEJICA
-ANO ALWAYS "EMEMBEI< THAT WMEN
1'11iTEIC 1NfUl<ED S IGNS UP WITH IJS,
MIE ENTRUST$ J.llS IN'TEl<EiSTS 7l> OU"' ~l<IENOLV, 8ENEVOl.ENT COMPANY. lif:
l>EPENl>S Ufl:JN US, AGAINST TliE
· "ENIOTS P05GISIUTY 'f}jAf 0/SASTEJZ
....._"'-:;::=:;::-"' NoAY STJZIKE
~I Hf!li W"TCll Me use:>. 1-11'1'1.e
fSC/C~OO
1111~ T<Jlm.E Kii>-
9UPJ'l:>5E
Pl5ASTEI< POIS
STlt11(£1 ANO
M1"re1< I NSu.,eo
CALLS US TO ~IWE A CLAIM ?
tu. 'TO~ll OIJ 1111:.
Ql/.tM •• Will HIS
Aoi.<1eATIOIJ ~ AllD
GI.OP! HfH!-
ly John Miies
ly Mell
~ E!rc:tricll word of li ft h19hlight .·~nlt 7 Htsrsr 31 Nitro· 57 Rooms
.U.7t ugby 8 Music al glyct1 in: 58 Ha lf: Prtfll STIVI ROPER By Saunders and Overgard
1~· hwmat lon symbols Comb. form 60 Actor
)lortar CJ Rest ing on lZ Tr io or No vell o ""d ·--thr knrr s quartet &I Roman cfl~!Clnd of 1~ Kind of mint :)) F1rnth river ty1ant J~ o6rdlgt: 2 WOl'dS )6 9tlWtf n! 62 Insect
··;2 wards 11 M1rch 1ndlst Comb. rarm 65 Dr ink '·· )
• II
·~
5 ' 7 • 9
IS
• ' ' '
PEANUTS
~·
o::..~o • • • • • .. 0 ••
•
0 II • e •
• • • • • • • • • •
I BUE'llO.I LET US Fll/D A
PLACE TO WATCH/ .. •THEN,
IF LUTCHE"R ARRIVES W1TH
THEIR TRUCK, WE .. •
0 0 .0 •0 •0
" 0 .• 0 • 0 a
• I• "o • o
• •
• 0 .•
•
0 • • • b • • • --·-· I
ly Charles M. Schull
• • • •
0 •
•
0 • • • • •
• • • • • 0 •
• 0 ••
• • • 0 • • •
\
Thurld•Y. Deumbtr 10, 1970 __ -_{._ ____ D_Al_L_:_P_I L~~T_.,J,_,9,_
1t -10
I. :..'.';· .. ·1 ":'"
JHI ITIIANIK WOl!.O
MR.MUM
ly Al Capp
ly Charles lanottl
c.J\.laT WILL THe
COveR C~RGe se
. .
By Gus Arrlola ;
By Ro9er Bollen .
_ c;;oess :.'M IJOI'
E~i.CTIJI CJo.l'TAllJ
l<All9Al!:OO l -. . --
" l
1
l .. , .
: 1 • •
.!iOTilE "' 1 141~ OfflCf
IS IOOil
AUlbMA1l0
. I
DENNIS THE MENACE
~
" I ·~ .
,
" ..
. '
• . •
. ..
• ..
\
• •
•
f
•
No .
1110
• Duaf twivel mirrors
r .11. ffractive design
GREAT GIFT
FOR MOTHER
MODEL IM-1
•
f1vori~ ,\
4 · f .t •. SCOTtH .Pllil ..
· .:s1rikiOt1v '1ttr1ctiv1 -11111 f~rtver
• Compl1te with 1turdy metal stlnd
. >No.«B2 ,. llG a.so _,
, ·.a ft •oMA : • Gr1~ul, n~~rel looking , • ,..... RV • Lasts 1ndef1n1t1ly II--1191111 • Met1l 1t1nd ind~
• · · No . 6063 llG 9.9S
4 PIECE
MAHANnA LO• II . .
1• • • 24-inch loose log drifri .
•Includes log r11t
FILIGRll
.ROOM
r:DIYIDEIS
•Complete with sturdy
frame •nd flOOf·to-ce i/ing ....
• T•nsion 1dju1t1rs included
• Choice of t1wer1I filig1H Pllterns
•
PRE-FINISHED
AUM OA•
PANIU _
• Full sizi 4' x 8' sheets
• Pre.finished • V-troovtd'
• Ouality features, yet Jow in pri~
•A _touch of luJtury _blends · ·
wrth 1ny decor •
.200 ct ....
•Silver ~
•Tr.ditiOn l ·
.ii ·· ' . MODEL NO.
• ,ML24LS
' •·Exctptiontlly gr1ceful
e A htndsome .tdition
1 to tht home
. llG :.47,9S ·.
SIT . --
'
e Reinforced
· ribbed safety .....
e IM:tudts·hlftdv
paint P1il thetf
IEG 11 .00
Ai.LMITAL
TUl .ITOD
• .• HolOI ,,.. firTnly
-• Enamet.rfinilh
VOIT OFFICIAL
FOOTBALL
e Rugged ell-fubbef Mil
e WMdMrproof -acuffproof
• Officitl 1ize.
•Brown· and white molded
l•ctt ind stripes· --...
DELUXE
FOOTBALL HELMET • Th• simple •••v w1y to trim
off pounds and firm muscles
ll·IOlll
12260
• Huwy duty Mtjust1ble head ·
bend, front 1nd blldt l)Mtdint
• Centred ••r pieces
NATIONAUY
ADVERTl~ED
•Double ldju1t1ble chin strip
•Double blr
No. 2008.9 lice pro1ector
REG. 6.SO
• A"OCIJdo or
Hil'Y9tt Gold ·o......-Cord • Chrome a.._,. ·
• A_utom.tic ••ttr •1ector "
-ii
'
SHOP
EVENING
MON. thru FRI. . .
UNTIL
10 p
'POIOIA SAi lllNAIDllO IOWNfY·NOl.WA
655 384 ORANGE FIRESTONE AT
• Unbre•kable houU ..
• ' , high qu11ity 3-jlw 1 chuck
•Double inN11ted
• Hi(ih "torque, doubl• \ ~~~=:·:::o:.; ... ~.. . . :
' -REG. I
No. 70 14.99
. Black & Oecke,..
HC,.ME SHO.
~NAHll~.
GAIDlll GIOYI
12662
EAST GARVEY NORTH MILLS . SHOW ROAD STUDEBAKER CHAPMAN
3 ILOCl~·EAST ,
100 ·YDS. EAST JUST EAST OF . IETWHN SO. "E" ST. JUST EAST • OF S POINTS , •, INDIAll HILL ILYD . .AllD ARROWHEAD OF 605 FWY. OF HARIOR
. ; .
f
..
'
,
I
. .
' ,
. . ' ~. I " . l
.f .
. \ .
' .
'\ ) I
. '
r r' I . " . .. ' . . ~. . 11 ...... i
·1
I
·,HERE; ~ IS . ~¥OUR
. I .
• ~-
I
I
.. . . . 1, •• ' • ' ~ I
'
•
,
.: .... ,· ... t.._ ~ l..1' ,.~,
l • • • ••• ~
• • • -.,·· L'I,
Place · your gift list and a sharp pencil
on a nearby table ··· then start to
slowly turn the pages of this gift guide.,
,. , . ' ')"'· .. •
. ... . . ' ' I' ' \" I I r·· • ' • . ! • '
.. .. . . .., I•
The answers are all here! You'll
find the right gift for everyone, but
hurry ··· t~r.e are·"only:·115
fl v
days left until Christmas.
.. . . ' " .. '
. ....... .. .
I DAILY Pl~OT I
• THUkSOAY', DECEMHR l 10, lt]O
... j \
' ' 1-••
,, .
• 11 • r· . · ·, ... .. .. ' ... . .
. . . . ...
•
\
•
'
' r~lft Gulde Supplement to The DAil Y PILOT, Thursdoy, Doc. 11, 1970
:~tra~ ,SeJJion
,;. .. Gift wrap pin I?" is no longer just a sheet of red and·
or jilreen paper a nd a piece of ribbon . Often the
wrapping no'"•adays has been as carefully designed
8$ the gift it cardes. Small designs (left) are pro-
Gift Idea Will Let
~ .. t~1ldren Si~ Relax
portioned to small packages ail11 some designs
(ri,ght) have dual functio n -like turning into dee·
orations after -or even before -V>eing wrapped
aroun d a ,5!ift. .J • ..
r"'m~~ Open Suftdays 'ttl Chrf1tm I ----
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
' ' BEGIN 'AT · I'
-~~r~ -.: ~:-Parenl.S are "progressive" if
~ they teach their children to
read at age three,
She hap?fned to draw a rock-
ing chair. "One thing led to another." she explained. until 3424 Via Lido, N~wport IMch ,
•
~"enlightened" if they prod the
, baby's artistic talents as soon ~as he can stick a fist in the
; finger paint.
she had Gram ma 's Lap, a • 811nkAm•ric11rd • M11t•r Cl't•r1•
child-sized \vooden rocker with ~~~9::1•Wsa~s-••g;i~~ .. ~ga:ga:gm:£CKsd
cheerful face and calico dressi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ painted on. I•
~ C~ildrtn are "precocious'' H ~-they can tie their shoes six
o. months before their next-door
~. plsym1:les. and they're '"little t men and women" if they don't
~cry when ii hurts.
: Now somebody want s to
; loosen the lid a little.
"' "I'm averse lo the in·
1t lellectual approaches t 0
S;cblldren's toys," says Joyce
:,Miller, designer of the new
:, "Gramma" doll. ''Children
:·have been overstimulated by
!: TV. parer;its and toys. They
' ~:n ee d security. Everything
;: Gramma does is either com·
;:f&rting or loving." ~ Miu Miller, a free-lance
"·advertising woman, is a -~former interior dect1rator and
'!S"r>rize-winning f u r n i t u r e
•.designer who created Gra m-
:' ma almost by accident, while ~ghe was s ketching furniture.
.: ~ -•' ••
But Gramrna isn't just
another cheerful fa ce. •·she
teaches Ch!ldreit to enj oy
~!~ft'," 18 ~r.!11 Mri~~he sac;:
"The theme is 'Are you having
fun? Jusl do your best.' II
isn'l 'Be careful, r.ou must do
th~s right'."
The 0 r a m m a collection
fe1tur~sf three rag dolls~ All
come with a color booklet abo~t the "funny h a p p y
ihings." Gramrna llkts to do ,
l!-nd one calls out affectionate ' ~xln~· li ke ''Confe here and
aquggle p \\'Ith Granny'."
ln add Ion to the dolls and
Gramma ·s Lap, the Sears
Chris tmai catalog and many
Scars slo~s 'vill offer Gram·
ma's Nap (a cradle ), Gram·
ma 's tea set, Gramma 's
house, Gran1n1a 's sewing kit
and Joe Dog (Gramma·s pet).
Chrlst1nas Is Love
~
GIFT WBAPS
CHRISlM!S CARDS
\
\
MEMORY LANE '
HARIOR CINTIR e COSTA MESA'
"have you di!"COvf"red us yet" \
Richness Marks Evening Wear of Se_ason
tn late day' and evening aginately. Obvloualy crepes ly Is lranalated ln terrna or ~ 1uhe1. Skirtl dtrn&Dd special
cloth• thl.-YWt ~n. thn and matte jerseJ.1 fall into I.be this hig her walatllne •.. wh ich treatment to relitv.e' the long
tj a rltt\ntli1 Duvet)'ll man new . soft mood, along with plact1 oe:w emphasla on lo~er ai iM)' J0ok: aide «aps, but·
a·1urprbe re-entrance: ·panoe \ chltfoia, aat~, 1heer lames. ~eckllnea, on eollar11, on more t 1 11 1 hemline ruffles.
I or cut Velvet are used Im· In dresses, the look primarl-important sleeve.e. On belts, or ons, cu 0 e • •
jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii -iiiiiii-
1 T'S MACilC TIME ' AT WALLICHS MUSIC CITY
South Coast Plaza
GLEN WALLICH . WAVED HIS MAGIC WAND
. · 'I TO BRING YOU-
' '
A STEINWAY 1
GRAND . PIANO
.WITH -THI .
PRICE SAWll)
IN HALF-
'" 1imple ~nglish, a iO Y. cll1count off ne w
price, even tho It loo~• and pley1 li ke new
-and has • naw piano guarantee!
AN OIOAN
DlllGNID' FOR
THE MAN -WHO
IS TOO LAZY TO
TAKI LIS.OHS.
ANYTHING YOU IUY ' · . • I» '
FROM GLEN WALUCH-
HE WILL LET YOU PAY
fOR A LfTTLE BIT AT
A TIME, EVERY j
'
A PIANO
THAT SILLS
FOR $1.98
A POUND
WALLICHS ARE HEADQUARTERS
FOR WURLITZER & HAMMOND
PIANOS AND ORG~NS
•
NOW AND THEN WailicM:MlllieCi18 '
SOUTl1 t o.AST PLAZA CQ5f.l MllA '
PHONE 540-llU
--·---~---·-----------
' • :· •: ·. ' } ...
• r
' .
' .
' ·, •• ~ ' t
' • •
GRAMMA DOLL IS NEW THIS YEAR
She Comes From Sears Christmas Catalog
GOLD'S
FURNITURE & APPLIANCES
SANTA 'S HEADQUARTERS
FOR BEAUTIFUL
GIFTS FOR
THE HOME
" •. 308' BRISTOL STREET • COSTA MESA
r
.CH RIST MAS SPORTS GIFT SALE !
•GOLFERS
TWO GREAT GOLF SPECIALS
~acGltlGOlt 10 S!ltllS Jade Nldtla111 GOLDIN llAl
J WODDt--1 l~ON$
Shtl "Tour fll1ht" Sh1ft1-M1dium fltK, Reg . $132 .... $109
AMF (VOIT) ::1 Chomplonsl'tlp Quallty
"CELEBRITY" GOLF SET
l WOOD ...... llONl--AlUli!INU"4 SH&ns
Sp1cl1I l'urch111 (While l hey L1:11) Reg ular $200 .. S99.SO
•MANY OTHllt GOLf GIFTS ANO GADGITS
• TENNIS PLAYERS
METAL TINNIS RACKETS IY HEAD, WILSON, CORTLAND,
SPALDINI;, OTHEltS, THE 1001( "USE YOUlt HEAD IN
fENHIS " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sl.9$
TINNIS OlESSIS .....•...... , • , , .. , .... fllOM S1S.9S
JR. TENNIS lACKITS '
TENNIS TRAINER BY TRETORN ................... $9 .9S
TENNIS GLOVES . . . .. , ....... , . . . S4 .00
MEN'S & IOY'S TENNIS SHORTS ...... , ........ fro111 SS.9S
MfN'S & BOY'S TENNIS SHlltTS ............... f rom S5.9S
TENNIS BALLS, Wiison Championship
Eltra Duty or Pinn C111tr1 Court (highly visible yellow) Reg.
price $2.2S t•~ . . . $1.89 C1 n
111,.lt-J <•N ... , <•"•"'o'I
• FOR SWIMMERS,
DIVERS AND SURFERS
WET SUITS . . . ...... from $23.50
VOIT CUSTOM DUCK FEET SWIM flNS (Blem)
Regular $11.95 ••.....•...... , •....•.... SALE Sl.9S
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY 9 ,;·~ . HEADQUARTERS for unusual, unique, different,
pr1ctic1I giving. Hundreds of gift items in
every 1re1 of sport.
SNOW
up to 18 inches in local mountains
SKl·LIFTS OPEN DAil Y
• FOR FISHERMEN
..... , •• ,•OD ... ,, IN OUR Hltro•r
RODS REDUCED 30 to SO% FROM OUlt RIGULAR SEI LIN G PRICI
IXAMnfl: R~gular SALE
1-SPECIAL GltOUI' ................. , •.... 19 95 $ •.•S
1-SPICIAl GROUP ....• , ................. 23.95 14.95
1-Sl'((IAL GROUP .................. 24.20 11.•S
SMAICESPIAlE DEEP SIA SPINNING lllLS . . SO 00 34.00
• ,FOR BACKPACKERS
ALL BACKPACKING FOOD 40•/o OFF
ltlCHMOOlt -TRAIL CHl' * Give 1 Goose Down Sle1plng Big for Christmas
•CAMPERS
ZEICO TltAV(lllt FLAMELESS CATAtYT IC PROPANI
HEATER MODEL #4000 Only $19.9S s
AND SHOOTER
FREEi BUSHNELL 6 POWIR SCOPE CHll II.,.
w1!h purckese of N(W Browning S.ml.Auto. Hi Pow1r -7mm
Magnum Rifle we will mount & bore sight FREI. t6•.•S
V1lu1 TOTAL COl1' ............. Only $212.•S Plus Ta!f
• GAMES GALORE
FUN THINGS
.. -. ..,,'., 0
.· ·~· ' . .,
}. . .
~ .. ·". r
SKI BOOTS !FIVE BUCKUl
SPECIAL GROUP, Si\VI to 7S "lo "
IXAMPlf: SASKA
Reg. $65.00 .................... " .. SALi $24.95
Reg. $65.00 ........................ SAU '$If.IS
' SKI PANTS fOVll AND IN TMf IOOT)
EtA·t--GA6uP, SAVE to 40 •1.
LL Reg . $45.00 ................ SAU $23.95
SANTA ANA STORf ONLY
11ucnD oaou• lif: PRIC:I A"IR SKI IOOTS 2
llLICTID GROU, SKI SWIARAI
EXAMPLf, Reg. $30.00 ......... " Ult $14.95
Turtl1 T·Shlrts, Reg. $5.95 ..•... , .. SALE .. C.50
-LAYAWAY-
Gin CERTIFICATES
It r r
.,.~ll!!l!!!ll .. lll!~llO ... illllllt" ............................................... ,,. .......... ~.""Jl~i~iiWA~!W ....... 4~W•SW ... 4 ... « ... 4 ... i~O ... WO'"'SC""'~H~ ..... ~ ... ~-~qAte""~~-·· ... ~,,,._ •. ~ .... ~-~·~-.,,~ ..... ~-----~~~~--~~~~~--~~~~~~~-·~~~~~~ l ---·-----. -·------·--· •• --~--'
l
San ta\ Wtll Deliver
/Most B~ycles Ever
Santa Claus 1 w11s alw~· a fashion leader. \wasn 't he e
first. in h11 bloc~ to grow
beard l~g and full? He ha ,
reindeer to pul11 his sieigh
while others were struggling
with the combustion engine.
And those red \1elvet trousers!
Rumor has it from the folks
up norih that St. i'\ ick mlg ht
be hauling his Christmas
goodies th is year in a bic~·cle
basket, what with alt this talk
about pollulion and ecology
. . . Albeit trut that reindeer
are quiel and generate some
body heat in the polar
climates. what Is quieter and
less polluting than a bike.
Well, if Santa does leave
Donner and Blitze n in the
haylort lhis year. the fact siill
remains that he'll be deliver·
ing more bicycle~ to starry·
eyed kids this year than ever
before : .. probably n million
or so. accord ing tn the Bilycle
Institute of Arnenca that
keeps tab on kids and bikes
and the "in '' group
. . ' see Dad and M,em light up llkt
th' Christma~ l(te, lhink
about a bike for !Mm. ll'!i one
\vay of saying 1her've slayed
roung. Think about lhal.
The Institute says to pros·
pe\iive Christmas bu ye rs ~1·
• r ·.-.·' that there is 11olhlng less safe
abouf'. one bike st~·le over
another., The important thing
to reme11ber \lo'hen shopping
for a bicy'c.le is to ~'t one that
lits. Don't etpect a youngster·
to "grow into" his blke.
It that Chris\mas bike is to
be a surprise, ask dealers to
a~rce to have you bring the
bike back arter Christ mas for
the proper fitting and persooal
adJu sl inent necessary f () r
sufcty <ind comfort. After tha~ , .
a scn1i·annua! inspection ana
adjustment can help keep the1
bil·ycle in tip-top cond ition .
An d if you ·ve nol bf>en on a
bicycle yourseH for 2 0
Christmases, _check out the
new ease of pedallini;t on the
ne1v geared bikes. You can Tale nt Test ..
Thur1dey. Dec . 11 , 1970, Gift Guide Suppltmtnt to Tht DAILY PIL0!-3
Dishwa sher s
Top Gift s
For Holiday
Eleclr lc dish"•ashers are
among the mosl popular of
Christmas gift items. A
perfect gi ft from you to you,
lo enjoy before the holidays as
weU as throughout the year.
More of these work·saving,
wife-saving appliances are
purchased Jn November and
December than al any other
time of year.
Most models feature a
capacily that lets you load
more tab leware and accepts
even out-sized platters, bowls .
cookie sheets and pol.<; and
pans. This is especial ly helpful
with the excess of dir!y dishes
that heavy ho 11 d a y en·
tertaining entails.
Best of all. you can help
keep your hands youthful and
attraclive . . , as berits a
Yuletide hostess.
RAIN • • • NEVER
SHOPPING IS FUN
South Coast ?laza One nice thing abnut bike<:,
too. They coine in a ll'irle
range of prices and co:ors and
sizes and styles. It must ha\'C
been mindblow ing In f\la
Claus. handl ing !ht' varict~' of
requests for hikes !hi s ~car.
Whal in invcntnrv! So1ne bike.:;
have little whcCls. :-nn1e arc
close to 1he ~round : th 0re <1re
light11·eight bi kes th<it c<irry
kids over thP ro<1ds 11•ith little
effort, or on 100-mi!e btke
hikes. There are sophisticated,
multi-ge<1red bikes fnr 1ho:-e
membe rs of the old hi gh
school gan~. There's e\'E'n a
pink bike for Grandn1a. \\'Jth a
\\'icker basket ent11•incd 11•ith
roses.
sta~e oul new territory when Jf you v.1ant \f) in spire crea11v1ty. Chris trnas tree merch;int s sui;:gesl, try ,1!1'\'-
you .re free on t11•0 wheels. 1nj! the teenager at your house a tabletop-sized tree of his /or her ) 01vn and
)'nu][ meet so~e g~oovy ~?'"I then watch that young person "dn his O\\'O thing" to triin it. for the holidays. lristol 11t Sa11 Diego frw., .. C011a Mfta .
pie . !ou. !'Spec1ally 1f you JOtn ·The youn,I! decorator cho se checks fnr the pattern of her do-it-yourself orna-_b=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;= a bike club in an urban area. ments and used cutnuts of her fa1·nrite rersonalities. too.
J'iCll' gadgets for bi~ycles lplllflJl9.IMJ:::.1iMMM~;:::~~~~~~~;::sJ.~~~-i:::..'J:a~;::sJ.~~~-M-;.ltliQ~------i=lil-MJ:lfliJC:f.li~J:a:l:Sil:K'SiMJZlJ:f.l~~~MJ1::121J:5.3i~~-Jllf.\---1 h11ve helped make cycling a 1 great sport for kids of alt j a~eti. lma glne cycling down OU R CONVE NIE NT 'f
quiet roads w1lh a stereo radio fi' .M i< · Ji ~ i a CHRISTMAS SHOPP ING HOURS: e "''"'ed lo the llandlebacs.1 a e II n OP,'P!f /f I ay MON. -SAT. 10 'Iii 9, SUN. 12 'Iii 5 ~
'ho"ld not be wasted on the I v.~ ,.. I young. ' (. ,.
When the ribbnns are ofrll "j / ~ flt. fi I"' . :~:,:~~e ;:;::t,~Sb. ~nr~"~i I w' '· 'n 11 / s r 0111. • • ' ... ' · 1
Christmas tree this yE>.ar. And • , ~
By the 11 ay. if you want to
overjoyed kid,i; ·around the i :J' ' ~'-" '\.
they \lo'On't all be under 20. ,..,•)fl.-fl~ I ----w -:
'1
A GUt Package rule!
With Gao! Things To Ea~!
Texas Spread ...
1'/• lb. BEEF STICK, Edllll !v, Mild Mlclpt
Lonshorn, Beile Fleur Cb1111, Smo kr
[Smoked Cheese BarJ1 Goud.a plu tmpll'tet
candies.
Cheese & Crackers $5.19
Two Coudas, Be\111 Fleur Cheese, Butter
X1e11 Chees,, and a box of bite-size Old-
:F11hioned Crackez1. A cheese lover'a de~
llahL
Pleasure Pak $8,98
1Yl •· ll!EP STICK. Gouda, Hor1er1dJ1h
I•.., Mild Midget Lonahom. Smoky (Smoked
Cb•••• Bu ), two Ch1111 Spreads, Bell• Fleur --i..,oN4-
fliC~dt1 t•!!S·
lodl Coast 1laza
l lllTOI. AT SAi llffO flllWAY, ctSfA 111UA
PMO•I J.40.6tt1
Tiki with 10•-or W1'11 mall
I !..(irk
I ..;pjew&ii, w I
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w i
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w
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11
ll
1i
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w
11
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BONUS OFFER
FREE.
18.8 S~nless Steel Salad Set
Mtb purchase ol
GENUINE
OIAMONU! 588.00
m1•ou•s<1 d•••~ond t1<1<:1~1 1e!
CJow ••th 1 tnousat>C l•i;ht~.
14-korol white or yellow gold.
1llw1lro1tons enlo •ged,
Toke o yeor to pay!
$900
lHE SET
•
'1
I
A. ••II -"'"<1"'11 !oe<>·
..... -!••, JiutOMOl•(nl·
ly ~I, !ho rioy '>"'1
11>. "10•1 I•~ ,.,1,,j
CHARGE IT!
8-1 41( yellow Of while
wlod gold broteler
wo"h • 523000
TAkE A FUll YEA.If TO PA.Y
NO PA.'tMENTS 'Tit JAN. '71.
t.+.Y.+.WA'Y NOW FOR CHR ISTMA':J.
Heart to Heart
Birthstones
H,.O<>(j Hoof\, lo•rh\l~l.
S.d•·by-..01 .... t..,.
1 • ( y.ito ... .., ,.h•!• !Jold
VR1 ·519.95 ,' ' . ~t·
Acc utron·
by Bulova
• Jo,
I • t
. JUSJ..SAY
I CHA.GE IT!
t YQUI ACCOUNT
OPBlllD IN
.TISI
HULO\'.-\ .
.. tG•hl •h•t
"'"-"1 o• '
B. c.···• ,. b'"·
1-•tcd "'~!•••· ~r r••rl ~ .• 1. :i 1• .. t l! ,
1•~'"0'~1 SIO.
c•1mD11•• nr
"''' blUt dot' LI ,.....,,1, 54'
lSTA.IL1 SHED 4J YE,t.11.S
· "The Stoces Th•f Confidence Built"
•
HUNTINGTON
CE,NTER
Beach & Edinger
Huntington Beath
892-5501
HARBOR
SHOPPING CENTER
2300 Harbor Blvd,
Costa Me sa
545-9485
---~-----------------~----b:Wlll!lll:lllt'tlll:t,at~Ml:mt:Yll'.91C~Wl'YlllB'IC9"bWlC*••••bDCi..W••l*W1'11'._,a••bU~~~--~YllllM••b*"•W~~"*r«Ml•
'
(
. .... .. ... .. ........ . --·~· ... . ...
1,:.w _. .... , ,. . . ...
..... Ill GuW. lul'!'lomoot to Tl.o DAllY PILOT, Tlluru.,, Doc. 11 , 1'71
I
I f t
I
i
Here's Good Way to A void
Season 'Noise Pollution'
Everyone knows that on the
nt,ht befor1 Chriltmtf the
house is suppoetd to be IO
quiet that no evm a moUM
ahould be 1lirrlni. ·
But, Ciement ' CJ -.r k e
Moore's popular Poem donn't
u y a tbing lli~l ,tJ)e night
after. Th i·s . po11t .. yulet ide's
evenings ale likely to be fi lled
with the :waH of blue AOUI and
the but or, !Up rock since
lltrtp ._µipment and record!'!
top tem lists or .. prt.ferred
slfll. '> .
Blarillc mu1lc4 ·a!I through
the hoult1 bowtYer, iln't neir·
ly .. pi......,. .. """"" .... the~ offlprly. '!'he ptrenl
who wan"t1 '° •Ive. tbe nolM
Yule ·Milsic Presents
Can Endure Lifetime
ij,ow many children's gifl!'I 1pprte1tlon and participation.
are: capable of Jastin1 11 The Yamaha method, for
lifetime? One of the v,ery few eximpJe, function• Of1 the which come to mind 111 1 &ift th1t provides enrichment ind scientific knowled1e that the
.adWevemeot lhrouih learni.n1. human ear 1oes throu1h rapid
An .enr.QJlmtnt ln 1 cl1as or .and sensiUve development, 5Cfteol, ther1 fore, ii 1 1t1rting 1t 1round 11e four.
wor..f.hwhile Chrl1tm1s g I f t The medically researched cur-
consideration. riculum takes advantage of
dhi!dren· as youna 11 four this natural phenomenon . Ear
years old have the abiUty to tr1lnln1 at that age can, in
aiWorb certain aubjecu within fact, make the diHerenCe of
1;1ckJramnrork of· an Informal being tone deaf or not in later
education program . Music is years. Pre-schooler1 1 re
o~ of them, advises Jay taught at the Yama.b1 schools,
Diet.zer, director or ed4catloo now located from cout to
or·tlie Yamaha Music School. coasl, how to use ear• 11 well
Ttit· reason , based on the 11 hand111, fttt, voice and mind
r°'siarch of authorities in the in 1 g a m e • o r i en t e d en-
fietas of ·educatlon , psychology vlronment. The rudiment.I of
1n~, medicine as well as music are firmly implanted
mtFcology, is that music is durinf the two-year primary
deep wj thin all children. courae, to the degree that
Training in the fundamentals most of the a Ix ~ y t 1 r -ol d
brings it out and helps gradu1tea 10 on to Instrument
establish a )>altern of music tralnln1.
----Jlll'Wo------.--------~
•
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11111. c .. t """"'
., M•Artllw lho4.
c.r ...... 111.,
67J.Jtt•
AN E'XCLUSIVE
Ou r Jodet Dre" (L) ond Coot Dross (RI ore
o f 100 % TREV IRA end carried exclus ively by
O 'Brien's in th e He rb or Ar ee. Both are he nd
wesheble in warm wat er en d drip dry requir ..
ing little or no iron in g. If you prefer, TREVIRA
may be dry cleaned.
The Jacket Dre 5s is eveilebll!I in Pink or Green,
wh ile the Coat Dress com es in Grel!ln or Blue.
,.
·I i I I
! ~L--::.. ! ~-I ~-~~~ J -'S[;i --. I
I
. .
MIRROR CON§OLE To
hold fG\lr 1love1 ,.,hilt fou
<heck th•r nt,., Chri1tmu hon·
ntc. Chtrr1 tolid1 and W•lnut
venter• in Medici (ini1h. 12 l/Z
in. 1: 9 l/l in. Ht. 45 l /4 in.
'
...... . ·~ -·--····
•
HU·N·TER'S ,ooKS
THI ·WUT~ PINDT ~UTOlU
fOI 110 YIA~INCI 1111 •
NOW IN r-rA ANA
FASHION SQUARE I ,
From ...
WINE RACK In ,..ood
&nd br&ss. Why not 1bow o((
you r 1ood wint.\.J Hardwood ' ~ol i ds &nd C herry \·••ttt• in
Barony fin i1h. )0 t/4 in. x 11
1/8 in . Ht. 14 1/4 in.
The Perfect GIFT
for the HOME ...
GA~fE Cb CKTAIL A
n ip rop gem for tOttrt1inin1.
H•rdwood ~ol i d1 and Walnut
veoerr1 in Medici (ini1h. T op
29 ti• in x 19 l/• in. Ht. 20 io •.
FOLDAWAY D!Slt COt
TV tahlr •.. or eveo Sollu.ir1t!J
Cherry aolidt aod Walnut'
"Ytt1etr1 io Mtdicl fin i1b. Top
26 in. x 20 in. Hr.. 30 1/4 i11.
·~11N1 .o~K Small qle
and useful. Hardwood 1olid1
and Ch erry ~1tnee:rs in A!lt.
Cherry fini1h, Top ZO S/8 i1. •
16 in. Ht. 35 ir.
'
'l
FROM O'BRIEN'S •• I 1514 No. Main St. CuJtomer Par/ting Lot
on ta111or Street GIFTS OF FASHION
II TO GIVE WITH PRIDE .I
y,,. c...,. '""" w.,._ S
PAlKIN• IN ..... I I
------------~------~
• •
SANTAANA
THE STORE OF FAMOUS NAMES
I
PLAYTIME CAN BE EDUCATI ONAL
B•by Test's Kertner's Bat And FHI Toy
'Playten tials ) Make ·
Great Gift for \Baby
Now children's education
begins literally in ttie cradle,
as soon as baby is three weeks
old. Or. Burton C. White ,
direc\.or of Harvard's Pre-
School0 Project, after ten years
of research wilh .infanta in
home envi ronments. h a s
created and tesled P\ayten-
lials. lhe first progressiv"e
series of toys designed to ~elp
baby discove r himself weeks
earlier, and develop the habil
or being alert. inquisitive and
confident.
Aid Given
weeks to six months, or older,
enjoy looking at themselves in
the unbreakable Baby Image
Mirror, which he also positions
on lhe Dura Stand.
When baby ls three and one-
half months old. Dr. While
suggests introducing h.im to a
second series of Playtentials.
This includes a color Play
Windmill which teaches cause-
and-effect action when he pulls
:he handle. There's a Hand i-
Pal with six little hands for
Many .~a·d
In Y~e
I I
Season
'
Thurld•y, Dtc. 11 , 1970, Gift Gulde Supple..,.nt to The DAILY l'ILOT..,.S
\
_,
{
;
..
·'
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••
)
save on famous name vacuums ·
and clean up for the holidays .
'·' . '
a. Regina electribroom. Quick pickups on carp$;
and bare floors. Slim, feather-light with rug p11i::
dial and disposal cup that eliminates need for ell-·
tra paper dust bags. Great for hard to get spoisi' ·
reg.34.99 2 9 • 99 :
b. Eureka Dial-A-Nap upright Four positions lo•·
dial your . carpets clean. All types from patio tO~
shag. Beats, shakes, sweeps, combs and sue•''
tion cleans. No dust feedback, sanitized dust bags.;,;
:2g.59.99 54 . 99:3
c. Hoover Handi-Vac. Slim, lightweight. For.-
qu ick pickups on rugs, bare floors and above··-,,
·the floor. High speed motor with powerful sue-l
tion. Conven ient throw-away bags. Easy to sto. ··• ~
19.99 ~ . . reg. 22.99 '· ~
d •. Hoover canister. Slimline styling, lightweigh ~
powerful. Cbmplete attachments r;nake it the id j·
vacuum for above the floor cleaning. Clean air filter. • ~
reg..29.99 24 . 99 ~ ,
< • ·e. Hoover upright. Does big cleaning jobs. Adjusts t
to clean low and shag rugs, bare floors. Powerful, ~ 2~peed motor, furniture guard. Throw-away bag. ~ l 49.99 r
reg. 54.99 ~ •
vacuums 73 -all 18 ~ order by mail °'phoneMA6-3S3S· ~ ~ ..
..
' .. I vacu . um " I
• -. ' ' I •
111
d
rn•y eo 1outh co11f pla11, ti n cl i190 lwy at bri1fol, coif• m1s1 , 546-9321
1hop moncl.•y thru 11turd1y 10 •m to 9:30 pm, 1und1y noon 'tit S pm
\
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MAVCq
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. l ~ ~, .... , l '-, 't •. .
.·
'i:o'111 Oulft s..,,1.mont .. T!'" DAILY PILOT, Thursday, Doc. It, 1'70
.rYule Gifts of Beauty IND of YIAR SALi I •
Some gift 1uggeslions:
• ~ -For 1 nn neighbor.
·'&sbwashing, diapers a n d
~tergenl! may mean that
hands need help for the
holidays. Pretty.up a pair of
household gloves with a big
red rose and glittering braid
<;H::a:ta. ~
. ·. "IT'S NOT TOO LATE M
FOil CHlllTMAI" at . R
· "BLANKINSHIP
and stuff each glove "1111 hand ~~~~'lof . 50% ff cream. There art NYeral -... -'" 0
creamy hand-savers· r r o m pll•flllp 0
which to choose -extra dry
skin cream. medicated cream Warehouse open to f?Ublic. Buy at dealer price1.
and anti-detergent cream. Custom frames available. Buy early for Christ.
-For a new moUfer. Say a \,mas. Lay-Away on Master Charge and Bank.Amer·
special Christmas hello with Icard .
two new medicated producta "An Otl P&intin9 11 A l11Hn9 &ift" for baby that will plea se
molher, too. Medicate;d baby ' Hows -t •·""'to 6 p.m .. M• ... "'Set.
oil and baby lotion both pro-" S..ttMy, 11 &M. to I P·"'·
tect baby's skin from ir-u •L 01 LS LTD .itatlon. h<lp heal diaper rash Flowery PhaJ e .GRIGlnA 1 •
fast. Wrap them as snowmen " l61f L\ ...... s-to AM PltMt IJl-4601
fT FLOORS Jn white tissue paper. add Gift Wrap and gifts by, gift wrap companies are gling lhrou£h a "flower. era.:• 1
1 DEALER SHOWROOM
shiny paper top hata, rlbbon-~a~s~e~v~id~e~n~ced~rby~th~e~m;oorn~fl~o;w1•r~wJ'j'a~t~hd(~le~lt~l~a~n~d~P~e~n~P~aJ~CWn~.m~·~r~•~•t~(f~ig~h~tJ~~~~~·:::::'~::::::~~~:'.'.:::~~~:'.'.:~ ''mufflers," ink-drawn faces with pieces all decorated in a. floral pr int. Norcross makes botli items. and tiny sprays of greenery.
Bolh oil and lotion come in
two convenient sizes.
' • • • . • • ' ' t • • • • • • • .
' :;..,.. r ' l i
-For a fel10w-worker.
Choose a cheery coffee mug or
pretty pencil holder and fill it
with personal sizes of handy
beauty products. For instance,
an extra dry skin cream in jar
ar tube is helpful to have at
the affice and is pin-money
priced. Another welcome tuck·
Jn is a crystal cream cuticle
remover f o r professional
manicures and pedicures.
See · whal we mean1
lmaglnatian and good latte
can make your "little alfts"
appreciated for many months
to co me!
Icicle Party
TN IANCllton
821HW
"IMOTI CONTftOL
UICIALI
Con!p1ct blo•crHn
portable color TV •
Ceb!Mit 111 or1intd
Knht11 lr W1111u1
color 1cc1n114 w11h
l itvtr celor tri111 .
s• • 3• Twlrt.Gort1
lpe1k1r .
l ·New 1971 Zenith handcrafed quality
> :: :-16" Color ~ortable with Zenith's
.... exclusive
SPACE COMMAND~ LOW LOW PRICE.I
Check Our
::_Zenith handcrafted quality for unrivaled dependability •.;
.. • • Z1nlth AFC-A11klmellc Flnt ·IU'llhtg CO<!· 'Ztllltfl HMdcr11ftM ........ C"n ... -
: : lrOI -etec1•on•c1lly l•n1 runes color TV cornbl-lemoua z.,,fttl h•ndcr1"11f de--
• • 11'ls!1nt1r -e,..n Oflrfecll yOUf UHF f•ne· oondtbi111y witn I JC11i110 to!td·slltl Id· ~ : 1un1"Q 1ulotn111c111r. val'!ees. ' . • Slldl COf'llmfe-ere ..,., .. tor htM. celot
ieve! ll'ld YOIU..,., "'° 11'1 Ol.oed 111011 Of\
lhe set k>r gre111r eonvtl'l'9!'IOI.
SPACE COM MAND" 100 REMOTE CONTfl01. , '
Just oresa the bu!ton on the small control unit )'O(I r,otd, In your
Pi and to change 'VHF enannela and 1urn Mt on Ot off. ON but·
1011 doe111 al!! No need to tum TV off m1nu1ft)' at •H ! BUY NOW! LIMITED QUANTITIES!
• ' ' THE NAME YOU CAN TRUST IN SALIS l SlltVICE
PYLE TV • 1501 W..r lalboa llvd., Newport leach -675·1411 '
Open Wffkd&ys l.f -S.turd•y 8 to 6
HOUDAY OPEN HOUSE! WEDNESDAY, DEC. 16th.
FROM 6 P.M. DOOR PRIZES -REFRESHMENTS
\ I
I
~. I • •
Sl'f()E MARKET'S
EXTRA SPECIAL
TO you : .. NOW
'TILL CHRISTMAS
'
A.
I
B.
' A. Gold , sa ...... Bl1clc I '
Pea u. Also Blaclc, Purple 1. Gold, Silver or Blick 1 C. Go ld, Silver or Bli ck
and Blue Crinkle. Ptau. Pt1u.
OFF HOUSi ·SLIPPERS
WHETHER ADVERTISED
: 8 91 8 91 I 6'' · .,,.,._,, • ..,,<•••••'4•4444 EE 44442 aawc•cwc•••«•44& ••••
" OR NOT. <OUR WAY WOMEN'S CLASSIC CHOW
' OF SA YLNG THANKS
FOR· YOUR PATRONAGE
ALL YEAR.>
:
:
Soft fu11y-wu1zy 1ttp·in with wt rrn cotton fleec• lining.
Padded so le and heel, Lt. Blut, Pinlc, Grttn, Gold and
Multi Chtclc, Size• 5 to 1 O.
2'6
! J.W'llitW!MIWW1tiiiaW_lliji.llll• 111011·1t1'i!t.1Jlt:'Mll!l'littlit lliltllilitllle tlitl!lii'lliAil ~ a . . .
. WOMEN'S • WOMEN'S BRAIDED-STRAP .
·'COLLAR CHOW '
Sho'tt OroPp•d t crylic upplr with long hair
· tipptd· dyed .ctll1r. Soft padded 1olt .ind ~•ti. ~t. Blue, Pink, Fern Gr1 tn. .
SIZIS. S TO 10
' ccc4 Jua'1aacc ! Jt
MISSES' 'AND WOMEN'S
FUR COLLAR MOCCASIN -
Smooth •inyl uppers with warm cotton fleect
lin ing . Soft padded sole and htel. Misses'
•iz•• 6 io ] in Lt. Siu& or Pinlc, Womtn 's
1i111 5 to 10 in Pin le only .
1'6
PUMP
B11 utHul op1n worlc drt11 1hee for th e holi· ~
d1ys. Nott the ntw diff1r1tnt htel. Choose
Gold or Silver,
SIZ.ES
5 TO 10 513
1taJt1111•1t1t11••······----······· .. ···-······
'
MISSES' TWO·STRAP
SHOES
A swettie for "HER." Holid1y
w:1rdrob1. Wear now end 111
ye1r. !li ck or Brown. Sizes
C•'1'it,ltl!liltl!lil11lllttitll'JitWW1tiiia\iltt'ittbW'li·1t · 2'6
INFANTS' FUR0 TRIM • YOUTHS FUil COLLAR
BOOTIE i BOOTIE 1
Vinyl upper with front zipper &nd i Wipe clean vinyl with warm cotton
crap• sole. White b11e ....,ith l ight S fleece lining. l on9 we•rin 9 cr•p•
!lu1 or Rid fur collar. Si111 5 to I . j sole and w1d9e heel. Si111 I to
196 1{; ···· r ··-··· . 296
FREE
CANDY
FOR. THE
KIDDIES
• :
i
MEN'S EASY-ON
SCUFF
'
Instant comfort sli p-on. Soft 2'6
"inyl upper, padded 1olt an.I
h1tl. Size• 7 to 11.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
10051 ADAMS 11 BROOKHUST
962-9171
(Next to S1v.On Drutl
HOLIDAY
HAND BAGS
fl OM
2• \I
HUNTINGTON BEACH
51'8 EDINGER 11 SPRINGDALE
14'7.9125
I L;
_,.
' '
(
•
1 Hot Drinks the Thing
Ch ill y Gttests Need to Be Warmed
Whatever the statistics say
sometimes it seems as U bad
weather just waits for the
winter holiday seasons. to do
Its worst. Unless you live in
the tropical climes, just think
of Christmas or New Year's
Day and se:e if you don't get a
picture or guests entering your
holiday-spruced house on a
waft of cold, wet air, fingers.
toes and noses chlled and
coats sodden.
Hot chocolate C()ming right
up kir the kids. But what
about the adult.! who need
something more spirited to
revive their energy and wann
thtVJ. up? A cold potion on the
rocks? Sure, that'll bring back
some of the holiday cheer, but
a wanner, more special and
festive drink is the toddy.
Colonia l Americans, rlfilng
soon miles on h9rs~clt or
by sled, warmed Up the spirits
which took the frost from their
bones by immening a hot
poker in their mllj!.
Most hot drink recipes are
by the glass, but from the
makers of Wild Turkey Ken-
tucky Bourbon, which many
consider the 'Cadillac ' ot
Thursday, Dae, 11, 1970, Giii Gu lde Supplom1nt to Tho DAILY PILC17-!
How to TiQy Up Son's Bedroom
Want yoW' aon lo be a neat. vertln1 a beatnlk pad into a
t1lk? Give blm a room he can neatnlk ~= ·
relate to. If a young man's e Give im a volcf In
room ls "square", lacks space; the room decoration-he14 the
• for recilrd collections, sports one who has to "live'' .!wltb
1 equipment, and h ob by furnishings and color sc~es.
paraphernalia, or just does~'t e Use attractive materials
turn h1m on -chances that can take the h.0, use
he'll apend as UtUe time they 're bound to • e t ,
oosslble there and have no in-PrefinJshed hardboard wall
ierest i.11 keeping it. clean. panels, for example, come Jn a
But lithe roont's attractive, variety of hand some
c om f o r t a b I e and con-woodgralns, Interesting tex-
temporaty, be may actually lures, and colors with youth
want to keep it looking that appeal. They also resist dents,
way. mars and scuffs and can be
Here are some hints on con-cl eaned with a damp cloth.
e Provide plenty of storage
space. Youngsters tend to be
·"collectors", so stnrage is
essential for neatness. A good
idea ls to install a section or
two or perforated hardboard
paneling, which accepts hooks
from which all sorts of items
can be hung and brackets on
which to mount shelves, The
panels also make excellent
display walls for spec.ial
treasures a youngstet--Will
want to "shuw uff." · ··
The DAILY PILOT-..
Tops in Local Sporti ·:
SUNDAY SHOPPING
IS FUN .
South Coast ?lua
lrl1tol at Ian Diego ,rwy., COit• ~ ...
;
..
.4 BIG DAYS
bourbons, comes some classic PITCHERS FULL OF CHRISTMAS CHEER
American hot drinks by the I ja;iiliil'ii• iiTiiodiiidiiyiTiiiiimiieiiAiiiig•jjiiniiiiiiiMiiiii•iidiio iwjjjljithijiBjouijirboniiiiiiii~ J pitctier -because If one
person needs some spirited
thawing out probably several
do. Use a pitcher instead of a
punch bowl, the Wild Turkey
people advise, because the
drink it.sys wanner that way.
And it makes sense to use the
best of everything tor )'QUt
'higher priced spreid' b«auie
the drink tastes bettor !ha\
way.
HOT BRICK TODDY
Into a pitcher put:
6 tablespoons _butter e tablespoons powdered
1u.gar
3 teaspoons cinnamon (or
more to taste)
t cup hot Water
Di~ve thoroughly, -add:
8 jiggers (It oi.) IOI prool
Kentucky boui'bOn
Fill with bolling water and
stir. Makes I drinks.
SIMPLE BOURBON TODDY
Into a pitcher put :
6 tablespoons p o w d e r e d
sugar
1 cup boiling water
Dissolve, then add:
2 cups 101 proof Kentucky
bourbon
6 slices or lemon
2 teaspoons grated nutmeg
Fill with boiling water, stir.
Makes 8 .drinks.
k
G!Ve !he llYlllr zig-zag
porillble S8'i~ machine by
Sinl}9r with ClllG. Makel button-
holes, em~ •139.95.
CUSTOM
fireplace ·screens ·
17 Dey Dollvwyl :
Inside • Outtide or Comer
Mounts 111 1'9utlful Decorttlve
. . I
Colon 111 Many ~ions.
WIDE sll!enoN OF
GAS LOGS
FREE ESTIMATES GIVEltl
Santa Ana Tent & Awning
2202 South Main-l-545-0491
' SANTA ANA
Give One~ Sewing on the newest Golden
Touch & SaW• sewing machine by Singer in the
handsome Bakernfleld desk. Features lhe ·
a>iclUSi'J!l Push-Button Bobbin , a builHn buttort-
holet, *'aahoiceoi nine stretch stilches. . I
' I
FREE INITI'liJcnoNI :;tiowyou hciwto Use FREE, DEUYERY •nvwhem in the U.S.A. your new s1•r' -ro inachi,..,, lnctudnig Alaska and Hawan,
FREE GIFfWR~ ill bllghl Ind -GIVE A SINQER GIFT CERT1F1CATE to save you Christmas tie-Ups. • to lhelriend wl'<)'s har<!to ShOp lor.
ThoSl-~'a-l'llnholPt,.. ... Clwlotn .. wltltlnJOwl.udget ...
or you may defer monlh~ paytnenls 1111 F9b.. t 9 7 t , Or-use the Slrioer l.ay-AWay Plan-deposjl
holdsany ilemtillDec.19. SINGER
Foraddress ollheSlngerSev.ingC..nter Get the cnifitl
nearest you, see Vv'h1te Pages ""I'-" • under SINGER COMPANY. ~ r.....,.._a1 T1£&1NGEROOMPN(r.
COSTA MISA COSTA MISA HUNTINGTON ORANGE GARDIN OROYI
,,.,,., .. htltllwtf UM H•rtlof' IM. llACH n Skfl-£•fl nu C:~•flMll
.... WJ Kl f.lUl 1-..t fl IMdl ....... J..OI• <lf1·1M1 lflll~ CNll l"ltt• MIPW Ctnltf Mlll'llilltttn 1-.11 Ce11lw "Tiit Cl,.,.. Cfnltf Ortlllt C:-ty P'i.Ja
The Super Klrig
'168
A mattress that's specfal beetu1e lf1 I superb
value! Tempered steel lnneraprlng wit with
Ortho'a exclusive Crown Flexcenttrsupport Is
layered with slsaJ ins4)ator cotton felt and topped
with an Intricate .crotl qulltlng.
Mattl'ffS .• 2 Box Spmg. Md Orttto4'ak
Plus FREE Clack Radio end Double Bonus
The Deluxe King
98
A lfeep eet that'•
• sllnct!Yt becaUlt 11'1 your best
K ng-Sized buy! Ortho'• 1paclaHy de1fgned
tempered steel Innerspring unit l1 lavlll'l9d with
fiber lock sisal ln111l1tol\ eonon tel\. ~ultt.d COYl!lr
and _.., ventllltecl 1lde bonltra. -....a 1·an.,,....w0rtflo.Plk
~P;;;lll FREE Clock R1dl1 Mid Dau•ll Bn11
Super Twin Full ·
'68
4433 Candle wood Avenue
C1ndlewood Shops
(across from L.akewood Center)
Phone: 634-4134
'
Especl1Uy dealgned and constructed from the
inner1prlng out! A tempe,red steel unltw/ttl sisal
lnsulatfon, then cotton felt. then a beautlful/y IC roll
quilled oover.And Orthoewn n rnforCl!ll and
venlifates tho bordera fornever-aag, airy comfort,
MfflrMI I 2 Box Springs uif Orttto-Pak
Plus Ortho's Famous
DOUBLE BONUS
King or Queen: headboard plus bedspread.. Twin
or Full: headboard and metal frame on easy·
rolling casters. All this plus an RCA radio with
every purchase of an Ortno King, Queen, Twin
or Full slz8 :sleep eet; et no ~ra cost. Really
special'? · ~~
As Always, the
Ortho-Pak
"Fieldcrest no-Iron King or Queeii alze'top 1h'eet
• Fleldcreat no-Iron King or Queen size fitted bot·
t~ sheet • 2 King or Queen alze bolster plllows
• 2 plllow cases • King or Queen tll8 mattress
pad • King or Queen eize metal frame on ee.sy·
roltrng casters ·
You Can Only Buy
Ortho Mattresses
at Ortho Stores
MAIL ANO PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED
. GUARANTllD
PREE CHRISTMAftELIVERY
SANTA ANA and
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
16131 Harbor Blvd.
(corner of Edinger) Next to Zody's
P hone : 839-457 0
\
A special srze for those who want to step upf11)1ft
a twin or lull, butaran't ready for a King, Durable
steel lnnef9prlng unit topped with springy 11 .. 1 and
sort, but long lastlng cotton felt. It's deaigned to
tat you sleep better so you feel better!
Mattre11 A aox Spring and OrthO-h:k
Plus FREE Clack. Radio ind Double Bonus
The Super Queen
'158
Undl!rthe beau tr fully rich, tcroll cover that's been
cloub1e·ntedle slllched, ls a 9lurdy and durable
sleep set SturdybecauseOrtho used a special
tempered•teel Innerspring unit, then the Crown
Flex cen!etauport. sisal and cotton felt. It's got it!
M•ttta• a loa 8prln1 and Ort~
Plus FREE Clack R1dlo ind Double Baaas
Del~e Twin or Full: I • 9· 7 '...--<. '
' '
Thl1slt1!)4eivalue ,,.
tea tu res thtt9f!Cl81 libet lock ,,,. sraat ln1ulator that lei. you a!Mp on the proper
flrmn• in all-nlahtcomfort. Thlt ln1ulator laowr
· tt. steel Innerspring unit and Under layers of cotton
·flltand tcro11 qutned cowr1ng. 111.itr"' a eo. 8prlng
Piia FREE Cleek Rldla 1nd DH.Ii Baau
ANAHEIM
1811 West llncoln Avenue
Between Euclid 11.nd Brookhurst Avenues
Just East of Fed Mart
Pnono: 776-2S90
• !
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I
~I~ Gulde S,upelomont to Tho DAILY PILOT, Thu:c'.::'d::•:.<Y:..• ="'--"'--"-'-'
:~Chichester Plans New
"¥'•"
Solo Sailing Assault
•
LONDON (AP) -Sir Fran-
cis Chichester, the roond·the-
world voyager, hoists anchor
next month for an attempt to
sail 4.000 miles in 20 days -
alone.
If Sir Francis averapes 200
mi~s a day, he wiU.1break
1 records for long , single.handed
voyages. The winner of the ...
I • 1968 transatlantic $Clio race ·-' . ' averaged 109 miles a day for
S 26 days.
;;, • The trip will be acroSs the
>{' Atlantic f r o m Portuguese
~Guinea to Nicaragua . ~ Chichester, a businessman of
4 69, beg an his adventures 40
years ago.
• I
In 1929 he became the se-
cond man to Oy soL'l from
England to Australia, lle flew
from Australia to Japan' in
1931, then the longest solo
flight in a seaplane.
In 1967, he sailed 2&,lm
miles around the .world in 226
days at sea, stopping only at
Sydney, Australia. Que e n
Elizabeth II knighted, Him for
the long feal.
Sir Francis began musing a
year ago about attempting a
solo voyage at ·an average
speed matched among sailing
vessels . only by the great
merc::hant clipper ships of the
19th century.
·San ··Diego Man Puts Up Carport,
Wag~.· ~T o~ghest , Fight ' of Life' .
' SAN D~GO. Calif. (AP) -1his home. But after a l lh: hour board but ~derson's i:teUUon
It bas ·been six JUOr!ths since. . wait, in line, he . became • for a. vatlan« was denied. The
Fred ~Qb started "11\e . dis~ted, went home empty board of appeals upheld Qle
hardest,' sfu&&Ornest fight of handed and built it anyway. denial 'but told Anderson that
my life." In so doing, he cost Cilntrol he could move the carport
SO_ far Anderson, a cerQent oC his power saw and· bis leg back Doly three feet inst~ad of
truck driwr hasn't gotten was cut so badly that he's still four. He now has Jost in tha
,anywhere. H~'s ngbung city of£ work. . last avenue or regu.lar gov~ ~ IWI.' ~ · A n d h e b u I J t t h e ' ment appeal, the City Council.
· ."You.,il!v~nq·reCard for the CarPort. with the help of ' Anders.on told Mayor OJrran
"little~~ .he tdld"Mayor 'neighbor Howard Fletcher. thllt maJor .public structures
: F:tank curran \in• front of the within inches of Fletcher 's such as bridges an·d highways
'I f·Clty •Co'UDCil this, week when property. A city regulation re-b·ave been built unsafely in
,1 ; Alfdenoo•1..r 1J>PW".!fad )een qaires a lour-foot clearance pl3ces. A teamster for 15 ·~ •.turned ~· • betweoo 'buildings. years, he said 3,000 other
: Birt he ' adt.'ntts 1,he whole The city sent out inspector 1n~mbe~s of the drivers' union
1 thing wu.his'tfNn fiult._ ' after Jrispeetor, but Anderson told him th.at they· would ~ ~· ~!'?. Cily KiU for a refu5ecf to budge. Fletcber ·"8ood City Hall" wlj.b a list of
' petiO&.tO ·· a ~arpOrt onto wenf .before the city zonJng illegal construction i,n'the city.
)ng ftew ·.: ~ • In ' Did · Newport .. _Bea~li ., ,,
• ,. ..
":er,..-~· ..... '"'*' llNCM .....
•·THI -~
·GUILDS~
.. . ·'
MIRC ,. ··'T~.~· ~ .(.
..
No 'Old Saw , • " ·i~' ,. >
. • • . ' I \:; J -::.
::..~ISSANCI ·, • CANNERY VILLAGE ·
J ..
'
'I
l
\
Best way to please both the bqy and'th e man,1inc lhe-f~mily ls ·to· he(p .the tioy
find .. new power hand tool fot"'the ma'rr.•And if yOu want.Jo )JeJieve ,tJiat '"rfe'w
saw" invented by power tool man~actufers,' try on for size this ,gift iS\..lgge's·
tion : a chain saw by McCulloch.' 1 • ,. ~ , ;,
•
•
' . :·
-~
71!~
FOR
HIM
0 N 0
RI N G S
Bu sy December
Schedule Set
By Boys Ciub
The Boys Oub of the Harbor
Area has a full schedule of ac-
tivities planned for De-
cember.
A Slei!p In will be held Fri·
day {Dec. 11) from 9 p.m·to 8
a.m. Saturday (Dec. 12).
Games and movies w i I I
highlight the evening which is
open to boys from 8 to 12
years of age.
The annual' Christmas Party
ts planne4 for Dec. 22 with the
aid of the Mothers Club. Boys
may register for the party al
the Boy~ Clu~.
· A winter camp will be held
over Christmas vacation at
Cedar Lake, oAe mile above
Big Behr. Flirt.her information
on the camp, which wlU be
from Dec. H to 31, can be ob-
tain ed at the Boy"s club aner
Dec. 13.
