HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-08 - Orange Coast Pilot. .
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• r em·a:1ns
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County Clos11·re
Aetion on Nude Spell Out Death
Bars to C.ontinlie . -. -To Life Magazine.
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DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * *
··11.-•• • A Y AFTERNOON, DECEMBER
VOL. 65. HO. J4J. ~ IEE!~~ 4' l'~GES
•ne"ll Be Okay"
Ul'I T ........
Still Fought
In County
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, '·'' -I • -•
" Perifuus Ti1n.e
•
LBJ Nuclear War Fedi:sReport.ed
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Lyndon B. Johnson was coocerried in
1003 that the assassinatioo ofJohn F. Kennedy might lead to nuclear war ,
according to former Chief -Justice Earl Warren.
Wilrren, in an intervieW' With the Public Broadcasting Service to be shown
on television Monday, said :Johnson cited ltle J>05sibility of war as one reason
the chief justice should head a commission he named to investigate the assas·
sinaUon.
WARREN RECAl.J...ED THAT the incident occurred a few days aft.er Kdi:
· nedy's death in DaUas on Nov. 22, 196.1.
MARGARET TRUMAN DANIEL ANSWERS QUESTIONS OF PRESS
'He Hu Gotten Over Worse Things/ Truman's Daughter S1ys
A drive that has drawn the curtains on
more than a dozen nude bars in Orange
County during the past year will continue
even though the state's Alcoholic
Beverage Control (ABC) officers have
got into the act. District Attorney's
representatives declared today.
In the interview. Warren said he was invited to the White House by Johnson
who "told me he felt conditions in the v.·orld were so bad at the moment .
he thought it might evm get-into a war -even a nuclear war."'
.,
Sleeps Flff.lllly
·Ex-president .Truman's
Closure actions which include the
Firehouse bar ln Costa Mesa will be
pressed even thougti the Californi a
Supreme Court has rul.ed that the ABC
agency can perform that function,
spokesman for ·the office's obscenity
division said. (Related story, Page 4.)
THE PRESID~ 'A'CCORDING "to Warren·, cited rumOi's, lafer proved to
be unfounded, that Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev and Cuba's Fidel
Castro might have been involved in the Kennedy shooting.
Costs Spell Deatli
Heart 'Showing Stress' Two Santa Ana bars offering the con·
troversial enter_!Mi.ment were rec!!ntlt
closed down through civil Litigation that
uses the language of the state's Red
Light Abatement Act to make its point.
Life Magazine to Publish
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPIJ -The fail-
ing heart of Harry S Truman .. is sho~·
ing the s1gns or considerable irritability
and stress," his doctors said today.
The 88-year-old former President slept
fitfully and was in crilical conditiont
"His heart condition ii 09t as goe<l this
morning as we had hoped it w.ould be,"
said John Dreves, a Research · Hospital
spokesman. "President Truman has im-
proved in some areas but shown no im-
provement in others."
. T[llman. weakened by age and lung in-
fttikm, was fed intravenoJ).Sly. He W;is
g!Ven o)(ygen to help him breathe.
''His heart is showing the signs of con-
·sidcr8ble irritability aod stress," Dr eves
.'81'd at,a m~ical briefing. ",He-;remains
in critical conditiqn ."
Physicians n1onitored Truman's. heart
constantly. They said recovery depended on.. whether his heart is strong enough~to
bll'tle the complications 0£1 age and in·
(Oetlon.
'{'nlm.an's vital signs ar,e;. Hrelalively
llloble, though the temj>era\ure• iS lluo-
tuating, but only slig htly,., a hospital'
spokesman said.
Doctors said the nation's•33rd chief e1·
,•
CHARLIE eROOJN, 'loO'VE
GOT ONLY 16 SHOPPING
O(l'/5 LEFT, 'IOtJ KNOW!
ecutive did not sleep well Thursday night
and early today. They said his ramily
was not notified of the restless night.
Thursday, Truman rallied from the
lung and heart ailm?nts that sent hirwto
the hos pitaJ four days ago. Marg~t
Daniel,.his Jaugbter, said Truman smlled
at her. '"
, ·''Jte's g~ti.ng klnd of contrary," Mrs. t>Miel said aftt: leaving Her father's
bedside and driving her mother, Mrs.
Bess Truman, back lo the family home
at Independence, Mo., IS miles away .
"He's"restless. He's feeling better. I
ha'Ve great faith lhat he's going to come
out ~of this all right."
Dreves said today Truman ls con-
s14Dtly 1given oxygen except when the
ma!k is removed'.for-other treatment.
Truman was rushed by .ambulance to
Research Hospl~I Tuesday suffering
lung congestion. He ·had been.uD for, two
weeks at ,home before t)e en£ered the
(Set TRUMAN, Page fl . .
And the Sarong Gals and Bristol
Gardens bars, both in Santa Ana, cur-
rently race identical action that could
close them or at least "clean them up,"
investigators said. .
Investigation of the Bristol Gardens
bar led tast month to the filing of
criminal actions against a grot.ip of
w.omeo and foi-mer pro football player
Willie Crittendon.
An ·Were accused of involvement in a
prostitution racket that allegedly had Its
headquarters in the bottomless bar. All
(See NUDES, Page !)
Professor, 47, Dies
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Herbert L.
Packer, 47, professor of criminal law at
the Stanford University Law School, died ·
Wednesday . He was coauthor or a new
Carnegie Commission study on the future
ol American legal education.
Final Edition on Dec. 29
NEW YORK (AP) -Life Magazine v.:i!I discontinue pubUcaUoo .with the issue
Qf Dec. 29, Thne, The: announc:ed today.
The publi~her shid tlie:~ ~y,ear~ld
magazine, fariiOus fcir Jls {lkli).e¢Fjtig use
of news photographs, will fold· because or
"continuing losses."
The year.end double issue ~·ill mark
the close of the weekly magazine founded
by Henry Luce.
Llfe was published at "very substantial
deficits in 1969. and 1970 and smaller
deficits in 1971 and 1972," the publisher
said.
"As our projections for 1973 took
shape, however, they showed. a resump-
tion of heavy losses, and the indications
ror 1974 were even more unfavorable."
Time, Inc. added.
·At about 10:'45 a.m., grim-faced: staff
members of the magazine began to
gather for a meeting on the eighth floor
of the Time-Li fe building at Sixth Avenue
and SOth sireet.
About 25(1 to 300 staff workers sat in
chairs or stood against the walls. waiting
for the meeting, which was closed to
outsiders.
The publisher said Time. Fortune.
Sports lllustr11ted and fl1oney. its other
major magazines, ''have dooc very well
this yea r."
Life lasted more than a year longer
than its chie( competitor, Look. which
ceAscd publica tion on Oct. 19, 1971. l..ook
also blamed rising costs, especially
postal rates.
Jn announcing the decision lo fold Life.
Hedley Donovan . edltor·in-<:hief of Time.
Inc .. and Andrew Heiskell , chairman of
the board, declared:
7· Die~ in Hijacking Att~nipt "Lire has been one of the great
journalistic pioneers. Its launching in
1936 opened a who le new era of pro-
fessionRI journalism. wkh consequences
still seen all over the ~'Ofld.
"Life a1;:hieved almost at once, and
• • • 1 ' • 1·,:·~· · 1 • , l , • kept through· 38 years, an important
ADDIS ABABA (UPI) -Five men ana' two' ~llt}"ig'ii!'.J'etlil'at crell'ri'11b<r 1 ""~"' ~eg. !11 ~ • voicUll..1t11e!i<1• •!lairsMe belteve the
two women anned with r1nes and a hand were wounded. : their lO's appe · be~ '"''itiA!if!l:~'· -~,.:cid'-'~--
grenade tried today to hijack a tourl!t-Listed in grave condition at ~ddi"' plans." with vision and ccmpassio.n. Lite will go
packed Ethiopian Airways jct but were Ababa's American Adventist Hospital They said the male hijacker pulled the on in many ways and places, not. least ln
shot to <h:ath by security guardB in a were s. V. McCollum( Houston, ~xas,• ptn ot 1 band arcnade and was about to it~ influence on the ,?tbcr magaunes and
shootout ~1gh abo~ the Ethiopian cou n-exec\llfve vice president of the Tenneco throw It towatds the passengers "'hen books of Time. Inc.
tryslde, 11rport off1clals said. Oil Co., and Dr. ltoderlck Hilsinger, or shot . ~ . The Time. Inc .. eX'ecutlves noted th1U
One of the male hijackers exploded a Temple University, Philadelphia, the Ille_ grenade "fell lnlo Hilsingt!r's lap Life "encou ntcrtd severt competition
hand grenade, injuring eight ~l'!Ons, In-radio said. buf he jun1~ uP and tbrtw It away from television stnce the late t9SO's" ror
el uding a U.S. oil company excCutlve and Witnesses said the hijacking a~J<:ml>t ff<im us," cne peii:9enger said. The the advl'rtising dollar.
an American university professor, Radio occurred about 15 minutes out of i\ddll\ gtenade eXploded In the after' Section or The magazine camcd "acceptable prof·
Ethioplt1 said. Airport spok~mcn said ~btlba en route to Paris. ~ (Ste HIJACK, Pa,. t.) tSff: LIFE, Plge IJ
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Pair Knew ..
What Loot
They Sough1=
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ~
OI ltle 0.il'f Pi191 SllU , •
• • A gunman !'cam 1nclud1ng one bandit
grotesquely garbed in a nylon istocki/t
mask and woman's wig invaded a
Newport Beach home Thursday night
escaping with several lhousand dp.llurs·
worth of loot.
The pistol·\l.'aving pair missed the man
they were after. according to police, ~
knew just what they wanted and go t it"
Loo6 at the Arthur Roy home, 51l
Irvine Ave .. included a large assortmeyt
of rare coins , a $4.000 fur coat and $80 !Jl
pocket money.
Detective Sgt . Sam Amburgey said tp·
day that ?\1rs. Katherine Roy confrOnted
the robbers at 8:45 p.m .. following a
knock on the door .
Her bedridden. invalid husba nd was
unable to intervene as the men burst
lhrough the door. den1aoding to see his
brother, Pal Roy. 1hen due hon1c from a
San Diego construction job '.,
Investigators said Mrs. lloy told them
her brother-in-law was not at home, but
they pushed on inside. demanding his ex-
tensive rare coin colleclion.
The home was ransacked while t.1rs.
Roy stood helplessly by. J
Total loss in the lightning-like robbery
(See ·ROBBERY, Pag~ 2)
Orange Coast
J
Weather
Those dark clouds will clear to 1
sunny skicS on Saturday, accord-
ing lo the wcatherlady -bu l 1
there's a slight (30 percent) cha.nee
or a few showers on Sunday. ~lighs
in the upper 50s lo lower 60s .
Lows tonight in the 40s .
INSIDE TODA\'
flfusicinns from Stal Beacll lo
San Clemente lt<nJe prepared
the ir Christmas nfferi11os with
flcuid.el's "!ifessia l1" beit1g tl1t
mast popular holiday piece. Set
rodoy's \Vetkt11dcr for times
and places. ......... _.
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Crwuwon1 i.t
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2 D•ILV PILOT s Frtdar. Dect1nbtt 8, l"n
Gwynne Sued in Girf9s Death Fro'" P•ge J
LIFE ... '
A t l.7 mi\li()n lawsuit today Ii the
latest chapter 1n t11e tragica lly sensal ion·
al &tory of Qlle·time cn.isadtng Santa Ana
abortionist Dr. John S. Gywnne. who ts
now In prlcon for murd£'ring his para·
mour.
The bachelor physiclan was sentenced
to five years lo life upon conviction in the
Christmas season slaying of the girl one
year ago.
Her parents have flied suit in Lo~
Angeles County Superior Court. seeking
wroni;ful death and puniUve damages.
Debbie Dwyer, 19 when she was slaln
Fro111 Page l
HIJACK ...
...
the Boeing i07, blC'\~·ing a 1 hole In the
fuselage but the pJJot was able to land
~fely at Addis Ababa.
T\\·o crew members and two other
passengers. including\ Paul ~1uller of
Zurich, Swit1.erland, were slightly injured
-,. the grenade blast that ripped a hole in
the Boeing 7ffl's fu selage and knocked out
one ot Its engines.
Other passengers included R . R .
McCall, of New York City, Texaco's
Eastern Hemisphere general manager,
and 0.0. Nelson of San Francisco, presi-
dent of Chevron Oil Company's overseas
division.
Others hospitalized included
stewardesses Aster Zerefa and Lllina
h1assarin and L o n d o n ornithologist
Rodney Searight. a hospital spokesman
said . lie said aU were suffering from
shrapnel v.'Ounds caused by the grenade
blast.
~ killing or the seven hijackers
marked the highest death toll in violence
conriected with an aerial hijacking.
'lbere had been several hijacking at-
templs by dissident Eritreans seeksing to
win a disputed border area and the
Ethiopian governn1ent installed security
guards aboard its :11.:el of Boeing 707s.
Hilsinger \Vas traveling with Dr.
Richard Wylie, associate chairman, of
Cherry Hill , N.J. They were en route to
the United States after going to Addis
Ababa lo make preliminary ar-
rangements for an exchange program
tha t would send Ethiopian student.s to the
United States.
Jn Damascus, a spakesman for the
Erltrean Liberation Front refused to con-
fll'm or deny the front's responsibility for
the hijack attempt.
'lbe •Pokesman said that during a con-
ference the fronl's leaders held in
Dema9CU5 recently, a decision was taken
to "escalate operat\ona against Ethiopia,
'I1>e Erltrean Liberation. F r on t has
fought for years to liberate Ethiopian
border areas it cla.ims for the former
Jtalian colony.
• • l'romPagel
[('RUMAN •.• •
bo>pltal. .
His condition first was classed "fair"
Wednesday, then fell to "serious" and
deteriorated to "crlt.lcaJ" Wednesday
4ight when doctors said he passed
\brnll&h the "ultracrilical period" due to
~ on Ills weakened heart. His rally
ljegan Tbunday.
• Mrs. Daniel flew from Washington to ¥.r father's bedside on an airplane pro-
~ed by the White House .
Telegrams and telephone calls from
ordinary people Truman loves, all ex-
pressing bope for his recovery, poured
tn to the Truman Llbarry at Indepen·
cience, which is filled with memorabilia
"-bis yeara in the White House following the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1945.
'Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (0-Minn.).
and the Shah of Iran, both called and
spoke wlth Mrs. Daniel.
·'Apollo 17'.s astronauts, after listening
to a news summary from the Houston
~pace Center, expressed "best wishes" to
Truman from outer space.
IT
DAILY PILOT
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...-11e111 SIM llWl"ltl!r.
In their Westwood apartn1enL once work-
ed in Dr. Gwynne 's Santa Ana abortion
cllnlc and she wu also of Ca1holM: fallh.
The "°'"plalnt ~ damages would
prohibit Dr. Gwynne from ever writing
&f" aeJ,ling rJ£lita: to , hi~ biography or ~
nart11llve of his crimes.
Wording of !he legal document also
suggests that Dr. Gwynne's actions im-
mediately following Miss Dwyer's death
could affect her status in the hereafter.
The John Dwyers cJalm he knew their
address and teWphone number but failed
lo prol'ide it to inves1igalors and also did
0 400
Ml .
not say the sl&ln girl wa$ a Catholic.
This -they maintain -deprived the
victim who lay In a pool of blood with
three .357 Magnum pistol wounds from
last ritea of tl1e church.
Attorneys representing the Dwyen
drew up legal documents designed to pr:.e-
vent the couple from suUertnr, further
pain an1 • grief through recounting It.
·•lie "''ould benefit from his crime
... " the complaint declares.
The 3l·year-old doctor maintained fn
testimony that. Miss Dwyer was ~
cidentally shot during a struggle climax-
ETHIOPIA
' ........ • Q
[AiDtSAtAaA)
u,,......._
IN·FLIGHT DRAMA-Five men and two women hijacked an Ethio-
pian jetliner today, but security agents shot and killed them in flight.
The plane, on a fli ght lo Parts, made it back to Addis Ababa and landed.
Mental Test Set
Chicken Rancher to Face
New Trial in l(idnap-rape
Chicken rancher Steve Bronson has
been on:iered to face a new Orange Coun-
ty Superior Court trial on rape, kidnaping
aod assault chartes that left a jury
dead.locked earlier !his week.
Phone Linked
To Defendant
WASHINGTON (AP) -For1ner \\'h ite
House consultant E. Howard }lunt Jr.
had a special private telephone used
almost exclusively for talking with
Bernard L. Barker, a defendant in the
Watergate brealt-in c ase , The
Washington Post reported today.
The Post said the telephone, in the Ex-
ecutive Office Building, was apparently
the only one in the White House complex
for which bills were sent to a private
home -that of Kathleen Chenow.
The newspaper quoted the former
White House personal secretary as
saying that it had been arranged for her
to submit bills for the phone kl an aide in
presidential assistant John Ehrlichman's
office.
A White House spokesman declined to
comment on the r~port.
From Pagel
NUDES •.•
face Superior Court tria'. on those
charges.
Investigators today said one reason for
continued action by their office is the
delay built in lo any action by the ABC.
They said the agency can revoke a
bar's license but the bar can continue to
operate pending a bearing and that often
tc.kes at least three months.
Using the red light act, District At·
tomey's officers said they can obtain a
Superior Court restraining order that
ohen effectively bans nude en-
tertainment.
Judge Walter Charamza o r d ere d
Bronson, 24, of Fontana to be retried
Jan. 29 on charges filed after he alleged-
ly abducted and raped a 19-yeaN>ld
Laguna Beach girl.
The prosecution witness testificJ that
Bronson jabbed an ice pick against her
temple and repeatedly raped her "during
a niahtmar~ ride to the Chino area.
But the ti1al ~te will be abmidoiied if
JSronson is found Jn the·meantlme lo be a
mentally disordered sex of!ende.r.
Judge Charamza sent him to
Atascadero State Hospital 1bursday for
that determination, Bronson will be
returned to bis courtroom Jan. 3 for the
jurist'• ruling.
The judge said tbe jury's verdict that
Brooson was guilty of sodomy and oral
copulation compelled him to seek the
diagnosis that could rule out further trial
action against the Fontana man.
Bronson was arrested Sept. 15 by
Laguna Beach p:illce who accused him of
Ctlmmitting the series of sexual offenses
24 hours Oefore against a blonde victim.
The girl told officers that Bronson waa
weahng several items of feminlne ap-
parel wben be picked her up on Pacific
Coast Highway.
She's Grandma
At Age of 29
SAN JOSE (AP) -Rachel Sabin,
a grandmother at 29, says com-
munication ls the key to making a
young marriage work. .
Mrs. Sabin became one 0£ the
youngest grandmothers a r o u n d
when her 1$-year-old daughter,
Mrs. Ann Munoz., gave birth to a •
poUJld, I~ iJtJ here Tueaday.
Mrs. Sab'lu was only 14 and her
~1:t~ ~~~ ~. were mar..
''We've alWaya been happy. We
communicate. We never argue,"
Mrs. Sabin sald.
Classes Resn1ne
After Ala1nitos Higli Rai.d Protest
Los Alamitos High School students
"'ent back to their classrootN rocs,y
following a campus domomtratlon Thurs-
day over the arrest of 23 students by
narcotics oUlcen.
Principal Dale Schroeder said !be
peaceful dcmonstralloi at the school In-
volved 1boul 150 student.I. "J talked 10
them tor abol.lt 1n hour and • half and
they v.<ent back to class," he said. "And
all Is quiet today."
The prOlest wa1 ~rked when 23
student& and three local adults were ar·
rested on char'' of operatina: an MB,000
drug rln" at the school.
An unCle.ttover agent was planted on
ca mpus by police earllu thll year.
Sho ga.111ed the confideDCt of campu1
drug dtaltn by telling thorn she hod 10r1
her parents In a plane crash, that Jbe
n·aa new to the area end that •he had no
friends'.
Known as "Lois," the undercover
agent let the "'ord get around that her
unhapplness had driven her to dni1s and
the needed quanUUes of cocalne, hashish
and any other bani drup 1he could gel.
Author!ti<I said %3 help!ul studenl •
supplled Loli "11h dnlgs and Tuesday lhe
youths and three adulta 1lleged to be
deatm-1 wtre picked up Jn a wits of
ratdl by Jocal police and 1tat1 narcotle1
officm.
All I.be studcnta were suspended under
dlltrlcl re111l11lw, Scbrotder oald. They
wUl appear before a campus oommlttee
with thelr pattnts to Lalk about rcin!late· ment, he added .
In their demomtraUoo 'lbund1y1 the
1tudent1 complained they had been "told
OUI" by 8CMol authorlli" who allowed
the undenxwer agent to operate on cam·
pus.
ing a quarrel over ber alleged drug use.
•·1 didn't know the gun was loaded,'' he
testllled In a trial that toolc only %11
hotln for !be Jury bl tJod blm l\lill)I of
te<Ond-degree murder.
Owyme was free on $25.,000 bail. when
picked up by Santa Bar1>ara County
Shtti.lf's deputies, unconscious In bis
parked car from a drug o~~"I ·
Abortion charges also hanging over his
head Jn Orange and Los Angeles counties
were dl!mlssed this week, in' the: in-
teresb of justice.
The District Attorney's Office toolc the
action based on a Nov. 22 California
Supreme Court ruling reve:n:ing portions
of the state's legal abortion act whlch he
hod cballonged.
l>urlllf earll<r !rial&, be lldmllted en-dltJR thoUsands of unwanted pregnancies
ln liJ.a Santa Ana and Westwood cllnlcs.
Demonstrators both Cor and against
voluntary abortion parad(l(t before his
Santa Ana offices at the ~'!!, f' !he controversy here. ,
1'be suit filed as the latest development
seeks $250,000 each for general damages:
pain and sufrerln&, plus '5001000 punitive
damages and funeral and burial expenses
fot Miss Dwyer.
Kleindienst to Stay
In Justice Department
tt.s " during mo s t of the 1960s, they
reported, "but the eost preuura and the
competitive prei>surcs kept building up,
and we have been running out or
ecooomles." .
Jn the past two years, Llfe reduced Its
circulation from 8.5 million copies to 5.~
miJlion and increaSt.."d lhc price to 50
cents for a newastand copy in an attempt
to build a high-quality audience.
'The impRct of these moves was Un·
dercut by a very heavy increase In
second-class pGStal rates which affected
Life. particularly because oC Us large
page size." the executive 's statement
said.
They said the magazine was faced with
an increase of 170.2 percent in such rates
ove r five years .
.. ll should be remetnbered that tM
Administration eiempted the pasta!
Service, but not the press. from price
controls which made Life's problem even
more difficult," they added.
Ralph Gra ves, managing editor or LICe,
was assigned the job of helping employes
find other jobs, both within Time, Inc.
and elsewhere .
There art 320 persons on the staff of
LiCe. a n ~ anothCr ~ Time, Inc.
emplO)'eS are involv'ed in helping to
publish it. All ehlployes will be kepl· on
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI)-Presid•nl
Nixon fonn~lly completed hi!_ ~d
term Cabinet today by apootl!lC!!ig that
Rlcbard G. Kleindienst will remaJn as at-
torney general.
the payroll through the end of the year
Corp. Democrats eharsed the setUement "a(ter which a notice perlod goes Jnto tf·
"'fas in exchange for political cOn-fCc.t," the publisher said.
·.tnooiloos. -1'ime k-Life buildings -in-New. York.
But this was coupled with an-
nouncement that five top Justice Depart·
men~ official.::: will be replaced as part of
Nillon's reshuffling of the Administration.
These are: Deputy Attorney General
Ralph E. Erickson; David Luke Norman,
assistant attomey general in charge or
the civil rights division ; Jerris ~.
administrator of the Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration; Roger C.
Cramton, assistant attorney general in
charge of the Office of Legal Counsel and
Leo M. PeUerri, assistant attorney
general for administration.
At the same time, the White House
.said Yale law professor Robert H. Bork,
45, one of the drafters (lf the
Administration's antibustng legislation,
will be a new face in the Justice Depart·
ment.
Bork will become solicitor general next
spring at the end of the current term of
the U.S. Supreme Court, replacing Erwin
N. Griswold who plans to retire.
There have been reports that• Klein·
dienst, confirmed by the Senate as head
of the Justice Department only after
lcr.gthy confirmation hearings, will not
remain loog in lhe second Nixon term
starting Jan. 20.
The hearings were spiced by charges
involving Kleindienst's alleged role in the
settling of an antitrust suit against
International Telephone and Telegraph
2
White House Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler, asked tr Kleindienst would be
replaced soon, replied : "The attorney
general will be staying as attorney
general ln tbe second term."
Ziegler said replacements for the other
five Justice officials would be named
soon. He said Erickson and Norman
would be offered appointments as judges
while the other three would return· to
private life.
Nixon announced tha! Kewel Lafontant.
50, a Chicago atlorney, will become depu-
ty solicitor general l'hen Bark ls pro-
moted to the top job. She will become
one of the highest ranking blacks in the
admlnistr.BUoa.
Z'BERG PLEADS
NOT GUILTY
SACRAMENTO (APJ -Assemblyman
Edwin Z'berg has pleaded innocent to a
misdemeanor charge of drunken driving
·in COMeclion with an auto accident Nov.
16.
Zane Vorhees, allorney for the
Sacramento Democrat, entered the plea
Thursday before Municipal Court Judge
Peter Mannino, who set a pretrial hear-
ing for Dec. 21. Z'berg did not appear
personally.
a p
Chleago, Lopdon, Paris, Tokyo and other
cities are to keep their names, as will
such corporate entitles as Time-Life
Books.
FromP.,.el
ROBBERY •..
was still being tallied today, but police
said it will be considerable.
No \'chicle n'as seen or he:l.rd during
the holdup, while f\lrs. Roy could
describe one bandit only as wearing the
bizarre female outfit.
The other -both were 28 to 30 years
old '-was stocky, with dark, wavy , styl·
eel hair and moustache.
Detectives said the two victims present
and the brother·in-law who arrived home
while they were being questioned could
offer no clues to the identity of the men .
They obviously knew of Pal Ray and
his co i n collectlon, said Detective
Amburgey, adding that no similar
holdups have occutTed in the area
recently.
Several years ago two men posing as
delivery men invaded the Lido Isle home
of millionaire sportsn1an Brigg.! Cun· ni.rliham and escaped with nearly a half-
m.illion dollars worth of jewelry.
Some was scatteted as they fled, but
other items tW'lled up later, fenced
through underworld sources, and th1.s led
lo eventual capture and convictiQn.
( ,, : t -
Henredon) s Four Centuries
DREXEL---l-iERITAG£.-4:lENREDON-WOODt.4ARK-KARASYAN .... ·•
INTERIORS
WDKDATS & SATURDAYS t 100 to S1JO
FllDAY 'TJL f:OO
THE COMPANY
THAT CARES
ON DISPLAY
NOW.
NEWPORT BEACH e
1727 WESTCllff DA.,
''2·2010
LAGUNA BEACH e
J41 NORTH COAST HWY.
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--
Apollo 17 ·Passes Halfway
Uf'I T .......
Last Course
Change Set
For Today
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) -
Apollo 17's astronauts, ~ way to the
moon in America's last planned hmar
vwage, fire up their\ space ship engines
today to steer them on the final course
toward the dark and lonely target.
Eugene A. Ceman, Ronald E. EvaM
and Harrison H. "Jack" Sclunitt were
awakened at 6:33 a.m. PST to this
comforting re~rt from Robert A. Parker
at Mission Control : "You guys look
absolutely super. No problem at all."
"Nice way to WaWUp,'' Ceman
replied.
The pilots reported getting good six to
seven hours of sleep ancr Schmitt said,
"We an feel pretty good this.morning."
Ceman took a nausea pill Thursday
nlght to settle stomach gas and Schmitt
earlier took two aspirin for a slight
headache.
DAILY PILOT ;J
Point
SIX CALIFORNIA POCKET MICE LIKE THIS ONE ARE ON APOLLO MOON FLIGHT
H•rdy Creatures to DetermlM Effects of Cosmic Ray Particles In Spece
The 52-ton spacecraft passed the
midway mark betwei!n earth and moon
at 3: 36 a.m. PST with the moon 132,005
miles ahead.
School Official Abandons
Campaign to Join Group
11J've seen my duty and done it. I only
have one and a hall years left on this
board and I can stand it."
With that remark, Orange County
School Board member Don Jordan
Thursday gave up trying to get bis fellow
board members to join the California
School Boards Association {CSBA).
Orange County Is one or only a few
counties In the state that doesn't belong
lo the organ ization, which disseminates
current information and co n d u c t s
Doctor Refutes
Suspect's Oaim
Ol Losing Mind
MARTINEZ (AP) -A pgycldatrist
says a man on trial for his wife's mirder
wa.s feigning insanity when he went for
a nude stroll along a roadway carrying a
bottle of root beer after D died.
Charles "Chick" Hill was "putting on
an act " Dr. Bancroft M. Broolcs told a
Contra' Costa County Superior Court jury
Wednesday.
He said he en.mined Hill, 45, a few
hours after Jane Bill, 28, was fatally shot
last July at the couple's rented residence
in Concord. , "He kept on mumbling to blmSelf that
be must be crazy and mebtally W people
never use that word," Brooks said.
Ho said the defendant clfl!\1«1 to be
suffering from delirium tl~··•tiut he
showed he dkin 't know Wtuit: are."
"When I suggested that some excessive
drinkers suHeriiia: hallucinations see
bugs he said he saw bugs when be closed
bis e).es, .. the psychla~ testified.
"But it is a medical fact that the
hallucinating see bugs when their eyes
are open and it stops when they close
their eyes." Hill also told the doctor he saw
unicorns, but Brooks testified most men.
ta~ly ill people imagine seeing real
animals.
seminars on education for Its members.
Jordan was concerned because in
April, 1973, the National School Boards
Assoclatior., a larger ·.-ersion of the state
branch, will conduct its 33rd annual con-
vention in Anaheim.
The county board belonged to CSBA
until two years ago when Roger
Anderson of Huntington Beach and Dr.
Doris AraUjo of Santa Ana became cowr
ty trustees.
Dr. Araujo in particular objected to the
"liberal" nature of the organization.
Jordan Wednesda)' tried to reassure 'hef ·
that the conferences have educators of
all points of view.
Only county board chairman A. E.
"Pat" Arnold supported Jordan, who felt
that Orange County educators woold he
"embarrasaed" at the April event
because "their own county board was not
a member of the a!!OciatiQ d"
He asked the boa(d to consider be~g
lng just for the next six months, a coat of
$250. "I kind of believe for the sake of put·
ting up a little better front and making
all of us as board members eligible to at·
tend the --· ... lhou1d be al-! flliated," Jordm, who lives in Garden
Grove said.
A recent state conference In Los
Angeles had seminar seaklns on early
childhood edueatioo, year-round 9Choo:11, .
goals and objectives 111111 oilier pr<11Jng
educational JSSJQ, ~ 'fld.
The board '~ -!OITle In-, formation from CSBA, 1M!.7iaid, but could .
use it "honesUy." Arnold atbd for a DlO'
Oon for membership and inst.ead,.. ~ mav.;s the meetlili be · id'
jourfte(I: 'It was. '
Pesticide Curbed
WASHINGTON (AP) The
EnWoom<nlal Protection Agency ~ .
day accepted. olfen tD 'eliminate volun-
tarily five uses' for the ~ akhio and dleJdrin Jiuf has rejected again a re,
quest that they he banned. The pesticides
are chemical relaUves of the already·
baMed DDT. ,
Old Comics' ¥ elluw Kid
Visits Daily Pilot Pages
Coastal controversy may mo.ve tnland
If regional commissions dictated by the
passage of Prop. 20 decide to take a
tough stance against building penni!a.
That's only one of sevenl top stories
and features the DAILY PILOT is bring·
Ing to a boll to be served up in Sun·
day's edition. Here Is a prevtew of some
of the rest of "Sunday's Best":
YELLOW KID RETURNS -One of
Ameri ca's first comic chat.acters, the
Yellow Kid , was created by R. F, Out·
cault. The Kid's popularity b a d
journalism glanls G<orge Pulltur and
Wllllam Randolph Heam bhldln' ag11not
each other for right. to publlsb him. Out·
cault'• grandson, Peter, who eperatea an
art lludlo In ..:.sis MeA !a pulling
tocether I dl!play of ortrJoll 'y e1Jow !<Ids
pl.. oome priceless arawtnp of hit
grandfalber'1 other fanta&Uc succeaa.
Buster Brown.
llllAT PlllCE IJQUOR~ -Federol
11tudle1 indicate liquor may be America's
moot widely ahuli<d dnJg. CrlUcs say the
liquor Industry may be contrtbuUng to
aJcobollam, the TU1Uon11 most acute
health problem, through lls sales
pollcles. Jn-depth report oUen a look al
what the Industry I• doing.
lllGH FOOD COSTS -What may be
the moot upenlllve thine .about lood IA>'
day Is the ~butlng It. A deJall-
. ed report" lo 1 head ol lettuce """'
the ....,00 "to ilie · e andJ!ncls the coot
ol the trip. WH·39 C...ls. Story Is Ucketed
for YOU Seclloo Stmday.
TELEVISION SPECIALS -Carol
'Burnett and Ken ~.~st~ of "Once
Upon a Mattress," let cover story trt;at.-
mer!t in TV WEEK which alsc. features
Bing C?osby family Christmas special
and a Barbara Eden musical comedy
lllu\I to love.
Hdi.JDAY BWES -Thia can be the time ·ol year hi< I08rlng hapJ>J-1 Or
deep de!Jesllon. Slaff · Writer Joenne
Reynolds loob 1t Dec<mber's high 111~
dde rate In an ll'llcle that advises "Dool
Isolate youneK."
YOUNG GUllU -Top draw "' the
guru Clrcull la I chubby cherub of 15
)'W"S, Maharaj JI, who transmit. wbat he~CAlll Perfect !<nowledle. It bu II·
tracted, more tbao 10,000 devot ... IA> his
side, accordina to feature story to appear
Swlday, with l!lustratlon.
PllETl'Y BABY -Cry>lal la I charm-
ing baby and &r message Is 19 clear u
her name. She has been chose:n u March
of Olmea postu ~lrl. Women's pa1e ltory
by Stafl Writer Jo Olson Is Illustrated
with phoqraphs by Patrick O'Donnell,
Wliat' s in Srore
For Apollo 17
Crewmen Toda :r
It is the last such trip for Americans
this decade, possibly this century.
Today was a busy day for the
spacemen. After a midday course ad·
justment to put them on a heading for
lunar orbit, the pilots planned to open the
hatch leading to their lunar ship
Challenger and make sure it is set for a
landing Monday in a fascinating moon
valley.
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) -' 1bey swing into lunar orbit ~ay
Timetable of Apollo 17 (all times PST evening to prepare for Monday's landing.
and subject to change): The astronauts will spend six days ex·
TODAY ploring the moon from the surface and
3:33 p.m. -Testing complete, Ceman orbit. Ceman and Schmitt will be on the
and Schmitt return to command ship moon for 75 hours, searching for both
America. evidence of a late volcanic upheaval and
5:33 p.m. -Crew exercise period. rocks that may date back to the moon 's
6:5.1 p.m. - Astronauts run zero gravi· begiMing 4.5 billion years ago.
ty experiment to stu4y how liquids react The finale to the $25 billion Apollo pro}
in space. ect was going so well in the second day
9:03 p.m -Dinner. Shrimp cocktail of, £light .that nostalgic flight controllers
and steak for all. ' had time to reminiscence as they marked
10:33 p.m. -Astronauts begin third off each completed step in the 12-day, 13-
sieeP period. -bour ffilSilOn.-
SA'l\JRDAY "As we tick those things off, people
6:33 a.m. -Astrm1p1ts awaken. stand arowid with a wistful look in their
7:03 a.m. -Breakfast of ~ambled eye and say, 'Jiey, that's the last time
eggs, bacoo, peaclies and cocoa. we're going to do that'," said Dlght
10: IO a.m. -Ceman and Schmitt enter · director Gerald D. Griffin, wtlo bas
llmar ~W.for more cbecks. wor~ on all 11 manned Apollo missions,
10:S3 a.m. -Lunar module pilots "I bate. to see this end." 1 "
return to the eommend ship. ' Se""1\tt. the flnt scieptts) to go to the
1:411 •.m. i Ml<ltoori> a>rllictlon, if moon,,·,,;.. malting lhe most qi hit unique ~-. -"'!"·---I ~ty and radioing back ao1Jeady
•
APOLLO FAMILIES RETURN TO HOUSTON AFTER MOON LAUNCH
Jubilant Wives, Children Luve NASA Aircr•ft
stream of scientific observations of
earth, including periodic weather reports.
He even told pilots of tracking aircraft
what lo expect around Wake Island· in the
Pacific. \
Schmitt, before going to bed for the
night, reflected briefly as a scientist on
the awesome sights be had seen.
"One philosophical point, if anything
comes out of it, is that somebody prob-
ably 31,i billion years ago or so could
have looked at the earth and described
patterns not tOO Oisslniilar.
"And It was within those patterns that
life developed. And I certainly th.int all
of us feel It bas not stopped doing that
progression and we'll probabfy see it do
things that even you and J can't imagine
it doing."
He also wil!Md, he did, that they "had
a poet on board Ol'le of these mlssions so
he could descrihe the th.1111 wt're ,mi,.. ing." I 1' • t'
First Installment'.
Of County Tax
Due on Monday
First instailment payments on Orange
County property taxes are due Monday;
Tax Collector Robert Citron warned ~
da")'.
Taxpayers get an extra day to pay up
because the normal deadilne, Dec. 11
falls on a Sunday. '
cttron abo warned about m a i I
paymenls. "They must be postmarked !Ji
5 p.m. Monday or a six percent penalty
will be levied," he llld. "Those who plati
to mail their peymentl should not wiit
tmlil the wt minute because Jhls time "I
year mail service LI unreliable."
In just 2 years •••
outselling every
European car
(except one)!
LOOK WHAT'S STAN DARD EQUIPMENT •••
e RA!DIAL .PLY TIRES e FRONT DI SK BRAKES
e FRONT BUCKET SEATS e FULL CARPETING
I e RACK AND PINION STEERING
SEE ONE. •
mm. Of fte New Car , ••
"61•1 ... a Teae•"
. TRY ONE. • . BUY ONE ,,, TODAY!
• 4
' ' 'I "J. ,. , ' '' I , • •
Bame Of 'l1lt New Cl!> , , •
"'Ge ...... Teeidl"
2121 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA •· l40 llao
•
'
' I
•
·-OAILV PILOT Frl4Ay1 Dtcrmbtr 8. 1~72
Nudie Bars Gird lor Battl@
ot Rodder
IDdes Agai n
~GS OF 111E ROAD: Ab, our cur-
rtnt drippy weather along this best of all
~ible coasts has caused me to drift off
i!fo nostalgia these days, dreaming of
ecrlier years when , I traversed this
~ton in grand a-utos of the time.
· · • "'" 'lbese vehicles were known in coo-
temporary jargqn as hot rods. They were
'1evised from autos tile owner Stripped
o(f all the non -essential nonsense
likeJend<rs,.TIJMing b9ards, windshields,
doorhandles and bumpers.
'lbus with bis machine lightened, the
youthful builder then cast about for the
bigges_t, most powerful V-8 type engine
he could lay his hands on. This new
powerplant was then stuffed in the hole
up front that had been designed in
Detroit for much milder action.
TUE RESULTANT BLENDING of
stripped-down car and huge powerplant
gave the owner a vehicle that indeed
would go like the hammers ol hell Ralph
Nader would have declared them unsafe
even idling at the curb.,
So these were bot rods. How much
gloriouS fun they were back in the days
when I was a lot wetter behind the ears.
Jt was particularly thrilling to roam the
coastline in your roaring roadster in this
kind of weather when the skies were
dripping some.
Ah, the exhilaration of the open auto,
the spray against your face, the wind
whistling through the grille, the roaring
exhaust, the fcnderless wheels shooting
cascades of street water into the air.
Those indeed were the days.
I AM REMINDED of all those bygone
glories because through some quirk of
fate and circumstance. it develops that
this week, during all thi s soggy weather,
J find myself driving to work in the fam-
ly Dune ·Buggy.
A Dune Buggy is a vehicle custom-built
from one of those little foreign devils
with the engine in the rear. The builder
takes off the original body and throws it
away. The factory length of the car
makes it ride pretty good. 'Ibat won 't do.
So they shorten it about 18 inches and
now it will ride like a buckboard on
railroad tracks.
Over all this, they install a plastic slip-
per and call it a body. A flap of canvas
serves as a top. Larger wheels are in-
stalled so the tires are outside of the
fenders. And away you go.
AH, TUE EXHILARATION of the open
J>.me Buggy. It rides so bard your
kidn eys are swapping places. The spMJy
in )'®r face, triclfling dbwn the back of
your neck and up your left sleeve.
Fighting the wheel to keep it from going
up Coast Highway sideways. 1
The wind. whistling through the in-
terior, carrying all your papers into the
nearest flooded gutter. The roaring of the
exhaust -and your headache.
The wheels. throwing cascades of
water into the air and up your left
pantleg, and into your lunchbucket, and
everyplace else.
SOMEHOW, IT JUST doesn't seem to
be quite like the good old days. Well,
maybe they just don't build them like·
they used to. Or, there is the faint
possibility that you aren't built like you
used to be.
The only satisfaction to propelling
yourself about in one of these latter-day
hot rods is that by golly, you're still wet
behind the cars.
Yes indeed . real v.·ct.
'Scr eams' Ignored
LO NOON (UPI) -The newspaper
London Daily Mail said today that
nobody paid much attention when a girl
model in the busy Oxford Street shopping
di&trict tested an American-made anti-
mugging device that emi~ a loud
scream .
Un.I.tee! Press IoteraaUonal
JC a Supreme Court niliog won't allow
San 1-~rancisco's tarot Doda to have both
a liquor llcense and ber ..00, act, she
isntt worried. "We'll se~ fruit juice and
nut.s" 1.Dstead ot liquor, she said.
The U.S. S.preme Court ruled 'l'llesday
!bat stata could deprive nlgj!Wuljs that
feature totally nude entertaiiunent or sex
pefformances of their liquor licenses.
The court ruling, officlals aald, in·
eluded only very blalant. entertainment
and it apparently won't aUect most
•1top1ess" bars oi: ordlnary .striptease
shows, a UPI survey showed.
Family Doubled
M.Lss Doda, SSn FrancJsco'11 matriarch
of tbe topless, said she will not cover nor
chaoge ber nude act -even 1f it means
giving up her liquor Uoon.se.
But other "bottomless" bars across the
L'<>Unlry -Jike Qieetah Two aod Mr.
Mort's in Lake County, JU. -'inay be Jn
trouble. The two place; feature total
nude entertainment. State's Attorney
Jack Hoogasian said, .. 'Ibe standards of
the community are against such nudlty.
This may possibly give me the legal
guidelines t-0 start a move against it."
In the nation's capital where blue
movies and topless bars have opened
U~I T..i.ihol1
Proud pat<nts Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Tarver show photographs of their
quadruplets born Thursday in Denver. They have 4 other children.
Philippine President ·.
Knifer's Main Target
MANILA (UPI) -Government investi-
gators said today that a man who slashed
and wounded the wife or President Fer-
dinand E. Marcm apparently attacked
her as a substitute victim for the presi-
dent himself.
Authorities named Mrs. Marcos' as-
sailant -shot dead by security men 00.
loni anaUonwi~-tl:!evisl-On audience mo-
ments lifter the attack Thursday -as
carnto Dlmaall and said he lived about so miles 1rom Manila. ·
They did not otherwise identify him .
Ireland Voters
Favor Division
Of Chrnch, State
DUBLIN (UPI} -Early referendum
returns today showed the Irish by a 5-1
majority in favor of a separation of
chlll'Ch and state in Ireland that would
end 35 years of special status for the
Roman Catholic Church.
A proposal to lower the voting age to 18
drew a similar margin, officials said.
First returns in from Thursday's
vot.ing_ showed only 50 percent of the
Republic's t.8 million voters responded to
Premier J ack Lynch's appeal for a
"massive" turnout tO demonstrate good
will toward Northern Ireland's Protes-
tanl majority.
Party leaders blamed cold weather, the
JK>rtoCOOlroversial campaign and voter
reluctance to tamper· with the chur<:h's
position for the poor Poll.
In the absence of any organized
political opposition to both proposals, the
issue was never in doubt. and party
leaden bad concentrated on getting a big
turnout of voters to make the decision an
impressive one.
Marcos said he accepted an offer by
President Nixon to send a specialist to
help treat ·Mrs. MartOS. He said Nixon
told him ~at all Americans were shock-
-ed .;,.,,· disin.yed by the attack.
Information Secretary Francisco S.
Tatad said the attack was part ot a con-
sPir8cr-to -M1exterminate~·-·both---.COS -
""1<1 his -Tatad linked the incident With , • ··,..Previous unsucceMfql~ ~
sina.Ctempts on Marcos ~ back
lo 'ealt' 1970.
Capt,. Ricardo Villanueva, heading the
invest!Salion into the attack that left Mrs.
M~ with severe stab wounds on both
hands .and one arm, said Dimaati's two
sislen and another man teotatively iden-
tified as a brother were arrested and are
undergoing questioning.
Dimaati made statements to his sisters
before the attack, investigators s a i d,
which indicated he wanted to kill Presi-
dent Marcos.
Investigators said Dimaali apparently
thought Marcos was going to hand out
prizes at an outdoors civic awards cere-
mony near Manila. His wife went to the
ceremony instead. ·
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Drlivtry of I~ D;aily Pilot
MIMn-FrMil•Y: II "" Clo .................. . ~..-• I'/' 5:11 ........ Qlt •""' y,..... copy wit!
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Winter Weather Snowballs
Snow, Sleet Exte1id A.cross Most of North
I
'
•
(Coortal '1lm"""11 ond
ti<!ol do.ta appear., today un
Pao• 20.J
three block> from the While Hou1e, lbe
U.S. Attorney's ofllce said It \iu ·•lll-
dying the S.preme Court rullllg. 'Ibo
city's alcoholic beverage commission
said 11 wu also t<vltwlna: !be dedslon.
In~ O!arlet L. ~dlalrmaa
of the city's liquor llcenliJlg bOnl, said.
0 No1r1fe can cleaa UP. IGIDe of the
perlormance1 ol nuik •a0i1ng fllll <!a ..
ciJlg that goea fsr be,_. Jiii! ln the
combat zone (downfawn) aru.'' ·
In Indlanapolls, a , .... daftc<r who
billa bene11 as Gloria Bee was arr.lined
in Municlpel COurt '11wnd1y on cbMges
' of dancinc lo the nude. Allthorilles uld ConUol (ABC), which regulll., bars.
the %1·YH.t-okl dancer wu arre1ted 1n an Jack K. Btnnan. attorney (or tbe
lndlanapoU. tavern. Garden of Ed<n in San Francisco, which
In Secramento1 Joe Ortea•, operator ot headlines • nude n1ove dance," Mid 15
a nudle beer bor, aid be Oidered bia bot· peroenl ol the topl.,. places would go out
tomleaa doncen w cover up. ol buslnesa, "Liquor !& what permits
"! (DI word from the ABC. 'll1e bi( mo<t of these club< w survive," be aa!d.
nm. WIS me to stop or get buted. 'lbe Owners .of some San Francisco '°Pless
glrll? They're kind ol llOITJ about I~" and bolUlmless bars said they woo!d
Mid O!lop. , • • -flg!lt any new enlorcement right bock to
"We'll lbri sn-"nr oploll .....,. , the 9.lpreme Court again.
place that pennlll lldlklnd ol cooduct on Tommy Heath, owner of two beer
a uniform.statewide belil," llid Edward bar. which feature erotic movies, satd,
J. Klrby, a lonnlr Jl'BI -t ..i cllt<c-"They've (the ABC) got one hell of a
i.r ol the C8lllornl& Al<obolle Beverage light on their bands."
Unetnployment Drops
November Jobless Rate Sinks to 5.2%
WASHINGTON (AP) ne'" nation's ~ t,.;o-tenths ,to '40.9 hours for the highest Bureau of Labor Stat!stics reported. I.t unemployment~rate drop~sharply-in__Jen:l.Jn..fmzr y_em"!,_.:_ __ _ Jl&S the lowest~e~-~~ce September of
November from 5 5 """rcer:tt io 5 2 ~rcent 'lbe November level was the JowesfiD trIO. At tile same time, ~1.ota)-n~r
· ,... · ,... 27 months, the report said. of AmericanJ with Jobs remained
of the work force, the Labor Department 1be total number of \Diem.ployed ~ virtually unchanged at 82.7 m.lllkm, the
said.to<lo_y._ ~ ____ peel more lban 200 000 to U million, the bureau said.
The bureau said that although total
employment was unchanged last month,
it was up u million from a year ago. Planes Curtailed
It said the jobless rate for full-time
workers dropped from 5.1) to 4.6 percent,
the lowest level sinceJnjd-1970 while the H F" h •• R d
rate for part-time workers, at 8.4 per-eavy 1g tmg . eporte cent, was virtually the same as last yea r.
THE REPORT noted a marked decline
in unemployment among white collar
workers from 3Ji to 3. l percent Within
this group, the jobless rate for pro-
fessional and le<.:bnical workers declined
from 2.8 to 2.1 percent and for clerical
workers from 4.8 to 3.9 percent.
Unemployment rates for blue collar
workers at 5.8 percent and service in-
dustry workers at 6.4 percent were
virtually ,1mchanged for the moo.th, but
the blue collar rate was substantially
below its 7.5 percent a year ago, the
bureau said.
TUE AVERAGE length of unemploy-
ment ·also declined, down from 11.6
weeks in October to 11.3 weeks in
November, the lowest in nearly a year
and, the report said, tne nation's labor
force declined by 240,000 to 87 million.
In employment, there were job gains of
78,000 in manufacturing and 156,000 in
services, while construction jobs declined
24,000 and mining 4,000, the report said.
The total number of workers on non-
farm payrolls rose 200,000 to 73.8 million
a gain of 2.7 million over the past year,
the report said.
The average length or the work week
dropped more than exppcted . f o r
November, down two-tenlbs of an hour to
37.l hours, the bureau said. But in
manufacturing, the ·work week increased
In All of South Vietnam
SAIGON (UPI ) -The heaviest
fighting in nearly a month raged the
length ol Sooth Vietnam tOOay but bad
weather forced a steep cutback in U.S.
air raids against North Vietnam, allied
spokesmen said.
The U.S. and Sligo!l commands
reported 83 C.Ommunist-initiated attacks
in the 24 hours ending at 8 a.m. today ,
the highest number since Nov. 11 when 87
were reported. Seventy of the attacks
reported today were by sbellflte alone
without troop c;ontact.
The U.S. CO!lllDDl1d said 4<l jet fighter-
bombers Oew missions against North
Vietnam in the 24 hours ending at 5 p.m.
Thursday, fewer than half the number
reported Wednesday. Spokesmen said .ad-
verse weather condJUon.s limJted the jet
strikes.
Jn addition, B52 bombers which ny
above the weather flew only · five
missions in the DemllitariJed Zooe, the
six-mile-wide buffer r.c:me between North
and South Vietnam. But "14 waves of B52s ·
bombed in Sodth Vietnam's nortbemmost
Quang Tri Province just south ol the
DMZ.
Their mission in Quang Tri was two-
fold -to destroy Communist supplies
nowing south in the event of a cease-fire
and weapons freeze, and to support South
Vietnamese forces endeavoring to recap-
ture·as much of the province as possible
before such a cease-fire.
South Vietnamese marines northeast of
Quang Tri Cjty, 435 miles north of
Saigon, reported North Vietnamese gun--
ners unleashed 1;400 rounds of mortar
and artillery shells against government
pooilioos 1bursday. In minor skirmishing
the marines reported killing seven Com-
munists at a cost of two of their own men
dead and 23 wounded.
On the political front, informed sources
sald President Nguyen Van Thieu is e:i:-
pected to address a joint session Of the
Senate and Olamber of Deputies early
next week concerning the current state ol
cease-fire negotiations in Paris.
1bleu met for an hour and 20 mi:mltes
Thu~y with U.S. Ambassa,dor
Ellsworth Bunker, 1t&eif klnge9t 1Sea1on
since a deputy of peace ~ Henry
A. Kissinger visited Saigon a roonth agO.
-frolf\ Norv.,iqy
4-he
FJELLSIKKER.
.+he offic.i"\ Coat-I
us.e.d b ~t h.e. . No·n1.1e.s ia,.,, Mou n+a • .-.
_ r«>~cue. t "ci "'s •
W il'la P,r'oof / r"ll Oi<;h.-1 r-'-•
proof, "\ri m~ed .iith.
.9!t1uit1e. wo1-f fu•. Pe~p l'l'I Q p po c k<t t ,
hcu'ld i..>armczr-pocK.e. t .
Bo titiW1--hcz fb :.eq I
o u+ w il'\d .
~f ec+ Ccc:t+ -fol"'
-the ~lopes.;w i y.,-te ,.-
con1112r-+: ~te. rid ll'lj ,
or WQTCL\1111,q i~~
f',.-lc\O.\/ Vli eJli:+ s a'""-'
Na--1y or 'red
,.
@) a@ ·@)~@
44 fashion island, newport center 644-5070
Cranston's
s-on Gets.
Trial Date
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
24-year-old ton of Sen. Alan
Cranston (D -C a1 1f .), is
scheduled to stand trial here
Jan. 18 on assault charges fil-
ed In the alle1ed drugging of a
fonner Playboy bunhy.
Trial for Robin Cranston
W BS pootponed from Tbllflday
in Superior eoUrt becaUlfl a
prosecution attorney wu W, a
I
court 11pokesman said. """"""-Cranston Is charged with
WET BAY AREA WEATHER CAUSES MUD SLIDE IN LAFAY ETTE
( BRIEFS ) w.11 •• Roof of;-Knocked Aokew A• Storm c ..... E\ Slid. ?
:~~~i:~~·i~1~w: Snow. In Bay Area.
in a West Los Angeles home
last March. Franciscirns Toss Vrban Snowballs
Fru1ilJ Dtttn10tr 8 1972 D41 l Y PILOT S
Prof Offers Pla11
To
MONTEREY (AP) -Stan-
ford University p r o r e s s o r
William S h oc k l ey , con-
troversial for contending that
blacks are genetically inferior
to whites, suggests the govern·
me nt pay men with low IQs to
get vasectomies.
A $1,000 bonus could be of·
men lectur ed se parately to
about 400 persons at ~1onterey
Peninsul a College. th e n
answered questions.
Willian1 Farr
Gets Fihn Aid
fered for each point a man's LOS ANGELES (AP J-20th
intelli gence quotient is below Century·Fox announced il will
100, says Shockley, an elec· sponsor a motion picture
tronics engineering professor. premiere to help defray court
costs for jailed r e p o r t e r
THUS, A ltlAN with an IQ o( William Farr.
90 MNld be paid $10,000 for Proceeds of the Dec. 21
10% OFF
WITH THIS COUPON
ON ANY OF OUR
CHRISTMAS TREES
LIVING CHRISTMAS TREES FROM $20.00 UP
BEAUTIFUL LIVING GIFT
JAPANESE BONSAI
NOW .. $s.so .•
TAKATA NURSERY
so-;. off
710 IAKER STREET (n•11:t to fir• $t•tion)
on Bristol •t l•k•r -COSTA MESA
546-0724
obtaining a vasectomy, an West Coast opening of "Thet~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
operation in which the ducts Effects of Gatnma Rays on i:
carrying sperm are cut to pre-Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds,., Vi!tit impregnation. Ne arly Everyone
Listens to Landers
e Bov Crut hed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Snow fell on San Francisco
an<f gave -the city 'I clilldren a
rare chance to toss urban
snowballs here T b u r s d a y
night.
Shoc~Jey made the proposal directed by Paul Newman and
Thursday in what was billed starring his wife. Joanne
a8 a "debate" with Cedric..X, Woodward. will be donated to
a black p r o f e s s o r of the William Farr Defense
psychology at Stanford. The Fund, a Fox spokesman said. snow to stick near sea Jevet1------------'-'--''------------"-------------------------
CORONA (AP) -A 2-year-
old child died after he was
crushed to death by his
family's car in the driveway
of his home, au,borlUes said.
Byrne forbade the government
Police uld Brian Reinhardt,
son of Mi'. and Mrs . Glenn
Reinhardt, died slx>rtly after
Thursday's a c c i d e n t in
Riverside Gen eraJ Hospital.
Brian and his s i ster ,
Charlene, 4, were playing in-
side the car. A hand brake
was released accidentally, and
Brian fell under the wheels as
the vehicle rolled backwards,
authorities said.
e Yortv'• In
LOS ANGELES (AP )
Mayor Sam Yorty will an·
nouoce Jan. 3 that he ls seek·
Ing reelection to a fourth
tenn, says his closest political
associate. He said Yorty
decided after turning down a
job in the Ni x o n ad·
ministratk>n.
Deputy Mayor J o s e p h
Quinn, recuperating at home
from an earlier heart attack,
said In ID Interview '.fhunday
that the C.ye&Hld mayor
plans to conduct a hard-hltUng
primary campaign this spring
that Is likely to mult In a
runoll.
eCleNCaH
RIVERSIDE (AP ) -An
· empty school bus was sliced ln
half by a Union Paclllc freight
train after the driver ap.
parenUy thought the train was
on another track, authorities
said.
The 66-passenger bus was en
route to an elementary school
here to pick up youngsters for
a field trip 11lursday when the
accident occ u rre d , the
highway patrol saJd.
The dr ive r , Donald
Shennan, 62. was treated and
released from Riverside Com-
munity Hospital alter suf·
£erlng cuts and scratclles.
e Prbon Closing
SUSANVILLE (AP )
Citizens or the suburban
ciUes of Daly City and
Pacifica Docked outside to
watch the fiakes silently fall·
ing past street lights.
SBORTL Y BEFORE the 1
p.m. snowfall, a h eavy
hailstorm hit the area,. with
the pellets sticking to sloped
car windshields.
There also were reports of
lightning as the snow fell.
It snowed briefly at low
elevations earlier, but the
white stuff didn't stick .
O~ers said the last
storm that dropped enough
Kitty Hawk
Crew Won't
Appear
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Tbe
21 sailors accused of rioting
aboard the carrier Kitty Hawk
will not appear before a con·
gressional committee evm
!bough invited and H forced to
appear some would invoke the
Fifth Amen<llnenl, a defwe
attorney said Thursday.
for any period of time came 10
yeers ago when most Northern
California valleys es:perienced
a white covering.
'The National 'N e a t h e r
Service said it apparently was
cauted by "one thunderhead
fi ve to seven miles in
diameter moving southeast
about 25 miles an hour."
The Northern California
storm temporarily blocked
highways, . reaping accidents
and forcing officials to close
schools ln at least three coun.
ties.
DENSE FOG packed Into
the San Joaquin Valley, cut·
ting visibility to near zero as
the season's worst storm
whitened even low elevation
ridges and heaped blizzards.of
snow on the Sierra Nevada .
Even the San Francisco Bay
Area was dusted with snoJV
and hail, with snow in Matin
County visible from downtown
San Francisco, where tem-
peratures fell lo a season low
38. •
In Marin, the twis t i n g
Paooramic Highway, an eight·
mile road connecting Stinson
Beach with State Highway 1,
was closed all day due to
snow, tbe highway patrol said.
'The roads up nearby Mt.
Tamalpe.ls, Mt. Oiablo in Con-
tra Costa County and Mt.
Hamilton near San Jose were
closed until snow plows could
arrive.
"It would be lnapproprlale
for them to appear before the STATE D I VIS I 0 N of
committee," saJd Milton J. highway~ crews dlll!lped salt
Silverman. "I trink the con· and sand on State Route 17
gressmen realized this and between Los Gatos and Santa
will not assert their subpoena Cruz to melt slush which clos·
power." ed the· road far a baJf hour.
A three-man House armed Several other ma)or roads
service subcommitte, which were closed brieOy due to bad
enters its tbird day of closed uislbility and snow, including
bearings into the racial lrou· State Route 20 near Marysville
ble today, boarded the giant and U.S. 101 near Leggett.
carrier Thursday and spent But Interstate 80 West was
three hours touring the 5Celle impassable due to zero visibili·
of the disturbance Oct. 12·13. ty from TrucUe to Colfax.
1bey ate lunch, chatted Highway o ff i c i a I s said
cuually with s e v e r a I passenger cars and light
crewmembers, talked a t trucks and buses with chains
length with three others but • were allowed to travel east on
said litUe after their visit. I-80.
Employes at lhe at a t e' s P .. '""!'-•••1111111~--... --------~I minimum security pri9on unit s E h =~ .. i==edf:~fy ex x~ ange
will close by July 1 - a move
the residents of this small 'Sh , ' T nd S ? community feel will be a blow aring re een. to their economy.
The news Thursday ti> the
280 men who work here was SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Friendship, more than
accompanied by ami$nces kinstrip , will underlie future human reiattons and tomor·
that they will be eligible for row's couples will openly engage in sexual relations wilb
prison jobs In other parts of friends and other oouples, says Dr. Ale.under Qmfort,
the st.le. The Inmat es British biologist and medical researcher.
themselves will be sent to In an article entitled "Sexuality in a 7.ero Growth~.
other prison units, it was ciety" in the December issue of Center Report. Comfort
reported. says today's trend toward awinging "marks the end, or
Minimum risk prisoners who the beginning of the end, or proprietary sexual attltude!."
have not committed crimes of Mate dtaring, says Qmfort, is a ''reall.slic view of the
violence have been housed at Deeds of c:oupies and individuals: for variety" and a "tec-
thls Northern C41Uornia foclll-ognJtion that the meetmg of needs nther than 111e1r !rn>-
ty. They have been used to tration is a gift which eaixc=s love , .• and strengthens
fight forest fires ~bout the primary bond."
the state. Ceoler Report ia !tie montllly pubUcaUon of tbe Cent«
• Pc-• Trial !or the Study of Democratie maltutlons, a oonprUU edu-r -· cational researeh institute bere.
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The ~~~~~ loMg delayed PentagOo Papers ::
trial will begin next Tuesday .
says the trial judge, but the
government will have to
eliminate some 100 pages of
proposed evidence it planned
to present.
U.S. Dist. Court Judge Matt
Byrne forbad the government
Thursday to use tome p.eaea of
the massive Pentagon Papen
study th•t the prooecuUOD
didn 't tell the defense It was
going to die et the trial.
Byrne denied a defense ,.
quest for time to llttl>ll' for
new material the government
has •dded to Its case slnce the
trial was baited by en 1ppeal
of a wiretap issue last August.
e Brcdfe11 B ... t
LOS ANGEl.ES (AP) -Tho
27-yw-old dough!« of Los
Angeles City Oouncllm1n and
mayoral cand idate Thom11
Bradley has been 1rrested and
booked for lnvutlgaUon of
posseulng d1ngerou1 dn1g1,
authorltle1 sakf.
A Personalized Gift
h t+i•t "''" of vevtt Ofl• of tftoto ffilYI fftot hot O'ltlfY•
fttln91 W\'f' Ht ,;.,. lrifffl I
9lf+ cortlflc• .. f.r • c11t .. 1t1
M.4• 1vH Of 1,ort coot •"' 111• from _, 1v,..rb 11loc·
tl•fl •f Etttlid1 o..d Scottb h
f11.flc1 for Olfl1fflrl11.
w .... ltff ,._., 1111 1ntr1e A ...
N..,wt ...... C ... ,_.
PttOMls M .. 1111
f ro• 11 • 'f.110 ••"•I ••r N•rlt"7•'
Nt:w/Hlf1 t.. V k 1ori• S•""'-1 D~btr JO
•-" D«rsib.rr 17 /row 11:QO I• 41)()
Co•t i • ••ti •i1il uiilh S11•I• ..•.•
giH hi• yo11r Chris I••• Lisi ••ti ,,, •fou C,,ruly c.,,,.
TRIM A T REE
SHOP
/0#' ~ ""'r tkcor•lilfK ""'"· u,,;q,,,
JJ.rJ i. fi"" iln11.,, •• Exflt•U i«t OHi"
of• liiwl., .l•porli .. ,Pl•s .. A mrri<••
.Mk 1111Wllits. fllf/'Of'IN/ 11nd Jo,,,r:J.
lit lrtt I irhtJ ... 1 uii ,,Ji.Jr .. .11tliorr .•
o.bblr ... .111-;,,;,,1.u """ o•kloor ..
ewSEce(fNTJ~S
'FINEST SllECTJ0N~
ARTIFICIAL TREES
Alre•lly Shoptll •••••••••••
Decortitecl ••••••••.••••••
Ill the llox •••••••••••••••
·~lfoust
(!;9~
All•• S.I .. NOW!!!!
REPLACEMENT BULBS
C7Yz ... -• . . • . . . . 7 c
C9 ---······-···ll c
~-mt:~ PIANTED «' YOO
WATER TREE
STANDS
1't:tfl :Jllt1r l rrr /rt ih ,,.,J 1rt:t •
1hro•1bo111 lb1 ho/ it/11:11 w ith orrr of
••rW.,1er'l'rn!iW""1 $5.95
C4MSTART~
8CAATCH .....
Green Garde ...
w B·J I• •ix witb 1111~ , , .•• 79C £v1:m1N0 veu NEEP.I
$1.19
ICICLES
Jo,."" oldf111hio ,,ed Chrisl"1d1 reg. 29c Now _ .......... -I 9 c or 6 for $1.00
reg.59cNow ········-··· 39cor 3 forS l .OO
SNO-J ET KITS
Nou' y•• r11n/l"'la ytu1r lrt r 111 J,o,,,, £,,, "'"' ,.,. 011.... · 'I ea reg. $3.98 now ..... -.. -............ , .
refills reg. S l.69 now ............................... 8 9e
CHRISTMAS COLOR
UNu/1 o/hlOffl;,•K rolor J•.11 ;,, 1i ,,,tf1Jr tlH b~hl.,,11. litrtt ltl«t/o"
•f "'""tif•l M••t. C hr1111r111 1C11tt 11s, Po111st t l 11111 B•ro"'"'• ~Azwlt•s """ ,,.,,,., "'ort. M.11.W yo•r ,,,,,,;o,. t11rly
TREETOPS
'Ft htiw r/;,,,,,.,,;,., /•"'1 lrrt IOflJ, 1011r tho;,, of colon
""" i lyltl. p;,J, 1bt O#t}•sl rithtfo ryo•r lrH 59 Holiday priced from .............. :................... C
GREEN ~AVEN GARDENS .
2123 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 6'6-392~
j 73 1 Wa<Warner.Santa Ana S.f0.676'
M•.W ,.., 1tltt1io'lf fr--Grwtr ll111Y11.1 ~•ow ,.,.,.,Jt l'ort1I f>/'ffWf,
1·w ltll'11li1'lf1 I• Hlltr u·n~ JO#. '
i\f,,j, yo11r stlt cli•• fro,., lt'hi1r 11i r, \ 1/,.rr ·r;p, Do•1l11s Fi'~,
p/11 rrl•l hi• Noblr, p/;,.,,,., '"" G r1111tl l· ;,, !lbtr1rtll l'f•.,l•l10rf
O.f1111, Sc11cli p;,,,., t it .• ,,, ,1t11'1t lo/I • 111 11 ' G IA .' 'I'S
)'"* "'"' 11110 brltrt I • y11to r I rrr, or pi t i o•t of O#tl 10 ht t • II••
flMJi1J j•1l llH ,,.,,., y•• tho41t ;., ••Y r.J11r ... .or,.,, •111 b11y ""'~Ml
IM1.Jrt.tly .,,,,/l0t/t'J. , All r<11ric1/,, """ $itr1 trf tli<,1111 •. ,f'f'<11/ulk
,f /ltl. • .1,tti<llf f'J,,,J Ct f.-rh.11.
SflOP f'.A RL)' 111111.E YOU s1·1t L lfA Vf. A G()OD Sf!t Ec ·r10N
'/ 0 CllCX»'l! f lo!Oi\I.
casro~~Nq
• DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
~
Board's Real Mandate
One thing was made clear by the Laguna Beach
schools recall election this week; there is no mandate
present In the community for either side in the conflict,
and neither side should consider that such approval ex·
is ts.
It appears about 35 percent of the voters in the
district turned out to cast ballots. The vote was roughly
split down the middle on the question of recalling trus-
tees Gera1d Unke and Patricia Gillette.
Looking forward from the elect-ion, the sch o -o l
board's real mandate is to patch up its shaky house hold,
forget past bitterness and act in a reasoned, responsible
manner keeping the educational needs of the children
in the district foremost. Political philosophizing belongs
elsewhere.
Board members must be responsive to the total
comn1unity, and not ju_st to that 17 percent or the voters
\vho cast si.Jpportive ballots. It \Vas the failure of the
school board to listen to the community that precipitated
the recall election in the first place.
The closeness of the election means something else,
too. No major changes in th_e distr~t's educational
make-up are being sought by the rommunity as a whole.
This is even more evident because of the large number
of people who opposed the recall beca use they were
against urecall" in principle.
Rash or drastic steps on the part of the majority
n1embers on the board or trustees, coming after a heated
election, could well be regretted in cooler, calmer days
ahead.
some 65 percent of the community didn'I care enough
about the school system to make the effort to cast a
vote.
The regular school board election In April, with
three trustee seats, including that of board president
William Thomas, to be filled may produce a clearer
mandate.
Worthwhile Park Effort
Despite its fantastic potential as a beautiful park,
Pines Park in the Capistrano Beach Palisades remains
a tragic eyesore.
And it could stay that way for years, because the
special parks district that administers the scenic acre-
age claims it has little money for development.
That complaint, however, has spurred some resl·
dents to mobilize as a ronservatlon corps of sorts to
pitch in and donate labor, money and plants to beautify
the area along Camino Capistrano.
The plan will only work, however, lf t~e· parks and
recreation district and the resi dents can blend their
efforts and. meager funds into a well-organized, dedi~
cated effort.
Palisades resident Tony Blotter came up with the
idea and bas voluntered· to help coordinate the projeCt.
.
I,
!· ..
·.
The cliff-hanger election did show one more thing,
Blotter put it succinctly at a recent pubiic meeting
when he said, "Tha_t park has sat there in ruins for 40
years, and now that we have won it as a public park, it's
time to save it."
s "WE.'vE 60~SI~ £.YfAYTH1N6 Sur SA1EOH-/llAY1E 1HA1S 'TllE ANSWE~" ---·.
The Hurrible
Origin of
'Humble Pie'
~YDNEY J.HAR,JUS)
We haven ·1 had a word-quiz on
.. origins" for quite a while, so here is a
set of interesting word Qerivations. A
score of 50 percent is respectable.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
What's going to happen in Laguna
Beach when nobody files for o[fice
because of fear of being recalled?
P.O.
TMl h lhlrt rtfll'Ctt ruMn° Yln't. Mt
lll(ffMrl/y ll'loM .. ""' --· s-,_ "' _.. hi OlltmY Cklt. o.!IY ~ilel,
t. What has ''contemplatiQO" got to do with birds? 2. From the French ~ressions,' "deux
2. How did the two ace," meaning two aces, and "tres ace," or three aces. and three in cards 3. nie poorer peasantry in medieval
come to be known as times ·were forced to eat a meat pie the "deuce" and made from the "umbles," or lower parts, the "trey"? of the stag.
3. Poople actually 4. A room in the House of Parliament
used to eat "humble buildings which was used for meetings
pie'' -v.'hat animal between members of Parliament and the
were they devour· genera: public or special lnt'erests asking
ing? for corudderation. (Hence, ''lobl>)'isl.")
4. What did the first room called a 5. Nasturtium, because of its pungent
"lobby·• refer to? odor, is a compound of the Latin for
5. What flower's name, literally "nose" and "giving pain."
translated, means •·pain in the nose"? 6. "Orang-utan," and its varialions, is
6. Why is a certain species of ape call· " the Malayan word meaning "man of the
eel by the odd name of orang-utan or woods."
some variation? 7. A military parade was originally a
7. Why is it a contradiction in terms to "preparation" for war, or evidence of
have a "victory µarade"? preparedness (from the Latin, "parare."
8. What was a "stadium" in ancient to prepare), not a celebration of its vie·
Greece? tory.
9. What fruit did the word "test" come 8. A "stadium" was a measured. leogth
Crom? of some 200 yards, used to lay out the
10. Why are the standing rules of a course foe a foot race: later, the name of
group.called the "by-laws"? the length came to be applied to the
ANSWERS: whole field itself.
I. Tbe Roman augue, or soothsayer, 9. "Zest" was at first a shred of lemon
would ·mark off a section of the sky with peel.
his wand, and then study the movement 10. "By-laws" were "town laws." from
of birds within thlll section, which was the Old English "by,'' meaning a town or
coiled a "tempJwn ." municipality.
Payola Still Pays Off
\VASHJNGTON -1be practice or
paying off disc jockeya to plug records,
JX.pularly known as payola, is a federal
crime.
Yet we have reported in a Series of col-
unms that record companies have been
slipping free records, TV sets and C'ash
under !he table to disc jockeys and pro-
gram officials.
In other instances.
narcotics, prostitutes
and Las Vegas holi-
days have been pro-
vided to those who
prefer a hot time.
For t h e (.'(lmpa.n-
ies , it's worth a
little payola to get
their records on the
hit lists, becawie teenagers with a billi91Y
dollars in their pockets nock to the
record stores to buy the hit tunes.
At first, our stories were downplayed or
denied. But not1 the. heat ls on.
The Feder>! Comm1111tcaUons Com·
mwlon h11 •lrudl' held four closed
bearings in Seattle, • t..m Angeles,
P!ttabur&b 'and New York City.
Vlnqary old Bill Roy, the FCC's com-
pliance chtti, bas vtgorously denounced
payola and ts now slowly moving the
FCC toward P"hlk bearings.
THE BIG PAYOFFS, Roy lhould find,
have been &Oinfl to the rich, white rock
'n' nil! dloc jockeyl. They get the
L~r tript to Vegas. But the
bllOkl ,and Spanlsl>language broad-
""'"' are,,... likely to got caught.
In Blken!ield, Clllt, f6r example, •f·
fidavla filed with lhe FCC charge lllal
Roymmd Gana, program dlrtCIOr of the
lllllc -w•U.r KW!C, h as
demondod and recdved payola.
Paulino Bunal or the tiny Bernal
(JACK ANDERSON)
Records finn swears lhat Garza "has
always asked me ror 1noney. We call it in
Spanish 'Mordida' ... Every lime that I
•isited Bakersfield, I wou1d pay him
from $75 to $100 cash." When Bernal
stopped paying, his sales dropped.
-A DANCE PROMOTER, L e o n e l
&ncbei, also swore he pa.id off Garza.
"When l stopped paying, my records
were no longer played on KWAC, except
on rare occasions," Sanchez swore .
When my associate Les Wh ltteti
reached Ga1'7.8, he burst out : "Never!
Never! It's completely polltltal, the most
ridiculous thing I ever heard. There's no
payola." But he oonceded he ls under
FC..'C lnvestJgation .
Our own sources, who would talk to U!'J
only after we pledged to reveal no
names. say aOme of the nation't biggest
blp_ck radio personalltit! hive been talc·
Jng money for playing records. EYen with
them, the !URIS have been in the $200
ran1e. One record promoter told U! of a
major eutem "Rhythm and Blues" sta.
tioo, wtucb oUered to play hJs rtCOrd for
a linfll• botllt or Sootdl.
RAY HIMSELF has eneountuod • new
!Orm or payola. The dl$C jO<koy IJllY pro-
mote h1.s own dance or other show and
"invite" a record CX>ITlpany to provide
hirr with talent al far less than the ping
rat .. The procttds go to the cflJ< jockey.
fl the performer complies, the <tl>c
)Oekey playa his record on the air. tf he
falls_to ibow up, the rocord ls lllJIOred. Ray calls thLs an .. indirect payment"
which appean to violate federal
st;.tutes.
A Case of 'Heads Y ot1 Win, Tails I Lose'
Painful Progress of Peace Talks
WASHINGTO~ -For the U.S .. the
Hnal Vietnam negotiations are torturous·
ly and painfully turning out to be a case
of "beads you win , tails I Jose."
Neither side is evincing much in :Oe
way of sqpport and
gratitude.
Publicly 3nd priv·
ate].y the U.S. is be-
ing berated and as·
persed by both the
Commurtists a n d
South Vietnamese.
It's entirely pos-
slble the way may
end with tbe U.S. in
as much disfavor in Saigon as ~ Hanoi.
COMMUNIST deviousness and in-
transigence was expected. Throughout
~ protracted and fateful secret negotia·
lions, they have end1essly COMived for
every conceivable advantage and to
finagle a double meaning into every key
provision -obviously for later use 1t a
time and for a purpose that suits their
totalitarian ends.
At the same time, President Nguyen
(ROBERTS.ALLEN)
Van Thieu has been equally and high·
handedly importunate.
His basic aim is to entrench ~£'If
personally and politically regardless of
the nature of the peace tenns. He is bent
on retaining absolute control even if that
means some form of dictatorship.
THIEU DEMANDED and i;:ot immense
quantities of military supplies. More than
$1 billion worth of planes, tanks, ..,guns
and other costly combat equipment were·
rushed to South Vietnam in the past six
weeks. Graphically illustrative of their
type and cost to U.S. taxpayers are the
following:
-32 C-130 giant cargo planes at $10
million per. Exactly why so many of
these huge carriers were turned over to
the South Vietnamese is not clear. 'Ibey
had none of these planes, nor any ex·
perience with them. Pilots and crews will
h<ive to be trained to fly and maintain
them.
-125 F·5 supersonic fighters at ~l.5
million per plane. The South Vietnamese
airforce had 18 F .SS and some 30 trained
crews. Obviously, scores of additional F-5
pilots and mechanics will have to be train·
ed -at U.S. expense.
WHILE THE U.S. will foot that b'I:,
the U.S. Air Force will not do lhe
training.
The peace agreement will require the
withdrawal of all U,S. forces. It is the
Administration's intent to meticulously
abide by Uils stipulatidt.-i:~ ·a coo·
sequence. the maintenance of tbe C.130s,
F-58 and ·various otber aircnff;;.and the
tragling of South Vietnamese clews will
be turned over to civflians hired for U1at
purpose.
It will be a big and costly job -as 600
new planes ot all types are involved.
That's the starUlng number added to the
South Vietnamese airforce since late
October.
But this and hundreds or millions of
dollars of other hardware and munitions
arc not saUsfying President Thieu.
He is de!Jlanding $5 billion in economic
aid over an indefinite period.
THIS ASTOUNDING proposal ~ What's
behind his clamor and pressure-for a
personal meeting with Prelsdent Nl.s:on.
When this..was Politely but finnly ~
down , Thieu resorted to guile. -in ~
characterisUcally heavyhandea manner. l
He tried to creete 1 rift bttwem lhe
President and Dr. Kissinger by -g
lhe latter of doubte1l<aljng -miSl ... g ;
both"bim and tbe President. ' ' " ~
Tbls ptOy was "' pateolty \,M.., tt •t J' by ifs OWll \Veiibl • 1
Wlllli> ....... ·lo •Pllll ....... le Tbie\hWtiif .. fie .. DlarKOf ;::;aQ'i$S
billioq eoooomic demand was Jti•iqaer't>'
rematl,' 11Mr. Prfttdent, tliat .-l;t
something for tbe U.S. Congfets to
decide. In our country, only C.OOgress has
the power to appropriate funds . The
President may propose, but Congress
disposes."
Tliieu glared, but said nothing.
Addendum: South Vietnam' has at"OWl;d
one million men under arms. U.S. in-
telligence estimates Hanoi 'has 145,IXIO
(.'(lmbat troops in SOOth Vietnam, plus:
another 100.000 Vietcong.
Seat Belts Need Better Promotion
To the Editor:
Your editorial, "Driving Life-saver"
on Nov. 30 stressed the £act that scat
belts are a necessity in auto-safety .
Within the article, there was a discussion
on whether to make the use of seat belts
mandatory or not. .
I believe that the importance of. wear-
ing seat belts does not lie within the Jaw,
but rather in the promotion by the con·
cerned.
SINCE t have come to America in
July, 1972. I have seen many ad-
vertisements on the danger of smoking.
There are warning statements on
cigarette cases. There are warning signs
in all cigarette advertisements. The
Cancer Society has done its share in pro-
moting antk!moking in perodicals as
well as television. As a result, I un·
derstand that the number or smokers has
decreased since the anti-smoking cam·
paign began.
HOWEVER, I have seen only a few ad·
vertltelru!nta promoll!lg the imPohance Of
wearing ... t hella. U ·periodicals and
television come out with m o r e ad·
vertisements to promote the use of seat
belts, 'the number of people who wear
seat belts will rise like the rise of non·
smokers. Though some cars have warn·
lng systems which remind people to wear
seal belts, too many more cars do not
have any warning devices.
I hope that there are Americans who
care eoough to make a change.
NOBUMICHr HARA,
Student CSULB from Japan
W•1' Bu,... Treu7
To the Editor:
11tls year, u in the. past, when the
holjdaya are behind ~. the Newport
Beach Fire Department will conduct a
tree-barning event at lhe be1th and
many thousands of ChrlstmN tne\ will
end their usefulness In a pall o1-k!.
CAN WE AFFORD thi• solutloo any
longer, wheo our alr has ::o m1ny other
terrible aasa ulUJ made upon It?
Burning Is wrong, CJpeclally when
nature bat a better solution and a further
use for sucb trees. Many other cities
bave.!ound a better solution.
My home town, Ann Arbor, Mlch.,
[....__MAIL __ B_o_x __ J
Letters from readers are welcome.
Norrnalt11 writers should convey thtir
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condense Letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All
letters must include signatu.rt and
mailing address, but names m.av be
withheld on request if 8Ufjicient reason is apparent. Poetry wiU not be
published.
shreds its trees and turns them into
valuable mulch and humus, which tts
grateful citizens haul away for ose in
their gardens. Trees .used for landfill can
also return to earth in a natural way.
I RA YE SPOKEN with several people
at City Hall wbo have listened to me
courteously but have offered no support.
Our city shouJd be responsive to our
needs, and if others share my concern
that we need to find a better solution,
then we should make that concern known
to the men and women wbo work for us.
Undoubtedly it is more economical _for
the city to bum trees than to shred them,
or for the sanitation men to haul them
away. But tn terms of air pollution and
the waste of natural resources, can we
afford to continue to burn?
M a postscript, I W1Juld point out that
the city will accept the donation of living
trees after Christmas from those ol us
who have run out of planting room in our
own yards.
SALLY P. NETZER
PN%%letl P~e..t I
To I.he Editor:
My son made a reramic ashtray at
school and it was recenUy displayed in
the art show at the ftuntlngtQJt<'Center
Mall. It was in the special ·awiias section
and it has disappeared -apparenUy
stolen.
HE SPENT a lot of time and effort
JIUiking it very special for me as a
'The Compleat Love~'
"The Story of Love. Falling in Love.
Courting. Making Love. A Lifetime of
Loving." 'fbese main sections, enhan-;ed
by delightful selections of poems, love
stories, et.lays and games, provide a r\,ch
experience. in the form of a large, prO-
vocaUve, lavlsbly UJu.strated book: 'nae
Comple.at Lover by Derek and Julia
Parker (McGraw·Hlll. lt5.115).
"WE HA VE TRIED to r<fle<t most of
the laces of ioYe In The Compleat
Lover~' lbe aulbors nott. "and In lhal we
are or course lucky to b(! writ_ing !n the
IV'1tls. Some ol. the pictures here, and
some of the poem.t too, would douhtlesa
havo lhoci.cd ow-V I c t o r I a n
gnmdpartnta. Yet how safe and unsbock·
Ing they seem today, compared with the
'full frontal' approach to love that Is now
so prevalent In books and perlodicals, on
etBge ttnd screen."
In the last two centuries, the Parkers ·
point out, taste has gone fQ>m almost
.
(THE BOOKMAN J
total repression to almost total license.
They have ateered clear of the dangen inherent in both extl'tll'd, !DUowlng a
clvilfzed truddle courte, avoidjnc un--
nteessary C?Udity but eaylng all 'lbiy reu
ahould be said.
YOUNG AND happUy married, lhe
Parkers -remembered for their
Ccmpleat Astrologer, wbiCh topped
250,000 in sales Jn 1071 and was -
translated lnto sJx langµages -want
their new book to provide everyone,
"whether they ara about to scribble a
fiMJt heart.and-arrow on the wall of the
11ehootyard, or are r,taonlng a golden
wedding cclebratiOo, ' With somethlng
with which they can ldMt!(y.
CAROLlliE HARKLEROAD
surprise for when I returned home from
a trip to the hospital. IL was beautiful and
I cherished it I ""'1d (IJld did ) cry. :
Last year I saved and bought him an ~':·
expensive coat which someone stole a • l
week later. •
WHAT PUUJ..ES me is bow a parent
could let his child keep anyth· .tg lhat
doesn't belong to them. Surely they ~
couldn't help but notice a brand new coat
Iha: Ibey didn't buy.
Has the world reached a poinl where 1
we are so greedy that we ~e '
anythiog "free"? D>esn't It oocur to
parenls that they must teach their
children not to lake things that do not
belOng to them, let alone , eocoqrage
tbeJD?. .
DOESN'T IT occur to these Ji!ftnl!
that even U it is a small bbdmade
ashtray ·of a big erpensive c:O&t that it
could be vr,:y-im~rtant to whomever it
belonged to? Are pa;enta so lackadablcal
that they don 't even notice a "new" coat
or toy? If this is the case, no wonder
there are so many juvenile delJnquents. I
reel sorrier for the kids than I do the
parents.
Maybe this letter wlJt open . &0me
parents' eyes to "new" tblna-s aro!p\d the
house. "Cute" little "takers" tum into
adult thieves.
MARY JANE HENDRIX
Ol-'NOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, Publilhtr
T1wmo1 Kcivil. Edf'or
ltarboJ'(l Krtil,licA I
Edltorlot POU<· Editor
Th~ ~ltoriol 1•1'~ of lhe 0.lb' rtlot sttks to lnfofm tnd atlmu-
Jale. readers b)' r~nU~ thla
ntWfl>lper'a opinion!! and ' l'OM-
mcntar1 on to1riel 11r lnteroat and ~tgntnc.ncc. b)' provldlna • r11rum h>r the expl"hllon nt our rt&aera•
o!)lntons, and by fw~ntlna th"
d vt<r.-t> vJ~lnu of lnforrftcd ob·
~rvt'h and spoknmon on tl)f)I~
nr tl\t> di.¥. ·-
Friday, December 8, 1972
) •
(
. •
•
A. NOW7.88 Reg. 9.97, Save 2.09. ''SoundScene"
AM picture radio displays photos,
art work bn 4 sides. push-button
contro ls.:(Model #P2755.)
...
NOW39.88
Reg. 49.97. Save 10.09. AM-FM
digital clock radio, new
"digitel" one-inch clock
numeral display, steep switch.
(Model #C4600.)
... NOW9.88
AM-FM
portable radio, AFC, ear-
phone, telescoping antenna.
(Model #P17~1 .)
AM clock
,
way__s
to save on
General • Electric • music
makers.
A little buys a -
lot of Christmas
,under the Squiggly~
.Roof. 4 days only,
Friday through ,•.if!:
Monday.·.
LIMITED TO
STOCK ON HAND
Reg. 19.97. Save 2.09. AM-FM
portable radio, battery oper-
ated or plug-in, two antennas.
(Model #P481-0.)
...
NOW22.88
AM-FM
radio, compact design, large clock
face, wake-up.to-music control.
(Model #C1400.J
digital clock radio, com-
pact, side control,
sleep swilch.
(Model #4315.)
NOW22.88~
Portable
cassette recorder with automatic
tape shut-off. (Model #M8430.)
rrlday, Oeeembtr 8, 1972
I
...
NOW24.88
Reg. 29.97. Save 5.09. 3-band oort-
able radio. AM-FM and PS, AFC.
precisi~n tuning. (Model ;:P4920.)
DAILY PILOT 7
I :
...
NOW27.88
Portable cassette tape
recorder, automatic
tape shut-off, battery
operated or plug-in.
(Model #MB440.)
NOW 37.88..A.
. .. ,· . .
I
Aow34.88 ·
R9g. 44.97. Save 10.09. Compact, portable'
cassette, push-button controls, automatic tape
11"tut-off, oper~tes on 3-way power.
(¥odel #1,18450.)
NOW 13.88~ . j
"Aecordmate" 2-speed ~ · ·
portable phone for youngsters, easy to operate.~
strong case. .,q;,r·---;;-..
(Model #V211.) -
l
_..NOW22.88
"Show & Tell" • 2-speed phone-viewer ror children.
The picture shows as the recor-d
tells. (Model #A651.) ·· -
NOW24.88
"Swlngmate'' 4-speed
"Wildcat" 3-speed
portable stereo. drop-down automatic
changer. (Model #V936.)
portable aulomalic phone, front speaker,
45 RPM adapter. (Model #V638.) ... .
NOW44.88
"Mustang" 3-speed portable /
stereo, two detachable speakers, drop-dawn automaUo
changer, top controls. (Model "i;.V946.)T
.,~, ...
e llANADA MILLI JSOOO Chlla'll'Orttl St. e, WOODUND llW 21SOO YktorY It.If. • •IYl•StDI '520~ • IAJff A ANl 3900 Solrth Bristo! SI. • TO••ANCI Stputvtda Ind HM!tlorflt • LA•IWOOD Ca-so" St. and P»dl'l'lotmt Blri. e IUINA PA•IC Bliicb Ind Dr111Ketfir~pe e OIANCI Clrdeft Grow Bfild. a.M MlftC!lemt
-Extended Christmas Store Hours Weekdays 9:30To10:00 · Sundays 10:00 To 10:00
\
•
50 Seized New Clues Flicker INDOOI WINDOW SHOPPING·
SU OUlt ALL.fliW CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS-
S kull Find Linked to Bormann Hunt
In Ma jor
Drug Raid BEHLI~ (UPll -A West
Berlin police spokesman S41id
today construction wor kers
may h 8\'t unwittingly un-
covered a clue to the fate of
~lartin Bonnann, Adolph Hit·
ler's dcpul y who has frt'quent-
ly been reported alive some·
v.·here in South America.
by the West Berlin reglstry of·
rice in 1965.
loatll. Coast ?tu•
Doenili, the new fuehrer, in.l _~_:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Flensburg where he had set-uP I GAINESVILLE. F'lti t l1Pl l
-More than ~ persons. mnsl
of them young people. Y.ere
arrested today in n massi"e
narcolics raid spearheaded by
federal agents.
The raid was disclosed bv
Altomey General Richard G.
Kleindienst ia \Vashington and
local officials.
''Th is is certainly the single
larges t operalioo eve r con-
ducted in North F klrida in·
volving drugs," said US. At·
torney Wiiiiam Stafford.
STATE AGENT Ron Stanley
U~I T-'"""M s .. 1 t 'ret'
said the raid, conducted by Alfred :C'ort von \Volf-
state, federal and local of-ersdo rf. 89. who spent
ficers, followed a two-!11onth 22 years in: Ne\v York
underco ver investigation in mental institution, was
which ot!icers purchased 93 ordered freed after dis-
narcotics exhibits having a trict attorney admitted
street value In t!xcess of he had no evide_nce
$500,000. against him in slaying ~Stanley sa.id the e~hibits in-of 14_year-old boy.
eluded heroin, cocaine. LSD. -----------
mari juana and assorted other
drugs.
Some drugs were seized dur-
ing the raid but the exact
amount was s t 1 I I un·
determined.
THRE E FE D ER AL
Tur1ipike
Overfloivs
lit Scotch
BUT SINCE then he has
been reported dead and alive
at many widely separated
spots.
The latest report, printed in
the London Dail y Express,
said Bonnann, the m o s t
powerful Nazi after Hitler, is
alive and prosperous in Sooth
America.
''We have no reason to think
his headquarters.
But Hitler youth leader
Arthur Axmann testified he
saw Bormann lying dead near
a blown-up tank in which he
tried lo break through tbe
Rusgian lines.
Since then Bormann has
been placed ln s u c b
wld~pread places· as Egypt,
Jtaly, Spain, Portugal and
various Lalin American na·
lions.
The spokesman said workers
laying cables in the ruins of
the Lehrter Railway station
close to the Berlin Wall found
two sku lls and a thigh bone
nea r the spot where a vague
post-war report said Bormann
had tx..-en buried.
one of the skulls belongs to 1;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:1
Bormann but we are making
the cbe:<:k because of the
area," the police spokesman
said.
TllE S POKES~1AN said Seven years ago police dug
police asked the prosecu tor's for t\\"O days at the same
office 10 Frankfurt. \Vest railway yard. They started the
Germany, lo send Bormann";,; search after a retired postman
dental records here for com-told justice officials he buried.
parison with the skulls. the bodies of two Nazis after
"We were not searching for the fall of Berlin and one or
Bormann." the p 0 1 ice them could have been
Th k Bormann . spokesman said. ·· · e wor ~rs just hnppcned 10 be at that A year earlier there had spo~ laying cables. But in view been another fruitless attempt
of the recent fuss about to dig for BonnaM's body.
Bormann we contacted the Bormann was last seen alive
prosecutor in Frankfurt to when he left the chancellery
make a check." bunker afte r Hitler ki lled
VNITED
STATES
NAT IO NAi.
BA NK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
NOW OPIN
SATURDAYS
9 to 1 P.M:
MON.·THUlS. 10·1 P.M.
FRI DAYS 10.6 P.M.
17141 540...5211 . LocatH I•: s .. COOlt PIDll, C•t9 Men
Altt. Vice .. ..S.-M•...,., Top Nazis who survived himself April 30, 1945.
testified at the Nuernberg War He planned to break out of 0. DEAN HEISER
Cr i n1e Trials that Bormann . ~B"'e:'.r'.'.lin"__a"'nd""-~jo:"i"'n_.'.'A'.'.d'.'.m':_. _Ka~''..'.'!.'::"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'""='I
1.1•as killed trying to break
through the Russian ring of
steel around the chancellery
bunker after Hitler committed
suicide there in 1945. He was
declared dead on this evidence
magistrates, including two
brought in from Pensacola and
Tallahassee, were conducting
arraJgnrnents for those ar-
rested on federal charges.
What do doctors recommend
for patients in paiii?
s1t1sroL, Pa. <AP > -They i;;;o;rr.;·s=LA=T•ER==='"iil Doctors all over the rouutry dispense over 50,000,000
had Scotch on the rocks at a
ramp to aie Pennsylvania THAN YOU of these tablets to their patients each year. A total of 83 arrest warrants
were issued, inclucting U state
warrants and 71 federal war-
rants. Officials said they ex-
pected the arrests to continue
throughout the day.
Kleindienst said the in-
dictments and arrests followed
an intensive, cooperative in-
vestigation by agents of the·
U.S. Bureau of Narcotics and
Dangerous Drugs. F I o r i d a
narcotics agents, local officers
in the Gainesville area. and
William H. Safford, U.S. at·
torney for northern Florida.
Turnpike near this Bucks THINK
County community Thursday.
There are many medications a
physician or dentiat can pre-
acribe for pain. Some are nar-cotic, many are available only
on prescription. But there is one
pain reliever, available without
presc ription, doctors dispense
again and again ... Anacin.
ton reoommend moet than any
other leading lableL
Headache and dental pain 'is
relieved incredibly fagt; minor
pain1 of arlhritis are depend·
abl y eaaed for hours; even the
aches a nd pain_, of colds and flu
respond to Anacin. So the ten·
sion and depression that ca n be
cauted by such pain will be re·
Jieved too. And millions take
Anacin without stomach UIJAeL
They also had Scotch on the
grass and mud at the bottom
of a 12-foot embankment.
A tractor-trailer tipped over
and spilled 1,000 cases of
Scotch, rye and brandy worth
$25.000.
"It smelled like New Ye ar's
Eve," said state trooper Den·
ton McLaughlin w ho in-
vestigated.
THINK
JE.aln lnM
Each year, docton give over
50,000,000 Anacin ta blelt to
their patienlt in pain. Ir doctors
think enough about Anacin to
dispell!le all theae tablets, what
bette r recommendation can you
ask when you are in pain?
When you're in pain, why
don't you follow the practice of
AO many doctors and take the
tablet a doctor might give you
in his own office. ~e .Anacin•.
Wntcllff ,._
N-port '-ck
AliOt 111• Newp9rter 11111
H-port a .... 11 You see, Anacin contains
mo~ or the pain reliever doc-
A little buys a lot of
Christmas in the kitchen
under the Squiggly" Roof.
Here's famous stainless
steel Revere Ware at great
savings, featuring copper
clad bottoms for the
ultimate in fuel economy
and masterful cooking .
Gifts to give with pride.
Famous Revere Ware
7-pc. cookware set Ji
Only 2~.~~7 /~
THE ' . o~BIT''
BUSUNE •
ALL IT NEEDS IS YOU I
T
... all you naad Is a place to go!
For information or bus schedules call "The Two-Bit Bua line" at 547-6004
or write to us at 1126 E. Wash ington Ave., Santa Ana, 92701
Includes 1 V1 qt. covered saucepan, 2 qi.
covered sa ucepan, 6 qt. Dutch oven.
io• skillet. Dutch oven cover fits sklllet.
Sep•rala goodlet:
2 qt covered saucepan ••••. Only 6.99
, , ;' ~ B"coveredskillet. ........... Only 7.99
'I" 2 qt double boiler ........... Only 11.99
• . )0 \~ 317 qt whistl:ng.tea kellle ... Only 7.97
~~\~~-~
o () 0 ' oruH0Ur Tlmtl'1Yf'f11t. •tl1t
• tlANADA HllU 18000 CtlltswP SL . WOOOU.ND HIW 11SOO Vftflr\' Blvd •• llYllSIDI J~ Tritt • SAllTA ANA 3900 So.ti! l!flstOI St.. TOllANCI Sf9\llvtdl ttt4 Ktwthome . LAllWOOD CMIOtl St. and r111mCJ11ftl 81\'d .• IUl•A ,, •• BeKll »nd Orlftjtlbolpt . OIAHGI Gl111t!11.Grwi aw. .. ~
lr:t1111lt4 CllrJ1tMIS St.A H••n Wt•k••r• 91JO ,, 10100 -S.•••r• 10:00 ,. 10100
''I guess if you're going to have a second chiJPhood..you
have to have toys.''· ~ ---------
L. M . Boyd
.Over a Million
-Fleas to Pound,.,r
That fish wiUt the most natural enemies is said to .f>e
the berl"ing ... TAKES' 1,280,000 Deas to weigh a pound
•.. ONLY LIVING thing the polar bear fears, I'm told,
is the walrus ... IT'S THE MALE parrot, not the female,
that most readily learns to Calk ... AMONG wild animals,
the night hunters outnumber the day bunters by far.
YOUNG LADY, can you envision a happy satisfying
life for yourself without ever getting
married? When the s u r v e y takers
put thai query to numerous girls,
three out of 20 said yes, sure, definite-.
ly. ~ was in this country. In Eng·
land, about five out of 20 said yes.
And in Norway, six out of 20 said yes.
AVERAGE INFANT gets eight
times as much salt as it needs. Do
you know why? Because the baby
food makers want that tot sauce to taste good to mothers.
They're apt to spike it with a dash or two too many. Or
such is the claim of a Michigan pediatrician.
CHRISTMAS BAN -The general court of Massachu-I
+.-ts-paded. a law in 1659 which prohibited Christmas cele-
brations. Not only that, a citi~en rould be fined five shill·
ings just for saying "Merry Christmas" to some associate.
I don't know why. Will check further.
WAS THE ARMY of Alexander the Great which intro-
_duce<I candy t6 the western world. Actually, the delicacy
which those soldiers so much enjoyed was a sweet root
from India called kand. Our word candy comes frOm~that.
J\.10ST RAlN IS abou t three. weeks old. That's· how
long it's in the ai r as nloislure before it falls, usually.
QUERlES -Q. "Remember Robert Wadlow, that
Camous American giant who grew to be eight Ceet, 10 inches
tall? How much did he weigh at birth?"
A. Nine pounds.
Q. "WllAT was the original 'manna' of biblical re-
port?'"
A. Some experts say it was a gooey-sugar from the
tamarask shrub. Others claim it was just a light lichen
blown by the desert winds. Nobody knows for sure, evi·
dently.
DOG NAMES-That the Egyptians possessed pet dogs
almost 5,000 yea rs ago no doubt you know. But do you
know the first three names of dogs? Gazelle, Black and
Fire)Xlt. Those were the earliest known canine monlkers.
An Egyptian king so dubbed his pups.
IF THE BLADE of that ice skate of yours isn't posj.
tioned halfway between your first and second toes, the fi t
isn't right ... WAS NONE OTHER than that great biblical
schol'ar Friedrich Heinrich Wilhelm Gesensius who claimed
Adam and Eve did not wear fig leaves but banana leaves
. , . THE WAY THE toy makers figure, if a toy.. breaks-
in the standard drop test from a height oC 54 inches, jll.$1
forget it. It's worthless. Daresay.
WRITING -That professional man said to write most
JegiblY is the arch itect. The doctor, still , most illegibly.
Common knowledge, this. But researchers who confirmed
it say their studies also show the more successful the
business man, the less likely he is to write readable script.
Among business women, however, the more success!uf
they are, the more distinctive their handwriting appears
to be.
RAPPlNESS -Again pollsters have been digging
into that thing called happiness. And they claim their
studies now show the happiest Americans of all are child-
less wives who live in small toWM. Interesting. Incident.
oily, they also contend those folk who live wbere they .
can see mountains appear to be happier than the flat..
landers. Jn genera], in general.
Address mail to L. M. Bo11d, P. 0 . Bo:t 1875, New·
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
. ~
• •
Women
Launch
TV Drive
Marijuana Defended
Commune Lewkr.Plem:U Own Case
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -
stephen Gaskin, s p l r i tu a I
leader of a 4~member com-
WASHINGTON (AP) -A rnune in rural 80Uthern-middle
GASKIN AND Dane Dexter
Culberton drtw three-year
prison terms _in th e I r
November1 1971 trial. Brandon
national coalition of women's Tennessee, bas pleaded his ~--------~
groupa bas launched a cam-own case before the st.a te
paign to ellrnioate "bad taste. Supreme Court.
crime, violence and. wlgarlty" Gaskin, 36, asked the high
from television programming. court this week to reverse the
The TV Clean-up Campaign convictions of himself and
organized by the Wasbington-three other c om m u n e
Bite Put
On Meet •
Lerda and Wilbur Jordan were
sentenced to one-year terms.
Their trial came as a result
of a raid on their communal
farm by state agents, who said
they confiscated 1,200 mari-
juana plants weighing 156
pounds -enough to supply the
commune for several months.
based Leadership Foundation members for manufacturing NATIONAL CITY CAP)
· ' anoounced plans this week to marijuana. - A ·truck reported stolen
' monitor television broadcasts M ,on d a y With 40,200
Gaskin, clad in maroon
jeans, a turtleneck shirt and
white sweater, said in his
remarks to the court: "It is
central to our religion to be
able to develop this state of
consciousness. That kind of
thing is so precious to us.
Gaskin, a former profes~r and protest to the local sta-at San Francisco State, told pounds of meat bound for
tiomr, 'sponsors and Federal the court that the use of marl-San Diego and -l..()s An-
Com.munications Commission juana and psychedelics is geles markets from Mexi-
. wheo objectionable material essential for attaining "a co was found abandooed · "WE DON 'T BREAK the
appears on the screen. spiritual consciousness" in the Wednesday. The meat was law in other ways on our
religious practices of his gone. farm. We're not outlaws. We're
MA R T H A RdtJNTl!EE, ~g:::rou::'.'.P:_· --~'--;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~=='-_:"_:•:_t .::h•:::r.::m..:in::'.g'....a:::n::y..:bod::::::.Y:_· ---'·-1
founder, president andl
treasur,er of the foundation,
characterized the movement
as ·representative of "the
grassroots of America -
withou t regard to race, color.
creed, political party o r
religion."
But most ofllii-SOO people
attending the kick-off_ luncheon
were ' white represe$tives of
Christian or Republican w~
men's groups.
THE LEADERSHIP Foun·
dation invites as its members
"all of those women who are
tired of crime, drug abuse,
pornography, dirty books, in·
spired riots and other forms of
moral ,pollution."
Were o• o•r woy
Set' Yo11 Christmn
Wal ....
Matthau Fully electric tY-iut -ns: tlot:lric rtlllrn, elettric
~ t.btJlllort, e(ectrio boclt space; elllC1ric· ·hal.f spice.
UNIVERSITY
f}?re Cl'fWfllllN/, r£r.'
11111 NlrWP'CIRT aOULn'"-RD
COSTA llllE&A. CA 11162~
look for big blue U
at Newport & 19th St.
B~ Discounted Sharp calculator with Olympia Typewriter at $179.50
Sharp dis~t price 79,50
$259.00
~--·~~~~A~R~EA~L~B~ONUS FOR CHRISTMAS
r
eat,
SPORTING GOODS
SINCE 192~
BACK PACK
SALE
' l~ICIAL l'URCNAll
Loadmaste• Backpack S3f00
•••• $64.95 .......•.. -•..
Trail loss Backpack Sl:J'S
.... $29.95 ...•..••...•.
Trail Kina s1ris • ... $29.95 ....•.•.....•
lockpock Fishing rocls make ftne gifts.
GIVE
FUN
THIS
CHRISTMAS
GIVE THEM THEIR
HEAD THIS XMAS
The fabu lous newest
Head Ten nis Racket
The all New ''XRI"
Sptciil s3600 Xmu Price
Reg. $46.00
Custom Nylon String
-lHE-GREAlESl--1--•:M.----GOLFER
SPEUA
24 Hour.
Snow l'hono
547-2545
COLLECTION OF
LEATHER
JACKETS EYER
Be sure and see our line of suedes,
chamois, chamels for guys & gals.
Skiers Special
(ond names you recognize)
#1 , Kneissl Skis and poles, Geze
step in binding. Reg. $209.45.
Xmas Special ....... $155.95
#2. Rossignol Olympic Skis, T omic
poles. Reg. $148.00
Nevada look in bind ings.
Packag'e price ...... $125.95
•3. A & T Olympic Skis. look step
in binding, Tomic poles.
Reg. $102.95 ........ $83.45
'WATER SKIS
XMAS SPECIAL
Terry Tunnel Skis
Plasiic Top-Drop thru Skegs
REG. $6,0.oo ·
# 1. Amold Palmer Golf Set
8 Irons, 3 Woods S99so
Reg. $138.00 .......
#2. Jack Nicklaus
8 Irons, 3 Woods $10900
list $132 Specia l
FISHING
XMAS SPECIALS
ALL FENWICK RODS
21% Off Ult Price
ALL LURES
Reduced 20%
ALL REELS at
Dl1eount Prlcos
''Shop with the Pro'& and
Give th• Right Offf''
SLEEPING BAGS
"
~veryone needs a Sleeping Bag
-We have a great value -
Nylon cover with good fill fo r
all amazing price.
_Red, Bl ue.JlrJk!ngtiolQ.f!.
$1695
-... & .. $110.00
!Wyland
Sid lchoci'.
Forml119 ·
--~··-
• I
Frida)', Otcembtr 8, 1972 DAILY PILOT 9
Extra $250 mllllon dollar
income tax refund for
California taxpayers.
SACRAMENTO--llinandal
experts are now predicting a
~,000,000 state income tax
"hind will go to California tax-
payers. The windfall resulted
from tlteSlalawithholding too
much money from California
t.upayen in 1972. Man1 of the
same taxpayers are also ex-
pected to receive Federal In·
come 'IJ.x refunds for the ame
year.
Your income
tax-prepared
free at
Wutual Savings.
Make.,_, appointment now!
The ea1t1Cr you file the sooner you
will receive your refund. Your income
lalf will be prepared by cm.-. "lax of
cAmeri~, one of the nation's leading
income tax preparation firms. All
returns strictly confidential. You can
save the normal cost of an individually
prepared income tax retumj as much
as $50 or more.
The FREE personal income tax
preparation at Mutual Savings is avail·
able if you add to or open a Certificate
Account for $4,000 or more~You will earn
the highest interest in the nation on
insured savings. (Sorry-YI~ cannot
provide this service for corporations, part·
nerships, business firms, estates or trusts.}
Make your appointment now and
receive free, an INCO ME TAX.
ORGANIZER. Helps you in collecting
the information you need to get your
proper tax deductions and refunds.
*Certificate Accounts cam 5*% for 1 year or more.
6% for 2 to 10 years with $5,0CX> minimum.
~ ~ ~~ ,
(THE Biii M
Coronll del Mor
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
and Loan Association
2887 E. Coal! Highway
3 blocks Wost of MacArthur Blvd.
Phone: 675-5010
Mon.·Thu' 9AM-<IPM: Fri. 9AM-ePM
•
JO DAil Y PI LOT
For Tl1e
Record ...
Dissolutions
Of ltlarriage
e111-H..,.m_ >I
S•ltl. 8t1rb.lr1 11'4 Sl•¥8fl O.
Nom,.,..,sen, V"<IYI H•rolG •nd
M•rlon Thom11. SuW!I Llnd• 1r.d R-1"1
WUll1m Jn-. JO<ln M. 1nd EdWlrd A.
Slddi., Dorollly HlkH Mid ·a.-,.
Fr-lcl'I
Dlclttfli.on, Geflld E-•nf •!'Id M¥11Y'I ''"'w Oulroi, T...,. .. Ind a.i-ro OUll'Cll
Wlll!m1n. K•lli«lne Mlllle •nd Ronakl
8 rown
Pitrtl. LI.Ill M1rle MM1 R....i ft.,,ltl
TIK,,,,., Emllo ffld ltlcM'1il Dor>ald.
M•rl,,..u. Pr.It A. •nd J.c:QU91lfls L.
Fo.1, K1ren Jo •nd Dolwl4 Cart
Ford. l uelll •nd H_,.o.r-1 W.
Ram1klll, J""'Hn E. •nd 51..,J.ey R.
Ji!<'llHI-Ell..i fol••~rel •l'ld Do<Mld
CUMon , •
MOore,,...,eher, W1trn1r J. 1nd G1orlele '· H1rvell. Ser..,_. ~I <1nd Joh<\ Lft
M•lone. P•m.i• Ann •n<I Tommy Jr,
G1r<I•. Ch•rlo"• Ind 8trt1llP.
MacMlll111. AUtt M •lld Ltroy w.
Tllf>O, Joe Ind El•IM V.
Reilly, Jo.n T. &nd J ohn F.
RD61M. EINnor •nd Jo. Jr.
f'tMIPS. Chrllllne """ alld !UcMnl ·~ Cavill, H•rrltt J. •nd Cert M,
OMoO. Patrlde A. I nd G•rY 0 . Wl11l•m1, Lloyd J, Ind April '#.
Ml "111. Sh•rOl'I L. •nd Mltlll•I [).
St"', Pllllfly and WllU•m A.
l(f'OllH , TQl'l.I AleMlt -Larry WrwN; LQPOll, L60 Ag .... lln and Gllftdll 1(1y
Gu!llen, Pim.II Carol 1"'1 JltfTY LUii
Fltf)C,..r, s..., •• 1 "· •l'MI R•lph c.
Ptums!Hod, P•mtl• Carol and Cll1rles
TMm•1
$111phry, Tefrl Lynr< •nd Alan LM
M11<sur, AMl lM •nd L••rv H.
Ay1!•, Ernntl,,. •ncl R_, LM
Mllltt<. Alan JOI'! and C•lherine J1Wn
Carr
L1rr11olo, Cl\fbll.,. ~ •nd Joseph
Murray
Dauo, JOMpti Carl and Rl'tlecc1 Lou
Rlbardl1r1. Gecr111 incl Patricia '~~ !Ira-.. Sheryl Lrnn •nd JerTY Don
!110, Emlly incl GordOl'I FarrRl1
!IUCl'lholl , C•rol J. ancl EU!ll'l'e R
Sta.ding, ~ loulH -Rk lllrd J-KlnH"J', H•rian 11.L -.Id M¥T L,
Riii. Gtor11c1 w.scon •nd Don..a !11th ~1nlcd1, Rocco A. Ind BorWe L.
Cart.,, K ...... lh Ali... and Glttnd.I Slit
Bourke, Rk llltd c . Md O.M A.
Tloddta, ll11trk1 E. •l'ld Mlcl'IHI
To:zer, Law• Liii •nd C.rter Kent
Fr1n1en, Jo.nn Fr•nces and Terrance
Rtlcl. Barry Lee ""' Horm.n Dllvl• Ruth, lngat!ll and John C«n.ell""
Evans, Don Mllrtln Ind Joar< Ewelyn
Marriage
Licenses
ARBUCKLE .l SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
U7 E. 17lh St., Costa Meu
1111811 • BALTZ-BERGERON
FUNERAL HOM!!
Coron• del ~tar l7J.M5I
Ctsla M.,. 141-Ull • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadtr11y, Costa Mesa u "'433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BE~CH MORTIJARY
1'115 Lagan• CanJon Rd.
OM415 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEM01UAL PARK
c.metery Morlult)'
Qoopd
--VI... llT1 .. Nea,.rt Bwll, C.Womla -• PPll FAMILY
COLONtU. l"VNERAL
ROME
1111 -Aft.
WtdM' ler •• • SMmlll' MOllTllARY
G'IMdollL n-.::;.-
•' ' .
F,1day, Otttrnber a. 1q12
Senior Deeathalon Star Firm Hits
Beach High Fifth Insurance
Bid Claim
..-.-.,._.c..-... ,
2 iUiii' *135 SALE
ANAH81M -~luntington
Beac:h High School senior
Kathleen Kong racked up a
record 7 .059 points In ·her
l{orior Girls ·category in a
performance that was a major
factor In tier school's gaining
fifth spot in the 1972 Orangt!
County Academ ic Decathlon.
Miss Kong was one of four
Orange Coast students who
received specia1 awards at a
Disneyland Hotel b a n q u e t
Wednesday following the fifth
a.nnua1 academic testing of
students Crom 33 Orange
County high schools.
The schools sent 2 2 2
students -11 l boys and 111
gi rls -to the event staged
last month in Huntington
Beach.
Robert Prohs~ of San
Clemente High garnered 5,86.1
points to top the Varsity
Boys section With Robert Alan
Curtis of Mission Viejo High
close behind with 5,765 points
and second spot in the same
category.
l\.10RE mAN 500 parents
and onJookers applauded as
Kathy Colesworth of N&wport
Harbor High took first place in
the Varsity Girls section with
a total of 6,228 points.
Villa Park i-ligh won the
team trophy for the fi rst year
in the school 's history with the
Orange school's g r o u p of
six students putting 37, 142
points on the board.
They fin ished 235 points
ahead of Orange High with
34;,007.
Foothill High, last year's
winners, finished third with
36, 733 points.
Included Jn the top ten st.u-
dent teams were 11untington
Beach Jngh, fifth with 35.108
and Fountain Valley High,
seventh with 34,245.
Orange Coast students won
a cluster of awards in the 10
academic categories fn which
individual judging was ap-
plied.
.U10NG THE winners of
handsome plaques provided by
a number of county businesses
were:
SPEECH R o bert
Prohska , San Clemente High,
868 points in Varsity Boys
category.
INTERVIEW ~ s t e v e
Damewood, Fountain Valley
High, 1,000 points in Scholastic
Boys and Steven Sweet, Foun--
tain VaUey High, 972 points in
Varsity Boys.
ESSAY -Jan Marker,
Mission Viejo High, 770 points,
Scholastic Girls; Robert
Curtis, Mission Viejo High, 800
points, Varsity Boys; and
Kathy Colesworthy, Newport
Harbor High, 800 point s in
Varsity Girls.
EXTRA CURRICULAR -
Sandra Lyon, Edison High, 54tl
points, Honor Girls and Robert
Curtis, Mission Viejo High, 4.10
points, Varsity Boys.
Valley Seeks Title
To Mile Square Park
By r.nCHAEL GOODRICll
Of rtla DlllY 'll•t Shi"
Fountain Valley is pursuing
a chance to gain title to 53
acres in Mile Square Park. for
the construction of a $1.3
million recreation complex.
City councilmen are pro-
ceeding with plans to acquire
the land through a grant from
the Federal Bureau of Outdoor
Recreation (BOR).
Since the county presently
leases the land from the
federal government it must
also approve the agreement
before the city acquires the
property.
THE CITY had prevtoosly
planned to develop two recrea-
tional sites, one on 13.1 acres
adjacent to Fountain VaUey
High School and the other a
41.5 acre site at Mile Square
Park.
The cost for the two site
deve!Opment was expected to
run about $1.5 million because
the city would have to buy the
site next to the high school for
,about $.175.000.
The city still has an option
to purchase that property until
Jan. I, according to City
Manager Jim Neal.
THE ffiGH school site was
considered to be a good cen-
tral location in the city and
would have allowed the park
and campus facilities to be in-
tegrated.
But councilmen and Parks
and Recreation Com-
missioners deckied that the
lower development a n d
maintenance rosts of an ex-
panded ~1ile Square site offer
the best buy tor the c;ity.
Plans for the 5.1-acre Mlle
Square site c.all for the con-
struction of 12 junior baseball
diamonds, two lighted softball
dlarqonds and two regulation
baseball diamonds. _
ADDITIONAL facilities will
Include lighted tennis and
basketball courts, oujdoor
handball courts, shuffle courts
and horseshoe pits.
*Jewelry~ppliq):r:
Leather · Tools
Brass Hardware
Gtost~ C~ting
~ppliq) .
Wood Carving
Tools
Crqft GJloo~
o"f Gift Certificates~
'"' ... ··-ill ~ ~ ;-try .............. __ ,, ......... ... ···•·••llUY e._v~ =-~ :";. _.. . . . .. . ~cti0ot
wnmt&a!l'TlmrLT
1411 N. CMllf•I P8'k A ...
Anaheim, C•lll.12802
~1wsu.om
\ --
t-trY..-• tr I .....
SAWllPJO S~ ENGLISH -Kathleen Kong,
Huntington Beach High, 840
points, Honor Girls. =-~ ... ~-:1
SANTA ANA -An 0rU1ge :;-..:.,~.:::::: ~ O.c.t_ ..........
............. Sledl.I. lllllf'f•
•W m ANY SJ¥+ ~tATII -Kathleen Kong,
Huntington Beach High, 800
points, Honor Girls; Yu-Sze
Yen, Saddleback High, S~
points, Scholastic Girls and
Chris Lewis. Los Alamilns
High, 575 points, Varsity Boys.
County Grand Jury report that ._..."' ....... •s .. 1 .................
indicated the county could f::.*'.:' .. ::::::;n ;; • ANY ITYU C°'91D
save $600,000 on employe, "''"" .. : ....... io • ·••• MYllATIONI
health insurance programt by ,:,=:-~u -~ • 19f.;~ ::.• ORANGE COUNTY putting them out to bid more ":.!?"'" • 0.."'~ iiii Cz:2 ~' J,... ,_*"•I•• 1• ....... Nl-..olt1 • Nl.Otff_ often has been by a conaulting 1au2 111ACAtnM ...... """ .., a-t• _. 1.
r. , ... ~ ...... -.... o-.. ,_.,,,,_
SCIENCE -Kathleen Kong
Huntingtoo Beach High, 800
points, Honor Girls; Darrell
Gallear-, Edison High, 660
points, Scholasli1r B o y s ;
Robert Prohska, San Clemente
lligh, 640 points, Varsity Boys
and K a l h y Colesworthy.
Newport Harbor High, 550
points, Varsity Girls.
.ltm. O.-'lllfill•Mlf_.._...,..._ .. 'O,C,.......,.
Ray Kann of Hewitt and1 ~=='=~="=:'*:":':~=-=-=':':":h:":":-:·'""":-:::._..=~===~~ Associates, the firm hired byl ·
the county Board of Hicks Gets
OK to Hire
Deputy DA
Supervisors to investigate the
Jury's charges, satd the only
feasible way to ~uce costs
would be to ~uce the
coverage offered employes.
UICIAl MOUDAY MOUIS: DAlll l'.SAT.'.1 0 • tt·
---~...,......._,
PRACTICAL ARTS -Tom
Brockington, Estancia High,
860 points , Honor Boyii; San-
dra Lyon, Edison High, 740
points, Honor Girls and Kathy
Colesworthy, Newport Harbor
High, 500 points in Varsity
GirJs.
-llOOIAL SCIENCE A N D
CURRENT AFFAIRS
David Clemans, F o u n t a I n
Valley High. 920 points, Honor
Boys and Margaret Raynor,
Los Alamitos High, 7M poin~
Varsity Girls.
FINE ARTS -William
Flocken, Mater Dei High, 820
points, Honor boys; Kathl~n
Kong, Huntington Beach High.
890 points, Honor Girls and
Kathy Colesworthy, Newport
Harbor High, 790 points,
Varsity Girls.
SANTA ANA -District At-
torney Cecil Hi cks got ap-
proval of the Board of
Supervisors to hire ·an ad-
ditional deputy district at-J --torneY' at a salary of about
$25,000 a year.
The board's blessing o1 Ute
move was delayed a week un-
til Tuesday because of ob-
jections of Supervisor Robert
w. Battin.
Hicks said he needed the ad-
ditional deputy to prosecute
homicide cases which had
skyrocketed in the past foui'
months.
The county -ha'd 71 murders
between July and November
which compares with 43 for all
of last year.
Kann said such a move
voould create ~mploye rela-
tions problems. He pointed out
that the current coverage wa s
reached through negotiations
w1th-the Orange County -
Employes A.Mociation.
KANN AGREED with a Jury
contenUon that the county's
health. insurance progranui
should provide g r e a t e r
coverage for catastropbic il-
lnesses and less for minor or
short term ills, but added the
warning about employe rela·
tions.
The insurance consultant
denied a jury contention that
frequent bidding on the con-
tracts would reduce costs
significantly.
Jolly llripet of ·red and w!Hte-loold 1he peppennlnl pier! 11'1 a 10llk:tdng
dock for Chrisbnu ships, decked with mqjc>/ cugo. Meny sffls htn al
ttie world, mode by ""'' people. Come celebntd Your ship Is heft.
TOTE HOLIDAY SPIRITS IN COATSklN.
Bota skin bags, handcrafted in Spain. l ined
with latex. Encircled with rope so they're
easy -rotoie.-FHI them with 399 wine for your holiday outings.
GrYE A CUDDLY KOALA FROM SANTA.
Here's an irresistible softy - our Koala
bear. He's the essence of cuddly, all fuzzy
and wa""!. From Europe. 6• 8'1-BI•
"tlnd 12' Sl!:e-9.--.:-o •• ..-. • • t • •
GIVE THE PARTY SPARKU -Starlite float·
ing candles from" Germany. Three c:ork
holders and 60 replaceable wicks in an oval
OOx. Float these fe-stl~ndlts
on ve~etab1.e oil, , ............. .
HAVE A CORklNC GOOD NEW YEAI.
Start with this corksaew and a New Year's
resolution -"No more tom or broken
corks!" 6" brass tool from Italy,
Works with finesse ••••• , , • , •
Fill A FEmVE CORNUCOPIA. Here's a
tradltiQ~I centerpiece for your holiday
table.-A horn of ·plenty, hand-woven of
natural rattan. Choose 9", l9-lll 1i:, or 17.~"' mes. ..... ., . • 1
PIER 1 IM-.PDRTS
2710 HARBOR ILVD •
COSTA MESA
ICOINll HAllOl • ADAMI)
SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10·10
SUNDAY 10 ·7
540.7337
SHOP NIGHTS -OP!N 'TIL 10 P.M..
•
•
BIGGEST SRECTION· EVBll
MEN'S FASHION HOSE
FOR
More than 100,000 pairs, from a
famous mill buyout! Pi ck your favor-
ite-crews,---dl:ess-ribs ,cables in
stretc h nylon or blends. In a host of
fashion colors. One size fits 10· 13.
COSTA MESA
• 3088 BRISTOL STREET
San DI ... l'roeway 411 lriltol
B
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~ '• ~ :r ••• -· • . • ;. . ·~ .• ... ·l' ..
·I
UPIT• ......
Sounds Warnlag
In hppes for a quieter
ettriStmas, Theodore
Berland blows whisUe
while .. a cap pistol is
fii'ed in his protected
ear. Experiment in Chi-
cago was accompanied
by warning that such
--items ca11 cause perm-
anent hearing dam-
ages.
Ex-model
Dazzles
On Cycle
TUCSON, Ariz. !AP) -The
1972 version of Motorcycle
,. Mama is a sexy, ~foot·2
'. .. fonner model £rom Phoenix.
She's 19-year-old D e b b I e
'. • Lawler. who has raced cycles
.:~ professionally and now soars
:~·over automobile! in much the
same fashion as daredevil
Evcl Knievel.
Debbie made her debut here
recently, \\'ilh promoters cnll-
· _ 'It's a taotural
: .. feeling -going up
·. through notldag
Glad then fa11dh1g
on nothing.'
ing her first girl motorcy-
li:' cle daredevil rider in the cout"t-
f-try.
SHE WENT 75 feet in her
first public appearance. a feat
which Debbie said scared her
promote rs more than it did
her .
..: "They worry much nlo.·c
about my jun1ping than I do,"
Debbie said. "For me, !l's a
natural feeling -going up
through nothing and then Jan ·
ding on nothing."
Debbie has been rid ing
motorcycles since she was 15
and comes from a family of
· motorcycle riders.
Her parents at first v;crc
• skeptical , according to Debbie.
. but since have taken to the
: idea or their daughter jumping
over automobiles.
•My n1om even v.•ants to
:. paint a po rtrait of me on my
1 bike," she said.
Before she started jumping
--wittr'Cowboy Browe:r's Motor-~
cvcle Daredevil Stunt Show."
Debbie \vas a racer in
. motocross competition. She
continued participating in the
sport despite a collection of
broken ribs, polled ligaments
and sore muscles.
Debbie said she found more
'. pressure modeling than in her
;: current occupation.
·! "In modeling, you're under
·: a tremendous strain." she
:: sajd. ''There's a k>t of
.: pressure in modeling with all
: · those lights beatina: down.
:: "WHEN YOU'RE inside,
·. you just can't be yourself.
:. When I'm out on the bike, I'm
:: much more natural."
·• Her tutor, and founder of
.• the daredvtl show, Johnny
·! "Cowboy" Brower, said he
': deflnltcly feels a strain even if
Debbie does not. ·~ "Sometimes 1 '11 go o\·c r her
· jump myself .befoi-ehand 20
: times just to make sure Jl's all
· right," Brower sald. "She's
capable or making real long
jumps, but I just can't let her
• unUI she's ready."
• In this rormcrly all-male de>-
~ maln . Debbie said she docs not
.:_want to become "one or the
:'-guys." ··~~------·-! ·:
r: ·~ •• •• •• •• • • • :} :f
..
I
•
,
DAILY PILOT 11
cmTMASll•llm: DISC
DAILY API SATURDAY_ lo~ IO 10 PM • IMDAY 10 AM to 7 PM
•
your
WIDE AllllTrtlNI W
AllAILE IAIY El
AT A LIW-LIW PICE
gg
A. Pretty C.l~tte doll walks and sl>nds a fuR
24" tall. Won' she be tlvilled to find tl1is doll
underthetree! • ·· ·
B. Reg. 4.47. from Ho1Seman, the II" ~oll·Wilh
a mix n' match wardrobe that some young miss .
will have fun with.
