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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-11 - Orange Coast Pilot17 ' . -.... • ~ ........ '!I ••• • ••••••• t .. White House Pay Freese • • • . • • .• . Largest Industry Marines Dodge Traet~ Gets Study Poliee Bullets By Mesa Planners In Anahei1n Chase .. . • es1 ns MONDAY AFTEl!NOON; DECEMBER II, 1972 • ·.u .s osen WK.. M.. NO. -.. ! S•CTM*S. M ..,..., Naked Bra~8? Air Force Recognizes Officer SAIOO!j W') -;Nba\..-.an,.Air.,;;.;,, ~bted~d<f~J\e'J.til'o"a~ __ ... _... _...;,...,,,, ' .... ~ \ ·-• ' • • •• • .J • ~·..--·~·' •. -r, B ·~.-:'I , . . • .. ~.order !!sued ,..,..uy I>)> Maj. Paul M.. l!QsOman, ~ation& oillcer ol the 377111 Security l'lllice Squacirtn •"Tl!D Son Nbut Air Base, say1_ 111 part: .. "SALtrrE WHEN YOU RECOGNl2ii an olllcer even though you both, officer and ooncommlsslooed oUicer, are nude." . An Air Force lpoi<eama~,aaid this was "Intended to emphasize the Im· pcrtance of saluting offiCers 1'hen reCopiud, whether in or ~ of uoifonn:." u. said he did DOI know Wider what circumstances offlOlln and enllsled pOr.oonel mlgllt encounter each othet in tile J\Ude. THE Ol\DER WAS ATrACllED to s pllologaph ol Brig, Gen. Ralph Hol- land new vice commander of the 7th Air Force. The general is in lull uniform. Marines Flee, ~ne Anaheim Police .Arrest · 3 Suspects in Burglary A trio of Marine c;orps enlisted lfien allegedly cornertd during 'a Ure shop burglary led Anaheim police on a oot·so- merry cbue ftmong nearby orange groves early Sunday, "dodging lawmen's bullet& oceu!Onally. . One suspect among the three faomg burglary. dlarges today suffered a minor wound In lbe sOOulder. , A punuirur: ~llc'e officer al1'Q W"5 in-Jtired when be reu into 8 concrete-lined fiood control ditch while sprinting after tile alletied burglars. Ofllcers aboard the Anaheim police helicopter spoUIChled tile siJspects finally in the orange groves below, resulting m their eventual capture. ·1nvestigatora identl;fled the servicemen facing burglary chargeo today a• Edward L. O'Conoor, 20; Randy G. IJUOn, 20, and Donald R. Sobeski, 19, an of Palm Springs. ' ! Police said 'O'Connor was Uie SlJ8l)eC sllghUy wounded by a bullet ·fired during ' . .,_ I the !"1!3'1il • -' ' • ' <Jlileer Rucfy~ i\lonnlila was tile policeman injured when he fell Into the dflcli phila -dlulng. tbe suspects. in the darkenid orange grove. In•est!i•tors at flnl come.red their quarry in the Capital Tire Sales store, 20IO E. Howell Ave., ·but the trio Oed before ofllcen could bead tbem olf. The pursuit through the orange groves conUnued for a total ot four hours before the Marines were captured. AutOnetics Gets Missile ·System Corqputer Deal North American Rockwell '• Autonetlcs division in Anaheim has been awarded a $9.8 million coelracl for producilon ol lflG missile .,stern•comJ"'len,.'~lo Atllonetlcs Preaidenl M. D.·Mlrplil, The coolracl with the Air Foret calla DAILY PILOT AD PEOPLE PLEA.SER for ~!loo JJf the .,._ oomputera for the SCRAM (~ ranee attock D"1LY PILOT clU111led want ads ·•re mlaalle) program In ll'IS-74. people pleaaers. See thil: The mbsllea ... desiped lo be C&ITled ' ~ .. . . Nixon Sets New Price, Pay Curbs WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pre!ident Nil<on win ask Congress to extend tile current economic controls beyond April 30, 1973 wben they are due to expire, TreaJury Secretary George P. Shultz said today. At a White House news conference, Shultz also said the President decided to freeze salaries in the federal executive branch, Congress and the judiciary. And as an example of the belt-lighten· Ing philosophy, Schultz said there would be "very substantia1 reductions" in lhe President's own staff. Shultz, Nixon's chief e c on o in i c spokesman, said no decision had been reached on how lonb the next phase of wage-price-rent controls should last.· To help decide this question, Shultz said, there wouJd be a "wide process ~ consultation" with labor, Congress, con- suniers and members of the cunent economic stabilization program. °'1 rel.al"4. ~ Scbultz saidthe Pi'<siC dent llad beeil 111ctesSlul 'in l\6ldlng spen- ding In the current budget lo !250 hlllioQ and that the budget for fl.seal 1974, which will be submit.led to COOgress in January, would be in balance on a full employment basis, Shultz said (he presidential decislona on tbe controls were • 'mutuaUY interde- pendent and mpportlve.11 He said it re- flected Nlxoll's "strong detennlnatloo to maintain the fight against tnflatlon ln the strongest ~a? poaslble.'' · Tbe pay action free""' the current salaries of all member.:: of government at the 'so-called "tederal executive level." This Includes hlgb-ranklng memben of government, congressmen and federal judges. It covers salary ocales rang!ni from $36,000 to 1611,000. The hiring lreeu In tile e:.<ecutlve branch will last at ltut m1tll late January, when Nlxoo oends to. Col!greol his bud&lliJ~-19'1.4, ~"" July l, 1'13. ' . Viee Law Hit Prostitution Stntute 'Il'legal' MIAMI (UPI) -Florida's law specifically forbidding prostitution has been declared WlCOIJStiluliooal, but police think they can use other laws to file charges for the same offense. U.S, District Judge William 0 , Mehrtens ruled that the stale law against prostitution is unconstitutional because the language In a section oo lewd conduct is too vque. Mehrtens' ruling came in a suit brought by Miami Health Studios, Inc. against the city Of Mlam'.i Beach, charg· l ~ police ·v.:ere ruining a business which provided "therapeutic health services." I The Slud.JOS were raided by police }Q times in five months. Forth arrests were' made by Miami Beach vice officers who said massages applied by s t u d i o employes included sexual acts performed on undercover policemen. Mehrtens cited a section of the pros-- titution Jaw which said "lewdness shall be construed to include any indecent or obscene act." This definition was so vague it would not permit an ordinary citizen . to determine in advance what acts might lead to arrest, Mehrtens ruled. Since the section on lewdness could not be separated from the main body of the larie he~::: ~J ~t wa~:tst~1:Panion laws against procuring or renting space for prostitution. In additlo11, the Dade County state at· tomey's office said charges could be filed against suspected prostitutes under another law prohibiting "lewd and lascivious acts with one another." Attorney Paul Gerson, who represented the health studio, filed a suit in federal court charging police violated the studio's First Amendment rights by harass ment and bad faith enforcement of the law . $4 Million Project Mesa Planners to Study Industrial Park Concent Plans for a new concept in Industrial parks will be unveiled before the. Costa Mesa Planning ComnLission tonight by a Newpot1 Beach dev.'.!lopment finn work· Ing on a $( m!Woo project near orange County Airport. Members o( the commission Will con· alder gr~tlng a zone exception and a ll!lllallve tracl map for the DOn Koll Company project whan Ibey meet at 6:30 p.m. in city councll chambers, 77 Fair Drive. Aroold F., HamiJa, ..chief ol advonced plaMinl for the clly of Coola Mesa . predlcled today thot the 94-unit complex would bloolne the largest. mulU-tenant lndullrlal Inlet ever developed in the cl· ty. ' ·The tract 11,propooec1 for location -h ol the Son D!ogo Freeway, sutheast of "We believe th~ to be the first in· dustrlal condominiur-in the country and the Don Koll Company thinks it will ~ome a prototype for ethers," said Hamala. "They think it might become a new rage." Under the condominium s y sit e m , building owners would enjoy tax ad- vantages which are not available to leaseholders. Parking areas, landscaping and other tervlces such as perhaps a compyter and a sandwkh shop, would be "common'' and their cost shared by the condOinlnlum tenants. Though the project will be located im· mediately "djacent to the airport. it will not cater erclualvely to aeronautics-- oriented industries. Envisianed Is a va· rlety of "clean" industry including elec- Senator Denies Pressure WASHINGTON (AP) -Republican National Chairman Robert J . Dole said today he is resigning and that United Na· lions Ambassador George Bush of Texas bas been picked to replace him. Dole, U.S. senator from Kansas , an· nounced his impending resignation as party chairman at a White House news conference following a 45-minute session with President Ni xon, but denied any White House pressure behind his decision to quit. Bush's actual election as chairman or the Republican National Committee will be up to the committee itself when it meets here Jan. 19, but Nixon's wishes are expected to be followed. White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Bush will continue as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations through the current session of lhe U.N. General Assembl)', and a replacement wouJd be announced later. Dole said he agreed to "stay on ln an advisory capacity for a month or two" to help Bush break into the job. "I find broad support for George Bush," Dole said . "We believe oor Teran wUI beat their Texan," Dole said in reference to Dallas lawyer Robert Stra uss, elected chairman (See DOLE, Pago ZI Orange Coast Weatlaer The weatherlady says you can uobullon the top button on your overcoat on Tue9day. It'll be a little bit wanner. lllgho of 5M5 ~ ezpecled. Overnight 10 .... bow- ever, will run from (hrT) 28 to the mid )Is. INSmE TOBAY Tht word's ovt agofn that tMrt'• Qoingi to bt a de1tNctfve tart.hquakt m San Frand.sco. Th'i.t time, it's 111chedultd" for Jan. 4. Stt atoru, Page S. ' GUITAR-Elec. w/caae. Xln't by Ba and FB-Ul jet alrt:ralt "°" uaed 1-----•'°"coo<Mllc . .P.Pald ~Sell $1~ot'----l>bj .. • <llhe!O....IA!r--lllld tiho-l»-..o..--- bst olr. Amp avaO nx-xxn . beJng deVel~ped f/,r ' Air Force '* by 1'-~f---11'ed...Hll~~A._,.-1Dd oortbw:t of McCorinlck Avenue on iiO acrts of land recently 1nne1.fld to Costa Meil. tronict, aue.mbl.x and manWactur.ing.~1-~...,,_..-->i.-.-...-. -" Asaistifil P1annln~ Dlttctor-RICtiii'd =· ~ :it:.. ,;.,.,. 1: • The gulLar was sold 11 soon_ as the ad North American, Margolis aatd. 8Pr,•red whleh p~ased both the ad-The mast~r computer Ii Installed In the verllser and the guitar's new owner. If SCRAM carrying craft to monitor •t•tua . you have ~melhing to sell, dial direct of the system and to Jll'Oll'l.m the tnJ• MWm. 1111 he a plwure. ~es for guidance to 1"tolectod target.., he added. ,. Planner• aay °" project reprtsents a radical departure (rom normal tndu!ltrlal complexes because It.a c o mp o n en t buildings will be owned, not leaaed, by the 'tenants. , l Dahlll said tbc floor space of the ~=.:.... l: :.:: ,....., ,.,,: buUdino-s wilt omount to approxlm•tely ..... ~ • ti.cit Mllflm ..,11 • ....... ..... ' ,.......... tt ~.000 .nua,re feel. That representa l111Wi1t11u::s::1 1t w,,_.,,_ "• -...... 1•11 about half as much floor apace as South .... .,. ._..,.. • w......,•, ,.... 1,.11 Coast Pllll. ,... 11$ I 14 WifN ...... • ' ,, ' % D.till V PIL01 5 MondQ, --ll, 19n Hughes R u 111o r Air Cal Chief Says 'N.o .Merger' Air California President Robert Clif- ford today dtsmL!sed a.s a "wild, wUd n1mor" reports that llownrd Hughes was golng to merge Air Cal vdth Hughes Alrwesl. Clifford said the Weslgate-Califomia Corporation still intends to proceed with plans to sell to Pacific Southwest A1rllnes (PSA). He said It would be a federal case to Hitchhiking Girl Thwarts Rapist Try A IS-year-old Dana Point girl. hitch- hiking to Laguna Beach Ulwarted an attempted rape Friday by a man v.'ho held a hunting knife to her throat in an effort to foi'ce her into the back of his van .. "Okay, kill me," the girl told the would-be rapist. as the youthful suspect bel<! the long-bladed knife to her. "I will, I mean It," the m1:1n said, but be was foiled when the young woman popped open the door of the van and ran. The incident OC"Curred in the 800 block of Bluebird Canyoo Drive of Laguna Beach. The girl had been hitchhiking to Lapa Beach where she works in a shop. She told officers that after she ran from tbe veb.icle, the suspect became apologetic and said that he would take her to work. He threw away the hunting knife. ne. girl ran over, picked up the knire and got back into the van. The man then drove her to the shop as he had prom- ised, she told police. The vehicle 1s described as a red van and the suspect as a man 20 to 22 years of age with shoulder-length blonde hair. Eatery Employe Stabbed· b y Trio A screaming kitchen worker at an Anaheim restaurant thwarted a robbery attem\'ll by \hree bandita early today, but nearly paid the. price of hls life for it. Alfredo S. Covarrublas was pistol-whi~ ped and · seriously stabbed in the chest during the incident at the Jolly Ox, 950 S. Ox Road, police said. The would-be bandits -two carrying pistols and one armed with a knife - then escaped on foot. Investigators who said they did not im· mediately determine Covan'l,lbias' ad- dress told newsmen he was taken to a hospital for treatment of the stab wound in his chest. The victim was seriously injured, but police said be i.s expected to survive. Rights of Gay Group Uplield ATLANTA (UPI) -A U.S. district judge bas agreed with the contention of a ·homosexual group that refusal of the University of Georgia to let It use school facillUes inlrflges on its First Amend· ment rights. U.S. District Judge Sidney O. Smith said his ruling didn't limit the university in controlling ils facilities, but upheld a previom order he issued to let the group hold a conference and dance Nov. 11 on the campus. Smith said only if the group or homosexual students failed to comply with school regulations or if a danger or violence existed could it be kept from us- ing the facilities. OIWIHCOAIT ST DAILY PILOT 1M °'*'llf C .... DAILY f'ILDT, wlltl 'fltlldl Is '*'*"'tll "'-Ntw11-,..._,, -Mlltfld ~ "" °'.,.,.. co.M l'WIWilrlO ~. s.. ,.,. 