..,:.: VIKING • • • ~ • !'ROM $225 , .. In addition to the special
event!, the Boys Club Is con-
tinuing its regular programs
which include intra mural
bas ketball for boys a· throulilh
14: self defense and judo:
cookie making ; photography;
junk craft.vand guitar lessons.
Further information on all
Boys Club activities I s
available by calling 642-8372.
~•ny alhtr ,1..,re1 . , , •nd many olh•r 9ift 11199t1lion1 for
~ ... :. him, ..... ..
CHARLES R BARR
ON THE TUBE
MliMll!D. AMl!DICAN GEM SOCIETY Fer t ID b•tf IJU lcl• to wh1t11
h1ppt11in9 011 TV, •••cl TV
WEEK -clidrib11t•cl with tfi•
5•111rd•y edition of th• DA ILY rt LOT.
· .. •.
-· ' I • ' . GAS LOGS ,.
• :'.24" Torrey Pine with multi-jet burner
: ••s· $46.so Sale $2950 fJ'". ·
"\Many styles and sizes to choose from . IL..IL..I.:.&..
~~. Come In and see them burning. ' . . ..
'\. :·
··-~:.
· ..
1
We also feature:
* GAS BARBECUES *GAS LIGHTS
I If You I
Have An
HALf IOUND
for CUSTOM SCREENS
the "SPECIALIST" to see is
fllMJd J. /_u
*OUTSTANDING WALL DECOR
*FREE STANDING FIREPLACES
Best Known for Quality &. Service
102 Town & Country, Oro1190
(714) 542-0174
Au.N frtfll l tf!K•'1 flJ~i"' 5-"-Mliol SI. 1-•ff t.141• Sr. fwf.j
"'"""' Daily 10 le S,JO '·"'· -Ope• Nion. & frl. "9,
• IANKAMlllCAID or MASTllt CMAIGt
\
•
Rug Shampooer-
Floor Polisher
A 8reat gift to save her. ti-me ao'd w,ork
all year! Shampoo's rugs O[ ·scrubs,
waxes, poli shes and buffs hardl~faces
to a beautiful finish. Bruslies arid pads
in.eluded. ,
' ..
''" , . .
... 'Tltl• Cltrlatftlft .t1!9 orlth•ol, llolldcrofted tlfb
1 .~ -' · , -': • '6Y.1'"41itl Southmi Colita111io Crafts,...•.. ,
• ori"'"' DA.rs e , ... ·.: s•T. -t1L , ........ , ... ;.mr AT 2•t1t. NEwron~•••c~
'
Heavy-Duty Upright
Vacuum Cleaner
Revolving brush sweeps up dus~ lint,
even deep-down gric co vacuum al l
types of carpets thoroughly -from
indoor-outdoor co shag rugs!
·-
t ;-
., f
• rMQ411A .. 8AU
TOl l ANQ
¥Al.UY • .. _
I •
'
·---------------
Thund1y, Doc. 11, 1970, 0111 Gulde Supplement to The DAILY PILQ\"..:.9 • • Accessories for Yule
To Be Soft, Elegant
.
r--~llUtOfl~-~--~---,.,.~--~·--:-i
: I Acti!ssories for holiday are
soft and eleganl . . . the
handbags, jewelry, gloves,
belts and. scarves all get In the
Longueue mood and stay close
to the body.
The handbags are either
clutches or short shoulder
straps in cut velvet s,
brocades, silks, satins. They
are flat and not oversized.
The jewelry Includes the dog
collar in smooth velvets and
satins decorated with em-
broidery and stones or soft
chains at the throat. Bracelets
adorn the wrist and earrings
have their place in slender
FOR
HER
M•ke Th is
A Diamond
Christmas
l l•rf Mr IOd-1-llnk b•1ct111 1n11
yN r & 111 It g•aw w11n e8clt
DCCI'~ "' be c•l~•Uta In 11t1 f\j1w1. Your 11111 llU l'OU' me.,..
orler. wit! gl'OW very precious wlllt
time.
s11r1..-br1't1111 · pie.lured S160,
• E1tll Md~ t179. Other s!ylel
ti' IOd ... 11n-br1ce1111s trom 1160.
drops.
The belts are wide In
painted lealhers , em-
broideries, brocades, silks,
with interest in the buckle.
The gauntlet ls still the im-
portant glove for the longuette
in suedes or kid C<>mbinalions.
Gloves have cuff detail but are
more tailored with few frills
and bows.
Beauly will follow some of
the leading trends in wigs
tlonger hair and more color)
... ma k e up (translucency
with color for Ups and eyes)
. . . plus greatment (hypo-
allergenic, etc.) into Holiday.
•
• •
•
Shape s and Shades
Mod look is enhanced this fall both by ne\v sha pes
sculptured timepiece by Sheffield, Calendar watch
rugged look '~in" for men this season.
of "shades" and of this
con1ple1nen ts the rustic,
High Sty le
For · Youths
Pre~enred
l<====-===="""""'11
DR. L. J. HASELFELD
OPTOMETRIST
EYES EXAMINED e RX'• FILLED
• ' CONTACT LENSES e ~1-j~~G)ENCY REPAIRS
''See Your Besl \Vith. J..lastc?"';dia,;gf
S POINTS SHOPPING CENTE~
The Holiday child will be the 18611 Maf11 St., Huntin9ton Beaf h
,•
•• ...
Qj , ..
.• . . .,
• •
f.1EN'S TR>\DITIONAL CLOTHING
traditiooal dressed-up child 847-127f'
.•. will\lnews aiid excitenient ~~~~;;;";;~;;::;;;;;~~~;;;~~~~~"""~"""[~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ in color!; fabri~ patterns a -= " , .,
looks. ~i' 1,. "" ~
COLORS' ... very fresh ' ~ ~~· ' ~ and clean·looking with the . • · · ' " '
Cl~sic red, navy and white · '
;,, . ot~' popular co lors will . . • • • ·, , •' be putP,le, hot pink, lemon
yellow, Peach, sea and royal ' ,.
blue. 1· FABRICS . . . the velvets ·
are back , both plain and
crushed. KtUt'.s are th e
strongest fabric~ both bonded
and plain ... Laces ... Voile
, . . polyes ter wOvens, with a
satin finish. eoµon suedes are
popular. ,
• ..
CHARLES H. BARR
PATTERNS , , . pin stripes
and bold slri?C' •.. strong , , .
as are the "fl31.ive" patterns
.•. Scandinavian· and Oriental
. , , many of th~ voiles have a
burn-out pattern -· . There are
lots or embroideries.
~ILHOUETI'ES . . . Many
dresses have a. midriff . , .
with either lacing or smocking
at the waistt,.. .• There's a
definite 2 piece look, of
dfesses with a vest. The
Peasant dres (often midi
length ) and t~ peplum ...
another ho I j da y look.
Pantsuits and }¥mpsuils are
favorites ... and the "pioneer
girl" has carvsj herself a
~Features·~ Styles·§~ Values
•
•
Wtsldi!f Mui,
1'/c.-pon Bnd1. Clllf.
::!II l>llrine Asen~,
Balboa Waad, Cali£.
M~'\Sl:ll AMElllCAN GEM SOCIETY
niche.
•
This animidtd rrankenstein Monster will tinnerve even Y'Ollr most
pot;er-f1ced fr~nds! T~rn the switch and thls·1llC!ronic ni1ht·
mll'e u•· hi eh llld twice as gruesome) groans into action ••• his
hands clawing, his f1C1 an unearthly green. Suspense mounts.
Shuddery secoods tick by. You'll need standby ll.tellll111ts for !ht
1rand finale "shocker" ... wtien his pants tall dOtl(fl below ivy
feque shorts. the Monster bhithes beet-red ••• 1nd .v1ryone's
face turns pu1ple! Uses flnhlleht batteries nailable 1nywtlere.
RE'-$6.98 • NOW ONLY $i.99
' "
GOLDEM TOUCH FOR'GlflSI
illltM llVlsh aold !Mdllli~ lrlltSform the simplest Sift pack·
en Into elepnt sho!Htts:I Y~ret 1n ntilinc assortment: of ='"" in ~'"·"' . n '"'· star "'"''""' r"" lo tdohl 1111 Ides, llCt t:ards, ootepaper •I yell'
·• ot3'.,.,,,,.;nl1• 9 · m.$1.oo NOW ONLY 4 C
"
GE PORTA-COLOR ••• lhe mosl
Con11nient Color TY you c1n own!
• EXCLUSIVE PORTA COlOR CHASSIS , .. lfilh stlld sl1!! C"om·
ponents operates cooler, lon1er, more tlfeetlvely, • VHF PRE·
SET FIN( TUN!NC , •• set it just onc1 and GE Port1 Color
"remembers" the best piclur,e tit/I lime you select the channel.
• 8UllT-IH ffiESCOl'ING ANTENNAS tor rec1iwin1 M!h UHF ind
VHF' stations, • "IN·LINE" PICTURE TUBE .•• for more 1t!lrbte
perform111ee , •• dr1m~ticflly reduces both siie 1nd weight.
AVAltABlE IN DECORATOR COLORS,., cht0s1ei1her1vocaclD or barmt{.old, •• 1 lerrific v1lue ..•
5199~~::
'
/IJL .•. , . 'GIANT 25• SCREEN WITH HEW ONE TOUCH
COLOR SYSTEM ... -----it a simp!ilitd tunin11 system that synchrcmizes ·111 th1
crilic1r color controls giving )'OU a perfect picture at Iha
touch of a button. • GE Cuiomatic Tint Lock ketps
scre·en lonts lire.like rerardless of channel dlanges.
• GE AFC Autom1tie Fi11e Tunint Jocks onto the opti-
mum color sj1nal to give you the sh11ptst, truest color
piclu1e 1v1i!Jble.
BI G SCREEN!
SLEEK STYLE!
GREAT VALUE!
•.
~· ...
NEW z5• SPECTIA BRITE CO\OR TUBE
New ult11 bn11iilnt color Pflospllofs.1lve yiftJ Ille bri1ht-
est, 1ichest color in GE histOf'Y. • Now enjoy maiimum
clarity and true·ti:f.hfe reali$1l\. You also rel GE's Relii1·
Color chassis !hat provides years of trouble tree
perlonna/IU. '
RICH FURNITURE STnlHG •••
There is 1 G£ model desi11ned lo complement 111y home
... any decor. • The EL MATADOR iUustrated 1s bold
Spanish splendor in rich prcan finish with sculptured
111!1 inserts. • Get this outstandin11 value with all CE's
e~clusive features for only $699.95."'
plus the stronoest Guarantee in Television
YOUR· SATISFACTION GUARANTEED ON PICTURE
QUALITY OR YOUR MONEY BACK!
Bur your Ge11tnl £1ectric Color TV frOlll 1 p1tlicip.11l111 de1le1 Ind 1lv1 ii 11C111111J
c111. If YOll ire no! tomple!tly uti1fied, l>!inc 1our Gu1r1ntet Certl!lc1t1 to till
dealer hOITI whom l'llU jlllfChlltd !hi Ht lfithi~ thirtJ clfy!.. He will 11k1 blc:t CM HI ind rt!und rour money.
Th i11 off e'r 0111ilie11 t<1 fl!lrrlu1.~r1t ririur to Dt!ceniber 31, 19'!0.
DRAMATIC STYLING
DELUXE COLOR TY
IN DECORATOR CABINET.
• EXCITI NG STYLIZED CAB·
JHETllY .'. Sculplure d dOOfS conce1I the TV and Eivt the look of fine lurn1!u1e. Huldsome Span-
ish sltlirc, also •~ailable in E1r!y
Americ;in, and contempon1y de-
si1ns. Sculptured Ba~ il~luded.
• GE REUACOLOR CHASSIS ...
leitures space 11e etched cir-r-== cuit1y for hich pe1lorm1nce and
reliabi!i11. • SENSITRONIC TUN-
ING SYSTEM,,. stltcls and am-
p!lfle~ sian•I 101 bt1t pictu1t
quali1~. • NEW SPECTRA BRHE
PIC TURE TUBE !he btl(hlest,
sharpest, most life.like co!or pit·
t~rl ~II!
f111allt" Ser tilce For Oller 23 Years
Phone 548-naa 8 · QUALITY
llllYlCE
1815 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
\ '
r,":'"'!'!""--~~ .. ~ .... ""1" .......... "!""-...... -... -........ '"" ....... '"" ... '"""-...,,-..... ----....... --........ ~ ... -.... ~...-----~ ...... ~~~~-~~~~-~------~· .. ----.. . _,.... .. ····· ............. . ... . ...... ~----·-~ ..
'
•
ft-4111 Gulde SuPflltmtnl to Tho DA IL Y PILOT, Thursdy, Doc. 11, 1970
Start Holiday Season With Fac ial
•• • ::. GIFT OF THE YEAR FOR ANY WOMAN
..... Beauty Routine With E••Y·to-u1e 1Tool1'
iThoughtful Yule Gift
,.~ .
. O ften Mean s Most -.~ · . .•.
·!ibis Chrlslm&1 la a good
ltfnf to remind yourself that
IS!f . the personal touch that
~ts. Instead of trying to
JMke a big splash with osten.
tBtious gifts and a great show
oC extravagance, concentrate
on the thougli tfu l small gift. ..
one w h i c h contains some-
thing of yourself. Here is
the real Christmas treasure -
something created especially
for the recipient. A n d even
though we're Jn lhe space age,
taking up needle and thread
might be the most con-
temporary gesture you could
make.
There's still time to whip up
' . piece of patchwork for
fashio n-minded friends, to
c,rochet a cap for your favorite
niece, to design a crewel-work
pillow showing the family pet.
~ for the lord of the manor,
woaldn't be like a handmade
suede vest, or a pair of petit-
j)oint slippers 1 t I t c h e d
e~pecially for him? You'll find
great new patterns that are
eaiy and fun to do. .L
All of this takes tiMe, It's
..
true, but there are ways to
find extra hours here and
there. You 'll be spending
fewer hours in department
stores with the other millions
of shoppers, for on!: thing, JI
you're at home milting your
own prese nts.
Plan to spe nd fewer hours in
the kitchen, too. Don't think
you need to stop to cook lunch
every day, either. 'Tls th e
season to sub!tltute a
nutritious time-saver such as
a l\tinute l\1eal of Slender diet
food from Carnation! You can
stir up this protein-packed
powder with 6 en. of non-fat
milk in just a min ute to make
a delicious, satisfying liquid
lunch. Just IM calories this
way -or 225 calorle1 if you
opt for the pull-top can
already mixed.
Pour contents Into a crystal
goblet, and while you stick to
your knitting, you'll also be
giving yourself a n I f t y
Christmas present: a slim
silhouette to celebrate the
brand New Year!
81,ck
""' Whit•
l'•l•nl
They give ycur child's feet somet11ing to celebrate
because they're built to fit And our professional fitters
are trained to make doubly sure they do. Strlde Rite.
The most trusted name in children's shoes..
.. .. ...
11.50 lo ll.50 'Accordin9 to Si1• w, C•"Y Width1 lo EEE
54 Fashion Isl and, Newport Center
Opp. Broadway e 644-4223
Al10 Alh1mb<1
THE PERFECT GIFT
For the entire family or
a ny pe rson who wants to
really .,. clean.
lite eppllMCe tflot 9tftlcllft te
Y••r t•llet INwl e11tf pro•I ... ftl
•Wll W•t111 ..... , •Pt•Y for c1 .... .
litt 9'1d WGnll elr t• dry, 111 pl9Co
of tell.. tl1111e IP.or ffmll•l11e
hrtloflll, tooll
Av1 ll •bl1 in 1!1 nd 1ril pl..,mbi~t
colon.
DE LIVE RED BO XED
OR INSTALLED
BEFORE CHR ISTMAS
Cflie
~idet ...
for d1t1il1 ct U
137-7311 •• 644-1 936
or writt
American B'O•y
P.O. Bor 4f I
El Toro, Cel. 92610
j \'
"I am my own woman, well
at ease." What woman
wouldn't deUaht in quoting the
ancient Chaucerlan phrase
with full conviction!
Especially at Christmastime.
You're busy shopping. In
and out of stores, in and out of
the car. You're planning
menus. For yoo to prepare,
Decorating the home for
fe!tlv1Ues. And all the while,
mana1lng the usual rouUne
dlahes, beds, children.
A woman owe1 It to herself
to stand apart from It all, col·
ltct her thoughts and com·
po1ure, so that she remalnt ln
control and not controlled . So
that she ls lovelier than any
Jift she gives, more ezqulslte
th.an her Christmas fare, and
more radiant than • n y
Christmas setting.
3DAYS
ONLY.
Thi• accompllshment 11 the
gift you give younelf. All It
takes 11 a beauty routine that
does the most for you ln the
last amount ol Ume, Here are
a few auggelilons to help you
enjoy the holidays with your
family, to be as beautUUI u
the eettlng around you:
Have a professional facial
that will soften the Une1 of
tension and Jive your face a
3 Best Se\\ers Reduced!
dKantron • ouaranto• d Mud• Sh••'
• proportl••;, •• stretch
• shoorOn•
c lour
Choice Sale K u on Scyle.
It Sav•· CbOOSC f r~m s~ades. Wsse'
Y ur Favorite Sqlc l In Tode.y's Ftsbion Pick 0
0 N ude Sty e. . 1 A.ltra Sheer, r At ThiS Low Price.
Sizes BuY Several
All·nlgllt centfortl
AtRYl.lC Sl.llPIR
$ 94
Sale
J_ _____ ~
Ladies
BRUSHm TRICOT
GOWNS
Sale
Choice o( Walts. Or Floor
length, Machin• Wuba-
ble, Quick To DtJ ~"ely
PMtel Shades, Sizes S·M·L
new clean &low you wouldn't
have bellevOd poalble.
Do the aame for your body.
Enlist the services ol a good
masseuae to work out the
kinks and revive t I r e d
mu1cle1.
Don't try . to 10lve beauty
problems with a makeup bot~
tie. Makeup ts for enhancing
beauty, not coverlnc up a
tired, aallow look. Watch
vitamin intake. Remember
Chrlstmss sweetmeats can
cauu blemlshe.s, and add
innches. Steal a few tG-minute
catnap$. And, If you know you
need eight hours' sleep, take
them.
Consider teclmolojY 'S 1Ut to
you : instant beauty aids
dealaned to make life easier
for bUJY homemakers. lnstant
halrsettert give h.11lr t
rerreshed gl11morous set that's
also cond it ioned In less than 10
minutes. No Un1e to wnsh
hai r'.' Do il nently, cleanly,
qui ckly with an Instant sham·
poo. Sprsy, fluff, brush and
go. Ne\\' halrcoioring products
Jet you foam in rich lustrou3
color In minutes to highlight
your h1lr fo r the holidays.
Women's
Girls
Toddlers
Men's· Boy s
CORDUROY SLIPPER
$ 54 SLIPPIRS
Sale $1 76 Sale
Choose From V inyl Moc or Plu sh T r im .
Step lo Wom en's O r G irls Si zes Or Tod.
d~~~s Animal Slipper With Krut Cuff.
Rugged Wide \Vale Cation Cor d uroy
Lined Jn Cotton Terr)' .... Mens Sizes
To 12 Boy Sizes 3 To 6
Full Fashioned, Covered
Buttons, White & Colors.
Sizes34 To40.
•
Men's Long Sleeve·
Dress or Sport
SHIRTS
Sale
Ne"er Need• Ironia,,
Choose From New Fa•h·
ion Stripe., Short
SHORT SlllVE $388
STRl~E SHIRT
Gi~s
Brushed Tricot
GOWNS
Sale
Fleec;y Acetate, Nylon,
Machine Wa•h able,
gu.ick To Dry! Pa,telt
Saza7To 1~.
Gift Box
BANLON HOSE
Sale
$ 94
Box
Of 3
Great For Gi ft Giving
Assorled Fas hions, Col
ors, Hose Scrctcb 1·
Fit, Sizes IO To 13 •
""' Childrens Cotton
Flannelette P.J. 'S
sa1! JS~
~1J: Soft Flannel Mac · :
4 Tu 6bte. Bors ac Girls s· •
•
I
• '
Congress Plans, New Assault on Elections Reform . ' '
Dy RA VMOND LAHR
WASHI NGTON (UPI)
COngress and the White HOUH
have kept wheels spinninc ror
yea rs without progress toward
re form of federal election
laws.
Now Congress is pre paring
for another effort because of
the . multimillion d o I l 1 r
television campaigns of 1970
and President Nixon's veto of
the bill to set lhnits on broad·
cast campal&n spending in
fut ure years. The Pr11ldent,
who said the bill 'vould ptua
only one hole ln a sieve, h11
promised to help get a broader
reform blU enacted.
By proposJna lintlts on
broadcast spending, the vetoed
bill reveraed the thrust of
measures which havu received
moat of the attention in
Congreu over the past 12 years.
Supporters of tho.se bills
wanled to repeal Iba .obsolete
a n d mearuna:les spending
GIANT 7FT
SCOTCH PINE TRE£
I
limits ot the Corrupt PracUces
Act of llU and the Hatch Act
provision of 1939 -40.' They
favored rireater and more up-
to.date dlsclosure of palltlcal
conlrlbuUons and 1pending1 and tax incentives to en-
courage small contribution:i.
SlmUar conclu1lons came ln
1962 from a commisslon ap-
pointed by President John F.
KeMedy, whop er so n a 11 y
favored outri&ht aubaldles
from the:, federal t.reasw-y for
the campaign expenses of can-
•
dldltea for fedel'll office. Primaries and pr e .eon-
No federal law now touchea ventlon c a m P 1 i I n a for
a polltkal c om m l t t e e nomlnltlons ire tmmune ftom
oper1Ur11 1n on1y one state. !ederal lawa.
Committees functioning ln two Starling in 1959, the Stn1te
or more 1tates can 1pend no has pa1sed four bills to repeal
more than $3 million a year, the meaningless limits on
but a ptrty can set up 11 apendlnt and to require more
many committees es It wl1he1, enlightening reporta on con-
each with a S3 million celllng. tribuUons and spending. All
No contribution can exceed died In the House, although
$5,000, but a "fat cat" can / one passed in 1967 by an 84-0
contribute $6,000 each to 11 Senate vote emeried from a
many conunfttees aa b e House committee but never
wishes. reached a vote on the House
floor.
The IM1 bill would have ap-
plied to pre-nominaUon cam·
paig n1, lncludina 1 t a t e
presidentlal primaries, and
would have required reports
from e-0mmittee1 working in a
single state In support or
presidenUal or congressional
candidate1. ~ Congres1 ran oft In another
direction in 1960 wheo it pass-
ed a bill authortzlni UJe of
federal fwtda to f l n a n c
presidenti al campal1ns.
381-
DATS
Dec.
10·11·12
Life Like
Complete With$
Stand, 125
Branch Tips
Bf»
Values 0 560
''TIME'' To Save
For Christmas Sale
2s Light MINIATURE
Indoor Set .
Sale s233
N CHORD ORGAN
OJOll• COR !•anti
$•700 Sal•f .
)
Ne Living r
Talking
BARBIE
Sale
' $3~•'2"
Ms.kt A I-l it With Your
Littb:Girl With Barbie.
·Save No•!
Save On Christmas
Gift Wrap 7 Roll
Printed Gift Wrap
96c
90 Sq. Ft. Ea. Roll 2 Ids. Loni
25Stick0n
BOWS
54c
AHOtlment Of Brilliant Colors
For Mllkin1 Gay Packaps.
Hot
Wheel
Sizzler's ct
by Mattel ••••
$ 94
Big S••in11 ChOOM From
New 1971 St1le1 Thie
Will Excite Any Boy OD
YourGif(UJt!
Ev1rybody1 h•orko
KERPLUNK
"1_ Ideal
sale
Save43%
Fun For The Famlly
..
fof Men'•' Wom•n
FAMOUS·MAKER
17-JEWEL
WATCHES
$1988u.
SALE .
COMPARAILI VALUU to $60
•You'd e1pec~ to l>'Y double the
price for these w«tchet
• E1pa.nsion,salin,linkandbrac•
let bands
• Square, round, oval st yles
• Calendar watches, too
• 'Vhite and yellow-gold tilled
caau and bands
• Shock-resistant, water-resist.ant
•anti-magnetic, unbreahbl•
maill!lprings,
In The arlon Sale
'"' IH1 •• -· Cl\'1Nt, _,_ .....
Boys or Girls
20" High Rise
BIKES
Dtluxe StJl• Com •.
plete With Attelf(>
rie1. Boy1 Jiu A
New Dr111 8r1ke.
Girls Come Wicb
S..kec
S..1 llf low!
Sale
SNOOPY MAKES A 'MODIL' MODIL
Comic Strip Dog And His Sopwith C•mol
Model Kits .Off ered
For All Age Ranges
Shopping for hobby model
kits today la a revelation.
Where emphasis wed to be
on planes, car1 and boats for
boys In an age range from I to
lf, kits are now being made
for every age IJ'tlUP and for
both se1.e1 -even for the pre-
schooler w h o s e developing
coordination sometimes makes
him appear to be all thumbs.
The unique array of colorful
hobby kits to be seen in stores
this y e a r starts with the
cementless and pre-palnted
1 n a p-together cartoon-type
models. From there they jump
Into !he class of hlghly.<Jetall·
ed automotive miniatures and
even cater to the space-mind·
ed who critically examine
every t!nglneerlng aspect of
lunar craft replicas.
Some of the best examples
of the revolution in hobby kits
are those deslgn@d b y
Monogram Model s' designer,
Tom Daniel. For instance, his
Imaginative Dune Rat. the
latest ln a series. is a fun-to-
sn1p-to1ether klt that will pro-
vide relaxation f o r anyone
from 8 to 60.
Why are model hobby kil3 so
appealing? Parents like them
because they keep children
fruitfully occupied; there la:
the value of extended play
time becalll• work can be left
standine for later attention;
there is the prqof of achieve-
ment: and Dad has the op-
portunity to work clOlely with
h~ child.
The child likes hobby kits
because he h~ the chance to
emulate his older brothers
who tinker with t h e i r
automobile and motorcycle;
th@re It the true pride of ac-
compliahment; the aenM of
compeUUoo comes into play In
wanting to bulld the model
belier than the olher suy; !he
purchue of a model hobby kil
&Ives the youngster the op-
portunity to make hll own
choice; and k1ta ani ed\leailon-
al Jn a way he likes to do
things.
Older children and adults
like hobby model klta because
they can do ln miniature what
they would Uke to do In lull·
size but can't afftlrd to do,
such a11 build a car, ship or
plane; the time spent on hob-
by kl~ Is totally productive
tlme; and the quiet of con-
centraUon halJ an amazing
soothing value.
Sttt?nped? Here's Present
For L\1an Who Ha s It All
For those lucky people vt"bo
aeem to have everything, put
your mind to flndin& unuaual
containers to 1tlt them with -
bottles or basket. to bold the
llqtld lu xuries already found
in their cabinets.
two compartmenta and a bigh,
rigid handle, It makes an eye-
catcbi.nf open · 1tor11e space
for a livlna room bar top.
Wrap It up with somethln1 to
drink already atashed Jn each
compartment and you have a
present flt' for rtch uncle or
cherilhed friend. · ,
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I For crystal liquor decanters
have e-0me a Joni way from
the cla1alc 1quare, btavy..cut
glass bottle once a part of
every n1ovie penthouse aet.
Thia year one can choose a
decanter 1hape to suit any
whlm1y : tapered, cyllndrical,
cublstlc, futuri stic and
pyramid-shaped are only a
few of the startling glass
designs.
A sophtJtlcated IUl'prlse for •
flUtng gilt contatnen would be • :
wlth a popular European ~
apertut rather than 11hard" Ii-I
quor. In this vein C&mpar! I
would be i aood choice
because it ls an lmportlnt in-
gredient in the Amerlcnao and
Negponl cockta.111, and because
• ~ •
Stoppers ron from huge
glass plugs to tiny corks.
Some bolUes, for higbiy exotic
potio111 presum.ably, are very
small, some hold over a quart.
Some are spouted, some stand
on feet or pedestals. All are
very "now."
In baskets, a new shape has
a Camparl and IOda LI a
pleuant beblt with most peo-
ple who have traveled in
Eu1ope.
The lively red Campari, or
mo1t other aperlttlr, make
fine lifts for those who don't
care for "hard" liquor sJnce
most of them ere quite low
proof.
GRAND
OPENING
41• 0. €b. e• THE SHOE TREE 1 ,-----,•·· ...
SHOE TREE
JR. I
SAME LOCATION AS •• , , •
THE SHOE TRll
3410 VIA LIDD-1.IDO ISi.i
NEWPORT HACH
Featuring
GIFTS! JUMPING JACKS
RED SALL
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lt~lt Guido SUJ'Plomont to Tllo DAILY PILDT, Thursdoy, Doc. 11, 1t711
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MAK·E THIS CHRISTMAS
.PICTURE PERFECT POLAROID _ ____.
COLORPACK II.
Sale
$22:88 ·
• Perfect Color
Pictures in
60 seconds
• Bleck end
White in 15
• Electric Eye
• Autom1tic ' •lectric •y•
• Tr1n1istoriz1d 1l1ctronic shutter
• Deluxe r1n91. 1nd viewfinder
• Uses fast lo1ding p1clr: f il m
• 01t1ch1bl1 c1mer1 cover
Sale
•
• Automatic electric eye exposure
control
• Transistorized electronic shutter
• Folding renge end viewfinder
• Four exposure ranges
• Can teke portreits end close-up•
with optional 1ccessorie1.
Sale
COMPLlnl WITH
R.ICTIONIC fl.ASH
AND AUTOMATIC:
UCHAl•ll
MODEL 360
S~le $14688
• Automatic. electric eye, electron ic
shutter
• Zeiss Ikon single window, folding
range end viewfinder
THE PERFECT GIFT
FOR SAVE
DAD NOW THE SUPER CAMERA!
Color Film Special
T0 lOI COLOR FILM
Sale 53 58
JEJ
P.4CK
!LIMIT OF JJ
WHILE 9UANTITIES LAST
Polaroid Color Print Mounter
with the purcho•• of 3 peck. of
type I OB eolor film.
NEWI
• • ••• '"
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Complete Selection of ·ca.ras '& Accessories .. 4 DAYS 'ONLY•
', "ENJOY BETTER LIVING WITH "GRANtS CREDIT" Dec. 10-11·12·13
•
DONl
MISS
THE
...
Tho Poleroid Comer• Girl will be
in our store on SATURDAY, Dec.
I 2, fro'!' 12 NOON unHI 6 P.M.,
demonstrating the complete line
of Polaroid Color Cameras and
accessories for you.
·,',Grants
complete
. camera shop
puf..yluriptin
the pichlre
Use Your
Gr1nt's .
Credit
Acco~t
~~ Advaa~ I
of lie
Great I
5a¥tn9I
I
I
'I
ust moVt-• \~et It'• f.liSY· J 1 f\\m y~ wish /
to th• tYP9 ~n your super 8
to sher#· eo -fl\\\ b8 i>fO"
r$ Regular f\\m d cle•r•r
lected crisper an
ever befOI'•· ~;\oma\\t tnieadlnG
reel to reel • •• • 1rom
-eiu ronltol ,
YOUR
CHOICE
MODE~
9779.
1~' ~c\<; up to revW'I' I -~~!,;;\~:: Sale $ prevents n'I •
~\us... ecJ · EA.
.-. ' ,,
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' iAYEATGIANT'S
ONFINEQUAUTY,
fAST "10TO FINlSHING
• Still Picture Pro! ;·
• fast 1.5 Pr<>ieelion .. t .
a Cord Storage Com·pl'
·-·
Your Choice! ::~~1
Fl GE ELE~~
For Polarold
Foldlng Pock ~ .... ,..
<••cepr rnoct.11aeo)
•nd 1t101t
35nun cerneraa
I
F~:~~ $36~~
Fully reeh er
<•dmium bot~••.ble, nickel-. used . d er1es me b
'" oors with A;c Y e it' cord liacluded I pow.
••hbulbs e th' · Moke s Pest! mg of tho
• 400.ft mm taP"'~;
• Gear Dri11en Reel
• Permanent fa;\O 18~PllMT #456 Moyie Projector .~
OI ~:::~ lubrication \lined
• comp\e\e\Y Self # 977Q Slide Projector ~~ .· . . . .
HURRY-dUANTITIES LIMITED!-~-:
The GAF VltW-.MASTER Walt Disney Character Theatre
has 10 Disney reels (70 full-color 3--0 acenea). Plus projector that lets
you show Disney scene1 In 2-dlmenalona for group fun. Plus a stereo
viewer for 3·dlmensk>nal Disney viewing; Plus a carrying case for th ..
projector and reels. Whit child could uk for anything more? I
SPECIAL ASSORTMENT
Yiewmasler Ruis 1
Sale 5 REEL~100
CHOOSE FROM I OO'S
GRANT PLAZA
BROOKHORST AT ADAMS HUNTINGTON BEACH
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Fondue, Too
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l·lere's an offbeat ~ift idea -at least it's offbe~at for •
the average male. Maybe th e kitchen manager
would appreciate tliis electric fondue set. It..:s -as
practical as'. it r handsome and just may give the
cook a couple o( new menu ideas for the holidays.
'
!Wore Ett1zds·
N eeded
By Nava jos
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WASHINGTON. (UP!) "'
Navajo Indians now look-more
and more to the go\·ernment
for help in times or . i\Y3.nl
rather lhan to their own pe<r
pie.
As a result, Congress .was
told in testimony released
?i.1onday. the Bureau of Indian
Affairs needs an elt:lra $12.5
million to meet g r o w i n g
v.·e!fare costs on the huge
Navajo reservation in Arizona
and New Mexico.
The BIA. in testimony to the
House Appropriations Com·
mittee, said it also needed a
supplemental appropriation of
$4 million for increased help to
Indians on other reservations.
BIA Coinmissioncr L. R.
Bruce said a "drastic in-
crease" in the welfare case
load on the Navajo reservation
was the result or a "change in
ntlitude toward applying for
assistance."
Bruce, who testified last
month in a closed session, said
the bureau now expects to pro-
vide welfare payments to
28,000 more persons than
originally estimated, with
23,000 of them on the Navajo
reservati<ln. · .,
The BlA'" off!cial rild .the 1 "change in attitude" 1oward
welfare was affecting the eo·
lire country but that it was
particularly true on ~Nava-
Hand bla:..m cut try stal
va"', fluttd top
ct.tod1td la sterling bose.
5.95
Holiday Candy Dish
I Stef'1ing silver and
crystal covered candy
dish, 7 3/4" tall.
Salt and Pepper set
Godmon embos,ed ' sterling
$ilver with glass li ners.
• An elegant
gift this year.
9.95
9.95 Three ways[ii1flr~ &A~Wf~ICA~~' ~ to charge! ~
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SOUTH COAST P\.AZA -COSTA MESA 540·7187
alsa lacoted 111 M9ll ,, ... "'
•
jo reservation because-variOlls
<lrganizations were urging the
Indians to apply . '"The City" -OroltfJ• Lohewood Ce11ter -Lc:~ewoad • .. Tyl..-M-'1''·-R~·
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Master Charge accepte d her~
-' •.·. l 1.
There's this little shop up "~· .. 1, !hat's been going 24Hours
a day to kee p up. Becau·se ever since Maste r Charge.
Christmas shopp ing's been a lot easier.
Master Charge has over 4,200 ban ks behi nd it. Th ai's wh y
you can use it for ~oods and services in all 50 st~tef. So
w~y nbt put Mast 1 Charge to work for you? • • i' Just look for the Master Charge si gn or this Ir..
symbol ®·
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' Accej)ted ~I dver towrl. ;all over Amert~
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1'.hursd•y, Dec. 11, 1970, (lift Gulde Supplement to"The DA.ILY. PtlQT .. 13
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I -MAT#'~'S8
. ADORAllJ
TINY
MATIEL'S®
.A BABY
' ·-lll'.l,!\'!(l:lir!IJ!hf.'.'i.
$486 $486 SAlE · SALE
I,ittle 'worke rs ca n $
,'build make-believe
h ighways! G ian t 18''
1 power-shovel, 17 "
dump t<uck, smooth.
rolling 17" grader.
Sale $226
Sale
74
2-0CTAVE ELECTRIC
CHORD ORGAN
(.~ ... ··
Easy to follow music.
Continuous vblumc control.
Hand10,me dttign.
,.
711 I i :!
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96 STORES .: •. ; ALL tHSIDE
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MAmL'S"'
,_ •. ,--:, . . I' .;
· MATtEL'S~J.•w
BABY GO ilYr:lYE
Sal~8 66 ••
SALE $ 486
TWIN TRACK
With
Dual Spring Boosr•1'$
THRILL·
PACKED
GAMES
SALE
c Sale
IA.
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SUPER
SPEEDWAY
97
$ 96
lO'' SMOOTH WHEELING ~' I ~ I
TRICYCLE
r
Plastic fender, adjusta·
ble ch ron1e plat ed $J74 hand lebars. Safety
gdp., 11reamers. Sale .
12" trike Sale $9.74
·-...... • ·-'
Cards Graced by Beautiful Landscape~
"Keep America BeauUfUl"
h an' often-beard theme tn this
year of ecology. Its influence
ii evident in this 1euon'1
Chri.atmas card deslgns.
Artists in the Norcross
Design Studio have chosen to
IUU!trate the natural beauty of
our landscapes as the subject
of many or the most appealing
cal'd! in the current collection.
Snow-c<>vered fields beneath
pale winter sides are ef.
fectJvely portrayed on a series
or moire.textured o a rd a
bordered in gold leaf. Dee~
tone envelopes in red or green
provide contrast.
New Engl and covered
bridges, horse.drawn sleighs,
deer and waterfowl decorate
varied winter landscapes. The
same mood ls re-created in a
city scene where 1 pastel,
snow-dusted skyllne rises at
the water's edge a1 a tugboat
1Udes past th! shore.
For the lradltloll-mlnded
' there la a varlety of tlmt-The Dove or Peace Ja ln· In addiUon to the cards engaae;menL b o o k 1 'fl
bonortd (!hr1atmu car d terpreted agalnat a 1tJppled dttcrlbed, which are packed lo available In a wide sel~ pf
theme!. A madonha and chlld sky of blue and green bo:1es ot :I, Norcross oCfen • styles and moUI11 ~.Mlig
la "-'J-• In •·•-ct bord·-• In •old, Em'-""", wide oell!Mlon ol lndivldual kitltnl, puppies, !loral ~ --~~ an •~•• g~ • -... and the humo-"• Cat·"" .. bl Christmas cards for the ,..,_ ~
design In ataloed 11111 colors. gold stamplJll and te.1ture special people on everyone's Gracious Uvinl. Holiday J*r·
Another con t e m po r a r y 1Ive new Interest to other liaL Little girls will enjoy ty lnvitatiollJ and cotorflll
portrait commemorates the· popular motlfa including San-receiving a three-dhiieruiiona1 thank you cards help to hep
Dla:ht ol the Holy Family Into tas, bells, wreaths and stand-up "1a-el , 11" high. correspondehCf: nowlng dUrinl
Egypt In deep blue with bright Christmas trets. Notcr09 calendars a n d this busy seuon. co~r accenu. ,;;;;i;;;~:;::;;=:;;:::;:;:;;;;;;::;;;;::;::;:;;;:::::::::::::::~~~~['!~ Shepherds are bathed ln\I
gold, illuminated by the Ugh!
of the Star that guide• them .
'Dle Wlse Men appear in a
profualon of colors, richly rob-
ed and bearing t h e I r
treuum.
Angell with lutes and horns
are delicately drawn on lex·
tured and gold-washed cards
which are paired with antique
gold enveli)f)es.
No collection would be comj
plete without the Partridge in1 a Pear Tree. Norcross offers
several lavish versions of this
favorite In brWlant color er.
feds,
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R.,• ONLY ~CARPETS
A FEW LEATHER SOFAS
AVAILABLE FOR
CHRISTMAS DELIVERY ... -----------------'<:<'. NEWPORT
INTERIORS
3326 E. COAST HWY.
IANK 011 AMERICA BUILDING
sHAG 3 9~
Ahe • 4.ff.6.ff.f.H·l2.ft.1l.ff•24.tf • 1431 South Main StrMt, S1nt1 An1
(.,,. ... Ill •41119tr
,.._ ,., "" lhtllftOfft
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WINTER IN PASTELS (TOP) AND PR INT FROM OIL PAINTING (BELOW)
Both "Art" Cards Are From Tht Norcross Collection For 1970
Dolly 9 to 5,30
Fri. 9 'Ill 9 547.3993 CORONA DEL MAR 675-6420
Don't Wait,
Start N ew
Year Now
'The nice thing about New
Year's resolutions is that the
one who makes them up is
you! In your own priv ate
bailiwick you can ponder your
few imperfections, and decide
which one! to obliterate In
1971. But actually, why wait ' ~:~~ !~~~:~. ;.;.:~o~:wo~~ \l .
the fir!lt day of the rest of
your life." We think that's a
point well taken,
Dieting. for instance, may
be a New Yea r gamblt }'tlu're
considering. Remember. it's a
snap to gain ten additional
pounds over the holidays, so
why not go into training
beforehand? It you limit your
calories judiciously through
the lreneUc Yuletide period, It
will be that much simpler gel·
ting down to the nitty gri tty
afte r 1971 whips in.
If you've been thinking
about coloring your hair, why
v.·eit until the NeW Year bells
have toll~d? A sparkling new i'
hair shade can enhance your
festive occasions if you make
1
.
the move now with a beauty. .
maker such as Miss Clairol. I '
1-Uss Clairol, of course is the
largest selling hairroloring in
the v.'Orld. It replaces hai r
drabbed by lime and exposure I
v.•ith the softest, most lustrous
hair imaginable.
Only Miss Clairol comes In t both Creme and Shampoo '
Forrhulas. offering a choice of
two convenient c o 1 o r i n g
methods. Even a slight varia·
lion in hair coldr turns on
young new tighls in your com·
pleition, and ts a fabulous cos·
metic touch for most women.
A wide variety of colors, from '
pale Flaxen Blonde through ,.
Sunlit "Brown to brilliant Black . !
Azure, make possible either a
gentle tone "lift'' or a 1·
dramatic change. A new hair
color can be an unparalleled
holiday iift to yourself. \
Resolving to find more
grooming.and-preening ti me?
Great. Set up a schedule now.
A schedule puts first things
first. and what's m ore
primary than yoo! Assign
yourself to a twice-a-week
beauty bath in addition to your
morning shO\\'er. For this
ritual, employ all the fairy-
princess goodies'. fragrant
bubble bath, emollient beauty
balms. pumice s t o n e s ,
manicure tools -the v.-ork!:.
These sessiOfl!I 1n your at·
home apa shoul d result in your
greetlna 1971 in rart, sleek
form.
And remember, your facial
t.1presslons reflett w b a t ' s
goln1 oa lntidt your bead. As
a major New Year beauUl!cn·
tlMJ move, tr}' a few happy
lbougbu.
We Make It
Whtie Southern cauromla
may not flt lni. the tr1dltlon1I
lclurt of a white Chrbtmas.
It houses son1e or the firms
responsible for Christmas dee·
or11t1v1 1iilylc-sctUns.
.,
JUILLEROY"SHAPED
WIDE WALE CORDUROY
SPORTCOATS
19aa
-
Luxuriously soft, all cotton corduroy m the
single·breastcd model with new wairt·dtRnlt\on,
wider lapels, deeper center vent. Print Unlng
and matching pull·up ixickct hanky ... two
inside brenst pockets. Regulars, longs.
COMPLETE ALTERATIONS INCLUDED
Fl.ared or straight!
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ACRILAN• BLEND SLACKS
IN STRIPES, SOLIDS
795
Hall-Prest• ACT!lan• acrylic and Avrit" rayoo
blend, guarantr · · .. lllonsanto for one year'5
V.'t.-arl Prc·ht'1 . re leg model, 29·38
•.. pre·cuffed • leg mode~ 29·42.
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499
·~--'
Sporting the turtle-emblem ••• with brua-buttoned
placktt front and a belt to wear or not. An Import
from British Hon1 Kon3 and in that marvek>w creue.
mist polyetler doubla-knll that needs no ironin1l
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SWJ7TO 14
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FASHION TURNS ON
THE CHARM WITH
THE PEASANT DRESS!
7ss
B!Jlot,ry-sleeved peasant dress of
crease·rt"Sislant calico cotton ... kmg
aod Oowy, with an elasticized higli·up
wabt and a b ·aJ·)'OU·like scooped
neck. The floral-striped print, t
country-fresh mix o( colors ... the whit fl
l&ce trim, with I hand-crocheted look.
SIDS S TO ti
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COSTA MESA-1601 Newport Blvd. at 16th
I • OPEN SUNDAY
II • S GARDEN GROVE -12372 Gordon Grove Blvd.
I
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-............ ~·~·"• -~
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THIS PANTSUIT IS
JUST WHAT YOU'VE
BEEN LOOKING FOR!
sss
But, who'd ever expect to find It at
~uch an unbelievably low price[ A
chic and cuu1l pantsuit in 11of1, rich.
bodied rayon knit with bon&!d l(oriate
linlng that holds the trim shape ... the
long·shirt top, with button.Hanked
zip-front ... the pants, 11edr: pull-om.
llDI 12 TO 20
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:Headphones
.Make Good
•
Please everyone in the house
.41t Christmas with gifts of His· . r n d • H e r s stereoph6nes,
~ackaged in their o w n
!ightWeight carrying cases.
Long popular among
iaudiophiles who want th e
finest In music reproduction,
l<05S stereophonea a l~ i re the
way to capture some private,
r>esonal listening moments.
l.Jse them . with stereo hi·fi as
we.JI 'As with teltvlsion. elec·
lrOniC· organ, and electric
tult.ir 10 lhAt each member of
the household can do his or
her ow n thing without dislurtJ..
if!g others or being disturbed.
'the His-and-Hers gift of
stereophone models K0.7278
in black for him and K-6 in tan
for her, lwt>phone extension
cable and carrying case.
rttails al under sixty dollars, aiJ over seventy-seven dollars
\tl.lue if p ur ch ased in·
slereophones. from S20 to i150
al hl·fi component 1tnd home
ebtertainment retailers.
.
Different
Mars Life
~xpected
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.
tAP) -The main charge of
detecting any life on Mars e.x-
pects to find livin1 organi~m1
On the planet but 11ay! thfy
'°'on ·1 be manlike g r e e n
creatures popular in science
f{ction.
jf)r .Harold P. Klein, director
nf life sciences al the Na tional
Aeronautics and S p a c e
A'd m In isl ration's Ames
~esearch C.enter, heads the
t:~am developing lhe life detec-
tion experiments, for NASA's
projected Viking mission tn
land two unmanned spacecraft
<in Mars in 1975.
He said Friday t h e
di6covery by Amell scientists
oJ life-building amino acids in
II.ii Australian meteorite offers
the besl evidence lo dale sup-
pOrting the theory of chemical
evolution of the universe.
'"If the theory is right, then
we may believe that che mical
eVolutinn may have proceeded
on Mars to the point where life
was initiated," Klein said.
But life en Mars may have
been checked at the level or
rnicro-crganisms er primitive
plants because the atmosphere
aDd environment of Mari hav.!I
M.en sttadily worsening com·
pared with the earth. he said.
Klein said , however, that
~tars and the earth started out
4.5 bllllon years ago with
1\niller 1tmospheres_and en·
v1renments. but Mars is a
1utialler pl1net with weaker
gravity ind great.er exposure
to!the sun 'a de 1 t r·uc t I e n
ultraviolet rays .
"AS Mera lo.!!l water i nd at·
mospherlc den.!lit.y o v e r
mj]lions of years. evolutionary
a48ptatlon may have produced
on the planet living creatures
ent:ased in tou~h shell struc-
eutu ol keep them surviving
against lemperature extremes
artd tack of water, Klein said.
An: Ames Center team
reported Tuesda y identifying
11 amino acids found in a
miteorile rock that fell at
Murchl~n. Austr11lia. Sept. 28.
1959. Th ese amino acids never
h8ve been found in any earthly
mittrial.
Thursd•y, Dec. 11, 1970, 01~ Oul ... SupPlem1nt 11 The DAILY PILO'fo-IS
T henie T reis Poor Socrates Was Jobbed . at Trial · One of the miM!t ' tllflilletnt· Robbi•, and candled apple
tren01 In 1 € h r 'l 1tm a11 themet; Cold, rtd, freen and
ATHENS (AP) -Socrates
11 making news again In
Athens, 2,369 years after he
drank I.ht poison hemlock.
Athen1 Appul1 Court. rev lti•·
ed the leg1I 1ope<11 of
,Socr1tes' ttt1J In the COutH ~
a lecture before a dl.stlnauJ1h-
ed crowd of l1wm1ker1 1
journalist.I 1nd university pro-
fessors.
thoutht lo beioq, AJIO, he ••id, there Wit doubt decor1Ung, 1ccordlni to a multl~lors rink high In PoP-!
spokesm1n, ha.!11 bttn \he use ularlty. The average teVtn,.
whether the 1nclent Greek cl the "thenle" trt e wtl)ch
The recent discove ry of the
"Royal Stoa," the site where
the great philosopher was in-
dicted, has been followed by a
new reconstruction a n d
critical examination of the
trial. A noted Athens high
court juda:e and historian,
Joannls 1.eglnis, says Socrate.!J
was the victim of "unjust In-
dictment" ind one of ancient
Grecces "greater ml8Car·
rlages ol justice."
Zettnlt chi.re• thlt ancltnt
pl1ywrl1ht Arlltophlntl 11!0
prejudiced the hurln&• by
depicting. SOc:r1W 11 an
athelat ·In bll celebrated play
'''T'he Clouds."
The Indictment w11 leveled
1galnat Socr1te1 by three
Athtniln cltllent; the poet
MelllOI, the I.Inner Anlto1 and
the orator Lykon. They chara:-
ed !he phllolopller w Ith
disrespect for the ,od• and
eorrupUon of youth.
penal law reCognized the of. be111r1 related om1ment.s and root tree carrles/280 Uatill, a
rien·se or corruptlori o( yaUth, deoorationl. Some of the m<llt minimum o( 84 decoratlon1.
and this additional chlrae Was popular are the circus, nur-four to six: doUn gJi.ss om.-
probably tacked on to make sery rhyme, Victorian , Della menlJ and 90 feet o( garland.
his posiiion graver in court. --:--'-·-----'---~----------
There was no court pro.
secutor, Socrat.es had no
defense counsel and there
were neither pr,osecuUon or
de[ense witnesses, FIR
Zeglnl.!1, a pnJjec11tOr of the
The one-day lri1I , he ufd,
was allged 1l a time when the
clima te of public opinion hid
betn 1ffected by the defeat or
Athens Jn a war aa:alnat
Sparta and by the political
passions cultivlted by · Lbe
S o p h i ·s t 1 , 1 philOS<lfihlcal
movement to which Socrates
was popularly but erroneously
The clvirge w11 Imprecise,
Ze1lnls 11Jd, 1lnce it men-
tioned nG 1peclflo instances.
Procedure for isseument of
senten« at th1t time ~as for'
the accuser to propose one
penalty, the conde mn ed
another, and the judges to
decide at a fin1J verdict.
'
"" t® -~fa~ ICISSIW ~:at IClllNll'S · ~:at ~,~
THUMBELINA SPIROFOIL OON'TCOOK MICROSCOPE
Cri1sy'1
MW
cou1in
with
r'ooted
grow-
ing
hair
•••• 12.11
9aa
YOUR FULL
SERVICE TOY STORE
Where Yeu'll •inti th• Greetest
Selectl.en• et Yovr feverlt•
lrand•I Her• Ar• Just a ••w: * Modome Alexonder Dolls * Fisher Price Pre-School Toys * Playsk.aol Educational Tcv-* famous Vogue Dolls * Murray Wheel Toys * Radio Steel Wagons & Scooters * famourMottel T.V. Toys
Tho"send• and Tho"1and1 of fa• ..
cinatin1 Toys te ChHse from at
Yo"r All•Tay Ster•·
Whul OHdl A111ow~ltd -,, .. of ChllfO
MAR·X BIG WHEEL
3 wheeled speed cycle. Big wheel in front for
maximum 1peed. Adju1t
mokimum 1peed.
....
16.95
Adjus1nble 1ent
for fitting
older childreo.
I 17j)
12aa
POl.Y PUFF BEDROOM
Beautiful YOUR SET P1,1tl her CRISSY 1tring, •h• Creole hundr14' of dilftr• GOOSE
DOLL .. owoken1 & e nt 1mbo111d design• few.rt up IC) 415 timet. . thot look ond feel like in-lnclvdes equipment rock, ll'HOWI 0
Gracefu l, ki11. With lay d11igr11. 11ide1 and cover glos1.
exquhite
• hond •
pointed
doll. With ••• 11,ts rC>Cted
growing
hoir.
•••• 12.11 •• ,.s.fJ
ass .... ' 7ss 399 •••• ,, '·" " J.91
,.
PRE-CHRISTMAS
f~~~./
PRICE EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 10 THRU DECEMBfE:'.:R::1::3::----,
•ult:: ?.liliJi1&... ~. ·<4Zfa1L1lh. •• ...,;""-i': SIZZLER$ ~·· ~-T
NEWPORT RACER SET SIZZLER
Set has Sizzler e lectric car and cho~ger, 1 •'track, CARS'
2 full curves and 7 joiners. Sin gle lone e1 ses, singl•
lane broke, speedometer. .. ,.
12.95
gee
TYCO RACE CAR SET
Th is double bcJ ,..ked curve racing 'et i1 a wild one
w ith 24'' of rocing action pock•d into a 3'x6'
layout.
Wotld'1 fosle•t
electric cars. Roe l
'em, chorge 'em,
qgoin a l'ld again.
• ••• J,50
266
""';"·-······ 1 use coul'le fea111re1 ~-tor ltf ·
Lemont llo~·fln11h. l 4 •• ·
for two or fCM.lr drtve11. etr.,...;..1,11 •&l lOYCOlf.
SUPER SEE 'n SAY
•
) rt111 .~
FACTORY
• Mold yo11r own corJ.
• h'1 like hovlng yaur
own 011embly line.
ALL PRO HOCKEY
The official game
N.H.L Ployert
As1ociotiol'I,
Ref.
12.50 aaa
PLAYSET Th!1 lovable, tNffed 1of1y ·~--"",,...
doll it 12" high, She come1
STARGAZER
REFRACTOR
TELESCOPES TOYS
with her ow11 hou1e and g
1et of bedroom furl'liture
and ployho111e.
'(Big enough
for a little girl
lo ploy in),
#1388
88 •••• JZ.11
.~~ 19ee
New eo lv-
touch chord
keys, wilh
1impllfted
number
1y11em.
'All-purpo1• teletcope
for viewing rh. hffv-
e nl nr di1lont lond-
scope1. Produce• Im-
ages nf remorkobl.-
clority, d ue to large 60
Mm obfective lenJ.
•••. 2,,,$ 2295
CROSSOVER
THE BRIDGE
Kohner "Pop-o.Mo•ic" chol·
lenge game. for ~ to " plcry·
e11, with 2 Pop-O·Motic cub•
t hok e•J.
•••••. '5 ••
344
Eo1y pu1hbu1ton oper·
o tion for the1e long
ploying 1uper SH 'n.
$oy toy1. This toy of-
fer• 1-4.C delightful
11cond1 of leorl'ling ,,.
•••. t.'5
7aa
Comet whh o magic detk. ·She co pi et w+iot YO\I draw,
write or trace. No bot1erie1 needed.
SHELL SERVICE ·s:r ATION
COMplete with 2 plos·
tic cori, tow truck a nd
got 1tatlon eq11ipment. •••• S.'5 3ss
·EUaRIC
IRONING
SET
Set lntlud11 l,_lfll
board, iron·eM......,
pod whh cOWf', 1'9ft fl
Underwriter o~ ,
•••• •.• s
"
••
•,
'fhe 1975 Viking mission
tests will check for carbtln
diO:xide inll1ke as in plants a11d
foJ carbon dioxide release as
in ..artlmal metabolism. A third
te!i} will wash a Mars soil
1a~J?.le with water In which
clouClfiig will indicate ltving TH E cells. A fourth will check for
gas content changes in a trap-
ped 1ir sample.
• 223 E. 17th ST., COSTA ME.SA
• 5'4 8 • 5 4 5 4 •
Open 'Tll 9 P.M. Until Chrittmot -Sunday• 11 to 5 •• , "CHARGE IT" -Your lankAm•ric:ard & Master Charge Welc:ome
Olanges In oxygen or carbon
dioxide content would in·
dlcate existence of a life form
The measurement! will be
t r an 1 m I lt e d by rAdio
teTGme1ry to NASA monitors. '----------------------------------------------------------------------
I ) •, • '
.,
.-
. .. ..
• •
(-Ill Guldt i uPfllomont lo Tho DA ILY PILOT, Thurodo y, Doc. II, lt7D
Veterans Administration Se rs 'Roll-Call'
'l(ASHINGTON IUPI) -
The Veter1ns Adm.lnistr•Uoo
uid today thtrt now are more
than llx tJmes as m1ny
veterlJ\I on ii.! rolls than there
altackfd 2t yean ago.
The lKl total was 4,251.1,000.
w;th more than 9$ percent nf
thoat from World War I.
Today'• total is 28 million.
most of them Veterans ol tbe
connlct that began with Pearl
Harbor. The Admlnl.str1Uon
also said the turrent total in.
eludes IW1'1 veterarui of the In-
dian wars, about 4 , o O O
Spanish ~ American w 1 r
veterans and t.5 million who
served Jn World War I.
' were when Pearl Harbor was
ut~~neS bw shoes
' Still Soaring
Space tops were big l•.~t
year but they'll be even bigger
this year, according to one
manufacturing representative .
He said thert will· be a switch
SANTA'S FOOTWEAR
HEADQUARTERS
M•1t•r Ch•r9 • a.lon gs W ith C hristm••
245·247 For .. 1 ...... , Lat-loach
4'4-27"
in emphasis this year from
toys aimed at blasting off to 1 the moon to toys that ei:plort
the moon's sUrface.
----AFTER 45 YEARS OF BUSINESS AS ONE OF
THE NATION 'S LARGEST WHOLESALE TROPICAL
FISH SUPPLIERS
PACIFIC GOLDFISH FARMS
•
HAS SOLD IT'S LOCATION & MUST DISPOSE OF
THE IR HUGE STOCK. THOUSAND S OF ITEMS
AVAILABLE AT GREAT SAYINGS.
GIOUND SIA SHELL ~--LI. 2sc ut>.tt\U~s \ 5'
1>-Q········································i.10
o'fll. ..... ...... 5
l GoJ.l.l.Dll I . . .. .. • .... 6•'
' ,,.11v. ........ ......... 5
\ GoJ.1.1.Dll , . . ....................... ······ \ 9 • 9
i:o11Go ··· .