C. Reg. 4.47. A special doll with a special talent
from Libby MasGrette. She stands 20" tall and
says "ma ma!"
D. Reg. 4.47 ·from Horseman. Botsie 0011 is fully
jointed and dressed for play. Take her home today
and save.
SAVE '5 ... G.l PllTAILE 4-SPEED Pm
WITB-MATCB EACIAILE IPflJEll
SAVE '1.98 •• .ID" TRICYCLE WITI CllRA
_ffllfll-AMLADJUSTABLEJIRIBAIL
Designed and developed to deli-ver big stereo 4411
sound through set of 5'14" spe~kers. Auto-IEG .
mati~. changer, solid state dual channel 49,;9 amp Ii her.
PMAlmTAPE SANYO TAClllAD
CAll:llEllT AMIFM CAI RADIO
2915 5915
OUR LOW PRICE A SPECTACULAR VALUE
Black c.ontour case with push button New idea in car radios, it ·features
COlll!OIS. mike, pre-t!OOl'ded tape tacho.,..ter styling •nd g~at per·
3lld 6 batteries. Recom to pt1y formarK:e. Includes spealler, a1t-
1nywlere. tenna, tocland key.
Sturdy well-built trike by Hedstrom. PA" tubular
frame with chromed, semi·Hi·Rise handle~r with
streamers and white vinyl guard grips. Adjustable
metal saddle.
RIG. 911 10.97
SAVE '2.98 .. .13" SAVE '2.18 .. .18"
SIDEWAl.l lllE SIDEWALi BllE
1899 1899
OUR RIG.19.97 OUR RIG. 22.97
Sidewalk bike with safety wheels. r ubular frame with cobra lenders.
Tubular construction. Cross b11r con crossMr convMSion for boy or gir l.
verts for llSe as Boy's Ol Girl's bike. Ad1ustable metal saddle, nylon bear
ings.
SAVE s1
SAVE 'I. .. ON OUR BIG
TRUCK ASSORTMENT FOi
All GOOD llTTlf BOYS
gg
RIG.
5.99
·your choice
A. Triple pleasure Riding Academy. J thoroug•
breds ride in heavy guage steel transport. Loading
ramp s, stalls.
B. Jumbo Hydraulic big hTul dump trocl tiffs
huge loads at trip of a latch. Heavy duty sturdy
steel construction.
C. Pepsi's got a lot to give witJI this lun·loaded
truck. Carrys 8 cases of Pepsi.!!. Dehver it for
Christmas.
D. True to scale all·steel camper for some young
vacationer's dream. Sliding windows, swing open
back door
E. Authentic rugged auto-steel replica of load '1
dump· sanitation truck. Easy.action fun for the
young.
SAVE 70c ••• SO Of 20 TWl•LE UTEI
EllJ•lDICllAIING B EGAllCE
Make your home a decorative extravaganza this OUR I I c
Christmas with this set of. "on·off" twinkle lights REG
from Plymouth. fOf your tree, inside windows, 166.
centerpieces. •
SAVE •1 ••• sn II SAVE 40c ••• 1115
151-UHS TINSR GAIWll 199 29C
OUR REG. 2.99 OUR RIG.He
Brighten your holida~ with this Cooose from gold or silver tins.If
U.l. appro~ed set ol indoor lights. garland !Gr decGrative holiday us!S.
Replace,,.nt bulbs .... 3Jr: pl lac~ stretc hes a full 3"115 feel
·4dHrhtd lttm1 not at last LA., ThouHIMI Oaks or lllvt"ldt 1tort1. • STORE HOURS DAILY & SAT.10 AM to 10 PM, SUN.10 AM to 7 PM 12·2021
3088 BRISTOL ST. COSTA ME·SA S.n DlofO 'Freewty ti lrlot.I
i ·! _. '."::
' .... ·-·. .. .
IZ DAILY PILOT
Mom-ner
Dies; 7
At Rites !
t
3000 funerals.
Hunter. 66, died and was
buried this week with his
lrophy.
Nine persons attended his
funeral in Titusville.
* A Stockton surgeon who
survived a l969 ,assault on the
world 's sixth highest mountaln
[ __ PE_O_PL_E~)
in the Himalayas, in which
seven others were killed, says
he plans to try again.
Dr. james Morrissey, 36,
said a group of 17 American
climbers will leave for Nepal
Feb. 15 in an attempt to
become t he first to conquer
the southeast spur of 26,8()&.
foot Dhaulagira.
Five Americans and twn
Sherpa guides were killed by
an avalanche during the 1969
attempt. J\1orrissey, one of
five survivors. said that all
five would make the new at-
tempt to scale the treacherous
slope.
* Montana Gov. . Forrest H.
Anderson has fi led a $500,000
damal!e suit against a doctor
and hoslJital because his sule~n
was removed in 1969 without
his knowledge.
Anderson, 59, a Democrat
'Who did not seek re-election
this year because of his heR!th
problems, charged in the King
County Superior Court suit
that he received improper
medical attention.
The governor said he suf-
fered from nutritional defi·
ciency, Joss of weight and
energy, and damage to his in-
testinal tract because or the
operation.
* Actress Janet P..tunro, who
once reache:d stardom in
British films but relapsed inlD
alcoholism, died in London at
the age or 38.
A year ago she was divorced
from her husband of 10 yearfl.
· actor Ian Hendry. They had
two children, who were in the
flat where she collapsed.
Miss Munro starred in a
movie called "'Mle Day the
Earth Caught Fire" and in
Disney films. She was given
an award in 1958 as "Best TV
Actress of the Year.''
* Isadore John Marion,
fonner husband of singer Con-
nie Francis, has been arrested
on federal extortion charges,
the FBI said in Las Vegas.
Marion, 40. was arrested at
his home after being indicted
by a New York federal grand
jury.
* Comedian Sbecky Greene
and Nalani Kele , star of a Las
Vegas Strip revue show, were
married in a brief civil
ceremony at the bride's home .
It was the second marriage
for Greene, 46, and the first
for Miss Kele, 40.
* Jollem Natow, a 29-year~d
fonner policewoman, was ap-
pointed port warden at Los
Angeles Harbor and is believ-
ed to be the first woman to
hold such a job at a major
U.S. port. ,
Her duties include ecology
policing, law enforcement in
the harbor area and work with
foreign vessels ln the port.
* Actor Norman A. Gibbs,
who appeared In "The French
Connection" and "'rbe God-
father," was sentenced to four
yean in federal pri90n on a
charge of smuggling $1.S
million worth of cocaine into
the United States.
The 1._year-old resident of
New York City. pleaded guilty
to the charge Oct. 14, and was
sentenced by U. S, District
Jlkfge Irving Hill, in Loi
Angeles.
customs agents found 14
pounda of cocaine in a false
bottom In Gibbs' JUltcase
w!len be noturned to Los
Angel~ from Acapulco, Mex-
ico, July 13.
* Brltlsh.PrbM M I n t a t c r
Elhwd Reodl and Ktog
Haueln of Jorctpl wtU visit
the United !Itel« IOOO, the
Whlto Houae lndlcatro.
• •
frldi'r. Ofctmhff 8, 1972
Fearful Boston Women Seek Protection
Ad good ttl
Dec:. 13. 1972.
P.IRIMO.Ulft
LIWIVAC 3911
If yours l1
cmytblng ltko
my yard.
you're gonna need a
whole army of theM
thlng1. Ko raking.
ju1t-pueh it around.
CHAIM
_s~w ,
1.-0iO~--· _ .. _. . ....,: ,;;JI.,, ,~~&o~
•
M'*-..quict<"""k ol BlewoOcl for
tho ·flf.p!-Gas powonci. llghtwolght alid :i.t!iC!enl.. . . .
-BLICK Ir DECKER
1 ~ JIGSAW .
\ i U you choose the Jig ICIW',
· ' atay 1n the workshop
I
· and make all kinds of
fa:DCJ border• and 1tuff.
YQURCBOICE
ass
YOUR CHOICE
BLICK Ir DECKER
HEDGE TRIMMER
And II you tciko tho
trtmmeir. get ou.tald•
and don't coma in tU
you.· .. 6nl.hed. th•
yard.
CORDOMIDC
HIKDY
IJTERm.
491
Liko hmng cm •G1ol1tcmt iooplng thing•
out of your way. A 1lnall tug. and the
cord 11 retraeted·out_of sight.
UXDERCAR
CREEPER
3a1
HEIRLOOM '
COLLECTOR
' . . . ~\
HOBBY BOXES
It' a a lcmtaatlc W<rf to bring together all your
IQ'fed.up jtllllr:. Great for malr!no wall
conglomeratiooa (made that up). Unllnlahed
wood hobby boxea to apark your
imagination. Decorate with aeeda. plants.
J>holos knlck·knacka. paddy·wacka. or juat
about <mytidng. . .
WELLER
SOLDERm
511
8"xl0"
8"x20"
10"x20"
14"x20"
12"xl6"
5a1
799
sea
699
711
WDJJ;R
MDU
WORISBOP
1711
Enrvtblno you need. Instant heat.
:°!t~t.f'lngertlp action gun. 1old1r.
tip, bNab and CClH.
You bobbyllt1 take note. Power handle
accepts blta for grlnd.lng. IO:JMilng.
buffing, drilling. or yo:i name It. (and you
get the acces1orlet)
PYRO
TORCBm
29aa
W1ld1, brme1. puts out heat Uke th1
profe11lonal, big rig. Two portable tanks,
take it anywhere.
PROP AME
TORCH
WITKTIMK
1 a1
Torchn and tcmk• (you.'2' ....
.,...lcom.e). Use for largll
1<1ldor\llg lobo. Noalo
d1tacbe1 {or ta:U:
roplacem011t. 14.1 OL tcmlr.
WELLER
AUTOMIDC
GLUEGUll
511
Hud my lddo pl"T. cowboyo with thooo la1t
•Mk and hcrffn t '"n U..m 1mc..
They must be ltuclr: eomewhere ln the
neighborhood.. Sboota bot glue or aealer.
PET
CLIPPER SL'T
5a1
Ten plec•• of
motor, blades,
and oct••sort•• (it
le't brobn lnlo pl-•· tho). S...o
7·1 buc:l:1 a throw -l>r cllpplag
owad•.
3-IJGHT
MILIBULOW
VOLTAGE SL'T
2411 .
ID blendo. does fOllr homo llllllor from
lack ol glamour? A Uttlo llght CG2l muko It
glow wlth b•lootee. L9w TOltap meana
Ito !IClfo, r to 12 ..,1t1.
111.JJii 1£Ksm
IJGKl'S
1 a1
Tho littlo guy with all
that power. Small and
out of th• war but
baa: more than
._h light for tho ·
job.
BLICKIJTE
POSTER
BULB
F• JOU with thOH crmy
poeters. or tor you
cmdu who want to ue
the lint on your 1weater. 147
MELinA
COl'l'EE
MIKER
111
Th11 Melitta character could po11tbly be
Nlcrted. to Mn. Olson? For a buck and
~. oho couldn't bo half a1 lrrltutlng.
Miii
HAIRDRYER
297
Under 3 dollar• and
works a1 good a1 any ol
th1 IS dolfa:r models.
Hot air i1 hot air. (then
why do I kHp talking?)
GLASSWARE
197
SET OFB
Your choice of either an.
8-plK'9 benrap set, or
cm S.ploco old lulhlonod
• ••• {~ 1111 tbcm the
supers),
ll·LB.
CllfDLEWIX
137
!low Couib>Iroddy CG2l cipply tbcrt 7 Y""' dotJrw II: cllnlcul poychol~ cmd muko
caadlM for U 11..tllg.
, .
•
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
.... lJ
Esprit de corps
os said to be
just one
benefit of
organized football.
·Bene its Score,.. High
•
Precautions are taken
so injuries are uncommon
to Junior All-American
Football games. But when one
does occur, the concern
is quite evident.
'
~ 1' .,.,,_
'""
. \
SLory and Photos by LAURIE KASPER
Of lfMi O.llY Pl ... ll•ff
Talk to a coach, mother or father
aboul Junior All-American Football and
they 'll ramble on about all the good it
does for the boys.
There are 17 teams totaling over 500
boys in the three llunttngto n Beach
chapters alone. And this means, ac·
cording to Pat Downey, executive direc-
tor of the Boys Club who volunteers as a
coach, many hours when the boys are orr
the streets.
Teams start Lreining in August, prac-
ticing three hours, six days a week until
school begins. Then , for the rest of the
season which eDded last weekend, they
only practice three hours, three days of
.
Not all the fun is
on the field
as this muddy boy
and the Corsair
cheerleaders will
testify.
At these 911me1, ,
mom, ded, brothers and
even little , alrierl • •
' .. -.
ere personally e per+
of the action.
•
the week and spend a good portion or
Saturday at the games.
Downey , who had a third son playing
this year, has been invol ved with the pro-
gram five years.
The boys , he said. learn lO work as a
team with people, to take a shot
physically and then tum around and give
two of them back, to be losers as well as
winners, to respect each other. to take
orders, to go beyond their normal en·
durance, to achieve a goal and. of course.
to play football. most men's favorite
sport.
LIFE'S GA,.1E
"They're really learning the game of
life. I think," said Dee Cox, women's ac-
tivity director for the city's teams.
Life is competition, she points out, and
football, even though the S.. to 13-year-old
players are miniarure in comparative
size, is a competitive game.
Boys compete just .to get a spot on the
team. Even if Chey qualify under the age,
physical and scholastic requirements,
they're cut if they're not good enough.
And even after they make the team
and are given a uniform and equipment,
whlch for safety's sake meets the same
standards as e-0llege gear, they must
continue to work hard because the coach ~~does not have to put every player in the
game.
During her seven years involvement
with the program. Mrs. Cox has seen the
boys learn "sometimes they're not going
to be as good as the other guy" but also
"with.in themselves what they can.do bet·
ter ."
The game is rough, they admit, but
they boast that few boys are injured
because they stick to federation rules
limiting who plays how.
Until this game which is pictured, no
one from Huntington Beach had been in·
jured on the field although a couple of
the youngsters were hurt in bicycle ac·
cidents on their way to the practices.
FIRST INJURY
Durlng this game, however. one young
man "busted his arm,'' drawing obvious
concern from the referee, coaches.
parents and other players. Still, the game
continued so quickly th'at the other team
didn't realize the damage they had done.
And it began with no lack of en·
thusiasm from anY of the players or
viewers. Half-sized cheer I ea de r s,
selected sisters of the team members,
challenged family and friends in the
stands with "We can't hear you" as they
lead the cheers which have taken them
many hours of practice to learn.
And, as at every game. the fans often
erupt with their own individual yell or
scream .
The games are exciting, Mrs. n>x said.
"Really they are because y o u ' r c
personally a part or it. It has so much
meaning because you know the kids."
Some boys don't like mom and dad out
there watching them, she said, but
parents even go to the practices. Since
these are usually scheduled from 5:30 to
7:30 p.m., dinner hour is often delayed
anyway.
Without the porents, the program prob-
ably couldn't exist. Parents raise funds
to support the program as well as com-
plete lhe mechanical aspects of it.
In addition to" the coaching, they man
the snack bar, Duy equipment, mark the
field . head the cheerleaders, put out a
newsletter, help with the boys' physical
examinations, registration, insurance and
weighins and sponsor a p a n c a k e
breakfasl to raise the $75 it takes to out·
fit a player.
"This is how everyone gets involved,"
Mrs. ~~said. "I could go on and on ... " •
·"
J 1j OAIL. '( l'rt.O I
Felines Fascinate
Her Verse and Cats Are Free
"l ike a mother cat, the
cliff curws it.self round the
th iti crescent of shore
scooped by the sea. The
castle itself is a {11'eat stone
cat, dabbling its paws in
tlie shallows.''
-8theL Jacobson
By ALLISON DEERR
ot 1M O.llY fOI• l!tH
Ethel Jacob.son is a five-cat
"·oman .
That 's not how many she
owns. It's how 1nar.y she can
accommodate when she curls
up for a nap.
The petite poet shared her
special wit and a glimp.se into
the world of cats .with
members of l h e Newport
Beach Friends of the Library
recently and talked about her
latest book. ''The Cats of Sea-
Cliff Cnstle."
Describing the life of the
colony of cats who inhabit the ·
cliffs of Corona del Mar, tbe
book weaves a fascinating
story in free verse and
beautifUI color and black-and-
white photographs by Florence
Harrison. She a I s o col-
laborated with Mrs. Jacobson
on another cat book "Curious
Cats,'' published a few years
ago.
The author has known the
cliff cats for more than 25
years. She made treks to
Corona del Mar from her
Fullerton home to see the cats
which now number about 30.
BIDDEN CAVES
They are elusive, so much
so that many residents of the
area d-On't know they exist.
"We had to take the photos
early in the morning and late
in the afternoon. because the
cats stay out of sight wben too
many people are around."
The book is dedicated to
Corona del Mar resident Mary
George, who feeds the colony
each morning at 7 on the dot.
Each evening she cooks a
Dutch o v e n of macaroni
(carbohydrates for warmth)
to which she adds fish parts
and other goodies.
"The names or the cats
were changed to protect the
innocent," Mrs. Jacobson said,
"and to make them fit the
personalities of each a bit
more. Mama doesn't work .
when there are several."
Her book gives a day in the
life of the cliff cats and their
kittens in a manner that will
delight anyone w h o loves
feline friends.
CATS OWNED?
It was noted that the cats
serve a purpose too. They
S('(lUl' the beach for food left
behind by beachgoers and
keep the piers free of rodents.
"I've been owned by cats for
years," Mrs. Jacobson ad·
mitted, "and we once had as
many as 16 although six is a
good basic number.
"Whenever mama cat had a
litter we had to keep the pret·
tiest, and the runt, and the one
with so1nething v.-rong and of
course the ugly one that no
ooe would take -and they
all turned out to be female .
"And then there was always
an unrelated cat who . just
wandered in and stayed."
She recalled a dinner party
in which her cat figured prom-
inently. Just as she was
seating her guests for dinner
her largest cat leaped through
lhe open window and landed
smack in the middle of the
table.
"Those people never came
back," she added with a
t"•inkle, "some people are
really picky."
ALl.ERGIES
She klld the story of a little
£irl who came to ber tearfully
explaining she couldn't have a
cat because her brother had
an allergy. ''Have you thought
of getting rid of the brother?"
the poet asked, quickly sug-
gesting a cat book as an
alternative.
Among other anecdotes
about fel ine activities she
CDmmcn ted on :
· Feeding: "Cats like their
food at room temperature, not
too hot, not too cold. ·Th ey
always want anything you
don't have in the house. ·No
two cats will want to eat the
same thing."
Ha ving a cat as a pet:
"They say there are people
who live without cats. I can't
imagine how."
Visitors: "My daughter once
had a boyfriend who visited us
then went home and told hls
family: 'She's a great glrl but
they have wall·~wall cats.' "
Sleeping: "CaU love to be
ON you, especially in the sum-
mer. I'm aboUt a five-cat
person and that's about all."
INTRUSION
Strangers: "l had one cat
that considered my mink stole
as an intruder. Every time the
closet was open, he'd attack
the fur. Needless to say it
looks pretty ratty."
Ownership: "You have to
stay borne and cat-sit instead
of visiting all kinds of exciting
places. But we love it."
~ Fullerton poet has
published collections of her
work reprinted from
mag~ like Saturday
&venlng Post and the Satur-
day Review.
A sample of her comments
in poetry OD other topics in-
cludes "A Short History of the
World": "Froqi Adam's Rib
to Women's Lib.''
J1coblon chats
with Mary Goot-ge,
Ryder and Walter
Dance to ••••
COUNT BASIE
SUNDAY-DEC. 10-8 PM
EXHIBIT BALLROOM
DISNEYLAND HOTEL
Door Sales: $5.75 • , • Advance Sales $5.25
Send money order to:
Bal Night Produdions
605 Orchid, Corona del Mar 92625
In Sunday's Family Weekly:
Organizations Saying 'Happy Holidays'
DAR
A Yuletide tea has been
scheduled for 1 : 30 p . m .
Wednesday, Dec. 13, in Evans
Manor by the San Clemente
Chapter or the Daughters of
the American Revolution,
Riviera Cl ub
The Riviera Club's
Christmas program, set for
11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Dec.
13. in the Balboa Bay C1lib,
will focus on the Bible.
Speaker of the day is Mrs.
Mary Dorr, director of public
relations for the American Bi-
ble Society. Biblical foods,
fashions, flowers , music and
artifacts will be included in
the program.
Annual Tea
Lawyer's Wives of Orange
Crunty will meet at their an-
nual Christmas Tea from 2 to
f p.m. Thursday, Dec. lf, in
the Tustin home of Mrs.
Robert Waldron.
Alumnae
The South Coast Alumnae
Club or Pi Beta Phi will have
its annual ChrisUnas party
and luncheon beginning at 10
a.m. Thursday, Dec. If, in the
Newport Beach borne of Mrs.
Richard Jonas.
Irvi ne Women
The Irvine Woman 's Club is
sponsoring a workshop on
making live Christmas
• WTeaths from 7 to 10 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 14, in the
Rancho San Joaquin
Intermediate School. The class
is open to the public.
Snow Ball
The San C1emente Com-
munity Theater will present
its first annual Christmas
Snow Ball from 9 p.m. to 1
p.m.. Friday, Dec. 15, in the
Moose Lodge.
AWARE
A Winter Luau Scholarship
Benefit. the annual fund ral.s-
ing affair sponsored by
Association for W o m en ' s
XHOft1
JDBITQ JDBHIJ
Gift Pack
AT YOUll PAYOtVft ITORE
Active Return to Education
(AWARE), has been set for
Friday, Dec. 15, in the Laguna
Beach home of Marge Roley.
Lucia Pageant
A Smorgasbord and Lucia
Pageant will be presented by
Anchor Lodge at 6:30 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 15, in the
Halecrest Clubhouse.
Christmas Tree
An old fashioned Christmas
tree will be placed in the
Estancia Adobe by the Costa
Mesa Historical Society on
Friday, Dec. 15. Persons
wishing to place ornaments on
the tree may contact Mrs. W.
Donald Smith at 646-1314.
BSP
The executive board or the
Orange Coast California C.Oun-
cil of Beta Sigma l>hi Sorority
and their husbands will start
their holiday festivities with a
dinner at 7. p.m. Friday, Dec.
15, in the home ' of Mr. and
Mrs. Palmer Anderson,
Newport Beach.
For A Career •.• NOT JUST A JOB
BE A ''WOMAN IN WHIT~'
ADVANCED
REGISTRATION
REQUIRED
••••••n•• ,,.,,. NIW CLASSU STARTING November 5 -Januery 8
lifetime Placem•nt A•sistonce
ll.Jl.'1 •aJ Af tdiosl pttHitnt.l con M• recrit111
' ~Uh. It uo, w lttlra1 "' 3 """'" ...
::::-..::.::.::::.:.:: 623 W. 17th, SANTA A~A 541-4461
vmlAN's llNIJITS AVAlt..UU:
------•
.
AAUW
The Huntington B ea ch
Branch. American Association
of University Women bas ar-
ranged a Harbor Cruise of
Lights and Holiday Gala at 8
p.m. Saturday, Dec. I 6.
Following the cruise, the
group will gather at the home
of Councilwoman N o r m a
Gibbs.
Xi Rho Pi
Xi Rho Pl members and
husbands will attend a pro-
gressive dinner and Christma s
party 'beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Saturday. Dec. 16, in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Mel Miller.
Toran11
Torana Art League's
Christmas party is scheduled
for Saturday. Dec. 16, in the
Santa Ana home of Mr. ·and
Mrs. William Hudspeth.
Xi Xi Pi
Xi Xi Pi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi members and
husbands will go on the Cruise
of Lights from Huntington
Harbour at 8 p.m. Saturday.
Dec. 16.
. . . ' .... . -
will replace the Mesa-Harbor '
C1ub's traditional gift ex-
change party at 10:30 a.m.
Thursday, Dec. If, in the
Mesa Verde Country Club.
Proceeds will benefit the
Joplin Boys Ranch of Orange
County.
Plus Ultra
Huntington Beach Plus Ultra
C1ub members will take toys
and refreshments to mentally
ill children in Garfield Con-
valescent Hospital Friday,
Dec. 15.
Members recently reelE:Cted
l\1rs. Barbara Browning as
president. Her board members
are the Mmes. Marie Shelton,
vice president: Zerline Warren
and Nadine West. secretaries,
and Modene Senter, treasurer,
Fete Noel
Observing a tradition
since its f ou nd ing nine
years ago, t h e Alliance
Francaise of th e Cali-
fornia R i v i e r a will cele-
brate Noel in the French
manner during a gala banquet
and soiree at 7 p.rn. Friday,
Dec. 15. in the Outrigger,
Laguna Beach.
Littlest Angel
Memtiers of the Calllomla
Retired Teadlers AssociaUon,
Central Division, O r a n g e
County will meet for a
Christmas Tea at 1:30 p.m.
Tueaday, Dec. 12, in the com-
munity room of Republic
Federal Savings and Loan
Association.
Harriet Wood, harpid, will
present a p ersonal ar-
rangement of 1be Littlest
Angel
NOW
Officers will be elected by
the Orange County Chapter,
National Organization f o r
Women when the group meets
at 8 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 14, in
the Santa Ana YWCA.
LB Women
A Christmas hmcheon and
bridge party will be staged by
the Woman's Club of Laguna
Beach in lhe clubhouse at
12 :30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 15.
The event is open to the
public and reservations are
due by Wednesday, Dec. 13.
They ~nay be made with Mrs.
Kim Ellis or Mrs. James
Partridge.
Big, Colorful Pull-Oul·and·Save Section:
Holiday Open House
Cookbook
Food editor Marilyn Hansen offers FAMILY WEEKLY
readers a very special Christmas treat: a complete
"open house menu for lei su rely holiday enjoy.
ment." Mrs. Hansen comments, ''Many dishes can
be prepared ahead, with finishing touches [added!
just before party·time. Have a happy holiday -,and
good eating!"
Look for step·by·step instructions, FAMILY
WEEKLY Kitchen.Tested Recipes, and colorf ully ii·
lustrated suggestions for displaying your Christ-
mas feast in the most festive manner. You'll find
all the "ingredients" needed just in time for plan·
ning your family's own glorious holiday buffet.
A FAMILY WEEKLY "Cookbook" Bonus: "Christ·
..... ·-· ,.... ____ _ -.
• •
Frlddy, Orce1nbtr 8, 11.172 DAILY PILOT 15 ~~~~--~~~~~~~-
Can Mother Escape for Her Own Welfare?
By JUDY lAllSSAUD
"Th< "'°""'1ula of 'wl-
/ore motMrl" who n\aT'Ched
"""" ~ p14co1'11 d<-mat1dirl{1 a 16,500 guaran-
teed minimum a n n u a l
wage. Tl~1e <Umandl are a
slap in tile face of millicn1s
of dece1ai . :self-f'eltc111t citi·
gcnb wel(cire as a coren.
11' fact. the United Slate•
7i<J1D ho.I familie1 that art
third ueneYation relief· ers ...
medlate!Y clamoring for al-
tenUoo. Tiie two boys, Keith
and Kmmelh. were 5 and S
yean oJa and tbtlr sister, Vic-
toria, ••• only 4. Their pa·
jamu ....,, old and thread·
ban! and lbefr bair WllS shag-
gy and cmrtantly ln their eyes.
From An 0Ttmll< Counl!I
N<wtpaf><1'
Aprll 18, 1972
'""'· "After all, who Lt tM
t11J)icat 'wttjare mother?'
The an.tWer is that ihe is
a woman who ho1 had .sev-
erol children by different
fathers and 1Dithout bem-
fit of maniage. The "W<I·
fare mother' U likely to be
a woman wlto has iUegiti·
mate childreft vear af~r
year beCaure she knows
that she can get child rup-
port /Tom the public.
A pair or okl tennis shoes
was lying on the lronl
porch. Children's toys were
strewn across the. walkway as
il abandoned in• hurry. What
was left of a front lawn was
wiltempt and overgrown.
"I like all klttlea," said Vic-
toria. "We have a dog named
Mecubah" said Kenneth. "He
doesn't uke other cats or dogs,
but he llk<I people."
11lese children were starved
for affecUoo. They have no
father.
'7n other words, bastardy
ii a profitable rocket i"
.slum& acr03s the countrv.
And one of the reasons the
countrJI has slums is be·
caUtt it has this· immoral,
psra.s{«c element that re-
Some old, sagging, green
drapes, donated by the Salva-
tion Army, were pulled back
to reveal three small chUdreo,
two boys and a girl. The door
opened and lbefr mother
stood, smiling nervously, in
the doorway.
'n\e house was stuffy. The
Goodwill couch had a spring
mllsing and when you sat on
it, you were almolt on the
!loo<. A donated TV set seem-
ed ill at ease in the comer
next to several pictures or the
chlldren. 1bere was a tacky
multi-colored, nig spread out
In the middle of the room.
Janie -tall, thin, gaunt -
is 22 and appears lo l\OJ7, Het
long, oily blood 1hair tumbled
to a soiled T-shirt tucked into
torn levls. She wore nQ shoes.
Paint drippings from the
ceiling poked ragged white.
fingers down the dark green
walls, an unwelcome bonus or ' The three cltildten we're im-
Engaging Personality
Attracts Opposition
DEAR ANN LANDERSo Wha t is a
father to do when bis 22-year-old
daughter gets herself engaged seven
times in four years and Is about to an-
nounce her eighth engagement?
In a period of 11 months this girl has
accepted three different engagement
rings. She has bought three '11'.edding
gowns (says it's bad luck to use a gown
that was purchased for a canceled wed-
ding). We couldn't return any or the
gowns because they had been altered.
There have been so many different sets
<lf wedding invitations sent <lUt that the
printer thinks we are crazy. 'The
newspapers will not publish any more .
pictures of her. Our fnends are sick of
buying shower gjfls. The ring she
brought home last night is from a man
she has known iess than six weeks.
Our daughter is beautiful, smart. has a
W<lnderful personality and makes friends
with no trouble. I guess the reason I am
writing to you is because I have been
overruled by ml,Bife at every tum.
This girl's foift!hness has cost me a
fortune. not to mention the em-
barrassment. All my wife says is, "It's
her life. I want her to be happy. Better a
broken engagement than a divorce."
Don't tell me that the girl needs to see
a psychiatrist. She has been engaged to
two Of them. 'nlank you vtty much. -
LAUGHING STOCK
DEAR STOCK: ne fact that Ille bas
been eqa1ed &o two psyclllatrtns does
bOt mean lbe doesm't leed therapy.
('Ibey P<Ollably .................... )
Your daughier Is alrald of marriage
aid she'd better undentaDd WHY before
8be accepts aay more engagement rings. u ,_. wt!• ........ lletp u.. fir1 "be
happy" •be 1boald eecovrace bet '° get
ber bead &ogetber and forget about mar-
riage ror awhile.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A dear friend
or mine passed away a few weeks agO:.
She was a voracious reader and so was
I. We loaned one another many books
and periodicals through the years and
enjoyed discussing them over tea .
The day after my rriend's funeml I
went to her daughter's home and asked if
I could go through her mother's library
~ ~>---'
and take back the books which I had
loaned her.
She was highly indignant and said, 'No,
you may NOT go into Mother's library
and help yourself. How do I know the
books are yours?" I felt as if she had
spat in my face. I left without speaking
another wonJ.
Some or those books were like good
friends and I am distressed that they are
lost to me forever . How I wish I .had
taken the time to have labels made and
pasted them to the inside covers. Maybe
my procrastinaUoo wil serve as a lesson
for others. Print, this, ~ease. -RYE,
N.Y.
DEAR RYE: Thant you for the sug·
1esUo1.. TllOle label1 can alte be uehtl
remlDden for bookteepen wbo forget
w~re cert.a.ill book! C!ame from. Yoar
dece~ friend 's daughter sounds llke a
creep. I'm not at all s~ I'd let the mat-
ter drop.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You have fre-
quently given advice to women who write
to you about the problems they face all a
result of being married to alcobolics. Do
you have any words or wisdom for a
woman who is married to a workaholic?
My husband Is completely devoted to
his profession and I feel u lf the children
and I are so far d<lwn the list that it Is
pathetic. ls there a cure for the
workabollc?-X.Y.Z.
DEAR X.: Nooe that I know of. It's a
de ep.rooted compullllo• tind most soc-
eHlful people llave IL My advice ts &o
stop feeUac IOn')' for your11elf, stop na1·
gin< bim and get basy with adlvitiel of
your own.
Got those wedding bell blues over costs
. . . guests list ... what to wear ...
and other details? Ann Landers' com--
pletely new "The Bride's Guide" will
help. For a copy, send a dollar bill, plus
a long, sell-addressed, stamped envelope
I 16 cents postage) to Ann Landers, Box
3346, Chicago, Ill. 60654.
Janie's deal with her landlord
to paint the house 1n exchange
for one month's rent.
When Janie and her children
flrst moved into that house,
there wereo 't even beds to
sleep on. •·1 wheel and deal a
let," said Janie. "I picked up
some old antique books clean-
ing garages. It's so defeating
to even try and wash walls in
this house. I've always lived in
junky, junky hou86. I wanted
to fix this place up."
The family's only source of
income Is a boarder who pays
S75 a mmth and some oc-
casional food stam~. Because
she must pay utilities in ad-
ditkln to rent, Janie tries to
water bet front yard but never
waters her back yard.
'''Welfare is suppo.sed to
be .for those who hwe no-
where else to t1trn,' said
Mrs. Beverly Cramer , a
case worker i'n the Aid to
FamiL~s with DE-pendent
Children (AFDC) program.
·111 19 out of 20 cmes the
ptople do havf' somewhere
elx to turti fQT /ina11cial
assi.sta11ce.' site added.·•
From 1111 Orange Count11
Nt'w.~paper
Jzou• 3, 1971
"On Jt"'riday night we have
tncat. always ha n1 burg r r
dishes," said Janie . "Our
main foetl is bread and l'tn
trying lo leam how to make
n1y own.'' Janie and her
children are always short on
soa p and shampoo. a n d
sometimes her children don't
have anything to wear to
school. They are a I w a y s
hu ngry.
Sf.ill , the young mother has a
warm relationship v.•ith her
children.She likes to take them
out separately once in a while
so they don't have to share
everything all the time.
Janie sat in her rocking
chair petting her kitten. "!l's
nice lo have the house quiet."
The kitten ju1nped off he r lap
Couple Congrotluoted
A host of friends and relatives celebrated th-e 50th
wedding anniversary or Mr. and Mrs. George F.
Linton during a reception in Berkshire's restaurant.
The honorees, who were married in Los An geles,
moved to Newport Beach in 1958 after his retire-
ment from General Telephone Co. He is a member
or Elk's Lodge 1767 and she belongs to Omega
Gamma Kappa sorority in Long Beach. The party
was hosted by the Mmes. Angie Anderson and
Kathy Bell Stephens.
Tree Tops List of Holiday Purchases
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -No
matter how muggy Dec. 25
may be in the South or
bliz.zard-like in the North, the
glamor of the tree is un-
dimmed.
Mom families put a
Christmas tree-high on the lop
or their holiday list . It may
look like last year's. The same
treasured baubles hang from
the twigs. The lights may
twinkle as before.
But whoever heard o f
Christmas Day without its own
tree?
shapely tree, becomes bushy
with pruning, and in eight-~
IO y e a rs of growth will
measure ·in as a dense tree
siJ:-U>elght reet tall.
Its three-inch blue-green
needles grow in pairs, usually
slightly twisted.
The Douglas fir, second in
popularity, bas needles about
the same inches in length as
the balsam fir, but they grow
all around the twig in dark
yellow or blue green.
favorites with buyers. They
are bushy and cone-shaped.
But once cut they tend to lose
their needles, even though
they are kept in water.
Norway sp~ bu lustrous
green needles no more than an
inch long, ahd since it is a
slow grower for the first five
years it makes an acceptable
table tree.
expensive than other spruces.
Americans buy 35 million
trees each Christmas t o
decorate their h o m es.
churches, schools and offices.
accord ing to the National
Christmas Tree G r o w e r s '
Association.
This generates $70 million
on a wholesale level , S'ZIO
million retail. with I h e
average price ranging arouod
16.
By rompar\son, the Forest
Service estimated that last
year five million artificial
trees retailed for 175 million .
Familiell who prefer the
arti£icial trees argue in part
that they are more convenient
or ecologically preferable.
Growers, however, note that
wood is a renewable natural
resource, while materials used
in artificial trees are not
Natural trees ultimately are
biodegradable, unl ike the
artificial variety.
and swatted any.
"In the beg1nn1ni:. when I
first moved here, t h c
neighbors looked down on n1e.
None of the women would
speak to 1ne," she said,
without :ingcr.
Janie wa~ n1arricd tit 15. All
three of her children w('rc
fathered by her first husband
during their first three years
of rnarriagc. As :i rl•sull of a
poor diet and a lack of vita·
1nins during her three con-
secutive pregnancies. she has
no calcium left in her body
and has lost half of her teeth.
Janie became pregnant at 15
out of wedlock. She was living
in a middle class home and at·
tending high school at the
time. ··i\1y mother wanted me
to goMa.n abortion," she recall-
ed, "but I couldn't do that. I
wanted to raise Kenny on my
own, but I finally got married
for everybody else. I was
alv.•ays trying to plea s e
eve ry one else.''
After her divorce, things
Your Horoscope
Pisces:
SATURDAY
DECEMBER 9
By SYDNEY Of\1ARR
1'\ctress-danccr Ann ~1iller is
a real astrology buff. She ex-
plains why she often fa lls in
love, declaring, "I'm an Aries
girl with the moon in Pisces.
And so I wear my heart here,
on my sleeve."
ARIES (March 21-April 19)·:
Emphasis now is on romance,
pleasure, fulfillment or hopes
and wishes. Pressure i s
removed. You can enjoy
. yourself. Leave details to
others. Look around : survey
situation . You are rewarded
ror recent efforts.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): Move ahead in area of
career, personal ambitions.
But also remember promises
to family members. Strive for
balance. Bed i pl om at ic,
especially in dealings with
.ubra. Room will be made l'br
you at elevated position.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Good lwtar aspect now coiQ·
ci.cies with special rom-
munication, gain t h r o u g h
writing, publishing. Don't hur·
ry at expense or quality. See
in light of reality. Pisces
person could play key role .
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Relationships are intensified.
Nothing no\v is apt to be
halfway -it is all or nothing.
Money' handled by associate Is
in good hands. But you will re-
quire an accounting. Know it
and act accordingly.
'Tis the se3!0ft for a •••
Sleepwear
Sale
became worse for Janie 1n·
stead or better. She lived v.·ith
a boyfriPnd for a ye11r, then
tried marriage again. This
time it w:is almost !<i tal.
"Jle ust'<I to beat rnt ;ind the
l0h1ldren," Janie recalll'<I ... Jle
hl•li! 11 loaded gun to n1y he;.id
mor(' than once. He also tried
to lake n1y daughter away
from me." The c h i Id re n
resented their secood fatht'.·r
greatly. One da y Jan ie ask~
the1n,"Do you want hint lo be
your daddy?" They said no.
"1'hat 's when I kicked him
out. ..
The house was quiet excC'pl
(or the sound of incessant
whining. The kitten \Vas
hungry, too.
"I don't hide anything from
my kids." said Janie. "I don't
want my kids to hate their
real father'· because of mr.
They might want to see hi1n
"'hen lhcy get older. I don 't
think they look at him as tht"1r
father. though. l1e Jives about
IWl!'n!y miles away and never
even sees them."
Jan1t:'s primary concem l5
htr children. She does not
l't l.1111 to f1ul them in the sam~
way her parents failed her-. "I
would hke to send my kids to
parochial school. I believe m
chscipllnc. I thi nk kid.s ought to
be raised thut way . I've done
l'vcryth1 11g I wanted to do and
I've ended up paying for 1t
right where I wn!"
She became very quiet and
thoughtful for a minute. Then
she said haltingly: "I get
nervous around people. I don 't
\Jke lo get ner\IOilll, but I do.
"fhe hardest critic on myself is
me. I don't like to show my
emotions . I guess that 's
because they're too host ile."
This young girl and her fan i-
ly are trapped in their pover-
ty . They are always hwtgry .
They are one of many. And
they live just a few miles from
the yachts of Newport fiarbor.
Don't Tell All
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Ar::·
ce nt on n1arriage and business
partner. Legal a r fa i rs
dominate. Tie loose ends.
Ccmplete project. Be a keen
ob.5erver. Let others sho .... ·
their hands. You I earn
valuable lessons if patient.
Pacing will be of utmost im~
portance.
VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221'
New contact proves beneficial.
Work procedures improve.
Streamline methods. SI op
hanging on to pll.$t. Future can
be bright if yoti are a self.
starter. Leo plays ke.y role.
One who serves you proves
loyalty.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Accent is on payment.
collection. You can add to
possessions. Key is to kno\11
what it is you really desire.
Separate needs from mere
whims. Be aware of budget re-
quirements. Change is essen-
tial and Virgo, Gemini persons
are involved .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Lunar cycle is such that
you gain renewed confidence.
Make fresh start. especially in
domestic area. Let the past go
-grab opportunity for future.
Your life can be more ful[lll-
ing if you make peace at
home.
PISCES tFeb. 19-March
20): Discretion now i s
necessary. 0on·t tell all you
know. Be mature enough IG
know what to confide. what to
hold in confidence. Applies
especially in dealing with
k>ved one.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ) o
Good lunar aspect now in-
dicates activity in connection
with creative endeavo r. Rela-
tionship with member of op.
posite sex becomes mean-
ingful. You seem able to be at
right place at right time.
Sense of adventure i s
heightened.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2l iolp;-------~
Entertain at home. Stick close
to what Is familiar. Deal with
Sagtuarlan. Yoo receive offer
which can be profiteble. Be
ieceptlve. Maintain balance
and humor. But insist on
recei ving fair price.
SAGITIARfUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Experiment with
ideas. Give fl.ill play to in-
te llectual curiosity. Means
test, probe -ask questions
and obtain answers. Short
trip is on agenda. Relative in
transit could make special re-
quest.
SMART SHOPPERS
GIFT EARlY
And
Th ink
JtoJn tnhR
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NIWPOITI• INN
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Just in time for Christmas gifting!
Floral Print
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Long. Regular $32.
Now$1985
For about two-thirds of the
buyers, Scotch pine ls the
favorite, and has been since
1962. Jt grows naturally into a
The balsam has dark green
needles, and both it and the
Douglas fir are fragrant in-
doors.
White Spruce holds its blue
green needles better than other
spruce and does not have the
tar-like scent of other spruce
and !Ir, but some persons are
not pleased with~ odor pro-·---------------------1 '-==========~ duced by their crushed r
{
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Eastern and Western white
pines have needles soft to the
touch, dark blue green, and
five to the cluster.
Spruces are long t i m e
needles.
Blue spruce, with Its long,
sharp bluish..white needles,
will not mature for 12-~18
years, and naturally Is more
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LA HABRA f ASHION SQUARI!
open m011dq tluu fridq til 9:30,saturday ti19:30,lllll<lq 12-S.
I
--
,1.f DAILY PILOT
Washington's
Owens in Line Luckman Rates Miami
. ' For SMU Job?
OAUAS -Jlm Owens, coach at the
University of Washington for 16 years, is
tchedu1ed to come to Oalla1 next week u
Southern Methodist University searches
for a new coach and athletic director.
Better Than '40 Bears
Owens Is well known in Texa!. He was
a former Oklahoma sitar and was on
Bear Bryant's staff at Texas A&M before
going to Washington.
Owens and two other coaches are
schcdnled for interviews berore Wednes-
day, the se1ection committee's target
d,ate to complete groundwork before a
decision. Robert H. Stewart DI, heeding
the committee, would not name the other
LWO. .,,
CINCINNATI -The baseball fan who
allegedly threatened to shoot Gene
Tenace of the Oakland A's during the
World Serie! here was bound to the
Hamilton County grand jury Thursday on
a charge of carrying a concealed weapon.
Elwood King, 32, or Louisville, was ar-
rested Oct. 21 outside Riverfront
Stadium. Police said he was carrying a
'loaded .22 caliber revolver. Another
person in the ticket line told police King
said: "If Gene Tenace hits a home run
today he woo't walk out of this ball
park."
NEW YORK -Veteran Pancho
. Gonzalez of Los Angeles moved into the
semifinals of the $75,000 Clean Air Tenn is
Classic Thursday night with an im·
pres&ve 6-4, 6-4 victory over Paul Gerken
of East Norwich, Conn.
Ove Bengtson of Sweden upset Dennis
Ralston of Bakersfield. 6-Z, 6-4, in Thurs·
1 day night's other quartes.final. Bengtson
draws his Semiffual opponent from the
match between top seed Charlie Pasarell
. of Puerto Rico and Haroon Rahim of
Pakistan. .,,
C:OVENl"RY, England -Ray Terrell,
top British swimmer who was dropped
from the Olympic squad after a police
drug raid, was acquitted in court Thurs-
day of. possessing marijuana.
Terrell, rated one of Britain's best
prospects at Munich alter nine months of
training In the United Sta~ under
American coach Don Gambril, was droi>
ped from the team following a police m.
veetigaUon of his room at the British
swimmlng training headquarters in
Coventry just before the Olympics. .
The swimmer always claimed that the
drug found In his room did not belong to
him, but said ..... "' bis teammai.a "smoked pot at the headquarters." .,
HONOWLU -James Jones of
Honolulu captured the first prize money
,Of ~111111 'lllurMaY in the fl ,000 Duke
~Surfing Clallric.
: · Mike Purpus of, Hermosa Beach was
·sixth in the competition at Sunset Beach.
Jeff llakman of Honolul\I finished sec-
·ood. followed by Oscar Malpartida of
J_~ Peru.
CHICAGO (AP\ -"Those o Id
Monsten of the Midway probably _,Id
crown me, but 1 think the Miami
Dolphins conceivably could beat our
Chicago Bears of 1940, called the greatest
professional team of all lime."
The man who said that today was Sld
Luckman. who quarterbacked t be
fabulou,, Bears of the World. War II era
to four National Football League titles,
th.e first in an historic 7J.O clobbering of
the Washingtoo Redskinl .in 1940.
The Dol.phim Sunday take a U-0 record
against the New York Giants with a
chance to match the NFL's aea.300
record oI 13 victories set by the 1934
Bears and matched by three later clubs.
The Dolphins also could tie the "streak"
record of 13 set by the 1934 Bean.
Bears owner George Halas always bas
regarded the 1934 Bears, powered by
Beattie Fulbers and Bronco Nqurald.
and the Luckman-l<d p0...moo... of
!IM0-41-0 as tn the class by tberMelv...
Luckman, eased oot of Vie Bears
coach1ng pictw'e several yean ago and
now a plutics firm executive, thinks the
Dolphins .,. great, but thelT coach, Don
Sb.ila, even greater.
In Luctman's book, they broke the
mold ror a peerless coach after aow·
retired Halas, but the five-time, all-NFL
quarlerback .....is: "When I lool: al
Shola, he reminds me of Halas wben I
was playing.
"Sbula 1w the talent '<Jf knowing what
be wanlS, getUng tt, and malntainlog a
great tea:m esprit de <..'Ol"J)S.
"Miami ts a magnificently balanced
team, with the game's three ~mest nm.
ning backs, tremendous recesvers and
some workers p!AJ!ng far above their
Sullivan's Fate
on Bench Sitting
Frustrating Life
ATLANTA (AP) -The view from the
bench is a lonely and fn.istrating one for
Pat Sullivan. but the 1971 Heisman
Trophy winner isn't complaining as his
first season in the National Football
League nean an end •
"I'm where r should be right nbw ,''
says Sullivan, the All ·America
quarterback from Auburn who was the
Atlanta Falcom' No. 2 draft choice.
"Bob Berry is having a heck of a year.
I shouldn't be playing," the soft·spoken,
band9ome youngster says.
"It's hard sitting on the bench. It's
something I've never had to do," the &--
foot, 198-pounder says. "It has bef!n
frustrating. But there's so mucb lo learn
here. It's a big step."
Sullivan, 22, a native or Blnningbam,
Ala., lw also learned tbe difference
between winning the H ....... Trophy
and tbe NFL.
"I think ti's the greatest college award
anyone can receive," be aays. "But It's
left in college u far as the pros are con-
cerned."
. fat spends hi,f weekdays ju!! like most
ordinary --goq to Atlanta Stadhun at 10 a.m.1 vie'Ning films and
working oot before leaving !or bis
suburban apartment and bis wife and
young daughter at about 5 p.m..
"My wife loves it here," Sullivan says.
"She's found IO many places to go shop-
ping and spend money," be added with a
grin.
Sullivan chose an apartment any
Crom the city becamo" I wanted a laJn.
lly atmoephere and • place for d•igl!ler
Kim to play."
'.1'be SuJUvans lino a qu1<I home Ille,
spending mosl ol lher evmin&I ntdllng
television or ilOilletimes going off to a
drive.in theater.
Sometimes they visit other pillyen,
like tight end Larry Mtalik or eklOe
friend Ken Burrow, a wide receiver •.
"We have the same problems any mar.
ried couple has. We have trouble getting
a baby sitter, too," Sullivan says.
Sullivan, who paS!ed and ran for l ,MS
yan!s in three yean at Auburn willlo
leading tbe Tigers to 25 victories tn 30
games, has .... aclioo brldly for lhe
Falcoos. lie has hll OD only S ol 11-
for 44 yanls and lw thrown three In-
terceptions.
"I """' happy to get the ClllllOftWlity to
play," be says. "Yoo get uperienc:e by
plasing. Bui l leamed -~ old IUY' in tbll le-hll prelty bard.
SUllivan -slowed ·tn the Fa1cms
training camp -he -three weel:s lat< after playing in the OOllege --"That blbdered me," Sullivan says.
iSays Clney's Beaeh
"By that time all the rooktes had been
looked at arid the team was getting riady
for the seaaoo. I didn"t know the system
and was on the fourth team. I didn't.get
much work."
Knew It Was There,
I
Put Thought,s Aside
' CINCINNATI (Al') -Johnny Bench,
the National League's Most Valuable
Player. was to learn today whether be
must face surgery for removal oC a
lesion in his lung.
The Cincinnati Reds' catcher
'celebrated his 25th b!rtbday Thursday
,night at a private party glven by Barry
Btmie, one of the Reds ownen.
• Bench. earlier, remaJned coofJdent that
;the spot discovered tn his lung last
!September would not he • problem.
• Dr. Luis Gonzales said results of a :rma1 test o1 Bench'• broncbill tubes
would be announced today. U tbe lesta do
• not show the lesion can be cured
otherwise, Bench will IDier-go surge<)'
.Monday.
Bench wos asked how he could keep up
his play during tbe plaiofl and World
Series once be lea.med about his eon-
'dition.
"I knew it WU there, but I had to put
the thollgbt utde," be said. "I knew that
aft.tr the sea1on there was 1 good chance
. they could CUI M ll.
41But r had to try to fcrget about it,
just like wtth my bnaJQtll lnte-rests.
iWhen you atep aCl"Oll thole white lines
yau have to be all bueball -lt'a game
ltiJne."
JOHNNY BENCH
returned to play with St. Louis and
Milwaukee.
Sullivan says he doesn1 know bow long
it takes to make a pro q~.
"It depends on how much ..rt you
get. I'Ve learned a gre.at deal but it's
disappointing to anyone to sit OD the
bench."
Buckeyes Resume
Practice Today
For Rose Bowl
COLUMBUS, Ohio (Al') -'lllird·rank-
ed Ohio State reswnes football pradice
today for ita Rpse Bowl date against No.
l Southern Callfomia.
The Buckeyes have been off since they
upoet lllcblgan !Ht Nov. 25 tn the
regular 9eQQD finale for a t-1 recud.
Ohio State mml« Woody llQa al9o
plans another practla! 8atunlay before
the players de-their Ume to lina1 u -
ams next week.
The _.,.. alJo will drill Dec. IS
and 19 before 1eavtD( for P-Do<.
20. They will laundl tbett West Coast
oooditloniog with a double practtce Do<.
21 at Citrus College at Azuza, near Pasa·
dena.
Hayes will be pennitled to earry 60
players on the travellni 1q111d, Instead o1
the 56 the Buckeyes took to the Role
Bowl two years ago .
Ohlo Stale Is making llJ third R4le
Bowl trip in the la1t five yean. The Sols
to Stanford In the Jan. t, 1971 game WIS
the only -the -Y'll ha .. 11111-!ercd In five R4le Bowl IPPOraDCU
potemW, lhanb to Sll1lla, who dld the
same thing al Baltimore.
"I wouldn't bo IUl'prlaed ti the Dolpl>lnl
finllh the reau!IU" ....... 11Ddefealed, jual
aa our 190 Bean did:"
Did Luckmon aewaUy believe the cur-
rent Dolphins oou1d whip tbe Bean who
made the T·l<lrmatlon the llCOWI• ol pro
football In the early -!
"Well, it'• llke P)'inC who would win
between Jack ~Y and Joe Loula."
aid r.nm.. "It '"!'lid be a -. <Jf
two -teams, but hec•ise <Jf olse and
speed, I'd ba,. to 10 fer the Dolph1na.
And that's a bnsh thing f..-me today
with Bulldoc Tllmer, Joe Si,dahat, Georre Musso. George McA!fee, X..
Kavanaugh, Blll Qs1namtt among othen
o! -great IMO Bean at1D olive and k:ickins· u •
·t.oetman lllrelsed, ~. Iba! "we
had • ....... equad and the "8Ulars
played both ways 60 minuta ..
"It might be a hone <Jf a dlffertnl col·
or H tbe Dolpillna had to maid> Us with
tbett belt a 11111 ·and.thq...bad' tn play
both o11 .... and -
"Bui the modern. loolhell plal"fS have
ao mud! more ..... far tllem, skilled
coachlntr -the kid le¥d, bigger bodl<o and putor lllOed. I look and
-when I -tbaoo l'I0-280-poond men ,_mg 'lr\lb lhe opee<I and-agility
they do today.
"I'll tell you one !bing, thougb,
Kavanaup ~ be a superstar
receiver In lllJ" erL So would McMee as
a runner and 'l'llmer, stydabar and
Muao a lbmeu.""' -twtman-aid SbuJa "worked a
mirlde' at Mlaml, a phewmwinal thing in
IUCb o --lie"'°" what be had to do when Bob Gr1-tlOt !mt. He went
... and "' Earl llorrall. And tt W<l<ked beoullfulb', just Ila It did at Baltimore
wllm J°"'"IY , IJD!tM IOI !IUl't and Shula came up wltlt Marnll"
Papo Beot Halla aid he had not seen
the Ilolpldm tn -tldo oeason, "bul
they are lxMmd to be a put team with
that record OVf'!l M entire season. And
what a pul job llmnD did in stepping
in for Griele ...
'!'lie 1tM Bein !elm. whose 13-game wlnnlnc: ltreU: the Dolpbins are at·
tempting to matdl; llaJ.s said. had
smaller piQel'I. "l pea we didn't have
the vttamfnt they build ap OD these days.
11But that telm'1 pl.,en were just aa
laot and ll!llrffod .... just u great com-
pellton u the DolebltJL"
Southern Cal .
Cagers Upset
By Amona
TUCSON (AP) -'.1'be University of
Arizona butetball team is learning fast,
coach Fred Snowden aaya.
Snowden'& team. whicb includes five
freshmen, absorbed the lessons of two
straight deleai. well •DOU&h to topple
17th ranted Soutbem Colifornia 71-69 tn a
llOll<Ollf"""1Ce game here Thursday.
'"Ibey played like a bunch of old pros,
espectally tn the cnicial momen!J," said
Snowden. .. I think the 1esaoos they Jewn--
ed oo the oout reol1y helped." Arizooa
lost to both tbe UDM!nlty of San Fran-
cllOll and Stanford !alt weekend.
AriJlona used I perfect free throw
s-,,, averqe to llnl< tbe Trojans. '.1'be
Wildcats were J.3.13 from the boous line
while Southern California was 3-6.
Southern Calilornl.a coach Bob Bo7d
al!o credit.a Wildcat fmhman Al Flem-
ing with being a dodslve f-r. Fleming
scored 11 points and hauled dovm JJ re-
bounds.
Arirona opened the game up late in the
first hall when they had an eight.point
spurt to give lbem o big lead until
midway thniugb tbe lina1 hall.
'Ille Trojam then came alive and Poll-
ed within "'" point belor< Arizona
-guonl Jim Rae.put the game any with two !tee with 11
aecmds mnaioing. atnt aiapman wu hlgb man f..-
Soutbem California with 17 points.
UK lffl
"'•'" CllaflONn
W"1r1 ...,.._
Wl!ll-= um"" ...... ••• """'* UIC
.Vltonl
e • T
j 0-0 10
• 1·2 11
' .. 2 J 1·1 11
5 0.1 Ill .... ....
f l·t t .... ' .. " ......
Art ... (71J
Tot111
e • T
5 ... 10
' ).) 21
4 loZ II ' .. . .; :: ~
IN '
'
Ex-area Ace Spa.rkles
Brian Ambrozich (arrow), former star basketball player at Hunting-
ton Beach High and Golden West College, scored 10 points I<> help
Brigham Young Univemty upset highly touted Michigan, 83·77,
Thursday night.
Players' Rep Calls Kuhn
The Most Rank Amateur
NEW YORK (AP) -Tenning Cool·
missioner Bowie Kuhn "a r a n k
amateur/' Marvin .Miller, executive
director of the Major League Baseball
Players Associatioa, bu reacted with
anger to the public dlscJOIUf'e of the
status of negotiations between the
athletes and the owners.
Commisaiooer Kuhn revealed the
owners' proposal in an unprecedented
st.ep at beseball's wtnter· meetings in
Hawaii last week and Thursday, Miller
summoned a press conference to express
his unhappinesll with the action.
"It ia an act only the most rank
amateur wouJd perform," said Miller,
who handled labor negoUationa with the
steel industry before moving into
baseball "Not only lw Mr. Kuhn shown
~ble Integrity," Mlller said, "be
bas performed an extremely destructive
act tn tenns of the negot!Jttons."
ln Hawall, the commiasioner revealed
in detail baseball's most recent offer in
negotiations for renewal of the expiring
general agreement and pension clauses.
'Ibey tDcluded the first concession ever
made In the area of the controversial
reserve clause that binds a player to his
team unltu sold, traded or released.
But the concession, which offers free
agent status to any veteran player not of·
fered at least $30,000 for his sixth major
league aeuoo or '40.000 for his ninth
year, was re)tcted as unacceptable by
Miller and the Players Aaaociaticn
"Were it presently in effect," said
Miller, "this magnanlmoos: offer would
affect five of the 980 players on major
league J"08ters."
Instead, lhe players have asked for
free agent status after seven years, 12
years and 17 yean, regardless of salary.
Back Faces Trial
NORMAN, Ok.la. -Fountain Smith
Jr., Oklahoma State University hallback
charied with selltni marljuano, was
ordered 'llluraday to I~ non-jury !Tia!
In Cleveland County Dlslrlcl Court here
Jan.19.
Smith is charged with unlawful
dellveryof marijuana to a Nonnan police
undercover agent last Auaust.
Additionally, after five years as a pn>
fessiona.I , ~ in the majors, a pl.ayer
would become a free agent if he ls earn-
ing less than the average big league
salary, now n.gured al about $32,000.
Tbe same free agent status would ap-
ply after seven years, fi ve in the majors,
if the player was earning less than 11r'.i
times the average and alter nine years if
the player was earning less than twice
th.e average.
Miller called the Players Association
ofier, "a modest proposal which goes to
the problems of all players, whelber they
are superstars, regulars or reserves."
The players also are asking Ior a boost
in their minimum salary from the
current $13,500 to $15,500 in 1973, $16,500
in 1974. and $17 ,500 in um. The owners
had offered $500 boosts per year,
reaching 11s,ooo in 1'75.
Miller said talks aimed at preventing
any repilition of last spring's strike
would be resumed next Tuesday in New
York and upresoed the hope that
"negotiations have not irrevocably been
polsooed by Mr. Kuhn's actions in
Hawaii."
LAKERS, SEATTLE
BATTLE AT FORUM
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los
Angeles takers hope to continue an odd
sort of mastery over Seattle when they
host the SuperSonics i.D National Basket·
ball Association play tonight.
Since 1969 Seattle has lost every en·
counter here with the Lakers.
The Lakers, meanwhile, are working
on a modest two game win streak after
their nm of t3 straigh.l victories was
broken by AUanta in overtime a week
ago.
Los Angeles. idle since stopping
Milwa ukee 116-94 Tuesday nJght, holds •
flve game lead over secood place Golden
State in the NBA Pacific Dtvi11lon.
Wiib a 21-4 season mark, Los Angeles
has a 14.~ game edge over the Scnics.
early seaaon p(cka as pouible division
challengers. '!'bey have alwnped to fourth
place wilh a 9-21 record.
, Bench ncelved good wishes from two
former baseball playen who had similar Jl>n>blmm.
FnUJk McConnlck, flnt baoemen for
<lhO lllMt> pemaot wlnnlnl Reds, had a
•lmilar lellon dl"""'ered In 195& while he wu a Reds' game lroodcoster.
"My girls were really ....-ried about
Bench," said SchoendieDJt when be arriv-
ed home in St. LoulJ after the winter
baseball meetings in Hawaii.
'Tm sure he'll be all right. They do
wonders with cpen.UOM.
"Alter I had my openllon my arm
was better than ner," i. nalled.
''Il<aJty, I wish him all the 1uct In the
world . ~ even though he betU heD out
Of US all )'tlf, II
Suspended Anteaters Reinstated
"l ~ I WU in trouble," = roca1led, on.. sendlnl • I to Beiicb. "Tile dlaghOSIJ 1'aS
~~· It WU bolJeftd to be a benlin
f
Mc:O:lnnldc said the doctors were 98
pei ... lt IUte the problem Wat bentcn,
jull lilol -·· docton. "That means there'• a two percent
~~~lt~illl~ld McCormick. "For a .,,. ......... ,... .. Jn and , .. It
but end f.lod aut for tute. I can't go on
wooder1nt -lhet two .,....m." ' St. Loull ..._,. Red Scho<ndl•nst
had llllloml1olll, undonmll SUJ'ler)' and
Reds 1111111F Sporky Andenon, frnm
his borne tn Thousand Oal:s, up.......i
cOneem and oplJmlam.
"The docton uaured UI lt'I nothlnf
that's goi'!f to last. O! oourse I'm coo-cemed, I m concerned a n y t I m e
llOmelhlng like this happens. I'm going to
keep elooe tabs.
"But they'Ye assured us for sure that
hc11 be ready by March and not lose any
oI hls health."
'
Hannony has r.tumed to the UC it'rlno
baall<tball P<"l"'m for the home -with Montana State UnifttlltJ &afllnlay
niflhl In Crawford Hall folJow1nt • -·· llU!J>Ollllon for llx playm, lnd1ldlnt t.wo
urly«l90ll starten.
Cooch nni nn tllUOll a statemoat lato
Thur>day altemooo !ollowtnc t be
Anteaters' return from three sames ln
the Hawalian lllaodl fnlm which the six
pl.ayers were abltnt.
"I have met and exchanae<I thouehl• ·
and Ideas wtth the six players Involved In
• our problem <Jf last week," Tiit u1d.
"Altor a thoroqh dll<Ulalon, I haw
decided, on the basis ol their poolUve
-to the atandarc1a " the --to ft!mtalil ihe llx pilotn inYlaolalf~ IDddlnlldJ-"We wtered a prolllem
IS I temn WO dealt with the ptob-lem," Tilt addelt. 0Ftft of tbe llx were
on the OOllrt with t11 today (Tbllnday) and the Giber __ .... llcbeu."
nn -w t11at -of !he_.,.
ed J>ia1'11 bad -oot -lve!y "1IJle the team -In llawlll and the
otHe ... spent time on the """' ahootlns.
lie dtCI nol reVMI which ol the six bad
been -ittni -lvtl)'.
nn wW nol -a dtllnlte starting lineup for the 8aturda1 night
1~ lmtJI todaf'• pnctloo ·la ended. the Oll<Nng lineup Is problemalical.
"I am ping on the ...... ptlon "" wtll Gary l'looloo, another of !be IU8f>OIMled
start tbe same five that started our _group,._wtll Wklergo a hemJa opienUon
games in HawaU," T1tt said. "Tbla it this weekend and wUl be ablent for ftve
subject to change followJnc Friday's or six weeks.
wortout, however." Tbe othen are Garr1ck Barr, Richard
Thlt means that Dave Baker will 0pet1 Clarlc and Sam Bunch.
at "'nter ; Howard Hawkins and Jerry TUt declined to give any reason for the
M1ras st forward : and Harlan feet and suspension and staled he was hopeful It
Gary Eubanks at the tfll8nl post>. could be fo1101ten .. quicldy as possible
Eobanka .. placed R!cbard M1'11ule in the for the good of the teem.
bacl:oourt for the llnRI same in Hawaii. Following 8atW'day •lcht'a action with
Scott MapolOll opened the ....,. at Montana Stale Unlvenlty be.. tht
center and Jim Newton had gaimred Anteaters am off for a week befOn
Startin{ guanl berth before they were mooting John Brown University tho
ouspended. Just whon they will r<tum to following saturday evenlmg.
DAILY PILOT
TA.RS POLOISTS
SEEK THIRD'PLACE
LONG B~QI -l'or the tint time In
oJne yean the Orange Coast area is not
rt:p'reaented In the CIF water polo Cham·
plolllhip finall .. No. I oeeded Downey
and Sunny Hills cl8L11 for tbe tllle tonight
at Bebnont Pla11. 1be Utle game is eet
for 9.
Lions, St. Paul Bang Head ·s Colony Faces
Rival Western
Newport H11rbar'1 Sailors, three tlJnes
champions iwd finallal! the past five
straight years, Is in a 7:30 third place UU
"1th ,Lo Puente.
OoWney•a only loss or the season was to
coach Bill Barnett'• Sailors and Sunny
Hills qualified for a shot at Downey wlt.b
a 9-4 triumph over Newport Harbor in
the scmlllnal.9 at the same site Tuesday.
Difficult Task
Confronts New
Huskers Coach
By HOWARD·L. HANDY
Ot ,.... Dlllly f'llet ttllll
Will the University of Nebraska be
back in the thick of the baUle for ·No. 1
honors in football again next season'!
LONG BEACH ~ WHtmlnsttr lllgh's
Lions and Ibo ilndtleatod, No. t ronked
SL Paul SWordsmen collide tonllht in
CIF MM football oemlliolls action at
Vet.._.. Sbldlum.
It gets under W8'J at I o'clock &NI the
Winnet' qualilies I« a llnaJs \e<l wJ\h the
surv!Vjll' ·of the Anabdm-western clash
at Anabelm ~wn .tonight..
Coach Morijon Anclcb's lmpreoslve
Swordsmen (ll-0) _,.five-point favorites
to eed the lJons'··-.'"11d much ol
that spread is besed on U>6 awesome St.
Paul delenaerw~ch baa allawed SS points
to 11 foes incl~ seveo shutouts.
That question may be a while in get~
ting an answer and most certainly lt will
take performance on the field before the
Cornhuskers are rated at the top aiain.
No one knows this better than Tom
Osborne.
Who is Tom Osborne, the anti·
Nebraska contingent chants?
Dr. Tom Osborne. former professional
football pl ayer with the San Francisco
49ers for one year snd the Washington
Redskins for two, inherits lhe bead
coaching jo b et the Lincoln school early
in January when Bob Devaney steps
aside.
Osborne W<l.$ in Newport Beach (or a
brief visit to talk to the Newport Harbor
High football team recently, taking time
from his whirlwind recruiting as-
signments and plans for scouting the
USCNotre Dame. The Comhuskers face
the Irish in the Orange Bowl on New
Year's Day.
Does he find it difficult to face such a
task , knowing the success Nebraska bas
bad in recent years?
•'Jl will be difficult," he admits. "They
(the Nebraska fans) have ·a high level of
aspiration for us and I'm sure they will
want instant success.
"But we lose about 50 percent of our
offense and our defense for nczf year
which means we will have 11 or U
starters retuning.
"But players like Johnny ROOgers,
RICh Glover and Willie Harper don't
come along every day. They will be hard
lo replace."
Are there any more like Rodgers ln the
fold?
"We have a couple of boys who played
90rne this year who will lake over his
l!lpoL How well they will do remains to be
seen. One of them is Glen Garson from
California and the other is Rich Bahe."
Too, the Swordsmen have an..obvlous
first-teaq:i All-GJF running back in Bill
Wal"(lo to lead the offense.
Wargo has run for 1,172 yards in 245
canies and 14 touchdowns. An ankle in-
jury aggravated ln St. Paul 's 47-4> win
over 14 ~ma two weeks ago makes him
suspect, however.
"He had a gimpy ankle in the La Serna
game but he's getting back into it," say!
Ancich, "he's begiMing to forget atxiiut
the pain."
St. Paul's passing game features
quarterback Pat Degnan. who has com-
pleted 76 or 129 for 1,234 yards and ti
Two days ago four members of the
Nehrt.Ska team were arrested on mari-
juana charges with trial set for Jan. 17.
AH pleaded innocent to the charges.
What does this mean in terms of
playing in the Orange Bowl?
JAY WILSON {251 TOWERS OVER MARK MAURER OF MISSION VIEJO.
"The Uting that is hard for some ~
pie to understand is the possibility of in-
nocence. I doubt if we will take any ac-
lion until the evidence is in.
"However. I haven't been in Nebraska
since it happened," Osborne reminded.
"And I really don't know too much about
what will happen until I get back there."
What was Devaney's reaction to the
Oklahoma loss on Thanksgiving Day?
"He's a very sensible person and we all
tnew we had a couple of chinks In our
annor this season. We knew we were
short in some places and I think we did
well in covering them up most of the
way:•·
Osborne has served as an assistant
under Devaney for the past t t years and
although others have been with the reti r-
ing coach for 'a longer period of time, he
is Devaney·s choice as a successor.
In looking back over the years at
Nebraska , ·Osborne feels a 49-0 k>ss to
Oklahoma five years ago was the turning
point in Comhuskers football.
"We were completely shell-shocked and
we had a choice of two things to do. One
was to quit and the other to !lit down and
analyze the problem, admit our
shortcoming!! and then work hard at
making a change.
Chargers Defeated
Hot Slwoting Diablos
Streak to 70-39 Win
By CRAIG Sl!EFF
Of tM Dally P'lltt St.tr
Mission Viejo High, behind some dazzl-
ing outside shooting, stormed to a 7()-39
basketball -victory over Edison in the
opening round of the Aztec Invitational
Thursday night at Los Amigos High.
The winning Diablos, now 3-0 for the
seaSCln, battle Santa Ana Valley tonight
at 7 at La Quinta while Edison abo bas a
7 o'clock consolation game at Los
Amigos with Los Amigos.
ln other first round games. Santa Ana
Valley knocked oH Los Amigos, 58-48 ;
Loara blitzed Bolsa Grande, 92-52; and
La Quinta routed Saddleback, 80-62. •
Coach Pat Roberts' Diablos just had
too much firepower far Dave Mohs'
Chargers and had an easy time of it after
a tight f1.rst quarter.
With the score 15-13 just seconds into
the second quarter, the Diab\os started
searing the nets from outside, jumping to
a 25-18 advantage with four minutes to
go.
Then with Rob Ferguson and Mike
Bo1Ao·en hitting with consistency from
out.side and 6-3 farward. Steve Rudesill
controlling the Inside game, the Diablos
outscored Edison, ll-0, in the closing
minutes for a 36-18 halftime lead.
MD Dealt 69-64 Loss
And that same trio put tbe game out of
reach for the Chargers with a second half
spurt that saw the lead go as high as 34
points.
The Olablos had a shooting percenlage
of 5'1.8 in the opening half and hit on 10 of
IS shots 167 percent) in the deciding sec-
ond quarter. BASSETT -Greg Green and George
Herold combined to score 48 points, but
Mater Dci High dropped a 69-&I decision
to Workman in the Bassett-Bishop Amat
basketbal !tournament, ther, Thursday
night.
Green hit 28 points while Herold can·
ned 20, bul thPt's just about all the scor-
ing punch the Monarchs could muster.
Coach Jerry Tardie'! Monarchs held a
M-29 lead at the half. but the winners
took tbe lead early in the fourth quarter
and maintained it the rest or the way.
Mater D.ei returns to action tonight,
feeing Damien at 8:30 at Bassett High.
MIM Otl C6'1 • w.r11.,,.111 C6tl
Herold
INr11nd•tt
~-:.
""'" MCC•uo!'IY ...,,.
Tol•I•
ft " ., ,. 6 I ' lO C1pl•
2 0 I 4 Gontlltl
13 2 t 2' McCormacll ·2 0 2 4 MU.II ...
203 4ltMr11.
2 0 2 ' C1-rnl1k
003•$wlnll0ft
t710 II '4 Tol1l1
k'" tty ou.n ...
'' " ,, 15
.. ,..,,.
5 1 3 11
' ' 1 24
' 2 0 ' 1 ' J 11
! 2 2 '
1 0 ' 2 I 0 2 1
fJU13 ..
121 ...... --
Ml11IOll Viele (7') EflMll (Jt) """',. .. ""' .. F.,._ulOll • • • " '""' ' • ' • flvdMlll ' ' I " W!laDll ' ' I ' M111rer ' ' ' I Wlnd'lell ' • • • nowen • • ' II '"' • ' ' " H111•1 ' I • 1 .... ~ ' ' • • """ J • ' I WI~· ' • ' • H1rr!1 • ' ' ' Troifill ' • ' ' .... • ' I ' T~tl\' • ' I ' Th1!1 • • ' • Fr IHI" • ' • ' TOlllJ )1111•70 To!1l1 14\IU)f
kt" Irr av.,,...
MIHlOll Vltlo " " " , .... ,. ,._ " 1 ' ,,__,,
Dues~ El Ca111ino Clash
Orang• COast C01lege'1 bosl;<tball
team getl one of Its .Uffett tats o« lbe
young seaaon tonight when the Plrotes
tangle with El C&mlno· In the -1flnala
·of the Mile! Eaton lnvltaUonal tourney It
occ.
It begins 11t 7.
ln another temlrlna) tilt, Cyprt11 bat--
ties Santa Ana at 9.
Cypress raced to 11n 11·71 decis1on over
Cypresa whlle Santa Ana downed
previously unbeaten Hancock, M.fle In
first round loum<Y games at OCC Thurs-
da.f nll)IL
Slddlebael< laced Glendale at 5 In the
CONOlatlon niund. occ cornea Into the El C&mlno
gam& with a 6-1 record and a ~ vic-
tory cwer Glendale In the opening oalVo
ol the Elton clasalc. El Camino, alto 6-1,
polled a 7UI win over Saddlebac~
W~ynll)IL
El O&mlno'• Warriors or cooch Bill
Bloom aot a balaneed attack In tbi!lr vi<>
tary aver Saddleback with 6-6 center
Rusty Sinith leading the way wllh 15
pointl.
CoKh 'Herb Uvaey's OCC P.lrates have
alao "1own pl,.ty of ocor!ng bolance lhus
rar In lilt 1972·73 cimpalgn wtth its five
ltatte.r9o'all averaging over or near the
10.0 mark .
Jotm S,cymour leads the way with a
14.1 average, fol\owed by Rod Snook
(II.I), Dean Bogdan (II.I). Tom Crunk
(t.S) and Bn1ce Miller (7.3). The latter
four are freshmen.
toucbdowm.
Sul that-is not nearly companble to
We.tmlnimr's aerial blitz, w h i c h
features quarterback Dan Accomando.
Accomando has campleted 105 oI 229
attempts for 11767 yards and 11 TDs.
And when coach Bill Boswell's Lions go
lo the running game it's Dan's brother,
Tony, who they usually rely on.
Tony Ac!cclmand:> baa scored nlne times
and lt was biJ hard running that ignited
the Uons to a 3&-22 conquest of San
Gorgonio in the first round of the
playoffs.
Westminster's game has come on
strong s11ice Su~t Ltagut warfare,
where the Lions finished in a tie for sec-
ond place with Anaheim.
Westminster's defense. re' v o I v Ing
1u·flund tackles Larry Grady and Rich
Seaberry and middle guard Sieve
Fritsch, must st<lp the Power running of
Wargo.
And on the other hand Westminster's
offensive problem stems around figuring
out how to whip the tough St. Paul !>-2
reading defense.
Too. the Swordsmen feature a strong
secondary. Boswell predicts a loV.'-S<:Or·
ing gan1e from both sides.
Powerhouses Collide
Marina Battles Katelin
For Tournament Crown
Marina's Vikings will attempt to cHmb
a notch above the Katella Knights in the
Orange County prep basketball ratings
and at the same time annex the cham-
pionsh ip fn the eighth aMual Marina-
Westminsler Rotary Invitational Basket-
ball tournament tonight.
The championship battle begins at 9 at
Marina. And it's a duel between No. 2
rated Katella and the No. 3 rated hosts.
Fountain Valley's Barons face Santa
Monica in the consolation finals at 6 with
the third place game between Millikan
f'ovnt .. 11 Vlller (11) """ .. 1 s 1 ,, Hl!I
M•l-
Relder
C. A~ml
T. Adami
H•ttleld
S.S.Uh•«I• ·-.... ,w
""" Kendrick
Raupp
Tol1l1
1 l 2 lS
7 I 2 5
2 1 0 J
0 0 2 0
0 l 0 3
2 2 1 ' z 1 1 s
l 0 l 6
1 0 0 2
2 0 2 ' 0 1 1 I
21 IS 13 71
511111 AMI !~SI
Oltcll""r
Martll'le!
Cl'l•PITl<1n
Z•r•I• ... ~
GllW:Z ,_
Hiii
ft ft pf It
2 D S '
2 0 4 ' I 1 3 9
• 2 J 10
l 0 1 ' I 0 I 2
2 0 0 4
2 2 1 '
Totals 17 11 11 •J
sure·by OU.rl1r1
Fo1ml1!n V111rY ll II 15 25---11
Sent• An1 n Ill ' 19--65
,_,
'~· '"" Ad1ms
Marillll 11111
tlltt•ll• 10 2 1 22
• 0 2 I I 0 2 1'
S 0 I JO
H1non
Sw•nwr1 .. ,.,
To1111
0 0 1 0
3 ' ] 12 I O r 2
31 • 11 10
Mlllilwn (ill
Cromer
M<Ott
DYkS!ra ··-Minor
ft ft •I IP
S 0 l \G s 1 s n
' 2 3 20 J 1 1 11
6 1 2 ll
0 0 I 0
5uA 11'1 Ollme" "'"~ MllUkln fl " u l'-70 12 11 14 11-65
•
and Long Beach Poly at 7:3{).
In Thursday night's se1nilinat action.
Marina slruggled (or three periods to
keep even with the Millikan Rams but
pulled ahead early in the final stania
with an eight·point barrage that suddenly
turned the game around.
Katella had to go overtime to defeat
~ng Beach Poly 82·76 in another nip-
and-tuck struggle.
Dave Brown's Fountain Valley team
had little trouble defeating Santa Ana . 71·
45, outscoring the Saints in the second
hall 46-23.
Tim Hill was high point man for the
Barons with 19 while Dan Malane con-
tributed 15. Scott Reider, 6-11 ace of the
Barons attack, saw little action in the
game.
Marina fell behind the Rams at the
outset of the game and with five minutes
left in the rirst stanza, was trailing by 12
points , 16-4.
Bill Fick and Bob Losner began to hit
with consistency in the second period as
the Vikings scored 28 points and left the
court at intermission even at 40-40.
It remained deadlocked at conclusion
of the third period. 54-54. and when the
Rams hit the first two baskets in the
fourt h stanza. the Vikings were aroused.
Sophomore Losner hit a pair or free
throws and Mr. Dcadeye scored on a
sideline jumper from 20 feet following a
basket by Fick and the Vikings were in
front to stay with 3:07 left. They moved
to a six point edge with I: 15 left and
traded baskets to the final buzzer.
In Grid Se1nis
Anaheim will be afforded a second
chance tonight with higOOr stakes on the
table than a Sunset League football
championship when coach C I a r e
VanHoorebeke's Colonisl!l tangle with Wl·
defeated \llestem High for the second
time this season in a semifinaJ CJ F
AAAA playoff game at the Big A in
Anahtim "'ith kickoff at 8.
\Ve.stern "'On the Sunset crown while
Anaheim and Westminster ·lied for sec·
ond in the final standings. The Pioneers of
Western and their two league antagoo-
-ists have all advanced to the playort
semifinals with Westminster and St. Paul
tangling in Long Beach tonight .
VanHoorebeke and Western coach Jfm
Everett are both concerned about the se-
cond meeting.
"We get a second chance," says Van .
"but rm not sure if that's too good."
.. , can't say rm looking ~ forward .to
playing them again." says Everett
Both teams operate successfully with a
rushing game although both can pass
when necessary.
Bob Acosta. the Western quarterback,
is one of the top high school prospects )n
the area and hls ability to operate the op-
tion play has been a big factor in t}le
Pioneers' sUCCi!ss.
He can also throw the football and has
gone to the air to topple more than one
opponent this season.
Anaheim's offense is built around three
seniors. Ron Anton is the quarterback
while Kirt Bethke and Howard Carson
are the Colony's leading runners.
The field at the Big A has been covered
. for two days as protec tion against rain
and dry footing should give the running
game of both schools added Impetus.
But Everett isn't forgetting the past. Jn
1967, VanHoorebeke's Anaheim team lost
to Santa Ana in \he regular season,
entered the playoffs as the runnerup
squad. then defeated the Saints for the
CIF championship, 27-6.
Sports Calendar
FtlO'IY (DK. II 811ke!ti.ll -Ellan(ll al L1<1un• E111cll. Sunn~ Hill~ •I Huntlfl9!0n 8HCI\, N~OPrt H1rbor 11
lllel1.i11, SerY!ll 1t UnlYerslty f•!1 •t I), Marini
1ou<r-.ey, L• Quint• tourn.y, llllhOp Amit tourl\IY). s.1un111v tDK. n 8aN<e!ti.ll-Etl1nc:i. 11 Santi.go, 01na Hllll •I
L1wrdale. NeWPOrl Hlrbol' 11 S•ntl M1rl• C1ll 11) I,
'• vn.,,nd Stllll •T UC Irvine (II, Mater 0.1 II llllhOlo A,naf tournev. LI Quonr• lour,,.y. 0•11lQ41 C:g,oa! C:oll~ h>urneY. C<U"Dnl IMPI Ml~ "" VUl1 Plrk •I
OCC 0 D.m.) ~r IDK ll) B•1~etball -M1rln• 11 Alhambrl IOUfl\t\' (~s. Allltmbr• JVt) 3 o.m .• Huntlnaton lie.en ln,.ll1!101'11I (Edison .... SllnnY Hlllt. 4:• D ...... J. Hunllnoiton h.cll YI Jl<1morw. (l::JG p,rn.), 8akl'rlfleld 11 GolOtn Wttl
ti o.m,J_ T-.,., CDK. 121
( ll1slc~batl -H11ntlno111n ltffcl'I lnYl!lllcw.-1 Coront di! Mir "" Arcldlt, 1:30, Nl!WDOl'I H1/1l0f "" Hunl!nQ!(ln Be«ll II, 1 D.m.). E111nd1 •I L1 Qulnll {1 1>.m.), Wett'"l"'t.,. •I Lowell. 1 D.m.)\ 00 Sin oi-II Sou"'9rn C•Hlornl• Coll-(I p.m.
Quarts
NOW$fi4J!
~ .. " "'11 . . • ~--·-·~. '\ t \ ..... _,._, .. ' -"-: ... ··-
when it snows,
itpot•rs
·~ ... '
I
j If DAil Y PILOT
Checking
Banquet
Trail
Kert ~1artyn "·as named
most valuable on t.~arina
Hlgh's waler polo t.e.am al the
school 's awards b a n Que t
Thursday night.
Special award "i nners :
v11rt.1tv
(llpllln· Kt11 Mar'lvn M o , I
v111.,.111e· Gii"' 9111•~; ""'°"' 1"""'-:
1•on•I Ke" Mllf!.,,,, ""°" '"''"""""· GilrY Illume. J...., ".,...,..,
C""iln: .. lc!Wtd MllMot · Mml
VtlUlllllll: 0 1111 c..ira: Moll l11'4"'0V<t0.
Vic ,, • ..,..
. ,,....""" Ctp1fln : BW Sld11r; MC>lt V11 ... t11e:
O•<ricl W .. ll; MOii lmp<O¥ec;I. 0aVl4
MallaU.. .,,
Laguna Beach lligh's Jeff
Wi nship was named most
vaJuable player on the Artists'
variety football team Thurs-
day night at the school's
spOrls awards banquet.
Earlier Karl Weber '4'as
named most valuable athlete
on the Arlisls' championship
cross count ry team.
Special award "·inners:
Vanity ....... Moff Vlll ... 1119: Jtff Wini.Np; W.0.1
IMplnotion.I: J..it Loo-: M O i I lrnpnNed: htt Cottam; Co-ca¢11lnt.: C~rls Ullom .....i 11111 ft-I-: Llnfom.an of tM Y111r : M.orca -111; aid! of 11M Y-; o. ... _,llWfl Hf!·
ter of ttM Yur: Tom ,,,.......,, ! j 1 Lien .........
MCi5t V•1ulblt: M•R Jc:tw\IOfl : Mosf
1...,.ir•"-1: R111d¥ Lum; Mos!
b"""o....:I : 51~t MOd!•l'IOI Cl>-C.lol>-
t.+n1: MIR J-•no! Mll•• "'*"t•
LI_,... o4 jlle Yell : John K FIL'M!'; 8adl o1 n.. Vt1ot : Jeff JohNon: SOD
Point Chit:: Johll ~I. Jotv: Kt1,.,....,
Jiff JolU':SOll. MM'k J'*"'-' .. ....._.--u
~I VllvMlllP: Phil TrlmbM; _,
l,.:191t1llan.t: Kiii Ci.A: MD 1 I '"""owd: Erk Ml;:Ot9; Trl-upt•!M:
K...in Pike, -" Alltl'1hon, PtlH Tr!~; trontnM: ICWlll Pllt1; OI· !~ ... LIMmM o4 ,,,. YM<: Clyth
GUllllM:; Oritnsl,,. L~ o4 -Vt1r : Ml<k Altd'I"-': Ollft>t.lw aK1I
o4 ,,,. Y1..-: Kwin Plkl; ~ ....
aact ol IM Vur: c ar.-, C1nldl11.
, CtMIC~
Frida)', °""""' 8, 1912
CdM Star Combines Prep Hoop
Results
Talent, Intelligence For Area
By DENNIS CAMPBELL r-r;~~~~~~
Of Shi °""' Jiu.t Jr.ff
Before talking about Bruce
Krumphoh, it's necessary to
put water polo at Corona del
Mar High. School into proper
perspective.
Under current coach Cliff
Hooper. th.e Sea Kings have
won CTF titles in 1966 and
1969, and the school has bad
four ClF players.or·the-year :
Pat McClellan in 1966, Jerry '
E ubank in 1968, Bruce Black
in 1969 and Garth Bergeson in
1970 .
Corona de! Mar has mt lost
'a league water pokt game in
11 years and has had more all-
league and All.CIF selections
than most coaches ever dream
of.
So v.·hen Hooper calls Krum-
pholz the best all·round player
he's had . he isn·t. as the
popular expression goes, just l.
whistli n' Dixie.
Says l{ooper: "Al Corona
del Mar we 're trying hard to
CORONA DEL MAR'S BRUCE KRUMPHOLZ.
develop complete players and
Bruce comes very clooe to
being this.
"He's not the best hole man
1 've had but he's the best all-
round player I've had."
Krumgholz may not be an
olfensive-minded pla yer, bu t
he's done his share or scor·
ing.During the regular season
he sccred 97 goals, 29 coming
on penalty shots.
A 6-0. JOO.pound senior.
Krumpbolz is following some
big footsteps.· His brother,
Kurt, was an all All·CIF selec-
tion in 1970 and was the CIF's
100-yard freestyle swimming
champ.
UCLA's championship water
polo team as a freshman last
year and is the world record
holder in t h e 400.meter
freestyle.
But Bruce, who seems
destined to follow his brother
to UCLA, hasn't had any dif-
ficulty making a name for
himself at Corona de! Mar.
"He's certainly as good as
his brother,'' Hoope r says.
"He's had the same skills and
he's had to assum e more of-
fensive responsibilit y.
Krompholz. eight years ago in
Corona del Mar's age group
swinuning program, and his
ability was apparent then.
"A lot of kids beat him in
swimming, but some 0£ them
were working very hard ,"
Hooper says.
"\Ve planned to bring him
along slow, because they say a
Area Gals
In Tourney
swimmer bas about eight niree Orange Coast area
years during which you can girls have advanced to the
work him hard, and we like quarterfinal round of the ClF
those eight years to be in high girls tennis tournament which
school. will be held Saturday at the
"We coold see his potential. UC Irvlne courts.
:o• .... -
Cage, Hockey Results
~ iop-~•O:u Moao:>.'°"" 'flt bt"o :..>I'\
..
Gals' Tennis
.. ~~ t:t:.1•.J'..t:.: q:f,,.:\
61 1 ved
l.00 .,)l.\i't~
<.al "\iillY
"°~ Ta"'
-th~ 0o lti o,tfo..-d
<'f~ I 00,r\::. broW....._
44 fashion island, newport center 644·5070
Moll VllUlble: Kiri W-; Moll
l....,.rillon1I : Erk: Hulst: Ollt1t.ndlng Senior: Kiri Weblr1 ~anding
Junior: Joe N1v1rro: Oubt1nOlng
!'iop"""'°'t : Glenn Wlli.on; Oullllndll'IQ Fr11hme11: Eric Hullll MO\I l mpro'I~
Vl nlfy: M1rk 5-y: MOii lmr>rov· eel Fr ..... Sc:pl\: Shlolrl C1lcllrwood.
In addition, the older or the
two brothers was a starter on
"Kurt played with Bergeson
while Bruce has weaker peo-
ple around him and has more
responsibility.''
Hooper began c o aching
\Ve played a kind of four-man Quarterfmal, semif'mal and
basketball· to help with water final round matches will be
polo and we could see that be I h the lirstlii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiii~iiiii~~~iiiii~~~~~iiiii~iiiii~ could shoot and handle the ball held Saturday' w t matches scheduled to start" at and had good mo ves, and he
Lee Batson wa• named most
valuable runner on t h e
Newport !-!arbor High cross
country team Thursday night
at the school's annual awards
banquet.
Special awards winners : v .... ,,
ea.it.ir:, Cr.it Cl1rt<t; M o 1 I
Val!Mble: LM 811_,: Moll lmprll'V9d:
Keny Som.
J.-111' V.,,Jfr. Captain: St.w CCIII ns: M 0 I ' VllU<tbl9: Sim Slmakl1; Mo 11
lrnproo.oecl: G.ry Kallfl. ·--c..pt1ln: •1111 ilt\cMrdSOfll ""°'' V1h11blt: Doll f'ukumotc:1 M 0 I I
!mprov«I: Don P11tOn.
Dale Peterson was named
most valuable player at Foun-
tain Valley High's annual
sports award banquet Thurs-
day honoring the Barons' foot..
ball team.
Peterson and mate Ron
Stone also received t h e
GaunUet AWard.
Special award winners :
Football
Vanity
Captains: Bill Hatfield, Ron
Stone, Les Becher and Dale
Petenob; Most Valuable :
Dale Peterson ; Most
lm(l'Oved: Doug W o If or d ;
Gauntlet A w a r d : Dale
Peterson, Ron Stone.
Jaaklr Vanity
Most Valuable: Steve
Thompson; Most Improved:
Dan Paez.
Sophomores
Captain: Mark T uc k e r ;
~1ost Valuable: Kevin Sereno:
~1ost Impro ved : Bob
Blackbum.
Freshmen
Captain: Rick Willard ; Most
Valuable: Mitchell Chambers;
Most Improved : Mike Allen.
J C Wrestling
RB-Sunny Hills Tilt
Highlights Cage Play
was a good swimmer." 10 a.m.
According to H o ope r , Tiii opm!1111 round palrlnos:
Krumpholz also has that hard-a.~ Hiuou11:1(1':'ud11l n. llobln
to-define trait called athletic Jonn IFootr.1111. 5111 All'L'lllrY (LI CMlldll VS. DIN intelligence. Lu u1;«111nc111. "Whe ' I . g an LHIV Vlldott !COl"Olll dll Marl ...... n ~·ere P ay1n Y Klm Wiison CRollir:g H11111. kind of sport, we try to look al J••n HKll<:nt IPllM vtfdftl ,..,..
the game and figure out how it Mind\' Mc<:ar~•'·
Aside from tournament pla y tory was over University in works and how you beat tbe M1t .. 1n-Fr1111tt1 t..._.IV Hlll•l vs..
in the Marina-Westminster, La which four Eagles were in other guy. Bruce figures that s=:.:=•111::U::r~'i'°'v..
Quinta Azt..,. and Bo'shop Amal double figures for coach Da ve out very well," he explains. c1wt1k:(ltltr·S1ut:.1 1Sou111 T«T1na:1. "''-Cklftt.V1rdl (lltolllng Hlbl1I YI.. aont• setups, five other Orange Carlisle. "He has a real keen game k""'991" t ... .-Pa1v1. sense and he's an unse lfish MCC1rm.v·•1111r IAeOllr•I v •.
Coast area prep basketball Coach Dale Hagey takes bis boy. He's not a one-man.;;;w•""'-•'"•~-=~"•"•"•"""-'•·iOiiiOiiiOiimj
teams are in action tonight. Newport team out of the area team." II
Coach Ebner Combs' Hun-for the t¥lo-game set in Santa Now, eight years after their The right price
f. t' H !ls h. on the right car tington Beach Oilers play host Barbara Cou nty. 1rst mee mg, ooper ca 1s
••-Hills La Newport's onl" test this year star pupil "a dream to ~ch. 'ltn_~ Fit'!~nv to we SUrmy ncers in a J There's no way we can have ~ '::f u;;.[NJkU
key non-Jeague test that is was a 74-61 conquest of Estan-any problems. He's not 8 f>ORSo-t& AUDI . . h' b I I ther • LtlM ..... '71 tllT l"wlcM alwaysagoodmeasuringstick c1a, in w 1c our payers robot, but e arent eny U44.tthrM1.o.A.c.11o.-.o.LL.
between the Sunset (Hun-were in double figures, led by problems when it comes to a.m w11111..=.!',":J.':ir"' "'11•
tington Beach) and Freeway,_:J'.'a':c~k~A'.'l':'lm'.'.a".'"~w'."H.<'.h_.'1"'6:_. ___ _:coa:'><O":"chin'.'.''~g'-"h"'.im'.'..:_" _____ ~!"!!"!!"!!"!!"!!"!!"!!"!!"!~'11
(Sunny Hills ) leagues.
Tipoff ls at 8 o'clock, as are
all the non-league battles
tonight.
Huntington Beach h a s
fashioned two in a row after
an opening loss to IA Habra.
Combe' quintet's most recent
victory was a 61-55 conquest of
Servile, which was rated No. 7
in the pre-season Orange
County poll. La Habra WU
ranked sixth and Huntington
Beach failed to make the Top
IO.
The early pacesetter for
Huntington is s opho m ore
Raul Contreras, who has
scored at a 15.6 clip.
Other tests include Se rvite
at University and Estancia at
Laguna Beach, while Newport
Harbor treks to Santa Maria
for a two-night stand against
Righetti tonight, then Santa
Maria Saturday night.
Coach John Dri s c o ll 's
Night Racing. 7:45 Mon.·Sat.
Starts Monday, Dec.11.
Or•-c.ii in! OJI ~ w111 University Trojans are heavy
7
111 -J1>1nnn ~0 me. l(Mlft' !GL •· underdogs to the Servile
'16 -srwitun tG) '"° llorlt-ro > machine which feature! 6-5 .,,_,I·!. ' ' H~i~ 7~.~IV9M iG> p1 .. ...., Fi•99•111 sophom-0re center Denni s
1a -auono IGl Dll'llld L1 Bl•nc Smith 10 1.1 :~ · F , La UI -NOOll COi pll!Md For9v IGJ, Coach Jerry airs guna l•\!i -L_, cG1 o.c. e11't'loc• 101, Beach quintet tries for its
u i'1 -L.w11 <01 i>1nn«1 Mat •e" 1G1 third straight conquest against
4:fn _ """ 1o i iilnMO 1111111111 1G1, Estancia. Leading the Laguna .
•:l~ _ •• ...,.. ro1 p1<1M<1 M11111r !Gl, five is center Norm Bedell.
1 '~Wt. _ su11r tG> wll!I ow 1ort1u Estancia's most recent vie-
~
Loi Alamitos Truat to Ponil ...................... ._ .. ,, .....
•
BOB HEUSSER
PRESENTS
SUNSET FORD'S
FOOTBALL
FORECAST
lt'1 time for our annU1I apecula·
tionl
With olovon of the 26 NFL tum1
doflnltoly ollmlnotod from ploy-off
cqnsideratlon, and with just two
· wffks left of the regular season,
it'1 time to SH iust who the eight
play-off team1 might be.
In the American Football Con-
ference, Miami has alrMdy clinch-
ed the title in the Ea1tern Division.
The AFC Central has cleared just
1 bit with the StHl•rs' big win over
the Browns last Su n day giving
Pittsburgh a one-game lead. In the
Wsetern Division, Oakland has the
title almost wrapped up. However,
the wild-card team in the AFC is
still very much up for grabs among
Cleveland, Cincinnati, and the New
York Jets. With a 1llght edge to
the Bengals, the play~ff pairings
would be 01kland meeting Pitts-
burgh, and Miami playing Cincin-
nati. The winner? Much too aoon
to pick!
The picture it a bit more muddl·
eel in the National Footbill Con-
ference. W11hlngton will win the
championship of the NFC East.rn
Division with the Cowboys the best
bet for the wild-card tHm In the
ploy-offs, GrHn Bay I uot may be
in the driver's seat In the NFC c.,._
tral aft• r def .. ting Detroit last
week. However. they hive a very
import1nt game next Sunday with
the very-much-llive Mlnne&0ta Vi·
kings. In the NFC Westem Division,
the 49ert have the edge, but any•
thing c1n still happen. The pl1y~ff
pairin;s could be G,...n S.y play-
ing Washington, end D1lla1 meet·
ing San Frtnclsco.
We'll take another last look at
play-off possibilities next wHk (ust
before the final week of the MllOn.
Saturday, December 9
WashillC)ton . . . . . . . . . 24 Dallas ... , ......... .
Cincinnati ........ 16 Cleveland
Sunday, 1 December 10
Chicago .. .. .. .. .. .. 20 Philadelphia
Buffalo .... Detroit .
Green Bay
Los Angeles
Miami .... ..
Baltimore .. .
. ...
...
Minnesota
St. Louis .
' New York Giants
Kansas City .
New England .......
20
13
10
10
19
20
13
21
13 New Orleans
Pittsburgh
San Diego
San Franc:lsc:o
. . . . ..
30
20
23
24
23
21
31
28
26
Houston .. . .. .. .. .. .. 6
.. ' Denver
Atlanta
Monday, December 11
Oakland .. . . .. . . .. .. 27 New York Jets
•
. . . ..
24
17
. 23
..
•
I
,I
' •
~ . • ;.
• • .. r
B
prtlly -ruce.
• •
~· •• ~
• ~ ,: ,.---------------
What's Doing
Outdoors
JIM NIEMIEC
Undor 1.,. than ldcel waterfowl hunting oondllloos South·
land dw:k hunlenr enjoyed a VflY good l<COl1d opening th~ past
weekend at most public and private shooting clubs in Southern
catllornia.
Blrd popu)ations were up In every part or the Southland
where water and feed condlUorus were available to waterfowl.
\Vann sunny skies prevailed over most Mooting areas, but the
new nights o{ duck.s worked lnto decoys throughout the morning
boors.
Heavy bunting pressure around the Salton Sea lowered the
aver&ge number of due~ bagged per gun, but for hunters aboot·
iag on private d ubs limits ot bull sprig w.ere common.
• Hunting In Rlvenilde Coonty got off to a good ~ also as
'1ubs r<p0<1'd fair to good shooting on Saturday but ooly a
f~w birds were bagged oo Sunday.
The per gun average at HJdden Va11ey Gun Club In this
county on Saturday was a Vf!'r'J respectable 6.1 birds. Duck
OOnters at Linc Raahauge's, hunting in Prado Basin bagged
tea t. sprig and ma11ard! but were hampered by low water.
The outlook for this weekend is very good and the word is
that new winter storm fronts wi1l be moving down from the
Gulf of Alaska throughout December. Freezing temperatures
are already kicking down lots of big northern birds including
gadwall and mallards.
Snotc Gee•e Co1111ts (Jp
Snow gt1ese have tripled ta n!f:mbtrs around tlte Salton Sea
and more aad more llonken are Wine spotted. It'• uaally about
tills Ume of tbe year wbe• lob or gene are taken oa California'•
W11&tr ult. .
Banters cu mab advaDee l'fltrvation to bma1 oa Wlstef by mu., la ud malllnr lite resemdoa eanl avallable at local
_.mi l(OOds 1tom.
Bllllttn who me large sprudt of geese ckcoY11 asually fare
pretty well at Wllter, w~ those buaten wltboat dttU lulve to
settle for u occasional straggler wbo wandtn wttlrl.n sllolgun
ruge.
Doa't bmtcb up yoar boater dteoys, sprud Uiem eat ln a
CfttCtllt allape aboat ZS yard1 from your well conetaled blind.
AUtw room for Dt'W boDbn to settle la between tbe decoys and
dtn't eall too macb or yoa'll 1poot tbe birds.
Tagged Rl,,...eeks Releued
Something new has been added to the Soothland pheasant
bunting scene. Mike Raahauge, manager of Linc Raabauge's
Pbeoaant Hunting Club In C'.orona, ts releasing tagged rillgnecks
into hw\ting areas during the week.
Raahauge says that any hunter return ing the tagged pheas-
ant to the club wW receive a $40 pheelant buQtlng card. Birds
wW be released on week days only, but weekend hunters should
be able to pick up carry over pheasant. For more information
on huoting at Raahauge's phone (7!4) 735-2361.
Weatherb11 Troph11 to l'oun9 Buater
James R. Melita n of Plttsbwt1k, Peu. wn awarded tbt
t?Ut uaaal Wut.bttby Bii Game tro~y at a dluer beld at
11oa Celllmy Pl .. tut -L _, Ille ~ w11 avid
on•1 1 FlllWI aDd ctmlef"'ltloailt Gov. Love of o.lerado.
Mtlfoto bu ..U.C:led olmost e...y m1Jet'' l11Be uim11 la
Mrica, Asia, Eorope, Nortll ud Soatll Amerlcl. la Africa be
1111 mode It ..,._ oallrll ud «>l!ecl<d IU dlfftfttll ll[lt<les
of game of wWU M are listed 19 &Ille recenl boob.
Mellon ""' ---..,..illlo8s "" -of .... 9tl"Vatioab ts, mu.seams ud die Ntw York 7.oologk:al Sedety.
m s e.ffortl &o preserve 1ame will be:aeOC banteMpertlmea of
Ille flhlte. lMal 1portrman Ken Nlle• of Newport Beacll acted 11 m11-
tu of eettmoak• for tbe more Uaaa !II gae1t1 invited by Roy
Wealflerby,
RalnboH• Trout f'ilf Creels
C01d weather has taken Its tall on fresh water fishermen and
has slowed fishing at most lakes. An exception J.s the fair to
good trout action currently being enjoyed by those anglers who
are fishing stocked lakes. Anaheim lake, llelped by heovy weekly plaots, is the bet
for trout flsbermen. Limits are common at the Orange C.OUOty
lake k>cated off the Riverside Freeway for anglers using Ver/ l'8ht line rigged with small hooks and sinkers._ Salmon eggs aod
ftoatlna' cheese bait are producing many stringers, but Eddie
Pope fum aOO splnnen are accounting for Iota of strikes.
v.il I.eke ts good for bluegil and crappie with an occasional
Dice catdl ol' bows being Jaken. Catfish are still being caught, Wt not in tbe number they were a few weeks ap , reports dOck· maD Smitty Smith. 1bere are pJenty of boats and mot.on avail-
able on weekends now as angling pressure is down at the pnr
di.let.Ive lake. Bass actkln Is slow at all Southern California lakes and
JiSted only as fair at Central California lakes.
For Sports
The DAILY PILOf 1' the
newspaper for sports along
the Orange Coast. .. complete
statllUcs oo local bom~and
away games, staff co verage,
more exclUJlve stories on i
Orange Coast sports than any
other I o c a 11 y distributed
newspaper.
•
• .
---~---
rrlday, Df<ttnbtf 8, 1972 DAILY PILO T J !)
New Snow Hits Mountai ns
Ski Conditions Excellent GRAND PRIX
5122~? ,I.If" ~ •• ,.WW .......... 1111 MM~ Wiit~
-. of.M.JIM ·-· r•I~ ....... -, ""°
"" illvdltt 1.Mh. '~ ---........... .. IWf ... •h' ... ,... l & L. ONH -fw ......... ..,.._....,, ,, ..... IN'llh ...........
IMCLUOIHO t Yl!Alt/tt.• Ml, WA.ll llAlfTY
Bv M.R. SNOW Of ...... .,.... ,..,,
Proml8e of cold weather l!
welcomed by Orange County
1klers1 who ahoukl l1nd con·
dlUons In the Oearby slopes
good to excellent for the
weekend, judging b~ latest
super reports -not lo men·
lion even better ones from the
high sierras.
New snow has been dumped
in the mountaim everywhere,
the measurement being from
two to 10 lnche!: a.s the week
started. '!be prohablllty ls fo r
additional new stuff at all
locations. ~kly, the report says the
Big Bear area, a lr ead y
boasting a base of at· least 2Q
inches, had from two to five
inches of new snow. This in·
eluded Holiday Hill, 2 to 6 over a. 6 to 10 inches base; Table
Mountain, 4._ inches of qew
snow; Snow Valley, 4 to 8;
and even more at Snow Sum·
.eon
llAH !Ill ·-••1.1r1 .._ ..
mit. are operating dall y.
1ttt. Watennan has 8 to 10
lnches of new stuff, with
Kratka Ridge reporting 6 to 10
and Mt. Baldy, 6 to 12,
As good as these reports
are. those coming from such
high sierra favorites as June
Mountain and Mammoth are
even better, where conditions
are declared excellent for all
operating runs.
This bas come just in time
for the annual safari ()f the Ski
Writers of Southern California
to Bear Valley this comlng
weekend. The scribes will
catch a plane at Orange Coun-
ty Airport and be whisked to
Stockton.. From there Avis
cars will take the reportus to
Bear Valley.
The big df!al Comes Satur·
day when the Southlandel'3
cl.ash with northen:f coun-
. terparts In a North-South
challenge open slalom on the
Nastar course. The racing
HAVOLINE
MOTOR
OIL
GIANT
30"xSO"
IL
RIP
PAN IC..,. y,.
C...,.& c:..-tFa... C'"-....
""'-
" & ,. 'l'EIGHTS
I // ,.,. .. .............
/I
GRAND IX
OIL FILTEB. 99 . .,. "" ,_ ........ t 199 & P..,.,.lar
l..,_-t1 t!ACll
12 F OOT
TOW
CHAIN
.Yi_, ... ,.
Ho11•I
"°"' 1 p..,
. .
2!?..
re
== I~ PRE TQNE.
CONCENTRATE
krif~i8oil · 199
C.I,
Dr,.0-lc•I F!r.E.nl,,..1.W ...... ,.
Cars, c.,.w, .....
DELUXE
STEERING
WHEEL
LACE ON COVER
may not embarraM the com·
petllion skiers, but there is
plenty or rivalry between the
two factions. Jn fact, SoCal
writers are the defending
champ ion!, having whipped
the Northern {08 the tan time
the rivalry was held l~O years
ago .
SNOW Tit"CICS~ T1blot MCllll'l l ln ll1s
-of lhl ttw peved pert lne ••••• lmQn9 ttw I.Id llopet Ind feltlll'" ltlrH
Pom• 1nd " ""'nV ~ 1-. ... lM tl!tll rHr of ltl9 M11t1r comcoetltlon
._,..,to bt DIQgef' tn.n -· T~ .,..,. 1300 r tot1 In 1111 ltn-n
INloOll '#lltl 50.000 Sltltrl 00fl'lpefl1l9,
Tiiis te•loOll tnw. will be lftlM'I ll\ln
:t.lOD rao:" wlltl • proj«:l..t I0.000 ..,.
trln. Tlw 11111 -II ttiat 1111 llf'lnd tl111l1 wlU bit bittd 11 C1llfonll1'1 Al·
pl111 Mudcl>n ••• s.-SUmmlt hOld•
M••l•r rlCJllO ~_,,., Sltwct.v.
~ of Moou1 S«I Clllb (Wiid In
N.wporl lk«:l'I) •rl bit!"9 l~lwmld 11 M•IV 11 Thlfrlll•Y l¥llllngs on tM coml"I "'9tlttnd trlP1. Finl !tip w11 lo ~ i.1t WM!!, Ind 1111 M•I will
l1'1:1UOf Suri V1lko'f (0.C, 1"231 ~
,1.111, Plrll Cltv 1nd S~rd (Dec. 1"
J2). •• ,Dodgt A.ldogt <tJllCN'tl '~ty cflllllllds ar1 lfodtl"I 10 !hi ••11, whl••
1 lunlor r1el11g tffrn rlbulkllnt p.ro-
11r•m b 111t'"9 dlr«:ted bV rouno 80b
P1tt0ft .••. Thi F•r W11$1 Ski Ann II
'POll_.lnG 1 lf'H11yM tour111,.,..,1.
Nrxt eompetlllon 11 S1t11rd•r 111 Hee....,tr V1lfff.
SUPER"X"
CARBURETOR
· TREATMEN'l'
Br111h h On ....
Ho•• It OH
fo1t Cleon
-......::,;="' D••~•;.., 29(
f "\
BRAKE
ADJUSTMENT l9C T OOL
30,000 MILE
BRAKE SHOES "'--"'
30,000 """ 399 ,., ••
MO.
DAV E ROSS PONTIAC
1410 "......, II.ill. et h lr Dr., c ...........
UA.$1 DIUCT -PACTOlY AUTHOIUUD DIAUl
SAVE3K·SK AUTO
PARTS
··x" BRAND
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MEDIC
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Engine•&.
Hy<lro11Jie 29( Vol.,. LlftHs
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FA ST FLUSH
~
Rr-.1 R111t,
Gr-1111• & .....
..... , H..
Cooling Sym.i 29.~.
SOLDER SEA L
HEAVY DUTY
BRAKE FLUID
"'"''Or U c..ds
S.A.E.
OIL FILTER
WR.EN CH
OR
OIL POUR.
SPOUT
Y011Jf 29.C U OICB
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BATTERY BR USH
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"'-• 99. Fo1t C ~ffiti.nt EA,
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Vol.,.. c....m.I
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1099
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU
DECEMBER 12, 1972
SPECIAi,
2999 ~,,.k
l* TON
HYDRAULI
JACK
l ift • 'T•
>lOO LBS.
f f-Unolll' A•I•... '
S.fety v.iv. r ·r. 14" L11t
899
GREASE
GUN
WOOEL lD
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"'" Pollt"-d a.-MJ .... ,
r.,, o...rr'Y M;.,., Gle 11
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MAZl.S•YEUlS-t.:lTTSaSQ[J)ERS
Eo1y N.w Woy To V11lcl •••
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EACH klT CONT "INS:
5•114•• Wol<lint T .. •h• ,, ... p,,,_, c,1""'', .s.1i.1., l'oll••• r.t._ .. 100 Ml•~••• ,..,,1.,. Tl-)1
1 w.r""' r1~ •1••• o.t & 010oa .... 11..i ..... " 0 111 ........... 1 .. , ..... 11 ••
Clouo11$1"'•~ 110;1.,, fo• .. ~I~••• r11c1 .. _, c_, ..... l•••nc•i... ._.
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... . . . . . . . . . . .
~
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DAILY PILOT f rl<ICJ, Otetmbft 8, 1972
Ton Regatta Slated
T·wo Southland Boats • U.S. Lirwup
Two S u u t he r o Califo rnia
bo..its are iamong the three
selected by the N o r t h
American Yacht Racing Union
to represent the United States
in the One Ton Cup world
championship regatta to be
held In Sydney. Austra.lla,
beginning ne'lt Saturday,
The Southland boats are
Bullet. a Yankee-38 owned by
John L. Shumaker of Santa
Ana : Bushwncker , a Ran ger·
37 owned by Harry Smith of
fl.farina del Rey. The other is
Columbine. owned by Bruce A.
Eissner of New York.
The series will cons ist of
three around-the-buoys ra~.
one ~edlum distance of 100
miles nd a long distance race
overr miles. Entries are
l ted to three boats from
country.
N RACING, which has
been popular iri Europe and
"down under" countries for a
ton~ time, ls done on a OOat-
for-boet-·basi! with a max•
imum Tnternatlonal Offshore
Rating the major equalizing
factor. One Ton cuppers rate
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21.5 feet under the 10R ONE-TONNER -Harry Smith's Ranger-37 Bush-
measurement rtJ.]e. wacker will be one of three boats representing the
The One Ton name has U.S. in the One Ton World Championship sailing
nothing to do with the site, regatta at Sydney, Australia starting Saturday.
shape or speed ol the yachts --''------''--'---------=-------
beini:t saned. It derives from a
trophy long ago dedicated to
do similar type racing.
This regatta will mark the
first time an American con-
tin11;ent of three has competed.
although Edward R. Stettiniu.s'
Tina won the 1966 cham-
pionship in Europe.
RACING 1$ done on a fleet
basis. Team tactics never
enter into the picture. The
trophy goes to the fastest
boat.
California International Sail-
ing Association is aiding the
two Southern California en-
tries financially to defray part
of the costs of shipping,
transportation and crew hous-
ing in Australia.
The recent Ya c hting
Magazine One Ton Cup Regat-
ta., co-sponsored by San Diego
Yacht Club. attracted 40 b<tlts
in the one ton. three-quarter
ton, half-ton and quarter-ton
classes. A Ranger-33
Bu!hwacker, also owned and
sailed by Smith, won the
regatta, whi ch is partly the
reason for selecting him to
compete in the world's cham-
pionship at Sydney. A Yankee-
38. similar to the one owned
by Shumaker, recently won
the North American Hall ·Ton
Championship s a i I e d at
Newport, R.l
Coverage
Of Radio
Extended
Two new remotely con-
trolled 3ites to extend the
Cout Guard VHF -FM radio
coverage has been announced
by the 11 tb District Coast
Guard headquarters.
'nle two new !tations are at
TranquJllon Mountain (34-35N :
120-33W) and Laguna Peak
(3+-0'lN : II9-04W ). '
The new locations bring to
five the number of high
altitude remotely controlled
sites f0r VHF-FM operation.
The others are Point Loma,
San Pedro Hill aod San
Clemente Island.
Weekend Calendar
Bahia Club Readies
Round Robin Race
The Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club's Round Robin Regatta is
the on1y competition scheduled
on the local yachting calendar
this weekend. The regatta will
be held on inside and outside
e<>urses Saturday and Sunday.
Other Southern Californ ia
activity:
Los Angeles-Long Beach
CABR!LLO BEACH YACHT
CLUB -Winter Series No. 1,
Sunday.
LONG BEACH YACHT
CLUB -Pt. Fermin Raei!,
OR, PHRF, MORF, Sunday.
Sa.ma Monica Bay
KING HARBOR YACHT
Christmas
Regatta Set
Next Week
Fiberglass
Tug Sent
Off • m SF
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Jtf°'9'• Werth
Estate-gilt Time
Drawing to Close
By SYLVIA PORTER
•
·-· F'1dly, -8, 197'2 DAILY PILOT 2J
-It ~s · a Car--N~pe ~ Plane
•
• DETROIT (AP) -When
tra!fu: gets too beavy aome-
de:y, Dewey Bryan might un-
fO;ld bis wings and fly away.
That is, if he can perfect hll
"roadable airplane."
Bryan took his latest p~
mE f'IACllINE 1111'1 really
1 car, but then ll lln'l really
an airplane either.
alrway11, ill got folding wings,
a pusher-type eng~ and
tricycle landing gear.
hopes his crutlon will .. tch
on llkt> -tnOWmobllel and
pleasure boats.
This ls the sea.son of the
f•ar wben mlddJe.htahe< In-, ··come parents the nation over
are making glfts to their
i:tilldren or other loved ones of
fairly subltanUal amoonb of
caah or valuable property -in
Order to take advantage !>!!fore 19'11 ends of the
bvorable irovision.s of our
conslder these l w o il·
lustratlons.
If your taxable eatate b<lor•
deducting yoar gift exemptj'ol) .
is 1100,00ll, your federal eetalt
tu will be '4,!llO. llUt II You
bequeath or give to a charity
SI0,000, your Federal , estlte
.tax wUI be cut to $3,000 -and
the actual cost of your bequest
will shrink 'to $8,IOO.
FINANCE
, 1lotype tO the S9th Delroit Auto
Shc:iw recently, causing 3.
mlllQ( sensation among the
more ' staid exhibitors.
It canies MJchlgan auto
llcen1e plates and an aircraft
reglstratioo number. It can ~
driven on the freeway or flown
from an area smaller than a
foolball field.
For highways, it's go t
everything (rom headJigllts to
a rearvlew mirror. F o r
Bryan, 49, of suburban
Highland, bas constructed,
built, flown and driven three
"airmobiles" In the past 24
years. His latest creation,
"Bryan Ill," took three years,
$3,000 of his own money , and
most of the parts from "Bryan
JI."
"WHAT WE NEED is a
llenry Ford flivver," Bryan
says. "You know, something
like the Model T. We need
something to acquaint people
to the roadable airplane like
Henry Ford acquainted people
to Carl,"
Bryan, who is a Buick proj-
ect mechanic at the General
Motors teJting grounds here.
"The little man who likes to
Oy today i!I out of luck;" be
explained . He wants the
"roadabl e airplane '' to
become a recreational vehicle
for people who like to unfold
their wlngs and get off the
ground occasionall y.
A laska 'Gas
: &Ill tax laws. OR IF YOUR luabl< estate
·And with tu refO<ID ahead before deducting your gift ex-
f o r 1973-4 emption is $500,0001 you?
and our es-federaJ estate tar-will be
, <ate-gift Ill 1111,500. But if you bequeath
Line 'Safe'
To Ecology
or give to a charity '5<1:,0CIQ, ~ = your federal estate tax will JUNEAU, Alaska (AP ) -
c 8 0 d i . drop to $102,100 aod the actual Gov. William A. Egan, oQ-
datts f 0 r cost of your bequest will fall viously elated over the pros-
drastic over-to $35,«Nt .. pect of a gas pipeline along
"'haul, t h e And this cost will be further 1he t:rans-..\}aska oil pipeline
gifts made reduced in states which allow route, says the move by El
in t b e s e deducUonS for charitable be--Puo Natural Gas Co. appears
closing weeks of the year quests fram estate taxe!I. relatively SD.fe for the en-·
well may reach the highest But, of ~· there are virortment. ,
totals ever. restr.ictions oa gifts -to pre-"Thi~. line will cause some
_ ____y_eol _useJf .them..._a.a__.Jax _enyimmnental prol!Iems," the ..
AT A sttRPRISINGLY dodges. --governor said thls week, "but
niodest income level, you and Among the gifts that must not to the degtte aS those with
)'OU? family can use our be rep:>rted by your executo'r a warm crude oil llne.
liberal gift tu: laws to your for tax purposes are:
, , own advantage. Gifts ovq which you .re-
... For a gift program, properly tained or controlled the in--
planned and faithfully carried come for life ;
: . QOt dwing your lifetime, can
he your surest and most soul-GIFTS WHICH you' retained
satisfying way to reduce your the power to amend or revoke
~te taxes as well as your during your lifetime.
~le costs. And a program And gifb made within three
of this sort will not only pro-years of your death which
duce tu savings on your may be deemed to have been
estate but important savings made "in contemplation of
on yoor income lax as well. death." To illustrate, if a gift
·n.e blunt fact is, however, is made to a child or other
that few taxpayer! below the person within three years of
• top iocome b r a c t e t s un-an individual's death, It may
_· dersland this type o! liletime be considered by the '.l'reaaury
gift program. and charitable to have been an 11th hour gift,
gifts in general. Thus, this made "in contemi>lation of
single primer. death" -and therefore tax-able as part of an es\ate in·
THE KEY REASON a stead of at lower gift ta'x
•. lifetime gill program Is so rates.
'"THE GAS WILL Oow at a
n!latively cool temperature,
and that's not of great en-
virorunental concern .''
Egan also predicted tl'tat the
$3-billion gas line probably
would be only one of several
eventually built from the rich
Prudhoe Bay oil Delds.
"Development of this gas
pool and this ·line does not
mean that there will not be
other lines," the governor
said.
Cc;.ast Bank
Valuable Is that gift tax rates Bill the presumption that Laguna Federal S a v. i n gs
are about 25 percent lower you made a gift in con-plans to jump county boun·
than estate tu rate!. More temptation of death can be darles and establish its fifth
... &J)eeificiaUy, our gift tax law rebutted. If, say, you're 49 olfice in Lake Elsinore, in the ' '. aucrws •you to to distribute -years old and ha~ to drop south-western tip of Riverside
.. • .tti.trtng your lifetime - a total dead on a handball court a County.
of '3(),000 among any number week after giving your niece a In addition to the head-
Introducing 1,, AIR CALIFORNIA'S
OWN , ..
VERY SPECIAL
..... ,!
She works Air Cellfornfa's new SKI DESK. Attractive she is, personM
able she Is, tool BUt unlike other "bunnies", she's an expert at get-
ting you to the Tahoe/High Sierra ski slopes from Orange County.
Specially trained, Jill Edwards, has a wide assortment of convenient.
economical Air California Ski Packages to offer you.
Air California's SKI OUR VALLEYS packages (for as many days as
you want) to BEAR, HEAVENLY AND SQUAW. SPECIAL CONVEN·
IENCE PLUS charter packages from Orange County Airport lo South
Lake Tahoe Airport. Or, If It's just information you want on the
easiest and moat economical way lo get from Sacramento Airport,
the gateway to your favorite Tahoe/High Sierra ski resort, Jill
knows and will be glad to make
your arrangements. can her.
Telephone
(714) 54~550.
AIR
___.-<.,~---...CALIFORNIA
-Ontario
Squaw Valley (lJ
.. ~ r.
Serving Sacramento,
San Francisco, Oakland,
San Jose, Ontario, Palm Springs,
San Diego and Orange County.
Heavenly Valley
,_•,,...--'®Bur Valley
• o( benerlclarles, free o f large gift of ca:;_b, the c:Qµris v quarters office in Laguna
federal gift tax. Oo top of that, wotild ~robably rule tbatcfou Beach, the a s s o c i ·a t I o n
yw can give an additiooal Wen! not contemplating dying maintains branch olfices in
sum of up to s,3,000 a year when you made the gift and ll San Clemente; Laguna Niguel
each to u many different peo-~need nofbe induded and LeiJ;ure .World,. Laguna ~easyou .wiah. ~m::..:.your::::.~'=ross=-esta===te=·..:..._·_~Hi~llls;:::·_'~·-.........__.::::,,,._ ___ _;_ __ ~--~~------~-------..,.-------------~----------~~ Your tuetbne exemption.. } .
may be used in any one year
or spread over many years .
., ·Il you give more than SS,000
to any one individual in any
one tu year, you must file a
gift tax return and pay the ta1
dlle. If joint gifts are made by
yt>u, as husband and wife,
these limits are doubled to
~;: $8,000 and '60,000.
· IF YOU LEAVE these same
amounts lo family members
via your will, they could be
. subject to ll'.e full force of our
..-, 'tede.ral and stat~ estate taxes.
• · Another ma}Of way to
M ~ reduce the federal tu bite on
.your estate is to make a be-
quest to an acceptable
charitable organization o r
cause -and ll is during these
weeka too that charitable gifts
always reach their yearly
peaks. · To suggest how thi!I type of
tax break can slash federal
estate taxes under today's
laws. and cut the net cost~ of
I.be bequests to es tates, JUSl
•' . ~:= RedBallVan
:.:.".Truck Fleet
· , On Propane
: ' · Red Ball Van & Storage Co. Oi Anab<im, and a branch
operaUon In Long Beach, bas
converted Its truck neet from
guollne to Uqulfled petroleum
gas. The conversions were
, , made by Petrolane's Clean~
Center in Los Angeles , and m-
voJved 28 wilts.
Peter De Santis, Red Ball
vice presiden~ said !hat be ex·
pected clean burning LPG to
bring hJs fleet in ~mpllance -~ with federal emlsiion 1tan·
dards for 19'15.
De Sanlls added that an-
ticipated benefits also Included
longer engine life, I e 11
maintenance, and lower fuel
costs, and estimated that Uli.I
would more than oll.tet all
·' · 'toltl of conYerUng to LPG.
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~ letier.. Inc. have been lll!PO&'-
.fngwltli remarkable frequency aRer the
nameo atdoctol'll, lawyers, arcbltectJ and
otb,r lll'OfeNion1l groupa t~tthe
Uniteil Statei. The)' are taklng ldvan. lase of the Profeaional Corporationa •
andAMoclatloi>aAct·anactwbichbrirlgs
all the tax bonefita of incorporation to , , the profOlliOM.
,
•
Great-Weot Life bar been working
'With many profesaional~-and. their attorM
neya developing penoion plana. profit
•hari~ plan•, medical reimbursement, disabil1~ income, and group life insur-
ance. With incorporation, 09.ntributiona
intQ tbete plans are UJ.Bde with ttbefore
tax corporate dollars". The plans are
UMd to retain valuable employee!! and
to minimize the prof881ionaJ.'1 l088 or
income in the form of taxes.
\
At Great· West Life, we feel incor.
poration is a very resourceful way for
profeasiooaJa to give themselves security
and reduce taxes at the ear'ne time. For
theee reaaona, we'd like to aee more
profeasionala with Inc. after their names.
Sowe invite you and your attorney to
cont.act our insurance innoV1tor11n your
city. Feel free to pick their brains about
incorporation.
T .J, BERNARDY, C.L U, A ASSOCIATES
Suite 300, 1020 N. Broadway Street
Santa.Ana T1l.: 8811-8712
T.J. Bemud,y C.L.U. Branch Manager
R.K. Patton, Group Ropreoentatlve
• 0--
Great:-West: Life
The ln1ur1nc• lnnov1tora
;z DAIL V PILOT s Friday, Dtctmbtr 8, 1q:7z
Demand for Wood
Products to Soar
WASHINGTON IUPll
Agrlculture secretary Earl
Butz says environmentalist~
a.re trylng to reduce supplies
of tin1btr while demaod for
\\'ood products Is likely to ln·
crease 6U percent by lhe year :woo.
Timber growth must be in-
creased on private lands to
meet housing and other wood
needs, Butz said.
llE SAID pressure from en-
vironmentalists who w a n t
more forest land reserved for
v.ildemellS and recreation in·
dicates that I.he Uqited States
"may even tace a time when
production from p~blic lands
may decrease."