11111100111 .,.. ~ ....... Mer.Ny ""°""' .,,,...,, fW CO.I• Mn•, H....,.,, IMd'I, Hwltlflf*t IHclllFN'lllll'I \'llley, Uvi- hldl,, lrvtMf"41111'119di .,... Ian ()lmeftlt.I IMI Jiiin C.pl1tf"-. A •IMI• rtotlOMI """" .. -lltl'lld lottWd•,... '"" cntn. Theo prlr!G1Ptl Mll"'ln9 Jlletit 11 11 DI W"' .. ., ltrMI. CO.la M.w, Qotlfwn4t, ttfiH. try to merge with Airwest. "Any thought of Hughes or Continental laking over -there's no truth to it," Clifford said. '·\Ve operate under the PUC (Callfornia Public Utilities Commission). They art controlled by the CAB (federal Civil Aeronautics Board ). "It \tould take federal legislation to permit it," be said. Speculation about a possible Air Cal- Airwest merger arose over the weekend when elusive billionaire Howard Hughes was --eportedly making plans to come to Orange County - or was already here. Air Califomia and PSA have run into unexpected roadblocks in their attempts to merge. The U.S. Justice Department last week filed suit to prevent the deal, charglng'-it would create a monopoly in north-soul., air traffic in Caliromia. Clifford. admitting that the ouUook for the merger may have been dimmed somewhat, said the airlines are ready for the fight. "If we have to go to court. \.':e'll go to court," he said. "But there is no \Vay that a merge r between Air California and H~hes could ever happen." he said. "It's a wild. wild rumor, like the one that Hunt Wesson Foods, which owns some bus companies back East, was going to acquire us. "That would take approval of the Interstate Commerce Commission," he said. The PUC is expected to act next month on lhe Air Cal·Airwest requ.est that has been opposed by the commission's own legal staff. on grounds similar to those in the Justice Department complaint. From Page l DOLE .•• o~ the Democratic Party Saturday. Dole met \\'itb President Nixon at Camp David, Md. Nov. 'l1 amid reports he was being eased out as part of Nixon's post-election r evamping of the Administration and the Republican Par· ty , but Dole denied he was being forced out. ''There was some specu]ation that I went to the mountaintop to be pushed off," Dole said. "But that wasn't the case. I never planned on staying long into 1973." Five Cyr)e Oub· Members Handed T e1'ms for Orgy LONG BEACH (A P) -Five members of a motorcycle gang have been sen- tenced to prison on kidnap, rape and sex perversion charges in connection with a three-day orgy last March at a local CY· cle shop. Superior Court Judge John A . ArgueUes sentencro Hessian Club Presi - dPJJt James E. "Crazy Jim" AUan, 30, lo consecutive terms of one to ts years (or kidnap, three years to life for rape and three years to Jife for forcible sex perversim. Allan was also given a con- current sentence of six months to life on two counts of assault likely to produce great bodily injury. Other club members and thei r sen- tences were : Linda Mae Bagala, 23, three years to life for one count of forci· ble sex perversion; Kermeth Ray Bates. 27, two consecutive terms of three years to life for two counts of forced sex perversion ; Earl Kenneth • •Mace ' ' Leibelt, 26, two consecutive tenns of three years tv life for forcible rape and sex perversion, and Richard "Rabbit'' IRiz:zone, 23, six mJnths to life for sex perversion. All are from Long Beach. A sixth club member, Bella Edwina Morris, 29, of Costa Mesa, was com - mitted to the ' California JnstituUon for Women at Frontera for 90--days ol psychiatric testing prior to sentencing. The gang members were found guilty last month of kidnaping two Las Vegas real estate women and forcing them to take part in sexual acts at Allan's cycle shop. Tofff!h11 Subject • APOLLO 17 L•ave L.-r Orl>ll 1 2 ·'6 ·7~ liftoff / • • \ R1••vo..• Docking \ ' ' • t: A ftTH PA"t(tNe Oft91T ,. ApoUo Route i.<00 .. &1x1?0NM L UN..,R Olt811 • • • • • 1!\ • &9 NM C>f6CE:NT Oft8t1 The complete route of the Apollo 17 flight is shown this morning, with the first moonwalk planned for in the map. The lunar lancd.::in_,g:_w_asc._.:s_chc.edc....:ul_e:_cd:_fo_r __ 4_:_33_,p_.m_. _tod_a-"~-· _It_w_a_s_t_o_I_as_t_a_oo_·_u_l _s_ev_e_n_h_o_u_r_s._ James Brown, 2 Otl1er s Arrested During Scrape KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AUPI) -Enter- tain~~ James Brown and two assbciates were arrested ear1Y today alter a con- frontation with Knoxville po l i c e , authorities said. Brown, charged with disorderly con- duct, was released after posting $250 bond . Charged with disorderly conduct and assaulting police officers were Freddie Holmes. Brown's manager, and Oliver Dyer, a Brown aide. They were released on $2,750 bond. Police Chief Joe Fowler said the three lingered around the Knoxville auditorium after a Brown concert Sunday night. He sakt coliseum. security guards at- tempted to get Brown and his associates to leave the pl'f!mises. Fowler said security officers even- tually got the three outside the eOiiseum. He said 1. fight broke out in the parking lot after police arrived. He did not know what provoked the fight. Two police officers were treated and released al a hospital. One had a leg in- jury and the other received bruises on his head, chest, face and back, according to police. Oklahoman Convicted SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Rubie Charles Jenkins of Tulsa, Okla. was con- victed in Superior Court of first-degree mcrder in the death of Roland Hannon Runions. The prosecution contended that Jenkins, 52, shot Runions in the desert north of Needles after Runions threaten- ed to tum Jenkins in to police for a series of robberies. Moy nihan Gets Post in India WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Nixon today announced tbe nomination of Daniel P a t r i c k Moynihan, Harvard professor and former presidential adviser, to be U.S. ambassador to India. Moynihan, 45, will be replacing Ambassador Kennetb 8 . Keating, a former Republican .senator from New York, who resigned to cam- paign for President Ni.Jl:on's rMlec- tion . Peace Talks On; Chou Reportedly 'Optimistic PARIS (UPI) -White House advise.r Henry A. Kissinger held ooe more secret meeting with Hanoi negotiators today and a French radio station quoted Chinese Premier Chou En-Lal as saying a cease-fire agreement might come in two or three days. The report coincided with Washington dispatches implying t h e r e ha::! been more progress in the talks than indicated in ~ssirnistic reports thought to have origiriated from the Viet Cong repre.seo· taUves. Walk Off Limits To Bar Barkers SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The barkers who tout the talents of topless- bottomless dam:ers on San Francisco's garish strip or erotica can continue to do so as long as they don't step on the sidewalk. Attorneys for the clubs in the North Beach section and the City of San Fran-- cisco disclosed an agreement in Superior Court on the functions of the barkers. The barkers won't be arrested as long as they stay off the sidewalks and on club premises such as doorways and en- trances. Kissinger and several aJdes sat down with North Vie tnamese negoUators Le Due Tho and Xuan Thuy in a heavily guarded viUa of suburban Neuilly-sur-- seine for their seventh meeting in eight days -the first Ume thelr aesslons have lasted so long. The conference got Wider way at 3 p.m. (6 a.m. PST) as the French radio station Europe No. 1 quoted Chou as tell· ing newsmen in Peking it was possible lhat the Americans and the North Viet- namese. Y,.ould reach agreement "within lwo or three days.'' Amb&Mador William J. Porter, the chief U.S. negotiator at the n!:gular semi- public Paris peace talks, aat ln on tbe Kissinger-Tho conlerence for the first time. And , perhaps significantly, North Viet- namese deputy Prime Minister Le Thanh Nghi arrived in Paris Sunday from Hanoi with Nguyen Van Kha . the man who played a large part in framing the Geneva accords. Nghi would have sufficient rank to sign any agreement which would have to be signed on the American side by Secretary of State William P. Rogers. Rogers flew home last Friday from a NA TO meeting in Brussels disappointed that he was unable to sign the ceasefire agreement this weekend. Lodge Bid On Race Refused WASHINGTON (AP) -A Moose Lodge today unanln1ously lost a U.S. Supreme Court appeal designed lo keep out Negro guest!. W~out further comment, the court said •the appeal by the Pennsylvania lodge railed to pose "a substantial federal question." n>e Harrisburg lodge was ord<red last July bf the Pennsylvania Supreme COUrt to serve black guests. The dispute centered around K. Leroy lrvis, a black , who is majority leader of the state House of Representatives. Jn its appeal, the lodge said by the same reasoniog the dining room ot every: private home in Jhe country would be open to the public if guests who were not members of the family were served once. Last June in a 6-3 decision, the high court ruled i.ooge 107 was not requirec;1 to serve lrvis or any othe1 Negro JUSt because the club operated \\'ilh a liquor license fro1n the state. The Pennsylvania court's ruling the follo\'-·ing month sten1med trom the same incident . In 1968, Irvis and a group of other legislators y,·ent to the lodge for dinner . It is a half block from the state Capitol. lrvis \\'RS refused service. The liquor license argument was based on tbe theory thal blacks cannot be bar· red from places whose operatio~s depend on state officials. That was rejected by the Supreme Court. The Pennsylvania court r u I e d , however that by opening its dining room to white 'nonoiembers, the cluL became a place or "public accommodation" under the state human relations law and would have to serve black guest! as well. In aiwl'ther ·case, the father of·a slaJn Kent State Univenlty student was turned down today by the Supreme Court as he tried to sue the state of Ohio for damages, Arthur Krause, 11.·hose daughter Alllson was killed in the campu.s disturbance May 4, 1970, was barred by Ille Ohio State Supreme Curt last July from sulng the state wilhout the consent of the Ohio Leglslature. Krause, of Pittsburgh, argued in an ap- peal that thi! vk>lated hi.s rightl!I undtr the federal Constitution. The high eourt dismissed the appeal "for want of a substantial federal question ... MARK VAN DORE!\', POET, DIES AT 78 TORRINGTON. Conn. {AP J -f.1ark Van Doren, Pulitzer Prize-y,•inning poet, died SUnday night at the age of 78. The author or "Collected Poems," which won the literary prize in 1919, was admitted to Charlotte H u n g e r r o rd Hospital Thursday for an undisclosed ail- ment. A prolific vrriter, bis v.'Orks included "Don Quixote's Profession," several volwnes or poems, an autobiography and a play, "The Last Days of Lincoln." Van Doren lived in the Falls Village section of canaan, Conn. Presidential press s e c r e t a r y Ronald L. Ziegler said Nixon was ''gratified'' that Moynihan is re- joining the Administration. T•ppan Elec.lrie Srnooth Top Reng• witf, co11ti11uou1 cl11n lng •..-all Model 11.1112 •.••.•.• SJtt.t j Tappa!! G11 lten9«' with co11tln•en e islMnln; ••tn, Model Z32 1001 ••••··· ···•••·· ..••..• Sl,t tl Tappin El1tlric ltt 1 with confin• •01.11 cle1nfrtg •••n,"l:ocftl J 1-2i 12 . llobert N, We.I l"f'*lcllrll Jlnd JlvDll ...... J1ck R. C11rl1y Viet P1'9110tnl Miii 0-•I ~ Thom•• ke1Til ltl• Supervisors ·to Consider ous c1ean1ng· Range ..r~zA 1llom11 A. M1rpltlne MAMllllf Ulter Q ari1• H. Loo. Rlch1r4 P. Htll ,...Int Mlfllt .... 1411"'9 -a. M.11 Pl Wftl .., • .,... ~ lhtdl1 m:I "..,.,. ~ ......,. llKfl: m ,._, ,,..,._ ~'"9f!M ---: ,,.,. ·--...,..,,.,. IH ~I JH Nenll II (.lfNM RMI Tlf1,t C114J '4Ml21 = WW ...... ,, .. &4a..Sl71 ,,.. ci... ._ ...... L..-.... 492.WJI ,,,__Or-.. c....., C-....iti. ..... 1JJI ~ "'2. er... Ce.hi Jlllblltfl""t --~;-ia....,.........1MfW.--flf'llltr11~ WIW"' _,,_ .. H\'Wt!Mmffth ....... _, • '"' ; t °" wtfMilil lf«W ...,.. ........... ~ . ...,. __, de• ,... ... NM et Celte ,..., Qlitlnll•. ""*1totloll • w llN'rlW ~ ... .