0 Go,.1.1.0ll . .., ...... .
' ~Go . .. • ..... ~ 1,0P tll ~ ,_,.\,\,OP \,\. •1 . io w • AQUA TIC PLANTS
Top The List With a Va cuum Cleaner
Helpful Holiday Hints
Aid Hap less Homeowner
For (!Uick holida y cleanups.
keep an extra bottle of pine
cleaner and a sponge in your
kitchen c Io set. Triple-duty
pi~e cleaner cleans. disi nfect.s
and deodorizes all al once.
Jusf"before setting up lhe
tree. saw ort the trunk at an
angle at least one inch above
the original cut. Place tree in
LBJ to Run'
water, mak ing sure that the
level of wat er is above cut at
all times. Make sure the tree
1 is well supported and is placed
away from sources of heat
such as fireplace.-; or radia-
tors and where ii will not block
any exits in case of fire .
There is no doubt about It,
evergI'.eens and the entire
ga rden appear much more at-
lractive when the Christmas
lighl:I are on. The reason isl
lhal darkness blots out
unsighll.v areas. But the bulbs
BALTIMORE (UPI) -Ac· should be placed so that they
~rdlng . IA> his y o u n g e r dn nnt touch the nee"clles nf the
brothier, 'fo r mer President evergreens and one should
Lyndon B. Johnson hall not check the position of them ~
CHRISTMAS SPICIALS
TABLES FROM 1269"
Play the fF.'Tll3 with the best '
B!UllMwidt.
THE NO. 1 NAME IN BILL/ARDS
MATABEJR
Tl" M•I ... • l .. tu•H • 111''
lllldl 111 ... ,1..,. -'•'• ""'·
'"'"'""' ....... 11lffld .. , ,,.,Hllfflll tlly, IMhl~t live ruMIV Conllflflt alld ,...,HI-I ~Uillty 11y .... l-I Clllh lollf .. 111 ,1., •• 1111,.
$695°0
YOURS
FOR CHRISTMAS
JOINTED
CUE STICK
WITH
CASE 995
up
~
M•n's Styl•• From $1.t S
LADIES
NASSAU $595
BLACK
BEAUTY
s2295
THE
DUNHAM
Vi" t hic:k thre•·pi•c:•
•1l1t• bed with rublM'r
cu1hlon• & 1il•nt r im
rttur n system.
BOWLING BAGS
From
$495
CHUCK'S Bowling, Billiards
AND TROPHIES
''"""'""' 2750 HARBOR BLVD. tJo":~:~~ ['..;.fl ~
-Costa Mesa 540-7303 , .
J-D
AQUAllUM
IACKGIOUllD
M•ny V•rl•tlH so•;. 0''
TROPICALS
zr ... , 12/I'"
each day. Windll may shift
gotten over lhe presidentialj~l~h~•m;;.:o~ul~o~r~po~s~it~io~n~. iiiOiiiiOi.i,iiiOiiiiOi~~~~~~~~~~=:=:=:=:=:~El~~~~~~:~_, .. ;I bug. ---.!.-_
In an interview puhlished in l so,,.""
•l~OftTID
LIVllfAUu 29c
ILUI N .
GIU•A•o •········ 49c.
LYJtnA.fL ..
Mou, ......... 1•50 SILV11t .._
DoLLAI ..... _ 98 c ••.
A'JtlCA.N
•IOG A. . ... .,,, c
lllDTAIL 'IN N . •wo•o ...... 7•50 'A.Hey ...
GOLD"IH To 250'"
kOr (Swfni I ... •••••• , ...... ~;: 500'" ...
l'onll ownen:
ORNAMENTAL STONE LANTERNS & PONO
FILTERS ARE GREATLY DISCOUNTED.
PACIFIC GOLDFISH FARM
14"2 IDWAIDS ST., WESTMINSTER
10'' IAN 1011&0 PlllWAY' AT IOLSA)
VISIT US 7 DA¥S A WllK 'ROM 10-S
the Sunday editions of the
Ba ltiinore News-American.1
Sam Hou ston John.'4ln said hel
thinks his brother will run for
the presidency again "next
time if Nixpn fallers."
Johnl!On, who last year
published a controversial
memoir called "My Brother
Lyndon," said he doell not
believe t~e Democrats have a
winning presidential candidale
for 1972.
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie. D-
Ma ine, "Ill strong bu t he will
fide away," said Johnson.
"He ill makini;t the sa me
mistake Ted Kennedy made.
he's running too soon."
Sam Johnson's comments
were made from a bed Al
Johns Hopkins H06pita1 where
he was treated for 11 leg injury
.._-that baa bothered him for 14
~~~~~~~~~~~~Y··~~·~ I r-•MMMMM••••••MMM•MM•M~~M.,.iMJ!fU¥!1M••M M•MMM·~~-M,
I Give Him F')) GOLF SHIRTS ~
I muns1·ngwear~ \~'!,,:~ GOLF SWEATERS i, · 1 H '·: GOLF SLACKS /' ~I
Ii ii I Ml
·i I
I I I ~ . I t ·~\\ <I f ;1
I ~l ···~··/!I
I • I ., \\ "" '"'::;, 0.1~',\'; , _) . gl
! 6 "~tte" <••ii Sl7.IO nl
'ull o"'•r 111ed1l Sl 4.00 ~t
''·"
" ··1 ,ig
I I I i 1 //~M.~i 5:
''• trl ' _, !1 Bi ~
~ ~
OP£N •:J0-6:00 MON •• SAT.-Fll. "Tll t !OO ,M
GIVE A SET OF BO
Foe ·.c
Like the Orange Bowl.
The Gator Bowl,
The Hula Bowl.
And, of course, the
Rose Bowl.
And pack11ge them up
nicely in a beautiful-to-
look-at Sylvania color TV.
The colon; are honest,
the detail sharp, and the contrast
vivid.
Imagine the joy of a
Sylvania Christmas.
BIG 25" COLOR!
8[~ 2:'1'" rl iAC'. n11•11s. "''!'f'rn. Syl\'ll111A
enlnr T\" n1ndl'I C'l~l.1 1n SjVlnish !<lfll'rl
r11hinl'1 . ln<"h1rt"~ 1111<h h11ttnn 1\utn-
n111t1r Fill<' T1111111~ 11nrl thr hiizhlv <1{'·
IJf'nd!lhlr Gihr11lt11r x.·, • tn1 • ('hA~;;f~. 1n.
unr t1nn Cha i r.~1df' Cnlnr Cnntrnl op·
liona!. r xlra.
$599.95
NEW, LARGE 19" COLOR
All orw table color 'J"\1• J las the
all new Sylvania 19"' diag. meas.
color acreen and the highly
efficient Sylvan ia Klhd slate
tripler. Bu ilt-in VHF and UHF
anlcnna&. Sylva nia model CXi8,V,
$398.88
'
~· ~ ~ • • • ' ' • '
SYLVANIA
Your headquarters for Sylvania home ent.ertainmcnt products.
(
WI RIALLY DO SERVICE WHAT WE SELL I
Radio Dispatched Service
Specialists on Sylvania, RCA, Sony, Frigidaire, Maytag.
Df'pendobllity ancl reliability siltc• 1947.
COSTA MESA-4\I £. 171h St,
'46·1614 D•!ly •·•. S•I. ,_.
EL TOltr"-Ltqun• H iii' Pl"'i•
137·3130 (Nt•t lo S~u .Qn)
Dilly 10·6, Mon. & rrl. 10·9
~· .. ---__ ·___:_:,_,:..._:,_·. ___: _ _._:~_i...:._._-'---'---~----"------....,;..--------.... -
I Thursday, Dae. 11, 1970, Gift Guidi Suppl1m1nt to Th• DAILY PILOT-11
15 CottJt Students Compl ete UCI Work
' rilteen or_,, ~ 1111 From Llpu B<lcb: John
r11ldentl are lllloilf 11 Albert HIQ&nl, 231 Viejo St.,
-II ccmploUq blcbelor dr1m1, and Stephen t~•il
de11ee nqulnllllllll dtlrinl Taylor, 2IO Btverly St., ooc:lll
From Newport B e a c II :
Jame1 Arthur Bratrud. 530
IM Hirn, 118 39tll St., 10Cial
Ille pul --ion 1t -~ UCINinl. .~K_••_nces~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-\
All II wUl JOCOlvl blcbelor
ol arll ._ dllrtlla ccm-
me.ncement uerclan next
Juoe. Jl'ollowlng are th e
1tudents. plus their ac:ldruses
RJvenlde Ave., art, and Karen JackBidweJ)
lclence1. says,
~ .• .~,.,~ <~'C11t Y our Own .
·:· ' ,. Santa Claus invites vis itors ·to "the other" ·Sa nta's
Village to cut thei r own Ch ristmas trees and tQ
.·vis it with him, see hls reindeer, watch elves at
Work and visit j!'.ift shops. This Sant8's Village is in
Santa Cruz Couniy. The "local" Santa's Village, in
San Bernardino ~1ountains near Big Bear. offers
.similar sights and shops but no cut-them-yourself
trees. For Ji't of tree fanns. write: Christmas Trees,
P. 0. Box 1582, Santa Cruz. CA. 95060.
'Most Active Patient Ever,'
Got New Heart 2 Years Ago
The DA ILY PILOT-
The One Thet CerH
ALPENA. Mich. (UP1 ) -world.
Two years ago, Donald Lee "You know, people have a
Kaminski was near dea th little heart trouble and they sit
from degeneration of the he art around. so careful and all," he
muscle . Today, at 40, he said. "That's not my way."
celebrated his second an-Kamlnski's v.'ay Is putting
niversary with a new heart. nearly 21.000 miles on his new
Kaminski ~·as the second car in lhe past six months,
heart transplant in Michigan much of the mileage ac·
and the 99th in the world. cumulated ~cause of his job
Since December. 1967, lhere as an exercise m a c h i n e
have been 163 he a r t salesma,."
transplants and only 23 of the He iJ an enthusiastic hunter
rec ipients are still ali ve. and fisherman. He grew up at
Kaminski talks about being_ ,,a ham.941n the woods of Alpena
the most active he a rt -catching his first fish at the
~~~~~~~~~~t~ran~s~p~lan~t~p~ati~·c~nl~i~n .i'~~e age of 4 and hunting al 8. i; -1 Kaminski smokes and drinks
and knows how to handle a
I
--
THE ROARING . FORK
SKI SHOP
SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTIES
OWN SPECIAl.ITY SHOP
"Get It On W ith Mester Charge'•
34141 COAST HWY. DANA POINT
714-496-4921
I hangover.
"Tomato juice is I he
secret," he Bald, with a
salisfle'd smllf. "You know it's
g6od for a hangover, so people
drink it the morning after.
\Veil. whv not drink It with the
beer? Ttien you neve r get the
hangover.''
Kamins ki 1uffered hls first
heart attack in 1966 and dur-
ing the next two years, he was
in the hospital seven times.
Fin ally. on Sept. 27, 1968, he
was admitted to University
Hos pital in Ann Arbor.
"He was going to die ," said
one doctor. "He was here just
to see whether we could think
of anything else to help him.
But he was terminal."
Kamin.ski's h ea r t
degenerated with a cond ition
known as cardio-myopathy -
was pumping less than a quart
of blood a minute. A normal
heart pumps more than six
quarts or blood into the
system every minule when Lhe
body is al rest.
Kaminski said doclors told
him a heart transplant would
give him a 5(1.50 chance to
live.
He said he told the doctor1,
"Hell, t know the odds. I'm
ready tor the transplant right
now."
The operation began the
evening of Dec. 2. It took an
hour and 15 minu1's to put the
heart of 22-year~ld Robert
Pushman , who suffered fatal
brain damage in an auto ac·
cident, into Kaminski.
He left the hospital on Feb.
2.
According to Dr. Donald R.
Kahn of University Hosplt61,
and majors: :
From CalUI """° 1 Altrl4 !Mb Halvonen, 317'1 Mlcllpn
Ave., German; Werner peter
Karle, 4311 !. 11111 St., ioclll
science; ShlFyn. Lee Jon•
Riddel~ 216 Sherwood Place,
mathematic~: .Sharon K1 Saba,
2020 Fullerton Ave., art, and
Saiidr1 An~ SchMlder, 1017-B
American Place, Enalllh.
From DBQI Point: Clndy G.
Burress, 25232 Staysail !)rive,
art.
From·P'ot•'--ln Valley: Ken-
neth Del Hansen, 178.'\5 San
Bernardo Cirtle, biJtory.
From H11ntbll(to1 Buell:
HeM!ne Sylvie Setlak, 7111
Talbert Ave., French.
From Jrvtne: Robin Gene
Leiter, 17192 MaM St ,.
history : James LeRoy Sheet.!1,
100 Foxalove Way, art, and
P1tricl1 A. Srnllb, art.
Black Dolls
CHRISTMAS IS .UPON US!
II you want to sp•nd e peace~
fu l hO#r pickint' out • tr1e1ur1
for the child on your li1t , • ,
come ••• us. Old Fe1hioned
ldea17 Yes. Old Fashioned S1t-
tiog7 Y ... SALE ON CHRIST·
MAS BOOKS? YH,
Trude Herp1r ·
675'·1424
• •
There'll be mort new black
dolls on Lhe market lbi1 year
and an lncreue in utroloty•
related toys . no1 I!. CDl6T Mwt • co~a. 4'n ""'R
ristmas
shop
everyCSunday
at CJlullock's
CSanta ..
shop .noon
to~:OOp.m.
SHOP EVENING HOURS
AT BULLOCK'S SANTA .ANA
9:30 TO 9:30-MON. THRU SAT.
•
striJ?eS are for-
tigers
Give your male animal sOme
wlld stripes for Christ mas ;. ••
Jack Bidwell has a huge stock
o striped sh irts, ties, s~rt
1coars and sl acks ... so!lle
domesticated, some wild. Just
th ink what a bold,ne\v,coror ..
fol shirt \vii i do for his ta!ne
grey suit. jack also has g~eat
sport coats-camelhalr, hDp ..
sack and corduroy alongWi tfl
a full line of accessories. '.
Stop.in and let lack show You
how eas.y Ch ristmas hun~ng
can be. .
Bidwell's oC Newpott, 3467
Vli1. lido, NewPort Be~h,
• 673·4510 :
tests taken of Kaminsld each L~--~-----------------...' month show him to be a ~
,l normally healthy man of 40. .Sit.op Bu.llotk'• SoMa.AM, I :30 tAJ 9 :30, Sunday• +ton till 6 :oo P.M., 1 Fa11lion. Squar8, 541·7211
I
. l
j
For that
special .
Whenyou11art Someone S
think ing about C::h • t •. her and Chrl5tmas, . rlS mas
sion .•. precious beyond compa re for
what it symbol izes. She may never have
evarylhiiig. But 1ha'll never have
anything that compares to her pmega.
.I
"
do yourself a favor,
Pas1 over those ord inary gilt thoughts
and think about a fine Omega watch,
The Omega watch you give 1hl•
Christmas will become a proud poaaes·
A-2S dll111on41. 1'1( 1011~ g.otd br1ttlrl .,.1tcll. S72S
fl-l'K t Olld 901~ 1111~ DllCl ll l Wtltll ..... , , . ,5515
c-s .al1ml'lld1. 14K •1111e 01 ~•llow 1olld otld
CO\'l f•lld ltrtctlt l WllCll ..................... 1m
J. C. ..J/.umphriej r!}eiueferj
1823 NEWPORT BLVD,. COST A "\ESA ,
CONVENIENT TERMS
B.4.NKAMERICARO;--MASTER CHAltG'
'•
•
24 YEARS 1N SAME LOCAT ION
PHO~l 14l·J40f
.,
I
Sleeping Bags 14.95 to 79.95
Back Packs & Frames 12.95 to 45.00
Camping Stove 8.95
K28 Goll ~alls 12.GO Dot
Sammy Golf Shoe Brushes 1.95
Duck Feet Fins 8.95
Wonder Kick Boards 4.50
Frisbees 95c to 2.95
Doorbar Gyms 5.95 & 6.95
Handf rips • Jump Ropes
Voit Junior & Intermediate
FootbaUs 6.95
, Other Footballs 5.95 to 21.95
Basketballs 3.95 to 19.95
Backboards & Goals
Volleyballs • Soccer Bans
Rams & Jets Fooball Uniforms
Champion Handball Gloves
Speedo Swim Trunks
Bike Parts • Tires & Tubes
Bjcyclis · Unicycles
CLOSID SUNDAY
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For the B91lnning Tennis
Player A Metal Racket for 17.95
Wilson T2000 Steel Racket
Strung Nylon 32.95
Wilson Kramer Racket
Frame Only 16.95
Dunlop Fort Racket Frame 15.95
Davis Classic Frame Only 32,00
Pennsylvania Tennis Balls
While Pr. Doz. 7.50
Yellow Pr. Doz. 7.95
Wilson Tennis Balls Pr. Doz. 8.35
Tennis Dresses
· 13.95 to 26.95
Tennis Sweaters Ladles
10.95
Tennis Jackets Mens 14.95
Converse Tennis Shoes
ladies 7.50 Mens 7.95
Jack Purr.P.11 Tennis ShoP.s
ladles 7.9~ Mens 8.95
538 CENTER ST., COSTA . MESA
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Thursday, Dec:trnber 10, 1970
,.
A GENTLEMAN WITH WHISKERS WISHES
TO SEE ME ABOUT MY IML"\'.IEDIATE FUTURE
This young lady is headed for Fashion Island to see Santa Claus.
Sixty fashionable stores are stocked to meet her every request -
and yours. Santa's on the mall daily and all stores are open nights
M~nday thru Saturday. Many stores open Sundays noon to 5 p.m.
ALL 60 STORES OPEN EVERY NIGHT (Monday thru Saturday) 'TIL CHRISTMAS
10 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.
ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER
l'•<ific Co .. t Highw•y between )•mboree and M•cArthur, Freeway minutes •W•Y·
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. II DAILY PILOT Tl!Uri.dQ, Otctmbtr lC, 1970
Plunl\.ett
NEW YORI( IAP ) -Quarterback Joe
Thelsmann of Notre Dame was named to
The AMocialed Prtss All-America foot·
ball team today over Heisman Trophy
winner Jim Plunkell of Stanrorrl.
Joining TheJsmann on the select all-star
6qUad wtre three repeaters from 1969 -
offenllive guard Chip Kell of Tenneuee
and defensive guard J im Stillwagon and
corner back Jack Ta1u1n, both of Ohio
State.
Texas, Ohio State, Nebraska. Louisiana
State and Notre Dame -the !tams rank•
td 1·2·3-.>8 in The AP's final regular
season poll -each plared two players on
the All-America tram.
Plunkett is the third Heisman Trophy
winner to miu 1electlon on the first team
of The Altoc:lated Pren All -America
football ttam in the 35 yeara the He lsman
Award t\11 been m1de.
Angelo Bertelll of Notre Dame, the
Heleman wiMer in JH:l, w1s not)>" The
AP AJl·A1nerlc1 flr•l team. Nelltier waa
P1ul Hornung, •Ito of Notre Dame, the
1955 Hellman winner.
The biggest surprise, perhaps, wa1 the
selection of Thelsmann over Plunkett.
Their passing statlatl'cs were fJlrly Ci>m·
par1~le.
TheismaM com pleled I» of 268-57 .8
percent ~ for 2,(%9 yuds and l&
touchdowns with 14 In le r c e pt lo n 1.
Plunkett was 191 for Ml-63.4 percent -
Sliare Div is ion Lead
Bengals Surprise
Pro Team of '70
CINCINNATI (AP ) -Paul Brown's
Cincinnati Bengals are becoming fat cat.a
In the National F'ootbatl League by
feed ing on other teams' mistakes while
keeping their own to a minimum.
In the la.st fi\'e ga mes lhe Bengals have
lost only one fwnble and have had Just
Coach Call s
UCI Polo
A Cru sade
Accolades have come Ed Newland'1
"'ay from many people and areas since
his UC lrviJle water polo tea m defeated
UCLA to v"in the NCAA championship.
However, one or the most impressive
tributes I've heard is one Newland hasn't
picked up -mainly because it was said
to me in private l.'Onversation witb.
Fullerton JC polo tutor Ernie Polle.
"I wi.sh my son was good enough to go
to UC!;' Polle said. "I'd give anything
$LINH WNIT•
-------WHITE
WAS H --------
for him to be able to go through
Ney.·Jand's program. It's not just a y.·ater
polo team -it's a crusade."
Polle's youngster is good enough to
pla y for FullerlOn .JC after havi ng
performed at Troy High, hoY.'C\'er.
At any rate, Newland surely deserves
aU the compliments that come his way,
He y.•orks hard, is sinl.'ere and dedicated.
And he believes that stuff he put out at
the UC! awards banquet Tuesday night -
his players arc magnifice nt human
beings and he y.•ishes they Y.'ere all his
gong, Further, his daughter could marry
any of them.
\\'ith that kind of feel ing . small wonder
the guys respond wilb. supe r
performances.
* * * Would you he.lle\•e the Cinci nnati
Bengals hnve the lnslde track lo their
N11lonal Football Le.nl'(1u• dh·i~lnnal tllll'?
They are tled with Cleveland l'1r the l~ad
but have easy y.·indups with Houston and
Boston.
Ceveland. 1nean"·hile, ha5 In lf'SI
resurJtent Dallas la llkely \•lclnry for the
latter I and Den\f'r -a probable win for
Cleveland.
A Cincinnati dlvlslonal crol4'U l\'ould be
some kind of feather In the c1p of
\·eteran coach Paul Broy.·n.
* * * Before awarding any divisional titles to
the Rams. bear in mind the distinct
possibilities of their losing to Detroit and
the New York Giants.
The latter game is Oct. 19 in Y.'hat you
c::an expect to be an icy Yankee Stadiu1n.
And Detroit surely will be the pivotal
~ame -if the Ran1s get by that one,
they should be In. Be~ldes San F'riincisco. the terinl tied
\\'ilh Los Angeles for the division lead can
be expected to I~ Its finale In Oakland
\\'hile Its other enga111emcnt tNew
Orleans ) looks like a shoo-in of SF.
three pas1es intercepted while the ir op-
ponents Jost IS fumbles and had 11 passes
picked off .
Thit di1clplined play resul ted In five
1traight victories for the Bengals and
moved them into a tie with Cleveland
atop the America n Conference's Central
Division with a &-6 mark.
"We make them make all th eir points
on their own power," said coach Brown
ln explaining how pr~cision has pa id nrf
for the Bengals' lack of power. "We don't
give the opposition many breaki."
The Bengals have also betn one of the
lov.·er·penallzed clubs in pro football.
"We're making fewer and fe.S.er
mistakes," Brown said, "but lha1'1 the
way it's supposed to be as you gain
maturity.''
More often than not, Cincinnati il out·
rushed and out·passed, but they do excel
in a host ol specialty categories.
Lemar Parrish is the Bengals return
specialist who has run back a kick-off 115
yards for a touchdown and a punt 76
yards for a score. I-le has ranked high all
year in the American Conference in both
return categories.
On the other hsnd , soccer-styled place
kicker Horst Muhlmann and punter Da ve
Lewis ha ve kept runba cks to a minimum
with their long boots.
Muhlmann has also converted 21 of 33
field goals and stands second in the
American Conference in scoring. Lewis
who averages 46.2 yards a punt, is first.in
the conference in that category.
''Our kicking game has been outslan·
ding," Brown said . ''It 's one of the big·
gest sing le developments this year."
The defense has really come alive,
allowing only fi ve touchdowns in the last
fi ve games. Brown ssld, "our defense is
getting better, but we're not the Los
Angeles Rams or the Minnesota (Vi kings)
Purple People Eaters."
And last but not least, Brown said, "a
great deal of l.'redit must go lo
quarterback Virgil Carter. We pegg~d our
future on him about the n1iddle· of the
year and we've been able to win with
him."
Brown thought It would be a long year
ctfter rookie standou t qu11rterback Greg
Cook was lost for the seaMJn and other
key player& were hurt. but it's been going
better than he ever could 've hoped for.
Ramos to Fight
Roj as 1'oni ght
At LA Ol ym pi c
• LOS ANGE LES (AP\ -Two former
l.'ha mplons and stable mates, 1'1ando
Ramos and Paul Rojas. square off
lonigh t in their persona l local war At the
Olympic Auditorium.
The 22-year-0ld R11mos dethroned "'Orld
light"·eighl titleholder, is fAvored over
Rojas. 28, "'ho once held a share of the
feather"·eight cro~·n.
The 10-round bout wa s set last \\'eel. but
postponed because RArnos came· up wilh
a familiar malady-an allerRY !hat caus·
ed puffy S\~elling around hoth eyes.
The onetime buddies in and out of the
ring parted company v. hen Hojali con1·
plained I.hat their n1anagcr. .lel.'kic
~tcCoy, v.·as devoting n1ore attention lu
~tando.
Rujas has n1adc no secrrt one of his
n1ain targets v.·ill be Ramos' right eye.
Ramus sufferl'd a se\'ere gash o,·cr the
eye in .,.,•inning a blood y decision Cl\'Cr
SuJitAr Remos at the Olympic se\'e ral
v.·eeks ago.
2nd Fiddle on All-America
for 2,715 yard1, JI TDs and 11 In·
Jerceptlnna;.
However, Thelsmann added 184 yards
on the ground to Plunketl'I 113 snd
finished second nationally in total oflense
with 281.3 yardl per game '° 363.6 ror
Plunkett.
T e Joss to Purdue, in wh ich Plunkett
was · tercepted five times, and the 1.et·
backs hands of the Alr Force and
California, in which llt was outshone Dy
Bob Parker and D1,ve Penhall, r11pec·
lively, hurt his chal\ces.
The Alt For.::e and 'cal game1 c11ne
after Stanford h•d alre1dy clinched the
Pacific a title and Rose Bowl bid.
In Notre Dame's lone def e 1 t,
'J'helsm1nn threw for Qt yards aa•lnlt
use In lhe raln and, 1ltJJou1h he wu In·
tercepted fOUI' 1lmt1, two of them came
late ln the a•rne as he de1perately tried
to pua the ltlah into con!ention.
~lrJ.wr '"'1:i;j -11"1 Ir•~'=-"• Wnt \llrl lllll , .. 1, m , .... \11 ··~Ill, ,,, ·1 ,1 • .,. -Er11i. J1Mlnci•, Air l'ffU ..... "j' r.. i fl .. • Cltv, •nd Elmo Wr)tllt, HouslOll. •·O, 11 ' '1· '•10<11 ...... l tli K -O•n O!t rdffl, Mlclll1•"· .. ~. uo, , ... C1~!Pft, 011~, 11111 ao11 N•wlon, Ntbr11k1, ~4. 41, Sr., LI Mlr1111.
Gt:d• -L~frV O!NtrlSO NOl[I O•m•, .. t. t.O, Ir., ue1n1, N.Y,, tnd (lllD kill, Tll\l'llNH, 6-1, 1..0, r., 11wr. G1.
c..,1., -Don ,._,,,.,11, Ctlorfd•. 6-J, t.O, Sr., lllYllWfl, Mt. ~r·•••Da(t; -J .. r"';'-""· Nol•• o.m1, .... 11;i\,~l ... '°1~1 ~"11~i>!:;'Mcc1w11~, Nortll C.uolln1." 0. J!I, Sr , G1rdfn <'Irr. N.Y. ~ Stove Wor1l1r,
'T1•11, .... 110.. Sr~ l <lclte City, T11.
N orth Star Catight i1a Middle
l\linnesota's J . P. Parise (11) Is separated from the puck by the handy
stickwork (lf P ittsburgh's Jim Morrison (27) and Ken Sc)linkel during
...
SF'S BOB PORTMANN SCORES
Warriors Trip Det roit, 110-99
UCI Cagers
Challe11ge Poets
In Tournament
By llOWARO L. KANDY
01 1111 Dl llJ l'lltl S1'11
Poetry isn't .selling well these da)'S and
the Whiltier Collt~ge basketball team
hasn't won a game in three outings on
foreign llOLI.
These !acts or life pose a distinct pro-
bl em for coach Tim Tifl and the UC
Jr\•ine basketball tean1 as the Anteaters
tangle with !he \\'hillier Poets tonight !71
In opening round action of the annual
Kris Kringle 1ournan1ent at the Cal Stale
( fo'ullertnn ) gyrn .
The hosts !ang!C' wi1h Chapman in the
finale 11 1th the v.·inners meeting Friday
night 111 9 and ;he losers at 7 lo conclude
the two·day affa ir.
Y.'hitti11r, defending Kris Kring I e
titli1>I, lost a pa ir or games in Hawaii to
start thl• season and dropped an ~75
decision 10 L'C' Riverside Tuesday for its
th ird straight loss.
111e Poc1 s have All five starters back
frnr11 last year's district J NAIA cham-
pionship 1ean1 p<1ced by high scoring Bob
Ch£'t.>ks, a 6·6 ce nter. "He "s an outstan·
din.it pro prospect." Tift says after ha\·ing
\l:lll.'hcd him pla y at Ri\'erside Tuesday
ni.:ht.
For\\·ar1ts for the POf'ls arc Ru.~s
Shar11le3 16-6) anti \Villie Nelson 16-ll)
\\'ilh Sieve Scoggin !6-2l and Willie Allen
(5-9/ co11 \ruling the b<1ckcourt.
L'C J will be playing its third game of
lht• season aft er splitting \1•ith Sonon1a
Stale and Cal State tLos Angeles ).
"1'111 ~l i ll optim islil.' about this season ."
Tift eonlinucs. "I dun't think we v.•ill run
anybody off the l.'OUrl becAuse we lAl.'k
hrisht hut we 're ~oing to irnprove Caf'i'l
"·rck . 1'hc kids are just now gett ing the
frel or playing together and their con-
fidence is building up.
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NHL action Wednesda.Y nlghl in MiMesota. The two tea ms fought lo i
2-2 tie.
Sports In Brief
No T~ for Ram Game;
Laver Tramples Ashe
LOS ANGfo~L~S -W~ks ago Los
Angeles Ram football fans began clamor.
ing for tickets to the r>etroit Lions' game
here next Monday night.
The Hams an nounced Wednesday that
the National Football League contest is a
78,000·pl us sellout.
The game will be nationally tele l.'ast by
ABC, w!th this area.blacked out.
•
TOl\YO -Stan Sm ith of Pasadena
beat Jan Kodes of Czechoslovakia 6·3, 6-5
\\'edncsdAy for his second triumph in the
SS0.000 rounrl robin tennis tournament in-
volving the lop Grand Prix fini shers.
In other si ngles matches, Corona del
~tar's Rod Laver downed Arthur Ashe, 6·
S, 6-2. It w11s Laver's second victory
against one loss while Ashe is l·l.
•
INGLEWOOO -lton Stewart 1lamn1ed
hon1e a rebound with tw o minutes ~
seco nd11 to play a~ New York scrambled
bAck for a 2·2 lie with Los AnReles
\\'edncsday, 1noving the Rangers into a
deadlock with Boston for first place in
the Nat ional Hocke y League East,
•
BOSTON -Washington \1·on learn
honors for the fir st lime in 36 seasons al.'·
cording to the official l!liO fielding
records released by the American League
office \Vedncsda y, but th e biggest
!'>urprisc is the nan1e that isn·1 there lhis
yc<1r -Broo ks Hnb111snn.
Thr 11;rcat Ballin11>rc {)riolcs third
basrm11n "'ho has led U1e league in
fielding Ill his position for nine of the last
10 years, lnl.'luding the past lour in a row,
waa nipped this year by Cleveland's
Craig Nettles, .967 to .966.
California's Jim Spencer led the first
basemen with a .995 percentage. wbil•
Milwaukee 's Roberto Pena topped lha
shortstops at .9i9.
• LONDON -A 30-ycar-old motht:r of
two won a record prize of $814.725
\Vednesday on the soccer pools -and
kept mum about it.
She asked for St>crecy <1nd hl'r name
\vas not re\'ealed. The jl<lfll~ firm simply
said ~he lives in Berkshire and has a 11ix•
year-old son and a rour-year·nld daugtl-
ter.
Her pri ze lopped the previous r~cord of
$811.200 paid nut to Percy Harrison of
Gainsborough , England, in 1966.
•
BEVERL Y HILLS -Rat.or-9harp
pas ser Dennis Oummit was namtd
UC LA ·s mo.<:t valuable player for lhe se-
cond straight year Wednesda y night at
the Bruins' Annual diiner-dance award
banquet at the Beverly Hilton . • LOS ANGELES -QuArtcrback Jimmy
Jon e;;. a junior who led Southert'
California to a lie with No. :!·ranked
Nebrask11 an1I a stun'ning victory over No.
6 Notre name, \\'llS named the Trojang'
most valuable player !or a second
straight year Wedne.<:day night. • T>URllA~f -"t an1 probably the only
coach in the country with 11 winn ing
record la~\ season that was fired," 1ay1
Duke Uni versity 's Tom Harp.
* * * t:lb•n Oliver. former Laguna l~ach
High:. Or1.nge Coasl Colll'gl' football
pll)'tr. had 1 1Uindool game for Weber
Slate !Ogden . Ulah ) ag11lnst South
DakoUt.
Manager Shocked at Loss of Title
Duke announced \Vednesday that it wa~
lern1inating :is agreement with Harp,
\,·ho has been head football coach for the
Blue Devils sinl.'e 1966.
The firing came less than a month
after Harp rin ished his first winning
season at Duke.
He returned a pa11s lntcrceptkln 21
\'trds and totaled 55 yards for a pair 111
Punt returns.
* * * This corner finall y hJl a prediction un
the nose : Edison 28, \Vest Covina'7, ~nd
there w11s a close mi5.o; on F:dison'A first
CfF football P.l11yoff. The lorecasl ~·as 21·
7 f11vor of Etl/~n The latter won. 20-7,
• against Sunny Hiiis.
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RICH~10ND. \'a. I AP ) -TlK' mana ger
of Robby Fosler says he d!K'sn't un-
dl'rst and th \\"orld Boxing Association·s
annount'('rncnt i1 hll~ wilhdra~·n reco gn1-
1ton or his l1ghlt'r as ~·orld hght
hen \') 14f'iJ:hl cha mp ion.
The ;ictio n wus taken. \VB1\ Prrsidrnl
l\J!I Dre nna n said \Vednesday, bc<·:i usc
lht 111an;,i~1·r fai lt·d "10 ptlst ;i forlr1 1"
i.;u.ir:1ntcr111,1: foster would d1.1rend his
Ct fl\1n af.!lil1n~t t ~e No. 1 contendt>r v.llh 1n
90 days aller a proposed hco.\')'Wc1ght ti·
tie hout between f os ter and Joe FraiiC'r.
Brennan said the manager, Lou
V1scusi. and the associa tion agrted to
!his <1rr:1ngement during the WBA con·
\'tt n\lf)!l last Augus1 in Montreat.
Al !ha1 time. 8renniin sRid. tllf' \VllA
ad vised Hi:sl.'uSi his agrecrncnt "tnust be
futr illC'd. othe r"·isc it \\·ould b c c om c
nel·essar.v for the \\'BA to y.•ifhdraw
rcco,t:n 111un·· uf th e \\'as h\ngton, O.C.,
fif!hlcr as l.'ha n1p1on.
''As ol this dat e," Brennan added,
"\'iscusi and Foster ha\'e not livtd up to
their commitm~nl and pledge.''
Brennrin . "ho Sllid the \\'RA shortly
1~ill announce a series of bouts involving
lhe leading ('Ontenders to Install a new
('hamplon, said Poster has not defended
his cro11n aJ:ainst th(' top challtnger
since "Inning it fl;lay 24, l!>f'lfl. This, he
sa id. '"h11s added s!rangula\1011'' to th e
d1r1.~lon and "dcpri\'cd leading con·
ICnder:s or the opportunity to comptle for
the \\'orld title.''
\1iscusi said from Tampa. Fla .. that
'Fosler had signed an agreement with
Houston promoler E .. rl Gilliam to fight
No. t contender Jimmy Dupree in
llouston Feb . 17 and pholostats of the
agrw ment were mailed last Friday to
Bren nan.
"I don't undersland th is.'' \liscusi said.
"l'\'e l'nmplied "'i\h every y.·ish of the
\\IBA 11nd we are ready for L)upree to
show on lh(' 171h in Housto n and tb.ere 'U
be a c::hampionship fig ht."
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• l!OUSTON -It's possible lhAl a ch1!fl·
pionship fight be twttn Muh11mmad AH
and Joe F'rA1.ier In the Astrodome may be
held up by a le gal t'Omptic alion.
Al i filed sun against the state or Texas
seeking a perm it to fight in the 11tate.
Now the Texas Con1mlssloner or Labor
Statistlc.<:, Thomas Smith, who ha~
jurisdiction over box intt and wrestl ln&
e\'ents. reportedly sald h!! could not allow
the fight because of the suit.
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Sea Kings
In 49-47
Cage Win
Already short-handed by
sickneM and Injury. Corona
de! Mar came close to losing
' another combalant Wednesday
• afternoon in defeating the
Downey Vikings, 49-47, in con·
solation round action of the se-
cond annual Lakewood baske t-
ball to\U'nament at Lakewood
Hjgh.
!Ille win moves the Sea
Kings into the consolation
semifinals with Orange Coa:cit
area rival San Clemente rri-
day afternoon at 3.
Mark Grigsby suffered a
head injury midway through
the secood half when he ron·
.. fleeted with an opponent's
: lciiee but is expected to return
to action on Friday.
Whether Mike Sevier tflu).
' t>on Kllllan (twisted knee l or
'·Casey Jones I ankle sprain)
will be in the lineup is ques-
tionable. None of the three
.!lt.arters was on hand for the
_ , game with Downey.
Before he left the action.
'Grigsby scored 14 points lo
Lie with teammate J o h n
Sumner for high point honors.
• The game was a see-5aw af-
Jair from start lo finish
Corona held a one-point edge
at halltime. 27·26. and Downey
moved in front at conclusion
of the third period, 34-33.
CtrtW Jiii M•r 401
4• II
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Klllll•< C<tmt rw1 -·-!.U""""' • ~ Clrtlfll'
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Ttl•ll
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c11rt1len1t n •tiWwe!I
, ~Ulf
Orlntf
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-Fredr\df;ion
tot1l1
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ic1r11 h Oulrlll'I c ... ~"• "I Mi r 1l h ' ~ 10 ,. t
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' " • ' • " • • ' ' ' ' • ,. " ,,,__. ,,__.,
----------------------------------------------------~-------~------
OfftDM Defense
EdllOO Edlao•
!IS John FW..r SE 218 Craig Morttnsen
192 Bob Graves LT 215 O.le Norton
!BS Jeff Carter LG IBS JeU Noble
IBS Jeff Noble c 165 Jeff Carter
175 Mark DeHuff RG 165 Brian Bayless
218 Craig Mortensen RT 180 Rocky Whan
190 Gary Balch RE !BS Ken Funke
1711 Jerry Hinojoaa QB 180 Dave Cant~ll
JBS Jim Moxley TB '"' Terry McNay
180 Rocl<y Whan FR 195 Mark Harmon
lfi<I Terry McN1y WR '"' Lyle Raymond
--
LE
LT
MG
RT
RE LB
LB
Cot
Cor s s
DAILY PILOT !3
Lengthy Trek
Edison Fans Moan
Over ~riday Game
Complaint.a continue t & day game would not be ad·
mounl In the wake of Edison vantageous for it.
Hlah School's slap in the face One man taking heat from
by Lompoc Hl&h officials and several areas r~gardlng the
the CJF Southern Section of-Friday night tu.side <Instead of
fice for allowing the Charger11' lhe logical Saturday afternoon
CIF AAA football showdown to possiblllty) is Edison principal
be contested 150 miles away Ernest Pascoe.
on 1 Friday evening. "I'm still receiving com·
With UC Santa Barbara's plaints, but my hands are tied.
17,000-seat facility the site for It upsets the whole educa-
lhe AAA battle between host tional process. We'll have te
Lompoc and Edison. It means let school out at 12 :09 (the
several hundred, and quite legal minimum day) so we ca n
possibly over 1,000 Charger get lhe students there. And it
backers wlll be unable to see really hurts our fans ," fume&
lhe finale lo the Chargers' p ·--great !Cason. d Many of the staunchest Students can be expe<:te tn
backers tif Edison are forced return to Edison following the
to !Iii this one out since it will game In the neighborhood of
certainty require a departure 2:30 a.m. ~
of well before normal working Pascoe indicates further. ac.
hours are finished Friday lion will be taken on the mat·
anernoon in order lo make I.he ter.
8 o'clock kickoff . "I intend on drafllng and
Normal driving lime is ap· writing a Jetter lo lhe CIF
proximately three hours, hut regarding AAA and A A
with the insane traffic con· games. Lompoc gets the home
ditions through the Lo a game because of twn away
Angeles area on Friday even-games lo our one away game
lngs. It's anyone's guess as to in the eliminations.
a safe estimate ,for departure "ff the CIF took care of us
from the Huntington Beach in the finals like I.he AAAA,
11rea. they'd a r b It r a r I 1 y ~y.
Veteran observers are of the ·genllemcn, you are playing at
opinion the inequity to Edison -and when' and that would
fan s would not have been be that.
allowed If this was a AAAA "But they don't handle IL
tussle, rather than the AAA thal way and so lhe coach and
finale. principal of Lompoc said they
CIF commissioner K e n wanted to play Friday night
fagans explains part o( the and that was that.
dilemma . "The p I a yo ff "I appealed to them but
manual says the championship they held fast. I reeall another
game will be on a Friday night situation a while back when
unless other arrangement is our school j San la Paula) had
made by mutual consent of to travel to Brawley for a Fri·
participating schools." day nig ht foOtbaTI game in the
The CIF revealed that playoffs.
Whipple, Zaltosky Tritons Rip Can't Be Hur -ried
On All-America Mt. Carmel Says Edison Boss
Five, 77-71
Edison requested a Saturday "It's just as simple as that.
game but Lompoc turned The CIF doesn't run the show
down the appeal . Lompoc fans so the designated home team
were subjected to a pair of has all the say.
lengthy Friday night journeys "It's my understanding that
in the playoffs -one to the Lompoc people weren't
Anaheim. the other to Azusa. treated too well in the eliminR·
Fagans a!SG pointed out that lions with the other hom1
a Friday night makes it possi· teams ... but I'm not sure.''
hie for Saturday rescheduling said Pascoe as he tried to find
Saddleback College tailback Toby Whipple and Orange
Coasl College defensive back Craig Zaltosky have been award-
ed berlhs on the 1970 JC Grid-Wire All-Amer ica team announc-
ed today.
Whipple amassed nearly 3,000 yards rushing in two years
at Saddleback. leading lhe Gauchos to two conference champ-
ionships. He led the nation with 307 carries this past season.
Zaltos ky, a freshmen, lntercepled 11 passes this sea.son
(an OCC record) and picked off six aerials in one game (a
stale mark).
Six area players were accorded honorable mention. Saddle-
ba<;k linemen Bryan Colbert. Rod Cummlnas and Rocky Fletch·
er were honored along with OCC lineman Dave Gleason and
Golden West backs Charlie Buckland and Tony Bonwell.
1970 Grid·Wire All·America
Pos. Player College
E -Larry Battle, Reedley
E -Lonnie Crittenden, Hutchinson , Kan.
I. -Jlm Merlo, Fresno
L -Daryl Checknita, Ariz. Western
L -Pat Cassady, Bakersfield
L -Leo La Roche, Col. Basin, Wash.
L -J. C. Garrett. Tyler . Tex.
QB-Steve Jacoby, Reedley
B -Sylvester Youngblood , Pasadena
B -Tommy Reamon, Ft. Scott, Kan .
B -Toby Whipple, Saddleback
Offensi\le Speclallsb
Fl -Tom Scott. San Mateo
SE-Scott Loomis, West Valley
TE-Duane Hill. Pasadena
L -Dt'nnis Chaison, Kilgore, Tex.
L -Dave Manning. Bakersfield
L -Leslie Miller, Gulf Coast, Mias.
L -Bob Skinner, Rio Hondo
QB-John Cherry, N. E. Oklahoma
R -Pat Riley, Diablo Valley
8 -Gary Bowles. Grays Harbor, Wash.
B -Brian Chiles, Wesley, Del.
DefensiYe S~ci11ist1
Wt
175
lfi<I
220
22S
1115
220
235
160
170
191
190
173
180
220
23.1
230
205
240
200
200
170
232
Yr.
So.
So_
So_
So,
So_
So_
So_
So_
So.
Fr_ so_
So_
So.
So_
So.
So-
So_
Fr_
So.
So_
So_
So-
L -Mitch Sutton. Ft. Scott, Kan. 262 So.
L -Bob Halhaway, Desert 24n Sn.
L -\Yes Thompson, Mesa, Ariz. 274 So.
L -Ken Sanduk. McCook, Neb. 2M So.
L -Billy Montooth, Ferrum, Va. 217 So.
LB-Larry Bananli, Redwoods 226 So.
LB-Keith Dooley , Central, Mis!!. 205 So.
LS-Ivan WeiM, Sequoias 219 Fr.
B -Craig Zaltosky , Orange Coast IM Fr.
B -Al Pekerclk. Fullerton 185 So.
8 -Dennis Bragonier. Ch11bot 175 So.
Field goal kicker -Al Vitiello, Nauau, N.Y.: punter -
Scott Nelson. Mesa, Colo.: return specialist -Benny H11milton,
N. E. Mississippi.
A big third quarter SCilrlng
binge and accuracy al the free
throw line in the final tlanza
gave the San Clemente HI"ih
Tritons a 77·71 victory over
Ml. Carmel High Wednesday
night in the co n .!lolation
bracket of the secnnd annual
Lakewood basketball lourna·
ment.
Steve Kalota and Craig
Anderson combined scoring
talent!! to lc8d the Tritons with
21 and 20 points with Rick
Bauer hitting 10 as the only
other player in double figures.
ARer trailing at the halftime
intermission, the T r I t o n 5
outscored the Crusaders 24-10
in the third stanza to take a
56-49 lead into the final period.
"We played pretty well but
had trouble with their pressing
defense in the fourth quarter,"
coach John Baker said after
the p;ame .
"They were also fouling ln
the fourth quarter and we hit
13 at the line to ketp us ln the
game."
The Tritons will fa ce Corona
del Mar Friday afternoon In
the consolation semifinals at 3.
San Clemente is now 3-1 for
the season. the lone loss com·
ing in first round action
against Dominguez. 48-48.
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' • ' " • ' " " 71-11 ,,_,,
By ROGER CARLSON
Of UM hllY l"llM llttf
A synonym for coaching is
preparation. Prep foo t b a 11
teama that are prepared for
battle are obviously well
coached .
That's the situation at
Edison High School where Bill
Vail, the Orange Coast area's
coach of the year for the se·
cond campaign in a row. ha s
Orange County's only un-
beaten team preparing for its
CIF AAA ch a m pion sh i p
showdown with Lompoc Fri·
day night at UC Santa
Barbara. The !!how gets under
way at 8.
Vail was out of town Tues-
day. laying the ground wnrk
for his Chargers' big momen t
at Santa Barbara.
"We 'll be leaving for Santa
Barbara al 9 a.m. We plan oo
getting there around noon so
we ctn relax. think some foot·
ball and have an unhurried
dinner around 2:30 In the
Mater Dei
Romps Past
Foe, 79-45
Rick Kniffin scored :11 point.,
and grabbed. 15 rebounds tn
lead coach Jerry Tardie's
undefeated M a t e r Dei
Monarch basketball team to a
lopsided 79--45 victory over
Baldwin Park In first round
action of the Bl.shop-Amat
tournament Wednesday .
After spotting Baldwin Park
the first basket U'le Monarchs
wasted little time moving Into
the lead and holding It for the
balan~ or the game to run the
~a!lon record to 4.0.
afternoon. in the event of fog. A Saturday some sort of justification for
"We don't want tn be bur· tilt postponed would have te l..ompoc 's unrelenting attitude.
ried with anything," says the be played on a Monday. Edison fans unable to make
man who has Jed the Chargers Lompoc's objection was bas· the Friday nocturnal journey
to 15 straight wins over a span ed on the fact the team had can .obtain the final result by
ef twe years. always played Friday nights calllng the DAILY PILOT
The Chargen will be holed and that switchinc to a Satur· (642--4321 ) at 10 :20 p.m.
up at the Towers dormitory onl--------------------C-----
the UC Santa Barbara campu!'i
-the same quarters usually
occupied by UCSB'!I collegiate
team.
Edison, incidentally, will be
in the second high school game
ever played at the classy
17 ,000-seat stadium.
And Vail reports the playing
condition is excellent
Edison's Irvine Le a g u e
champions have lhelr In-
dividual standouts. to be sure.
Quarterback J erry Hinojosa
is the Orange Coast area's
back of the year and first
team All·lrvine Le a g u e
choices are in every direction
with tailback Jim Moxley.
linemen Mark DeHuff and
Craig M or t e n se n and
linebacker Rocky Whan in the
fold.
But It's been lhe total team
effort that has made lhe
Chargers into the formidable
force they are.
"We Lilnsider ourselves a
famil y. A lot of things enter
Into a successful football
seaso n. You have to work reel
hard at it and you have to
make them perform.
"It's a matter of taking ad·
vantage of what your players
do best. lfi; not a case of out·
coaching anyone. you just try
to do what you do best ... and
try to keep them emotionally
UP-
"We've been down mentally
nn occasion. but by gamf! tim,.
they've snapped out of It.''
says Vall.
As for Lompoc. Vall opines.
"they 're another good, sound
football team. We'll have lo
beat them. they won't be11t
themselves."
!' • ..
f
!
i • J
1
I
I •
Area Sweeps CIF Hono·rs
Kniffin, a 8·3 junior who sat
on the Monarch bench la11t
.!leason, enjoyed his biggest
night of lhe early campal1n.
Steve Kemper was clase
behind him with 14 rebound s
but scored only one point.
The Monarchs return to ac-
tion toniic:ht 11.t 8:30 facing host
Ba!sr.tt. 87-67,wlnner over Sier·
ra Vista .
The Chargers received a jolt
when il was learned backup
tailback and d e f ensive
specialist Bob Smith was Inst
for the game with a broken
ankle 11ustained in the West
Covina romp last week.
But a bright spot In the
Chargers' plans is the 75 per·
cent chance that tighl end
Gary Balch will be ready for
full i;cale duty. Hr.'s also the
team's placekicker and •
defensive stalwart .
•
Corona del Mar High'!!
Garth Bergeson was named
.,player of the year In CIF
water polo circles in the All·
ClF selections.
ClF champion Newport Har-
bor. however. led Orang e
-Coast area teams with five
• All-ClP' players and I.he coach
al the ye1r. Bill Barnett.
The S1.llora' goalie Ed White
.and Mitt Greer were accorded
flrsl team honor• while m11te8
Jlm Smith and Jay Farrer
were second te11m chalccs.
Kevin Ashe w1i. 11 third
team selection lor Newport.
Corona del Mar's Kurt
Krumpholz was a first team
pla yer along. wilh Bergeson
while the Sea King!' Greg
Loilz C(lpped a second team
berth.
Third team honors went to
.John Holyoake ol Corona de\
rth1r, third place finisher in
CIF circles.
Cc>5t.a Mesa 's trvlne ~ague
powe.r was re.presented by A
pair of players In the elite
g.roup with Ron Mbtolek nab·
blng • first team berth.
Mate Mike Beal •r11bbcd a
third team spot and two other
Mesans. goalie Rod ROM and
Bill McAneney, were on the
honorable mention list.
Other Orange Coast area
players securing honorable
mention !lllltus were Hun-
tington Beach's Cl•y Evans,
Marina's Chuck Holloway,
Corona del Mar'1 Rick Walker
and Est1ncla'1 101Ue Doug
Welle.r and Ward Saunders.
The bah1.nce of first team
selectloM consisted of Bob
Neum1nn (Lakewood), Pat
Brady (Downey). Guy No·
jarl11n and Greg CarC'y (Sunny
Hill!l end John H&le of La
\
Puente.
Second'team berthi; went to
La Puente's Jack Dayle •
Upland's Phil Boor ti .
Redlands' Bruce Ko.".cis, El
Segundo's Jeff R a m e v .
Garden Grove's Rod Cade.
Mira Costa 's Dan Matthies
and Foothill's Steve Furniss.
Third team honor1 were
earned by Sunny Hills' Gary
Farria and Dtrk MCCuen, LI
Puente.'1 Pett Salcido,
Crt..ctnta Valley'& Fred AX·
elaard, Vale.ncta·s R I c k
Plckrcll . Buena's Kent Elder
and Lakcwoocfs Steve Henley.
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tj OAJLV PELOT Thorsdi}, Dtctmber 10, 1q7Q
Start
·Your
Engines!
by Deke Hou/gate
Ei:penslve as It Is, auto racing requires the suppqrt of large
American corporations thal exchange mooey for publicity. Somi:.
companies sponsor cars, so me races, some entire racing circuits.
Th.ls sort of trade out is ethical and in most cases bene-
ficial to all concerned. Companies associated with auto com-
petition usually find Lheir key personnel are quickly consumed
with the competitive drive of the racing fratemily. More often
ttmn not. racing oriented companies strive to improve their
products. • The best example is the fantastic acceleration of tire devel ·
opment during the Goodyear-Firestone reud of 1963-68. Nearly
all ol us drive on safer tires because. of that tire company racing
binge. Commercialism of the sport can have its less favorable ef-
fecLs. too. Going into 1971 the U.S. Auto Club and Marlboro
Cigarettes have agreed to a partnership that will provide huge
gobs of revenue for dri vers and car owners, to help them stage
even greater e:nlertainment for motor. sport fans ne:i:t season.
But one of the unfortunate side effect.s is the USAC giveaway
C>f a priceless resource. l~enrorth, the U.S. driving champion-
&hip will be called the Marlboro driving championship.
The ghosts of T.ommy Milton and Rex Mays should rattle
their chains. The national driving championship dates back to
1909, even before the first Indianapolis 500, and it shouldn't be
sold over the counter like a piece of meat.
If other sports did what USAC h~s done , Churchill Downs
might change the name of the Kentuck y Derby to the Southern
Comfort Derby. and the Pasadena Tournament of Roses people
might rename the ir game the Four Roses Bowl.
IJSAC ()..,n• l\'ational Drivin9 Title
USAC owns the national drivin g title through a historic acc\-
denl. In 1"5 the Contest Board of the American Automobile Alisn.
was disbanded, leaving the sport without a major sanctioning
body lo govern It.
ln an emergency meeting Influenced strongly by Tony Hui·
man, owner of lndlanapoli1 Speedway, USAC was born. The new
club pk:ked up AAA'1 obll1atlons and carried on in a· remark·
ably orderly fashion.
During the transition, however, certain club personnel came
Into tbt: off.ice over a weekend and threw out all the old rtconl1
qt champlonslUp races dating back nearly half a century.
_Fortunately. one employee dropped by the orfice that week-
end aiid foond the files ransacked. He quickly rummaged through
the trash bins and rescued the heritage of American racing -a
complete set of rtcords of the driving championship from 1909
ili ... g\ 1155.
· The salvaged files ba\·e re mained underground , evtn to this
day. .
Part of "fadb•n• Ave1121e Package
• , USAC may not care about this counlry's auto .racing history r prior to 1965, apparently preferring to hand it over to a cigarette
company as part of a fl.1adi50n Avenue package. For those en·
'• thusiasts who do, here are some highlights from those under-
ground Tecords :
The top 10 leaders In national championship races won are
·:'
.. .. .. .. •
,:
~:
,.
' I •
A. J. Foyt, 4.5: Mario Andretti , 29; Ralph De Palma and Roger
Ward. 26 each ; Tom tnY Milton . 23: Earl Cooper, 21 ; Tony Bellen·
hausen and Al Unser , 20 each; Jimmy Bryan. 19, and Jimmy
~turphy, 16. The top 10 in championship points scored are A. J. wilh
l t.650 ; Andretli , 21,329 ; Ward. 16.824.4: Bobby Unser, 15,3TI; Al
t.:nser, 14,675; Cooper. 13.530 ; Jim McEl reath, 12,951 : Milton,
12,367 : Lloyd Ruby, 12,226, and De Palma. ll.871.
Other active drivers among the top 50 all-time point scorers:
Gordon Johncock, 13th; Roger McCluskey, 15th: Bud Tingelstad,
24th ; Joe Leonard , 31st; Johnny Rulherrord. 39th: Jim Hurtubise.
44lb and Billy Vuk ovich. SOth. Costa Mesa's Dan Gu rney , who
retired last September, reached 36th on the all-time list.
Other famous names sti ll In the top 25 include Harry Hartz.
Ti;d Horn. Ralph Mulford , Eddie Hearne, Dario Resta. Johnnie
""8.rsons, Johnny Thomson and Sam Hanks. ·
Marlboro, take 'em away. They're yours now.
Torrance Driver Wins Title
There wert ll national amateur tillta decided at SCCA ·~
Amuican Road Race of Champions two weeks ago at Road
Atlanta, but none of them was as Important as tht title won by
%1-year~ld John !\1ortoa of Torrance.
!\1orton drove his BRE Dat1un to a C Production class victory
over some or the toughest pros In the sport.
(Although this is nominally amateur racing, the C Produ clion
tla,;s 11 heavily Infiltrated by pros, who compete for rorscl>e.
Datsun and Triumph factory teams.)
!\1o.rton left Bob Sharp. Alan Johnson, Peter Greg~. Jnhn
!\tcComb. Chuck Dietrich, Pete Harrison and others behind and
won a classic whtcl-to-wbttl duel with Bob Tullius.
Seldom bas there been a sweeter comeback for a dri ver so
young and lightly regarded. Few fans may rtmtmber this, but
six years ago Morton teamtd with the late Ken Miles in lht
Sebring 11-bour classic at the wheel or one of the world"s most
exotic ratt cars -the 427 C<lbra prototype.
Shelby Sign• Onl11 l\'hze Driller•
Cobra tamer Carroll Shelby was challenging the red Ferraris
rrom Italy with a fleet of five Ford-powered sports cars. But
while Sllelby had brought five cars to race. he had signed only
nine drivers. Shelby had logically figured tha t at least one or his power·
fuJ race cars would drop out early, giving him a surplus of re-
lier drivers for the other four cars. But as the race wore on, th is
didn't happen .
Standing near Shelby in the pits was Morton, a bespectacled,
211ight 2%-year-0ld who had dr iven from Cali fomia to watch the
raoe. "Kid, I'm glad to see you." Shelby said. "How ·d you like lo
drive for me ?"
Two years earlier P.1orton had moved we:;:I from \\'aukegan .
111.. to enroll in the Shelby Racing School. Waiting for his 21 sl
birthday, when be would become eligible for a competition Ii·
cen.se. Morton went to work al the Shelby America n ractory.
With a license Morton moved back to Illinois, won a class
title and returned to Cali!ornia. He fin ished 1963 with an amateur
race at Willow Springs, where he was matched against veteran
Ronnie Bucknum.
r
Apaches
Topple
Marina
By ROGER CA Rl.SIJN
Of lllt D•UY l'Uot l11tt
f\Iar ina High School's four·
game win stre11k "-'BS cut short
Wednesday night by a hot
shooting Centennial five In the
second round of the 6th annu:il
Westminster-Marina basket-
ball tourney at Marina's gym.