While demand is growivg
for timber products, declining
efficiency in lumbering is
reduc lng available supplies.
Butt called a news l'-Oh·
ference Tuesday that followed
a Ralph Nader report alleging
that the U.S. Forest ~rvice
under industry and Whil.£!
Hoose pressure has been turn-
ing national r 0 r e s t s in·
creasingly into "timber fac--
tories."
Butz' news conference was
specifically to d i s c I o s e
preliminary results of the
deparrment's once--a ·decade
Stock Offer
Set By Firm
In Irvine
A public offering of 300,000
shares of Microdata ·Corp.
commor.-stock ls being made
at a price of $7.625 a share
through an underwriting group
managed by Harris, Upham &
Co. 'The company. based in
Irvine, designs. manufactures
and markets minicomputers,
related equipment and su~
porting software primarily to
original equipment manufac-
turers.
The company also sells com·
P.!ters to educational in·
stitutions for use in engineer-
ing courses and computer edu~
cation training.
New proceeds will be used
principally for w o r k i n g
capital, for expanded
marketing and research and
development programs and
also for expansion of manufac-
turing facilities and to repay
s!>ort·tenn bank borrowings.
DISENCHANTED
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C ..... !Mtlt C. ... I C.wn•11b
FINANCE
Now ... You Too Can
Lease a Lincoln.Continental
C.ft us today for the exciting new Full
Maintenance Lease et Johnson l Son
on the Lincoln or Mercury of your
choice. The trouble free way to enjoy
tfwit ne-w car you want,
540-5630
ASK FOR YOUR FREE LEASE BOOKLET
•
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OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST
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' . Thursday's Oosing Prices Complete New York Stock Exchange List
NEW YORK (AP}-Aided by som~ Of !be blue-
chip lisues,, the stock market pushed ahead Thur.-
day, in active tradlng, for the second consecutive day.
. The Dow Jones average ol SO industrial slocl<i
: which set another record closing high Wedn .. day
at 1:027.54 , stayed on the plus side throughout the
session and set another clo111ng high.
Advancing issues OD the New York Stock Ex-
change led losers, but by 1 narrowe:r margin than
on Wednesda y.
.. . •
DAJL V PILOT %3
J
:,tlf UAIL.T f'IL.UI
$250,000
Presented
For Unit
LOS ANGELES tAP l - A
$250.000 !lift to build ti
pedia trics facility at the City
or Hope has been presented by
Los A n g e I e s businessman-
phila nthropist Harry Groman.
City of Hope Executive
Director Ben Horowitz said six
examination room!. four treat·
ment rooms, a laboratory and
several offices and treatment
rooms will be incloded in the
4.000-square-foot facility.
e Dr11g Ab11se
SACRAi\1ENTO (A P)
First·time drug o ff e n de rs
co uld be sentenced I o
rehabilitation treatment or at~
tending classes on drug abuse
instead of going to priS-On Wider
a bill on the Governor's desk.
The proposal. ordered by
Gov . Ronald Reagan. cleared
its fi nal legislative hurdle in a
27..0 Senate vote.
Sen. George Deukmeji an (R·
Long Beach1 authored the bill ,
\Vhich could be applied to first
offenders if their dru g crime
did not involve violence and ii
the dist rict attorney, judge
and defendant all ·agreed.
After successfu l completion
of the treatment Or study
course. cha rges against the of·
fender would be dismissed.
e VD Classes
SACRAMENTO (AP)
School dist ricts could contract
wi th private firms to provide
drug abuse and ve ner ea l
disease instrl!ction under a bill
to the Governor's desk.
Asse mbl y man John
Vasconcellos ([)-San Jose )
said his bill would do nothing
to change the present state
law requiring parents be
notified before a child is
enrolled in VD instruction.
The Asse mbly then voted 5.S-
5 to approve Senate amend·
mcnts to lhe measure.
e Re se arr fa OK'd
SACRAf\1ENTO (AP) -Ex·
perienced acupuncture doctors
could part icipate in research
experiments in California -
even though they aren't licen·
sed to practice medicine in the
state-under a bill sent to the
Governor's desk. ·
Assemblyman Gordon Duffy
(R·H an ford ) said such
acupuncture ope rations a nd
pcrfonned under the supervis·
ion of a licensed physician or
surgC(ln.
Acupuncture is the tradi·
tional Chinese method of using
pins inserted at crucial nerve
points in the skin to block
pain.
The bill is supported by the
California Medical Associa·
lion.
e No Co11dlllons
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Hospitals already performing
sterilizations for contraceptive
purposes could not impose
condilioM on patients they
don't impose for other medical
operations under a bill sent to
the Governor's desk.
A 42-.19 vote sent the bill to
the Governor's desk following
an assu ran ce from
Assemblyman Henry Waxman
([).Lo! Angeles) that it was
not requiring hospitals to
perform sterilizations.
The measure was authored
by Sen, Anthony Bellcnson ( [).
Beverly Hills).
e lle •lth Pl•ns
SACRAMENTO (AP )
Clo9e to SIOO mJIUon in aMual
p~poid health plAns would be
,...ulated by a bUI ..,., to the
Goftmor 1 few houri be[ore
the L<al1lature adjourned.
Allemblyman Gordon Du!fy
(R-Hanford ) told the
As&embly the measure Is neceuiry to put up irtanifuiifs
for the quality o( care offered
by '22 ]>rtvate firms con-
tractll\I with the slate to pro-
vide OU<h oer\/lou
All the pel'IOns ,....ed, Dul· ry Mid, .... welfare toclpleoll.
1
Frt<W7, DtetlnDtr tl, 1CJ72
• 'Prices Ef ectave thru
Sun. o.~. l.8ab
\Vhile Quantnie's
Las1 : ·
Women 's Model
Family Treat!
POPCORN
Reg ul ar 15c
Now Only !
CUT '3!
Adve nture
Tunn el
\Vas$i.99
ii: 4 99 l''IJ
¥,~,~ For indoor -outdoor
play. Print \'in.vi COV· · .. ~ crs 24·in. diameter·
hoops of spring stl>tl. :
72·in. size. (
CUT '.1!
Men's
•
CUT -ii 14 . 96 !
Racy 26-inch
3-Speed Bike
Was $54,95
3999
•
Caliper brakes front and rear.
Light\reight. 3·specd trigger
shift. In black.
CUT ;4.80!
Doll
Hous e
\\'as $11.i9
6 99
All metal Anlebcllum
n1anor. 6 rooms ele-
ganll:>" furni~hed in
rolonial • r "nod furri·
iture.
&v CUT 'l 9.95!:
All Weath er
Coat
Was $39.90
1995
Dacron • polyester ra·
yon treated \Vilh
Sailchgard.ei Grey
che<:k. to.ten's assorted
sizes .
I
Sewing Basket
CUT99c!
Girls' Sli ps
' .
CUT
'3 and *4 !
Boys '
Shoes
Were$8.99
to$9.~pr.
5;;
Brass • backled .a.djllS-
table strap. Le.alhtt
uppers In brown.
black. Sizes s~ to7"'.
CU T *4
to 711 !
Women 's
Footwear
\\'ere $6
to$16 pr.,
-.
} 9 7to5~.9
Up-to-the· minute
styles In dress and cu-
uals. Many colors to
<'hoose from. ~ 4 to
JO.
•
SAVE .ii2J.89!
. ' . Wood Expose
Gourmet Cart
s77
Natural-finish solid oak chop-
ping block. \\line bottle con1-"
partmer.L Center storage
dra\\·ers.
Was$9.97
499
Ski-loot jacket i• water ttJ*lent. Quilt·
fd reverses to smooth
~ide. In gold.
CTJ.T $6 !
Sleep
Shift 'n
Skirt
Were$10.9t
499
\Vhite long slttVe shift
with lo':fi elutk:iud waist p nt !klrt. Jn
small and large sizes.
Cl:fT '2!
Bozo, the Clown
·cur"2:68 1
Women's Blouses
CUT 66<'
Men's Underwear ., . Sport Shirts
Were
$4.H } 99 .... 2 4·9 "·" . -\\'ere
$l.lrl ,,:.. }99 St.Ii
• •• 99,. ·w,. · '3 9. 9 "-" _·4 22
~ sl~vu. Solids and
stripes. Perma:J>rest ";.
Sears
Priilts and wlich. P.lany col· oritocboose from . P r i n t col l.Qn.broadclOI h. \\'bite toyo.
SAN TAANA
1716 S. Ma in St. Phone 547-3371 .
Spctlal Christmas Hours
Mond av tbru Fridav 9::111 i\.M. to 9:llO P.M.
Saturday 9::10 i\.M. to 6:00 P.M .
Sunday Noonl1l 5 P.M.
H11111•m '"'" ••• Thl11 ;, SfOf'tl, r ot1 Cnn f .l'flf•('I SPr1:it·n ;,,,,, Q11nlit,-.
''."intl1t/pc1ion C11t1rtu1teed or l o11r .l/101f!_r flock."
·,.
. --
Pmna-Pr~, 4 gore. White..'
7·14, 7V..14~. Pull his ~ihg ring•to be&r
lOfnnlll' II~. · . 4-·~ttt.11.n nld, Nl\'1,
..
Want So(lleti.~ng From
Sears Catalog?
Con\lenltat
--.-,p"n:upservi«l•
avlilabfe ID our
Cltalog Slore.
_CAllL__
547-57'1
ztrHOURS.
Briefs, T.fihlrta, uMtt-shlrtll. White.
ii ••
. ·-
·.
' .
I . • ----·-.------"~--
frlday, OKl!mbtr 8, 1972 DAILY PILOT
c·oast Mus·ieian·s Make Note of Season
Forty voiC.s, cfirectecf\b.i Pro:.·
fessor L1u:lo l1k, wtiiCh form
the Choir of Southerft C.illfor-
nia College will preHnt Han·
del's "Meuiah" at 7:30 Sund1y·
in the college auditorium. the'
concert is free t.o the public •.
Above, soprano soloist Rob.yn
Palmer sits at a practice orpn
with Cathy Boone, center, and
Deborah Turnbull.
, .,
'
¥oie_e·s_.:GbinteiiJi ·:.";¥ule Concert
• 4' •''-"I; .. ''.,"'~ ·~·
· · ~ · ' Sixty singers plus musicians
-Ir
from the South Coast Sympbonette ·
will perform in a special Christmas
concert Sunday evening-"A.City
or the King" in the San 'Clemente
Community Clubb_oi.ise. .
·sponsored tiy lhe south Coast
Choral and Light :Opera Associa-
tion, the concert \fill begin at 8
p.m. with· Richard Dastr,up conduct-
ing the combined groups.
Soloists ·will include Jack Cole-
man, a popular biss-baritone who
has been featured at the Pageant
of the Masters and many · other
•'South cbast productions.
Helen Walton of San Juan Cap-
istrano .will be the soprano soloist
' of the ev.ening. Third . soloist will
be Chris. Wilson, a'veteran of con·
ioerts in· Carnegie Jiall, the Vienna
Boys' Choir and television. '
Yet another soloist will be tenor
Joseph Wood, a pellformer with. tho
Irvine Master Chorale and the '.ta·
guna Festival Chorale.
Glenda . Betts, a · Capistrano
Beach· remdent, ·will be the alto'J)el'
former for the specfal Chr!Stmas season concert.
Pictured at left, deep iii pnc·
tlee, are, left to right, Ken Chap-
man, Joe Wood and Chris WllsOn
along with pianist JoAnn Williams.
Tickets, at t2 each, ~re available
through the House 0£ Music in ,$an
Clemente and will also be &Qld II •
the )l<>x office on the evenlnt of
tho concert.
\
. '
•
• '
... •.
=~i : .. : ::; ••• ; ... l ~ . ... :--! •• Above, Warren Peterkin lffds .. ;.
the Golden · West College Com-: :
munity Chorale. Backed by 1 ::
dance ensemble, the chorale : :
will perform Tch1ikovsky's ;:..
"Nutcracke·,. Suite" in a Christ· .... ; •
mas con cf: rt a·t 8 p.m. Dec. 15 : •
in the community theater in
the GWC camffUs. The pro-
gram is free. Left, Meri Hicks
rehearses with the University
Chorus and Orchestra at UC
·lrvine-forthe presentation of
the Christmas portion of '
Handel's "Messiah,; and other
Yuletide works in Crawford
H 1 11 Sunday. Performances
are S:Cheduled at 2 p.m. and .
8 p.m. under the direction of :
Maurice Allard, associate pro. :
fenor of music. Admission -..
II $1 . • ·• -: •. . . . .
.•
Nino high school choirs .,. Portlclpoting in
1nnu1I Holidoy Choral F .. ti••I In the Or•
Co.st College 1udltorlum at 4 and 7:15 p.m. Man.·
daY. Festlv1I director Rlchlifd Reub Mys stud•tlf
from Mlrint, Newport Harbor, Lot Am""' B
Medena, Editon, Costa Me11,.S.nt1 An1 incl Co;.na
del Mor high school• oro ox-'"<!. -, Mil¥.'
Bertolot, F•y S.fstrom ~nd Miko Smith ot C~
Mo11 Hlth School proclfto.
' ·-----.
..
... • ••
,?6 DAILY PILOT
-·--r
'
WHAT TO DO . ,
Newport Ballet's ~hristmtµ Offering: ·'The Nutcrooker'
"
DEC. I
.\ NUTCRACKER BAU.ET -Newport Ballet Association pre-
'sents ''The Nutcracker" at the John Wayne Theater. Knotts
t :lJierry Farm, at 7:JJ p.m. Tickets $5-3-1.50 available at
Coast Music and Knott's Berry Fann. 552--0042.
, ,, • DEC. I
";'VARIETY SHOW -Newport Harbor Social Studies Club
presen1s a benefit concert for the rural poor al 7:30 p.m.
" to Sanl.3 Ana Valley High School, 520. W. Walnut, Santa
Ana. "Country ," folksingers, belly dancing by ~larma, I~·
.. Qonesian dancing by Devi Ja and variety acts. Ti ckets avail·
. ·:11ble at Nc..-·porl-~1esa Education Association, 735 Baker St.,
,&,stn ~icsa . ~2432.
,,. DEC. 8
\\'IND El"SE)IBLE -Concert by University \Vind Ensemble.
.. -Jo'inc Arts Village Theatre, 8 p.m.
DEC. 8
lJSJCEF CONCERT -Christmas concert sponsor ed by
.: 1ifodel United Nations, UCI, and Coastline Chapter, United
'Nations Association. Crawford Hall , 8:30 p.m. TH:kets at
,-f3 and $3.50 students, and $4 and $4.50 general. available
at Associated Students Box OCfi<:i!, UCI and Ticketron out·
Jets. , 't •
,, DEC. 8
'USIC FESTIVAL -Irvine Master Chorale appears in coo-
1.<ert at 8:30 p.m. Orange Coast CoUege auditorium, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa . Program includes Respighi's
.. Laud to the Nativity," Pinkham's "Christmas Cantata"
and works by Gabrielle. Performances sold out.
DEC, 8-9
~!tfPDEL EXH1BIT -"The Poseidon Adventure" at South ~.;Coast Plaza, Cc«a. Mesa, will exhibit photo displays,
. fiketcbes , renderings, and 16 mm scenes from a new !ilm.
• ?.'. !... ~
DEC, 9
HOUDAY MOVIES-Calta Mesa Llbl'Sl'f presenls a double
feature at 10:30 a.m. Dec. 9, with "Christmas on the 1201
Dey" and "Clown, Tbe Shaggy Dog :" the tfa.di.tiona l "Christ·
mas Carol" will be shown at 10:30 a.m. Dec. 16 and the
annual Olildren's Ouistmas Party lakes place at 10:30 a.m.
DEC. f-10
SW AP a.tEET -Second weekend o( F1ea Market on Festival
of Arts grounds, Laguna Beach, IO a.m. to 6 p.m., 'I ad·
mission. Ticket good tor both days. Olildren under 14 ad·
milted free when accompanied by an adult .
DEC.9-24
FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS -Downtown Los Angeles C1lristmas
iHuminaUon begins with a "Parade o( Llghts" at 6:05 p.m.,
Saturday, featuring 75 parade units. Parade starts at First
and Broadway, south to 7th Street, up 7th Street to F1ower
aod along Flower to 5th Street. Outdoor entertainment will
be presented through Dec. 24 with daily presentations rrom
11 :30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. in the Music Center Plaza and Los
Angeles Countf Mall, •
. THROUGH DECEMBER
APPLE RARVESr -Oak Glen's AnnuaJ FaJI Frolic in
Rlverslde Cowlty. A visitor's shopping center (cider, apple
pies, cheese, old-fashioned candies, homemade pastries).
Two zoos, two trout-fishing ponds, miniature gold mine ,
nature walks and picnic grounds. Located north on Beau·
mont Avenue, from Beaumont, or north on Oak Glen Road
from YucaJpa .
DEC. 9 ·-10
FREE RIDES -Land.sailing, sponsored by American
Landsalltng Organization) takes place Saturday and Sun·
day at Mile Square, Brookhurst and Edinger, Fountain
Valley. Free rides. 546-800 for information .
\'
: ~usic Fills Center in December
; ~'.ti~sie, sports , a ~mpuler month of December close oul Rigby and other members of meeting of the Santa Ana-
, Ctio.£erence and a host of the 1972 schedule or activities the women's U.S. gymnastics Tustm Board of Realtors, a
tJVistmas partie.s during the at the Anaheim Convention team who competed in the re-~usiness meet~g and recep-
z...,· cent summer Olympic games t1on of 1,000 Untied California
..... Center. In Munich, Is scheaul"ed for patrons, 1:b~ Celesco Industries '1-" enter Hosts Tbe music events include • Friday Dec-is beginning"' a •nnua1 Chri•lma• dance and. (~ concert by "Manas.us" and p.m. ' ' · lu~n fo~ member.! of ~B· the fourth annual "Holiday In Basketball invades t 'be Glot>al Van Lines.
· •• jr _ ali Troupe Music" restivaL Two thousand Convention Cente Dec, is, 'p"J~C'K' -Wl·C•ocl• ~
'T choraleers -representing 2C when 16 Soot.bland high schooJ
t..-!£ Anaheim JUIUO. • r and senior basketball teams collide in the , "2he American B a 11 e t third' ·'rob' BOOISBOPS , i,; -ter will appear in the high schools -will pr.,.nl ' annual, rou~ m
·,c Center's Pal/Ilion ror 12 'the trarutional sounds of "lnvitatioaal Ba Bk et b a 11 THI cirr
Christmas, -Dec. 13-14. Tournament." The five-day a-,.. • '71'1 639-7700 ' · orman<:i!S, beginning Feb. tournament oonclud., Dec-'". $0\ITH COAST '""'IA -•• ·• gh F b 21 "Man,.•a•• ''the latest rock· · ""'· c 1
: ~:,i.e.uin>ll e · · group ~n. and featuring P!'lvafe events planned in-°'"' M. .. • 171'1 ,_ 1'1 ,.....,..
; .. -repertoire. to be a~-c:-i:u. f "rl r elude a benel1'l sbow and r~.cc ed -d t -1 ho ti 11 Stephen ~. orm!E: y o ~1c 1n e a1 s r y, w1 ,...,,,_ -"' nd dance for the Costa Mesa ' ~in three r u 11 • I e n g t h "Crosby' ~. Na.w a Good Deed
}Qets, several new works and Young." will make their Police Department, a dinner· make the scene
revivals by t h is Orange County debut on dance for employes of West
guished Company, Lucia Saturday. Dec. 9, at 8 p.m. In Anaheim Community Hospital Sundays
and Oliver Smith, direc-the Arena. and a dinner-dance for
~ A "Gymnastics Carousel of Mootgomery Ward employes, in the l1Q!Qijl!1)i
i . roster of artists (in Champions," featuring Cathy Other bookings include a
betical order I includ es• ~~~;iiii;;;;i;;;;i;;~iiiiiiiii;;;jji;jjliiiiiiiiiiiii9.:.Niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&:..~~iiiimaak.iiiiij• elebrated Jtalian premier I~
· 1~:,~. r d.~~· ;.pa;::~ SHIP. FRUIT N 0 w.1 •d"'-it season with the Com-
_ .J.>4.Q_y; Eleanor D'A ntuono.
~el Denard. Royes Fer-
+ nande:z, Carla Fracd, Cynthia
Gregory. Ted Klvitt, Natalia
: Makarova. Ivan Nagy, John
! Prinz. Michael Smuin, Teny
, Orr; Sallie Wilaon and Gayle
: Young.
There will be two mid-week
!in-priced matinees, m
~ esday, Feb. 14, and on
• ay, Feb. 20. There also wi1'1 be a Saturday matinee at
regular prices on Feb. 17.
: Andres Segovia
; At Music Center .
Andres Segovia will make
~ lwo re<:ltal appearancet· ln the
~ Music Center's Pavilion on
~ Jan. 24 and 23 at 1:30 p.m.
: The guitarist will perform
~ two different program1, 1tated
.. S. Hurok. Tickets are now on -. sale et !he Music Center,
Mutual Agencies. Wallichs and
Liberty Offices. -----
GIVE A
1 lN '"'
"•f.:T
-~rltt"''' w ., ,,.. .. ,.h_
I !• .. l(•I 11~ 6
<ll'lllltt
J
It's so cold b1ck East I It's pratty cold right here in New·
pert I) th1y'll enjoy these Cellfotni1 fruits. Gi•nt size~---'"
N1vel Or1n9e1, Coechell• Grap1fruit, lerge Avacados,
Oetas, Nuts, Gift P•ck1. And wa h1Y1 '.em itllt Ff'om $5:95. CaU ui 673-1718.
Ban'kArnerlcard or Mester Cherge OK!
STOCK UP WITH THUi MONEY SAVERS !
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• 1Y POPULAR HMAMD • GOOD llZI NOW • SH IP A CARTON •
• CAuuFr'4om. ICEIERG : TANGERINES :
• -•. LETTUCE • • • -••m IA# • 25C ••cH •• I 5Cu.cH : .,. LB. : • -$2.99 CARTON • u.et J • Limit S • •
.... tMt ..... with thlt CMtptin • with this COUl'Of' • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ····~························· • IELL l'El'PERS • .::~ ==· . GORG~OUS •
• "' : ORANGE : POINSETIIAS : : CUCUMIERS • JUICE • • • • 6r<>a25C : 49' 9-1 : Sl.OOoFF • • .... .__
• ltlt.wrls ' • l.Jlillt y, ... • with thl1 covpen • • witt. C9Upeft 8 Mtli l'MI C..,.. W • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• c •• , •• _,.,.. hc:llftber 13, 1t72
"Onmo• Counq,11 M"'' PopMl.ar Product and flower Hou$e"
~·
cfi
NEWPORT PRODUCE
OpH 7 ll"Y' a WHk I o.m. ta I p.m.
2616 _,... -.. the P .. r ... 1o
""""' ,,,..,,,
671-1711
67M2'1
IQNDID FRUIT SHl,rlR.
FOlt JI YEAll "Whert Qualitw la lit•
Order of tht HoUltn
) '
DEC. 11
CHOIRS -The combined cbotrs or Newport Harbor Lu-
theran Church and OUr Lady Queen or Angels C.!hollc
Qiurch, dlrected by Les Van Dyke, wW preaent Hlodel's
"Messiah" at 7:80 p.m. in the Newport Harbor Lutheran
Oiurch, 798 Dover Drive, Newport Beach.
DEC. It ,
HANDEL ORATORIO -"~!all" by Handel to be pre-
sented by Untversity Chol1ls and Orche!lra under directfon
of Maurice Allard, associate professor ol music. Crawford Hall, 2 and 8 p,m, Admissloo $J,
J;>EC. II
DIXIELAND JAZZ -Four bouni of llve jive as Jan In-
corporated meeta at 2 p.m., at 211 E. C2'apman Ave., Orange.
Admisskln 12 .
DEC. 11
"BAL NIGHT'' -Disneyland Hotel features Coon! Basie and
his famed "Solid Beat" band. Dancing begins at 8 p,m.
Tickets at the door IU5.
DEC. 11 ·
Clll\ISTMAS CONCERT -Santa Ana College presenls Pa-
cific Pops, 22-Plece orcbestra~ with tbe Notables, 20 mixed
voices, playing and singing favorite Ouistmas tunes at 8
p,m, In Phillips llalL Admission .free.
DEC. ll
DSC. 1•
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL -Ooldm W• -al!erlal )lall-day selecllons, dlrected ii)' ,_, --., Tbe C<llCll'I
lakes place at 8 p,m. In U,. GWO -mlly theo~-Ad-
mission free.
DIDC. U '
FREE LECTURE -Jee S..,.,tioo tells his "Oll)'Sle)I of a
Dropout" In the faculty lounge, Santa Ana College, at 7
p,m, The Ille of a rough Brooklyn kid who dropped out of
high school four limes and went through 30 d-j<Jbl
only later to fmd bimself and become a prlurwlnning au-
thor, attorney, ioclure< and prolC81Dr of law.
DEC. ll
HOLIDAY CONCERT -Commwtity Chorale in Christ-
mas concert. Works include "Nutcracker Suite" directed
by Warren Peterkin. '!be free, 8 p.m. concert takes place in
the Golden West College community theater .
DEC, 17
COMBINED CHOIRS -NOWpOrl llari>or Lutheran and Our
Lady Queen ol Angels Catholic churcl)es presents the airut-
mas portion of the Messiah at 3 p.m. in the Catholic church,
2046 Mar Vista Drive in Corona de) Mar. A free-will offering
will be taken. ft.fADRIGAL CONCERT -Golden West Singers ~nd Madri·
gals present holiday progra,m dlrected by Gi!rald Schroeder, ll!ROJJGH DEC. 14
with instrumental group. AdmliSion's free ttf the 8 p.m. SOUL MUSICAL -"Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope" opens
concert in the Golden West College community theater· at Huntington Hartford Theatre, Hollywood. Performances
JAN. I' Tuesdays through Saturdays al 8:30 p.m,, Sundaya al 7:30
SYMPHONY CONCERT -Concert for the New Year wW be p.m. Matinees on Saturday and Sunday at 2:30 p,m, !Jmlted
conducted by David An-y. al ' p.m. In the Community four week engagement. For ticket ln!ormation, call (213)
Theater, Golden wes1 O>Uege. [Admir~=·-":aon:::i':1.::::::::::: -..
Singers
Gleeful
Members of the Golden
West College Singers .
and Madrigals will pre-
sent their annual
Christmas concert at 8
p,m, Tuesday. Among
the loung people dlr-
ecte by Gerry Schroe-
der are, left to right,
Wendy Schlitz, Ted
Teaford , Christine
Skweir, Mike Meighan
and Teri Smith.
fflurala
Pearl Compan'I
hn•ltes 9ou to see
•ts ea>qublte -11eetiots
ot pearl feioel.,.
Holiday Gift lt,ems
Rings 1tortlng from $13.95
14 Kt. Gola; Up to $1,000.00
Nockloc" $25.00 I• $5,000.00 murala Pearl
Coml"""I
MARINERS VILLAGE
25042 Del Proclo
O.n• Point Herbor
4tWJJI Delly 11.f. S... 11""
Yo-u are invited
to the
8aric§l.ntoriio llirierrs
Newest Wine Tasting Cellar
Be our auest, come to the San Antonio Winery.
Visit our Wine Tasting.Cellar at 1500 New~~
Blvd., Newport/Costa Mesa, Just off Pac1f1c
Coast Hwy,, (714) 645-8940, Sample our superb
Gold Medal Wines. Discover for yours'11.and
enjoy our serene old world charm.
Choose from our distinctive assortment of
Holiday Gifts, Wine Jellles, S.vory Cheeses end
beautifully wrapped GIFT BASKETS end BOXES
of fine winos, TIMI perfect holldey gifts for Family,
Friends and Assoclat11. Our wine tastln1 cellars ·
at the San Antonio Wlneiy are open 7-d~ys a -k
for your holiday shopplna convenience,
Vfiit our upstairs dining room for an epicurean
treat. Each of our sandwiches has Jts own charac·
ter featuring Catherine the Great, the Mone Lita,
RomeQ and Juliet, the Hamlet and many oth~r
edible dflig/lts. We have frH parkin1 end foOd
toao. ,
When you are In downtown Los Angeles, YOU
ARE INVITEO to teke a tour of oor Mein Winery,
Museum end Park. The San Antonio Winery Is the
oldest producing winery In the city of Los
Angeles. We ere located et 737 Lemar St'MI, Los
Anples, (213) 223 -140L FrH parkln1'l1 Mil·
ble. Or visit one of our wine tastlna cellars:
Olvert Stl'Mt at the Tr•d• Mlrt Bulldll\I • CAN~
PARK, 21131.Sherman W•y • REDONDO IEACH, 1411
Sout~ P1clflc. Coast Hlahwey • SA~TA Aft~ 2122 Marth
Tu1Jln •ONTARIO. 127.t1 Mtlllk•n • WlST LOS .
ANGELES1 12~2r··s1nta Monie• Boulev1rd. '!_o open
soon. ·~ARINA 0£l.._REY/V£NICl. 2221 LlltCOln Blvd.
WC ACel~ 8ANM.AMlltlCAl't0 ANO MA8Tl!:ft C"AltGl
'
~--•
-.,-.,
• i'/'" ,_~} -
..
\
...
FrldaJ, Oectmbtr 8, 1972 DAILY PILOT J':
House of Hyun Now • Ill 6th Year·i
u yoo thlnk this yeat bas -ful,
you might find it even harder to believe
that six years have passed since the
House or Hyun opened in Laoona Beach.
To celebrate this ma!of milestone,
owners Peter and Louisa Hyun are going
all out this weekend by way of a gala
sixth anniversary party and celebration.
Beyond the standing treat always pro-
vided by this restaurant's great Chinese
cuisine, there will be an added attraction
during the two-day obsenance in the
lorm of champagne on the house for all.
The festivities ,_ further highligbtd by
special entertainment -will be under
way tonight and Saturday, from 5 p.m.
to closing.
Any Jelection on the House of Hyun
menu should measure up to the occasion,
but two especially worthy conlenders !tre
the almond duck with wild plum sauce
and lobster mandarin.
Also, prior. to departing, you'll tpp off
the ev~ing m rare form if you bead to
the debghtful Pagoda Room for 011e of its
featured tropical ·cocktails.
Out 'N About
NORMAN STANLEY
And any Friday or Saturday you can
catch an engaging performer in this
room in the person or Kenny Croes. Ditto
Thursday and Sunday when Anna
Hamilton moves center stage.
The hillside House of Hyun is located at
410 Broadway, close by .the Laguna
Moolton Playhouse, Laguna Beach.
HOW MUCH SERVICE?
Several of Orange County's t<1p
restaurateurs recently called our et·
tention to a fascinating guide regarding
the service you can reasonably expect
while dinJng out.
They, along with other members of the
association throughout the country, are
currently partlcij>ating in a nationwide ~
"We're Glad You're Here!" hospitality
promotion.
Purpose or the ca mpaign, according to
NRA president Robert D. Flickinger, ia
to undertake a concerted effort to pro-
vide courteous, warm hospitality to
restaurant guests.
Foll~E'::~e 10 basic situations by which you can judge if your waiter or
waitress bu extended the courtesy of the
"house", and really means, "We're Glad
You're Here!"
Oid he or she:
I. Give you a friendly "hello" and
"goodbye"?
2. Smile one or more timea ·While
serving you?
3. Recognize you by name, if you're a
regular customer"?
4. Offer help to fellow ernplo!""!
5. Make at least one auggestion t
t.nbance your visit!
6. Help anyone needing a p e c I a
aolstance, such as a handicapped. o
elderly person?
7. Advise you ol specialUee r
services?
8. Give special attention to sma
children In your party?
9. AUempt to be especially patie1
with people who seemed to be groucbj c,
irritable?
IO. ApologU. and ezplain the reason
there are any delays in your service?"
If your waiter or waitress ~ u
lo these guidelineo, extend him or her lb
coortesy ol a compliment and expre>
yoor satisfaction to the restaurant. ho:
or owner.
Your courtesy in recognizing superk
hospitality will cause It to be extende
even more.
Give it all a try thia weekend wbil
y<fu 're dining at your favorite restaura1
in Santa Ana, Seal Beach. San Clemeo!
and all points In between.
WHAT TO DO • • • Oii_tnnel 28
Spotlights
LandBuyini
(From Page 26)
DEC. I
SYMPHONIES FOR YOUTH -Charles W. Bowers Memor-·
ial Museum, 2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Two junior high
schools from ·Los Angeles will present mixed choruses at
Los Angeles Music C.enter. Bus leaves Bowers at 8:30 a.m.
and returns at 11:45 a.m. Round trip and symphony is $3
for noD-members and $2.75 for members. For information,
call 834-4024.
DEC. t
DEC.I
CONCERT -1be University Wind Ensemble will present a
Cltristmas ConCert under the d1rection of Kenneth Brungess
at 8 p.m. in tOO Village Theater on the campus of UCI.
Tickets are $1 at the Fine Art& Bot. Office.
DEC. IZ
FOLK ENSEMBLE -Plummer Auditorium Chapman Av-
enue and Lemon Street, Fullerton at 8:15 p.m. The 110-
member Aman troupe will perfonn oo stage. More than
350 different authentic ~mes, six different orchestral
st)'les and combinatktM, up to 20 different ethnographic
areas are presented in group's concerts. Tickets are
$3, with a $1.50 discount students. All seats reserved.
DEC. 1%
CHAPMAN SYMPHONY -Music by Dittersdorf, Stmvinsky
ond Beethoven will comprue the flnil C<lllC<lt of the Oiap-
man Symphony Orebestra's tenth season, beginning at 8:15
p.m. In Memorial Hall Auditorium, 333 N. Gla&sell, Orange.
The land buying craze ih
is sweeping the country a1
~paraling thousands o(.
Ible Americans from thel'
savings wiU be spotlight
Bill Moyers' Journal
at 8:30 p.m. on KCET,
nel 28. ~ Americans who are -
vesting in dubious re~I • in a desire to escape
overcrowding and pre
urban life are seeking "~ gri·La acres in the lan4
forgotten dreams," s a
?doyers. ,
MystieMdbd
BOAT PARADE AND ClllUSTMAS PAGEANT -Sea World
<Jn Mission Bay, San Diego. Pageant will begin at 6:30 p.11
when 100 decorated boats leave Quivira Basin for five-mile
cruise around Mission Bay to Sea World. carolers and
choirs from several high schools and cburcbes will sing ,
8 p.m. in different Jocatioos throughout Sea World. Santa
Claus will light Sea World's 320-foot Christmas tree at 9:30 p.m.
T'u:kets at $1.50 are available at the door.
DEC. 15
CllAMPIONS-Gymnastics Carousel of Champloos, pn!50!1ted
by Southern Calllornia Acrollotic Team (SCATS), features
Calby Rigby and 70 other girl gymnasts at B p.m. In the
Anaheim Cooventioo Center. Also appearing are Kim Chase.
Debby Hiii and Kyle Gayner ol Coma Mesa. Tickets, $2 gen-
eral admission, $3-4 reserved seating. &:JS.5000.
Moyers will focus on 'U
Southwes~ whero many of D
land sale abuses are tUi
place. He reports lbat ~j
tho!e duped Into In ·
their ·life savings in a p~'
earth are shocked when t1it
find tbey have purtbased hi
ren desert.
DEC. I· I Golden West College dancers will perform in many
moods at B p.rn. Wedne5day and Thursday during
their Christmas dance concert in the dance studio.
Dancers, from bottom, are Diane Matthews, Joanne
Perreault, Betty Lou Wallbank, carol Williams and
Debbie Manning.
DRAMA WORKSHOP -"No ·Place lo Be Somebody" by
Charles Gor.done. directed by Luther Whitsett, graduate
student in drama. Sponsored by School of. Fine Arni. UCI
Studio Theater at 8 p.m. Admission $1.
THE BLACK KNIGHT
RESTAURANT
INTIMATE DINING
COCKTAILS • DANCING
SEAFOOD BAR
ENTERTAINMENT
Open Daily 10 A.M. to 2 A.M.
Lunch 11 :30 to l
Popul~:·~e~•nd JERRY LAMBUTH
330 EAST 17TH STREET
COST A MESA. 642-2304
NOW FEATURING
2FOR1
BUFFET LUNCHEON
$2.25
Monday through Friday
ALSO
2 FOR 1 DINNERS
Sunday through Thur.day
®!~~~.~
Huntington Beach 536-1421
Nightly Dinner
Specials $3.95
Tmlc/tf,f?mLE
40D MAIN.BAUOA PENINSULA
PLENTY OF PARICING • 6n.4633
MR. SENSATIONAL, LEE DRESSER
Now Appearin9 aboard the
REUBEN E. LEE
151 E. Cpest Hwy., Newport Be1ch
'Beej
)faster
-.,, IFormtrly lh.t• 0111
LUNCHEON
MM. Ml'!' frl,
11 :JI te 2130
DINNER
Mee.•ht. I hi 11
h-4tly 4 ,. 11
Featuring a comvtete ntto menu of steaks, lolr
ster, seafoods, Prime: Rib. mld otheT entrees
lnctuding the hOuse apecial, Beef Master Com-
bination platter.
..
-SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MENU -
HAl'PY HOUR: 4 to 7 e Moo • Fri.
wltlo Hof"'H0n 11'-ft
Now 8PJINflftJ
JOHNNY SHElllDAN
T.,.._ thru lat. -I p.i'ft. '' 1 •·'"·
3010 HARBOR BLVD.
IAt......,I Cotta Mota
Reservations: 54?·0319
-
T & E DRIFT INN
Cocktails
Cauntry
• Entertainment
,.."":.:.:'°' Westem
THE COUNTRYMEN
MANNIE e DON e JON e CHUCK
LUNCHEON SPECIAL -$1.65 .;. Mon.· Fri.
LADIES NIGHT WEDNESDAYS from 6 PM.
wen Drt.b 10c ,., i....
OPEN DAILY 7 A.M. to 2 A.M.
1717 N. CAMINO REAL, SAN CLEMENTE
5 An1n.tat
TUESDAY
December 12th
FASHION SHOW lor M EN I
CAROLE EHLERT presents
"What Every Man Should Buy"
.•. for tht wlf1, secretery,
sweefhtart, OR7
..clothat s,.ci&lly S.l•cted by l•tt•
................. ,! .....
c ............. ,,..., ....
Ent1rteinment -ttort d'oeU¥rts
(Female Critics Allowed>
I
•
37 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER
..._." euft•"'' 6. ...__ A••P..-idflll 111-·11-•144-2030•
.~---------------~
One adreeatour
rei&Ur~ ............ ana tt1e Seoondaitree
gratis
I wflH yotil pnq•t t+.lt cevl""' -••lid
S11nd•y tfiru lllwnd•y 'til 0.c. 221
Many excitin~ entnes frt111 $3.25 m $5.75
.,
ORANGE COUNTY'S FINEST
NEW YORK STYLE
DELICATESSEN e RESTAURANT
H@OHMAN'3
featuring
Kosher Style • German
Italian Foods
In our Dlnfns Room or to take out
COCKTAILS • WINE • BEER
BAKERY CATERING
VISIT OUR COMPLETE DELICATESSEN
AND BAKERY WITH IT'S UNLIMITED AR-
·RA Y OF DELECTABLE F'O 0 D S FOR. ,_
YOUR GASTRONOMICAL PLEASURE. ·.:..
WE FEATURE ZWAN HAM AND Tiii ::;t
• FlflrST-CHEESIS JiVlULAll.I. -;:,,..--~
--OPEN 7 DAYS--~
Sun. thru Thun. -10 •.m. to 9 p.rn.
Fri. •nd S•t. -10 o.m. to Midnight
AMPLE PARKING
428 ~. 17tll STREET
COSTA MESA 645-1900
..
-·
•
'
2fl DAILY PILOT , Fridal', Dtctmber 8-1972
WH AT TO DO .
'· Ill ; •
New port Ball:e t's .. ~hristmas ·OfferiTJg: ~The Nutcracker'
''l ::--D1!JC; r-
,,NVTCR.ACKER BAU.El' -Newport Ballet Association pre-
' sents "The Nutcracker" at the John Wayne Theater, Knotts
.r~rry Far114 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets '5--3-1.50 available at
Coast Music and Knott's Berry Farm. 552-00-12.
"''1' DEC. I . ., Y.AJUrl'Y SHOW - Newport Harbor Social Studies Club
presenls a benefit concert for the rural poor at 7:30 p.m .
. , ~· Sant.a Ana Valley lilg h School. 52<1 W. Walnut, Santa
Ana. "COuntry." folksingers, belly qancing by A farina. I~·
., k.Qonesian dancing by Devi Ja and variety acts. Tickets avail·
, ;;.able at Newport-Mesa Education Association, 735 Baker St.,
Bosta Mesa. MG-2432.
"'' DEC. 8 WIND ENSE~1BLE -Conct!rt by University \Vind Ensemble.
'·-l'linc Arts Village Theatre, 8 p.m.
·-:..-DEC. 8
1.JNICEF CONCERT -Christmas con«:rt sponsored by -~ ).fodel United Nations, UCI, and Coastline Chapter, United
·'Nations Association. Crawford Hall, 8:30 p.m. Tickel!I at ~11'$.'I and $3.50 students, and $4 and $4.50 general. available
at Associated Students Box Office. UCI and Ticketron out·
lets.
~ DEC. 8
'USIC FESTIVAL -Irvine Master Chorale appears in con-
<.'t?ft at 8:30 p.m. Orange Coast College auditorium, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa . Program includes kespighi's
"Laud to the Nalivi ty .'' Plnkham 's "Christma s Cantata"
and works by Ga brielle. Performances sold out.
DEC. S-9
!t!IODEL EXHIBIT -"'lbe Poseidon Adventure" at South ~st Plaza, Q)sta. Me6a, will e x h i b it photo displays,
~ fiketcbes, renderings, and 16 mm scenes from a new film.
' . ~,,,~
DEC. 9
HOLJDAY MOVIES-Costa Mesa Llb~ presents a double
feature at 10:30 a.m. Dec. 9, with "Christmas on the ~
O.y" Bild "Uown, The Shaggy Dog;" the traditional "Christ-
ma~ Carol" will be shown at 10 :30 a.m. Dec. 18 and the
annual ChJldren's Christmas Party takes place at tO:SO a.m.
DEC. t-10
SW AP MEET -SecoQd weekend of Flea Market on Festival
of Arts ground!, Laguna Beach, IO a.m. to 6 p.m., $1 ad-
mission. Ticket good for both days. Children under 14 ad-
mitted free when accompanied by an ad ult.
DEC. 9-U
FE.WJVAL OF LIGHTS -Downtown Los Angeles Cuistmas
iHuminatJon begins wilh a "Parade oC Ligbts" at 6:05 p.m.,
Saturday, featuring 7S parade units. Parade slart!!I at First
and Broadway, south to 7th Street, up 7th Street to Flower
and along Flower to 5th Street. Outdoor entertainment will
be presented through Dec. 24 with da ily presentations from
11:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. in the Music Center Plaza and Los
Angeles County Mall.
THROUGH DECEMBER
APPLE HARVEST -Oak Glen's Annual Fall. Frolic in
Riverside Qiunty. A visitor's shopping center (elder, apple
pies, cheese. old-rashioned candies, homemade pastries).
Two zoos, two trout-fishing ponds, miniature gold mine,
nature walk.!! and pi cnic grounds. Located north on Beau·
mont Avenue, from Beaumont, or north on Oak Glen Road
ffi>m Yucaipa.
DEC. 9 .JO
FREE RIDEs -Landsailing, sponsored by American
Landsailing Organization, takes place Saturday and Sun-
day at Mile Square, Brookhurst and F.<linger, Fountain
Va11ey. Free rides. M6-8045 for information.
<,·-·~" .,,, -.
' (/1" . ,_.
: :?Mu sic Fills Center in December \. ~.~ ...
: !'i"Music, sports. a computer mon th or December close out Rigby and other members or meeting of the Santa Ana· ~erence and a host of the 1972 schedule of activities the women's U.S. gymnastics Tustin Board of Realtors, a ~tu'istmas parties during the at the Anaheim Convention team who competed in the re-~usiness meeti~g and _rece~
:-. · Center. cent summer Olympic games tion of 1,000 United Califon.ua
.. --in Munich, Is scheduled for patrons, OW: Celesco Industries ':J' ·.enter Hosts The mustc events Include a Friday Dec. 15, beginning at 8 annual Christmas dance and a ~ conct!rt by "Manauas" and p.m. ' luncheon fo~ member.s of ~!:'"h · the fourth armual "Holiday In Basketball invad~ t 'he Global Van Lines. ~D., ali Troupe Music" rest ival. Two lhousand Convention Center Dec. 16. 'p"r"~c'i' """'wr'c'oci' ~ -choraleus -representing 24 when 16 Southland high school
: "~e American e a 11 e t AnaheUn junior and senior basketball teams collide in the , ii'. · ter wHI appear in lhe high schools -will presenl third a n n u a I , round-robin BOOKSHOPS 1
, ' c Center's PaVilion ror 12 'the traditional sounds of "Invitational Bask.et b a 11 THf cn'f
• be ·nn·ing Feb Christmas, ·Dec. 13-14. Tournament." The five-d ay a.-• C714l m -1100 ormances. gt . "Manassu," the latest rock-tournament concludes Dec. 11. SOUTH CO.t.ST PlAZA °'"""' ! · :.through Feb. 21. • c •• .., ...... • C71•! s.o.21t1 ,......,..
; ~e repertoire. to be an· group sensation, and featuring Pi"ivate events planned in·
, ~ced in detail shortly, will Stephen Stills, formerly of elude a benefit show and
· ~in three f u J \ -t e n g t h "Crosby, Stills, Nash and dance for the Costa Mesa Good Deed
; b:Aets, several new works and Young." will make their Police Department, a dinner·
' 4;riiny revivals by th is Orange County debut on dance for employes ol West make the scene
. (i";linguished Company, Lucia Saturday, Dec. 9, at a p.m. ln Anaheim Community Hospital Sundays QMse and Oli ver Smith, direc· the Arena. and a dinner-dance r or
tan A "Gymnastics Carousel of Montgomery Ward employes. in the l1Qlijijlf1)f . 1· ·, roster of artists (in Champions," featuring Cathy Other bookings include a
be ti cal order l includes11 ~iOW;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiwaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUiOOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii°"'ii;i;;A;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiOiMii>.iiiijl J · Celebratefi Italian premier!.
' i.:.:t. r da~~:· i/~:~ SHIP-FRUIT N 0 w ! •d t season with the Corp:-
.. ...Pl9.Y; Eleaoor o·Antuo~.
l"'MiClh ae.l Denard, Royes Fer-
nandez, Carla Fracct, Cynthia
J GregOry, Ted Kivltt, Natalia
t Makarova, Ivan Nagy, John ! Prinz, Michael Smuin, Terry
Orr; Sallie Wilson and Gayle f Yoong.-
~ There will be two mid-week l Eprlced matinee!, on y, Feb. 14, and on
Feb. 20. There also
"' Saturday matinee at
~ regular prices on Feb. 17.
i Andres Segovia
' ! At Music Ce nter • 2 Andres Segovia wlU make
: two recital appearances in the
• Music Center's Pavilion on i Jan. 24 and za at 8:30 p.m. ! The guitarist will perfornt
,, two different programs, stated ~ S. Hurok. Tickel!! are now on t sale at the Music Center, ! Mutu al Agencies. Wall lch.s and t Liberty office!.
GIVE A
I 'IN~
r,1.=T
,
It's so cold beck East I It's pretty cold right here in New.
port!) they'll •njoy thes• Celifornie fruits. Giarrt sizei._ ___ ,.
N1vel Oren9e1, Coachella Grapefruit, lar9e Avacado1,
Oates, Nuts, Gift Pack1. And we heve '•m alH From $5.95. Call us 67J..1718.
BankAmerlcar.d or Mester Charge OK!
STOCK UP WITM THISI MONET SAYERS !
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• If P01'11LAI DIMAND • GOOD II.II NOW • SHIP A CARTON a
: CAUWUFLOWn • ICEBERG I TANGERINES :
• •. LmUCE 1
1 • ~D llZI I 0 • 25c • I Sc EACH : c LI. :
• IACH a S2." CARTON
8 u.tt I • Limit 5 • •
8 wMi ....... ,.. • with thll c0t.ipon 1 with rhl1 coupen • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• BEU PEPPERS • .::~ ~~~:.. • GO•G~OUS • 1
... : ORANGE 1
: : CUCUMBERS 1 JUICE : POINSETIIAS 1
: 6-2sc : 4tc 9-t Sl.OOoFF I • I •• •• ~ . ..._ o...,
• u.tt ' • I.Wt VJ .., • with thl1 coupon • • with thl• ,..,,... • Wltfl; "" e..;.. • •
··~··························· c.., ... npfr• o.c ......... 13, 1972
NEWPORT PRODUCE
0,.0 7 ll9yl a WHk I a.m. to I p.m.
26 U Now port lour-ci on lite-Plftlos•la
•ho ..
47M711
'1M711 ,,,..,.,
"IS Ytan of Prod""•
KnotD llot0"
IQNDlD FRUIT SHl,,Elt
FOii: JI 'ff.AAS "Where QIUllity fl the
Order of the HotUt"
. . . • •
DEC. II
CHOIRS -The combined cbolno o[ Newport Harbor Lu·
!Mran Cllurch Bild OUr Lady Queen of Angolo Calhollc
Olurch, directed by Les Van Dyke, wUJ pretent llliridel'1
"Meu lah" at 7:30 p.m. ln the Newport Harbor Lutherazi
Olun:h, 798 Dover Drive, Newport Beach.
DIC. JI
CBRimiii\J>ECJAL -Ooldlll Wiii llllld olerlttl -day selections, directed by 'lltomu lfsUBdol..,,,. _.I
lakes place at 8 p.m. in tho owe _ ... II)-dM/t .. M-
mlssl,oo free.
DEC. 11 . DEC. JI
HANDEL ORATORIO -"Ml!Mlab" by Handel lo be pr.o-fllEE LECTURE -Joe SorMUno telh hJs 1'0d)'!llO)' ~ a
sen led by University Chorus and Orchestra under directlor;i! ~·:._ilallll'll!;'."..c·ilL.IOOJaculJ~~'i",-Sl'!'~~.:°olle~~~-
of Maurice Allard, associate professor of mwilc. Crawford. p.m. The life d. a tough Brooklyn kid who dropped out cl.
Hali , 2 Bild 8 p.m. Admissloo $1. · high school foor times and went through 30 d-jolll
DEC. 11 only later to find bim.sell and become a prlze-wlnnlng au-
DIX.lELAND JAEL -Four hours of live jive as Jan In-thor, attortley, lecturer and professor ol law.
corporated meets at 2 p.m., aL 211 E. ChaplW!D A~.,. Orang~ DEC. 15
Admlsslon 12.
DEC. 11 HOLIDAY CONCERT -Community Chorale in Cbrlst-
"BAL NIGHT'' -Disneyland Hotel features Count Basie and ma s concert. Works include "Nutcracker Suite" directed
his famed "Solid Beat" band. Dancing begins at a p.m. by Warren Peterkin. The free, 8 p.m. concert takes place in
Tickets at the doc:r $5.75. ._ the Golden West College community theater.
DEC. 11 DEC. 17
CHRISTMAS CONCERT -Santa Ana College presents Pa-COMBINED CHOIRS -Newport Harbor Lutberan and Our
cific Pops, 22-plece or<l!eSra, with the Notables, 20 mixed Lady Queen ol Angels Catholic churches p-eseilta tbe Cbr;s. ~ces, playing and singing favorite Cluistmas tunes at s· mas portion of the Messiah at 3 p.m. in the Catholic church,
p"ln. in Phillips Hall Admiasioo free. 2046 Mar Vista Drive in Corona del Mar. A free-will of£ering
DEC. 11 will be taken. J\.1ADRIGAL CONCERT -Golden West Singers ~nd Madri -
gals present holiday program directed by Gerald Schroeder,
with instrumental group, -Admisalon's-free to the 8 p.m.
concert in the Golden West College community th eater.
JAN. JC
SYMPHONY CONCERT -Ca!<ert for tbe New Year will be
cooducted by David AnlbMy, a1 4 p.m. in tbe Community
'Ibeater, Golden West O>llege. Acfmisiaon $1.
Singers
Gleetul
. Members of the Golden
West College Singers
and Madrigals will pre-
sent their a n n ua l
Christmas concert at 8
p.m. Tuesday. Among
the young people dir-
ected. by G<!rry Schroe-
der are, left lo right,
Wendy Scblilz, Ted
Teaford, Christine
Skweir, Mike Meighan
and Teri Smith.
THROUGH DEC. JC
SOUL MUSICAL -''llOn't.Bolher MO. I Can't Cope" opens
at Huntington Hartford Theatre, Hollywood. Performances
Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8:30 p.m., Sundays at 7:30
p.m. Matloees OD Saturday and Sunclay at 2'!0 p.m. IJmlted
four week engagement. For Ucket informaUon, call (213)
-1.
murala
Pearl Compan'I
ifttilte• 11ou to see
aft ea:q11idte coUeetion
ot pearl jf?IDf!I,..
Holiday Gift Items
Rings 1t1rtlng from $13.95
14 Kt. Gold, up to $1,000.00
Nockloc" $25.00 to $5,000.00
murala p,,arl
Compan'I
MARINERS VILLAGE
25042 Del Proclo
0.na Point Hlirbor
4tWJJJ hllf 11.f, S-. 11"'
You are invited
to the
Sari c511ntoriio lliziery-5
Newest Wine Ta.sting . Cellar
Be our guest, come to the San Antonio Winery.
Visit our Wine Tasting Cellar at 1500 Newport
Blvd., Newport /Costa Mesa, Just off Pacific
Coast Hwy., (714) 645-8940. Sample our superb
Gold Medal Wines. Dlsc·over for yourself and
enjoy our serene old world charm.
Choose from our distinctive assortment of
Holiday Glhs, Wine Jellles, Savory Cheeses and
beautifully wrapped GIFT BASKETS and BOXES
of line winH. The perfect holiday gltts for Family,
Friends and Associates. Our wine tasting cellars
at the San Antonio Winery are open 7 days 1 week
for your holiday shopping convenience.
Vf;it our upstairs dinin' room for an epicurean
treat. Each of our sandwiches has Its own charac-
ter featuring Catherine the Great, the Mona Lisa,
. Romeo. and Juliet, the Hamlet and many other
edible delights. We have free parking and food
to flO . .
When you are In downtown Los l\naeles, YOU
ARE INVITED to take a tour of our Main Winery,
Museum end Park.'The San Antonio Winery Is the
oldest ,PrQduclna winery In the city of Los
Anples. Wo aro'locatld at 737 Lamar Sl'Mt, Los
Angelu, (213) 223-1401. Free parklna 11 Mii·
able. Or vl•it one of our wine tastin& cellol'I:
Olvere ftfMt at the Tr1d• M1rt 8ulldl11& • CAN~
PARK, 21"91 Shtrmen W1y • REDONDQ IEACH, 1411
Soutt, Plctflc Coe•t Hl1hwty •SANTA AAA 2122 ftorth
TuttlrrrONTARIO, i 2747 MlllO,an •WEIT LOS
ANGELES, 12221 Santa Monica Boulevard. To open
to0n·, •MARINA DEL REY/VENICE. 2221 Llnc'Ofn Blvd.
WI ACCll"T BANl<AMIUUCAJltD AND MA&T£1t C HA.ftGl
• • "•
•
Mystic Mood
'
DAIL V PILOT If
House of Hyun Now • Ill 6th Year,
II yoo think this yur has gone fut,
you might ftnd It even harder to believe
that siJ: years have passed since the
House of Hyun opened in Laouna Beach.
To celebrate th.Ls maj(r miJestone,
owners Peter and Louisa Hyun are going
all out this weekend by way of a gala
sixth anniveriary party and celebration.
Out 'N About
NORMAN STANLEY
Beyond the standing treat always pro-
vided by this restaurant's great Chinese
cuisine, there will be an added attraction
during the two-day observance in the
form of champagne on the house for all.
The festivities -further highlightd by
special entertainment -will be under
way tonight aod Saturday, from 5 p.m.
to closing.
Al)y selection on the House of Hyun
menu should measure up to the occasion,
but two especially worthy contenders 9re
the almood duck with wild plwn sauce
and lobster mandarin.
Also, prior to departing, you'll top off
the evening in rare form if you bead to
the delightful Pagoda Room for D'le of its
featured tropical cocktails.
And any Friday or Saturday you can
catch an engaging performer in this
room in the person of Kenny Croes. Ditto
Thursday and Sunda y when Anna
Hamilton moves center stage..
The hillside House of Hyun is located at
410 Broadway, close by the Laguna
Moulton Playhoose, Laguna Beach.
BOW MUCH SERVICE?
Several ()f Orange Countf's top
restaurateurs recently ealled our at-
tention t<l a fascinating guide regarding
the service you can reasonably expect
while dining ool.
They, along with other memben of the
association throughout the oountry, are
currently participating in a nation.wide
WHAT TO DO • • •
(From Page 26)
"We're Glad You're Here!" hoapltallty•
pivmotion.
Purpose of the campaign, according to
NRA president Robert D. Fllcldnger, is
to undertake a concerted effort to pn>--
vide courteous, wann bolpttality to
restaurant guests.
Foltowtng are 10 basic situations by
which you can judge if your waiter or
waitress has eitended the courtesy of the
"house", and really means, "We're Glad
You're Here!"
Oid be or she :
1. Give you a friend1y "hello" and
"goodbye"?
2. Smile one or more times while
serving you?
3. Rc<:ognize you by name, if you're a
DEC,&
regular cmtomer!
4. Oller belp to l•llow emplo)'<!ll!
5. Make at least one suggest.kn to
enhance '/fU' visit?
S. Help anyone ncedlng a p e c l 1 I
auistance, IUCh aa a handkapped or
elderly-!
7. Advlse you of speclalUee • er
aervtces?
8. Give special attentk>n to small
cblldren In your porty?
9. Attempt to be especially paUen!
with people who seemed to be grouchj or
irTitable!
10. APolO(lze and explain the r.ascin if
t~ are aey delays In yoor service!"
If your waiter or waitress me&Sl.ltt up
to~ .,.i.i.u-. ext.oo him or her the
courtesy of 1 cempllment and ex~ss
your aatiafacUoo to the restaurant bofit
or owner.
Your courtesy In r<cognizlng supertoc
boepitaH\y will ...,.. It to be extended
even more.
Give it all ..a trJ this weekend whllr
you're dining at Y"* favorite ~staure.111
• In Santa Ml, Seal Beach, San Clemente
and all poln1a In bet....,,_
DEC. t
SYMPHONIES FOR YO -Charles W. Bowers Mermra
ial Museum, 2002 N. Main ., Santa Ana. Two jllllior high
schools from Los Angeles w· pre!leDt mixed choruses at
UJs Angeles Music Cent • us leaves Bowel'3 at 8:30 a.m.
and returns at 11:45 a.m. Round trip and symphony is $3
for non.memben: and 2.75 !or members. For infOl'mation,
call 83M024.
CONCERT -The University Wind Ensemble will present a
Cu-Jstmas Concert under the direction ol Kenneth Brungess
at I p.m. in the Village Theater oo the campus ci UCJ.
Channel 28
--Spotlights
Land Buying
1be land buying craze 1ha I
Is ~ the country and
_,atlng -o(.1 II 11i1e Almricana crom thelJi:
savlnp will be ll(IOllilbt ·
DEC. I
BOAT PARADE AND CHRISTMAS PAGEANT -Sea World
on Mission Bay, San Diego, Pageant will begin at 6:30 p.11
when 100 decorated boats leave Quivira Basin for five-mile
cruise around Mission Bay to Sea Wm:Jd. Carolers and
choirs from several high schools aad churches will sing r
8 p.m. .in different locations throughout Sea World. Santa
CJaus will light Sea World's 320-loot Christmas tree at 9:30
p.m.
Tickets are $1 at the Fine Art& Box (){fice.
DEC. lZ
FOLK ENSEMBLE -Plummer Auditorium Chapman Av-
enue and Lemon Street, Fullerton at 8: 15 p.m. The 110.
.member Aman troupe will perfonn on stage. Afore than
350 different authentic costumes, six different orchestral
~yles and combinations, and up t<l 20 different ethnographic
areas are presented in the group's concerts. Tickets are
$3, with a $1.50 di.9coWlt for students. Ali seats reserved.
DEC. lZ
CHAPMAN SYMPHONY -Music by Di~, Stmvinsky
end Beethoven will comprise the first concert of the Ol&p--
man ,,Symphony On:hestra's tenth season, beginning at 1:15
p.m. In lllemorial Hall Auditorium, 333 N. G1aasell, Orange.
Tickets at $1.50 are available at the door.
Bill Moyers' Journal
al 8:30 p.m. on KCET.
nel 21. Amerlcana: who are.·.. · -
vestuia: in dubious ~al
In a d<lllre to petCresiapeu.'.! ovOl'Cl'CIW<llnJ and
W'ban Ufe are aeeking ''
gri-La acrea In the wi4 . I
forgotten df'eaml," a I s
Mo}'ft'S. , '.
·· Golden \Vest College dancers will perform in many
mood s al 8 p.1n. \Vednesday and Thursday du.ring
Lheir Christmas dance concert in the dance studio.
Dan cers, from bottom, are Diane Matthews, Joanne
Perreault. Betty L-Ou Wallbank, Carol Williams and
Debbie r.1anning.
DEC. 1-t
DRA!llA WORKSHOP -"No Place to Be Somebody" by
Chari.., Gordone. directed by Luther Whitset~ graduate
student in drama. Sponsored by School of Fine Am. UCI
Studio Theater at 8 p.m. Admission $1.
Moyen will focus on
Southwest, "'-1D011J df . e
land 1ale ....... °" ~ p1a<:e. Be reports lhllt · ' • ' f
tho5e duped Into In~ their llle savings In 1 . I
earth are sbocted when y
find they have pun:bued' W·
~n desert.
DEC. 15
CllAMPIONS-Gymnamlcs Carousel ol Champlom, presented
by Southern California Acrobatic Team (SCATS), leetur.s
Cathy Rigby and 'IQ other girl gymnasts at 8 p.m. In the
Anaheim C.OOventioo Center. Also appearing are Kim Chue,
Debby IDll and Kyle Gayner ol Costa Mesa. Tickets, $2 gen-
eral admWion, '3-4 reserved seating. 635--5000. -"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THE BLACK KNIGHT
RESTAURANT
INTIMATE DINING
COCKTAILS • DANCING
SEAFOOD BAR
ENTERTAINMENT
Open Daily 10 A.M. to 2 A.M.
Lunch 11 :30 to 3
Popvl~:·~:.:1nd JERRY LAMBUTH
330 EAST 17TH STREET
COSTA MESA 642-2304
-----~:
NOW FEATURING
2 FOR 1
BUFFET LUNCHEON
$2.25
Monday through Friday
ALSO
2 FOR 1 DINNERS
Sunday through Thurtday
®!~~~.~
Huntington Beach 536-1421
Nightly Dinner
Specials $~.9S
TALEcld~mLE
400 MAIN,, BALBOA PENINSULA
PLENTY OF PARKtNG • 673-4633
MR. SENSATIONAL, LEE DRESSER
Now AppMl'ing aboard the
REU~EN E. LEE
151 E. Co•st Hwy., Newport Beech '
LUNCHEON
MH • ...,_ M .
11:10" 2:l0
DINNER
....... s.. 5 te 11
5-llffy 4 ,. 11
Featuring a complete 7U10 tntm1' of iteaks, lob-
ster. seafoods, Primt R~b .. and other en trees
l t1cl udit1g the house tpecial, Beef Master Coni.-
bit1ation platter. •
-Sl'ECIAL CHILDREN'S -U -
HAPPY HOUR: 4 ta 7 e Moo· Fri.
wttliHotlltlnd'-"
New •ppHrlftt
JOHNNY· SHERIDAN
TIHt. thru ht. -I""'' t• 1 •·"'·
3010 HARBOR BLVD.
<At lohrl, Costa M.,.
Re1¥Yatlons: 549-0319
•
T & E DRIFT INN
Cocktails • Entertainment
Country ,... "":.:.:•°' Westem
THE COUNTRYMEN
MANNIE e DON e JON e CHUCK
LUNCHEON SPECIAL -$1 .65 -Mon.· Fri.
LAOIES NIGHT WEDNESDAYS from 6 P.M.
w ...... s0ct.r..-
OPEN DAILY 7 A.M. to 2 A.M.
1717 N. CAMINO REAL , SAN CLEMENTE
5 Annual
TUESDAY
December 12th
FASHION SHOW lo• M EN I
CAROLE EHLERT present.!
"What Every Man Should Buy"
... for the wife, secretery,
1weethe•r+, OR 1
Cl•Ml•t S,.eci•llY S.i.ctit4 ~ L..111
I 71.111 ........ 1J .....
CeckNI ............. , ...
Entert1inm1nt -Hort d'oauvr••
(f emale CrUICI AJIO'Wf!d)
37 FASHION ISLAND
NfWPOIT CIMTll . .......... "_ ........... AM .. P-"'l"I
........ ,i.-
•144-2030•
One adreeatour
.-....~ ... --anil the Second entree ••
ORANGE COUNTY'S RNBT
.,
·1 'I . -·I
NEW YORK STYLE , 1
DEUCATESSEN e RESTAURANT .•
H00HMAN'31
featuring
Kosher Style • German
Italian Foods
In our Dlnlnt Room or to take out
COCKTAILS • WINE • IEU'-,
L •,
BAKERY CATERING -~~
'
VISIT OUR COMPLETE DELICATESSEN ' ·,
AND BAKERY WITH IT'S UNLIMITED AR -' .J
RAY OF DELECTABLE F·O 0 D S FOR'::;
YOUR GASTRONOMICAL PLEASURE.
WE FEATURI ZWAN HAM AND THa
FINIST CHllSIS AVAii.Aili
--OPEN 7 DAYS--
Sun. thru Thurs. -10 1,m. "'9 p.m.
Fri. and. S.t, -10 a.m. ta MklnJtht
AMPLE !'ARKING
428 E. 17th STREET
COSTA MESA 64M900. ,
..
'
•
~B DAILY PILOT FrtdaJ, °""""" !, 1972
One Of ~ Count11's Moat Beautiful Reataurants
~-.. J"' tilt be"
Feo4 -Cocktall1 -Eatertaiftment -Duclnt
Now Appearing
CHAPTER Ill
DON-JISSE-OA.VE
Tw1sd11y thrv Sunday 1:45 -1 :30
OPIN DAILY
lrMll.fut -LuMh -Dinner -Su"day Brunch
EAltY BUFFET DINNER-$3.25 to $4.25
Se..Jad Bar -Choice or 7 hot entrees s•aya 4 to 7:30 p.rn. • Mon.· Fri. 5 to 7:30 p.m.
31106 COAST HWY .. SOUTH LAGUNA -49'-2663
•
IN THE GALLERIES
ft.llJCKENTHALER CENTER -119 Buena Vi.sta Dr., Ful·
1erton. Hours: TUcsday-Suoday, 1-5 p.m. Olde Country Holi·
day Faire takes place through Dec. 23; pillows, quilt~. oma-
ments; stuiled animals, jewerly, crafts, arts, foods and
aweeta.
BOWERS MUSEUM-Exhlbil of school chlldren's Holiday
Art from acr05S the county, Evidences ol talent, joy, an-
guished rendering, intf06pect and frivolity. '111.rough Decem-
ber at Bowers MU8eUm, Santa Ana. Open 10 a.m. to 4:30
p.m., daily. Closed Mondays.
1...AGUNA BEACH MUSEUM OF ART -Art Auction. Surf
and Sand Motel, Laguna Beach, 1-4 p.m. Dec. 3. Catalogue
admission $5. Auctioneer Richard Challis.
SPACE ft.IUSEUl\t BUILDING -California fl.fuseum of
Science and Industry , Exposit loo. Park, Lo.s Angeles. Salon
showing of the paintings of AlckJ Luongo through Jan . 31.
JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast Hwy .. Corona
del !t1ar. One-man exhibition of sculptures by Guy Dill .
Hours: daily from 11 a.m. to S p.m.
PURCELL GALLERY -Art and Education Bldg., Chapman
College, 333 N. Glassell St., Orange. "Propulsions," a series
~ ......... -...... .... -~,
•NHtll H•lla<ll Sl"'k tJ.JI ,,.,, .. _ ""' ~-.... _. .. -. ................... r ... ~• --· .. ... A,111.
l~-<:M -
Holiday Faire Has OM Country Flair
or contemporary palntinp on canvas by Jeny Sblplro ol
Cotta Me11. Houra: 9 a.nt -5 p.m., Mondaf. ~ Priday.
FINE ARTS GALLERY -santa Ana Co•, 17th Stroot
and Bristol "Monwnentl of African ScuJptun," a 50-plice exl\lbit with work.t from 17 private and public CO)lectlool
throughout Soulbero Calliornla. Open wodrdaya lrom . 10
a.m. \o 3 p.m.
PEPPER TREE FAIRE -1514 W. Broadny, Anallelm.
Christmas Fe1Uval opens Nov. 16 and each weekend ther~
aller until Cbrlatmas. Open Thursday, Friday, Saturday and
Sunday from noon until 8 p.m. will feature wares of South-
ern Califomla Artisana. Free admission.
NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -2211 West Balboa
Blvd., Newport Beach. Major ret.roapectlve exhibition of
paintings, large watercolor$ and Chinese Ink drawings of. Reg-
inald Marsh, an important American artist active from the
late 20s until his death in 1954. Recent paintings by Jerrold
Burcbman in the entrance gallery.
Dollnl Sharkey, Karen Moriillaro, Wllll1m P1yoe, lloblrt
Krieger, Lawmice Le Brme, W~ W. Tennanl ud -
~--·-... ·~ ,· ~--"· NEWPORT llEACll my RAU -S1110 Newpcrt Rlyd., -
porl Belch. Houn: daily, a 1.111.>1 p.m. On alllbtl ,ll!!!ulb
Doceniber, lliuraUvo llCl')'llct by Bernie ~ ol Oan11i
de! Mar.
UCI GALLERY -Three ICll!pture• In color by Joyce Jlay-
alhl of Loi Aogeltl on dllplay In Art Gallery, Fine Arts
Village, throuib Dec. 10. Art Gallery open 'l\leedaya throuib
Sundays from DOCll to 5 p.m.
CALIFORNIA MUSEUM -SClence-Technology Education
Center. 700 State Drive., ExposlUon P a r k, Loi Aogelea.
Youth Art Exhibit Nl!•h•tlng of '5 drawinga by studmta
grades I through 12, ..Oectlng !heir visual lnterpftlatloM of
Mexican eultutt, Japanese culture, cbildren's alllrles by Leo
Politi or Oscar .Wilde's Fmy 'hles.
~~:~~ Chorale
In Concert 9" ALS
Served Monday, Tuesdly , Wednesdty, Thursday
RED SNAPPER ................. , 1.95
GRILLED SEA BASS ... '·'. ·~·.... 2.26 Ample Parli:in9 ' ==========~======ii,' Fine ltallat1 C:trbhae C:ockrails
2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY
·:COCKTAILS ENTERTAINMENT SH IP AHOY ....... -........ .-1--u·i -' 673-8267
MAHI MAHI . . • .. • • . • • . .. . • • • • .. 2.26
TOP SIRLOIN ..... ,............. 2.46
NEW YORK STEAK ••••.•••• ,.... 2.96
LOBSTER TAIL • . • .. . • • • • • • • • • • • 3.95
STEAK AND LOBSTER • • • • • • • • • • • 4.95
Andree Jordan, soprano.
llauglo-Lawrence and Arthur
Edwanll, barltooes, will be
toloiltt: for the "Cbrlatmas
Oratorio" by Heinrich Schutz
which will be a hJihlllbt ol lhe
flnt ln 1 aeries of five con-
certs I<> be prestnl<d by lhe
Loi Angeles Master Chorale
and Sinfool• Orchestra at the
Dorothy Chlndler Pavilion o[
lhe Music CenlB tllis ......., .
•
I ~
"
)
" I
•
. • ' . . • • • l
:=;-:.::: ·-tfil"I;,.,
NOW Al'PIAllNG
M«Xl°'1'N
~uair.l-
''Finest t.lcxican Food
in Orange Co."
1 w..11 ..... 11tll A.M. te 12:JO
DEL
REY
TRIO
Charbroil tr-f.ood ta Go
Opt11 7 D•Y1
Coc:kt1il1
Ent1rt1inm1nt
.. , 'IV. Ufll St. e ~-9761
Ctlll Mnt I ......... 11tJIA.M.te1:JO
~i 4rOl-ll MIDNICJHT
90.3 E ..... DAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962.7911
~,,. ll'Mllltllrwt • UUIDI A
., Gat'411" Gr.vi ~
PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES
·HAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE THE .
OLD DAYS
How Me 'n Ed's mobile owns speed delicious
piplnlt'hot pazu to your door In minutes.
For PIOll!Ph•rvlce phone 646-7136
(f4ewpcNt .. ach/COltl Maa-17th end Tustin) · /. /
ar 147·1214 (Hunijngton Beach-Beach and Hie!), /Jt/
Git the rizzl with PlzzaZ -~;: ~ 'lnen-~ ~-~,,__,.,.
ed
01ore
$J!J4
I I lban lal thin s1 per person now thru Dec.16!
llae'e A.,_ pt:
j I ' u ''r1210l ; s ...
K w•yr.wc;>++-
A ... fll...., ......... A,...,,, Osdpo4-
A ... ,,, ..,., ._.. ...
The Colt1ll'l ..... .UP will! a
Christ-Sll<PI •'I lleacue Kit
filled wi .. lllo l*'J. aokJeb brown
chickee ..-II dot Dali!'~ At this
speciol ....... ,_ fmllly and
• !riendl wtlw:.glil 11 •p. ' .-,_CHICUN
'. ~11 .....
llNTUCKf N11D CHICllM
ltll hit c.-...... ., c., ....... .
lltmlCl\' PllD Cl<ICll!t
14121 ,... c..t ....... .. -r· '•'""
Reserv•tions
Open Daily -5 p.m. to 2 1.m.
CLOSED MONDAY
TEMPLE GARDENS
C#{NS:s:BRestaurant
RICKSHA
COCKTAIL
Luncheon & Oinn•r Daily
IUfflT LUNCH 11 :J0·1 :JO
Mowffy tllr1I fridey
Featuring Exotic
Tropical Drinks
Real
cantonese Food '
eat here or
take homti
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORiolo 3..t560
Opu Y•r Aro ... hHy 12·12-frl . ...i s.t. 'tH J La.
n 0 ... .1, LU!~':!IR!!ER \....:~.,_..~ COCKTAILS
SEA FOOD-STEAK5-PRIME RIB
INTERNATIONAL ENTREES FROM $2.15
BANQUET FACILITIES
For A Festl•o HolMy Aff<tlr
h•orY• Our Spodal F«IAtloa
For Your Christ1nal °' New y..,. P..tles
"~M8Clic
ANCHOR INN
HOUSI °' SIAl'OOD
NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH
11 :JO le 2:10 Tooa. "'"' l'rl.
Ni9htly Din"•~cktail• 4 to 11 p.m.
Sund•y 2 to •:10 pm-Closed Mond•ys
' 1814 N. Coast Hwy. IEI Ccnnlno Real!
SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571
496-5773 499-2626
---"',,1111.. • 1.~~\\ ~Ollgp ~ GOURMET DINING
OYSTER BAR • COCKTAILS
P'ltllH LOCAL LOllTllt
Co: p'1to ...._. H.tl
BRANDIE IRANDON DUO, r, .... s.t.
ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR"
'4 to 7 p.m. Mon. thru Fri.
htlllM IN•., Mwt.l't, 12:11, Ill...., o,_ lnon Dayl\
JZI02 COAST HWY,
C•t c~_V•tlf7.'•111w1r1 LAIUNA NllUEL
·• ..
-ind .. "'""· fldit: "'-'°"" droiu If bMld pollto or ric1 HllfllliiM
1627'1,_.c...t Hw-it, Hunt ..... a.ct! 12131 9'2·1321
lunchlOlt • dinntr • /Hnqufll
'"" FLI ENTERTA!NMINT • 1 NIGHTS A WUll
'1ANCING * HAP HALL DUO
Wltll 0.. 'Mllll ... l•H
THE NU·TWO
Paul O'lltl• lo Wfilt -
SUNDAY 'l&UNCH
11 A.M. tti 2 P.M..
• • •
Tbe concert "Oiristmas
With the Chorale,'" a!WQ'&
one or the most JIOl'lllr ol lhe
,,.; ... will be ~ Dec.
17 at 7:30 p.m. and will II>
elude Frtncb. Sponhh and
Gennan carols.
Museum Names
Acting Head
The board of the Newport
Harbor Art Museum has ap-
pointed Betty Turnbull as tbe
museum's acting director.
Mrs. Turnbull succeed 1
Thomas · H. Garver, who
resigned recenUy to usume a new post in San Francisco .
t.1rs. Turnbull lw been a
member of the museum'• a·
blbitioll committee slace 1117
and prevk!Ully served as
curator of eXhibltiohl.
Rick Nelson
At Disneyland
Rick Nebon ond The Stone
Canyon Band have been signed
for a 1peclal New Year's Eve
concert at ~. Dec.
31. Engagemmt mart'
Nelson's debut at the part.
C!osed Sundays
•
• We ire loc1ted next to
tho Moy Co. In South
Co.it Pleu . • 1 c-plot• wl" soup o< Nlod.
Clloic• of potatHI or rice. • • • • • •
1 209 Palm , Balboa 675-5774 1
• t ........... P.-tf u--.1 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
MEADOWLARK
COUNTRY CtUI
Lark-Room
DINNER SPICIALS
Cholc• of So111p •t Sola4
l•k•cl '•t•t• or llu Pll•f e 8orl19 lroM
.... ,.,. • o....rt
WIDNISDAY -Top Slrloln StHk P.-?!
THURSDAY -Primo Rib z·-·· s-,,_...
PllDAY -Beef Str09onoff -z·-·--SZ. ti
IA TUI DAY -T ourno4o1 of loef ----··.. "'21
SUNDAY - 2 Lob1ter Toil1 •z_F_._,...._7•· $1.10
.Or•H9e Cou11t1''• T.,, ~-t
JOE Ll•GINS
Tho Ol'ltll"'I H~~ -;>· WILLY JA
l•11q11et Focllltl•• "' t• 450 '"'''
1~712 •aAHAM AYIMUI CM W...,J
HUNTIN•TON llACH 17141 146-1116 11111 1'2•1tl4
•
.,, ... .....,
--..... io.1 .......
~A%' °"~1" .Pe/,
a' ~ ~ * ~'9Rs~~
Suca1/at·S../ /iOM
Coplai.oCoo4~
broikr. Delkocia
from IMS.-S.ar.
M1J611i{iofMHorw
l'inl.
C11t1111 I L111tt1 •• ---SUNDAY IRUNCH
•
! • • ! • ! Friday, O~tmber ~· _1_'17_2 ________ DA_l_LY_PIL0!__ 2:9
Channel 50 Offers
Program of Variety TV DAILY LOG
l ..... " A$¥ ~ ....
VJaristmas Story Retold
Channel 50, Orange County's
only color television statlon.
offers varied -programming
Monday through Friday, 4
p_.m. to 10 p.m.
MONDAY
-"Happy Birthday, Wanda
June" discussed by playwright
Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
7 :80 to&e rnatlon a l
Performance -"Phedre" See
ll.!tlng Dec. ti at 8:30 p.m.
1:00 Woman As Painter -i :IO Electric Company An examination or woman as Entertainment, music a n d h the creator, the artist, as op-
wnor to teach reading skills, posed to her traditional role as
produced by the Children's the subject of art, or an
Patricia Neal and Cleavon Little portray me m bers
bf a rural community in the Blue Ridge Mountains
o{ Virgiriia on Earl Hamner Jr. 's "The H omecoming:
A Christmas Story." The acclalmed drama about
"the simple love, pride, wonder and reve rence that equal ~ the true meaning of Ch ristmas" will be re-
broadcast at 9 p.m. tonight on Chan nel 2.
Television workshop. artislic ornament.
4:31 Mister Rog er s ' S:SO Playbouu New York -
Ne.ighborbood -Variety pro-· ''Throne of Blood " Akira
gram communicating with Kurosawa's 1957 film classic.
young children, hosted by starring Japanese idol Toshiro
Fred Rogers. Mifune. is based on Willian1
Holiday
Classic
In Laguna
5:00 Sesame Streel -Hour-Shakespeare's Pt1acbeth.
long program for preschool WEDNESDAY
children, pr o du ced by 4:00 Electric Company
Children's Television Network. 4 : 3 o MI st e r Rogers'
6:09 Maggie and th e Neighborhood
Beautlful Machloe - Maggie's 5 : O O M Is t e r Rqgers'
guests exercise in "Chairs" in Neigllborhood
varying fo rms of fi tness and 5:00 Seaame Street
grace. 6:00 Family Game
6:38 Focus Orange County -"Paul 's Case" Explores the
"Power Crisis V e r s u s connict of values facing· the Ecologistl~ Robert B e c k , radical young -g_~e bent on
Edison ,Division Manager, and reordering our p o I i t I ca I ,
Ecology Group D i r e c t 0 r , economic and social systems
James Somers discuss pros but now assimilated into the
Two weeks of holiday en-and cons of Ediso n Company establishment.
lertafnment for Lbe entire e 1: pan di n g its steam 6:30 FRENCH' CHEF -
fa mily is the offering being generating plants with host "Brunch for a Bunch" Cooking
d b the L M It
Jim Cooper. techniques explained a nd
ma e y aguna ou on d ed b 1· Child ?:IO Special of the Week _ emonstrat y Ju 1a · .
Community Playhouse through "Profile in Music _ Shirley 'i:OO SOUL! -Farrakhan,
Dec.17.Theschedule includes Verrett" An in -d ept h in-The Minister"
two Thursday and Friday terview, conducted by Bernard 8:00 P..tasterpiece Theatre -'·Van ity Fair" Par! IV 'The 'ghts t a 30 ·lh t Levin, of Miss Verett's life n1 a : p.m., w1 wo w1·cked Nobleman' B ec k and well-known operatic roles. Y
SaturdayandSunday matinee8 I : 31 International Sharp teases d eg e nerate
look at tlis cartoons from lhe
past and his work In filn1 to-
day.
6:30 The Ju11t Generation -
''Drug Laws" Their effect and
some proposed changes. "ltfeX-
ican Customs," a skit fron1
the Ace Trucking Company.
'i :OO Tbe Plot to OverthrOl-l'
Chrlstma1"
8:00 Focus Orange County-
TV HIGHLIGHTS
BS D 8:00 -"Rudolp h the Rednosed Reindeer "
A r epeat of the animated musical classic • .narrat~
by Burl Iv~, which· features famous reindeer who
runs a\vay with another outcast.
~BC 0 9:00 -"Touch of Madneu." A young
\\Oman \\'ho ques tions her own sanity returns to the
haven of her youth but finds it transformed into a
house of horrors.
" Power Crisis Ver s u s
Ecologists" See listing Dec. Friday Saturday
11 at 6:30 p.m.
FRIDA v Evening Morning
8:30 Special of The \\'eek -DECEMBER 8 DECEMBElt 9
"Profile in t.tusic -Shirlev ,.----------~ 7:00 II (I)..,_ S.Mltlr
\'errett." See Usting l>c(. 1'1 APOLLO 17 covtlAGE 8 9 mJ Ill. Nnlllt
at 7:00 p.m. ., ,., . " m-·-4 (lO pi.lfllWlll II llluitd tt dil"ft -. : Electric Company Mll'llUI ltOtlce. ttl •M J Mtwtnls, 1'4 llll Olctric C.JNillY R1plays II t
4 : 3 0 MI s I e r Rogers' Cfttra.1• t i Ille Hitltt of Alellt 17. 10:30 & ll:JOAM
Neighborhood
5:00 Sesame Street
6:00 Book Bew:. -"J\.tary
Todd Lincoln : Her Life and
Letters" Linda Levitt Turner,
co-editor of the first comolete
edition of the letters of Ma rv
Todd Lincoln. will be Robeit
Cromie's-guest.
6:30 Maklnj:l ThlnJ:S Grow -
Bring daffodils. hyacinths. and
early tulips into the house with
special tips for apartment
~:30 Woman a!I Palntt r -
See listing Dec. 12 al 8:00 p.m.
9:00 Firing Line% -"Hate
America" Arnold Biechman
and Dotson Rader. represen-
ting two generations of Colum-
bia Universitv liberal thinklnJ:!.
will debate the significance of
the radical movement.
~---------~ 7:.JO ODu1J's TrMllHY
1:00 e o om mm,.,.. 00 f'.•,ua =: m®J -0 Ponderou 0 rn (I) .llttM• nw
0 Wild Wild West (I'\ TY I ClauillHll m The flintsltnes ~ Ulltll Ruu .
(!)Gomer Pyl1 'USMC m Movits: (C) "P1r1trooptf'' (d11)
@ Allee Hllltts '54-Alan Ladd, Susan Stephen.
fE Mi Dulce [riillOflllla "Tiie Sliper" (mys) '52---Mhur
ED Hodiepodp Udct fraru. M1rie WindSOI'. 0~ Mryberry RfO (D) Mister ltogers' Ntfttiborll"4
Q!) l'layhouw 40 1:00 0 (1) Bu1s BunnJ
E,E Tllrtt Stot1ts 0 m Pb1t Panther
':30 CJ) Ho11n'1 K11HS l1 khll Wapt Tllulre
0 Movit: (C) (90) "Poctetful ti D (1) (J) Tiit <h1111nds Mi1K!t~" Cond. {tom) '61---Glenn ffi Country Mu.le
ford , Bette Davis. EEl @ Ses1me St1ttl Repli)'S at
(I) CBS Mews 9:JOA M.
OQ} Mtrw Griffin Show 11:30 0 (j) Sabrina
m ,1.nc1y cn1rrt11 o ~ m The ttol[Nldub
(!) Gil1i1an'1 l&llAd ! 0 (X}@ m AIC Sllpersbr Iii•
(1'1 C~'!: Ul!n1 THb llllfllll'llttt ie: (C) "The Red laron"
t!) Astr1nom7 I 9:00 EJ 00 .lm.uinl CM1
1 •• ... : '1
Hey Kids! The Greatest Christmas
P~rty You Can Imagine-FREE!
at 2:30 p.m. Performance _ "Phedre" A noblema n Lord Steyne into in-
The production is tile classic stunning French TV ballet traducing lier into society.!-----------
Christmas opera by Gian· based on the ancient Greek ";;'e~ her husband discovers I\'¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥JJI.
Carl M nolti , • -·" and Phaedra myth, combi'nes a s e as been accepting money o e , '.rulJ<llll and jewles from Steyne,
the Night Visitors", with Doris libretto by Jean Cocteau with Rawdon challenges him to a
m Jo1111t CaTSOll 0 ~ m Roun Htlidays
~ l;rMn Ams O MMlt: "C111ffn" (wes) ·~
a!) Action Theatrt Don 81Jry, Robert Lawery.
t:f} Dot 42 PM 0 Moril: "99 Riwr stnet" (mys) '' ••
Bring your folks to the Reuben E. Lee to
see Santa's bre~thtaking arrival. You
• won't believe your eyes!
; EnjoYthe special Children's Show by a
host of entertainment groups high-
lighted by Skiles & Henderson .
Surprises galore-games, prizes, bal-
loons, pop corn, slurpies and carnival
rides.
A really sensational party ypq can't
, a.f(ord to miss at t~e-~f..~ •.
Newport Beach Sunday,~-.17;-t
12 noon to 5 P.M.
Shi Id . al . .n.__. the choreography of Milko duel. e s as music uu~•or; s bl k parem e , and stars 9:00 The Toy That Grew Up
Jerry McCulloch as stage ballerina Clfl,ir Motte. _ "An Hnur with Mack Sen-
director; end concert pianist 9:38 30 Minutes With -t" p ·b h Elizabeth Drew interviews net ays tr1 ule to t e King
Paul Karadyi supplying the of Slapstick with three Sennett
music. one-to-one with Clark Mac· comedies: "l.llve, Speed, and
Hal O'Neal is creating the Gregor. Thrills."' "Our Dare-Deveil
c h o r e 0 g r a p h y , and the nJESDA Y Chief." and "Teddy at the
Festival of Arts Chorale is 4:09 Electric Company Throttle " starring G I or i a
under the direction of Jack C : 3 I M I ate r Rogen' Swanson and Wallace Berry.
Kre!tlng. Bert ~tey has Nelghborllood THURSDA y
designed the oc:.twnM, Carl 5:• Sesame Street 4:00 Electric Company
Callaway 1Upplies the lighting I :• XDow Your AaUqaes -4 : 3 O Mi 1 t e r Rogers'
for Richard Andenon'1 set. How to com pare a reproduc-Neighborhood
Jane Westbrook aod 1.ucllle tioo with an antique and the 5:00 Sesame Street
van Beeber. are a1tematiDg .secrets-of English silver 6:00 Artists In America _
the role of the nioiher. and marks; bd6ted by Ralph and ';Jules Feiffer" A ftm • filled
• A.r;nahl ts sung by Da'lid ·Buiz. Terry Kovel. visit with ore of America's
· Bifl~~;.and,·_-:6:~3";;;;EUi;;;;:·o~l.~N~o:;;rt<>;;n~Re~v:;;le;;w;;s :;;;most~;::r;:;es~pect;:;;;;ed.~~salirist;;;;' ~· ~s~,=an.::d.::a Rlchard SUtlilt ftiieor ·ar' the I
' UJree Kings, wt(h"Carloe Gallo
as tbe Page. 1 Reservatkln! may be made
by calling 494-0743 after 1 p.m.
Tuesday through 'Saturday.
, BY . THE BOATLOUS . -
• • • • •• • • • •
At Callfomi1's Most Modern Marina
· INERSt ILLA.GE .·~
'&\. Open 'Tll·9 P.M. through Christmas ~ W By Candle Glo · Murata Pearl
, Candy Calliope ·Rautronics •
...
; : • The Elephant Shop Needle Mania ~· •
· • Hiclcory Farms Pike's Gilts & Cards ~
.-JW Jewelry Design Social Butterfly • • •,;
Kellenburg Marine Whimsey Hollow .
-SCATS PRESENTS -
GYMNASTICS CAROUSEL
OF C~~PIONS
OLYMPIANS -MUSIC -GYM WHEEL
DEC. 15th -8:00 P .M.
ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER
CATHY RIGBY
t M011 .. r11.ott11,..,
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Visir~SM1PMNl1
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l r«••Y
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525-1526
lonc•ln A••· _,.,
·~· 121-4070
S•nOloa•f •J
(1pl1tr1no
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Sii Of .I.DAM & fVf fl )
• SWffT SIJG.1.1 (I I
!ll 1111111 11 MUIT II Wllll•t.•1111 111
.. 1ch l lvd.
, 5o. o! G1rlllln G•••• I•••••• 5]4·6212
(MllLfl llOlllSON
"THI MICMANK" (PO)
PUllS • lff VAN Cliff
MAOJflfKflfT 7 llDI (PG)
• lm< .. n •••· ••U ol llnOll
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Sanla An• ,, ......... ..
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541-6011
El) Uttlt R1scall '53-John Ply!lf, Evelyn Ke)'IS.
7:00 0 [1)"tJ It) NeW$ ID Movie: (C) "Ult of tht Mohl-
0 Bowlln1 for ttonats tans" (wes) '60--Josa Mailo, Luis
@ Truth or ConHCjuenees lnduni.
(1) Circus t!) Miiter R1p11' lfef1hbtr!IM
C:J What's M1 l ine1 t!) Ci11t Ill 11 T1rd1
ID I Lovt Lucy 9:30 fl Scooby-Doo
aJ I Drearn· ot Jeannie 0 ~EI) Tht B1flleys
@ Wor111 Prtu (6) TI1u1na: Window ti t111 SOllllt
ff} B1rte!1 0 (])TIM BrldJ Kids
ED The LMIJ' Arts I (i) Cartoon Ca/'lllJ1I "1 El Amor T1t11t C.11 dt M11jt1 1)1 Su H11lll:
@;Movie: "Court M1rtial ti ll11J' 10:00 Q ®J ED f'rl fHtball Cltvtl1nd
Mitchell" B1owns ws. Cinclnn11L
f!il "'"' ...., o m (iJ .......,. m Spted bctr Q'!!i Ronet SU!ts
7:30 0 ! IJlC1lL I Tbt Ni1ht lthtrt 10:301J (I) Jo• Mill tilt Pmycab
Christmas (R} O Morie: "l.nt of tilt tr.W ...,_.
0 Hollywtld Squa"s (wes) '43-llmes Ellboti.
0 Mowlt: (Zkr) "llldi1111 Aveaut" 0 rn (I) Kid Ponr
(dra) '62-01n1 Andren Q Mwlt: (C) "lltUt Tiii" (dr1)
(I)T1 Tell the Truth ·~erlin1 H1ydtn, Arthur Franz.
00 Tiit Thrlllsteten 18 l;olfll Slllti•I Jlllhl fJ liii1Uo11 $ Mowie: (Zh') '1111 Ill-fD MIM loctfJ' lf.i,tl'*Mod
ttrns" ldra) '&2 -MichHI Callan, 11:00 O C1J Tttt flllltstNa
Clifl Robertson, Suzy Parter.
@I Tiie Nft Prict· b ltiPf m n1t c1r1 m (]) Dfa1ntl m Los Bmrl7 de l'eral'flllo
fD (.lj) Will StJfft Wetk
APOWt 17 CCMMlf
All pr.sr1r11111Jn1 11 111bjtct W cMrlfl
without notice, OR 111 J flttwMI, ft/
cover•&• of the llishl ol Apollt 17.
m Ualamed WorW CIJ M9bi1t MoMt S111W m Tiie Eipltr•rs 0 m g) Tiii Addams fa•llJ m f11nk)' P111ntom
1:00 8 (JJ I lliiC1AL I Rudolph the RM· : ::..!
nosed Rtindtitr fD ltcha Ub"
0 fiOl m !."1nford Ind Sen a This Wetk ,. "" fHltl.IM
0 Cl) @J Cl) Thi lrldJ 81111dl ll:JO (j) Mftit: "Ollf of 1111 lllt" (do) m Ho11n's Keton @) Perry Mnoi -Geol'at B11nt Vi11lnla M._ m Hnlanc1 ,.._,_ 0 (]) m Udsvilll _... .. ,.. m Ullb•H WtrW
fl() Qll WllhimatH WMl In lnilW Q) MMe: (C) "Celnlss tf iltlodu'" m En1t1tt ..... PmtnU <ldvJ ·s1_...wory c.11ioun.
a!) llMll fI) Dlctric C..p•IJ m Mftlt: "TlMi .... •• ""rid .... Alt&moon
l:JO 0 ®J (£) n. 1Jt11t PIOplt u rn@ m"' P•rtridit , .. ltf 12.-00 a rn Atdllt'• n F....i. m Merw f;ritfln Show 81Mrl w.,_ Dube
@ Just l;eneretioll fJ (I) m Thi Monkltl
fD Cltywatcl!en G MMt: (C) "I• lltlt" (wa)
9:00 CEJ (ii) I I PfC1o1.l I Thi Homec:r>M-'53--Glor&t Mol\tJol'lllry,
1111: o\ Christmas St,,ry (R) ID Thi ClllC _, Mn. Mult
0 OQl €E Chost story @ CAE: C)plll lhfwllllJ MIO
0 @llJ al R••• 222 ED Mister Rlpfs' "ti....,,_.
f"'l ~1lzrl 111 Ai!vent1111 (tJ Titt Elplom1
ft) Nunea Tt Plrdoll1t1 12:30 A C1'1 lnt lde foalbl11
ED 11!1 M1sterpltcl ni.1trt (I) 0 (]) GJ A1111ria11 lllMl.ttM
€E1 IM Co1q11Ult m ElnMntlrJ ..... Cl' TIM VlrsiNl11 (HJ C.U: Ulln1 Tt1b lrr&tlllrtrttlf
a!) Dra1111 fD Sal• Stml
!:JO " I R11'l,r.' €m S.WO. Allps 0 rn (I) I!!) Tiii 06l1 ~ 9 Tiii Bil Vaftty
018.... 12;45 0 Cl) hi FIOlMA f'fl-CIM Shew
IO:OOl!ltBBm...,. J:OO O (l)f'rl fHtltlll Washiniton .. It m i.... Dallis.
0 Cil Ci) Ii!) lM -· ""' 0 ~.. """' ........ G lorh «ar1ot1 Pmll'll nn1111. o 11o11tr 0111tt
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ED IMI ID Stu! Tfll1 m LU 111111111 m ..... CiID Pmnltr 40 @E 0111 111 II T1rdt m K111pn. of ttit s.. m c.iH1a11 .ldvtfttllfl
It.JO 0 T1lk lldl tif.} Sporb Ch1lleq1 m P•tli~t J1111Ctio11 1:30 o rn oo m eon111 rHtlltll n.
!.t)l BIR MOJ'lfl' Jetimtf C...nlt ltwl a-'..._. o -= 1<1 ., .. ., -(""'
.
'
Mariner's Art Gallery Yankee Peddler
Volley Hi Puerta del Sol \
.. :
Grand Lind
Singen
EE DlltdOlt SportNNi. '50 -Geora• Monlaomll)'.
11:00 II 0 0 ID m al Newt m Cll111pi011Jlllp ao.tln1 J
(}](I)~ """ ID Mlm ~"''" ...........
• •
' . .. .. •' •••
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I '
•
feed Your Whole Crew al:
The Brig
DISCOVElt AN IXCITING
VILLAGE IY-THE·SEA
•• , Something for efft"(on• • , •
mom, pop, th• kids, the 1onor, the
VoV""et. th• connoiueur . , •
ot Oona Point
The Deck Hand •
'
Special GWMl 1972 Otymptontl
Kim Chau, Debbie Hill, DogMGr Hlntnava
Pius Ca1t of 70 All ~rl c;y,.nam
la~nc. lectm, Vaulting HorM, Uneven Ian,
,.,_ b:.,d .. , °'"tt ancl lrt4i \'iclual PerfonMra
rtoceHI to Help s.nd SCAT GYMNASTS on a
Wedd Wi4-C1n11p1tltktft atMI lxhilN'*' Tow
bsmtd StllS $4 Ind $3
Gtnerll Admission $2.00
Ticket lllfonnaticM (7141 635-5000
' Titk•b avaOable at Anaheim~ Center,
AH ui..rty, Mu1..i & n ....... Aeond"-
•-DON'T MISS TllS ONEI •
N1wporl ,., ... ,y
•I •• ,., 51.
545-331
... IA Tl Mtt't Miii trt~
.I. llP.1.IATl PIACI !P•I
"111•.UAIAIKIN lAIT O• TMI llD 1101 lOVlll (P&i
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• Mtrie: "Mn Miii ... .....,.. 01)Alllt lllldwlla
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T Nn, Chuclt 8'ny ind Poto stll Ill T• (ltlrl)
114'11Chl'l t1m111t1st coort. 1111 ... ..,.._
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tB CtlntrJ Mi.ilk QI TIM f ....
38 DAIL V PILOT
CAPT. KANGAROO
Bob KHsh•n
Captain Kangaroo Ages Well
EDITOR 'S NOTE -Bob
Keshan parlayed ll purt·
rime page's job aL C&S
f1110 tlu." longest runnnig
(hild-rr11 's .sl101v (Hl 1elev1·
siou. 1-le's Ca ptain Ku11u·
flroo. A11d he 's serious
about it.
By PAT r.tlLTON
NEW YORK (AP I -Cap.
lain Kangaroo. proprietor 01
the longest-lived children"s
shO\\' on television . doesn't
think of himself as babysitter
or leacher. J~e is a com·
municator.
"We are not a show . we are
a visit," he says. "We try to
build up an intimate rela·
tionship with the child at
home. Our prime purpose is to
entertain. Then to educatl'.
There is no one restraining a
child from getting up and
walking away, so we must
first attract the child's at·
tcnlion."
Cliildren's Slioiv Outlasts All Others on Televisio1i
That from tht' man 'A'ho fi rst
broke into television as the
horn-honking clown Clarabcll
on the 1-lowdy Doody Show,
and who now at the age of 45
is the patriarch of children's
attention. li e recent I v
celeb rated his I 7 l h arl.
nive.rsary as star and pr~
duccr of Captain Kangaroo.
ll began .on Oct. 3, 1955. Bob
Keeshan, aged by wig and
makeup for the television
cameras, hums softly to
himself as he plies a feather
du ster inside the "Treausrc
House." "I'm Kangaroo," he
says. "Captain Kangaroo. Why
do they call me Kangaroo?
It's because I have huge
pockets on my jacket,"
Thus did the Kan garoo
dynasty begin with t h a t
grandfatherly face and those
hu ge pockets -pocket s
capable of holding marvelous
Wlcxpccled things a
banana. or a pitcher of lc<1. or years, Keeshan comments. would like to see a minimum
even so1ncthing live and w\g. "Basically, children ha ve re-or violence because it is not a
gly. mained lbe same. There have typical part of life. "Very few
been some external changes. of us are subject to violence
The morning sho\Y hils an 1'hey are more sophisticated. every day," he says.
esti1naled al!d!cncc uf nine The.y ha ve a fund of gener.3 1 "Children are intelligeflt
million daily. 25 percent or knowledge and their cOflcept human beings," says the Cap·
which is adult. starting a;; of the world around them is tain. "Whal our job Is, Is to
you ng as 2-year.olds. far greater than ever as a cater to their intelligence and
"\Vh en 1 first started doing result of the media, but I don"t develop it ih good ta ste ."
children's television. I had no think they are wiser." Keeshan still finds his role
inte rest in being an actor or "Children still grapple with as Captain challenging. He has
working in television. I \Vas the same problems as how to flever considered the possibili-
slill in college and intended ~o put their knowledge to work." ty that the show could go off
be a lawyer," Kee shan says. Keeshan, who participates in the air. "lf It went off CBS,
He worked part·time at CBS governmental and FCC hear-which I can't conceive. I'm
as a page and did re search 111 ings, believes that children do sure it would go to another
the side to help Bob Smith of not learn violence from TV. network."
the Howdy Doody Show. A "That's nonsense," he says. tte says that as long as he
cordial relationship devel-0ped. ''That ch.ild is going to learn wants to continue doing the
and Bob Smith offered him a how to rob somewhere else . It show, he can't see not being
fill·in position as Clarabell the is not TV that triggers him: able to do it.
Clown. , It's in his background." "It has become an in-
"! take children's TV very He added however, that he stilution."
seriously ,'' Keeshan say s1----:=================:;---'"without intending ii to sound like a crusade or someU,ing." RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENTS
Looking back on the 11 START DECEMBER 14th
'Man of La Mancha' TICKETS NOW.
AT BDXOFFICE ·OR BY MAIL
Classic Becomes a Film Classic
Bv GEORGE LEIO \L
Of tt11 0.11'1' Plllt St11ff
The impossible dream of
seeing a perfect lransforma·
Rubenstein
To Perform
Artur Rubinstein w i 11
perform an aU-Chopin recital
: program on Tuesday evening,
--Dec. 12, in the Music Center·s
Pavilion.
The pianist will make only
one appearance this season for
Music Center Presentations.
Ru b ins te in will play
Chopin's Barcarolle, Opus 60:
: 1\vo Valses ; Sonata in B
' minor, Opus 58, in four
movements: Ballade No. 4 in
F minor, opus 52; Nocturne in
O flat major, Opus 'll. No. 2:
and Six Eludes, from Opus 10
and 25.
~do
•....o«I 11.t.tM •• •' ... -M l•Mlev1 II~• hi• •• 01. S.-:U.
THE NEWEST OF
THE SKI EPICS
"This Is Skiing"
Al'o IPGJ
JEAN CL.AUDI llllY
"Snow Job"
WATCH '°I
"Pill AND TIWI"
KIDS LIKE
UNCLE LEN
NATIONAL GENERAL
THEATRES
tion of a smash musical stage
hit into an engrossing, en-
tertaini ng film is realized in
the Arthur Hiller production,
United Artists' release "P.-lan
of La Mancha:".
Another impossible dream.
that of Orange County au·
diences seeing a premiere, G·
rated, holiday season movie at
nearly the same time it is of-
Renata Tehaldi
Recital Feb. 26
fered in L<ls An geles. is also
being realized. The Cinedome
21 , Orange screens the film
version of the Broadway
classic beginning Thursday.
The film. too, 1s a classic. It
may be appreciatt'CI on any or
all of several levels tastefully.
beautifully. and simply ex·
plored in this film version of
Dale Wasserman's.work baSed
on the Cevantes Spanish novel
"Don Quix ote."
Peter O'Toole sings and acts
the Cerv~ntes-Quixote role
magnificenlly.
Sophia Loren's earthiness
and heretofore unheard vocal
talents abound in her robust
portrayal of the pedestal-
bound Dulcinea raised from
the scullery maid, tavern wen-
ch Aldonza .
James eoco·s Sancho Panza
is everything one might expect
and more. He sensitively ex·
On one level, one might ex·
peel the femini st movement to
be upset by Alonza 's in-
ternalized e I e v a t ion to
Dulcinea -the lady within
who deserves c h i va I rou s
respect of men.
On another level, humanists
might ovt>rlook this playback
of the majority sex' plight of
centuries, in favor of the en·
couragement to persue idetils.
BOXOFFlCES 'OPEN FROM.12 NOON TO 9 PM DAILY
wiThitiiiE ~\:.= n2Iiill
Among the ideals so ably pursued in this runaway (this ... _ .......... _, ...... , .. ;1.01.l.ltll•'-""'~"·"""'uc:~R-... l--.
I .. u..-.u;llJ~l9'VO ... .S:ll.•""-lSW•1 ...... lf\110~ time !ta y) production, is a 0"1-.G1 J..,DIAIOc.--•••.Cl<Al' ..... A•L..-.e.w.11 ....... -(7Mlm-ut1
new filmdom musical slan· r1c~ot• .,.., •I So. c..1.-M~•1., ea~ 1J7 So. Mi~ st.&. .11 dard Of excellence. Laurence Mltlyol Tocbl .0.11nclo1 (Phono MA. 7·l14S for ne1re1t 10c.toon) plu1
w.11,ch< Mu•ic City $to••• & UOf'"-Y I <'-•t "-•nd o• """"" 466-l~~l
Rosenthal de.serves plaudits I -~~ ............... ~ .......... ~~~~~~~~~"'io"'io"'io~~-1 f-0r his adaptation of the Mitch 1-
Leigh score.
A best·selling sowidtrack
album is certain to result
from the pure excitement
Rosenthal · whips into the
repetitive, brassy orchestra-
tion.
"Nlglll ....... , xmi.'" & ''W;>dly w ... w OJ MoltMr GMM''
Al All Tllmlllrtt • S.r. & Su-ii. fM>lf.. • l~:JI AMI J:JI P.M.I
Renata Teba1di. iA·ho has
reigned as diva supreme in
m1111y of the world's leading OP-
era houses, will appear in a
rare sing)e-recital appearance
on Monday, Feb. 26. at 8:30
p.m.
Mme. Tebaldi's recital will
be an additional event of
Music Center Presentations'
1972·73 season.
plores the nuances of the role.r----::;;~;:;::~;:----1 He is the realist ·with a capaci-
ty to overlook reality while
supporting the ideals or his
knight errant master.
I
A RIOTOUS
HAPPENING I
larbN StffholMI
'1 RAQUB. 'WELCH ..
KANSAS CITY ' IOMllR
Illy• O'Neol
"WHAT'S UP
DOC?"
-AIM -
A TM"-' O• S.lh!
wJth OIYMpk Ski CM.,
"SNOW JOB"
Jean-Claude Killy
IOl'll Color-RotN CPGI m ME!ROCOlOR -o
c..t. s..-, ... .,.... 2:00
CHRRL.E!I BRCN!iatl
''THE MECHANIC"
(S]Cll °""9111,.....
JAN-MICHAEL VINCENT · KEENAN WYNN
JILL IRELAND
WAlllAllOl•l
CHARLES BRONSON ln
"RED SUN" (PG)
2 ... AlCW•21VIUO
GOLDIE HAWN in
"BUTTIRflllS ARI Fiii"
tMtlltAllllJ
~ICll.lf3• MSIMPfOKtQIG -
8.ARBRA OMAR
STRE™D · SIMF \~J ... ~:.'=!:. IUNN.t' 6 ,~~o;-.
rtft .... ....-,~· ..... ueu11,·
l'M CA• NI POllYll"
•tlll&tll••
Ice
skating
eveiyday.
MIU YllllDE
SHO,,INli CINTlllt
2701 H11rbor llwJ .at Adami
Co5t11 M11,1 , C11lif. 92b26
Tel. 17141 979-8880
JMC-·1:11111~
•
"IAllOH ILOO~' Ray Mllluiol • • ..., Griw
"THING WIT
1 HEADS" IPOI
H;tu•11w X·r•llilll """' "IS TNl!lll!' s•x
11.l'Tlll DEATN"
··~UTN•Y SWOPf"
..... i. Celwl IX)
People used to pay. $5,000 a voyag~ to enjoy the wo nders of the
Queen Mary. You can do it for about the price of a movie. From
the enormous engioe room to the towering bridge, you 'll see this
incredible ship as no passenger ever saw her. You'll also take a
fascinating voyage of adventure and discovery through Jacques
Cousteau's Living Sea , a com plete attraction in itself. It's all on the
Queen Mary and you're welcomed aboard any day, rai n or shine.
. ·· •" . ..,
• . ...... · ·. .......
BILLIE HOLIDAY
LIST TIMES
MONOIY
OEC. 11 DY SINGS THE
BLUES
'Af.lJJ.X" ..V-•1 ~ 'Y ·l f.j.4l(")QAl(;f>I ono SE.l<9'f c;.o..>G¥
1"1~1()'-". •. ...-~,,, l~~:,:S 11-{fl\J!i
..
o:flC IJO'!OJ flll.~r !.Xl ....._,~% co-\olCJl"r.ng QIC.Kl-1.0 P11'/CP
·~oec1i'IA.\l>IVS<,.r,,• r .~\~U j.:-.P~!P(;T\jo:{ .. ···.,
Ab•Al•11 Arkiit-S.lly l•Utn11••P'•I• Prntit• IRJ fA
"lAST OF THI RID HOT lOVIRS" -.
OUI CHRISTMAS HIOW STAln TWIS. DICEMlll lt
Steve McQueen ''THE GETAWAY" Ali MocGraw
-HELD OVER-
HEY CALLED IT AN ACCIO
HE CALLED IT MURDE
IT WAS THEIR CONSPIRAC
IT WAS HISS
&
"JmlOI o o••• TH•ATR .. ••• 0 •••• 949·3102 •••••
Atlt•O• AT AOAM• ,0.T• Me•A ....... •l> 0-
M!D •• ',......!!' "' ..., ... •••· ?If.'~!. , 1 ~ PHJ
0.r Cllrith"•I Sh•• 5t•rt1 Jl111r. Otc•111~1r 21
~:;·~ ''UP THE SAND BOX" ~.,
'"''
JAMES GARNER -KATHARINE ROSS
WHO DID IT?
1 Man's best frielll ...
' ..-aman? ••::;y.only
. lhelr1e1°s
METROCOLOR
EOWARDa
_HARBORA2
H•tlOll l lVD •T WILSOll fT.
CDSTA M! S• 64f.Ol"'J
--TheWRA'111
of GOD
-·A ~
-::!: -
0.r Chrisf111•s SMw Sf•rtl Fri4•Y DK. 22
2nd at CINEMA WIST # ;~1
U•4'°C"°'"""'· .)MA.t ~ ...... ,. "nll IUl5lAll"
luTTllFUll All Pllr"' "TMl M!CMANIC"' NOW PU.YING
(tNfM& VII.JO MISSION YllJO IH·••tO
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers-
r.---+-------------· -· -
DAIL 'I PILOT :J J
Four New Theater Groups ~orn • Ill 1972
Just u 1971 was a baMer
year in Orange County com-
munity theater fo r the overall
i"7',f.!,+=..;;;atur!ty-and renewed am-
bition of most of i l s
playhouses, so 1972 will be
remembered as a year of
growth for most or the
established groups and the
natal year for a nun1ber ol
new ones.
ather & La~. currently performing at the New-
Beach Hungry Tiger, 355 E. Coast Hwy .. try
bridge the so-called generation gap with its show-
ce format that appeals to all age groups. Sur-
ding featured vocalist Myrna Jay are, clock·
Pete Wilson, Bob Sherman, Bobby Denniss
Jim &kew.
MOONCHILDREN
A comedy by
• • • Mich••' Wellw
The year just entered into
the record books saw four new
theaters take their first steps
while one, the yearling Buena
Parle Players, drew the fmal
curtain. Most impressive of
the newC<lmers was t h e
FuJlerton Civic Light Opera,
which staged thrre musicals
-each better than the last -
and appears firmly ensconced
in the county's cultural -sce ne
for years to come.
'lbe olher firstborns were
Newport Becich's Pacific
Group ~ater and Orange's
center Ensemble Theater -
which staged one productio!l
each in tbcii: ini~l year -
and the Placentia Playhouse,
which produced two, picking
up Buena Park's canceled "Of
Live Theater
Thee I Sing" as its opener.
IT WAS A year <i cootlnued
demonstrations of ambition tn
the area of heavy drama,
lhough the overall quality slip-
ped a notch from the lofty
level of 1971. It was a rather
shaky year for musicals, wit h
at least three playhouses
sounding sour notes, · but
outstanding productions of
"1776" at Fullerton CLO and
"A Funny Thing Happened on
the Way to the Forum " at
Westminster served to balance
tbe scale.
It was the year that Orange
Coonty was inundated by
"Forty Carats '' with
simultaneous productions in'
Laguna and Costa Mesa,
3nolher in Fullerton and a
couple more across the county
line' in Long Beach and La
Mirada. But "Carats" was the
only play to be repeated in the
county all year, which is ont?
note of optimism.
It was a year the Santa Ana
Con:Lmunity Players would
probably rather forget. _Two of
their shows ("Long Day's
Journey Into Night" and
"A MASTERPIECE!" !Ill ~MJLO.l=,
"SUnrise a t CampOOello")
were jettisoned just days from
opening night. And t h e
triumph of their w o r I d
premiere of ''S win g ing
Singles" was dimmed a feW
montru later when playwright
Joe Del Hosso tw k his life, a
trai;:C<ly thal still weighs
heavily on his many friends in
the theater.
FOR T II E Westminster
Community Theater, it was 3
year of double eihilaration.
!J'he Westminster players pro·
duced two of the county's best
shows j "Forum" and "Star
Spangled Girl") and later in
the year broke ground for
their new theater building,
now under construction.
There were cheers too at the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse
where, after more than three
seasons in the new theater. the
board of directors reported the
playhouse had climbed into
the black. The top Laguna
production s of 1972 proved to
be the first ("Teahouse of the
August Moon") and the last
(''Summer and Smoke"). r
The Irvine Com m unity
,).'. Front Page.'' ••
TOM TITUS
Al Orange County's oniv
professional theater, Sol.lib
Coast Repertory, the clear
standout or a heavy 10-sho\\'
season was Its stu nning
"Pueblo," a n outstanding
dramatization of the 1968 ship-
seizing incident. Olher im-
pressive shows were the
Intermission
Theater, on the verge of
bankruptcy at the close of the
1971-72 season, erased its
debts with a well-received
version of "You Can't Take It
With You." The new season
began Vo"ith a reorganized
board of director3 leading the
uphill climb toward solvency.
1'he Lido Isle Players .,,_ Chekovian drama ' ' U n c I e
creased their output by half. Vanya" and the v l n I age
staging three shows 111st.ead 11f C.t'Orge KeUy comedy "The
two, but will go back to th~· Torchbearers."
two-show season nexl YL.,1 r. or tbe ~arly 60 productions
The &1n Clemente Comn1u n1ty staged by 16 community
Theater kepL up iL<; busy playhouses during 1972, which
schedule with six productions. "'ere the Jll09t impres!:ive:
borrowing "Dear Liar" from This column will offer its vieW
TENNESSEE WTLLIM1S _..:La~gun··-·1ftlerllshemlg•~inigli"i1T~he-i!ne~x~t~-~~k~. jj!~iiiii: succeeded Neil Simon as the coonty's most pr 0 du ce d TH•ATll:I cLoS•D TOH IOtfT OHL Y playwright, descending on ."OI'. ~ .. fft_ ... ,r!H., Costa Mesa ("Night of the
Iguana"), Hunti ngto n Beach
("Cal on a Hot in Roof" J.
Laguna ("Summer a n d
Smoke") and Sanla Anu
("Period of Adjustment" L
Believe it or not, Simon scored
only once in 1972, with
Westminster's "Star Spangled
Girl."
5lClw .... l ...... IMfll
N-Mt ltnef'll .. Sffh
WJllMI' ef I Acad9"''1' A••nl1
"1"100Lllt ON THIE ltOO'"
IT'S THE 810 TOP 01" WONO<TAINMliNll
WALT OIS,_IE'l"S
"OUMBO" a "LOllO"
G.cilcli. H•wio
"BUnEltl'llES AR E FltEE••
& "THEltl!!'S A GIRL
IN MY soup••
''THI!! OAll'#IN ADVt:NTUlt•" • "TOii.Ai TOll:AI TOlt.t.t••
hlll !Iii
7th
BIG
WEEK
NOW! NO RESERVED SEATS' WINNER!
3ACADEMY
AWARDS
Tlut Syndirm
Tlut way IJwy linll-
Tlut ...., IJwy dillll.
SIECJAL CHILDREN'S PRICE
OHLY$1·50
WW C.. Pr•wk1w
DIC. 1 • thr11 DfC. · 17 ..
Fii., SAT., SUN. I P.M,
Mlf PID!llB. l!!l G 1
-. Bound for
1Jwl FRANCISCO? ~ • business, pleasure
-:-• weekend, vacation.
(oy at Nob Hit! Motol. • Cw•••··· LecariH ...............
• ~hrtt ... :ft c.....n1i1a..-
. MIW08
FUR PARENTS AND
'VDUNO PEDPlE
I
••won11MM1mo
~ II.it 1111¥ ¥11'/
Ill urtaltl .,.. .. l
114 646 1363 •
~'"' /, .·/ 1 ,,,1~r l<r;. ,,,,,. i'
O•ANDPAIH W"ll 1fNI _, portiClll
TV SET
plul ... rru• 11.,.n
SD FREE TOYS!
M.a. ~: io-11 • ,.. ... Ylltll • liemc;io
plus .••• SJ* .. sill lot _,. cllildl
pr S.0.~Ul'IDA~ "'ATIN~l, 0€CU•t fl I ttn '1l I aoo,1 o~uo 11 » •• -!HOI H ...,., 1.111J "'
"BLUE WATER, I WHITE DEATH"
1 ...... -.... ---s-i .:.::;".::.::.;:.:-;~:.::::: .
~UIS - l COl.0-C••f-1
I fO~ SOUTH cll"51 II lt<t ... lJlt
-~'""'°"'" .. co.u ... ,. , .... ,,,. ..... _,. .4
!'+,_ ....,.., ""' -;~::;~~~:;;~;;_,;,:,;;:;;;~;z:·
...._. _OCT!,OIQ ,,,_
----·--..c;ni;tl
NOW!
'
0 • "SWEET SUGAR" (R)
GALA PREMIERE THURSDAY, DE CEMBER 14
t'ONIOltlO IV
THE HARBOR REFORM TEMPLE ol NEWPO RT BEACH ~, ~ .. ,,..,.,,.ofldo.o" ...... l"fOf--.Coll-U5I0111f.Ull
".)
•
~rer Sophia James
OToole. I.Oren and Coco
dream lhe Impossible Dream·
in an Arthur Hiller fllm
.. Man of ~
bMancha"
·~--:;-. ' .. · Umted ArltSIB
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY
RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT
;,ECIAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR GROUPS OF 25 OR MORE • • r fl/l,BOXOFFl<!E OPEN NOON TO 9P.M.
::: •• ;SALES, 300> W. CHAPMAN AVE. ORANGE . Ck.17141 •32-3797 ·
11 I I 'FO R DISCOUNTS AND IN FO.CONTACT JIM DEAN GROUP
·-
•
• .
•
FROM.Fashion Island
Newport Beach
' •
STER-EO SOUNDS -OF . THE HARBOR
' •,
. . • . . . . • . . • ----.
BRAND NEW
1973 DUSTER
2 DOOR COUPE
'70 FORD
MAVERICK
6 <;yfinder, 1utom11tic, r1dio,
hn•ler, 1ir <;~ndition ing.
!OK91TI 18160)
'70 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT 4 DR SEO
VI , eutomatic, radio, heal•r.
pow•r 1feeri119 , power
b rak11, power wind ows, eir
co11d itionin9. ( ~01 AFV l
51.495
'69 PONTIAC
CATALINA WAGON
-. door, l 1••'· V8 , •utom•·
tic, rdio, h••+•r, power 1t••r·
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ditio11in9, .roof r•ck~ !XWS-
357)
51695
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CATALINA
2 Or. H.T. VI, e11tomelic, tf -
dio, h•eter, power 1te•rit19
& braka1, W/S/W, eir co11d .,
~invl top. IXNH 3241
•
r/
~11 just purchased
inventory of 1 ·the '~fire 1913 · Plyrno h • orrner · Ch b ut de~ler. A t I rysle:r. uy ·•nd We ·are Pas . r11 Y fanttttic
on to yo u with th sing the NYi".'91
•1• outttandl"I
''lf ' · ~.I AY
DISCOUNT
SAVINGS''
STOP BY TODA y
AND SAVE.
LARGE SELECTIO N
TO CHOOSE FROM
BEAUTIFUL
NEW 1973 FURY 111
2 DOOR HARDTOP
We· liGVelhe largesrinventory of l973 Clirysters and
Plymouths in all of Orange County_. This tremendous in-
ventory assures you of greater savings. For savings,
service and satisfaction· it's Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth.
Atlas Serv· 0 , c . . ice epartment wef · • R!;~rt•on vehicles rtquirin~. and henors •ff Chrysler
Charge, e~a:f whe~e car was ·pu..J:~ and warranty '#Ork.
and o· kAmer1~ard, Ci rte 81 h , We honor Master 1ner1 Club • , . enc e, American Exp,....
:10 PLYMOUTH
FURY 11
Vi, a11tom•lic, radio, heal••·
power 1le•rin9, whae 1ide
wall tires, ,;, c;onditioni n9.
IPL41L0021973<1 l
-'68 DODGE
2 DOO~ DART
A11tomati'-radio, h ••I• r ,
power 1l••r1,,g, wh ite 1id1
wtllJirt•· !WPll. 101 !
s995
'66 CHEVROLtT
IMPALA 4.DR.
SEDAN
VB, aulom•tic, r•dio, ht •l•r,
power 1te1rin9 , whilt 1id•
w•ll t ire•. !TSM 22'l)
'68 MERCURY
MONTEGO 2 DOOR
VI, eutomotic, tedio, ~•111•.
flower. 1l••r)119, W/S/.W, eir
conditioning, v1 n y I lop.
IXDA Olli
... -....... -~· ..... .
'67 FORD
GALAXIE 500 SEDAN
va, •utom1tic, r11dio, h••t1r,
power 1teerin9, W/S(W, •ir
cond itionin9. IUK C 919 1
'68 · PONMC
BONNEVILLE
2 DR. H.T.
¥8, 1.ulom1tic, radio, heeler,
power 1leetin9, power bro~·
••, w /1 w, eir conclilioni"9· pow$1'1' I WQM 1821
•
FOR TH E FIN EST RECR£ATIONAL ,
VE:r cLES IN ORAN GE ·COUNTY
. .
1973 1/2 Ton Jntemational ·Pi~k.;gp
. .
1MMEDIA TE .DELIVERY ••
5C I"'
· -·-fed Retail Price
Off Manufacturers Suqqet
W . No. 8J7107H276t(I
. l~TERNA TIQ!!,_Af.: • 1-TR VELA L 3 ~
VS, automatic, power steering , power brakes , air con-
d itioning, trailer tow pkg., custom interior, deluxe-ex-
terior, AM· radio. r-~
-. '
• •
~----------.......:_-----~-----~'---.. --
DAILY PILOT 33 .
'
-~ ' •
·.:·oECEMBERlS THE TIME ·TO BUY AT ••• WILSON FORD . ' . .
' . ' •
BliY .A CHRISTMAS PRES:E"Nl .
' ~ FOR TH£ FAMILY
DURING OUR
PRE-IN VENTORY
. ClEAR ANCE ,, ' '
All
NFN
WITH A BRAND NEW
CROSS COUNTRY
I' DELUXE CAB OYER CAMPE
s#:7799· "·
IMMEDJATE DEl:IVERY ' -
302 CID v-a;setect:shift
cruise-o--mattc-transmission.
belted tii'ts, diluxe bumper
group. '(#3A47F141208)
.IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
BRAND
NEW FORD COURIE R
/ ' 1MM~DIATE
<DELIVERY
. .
, •
'73TORINO
nidio, heater. extras. (953-ASQ)
Rollye Wheels, Fiber Gloss Shell (64634H)
·OR·
'68 MERt·MARQUIS
Loaded inti. fociory air. (YCR919) -o•-
'69 ECONO. VAN
• •
rrl03y, Dtambtr 8, 1972
MUTI AND JEFF
AU. cio.v 'ltlU
DO 511.P1D
TMINGS !
I'M NOT
STUPID ALL oo.v,
BOSS!
~ YW-IT SOMEONE
WHO IS
SMART!
OH,tt.i~!
I WIN ALI..
KINDS~ f'Rl2ES
DOING CROSS
WORD PUZZLES!
FIGMENTS
1.:-OF. COURSE
I .-YOU'RE SiGNtNG-~ THE CHRISTMAS
-· CARDS FROM
! FRITZI ANP NANCY"
y .. ·:·•
1~~:
f!!!Y'! C~d~DSS~!~~,.,,!,~~-~LB IE Flower part 45 Compa111t1'i'•
1 D9J>1ned word
1 Navigator'• 48 lmp1..W. It~ device 49 ..... ,.of th• 1 An emotion Gu1rd
: Whhout 53 Ran easily
J molt1ure S4 Mttat ..M.r Zo!a S5 District ll~7 ~~;i:;.. 56 ::~ine
8 Cotton unit 51 Edna -
9 Gal --: 58 ''lh•o™r-
French city: in town"
lnlorm1I 59 Fender
V.rv bed blemlehff
-an: ea laindebt
Depended 61 ChemicM
upon tuffbc
-fixed: DOWN
Fktd Idea 1 Opefli11g
Word on a 2 Volume
receipt 3 "Did you
Native ---t"
P.rtol 4 Kindolfaot
CW.b9o 5 lnce ... ni
Tractl talker
3 Par1_nt1 S Church
Unit vestment
5 Dinn• 7 River of 6 Mate. Alriea
7 Herbgfnu1 I Netherlanda
New York commun•
Gi1nt great 9 M11'1d1
I European• 10 Femlnin•
Kind of name ! broom 11 W11pon t StvlflD• 12 Sheltenid
ICC6untl from the
MOYffliOWty wind
' I
13 l1111rutMnt ·
21 Bid deytor
C1esar
22 "-In
Toyland"
2-4 Peels
25 Mr. Runyon
26 R1ng1 c111t
27 ······loot oM
28 E~ists
29 EJ.tlnguilh
30 Come out-
3J 'Station•••'
units
33 Croons
36 Eng&Vtd in. asw1r
37 Hire lglin
39 MR"°" on.'1mind
40 --fltkes
42 .A.rtist't
rieceSlity
43 Sings
45 Plurat
pronauft
46 Glided -47 Riflptd
48 Kind of oolf
tourn1m.,,t
"49 Ship's
complemtrtt
50 Asie" natio"
51 Threld:
PF1lbr. ., c"' 64 Atrk:M
~ .. -
II l2 IJ
PEANUTS
by Chester Gould
by Tom K. Ryan
YOO CAN LENP Al.O'l'OFMONeY
· IN 15 'iEARS
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by Emie Bushmiller
-AND FLO AND VERA
AND ABBY AND
BETTY AND AMV
•AflD AGNES AND-
r----= HERE IT 15~
I fOUNDITJ . •
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
PERKINS
p
DOOLEY'S WORLD
1
• SAU Y BANANAS -By Charles Bariolti '
GORDO by Gus Arriola i
by Ferd Jollnson •
ANIMAL CRACKERS 1, by RCM)el' Bolen
·=~ ....... -.......