-.nfl'IJltJ .., ll'llfl P,l.f """"""' ftlllnwr ... IN! ... GM """"'"'' I • Raising Their Own Pay Orange County SUpervlson face up to the touchy subject or ral.sing their own salarlet Tuesday. Bolstmd by r«0mmenclotlon1 from the Grand Jury and the Oranae County Chamber of Commerce, the board members wm, In an open hearing, discuss lncnulng thelr currtnt $17,600-a· year-pay. Tfle open dilculsion contrails with a cloSed door meetine two year• qo dur- ln:J whlc~ supervtsors Informally deckttd to rabe the.tr pay to the level of municipal CX>Urt Judge." -$29,<m a year . The move, new1 or whlcb leaked out, led to a pub Ii c uproar and l'!Cat1 movements agaJmt three supervlsora. The furor lattt waned. The Grand Jury and the chamber of commerce hove llnct! l'fCOm.mended lhal the supervltora raiJe their pay lo the munJclpal court level. Informal discussions have lndJcattd that 125,000 to 111,500 a year might be Ille figure they Will agtte upon. This dtaplte lhe fact Oult many county of· flclals are paid $32,000 or more, eon'le as hlgh •• jj2,000. fAl3 Anjjles supervllon are paid 136.000 a year and San Diego County leader• recently Increased their pay lo f22,000. , f New!T ........ c..,,.,,., I I 10... .. ..,. .......... ,.. ..... _ irMctrk. ... • ...... ._. ......._ ,...,.__,......., r.,.. "'" ,.. ..... ..., ~ IMw • Cs: llstse• C.._.. 0... .-. .:;'9 .... ::: ...... _,...,.. w .. ,..,, ............................ '"·-.. , ... ....... ...... Of ............. ,...,.. ..... ,...., ................ c.. _c.._.,_ ~ NllMllll:OP u CAl.IPOllNIAIS U.llOlif C'OOl"lltATIYI IUYINO 01101,11" .,., .. ™• YOl.UNll IUYtltl l'OWlrt 011 Ill 11'011$ 1015 NEWPCRT BlYJ. CllWl!t=·m Costa lf.esa -Phone 548-7788 ::i.!19Jllll ............. .......w .. lifllDl{M( ............. '* ........... ~""''"""" .......................... .1 ' • t VO cy Su p art ma of tw qu fe Br" re • Publislafng lnjt1nctl0tt Ex-C IA Officer Loses Court Bid WASHINGTON (AP) -By just one vote, a former Central IntelUgence A.gen· cy official lost a chance today b. tbe U.S. Supreme Court to fight an Injunction preventing him from ~bliahlng boob or artlc~ contalnlng claullled C I A material. Tbe ei:.cJA man, Victor E. Marchetu of Vltnna, Va., uilled that the Injunction could lead to a "lwlematlc ocbeme of censorablp. Needing the votes of at 1'811 foor iusticts to be heard, be managed to galn onl,y tbne -WUllarn O. Doutlas, William J. Brennan Jr. ina Potter Stewart. Against blm were Chief J"'tk:e Warren Saibl"leback Ca ndidate W ithdraws One o f n candidates !eeklng air polntmeot to vacancies on the Sad- dlebact Community College board of lru!teel bas asked bis name be withdrawn from consideration. Chester G. Briner, 21311 Turquesa, ~1ls.sion Viejo, ln a letter to college trustee., said be applied for one of the two posJUons because of his concern that qualified applicants might not have of· fered their services. Upon review of the llst of applicants, Briner said he was saUsfied they represent a wealth ol. talent. Trustees w11I continue to bold executive (ciooed) aeaslons tonight, Tueaday and Wed.-lay to Interview the applicants. The board's selections to the two posts will be announced following Wednesday's round of Interviewing. Expansion of the board of trustees to seven members was authorized by voters during tbe November general elections. Newly outed Trustee Area Five in- cludes Laguna Hills, -tbe -Trustee Ana Sevm tabs In Mission Vl<- jo, San Juan Captllrano and porliooa of El T0<0 and Lquna Nlcuel. s...n peroona have •Jllllled for area Five, and 11 tor uu Sewn. I They Take It OH for Charity BALTIMORE Md. (AP) -Some 35 womm did their port for charity - primarily by tUlng off their clotbea. Exotic dancera from Tbe Block - Baltimore's burlesq~ area -donated their time Sunday for shi: continuous shows to raise Christmas toy mooey for handicapped cblldron. Bur!es-A·Thoo Il enlisted the talents of dancers repreaenting most of the night clubl · 1n the area u well u alumnae from as far away u Alaska. Pbll Harris, president of the sponooring Variety aub of Baltimore, lald rocelptS should total 14~. E. Burger, and justices Thurgood Marab.U, B)'IVn R. White, Harry A. Blackmun, William II. Rehnquist and Lewis F. Powell Jr. The Injunction, upheld In September by the ftb U.S. Circuit Court In Richmond. Va., keeps MarebetU from wrftlng aboui any claufied CIA material without tbe agency's consent. The former executive assistant to the deputy director of the CIA ariue<t that the restraint Imposed by two federal courts Is contrary to freedom of speech aod to a 1971 ruling that newspapers could publlsb portions of the Pentagon Papers. His appeal wu hacked by tbe American Civil l:.ibertles Union. 'Before going to work !or tbe CIA In 19!58, MrchetU signed an agreement neve.r to divulge clauified lnfonnatlon without the CIA director's approval. After quitting In 1969, he submitted an article to Esquire magazine that the government contended would disclose classified ln(onnatton about intelligence sources. methods and operations. Marchetti also has attempted to publish a novel about the agency and has appeared on several radio arid television shows. , The apiieaJ said tbe injunction would Jead to ... syat.em.atic scheme or ce"-'Ol'Ship which will surely mult in the denial of the fundamental right of the American people to be supplied with in- formation about the conduct of their government." The government, defending tbe ruling, said it ia in accord with the Supereme Court's "consistent ~itlon of the need for secrecy in the sensitivity areas of foreign affairs and national security." Friend-of-court briefs s u ? po r t I n g Marcbi!tti were filed by the Authors League of America and the AssociaUoo of American Publishers. Neither the slx·justict majority nor the tbne dlsaenters who voted to hear tbe dispute guve their reasons. Lifeguard Group Says Long Hair Poses Hindranc e SAN Dl,EGO (APl .-A na~ _ ... -...-_led bJ I DllD fr""1 San Clemente, Sly& tbal long hair and IJIHavlng don't mlL Pbll Stubbs ol Sal. Clemente, -!dent of the Natiooal SUr! Life Saving Aaocl .. lion, "'!>lalned that swlmmera clinging to a pier or other object pose the greatest m.,,..,. for long·hal . : llieguards. Shaggy loob ondanger both the llleauard and the struggling swim· mer, agreed the IS80Ciatlon, which Fri· day voted to set standarda !or length of memben' hair. The endangere<! swimmers can "turn loooe, make 1 1..,p for tbe llleguard and grab bold of whatev~ they can,'' Stubbs said. "U the balr is ao long the llleguard can't see then It's a hazard," said Capt. ROOert Burnside of the Los Angeli;s Cowlty Lifeguard aervlce. "If the balr ls ov .: bis ears, be c:.n't bear as well. And ii it b long eJ-'> for the rescue victim to grib a )\andful eaail,y, then botb of them. are in .danger." lolans0tts Applauded UPIT ....... Sprucing Vp Santa A dignified Santa in Detroit, Charles Rossi, always der a hot hair dryer to sit in the posh Saks Fifth looks his best, boots shined, belt buckle polished. Avenue store, he swears by the hair on his chinny- ~Th~o~u~g~h_h_e_m~ust-'-'s=ul=l=•=r =th=•:...::in=di~·gruc.::c·t~y=o=f=m=·t=ti=n~g=u=n=· ~-c=hin='::.:<hin th_a_t_i_t'_s _wo_r_t_h_it_.~~~~~~~~~ Nation of Wogs? Suspect 5eized In Stran gling Of Alaska Coed SingaPore Battle s We ste rn Styles SINGAPORE (UPI) -"T'll wear what I dt.mn well please," said office clerk Miss Mary Tan -and so the reaction went all along modem, hotel-lined Orchard Road today following another in a series of official bwu against Western influences in Singapore. 'I1tls time it was mini-skirts and women's hose. "I don't care what the government says," said Miss Usa Hayward, a shape- ly Eurasian sales girl conspieuously at- tired in both offending gannents. "I'll stick with my miniskirts no matter what." Goh Keng Swee, 54, the No. 2 man in Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew's govern- ment, declared Sunday there is "gbasUy evidence" Singapore is beading toward becoming a nation of "wop." An acronym for "western oriental gentleman," wog is a term of contempt in Asia, applied to persons who forsake their native cultures and adopt Western life styles. 'The brainless young who follow Western fashioos and wear long hair are part of the wog culture in Singapore," Goh said in a public address. "Wog women wear mini-skirts and nylon stockings and think tbey look smashing." Gob, head of government while Lee is on a tour of. Europe, said it was about lime the government moved to "reverse this lrend" because "a wog society has no survival value in Southeast Asia." English language newspapers i n Singapore took issue with Gob's charge. The Straits Times said in an editori!il it wasn't clear what Gob was getting at. If modesty was the problem, "is the mlnlskirt any more or less immodest ... than the thigh-piercing cbeongsam of tbe fifties?" FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) -State Troopers say a 21-year~ld Gambell, Alaska, man has been charged with the slaying or J.ody R. Stambaugh, 18, Juneau, In her dormitory room here Sun- day morning. Allen R. Wallunga was being held Jn the state jail here after troopers arrested him In the University of Alaska dormitory, said Gerald Bow k et t , manager of the university's news service. An autopsy perfonned Sunday listed the cause of death as strangulation, a State Patrol dispatcher said. Authorities said the young coed was slain in her seventh-Door Moore fflll room as her roommate looked on. &wkett said the screams from Miss Stambaugh's room attracted a Door IUperWer. . ~ Laguna Gets New Library By FREDERICK SCBOEMEBL Of tH DallY Pli.t Shift The coming of the new year will mean the coming of a brand-new library facW- ty to tbe city of Laguna Beach. Workmen are putting the finishing touches on the new $282,000 library at 363 Glenneyre St., which will be officially dedicated and opened Jan. 12. In addition to the regular stacks, tbe library will offer an adult reading l0W1ge, a children's read.!Jlg lounge, study aico\res and small d>llference rooms tor use as meeting halls . The adult and children's reading areas will open ooto outside patio areas for readinf or relaxing. I.ocally, more than $1.000 has been -SlOO from Barbara Rabinowit.sb to donated to the Friends of the Laguna be used on an as needed basis. Beach Library for interior and exterior The cedar-siding structure has been improvements tbat could not be covered under construction for more than 11 in the county's budget for the project. months. Officials predict there will be no The gifts include: delay in opening the building in early -$2,500 from the Soroptomists Club January. , for furnishings in the children's lounge. According to James Buctley, a -fl,000 from Mrs. Rober! Du Soe for outdoor benches as a memorial to her spokesman for the Orange County Public Library office, temporary quarters of the late husband, Cmdr, Robert Du Soe, library, 305 N. Coast Highway, will be US~i,ooo f~m the Nature Study Group cl= ~j ~°iow time for workers to for an outdoor reflecting pool. -fl,000 from tbe Dejong faimly. move 30,000 boob, 1,000 phooograpb -flOIJ from the Ebell Qub for .,., 1J1. records and thousands of periodlcab to terior kiosk. the new facility. -$500 from the Altrusa Club for a · Library patrons will be served by the fireplace. Orange County Public L i b r a r y ' s -$400 from individuals and organiza-Bookmobile wblle the transfer is being Uons in memory of Nita Carman, the made, Buckley said. A schedule for the Laguna Beach civic leader who helped service will be announced soon, be added. fonn the "Friends." A tree is expected A total of 450 square feet of space will to be planted In her honor. he occupied by the Laguna Beacb -SlOO from the Assisteens for Chamber of Commerce. The structure furnishings in the children's lounge. has a total of 8,000 square feet Santa Oaus Sez: This Christrn as Gi ft keeps on giving-Spring Summer, Fal,l and Wi nte r. Atala 208 Tour of lta~. Sinplex equipped - Atala 104 Gran Prix, &ampagnolo equipped - Professional Atala 101 Record, Fun Campagnolo. 673·5051 2120 West Ocean Front Fonner Preildent Lyndon Johnson and wile, Lady Bird, acknowledge applause at Communication~ Awards Dinner of the Dallas Press Club. Johnson paid trlbut,e to ex·presideilt Harry Truman1 prais- ing his "great heart and great leader8h!p.' /, • S DAILY PILOT 3 Channel 50 Report Set On Sch mitz Lame duck congremnan and unsuc- cessful American Party pmldenUal can· dldate John G. Schmitz Wednesday will f;i.ce a paMl of four county neW1rnen In a taped KOCE, educallonr: television Channel 50, program. Aides !or Rep. ScllRUJz (R·TUstin), said he will disclose his future plans dur· Ing the ball-hour program which will air at 6:30 p.m. on Dec. 18, and at e p.m. on Dec. 2t and 28. Former KN>CT newsman Jim C.ooper will host the KOCE production, "Focus Orange Cowlty." Others set to quiz Schmitz are Tom Keevil, editor of the Orange C.oast Daily Pilot; Jame.s Dean, 'execuUvc editor or the Santa Ana Register, and Howard Seelye, poliUeal writer for the Los Angeles Times, Orange County ~kin. Lat.er on Wednesday, Schmitz will ap- pear before members of Sigma Delta Chi journalism society, Orange C o u n t y Chapter. Al Hewitt, managing editor of tbe Daily News Tribune of Fullerton and president of the SDX chapter . .said any county newsmen arc welconu. to attend the 5,30 p.m. dinner at tbe Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana . . Schm1tz wu defeated for.J:e-tiec:tion as a Republican incumbent ,in1 the ,89tb Congresskmal District by 1 s 1 e 1:1 o r Andrew Hinshaw in the Ju.oe PfAmarY e~n. Hinshaw receivect 1 2.Mil~~ margin. , r As the American Parjy ~ bearer in November, Schmitz ·dn!w.,oae million votes or one pereeot of tbe na- tional vote. Schmitz and bis family ,_. live In Washington, but maintain a home in Tustin. I Once a state senator, Schmitz formerly taught philosophy, btstory and polltical science at Santa Ana Junlor College. Men's Marriage V oi.d; 'Woman' Could Be Charged AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -Tbe marriage of two men, one of whom dressed up like a woman, ls null and void and the man who poled u a woman could be jailed tor W.