The Apaches shot dO"-'n
?.1arina. 66-56, to advance to
the semifinals Friday night
18:30) against the "-'inner of
tonight's Los Alamitos-Warre n
clash.
Marina will also return to
the Vikings' gym Friday for a
7 o'clock encounter againi;.t the
loser of the Los Al-Warren
contest.
Garden Grove won the con-
solalion test with St. John
Bosco Wednesday, 59-47, and
faces th,e survivor of the
f\1agnolia·Rubidoux game al
Fquntai n V<1llcy ~ligh t8:30)
F'riday.
Coach Jim Stephens' Vikings
got their shots against Cen·
lennia1 -but the Apaches
allowed only one attempt al a
time as the <.:ompton·based
winners ripped Marina In the
rebounding dcp;irtment.
"We 're going lo hav e to i.tet
better bn:ird strength than
"-'hat we showrd 1on11i;ht." said
Stephens following the IO·point
loss.
OAIL y PILOT Plloltl bY l'•t·•~-o•Doftn1H
In Tournament
Lions Cool Off
Barons, 79-51
By· PHIL ROSS
Of tlll D•llY l"tlof St.ff
When a fast break-type
basketball team shows up for
a game and then proceeds to
have a poor shooting. night, it's
apparent that the quintet
should've stayed home and
prayed a lot.
Such was the case for the
Fountain Valley Baro o s
Wednesday night in t h e
quarterfinals of the sixth an-
n u a I W e stminster-Marina
Rotary Tournament.
Coach Dave Brown's
charges. as cold as a fresh
catch of something from the
ocean (~.6 pe rcent fro m the
floor), were caught off guard
by host Westminster. And the
Lions respo nded by recording
a one-sided 79-51 triumph,
their second win in succession
and Fountain Valley's initial
setback in four starts.
West minster (2-2) meets the
winner of tonight's Compton-
Katella tiff (8 :30 in the Lions'
gym) Friday night at 8:30 in
the tourney 1semifinals. The
Barons f a c e the Compton-
Kate\la loser at-7 Friday.
In a consolation quarterfina l
preliminary W edn e sd a y,
Riverside North outlasted San·
ta Fe, 56-54.
Westminster canned 27-of-53
rrom the field (50.9 percent)
and 25-0f-34 at the charity
stripe (73.5 percent ). The
Lions broke away to a quick 4-
0 lead on a lay-in by Terry
Meisenheimer and a steal and
lay -in by Jay Johnson and was
never headed .
with a game high or 29
markers.
While Meisenheimer WllS
throwing in field goa ls and
gratis. tosses in the initial hal f,
6-8 center Eric Southwick was
taking personal possessiorr or
both boards with a dozen first
half rebounds.
The Barons got as close as
45-30 midway through the
third quarter on a brief 6--0
spurt with Mike Foote canning
a 20-foot jumper in bqween a
pair of free throws and a driv·
ing bucket by Dave Lynch.
The latter, who finished
behind mate Ken Shibata I 12)
with 10 points, accrued foor
foul s in the first half and
eventually fouled out with 3:49
left in the contest.
Jeff !\1orrow 117) and
Johnson I l l) f ollowed
Mcisenheimer on the Lion side
of the ledger.
Prep Cage
Summaries
A••OYO INVITATIONAL
c .. 1mokrn1lll• OY•tlH ·P'IMb
C""l"• llQ, P1 ... d1n1 '9
Glendorl 61, Ktc>Oll 6.1
CIWlll1Y ''· Solc:o TKll '4 Bl•lr SI, Wl!llller u
Con .. llllon O\l•rl•r·l'lllllt
Gtendll•• 61. Ke11""I '5
El Jl•nct'lo 61. El Monie '1
IA$$ETl·l lSHOI' AMAT
l'lnt 11ound
P!u1 lC 61. S•~ Bernardino '5
Tllouulld 0.kl I,, Monr.,...!1 '1
M••tr 0.1 1t, ll•ldwln P.,1! U
ArtMll• .... L• Salle 6&
lt1mon1 11. St. P1u1 •• "We had ,i::ood llflSJtion but
lhey just went right nvl"r the
top or us and took 1he b::ill
a"'<IY. TI1cy gave us the sho!
but "-'e only had one chance.
"We got beat by a fine team
so l don 't feel t()(l bad about it.
J3ut we never did havr five
pla yers playin.i:: "-'Cll ;it a
lime ,·· summed up the Viking
boss.
BALL ON THE LOOSE -Ma rina High players Brian Sanders (41) a·nd Jeff
Butt !231 lake a look at the ba sketball. alonJ? v.·ith Centennial's David Shofner
(30) in the latter's 66·56 \.\'in over l\1ari na. Dean Bogdan is behind Bult.
The 6-3 Meisenheimer. the
only returning starter from
last year's Sunset League
cha mpionship s q u a d , ac-
counted for 2tJ of his team 's 42
first half points and finished
Bl!-Amat M. F""11n1 5tl
Lul'lle•ln 91, 5! P1ul JV 42
81He!! 11, Sierra Vli!I 61
IEVliillLY Hll.LS TOURH"""IMT
Finl Round
No•ft'I Torr1nct ~•. Mllllk•n JS
Mire Cosll 71, CulYt• Cltv l'
S&nll Monlt1 61, Venrur1 •I
Buen~ IS. Serr1 5tl
Kipp Baird , thr Vikings' 6·5,
218-pound srninr, injured his
lcfl ankle \v ith I 41 remainin,i::
in the third period and sat out
the balance of action. He was
scoreless white in actinn .
Centennial hit well from
outside and the Apache zo ne
defense commilled only srvcn
foul s. limiting l\.1arin:i's scor·
ing output from the rr@e throw
line.
And nnce coRch W i I 1 i c
Emanuel's crew gnt ;i. decent
lead (44-33 when Baird went
outl it resorted to dr;:iwing thr
Vikes nut of their zone wit h R
passing garnr.
That opcnrd 11 up d0wn ltw.
baseline and lhe Apaches
quickly took adv ;i n t a g e
through the hack door to
further frustrate J\.1 a r in a · s
hones nf romi ng h:ick.
Bill McGuire ! 161 and fff'an
Bol!:dan t 15) were the lone
Vikes in double FiJi;urcs .
Bnl!:dan (6-6 ) 14•as espcci::i.llv
effective in the earl v goings
wilh his outside shootinl!:.
i-~u""
W.oqoonf''
Mlll~t
flu!!
MtC.••..-•
lf~v~IO'
s~""·" ll~<>d•n
"'''~ lo1~••
·tr
M•rlft• {Slol
I• II
' ' •
' • • "
' • • • ' ' •
~I lo ,
' ' , ' • . .. ' , , ,
' " ' . " "
MV, Edison .
In Ac tion
~llss1on \lirJO and Ed1sn11
high schools enler tournamcn1
play for the first time !his
season \\'ilh action in lhe La
Qu111ta basketball I 0 urn e y
slated tonight at Los Anu gos
High.
,\iis~iun Vii!JO open~ with
Bulsa Grande Rl 7 "'hlic
t-:rlison ;ind Los Amigos tangle
at 8:30.
L'nlvcrs1\y l\1gb o 11 r n c ti
lournrv action 1n the Lennox
setup 'this aflernoon againsl
St. V.-nevirvr.
L.i Quinta Tour ney
Al l.os Amigos
Jl..1i~sion V1ejn vs 13 n ! s a
Grande 7 p.m .
Edison vs Los Amigos H :\0.
AL La Quinta
San1a Ana Valley 1•5 Sad-
dlcback 7 p.m.
Loara vs Quin!a B .10 .
Lennox Tourney
Lawndale vs Heritage 7 pm.
St. Genevieve vs Cn1vrrs1ly
4 pm.
t:lsinorr N & .\1 vs Chadwick
5·30
&>ll·Jcff 1·s ~nnO)i S :it1
.J \' Basketln1ll
Ct"'•~~!~! !••1 l'•oam·•~'•" Pll Un•VOr\ltv (Ul
r..,..~.y
~~~·"., s,..,11~
S••w•.t
lnl~•" ro1~11
It 11 Pl I~ !•~,,~~n· 111, != r-oecn 1~1
I j l ,, ~a; .. ., (\) F S1lv'l•I II)
1 0 ' 1l W•lflM"'' in~ c Mull1ni• i~l
• S 0 11 l\ln'lnn~ II• G w~i,enDe'" f!ll
• " I ~ Auln~'~ l•l r-Lln .. n19 111 1
~ 1 1 )1 ~CO'l~Q "'"' f;l(ll)•l1•n~lnn ~.no
11 11 1 ~~ I l"~~mn8 ; L"'"'' 1 11.,,,.nn I
1cOrt bV O"•rt•'! 11'11~,MUV -Wclr~no~ ), J\ndN"'n ),
(tnt•n~ltl '1 I 11 1,__!>li "'ldO'~ I
Mtr n~ II f I ?l-5' >l•lf!•mo Un·V~•\llV 1111
Zaltosky Top Pirate Hitter
Orange Coast Co 11 e g e
freshman Craig Zallosky "-'as
selectrd lhe hittrr of the year
at Wednesday night 's awards
banquet hononng thr Pirate
football tean1.
The aw11rd, given in honor of
the late Billy Jenkin~. replaces
the Pira!e of the ~·rar award
given in p:ist seasons.
The most valu:iblc p!;iyc:r
award \\'('n1 to lrrsh1ncn
qu;irtcrhark (:ary \':ilhuC'na
\1·h1le Dave Glct1~nn 11as
.osrtctll'd as the nutslanding
lineman and Bnh Curry 11:is
named thr tor bark.
The leadership a\1·ard "'cnt
to drfcnsive hnrman llarrv
C::irn1ack ;ind guard Rirh
Du ra nte 1vas selected as the
most imprn1•ed pl;iycr.
IUJlllANK•HDOVEJI Dl'EH
Flri! Round
Banquet .Trail * * * ~011nlllft V•lltv {JI!
" " " "
C1m1rlllo 11, Ptlo1 Vt•de' 6t
C•eicent• V•lltY 61, Buro.nil JV •
MUrJlfW SS. o.n1rd •1
S1nt• B••b•'• 54, Muir '4
Burbank 6', V1iencl1 60
Hol•t O.me 51. Glitll41l1 57
(iarth \Vise was named lhe
fir~t rec1pienl Qf thr Ri\I
Jenkins Memorial Aw a rd
\Vedncsday night al Hun-
!1n~ton Bc;ich High School's
sports awa rds banquet honor-
ing the football. cross country
and "'ater polo teams.
The a\1'ard is r.mblc:mat1r of
the football !eam·s m(lSt in-
sp1r<1tional pl;iyrr. \Vise also
carted off honors ;is co-cap-
tain. along \1·ith most valuable
player laurels.
l\1o:;t \'aluablc il\.\'iirds in
cross country 11nd 1v;i1er polo
wrnl to John f\iullins and Rick
Hrnry.
football
V.1r:;:ity -Co-captains: Aili
Twigg and Garth \Vise: f.tVr :
r;arth \\'ise; i\1ost lm rrovcd :
P;:i.ul Cnurtncv: Rlll .Jenkin~
r.·1f'morial A"·ard : Garth Wisc.
Junior varsit.v -Captain:
.John Vogt : :vi VP· Bill Harbin.
Sophomore -Captain
Paul Fiskne~s: '."ltVP : K\c
Van Amcrsforl
Frosh -Caplain : Da1·1d
:'11cBcth: l\1 VP: Alonzo Milan.
\\'aler Poto
Varsilv -C<1pt;i1n: Rick
Henry : l\1V: Rick Henry
.Junior var!;ity -Capt::tin .
l\likr Bry11n1: :'llV: r.·1,rk
N;iglrst;:id.
Sopho111nre -Captain: r:arl
Simm:;:; r.iV: Bru ce Harrell.
Cross Country
Improved . Rick Snyder.
.Junior Varsity -Captain:
James \Vilco>:: MV: Gary
Robertson ; ?-.lost Improved :
Brad !\1ilter.
Frosh-Soph -Ca pta i n :
Charles Grazier: MV: Jim
Lord : ~1Qst I mp roved : Jeff
Duyndan
Co,;111 1llcs11
Ron Misiolek \\'as n;imed
L•"<~ ' • Slllb•'• • • lttlde' ' ' G. C.1•!lo:• , • P. GerMr , ' Jiii's ' • Fool~ , • l(rJ,11..,1 , ' P:>wer ' ' c ... i~e , ' 80Yil' ' • lo!fl• " '
Wutmln1ter Otl " . J'll>~-} l
Mel•enne•<M• 10 •
SDUlll'•;ci< 1
' " ' " • • , • ' ' • ,
' ' • ' ,
' • , • " " -" ' " • " ' •
LAKEWOOD TOUJIHAMl!MT
Clllmt'IOfllflll' Qu•rll•·P'ln•!t
OomlnQutl H, SI. Antllo•w SJ
Lfl Wiiton 6•. "neflt!m JI
sr. MOHIC.t. TOURNAMENT
S..lesl•n JI. C•e1ol l6
Pt1er J<tooltr 56. 51. M""lu U
Ul'LAHo.MOHTCL.t.11 TOUJIH"""IHT
C~ampkrn.itl• Ou•rltr-Fln•t1
No;.t!n.,..,. J.Q, Cl!&"•• Olk ..
Uo!1n~ 15. Cl•remonl •I
()ft!lrla ''· 8on11• 6) Cc,.1n1 43, M.,..t,i.lr JI
.....,,,,.,.,.,. ~ S C.•••• IS, P°""'"' 7l , " • 111~\~lev 1 ' C.l~d•tQnt n. O..••lt S? re~rMJn 0 1 Aru ... 61. G•n~1No S1 ~,am~n 1 1 Ebenl1awer 1'. Alt• l.Omt JJ
Ml'!lf!O!M 1
• ' • ' ' ' S !11 1 ti HOH LEAOUI mns! valuable nn Costa f.icsa ";~11': 11 ,5 sau111 Pa1•d•~• 10. 11:ova1 Ofl~ u • ,
" " l'.ghS h 1· t I s a rt sanM~r1"""·Law11tonJl i I • c 00 s "'a er po o learn '"r• by Y• er• Wtil!ller c11,11u1n 60. Webb u \Ved d , ht [ f 'f Foun111~ V•lltV 10 n H 1>-.-51 Mon1C11lr Ptep lOL Norll!rldg1 Mlll-nCS ay n1i; a ac ivt 1es · we1•m1n1ter " 24 15 11-" """' 11
honoring the f\fcsans' 1970 -=:::======:::::::====:--;----:;::--:-:-
sC't1Son. J
The Mustan.cs fini shed se·
cond in the Irvine League anrl
advanced to the quarterfinals
in the CIF playoffs.
Vars1t.v -Captain: t-.1ike
Beal : i\1V : Ron Misiolek:
l\1os! Improved : Mike
O'Brien : f.1o.~t lnspira!ional :
John Carpenter ·
!k'c.~ Cllptain : Doug
\\'ulH. f.i\I · Boh \\'altrrs:
~1 ost Improver!: Strve Mar·
rr:n : i\los! lnspir;:i.t1nnal : ?-.-1ike
Hollister.
Cee -lap1ain : A I an
Langston: MV : Richard Whit·
morr: i\fost lrnptO\'ed : .John
\Vhitmnrc : f.·losl Inspirational·
David Lund.
.WHY BUY?
Mnko l oaoe P•¥men11
of lSC 17 !or U Mo.
lll~w 1'11 VW 8UQ
CH!CK JVERSON VW
THE ARROW
BELMONT CLUB
Arrow's expensive
looking eve ryday
shirt In !ha newest,
most wanted colors
and wh11e. Long-point-
ed Mad ison Avenue or '
wide spread Bard collar
styles ... Perma·iron in a
b lend of SOI SO Fortre/9
and co11011 •.. stays smoo1h
all day long. Get 1'menca's
grea lest ~alue in quar11y
sh irts .,. Arrow's
Belmont Club. S&.00
LEON 'S
MEN'S SHOP
227 £. 17th St., Co•'o Meso
'.en. lllr11 1"11. t :JO.•; 5•1. t :lO·•; Sun, 1
ll•nk"~•lc~n-~·.1r1t1r Cll•"9•
\).
Varsity -Capt;iin: Dana
ll:ih1n : MV: .lnhn r.tullins.
.l11ninr varsi ty -Capt;:iin:
Lrs Polls: i\IV: Dennis Polt.<i. , ----------'--==---------------------::__:_:::_
J'rt'l''flfJJ"f llttrl1t1r
\\all C.rrer was named mosl
,·:ilunblc pln~·cr on ;\cv.•porl
J-larbor ll ii;h School's Clf
chan1pic.nship water polo team
\Vcdncsday ni~ht al festivities
honoring coach Bill Barnett•s
outfit
V::irslly -Captain · Erl
\\'hire : f\IV: t.1at! Greer: r.tost
COLD • • • NEVER
SHOPPING IS FUN
5outh Coast ?tua·
lltlSTOL et SAN DllGO HWY., COSTA MUA
stereo103FM
• • • • music music music music
• good music
f I
1 ·
..
..:
Good Pheasant Kill
The P owers family of Costa Mesa had a limit bag of pheasant recently while
hunti ng in Chowc'hilla. Sons 1"1ark (left) a nd >Greg Dank their father. Claude.
Alterations Slated
At Mission Viejo
Mission Viejo Country Club
has been dubbed "Mission
Im possible" in the past but
gradual change1' cou!d bring
the lengthy, hl\ly coorse into
pe~pective ror I.he average
golfe r according to Roger
Belanger, host pro.
Latest change has been the
opening cl a brand new thr~e.
par hole on the front nine. The
old No . I has been eliminated
from the course with the new
hole known all No. 7.
Eventually the long, five-par
eighth hole will be revised to
run parallel to the San Diego
Freeway from the seventh
green.
Water pipe construction ls
currently taking place gettin g
ready for the parkwa y that
.will eventually cross the
freeway and dlvide the course.
Meanwhile, a W i n t e r
Wonderland tourname nt is
planned al h11ssion Viejo
Saturday, Dec. 19 w It It
members urged lo sign up in
the pro shop at the present
time:
~le•a l' erdc
Tn a partner's best ball
tournament at Mesa Verde
Coontry Club over I h c
weekend, Dick Lassen anct
Dave Hillman !<:(lrtd a 66 for
low gross honors.
Clare r.tose r and La ssen
teamed to win the low net
compelltion ·with a 62.
T'>'-'o teams Ued for first
place i1 . a 1~·0 low ball~ or
foursome toumamenl on Sun-
da y.
On one team were Ken and
Phyllis Leasure with Jllhn and
Ju.lie Adams. Helen and Ralph
P.1oeller teameifwlth Burk and
Louise Wilson on the othe r
team with each postina a
score of M.
Santa Ana
Santa Ana Country Clu b
completed the annual men's
club high-low t.ournamenl with
G ene Fason and John Knox
defeatin g Ed Hayes a l'I d
Ca rnie Krausnick, 3 and 2. for
the title,
Competition was by match
play over the past six weeks
with playe rs teamed on a ha n-
dicap basis, one high han-
dicapper with one low han-
dicap star.
/lfeadowlark
The on~-postpontd men 's
club hookers and s I i c e r s
tournament at P.1 eadowl ark
Country Club will be staged
Sunday with a shotgun start at
10 o'clock, weather permitting.
This is an annual com-
petition with over 2 5 0
participants playing on teams
headed by owners Gomer Sims
and Cece Hollingsworth.
Cosla Jlle•n
Steve Woodruff was low
gross winner in a men 's club
tournament over the wtekend
at CQsta Mesa Golf and Coun-
try Club.
Low net honorll went to1Jack
Feller with a 67 followed by
Fred Gammon, Pat Kalama
and Jack Valasek at 69: and
Denny Benedict and Dick Van
Metre at 72.
In a partner's best ball
tourney for the women's clu b,
Jeanne Creighton and Jeri
Watson copped flrtil place with
a 65. Vi Hoskins and
Rooc mary Skillion Cioillhed se-
cond at 66.
A lie re!lulted for thi rd place
between Sylvia While and
Joyca Cap lin on one squad and
Hazel Webster and E•sie
Stipes on the ot.her. Both had
fi7 s.
Ra11rho SJ
A three-way tie for first
place resulttd in a men's club
low net tournament at Rancho
San Joaquin over the weekend.
Jim Dooley. Joe Kosinski
and Arnold Acselrod all finish-
ed with lb. Ed Hewitt copped
the next spot with a 70.
Few Pigeons Arouncl
Band-talled pigeons a r e
llcarce throughout Southern
Californ ia nnd poor shooting ls
In prospect for I.he Saturday,
openi ng. of the pigeon season
~·hich continues throug h Jan.
10. acco rding to Monday field
reports from wardens of the
Department of fish a n d
Game.
fair to good numbers of
pigeon!I are reported In San
Lula Obispo County. but not as
many as there were for last
)'i!ar's opening shoot in that
area.
A monlh ago there were
betwetn 7,000 end 8,000 band-
Lails In the Fru\l'!r. Mt. Pi nos
and Tec\lya Rldgt areas of
eastern VenturLll C'AUnly, bul
· lhey pulled out following 1
light snow storm and haven 't
returned. The DFG notes that
lhl'! unpredictable birds could
co me in at any time, but only
a few :ieml-re.1ident birds are
around right now.
There is a good crop or
acorns in the eastern Ventura
County mountains, but the pin-
yon nut crop is onl y fair and
very spotty.
In the San Bernardino and
San Jacinto Mountains and in
lhe Mt. Palomar country of
San Diego County the story ls
much the same. There are a
lew scattered flock.' or blrd.<r
feeding on an e1ceptlonally
good crop of acorns. with very
poor hilntlna forte11t for the
openlna.
Th< dally bi& and total
pcsstulon limit on band-tailed
pla-s Is eight. Shooting
hour11 will be lrom one-half
hour before sunrlst to sunset.
----------------..
Estancia
Rebuilds
111 1971
Estancia 's Eagles turned the
Orange Coast arl'!a football
scene topsy-turvy in 1970 with
the school's first-ever winning
season.
And coac h Phil Brown's
charges did it in a big way,
posting a ~2 record and ad -
vancing all the way Lo the ClF
AAA quarte r finals, where
they were l'!dged, 1>14, on a
rainsoaked field by top-seeded
Bonita.
The Eagles' only other Joss
-a 14-12 squeaker at the
hands of powe rful Edison -
cosL them the Irvine Lea gue
title. But the Eagles will be
back for more In 1971.
Brown figurl'!s '71 will be a
rebuilding year with the entire
offensive line and all-round
star Curl Thomas deparUn11
the premises via graduation.
Perhaps the one individual
who figures to be a key player
in futur e Eagle hopes is lrl,
180-pound Hank ~1oore, who
won a varsity letter last
season as a sophomore.
"We think Hank has poten-
tially as much talent as Curt
at this staga and he's still
growing," Brown says. "He'll
be pla yinc somew here all o(
the lime because he '1 one of
the besl all-round athletes at
our school. '1
Moore saw action in '70 as a
backup man calling signals
behind Thomas In addition lo
logging duty as a running back
and slot back.
He'~ expected to wage a bat-
tle with Oluck Boegl for the
quarterback spot a I t h o u g h
Brown Indicates Moore could
find himself flghtlna: it out lor
lhe flanker post with M , 131}.
pound returnee Lee Joyce,
also a defmsive ace.
The receiving corpJ Imes
Bob Kaise r and Le e
Frleder&dorf but Brown is
confident that Joyce. ~1oore,
Kevin Brown, Pierre Sauot
And Scott Gaynor will fill the
bil l there. All are lettermen ex-
cept Gaynor. who played on
the sophomore tea1n last
sea!IOfl. '
Defensive backs M a t l
Wukawlti and Gary Logsdon
return to the fold along with
interior linemen 0 ' Ne a I
Brl'!wer, Dennis Snyder, Craig
Dennl.11, Kim Shoru and Bob
Conklyn.
Conklyn. counted on heavily
as a starter at the beg.inning
or liu1t ~a!IOll, has been con-
tinually troubled by 1 bed
knee" but the El.gle coaching
5taff e1pecl.a: bli thlnas from
hint next )'etr.
Something which wes la ck-
ina at limes dw'ing the 1970
campaign -11 steady kicking
11;amt -could i;aln more pn:>-
mlne.nce In '71 with Gay nor
and Ke.Una: capable of toeing
the line.
'
---------------·-------,
ThurJdo\1, December lO, ]q70 DAILY PILOT Jlt
Plenty of Sl{iable Snow
By ESTHER BILLINGS
01 ~ Oall' ,1 ... l lllt
The 1tason'1 Unt big storm,
tem:,orarlly tlOling some ac-
cess roads in its fury , has left
th!'! West with plenty of skiable
snow.
In mid-California on the
we1tem Sierra Nevada Badge r
Pass ln Yosemite National
Park. Dodge Rid11e. and Bear
Valley have opened for the
aeason, the latter two da lly.
Badger will operate weekend s
until Dec. 19, then dally.
open for the season wllh 414'!
inches of mow. There Is nt1ht
a:kllng Monday through Satur4
day at Park c.lty aJld Solltude.
and Winter Park are open.
Breckenridge is boasting a
new resident, Olympic all-star
Jean-Claud Killy.
Did you know t h a t
Local skiing 11 sllll In good
ahape trom the lut 1torm,
with &ood akllng for the
weekend . Conditk>ns chanae
quickly early In the aeaso n, a:o call the Ski Tow and Lift Lee Canyon, Nevada, is in
Operators for th.e I ates t "snowtires'' are a~ptable in dally operation with 24-36 in-
reeorded repOl't at (2l3l AT 7. mounta in a.re•s In Utah.! Don't ches of snow . Skiers at thh'i
9711 . try to 1et by with them In area may combine the
NASTAR (National Standard California. Our Hi I h.,; a y sporting life of L11 Vegas at
Race•) were Inaugurated last Patrol does not accept them night with the outdoor type on
season at Snow Sum mit. 11 a substitute for chain!, and the slopes during the day.
They'll begin again this season Ones are heavy if you've no TaOI Ski Valley in New
as soon as the Log Chutl'! Run chains where they 1 r e Mexico Is ope n, Located just
course has adequate n1tural specified. out of the picturesque. town of
snow cover. In Colorado Ar a pa h De. TaoJ, the area haa spent more
A contract was awarded lo
pa ve nine miles of road from
Arroyo Seco to Taos Ski
V1lley. The contr•ct c11!1 for
the road lo be flnlahed by the
r.u o1 1111.
Taos Ski Valley work crews
are cutting trails now for two
major double chairlifts, and
comprehensive plans h a v e
been drawn for th111 develop..
ment 1t the new base vlllage.
Blake 's ntw villafe will
become the fourth maJOr are ..
In the scenic and snowy ski
country surrounding 13,160-
foot Wheeler Peak.
Others are the exlstina: Taos
Ski Valley, Red RJver Ski
A~a to the north , and Ana:el
Fire Ski Area to the east.
On the western approaches
to Lake Tahoe. Sugar Bowl
and Boreal Ridge a 1 o n g
Interstate llO and Heavenly
Valley, Sierra Ski Ranch , and
Echo Summit along Highway
SO are open.
In the Ren~Tahoe are1 Ski
Incline. Slide Mountain, and
Mt. Rose are open. Tan-
nebaum will open Dec. 19.
Snow Forest has been nam· Aspen. Breckenridge, S k I than $500,000 in initial work
cd the site of' the YlttCA's first Broadmoor, Crested Butte, for the $9.7 mllllon "ski
"'eekly Ski School program . Geneva Basin. Hidden Vall ey, circus" it plans to build 1.6
The Big Bear re~ort will play Ski Idlew ild, Key stone, Lak• miles south of the existing ski
host to bus loads of sklers Eldora , Loveland. Monarch, village "when our new road is
every Sa turday during the ski Pur1atory, Steamboat, Vail, paved." season with all ages -·• _ _:_.:__:_:.:_ ___ _:. _ __c_c__ ___________________ _
It 's great to ha ve a lot of
anow, but for Bud Hayward at
J une Mountain last week it
was "enough, already!''
Rushln11 to compk!te his No. 4
double chairlift, the :in ow
stalled the effort, hiding
equipment unrler depths of
beautiful fluff.
He's di.Rging oul. In the
meantime, skiing is very good
to excellent on about 2Yi to six
feet of pack and powder snow.
Mammoth Mountain has about
six feel of deep powder to
pack.
;:~::;~~~:~:::~~ :::: s: EZBA BOOO Bowl, Homewood. A I p l n e
~1eadows. Squaw Valley, and
Papoose Peak are open fo r the ~
season.
Mt. Shasta at the northern
tip of the state murt hold the
present reeord for snow dep th
with 11 1~ feet. Operations
bega n [or the season -alter
the road was opened. Mt.
Lassen, in Lassen National
Park, is also open. Real
NAST AR races havl'! already
lngun al Mt. Shasta, as well g1"v1"n' as Alpine Meadows and Bear
Valley. h" k Both Mammoth and June
received more new snow th is
week to add to the load receiv·
ed last week.
ln Utah Alla. Beaver Moun-w IS ey.
ta in. Brian Head, Brighton, L.-::.---.,,-,-,-,-.,,,,.----,---,.,.---,,--,--,-----,===-,:-=,,-:::c,,J Park City, Park City West. illlALSI'"'"' w111sK1,, KlHTUCK• 1T11.A1GtoiTaoYt11M>N w111SK1• ••l"llOOf• 1•1AUDlD . u•• 111100K11111nw11&co~r11Al'lllrOt11t,K'·
s'now Basin, and Solitude are
.... I D .
•
I ~ • .
' . ' \. I
SILVERTOWN CUSTOM • 80% MORE MILEAGE
AS
LOW
AS
.;.,. J.00·13 bfat;k ..... pl1,1t.
"""" .. _. .. ta• of $1.96
•nd , •• .;.._
BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE
SALE INDS DECEMllU !flt!, 1 '70
USE OUfl RAIN CHEClt l'flOQAAM. 8.F.Goodrich win
get you the lire you w1n1. Should -run out of YoUf Mr•
d u1ing lhM oflw, .-. will be hippy to iauti VOil 1 rein chtek and
c11de1 your lire 111h1 1dv1rtiHd l>ric• for fu ture deliwry.
•
• DEEPER, WIDER TREAD
• WIDE "78*-SERIES STYLING
• RUGGED 4-PLY NYLON CORD
.
Regul1r 5111
S i11 Prlc• Price f .E.T.
7.00.1 3 25.75 17.Q l .96
5.~15 25.15 17.88 1.75
C-78-14 (6.95-14) 25.80 1t.aa 2.17
[78-14 (7.35-14) 26.85 21.n 2.2~
f7B-1• & 15 (7 .75-14 & 15) 28.45 24.88 2.4 ..
G78·14 & 15 (8.25-1 4 & 15) 3 1.15 26.88 2.60
H78-14 & 15 (8.55-14 & 15) 34.15 29.81 2.80
J78-15 (!1.85-15) 38.65 31.11 2.87
40 000 MILE GUARANTEE BRAKE RELINE $ 95
' '
• EXPERT WORKMANSHIP • QUALITY REPLACEMENT PARTS
2049 Harbor Blvd.
IAT IA.YI
COSTA MESA
• SPECIAL LOW PRICIS
PEN
f A.,M, lO I ".M.
MOHo.-.v
'YHltOUOH
'ltlOA.Y
OllEH $ATU"O.t.Y
110.D No. Tustin Ave.
ORANGE
Phon e 646·4421 ""· '0 ""· Phone 532-3383
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS HONORED
ALL
CAIS
I Excf'pt D1ac1)
~--""Y.'·~·~ ..... . " .. -· ··..__.,<>
LIPISAWlll llA•IAL TlllES
"'YOVlt LffE $H0Ut0 •l ltlOING ON rHlltf"'
'
•
'
\
\
•
OAILV PILOT
Tf1U R S O AY
DEClMl£1t 10
1:00 8 l it: News (C) (60)·.ltrrt OunphJ.
8 llllllC NtwleMct (C) (60) Tom '~r. 8 TN AMII SbNJ (C) (90) Mic-·
tJ M111tle, 5'ndJ Baron, P11rllls
G11011e. lee Ha1rison Ill 1uest.
Jlicll Uttlt is (l)·llost.
0 TYRONE POWER is lhe * "PONY SOLDIER"-Color
D Sb: O'Cttct Mt~il: (Cl "'Tht
PMJ s.ldilf" (wesltrn) '52-Tr·
1011e Power. Cameron Mitchell.
Mitchell. Thomas Gomat. PennJ
Robert Korton. In the e1rty dan ol
\ht Royal C1111di1n Moonted Police.
in 1876, 1 Moun!Mi is Oldertd to
brine bad: 1 tribl of C.111dian
Cree Indians, who illtp11J crossed
tilt U.S. border il'll.o Monta111 to
hunt buffalo a.nd make •Ir on
American cavalry troops.
G Did: V•• DPe (30> m TU Fliattto11n (C) (30l
m a11C11"" r ... (CJ ""' fD HHppodp ltdte {C} {301 9 (I) CIS Ntw1 (C) (30)
@!) FiH F1•i1J (301
ti>·~ 34 (C) (60)
fD True Advtnllnt (C) (30)
Eii) La Her• F••ililf a111 ratricil
GJ Ni .. i11 tilt lttt1 nd (C) (JO)
l :JO G Ctn'id ca ... (30) m TH f1Ji111 NUI (C) (30)
Into the StepN1n•1' ~P0111,111it1 to
joi11 1n o:dusivt cou!Mry cl11ll. m Dafi4 f101l Dew (C) (90)
M1ri1 C.t11s 1$ Milo 1uest.
m oi,.,c 1o!l111 <t> <2 "'' F11nki1 Criiwfetrd vs. CU Norie11
in ft•tlltfW'i~t bout.
ED ftEf ~ .. (C) (? hf) Thi
Roral. Sh1kn11t1t1 Comp1111 Pro·
dlldion of ''M1rtt/S1dt." Palrlt'
M11u. l1n Ricll11dson, Gl1nd1
Jldtwn 1nd !he. lloy11 Sti1ktS4)11re
Company will pelform.
Eii.) Pitt.er• tw IMlll (lO)
9;00 lfl Ci) (j) CIS Thlll'sdl' Ut¥it:: jC) "Clwlk1" (vmttrn) '67 -Rod
T1ylof, £melt Bor1nine, John Mills.
TM h1rd·hlttin1 story 1f 1 run·
tl1hter wllo finds out whit cour111
Is when he is trapped-In 1n isol1ted
tort 1bo111 to bt •ll•cked by 1 t1ib1
of ra(ina Indians.
0 I ntmJI I lilly Cr1U11 Leuis-
b111 tniUii (CJ (60) ''011111 ind
Resi.Jrrtcllon of Jews Christ." Spe.
till 1111s1s art Cl1udi1 Tur11tr, Miss I
Sou111 Clroff~, and N01111 Zimmer. o @rn m .. et .. 1 111 tti. '-* (C) (30) "No Fancy Filfures. ~ I
P1ul t1kes tctiGn •a:linst tt11 o•n·
11 Qf 1 sll1dy discount store. H11b
Edelmn 1uests.
E?i) filllenp (C) (30)
m eo.a.te d• Al•••· (30)
Cl:IN1t141 (60)
!:300 ~(1)f.eNa11CJ (C) (30) "A
Case ol Spril'l1 FMr." Celestt
Holm. and Robert Simon 111 lei· i
lured ind We$1ey Mt/ 1uest-sl1rs
1s a wealthy Cente1 City widow!!'· I
11rmer who 1a11s in to¥t wilh All· 1 "· 0 (ijJ rn m Th• Odd Couple (C) I
(30) "Felix Is Missin1." Felix
leavts town on a photo 1sslinm1nt,
EXCLUSIVE
ENDS TUES.
NO ROOM TO RUN
NO Pl.ACE TO HIOE
•
I
NATIONAL
GENERAL THEATERS
.CHILDRENS' MATINEES
SATURDAY & SUNDAY
"Santa And
The Three Bears"
ALL SEATS 75c
SAT. -12:30-2:00-3:30
.SUN. -12:30-2:00
~~-Q) Cl) JllC NiPltJ """' (C) (30) fD 1\t Frtldl Dlef (C) (30) {R)
Q!l (}J Mr Fa ... ri\I Mlllilfl (30)
fm Social Stnirity (Cl
fD Tht Duer! Report (C) (30)
a:l FMlifi'm 4el AMtor (30)
l!D AIC E\lllli111 News (C) {30)
ind Oscar becomes 1 prim• sus-i·------------------------JI peel in ht• "dlsappe1r1nc1." Albert Brooks 1uest-st1ri as Rut/, 1nd 1-----------------------·I
1:451i')MMlicaN:
7:00 IJ CIS [f'elli!11 Nrws (CJ (30)
\~alter C1011kih.
Q ID NIC Nitllttf News (C) (30)
David Brinkley, Frank McGee, Jolln
Clllnc:ellor,
G Wbt'• My Li•? (Cl (30) m !lJJ rn 1 "" ...., (JOJ m w u. a.ct cq (30>
ID l1J "'"" (CJ !JOI fD ~ w--. I Mod•• lilt
130) (R)
iB Cf) Tnrtlll • Cou1•111rts (Cl c9 Qritt tt11 LMq ~ (C) (30) e-• <•oi Gi) .,..... Maril (55)
fD Tlllt Cift (C) (30)
7:30 a am r • .a, AH•W tc) t3oJ
UMlt Bil[ mini his wards' mem-
ory of their father f1din1, t1k1s
Bully, Jody and Cis51 lo their
childhood home ill lnllian1 in 111
effort to rekindle their mcmori11.
0 11J 11) Ill ......... (C) (tiOJ
Speci1I 111Uts l1n1 Korne 1nd
Lloyd Gouah is featured as Set
Fla11111n. o-....... CC:J (JO) !lil•-m lhcMs T.,atils (30)
!:45 @m Past.r's W (C)
10,00D llJ(t)l!lO.o ..... (CJ
(&!) Guests 111 Glenn FOl'd. Bai·
blra Feldon, Chartes Nelson ReiltJ
ind !ht Golddi~rs.
0 Ma: 5 Nin (C) (60) Kevin 5'11-
ders, B1,,., Morris.
0 @ (I) EE t111 t• .. rtal IC>
160) "P11adia BIJ." Rich1rds trits to lt•lll .rty the Pt09le of Para-
llist !lay want him lo leave. Guest-
star1in1 1r1 How1rd Duff. Ptl rlcia
SlerlinL Scott Br•d1 and "'on.
Kincaid.
0 n. Saiflt (601
m leerp Put11• New1 (C) (60)
Ell LI f1111ilil (30)
Gi) ~ con el 'r•I. H1r111-
pl (JO)
l ony R1nd11I and Tht Modtrn Jau llt:JD CD I ll h1111 fttws ((l (30)
Qutrtet 'lisit flip. fE) s,u.llU.. (C) (601 (R)
0 "'" (C) (JO) 0 (i7} (1) &J Mitt linuln (C)
(60) .. BHIJ." Or. Lincoln is sum-
moned whe11 1 lJ-rur-old black
a:> Aqlli Tr11 Palints {30)
10un1ster, SOii of • while falhei, 11:00 II tnl (I} m News (C)
1hreatens lo jump f1om I buildin1. --t'7' Ill N (C)
Gu1sts 11e Darren McGavin, Charles -._ ~ • ""
McGraw 111d Geor1e Spell. 0 Ca1 YeM Top This? {Cl
0 MHlton $ Movie: (C) "'lite lont-tJ &J ,.._ (C)
0 Tlt11tre !: "Sherlock Hilmes
''If you see
othing else this year,
you must see
FIVE ERS9 PIECES.
It will not, I think,
/>~ ever fade from fr '.·, memory !11
~· J..~:~,.... -".C~Al'D':~(;rf( !.:•
r ~· . .''."S"' ri~Tuf\~. F.• .,. • ~f.~ p,~,
JACK NtCHOLSON., FIVE EASY PIECES .... t;~ '" E •·' ,,:;-,_.)n~--$~J(ll·_., •• ,.,, ., .•. ~. _,.,,,,,. .. ~ ''""'"''
..... " .. < ........... ·-··..-······· ..... ., .. _., • ...,, .• ._ .. .
SHOW TIMEI
~~. tl11'11 l'rl. •1>M:U·ll:ll
Sat. l :JS.J:~:tM:>M:11-U:11
S"". t :•l:U-S :•J:•t1JI
EXCLUS TVE
ENGAGE~fENT!
"AH Ul{Rlt;AH YA$T(R.
N CC fAR.....0 AWA,, !!If; l ltt lYl•IClll tllM I
ll•Vf SH/I THIS Tl.Alt!""~ "•""'-•-•rr1o1,.-. ..... -1"_,....._. _ ...... -.. ~-.. ..,. ............. -.'"'"• """''"'""''_.,....I);. '"'"""""~·-... -· ,,,, ....... ., .~ .. d 1 .. ..... "'" , .. , ............ ..
1•1'" oll! !' IHt~f '' OHlY QHE PK:TU~E 'QU CA>i Kl 1~1S f!A~. rlYl (Air
~l!Clt iltO!JlD ll Ill" -...... . •• .. •n """' .-.
" rrtfnsion" (mystery) '69--ffany llu11dino, Jo5epli Cotten. Dina Mtr· rm. Priv1lt invuti1ator 1ets him·
wtf on th1 wron1 si!Je Qf tht l1w
when Ile searclles lor II.is client's
~1111 ltie ttMSt el fur" (mystery) 1-----------------------·4~i1tl Brvce.
mur6e1e1. m T11J1ti tr ClnwqllHtt:I (() (30)
QJ It Ttkts 1 Tllief (C, (60)
GJ Mftir. "tallinl Df. Dutk•
(horror} '43-lon ChantJ.
ID Merit: "Aliltlny" (mystery) '49
-John Bui, Marth• Vickers.
@ ll) Ptuy M1ao11 @t Theftlt Int IC) (30) The The·
111e R1pport'1 Yersion ol frank
C11ney's "The Rl1hteous Afe Bold" is f11turell. 11:3011 9 (I) Mtrr Griffin (C) Guests:
@E Ciowr11111enl Fil111 (Cl ·~OJ
Ell Ne C.1!11 • los Ho111iHU (30)
7:55 ai) Cut1tit• lft Se111ndo1 ISSJ
1:00 a ~ rn Ji• M111t11 1c1 (60)
RoJ Ropn and Dile [~ans 111
ipeci1I 1111sts.
A Ylrlff\it Cir1h.I• Sllow (C) (60)
Scitedultd 1uest1 include Clo111
Lorin&. W ine Caldwell, Bitl D1ilJ,
ind Mll!Ofl Christopher. m Te Tell tht Tnrtl IC) (30)
fD W1sltirllf011 ii lltiew (C) (30)
C.101 Burnett, Mitzi Gayno1. Ross
Hunter.
0 ~ @ ID Joh11n1 Cl1son (C)
Gues(f; Include D11vid 5!e1nbt11.
0 Tllt Motil C11111 (C)
0 aJ Didi Cawtt (t) Buck Henry
is 1uest llo5l. Guests: Pat Mc·
Corrnicli, 1 Wtin1 bear f1om lht
Moscow Circus on let; folk sin1e1
Ooc W•tson.
fl!) Tht Ahocates (C) (A)
fI.i) CJNliln Reaurdl (C) (30) 12;00 0 Movie: "F1llt11 Idol" (drtma) Ell Y1111>u.wt (C) (60) '49-Ji~ H1wkins, Mlchele Moraan.
1:05 Gi) Ttlt·lttist1 M11siul (551
l:JO ID @ {i) fD lro1side (Cl (601 ·'f11e ufii'a on of Hands." Chiel
Ironside innsli11tes 1 let11a1e
ltilh he1ler -1'lo he suspects is the
dupe ol his man11er. Oav1d BH·
ton. Al1n Hewitt and Phyllis love
1uest. o ~ rn·m atwitdt.d <c1 (3oi
"Tht Cortie.an Cousins:· [ndo1a m••n Samantha 1cl !ik1 Seien•. throwtn1 1 1i1nt monkey wrtnch
DAYTIME MOVIES
t:• 8 "A n...M 11111 .... Nilllll"
(1d¥tnl1111:) '4~rntl Wildt. Eve·
1)'11 ltl~u. "Stta tt uw•
(western) '4t--Willl1m Holden. a '1'9 ... tf [MyU!lnl"' Con·
dl&Sloft (lfrtll'lt) '5~ L•nrt,
Sltlllltn lord. Louis Jou1d1n.
m All·Nia~t Show: "lletit, the
Moon MtnKt, .. "IOI~ T1 ll:ill" ind
"llll Spltttf 1nlf tM FIJ.~
@(])Did Cawett (C)
l:DO 1J Motit: (C} "list of tht Fast
4i:uns" (weslern) '58---~ M1hon-
ey, Giibert Roland, Linda C1ist1I.
0 0 News {C)
2:00 0 Co11111111ftity luHttin l111d (C)
2:JD IJ NNS/GM: th Thb D11 (C)
!:JO 0 "Tiie C1een-Eptd 11ondt" (1d·
venlute) '57-Su11n OUvt1, m "Ital Ctn1tltiln" (dr1ma) '59
-M1mi1 Yin Dor811, Steve Coch-
1111. .
l:DO m ''Quall!' St11tt" (comedy) ·37
-K1th11in1 Htpb111n. f11nchot
lont. 0 "Slfltt SMtll If S.,wu"" fdn.
m1) '57 -Butt L1ncut11, Tony
C11rlls. SU!lft Harrison.
4;30 II (C) "WH ttfritl,l:e" (dt1m1)
'SI-Will Roprt Jr. M1u11eft O'·
S11Ui¥1i., Tro, Dotl1hu1.
e JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Quailty Printlng anif D•pendtble Service
for mort than e quarter of a ctnfury
PILOT PRINTING
2211 WEST lAl.lOA I LYD •• NIW,OIT llACH -&42·4l ?1
• 121 ·4071
"IT'S A MAO MAO MAO
MAD WORL0'0 tG)
plu• e J1rnH G1...-r
••SUPPOIT YOUR LOCAL
5H .. llll't •• (GI
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
UNtr 17 """' Ill wllll ,.,1111 "NO ILADIE OF GRASS~ !Ill
Plv:s e kl111 Olftiy
''THE ST RAWll!RllT
STAT EMINT" (Ill
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
s-r...r• .... • --•!'-! ~., •• l
ll"rt"'ll•t E111191-.11
U"41r 11 """' Ill will! 1"1rt11t ••IAlllT, llUN" l•I plyi e SetOllCI C1ter ,Mh1rt
"STUOENT NURSl!S" (Ill ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Wl il"'llNUIQ
HI-WAY 39
Oll lVl -IN
ll"•t,.,llrt Entlflmtnl!
Un<llf 11 mu$! bt Wiii! plr..,I "llAISIT, JIUN" !Ill
pl11s e S«tM Ct .. r "11hor1
0'STUOENT NURSl51., lfll
Exchrllve Dt'l~•l11 5Jlitwlntl
... _ -,tin-lifllltl e Ctlllr
I ••9<1-··outTY DINGUS MAOEI" IOPI
511·1111 phis • .,.,... W1y11t
0'THI UNOEPEATIE.D" 101
••••1••••1························
li•tl1111 .. , D•l~e-111 5llowl11t l
Ulllltt 11 "'"' M wllt! "''"' ••TM&" ILOOD 1110511!" 1•1 PklS e SK-Celer Hetrtr llltw
"THI IODY STEALER!." CJll
""'"'"'" ir., ... _., AU C•llr SMW (GPI
"ELVIS-THAT'S TMI: WAY If U"
'4fl e """ I-'! "MOUSE 0, DAJllC SHADOWI" IGPI
·······•••ti••••···················· s2.oo , •• CAILOAD
Dlvtl• Ntmr ......,!
UMtr 11 ll'tllll 1111 wltlt flf"'flt "'TMS I LOOD 11011" 11111
..... • ltc:tlllll c.... SMw
"THI IOOY ITIALIRI" (II
········••1••····················· .•..
'Sleep of Prlsoaers'
' THEATRE PORT UC Irvine Offers 67l·6260 -CORONA DEL MAR -FOR o\DULTS
Fine Short ~rama I She's woman enough,
C: ;are you man enough?,
By TO~f TITUS
Of 1'11<1 O.llY ll"Ull lt•ff
A restless night passes In
fits of philosophical som· ,
nambulism for four captive
soldiers in Christopher Fry's
"A Sleep of Prisoners," an ab-
breviated drama production
being offered this wee.Ir: by the
students of VC Irvine.
As the maiden effort In the
small and adaptable Studio
Theater of the university's
"A SLl!ll' 01" ll"lllONl!lll"
A d•.,,.I 111 ot111 Id b't Chrl1tooht• ... ,. dlrKltd &v RoOtrf s. CUHltr,
dHlgl'led b'I' ltrl Avr11, n.i-.111111 bv CtmtnM HI"'''· P•t1tnltd !Or'1'9ht
lhr-h S.lurd1v 11 1111 Studio Tlle11tr .ltl 11141 UC lrvllle Flow Arts VUl1111. THI CAST I
(pl, JOHPll A.di"" • . . . Olivid YlllCt<ll
Pvt. Ptllff' Able ••••· .. lruc:t l ouchlrd
P"'· D1.,ld kl"' ... ••• ..... HutG Pltl Pvl. Tl,., MH6ow1 ...... Don Frttm1n
a rme: lnterpn:tatlon by Bruce
Bouchard, whose character
seems .deslined to be the vic-
tim of someone's aggression.
Only his chin w~iskcrs detract
from what is essentially a
youthful figure.
!"!ugo Paez relies largely on
histrionic outburst to establish
his overzealous anarch.ist, the
perennial Cain to Bou.chard's
Abel. His is ·a st r ong
1 performance. but oJten ~
motivated by circumstance.
Probably the best of the Jot
Is Don FreEiman as the old
soldier wisened to the ways of
men. He is entrusted with
lying the play together at the
climax and thli he does quite
handily, adding a dash of
gentle humor to his character
new Fine Arts Village, il is a en route.
most impressive study of the Particularly Impressive In
forces which divide mankind the mini ature theater are the
his best contac ts
are m bed'
lllnlflt
$.RR~ GllOSS Mid
HICllOW OUIElllOOUS
ARLENE TIGER· VASSILI LAMBRINOS ·ANDRE LANOZAAT .l-. """"'~~ , · PINAVISION" "" MADRID I ROME : ClllEMATION I NOUS TRIES Color by llell!Xf 'CJ
and have dooe so through the technical effects, of which the 1 =====================:;. ages. fiery furnace sequence Is the 1.
1
.
Director Robert Currier has most arresting. The aban-NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
lnjected theatrical gusto into doned church setting rs!'-~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~;:~~ what Well could have been a flawlessly constructed and
wordy exercise for the four ldeal for the imaginative s_tyle
student actors involved. Inden-or staging employed.
lilies are elusive. yet the •·A Sleep of Prisoners" will
motivating compulsions o f be presented for three more
each -wisdom, strength. performances only at the
passion and idealism -are Studio Theater. ton I g b t
clearly established and serve through Saturday.
as the basis for each sold.ier'sl ro;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I
several dream characteriza-
tions. 1 ·David Vincent as the rank-
ing rorporal am<>ng three
privates has perhaps the most
difficult assignment for his is
the leas( -identifiable
character. Vincent is a picture
of controlled strength and
.untested authority and his role
is extremely well done.
The callow idealist is given
11rtt1r1 Strelw ...
"O• A c~., D•r
Ye11 Cci• S.. , .... ,.,, ..
6 JYllt "lldrtwi
'"Dorll11t LUI''
NOW PLAYING IN REPERTORY
Wed. • Tll•n, "INDIANS"
by Arfh,11r Kopif
l :JO P.~.
Fri. fttru Sufi.
"THE llJITHDAY PAITY "
by H•rold Pinter
l :lO P.M.
f.?.; J'outh Coast Repertory
SKI
MOVIEI
l'IOT THE FIRST-.JVST THE BEST.
"Slit •...;. I" 1i 1111 tlit lint 1kl lfttvi1. 11'1 julf th1 1>111. It 11 111itln1,
1Mli1el •ntl ll>•••llflil!. It Ii • fte1tur1 '''"' Su-ir fllln1, 11>•ed1111r1 tf
tt.t lllM f111lv•I wlr""" "S~i thl O"''' u..,;,,,"' •""' "TI'I• M11llolu• Nip:• A SUMMIT-MACCILllYllAY·flEEMM rllODUCTION
Fri., Set., Dec. 11·12 New,.rt' Herl>ot H.S. I p.111.
16tti &. l"i11e, Ntwport
Fri., DH . 11 S1.le11t.e Lecture Aid., I p.m.
U.C. or l"i~
Children Under 12 $1 .25
ELVIS
rlESLEY'
"That's The
Way It Is"
"ONE OJ' THE YU.a"S FUNNllST COMEDIES." R<1.~1rd H1 rm1ir-l.A. Fr11 Prtit
BALBOA 1
673-4048 I o,...
6:45
nt I. l•IM. ..... ,...1 .... 1.
HELD
OVER
ENDS DEC. 15
BEST FOREICN
FILM OF '69
"THE
GRASSHOPPER"
Andy's Fun
A$lr: anr kid. "A5k Andy" Is fun,
Stt ft SaturdaJs ln the DAILY
PILOT.
•
'"****' 1rs ALL so FUNNY!" I I MIOHlllT RATING I -HA , ... ~ Dti/r ,...
WWW AnD Olla mtlAGllSJ .. , .......
PlU5 -Tony Mu11nt1-S111y Kend11I !"''THI lllD WITH THE CIYSTAL PLUMAGE'" 15'}
ct:t->;6!0 ~ EDWA~DS ~
TH•ATR• .... .-.. -tott""""-~w1"'
_________ .... ___
CALL 546·3102
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ' ' w u s A ' 1!Pl PAUL NEWMAN •rid JOANNE WOOWARD
ANTHONY PERKINS
1114 TO' HIT-Gt •rt• lt111ntdy ''ZIG ZAG" IE!i W1lloch & .t.11111 JockMll ;.. fGPI
18th RECORD WEEK
Elliott
Gould
Don•ld
Sutherl1nd
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
• •• .,. . . .
~1·1\S ·ll .
''Rabbit, run"
James f.aan·An~nene !Dner·Jack Aloomm \, f.ame Sno&Jess:.Arthur Hill._..,...,, ....... _-=~
J lftOfltlils Cl•• leilblt AllflffOfll t•ll OMt te ll1f lilh wife
cltorettft. He tiu11't come ,.._ yet.
18th Record Wnk Elliott Gould, Don Sutherl1nd
RATED HG" -IT'S FOR EVERYONE -Exclusive W1lk·in Run
1111 TNl WllTMtNITllll ClfNfltfl c¢1=1
W1S11ftf!11ltr a Ot!tttl 'fl'~ S'-. S1r. G". & SHI ~ ,.,,_
.. ltO$S HUNTtJI ,.,_
AIRFIORT -BURT UNCASTER • DEAN MARTIN ··"· ....
?11d F11tur1: "THI OUT·Of.TOWNEIS" 101 HELEN HAYES
HELD OYER!
3RD BIG HIT
t
fred M1cMurr•y
N1ncy Olton in
2nd HIT
Jeck Wll~ 111
"•
•
HOUSIS FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE TRANSPORTATION HOUSES FOR 'SALE ' . HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR'SALE HOUSU FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
~ 1~-1 J~~ l~-1 --1 --1 1;;;;;;;;;:=::;:;;~;;;;;;;:;;;;;;n====;;1;;;;;;;;;;:D=o=v=E=R;;;;;;;S~H~O~R=Es====;1-"c~A~L~IFO~R~N~IA~.
1---·------1-1000 Cost~ Mesa 1100 Ntwport Be•ch
1--~~----1
'o1.inda J:Jl BA YFRONT s;g •... ~!~~lh family
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES BY OWNER ~~~~· ~:;: .. ~~'.' ;.'...:,:•
77 Linda Isle Drive
Ne\vly listed -Lot #60; perfect for the !am·
ily who wants a spacious waterfront home. 4
Extra tie BR .. 4 Ba .. owdr. rm . L$!'.e. liv. rm.
&:: den; 3 car garage. Beaut. patio/garden
w/rm. for pool; deck & dock. By App'l.
For Complete informetion on all homes &.
lot1, please call:
BILL GRUNOY, REALTOR
133 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620
Gener ti 1000 Gt>neral
RUSTIC RANCH 2 IN 1
$26,500 .
3 Bedroom -2 B1th. N t w I y decorated. fo.mily rooni. step do\\'n !IV·
Ste1m room, j1tUI1.I, den & bar. Rtdwc.od ing room wi1h crackling fire.
deck overlooking pier & slip for 40 ft. boat. place, count!)' kllchcn and cheery brcaklast r oom. $110,500. !\fan! Tho.l's living, li-tove In
REDUCED $7000 for quick scle! ,.;•"1 , .. ,,. ""' '""' ,,..,. optioned too! Reduced to
548-1936 or 644-4684 SS<.950
Colesworthy 1000 Generel
SANTA'S GIFT BAG WIFE PLEASElt & Co.
Rc11.d 1his ad co1uplr.1ely and ne:1ltor
consider 1his five l)edroorn Ne11'fl0rt Bcai•h OUi1;c
hon1e on a <1uict tiee lined 1028 &ysicll' Dri._.e
sll"t'i'I in N<'ll'port BC'ach for 67:-r.4930,----
only $44,950. This charn1er LOOK I
ha11 a secluded livi~ 1'00111, 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
spacious rainily roon:i .. 1111d $141.00 mo. incl. taxei
a n1odcrn sunny ~llciicn. Tttkr over subject 1n c.'l:is!ing
Now for th<' 1~·~y o( hCe: the Fl-IA loan nnnunl •1t 1•atc ol
bac:k y1:1!'d, rt s 171 fl' c I 5~ ~: and you'll get 3 large
across !ht• back, has a frul-bi..xhooin~ 2 b,1ths rook fil't'-
1. 1' I· · a Ja11•n · las 1e pa 10, anai, • plac(' built-Jn kitchen fore.
$100 Down J:-SIDE-$23,500
3. Bedroom .2 Bath "101 >=-•Ide '°'"'°" "'"'
$19,9;.0 11tr.cct, 3 bdr1n•, h1·wti Ooot'I,
:) extra 2.-<:ar gar., hltgc lot.
11lus closing co.sis and you ·No· down or sninll.
cun n1ove into this unbellrv. Cotta Mesa Investment
able value before Xmas. It 's 548-7711
only ? yrs, old, has a Jire. l ;G~OOMoo<s-B"R""•=.,:-:,=n•u.=n=·
plaet!, built-in kitchen, fon::-donberry Jn No. c :fl.I.
ed air heal, all 00\\'!}o red1.>c-Assume existing I"llA !Olin
orat~ .• HURRY on this of approx $25, 750 w/lntrresl
one~
RC'al\pr
2629 Harbor, C.h1.
al only s;. -;; . $2500 do'''"
payn1nl. Chas. C. 1'1artln
Rllr. >18-119:)
WVELY, ciuiet, $CCluded .
ocean vie"' hon1e. 2 br. den.