•.•
...
• . " ,,.,
~'--~~~~~~__:::::::
THE GIR"-5
by Harold Le Doux
~.Jj,11(,,~ ,I ~fo'O#f§ 12"6 ~·
4'U yoa au me, be'• tlle one wbo needs adrice -a 11
beaatlfal wUe like &bat and be complains aboa& her 1 coffee."
by Mell
by John Mlln
•
r
I
-· ·-
Frld1y, Deetmber 8, 1972 DAILY PILDT'-:Ja
--
Everyone Hai
Something That
~omeone Elie Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,';,
Find It, T rode It • ,
With e Want AcL-.lf
.,
·rhe Biggest Marl<etplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
l~~~s.· ' . '
•
.~'"I.. l~L .....,.. ... s.i. I~ I
-.~-Salt' ~ llllASSllClmS
REALTORS
-EAST'CXMST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR. CAU,.
644·7270
* Magnificent DupJex • • •
. . . in Corona del Mar
c '
HARBOR ISLAND ROAD
SpacioUB BA YFRONT home with pier & slip,
in prestigious location. Rustic design with
heavy Shake roor,·tots of paneling & beauti·
ful natural stone. Family-pool room, neat
Dad's den. 5 Bedrooms, formal dining room
& large bayside terrace. $218,000
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
P r i v a c y & trees; immaculate 4 bedroom
home. Professionally decorated \Vith many
fine appointments, all at a most realistic
'price! $69,500
WE HAVE RENTALS .
One & 2 bedroom adult apartments on the
East side, in Costa Mesa. Ali luxury, built·
Spanish architecture prevails in this delight-· l g g etc Fro $160 ful DUPLEX -TRI-LEVEL, 4 Bedroom, 2'h ms, poo • ara es, · m
bath,, ~eplace, buill-ill._l!il~hen, EA.CK _· _
UNIT •1 Bedroom, 1-bith. Enjoy your 3 ter-
raced ,porches. This as a beauty for only
.... ., . ' .......•............ ' ,. . . . . . $78,500. .. ' *
l'tARBOft
General Genor1I
oftnJa J6/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Linda Ille Waterfront
Just completed -modern 5 bdrm. 41h
bath home with family rm., game rm., forn1-
al dining rm. & magnificent 25 ft. v.1ater·
front Living rm. w/frplc. & wet bar. $285,000
53 Linda llJe Oriv•.
Elegant 5 bdrm.1 4Vl baths; on lagoon. New
carpets; drapes & wallpaper. 4 Fifeplaces.
Lovely garden & large slip ...... .,: $212,000.
IOI Linda Is!• Drive
Lovely 5 BR., 4 ha. home with downstairs
waterfront mstr. suite & lge. game rm. or
study. Mexican tile J!,QOrs,_~~ ceilmgs,
quality construction, slip ..... , . . . . $155,000
For <;omplete Information
On All Homes & Cots, Please Call:
General
GOING, GOING,
GONE.
\Veil Nearly GoflC'. Owner
must sell. Bring your
Clean-up M a terial s. 3
Bedrooms, 1~' Bath s,
f ireplace, B/I Gas Kit·
chcn. H.ome re ce ntl y
re-carpeted. Adams a t
Bushard area in Huntington
Beach. $2 8,500, Cal!
Anytime 646-0555.
PRESTIGE
4-PLEX
-... s.i. I~ I _, .. sa I ·
•
General General
• 1 .,
' ;;i .. !
" • ' . i • PICK A PAIR OF$ MAKERS :
Ground broken ! Two duplexes, Newpoi:t/'
J-Jeights location! 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths and
2 bedrooms 2 baths! Two of them, side-by-
side, great .ID vestment potential! Fir~t time~1
offered! At $66,950 per! Review the Unique
investment Analysis.
Ne1vport Heights, All 2
&>drooms. ldeal ror 01vner
occupancy for one Unit is
Kxtra Large, En c lo s ed
Garages. Possible lo own
for lO"k Initial Investment. $90,000. Call Anyt i me UNl9UE HOMES OF NIEWftORT IEACH, 6454500 ~-.
646-0555, A Hstl .. of LyleH Ewl•t -t
BILL GRUNl>Y, REALTOR
341 Bayiidt Dr.~ Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 I SU.nrlse. Sunset • . . suas101A1r o• rHc <OLWlU co. Gener•I Genera1
COMMERCIALLY
ZONED
RESIDENCE
. . . ~i~"' General Gtneral I '
i If you enjoy viewing the harbor and ocean,
this is the place for·you. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath
plus 2 'fil"eplaces with a built-in Kitchen:
BACK BAY, BEAUTY Over 40 different businesses
are possible in this 4
bedroom, 2 bath home in
Westside Costa Mesa. Ideal
for the aspiring individual
wishing to start his o\vn
business with the advanlRJ!:e
of being able to live at the
same location , • • • only
$28,950. 673-8550.
OCEAN SIDE OF HIGHWAY·~
. l Nice 2 bdrm. home on lge. 45xll8 It. R·2 lot. I
Room for an additional unit. Xlnt real estate ~
investment to hold for the future or im-~
prove now. Shown thrti our office only. caiiJ
for app'L Won't last long at $59,900
• Beautiful !Andscaping .. ., .......... $64,950.
* r AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES Gtneral
EleganJ. 3 BR & family home on quiet cul-
de-sac in area of fine homes, features double
firepl, D/W, bllins, flagstone entry, lush
ldscpg and.much more. $39,950. 2290 Red·
lands Dr., 'N.B. CORBIN-MARTIN 644-7210
Genor1l
. SUPER DUMP • •
*' * * * * *
Tru1y a fixer-upper, 3 BR on huge eo•x300'
Jt.2 !Qt. Room for 6 units, Eastside. Sound
interesting? Call for details, $23,950. •
THE REAL
BSl:,l\T&RS REALTORS
I
' 644-766~ I
TAYLOR CO.
DUPLEX & BACH. APT.
$41,500.
OPEN TL 9PM
~General General "!~ NEW ON THE .1;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I _;___E_sts-.-d-~-+, ... ,i
IRVINE TERRACE -$150,000
), INCLUDING THE LAND I
Magnificent view of bay, ocean & Catalina.
/\ niost 'elegant home of charm & quality
BA YFflONT -OPEN DAILY ~r21
I
• consisting of a huge family room, 2 master
bedroom suites plus a third bedriil &·bath.
Fisher stereo thruout, 2 fireplaces, many
extras in kitchen, huge workshop off garage.
Lovely free form pool in private front court-
yard & many rare plants.
329 VIA UDO SOUD
Only 4 years old; with 4~10 sq. ft. of pure
luxury -5 lge. bdrms. (you must see the
master bdrm. & bath), 6 baths, steam room,
jac~,. 2 wet bars with ice-makers, 3 car
garage & slip for 2 lge. boats. Call for bro·
chure. $270 000
LINDA ISLE -$245,000 ' ~
-INCOME .-
$610. Monthly
8 Units, spark]ing clean on
the inside, old on the out-
side. Must sell or exchange
for tax reasons. Priced
onJy $48,500.
Beautiful custom-builtbome for present own· , The area's top P:Ofessionals
~ ~ On lagoon. Protected patio, (!ier & slip are at your service.
I fur up to 65' boat. 4 B<lrms, family rm, w/
-INCOME -
$170. Monthly
1'wo houses on 50' x 100' lot ,
Big Bear Lake. $9,000.
equity. Tnlde or sell w/
E·Z· Y tern1s. Qnly $23,650.
Hurry, hurry! '
, wet bar, formal dining rm. & game rm. Many
f Juxurious features. 2-Story entry with choice
_ tile floors, blt-in vacu~ system. -INCOME-
$345. Monthly l ''Our 27th Y ••r'' General ,
WESLEY N. ·TAYLOR-GO., Realtorsl;;-~~=;o;;;;;;;;;o;;'"'" ----=--3 _Ynlts close to £hopping -
room to build more, Priced
to sell before January. Only
$32.500.
! 2u1 Uri J.....,hi Hiiis Rood BilCK, TILE ,4·U·IDEAL
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-1910 AND BEAMS COSTA MESA
' Ge-11 Gener•! · LOCATION '"-'---------··-------!' .. set the, theme in this
CALL ANYTIME
646-3928 545-3483 1• custom 4 bedroom, 3 bath fn.000 FP -Near South There is a reason
18 years, ~e location
Lachenmyer
R1:.1ltc.•
!IJl!I .. , home. Features l n cl u de Coast Plaza. Almost new
beam ceilings t h r u o u t , only 31h yrs. old. Gross
formal dining room, large Income $$40 based upon 3
separate family room bedroom ($254)) 2 bedroom
w/parquet floors, e!egant ($185). After fixed expenses
living room' w/wet bar all and loan payments $12'l3.00.
electric kitchen & iued Scheduled cash spendable
co u r tyard entranceway which is $13.82 ca..<Vl plus ========
Nestled at the encl of ~ $4.98 equity buildup. Total
quaint little cul-de-sac 011 reb:lrn ns.80. All this'. and
huge lot. A tru4' diUerent the .appearance of a s1nii:le
home with quality bullt into family residence. Contact
every sq. ft. and oHered a t Rlchard Van Wert.
Walk to Beach
6 Bedrooms
.. '
OCEANFRONT -CAMEO· SHORES
OPEN· SAT. l.S P.M. 4651 .BRIGHTON RD.
Unparalled view w/compJete privacy.
BeaulifUl home -4 bdnns., 4'h baths, lami·
ly rooD!. Spectacnlar pool w /fountain, water-
fall, therapy jacuzzi. $350:000. Carol Tatum
CORONA DEL MAR CHARMER
This'' home is for ~ou if you like bright Ted
shag carpets, a cozy living rm. w/huge brick
fireplace, 3 Bedrooms plus guest quarters.
$94,500
HILL TOP FAMILY HOME
•.. with forever ocean & spectacular night
light view; 5 BR., 3 baths, 3 car garage.
Llrge corner Jot. Ready for occupanc~.
·$122,000. LaVera Burqs '
PRIVATE BEACHES, TENNIS ·CLUB
Lido values -1. Charm. 3 BR. on St. to SL
$71,500. 2. Two-story 4 BR., FDR & beams.
$76,500. 3 Bayfront w/pier. 3 BR., best buy
$144,500. Eugene Vreeland ,
JRVINE COVE -VIEW
This immac. 3 BR., 3 bath & den home over-
looks the finest priv. be,acQ. in \be area.
Quality thruout is evidenced by many-fine ·
features.',$195,000. Edie Olson
BEAUTIFUL OCEAN VIEW
only fl:l.900. • ELMORE CO.
CAIL MtH;sio (Open eve•.) REAL ESTATE DIV.
Pool
WALK TO BEACJI! Wrought
iron enclosed front yard .
Curved driveway. Stained
glass plus tiled entry. Fam·
ily room. 6 bedrooms.
Sparkling blue pool with
slide, Low care yard. A few
steps to park ~nd gree.nbclt!
ASSUME S27,000 GI WAN.
6% % INTEREST. $292
month. Act fast. Call
,·. HERITAGE
REALTORS
Beach-Pool
Just Reduced
$2000 !
BIKE TO· BEACl-1! JUST REDUCED BY ANXIOUS
OWNER! Formal living
room and dining room.
SUNKEN FAMILY ROOM!
Cozy breakfast nook in
cfiet''s kitchen. Truly giant
size bedrooms. Laundry room. Covered patio opens
to SPARKLING POOL! The
.. ,_
10 UNITS
EASTS'IDE
$145,000.
Cnnsistent income of $1660.
All individUal houses with
garages. on 1 acrt>. Call for
details on how to buy.
N-rt .,
F•lrvi.lir
646:1111
l•nytlmel
-· '
IOll l\I I Ol \IJ\
' L ,7 , I {) ' 5
;'Bigg.St hdrooms
i'n Town
abarpest home in the area. "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Dill fast. 645-0303. "!
at This Price"
Adult occupled 4 bedrooms, 2
FIVE UNITS bath home on quiet
I Olli\ I I fll '11\
' ' '
cul • de • '8C. Beautilul!y EASTSIDE malotaioed and landsca.00.
Park-like backvard 1 s .. COSTA MESA 45'x1'1' -for pool or play. !NVE~R'S PARADISE _ 5 Separate utility porch. Lots "• v of shelves end cabinets In Separate homes nestled 1n garaAe. Ohly $28.960 _ All
· Bay·& ocean spread at your feet. Short walk
I to 2 great sWlmmin~ beaches from charm·
llig s-BR.~2 bath h~me. $195;000. Mary
Harvey
3000' TO OCEAN on this huge lot. Great lax terms and VA-FHA-5%
shelter and Po t e n t I a 1 Down. For appointment to
Here is the beach home that li(rowth. EaC'h unit with see call 8421-.. 2535. You JilVe l:)ttii dfeamtffJ( separate ga\-agc, yard and ___ ...._ ___ _
11.bOut. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, laundry area. Lolli o f ® .....uao REAL
fol-mal dinlng r 0 0 m , privacy, covenlence· and at-ES• "":'"I'".,...RB I
I ,
I
!
NEAT AS A PIN beam~Ulng fa mi I y m08pbere. CALL WI tor full .,,.., .111
Portofino Model, Harbor View Homes; 3 BR., room -feiCtl-a lat"Re muter detail.11. Asking $76,500. 1 _::===OPEN==·'::"::'::™=::. 2~ ba's. Shutters & used brick trim out· bedroOm suite, been pro-CALL 540-l~ Open Eves. r.
side. IJght & bright colors Inside. $69,000. r::.::i~. ~:;o:i:::iy .! $17' 950,
Kathryn Raulston • outata<>1U"" value f 0 r 2 lR 1 Y2 'BA
, __ _..,. °COSTA -VIEW LOT -$17~ -. $36;1liO. l'a•t '""'co'·ATS Sharp 2 ,..,.,,·home with ~ · I ki · • oomplete mode-n facill~ Beaullful view ot overloo ·ng LaCosta & GONE FOIEVIR i<>Cludcs a bath htsldc. Lota
Counlr;i Club. For further informallon call WALLACI IS YOUR RENT or """""' & drapes with Mary Lou Marlon _ u· ALTORI elec butt\tns also dl!hwuher. , Tull one ts • · Opon Ewnl..,s DOLl,AJtS mWlt .... lo believe.
_ -~ 962-4454 • Jt'11 1lQf. too late to nc·
-r.umul&te llO'l'f'lethi!fl; f o r
Colch.•.111,a..... SRDOM SEEN =~ f::'m~fu°1~ Realtors 5'5-&ls1 *tJ.430 ~aALTOll,~ HONEST TO ·oosH 'm.t llvifltl room, built.-ln bar. C>oen ~Vffo
' -PLEX . Fri<E&UPPER: Lar&ekltcheowfthpknt>ol NEWPORT HEIGHTS
-· . -Prim• locadon. Make cupboards. Auume VA loan $J2 950
550 N&WPORT CEN'tlR DR., N.I,. money h('re! $4.1,000. ·-i~.OO ~ nton~~~~~lO~f 4 BR. + maid~• or .autit rmt
C vv.\l l<fK·/11'1 ~I
~J PeckY ""!Ill"" ... ~rl
·· for Aotlon ••• Call 142-5178 .... (~~j;i) ~L~f~1f0~."
'
. I
Call
642-1771
SCENE BEST FOR THE a 1 e . · r
oovER SHORES . Be~u1uu1 LEAST! <:osta Mesa ,;
view home for the $25 500 l discriminating. Over 3300 Need a truly spacious and • ·• · •
General
9:f21
sq. ft. of private and seclud· roo~y home. tor your large This has to be the best b~
ed living. 4 Large bed-family? nus gorgeous 2 in Eastside Costa iJz·
rooms beam ceilinged fam· story, 4 bedroom beauty will With 3 bedrooms ~
ily ~m. formal dining fill the b,ill! }lu~e pie shaped baths, this cute, Well -·
room and pool with jacuzzi. yard with patio, loads of scaped home gives you. tre-
Many more exclusive tea-closets and storage spaces, ml'Ddous location as \w:fl
tures $129,500. Shown by' ap-and FORMAL DINING as Jots of privacy. ~~
pointment only. ROOM! Lovely Garden down and owner will c~
PETE BARRETI ki,khon wilh eatiog ""'"' "'!I . See it today ..... Il s 2050 square feet of sheer -REALTOR-pleasure at 001y 137.200, 4 Bdrm Becqity
NEAR BEACH ' 642-4353 'NUFF SA I D ? ? CAl.J...
$41 500 ~ ~ COATP ' . . .
Immaculate thruout. Lath &. OV'T &
plaster wa.lls, new crptl?, up. G WALLACE
•"d•d. hke ••w. Fonnl REPOSSESSION REALTORS
C~2 ZONED;~
33,750. •
dining -patio. Choice loc. -546-41 Xlnt tentis. To see drop in Just released, sharp 3 41-70'X120' comer lot, plenty o
parking space. Convertihl
house for office or bwme.l( at bedroom, 2 bath corner (Open Evenings)
1733 Westcliff Dr., N.B. ·home. Real-quality witb'.I"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'
645.7221 hardwood Doors and plaster • VACANT .-
* FOR LEASE * wall•. Won't la•t a wook, Reduced to $24.500. 4.1,.
+~car aar.
Lwcury apt. on the bayfront.
Slip avail. 3 Bdrms., 2
baths. $550 mo. )'.early
$~1ix:w! ,Priced at only ~ .. 2 baths, new Ct'PIS
Cali 546-ssso (Open eves) & paint. Lrg co~ lot. FHA terms. Call ~ytlml'.
400[.17• •
C.M.
George Williamson
Realtor * 54U570 *
~ • "" HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
a.., ~ ....,. .nr.ct..y wttll ,.. ,.,. •••...., •
... .............. All .... loc .................. .
.. clncrllMHI I• ...-..... •r 4111\owfk1 .. .,_
...... I• tocfor's DAILY PILOJ WANT ADS. P'otro•
........ ,.. ..... for .... ., .. '"' .. ~ to
lilt w• ............. i. fMI coi. ... w• Mclo:y, s.t-. _, ........ .
HOUSES FOR SALE
3 Btdrooms
1215 Somerset Lane ( Baycrest) N. B.
$89,500 (Daily 1·5)
3 BR. and Family RM. or Den
2290 Redlands Dr., 'Newport Beach
642-1771 (Sat. & Sun. 1-5)
2030 Galaxy Dr. (D<>ver Shores) N.B.
646-1550 $ll2,900 (Daily)
4 Bedrooms
24401 Santa Clara, Dana Point
644-2430 $94,950 (Sun. 1-5)
4 BR and Family RM or Oen
*4651 Brighton Rd . (Cameo Shores CdM
644-2430 $350,000 (Sal. 1-5)
**1653 Bayside Dr. (Yachtsman's Cove)
CdM 675-1935 (Daily)
*987 Sandcastle Dr. (HVuHills) CdM
644-2430 $85,500 (Sat. & Sun. 1·5)
19201 Edgehill Dr. (Turtle Rock) lrvine
644-2430 $105,000 (Sun. 1·5)
S BR and Family RM or Dtn
**#46 Linda Isle (Linda Isle) N.B. · ·Mu235 (Sat. & Sun. 1-5)
**#3 Linda Isle (Linda Isle) )\l.B. · ·642-8235 (Sat. & Sun. 12:30-4:30)•
**#54 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) N.B.
.. &14-2430 ,289,500 (Sun. 1-5)
**1324 W. Bay Ave. (Balboa J'en) N.B.
(Sat. & Sun. 1-4)
_ LOTS FOR SALE
SCOTT REAL TY 53&-753.1
Gener el
MACNAB
IRVINE
FINER HOMES
GOT THE SMARTS?
. '
'
Then use them. Dream your own color .
Scheme in this beauty now under construe.. :
tion at #23 Augusta Lane in Big Canyon ....
Be the first owner and be a winner. Lois
Miller 642-8235. (Sl2)
IN THE VILLAGE OF HARBOR
VIEW HOMES .• '
· we offer a 2 BR, den home decorated w I '3
imagination. LoWest price presently avail .. ..,
able in Harbor View. Priced at $53,500: r
For special showing -Betty Kerr 644-6200. ,
(Sl3) , ;
QUALITY, LUXURY, VIEW & CHARM
1h. acre in Lemon Heights. Choice loca·
tion. 3 BR, formal DR, wann FR. Liv-;
ing at its best! Helen Wood 644-6200. (Sll) ·
LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT
45' of sandy beach -beautiful master '
suite on upper floor -plus 2 BR-2 baths
-den -DR & terrific kitchen w /break.-
fast area. Valid reason for sale-$225,000. "":,
(Sl4J
UPPER BAY •
Beautiful 4 BR, panelled FR, fireplace iD ;El
M BR, quiet street. house & grounds ex-
tremely sharp. '49,995. (Sl5) '
HARBOR VIEW PORTOFINO
Your eyes will light up like a Christmas ·
Tree when you see all the goodies in thiL
special home. Over 2000 sq. ft. of living :
space. Eat in kitchen, traditional sepa-1•
rate DR, LR w/conversation pit &: fire;._
place, oversized FR + 3 BR's & 3 baths r I
Unbelievably priced at ONLY '58,9001
Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (S35) l
[Irvine I -b-IM .. ""°1~-,..,11
•
IOI Dowt Dt'lve 141-12SS
1'4M MeMrthur M4•UIO
..
' .,
' . . . . " .. . . . ~----
,. ( ' •
D,t.ll Y PILOT f rlday, Otcembtr 8, 1972
. •c.•,•..,•.• ... -1 •M•.•r •. -• l1 _H;;";;";;'1;;"';;'"';;";; .... ;;;;;;b;:;;;;;;;;;J;t;;"";;;.,.;;;;;;;;;;:,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .'!"*P!"! ~ -port ....,, ~ 1111pt!! ,
MES.& VERDE 1' -k VICJ'OlltlAN PARK
160
" 1MMED. Poss&s. 3 BEDROOM $2,ooo Pre-Grand Opening Sale! TowNHous1 . . 'NEWPORT ·TOWERS
;;JIUNTINGTON PACESETTER 1 ':;~.'i.!~ •. ;~.~,i"'~nd~ $23,500. ·.;.~~4 \:/!'\~: ~w:.;;::6"= ..... -;,.~N~8~~t<1oc-'""'IR + FR + DEN S BeUroom'i, Zl,.t bath5 0 Frpte stove; !01.1 or ttlf!, J BA 60' x 100' fncd lot hOme tn Callfomta: 'BDme1 ton beiore the a1ow1na' · tric Con.do•. Carpellrla:,
Pure deliatit arc featured in NICC':l).' de<:oraled. Obi. Kiili'-patkl' tdsCpd dbl gar, eJeC; OoveJopmmt. Vacant and &plc. ff thef bMm9d eel[ ~peries. J"ldiitint~'<ft eart . $56· B50 ·for 2 slodea of lh~ nil llv•blc •s• A on an R·2 loL · blllnR/O, dln area, eattrc quick· --bl<!. , .laaillY,.. .,. oll>r a -om1oo1q lie !>07•-•f -$ 1
950 hom~, Sit I~ your beaulitully MORGAN REAL TY bar, w/w erpta. FA ht. A How prict\t at S31;tJOO. to :yQp" auffta ln the formal Uwt ocean b'OM your tivtna -52, pal'Mried living room nnd run 673-6642 · 675..6459 mu.at to see! 9 Yr• new, ad iricl h UVintrm. ThiJ -4 BR.,' bl. rooni fc muw ~
Yes. the o.aption is riVJt! If your tot's through the new loe,pa,ymtskuthanrent. . ·11 ~au•••·· •. ~'lion ex•-u DalCQni!:•. Pool. »*~1 11tft lustti thag carpeting \\'hile BY 0 w n e r. Sperctacular I ""' -v ._ au " ._ ~1 doclct Top ...:k' &
you bought this btaullfuJ )'(IY Vit'.w th" firep.lac~ and Spyglass Hill for@Yer view lflfii11111!Jll-Ir ~ Mll'1 price tq -l~ti-terr.' p.ll'rkiA1 homto your COlrt 'A'OUld ht! ....,., .. k'"·• ·-pl•"•~ on t .. _ ......__ ... ,_ I·-·'"'""-, n1w-4 -J,U.-. -ur.*i .I06 850 Ow . e<t 1 '~ = -· ~ •~ '~" ·-~w-. · OPIN SUN. 1,5 " ~levaton. ™111 .,..,...,.. 1No;1he'm c':ifr.8!'~~n mW>~ huge JUl.rk·Uke Y•• . Jusl ~ litedit!oo~mt. Sep. tQ..4471 (:t:l) 101 •! kEA1.'rY .. -. 1~ PL•c1 l, ~1!'!t. "°.Wa.ft·"·~-w .. cw. I sell. Ideal for l~e family, one block front the Balearic dln1011 room . ..,.,, ·530--TOSO Univ. Park Center, lrYine ....,. .," "' ~ fl. w.r-...
... ...i:th-2&Xl sq, fl ., on quter School and priced u.t only 67S-10 0 -CaJJ....An,vttmG'r. ~ CX)Nt>O SPEX:lALJSl"S ~ •
• :""'\-de·sat". l'illl -<&!f,!W: Call 546-2:113. HARBOR View Hills. beaut. h Office hours 8 A?-1to6 PM ffAU'll' ONE TO, SEU.? WE -;~ Pr 1 c e ocean view, 3 Br. 21! Bll. 4 BDRM · xtra s arp, •"" N BUY
'M6'23l3. ~ .. , brk fpl, all crptd, .n "!V!I• -c ·-ONE! WE'VE. GOTl'EM! 1 • · ~,950. Pl('ase Phone .THB R" a 'I' d~n. ~.500. 644-l330 eves & L D.-h CAN DO IT! WAN A
: (iu· THB ....,. "ij ~~~ c::•·M.,. terms. $29,000. * MODERN * "1•4'5 3G9 E. 0iut Hwy:, CdMl , -~,;~.J"' Jr 3 ..\"c C .Ra.w. 3Bdrm.,2baths;hlghbeam ,........ LOftylivingawalts you! *·$7Mtl0* RE'AS rro S2-1 95'0 · &Sl~mS r__.__ Room For 3 BR. + FR. I lorwin reolty inc ceil's., lota.of gl1U11. 3 Decks. ~...... Act swiftly . ** $32 f50 ** ~u~ ~. 'tarwt~
• OPEN l.NTl.tPM" .arru 960 .uns Comparetbls at$41,500. ,..._,,.. toselectyour own <BR.+ Mald:i-m~ot-.. -·•ru,1-.~. E LI • · Nice Eastslde Arca. 3 bdrms. o-T"TV * SHARP * ... ..... .... ,,.,..,:!: ,... . WIFE xtra v1ng · & family rm.. fireplace, 2 Bdrm., 2 bath hQme w/ Newport Beach condominium. PeekyM:_ oupant!llWi.tandl.:!baa C8.f'P~ ·~ PreptrfY 16'
' ' The large f111nily 1'00n1 has lallte piilio 1v!th barbecue. decks & patio. Only 3 yn. Visit the temporary offices ol the ....,, .. .,. bu,y tri ·:·· INSURANCE bttn added 10 make this Dbl. Gnr. Alley access for old. Priced fOr Immediate Newport Crest Information Cen1er, N'pt HU. Better h~I TAX SHELTER
R-tt.cutlve _ \Vcstclirf 3 bed., Harbol' Highlands fnn1ily hon~-"" or cnm~r sloroge. $23,000. sale, $38.000. conveniently located at BALBOA BAY PROP. 50 UNITS
c2lialh on nlanlcui·ed corner honie son1ethiug SJ)Ccial. Sll.ri...u. :i BR. 2.BA. dbl gar, 60'xl00' * \VILL TRADE * 2400 West Coast Highway * 642-74'1 * $639 ~ .. '.li. Plush carpets, drapes, Wet bar, bean1 ceilings, t'X· CA.LL ·.t:' c •••·1•t.a Jot, schls & shp'g close by. A beautiful condo apt. in Suite B, Newport Beach. · 32 UNfTS
tra fireplace. J~XlOl for the 91\::1~ Seller pays $500 of buyers West 9, LagU.na.Niguel, right Open Dally 10 a.m.10 sunset. Senta An• $395 M builtins. dining room · pri-pool table. Privace bric·k A 4£ eosts, $1400 total cash ......,.d. on the goll """""!, for vate yard \lfith heated pool! front ,. .. ,.,1.,n nntio. Three ....... ...., , ·~.... home In the be•· ·-a. BEAUTIFUL 2.slr)': 4 bdrp1. '15% down, Wesliirfc C.M. -1 b t 00" ~ ,...... REALTY Ownet'ship is chea"". r than ·•· a.<: ...... 171•1 6•5 61'1 3 FOR INVES OR .., ,.cm )' l'ai;:er owner a Jaroe bcdroorrls, 2 ba!hs, · r.-"" "" -"" ba formal dlnin&: rm · •m,950 Subinl! ,·our ... . . . h NeSr Newporl P••t Offlte rentership. Call no\v •Price in comparable range ""Vero.,d ~uo· . •·ated _;,• GOOD MO.MINT .,.... ~ !lf!paratC' ·Af't'VLl'C' 11or c · or op to mid·$40's. Ottered ""' ..... "~ ~ ternis! · clo!lt' to l\larincrs Park ancl I' comer lot. Owner $45,300 SaJe/EXchllllge Up.
School . Prin1e Ne 'II' Port MESA WOODS BUil T at ':·~RTH END * 557-4215 or 546-8822 673·S221, 613-1610, 64&-237'9
Beach nt'!ii;hborhood. $44.500. bed b h 962 2456 • ~ -H Ith 2 ••-t , 2 Tutti~... Ownr/Brk · ~t:~ C. F. Colesworthy & Co. -4 room 2 at , -_.._,,, ome w ............. ap · oi: •• I ~~~!":!''!'!'!":!'~~~ rm. gue!l.t apt. Walk to beach __ 8v_0w-~-s--J-"' _ INVISTOll. S 640·0020 femily· rm,-quiet nbr· *WH'I' PAY -RENT?* 6-shopplng·oentor. -O,:ean • '"" • ·~ ~"-TWO~l'LEXES 'Xlnt t
O·wn ~·• own Bdnn view. Proi'ectlng an annual Med It er t' a n ea n home • re um,
TL.. h d $39 700 · · · ,__ · ·· Featured In Home only $41,500. ••cb. $47);11. What rrsy 00 • • • bath condominium -newly income of ,7,860. Priced at maa:azine. 4,000 eq. ft, + down. Call for details
YOU'VE FOUND Le.. Behind larw-in realty inc painted and sparkling clean. $7S,IXKI. maid's qtn, Milllon dollar 842-1418. A BUY
1
IT • $450. riioVl'fl you in. $14,950. Englund Rtal Estate view of couUine & city • llA111 •
Over 2200.,... n. 4 hedroon1. Is Your Find 968-4405 full price. Principals only. 318 THAlJA' 494.SOOl lights. s BR, Pool , air cond. WMKll
""' Ask ror·Jolm·Malo. 1, lot cu t built~ separate fan11ly roon1 which IA inorning 11'<'~11 ·: lx'dr11on1, II Ae'.ABIAN RURAL CHARM 71: a~re . s om • -.-' could be 5th bedroom a · ~ 1 pre!tl?nt o\vner in-1~ . ll!TI "·ach mvd. H.B. · I 2 u.•uh lliinic l\llh a ii·urni PRICE REDUCED This 4 bdnn., 2 bath family Cowan Heights area. Pru~ oc ' l,a}'ge corner l~t. boat. ac·1 fh'l)pl:t<"•'. 11 v1•ry 1~rh·:;lr> 9 S REAL ESTATE 1148 000 Pho RE IT "'· ss. Only asktng. $48,500., rcai· yard \\'ilh :1 sp:iddim.: 22.6 EAS. T 1 TH T. ...,,.... .,.,A4 Eve•·. ~"-"-' home is close to everything, reduced to , · ne · · · ·
I I S BR 2 full b th ~ ;:iocr.JOl built at lhe same time, gives =-544.a928 or 630-050(). $13,000 Financial House 111 a pr rne oration. pool. jat'l'Uzzi. pins ;1 ··rv.y , paclOwi " ·• . • a HNV'I d 1·-
GINNY l\tORRISON i.:tt.~ hiir-f>-<1 pil. It'~ e111pty, 1·ustom home on .70xl25 il. REPOSSESSIONS you the "fre!!h nil•" feeling Modular/ FR'EEo~KJl!l?·
****• -REAL TO~ ;:nrl \\'11.iting for you. s:; t.:i~~l. I loL Copper plumbing, !rpc .. For information and location o( country living. Huge den l•k• Forest Newport BMch p,..Bullt Hom••· .120 CAU,. BART VANCE *(IM* l505 Mesa &16-7171. cov'd. patio., tropical plus family room. Call Ron i ----~~----
! u n d s cap l n .11:. Choi1..-e of these F1:£A & VA homes, Williams. $85,000. CORNER LOT 3 BR, :/J 4 Br. + Fr. + Pool Building a New Homt1 CO-OCORDNINSAUL't'EDTANTS.CAPITAL l .,, •Verde Dr. ERst, ~......,. R•• 'I' Eastside location, for eontact · • .A'6 1 bl Sa M • * --* c • ~ -b KASABIAN /. fam rm w/frp c, tns. . Want to ve oncy. ~1US 673-«162 eves. \ * * osta Mesa ~·"&RS $34,500. Illness, shown Y ._,,""' clean oven & water purifier. Qlanning custom built home · Try Modular Magic! "~· -*•* 5!>7-4130 ~6"°.L app't. only. R I E 962 1.1.~• • li4'1~ Owner anxious $3 9 000 on Peachtree Ln. 4 bdrms., RACINE HOMES IV OWNER
;'lf:: !0f>l'n Eveningsl OPEN Tll. 9PM DavisMR~~lt~OBINS0~--7000 ea state ._ REAL 'ESTATE 1837-<!61 _· ' dlhlngnn· .• 2•"",, .,be~. M~em 213:CJ6.nlT TO "SITil.E ESTAT,:
What Does "5" SPYGLASS • um ~ r--den G-• 12 ··-·t ' Mesa Vtrde $1200 TOTAL DQWN 1190 Glenneyre St. 2 -RY ELEGANCE ., island kitchen. Even a bltn ........ ~.,v • ""1 a. ,.. y ? 4nA_...,73 1:A~'ll6 .,,v • ..) dee ft'ee Bea= BR, mostly studio, 't lie mean to OU. SPECIAL Very COOi~ Location. lst, Sm~ 3 Bedroom cottage, i>T'"'" ... ~ BR. 3-BA. w(study + faro p ze. I~ 3 BR, 2'11; ba. owner's. Xlnt time on market 3 large· ""lih.trY k!tchen. huge back • mr 3 gar frnt &: rear decorated and landsca · tlallll HorlM 1m1. ........ .a It= 000 ~,, 11 ~-It niay niean a rantastii:: Oil(' F \:\TASTIC . SPECTACU· . ' ....... .' r .. & ,-~rd, not far from beach. 2 CUSTOM UNITS patk., b.lu-u;,· f .. ln, $41,950. And a covered patio beeide ,.... """"' .,,,, , .,,..)o ex tu,. 5 bedrro1n 2 b<1th 1 L,1.1' SUPER ThrC 'are bedrooms . .__.,. ... IVlng +P'-·-.Mo•sSt.•-a 837~7 .-. a SPAR.KU. NG POOL . loan allijfnable. $3lt-9544; • homd \\'llhin one 'block of ·' " · · · e formal dining. 2 fireplace. Only $24,000. BKR. 962-5511. uulli ....... ........ '""'·-,,g........,, ~ ooe of the niore prOl(rrssi\'•' 1101 l'll!lUgh .v.·ords to des· Lush carpeting & draperies. Woodsy street. 3 Bdrm., 2 $52,500. .;::~;;;:•••.,;~:.:;.;:;-:;;;·====-I
grade schools in California. i.:nbc the vie"' this home Huge covered patio, At· BY Owner _ Franciscan be. upper. Frplc., dining MODEL CARDEN HOME 3 CALL (9 646·141• Moblte Holntl IU WilE INVESTMENT .JJ.youlun·ralargegl'oupin~ offel's. 3. brdrs .. 2 b~t_hs, tractivelylandacaped. F ta' 1 4Br 2 Ba rm. & view deck. Lower BR, 2 BA; entry kit., atr, 11•~• __ F_o_r_S_,o_i. __ ".'."'"""'.'7 la )'OUrg, In 1bls 4-plex 2
fa1nily aud \Vant a prestit::" lat<ge llvin1:: iwnl, dining Before you buy any house ra°n~ ,::;8·w~':i:thedrai ceil .: 1-BR.. bath; fir. to ceil. fplc, open beam!, bltns, cpt,Jdk& -~ .._....._ Bdrm.s eactl + crpts, drps,
nrtig-hborhood ror on I y roon1. ~arge lot. Presented see this one. Broker , shag cpt, drps, pr 0 f. glass opens tD pr1v. patio. drps. $43,500. 837-6161, llAL Tf Matof ffa IUHIYQ &: ranges. lncon1e $540. per
1 S3S,j(l(I. ('all NO\V .. '\42--2~x15. at $69,!Jj{). 557--7398. lndscpd. $41.500. lO percent $75,IXll lncl. plllJls for add I' I. Near NeWpert "1'••1 '0ftlt• mo. Asking ,$47,500. Call
·'· ·r· . ~ liii• TAX SHELTER TIME dn. 842-8004. . ~~uxe .1.:.cooo1sq. n. home. 4HB•ED1nR001n1 M ~~!1oME.. JUST LISTED• SALES a LilAStNG ~~sH.2502111t.LEv REALTY
'
. nm REAL • . ,. for 1973. Eastside sleeper. 5 . vu:"an YJCW, course. t • C8.Ul<'\U<U ce • (! ~••was -·~ hou on a lot two 3 OWNER wants ac ti on. 494-TaSl ings,CW1twetbar,tamrm, Newpc)rt Beach Duplex. 3 fuUeervketac hy I Maanolti.1:£:llnger,FV ~&ft~~ 1 1 11 I b e~;ooms, ihl're 2 ~~5:038~!~~unbi;::~y $$.SOO. 837..g61 Bdnns. down. ·2 up. Shag IJallllal' Matl' llmes 11nchntrlal Property 1,61
·bedrooms. Price of $85.000 $39,500. Call for .details, TRI-LEVEL Wooos HOME _carpeting, frplc. in km·~r:
NG POUNDING SURF ;, 7.S tim" annual !Fl:· M2-1418 PATii WALKER , BR, ,-llA w/fplc, wet Nicely deconued up~~·· 531 i.•OQ M'I I.of 80'd;$'; x!nt
C1 ~ SOMETHI Brand New Surfside Duplex . Grab, lhat phone th 5 in-REALTY bar, Jge patio kit., fantutic dishwasher &-. built•lllB. -.. Anchor Invertmen11
att'a.
i.TD.
SPECIAL Pl'ninsula locat~n! Plush 2 C:~"~eaitors Bert Mott OWNER says, ''sell now'', at $58,500' 837~1 ~·cx:k. GOLD Medal 24x60.2 br; 2 ha ,833-1~~7;..4-"7·.,,.-,.----
blg la ily ho f th bed., 2 bath ~ustom units -S48-ll6S Eves. 557~ his 4 BR. lam rm, etc. 2700 PRICED RIGHT! LAKE FOREST REALTY : 3663 •642-ml Eves, + den, porch xtru, nr fwy Mounttlr1, Duert,
-m ml' or e best carpeting, drnpes.1::.:""':;:o.=="'="'===~'O sq ft of luxury $49900 Big ocean viC'w1 3 Bdrm., A;-reduced $.1500 prin R--174
wing family. 4 Oversized breakfast + bar benm ceil-DELIGHTFUL EASTSIDE 3 CALL 80-1418 "p AT Ti 2 bath home with beautiful lido lilt -~1 •• H.B. Adlt Pk. ~7. I ~"'·;.;-.-..;._'----..,;..-"
rooms. 2 baths&: family ing • spectacUJar view! lxlrm home 1v/bea0Ut~ in-WALKER REALTY. view of ocean & hills. Lge. 1----------... ...,. LOTlnfamouaLake Hava.su,
•TOOm, located on cul-de-sac BuiWer asking $91,000. 10~{> terior. deep shag crpls, trg living & family rm. w/frplc. * CHOICE * home ol the workl~WI ~t just a .block ~~ dowu or try a trade! 1 corner lirepl for that cozy OWNER leaving. Family 1111' ·Attached 2 car garage. Nice Noni Corner l.Ot I !M--· LcihdOD". Jlridoe. • · ed
'.elementary pncc $34,;;i;.JU -Christmas. Oil;dng area -a ll is huge with natural brick patio area.. Easy-care land· 5 Bdrms., 3;S baths plus din "I· ltMI &tat., close to all .f°bool.s. l' . .
<Zall 540-1151 Open Eves. submit terms _ $29,951). can s~.950. 842-2561. scap~ !.J~ "; $49,950. rm. WI $'19:soo ec · $9000 or will trade for Costa ,with VA terms available. t.a~ builtin kitchen. E-Z to buy. fireplace. 4 bdrm, brk, pl. lge 8Und k . GMerlll
._ HERITAGE
,. 545-8424, SOUW COAST OWNER trans. assume 5% % ;,rs.aw LIDO REAL TY Meaa or NewpOrt Beach in-
' 1 I l I REALTORS. Joan. 3 bedrm, 3 balhs, -~:=..>I"':""~"·tJ::.W 1 :,,,~::· -~~*..,~-·~·~~",..·-:.,. ~ lay Area .a. ... I rents ~ come .Prop. ~-I I ~~~~~~~~~ OPEN Hx;;SE dining rm, built-ins. brio:, * 6-*~ . CUSTOM BUILT 5 ~' ~· --eRENT..U.e Palm Spt{rcs. II· "" 128 000 846-0004 •r il<drooml, 3 bathl, Iatui!y For S.le ll2 Nr. A/Port. 3BR, 2BA. hid ·~.!f!~!'!"''!'!~!'!"'~~~I $27,250 SUN. 1·5 owNEff. must sea" bedrnu, BY Owner, Just remodeled. rm. office( many, many * 20 UNITS * . poot, wkend, ~k, cm.•1.1 " VIEW 3 spaciolls bed r ooms. 20101 $PRU.CE entry hall, dining nn, ...,.~...,...c.w new bltn kit .. ~ BR, beaut xtras. Swimming pool + $lfS.OOO 1 t'hriltmu avail.
· -Cheerlul UY.iDi __ t,_o om, Don't rent. buy ttlis 3 bedrm. fireplace in family rm, brk,. patio. reduced. $_ T !_, 0 0 0 . wading IJOQl S87.SOO. ~ Slx \:BR:' t4-t--~-~~ !!!l!.!.7-7~="'==~1
REALTORS
You couldn't duplicate this hand!lC1me. f Ir~ place · xtra big lot, separate $36,500, 962-S566. FANTASTIC VIEW 67fHl839 or Gn-1166. Roy McC1rdlt Rffltor 8~· B & ;·u.nits • $29,250. Or1 .... Co. Pron. ~76 I "~ , --ly home today. It offers ~. u 11 t -1 n k. 1 t c h e n • workshop, for only $26,500. O\VNER must leave, full din· N..,....+ IMch 1810 Newpol't Blvd., C.M. d 6 G . ;,.;z.;. .;..;.:;:.o
Charin anc1 modern con-i:l1sh\\·~er. Patio. Fres?IY tarw1n realty Inc ing rm, 2300 square feet. 4 .. of Laguna & ent;n_ C!JllSt· 1--="""-------·1 . 541-7729 RED CARPET RHltor LAGUNA ~ti Elt&te by
• venience1l. Be11t ocean· and painted inside & out. Like * 968-MOS * bedrms, den, bric, $42,500. line! 2 Bdrm. OOme; den, Pen. Pt.. Octenfront I owner. 3,35 hillaide 8.Cftt -
,'i, ,b'~ view in Corona del i 1ar new carpeting. Jr. estate * DUPLEX * 846-1383. 1% baths. Just 10 min. to Prime of all oceanfront to-* 84U5U * larae 2 Br, 2 Ba home.
'-:, ''~m this spacious 4 bffi. park-like grounds. 540-1720. B Ow OPEN HouiE! 3 bd rm Newport. Offetedatl79,500. cations; this cbannllle 3 BAYFRONT HOME 8u1IM1t PNMrtv 154 StOl)e walls abound. EX·
room home for o n I y Y ntr din 12' wall Call: 613·3683 548="1'30 Eves. bdrm 2 bath house Mid-P -•--·1a tlm . · .;.;.x.::;.:..;.s. • T JJ. EM E PR t V ACY .
-$H!5.000.00. _P_ool too! Call 770-m W. 11th StrHt. 1•34""'.750i"'. 61n""So·· ........ ~ Dr. ,., ,. look•.'lhe ocean "-h:;;:; euuJSu area, ht e TWO lbrs To TA t : Beautiful canyon \1ew. 14
uw•uu oi: oUered. 2 lots with hC1U.e on 1,u;...-.na., CHOICE LOCA· bones allowed. 1111:1">,000. -!t .,tb_,ee. 673-8550. . 2 B<lnns., 1 ba., each unit 846-2128. entrance. A rare llsttne al one (Inly Sep or together 5 on.--i -u~
··' 2955 Harbor Costa Mesa Ext. newly painted $35,000. $110,000. BR, 4~ SA, ~d• nn, ~ TIQN, llmtbwtorl .~ appointment (Tl4} 49t-<1581. "fl·~RB-.x.l ' £W Open SAT /SUN 1·5 3 Br., 2 be, trplc, patio,""'~ rm., !iv rm .• din nn., 2 .=~~· O~ RHI E1toi,, ll2 -~~ aiEN ~·j Bca~~~!Nne!~n year M2-7C:R. RoBiNscii_s.5647 =~~~.'By owner.1 """?.'~~!"!!'!'!!"!9'I lf"'IAIC'~ =:· C:r:.pl~~.mci~:!d ~ 117,5111'~-. 1Jl'lte: ·~1!_.x ... w.._!!!!.....,._ __ _..'-
.s . ol? 2 story, 3 ~room home 2 'Houses ;lrv;;in;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1 · """'""'"° 1969. Will 11ell furn or un-XAHPAX: J!Qbel Rd. a· Ba. 2,_. SA ccmdomlntwn · · · SMELL THE with panoramic ocean & th I OOO 0ce* an~~.!i.~ RF.ALTYINC torn. Open house Sat/Sun Kibel MMd, KawaU a.pt. ~t earner apt. ~ .(, roas Ulnf! view. 10';, down .Bo on Y $32, ~ ESt946 l-4 pm. Agent 675-8181. · Commerclel overklokine yacht dub Ir
:n ... AGNOLIAS terms ,vith quick possession Xln't. renta1s or live In 1. " ... _ ~~T0E1 ~~~-Ael , 34TnEDVIHUa UBdoERNBT & ~M ~i e---Propt< ~y IA bay acrou ttreet ttom m if desired. S.15.950. (Rent the other) 2 BR each. u~ uAu...-~ ulU',.\ • 01..-oJVV ,,.. ,.,.__ EXCLUSIVE ~ ~ oc~. Hallandale, FJ(lrida. !i;~~emfii:i18St.;the~ir~~~ ~n•~~ay. r!'ar~rt~~-t~ La,aun.1 Hill_• 200tw.T;'~2eeo BAYCREST HOME C-2 Zone ~.·oooto ~l-0tacb.yac.Tndeht0t C '.VMl<I R & lf I
Realtors 64&-7711
:M>il3 Westeliff Driv~
Open 'till 9 Pr.1
642-1060 if interested, ing"'~., bright & •cheerful -~ . " ...-..,ortWtrhWJF Exciting, new, CWlkJm 3 Br, c•--S::.~""Caw, propetl)o,
EN HOUSE DAILY kltch. & 3 nice bdrms. At-BY 0-WNER. 3 BR. 2 ba.. 3 Ba borne dealpd::I for the ..._. r...::.... Real. .., 49M;88 ,1 * OP · * tractive price of $31. 750 in-new kltcb, folly encl back discrim.lnating. Ovttdsed Excellent comer locaUon in ~ ~ ~7A:~1fa_M t,~~ eludes the Ind &: its location yard, gas BBQ, aprinklen, HARBOR '(IEW HOME gar. Beaut de(:(ln.ted, drpd, the heart ot Cotta Mesa. RMI llt.,_ Weftfred 1'14
EASTSIDE,4br,2ba,pool, ~·~~1"!:Z:Tr'v!°.fP~ :a=.. ~.Call 5BEDROOMSlc 3BATHS 17;~·FoM~RSETLA. ~ =~e=pla:df: * n..•C.,cas1t'1* $30,900 irplc, """bit, cpts, drps, I NEWPORT BEACH ho-B--"••-'· ·----1 T• . bl I crut. 10 .S ong. ' ~·• Y ·-· • Will buy Yolll' -· :All 10 . 4 Bedrm, dining room. entry Ins, te ' a~ TIME FOR See thta great family home! OPEN l..S P.M. DAIL y rea«b' to move into with a cuh wll.hln 72 hrs. ~·u . t . ReaJtors 646-ml hall, cu.stom ceramic tile, kl dn, $40,500. Ownr O Larve family nn., sunken fast ~· Owner m~ ...,..
Q; ;, ... 2043 Westcllff Drive indirect lighting, natural BY Owner, Sharp Mesa • living rm., formal dlnlng 106 Linde 11 .. Dr. ~.ti~,, tr\ll~t ~<rlf , mt
Open 'till 9 Pr.1 wood cabinets, prime home Vwele Jndscpd home. 3 huge ou·1c1 CASH rm., 1 brlck flrep1acn -wl"t 3 BR, 3 BA, 2900 liq. ft. 35' Call ••o f..'l:: Ii area, 54G--1720. br, + lam rm. Paneled 2-be.r -prof. decorated & Dock. Xlnt buy In N.B.'1 iNVWMm;"~MSJON 1 . • ' "'ANTA'S BEST car gal"; crptd entr &: patio. land~. $$$ofhlras. finest w at erf ro n I com·
-~ I'm Penn. bound! Under THIOUQH A Fee Jarid $'14,950 , 64H>277 munity. Vacant. Owner ~ ii ~
&'just received word lrom priced> at $29,500. 546-9099. "~INCE 19$4" •. • motivated • ~~!U. J
..1f.-<'"!'ta to sell the nlcc!rt hon1e 2955 Harbor, Costa Mr:!sa. BY Owner • The largest. bl western Ban1c Bk!&:. • pi•toT-BRING THE ,KIDS WEL TO~ !v,OMPANY ' ~ ' 9 -~.,. ... ,INC.' lit b.is ·pack. Buy It and you nieei.t, I east e1tpensive, Unlverait;y Park, ln"ine DAILY J Near the beach. Charming 5 vi.,.._.,,, _ _ , _ _ ....,~
w)ll bet Sanla "", •·1" ', $25, 950 •lngl,,.•tory ' BR borne In Day• 552"7000 Nltfm • BR. ;i J>a •• den, ..... al din· WALK TO llACH FIRST nME 0 your am1 y. Mesa del Mar $.18 500 WAKT AD Ing, treed brick ......... ts. beautiful beautiful 3 bedroom. Elegant 54.9-1857 · ' · ..,..YW-, . , pools I: tennia from thit PRtvATE l)U1y wants: smail
llreplare. ea,..c f ami iY l,O:~~--~~~ RACQUETClub2story4Br. "--ctEM , <BR. 2% be., tge. liv. ""' OPFIUD home w/lncomt units jln
kitchen. built-in range, oven CUTE eo1tt~ · 2 Br. Nesti· 3 Ba, fam rm, formal dining 1610 w. Coast H'""'.,_?J!!_ b.,....lt·ln .~t~. wllh dining ' S-a In an .......... .,,_._,, Corona dfl JUr, In &tel
& dishwasher. Beautiful ed in rees. $24,500. Lot rm, tile roof, huge master 642 5678 -.,.~ -..r.'!::"'...:. ..,.,200.,.,.......-uc14 Die.~. Wrlte'R.8 .Scott.
palio and a park-like yard. 140'xS9', R'.l. Prln. only. suite. Owner. Prln. only. • REALTORS CAYW* """sa.l290RE*AL TY 1 1~;'].~ .. ·~-Jro!!_,: General Dellvery, Los ;y;jiPliCiill 54~1720. Contact J im. 64~3509 or $44,300. 832-7059 Sell \die ttenu ••• 642-M?B _.__ VII"..,... wU1 a...,,-~!tell Ca MJ22· '40IJ
67>-3031. • 75% at 8% for 30 ,....,. '13Hin. ·, ' > ·
BY Ow~r nice 3 Br, l Ba ~G 2 BR., den, Agent. 6'15--7225. WANTED, 3 Or 1 bfdn>om. 2 !~-23,0002 BR, I BA starter~··: dn, 1220 0..@'R ..5\.,,,_j -/)13, ~Q.• ~·~~~: -FIRST TIME .bath -., -ide· 1-· occu:nJ~e3fus~ ~~ ~~ l-'2905=-'H'"arvoii7,~r,[jC~otfita~M"'e"'aa'-ll~-~~i::!:J!!cfj!..·_· __ u_:03:,=.•""_1 Q --~ ).~~ ~. (/" ~ ~ !D%-1ln._m4Jort ·OFFIRED -: :!: ,=..~~
,.,.,. renters to .,t st•rted. R-2
1wrs The Pun/e with the !uilt-ln Chuckle , =--,w.1
8 · }Y,~ ~: • st ... , In an Alpha Beta Price rana< <If up to 145.®IJ.
eArpets • drapes thl'\IOUI. 65•xi35· • f Fountain Vallty 6""'249 cenle,!... $13,~ arou • Prl pUty, Prindple1 ott,y. ~age k.ltchen with j!llS 18788 llCf· I.) . O R.arrange l.tten o, the ~. , • SliM,IAAI Owner wW cnny 557--4il'l3.-~· country atmo.~phl"re. 2. $33 950 lour kl'Ombltd wetd• be· ' layfrom Bungalow '1w. at 8% tor 30 :9t&r1. ~P'°"RJV"'."'.""'P"a-.,..--wan.....,ta_,5,-,RR"'
Call now. OO'x300' 1 Blk • 171h SI. 1 low to form four slrnpl• words, 3 BR, 3 BA, ~en, 1*tf oond. ~~L 675-722 S. • bome ~1 size lot In M;;
Shop'g 4 BEDROOM I T A s· R E N I Pier for 70 vesael. For l660 ORANGE C.M .• XitU Verde. Avail Jan '73. Write CAIL Mr Harri! SOUTH 1 I I" .
1
I' I cornpl lnformallon on this · · ' ·-· ----· - -. for Doctor's office etc. 4 Clutifit'd ad No. 541, ~ COAST R.E. 545"8424. Lovely, large home In real e1<Clu:::,;!,~1W. pleue call , BR. Sttanish decor. Xln1 Pllot P.O. Smi: 1560 Cotta
!';/. Rel\ltors '~ Coron1 del Mir lharp area. Big, roomy ~Ted-·M2:f.I0&2.-.-.-temtl.JJeit otter. Mesa, CA 926'6 r Ope~ -PMtlM tam room, la'f'lle HOLL ... D •·~ 5 •-. . ·'''OLE' OLE' PRICE REDUCED ldtch<"· extr• deep lot A I T U D A N I 1'i *'!be Blulla -3 BR, 21> ba, ..,. -· .,., WAN'l'ED from pvl. ow.,,, .:Jtt .J , children walk to nearby upgraded. "D" plan. l )It'. ln& Oranse,.CM &f5.411f0 Lq. Bell• ocean.front cha~
MEDITERRANEAN VIL· Owner lll)'I Mllt Thia little school. Be sure to aee Jt! / / I' I f• $5f,500. Owner 64f-8430 \ · Condimlnklmt h8e. Prefer \vlth rental uptt E 4 PLEX Deluxe, duplex ls a t'eal buy at I' Ouplexa near the ocean ' hr le . 'l.0 lnpluded. Pvt. party wlll lJa1 •*ioUI and .ff'clodfld a.part. $!11,950. CUle home tn lront, Miltl. i.non, Rtt.I\(lt ' ~. -N . cyh~ -~or .-.2'7911
ipenta In a.n exclu1lve and nk:e yan1 with lar!t:e plan111 I • *' m30ll3 *. NEWPORT RIVIERA·ALL WANTED: l;ahd 5-10 Ai:rft.
• ..._ntlal k>catlon. No va· at>tl .,..., and "°"' view U1-51H U::) Ul-5111 I S U M E 0 !• Now..rt -.. CJ( I n.oo11. r.ra. pl-.Qnnae Co. !'.one A.
rJ tj!iifk:1e1. ·Expand YoW' port· apartment OYf!f' ml.a.rage In . . ::: L·.; -=s=;=. crpt'd. 3 BR. 2 BA, din rm.1. 213J-..m. Pv't p I y ,
.air ·lo11o wltll tllit .... tor • rear. Call ~m-. OWNEl,t deapentte 2300 I I I I' From '" big !191 "Evory-.. ,,. DOWN ll'Jlc, lOltlO priv. patio. J n•-·' I ""'""10"<1own: Ii~ 'hill :!~.f.."~.a1~~1irt,~ '::'.;:;~~:;=~body In fa vor of birth con· (Pltll nonul -•·will -.1:·=.--i:=::t
• 14!,500.1161-13'13. r'' ROBB AS 1•rol hos1lrea0y--."•"I ~i:e":"T:"~Spic ~-.~~ta,$111>·[ 1~ :; ~cf~ OWNER anxioUJ. Park yard, l--ilr-,.,-TI,lr-1_1"7r-t.1Ti-l· • Co!llplett tht diuclde qvot.cf Cit tR\ltQ .' Jee tllrectoey. . ,....... ~~.:._: .:..: "'"· .large home. 4 . . . .. by filllno In th• .~1.ino "'°''' °""Sot/ ..... P.M. s-. I .....,, 2 !Ill, 1~ 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·I •ues•DI-.•' °' ''" C:O..W.a,., co. bedrm11, buUt-int. b r k • vov dt'l1fol) from tt1!) No. 3 below. Onfv.nlty lltHlly -9A. Jllt.tna. trpc.~ .... •
1 1
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ER mUlt llttL • bednn11. • $37,900, 98.2-8865. a -I' I -: ...... ic llliDI ---Uvl..i room, hmlfJI DUP~IX·•Y OWNER OWNER Acrffice •• bedtin, "" t:i~l.~\\'.;18s~t':..ls ' r ,. I' r F I' I 3001 E. Cot. HW)I ......... • • _,_ room. flttDlact, b r k • 108 L&rkspur, remodeled & l baths, den. swim J)OOI, . . - . _ _ _ • _ OPEN HOUSE 91.n 1-4, a). -=~ = Ol'l)y. N 0 • ~tty 200
" • "40-l!Z.· ready to move b\. Shuttcn. park ilk•"""'· brk. $31.500, e ~~1',"'w, ..... L ."•0•1 I I I • I I I I owner, 3 Br,, 2 Ba. clen. 2 ' chit-...... 15. :MllO llden, TREAT -")!,~ ENJOY 11tE . bl:Autltu) new kitchen, ~11'1 842.flG!>t. _ ~~ . • . . . (rplct, ~.iaed d~"lnae• C..M. t1Wl17. 121.IOO. Ch....,,.. t
l'l..i • APP1" liOLfDA !S • c..-pct. <>Pen Sun 1.Q, Any day Is the BEST DAY to Z12 MarttHt Of.'~ N.B. LlJlt to trldet OUr Tndiit1• • • • .... N' Tnlii''
9EJ: "P!'l'E 'N TIWE·• l!,500. 672-WiS; 6Th-7816. run•• $d! Dol>'t de~.. SCRAM·UTS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 100 -645-t3ll!. l'antllltcol..,.llfor·*' ltan'llll .watter Matll\ou
hlle ltem1 . MZ.'1671~ Ada ••• 642-;117! .call tody-CllMIDed Ml , •• iilifi 511!!!!,5!"rtor5bucltl.' &M-Caio!Bumm • ----~------"""---------~------~· .
TARBELL
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t Bu1Jnoaa Hou-Unfurn. J05 Hou-Unfurn. 305 T-:Mlff Unfum. 3U Apts. Furn. 360 Apt. Unlyrn. 365 Apt. Unlum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. Opporiunlty 200 N B ~ I ;.;;c.;;;..;...;....;..;.. __ ...;.;.;.1.;.;,....;....;......-....;;. __ -""''-"';;.;...=='--~ 345Apt. Unfurn. ,!f)s
* !JQUOR !JCENSE ·* Cotto MeN owport '"~ Huntington Buch Cotto -o.-al O.notol Newport Buch Newporl Buch : ~eO.tyonanJese .. ra1. ATTR. trg ~ h< h••· THE BLUFFS NICE clean 2 BDRM Unbelievably BHulilul iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim l ;W:;;H~Y;.:~P:=A:_-:R~K;;--;N;::~=== .• =.=~:;r:,[:;5:1
(Cloddalla). 119,800. Dr1>1/part Crpt, .... n!fria. 3 l "R $350 MO --· 110 ba, bllna, VAL D'lSERt: G"""'• Apl.. EL CORDOVA APTS. .. .... ~'""' ~
WlnalDn Collect (21.llm-4249 No dogt. $137 mo. -• • • W/D, w/w crpll & d'P&. Adu!" :no """· F'lowcn F-$145 ST' ay HOME ON
I ~hi Loon 240 *•HAPPINESS• * ~c "Trl-1 . .evet" ond ~$180~.eT~o~-~eoll~-~ (~::'.'.:= everywbuo. Strearo & ,_,. A ' l_.....,..._ _____ ,i. ·->OW' lriendl, .Wt, Cul de aac loco; nr. H!lwport'lffch Water!all,45'poolllec.J.lm. 1 & 2 Bed_,.s WEEKENDS
1st TD L famny and "Pct• 'N' Tllliei" pc)OI. Ptl~e Ceutures. Some Sauna, SgJ.1 1.2 Bdnn., Disbwuher · Shag Carpeting· Walk·in Clos-• oa ns 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fenced ocean view. Avail. 12115C 'I'Rl·.LEVEL 2 BR. 3 BA, )"un>Untutn. Imm 1138. els, Forced Air Heat • Extra Large Rooms -WOULDN'T YOU?
8.,, M_ INTEREST yard. Dbl garage. $230/mO , ~· Magnlllcent view on ~IT: :l!IOO Paraooi, BeautJJul Game Room -Heated Pool ·BBQ' ..
I .,. "' tnclud""' w•t•r. 519-2646 {;;s . -Bay. FUU bltas. 1425: 6 · • Jllnclosed Garages. Quiet surrol!fldl%W• and 2 d TD L \:C ~ mo. lee. or monthly. El ,.._Ito M~ c1-•·1o-• . (N H bo &Ha lo St)
I 0 080$ ·~· ~1!!5·.=.•·2~ ~'. ti' ' '{ ~:::<lfln:.::O=."'A,..'"'""=t ::::a6:..· ---I BR';1~ $130 & ·in;· -~"lJ~~f Livfng ~Nor P.ts. n
· Lawetl rat" Oran .. Co. ..,1215 •. mo . .-. Uhlurn. & Furn. 2077 Charle St., Cotta MeN 642-4<170
"WE BUY TD'S" A~. 2 BR• romp!. rea ly Dl:L\JxE Townho...,, 3 BR. All Utilltloo Paid ~ cpt/d, fenced yd. Adults. no l 'h Ba. Crpts, drps, blt-ina, Poot &. Recreation HACIENDA HARBOR
Sattler Mtg. -~Y-:, pett, ~-3150: 54&--~13 2414 Vista del Oro lge pvt. patkl. dbl gar. Nr. 1959 Maple Ave., CM From'$154
642 .. 2171 ~11 * 3 Bk. 2 BA, dbl gar, bltna ~IT:~~.:f~ So. Coast Plaza. 979-9184. Also garages for rent DELUXE 1 & 2 BEDROOMS
Serving Harbor area 2'J yrs. Incl. dshwhr, ~le. fncdll-...,0='="~=-"==:,,.-Duplexes Unfurn. 350 I •iiiiiii;iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Furnish.cl &. Unfurnished
2nd TRUST DEED LOANS yrd, $260. 673-31125. • STEPS TO Beach. Spa~. CHRISTMAS SPECIAL Heated Pool -Garages -Shag Carpeting
WUJBuyTrustDeeds 3'BR, 2BA. tenredyard. l::f'iiix\'love, relrlg. Utd Corona del Mar *FREE RENT* Dishwasher_ All Utilities !'aid.
*·BROKER 642-7491 * Family only. $250/mo. ALA R . I I e ,., -s CP"'-C=.'-B=;..2.;..;.:"'-~-$10 Ott on 1 Week' a Rent Adults Only . No Pets * Agent, 831-1271 * 1" • s -~"7VV A .:i r, Ba, 21Ai car $30 OU on 5 Week's Rent gar. Ocean vu, priv heh 241 AVOClido St., Costa MIN I~ 3 BR, ~. ~ Pre1ldent e NEWPORT HEIGHTS! privl. $350 mo. Wkdya aft 1, 2316 Newport Blvd., CM -r.r.-j1! Place, Jrg lenced backyard. Cozy 2 Br. Stove, re!rig.675-·~~;::::'-'· ~~~~= '""°""'548-""'97"'55..,;«.,64>-""'336""'7"""' VILLA MARSEILLES
968-'538. Cbild/md pet. 1135. 2 BR 1 BA " SPACIOUS f & 2 BEDROOM APT. '· ctrrE 2 BR-·· n· 1-y-~. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 · % 's, BLT-INS,< 1000 SQ FT gracious living """ cuu WOOD PANELING, 2 Br, · 1~ · Ba, dlx mob: Furnished & Unfumlthed
H F I L-• 300 lge gar. Cpl only. Good kx:. PATIQ. 6#-1687 home. w/w ........ t, auto Adult Livi-
..,_ ~m '""" 1175. 714/435-4719 VLEW .•• 2 Bedrooms, -• , ... Costa Mela dshwhr, compl turn. Htd Disb~asher color coordina~~-pltances •
HUntln..._ Beach 2 BR. l98S-C Ch a r 1 e • 2 Bath den yearly ' pool Mature adlts. No pets. Plush shag c•~et -m ;-ored w be door•-, ...... n45/MO. No 'dop, ' I 2 BR DUplex, cpts, drapes! P,15/mo. 4 Seasons's, 2359 ..... r .... ~ ;r
Walk to water, sngb .• Bach · 642-2259, ~1017 lease of $375. Realtor, bltins, washer, dryer, yara Nwpt. 548-ii332 indirect lighting in kitchen ·.breakfast bar •
$SO. Al,;o 1110 """8· Utll pd. 2 BR, 1 BA. crpll, d'P•. 644-7270 & garage, no pets. $180, HOLIDAY PLAZA huge private.fenced patio· plush Jandscap.
Roni-A-House 979-8430 dlspoaal. rmmed. occup. No w .. t C.M. 646-2385. DELUXE Spa"'°"' 1 BR ing , brick Bar-be-Ques -large heated pools
La una hach pets. P,65/mo. 61J..2918 ONE block fron1 ocean • W. 2 .BR, 'l lii BA,-crpts, drps, !urn apt. $135. Heated Pool. & lanai: Air conditioning.
Nwpt. 3 BR. 1% BA. outside bltns, washer/dryer, patio, Ample parking. Adults, no 3101 So •. Bristol St., l.•nt• Ana-5574200
$110 -NICE Bach. So. La· Dana Point shower, tam rm, liv nn, din gar, $170. mo. 695 Darrell pets. COLDWELL, BANKER &. CO.
guna Full kitch Ocean area, brkfst bar, crpts, St., Ott 962-5367 aft 5 PM. 1965 Pomona Ave., C.M. MANAGING AGENT View' • 3 BR, 2 BA, trpl & gar. Just drps, kit compl bltn, elec SUPER d 1 do
· -• ~ N t doo -y new up ex, spa us TRIPLEX _ Garden apt or l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!ll!!!!!!!!l!!!!l!!!!!!!!!-•'ltVI • UTIL PD. 1 Br. Sep. All.lee • ......, per mo. opes. gar r opener, .,..,.,, r. 1~ be tlo -714 °~3883 lease 714·°'"-3287 w .... ,....., open ams, pa • N'pt Hgbta. 2 hilts to sbop'g 1 ' '_cottage. Pool. ~rator : u.>;T'"" • • .VU"" _ 2 Br 1 ba & 2 b 2 ha A F 360 A U I ,,_ . y EARL y Re"tal-Unfurn. gar. • r, · cntr. 2 BR, pvt patio, end l'-"'pts."'-.;...;u.;.rn;;;----~;.: pt. n urn. _.. El T •· 642-6851 or 642-9855. gar. Water & gardener pd. $215 • tITIL P.D. Charming Oro Vacant Now. 3 BR. 5 houses Furn 1165 Unlurn ~~ Newport Beach Costa M.M
2 Br. Frplc. View. Deck. 0 -·-0 from the beach. Ne1wly * EA s Ts IDE 2 BR ; ·~ '°iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiimiiiiiii Gar. al"v.ft rove painted. Large brick patio. w/garage. Newly painted. "673-0071=-='--------4 BR 2 ba 2 cl • NU~VIEW RE.NTALS * FREE RENT t "I All U.til Pd. 121 34th St. ~~-Ref's req
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d· 1 BR, f'.um, 2 lrg. closets, parlc''g.w!lncii-y.A~.:w.
6134030 or 494-3248 Christmas..Channing 3 Br,• 2 N.~. Phone; 213:542-Sm or • queen me bed, priv dress-3-BR. 2 ba·furnlsbed Steps to
N Be h Ba t/d b . TI4. 673-5562. $285. & $295. NEW! Crpts & ing rm. xtra lrg rooms, encl ocean ................ $2'/5
_ ewport ac s235; crp ;:9491 1 t ~~ · THE BLUFFS drps, pvt yards. 288-294 E. gar w/storagc. Adults only, 3 BR, 2 Ba •••••• , , •••. $285 Furnished &
646-1204
365
HARBOR GREENS
'
It's au here for you to enJo?saturdays an~
Sundays and alJ week long, too. ·
$750,000 ~ealth ipa, 7 swimmin g pools, 7 Ugh~
eel tennis C9U11s, bicycle trails, putting greeri,
sbuffieboaid, croquet. Spacious Junior. l ~
frol\I $174.50 monthly, pfus 1 or ~bedroQm
plans and Z.story wwn houses with 2 or !! rooms. All with electric ltitcbens, privat
cony-er paUo, carpeting, drapenea. Su ,
ranean parking, elevawrs, optional mal&iei>
vice. Gounnet food market, dry cleaneti,
beauty salon on grounds. See beautlfully fulj-
nished models today, 9 a.m. lo 6 p.m . Otjier
times by appolnlment. Just north of Fashiotl
Island at Jamboreo and San Joaquin J.tillo
Road. --r
PARK NEWPORT AP~TMENTS
on the baf ,
relephone (714) 644-1900 for rent1I inform4tlP,n.
Huntln ton S..ch Huntin
OV R 62 ???
RETIRED???
SOCIAL SECURITY
PENSION???
365 •• "'~t '
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•••
WATERFRONT . PIER & 546-04':· ; 4BR,~BA 19th C.M. 64&-0087, no pets. I 2 BR, 1 Ba, Penin ····• • $250 fu _._, FLOAT • 3 BR, formal din-CONDOMINIUM 2035 Fu lerton. C .M. we Have Winter Rentals Un ml....u Newest Apartment Complex
ing nn. 2 baths, w/w c:tpt., ritJngton Beach Desirable f~r plan, lrg ~H;,,;u'"n"-ti.;.ngtoz.;.;..n;...clff=c;;;h;;..._ SPAC. 2 BR. beam ceilings, Will Take Students From $l30 to $215 mo Lowest Rates
!lrept, dbl garage. Yea<ty encl...., •" patio, Wik to much •lorage. Attrac. turn. Also Oceanlronts Avail. 1 Br. $123 • 2 Br. $144 • 3 Br. $164 =:eu0:;;,.F~. ~ IMMED. ~CUPANCY !:o~~y :::a;.~ $400 N1;~x~R~·~~:lc1 f~~so. ~f~~ s:_~~ CALL: 613-3ti63 BachtSora e 1 Bclrms ALL UTILITIES PAID
pell. tPete Barrett Realty. ~:i" 3 Br fl5(1dsh.wshrmo. LUXURY Oceanlronl _ New SPANISH DECOR * SHADY ELMS_ POOL * 2 Bdrms • 3 Bdrma VILLA YO.RIA " . .
' ' 60-4l53. garage, & Dramatic 4 Bdrm CLOSE TO BEACH • Adultl Poolside $140 up 1 Y.I or 2 Full Baths
Walk to Water, S110. Al., 334 Portland Cltcie, H.B. Dining Rm. 15 5 0 IM o·: $225: mo + $100. """"ty • Children next block Call 842·9622 '
C.M, Mpb, SU!i. Also Beach, 536-llD Yearly •. Dave, 615-1972 or d~GE~~&~ 171 E. 2'lnd.st:, CM 642-3645 Master size bedrooms w/ I "1!!!J!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!i!~~i!i!i!ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~"~'!J!l
J:tJ:LHouU-:.JL ~~ 3 BR 2 BA ~ ... -.., =·Ige. 2 BR house_ l•J•MM ... iiEiiiDii.ii;i;DCi;iiCi;UiiPiiAi;N;;;C;;;Y;;; lFU~~~ B:nT1~: rg :OOBd~~a:. ~ ~g ~mce~':U ~Ap ~='·-U.=nf;..u-'-m""-. ---365~ Apt. Unfurn. :~
FINE fro~ ho 3 • 1 bltins,~l9. New crpts drps Completely Ea.stside C.M. Ph: eves, W. Bay • Newport Beach. wood burning fireplace. Cost1 Melli Huntington Beach ocean "' use, per mo Children & -Pi'1 t $2ooi · ht &· New 3 Br apta $250. mo. 6'13-45TI. Convenient laundry area I-""--'-"=.;_ ___ _
BR. 2 bas, Winter or Yrly. pets o. ·k. A g ent . 1aJa !• $100 ~ty fee. Dbl garage, dshwshr 1 BR. $130 & $140. 2 BR, ~ 8~'-2 ~843 ott kitchen. Enclosed pa· EXTRA LARGE 1 BR $1S5. -.-L,-,-".,"-1-b,-.'-p-t.-------I
673-4191, Z13-'795-(£)4 9&t4471 or 546;.Si03 ' ~55~7-8113=~·------334 Portland Circle, H.B. $165. S/Pool. Ideal for ·•c:v:=erung::;" °""''·'-~--~~ tios. 2 swimming pools, Utils pd. Refrig, range, cpt, e Adult ,~ 53'-llll ba hel 1993 Ch .,.... sauna, recreation facili· drps, Hid Pool. Mature • Dishwashers . ; I Newport Island LSE 2 BR, c r pt s • d rps, c ors. urch SL 3rd Girl needed for 3 br ties. Security gUard. No Adults. Infant ok, no .pets. • Choice of 2 color _ • .,
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. VACANT Brand new 2-BR dshwshr, garb. disp. pool. DELUXE 2 Br cov patio MS-9633. townhse in Park Newport. pets. Walk to shops, 1 8 8 7 '" NEWPORT Isl.Jlld. ~uded condo, !uUy upgraded, xlnt E1ec gar dr. $395 mo. ..i-.. 1· bll dbl, FURN. 2 BR. Ar.t. Pool. $122.50/mo + $91 ref. ! ?,:1~ carpeting , •\ ;
l Br boll.9E!. Bayfront pier & crpt, fncd patio, wshr, dryr,1""548-""'2253'=C.'"" _ ___,,,..---,--,-~::-~y ~v~te ~. -CJOielO &oops. Ariwts, no -depos7~ove lnl2/17:-EWS Miilil1 Opin l0-t117 pm QUIET DELUXE effe~t;j pool '+
sl!P• Gal\ Furn. $225 mo. relrig. Xlnt toe. $225 per 2 le 3 BR. (one w/fam rm) Water & gardener paid. pets. $160/m.), 640-1613, Days 879-140l Lyn-2700 p te W CM • winter, 673-0883. mo. inc pool & rec facilities. From $275 to $300 yrly Resp. married c 0 up I e. l!Ml Poi:nona, C.M. ne. 833-0780, Ann. e raon ay1 1 & 2 BR. APTS. • Dead·bolt locks
San Cltmente Move in lmmed. C.U Dale, CAYWOOD Realty ~1200 (Adults). $165. no pets. e Quiet Area • 2."Br. New WANTED rilale, straight-to nr Harbor Blvd&. Pvt. Patios * Htd. Pools • Only Sl40 per mo .. ~. ~11 AGJ'. NEWPORT Sboret 2 &, den, 842-3216. decgr. $170. PatiO, gar. share 3 BR Npt Bch duplex, . Act.ms Nr Shop'g * Adults Only ~~~PUERTO : SHO~; ~~·H.B. TOWNHOUSE. New, 2 2 Ba. pool.&: club privt. Nr. NEW 2 Br, 1% Ba triplex. Adults, no pets. lfJO 21st St. % block to beach. Fireplace lrn Santa Ana Ave., C.M. 536-4SlS°:,rs~1Uii
pvl(TI4) 82l-dA>vw..544-23l6 • Br, l~ Ba, on pool Lease bcb. $300. 213: 681-1278. IDtn range, frpl, crpt, drps. 543-2127. & fumiture. $IBO/all year. 54e n370 Mgr. Apt. 1l3 646-5542 . , 1 -c;=-;::=~· 7--,,,·,.--.i $210. Kid ok. Walk to ""'°°1· EXEC condo In Bl-·2 aty No ch Id rn In o peu. Furn. B•ch. & I Br. Ex· I _.::;675-:::,.::1"::.;11::_. -----IMI "TI!E GABLES" * FRESH Al" A'ITRA~ 3 BR 2 beach. Next to Hunt. Harb. 3 BR. 2'% ha, 2 pa~lc $190/mo. fl09 3)th St. HB. ceptionally nice. 2110 2 BR k>'lver duplex.. 1 blk .to ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 2 Br,• 1% Ba W/ gar. Ad.Its. ' I\ BA. ShorecbffB area, ocean 846-1165 + xtraa. $450. mo. 551-2490. 6'13-0413. beach. Yrly or winter $225 '!! Crpts, drps, bltns, tncd yrd Walk 3 blocks to ~ti
W. S275.. m-6331. LEASE, 4 BR, 3 ba exec ti.ML 'P.:•Ml:O :-$140 Mo •. 2 BR. mtns, crpts, Newport Blvd.1 C;M. or.$200 mo. 130 46th St. See w/ patio. Wtr pd. 636-413}, Lrg 2 & 3 BR. Apts. Nef11Y
:1 HoU... Unfum. 305 'bonie, pr 0 t ~pa:t,.1_-_...,. .. ,,_...,.....,v" .. _______ drps. l:rplc, patio & lndry NEW 1 & 2 BR's froJn $190 to Nov 24-26 ·or phone DEL,UXE 2437 Orange Ave No. 0 .$160. decorated, w/w crpts, dips,
tlose to Schla & beach, NIGU£L.Shores 3 br den 2 facil. Couple & 1 sml child $2:1). Nr. beach & shop'g. 213/285-4215. APARTMENTS 2 BR, upsta.in. bar, bltns, bltna, except re.frig. $16! &
Genw1I $36S mo. 968-2S'l0 be., new home ~loonipl elec ok. No pets. 842-4664. 114 E. 20th. CM, 548-0131. SEACLIFF Manor Apt s Air Cond • f)'plc's . 3 Swim· crpts, $165/mo. Vtil paid. S235. No singles, no Pfts.
1.:::c::.;;:;,:;;;.,.c _____ .l,,:";B"r."'iiCoodoc=;""·-";;C'PC,.,."-·-dr.,=, kit includ. refrig. in lovely Newport Buch NblyCEga~~re,•.•1"'A·dQululteovert. Sep30r.. 1Ba1,i.h50ei·o'Poo1'.•1','~ Put1"a-npd1i~ ?;1~~P~~ ~e~~es~d ~Mr.or Whl}r J 2 ~~. 53&-1711. +I-' blois, retrig, pool & clubbse. gate controlled community. --'» ~ ....... ... DUPLEX·lmmac. 2 f."OV
$225. 548-1405. Avail for tease Jan. 1st. $425 *BEACON BAY* No pets, 548-1021. Ave~k about ow-discount Billiard Room. -'86-"2-31~-="°""'=~~=~ patio, new drps, ~ true,
SHARP 4 BR. 2 BA. ,Carpets, per mo inclds assoc. dues. 3 BR, 3 ba., elec kit, rel. e $135 • Nicely furnished 1 c548-o.=..=oc· ------1 l B~ B:·~~160$l85 * SHADY ELMS -POOL * priv. dbl gar. L e!J y
drapes, blc. d 5 h w sh r, Shown by appL 494-6483. Dishwhr, c pt s Id rp s. Br. Apt. Adults. 132 w. LG-. 1 bdrm. apt., 1 blk. to MED. ITERnRANmEAN • Adults Poolside $140 up grounds. Water & ~~ $275 S:U 2998 Garden. NO PETS. $525 Mo. Wilson CM. 645-4530. bay or ocean. Freshly paint· e Children next block paid. Resp. marrlea ·;q1.
/mo. -• Houses Furno or yearly Jeaae, incl. utilitliea. PLEASANT--Iower-l-Br pool ed, _$165 per mo., 675-4600 VILLAGE 117 E. 22nd St., CM ~3&15 (adults). $165. No.• 't>fts.
........ w.1tdtCOITAMllA Irvine Unfurn. 310 HOPE GERRIE Rlty M.5-4400 adults, no pets. Util pd, 1884 $325 • Yearly Oceanfront. 2 ' BACHELOR. 1 .l 2 Br SU-32TIJ _.--;, • Monrovia. 5f8.-0336 BR, 1 BA •. Deck. Gar. Blt· 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. w/furn. avail. Heated pool. NEW beach apta, 426-2hllSL
-~BR. JBa. Alr/oond. ,, $26S Corona del Mar lns. 645-8908. (TI4) 557-8020 $120 & up. adults. 853 4 blocks from ocean. 1 ~R
These Are Just A Few 01 3 BR. 2 Ba. air/cond •• $285 . . I •--~ 11¥1 2 BR. Crpta, drps, bltins, WINTER. 2 BR $2'25. 4 BR: RENTAL OFFICE Center St. 645-8965. $155 mo. 2 "BR $195 mo, 3
Our MANY RENTALS •• , 3 BR. 2Ba. air/cond ••• $310 2BR. ~O SeaVlew, 1 blk ~uu•n .. forhnt Private patio. Gar. Chu.pie h S125 1 • ..:0:'.'.PC:E:'.'.N:..;'.10'..:AM~_::to"-"6-'P-"M'-e TROPICAL POOL e BR $265 mo. Martager * 3 BR. 2 ba. Atrium •••• $340 from big Corona. Adults. I ~mmiiiiiiiiiiimi·~~ pref. 548-STil, 642-3.534. =~~,.YNr ~f~ Time To Step Up 2 Br studio. 1% Ba. trpl, sprl wanted. Tobin Rea1ty, ~
$115 . NEAR Everything! l 3 BR. 2 Ba. Atrium •••• $365 Furn or Unfurn. $.150 or $300 !I BACHELOR, util paid, $145 8trcase. Gas&: wtr. pd, 145 S.3371. \ , 1
Br. Furn duplex. E/side. 6 BR. 3 Ba. I.am. rm .•• $475 per m<,> on 1 yr lease. Apts. Furn. 360 mo. $50 cleaning fee, Nr Apt. Unfurn. 365 Your apartment in a French E. 18th No. 9, 548-ll68. MOVE-IN TODAY ,
Avl now. POS9eSSIOn Jan 1. Owner, OCC &: UCI. 557-7768. :.;,;;;.;....;;.;...,;;;.;.;;_ __ -'.;;; Country Garden -yet near NEWLY decor 2 BR, l Y... ha 2 BR in spac. 4-plex: '$i39.l * eve5 21.3:282-52.52 Balboa Island 1 BR. Furn. Apt. $140/mo. Capiatreno Beach shoppingblya n d activltid. studio. Pvt patio. Child ok. Pool. Kids ok. See 'ltsgr. 1
$135. ALONE on IA Ac! J.luge Huntington Be•ch No pets or children. ~ 1.;::::::::;;;=:..:;.:.:::;:;: __ I Impecca manage • no pets. $100. m Joann. 17371·8 Keel90n. 1 ~-.,Y: of
1 Br. dbl gar*. Vacant .... n Mobile Home, beach, LqVELY 3 Br. 2 ~· Steps Center St., C.M. 642-5848. NEW lux, oce&.n vu, 2 BR, personal private. Two ~3627 or 646-3391 Beach Blvd, oU ·~ater. ~ to beach. Beautiful & Pal•"sade $250 34626 bedrooms, den, 2 baths, ,..,.. "'=10 r "'7-'260 • ' modern. ~nn util, winter 1 BR turn apt, $105. s, · mo., patio, picture·book kitchen. 3 BR. 2 BA. 1% blk to beach. "'10°'o::J 0 O'I ..... ' • ' 1
$1'5 • O)ZY 2 Br Cottage! fam park, $165, inc 1 -2538 Newport IDvd, Camino Capistrano. Oubhouse w/pool & tennis 2 WEEKS FREE RENT! 1
Gar' Fen-• for tot. ~ing. Avail Dec. 16. lease; $400 mo., yearl,y Call ,,A,. ,,,,..,.. Fireplace and other piuses. W .,.. Br F"I N •-o. ft<•
1..-.ou "SINCE' 1948.. • ~ Winton, Realtor 675--3331 ===o:"°':=~""'="-=~ Corona del Mlir From $195, adult section. crts. ater pad, _,.,, mo. · · .. c. r. """ _...,
* •-1•--p • I IMMACULATE 1 Br Sl25 util 'iiiiiiiii;i~i;;i~iiiiiiiiiii THE VENOOME SG-1837 aft 5 PM. Call 53&-1661,-S.S 11m. $154. FIXER UPPER! 3 Br. ~~i:~m p~ ~ Newport BMch u. -eninau a Pd. Sngl sty, cpt/drp, prl I LARGE 2 BR, crpls, drps, wkdaya. '
2 ~ Huge yard for kids/ Days 552•7000 Nlfhtl NEWPORT Island. 2 BR, LARGE 3 BR. 2 BA, furn, Patio. Quiet adlts. 673-2056 1845 Anaheim Avenue nr Estancia Hi school. Older NEW dlx 2 br dplX~ tlnt,
1
pe..... Dier & float $310 mo Year upper duplex. 1 hlk to LRG. clean 1 Br. Pool. For ~-Call Mn. Phillips 540-0781 pref, l135 613-8145 eves. drps, D/W, bltns. Sl'l'S'. jlJ
LANDLORDSI 'round $250. ~·'"-· beach, 2 blks market. Yrly New Villa Paul• LG K53&-n!~ .. v. ille. 53~.~.-sERvtCE or mo. ·uu '\I, adulU .over 35. $125 util pd, E 1 Br. Pool. Nr shops. ,qo;u
FREE RENTREAL NTALS 2 BR. lli4 ba .•.....••.• $265 June. 819-2061 days, rental, monthly lse. $325. 645-mi or 548-2401 2 Br., 2 Full Ba. AdltJ;, no pets. $140 util !'d::t CT.,~:;;--=,--,==,;,...
BEACON 2 BR. 2 Ba .••••••....•• $300 m-7013 eve'!I. 214 35th St., 673-4500. I-'===..::.:="----FamiUes Welcome 1884 Monrovia. 548--0336 WALK TO BEAC~ * 645-0111 * 3 BR. 2 ba .••.••••.•••• S325 Condominiums e S25 Wk & Up On Ocean Huntington Beach ON TEN ACRES Sha& cpt/drps, patio, LRG. 2 BR, l1ii BA. priv. New 1 & 2 Br, cptf
, -SI 4 BR. 2 ba. Broadmoor $385 Uni 320 1 --1 .. Bach • 1 BR-Rooms 1;;:;;:::;;;:;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;; Apts. furn./unfum. Lease beam ce.il., garages. patlo No pe" Cb"•-k d5WShr, lrpl. 316 ·1 th. LANDLORD • 4 BR. 2 ba. tam rm •••. $400 urn. M;idS"ervtce 4 Pool • Util Pd Fireplace I priv. patios. F $180 · ...,, ...... .,.n ° · 847 3957 ' L.OUINTA HERMOSA Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkist. 622 H=ton CM $155. T.16 Joann. 846-1584. -' >d '
We Spec!alil:e in Newport i ed h•11 Costa Meu • Call 615-8740 • S""'-'·'" Country Estate Liv· 900 Sea Lan, CdM 644-2.611 See Mgr. Mr. & Mrs: Hoban NEW 1 & 2 BR's from $170 to ~chN Bzl.".', ·.~~ l_Onm Beach . Corona del Mr.r . r I BEAOI &: Pier. 2 BR $225. _....... 548-2062 $190. Nr. 1>¥cb •· 'g. Dt«ll YU ..... ~ .._ & x..acuna. Our Rental Ser-e DELIGHTFUL 2 Util pd. Adults. 303 E. ing & Spacious Apts. Ter· (Mac:Ar\hur nr C.oaa:t Hwy) e NEWPORT e 114 E. .CM. Y:f l!_e.ncy, Gar. No dq,••·
vice ~' FREE to You! Try BEDROOM _ split Ed&e'Nater. {l) STI-2866. raced pool; iuok:en gas 01'W""lll1:1 ~J..1Vi~w RENTALS Unl PIU'REALk c TY, '-" llevel.ediNetear shopping. FmoURNrnc" 21 Bru:fs507· YearE ~rm.... ~lnlYRUnbelievabF'URNle Lit''""'115. . = Joo..~p;~2 ~~ ~:~~::i~rsc: 2 ~SAdt ~CM· ~:_-mBAJ. =I' lNf!WBR m:,,r fltg•
673-4030 or , 494-3248 c!iJ ,._.*1_ en ~~~ne mm a occupancy. · · · .cwu B • . • plus apacidus: 1 bedroom 1 &: 2 BR. Furn &·'unr. D<lJ'. ., • Vl<rVY'"· dlhdlhwsh~: Sl50 mo. A~.~~ ''0'7,==--';;::;:1!:::;1;:---~ • #N.,..._..e, ~ ~ / mo "' -o .B:=1c;"":c"c,673-68!0"""='"''=~=~ 2 BR. FURN. 15 ......... ,.... with _.vate en-Cb•"ld-n's Sect~n,. 2 BR unfUtn ........... , d'"""• 67~ , , 18.lbff P•nlnsU I , .O.ttice ... bbln~s AM to I PM RL.,_,TR. • ' U't"I"(~• §ruoro $ll5; l BR. $175, 2 2 BR. Studh>Furn • .._" t:;;;." $200 pr =nth. Both MUST •• SEE' Fr"' .. ..., ~/oven, retri&:No ~ .r ' BR. $235 to $3)0. ..,_ uni tennis . · • ...., $140/mo._ 96&-1456. BEAt.rr. 2 Br, 2 Ba. ;dlx
BAY VIEW 1 BJ:l. w/w shag 4% BR, 2 ba, Univ Park ott E•lt Bluff Marahall Realty 675-4600 ~·1.JTllJTI&') PAID ts nat ~ & ' ALL UTILlTIES PAID poolside nr bch. $1ffi Jow
crpt'g, drps, pamt. All new. CUJ1'tt Dr. AvaU Jan l.I---------Adults No peta: call Bailey -85.iO As[t. Call 64&-1038 S~~~~·=r& ~. N"O dep. 2320 Florida. 536-l976.
Yard. Gar. $190 yrl Y • 633-9393 ext 195 wkdys; BEAUTIF'UL "E" plan 3 Br. "C.;.o;..ro;...n_a.,...cle_l_Ma_r___ (f blks S. 01 san Dleao Frwy 2:i;:s ch~. = ** 3 Br., l'h ba. ** pets. $16S/mo. 979-013(. WALK to ocean, 2 mt,·~ty
G4H029 ~C,Sat & Sun. Fannw t;'°~Ui ~::if mo. UV RM •/kitch bar combo on Beach, 1 blk w. on Holt location. Lease $3)0 pr. Large. newly decor. encl LARGE 2 BR. ts & dee cpts, dl'P$. 'bltln$.
Coron• del Mar L•nuna BMch or ae r -· · con-2 sml bunk rms. prt sundek to 16211 P~"·"a:e , ---.) month. Call s~ ••= °'TR. patio, bltn1, crpt, drps, · carpe Consider child 536-615S.~ i 1::7:;::~:--;:;:'7-;;:-;j::_:;!•~::::::=::.:-:-~-:-j,>i~d~e'!:r~2nd!!;!!..i~ll!,.!l63l!7-4589~~·--nn Fernlea1, "•AJI01n a.<'l\a-' :o.-.uo: •...-o.NU n.u Cl--lo e·--••ing $170 drapes. No s l n g I e 1 . !!If. 1: ""' ~ <n4) 847-5441 """' ... ~,,... · 113()/mo. Call 543-m9 · 2 BR. Partially furn. to OLD CdM 3 BR. ;.,(llBA, 3 $160 • UTJL PD. ] Br. So. foUntiln Valley 1 BR. Crpta, drps, stove, mo, 880 Center St., CM. Call k Sl40/ , I I
frplcs. 1 yr Ille • .,...,., mo. Laguna. Bltns. Patio. Cat:1------'---i;C;oat;;:;: a;;;M;IOI;;'";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. disposal, lrg. cov'd deck. aft 5:30 pm wkdys, all day 2 Bdrn\ 1 Bath, Blt-lns. ~ · motth .,. 1t --•J91 ok. co·~ ~R. Fam R m , $145 • $~65 • Immed. occup. $ 1 8 0 • wknds, ~. New ...... ....,t N""'• ,.iot-taro Mr. Sm • :, '
OhTV n.vv-.>.0 Bachelor & 1 BR, patios, 613-2918 . n'5i'Mo':" ... 531-«180 -BEAt.rr. 3 Br. 2 &.-1n inr-2 BDRM. trplc, adultl, no $195 . 2 BR. Apt. Huge deck. Separate dining rm, 2 2/3 LIVE LIKE A KING frplc's, prl\I. garages • 2 Story Condo. Orps, w/w new f.plex nr. paritt Bllns, pets. $250. mo. 417 Potnset· Gorgeous ocean view! ba, dbl encl&:f_a:ar, awirn Dl\tldea --&.th & 1011 of SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Ba. open crpta, 2 b4rm lg ba. LARGE 1 Br. bit-Ina, d hr lio $%0. 1163-,,_, ua. See Sat & sun 10-5 $300 •. t.RG. ·2 ~ Den. 2 BA. pool. SaW\8. ba, tennis At Budget Prices! closets Rec hall pool &: beacm, priv gar. Avl ap-upstairs. Living rm., dining dshwhr. Adults no peta. ·W ' pa • • ,...,...,.
-u.. F'rplc. Gill'. 30' deck. View. ~. 3 ml from beach FURNISH"""'-;-pool ~ sawia be.tbs. prox. Dec 10. 6'13-0037, rm., kit. % be.. d~tn. $130. 60-5168. • Laguna Beach ;
Cotta m.M Nr. ocean. 637--4334 -UNFUJIN!Sll~uED See fOr ...,,_If. 11301 615-4873 Fncd patio, gar. No cbildttn LG 2 BR with wltho l L
LRG. 2 BR, !!repl, dbl NU-VIEW RENTALS Hbntlnatan Beach Keelaoo Ln'.(i-btk w. ol *GREAT VIEW-> BR.* or pei.. Older COUJ>le. • or u UNIQUE Laguna CUll&...,c
garage detaehed. covered .673-4030 or 494-3248 ,;;s;.;. * POOLS Beach, l blk N. of Slater). Frplc, bltns, sundedm, pool S165/mo. ~-~:1,~~~ :;t,.~ ,wa:e:.e-"~':· ~-S "! patio~ yard. o .. cblld * 3 BR. & DEN * llUNTINGTON Omtinental 81>-'1848 $210 u~ 644-6344 6'JS.S53S HAPPINESS ia enjoy Ing •
K I Ph 64" __ ,,,,, TownhoUae 2 &: 4 Br ..... * ENCLOSED • ' "i Illa I UI , __ ., UNFURN. 2 BR apt. Adults, ahopplng. 2 BR .. 2 Ba.; .
0 · lnf0• : ~ MEDITT • .,STYLE I% Ba, blins, wsbr-'or;~: GARAGES. LRG. 2',Br, beam ceU., crpt, 2 BDRM. 2 car covered park• ~ g 0 e, 14iuuy, no pets. SJ.40. 610 Joann St. nn1. Ii storap~m
or . Frplc. 2 Bathl. Bui]t.tn crpbl, drps, cl<>Ml 'to 1tmp'g * CONVENIENT drps, bltn d·wahr. displ, pool ng. ~1.~Jr hicld'g ~1:11~ ~!~ z:ane Apt c, C.M. M&-9573. w" l lpttipel'I, EA~SIDE 4 Br, 2 Ba, trpl, kitchen. W/W Carpets. & schools. 962-8181. 1X>~.ALJ...BEA01ES --&: util P'f· Adults, no-=· water. . Jbau and _CUol BulUttJn 2 BR. Duplex. $145. Crpt'd. 1 mosak: tile, ahutt $450
!:!.':'..'t'. ~~d"'b·I -;,~.-uCl~o -10 T:OM.wlS,..,.SlrcDNa ·REALTMY~ Irvine FROM $1"' MONTH NCamr--.taJ.-!210/mO. SPAc--duplex. •-BR. 21> "'" "Pele 'N' Tiiiie." child & muill pet ok. Mo. -aily-furn, ~ ~· "-"ICI ~ . "N eron. ~. ttep dining. close to heh, ten• 645-l'(lS adullJI only. Abo aVaD.
""''·No pe!S. . * 494-0731 * 1195 NEW 2 BR 1!4 BA ADULTS PLEASE * 1 BDRM. FURN. nl•, Jl8!k.136S mo. 64tH~Jl. s;,!Clt/•~.5Qu31•'brAd., ulz,. &no. LRG Z ~R. l\I Ba studio .,.to ::;g,ther...,luxuByryapp~ !J!: $275. CJean 3 BR, 2 BA, htd , ~ . · 2 (:cnck, Bit.ins. Pocil. ' Adult A t. N lake """"""' C t MeM .... r ... ., ... ..., """" .. ,.....,
'pool. 1 ..... game rm. }"rplc. $300 MO. New, Ww, 3 Br. ·Call .. ~7 VILLA POMONA P eat _.... OI a pebl $19 $Imo 2281 Shag. bltlns, pool. $160, uUI "'"'4653. .~~, 1
Bltns -:1w carpet, drapes. Ba. home. Carp/drapes, ll'W . ..,.. =.utN =~/patio1oi LRG 2 Br f150 Car Orps Fordlwn. Bua &f&..lS89, pd. 1968 Maple, 645-6647 e VIEW e ' I I CeIJ.,P Park. 51H43& bltn RAO. Place l!ealty. La9una ~le PHDN&-'42-2015 l2th"st053&-1~7, mo. •Ive, prtv' tncd ,,.rd, kids RH. 64&-4939. Dl:LUX 2 II!'-11' Ba• •hl>i OCEANFRO!tt'.:;'
5 B
R&.FamRm trolc''Bar, 494-9104 . 4!M·9'129"""'~"T Yle.,..~2.ar,2 (1760PomonaAve.) OK no pe111 w. side, $180-2 Br, l\i Ba. crpt, dsh/wasfi. gar, rte. 2BR,2BA.LcaR:lita"8 ;bf . & bop N rt a..ch i "-".IU.. ,~I;<" · CUTE 1 Br. duplex. Avail. en:.n18. ' Townhoute. CrpQ:, drps. $155. '166 w. Wll!On, 54HT31 Adults, 00 pets. £iev.,>IW .,,
Ha<bor" Nr /,.. 1 1f· owpo Ba. on Goll °"""'· UlO WEEKLY-MONTHLY now. Small pr\v. yard. DELUX """" trg 1 BR. apt gat. 2649 Granat, Apt E. NEAT/clean/-d I BR. boacb. Pool, S<curltJ,, 735
Avl app~ • • MINI FARM for dm!Opln& mo. Call 675-ml. Exocutlve Sufte1 Small Child OK. Refs. $1«5 In ""'-, ao.. to Sooth CM. $1t-OOI. pr, $115. Back Bay area. Coutell'Z:.. fu1t"P"• ~"':;,1 · •4 111' Fam YoU"8 s-lna cltbeory. Ml11lon Vlalo 20IO Newporl Blvd. 1 ~~or i!:,.~·blka o.ut"&nter. Adlts. no peta. ** BEAUTtroL l A 2 BR. :ISO Delmar, !ll3·CE.J-966S. ,... ~
Rm. .,.b-ptll, ar drpl. ' L • e ::>f:n ~::e::u•:.: 3 BR. 2 BA, CJPt•, drps. Costa Mesa ttom 'Beach, nr. shopping, JIM. 557-6629 ~~:"'poruy~ -~ ~ -i -BR. ~ An-mms~l6 SPLIT level 2 BR ~~q,u.
$ 215 I mo • w I option overseert to ilart from bltna, pool prlv\l. Isl 4 last 642~2'11 etc. No Iona' haln. 536..Ql66 2 BR, 2 BA, crpt, drpt, bltna, 1180· Cal' l f'' · poo appreeU1te. 1B13 Viola Pl, cfrtlt,-.J.1n bu. OClc...:-,vkw
5&-086'J. Krttcb.Postlbllltle• mo'• rent. $235/mo . STUDIOS.& I BR'S Lttguna S..ch Wahr/dryer hookup, patio, ' "°302. go.ta M!I!: ded.-~ 2~ iHR.U Br home. pas.. unllmlted. Ltvtna fl\l*l'tft11 830-0871. -• FREE IJnnui gAr. l child/no pet. $170. FOR least', new Townhoule 3 tOWn. $225. Yrly. Adbfts-1-
EMtalde. New en>ts &: tor ovmecn A-1 or 2 mini Townhouse Uftfum. W • FREE Utlllties API' Avail. tmmed. oc-181.ff l5el Mir 54S..f;27S BR. 1~ BA, crpt1, drps. Dana Point A: leat + $11» delJoctt.
fmlbly otlnted. f'X:ple. Dble people. Availablefor$135. + •Full Kitchen _ cupaney, newly re<lec. 1 br. $140/Up ipac 2 Br1 & 3 Br, dshlwahc, dblpf11' POOlm' n.,r / 494-(1((1$ eves, Seer Ap( S.t,
gar. '646-2768 Utlii M~ Fountain Velley •Heated Pool ocel'r!2. V'll'ld.1Blk';Jt:tromy w1111ter. !Mi Ba., POOi, cpt/orp, bltns, South 2ouBat au •• ~4• 6-OCEAN bluU, IJR, w w &tn. Avail. Jan. i.t.•,
2 BR cute fenced cottage. Harbor View Home ... ,.. A ts on . r eue. PlYKmd. 1998 Meple, No. 1 2 Br.. .. crp.:.., rpc, cpts, dt•Pt'I. re i:. lllaye, 2 BR apt, w/w cpt, ~· 'kit.
Pool avail. '2«lfmo. 177 'l:. 4 BEDROOM _year~ 3 BDRM townboult, 21,9 • Laundry Facllltlei. $180 per mo. 1772. ·&4>3813. blln•, end pr/patio/Yard. wshr/dl')'t'!r, $250. mo. pref rum. ocean view c _,
22nd St CM. 64~9645. I . .,75 bnt,hs, frplc, dahwbr, i,., • TV &: ma1d scrv avail BACH nr beach ll35-$lM. Col LC 2 BR d Sl65 &: $175. 5 4 6-0 ( 6 9 ; middle q:e, telJf'IXI (.'Otlple. vtry' nke bra~ on the
3BR., ~ t i.nc:l $225 mo ease ,.... . mo. Ava pallo. 1tt. dbl gar.~ • Phono ~ l\!. 1.m N. ())Ast • Open $16.; 00:0 ... 2 ~~n. '1:0 56-9491, John. Aft 5 PM, call 496-0003. &TOUnd PArkl~. AR l:Yr•
OlUdrcn • 11 0~ Lf& yard able December 15th. rno. Afttt 4:30 pm, ~ F0r thlU l~em Under SS(I, tty Evts.. 67S-436'1, 4 $ .t • 2 5 0 8 pe1,, 309 Monte V I at a A good want ad la a eood In. For that Item under J50, try round, '190 mo. Mt, Blecb,
97!M32'l REALTOR, 614-7270. Neod o "Pad"? Place an •di the PenflY Plncher. ews ~ ~nt. · • tbe Pfw!ny Plncher. _..,._,_"7_. ------
,
•
)
, OA.U.V PILOT frld.Q, Oeetmbu ll, 1972
l~I LoollM-. lal 1-:-1~ 1----1~ [ llil f-·-··-l[tl~ ... --... -I ~
IJ._, Ap1s Apt.., Apt1., ,,l;.;u..;.l.;.neu=....;.R;..e_nt_•_I __ 44_5 ~°""" 1'-.... , SSO 1 ,o_e_b~y-•l_tt_lllf~----.;.Hou.;.;..;';.;°".;.l.;.•_•n_1_ne;:... ___ Job W.,,ltd, Mole •,~Furn. or Unfvrn. 370 F,;:.r,, or Untum. 170 Furn. Of' Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 r~ , •"'LEM ,_ ........ HELP Goki Puatan motbu LOVE l ca.re 1ar little totJI OOUPLE nm1a work. we MAN, Nine:I&, reUable, bun. ·~-----------------l---:-:------:---"7.-:-----1AVAJJ.JU> ar .... t. '-'WQ. /) II ....... __.__ a ' .. _ '""" 1 • ZIM liCI· ri . comer 1tore, cat w r<l'nlllW • Allwlla le: New 1 and wUl dean your home thor· dabWI, hu ...,.,n ~ .-:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~=;;;M;te1;M;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;;C;ot:t;•;;:Meta:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;I Pretcnt tenant, c.noeu & SiamC9t kUten fnd. Vlc CStabw')' IJ'act) H. u . OUihly, EX.per. cau 646-0l30 ~ 1t1t.iorm, and la\ffi: N Cha!fln. t~ nn. ft. dlaplay Corona del Mar Slate 5J8...8034. 1fter 6 pm. dries, plua 18.let. nteda IOOd
window•. 40 ft. facing Cout Beach, Save from the cold. ,:IC~ ,.".,=ot~d-hli<_h_ac_:hi_""~""'~ Prof. C1r-t Cle1nl-permanent Job. 53&-«*>
Hwy., 65 n. side 11reet & 673-9351'. will bab,yslt wh.ile you do AlJo wl~-11 Door c~. RETIRED J?l'Ol ,entle-mar.
*IU"den. I*tklna. 40c *I· ft. SIAMESE Cal .. female Otrlsttna• I h 0 p p In lit . .. .. , •C/\O 1*(:1$ PIT emplOy. Will
~. ~INECREEK LIVES UP TO ITS NAME ...
"1ve' 500 tree• ind 10 'a11e1m1 create a re411dno Mtling. Wood
,"deck.I, two patios, slldlno Qless doors, bflng tile High Sierras ,
·!'n!o your 1p11c1QU• l· or 2-bedroom garde!'! al)artment From
:,S165. Deco1a\01-llne lurnl1ure p8Ckege1 1v11Heble. ~300 Fa!r11lew A~ Coala Mes.. Phone : SAS-2300.
FOR
BETTER
e I Ml. to Buch e Sun Decks &
Patios
• Carpets, Drapes
• Lo,dt of Parking
• Garages -P0ol e Rec. ~oom
714 /646-6505
Al.MJ otnce suite, 650 tel· ft. ~.it;_ Warner & Bolsa Roberta 64l).-0818. 1 -.,..,.:Cofi:=.;°":::;1.:,cho,,::~:;,o·-===;,· ~ work at prac. anythlna
JSc. Rented w/1tore or aep. Chica H.B. Fnd about t 1-"=~."-"EN""'Jo"'v~n"i"E--HOUSE OF CLEAN ta.lt aalary _ 64&.fn34 ,
arately. C. W. Muten, I =o""""'~~""°=,·~84&-~1~426.7.---,.--,-t-IOLIDAYS * f'oor, windows. c:.rpt, walls, Job Wanted, Female 702 ,
Realtor, 673--4120, SMALL shamY .• ~ack dog SH "Pet. 'N' Tiiiie'' I )'r&. In area. 6'2·6824. ~~. l~:ldnJo...~ p= WOULD like to babysll, my °MESA Cleanlng, carpets, LADY wl1he1 H!)U.tekeeplbe '"'& 962 N1L>ll homv, Costa Meaa. Phone wlndow1, Ooors, etc. Retkl/ It Nunln& In private JK1me.
"""' · """"'' &1~1f:ITG. co1nm'I. ~7.fi742, 548.(lll. Prf.l'ler m&le1. W r It e 1
FND Blk, grey, tan short ---------Xlnt Hou&eeleaning Clullt\ed Ad No. 568, Delly
ha.I.red lK>und . 1 blue eye-, 1 r..:arpenter By Day. Own Transportatlon Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Co!ita I
brown c-ye. Pregnant. Vic. * 83&-0648 * Mesa, Ca 92626.
17th St CM. ,_,_ "'"' CARPENTRY ail phaEs, ex-l l ~--? W ·• · v .. r ,u.J'I. ~rUy done at reasonable Dedlcat.d Cleaning NEED beip a 1-1"" e }~LUFFY, It colored male l'atea. Fut acrvlce, 968-7914 * \VE 00 EVERYTHING * have Aider, Nu r • e •, '
puppy found on WU.On in all.er 5 wkJt··-, ··~•-R•'-. Free est. 64&-2839-Housekee~ QJmpa.nlons, C ti.1 963-86'7'9 ~· -v .... u.-ui Homemakers, Up John ,
· · · Sat. & Sun. '" 'ft.fG • cl ~ "'7~1 UPPER Retainer, in front of HAvuu' • ea.nup Ii,-exp '" """ -Party Pleasers. Harbor & LARGE OR SMALL college student, ige trk. All typet work. C\Jt doors, 534--1846 or 534-2164.. · Help Went9d, M & F 710 Baker, C.M. 5-15-6446. l --• n-•-• tram pane , 1-.::niuu, ,.....,, e, I •onl~ YEU.OW Lab, Marineni ~1-962 1961 1 c,;.;;;.;;.c··;o...•______ ACCEPTING appllcatlom re.-..., etc. - -1 -
Drive, N.B. Male, 3 to 5 MJNOR Mme repairs. Plum-* IRONING· * for full Ume dishwashers, mos. old. 645-2164.. bing _ carpentry _ painting • Moderate rates 6(5'..7487 busboys, cook1. Must be at
f"ND • German Shepherd 3-4 tile. Call 541)-556(1, . least 18 yrs or 11.ge. Colony
AU UTILITll'S PAID mo. old male, colored nose. Maintenance K 1 t ch en , San J uan
1 & 2 BDRM'S. y,·,. "-ta M,.. r:Ao .,.,_ \Vorld's Best Carpenter Capi..atrano.
IDEAL Costa Meisa loc. Ofc/sto~. 1200 mq. ft. o.y.,
~3437, 548-7398 eves &
wknds.
. ....,., ' ~" Small Jobs e Reference1 FLOAT MAINTENANCE
•----In --~Ing lot al ...... ,. Local manur8.ct11..;na 11r1n ~~F~u~rn~-~&~U~n:lu~•;n~. ;A~v:•~il;.· ll;;lndnsu;.1tir=i:l1°il~R;;;e;;:n;;;t~11;;:~4i5i:'O FOUND prescription sun cn41 645-7588 Palnt & \.I-· rot repair. 13 ACCOUNTING CLERK :
670Sq F' 3 .___ ...v: gUUOR:"s .,....,. ALL\y""sof"-~n+ ..... bl& yea r s experience. -~ .... · · •· P•wax: pwr. ~· Jr~a11hlon Js1and, ~l. & •m·'°l. ..........,..-... ,. t:A• 2757 R.E. Whittemore needs ve~tlle gal to han-1959 MAPLE STREET, COSTA MESA
Alto Garaget for Rent
·W(j sq. (t. UO It 220 pwr. u.t .,...,... die A/P & AIR. Ute typln«,
Pvt. office. plenty --FOUND in Baycrest area-536-1648 p I ti & Start •A"". Call Sally Hart. Male black & tan Collie mix 1 ~--~-~----a n "I ...,..., CR.ltr~~~~k~:S~· dog approx 4-6 mo. 548-7226 Carpet Service Paperhanging =· ~~~~1B11~d.~
~ -~"-'sq"".""n='.'-"M7·~\--,pac-e MALE Beagle found in JOHN 'S Carpet It Upholstery CUSLOM PAINTING CM. ~pts., "' Apts., "'pts., to. Furn. or Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 1 __ F_u_•n_._o_,_u_n1u __ m_._-_1_1_0
. ;: ..
:~ .. . .-,-
THE EXCITING
PALM MESA APTS.
FUN IN THE SUN! ~j Minutes to Newport Beach
·;Unbelievably large a.pts. Decorator furnish-
·~·ed Huge Pool, jacuzzi, electric built·ins, shag
;:carpets, drapes, sauna & more!
;, ADULTS-NO PETS
;: SINGLES . . . . . . $ 150
~ 1 BDRMS •..... $160
;: 2 BDRMS. $180
':! Unfurnithed Apts. Available
:: From $10 to $15 LESS.
~ YOU 'RE RIGHT -
:: THEY'RE UNDERPRICED!
;: 1561 MESA DR., COSTA MESA
~ 5 blk1. E. of Newport Blvd.
546-9868
Fountain Valley I & w/front office, lrg rear College-Pa"rk-aiea.549-.f338. Ori-Shampoo fTI!'e Scotch· tnter/Extcr. UnrUin. litter. AITERNOON Ncwgpape
,,,-door. $237.50/mo. ln7 Whit· FND Grey & White Male cat guard (Soil Retardantal. spec. price. Free color con-delivery. Newport Beach ~liiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiil..~.ii~I tier Ave. CM. 646-6033 days vie. Sunset Beach, 592-1647. Degreasen Ir: all color 1ulting & eel. Lie. Ina. area. Must own dependable
SHAKEWOOD ~ or 64&-0081 ~~. YNG male gray/wbt cat _ brighteners: & 10 minute Won 't be underbid. 642--6005. 1 ~ve~h~''~'~'·-64<H~_l62_._~=-1 Largest 2 BR's in town. 10349 Room & Board 405 1300 SQ. rr. M-1 space Very friendly. Flea Collar. bleach for white carpeta. No Wa.sfin~ APT w/kitcherwtte & Util to
Slater Ave. nr. Brookhunt ;;fl . w/front otfice, lrg rear Vic: LincolnHigh64Hll39 :ve= ~:~cl~~ *WALLPAPER* an independent honest &
& SD FN.')', F'lu. Valley. -pnv rm in home of door, $170/mo. 1787 Whit-Lost SSS living rm., dining rm. & When you. call "Mac" cI1 ean .. ~dyi~n1 exlnch8nge for (TI4) 962-4481. e Priv. adult prac nurse for ambulatory tier SI., 01. 646--5033 d~, 548-l4« 646-17ll ew 1u-.. ,..,. p my 11n1 .
areas (famlliea too!) ~Bal· gentleman, lic'd & ins'd. or 646-0081 eves. hall Sl5. Any rm. s7.50• motel in H espe r I a .H i
anced power kitchens: • 4 963-'82'la Belt Buckle couch $10. Chair SS. 15 yrs. L.M.B. PAINTING .-.....Art. v.'OJlderful clean air · S.A. nr \Varner. 2-3)00 sq ft s·1 -t h ~ "th exp •-w•-1 coun'-ool ~~ Swlm'g Pools e Outdoor Hotels, Motelt 410 units & 1400 *I ti, rear 1
1 vcr, bl''0ck• • ~ .8~1 ,w. !hod. ~ 1 d•~ k ~. U AT YOUR SERVICE & good water. Lady mu.st BBQ'11. e lndiv. priv patios arge, a uutl8. s -arge me · 0 wor reyse · WINTER RATES liav<! own small income. By loading. Paul Christ "Y' _ crossed with a "T" Good ref. 531-otOI. ~"""' • Shag crpts. 'VEEKLY rate. s -\Vaterbed!!, """'-.......... a<~•. LARRY BOHLEN 546-i;o.w quali!icatlon can later be ...,, ·~ ~ plus small "B", Low in c t C t ~1 ~-Huntington B .. <h Color TV, Kitchens. 1 bJock CORNER. ~·-· M 1 emen, oncre e PAINTING & PAPERING, mana~r. ••.:er ~rn\an. ~ zone value, xtra high in sertti• l call coll t aft 7 T••-vebe~~:.,. N~~ .. Beach v.·/~ bldg. 991 W. 00 St., 1nl'nlal value. One of a PATIOS.PLANTE.RS 19 yn. in Harbor area. Llc p ease ec pm, BRAND NEW ... '-"""6""• ,,...--°"""" ,..__,a >lesa. 642-349(1, malchina n11ir, can not be 64)-&
2356
bonded. · Ref's furn\,. CTI4) i»-9695.
QUO VADl·s I I I ~ t H 415 ~· -~ ~ NI Concrete work. Brlck, ASSEMBLERS ppl 1 uuea ome RENT M-1. 1125 sq. rt. Sl40-replaced. Rev.•ard. Call • , a )' a Luxury Garden Apts. 645-2142 a_[t 5 p.m. or !!lumpstone wk. 894-3533. APT. Interior Paint Ing, gate,' 7 am, MacGregor
Bachelor, 1 &: 2 BR's. :'~m5 Logan, No. 6• C.M. 647-5678 Ext. 323, (8 to 12:30 PATIOS, 111•alkl, drives. Saw, Carpet shampoo, cleaning. Yacht Corp, 1631 P1acentia,
$135 to $1&.:i * Private Room * . or 1:30 to 5.) ~~te~~~ori:~~ Re~. Ins. 64Z-7\l58. _CM_·------~-•
litd Pool-JacUzzi-Saunas Rent•ll Wanted 460 LOST: Gray Keeshonde fem. INT. & Exter. Accous: ccil· ASSISTANT Cook, ambitioua
Re reation Room & ?t.1orc! Ambulatory'~ or Man pup, "Tassie" 2% mo., from CUSTOM CEMENT WORK iJ1gs sprayed. Lie., Ins. young man to asalst chef in
Adulls Only -No Pets Good, nutritious Food. EXECUTIVE FAMIL y 'Blufts' area, New p 0 rt . Drives, WAU<S, patlos. Local refs. 645-0809, Chuck. steak house operation. Ap-
BRING IN THIS AO & ~-' 10 l-·-4 0 , 5 BR. Reward, 6-4 4-2 4 2 9 or Pool decks. Don. 642-8514. ~ in person, The Barn. Nice, cheerful atmosphere. •= ........ INT & EXT painting, paper 1 H ~ Bl c M 10 ASK ABOUT FREE *Call 548-475.1 * house or Condo. Eaatblu.H/ 6'2-5330. CEMENT WORK hanging, natural wood ar.....,r ·· · · ani-
DECEMBER RENTI \\'estclltf area. Hon\e !Old -WST; small, male Black Rsnbl rates. finishing 548-7905. 1 pm.-Mr. Lewin.
18992 Florida St. 847-9448 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•! xlnt care of yours. By Jan Lab mixed, wearing red * 586-3141 * PROF. Painting, also roofs, A~ISTANT manre & l~:a blk. W. of Gartield PRIVATE Rooms_ Men or 10th. 96S-6104. hameS!!. Ans to "Dinky." Child Care accous. cell. inter/e.xter. maintenance coup e for
and Beach Blvd.) Women. x l n t nutritious 'I-~!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~ Vic betwn Irvine & Tustin, Uc/Ins. Free est. 645-5191. large complrnc: in C.OSta HUNTINGTON Gardens meals. Complete. care. Ph. C.J\.f. 548--0327. !!,Licensed Mesa.
64"-"""" Plat.ter, Patch, Rapa Ir &IZ-897U Apts. Heil at Bolsa O\lca. .....,...,,o.
430
[ ll•l WST in vicinity of B y-Sltter * 846·1323. Compare -See Rentalt to Shire ~ Broadway Shopping Center Day care for 1 child. Infant * PATOI PLASTERING AT'TRAC. Receptionlst/aom
....·hat you're missing. Fr. l.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil.liiiil small -white male t oy -4 yrs. Full time. Prefer All tfpes. Ffte estimates clerical. Over 25, nigh
$13(}-f.l;O. Will share nicely furn 2 BRI• poodl1e. Reward. 96l-5315. ...,, or k Ing for teachers. Call 540-6825 ·only. Wed.·Swt. 846-1361-
DELUXE, Apt -priv. patio. home, Has feminine touch. Personals 530 BLK .t wht Shep/Husky 4 Fenct'd yard&: 2 playmate1. Alfl'O MF.OL\NIC
t.fa11ic. 6 pools sauna. teMia, Utlls pd.-all priviledges, mo. Ml . Vic. Harbor H.S. Hot lunch, r;nacks. Villa Plumbing for AAA garage, perm., xln
$Ill. Spacious Po Otl side stove, refrig, sm. elec ap-* HINDU SPIRITUALIST * Re~:ard, I love him dearly View School District, FV. v.'Orking cond, JnOStbt Ut
... Unfufn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Bungalow $150. M&--0259. pliances, BBQ & patio, Let this ad c~ge your 6T.HmO Just sooth ot Edinger off DRAINS unclogged • $7.50 mechanical & f'ront end. !!-ii'---------1 BR .. 1 blk to beach. Shag Tropical setting, ~ whole outlook on life for the 'LO ·~N-'G~bair-.-0-_-_-18-bby--ca-t ~lagnolia. Nr. San Diego Sewer line to 100' • $15 Hunt Auto 6!nter, · •--h N ~ Be h . better ProfeSAklnal advke ·-oe.-i;-......, 557 '""l ""'2502 * 1 ft-'"" ......... -n Rd, lB ll;i."-'u.;.n;:;•_;;-.;.;;.<.;..;.____ ewpo. • •c crplg, drps, l"'lry fac . $135. I will share my home w~s-on life. Lie. Readings daily. w/whlte face & chest, flea • • ",1 · --.oo • * ~ ~ ... -....._...,v --B~A-L_BO_A_Y_E_A_R_L_!E_S __ , 20'l 14th SI. 536-0352. Ingle wo~. & young child lO AM·lO PM. 492-9136. collar, Baycrest Are a . Contractor PLUMBING REPAIR 494-3Wl. .a FAIRWAY VILLA 1 Bdrm. $l85 Laguna SNch + babysitting. Walle ~ 492-9034, 312 No. El camtno Re"·ani? 646-8389 No job too &mall AlITOMOBIL.E Lr: a s In
7 Bedrm. 2 Baths. Cov'd 2 Bdrm. 2 Bath 5235 ~~~. $125 + Y.i util. Real, San Clemente. LOST; white long haired cat. JACK Taulane -Repair * 6t2-l12ll *· Sa I esman, ~teed.
,,._patio + golf & tennis. New carpets, drapes, beam t BR, apt. Adult.!, no pet """"'"""•"" FREE BOOKLET Vic. Wallace &: Hamilton, remod., add!L :I> yn. exp. 1 -~C~O~L~E~:Pc,.L"'u"M;,.:B~l"N"G,--Mam1gement opp. G ~~~~~~= 2 & 3 ccilinp, garage. 0 ave' Near town, Beach, Furn FML lo shr tum. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Problems of Investing $10. Rew. 6t2-9709. Llc'd. fo..fy Wa,y Co. 547-0036. 24 hr. service. . 645-ll61 ~ill~!! ~~~g.~.~4) ·~-· 2 Ba. blk lo heh. Ne\v -!'F.r.ACl972LlFFor 49l--06Mano:s·Ap1'. 1 :~~i~~turn $165. 494--0451, ~·CM si:m~.4 5 .. ~ 3 ~ ~. For Retirement Income LCOST...:._, PETCi ~GOOSE, HVic. Drafting / I I 633-Mlil (713) 749-MlL
S280 lse 494-3.383 ~·· • 538-4507 · ' PHONE BART VANCE enuiu 0 •71.Y. .B. Electrlc•I Sewlnt A terat '1nl AVON REPRESENTATIV '.Ji4-M. · ' BR. $143.50. Pool, Opts, Lido ltle ~~-------540-7115 673-406:il eves. O'I EARN MONEY
drps, bltns. garb. di1pl. 15251----------GIRL 28 seeks fem to shr 2 CO-ORDINATED CAPITAL BLACK Labrador Retriever, ELECTRICAL I REPAIR I Vicki's Originals For OC"W car payments
¥esa Verde Placentia Ave, Ask about PENTHOUSE,1 2 BAR.,all2 1ba. BR apt on Balboa Isle, rent CONSULTANTS 2 yn old, maJe, lost in C.M. REMODEL I 20 yn. exper-Prof. des1gning, tailoring & Christmas pre11ents. Coll~ ~ -----our· discount. 548-2682. ~"DegreeFum v ew.nf v 'i;\tlj $112 ea. telephone 833-1670 YOU owe It to yourself to see-Reward.~. lence. 645-6211. restyling. 64.5-4325. costa, Va c ~t ion s I
UXE 2 & 3 Br, 2 Ba. c Ho 1 c E OCEANFRONT mcu. or u urn. bet. 8 & 5_. 673-3493 aft 6. Jolly Good Christmas enter-I _ ,.2 r•.11r Feb~.Call now to • 00 1160 Re tal • M!curtty building wsr Afghan Hound, blonde, El.FL'TRlCIAN, licensed, Alter•t on--~ ... 1 11 'llltl: · gar. up. n large 3 BR, 2 bath on BOYD REALTO"• -•. 930 NEWPORT Sch, Straight· tainment. You'll get It ln vie Cenl•r SI c M N t .,... ..., a !!. -. ·~c o~' Ma-Av c •--··•-~ I '"'"" o•;r;i · " · · bonded. Small ""be, maint. eat, accura e. ""')'ea.ti exp. , ·· .,.,.,,, ""' · .xu. ... re ...,,, w garage. male roommate to shr "Pete 'N' Tillie", atarrlng Reward 644-2484 54&-3917 I" BABYSITrER. 3 to 5 days
' 1034. F 'place, forced air heat, Newport Be•ch sharp home w/pool $150. Wal ter Matthau and Carol · ; · & repairs, S48-53l3. wk, 7 to s or 2 to 5 pc'tm
!f!• wpo•t Beach yearly only, 673-3434 MS-1502 Burnett. 1e_~ G1Af Rotteryf Bajasll~e Gardening Signs job. My home. Bal hie. _ ==~-~---~ .. ....,. w pictures o , d 67S-ll14 WESrCLIFF, 2 bdrm., l'r, L• SHRE 3 Br, 2 Bahm E/side, PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-Reward 546-2656 BOB'S GARnENING MAGNETIC SIGNS Trans req' ·
:•: ba., townhouse, bit-in!!, pvt. 1-ve CM. New decor. Kitchen, fident , s y mp at he t I c I ~==~~=----& LANDSCAPING $10 * 64>2449 BAKER, Man or won'l3n, :·.·: OCEAN and patios, adults only no pet&. lndry, lrg yrd. Student ok. pregnancy counselina:. Abor-LOST: small white Shep-Ter-· • will tran. Afternoon ahif A il J 1 I~ • d . f AP ne· , mix, F-, y,·, Baok Residential &. Commercial Telovt'ilon R-I• Ho '•' va · an. · ......., per mo. &15-1570 lion a options re . · ~... lrvine lnduatiial .._ Wtnchell's Donut use :::HARBOR VIEW 548-753.1 FEMALE to share nice 3 CARE. 642-4436. Bay area, C.M. ~'m!I Complexes. 2947 Harbor Blvd, CM.