-;a--TGU A1'orDlf Gen- -orawlwl ·-~..,,, ___ .. -- fllaely when· be wrote hll name ln the s]IOce cm a·marriq~.llcelM ~tloo for a female. .. Billie Ert ls not a woman u called for by the otatute," Martin aald. '"l'bere- fore, tbe information given u to tbe woman's maiden, name on the •ppllcatioo ls false." Erl and Antonio Molina, 1 former high llChool football star from B ......... ville, were united in a double rlnl wed- ding Oct. 5 In Houston, but when they tried to Ille their marrlage llcen!e, autl> orities said it WU not legal. 1be.ir attorney, Richard Crosl, b a 11 taken the matter to court. "I can fmd nowhere in the atatute that one bas to be a woman," CromJ aaid. "If the attorney general would rud bla own opinion. he would rmd that 1t dldn' .... quire c:ne of lhe applicants to be 1 wo- man . "It's a shame that two people can't get married when they want to live ~ gether in a legal sense,'' Ert said. But Martin said the legislature Inell· cated it intended for marriages to be only between pe1'SOl'll of opposite sexes when it specified that "a woman'• makl- en name" be included on marriage license applicaUons. 1":;. "-'==---., 'tfl CW.• ,-o ....... . f -· T_ ... WM. ••••••• 'Ill' ..... j l • • , 4j DAil Y PILOT .._ .......... 11.1m • Supervisors :Pass the Hat . RICKY TICKY POLlTIX -Back in J970, memben of our Orange County • Boan! ol Supervisors wtstfully looked in- .... \:'to their wallets and found the contents , wanting. So they started some machinery rolling to get themselves a raise in pay. • About that tlme, a large number of our good COWtty citiiens looked into their wallets too. 'Ibey discovered little there but maybe a couple of dead moths. Most of these citizens, unlike the supervisors, couldn't figure a way to get a raise. So, when the citizen.types found out tbaii ~ supervisors were about to fatten their blj> pockets, all bell broke loose. 'lbs result was that the supervi90l'S retreated. Faced with ·• public uproar, tbeJ', d!idded the $17,500 they were taking home was 1jlis\ fine and no sense making • l!jg flJS! •bout it. frl~ING was the public noise lllll>t~.that they've left their "'iil•W-"". Ille two years heoce. I<: ... -drifts down from Elbe Oluoly Seat that our five board JMD-liaft ....,. again been probing .._Ink> the coofines of their pocketbooks and "pni\iolily c:omporlng the cootaits with those or other County Seat luminaries. ~.. of ~ other .officials ate even ,., 11Upposed Jo wolt !or the five board ~members. t So while county supervisors make t:;$17,500, the county's director ot aviation. ~or emmple, makes $23,676. The head of to>building ..,.;.,.. gets 127,156. The road corrunis8ioner is compensated with ~ $36,516. 1be chief flood control engineer ti makes the same. Even the tu collector gets $20,628. I' YOU MIGHT CONCLUDE that 1n our ktcounty, appointed officials all make more ~ elected olficials. Not quite so. 'lbe <i"asses90r is elected and his aMUal J-""o&Yd>ect is $31,llM. Meanwhile, the !<elect.ed DiBtrid Allomey collecta $38,532 !'~in bis annual ficbt against crime and !"m.iie.i.n. . . ~ Alu, ·It ml beam• dell" tW. the county mpen\acn are m:i tbe abort end of the payroll line up at the OJunty Seat. And Ibey !eel unoomfortable stancling way back there. They figure that after all, they a re essenttally sitting as a Board of Direc- ton for a ccrporation worth more than $300 mDlion -which is our county government -and as the shakers and movers of such an awesome outfit, they ought to be worth a few more buc1a: to us tupayen. ONE OF THE MASONS o u r supervisors take such beat in salary mat- t.rs Is that IJI08I people llOrl of figure them like a city couocilmaD. 'lbat is, they mo part-lime belp and should be doing aomethlng else to mete money. 'Ibey abouJd be """""11 the city -or <OUnty -IOrt ol llke a hobby. Well, that may be okay in some liWe village where the cooncll's principal oc- cupation is to preside over a railroad crossing. But.i a $300 mlllioo ouWt! That may be another question. To top it all of/, Orange County's superviaoriaJ counterparl> up in LA County make 136,000 each year and down In S.. Diego County the supervisors r«mUy ~ their own poycbecks to $22,000. No wooder the five poor fellows who sit on our board M1! beginning to suffer in- feriority complex of the walleL ANYWAY, YOU HAVE lo figure the 1Upervllon aelected a good lime of year lo trot out the aaJary ~Oil again. 'Tis the Yulelide ..._ for pv!ng. Who went& t.o be an Ebenezer Scrooge? I'D bot the supervilon doo't. So In the spirit ol the -yw an just bet they'll Ii•• themael... llOIDethlng this llme. 87 Reds KllW Tip .From Enemy Aids Viet Fight Uri T.....,. Divoree Pending Stanislas '1Stash1 Radziwill has confirmed the persistent rumor that he and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' sister, Lee, will be divorced. The couple were married in Virginia in 1959 and in a Catholic cere- mony in London in 1963 after the Vatican granted annulment cl Prin- cess Radziwill's previous marriage. . SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese mlll-.0 acting oo a ·dp-ilom 1 Viet Cong defector Intercepted a Communist f...,. moving from C.mlwfta toward SaJgm today and killed rl .lft • bitter fight just u miles northwest ol the capital, military OOW'CfS said. '!be fighting broke out nlnt miles sooth ol Toy Ninh province capital .and was still going oo !ate In tho .nen-. Viet- namese officers said. Hlglrny 22 linking Tay Ninh lo Saigon, 6Q mi1es awoy, was cut aod "We'W ·got the Communist bodies stacked on the road," one South Vietnamese officer laid. Government casualties In the first 10 boors of flgbling were One wounded, he said . SUNDAY, TYPHOON Therese smash- ed into South Vietnam's central cc.st, military spckesmen said today, wrecking one ol the last U.S. Army bases in tbe war zone and cutting back a t r strikes tbrougboul the country. But the U.S. command said B52 bombers, which fiy above the weaU:er, flew their heaviest one-day n.ld.! in the Saigon area in more Israeli Spy Ring Broken Moshe · Da yan Target of Dangerous Syrian Assassins By United Press Intematlona.I TEL AVIV (UPI) -Police said today the biggest and most dangePOUS spy ring ·ever· smashed in Israel had planned to assassinate government officials, in· eluding Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, in the near future. The disclosure came as the number of sµspects arrested since last week rose to is Margarite McCausland, a stewardess. e POWs Me-.!'! The cbalnnan of the "Remember the Pueblo" committee said today he had received informatioo that 115 U.S. servicemen were being held prisoner in Laos and that I U olben bad beeo rooved to POW camps inside China. 'n!e Rev. Paul D. Lindstrom, chainnao ( ) or the group that was fonned after the JN SHORT... capture ol the U.S. lnlelligeoce vessel ... ----------""· Pueblo by Nortb Korea Jan. 23, !!Ifill, told reporter> in llangkol< be received his In- 38 with the seizure of 17 Arabs from their homes in northern Israel during lbe night. Four ol those in custody are Israeli Jews, the others Arabs. DewtY Superintendenl or Police Uriel Sasaon caJlod Ille Syrlao 1PY ring "the largest, best organized and most dangerous that we have come up against since 1948," the year the state was bom ecr .. hProbe formation (rom sources in Vientia:ne the Laotian capital In Saigon Sunday' be said South Vieblamese ·sources told 'him that ooly 1711 ol the Ml known U.S. POWs ln North Vietnam would be releaaed under termt of the peace tetUement cur- rently beinc ~in Paris. e Fl11i ... Aee ID MIAMI (UPI) -World War I Dying ace Eddie RJckenbacker remained in seriou,, condition Sunday at Mercy Hospital fighting effects of a stroke suf- fered Oct. ll. Rickenbacker arrived in Miami from New York to celebrate his 82nd birthday shortly before he wa.s stricken. The retired chainnan of the board of Eastern Air l.Jnes wu first listed in critical condition but has been downgrad- ed to serious condition. e Alletttle Vidt MIAMI (UPI) -Chile's Marxist Presi- dent Salvador Alle.ode got a tumultuous welcome from Prime Minister Fidel Castro and thousands ol cheering, Dag- wav!ng CUbam wbeo be arrived ln Havana Sunday nigbl Live coverage of the event was broad- cast by llll island-w1de hookup ol radio stations monitored in Miami. Radio announce.rs said crowds at Havana'• J OR Marti Airport and along the l&-mDe ~de route Into town shouted "Viva Allende" (!.(mg Uve Allende), waved Chilean and CUban !lap and held up signs with slogans including "Fidel, Allende, El pueblo 1os defiende" (Fidel, Allende, Tile people defend you). CIDCAGO (AP) -Investigators coo- tinue to sift through the charred pieces or a United Air Lines Boeing 737 jet which cr~ed ln a neighborhood here Friday, trying to find the cause of the disaster. The job of Identifying the bodles or the 45 victims ended Sunday. In some cases, relatives did not recognize lictims, and the coroner's office was forced to rely on dental charts and lingerprinls. Explosions Rock 3 Cuban \ I theTwelve of the 18 vicUms who survived crash remained hospitalized, in- cluding one in an intensive care unit She Aid Offices in NY, Miami By Tllo Aaoclated Prou Three eirplosiom early toclay damaged a CUban,refug--travel agency ln New York and New York and Miami 0£· fices of a fum which forwards parcels • from the United States to Olba, police said. The first explosion shattered the office of the VA-OJba Forwardin( Co. In Miami at about 3:20 a.II)., polce '8ld, ~ by blul! al VA:UUba's Neif Yorlt Oflice in W asbingloo Heights and the Calypso Travel A¥;eDcy in Que..,. sllortly alter 4 a.m. THERE WERE NO ._-ts of injuries. Police in Miami said they believed an anti-COmmunist refUgee organization was responsible for the exploslpns., ''but we really are just speculating right oow. Tbere are so many anti-Comm~ groups opentlng right now we couldo'I even begin to say wbo did It." Police in New York said Anania Falcon, owner of the travel agency, told them she bad received telephone calla from UDldenlifled persons who llftalened lo blow up the business. Both blasts in New York heavily damaged the businesses and broke win- dows in neighboring businesses and apartmen~. . Federal agents were investigating all three explosions. ~DA~U POLICE said the bomb that -""'.WC.. GleJlle ~­pany in the city's lJ.ttle Havana section was placed on a window ledge behind an ironwork grill outside the building. The building also houses a CUbao refugee clinJc and offices of the U.S. Im- m.igraUon and Naturalization Service but police said the damage was coofmed primarily I<> the VA-Cuba office and an auto belonging to one of the company'• owners. "It wu a bomb explosion, some kind of infernal device set With an electrical timer," said Miami District Fire Chil!f Dan Heyda, who added that a police -oquad found fragmenlll ol the tim<r in the 'wreckage. than tw<> monthl belweeo nooo Sunday and midday lodq. Spol«smen said 39 mis unlooded an esUmlted 1,110 tons <JI uploslve1 on auspocted CommUDlsl cmceotralkm within 41 miles of the cepital ;... the heaviest 1151 strikes ln the SaJion aJU sloce Oct. I wbeo u ol the big planes bit around the dly. MILITARY SOURCES said t be mlllliameo in the Tay Ninh figbtlng were tipped by a Communist defector Sunday that an estimated 500 North Vietnamese and Viel Cong troops bad moved oul of their Oambocliao sanctuary and were moving southiiast toward Saig<ln. Acting on the inteWceoce, government troops poured 1,000 ar!lllery sbellJ Ink> the "Com- munist pooltloos during the night, then moved in to make cootact just after dawn today, Typhoon Then!se bit South Vietnam near Qui Nhon, the country's fourth largest city 250 miles north of Saig<ln, packing winds ol Ill miles an hour, military spokesmen said. Pnwincllll authoriUeS in Blnh Dinh said damage "was widespread throogboul the prov- ince." although there were no repo<ts of casual lies • The typhoon llmiled air-strikes In cen- tral South Viamm provilv:es Sunday to ooly 22, spokesmen said. AMONG THE lWIDEST bit ,... was the Lane Army air -jllll outside Qui Nboo proVince capital MillllrY """""' said three U.S, beJicopters ond a South Vietnamese Al styr.