2 ba. S39,500. Co111iider
lensc 'opiion. Q\\•1K'r !'>UWI007
•• COi.LEG}>; PRK -$'14,!IOO •• Only 10°/o Down ' BR-FHA m~<-LO ON
\ViJJ buy this i'OOn1y 190o sq .. • BY OWNER. &15-0927 *
1l. 3 bedrucnft, 3 bath home
with Jan?:e separate· family Mesa Verde 1110
room and for~ dining,
You'll love !ht near new
shag c111i>et and lhc 40 x 00
\\'ell Jandsca1K'd rear yard.
Priced fol' 1111h•k s.ale al
$32,500 \Vllh easy ll•rn1s -
C:lll 673-8550 or 646-7171.
1-0' THE REAI.: \~ESTATERS
"· ' • ' "111 p ....
BRANO NEW
DUPLEXES
~·luxe 2 & 3 Br, SManl~h S.·
Cunl'cntionaJ (lcsiglt Cr11t,
cll'PS. ft•plt', llltns k dlsh-
11·;,slll'r. l..and~cnJiing &
spl'inklr1·.~ <."t1111plrlrly rl'l\r.
t'd. HOl\lf.: & INC.'01\11~ -!-
TAX SHt!:LTEn In choil'c
an:'a of Co.~1·1 r.1rsa.
WOW!
$27,500
NEWPORT BEACH
"THE BLUFFS''.
!-~a.st selling . ever popuh1r 2.
sty'. 3 BR, home. l00'1i
1
:'tlaint. free • incl. pool •
11·alk 10 shopping & schools
• just plain GREAT! C-.:1.ll
toda.v!
2·114 Vista Del Oro
Ne~'POrt Beach i4l-113.1
MOVE IN FOR
CHRISTMAS
WITH 10°/o
DOWN
$175 .month total paymenl.
Heavy shake roof, rough
\\'OOCI exterior, shuttered
windoY.cs & a split rail fence
around front yard, makes
this a true ranch style. All·
sume high VA Joan, annual
percentage rate 6SO and
!Ola! payment $175 n1onth.
Iniide you'll find 3 bed-
room1, 2 baths, beauliful
bullt-in kitchen, brick fire.
place _ making it a \'ery
comfortable h<>me. So don't
Y.'l.it • it \•:on•t last.
LIVE IN ONE
RENT THE OTHER
Profitable to OY.'TI ... A plea.
sure to live in! The home is
a custon1, luxurious charm-
er "'ith 3 king size bed·
rooms: country kitchen and
huge family roon1, fol'mal
dining, secluded living room
.. ,PLUS a separate one
bedroom money-maker that
really redu~s those month-
ly payments! ;45,950 for
both! $4600 dol'.'n, See today
Call oow. Thanks. 546-2313
or 64&-TI71.
For having called &bout our
gorgeous TRI-LEVEL ho1ne
in the beautiful i\1lssion
Viejo area with 2,100 sqtial'C
feet ol lul!Cious living. l!'!I a
fully improved atrlun1 i;ar.
den home y,•ith 3 bc!dl'OOn1;
3 baU1, 1orn1a1 dining 1uun1,
big breakfast nook and a
huge family roon1 with \\'Cl
bar! lf this sounds 11 kc
YOUR KIND OF Ii 0 t<I E
then don't delay. $38,930
takes it.
a la~·n l'ollcyba!! area. ai~ ed. ai;. heat double g~l'fl"e,
a pool. You n1us1 s_ee this f'UI de sac ;fl'Ccl block 11~11
bclore you buy. C111J alS-2313 fe1icr and an cx~llcnl Coi,:ta
li.iesA addl'('SS Call now • -C="'==.='77=.==
Ofe11 E1·ts. • Educational Center Mesa Verde Duplexes
N":H' entrance 10 Baycresl. 4
tl&ndy brdroo111s (maslcr
bcdrooni Sl'paralcd 011 other
side of honic1, full si1.e for.
1nat din ing roon1. faniily
1oon1 \\"ilh bl!ill in dl!sk unit.
lov~ly acrilar1 carprts, vinyl
wall t'Ol'l'ring -$~2.950 -
O\\'ner wlll help finance with
JO~ down. Phone 6--16-TI71
lo \'iew.
546 1640
Realtor
2629 Ha.rbor, C.hl.
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
/Ca.. co:Ts
10 THE REAL
\'."\.. ESTATERS
-~WALLACE i iiiiiiiiiiiii-~~---~------1
REAL TORS CORO!"A DEL MAR
-54"4141-R-2
(Open Evenings) :: Glu1::.,.. 10 tx•at·h
~ . '
TAX DODGE Can You Afford
175.00 mo
Totol Pmt.7'
32 Oelu.'l:e units in the city of If you can this is your honll'.
Orange. Gold i\1edallion, all a beau1i!ul ranrh slylc 4
elec ... 5 Fourp.lexes and 4 bedroom 2 bath Cosla l'lk·sa
Triplexes 1vith corhmunity residence, loralfd in :i Cun-
pool, plus green belt 8.J't'a. tastic area clost 10 cvrry.
Terrific tax defern1ent on thing, Enjoy the bl'lck fire.
high income. Call for details. place, buil!·in ki1chi~n. 1lou-
ble garage & fol'C('d uh· hen I In
Newport tor only S26.500 • Sec ii? •• 546-8'40
Cozy 'l HP., hon1c
On •lo fL . lot
\','l':I n1a'it11ainecl
E.xcclle111 rl'n!al
Only $~3.300
Jlca!tori1
"Our 25th Year
Th• Harbor Area''
673-4400
546-1640 El!!n1enlal)', Jntern1rdialc.
Realtor
2629 Ht1rbor, C.i\1,
NOW ·IS ....... .
THE TIME TO BUY
Buy ahead or spring nu1rkrt
in Bayshores. Per rect hon1e
!or the discriniinating. Lrg.
Hv, rni. adjoining lovely pa.
tin, 2 Bdrrn. & den & din
rm. $49,i'IOO,
liigh School and Orc1.ngi•
Coast Collt>~c a1·c all 11 ilhin
\\'ulkini,: distance Tlirre bd-
1ms. 1% bath ·hon1<' ,,·ith
B/N's and scparale dining
r1n: A bll.rg!lin at only 326.500
1vith FH1VVA :c.rn1s , Largr•
shoppin~ center and S.'t11
Diego Jo'r<.>e"'ll)'. nearby fo1·
your con\'cnitll{'.:.
M. M. LA BORDE, Rllr.
&!6-05."lJ E\'CS: ~l~.:~2tij
SALESMEN
21 Year old Corona de\ !llal'
finn hos openings fo1 :! (.'., ..
~rlcnced real e:>tatf: salE'!i·
me.n Please call: Leonard C'Olcfwell,Banker Smilh or \\'alter llaasc for
Beautiful Glen J\lar home
ready and \\'altlng for you.
Sh!U'p 4 bedrm, 2 bath house
nestled among stately trees.
Close to schools & shopping,
Newly painted inside and
O\\'ner will install new car-
pets. Act now &: you can
hang you!-s1ocking1 on the
fireplace in 11me· !or Chris!·
mu. FHA/VA terms. $28.500 F11irvi•w Newport Beoch
No Down VA
~ 1 ... •• .. • .. ·
1
... 6 .. ~-~ .. -3 ... _ o ... o_o .. -.. -.... -
, 833-0700 '4+2430 • · Eastside 5 Plex •
WALLACE
646-8111
(anytime)
•
co:Ts
, REALTORS ~=====~· Open Evenin91
• 962-1454 • Chestnuts Roasting
Realtor Check into this oulst.'.l.nding
2629 Harl>or, C.i'II.
FHA OR VA
BY THE SEA $88,000
356 E. 20th Street
Costa Mesa
642-4905
J blkf; So. of S.D, f\1·y
Harbor .r.. Da!r Plat't', C.i\I.
Bus. Phone !'i.;i7-83'l':l, Ai::t
Eves. r12 !-086.i
Mesa Verde Esta te s
Now avail • 3 choice hurld inc
si!es adja«nt 10 picturesqll<!
nioclel honlrs t..'On1 plex • 11ur-
roundf'd by h1xul)· 110n1cs In
ltl'l'U of bt'1nJty & pride of
ownership_ \Valk lo i\fc~
Vrrd1• .~ Costa i\l csa Coun.
tiy Clubs. $15,000 -$16,500. MUST SELL BY OWNR
Bkr. Cal\ ~·10-1on. BrJnd new, ice sln1p\e, t blk
Owner Transferred bcuch, 3 br, 2 ba, 2 frplc,
•I b1·. Choice toe .• \\lulk 10 h<!11111 ceil'(:, w/1v crpt, huge
school, p11rks, i;oH. J,ush dhl i.;ur. 642-i523.
11·opieal tan<1sc1111l1\i;, ra. -*~~L~l ~o·o~s•A•N~D=s~*
hona, ll'All'rf·.111 & patl(is "u1·. Spai•kling, 3 bdr111 .. :! haths.
round lgc pbol. i\la11y e".:lras. l Blk. to IJCoch, $32,:J()I),
St!!.700. By O\\!'l{'J' 546-0800. Nc1vrx>r1 Beach n eatly
3 RDH~t. 2 Ba lh. 01'CI' 2(1(YJ • 675-1642 *
liCJ. C1, Catne rn1, frplc, I ~o~u•P~L~EX • 1 br up. 2 br dn.
ft•nccd y;111i. t•; Ulkli 1ron1 " 1 & I ,,. -ly .;--1:11r, nca · c ean. 1 c" golf tlJUl'liC'. $."JSOO d n · furn, :nl' lo bch. Sacrifice.
P)'n1n1s i19;,;n10. !O\\'.NElt' Owner. 71·1/ 542-19·16,
s.1:1-31&2. '"'"=-;C"Cc-~.=~.:;--••= DUPLEX at ocran • .:. br, 2 ·I BR, :l ba tr 1-ll'\ rl: . .-car ha. up, 3 br. 2 ba dn. Vici\',
elee i;11_ra~. Jr:c fum1I)• r111. Prep int. & fllrn. 57;>-0922 JJOOI , hn·p1t. Cou111ry l'lub 1-..c._.c... _____ _
n1l'a. $5-1.9.'iO. Princl11als 011-
ly. ;,I0-1:-PI. Newport Heights 1210
HOUSES ~R SALE I ·
VIEW
FROM .
1111
MOUNTAINS TO ,
THE SEA
Designed tu m1tke the mt'ltl
of the beautiruJ panoramic
view this roon1y Lusk 4 bed.
room home 11 the ideal &et-
Ung for your family, }land~
some natural y,1JOd cabi·
nets, red brick patio. tinted
gl8Sll and l car garage are
a few ot the many addition·
a.J features that make thil
prope11y so iJW!cial. $57,500.
Call 673-8550
\O 'THEREAL
'."\.. ESTATERS '-.. r • •
'FREE
You ahnost get th is klvely
2 BR. honie free, on these
two 30 ft. Jots, So. ol Hwy.
Drive by 312 Orchid then
cull for detail11.
IMMEO. POSSESS.
r-.tove right in. 3 BR, Con-
venient Joe. Carp.. drapes,
fl'J)I.. F'.A. ht'at. Dbl. garage.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 67S-6459
LITTLE MONEY
MAKER
Only 10'1;, down \\"iii buy this
one bedroom hOOsc with
guest apt on a well located
R·2 lot •.• ONLY SJ2.950.
Let the f'('nt on this charm-
er pay the "'ay while you
11·atch the property values
soar. Call us 10 Investigate
this rare invr,st1ncnt opp:1r-
1unity a t 673-8550.
[1:)' THE REAL
\""\.. ESTATERS " -I ', , ", I ,
R EDUCEO $4,0001
S.1crifice! Slckncgs, forces
~ale of this 4 BR. fam. rm.
&· pool h0n1I.'. 2i.'~ Baths. 2~
ca.r gar. 100x10;, ft. lot.
l\1ust sell no1v • $49,500.
Call Pttlrick \llood 5-15-2300
0 Bill Haven, Rltr.
ll 11 E. Coa81, Cdi\l 673-3211
1/2 BLK. TO BEACH
3 BR. 2 ha. Heaut, n1ahog.
pant'ling. Newly redccorat.
("(!. A drea1n home in a
drea1n location. 154.900 .
Delancy Reel Estate
BALBOA
ISLAND
on an open fire
011·ncr S4JIS "SEU.." his ::;
bedroom, 2 ba!h honll' in
1.Tesa Del i\1ar. BeautHully
carpct<'d a nd draped. Built.
in bar in family roon1. Large
CO\'<'red pu!io, corner lot
\\'ith l'OOm for boa! or 1n1il-
er. 0\\TIC'r has pu1chR~ctl a
hon1e a t lhe beach. Jus! J'{!.
ducetl 10 $29.750. Call fu1· an
lnspeclion. &16-2313
Nr11•p:1rt Bcuch 11·lnncr_ Jusl Luxury & con1for1 by Ute st'tt
l'l'<lured to V.A. apprn.i~I uf ju.st ~ sl<'Pli a\l'llY. 4 bcd-
S.i2,:JOO. 3 1ar;::c bt'droo1ns.. roo111s -5 bath.-;, E:nlertuin
funiily 1oon1, 2 ba1hs and a in parl<'lr<I fan1ily roun1 at.
drcan1 kitchen 11·i!h built-ins n1 osphc1·e or fornuil 11vilu;
including the rcfrige1·ato1· 1-0001, lloih ha,1'e 1na."8ive
and used bl'ick har-b-qur, a flrep.lal'<'I. \Va1ch lhe Spin.
100 ft . wide Jot and seclud· akers sail by from !hf' glass.
ed private CO\"ert'd patio. ed patio on the 1-oof. Thcrr's
Call today lo 51;:~ thi~ roomy a sp.."Clal incon1e f,•i1lurc,
bcuu1y. 67:~iJO loo~ A rare v'!llue ar $69,500.
REPOSSESSIONS
Sparkling clean hon1es, son1e 1----------
nc11•ly painlcd & carpeted. 2, Newport Beach 1200
3. 4 & 5 bdrms. Sonic 11·i!h 1----------
BY O\VNErt: 4 Br, 2 ba, 2828 E. Coast Hwy .• Ccll\t
h1Jlc, bllns. i\lany :dras. --~~":.,..'·~127.•~0=~--
VACANT
LOT
$37,500
WILLIAM WINTON
Re•ltor
229 l\farine, Balboa Island
675-3331
OWNER
DESPERATE
at Christmas time in lhis 3
bedroom + den homt>. f'am.
ily/dining room. bltns, dish.
11·ru;hcr. crp!s, drps, cover·
cd patio, dblc garage_ All
in p!'t1ect condition! 11\J.
I\ I EDI ATE POSSESSION!!
Oh yes. it HAS a FIR.£.
PLAc;E! ! $28, 750.
Wells-Mccardle, Rltrs.
1810 Nc .. vport Blvd., C.i\1.
548-7729 ..,..,..,,....,..,..,..,..,1 Three Stparate Un its
EASTSIOE C.~1. Con1'cnir111-TAYLOR Co Jy located to schools shop-
• ping and public !runSpor la·
lion. Roon1y two bclrm ho11ir DOVER SHORES
Brand NE\V & beautiful 4
BR. den, formal din rm.
OPEN 1-5 $105,000
pools. fl!A-VA 1'tll1V, re1·n1s, S-0-0-0
Jusl call &16-7171.
1'""' 117·000 '" 1''°·°"· UNUSUAL Collins & \\latts 1111·.
8&13 Adams Ave. OO'l-5.12.1 ln!\'rt•stlni;: floo r 11liu1 with
-roon1s i.:alore in lhe Ju•a r! $25,450-Pool or Ne1vpor1 Ht•lr;hl ~ -:-i n('n.
4 Bdrm. + Family rm. BAYCREST AREA·1~~--------As.~tune c:'l:isling: 111w. ]01111 nr
4 BR +FR+POOL VACANT .GIANT! 61z',i. f_;ll'gani eotry hall. 4.
Enjoy a J'f'fl] (:1n1ily Christ. Bedrooms, huge f11.n1ily
Nr"·port Brach lo\·crs look nias in this 1nodrrn 5 bl•d· room. n1llUl'lll bi·ick fi1·c-
at 1his . 4 big l>dnns . fan1-nJOm , 3 ha!h ]ux1uy home. pla<.'t', s\\liln pool, park like
II~ 100111 • spark!in::-pool • Bcan1cd C"athedral ccill~s. yant. 540-17al
plus Hal'OOr High Schoul · HUGE fa 111iJy 1'00n1, ma.s. 2955 Harbor TARBELL
\Ves11·1ifl ~horring . 1\lJ this si\·r rock F'IRE:PLACE, dra-1----------
1111<1 onl,1• n1inutrs to I hr n1atic raised marhlc entry
bc1H'h. Pl'il'Nl unt],~r markcl hull. Pi·ieM at Vl\ 11/lprais:1I Costa Mesill 1100
1wn1s, fttn1ily 1·no1tl 1\•1111
fin.•place 11 11d burl>t'CU('. !"'Jc.
luxe kitch1•11 \Yhh huitt-i n
ft'l'C'~rr. l"f:'fr!i,:t'l'rt!rir rui<t
blenclcr. L111·}.:e puol 1vlth
loads ol clecking, -Phonr
616-7171 and only $39,j()(I_
"'ttlk 10 :i s(·hls. Wou ld <.'Oil· y1 LOW DOWN y1
~l~t·r_k_·•_·'-'·_~1s-;iJ06, Buys $41,500 Duplex
2 BH, den, l \li l>aths, frpl. + rocuny I-Bl~. apt, Large
p;llios. Top location.
Univflrsit\• P a rk 1237
OLE 'I
A11!hentl1· Sr1tuiish .s•i'll' w/
11J" 1·oor. t•u1hcdn1I ccilin!;.
3 Bil. 2 ha .• 2 jlll.tlos, \\lidt>
l•)t, Owner' ii l'l'<lUrt'Cl tu
$39.500. l'l lukc orfl'I'!
(ired hill
r:ralty
Univ. Parl; Ccntcl', l.rvine
Call /\nylln1e 8..13--08'.lO
Univl'r'Si1y Realty 673-6.'ilO
3001 E. Coast Hwy., C.dM
BY OWNER
ON THE BLUFF
htw Bi.st .~ LitUc Coronn heh
2500 sq. ff. luxury home. 68
fl. Ocean Blvd. frontage .
Principals only. Jo'or ap-
poi ntmenl call 675-3497
-If PANORAMIC VIEW
Luxur)· Ocean Blvd. Duplex.
Q\'crlooklng Jetty & llarbor.
By Owner: 673-8866 * l\fodel home -$6000 under
mar ket value. Gorg~us 4
bet.lroom 2 story hOnle . J
sparkling baths, fully car-
peted, huge family roon1.
formal dining & "·ouJd you
believe air conditioning?
tmmediare possession. \\1ill
sell in the next 48 tioun for
$39,950. All tenns • FHA/
VA _ NO 00\\'N. Ca t i
545-8424 Souih Coast Realtors
410 i\1orning Star Lane
CITY LIGHTS VIEW
on hard10.•ood floors. atrnH'·
ti\·e open bean1 uni! ovrr
garage and sl'poratr b11du:-.
Jor's cottage. Prh·alc )artl~.
D . gar. lar~e laundry
roo l Pl'iccd a t SllUOO •
fur •lllil-k salt•. Rc1h•r hurry., of S.19,900, 0111 of slale 01111-
l•l.\I. &13-0.'W:-: er 11'-ints ACTION~ 1 $1,200
FORE~JA~;.,,~i.SoN 1 Walker & Lee '"" lh•· .""" l"''"''"I
Luxurious Living! I========== JUST LISTED ~ f abulous 11 Linda Isle 1306
··s1urf-"" Angcli1rr., 2 BR. PARADISE FOUND 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;==;1
TWO SEPARAn--
GARAGES
THREE BEDROOMS. Large
living roon1. dining area, tl!.
ed built-in kit. and service
porch. EXTRA LARGE
STEP 00\VN DEN with
Franklin stove and BI N Bar.
B·Que, New cpts. including
d<"n, Large fenced yard -
Priced at $26,500. ASSUl\tE
$21,800 Gt WAN.
M. M. LABORDE, Rltr.
646-05:)5 .Evc1: 646-4579
REPOSSESSIONS
3 & 4 Bedrooms, fam ily
room, ri!w crpts & paint.
No down payment • no clos.
ing cost1 to veterans, Sev.
eral to choose from _ for
details call 54(}.ll5l.
"Tiie Only Way lo Buy··
I¥ ~~~~1
UDO SANDS
Beautifully deooraled 3 bed.
rm. 2 bath home. ClOSe to
beach. F..a.sy ACCUS, Good
for investment minded.
JEAN SMITH, RLTR
&16-lZa 400 E. 17th St., Ci\{
BEACH DUPLEX
2 Furnished Units
Xlnt lecellonl
$21,000
Gtorg• Wllll•mson
Reeltor
67J.43SO 645-1564 Eves.
e \VESTCLIFF CONDO e
2 BR. 2\i ba. Ctubhous~
Pool, sauna. Owner/can')',
Ea!it c.~f. 3 BR. 2 a.. VA no
do\\'11. F1fA $1650 down,
FORTIN CO. 4'2-0000
Preslige Dover Shores. 4 "'l+s.,;ffiit offers. ~"n,I ll,'°11{130r:. C~T Hral!Ol'S 0·~11.\) Eusl sidl' :: lflh'lll
------• 2013 \\'ei.:tcliff J)ri\e at'<!halc • clo.'<c 10 h";u·t or
n10dl'l on olll' lrv1•l, Cust11n1, \\'ill br your l-'On1mcnt when
profr.s11. dcroralcd . n10\'1• 111 }Oii st't !his one. II has 2
t'l1nd, sun1p1uous n1s1 r .. ~11i11·. Bt''s, 2 Im, blln "·ct bR.r,
Exquisite Bayfront
' fam rn1, formal DR & 31.~ M. M."LaBorde, Rlt r.
bfls, Looks like a 1nodcl 6-16-0:».l G'IG-1~17:'1
hon1c. S124,5001 ••ii"ii"Oiiiiiiiiiiii..,._ __ Harbor View 61G.'iill Opt;n ·ni !l:OO ri\T do11nto"·n _ Lar:.: ... Jt:.! 101 .
In Co rona del Mar ---~ -OR. r11con1e rcn1:1!, for that Jl11•all.v 11i!ua1<>d on t'Ortll'I'. dt•n & llv. r111. Beautiful pa-Open Daily 1 to 4
Evrry /''l:h'a. CALL r\0\\' for !i•1 & ntce landscriping, All SI Linda lile
"Om· ZOlh Yooc" Open Daily 1-5 ·I Bcilroonis. lun1ily roon1 -1 FORCED SALE tax shelter · P'l~.~iblc Corll· flflp't. /\skln6 $42.:,00. \\'ur1't !hi~ .~ n 61·~·,;_ a~sumable Bill Beots Yl(esley N. Taylor Co. 2001 Al ' A & 20,h REALTOltS ISO ve
2111 San Joaquin Hills Roal! Custont built, forn1al d ining
Ne'A'port Center 6444910 room, 3 l>N!rin. 2 I.la, srri
Jivin~ rm., f.ircpla cc, farnil.v
l:1l-den kitchen on e':1r:1 Sirikinl!' large Spanh;h home, 111erclal or n1u1liplc uuits.
l!irge lol. Luxury l1<1lh \\'ith nCHl"rll;11,. 2SOO S(I. fl. Own. ON LY $22,500. -Ca 11
su11 l<rn 1ub + mariy eXll'U-". rrs forN>cl 1o !runsfrl' Easl. &l&-7l71
las!. lrn111. ~\'t• it roduy. Price l't·
Ask for Etta Frven1an du(iod 10 S.ll.000. PETE BARRm
675-3000 rn1., elec bltns, FA hc1tt, p;1.
S13.00J. You 011·n the land. a Bcrh·111s, lam & rlin 1·n1i;.
Phoor &16-7171 Best offer! List rd SG3,500. IO ' THE REAL'
\'."'\.'. ESTA TERS ii.· d h•11 Really • 642-5200 :' .. ·.;re 1 1 ~~~1 Huntington Beach 1•00 The Nun1ber To Call \\lhe!hcr lio \1·.lgas fired BBQ pit,
Buying, Selling or Leasing dble gar., space fol' bnat &
" 'Jf'fN ·~r,T1l ~ f'V. ~~ N
Un;,·. ,,,,.., c'""'· i.v;oe OCEAN VIEW-J Brm IRVINE TERR. •2 !railer.
1501 Bayadere Terrace Lachenmyer Rlty
0Pl'n Fri., Sat., Sun. Tree Call 64&3923 E1'l's: ~)IS-fiili~
Bar9C1in Hunters -Step Right In!
shaded 3 BR. 3 Ba. hon1e __ __ _
•.. To thi~ f'l\'<.'<10111 11 .. 111e
\1 i1h :in e\i•llng hi-;:h ~']I,\ LEASE W /OPTION
Beautiful rustic cottage. 2
Bedroon1, family, dining an<l
Jtllt'st r no 111. Hardwood
floor~. hllris. tr('(' Hnl'.'d
s1recl, East~illc, Cosla l\lcsn.
r>;o"' 1·ncan.l. full price
$2:i.~. ca\J 510.1151.
PLUS hobby rm. & 2 car FOREVER VIEW
_gar. Li;e. slreet _ to -street & pool side pleusurr. ~Cl\'
lot. Priee only 154.500. · custom home by Ivan \\'e lls loun & 11 lu11 assurnallle 111-Sp;u;;iuti~ 2 11\ory, :: tx-drn1 I·
lrn'Sl 1·;lll'. :: b !nn~. hii; bonus r0on1 alt hl!ns )l(';n•y
)ard<; ln :1 fill!' toralion. shake. bloo:;k \1'nll. qu0Je1 1"t1l-
Plt·a~n! St. /\lni .. st Til'll' rlc·ia.c'. $213. Jo'or clf'toih; !<ha~ t'flrNI.•, kjll'IK'n floor1;1 <'all J;u•k lli1mrno11d, lltrl.
fljll,\\' ,\ i1i.\fll0
llE.U:I'\' l:\f.
.~s · 1•11 ~~7S_!C·J~
Macnab-Irvine
Realty Company
COLOSSAL VIEW
FROM 1-"RONT RO\V Ofo~ IR.
VINE TERRACE • all the
harbor and ocean aclivlty
(or your enjoyn1ent, Pre!ltigt'
rcsldf!ntial location. T w o
gorgeous homes. Now avail.
able from $167,500,
· Macnab-Irvine
in Dover Shores. 4 BR, 3
BA + pwdr rn1 .. fan1ily
nn,, dining mi., Znd lrplc
& 1va.Jk in wet bar. r.oy J.
\Varel Rltr .• 103.1 i\larincrs
Dr., 646-15.lO Open Dail~'.
& 11•1r1tlo~1 1>0\l'rln;;s.,. l:ii::r fl.E. ;140.11;;1 S2J.9j(J • .
"Thr Only \\'ay lo Buy··
A.,.,,, '"•·'""'-$3800-dow_n_
$29 500 O\VNEH. Want1i to sell flO\\': View & pool & you owr· thl! , 4 Bdrm. + Family rm.
CORONA HIGHLAND S
land In CoroM I I r-.lf\ 4 4 BR + F ·1 C I II I h II r lnl! $20.000 tokes lhi~
Bd , 2 bo (e 'r.1 am1 Y rm. .-·ntra our 11 t1n, l'nl ry :o • bt';:u11lrul ,\1c11a Nnrth hon1e. m1s., ths. 0 ll Y lleau1Hul hOlll<', ,\ kin;,; ~\letl liur::•· l11111ily rn1, dl11ing rm, t im ~...... 5 Bit plus 1!lning roon1, """•"""l. hcth~10n1~. 111 r ~ r f;11nily "!ln~a111" ki!('hrn lu.J11:,:i"i.; hll-lns 1* BA, Sridnk!cri1 CORBIN room. 3 bri!h~. lin1• t/uallty l11111ps, l'lrgnnl b..,okcascti. fl'ont & back. H.cchvood
• bul1t-in11, 011·nrr desp('rt1!C, Many l'Xtru..~. ~I0-17:l() fcnee 011 3 111r1cl'i. Nr. sOOps,
'"0112tl 2955 Harbor TARBELL 11 MARTIN i955 Harbor_~!EL~ CONTRACTOR'S--;~~::;~g i~~~ta~c. 1°Cp~11.
T I • Steps To Ocean e REPOSSE·SSION d11>S. Sn111ll 4%~1, ls!. 10~,
REAL ORS ~-7662 1 Einpty & llke 11e"': Only 2nd. J-1 1,\ appra~Bl $26.000
$24,950 $32,;,(JI)_ 3 Bfl.. fan\ rm., 2 3 Jk<lrooni n.e11r Dunu Po.,int al 8',1'1. 1169 Dorset Lane, C~1. 54tt-353<1
3 Bd + O hfl, 2 Cl'lr llar., hhn11. i\l1rln.1, $ti00 , do11·n. Full '"'· •.n CAYWOOD REAL TY rrice us..-.100. T1n1nl'tl. ros. 'SPARKLING 4 b c d r oo n1 642-t23S 675-3210 T•ke Over Sl/.c Yo 6306 \V Ccw:t Hwy NB 8CEt1li:in SE}:: TiflS ONE1 hon1e l n1rnrdiatc '!!!!!~~"!!'"!!'~":'!!!!!!lapr .. ~n. ''Pride (Jf o\\1l<'r· • 548-1290 • C11li .'9:').j560 Broker. JAISSl"&Sion. All bltn!i, cozy ~ VILLAGE I !!hip hoffi!' Payment.! of -• -fireplace, fan\ily roon\ in $126amonulonexi!llln~fin-ASSUME SY.c•/e G.1. $21,500 quiet l't'siden!ial area.
11'1 fantastic lo live in a vii-anclng, laJ¥e rooms. Excel-5 BR. ~ $26,000 Briihl & clK'<'rful 2 bl'drooin Owner anxiowl • all tenns •
lage at University Park. lent oond!Oon. 5-tO-IT.IJ lmmed, Po!lse~. North Cos1a. Eastslck home. Hai'd\\'OOCI f'HA/VA • NO 00\VN or
PARK & POOL
Park Lido. :J Brl. 'l Ba. l\il
h!tns, nc11• cpl /ilr(ls, 'rpl•·.
patio, fluOl & 3 i.:arai.::~s. i\
1..-on1lo is 1hc bc-sl In ci:u·rfrC'e
liviui;. /\skinl-' $33.~'0"l.
CALL c::> 646·1414 91~.~ Nt1r Ntwport Po11 Otflcc
"FIXER UPPER"
One bcdroo1n liv1b!e l'0\1111;t'i·
in Nc1v1)()rt llrlg-hls on n ;,():-.;
127 fno! lot. rll•nt or liv,, in
thi.~ un1il yvu 1:11·c l'l'Udy ro
buil1 yovr tl«'11n1 h<1111~-.
Be111 l()(·nllon !11 the llt"ir,hl 11
for $19,!130. Call for sl101ving
[)16-2313,
Dupl•• In Distress
Call Anytin1e 833--0820
Back Bay 1240
2'.!' :\lOBIL~: HO~IE: Gri!ri t
V1tC' spol •Jr Bach/11tr:i, i11
r11•k on hllY. Cobana. 2
1\•fl'h:(~. 5x7 stf'l'l locker.
Pvt bt..•ul'h & boat lift. Only
$6·0. j18-67G.1
Corona d el Mar 1'250
BLUFFS 4 BEDROOM
A rare flnri fl 4 l~roo111, J
bath "C"' plan in the
"Blults" wi1h IJl"'n be:i.111s
.-rid n ha1t'Olly !or )'ol.11' Ju.
llct 11111_] 1Ji11\(l for llomro and
nt.•arby pool lnr everybody,
~111kr yv<Jr~l'lf JJRl't Of lht
l'lll't'fn:oe life in 11~ Bluffs.
1·16.Roo.
Ca 11 biJ-8550
Q..\TI(!r ni u :I I K ii hrforc -~
Oirislmo~! 2 BR. l·bo ca. '\VOULD YOU LIKE A
unit. Rrini;:-off~r,;! SP L l'T-LEVEL TWO
Cali: 67J.3663 54!>5!H2 E\'C.!I. llEOROO~I HOUSE Ii o
. associated ;
Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath 2955 Harbor TARBELL f!.tesa. nr. !§hopping center. floor!I. Largl.' n.2 IOI. tm. ali5urne low inlert'11! loan.
lamUy room home. Use of LARGE tmmac 3 BR + New palnt thivout. New 1n('(,llnte pmi$CllSiOn. Thlt Call 543-8~. Soulh Coaat
tennis courts, s•imming tam r~ near· Bftck 88)' FHA-VA O.K. 675-SiiOO one is prk"<'d to sell Jn a cRe.:;:;•~ll~o~"~·~· ~--..:...-~i-.,;"""""'"'"""'"""'
pools. and rtm:'atio~J facJJ.. area, 2 brlcic frplcs, hrdv.·d Pyramid Exchangorl'I . f\un·y, Sell, lt•s•/opt or rent NEWPORT ISLAND
BROKERS-REALTORS
102\ W lolboa 67J-J661
roomy that your 1rand
piano Is no problem?
WOULD YOU LIKE A BIG,
BEAlM'lruL SlDE YARD
that Your neighbor dots all
lhe work on ?
\VOULO YOU LIKE AN EX·
'ffiA INCOME UNIT to help
m11.ke your payment.c? •
ltle! mcluded. Thett" much tloors, bllns, w alt c d WATERFRONT PATIO A _:;:-_'-"-'-,.,=.-..-"-'"'-"°-i • BR,, 2~ .ba,, f11>lc. 2 Car 2 BR. f'rplc. Sep. gat::tgc,
more to lite for $30,500. can paric-!ike Yard, cove r ed 01ie of the best in Tiie Co\'es, 3 UNITS gar. 3 Yrs. old, ~Sq, Ft. bedroom, rre rm. $.12,500.
Drive by 602 lrb. now $46-231.3 patio, trees. Quality hou&e Room for a larg,. boat SepArale hou~s E-iddc 2 A·l Corid. VacBnt quick J>O$. n .2 lot. 20% dn. By Owner.
on a beautiful street. tOS' 4 ~s en, frplc, pooi. room 'ror 11eq. Call tod8.)'! 673-2'36. 11-lE '"Yellow P atts" or ',O THE REAL
\"'\. ESTATERS Down, $.13.000. Klnga11.rd 1111.000 3 more. Income~. Price Call PatrlCk \Vood 515-2300 REDUCED 14~; l'ark Lido chw\lled .•• Dally Pilot
,. . ''• R.E. 1-11 2-Zm. LIDO REALTY INC. "°·000 i!i.000 clown. ,Art. e Biii HaVen, Rltr. 1V1nh~. 3 ltr, !1 Ba, lm1ned. • ~rvice Directory. Check It
TIRED of that old rurn11u~1' 3377 VI• Lido 673-7300 MG-27!i!I 2111 t . Con..!it, Cdfl.f 673-3211 pou, Rt•ltor 64&--0732. I for the Rervlce you need. ~~-""~""'~-"~-~-"--'~:..C:cc;;=.
\ ,. •
$15,500
UNB£LIEVABLE!
TM.1 '11 Right? }lard to be·
lie\'<'! Bui 11·ue! ! A l &!<J.
roon1 home and '"'O 1ianl
lnts for the prlcP or one.
Price includPs full ~izc a.l-
it')'. R-:l zoning, you con
have many more unll11, All
with ocean view, 1,3 ml.
from bcaeh. You nan1c the
temur. Fanlaslic vah1c!
Don't Delay Dia l !)62..5.'j85
FQREST E. OLSO"
Inc. Rcalton;
19l3l Brookhurst A\-e.
Hiint.lngton Beach
OWNER
DESPERATE
Model home • $600 untltr mar.
r
ket valu~. Gorgeous 4 bed-
room, 2 i;tory home • 3
sparkling bath!!. fully cnr-~
pct'1d, huge family room, '
formal dining &: v.1)uld )'OU l
bellnve air conclttionln1t? t
Immediate posseulon. \Viii I
It'll in !he next 48 houl'll for
Ul.950. All term11 _ f1tA/ I
VA • NO 00\\'N. C 11 l l
~24 Soulh Coast Reallon1 1
BY owner: Two 2 B~~nwr J
lot. t:::i.:cepUontll ~-ln-
con\C, 1229 Delaware St, i
IT'.S Beach house time. 811'
gest M:lectton tvtrl See tht
aecuon nowt
l
I •
'
~ lo DAILY P1LOl
·y ~.Ill POR SALE
' ~ H'!'!"+ -1.ao !-:; COllfTRY ENGLISH
~...::
' ·-I •' I ' ~'· I Y,'""f ·-. -·-• :.-._.( , ......... ;. .. ' '-.
I I
..
. .
CHALET
Unbtlltvablt! Quiet trt't Jin.
lfd ti. to JoaM of NEW !:NG.
LAND OIAIUfl Hut•
room1. Taardrop chandelltr.
ed tonnal dlnlnt. ArcMd
ce.ilinl" A doors. Thlek wall•
With atrtftlth like "SAM·
SON." Step down mu1er
suite. Maulve Jot; -burnlnc
fireplace. WaJk.in close1s.
Loa.dA of brick. Cove.red pa .
tio. Rich v.'OOd pariel~ de·
taehed llra&a. Only $27,700.
Best to hurry and calJ 171~1
962.S,.W,
FOREST l OLSON
lnt. RP.'1klrs
1919.l Brookburst Avt.
Huntlnrton Beach
$22,500
4 Bedroom 2 bath with a.II
bltf1a. Covered patio, Wt'll
l1ndaeaped with .11prlnkler1.
Quality carpets, drape1, dee..
oralina: ls fresh and v.·ell
doM, dbl rvaae, walk to
shoppina: &nd school• .
IC'"' I ;4S(;<J ....... 't', °''· o;•• ¥ +¥ w
HOilsliS FOlt SALi lllNTALS RENTAL~ RE NTAL~ RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS
Lo...,.• looch ll'U ......;H..;.°"='°;.;:'...;F...;u;.;.m;.;;l;.;:oh;.;:od:::.,_ Hou.., Unfumlohod Apia. fuml-AplL fumlohod Apto. Fun1-Apia. Pumlohod
PANORAMIC LOflll• leach 170.I CNI• MoN i!OO Oonoral -:H::""':::::!'!!::...,:::::::':::H;:"':::•::•:::Hun:=;:"";:"':;'°':"::lo;:...,:=-=l:D:'.°""::'..;;"°-=.51nt:.......::-"."47::-;::40
VIEW t ... o':i':I~~~cl1 1.1!. 1:lr·m""i ~? t. Just For s~G~.~id~J°A" i!: u=~ed oceaa ~·· (A.) J bdrm, Jurn. \lnlt • .jlt ..... u5 . s· I A.J I ofa nuinla _JJ. rm d rina lM, MllJ. Cout llwy . • ""'"':':i'.· :~ .. dr: ... •Mrll<I .. tlo, "' yd• CoU•r• Pk. 14. 3 BR + dln'r In I e au t· la(i . e 0 a lo bMch. L<•n @116! Mo. Crpt'd 2 BA, "'5 mo. Avail e Cuual tata Ii·•· •-•-La Quin H RINTALI
t&nct to beach. 3 e.droomt, (8.) 2 bdrm., 2 bath, view, lit Ph: 54N33t South 8a1 Qub t. a whol• es · •wit .s:.u""i. ta er-.A...._ Unf I Mel built-In kit<h<n, •.Ck• 1,,., cl ., h, mm'r lush lftOD atmoapbe.-. a. atroll ir... = um •
terraetd ~ a r d. $42,SOO. OM to ac eYtr')'th\111. 2 BR bouM. Crpta A drpt. J new Wl¥ oC W• d11l1nt;d lined walk wrJ; to,r.Ul' ;J:l J'lnlplact, chann. Okler child. Sl-i& mo. No J>flU. *ITT lu•t f.ot •lni!e people. lt 1 ChMral 5000
Call • plact w/ v.'OOd pantUlnr. Wlllact, A.Dl 6 run Uvlnc with warm, cty. ALL Ill IS I CLUOID
Lea,. r@ S:l:50 Mo. 1 ,-.,,.--.,c-ii'-'-~~~~ namle Nl(hbor.. 11·1 a 1 ••· Unf. 9150 -Purn. SllO YENDOME
(C,) ~ bdnn. oldtr homr, 3 Br, family, 2 bl. lrplc, htalth club. aaum1, twlm-2 IR. Unf. $175 -l'urn. $210
clote In Joc1.t1on, Flrt:pl•«. ltue opllon. AU bltr11. fncd mlrlJ pool, P&J1Y room1 bu. 3 Spac. fir. plans. decor. furnishin11; IJve lMJi.tACULATE AM'S! AO tan
RENTALS
Apt•· Unfurnished
COlta Mota 1100
8RAND NEW Eutlida t A ~
BR. 1 ol 2 batha. SIM 111
Sl". crp~. drp1, dshwhr.
1tU clean 1•• ovtn. all Y.'11'
A ru pd. Hid pool. 324 £.
~h St f46..9141.
VALUE ~ Qul•t 2 Sr., crpt.i,
drps, d11hwhr, pool. Adults.
No pea. St30. 2295 Pacific
Ave .. 01. M&-61'11 or
642-4429
Kitchen wl nnce A rtfrif. yd, Yr old. sm. ~1•76M. l~fd1, Indoor roll dr1vtn1 within rornantic aettin1 w/fun or privacy. ADUL.T and
Dlahw1kr. 1..e._@ PlO Mo. ran1•. t.nnl1 court1. pro Terraced pool, prl. sunken (U BBQ's W/ F'AMll,.Y ~llon ~,en. l Bi\. Gd ir<lend Uhni~~·
MISSION REALTY Newpiert leech 3200 &hop and re1ldtnl ttnniJ pro. Cl L-I p k · ha1 crpl$1, rps, s "' ' 98S S Coa H Sl lP t 2 Btd secu1ded seatina: compl. W/Ram1d1 & FOWl· Ole to srwpp ng, Ir patio, be•m ceilings, rrple.
REAL ESTATE
1190 Oltnntyrc St,
• •I wy. BEAUT Gardtn of Edon .. na . I: room IUX· tain. .. Spa.•:.iOUll 3 BR's, 2 ba ""' Eld•-537 0062 aft Pl'ione 494-0731 ~ ury apartment• with au the p:ar. ' ~ "· • r;!ory, 4 br homt 1 blk trom modtrn convtnlencei avail. * Color co-ord. kit w/ indirect lt9htin9. * Swim pool. put/arteu . 7 pm & s11n. Sl~/rno.
Jl"'e' Rl11ted8&1 Attr. tra.dltion&I V•c1tlon Rentelt 2t00 pvt beach ln Npt Hatbor •hie. 1'urnl1htd and unf\.lrn· *, Dtlux• r•ntt I ov•nt * Plu sh sh•9 c:rptg. • f'rlll, l't\dlv /Jndry "fac'I~ , 3 ., ••P. liv. nn., ava.U for I s e , Lee * Bonus stor•9• apac• + Cov. c•rport 1845 Anaheim Ave. LGE cle11n quiel I Ir 2 br din, rm. l tam, rm. H 0 LID A Y Re1ervatlon1 cardtn/fam rm. dln't rm, llhtd. * Sculptured m•rble pullm•n I tile baths COSTA M~ 642--2824 apl~. l br 'suo, \\'•!er paid.
n& Emerald Bf.1 $75,000 avail, Modern 2 Br. •Pt•. nr llv'r rm, Ml bar & powder MODELS OPEN DAll.Y * Elevant recre•tlon room, 2 br Sl60, util paid. No
Shown by app't. ak! attaa Bir Bear Lakt to rm downatalra. Obi garage FURNISHED MODELS OPEN D'ILY chlld.rt!n. 33l·A Avocado. 8111 Grundy, Re1lter resp, party, S41)..;ms,, door opetlfr, beaut Brnwn lo A.M. • I P.M. "' C:'\f
13.1 Oovtr Dr., NB 642-4&20 LUX. 3 Br. s Ba. SANDPIP· Jordan patio tum, 1•• s..a. Blk from Huntington Center, San Dieeo •1NT'L flNDERS e NOW RENTING e
Q • O'h.r I n. tn-• RINTS ,ltOM Frwy .. Goldenwest Coll1 .. e. "' "' e $73,500 e ER Unit. Palm Dea. Pool•, wcu ea "" • FrM To landlords Mesa Verde Atta. NE\V Du . ••roRY. l,Ollt) Sq, rt. golf. Lea1e month or aea. 1n;&inte1W1Q1 11rdener. $150 San Dieio Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on 1 2 lBR bltn 1 ~ $1000/m.o. CaJI owner Beach 3 blka. to Holt; W. on Holt to . . . 645..0111 P exes, " • s, enc 3 "Br/2 Ba. livtna:/rm l 50n. linmed. avail. 'JI•: 64~ ar wrlte to Box NEWPORT llACH' 1 -Q . rar. palk>s. wshr I dryer
tamily/nn, 2/tp's. 34&~9 or TI•: 536-26M eves. M2Z, Dall.v Pilot, 330 w. SIO IRVINE AVE. ~ u1nt1 Hermow 714: 147.5441 4J5 W. lttti, C•• M.. hookup. Also Jrg 2 &. 3 BR * GOOD TERMS I I * e 3 BR, 2 BA HSE ON Bay, C.M. $17;, NE\V 2 BR apl. 8':st _1;::"~'~·'°''-",,:'.;,'·~046-=lQ.!4~=~-I
404 Emerald Bay APOLENA, COMPLETELY 1 3-8~0-R-M-S.-, -2-.,-.. -th-,-, -.,-w-1 JRVINE & I bth Coda Men 4100 N..vpert Hgh. 4110 locaUon. 356 E, Xlth St. NEW TOWNHOUSE
4%-2609 FURN, 123:1. e7~2901 carpeting. Facti pool . $2'75 (714) '4S.0SJO Costa Meaa. 642-4905 2 BR, l\ii Ba.&: 2. Bfl. Q-ptg,
RINTALS month. Jlealtor 54M966. ./ Beautltul 1 ol 2 BR turn 2 BR, fpJ I< patio, winter drps, self cle&n1n1 a:u ov-
494-M73 M9-031fl
EMIRALD BAY
1, L NI I 1707 HDUHI u-.a.·rnf-L-~ SOUTH BAY CLUB or unturn ~ts. OFFER.ING: rrental 6 mo's adlt., no pol>. Costa Mooe 5100 '"·encl aar. Patios. 5"-3fi05 ,. lllllUl .. lllil •1un• 9ue "'"" -Unlvertlty ,Perk 3227 ae.lf clean, oven.s, D/W (i.o SlT5. ~7602 =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:=; _,_11~w~·~w~1~1'°~"·~.,-~-=! ~ 962-4471 ,-. ,.uz.10:1; 4 BR, 2 BA, 2 •ty Pacesetter, ~O~·~·!!!·~··~'!__---...!-~! 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 2 Br), di•Pll, 1hag crpt1, • * DELUXE 1 &. 2 BR
._ •· ••• · vlow, many xtru "951 * Z BR. $IZS * 'BR Fom Rm •. d'" _ APARTMENTS , , , d"'· Jaouui k Sauno bath. Corona clal Mor 4!50 BRAND NEW Z BR Canlen Ap!J. Bit·'"'· priv. •--t This Prlcel Moranao """'· ""der· ·· • · • ••· ,.... ""•• Pool. FOR ADULTS , polio, h""d pool, !rpk.
, 99'8 prired-$31,950 coll 968--2643 Large 2 Bedn>am, Ne 1 r 2~ bi, Turtle Rock•• $365 Llvo whore th fu Iii only. 2 ~BR, fully crptd, pool, So. REALLY DIJ'F'EREN"f•. Adult1. $1'1!> mo. 546--6163
'"· 1 Only $24,9SOI Hurry! · · ! BR, D.R. 2 bl, •••••• Im e n MERRl .. 'C 00 s of Hwy. CIOH to alwlps. • 0 _, 2 ,_ h I 1chool1. F•nced yard for ! BR F ·R 211 b •'ll'lll ~ W D d I 2 All deluxe featuret. Prlv, pa.. N-" LUXURY 1 •-2 Br--3 _,.,.rm .,.t , ow low kid & ,_ VACANT , a.m m, a ... .,....,...1-;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;:;;; ·~ M I W It u II 1185. IM. 673-8 IJ. J ,_ "" • " FHA tl"~!I or take ove'r Jow Condominium 1950 BLu1i' .. iEACONI • BR, family rm., 2in, b11, la _, C..O:'t! ~c t...Y 2 IR l-llk to Ocean 10'· ..,.,a_m ceilings, panel-Dshwhr, ahag cpl, car•ae~.·
interett VA loan. :.::.---"'" * 645·0111 2500WES<Jl.IAFVEt, ·OTll···.··;;.;~·,1315 PALM MESA APTS, ~=~~~~'="=---·! Call Aft 4· ..... 4--4.\SS In&. frplcs avail. Bit rec Pool & Rec. Quiet adult liv·I HA,l'DAL RIAL TY $23,500 * i:.rw LOVEl..Y 2 BR. 1st flnor. -blJ"li', putting green, sand ing! 64:z....4•TO 1
•"t.-440
5
S!eal of the ytar!!! Roomyl,-;;,,.---,:-.,c-'-~-...:..:. Very 11paeiou1. Nice 1-BR., patio; w1lk to 110~• volleyball. !You Name II?). LRG 2 Br&: den er 3 bdrm.
-4 bffiroom, 2 bath and fam. JF you are lookin1 for a ren· l BR TURN. tl49.50 furniture:. Carpeted. Private & beach. 1 Adult over ~. Adult1, no ~11. Clo1e: to Gas k wtr pd . Crptt, drps,
. ~
h1"ake offer on one year new
3 bedrm, l.. balh home.
Good assumable }ol.n,
Pt1cific Sheres Realt'/
53U8!K Eves: 847~
ily room townhouse. No tal call now! We have 3 and BaeMlors F'l.lrnlahed patio, Brick P15s-Throu1h Sl25 Mo. I.ii. 673-2222 · e\'erylhlng, Sl&S. re.lrig, ra.nie. Over ~-SI4C .
more yard work for you, 4 ?'drfrom ho~ ranglna: In from 1140. bar. Beautiful living room Ir. l BEOR00~1 furn a p I ~8-2407
Many exlnt , . Call uowt price m s......, to $300 per 2 BR •Pl• Sl'Ja mo. kitchen. Very reuonable / 1175 387 W, Bly St. fbtwn Harbor -~=·====,..-,-·!
tlnveitora dlttlc thia one) ~n~':,o~ ~ •xceUent mo.Imo. OK nnt. Finl month only. w gara!e 67!'>.~ * & Newport Blvd, li( ml N, * TOWNHOUSE *
Larwln Realty, Inc. ne I • mme art • POOL Children &: 1mall pets of 19thJ 2 BR., 11,!I BA, Cillis, dtp5. rrady to move.In now. Yes, welcome. 351 Vietor-la, Apt 2 l BR f1JRN-Nr. Shp'f 1150. S46-0D'l3 patio. Adults. S165. 13t E.
t62.6tll Anytime v.•e have apartment.I, too! •SAUNA LCLITA Card•ns _ Furn ,,_ 602 J~ellotrope, 646-6300, e Also ask about our • Mt'lody Ln . 548-1763 Call for detall1. Coats Ir. Unlvenity Park •JACUZZI ,,. 644-&191. -=-=:::,,.::::,:.c:..;_.:c, __ .f
RINTALS WaJlace Rltn. tu.-4454 D1y1 133-0101 Nlfhtt 1561 Meaa Dr. Coat.a ?ift11 unturn deluxe 1 hr &. dt'n I:::===::::::::::::::::== BRAND NEW SUPER apt. • * * NEW 2 Ii 3 BR. Sha.a:
House• FurnlthM -,---'~7=-~,0.::--':.:..-1 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!'!!!!!!I Phone 546-9'60 w/patio. Jnfant ok. $145 mo. all features above + 2 Br., crpl1, dwhhr, 1ar. Only 3
BUILDERS _;..:.;;.;=;...;..===-* 3 IR. 2 BA. *I' 1...,, .... .,..,__,__,...,f •" • w1, ,.;d. Pho"' Balboa 4300 2 Ba., 2 °"'"· nel1hbon in '°"' Bldr.
CLOSEOUT General 2000 FA?-.lTLY JIOME ¥.'/ hu.ae Unlvertlty Park 2237 839-0959. 12192 F.dinger (2 e 125 WK. OCEANFRONT Child ok. Nr. s. C.out
credit rQ!ctions place 7 horn.. "'-'==----..:::;.:. I fe~ yard .t double 1a.r. RENJ fURNIJUR£ blks E. of Harbor). Lovely Bac.he:lora. l·Bdnn. DELUXE Pla1.11. M0-1m or 5'411-2321
e1onchoia.lot.ontlwmar· * $95 Incl utfl * aae. Sl9o. CALL TODAY! DON'T DELA.YI Lt 2 Br Duplex ?t1"aid str, Pool, util. TOWNHOUSES SPAC 2 br, 11~ ba studio.
ktt ap.in!! l-7 Badrm1l 3 A: GROOVY B1chtlor apt w/ ILUE BEACON CALL US TODA.YI *DIRECT TO T!:NANT crpts. dtPs. bltN, beamed • 67S-8740 e ON NEWPORT q:ACK BAY Crpts, drpa, bltr'l!L. Nr
,1 . 4 baths, bltna, crplf, ihake pool.Alto 2BR.S145 uUJpd, * 645-0111 * 2 BR. 2 bathi ........ $275 U.Hr. Delivery ct!lling1,pr.Jaundry.Adull11 PENINSULA . l BR. furn. 1chool11 &t 1hop1. $165
:roof etc.. from S33.940. ILU! BEACON 4 BR. 2 ba. El Toro •• ,, 1275 toor. PurchaM Option am pet OK. 169 Mesa Dr. Adulls only, no pe 11. 3 & 4 BIW &. Frplc. fa.m _,,.._ __ 11~"~·-------t
RANCHO LA CUESTA * · 645-0111 * 3 BDRM ., Famlly rm ., park Elegant 3 Br 2\.J ba •• $4~ Complet• 1 BR Apt u 642-0863: 646.1166 Sl~/mo. 644--075.l aft 6 pm. roo.m, double aaraae. Beaut. LRG 2 BR. l ~i> BA. lmmae .
.!..-_ Brooiburat 6-Atlanta., H.B. ========= like yard. Coata Meu.. Kid1 4. BR. 2~ bat.ht ........ $350 Low 11 $22/tno. NEW FURNISHED APTS 2 Br. 315 E. Bay. Wlnter SJXI loun1e. Pool. Billiards crp1~, drps, bltna. Close to
"). ~ 961-U31 Open 10 am.a pm OK, brk., $200 • month. NO l BR., mo. to mo ••••••. S.150 30-Day Minimum BACHELOR 1-2 BR monthly. yrly avail. lnq. Adult & Childr~na a~a achls & ahop'g. $l5~ No
·: CHRISTMAS SPICIAL 1--R--•n"-t-'e"l•c.l-'o-'-Sh:;;•;;ro..o..~200:.:;;;5 ~F~E~E:,:,. ,;."'cc0-_c1:.c72"'-0· ----13 BR. 2~ baths • •·• $300-1325 * WIDE VARIETY FROM $135 MO. No. c 673-1521, M&-7771, $250/mo. Ml-0000, 540.5147 Pf!I•. 549-3524, ~
. , Takt over GI loan, no qual. MATURE Employed ral ls LAff.GE 4 bednn home with 3 BR, 2 Ba. tnhouse .... $340 CUSTOM ,URNITURI r"nt. Pomona tr Park. 642-2015 • OCEANFRON'!' 3 BR. 2 BR. unfum, crpl3, drps, 1~ .• il)'ln&'. Beat location. 318ed-tired of apt. livln1. Wol.lltl bltni, lar.ce yaii:! w/b!.t i d h•11 RENTAL AITRACJ'fVE 2 BR. S235. Utllllie1 ineludtd . e MARTINll!t.UE e bltns. $I30/mo. ~ W. -rm. 3 ba, trplc, bltna, crpt1, llke to pool rt'sourcts with covered patio. Available re I Sl.T w. 19th Sl, CM. 541-SCI! Quiet. Pool. Adults (w/tl!l!n& Winter lease. 673-472A ... Wil!IOn or call 54a--0760
•-S b It 8,1 oU>"t mature empJnved -1 a, rent now to a nlc:e family at $270 kl 11 ..... ,.~ -,:-==--'C-"C-._.~--1 Pt1rk·Llke Surroundings NE\"LY ~ 2 B / •. ...vs. u m · ....w• y~ .,.., per mo. Call qent. MG-4141 HOLIDAY PLAZA 0 ,JJ, .,.._ .,..., 64.2-2825 9 1 BR. newly dee .• close to DELUXE 1-2 I< 3 BR APTS. " '"'""e. r w 1ar. . m house in CM area. D!:LUXE Spacloui 1 BR BONUS ARRANGEMENT btllches A: ihop'g. $l50 per AllO FURN. BACHELOR 1130. Wtr pd. Nr. sch!. 217&.-
•1--·. tl•cd:tl!Jl l·,O~~f~~re"'"';;.·e~•-•_x_'_'_•_•_•_•_d_ •. f3d:n~~~. f~J~~ln~··~~~ Unt··· p .. ~!-ALCeTYt I"" luAmrnplapt Slk351. HeaNttd"'poohlfdl. COMPLETE,LY .turn 1 hr mo. Util pd . 67S-58l0. Prv patiog * llld Pool! MCEPSAlac:eVnEtlR•DAEve. 636---td12tl 2 ·-
1
,_.l •• ... ~ ...... nt-r, ., •. nc e par ng. o .. • apt, nev.·.• pa inted, N I • :.-new. re -!V •• BEACH pd •-$390 a month NO FEE CLEAN, llltra et 1 BR, r ~K>pg e Adult.only '.:: iu1.n a , .... cuna, to · • CaJJ Anytime a:u.M2o ren • no pett. 1965 Pomona, $140/mo. 977 Va I en e i a. m Br, dnstri;, cpls/clfl>S, bltmi.