::!'Where Convenlallty NEW·DELUXE Oceanfront. bi•g B<lnn horn• w/2. CdM WOULD Merrill Richan! Cax I iiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 557-4299 alltt 5pm. ,g:>~R,.fu:'. ~1:"::1!. BEAUTY OPERATOR ;:: Prevails'' Crpts, drpa, bltins, Jrplc's. area. 675-6096 or 548-4248. or anyone knowing his ~ ~F~R~O~NT~-yd-.-,-.-wn-.~,-... -.-,=10 Semce can $.ID. &t&-0(12 ~egant apartments del\igned 2-3 or 4 Br Avail. Yearly. 435 wbereabouta please contact I Tm' mu back d8 also weeding
..._ 6la-4911 Bkr. Gar1ges for Rent n . Uechty at 550 Npt. Cntr Wtnctton ,......--yd 'otn ,~Y· t--trim-•--,' Tllo PART TIME '"'fith a Master'• touch, su· "'"' Suit -~ ., •• _...,,.,,. . """' ..... ,. C .)ierb hou!!e !!t'CWity, excJu. SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 ~th GaraJCe for Storage. ...,,, e o),)'I, vrr-auuv. hauling. est. Le:t the I'--'---------Guarantee + omm.
:<!Sive Versailles. Club and w/irplc. CdM High School . from $140 1959 Maple Ave., Costa Mesa PREGNANT? Th Inki ng professionals do lt. 962·8612. Repair Work a: Remodel Montgomery Ward 'f::' with uniqUC' Aquabar, area. $275 Mo. Avail 12/U.. Mana~r. Apt 5. Abortion? Know all the Schoolt & PROBLEM SOLVER At ReMOnable Prices.
: ntains and formal gllT· Hal Pincllin Rltr. 6'75-4.J9'l G·--~ ,.nt. facts first! Call Lile Llne, instructions S7S Pro A_. --. ··--'-Call 63&--C945 --~ ..... 24 hn 541-5522 , ----------f. giuuener. ''""""' ""''"• :~ens. All part Of the South 1 BR. Apt. Community Pool. Oakwood Is $1 m!t!lon Jn 918 Palm St, H.B. • 1 • thlnning, pruning, ahaplng. Put a little "loot" in your ~~l's linest apartment Sl85/mo. See at 8'.11 Dom-recreation. Swimming 536-4678 or 53&-4979 PALM&: CARD READINGS TENNIS INSTRUCTION • Cleanups. George, 646-5893. Levi.._seu those baubles for Beauty Salon
892-4611 H.B. 1)ommunity. lngo Dr. or call 644-2307. STORAGE down Put, pl'e9ent a: future. Group or indiv. XI n t EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. "bucb". Call OU.Wed !i.l*droozn/sludios from $195 NEW 3 BR. 2 bath Dupl•x. pool s . Health clubs. garage town Advice&: he~in many mat-Chriatm8!! gift. 536-9368. .,,.,_....,_ '' s na Tennis courts Costa Meaa Ht\ mo Complete --'en s er v. "'" ""'9" '•' 2 Bedroom from S305 Ground floor . 217 Drd St. au s. • &12-4228 • ten. 213: 1350. Fully lie. GUITAR & Bass Inatuct., by Kamalan1, l46.4&1s, 642-1117.
:alodell! open 9 A.M. Iii dusk S275/mo. Yearly. 673-9558 Bllllards. Indoor golf driv· 1----------SWINGING SINGLES ProfeS!!ional Musician. $3.50 :.·~ New 2 Br, 2 BA, frplc. ing range. Sand Volleyball. Office Rental 440 Call Jim, 2 to 8 p.m. per Jl'BllOn 847-1066. General Service• :=: {7!i. S250. yearly. 216-2lst St. Whirlpool Baths. And lots 1.;..--;.;;...;..; ______ 1 __ ==~539-=3122~==~ :~: ·~ * 962--0349 * more. A resident tennis CORONA DEL MAR COUPLES PARTIES [ 1~ UNORGANIZED? Cle a n ·~N THE BLUFFS 2 BR. 1 Blk to Ocean, new pro and activities director u:paceto si:or::f' ~~ o~~ Call Ph~~ 8 PM s.¥kllllnd""'*1~ ~o':i"se~ge~~~d~~r::
, • AT NEWPORT shag, 11tove, paint, $250. who plans free Sunday blC Your Price! Ron S45-5686 :~ yrly. Utill pd. 673--0'73l. brunches and barbecues. de1a.i&n· Full 9eC\ll'ity dJt. ALCOHOLICS Anonymowi. sue 548-4797.
' • OCEANVIEW yearly duplex. w ample parking. PhoM SQ-11217 or write Answering Service/ ;~Newport Blvd., turn al 2 BR, 1 be. $250. 64.f-6780 or Starting es low esd $140. BOYDA..t<REAL!Dr'!'OChrlRS•~ ~30 P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. Equlp./Mobile Phones HANDYMAN -All kinda of ·~Ital Rood <1 block 642-36.39 S ingles, one an two-o•.,.....,.. work, 1mall jot. a
:i!IJ>ove Pacifk Coaal Hwyl •• "se~n~c'"1.-,,,...--,-,e----1 bedrooms, furn ished and CORONA DEL MAR Soclol Clubs 53S Free Phone I •pedal\y. ~·' 546-9723. :~=~·B~c~1:~~~· -----------·I unfurnis hed. Sorry no 408 Sq. Ft. Suite. lmmed-H 1. l~elephone: t n4) &15-0060 WE care at Ca.sa Contenta. children or pets. Models latr:Jy avail. 45c Pr:r sq. Don't Be Alone au 1n9 ·~ Gracklua living in quiet open dally 10 to 7. ft. Ample parking. Secured For the Jlol:lrlays! Brochures -Car Telephones. SKIPLOADER I: dump truck
I, •• : NEWPORT TOWERS area with ocean vu, 2 BR. bldg. Ask for Christine. DISCOVER Automatic Call Dlverters, h&I
•'· ON THE BAY 2 BA, c 0 I 0 r co-<ird Oakwood BOYD REALTORS ~5930 Discovery Save $Buy A New Phone =!~ .. · . ~~!!:. s::'m~· ir· cpts/drps/dswsbr & range. PRIME Costa J.1eaa medical 714-83S-6885 213-387-3393 Syatem For Your Ottice! . ..., ~ 2 BR, 2 BA, all elec-i...;e din area. open betLm Garden Apartment• space, now available with PTL Comm Systems 979-1234 YARD, p.rqe cleanups. :·ttic C 0 n d 0 • • Carpetini.:. ceiling, priv balcony, rec ' lmmed ocai.pancy. Nl*W Vaca.nc~ cost mone,,! Rent Put a little "loot" in your Rell1C>W trees, dirt, Ivy. :~ t~~t& ~=· ~f laundry. Adulll, no pe'tl. NeWport Beach cpb, drps &. paint. 2 Yr your mu., apt., •tore Levis-sell those b....ubles .for Orlvewya, graillng. 847-3366. ;'.ibr ocean from your living 49:il-2259, 492--0464. lrvlne and 16th lell!le min. Phone> Mt. bld111: .• etc. thru a Dally Pilot ''bucka", Call CluslUed A good want ad Is a aood in-
t\ Ap!L. 64s-o5!50"_ 842.-8170 _ }loe ...... 968-1097 «Nes. ClalSIRed Ad. 642·56'4. 642··5671. veal.Jnent.
I,· lconiell. Pool, patk> area Furn. or Unfum. 370 DESK apace avaUable S50 ,. m & muter bedroom - -'i~:=~~~~~;~;r""==ri5~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~:;~~~1==="' 1 boat docks. Top deck & -----~ ........,,, mo. Will provide furniture ·~u b -lerr . porkln< Balbo1 Penlnwl1 I ;..... -II &I al$5mo.An,....ring,.rvlco STAR GA'ZEK~\I( '14*/elevaton ~ &: " ~ avaUabl~. 17875 Beach Blvd.· '-'jt ,, nfurnl0ahed. From JBlt,2bu.,avaUnowtoJune }funtlngton Beach. 642-432]. l"'==~,.-~----111CLAYJLPC>LI.AN
1 /MO. 3121 W. O>asl 30th. frplc, blt-ln1, , g OFflCES 1050 sq tt total i:. Y0«Doi/y.Adlw1tyGuld• i:j.. i l;"wy~N"B00.-06U-~;:2lll2=;---· I dlllhwshr, $225. mo, 929 W. Rooms 400 Nu, c;rpted., r e c e a a e d AccorJ/111 to Ill• Slan. :~· Yearly-Ba yfront Balboa. Blvd. 2u-es+-ll83. Jlghtlna:, a/c, induatrial To dewlop mtslOQI fot Saturday,
)J.:t.ovely new untum. t1pls. Corona del Mar ATrRAC quiet rm le bath.. Blft, 18c per sq ft. ~1417 reodwordiCCfrnpc:lndlngtorunbers I~ .I: 2 Bit, 2 bft. each. 1~1er Pool privll. Pvt ~td. Nr .al;;•,;:3:,iPe:·m""-. --,,,=:;:c:-;,;;I ofyourZodlocbirth'atgn.
.Many_u.tras. Immed. SPAClOUS 2 BR.. belim Back Bay, CM. Bui or prof DESK space available_ $59 1 &c.ltn JI N.w '' '1
C\lpaDcy. N?ll's., t:J. So. Of ltwy. woman. SIOO/mo. 646-fl002. mo. Will provtae furniture i ~ ~ 3~~''
: 673-3663 m80S6 Evt:t. $193.50 onlh . Adultll • 110 R00¥S SJR wk up w/k!L at S5 mo. Ariswerlng servl<:e "~-3A Moft9tf; 6A ln'lpor1orlt
, associated
OROl"'.[r's -REA LTORS
~c2 •, "" lo•b"'" •7l-l6•J
l'lel.t. llroki•r644-484S. $.'lO 9.tk up apla. 2376 New· avalleble. m Forest Ave.. 69..f2 .50ey l!Mott.. MP80P•
Bl d CM "'-"• ........, •• i.. "" n-OIMIHI 6 Un.auol :UC., 6' Elw"llia C t M port v ., · -·11 •0N· Laguna Be....,,, .....,............,, 7 For 37 L9'f 61 Youo
OI a e.. PRIVATE Room, nice Coltl OFFICE rental or desk ~HAYJI ·~ JI~ 6l~le AJHtH 1 9Dlin't 39Too 69Htolm
Brun Ne'P DC'lllXC Unlr. 5*-9348 ay, Laguna Nl&ueL l.._,l 11 ~ At Mlk1t 71 \MQ
D. f ' 61~72 12.,.. AJMud\ 72Mow
LA MANCHA Mesa home, $66 mo. ~~Handy 10 San Dleao IO~loog AOHMDwoy 70N«inwy
n.cnt naw or )'O!JI' con-KITCHEN prlvllp. Man 831· 400. CAHCQ IJOOlol' AlOt 73Nd ~ 2 WEEKS FREE * Mruetion allowance ot 1 only. S60/mo. 7161 MlMr St., "'P"°RO,,_FES'='°"'s"'io"'N"AL"""s..=1,.-...,=MIY::-:I 1• ,..,_ u o.. 1 .. c.r. ~ Yilf'O clel Mesa mo'& fl'ff rent. l BR, 1 BR C.M. 893-MfO, to IO· HC!\l at Bol&a Chica,· JllHttl 1''°'-!l~ ~r'°'
r. ' den, 2 BR'1 A 3 BR'L WE£KLY monthJ l bllc lLB. $215/ 846--1323. ~ULT ;~~ ,11~, nv. ~T GARDEN llOMES From S155. Oa.hwshr mc1 or ....... ~.. mo. 16"'7 llMoon •IS.... 11n.. ~RVINE AVE. AT MF.SA gar IWlm'g pool 8B(ia to bead\, cell '".r-LU or AIRPORTMtnV1ew,3ottice ~ 19 si-•tF~ 7'~ ~~ In w/dtPotlta only Peti accept11.b1e. · 8'73---0MO Aslc lor Bud. autte, crpts, drps, A/C, 20()(1 50Afi.;,. IO 8-t i.t
Br. Sl80 "-·2 Br. S3XI 1 ~:1CT '778 Scott Pt., C..M. NICE rm ., E/11de CM. Kit., 833-8350 e'(et, 548--4757. 21 NO* ~1 ~ :i ~--· I: Night --.;urlty, Pool. prlvll. }'lon-1mo~er. S70. ~:::r.. iJe-m 8lMolot
FOR ACTION .. , !>18-11167' "'pm. !1';¥9· TIME FOR ,::::_ i;;::..., :l~
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
CALL 642·5678
ROOM rot rent, mahll"t l6 Tit :w torilkltnc• u P~ work!~"''"" no drinlti,,.. DAILY PILOT 27 c.-.. ,,.,.,,.,.,,, .. "" Co ! loc •~-JO 21 DIM ~You 88 PoiM nwn n · <PN"'VY ' 29 Tuiln ~9 Mlf'QI• B9 Ftll(rof
Llk• 10 tradl'! our 1'roder'• CLASSIFIED ADS JOY~ "'""".. '°"1\7:""
Paradllle column ta tot you! '°'aooa ta\Nl 6\N trll
5 llTlll, 5 d8YI tor 15. eon ... •IS/ 181 -'1 ..
d"1' : •• ---642-5678
•
* * * * * *
Trader's Paradise
32' Sloop, PC Cllll8, Fleet
Champ, 6 HP Outbrd. Will
trade for late model car
., 1
Call 673-2490
$26,5,000 N. Tustin, 5 Ac ..
huge home. Trade $200,000
eqty for IOlld Income prop-
erty. Prin only. Bkr.
M7~
2 BR + 2 SludiO apts, Palm
Springs, nr shoPfl & schJs.
$37,500. TRADE 26.t.I cqty.
ror Inc. or hme, Orange Co .
64& 3928 Lachennlyer Rllr.
TRADE $48,CXXI equity 2
new hOutes Ontario, R·l
view lot Brentwood for
11nlt.!L1'D'a, 00.t ..••• ..,_.,,.,
BEAUTlruL ~A M A H A
ORGAN rtlythm maker, roll
top, lookl like desk, new
coodlUon. Trade for am.
truck or 'l''l''l' 6CS-4932.
ANSAPHONES, val 1150. ''ll)
Honda 350 SL, val $500. '66
VW Campttt, val Sll51J. '71
rortt van, $600 eq. For prop,
photo eq, tum t>r'l' 6'75-7877
$100,000 1st TD, PflY$ Sl.345 mo. at G~'Jfi. Trade for
home, yAcht or ?
Darling Realty -* * .. *
.-.
lines
times
dollars
BA YFRONT IiOM E -Nau ti
cal, tropical, 3 Br, 3 & +
guest apt, dock for 2-75
boats, 60' on bay. Trad ~.lXX> eq for 'l'l>.i. 67'5-10'1'0
Fun & Ski boa.I, 16'
Mahogany 112 HP
For Sl,i cab over or
7??
• 557-7621 •
16 Unlls-$34.M oq. Anaheim·
w!JJ trailo for free A clea
comm'I or Indus land.
Prine. only,
Call 557-9500
WlLL trade toP quality oi paintinga, lnchlcpa, ae.
any s11.e tor anythlna: o
value, need small utll trlr.
WT on i::;:aclmle.ato)
pvt. Community, RWtr, Wldram<l ul)o, launcll, tlocl<
Eqty fU ,900. Trade IDr loc
R-1 acre. $3&.89U.
ORANGE Co. Mountaltl
Ranch &: Acreqe. fdeaJ
syncllcatlon, 1pa, church1 frontlr.r town, Trade to
t!'xc. home, deaert'l' 838-46111.
2~A. SUb divided, level ~
cor !Qt, Jtl dcse:rt, 29 P&lm1,
Clear, Value approx $2!i00.
IDr Motor.~; lf up, ~
trlr, nice, ~12 owrvunc
* -*
•
DENTAL ........... Exp'd In F'UIL --...... Morchao>dlsl119
X-rays A oral evacuation, Newporl Rt.ch ..,... Writr Frm&le, F.olhus!Ntlc tnven.
!143.ji841. Oau!Jled sd No. 497, 0.Uy tmy t1nn oervlcina tocal
DENTAL SEC Lall u n a Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Colla ltottt, part time, Merehan-
USBOYS.J8 yn or older. Nlauel. btwn 22 le 4~ at A1ua, CtW 92626. dlslni exp It e_ar neceuary.
APPlY in ~J"IOn after 4:00, leaat 2 yn exper. f13..6495. Gener•I Hou1ecleenfng ·Reply P O BOx 492'71, Lot 35.1--East toa..t Ii w y, --.;--"':--;;-::':-:;==-Occulonal Work Angeln, 90049 or 213-476-73'13
SECRETARY
Openlnp In N"'POI"( I Seal
Stach tor eicper. .ecre-
.. rtes.
Apply "'-p.,..,
1055 No. Main, S. A.
Newpo11 Bch. Dentel Al1f1t•nt No HH.vy Woril:. Must Drive! Mort ...
Newport Beach &t6-261S Good Shon Houn I ALTY ln1urance girl, pay • lnturence Sele1
Rm. 311 Bttwn 9 am I J pm So. Calif. ht
National Bank
Equal Oppor. Employer exper. pe.rHime, c d M DENTAL Assiltant-Exp'd, A\'fly In Per90n F II L~ Send""" p o chaln1lde. F/tlme. X-n.y am . 1 pm •M 'I •r. q:ency. resume · · certlHcate ._,.d. MS-&&75. RENTAL READIER lnturance Company Box Sim, Orang., Ca. 92667. ·-• H 2 I San INC woman t 0 r 569 W. 19th St., C.M. u openinp n SECRETARIES * 100°/o FREE * Ne.....-C.nttt ott!.ce hi .. ~. Department Stott GENERAL Office typing fil. Clemente area. We 1t...,. -~· -J W Rob'nson 'd Onlm:I honie owners o s . Nlte wcrt. bond.able, pd. • • I ine I phone. Exp · c..Jlfornla'a Ja.z-pat Savl.np vacatkm I: Int. 40 Hr. wk. Apply at 345 ?.1cCormlck. I: I.Dan O>mpanie1. AU
6f.f.-0606. Newport Beach Costa Mesa. qWllllitd leads. Ex~llent Lb: Relnder's Agency
4500 campus Dr.
CONSUMER
LOAN OFFICER
Excltlna oppor. In Costa
Mesa for exper. conswner
lOlm officer. Property Im·
provement & Mobile 1-lome
b&ckrround pref'd. xtn't
worklnc conds It 1rlnae
benefits. Please call
Rod Le11.'is cn4> &U-4n1
Glenda la
Federal S•vlnfs
2300 Harbor Blvd, CM
F.qual Oppor. Employer
Cook-Broiler Man
Day shift, w/great exper.
In Ir& food operation. Call
Clef Fftd. (TI.f) 6#-1100.
COUPLE, bondable, to be
full time managers &: do lite
maint. 67 apt units, Costa
Mesa, Salary, frff rent &
other benefits, 5 4 6 -1 7 4 0
eves,~ eves
CPLE-over 26 manage 30
units, CM, apt + salary.
53IH333 or 213: m-8589.
CREDIT CHECKER
Exper prel'd. Costa t.1cu
~· Call c ollect
2131881·5050.
DEIJVERY ol D A I LY
PlLOT, SUNDAY ONLY, to
nfMIPllper canien. Re-
quires the UR of a Station
Wagon or VM. O>ntact Mr.
Hany S..ley, 330 Wm Boy
St., Costa Mesa. ·
DENTAL ASSISTANT
Chal:nide, sit down. 5'4 or
00\W. Experienced. 5 days, 8
~~~l~n:~n. 64(H)300.
DENTAL Assistant for front otace, X-Rays & Prevention
lnltrnction. Non-smoker 18
to 28. 644-0011
Hu Opening For GIRLS. TRA YEL tnlnlna. tn4l-233->349 Mr. , Fox, 9 am.-4 pm.
STAMP & If 're~ for an ex· MOTEL maid, Mon ·Fr l. COIN DEPARTMENT tti"°"job M M •·-· Prefer mature person . c ng 1ee r. c~, 1 ·-·-· Beach 4M-8521 Part·time, exper not neces-~raton Inn 21112 Pacific ....,..,,..... · '
sary, buthelpfuL Coe.st Hi~, Suite DJ, NURSES aides, exper ,
HunL Bch. We have open· preferred, all shifts. BeYCr·
Apply in person 10-5 pm ings Jor 7 girls free to travel ly M a n or ~nvaleacent
•2 Fashion Isl., NB all over U.S. High pay Hospital. 24462 Via Estrada,
Equal Oppor. Employer transportation paid, Parents Laguna Hills.
MS-2118 Newport Beach
SECRETARY with J'f!Cent
lite 6 disability insurance
experience for 4 da.Y wk. St&rtina: salary up to SS50.
Phone -Mn."'t.adenburger,
•47-007
SECRETARY -Newport
Beach Attorney !lt'l:!ka part
time eecy. Must have xlnt
typing skills. Call bef 1 pm. !!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•lc;w~el~<0~m~egat~ln~l<'~"'l~ew;.'=.,, PIANO Player Ir Drummer.
H 0 USEKEEPER. llve·ln, Apply in penion, Carml's SECRETARY, pan time, to DINNE~ COOK privftte room TV, $300 per Bar, 810 W. 19th St., CM. work tn own home. Muat
644-8227.
e BLJipeDQnledPHIN e ~"~~e. Engtllb pref'd. POLICEMAN type a neat letter and take
"°~ dictation. Mr. Darlin;. 3355 Via Udo, NB HOUSEKEEPER. Udo Isle, S•l•ry $172 • $1071 499-4588 momlnp.
•DISHWASHER, ex· (babyl, mature. EngllshLaten.l entry only. Helehtl miiiiii .. iiiiii~iiiiiiiii
..... need. Apply lo Chet -speakh>r. Own trsnL RelL min. 5'8", rosr, Buie. S·ecur1'ty before 2 or after 5pm, Bahia Pvt rm I: bath. fi'lS..3143. Presently employed Calif.
C.Orlnthlan Yacht Club, lfiOl H OU SEKEEPER/Compan-P.O. Apply before Dec. 13th,
u.,..w. Pr .. _cdM Ion-M""' •-c No omok-' p_..,..nnet DeJ"., <trailer.>. Ofli· 1cen OOUGHNt.Tl' shop, nite shift, tna. call ~-lW Slater Ave, Founlain
Female, qe 25 to 4.5. Apr>IY HOUSEKEEPER, live in, 5 Valley. Part time le Full Ume ~ k~h sttc.M~ut, ~ .. "'too ~J:,-~ Re•I Est•t• S•l•s A~~e ~:-1 !!re:~~ n~
EXECUTIVE S.ECTY HOUSEWORK 4 No ironing. fR£E hospital to life insurance.
DENTAL RECEPTION 94:30 Tues & Fri. Must be Opportunity to advance to
FM! growing Huntington thorough. Own tr an 1 p . LicenM Tr•lni"I detective. Contact Security
Bl'ach J>t:eventive Pract ~ce Ref's. After 6, f>W-.8148. LI ltod Tl Only Agent. While Front Store. has opcn1ng for girl v.·1th ~ m . . me 22'12 So. Harbor. Anahl'lm
ability 10 assume respoml· · Famous license COlll'!le now ~fon, Dec. 11th, 9 AM·.12
billty in addition to being JO\m...tc om~f"'\h..ftl.tn available lh:U Tarbell Com· noon.
Intelligent creati ve enlhu· H\.Vll"'IL i-~"'"a. pany. Applicants ~.UY .re--==~===~
siastic & 'cheerful.' Salary SERYICES•ACll'.CY Nlmbuned upon 9U_A!~c~~ .. · • F nr 'ted 22 ~ or expene'"""" ..... SENIOR EDP open, uture u uni . FEE PAID people. Openings avallahle. CONTROL CLERK to 35 yrs pref'rd. 846-0054. Complete training program.
EXPER'D cable TV un.. Sales Manager to $11K Future mMagement oppor-Run EDP S.rvke Desk.
deritr0und inst a 11 er s f'leld Service to noK tunitles. Call Mr. S1oa.n at Perform tape librarian !unc-
deslred. Trainee con111dered. Sales Order Desk to S900 832&40. lions, balance control tcitals
642-3260. Teh!prompter. Above require knowledge TARBELL and update producUon job E qua I opp or tun It y of lndus/comm'l adhesives . control cards.
employer. Sec'y/Advertising to $650 EXPERIENCE :
EXP'D Shoe SRJeii.,.,an for AIP, lnven .. Control S46Cl REAL TORS 1 to 2 years
' Order/Expenence $460 --,-.i""';i.;"".,.;,..;;--t 1-~ Womens Better Shoes. Pu has Clrk/Typl.st $460 RECEPTIONIST prior contro c Cll\ exper4
Cameo Shoe Store, South ~ucti~n Clerk $460 An Interesting A c~ lence In OOS or OS environ-
Coast Plaza, CM, 3333 MTST /Gen. Ofc to $600 positk>n in the pleasant en-ment.
Bristol St. Free & Fee Positions vlronment of an engineering A-pply 9-12 Mon thru Fri
FRY Cook, exper. only.Swing 488 E. 17th tat Irvine! CM firm for a proficient typi&t. PACIFIC MUTUAL
shift only. start $2.50 per hr. 642.1470 Exper. not necess. 700 N~r1 Center Dr.
Cottage Coffee Shop, 562 W. _ ~ __ ........, Odetics, Inc. N"'PQrl Beach
19th, CM. ~-----J!.15 So. Manchester equal opportwlity employer • Fut results are Just a phone JANITORS for steady part Anaheim call·~·~. Want ad results , .. 642-5618 time work. 6 to 10 p. Mon Equal Oppor. Employer SERVICE Station Salesman
•••••••••••••••••••• thntWrlt• Frl-Oe~y, ~~: RECEPTIONIST & lubeman, top pay & 1r1ng1,1 •
I pl Ex benefits. Exper. man pref'O. Sla.wKm, Conunerce, 9XKO or apartment com . ex. · Full 1: p/time avail. =Y. I =""=='=~"-';Pc-art7"":c. ,,..,--,,1 I pericnced. Ute office work Shell Sta-l1th & J~RS. -ume o · & typing. Part time. Fri '
fice cleaning, eves, husb le Set I:: Sun 11 to 7:30. $2.50 =N=.='B". ="""'""'=-:-:== wife team OK. car Ir phone OOur ' SER.VICE Station Attendant
a must. CaU S32/6568. per Ph 546-0370 w/expf!r. Top wagea I:
JUNIOR Salesmen: 1().15. • romm. Apply Chevron sta·
Earn $20-$<0 per ....it got-RECEPrlONIS'I', AIR ~ -11)4 So. Coeat Hwy, Lq
ting new customera for the payable exp. Inter Mm. Beach.
DAILY PUDT. ThilJ Is mt a Wed, 7i~Q.~3CI ~I 'SER="V1"=CE0:-1ta=tlo=n-a"tte=nc1an="t
For an ad In Wom•n'• World
Call Marv Bath 642-5671, nt 3JO
newspaper r.ucollte .'!!! does ~ mda: 1 Sulte '1M part time. Exper pret'd.
not include e.::ung or ' Lowen Osborn E n co
deUverln&:. Transportation is Service llKXl1 Brookhunt, provkted We work four Restaurant H 8 '
houn .tier school """ ' on TONIO'S '"'"'-,.,· ===....,.,,== SatW'day. We have openings • , , SERVICE Stadon Attendant.
for Fountain Valley A South An •xc1t1n9 new Lawry I P /time eves A wknd.11. Lite
Sliver-SHm Loop-Stitch Lace!
9165
SIZES t0~22~
"" 11f ,..i .... 1lf r.;f' ...
"You never looked slim-
mer" are word• you'll hear
qaln and again when you
•-ear thil a:entle shape with
""""' yoke. Elepnt In knlt>
or crepe.
Printed P1ttern 9165: NEW
Half Slte1 101,~, 12&,i, 14%, 16~i. usn-, ~A. 22'1\. Size 14\.ii (bust 37) take. 2118 yds.
54-lnch.
SEVlllfl'Y .f.'fVE CENTS
tor each pattern -add 25
cents tor each po.ttam tor
Afr Mall and Speclal Handl· tnrr othe"""' third-class deli..iY wlll (alte thre< weea or more. Send to
-Martln.thcDAILY PILOT, 412. Psllml Deot., m wnt lSth St., New Y~<:.'<.._ N.Y. !Oil. Prlthnt 1'MW. ADDRal w(
IJJ'. ga: and l'ITU:
NtJMllEll,o SEE ·MORE Quick
Fuhlonl and cboo9e one uern trte from our na:.&Jmmer CataJos. AU
JN:t~ ~(; BOOK
1CW todU, Wffl' tomQn'OW.
Sl!NsrANT FASHION
BOOK • . Hundl"lda o f
.fuhlol1 tactt. SJ.
Cluallitd Adi • • . l4U67I
Huntington Beach area.e on-Associated Restaurant mechanical exper. Neat a~
ly. You must be out of OPENING SOON pearance. Apply AM, ml
school · by 3 PM to N C t D Newport mvrl., CM. participate. Experience.1 2 I 0 ewport ·~ at t • I iiiiiilii-iii ... iili;;;iiiiiii
boys gtwn pr Io r It y . Fashion Island, N pt Bch SEIT ANT
!lGA-9641. Seeks
• WAITRESSES RmAuRANT J W. Robinson • HosrESSES • e BARTENDER
Ne"llr'J)Or'I Beach
Jiu Opening For
PBX
552 ~1ultlple, 3 wks
only. Must be exper.
e BUS BOYS e KITCHEN PERSONNEL
Apply in Penon
Mon. thru Fri. 11 am to 3 pm.
An equal opportunity
•mpioyu
Now Interviewing "
For Experienced
Deli Penonnel . Fry Cooks
Waitress Mgr. -Waltttsses
Hostesses Bua Boys
Counter Girls . Dlshwashen
Apply In person 11).5 pm
•2 Fashk>n Isl., NB
Equal Oppor . Employer
REsrAURANT' Exper. bus M ••-· help, waiter or waltreu. Phone or apply on ........
Ben Brown's Restaurant, Sat. between 9 &:. 5
3ll06 s. Coast Hwy., So. C D Laguna. s.. Miss McLeod 630 Newport enter r.
KENTUCKY Fried Chicken bet. 4 & 6. Newport Beach ~7804 needs male & fem a I ei"'==~.,,..:-;:-:---;;:=
Utime help. Apply aft 1 PM RETAIL Sa le a• Exp ....... .n ""E D'-'"tn'ORS at 2929 E . Coast Hwy, CdM. Salulady Frrtme. Apply ln ~ ""''r.u> penon N~ Stationen.. Would you like to make nne
LEGAL SECRETARY 4229 Birch St., NB Ask for extra money selling Shaklee
w/good skills &c experience. Sytvla WesL products? 54!-6253.
• 64H610 Anytime. ' LVN R.N. or L.V.N., run time &: =""="'"'=-;c-:c::;:= part time, even.tna: I niaht SHAMPOO girl le aal&tanl
3-11 &: ll-7 56-3061 shift.. Beverly Mara Con-Full time Salary I: com·
MAID WANTED, part time, valescent Hospital, 24452 mission Apply in Pel'9)n
for motel work, Newport Via Eattada, Laguna Hlll1. Hair West 3305 N'ewport
Beach. 6T;>-3463. RN all shifts, f/tlme ICU. _Bl~v~d~ .. TN_.B_. ~--.,.--
M A I N T E N ANCE Man, Pacifica Hosp, 1 8 7 9 2 Slng\11 needle operators
exp'd, 2 days a week, large Delaware, H.B. 842-0011. Part :s!:f95 time,
apt blrlg complex. 84&-0619 S•lts
MANAGEMENT trainee -Representative needed for Sl'M'ER delflred eve:ninp.
College fU&d, ambitious, ag-Orange County territory. Corona del Mar Area. Own
grealve. Starting salary to 56 yr old company. Salary, l litraiii"'ii·ii644-593iiiiiiiit.iiiiiiiiiiiii $100 a mo. Call Don Was· commiulons, bonUA It other
Tilt the beret jauntily; toss lnser, 544-91Xll. hinge benetlt.a. For appoint· =ghA L3000 S450
on the acarf and go! MAnmE gal, Prr CM Ina. ment call 642-7960 Mr. Keypuncher $460
Spllt...et'ond set! crochet Office. Exp. not nee. Fll· :';.',,,.....~;=;· ,..,-,..,--;--;;:::;:;= ~/Gen. olc $C'75
bright loo1>4titch lace beret Ing/type A: ability to com· SALF.S Clerks A Cuhien, FIC Bookkeeper SCiO
and lone acarl In no time of munfcii.te a must. Daya IOmC exper. Apply l n Aalstant Booklceeper $SCIO
bullcy yam to spark ootntl. 835-3437. peraon. Olecke!' Auto Parts, ftecept/Secretafy $SOO
Tenific In 2 oo~Pattern Med Bek Ofc $450 ill E. 19th St., C.M. J.,egal Secretary $650
1219-dlroctlons L Experl""'° Local ~-=~·==;-.,._--j Wrtttt/PR $3 hr uiVENTY·FIVE CENTS Call ~.;.;. SEAMSTRESs Tax S.C..ta!y $51'
fbr each pattern -add Z WESI'Cl.JFF Exper. on Ute Industrial SM· rue Cleril: S36S
cents for each pattern lor1 Pet"90nnel Agency ch.lne. General mendlq. Advertlltna: Sec'y $650
Alr Mall a.nd Special Hand · 204.3 WeAtclltr Dr., ND Good pe.y, &ood houn. Engmg Secretary to $600
lnK; otberwlle thlf'd.clau 645-2770 Irvine 5fO..«'iO Typist $425
del1my wUI take three NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Free & Ftt POlllUons weeks or more. Send to MEDICAL Alllstant·Back Tempo Tempo.rary Help NEWPORT
AUce Brooks, the DAILY oflice for busy GP. Mu1tl"iiiiii~llli'~~~~-
PILOT, 1o;, N-O<tslt know X-Ray. Draw blood.I" SECRETARY Por_,..I Afoncy
Dept., Box 163., Old Cheh1es EKG. p,,f\ulon Viejo A El 133 Dover Or., N .8 . StaUon, New York. N.Y. Toro areL 831·7520. TO '42-3170
10011. Print Nome. ......... MEDICAL "-"lstant. bulc SUPERINTENDANT
ZlpE ~t~E =· ,72, Jab & x•ray, 5 yn 00.ck of4 OF SCHOOLS ~hft,D knit. etc. Fret! flee ex.p. Lawton School, 623 Top exec . .ec'y llkilla. PrlOr
dlnctlona, 50c w. 11th St., S.A. 50-4461. ~-"""...'.'!~:.....ex»er~.:it, TIME FOR rueut ~ Beiol ..,.....,_,, Att~"""' al: ._..,
Buie, w.cy ""'"' ... .: MERCHANDISE bo<rd m-,...d. IQ.U> ==~'Mi.;: 1n ]~R=.,, · ~~~,E QUICK CASH terns. $1.00. ordtnation, dlstribuUan ot to c,lullrted ad no. ~ c/o 0---Olft-atocltlwlln<ch _ _, o.tly PQD<, P.O. B<lo! 1!60,
-more thao 100 l1fts -1-.. Appnclatlon of con-Oolta Ytia, Ca. JHROUQH A si.oo. at:ruc0on a: quality of nne,l~"!'l'-!!!'!'~•"!'!°"~ I -.._ -• cloth!nr -•Oal. Sec'y Bldcpr i. $IOO n.oo. · The Red Balloon, Hunt. lfar-Ftt Paid DAILY PILOT 10 Jllf1 a.. ....., • !Oc. hour. Call Mr. lleyMld1, Pm. ..,... rtatit hand lo
8oJOlc " u "PrUe .t.l&UM. 644-8897 lor 1,ppt. arow w/e."<pandtnc co. ~" Beek 1 _ is oattems. Great btnetlta I. loc&Uon.
...... . ....nt c-tt Kim, 8.U-2700. Abo FM WANT AD M;.... QidH 8°'* 1 _ Vacanclft COit mon8Y1 iw · Jobi. Dtnnia I: Denat. 11tt~
~ )'OUr houle, apt., stort toMCI Aaenc:y ot Irvine,
Ne. ... """'~. th1 .. -1)8.2 Mlehellon Dr. &42 U'7tl J!bloull!Ulpottems.!IOc. blda.,ntc.lhnlalltsllJ'~ Jlall1 Pilot Want Adi.... °'i919
Claaotl!od Ad. -,.... -
Frid.I" -8, 1972 DAILY I'll.OT
Are , You Lettin9 Cash
Slip Through Your Hands
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
Will Sell Fast!
1. Stove
2. Guitar
3. Baby Crib
4. Electric Saw
5. C.mer•
6. W•sh•r
7. Outbo'!rd Motor
.. s-Sot
9. Couch
10. Clarinet
11. Raff'ltorator
12. Pickup Truck
13. Sowing Machine
14. Surfboard
15, Machine Tools
16. Dishwasher
17. Puppy
18. C•bfn Cruisel"
19. Golf Cart
20. a....Mter
21 . Stamp Collection
22. Dlnett. Sot
23. Play Pon
24. Bo,tllng Ball
25. Water Skis
26.F,_
27. Sultcasa
21. Clock
29. Bicycle
30. Typewriter
31 . B•r Stools
32. Encyclopodla
33. VKuum Cleaner
34. Tropical Fish
35. Hot Rod Equlpm't
36. Fil o Cobine!
37. Goll Clubs
38. Sterling Sllvar
39. Vlctorl•n Mirror
40. Badroom Sot
41. Sllda Projector
42. L•wn Mower
43. Pool Tobie
44. Tira
45. Plo no
46. Fur Coat
47. Drapes
48. Linens
49. Horta
50. Alrplane
51 . Orpn
52. Exercycle
53. hre Books
54. Ski Boots
SS . High Chair
56. Coins
57. Electric Train
SI. Kitten
59. Cl11ssic Auto
60. CoffH Tobia
61 . Motorcycle
62. Accordion
63. Skis
64. TV Sot
65. Wor1< Bo~ch
U . Diamond Watch
67. Go-Kart
61. Ironer
69. Camping Tr•ll•r
70. Antique Furniture
71 . T•JM Recorder
72. Sailboat
73. Spont Car
74. Mattrus Bo• Spgs
75. Inboard Speedboat
76. Shotgun
n . Soddla
78. O.rt Gama
79. Punching Bag
80. Baby Cerrl-s•
81 . Drums
82. Rlfla
83. Desk
84. SCUBA Gaor
Thew or any other extra llllngs aroad the IJoaw
can be ha'Md Into cash with a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
So • • •
Don~+ Just Sit There! •
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
•
' •
·.
' ' ' .
' ' ' • ' l ' I
,,
. . .
• -••i•. --· -.
n ~ . .,..
DAILY PILAIT FridoJ, -1, 19n
[IlJ I ][Ill ][§) [ I~ I ~ I • I ]~ I 5 :' ) • £1.-,a• ....... •dx·r ....... -· n •rs• r .. ..... ,, ~I •rs t 1
W.m.I. M & f 111 IWlp Wonted, M & F 110 Appl'-o eta Furniture '10 Gor..,. Solo 112 Gor ... Solo 112 Mloalt-.n•• 411 Ml...al~n"' Ill#. R~, HIP!, 4
-"" St.r• IU
WOMAN or man lrom Jilli. I, O'KEEJ"E l Merritt tell WAJUllOUSE SALE THIS Nf"JCllBORHOOD•SAU; UNUSUAL be~ an-* & 11-1'\N * 2 UPltOL cbaln. 2 DaNah ..,.., Job wrappinit omaU -dbl Ovt1!. ..... WEEK NOON "TlL T rM. Baby ltew Incl. oib, r~r -fumlt""' lUld .... ...,.,. , ,.,. mod chain llS .. , !Ael!l<r-ZENml A RCA TV M at ~ and nw.lntaini~ ne\19' ~ ~· MODEL HOftolE to'UR· bed, clothes. toys, etc. Avon eellOriee. beautlfuU,y pain-FRIDAY 7:• p.M. top catfee table; Dlnlah Or&rce O:>unlY'I J.at:lat
filn. Some Poliah or whl.BI!. $199. Penney'• dbl fits Ji JN cs p L. Us_ bottlet. dttu rorm l nui.n.y ed oak 1Sdeboud., tfub dWr DICIMBlli I mod cottee table: Magnavox det.ler. All a\lai"l, modi& 1n
CJ.echOlllovak kno\vl~ in door ftebil:, xJnt mnd, $150. fM>liIE ANTIQUES. HUGE oUK..tr barpinl. 6 place set· w/ottoman, mt'.ll'I 3 l1*d New A: i.aatd Aii'DllJ,ft (J'OO\ hi-D W/ert tpelkel' $35, ltock. Priced below the dt.
reftdlng and some typtnjt ~nm. SAVINGS. 3'&00 UtVINE ting Reed A Barton, Clu51c bicycle, old Ma.hogan)' tie*, bankruptclel A 1't~ &M-7413 countel'I w/S yr picture
~ . ·~TRAINEES
nec essary. Dependable, KENMORE au 1 0 nl a t I c "BLVD. (1 Bl.CK s. Of.' Rc.c + 6 extra p~ $40. mtn I: women•• fll&Alby aJoN. ,Portable dilor TV's, MilCeiaan..u.. lube! l )"I' puU 4 1 )'t
neat. Laguna Be a c h , waabtr, family alze, three BRJSJ'OL) N.B. 540-1371, Thun., Fri It Sat. %Ml'J clotblne. bn.PQNd aWa aiia new vtivf:t cMln, dlvMS. Wa9tM 120 36,.rvmoce .. CuF .. .!,! °'::.~ .. .!.'!
Start Work Monday 1 ~494-3~~Tl7~~9~am~~·'~7-~9~P~m~.~ temp. 6 monlhl oht. Ex· Msl'RcHG & B. of A. FaJrblll Vt'., newport deooralO!' arUcles. al.ck· Spanlah cockta.ll tablea,1 --'-"'"'.._'-___ ....;;;;; -·-.. -.. ~._... eellent COl\dltlon $ I 5 0 . POOL Tablf' Scats W/all Beach, $48--1007. nacb. Qtey Dec. t &: lO lam111, plcturte, bedroom PRIVATE PARTY WANTS terVft:e on premilet. ABC ~ 642-oo22. egulp Incl 1ighls, ss'.l. Ant~ GA.RAGE sale Sat. & Sun, 9-betweel'.I 10 ~ aOd 6 p.m.. sets cheat. d1nln& tables· •TO 1 8tlY Pl.ANCW n:>R Color TV, 0021 Atlanta at For Mad... I~ 12 cu FT Seal'!! frostlE.'81 que Oak drop front de~k. :I. 1788T. Ba,y s~-~taboxin :2~~~~e;: bufk.ts. --t:lzr-ma~-G\SH .. ~ Mll&l\Plifl, J{.B. 968--3329t
. re(rig. Good oond. SlOO. or $50, Wall hung t'll'Ct frJJIC Valley, Carrltt ~ • dlanapolla. 114/9&&-f4600., 1 tr e 1•e1,, refrl.a~n. • 835-227S•· STEREO, deluxe 1973 Gar-
G. B. INDUSTRIES mako oUC1'. 613-il819 or $50, w .. uoch"' ,.frig. 11> 2 for •M, awing Mt, k!ngli.e '"""''· w&5hen, ..,..,., WtJm;D m•alilv ~ ral'd modd, W1ie Pl'!'-
675'-7429 moWt'rs, hand & gas, S3 & ~rm. set, Spanish Uke CHRJSfMAS Speclal!· Huge dlsliwuber a. MUCH ~· tr;;zlf. · ~ changer, Jen.en
Antlquet IOO JCEmjORE pol1. di!ih-~lO, 2 pull up chrs, $4f> both, new, rxtra timi mattreu, H. O. l~t: 2 p-a.tna, over MORE!..! 644-J.59'i air •nston 1pet.ken. 220 __ ,_..______ ho b'--k Wl\lker ror travel trier, $8 968-6993 eve. $3®, never used, sacrifice WINDY'S AUCTION Watt , llM/FM MP X
SCRAM LETS washer, c p. ...... -to~ nlU'I An•C-.a "-·-..;.i, e WANTED e · °"""' table · ,,.,.. d-t. n -...:i "'l.strlbutlng •-~Hydro • Used 6 mo. s•r.11. Gl<HJt All xlnt cond. M2-9I39 TOOLS-Sanders, vibrator, ,....,.,. ._......., ™'""·· 6 "'"' ~~ • tteeivcr, ~ ...... .u....,.. "I l\.l-CV"" '"""' clu•-2 _., • ., '·--....... Slate btd. Cood condition. -u A ...... ,.. .. t...,:i wu left
all .h
'
. ROCK ?i,lAPLE -dining table ht-It. disc & buffers (air Ir .,., '• "' ~· ..,# • ,..,.. •--· ::~-, Equipment Loe Y • • . __ A: 6 cht.lin, buffet cabinet, 4 t1ect.). I-land drills, sldll 0<af~1:_e_s. ~~~id ~ COME BROWSE AROUND 842·24.17 uncWmed. NoW S 1 7 S .
No Exper. Req'd.
•• A> We Train
$300-$410 Per Ma.
Caff
776-8551
Set. 10 a .m.-6 p.m.
AITllE.SSF.S. Thll a:
p/Ume. apply, Colony
!C ltchen, San Juan
Capistrano, 27142 Ortega
Rwy.
AITRESSES 12) Mexican
food also 1 Hostess. Exp'd.
over 21. Apply nn. Cout
H~'Y. Cdr>.I.
Waitres1411, Exper. * ~9731 .
WANTED, 2 Women. Tent-
parary Case Covering &
Ute Assembly. Will train.
Apply bet I & 4, 875 C \V
15th St. Off Placentia. NB.
ANSWERS REFRIGERATOR & stow, .. _. h •-" 1 11 clock 1 L"-"" u>ClUU-1~ •wu...._ 21)7$% Newport Blvd. M••i'·"l ln•l•·-•il22 Terms. Credit dept . 1 ISO h TIJO 11.1awer c est, ....,_ saw, e ec. me , e ec. ••'nk. ·~ Corv-''r~' llodao. v -•. ..,.,o:o"'.. ..,.., _,... . ~ry ~ea~, 1 ee.~' w/chair, 2 end tables, 2 add'g. mach, l e I e c. rleeds °'!.-i. ~ otter! Behind :ron)"s Bid&. Marls. co:1.-.iu ...
Banter_ Deu.nt _ n.fouse _ e 1 m 1 n s er v e · • occ. tbls. Also milM!. items. typewriter, many more ... ,....... Costa Me1a * 6'6-8686 * a.EARANCE Sale, 12 21'' O:i1or TV, beaut. .picture
AbtiC:>rb _ BEEN BORN Weatmlnster. LIKE NEW. SACRI1'~ICE! Items. 217 Cedar St NN'J)Orl Sat. A Sun. Sl2l Boraeaux string Giblbn, l1ute, Glbeon $95. alao 19" Blk &. whi1-e
From tea baa: tag: "Every. OVER ax> wa.shen, dryer11. 548-<Ql. Shores. NB. ~7667 Ave., lIVine 551-2246. * * * acoustic elec. drum ae;t, port. $35. 9'79-4462. ~ m· ... -,of birth -o· refriRtta.ton from $39.gj. ORGAN G I b SUPER 'c·-.J Sale Sat & TIIOMAS Spinet DliWln & PRE HOLIDAY SALEI tenor sax, new trombone. RCA color comole ..-....... ~ •v '"" S4S--(l780 • U rans e n • ---bench $11(1, Simmons • l/l OFF Gibson tenor. banjo. *. Sz •-, -~-tmaa. 11'-n:.,,.,,..~'t trol . bas already BEEN · rhythln keys, only $1250. Sun! Sabot, Honda_ 160 dirt hideabed, $S0 w/linen I: Cello 1V 8 IChool CSkL w .... ,.,. '"' ..,...
BORN." ~ 1 YR. guarn, de! & In· Sony 500 tape recordE!r, port bike,. kltche\1 .1 t ems• elect blanket $100. Heathkit ENTIRE STOCK Thriit SboP ··Gt.Ueryt-1«111,,::963-:;. "'2963::;;';-,,~-,=~--
ANTIQUE shipment from stall. Late ·mod. all cycle deck, speaken, ?>Use. $200. clolhmg, something for Stereo ulaYer $60 Stnl 'p,{1/1 & DESIGNER CabrilJo, Ct.f. Thurs/Fri) FRENCH Prov. 5' Magnavox Kenmore washer. 83!)-lTIS. Buffet Beaut. from Biggers, everyone! J947:L Sierra TV cotiaole $35,' .... T' SklS. DRESS et Sat only, · Stereo, very l(IOl:I cond. the~~_)t and Europe. COLDSPOT 17 cu ft upright C.ood •lornge, $1"5. All Raton Rd .. Jrvme. (Broad-poles Ii bindinis. ~·2 O, IW' •673 2698
Oak: ruuno. &·square tables. f~r. coppertonc. Slt:i. ill"ms perf. cond. 640-1157 moor Turtlerock) 549-4068. Sat 12-6. • Velwts . Ta:ffettfts, Etc. SAXOPHONE. xlht · f o t'l,;o"~'='~-..,.-,==:-:--Butcher block. pressl>Qck ,,...,1694 alt 5 30 -• 61•7•.u. . beglnnen, bas -new pads 25" 'l'nJTone & 21"-JtCA con.
arm chalrs, ice box, bcauti· """" ; · 3 Cushion Teak couch $70, '53 Morris ~Unor Conv. 2 full Houwltold ~· 814 326 Marine ~v:'". . Bal. ls.l corks &-ip~ngs ~Ins !:!>Id sole cOlor TV. UHF S150 or.
lu1 sWeboards. lots of teak chair $JO. 30" sq tenk beds, KRmc tbl, couch, la""'uer ftniBb. Llk nc rm-ffHj3l9 or &G-Cl89f t Furniture 810 tbt 125, \Vht fo111ti~a 1-•,m l'hllil"'!, coUee1end tbls. a NEW--• u ._ __ ... _ 550 s. Coalit Hwy. Lil.g. Bch ~·· .' -e • w. • , Chriatmas goodies! ----------1 ... '" a.nu an que nu-•·11 ........ : · IJ ) ' ,For quick aa.le. $6:>. G4&--60i8 .,.,. .-....u. M·--Co....,. Th B' A • !!Cl, 7 pc's $125. 1938 J\.tahog. TVs, many lamps. stereo oouches eha1ra misc MOY-• ,,... .....,..., -·-• 1zarr, nt1ques BASSETT dining &et, lt drfsscr/mirror, end tbl. TV combo. 2· R)rli bikes. Ing, mtPt aell. br1enlil'rug. ANTIQV,E · chell_; 2 bUi-BARITON~ Saxop.hone. ~t.f ~· •, .'
2500 Newport Blvd., CM peh~an,hovacht ta&btobu&ff6 cl~~,· 546-1694 aft S:30 p.m. -10·1othinA", n1ucChMm~_:_ .... l~l9 9, x l2, -~· 548-8948. · fell, mahoC single· beds 'I: 1Zvere1tt Scbefler/by''Buftet. ' ~ . HOOSIER-. Millf cond. c ina ut -ct. cc.. "rnnge Ave, :--~. -.,,icture-tramea; · Schwinn -Exoe ,-AP!a:-$325. 8~
w/fiour, sugar, stained over S300.&l5-5787 . ~~~:elhe~~~res::. DEANE Gardcri T'ra ct 'ewelry 11J girl's St!~, ash td~ SD.JMER fl.'lark VIE natl Iii
glass $350. Complete Edison HAND-ca~ Mexican .~bl Marble top nite stands $65. Ga r age 8 a I e. Anti· -dresser w/m l'T'Or, walnut allo Sax w/caM!, Paid fr.iO, , FrM to You
"Gem" p hon o graph d~sser, 8 x2', & desk, 38 x Desk & chr $90. 421 Kings qucs/Niftlcs on en. street. WEDDING 911,.LS •• , ~~ • c1o:i'1: ..&a,~ Sell for $400. ~4T. • ,
w/fireside Mm $550. Dough 4ro',.· 5!lx2675; •• P~!!e. ,,~~ ... mir· Rd., N.B. 642--0808 E8un!eh,onl. Ho2retbbrooklks , S. ~faff Won't be riogtng for me .i chest, 20' freezer. All v«lrlh ORUM · ~-6 Pl~. + • Lino• 2 Times $2.00
table w/flour bin & drawers ...., U'WV~ COMPLETE household f " my gal. so must sell beauL klokina: a l! 841-3366 I.udwfg SRIU'e. $100. AJfe.r " , ' '
$175. 64&-0018 or~. 8' sofa w\th matching 5' furniture including Pack~ Adams. 8:30 ti\ ? Sat. only. % carat diamond ring, His ndlo Dlppl-1 , ,6 ~ &f&G469, ·• .
BRIT1SH Antique Importers loveseat, never u se d . Bell EntertalnmE"nt Center. DEC. 9 & 10. Curlis-Mathes & Hen wedding bands; frMI Ca ".. BLACK king hair male ~t-
Peraonally selected whlsale Avoca~ velvet. S 2 8 5. Bar aize pool table. lO'll W. TV-Stereo-Phono, make of-white/yellow gold. Save'$75. Get·acquaJnted special. New· Offke Furniture/ ten, 3 mo. N~ good
trade only. No retail. By 995--6157. Wlbon, Costa Mesa fer. Good drapes, gUilar (have bili of sale & guar· ly opened Candle Factory, Equip. 824 home. Eves or wkDils
appt: 213-431-7281 S. B. *** Sofa & matching love ANTIQUE Secretan· desk, amp $20: Other good items. antee of qualily from local v.1'1ol~ A: tttaU candle ,IC:S<&-~:a51=o.,...~--.,.-,~-,
MUCH antiqi.ie furniture, st>at, never used. Both $160. dressf'r, Clwst of d. ra11"l'l'll. lnMl Glou1,_-eslcr. H . B . jewcle[pl. Asking $285. supplies. 1240 l..oG9;11 Ave, A ,typewriter n."pair:man bM 2 Female dogs ahola &: bric-a-brac. ~loving. niust u 11 ho 96.~ 7!1\0 962-2488 They'n!lf reall,y Vt'l'Y hand-C.M., 1 block iOUth of late nlOdel elec type\Yrll&s -··~1 11 ~ yn 0 1 d sua Y me, ·' ·-T11•n beds l\Usc chain; & !IOITle ring• & a good buy. Baker btwn Harbor I Fair-I calculaton, like new.. ~~::;-I ""~land.· 1 0 v I! sell. 548-8948. RATTAN, blue/ureen Honi.I, this. Upright buff• I, 9 a.m.·S pm Sl\t. Ol}ly·Ping •-· 11:•~ ~...,., rebll gU"-"'7 =• d ~~-~-• tab! t 546-Sno e\'es &. v.'kends for VR'W. J'W""l<»), • • .... • "" -~ ays, _ .. .,.._ 847 >123 ANTIQ • Sale. 0 n oon· 7 pc living roorn set, 6:ood 61-1-4493. pong c, a11•n sweeper, aft 6, 5:11--0538. u u..u-.::n. -•
aignment acceptable. Please cond. $75. 963--2414 0 1 shutters. games. Mascnus app't. NO CHECKS · CASH Sarra Thtlft Shop SF.C. ch-~ ~. ···-• d-I.DYING Germ. an Shepherd
ll f L ~•2'JO IN . su te. 7 pc. Pecan. ...£.--' 0-,. -~, •-am· ONLY lll M · St H t Sch •-... ..,.._. wuuu __ _.i ca or app .....,.. · ROUND oak table 48", old 1nust sell. $450. Exquisite ,.·~~t." ml:::.· 388--9~~"1me'ti"Rd · 811~ ., alunCh. rl 1' .., f»--51), stor cab $40. 867 W. pup, female, 9 wu, tree to
CASH o~.1., NCR. ·--·i d •-h Eb I f g· Id ,_. -. "'-TURQUOISE JEWELRY having its annu s mas I&• CM, Pi•-, 642 •-. good home. 673-35U '""5.., ~ .... , rn.1 roa ut:"C , on Y cus om so a go su ipe I College PrkJ CM. Ind' Id Th Dec 7 &. Fri ""1 ......... ~ m: ~~900. Mint oond. 2EU<paghoola~·liCvh=,c~-0066. n;ce ~.1~~$. :b1~e1c~~~ FIVE Family Garage Sale, ~~~~~:bl, ~gifle.81, 1~!~·~!?1! ·Toys!. 1ly-ir_ P"ianot/Orflns~ 126 ~Y. ttaln~k=·::i:.i·
eves 100 Short St at Via Lido & hlshi, 'f et I ah es etc. ts or ""' "''"" e am . _, ,,_
WANTED custodian halt CHRISTMAS Story cordltion, Floral pattern · NeWpon Blvd, Christmas Wholesale pticel._ 6200 W. N~ I. near new. 0111'111 HOBBY ·~·~
time. Head Start Proeram. backgrounded Tiffany table $25. ea. 545-7983. · '~~ti~~ny~e::drsr bedG'x~~~; gift!.!, clothing, j e.w e Ir y , Cit. Hwy, N.S. 645"'7317. BEAtrr solid ~ dlniug MIRn . , GERMAN Shepherd male
Call 968-5122 between 9 & 2 01am'°"~·=· =673-4MSC'-'=.,--.,..~-,, MATCHING velvet ~<W!.s, v.•alnut, whl top $'.40. 42'1 Antiques. 1-lou!ehold. Sat, DIAMOND* carat & ~ut Bet, Jge hutch,!. $625} •gs , • -r-, •puppy, 6 n10nths, shofa.
pm. WALNUT gate leg table w/6 fonnlca table &: chaU'S & Merrimac Wy CM Mana~ers Sun. 9 to 4 brushed wht/gold Ti~ Honda 350 street. 360U nil. Doti I buy any c .gan until l'..ovabl~. 548-9337. w'E need Sh a k 1 e e chairs, leaf & pads. $200. misc. 675-7942 after 6 pm. olfh.-e. 538-7845, 545--6300. MOVING : Dinellt>, 4 pc, sec-aetting, .$300, apprai8ed at New cond. $465: Sofa, 8' you can P~! Non.players FRISKY buff Cocker Spaniel
. Distributors. No experience M!H>542 SOFA FRENCH PROV. 9' WROUGHT iron patio furn., tional, desk chair , pwr $480. 567-0Cll bef 1:00 p,m. curved, $90; Reel lawn welcome to attend~ work 9 ~ old, good ho~
necessary, No lay off:t. For Appli•rtces 802 * sroo. * settee, chaise Joung e edger, pictures, nl is c WANTED: Ladies l d mower S2D: lc'e dresser ~-F~r inlonnahon . w/ch1lctreri wanted. 536-8505 .~·!imin';~1~ 3~~--0n:. _,,________ 96S-18Tl w/stool & chair. $75. Gd. household items, V\V n1ags, fastooned diamond !m $10: 6'r.H760 ntact~fu~terlch AIREDALE Male, l 'ii yn,
e DlSHWASHERS, washers, LOVELY curved Damask rond. 673-3631 -' garden tools, 2800 Sbantar, watch & ~t \Vatch. O,IRISTMAS Flea Mlil'ket & . abandoned. Obedience train·
MIO \VANTS TO \VOID<'!' dryers, reblt, guam & ~_tional davenport, 0 ff MOVING: l\Iusl sell, best of-at Adams, C.ltl. 64&-0356 Boutique. Sant a Ana CNlt Music S.rvictl ed. Pl!M" help save. 962-2251
DRIVE A CAB! delv'd. m-.7620; .546-5218. white. $100. 642-fil19 fl'r takes, 9· sofa & club SAT & Sun, Dineltc lbl 6 Machinery 116 Y.W.C..A. 1411 N. Broe.dwQ, Newport Blvd. at Harbor
CHOOSE your houn, 11-ork TWO deltLXE!' stoves for iale. GLASS cof(ee table, rocking chair \\'/Ottoman, like ne\\'. chrs-comp. Bdnn set-Rce!IC 1 ----"---~--Dec. 7th, 8th &: 9th. U Noon Co4ta Mesa .
for yourself, be your own $100. each. chair, mahogany drop Jeuf 645-1731 after 5 pin. trailer hitch. P.1uch more LATHE-l41:aa 10", 4 "J'a,v, 3 to 9 pm. Antique~. boob. *PJANOS*°RGANS* I · 11~.' J "°8s Men or \\"Omen. Can be • &1&-5534 e table. 673-9251. misc. 2454 Norse Ave, CM. Jaw, KDK tool OOlder. je~>elry, doll!, COU1S, bot· Hammond \\'urliucr many Pim.,..._... ~ = handicapped. Vls, WHIRLP<X>L el~c dryer FORMICA 41" round table. 2 Garage Sale 812 548-25.:j.j Jacobs Chuck on steel wood Ues, gUta. olM:rs. Pi-e.season sPecials,l ';;i;i;i;i;i;i;;i~j
. Age 21 to 70, sup. S25 extra leaves, 6 upholstered . SAT. DEC. 9th JO to 4 l !~ta~bl~•~·~l350~·~'4&-~!:6Sl~-=!,!! DINNER China, 12 pfAce aet· .model close-outs. Piaoo &II plement your income. Drive ~43 chairs Uke new 536-3905 SKI . ~u1pment. s cub. a, l'ol11s1 sell furniture, clothH & Mi~l ..... us tlJ ting + all .ext& diabea $80. Oqaa rentals. Money UY· Pets CSeneral aln. a cab 6 hrs OI' more a day. . ' . . furniture, clothes & mL-.c. '71 Yam~ oo . MX.. xlnt ~on ehest.'Ethlul Alll!ni tag birg\in& are berc r '"bt ' · -· ~!
Apply in penon, Yellow Cab "~!i-E~s~u~;t~~~r. ST~, i:,5&rDm~Anti:: '!ii~.'~~ ~~it!~~· c~ cond. 1915 Chul>Mm, CdM, KITOiEN cabinets 1e G dwni sso. Chest ~~~ ~at: .. 100 GAL. Pembco tani6 2 ~ 186 E. 16tb St., Costa chair $30, 675-37'94 SAT & SUN. ALL u••bto (Irvine Tem.ce) 673-T!il8 formka. counter to P s . ~: ~~~.~· ~rs v .. • l.1 -•_.J aUichs Music City power filters & under graw.I · "'UICK CASH .... MOVING; Must setl. Sect. Harden Enterpriael, 815 W. OU-la a11eu, ......__,,,.,JI! .......... sOO filten. Volcanic r oe k
'"Weed it le Reap" ..,.. LIVING Rm, Dining Rm 'Items Incl JU-Fl. toaster, sofa, chi's, TV, lamps. Miac.. 18th SL, C.M. ~2842. 645-6574 th. Cout PJ.ua -54>-2830 display, plant&, t r o p I c 9 I THROUGH A furn. Many many pieces! mixer, Misc. 3071 Platte Dr, No Item Over $25. Sal. on1y. ADLER 21C elec typewriter, .,. • . • *-'~~GANS Nb. SlSO worth of trocilial
From treuures to trash Also Piano. 962-1449 CM. Dec. 9 2453 Irvine Apt A carbon + silk ribbon.L L~ ;:a.. -STOI.£ ~ -~·Out For Bu.mess &h $600 value, Sacrificd'Mr
tum them into cub WANT AD BEDROOf'of . set, 2 n It e SALE. SAT. 9 10 5, Tent, oxy· C.l\t. 642-2732. new $250. 9 ft Sofa., -Jiii'" • JI{ Best ~quality • P:rlcH "" serv. pX). 5121 Bordeaux AVf.
CAIL DAILY Pn.oT CALL 642·5678 stands, ~est ot drawers, & gen lank. Motorcycle elec l\tOVING: 10 speed Peugeot, new, Sac $2)0. 644-5516: SAPPHIRE BLUE Kawal-Ste~ay-Baldwin, etc. l.rvine. 551-2246 ' ~ • ·••• · ,64J..66'78 I -,,-,.--,---,.-,--~,, lrame. $50. 675--0771. guitar. degk, T.V., t e I es co pe . mlcrosoope, H USBAND'S Christ.mu!! A lsed $450. Sell s.1116 Playe.r Pumos I. Rolls Cits jj2 4~, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmportK 970 17319 Oak, F.V. 847~ clarinet, Ot"Kan, crystal, dirr Salute him. wl'SJ'' cannOO ppra · Relltab ••••••· We Bu,y-SeUI;;.;;;.;._,..., _____ ,_ ~:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;j ANTJQUES & interesting nerware, etc. Sat & Sun, 615 on whls, shoots beer cans. or oft'er 549-1746. DalJ.y 10-6 , Sun 12-5 PERSIAN klttens, CFA rea ..
lOO% GUAIANTllD 100010 GUAUNmD junk. Dec 9 & 10. Fran-Rockford Rd, CdM. 6'(3-4194. BOUTIQUE items: New FJELDS PIANOS shots, will hold for Xmu.
BUY WITH CONFIDENCE
CARS LISTlD ARE
GUARANTEED 100%
'69 YW BUG ..
.Auto. 1ticli. r.dio, bumper 111onl1, odt•
clton, IZVF 1•21
MAKE OFFER
'71 YW SUPER BUG
Atclio, bu111ptr 911t,d1, lo 111ite1, ••Ire
'clttn cer. {604 CX DI
$1688
'68 YW CAMPER
Clt•nl Uc. IVZZ 0271
$1688
HARD TO FIND
VW, 6 PASS. PICKUP' TRUCK. Tliit lierd
+o fl..4 pickup 11 in oac•lit11t co1teUflo11.
1$1(1( lilOI. N•w 1600 CC •t19l11•, '"'11'
r•••· $1288
'71 YW CONVERT
"4 1,.-d. reclio, wfitte wtl1 tlr.1, lili:1 11tw .
M111t ••• tt.;, w"li •• a. 1011 EAGI
MAKE OFFER
'70 YW BUG
4 1pttd, rtdio,-.clttrt, 011cotlent cond.
It 72 .AS Pl
$1388
'71 YW..Pop Top Camper
R .. dio, burnptr 911trd, p1rftcf cortd. 1972· IZW I
$2788
'71 vw· 1 Pass. Bus
lt4io, bull'lp•r t U•rd1, ow•rti•td ftcto'Y
t lr, 17,000 ll'llltt. Ntw ctr wt rr'fntf.
!SJI CEL I
$2588
DEMO SALE!
AU UNDll PACTORY ~ CAR WAlllANTYl
LARGE SELECTION
EXAMPLE
l to Choose From
411 VW DEMO
A.I.Ito. tr'"'·• r1dio. h•utiful M•t1/lic l!u• wtth 6ttfli lnt•rior, S,l2,0 111i. ~'Now ~r W•"•:y ~o ::0 i'2 295 I• Sno.
"
•
clscan Fountains by the MOVING . maple·baby turn., MOVING' W .... w.-Ao..~-handcrafted Items lar aale. Costa. Mesa (n4) 64.S-32!l $75. 892-2970. l
Sea, 21831 Seacn!sl Ln, H.B. braided rug, toys, misc. -..i.. • -~·~.._TT"'• J.&e Zodiac pune ~ CU.le tfPRiGH'l" Piano-1:-seiEi; DMti •C•
GARAGE Sale-Sat. on l Y ttema. 11n Burnham Cir., ~t-:.i:t . I~~ atiµfed toys $3.,--Cbriatmaa Baalitllill maboga :-'"2a<:-~ --~
Jo-3. Couch $45. Golf cart, H.B. 962-2179. Beat orter 548-4871. elves $4., Crochet Poncbos cellent ~ Must 't en CHRISTMAS · la: only arowid
misc. 2850 OIKis Rd. CM GARAGE Sal~ Boats, autos, ' ... Di" a :.a...I $12. 8f2..l988 to be &pPrf!C{ated. Sacrifice the' comer Ir. a Great Daqe ·1Mesa Ven:le \. toys, hl@hold Items. crpta, ~E ,two • .a.-.outdoor ''HEAD Skis," Standatd m5 $375. -t.Sill-'-Mto-f831-atte:r· 6 pupPy ls What your man
605 VI rl C electric clock. Never Wied, M .. ..., ..... i.1 • ....1b.,. f. pol os, pm., · ,-••b! ANC Champion TOOL.S, Handv."Oven articles-etc. cto a, o •I a cost $290 sacrtfiee $l!iO "!'-~ ""'........ ......... la
2 ch d. "--· 303 ME:'Sll, Sat&. $un.9 &10. 1()...4. ,,.~6 ' ' boob. S00. SchWinn unlcy-BEAUTIFUL Italian Provin-l.in!d. Fawna I: 8 cks n , is,.,,., misc. ....rv«-• · 1 N ··--• $ 3 O ~1 1818 o--i 1 ~1 CM •·t n1 c e. ever Ullal. , dal Hammond H-"'-0...,.,.,. .~=-=~-..,,-c--... -. .....,, a sauo:: a. . .-o Y S PC Med Br SUlte $150. wm~~rn 410 Shot o"-•714 .,,_ ·a-,;; ....., • .....,. gun ........., tor sale by owner. Will con-OOING to ColleKe, need DINING Set, Bathtubs 6 Couch/Chr $50, Misc tum. $115 Winchester Ml2-12 ga aider de fine ...ia-.. ~ siilks, baby furn. Many Oilers comkl. 104 Yorktown shot' gun $175. No checks. LADIES beige leather coat, do tra on ....,. i::::., ... -u home for renUe S 1 ,
'ft -1 "~'' Ln CM •-t "~" ~ ranch mink collar, az 16, \l.'tl ~ u•.,.....,.,..,. Bernard. Fem., 3 11"1 oM. sc. 1 ems. ol'oa"VJ'O • • .,. ....,,........, $1 75 ~ lik •-~~ M·'· •~-cost :>. "'" • f! new. BUY a P1a,yer Piano for ....,,.._ P•K.-.::u, &11.e Ol.IQ .
Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! Sell Idle Items ... 642.-5678 IIOLIDAY dn!u apecial & Nice Chriatma.s p re sent Cluiatmas. Dav l d T. 968-96lL
Autos, UHCI 990 Autos, Used 990 ~ei!: ~ 64H597. -oupree; M> D ~ La .• 1.G"'E°'RM.~'-=Sh-•""p.-.. =.,-."'1'"mar"""•·
OVERSTOCKED!
MUST
MOVE!
'65 MUSTANG v-1; coupt, •uto. 'trt111.,
pOwtr 1toori119. Uko Now cm. IH•C 1561
$895
72 CHEV. VEGA
J cloor cpt. 4 1pttclo rt·
dlo, tiotftr, likt llfW,
14t0 Ell!
$2195
?2 DATSUN 1200
2 Door S • d • 11, Allto.
'6' FIREBIRD
Coupt, Vinyl roof, t ulo.
htn1., rtclio I tittl••· A
bttutyl IXDA 101)
$1695
'70 DATSUN
STA. WGN.
Auto. trt111., t lr, rtcllo &
ht tlor, ro•f rte.It, rttl
flM. f91J IXUI
$1895
'61 PLYMOUTH
VALIANT .
6 cylif14t,, •tick • h If t .
Eco110Mlc•I tl't111port•-
lle11. A 900 .. buy. IWVlt •.
$1'695 ~ 3421. Ju1t
$195
'72 DATSUN 1200
f•1fbtc•, 4 1po .. d, r•4lo,
ho•tor.
$1995
'70 CHEV ;-, l'ON
'v.1, t11te. '''"'" ...... of
"tk , .... OK '"''"'r'· \,..+ .. _,_,, ftc, ,;, I
.. ...., .+fltt ....... (111·
.%JU $3899
'70.FORD
.. • ••• clu!. w••··· v.1.
11110. tl'ot11., l & H, roof
''ck. Hico for 9roup1.
176J AGCI
$2699
'71 DATSUN P.U.
Act lt.4, wldt tJ,._1 -I
wht.11. A·I c•"4.1 16•1·
24HI
11995
S.. Our Large S.lectlon of P'U11
Camper• and Othir FN C1n
Garden Grove Datsun
13'01 H .. bor Bl...t., Gardon Grove * 534-1255 *
-
~-~ ~ St. NB WASHER, cb'yer, elec range, CM 5'5-t660 2 female, $25 each. \Vill be ~ ...... JON -1<6..... I • hkleabed, Sin&er aewlng x~ Hammond Prof. Organ T wks, by Christmas,
l2>tlB Bldg. Must move! mach w/cab, mo v I e in xlll't cond. a:.t over 979-6420
WoocJ const. wired, crptd, camera, C.USCtte recwder, $10,IXXl. Pvt pt)' will sell for cMA~LE-='':lrla-,..,.h-So:-711"or-.,..1'°'6,..moe-.
Coat $2400, Now S 4 7 5 · misc. &G-20!3 $5500. 673-6234. old, shots. AKC. Jo,emale
639-3()75, PL A Y H OU S E , Cl\ild'a PVT party wanbl IO buy Setter 3 mos • old, AK(.
HEIRLOOM Glass Boxt'il cuatom made, a h I n c I e 1 , O>mole piano, in pt con-846-39!H. •
mfg to you. Made to onler. dutch door. EZ to mow, dJtlon. .tor cub. 962-0657 MINI SchnaUZE'l" pups, AKC,
Lowest Prices. West Coast $50. or best ofter . 644-8087 * WURLl'IZER EL E c 7 wlo:, will hold ~I 44w: y~i:-~=-:~ N:~ODELING SALE ~= ~ ~-~-644•7895
Gfr
carpet. Xlnt cond. call PRIVATE PARTY ** YIIBfGHT PIANO; good ENGLISH Bulldog puppt:, 5'0-4032 alt 12:30. Drapes, crpbl, plants .t: mile. cond. $DI. Call after 6, AKC pedlar@e, xlnt penontl
ANXIOUS to sell Newport Sat. only. 1 to 5 .. 2127 9'19-8198. • pet .&: BhO'w qua l'I t )'. ~ach Tennis Club Windward Ln, N.e . 642-33&1 847~
Membenhlp. 640--0570. A iYLE HAIGH ORIGIN XL WANTED: Piano in good 1-:0""~·.,-,-,,,-=-=.,-
CARPET layer )Ju Shlgl-6: oil painting, !Pd fram~ mt ~~.f~ pay up ~-~-bMer Al~ ~05 ~:erman Fii ill aell 24"' X 36" "Fall" scene Sl.25. O -· r,. '"11.11. ut7 38.18 ru,_.,. • ' pl~r.w558'-fll&2 a; .C95t WOlldertul Ch rt st ma s PIANO, French Provinclal 5J9.7l92
Sl.JllFBOARD _ 1.6.. Greg present. 64&-0818. spinet, li\le new. C a 11 SILKY TERRIER
N'i>1J, oerfect cond. $45. BELGIAN an "''001 9x14 STh-0380 aft 6 pm. ~ur:~~ ~~iis.7 ~-s.µ--13'72" eves. cupet, light beige. $35. GUU3RANSEN Sp In e f • l 0 _ :__ l male 2 NEW .,.,...,r heavv .. vJon MrKASA pon::elaln, 90 pc walnut flnbh. Xlnt cond. UUACI" pUpp..,,., • I ,........ • ., '"' aet "Rolle Mist'' s 5 s. $450. Call 837-1430 fem. for sale, 6 wkl ol,d-= 73~. ~ yds, 552-ml • HARDMAN 40 In. Plano 54&-63115. !
,USED BICYCLES BOUTIQU E lt•mo E=U.nt oontlltlon. $41JOi *"!50"•12>.PunbredS!>rini·
AU types oo-12T.1 Close-Out!• candles, IOl.J)S, 549-0087 ~t~15·~00 SollJll toy's. de. Buy now for s.w1-MKhi-121 · · ' B.\LDW01 Spinot \>lant>'lll!IO. °""'""''· Who I ,., a I e .,. · GEJIMAN Shephmi pupplM ~ catwicrSP a a J ih prieM, 2)7 62nd St. NB. SINGER Zl&·Za& portable. 4 to good bomea llS. each. -;
cb!st -. 60-2490. FLUORESCENT Fixturee, yean old. Excellent o» .f9'Hl99S '
FOR Sale. Reel McLean Complete w/lamp from ditlon. $40. ~ POODLE, mJnlature fem~,
Lawn·-lo F.dger. $125. $4.95. Gonl Surplu•, 1658 Sporting Good• l30 ·-· 30 moo. (~ Xlnf l'Olldt l46-0388. superior, a.ta Mesa. species). 53&-8108 ·1 oiSIGNER"-Rqgedf AM'N' WOOD p14)tl!Oule, 1 h a k e GOLF Clubs--4 ma t ch e d * AKC MJnl Schnauzer pu~. Andy'• Giant aile. 4' tall roof, 5 ~ hlab-.~6 mo. old, "T1Uel1t WOOcts." al u,m . male A femall!!'. Ca I I w;. MHi8891• sso. IShafb. neYer uaed. _New 63.'Hl955 <Orahgc>. j
O'KEEFE and Merritt disb· '96&-m4 $1i0-alldng ·$lOO. 54&--3950. BASSET Hound, 10 mot o~
...-. ~· COl<llllloo.115. POOL TABLES-BRAND j'IU GOLF clubs • baa. 4 •hoU. -1tock, ap 633-S'M after & · 'FACTORY DlRECI'·LO AS ~uUUnc Exec. mo d,e l JM:t.pert. $15. 847-4!>13 ,
P 0 RT ABLE typewriter, $29. oods, S matched Irons $95. GREAT Daoo pups, Interni.-
S,,C., SUper tterling model, 633--3461; 5\14--0466 !iS'l-5460. Oorut1 Champ __ Blood !the,
6ce_i eond. $75. 562-MOO. FULL be.m!I complete befir SKl~ · ain;»ost new ~gnol AJ$C reg S75. 962-5495 att S:
• JN11;Rl0R DECORAroR tapper l)'i:tem. tt~, C(>-2 210 .... Hf':ad Killy 11• ~ AKC Collie Pupa. Ready tao
• Speciall&ln,a In Andwe;t nleeh. I: door ld&OC., sno.I em. SJ2) ,ryounted'.,645-1624. go Cbrtstmu. ICall Jfter·• ~ pricca 9?9-28tf 'S.A. Ted !MS"-1918, 64A:28!. BRUNSWICK walJWt Jogger,. pm or Sal A: sun 91S&-tto1 " I
MINK alole. Oler CU&inl ·2!!tAL. ~IW~ like' nilw, ~I bOTSTA.NDJNG BORZOlS!
orta:. xtnt~~ hetm°ets...,.... cond, $S 1 $7. (Rua1an Wolfhoundl). BM
_,,,1_ 548--5420 ........ WANTED: crou oou:ntry lk1 bl'el!dlrJI Tmna. 832-7f51'.,
FOR Sale-Uled SdnriM 10 ~pment , fO!' man. ls UlASA Apeo _ pijppla. AiC
'apd, $fl0; Steel Guitar, $35. SE'WINfull -G INddnob ~ !?~ woman. Call. 6*-1133 rq, Shota, SBJ, •
9oth gd cond. ~· L . ca • ex .. vi .... -· SKI t1aot1 •ha a. 9 1: 13. -SCS-!119 , WIU,,~nQ' blue c.11tp VW Fill* 1uJ .. net .,$1D. Xlnl oond. Le a 1· h fl r . SCHNAUZER ~ P'UPI. Sboq;,
.wri-.ft ... ~. pftn1 ~l384 &CMl34. WUI bold 'for Otn.tmU. ""· _.tut MAGNAVOX Stem U..tn KASTLE m::iw skla, %1D'a, Tmns.~~. I 2i:" Oii&or TV, AM/FM wl h N ..Look bl ~£ -dryer Mldlo A ...ard pla><-r. 90" 2 ~ ov.ltd --· WIRE F"" T-AKC. '25: Riv\fin 'trailer hitch . cuahion .or.a. 549-Jtn rfect co . $8). 96J-..5J65 wn1 hold tor C'hrlltmaa.
$10. 6'D-Q33 SUR r BO ARD 8 • 1 tl'C'~. Store, Rt1t1urat1t, Groom Inc. 639$9, •
RUG. 9 x 12, 11moet new, •ta~IJa.n Surf Craft $65, Bar U2 BASSET Hound pups, cha01p
Onnp A yd]ow, wg. $30. 5'8" Bahne, $45. Both 11ltt! RE$1'AIJJ\AN1: ~"'•' show quality. ~ ~114 I cood. ,163-017'3 , 1 . · EQuJp;•Walk· wormed. Breeder &39--0919
-~·~PE ~ 'hi o ~cl>lh box l'x10'' =~ Ch~-.. ~! •r..LoC-..v _, X. extra ~t. Tabin ' t ·~. pie 'catie A other .-....... r .....,., , .. ,mu w-lllftlt~ ... like new, orialnal ct~. An ' .t.. tft to mllCI equip. ' 8Tr1.0rt or 4PtO, 5Wi mo old male. ARC
box, ..,u., 49J...ll585. $ t 9 9 • _ Ch t l 1l11;1a1 4M-3l2L Clll 28th SJ.-, Ntttpt w/•ho..._ 567-3098. J
W&nt a<t rclOI .... , 6W611I . Lar=kWY: .. !!!! Bell. • W!!J! ad ,noolll •• ~
• ,,,or-:---
' .
I Frid.,, °"'"'"" 8, 1972 DAILY PILOT 4.1 --------
· J!"?'"'!!~!Ml!!.----~·~56 HorM1 IN' INts, 0..-ef • ,. IMt1. ,_. • t06 IMH_, SIU 909 Cyc ... , Blk• Auto S.rvlct, P11rt1 949 Auto S.rviee, P•rts 949 General 4 ----\.-.. Scooten 925 1--------.,-9 TR old rq:. Pinto it!ldlna, OlRlSTMAS hone• ll. n d U.-1& flat bbltoln Jon Boal t.YllAH 11', Jabrd liW>MIWl. 11 DIESll 11 VOLKSWAGEN Ip ('(' i. I' Underseal 1''0R " Jolly G 0 0 d
950
.$:XKI. 9 yr old Palomino ponlta sale. Alto honel for AJwnlnum. 'Tii h,p. mokr. Kllnlllllr blt. 'S4 model, •• •• '72 Tri h engine overhaull, 40 hp • Chri.11.Dl.M. get in your cat ,
mare $300. yea r 1J n r ""'· Rtdwood St ab I ea . -""1dltl0o. $250. 83$-n&< qomJll. -LonU like 11mp S:IAO. 1500cc 12'5 b"'k' · S-ciol go ,.. Walter Mntthau ard
.. , ... mlno ... i .. to $150. Will LaJruna ~ Ro ad . afte.r s. new. Orts thnlout w/brand DISAPPOINTED BY \VHAT Bon-vi•lle reline $27.95 + parts. r-Carol Burneu ln "Pete 'N' tak"'i: otters:S..11n alt 6 49Ml8l 1 8 -...__ / new era¥'" marine 4 cyl YOU SAW AT THE SAIL-,..,. sedans only, incl. replace "Pre\.'ent Ru.Kt le Corrogion" Tillie"
D911fw Mar"-model ID q ., Dual •kie: BOAT SROW! Nov.' consider LIKE ne\!.', gold • white, shoes k MM.ti.int> drums, Assusing dust ~ v.•ater tight
pm. . lr;f P. fM controk. Call l'l5-...a96 to tee a full powered cruislng aux· cl~ I fast (7E7749l ~-Beach Automoti11c Center. underbody "includes steam
tlUNT CoJh ILs, BlLarllcs, lsGumX· ..__, 11~1·1 HOND. A _ ... _ '"·-at 58 Unda blt', N.B. illa.ry Dutch·built to Uoydil !~ h""'e'1~~ TH.,.munt 'n~ 84~. ~~.:!;,,·,·Alll27F;_~· •· RL~a,'. merwa: l, t ue,u • • ...... 1,llllllll l(.. ..-. &ft.'-'-"lm,SEARAY" lOOA·lStandardswltbover oo::ac ,,u., • Qll;:.llaL -'-"~~-----,.,..,~ "'"" • ""-""
Nice $40. Navy htu~ mt'd _ new $140; Jenoa. ~ ccnd. 6 Oki• Paet-a-jet, 20', ~ 400 miles l"8Jlge at 6.5 kt.II 00 _84_7--~~-~-==--VW Motors, complet@l)I reblt, Pruduehl) •
Recre•tional
Vehi~les 956
~TREET-Buggy . orn• or a
kind Body. 111.00 CC V\Y ~lust sell! Call aft 6 pm,
1;1'"'"'63.
waht $20. sz l4, 6f4~ ~4' Foot 21 $2'15. Series, F41ulpped for Water the intcmal tank. Aluminum 1973 750 HONDA Inst. I: Guar. S2!Kl & up Ex-G USTAFSON
BEAUT Palomlno, ~s well Boals ~----I 900 · cw;-I: ...... 1..... tandem .:pars. staink-u steel tank& Very low n1ile1.. Ridden changf". Also SC'l' us for LINCO LN-1.,\ERCURY -~tra.lned I: bdia11M. Suitable • v.nw• ._.... ~ Dd hardw' Wheel t • Gold /blade tri Tune Ups .t Vah"' Jo~. 16800 Be•ch at Warner · !'· • I Booti .. _____ 116 trailer. Gall after 12:00 a ar@. steer-wice. w m. Vince Automotive, 1366 K for nu or exp r 1.r11r "' or 13, WHALER 35 HP Mete. 1 r.....-DOOll. tn.4) 831).M82. MUS'l log, h\'O speed winches, Extras! Cost $1891 00\\/. Huntington &each
show. $400. 646-4753 Trlr Xlnt cond. $ 8 9 5. 20: SIOPJACK, •72 Open SELL! ~bed f~:n:b~d ~~sl~iJsee. Sacrifice $lei. ~71~11e., Costa Mesa, "Home of fh·e Viking" Sports, Rece, Rods 959
a,s ARAB Gelding, 3 yrs. 644-2226 Sp. lU B.C.Y.C. cruiser, 16.'i Mert. Extru. 'Tl $ldpjack 20' open cruiser, 'th ... ak lloo u JO er,~· ' I~~-------842-i844
$250. Tack add I ti on a I . 1601 Bayside •With J ttaile~ p:rt prty. 215 OMC. _.Im; llual be.tu. Wl e rs. nequa"" BARGAINS in girl's bikes. "UICI( CASH
545-3138. S)~, BOSTON-Whaler type n4· ~ 64U540 quarter llf&ta. cockpit cover, storage. Quality and Crafts· Schwinn Stingray -$ 211 • ,.-MeADAMS Bros. auto...t>ody
MORGAN' 8 YI' old gelding. dinghy, new cond, used 23 n oIF.Sll. L~ '71 Bimini top, compass, elec. m~!~~. superiodr wa;rdbes Sch\\inn 24" wJdbl baskets THROUGH A ) & painling-C0rn('lete paint
So ,_, · 1150 Call "· 0~... _ ... ";.......,.,--· "·t, bUge pump & blower, safety are tn~ .. ale to escr1 . on rear fender $15. Schwinn I )Ob.I ~ 1ninor dents $85. me u..un111g. . IWn!t'. ... $345. Of'r . ~ ........ ' ._ dt. $5150 613-6234 Do not even con\e to look 20" no. 646-8297. CLASSIFIED AD 64j-74fll. 1643 Placentia.
Sf&-9135. 64:Hl904 Uinll: raJ'Wf, loadm. 613-6966. pa · · until you are ready to buy .71 SUZUKI 50cc street bike CM. O~,C:.DlNyG.,.s. yea.Ger ,u•'.'. 12' 6'' Starcraft, lbrgls, trlr, SKJPJACK 24' FfB. 4 mo1 ~~bin Cruise~~ or you "''ill go away eating 150 mi like ~ $165. 642-567·8 1 c=,c-,."".c,.,ifi~oo~A~d-, -.-.-642~,~_,..,=,
-alum. spars $651>. Prlv. Pty ,oW. NlY equip( In water, stereo', Cleptb ~r-..-r::ii your heart ~ut. -l\!AN'S BIKE Italia~ 3-spd. I ·A_u_t_os_.-N~ew---~9=90 Autos, New 980
DE Tamaro Pantera. I i n1 t•
gm v.'/ blk hood & l:runk. 10.mr ml: ~ew-bdlator·
nl0diticatt011 & distrlbut.ot·
kit t: bauery. Smoked glai>t1,
side rnirrur kit. & 5idc
stripe k11, new Nichol tail
pipes:. $9800. Ph: 645-7622.
tpt spirited P>O: 548-4691 &12-8852. slip avail I0-1837 aft 5. galle xtras sJ~ps 6 THE MAGNIFICENT 1973 2 ino old UJ 642-9'T77 0; Autos, New 980
Clasatnedt Ads ... 642-5678 Sell Idle it~ms ... 642-5678 Need a "Pad''! Place an ad! in co~$9975. 67r.-asn. *. '~ONTEST 31 * 645-5935. ' .
Autos, New 980 Autos, New 9IO Autos, New ,. 9IO 1!168 • 25' Chris Craft wm be open Dec. 9 & 10 in ·n YAMAHA 250 Enduro.
· ' Corinthian Sedan. Chris 210 Slip 3A, Newport Arches l\lany extras! Ex! cond.
HP w/only 135 hn. Xlnt Marina. (behind Centlnella $550. Call 640-1156 -.aoe TERRY'S
BUICK & OPEL
DISCOUNT CENTER
-~-!cYO~U CM!:'QJIDER A BRAND NEW _
73 BUICK CENTURY Hi(RDTOPl:l>UPE ,2RIG'HT N04W FOR30NL•s
Pl111 l aw & lie. w.-. 4ADJ7
TOP VALUE USED CARS
'71 B~ICK
70 BUICK LA SAUi. c-.. .._.., s.4... p..,_ .... ,..., ....... I
...... feet.., -"· whryl ,..,, etc ..... dlim 1 ...., cs.
IXYI 4341 .
,,_..., .................. ,ca... = 1i':s:t'9'-I i
1
tetr ..... ... '67 VOLKSWAGEM
TER1tv ··au1c~K
cond. owner a n x i o us . Bank) * '70 Honda 350 CB. Xlnt
n4/645-2T20 Holland Yachts/Newport cond. 6000 mk's. $ 3 9 5.
SKIPJACK ~ •. Flybridge, TI4-64!l--0139 67j..2!116 aft S pm.
fWC' 200 hp in~ror USED BOAT SALE '72 Honda CL 350 Any
motor, oy.tiiggen, 2 ~. Kite-w.frlr ..••••••.••• $750. reasonable cash offer
b.tho-reccl'der, bead, bait Hobie 14', fair cond •• $570. • 644-7222 *
tank. Etc. $500). 548-2184 Hobie 18', fair cond •. Sll50. Y MfAHA '68 lOOcc Trail
40' CR.tJISER,.GMC 6 11 Hobie 16', l Demos, $1450 up bike, xln't cond. 100 orig.
delsel, , . S.S., fatb._,, r.~ Clipper 21' w-trlr •••• $2595. ~~· fi7t&.m. __ ~
Sl ,500..-Mooring--av--Clipper~26', r~ .... ${450. Electric C•rs 930 pty:. n4/615-238l. Columbia 22' lnbrd w-trlr
S .. F AIR L I NER Twn New condition ..... • $6125. OWNER Sacrifice, Great lit-
Otryalers, Good cond. pn). All !hese and .new boats the 3 wheel elec car . for
Abo" good Jobfiaon 18, $125. Available at Hobie Newport, cpsb, very reas. 96H212.
644-5084 1700 W. Coast Hiwy, 645-a>62 Motor H
•-'I 909 HOBIE CAT 14' Sale/Ro;::• 940 Bolits, _, Xlnt cond. $850.1---------
32' Sloop PC ews, _,,. 5.'!8-&!0 <Orange> PACE ARROW
.......i. $3im. Fully equip. 6 Booll, Slips/Docks 910 TIOGA
HP /outbrd. New cush, sail * * SIDE TIE A il. N ORANGE COUNTY COYef, Will trade for lat@ . 118. • ear HEADQUARTERS
model car or .. u. 673-2490. . Lldo. Dock power • _water. OFF-SEASON
818 Good . can 548:-0058 aft6 pm ~,,,_. .a.i.. ,.,.., .:;\',~"."! 1oo11, 5pood & Ski 911 DISCOUNTS ::.-"'.,.:,... ~= "':;!: lJl Ft Se• Rq lJlll seriea. 1 NOW AVAILABLE
structor Sn--1965 year·new. 445 CI Oldsmobile . pack-a-jet..,.,... Equipped
RACING SaOOt 2 sails. Xlnt for tiabing • water ·skiing.
coDd. $215. ruJJy equipped t a n d o m *· MS-1«14 * 'trailer. Thil outfit is: like
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
CREVIER
HOBIE £at ~·-a"""' old. AU -.. ~ "'" $9lJlll. MOTOR HOMES raclJW. gear. ·Trlr, Ex. cond. Sacrifice $5Cm. Pb one .,,,.. W ..... S.A o'"3l1l $1600. 5'Hll6. &»<482. ~ . =" . . ~
. SINCE 1933 e LIDO 14 e 16' _, Whalor .nthoul ."' TRAVCO 5th & WALNUT, HUNTINGTON · IEACH $400. . Call 557-1126 motor, fully equip,•"-'' pon . Z5. DISCOVERER model $1500 Cost nu $2500 20 -22 CONTINF'N1'ALS 5 3 6 6 5 8 8 FLIPPER #I ~-' lJl' PRIDE & JOYS
• • . $150. 675-2592 MUSf sell 14' Sid boat & .. VAN CONYERSIONS ~'""'"''!'!"!!l'!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!""l~~!!!!!!!!!!'!'~!!!'!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!""l~/Classified Ads , , • 642-5678 Trailer. !;ales • Service • Rentals
-Au!Os, UMd 9'0Autos, Used "° Autos, Used "° Autos, UMd "° ,131-2164 .. 548-8995 * Danmar Inc. * 1---..,---------------14' SKI BOAT, good cond. 13801 Harbor Blvd., G.G.
Evinrudt" 55. Best offer. Call 5.11~
''
' "
YEAR;END CLEARANCE
All Used Cars Are Reduced For Immediate Sale?
OVER 70 PREVIOUSLY OWNED CADil.LACS
AND OTHER FINE· AUTOMOBILES-
'71 COUPE DE VU.l.tl
FACTORY AIR coNDmONING, vinyl top,
fuU power, beautiful cloth A: teether interior.
AM/FM, cruise control, many deluxe xttas.
7 to choose from. (050CXV). From
'4777
'88 SEDAN DE VU.1.E
Factory Air Conditioning, full power, vinyl
top. leather interior, tilt & telescopic steering,
AM/FM radip,"etc. (VDP877>
$2222
'71 ·ELDORADO
Convertible. ~tber intmor, full poM!!l', fac-.
tory air, Wt wbee1, AM/FM stereo with Ulpe
player, power door locks, twilight sentinel,
cruise control, extremely low mileage. (404086}
'6333
'M SEDAN DE VJLl,E
1'111 power, factoiy air conditionlitg, cloth A
leather interior, · AMl'FM radio, power 'dool'.
Jocks. less than 51,000. miles .. Shows outstand-
ing care. CSRM13.1)
'78 COUPE DE VU.I.E
8 to choose from, Cloth or Leather ln~riors,
tilt wheel. AM/FM stereo, power door lock.
Choice Of colors. (134AUK) From
'71 SEDAN DE VD,l.E
Vinyl top, Full power and factory air condi-
tioning. Leather Interior, tilt-tele wheel,
power door locks. AM·FM ndio, etc. 7 to
choose from. ( 430CZI) From
'4777
'7Z l'LEETWOOD
Brougham. Vln.yl top, Ltather, dual comfort seats, ,fUU power, factory air, tilt wheel, AM-
FM stereo, power door locks, crulae.cootroi.
twlligbt sentinel. (611.EAC).
.. 777 ,
'7Z «:OUPE DE VU.J,E
Vinyl top, Leatber interior, full poWer, tactory
air, AM/FM radio. wblte walls, low mileage. 1.ocalli owned and driven.
ewes, S31-.fl9'10 _ Next to G.G. Datsun
. JUST'GO
[i] 1\!0TOR HOME RENTALS I .A. Or. Cnty lgst rentaJ fleet
.. LOW WINTER RATES
604 N. Harbor Blvd.
111 i tad . . -..
llJS.9030
C-pon. Sale/.Rent 920 Rent A Motor Home
Slide in camper sleeper.·
INSULATED.
for your V.c:atioli *-1 * $29S. e NEW LIFETIMESe
531-2304 Free ml&: insur •. All optional
1989 Fqfd % Ton, 101ii' equip $175 wk. Pvt Pty.
Camper: Low miles. See tolc.0838-05:!3=-==~~-~-~ apprec. 551-1989 aft 5 pm. ·n Shasta Motor Home for
Cyd• ·Bikes ~e. lB', seU~td, sips 6,
1 • """., 8lf cond. tape d e c k • Scooters .,~ ~ _
•n YAMAHA Mini Enduro $1000 or ~t oiler for eq .•
, MX clean A super fast 1or Fully equip d Mo!_Or Home,
deaert or track. $Dl firm. Xlnt oond. 642-UW.
6'2>7689 '12 Pace Arrow 24'
'71 Honda 350 ScrambJa' Ex-alr, gen, ~ a day &:: Sc mi
cellent condition $350. Free insurance. 6'H239
Sf>.8855 Tr•ilers, Tr•Yef 945
.'t!I HARLEY Sprin~ $lJlll .
cub. 8,000 'tllill!'S, needs
front brake. 979-9328
J HP BRIGGS A S"J'RATION
-BIKE. 16(). Call -
~-. -,, - - -
Brand New 1973
HORNET HATCHBACK
Tinted Wlndshlfkf, w11...,1 Dix, liN•v Durv
Cooll<>g tAJ~7E lll,91)
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY $2499
1972
AMIASSADO R
BROUGHAM
v.1, Vinyl Too. Avlo. T•ilns., Cus.IOm 11111;.
vlOwl R~hnlng Seo.ii!., W/S/W, \l'sibil\ly
Grovo. P 5,, Pr..,.-r O™' 1ir1kei., Tiii wneel, AM/Fi:A Mvl•lllel< Sttreo, Vlnvt Makllnv.
!A.2AU1lltll'llJ El<tKVllVI °'1'notlf!•llOr,
Less lllen '® mlln.
$4399
BUYER PROTECTION PLAN
24 Mont hs or 24,000 Mile Guarantee
Av,ilailile
'72 & '73 GREMLINS '72 MATADOR
STATION WAGON
Ml v ... Wood Grell! Skin, P .. mlum T lrfl,
Air, P,S., P, Olt.e lrffn, L11991g1 R•c~,
lrd SN !, AM/FM Slw".
'ef·-.. 1 ~
$AVE
Good Stltcllu of '11 ~ '11 M.atatl6n
.IYilllolblt,
Levi Gremlin
Now In Stock
lmmediote. Delivery
'70 HORNET '70 AMBASS. '69 ·PLYMOUTH
2 Dr, Air, 1l<e1ll1nt eo11di. SST Fury St•tion Wagon
tion, 1661 AFWI f ull Po_;, Air Corid., Full pow•r & f.a.etory •ir. Pert.ct f1Mily cir. !849. !YET t2Jl ASG J
51795 52295 s1995
'68 YW Camper '64 GMC '69 JAVELIN -
l uy lllOW & ''"'• Xc1l1llt Vi TQN• PICKUP SST cond; .. ltr91r f1cfory• I ll· E.c:1ll1nt condition. I L26-.4 Spd. R11dv to go, ! M· 9in1. ( 177 DFE l 262) 1161941
51795 '795 tt695
All Sale Pricft Good Thrw 12-11-72
DATSU 'N
D'EALIN' DAYS
l t12 CLEARANCE $1886
'11 HONDA $600 '"111> HONDA •$650
9837..e&.18 ot 961Hm4• •n HONDA '36ll SL
SUPER COND. $495 OR
. --------------..
I '
j
•" t
I
I
• ' I.
I
I
• r
I
I<
.1
--
'7• SEDAN DE VU.1.E
Vinyl top, tapeatry interior, full powler fac-
-tory air, ttlt whttl; AM..FM, power door focks.--
twlligbt sentlnel 6 to choose from. C554ASI)
From
'3$55
'70 C:AD. BB01JGBAM
Beautlful Flremlat Paint with full leather in-
terior, dual comfort seats; vinyl top, full pow--I er, tilt a telescopic steering, stereo, cruise
control, llght aenttnel, m01t all xtras. Co.13-
ADYl
'UELDOBADO
Full power, factory air, AM-IM stereo. padd. ed---top;-Leather lntoior, .power __ door. _lodq.~
Vlnyl top, full power, factory air. custom
tllt·tele wheel (215BSY)
'2515
'79. B1Jlc:K LES.UUU:
Cwtom.4.:door hardtop. Vinyl top,.lWJ power,
fact~ air, white wall tires, nidio, hMter,
low mllea. Exceptiooally clean. (648AEt) -
Hours: 3;30 AM to 9:00 P·M .Mon. thru Fri.
9:00 AM to 6:00 PM Sat and Sun. ,.
' • ""1"",'\.""'"""'~~C.l'tL~,
2600 Harbor~ftlvd~, €0sta M~.£
• 540-9100'
•
OFFER. • 557-7630
'66 Hobda 300 Scrambler rood oonditlqn '31M). '
aft 5; ~5!M3
1-Girl's wim Bike *"' . 6'2-4l34 ll4INI llIKE. Nova lrame, 12
ILP •• McCuUoCh 9, 2 spd
I tram,, Exe _Oi>nd 540-0826
•n SL'lO • St. lie. ,.,Pvt pty. $3JO. At t er
l tlOp.m., 5M-Hl·
HUFFY Bike 26" mens. ex-
cellent condition $19. ' ' 673--mJ
•
•
. .
-
' . •
Frtdaf, Deamber 8, 1972
............ 1§1 I
1T;.;.".:.JC1;;;lto;• _____ 96..;.;;2 Truck• 9'2 Van1 -------'n Chevrolet
Plclcups & Vans
Bit Stock
L-Prlcft
HOWARD Chavrolot
Newport Booch
MacArthur & J111·100rt>e Bl vd
'70 Chev. :t4
Ton pick up. VB, custom, AT,
PS, lactory alr, 8 ply ti.res.
11,rap around bwnper.
Priced at wholesal e.
<9mSEi. Only
S2450
13~555 HOWARD Chovrolot
1971 EL CAMINO, Clean, Newport h•ch
VANS!
VANS!
VANS!
Double Discounts Low mi., 454 ell&;, cowl Jn-t..iacArlhur Blvd Ir Jan1bor('{'
duct. Posi I.met, hydro , IJS..0555 GMC's -Dodges -
aaatom whJ..g, Ar.f·FM, Of-'TO INTERNA110NAL % Ion Ford -Chev,
fer. 832-39·=18"-o"""'-,-~ TravelAll. Vll, auto.. air, CONTEMPO . Pl'.:RF'ECT .
'TI TOYOTA Hi lux truck, heavy duty camper equip. CHINOOK, TRAVCO FOR·
R/H, Big tires, s t ep ped, acellent. tires. Kelley ENSTOV . PRIDF. & JO\'.
bumper 15,000 ml, fl100 . SUggested R.tlAll $3Z!O. Our Save on this
536-3389 SA.le· Pritt thru U-1().72 is Year End Clearance
'61 Dodge ~ Ton Pickun, V· $2999 .. rn7ASF) ( P 4 5 5 } like this '72 Ch('\/. v ton, 8 A Trans Powe St DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, "' " ultol ou' Tir ..,..Ex 2480 HarOOr Blvd., Costa 350 VS, automatlc, p<)\\'er Ing, eavy ty rei;. • steering, H-78 wide base
ceUent Cond. $595, 832-53l1. Mesa, M&-8017· tires, radio, with cont('mpo
'70 GMC Suburban, air, full '68 Ford ~ Tn Std Trans, sporlsman II. sleeps 6,
Lo · -~"" ......,.., Ru ns like new $1395. • '56 t · bo & t ·1 ' pv.T. ml!. ~ ..... ~·.. s ove, 1C<' x 01 e room.
or 494-1772. Ford PU w/camper V-8. In beautiful dark yl'llow &
'60 FORD '~ 1011 heavy duty, Eng. runs good. $395 • '52 white with matching inter·
for used cars & trucks, just
call us for free cstimatea.
GROTH CHEVROLET REWARD nJ Ford 1 Ton Stake Bed, V-8, ior. #CGE252Ul27577 Srock V-8, 4: spd. $400. cuh o Y· $395 e '62 Dodge·2(1' Stake 12
842'®2 Bed. ei .. n • ,., new '"°" Ru . ·1 S6995 . WILL PAY OYER '69 """""'ta Hilux 1; T. block 318V-8, 645'-fi644. efal Ask for Sales Manager
'"J" 18211 S<!ach Blvd. K II Bl Book pickup. Olig °"'"''· $1395. Von1 ' 963 Save . S2000 Hun•'""'°" Beaoh e Y U8 Call au 4, 645-3447 ~ ~-o I I Full Pric:e S4995 847-6087 KI 9-l\1! For l•t• moda , e oon, '68 Ford %. T PU 4 spd, 19n Ford Van conversion. 1 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR Jow mJleege domes·
Radio, good cond, 11700/of. •on low ml. <' ""< r r11. I , BILL BARRY FOR TOP USED CARS k fer. 5'18-8165/528-2057. I $49JO/best offer. 831-2268 -tics, Imports, true s or
If your c.ar Is extra clean, camn.rs
NO\V ON DlSPLA Y
Sales Service
Parts Body Shop
I~
MGA Now at '72 Prlc:esl :
MANY MODELS i MUST lll!ill 1959 MG A
w/rebJt enc. $300. Of' belt
oUer, 122 Sl!irr&, No. A, San
Clem.
1971 Datsun Pickup ·n GMC Van, V-8, panelled, nrst ,..-•
SlS25 flnn. 645-mt ~t~qs, many l!ixtras. PONTIAC..OMC-FIAT we u~AUE.R BUICK Call and aak for Buyer '69 1750 Spider Veloce 5spd, ~.vw 1>1 SI. ot S.A. F..wy. 2925 H••bo' Blvd. DAVE ROSS Xlnt cand, $2350 ftnn. MGB
& COLORS
Immediate
DeHvery
AT
See It . You'll Buy It '59 FORD Pidtup, V-8, 4 •pd, ~ E I t St S • ""°1000 -•~ -42 ''" "'l '69 Ford Van N•1 tires $1900 .,,.....,., · s ' " ·'" J..JO-Costa l.1<'18. 979-2500 ~· or V'lr".l.Jol MGB '69 ~-· --~•-runs well. $475. Pvt pty, · • · ......,.,v. ...,....,,
m""t "'" 963-1752 Firm. C.,h P,..fom!!l. 1965 KAISER maH van, 4 IMPORTS WAN'TF.D PONTIAC AUSTIN AMERICA amlfm. Now ti r ", * • 1. 9 7 2 Lu v • 646-2644 • cylinder, good cond. $500. Orange County's b r k s I ba t t . Pvt ply. ..Dt41t ltwi.t
• TOYOTA Picku!>'AMIFM. ltoa"Y du· '62 JHp V•n, reblt on9. 64>-3'84. TOPS BUYER I* 19711 AUSTIN AMERICA· '72 Datsu 1200 96>-1'70, alt 5· ty bumper. T.O.P. 552-9359. firm $250. 646-9150 .sg-CHEV. VAN-.1 speed, BILL MAXF.Y TOYOTA 2408 Harbor Blvd. AM/FM, low mileage. R •n MGB rdlltr 8K mls Rlbr
MUST Sell, IMS F 0 rd mag wheels & paneling. 18881 Beach Blv :. Cotta Mete 546-BOl7 673-4222 FM/MPX/tpe Abarlh Exhlt 1..~ Harbor, C.~i. 646-9303
'70 TOYOTA Crown 4 Or. Sedan. Auto., air, vinyl roof.
In f"Xttllent co ndition .
Kelley Suggested Retail
Sl98l Our SaJe Pri.L'C thru
12-10.72 ia $lS99 (239810)
IP442) DAVE ROSS PON·
TIAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd.,
Pickup, Excel rond. See to '67 FORD VAN CALL. 545---7630. H. Bcac.h Ph. 84l855S HOUSE Hunting? Watc.h the E.xecutive Car, Air Cond, etc. Call S47-1627 Herb Ltt
apprec. Best offer, 5-15--2124. 646-0622 r:ani ad re~11u~ . 642-!Yl?R Sell idle items ... 00·5678 OPEN HOUSE column. AUSTIN HEALEY AM/FM Stereo. lOClO miles, '67 MGB only 35 CKXI miles
Autos. Used 990 Autos, Used 990 I ·A~u-t-01-,~U7sed~--~990= Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 --------1 ntust. see and drlveN. must sell. $1txxl. ' '
I ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, '61 A"'tfn Hoa!ey Spnto, NO DOW * 67H4&4 * II engine xlnt, body fair.
GR EAT u ·sED CARS
'72 CHEY NOYA . S2195 '66 • '70 Y.W. BUSSES SAYE R9Cllo, ~'''" lo-.t mllft. (0$1G8X)
Good Color Stl«llo11.
S1595 '67 BUICK RIVIERA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
'71 Y.W. CAMPER . . . . . . . . . . . . S2795
F1<lory modtl, ia.. milts, •Ir COllll. (Jt.JOSW) '70 PONTIAC CATALINA CPE. S1495
'71 JEEP WAGONEER S3795 '64 Y.W. KARMANN GHIA S795
Radio, l'!Mler, broWft/bl•dl lnttrlor. (50SE8F)
'71 Y.W. SUPERBUG . . . • • . . . • . . . S1795 '64 Y.W. BUG .................... S795
lledlo, l!Mlw. ~ toftl, (74'DJOJ
'65 Y.W. BUG ............•.•..... S895 S1495 '69 Y.W. FAmACK Wl'llt1 with black '"~· (RU8'3lJ
'66 Y.W. BUG ................... $995
'67 MUSTANG .................. S1295 Air, meny _.1r•1. dMn. IT8Pn21
Rtdlo, llHtw, •llM. tr1M., _.ll'l'lt buy. (VTUU2) '68 BUGS -lafCJe Selec:tion ....... SAYE
M1,,y col0f1.
'69 Y.W. BUG ..... ' .............. S1295 '69 BUGS - 7 to Choose From ..... SAYE
LARGE SELECTION OF BUSSES, CAMPERS & STATION WAGONS
Needs clutch \\'Ork. Best ol·
fer over $100. 6T:>--0970, ask
for Mike.
'61 Austin Healey 3000
ONLY
$65.45
OPEL
'69 OPEL Runs good. Needs body work Pl't' mo.
$300. Call alt. 6 • 551-"'45 for 48 month5. Full cash COUPE
BMW price is $2195. Defered pay-_--------I ment price $3141.60 A.P .R. 4 SPEED trana:l_~~· new 14.34%. sliver paint (x·rnua:J.
Vuil our new hom" ~ulpll11 hon} $966 r~ ..:::::, w.:;::' :t.:.!o _ Soo 11-Y ou'll buy Ill
234 ~-11th SL 4 door •. ~ cyl, !1.Ulomatic vo•vo , transm1ssK1n, radio J. I.I
COsta Meu .w;.4444 heater, low miles, like new
USED BMW's (195EKTl. '"' Harbor, c .M. '""""
''9 1600 Sl 795 1953 ()pol Olympia Slatlon
70 2002· HUNTINGTON BEACH :~ofie~;Q..~ PX! or
'71 2IOO SEDAN Chryiler/Plymouth •n ()pol Rall,., $1150. Air
CREVIER BMW lfifi61 Beac.h Blvd., Hunt. cond, buck sis, roMOle, dlsc
Sa.les • Service • Leaain& Beach 5t0-51G4, 80-t'l631. brkJ. 673-3268.
n w. :ut &,38j;f Ana ~~""~ ~ = PEUGEOT whls. NC, prl ply. 6'15-<t281 BMW 2002, 1969, Red/Black eves. 1--------
AM/FM, .XAS r a d I a I " ·n °'""" 240 z auto, '69 PEUGEOT Konis. like new, $2100. am/fm orange, $39xJ. Blk
557-5237 int, prl pty. 838-366S.
CAPRI '12 Datsun mo lmmac, Muot
--------1 sell . Lota of xtras. 968·3682.
STATION
WAGON * CAPRI 1972, like new. private party. AUTO trans.. radial tires,
R&H. li,000 miles. $2600. 1971 DATSUN Pickup 24 IXXI heater. t90fiAF'Vl. Only.
Call TI4/96S-9168. mil", $1475. Firm' ' ' $1666
1972 Capri V-6. $100 & Take 557-8187
Over Payments, Call Rick, .. '72 240 z. *
640-5141 aft 5. Auto/AlrfMags. Pr Iv ate
CAPRI 1972, low miluae, f Party. 675-4858 or 615-8882.
spd, R&H. $2200. '69 Dataun pickup-New pa.int
e 833-1958e & brakes. $950 or olfer.
Soo It, you'll buy It
~Uui&
Costa Mesa, St&-«11'1. ,
' URGENT, must lll!ill, "lO '
TO)'Ota Corona. ~ brkl, ~
tins. Leavilll: for Europe. ~·
Belt offer. ~. ,
'69 TOYOTA Corona 4 Dr. :
Wcbeli.g tires. Sharp mn-\
dltion! S940. Pvt P t y . ;
(1)63&-2399 ~
'70 Toyota Sta. Wag. i
~"'"""'='"Bob=-'"'"7""=.' -,... • '70 Mkll "'agon. 4 spd, air, ~
priced lo sell, 493446'1, :
4991:71 COROUA I
WAGON j
4 SPEED tras., radio, buciret ~I ..... (85$125' !:
" Soo it, you'll buy ltl l
I •
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9Jl3 i
TRIUMPH I
'58 TR.·3. Xlnt cond. Must see ~·
to """"'· Pvt p1y. '46-12511 I alt 6 p.m. 1
VOLKSWAGEN j -YOLYU CITROEN ..::;548--0442"-'0=o·~---1 ' '71 Datsun 1966 Harbor, C.M. MS.9300 ''!~· :r·r:: = :
Citroen MaHratl Piclcup can-PORSCHE ped, OUor, 673-9775 ; ·r-· '58 vw no engl:ne, m a.1ao :
AWARD WINNING
LUXURY CAR
Perfect tor weekending -· vw part&.. :
very c.lean, low mileaJ;:e, WJU.. Buy your Porsche or 968-124L ,
ec.orximy hauler. (781BZV) \rw paid for or not. can -===-.:-c==::-:;::::-1• $1889. Bil Maxey Toyota, Kent Allen 837...ax> '68 VW Reblt eng, new t1ru. l
Road & R•llye Motors 18881 Beach Blvd.. Hunt. PORSCHE •68 gu, xlnt cond. new brks. extra clean. •
Beach. 847-8555. .69 engine, 3S,OOO milca. Pvt $Ul50. 499-4CM. ;
Orange County's Oldest Olt. RAT pty. 547-4305 • '9) VW, Very good cond.:
1609 Pomona Ave. Vacanciea COit money! Rent Radials, Nu brakes, $11.50.
Cosla Mea 714-~3559 '68 FIAT 850 coupe. 3800J ml. your hou91!:, apt., store .;-~~·~--.,.,--..,.,-$200 work on eng. $400 or bldg., etc, thru a Dally PUot ':;!; VW Bug, p a r t i a 11 y • ~=~===;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~~~=====~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~A~u~~~'~N~-~;;;;;;;9~~~---~ ~~M~•-----~-: 11 * '62 FIAT 1200 .. now! Call 642-$18 Now! Need• new trans. 646-4231. t
Now LEASE that special ce1r of your choice at w. ~~~·~" Auto•, lmportocf 970 Autot, Imported 970 :
a payment YOU can AFFORD, from -Oller , ... =~~ NEW CAR· TRADE-INS l
OrangeCounty's No. 1 Buick Opel Dealer! ~~.~
NEW 1973 CENTURY Luxus Colonnade Coupe JAGUAR
JAGUAR '65, 4 dr 900. 3.8 S.,
lmmac., lo miles, wire
whla, air cond., auto trans.
AM/FM rad ., nu
silver/grey paint, re:I. lthr
Int., $2500. 833--9550 bet 8 am
Equipp•d with turbo hydr•motic trens., power s+••rin9, r•dio,
W /S/W tires, tinted glass, air conditionin9, ind power disc
brak•s.
T-goo4 credit 11 o1 Y" Modi
NEW 1973
BUICK
LE SABRE
$9604 PER
MONTH
+TAX
Sl'OlT C:OUl'I
Equipped with turbo-
hydrametlc tr1ns.,
power steering, ra -
dio, wsw tir•s, tinted
9la11, •Ir cond. end
power disc br•kes. s1•0501 PER
MONrH
+TAX
Equipped with
turbo • hydro·
metic fr1ns.,
pow•r steering,
radio, wsw tires,
tinted 9less, air
cond., power
windows, power
d isc brakes,
power s•at.
.
SPORT
COUPE
s12101 PER MONTH
"Ii pm.
1970 JAGUAR XJ6. Perfect.
24,000 miles. Red. $V500.
CalJ 642-4391 or 642-2789.
MAZDA
*Al* LAST
• • • AUTOMATIC
ROTARYS
IMMEDIATE
Dl!LIVERY
HUNTINGTON BEAC,H
MAZDA
r + TAX 17331 BEACH BL VD.
Pct ,,,,_..._.. .. 1.IM.,._,_ .......... T ....... ,_, .,._. .. ...._ .. ......,......._,......,. ... .,._,,_., ... ,,., ....................... .
I
TIME FOR'
9UICK CASH
THROUGH,"
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
1972 VEGA ST. WGN. $1999
Only 6,'500 Mll•1. A11tom•tit.
1972 DATSUN 4 DR. $1999
011lv 1,500 Mll11. A11hi. I Air.
1972 RENAULT R-12 S. WGN $2795
011lv 2,500 Mii••· A11torn1tlc .
1970 LINCOLN MK II $5195
Show,oom Fr11h -Filly Eq11ippM,
' 1969 PORSCHE 912 $4495 1. •
k•vtiful Met•lllc Gold, I
1970 M. BENZ 280SE $7995
Co11p1. A C1l11ctor1 Item.
1971 M •• BENZ 2~ $5995
-4 Door Setl•11 with Air.
1972 M. BENZ 220 $5995 .
l111 Th.11 12.000 Mllo1.
1970 M. BEHZ 250C $5995
'•p11l•r Co11po MMol wltll Alt •
1968 M. BENZ 2080 $2695
Compl•t• R1b11llt Motor.
JIM SLEMCNS
IMPORTS, INC.
111 W, WARNIR SANTAANA 546-4114
•
,
, .. -13
I~ I _..... l§J I _..... l§J I .......... ~ l~ [ ,.. .. ~.. l§l I .w ..... .. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; II ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; l~I l§J [ ··~·.... ]§].
l~-+--'-lm-'pott'--"'--9-'70 Autos, lmporiod 910 A-lmpottod · 970 AutOI, lmporfod 970 Autos, UMd 990 Autot, UMd 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used 990
l VOLKSWAGEN
XL.NT cond. '70 v w E:AMPER, Tlt'W eng. ·n BOG. 1 owner. Make often.
491H574
'IJ3 VW Bue, new eng. &
tlutch. Recent valve job.
$4~. 536-0450. aft 9 pm.
''!' vw, xlnt cone!, R&H, """""'!. $900. ~ * 546-1269 *
'(W VW Bug, oew btks, tires
• paint. Good mt. Runs ~· $6:i(). S<HM46. "71 Super Beetle • ~
1 ecau 838-7405 aay&e
•Eves aft 7: 499-U67e
'61 VW Camper, rebJt 1600
dng. Xlnt cond. 553-9214 or ,r:; Nu btks, clutch &
qres. Lo mileage, Xlnt
<f?nd. $800. 979-5229.
'64 Bug-New 1385cc en(ine &:
Pa.int. Good tires & brks.
..... 5411-1235.
I '69 vw BUS
~ cond, $1650. 644-4447
1'65 vw $450
54&-~59
t '71 vw Bus, $219S
. -I * '67 VW Bug,
xlnt oond. Red.
$825 644-1033
'71 CAMPER, Pop -top,
11;/dbl. bed, stove, refrii;:.
~M. loaded 12190. 61!l:j036
'&t vw $400. Looks, .runs
Jtreat. New tires. 866 W.
Wilson, CM * '56 VWBUS * Good engine, reasonably
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN
'10 v.w . .POP·TOP CAJllPER 1971 YOLKS with air eondi~. all
whit• with 1>o1ge mtertor 7 PASS BUS
Kelley Suggested Retail AM FM Radio SUnroor Lt $2885 Our 8a1e Priee thru ll-lf).'l2 ill u;91J DAVE Blue w/white top. Very RO~ PONTIAC, 2 4 8 0 clean. 076DFB.
Harbor Blvd., Costa M<aa $2295
MH0!7. CREVIER BMW ·n vw Bus, 34,00J mt. nu
brakes & bltd tires. c:uatm Sales • Service i Leui.ng
Int, 5 pass w/dbl bed. ~ a:t8 W. ht St., Santa Alla
mac In & out. $2500. 835-3171
TI4-894-6017 alt 6 or •..:• VW
wkends. -'Tl VW Bua, 1 ~-~ Bug. 4 speed, radk>, heattr, ,._...... ~'\ clean car. fZRT887J . Only whts, am/fJn ster. . 5995 15,000 mi's. Ice bole, cur-
tains & ~q. Mr. Gordon. HOWARD Chevrolet
days, 542-4441. Ev es Newport S.ach
557--4600· MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree 1972 VW Bug, X t r a s , 133-0555
lealherette int. rad i o ,
~m":~;..""m::~ '69 V.W. BUG
$1795 cash. 67J.-3601, morn-air conditioning, radio,
'"•'· beater, ~$89.5).
'65 % Camper, new brks,
trwwn, 1600 '"'" pain~ HUNTINGTON BEACH
super paneling, bl tin spkra, Chrysler/ Plymouth
leaving for liawail $900. 16661 Beach Blvd., Hunt.
546-i105. Beach 540-5164, ~1.
'67 V\V Camper excellent ,6B VW Ca <..'Ondilion i n c l u d e s 3 mper
bedroom conversion for top Whtte ~op camper with
Must sacrifice this weekend radkl--;---etec. .refrigeration,
Call 838-3552 Dir and SJ)lit front s e a t #n Karmann Ghia. rvwr--O'l31. Hurry for this
Low mileage, New car war-one. $1499.. Bill Maxey
ranty $2095. Must Sell Now! Toyata, 18881 ~Q.Ch Blvd.,
0005049 Hunt. Beach. 847-8555. ~ . 1~;=""'"'""""'~""':;:-;o::: '67 V \V Squareback-New
'68 V.\V. Bug, RMI, ~·1 motor, xlnt body. $850.
rear; Re-bit eng. "'-"ce 543-0581 or 53&-7472. ~.,iioso. Pvt pty . VOLVO
Priced. 548-1610 ..,.., ll t 1---------'63 V.W. VAN, "'""ce en '65 VOLVO 1225
Radio, beater. Auto.
'6'1 VW BUS -New engine. cond, New engine, equipped
$500 or best offer. call for camping, Make oHer
$13-0071 or 673-1829 548-5155 aft 4. 1-;c"-==,:C'-'i'---,= $550. 64&-4186
1utos, Usod 990 Autos, Usod 990 Autos, Usod 990
M-IKE McCARTHY
Buick -Opel -CMC Trucks
ALL PllCIS PLUS TAX • LIC.
894-5631 OP£N SUNDAY 894-5631
These cars carry 100o/o unconditional
Mechanical guarantee for a
period of 30 days!
1972 BUICK ELECTRA
'4 Dr. H.T. v .1, 111+0. tran1., factory 1ir conditioninq, pow1r s4577
st1,erin9, power bral"1, pow1r windows, power 1e1h, r•dio,
he1ter, whit.will tires, til'!t1d 9la11, wh11I C0¥1tl, Lancl•11 top.
S1rial No. 10911.
1970 IUICK...WILDCAT CPE.
Cpe., V-1, 111to. tr•M., f1ctory air conditioning, pow1r 1t1ering, ~477
power br1lr11, r1cllci, h11tar, whitew•ll tir11, tintacl gl11s, wheel · ·-.
co¥•r1, L111da11 top. Licen11 No. 178AGA.
I
I
1970 BUICK RIVIERA
VI, •11fo, tr1ns,. f1ctory 1ir conditioning, power 1t1erin9, power
br1lr11, power windows, r1dio, h11ier, L1!!0111 top, tilt wh11I.
lken11 No, Ol7ADV.