-flgbter-bomber seeking refugre from the high winds were ''extensively damaged." "'!be rools ol all the buildinp al the base were tom <if," me U.S. otfker said. Moot ol the builcllnp at Lane are quooset bub . Lane Ill one ol the last U.S. Anny bases In South Vietnam. It Is the home of one of seven helicopter air cavalry squadrons and several hundred administrative troops. 8 Persons Die In Fiery Office Building Blm;e CLINTON, Mo. (UPI) -'nle - ol Darlllle -...i ---be beard ..... Ille wall ol -and Iii rumble of fire trvcb radog lo tbe Gld Daily Democnl Builcllng. "Help us! FOf'l't me -aave tnY mother!" WHEN FIREMEN got Ink> the ollice building, "there were beams and bricks covering them both up to their necks," said wlunteer fireman Paul Decker. "Someone called out for more men." Four vohmteers ran into the building. Suddenly, a wall collapsed on them. II killed Miss Hunter, 27, her mother, Mnt. Mike Hunter, Ill four volunteers, and a fireman. An eighth victim, the building manager, atso died In the explosion and fire Satunlay, poosibly •tarted by .. a" cumulatkm oC leaking gas. The bias! ripped up from the basemen! ol the old oewspaper building late Satlll' day and destroyed all but ooe wall. "It was one bell ol an explosioo," said Fire Chief Doo Lucas. "It blew out win- dows for two or three blocks." WCAS SAID 200 firemen fnm 18 deplrtments in a ~ ndius of this town of 7,500 penons came lo belp, ba~ tilng the blaze in !Ubfreezlng M tber. Decker, who was not Injured when the wall fell oo bis comrades, wu still on the scene Sunday belplng others In dlglng oot the Wt body. "OI courae I'm going hack to belp," be said. '"l'hen's still a man buried Wider that mess. We have t.o help cme another Jn small town like lhiL I've got I<> p bad<." ............ Sloe WeHeetl Otlt legal proceedings are under way against actress Rita Hay- worth for allegedly walkillg out on a film she was making in London. A World Film Serv- ices director said the legal ac- tion was prompted by the 'con- siderable loss caused to the company.' Irregularity Of Truman's Heart Cited KANSAS CITY (AP ) -The b .. rt of Harry S Truman continues to .show lr· regularities in rhythm, doctors "'P.Orted today, but the fonner president told them "I feel all right" and spent a reslful night. The 118-yeaMld Truman remained In lerlous condition Ibis morning, hospital ollicials said. A MORNING medical report from Reoearch Hcopital and Medical Center said Tnnnan was asked ~Y Diehl about 11 p.m. EST bow he feh and be ~: "I feel all right." 1'bil came --' Ills ~ llld devoloped lr-....,ianU... .. Truman allO Wal nked If he imt ll1)'wl>ere, and replied "no," the bolplla1 reported. A medical bulletin issued at 10 a.m. to- day said Ttuman11 blood presau.re was 120 over &O, his pulse 78, resplr1Uon ill and temperature 97 .a. John Drtves, hospital spokesman said all these in· dications were within normal limits. His kidney lunctioo was adequate and he cootlllued to take tube feedings well, Dreveo added. Serialized Sex Columns Missing PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Reoders semhed their newspapen in vain today for the lstest llWlll uplolta of tho heroes and heroines of Cambodian- style serializ.ed pomognphy. Under onion from Ille Mlniltry of Na- ""'81 Deleme, Ille -ol ln- !ormatloo lmleflllllel:y 8Ulpetld<d IOU£ -Penh ... _. for publl•ing ()llecene _.._ -other popen mov- ed qu!eldy to supprea any ,.. lllorles ·wblcb mlgbt.olfeod. · The majOrily ol J'lmom Penb'a II dally newspepert carry a cmtnl -devoted I<> lurid ou jokes, ofortol o(,u- plidl .. lllll encountors and ...,.... ol superiiuman aexual --· The -are -ied by ezplldt IDuslrallaU. Baek Ice Glazes South Plains ;rhe bomb flew out one wall of the of. flee and wrecked a car owned by Mario De1 Gado, one of the company's officers, police aaid. Dr. Inocente . Laruabal, a Ollte ..... refugee physician, said be was asleep on 'Pressure's Off Says Fischer But Seaboord Has Good Weather; Snow Hits North ' l«W lioW ............ l:M~ 0.4 -· .. ,,.., Natl ......... , •. ,. t 11'Ul\o. .. . l'lrlf ............ , ... T:»•.flll> l.t ..... ,_ " ••••••••• 121• .. "'" '"' !:."".':. ·.-,..-;:;,;;· J!l' .. r:. J;1 Mo. • ._ M:" .. "" J:;;; lt:lfp.m. • t > ' a couch In the Miami CUbao Asaocla- lion's ™1our clinic In the !root ol tho building at the time or the blast. 11rr Lin'ED ME oU the couch and I lhoolthl II WU a plaoe Crull untD. "· llllelled gunpowder," Larazablil told police through an lnlerpreler. He Aid be did not spea1t enough Erlgllsb lo call police himself, ID be telephoned bia daughler at home and asked her to cob- tact authorities. 111 TBINK rr1 pretty chkksl," J'llcblr Mkf. "But tt•1 to be expected," In three meet.,,. bot--In the "San ADtallo II-, d"IWS W11'1 r«ehed every Ume. ".' ' • h f I I t ' • Bakers Go Back To Work LOS ANG!LES (AP) - Bak .... """' blel< OD the job today an.r 1 monu.JOng strike and loctoul which halted operatlons at ·plan producinfl neorlY hair Iha bread ln the western United States, • Union members approvtd a new CCW)tract oVer l h e weebnd. The atrlb was call• ed OD Nov. 11 ln 1 dl>pute 9"er «ll)MCUUve days off. UiJdtr tbe C11Dtract, workers wbo tall IO reco!ve IWO days ol! In I row each -will rteelve a !!:rsia:~ .. i:~ ~ receive two c:pnsecuUve di~ oll. Manag.,,.nt of Ille m . , . . . ~ ... .. · Violent Crula Contlnental Co.,'.wlllcl\ wu the • This boxcar, it brakes IOOIOOed, rolled th r o u g 11 an LA lnteraection killing a ~fir.t:.'~ ":,..the Ji::.ke\,~~ child, injuring six other persons and demolislling> five cars. The car was baking firms 'conlended that _dr_ag~g~ed_th_re_e_bl_oc_k_•·--------~----------­ the union demands would make it Impossible to supply consumers with fmh bread dally. J~ph Kane, executive vice president and chief negotiator for the Bakers and Con- fectionary Worker• Union, An..<:JO, said the strike al· fected.. 11,000 workers na· tionwi.de. Some workers walk· ed. off the job on the East Coast. SF Quake Predicted-Again of one of the many skyscrapers that she fears may come tumbling down precisely at 9 a.m. on the fourth day of the year 1973. person is reported to have called back asking, "Ras the earthquake been resched· uled?" • DAILY PILOT 5 Bay Area Stiff With Icy Glaze MINNEY'S SHIP CHANDLERY -~ S-11 -5111,. - N .. tlcol lloob -Slolpt .._,. FINE SHIP MODELS Marino l'Tlnts -Ship Clocta SAN FRANCISCO (APJ The weathertnlln promise& lit- tle respite today from the blllng cold spell !hat giazed . the san Francisco Bay area with Ice over the weekend, bursting water pipes, fretting swimming pools and making driving hazardous. The mercury dipped to 35 during the night, and the U:S. Weather Service say1 it could plummet to the 20s tonight in the Bay Area. ' Bui forecast.rs said there was only "a very slight" ~ for snow In the Bay Arecl, and predicted it would be ,increasingly cloudy but 0fa1r Tuesday. Daytime highs In the 40s are e"pected. Some snow or rain is ex· peeted In northern California, however, and the Weatherman says snow ls likely north of Tahoe. Blowing and drifting snow may Pose a problem for traveJers in the Mt. Shasta Siskiyou area, the weather service said. 1 N CREASING cloudiness and continued cold weather also was forecast for the in- terior valleys where the lows will be in the 20s or low 30s Hatch boards and the highs in the low 40s . L•rt• Stilec~on ef N•vtlc•I Subzero weather was Decor•hw It.mi a Olfh recorded in the Tahoe-Don-~ 0"'" l\llNllllGS-furs. TM•U SAT. -'TIL ,. ner-Truckee basin and the ~ MINNEY'S SHIP CHANDLERY thermometer tumbled to 'll ln 2537 Wftt COCISt Hifllway Oakland. 23 in SacramenlO, 27 548-4192 , .... , ;:~~·:~:..,....11 in Fresno, 30 In Red Bluff and! ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 38 in San Jose. "°_."""*"' ,w:.,~~·r;::~ ~~!"': What do doctors recommend Rafael and San Anselmo areas fior patients m• pam• ? of Marin County w h e re • temperatures plunged to all· Doctors aJI th try dis 50 000 000 lime lows ••nging from ts to over e roun pense over ' ' ie deg.ees. of these tablets to their patients each year. The California Hi g h w a Y 'l'here are ma~y medk11tion11 a lt'ln recommend m08t than any Patrol reported some patches phy1ician or danti¥t can. pre· otht>r leading tablet. <If ice on Mar in C.Ounty roads acribe.for pain. Somr :ire na r· Headache and dental pain iM and on roads in the Oakland cotic, many are available unly relieved incrediblf fast: minor hills. Ice caused the closing of on.1n·flflC~ption. B~t there .is on~ pains of ar1hritis are depend · Panoramic Highway above pain ~h~vez, a11•dable '_Vllhout ably eued lf?r houl'IJ; even the '"II y II d ffi lh i>rescnption, doctor11 d11pense aches and pa1n11 or colds and flu "'d a e~ an o 1cers rew again and •cain ... Anacin. rl'Bpond to Anacin. So the tcn- sand on Highway 9 around the Each year, doctors give over sion and <Jepl't"Saion that can be Saratoga Gap because of 60,000,000 Anacin lablela to <:aufM'd bY Such l)Bin will be re· dangerous ice. their patient.I in pain. If doctors lieved too. Aiid lniHiOrul:' take The cold snapped two San t~ink enough about Anacin to Anacin witho,tt atomach UJl(let. Francisco water mains in-dispense all these tablet.II, what \Vhen 31.'1• in pai,.n, why temtptin' g water servi~ to better recommend~tion ~n you don't YOU., . Q. ~Yee or uk when you are ~n pain? . so many 4QCf_ i¥e the about 70 homes for up lo three You aee, A~ac 1n . contains !ahlet a d , _ i;qi,Jght ,Ji~ you hours. more o( the pa.in rehewr doc· in hi• owrr~."''Ji1k4fA.nacin•. But Independent bakeries and those owned by large food chains worked around the clock to take up the slack and no serious shortages were reported. SAN FRANCISCO (UPIJ - Yield Se!Ues wishes she had the money to rent a helicopter for a few hours the morning of Jan. 4. She thinks she might wltoess the destruction of San Francisco in a great earth- quake. Won! is fillerlng through tl)is q~e-conscious city that the date has been set -again -for that cataclysmle shock that the experts say is due - sometime. But experts also say no one ~ forecast a quake. Vicki and a half-dozen of her coworkers are planning to be out of town. They have passed the word in their building and say a tot of DeODle don't take it quite seriOusly enough to leave. "But a lot of them will be late for work -if the quake does not happen," stie says. Mental~ Kane described the agree- men t as ••a major br<lltthrouch in solving the m -t inblem which 04 been with 1he Industry r.r 21 years." 'nM! approval vote wasn't disclosed. Swims From Alcatraz WE QUOTE PRICES :": There wu no estlmate for the cost of the atrlb, but a lawyer for m Aid it would cost his fum. an addlUonal S2 million aJear to meet the unioo'• f demands. Residents of some com- munes where many of the "hip" people now live, are get· tJng their nisty vans ready for a trek 19 safer ground. Vkkl, however, is not a commune dweller. She is a citt't who worts in the finan- cial district. on the 28th noor "LOOK,'' SA VS the young offioe worker, ''if we were up here when It happened and we d_idn 't know, we oouldn't do anything about lt. Bui when somebody tells me just when it's going IO happen, rm goinfl to get away." "My mother is going to L.A.," she adds ... Word about the predicted quake has been ~ by the "alternative" press ·arxt radio stations. It bas not yet been acknowledged by lhe scientific comm\Qllty. 'lbe tut such ell:erciee In ,. eu1hltUke countdMru 'oc- SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A skinny Englishman who stays out late and doesn3 watch his diet has· swum the cold and treacherous mile f r o m A1catraz to San Fraoclsco. KeMeth F. Crutchlow, 28, said !Je didn't train, hadn 't. swum a stroke in three months, stays out late and "I drink and I eat everything I want. J consJder myself a regular type guy, so this proves if you want to do something all you need is mental desire." currecf in 1919, . when• the J ONLY ONE THING CANOunAST HER DIAMOND arid !hit II your Ollmll.low. Hare ere iwo lmporttnt W1Y1 to stall !hit low: our MW dil.-d IOlllllnMI In 14 Unit gold.' Loft. ·OdysMy"· In flonrltlnod or highly pollohed gold. from '326. ~ to diomond wwlght. Mltdling wo~ bond. $35. Right. "Love S.ts. • from $365. Contounid wedding bond to motdl. $20. EnWgad to Show'o.tall. Do Something Beautiful.,. C:Mr99 A«~ l•Yltecl -A_,.lull 11,,.au llHlllAr-1ct.