•ha.re w/hlp per.on. Pvt bch· l-iN..;•_w.::port:,:·,:540-~~172'='0.=:-~ 1 ~~~~!!!~!!!~~".!l.~C~M'--------540-T6l2 tt1ponalble adults, Mrs. l San!a Ana Ave, CM Adl 1 Sl 45 646-262T ;":, lSSUM!: 5% FHA mortJ... $U5 mo. John 533M.lli, Ex * SECULDID *I' · ===~=---Brown. 613--0!59, 6T"_... M&T. Apt lll e J146.S542 "on y. · · ' ~ • of -.. ,.,,.. '"··h t f Ch.1teau L.1Painte EASTSJDE 1 BR. w/trple. .... THE ...,..m •.,. LRG 3 Br, crpts, drps, new ""·-.-,\.UV . .._.. au or ~. COZY Corona dei Mar 3250 ...._1 1 ll" tit pd L.d • .. '"'"'··~ -1 t Kid ok i~ N 1 $15,800. Heated pool, t w 0 f ='========= f 1 Bedroom mltage. 1---------........ wee 2 Br. turn •Pl. Poo . . .,.. mo. u . 1 adult on-1 e 111• 4351 New 2 Br, lli9 Ba w/ pr. _.n · s . -a"° o.
atory, 3 bedrooms, 2'b bat.hi, Cotti M41si 2100 Near beach, ·rots & pe11 ok. 3 BR. e used brick fpl. e C&rpor1. ClOM! to shops. ly, Call &f2-3520 Ad.Its, cpll, drpa, fncd yd Maple Ave. 642-6.J.M.
form•l dlnlnr room, family .:.:;:.;.:::..:.:==---==:I P'urnltur• avail. ll!IO. h!tns • 2 car gar • So. of Adult1, no pet1. O°"N"°"E_roo_m--,-p"t_w_/~,.-,~h. 1 BR. Lrc ~loselt. Pool. w / P•t. Wtr I Grdnr pd. IMMAC. I Br. Ltg closets.
room w/f!nplace. Ca,rpeta l. $100. Jncl's util"a. Sm. apt tor ILUE BIACON Hwy • 1250 Mo. -ar wUI 1941 Pomona Ave, CM Older tenants only, $.55 mo. Sh 1~f f 1 c board · Ne · 636.--412> Redec. Pool. Adull.$, no
• ~; dn.pe1. Vlelnlty Brookhunt adult man. Near 15th .l * 645·0111 * l!('ll. Realtor 67$--57:26 Utllllie1 lnclude_d. 6421560 ~p~nro~~i. A~:.I or· 18M 2619-L Santa Ana Avt. $l:i5 pets. Util pd. 54&--03.36.
, ... , ~ lndianapolla. By owner _N;::'';::""'°::rt:·,_"',.2-S583=·=·===,I ~:___::_:;_:__: _ _:_: HARBOR View Hillli -acean Coatt1 Meie 4100 EASI'SIDE 2 BR uni. house/ 2439-G Oraflg{' Ave . $155 2 BR 1tudkl l~~ BA. utll rm.
after 6;00 PM 1162-1635. -Costa Me1.1 2100 view, l Bdmu, family nn.1 .;;;:;;;...::;:;::~---'= furn. apt• St•5 & up, Pete ---------WILSON GARDENS APl'S close to schla. Avail 12-13
: .. O"'P"l"N"'S"A"'°T"'"'&:-$:-.U"N"°'"°l-4""' Newport k.1dl 1200 $373. 1~3791. 644-6291. JlEMARKABLY s.57-9187 or MZ-442.1 B1lbo1 l1l1ncl 4355 2 BR Unturn. Newly dee.. _1~165~·-."'6-~1~15.1..;...,. --~-I --"--_;.;.;:.;._....;;:;c.. 3 BR, 1 ha, Jee ftnced back UNBELIEVABLY N •· d ~
1"J.:'i, 9212 MOKIHANA DR. 3 B 2 •-lowe " f d 1 yard c11,_,rt Walk to Vic ,URN Bachelor&. 1 Br. GORGEOUS 1 br •pt , .. ,,·1 ew cpll • rps. Spac LRG 2 BR apt, patio, drps, r, -r ~ o up•x . • "'" · . Balboa 3300 EXTR'ORDINARILY • aro"n~-. •d,lt•. -pet•. ·1 t •-& .-CORNER :P.1oldhana &: lm· w/patio & dock, cable TV, tona School. $185 mo. ""'eEAUTIFUL Exceptionally nice! lmmed -1/6. $150 010• ll<O = .:,:,,. F ..... cpts, ut1 rm or wasn.:r
-,_ ..... Btw·. B&nnin• & Ham. -1 tu tu Cleo ., d It • 11 & A 2110 Newport Blvd, CM Slnil• nr matTlod •pl. Utll mo. UOJ ountain Way dryer. gu, 1155 "P· 546-8688 ... ..., e, ...., nr un rn, car, n ni epo1 1 BALBO BAY FRONT -2 br Vil O'itlrl Girden Aptt ... F.. !Harbor, turn w. on
ilton l Blk W. or Buahard. laundry 1acll. Leue on!y.1 ~l~"~'-"'c,o_n="'n"-t.-'M-"2-'-l'-'0-'15'-. --I unf. lower duplex . Frplc, Adultt no Pl!ll MESI\ VILLA-147 Flower t-'-''::'_d.::R.o-"f':.""=..:·•::.· .:.61.;;>-_;56:::00:::..._ l-'"~'i~J.,~n~J::_. ==~~=~· INE\VLY cl~rattd lge I BR,
3 BR/2 ha, bltlns & dln't 6Tor3003 or 6~1. Q\vner. 3 BR, 2 BA, new carpet& & crpt, drpli, pvt beach , Putt! • t rfall It C.M. 1 BR Apt _ $140 I_ bl1J1s, SlJT.50.
area in kitchen. W/W crpt, 4 BR .i den, i,s blk to bc.h. paint. rmmed pou at $l50 .carage, No pets. ~1a1Tied rtl rreen, wa e * Aft 3 646-0921'.l * GOLD MEDALLION * 841-3458 *
frplc. Le As1umable 5% "%, Ya ....... Vu of oc••n. Wntr mo Call MR. HOEG EE, SO. couple preferred. Leue S375 ·~•m, llowen everywhere, ~==~~----Huntington S.1di 4400 Modern 2 Br. 1~ Ba., patio, "2-B~R~-nl_.:.;_:. -"h"d--1--,.
VA •---. By o··-r·. 968-0'71 '" '--k 45 PoOI rec room billiards • BEAUT. Bach. & t er. t d CE Id Eocl u urn11 e w erp,,,,
I•'•. ~• ··-1101 ~a•ho-~. 6<'7671 COAST REALTORS, -p. mo. U\11.; apace optional. , ' . ' ' BEA. UTIFUL >"U RN APTS crp 1• rpa, '· · d & P I N t -l ~==~~~""'"=:u=:,'=::~:;:~'I~~~;,!~·:'.:,."'~"~ ""'£_"_:_" 675-0800 BBQs, Sauna, fu m .. unturn, apts, $29.50 wkly • up. · · Ear, :P.1any luxury extra"! rps 00 . opes . . :-_ Fountain V1ll•Y 1 1· am . iv ..... .....,.. . I ==========I Sln1le1, 1 BR, l BR +den, Furn., Incl utll, 546-6451. $1-0-$165. Quiet, prlv, patio. 2 Nr. bus. $155. Adul15. 120 E. * 549-4148 *
.• $ll SOD 418 Bayshorea 2225 3dBr, 2 Lgba, elee kitche;: cptsd, Bilb0.1 lslend 3355 2 RR. From $135. See it! 1 BR, furn. Sl50 inc.I util. ;~~r!:~~ !i,'.c'•"~~e;.5~"f _20_thc.·~-=~---• 1&t2 BR . Newly carpeted,
, 2 B turn 26 rp1. e aara1t. tnce 2000 Parson. R.d., 642--8670. Pool, iarage, dlspoaal. clrapes, elcc. kit chen.
Steal of th. year!!! Roomy R · 11 Bayahore Dr. back yard. S24~/mo + l BR. 2 ha, dishw1aher, fore-Between Harbor II Newport Adul~. no pet•. 642-2383 Sll.una . RPc rm. * $170 * Children ok. Ph. 64&.81~
4 bedroom, 2 bath and tam. Open Weekends. ( 213) deposit. Avail 12/21. East ed . h .1 • 2 Blk N. l9th. 17.'.01 Kt'el.wi Ln . (1 hlk W. 3 BR, 1 1~ BA, pa.tlo, bit-ins. ll35-2 BR bl Ul-lMS for appt or 64.5--3584 aide. Call M8-35TB. air t'at, carqe. Aval 1-~-'-'-'-.::.0"'-~~~ 1 BR. furn . apt. Healed Pool. ot Bea<'h Blvd. on Slater). <'"fPL'I, drps, Ask about our • crpla, drpll, tns,
, _ .Uy room townhouse. No "'"'"'.::;:~""':::.;:;,--,,,,,...-12/23. 673-2431. CASA d ORO No ...,.1,. Childnn ok. See at * M2-?«R. di t 1 ll80 C S Conv. to shopa. Adult. only, more yard \\'Ork for you. MESA del Mar 3 Br. Bllru!. 9 "'" scoun Pan. enter t. 1 "'" 'lOO University Par k 2237 126 Monte Vista, CM. N 1 B &1z.o~A.. no pe A. ........... · -1>1any extras ... C.it now! New palnl A: c r p 11 . CASUAL ew r-1 blk to bch S\50 . '-'""'~"7-,.,.-,~~~-~~-""-"~~~~-
(Jnveaton check thl1 one) 4 BR: '4 6 ll,!I Bath. partly 1250/mo, Dy1 f)46-9222, eve• Huntington leech 3400 CALIF. LIVI NG! 1 BR. partially furn. Trailer. I \Vttk frtr, pri deck / pal -Oufet Adult Livlnn 2 BR stucllo l!lfll, SI.ci. lnquift
L I R It I
545-43'4 1 air • cond, SlOO ; mo. Adult Quiet sinales &: cpls only 1 • 1343 Bakt'r St, Apt A or B, 1rw n ea y., nc. turn. S.150/mo. Nn pet&, RENT or asaume 6% 7a loan. in a warm . !I.fed t. atmos-112 W WU No & 2 BR. Shag c:;pts, bltn11, or call ~1-2399
962-6988 Anytime -==C.=ll=ll=''=833--06=::=":== ATTRACTIVE 3 Br. 4 Bdrm 3 bath crpts drps phere. Spae1ous color co.. · · aon. · 43, CM. 204·A 14th 673-1784, 5J6..1319 bt'aut Jndscpd, $150 & $170 ----------!
FOR S4le by onr, on -Townhouse, nr CM <'lty hall, 11141 BlnghamPton c~. Cali ordinated •Pl•· de1igntd It. LOVELY l br in qu iet area. S125-LRG modem t BR. nr incl all utll. Adult.sonly no •t BR, 1 bfl.. MESA
.-
cul--de--ue, 4 BP. a: den, 2 ~C~·~· .. ~·~d~·';-,M~·~·;:;;:~22~5~0; I "'~··~thJ·~·~'·c,'~""~·~lr~h~li~·~poo~l, 963-5230 furnished for 1tyl. &. com-Dependable adull<;, $14i be&ch, c.rpl5, drp1, chlldre.n pet11. ~E~ •• E.INllOU cr~18400drp1; rar. 2 car 11r. S225/mo 54>7-474. fort. • Pr\\' hid pool • 2589 Orange, M8-a360. ok. -409 Calif. 536-4261, 241 i\V0!.'11.do St. 646-09'79 "'" · · "" • ·
_.. ba, w/w Ir. drps. 2-car 1 BR collage fl blocks from AVAILABLE F b I I l 2 BR. 2 BA mobile home. Kitcht'n w/ Indirect llfhtin1 $8.'>-BACHELOR apt f or 847-5169 HARBOR GREENS 2 BR, itovr, crpts, gan.ge, 2 .~ auto-Opt'n gara&e, lovely yd .__ h 519,, F ml J Cd'! e 11. eaSt' Drilt"·ood Park at the 0 ~1,,., R/0. UTlL. IN-hlld k N t for trtta, anxlou.11 owner ""'ac · >S e ea • "• artrae 4 & fam. In Meaa b h Ad I I 1 ...... " woman. Utll pd, Carport. LRG 1ttrae 2 Br. Avail now. "' ren ° · 0 Pe • ·
·.
:· . . -
·-
.. ;
:r.
'
.. .
• ' " ' .. . ;.<
going to Europe Feb. l it. I :'J>.=3=180=====·=== Meadows. Colleae Realty. T;11~~wi~ds RI~ s!T-~~1 Y · CLUDED, AduH1 only · no 181 Broadv.·a.y 548-4~\S. Pool, Kids & pets ok. SUSS. GARD!:N It STUDIO APJ'S $140/mn. Call 548-6031
$33,300, must ii;ell so make 546-5880 1-----~----1 pets. l BR A t W t "d 847--S.135, 96&-'JSlO. Baeh. l., 2, 3 BR's. from $ll0.
Lido Isle 2351 ~"".:.:,.------· ILE:ASE Ophon fl Br. 3 Ba. BACHELOR $145 P : 1 er PAL • 2700 Petenon Way, C.M. Newport Beech 5100
1-'o"ffer=. =O=n=r=l4=2-30l0==· === 1----------4 BR. 2 ba, formal dln '1 r m. pool, gardener pd, clote 10 l BR. Sl7S SL15. 314 E. 18th St * 1 II 2 BR. Crpt1, drp,, 5116-0370
5 BR., 4'li ba. waterfro nt Quiet cul-de-1ac 1treet. S26!"1 bc'h. bll~i ns, cpts, clraPt'•· Jfi:'i w. wui.nn. &42-l9'fl ** MS.-1733 **' bltn11. 733 Lake. 536-3700, :.=;~;:,..~=o...-~=~
home w/clock on Lido Nord. mo. Clole to aehool1. Ea1t Vacant SJ7!!1. {213) 860-42116. rs ~ • • • ,~ •• I IMMAC. l-2 BR. Lra t'losets. 5..16-D275. VILLA MESA APTS. 11~ Month side ., ...... 0 c R d p ---------2 BR, Prlv patio. I-ltd pool .
"STORY Southern Colont"al. """ · U......-uJO • 2 BR. •rpt. J•-• yard, p•tlo. 6 n tf! up . wk up e ec. ool , Adul1s, no pelli . .-3 BR 3 Ba off t ho ... ~. Utl pd 2 car en<'l'd car. Children 5 bt/3 ba, d In• & /rm, · · ·\\'a er me •*•HOUSE FOR JlEl\'T. l garase. Privacy. 2 kld1 OK. STUDIO & 1 BR A.Pl• l's. . M~6 Lagune Beach 41705 1 I furnished ..•.... $450 month hr l b Ir• Jen-• ~ 0 Col 1V ho pool w~ COllll', no pet1 p ease? fam/rm. Located In Beaut. Bill Grundy, Rllr. Ml-4&20 • a, """"" >''""'· 1229 Oelawart: St. or • P ne seiv, 1 BR. Adult1. Pool. Ideal for $165 mo, 719 w. Wllwn.
section of S.A. Hght1. Ex· 644-7891. NEW_ 3 & den, 2 Bath, crpt, • Lhwn1, maid ~trv ~'Jllll. hat'htlors. Spacious. $125. $30 WK LUXURY 646-lli l
1630
3 Br, 2 Ba. unfurn, Bltns,
Cfl>!~. dflls. $225/mo. Cllll
M().7573 or alt 5 968-8658.
3 BR, 2 b11.. cpl& A. drp1,
blln~. Belwten bay It ocean,
Yrly rtntlll. 673-1171.
lJ1tlng GI ?..lortga.ll'e, can be Balboa Iola~ 2355 e 2 BR \Vl111 POOL drps, fenced lanclaepd . • Chlldrf!n & rr M'cUon . 1993 Church. 548-9633 &: up. Bachelors, slnalei, l ~~C.::.,;--=--.,,-~
s.ssumed W/W On pymt. ..-FRONT HOUSE $245/mo. C•il ••• •291 * SUNNY ACRES * Pd SJ&z.50~ 2 BR unit with TIME FOR ,,.,._.. • .. ~ -1• N Bf··• •••97u rm, atepa to heh, all utll, flreph1.ce, crp\1, drp1, beam
S37,500. 54~'2992. 1010 so. Baylrnnt: •Br. 3,; ......., * 1g.94:.., •••HOUSE FOR RENT 4 ._, ewport vn. '""' "" Newport Beach 4200 hid PJOI. Jinena, rec rm, Ill ,. "'UICK CASH * 2 BR DUPLEX · • • • a a • • • • I I--"----""---...;;;:.: ce ng, pa 10 entry. Adults ,.. ANY Day ii the BEST day lo ha. y,•aterlront home l 2 hr. , un-br. 2 ba, fenced back yard. FOR y & 1 COUNTR\' CLUB restaurant, cocktails, danc-only, no pets. references. THROUGH A
run a.n •dl Don't lba.gara.geapt.Dlw'.'k. furnished. Crpll & drps. 6#-7891 Oii room-mae on LIVING inc. 2334 Santa Ana Ave .
delay .. call today, 642-5678 BUI Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 Nlct: iii: cltan. 343--0422 · guarantttd payment plan. Villa,.• Tnn lfo1el Apa 673--0.193 DAIL y PILOT jc:="=:=========...=:=::=:==:====~=====~;;:~= Unusual NEW untt a:ives ea. Luxury1 O•nl1en 11.pts, offerin& 494.9436 1 ,~.~;-BR=-1~,,~ .. ~-~-~ I
General 2000 Oenert1I 2000 Ge"er•I 2000 Fountain v .. 11.y 3410 fully prtvatfl att:11' entry, comp . pr VlC.Y. be. u I . ===="""=---"I )11 ' >11 • encl pa!'lo, WANT AD t--"-"'-------""'-==----...;;;:.:;;;..;;.;.;:;::;..;;;:_ ___ ....;:;.::_ I'--'"'--'----"'--"'-' I ea w/f-plact:, bath, he a med lndscpg .i unparalleled BACHELOR, ntllr beach .\ pool, wsh/dcy, st v / re r •
•'
S@~~lA-L£t-~s·
The Purzle wilh the Built-In Chackle
:l1 DIMYAW1· I I I I I
'r_,",_o......-c .,.o_R.....-il l _ I I I I' .
I OFATO I '·I 1--~, .;,...;., .~, -=--, -I Doflnflion ol a bochelOh
_ • . _ • A rnon who hos cMoted .ome ::::::::::::====~ worthy womon out of her
I S I N 0 A L ,-. fl·•• ~ ...... , ~, ......
1
_7_c;;,,
1
,.;;.....-l A C-ltto t!>e d>.Qlo .......,
:" by IUI ... to t!>e M"'1 ... -0 • • • -• ~ d9..,.lop fr°'" ~ No. 3 IM!ow.
• :~w'tt"~~~~enus j' r r r r I' I' I
6 g~l'f=~ LETTW TO I I I I I I I ]
SCRAM·LETS ANSW!RS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000
• BR, 2\ii BA, bl1.ns, ponl, 2 cellina:ll, patio, nofri;:. All n!c.rna!ion11.l faeililil's in a 1hop1. Utt\. pd. Nltt, Reier. cpta/tlrp1, Pet• ok, $181). 642•5678
car rat. S245 mo. lat A: rec. lacllltif'll. A\'a\11ble country club almospht're. -'="'='='=· ;,",=.°';;·='="'=~="'===~=....WO===·==::;::===-========= t.aal, SlOO ~lean up. 842-5.Soll mid-Dre. &t&.OOTl Furn or Unf. l\fodels optn 10 -I ..;=::.::;;::..==::!C..:.:C.::.O:f-'1;;.1.:,..:0...:;~M:CO::. . .::C.'-M-ob--H-m am.fl p.m. Rents from S1"5.
OAK\VOOD GARDEN
Le1un1 let1ch 3705 \\'/cabanll, comp\. furn, htd APARTMENTS .::.::==..c:;==--"= pool, adll1, oo pet1. .._ o-"'"" N Bl _. liOO 16\h St., NB S.185. 2 BR. recently rrmodel-at:aAt1n1 ~ wpt \.,,.., 642~17t)
ed. t-.lature adu\11 . 190 Ca-1_'4_'-"" __ ,;_· ------;;=====-..,~-~
nyon Acres Drive. 213: * 1 BR. Furn. upper. OVERLOOKING Entr or
393-2501 Cirport. Pool. SlM / mo. Lido file 1horinc ctr, cute \ •~•. Be11ut 3 BR 2 BA -·•I· 560 Hamilton <1r c a I I br upper apt. $1·1:i mo yrly ,,......., ..... !st', \Veter pd. Call ti73-9217. bit, Beams Oini, frpl, vlew.1.:::"'::~.:::180:::_. _____ _
lmmar. &.12--7449 e\'tl. CLEAN It. QUTET Q{AJt.\llNG 4 BR, 2 ba,
1'Urn. B1chelor $115. l Br. frp\c, J,; blk to b<'I\, yrly, ---------I lurn or unturn. $285 .' mo. Lagun• Niguel S707 S175. Adults only, no pet!!. 673-24~>. -"---~---'--·IC:S..'.'.:..:M~l'~·~·~·~2~135~E:ld~•~"~·C=M::: ~-==~-'--~---GOU~ cow-se vlf'W home • 4 $30 wk-1 per, wlkil SJ5. l BR. furn apt, Ulil. YEAR· L\' Garage, Nn ctuldtf'n or hr, 2 ba or 3 plua den. J\faltl 1er, l!Mn!I, :rv A tele, pttl. Ca.JI 67~2930 aft 5.
Ji'rpl<'", drpa:, nev.· Aha,e crpt, Sl:'•Lllr'k Motel 2301 Npt
bltn1, outdoor patio•. crill, Blvd. s.i&--7445. SUDDENLY Avall11blr lhru
brttlf!way, tneL $295/mo. Acapulco Apia attnc.Uve, Junr, L.ge 3 BR, l BA, 4~~ Pool, UtU paid, Garden !lundeck. ~~14•
ll\•lna:. Adults, no ptt.1. BAC11ELORS I: 1 br apt.
CllRISJ'!l.t.AS IS toml11t1:! S.-U 2 BR, $1TS • J BR. S145 $80-$150 ye1rly, 1216 W .
)'OUt unwanted ttem1 & pltk 1800 \VAllace Ave:, C.1\1. Balboa. 6Th-7376 or oIDf-9-til.
up fut c••h thtu • O.Uyt--"-==c:c=="--Pllo1 Claulfif!d 11d •• , u·1 $25 Per WHk & Up *' OCEANFRONT 1 BR.
ea1)' .• call 642-5671 BACHELOR & 1 BR. Yc1rly $175/mo. Alto $140.
TV le. maid lll'rv 11va11 . mm or 644-6972
4."in Vlc1orl11 C. M
ls you •l'f In the das1Wed * l "R F ' $·1,5 N•woort Hftl, 4210 SECT'JONt Someone 11 u • urn. ., • 1-----''-~---
watchlns for it. o l •I POOL, 8ltn1, crpt11, rll'Pl, no &<~ todA.V! rhlldr'f'n, no pe111. 32:;.J z.
17th "Pl, C!l.I. Ml-1138
CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adults, no
pets. L.& kit. Sl.~$1 ~. 2~Z1
E. 16th St, NB. 646-1801.
• 1 • •
RENTALS r.~NTAL~ RENTALS RENTALS
Apia. Unfuml"1od ~IL Unfurnlahod Apts. Unf\lrnlshod ~IL UnfVml"1od
~port e .. ch 5200 Plow port Beach 5200 Huntington Beach S400Hunllngton Buch .5400
PRESTIGE LOCATION .JJunlinglon
Custom Garden Apartments
I, 2 & 3 BEDROOM
fAMIL Y UNn NOW OPEN
CUSTOM FEATURES:
Ctntrtl Rt~r••tion Ar••-Swimrning Po ols
W•dlng Pools & Stun•s-P ... t.Gardtq P•+ios
Color Coordin eted Or•p•l & Carpeting-
Soundproof V..'•lls & Floorino-Blt-in Ren9e
& Ov•n-Oiihw•sher-Ceremic Tilt Baths
Optn Beam & Va ulttd Ceilin gs-1/1 Mile
To The Btach.
21551 Brookhurst Street
(S. of Hamilton) Huntington 8e1ch
MARINER SQUARE APARTMENTS
immediotely ad jacent Westdff shop·
ping center -has a Townhouse avail·
able featuring private residentia l at ·
mosphere. 2' Bedroom. Water, gas &
cable TV included in rent. Kitchen
b uilt-ins include dishwasher & disposal.
wall to wall carpels, full length linon
drapes. Al so available I ·2 & 3 Bed-
room, $185 to $255. Call Bob Buckley
at 645·0252 or come by MARINER
SQUARE Apartments. 1244 Irvine
Ave., N.B.
PHONE: 962-4458~~~~~
Huntington Beach ,S4(lO Condominium 5950
LRG Attra.c 2 Br lrom $139. BEAUTIFUL Coun!Ty Club
All extras. Pool. Kids & Villa, C.1\1, 2 br, 1\2 ha, P\'t
pets ok. Furn. avl, 847-8335, patio, crpls, dr11s, bltns, e!c.
Newport Beach 5200 Corona d•I Mar 5250 !lfl,S-7510. S260 nio. Call J e: a n n e
• NEW 2 BR a p t s , _E~d"•-·•~rd-"'''""'-".,;,;..c;:.323:::.. __ _ 1----~---~-PARK NE\VPORT -care 2 BR, frplc, Ganien setting.
lree livg overlkg 1he v.•a1t>r. I child.
7 pools, 7 tennis cts $750,000 $177:1/mn. 614-2ii62
~--~~-~~-
from Sl35. Cpts. drps. bltns,
Family section. 846-7277. Rentals Wanted
Spa. From Sl 75 to S~50. 2 Br 1 Ba /F 1 N 2 BR, crpts, drps. bltns. ----------
. . I\' rp {', 0 MAT URE woman. 2 ""'' 8. Ca.ch. 1 or 2 Br. Al~ 2 sty 1 "Id Close to beach. Baby ok. r 11 wn, m pets. $175/mo. I"'. ""lJ= 9, wnuld ltkt to sha.re your Townhouse.II. Elec. kl. prl. Ca.II 673-!H&.'l ......, ~ "" pat or bal Subtrn prkg, op! , ____ . __ . _____ home, preferably Whither
m11.id aer cpts, rlrps J ust N. BR, 2 ha, crpt.s, drps, $l60 2 B.R., pool, pvt patio. l'l('hl area. \Viii contribut('
of Fashion Isl at Jambort>e stov<', N'frii::, dsh\\·hr. garb. gar, cpt., drapes, stove, '°'· S75/mo. +-help \\I/ food. , I S2"" Tie\V, 7811 Glencoe, 842·2834 . Good k Sh / & San .Joaquin llills Rd. .,1sp . ...,/n1n. 67a..2698. coo·. arr "' mar.
st'-1900 for leasing Info. 2 BR Apt I rie<I cpl or 14·oman only, . w i:arage. Fountain Valley 5410 &12-172$
SEACLIFF ~lanor Apt !I. Private l.'ntran~. SlXl/mo. 1---------'---
Spec, holiday discount + 700 Narcissus. 67S-187~ ALL NEW ISRAELI Engr, bachelor 27.
monthly di6c:. $1·15-$160. 1 & VALLEY PARK I \l'ants to tC'nl sml hse in
2 BR, 11.t BA, crpts, drps, Balbaa 5300 Nwpt Bch or C~1 . Please
patio, pool, children "'f'l. For FAMILIES will\ pl'e. call 12131 451-1920 aft 7 pm.
come. 1525 p I a ce n ti a. BAY FRONT YEARLY school children only,
548-2682. 2 hr, 2 ha, unfurn (will l\JrnJ . .Z & l BR and 2 BR Studio
Pvt i)each & patin. No pets, $160 10 $215 * TiiE SEVILLE $300 per mo. Call 673-Qn4. 17256 Sour· ~elid, FV
New 2 Br, 14 Ba w/ gar. (Just South of \'Varner)
Adlts, cpts, drps, lncd ~·d Balboa Island 5355 (714} 540-4785
GARAGE SPACE for Antique
Automobiles.
li73-:z:m:
Rooms fer Rent 5995 631Hl20
2619-L Santa A11a Avr. $1:.:i * BALBOA ISLAND. 2nr,1 ----------j ~CTIVE bedroom in
2439-G Orange A\IP Sl .).) frplc, Ca 11 alter 4, 213/ Santa Ana 5620 t>rautiful home for young
2 BR. carpeted, draprd. 377-2140 C'mployed \1·oman. Many
Ocean vie\v, s unit e ck , I CAN'T BE BEAT privilrges. $7.'.>. H . B · garage, washing I a c I I. Huntington Beach 5400 S42-56M ______ _
$225/mo yrly. 642-3978 e1·es -;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; j SHARE my home. nr HMg,
& wkrw:ls. ·oN BEACH! SING LE STORY NC:1\•por1: .voung emply'd
Westcliff Riviera South Sea Atmosphere larly. Col. TV, etc. MS-2.579
.. * ..
""' Wh•ddy• Want? Wh•ddya Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Special Rale
5 Lines -5 times -5 buckt
ltUlES -AO MUI T IHCLUOe
•-WMI ye.II Mv• I• Ir.cl•. S-Wlilll r-t -I ill lrH"'
S-YOUll pb9M •nll/l r Met•IM. ._,. ht .r M¥1rtlilfl .. '-NOTlllNO FOi IALI -TllADES ONL'rt
R SERVI
DAILY PIL01
I DI
Babv1lttln1,,~_..;:;w;::so~1~G;;:a:.:.•da=""''"''"----•"I•"
Found (Frff Adt) 6'00 tifOTH tR Will babysit My MONTHLY Lawn ma int .
INJURED on Coast ltwy nr home, fe.~ yard. 9 mot Lawn A 1prlflkler1 tm:talled,
IOU So , ... n.... c to 3 y1't pl'f!le.rrtd. West (If Roto-lllllna:. Tret•. lhruba 1, , ...... una, .,.,..;. .,, C ad ult male ca t, solid a:ray 1-larbor e.nter. $4 day. 50e removed 64&3433.
w/whlle collar. Taken to hr!~. Full time or oc-EXPER. i1awaUa11 Gudwrter
Santa Ana SPCA. 4~1151 ClllionaJ. Days. Extitrlenctd Complete Gardenl1f1
LARGE reddish male doK, L:-~l~~Y care, toddler. 7 Service. Kama.l&nf, 6f6..f6'16.
pog1ibly COii ie I Retriever ~-30 kl 11 · mix, about 3 yrs old, vie. am . .,. pm w Y· ot General Services "'2
Caplslrt.no HiJhland:I, Sat, meal 1. Hubor/Ba.ke.r.
nl;ht. SJG.6816 M~1539. c:.=·· ~~· :::.
2 to.tALE puppies wtute w/ concrete, appliance• 6.
hlack mark Ing s, vie Brick, Ma1onry1 water ~ater ttpta.cimenta.
Primrose Dr & Jacaranda. etc 6560 646-3Sll Mon thru Sat. T to
l\'leaa Verde. Call .557-7297 7.
'
'OU ND p M I BUILD, Remodel, repa\r,.1,RA,;:..l_N~G~~t--,,_.....,-tall=~~I up py • e Brick block c on c re te u ,er•~ ... ""·
Gcrmnn short hair pointer. carpe'ntry, no'job too small Quality work. Reasonable.
Vic. Golden Wesl College. Llc. Contr. 9S2-6!WS Free e1t. OOS-2208.
81Z-S315
SIAto.1ESE cat adult aJtemi BR Jc K *BLOCK•sroN& Haullng 6730
To Place Your Trader's Paradise Ad
PHONE 642·5678
l •-aJ ,,.. . By the hour, after 5:l'.I --·----_;,..-I n1ae,""' inf, Jound at 642-1948 * M>-0758YARD/Gar . Cleanup. El !\lorro beach in Novem. __ .. her, 4!H-1788 BRICK. Block, atone. Patiol, Remove trees, ivy, U"ll.Nl.
Trade $3,000 equity, 3 hr, 2
b11 Lake Havasu hvme :or
property or ?
CALL
Eves, 673-4TI2
12 Un irs, prin1e Joe. Santa
An11. 7X Gross. $50.000 Eci.
Trade for $50,000 to $60,000
hon1e, dupfl"X or triplrx.
Ov.·ner/Bmker 673·31]}
Havr LOT Lak Elsinore.
for housr, duple.It, e!C'. Also
Be.ck Bay 4 & fan1, pool
homr for u·ipll.'" this arra.
Colleg<!' Realty ~16-5880.
3 Units N1vpt S.· or 3 units
C, J\fes;i for S.12 units R.l\~'t o: l'.!llcs<i. Garden G1·, 11r
A11ahl'i1n. Ask fnr Al l(!ng
Jonrs Rl!y Inc. NB. 673-6210
lO !ol'vrl acrt's Potential
niobilc hon1r paj.k, 1-fcmcl .
\Vanr n1ultlple unit Joi Hunl-
hl{;'1 11n Bch. ar-ea . Pyramid
Bxchangor!'I 675-8800.
Ne14•pott R·l 101, $20,000
i"qui!y clear: fnr incnmr.,
beach' ci!1cs. L.A lo New.
port. Hal Pinchin & Assoc.
RcahoN! 675-439"1 Any1imf'.
Trade 1955 Ford Pick Up,
Shon bcrl, 6 l"ylinder. Very
R'ood mnd. for VW or sin\.
ilar car.
847-IBGl
entrance ways, No job too Grade, backhoe, 962-1745.
HIGH DE.~ERT for Health. 1-'0UND ll·20, sm fem. blk imall. 646-7825, Ref furn. JUNK Wanted. Free metal \VANT Calif.Nev, 2·3 l'-1 elev dog haa wht on chest &: ----'--~'----HAVE Cl cor. 90xU7 2 bldg& neck. Very 10 v 8 b 1 e. pick up &. earage cleA.nups.
S68,000 eq-$42.000 inc. S145 54a..5721. 12/10 Cabinetmaking 6580 Hauling. Ed Stone, 54.3-39l3.
n10. Owner. C~1 6'16-8558. GOLDEN Cocker ipaniel TRASH & Garage clean-up, 7
Have Sl 5.000 .... Yorba Lln. puppy, just a few wk.5 old. CHRIST1\.1AS Completion of days. $10 a load. Free est "" amall Custom Quality v.·ork. Anytime, 548-5031.
du doubl e store bldg, C25M Vic o! Ocean Blvd & I St., Dry b_ars. shelves, misc. JUNK Wanted. Free metal Value' for beach area store, Balboa. Ca.II 673-2485 ~5-0044 64&-home or units. BLACK & white Ken · 2042 pick up & garage cleanupt:.
646-22!l0 C 0 cker/Be .. le mix~!.; CUSTOM WOOD\YORK Hauling. Ed Stone, 543-8913 FurnitUtt & Cabinets CAPISTRANO C ZO¥D· Santa Ana. Hgt.s area. Call S.i8-423.'i or 645-0044 HAULING & Cleanup. Trffs 4+ acres, Free & <J!ar,.,.c>l<>-02.;c..~·~"''-------_ _:c:..:=:..:.:..::::.=.;.:.._1 &: shrub!I ttrrioved. Free
$130.000. TRADE for incon1e YOUNG lemale calico cat -;:----;--7----:-;:::;l.!"~u~·m~•~l!"~"~s.3<33~~· ----1 or~ w/collar. Vic. Santiago ;C~•~r~po=:n~t!e~rl~n~g!_.. _ _:6:5~90:1:::---::---:·----;;:;I
REALTOR 5'18-771.1 DrivP, Newport Beach , H I f 67l5 642-1563 CARPENTRY ou1ec ean ng -rrade S3800 eq, in 2 BR. 21.:c=-::::::_______ 0 R ms b
'
'CUNG al . MTN R ,EPA .. No Jo HOUSE OF CLEAN Ba. mobi! h0n1e in lovely m e \\'U'f' haired
Bayside Village, for late mo. fox 1er1·1i"r Vic of Adams Too Sma.I. Cabin'"t in ear· Complete House Clea.nirtK
od M I I M 1 ages & othe r cabinets. 642 6824 • de.i canJJ>f'r/van or car. a agno a. • U!I 545.8175 u no ancwer leave • Owner 67~1642 describt>. 962-2045 msg at 646-2372. . H. 0 . HOUSE OF CLEAN
TRADE Ul62 Che". Pickup. GRAY Poodle with 2 flea Anderson Special for Dte. 23rd & 24th.
V.S, air, HID shocks & collars found Vic. Cst Hv.')' springs; For vw BUS or 11.t Fashion lsle. 61::>-lt39 REMODELING & Repair 1 Free Hr Cleaning Just To S~ialist. Comm'!, residen-Prove That We're The Best.
Caniper. Please calJ lor in-FOUND-r.fale black&: wh ite lial . Paneling, c ab inets, 64~
lo 842-3494. killen Vt/flea collar. Needs l=-==,.,.-,,=c;c;-;tl';::";\ marlile, lormica. 644-7598. DAY Work wanted 3 AM to l t>lall order busint'!IS, marine new homt'. 8,l&-9273. PM $17 per' day, Good & e~
I • Ou LET the Swede.do it. Repair, supp iN> · etlUipn1i"nt. Net F ND-Girls bike near remodel & pa tios. pc-rienced o\\'n trans p,
$1500 n10. Over $6000 inven. Balearic School. 673-5417, 494.7853 , ~-=...:;:'~·=~==~--
tory. Trad!.' for car, boat or 546.2530 1• HOUSECLEANING 0'~968-c,:,~88~7~3-=~-~~~1r.1EN'S pri"sc r iptfon Ceme.!'t, Concr~te.~By day, Own transportation
HIGH DESERT for Health. sunglasses. Vie: Horizon CEl\rENT \YORK. no job too 83&--0648
\VANT Calif.Nev. 2.:1 ~f elC'V Ln, HB. 962-{)816. 5mii.U, reasonable. F re e l\.feas Cleaning Service
HAVE Cl cor. 90xll7 2 bld.c.s FOUND Estim. H. Stuf\ick. 5-18-8615 carpets, \vindo9.'5, floors etc.
S6S.OOO cq.$42,000 inc. S•l45 Boy's gl'«'n bike. CEr.lENT \York. Reas. City Res &: Commc'l. 548-4111 mo. (}Nncr, CJ'.1 646-8558, i;.u: Q~Qn "'"°"""" &. stale lic'd. Side walks, 2 WOMEN, etflcient, own
drives, patios. 642-8514. transportation.
J'.fORE Concrete patio lor1•==='537=="'920;====I
2 Bdrm. Unfum. Bllns, moro~.
crpts, drps, Healed Pool. • 2 BR unf. From $225 2 BR.· 2 BAT!l * $15 PER \Vee Jc.up * * * * * * \VHfTE rabbit found on
1800 Westcliff Dr. NB • 2 BR l''urn. From S285 \\'/kilC'hens. S27 .50 p e r !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!]!!""'""~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!]!!~!!!!!!]!!!!!!!!!!!!!]!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ;;E~,~~'~L~"~·~N~-~·~-i6'6-8~~260~= less money. Artistic ""Settinll'.. I• ~~!!!'.!!~-----l ;L~o;;s~l;;;-;;---;;;;=:;--6407.::1 Llc., call Max at 644-0687
• '"2·5388 * Carpets-dran..s-dish"·a.she r Carpets & drps .,.. ,,... \\'C'tk·up Apts, :l\.fOTEL. S.18. REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE
2 BR.,,-,, remodeled,· new hea1crl pool.sauna.1-tC'nn1s All' Conditioned 97!'!5 Land•caplng 6110
-RE\VARO Offert'd for !-,REE Est. Sawing. break· LA\VN r.Jaint. &: Cleanup. ,,.. rec room-.,cean v!ewi: General General
cpts, drps, Rer .. rnngc, gar. patios-ample parking. Private Patios
Boat dock. $250 Yrly
1-BR. furn. U!il pairl . Boal Sccurlly guards. "°''· mo Yrty. 673-7340 HUNTING TON
2 BR, den, 2 ba, cpl, drps. PACIFIC
Lrg liv rm. stnrage, pat, 7U OCEAN AVE .. J.l.B.
pool, jaccuzi, t>-'tH!:. zm <714) SJ&.1487
pels ok. $255. 642-57&;;. __ Ole. open 10 am-6 p •.. Dally
NICE 2 BR. Pool. Bltns,
crpts. drps. patio. Adnl !i:.
no l)('l.!i, $150. &12-8001 ,
642-8006
OCEANFRONT 2BR. cpl &
drp
Sl!IO winter, $240 yearly
7JOO!n1 Se11shore. 213: 248-1.921
Managerl by
'''TLLJAi\f \VALTERS CO.
Sublease On Beach
Ll'I!: 1 Brt. Only $200
2 Br. 2 Ba. Only S225
2 Br \\'/OCE"an v1e1v &
48~ sci' priv dC'ck. Only S300
Irvine 5238 r,urniture availabl"
Now LEASING ! Huntington Pacific
New, family and adults un its APARTMENTS
with total recreation club 711 Ocean Ave., H.C.
and pre.school. t , ~. ,t, 3 .136-1187
bdrms from $150. Nr. shop. J'.tanaged by
ping:, golf, schools. Just ~~"-'~"-'•_m~W-'•~fl~c_n;c..;C~o.~-
south ol San Diego Fwy. on H t'ngt G nada
Cw'Cr 0.-., '"''""· 833-3733. un I on ra
PARK WEST
APARTMENTS
O\vned and 11al\ag:ed by
The Irvine .. "".ompany
East Bluff 5242
TWNHOUSE 2 Br/21l ba :
hltins & Frplc. enr.t dbl gar.
752 Amigos \\'y; 67j.5!13.1.
Corona del Mar 5250
1 BR. From $135
2 BR. 2 bA. From $155
Sep FAJ'.11LY SECTfON for
children ur.der 5.
.."ust South of \V11rner
on Golden West, H.B.
{714 1 847·1055
CASA del SOL
Channing:. casual, ni:w apls
at the beach.
1 BR. From $135
HEATED POOL
Plenty of lawn
CarPort & Storai::e
HIDDEN VILLAGE
GARDEN APTS.
2500 South Salta
Santa Ana O MG-1525
2 BR. er-pis, drps, gas
rtishwsh r & relrig, Nr. So.
Coast Plaza. 54:Hll88.
Laguna Beach 570~
\VORKJNG or college girls.
singlr, room for · re n t
11•/kitchen privil. ;H6-:l793
LOVELY room, pvt hon1c,
adj ha. rmpl gent. S60 n10.
Nr o .c . AU'Porl. 54&-1713
LARGE Furnished mom in
niC'e home. pril', enirance,
t•ef'i:. * 548-3700.
FURNISHED room for rrnt.
Cost;i Mesa. $18 week. Call
~)~G-1807
ROOi\I !"or ren1 in Cosra
l\1esa nice & quiet horn('.
\\'ork1ni: man only. 6-12-17!11.
\'NG Coficgc or working i;irl~
Bal. Isl. Kil & TV rm. tele .
$80/mo. 67:>-3613.
NICE Room. priv. home.
Jc itch. privil . + Near sho p·g
& lransp. C.M. 54~1061
Income Property 6000
28 UNITS
ExcC'llcnt inve1jlmen1 !n •or
locat1on and tor condi11on.
''ou must sec tn appreciate.
Call for con1plctc informa-
\1on. Asking S.325,000.
Income Property &000 Industrial Rental 609G recovery or Yr old Ruddy lni;, hauling & skiploading. Dependable reliable &: reu
Abyssinhtn Altered male Service & quality. 548-8668. -1cs. 847-3620,
CUSTOM FOURPLEX NE\\. Bid rm 1 2300 . · · . '" , g. 0 • . sq. cal. D1sap(K'areff Fri, on Choice Ne\\'port area, 3 BR ft. Nr. Baker and Fa:tvlev.·, Lido lslt. 644-0080. Contractors 6620 EUROPEAN Landscaper
& 2 BR unils_ Ideal 01vncr 1 yr lease, Su 11 1 \I an :;;::..:.::.=c::;,:c..: ___ .;::.=1 own design & work:mansbip,
occupied & ta.'C shelter prop. 5-IO-J.129. ' RE\VARD -While longhair MY \Vay, quality name call 496-3383 eves. S,1~ 1 Sl'OOO l =========='I fC'male ca1 \1'/ blue C'yes, rennlr. Walls, ceiling, fioo" erty_ · ~ ncome. -· d Jc ·1 & ,... VICE 6115
Do1A.·n. s7:-i.ooo. Lots 6100 "al.a<dta.1. '•"krs. A1 ns .... ·eJrs to I ;'~";·~N~o~~jo~b~t~oo~~·~m~.u-.1 :MA=:ID=S=E:R====::::I PERRON 642 1771 y. 5 or oan, 1~ 543-1·19-1, 24 hr ans. urv.
• N~::ED Christmas money. 673-Sl2S or &16-l23I LIC'D Conti._ Remodelinit. Maintenance 6829
Mus1 sa~rifi~ my beautllu_l, YNG white: female rloi:, hlk add-0ns, roofing, p11inting &
Business Rental 6060 le\•el. v1e1v lots, located in strip on tail, Dalnlatian rcpain. 5 40-7 8 5 g or GEN. main!. &: home repair;
----------prestlgt; Ar1iona suDclivislon cros!'I. Deal. Just !!payed, !i-I0-76&1. painting, carpentry & elec.,
L,\RGE ~1udif" for rent, for $49:> each. ~I. Morgan, needs care. 5-18-4568 or Apt -no,.. b too~.., 1215 So 7 h Additions * Remodeling s a s,,........ "''" ~ space for 111 us i c · t ~,I.. Phoenix, M3..,8261 G•-.. ·,,k & Son, LI" Free est. 96&-7832
I I I 22,n Arizona 8.1034-Telephoncl'O"C,,.=,'---~.----'"' , essons or 11r C asse!'I, 602_946-75lt CAT: \oung, adll d male Si. 673-60~1 * 5-19-2170 HOME Repairs: Painti ng,
Newport Blvd., or call I -----------1 amest>, decla\\'ed. 1'1issing 1 carpentry, cement work. Sm
646-9"12.l after 6 pn1. Attention Builders mo. Reward. Please return. Remodeling * Additions jobs OK. 646-644S
OFFICE. STORE. near N'pl, One acre with existing 3 Bed. 675 16n KARL E. KENDALL
ho R f 12 1,.;,.;.,=..cc.. _______ I Li~ns«l·Bonded :NS-1l17
Pos! Office, 5::2 Sq. Ft. r~ n1e. c:iom or m_orc LOST . Small shaggy black Masonry, Brick 6l30
Good parking $120 mo. units. Possible subord1 na. d:.l Srotf & C k · C
G h RI "'"ll• 1· 7' · ~ 1-· IA' """ ' g, ie oc er mix. _:.;•~r~po;:.:.t_C:l~•~•~n~i"~t-~66:.:.:2:5 ! COMPLETE Cemenl &: ra am ly, .,.,..,....,. ton, '' /#" inancJnR'. ''"·"'"' lure. No quC'stions asked. -PERRON 6421771 Masonry. 21 yrsexper. Free STORE . 826 ~'. 19th St., Cr..1 . -Reward. 536-4565 Clean.CJeancr.Cleanest! e8t An time 8 4 6-4 91 T
A1·ai!. 12/9. Attenlion Horse Lovers LOST: German Shorthair Kurt 11/agner Carpet & • y ' '
$115/nio. * 5-18-1768 70 x 198 R·I on O~d Pira!e polnlf.'r, 6 mos old, liver Upholstery Cleaners. S 9•1~"=l2-='483=·=======
CORONA Del J\;1ar. fi60 Sq. T..a.ne. Only $18.500 Agt. ticked, white !ail. Reward. 11verage rm. 534-530.'.>. p · I' 81fl-'!la3 633-5642. a1n ing,
ft. E-Z Parking. prime loc. · -==========:bv~,~o~C~·~'--_;64~2~-56~71'.'...~--Paperh•nglng Real onomics C.Orp. 675-6700 -MALE "· 1 • F & 1.1 Cleaning Service A 6200 .,,.,a pcnn1 Siamese H 1 STORE & Office . nice Bldg.1 __ •_r_•_•~9-•-------i f'.at, 9 yrs old, lost vie Costa o iday Special, Certi.Foam. DO It yoursell. You do t;rim.
S.J.'i -$225. Eves 673-1784, l\1esa St & Irvine 646-8135 e1, dries in 2 hn. 536-3508, Avi:. 3 Br. house. Bxter ""1319 222 ·1h St liB SAC! $16.000. 3 plus level . . . 53&-2247. stucco SlSO. Incl maCI &
.>Ju-· ;i " · Acni. Lake ~I at hew 1 FEM. Irish Setter, 6 mos old.
6070
Estates, 14 mi/Riverside. Lo6! near 4600 Seashore Dr. CRPTS/Windows -3 rms & labor. All work ilt&r ·
Ungrnd/uU's, Gorg view last wknd . 67~92 hall foam sh11.mpooed + l~S4~7--~144c_;;,l.~-~~-+~
mount & lakes. 54~19 alt FD.1_ longhaircd gray cat, romp! window washing both HOLIDAY Special lntef &
SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY 5. 4 while feet, green t'Y"· for $37.50. 827-3182 11.!t 4:30. Exter Painting. Free ,eat.
DI d r--Cl In Local ref's. Lic'd &: , Ins. J-2-3 room, "P to 3.000 sq. Lamina Niguel. 49a-5227 a.mon ,._,1=t ean g d "' Free window washing in&i e
ft. offi re suiles. Immed. OC· ,R~·c...;E;;:._W'-"'•"n"t~e~d __ _:c62:40c:iSEAL Point Siamese cat, al. Pre-holiday special & out. Call Chuck, 645-00o9 "'>P•""Y O•••g• C •I y Free Minor Ren<>irs W/Clng. .. "~ · '"' " · IC'red male, vie BcigrC"en ,... A. 1 1-···., Commorc Private buyer wants apt units 300' $15. We -1~n install. No Wasting irpor '~ "· · Pl.. El Toro. R1\·d. 837.2.549 ......._ Complex. adj. Airporrer good location. any condition. Free: est. 645-1317. * WALLPAPER *
J-lotcl & Res1aurant. banks, _".67~~~·~5~Uc_ ______ .I-----------: SfE J . \Vhcn you call "11ac''
San Diego & N'pl F\\·ys, BUSINESS and Personals 6405 By A~ar~a~.~~~',!:~~.,64 ,~s._1~""=---,=~"';;;;~Jm" 2 BR, From S215
21661 Brookhurst St, HB
(7141 962-6653
OCEAN VIEW · Lrg 2 BR.
apts. UnJum. Crpts, drps.
blt·ins, patios, .,... al king
distance to IO\\'n. 100 Cl iff
Dr., Laguna Beach. 494-.'>198
UNCRO\\'DED PARKING FINANCIAL service. Free est. ~~. 1 .f INT. or EXTERIOR B UNITS LOWEST RATES *Palm & Cards* PAINTING. Ln<. R••. lM·
"Don'1 \vait 1ill Jan." Nn1\ O\i'fl('r/mgr. Z172Du~nt Dr., Business SPIRITUALIST RE.<\DER Carpet Laying & MED. Se r vlc !'. f ree
ON 1'EN ACRES
l & 2 BP.. Furn &. Unful'TI
Flreplact.'S I priv. pallcs I
Pools, Tennis • Contnt'I Blcfst,
900 Sea Lane, Cdr.t 64f.:?b1 I
(MacArthur nr Coa•t Hwyl
NEW DUPLEX
2 Bdrms. • 2 Bath
$1 ~1 MONTI-f _ POOL
Incl cpt/drp~, kids OJ<
DELA\VARE STUDJO 11.pts
2620 Dela\\·are, H.B.
&12-2221; after 3 p.nl, 536-11116
2 BR. Palio. Ptlol. Children
01\. Sl5:1 up. I n q u ire
ren!al bonus plan. 8181 I Priv. patio, Enclosed garage, Garfield, 12 blk E. ol
Carpeted & drape.I. Comp. Beach. 962_ROOI.
built·ins. lmmac. Jandscap.. -~--c--~-~
lng! 3 BR. :l ba, Pri<'e re· * Small Children OK I
duc:ed to $300 ;')Cr mcinth . NI::\\'! 2 Br/2 bfl, pa!io
)
or h11l('ony l\'p(' Agl :
675-6050 * &17J.1070 or· 631-0514 * .... -·lfl Cl .. 111<. I WALK TO OCEAN I 1 & 2 BR NE\V ap1s. 1',rplc'1.
CORONA DEL MAR Patio. Adults. LindOOrg Co.
Deluxe 2 BR, 2 ha, upsta.!rs 5JG.2579 * FRESH AIR RPI. w/pnv. sundeck. all bJ1.
ins, cp!d._ <'IJ'l\Pt'd. lmmf'd .
occupancy $225 Prr !\1o.. \Valk 3 blka lo Beach~
:.year leW. 1 Beaut hi11; 3 BR npl. w/w
• 1 crp!.'5 drps bllns exeept
475-6050 '\ I 1-err~. $225. No pets. 536-1711
U1M MM'IE'"''I Cl .. a. f 2 BR Dbl b11th, p\ll patin,
dsh\Y&hr. Pool. Ariull~. Qu tet * COROLIOO APTS * & bcauttful. St8;J lncl·~ 11111.
2 BR Studio._ Unfurn. ,\JI 17676 Cami"ron. H .B .
ek'<'. dsh\\•lu-. <lbl carport &. -'"-'-""-'~'-I ~~-----I 111: pool, $190 & up, 673-3378 \VA!\'T Older ccuple to
2 Br, clean, UPP<"r, Stvfref. manage 6 unHs. c2 bdrl. s;,o
gar, CID. S. of hwy. $190. allowanct' on $130 rental.
no pets. Cpl prt'f. fiT.~7~78. \Vrltc D11ily Plltil Box M-12,
213:431-1195 11ft ·I mil. 330 \V. Bay SI, Cl:Nta ~1t>liill.:._
EXECUTIVE 4 Br:-~1., Ba. I Ne1v I hr·l hlk ti'/ bch $130
2300 sq . fl . Frpl, hllns. g11r. 1 v.·cek lree, prl deck/pa!
$345/mo . lse , 714 Quiet 8in"1es & crl~ only
Golc,enrod. 968-8658 201-A 14th. 67J.J784, SJG.1319
DELUXE 3 Br, 2 Ba, bltn~. * BEACHBLUFF Apts
dhwhr, IK'"'' Ahag crptg. 2 le 3 Br, 2 Ba. d1shwashC'rs,
rrplc, 111.undry rm. fncd pool, patio. 11231 ~11ia.
patio & gar. $235. SIH302:_ 812.&177 or 847·3951,
OIOICE 2 Br. 2 Ba. Sn. (If 2 BR Duplex: Cle11n-Q11iet.
}fwy. Elec. bllnll, tPl5, drps. N~v.!y decor. I Child OK.
$250 mo. Rltr, 673-:l?ll. 1150. 825-6.)89. f&T B~ rio-,-.-,.-,-,..-.~b~l-ln-,,· t
!llll . nr Sch k Edinger.
RIZ--2387 m' M~7062
is the rime to invest. Pnrte Rm. 8. Ne\~'Pott acn Oppart•Jnities 6~ Help in all problenis, Jove, Repair 6626 estimates. 646-0210. ,
of ownl.'1-ship in priine rent. ~3.1-:1223 Court esy to Brokel'll r APERHANGlNG-'Fr•c MA IL Order, marine equlP & marriage, businesl!, All read. C La al location. Call for ('Offi• DESK SPACE ,-. I s . 1 •1 d ARPET yer H. "'ea ...... '-'''·· ••ti'•l•"'•"o• ..... ' .. an· suppl ies. Ner $1500 per mo .. g11 pr Vale. pccia ~ rea · p 1 50! H I .... " " .. ... DELUXE Duplex, ne\11 In p\cte inlormar1on. Asking oo.~h sc"iired by ""r $'"""' tngs. Open 7 day•, 9 am-oyesters. s, 1·os, teed, Dan Schwartz,
5740 Dana Point
A I Dnh • Slot• Ml)() 000 "'6 "13 222 Fore!.t Avenu9 '" "'~n• ~hags. Sell for I a bor. r:.•7_m•
pr1. nr. e .. y '" .. , , . .,.. . ...., 1nven1 0 r y. 96 8-8 g 7 3 lO pm, 7421 .\Ye:stn1instcr i;53!>-~~3;m~. ======oli~~ifE·if-;.;'&-;:;;;;.=:-A.;;;;;;;:1 Park & new harbor. 2 Br, Laguna Beach evcs/v.•knds Ave. 893-9854, \Vestmlnster. INTER & Exler. Acoous.
111':1 ba. Fenced ~'ard, newly Jndscpd . Garage \\•/extra 494·9466 FULLY LICENSED * Dra~ries 6630 ceilings sprayed, low P ·ces
cnl. directly inio kilchen. DESK SPACE 1 ~M;.;oc.na=y_t;;:oc..:L~o.:•;.;n_...:63:;2::01 Reno"'ned Hindu Splritualist gd v.·ork. 5,.':,7-7455, 548-
Bll·ins incl. di shwasher & !-=========~I Advice on all maltl'-?'$, DRAPERY PAINTING • Ext-Inr. 18~.
itarb. disposal. Carp. & PRICE REDUCED 305 No. El Camino Real 1st JD Loan Love, r.1arriage, Business r.tANUfACT~1;ER expcr. Ins. Lie. rree ~est.
drapes thniout 2.stories. Eastbluff Cus 6 units, Ownrs S.Jn Clemente Readings given 7 day5 a 22 Yrs In Area. a1~236 Accoust. Ceilings. 968-9126
S200 i\fo. AV1lil. ln ~now, 4 Br. 3 Ba hn1 + ;, studios 492-4420 7~o;:, INTER.EST wt'i'k, 10 am. 10 pm . INTERIOR TEXTILES ai'
'I ~-I 1 N 1 SHl6,:xx;_ 0\1·ner 675-5011 312 N. El Camino Re11.I, \Vc've Done All The r.1ode:l11 PAINTING: ~~nest, gu . a,."· ren ng Ul.:C. i;. n pe !!. I c~--'-o~--~-~~ OFFICE-Gar11.ges & lencC'd 2 d TD L Let Us Oeslgn For You: te:rd \\'Ork. Lied. 1,:-0Cal ~ II, Drive by 33901 Copp!'.'r It's really not the.I ha!'<'! Yrd space w/gas pumps, In n oa n San Clemente c ll 675-57!0 ft I
Lantern, Dana PL or call to replace. J ust watch lhe HB Avail fur rent ft-om <192-9136, 492--0076 Spcci11.I Prc·Holiday Sale. a ' a J.