I 1970 BUICK LE SABRE
' • C~. V-1, 11i1to. tr1n1., f1ctory 1ir conditlonln9, power 1taerin9,
pow1r bralre1, r1dio, h1af1r, whitewall tir1t, til'!tff gl11t, l1nda1i1
top, tilt wh1el. lic1n11 No. 078BMA,
These cars below carry a 50-50 mechanical
warranty for a period of 30 days
1967 DODGE MONACO
Cpa. V-8, auto. tr1n1., f1ctorv 1ir conditioni119, power 1 .. erin9,
r1d io, h11ter. Licen•• No. VEC3JO,
1968 BUICK 225
'4 Or. H.T. v.1, 111to. tr1n1., factory 1ir conditionin9, po-r
.. 1t11rinq, power br1lr11, power windows, pow•r t••h, r1dio, j ~e1t1r, whit1watl !iris, tint1cf 9l•t1, wheal CO¥er1, L1nd111 top,
t tilt wh11I. Lic1n11 No. WEGIOO. Ii 1967 BUICK SKYLARK ..
t? Cpe. v.1, a1i1to. tr1n1 .. factory •ir eonditioni119, power 1t1erl119,
1: power br1k1t, r1dio, he1t1r, L1nd1u top, Licel'!1e No, VEZl74, .,
: ~19~6=7__,FO==R=D-=-=M""'US;;;:T~A:-:-N"'G:---------
,1
; v.e. a11to. tr1n1., power tte1rin9, r1clio, h•at1r, Lend1u top.
1
i Lieen1a No. TSR595 ,
,f 1970 OPEL WAGON
,' '4 cyl., 111t 0. trant., f1etorv •ir conditioning, r1dio, heater, Li-
:· cant• No. 9138HK.
:~-19_6_8_P_L_Y~M~o~u=T""Ho-=FU"'R""'Y~lll~-------
' l:.H1rdtop, V-1, auto, tr•1H., f•cfory air 001Mfltioni~9, powtr
1tiari"9· pow•• br1k11, r1dlo, h11tlr, L1nd11i1 top. Lic1n1e No.
1·XCPll6.
1&1969 RAMBLER ROGUE -' , ,.Cp1. 6 eyl., a11to. tr•n•., powar 1t1erln9, radio, h11t1r, tfnt•d
91111, wh11I co .. er1, l•Miau top, Yinyl interlor.1 Licen1e No. XUR·
I '47).
I 1;1969 VW WAGON
)
I ~. cvt., 4 1pe.d, FM r1dlo, h.1titer. licen1e No. 2AD305.
b
"
·'
51077
VOLVO
VOLVO
'73's
HERE NOW!
Come in test Drive
TODAY!
See It -You'll ,Buy It
~ru. Wii& W VOLVO
1006 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303
Autos, Used 990
BUICK
'64 Riviera
VS, automatic, power steer·
ing, air cond, bucket seats,
console, wire wheels. (fVS-
5,;2), Only
$1095
HOWARD Chevrolet
Newport S.ach
MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree 833.o.555.
'66 Riviera GS--1.Dw mi.
White. AM/F, air, full pwr.
Pvt pty, $1500. 673-7099.
'69 Buick 2 dr Electra, Top
Stu:.pe! $2(XXI.
842-1'>60
BUICK
'66 BUICK
ELECTRA 225
" door, v..a, automatic
transrn.iMk>rl, factory air,
power steering, p o w e r
b~es, radio, heater, xtra
rut-e.
$695
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Chrysler I Plymouth
1ti661' Beach. ffivd., Hunt.
Beach, 540-5164, 842-0031.
1970 BUICK
RIVIERA
Fae air, full power, AM FM
radio. Green w/matching
vinyl top. Extra clean.
489AGH.
$2999
CREVIER BMW
Sales . Service • Leasing
208 W. ls! St., Santa Ana
83$.3171
'72 Buick Electra
4 Or. hardtop. Air full powe-.
Door locks. Cruise control .
Black Beauty!. 582ESE.
$4995
lAacHoward
S31-6000 or S31-G607
Corner 1st & Harbor
Santa Ana
CADILLAC
1970 CAD SED
DE VILLE
Full power AM FM & 8 track
stereo gold w/white vinyl
top. Leather tnt. 314:ASJ.
$3495
CREVIER BMW
Sales • Service . Leasing
200 \\'. 1st St., Santa Ana
835-3171
1972 CADILLAC
SEDAN DE VILLE
Fully equipped Golden finish
with light interior nearest
thing to a new car, Only
10.000 miles. 509EJX
SAVE HUNDREDS ~
MacHoward
S31.-or S31-G607
Corner 1st & Harbor
Santa Ana
CAD '69 CGnvert. High
mileage, Excellent oond,
new Mic11elln tires. Isl
s2.ooo taJcn it! 644-ll79.
'Ei6 CAD Conv. New top, all
xtras. Full pwr. Fine ooncl.
Pvt pty. $1350. 552-9171.
'69 DeVille Convert CLEAN!
$2950, OFFERS! 0 a v e ,
675--1972 or 494---0615.
'65 CAD, $800 or exchange
~-~~~~~~
CADILLAC
YOUR ONLY
FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
CADILLAC
DEALE!t
CADILLAC
* PRIVATE PARTY *
'70 Cadillac Eldorado
$4300. 67>-7429
CA MARO
'68 Camaro, V·X, pwr, ftlr, Jo I
mt, retalis SIR75. Make fair
-CHEVROLET
100°/o WARRANTY
'72 CHEY IMP.
Custou1 l'pP. V-1!, auto1ru'lllc,
power 11t~rlll~. po""(' r
hrnk<•!I, lH.I' cond., vin' I roof.
this C'f!r is~ very r ll'nn I
priced low. 18251YfC) ONLY
$3095 Largest ist·ll'ction of Cn.dll·
lacs in Orange Cou11t)o'.
Sales-1.l'asing. 830-8462. HOWARD Chevrolet
offer. fttiss10n Vil' j o .
1
.Nabers
• 1971. Camaro Rally Sport Newport Beach
xlnt cond. $2250, 1'1aeArlhur Blvd & Jambort•t
673-4800 or 64&-0731 83USSS
Cadillac SHARP 1969 camaro vs. PS.
2roO HARBbR BL, PB, xlnt cond. new tires.
COSTA l\TESA $1650., 495-4391.
""'·9100 Open S"nrlay CHEVROLET
1971 CAD. Cpe.1------
De Ville '65 El Camino
Beautiful gold finish, loaded
v.·i1h eKtras. Hurry en this
one O'J3CPJ.
VS. automatic-.
(R78653). Only
air.
$895 $4995 HOWARO Chevrolet
M H Newport Beach a;c OWard MacArthW' & Jambor"' Bl'd
531.-or S31-G607 833-0SSS
Corner 1st & Harbor '63 Ghe~Nova, \llhite, Good
Santa Ana cond. Immediate Sa I e
847-7384 eves/wknds
CADill..AC '68 S e d a n "·n"'"'E"l"'c"am~ioo-, -all-,-, ""'"'l"pb".°"10 deVille. Factory air, full mi, yellow/brown int. $3000. power, vinyl top, tilt &
leleSCQplc steering, twllite 644-8693, 54&-1653.
sentinal, AM/FM radio, "li6 Chevelle, SS, 4 spd, P /S,
etc. A one-owner car priced Excellent condition, $750.
beklw Blue Book. 1st $2200 557-ii513.
check takes it. 644--2949. * '77 EI Camino, Air, concl,
·&i lmpapa SS, blue in & l)lll,
nu tires, gd 2nd ear, On:;
ov.•nr S2A50 fir m, cash. Ph: -· iilEV '69 CA111ARO s::i, ;?:"(,,
Hi perf 4 spd, nu1.c:s, tnu·11on
bars, Cle-dn $1800. 645-8020
or 6Th-5396.
1971 VEGA 2-dr halc-hback
cpe. ~1ag \l'hl!i, vinyl lop,
F~t stereo radio. <l ~pd.
$1799. 962-1886.
1!163 Chev.· Impala Super "
Sport. $250. Call after:'. 6 PM, I
846-6828.
1967 . L\fPAl,.A, V-8, air. I
door, original owner, ~-
962-0767.
1962 If\.1PALA, needs some
\\"ork. S\50. 673-5681, cull j
after 6 pm. I
'57 BLACK chCV)'. clean, 61 cyl, stick shift, good cond.
$295. 846--6102.
for sqback VW. Fast results are just a phone
Sell idle ilems . . 642·5678 546-7834 call away • 642-5678.
Radio, 7500 mi, make offer,
($150 over blu bk) 64<J..03.J3.
Don't give up ~ shi~!
"List" it in cla.u1f\cd, Ship
to Shore Results! 642-5678.
980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiliiii~iiiilliiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiii
980
VEGA
FASTBACK
'70
FORD
MAVERICK
6 cyl., ''dio, ~'''' wtlltew•K 11r11, tltlt9d
flffU, Whfft CCIVI!"$, ¥11\yl
lnt1r11r I 7:120J io I
$1566
V·I , •uto. 1•~111., f1ctory 1lr c11wllt11nln9, pawtr ;.1..,.1ng, rMio, ht•l1r. W!Oltew•ll lire<, l!ntM
9la1t, Yinyl lnl1rlor (SU.
Ill' Iii
$1366
-1-
v.w.
I tl'HCI. radio & heeler
!'SlESOJ
4 speed, radio & ht"ll t
,X~Slll)
$666
FORD RANCHERO
.. llllflt { #iJOIJ)
STA. WGN.
v ... 111111. trans,, I tllrr •Ir c.lldlllonlnt, pf)WG•
ll•rln1, rfllle, healtr (UJAl86l
CHEV.
CAMARO CPE.
Jltdltl, MOier, Ylnyl lft·
ltrlor ITQNtnJ
DELTA
v ... ;.,111. lr1ni .. l•1<1o~
•Ir tDNllllOnln9, paW11r i!Hrlnf, pawtr br~k",
rldlO, helltr, wn11tw·n 11r11, yJ"yl tollf, llnlecl
11111, Wllffl (0¥1!"$, llft•
Cloii 111p Pl79MUJ
II .. , tulO. tr1n1., ltclOry tlr Condi• 1;onln1, p0w..-t1to1rlng, ,...... IH"1kH,
pa-..r w1nclow1, rflllo, he•ler, whit ..
Wtll Hm, vlftrl ..... t'421iCU)
TOYOTA
VI, ; u•o. ir. nt . l~t!Or'I'
Tr coodi!loninv, paw1r
\IH•inq, r~dlo & l!Hllr
'~""'' ~666
'66 CHEV. STA. WGN • v ... ~•II. tr1111., l•<,.l"Y
:r C'OMllllonin9, ""'"' i lttri"i' r~llllO & hffl.i'
USllGEI
$466
4 ~Pfflil. tldlo & ht:ttr
1 ll4AlJ I
$766
44 DAILY Pl~ Friday, Dtcembtr 8, 1972
~A;utos;;;;;;';;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;'~w::;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~::;;'~N;'w::;;;::;;;::;;;;9~IO ~~~~~~~~ ~-----~J§J~j ~I u;;;; • ..,;;; .. ;;]§];;;1'
_,,,_ l§J I _,,, .. l§l .;;ml .. --.. -.1§1~~ 1973 BUICK Century Hardtop Coupe
78 NEW
1973 BUICKS
In Stock For
Immediate Delivery
AT NO PRICE
INCREASE
$JJ88
350 V.1, AUT'OMATIC TRANS., POWER DISC
BRAKES, RADIO, BUMPER STRIPS, f/11. CAR·
PET'NG, STOCK .1:1031.
CLOST . OUT SALE ON 1972 BUICKS·
NEW-DEMONSTRATORS·EXECUTIVE
CARS OPEL G.T.s in stock 1•11••••n OPEN ALL DA y SUNDAY DIUVllY
MIKE McCARTHY BUICK
BUICK·OPEL·GMC TRUCKS
15550 Beach Boulevard, Westminster
894-3341 1 Block North of Sfln Diego freewaf
On Beach Blvd 01 Mcfodderi 531-2450
Autos, U...t '90 Autos. Uood '90 Autoo. Uood 9'0 Autoo. Uood -~------
'90 Autos, Uood
OLDSMOllLE CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL COUGAR
'69 Malibu SS
Cpe., V8, 4 &peed, ~I roo(,
wide ~. mag whffls,
rv=.~~
$950
HOWARD Chevrolet
NowpoW Beach
MacArthur .l Jamboree Blvd
833-0555
1910 Chev. O>ncours Estate,
8 Pasa. Sta. Wgn. Pwr.
Steering Ir brake&, AM-FM
Sto?reO rc.dio, tilt steer. whL
Factory Air, Iuggaa:e rack,
new tires & brakes. Panel-
ing. Askln&' $25'15. 557-4861.
--------1--------1-------~ '69 NOYA '73 MollN Carlo '71 MARK Ill ·:,~~"!),~;~t~ 'r.::: S c-A beautttul <"· Yullv equip. ;m;:m-1m. Villa cruu... 9 ..,, w~
'68 Ok.ls
IZ·DOOR
6 cyl., 3 speed atkk ahitt, ex·
tra clean (TXB283..
$966
. S.. It -you'll bvy ltl
3ltMlmi4
-IOYUTA
r-oed. bottencotch oolor. and DODGE vs. AT, PS, Ak1 .~~ Auto Trant, All' Cond. brown leather uph::Utery. PrlCed under wno\eo.I'" SH.88 (964CEK) (WAV660J. Only +,..,...mo. $6495 '67 DODGE $1595 . 36 mo. O.E.L. Ma ff ward MONACO HOWARD'Choirrolet ' Immediate Doli,,.ry C 0 N •--~ LEASING S tatton w...,,, v.a. ow..., __
ALL MODELS 531-or 53Ml607 automatic "1Hwriolulon. tac MacArthllrBlvdA Jomboref Comt1r lit & Ho<bor air, _... 11..n-.. ,...... · m:eus
Sautll. ; C-S•nt• Ane windoWa, n.d'<> a: heater 'Tl OLDS Toronado. A~ --------1 CTYA!OO) Gold. ,EQc>ny . vinyl root
'70 UNCOLN MARK Ill. $595 ""'om Inter. P.S. oJ<
1st U...:..-1 &onze 'ext., vinYI root, HUNTINGTON BEACH Ste,.,, all electric. ':zs.ili
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 IMIUUllil leather tntenor, stereo, tUt Ch Je f Pl th miles. Kelley Sugge1te4
-100% WAltRANTY wheel, full power. Pride ol rys r ymou Retail $53lO OUr Sale Priol!
Ba..i. l.easilll• ownership l'l"Dected in this 16661 Beach Blvd. Hunt thru 12-to.ri ls $4599 (P439l '70 Caprice Cpe. la --beautiful auto~bile. Kelley Beach Stl)..S164, 842-0631 l 3 9 6 s 7™7018821 DAVI
1973 MONTE Carlo, Maroon VS, AT, PS-Air, till wheel, ~sted Reta.ii $6240 Our '68 DODGE ROSS PONTIAC 2 4 g o
(color of '74), 3000 ml, electric winOOwl, electric 2001 Michelson Drive Sale Price thru 12-lG-12 ls Harbor Blvd. Co~ta Mea
Swivel buckets, air, PIS, seats, vinyl roof, 22,853 (Corner ol MA_ .. _. ...... ) ~ (203FDM) ( P 5 2 9 ) CHARGER 541H!Ol7. ' ?IB. radiab. list $5170. miles. (417AK0). Only a,o,;n.i.u,... DAVE ROSS PONTIAC,
Sacrtt, ;-. 6 7 3-3 6 01, $2395 ""1ne, CaiiL 921164 2490 Harbor Blvd.. Coota V-8, automatic b'ansmlulon, momingL 714J133..86J) 2131627-0367 Mesa 54&-8017 factory air, power steerl11$!:,
•59 EL CAMINO, a real""'' HOWARD Chevrolet CONTINENTAL · ndlo A heate., vinyl roof
ey! P/S, P/B, air, new Newport llHch , '71 LINCOLN (7ll!CXJ) $995
brakes, shocks, tires. Must MacArthur Blvd Ii: Jamboree OONTL 71 Mark ID Bl ~·-L 11
see. $850. or 1 968-3'.62 13J.0555 white top, 10 mlle, iea.:.=; ~~~ ~new u d. HUNTINGTON BEACH
100% WARRANTY ,67 CHEVY II Pvt pty, full equip. $6500. dition, Michelin tirea Chrysler/ Plymouth
Excellent Remnd car fol'
sale, 1957 Oldsmobile 4 door
sedan . .Pow..'r st e e r I n 1~
power brakes. Excellent
condition. Only 61,000 mlk!s.
call 548-7670 evenings.
PLYMOUTH
'71 CAMARO 61$-""'5. $4395 1~!.., ~u Bl84l:oo~unt ~-8. automatic, power steer-4 ~61on?'l. r:;::mati: 1!m L l n col n Continental "Ii '70 PLYMOUTH
.... a1r. bucket .. ais. c:on· heate•. exh'a c1ean O'SS627> ~·i<foo' ;ng;,,t'"' off';: Macffoward FORD ROAD RUNNER :\~·A "'8rp "'· (155DFC) $695 Call-6*6440-.....kllay•-S31-6Clilo or 531-4607 '72 FORD PINTO V·8, 4 ,peed, radio & heater,
$2995 'HUNTINGTON BEACH '71 Cond Sedan, n.ooo mt Nu C 1 t & H rbor vinyl interior, """"' tape, nd ·~-~-~M omosr-•. •-.• S""'IRE WAGON t67loozi HOWARD Chevrolet Chryslor/Plymwth ~'"'100'"-·-~ ~ ~ ..,.v . $1595
Newport BHch 16661 Beach Blvd Hunt '66 Cont'l Conv. Man>ot> 'fi1 SEDAN lo ml, x1nt o>nd. Automatic tranmn-n. lac-HUNTINGTON BEACH MacArthur Blvd&: Jamboree Beacti 540-5164, 842-0031 N air ·•-·I w4 tory air, radio, heater, th
.3 •. -55 w/nu blk ' top. Eng xln't u tra, stereo, • ... u.., ·~ tinted glaM, Iuggari::e rack, Chry1ler/Plymou m,;;;;;~~i!!";;;;;;;;;;"i~;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;'i:!i~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'i:!i~ ~ Want ad results ••.• 642-5618 shape. Make ofr. 64&-2545. 1 ownr MS--1511. like new, balance of factory 16661 Blvd Beach Blvd. Hunt l/.~os, Used 990Autos, Used 990Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, U"" 990 Autos, U...t 990 Autos, UMil --990 WBlTMty Beach 540-5164, 842-0631
ALL MARK'S and CONTINENTALS
Are Now Being Offered at
APPRECIABLE SA VIN GS
.) '71 Continental
COUPE SALE PRICED
SPARKLING exterior finish with immaculate interior. Landau, Luxury equipped
thru-out. Full power, auto. temp. air, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, power door locks.
Drives like new. (809210)
Step Up. To LUXURY ..• $4575
'69 Continental
Excellent Selection Of
Owned :\ttark Ill's and
Previously
Mark IV's
HARDTOP COUPE
BEAUTIFULLY maintained inside and ouL Equipment with landau, power steering,
power brakes, power windows, power seats, radio, heater, factory air cond, (Ml.FYV)
'69 Mercury Marquis
4 DOOR HARDTOP -SUPER SEDAN
Immaculate inside and otit. Full power including 6 \\'8.}'
seat, factory air. AM-FM stereo radio, Landau roof. This
beautiful car show& excellent care. CYX\V 397)
$2275
'70 Malibu H.T. Cpe
1 OWNER-20,000 MILf,S
TIUS beautiful car ls like new thruout. The best of care
is reflected in seeing and driving V--8, auto. trana., radio,
heater, power steeri n ~. power brakes, factory air cond.
Landau root. (ZSJ488J.
$2 675
'70 Mere. Marquis
4 DOOR HARDTOP-SHOWS EXCELLENT CARE
FINEST ix1uipment thruout includlng l'ull power, 6 way
individual front seats, factory air cond., AM-FM stereo radio, tllt \\'heel landau roof, etc. t990ADZ).
$3175
$2775
'71 Mark III
EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN -25,000 MILES
Fully Luxury equipped including climate control air, lull power Including 6 way seat,
AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, landau root See and drive today.
'68 Cadillac
SEDAN DE VILLE
ATI'RACTIVE thruout, full power equipped with factory
air, 6-way seat, door locka. tilt & te1e wheel, landau roof.
Excellent tires. CXTAJ.54).
$2375
'70 VW Bus
J SEATS
RED wilh black interior, radio, beater, Jooka and drives
like new. (919BSW),
$1875
'69 Marquis Brougham
HARDTOP COl'Pf; -SALi PRICED.
EQUIPPED with the finest equipment including full pow-
er, 6 \Vay individual front seats. factory air cond., AM·
FM stereo radio, tilt wheel, landau roof. <323DRB).
$2375
$6575
'67 Olds 93
4-DOOR HARDTOP
\Vhlte with ~ interior, full power, factory air
cond., landau. (XD093), ~e ~
$1075
'67 Cad. Hardtop Sedan
IEST IUY
BEIGE with parchment interior, full power, factory aJr
cond. (1WP400J.
$1675
'70 Mercury
COLONY PARK WAGON
10 pllS!lenger. BeauUfully maintained. Fully equipped ln·
eluding factory air cond., power steerina:, power-brakes,
luggage rack. (982 BIM)
$3175
SEE ONE .... TRY ONE .... BUY ONE .... TODAY!
••
•
"Orange Colollr'1·FCltllllr of""' c..t"
.. HARIOl'I ILYD. COITA MUA ; .. -•
n.n. or Tllo ..... e... .••
.... ,. h•dl"
$2595 1968 Plymoulh VIP 4 dr,
HUNTINGTON BEACH vinyl.~· radio, heater, air
th conchtionlng, pwr steering It Chry1ler/Plymou brakes. New tires&:. brakes,
16661 Beach Blvd. Hunt. xJ.nt cond & ju.st 52,CX»
Beach 540-5164, 342--0631 miles. KeUy s u g g e 1 t e d
'67 FORD Mustang. V-8, re ta i I $1.350 .••. price
auto., P.S .. chrome wheels, Sll50. 837-4239.
excellent ttres. S h a r P · '68 PL YMOtrm Suburban
Kelley Suggested Retail stat win. all XtralJ. great
$1310 Our Sllle Price thru cond $895, 6tH569 U.10-72 11 tll!l9 (XXF677)
(Pf<'I) DAVE ROSS PON· PONTIAC
TlAC, 2480 Haz1lOr Blvd.,
Costa Meta. stfHIOl 7.
'71 Ford entry Sed. 6 puo
st& wag., full pwr, a!Jt, r /h,
x1nt cond. ·Must sell! $7l95.
993--0993; &tt 5 673-1824
'56 F'airtanl'. 2 dr.. Hrdtp,
r /h, auto trans, oric ownr,
"like. D!W''! s:ns. 831~.
llml FORD Countey SquUo St& Wgn. Xlnt cond. Pvt.
pty. best ol!u 673-199.1.
'71 PONTIAC Crand Prtx. SllYer with ebony vinyl IDp
plus opera side windows.
P.S., P.W., air, r ally
wheels, tilt wheel, stereo, lo
mileage. Kelley Sugesled
Retail $4~. OUr Sllle Price
thru 12-10-72 ts S.Q99. (P4621
t276.571JAT16542) DAV E
ROSS p0NTIAC, 2 4 8 0
Harbor Blvd., Costa Meu.,
"'6-8017.
'68 FIREBIRD , '65 FALCON wagon, fair
condition $275.
847-8115 2 DOOR · hardtop, V • 8 ,
'72 LTD Coun•..., ~.1_ a u t omatlc transni!'*'n . • , ~--. ..,..... ......... 1"d<> &
P/S, P/B, AJC, xlnt cond. beater, vinyl roof (.XCE528)
~tl2-?p.m. $1095-. .
'59 FORD station WllJtOll-.
Runs wen. but needs HUNTINGTON BEACH
,.dia.,... fl5. '57-5440 Chrc:~Plymwth
'70 LTD, 2 dr, air cond ~000 16661 ~~~ .. Hant ml Excel cond, one O'lml!'r; Beach 51).Sl.64, ~1
Low wblsle, 548-0378 '72 FIREBIRD, 1 m m a c • -1-Super klAded w/fJlct xttas. JEEP Must .. 11. 54Hl60.
'69 PONTIAC GTO Couj>e.
1963 Scout, 4x4, mechanict.lly VS, P.S., air, vinyl roof.
good, Best offer. Kelley Suue!ted Retail
53&-9522 $2100. Our S&le Price U.U
•72 Toyota l.e%ld Crut.er, 4 U.10-72 ii $1799. (662f'VY)
(llOOA) DAVE ROSS l10N-whl drive, like new, 14,000 TlAC ··~ u.~ m~ mi, $321(). 53&iB48 all 5. • ~ a.cu-...-.u.,
'61 OCOUT, Pick up, Warner
hubs. 289 Ford engine, $900 • ..,....,.
MAVERICK
'70 MAVERICK, auto, new
tires, kiw miles, clean.
$1450. ~7938
MERCURY
OJSta -5*«117.
· '70 PONTIAC
Executtw 9 pan wagon V-8,
Automatic, power steering,
air, dee. wlndows, electric
rear w l n d o u· . rack.
Howards' spectal buy of the
week priced at wbolesale. t452BEO l., only
$2450
HOWARD Chevrolet
'70 MERCURY Cougu. V-8, Newport Bo•ch
P .S., air, vinyl top, lo MacArthur Blvd A Jamboree mileagti. Kelley suggested • .,11 ~11:5 •
Retail $2960 Our Sale Price -
thru 12-10-72 Is $ 2 6 9 9. "'69'"""PO=NT=IA=C~G,.-nd~Pnx-.
(913BHZ) 1?432) DAVE P .S., air, Vinyl roof, P .S., lo
ROSS PONTIAC, 2 4 8 0 mileage.Exce llent con-Harbor Bldv., Costa Meaa, dition. Kelley Suggeded
5f6..8017. Retail $2705 Our Sale Pnce
•n Colony Park wagcn -thru 12-10-12 is $ 2 5 9 9
Only 19,00l ml. Abllolutely IYQP729) CP493) DAVE
immaculate! New tires, de· ROSS PONTIAC. 2 4 I 0
Jux air, Pis, p/b, tilt "'"hi. · Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa,
Iogg rack, etc. $3495. 644-"S46~"'"'1~7·o...,~-~--(l376. 1964 Red Convertible xlnt
71. MARQUIS Brougbam 2 transportation $250,
dr, AM/FM stereo, vinyl 64M088
roof, tilt whl + more. Ulw '69 LeMans 2 Dr. Hardtop
miles, $3975. or 1' 968--31)2 Air. 1 owner. 24,000 mt Best
'65 MERCURY Cok>ny Park otter! 646-3591 aft 5.
9 Pass. Wagon. GOOD
SHAPE! $650. S.l&:n.
MUSTANG
'67 MUSTANG
FASTBACK
V-8. Automatic transmission
radkl, heater CTSP875)
$695
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Chrysler f Plymwth
16661 &.ch Blvd. Hunt.
Beach 540-5164, 842--0631
MUSTANG '72 Fastback.
Wbt/bllc Int, '51·2V ......
mag whll, WO tires, loaded,
~ Fair value, $2875.
ltAMILER
1985 RAMBLER American,
Xlnt oond. $525 or best of-
fer. 54~
T-llRD
'71 T BIRD
Landau loaded with extr&1.
Mag wheels beautiful black
fihish with black lntertor.
Hurry on tbit one -below
market value! '101CKX
$4195
Macffoward
531-4000 or 531-4607
Corner 1st & Horbor
•e; MUSTANG hard top, V-8 , S•nt• Ana •
1 owner. $700. Leavlng
country. Muot ,.11, 5311-7296 '72 T0 81RD
MUSTANG '66 Convert. 1 Assume blllance of $e300.
owner, eood condition, $850. Fu,U Fact. Equtp.-incl. cnllte 6T~ control auto tt!:mp. AY:/FM
PLDSMOllLE ~...i"" _;,ay .,::'.""g, ~: 11---------1 special order WAinut Fire '69 OLDS CUtl .... SUpretnll, paint w/malehiJW Wheel
only 37,000 ml1eL $1485. ot covers. Prtvate Party,
belt otter MJ-4305 Eve1. 838-7869
1111 01\ll 4G. • llpd1 °"' .'70 T-BIRD Lindau c... an ......,,, ~ -• ......, -·.lY!ll mllet. Perfect llOO. ""'' 147-lrlt. c:ond ....... 642 ..
1J82 Ok!I CUtlul •• Re-bit "10 T..StRD 2-dr, fWl pwr, tilt
engine, -bt.t'°'Y· IWI. "1«, air, "'"°L xlm dond,
IZll. MH337. pm. Pvt J&G· .,..A oo
1966 ctm.AS 2-dr HT. Auto, YE~
PIS, 8 cyl. !M cu In, Xlnt I:::-;::::~..,.--'----!
c:ond. $560. 1161-2!145 '12 VEGA CT. -• epd,
'18 F-15, V"'8, P/S, good Stenoo. Xlnt conCI •. ~
cond. Orta· owner. MUil 1eU 49Wtu btwn ~ .l 4 pm .
S950 or belt otter. 6M"i6_!. 1171. VOOA, RIM, auto,
FMI IWJl.lltt an·JUat a ...,,.. 28,000 m11H, $1450. Mlllt ~ "-----------------·---------------"'!"-----... -------------··.an....,.,~ aot COmponi "'· 89U'l43. , .
• •
,,.
I
I o t
-
NEW '73 DODGE SWINGER -..
SPECIAL r-::;;--,
2 DOOR HARDTOP
Full Facto ry equipped
Order Yours Now -=
~
_$199 DOWN s71 A MONTH
$21 ,88 . '"'''""""·""'·"';' -""'·'"""-ind .... 1~ .. ,. ··FULL ,.,. • ...,.,,,. ..... , .... __
!<Id•! (0< 36 OIOl. Dtfflrt4
"'"' f ti<t 127SS ;,.,:1. !O• & PRICE ,,_"""' '""""" lAll l l.U"
Fully factory equipped 109" wheel
base. 1/2 ton , coil. springs, fro nt & ·
rear. 26 gallon fuel tonk, duel jet wind-
shield washers, fre!Ji air heater with
defroster.
•
LARGEST SELECTION OF --
VANS
IN SO/C ALIFORNI A
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
DAI LY PlLOT 45
'72COLT
2·DOOR
·.HARDTOP
Auto. fr~ .• radio, heat-
er, whiteWoJI tires, reclin-
ing seats: til t sreer ing
wt>eel. (4 l9FAX). •
$199 00.WN $42 A MONTH _ ~~~:s
$.1. ·sss FULL -
PRICE
11 •• ,, t.tel 4•:;;;;: 14 7 I<
r<>Hll _......_ ......... 1 .....
,..,~r-.-.., .. _
'""I '°' Jt ,..., Oo!o.H•d
''"'' '"'"I 111 • , ... 1 •o• & •~..->< 4/H.IU Pl~C(NlAGt
U Tl •'IO".
BRAND
NEW 73DODGE
_.CHARGER
119,t11olol<l11.p,.,,1 114"
-... fl""I· i•<(lu, i ... ,. l oll <ONy .. , ...... , .. _
11t4<t tor )6 .,.,. Otltn td
,, .... ,, ... lJ77J i .. 1 hi• l
!~-~ rt!ICDl!Nif
•All ll.Jl 'J.
TAK.I
i-YOUR
l
'71 PINTO
2·DOOR
'71 COLT
2·DOOR -
'71 VEGA
SPORT COUPE
$199DOWN
FULL
PRICE
I CHOICE Radio, heater, bucket seals, plus fully foc-
tory &qufftd. (032(80)
Rodio, heater, deluxe wfleef covers. tilt
steering wheel. ( l SOCPI) ·
' ' ' Fully loctoty,oqJ;pPed._(100CKZ)
$30AMONTH
$199 is totol dn. pyi;.t. $30 is to!ol mo. pymt. ind. 10•. license & oll
carrying charges on oppr;;credit for 36 mos. Dtftrrtd pymt.price
$1279 inc.I. tent & license. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 13.95% l ... 111" ••
'72DODGE r .,
~, ;72CHEYRDLET
$1688 Ki~,~~00~!~~,;,.~·· $3188
'70 C,H , 'YSLER 300
V-B--oo~ •• ~~" ~~ ,~,,ry .;.. s 13 8 8
radio, heater, landau & much more. (206ASJ)
CHALLENGER
2 -DOOR HARDTOP. Fully facto ry equipped,
low mileage. ( 196fFH) er steering, radio, heoter, luggoge rock, whi1e-
fULL PRIC•· woll tires, disappearing tail gate. (414ELFJ FULL PRICI FULLPRICI
'69MUSTANG ... · · '69 CHEVROLET '69 TOYOTA $7
2
DR HT $1088 39•V-~.!!.'!~~~ .... ;~ $788• ·~-~~~~~ .. , 8 8 V-1, Rodio. htattrond bucket Sl!Ofs. (XIH729) · rodio, heorer. {YQ0759). ' '
FULL PRICI FULL PRICE FULL PRICI
'71 FORD
Galaxie500
Auto. trons.. power steering, oir cond. (898EJT)
'70 YOLKS $988 '70 DODGE
$1488. 41pttd"'"'-'~!h!<(t78BNl) Fully locto•~:~I~~ 6 Cyl .. $1688
FULL PRI FULL PRICI st<k sh;ft. C93909El. FULL PRICI
--~!!'!!"!'"-----UT H , ~ . '69 PLYMOUTH$ '70 MA YERIC"$
$1088 . WAGON 688 ~:;,~':!!.!~~.-98
_1_ '70 ·PLYM
' I-WAGON
i A;uto. trans .• rodio ood heoter: (S9SAL Y)
!
' '· '68 DODGE ! 1/2 Jon Pickup
WE
APPRECIATE
YOUR
BUSINESS
FULL·PRICI . <qu;pped w;th '°"~ '°' h'°'"· (bB9EOSl FULL PRICI ,
-~·69DODGE ·$7-33·'70D D E
Charger 440 0 Auto. ,,,!:',~~~!~ .. ok "'"
V-8, outo. trans., power sleering, rodio, heot-FULL PRICI (OL41G00101622)
tr. (XS29l9Gl62466)
$1088
'
.,,
'
•
•
. ·•
. I'll ffi BE HOME
FOR CHRISTMAS ~
-IN-A -
NEW FORD • (he.pt rs.t.sJ
SO GALLONS FREE
GAS
TO MAKE THE TRIP
LTD
SQUIRE
WHEN YOU BUY YOUR
NEW •73 FORD AT
THEODORE ROBINS
~~~ ... FORD
•
' SEE US !IEFORE YOU BUY.
You-Will Like Our·Pilce
Our Service And Your
New Pinto Watch!
PUT
A
. ,
\
i
• • • • • • , .. J. \. • I ~ ....... ~ .... ~
, .
BEAT DIE
'73 . PRICE . RISE'!' ' I
"
''
' . . '
" WE HAVE A BIG
SELECTION OF NOi(, '73
'
~RS AND TRUCKS 1..-,1
r • ! '
WERE PRICiD BEFORE . ~ ~ ~)
DEC. 1 PRICE-INCtiatE:.
YOUGn ...
EXTRA: ~A~!'~~ WHRE lnt:1 ·~
LAST!· ,
T0 BIRD SALE ,
6 AVAILABLS-'70 to '72 MODELS llAND--NEW AS OF
SEl'T. 11th, 1t72 !
OUR A -1 WARRANTY
IS GOOD AS GOLD FROM
COAST TO COAST I
r-·
Wiien yo11 ~11y a 111-d car with th• ft•w A·I War·
r•ftty, you la1¥• your worri11 on '(O\lr Ford Oaal·
for th• firat 30 d•Y• or 2,000 1'"ile1 your 'ford
O••l•r 911•r•nt••• to p•Y 100% for •ny mejor ,,,,_;,,.
for th1 ne11t 2'4 montht, yo1o1r ford Dealer quarall·
ta•• a I 5 '% di1eo11nt on rapair1 covered under the
n1w A·I Warranty.
You q•f A-I prot1ctio11 when yo11'•• 011t of town
tool In 1v•rv Stat• of th• Union yo11'll find pariie,!; '
patinq ford D1al1n who will promptly and eourta-
0111 ly ho11or tha 24 month provi1io11 of· yo11r A -1
Warranty,
Coma ••• 011t ••lectio11 of A·I Watf'a11t•acl 111H
cart today! W1'r1 A·I Warranty h1adq11arf•r• in
thl1 •••• ••• fft• da1l•r1hip wt.,...-you laava yovr
worri,1 on our doonhp. '
. ,,
• -· ·-··-$349 .... •!'--"-· b ~I 7 1 T-llrtl Lo•-.._ ,..... ""'·· llrtL, whtd., MGH. olr
coed .. 1-mllft. 1125·
CCMI _
POIDI -CHlftOLll'-.-MNl---10YOfA· -_.
Y.W. -M'l'ltflt-MftCUIT
,. ....... coN .•
roef ..... t••d
llliles. llH AFUI
~······~1 ................ .., .......... . : ~~~ -: .. ~-:::
.-, lew --.lH7-IHll , . ~..:::.."::.: $ . 2· 96
MUSTANG HARDTOP ---~ '67 CHEV. CA•ARO ·H;T. $4'096· '67 CHEV.· IMPALA 2 DR. ·H.T. Rad;., h .... '~" ..,1 .... 1;., "l'.w" ~·n6 '68
Fully factory equipped. Radio,
heater, etc. Good miles. 1128-
AYDI
71 MAVERICK
I R•d'io, heater, automatic, va. $f96 steer .. a ir cond., V8,1960d mites.
. ' power steering, air cond., good (090 BQE I . ' ------------·--·t miles. 1119005 ) · \_ -· ~ · t . ·-· .
2 door. Radio, heo1ter, b cyl-
inder, body side mldgs., wsw,
wheel covers, low miles.
I 722COLI
69 LTD H.T.
Radio, heater, automatic, pow-
er steering, •ir conditioning,
good miles. IZSS4381
'70 V.W. BUS 7 PASSENGER
4 speed, good miles. Two tones.
'\6 1'1 ASN I
• .
I
$1896
'67 COUGAR XR7 ·
Full power, eir cond., vinyl roof,
good miles. (VGA 192 J
TRUCKS & VANS 15 TO CHOOSE FROM
E111mple: 'b9 Dodge sport V•n. $1'396 R.d;o, hHle•, o"tomolk, good "
miles. IYCU9 17 l
'66 GALAXIE 500 . ' 2 dr. H.T. V8, radio, he•+.,.,.eu-
tomatic, power steering, low
mi les. I SVY509 I
--. .
'63 ·MERC. STATroN · WAGON
Col. Pr.k. Full power, o1ir cond.,
good miles. t OJW 5071" · .~96
'65 MUSTANG . HARDTOP
Full~f•c ~'Y '"'l"ipped. ~dio,. ~96 hea , efc. G6od miles. I osx~ . 8561 • ' ' '
"
'63 FAl'COtt sEDA'N '
Ro1dio, he•ter, autom1tic, 6 cyl-
inder, good m!l.s. IQRB830I ,.
. . ' -....
rAm 1 snv1c1. HOURI
1• t,.,,MM.
1 -. ' '"" .......... • l '
$396.
f
{
I
l
l~
'•f
s
t
p , I
• . • . .
San Cle1nente
-Capis~ralio
' -
Today's Ft.al
EDITJ.ON N.Y. Stoek8
-· VOL 65 , NO. 343, 4 SECTIONS; 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DEGEMBER 8, 1972 TEN CENTS .
High Costs · Spell Death for Life Magazine
NEW YORK (AP) -Life Maga:.ine for 1974 were even more unfavorable,"
will discontinue publlcation with tbe issue Time, Inc. added.
of Dec. 29, Time, Inc. announced today. At abOut 10:45 a .m., grim-faced staff
The publisher said the 36-year-old members of lbe magazine began to
magazine, famous for its pioneering use ptber for a meeUng on the eighth Door
of news photographs, will fold because of of the Tirile-Llfe building at Slxth Avenue
"co.ntinuing losses." and 50tb Street.
The year-end double issue will mark About 250 to 300 staff worten sat in
the close of the weekly magflz.ine founded chairs or stood·against the walls, waiting
by Henry Luce. !qr the meeting, which was closed to
Life was published at "very substantial outsiders. · •.
deficits in 1969 and 1970 and smaller · The publisher said Thne, · Fortune,
defi<;lts In 1971. and 1972," the publisher Sports Illustrated and Money, its other
said. major magazines, "have done very well
"As our projections for 19'13 took lb.is year." ·
shape, however., they showed a....resump.---Life-lasted more than a year longer
tion of heavy losses, and the Indications than its chief competitor, Look, which
ceased publication on Ocl 19, 1971. Look
also blamed rising costa, especially
postal rates.
In announcing the decision to fold Life,
Hedley Donovan, ediW...il>dtief o! Time,
Inc., and Andrew Heiskell, chainnan of
the board, declared :
"Life bas been one of the great
jou~ic pi041eers. Its launching in
• 1938 opened a "'bole new era of pro-
fes11iooal jOu.mallsm, with consequences
·:still seen all over the world.
"Life achieved almost at once, and
kept through 36 years, an important
voice in American aff8irs ; we believe the
magazine-has spoken responsibly, .and
with vision and compassion. Life will go
ruman's
Snow Seen •• Ill Tustin
Weather Service Cit.es Freak Air Cu·rrent
.
Tustin High School studfllts frolicked
in falling snow for about 40 minutes this
morning and an El Toro Marine Corps
pilot reported hall in the area as the
latest winter stonn passed over Orange:
County dropping a ball an inch of rain in
some aras.
About 8 a.m . students in Mrs. William
Scbreiber's class _at TusUn High played
amidst the !ailing flakes.
The National Weather Service describ-
ed the snowfall as being the result of
freak air currents, since mo~ levels in
Southern California are generally ex-
pected only above S,000 feet this
weekend.
About the same time snow was said to
be falling. in Tustift. a jet. pilot landing at
El Toro reported falling ice pellets.
The weather service forecast calls for
mosUy. cloudy skies and occasional
•bowers tonight. ,.
on in many ways and places, not least in cents for a newsstand copy in an attempt
Us influence on the other magazines and lo build a high-quality audience.
books ol Tlme, Inc.'' 'The impact of these moves was un--
ne Time; Inc., executive!: noted that dercut by a very heavy Increase in
Life "encountered severe competition second-class postal rates which affected
from television since the late 1950's" for Life, particularly because of its large
the advertising dollar. page size," the executive's statement
The magazine eamed "acceptable prof-said.
Jts" during m 0 st of the 1960s, they 'Jlhey said the magazine was faced with
reported, "but the cost pressures and the an increase of 170.2 percent in such rates
competitive pressures kept building up. over £ive years.
and we have been running out of "It should be remembered that !he
economies." Admini stration exempted the postal
In the past two years, Life reduced its Service, but not the press, from price
clrculBliorLfr:om 8.5 _million copies to..5~ controls which. mjlde Lif~'s problem even
million and increased the price to 50 more difficult," they aitded.
•
ETHIOPIA
,tfU~'f re .... .,....,
Ralph Graves. managing editor of Life.
was assigned the job of helping employe:s
find other jobs. both within Time, Inc.
and elsewhere.
There are 320 persons 011 the staff of
Life. an d another 350 Time. lnc.
employes are involved in helping 10
publish it. All employes will be kept on
the payroll through the end of the year
"after which a notice JX'riod goes into ef-
fect," the publisher said.
Time & Life buildings in Ne\v York .
Chicago, London , Paris, Tokyo and other
cities are to keep !heir names. as will
such corporate entities as Time-Life
Books.
orse
Heart Shows
Stress, Say
Physician s
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -The fai l-
ing heart of Harry S Truman "is show-
ing the signs or considerable irritability
' -and stress," his doctors said today.
The 88--year-old fonner President slepl
fitfuUy and was in critical conditiot..
Perilpos ·'Ti•11e
LBi Nudear War Feitn.Reported
A~ --:Ja day ii~'-. alon8 the orange , il!ith ildol1 wi00i-, ,
to 11-.-thii 'Jiiiili\resl •
1~ t 'F" r I\
,.) ... '"'. ~ ..,. .... )
\ -I l • ,•
·0 1·.·
I ~ "Hia heart condition \S ncR. al &ood this ''it· ·~ ...,r:nlftg ... -1'04 'bap<d' it ..ool.I be,"
said John Oreves, a Resean:h Hosp\ta\
spckesman. "President Truman bas im-
proved in some areas but shown no im-
provement in others." . . . -. .
WASHINGTQN (UP.I) -Presidenl Lyndon Jt Johmon wu coocented In
1963 thttl lbe-•-'••tloo or_ John f, Jknnedy mi8hl lead to nuclelr war,
according lo -Chief Justlce,Earl w...... -
War,.., In an Interview with the PubUc Broadcasting Service to be tlbown
on television Monday, said John.Boo. cited the possibility of war as One reason
the chief jW1tlce should bead a oommlssion he named to inveslieate the ..,...
sinatJon.
ll'ARllEN RECAU.ED THAT the incidenl occurred a few days alter Ket>
nedy's death in Dallas on Nov. 2Z, 1963.
In the interview, Warren sUd be wu invited to the White House by Johnson
who "told me: be felt conditions in tbe world were so bad at the moment ...
be thought it mtgl:K _ even get into a war -even a nuclear war."
THE PRE!IDENT, ACCOllDING to Warren, citeil romnrs, later proved to
be unlowtded, that Soviet P,..mier_ Nikita. S. Khrusbcltev and Olba'o Fidel
Castro miibl have been involved in the ~edy shooting.
.
Cotnacll in Clash
'lbe Ot'allge COunty Jiacl>or Depart·
menl station al Nellj!Olt Buch logged oal1 ,J1 Inch ., rafll during the 24-bour
pedod' ending . at 1 ·11'1il. The season to
a..t.WIJ ~Dy the rain gauge at
1101 Bayside Drive Is 4.01 Inches.
· Small craft warnings are up 8nd are
expected to remain,up through-Saturday,
as a result of the gusty afternoon winds.
A -private rain watcher, J. -Sherman
Denning of Huntington Beach nported a
total of .36 inch of• rain in that city for
the !f.bour period ending at 8 o'cJock this
llKIOlillg.
Iii San Clemente, rain watchers
reported .2 of an inch C:uring the 24 hours
. ~nding at 8 o'clock tbis IMrning, with a
total of 7.1 inches for the season so far .
Rainfall amounts from the latest storm
reported in tile 24-bour peri<ld ending at 8
a:m.-ohowed .43 inch ·in Santa Ana; .46
Inch In Villa Park; .39 In• Irvine and .40
inch al Saddlebaok Peak.
Proposed Pools Periled
It was expected to bt a rootine city en·
dorsement of a year-long petition drive to
set up a taxing district to pay for two
pools in the Capist rano Unified School
District.
But Wednesday's action before the San
Clemente city council turned into a tense
cliffhanger, lnstead.
And tbe year's work by hundreds of
parents nearly ended in failun.
Bruce Deacon,. the _clJairman ot
Parents on Pools (POP ) had asked coun-
cilmen to pass a critical resolution en-
dorslng the two-yea r,. nine-cent, special
tax rate.
San Clemente's and San Juan
Capistrano's blessings are needed before
county supervisors can authorize the
district. Councilmen moved to endorse the
resolution. But councllman Thomas
O'Keefe offered an amendment.
The city would endorse. the resOlutlon,
he moved, onJy U the district'• voters ap-
proved as weU .
At that Deacon bristled.
"What 1)'ou've just done," be said, "ls ·
set a year's work by hundreds of parents
right out the window."
O'Keefe was adamant, bowevtr.
01 can't aulhoriie an lncrelse in the
taxes withoUt some comment from the
taxpayer,'' he said.
"We obttdned signatures of 25 percent
of the re11l1lered voters in the dtatrict,
and now you say It's not enough Deacon
reolled. .,_ ~ i•in.e law al(yl all J VI deed J.S 1
percent, and we went way dverboa ,
anyw•Y," he added. O'Keefc said hi! experience as a
lawyer Jn labor relations showed that of-
time•, persons algn a petition Wldcr
pressure.
Deacon then replied that there is a
provision in the special service district
law that allol'fs for an election if 10 per--
cent of the electorate signs yet another
petition.
Moments later, a roll call vote lhowed
a S.2 defeat for O'Kee.fe'a amendtnent.
Councilman Cliftoo Myen supported the
special election measure.
Paul Presley, who voted against the
amendment, said a public hearing before
supervisors would fUlflll tbe public's right
lei speak against the i.wle.
"U the taxpayers want an election,"
Presley declared, "then let them
(See POOLS, Pa11I Z)
C·letnente Council P otls
Palisades .on Annex Bid
San Clemente came a few measures
closer to atUlexing tK> acres in the
Capistrano Beach Palisades this week
when councilmen ogreed to poll reoldenla
of an estates a.... to see U they, too ,
would be willlni to merge.
Initially, a large trlaoRUl•r palcb of
land stretching from the San Diego
Freeway nearly to -Camino Caplstrano
was pf'OPO.'ed for annexation, but coun-
cilmen Wednesday pondered the addition
of a !ew midentlal lots ok>ng Cimino
C&pistrano as well .
The hitch in winnlng approval from
many of Utoae rui~ta. hoWever, ts the
problem RY~ the. ~"Pin& 411~ ~ -rllv<slock. • ,. •
li09onl -res!Cknb o! ...,iillilft "~""
pertles in lbe propoied annexation are"
keep the stock. (f they were to become
part of San Clemente, the anlmal1 would
be forbidden by city code. '
Yet another deterrent mliht be the 1 ..
vylng of an $800-peNcre annexation fee
to the residents ll they chose to annex.
Councilmen agreed to withhold any
fonnal actkm on seeking the annexation
unUl the poll Is coocluded.
The Initial anneiaUoo effort c:omes
fr<>m the Grant Land Company of
Anaheim which proposes to build a large
townhouse development on the 80 acres
southerly of Grant's Plaza shopping
cer.ter.
'111at UDOC<Upied territory presently Is
tOned for such use, spokesmen for the
developer have said. •
Proposalo call lot ~!he "me
densltY of •bOtlt fou(.~.,. If tbe
unex!'lao,.Wt!fe~ ii , u lli1o dty fjnolly , '"'· bOU .. dart.> for ·!he 111 'n~ •nm itep
would be a formal r for annetatioit
be(.,. the coonty'a~·Age Fclrma-
tloo Commission ( J,. >
Th•t.pancl woul aeJ P11blic l\Urlnp to
eumine the req-.. •
I
' -
Mt .
-... . ..
1 UPI ........ -' IN-FLIGHT DRAMA-Five.men.and tll'O ·women hijacked an Etliio-
pian_~1!1ner_tQday,.but ~.1Y a,genpr shol anjl liillecMhem !!' fli8!!t.
The plane, on it Oighl to.J'arts, made it back to Ad<lis Alliiba .aiia landed. · ·
7 Perish in· Hijack. Dram~
In Skies Over Ethiopi~
ADJ?I~AB~ \l[Pll :-Fl v! mµ af!d . two women armea Wit"h ritfes ana a liand
greQade tried tQd.fy to bJjack a tourist-
packed Ethiopian Airways jet but were
shot to death by security guards in a
shootout high a~e the Ethiopian coun-
tryside, airj>ort officials sitid.
One of the male hijackers exploded a
har.d. grenade, injul1ing'eight petiQflS, in·
eluding a U.S. oil company executi\'.e and
an .American university professor, Radio
Ethiopia said. Airport. spokt?smen said
Counsel to Rule
Whether Official
Can Hold Office
City at~~f.James Okazaki and other
San Juan Capistrano officials plan a
meeting early next week to determine if
the assault cooviction of Councilman
James Weamers means that the local
businessman no longer can hold o[fice.
Altbpu.gh Weathers received a jail
scnt.el!Ce \}lursday for assault with a
deadly weapon , City Manager Donald
Weidner said today there still are
elements to be determined befOre a
decision is made.
Under Caliiornia Jaw a felon cannot
hold public office. Technically, the case
stemming from a domestic dispule last
July 27 involved section 245 a. of the
penal code.
Weathers was arrested alter Con-
fronting sheriff's dept1~ies with a loaded
shotgun. l;Je entered a plea of guilty to
one count end on Thursday was sen-
tenet!d to 11pend his weekends for the next
four months ih county jail. Superior
Court Judge William Murray olJo
ordered Wealhez;a tb--l):Celve three year1
probalibn~ ; ' -\ • .. . '
1 8tfore thal gen~ was handed dO•n;
I· ho11t.vtr; \Y~~ rctlv..t """"~op.
port rrom ldlow leoun<ilIIMni.and othe•
city offlii\a!J who wrote ~ ....... 'lilrwing
that the 001lneS1Q,\n '1 ~ormance as a
councllmin "has been exhru>lariy.
"I'm wlllin~ to lay publtc-Jy'tha\ I sent
(See Wl!:A'l'HEllS, Pqe Zl
•
two security e¥enll and a crew member -were ~wourided.
Listed in grave condition at Addis
Ababa's American_ Adventist Hospital
were S. V. McCollum( Houston, Texas,
executive vice president of the Tenneco
Oil Co., and Dr. Roderick Hilsinger, of
Temple University, Philadelphia, the
radio said.
Witnesses said the hijacking attempt
occurred about 15 minutes out of Addis
Ababa en route to Paris.
They described the hijackers as "in
!heir 20's and appearing to be Ethio-
pians."
They said the male hijacker pulled the
pin of a hand grenade and was about to
throw it towards the passengers when
shot.
The grenade "!ell into Hilsinger's lap
but he jumped up and threw it away
from us," one passenger said. The
grenade exploded in the after sect.ion or
the Boeing 7'11, blf'Wing a hole in the
fuselage but the pilot was able to land
safely at Addis Ababa.
Two crew members and two other
pa3Sengers, Including Paul Muller of
Zurich, Swil2erland , were slightly injured
by the grenade blast that ripped a hole in
the Boeing 7f11's fuselage and knocked out
one of Its engines.
Other passengers included R . R .
McCall, of New York City, Texaco's
Eastern Hemisphere general manager,
and 0.0. Nelson of San Francisco, presi-
dent of Chevron Oil Company's overseas
division.
Others hospitali ze d
(See IDJACK, P11e !J
C~A~llE !5P.0Ul)'I, '/()()'VE
GOT L~ 16 SHOPPING DAV ,LEFT, 'ioV l(~ptl)f
included
"' ~ ~ , ..
"
t •
Truman. weakened by age and lung in·
fection. was fed intravenously. He was
given oxygen to help him .breathe.
"His heart is showing the sigJl.'I of con·
siC...:rable irritability and stress," Dre!.es
s3id at a medical briefing. "He remains
in crilical condition."
Physicians monitored Trwnan's heart
constantly. They said recovery depended
on wbether bis heart is strong enough to
battle the complications of ege and in-
fection.
Tn.man·s vital signs are "relatively
stable. though the temperature is flue·
tuating, but only slightly," a hospital
spokesman said .
Doctors said the nation's 33rd chief ex-
ecutive did 1l0t sleep well Thursday night
and early today. They said liii;".family
was not notified of the restless night:.
Thursday, Truman rallied from the
lung and heart ailm!tlts that aent him to
the hospital four days ago. Margaret
Daniel, his Jaughter, said Truman smiled
at her.
"He's ·getting kind of contrary," Mni.
Di.niel said afte · leaving her father 's
bedside and drivi ng her mother, Mrs.
Bess Truman, back to the [amily home
at Independence, Mo .. 15 miles away.
"He's restless. He's feeling better. I
have great faith tha. he's going to come
out of thD a.II right."
Drev~ said today Truman is con·
stanlly given oxygen except when the
mask is removed for other treatment.
Truman was rushed by ambulance to
Research Hospital Tuesday suffering
lWlg congestion. He had bee.a 111 for tv.'O
weeks at home before he entered the
hospital.
"
Orange Coast
Weather
Those dark clouds will c1ear to
sunny skies on Saturday, accord-
ing to the weatberla~ -but
there's a slight (30 percent) chanee or a few showtt1 on Sunday. Highs
In the upper SO! to lower fi(}s.
Lows tonight in the 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
Musiciafl.I from Selll Beach to
San Clnntntc llovt prtpartd
thtif Christmas offering!f tmth
Ha11del'1 "Me11iah" being the
most popular lloUday piece. See
todo11's W eekendtr for times
and pkrces.
•
z DAILY PILOT SC
29 Applications Eyed
Interviews Set fnr 2 Sail.dleback P.0$"8.
Twentv-nioc applicants for t\4o'O open
po.'!ltlonS on a SaddJeback Community
College Board of T.ustees will be in-
tervle\4o'ed. in executive session continuing
today through ·,vednesday when the
selections v.•ill be announced.
"Tentatively, the board will announce
the tv.·o appointees on IX'C. 13, following
the final interview of the six finalist can-
didates," said Fred H. Bremer,
district superintendent and college presi-
dent.
The l\vO openings occurred on the
board \\'ht'n district voters decided lo ex-
pand the body from five to seven to in·
elude the representation from Mission
Viejo. Laguna Niguel. San J u an
Capistrano and Laguna Hills.
Applicants include seven for Area Five
"Which takes in Lacuna liills: and Z2 for
Mel S.veo wbleb bw;luded Miiiion Viejo,
Sin J111n C.plstrano and portions o1 El
Toro and Laguna Nlgue.I.
A flip of the coin detetmtned that the
appointed terms for Area Flve will ex·
pire in 1973 and Area Seven will end in
1975.
Initially, openings created by voter ac-
tion are required to be filled by ap-
pointments made by the present Board of
Trustees.
Applicants for the offices are as
follov.'S :
AREA FIVE -Robert 0 . Bowers of
25412 Cousteau Dr., an official with an
air conditioning firm; Robe.rt D. Durrans
of 24981 DeSalle, a banker ; Stanley
Jolmson of 25011 DeSalle, an account ex·
ecutive; James W. ~1arshall of 140-A ?.1a-
}orca, a retired college president; Paul
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
0
DISTRICT_,-.-/,--"
•lY_!~l~!_T
i ... N OllGO COUPllT
' Raber ol U952 Wells hr1o. an lmurance
claims 1pecW1st; Jamea. F. Wand o1
25 191 DeSalle, an ,lnSurance claims
representative: and Harry F. Wandllog
of 562·0 Avenlda Sevilla, a retired school
superintendent. All candidates are from
Laguna Hills.
AREA SEVEN -Al R. Arps of 32802
Valle Road, No. 9S, San Juan Capistraoo,
a ntired educator; E.W. Barbee of 27112
Jeronimo Road, Mission Viejo, a
minister, Michael W. Berns of 26911 Can-
yon Crest Road, San Juan Capistrano,
an associate professor: Donna C. Berry
oI 26661 Allicante, Mission Viejo, a
homemaker; Clifford Boehmer of 2S266
Paclrica Avenue, ?.-fission VI e j o ,
em p Io ye d by Jl.1c0onnell Douglas:
Chester G. Briner of 2.6311 Turquesa,
Jl.1isslon Viejo, a stockbroker: Charles K.
Dargan of 29362 Spotted Bull Way, San
Juan Capistrano, an administration
manager; James. D. Dodge of 26982 Car·
ranza Drive, Mission Viejo, an architect';
Robert D. Edwards oC 25011 Sebastian
Lane, Mission Viejo, a lead administrator
of guidance systems: William T.
Everhart of 25511 Paseo San Gabriel, San
Juan Capistrano, an educator; and
Richard S. Fiore of 23651 Amalia Place,
?.-fission Viejo, an attorney.
Also Dennis L. Halloran of 22976 Via
Ccreza, Miss ion Viejo, a district rrwiager
for an encyclopedia company; P'reston
HO\\'ell of 26495 Naccome Drive, Mission
Viejo, a rnini!ter; William S. Hulsy of
24622 Satuma Drive, Mission Viejo, an
attorney; Mark C. Johnson of 26502
Montecito Lane, Mmion Viejo, a sales
manager of hospital products: John W.
Morrow of 31576 Flying Cloud Drive,
South Laguna, an educator; Leo · B.
Newton of 32511 Azores Road , Laguna
Niguel. deputy district attorney for Los
Angeles county; \Yilliam P. Paulson of
31 lt1onarch Bay, South Laguna, a prin-
cipal in marketing organization: Dock H.
Pegues, 24652 Ar~ Drive, Mission Vie·
jo, retired Lieutenant Colonel, USMC ; H.
E. Pietsch of 25972 Jl.1ontanoso Drive,
~fission Viejo, a manager of technical
services of an automation company:
Allan G. Rawland of 22864 Via Pimiento,
Mission Viejo, a project coordinatM vf
county comm unity services project; and
Robert Schiff of 26851 Via Alcala, Mission
Vlejo, a chief of a serology section
laboratory.
29 APPLY TO SERVE SAODLEBACK AREAS 5 AND 7
Decision on Two New Trustees Is to Be Released Dec. 13 et.
Extension OK'd
For Teen Center
In San Clemente
McCaslin Resigns
Pla nning Post
In San Clemente
San C1emente area contraetor Ray
McCaslin -a city planning com-
missioner for the past five years -
resigned his post this \veek citing
personal and health reasons.
The city council Wednesday accepted
the loss of the local builder "with great
regret" then swiftly set up plans to find a
rtplacement for McCaslin.
Sources said the popular builder -
who recently bullt the new community
clubhouse -plans to undergo back
surgery soon.
Mayor Arthur Holmes asked that any
local res.ldent interested in the o.ppointed
position submit a resume to city hall .
The deadline, the mayor declared.
would be Dec. 22, and the council would
screen and interview the candidate at a
special session on Dec. 27 at 7:30 p.m.
Capo Pact Approved
The county Department of Building and
Safety will continue to provide inspection
and enforeement services for the city of
San Juan Capistrano .
A proposed agreement, extending the
contracted services was approved by the
Board of Su pervisors Tuesday.
DAILY PILOT
TM or.,. C-1 DAILY "ILOt. wlltl ..tlidl
Is c~ ftle News•Pr111o II publllll• lry
Ille Or" ..... 0.lf ~lllllftl ~. ~
nle elllt*ll •re MIKMll. Md9Y t11rwt11
Frlltay, fw C..te Mft•, N ......... t le~
H1111ll...... ll1Cll/F-t1lrl V1ltey, L1~un1
a.di, l""IM/lldlllftecJI encl Sin CIMMf>te/
S1tn Jl,IM ~1lr-A 11nQle rgio...I
M11ti.n is publltMd s1111n11y1 ..w sun111v1.
1119 ,.,lncfplt tlllllltlllrol jM.t11I 11 •I llD We1t
.. , a1r .. 1, C°'t1 Me11, C•lltorn~, tUl6.
' at.lt1rt N. w.td
l"tnoOl!ll •lld ''-"'''"'
J 1clc A. Cvrf•Y
Vice JirnlHlll encl 0.-11 ~
Tl111un 11 K•1¥il
litllltw TI.•"''' A. Murplli11• MM.ttiftt E.tllltw
Ch•rln H. loot Rlc~1r4 P. Nall
A.11111 ... 1 M-...Olne Elllllen ... ~ .......
JOI N•rtft El C1ml11e a 11I, t2•72 . ..__
c.. .. Mwl Jll ~!:r ltfeet .......... 9"<111 Sin N hu.....,e Htllll~ Meet!! ,,..,, hKtl ........,.,
L..-IHdll 2n """"' A....-
, ........ Cn 41 "4J-4J21
a..tfle4 MNttW., 642·1671
S.. Cleo• ... A• D1,a9Mltl: , ... ,, ••• 4ft.4421
~t. 1'11. OreN9-(ffll ""'4lttlllll ~. No ,.,_. 1twte. lltRlrel~ ........... '"'"" . .....,,...,... ........ 11'111 M ~ wllt'WI NllCIM ,.,. .......... .,....., ........
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-.ttlllll• SUS mlflttlftt,
From Page I
HIJACK ...
ste\\•ardesses Aster Zerera and Lilina
hfassarin and London orn ithologist
Rodney Searight, a hospital SfXlkesman
said. He said au were suffering from
sltrapnel wounds caused by the grenade
blast.
The killing of the seven hijackers
marked the highest death toll in violence
connected with an aerial hijacking.
There had been several hijacking at·
tempts by dissident Eritreans seeksing to
\\·in a disputed border area and the
EOiiopian gt1vemment installed security
guards aboard its .ltet of Boeing 70'ls.
Hilsinger was traveling with Dr.
Richard Wylie, CUllOciate chairman, of
Cherry Hill, N.J. They were en route to
the United States after going to Add is
Ababa to make preliminary ar·
rangements for an exchange program
that would send Ethiop~ 1tudents to the
United States.
In Damascus , a spokesman for the
Eritrean Liberation Front refused to con·
firm or deny the front's responsibility for
the hijack attempt.
The spokesman said that during a con-
ference the front's leaders held in
Damascus recently, a decision wu taken
to "escalate operations against Ethiopia.
The Eritrean Uberation. F r on t bas
fought for years to liberate Ethiopian
border arerui it claims for the former
llalian colony.
From Pagel
WEATHERS . • •
letters endorsing the c o u n c i I m a n ' s
performance since the Incident last sum·
mer," Weidner said.
Other letters of support went to the
court from Councilman Josh Gammell
and Councilman Roy Byrnes, a close
friend or Weathers and a promlnent local
physician.
From Pflfle I
POOLS ••.
circulate their own petition."
The next stop for the parents is the ci·
ty of San Juan.
Ahe.r that, supervi~rs will cast the
final decision.
The pools are proposed for San
Clemente and Dana Hills High School and
would be open for use by students and
lhe general public as well -si milar to
tennis courts and other athletlc facilities.
San Clemente's teen center won a six·
month renewal to use the community
clubhouse basement this week -as well
as a little more latitude on the days it
can stay open.
City councilmen Wednesday agreed lo
a six-month extension of a use permit for
the nonprofit center.
And during the vacation period later
thi~ month, parks and recreation com·
missioners will examine proposals to add
at I.east one more day onto the center
schedule.
Thus far Thursday nights have not
been made available to the group, but
adult advisers asked that the council
allow that night as an open one because
the present Monday hours attract few
teenagers.
Dana Hills Band
To Give Conce1't
Memben of !be Dana Hills High School
band will introduce themselves and tbeir
booster dub to the public in a !peclal
outdoor musical concert tonight at
Grant's Plaza parking lot.
The band, which formed recently in ad-
vance of the opening of the new high
school. will perfonn starting at 7 p.m. ln
lhe parking lot.
1be parent booster club which organiz..
ed this week to support band actlviUes
will serve c;ofJee and hot chocolate to the
audience.
Post Offices Set
S pecial Y ule Hours
Special weekend ,., .. siness hours wilt be
started at several south Coast atta post
offices Saturday to help oope with the
rul'th of Christmas business.
Postal aides said the windows would
open from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. each
Saturday until Christmas at the branches
loccted ln San Clemente. Capistrano
Beach, San Juan Capistrano and Dana
Point.
Occupation Program
Classes Registering
High school junk>rs ~•nd stnlors
N!glatering for the second trimester
S A R Tuelday may enroll In any of II ea CCOrd eached C.pisluno-Laguna R e g I o n a I Qo.
"' _ . cupeUonal Program classes.
OAKLAND (AP) -Sea1r11n Llnol and The procram 1rantt up 10 25 unit.I for
the Mastera, Matu and PJlotJ unk>n hatve coune completkm and students cracfuate
reached tento.tlve agmment on a con-with a vocational skill, that can prevlde
tract and pickets have been removed needed collese money, or a Ufelong
from the line's terminals hel'fl and In career. Further lnlonnation Is available
Hawaii. Seatraln frtlghU!ra Tran1lndlana by calling 4N-8546 and asklng for
in Honollflu and Trinsontark> In Oakland Regional Occupatk>nal Prog:rani usllt·
were picketed Wednesday. ance.
)
DAILY I'll.OT SNllf P .. 111
CURTAIN GOES UP .TONIGHT -.ON "\YHY NOT JOIN THE ~GIRAFFES" AT TRITON CENTER
Kathy J ackson Waggles 1 Wee Fist at Denny Mich.el; They Pl1y Lead Roles
Clemente Pla11ner s to Map
\
Coastal Initiative Areas
San Clemente planning commissioners
next ~·eEk will start mapping sections o
the city's coastal permit zone to
determine \vhich h igh-den sity
neighborhoods might be exempted from
the stiff development controls set by the
Coastal InltiaUve.
City Directo r of Building and Planning
Richard Ahlman th is week presented a
skeleton version of a map which
ultimately will show all the areas in the
city where the harsh provisions could be
lifted, if the coastal protective com·
missions agree.
Roughly, Ahlman told city councilmen
\Vetlnesday, most of the city's R·l pro-
perty -:zoned for sing~family residen-
tial-would qualify under the exe mption
standards.
The initiative sets forth criteria for ex·
eluding some areas within 1,000-yard
2
coastal permit area only if the sections
already arc nearly saturated "'ith
de\le\optncnt showing lhc highest and
best use of the land.
Some tracts. ho11·e,·cr, fall a little short
of the ru les.
Among thcn1, he explained . arc the
Riviera und Shoreclifls colonies.
O!hcrs cOi.ild be added as \\'ell. he said.
once the total study of densi ty 1s com·
pleted.
One dcve!opm('nl. ho1ve ver. is certain
to remain under contrtils of Proposition'
20
The Nixon estate. Ahlman conceded
after his presentation. falls under the
coastal proleclive provisions.
Presumably. if !he President planned
any major alteration of the land use.
he-li ke everyone else-would have lo
get a pennit.
a a r
'G irciff es' Pla y
Ope1is Tonight
At Clem erite Hig1i
San Clemente High School"s drama
club will present their fall production of
"Why -Not Join The Giraffes " -vdth a
custom recorded roc k music score -
tonight and Saturday at the high school's
Triton Center.
The production. starring K a t h y
Jackson. Denny Michael, Nick ~1anlrcdo
and Lyssa Black will start at 8 p.m. each
evening~ and tickets \\'ill be 011 sale at the
box office.
Music for the play v.·as recorded at a
dance held at the high school recently
"'here a Pasadena group called "Yield"
perfonned.
The light comedy takes place in New
'"ork Chy and centers on a rock group
known as the "Giraffes:· The story is an
adaption of a novel by Hope Campbell
abaut the problems of a New York
teenager. her girlfriend. her long-haired
brother and a zany father and mother.
Tickets are $1.50 for adults.
Henredon, s Four Centuries
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7al 111111/l!lld. "
INTERIORS
WllKOAYS & SATURDAYS t100 to S:lO
FRIDAY 'TIL t :OO
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THE COMPANY
THAT CAR ES
01)1 .0ISPLA Y
NOW.
NEWPORT BEACH e
1127 WESTC\.IFf DR ..
642-2010
LAGUNA BEACH e
145 NORTH COAST HWY .
4t4-6111
TORRANCE e
2l64t HAWTHORNE ILVD.
• ]71-127•
f
r
'
'
I
Frid'1, Oe<ttnb<r 8, 1972 DAILY PILOT JJ -lttonev'• Worth It's a .Car••N ope~ Plane Estate-gift Time
DETROIT (AP) -~ TKE MACHINE iln't really airways, its got foldlfl4il wiog:s, __ "WHAT WE NEED Is a hopes his crtatl0n wW catch
traffic gets too helyY iDfM. a car, but then It lln't really a pusher-type en&Ine and · •1enry Ford nivver," Bryan on Uke mowmoblles Md
Drawing to Oose __ day, Dewey Bryan might wr an airplane either. tricycle landing gear. says. "You know, something pleasure boats.
fold his wings and ny away. Jt carries Michigan auto Bryan. 4.9, o! suburban lik.e lhe liiodeJ T. We need "The little man who likes to
Th t . if he can .... ..1-..:J. his -Jlcenae plates and an aircraft Highland, has constructed, ny today is out of luck,'' be a is, ,.......~ reatslraUon number. 11 can be built. flown and drlveu three somel.hing to acquaint people
"roadable airplane.'' driven on the freeway or Down "airmobiles" in the past 24 to the roadable airplane like explained. He wants the
By SYLVIA PORTER consider these two u: Bryan took his lated pro-from an area smaller lhan a years. His latest creaUno, Henry Ford acquainted people "roadable 8 I r PI an e'' to
This Is the season of the lustrations. totype to the 59tb Detroit Auto football field. ''Bryan Ill," took three years, 10-cin ." become a reere1tlonal vehicle
year when middle-hlghtr in-J.f your taxable estate bef(lre Show recenUy, causing a For tughways, It's go t $3,000 of his own money, and Bryan, who is a Buick proj-!or people who like to unfold
come parents the nation over deducting )'Out gift e.1emptlon FINANCE minor sensation among the everything from headJights to most or the parts from "Bryan cct mechanic at the General their wings and get off the
are making gift• to thelr b fl00,000, your federal ettate more staid exhibitors. a rearvlew mirror. For U." Motors te!ting grounds here, ground occasionally.
children or other loved ones of tax will be $4,800. But lf you ·'----------' -----------~----------------------------------------' bequeath or give to a chJlrky fairly subst8ntial amounts or tl0,000, your Federal estate
cash or valuable property -in tax wW be cut to $3,000 -and
order to take a d v a n t a g e the actual cost of your bequest
before 1972 ends of the ill brink $8
favorable provisions of our w s to· JOO,
gift ta1: laws. OR IF YOUR taxable estate
And with ta1: reform ahead before deducting your glft ex-
t o r 1973-4 emptk>n is $500,000, your
federal eatate tax will be
and our es-$116,500. But if You bequealb
tate-gift ta1: or give to a charity $50,000,
laws among your federal estate tax will
the prime drop to $102,lllO and the actual candi -dates f 0 r co.!l of your bequest will. fall
drastic over· to $35,600.
haul, t h e And this cost will be further .
gifts made reduced in states which allow
in t h e s e dedUctions for charitable be-
closing weeks-..pf the year quests from estate taxes.
well may rCach the highest But, of course, there are
totals ever. restrictions on gifts -to pre-
vent use of t.bem....___as tu.
AT A SURPRISINGLY dod
od ges. . m est Income level, you and Among the gifts that must
your family can use our be reported by your e1ecutor
liberal gift tax laws to your for tax purpotes are:
own advantage. Gifts . over which you re-
For a gift program, properly tained or controlled the in-
planned and faith£ully carried come for life;
out during your liretlme, can
be your surest and most soul-GIFl'S WHICH you retained
satisfying way to reduce your · the power to amend or revoke
estate taxes as well as your during your lifetime.
probate costs. And a program And gifts made within threte
of this sort will not only pro-years of your death whicll
duce tax savings on your may be dee.med to have been
estate but important savings made "in contemplatlon of
on your income tax as well. death." To illustrate, if a gift
The blunt fact is, however, is made to a child or other
that few taxpayers below the person within three yean of
top Income b r a c k e t 8 un-an individual's death, it may
derstand this type of lifetime be considered by the Treasury
gift program and charitable to have been an 11th hour gift,
gifts in general. Thus, this made "in contemplation of
single primer, death" -and therefore tax-
able as part of an estate ifl..
THE KEY REASON a stead of at lower gift tax
lifetime gift program is so rates.
Alaska Gas
Line 'S afe'
To Ecology
JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) -
Gov. William A. Egan, ob-
viOO!lY. elated over the pro&.
pect of a gas pipeline aloag
the trans·Alaska oil pipeline
route, 1ays the move y El
Paso Natural Qas .Co. appears
relatively 8'lfe for the en·
vlronment.
''This line will cause some
e:nvlronniental ~~ms," the
governor said this week, "but
not to the degree as those with
a warm crude oil line.
"THE GAS WILL now at a
relaUvely cool temperature,
and that's not of great en-
vironmental concern."
Egan also pcecllcted that the
$3-blllion gas line probably ·
would be only one of several
eventually built from the rich
Ptudhoe Bay oil fields.
"Development of this gas
pool and this line does not
mean that there will not be
other lines," the governor ,
said.
Coast Bank •
Makes Move
valuable is that gift ta1 rates But the presumption that Laguna Federal S a v i n g s
are about 25 percent lower you made a gift in con-plans to jump county boun-
than estate tax rates. llfore templation of death can be darles and establish its 'fifth
speciflclally, our gift tax law rebutted. U, say, youn: 49 office in Lake Elsinore, in the
allows you to to distribute -yean old and happen to drop south-western Up of Riverside
during your lifetime - a total dead on a handball court a County.
of $30,000 among any number week after giving_your._Diece a In addition to the head-
of beneficiaries, free o f large gift of cash, the courts quarters office ... In Laguna
federal gift tax. On top of that, would probably rule that you Beach, the assoc i at Ion
you can give an additional were not contemplating dylng mainta1na branch offices in
sum of up to $3.<m a year when you made the gift and it San Clemente, Laguna Niguel
each to as many diUerent peo-therefore need not be included and Leisure World, Laguna
She works Air Callfomla's new SKI DESK. Attractive she Is, pe,.on·
able she Is, tool But unllke other "bunnies", she's an expert at get·
ting. you to the Tahoe/High Sierra ski slopes from Orange County.
Specially trained, Jiii Edwards, has a wide assortment of convenient,
eeonomlcal Air Callfomla Ski Packages to offer you.
Introducing Ill AIR CALIFORNIA'S · O'ft'N, •
VERY SPECIAL
'Balint!
Air Callfomla's SKI OUR VALLEYS packages (for as many dsys as
you want) to BEAR, HEAVENLY AND SQUAW. SPECIAL CONVEN·
IENCE PLUS charter packages from Orange County Airport to South
Lake Tahoe Airport. Or, lf It's just Information you want on the
easiest and most economical way to get from Sacramento Airport,
the gateway to your favorite Tahoe/High Sierra ski resort, Jill
"'
knows and will be glad to make
your arrangements. 'Call her.
Telephone
(714) 54()..4550.
AI-
CALIFO RNIA
Squaw Valtey (lJ Serving Sacramento,
San Francisco, Oakland,
San Jose, Ontario, Palm Springs,
San Diego and Orange County;
" r.
Heavenly VIII.,
'-'',...-@Bear Valier
•
pie as you wish. in your gross ~te. HUis. Your lifeUme exem~ion -=:.:.:=-=:..:=-::::::::: ___ ___::=:=--------....:...----""7"--------------------~-------------------------
may be used in any one year
or spread over many years.
II you give more than $3,000
to any one Individual in any
one tax year, you must rile a
gift tax return and pa~~e tax
due. If joint gifts are ~~'de by you, as husband and wlfe,
these limits are doubled to
$6,000 and $60,000.
IF YOU LEAVE these same
amounts to family members
via your will, they could be
subject to tt.e full foree of our
federal and state estate taxes.
Another major way to
reduce the federal tax bite on
your estate is to make a be-
quest to an acce ptable
charitable organization o r
cause -and it ls during these
weeks too that charitable gifts
always reach their yearly
peaks.
To suuest how this type of
tax break can slash federal
estate taxes under today's
laws, and cut the net costs of
the bequests to estates, just
Red Ball Yan
Truck Fleet
Qn Propane
Red Ball Van & Storage Co.
of Anaheim, and a branc
operation in Long Beach, bas
converted Its truck neet from
gasoline to llquiUed. petroleum
gas. The convers10m were
made by Petrolane's Clean ~Ir
Center in Los Angeles. and in·
volved 20 units.
Peter De Santis, Red Ball
vice president, said.that he ex·
pected clean burning LPG to
bring his fleet ln compliance
with federal emiS!lon stan·
dards for 1975.
De Santis added that an"
ticipated benefits alltO Included
longer engtne life, I e s s
maintenance, and lower fue.1
costs and estimated that this
would more than offset all
costs or converting to LPG.
w.,. •••• , ... .,.
S.• 'f'•• Cltr..,_
11\e letters Inc. have been appear-Grea~ West Life has been working
·ingwith remarkable frequency after the with many professionals and their attor ..
namet of doctofs; lawyers, architect.a and neys developing peQSion'plana, profit
other profesaional groups throug)wut t.he sharin~ plans, medical reimbursement,
United States. They af'f; taking advan.. disability income, and group life in11nr-
tage of the Profet1ional Corporations ance. With incorporation, contributions
and Auociation1 Act;., an act which brings into these plans are made with "before
illl1.hi"taJlietfefite bnl!COrporltlA>ll w • t.ax corp0rate dollara":Thei>lan1 ire
the profwions. Used to retain valuable employees and
U> minlm;.., the profeeaional'o lou of
income in the form of t.u:es. •
• At Grea~Weat Life, we feel incor-
poration is a very resourceful way for
profeuionals to give themselvee securitj
and reduce taxes at the same time. For
these reasons, we'd like to see more
profeuional1 with Inc. after their names.
So we invite you and your att.omer to
contact our insurance innovaton 1n your
city,Feel free to pick their braill8 about
incorporation .
T .J. BERNARDY, C.L.U. & ASSOCIATES
Suite 300, 1020 N. Broadway Street
Santa Ana Tel.: 836-8712
T.J. Bernardi;,, C.L. U. Branch Manager
R.K. PatU>n, uroup Repreoentative
Chn
Great-West Life
The lnturenc• lnnov1~rs
~
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.~
22 DAILY PILOT SC
Demand for Wood
P1·oducts to Soar
\\'ASHJNGTON 1UJ'l 1
Agriculture Sl'Ctl•tnry Earl
I:luti says J!O\'lfl11\r1en1al1sts
arc Ir) inJ; 10 reduce suppl\es
of tin1ber whilt> <ll·rnand for
"uod products 1s li\.:\•ly It> Ill•
t•rcase 60 fll!rt't.'lll by 1 he ~('<If
2000.
T11nber ~ro" th nnist be u1·
t're11sed on pr1v1Hr land~ 1<1
111ect hous1n~ and other l'.ood
needs. l3u1z so.11d
llE SAID prt·ssun .. frurn en·
\•tronmcntalists "'ho want
n1orc fores t lnnd rescrVl'<i for
"·1lderncss and recrP<ltlon in·
d1cilles that 1hc United Stnfl'S
'111ay t'\Cll face o 1ln1e \\'hen
productinn frun1 µubhr lands
n1ay decrl'ase. ''
\\'hlle demand is. gro\\ 1ng
for tuntwr products. declining
t•fficiency 1n lumlx>ring is
reducing a\',:ulab1e suppl1l'S
Uutz ca lled a nc\\'S con·
fcrcnce Tuesday that fo\lo\\'L-<l
a Halph Nader report alleging
that the U.S. Forest Service
under industry and White
House pressure has been turn·
ing n:it1onal f Ore s ls in·
creasingly into •·timber fac-
tories."
Butz' news conference was
specifically lo d is c I o s e
preliminary results of the
depa rtment's once-a · decade
Stock Offer
Set By Finn
In lrvi11e
A public offering of 300.000
shares of Microdata Corp.
commor. stock is belng made
at a price of $7.625 a share
through an underwriting group
managed by Harris, Upham &
Co.
The company. based in
Irvine. designs. manufactures
and markets minicomputers,
related equiprnenl and sup.
porting software primarily to
original equipmen1 111anufac·
turers.
TI1c company also sl'llS com·
pufers lo t'du>f!lional in·
slilu!ions for usd in engineer-
ing courses and compuler edu-
cation training.
New proceeds will be used
principa\ly !or w o r k i n g
capita1. for expanded
marketing and research and
dcvelopn1en! programs and
also for expansion of manufac-
turing facilities and to repay
short·tenn bank borrowings.
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COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST -... ... QllltJ ... "-""" °"' .... .... (M.tl Hllfl ltw .....,
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Trading Active
On Wall Street
NEW YORK (AP) -Prices averaged out about
even in the. stock market today alter two day• of
gains. TradlDg was fairly active.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials spent
most o( the session seesawing fract.Jonally above and
below Thursday's figure of 1,033.26, which wu a
closing high. L Advances and declines on the New York Stock
E:tchange \vere almost in balance for several hours.
. "We've been having periods ot one-day correc-
t1ons now and then" said Larry Wachtel vice
president for research at Bache & Co. '
•
Frid1y, Dtctmbtr 8, 1972 SC DAILY PILOT 23
KI DS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SA TU RDA YS IN
THE DA ILY PILOT
--------···-·"-··--· (
24 DAIL V PILOT
$250,000
Presented
For Unit
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
$250.000 gift to build a
pediatrics facility at the City
of !lope has been presented by
Los A n g e I e s businessman·
philanthropist •larry Groman.
City of Hope Exeeutivc
Director Ben Horowitz said si :ii:
examination rooms. four treat-
ment rooms. a laboratory and
several offices and treatment
rooms v.•ill be included in the
.J.000-squa re-foot facility.
e Dr11g A b11se
SACRA:\>TENTO IAP \
First-time drug off c n d c r s
could be sentenced t o
rehabilitation treatment or at-
tendinR classes on drug abuse
instead or going to prison under
a bill on the Governor's desk.
The proposal. ordered b.v
Gov. Ronald Reagan. cleared
its final legislative hurdle in a
27-D Senate vote.
Sen. George Deukmejian (R·
Long Beach 1 authored the bill.
\\·hich could be ap plied to first
offenders if their drug crime
did not invo lve violence and if
the district attorney, judge
and defendant all agreed.
Aft.er successful completion
of the treatment or study
rourse. charges against the of-
fender would be dismissed.
eVD Classes
SACRAMENTO CAP)
School districts could contract
"'ith private firm s to provide
drug abuse and v en er ea I
disease instru ction under a bill
to the Governor's desk.
Assemb l yman John
Vasconcellos (0-San Jose)
said his bill would do nothing
to change the present state
law requiring parents be
notified before a child is
enrolled in VD instruction.
The Assembly then voted 55-
5 to approve Senate amtind-
ments to the measure.
e Reseor"h OK'd
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ex·
perienced acupuncture doctors
could participate in research
experiments in California -
even though they aren 't licen-
sed to practice medicine in the
-state-under a bill sent to the
Governor's desk.
Assemblyman Gordon Duffy
(R -Hanford ) said such
acupuncture operations a n d
performed under the supervis-
joo. of a licensed physician or
surgeon.
Acupuncture is the tradi-
Honal Chinese method or using
pins inserted at crucial nerve
points in the skin to block
pain.
The bill is supported by the
California li.1edical Associa-
tion.
• e No Condltio11s
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Hosp itals already perfonnins
sterilizations for contraceptive
purposes could not impose
conditions on patients they
don"t impose far other medical
operations under a bill sent to
the Governor's desk.
A 42-19 vote sent the bill to
the Governor 's desk followin g
an assurance from
Assemblyman Henry Wm:rhan
(D-Los Angeles) that it was
not requiring hospitals to
perform sterilizations.
The measure was authored
by Sen . Anthony Beilenson (0.
Beverly 'Hllls).
e Health Plona
SAPRAMENTO (AP)
Cloee to $100 million in annual
· prei)ald health plans woold be regulaled by a bill sent to the
Governor a few hours before
the Legislature adjourned.
Aasemblyman Go<don Duffy
CR -Hanf ord) told lhe
Auembly . the measure ls
nece1111ry lo put up standards
for lhe quality of care offered
by 22 ptj,vate firms con-
lrij:ling wilh lbe stale I<> pro-
.vlde such aefvlcts. All tho penoiis serve<i, Dul·
fy tald, ate welfat! recipients
Fri!IQ, 0Ktmbtr 8, l!J72
' .
Sears
Women's Model
Family Treat!
POPCORN
Regular 15~
Now Only!
CUT '3!
Adventure
Tunnel
Was$7.99 l't 499
For indoor • outdoor ~~1 \i ~\11..{J play. Print \•inrl COY··
CliT ,·.1 !
1\'lc n · s
Sport Shirts
\\'t re
$1.!19 }99
ers Z4-in. diameter
hoops of spring steel. 1 72-in. size. -
~ \\'tte 79" • SI.SO
CUT .w 14. 96 !
Racy 26-inch
3-Speed Bike
Was $54.95
3999
Caliper brakes front and rear.
Lightweight. 3-speed trigger
shift. In black.
CUT *4.80!
Doll
House
\\'as $11.19
699
All metal Antebelknn manor •. 6 rooms ele-gantly famished iR
colonial • I ·11..:I furn-
itw-e.
~¥ CUT $19.95! \
All Weather r-
Coat
Was $39.9()
1995
Dacron • polyester r1-
yon treated with
S(:Ql.chgan1.<t1 ~
·~ check. t.ten's asso
siz.1!11,
I
CUT ;2.50 !
Sewi ng Ba sket
CUT 99t:!
Girls' Slips
"" 2 49 ..... w .... 99 ~ .1 .H
'
CUT
"3 and $4!
Boys"
Shoes
'Vere$8.99
to ,9.99 pr.
Bras.I • buckled adjll$-
table strap. Leather
UppE'rs in brov.·n,
black. Sitl"s 3' 1 lo i'lt.
CUT *4
to ·i JJ!
Women's
Footwear
Were $6
to $16pr.
} 97to5?,.9
Up-to-the· minute
styles in dress and cas-uals. Many colors to
cheose from . Sizes 4 to
IC.
SAVE .w21.89!
' ' Wood Expose
Gourmet Cart
Regular $99:66
$77
Natural·finish solid oak .chO{I"'
ping block. Wine bottle com·
partrner.t. Center storage.
dra\\'ers.
.
CUT ~4.98!
Wasl!.97
499
Ski-look fac:ltel .. water repeflenl. Qui lt•
l"d ~vers~ to llnOOlh
side. In eold.
.,
ClkT:f6t •
Sleep
Shift 'n
Skirt
\\'ere $10.99
499
\\'hite long sleeve shift
wit h Jon~ e\asticiud w-.i.i!t pnnt skirt. In
small and large alJ:es.
cur•2t , ··
Bozo the Clown
cur '2.-68! <;U'f 66 ~
. ' . . .
w .. '. "399 . $5.99 . . • . ' . .r
' Women's Blou ses
Yi ere ,. ...
Men~s Underwear _
IA"ing ,1cc,•es. Solids and
stripes. l'en11a-Prcsl ·~
\' Prints und solids. fo.lany col-
. on lo choose from.
Pr I n t cotton-brOadcloth..
'Vhite toyo. Perma·Preslt . "4 g!>tt'. White~ 7-14, 7~1tY1 • ·run his talkiiif ?ln1 to Hear
JO funny Unes. '. •
1007.i Po~ter. Jn red, navy, br~.311-36. I ' •
Bri~f•, T-shirts. 11nder-whirt.s. While.
Sears SANTAANA
1716 S. Main St. Phone 547-3371
Special Chrlslmas Hours
Mondav lhru Frldav 9::10 A.M. to V:flO P.M.
Saturday !E:l"O'A .M. to 6:00 P.M.
suriday Noo n to 5 P.M.
He11u•mbe r ••• Tli l• l!f s~rll. 1"011 (.1111 f:K(lfJ<'I Serl'iC~! ~"'' Qunlily.
"Sflti~J11(·1ion G11nrfln leud 1Jr l"1111r .l/01111~· flflck. •• ,
. '
I ' • • ...
W;lnt ~inet~i~g Froitl . . , . \
S~arsCatalog?:.
-Convenient
pltt-up senice is
avallable·l1 our
Ca11Io1 Store.
CAI:.L
54?-57~1
%'4 HOl:JRS
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Lag1111a· Beaeh
EDITION
T oday's F .. al
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 65, NO. 343, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR NIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1972 TEN CENTS
....
High Costs Spell Death , for Life Magazine
NEW YORK (AP) -Lire Mag-·
\viii discontinue pubticatloo with the issue
or Dec. 29, Time, Inc. aMOUnced today.
The publisher said the 36-year-old
magaz.ine. famous for its pioneering use
of neW3 photographs, will fold because of
"continuing losses.'' ·
The year-end double issue will mark
lhe close of the weekly magazine founded
by Henry Luce.
Lile was published at 1'very su~lantial
deficits in 1969 and 1970 and smaller
deficits in 1971 and 1972,'' the publisher
said.
"As our projections for 1973 took
sliape7 1iowever, they '"'SbOWe<! a resump-
tion of heavy losses, and the indications
for 1974 were even more unfav9rable,"
Time, Inc. added.
At about 10:45 a.m., grim-faced staff
members of the magazine began to
gather for a meeting on the eighth floor
of the Time-Life building at Sixth Avenue
and 50th Street.
About 250 to 300 stall workers sat in
chairs or stood against tbe walls, waiting
for the meeting, Which was closed to
outsiders.
The. publisher said Time, Fortune.
Sports lliustrated and Money, Its other
major magazines, "have done very well
Uul year."
ure ia·stea more than a-year longer
than its chief competitor, Look, which
ceased publication on -Oct. 19, 1971. Look
also blamed rising costs, especially PoStal rates.
In announcing the decision lo fold Llfe,
Hedley Donovan, editor-in-chief of Time,
lnc., and Andrew Heiskell, chairman of
lhe boanl, declared: .
"Lile bas been one o.f the great
joumali.s:tic pioneers. Its launching in
1936 opened_ a whole new era of pl"()ot
fesslonal journalism, with consequences
stU! seen all over the world.
"Life achieved almost at once, and
kept through 36 years. aq important
voice in American affairs; we believe the
magazine has spoken-responsibly, and
with vision and compassion. Life will go
ruman's
One Vote Each
on in many ways and iJlaces, not least in
its inQuence on the other magazines and
books of Time, Inc."
The Time. Inc .. executives noted that
Lile "encountered severe competition
from television since the late 1950's" ·for
the advertising dollar.
The magazine eamed "acceptable prof-
it$" "during m o s t of the 1960s. they
reported, "but the cost pressures and the
competitive pressures kept building up.
and we have been running out of
economies.''
In the past two years, Life reduced its
circulation from 8.5 million copies-to 5.f>.
million and Increased the price to 50
cents for a newsstand copy in an attempl
to build a high-qualUy audienet:.
'The impact of these moves was un-
dercut by a very heavy increase 111
second-class postal rates which affecled
Life, parlicufarly because of its large
page size,'' the executive 's slalement
said.
They said the magazine was faced v.·ith
an iocrease of 170.2 percent in such rates
ove r five years.
"It should · be remembered that thr
Administration exempted the postal
Service, but not the press, from price
-controls Which made Life's problem even
more difficult," they added.
Ralph Graves, managing editor of Llfe.
v.1as assigned lhe job of helping employes
find other jr,bs, both within Time, Inc,
and elsewhere.
There are 320 persons on the staff or
Life. a n d another 35() Time . tnc.
employes are invo lved in helping 10
publish it. All employes will be kept on
the payroll through the end of the year
"after which a notice period goes into cf·
feet.'.' the publisher said .
Time & Life buildings in New York .
Chicago. London. Paris. Tokyo and other
cities are to keep their names. as will
such corp:irate ent ities as Ti me-Life
Books. -
orse
Heart Shows
Incumbents Gain &i Stress, Say
~ '/"·'
In Recall Count
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of .. 0.11'1' """ ''*" A mid-day check with :R.ecall Election
recounters indicated that of r o u r
precincts ciiffillletea at that time, school
Laguna Insurance
Company Bought
By Chica.go Firm
Peacock Insurance, Inc., of Laguna
Beach was one of several insurance.
agencies purchased for an esUmated $4.7
million by Fred S. James and Company,
Inc., in mergers announced Thursday in
Chicago.
John Cooper, pres.ideot of Peacock
Insurance Inc. said the merger will allow
the local agency to expand the com·
pany's services to local clients.
He said the merger will not mean
personnel changes or o p e r a t i o n a I
changes. The name will remain the
same, he said .
Ciooper declined to reveal the merger
price for the local concern.
Ciooper said it is likely that with the
backing of Fred S. James Company, Inc ..
Peacock Insurance will expand opera-
tions into new areas of Orange County.
Robert C. Peacock , son or the founder,
Roy W. Peacock, stepped down as com-
pany head In June 1971.
"We antici pate that over the next five
years we will acquire a considerable
number of other brokerages in Orange
County," he said.
Cooper said that 'he James company,
world's lacgest i08urance brokerage
firm. had set aside five million shares for
insurance brokerage acquisition.
Other agencies purchased by James for
176 shares of company rommon stock in-
clude firms in New York, Rocky Moun-
tain states and Philadelphia.
board Trustees Gera1d Ll.nke and
Patricia Gillette had each picked up one
vote. •
Linke -survived recall by only six votes
accordin( to lhe fil'll COWl t of ballots .
from iK prd!lncts In the Laguna Beach
Unified School District, while Mrs. Gil-
)ette retained office by 72 votes.
Roland Mallbot, JUWVilor ·for the re-
count. said It -uni, thal the three
-<o\llltlng bellots would llDl.ib Saturday .:iftemoon.
Generally, precincts ln the north
(including Emerald Bay) and south ex-
tremes of the districf," .. Supported the two
trustees. while--pfeCinctJ at Top of the ~
World and mid-Laguna seemed to sup-
port the re<'all.
Age and wealth also appeared to be a
factor wit hthe precincts· located in high
income and older age areas voting
generally to suwort the two trustees.
Top of the World, where ruidents are
predominantly younger families with
school-age children, vuted heavily for the
recall.
The recount which will cost the school
district $400 was first requested by sup-
porters of Linke and Mrs. Gillette, ac-
cording to the Registrar of Voters office.
Two candidates in the electKm , Mrs.
Lucille Whitaker and Michael Sagar both
indi.cated that the7 would have requested
a recount due to the narrow finish.
llijackers Indicted
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) -Four men
accused of hijacking an Eastern Air
Lines jet to Cuba have been indicted by
an Arlington County grand jury on
charges of murder and attempted rob-
bery in the slaying of a policeman and
bank manager here Oct. 25. Arlington
Ccmmonwealtb's Atty. William J.
Hassan said Thursday the indictments
will be sent to the State Department to
be included in a request for the ex-
tradition of the four from Cuba.
Passengers, Guards Kill
Seven Would-he Hijackers
ADDIS ABABA (UPI) -Five men and
two women armed with pistol!! and band
grenades tried to hijack ao EUllopJan
Airlines Boeing 72il today. Passengers
seized and disarmed them and security
guards shot all seven to death.
It was the largest death toll in a hi-
jacking case. ?:"British couple Jn their 70s held one of
tbe hijackers under their feet.
Other occupants of the plane seized
aoother armed air pirate and, a
puoengcr said, "kicked him and kicked
him and wouldn 't let him use his gun un-
tU he Wll3 eventuillly killed with a whole
magailne of bullets."
Passengers suggestec:f that the women
may have smuggled the guns aboard In
their high-heeled, platform 10le aho<..
They 1t1ld the air pirates hurled at
lcut two hand gemade!I find one ex-
ploded. wound~ a number of the
passenger!. tnclodlng a U.S. oil company
executive and an American college pro-
fessor.
The pn>fessor, Dr. Roderick Hilsinger
ol Temple UnlveraUy, Philadelphia, was
credited with aavlng IOme lives by pick·
Ing up lhe band grenade and hurling It
away before It exploded In the midst of
lhe passengers. He wBJ hit by shrapnel
and was reported In grave condition at
an Addis Ababa hospital.
Tbc other wouoded American wa!I S. V.
~1cCollumn of Hou~ton, Te x., executive
vice president of the Tenneco OU Co.,
Ethiopia Radio "'ported.
Tile plane carrying 94 passengen and
c:nw WN com-about II min·
utea out ol Addia Ababa en route to Parll
with 1topovers In Cllro, and Rome, wit·
ne11Ses said.
Tbey described the hijacken as in
their 20s and appearing to be Ethk>plarui.
Although damaged, the plane wa1 able to
land at Addl t Ababa where . the
pa,..ngers boanled another ntght.
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DAil Y llllOT Ili ff l"Mt.
.JoRy Civil Servant
"It makes thenrslriile; that's why I do it.'; exp.I3ined
Pootal Clerk Wait Timko. He's shown aSSisting 'a
customer ·at the Fotest Ave nue Post Office in La-
guna Beach. Timko'd.re~ as Santa Claus each year
from Dec. 1 until Christmas and keep..5 his good
humor despite the heavy Yuletide mail ·loa:d. This is
his third year as Santa's helper.
J
Snowstorm Visits Tustin
'
W eatlier Service Credits 'Freak Air Currents'
Tustin High School students frolicked
in falling snow for about 40 minutes this
morning and an El Toro"Marfue Cofl>s
pilot reported hail in tbe area as the
latest winter storm passed over Orange
Laguna Pioneer -Sylvia Peacock
Dies in Artesia
Laguna Beach pioneer Sylvia F.
Peacock, widow of Roy W. Peacock, died
Thunday in Artuia. Mn. Peacock first
came to Laguna In Jlt7 and lived in the
Art Colony untll moving to Laguna llllls
In Ul66.
The Peacocks owned and operated the
motoriud stage line between Laguna
Beach and Santa Ana until 1920 when the
late. Mr. Peacock lounded a real est{lte
and lnlurance business, now known as
Peacock lnsuranct, Inc.
Mrs. Peacock was actlve in Laguna
Bcach civic a!Calrs Including t h e
American Red Ctoss, VFW Auxllfary and
the Laguna Beath Little Sym phony
Orchestra circa 1920.
She Js survived by a sister, Doris Sud·
daby of 'Nstin; daughter. MargAret
Negus of Fallbrook ; and oon, Rober\ C.
P .. cock of Laguna Bcacb.
Arrangement.s were private.
County dropping a hal! an inch of rain in
some areas.
About 8 a.m. students in P.1rs. William
Scl'!reiber's class at Tustin High played
amidst the falling nakes.
The National Weather Service describ-
ed the snowfall as being the result of
freak air currents, since sno\\ levels in
Southern California are generally ex-
pected only abo ve S,000 feet this
weekend.
About the same time snow was said to
be falling In Tustin, a jet pilot landing at
El Toro reported falling ice pellets.
Laguna Beach's unofficial rain watch-
er, BUI Shields, reported .09 o( an inch
in his gauge over the 24 hours ending at 8
a.m., bringing the season rainfall total in
tht Art Colony to 5.23 inches. Last year
at this tin.it, Shields said, Laguna had on·
ly .82 o~ an Inch or rain. The city got ooly
6.18 inches all last year.
The weather service forecast calls for
CHARLIE !IROWN, \'OO'VE
GOT ONL~ 16 SHOPPING Ol\~5 LEFT, Yo\) KNQW!
1
mostly cloudy skies and occasional
showers tonight.
A clear and cooL Saturday is expected
along the Orange Coast with gusty winds
to 20 knots from the northwest.
The Orange County Harbor Depart·
ment station at Newport Beach logged
only .21 inch of rain during the 24-hour
period ending at 7 a.m. The season to
date total recorded by the rain gauge at
l~l Bayside Drive Is 4.~l inches,
Small craft warnings are up and are
expected to remal n up through Saturday,
as a result of the gusty afternoon winds.
A private ra in watcher. J . Sherman
Denning of Huntington Beach reported a
total or .36 inch of rain in that city for
!See STORM, Page %1
Police Auction
Slated Saturda y
The l.aguna Beach Police Department
will sell At auction a six-month supply or
found and unclaimed reoovere!d stolen
properly stnrtlng at It a.m. Saturday.
ltemll to be sold' Include carved lndlan
table!!, several bkycfes Including ...,10-
speed racing bikes. stereo Sets, jewelry
and other "odds and ends," l!iaid George
Pietts. df'pnrtment au.,ctionttr.
~'unds received bY the aUction will he
plllctd In the Lagwi.a Be:1ch general fund.
•
•
Pl1ysicians
KANSAS CITY. ~10. rUPl ! -The f3il-
ing hea rt of Harry S Truman ··is show-
ing the signs or consid<>rable irritability
and stress." his C:octors said today.
1lie 88-year-old ronner President slept
filfully and was in critica l conditio1 •.
"His heart condition is not as good this
morning as we had hoped it would be,"
said John Dreves, a Research ilospita1
spckesman. "President Truman has im-
proved in some areas but shown no im-
provement in others."
Truman, weakened by age and lung in-
fection, was fed intravenously. He was
given ~icygen to hel p him breathe.
"His heart is showing the signs of con-
sic'.~rable irritability and stress," Dreves
said at a medical brie!ing. "lie remains
in critical condition."
Physicians monitored Truman's heart
constantly. They said recovery depended
on whether his heart is strong enough to
battle the co.rnplications of age and in-
fection.
Tn.man's vital signs are ··relatively
stable , though the temperature is fluc-
tuating. but only slightly.'' a hospital
spnkesman said.
Doctors said the nation's 33rd chief ex-
ecutive did 1l0t sleep well Thursday night
and early today. They said his family
was not notified of the restless night.
Thursday. Truman rallied from the
lun~ and heart ailm:?nts that sent him lo
the hospital four days ago . Margaret
Daniel, his Jaughter, said Truman smiled
at her .
~ "He's getting klnd of contrary," Mrs.
Orniel said aftr leaving her fa ther's
bedside and driving her mother, Mrs.
Bess Truman. back to the family home
at Independence. Mo .. 15 n1iles away.
"He's restless. He's feeling better. [
have great faith tha. he's going to come
out of this all right.''
Oreves sai d today Truman is con-
stantly given O){ygen except when the
mask is removed for other ITeatmenL.
Truman was rushed by ambulance t~
Research Hospital Tuesday suffering
lung congestion. He bad been ill for two
weeks at home before he entered the
hospital.
Orange Coas t
Weather
Those dark clouds will clear lo
sunny skies on Saturday, accord-
ing to the w~atherlady -but
t.here's a slight (30 percent) chance
of a few showers on Sunday. Highs
in the upper flOs to lower OOs.
Lows tonight In the 40s.
I NSIDE T ODA.\'
i\1usicians from Seal Beach to
San Clementt: ltave prepared
their CllrL!tmas offerings wllh
Handel's "Mes1iali" being the
n1ost popular holldat1 piece. See
toda11's \Veeke ndtr for lfn~s
a'td places.
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R iglit Precinct
Address Give1i
The office or the Orange County
ReglJtrar of Voters today tssued a
corrected address of a polllng plact
In 1\Jesday's Laguna Beach schools
recall ele<:lion.
According !o 11 spokesman ror the
registrar, polllng place nutnber 30
was \ocalt:d al 28'l Grandview St.
Reade rs wlll note the precinct
breakdown of votes In Thursdav's
DAILY PlLOT listed precinct 30-at
315 ltarold Drive, The vote totals
listed for that precinct remain
unchanged pending a recount.
Nudie Bars
Still Target
Of Crackdoivn
A dri\·r that has drav.'n the curtains on
nlore than a dozen nude bars in Orange
County during the past year \ViU continue
even though the state's Alcoholic
Beverage Control (ABC \ off.icers have-
got into 1hc act. District Attorney's
representatives declared today.
Closure actions \\'hich include the
Firehouse bar In Costa ~Iesa will be
pressed even tl}ough the Calirorni<1
Supreme Court has ruled that the ABC
agency can perform that fun ction.
spokesman fo r the office's obscenity
division said. (Related story, Page 4.)
Two Santa Ana bars ofrering the eon·
troversial entertainment \\'ere recently
closed down through civil litigation that
uses the lan~uage of the state·s Red
Light Abatement Act to makC' its point.
And the Sarong Gals and Bristol
Gardens bars, both in Santa Ana . cur·
rently face identical action thal could
close them or at least "clean them up,"
investi gators said.
lnvestigalion of the Bristol Gardens
b<ir led last month to thC' filing of
criminal actions against a group of
women and forn1cr pre. football player
Will ie Crittendon.
All were accused of involvement in .J
prostituti<ln racket that allegedly had its
headquart ers 111 the bottomless bar. All
face Superior Court tria' on those
charges.
ln\'estigators today said one reason for
ctinlinued action by their office is the
delay built in to any action by the ABC.
They said the agency can revoke a
bar's license but the bar can continue to
<lperate pending a hearing and that <lften
U.kes at least three m<>nths.
Using \he red light act, District At·
tomey's officers said they can obtain a
Superior Court restraining order that
<lften effectively bans nu d c en·
tert ain ment.
Baja Caravans
Deadline Monday
Registration deadline for student
caravans to Baja caJilomia is l\1onday at
S p.m. at the South Coast YMCA office,
465 Forest Ave .. Laguna Beach.
Two caravans are scheduled , one for
seventh and eighth grade students and
the other for high school students. during
the week of Dec. 18 to 22.
Students will travel in IS.passenger
clmpers and will cover about 50 to 80
miles a day in the La Frontera region of
Mexico. according to Bill Davis. Y~1CA
associate executive director.
Further informati<ln is available from
the YMCA at 494·9'131.
Ba rge Spills Oil
SAN DIEGO (AP\ -About 200 gallons
of fuel oil spilled into San Diego Harbor
Thursday night from a refueling barge
servicing the aircraft carrier Coral Sea,
the Navy says. A Navy spokesman said
lhe accident occurred as the barge was
preparing to pump oil to the carrier.
OU.M•t COAST '-•
DAILY PILOT
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SADDLllACK
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
0
DISTRICT ,,_-;.,.,.,,.
llVtt S!Df COUWI'
Jlt.;;11\KI COUM-;,-
DAILY PILOT Ma• IJY Ma'" Crvm
29 APPLY TO SERVE SADDLE BACK AREAS 5 AND 7
Decision on Two New Trustees Is to Be Released Dec. 13
Village Faire ~arking Lot
Rezo11i11g to Be Requested
Laguna Beach planning commtssi<ln<:rs
meeting at 7:30 p.rn . :.:onday in City Hall
chambers vt'ill consider a package <lf re·
quests from RHO Corp. & LGJ Corp., for
the Village Faire Shopping Center. ll20-
l l90 South Coast tlighway.
Nixon Con1pletes
Cabinet, Keeps
l(leindienst
CA!\'IP DAVID, Md. fUPI )-Preside.nt
Nixon formally ctimpleted his sceond-
term Cabinet today by ann<luncing that
Richard G. Kleindienst will remain as at·
tomey general.
But this was coupled with an·
nouncement that five t.op Justice Depart-
men official: will be replaced as part of
Nixon's reshuffling <lf the Administrati<ln.
-These are : Deputy Attorney General
Ralph E. Erick.son ; David Luke Nonnan,
assistant attorney general in charge <lf
the civil rights division; Jerris Leonard.
administrator of the Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration: Roger C.
Cramton. assistant atl<lmey general in
charge of the Office <lf Legal Cowisel and
Leo M. Pellerzi. assistant attorney
general for administration.
At the same time. the \Vhite House
said Yale law profesS<lr Robert H. Bork,
45, one of the drafters of the
Administration's antibusing legislation,
\Yill be a new face in the Justice Depart·
ment. ·
Bork will become solicitor general next
spring at tbe end of the current term of
th'!: U.S. Supreme Court. replacing Er..i1in
N. Griswold who plans to retire.
There hav~ been reports that Klein-
dienst, confirmed by the Senate as head
<lf the Justice Department only after
lt:r.gthy confirmati<ln hearings, will not
remain long in the second Nixon term
starting Jan . 20.
The hearings \Ycrc spiced by charges
invol ving K!eindienst's alleged role in·lhe
se!tling of an antitrust sult against
Intemalional Telephone and Telegraph
Corp. Democrat s charged the settlement
was in exchange for political ctin·
tributions.
\V~ite Jiouse Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler, asked if Kleindienst would be
replaced soon, replied: "The attorney
general will be staying as attorney
general in lne second term."
Ziegler said replacements f<lr the other
five Justice officials would be named
soon. 11e said Erick.son and Norman
1v<luld be offered appointments as judges
":bile the <llhe.r three would return to
private life.
Nixon announced that Kewel Lafontant,
SO. a Chicago attorney. will become depu ·
ty solicit<lr general when Bork is pro·
moted to the top jdb. She will become
one of the highest ranking blacks in the
administration.
Fow· Disl1wasl1ers
fake11 F1·om Ne'v
Home in Nig 11el
Burglars who may have been in·
terrupted at their task ca rried off four
dishwashers Thur~ay ni~ht from a near-
ly completed Laguna Niguel home pack·
ed with brand new appliances.
Orange County ShcrUf's officers said
intruders forced open the garRgc door at
33541 Mer\10$plke Drive, and ioaded the
f<lur dishwashers onto a waiting vehicle.
Deputies '°1ld officials of Avco Com-
munity Developers. the firm responsible
for development of the surrounding tract,
valued the stolen appUnnces at $457. _
Officers said the lo."s to the company
1·ould ha\'C bt..-en ten tlrnes thut amount.
'Fhey a~sumc that the burglars wtte
disturbed 11t .some point o( thtlr opera·
tion.
The company's reque st (or perm ission
to provide two--level parking structure in
an R·3 zone. permission to increase max·
imum height of SO feet by two feet,
permission to increase allowable sign
area and an encroachment permit to use
an area under a ci ty alley.
Other items <ln the planning agenda in·
elude:
-A relocation premit for the Girls'
Club <lf Laguiia to move a house from
Catalina at Thalia Streets to Bluebird
Park.
-A request for recommendations from
the State Division <lf Highways on the
abandonment of a porti<ln <lf Laguna Can·
yon Road in the Sycamo re Hills area.
-A rl'.)l<lrt <ln the Hortense ~1iller
gardens.
Bandits l1ivade
Newport Home,
Obtain Loot
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tM n.lly Plllt It.et
A gunman team including one bandit
grotesquely garbed in a nylon stocking
mask and woman's wig invaded a
Newport Beach home Thursday night,
escaping with several thousaDd dollars'
worth of loot.
The pistol-waving pair missed the man
they were after, according to police, but
knew just what they wanted and got it
Loss at the Arthur Roy home, 511
lrvine Ave., included a large aSS<lrtment
of rare ctiins, a $4,000 fur coat and $80 in
pocket money.
Detective Sgt. Sam Amburgey said *
day that Mrs. Katherine Roy confronted
the robbers at 8:45 p.m., foll<lwing a
knock <ln the door.
l!er bedridden, invalid husband was
unable to intervene as the men burst
through the door, demanding to see his
brother. Pat Roy, then due home from a
Sah Diego construction job.
Investigators said Mrs. Roy told them
her brother-in-law was not at home, but
they pushed on inside, demanding his ex·
tensive rare coin collection.
The borne was ransacked while Mra.
Roy stood helplessly by.
Total Joss in the lightning·like robbery
was still being tallied today, but police
said it will be considerable.. ·
No vehicle was seen or beard during
the holdup, while Mrs. Roy couJd
describe one bandit only as wearing !he
bizarre female outfit.
The other -both were 28 to 30 years
old -was stocky, with dark, wavy, styl·
eel hair and moustache. •
Detectfvts" said the two victims iresent
and the brother·in·law who arrived home
..i·hile they were being questioned could .
offer no clues to the identity of the men.
They obviously knew of Pat Ray and
his c o i n ctillection, said Detective
Amburgey. adding that no similar
ho ldups have occurred in the area
recently.
Several years ago two men poalng as
delivery men Invaded the Lido Isle home
of millionaire sportsman Briggs Cun·
ningham and escaped with nearly a hal!·
1nillion 001\ars worth of Jewelry.
Some was !'cattered as thno fled, but
other items turned up laler, fenced
through underworld sources, and this led
to eventual capture and conviction .
State Solon's Aunt
F uneral Set Monday
Funeral tcrviceJ are scheduled ~ton·
day for Mrs . Capitola Bsdbam, an aunt
of State As.~blyman Robert E.
B•dham (R-N•wport Beach). who died
Wedntsday.
Rites \\•ill be al 10 a.m. in Pacific Vlev,r
Mortuary for !\trs. Badham, M, who llvtd
at 556 Olorietla St., Newport Beaeh with
her husband, E. Dick Dedham.
She leaves in additiot'I, a daugbter, a
brother, four stepdaughten and 15
grandchildren.
'
29 Applications Eyed
Interviews Set for 2 Saddleback Post.&
...
Twenty.nine applicants for two <lpen
poiIUOils Oil a saddlebact Commani.\Y
College Board of T· ustees will be in·
tervlewcd ln executive session continuing
today througb "Nodnesday when lhe
selections will be J.MOUnCed.
"TentatiVely, the board \\'ill announce
the two appaiDtees on Dec. 13, following
I.he ftnal Interview of the six finalist can·
dldates," said Fred H. Bremer, ·
district snpcrlnlendent and college presi·
dent.
The two <lpenings occurred <ln the
board when district voters decided to ex-
pand the body from five to seven to in·
elude the representation from Mission
Viejo, Laguna Niguel, San J u a n
Capistrano and Laguna Hills.
Applicants include seven for Area Five
which takes in Laguna Hills: and 22 for
Arta Seven which included Mission Viejo,
San Juan Capistrano and portions of El
Toro afl9 Laguna Niguel. •
A filp of the coin determined tha t !he
appointed terms for Area Five will ex-
pire in 1973 and Area Seven will end in
1975.
lnllially, <lpenings created by voter ·ac·
Uon are required to .be....Illled bY-a~
point ments made by the present Board of
'frustees.
From Pagel
STORM ...
the 24-hour period ending at 8 o'clock this
1norning.
In San Clemente. r ain v,.atcher s
reported .2 o( an inch ~uring the 24 hours
ending at 8 o'clock this morning, \\'ith a
total or 7.1 inches for the season so far .
Rainfall amounts from the latest stonn
reported in the 24-hour period ending at 8
a.m. showed .43 inch in Santa Ana; .46
inch in Villa Park ; .S9 in Irvine and .40
inch at Saddleback Peak.
Laguna Men's Club
Plans Holiday Party
The Christmas party of the Laguna
Beach Men'i Club will be held beginning
al 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Airporter Inn
Hotel in Irvine, across from the airport.
Reservations are required and may be
made _b~ calling Tod Sloan 494--2702.
Novelty aM musical acts provide en-
tertainment. •
Applicants ror the ortices arc as
follows :
AltEA FIVE -Robert D. Bo11·crs of
25412 C.Ousteau Dr., an official with an
air conditionlng firm; Robert D. Durrans
of 24981 DeSalle, a bankt'!r: Stanley
Johnson or 25011 DcSalle, an account ex·
eculive; James W. Marshall of 140-A t\.1a·
jorca, a retired college president; Paul
Raber of 2.;952 Wells r~argo, an Insurance.
claims specialist; Jdmes F. Wand of
25191 DeSalle, an insurance claims
representative; and 11urry F. Wandling
ol 562-D Avenidu ScviUa, a retired school
superintendent. All candidates are from
LagW1a Hills.
AREA SEVEN -Al R. Arps of 32802
Valle Road, No. 95, San Juan Capi~trano,
a retired educator; E. W. Barbee of 27112.
Jeroolmo Road. Mission Viejo, a
minister, Michael W. Berns <lf 26911 Can·
yon Crest Road, San Juan Capistraoo.
an associate professor ; Donna C. Berry
of 26661 Alllcante. Missi<ln Viejo, a
homemaker; Clifford Boehmer of 2.S266
Pacifica Avenue, Mission Viejo,,
em p Io ye d by McDonneU Douglas;
Chester G. Brjner ()f 26911 Turquesa,
l\1ission Viejo, a stockbroker; Charles K.
Dargan oL 29362 Spotted Bull. Way ... _5_!ul
J uan Capistrano. an administration ·
n11:1nager : James. D. Dodge of 26982 Car·
ranza Drive, f\.1 1ssion \1iejo. an architect:
Mental Test Set
Robert D. Edwards of 25011 Sebastian
L<.nc. Mission Viejo, a lead adnlinlstrat.or
or guidance sy&tema : Willlam T.
Everhart of 26511 Paseo San Gabriel, San
Juan Capistrano, an educitlQr: 11nd
Richard s. f<"'1ore of 23851 Alnalla Pia.cc,
-Mi6!iion Viejo, nn attorney.
Also Dennis L. Halloran of 22978 Via
eereza. Mission Viejo, a district man.ager
for ,an encyclopedia company; Preston
Howell of 26495 Naccome Orlva, Mis.!lon
Viejo, a ntlnlster: WITIIM\ S. Hulsy or
24622 Salurn:l Drive, Mission Viejo. an
atlomev; l\1urk c. Johnson or 2650'l
l\1ontecilo Lane, Mission Viejo, a sales
manager of hospital produeb; John W. ~1orrow of 31576 Flying Cloud Drive.
South Laguna. an educator; Leo B.
Newton of 32511 Azores Rclad, Lnguna
Nigue!, deputy district attorney for Los
Angeles county ; William P. Paulson of
31 twtonarcb Bay, South Laguna, a prin·
cipal in marketing organization; Dock H.
Pegues, 2-4652 Argu.s Drive, Mlsllon Vie·
jo, retired Lieytcnan( Colonel, USMC; H.
E. Pletsch of 25972 Montanoao Drive.
Mission Vitjo. a rnanagcr of' teclmical
services of an automation company;
Allan G. Rawland ()f 22864 Via Plmienl<l. ~1ission Vie;<>, a project coord inator of
county community services proji:ct i and
Robert Schiff ()f 26851 Via Alcala, Mission
Viejo. a chief ()f a serology section
laboratory.
Chicl{en Rancher to Face
New Trial n1 IGdnap-rape
Chicken rancher SteYc BronS<ln has
been ordered to face a new Orange Coun·
ty Superior Court trial on rape. kidnaping
.ind assault char1:.cs that left a jury
desdlocked1 earlier this '>''eek.
Judge \Valtcr Charamza or d c r e d
Bronson . 24, ()f Fontana to be retried
Jan. 29 on charges filed after he alleged·
ly abdu cted and raped a 19-year-Old
L.'lguna Beach girl .
The prosecution wi1ness tcstifiLJ that
P:ronson jabbed an lee pick against hlr
1en1plc and repc:itcdly raped her during
a nightmare ride to the Chino area.
But the trial dale \\•ill be abando.lCd if
Bronson is found in the meantime to be a
mentally disorde,·ed sex offend. ·.
Judge Chararnza sent him to
a 2 F
Atascadero Stale Hospital Thursday for
that det ermination. Bronson will be
returned to his courtroom Jan. 3 for the
jurist's ruling.
The judge said the jury·s verdict lhat
Bronson \vas guilty of sodomy and oral
copulation compelled him to seek the
diagn~is that eould rule ou t further trial
action against the Fontana man.
Bronson was arrested Sept. 15 by
L.1gtina Beach police \\'ho accused him of
com mitting the series of sexual offenses
24 hours oef<lre against a blonde victim.
Tl".e girl told oUlcers that Bronson '>''BS
wearing several Items of feminine ap-
parel when he picked her up on Pacific
Coast Highway.
I Henredon's Four Ce'nturies
DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-KARASTAN
•
THE COMPANY
THAT CARES
ON DISPLAY
NOW.
NEWPORT IEACH e
1727 WESTCUFP OR..
642.JCllO
LAGUNA IEACH e
145 NOltTH COAST HWY. 4, ... ,,.
TORRi'iNCE e
21 •4t HAWT HOlNI l l"D.
111.121•
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Saddlebaek Today's Final
EDITION N.Y. Stooks
VOL. 65, NO. 343, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
High Cost·s Spell Death for Life Magazine
NEW YORK (AP) -Life Magae:inc
\\'ill discontinue publication with the issue
of Dec. 29, Time, Ihc. {innounced today.
The publisher said the 36-year-old
magazine, famous for Us pioneering use
.o! news photagraphs, will fold because of
··continuing losses."
The xear-end double issue will mark
the close of the weekly magazine founded
by Henry Luce.
Lile was published at "very substantial
deftcils in 1969 and 19'70 anCI smaller
deficits in 1971 and 1972 " the publ isher said. '
''As our projections for 1973 took
s~pe. however, they showed a resump-
tion or heavy losses, and the indications
Snow Falls
In Tusti11;
llail· N oied
Tustin lligh School students frolic ked
in falling snow for about 40 minutes this
r;ioming and an El Toro J\1arine Corps
pilot reported hail in the area as the
latest winter storm passed over Orange
County dropping a half an inch of rain in
some areas.
About 8 a.m. students in !\Irs. \Villiam
Sc.hreiber's class at Tustin liigh played
amidst the falling flakes.
The National Weather Ser\'1ce describ-
ed the snowfall as beLng the result of
freak air currents, since snov. levels in
Southern Cali fornia are generally ex·
peeled only above J,000 feet this
weekend.
About the same time snow was said to
be faUing in Tuslin, a je1 pllot landing at
El Toro reported falling ice pellets.
Laguna Beach's unollicial rain watch-
er. Bill Shiclds. reported .09 of an inch
in his gauge over the 24 hours ending at 8
a.m., bringing'the .tellOD rainfaU total Jn
the Art Colony to 6.13 inrbes. Last year
at this tin.e, Shields sald , Laguna had on-
ly .82 of an inch of rain. 'l'be..city got only
6.18 inches all last year.
The weather service forecast calls for
mostly cloudy skies ana occasional
shoM!rS tonight.
A clear and cool Saturday is expected
aloog the Orange Coast with gusty winds
to 20 knots from the northwest.
The Orange County Harbor Depnrl·
ment station at Newport Beach logged
only .21 inch of rain during the 24-hour
period ending at 7 a.m. The season to
date total recorded by the rain gauge at
1901 Bayside Dri ve is 4J,t inches. •
Small craft wii.rnings are up and arc
IS.. SNOW. Page ZJ
for 1974 were even more unfavorable,"
Time, lnc. added.
At about 10:45 a.m., grim-faced staff
1nembers of the magazine began to
gather for a meeting on the eig_hth floor
of the Time-Life building at Si:J:th Avenue
:.ind 50th Street.
About 250 to 300 staff workers sat in
chairs or stood against the walls, waiting
for the meeting , which was closed to
outsiders.
The publisher said Time, Fortune,·
SpOrts Illustrated and Money, its olber
major magazines, "have done very well
this year."
Life lasted more than a year longer
than its chief competitor, Look, which
Headless Napper
ceased publication on Oct. 19, 1971. Look
also blamed rising OOSIS, especially
postal rates.
In announcing the decision to fold Life,
Hedley Donovan, editor-in-chief of Time,
Inc., and Andrew lieiskcll, chaim.'.lan of
the board,' declared :
"Ll(e has been one of the great
journalistic pioneers. Its launching in
1936 opened a whole new era of pro-
fessional journalism, with con~uences
stil: seen all over the world.
"Llfe achieved almost at once, and
kept through 36 years, an important
voi<!e-in American affairs; we beHeve the
magazine has spoken responsibly, and
with vision and !il)mpasston. Life will go
OAILY PILOT !lint I"'*'
A snooze in fhe Irvine sun is a favorite class break pastime at UC
Irvine. The chilly, wintry weather of recent (lays prompted one stu·
dent to enjoy his nap in the warmth of a parka pulled over his head.
Seven Skyjackers Sl~in
Pirates Seizecl by Passengers, Shot by Guards
ADDJS ABABA (UPI J -five men and
two women armed with pistols and hand
grenades tried to hijack an Ethiopian
Airlines Boeing 720 today. Passenge rs
seized and disarmed them and security
guards shot all seven to death.
It was the largest death toll in a hi·
1ack ing case.
A British couple in their 70s held one of
the hijackers under their feet.
Other occupants of the plane seized
another armed air pirate and , a
County Rejects
Settlement Over
Church's Oahu
An El Toro area church has claimed
$50,000 damages in connection with con·
!'lt ruction of an overpa ss on £J Toro Roalt
buL offered to settle for $4,000.
The Board of Supervisors. however, at
the request of county Counsel Adrian
Kuyper Tuesday turned down the set·
tlement offer.
Kuyper gave 1wo re3sons for his Dd-
vice. To drop a rawsult because an ap-
prals:il will cost $4 ,000 would be setting a
Md precedent and the county estimate of
the total de.mage to the Abiding Savior
Lutheran Church propertY Is but $2,800.
The county counsel asked permlalon to
hire apprai~r Thomas Pike for a ree not
10 exc<ed $4.000.
Attorney Will iam O 11: n n e m eyer,
representing Lhe church. offered to
ac«1pt the $4,000 "-' total payment for the
domages. Ile araued that the overpass
had "esulted In inverse condemnation (a
lowertn& ot value) or the church pro-
perty.
passenger said, "kicked him and kicked
him and "'ouldn't let him use his gun un-
til he was eventually killed with a whole
magazine of buJlets."