-.... MMflf CM,._, tot, SLA.VlcK'S Jewelers Since 1917 ' 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 Cllrt"-' MIW91 °"" ~ "'"' ........., ............. t1• "'"" Wlltl IC!Ullofll Mt Torr-..u, Ort,._. U CerTllof, LI Hara. AllOt St" Dllll'O ft U S V11gt1. • -and otllers held ai !Uni 1 filled "doomaday" party in front ol Olty Hall on the night that someone had said · San Francisco ...Wd be destroyed. The time far the predicted 1973 quake was set by Reuben Greenspan, who has been call- ed an ''independent geophyslcbt." He made his prediction in Interviews with several newspapers In Arizona and California earlier thh year. Gremspen has since made himself unavailable f o r elaboration on the new dooms- day f_..i. IN THE published In- terviews he said the epicenter of the quake will be 2~ miles south of San Francisco. It will have a reading of seven on the Richter scale -enough to wipe out much of the city. Greenspan, now 68, has achieved ~ notoriety for pnodlctlng earthquake&. That was beet in 1935, when he was a mathematics teacher in New York City. One he predicted is said to have destroyed the city .of Quctta in India, with a Jou of 52,000 lives. On May 14, 1951, however, he said San Francisco would crumble at 9:30 a.m. Sunday, June IO of th1s year. '!be hotr of doom paased quieUy and one concerned CollectthisweekS packof 10 new''Picture Perfed'' MenttRecipe s Betl·Stroaonoll Baked Stvlled Pork Chops Bettin'• Chicken • B"I Pizza I Fru~ Slulled Pott Loin Slulfed Zucchini Now Encland Boiled Dinner Chicken Clcciatore (Hunter's Style) Baked Ham With Raloln Souce a.M Fish Fillets in WhMoWlne ~. r--~-WflH-AN't.GASOLIN~PURCHASE~~-1----t-- " STANDARD STA~~~:~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~. ii \ f, I • Cndchlow, six feet tall and weighing 154 pounds, braved vicious currents, ~egree water and 38-degree a tr temperatures Sunday for the swim across the stretch that once helped keep some of history's toughest crimln.als on the former prison island. OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -~· . -CHICI THUi SU"I SALi SPECIALS-s"", .... , .,., •11. "rin JOHNSON'S BABY SHAMPOO, 16 01 •••••••• $2.29 $1.19 BUFFERIN, IOO't ••••••.••.••••••...•.•••••• $1.67 Sl.47 BINACA BREATH DROPS, l/l 01 •••••••••••••• $1 .25 $1.00 CREST TOOTHPASTE, 7 01 .• ,, •••••••••••••• $1.ll 19c --$1.49 $1.09 7Sc 69< He made it in one hour, 28 minutes, then collapsed on. the shore near F is h er man 's Wharf, unable to speak. 2700 E. Coast Hifbwav. at Femleaf. Corona del Mar Crutcblow wasn 't the first to make the swim but probably was the only one to do it at the coldest time. of the year. • 644-7575 you really rt\113t see cof RBOTT TIE SHOP / .. •• frot1t #.e~berf1albot+.shd ios jtl Carmel Valier, to at-ease of. New~ ~eaa-i ... Sit1tply #\e worlq~ ·-finest ties. (-CCJ-ttt:;_--@{J l-~ I I]@ 44 fashion island, newport center 644·5070 _, ' 1, - e DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE New Sex Two re<:ent big~ ~ decisions will\ regard lo nude and lewd enterta.lninent may inspire so1ne or Or- ange Co unty's tavern OJJerators lo clean up their enter- tainn1ent offerings, but authorities antici pate no major wave or closures. Nude dancing, opined the courts, is not necessarily obscene or illegal, but if it becomes lewd. the law has the right to crack down in the interest of protc<:ting "pub!J c \Veliare and morals.'' The decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, which up- held the right of California 's D,epartment of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) to suspend the liquor license of an establishment offering explicit sex in the guise ot entertainment, followed a state Supreme Court ruling on the same subject. The state rourt bac ked Justice Robert Gardner's Court of Appeals opinion that, while nudity itself n1ay be acceptable, actual or simulated sex acts portrayed by nude dancers do not qualify for protection under the freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Orange County authorities. who have been trying for years to curb the free-wheeling entertainment of· fered by a few local taverns, gerlerally wel co med th e. high rourt decisions. HO\\'ever, there appear to be ways to circumvent them, -especially the U.S. Supreme Court rulin g \vhich is specifically directed at establishments serving alco hol by the drink. Show Curbs soda pop-sipping IS-year-olds-without running afoul ol ABC rulings. -There has been some concern t.hat ABC agents now \vill become arbiters of public morals. U they should become over-zealous, this wiU be another matter for the courts to consider. The fact is that the ·new court rulings now provide California wilh two separate weapons, the liquor control laws and' the Red Llght Abatement law, used In the Gardner case, with which to establish some lden~able lin1its on the more exotic entertainment that has de- veloped in recent years. Miles of Smiles A week from today. a panel ol judges will look al the Orange Coast's "40 Miles of Christmas Smilest~ to selecl Christmasville, 1972, along with Ille best-deco- rated homes and businesses in each of some 15 coastal communities. The friendly Christmas decorating contest, spon- sored annually by the Orange County Coast Association and the DAILY Pll:.OT. was expanded two years ago to include the new SaddJeback Valley con1munities and the coveted Christmasville award for the best overall deco- rating effort. Last year, San Clemente was Christmasville, and in 1970 the honor went 'lo Laguna Beach. First, second and third place plaques are awarded in the residential and commercial categories in each participating cotnmu- nily. Whil e nlost of the entrepreneurs feel they'd have a hard time attracting customers to watch th eir sho\\'S if they couldn't provide a little supportive alcohol. at least one has openly contemplated the possibility of providing only drink setups for clj~fllS bringing their own bottles. And one Los An~eles producer of nude sho\VS says he has never bothered to seek a liquor license because he can draw a good crov.1d by opening his doors to Local committees will submit nominations .for judg· ing Dec. 18 and 19, and awards \vill be announced by Christmas Eve. , Even for non-decorators, a drive along the .i40 1rliles of Christmas Smiles" from Seal Be a ch to San Cle mente can inspire some instant Christmas spirit. ~..::;:,. ....... ·wE OUGHT TO c.o BA.Cl<. To WARTIME RULES.-SURVIVE' l'.IFT'< H 1.iAc1<.1NGS AN!> you <:JET TO RETIRE."' Death-· Penalty Is Still a Live Issue • 'Practical' Man Doesn't Look Aheacl I suspect that one of the most abused The death penalty, battered almost to words in 1the ~·orld may be "prac tical.'' extinction in the courts, is still alive if EDITORIAL Disraeli long ago defined a practical man not exactly kicking. Californians voted on as "a man who practices the errors of Nov. 7 to overturn a state Supreme Court RESEARCH his forefathers," and litUe has changed ruling that outlawed capital punishment. since then . 1be Florida Legislature l:p.s approved a More than 20 years bill making the death ..,.n,.Jty mandatory · · 1 · F nd ago, all the "im· ,.. .... -posed 1n peacetune on y 1n ranee a . __ 1 1 for. van·ety of crilnes. And the.National sh So pract1U11" socio o-Spain. Once aboli ed in the viet Association of Attorneys General last Union, the death penalty was reinstated gists and city plan· week voted for limi~ed use ~ the death there in JIJSO,and now applies not onJy to ~ w~re warning pem.lty, recommendilMl a mildel statute. treason, espion.!lge murder aQd rape, but tJie ~ors and mer- All tltla acfultT .... ~, ........ ''i\IO Ii; ~theff, collnlerfeltlng, ' c\Wlta m ~-t· Am--dowo"' .... ~ .~~ ... !41ttd; .. ,_, ..,.iau... . , ... ":,w~~ue·- on June 29. ln a H decision, the court The staie-bY-state situation in this tr' d o:w'" ~ • rule-' out executions under ..any ~J country is ·mtz:ed. At the time of last ~ were ecaying • . laws which give judges or juries discre-J , US SU Court rur 11 rapfdly and needed some radical reJUV· une s · · preme mg, enation or they would be lost beyond tionary power to sentence a pe~n to states had abolished the death penalty ' death. Left unsettled wa~ the question of through either legislative or court action. recovery. whether laws mandating the death and five others had res tricted ii to such None or the practical men believed penal.ty . for certain crimes would be "extreme" offenses as treason or killi ng them. Some of the merchants even op· pem11ss1ble. a police officer. Moreover, four states posed such mild revisions as one-way streets, 'for fear they would ·''hurt SOME LEGAL authorities, including California Attorney General Evelle J. Younger, believe that the answer to that question is "Yes." By approving Proposi- lion 17 on the Nov . 7 state ballot, Califor- nians reinstated the mandatory death penalty for four crimes : (1) killing of a prison guard by a life-term inmate : (2) train wrecks resulting in bodily injury: (3) treason against the State or California; (4) perjury resulting in the death of an innocent person. But the primary significance of Proposilion 17, as Younger sees it, is that it "restored to the legislature the authority to pass laws providing for the death penalty (in other crimes). Now, whether the legislature does anything about it, that I don't know, and that is of Sec1>ndary importance to me." AT LEAsr 37 countries ha ve abolished or abandoned capital punishment, or have retained it only for exceptional crimes or in time of war or ma rtial law . In Western Europe, the penalty is im- with capital-punishment statutes had no business." The thought of creating 1nalls prisoners awaiting execution. STATE LAWS mandating the death penalty are certain to be challenged in court. The American Civil Liberties Union already bas served notice that it plans to attack capital punishment per se on the ground that it violates the Eighth Amendment's protection against cruel and unusual punishment. But such a test will not be possible until California, Florida or some other state seeks the death penalty under a law which requires it. And even if such a case were to occur tomorrow, it might be five years before it reached the U.S. Supreme Court on ap- peal. A statement made 50 years ago by Clarence Darrow seems equally valid today. ''The question of capital punish- ment has been the subject of endless discussion," the noted criminal defense lawyer said, "and will probably never be settled so long as men believe in punishment." ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ and barring vehicular traffic positively appalled them. I Well, the downtowns are now in the full process of decay all over America. What has been done to save them has been too litUe and too late. New skyscrapers have been erected, some civic centers put up, and a few trees planted -but the shops and restaurants keep moving out to the suburbs, the tax base dimini shes, and squalor sets in right alongside that proud new edifice of stone and steel and glass. AlL THOSE "fuzzy.headed" idealists, two decades ago and more. told the prac· tical men this was going to happen if their downtown weren't made mo re habitable -not fo r offices and institutions, but for people. Nuclear Power Safer They pointed out that a downtown district cannot close at 5 p.m. That it must be a day-and-night center, where people oould stroll and window-shop and snack and be entertained. That putting up immense new buildings was not the an!Wer ; indeed, this onl y complicated the problem, by congesting the area in the daytime and vacating ii at night. One of the repetitious elanns of the o11nti-ouclear power front is the claim that the production of such power poses a serious thNet to public heallh and safety. A group of University of California ex- perts has put the lie to that charge in a study for The ltesources Agency of Californ ia as a basic contribution to the state's long-range planni11g on how best to meet the power needs of its growing population. THE ENGINEERING-medicine study teams were headed by two UCLA ex· perta, Dean t'baunccy Starr of the School of Englneerlng and Applied Science, and Dear Gloomy Gus How noble It ls lO AJ, ''I will _not t!U my fellow man.'' However, thls will not prevent him from klll!ni you! U. B. M. ""' ........ l'tfl«tt ........... vttwt. llM ........, ._"'Mt ....U111r, ,_. ..., "' ..,.. • • .._.,. On. D91tr Ptiof. • Dr. Moses A. Greenfield, Cllief of lhe Medical Physics Division. They were assisted by some 30 professors, con- sultants and research assistants from UCLA, UC Berkeley and the UC Medical Center, San Francisco. An eight-month evaluation of both oil- fired and nuclear plants by these highly qualified and impartial a u t h o r i t I e s brought the conclusion that nuclear plants averaged )('SS than one-tenth the risk of oil fired plants In routine operation. Furthennore, the pubUc health ri.ek from either type is. according to the report, "roughly comparable to the hatards to wttich the public ls exposed by un- controllable natural events, such Q.!I belng :struck by lightning or bitten by a venomous animal." S\lch deaths, the report added, occur at an annu:.il rate of approximately one per mllllon or popula- tion. THE UC GROUr did not include natural gas plants J>ecnuse o( the con- tinuing acute shortage of that fuel. In lhe opinion of Dean St3rr the bulk of future power planL'I in California will be either nuclear or oil·flred . With oil a depleUng fuel source, with nutlear power'1 proved 8Uperlority In cleanlinc5s, and this new proof of Its aafety. areuments aaainst the well- planned, env lronmentany acceptable nu· clear plants seem 1peclou1 to say the least. Clllforala Featart Servke BUT THE PRACTICAL men shook their heads at such Utopian proposals. When they began to get worried, a few years later, they made a few half· hea rted attempts to humanize the downtown, but ii was already too late. Their downtowns were either deserted by dusk or, in the larger cities, were in- fested by the least savory elements of the population . "Practical" should not mean "short· sighted." It should not mean "greedy for quick profits." Properly used, it should mean, as the dictionary infonns us, "niindful of the res ults, usefulness, ad· vantages Qr disadv aniages of action or procedure." On these tenns, the ae lf·styJ. ed practical man of our time stands in· dictl!d as the fuzziest-headed, most slmple-mindcd Utopian of them an. .