49-1-2328 days, -1!»-4791 e\'('S furniture &. miscellaneous l2/i. Call .149-3373. 'rerms based on e:<rll i1y. * MASSAGE * Call 549-02.16, 24 Hrs. INTERIOR & E}.TERIDR
or 499-1397 Lingo Real columns ln th& Classified . 642-2171 545-0611 SAUNA * \VHIRLPOOL Jetry's Painting Servil-e
r-101• ln"'Simenl•. "'Action. . I* NE\\'PORT BEACH Civic <!., .... ,.,. H.~-·-· 21 Ln G Pl I Furniture Restoring • 496-1864 • l ""' " v" ""' (enter 30() fl 10 JOO[) ff, ..-..::• v •UVl '" YfS. •-e\y irJs, U.~h faC Jiffe!I, ·
A & . 1 6701601 Sattler Mortgage Co. o""n 6 day,, noon.midnight. & Refinishing 6675 HOUSES, Docks, bo~t1,
F I • V II 5410 Fount1'1n V•lley 5410 Tisw secretana ,,.. · 336 7 •-th' on11. ly :...:;o~u~n~·~·~";,...:..;•cc•·-,Y _ __;.,;,;.;,...:_c;.:;.;.c.:.;;;,..;_c;:.;.:o!.__:.;_;.: ~. l th Street 2'J30 \Y, Coasl Hwy, Newpon FURNITURE STRIPPING e\·:ry in~ re as
3i00 NE\VPORT BLVD. N.B. ===========I Bellch. 548-360S GRAND OPENING SPEC ~1nted. Free est. 646-
:J.ounfain~
JleJ;terrn11enn Styls lu:irtry
1 & :? Bedroorm -2 Bath,
Adult Living
Furnished &i Unfornlshed . , ....
e l)bh-1.lltr
• Shti C•rJHlll
• Prifft• r11tloe
• a..-l C...tin e 8--' C.Ul"P
8565 Slater Avenue
'~' 1 '~'l..,,l llWll Ntrlfl Tit Ti:"TW' Jlfl M
Ii.tit loi milt '° •"""'*""· 9684~5
• • t ...... -.t;
I
·-~
670~•uJ'.l.iE"'Bl-A503Y2 Money Wanted 6350'"•--D-'E"-Sf'-'E-RA..;c.T_E_L_Y ____ d I .,....,.,.. .,.. ....... JAL! Any average chair or Pl t ·ng Patch C~! NEED 2nd money on 2 pro-ride 10 Yorb11. Linda by 7:30 l :""':"'="~'='!~',;;";•~n<d;S5=:,·,;":2-34=.~"~·l-!~~~~:.~r~f~r-' ___ ,~-~·~-I 1670 SANTA ANA AVE,
35c sq, ft.
675-Z.164 or 5'11·5032 * XL'llT OFFICE Sr1.1te
No1\' Avail . LTOO BLDG ,
3335 Via Lido. NB. 673-4501
300-@1200 sp, ft.
OFF1CES, SOO-S90-S180.
Cosra Meu.. 646-2130
I NICE Small air-cond nlftce I under $100. 1555 Baker.
Suite C, C.M. !S40-25TI.
pe:rties. One private home A~f lrom C.M., 1 v.·ay only.
equ ity is $15,0(K), want $5000 Eves IH6-l814. Gardening 6680 T PATCH PLASTE~G
or more. 10% Int. pd. 1169 ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. AL'S GARDENlNG AJI types. Free estima'!'
Dorset Lane, C~f. 2nd piece Phone 5'12-7217 or write to for Gsrd~ning & srnaU lanJ.1-====C=aJ=t =5'=1>-682S=='=~·i='I of real esls!e ls on P.O. Rox 122.J Costa Mesa. .I P<y.1larino. Land v a I u e 11Caplng se-rvicea CAii ~5198 Plumbing tl90
$60,000 plus older house & Announcements 6410 Sen.·ing Newport. Cdbl, r.o.s. "'-'~=.;;.;, ____ -;;.;.:.I
sh«ls, WAJtt $12,000 1ecorw! ta blesa, Dover Shores, PLU?l l.BTNG REPAUJ.
on this one. 546--3634. CHRISTMAS CARD \Yestcllll. No job too small ~ rn.ooo SECURED w/2od RETURN ADDRESS STORM REPAIR e 842-Jl28 e
rtero or trust. Pay 10% + 10 STICKERS Tree work, surgt>ry, bricln~. DRAINS Plugged? Draifilne
points commercial prop!'rty, $1 FOR 1000 pn1ne, Landscp ma Int, slow? Expertly cle:anedt S9.
Call 548-~16, r.tr. Neu Send your dollar and cle11.nup jobs. Time open. 25 hr serv. 53G-385C ·;;;o 'ANNOUNCEMENT"$ your copy to: Proless Gardener. George
_1n_d_u ... 1_tr.,.ia'-'l .. R_e ... n_1_1l__ i nd NOTICES Piiot Pr1nt1ng, Label Dlv. 61&-5893. Rooftng
Box: J87f> t.:ARDENING f' C
B Ex • -~ J WENEDA Roo 1ng O . SMALL UNnS Found !Fr., Ads! 6400 Newport S.aoh, Ca. 92663 Y ""'"0~• •p&n<se Ropaln, RccoVOl" '' New
COSTA MESA l'OUND '~-Your labels will be &e-nt by -~-*-548-0228:,;:_=:...:;*~--I Roofs. 1700 Superior Aw , --..a;e il'&Y & white rerurn mail AL'S Landscaping. Tree Ci\1. si;,.1691 2-l HRS,
1
$!'1'1 & S-115 mo. lmn1<.'d OCCU• .. ,. Vi,.,,_,_ A "n. '===="-'===== ... .. v • .. .,.e ve a: oey1; reomoval. Yard nmodcllng. BEFORE You buy, a.It T.
Pl)nrv, fiOO.jT;j 1111 Diii.NG $1 . 646--5244. Auto Trash h11ullng lot cltanup. G"• Roof\"• Co R~ * NEW BU L * T · 6 .. 5 kl -11~ -·~ FOUND 2 blke11. 1 blut & 1 ransporfat1on -JlePfllr apm en. v•,,.. "°· •P••l•llot. ·6 ,5_ , 17.80 sq ft un l1s: office, re~!. bO • -I 1y ·•~""="~·-=~"':;·:...:.&!6-'380::.::=:_ __ , l:" ...... r. J11.p&ne!lt! Gardener, a.•0 ~-• room. 11()...""' pov.·er, (I en ~ FREE transportation daily ....,.I"" ..,._;;'""
or parkinit. J81h & Whittler BL.ACK male: poodle, i\lrsa 10 & from downtown L.A. Com'plete yd St?t'\llct, NeAt hL~E~E"°"ROO=~FIN=~c"""co"'· ~"'-"',-,::--·!
Ave •. CO!ltll M™· Verdr a~a. !>lfHi084 lron1 Nt"wport by drlvin1t le Rell•. Fret., est. 6'$24:89 ol a1I types, re'c ~-;"rf':
C. ltobtrt Naltress, Realtor BLK & t&n pup1 C.M. V\Y bus. C.11 714: 6~~ Complete Yard C•rel rtP'lnt:, roof coalinp. Uc A
°"-.t~ Mf"U 64Z.t435 M&-1236 an 5 pm. or 213: 620--0300 Jl:i.t M0-48.'T bonded al.nee 1947. 6&2.-1222.
I
•
L-·------~-~---"""-'~~--===----1.-=====o..:·..:..-"'--'--"-'~~=---....,---==;;..,..;:;;!,;;:;:;;,;;;;;=~---.....;..:i
M DAJL:Y PILOT TM!rsd.U, Dt<nnbtr 10, 1970 'Jll,~~ju~>al~CT~r~u1RY!:"i~JO~l!!S:! & .. JOBS a EMPLOYMINT JOBS & EMPLOYMINT
ls.wtF=l""~---...:•::;Ne;:: Jolla Mon, W-. 7100 Jolla Men, Wom. 7100 Sthool1-ln1trucllon 7600
MIRCHANDISI FOil
SALi AND TRADI
MIRCHANDISE FOR MIRCHANDISI fOR
SALi AND TRAD! SALi AND TRADE FREE TO YOU FREE TO YOU
~ • Alllnlltw DENTAL ASSISTANT, chah-MEN 10 mod•! .wr. • IT'S YOUR MOVE
• ~ Deaiped to wit YoU. side, atttrnoon to ~ve hra. soorttwear. part time evu. BREAKING Up hou&ekeep. NOW IN ONE LOCATION
o ••• ,.•s.1. 1122 Pl•nM & 0f'11M• IUO Ml1toll'11*'"1 MOO FREE To aood horn•, lenced COCK A POOS. ?ilothtr And 5
ylJ'd..lovable male Ault puppies will be am.all dop,
1hephered • terrier mllC. Hold until Ch r I 1 t m • •
MM. breed. Blk .. Whl. 892-8116 a.ner I. 12111
Shol1. Housebroken. Loves TERRJFJC Man'a dor Black
: Call Jo * 6*-64'6 n4 "' ' pm\ Som• Sal'• 1,.,,'A=G~1~"'c.· ~83f>-350~'-I;,,.. ~,.,..,.. INDUSTRY CA""rRS ln&-do YoOr Chrl11m11 lhop. Conn * Y•m•h• ~.ler•llons -6,41'"4$ Salary opoo, lri°" ""'""· M!DDL£ Agtd woman, lO or . ftU ping here. Danl"1 luinlt""· * ThomH Or••n•
* AUCTION * FRIDAY, 7t30 P .M.
DECEMBER 11th N••t. •ccur•te, )'J ~exp, Ph: &l'\Yllmt, (H.B. area) over, neat appe11rance, for t1ble:1, lampa: 18" Zanlth Abo complete ~recunn
,;8,;am;;;,·;9 ;::.•:;m::., ;:-::..::;:;·c_~~ I MANAGER TR Al NEE, TV (rt.mote control); di-ttf planot &: oraani Repo1 & 81nkrupt furn
Bdmi !!!ti, OiVUll, ChairJ.
Recliner•. MaltttlM?a. Lane
cedar chetf, De1ka, Coffee
this, Hutches, Swaa lamps.
Din's tell, Buffets. Stereos,
Color TV'1, GarTard turn
table, Speaker., ''hpe rf'.
c:ordet1, AmPI. Elec: rultar.
record albwn1, Tube tesl-
rn;. New arpel, Refrig,
Wuhera & Dryers •nd much
childrtn. J-635-4090 or lab. rerlstertd with
6174 DENTAL chair auislS"' with Stutlni alary $320 mo. 1.. AIRLINE & TRAYll !nett• Mt Comple,. doub~ Open Su....,.. w
front oU1ce captbllitiu. quire in penon, PAY·LESS bdrm te1: tw'in bed 1 Dail
836-44&3, 12/12 American Kennel Club 4
LOVABLE tiny black mixed year old male. •94-Dl!I 12111
breed pups, 3 mo'1, S lbi. ~ Ttn-ler l,i Chihuahua Re•. a lamb. Also, •mall pupple• 2~/t mo. old am
Terrier 40 mo'1. Nttd &d brtr.d 227 Monte Vl1ta CM
homl! fncd yd. 11) ~1766 54g..7932, 12/12
•fl 5· 5"43.-081.3 da.yt l2/U VERY Lovablt male coll!,.
3 Adortbl• tiny bl'f'd dcga 4 and shepherd mix mf'dlum
lb• e1ch l year 2 n good wilh ch ildren h1brk
cock-&-poo, peek...a-poo 6 t t) 826-7235; 836-4493. 1211?
MOI. h!lbrk need goodll-'~~.,,c..;,:_.;cc_-"_-':I
homez. l male 2 females. NEED Good home for red
+ Vttne, The Tile Man + 64M801 SHOE STORE, 2221 Harbor • ~~ W/he&dboard• .. •Pttads: y tll 5 -Fri d1 9
CUit. work. Install 6: repaln . ===,;;,;,;=:=:-~-I Bl d Cott M e ERATIONS AGENT . llneni·, kl'""-n applla-o·, COAST MUSIC ELECTRONIC _ C o u n t e r • ;:;;'.:::." .:;::.:::.• ..::::'::";:·___ ""'"' ...... NEWPORT "•"" Nb Job too s;mJ, Pluter 1 ~ • Tl SALES chlna.; silver: a n 11 q u e ' ~oR pltchtnc. Uaklng shower u.lesman, tlllp'd. MODE~Work Shop. Ltarn • VATIONS d!'f'ue.r, hall lrM It. piciure Cosla Men. * &12-2851
rciialr. 8'7°19!17/846-0206. H. W. WRIGHT CO. 10 be• photoaraphlc model. • AIR ;'ff..t'JGHT-CARGO frames, Vacuum cleantr, ORGAN By Owner: Conn JTIO Newport Blvd., C.?t1. 54Q..3460_ e CO"---"!CATIONS CERAMIC Tile 'Mlrk. fl'M •MJ Lun1 fiahlna tackle, tool!, lug-Se re n ad e, U1 note
eft. No job too miall. EXPERIENCED \Vatters for ~~i'itirtsoJt.LVN 11 • TRA' ~GENT II.It. Bua:aln1 I a I 0 re! m&11ual1. 2S note pedal, 596-2426. Continental Str\'ice. Apply , l-:30 •i II S I p 11• Mii\)' Christmu atft Jte.m1. percuulon, 1tU conttined
1----------l daily at 2121 E. Coast Hwy, p.m. "' r ne C 00 I IC IC 2214-B Rut&en Dr (btwn speakers. Like new. Less J;=::;;:-----;;;;:;l,~CdM~.~==~-~-LVN SUPERVISOR RELIEF 610 E . 17th, ante An1 Wi!IOn & Avocado!. C.M. than % coat, only $1250.
lfopsoll 6977 EXPERIENCED. •ini\f' nu-3-11:30 pm. o;,,.;;;.i54~;>;;F.,-:=:-646-6919. ftiday unltJ ~ What a Chrl1tma1 Fftl more! 548-0813: 136-449.l l2/l2 doxie mi:ii: !IWtet and IOVllblf'
1-T---So-----di• ......... ,.. Apply 82.1 w. LVN SUPERVISOR RELIEF MERCHANDI E FOR GARAGE So.lt, Fri-Sat.SU,, .c64;;;'-;;;23;;;93;.:·=~-~-1 WINDY'S AUCTION ~ op ii, Sandy Loam lSth St. C.M. -Mtdk:lnes 3-11:30 pm s•LE •ND •• CH ' LYMAN t~~SCAPJ.NG EXP'D ELECTRONIC L•VNm SUPERVISOR 11-1:3> """ ""' ""'DE Jo'1rn, clot.M:1, dl,hf-s, many RJSI'MAS SuuesUorta -
6 Ado "' Id "='""'=~· -c'',;·-"=1'--08-"-'-~"=""'1 rao.it ttens 4 mo. 31: blk ( v.·h1 . 3 il'Y 11gers. FREE Horse manure. 2311
Adult• altere<l/ipayed cats Cypres& St., Santa Ana
11.ll need &d homei 336-4493; Hel1hlt 540--09'.!5 12/12
548-0813 12/10. FREE ChriJtma1 puppiea
......,...,....., Chris(;maa item1 . 511 Orchid lfammond, Steinway, COME BROWSE AROUND
COMMUNICATIONS L v Ii RELIEF Furniture 8000 CdM, 67:>-1338 or 673--9123. Y,afl'lllha, New&: u~ planoe 2015~ Ncwporl Blvd.
Uphol1tery ,,,. TECHNICIAN SUPERVISOR 11-7:30 am. GARAGE SALl PLUS c. moat makes. Beat buy1 In Behind Tony's Bide Mtt'l1
I ST L E P k Lldo r-·-' Appll•ntas 1100 So. Calif. ti Schmidt Music Colla Mesa * t•l!""OI! N A L R ar ....... n ..... e~nt Moving tn>m la• homo to r-I -ADORABLE black kittens ad c r • b I e <"urly..flaired'.
C ., ...... ........., 901 N. Main, Sallta OPEN DAILY !I 10 4
Ctykcsk t • 1 (Cay·kos-key) Good meehanic. Sell reliant enter 64...-...m apt. Din's, Liv It den LARGE selection ot recondi. Ana.
;<:u1tom Upholstery, 1831 548-86Tl PART time 1irl nttded en furn, 1tetto, i'• en tools, tioned appliances, repos, ,,_ "'===~-~=--1 FACTO
wanl new homes f 0 r 114&-5334 121.12
Cttriltmas. Will pay spaying INTERVIEWING Pa re n t s re4!. 2315 Notre Dame Rd. !or Dalmatian J>IJPI· Ready
C.M. 543-6450 12110 fDr Christmaa. STh-1232 12/ll
FREE f''uny laeed medium FREE To ~ood horn~ 3 mo
1z puppy, Lovea kids hall gray lema.le part Be:rme~
ahot1. 6 mo old paper kitten 774-5846 12/11
•M•wport BJ·~. CM •• ,_,, ••. 1 ,i1;-;,.7.'.~C~o~.-c07_"7,,-,,EX=r~RA""'s'I \Ved, Thur1 & Sun to assilt lawn mowers, Ta le tennla, · EMERSON Grand 5'6", Xlnt ·.• RY CLEARANCE .!-' ,.... '" '" ..,... """" t l ,,.. •• ~· phances from model homes. ma.OO,any finish, $950. Pvt OUTSTANDING VALUES,
• for non-unk>n "'Ork I.A.G. actlvltle1 director. ec, tt'. '" .... ~:m eve5. w dell · &: JOI$ • EMPLOYMENT t-. °" •~t. Interviews will bf' htld on Garaae Sale Sun DK ,, e ver, service guar. pf)' 968-2645, 968-1416. AU, LIKE NEW. BIG DJS. • '"' ...,....._ l"' ........_Sand ,,_ H...,, antee. COUNTS. CHRISTMAS Dec. 15, 10 am to U pm. .-. '"'" ca.auc r., ar. DUNLAP T I I u y
j obW1nted,
Women . 7020
~RACTJCAL nurae w/boy
. Cari ot man alone, no
tin;. Live in. Av a 11
12/20/70. Salary $ 2 5 0 '
~63 1DAM-3-9PM
AIDES -For convalescence,
'1e.lderly care or famlly care.
J:lomemaken, 547-668L
SECRET ARY . Sharp!
Dependable! Experienced!
In 30'1~ 548-a341.
Gen'I Ofc $425
Moving 10 beautltu] new CM
cffices, Xln't oppor, !or girl
w/lite Eat'roW or R.E. Ca.II
Miss Laura., S57.fi122, Abl.
&&ii Abbot Personnel A~I).
cy, 230 W. Warner. Sulit hi,
S.A
* GENERAL HELP *
$3.75 HR.
Full or part time
Oependtble. live in area.
Mr. Pov.-era 546-9862
HOUSEKEEPER, exp, ref. Girl Friday
Deywork or 5 days. 646-988t 1 Girl Ole, Architectural, e:n. 1----------· I aineering or an atudio bck·
1----------.1 cmd helpM, Creative at.
Job, .. s -llMloien, Wom. 7100
ACCOUNTANT.CPAtinn in
Laiuna Beach need1 femaJe
accountant to do full charae
bookkeeping work u well u
tax work. Must be familiar
with data pnx:easing. Must
be wtll &roomed, ag·
cres,ive, cre11.tive and
tenaclcus, not a p~
crastlnator. Degr~t:
de.Mrabl' but not man-
datory. 4%--0768 or 54G-8876
ASSIST MGR (couple) Ltg
complex, husband main-
tenance, wife for o!tlce.
Good aalary, + apt. Call
Ccmdr. Retting at 54>3214
AUTO SALESMAN
Wanted put time Student
perferred, No Upertence
Ot'Ct:"l&J')''
·-··~
1X1C¥phere, Typing, SH ad
but not nece111.
MISS EXEC AGENCY
410 W. Coast Hwy, NB
646.3939
* GROUNDSMAN
Saddleback Cc 11 e i e ac·
ceptlng applications' ror
position of Groundsman I.
Starting aalary S507-$532-
$539. monthly, depending on
qualifications. C a 11 Mrs.
Ra.dner n4/837-9700, 499-2211
4~950.
*HEY GALS*
~ expanding Company
nttda 12 gals. Full or part
time. Live in area.
$3.25 HR.
Mr. Clark
HSKPRS Emplyr pays tee.
Georae Allen Byland Aaen-
cy 106-B E. 16th, S.A,
547-0395.
tun-Harbor Blvd, 645-0466 I ;i;""=""==--~~ I='====--=-~==: I HOUSEKEEPER, N e & t , 81.BYSl'ITER: For 2 Yl' old capable y,-omu, live-in, No ~y. Live-in, Ille hsewrk. h'ld NB 67" 001· c 1 ren, . ., .,,.....,., :;i. Good Pa,y. 644-5249 *HOSTESS* BEAUTICIAN for busy. Sharp, experienced, Ml time.
popular C.M. shop. No Apply Alley West, 2106
cliehtele nee. Paid vac. ~anfront, Newpt Bch.
Grad1 welcom e . Ph. 67~1714 Manager. Sf6.U86 • * B EAUTICIANS for Ifttemational Beauty Salon, IF rr·s BE'ITER PAY YOU
N.B. With or without follow-WANT, represent Texas Oil
Ing. 64>1050. Compaey. Air mall T.K.
l·*~BEO--A-lll'Y--0-P_E_RA_T_O_R-~· I DI ck e r a on ' pres , '
Female. Apply tn peraon via Southweatern Petroleum
Ph: 545-<1209. Corp., Fl. Worth, Texu.
BOOKKEEPER I STENO, I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
for Newpt. Sch. builder, I'
pa.rt time to 1t&rt. Write
giving work history &.
aalary deslrtd to Box
M-2082 Dally Pilot 330 W.
Bay, Costa Meaa. ·-
Apply In penon only, The hor View Hilb, Cd .:..:;•~·~•:.:;•~lon::.:, ___ _::12D5:::::i ~AWAY, 3 channel light
Greenbrook Recreatlonl-::-::':..,.::.,,.:;.:=,:,.=;'Cf.--1 APPLIANCE show1, Cclor orgafl!I, Auto Cl b M 11 81 d btwn C 0 RN E R Bed u n I t 1!tS NeWpOrt Blvd., C.M, 23'' Hollman blonde console color bars, Or.>11-younl!U
u • acno a v w/covers, bolaters table e ~7711 e & 19" RCA tbl mod. Each controls, Stereos, rM stereo
Elli• & Talbert, F.V. Coit $200, sac S120. and I "'==~==~~~~ S65 &: in )[Int cond, Ph: radios, I.ape pla,yf'rlii &
PART 11me night Mu. for new. Sofa, eold velve 8', RErRIG, 1969 Adm Ira I, ---=~"~~~-=~-I tapes. XREXSAR CORP.,
1m1"l N.B. motel. 2 or 3 Coit $250, accept 20. ~~st-fret', COP91!rtone, 4% x RCA 21" color TV 87~ "B" W. 15th SI, N.B.
nlttt per wk. + lite ma.int. Brand new. Pvt 1'4 t y Works IQOd. n25 or bes! ol· C ~ D •
$ hrl per wk. Retired man 91)S...4853. .. I ===*=6!~3-4-525_*___ fer. 557-7456 Ulrvm raperlff
p~!,'d. Call 67>1Ml I---------+-WESTINGHOUSE fro&t·f?ft DK-orator d ~-~-'--------!* NICE-2 .ofas, rolt'" • 19'" SLIM Lt NE B&W rapery wor ... ......,., -~ retrig. White wlsquare cor-closing out ~ Ard t PRIVATE Christian achoo! odd chaira, la.mp11, end ill Portable UHF I VHF S35 ~ Y 1 o needs bus drlv!!:r, short coffee tables, ~Ink!:&. bl ners. Av a 11 12119, $100. Ph: 548-6529 ' . drapery fabric and made-up
hours. Will train. Good driv· ...... l · 830-5l64. drr-.perles. Mattirlals from ucu&-c0mp, oU n · gs, 23" RCA Color TV 75c a "ard and ,,,.,,,.,, in1 retard required. 18835 men's suits 40 auL SUPER 1970 db:. 30" Fria;a-M S251J 646-59 ~
I ra i ned. 540·6029; SCOTTIE and We1tie female
646-7115l 12/10 dots, both AKC. 147-2489
PUPPIES • German .12/11
Shepherd mix, ~ temale5, 1 "SAVE me from !he pound ."
male. R.eady for Chrl1tmaa. 8 wkl malr grey a. white
Ne.<! aood home1. ~~1B60 kitten 642-3323. 12/11 C.M. I:l/11
1 YR old black It white FREE marine p I y wood
l..abrador/German P lnscher scraps. 646-2377. 12n2
mix. Ccme1 w/lovely PETS and LIVESTOCK
hnmemade doa: house. Gooclll-----------1
w/chUdren. 83().5164 Peta, Gener•I -Brook h u r 11 , Fountain bureau It cheatM planters, dafn! elec, rang~; yellow; a pie. · 14 from S5 pair_ Sa.le start$
Valley. 962--3312. aarden rum . ...-...:.3214. used 2 mo. Sacriflct $125. Monday for one week ONLY. 11 PR~OUS PUpPle~ of CHINOllll.AS: Emqeney
496-2686 or 493-4196. · HJ.fl & Stereo 1110 3853 Birch St., NeWPOrt !!mall muc~ breed, Ready Illness rorces 1aeri!ice ot
RECEPTIONIST w I typing
& shorthand. Exp'd. Good
pay. 64Z-3472
* SALES MANAGER *
9' GOLD prln!' acfa, qUallty o;;c.:..:..::..::.:.:c::::::...,_.;::;.'.'.. Beach. 546-143!. adj, to Or. for Ch r 111 mas. 29-1 prime anirna.la a: equlpt
cons!. & cond. $135. Quttn a ti lllO MAGNAVOX Combo ange County Al"""n. 645-0487. 12/10 Call 536-2241 Anne p«an din's table. $50. "'n ques fstereo-AM/FMJ 5'1-~=.,...-'---·•:..cc-.::_ __
STOP • LOV~BLE. Sm breed beige CHINCHILLAS : Be i r• l
Doub!' bed & Hollywd TRUCK load of Oak. In time Console. Like n,w, Priv • SWAP 1,rr1er muc dog S mo. hsbrk atanda.rd w/cages,
frame Sl5. PlaUorm rocker for Christmas, China prt;y. 847-8507, Eve 9611-U7~. 548-6101 nds gd heme fncd yard. 1 642-ZSlt
Major land developer needs Sl5, 644-.5123, Harbor View Cabineti;, round lable1 . LONGIN ES Stereo record 2073 Newport Blvd., C.1.!, t6lf>-~~79~7~5:h--,'&1&-1~~<~93"__21~2/~l~OI:"========:'"" J
lemale Sal's Mgr. to Homes. school clocks, chest of player, 3 mn's old, sells for J:~t~o To5ny's BldRg tr~t.) Lo v A e LE 6 mo, G. Dogs 112.5
supervise 25 apartm,nt rtn-BEDS Custom corner set drawers&: Etc. (OH lit St) $80-·Asking $50. Call eves: rn; tove1; e 11'1; She pherd -Toy Co\Be,1-"="-------"=='I
tal a.aents. Min 2 yn col· w /spread 1, backrest 185 Pasadena Ave. 8-7 pm. 847-0323. & M\BC. female. Free 10 good home . JUST IN TIME P'OR
leae: ex""curc to sales pillows, table, cheap! $120. STORE WIDE SALE 4 s......i -rt bl I "It we don't have what you 531 •~•. 12/10 ChristmH ~ Al 2 . . '''''"' ..., a e a ereo v.•anf we'll I . t ' -u training pfOin.ms. P~I. SO pn twin 11.U un-EVERYTH.ING. ~% Off. Westinghouse. Detachable ' ge it or you' ONLY 2 Otriatmaa '"""l's* Male Maltese .. whir'. l'-'
age1 30-35 &: sing\,. Send matt'hed mattreases &r b:ii: Our way of 1aying Meny apeaken. $45. 962.-86811. COMP~ETE Eltt. train ,;et, le!t l male l female lull of yr:&, Reg_ * Sliver teacup
reliiume & salary history to; sprgs $25 pr. Ca.JI: 646-2021 . Chrl:slmas lo Our Cu11lomers 3 t"ng1nes w/cal'l'I, 2 levels fun make a cute pair 8 wks. female Poodlf!' * Black toy
LEADERSHIP HOUSING NEW floral Riviera. queen· MARY LYNN ·s ANTIQUES C•meras & on s!and. Orig, cogt S750. i 546-4639 1.ll 6 12/12 frmale Poodle. Nn pape_r1 •
SYSTEMS, INC. P.O. Box 11izc sleep couch. Very com· 2432 Newport Blvd, CJ\.f. Equipment 1300 Yr old, sell as is $250 all in· 4 Ad bl . . . cheap! * 646--0142 • 33J E.
2160, Newport Beach ct fortable. $225. Ccst $600. --· 1--"'=!:::"":.:..-_.=;:::I eluded. OUM:r toy• avail at .ora . e tiny niiniature 11th St. C.M.
phone (TI4l 642-4960 Call betote noon or lltt 6, Sewing Mlchlnff 1120 PENTEX Sportmatic F 1.4 50 10% of cost. 675-3003 or ~~ie ~ix puJe~ we:~::~ CHIHUAffiiAs . Re~
SALES PEOPLE w&nted tor 644--0SlS. S mm. Make offer. 673-5023. 968-2379 12/12 your puppy now in time tor
the fastest I row Ing CURVED Wet bar, blk naui. ACRI FIC E 1===="='='=238====ol9x12 Twa~-' h•· I 1 1~ Chr•'•lm•• F ·~ l 1910 Sing-oulo •lg·ug, •"lo ~. -0 carpe · "01• TALENTED Bl•ok t I · ' rom ~. ma e organization Jn the country. aold stud diamond pattern .... "' u Nausahyde chair & ottoman ema e or female. Stud servlct Ask lor Earl-Call 548-0971 Pf'rf cond. Fer home or pvt uullonholes, blind hems, ov. Sporting Goods 1500 S20. Trundle couch, $35. Coc:k-a-Poo, v er Y af-ll bl 1 I i1
Arn for appt. club. $3.iOlofr. 5fG....tlBJ. erc:ast, zig-zags, el!', w/out S S ae ;ge club chair 1~ All 4
1 !.c_7i4;5o7 n at t • Alter121
6
2· ~h_:ah~111 ~~r ::ir:! cf
1
ll[.
attachmenta, W/walnut con. KI • 215 Head competition ""· ;n 1 !er. ;,46-3634 •SALESWOMEN, e:ii:per·d. LIVlNG Room !'hair, light aole. $42.l2 full price, or w/blndi"I! $50. Boot!, sz good cond. Cail 644-4606.
lmmed. poaitions avail. See aqua/gold, 1hep !'asters smaJI P'Yffients. 54s-.o 12\,, plastic .$50, lthr $25. CANADIAN Lynx P e lt. BLACK &. gray atri?'d SHERRY'S POODLES
Mrs. Edwards, C ff R J s $50. Likt ,,w, 847 -. , .. , ~ 67o 1M o Be 1.1 ... 12550 D k female kitten 3 mo's . .......,, • 1()..7 dally. ,,... "-><"I 11.u l ... • ar walnut .... _,.,1.,. o.o 'us! all 1· 9 yrs expene. n«
FASHIONS, So. Cca1t 96&-1178. -'.::::.:'.:::;!;~~~---1;;;,;;tt;""'=,-,""°"'~-,-I do•k 6 d N ...., ~ .n\r'... b 1,;~,.,,,~------SPE WINDANSEA !IUrfboard .. rawen:, ev1mar pm. 12110 AIJ reed grooming. Ji'l'tt ~?-'~"'~·-------KINGSIZE Mattress & box CIAL 6'6". New $110 selling fo; lop, hke new. S75. 67~747 1:i=-,,==~~~.--,.c'I pick up &r. deliv,ry, Christ.
SALESGIRL for home decor 5prini, extra lirrn. &: linens. Repair any make, any model S75. Xlnt cond. 54~2629. eves. COLDS PO_T Rehigeralor mas pups in all colors.
shop. Apply btwn 1.S pm. Recllner chair, Both like ~~I ~u~d;~. h:~~). ~~~~: I H;;,E~A~D~D~H~~2l~S~w~/~So~lo~mo-n:l;;wiiol!ru.ollii'Faoo~k'7Ch'hiiild;;-;C~r.i:tt17'15 ~:~s _ re:i,ai~~! C0~41;; 546-2848
DANTE 'S Home Decor, 2482 o"~'~w~-=64=2-=9980~-· ~~--54:>-8238 bindings. Never used. Make volume .ut, -66. Like new after 6 p.m. 12111 TWO yr old male C.Olden
Newport Blvd, C.M. KROEHLER dining rm offer. 54g..1362 aft 6. $65. Beige acrilan carpet, Retriever "Champ," gold
SECRETARY. Sharp gal to walnut table w/pads, 6 ----------l'""~;Ci::..,OO::.:::.;-=--~I bound 14' x 18' &: 3'x4' $85 L~VABLE f'relendly 'Pl color. Choke chain.\ flta
v.'Ork in Quality Control ckall'I, bullet $300 or otr. Mu1fc1I SURFBOARD, xl n't cond. 548-0587 . Siamese fem ale br tabby col Family grievln&: • -R · t 2 7 Low Raller w/klt'k. 170. ' 31111 mo short haired l · ur:pt. equ1remen s • yrs. 14 -498.1. Instruments 1125 ca.l/ 64~5960 ~DY'S QullJity clothing: 538-l22S;. 836-44SJ .~110 REWARD. 549-3957
exp., H.S. grad, IYPt 55/60 LOVELY Sofa, never used, ==='~======! K1mberly-Le11ie Polmer Etc. . * CHRJSTMAS PUPPIES wpm. Good atartlng 1al1ry quilted nora, scott'hguarded 4 Pc. DRUM SET, red pearl, Mlscell•-·s 8600 Sizes: 14 • 16 • 14"1: • JS•.; _ BEAUT calico, yr old, fem, Cock11.poos. 6 wks. c Id. + frlnge bt"nellts. For inter· Sl2S. Maleh!~ loveaeat $15. + hi-hat, 22" cymbal, '-'-"-"=;;;;"-;;;;;:;:. __ =.::i tlll,i. CO$tume jewelry, Call well mannered. :n Id home. Really !'Ult & cuddly. Only
view appt. Ca1t Mn. Gon. 530-8337. throne, all access. Xlnt CHRISTMAS sp,clal _ for appl : 833-0534. Call anyt i me : flO ea
zaJez 492-1153 cond. $400 invest. -Sacrifice 644--0117 12/11 · · WALNUT bedroom set, triple $200. 548-5148 after 4 pm or Newporl Beach Tennis Club 2 • CO UC ff Es match/ · Corona del Mar 644-TTOR Secretary dresser, mirror, bookcase weekend memben;hip. SalO + trans. loveseat, dinette 1~1 c.mplt FREET~ gd ~mes l lovable DALMATIANS Ch I bred.
Pl••h offi-. Typing 60, S.H. headboard, niaht sland. Xlnt fer fee , 962-6549 after 6. King-sz bed, coffee' tbl, Ir blk trrrier mt...:ed pups 3 It. 4 Take home Chri1tmu or wk '""' DAVrNCI 1.1M 1peciaJ pro-mo foo:I yards 1 ~1766 llD, Call Lorraine, Weslcliff cond. SlOO. 494-1788 feliialonal accordion wlelec· TENT for sale. JD'-'<14' tent rehig. Lido Jslf'. 613-0487 · · before. Top cond. Pvt Pty:
Personnel As ency, 2043 DECORATOR Mi rrors. Ironic pi r.k-up Jar with floor. All stakes and Afr 3. aft Sor 836-4
493
·
12110
642-1937
We5tclift Dr .• N.B. la mps, diests. beds, pain-amplification & special lone po.les included. $35.00. Call BICYCLES, Stingra.y1, nictly FR.EE to iood home. Cute • GERMAN Sh.orlha lr
,.. SECRETARY-Ma.rk,tlng. lingg, chairs. dishes, affects. Fraction oric cost. 841·8268. painted, good cond., reason. mixed up pu~py 1'male 7 Pointer, 6 mo, ready for
90 Shd, 65 typing, min. 5 yn; l ='~'~,;~''~'=~~·~646-C"C~"'~"-~-962-8454. MOVING . Player piano & able, OtMr milt'. blke1. Mini ~~~Id S42--:i29f Ill i;~~ training, AKC reg. Line ot
mfg, exper. Gd. hen's. S500 ENGLISH Period tum. Cur\/· SLINGERLAND Profe~sional stool . relnsh, 60 roils incld. bike 4 HP Cat, xlnt $95. lield champions. 644-5194
to start. Columbia YachU ed sofa-loose cushion drum aet. Black Mother of Misc turn pieces, Ranch 64:Z..l272. AI?ORABLE 8 wk old .calico SCHNAUZER Pups for
540-7070. bk/chr &. coffee t b I. Pearl. Like new S225. 80 Oak Sets, Christmas roof 1·150.000 B.T.U. Day &: Night ki.t~ei"g pe~fecl t Ch~i~m;~ Chrlstma!I. Best Chap/P~d
SERVICE STA SALESMAN 644-0928. Basa Accord ian $30. 10-1 top acene -5 train cars, furnace, exterior mountine: gi 1' as u • Bolton: Dys: 54 7-9561 ,
exper'd. neat in appearance. BEOROOM SET-Level)' an· Sunday. 948 Pisularino, Cttf. elves Etc. 644-2677 SlOO, Contact Mr. Laney or
544
-l096.
12111
Eves; 494-3573
Full and part lime. 2500 tique white w/2 1ide tabl,s, ROTH Coronet $'75. Roth UPRIGHT Piano, S 2 2 5, Mn, Gretnrria.n at the l -SIAM.ESE, l-lons h 11. i r AFGHAN AKC Fem Whitt:
Newport Blvd. C.M. $50. Triple dresser&. mirror trombone S75, N 0 b I e 1 Guitar w I c a 1 e S 2 O. DAlLY PlLOT, 330 W, Bay, btacli:d ki1te39.,6 mo'sO Both w/blk mask. Cham~ bloo!1·
SERVICE Sta. help, tull time $."JO. ~1925. clarinet S120. Artley Flute Stereo-pl1ono AM /FM con· Costa M,sa, ~49; • -54 II J 2~1 r, line, Hsebrkn. Show or pet.
11\.\lll"IC ube man. key po111ion for TOUCH And sew Sina~r " ,,.,,... ,... '°',"",...PERSONNEL 1 · 1125. 0•0 t!41. .50le S25, Port. TV & Stand •cTION · · Will hold tor Christmas. SERVI right man . Must be exper'd. never used $175. Trundle CONN CORONET, very gd. $15. lJ&-3839 alter 5 pm . MAINTLNANCE COMPANY FREE kittens -1806 Portl~6476-71~658~·---~~=~I
CARR IER CES•ACEN(y ALSO: part time sraveyd. bed Lt. oak. Pract. ne\\' cond. Appraised $75. Bat ofr CARPET Jaye~. have sh~g Olllce &: Housecleaning Barmouth, N.B, 644-7127. UIASA Apso puppie .. AKC, 9
* CASHIER -?o1aturt: wo.
man, tun time_ Xlnt oppor.
tunity. Apply: Jim William•,
• SUverwoods, No, 45,
Fuhion 1.sla.nd, N.B.
488 E. 17th (at Irvine) C.M. & wk end nights. Richlield, SIOO. 6'1>-5632. lakes &t~2475. upt1 deal direct, exp In· Guar. Satisfaction. Free est. 12112 wks. Christmas gift for en. BOYS 642·1470 19th & Newport. C.M. MOVING-Piano, Spanish e TROi\fBONE W/CASE stall, can tin. 539-8327, 531-3375 NEED rd home lor grey lire fam ily. Pet, show quall-
WANTED
. SERVICE STATION AT· couch, Hi-Fi, leather chair, e Like new S60 e ~·~'7~"7=4-0""==~cc--cc--I FOR sale: Use!'! 4· nuorts· ~~~ cat; fem, g ;;i7~~ ty, S150-$200. ~2a:M.
LADY To cook for 2 elderly TENDANT all zhifts open. Washer. Relri1 & misc. See • 545-5862 • MOTORCYCLE Tr a I t er , cent fixtures, S5 each, as is, -· POODLES -Standard, AKC
ladles Sat & Sun, 673-32&4, Apply in penon, 4678 CAm-Saf at 218 Jaamlne, CdM. F'OR Sale-Four pickup guitar holds 4 bikes $90. IVlcLanc Contact Mr. Laney or Mrs. KITI'ENS, Part Slameae & Champ. sired, show quality,
tor the B11lboa. pus Dr., Newpt Sch. ' 2 TURQUOISE occasional & 15 \.\'at! amp. Excellent edser. used: cnce, $60. Greenman. Daily Pilot, 330 domestic. 7 wks to 12 wk5. black. 2 mo. Christmas. DAILY PILOT LVN, 3-11 shift, medications SERV. estab. Fuller Brush chairs. Sc:otchgu1rded. Xlnt cond. sso. 642-2683. 646-1135. WtEI Bay, Costa Mesa 897-5480 or 836-4493. 12/12 492-8364
Dana Point, San Juan Park Lido Convalescent rte, $125-$175 wk. 10 at., also cond. $50 ea. 962-9762. VIOLIN-Xln! Cond. New 4 & 8 TRACK tape deck. Us· TECHN ICOLOR CAZZETTE LARGE watch dog needs AIREDALE Puppie1: AKC
Capistrano and Hospital, 642--2410. pt time. 546-5745 KlNGSIZE Bed s1s, D~sser Boii• & Xrra "E" String ed: 2 months. Have orig. PROJECTOR, mini console, horn' without children. Born 9111170. $125 ea. ref
Capistrano Bt:ach. MAINTENANCE MAN THE DAIL y PILOT $20, Stack tablea $8, 646--3398 &14-ll'A32, 675--1 9;)]'. '-sale~ sllp. Beat o t I er 8 rolls adventure It. cartoon 492-7344 12112 litter/champ p' di I re e .
Contact Mr. Seay nt Corona del Mar Apt com· be.Iott 6 pm. 548-6502. l!lms. Value $~50. Best or-2 Medium-sized dogs needi="""=~""=~~-~~~-I DAILY PILOT ple:ii:, 51,., day week. Must h:~.0Q:: ~ ~ JAKE'S Used Ev,rylhing !er, 545-3767. good homes. 1 Poodle, 1 GERMAN Sheph,rds, for
San Oemente oUice have aeneraJ knowledge ot men' a department. Applicant P ianos & Org•n• 1130 Buy-Se I I-Trade. Color'l ·A~NT=I~Q~u=E~~O~rt-.,--l!-9-2, Yorkshire. 8944839 12/12 stle or Ira.de, AKC. Cham-
305 N. Et Camino Ret.J janitorial, plumbing & elec. must be able to report, Office Furniture I010 :!! NOTICE !'.I Co_n•I. 21 .. TV $125. Port 1V handc11.rved. S350.' Tteadle BLACK Kitten haa ahols. pion show atcck. 6 wk! old.
49J.4420 ll'ica.l, Pleasant working con-write clearly, underitand Retln'd 34xfi0 wood desks, we have pu t every Plano &: $23. 117 E. 18th, CM. sewini ma c h In e $40. Adults only 54g..3339 1111 7 1 _894-4~-"-'-·~------
COASTAL AGENCY dllions w/pald Ina, & vaca-Lssentials of photography & $69.SO e Relin'd wood arm Organ on Christmas Sale tor *MINK STOL&12 sk in fully 64~1289. PM 12/10 CHRISfMAS puppies IAKC\.
A membtr of t!on, Permanent S?'cily layout. Top company bene. rotary chain, $29.SO e We • cll!an sweep sellout! New, ll't out Emba Tourmaline.1 't~/=3-CA=R~A7T"'".~35~p-.,--.. -,-al GREEN Euly Amerlt'an Small min poodles. Will
Snellina: I: Snelling Inc. a,p, ex?'rience & referenc. fits, rood salary, attractive have the largest selection uaed , •hopwcrn &:. discon-Xlnt quality, Xlnt cond. ~ddlna set. Never httn u~ sofa. lSffi Orange Ave. hold till ~hristmai. Shot& Ir
The World's L•rgett ~io~rlte box MlOS6 Daily new quarters. Apply in writ· of used office fUrt'I in lhlli tinucd mode\5. Some. at or $400. &16-8771. ed. Cost $375. Best otter. See In alley 2/10 puppy clipped. 962-2195.
Professfon•I Jng on1y, cltln1 ,xperience, area. near dealer's cost · ~me at PLASTIC Lamina!' VE'ncling 544-0617 BLACK w/whlte markings, MINIATURE Black Poodle
Employm.,,t Service MAN who knowg boat pro-background &. education io Me ~faha.n Desk roat-plu!. For a money sav. m.1!.chlne, ntw. 1200. Dinetlel•c~A~RP=ET=-1~.,-.,-h-,-,-h-1~.1~,.-, coc:k-a·poo/ terrier puppies. pups. AKC R,_s I 1 re r~ d.
2'190 Harbor Bl, CM 540-6055 ducts & service proprietors t.faraaret Greenman, Per-1800 Newport Blvd, Ing dl!al en qua lit Y tb!, 4 chail'li 135, Baby crib shags 11 fantastic iavinga' 642.-0357. 12/10 Creal ror Christmaa sifts.
Harbor Blvd. at Adamt1 ~7-s.;;~2.advt Dec .·Feb. 10nne:l Manager, Box 1560, 642-8450 ~.~r~~d~~{u. s:o:r1':'vr~a~ &: chest. S35. 84Z-8772. Free est. will plta ae : CUTE male puppy • part 540-1752. .
COS:.tETIC SAL!:S: NEW Cost-Mesa, Calif. 92626. Sun all. ELECTRONIC Eqt.-scopc, 871-9951 Germ an Shepherd . e SPRINGER . Spa:niel Gun
fan ta s I le Product . MECHANIC for marine • WANTED • G1reg• Sile IOt2 WARD'S BALD\VIN sruotO VlV~1. sine-square • i g ·''POO=~L-~T~•7b~l,-,-~.~,,,-.,-..,~.,-k 642-1411 12/U Doss. pick of htter,
Guaranteed c l ientele , ;achinery en small bofts. Ceramic TUe Layer 11119 Newport, C.M, &12-8484 ge~., hl.li aystem plus 'n $269.95 & up, Chud<'s Bowl-SHELTIE cockapoo 11,9. wks, Call ~73
.546-3904 me •xper. in diesel &: And OCCASIONAL Ch11.ln: 8' S I Lp ,;, &14-6285. Ing & Billiarda, 2'150 Harbor fem . id w I ch Id r n . BOSTON Temtr pups. AKC, ele~trleal work. 548-9617 Linollum Llllyer M>fa: \l.'lng ch11.lr: Kenmore P net Piano $295 MAGNAVOX combo (11terro-Blvd., C.M. 540-7340. 962-7631J 12110 9 wks, $125.
COCKTAIL Waltr'M5 youn.:. da.ys & evei. for small job ln Fullerton. v.·asher & dryer: 'fypewriter Thom•• Organ $195 Artt/FMl, :;· Con80te. Likt RELAX-A-CIZOR lou in-· • 54~2301 • !.~ctive9.h AStppC. lnM ptrJOn. 87S-5758 table; Small meta.I desk; 100 New & Used new. Priv prly. 847.8507, ches be foft' ~Ilda"•. a FREE T~ qual Mme beaut IDEAL FOR CHRISTMAS -
'"" W • 1 t · · · il Ch r l s t ma 1 decora.11 .. ns, Pianos 'Cn Sal~ E ....,o J Iona: ha.irtd calico female newport WOl\IEN .... ·anted for caM "' ves """"llTII, P'rf"ct gifl, Pat'kaled like ....... 13 "/'" Black Lll.b1'1ldoodle1. 6 wk! COOK -Hllusekeeper lite • dresse!I, coat1, aweaters & a.ac:h Music Cent•r '" .u u. 1 61' ~11 " 1 el coverin;; & ltf!. usembly. 2 Dbl beds, t w/match ne\.\'. 5-I0-9.'138. -;;M;:C.;c;;r;;;;;;-s;;;o;;;<;;d,ll,'~d,'d-~·~~~·-.~~-~I nW'!lirl&du11e1. Lve-in. Mon pe~onn 875 "C". "'· 1~,h St. Ap-Hand Knita, 1ize &-10, etc. Huntln.:ton Bch. 847-8536 FEMALE German Shepherd. thru Thurs. Sl 7 J day , 1.J ti Anytime. 646-811()2 ( 164 6 WURLITZER Baby '"""nd dresser. Refrig, Gaa stove. e SKI lamilics reserve now! silver, 9 mo, to good home. LONG-Haired Dachah und1,
•-.,c._ P cations accepted Sa I . t-·l~B ti "''" Che11.p, mu st sell. &12-1920. Cabin at M11mmoth Mnt. •••tt'" '"ilO AKC.. hlack & Ian. IdeO] !or ·~· agency De 12 h • y on;-11.YCrei ' pill.no model 1500. Brand '"'"" ,,.. ~ COOK-houaekee,.r, C.M. g c.. 1 · NEW Se11r's girt'5 b!cy,lc 3 Sips 7, Jo"irepl, elc $18-U) -::j~;;;,~~.-;;;"'-;;;;};l~°'~"~"~m~•~·~· !"6-~3~14~7~. __ J GAR.AGE SAU:: 1215170, new. m&hoa:, List prlee 1_..,,a, S40. · per day. 5.ll·3~74 day!I. FAT orange l while male SMALL y rksh' T ~
to 5. Eldtrly couple, 1 an ln-833 Dover Drive Schoolt·lnttructton 7600 10 AM , 2145 Colleae, Costa \\'/ta:ii: S..le price $1600 ~''" cat fn:e to good home 0 ire tr-ntr valld, 64&J.IO(I , Ne"'POrt Bt:ach ,.fesa. Ladies bowllna: bal. cash, 11ve SIOOO for • &l j...,39.17 * TROMBONE w/cast', like 830-!164. l2/t0 pupple1. AKC. Will hold til
642-3870 COSTA MESA ball shoe11, golf club, like Chrllltm11s, 9fi2...6,328. NEW Black leathl!r couch & new SGO: Kodak co pier $25: ,;;o.:.,.:;;,;;,.,,,~-~~-"";.;;;I Olrlstma11. ~7~22 aft fl COUNTER GIRL. part tlme G 1 130 c.,,, c..,,., SIAMESEfRussian Blue eat.. , .
11.1k. ends. cwr 18. Chow PRE0SCHOOL new, toys, clothe~. odds k EBONY Fiaht:r Baby Grand. Spanish gun case, Ill 1 ove · .J"O.r..JO<U. 1 yr old . Looks Ruasian COCKAPOOS..A.donb\11 blk
lkll Reslaun111'1!, ~ s 76 Dir of Planning IS!t-l Monrovia. ~ Jlly + ~nds of f\irnlture. You name What a beavt Chrlstmu • * 615-4678 * • WF; LMn·BuY·Sclll anylhlnt Slut. 6'rMlllT. 12/1.1 & ""'hilt 1potted, 7 wks old.
Newport Blvd., C.~f-To D>.OCO. BA In ll'C'hltee. Full da.y acplom. Pian. ii ~ v.-e've probably IOI it! p"'scnt! SU95 owner . CANOPY Bed, In a lovely Coaat Pawn &: Auction. 2426 S5 each. 615--3343. l 'D:ENT=:,.,.AL~=REC=~E~PTl=O~N~l=!rr~-.1 1ure/c1vil enw. J..S yrs R.E., ned program, hOI IUJ'l('M's. SOFA bed, rattan !umiture, 613-2259, 644--5972 antique white, $65. ?olatchina Newport~. 64~ K11iEN, 6 wka, plma~,l * * LOVE f'OR SALE. AKC
l11nd develop~nt or plan-Ag,sz.G hrs6·30arn.fipm I ltou hold-vi •-1. Id tbl 110 .,.,.., FIR o rin1;t tabby BJ ' f G Dtak only. Dp'd, Profidenl • · • m IC !If.! 11"""'• """"' n!OM.AS ORGAN I e. 1· ea . .,...,........, EWOOD 114T-7;iJ5 12111 11.wn. reat O.ne1, 7 wks.
with i,.llnllnct. Afttmonn to nlfli bc:kQTnd. $18 wk, Compare! 642-4050 •'60 TR-l for p&rta E.'C. cond, "l.a~nce Welk" PIN Pool Table, u!ed t \\'It. F~ dt>Uvery. 891,1658 ..::.:fi~u:'i'On'io.:C~~j~!l68-~53~18~.=""'~--~-1 "-11 • 9 ) e r 838-5237. Startlna at noon on Slit. ,,,00,1, Sacrlfl-II"~ •--. ~.1 11~ •-it , 17• NI 2 rEMAl.E Terrier Cocktr ev. ...... .. • pm I l()me Mkt M I===-~---~-._.. ~ un. '-In ,,.,.,,.., .or ;), ce -· P"PPltl. 8(2...367& 12/U y 0 R K s It I R ~ puppie1,
S.t'a, s.Jary opcon, trinae ng 1nager PIANO Le1sons )1>Ul" home I i'ii"i:'2;;·.,"';:;,,;:C;;;ol.::toc;";,· i'Nii.B'i.-c i.::•::c•l:::l':''!J"'~·..'5<~3'~3~1.!.71'.:..___ Chrl1tmu Cift. 8.'8-J233 M iac. W•nted 1610 R.e1tdy for Chri1tmu AKC
b9nefifl. Ph: anytime IH.3. To $1 .IXXI. R.E., land cjtvtl· Certified teachers. Mulllc ESTA1'E Sale • 210 Polnset· HA~t~tOND model M . 31 'su"°"M"-<:=YM=:~Sl~l~&h~tl>c'--CU~,..~.11;o.;=,_;.;.;c:;:.:::::.._...::= Frff Pupple1 lor Cl\rlstmu reg 673-71143. '
am) • am-I pm St&-~ cprn..nt. De.re e prcrd. syatcmL Mr. H., h c:c ck . tla, CdM. F'rl, Sat ,, Sun, Spine! o-n. $600/ Ph: MUST SEU.. • w ANTED • * ~fi.l374 • 12111 st• :..y Terrier ~·-.. •Ve '°"=='"""===· ===-' Ideally v.-ould blv, ft..I 1in-tu •~t<> ...._ ll 12 o l' 10 5 ·•-""° ... ur., ftA 1i:>ENTAL RECEPTIONJST . a:le t&mJly apt A mobile .....,..L>OO lJ"<'c.T • · « "'h am to 54!>-6477 =,,*,,,""""",.,,--•~''-'-''°-*~-I MARINE PRODUCT COCK.a-poo, 3 mo old malt. reg, Will hold ·11 1
l>Mt: only, Mu.at havt dental park, TAHITIAN &. Hula CIAs1t1 I ='"m".=-';..'"';:''°'',.c°',;.'.,,.,· ==~ BALJ)WIN Oraan &: tptllker. SMI'J'll-Corone Coronel tlec-PUMP &IMM'l. 12/10 Chrt.tmas. &J0..5169 aft :J.
orr. eltPH', 1111U1StlOP:, .act:IJ ~!!!!!BB!••!!!!!"""'""' I 8)' MitlhJokalana. PhOne STOVE, FURNITURE , Uke new, tull p e d a I tric l)Ortablc l)'f>('wrltcr. 21;4" \n111ke. 2" output, F'REE Pu.J)py 9 \\·etkl, f'hll· U30 rec, ok, mcmt 8ofnt Safa. THE "Yfllo1" Pa&e•" of 646-2012 alter l PM. MISCELL, Sat .l Sun. tl8J kf!ybo8rd. $1600. 644-4277. Neatly new. $85, ~~. 646-5361 fy tan ooleffil 542.8043 12/ll Hor•••
C! .. i .. ---.....__. .. ,, t ft ... P l l *POPUL•R p1•Nru... Wallace, Cotta ~1tu .. ~~ optn, ...... ,..05 uc.-no:u . c: at111ied. •• ~y 'O t ,.. ,.. "JI( LO\VREY Spinet organ. dbl AMY, 8' x 4' POOL e WANTED e f"REE RAbb1t1 to rood REGISTER.ED \t b ti 1
Ph: •Jt)'ti.me, (H.B. artal Sen1ce Director)'. Check It Ltuona In hotrlf'. S2!S mo. S•t • G•r•ge S•le •Sun kt'yboard, blonde. xlnt COD<'.• TABLE. $1~ • 3-WMel Cu1hmari hOn'U!I 54~7865 U/10 2\i yrs old. ~a bfo~:
S am.f pm, NS-3540. fQr tbt Hn'lce )'Dll need. • S4&.:m9 • 32ot A. Marruerhe, CdM MO\-lnc-oc $350. 54Wl46. ___ *_6'_<_-0_1_5<_• ___ •. __ ..;c_ALL;,,,;,_963--1867:.::,,;.;,:.;_ __ 1rREE puppl~.11 &fl.8937 1.2/U S@ ar trade. MU703.
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PITS ind LIVllTOC.K TRANSP'OllTATION
Hera•• 1130 Marine Equip. tOU
CARVED We1tern Saddl•. Chr1•t1n111 "Give A\\'11y" iale
••rldle bfl11, bre:a1t t.'flllllr, 8' nipper 5a!I bQals $16$.
tapklero1 6 bridle. Braul. 11' A 15' run1.boul1 M5.
Chrl1tma1 (if!! 3'11)..(H28 ti' (•aooe/12' 1kllf SI.rt.
eve1. Pt10ne 616-!NXIO I 64~
F.NGLJSH 1addle \\'/all lit---·
tin1ts S~. AlllO youth 11i1.e Bo•t Slip Mooring toS6
wea!er11 saddle S60. Xlnl
cond. '494-11118 alt 5:SO.
Q U A RTE 'K Thorou1hbttd
mare. Swtet <l ispo1lllon '
apirHcd. $425, Call 61~1
afler 3 PM .
Re1l1te~ Qual'ler Jlorae
2 yr old, Mu1t sell
&14-8407 • 675-3770
8 MO old Chestnut coll.
Parentagr. '1 Qtr Ir 19 Ap-
paloo~a. Well ten1pe.rl'd.
•All 5: 645-1794•
IF You v.·ould like lo buy a
nice. lively pony f o r
Chrl11ma1, call MG-al02 aft
S:30 PM .
TRANSPORTATION
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
1'fid.,.,·11y -Croon -Alool -
l1land -ALIMONY
Definition n! a bachelor: A
man who has cheatet1 some
worthy woman out of he r A~
IMONY.
• ~· SLIP. Choice loca tion,
ample parkln1.
545.1 401
BOAT Slips available 26 lo fO
Ct. Newport Beach,
673-664)i
Bott Ch1rter
Chri111na1 l>oat parade
yachts available
6 pn1 Iii !/De<> lR-23
i.:1111 EH&-9000 I 64!">--0KR.i
Chrislmas Weck Charter
32' Twin-screw Chris
avall, ** ~1-2434
Mobile Home• '200
1U:t?111t?l!l•I•!U1"i
• Southern California's
FINEST
ADULT PARK
SURROUNDED BY
ORANGE GROVES AND
AGRICULTURE
. $300.1XXJ
RECREATION CENTER
Dtle1 $1.00/Mo, Per Cou ple
NO ENTREE FEE·PET 0 .K.