Passengers suggested that the women
may h:i.ve smuggled the guns aboard in
thei r high·heeled, platform sole shoes.
They said the air pirates hurled at
least t.,.,·o hand gernades and ooe eJC-
ploded , wounding a number of the
passengers. including a U.S. oil company
executive and an American college pro-
fessor.
The profeSS(lr, Dr. Roderick Hilsinger
or Temple University, Philadelphia, was
credited with saving some lives by pick-
ing up the hand grenade and hurling it
away berore it exploded in lhe midst of
the passe ngers. He was hit by shrapnel
and was reported in grave C1Jndition at
an Addis Ababa hospital.
The other wounded American was S. V.
McCollumn af Houston, Tex., executive
vice president o[ tbe .Tenneco Oil Co .•
Ethiopia Radio reported.
The plane carrying 94 passengers and
crew was CQmmandeered about 15 min-
utes out of Addis Ababa en route to Paris
with stopovers in Cairo, and Rome, wlt..-
nesses said. <
They described the hijackers as In
Bu1·glar Gets $644
In . Precision Tools
their 20s and appearing to be Ethiopians.
Although damaged, the plane was able to
land at Addis Ababa where the
passengers boarded another night.
"There were many. many bullets."
John Lodge of Sou,thampton, Enghl d
said. "And t\\'O hand grenades were
thrown and one exploded."
He reported that the Briti&h couple.
named Macintosh, held dOW'n one .of the
hijackers with their feet until security
men shot him.
Student , Housing
Stud y Postponed
To Tuesday Night
A s~cial study session on pupil hous·
ing by the SaddJeback Valley Unified
School Di.strict originally scheduled for
tonight bas been continued to Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. at Los Alisos Intennediate
School in £1 Toro.
Sllddleback trustHS WMl to get started
on a new high school by choosing plans
for one before the Feb. 6 bond election.
and . beginning construction immediately
afterwards if tbe election passes.
'l'he meeting Tuciday i.s open to the
Precision tools valued hy their owner public. It will bo In the music room at
at $644 were stolen Thursday night by 25171 Moor Avenue.
burglars who broke into t.he garsge of A Trustees and an advisory commiltee of
Mission Viejo home. Orange County staff end student4, from .f\Usslon Viejo
Sheriff's office rs reported. . ·;.•r"-il~llgh School and residen ts will be looking
Engineer Roy Walter Williama:, 2~ alreacty drawn plans of architects for
Qulnto.na Lane, !aid o!fk:trs the intNder othu schoolt.
at his home took the tools and the tool Tonlght's meeting was c a n c e I e d
box he kept them ln from the workbench because of Inconvenience for some
ol his B''"ll'" pantclpanta.
;.
on ln many ways and places, not leas t in
its influence on the other magazines and
books of Time, Inc."
-The Time, Inc., executives noted that
Llfe "encountered severe competition
rrom television since the late-1950's" for
the advertising dollar.
The magazine earned "acceptable prof·
its" during most of the 1960s, they
reported, "but the cost pressures and the
com'petitive pressures kept building up.
and we have been running out or
economies." _
In the past two years, Life reduced its
circulation from 8.5 milllon c.opies to 5.5-
million and increased the price to 50
cent s for a newsstand copy in an attempt
to build a high-quality audience.
'The impact of these moves .,.,•as un-
dercut by a very heavy Increase in
second-class postal rates which affected
Life. particularly because oi its large
page size," t h e executive's statemenl
said.
They said the magazine was faced with
an increase of 170.2 percent in such rates
over five years.
-· "It should be remem6en.'CI that the
Administration exempted the postal
Service, but not the press, from price
controls which made Life's problem even
more difficult," they added.
Ralph Graves. mana ging editor of Life .
\\'as assigned the job of helping employes
find other jobs. bo th within Time. Inc .
and elsewhere.
There are 320 persons on the staff of
Life. and another 350 Tirnc, lnc.
employes are involved in helping to
publish it. All employes will be kept on
the payroll through the end of the year
•·afler which a notice period goes into ef·
feet ," the publisher said .
· Time & Life buildin gs in New Yorll .
Chica.go. London. Paris. Tokyo and other
cities are to keep their names. as will
such corporate entities as Time-Lire
Books.
Truman Weakens
Failing Heart Called Top Concern
-'
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Doctors
at the bedside of Harry S Truman said
today they have "major concern" about
the failing heart of the criti~lly ill 88·
year-old fonner President. He was given
extra medicatioo to keep him relaxed ..
"President Truman remains critical.
The area of major concern ts still
general cardiac weakness, aggravated by
restlessness or body movement, which is
relieved by medication," said a mid-day
medical statement at Res~ Hospital.
Truman, weakened by .... age and a lung
infection, was fed intravenously. He was
29 Seeking Two
Or~. P,ositiQi;tS.
. ,.,11 ' -'
OD. ~llege lJDit
Twenty-nine applicants for two ope!\
PoSilltlol ,... a SOddleback Commll(lity
~ Boa..i of T. ustees wlil lie in·
tervleftd in executive sessian cootJnuing
today lhrough -.Vednesday when the
selections will be ;,mnounced.
"Tentatively, the board will announce
the two appointees ~n Oree; 13, following
the final interview of the sil finalist can·
didates," said Fred H. Bremer,
district superintellllent and college presi·
dent.
1be two openings occurred on the
board when district voters decided to ex·
paQ(t the body from five to seven to in·
elude the represdltalion from Mission
Viejo, Laguna Niguel, San J u a n
c.apistrano and Laguna Hills.
Applicants include seven for Area Five
which takes in Laguna Hills ; and 22 for
Area Seven which included Mlssion Viejo,
San Juan Capistrano and portions of El
Toro and Laguna ,!flguel.
A nip of-ilie coin determined that the
appointed terms for Area Five will ex-
pire in 1973 and Area Seven will end in
1975. I
Initially, openings created by voter ac-
lion are required to be filled by ap-
(See SADDLEBACK, Page 2)
Bicycle Trails
In Viejo Urged
By Traf fie Unit
A bicycle way should be established on
Chrisanta Drive in Mission Viejo for the
use of high school students, the Orange
Cotmty Tralllc Committee has recom-
mended .
The Board 0£ Supervisors has taken BC•
tion to provide the marked bike way on
Chrlsanta between La Paz Road and Via
Viento, a distance of about one mile.
The traffic group, after a review of
traffic volumes, pedestrian activities and
bicycle travel patterns In the vicinity of
Mission Viejo High School recommended
the local bicycle way, Supervl9or Ronald
W. Caspers reported.
The committee stated that parking
restrictions in front of homes ii;t the area
would be necessary but Indicated that
parking shoukl not be re!lrlcted until
there: Is a demon9trated problem.
CHARLIE 9P.OllN. '/CO"IE
GOT ONL~ 16 SHOPPING o,t.,~5 LEFT, \'cl) KNOW !
-
given oxygen to help him breathe.
"There is cardiac stability, but it is ac·
companied by extreme weakness,'' said
the statement, read by hosp it a 1
spokesman John Dreves. ''His heart con·
dition is not as good this rooming as we
had hoped it would be ."
Attempts to feed the ailing, aging
former president failed , so doctors had to
feed him entirely by arm injection and
through a tube in his nose .
"He's still listed as critical and he's
slill listed as stable," Dreves said.
"Improvements which have occurred
during the night include the pulmonary
situatioo and kidney function."'
Truman first was hospitalized with
lung infection. That ailment had pro-
gre~ but doctors said that if he was to
survive his heart would have to stand the
strain of batt'ling age and infection.
Truman 's heart was monitored con·
stantly .
"The former president has tolerated •
tht: monitoring remarkably well and is
always cooperative." sfli<l Truman's
personal physican, Dr. \Vallace Graham.
!See TRU~IAN, Page !I
Perilous .Tin1e . ~ .,
LBJ Nuclear War Fears Reported
•
WASHINGn>N (UPI) -·PreJidellt Lyndon B. Johnson was C1Jncemed in
1963 that the assassination of JoJ!n F. Kennedy might lead to nuclear war,
according to former Cble:f JU!tlce Earl Warren.
Warren, in an ,inter\liew with the Public Broadcasting Service to be shown
on television Monday, said Johnson cited the possibility of war as one reason
the chief justice should bead a commission he named to investigate the assas·
sination.
WARREN RECALLED THAT the incident occurred a few days arlir Ken-
nedy's death in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963.
Jn the interview, Warren said he was invited to the \Vhite House by Johnson
who "told me he felt conditions in the world were so bad at the moment ..
he tbought it might even get into a war -even a nuclear war .. ,
THE PRESIDENT, ACCORDING to Warren, cited rumors. later proved to
be unfoundecJ, that Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev and Cuba's fide!
Castro might have been involved in the Kennedy shooting.
Planners Decline to Add
More Industrial Acreage
,
Irvine city planning cotDJTUSSK>ners
Thursday night refrained from adding
more industrial acreage to the Irvine
Industrial Complex (llC) while t~ con·
tinued their revision of the planned" com-
munity zoning text governing the 2,800
acre industrial-commercial park.
Ray Kimmey, IIC executive, asked
commissioners to consider a d d I n g
acreage northeast of the complex ad-
jacent to Marine Corps Helicopter Sta·
Uon, Santa Ana. Kimmey proposed the
area owned by the Irvine C.ompany be
set far medium industry use as long as
the commission is completing the 10th
revision of the original zoning ordinance.
The land Is now mned for agriculture.
,Assistant City Attorney-John P.furphy
told commissioners they could not act on
the rezoning of the land since it had no!
been advertised in the hearing notices for
the zone law rev\slon .
Murphy suggested the addition to the
indll.1trlal acreage be sought in yet
another revision to the ITC zoning.
C.ommissioners labored for another two
hours over the 34-page draft by planning
consultant Ed Haworth. The document
spells out what uses are allowed in the
ll C, and where , and regulates signing.
landscaping, fencing and parking lot size.
The most significsnt change in the 7.0rlt
law to date, h16 been the merger of com·
merclal areas and the requirement that
any development In such areas be sub-
ject to site plan review. Site plan revlew
gives the city the power to control loca·
lion or buildings and parking lots , but
removes the blanket aU.lhotity to deny a
development a condJUonal use pennlt
1 would yield, llaworth said.
The new procns reUeves McDonnell
Douglai Corporation and Do u g 111 s
Development Company from the burden
of setklns a condJUonal use permit for
any office. resliurant or hotel which
might be built on their SO.acre parcel
across MacArthur Boulevard l r o m
Orange County Airport.
The permit requirement on the
Douglas parcel was set by county
government prior to incorporat ion of the
new city last year. At the time. county
officials approved a rezoning from in·
du strial to commercial use.
The Douglas firm is preparing 11
master plan of development for the
(See PLANNERS, Page ll
Orange Coast
Weather
Those dark clouds will clear to
sunny sktes on Saturday, accord·
ing to the weatherlady -but
there's a slight (30 percent) chance
of a few showers on Sunday. High s
in the upper 50s to lower 60s.
Lows tonight in the 40s.
INS{DE TODAY
~1us1cians from Stal Beaclt to
San. Clemen~ have prepared
tlitlr Christmas offcri11g.'I with
llande1'1 "Mestioh" being th~
most popular holidoy JHece. See
tnday's Weekeflder for tiwie,,
and places.
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COMMUNITY COLLEG E
DISTRIC~T:_,..-.,r.--
0
SADOll a.A.CJ:
COlLIGl
SAN JUAN
CAl'ISTltAHO
•1v~~1~!.'-
1AN DllGO COl,UH'f
OAILY f'tLOt Ma11 D1 Ham Crvm
29 APPLY TO SERVE SADDLEBACK AREAS S AND 7
Decision on Two New Trustees Is to Be Released Dec. 13
Ni~on Co1npletes
Cabinet, l{eeps
[(lcindie nst
CA~IP DAVID. ~td. rUPI )-Presidl'nt
Nixon form::illy completl'd his Sl'cond·
term Cabinet today by announcing th;.it
Richard G. Kleindien st will remain ::is at·
tomey general.
But this 1\'a.~ coupled with an·
nouncement that fiv e top J ustice Dep::irt·
men official: 1\·iJI be replaced as part of
Nixon's reshuffling or the Admini stration.
These are: Deputy Attomey Genera!
Ralph E. Erickson; Da\'id Luke Norman.
assistant attorney general in charge of
the civil rights division ; Jerris Leonard,
administrator or the La"· Enforcement
Assistance Adn1inis1 ration : Roger C.
Cramton, assis tant allorncy general in
charge of the Office of Legal Counsel and
Leo r..1. Pcllcrzi. assistant auorncy
general for administration.
At the same time, the White. House
said Yale law professor Robert H. Bork,
.\~, one of the drafters of the
A~ministration's an\ibusing legislation.
will be a new face in the Justice Depart·
ment.
~rk \\'ill become solicjtor general next
spring at the end of the current term of
th'! U._S. Supreme Court. replacing Erwin
N. Gns"·old who plans to retire.
There have been reports that Klein·
dlenst. confirmed by the Senate as head
of the Justice Department ooly after
~r.gt~y con!i~mation bearings, will not
remain long 1n the second Nixon term
starting Jan. 20.
The hearings were spiced by charges
i.nvo~ving Klelndienst's alleged role in t~
settling or an anlilrust suit against
International Telephone and Telegraph
Corp. Democrats charged the settlement
was in exchange for political con·
tributions .
~itc liouse Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler, asked if Kleindienst "·ould be
replaced soon. replied : "The attorney
general . will be staying as attorney
general in the second term."
Ziegler said replacements for the other
five Justice officials would be. named
soon. 1-fe said Erickson and Norman
would be offered appointn1ent.s as judges
while the other three would return to
private life.
Nixon announced that Kewcl Lafontant ,
50, a Chicago attorney, y.·ill become depu ·
ty solicitor genera l when Bork is pro·
mated to the top job. She will become
one of the highest rank ing blacks in the
administration .
OIAN&I COAST 1s
DAILY PILOT
TINI Cit" ..... C-1 DAILY P1lOT, wfth _,k.11
fl. UINll_. !tie 111-.Prwss, Ii ll!.lblisiled by
...,. Cit".,.. °"" PllbllsllinQ Com~nl'. SeP!I·
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f lNI PflnciP"I lllUOl!ll!lfll pi.nt 15 It 3JO W~I
Ill' )lr9lf, CMl1 ~. Ctllloml ... •it».
JteD11t N. W11d
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J eck R. C11tl11
Via f"raW..t anll ~11 Mll\IO'ef
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Thom11 A. M111phin•
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.......... """"" ""' -......i~ /W'lln ""'1 .. ~ wUl!tUI ..-..1 J*"· ......... ~-· --~·HMf•teo.•~ <all:..,_ llin IW c1rrltr tt.U ~I ... 1M I IJ,IS "*"'f'llVI m!HIMY
...,.......,,. •·• '"9Mtrlr.
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'
l'ro111 Page l
SADDLEBACK • •
pointmen ts made by the present Board or
Trustees.
Applicants for the offices are as
follows :
AREA. FIVE -Robert D. Bowers of
25412 Co usteau Dr., an official \\'ith an
air conditionin~ firm : Robert D. Durrans
of 24981 DeSalle, a banker: Stanley
Jol111son of 250!1 DcSalle, an account ex·
cctitive; James W. Marshall of 140.A ~1a·
jorca, a retired college president: Paul
Haber of 24952 Wells Fargo, an insurance
clainls specialist; Jdmes F. Wand of
25191 DeSalle, an insurance claims
representative; and Harry F'. Wandling
of 562·0 Avenida Sevilla, a retired school
superintendent. All candidates are from
Laguna Hills.
AREA SEVEN -Al R. Arps of 32802
\talJe Road. No. 95. San Juan Capist rano.
a retired educator ; E. \V. Barbee of 27112
Jeronimo Road. 1'-tission Viejo, a
minister. Michael W. Berns of 26911 Can·
yon Crest Road. San Juan Capist rano.
an associate yrofessor: Donna C. Berry
of 26661 Allicante, 1'-1ission Viejo. a
homemaker: Clifford Boehmer or 25266
Pacifica Avenue, Mission Viejo .
e m p Io ye d by McDonnell Douglas;
Cheste r G. Briner of 26311 Turquesa,
Mission Viejo. a stockbroker; Charles K.
Dargan of 29362 Spotted Bull Way, San
Juan Cap istrano, an administration
manager; James. D. Dodge of 26982 Car·
ranza Drive. Mission Viejo. an architect:
Robert D. Edwards of 25011 Sebastian
Lt.ne, Mission Viejo. a lead administrator
of guidance systems; William T.
Everhart of 26511 Paseo San Gabriel, San
Juan Capi&tr.P;no, an educaoor: and
Richard S. Fiore of 23651 Amalia Place,
Mission Viejo, an attorney.
Also Dennis L. Halloran of 22976 Via
Cerez.a, l\lission Viejo, a district manager
for an encyclopedia company: Presoon
Hov;ell of 26495 Naccome Drive. Mission
Viejo. a minister ; William S. liulsy of
24622 Saturna Drive, 1'-1ission Viejo , an
attorney: Mark C. Johnson of 2650'l
l\.1ontecito Lane, f\.1ission Viejo, a sales
manager of hospital products; John \V.
f\.lorrow of 31576 Flying Cloud Drive ,
South Laguna. an educator ; Le<> B.
NeY.1on or 32511 Azores Road . Laguna
Niguel , deputy district attorney for Los
Angeles county ; William P. Paulson of
31 r..1onarch Bay, South Laguna. a prin·
ripal in marketing organization; Dock ll.
Pegues, 24652 Argu!:i Drive. Mission Vie·
jo, retired Lieutenant Colone l, USMC; H.
E. Pietsch of 25972 Montanoso Drive,
tllission Viejo, a rru:.nager or technical
services of an automation company;
Allan G. Rawland of 22864 Via Pimiento,
tl·lission Viejo, a project coordinator of
county communit~ services project; and
IWbert Sclliff or 26851 Via Alcala , Mission
Viejo , a chief of a serology section
laboratory.
From Pagel
SNOW ...
expected to remain up through Saturday,
ns a re!Jlllt ~f lhe gusty afternoon y.·inds.
A private rain watcher. J . Sherman
Denning. of llunfinl!!lon Beach reported a
total of .36 inch of ra in in that .city for
the 24-hour period ending at 8 o'clock this
morning.
In San Clemente, r ain wat c hers
reported .2 of an inch ~urlng the 24 hours
ending at 8 o'clock this morning, with a
ootal of 7.1 inches for the season so far.
Power Failure
Darkens Viejo
A power failure that struck ~fission
Viejo \Yednesd.ay night was the result of
a cable faUure. caused by wet weather. a
spokesman for the San Diego Gas and
Electric Company said today.
The powtt outage hit at 7:45 p.m., ac-
cording: to Dennis Pagnln, and 75 percent
of the homes were restored to power by
8:30 p.m.
Complete rtp6irs were made by 1'l-r JS
p.m .. he added.
Pagnln Mid the underground cable ap-
parently failed because of D fault ln the
insulalion which allowed ground wntor to
seep ln.
Faeult1 Briefed
Merger at. UCI -
.
Not Likely Soon
Any decision to merge the UC Irvine
school or engiacering with another
department, or accomplish other ob-
jective s of an administrative stream-
lining , is hardly imminent, faculty
members were told Thursday.
Dr. Hazard Adams, vice chancellor for
academic affairs, detailed the com·
l'roan Page l
TR UMAN ...
He said President Nii:on'i; White House
staf fhas been "cooperative and desire to
help in any mauer."
Doctors said Truman "improved in
some areas but shows no improvemen\ in
others."
•'J1is heart is showing the signs of con·
siderable irritability and stress," Dreves
said.
Truman's vital signs were •·relatively
stable, though the temperature is flue·
tuating. but only slightly."
Doctors said the nation's 33rd chief ex·
ecutive did 110t sleep well Thursday night
and early today. They said his family
"·as not notified or the restless night.
Thursday, Truman rallied from the
lung and heart ailm:?nts that sent him to
the hospital four days ago . ~1argaret
Daniel, his Jaughter, said Truman smiled
at her.
"He·s getting kind of contrary," ~'lrs.
Drniel said altP leaving her father's
bedside and dri\•ing her mother, h1rs.
Bess Truman, back to the family home
at Independence, Mo., 15 miles away.
"He's restless. He's feeling better. I
have great faith tha~ he's going to come
out of this all right."
Trum«n was rushed by ambulance to
Research Hospital Tuesday suffering
lung congestion. He had been ill for two
weeks at home before he entered the
bospitaJ.
His condition first was classed "fair"
\Vednesday , then fell to "serious" and
deteriorated to "critical" \Vednesday
night when doctors said be passed
through the "ultracritical peri~' due to
strain on his weakened heart. His rally
began Thursday.
f\.1rs . Daniel flew from Washington to
her father's bedside on an airplane pro-
vided by the \Vhite House.
position or a committee be has set u.p to
review and mt1ke alternate recom·
mend.atloos on a draft reorganization
plan. A final recommendation for action
by Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich is not
u:pected to he ready until spring, Adams
told !ac.lty Thursday.
The preliminary proposal sent recently
to deans of schools, departmen t
chainnen and program directQrs, has
sparked some coocem on campus that
certain study areas may be threatened.
The tentative plan would merge the
schoob of engineering and physical
sciences and the departmeot of computer
sciences. One dean would replace the two
deans and one cbainl'!an now heading
those three distinct study areas.
U this and other changes were to be
approved as submitted, nine deans would
replace the 18 academic administrators
now reporting to Dr .. Adams.
Engineering facul ty earlier this week
voted to withhold endorsement of such
plans, and said consideration should be
given to abolishing engineering study at
UC lrvine"lf the school canoolbe kept as
an autonomous unit.
The proposal to restructure the
academic administration of learning
units at UCI came about at the request
or officials at UC headquarters in
Berkeley. A five-year academic plan is
required.
Adams pointed out that bw:lgetary
limitations inspired the need to consider
reshuffling academic divisions and their
leadership.
Exclia1ige Club
Gets 'on MU;rks'
The Exchange C1ub of ·Saddleback
\'alley will hold its second annual Run-
ners Competition at 1 p.m. Sunday at the
Mission Viejo Hig:1 School. '
Seven racts tor men, women and
youngsters ~·ill be held at distances rang·
ing from one mile to 10,000 meters (6.1
nliles l.
Runners from throughout California
have signed up for the distance derby, Bill
Kohler. Exchange Club president, said.
Contestants may register. at the high
school track on the · -day or the race.
Further information is available from
Cary Westad at 837.a&lO.
a
' TO DIRECT HOSPITAL
T. Eugene Dahlgr•n
Dal1lgren Given
Saddleback
Hospital Post
T. Eugene Dahlgren. executive direclor
of Martin Luther Hospital, Anaheim . has
been named director of saddleback Com·
munity Hospital and the Laguna iiills
Aiedical Center for Outpatient Care.
Dahlgren, who has been at Marlin
Luther for eight years, y,·ill retain his
post thert. His new position is regiooal
·vice president for Orange County for the
Lutheran H.ospital Society of Southern
Calirornia.
The Saddleback hospital is currently
under construction nex t to the medical
center at 23561 Pasro de Valencia . When
the 150-bed facility is rompleted in July it
will form a complete n1edical care facill·
ty with the medical center.
In announcing the appointment, Frank
J . Schaeffer, president of the Saddle back
Community Hospital Board of Directors
said, "Every effort will be made to con·
vert cost savings available through our
affiliation with the Lutheran Hospital
Society into lower charges for services to
patients."
Professor, 47, Di es
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Herbert L.
Packer. 47, professor o{ criminal law at
the Stanford University Law School. died
\\'ednesday.
a 2 ..
-r 2Gunmen
Mak e Haul
' In Newport
By •RTlllJR R. VINSEL
01 tilt 0-H., f'Ji.I Jfllf \
A gunman team tncluding one bandit
grotesquely garbed in a nylon ilockin&
mask and woman 's wig invaded a
Newport Beach home Thursday night .
escaping with several thousand dolh1r1'
\vor!h of loot.
The pistol-waving pair n11sscd the man
they were after, arcording to police, but
knew just what they wanted and got it
Loss at the Arthur Roy home, 511
Irvine Ave .. included a large assortmtnt
of rare coins. a $4.000 fur t.'Oat and $80 in
pocket money. . Detective Sgt. Sam Amburgey said .lo·
day that Mrs. Katherine Roy conf~nted
1he robbers at 8:45 p.m .. followmg a
knock on the door .
Her bedridden. invalid husband wa!I
unable lo i~tervene as the men burst
through the doort demanding to see his
brother, Pat Roy, then due home from a
San Die~o construction job.
Investigators said Mrs. Roy told them
her brother-in·1nw was not at home, but
they pushed on inside, demanding hi s ex·
tem;ivc rare coin collection.
1'he hotne was ransacked \\'hile Mrs.
RO}' stood helplessly by. .
Total loss in the llghtning·like robber y
was still being talll ed today, but police
· said it will be considerable.
No vehicle \Vas seen or heard during
the holdup, while Mrs. Roy 1 could
describe one bandit only as wearing the
bizarre female outfit.
Former Acn·ess
Suc cumbs at 101
Funeral services will be held f\.1onday
for Margaret Lindsa y F'iedler lr\•ing.
formCr Broadway actress v.•ho died
Wednesday in Garden Grove at the age
of 101.
Known as "l'.1a Irvin~.·· the cen·
tenarian funct ioned as a oackstage ad·
visor as well as a stage advisor as ·well
visor as \\'el las a stage personality dur·
ing the days of lhe Ziegfield follies.
Services will be hel d at 2 p.m. at th!'!
Daly and Bartel ~1or1uary, 2425 W. Lin·
coin Ave .. Anaheim. Services \\'ill be con-
ducted by Bishop James J . Jones. Jr. of
, 1he Church of Jesus Christo f lhe Latter~
day Saints. Telegrams and telephone calls from
the ordinary people Truman loves, all ex·
pressing hope for his recovery, poured
in to the Truman Llbarry at Indepen-
dence, which is filled with memorabilia
<lf his years in the White Hoose following
the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt in
1945.
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-MiM.),
and the Shah of Iran , both caned and
spoke with Mrs. Daniel.
r Henredon,s Four Centuries
Apollo J7's astronauts, after listening
to a news summary from the Housoon
Space Center, expressed "best wishes" to
Truman from outer space. ·
From Pagel
PLANNERS. • •
pa~l the parent aerospace u n l t
purchased from the Irvine Company
several years ago as a possible plant
location.
Only two buildings presenUy occupy
the site, fronting on Campus Drive. The
40,000 square foot. ~galow.type struc·
tures formerl y housed D o u g I a s '
Astropower Labs division. The firm is
leasing the buildings to other firms, after
having been granted a use permit.
Debate over the . issuance of that permit
and the necessity for the city reviewing
every potential use, led to the 10th
revision of the JIC development game
rules.
At the time, neighboring commercial
parcels were-not subject to the use
permit requirement.
Commissioners Thursday voted 4 to 3
to continue the decision on the revised
zone law to their Dec. 21 meeting. C.om·
missioners Richard Kent, 11-t'rs. Ellen
Freund and Franklin Hurd opposed the
delay, suggeltin~ city staff could ac-
com plish the minor revisions resulUng
from Thursday's discussion.
Among those revisions are a clarifica·
tion or the parking standards to be re·
quired. The present guideJine requires
slightly fewer spaces per 1,000 square
reet or floor space than the standard
recommended by Commissioner Kent.
The final draft goes to the City Council
for hearing and final approv~l.
U1ii Higli f!and
Plciy s iii Parade
Irvine residents can watch their
representatives in the Huntington Park
Christmas Parade, the University lligh
Trojan Band, Saturday on the live
telecast at 7 p.m. on Ch:iMel 13 .
The program will be rebroadcast on
Christmas Dar at 4:30 p.m.
The Trojan Band and Drill Te•m
regularly provide h a I f • t l m e en·
tert.ainment at football games. Drum Ma·
joreue Barbara' L'Heunna ncen11y ~·on
second place in the Tustin Tlller Day
Parade and the Drill team took third ln
the Chaffee 11Toum&ment-ol-Bandl/'
The Trojar\1 will also pertonn at
Disneyland In the Maln St. Parade Jan.
27, by invitation.
Vivian Trtem Is bond director. Judy
Mclnfils directs the drill team .
•
OREXEL-HERITAGE>-1-iENREOON-WOOOMARK-ICARASTAN
7al 111111/aui "
INTERIORS
WIDDAYS & SATURDAYS 9:00 to 5:JO
FRIDAY. 'TIL 9:00
'/
THE COMPANY
THAT CARES
ON DISPLAY
NOW.
NEWPORT BEACH e
1.n1 WUfCLIFF Dk..
••2·101t
LAGUNA BEACH e
34S NORTH COAST HWY.
., .. ,511'
TORRANC! e
23649 HAWTHOlNI l lVD.
J71ol27t
I I
I I
Cranston's
Son Gets
Trial Date
LOS ANGELES (API -The
24-year-<Jld son of Sen. Alan
Cranston (D ·Calif.), is
scheduled to stand trial here
Jan. 18 on assault charges fil-
ed in the alleged drugging or a
former Playboy bunhy.
Trial for Robin Cranston
v.•as postponed from Thursday
in Superior Court because a
prosecution attorney was 111, a
court spokesman said.
Cranston is charged with
-.•
WET BAY AREA WEATHER CAUSES MUD SLIDE IN LAFAYETTE
( BRIEFS ) Walls, Roof of; Knocked Askew As Storm C1uses Earth Slide ?
~~~~~~~~:.~1·i~i::~~ Snow. In Bay Area.
in a West Los Angeles home
last March. Franciscans Toss Urban Snowballs
Prof Off er s Plan
To Curb Crowd ing
MONTEREY (AP) -Stan·
ford University p rof es a o r
William Shockley, con-
troversial for contending that
blacks are genetically inferior
to whites, suggests the govern·
mtlnt pay men with low IQs to
get vasectomies.
A $1 ,000 bonus could be of-
men le<:lured separately to
about 400 persons at Monterey
Peninsula College, I hen
answered qut!slions.
Willi a n1 Fa1·r
Gets F ibu Aid
fered for each point a man's LOS ANGELES (APl-20th
intelligence quotient is below Century-Fox announced it will
100, says Shockley, an elec· sponsor a motion picture
tronics engineering professor. premiere to help defra y court
Fndai Dtcernbrr 8 1972 DAIL'( P\~~
10% OFF
WITH THIS COUPON
ON ANY OF OUR
CHRISTMAS TREES
LIV ING CHR ISTMAS TRE ES F ROM $20.00 UP
BEAUTI FUL LI VING GIFT
JAPANESE BONSAI
so~. ort N OW 55.so .•
TAKATA NURSERY costs for jailed r e p o r t e r TllUS, A ft.JAN with an IQ of William Farr. 710 I AKE R STREET (neat to ,Ire St•tlon)
90 Id be 'd 110 000 f on Britto! •t l •k•r -COSTA MESA wou pai • or .Proceeds of the Dec. 21 544-0724
·obtaining a va~tomy, an \Vest Coast opening of "The 1~'.""'--""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~"""""""""~""""""~
operation in which the ducts Eflects of Gamma Rays on l·--
carrying sperm are cut to pre-Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds,"
vent impregnation. Shockley made the proposal directed by Paul Newman and
Nearl y Everyone
Listens to Landers
e Boy.Crushed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Snow fell on San Francisco
and gave the city's children a
rari: chance to toss urban
snowballs here Thursday
night.
Thursday in what was billed starring his v.•ife. Joanne
as a "debate" with Cedric X, Woodward, will be donated to
a black pro res so r of the Wliliam Farr Defense
psychology at Stanford. The Fund, a Fox spokesman said.
snow to stick near sea 1eve!•------·------'---'-------------------------~---------------
CORONA (AP) -A 2-year·
<>Id child died after he was
crushed to death by his
family's car in the driveway
of his home, authorities said.
Byrne forbade the government
Police said Brian Reinhardt,
son of h1r. and h1rs. Glenn
Reinhardt, died shortly after
Thursday's accident in
RiV1!rside General Hospital.
Brian and his sister,
Charlene. 4, were playing in·
side the car. A hand brake
was released accidentally. and
Brian fell under the wheels as
the vehicle rolled backwards,
authorities said.
e l'orty's 111
LOS ANGELES (AP)
l\1ayor Sam Yorty wlll an-
nounce Jan. 3 that he is seek-
ing reelection to a fourth
term. says his closest political
associate. He said Yorty
decided after turning down a
job in the Nixon ad-
ministration.
Deputy ~tayor J o s e p h
Quinn, recuperating at home
from an earlier heart attack.
said ln an interview Thursday
that the 62·year-old mayor
plans to conduct a hard.·hitting
primary campaign this spring
that is likely to result in a
runoff.
eCloseCall
IIIVERSIDE (AP) -An
empty school bus was sliced in
hall by a Union Pacific freight
train after the driver ap.
parently thought the train was
on another track, authorities
said.
The 6&-passenger bus was en
route to an eleme.ntary school
here to plck up youngsters for
a field trip Thursday when the
accident occurre d , the
highway p<ftrol said.
The driver. Donald
Sherman, 62, was treated and
released from Riverside Com·
munity Hospital after suf-
fering cuts and scratches.
e Prison Closl119
Citizens of the suburban
cities of Daly City and
Pacifica flocked outside to
watch the flakes silently fall-
ing past street lights.
SHORTLY BEFORE the I
p.m. snowfall, a be av y
hailstorm hit the area, with
the pellets sticking to sloped
car windshields.
There also "'ere reports or
lightning as the snow fell.
It snowed brieny at low
elevations earlier, but the
v•hite stuff didn't stick.
O~vers said the last
storm that dropped enough
Kitty Hawk
Crew Won't
Appear
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The
21 sailors accused of rioting
aboard the carrier Kitty Hawk
will not appear before a con-
gressional committee even
though invited and if ·forced to
appear some would invoke the
Filth Amendment, a defense
attornev said 'Thursday.
'·It would be inappropriate
for them to appear before the
committee,'' said Milton J.
Silverman. "I trink the CQn-
gressmen realized this and
will not assert their subpoena
power.''
A three-man House armed
service subcommHte. which
enters its third day of . closed
hearings into the racial trou-
ble today. boarded. the giant
carrier Thursday and spent
three hours touring the scene
or the disturbance Oct. 12-13.
They ate hmch, chatted
casually with s e v e r a l
crewmembers, talked a t
length with three others but
said little after their visit.
for any period of time came 10
years ago when most Northern
California valleys experienced
a white covering.
The National 'Neath er
Service said it apparently was
caused by "one thunderhead
five to seven miles in
diameter moving southeast
about 25 miles an hour."
The Northern California
storm temporarily blocked
highways. reaping accidents
and forcing officials to close
schools in at least three coun-
ties.
DENSE FOG packed into
the San Joaquin Valley, cut-
ting visibility to near zero as
the season's worst storm
whitened even low elevation
ridges and heaped blizzards of
snow on the Sierra Nevada.
Even the San Francisco Bay
Area was dusted with snow
and hail, with snow in Marin
County visible from downtown
San Francisco, where tem-
peratures fell to a season low
38.
In Marin. the twisting
Panoramic Highway, an eight-
mile road CQnnecting Stinson
Beach with State Highway 1,
was closed all day due to
snow, the hlghway patrol said.
The roads up nearby Ml.
Tamalpals, Mt. Diabk> in Con-
tra Costa County and Mt.
Hamilton near San Jose were
closed unUl snow plows could
arrive.
STATE DIVISION of
highway!. crews dwnped sail
and sand on State Route 17
between Los Gatos and Santa
Cruz to melt slush which clos-
ed the road for a hall how-.
Several other major roads
were closed briefly due to bad
visibility and snow, including
State Route 20 near Marysville
and U.S. 101 near Leggett.
But Interstate 80 West was
impassable due to ze ro visibili·
ty from Truckee to Colfax.
Highway officials said
passenger cars and light
trucks and buses with chains
were allowed to travel east on
HO.
Sex Ex~hange
'Sharing' Trend Seen?
SUSANVILLE (API
Employes at the s t a t e ' s Ji"'3:i<''-..a•••m:m•e11•••m••g""""r.ll
minimum security prison unit
here have been served notice
that the ?oo-lnmate facility
will close by July 1 - a move
the residents cf this small
community feel will be a blow
to their ecooomy.
The news Thursday tD the ~
280 men who work here was
aC<:.'Ompanied by assmtnces
that they will be eligible for ~
prison jobs In other parts of
the state. The inmates
themselves will be sent to
other prison units, it was
reported.
f\1inl.ntum risk prisoners who c
have not. committed crimes of
violence have been housed at
this Northern California faciH-
ty. They have been used to
fight forest fires throughout
the state.
• SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Friendship, more tban
kinship, will underUe future human relaUoos and tomor~
row's couples will openly engage In sexual relations with
frien& an_d other couples, says Dr. Alu:ander Comfort,
British biologist and medical researcher.
In an article entitled "Sexuality in a Zero Growth So-
ciety" in the December issue of c.enter Report, Comfort
says today's trend toward swinging ''marks the end, or
the beginning of the end, ol proprietary rexuaJ attitudes."
Mate sharing, says Comfort, ls a "realistic view of the
needs U couples and individuals for variety" and a "rec-
ognition that the meeting ol needs rathet" then their fnl>.
tration is a gift wtllch e~ .,ve ... and strengthens
the primary bond."
Center Report is the monthly publloaUon ol the Center
for the Study of Democratic Institutions, a nonproCit edu.
cational research institute here.
A PenonallJed Gift
f •
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tluue guy1 tt.1t ha1 •••rv·
thln9? W),y 11ot 9i•• him •
9ift c•rtifict+. fo, • c11t~l'l'I
rntde tult or sport co•t a11d
1l•ir frorn ~r lWP•tb ltltc·
tien of El'lfJlth tlld Scottith
ftbrlc1 fot Chrlthl'l•t.
Wtmlltf Pl-. 1112 ll"ffH A".
N...,.rt hMlt. Cellfeni.
PHONl1 '41·1072
SANTA Wll~L BEA'l'OUR Cl-IRIS-fMA.'ii
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SA"f'URDAY o ,.,.,,,,,Mr 911•.J VrcrtNINr 16
fro• J 2 -4:()0 URJ u I D•f' N11 rJtr1 "'
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ART IFICIAL T REES
All'eacly Shaped •.•••••••••
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REPLACEMENT BU LBS
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STANDS
kt'('/I '""' ,,.tt frr1h 1111J ,,.,.,,.
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Green Garde •.•
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POINSETTIAS •from $1.19
ICICLES
for <1n ()/ti f"shi""'d Christrrsas
reg. 29c Now ........... .
reg. 59c Now ...........•
SNO-J ET KITS
I 9e or 6 fo r S 't .oo'
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refills reg. $1.69 now, ........•.••••.......•••...•. 89c
CHRISTMAS COLOR
l..oild1 of blootni111t to/or }11 11 /,, I iHlt fo r Jbt hol ;J,l'vcJ11~t Jtlerl/11"
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GREEN HAVEN GARDENS
2123 Nt:wport DIVd.:Cosrtl Mesa
37 j
01 West Wttrncr, San La Anll
646-.191~
S40-676l
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·10 CllOOSF. l'l(Oi\I,
• DAILY PILOT E DITORIAL P AGE
Citizens and Planning
.l\t lest Irvine ha s the basic ing redie nts it needs to
('O mpl ete a general pla n -tin1 e and nl anpower.
The Legislalure last week passed a bill by State
Sen. Dennis 1':. Car penter (R-Newport Beach) giving the
new ci ty one yea r to do a thorough job of planning.
Two days later. cou ncilme n \vere interviewing general
plan consultants.
They voted 4· 1 at the end of the eight-hour session
to negogiate a rontract with one firm. Henry Qu igley
;ilone favored anoth er firm he felt would infuse the
rity's plan 'vit h 1naximum vision.
1-lis colleagues chose a firm that promised to gather
the visio n of all Irvine's residents in developing the
general pla n, not hand down pronouncements from the
1no untaintop of its own expertise.
\Vilsey and ~lam pron1ise both a unique planning
n1e thod and citizen involven1ent. Further, the firm is
no stranger to the !·!arbor Area. 'l'hey recently co m-
plelcd a three-stage redevelopme nt plan for Costa
~lesa and have done \vork for Newport Beach in the
:1reas of traffic and air transportation.
The firrn th us offers Irvine a reputation, a proved
desi re fo r excell ence in planning, an attractive method-
ology and n1ore.
The "1nore" is an elusive "chemistry," as Mayor
\\'illia1n Fi schbach put it.
~le and others on the council believe the \Vilsey
an d l·lam consultants will work well with 1rvine's in-
fornie d and in terested citizens melding residents' col-
ie<"tive vision into the \\'Ord and n1ap guidelines for fu-
ture city deve lop1nent.
Fu rther. the majority of the council feel strongly
this procfss 'viii best serve all residents of the city.
They were assured the data gathering required to assure
the same quality of planning for all areas of the city,
v.111 be done by the chosen firm . '
The general plan clock is running. The Dec. 28,
1973 deadline is not as far off as some would think. It
is time to pursue the details of the contract with Wilsey
and Ham and to grant it , barring an unreasonable es-
ralation of the firm 's original moderate estimate.
Finally. councilmen should not fear spending what
is needed to provide a meaningful plan within the time
allotted.
A Two-way Benefit
Few persons are given opportunities to participate
in "international relations." Families in Irvine and
Saddleback Valley communities are now being afforded
a chance to personalize America by opening their homes
to an American Field Service foreign student next year.
Both University fligh and Mission Viejo High of-
ficials are looking for volunteer families to play host
to foreign -students while they attend the. two county
high schools. ,
The only requirements are a genuine interest and
a home situation which a student could fit. A family with
its own children near the same age is preferred, but not
necessary.
Interested residents can contact Mrs. George Buetti.
Uni High chapter president. at 833-2384, or Mrs. Mary
Boehmer, Mission Viejo High, at 837-1002.
The costs to the family are minimal. The rewards
-including close association with a different culture,
helping a deserving student and expanding your own
family life -can be great.
SB
The H ur11ble A Case of 'Heads You Win, Tails I Lose'
Origin of
'Hurnble Pie'
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
\\"c haven"t had a \\"Ord-quiz on
""origins"" for quite a 1,~1hile, so here is a
set of interesting word derivations. A
score of 50 percent is respectable.
1. \Vhat has '"contemplation ·• got to do
\11th birds'.'
2. How did the two
and three in cards
come 10 be knawn. as
the "deuce" and
thC' "trey"?
3. People actually
used to eat "humble
pie" -v.·hat animal
1rere they devour·
m~·~
4. \Vhat did the fi rst room called a
"lobby" refer to?
5. What flower's name, literally
translated. means "pain in the nose"'?
6. Why is a certain species of ape call-
ed by the odd name of orang-utan or
some variation ?
7. Why is it a contradiction in terms to
have a .. victory !Jarade"'?
8. What was a .. stadium'' in ancient <.iri~ce?
9. What fruit did the word ''zest" come
from?
to. Why are the standing rules of a
group called the ''by-lav.'s''?
ANSWERS :
L The Roman augue, or soothsayer,
would mark off a section of the sky with
his v.·and, and then study the movement
nf birds within this section, which was
coiled a "lemµlum .''
Dea r
Gloomy
Gus
\Vhen 1vill Irvine's Pharaoh
let my people go ?
M.W.
Thll '''"'" nflKll n•r1• VlfWI. ... ,
M(HMltil,. fhoM llf !flt -· S.-
Jeur i>el ,._Vt It Gloom' Giii, Dalty f'lkll.
2. From the French expressions, "deu:ic:
ace," meaning two aces, and "tres ace ,"
or three aces.
3. The poorer peaWitry in medieval
times were forced to 'eat a meat pie
made from the "umble.,," or lower parts,
ol the stag.
4. A room in the House of Parliament
buildings which was used for meetings
between members of Parliament and the
genera: public or special interests asking
for consideration. (Hence, "lobbyist.")
5. Nasturtiwn, because of its pungent
odor, is a compound of the Latin for
"nose" and "giving pain."
6. "Orang-utan," and its variations. is
the Malayan word meaning "man of the
woods."
7. A military parade was originally a
"preparation" for war, or evidence of
preparedness (from the Lalin, "parare ,"
to prepare), not a celebration of its vic-
tory.
8. A "stadium" was a measured length
of some 202 yards , used to lay out the
course for a foot race; later, the name of
the length came to be applied to the
whole field itself.
9. "Zest" was at first a shred of lemon
peel.
10. "By-laws" were "town laws," from
the Old English ''by," meaning a town or
municipality.
Payola Still Pays Off
\VASHrNGTON -The practice or
paying off disc jockeys to plug records.
pvpularly kno\~·n as payol a, is a federal
crime.
Yet ;i;e have reported in a series of rol-
umns that reaird companies have been
sli pping free records. TV sets and •;·ttsh
under the tabl e to disc jockeys and pro-
gram officials.
In other instances,
narcotics. prostitutes
and Las Vegas holi-
days have been pro-
vided to those who
prefer a hot time.
For t h e compan-
ies, it's worth a
little payola to gel
their records on the
hit lists, because teenagers with a bill ion
dollars in their pockets fl ock to the
record stores to buy the hit tunes.
Al first, our stories were downplayed or
denied. But now the. heat is on .
The Federal Commtmications Com-
mission bits already hCld four closed
hearings in Seattle. Los Angeles,
Pittsburgh and New York City.
Vtneaary old DUI Ray, the FCC's com·
pilance chif;f, Ms vleorously denoun ced
payola and Js now s'c>wly moving the
FCC toward public hearinga.
THE BJCf PAYOFFS, Ray should find,
haYe been going to the rich , whi~ r()(k ·n· roll d1lc jock.ey1. They get the
thousand-dollar trips to Vrgas. But the
bla<b and Spanlsl>language broad·
cuttn are more Ukcly to ge£ caught.
In Bakersfield, Calif., for example, af·
fidavtl> llltd with the FCC charge U>at
Raymood a • ..., program director of !he
Jitt11 thousand-watter KWAC, h a s
demanded and l'f<ltlved payola.
PaullDO Bunal ol the tiny ll<mal
I
(JACK ANDERSON)
Records firm swears that Garza "has
al ways asked me for 1noney. We call it in
Spanish '~1ordida' ... Every time that I
visited Bakersfield, I would pay him
from $75 to SIOO cash." When Bernal
stopped paying, his sales dropped.
A DANCE PROMOTER, L e o n e I
Suichez, also swore he paid orI Gan.a.
'When I stopped paying, my records
were no longer played on KWAC, except
on rare occasioos," Sanchez swore.
When my associate Les Whitten
reached Garza, he burst out: "Never!
Never! It's completely polltlcal1 the most
ridiculous thing I ever heard. '11lere's no
payola.'' But he conceded he is under
FCC investigation.
Our own sources, who would talk to us
only after we pledged to reveal 110
names, say sol'ne of the nation's }Jlggest
black radio personalities have been U1k-
lng money for playing records. Even with
them, the sums have been in the $200
range. One record promoter told us of a
major eastern "Rhythm and Blues" SW.•
lion, which offered to play bis record for
a single bottle of Scotch.
RAY lllMSEU' tw encountered a new
form of payola. The disc jockey may pro-
mote his own dance or other show and
"invite" a record company to provide
hlrr with taJent at far Jess Ulen the going
rate. The pn>ceeds go to the dllc jockty.
II the performer complle.s, lhe disc
jockey plays hlJ re(Otd on the air. If he
fall• ta show up, the rtt0ro i. iporecl.
Ray calls this an "l»dlrect payment"
which appears to vk>late fl!!deraJ
statutes.
Painful Progress· of Peace Talks
\VASHINGTON -For the U.S., the
final Vietnam negotiations are torturous-
ly and painfully turning out to be a case
of ';heads you win . tails I lose ."
Neither side is evincing much in :Ile
way of support and
gratitude.
Publicly and priv-
ately the U.S. is be-
ing berated and as-
persed by" both the
Commwtlsts a n d
South Vietnamese.
It's entirely pos·
sible the way may
end with the U.S. in
as much disfavor in Saigon as in Hanoi.
COMMUNIST deviousness and in·
transigence was expected. Throughout
the protracted and £ate£uJ secret negotia-
tions, lhey have endJessly connived for
every conceivable advantage and to
finagle a double meaning into every key
provision -·(lbviously for later u.se •t a
time and for a purpose that suits their
totalitarian ends.
At the same time. President Nguyen
(ROBERT S.AI.I,EN)
Van Thieu has been equally and high-
handedl y importunate.
His basic aim is to entrench him:clf
personally and politically regardless of
the nature of the peace tenns. He is bent
on retaining absolute control even if lhnt
means some form of dictatorship.
TRIEU DDtANDED and got immense
quantities of military supplies. More than
$1 billion worth of planes, tanks, guns
and other costly combat equipment were
rushed to South Vietnam in the past six
weeks. Graphically illustrative of their
type and cost to U.S. taxpayers are the
following :
-32 C.130 giant catgo planes at $10
million per. Exactly why so many of
these huge carriers were turned over to
the South Vietnamese is not clear. Thcy
had none of these planes, nor any ex-
perience with them . Pilots and crews will
hove to be trained to fly and maintain
them.
_ -125 F·5 supersonic fighters at t l .5
million per plane. The South Vietnamese ·
airforci! had 18 F-5s and some 30 trained
crews. Obviously, scores of additional F-5
pilots and mechanics will have to be train-
ed -at U.S. expense.
WIDLE THE U.S. will foot that b'r .
the U.S. Air Force will not do the
training.
The peace agreement will require the
withdrawal of all U.S. forces. It is the
Administration's intent to meticulously
abide by this stipulation. As a oon·
sequence, the maintenance of the C.130s,
F-5s and various other airtraft and the
training of South Vietnamese crews will
be turned over to civilians hired for thJt
purpose.
It will be a big and rosily job -as 600
new planes of all types are invol\"cd.
That's the startling number added to the
South Vietriamese alrforce since late
October.
But this and hundreds of millions of
dollars of other hardware and munitions
arc not satisfying President Thieu.
He is demanding $5 billion in economic
aid over an indefinite period.
THIS ASTOUNDING pro~ is what's
behind his clamor and pressure for a
personal · meeting with Preisdent, Nixon.
When th.is was politely but firmly turned
down, Thieu resorted to guile -in
characterislically heavyhanded manner.
He. ttied to create a rift between the
President and Dr. Kissinger by accusing
the latter of double-dealing -misleading
both him and the President.
This ploy was so patently phony it sank
by its own \veight. -
What seemed ta particularly rankle
Tbleu when he blandly popped bis $5
billion economic demand was Kissinger's
rema(k. "Mr. Prei:ideot.i Uil( "-ts
something for lhe U.S. (:,oogrfiss to
decide . ln our country, only COngress has
the power to appropriate funds. The
President may propose, but Congress
disposes."
Thieu glared. but said oothlng.
Addendum : South Vietnam bas around
one million men IJQder arms. U.S. in·
tenlgente esiimates Hanoi bas 145,000
combat troop.s in SOulh Vietnam, plus
another 100,000 Vietcong.
Seat Belts Need Better Promotion
To the Editor :
Your editorial, "Driving Life-saver"
on Nov. 30 stressed the fact that seat
belts are a necessity in auto-safety.
Within the article, there was a discussion
on whether to make the use of seat belts
mandatory or not.
I believe that the importance of wear-
ing seat belts does not lie with.in the law,
but rather in the promotion by the con-
cerned.
SINCE I have come to America in
July, 1972, I have seen many ad-
vertisements on the danger of smoking .
There are warning statements on
cigarette cases. There are warning signs
in all cigarette advertisements. Tbe
~ncer Society has done its share in pro-
moting anti-smoking in perodicals as
well as television. As a result, I un-
derstand that the number of smoken has
decreased since the anti-smoking cam-
paign began.
llOWEVER, I have seen only a few ad-
vertisements promot.ing lhe importance of
wearing seat belts. U periodicals and
television come out with m o r e ad-
vertisements to promote the use of seat
belts, the number of people who weer
seat belts will rise like the rise of non-
smokers. Though some cars have. warn-
ing systems which remind people to wear
seat belts, too many more cars do not
have any warning devices.
I hope that there are Americans who
care enough to make a change.
NOBUMICHJ HARA.
Student CSULB from Japan
Why Burn T rees?
To the Edllor :
1'tia year, u in the put, when the
hollda)'> are behind u., the Newpor\
Beach Fire Department will conduct i
lTee-bllmlng event at the beach and
mall)' thousanda of Chrislmas trett will
tnd their usefulneu in a pall of 1111oke.
CAN WE AFFORD tblJ oolutloo any
longer, when our air ha1_to many other
terrible assaults made upon It?
Burning is wrong, eapeclalty when
n11ture has a better soluOon and-a further
use for such trees. Many othcir cities
have round a better aolutlon.
My home town, Ann Arbor. Mich ..
( MAILBOX )
Letters fram readers are weicotnt.
Norma.Uy writns should convey their
messages in 300 wordl or les1. The
right to condense letters to fit space
or ehmMate libel U re1ened. Ali
letters must includt' .rignature ond
mdiling address, but nam.ea "1911 be
withheld on · request if aufficfent
reason is apparent. Pottrti will not be
published.
shreds its treca and turns them into
valuable mu lch and bumus, which , Its
grateful citizens batll away for use in
their gardens. Trees used for landfill can
also return to earth in a natural"way.
I HA VE SPOKEN with several people
at City Hall who have listened to me
courteously but have offered no support.
Our city sbauld be responsive to our
needs, and if others share my-concern
that we need to find a better solution,
then we should make that concern known
to tbe men and women who work for us.
Undoubtedly it ls more economical for
the city to burn trees than to shred them,
or for the sanitation men to haul them
away. But in terms of air pollution and
the waste of natural resources, can we
afford to continue to burn?
As a postscript, I would point out that
the city will accept the donat·ion of living
trees after Christmas from those of us who" have run out of planting room in our
own )lards.
SALLY P. NETZER
Puz:led Parent
To the Editor:
My son made a ceramic ashtray at
school and it was recently displayed in
the art show at the Huntington Center
Mall. It was In the specl81 awards section
and it bas disappeared -apparently
stolen.
HE SPENT a. lot of time and effort
making it very special for me as a
'The Compleat· Lover'
''The Story of Love. Falling in 1.ove.
Courting. Making Love. A Lifetime of
Loving." These main settlons, enhan~
by dellgblful selections of poems, love
-stories, essays and game!~ provide ~ rich
experience to the form of a large, pro-
vocative, lavishly illustrated book: The
Compleat Lover by Derek and Jlllla
Parker (McGraw-Hill, $15.95).
"WE RAVE TRIED to reflect tnost cf
the faces of love In The Compleat
Lover," the authors note, "and ln that we
are of courae tidy to be writing !n the
t970S. Some of the plcturu here. RJ\d
some of the poems too, would doubtleS*
have &bocked our Victorian
grandpartnts. Ye! how .. re and unsho<k·
Ing they teem today, compared with the •run frontaJ' approach to love that is now
10 prevalent in books and periodicals, on
stage and screen."
In the last two centuries, the Parkers
point out, taste bas gone from almost
(THE BOOKMAN)
tot.al repression to almost total license.
They have steered clear of the dangers
inherent in both extremts, following a
clvllized middle courae, avoiding un-
nect:mry crudity but s11ying all they !cit
•hould be said.
YOUNG ANO happily married, the
Parkers -remembered for the ir
Compleat Astrologer, whlcb topped
250,000 in sales In 1971 anct was
translated into st-. languages -w11nt
thelr new boot to provide everyone,
"whether they are about to scribblo a
fln:t heart·and..arrow on the wall of lhe:
schoolyard, or are planning a golden
wedding 'celebratlon, ,,. with IOfnething
with which they can lclenllfy. '
CAROLINE HARKLEROAD
surprise for when I returned home from
a trip to the hospital. It was beautiful and
I cherished it. I could (and clid) cry,
Last year I saved and bought him an
expensive coat which someone stole a
"·eek later.
WHAT PUZZLES me is how a parent
could let his child keep anything that
doesn't belong to them. Surely they
couldn't help but notice a brand new coat
that they didn't buy.
Has the world rejlChed a Point where
we are so greedy that t.'e weJcome
anything "free"? Doesn't it occur to
parents that they must teacb their
children not to take things that def not
belong to them, let alone encourage
them?
DOESN'T IT occur to these parents
that even if ·n is a small handmade
ashtray or a big expensive coat that it
could be very important to whomever it
belonged to? Are pa.;ents so lackadaisical
thal they don't even notice a "new" coat
or toy ? I! this Is the case, no wonder
there are so many juvenile delinquents. I
feel sorrier for the kids than I do the
parents. ·
Maybe this letter will open some
parents' eyes lo "new'' things around the
house. "Cute" little "takers" turn into
adult thieves.
MARY JANE HENDRIX
OltANGI! COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wetd, Pubtlslu!r
T l1oma1 Keevil, Editor
Rarbora Kreibich
Editorial Poot Edit or .
Tht' cdl\orl11I J.>Altt' or the Dally Pilot 14.'<'kll to lnrorm 11nd stlrnti· hllf' rc11dc:r11 by 11rntntln1 this
ne\\'1paper'1 oplnk>n~ 11nd com-
menter)' .1n topleit of lntcmt .-nd
tdgnlflnncf', by J)Nlv\dlnK " fnr11n1
ftlt-.the H µ.reation of our rrMk'f's'
oplt1lon1. 11.nd by fJr"('ntlnic lh t• d1\o'Cl'H vic\\1~lnt11 o( Informed ob.
M.'rvt!rl and .-pc»c.."dmcn on toplc11 or the dlly,
Friday, December 8, 1972
-
• I I
j
l
7
7
Huntington Beaeh
Fountain Valley
'
--
Today's Final
N.Y. Stooks
VOL 65, NO. 343, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 19J2· TEN CENTS
Huntington Trustees Clash Over Bond Issue
A badly. divided board ot trustees was
squabbling a,gain today over a $21 million
bond measure that goe!I before voters in
the HWltington Beach Union High School
District next February.
The current bone of content.loo Is a let·
ter written by high school Trustee
George Logan to various school and city
officials in which he criticized the
measure. t
Logan's actions, in tum, were 'criticiz-
ed today by two other high school
Seven
t~tees and the chairman of the bond
campaign committee.
1bey said Logan is out of Une.
But another high school trustee said
Logan. is within .hiJ rights. Trustee Ray
Schmitt also said he agrees with some of
what Logan says. Schmitt added that be
doesn't kzlow whether he'll support the
bonds or not.
Trustee John Beniley criUciud Logan
for casting doubt an the in\egrity Qf the
board.
Bentley said he felt Logan's letter sent
ta two city councils and three school
boards was contrary to good
boardmanship.
"I resent the implications that the
board is incompetent. We've been
through many traumatic and dramatic
soul searching times and I challenge
anyone to show a major expenditure
made that could be called foolish."
Bentl,ey said.
Bentley was referring to Logan's com-
ment that the district had displayed a
tendency in the past to spend excess
funds whenever they were available.
• Bentley has served on the board for
nearly 10 years.
In his letter, Logan proposed that one
new school combined with classroom
space that would be saved with the im·
plemcntation of all-year schools would
solve the district's overcrowding problem
in the near future.
"Does he want to crowd our students
Hi jackers l(illed
'·
Ethiopia Jet Passengers Attack Terrorists •
ADDIS ABABA (UPI) -Five men and
two women armed with pistols and hand
grenades tried to hijack an Ethiopian
-' Airlines Boeing 720 today. Passengers
seized and disarmed them and security
guards shot all seven to death.
lt was the largest death toll in a hi-
jacking case. ·
A British couple In their 70s held one of
the hijackers under their feet.
Other occupants of the plane seized
'Life' Folds
Due to High
Postal Costs
NEW VOllX (API . Uk >11p1;,,.
will cli1CC11tlnue publlcat1on with the ismie
of Dec. It, Time, Jnc..--loday.
'l'llo p •NN±t laid the .,.....kl
mapzlne, ,,...... lot Ill f.~ use
of lleWI piloqrapbs, 'll'iII old beclluse of
"ccntinuiag losses ...
The year-end double issue will mark
the close of tbe weekly magazine founded
by Henry Luce.
Life wiS published at '4very substantial
deficits iD. 1969 and 1970 and smaller
deficits in 197J and 1972/' the publisher
said.
"As our · projections for 1973 took
shape, however, they showed a resump-
tion of heavy losses, and the indications
for 1974 were even more unfavorable,"
Time, Inc. added.
At about 10:45 a.m., grim-faced staff
memben of the magazine began to
gather for a meeting on the elgbtb floor
of the Time-Life building at Sixth Avenue
and 50tb Stn!et.
About 250 to 300 staff workers sat in
chairs or stood against the walls, waiting
!See LIFE, Pare %)
·Services Slated
For Huntington
Camper Creamer
Funeral services for Jack Kenneth
Creamer, 18. or 10381 Somerville Lane,
Huntington Beach. will be held at 11
a.m., Tuesday, in Smith's Chapel.
Burial will follow at Westminster
Memorial Park.
Creamer's body was found Tuesday
morning in the nountains n e a r
Wrightwood by San Bcrnardtno County
Sherifrs deputies.
The San Bernardino County Coroner
says the cause or Creamer'~ death Is atlll
unknown. Tests are continuing.
Creamer disappeared Sunday while
camping ~'ith four friends. He was found
dead. next to a rain.soaked fire pit with
his motorcycle parked nearby and in
working condition.
Sherilf's deputies reported oo signs of
violence. -
Creamer was graduated from Jlun-
tington Beech l:figh Schou!. He l1_nrvlv·
ed · by his father, Jack C. Cfellmer,
Westminster; a sister, Mrs. Carolyn
BeaUy, Xansns; two brothers, Ronald of
I..ong Beach and Clinton of Ft. Lewis .
Wash.; and his paternal grandmother.
Mrs. t.ula Creamer, Garden Grove.
CHARLIE eROOlN, 'IOO'VE _
GOT ONlV 16 SHOPPING
DA'/5 lEFT, '/Oll KNOUl!
another armed air pirate and, a
passenger said, "kicked him and kicked
him and wouldn't let him wie his gun un-
til he was eventually killed. with a whole
magazine of bullets."
Passengers .suggested that the women
may have smuggled the guns aboard in
their high-heeled, plaUonn sole shoes.
They said the air pirates hurled al
least two hand gemades and .one ex-
ploded, woonding a number o( the
passengers. including a U.S. oil company
executive and an American college pr<r
fessor.
The professor, Dr. Roderick Hilsinger
of Temple University, Philadelphia, was
credited with saving some lives by pick·
ing up the hand grenade and hurling it
away before il exploded in the midst of
the passengers. He was hit by shrapnel
and was reported in grave condition at
an Addis Ababa hospital.
-The other wounded American \\'as S. V.
McCollumn of Houston, Tex., executive
Perilous Ti1ne
LBJ Nuclear War Fears Reported
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Lyndon B. Johnson wa1 concerned in
1963 that the '!'f'llB•'Mlioo of John F. Kennedy migb& -lead tp nuclear war,
.,., ··~J\lalltelorlWamn. 1
Warren, In 111 lntervieW with the Public Broa~ung :,;mice to ·be shown
on teley1akm Monday aaid.Johosoo. cited the ~ibility of war a1 one reason
tba eldef jmUoe lhouJd bead a commission be named to investigate the AMAS·
sinltkm.
WARB.EN R.ECAIJ..ED THAT the incident occurred a few days after Ken-
nedy'1 death in Dallas on Nov. 2:2, 1963-
In lhe interview, Warren said be.was invited to the White House by Johnson
who "told me he felt condJUons in the world were so bad at the rpoment ...
he thought it might even get into a war -ev.en a.nuclear war."
TRE PRESIDENT, Aca>RDING to Warren, cited rumors. later proved to
be unfounded, that Soviet Prf:mler Nikita S. Khrushchev and Cuba's Fidel
Ca~tro might have been involved in the Kenne:dy shooting.
Sex Film Dispute Heads
To State Supreme Court
A court battle that began when
Wes11ninster Police Chief Walter Scott
refU"f'd to return to their owners' movies
and photographs be still insists are
obseene is headed today for the
California Supreme Court.
The latest appellate move ordered by
the Orange County District Attorney's
Office "On behalf of Scott comes just two
weeks after the Fourth District Court of
Appeals in San Bernardino ordered the
return of the materials to Frederick and
Kay Loar of Huntington Beach.
_ Deputy Di.strict Attorney 0 re t t a
Sears said she plans to file her office's
latest appeal early ne;it week.
Loar, $, and bis wife, 32, of if062
Humboldt Drive, la.lit saw thelr work
products May 25, 1971, as Scott's officers
carried more than 20,000 movies and
30,000 photographs from their Pete Voss
Showcase warehouse at 15144 Golden
West Circle ln Westminster.
Superior Court Judge Robert L.
Corfman ordered tbelr return last April
after a jury in his courtroom found the
• Loers not guilty of multiple obscenity
charges.
Scott refused to return the malerials.
packed them away in his vaults and
declined to consider numerous appeals
delivered to him by the Loars' lawyers.
The police chief was accused last "''eek
of stalling on the return or the materials
because, the Loars claimed, an estimated
2,000 reels of the sexy movies are miss-
ing.
Scott denies the allegations. And he
claims that a check' of the inventory if
and when he is finally compelled to sur-
render the materials will p r o v e
everything is there.
Barge Sp ills Oil
SAN DIEGO (AP) -AbOut 200 gallons
of fuel oil spilled into San Diego Harbor
Thursday night from a refuellng barge
servicing the alrc_raft carrier Coral Sea,
the Navy says. A Navy spokesman said
the accident oceurred as the barge was
preparing to pump oil to the carrier.
Nudity llnder Attack ' •
vice president of the Tenneco Oil Co ..
Ethiopia Radio reported.
The plane carrying 94. passengers and
crew was commandeered about 15 min-
utes out of Addis Ababa en route lo Paris
with stopovers in Cairo, ~nd Rome, wit·
nesses said.
They described the hijackers as in
their 20s and appearing to be Ethiopians.
Although damaged, the plane was able to
land al Addis Ababa where the
(See HIJACK, Page %1
It's Snowing
In Tustin?
.4w-Come On -.
~II' tlfgb School sttlde1i'13'lro!icKed
in fining mow fof. about 4o minutes this
morning and an El Toro Marine Corps
pilot reported hail in the area u the
latest winter storm passed over Oralige
County dropping a half an ineh of ?ain In
some areas.
About 8 .:i.m. students in ¥rs. William
Schreibcr's class at Tustin High played
amidst the falling flake s.
The National Weather Service describ-
ed the snowfall as being the result of
freak air currents, since sno\I. levels in
Southern California are generally ex-
pected only above S,000 feet this
weekend.
About the same lime snow was said to
be falling in Tustin, a jet pilot landing at
El Toro reported falling ice pellets.
Laguna Beach's uoofficial rain watch-
er. Bill Shields, reported .09 of an inch
in his gauge over tbe 24 hours ending at 8
a.m., bringing the season rainfall total in
tilt Art Colony t.o 5.23 inches. Last year
at this tin1e, Shields said, Laguna had on-
ly .82 of an inch of rain. The city got only
6.18 inches all last year.
The weather service forecast calls for
mostly cloudy skies ano occasional
sho wers tonight.
A clear and cool Saturday is expected
along the Orange Coast with gusty winds
lo 20 knots from the northwest.
The Orange County Harbo" Depart·
ment station at Newport Beach logged
only .21 inch of rain during the 24-hour
period ending al 7 a.m. The season to
date total recorded by the rain gauge at ,
1901 Bayside Drive is 4.Ul inches.
Small craft warnings are up aod are
expected to remain up through Saturday,
as a resu lt of the gusty afternoon winds.
A private rain watcher, J. Sherman
Denning of Huntin~ton Beach reported a
total of .36 inch of rain in that city for
the 24-hour period ending at 8 o'clock this
morning.
In San Clemente. rain watcher s
reported .2 of an inch l'.uring the 24 hours
ending at 8 o'clock this morning, with a
total of 7.1 inches for the season so far .
DA Will Continue-Drive
A drive that has drawn the curtains on closed down through civil litigation that
more than a dozen nude bars In Orange uses the language of the stole's Rt.'<l
County during the put year will continue Light Abatement Act to make its paint . even though the state's Alcoholi c
Beverage Control (ABC) ofCicers have And the Sarong Gals and Brlst.:il
got into the act, Dlslrlct Attorney's Gardent baf15, both In Santa Ana, cur·
represenltltlvea declared today. rently face Identical action that could
_Closure act.ions which include the close U)em or at least "cleao thep1 up."
Firehouse bar In Costt Mtu wW be -inVfttlSltlort-S&idr
pressed even though the California Investigation of the Bristol Gardens
Supreme Court has ruled that the ABC Mr Jed last month to the fil ing of
agency can ptrrorm that fUncUon, criminal actions against A group of
11pokesman for the office's obscenity women ,nd ronner pre. football player
division said. (Related story. Page 4.\ ·wnne Crtttcndon.
Two Santa Ana bars offering the con-All were accused of Involvement In '1
troverslal entertainment were rectntly prostitution racket that alltgedly had Its
-·-
he:idquarters in the bottomless bar. All
f11ce Superior Court Uin '. on those
charses.
lnvestisators today said ont reason for
continued action by their office Is the
delay built In to any action by the ABC.
They said the agency ca11 re voke a
bar1s Uoonsc but l.be.bar..c.an coatinuc to
operate pending a hcerlng and that often
lt.ke11 at least three months.
Using the rt<! U'ht act, District Al·
tomey'11 otncera sa id they can obtain a
Superior Court restraining order that
orten ·effectively bins nude en-
tertainment.
,
more and more ?" questioned Bentley . ;,I
haven't seen sufficient support for all-
year schooling to feel it is a comfortable
solution to the problem ."
He \~'as ref~rririg to recent opposition
by some parents and teachers in, the
district to plan::: for implen1enting ·op-
tlonal all-year schooling.
"!l's a matter of simple arithn1etic
that we need two schools." Bentley said.
The district Is ctJrreritly overcrowded
by 3,000 students and is expected to grow
by that many by 1974.
Logan 's letter was also critic~ecl by
Board Presid.ent Dennis Mangers and
Bob Knox. chai rman of the Citizens Bond
Cornmiuec.
"The 1ncans by \vhich George has
chosen to Cxpress himsell is unfortuante.
ll hurts our efforts to form one cohesive
unit in this district." said Mangers.
"I think he"s ignoring the facts that ar('
a1Jailable in the master plan which
!See S.QUABBLE, Page ZI
ftl/\111'1\~ET T~·1MN!I&. .ANSWERS QUESTIONS OF PRESS
' 'He Hu GoH9n"OWiwoniTfitngs,' Truman's Daughter Says
Truman Weakens; Chief
Concern Over His Heart
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPJ ) -Doctors
at the bedside of Harry S Truman said
today they have "major concern" about
the failing heart or the critically ill 88-
year~ld former President. He was given
extra medication to keep him relaxed.
"President Truman remains critical.
The area of major concern is still
Huntington Fire
Rages Half Ho11r
Before Discovery
A basement rire call8ed '13,000 damage
to the home of a young Huntington Beacli
couple. Thursday as it burned in the
unoccupied basement or their house for
an estimated 30 minutes before it was
discovered.
The couple, Mr. and Mrs. William
Delanty, said all of their toddler's clothes
and. toys were Jost in tpe noon-hour blaze.
Jn addition, most of their Own clothes
surfered severe smoke damage, fire of-
ficials said.
The couple were. sitting in the front
portion of their rented home at 407
Delaware St. with two closed doors
between them and t~eir burning bese-
m·ent when they smelled smoke. Updn
opcnini_ the . \)aseynent door. they were
immediately drl\len out of the home !Sy
heat and smoke, Delanty said.
The fire, which burned one upstairs
room as well as two In the basement.
took 10 minutes for four flre units lo con-
trol. There were no inluries in the bb11:c.
fire officials said. The cause is still und('r
investigation.
Board Member
Ca1i't Ta.ke Seat
Roger W. Belgco could not take hi.'i
newly won seat on the Foun Uiin Valley
School Board Thunday night because he
hus not filed. a financial disclosure s1n1e-
1nent on his e)!(:Uon campaign.
Belgen was elected (tom a field of six
cantUdates In a special election Tuesday.
To ·have been.autecl-'l'bunday. bit flnan.
clal discl01Ure was requited by s p.m.
Wednesdlly.
8elgen Mid he hoped lo ftle lhe slot..
ment wlth tbc Orange County Reatatrar
of Votert-wlthln a Week and take his seat
At lhe next school board meeting on Deer
21.
general cardiac \\'eakness. aggravated by
restlessness or body movement. which is
relieved by medication ." said a mid-day
medical statement at Research Hospital.
Truman. weakened by age and a lung
infection, was fed intravenously. He was
given oxygen to help him breathe.
"There is cardiac stability, but it is ac-
companied by extreme weakness," said
the statement, read by h o s p i t a I
spokesman John Dreves. ''His heart con·
dilion is not as good this morning as we
had hoped it would be."
Attempts to feed the ailing, aging
former prcside~t failed. so doctors had ~
feed him entirely_ by arm injection and
through a tube in his nose.
-''H'e's stil1 Hilted as critical and he's
still listed as stable," Dreves said.
"Improvements which have occurred
during lhe night include the pulmonary
situal ion and kidney function.·•
Truman first v.·as hospitalized with
lung infection. That ailment had pro-
gressed but doctors said that if he was lo
survive his heart ~·ould have to stand the
strain of battling age and infection.
Truman's heart "'as monitored con-
stantly.
"The former president has tolerated
tht: monitoring cemarkably well and is
always cooperative," said Truman's
(Ste TRmtA.N, Page !I
Orange Cea st
Weather
Those datk clouds will clear to
SWlny skies on Saturday, accord-
ing to t~e wcatherlady -but
there's ·a slight (30 percent) chance
ofa few showers on Sund&y. Hfllis
in the upper 50s: to lower fiOs.
U)ws tonight in the 40s.
INSIDE TODA.\'
-i\fu..yicians /T(JT(J Seal Beactt to
S«n Clemente /lave prepared
their Chrlalmas offtri1101 with
llqudel's "Me111iah.'' be;ng the
most popular holfda11 piece . See
to<la"'' Weekender for times
011d place1.
Mlllv•I II..,... n
M•tleMt ~ 4, I or..,. a.et? 11
... ,"' .... " !1'11 S!!'f'a .....,.. II fjirh ,,
tMck MerttlS U.11 "''''"" .. TllN:'-• 1'41 ... ..., . .............. ,,.,,
WHN ....... t. f .......... twl
. .. -----------·
'
_2 DAIL !._PILOl "
Drug Raid
Protested
At School
Los Alami1os IHgh School students
went back to their classrooms today
follo,,.,·ing a campus demonstration Thurs.-
day over the arrest of 23 students by
narcotics officers .
Principal Dale Schroeder said the
peaceful demonstratio1 . at the school in-
volved about 150 students. "I talked to
them for about an hour and a half and
they v.·ent back to class," ~e said. "And
all is quiet today."
1be protest was sparked Y.'hen 13
students and three local adults were ar·
rested on chart:' of operating an $80,000
drug ring at the school.
An undercover agent was planted on
campus by police earlier this year.
She gained the confidence of campus
drug dealers by telling them she had !Ost
her par'ff!ts in a plane crash, that she
was new to the area and that she had no
frit'nds.
Known as ''Lois," the undercover
agent let the word get around that her
unhappiness had driven her ln drugs and
she needed quantities of cocaine, hashish
and any other hard drugs she could get.
Authorities slid 2.1 helpful students
supplied Lois with drugs and Tuesday the
youlhs and three adults alleged to be
dealers were picked up in a series of
raids by local police and state narcOliC!
officers.
All the students were suspended under
district regulations, Schroede r said. They
will appear before a campus committee
with their parents to talk about reinstate·
ment, he added.
In their demonstration Thursday, the
students comp lained they had been "sold
out" by school authorities y,·ho allowed
the undercover agent to operate on cam·
pus.
FromPageJ
LIFE ...
for the meeting, which y,·as closed to
outsiders.
The publisher said Time. Fortune,
Sports Illustrated and ~1oney. its nther
majnr magazines, "have done very \1·cll
this year."
Life lasted more than a year longer
than its chief competitor. Look. which
ceased pubUcation on, Oct. 19, 1971. Look
also blamed rising costs, especially
postal rates.
In announcing the decision to fold Life,
Hedley Donov an, editor-in-chief of Time.
tnc .. and Andrew Relskell, Chairman of
the board. declared: '
"Life has been one of the great
~ouma\istic pinneers. lts launching in
1936 opened a Y.'hoie new era of pro-
fessional journalism . with consequence s
still seen all over the world.
"Life achieved almost at once, and
kept through 36 years, an im't>ortant
voice in American affairs: we believe the
magazine bas spoken responsibly, aOO.
triith vision and compassion. Life will go
on in many ways and places, not least in
Its influence on the other magazines and
books of Time, Inc."
The Time. Inc .. executives noted that
Life "encountered severe competition
from television !lince the late 1950's" for
lhe advertising dollar.
The magazine earned "accepU!b le pro£-
its" during m 0 s t or the 1960s, they
reported, "but the cost pressures and the
Co'mpeti~ve pressures kept building up,
and we have betn running out of
eConomles."
In the past two years, Life reduced its
circulation from 8.5 million copies to S.S·
million and increased the price to SO
cents for a newsstand copy in an attempt
to build a high-quality audience.
'The impact or these moves was un·
dercut by a very heavy increase in
second-class postal rates which affected
Life. particularly because of its large
page size," th c executive 's statement
said.
They said the maga zine was faced with
an increase of 170.2 percent in such rates
over five years.
OlANlol COAST Ha
DAILY PILOT
Tiie C)rflflOI CO.SI OAll Y ~tlOT Wlifi Miich
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Frettc h So11rces
Vietnam Peace
Talks Near End?
Pi\t{IS (UPI) -Wb.lte House aide
llenry A. Kissinger met }>resident
Georges Pompidou today shortly before
his fifth meeting with Hanoi's I.A? Due
Tho. and French diplomatic sources said
the Vietnam peace negotiations appeared
near their end.
K1ssiqger started talks \\'1th Tho :'It 3
p.m. (6 am. f>STI in a mansion belong·
S uit Filed
On County
Abortionist
A $1.7 million lawsuit today is the
latest chapter in the tragically sensation·
al story of one-time crusading Santa Ana
abortionist Dr. John S. Gywnoe. Y•ho is
nnw in prlcoo tor murdering his para·
mour.'
The bachelor physician was sentenced
to ti ve years to life upon conviction in the
Christmas season slaying or the girl one
yel'!r ago.
Her parents have filed suit in Los
Ange les County Superior Court, seeking
wron&ful aeath and punitive damages.
Debbie Dwyer, 19 when she was slain
in their Westwood apartment, once work·
ed in Dr. Gwynne's Santa Ana abortion
clinic and she was also of €athollc faith.
The complaint seelting damages would
prohibit Dr. Gwynne from ever writing
or selling rights to his biography or a
narrative of his crimes.
Wording of the legal document also
suggests that Dr. Gwynne's actions im·.
mediate!~· following Miss Dwyer's death
could affect her statll!I in the hereafter.
The J ohn Dwyers claim he knew their
address and telephone number but fail ed
to provide it to investigators and also did
not say the slain girl was a Catholic.
This -they ma inta in -deprived the
victim who lay in a pool of blood with
three .357 tfagnum pistol wounds from
last rites of the church.
Attorneys representing the Dwyers
drew up legal documents designed to pre·
vent the couple from suffering further
pain an< grief through recounting it.
"lie would benefit trom his crime
... " the complaint declares.
The 31-year-old docto r maintained in
testimony that ttiss Dwyer was ac·
cidentally shot dUring ~ !truggle climax-
ing a quarrel over her alleged drug use.
"1 didn't know the gun was loaded," he
Lestilied in a tria1 that took only 2\fi
hours fo"r the jury to find him guilty of
second-degree murder.
Gwynne was free on $25,000 bail when
picked up by Santa Barbara County
Sheriff's deputies, unconscious in his
parked car from a drug overdose.
Abortion charges also hanging over his
head in Orange and Los Angeles counties
were dismissed this week, in the in-
terests of justice.
The District Attorney's Office took the
action based on a Nov. 22 California
Supreme Court ruling reversing portions
of the state's legal abortion act which he
had challenged.
During earlier trials, he admitted en·
ding 1housands of unwanted pregnancies
in his Santa Ana and Westwood clinics.
DemonstratQrs both for and against
\•oluntary abortion paraded before his
Santa Ana offices at lhe height of the
controversy bere.
The suit filed. as the latest development
seeks $250,000 each for general damages;
pain and suffering. plus $500,000 punitive
damages and funeral and burial expenses
for Mi ss Dwye r.
ing to an American jev.'eler in the
fashionable Neuilly su r Seine suburb.
The U.S. diplomat arriVi!d finit at the
villa and when Tho arrived accompanied
by hi!! aide, Xuan Thuy, the American
walked down the steps. shook hand! with
both. and escorted them lnto the house.
There was no lmmediate indication
whether the secrtt m~tings would con-
tinue Saturday. There mre unconfirmed
reports that Kissinger would soon leave
for Washington.
Tho and Kissinger met five limes this
v.·~k for a tota1 or 19 hours. A complete
news blackout was kept over the progress
of their talks.
As Tho and Xuan Thuy, the second-
ranking Hanoi negotiator, left ,!be confer-
ence villa in suburban Netiilly, they shook
hand! wttb Kissinger and lhen waved to
him as their car drove off.
KL!slnger left the American • rented
villa five minutes later to report on the
1net!ling 'to \Vashington and to the South
Vietnamese delegate, Pham Dang Lan1 .
Earlier, Ki~inger spent 7S minutes at
the Elysee Palact.
The nev.'Spaper Le Monde said there
"M'ere indications the political solution had
been reached and the negotiators were
discussing -application of the peace a~
cord.
Fro1n Pagel
TRUMAN ...
personal pbysican, Dr. Wall see Graham.
He said President Nixon'Il White House
staf thas been "cooperative and desire to
help in any matter."
Doctors said Truman "improved in
some areas but shows no improvement in
others."
"His heart is shov,.ing the signs of con·
side rable irritability and stress," Dreves
sa id.
Truman·s vital signs were "relatively
stable, though the temperature is flue·
tuating. but only slightly."
Doctors said the nation's 33rd chief ex·
eculive ,did not sleep well Thursday night
and early today. They said bis family
\\'as not notified 'bf the restless night.
Thursday, Truman rallied from the
lung and heart ailm!nts that sent him lo
the hospital four days ago. Margaret
Daniel, his Jaught~r, said Truman smiled
at her.
"~le's getting kind of contrary," Mrs.
D~niel said aftf' · leaving her father's
bt.>dside and driving her mother, Mrs.
Bess Truman, back lo the family )>ome
at Jndepend~Jdo., l5J;Qll~ away .. 1 "He 's restless. He's feelin& better. J
have great f3\th'tha~ he's going to come
out of th is all right."
Traffic Referee
•
Post Approved
A new JX>Sltion of traffic referee for the
\Vest Orange County Judicial District
Court has been approved by the county
Board of Supervisors.
Kenneth Smlth, presiding judge of the
courts in Westminster, told board
members the referee was ~ry to
rellev~ lhe !Gad on judges. The position
will pay $16,740 a year.
The new post will be for an interim
period only until a new state Jaw
become& ef£ective allowing municipal
courts to hire traffic oommlSl!iioners,
Judge Smith said.
Kleindienst to Stay
Nixon to Replace Five
In Justice Department
CAMP DAVID, Md. {UPf )-President
Nixon fonnally compleled his second·
term Cabinet today bY announcing that
Richard G. Kleindienst v.ill remain as at·
torney general.
But this was coupled Y.'ilh an·
nouncement th al five top Justice Depart·
men officia! · will be replaced as part of
Nixon's reshu!Oing of the Admln\strltl:ion.
These are: Deputy Attorney General
Ralph E. Erickson; David Luke Norman,
assistant attorney general In charge or
the civil rights division ; Jerris Leonard.
administrawr of the Law Enroreement
Assistance Administration; Roger C.
Cramton , assistant attorney general in
c:harge of the Office of Legal Cotmsel and
Leo M. Pellen:I, assistint attorney
general for admlnlltraUon.
At the same time, the White House
SR.id Yale law profesaor Robert ll. Bork •
-45, one of the draftera of the
Admtnistratlon'1 antlbuslng legislation,
will be a new face ln the Justlc:t Depart·
ment.
Bork will become solle\1or general next
spring at the end of the currtnt tenn of
tho U.S. Suprtme Court, replacing Erwin
N. Grtswold who plans to retire.
There have been report• that Klein-
dienst, connrmed by the Stnate IS head
of the Justice Depiirtment only after
ler,gthy conlirm.aUoo be•rlnll•. will .,.,
rt.main long tn the second Nixon term
1t1rtlng Jan. 20. ,
The Maring~ were spiced by chArges
involving Kleindlenst's alleged role In lhe
settling of an antllru!l suit against
International Telephone and Telegraph
Corp. Democrats charged the setUement
'M'as in exchange fnr political con·
tributlons.
White House Press Secretary Ronald
L. Zltgler, asked if Kleindienst would be
replaced soon, replied: "The attorney
ge neral wi ll be staying as attorney
general in tne second term."
Ziegler said replacements for the other
fi\•c Ju~tice officials would be named
soon. He said Erickson and Norman
would be offered appointments as judges
whlle the other three would return to
private life.
Nixon announced Uiat Kewe1 Lafontant,
50 a Chicago attorney, wtll become depu·
ty' solicitor general when Bork is pro-
moted to the lop job. She wUI btcome
one of the blghcst ranklng blad<s In the
admlnlstraUon.
Ziegler also confirmed that two of.
flcWs of the Interior o.portmtnl wlll
leave their posts. They are H.arri50D
Loe&eh, assl1tant scerttary for public
hind mattageme:nt. ancftewB R. Bruce,
comm!saiontr of Indian affairs.
The ll·member Nixon cablntt for the
second ttrm 11 au white aod all male.
Ziegler w11s asked why the President
lncluded nelthtr women nor blAC!ka.
"The President Ir looltlna for the btst
qualified people lo nu thete posts,"
Ziegler said. "lie feel1 the men be hu
selected are the best Individuals."
•
0 "OO
Ml.
ETHIOPIA ........ • c« ......... ,
. ·-.•. •.· ~"!".)~~~-... ·: . . . ... ... ··:·~:.-:. .::: ~···
U~I ....._ ..
IN-FLIGHT DRAMA-Five men and two women hijJtcked an Ethio-
pian jetliner today, but secyrity agents shot and'killed them in flight.
The pl'ane, on a fligttt· to Parts, made it back to Adtlts Ababa and
landed.
From Pagel
HIJACK ...
passengers boarded another flight .
"There were many, many bullets,"
John Lodge or Southampton, England
said. "And two hand grenades were
thrown and one exploded."
11e reported that the British couple,
na'med Macintosh, held down one of the
hijackers with their feet until security
n1en shot him.
'"\Ve were hijacked just after takeoff,"
Lodge said. "There were seven hijackers
and they did a bloody good job, excuse
my expression."
Passengers said there were six securi-
ty guards on board and thal the aerial
battle OCCl,lrred high over the Ethiopian
countryside.
"They killed all the hijackers," the
Briton said. "Some of the passengers
\\-'ere injured and are ln a hospital."
Asked how the cache of rifles a n d
grenades wer.e smuggled aboard the
plane -an Ethiopian Airway!! flight to
Paris -Lodge said. "that's a good ques-
t.ion. There was a tight search when we
were boarding but the women wore those.
high-heeled shoes and it seems some of
the guns were hiding in their soles."
George Hart, also of Southampton,
praised Ethiapian Airlines for w h a t he
called "a good job.
"The amazing thing was that the
pistols which were used -and there
were at least 30 shots fired -made a
minimum of noise," be said.
Bill to Build
Chino Preserve ----
To Be Presented
A bill will be introduced to the 1973
session of the Californ ia Legi slature to
establish a wildnemess preserve in Chino
Hills.
Assemblyman Joh n V. Briggs CR·
Fullerton ) who will prepare the
legislative resolution held a point press
conference Thursday in Placentia with
Supervisor William J . Phillips of
Fullerton. Phillips is the original 1ponsor
of the wilderness area project.
When the proposed Chino Hills airport
was being discussed last spring, Phillips,
urged by anti-airport groups in Placentia ,
Yorba Linda, Brea and Fullerton p~
pOsed the wilderness area as a joint·proj--
ect of Orange, Riverside a n d San
Bernardino counties.
Briggs said Thursday he will either
seek a state grant for the project or try
for federal funds. He said he wa s con·
fident of congressional action io finance
the park.
P1·ofessor, 47, Dies
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Herbert L.
Packer, -47. professor of criminal law at
the Stanford Un.iversity Law School, died
Wednesday.
-
2Gunmen
Make Haul
'In Newport
By AR'l1lUI\ R. VINSEL
Of t111 0.llY Pl"' lMJ
A gunman team including one bandit
grotesquely garbed In a nylon stocking
mask and woman's wig invaded a
Newport Beach borne Thursday night,
escaping with several thousand dollars'
worth or loot.
The plstol·waving pa ir missed the n1an
tl)ey were after, according to police, but
·knew just what they wanted and got it.
Loss at the Arthur Roy home, 511
Irvine Ave., included a large assortment
of rare coins, a $4,000 Cur coat and $80 \n
pocket money.
DetecUve Sgt. Sam Amburgey said to.
day that Mra. Kalhertne Roy confronted
the robbers a.t 1:45 p.m., following a
knock on the door.
Her bedridden, inv8.tid husband wu
unable to intervene as the men burst
through the door, demanding lo ,.. hi•
brother, Pat Roy, then due home from a
San Diei:o construction job.
Investfgators said ~trs. Roy told them
her brother·in-law was not at home, but
they pushed on Inside, demanding his ex-
tensive rare coin <.\il!ectlon .
The home was ransacked while Mrs.
Roy stood helplessly by.
Total loss in the lightning-like robbery
was still being tallied todsy, but police
said it will be considerable.
No vehicle was see n or heard during
the holdup, while ~trs. Roy could
describe one bandit only as wearing the
bizarre female outfit.
FromPqeI
SQUABBLE. • •
shov.·s we will need . two schools," said
Knox, a We!!tJninster attorney.
"We can debate -about this, but in the
meantime our children are suffering in
O\'ercrowded chwrooms," he added.
Trustee Ralpb Bauer was not available
but Ray Schmitt. a lnng-time member of
the board said he agreed with parts of
Logan's letter.
"I 1hink George has A rigltt to express
himself," uid Schmitt. "I stil l think we
should have goM for one school and put
all our efforts into that."
Schmitt, who along with Logan voted
against putting the tv.'O school proposals
on the ballot, did not rule oot the cha.nee
that he might support the bond. "l still
haven't made up my mind," he said .
f s s Henredon's F~u~ CentUries
DREXEL-HERITAGt-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN
INTERIORS
WIUDA TS a SATURDAYS t :OO .. S<lO
HIDAY 'TIL t :OO
THE COMPANY
THAT CARES
ON DISPLAY
NOW.
NEWPORT BEACH •
1727 WESlCLIFF OL,
"42°2010
LAGUNA BEACH •
J4S NOlTH COAST HWY. ., ... ,,,,
TORRANCE e
l JMt HAWTHOlHt ILVO.
J71°lt7't
--. --••• --
Crans ton's
Son Gets
Trial Date
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
24-)'!ar-old son or Sen. Alan
Cranston (0 -C al l f .), is
scheduled to stand trial btre
JaT.18 on assault charges fil-
ed in the alleged drugging of a
former Playboy bunhy.
Trial for Robin Craruiton
was postponed from \bursday
in Superior Court beCause a
prosecutkm attorney was ill, a
court spokesman said.
Crarutoo ls charged with WET BAY AREA WEATKER CAUSES MUD SLIDE IN LAFAY ETTE
( BRIEFS ) W1ll1, Roof of ;• Knocked Ao kow As Storm Causes Ear!h Slide ·~
~~~·::!~~~~~ Snow. In Bay Area.
in a West Los: Angeles home l,
iastMarch. lranciscans Toss Urban Snowballs
Pr of Offers Plan
To Curb Crowding
MONTEREY (AP I -Stan·
ford University pr ofessor
William Shockley . con-
troversial for contending that
black.s are genetically inferior
to whites, suggests the govern-
ment pay men with low lQs to
get vasectomies.
A $1 ,000 ·bonus could be of·
fered for each point a man's
intelligence quotient is below
~00. says Shockley. an elec-
tronics engineering professor.
men lectured separately to
about 400 persons at Monterey
Peninsula C.Ollege, t hen
answered questions.
Wil lian1 Farr
Gets Fihn Aid
Fnday, Otefmbtt 8, 11172 DAILY PllOl ~ ~--"--'---'----------
10% OFF
WITH THIS COUPON
ON ANY OF OUR
CHRISTMAS TREES
LIVI NG CHRISTMAS TREES FROM $20.00 UP BEAUTIFU ~ LIVING GIF T
JAPANESE BONSAI
NOW
50-;. off •s.so .,
TAKATA NURSERY
LOS ANGELES (A Pl-20th
Century-Fox announced it vo'ill
sponso r a motion picture
premiere to help defray court
costs for jailed r c po r t e r THUS, A MAN with an IQ of William Farr. ~ 710 BAKER STREET (n•wt to Flro Station}
90 Id be "d $10 000 f on lrj1tol at Baker -COSTA MESA wou pai • or Proceeds or th Dec. 21 S46~7l4
obtaining a vasectomy, an Wesl Coast opening of "Thel~ ................. ...,...,...,...,...,~...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,,,,.!
operation in which the ducts Effects or Gamma Rays on 1::
carrying sperm are cut to pre-Man-in-lhe-Moon Marigolds." Nearly Eve r yo. ne vent impregnation. Shockley made the proposal directed by Paul Newman and
Thursday in what was billed starring his wife. JoaMe
as a "debate" with Cedric x. Woodward, will be donated to Listens to Landers
a black pro t es so r oI t~ William Farr Defense
e Boy Crushed
CORONA (AP) -A 2-year-
old child died after he was
crushed to death by his
family's car in the driveway
or his home, authorities said.
Byrne forbade the government
psychology al stanford. The Fund, a Fox spokesman said. SAN, FRANCISCO (AP) -'snow to stick near sea Ieve1 1------------..:..c:c....:..c.::::.._.::.:__:c_::..c_::.._:. __ ....:...:....._:_:_ ________________________ _
-
Snow fell on San Francisco for any period or lime came ID
and gave the city's children a years ago when most Northern
rare chance to toos urban Callfornia valleys experienced
snowballs here T .h u_r s d a y a white covering.
night. The National 'Ne a the r
Citizens or the suburban Service said it apparently was
citie.s. of Daly Cit~ and caused by "one ·thunderhead
Pacifica flocked outside to five to seven miles i n
watch the Oakes silently fall-diameter moving southeast
PoUce said Brian Reinhardt,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Reinhardt, died shortly after
Thursday's accident in
Riverside General Hospital.
ing past street lights. about 25 miles an hour."
Brian and hls sister,
Charlene, 4, were playing in-
side the car. A band brake
was released accidentally, and
Brian fen under the wheels as
the vehicle rolled backwards,
authorities said.
e Yort11's l11
LOS ANGELES (APl
Mayor Sam Yorty will an-
nounce Jan. j that he is seek·
Ing reelection to a fourth
term, says his closest political
associate. He said Yorty
decided after turning down a
job in the Nixon ad-
minlstratlon.
Deputy Mayor J o s e p h
Quinn, recuperating at home
from an earlier heart attack,
said ln an tntervlew 'lbursday
that the 62-year-old 11'18.yor
plans to conduct a bani-hitting
primary campaign this spring
that is likely to result in a
runoff.
eclo•eCall
RIVERSIDE _ (APl -Alt
empty ICbool bus was sli~ JR,
half by a Union Pacific freight
train after the driver ap-
parently thought the train was
on another track, authorities
said.
The 66-passenger bus was en
route to an.elementary school
here to pJ,ck up youngsters for
a field trip Thursday when the
accident occurred , the
highway patrol said.
The driv e r . Donald
Sherman, 62, was treated and
released from Riverside C.Om·
munity Hospital after suf-
fering cuts and scratches.
e Prison Closl11g
SllORTL Y BEFORE the I
p.m. snowfall. a be av y
hailstorm hit the area, with
the pellets sticking to sloped
car windshields.
There also were reports or
lightning as the snow tell.
It snowed brieny at Jow
clevatiOns earlier, but the
white stuff didn't stick.
Observers said the last
storm that dropped enough
Kitty Hawk
Crew Won't
Appear
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The
21 sailors accused of rioting
aboard the carrier Kitty Hawk
will not appear before a con-
gressional • committee even
though invited and if forced to
i,ppear some would invoke the
Fifth Amendment, a defense
attorney said Thursday.
"lt would be ina,ppropriate
for them to appear before the
committee," said Milton J.
Silverman. "I trink the con-
gressmen realized this and
will not assert their subpoena
power~ A three-man House armed
service subcommitte, which
enters its third day of closed
hearings into the racial trou-
ble today. boarded the giant
carrier Thursday and spent
three boors touring the scene
or the disturbance Oct. 12-13.
They ate lunch, chatted
casually with s e v e r a 1
crewmembers, talked a t
length with three others but
said little after their visit.
The Northern California
stonn temporarily blocked
lµghways, reaping accidents
and forcing officials to close
schools in at least three coon-
ties.
DENSE FOG packed into
the San Joaquin Valley. cut-
ting visibility to near zero as
the season's worst storm
whitened even low elevation
ridges and heaped bll.u.ards of
snow on the Sierra Nevada.
Even the San Francisco Bay
Area was dusted with snow
and hail, with snow in Marin
County visible from downtown
San Francisco, where tem-
peratures fell to a season low
38. .
In Marin, the twisting
Panoramic Highway, an eight-
mile road connecting Stinson
Beach with State Highway I,
was closed all day due to
snow, the highway patrol said.
The roads up nearby Mt.
Tamalpais, Mt. Diablo in Con-
tra Costa County and Mt.
Hamilton near San Jose were
closed until SllQW plows could
ariiVe.
STATE DI VIS I ON of
highways crews dumped salt
and sand on state Route 17
between Los Gatos and Santa
Cruz to melt slush which clos-
ed the road for a hall hour.
Several other major roads
were closed briefly due to bad
visibility and snow, including
State Route %0 near Marysville
and U.S. 101 near Leggett.
But Interstate 80 West was
impassable due to zero visiblli-
ty from Truckee to Colfax.
Highway of f icials said
passenger cars and light
trucks and buses with chains
were allowed to travel east on
HIO.
SUSANVILLE (AP )
Employes at the s t a t e ' s pmr.1C11••••mm•••••a••••.,.~I
minimum security prison unit
hert have been served notice
that the 700-lnmate facility
will close by July 1 - a move
the residents of this small
commun1ty fee1 will be a blow
to their economy.
Sex Ex~hange
'S haring' Trend Seen?
The news Thursday _, the
280 men who work here was
accompanied by assurtnces
that they will be eligible for
prison jobs in other parts: of
the state. The inmates
themselves will be sent to
other prison units, it was
repor!ed.
Minimum risk prisoners who
have not committed crimes of
violenct have been housed at
this Northern calilornla faclll·
ty. They have been used to
fight forest fires throughout
the state.
e Pape r # Trial
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Friendship, J1l()l"e than
kinship. will underlie future human relatioos and t.omor·
row 's couples will openly engage in 9eXUal relations with
friends and other cooples, says Dr. Alexander Comfort,
British biologist and medical """'8rCher.
In an article entitled "Sexuality in a Zero Growth ~
ciety" in the ~mber i.S$le of Cmter Report, Comfort
says today's trend toward swingjng "marks the end, or
the beginning ol the end, of proprietary oerual attitudeo."
~iate sharing, says Omfort, is a "realbtic view of the
needs of cooples and individuals for variety" and a 11rec-
Oflllition thai the meeting of _needs rathe.-than their fro>.
traUon is a gift which e:a:presses love ... and strengthens
the primary bond ...
Cent..-Report is the monthly publlcallon of the Center
for the Study of Democratic InstituUons, a nonprofit edu·
cational research institute here.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The ~~~~~~:::Iii!~"""'~~ long delayed Pentagon Papers =
trial will begin next Tuesday,
!Dys the trial judge, but the
government will have to
eliminate some 100 pages of
proposed evidence it planned
to present.
U.S. Dist. Court Judge Matt
Byrne forbad the government
Thursday to U8e !IOme. pages of
the masalve Pentagon Papers
study that the prosecution
didn't tell the defense it was
going to cite at the trial.
Byrne denied a defense re-
quest for time to prepare for
new material the government
has added to its case since the
trial wa! halted by an appeal
of a wiretap Issue hu1t August.
e Bradle fl Bus t
LOSANGELES(AP )-Tbe
27-year-old daughter of Loi
Angele• City Councilman and
may0raJ candidate Thomas
Bradley ha! been e.rrested and
booked for lnve11tlgatlon of
f>()Melslng dangeroua drugs,
authorities 11\ld.
A Penonallzed Gift
h th•t "''" of yo11n 011• cif
tit•\• 0 911.,. tfriot h•• ..... ,..,.
thln9 7 Why not giT• hiM 1
gift cffflflcoto f0t o cv1+o111
111•d1 111it or 1port coot 1rtd
11•• f,om ovt 111p•rb 1•l•c•
tiol'I of E1"19ll1h 0114 Scotthh
f1b1ic1 for Chrl1tn111.
w .... ttff ,,... 11 11 lrtt• ""·
N..,.n ...... Cellf.,.I•
PHONlt '41·1012
•
~e ~
'ffti OtN~ C4W£§
SAN'I'A WILL IJf: A'rOUR CllRISTMAS
'l'R EE Lo·r •t 11.,.-bur 11•111 If'"' r"'r
SATURDAY Dec,,,.bn 9 •1rd Drr,1r1htr 16
fro• 12-4:00 "'"'' "' o•r N NrJtry 111
N~ 6-Jti<toriu ::i Nnd.ry Dctt•IH'r 10
•ndDt''"'IH-r 17 /rorw, J2.00 lo 4.00
C11Mt> ;,, <1,,J oiJ ii u•ith S•1rl• .••••
ciw: bi,,, ::t••r C/Jri)/ ,,,.1111 Li JI"'""
itt •Int C11PHiy c.,,,,.
TRIM A TREE
SHOP
/1" •II yo•' tbtttrdti"t ,,uJ~. Uniq•t
Nrd 10 fitul i1nas., .•. Exprnsii·t o"t
•f 11 ltitul •• J,,,ports .. ,p/,,s .. Amtrk••
llUllit #()f . .,//its. llffpurltd """ ao,,,,,.
/ ie l rtl I iihtr., .1 111inltlt .• ,11tli11• .•
bMbblt. , . Jn i If iRl 11rt 111 nd OMldoor. .
ART IFl CIAL TREES
Already Shaped .•.•• , •.•••
Decorated •.•...•..••••••
h• the box •.••••••..•••.•
1'11 nn S.1.-:"i'Cl\l':!!!
R EPLACEMENT BULBS
C7 1h . . . . . . . . . . . . 7e
c9 ............. ll e
WATER TREE
STANDS
Kttfl ::to•r lrtt f r,Jh .,,J i rtt•
1bro•ibo11l lbt ho/ itl•1J urith ""'of
<1Mr w.1,,."Trtt S111""'1 f5 .95
G reen Garde ...
.., B-J to•ix with,.,.,.. •.. , . 79c
ICICLES
$1.19
fo' un r1ltl ft1sbionrcl Chri•/ma.I
reg. 29c Now .......... , , I 9 e or 6forS1.00
reg. 59cNow ............ 39e o r 3for Sl.OO
SNO-JET KlTS
N•11• 1°" ''"' flrxlt.yo11r lrtt "' lxunr. &J1•Plli /11ts of /11,,. $ }08 reg. $3.98 now .................... · ..
refills reg. $1.69 now .............................. 89e
CHRISTMAS COLOR
Lood.1 nf bloo"'i"I rotor j" •I in I;,,,,. fo ,.. lht' Jw.liday1J11'"8t s,fnl/o"
of b'"" I if"/ /\fN ,,,J, C Itri.; I mdJ C11t·t NJ. Po 1 ,,,,111111, Degon'"'''
A z.1/,;11 anti "'""Y mort. 1\l,,A.o:r yo11,. 1elrct io11 rt1rl1
T REETOPS
Wt"'-''" 11;,,,,,.,,.;,,, /11 11'1 I r,rr lops, yo11r choltt of colorJ .,,,J Jtylt's. Pftlt 1h~ ""' j11sl ,..;,h1for1011r lffd 59
l'loliday priced fron1 ••• • •• •••••• ••••• •• •• ·•• ••· • •· • • • C
GREEN HAVEN GARDENS
2 l23 Ncwporl Blvd., <Asia Mesa
373 l Wesl Warner, Santa Ana
646-:19 2'
S40-6761
M• .. :10•r 1tlntifln/rn'1t Gwt 1r 11•1""' ·' ,,,, .... "'rt1h l'ortll of.,.,.,.,,,
·rwo l0t"'lion1 10 IH-tttr ~,,..,., 1'•"·
,\lo1Aot ,.11.,,. '''''' ;,,, {''"" p~hilt fir, \ 1/1•,, ·r;p, D o•1l11s r,·,,
p/,,nt•I "'" N11hft, p/""'"' '"" G,,,,,,J /· ir. 'fhr11rttl Pl• •t•I i•n
V n•1l111. :itol.-b p ;,,t. '''· •... J.11hf1 tof'1 111 11· GIA '' 'I'.,
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flo<ktJJ"1JI lbt .... ,,.,.,,,hf,(,,, ,,, """ ro/11r, •. .or WO• PHol1' b111 ""' ~""'.' IM• 11/,-..,,Jy &,,,, jltttirJ .• <Ill r •f'ittit J .,,.,J 1il t J .,., J 11pf11T •.. rr.,J1111r
p,.;,,1, • .i.pl'ti•I ri1rvl t!t•·rrlrw1.
:!JI/OPE.A KL.Y lf'llll.I. \'OU $'1'/LL ll.-1 l 't: A (,OQD .\l'l.l·C l 10,"I ·ro CllO<»E 11ROM.
cusroM~Nq
------
+
•
• D A D .Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
Drive-in
After . nearly a year of heated controversy, Foun·
Lain \'alley city councilmen appear to have given the
ax lo the Syufy drive-in theater project.
By a narrow 3·2 vote, the Syufy group Tuesday
night was denied a conditional use permit to build a
four·screen drive-in theater near the intersection o(
Warner Avenue and Newhope Street. The denial cli·
maxed a second attempt to place a theater in Fountain
Valley.
Although some of the arguments voiced by home-
owners about property value loss. the danger or X-rated
movies and trash seemed exaggerated, the majority of
the council felt their opposition constituted the feeling
of most Fountain Valley residents.
So be it. But the cou ncilmen and homeowners also
must keep in mind that the owners of property in the
city's industrial area cannot be asked forever to sit on
their land. Action should be taken by the city to facili·
tale attracting permanent or conditional uses which
meet with general approval.
Silent Treatment
Huntington Beach city councilmen have been
strangely quiet about. the future of the o1d downtown,
and the future of their beach access suit against the
Huntington Pacific Corp.
Silence is not one of the council's trademarks, so
the quiet attitude leads to considerable speculation.
Since councilmen killed the controversial Top of
the Pier plan -a five block parking lot facing t)\e
ocean -they have held three closed executive ses-
sions to discuss the beachfront and the downtown.
Battle Ends
trary to past council expressions.
City hall sourees say the downtown $1lcnce-is on
the city attorney's advice. P)'Dlicity on any proposed
governmental projects might mvolve the city in further
inverse condemnation suits.
On the beach access suit, the city attorney says It
should not be dropped until the state backs Its promise
to buy the private beach with cold cash.
The silence on both projects is indeed unusual, but
perhaps it is better than empty words with little 'l!ros·
pect ot action.
New Approach to Study
Any syste1n that allows students to study less while
learning more can't be all bad. And when it has paten·
tial for cutti11g costs of instruction as well, it becomes
decidedly attractive.
This is the situation at Golden \Vest CoUege where
a system of self-paced instruction has replaced the old
lecture-style course in most beginning science.and math
classes.
The Audio-Tutorial (A·T) system, as it is called, is
a multi-media learning package that relies basically on
a tape recorded Jesson, combined with supplemental ·
slide shows and physical exhibits which the student
studies on cue from the tape.
This may sound like an impersonal arrangement, but
officials point out that the instructor, once freed from
the burden of preparing for and giving mass lectures.
ends up offering more individual 'instruction than had
been POssib1e before.
. The only comment on the downtown is that its
development will be in private hands -a view con-
Further, officials have solid statistics showing that
students really do learn better on the A·T system. and
that the.v like it better, too. So it looks like a good syi;.
tern all the \vay around.
H
"Wl'VE SOMSI~ lYUWill1N6 BUT SAl~OH -MAYgf lHA1~ 1HE ANSWE~ --·.
The Hurrible
Orig in of
'Hu11ible Pie'
(sYDNEY J.HAR.RIS)
\Ve haven't had a word-quiz on
"origins" for quite a while, so here is a
set of interesting word derivations. A
score of 50 percent is respectable.
1. \Vhat has "contemplation" got to do
\\'ith bl Rls?
2. How did the two
and three in cards
come to be knovtn as
the "deuce" and
the "Irey''?
3. People actually
used lo eat "humble
pie" -what animal
were they devour -
ing?
4. What did the first room called a
"lobby'' refer to?
5. What flower 's name. literally
translated, means "pain in the nose"?
6. Why is a certain species of ape call~
Cd by the odd name of orang-utan or
some variation?
7. Why is it a contradiction in terms to
have a "victory parade"?
8. What was a "stadium" in ancient
Greece?
9. What fruit did the word "zest" come
from?
JO. Why are the standing rules of a
group called the "by-laws"?
ANSWERS'
I. The Roman augue, or soothsayer,
would mark off a section of the sky· with
his wand, and then study the movement
of birds within this section, which was
coiled a "templum."
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Richard Wilson writes (Daily Pilot,
Dec. 4) that President Nixon seeks
to modernize a federal bureaucra-
cy which grows vaster every year.
Let's hope he does not attempt vast
deeds in a half-vast way.
L.D.
TMt ... tu.... "'"-'-" rud11't' 'lilw.. ""' -rll'Y tllo9 .i lfle lll'#SHltll'. SIM
., ..... "' -.. 0.....,., Gus. oa.1Y l"u.t.
2. From the French expressions, "deux
ace," meaning two aces, and "tres ace."
or three aces.
3. The poorer peasantry in medieval
times were forced to eat a meat pie
made from lhe "urnbles," or lower parts,
of ti"'" stag.
4. A .room in the Bouse of Parliament
buildings which was used for meetings
between members of Parliament and the
genera: public or special interests asking
for consideration. (Hence, "lobbyist.")
S. Nasturtium, because of its pungent
odor, is a compound of the LaUn for
"nose" and "giving pain."
6. "Orang-utan,'' and its variations, is
the Malayan word meaning "man of the
woods.''
7. A military parade was originally a
"preparation" for war, or evidence of
preparedness (from the Lalin, "parare,"
to prepare), not a celebration of its vie·
tory.
8. A "st.aditim" was a measured length
of some 202 yards, used to lay out the
course for a foot race; later, the name of
the length came to be applied to the
whole field itself.
9. "Zest" was 1t first a shred of lemon
peel.
JO. "By-laws" were "town laws," from
the Old English "by," meaning a town or
municipality.
Pay ola Still Pays Off
\VASHINGTON -The practice of
paying off disc jockeys to plug records,
p<ipularly known as payola, is a federal
crime.
Yet we have reported in a series of col·
umns that record companies have been
slipping free records, TV sets and cash
under the tatile to disc jockeys and pro-
gram officials.
In other instances.
narcotics, prostitutes
and Las Vegas holi·
days bave been pro-
vided to those who
prcler a hot time.
For the compan-
ies, it's worth a
little payola to get
their records on the
hit lists, because teenagers with a billion
dollarS tn their pockets flock to the
record stores to buy tbe hit tunes.
At first, our stories were downplayed or
denied. But now the heat is on.
The Federal Communlcatloos Com-
mission has already held rour closed
hearings ln SeR.ttle, Los Angeles,
Pittsburgh and Nt'W York Cily.
Vinegary old Bill Ray, the FCC's hom-
plian<e chief, ha> vigorously denounced
paYola and Is now slowly moving the rec toward public hearings.
THE BIG PAYOFFS, Ray oOOU!d fond,
have been gaing to the rich, white rock
·n• roll dllc jodcoys. They It! the
thousancktollar trlpt to Vegas.. but tht
blackl and Spanish-language broad·
casters are more likely to get caught.
Ill Baktnfietd, caur., !or example, al·
fldavita filed with the FCC char11e that
lla,ym<iiiil Gana, ~rocram dlrector or the
IJttJo thoosao<l-wattor KW AC. If• s
demmled and received payola.
Poul!no Btmal of the tiny Bernal
•'
(JACK ANDERSON)
Reconb firm .swears that Gana "has
always asked me for money. We call it in
Spanish 'Mordida' .•. Every time that I
visited Bakersfield, l would pay him
from S75 to $100 cash." When Bernal
stopped paying .. his sales dropped.
A DANCE PROMOTER, L e o n e 1
Sanchez, also swore he paid off Garza.
"When I stopped paying, my records
were no longer played on KWAC, except
on rare occasions," Sanchez swore.
When my associate Les Whitten
reached Garia, he burst out: "Never!
Ntver! It's completely pollUcaJ, the most
ridiculous thing I ever heard. There's no
payola." But be conceded he ls under
FCC Investigation.
Our own sources, who would talk. to us
only after we pledged to reveal no
names, say some of the natloo'1 btggett
black radio personalities have been tak·
ing money ror playing ttcords. Even with
them. the sums have been in the '200
range. One record promoter told us of a
major eastern ••RJlyt.bm and Blues" sta·
lion, which offered to play lUt r<conl for
a •Ingle botUe of S<otch.
RAY IUMSELF bas encountered a new
ronn ol payola. The disc jockey may pro-
mote his own dance or other !bow and
"invite" a record company to provide
him with talent at far leu t.fiad ~:Ing rate. The proceeda go to the dllc y.
II the performer <lOOlplleo. the dllc
joclcey playa his recorcl on the air. U he
loll! to aliow up, the recorcl la lflJIOl1'd.
Ray cal!J this an "Indirect poyment"
which appe"" to violate federal
statutes.
A Case of 'Heads Yot• Win, Tails I Lose'
Painful Progress of Peace Talks
\VASHINGTON -For the U.S .. the
final Vietnam negotiations are torturous·
ly and painfully turning out to be a case
of "heads you win, tails I lose."
Neither side is evincing much in :he
way of support and
gratitude. ~
Publicly and priv-
ately the U.S. is be-
ing berated and as·
persed by both the
Communists a n d
South Vietnamese.
It's entirely pos-
sible the way may
end with the U.S. in
as much dbfavor in Saigon as in Hanoi.
~ST deviousness and in-
transigence was expected. Throughout
the protracted and fateful secret negoiia·
lion; they have endlessly coMived for
every conceivable advantage and to
finagle a double meaning into every key
provision -obviously for later use 1t a
time and for a purpose lbat suits their
totalitarian ends.
At the same time, President Nguyen
(ROBERTS.ALLEN)
Van Thieu has been equally and high-
handedly in1portunate.
His basic aim is to entrench him:e!f
personally and politically regardless of
the nalurc of the peace terms. He is bent
on retaining absolute control even if tOOt
means some form or dictatorship.
THIEU DEMANDED and i;Ol immense
quantities of military supplies. More than
$1 billion worth of planes, tanks, guns
aod other costly combat equipment Were
rushed to South Vietnam in the past six
weeks. Graphically illustrative of their
type and cost to U.S. taxpayers are the
following:
-32 C-130 giant cargo planes at $10
million per. Exactly why so many of
these huge carriers were turned over to
the South Vietnamese is not clear. They
had none of these planes, nor any ex-
perience with them. Pilots and crews will
hh\'C to be trained to Oy and nl:llllf:llll
the1n .
-125 F-5 supersonic lighters at t l .5
million per plane. The South Vietnamese
airforce had 18 F-Ss and some 30 trained
crews. Obviously, scores of additional F ·S
pilots and mechanics will have to be train-
ed -at U.S. expense.
WlflLE THE U.S. will foot that h'J:,
the U.S. Air Force will not do the
training.
The peace agreement will require the
withdrawal of all U.S. forces. It is the
Administration's intent to meticulously
abide by this stipulation.. As a con-
sequence, the maintenance-of the C-130s,
"'-Ss and various other ail:'craft and the
training of SOtJtb Vietnarn,se.:crtws will
be turned over to civilians hi.fed for that
purpose.
It will be a big and costly job -as 600
new planes of aU types are involved.
That's the startling number added lo the
South Vietnimese airforce since late
October.
But this and hundreds of millions of
dollars of other hardware and munitions
arc not satisfying President Thieu.
He is demanding $5 billion in ecooomic
aid over an indefinite period.
THIS ASTOUNDING propasal is what's
behind his clamor and pre5SUre for a
personal meeting with Preisdent Ni1on.
When this was politely but fimJly lurned
down , Thieu resorted to guile -in
characteristicaJly beavybanded maoner.
He tried to create a rift. between the
President and Dr. Kissinger by accusing
the latter of double-dealing -misleading
both him and the President.
This ploy was so paU!nUy pl1QIJ1 ~· sank
by its own weight. • Whal seemed to pOrtleWorly 'l'anklt
Thieu when he blandly popped bis IS
billion economic demand was :!.ur's renyrrk, ''Mr. Presldc!iif; .. (""Is
something for the U.S. 1Q;ln to
decide. In our country, only Congress h&s
the power to appropriate funds. The
President may propose, but Congress
disposes.''
Thieu glan!d, but .. Id nolblni.
Addendum' South Vietnam bas around
one million men under arms. U.S. in-
telligence ..timates !laDcil bas 145,000
combat troops in South V"tetnam, plus
another 100,000 Vietcong.
Seat Belts Need Better Promotion
To the Editor;
Your editorial, "Driving Life-saver"
on Nov . 30 stressed the fact that seat
belts are a necessity in auto-safely.
Within the article, there was a discussion
on whether to make the use of seat bells
mandatory or not.
I believe that the importance of wear·
ing seat belts does not lie v.•ithin the Jaw,
but rather in the promotion by the con·
cerned.
SINCE I have come to America in
July, 1972. I have seen many ad·
vertisements on the danger of smoking.
There are warning statements on
cigarette cases. There are warning signs
in all cigarette advertisements. The
Cane<:r Society has done its share in pro-
moting anti-smoking in perodicals as
well as television. As a result, I un-
derstand that the number of smokers bas
decreased since the anti-smoking cam-
paign began.
HOWEVER, I have seen only a few ad·
vertiseinents promoting the importance Of
wearing seat belts. If periodirJils and
televlsion come out with m o-r e ad-
vertisements to promote the use or scat
belts, lbe number of people who wear
seat belts will rise like the rise of non-
smokers. Though some cars have warn-
ing systems which remind people to wear
seat belts, too many more cars do not
have any warnin'g devi~s.
I hope that there are Americans who
care eno\lgh to make a change.
NOBUMJCT!J HARA,
Student CSULB from Japan
Whl# Burt& Tree1'1'
Tl> the Editor:
Th11 )'f;ar, r.11 in the past, when the
holidays ere behiod us, the Newport
Be11<h Fire Department will conduct a
tree-Durning event at the beach and
marJY thOlWlnds of Christmas trees will
end their usefulness In a pall of lltnOke.
CAN WE AFFORD this aolution any
longer, when our air bu t0 many other
terrible usaulU ~ upon It?
Burning Is wrong, e<Pe<ially when
nature hu 11 better solution and a l'w1ber._
use for such treea. MRny other cities
have found a better 10lutk>n.
My home town, Ann Arbor, Mich.,
(...___MAIL_B_ox ___..J
Letters from readers are welcome.
Normally writers should convey their.
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condense. Letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is 1'eserved. A.Lt
letters must include signature a11d
mailing address, but names may be
withheld on request if su/ficie11t
reason is apparent. Poetry will Mt be
published.
shreds its trees and turns them into
valuable mulch and humus, which its
grateful citizens haul away for use in
their gardens. Trees used for landfill can
also return to earth in a natural ~ay.
I HA VE SPOKEN with several people
at City Hall who have listened to me
courteously but bJve olfered no support.
Our city should be responsive to our
needs, and if others share my concern
that we need to find a better solution,
then we should make that concern known
to the men and women who wort for us.
Undoubtedly it is more economical for
the city to burn trees than to shred them,
or for the sanitation men to haul them
away. But in terms of air pollutioo and
the waste of natural resources, can Wf:
afford to continue to bum?
As a postscript, I would poiot out that
the city will accept the dooatton of llving
trees after Christmas from those of us
who have run out of planting room in our
own yards.
SALLY P. NET2ER
Pu:i::i:l ed Parent
To the Editor:
My son made a ceramic ashtray at
school and it was recently displayed in
the art show a t the. Huntington Center
Mall. It was in the special awards section
and it has disappeared -apparently
stolen.
HE SPENT a lot of time and effort
making it very special for me as a
'The Compleat Lover'
"The Story of Love. Falling in Love.
Courting. Making Love. A Llfetime of
Loving.'' These main seetioos, enhanced
by delightful selections of poem11, love
stories, essays and games, provide a rich
experience in the fonn of a large, pro-
vocative, lavishly illustrated book: The.
Compleat Lover by Derek and Julia
Parker (McGraw-Hill, $15.95).
"WE HA VE TRIED to renect most of
the faces or iove ln The Complent
Lover," the autbo1'11 note. "and in that we
are or course l11ek:y to be writing !n the
19705. Some of the pictures here, and
some or the poerM too, would doubtless
have shocked our Victorian
grandparents. Yet how safe and unshock-
ing they seem today, oomp.,.td with the
'full frontal' approach to love that 'l.s oow
.JJO prevalent In bf?oks and periodical!, on
stage and sctWD· ''
tn the last two centuries1 the Parkers
point out, taste · has gone from a~3t
(THE BOOKMAN J
total repression to almost total license.
They have steered clear of the dangers
Inherent in both extremes, following a
civlllzcd middle course. avoldfn& un-necc~ary crudity but saying all lhey felt
:;hould bo said.
YOUNG AND happUy marrled, the
Parkers -remembered for their
Compleat Astrologer, which topped
250,000 In sales ln 1971 11nd Ml
translated into slx languages -wMt
their new book to provide everyone,
''whether they are about to acribble a
lint beart..,,cH1rrow on the wall of the
schoolyard, or are plannlog a golden
wedding celebn1tton." with IOll!t!iintl
with whld> tl)ey can ldenUl)t. ·
CAROLINE llARIU.EROAD
surprise for when l returned home from
a trip to the hospital. It was beautiful and
I cherished it. I :ould (and dld) cry.
Last year I saved and bought him an
expensive coat which 90IDeOOt stole a
week later. '
WHAT PUZZLF.S me is bow a partnl
could let his child keep anyth!.:ig tha'
doesn't belong to them, Surely they
couldn't help but notice a brand new coat
thai they didn't buy.
Has the world reached a point where
we are so greedy that we welcome
anything "free"1' Doesn't it occur to
parents that they must teach their
children not to take U1ings that do not
belong to them, let alone encourage
them!
DOES~ rr occur to -_parents that even if It la a small handmade
ashtray or a big eipensive coat that it
could be very important· to whomever it
belonged to? Are patents so lackadaisical
that they don't even notice a "new" coat
or toy? If this is the case, no wonder
there are so many jilventle delinquents. [
feel sorrier for the !deb than I do the
parents.
Maybe this letter wiU open some
parents' eyes to "new" thm.g, around the
house. "Cute" llttle "takers" turn Into
adult thieves. .,
MARV JANE HENDRIX
OIAHOl COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, PubUsher
Thom.at Keevd. Editor
Rorbo ra Kreibich
Echtorlol Pogr. Editor
Thr t-dltorlRI llllMC of the Dally
Pilot ~tt'k.' to inform 11.nd .11Umu·
11.\1 1! rC>11.den by 11r11.cnt1ng th~
nt•"11p111per's opinion• and oom ·
mentar) on t1;;)Jcs or lfltti'Cl'\ 11nd
shcnU\cance, by provklina a (nrum
tor tl\e tXJ>rM.'llon of our rcadcra'
op\nfo)U., and by prff!?ntl~ tht:
diYttte \'ttwpotnts nf Into~ ob.
H~ and 'l()(lkftrMn '°" toplcl of th• da,y.
Friday, December 8, 1912 ·
• ..
7
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Orange Coast
' EDITION
·-Today's Flaal
N.Y. Stock8
VOL. 65, NO. 343, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES . FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1972 N TEN CENTS
High Costs Spell Death for · Life Magazine
NEW YORK (AP) -Life Magazine
\Viii discontinue publication with the issue
of Dec. 29. Time, Inc. announced today.
The publisher said the 36-year~ld
magazine, famous for il! pioneering use
of news photograph!, will fold because of
··continuing losses."
The year-end double Issue will mark
the close of the week1y magazine fwnded
by Henry Luce.
Life was published at "very subatanUat
deficits in 1969 and 1970 and smaller
deficits in 1971 and 1972," the publisher
said.
"As our projections for 1973 took
shape, however, they showed a resump-
tion of heavy losses, and the indications
for 1974 were even mo" unfavorable,"
Time, Inc. added.
At about 10:45 a.m.~ grim-raced staff
members of the magazine began to
. gather for a meeting on the eighth floor
of-ffieTime-Life building at Sixth Avenue
and 50th Street.
About 250 to 300 staff workers sat in
chairs or stood again!t the walls, waiting
for the meeting, which was closed to
outsiders.
The publisher said ~e. Fortune,
Sports Illustrated and Money, its other
major magazines, "have done very well
lhis year."
Lile lasted more than a year longer
than its chief competitor, Look , which
ceased publication on Oct. 19, 1971. Look
also blamed rising costs. especially
pru;tal rates.
In announcing the decision to fold Life,
Hedley Donovan, editor-in-cbier of Time .
Inc., and Andrew Heiskell, chai rman of
the board, declared :
"Lile has been one of the great
journalistic pioneers. lts launching in
1936 opened a whole new era of pro-
• fessional journalism, with consequences
stil: seen all over the w·orld.
"Life aChieved almost at once, and
kept .through 36 years, an important
voiei! in American affairs; we believe the
magazine has spoken responsibly. and
with vision and compassion. Life will eo
on in maqy ways and places, oot least in
its influeoce on the other magazines and
books of Time. Inc .. ,
The Time, Inc .. executives noted that
Life "encountered severe competition
from television since the late l950's" for
the advertising dollar.
The magazine earned "acceptable prof-
its" during mos t of lhe 1960s, they
reported, "but the cost pressures and the
competitive pressures kept building up.
and we have been running out of
economies.''