---· B11 George --- Dear Georgl": My husband subscribes to a ,,,,_ called man's magazlnc which features many nude women, and It seems Ill! rather childish to me . Oon'l you think these magazines show a certain immaturity? MRS. E. Denr Mrs. E.: Not the ones 1 subscrfbc to -the gait shown there are about '' mature as anybody could get. ( Retreat from the White House Presidential Escape .llatch As the crow flies, and this is the season for them, President Nixon's 1nountaintop at Camp David is about 40 miles away and at a lower altitude. Those of us who reside intermittently in Virginia ·s Blue Ridge think o f l\'.larylaild's continuous Catoctin Mts., where Nixon's place is, as barely moun- tains at au. The President is under some kind of possibly transient imprcssioh that he· can think better at 1700 -feet elevalioo 'ln Maf'118nd than St r sea level in Was~ lngton and intends, so he says, to do so increasingly during his second tenn. That 17()()..feet elevation figure is a guess. Ac- co rd ing to the geological survey , the elevation above sea level of Camp David is classified information. The Sur· rounding area runs up to about 1700 fee t, and at one point, 1900. GIVE OR TAKE a hWJdred feet, the experienced thinker at these modest altitudes tends to judge the clarity of thought on what is being thought about. It is much better to think aOOut easy things than about hard things, and it is to be marveled that anyone except Presi· dent Ni1on could , while wandering in tbe woods on a mountaintop, give even a shadow of thought to the organizational st ructure of the Office of Budget and Management. There are much better lhings to think about. How. for example, do the deer know that it is the hunting season and (rucHARD WILSo~ Camp Davi4. l t is' simply getting away from that P!)bllc museum in which you are required' to µve·<1t 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. The mlllloris ·ot ~pie who troop through tl1e 1>uiliic riioms of the White House cannot understand this, This thus come to graze on the expensive rtlatively ~l structure seems to be shrubbery at this particular place wbert a comfonable and ·derteinly convenient strenuous efforts are made to exclude place to. live..lThe l,"resident can walk to anyone armed with even so much as a work, the fQOd is lbod, and the ac- bee-bee gun? Why, at the end ol commodaq-lavish l>ei/ood tbe dreams November. in a sudden clearing of the _Qf 1he aver.Ip Amuiean. skres after a rain, do the harbihgen ol ·!Jut, wilh tlio ~bje exception ol Har- spring, a small flock of genuine -r;t,s ~ti~!! PftS!dents come to hl~~blrd!, ski\l<T ~OUih the ba(e ,,...? ii'~~-@!Ir· · ·cling emotions . · ~-wi.,~.u; .::.=.Mt-::--'which can only • i= .,.i: he·loll~"l.ftllol~..J~ -.• way from !her< ~ of ttie windows or tile '""1~ at lhe sur.--. '"' ., . , · .. rounding cleared area and ' making men. OF ALL~ in this century, ta! notes of all that needs to be done to President Nixon ls the most determined make the place presentable. This is best and organized in hls escapes from the done in the bad light of inclement Whie House shrine and museum. He bas weather and often leads to the conclusion even built in bis escapes on the White that there is so much to be done that it House grounds, moving from one ofice to would be better not to start something another as it suits his moods or the kind which never could be finished. That is the of work he is doing. begiruiing of wisdom. Clear thought at its Government owned and Navy operated best. Qvnp David, when last seen as a guest President Nixon says that he has writ· during the Eisenhower administration, is ten some of his best and most important comfortable but not to be compared to statements and speeches while isolated la vish official bide.a.~ in other coun- and insulated at Camp David. This feat , tries. Its charm is sttictJy U.S. NaVJ, of. goes contrary to the experience of others ficial, which means sedate surroundings, who enter these bills wit h high literary good food and ready service. aspirations and emerge without a word President Nixon likes to so buttrem: bis on paper but pleasant memories of feet privacy. When be flrat occupied bis law warmed before lhe fire while watching offices in New Yark City be instructed hls Redskin football games blacked out in secretary, Rotemary Woods, to inform the immediate Washington area. b~s law partners that ~ was not keeping his door closed In an otherwise open-door office to be ei:cJuilve or offensive. It was the only way be pouJd work. NO, MR. PRESIDENT, it is not the cl3rlty of thought which lures you to Irish Incapable of Love? Some people solve the problem or sex. by gelling married; but not in the way yo u might think. George Bernard Shaw , the great Irish dramatist, was one of these rare birds. Shaw married and promptly rorgot sex, with anyone else and with his wife. He frequently used his wife as a shield against the impor· tunings of the many women who pursued him . In a letter lo one of these ladies, drafted by S h a \V himself and slgned by his wife. mention \vas made that Char- loUe Shaw was beyond any "corrupt per- sonal lnterest" in Shaw. The letter added that Mrs. Shaw was perfectly willing to pl-.y the jealous wife if her man could but get on with his work. TlfE ARRANGE!\fENT seemed to work perfectly. Shaw married Charlotte J>ayoo-Towns:he.nd, the Irish heiress whose money freed hlm from journalism and poverty. His wife gave him the IK'CUrlty which enabled him to write his grent plays. These were begun In t898, the year of the marriage. Jn the recently published "Collected U!llers -l89S-l010" thtre ls an unusual Shaw letter to the actress Ellen Terry . It is unusu1d in that it seems to reflect the real Shaw , and not the outrageous ptrsona he had Invented and peddled brUllantly lo the world -the mocking Irish mountebank, to whom nothing was $llcred 11nd no hold' barred. "What poople call love," Shaw wrote to Miss Terry, "ls Impossible except ns a joke (and even then one of the two l!I sure to tum serious) between two (CHARLES McCABE) strangers meeting accidentally at an inn or in a forest path. Why, I dare not for my life's happiness make Jove to my own wife. A delusion, Ellen, all this love romance : that way madness lies." THERE CAN BE no doubt that lhe old boy meant all this. Ile married at 42, which is late for even the late-mar- rying Dubliner. He had sorted out bis priorities, and physical love was quite down on the list. Not that he hadn't known sex. He was quite a philanderer before his marr>age. Shaw had just decided, as he makes clear, that he wasn't going to let sex get in the way ol his life, which was his work. F.ven though Shaw was an Angl~ Irishman, his vlew.11 on love seem to sup- port a theory I have, which ls that in matters of the affections the Irish m romanlJcs who are incapable of love. Not tbat they are incapable or the Idea of love. 'l'lult ts the romantic side, and Is relll!Cted In the poetry of tbe race . IT IS nns conOlct between what love should be -1 red, red rose or whatever -and what lhe dream turns out to he, that makea a muddle ol so many Irish marriages and lhoee which are half·lrtsh. Th.e Irish 1tre 80 used to unhappy mar. rlage1, on both sJdes, that lOOse Involved hnrdly note th<! fact , and assume It to be sln1ply one of the more-or-Jess universal datum of existence. That lhil lnablllly lo love. at lMsl In the man, sprlnga partly from fe8r lbl':re can be no doubt. The sexual education of the I , Irish young hangs forever around tht throat like an albatross. BUT THERE IS more to it than that awful moral blarney. There is a general inability to feel, and to sense the needs of ot hers: The Irish are too immersed in their dream, which ls partly. elves and ancient kings and high and glorloua queens, and partly tbe Gull Stream which produces a kind of gaseous and unearthly climate. 'Ibls both produces the dream and livea off It, That dream cuts ao many ol. wi off from tbe world ol real leellng, and leads some of us to such eccentric conclusions ~ a life ~ by ordinary marital rela· lions. There 18 no doubt Shaw wu right In his ste~ self.analysis, and his even sterner action upon Jt. But where do you find women 11ke lhat ? OJl:ANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, PubU.1her Thomc1 KcevU, Editor Borbarci K1'tiblch Edlt<rriol Pog• Editor TM-i:ditorlal llllKC! or the Dt!:lly Pilot sttk:s to Inform and •Umu- }ate Nitiden by ~ting thl1 ntwsp1per'1 ()Jllnlons ·~ com . mental") on tople1 or lntehst and 1h:nlflc11nce, by ~vfdlng a forum _tor th:!._1tX11.rt1llon oC our rhder1' llolnlon1, and by f>f'denllnli: th~ diveru ~fWJ)nlnta or Informed ob- ..,rvel'll •nd •1.iok~en oh toplct .:ii the day. Monday, December 11, 1972 • I '' • .. ' 1 •• '· •• ' .. Warning , . ' That Cigll(.I •• \ ' , . . . .. • ' ' • .. ' • • .- • ' ' •• .. • • , . ~~Daydreaming'' . . ' . ' L . ' . ' . . Winston tastes SC::· )0 when a · cigar~tte "sfi:o.~ • ~ . , ••• • , • .. . ,. • •' • ,. • • • .. • • ' " . ,,,, , . . I " 1· r·' . ' • • • .. J .. ' '"I • • ... ' . . ' ; 'I .'\ ', '' ' . .. ' . I •.' ' - • . ' I ' " ' I I 'l· ~) ' . . 1 ' ' • -~ • ' ·- • • • ljooNr, -"" 11. 1972 PILOT• • ' .• ,.. _ •• For The Record vii M:;;;:~ to Visit Discover -a Treasury, f i·lled with Chr.istmas • • Di•••ltdl•• of 1'f•rrt.,~ '"" .... ..... Mllll111 '"'···· ~ .. •:t.,.ue. a~~1ct~ !ihthe~~'!t~ 'llloodly llld W-y 11 and to a meeUna or the Board pert of an lntena:lve one-week &Jpervi10n. • 9QUl'M In \lmerlcon municipal County departmentJ where and county. government. the vlslton wJU meet with e1:~ 'l11e M ..... olllcllll, ll0"'1 -Uvt1 IDd llilc4' ...-..... eloc:ted to lllolr ~ wUl lM lnclllM llood OCl!lltOl, ltldl attendlnc I 1111111i1r o n llld Wulo d~I, Allllltlon manag-Cl( ""'"" 1rt11 llld Jllln!ilnc. al the llillYWlllj> ol loulllarn To aid In ll'IMllllna and cawoni11 niion.11o11111c11oo1 ~ U. IDUrl. Rlila bu ol Publlo ~ oolllltd • -· ol blllncuol USC -.... _,.. ol M-A-io.n llldlro 11> Ill outllllldlaf ,,._ Cll dudtac .... Illy VW.. ..... public~ ... ._ .. Ml • ., .......... ; will ... _., -dlY Ill-. Olrlll, ....., ~ go--la IOlua1 Ml; Ill "-"dol, ~ operaucm· Unulb lllo °"""'"" ~I - ol Rlcllu\I --· ~ A!ll ,....,. ....... ~ w lstaot lo,.,,.,liot Dltld llartlaoii, ~ L. Baker.. • , ~IC Mml;,.,. '&'II II' Ruiz 1tlelldl 1111· U8C pubUo ,.. .... bl' the '°"'""'""I ol •dmlnlalralllln I • h o o l lbe 11111 ol M,atoo which 1111 becau..o ol hll 1-o,ncl north ol Moxlc<I Clly. Rull w11 because--hi II lllllqul; lllted by UIC lo oonducl the ~":t~· ~'"\Ir lllo GlllJ : on,.lho,loont 11~1 ... ofCicla!al'lll~ .... ~~ rJ:ldo'llf.= ~·~ "'i:!:.!: ment l\ljKll · ond ... , IO•trn-• Pldlllo, a ........ taUvi or ment In ICIUll O)IOl'ltlon. the IO ..... o1 the 11111 o1 THE . M'111Co, , . ClllOWDID lwo-doy The 11'11 lbe men govern II schedulo lacludu 1 villt to under \l'lllllllCloua I r o w I h School Board Backs '"'lllU!t. .--. to 1\11111 °"' ~ l•••~ly), Nt111bllll..ii, bu -Ila population increaae Ir om to,000 10 years ago lo 111111,000 today, for ~umple. Other counties represented 11'1 Toluc1,-N1uo1tp1n 1 Tlelntp111U1, At l11pln, £c1tepao, CU1uUU1n, 'tt•· coceo. Coloelco Ind T9ftln. clnp. . , 12 'til xnias WJ1u10111 new s gift idea! :=: '::.C::. 3-Mood Portrait Gallery. ....... STATUUMT •• r;-fd1aw111111 ~ •• •111 lllnf-Give o ''Personality Ponel11 thot captures all aspects of yotJ- ,J,:O~l{''-111 •:~l"'~ or one you l~ve. Not ~napshots, but three different original ,.,J~ c.~~"' Mtttl!yit, 1,111M mood ·portraits professtonolly captured in Life.Color® and ~ 1~~ ':'.:.i,. '**"..,. _.," handsomely. mo.tted. Come in or coll today, and we will ,_ ...... hov.• them m lime for Chrislmos. $9 •• 9.5 (Frome oxtro.J Tlll1 ,,,....,_, tllM wlltl fM Co111ttY (kirk of 0r""9 County M r ,._..,._ :911, ~ 'fl.. iilfiall % ttiW 1t7t Wll,1,.IM\ I . ST JOtlN, COUNTY • JIIJl'rT\mm_7t:_q ~~~M'ft'\J' CLERIC, I r atwny J. MacNa. ~ -WI.....___~~ JJL.aJ.~\JUI'~ ,f.' ~. r.~ .. ~ .. .., .:.~ ...... _____ H_U_N_r_1_N_G_r_o_N_BE_A_c_H_._PH_o_N_E_a_•_2 • ..:3.:.3.:.l 1..:·_oo_:__· .:.2.:.u:_ ____ _ ' ) . gif~s. .. .. .. .. ' .. .. PRINCE I MATCHAIELLI WIND SONG 'GIFTSE1· COTY IMPREVU SPRAY 1 MIST . ,. ,, ' . ColotM .,,., Milt • '•rfMlftl RIV LON INTIMATE CLASSIC -GIFT SET 9Proy Mitt ind ~Ultlfts Powdtf ~700 I •3so , ' • CHAMPAGNE IOTTLE FOAMING BATH OIL • ~7e BONNEiftt ·1.006 LOTION ·SANTA PACK APRIL SHOWERS DUSTING 1 POWDIR • • ' . PUB BRUT ."33" COLOGNE GIFT SET 5 ·0Z. Splash·On lotion and Spray Deodorant $500 -~,.' • Regular, Oriental Lime and Oriental Spice Alter Shave HIGH SEAS AFTER SHAVE LOTION Our PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT is oplft to serve you 7 days a w11k. Extended Christmas Store Hours . W1tkd1ys 9:30 To 10:00 Sundays ~ 0:00 To 10:00 HoVI your prescriptions filled while you shop 111 of Troosury's wonder· ful volu11. the 1amn~~§.