14 MODELS
ON DISPLAY
WANT TO ?tlOVE IN NOW!
G. M. C.
TRUCK CENTER·
CALL 546 -6750
24 hr. Phone
SALES e SERVICE
UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Blvd., Coit• M•••
Motorcycle• f300 Truclc1 __ _,_ ___ _ '500
nn.n.l'U"I
THINI
HONDA ..
''fRIEDLAHDER'1
'61 FORD FIDO
Picku11. VR, l li()t'ed, wllh ov-
f'rdr1\'t>, 8 ft , bfod, traded hy
nrlg1naJ O\\'ner drivt'n l'.lnly
42,000 mUea. Lie, GIG846.
~777 .
Johnson & Son
262fi !!~rtx"tr, c.~.f.
'66 FORD l1·TON
Cu~lutn cab. bucket sra(s,
ra11ger piu·kage dlr. Ca1np-
er equipped, 1i'slut1 \\'Ill
lake car in trade or liflRnC"e
pri\•ate pa11y. 54&.1736 or
~9~-6811.
'55 f'orrl Pick-up. 6 C)'I. gllflrl
herf. Very good corn!, $350.
IW7-186.1.
1951 Forrl 11 Ton Pickup.
Good cotlf'iH ion S350
• 64l-11!"193 •
Campers
FALL CAMPER
CLEARANCE
9520
DATSUN
REPOSSESSION
'69 2000 ROADSTER
j SJ)H'd trans., pre • spec
1·hrome ""'herls. rect ,x1er-.
1nr., plush hlark Interior.
Cost $.WOO, Mu.at 11.crifice!
Take old rrade or v.•111 fin.
11nre pvt. pty. ZNV731 dlr.
Art 10 A~t call Maury
Mll-:110ll ur 494-7500.
DOT DATSUN
OPEN DAILY
AND
SUNDAYS
18835 Cea~b Blvd.
Hunti111ton Beach
842-7781 or Y.0-04.il
'71 DATSUN PICKUP
Used • IU.rl io, heater, 11!ep
hun1pt'r, rllr. Pin strippinJ::.
\\/lit ta~ car in trade or will
fitt11n~<e pr t vat c part)'·
~().f:T36 or 49-1-681 J.
'68 DATSUN PICKUP
rt:u1 irt, hea ter, 1ilr .. 4 1peed,
! \VPP 762) Will lake car in
!Tade or linance privllte par.
IY. M(i.8736 or 49t-6811.
1970 DATSUN 240 Z, a ir &
11111'!&, 2,000 tlli .. S4.800 lirn11
5:~9620 or 846-!19~7
e "6.i DATSUN P.U. J.11\E
NI::\\'! Rchlt eng-R/H-4
iiprl. 673-3244.
FERRARI
FERRARI Ov~r a dozen hrand new 8 Ne"lXlrt lmp:irls Ltri. Or-
BEAUTIFUL 1970 B"n"•"<'ll• ft. lo ll IL can1per1 no\\' AnJ:e County's only author-
16' Convertible 1970 Ouchila
a:las11 boat, 40 hp Evinrude,
VanllOn lrlr & all extras.
Absolutely new cond. \\'ill
sell for balance owed, $2'135.
Call 642-1 "2 art 5 or wknds.
F isherman's Delighl, 18'
Thurnlerblrrl run-ahou!, J.'l!I
hp OP.1C g\ern drive eni;:-. 60
jj:/l.I ga~ cap., olher extras.
Bruit &. trlr. $2200. 54;>-111 48.
SABOT sailing dinghy. Br11nrl
11e1v. Sacrifice. AIM l~'
fibe1"glas1 canoe, ui;ed once.
968-8873 eves Ir v.'knds
. ... " • .&la~hed to 17.erl de11.lr.r.
Double Wides Stt Up i:1i~::h. ('n~~.ry P~~·(·h!~~ri s49 .~i~~L SAi:-~~~~~~~:~TS
C I WI h April 1!l70. 011 nf'r n1u1if srll FACTOllY
omp ete t rlue lo illness. Asklng $l:F.in. IN¥01CI Ne1P.'}X>rt Beach
JAGUAR
JAGUAR
HEADQUARTERS
The only authottzed JAGUAR
Maler iii Utt tnUro H.atbor .,.L
C.omplelt.I
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
BAUER
BUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
234 £. lTlh Street
548-7765
9600 lmporttd Auto• -PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN
VW LEASING '68 TARGA 912 • Ta..'" &. l.ic, IX>~n
A lle•ut)'. (700Al~TJ 011ly e S:i().87 per nionth
$4795 • :16 month open end leut
1971 VW DVK
DON BURNS , AT
Ponch• Audi, l TD. CHICK IVERSON
1:1631 ll1u·bor Blvd. ti3t;.:l:l33 VW Just~-ol Gerrlen C:m\·e •\\-y, 1910 llARBOR BLVD,
COSTA M~A "Bl::AUTl •"UL." 67 912 Tarp ~~~=~=~~-=
NP\\' 111otur, paint, pit•rlli•. '69 VW SEDAN
l\h1i;:a 5 sr.11'1. Konl• -•· ·r d & A.\1/~'M/SW Blk lealh tnl. Auton1"11c ~tic.._ ~h! I ra 10
li46-ll64 heater, {' \\'S3491
$1799
SAAB Harbour V.W. 111AC~NlrJCENT ·;,,~ Ja11:uar Authorized Deal~r
XK 140 Rnarlster. \Vi rt 11·!)15 Sille• • !M>rvice • Parts
A renlovahle hard!op. Must • 18711 R~·Acll RI 842-4435 sell imnied. l~t olt~r at Sonet Coupe,s In Stotk ~ · •,
$400 Call 67M>1-0l 0 T Oran2e County 1 Nf'\\·e11c Dlt.1 __ H_U_N~T~l~N~G~TO=N=R=>:_A_CH __ "'"°'"'" 27:111 """''"' o,, COAST IMPORTS WANTED Cd1\t I'll pay lop dolla-for your
KARMANN GHIA ot Or11nge Co1111ty Inc.
1200 \V. rncilic Cl'.IMt J1wy.
642-0406 • 546-4529
VOLKS\VAGEN today. Call
and nsk for Ron P!nchot.
549.3031 Ext. 66-6.·. 673·0900.
KAnMANN Ghia '6!), Xlnl·----------1• 1970 V\\' AUS . Good con-l .. lrld, lo 111i's, blk \\'/wh int 1 · diBor1. $2695.
PrieeJ to sell ~7-44$. TOYOTA c,11 •" 1•'>'. &1s.1"'7 '6f1 KARP.1ANN G lllA. Xlnll----------·loo=---=;--,=,-,,=:--::= l'iltld . On11:. O\\'ner. Rc~I of-PUT A '63 V\V Bug..C.l~sn, ne~iy
fr r. 64:.!-25115 eltl'r 7 pn1, rcblt en(.!tnE". $600. ~. Toy 9am-5p111, :\lnn-Frl.
'66 Karm•nn Ghia
(;nod l~111d, SIO.iO. ti73-l105 OTA '64 YW SEDAN
MERCEDES BENZ
Q, .lll')t' County ~
L '' n, ,1 s .. 1.,.:t10 11
N· ,, & u,, n
f,\f?• c»d•·"> Benz
Jim Sl emons Imps.
v.,<1n t·r & M,11 n St
Santa Ana 546 4 114
'I
~ dr Sedan, xlnt conrl1tion
$!11WJ -193-1018
MG
Radio &. lil'fllrr. (JFK402) Jn Your S tncking for Xmas $875 Frl'.l111 Dean Lewis
Harbour V .W. ...Deon LW!iA
.IMPORTS 18711 REACll BL. 812-4435
HUNl.JNGTON BEACH 1966 1111..rhnr, C,,\I. 646-9.'!03
'69 TOYOTA '66 vw Sunroof
Corolla Station W•gon Jmmaculale oond ition, Yellow
\\'hi!e w/blark lntcrior, Like \l'ilh pin strippini::-, new tires
new_ Lie, X\VZ!l28 & engine Guaranteed for 90
$1 299 days. Lie. VPT905.
CHICK IVERSON CHlcJ'~~ERSON
'16' OUTBOARD, trlr. '.l5hp
Evinrude, elec start, i\lany
.>t:lrall, aacritice S 5 5 O,
673-5817.
Awnings, Skirting, T•x Jo'or !nlormation 1.:aU ~1r. Pnsili\'l'I•' flO added dr.11.lr' 642.S.105 r 540-1764
& L• M C J, c · 11 / J Aurhorizetl Fernn1 Dealer 1----------·I IC. nrl'uion, ye 11y, 4 charge.11! 'E1•ery unit r!'arly I=============== MG 549~3\ ~~ 66 ., 61 vw
1970 HARBOR BLVD. M9-3031 Exl, 66 of' 67
14' Pleasure Ski, elcc 1t11rt 35
H.P. Suntop. Trai.ler. $495 or
best. 646-5537.
AU. NEW OYSTER : 8' Fold.
in&· fi bf'rglass Calamaran
dinghy $250. 673-4923
s .. 11bo1ta 9010
CHRISTMAS SALE
FOR A
BOATING NEW YEAR e COLUMBIA T.l e LAPWOR111 24 e YANKEE 21 e CORONADO 25 e CORONADO 27
''ACHTS ROYALE INC.
2912 W. Coas! Hwy. 64~10
RENEGADE
of
NEWPORT
Famou1 ~· Topg'J culler,
die.sel, A.P .• 1 bags o! sails,
every possible equipment to
go anywhe1e i'l lhe v.·orld.
Aakina: $9500. 64&.1914 Eve.
CHRISTMAS GIFT e NEW SABOTS -$269,
Complete
YACHTS ROVALE INC.
2912 W. Coast Hwy, 64~10
\\iOULD You like use of 40
Kelch! Jn e"change for
sm/10&11 fully secu r e d .
Rt-fore .You buy a ~ailhoat,
invealigate this. 67f>-2400.
161s' 505. E"tremely las l.
good cond. Full race. J ih .\
spinnaker & trlr. $12.JO. Call
eve11. 21~/966--8033.
SABOT, Semi racinR: equip1.
Xln! sailing 1..<0nd. Evrs
after 6, anytime V.'kends,
644--4177.
CORONADO 25 No. 596. By
From $9999 (Ser, 71691 1_4_96-_IOO_l _______ 1 for lmn1erliate installation on Sa.lei, Se1vice, Parts
FINANCING AVAILABLE 1WO 1970 Honda Trail 70 your ll'Ut'k or a new 19n! FIAT lm111t'diale Delivery, COSTA r..1ESA 1970 HARBOn BLVD .
Dl.-R. TR 193 bikt>s, like ™'"'" lnw THEODORE All ?tlodets COSTA l\1ESA '71 TOYOTA'S '66 VW BUS "'""'" ""' ... Two "'" ROBINS FORD mfl 14851 JEFFREY RD helmels, SIU ea. Also 11u10 ~a .
s Mr. souTH o .. • 1·usT1~. I ;,;o~o;'..,\ri~:u:-';r~:i;~-":-·MM~~~l>:·.:-"'1:.-••• I 'coc;;~'/.-··~~._.':;.s"~As_o_n_s_L-'-'~';~;<J-"'~1~0 I .. ~
% MI. souTH o~· Porche nn•Ks. New tires '64 Ford Camper Yan
SANTA ANA FRWY, $140 T\\'O Bell hrln11•1s Sl.'i
11* ~1 1. NO. o~· f'Rr h. All $650 call 548--61).1 Con1pletcly e11uipre•I "''il h
81\N DIEGO FWY .)' ALMO~'T New Molorcyl·lt>ll pop toµ, ice box, slove, rl lr .
Suzuki 50, $275, Suzuki l:ZO, Radlal lire~. l O\\'ller. (UED-
(7141132-1515 S•f.O. Pri\·ate party. 10~) \\/ill lake car in n·ade
&t:Ml283. or finant.-e. 546-3736 or
Triple Wide Corn•ll DIRT Bikf's: SarrifiC'e Nrw i -'~'~1-6"_l_1. ______ _ Hill crest e Flamingo
Paran1ount e Universal ~!~rl~«D~~~~~9~~~2~Q New 171 Datsun
Bat·rington • Broadmoor or ~>t.">--0807 161): OllC, Pickup v.·ith can1p.
Contiriental • Star er. Sale pri1:e $2099 d\r.
General e llillcrest llUSQVAHNA 360MC, new I• 4594a4\ \\'ill take car in
' 713
NOW ON DISPLAY
auto sport ltd
Au1hori1.cd
SALI::S e Sl::RVJCt:
e PARTS
!1625 Carden Grnve Blvd.
5:!7-7777 Call Coller!
CHAPMAN pis1or1.~/ri 11gs/lrans, g oo <I traclc. \VIII finance ririv111e
MOBILE HOMES t.'01111· not raced, $700. 1111r1y cnll 546--8736 or ~
12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. 496-3600. "fl.1-6811 ''THINK'' * 11-1 1530-2930 . '6!t TH IUMPll fi.'iO, reblt. 1 .~.~.1~c=1~1 E7.'V~,~.~T~p=;,~.k~U~.-.. ",
Good l.'<lndil io n S79a. 1 Dllfl Want To Live In carnpe:r. Nt!w relrig. Very o ~
COST A ME SA 1--;;;m*o.";;'"';;::;'°':;:;;::*---;;;;;--I ~m::c,I. ::.':::·1°:::1_:':,':.:":c' .:."'~":::·::.'6'.:'.96'.'.___ I •
Local spaces available now! 1970 Bridgeslone IOO e '70 F'ord Van Camper
U you are serious about buy. Only 218 mi. $325 Ve..., 1'il.-e! NEW 124 CPE. DEMO 83.1--0536 • J in~ a mohile borne., .Now's Aft 2:;\ll 968-5075 $2795
lhc time to see 1970 YAMAHA 12.'i Enrluro. I=========== I SM
BAY HARBOR lfillO n11Jc~. \\'ith heln1 et, Dune Buggi•• 952S "'fRIEOLANDfR"
MOBILE HOMES $43S lirn1 . K30-5l!l0
J42:i Baker St. (at llarborl * '70 HONDA 750 * * BODIES $75 * 1J710 llACH ILYD.
Costa 1t1e1a 541).9470 XJnt Cond, Call: 646-72·14 or 2084 So, Auahelm Blvd. 00,,, •• ,f_,,~w.y.J53t7l ~· A1111hl'int ,,...., """ ...,.,..,
Triple Wide Cornell :i.'I0-600!. 639-llal NEW-USED-SERV.
Contlnenlal • Paramount HON[\'\ ]970 CB 450, like • - - - -•
Barrington • Uni\'ersal nc\\".1695 Imported Autos 9600 - -~
t •lamingo e Geneni.1 8.1\.2117 or 49!J.7366
f>roadn1oor • Star MINI Bike 400X cal. xl11!
Hillcre~t • Cambrida:e £.'Ontl. 4 hp 100. ~S-03<11
CHAPMAN 111!1'r 3.
MOBILE HOMES ·10 llnurlo T1·ai1 90. Good l,1n.
1200 N. lfarhor, S.A. di!ion. 3,-,.. Broadway. Cl\.f
• 714/~11-8105 * · $2:-xt or Bi·sl orrr·r
COSTA MESA * * 1966 1~0-N_D_A_1611-.
Ca~uel l\lollilf' J•j;ta1e Liv'i: ~·rarnblcr. X!nl cond.
Ne 12, 20 & 24 \\lidc Moriels S2~ll. :~111.!1697
Now nn di~plHy in ;, Star ·69 'VAJ\.1AHA _ 750 er, i.:lnl
GREENLEAF PARK 1~u111. Make olr. Mini b1ke-
ALFA ROMEO
'59 ALPHA H.ornro, new ha!-
lr ry, tirrs, brakes &, \\'atcr
1•un1p_ r..1ust st>ll. 64fr2J20
AUSTIN AMERICA
AUSTIN AMERIC A
'69 124 Sport Cpe.
4 .~recd. Nl.'w l)llint. A beau-
ty: tXL\\f 2:15 1
52395
DON BURNS
Por5che Audi, L TO.
136.:11 lh1rl)or Bh·d. 6.16.:l.ttl
Just S. or Garrlrn Grove F\\'}',
J1rlllPL1ll
jl 111 po rt.-,
3100 W, Coast J1wy., N.B.
642-9405 540-I7ti4 ............ t.ift\ THINI ... ~ ..
''FRIEDLANDER"
1JIJI I EAClt ttlWV, 2f)
893-7506 • 5:'17-6824
NEW·USED-SERV. .............
'63 P.tG Mi1tget. Look• & run1
great. New painl, clull'h,
t'tc. $650, For appt 8.'\G--1917.
MGB
'68 MGB·GT
r11 11ock. lm111cdi11tc dellvf'ry,
La guna Beach
900 So. Cst. Highway
494-7503 * 540-3100
'71 COROLLA
8 Pasengrr Ueluxe.
& heat.er. tSVT 0781
51565
P.adio
Harbour V .W.
lf111 Rt::AC!-1 BL. 847-4435
llUNTlto;GTON BEACH
* '68 VW SEDAN •
l.ood l~uut. $Jrr;, or make of· llthhO, hf'aU•r, dil!C' brakes, ri'I', 1i9'i"-7:12\.
f;u·1ul'}' air low 101v n1ilr~! --~--~~
T.11kc olde~· 1·11~ or l!llHill 'ti.-, V\V _ Uuit sunrl. Jll('w
i\riwn. Under lilt'!. \\'a1111nty. p1~l!n:1.llo! hrk~, Like new
Call l\laury dlr. a ft 10 11111 $7.IJ .. i..fl.;!!lo\9; frl4.8!-llJ:l f'\'f'S.
!i10-3100 or <19-1·7:!00 o:n:121. '6~ V\\', No troubles. Nu 1 -------~·~--I vnlves, lirk~. c;irh, "Like BILL MAXEY new", ""~' nh·. '~'""17
'66 vw ITIOIVIOITIAI ~n.oen wlth 1'.1lntra.sling lnl~r
•.mA-m!l.iE-;;;.A .... ~.91.1 1ur, tu111'!1 exhaust run1 like
11U1 BEACH BLVD. new. S'1'L-11'1~ 1 '
Hunt. lle•ch 147-1555 $999
1m1N.ota.utHwy.onl!clo CHICK IVERSON
'69 CORONA vw
l!urdtop. Vinyl roor, <1 ~pcl't.I, rrl!l.:.l/l.11 t.:i.:1. 66 or 61
irnlllHCUlrtl~ .. .Sky Blue. Sae-1970 llARBOR At.VO,
Local, 1 n.,.,•n1·r. IXl)A\Jj(J! rllit·l'. \\.'ill hike !rarif! nr COSTA o\!ESA
$2195 fin\HI<.~' p vt, pl)', Ca ll .Sill, '61 YW BUG
11Jr. s-io.:uoo or 49-1-7500 af1 . . DON BURNS 10 11.111 XI'S J.43. Xlnt. t."Und. liood transporta.
Por1ch• Audi, LTD. 'fi!I Tu~ota Corolla. Ntw !lnu.
1 ;~\J I/arbor HJvtl. ti36<Z:!J3 paint t'{JJLlplcle l!llJ.:1111!
.Jui<t S. of Gar~lc11 L:rtl\'c F11·y. ll\'<'l'l;auJ. f;Jl(':ikcrs, clean.
$499
'6S MGB-Xlnt Cond. s1:1uo. &1&-6:~. !lan1-~pn1.
S1UOO. Call ~f>.<11&1 i\hu1-rr!. 213/438-09·17
CHICK IVERSON vw
f'4!1-'.IO:l1 EsL 66 or 67 ==========! \1knd11. '69 TO~v-o=T~A-C~O~R~O~L~L-A" 1 OPEL 1970 J IARB(11l Al.VD.
COSTA Mt-:SA ----------IN••w 1111i111 ('t1111plr!t" englr11•f;;,;---;;==c,---""°'==-=o I '69 OPEL G.J. 111•1>rhaul C1l•u11 \\1111 cu11td1I. ·~11 VW BU<.;, run.<i, S200, 111
1·r· 1nutr;1•cyi:l1•' !or ciiuity _ Min1111ar. Apt R, San Oe-
1>12-41:.!I Ex1. 2:.0. n11'11h•, nft1•r ~:CKJ Jl."\I.
Sil\'er nu•t11Ul1· Coup('.
1 YSY 4·1:.1 "'" '69 10YOTA Co1v111n 2.11r . '65 BUS
owner. Likl! new, many ei.:-11~ "'hillier Avenue &12-1350 sr..o. 962-12i2
traK. $6500. 714/495-5261 * o. -M"•I M"''' * '~~~=~~-
Sales, Service, Parll
lmmerfiate Delivery
All Model.I '68 FIAT 850
SPY DER
Vinyl lop, lo 1111. Xlnt <:ond . R1·bil! lf100, nu clutrh, hrr~. $2595 $1150. M&-:lJiltl i.:1'11,, \'ult r.•g-. i\lust Sell~
,,,.q;:a1n-1 " : " '69 HONDA 160 1300 ni i'1,
47' n1~hile hon1e , lU.' 111dc, in I like oew. SJ25.'
prt'i;!11::e Io 1· ii t 1 on on ~~16-7376
Ne\\por! \\'!11Cl'fl'QnL A few ~1r1)i; 10 your boat 111 the I Auto Service
J1rtupori
Jl111po11~i
RDSTll. Red wi!ll hlac·k \11.
ter1or. Like !W w, YQ\'83~
$999
DON BURNS i--------l '""'· "",o:• ''"'·
'61 VW Good cond. P0<sch• Audi , LTD. TRIUMPH ··~ $.1u11, 64&.9\0ll
1;1n;;1 llnrhol' Rlv•I. 6:l6·2:J:l3 1----------·l·----=-,-,=="'°'"°'=~~-
SOS Olympic Racer
161,~' Glass hull, lull rig,
.11pi11nakl'r. jib, main, trapeze
& tl'lr. $11.'JO. ll.1.l-la26
20' JR. F'olkboat, aea.worthy,
n111noa:. keel boat. S\000 nr
bf'~t ofr. 545-3280 days,
M!)...1.189 f'\'f'S.
dock. Cull 71 4/ ;,4R-8!!7!l. & P•rt1 9400
D t V 0 RC E f' or c rs ---------·J_19~CliW, Coast Hwy.,~764
, a 1 e -M 0 bi I e h 0 ni e ron !Mlle or tradr. 283 Chrvy I =:=="i'======
CHICK IVERSON vw
,lu11t S. llf (i~r•h'11 ~:rovf' F\vy. '68 GT-6 • l~~ii V\\f ~-A~'TRACK *\1"1101.ESt\t.~:-Sl!50 * OPE:!. f1u1rh11ck '(i(l, rc<I. nrw tii:>--r.:rlfi A~·1· 6P:Yf
l1rr5. Xlnt ~,ind. $ 6 7 0. 1 -l!al1an r,".' ns;-rf"11, Low rnilc-V\\', 'ti.·;-:.;.;,hck, V"Y •ood
.,.,,/l'll bana. Beach locallon. &t ~-lipd Hydro & 292 f'oi•d "-
Asking $ol.:i9i Rl'asoruihle l-spd lrans. \\Tani 6 ryl\nder AUSTIN HEALEY
o llrri; accepted. Adull part. Cht>vy & t ran~. 642-3!!4!!.
a1!'1.:i031 r;x1. li6 or li7
1970 llARBUH BLVD.
CO~'TA Mt:SA
67~.lt:nl.~l (\' ., 414 ·~ ==========I 11ge, ·" 1 t·11r. ViTY lo price, $750 . $2195 "'4M PORSCHE 19' SI..OOP. Cab ~Jeeps hvo.
Price $&75, Ph: 540-1123
e\'P~.
!i..l&-ti9;\1.
Motor Homes '215 ----
Hlgh\1·11y lrailrr $7~1(). 67J.1860 M ini B ilc•s '275 -------Spe•d-Skl Boat1 9030 2 MINI hike1, '.111 Hr. app1-uic
1970 CalHornia Nev.•nnrt, !:Kl 10 hr• u~e. Xlnt cond, $UO
Y " l'IH'h . :1'!6-2fl0.'1 hp OM C, hiS?: w hee 1 1 --~=~~~=~--
WallstronS?: lrailf'r. ~I nt MINI bike flllP
f11m il.v ~ki boal for SZ250. Likr new, $135
Call M7-5R'JI \\'krlny,. * 64•-4796 •
II' Ski Boat: 100 hri John.'ltln 9300
1 C Motorcycl•• mntM, trr. stm tarp. l----'--------
X•ras.
Sl950 •• 612--0190 Jh1nda 1971 'i~c K-l.
J.ikt' flf'IW. 1000 mi.
.. $137~. 64~16'19 *
l··-·-·-•_T_r_._;_1._,_. ___ 90_3_2.:,-,~,0~1~10_N_D~A~7:~~-.~1 .. -,-,-~-.~c
ln\v n1ih·s Cu~t. rover $9.lO.
Gl(;.....q2:n art G Pl\1
9425 Tr•ll•r, Travel ----1
2000 ll•rbor Blvfl .
Co5hl 1t1l'A ;1'1(1..9100
19611 CHE.'VY hAU Ton P.U. 6
rr1. ~lnruh1rd !!hif!. 17.000
1970 16' AMERICAN bonl
trallrr, user! onrt, Sl 50. Call
~£1.-44RJ before 5 ·r.~ Tll1Ul\1 Plr :~ 111\, l'rl1·1· S1ti00, 1•1rn1.
• _1s· HULl_,-7' Bell Ill
w/lnilrr. Act..'t':UOrlrs, Be.st
Oner. 6·16-7:xi0.
M1rln• Equip. 9035
•WANTED•
MARINE PRODUCT
PUMP
2•-." ln111kr, t'" oulpUt,
~5361
MECl1 PEB.F. s.llOO :1.11~tm1. [>,l~i~ F.VF.S ~O~A~T~s"u~N~P~lc~k--,-,-. ~.~;~,~,.-,
l~ )'AMAllA llOCC. Good hody. Rood en.it. St>r 11l
f irtt $100 1akei ii Aul(! 695, 2026 llarbor Rlvd,
Good condilion. 548~4!17 C.M. 61&-!r>'IT or ti13-i49!1.
1970 YAMA HA 1%> MX', la~1 I •53 Ji'ORO \YtNDOW VAN -
& "'habit, Exlrfl,. Ex-[ R&ll, ln~ulali'il & p1uw-ll'd.
c"t"l1rnt t..'Ond , 67~. $.i75, S:,i-4:i>KI nr 6-16-26!1~
$4Tj CAil ~ 11n1lnr, auto. trA11~ .. pf5,
'67 SPRITE
A re111 ui1·1• car! I t8JBSYI
$1195
DON BURNS
'6!1 BM\V 1600, !leader, rng
ln!Pi<, slcreo, Sac. Pvt pty,
67;l.3!lJO nltr 3 p111 .
'69 850 SPYDER
Pas.Ktona y1·ll111\'. Clc11.n~
4VCl' ~79l
$1795
DON BURNS
Por1che Aud i, LTD.
i;;ittl llnt'lMlr lil\"11. li:~2.1.l.l
.Ju1t S. nl Gardrn Grnve fo\1y ,
'61! FIAT 12·1 Sporl. Vrry
~lfl(I C'Qrld. Ht,11, In ml.
!\lust 114'11. $1!Y.il or be.lit ol-
lrr. li7!o-81172 l'\'rs.
"6:1 rlAT 1ra:>~R~o.-d7,~,.-,-.-,,.-w 1
palnl, b11t1ery, brks, hel1.W
Ill~~-2R l\1PG. ~118-94'.fi.
DON BURNS '6'1 V\V.~v.-.. ~,.,,~-co-m-,.-.
1•l1nni.:r rn11:1ne. Nev.· paint.
Por1che Audi, LTD. S~7'.1/nffl'r. K. BI o c k , '66 PORSCHE
Coupe fll2, 5 -r>Ct'<t, brown 13631 lh1rh .. r Hlvcl. 6.lf>.2:l1J 531>-771 1.
\\'llh hh1ck ln11•r1or. Brnnrl .Ju~t S. or <i11rt1rn Gro\·e F\\•y, • \!'ll;ll v=11~-.-x=1"7,-ro-rni-,-~;,-,;~ri-•
new Pcrrrlli tires. XYJ47~ '6-6 TR·4A k 0ut. EnJl,lne & lire& very
$3299 Jrood. 1 Owner, $950 or best
CHICK IYERSON Ho111l~t('r. Rn!i.~h l orrr1·. li·l:>--.12!17
YW .i;rccn,1YRL>t'l()j;1 rac ng-'67 VW BUS
r~19.:io:11 Es1, 66 or li7
19i0 llAllBOlt Bl~V[t.
COST A ?-1 !-:;SA ,
S1495
DON BURNS
7 Passenl!'.•·r·. lt1uH11 &. heater,
I UVf.f 52•>
'66 912 COUP-E Porsche Audi, LTD. IJ6J l 11A<·l•' 111•~. 63ti-'3J.1
.fu111 S, of Ganlrn Grove ~\\'}'.
TH 3 'Ml. Vrry i;:ood cnn·
$1677
Harbour V.W. I Hr.\V :11;.<1)
$3695
DON BURNS
1IH1on. l/11rdlup & 1·iir1. 1~711 BEACH BL, 1!42'4435
vi•rt ll1lf'. $~17.'i or buitl olll'r. llUN'fJNG'l'ON BEACH
:"'il-li(i:;i. 1960 VW BUG JAGUAR Por1ch• Audi, LTD. '(iii Tit 2j(l Tr iu rnph DATSUN l----------·l l3G3l ll11rhor Bl vd. 6.%-:i.133 ovf"Nlrll•e. l\1 u~I sell. r .o.r: Rl'<I, wi!h mag v.·hc~J,, wide ----·------'61 JAGUAR JuJ1.1 !'. ol c:11t'<l~n Gn1vf" fwy. ~l4S-~iJ~lll art 3 pni. ovAI th'l'M, new onA"1ne i:;uar-'67 DATSUN WAGON .... · · an1ccd lo" ~ days IF117-t l!lli.1 Pori11~1i: ~llK'r , !IO, ll<'W Tit 69 GT 6 + iclnl ror11I. nu $799 '
Jllllnt .C. 11urr1or. Xln! run-rlull·h Ii tin•$, l\1usl acll CH
Auton111 tlr., <!Ir, Tindio, hl:'a~.
tr, ~PM·lal \\'hei•hr. !VO&'
951) \\'Ill trnde or rlnnnc~
pl'ivntl' parry. ~36 or
-t!M-ti.'111, l
'70 2000 ROADSTER
4 tl r. ).I lil11, t•dio. ~••l•r,
(WIW.~111. 0 •1•dti•1.
$1495
~..,,..
nh1i: ('1.11111, S2400 or lw-sf or. !2131 693.SISI. ICK IVERSON
ft•r. ~\fork lltl-1234 ext JO.t: VW
hunir, !!'.JO-G1J!l. VOLKSWAGEN
'61 PORSCHE "O'' f>l!l-SO~l F:~t. li6 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Co11v. 1war "of'\'' t:Vt>ry1hln1:. 'f,f, V\V 1300. Co1npl reblt 10 COST \ f\fESA
l\:u~t •rllt ~111kc offer. The HiOOcc-. Sii( l::rsun t·111n.1 --~.,.,,..,-~""'c:----
lHlO l-la1•!10r Blvd. G-1; •. QIGti cll·tHlf'~t 'GI In IOWll! &lf.-19 14 llnlli•y 2 h11m'I, IJWr rn111k Authorited Dir. -,63 JAGUAR XKE-Jo:vrn1n11:~. 1111llry. $·\:JO. 53 6-S335, Snlr~. N'rvil'('. r11rh1
l.lkr nr,v, ?\hlJlt !k'I! !WPI, HIG!I !-Ill TANGERINJ.;, lila!·k uGS-'.oGG All ?\l0<lf'IS lo C.h?<'se From
10·11 illr. \Viii take. car in . ROAnsr•·.1·t ln!l•rlor AM I ftol l'ln•IJI • '67 vw nus w I bed 11r Servtce ~tor~~Y till 7:00 Pf.1
'68 1600
lrHilr or finance prii·atc par· r11rtl11l11,' tl"ltn~l91or ';11;11il lon. .,r:1111. Good mnd. $1395. Se<-Snt 1111 NQOn
IY. !'!46.Ji17:16 or ·1~14-o61111 . N1w p1h1! I i~lttio• "A r11I ~~ COAST IMPORTS -11111"' Doi t". ICHU·JI], Xlnt 1,11111. 642,..5727 at 164 J\!lr1111111r, S.C. OAOSJ~ ~,.1 -J'ORsCJl E.CO. CONn • .,,, vw BUG, x L NT 01 o"""' eooni, 1n<. $2195 • * HEST O~~i;'ER • • COND, S9~iO. 163 DEL :0.1i\R 13XI \V, Peclllc <'OfliJt !fwy
Rf'11dy lo RO! dlr. (\Vl--:a,"J ) . CAii Af1 ti: 400..IJ02 !"T, c. \I. IH2-0t06 • ~1&-1:.zi
\\lltl l11kti trnde r 1.\fl'Ani:e ll'Ui----·· -tu_J_. _
1
.61 911 , !i . s1d, Wcbflr1. nu ]96!)-V\\' Hus, hhl". ,,:ln1-oon.100lll \/\\'Bug, Radin, l'l'Ar
prl\'a!e party. 36 or ,-~ '"""""'4 Tire:•. ·1-.<nl mi'J, $.'l9!ill. d11fon, onl)' 27.lm nil. $2000. 1eet 1pcakcrs. $1375, prL pfy,
••• ~ ·.!
I "'P'!rlacl Au tot
'6515DOSVWVARIA ·.,:
!tuns llt'i.iuti luUy. Radio. ht!'1-.
rr 4 ~peed, (SBS7~H ST'.(7-
Johnson & Soll
16~ llarbor, C.M. ~~
'65 V\V AM/f'?t1 Snrl_ Vf'llY
.i::ond 1-ond. $675, S..e Mi~ ft
7100 Colle11e. ~o. 15, CM •,
Imported Autos MOo
Bill Jones' _
..
B. J.
. ;:
SPORTS CAR · :;
CENTER INC:
2133 HARBOR
COSTA MESA ---·---..
If you own 1n Imper~:
•d car and n•ed MN•
ic•. com• sae us 1t If'
Sports Ca1 1. All n•w.
1er vlc• •nd part1. f1tl·
liti•s. All new P1lnt &
Body Shop. Speciallz ..
ing In cu1tom pilnf.~
F r • • estimates. We
Mrvlce ALL Imported
cars. ---·---
. • .. .. ..
' ..
MAJOR
TUNE UP
-· .,
l11Ch1dM ,hip, ,ai-'S, ....:.: ~·
.. •••• , ....... •tll1tt111ettt, ..
co•ri.11ret•r eit9 •II l.ttar -
let· SlJ.tl.
S P E C I A L ,-
$19,95
---·---·
AUTO
l
' ..
ACCESSORIES ..
Pull llH fer IM1Mrh• llt tlll!' , !
co11att •• Xmft .,.cl•la. , ·: l •
---·---· ! .. :
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
SPECIAL
•:: <. .
..
$10.50
---·---
HARDTOPS
C111te111 lt11t•lle4 fM Pt.t
150 Sp~d_.. ltet. S2Jf. S,..
col•I thl1 m1111th -
$189.99 -
---·---
Bill Jones' ·
.,
·-
'i • • l ' -' l
• ' ' -,
... . ·,
..
B. J.
. -. ":
.. ' • . :
·I
•
SPORTS CAR· ·j
CENTER INC._ .;,j
2133 HARBOR ' i
COSTA MES~ ' 1
540-4491
Corner Of Harbor
& Elm . -Service
Entr1nc• On Elm
Cl•M4 J111• & ti1 1w '""
l •a -Ope11 'ti! t P.M,
WMllMl49f, OM. lJ • 2t
.. ; l
' ...
•I • • • .1
'
.. .! '&! \'AMAHA DT-1 Endorri 11!16!1 fORD, ~'-100, pickup,
:i.I0-112.1 evu. xlnt cond •• $1975. 496--116.14. "94-68U. i 2tDO Ha11bor Blvd. 645--0466 Ml-810~ d~•. uk tor G~a;. -'192-8:.!Rll A!lor 7 P~f 6'14.fti87 a fter S ptn. --~----------
•
--. I
I
°j, a OAllV PILOT Thund"1. Oectn1btr 10, 1970
' t!CANWCRl~TION TRlHSl'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION .:.T::RAH=S:::.~=RT:..:A:;;T:.:.IO;::N:;__f ~T.::RA:::.N:.:.S:.:PO=R.:.T A:::.T:.;l;:;ON;;:__ f .T:..:R::A::N::S::..PO:::R:::;T:.:.A:..:T:..:I O:.:.N:._. f TRANSPORT A Tl OH ~ :' •-MOii I-led Auhlo '*' Imported Autos -Imported Cars -~
9900 U11d Cars ,9900 Used Cors 9900 UHd Cars 9900 Usod Cara 9900 Usod Cars ,;,__.:.;:c..;_~~;,;,.;;c11~"--"=-~~;.;.;;.;
-:-VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN WE PAY TOP
DOLLAR CADILLAC CORVAllt FORD OLDSMOllLI
~ ()oe &rfolli ~ '69 YW BUG Large Selection ~ Cl' RadK>, b,,,.,, <TURU1l .ur. Of YW Campen,
FOR YOUR CAR 1961 CADILLAC '65 OORVAIR lllonu, good '66 FORO GALAXIE '61 DELTA U BLUE CHIP Cpe, O.Vllle. Factory air, "'ndltlon. can 842-'217 • Dr Automatlc ..... -2 Dr, Hardtop, lmmaculal• full powtr, tUt A telescopic t;11ttkda,)1: after 'l pm.. slon' radio he'ottr pov.-er thru.out. Automatic tram-'::' T & M MOTORS Mun "" Will '""' oldor Vans, Kombls, ·r ~ lln•""· 54&rn6 °' Buses,, N-& Used
: ,68 VW · B good nd lmmediete Delivery
; AVTHOIUZED I ongtnaJ ."!;.,r. 11f;o : CHICK IYERSON
AUTO SALES steering Whee-I, etc. (VCL-atecivw. fa~tory a1;. (RTR. mlulon, radio, heater pow.
We carry contra.eta 142) BeauWul oawless white COUGAR 481) im. er 1teerlnr, taeury ..U:, ~
on ca?"B S99 & up. finlab with black cloth & Johnson & Son dau roor. <VGY' 989) S21ll.
2145 Hubor Bl., 5<M392 l"ther lnterlor. '67 COUGAR Jahns & Soll $3299 Xtra cleu. Automatic trana-2626 Harbor, C.M. 54().5630 Oft
NABERS mission. power ateerini:, '67 Falrlane VS convrt. Xlnt 2626 Harbor, C.M. 54IJ.a
: 842-&t30. YY'I factory air, Adio, heater. cond. Lo 42,000 mL Inside • '62 OLDS Station Wagon
'64 Riviera, M.ichelln radial CADILLAC (TUXlilO) $1(44. lmmac. red vinyl w/good Gd. Trans. Pvt, Pt)', $295.
BUICK
• ~ • SALES . Imported Cars 9600 $3031 Ext. IA! .. 61
#, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. tires, air concl, full equip, 26l)J Harbor Blvd. . Johnson & Son white top. Best buy tor $950. 549-3801 Alt 3:30
Xlnt cond. Bluebk whlsle Costa Mesa 540-9100 21)26 Harbor, c .M. 540-5630 Pvt pty. ~U65. ; • SERVICE COSTA MESA
'69 VW BUS $940, Make ofr. J. lk!rtha, '61 CADILLAC PRIVATE Party ex cond LINCOLN PLYMOUTH
• • •
• • .
' • • • • • . • ..
-.. .
. • • ( . •
• • . • .
e PARTS
WE HAYE THE
BEST SELECTION Of
BMW's
IN ORANGE COUNTY
• 1600's
• 2002
• 2500
• 2800
• 2800 cs
•AA Colon
• AU Models
• Immediate Delivery
REPEAT PERFORMANCE
"
8MW1 are built for Germany's no-speed-limit
autobahns, The fo~r will cruiM all day af 100
mph. The she will do the same at 120 mph. If
thllt kind of durability is your speed, lff vs
for the frff booklet, "33 Reasons Why BMW
ls,Better." Or ask for the key. You'll get the
mesuge.
'67 TRIUMPH TR-4 1'Moke Offer"
Convertible. Wire wheels, r ad i o. heater. 4-speed
CTUA-776J
'65 TOYOTA ............ S1695
"Land Oulser". Radio, heater, 4-wheel drive. 'l'hls
model is supl!.'r strong and ready for anything ! I
CRLZ-213)
'68 RAT 850 SPIDER . . . . . . . S999
4-speed. radio, beater. CWIC-283)
'69 MGC/G.T •....••..... S2495
Radio, heater, 6 eyJ., wire wheeJs, radial tires. Extra
sharp!
164 ALPINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S595
'. Rad1o,. heater, 4-l!lpeed, Convertible. (OXH-875)
• ~68 YW FASTBACK ...... S1275
Rad.lo, heatefo, 4-ipeed, factory equipped. (WBC-$67)
• ~68 MERCEDES ..•••..... S2100
3:>oo. Air Cond., com plettl)' tebullt englnt, radio,
)ieater, 4..i;peed.. Alech. perfect! (YXU-985) . ~63 KARMANN GHIA ...... S995 • .ftadlo, heater, 4..gpced. Rea1 fine condition. (OLN-434>
.
!65 MUSTANG ............ S795
j\l.r cond.. V/8, radio, hester. Very Jow mileage. Runs
.great! $100 under \vholesaJe blue book!
··~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
:59 DUNE BUGGY ......... S599
'V.W. Oversized resr tirei;, roll bar, metalUc paint An
~xcellent buy at (WYG-149)
loe n .... totd
OWNll_.IN, M•l.
We h•v• • fln•ncl"t pl•n to fit your budget
lncludlnt 100% flnanclnt (0.A.C.) Will take
your c•r In tr•de paid for or notl Com• in
•nd t•lk with one of our experienced cou""
cilor1.
•
AVTHORIZED
e SALES • • SERVICE
PARTS
Joe
T & M MOTORS
OPEN SUNDAYS
8011 Garden Grove Boulevard
l!J Ilk. E. of leecli Blvd.
I
534-2284 892-5551
)
t
UI
!"
-!:
!
Cll "' Cll • -< "' -
ell .... w
i .0
ft
•
1 PIWCnger. Slill under fac.
t.ory warranty. (YBC944)
S2695
DON BURNS
'69 ROADRUNNER oft: 675-4930, home 6'15-5734. Convert.Ible. Full power In-One owner. Wld~ ~ tltea:
BUICK '68 Riviera. AU ex· eluding factory air. Lie. air cond. Auto tran1, --,6-6.-Ll_N_C_O_L_N __
tl"aa, Xlnt cond, Beat bid VZD 123, ~. ' PI S-PI 8 V 8 en I.
over S2650. Pvt pty. 642.1634 Johnson & Son Yellow/blk Int. Muat sell 383 vs, automatic, powtr
or 6'fl..61.90. 2626 Harbor C ,M 540-5630 before Chrlatmu $17,950. Contin•~t•I 4 dr, Full powtr, steering, dlr. Excellent eon.
'61 4-dr Buick. Air~nd. , ' .' · . ~68. •Ir c:ond. l94JSI. dition. Lew miles. (UED14!)
elec windows Xlnt cond • 59 CAD Limousine, New '69 COUGAR $2195 Will take car in trade or
Porsch• Audi~ LTD. $600. 675-25n.' · eng, new trans,_ new Automatic trans radio heal finance private party,
13631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 1923 BUICK 4 door Seel upholstery. $800, 835-4497 er powersteeri~ air'cond lltM *'·~-· 541J.8736 or 494-6811
JW1tS.ofGardenGroveFwy. $600. Stereo wilh ex~~ '67SEDAN~eVIU.E.Xint ~u top.<YWS2m1$& ~ ,~ 'G5BARRACUDA,spd.Hi-
speakers $25. 633-9789. :.~· ::-' = $3200 or Johnson & Son 2100 Harbor Blvd. Sf5.0466 · performance. Extras, good
VOLVO o er. . 2626 Harbor CM """~ cond. Going in service. • . . ~ 548-8234
CAMARO MERCURY 1~=-~-=1
l.l'U'U'U"U '68 SEDAN DEVILLE :S:·nrcCAM::;;;:A;,;;R:c;o,1m;,:""';;: . ..,.;:;"";;-;"1--~D~O~D~G~E~--.-69-M_O_N_T_E_G_o_M_x_ ·~:l;B~1~~·~·~
· THIMI ~~Very low mileage. '69 DODGE 2 Door Hard Top. Landau --------1
CADILLAC
'VOLVO' .Landau top, factory air, 1ter. ~ TON roof, finish like new. Auto.
eo, full power. Loca1 one PO ..... ac ID owner. (\VMX l4S) CHEVROLET Camper Special. Automatic, matic transmission, radio, "'"' power steering, 11,000 actual heater, power steering, pow. "FRIEDLANDER" $3995 -------1 mil.,. ••• m under rac1o..,, .. ""'1"'" <WXED92> 12222.
DON '68 IMPALA warranty! Immaculate tbru-Johnson & Son '66 PONTIAC LEMANS
2 Dr. Hardtop. Value plus.
Automat i c transmis-
sion, power steering, power
brakes, air condltionfne 1"1-
dio. heater, Landau t" op,
CRZB791) $777.
iuse SllAC" urn."' BURNS ~ Dr. H.T, Well maintained. out! (388-38E) N:;~:o.Sf~ Porsch• Audi, l TD·. Beautiful maroon w/ black $2799 2626 Harbor, C.M.
, • 13631 Harbor Blvd, 636-2333 interior. Automatic, P.S., R.., ~ Ju" S. ol G""''" Grov• Fwy, H., whU• walls, etc, (YRU. CHICK IYERSON l\.~U!iTANG
-1964 CAOILLAC S24) $l5S5. YW 1--------0 VOLVO Cpe. O.Ville. Facio..,, air, JohllSOll & Son 1910 HARBOR BLVD. '67 MUS.YANG
All 71's A.re Here ~ull power, all le!lther inter. "26l'ST'Har7'bor=·;C:::.M::.·_:54-0-:::o;:5630::::f~~_;:CO'.'.ST~Ac_;MESA~~~-
Savings Up To ior, loaded with extras. Looking for e car? '64 DODGE POLARA l . •p••d. 111w ptint, c:l ttn, , ••
$756 -~:r :1 ~te exterior, EASY 4 Dr, Sedan, Exceptionally d10, ht•t•r .
on remaining 70's (#6263) $999 Call Auto Referral free of clean! Drive to appreciate. $1395
Over Sea.s Del. Spec. charge. We have sellers A u tom a t I c tnuwnis. NABERS waiting. AU types & priees. sion, power steering, a I r ... ~
fln•u [niO:• CADILLAC 5'11"' also wekome, oond. ndlo. (RRV2<ll) $699.
UUL """' 2600 Harbor Blvd. 6424431 Johnson & Son 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 Auto Referral Service 'fi6 Ford Mustang Fstbck IMPORTS Costa A1esa 540..9100 $JOO 2626 Harbor, C.M. 540-5630 2-0r hn:tlp, RIH, Clean!
1966 Harbor, C.i\I. G4&-9303 _'69 CAD CPE DE VILLE l.954 Chevrolet 'fi6 DODGE Polars Conv. $995 1 =.-o=-=~~~~ Air, Full pwr, All leather in. s1au· W good Sac. $575 T.O.P. Will trade.
Johnson & So11
2626 Harbor, C.M, 540.!iD)
'70 GTO
455 cu. in. Ram Ail',
close ratio Wpeed,
boo(I tach, Ride & Handl'c
pkg, PIS, P/D/B, RadJo
& beater, New Fireston&
Wide ovals. "AIL BLAC:Jr'
1'1ake offer or trade for
late model Ford truck.
646-4665
'69 VOLVO 1800 'S' ""°'· Vinyl top, Loads of '';. =m ~ . 5.17-9359. BLUE CHIP
xtra•, Re"1 •ha'P! ,57 CH '69 Pol"" 4 dr, air, PB. AUTO SALES '69 PONTIAC GTO
Clean as a pin. Low mileage, $4495 EV. Hayden Proffitt X-Hwy patrol, xlnt cond. Looks & runs like new • .Auto-
1 owner. (WEM 916) BLUE CHIP blueprint 327. Amer mags, $1050 must sell 9fil.-OS42. 5404392 * 642-9700 matic transmission, radio, nu paint, bkt. seats, trans. heater po 1-~ng S2895 '68 DODGE Mo"'"' '" -'67 Mustann . w•rs =" ...... AUTO SALES by Art Ca<T. 84,_,,.,, all 4 ,., .. • .,, " """'''" air etc <YCU. DON BURNS '61 CHEVY ~r Bel Air Fully equipped. Xlot cond. Hardtop. Owned by little old 950) $2666. ' •
Porl.che Audi, LTD. _,....,_,,_, __ * __ 64_2_·97_oo RIH. PIS, fair· body. Gd .6Pvl9 ~ty. S42-3Al59to. 383 P school teacher, 29,000 actual JohMOll & Son mech Mt\n Call: AIU n 82 .-uarger-u . • /I, mil cue .
13fi31 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 '64 CADILLAC 1""" _,,,,. '13't-• Xlnt cond. Must sell. $1895. ea:s·s·d :,12> :~Too sell! 2626 Harbor , C.M. 544).5630
Justs. of Garden Grove Fwy. • <r<JJ CHEVY. Malibu 283. 64&--0652 or 54~7231. 1 · or EXCEPrIONALl..Y c lean R&H. Automatic. f!M...7506 aft 10 am. 1967 Pontiac Grand Prix
• 1002. Xlnt, sound. N•w c,,,. o, v;n,, ''" ,,.,., 1600. 646-2209 FALCON '65 MUSTANG brakes, valves, etc. $350 •itr• c:le•n, * ,56 CHEvY NOMAD-Xlnt . convertible, 25,500 actual 642-fil91. miles. Full power. 642-.3260, 1-:::====== $1495 engine, new interior, $225. '62 FALCON Wagon Clean 4 6 1 1 ,;_ .,,,_ .. __ ~9724 I-644-5308 • · cy ., au orna.....,, rawu ,..,..t. ,,,.t===-...,,,=-~I
Anti
~1 I 96l
5
· new tires. Runs good. $250 er dlr Extra clean (YEU '69 ATALINA, 24,IXXI ml;
que1, ~ass cs ~ ~-... --_ '66 .BEL AIR, 2 dr, standa;d or Best atfer. 642-4613 9i;) Wm take trade or~ dark metallic brwn, vh1yl
1929 MODEL A Ford, all '"°'°"' shift, good oond. $f.OO. ance private party. 546-8136 top & int., air oond., ps, Pb.
original, 4 dr sedan.-50% 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0W6 675-517S. FORD or 494-6811. SZ50.644.{13()8a1ttt 6:30PM
''"'""· Bodi-xlnL M"'I CADILLACS JO' 1964 CHEV • Bel Air 2 doo• '65 M tang A 1 e '68 GTQ.S11CK sell. Make offer. 496-436:.?. $ Clean. Good running $350. 166 COUNTRY SEDAN Gooduscond. ~~.u$~00v:~ BEST OFFER. * LONOON TAXI (l9G4) * Sat-Sun-Eves 545"2555. Station Wagon. Run1 good. otter. 642-4993. ** 962-9572 **
BEA RUNS GR Largest Stock of Ou•lity VS, automatic transmission, RARE J="' n..R .. _, •-~~
UTY! EAT! Cadillacs in Oranne COMET J'lldio, heater, power steer. '66 111USTANG V--8, auto. ""'"'· xin7' ~'';,nd. &;; Petrol 4!J9..3688 C • ing etc. (SAA8fi6) $99!1. R/H. Very clean-! owner. .. .... ounly '65 COMET CALIENTE JohMon & Soll lllOO *** 962-7408 -•-"-•-"'_r_l250_. """"'---· --•
A;.;ut=os:;_..;.W;.;•;·";:;.;led:"---9"7.:.::00 Cpe DcV Convertible. v e r y clean. '63 PONTIAC Boruieville, all W£ PA( CASH and~· i:;~Vllles Automatic """""'"Ion, ,.._ 1-26'26-H~arbo=r'-, C=.M~·~~-...c.co OLDSMOBILE ::.'~((~ ~ $300. er
1963 through 1970 d!o. heater, power steering, TOP DOLLAR --------..:.:::,,:c::~:::..,:,::: ___ ,
Plus Many Other Fine Cars. power bnkes. CWAB 885) '65 OLDS 88 -'70 TRANS.AM FOR YOUR CAR ALL SALE PRICEO 1m. 1or Aft s wkdyo 6'....,. NABERS CADILLAC ~~"t!~~.M~ :.~ CLEs!NA~d~EB~~RS :u1:~~utlilc,po;:r·c::~~o, h•tter. --.-RA ___ M_B_LE_R ___ I CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 HarbOr Blvd.
Costa Mesa 54(' .. 1200
WE PAY TOP CASH
for used c:M1 & trucks Just
call Us for free estimate.
GROTH CHEVROLET
2600 HARBOR BLVD., '61 COMET' Runs V•'Y Good. THEOOORE $695
COSTA MESA G"at Tran•. ROBINS fORD 1961 Rambler, R""' ok. N"1
54().9100 OPENSUNDAYi-'="°===*=*==="'=""=34=931 2060 Harbor Blvd. ~ lfoU_J_. · tires. l" ,~ $175 646-S914
CONTINENTAL C..la M"' 2100 H..-bo, Blvd. 64>0468 --------1 '65 CAD CPE DE VILLE 6U-00l0 ="'i,~;..,::~-.=';::.:= I·--------
Air cond, 1-'uU pwr ,69 FORD F ·r1 67 OLDS 98 Landau top. '69 CONTINENTAL ai ane, pis, 4 Dr. Hardtop. Beautiful con.1 ___ T_·B __ IR_D __ _
$699 Coupe Carefully maintained p/b, V-8· 2 dr. Gd cond. ditt.·on throout. 36,000 actu.al ,66 FORD T-BffiD Luxu;.y throughOUt. Full Muri sell. Best ofr ac--1 Full 1 BLUE CHIP po\\·er """iP......i. Facto"' air. cepted. 54&-1662. mi ea. Y ux~ equip. >Jr cond, Full pwr, Lanttau ~y •"'u .. , ped, full pov.·er, lllf' cond. top Leather interior Xtn. AUTO SALES Leather interior. Landau '62 FORD, 2-dr, auto, R/H, (VHQ918) $1999. cle3n. •
;....,392 • 64,_,700 Root <YPrSJO> 13717· Nu '""· '" "'· $350. Johnson & Son S1299 Johnson & Son 646--0129, 1961 o""" s1. _
AskforSa.1esr.1anager '70 Cad Fleetwood Ci\1. 2626 Harbor,C.M. 54()..5631) BLUE CHIP
182ll Beach Blvd. Broughman, lo mi"s. \\'hlte 2526 Harbor, C.hl. ~0-563(1 '57 Ford Ranchero. Zem SUPER Spon 442 01 d s
HWltinglon Beach Turquoise trim, $6 850. '63 LINCOLN CONT'L miles on eng & Irani. Beat Coupe, '65, In super corr AUTO SALES
847.s'.)87 KI 9-3331 642-4()62 aft 5. Full .P\\'r,, Air cond, All leath· offer over $250. 644-5308. dition, new paint and tires, 540-4392 * 642-9700
IMPORTS \VANTEO SHARP .67 CAD lo mi's full er 1nlenor. Loads of xtras! ,57 FORD 6 1 r k llOO spoke wheels, bucket seats, ===~~---,,'I po1over. $2900 ' ' $599 • cy ., 5 JC • • air cond, power steering. 1968 T-BIRD. Full power. Air
OrangP. Counth?9 847-1865 .aft ll A~1 492-7999 or 206 La Palma, Gray with black interior. co.nd. AM/FM stereo, Lo
TOP S BUYER . BLUE CHIP Apt. 3, San Clemente. One ov.·ner has treated it mileage. $2400. 675-3325
BILL r.IAXEY TOYOTA '63 Cadillac converlible. Full AUTO SALES * '64 GALAXIE 500. Z.Dr, lovlnily. Below blue book at '67 T·Bird, Leaded, $1695.
18881 Beach Blvd. JIO\\'er, xln t cond. $600. air, PIS. $525. 673--6542 or $800. 494-9466 or 495.5696 RIDE IN COMFORT. Pvt
H. Beach. Ph. &17--8555 646-4214 aft 4 pm. 540-4392 * 642.9700 673-3209. eves and weekends. pty, 673-2169
WE PAY TOP OOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
If your car is extra clean,
Re UI" first
BAUi."'R BUICK
234 E. 17th St.
Costa 1ilesa &i&-7765
Auto Le1sfn._g _ _..::9.:.B1:.::0
LEASE
A NEW 19n
PINTO
S50.00 mo.
Used Cars 9900Used Cars 9900 Ustcl Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900
ONE DOLLAR OVER!
BRAND NEW 1970'5 UNDER INVOICE
We have several
new 1970 <36 mo.I
open <.?'Id
e ~ z r RENT > A NE\V lm
te9os &
Cou9ars,
Marquis.
near
Mon·
Mer·
~ n 0 :Ill PINTO : ., ~ !: ~ S4J0AY
•::i:cmz:i .c; ,. ~ il: G\ 4¢ MILE
cury House Cars at con·
siderable less than invoice. WE HAYE SEVERAL BRAND NEW 1970
COUGARS & MONTEGOS LEFT
~ C: U'I Ut PlFf A LlTI'LE
Q m !!J KICK IN YOlfR l'l '" 0 Iii LIFE! C 0 0 THEOOORE ~ c O:i ROBINS FORO m Z 2000 HARBOR BLVD.,
gt -t COST A 1'1F.SA r; ~ z 642-0010
.. ~ !-=============
--------
•
Used Cer1 9900
SPECIAL
DISCOUNT
SALE
MONTH Of DEC.
(Gnnclklds neffi new &hoeil)
50 CARS
To chOose lrom. No down on
•pproved credit.
~~ 2100 liarbor Blvd . 64»t66
Come
over
buys.
• In look today &
these tremendous
You'll want one!
Johnson & son
(1 Miit South of San 1Mttt fl'ffWIJ)
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e
MERCURY e COUCOAR
540 5630 Hzt H-.... 642 0981 • COSTA MISA •
AT Sl OYER INVOICE!
COME IN AND LOOK OVER THESE
OUTSTANDING BARGAINS TODAY AND
TAKE ONE HOME
Johnson & son
11 Miia S..tlt of 5Go DIOHJO ff-ayl
I LINCOLN CONTINEHTAL • MARK Ill • MERCURY • COUGAR
I 540·5630 2'~~~:'Mi:"' 642·0981
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