In the past two years:-Life reduced its
circulation from 8.5 million copies to 5.5-
milllon and increased the price to 50
cents for a newsstand copy in an attempt
Newport Gunmen Strike
Pair Escape From Home With Expensive Loot
I
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot .... Dally ,1 .. 1 lhltr
A gunman team including one bandit
grotesquely garbed in a nylon stocking
mask and woman's wig invaded a ...
Newport Beach home Thursday night,
escaping with several thousand dollars'
worth of loot.
The pistol·waving pair missed the man
they were after, according to police, but
knew just what they wanted and got it.
Loss at the Arthur !Wy home, 511
Irvine Ave., incltJ<!ed a large assortment
Heart Poses
Main Threat
For Truman
KANSAS CITY, Mo. !UPI) -Doctors
at the bedside of Harcy S Truman said
today they have "major t'Otlcem" about
the failing heart of the . .critically ill 88-
year-old former President. He was given
extra medication.to keep him relaxed.
"President Truman remains critical.
The area of major concern is still
general cardiac weakness , aggravated by
restlessness or body movement, which is
relieved by medication," II.Id a mid-day
medical stateme11t at Research Hospital
Later tbJs aftemoon, doctors aaid bis
heart was "extmnely pttearious."
'l'nlman, weekened by ap and a lung
infection, was fed lntr.venously. He was
given oxygen to help him breathe.
'>There Is cardiac stability, but it is ac-
companied by extreme weakness." said
the statement, read by h o s p i t a 1
spokesman John Dreves. ''His heart con-
dition is not as good this morning as we
had hoped it would be."
Attempts to feed the ailing, aging
former president failed, so doctors had to
feed him entirely by arm Injection and
through a tube in his nose .
"He's still listed as critical and he·s
still listed as stable," Dreves said.
"Improvements which have occurred
during the night include lbe pulmonary
situation and kidney function."
Truman first was bospita11zed with
lung infection. That ailment had pro-
gressed but doctors said. that if he was to
survive his heart would have to stand the
strain of battling age and infection.
Truman's heart was monitored con-
stantly.
"The former president bas tolerated
tht monitoring remarkably well and is
always cooperative." said Truman1s
personal physican. Or. Wallace Graham .
He said President Nixon'!' White House
staff has been "cooperative and desire to
(See TRUMAN, 1'1ge I)
Post Offic,es
Open Saturday
The Newport Beach and Corona
de! Mfr Post Offices will be open
Saturdays the '11eXt two weeks to
handle the · crush of Christmas
mail Vance Roberts. assistant-
New1port Beach postmaster, said
today. All scrvlse will be aveilable dur·
Ing the hours of 9 a.m. to noon Dee.
9 and t6 . .he said . "And U we really have a crowd,
we'll slay open even later," he
said. . The post offices on Riverside
Drive, Morine Avenue, Main Strett
and Orchid Avenue will a 11
participate In 1he extended-hour
pr09r,m1 Roberts snld.
•
•
of rare coins, a $4,000 fur coat and '80 in
pocket money. .
Detective Sgt. Sam Amburgey said tcr
day tha t Mrs. Katherine Roy confronted
the robbers at 8:45 p.m., following a
knock on the door.
Her bedridden, invalid hu sband was
unable to intervene as the men burst
through the door, demanding to see his
brother, Pat Roy, then dUe home from a
San Diego C(lnstruction job.
Investigators said Mrs. Roy told them
her brother·in·law was not at home, but
they pushed on inside, demanding his ex·
tensive rare C(lin collection.
The home was ransacked while Mrs.
Roy stood helplessly by.
Total Joss in the lightning·like robbery
was still being tallied today, but police
said it will be considerable.
No vehicle was seen or heard during
the holdup, while Mrs. Roy could
describe one bandit only as wearing the
bizarre female outfit.
The other -both were 28 to 30 years
old -was stocky, with dark, wavy, styl-
ed hair and moustache.
Detectives said the two victims present
and the brother-in·htw who arrived home
while they were being questioned could
Perilous Ti1-11e
LBJ Nuclear War FeaPs Repbit.ed
WASWNGTON (UPI) -President Lyndoo B. Johnson was concerned in
1963 that the wuslnaliOll. " JalJii F. lfeMedY might lead to nuclear war, •ccanliac in former Chief JUi11ee Earl warren.
Warren, in an intervtew with the Public Broadcasting Service to be shown
on television ~tonday, said John!OD cited the possibility of war as one reason
the chief juMice should head a commission he named to investigate the assas-
sination.
WARREN RECAIJ..ED THAT the incident occurred a few days after Ken·
nedy's death in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963.
In the interview, Warren said he was invited to the White House by Johnson
who "told me be felt conditions ln the world were so bad at lhe mome~t , ..
he thought it mJibt even get into a war -even a nuclear war."
THE PRESIDENT, ACCORDING to Warren, cited rumors, later proved to
be unfounded, that Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev and Cuba's Fidel
castro might have been involved in the Kennedy shloting.
Pass engers, Guards Kill
Sevep Would-he Hijackers
ADDIS ABABA (UPI) -Five men and
two women armed with pistols and hand
grenades tried to hijack an Ethiopian
Airlines Boeing . 720 today'. Passengers
seized and disarmed them and security
guards shot all seven to death.
It was the largest death toll ln a hl·
jacking case.
A Brltisb couple in their 70s held one of
the bijacken under their feet.
other occupants of the plane sei%ed
another armed air pirate and, a
passenger said, "~iOl<ed him and kicked
him and wouldn't let him use his gun un·
t.il be was eventually killed with a whole
magazine of bullets."
Passengers suggested that the women
may have smuggled the guns aboard in
their high.heeled, platform sole shoes.
They said the air pirates hurled at
least two hand gernades and one ex-
ploded, wounding a number of the
passengers, including a U.S. oil company
executive and an American college pro-
fessor .
The professor, Dr. Roderick Hilsinger
of Temple University, Philadelphia, was
credited witb saving some Jives by pick·
Ing up the band grenade and hurling it
away before it exploded in the midst of
the passengers. He was hit by shrapnel
and was reported' in grave condition at
(See HIJACK, Page Z)
Brief Rocket Burst
offer no clues to the identity of the men.
They obviously knew o[ Pal Ray and
his c o in collection, said Detective
Amburgey, adding that no similar
holdups have occurred in the area
recently.
Several years ago two men posing as
delivery men invaded the Lido Isle home
of millionaire sportsman Briggs Cun-
ningham and escaped with nearly a haU-
million dollars worth of jewelry.
Some was scattered as they fled, but
olher items turned up later, fenced
through underworld sources, and this led
to eventual capture' and conviction.
Balboa ls.land
D~n'Sity Ctttb .
Tightened
Newport Beach p I a n n in g com·
missioners Thursday night voted to make
people on Balboa Island build smaller
duplexes.
C.Ommlssioners approved a modified
fonn of the existing limited duplex (R·
1.5) zone passed last month by city
councilmen as a curb on the island's
runaway growth.
lf councilmen concur with the change.
duplexes will be limited in size to one and
one-half times the buildable lot area.
Commissioners recommended changing
the R-1.5 zone to eliminate a parking
restJ:ictioo that would have required one
space for every rive rooms and an ad·
dittonal space for every two rooms
thereafter excluding bathrooms.
"The commission decided that con·
sidering the narrow lots on Balboa
Island , that parking limit would be too
harsh." said Assistant C o m m u n i t y
Development Director James Hewicker.
The commission took almost im·
mediate action in applying the new form
of R-1.5 zoning to Balboa Island and
Hewicker said there were some in the
audience who didn't like it.
"There was opposition to limiting these
duplexes, but a spokesman for the
Balboa Island Improvement Association
said his group -and most island
residents: -favor it," He wicker said.
By approving the modified emergency
ordinance, commissioners also rejected a
proposed fonn of R·l.5 zone lbat was
tossed out by councilmen when the ex·
isling law was passed.
That form of the zone would have plac-
ed a limit on the size of the second unit
in a duplex but still YiOUld have allowed
the structure to be twice the total build-
able lot area.
.
Apollo 17 Right on Course
SPACE CENTER, HouslOn (AP) -A
brief burst from command II h I p
America 's rocket engine today guided the
Apollo 17 astronauts onto a precise
course toward a Sun<biy reOdeivoos with
the moon. (See pictures. related stories.
Page 3.)
To their amusement. it also shot them
into " Tnass of lee particles -the work
of space-age plumbing.
liugene A. Ceman, geologlsl Harrison
H,..&,hmll . 11111 Ronald E . ..Evans con-
ducted the flawless flt1ng 147,000 mnes
from earth, triggering the big engine tor
two seconds to steer off a collision courff
with the moon onto a path th&t will take
them to an orbit within 70 milea of lunar
ourfa•• Sonday .
I •
110hhh, there we go," sald Evans. the
command ship's systems expert, as the
engine lit up.
"Bum is on time and we got shul
down," said Cernan, the ApoUo 17 com·
mender.
The astronauts earUer dumped waste
water and urine overboard and It frou
Into tiny particles in the fri gid spaee ta·
vlronment. With the sun rtfiectlng off
thtir lcy !)Urfaces. they rtsembled
Dickering tiiefl its 8J they floated In front
of the spaceship.
After the firing. Cernan reported, "We
just caught up with every one of those lit·
tie billy particles. We're right In the
middle or them. •
1'Thef're drifting In rnndom lashlon.
Some are going against us, some away
from us," he said. ''We've really got a
~1ar field out there."
11 wa~ a first for the Apollo program.
The rocket fuing removed one or the
continuing effects qf delayed launch of
Apollo 17 on Thursday, when It got aw11y
from cape Kennedy 2 hours and 40
minut es lnte because of a compuler prob-
lem .
To make up for lost tlme and to get the
astronauts to the moon on the original
tlmtll~ Mlaslon Control bad them
\ rocket -out"'-of earth orbit at a 'higher
speed than planned.
That llrtng, however, was 11ightl9 off
course and aimed AlJOllo' 17 directly at
lhe moon. The brief firing today rHOlved
that.
•
-..... ..-.---...
to build a high-quali1y audience.
'The impact of these moves was un·
dercut by a very heavy increase in
second-class postal rates which affected
Life, particularly because of its large
page size," th e execuli\'e's statemen1
said.
They said the magazine was faced with
an increase of 170.2 percent in such rates
ove r fi ve years.
"It should be' remembered that the
Administration exempted the postal
Service, but not the press, from price
controls which made Life's problem even
more dirficult," they added .
Ralph Graves, managing edi tor of Life.
1o1.·as assigned the job of helping employe'.'l
find other ivbs. both within Time. Inc.
and el5e\\'here,
There are 320 persons on the stafr of
Life. a n d anothet 350 Time, Inc.
employes are involved in helpipg to
publish ii. All employes will be kept on
tbe payroll through the end of the year
"after which a notice period goes into ef.
feet." the publisher said.
Time & Life buildings in New York.
Chicago. London, Paris. Tokyo and other
cities are to keep their names. as will
such corporate enlities as Time-Life
Books.
DAILY PILOT llatf .....
HEADLESS NAPPER AT UCI? NO, JUST NIPPY WEATHER
Even Chill Didn't Interrupt Snooze; He Just SnU91led Down
'Fr~~ty the Snowman'
Pays a Visit to Tustin
Tustin High School students frolicked
in falling snow for about 40 minutes this
morning and an El Toro Mar ine Corps
pilot reported hail in the area as the
latest winter stonn passed over Orange
County dropping a half an inch of rain in
some areas.
About 8 a.m. students in ~lrs. William
Schreiber's class at Tustin High played
amidst the falling flake~.
The National Weather Service describ-
ed the snowfall as being the result of
freak air currents, since sno"' levels in
Southen caJlfomia are generally ex· pe:cted only above ~,000 feet this
weekend.
AbOOt the same lime snow was said to
be falling in Tustin, a jet pilot landing at
El Toro reported falling ice pellets.
Laguna Beach's unofficial rain watch·
er, 8111 Shields , reported .09 of ~n Inch
in his gauge over the 24 hours ending al 8
a.m., bringing the season rainfall total in
the Art Colony to 5.23 Inches. Last year
al this un.c, Shields said, Laguna had on·
ly .82 of an inch of rain. The city iOt only
6.18 inches all last year.
Professor, 47, Di es
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Herbert I..
Packer, 47, profetsor of criminal law at
the Stanford Uni versity Law School. died
\Vedncsday.
CHARLIE el\OOlN, \'oO'VE
GOT ONLV 16 SHOPPING OAV5 LEFT, 'IOI.I KNOW!
.. ~ ....... __ . , .....
The weather serv ice forecast calls for
mostly cloudy skies and occasional
showers tonight.
A clea'r and cool Saturday is expected
along the Ora nge Coast with gusty winds
to 20 knots from the northwest.
The Orange County Harbor Depart-
ment station at Newport Beach logged
only .21 inch of rain during the 24-hour
period ending at 7 a.m. The season to
date total recorded by the rain ga uge at
1901 Bayside Drive is 4..C.1 inches.
Small craft warnings are up and are
expected to remain up through Saturday,
(See SNOW, Page!~
Orange Co•st
Wellther
Those dark clouds will clear to
sunnv skies on saturday, accord·
ing ·to the weatherlady -but
there's a slight (30 percent) cllaoce
of a few showers on Sunday. Highs
in the upper 50s to lower 60s.
Lo'o\'S tonight in the 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
/.fustcicms from Sent Beach to
Sau Clemexta llnve prepared
their Chri.,,tm.as nfferinga witll
Handel'i "i\feuiah'" being l~
r110,11t popt414.T holiday piect. Sec
toda11's \Vtekeuder /or t.in1e s
nnrl placea .
l..M. tt't'll t ... ,"" ,.
C•l'*"'I• S ct.t .. lnM D-W c-. M c..-~
OHnr. "-l'«t If Mlltrt.I ,_ •
"1!11-. ""' Fltf' IM ltte... It
HtAK-If AM LHlll«t.. 11
-llM• '
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•
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Nude Bru·s
Still F ougl1t
111 Comit y
A drive that has drawn the Cllrtains on
more tf'lan a 'dozen nude bars in Orange
County during the past yeer v.•iil continue
t>ven though the state's Alcoholic
Bt'verage Control (ABC 1 officers have
got into the act, District Atlorney's
rt>p resentat lves deelared tOOay.
Closure actions which include the
Firehouse bar In Costa ~tesu will be
prl!ssed e\'en though !he Califomie
Supreme Court has ruled that the ABC
agency can perform that function.
~pokes.man for the office 's obscenity
di\·ision said. (Rcl.'.lted story. Page 4.1
f'A·o Santa Ana bars offering the con·
troversial entertainn1ent v.ere recently
closed down through ci\·il litigation that
use~ the language or the state's Red
Light Abatement Act to n1ake its point.
And the Sarong Gals and Bristol
Gardens bars. both in Santa Ana, cur·
rentlv face identical action that could
close them or al least •·clean them up,"
investigators said.
investigation (lf the Bri sto! Gardens
bar led last 1nonth to the filing of
criminal actions aga inst a group of
women and forrnct pr(, football player
\\'illie Crittendon.
All werl' accused of involvement in :.i
prosti tution racket that allegedly had its
headquarters in the bottomless bar. All
face Superior Court tria'. on those
charges. Investigators today said one reason for
con tinued action by their office is the
delav built in to anv action by the ABC. The y said the 3gency can re~oke a
bar's license but the bar can continue to
operate pending a hearing and that often
t<.kes at least three months.
Using the red light act. District. At·
tomey's officers said t~ey can obtain a
Superior Court restraining orde r that
often effectively bans nude en·
tertainmCnt.
Judge Rejects
Back Pay Clain1
Of Firefighter
A disabled Newport Beach fireman
who claimed the citv \o\'as unlawfully de·
nying him more than nine months in
back pay has had his claim rejected by
an Ora nge County Superior Court judge .
Judge James F. Judge denied the writ
.sOl.ight by former fireman Edwin C. Hall
and rultd for the city after studying
arguments filed by both sides in the
dispute. Ha\\, a 'ID-year veteran of ·the Newport
force, hurt his back and knee wbile on
duty July 4, 1971. He was off ttuty from
that .dat. to Oct. 2, but found on bia
.return to work that he co~ no 1onger
,"perform his regular duties, he sald.
Hall said be was placed in an _@!1.-
·minlstrative post last May 22 and asked
tbe Public Employes Retirement System
two months later to grant his disability
retirement.
Hall cla\mtd he \Vas immediately p1ac·
ed on sick leave and did not work for the
city after July 24 . Jfe argued that he ask-
ed Aug . 25 to go off sick leave and on
rtgular leave with fuH pay and that the
city unla\\·full~ denied the request.
Judge Judge ruled that Hall had
received full workmen"s compensation
for the period Jul y 25 through Sept. IS
and that no further obligation could be
asse ssed against the city.
Sporting Equipment
Stolen Fro111 Garaae " A Newport Beach waiter returned fron1
a Tahlli vacation to find his garage
burglarized of nearly $2,000 in skin diving
and ski equipment, he told police
Wednesday.
Jim Slz.er of 115 35th St. tol d in·
vesUgatora the assorted gear was stolen
from rtorage cabinets in the structure.
OIAN•I COAST "
DAILY PILOT
TM~ c..t OAILV PIUIT, •lltl _.,,
Is ~ ... N~'"ra1, II llUMllbt'll Df
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9-dl. l""'lnt/SllelltMcll end 5fff C..,_1,1
kl'I J._. Cllllt"-A 1i..ttc reglon<ll
fdlllln .. IJldbiltMI Ulvnl.,_ ..-.cf SlltlCl•yl.
f"-,.,.tncfMI MUlll'I ..... fl9111 II •t .UO Wfll
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ETHIOPIA
0
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r#IHIAIAIAI
UPI*"'-
IN.FLIGHT DRAMA-Five men and t"'O women hijacked. an Ethio·
pian jetliner today, but security age nts shot and killed them in flight .
The plane, on a flight to Paris, made i t back to Add.is Ababa and
landed .
Irvine Faculty
Told Merger
ls1i't l 1nn1i1ient
Any decision to merge the UC Irvine
school of enginee ring with another
department, or accompli sh other ob-
jectives of an administrative strtam-
lining, is hardly imminent, faculty
members were told Thursday.
Dr. Hazard Adams, vice chancellor for
academic affairs, detailed the com·
position of a conup.ittee he has set up to
revie\o\' and make alternate recom·
mendations on a draft reo rganization
plan. A final recommendation for action
by Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich is not
expected to be ready until spring, Ada ms
told faculty Thursday.
The preliminary proposal sent recently
to deans of schools. de p ar t men t
chairmen and program direc1ors, has
sparked some concern on campus that
certain study areas may be threatened.
The tentative plan would merge the
schools of engineering and physical
sciences and the department of computer
sciences. One dean "·ould replace the two
deans and one chairman now heading
those three distinct study areas.
Jf this and other ·changes were to be
approved as submitted. nine deans would
replace the 18 academic administrators
now reporting to Dr. Adams.
Engineering faculty earlier th is week
voted to withhold endorsement of such
plans, and said consideration should be
given to abolishing engineering study at
UC Irvine if the school cannot be kept as
an autonomous unit.
The propasal to restructure the
academic administratiqn of learning
unitS at UCl came about at the request
of · officials at UC headquarters in
ll<lr~ey. ~ !ive-Y,ea• acadel!llc plan is reifUlred. ~ 1
Adams pointed out that budgetary
limitations inspired the need to consider
reshuffling academic divisions and their
leadership.
Netv Girls Club
To Be Opened
Witli Hoag Grant
The Girls Club of the Harbo r Area will
be opening a second clubhouse in
January thanks to a $35.000 grant from
the Hoag Foundation.
A spokesman for the club said the
grant has enabled the organization to buy
a house at 2032 Orange Ave., v:hich is
being converted into the sec ond
clubhouse.
The Girl 's Club presently operates out
of a building at IBIS Anaheim Ave., and
has a mobile van which visits various
schools fi ve days a week.
The addition means that girls living on
the east side of Newport Boulevard will
have a clubhouse of their own, the club
spokesman said.
The award of the money was made in
October when it was learned that lhe
Girl's Club was trying lo buy the Orange
Avenue home.
. Founda!ion president George Hoag 11.
m awar~llng the grant. said "!he tloag
Foundation ha s ill\\'il}"S been inte rested in
the Girls' Club.''
From Pllfle l
HIJACK ...
an Addis Ababa hospital.
The other "'ounded American was S.V.
f\1cCollumn of Houston. Tex .• executive
\·ice president of the Tenneco Oil Co.,
Ethiopia Radio reported.
The plane carrying 94 passengers and
Crfl" \\'SS commandeered about IS min-
utes out of Addis Ababa en roure to Paris
\\'ith stopovers in Cairo, and Rome, wit·
nes.ses said.
Tiley described the hijackers as in
thei r 20s and appearing to be Ethiopians.
Although damaged, the p13ne was able to
land at Addis Ababa where the
passengers boarded another flight.
"There were many, many bullets,"
John Lodge of Southampton, England
said. "And two hand grenades were
thrown and one exploded."
lie reported that the British couple,
named Macintosh, held down Ont of the
hijackers with their feet until security
men shot him.
"We were hijacked just after takeoff,"
Lodge said. "There were seven hijackers
and they did a bloody good job, excuse
my e.xpres.sion."
Passengers said there were sll securi-
ty guards on board and that the aerial
battle oceurred high over the EthiQpian
countryside.
"They killed all the hijackers,'' the
Briton said. "Some of the passenger3
were injured and are in a hospital."
Asked how the cache at rifles a n d
gru1ade1 were smu&gled aboard the
plane -an Ethk>pian Airways fllgtit to
Paris -Lodge said, "that's a good ques-
tion. There was a tight search when we
were IJ!>arding but the women wore ,lhose
high·heeled s.boe3 and it seerm aome of the guns were hiding In theft 90Je!,"
George Hart, also of Southampton,
pr~ised Ethiopian Airlines for w h a t he
called "a cood job.
"The amazing thing was that the
pistols which were used -and there
were at least 30 shots fired -made a
minimum of noise," he aald.
Bill to Build
Chino Preserve
To Be Presented
A bill will be introduced to the 1913
session of the Callfornla Leetslaturt to
establi!h a wildnemess preserve in Chino
Hills.
Assemblyman John V. Briggs· (R-
Fullerton) who will prepare t h e
legislative resolution held a point press
conference Thursday in Placentia with
Supervisor William J . Phillips of
Fullerton. Phillips is the original sponsor
of the wilderness area proje<:t.
When I.he proposed Ch.lno Hins airport
was being dlscusaed last aprin&, PhlWps,
urged by anti-airport groupo lo Placentia,
Yor~ Unda, Brea alld FulJertoo pro-
posed tbe wtlden>ess ana as a joint pro!·
ect of Orange, Riverside a o d Sao
B<mardlno cocmtln.
BrigiJ said Thursday be will either
see.k a st.ate grant for the project or try
fo r federal runds. He said be WIS COD·
fident of congressional action to fmanct
the park .
Sex Film Di spute Heads
To State Supre1pe Court
A court ballle thnt began \.\'hen
\\1estminster Police Chief \Valier Scott
refused to return 10 their owne rs' movies
and photographs he still insists art
obscene is headed today for the
California Supreme C.Ourt .
The latest appellate move ordered by
lhf' Orange CoWlty District Atlomcy 's
Office on behalf of Scott comes just t .... ·o
v.·ee.ks after the Fourth District Court of
Appeals in San Bernardino ordered ll'te
return of the matertals to Frederick and
Kay Lea r of Huntington Beach. .'
DC'puty District Attorney 0 re. 11 a
sears said she pl ans to Ole her office 's
latest appeal early next week.
Loa r, 35, and his wife. ~2. of 4062
l1umboldt Drive, last saw their work
products May 2S, 1971. a& Scott'& ofHctrs
carri~ more than 00.000 movies and
30.000 photographs frorn their Pete Voss
.J
,
Sho.,.,·case warehouse at 15144 ~Iden
West Circle in Westminster.
Superior Court Judge Robert L.
Corlman ordcrtd their "'"'"' laat April after a jury in his courtroom found l.be
Loan not guilty of multtplt oblctnlty
charges. ·
Scott refused to return tbe materlala,
packed them away ln bit: vaults and
declined to consider numerout appeall
delivered to him by the Loin' law)'en.
The police. chler was eccused Im wttk
of stalling on Lht return of the ma!(o:rlals
because, "the ~n claimed, an estimated
2,000 reels of the sexy movies ~ mias--
lng .
Scott d@nie1 the allegatlont. And be
claim• that a <hctk of the lnv,.tory If
and when he is finally compelled co sur-
render the materials wlll prove
everything Is there!.
l're'" Pllfle J
Vietnam Peace TRUMAN • • •
help in any matte:r."
Doctors iald Truman "lmproved In
so~ areu but show• no Improvement in
olhen." Talks Near End? ;;Hls heart is showtna the signs of eon·
slderable irrltablllty and stress,'' Ortves
said.
PARIS (UPI) -White House alde
Henry A. Kissinger met Prffident
G<ol'fl•• Pomj>!dou today shortly belo"'
"hll fifth meet.Ing with Hanol's Le Due
Tho, and French diplomattc ~ said
tbe Vietnam peace negotlatJons appeared
near their end.
Kissinger started tanu with Tbo at 3
.
Nixon C.Ompletes
Cabinet, Keeps
KJeindienst as AG
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI)-Pre!ldent
Nixon formally completed his $tCOnd·
tenn Ca~lnet today by announcing that
Richard G. Kleindienst will remain as at·
tomey general.
But this was coupled with an-
nouncement that five top Justice Depart-
men offlcia~~ will be replaced as part of
Nixon's reshuffling of the Administration.
These are: Deputy Attorney General
Ralph E. Erickson ; David Luke Nonnan .
assistant attorney general in charge of
the civil rights division; Jerris Leonard,
administrator of the Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration; Roger C.
Cramton, assistant attorney general in
charge of lhe Office of Legal Counsel and
Leo 1.1. Pellerzi, assistant attorney
gene ral for administration.
At the same time, the White House
said Yale Jaw profeS90r Robert H. Bork.
4S. one of the drafters of the
Administration's antibusing legislation,
will be a new face in the Justice Depart-
ment.
Bork will become solicitor general next
spring ·at the end of the ·current term of
th~ U.s·. Supreme Court, replacing Erwin
N. Griswold who plans to retire.
11\ere have been reports that Klein·
dienst, confirmed by the Senate as head
of the Justice Department only after
ler.gthy confumation hearings, will not
remain long in the secol)d Nixon tenn
starting Jan. 20. \.
The hearings were spiced by charges
involving Kleindlenst's alleged role in the
settling of an antitrust suit against
International Telephooe and Telegraph
Corp. Democrats charged the settlement
was in exchange for political con·
tributions.
----"'~•man's vital-sips v.·1re "relatiYtlY
stable, thouSh the tempenture ls nuc-
tuatlng, but only allghtly ... p.m. (& a.m. PST J in a rnlJl!lon belong· -lne to an American jeweler in the
fashionable Neuilly .sur Seine suburb.
The talks lasted 4li1 houn.
In Waabin~on, the WhJte House said
the negotlatfons will resume Saturday .
afternoon 1t" a site to be selected by the
North Vietnamese. No furth er details
were given.
Tho and Kissinger met fi ve limes this
week for a total of 19 hours. A complete
news blackout was kept over the progress
of their talks.
The U.S. diplomat arrived first at the
villa and when Tho arrived accompanied
by his aide, Xuan Thuy , the American
walked down the steps. shook hands with
both, and escorted them into the house.
As Tho and Xuan Thuy, Lhe second-
ranklng Hanoi negotiator, left the confer-
ence villa in suburban Neuilly, they shook
hands with tGssinger and then waved to
him as their car drove oft
Kissinger left the American -rented
villa five mt nut.cs lot-er· to report on the
meeting to Washington and to the South
V-lttnamege deles•~. PhAm Dang Lam.
Earlier, Ki ssinger spent 75 minutes at
the Elysee Palace:
The ne.,.,·spaper Le 1.1onde said there
\\"ere.indications the political solution had
been re ached and the negotiators were
discussing application of the peace ac-
cord.
From Pagel
SNOW ...
as a result of the gusty afternoon ""'inds.
A private rain watcher, J. Sherman
Denning of lfuntington Beach reported a
total of .36 inch of rain in that city for
the 24-hour period ending at 8 o'clock this
morning.
In San Clemente. r a i 11 wat c h er s
reported .2 of an inch ~uring !ht 24 hours
ending at 8 o'clock this 1norning, with a
total of 7.1 inches for the season so far.
Rainfall amounts !rom the latest stonn
reported in the 24·hour period ending at 8
Doctors said the nation's 33rd chief ex-
ecutive did not sleep well Thunday night
and early today. They aald his family
was not noliried, of the restless night.
Thursday. Trumah ratlled from the
lun" and he art ailm~nts that sent him to
the hospital four days ago. Margarel
Daniel, his Jaughter, said Truman smiled
at her.
''He's getting kind of contrary," Mrs.
Dr nlel said aftr leaving her father's
bedside and driving her mother, Mrs.
Bess Truman, back to the family home
at Independence, Mo., l~ miles away.
"He's re1Uess.' He 's feellng better. I
have great faith tha~ he's aoing to come
out of this all right."
Truman was rushed by ambulance to
Research Hospital . Tuet:daiy suffering
lung concestlon. He had been ill !or two
weeks at home before he entered the
hospital.
His condition first was classed "fair"
Wednudsy, then fell to "serious" and
deteriorated to "critical" Wednesday
night when doctors said he passed
through the "ultracrilica l period" due to
strain on his weakened heart. His rally
began Thursday.
1-lrs. Daniel flew from Washington to
her father's bed.side on an airplane pro-
vided by the While House.
Telegrams and telephone calls from
the ordinary people Trwnan loves, all ex-
pressing hope for his recovery, poured
in to the Truman Llbarry at Indepen-
dence. which Is filled with memorabilia
of his years in lhe White House follQwing
the death of fo~ranklin D. Roosevelt in
1945.
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn . ),
and the Shah of ]ran, both called and
spoke with Mrs. Daniel.
Apollo 17's astronauts, afler listening
to a news summary from the Houston
Space Center, expressed "best wishes" to
Truman from outer space.
Air Pact Settled
a.m. showed .43 inch in Santa Ana : .46 NEW YORK (AP ) - Tentat ive agree-
inch in Villa Park: .39 In Irvine and -AO-ment--has-been--reached on-a-contract-
inch at Saddlebaclt Peak. between Pan American World Alr\o\·ays
Rainfall amounts for the season lo date and 8.000 clerical employes who threaten·
_al each of th~ reporting stations are: 5.76 ed to call a strike Saturday. Tenns of the
inches in Santa Ana: 6.09 inches in Villa accord "·e re not disclosed Thursday
Park; 5.03 inches in Irvine and II.IO in· pending a ra llfi catk>n vole by the em·
ches at Saddleback Peak. ployes.
a • r Henredon,s · Four Centuries
•
THE COMPANY
THAT CARES
ON DISPLAY
NOW.
DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN
7NJ 111J11laurt "
INTERIORS
WDIDAYS & SATURDAYS t 100 to 1:30
FRIDAY 'TIL t :OO
NEWPORT BEACH e
1727 Wl:STCLIFf Dll..
642·2010
LAGUNA BEACH e
!t41 NORTH COAST HWl',
4t4·6111
TORRANCE e
2lMt HAWTHORNI ILVD,
111.1art
•
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i
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I
Cranston's
Son Gets
Trial Date
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
24-year~ld son or Sen. Alan
Cranston (D-Callf.), Is
!Cheduled-to stand trio,! bet-e
Jan. 18 on assault charges fil-
ed ln the lllleged drugging of a
rormer Playboy bunhy.
Trial for Robin Cranston
was postponed from Thursday
in Superior O:>urt because a
prosecution attorney was ill, a
court spokesman said.
Cranston i.s charged with
•
y •
To Curb Crowding
MONTEREY (AP ) -Stan·
ford University p r o f e s s o r
William Shockley , con-
trovenlal for contending that
blacks are genetically inferior
to whltes, suggests the govern·
ment pay men with low IQs to
get vasectomies.
A $1 ,000 bonus could be or.
fered for each point a man's
intelligence quotient is below
100, says Shockley, an elec-
tronics engineering professor.
men lectured separately lo
about 400 persons at '-1onterey
Peninsula ColleJle, I hen
answered qul'stlons.
Willian1 Farr
Gets Filin Aid
_F_ri_da::Y:_' _D_"_•m_be_•_Bc_, _1_97_2 _________ DAILY PILOT 5
10% OFF
WITH THIS COUPON
ON ANY OF OUR
CHRISTMAS TREES
LIVING CHRISTMAS TREES FROM $20.00 UP
BEAUTIFUL LIVING GIFT
JAPANESE BONSAI
NOW .so•;. off •s.so ••
WET BAY AREA WEATHER CAUSES MUD SLIDE IN LAFAYETIE ( BRIEFS ) Walls, Roof of Houto Knocked Askow As Storm Causos Earth Slldo
TIIUS, A MAN with an JQ of
90 would be paid $10,000 for
LOS ANG ELES (AP )-20th
Century·Fox announced it will
sponsor a motion picture
premiere to help defray court
costs for jailed r eporte r
William Farr.
TAKATA NURSERY
71tt BAKER STREET (next to fire Station)
on Bri1tol at 81k1r -COSTA MESA Proceeds or the Dec. 21 546-<1724
~~~~::n~le~~::.~:. Snow? In Bay Area?
in a West Los Angeles home
last March.
obtaining a vasectomy, an West Coast opening of ··The 1~"""""'""""""'""""~""""""!"""-"""'""'""""""""""""""""""""""""""""!' operation in which lhe ducts Effects of Gamma Rays onl ·---N--I -=~p=i:e cut to pre-Man-iJ>.the-Moon Marigolds," ear y Everyone
Shockley made the proposal directed by Paul Newman and
Thursday in what was billed starring his wife, Joanne
as a "debate" with Cedric X, Woodward, will be donated to
a black profe sso r of the William Farr Defense
psychology at Stanford. The Fund, a Jo'ox spoke~man said.
Frariciscans Toss Urban Snowballs Listens to Landers e Boy Cru•Jaed
CORONA (AP) -A 2-year-
old child died arter he was
crushed to ,. death by his
family's car in the driveway
of his home, aulhorities said.
Byrne forbade the government
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Snow fell on San Francisco
and gave the city's children a
rare chance to t05S urban
snowballs here Th u r s d a y
night.
snow to stick near sea levell------------.:...;'--=----------'---'--~-------------------------
!or any period of time came 10
Police said Brian Reinhardt,
son of :P.fr. and Mrs. Glenn
Reinhardt. died shortly after
Thursday's a c qjid en l in
Riverside Genera);'.'Hospita1.
Brian. and his sl,ter ,
Charlene, 4, were playmg in·
side the car. A hand brake
was released accidentally. and
Brian fell under the wheels as
the vehicle rolled backwards,
authorities said.
e Yorty'• In
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Mayor Sam Yorty will an-
nounce Jan. 3 that he is seek·
Ing reelection to a fourth
tenn. says his closest polil.ical
associate. He said Yorty
decided after turning down a
job in the Nixon ad-
ministration.
Citizens of the suburban
cities of Daly City and
Pacifica nocked out.side to
watch the flakes silently fall-
ing past street lights.
SHORTi.Y BEFORE the 1
p.m. snowfall, a he a v y
hailstorm hlt the area, with
the pellets sticlting to sloped
car windshlelds.
There also were reports of
lightning as the snow fell.
It snowed briefly at low
elevations earlier. but the
white stuff didn't stick.
Observers said the last
storm that dropped enough
Kitty Hawk
Crew Won't
years ago when most Northern
California vaUeys experienced
a white covering.
The National 'Neath er
Service said it apparently was
caused by "one thllllderhead
five to seven miles i n
diameter Tl'l()Ving southeast
about 25 miles an hour."
The Northern Cali£omia
storm temporarily blocked
highways, reaping accidents
and forcing officials to close
schools in at least three coun-
ties.
DENSE FOG packed Into
the San Joaquin Valley, cut·
ting visibility to near zero as
the season's worst storm
whitened even low elevation
ridges and heaped blizzards of
SJWW on lhe Sierra Nevada.
Deputy Mayor J ose ph A
_Quinn, rec:uperating_al home_ ppeal'-
from an earlier heart attack.
Even the San Francisco Bay
Area was dusted with snow
and hail, with snow in Marin
County visible from downtown
San Francisco, where tem-
peratures fell to a season low
38.
In Marin, the twisting
PanoramJCHrgliWay, an eigttt=
mile road connecting Stinson
Beach with State Highway 1.
was closed all day due to
snow, the highway patrol said.
The roads up nearby Mt.
Tamalpais, Mt. Oiablo in Con-
tra Costa . County and Mt.
Hamilton near San Jose were
closed until snow plows cou1d
arrive.
&aid in an interview Thursday SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The
that the 62-year-old ~~or 21 sailors accused of rioting pl~ to conduci; a bard-hi~ aboard the carrier Kitty Hawk prnn~ campaign this s~mg will not appear before a con·
that 1s likely to result m a gressional committee even
runoff. though invited and if f~ to e aoseCall
RIVERSIDE (AP) -An
empty schOot• bu.I was sUced in
half by a Union Pacific freight
train arter the driver ap-
parently thought the train was
on another track, authorities
said.
The 6&-pas.5enger bus was en
route to an elementary school
here to pick up youngsters for
a field trip Thursday when the
accident occurred, the
highway patrol said.
The driver. Donald
Sherman. 62, was treated and
released from Riverside Com-
murllty Hospital after suf-
fering cuts and scratches.
e Prison Closing
SUSANVILLE (AP)
appear some would invoke. the
Fifth Amendment, a defense
attorney said Thursday.
"It would be inappropriate
for them to appear before the
committee," said Milton J.
Silverman. "I trink the con·
gressmen realized this and
will not assert their subpoena
power."
A three-man House armed
service subcommitte, whrch
enters its third day of closed
hearings into the racial trou-
ble todav, boarded the giant
carrier ·Thursday and spent
three hours touring the scene
of the disturbance Oct. 12-13.
They ate lunch, chatted
casually with s e v e r a I
crewmembers. talked a t
length with three others but
said liWe after their visit.
STATE DIVISION of
hlghway_s crews dumpe<l. salt
'and sand on State Route 17
between Los Gatos and Santa
Cruz to melt slush which clos-
ed the road for a haH bwr.
Several other major roads
were closed briefly due to bad
visibility and snow, including
state Route 20 near Marysville
and U.S. 101 near Leggett.
But Interstate 80 West was
impassable due to zero visibili-
ty from Truckee to Colfax.
Highway officials said
passenger cars and light
trucks and buses with chains
were allowed to travel east on
J.80.
Employes at the s t a t e ' s ••iM:!lilEl,.•D1""1C•tc:: .. "'1110Zl•Slli1aEOiZ"iJi
minimwn security prison unit s E h J
here have been served notice ex xa ande that the 700-lnmate facUity ., e
will close by July 1 -a move
the residents of this small 'S J • ' T nd S ?
community feel will be a blow iaruig re . een. to their economy.
The news Thursday to the
280 men who work here was
accompanied by assu•nces
that they will be eligible for
prison jobs in other parts or
the state. The Inmates
themselves will be sent to
other prison units, it was
reported.
Minimum risk prisoner;; who
have not committed crimes of
violence have been housed at
this Northern CallfomJa facili-
ty. They have been used to
fight forest fires throogOOut
the stale.
e Paper• Trial
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Friendship, more than
·kinship, will Wlderlie future human relations and tomor-
l'O'IV's cooples v.;J.l openly engage in srexua1 relations with
friends and other couples, says Dr. Alexander Comfort,
British biologist and medical researcher.
In an article entitled "Sexuality in a 1.ero Growth So-
ciety" in the Decoml>er issue ct CenW Report, Comfort
says today 's !rend toward swinging "marts the eod, or
the beginning ct the .end, ct proprietary """"1 altitudes ...
Mate sharing; says Oxnfort, b a "realbtic view ct the
needs ct couples and individuals lo!" variety" and a "rec-
ognition that the meeting cf needs miler than their fru>.
traUon is a gift wbicb eJ:pres!Je9 love •.. and strengtbms
the primary bood."
·Center Report is the monthly publication ol the Ceoter .
for the Study ol Demoa atic Institutions, a nonprofit edu-
cational research institute here.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The ';~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ long delayed Pentagon Papers ~"!:~::'.'.:":.:=::
trial will begin next Tuesday,
says the trial judge, but the
government will have to
ellminate some 100 pages of
proposed evidence it planned
to present.
U.S. Dist. Court Judge Malt
Byrne forbad the government
Thursday to use sOme pages of
the massive Pentagon Papers
study that the prosecuUon
didn't tell the derense it vlu
going to cite at the tri.aL •
Byrne denied a defense re-
quest for time to prepare for
new mflterial the government
ha s added to its case since the
trial was halted by an appeal
of a wiretap ls.sue last Augwt.
e Braf(ley B111t
LOS ANGEi.ES (AP ) -The
27-yenr-old daughter or IAs
Angeles City Councilman and
mayoral candidate Thomas
Bradley Ms been arrested and
booked for lnvcstlgatton of
possessing dangerous drugs,
nuthorltle! said.
•
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t+iln97 Why not 9ivo hi'" •
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• DAILY P ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Trailer Clash Looms
An expected confrontation between trailer park
residents and Newport Beach couricllmen never materi·
a11zed al ~tonday night's city council meeting.
But they1re still on a collision course.
Councilmen have instructed the city's building de-
partment to pull all stops in a campaign to brin g health
and safety standards in the dozen Newport Beach trailer
courts up to code.
'fhat, building officials say. is going to mean clos·
ing some of them down.
"There's just no way some of them are going to be
able to meet the standards," Bobby Fowler, building su·
pervisor, told councilmen.
The directive remains. ho\vever.
Fowler pointed out that some trailers are just in
suc h poor shape they can't be repaired. He al so said
sorue trailer parks have permanent structures -homes
-in th em that are expressly illegal.
I\nd presumably they'll have to come do\vn.
\Vhat this means,. and councilmen say they fully ex·
pect it, is one hairy fight \Vhen the park residents are
backed to the wa1t.
How soon that will happen is uncertain. The city
has already :warned that legal action is pending against ·
six parks unless they hurry up and at least bring their
registers up to date and stake out their lots.
\.Vhen that happens. the detailed inspections will
begin.
Repair lists '"'ill then be given to trailer owne rs.
1'he ones \vho doA 'l -or can't -comply, wiJl be given
eviction notices.
That's \\'hen the fur \Viii fly.
It's tou.c:h to tell somebody -in these cases often
one who is old and relatively poor -that they haven't
got a home anymore.
Highway and bad been scheduled tor demolition wben
construction began on the Pacific Coast Freeway.
Now, of course, there is to be no freeway and the
trailer residents and owners perhaps thought that was
the end of tbat scare.
Certainly, with the threat of the superhighway
pending, neither l h e residents nor the owners ..,-•re
about to sink any amount of money into maintentq.ce
they could live without
And since the freeway was hanging fire for more
than 10 years, they find themselves with a lot of catch·
ing up to do.
Some, obviously, aren't going to be able to do it.
The city is obligated to enforce its re~lations, no
doubt about it. Aien of compassion like Fowler and the
man doin_g the individual inspections. Inspector Wally
Cloud. v.riU be resoonsible for determining how close to
the letter of the 'law the enforcement is to be.
The hopeless cases will have to be removed. bow·
ever. And when that time comes, somewhere in the
heart of Newoort Beach offi cialdom will have to come
some sense of oblieation to help the dispossessed find
their way to a new home. -
Campaign Spending Curb
Not a bad idea, putting a limit on the number of
dollars 'Newport Beach city council candidates can
spend on their campaigns.
In local elections, as well as stale or national cam·
paigns, it's easy to buy votes with a big bankroll financ·
ing a slick advertising campaign.
One thing about Councilman Carl Kymla's s ugges·
ti on bothers us. however. •
But if thit home is a hazard to themselves, as well
as their neighbors, there isn't much else that can be
done.
He indicated he thought a specific limit should
be written into the charter. An ordinance would do
nicely, with the principle of limitation perhaps enun·
ciated in the charter.
~t'VE SOMSEt> EVEl\Y1111N6 SLIT SAl~OH -MAY~t THA1'S 1HE ANSWE~
--· Many of the vtrailer parks front on Pacific Coast
The H urrible
Origin of
'Hu.11ible Pie'
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus
Just solved Balboa Island's traffic
problems : Sink the ferry and blow
up the br idge and maybe they'll
stop griping.
N
A Case of 'Heads You Win, Tails I Lose'
Pai!lful Progress of Pe·ace Talks
WASHINGTON -For the U.S., 1he
finaJ Vietnam negotiations are torturous-
\y and painfull y turning out to be a case
of "heads you win, tails I lose." (ROBERT S.ALLE~ h<ive to be 1raincd to rly and ma111ta1n
them.
He is demandin~ $5 billion in econonllC
aid over an indefinite period.
~YDNEY J.HARRI~-Neither side is evincing much in ;he --~O~id=-T;..im=eo.r_1_way of support and -van Thieu has been equally
handedly importunate.
-125 F·S supersonic lighters "t r.l .5
million per plane. The South Vietnamese
airforce had 18 F-Ss and some 30 trained
crews. Obviously, scores cir additional F ·5
arid -fi1gti---piJC1ts·an<hnechanics-will·bave10-beinin·
TIUS ASTOUNDl~G proposal is y;ha~·s
behind his clamor and pressure for a
personal meetin g with Prei9dent Nixon.
\Vhen this was politely but firm1y turned
down. Thieu resorted t0 Ciiile -1n
characterislically heavy handed manner.
\\1e haveR'l had a word--quiz on
"origins" for qui1e a while, so here is a
set of interesting word derivations. A
score or 50 percent is respectable.
1. What has "contemplation" got to do
1vith birds?
\ 2. How did the two
and three in cards
come to be known as
the "deuce" and
the ''trey"?
3. People actually
used lo ent "humble
pie .. -what animal
were they devour·
Ing?
4. What did the first room called a
"lobby" refer to ?
5. What flower's name. literally
translated, means "pain in the nose"?
6. Why is a certain species of ape call·
cd by the odd 1.ame of orang-utan or
some variation?
7. Why is it a contradiction in tenns to
h:::ve a "victory t.tarade"?
8. \Vhat was a "stadium " in ancient
Greece?
9. What fruit did the word "zest" come
from ?
10. Why are the standing rules or a
group called the ''by-laws"?
ANSWERS:
l. The Roman augue. or soothsayer,
would mark off a section of the sky with
his wand, and then study the movement
of birds wilhin this section, which was
cs I led a "temvlum."
Tllll hatu,.. ttttem ""'"' \ti.wt, lltl
MHSWrily thOM llf "'' -· S... y...,r "' ........ M GIMll!y Guti Ptih' PIW.
2. From the French expressions, "deux
ace," meaning two aces, and "tres ace,"
or three aces.
3. The poorer peasantry in medieval
times we.re forced to eat a meat pie
made from the "mnbles," or lower parts,
ot' the stag.
4. A room in the House of Parliament
buildings which was used for meetings
between members of Parliament and the
genera: public or special interests asking
for consideration. (Hence, "lobbyist.")
5!\Nasturtium, because of its pungent
odor, is a compound of the Latin for
"nose" and "giving pain.''
6. "Orang-utan," and its va riations , is
the Malayan word meaning "man of the
•voods."
7. A military parade was originally a
"preparation" for war, or evidence of
preparedness (from the Latin, "parare,"
to prepare), not a celebration of its vie·
tory. ·
8. A "stadium" was a measured length
of some 202 yards, wed to lay out the
course for a foot race ; later, the name of
the length came to be applied to the
whole field itself.
9. "Zest" was at first a shred of lemon
peel.
10. "By·laws" were "town laws," from
the Old English "by," meaning a town or
municipality. •
Payola Still Pays Off
\VASHINGTON -The practice of
paying off disc jockeys to plug records.
pt.pularly known as payola, is a federal
crime. ,
Yet we have reported in a series of i:ol-
umn s that record CC1mpanies have been
slipping free records, TV sets and ('ash
under the table to disc jockeyS and pro.
gram officials.
Jn other instances.
narcotics, prostitutes
and Las Vegas holi•
days have been pro-
vided to those \.\'hc.1
prefer a hot time.
J.~or I h e compall·
ies, it 's worth a
little payola to get
their records on the
bit lists, because teenagers with a billion
dollars in their pockets flock to the
record stores to buy the hit twtes.
At first, our stories were downplayed or
denied. But now the heat is on.
The Federal Communications Com·
mlssKm bat already held four closed
hearings in Seattle, Los Angeles,
Pittsburgh and New York City.
VIMgary old Bill Ray. the FCC's com·
pllanee chief, haa vlgorou~y denounced
~Ja and is now slowly moving the
POC to"ard public hcarln&s.
THE BIG PAYOFFS, Ray should find .
have . been 1oing to the rlch, while rock
'n' roll d!M: jockeys. They get lhe --ar trips to Vegas. But the blocill and Spanisl>langlinge _ broad·
... ten are more ll~ely to get caught.
ID Bakenfleld, Cllif., for example, af·
lidlvlll fUod with the FCC charge 1oat
~ Gana, program director <Sf the JJttb thousand-watt.er KWAC, ha s
clemondod and ...,.lvod payola.
Peullno Bcmat of the tipy Bernal
. .
Records finn swears that Gana "has
always asked me for money. We call it in
Spanish 'Mordida' ... Every time that T
visited Bakersfield, I would pay him
from $75 to $100 cash.'' When Bernal
stopped paying, his sales dropped.
A DANCE PROMOTER , Leone I
Swchez, also swore he paid off Garza.
'When I stopped paying, my records
were no longer played on KW AC, except
on rare occasions," Sanchez swore.
When my associate Les Whitten
reached Garza, he burst out: "Never!
Never! It's oompletely Political, the most
ridiculous thing I ever heard. 1bere's no
payola." But he conceded he ls under
FCC investigation.
Our own sources, who would talk to us
only after we pledged to reveal no ·
names, say some of the natkln's bigg(!st
black radio personalities hate been tak·
ing money for playinJ records. Even with
them, the sums have beep in the '200
range . One record promoter told us of a
major eastern "Rbythm and Blues" sta-
tion. which offered to play his rteard fcrr
a single bottle of Scotch.
RAV IDMSELF has encountered a new
form or payola. The d!JC jockey may p~
mote his own dance or other ahow and
"invite" a record compM)' to provide
hia wlth talent at far less tbatl the gotng
rate. The proc:eedt go to the dill: jockey.
tr the performer complies, the disc
jockey plnys hL• re<ord 0<1 the air. U he
falls to show up, the record la ignored.
Ray cal11 this an ''lndlrect payment"
which appears to violate federal
sh1tute~.
,
,
gratitude.
Publicly and priv·
ately the U.S. is be-
ing berated and as·
persed by hoth lhe
Communists a n d
South Vietnamese.
It's entin!ly pos-
sible the way may
end with the U.S. in
as much disfavor in Saigon ss in Hanoi .
COMMUNIST deviousness and in·
tr~~ was expected. Throughout
the protracted and fateful secret negotta·
tioni, they have endJessly coruUved for
every conceivable advantage aft\: 10
finagle a dpuble meaning into ever,f\\ey
pntvision -obviously for later use it a
time and for a purpose that suits their
totalitarian ends.
At the same time, President Nguyen
His basic aim is to entrench himself
personally and politically regardless of
the nature of the peace terms. He is bent .
on retaining absolute control even if that
means some form of dictatorship.
TRIEU DEMANDED aod (;;Ot immense
qUantities of military supplies. More than
$1 billion worth of planes, tanks., guns
and other costly combat equipment were
rushed to South Vi.etoa.in in lh~Jl!llSl six
weeks. Graphically illustrative 0( their
type and cost to U.S. taxpayers are the
following:
-32 C.130 giant cargo planes at $10
million per. Exactly why so many of
these huge carriers were turned over to
the South Vietnamese is not clear. They
had none of these planes, nor any e1·
perience with them. Pilots and crews will
ed -at U.S. expense.
WlDLE THE U.S. will foot that bill .
the U.S. Air Force will not rto the
training.
The peace agreement will require the
withdrawal of all U.S. forces. It is the
Admini stration's intent to meticuloosly
abide by this stipul.at.lco. M a con·
sequence. the maintenanci or the C.t30s,
F .SS and various other aircraft and the
training of South Vietnamese -crews \Viii
be turned over to civilians hired for that
purpose. -
It will be a big and costly job -as 600
new planes of all types are involved.
That's the startling number added to the
South Vietnamese airforce since late
October.
But this and hundreds of millions of
dollars of other hardware and munitions
ar~ not satisfying President Thieu.
He tried to create a rift between the
President and Dr. Kissinger by accusing
the latter of double--dealing -misleading
both him and the President.
This ploy was so patently phony it sank
by its own wei&ht.
Wbat seemed to particularly> rankle
Thieu when he blandly popped his $3
billlon economic demand was KLsalnger's
r~k. !'Mr .. ~ tmt.J·i s
something for the U.S. Conarm to
decide. In our country, only Congress ho&
the power lo approprtate funds. The
President may propose, but Congress
dis . " ~glared, but said nothing.
. Addendum: South Vietnam bas around
one million men under arms. U.S. in·
telligence estimates Hanoi bu· 145,00!l
combat troops in South Vietnam, plus
another ·I00,000 Vietcong.
Seat Belts Need Better Promotion
To the Editor:
Your editorial, "Driving Llfe-saver"
on Nov. 30 stressed the fact that sea t
belts are a necessity in aut~safety.
Within the article, there was a discussion
on whether to make the use of seat belts
mandatory or not.
I believe that the importance of wear·
ing seat belts does not lie Within the law,
but rather in the promotion by the con·
cerned.
SINCE I have come to America in
July, 1972, I have seer\ many ad·
vertisements on the danger of smoking.
There are warning statements on
cigarette cases. There are warning signs
in all cigarette advertisements. The
Cancer Society has dooe its share in pro-
moting anti.smoking in perodicals as
weH as te1evision. As a result, I un·
derstand that the nwnber or smokers has
decreased since the anti.gmoking cam·
paign began.
HOWEVER, I ha ve seen only a few ad·
vertisements promoting the importance of
wearing seat belts. U periodicals and
television come out with m o r e ad·
vertisements to promote the use of seat
belts, the number of people who wear
seat belts will rise like the rise of non·
smokers. Though some cars have wam-
ing systems which remind poople to wea r
seat belts, too many more cars do not
have aflt~warning devices.
I hope that there are Americans who
care enough to make a change~
NOBUMICHI HARA ,
Student CSULB from Japan <
Wh11 Burn Trees'/'
To-the Editor:
This year, IS in the past, when the
holidays are behind us, the Newport
Beach Flre Department will cooduct a
tree-burning event at the beach and
IN?\)' thousands of Ou1stmas tree. wU I
end their usefulness ift a pail ·of smoke.
CAN w'£_ AFFOJID.. this ooiutloo any
tonger. when our alr bas i;o many other
terrible assaults made upon It?
Burninc is wrong, especlally when
na bas a better solution and a further
use or such trees. Many other citlei.
hav nd a better 10lutlon.
My town, Ann Arbor, MJch ,,
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( ~BOX )
Letters from "Ttaders are welcome.
Norrruzlly writers should conve11 &heir
Tnessages in 300 words or Less. The
right to conden.se letters to fit space
or eliminate libel i.t' reserved. All
letters must i'1.clude signature and
mtJiling addreS8, but names ma11 be
withheld on request tf IUf~t
reason is apparmt. Poe~ toill not be
published.
shreds its trees and turns them into
v&luable mulch and humus, which its
grateful citizens haul away fOr U88 ln
their gardens. Trees used for 1andf1ll can
also return to earth i~ a natural way. . .
) HA VE SPOKEN with several people
at CltY Hall who have listened to me
courteously bot have offered no support.
Our city should be responsive to our
needs. and if othera share my concern
that we need to find a better solution ,
then we should make that concern known
to the men and women wbo work for us.
Undoubtedly it is more econo.mlcal for
the city to bum trees than to shred them,
0r for the sanitaUon 'men to haul them
away. But In terms of air polluUon and
the waste of natural resources. can we
afford to contillue to bum?
As a postscript, I would paiftt out that
the city will ae<ept lhe donation of llvinl
trec1 after Cluistma1 from tho8e of us
Bii Geer9e ---·
Dear G<orge:
l_low can t strike
quaint.anceshlp r with
ml:!n7
Dear Louise : • .t
up an ae-
a strange
LOUISE
ltow itrange a D\An would you
Uke to become aoqualnted with?
Drop by the office bere any day
from 9 to Sand I'll introduce you to
some bizarre ews . . . some of
these meP are .. 1trange you won 't
believe them. •
who have run out of planting room in our
own yards.
SALLY P. NETZER
' Traffic Selutlon
To the Editor:
1 wholeheartedly concur in the views
expressed in your editorial in the PILOT
No\I.. 29 on Recreation vs. Traffic. Your
reaction to the proposed development at
Newport Dunes was almost identical with
my feelings regarding the Irvine Com·
pany's proposed Inn and Restaurants
development on castaways Point , name-
ly, more eongesUon on the Coast
Highway particularly at lhe Back Bay
Bridge.
A POSSIBLE SO~UTION would be the
doahl&<leeldac of Coast Highway from
Corona del Mar to the western end of
Newport Beach. Part of sucb a plan
would be to raise the Back Bay Bridge to
the appe,..tevt:I only, which would have to
be widened at that point to six or
possibly eight lanes and provided with
suitable access ramps at each side of the
bridge.
I attended the meeting of the Newport
Transportation Committee on Nov. 21. l
heard tl lot of talk about various pro-posals, but not.bing that seemed ac-
ceptable for solving the most crltlcal
problem, the congest.Ion on Coast
Highway.
I ADMIT my suggestion of double-
decking coast Highway is open to ob-
jections, tnclud.ing cosl However, 1
believe tliat 1111y such objections ~ be
surmounted and that the COit ts nOt pro-
hibitive wbe6 v~wed In comparison with
the coot of the preoent and proposed
developments which wUl contribUte to the
otherwise unbearable traffie problem on
Coast Highw ey.
MILDRED KNIGHT
J>u:rzletl Pare1tt
To the Editor:
My son made a c·ennnlc:r ashtray at
school and It was recently dlaplayed In
the art show at the Hun\lngto1. Center
Mall. It was in the special awards section
and It hu di'8ppeared -apparently
stolen.
!IE SPENT ti lot o! time and effort
. '
mating it very special ror me aa a
surprise for when I returned borne from
a trip to the bospital. It was beautiful and
I cherished it. I could (and did ] cry.
Last year I &aved and bought him an
expensive coat which someone stole a
week later.
WHAT PUZZLES me is how a parent
could let his child keep anything that
doesn't belong to them. Surely they
cou1dn't help but notice a brand new coat
that they didn't buy.
Has the world reached a paint where
we are so greedy that we \Wlcome
anything "free"? Doesn't it occur to
· parents that they must teach their
children not to take things that do not
belong to them , let alone encourage
them? .
DOESN'T IT occur to the8e porents that even if it is a small handmade
asfJ.ttay or a blg expensive coat that It
could be . very important to whomever it
_be.Jooged to? Are parents 90 lackadalsical
that they don't even notice a "new" coat
or toy? If this Is the case, no wondE¥"
there are so many juvenile delinquents. 1
feel sorrier for the kids than I do the
pa rents.
Maybe this letter will Qpen &eme
parents' eyes to "new'' things around the
house. "Cute" little "takers" tum into
adult thieves.
MARY JANE HENDRIX
ORANG£ COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, PubUrl!er
Tlumto.t' Keevil, .Editor
Barbora Kreibich
Editorwt Page Edi!or
The edltnrlal 1111w;c or the Dall)•
PiloL~ka to lnfMm t1ind •timu·
lnlc t 1"'l!dl"rt by f)rt'llCntlng thbl
rte\\·1tµa1>et'f: oplnlon1 enrf aim-
mcntal")' on to11lct ot lnterett 1rwj
a1Mni Clcancc. b)' provkllng a torwn tor the exprettlon ot our T'Ctlrdcr11'
opinions. and by Jlrt!ICnting tht• divenc vlll\\'l"'lnt1 ol tnrol'fMd ob.
"trvt'l't •nd 1()0kesmcn on to1)IC1 ot the di.y.
Friday, Del:t!mber 8, 1972
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Orange Coas Today's Fl••I
N.Y. Stocks
VOL 65, NO. 343, 4 SECTIONS, 41> PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1972 c TEN CENTS
• ane es Ill
Frosty Snow111an Visits,
Tustin Stude1its ·Play in Snow From Freak Storm ·
1
~ Tustin High School students frolicked
ln falling snow for about 40 minutes this
morning and an El Toro Marine Corps
Pilot reported hail in the area as the
litest winter storm passed over Orange
County dropping a half an inch of rain in
tome areas.
About 8 a.m. students in Mrs. William
Schreiber's class at Tustin High played
amidst the falling flakes.
1be National Weather Service describ-
ed the snowfall as being the result of
freak air currents, since snov. levels in
Southern California are generally ex-
peeted only above :i,000 feet this
weekend.
About the same time snow was said to
~ falling in T'Ustin, a jet pilot landing at
El Toro reported falling ice pellets.
Laguna Beach's unofficial rain watch-
er. Bill Shields, reported .09 oI an inch
in hi9 gauge over the 24 hours ending at 8
a.m., bringing the season rainfall total in
the Art Colony to 5.23 Inches. Last yea r
at this tin.e. Shields saki. Laguna had On· 1 ly .12 of an inch of rain. The city got only
6.18 inches all last year.
1be weather service forecast calls for
mostly cloudy skies aoo occasional
showe rs tonight. --~=,An,cl~and-coorsaturdayis-eX:peeled
along the Orange Coast with gusty winds
to ·20 knots from the northwest.
1be Orange County Harbor Depart·
ment station at Newport Beach logged
only .11 inch of rain during the 24-hour
period ending at 7 a.m. Tbe season to
date total reco~ by the rain gauge at
1901 Ba1lhfe Drive ,i.:u1 •tr·
Small craft· warninp are up and are
erpeded to remain up through Saturday ,
as a result of Uae psty afteruoon--winds.
A private rlba -.atc:Mr" J. lbetman
Denning of Hm1tinllton Beacll repo<Ud a
total-of .31-mcb of-rain in-that city for
the 24-hour period ending at-8 o'clock this
morning.
Jn San Clemente, rainwatcher s
reported .2 of an inch .;uring the 24 hours
enfilng ara o'cloek th1s morning, with a
total of 7.1 inches for the season so far .
Rainfall amounts !rom the latest storm
reported in the 24-bour period ending at 8
a.m. showed .43 inch in Santa Ana ; .46
inch in Villa Park: .39 in Irvine and .40
Mesa Police Nab
Grove Woman
On Drug Charges
A Garden Grove department store of-
ficer was arrested by Costa Mesa police
a~ her home Jate Thursday, charged with
five counts or drug sales following a four-
month investigation.
Sandra D. Richardson. 28. of 12112
Adrian St., Garden Grove, was booked on
suspicion of three counts of sale of mari-
juana, two counts of ,sale o~. dangerous
drugs and possession of m~nJuana.
The possession of mar1Juana charge
stemmed from pollce raiders' allegations
that she appeared to be high an~ h~d
four suspicious burnt cigarett~s lying 10
open view in a room clouded with smoke.
Detectives Jim Blaylock and . Don
Casey claimed that just before they 1den-
Ufred themselves and placed her under
arrest that Miss Richardson offered the
quote of the night. · "I'm on the way . , ." she assertedly
se.id. Investigators accuse her of selling
small quantities of drugs to a person
Identified as Agent 22 dating back to
September.
OAIL y ~ILOT staff ~
HEADLESS NAPPIR AT UCI? NO, JUST NIPPY WEATHER
Even ChU( Oiclft't lntirrUpt Siloon; ~Just Snuggle·d Down
inch at Saddleback Peak.
Rainfall amounts for tbe season to dale
at each of the reporting stations are: 5.76
inches in Santa Ana ; 6.00 inches in Villa
Park; 5.03 inches in Irvine and 11.10 in-
ches al Saddleback Peak.
Astronauts Speed ·Toward
Sunday Landing on ~oon
SPACE CEN'l'.ER, Houston (AP) -A
brief burst from command s h i p
America's rocket engine today guided the
Apollo 17 astronauts onto a precise
course toward a Sunday rendezvous with
the moon. (See Pictures, related stories,
Page 3.)
To their amusement, it also shot them
into a mass of ice particles -the work
of 6pace-age plumbing.
Eugene A. Cernan, geologist Harrison
H. Schmitt and Ronald E. Evans con-
ducted the flawless firing 147,000 miles
from earth; triggering tbe big l?ngine for
two ~nds to steer oH a collision course
with the moon onto a, path that wUl take
them to an orbit within 70 miles of lunar
surface · SUnday.
"Ol}hh, t;here "'-go;'' saki .Evans, the
command lblp't •ystems expert, as lhe
engln< Ut up.
"Bum is on \lme and we got shut
down,'' said Cernan. the Apollo 17 com·
mender.
flickering fireflies a:;,they rioated in-front
of Ute spaceship.
After the firing. Cernan feported,'"We
just caught up with every one of those lit-
tle bitty particles. We're right in the
middle o( them.
"They're drifting in random fashion.
Some are going against us, some away
from us.'' he said. "We've really got a
star field out there ."
It wa~ a first for the Apollo program.
The rocket firing removed one of the
continuing effects of delayed launch of
Apollo 17 on Thursday, when it got away
from Cape KeMedy 2 hours and 40
minutes late because of a computer prob-
lem.
To make up for lost time and to get the
astroriauts to the moon on the original
Umeline, Mission Control had them
rocket out of ellrth ·orbll at a higher
speed than planned.
That firing, however, was slrghtly off
CQurse and aimed Apollo-17 directly at
the moon. The brief firing today resolved
that .
53 Feared
Dead; PlaIJe
Falls Short
BULLETIN
CIUCAGO (UPI ) - A tempOrary
morgue was set up this afternoon near
the site of a United Air Lines crash.
There was no Immediate conftrmaUon
to a dispatcher's report that S3 per$0ns
were ldlled,
CHICAGO (UPI) -A United Air Lines
airliner crashed today on Chicago's South
Side a mile and a half south of Midway
Airport, the Federal A v i a t ion
Administration said.
Walter Kimbrough, UPI traffic chief in
Chicago, said he saw billowing smoke
close by his-home on the Southwest Side.
Power in llie neighborhood went out
shortly afterwards. he said.
The plane was described as a Boeing
747 twin-engine plane. Authorities said it
went down approaching a landing at
Midway.
Officials said the plane \11as United's
Flight 553, which left Washington at 10:40
a.m. (PST) and was scheduled to land' at
dway at IT:Jt-p:m:-
The aircraft is a jet \\'hich normally
carries 70 to 80 passengers.
C h i c a g o police communications,
ho\\·cver, said 61 persons were aboard -
55 passengers &od six crew members.
Mrs. Kimbrough said she was talking
Oh life tol~.,..i..n sudd..,ly Ibo lighta
and PQWff. ~ out and th< '9"Qi1 o! a
crash-was beard" by her two tons, Terry,
32. alld J)eonis. 29. • .... -··
"Th1s place is bedlam ·a:rouna here,"
she A id. "The boys were watching from
-the -front window.-l asked wbat hap-
pened. They said it sounded Hte a plane
crash.
"ft ruined two homes. they say. Oh, the
smoke is pitch black, just billowing.
There's no powt!r, oo heat, no nothing.
"Ambu lances are just screaming down
the street. There are sanitation trucks,
police cars. ambulances."
Mrs. Kimbrough said the crash was
about a block from her borne.
"I ran outside and one kid· told me the
roof is gone from one house. It 's bedlam.
Bedlam!''
Nearby Holy Cross Hospital said 15 in-
jured had been received Crom the crash
and no fatalities.
Three houses were reported on fire in
the vicinity uf the crash.
Police were having difficulty keeping
people. from the scene.
Fill Christmas
List Saturday
On the ninth day of December -that's
Saturday -the Costa Mesa Police
Department wlll offer you just about
everything but a partridge in a pear tree.
The quarterly auction of lost or stolen
anu unclaifned valuables gets under way
behind the police facility a 99 Fair Drive
at 10 a.m .. rain or shine.
Bicycles, tools, jewelry and a wide
assortment or other items are available
at bargain rates. Checks will be ac-
cepted.
Professor, 47, Dies
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Herhert L.
Packer, 41, professor o( criminal law at
the Stanford University Law School, died
Wednesday.
U~IT .......
MARGARET TRUMAN DANIEL ANSWERS QUESTIONS OF PRESS
'He Has Gotten Over Wor59 Things,' Truman's Daughter S.ys
Truma,n Weakens; Chief
Concern Over His Heart
KANSAS CITY. "Mo. iit>iY ~' -·
at the bedside of Hafry S Truman said
today they have "major concern.'' .about
Ute falling heart or lhe crltica)ly Ill a.
year-old lonner President. He was given
extra medicaUon to k'.eep him relaxed.
"President Truman remains critical.
The area or major concern is still
general cardiac weakness. aggravated by
restlessness or body movement, which is
relieved by medication," said a mid-day
medical statement at Research Hospital.
Later this afternoon, doctors said his
heart was "extremely precarious."
Truman. weakened by age and a lung
infection. was fed intravenousJy. He was
given oxygen to help him breathe.
''There is cardiac stability, but it is ac-
companied by extreme weakness," sa id
the statement, read by hosp it a I
spokesman John Dreves. "His heart con-
dition ls oot as good this morning as we
had hoped it would be."
Attempts to feed the ailing. aging
former president fail ed, so doctors had to
feed him entirely by ann injection and
through a tube in his nose.
"He's still listed as critical and he's
still listed as stable," Dreves said .
"Improvements which have occurred
during the night include the pulmooary
situation and kidney functio n."
Truman first was hospitalized with
lung infection. That ailment had pro-
gressed but doctors said that ir he was to
survive his heart would have to stand the
strain of battling age and infection.
Tl1Jman's heart was monitored con·
stantly.
"The former president has tolerated
tht monitoring remarkably well and js
aJways cooperative,'~ Sllid Truman's
personal physican, Dr. Wallace Graham.
He said President Nixon·~ White House
staff has been "cooperative and desire to
help in any matter." ,
Doctors said Truman "improved in
,, '
' some areas bat 'Shows 110 impTOYement in
others."
"His heart is showing the signs~ con-
siderable irritability and stress," Dreves
said.
Truman's vital signs were "relatively
stable, though the temperature is Duc-
tuating, but only slightly."
Doctors said the nation's 33rd chief ex-
ecutive did 1l0t sleep \Veil Thursday night
and ea rly today. They said his family
\11as not notified of the restle$ night.
Thursday, Truman rallied from the
lung and heart ailm?nts that se~t him to
the hospital four days ago. Margar~t
Danie l, his Jaughter, said Truman smiled
at her.
"He 's getting kind of contrary," Mrs.
Diniel said aft,. leaving her father's
bedside and driving her mother, Mrs.
Bess Truman, back l.o the family home
at Independence, Mo .. 15 miles away.
"He's restless. He's feeling better. I
have great faith Iha. he's going to come
out of this all right."
Truman was rushed by ambuJance to
Research Hospital Tuesday suffering
lung congestion. He had,been ill for two
weeks at home before he entered the
hospital.
His condition first was classed "fair ..
Wednesday , then fell to "serious" and
deteriorated to "critical" Wednesday
nig ht when doctors said he passed
through the "ultracritical period" due to
strain on his weakened heart. His rally
began Thursday.
Mrs. Daniel flew from Wasblngton to
her father's bedside on an airplane pro-
vided by the White Hoose .
Orange Coast
Weadler
Air Pact Settled
NEW YORK (AP) -Tentative agree...
menf has been reached on a contract
between Pan American World Airways
and 8 000 clf!rical employes who threaten·
ed to 'call a strike Saturday. Terms of the! ·
accord were not disclosed ':'hursday
pending a ratification vote .by the em·
p19yes.
The astronauts earlier dumped waste
water· and urine overboflrd and it frQZe
into tiny particles in the frigid space en·
vironment. With the sun reflecting off
'their lcy surf•ces, they resembled DA Fights Nude Bars
Those dark clouds will clear to
sunny skies on Saturday. accord-
ing to the weatberlady -but
the~·s.a sllght (30 percent) chanee
of a few showers on SUnday. HJghs
in the upper 50s to lower 60s.
Lows tonight ln-the...405-
~riton to Try
Alcatraz Swim
County Drive Goes on in Spite of State Efforts
troverslal entertainment were recently prosl iluti<ln rocket thal allegedly had its
closed down through civil litigation that headquarters in the bottomless bar. All
uses the Language or the state's Red face Superior court tria' on those
Light Abatement Act to make Its point. c~;~::uga1ors"" loday said OM reason for
INSIDE TODAY
Musician.$ from Seal Beach to
Sa11 Clemente IUlut prepared
the ir Christrnm offering& with
Handel'• ·'~feuiah'" bei1lg Ult
tnost popular holiday piece. Stt
toda11'1 Wtektt1dtr for timtt
01W ptoccs.
J_
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Brllish
adventurer Kenneth F. Crutch1ow sa)'$
tie will swim the dangerous mile from
_Alcattai llland· to Fisherman's Wharf
Sunday a~r mali:e It or drown.
A drive that has drawn the curtains on
nlore than a dozen nude bars in Orange
County dur ing the past year will continue
even though the state'~ Alcoholic
Beverage Control (ABC) officers have
got----tnto the net. Distr1ct-Attomey's
rcpresentativei; declared tod::iy.
And the Sarong Gals ttnd Bristlll contlnu'ed action by their office is the L.M-:"'lt't'f t Mlrtlltl ....... tt
"'""'-' --.... °' .... c--. " ......... ., ... I
\ • '
•
The 23-ytllMld 'who ,., record• walk·
ing and riding a bleycle acrou lloatb
Valley while w .. rinfl a-bowler bat
face to.degree water and vicious currents
for the nine tenths of a mile swim,
"They 1ren 't going to pull me out,
that's tor sure."
If they do pull him out, he won'i be the
fim.
Closure actions which include tho
Fiteho\IH bar In Costa Mesa will be
presstd even though the Cal!Iomfa
Supreme Court has ruled that the ABC
agency can perfofm that function.
~kesmt1n for the offlcc's obscenitY
d1v1sion !lnld. (Rch1ted story, Page 4,l
'Til.·o Santa Ana bars offering th<! C'bh·
r _ -·
Gardeot bar.._.both In Santa An•. cur· dtlay bullt-in.to·tny ectlon by lh• ABC.
rtntly fnce klentical action that could 'Mley said the ·agency 1:1n revoke a
close them or at least "clean them up," bar's license but the bar ca"n corttin~· to
invegtlgators tald. opcrate..pendlftf a hearlng and that olten
I'bVe·sng~tlon of-the Bristo! Gaf\'.lens U.kes at least UI~ months.
bar led la~ rnot;ith to the filing or Using the red light act, District Al-
criminitl actions agatnst a gl'Ot.lp of torney's officen said they C3n obtain a
women and fom)tf prt. football player Superior Coul1 restralrung order that
Willie Crittendon.J ofttn effectively bans nude en·
All were ecx:us of Involvement ~ tertalnment.
•• . ..
' • .• • . .
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-
• DAIL V PlL OT '
Passengers,
Guards Kill
Skyjackers
ADDIS ABABA rU Pl ) -five men and
t"'o \\'omen armed \\'ith pistols and hand
grenades tried to hijack an Ethlop1:i n
Ai rl int.:S Boeing 72fl today Passenge rs
seized and dJsar111ed !hem :ind :>ecuri!y
guards shot all sevell to death.
It was the largest death toll 1n a lu·
jacking case.
A British couple in their 70s held one of
the hijackt'rS unde r their feet.
Other occupant s of the plane seized
ano1her arlned air pirate and, a
passenger said . "kicked him and kic ked
him and 1vot1ldn 't let hint use his gun ua-
tll he was eventuallv killed with a whole
magazine of bullets:"
Passengers suggested that the women
may hll ve sn1uggled the guns aboard in
their high-heeled, platform sole shoes.
They said the air pirates hurled at
least two hand gernades and one ex-
ploded: wound ing a number of the
passengers. including a U.S. oil company
executive and an An1erican college pro-
fessor .
The professor. Dr. Roderick Hilsinger
of Temple University. Phlla~elphia, ~as
creditec! y,·ith saving some lives by pick-
ing up the hand grenade and hur~ing it
ay,·ay before it exploded in the midst or
the passengers . He was hit by shrapnel
and was reported in grave condition at
an Addis Ababa hospital.
The other wounded American was S.V.
McCollumn of Houston. Tex .. executive
vice president of the Tenneco Oil Co.,
Ethiopia Radio reported.
The plane carrying 94 passengers and
crew was commandeered about 15 min-
utes out of Addis Ababa en route to Paris
with stopovers in Cairo. and Rome, \l'il-
nesses said.
They described the hijackers as in
their 20s and appearing to be Ethiopians.
Although damaged, the plane was able to
la nd at Addis Ababa where the
passengers boarded another flight.
"The re were many. many bullets."
John Lodge or Southampton. England
said. "And t\\·o hand J!renades were
throYrn and one exploded." ·
He reported that the British couple.
named Macintosh-'-held down one of the
hijackers with their feet until secur.it y
men shot him. •
"We were hijacked just af1er takeoff."
Lodge said. "There were seven hijackers
and they did a bloody good job, excuse
my expression."
Passengers said there were six securi-
ty guards on boarP, and that the aerial
battle occurred high over the Ethiopian
countryside.
"They killed all the hijackers," the
Briton said. "Some of the pas&engers
were injured and are in a hospital."
:Bill to Build
Chino Preserve
T o Be Presented
A bill will be introduced to the 1973
!ession of the California Legislature to
establish a wildnerness preserve in Chino
Hills.
Assemblyman John V. Briggs fR·
.Fullerton ) who will prepare t h e
legislative resolution held a point press
conference Thursday in Placentia v:ith
Supervisor William J. Phillips of
Fullerton. Phillips is the original sponsor
of the wilderness area project.
When the proposed Chino Hills airport
was being discussed last spring. Phillips,
urged by anti·airport groups in Placentia,
Yorba Linda, Brea and Fullerton pro-
posed the wilderness area as a joint proj-
ect or Orange, Riverside and San
Bernardino eounties.
Briggs said Thursday he will either
seek a state grant for the project or try
for federal funds. He said he was con·
ftdent of congressional <1ction to finance
tbe park.
OIAN•I COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
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Tho1111, K11Yil
Editor
1l!o11111 A. M11•pliin1
Ml,,..lf!O E"'ICW'
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I L
UPI iti.Pilote
RETAINS JUSTICE POST
Attorney General Kleindienst
Kleindienst
Will Re111ai11;
Aides to Go
CAr-.tP DAVID, i'rtd. (UPI)-President
Nixon formally completed his second·
term Cabinet today by announcing that
Richard G. Kleindienst \viii remain as at-
torney general.
But this was coupled with an-
nouncement that five lop Justice Depart-
men offieia!: will be replaced as part of
Nixon's reshuffling of the Adminiftration.
These are ~ Deputy Attorney Gene ral
Ralph E. Erickson; David Luke.Norman.
assistant attorney general in charge of
tbe civll rights division: Jerris Leonard,
administrator of the Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration ; Roger C.
Cramton. assistant attorney gene ral in
charge of the Office of Legal Counsel and
Leo l\l Petlerzi. assistant attorney
gen eral for administration.
At the same tlmc. the \\'hite House
said Yale law professor Robert H,,,Bork.
45. one of the drafters or the
·Ad1ninistration's <intibusing legislation,
\Vi l\ be a new fa re in th e Justice Depart-
ment. .
Bork will become solicitor general next
spring at the end of the current te~m ?f
th<:.> U.S . Supreme Court. replacing Er\1·1n
N. Griswold who plans to retire .
There have been reports that Klein·
dienst, confirmed by the Senat.;: as head
of the Justice Department only after
ltr.gthy confirmation hearings~ will not
remain long in the second Nixon term
starting Jan. 20.
The hearings were spiced by charges
involving Kleindienst's alleged role in the
settling of an antitrust suit against
International Telephone and Telegraph
Corp. Democrats charged the settlement
\vas in exchange for political con-
tributions.
N eiv Gi rls Club
To Be Opened
With Hoag Grant
The Girls Club or the Harbor Area will
be opening a second clubhouse in
January thanks to a $35 ,000 grant from
the Hoag Foundation.
A spokesman for the club said the
grant has enabled the organization to buy
a house at 2032 Orange Ave .. which is
being converted into the seco nd
clubhouse.
The Girl's Club presently operates out
of a building at 1815 Anaheim Ave., and
has a mobile van which visits various
school s five days a week.
The addition means that girls living on
the east side of Newport Boulevard will
have a clubhouse of their own, the club
spokes man said.
The award of the money was made in
October when it was learned that the
Girl's Club 111as trying to buy the Orange
Avenue home.
Foundation president Grorge l·Toag IT.
in awarding the grant. said •·the Hoag
Fout'ldatnni has always been interested in
the Girls' Club."
TONIGHT
"CRYSTAL CHRlSTMAS" -Costa
~tesa Jligb Lyceum. 7:30 p.m.
• Perilous Ti1ne
LBJ Nuclear War Fears Reported
WASIUNGTON (UP!) -Pmitl@lll Lyndon B. Joltruoon wu concerned In
\Bel tut the .....,.tnaUoo ot John F. Kennedy rnliltt lead to nuclear war.
according to former Chief Justice Earl Warren.
War-reh, in an interview wllh lhe Public Broadcasting S:ertlC~ to be shoy,•n
on television Monda y, said Johnson cited the poesibUlty of war as one reason
the chief justice should bead a commission he named to lnv..Ugete the asou-
slnaUOn.
2 Gunmen
Make Haul t
In New por t
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 1M Dt.ffJ Pli.f SNH
POLICE BENEF1T SHOW A N 0
DANCE -presented by Costa f\\esa
Police Association, Anaheiln Convention
Center Arena, 8 p.m. Ticket inforn1atlon
96.1-2445.
WARREN RECALLED THAT the incident occurred a few days after Ken-
nedy's death in Dallas on. Nov. 221 1963.
A gunman team including ooe ba~dit
grotesquely garbed in a nylon stocking
mask and woman's wig invaded a
Newport Beach home Thursday night.
escaping with several thousand dollars'
worth of loot.
CHRISTMAS CONCERT -; Southern
California College n1usic department
presents annual concert. Co I Lege
Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Free.
In the interview, Warren said be was _invi ted to the White House by Johnson
who "told me he feJt conditions in the world were so bad at the moment ...
he thought it might even get into a war -even a nuclear. war."
IRVINE MASTER CHORALE
"Christmas Festival of Music," OCC
Auditor ium. Tieket inronnation 548-6049.
THE PRESIDENT, ACCORDING to Warren, cited rumors. later proved to
be unfounded, that Soviet Prornler Nikita S. Khrusbchtv and Cuba·, Fidel
Castro might have been involved in the Kennedy shooting .
The pb1tol·waving pair n1issed the man
they were after, according to pe>lice, but
knew just what they wanted and got it. OCC FILM SER IES -"Johnny Got
His Gun." Forum, 7 p.m. $1.00. Loss at the Arthur .Roy home. 511 NOCHE CULTURAL CHICANO DE
AZTLAN -Dinner, music, art and photo
exhibit. Folklorico Dancers, rum and
drama. OCC Student Center, 6:30 p.m.
S2 50.
"l\100NCHI LOREN" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, 18'27 Newport Blvd .. 8
p.m. Reservations, 646-1363., Fri., Sat ..
Sun.
UCI CONCERT -present~d by
University \Vind Ensemble. Fine Arts
Village Theater. 3 p.m.
•
Irvi ne Ave ., included a large assortment
or rare coins, a $4,000 fur coat and $119 in
pocket money.
Detective Sgt. Sam Amburgey said to-,
day that ~rs. Katherine Roy confronted
the ro~rs 8t 8:45 p.m .. foUowing a
-knock on the door. ·
Life Magazine to Publish
Final Edition on Dec. 29 Her bedridden, invalid husband was
unable to intervene as the men burst •
UNICEF BENEFIT -Christmas con·
cert sponsored by Model United _Nations,
LC! and C.oasUine Chapter, United Na·
lions Association, Crawford 11all, 8:30
p.m.
BASKETBALL -Estancia at Laguna
8 p.m.
NEW YORK (AP) -Lile Magazine
will discontinue publication with the issue
of Dec. 29, Time, Inc. announced today,
The publisher said the 36-.year-old
magazine, famous for its pioneering use
of news photographs, will fold because or
"continuing losses:"
SATURDAY. DEC. ! The year-end double issue will mark
''ELIJAH" -presented by Estancia the close of the weekly magazine founded
High School mus ic d e p a r t m e n t , by Henry Luce.
Auditorium. 8 p.m. Life was published at "very substantial
;,CRYSTAL C HRI ST r,f AS,•' deficits in 1969 and 1970 and smaller
presented .bv Costa Mesa Hig h School, deficits in 1971 and Im," the publisher
Lyceum, ?i:3o p.m. Student!' SOc. Ad ults said.
51. "As our projections for 1973 took i .~100NCHILDREN " -South Coast shape. however, they showed a resum)>-
Repertory Theater. tion of heavy losses, and the indications
HOLIDAY f\.10VlES -Children's films for 1974 ·were even more unfavorable,"
at Costa Mesa Library, 10:30 a.m. Time, Inc. added.
BASKETBLLL -Costa Mesa at San-At about 10:45 a.m., grim-faced staff
tiago, 8 p.m. Harbor High at Righetti, 8 members of the magaiine began to
p.m. UCI v. Montana State, Crawford gather for a meeting on the eighth floor
Hail. 8 p.m. of the Time-Life building at Sixth Avenue
BACK BAY TOURS -Sponsored by and 50th Street. ·
Friends of Newport Bay and The Sierra About 250 to 300 stalf workers sat· in
Clu b. 1.feet at corner or Back Bay Rd. chairs or stood against the walls, waitirig
and Eastbluf{ Dr. 9 a.m. for the meeting, which ~'BS closed to
SUNDAY, DEC. JO outsiderS.
MESSIAH -Handel's orator i o 11Je publi'sher said Time. Fortune,
presented by UCI Chorus and Orch~i:a . ~ports Illustrated and _ .ney. its other
Crawford Hall, 2 and S--p.m. Adm1ss1on major n1agazines. "have very well
SI. this year."
"MOONCHlLDREN '' -South Coast Life lasted more t n a year longer
Reper tory Theater. than its chief compe r, Look. which
ctased publication on Oc . 19, 1971. Look
also blamed rising costs. especially
postal rates.
a
In announcing the decision to fold Life, through the door, demanding to see his
Hedley Donovan, editor-in-chief of Time, brother, Pat Roy, then due home from a
Inc., and Andrew Heiskell, cbainnan of Sao Diego construction job.
the board, declared: Jnvestigators said Mrs. Roy told them
"Life has been one of the great her brolher·in·law was not at home, but
journalistic pioneers. Its launching in they pushed on inside, demanding his ex· 1936 opened a whole new era of pro-
fessional journalism, with consequences tensive rare coin collection.
stil! seen all over the world . The home was ransacked while Mrs.
"Llfe achieved almost at once, and Roy. stood helplessly by.
kept through 36 years, an important Total loss in the lightning-like robbery
voice in American affairs; we believe the was still being tallied today, but police
magazine has spoken responsibly, and said it will be considerable.
\\'ith vision and compassion. Life will go No vehicle was seen or heard during
on in many way s and places, not least in the holdup, while Mrs. RQy could
its influence on the other magazines and describe one bandit only as wearing the
books of Time, Inc." bizarre female outfit.
The Time, Inc., executives noted that The other -·both were 28 to 30 years
Life "encountered severe competition old -was stocky, with dark, wavy, styl-
from television since the late 1950's" for ed hair and moustache.
the advertising dollar=-. Detectives &aid the two victims present
The m11gazine earned "acceptable prof· and the brother-in-law who arrived home
its" during most of the 1960s, they while they were beina: questioned could
reported, ''but the cost pressures and the offer no clues to the Identity of the men.
competitive pressures kept building up. They obviously knew of Pat Ray and
aDd we have been running out of his co i n collection, said Detective
economies." Amburgey, adding that no similar
In the past two years, Lire reduced its holdups have occurred in the area
circulation from 8.5 million copies to 5.5-recently. .
million and increased the price to 50 Several years ago two men posing as
cenls for .a..ne.wsstand.coP¥..ln..an-attempL-dclivecy....men..invaded..tbe t.id0 _ lsle.Jwme__
to build a bigh--quality audience. of millionaire sportsm!"l Bnggs Cun-
'The impact of these move s was un· ningham and escaped w1~ nearly a half-
dercut by a very heavy increase in n1illion dollars worth of 1ewelry.
second-class postal rates which afrected Some "''as scattered as they fled, but
Lire, particularly because. of it s large other Hems turned up later. f~ced
page size.," the executive's statement through underworld sources, ~~ this led
said. to even~ual c~pture and conv1chon . .. Jli,,pils Protest
Narcotics Raid
At Los AW.mitos
,, 2
·Henredon's · Four ·Centuries
Los Alamitos High School students
v.·ent back to their classrooms today
following a campus demonstration Thurs-
day over the arrest of 23 students by
narcotics orficers.
Principal Dale Schroeder said the
peaceful demonstratior. at the school in-
volved about 150 students. "l talked to
them for about an hour and a half and
they \vent back to class," he said. "And
all is quiet today."
The protest was sparked when 23
students and three local adults were ar·
rested on char&' of operating an $80,000
drug ring at the school.
An undercover agent was planted on
campus by police earlier this year.
Sh~ gained the confidence of campus
<lrug dealers by telling them she had lost
her parents in a plane crash. that she
l\'as new to the area and that she had no
friends.
Known <'.IS "Lois," the undercover
agent let the word ge t around that her
unhappiness had driven her to drugs and
she needed quantities of cocaine, hashis h
ann any other hard drugs she could get.
Authorit ies l''.lid 23 helpful students
su pplied Lois with drugs and Tuesday the
youths and three adults alleged to be
dealers were picked up in a series of
raids by local police and state narcotics
officers.
All the students were suspended under
distrlct regulations, Schroeder said. They
will appear before a camput committee
with their parents to talk about reinstate-
ment, he added.
In. their demonstration Thursday, the
students complained they had been "sold·
out" by school authorities who all owed
the undercover agent to operate on ca1n-
pus.
'
r , !!"(
'
THE COMPANY
THAT CARES
ON DISPLAY
NOW.
Sex Film Dispute Heads
To State Si1pre1ne Court
/\ -.:ourt b:i trl e that beg'nn '"hen
\V1·~tm1nst cr l1ohce Chief \Valter Scotl
rc fuS<>d to rctum to thei r owners' movie.o;
anti photoi.t r11phs he ~111 1 insists arc
obscene is hcndcd toda y for the
Cnlifomia Supreme Court
The latest appellate move ordered by
the Orange County District Atton1ey's
Office on behalf of Scott comes just two
y,·ecks after the Fourth District Court of
Appeals in SalJ Bemardjno ordertd the
return of the ma terials to Frederick and
Kay Loar of liuntingtoo Beach.
DepUty Dtstr:lct Attorney O r e t t II
Sea rs said she plans to file her ofUce's
latest appeal early next week.
Loar. 35, and his wife, 32. of 4082
llumboldt Drive, lost saw their work
producus lftay 15. 1971. as SooU's officers
carried 1uorc than 20,000 movles and
30.000 photographs rrom thei r Pete Voss
Showcase warehouse at 15144 Golden
\Vest Circle in Westminster.
Superior Court Judge Robert L.
Corfman ordered their return last April
after a Jury In hls courtroom found the
Loars not guilty of multiple obscenity
charges.
Scott refused to retun1 the materials.
packed them away in his vaults and
declined to consider nwnerous appeals
dellvered to him by the Loara ~layiyeN!'.1
The P.Ollce chief was accused la st week
of stallfng on the return of the materials
because, the toars claimed, an estimated
2,000 reels or the seiy movies are mlss·
Ing.
SOOU denie• the allegations. And he
claima th at a check or the inventory If
and when be is finally compelled to sur-
render the materials will prov c
everything Is there.
' OREXEL-HERITAG~EN REOON-WOOOMARK-KARASTAN
INTERIORS
Wll KDAYS & SATURDAYS 9:00 to 5:30
FtllDA T 'TIL 9:00
-·.~
• ,
•
NEWPORT BEACH e
1727 WESTCLIF,. Dlt.,
642-2050
LAGUNA BEACH e
l4S NORTH COAST HWY, ..... ,,,,
TORRANCE e
2JMt HAWTHORNE ILVO.
J71·127'
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7
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7
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, • Frld111, Dttrn1btr 8 lq/2 DAit Y PILOT 5 1
CranstQn's
Son ~ts
Trial Date
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The
14-yu.M>ld ton or Sfn. Alan
Cranstoo CD-Call!.). Is
seh<duled to stand trial here
Jan. 18 on assault charges fit·
ed in the alleged drugging of a
former Playboy bunhy.
Trial for Robin Cranston
was postponed from Thursday
In Superior Court because a
prosecution attor~y was ill, a
court spokesman said.
Prof Off ei·s Pla11
To Curb Crowding
MOm'EREY (AP) -Stan·
ford University pro re as or
William Shockley, con·
lrovenial for contending that
blacks are aenetically inferior
to whJles, suggests the govern·
ment pay men with low IQs to
get vasectomies.
A $1.000 bonus could be of·
fered for each point a man's
intelligence quotient is below
100, says Shockley, an elec·
tronics engineering professor.
men lectured ~parately to
about 400 ptrsuns al ?.1onterey
Peninsula College, t hen
answered qucsllons
Willia111 Fa1•r
Gets Fibn Aid
-~Tll 10% OFF
WITH THIS COUPON
ON ANY OF OUR
CHR ISTMAS TREES
LIVING CHRISTMAS TREES FROM $20.00 UP
BEAUTIFUL LIVING GIFT
JAPANESE BONSAI
HOW 50% off •s.so .•
TAKATA NURSERY Cranston Is charged with
WET BAY AREA WEATHER CAUSE S MUD SL E IN LAFAYETTE THUS, A MAN with an IQ of
90 would be paid $10,000 for
obtaining a vasectomy, an
operation in which the ducts
carrying sperm are cut to pre-
ven t impregnation.
LOS ANGELES r AJ>)-20lh
Century-Fox announced il will
sponsor a molion piclure
premiere to help dc(ray court
costs for jailed r e po r t e r
William Farr. 710 BAKER STREET (next to "I" Station)
on Bristol •t Beker -COSTA MESA
546-0724 ( BRIEFS ) W1ll1, Roof of;-Knocked Askew As Storm Causes Eorth Slide ?
:~·~~~·:.~~ei~::.'~~ Snow. In Bay Area.
Proceeds or the Dec. 21
West Coast opening of "Thei~-.... --.... ...,..., .... ~~"""""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~ Effects of Gamma Rays onl-
Man-in-ttie.Moon ti.1arigolds, ·'
directed by Paul New11J-3n and
starring his wife. Joanne
Woodward, will be donated to
the William Farr Defense
Fund, a Fox spokesman said.
Nearly Ever yone
Listens to Landers in a West Los Angeles home
last March. Franci.scans Toss Urban Snowballs
ShockJey made the proposal
Thursday in what was billed
as a "debate" with Cedric X,
a black professor of
psychology at Stanford. The • Boy Crus h.,d
CORONA (AP) - A 2-year·
old child died after he was
crushed to death by his
family's car in the driveway
or his home. authoritles said.
Byrne forbade the government
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Snow fell on San Francisco
and gave the city's children a
rare chance to toss urban
snowballs here T h u r s d a y
snow to 1stick near sea leve11------·--------------------------------------------------
Pollce aaid Brian Reinhardt,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Reinhardt, died shorUy alter
111Ursday's a cc Iden t in
Riverside Genera] Hospital.
Brian and his sister,
Charlene, 4, were playing in-
side the car. A hand brake
was released accidentally, and
Brian fell under the wheels 8s
the vehicle rolled backwards,
authorities said.
e Y orty'• Jn
LOS ANGELES CAP)
~1ayor Sam Yorty will an-
riounce Jan. 3 that be is seek-
ing reelection to a fourth
term, says his closest political
associate. He said Yorty
decided after. turning down a
job in the Nixon ad-
ministratlon.
Deputy Mayor J o s e p h
Quinn, recuperating at home
trom-an earlier heart attack;
said ln an interview Thursday
that the 62-year-old mayor
plans to conduct a bard-hitting
pr~ campaign thi! spring
that is likely to ttsult In a
runoff.
ecro • .,c.u
RIVERSIDE (AP) -An
empty school bus was sliced in
half by a Union Pacific frei&ht
train after the driver ap-
parently thought the train was
on another track, authorities
said.
The 66-passenger bus was en
route to an elementary school
here to pick up youngsters for
a field trip Thursday when the
accident occurred , the
highway patrol said.
The driver . Donald
Sherman, 62, was treated and
released from Riverside Com·
munlty Hospital after suf-
fering cuts and scratches. • e Prbon Closing
SUSANVILLE (AP), -
night. ,
Citizens of tlt\, suburban
cities of Daly City and
Pacifica flocked outside to
watch the Oakes sUenUy fall·
Ing past street lights:
SBORTL Y BEFORE the 1
p.m. snowfall, a heavy
hailstorm hit the area, with
the pellets sticking to sloped
car windshields.
There also were reports of
lightniflg as the snow fell.
It snowed briefly at low
elevations earlier, but the
white stuff didn't stick.
Observers said the last
storm that dropped enough
Kitty Hawk
Crew Won't
A~ear
SAN DIEGO (UPI I -The
21 sailors accused of rioting
aboard the carrier Kitty Hawk
will JlOt appear before a con-
gressional committee even
though Invited and il fon:ed to
appear some would invoke the
Fifth Amendment, a defense
attorney said '11tursday.
"It would be inappropriate
for them to appear before the
committee," said Milton J.
Silverman. "I trink the con-
gresmJen realized this and
will not assert their subpoena
power."
A three-man House armed
service subcommitte, which
enters its third day of closed
hearings into the racial lrou·
ble today. boarded the giant
carrier Thursday and spent
three boors towing the scene
of the disturbance Oct. 12-13.
They ate lunch, chatted
casually with s e ~ e r a l
crewmembers. talked a t
length with three others but
said little after their visit.
for any Period of time came IO
years ago when most Northern
California valleys· experienced
a white covering.
The National 'N e a t h e r
Service said it apparently was
caused by "one thtlllderhead
five to seven miles i n
diameter moving southeast
about 25 miles an hour."
The Northern California
storm temporarily blocked
highways, reaping accidents
and forcing officials to close
schools in at least three coun-
ties.
DENSE FOG packed Into
the San Joaquin Valley, cut-
ting visibility to near zero as
the season's worst storm
whitened even low elevation
ridges and heaped blizzards of
snow on the Sierra Nevada.
Even the San'Francisco Bay
Area was dusted with snow
and hall, with snow in Marin
County visible from downtown
San Francisco, where tem-
peratures fell to a season low
38. .
In Marin, the twis t ing
PanoramJc fU.@.~li...!!l ei t·
mile road connecting Slli\SOn
Beach with State Highway 1,
was closed all day due to
snow, the highway patrol said.
The roads ug nearby Mt.
Tamalpals, Mt. Diablo In Con-
tra Costa County ahd Mt.
Hamilton near San Jose were
closed until snow plows could
arrive.
SfATE D I V IS !ON of
highways crews dumped salt
and sand on State Route 117
between Los Gatos end Santa
Cruz to melt slush which clos-
ed the road for a hall bolJI'.
Several other major roads
were closed triefly due to bad
visibility and snow, including
S!!!te Roote 20 near Marysville
aJid U.S. 101 near Leggett.
But Interstate 80 West was
Impassable due to zero visibili-
ty from Truckee to Colfax.
Highway officials said
passenger cars and light
trucks and buses with chains
were allowed to travel east on
HO.
EmPloyes at the state's ll'"'•~:----~~---~·-••am•='i11
mintmum security prison unit s E h
here have been served oouce ex X'° ande that the 71JO.lnmate facility ._. 8
will close by July l - a move
the residents of this small 'S J ' T nd S ? community feel will be a blow taring re eeli.
to their economy.
The news Thursday t> the
280 men who work here was
accompanied by assu$nces
that they will be eligible for
prison jobs in other parts of
the state. The Inmates
themselves will be sent to
other prison units, it was
reported.
1'-1inimum rrA prisoners who
have not committed crimes or
violence have been housed at
this Northern Callfomla faclli-
ty. They have been used to
fight forest fires throughout
the state.
e PaJH!r..:l'rla l
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Friendship, more than
kinship, will tmderlle future human relatlooa and tomor-
row'5 couples will openly engage in sexual relailons with
friends and other couples, says Dr. Alollnde< · C\lmfort,
Brl1ish biologist and medical researcher.
In an article entitled "Semallty In a Zero Growth So-
ciety" In the December ...... ol C<nta-Report. Qimfort
says today'• b'eod toward swinging "marb the end, or
the beginning of the end, of proprietary sexual attlludeo."
Mate s1wlng, lll)'ll Olmlort, Is a ''reallitlc view of the
needs <i coupka and indMduals for variety" and a "z-ec..
ognltion that the Dating cl ooeds rather than their fru>.
tration is a gift wbicb exp: eoow love • • • and strengtbem
tile primary bond.''
Cmter Report ts tile monthly publlcatlon of the Center
klr the Sludy of Democ! atic Inotllutlons, a nonprofit edu-
caUonal research institute here.
LOSANGELES(APl-The lloiilllllt"'~~~llllt"'lllll!!llllt"'llllt"'lllll"'~llllt"'llllt"'':!"!llllt"'llllt"'llllt"'~~I long delayed Pentagon Papers :.::.
trial will begin next Tuesday,
says the trial judge, but the
government will have to
eliminate some 100 pages of
proposed evidence it planned
to present.
U.S. Dist. Court Judge Matt
Byrne rorbad the governme~t
Thursday to use some pages of
the massive Pentagon Papers
study tlfat the prosecution
didn't tell the defense it was
going to cite at the trial.
Byrne denied a defense re-
quest for lime to prepare for
new material the government
has added to ils case since the
trial was halted by an appeal
of a wiretap Issue last August.
e Br adf.,y Bu1t
LOS ANGELES cAe) _,,,.
27·year-old daughter of Los
Angeles City Coi.lntllm1n and
mayoral cendldate Thomas
Bradley has been arrested and
bQpked for Investigation of
pd!>sessing dangerous drugs,
nuthor!Ues Mid.
' r
A Penonallzed GI~
Jlidtaro .Scniun .U~.
'nntt Custom TaUoring
It +ft1t l'll lt •f Vo11'1 Ott• of
tho1• , .. .,. th1t h11 •"•rv·
thl"'' Why "•t ,1 .... hi'" •
9lft c•ttlflc1 .. fir • c111to'" '"•cl• eult 01 tpott coil 1ftd
1l111 fro'" our 111p1rb 11IK•
tlo" of £n9ll1ft 1rwi ScoHhh
f1br;c1 for Clrlrlttfn11.
We1tcltff ~ 11 J2 1"9• A"' __ .. Colli....,
PHONl1 H l•1071
SA1'rTA WILL BE AT OUR CIIRISTMAS
TREE Lo1· .. 111".-ho r.-,,J W.-,.,,,t"r
SA1"URDJ!f..Y .D,1,t"mln.r.9 11tuiD«1t11Jln.r .16
/,..,,. 12-4 .-00 .,.,J di O•r N11r11tr-y .-t
Nftl1HW1 &-V irklri.3 S11n;Uy D~,.,/Jn-JO
-" Dt1tllf#btT 17 fro"' I l;QO to 4.QQ c • .,,, ;,, ,,,,J r1is it '"it bS••t.3 .••.•
,;., hi• 1011,-Ch,-ist •.-1 L1'1 1 ,,,,J
pl •.frtt C.ady c.,, ...
TRIM A TREE
SHOP
.for MI r•,. tk,,,,..,;,,, ,,f! .. Js. u,,;~
"-"' r. fi.J ifestJ •••• .E.'fp ... Jiff /JIN'
.{,, •itui., J,,,,0.-11 .. Jl/111 .. A111"U..,,
..Mk ,.,,w/li1ts. lwop(lf"ttt/ 11,,J Jo•1tr
1it ,,.,, I i1h1s .. ,,..,;,,It./, .. Attio• .•
b11bblt' ... .llfi•i•l11n .,,J 0111J_., ,
ARTIFICIAL T REES
A!nady Shaped •••••••••••
Decoroted •••••••••••••••
hi the box ••••..•••••••••
All•• S.l r N4)W!!~!
REPLACEMENT BULBS
C7!/;i ............ 7 e
C9 ............. lle
WATER TREE
STANDS
J\rt'p 1o•r ,,.,, frrsb ,,,,,/ ,,.,,,.
thr,,111ho11t tb1 boliJ•11 with o"t of
•• ,.w,.1er'Tn1Su,,J1 $5.95
Green Garde •••
-B-11• •ix with '"6"" , .... 79c
ICICLES
fo,. ""old ftnh;o11NI Chrislw"' 1 reg. 29c Now . . . . . . . . . . . . I De or 6forS1.00
reg. 59c Now ............ 39e or 3 for SJ.00
SNO-JET KITS
Now yOM Ull j1t1elt yo•r trtt ol ~,,.(,
E.-s'l•"Jlotso//11•, •)DR reg. $3.98 now ...................... .
refills reg.$ I.69 now .............................. 89c
CHRISTMAS _COLOR
LoaJJ (J[hJoo,,,;,,,_ (u/D,. j 111t i11 t i111r fi1r thr /i,,/ i1/,,y1 /J"Jle srlr<I ;,J,.
of hr1111I1/11/ Al N"'', C hri •' "'"' C "''" J, P(Ji n srl Ii"·" IJrB"";" 1,
A:.tilr•I """ ,,,,.,,, mo rt. 1\111.tt yo11 ,. J1'1r,1Jo,, r•rly
TREETOPS
1"1h.11·11lim,,.,.,.;,,z [<1"'"1 ,,.,~ top1, yo11,. <hoi"c~ of roltw1
111u/ J/y/11. Pir• th1 nnt j11•I ri1h1fo,. yo11r '"' 59 •
Holiday priced rrom................................. C
GREEN HAVEN GARDENS
2 123 Ntwport Blvd., Costa Mtsa
3731 West Wa.rntr, Santa Ana
646-)9l'i
S40-67<1'>
/11•'-'r 'flJ•r 1tlHlio,, /roflf (, ,.,.,.,. //;11 • "l \ ''""' I ,,,/, I ,,,.,,1 0{·1 rttt.
'l"wo f~"'"'"J IO /Hll<'I' •rnr I'""
1\1,, /tr 1011 r srl<'rl ia,. ,,.,.,,. 1r h 1/t I 1 r. \ii• '' I 1p . /Jo•~'"'' I •.r.
/l/""'"' '"• ,'\;ohlr. P l•'""''"• (, '" •trl I 1 r. \lo, <1rrJ 1'/.," '• f 10•
V d11tl•J •. \fol 1b l'111r, '''·. . ,1.,b/r top> I•• / I' (,/A' I \
\ o• "'" 1 "'"' hr'"ll '" "'"'' /rrr, (u·p u i ""'" n/ o•r• ID lo, • ••ltJ., /lorltrJ;••I 11N U ... I' , .... ,no,,.,,,,.,,,, /f>/l)r '.Ar l'O• ..... , ,,,,, OH1 lb.ii
IM111lrt*'1r 1.,,,, j/,14ltrJ , .All 1•r1rJu·1"11J •1:r1 "" .l11pl•;t • .n11/1Jl1t
1ricr1 .• .Jfl«i.il 1•;111·/ ,.,,, .,,.,,.,ll ·
.\llOP 11~ HLY WI/II.I l Ill' \ I lf.L /IA I'/~ A (,{)OD .\l:l.tC I IQN
'/"O CllQOSE PRO;\I.
•
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' \
-.
.. lJAll,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Gag Rule Ill-advised
A S<><alled "procedural ordinance" adopted by the
Costa Mesa City Council coul d seriously erode the spirtt
or communication which bas existed between the tax·
payers and their representatives for 19 years.
Councilmen' say the ordinance was drafted to spell
out in detail procedures ror conducting the public's
business.
Certainly, the ordinance accomplishes some of these
regulatory aims. But intentionally or unintentionally,
it also throws a major roadblock between the city's
e lected representatives and the taxpayers they serve.
. The major objection to the ordinance concerns the
withholding of public documents from the taxpayers.
Letters a ddressed to t he council. as well as other cor·
respondence formerly available, have been made seCre t
by the ordinance.
Provisions of the ordinance clearly give the city
n1anager the right to screen all mail and the council
the right to v.r:ithhold correspondence to them until it
is officially ordered "received and filed" at a council
meeting.
This n1 cans that the press, and consequently the
public. would never kno\v about serious complaints
fron1 various sectors or the community, should the
council decide to exer'tise its authority i:iot to "file" a
Jetter.
The ordinance also makes it illegal for a member
or the city council to e~-pose an unlawful act of his col·
leagues -unless his colleagues allow him to do it. A
section of the statute clearly prohibits a councilman·
from discussing the subject of an executive session
unless authorized by a majority vote.
· Since executive sessions are unlawful -with the
exception of those dealing \vith specific personnel mat·
ters and specific pending litigation -the public's right
to know supposedly has been safeguarded. But under
the new ordinance, a councilman who wished to discloge
information about an executive session that was not
confined to those two areas. and consequently illegal,
would risk a $500 fine, six months in jail, or both for
clearing his conscience.
The!e flaws, coupled with a section which prohibits
lhe participation of the public in a study session unless
authorized by the presiding officer, clearly demand that
the statule be immediately rescinded and re-drafted.
There is neither a precedent nor a reason for
Gosta Mesa city councilm en to "'impose secrecy restric·
lions on the public's right to know about government
business.
Plain Talk on Planning
Costa Mesa Planning Commission Chairman H. J .
"Jimmy" Wood made a classic comment recently, re--
fleeting realities of the way Orange County was built
in its ambitious pioneer days.
The way it came out -taken literally -it suffers
in translation.
"I think the staff has gone out on a limb on this
eeology bit and 'listening to the people kick'/' said
o-Wood. "They're not listening to the people tha t have
money and want to do things."
Wood is a veteran commissioner with roots in the
same soil of manual toil as onetime Huntington Beach
Mayor Ernie Gisler, another colorful commentatO!" on
local affairs and how they are handled.
''Hell, no!," Mayor Gisler once thundered at a spe-
cific issue, then congratulated the newsman who quoted
him for making .it clear to the readers what he meant.
Chairman Wood's remark might irk environmental·
ists as heretical and anger Costa Mesans who interpret
it to mean their voices don't count, but both strict views
would be wrong.
He simply said when it gets down to community
development, the willingness to invest money talks and
he said it in the plain language ·of a working man who
has helped plan and build one, both as a contractor and
a community servant. c
The Hurribl e A Case of 'Heads Yot1 Win, Tails I Lose'
Origin of
'Humble Pie'
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
\\le haven 't had a \\'Ord-quiz on
•·ori gins" for quite a ~·hile. so here is a
set of interesting word derivations. A
score of 50 percent is respectable .
I. What has "contemplation" gol to do
\1•Jih birds?
2. How did the l\1·0
and three in cards
come to be known as
the "deuce" and
the "trey"?
3. People act-ua\ly
used t.o eat "humble.
pie'' -what animal
v.·ere they devour·
ing?
4. What did the firsl room called a
"lobby'' refer to?
5. What flower 's name. literally
translated, means "pain in 'the nose"?
6. Why is a certain species of ape call-
ed by the odd name of orang.utan or
some variation?
7. Why is it a contradiction in terms to
hove a "victory µarade"?
8. What was a "stadium" in ancient
Greece?
9. What fruit did the word "zest" come
from?
10. Why are the standing rules of a
grou p called the "by-laws"?
ANSWERS'
L 1be Roman augue, or soothsayer.
would mark off a section of the sky with
his wand, and then study the movement
of birds within this section, which was
called a "temµl um."
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Painful Progress of Peace Talks
J 've never seen a guy in e bottom·
less bar who looked like he just
hated being there.
R.H.N.
n•clS$1rllY t!IG$1 at ~ ~ ... ,.,. "'"'
.,...,~ "' ..-hi Gio..rny ~S. D1/1Y Piie!.
WASHINGTON -For the U.S., the huvc 10 be trained to lly and maintain
final Vietnam negotiations are torturous· ~ ~ them.
Jy and painfuUy turning out to be a case ROBERT S. ALLEN -t25 F .S supersonic righters at $2.5
of "heads you win, tails l lose.·· million per plane. The South Vietnamese
airforce had 18 F·Ss and some 30 trained Neither side is evincing much in :hr crews. Obviously, scores of additiona1 F-5
way of support and Van Thieu has been equally and high-pilots and mechanics will have to be train·
-gratitude. ed -at U.S. eapense. Pid~_llcly and priv· handedly importunate.
ateiy1he U.S. is be-His basic aim is to enlreoch himself' WlllLE THE U.S. will foot that bill ,
ing berated and as· personally and poUtically regardless er lhe U.S. Air Force will not do the
perse(,t by both the the nature of the peace terms. He is bent training.
2. From the French expressions, "deu x Communists a n d on retaining absolute control even if that The peace agreement will require the
ace," meai:iing two aces, and "tres ace," South Vietnamese. wilhdrawal of all U.S. forces. It is the I • · 1 means some fonn ol dictatorship. or t)lree aces. ts entire Y pos-Administration's intent to meticulously
3. The poorer peasantry ln medieval sible the way may THIEU DEMANDED and kOl immense abide by this ·~iP,ulatioo. N a con·
times were forced to eat a meat pie end with the U.S. in quantities of military supplies. More than sequence, the. mam~ of the Cl30s,
made from the '"umbles," or lower parts, as m~ disfavor in Saigon as in Hanoi. $1 billion worth of PlW's;-t3:f1.ks~guns-li"~.and-VarlOUS-o~~aft and t~
of the stag. • . . and other cosily combat equipment were trainlng of Sout1!. ~~ _mws will
4. A room In the House oI Parliament COMMUNIST deVJousness ~d in· rushed to South Vietnam in the past siz: be turned over to civilians hired ~or thal
buildings which was-used-for meetings-trao.Rg8QC8;-was expected. Thl'Ougho!1_t__weeQrGrapbicaUy illustrat.ive-~~~·~-1'¥.1':;;"~· ;:;-~~:::;;-:;;;c;;"T,;;;":--;;::-,"" between members of Parliament and the the protracted and fateful secret negot1a-type and cost to U.S. taxpayers -are the tt will be a big and costly job -as
genera: public or special interests asking tions, they have endk!ssly connived fo r foUowing: new planes of aU tYJ>eS are involved.
for consideration. (Hence, "lobbyist.") every conceivable advantage and to _ 32 C-130 giant cargo planes at $10 That's the startling number added to the
5. Nasturtium, because of its pungent .finagle a double meaning into every key million per. ExacUy· why oo many of South Vietnamese airforce since late odor, is a compound of the Latin for Oct her ''nose" and "giving pain." provision -obviousJy for later use at a these huge carriers were turned over to o .
6. "Orang-utan," and its variations, is time and for a purpose that suits their the South Vietnamese is not clear. 'Ibey But this and hundreds of millions of .
the Malayan word meaning "man of the totalitarian ends. had none of these planes, nor any ex· dollars of other hardware and munitions
woods." At the same time, President Nguyen perience with them. Pilots and crews will are not satisfying President Thieu.
7. A military parade was originally a
He is demanding $5 billion in economic
aisLPY.M an indefinite period.
TiflS ~TOUNDING propa6al is what's
behind his clamor and pressure for a
personal meeting with President Nixon.
When this was politely but firmly turned
down, Thieu resorted to guile -in
ctiaracleffiliCally lieavyhatmectl'iiaDner.
He tried to create a rift between the
President and D(. Kissinger by accusing
the latter of doobl&<lealing -mis!eedlng
both him and the President.
This p)oy was .0 patently pbooy tt unit
by tts own weight.
What seemed to particu18"Y rmkle ~
Thieu when bis $S ,
billion econo ic demand was '•·
remlirl(, " . Pre<ldml. tlM l
something -the -\J .S. lei
decide. Jn our country, only~ h&5
the po_wer_ to. appcoprlil:te funds. The
President ma)I< propose, but Con;J
disposes."
Thieu glared, but said DOthing.
Addendum : South Vietnam bas a
one. million ~en under a~. U.S. :.:J
tell1genoe· estimates Hanoi bu'" lt$,W1:
combat troops in South \lff!tmln, P1Jf1
another 100,000 Vietcong. ·1
"preparation" for war, or evidence of
preparedness (from the Latin, "parare."
to prepare), not a celebration of its vic·
tory.
8. A "stadium" was a measured length
of some 202 yards, ll!ed to lay Out the
course for a toot race; later, the name of
the length came to be applied to the
whole field itself.
Seat Belts Need Better Promotion •
9. "7.est" was at first a shred of lemon
peel.
10. "By~laws" were "town laws,'' from
the Old English "by," meaning a town or
municipality.
To the Editor:
Your editorial , "Driving Life-saver''
on Nov. 30 stressed the fact that sea~
bells are a necessity in auto-safety.
Within the article , there was a discussion
on whether to make the use of seat belts
mandatory or not.
[ ...... _MAIL __ B_o_x_~J ~ say leave the signs up except for those
which confuse your view of the traffic
signals.
SAM WRAY, JR.
Tl'flHic Solutlo•
Letters from readers are welcome. To the Editor :
making it very special for me u a
surprise for when I returned home from
a trip to the hospital It waa beautiful and
I cherished it. I could (and did) cry,
Last year I saved and bought him an
expensive coat which someone stole a
v.·eek later.
Payola Still Pays Off
r beUeve that the importance of wear·
ing seat belts does not lie within the law.
but rather in the promotion by the C()O·
cc med.
SINCE I have come to America in
July, 1972, r have seen many ad-
vertisements on the danger of smoking.
There are warning statements on
cigarette cases. There are warning signs
in all cigarette advertisements. The
Cancer Society has done its share in pro-
moting anti-smoking in perodicals as
well as television. As a result, I un-
derstand that the number of smokers tias
decreased since the anti-smoking cam·
palgn began.
Normally writers should convey their I wholeheartedly concur in the views
messages in 300 words or less. The "' expressed in your editorial in the PILOT
right to condense.· letters to fit space Nov. 29 on Recreation vs. Traffic. Your
or elimi1wte Libel U Te.served. All -reaction to the proposed. developmefit at
letters must include signature and Newport Dunes was almost identical with
mail~ng address, bu? names mau be my feelings regarding the Irvine Com·
WHAT PUZZLES me ls bow a parent
could lei his child keep anytbing that
doesn't belong to them. Sj.trely they
couldn't help but notice a brand new coat
that they dldn't buy.
Has the world reached a point where
we are so greedy that we wekotne
anything "(ree"?. Doesn't it occur to
parents that they must teach their
children not to toke thing3 that do llol
belong to them, Jet alone encourage
them?
WASHINGTON -The practice of
paying off disc jockeys to plug reco rds,
pcipularly known as payola, is a federal
crime.
Yet we have reported in a series of col·
umns that record comp3!lies have been
slipping free records, Tl' sets and cash
under the table to disc jockeys and pro-
gram officials.
In other instances.
narcotics, prostitutes
and Las Vegas holi-
days have been pro-
vided to --t.hose who
prefer a hot time.
f'or t he compan-
ies, it's worth a
little payola to get
their records on the
hit lists, because tee1_1agers with a billion
dolla rs in the.ir pockets Dock to the
re<:ont stores to buy ~ hit tunes.
At first. our stories were downplayed or
denled. But now. lbe heat iii on.
The Federal Communications Com·
miuion has 11lready held four closed
hearings in Seattle, Los Angeles,
Pittsburgh and New York City.
Vinegary old Bill Ray, the FCC's com·
pliMce chief, has vi&orously denoWlced
payola and i1 now slowly moving the
FCC toward public hearing~-
TllE BIG PAYOFFS, R>y should find.
hav. been IJ')ln1 to the rich, white rock
'n' roll dioc Joe~•>"· '""Y get tho
• -~lar__l!iPl_!o V~But the
blacb a.;r-Span111>-languag• bl'08ll·
ca\ters ire moro llkely to get caught.
rn Bakersfield, cauf., for eumple, af..
lidavlll filed with the FCC charge that
RAymond Oana, program d!rector or th~
lit& thousand-watter KWAC, h as
denllllded and received payola,
Paulino Bernal of the tiny Bernal
. I
(JACK ANDERSON)
Records finn swears that Gana "has
always asked me for 1noney. We call it in
Spanish 'Mordida' ... Every time that I
visited Bakersfield, I would pay him
from $75 to $100 cash." When Bernal
stopped pa ying, his sales dropped.
A DANCE PROMOTER, Leone I
Sthchez, also swore be paid off ·Gana.
'When I stopped paying, my records
were no longer played on KWAC, except
on rare occasions," Sanchez swore.
When my associate Les Whitten
reached Garza, he burst out : "Never!
Never! It's completely pOlitlcal, the m~t
rid.ic'ulous thing I ever heard. There's r.o
payola." But he Conceded he is under
FC;c Investigation.
Our own sources, who would talk to us
only arter we pledged to reveal no
names, say some of the nation's biggest
black radio personalities have been tak·
Ing money for playing records. Even with
them, the sums have been in the $200
range. One record promoter told us of a
major eastern "Rhythm and Bloes" !\t.a-
tion, which offered to play his record for
a sing:le botUe of scotch.
RAY HIMSELF ha.I encountered a new
HOWEVER, I have seen only a few ad·
vertisementa promoting the importance of
wearing seat belts. U periodicals and
television come out with m o r e ad·
vertisements to promote the use of seat
belts, the number of people who wear
seat belts will rise llke the ri se of non·
smokers. Though some cars-have warn·
ing systems which remind people to wear
seat belts, too many more cars do not
have any warning devices. . •
l hope that there are Amencans who
care enough to make a change.
NOBUMlClfI RAR1\,
Student CSULB from Japan
Sigm Add l'la""r
To the Editor:
Your story "Sign Pollution in Mesa'!"
w11s M interesting exposition oC the topic,
but l find that I disagree with most of its
conclusions. Let me start with thJs one :
"(Costa Mesa planning chlel) Hamala
believes that Costa Mesa's major form of payola. 'l'be disc jockey may pro-boulevards do not communlcate with the mote hll own dance or other show and . "Invite" a rec:otd COID.P..IQY to prov:kle apll'lt, vs.Ju~, and ideel& of the people of
hlrr with lal!"I at far lesS llwl the gotrif -Coota M-.
rate. Tbe proco<da go to.the d1'c jockoy. WHERE DID Mr. llamala gel that
If the perfonner complles, the dl.sc idea? 1t looks pretty subjective. to me,
jockey pla)'! his record on the aJr. If he and r don't remember having anyone ask
rails to show up, the record Is lgnortd. me about my spirit. values and Ideals in
Ray calls thlt an "lndirect payment" connection with the clly of COsta Mesa. If
whlch appears to violate federal the plaMers have alreRdy formed an
sh1.tutes . idea of whtlt they think the place should
withheld on request if sufficient pany's proposed Inn and Restaurants
reason is apparent. Poetry will not be deveJopment on Castaways Point, name-
published. ly, more congestion on the Coast
Highway particularly at the Back Bay
loo~ like, why spend time counting the
18,715 words of information to wbicb the
Costa Mesa motorist is exposed?
I'm not knocking the study, which looks
like a good report on the visual situation,
.but I am saying the planning rea>m·
mendations don't neces.5arily follow frorh.
the statistics revealed by the report. My
own ,feellng about Costa Mesa is that its
character as it has developed is that of a
bustling, growing, pragmatic town with a
lot. of vitality.
PERSON ALL V l don 't object at all to
the flashy clutter of signs and billboards
in Costa Mesa; in a small way there's
rome of the exciting flavor of places such
all Times Square in New York. It's true
that the sense or vitality stimulated by
nashlng lights and blown up messages is
artificial, but then t have the feeling that
Costa Mesa is going to lose Some of Its
air of liveliness and some of Its character
if we try to force It into a slicker m~la. l
1---Bll George ---,
Dear George:
How can r strike
qualntanceship with
man?
up an ac-
a strange
LOUISE
Bridge.
A POSSIBLE SOLVTION would be the
doubl&<le<ldng of Coast Highway from
Corona de! Mar to the western end of
Newp:lrt . Beach. Part of , auch a plan
would be to raise the Back Bay Bridge to
the apper.Jevel only, which would have to
be widened at that point to six or
possibly eight lanes and provided with
suitable access ramps at each side of the
bridge.
l attended the meeting of the Newport
Transportation Committee on Nov. 21. I
. heard a lot of talk about varioll! pro-
pooals, but nothing that seemed ac-
ceptable for solving the most critical
problem, the congestion on Coast
Highway.
I ADMIT my sugg .. tlon of double-
decking Coast Highway is open to o~
jections, including cost However, I
believe that any such objections could be
SUMTIOlOlled and that the cost Is not p~
hlbltiva when viewed ln compariliOn with
the. Q)St of tbe present and proposed
developments which will contribute to tbe
othcrwl.se unbearable traffic problem on
Coast Highway.
MILDRED KNIGl&T
Pu:r;ded P•rertt
.Dear Louise: --T<Hho-E41tor+ ...;..
Ho'w strange a man would you My son made a ceramic ashtray at
like to become acquainted with? school and It was recently dJaplayed in
Drop by the o(flce here any day the art show at the· Huntlngto11 ~ter
from 9 to Sand l 'll lntroduce you to Mall . Jt was In the special awards 9ection
some bizarre guys . • . JOme of and It hu disap~ared -apparenlly
these men are so strange y.'.>u won't stolen.
believe them. RE SPENT a lot of time and e1ror1
·-
DOESN'T IT occur lo these parents
that even if it is a small handmade
ashtray or a big expensive coat• that it
could be ·very important to whomever it
belonged to? Are parents so lackidaisical
that they don't even notice a "new" coat
or toy? U this Is the cue, no wonder
there are so many juvenile ~ts. t
feel sorrier for the kids than I 1do the
parents.
Maybe this letter will open some
parents' eyes to "new" things around the
house. "Cute'' lltUe "takers" tum into
adult thieves.
MARY JANE HENDRIX
OltANOI COAST'
DAILY PILOT
{iobt:rt N. Wt:ed, PublU1~tr
Thoma1 Ktevil, Editor
BorborCl Kreiblch
Editoriat Poge Editor
The l"dltorlel IAIKll f)f the Oflilly
Pilot ~k11 lo Inform and iiUmu·
lale rtl'ldcrs by pre.t'nli~ thit
new,paper·s oplnlonii n,od oont-
mental')' on ff)1>lcs of lnte~t •nd
s.ij,:nlflcancc. bY PrCl\•idlnir a fnrum
(QI' the exprell'lon or our rttd~ra· ()pinionJI. and by pr1.'l<!nllng th1•
dlv~T'M! Vl..WJKll nt• or Informed ob.
~rvctl 1nd 1pok~n on top;~
f)f th~ day.
Friday, December 8, 1972
I
I