~,~[.Y e HUADA MIW 11000 C~llwor1! St e WOODLAND HILU 21500 Y:Clory ~,; e llYllllDI 3510 T~er e SAMU AH """',_ .. ,Ir' . . --~St e TOHAllCI Stlo\•lil snd HIW1hom1 e LAllWOOD Ca!IOI St .. Pao-I 81"-e IUIH IAH -Ill °"'Clliloopo • OIAHI Garden Grwt lllvd. llld llllllCMll« 1ahM'41 Clttlet,... Sten htn. W..W.,1ttJl1e 1tlM.....,. 1Mt Tt lttlt - ·'· ' . .. I' c * * * * * * -* * .. ' . ~ .... ., .. . . ' , t . . ' FOR THE BRIGMTEST CHRISTMAS MR ••• . ' CHOOSE GIFTS AT THESE FINE SHOPS ••• ' ' ' . * Sav-on Drug * Richard Bennett, Ltd. * * Market Basket * Rion Hardware * * * J~n ~&hl " .. . ' • * W estcliff Shoes * Dick Vernon's I * * Bank of Ameriea * La Galleria * * Hickoq Flµ'DIB * Dr. Lon Roy Elder * ) -* Cobblers Bench * Montgomery Cleaners -* • * Paper Unlimited .. * Halliday's Men's Store * •.• ,,. ~ •• -:.~.~ ... 1,,.-. r.,.· -. . . • _Mond.lf---"-. _-._m_11er_1_;_1, l_m_.;__ ___ -DAILY PILOT • • •one-stop' shopping at its finest! • • • Veta's Intimate Apparel -• Charles ·H. Barr Jewelers Playboy Hair Stylists The Storekeepet W estcliff Plaza Barber's Humpty Dumpty Children's Darrell's Dedrick Tux Shop Westcliff Plaza Shell .. • . l . ' AVOID THE • ' WRAP1ACE . SHOP NOW! FREE GIFT WRAP At Molt of ·Ow Stores ' VISIT SANTA MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, ~o A.M. TO NOON, 1 TO 4 P.M. & 6 TO 8 P.M. -SATURDAYS 10 TO 12 & 1 TO 6 P.M.,... SUNDAn 11 A.M. TO 4 P.M. . I ' I • • I • • ' ! JI DAILY PILOT s Monday, Otttmbtr 11, 1m Farah's the Target PUBUC NOTICE ,ICTfTIOUS •VI Ill llAMI: ITAT9M9KT T,_ follow1111 ,..._ ill .... ..._ ••: Labor Organizers Aher Clothing Chief OA.VIO IT•WAltT A.llOCIATtl. 11»1 .,...,.. ... Ml, Ht.llltlncrtori lkectl. c.llfortrlki ..... O."'d $1tW9f1, tlW ...........,. Me.. 1d. Hl.lnllr.9100I "-fl. ~Mttmle ,.,... Thlt IM'-& .. belnt ~ 1¥ .. ........ , EL PASO, TeK. (AP) -by company eslimate. 94 per- WIIllam "Willie" Farah Ls the cen\ ol the workers art Mex-taratt of a labor or111nizlng lean-American and a large move that some observers ~jority are women. predict could change the (ace THE UNION says that the or an entire industry. The Amalgamated Cloth1ng El Paso area, spread along a 'Vorkers Union ls seeking to mountah va!Jey across the represent employes at the Rio Grande from Juarez, has Farah Manufactrrlng Co., one the largest unorganized supply of the nation's leading prod-or clothing worken in the ucers of men's and boys' country. some 18,000 to 20,000, slacb:. ol which only 2,200 are said to be under union contract. "IF THEY CAN crack Farah is the city's largest Farah," says an out 1 Ide employer, hiring about 14 per- observer. "they can organize cent of lhE. local work force in anywhere In the country. He's four factories. The company the big one. The tough one. says ii traditionally has paid And that's what they 're aft-among the highest wages in er." the area. There have been numer"O'lS 'nlt starting wage ls $1. 70 legal etinfrontations a n d hourly, 10 cents above the federal rulings, most favoring minimum. but sub-standard by Farah, 53, the president and Wlion estimates. chief executive of the com-ln some respects the com- pany founded by his father. pany seems an unlikely unfon The union has now organlud a target. na.Uomrlde boycott of Farah Plants seepi clean and well producla. ;Ugl\!ed and mlllic Ls piped in. Neither side sho\11S signs or Rot meals are available for 70 yielding. "It Mr, F a r a h cents. BenefltJ lncl'llde free bus service, free coffee and ~ rweet rolls at breab and a 'If the11 ea• f11'9ek Farah, tk!f -'"'lfaRi~e liltt1• ..,.._I• the eevn- tr11.' chooses to fight for five of 10 year3, as he's stated, so Is the union," said Ant onio Sanchez, the union's joint board manage,· in El Paso. Says Farah: "We're doing the right thing. We're going to v.•in. It's that simple." ' THE STRUGGLE began last May In a walkout affecting Farah plants in El Pa.!IO, San Antonio, Victoria; Tex., Albu- querque and La1 Qouces, N.M. Union leadert claimed 'bat 3.000 .:>f a total work force of 9.500 left their jobs and they are trying to increase the number. The company said less than 2,000 walked out and claims some have returned. fne clinic. Major. medical beneDts are available after a J"ll', as are pension and p<Ofit·sharing plans . S'l'RJXE ·LEADERS said such benefits are Irrelevant Free coffee and transportation would be unnecessary if wages were ltighet, they said. Labor boltd mana ger Sanchez said the workers want two key1 thinp: '!Job security -if done an illjustlce, they !hould have some reco1Jrse. They live in rear or when their last day or work-is coming.- " And di,!llily -they can not Ill'! anything. They cannot express themselves. The com· pany has taken their human dignity away from them." Farah said the "dignity" charge is groundless and that job security is inherent. "It cos_t.s us thousands of dollars to train the worker," a spokesman said. "We invest Dtvt• Stewert .-.... --•· to fund t.1. Tlll1 lle""""'I flled .... tM C-'Y WIUllOIA.UWI more IU. Cieri! .. °"""" (CMlfY Oii o.c. .. 1m retlr::nent. We a150 Invest a wrt.t.tAM E. St JOHH, c-'Y on. -,. lot of tJme and effort 1n .._.., "· ~. °""""'· "'*' teaching the worker skills and "u11tl111N °"'l'IO' coe1r DtllY '41of, ~ 11, "· "· 1,12 .. """""' 1. In providing hiin work aids so nn am-n that he remains productive throughout his work life. PUBUC N011CE "TO DISCJJARG E th C FICTITIOUS •UllNISI pl . II r th NAME STATEMENT ... ,. , , e m oy.: v1rtua y or no o er T"-1o1row1nv per'°"• ,,, Ool'lll th t d h. dur t111"'""1 •1• ~eason . an 0 eny I~ -CAPE AIRE co .. 1.-w Wll-. 1ng retirement the benefits we cc.1e ~. j:e111on1L• 92671 Wllll•m T. Rouielle, t30t2 CaplltrMO ~ ~ H""'ntton hed1, Cllltomle ' I.Ille C. Miiier, 1m M.ul Clrde, I II Cc.le Miu, c.llfoulle ' ~GU te !IOU Tllf1 ill.ls.I-L1 being c.ond\lctfd oY I I ' h L wtrwrllllp, p a n -t e u o ti wi1u.m T. Roct1e11e ' k This 1i1tWMflt Hied wUt! t1111 """"" rott 'IS not tDOr "• C!e<k of Or111111 County on Dec. 1, ltn, itag. And it's not :'~~~:~. ~~~GU!llY c~ ~ 't' • .,, .. gostll O. PuDllslleo! Or•rio-CG11t o.nr •11o1. 0.C.mDer 11, It. 2S. 1'12 Ind J_,-, 1, ~191l 3el-1'.1 have been providing during his tenure . . . would be, to say PUBLIC NOTICE the least, unprofitable and un--~ *"" conscionable.'' i~~T::~:'c~.~r~=~~~:~: The central issue remai ns TM 1o11aw1ng ~· hlYe 1bencklrled . ,. In. UM of ttM ffctl!I-bu1lnen neni. the boycott, !ls success or CATALINA ISL.AHO CLUB •I 1221 w .. t rail,,.... Co.111 Hlgllw1y, N.....-pcrt a•• e 11, ... "'' Cellforn11. The company in its Se~ Cro1 compeny, 1 Pod street, san • • i; Fr1nclKo. C•llfoml• tember s t at e m e n t i.O s11bGI a.v hl.nd c1Ub. inc.. 1ti1 shareholers, reported a loss ~~~';..O:~' Hltlrtwer. N....,. eekh, for the quarter ended July 31 This lll.lslnese WH conductecr b'f • I •• ed 'th g-r•I PlrtMr.nlp. o ..,,051,000, compar WI a ••lbtll a.., hl•nd c1uta. inc. profit of $1,741,000 a year ago. r.='W:· O'i<eete, Sales dropped to $41,163,000 ••Mu fro $52 239 OQO Pultllshed Orenot COM! Oeltr ~llol &rite iead'ers.col1tended the ~,"';rnber t1 •fld 0tarn11er "' ~ &Jump in sales proved the ef-PUBLIC NOTl- fectlveness of the boyoott. And "'6 Sanchez said earlier this.1-----.,~«~---- month the "boycott has now Fl~~~o~:A:~:,,i:N2:s taken full force ." TM followlng corporerlon 11 doing F h , II l!r'b •~..I business '" ara partia y a I Ui.cu TIUD-H--TRU Tov Co., 113S E .. , !he drop in sales to disruption Tru11ow A.,... FuUerlon. Cellklrnl•, '2631. (A CelllOl"fll• CDrJIOl"ellon) caused by the walkout. But he Thi• buslneu 11 conduc•f'd by 1 e«· Id h . r I lh llOl'llion. sa t e ma]Or ac or was e T1ue»1-T11u TOY co. obsolessence of finished goods Girth G. e>.rd.,... d lol . I . Seocrtoterv, Treawrer an raw mater ..._ 11.ven or1es Thl1 it1ttmenf w11 lllf'd w1111 tne caun· resUJting from an un-ly Clerk of Or1no1 Covnty on 0.Cernber I, 1911. precedented fashion change F.21ts1 rrom -ven to knit goods Publl~l'H!d °"'"" C011st Daltv Piiot, ""' • ~emtltf' II, II, 2S Mid J.-ry 1, 'THERE IS UtUe tangib: I'm ~IWJ evidence that American con-PUBLIC NOTICE sumers are paying attention to FICTITIOUS aus•N•H the boycott effort," be told trlAM• STAT•MaNT . stockholders. ,,,n. 1°11-!na PMIOll 11 dOlnt 11us1- Later he told an in· THE GREENHOUSE, lliD Gltnntyre, · "I •-ti Lffllnl &eKll, c111tornta nui terv1ewer : can 1o1:: you P•""'41 Lour,. Bur1. 1v Hloli °""'· plain -the boycott is not Leourwi lttldl. C.llfornle '26.Jl . g Tllli Wslneu Ii o.lrog c.Drlducled by In working. And it's not gom 1nc1rlltdua1. to." P•rnel• LOlllH eiort Thi• itel-1 fl led w'ltll IM County Cllrt. of Of'ange COlll!ty °"' Oeumb« I, ltn. Wll.l.IAM E. ST JOHN. COUNTY Farah said uiller this month that "DIW mierl are coniing in at 1 ftcord peee" and the company WU in- creasin& production penoanel bya-1,• Fonll'o 'lll9!lt,... Iii .. Gateway ~ here, wt.re, Ford Get,s Increase OK for 1973 MOfhls Cl.ERK. Br hwrty J. Mlcklox, Oepuly, ~-21'56 -PuMllNd or.,. Cont Olllty Piiot. Otcembe!' 11, la, 2:$, end .1""'9ry I, 1m MIUf PllBUC NOTICE -lltcnncM.IS autlM•SS DISENCHANTED MUTUM. ''*D IALllMAM, Tt11r1 b Ml AM-. 2 Openlrlp llllW ..... 111ble to ,..,.... _,, • h~lrlf prMuet, not ,,. l«i.cl lly fhe, 1todc !Nrtl-'. fl•r ••1 Cll W• -... w o.. OIMll -mt) lltfe'1 DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) - Ford Motor Co. will increase 1973 model prices by an a-of l&U5 lodl!Y,.of. ficals aald. The 1.5 percent price tn- crease ranges from $29 on the •• • •••i•••············· • , MA.Ma STATEMENT The folloWl119 pe!'SCM 1r1 dol11111 Pinto two-door sedan to $190 busl-"' On the Cont.mental "·-k IV CATALINA ISL.ANO CLUe, 1221 Wffl PULi • c-t Hlvtrw'•r· .......,,,,.. BI. c". Ford had asked the Price c.~=··, . ., 1.i1nc1 c1w inc: 1221 Commission for an average Wes1 c-' H1911w.., ... ...;_, i.K11, -. bu h Id can1omr1 IA C.llfllml• COfl!Or•llonl ,._ mcrease, t was e to 1ntema"-' e.., c1u111, lncOf'IXll'•ied, the smaller figure 1617 wntcHff 0r1.,.,. suit• 205, Newport • l •acll, C•ll"'l'l• IA C: • 111 or n I• Officials said the request did ~1r'~'?""1· 1 eonc1ue1e11 bV 1 not include a profit margin for NrtntnNP'."" • • venw• dealers and added that the in-BAI.BOA BAY ISL.ANO • DALE CARNEGIE COURSES 1 Ct.UI, INC. , • «:n!ase approved by the com-er: Ttiomet J. o•tr:Mfe, mission does not cover the full Thl• .~ .... ,. .. w1111 "" c-• • cost.. involved in meeting new ty C11r1r. ot or.,. c-.tv on Nov. '· 1m. • government safety and pollu-iQnt Clillferlll• Ttltt c....-v "'""' • • • • • • YOU QWl'IT TO YOURSELF II * O."lop T,......"' Per.. I Self Ce11rid,,;;, * l11cr•••• Meth·•tiOfl•I Allillti•• * De.,elep Mere Efffftlft Speeking AbilitiH DeJ W.... Klflt & A..W,_ • • • • • ... _, '" 8334111 _., • • • ·CLASSES NOW STARTll'IGI • •••••••••••••••••••••• l"'"11lat:1at1 Tormenting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoids) Tissues Promptly Relieved In many cues Preparation H gives prompt, temporary relief from IUdi pain and itching and actually helpo ahrink swelling of hemorrhoidal ti&- suee camed by inflammation. dredl of palimla obowed tliil tobetnaoln--Ja fact, maa,y doctors, tbem· eelvea, me PnP'ftlion ff9. or recommend II for llMlr falD. files. Preparation. H olntnwwt or 1Uppos.itoriea. Testa by doctors on bun- personal radio pager • TONE or VOICE • LOW COST • NEW. COMPACT l'OCICET UNrT • t\IC)NTH to MONTH UNTAL IASIS • t1::,,(.f ( 1111"1 .' ll'l)ifl l l 11 l'IH J~i 'i ! ! ; \ : ( I , 4ttlo._.,._ ...... PtttllDJ II lion standards 1• ktll .... ...... • IMI• ~ C ....... ftllfl Ford said prices to deaJers Put1111Md °':::' Cottr 01ur Pr1o1, on all firm retail ordera signed ~;;r'* 27 0ecem11er " 1~~ before midnight Sunday will not refitct the i n c r e a s e ,, 1 ___ PVB __ u_c_NOTJ __ CE __ _ reprd]eM of when the .:ars are deliverec[ Profits Up At Thrifty ,tcTTTtOUS aus1N•ss NAM• nAT•MEMT Tiie tollow1ng penon1 1r1 dOlrtD WMMs• ": l.EO'$ RESTAURANT, um H1r110r. CM!• Mele, cent. 92627 JoM H. ll'ld Mery l.OUIH Fry, Wt Vldorl1, Nt. G-4 Coste MIM, C.Hf. "'" Tlll1 bull-b being conducttd by I~ dlvklwoli. Jolin H. Fry 11111 lttfemlnt flied Willl Ille C-'Y Cl.rt: of Orainpe Cauni., on : HOY. JO, ltn Wit.LIM\ E. ST JOHN, COUNTY Cl.l!!ltK, Br B...,.rlr J . Mlddcl•, Deputy. Durin th r· I h' h 11t11•1 g e ISC8 year w IC PublllNll 0••1!111 Coell O•llY Pllo!. ended August 31, 1972, sales D1cem11er ,, 11, 11. :zs, 1•12-330ll·72 and profil.s or Tbrifty Drug PUBLIC NOTICE Stores Co. Inc. exceeded allq----------- prevlous records, according to FICTITIOUS IUSINl!SI Leo MAME STATEM•NT nard Straus, Prealdent. T"-to!lvwlno ~''°" 11 c1o1no 11us1n11, ... Sales reached a new high or . LANCE METCALF & ASSOCIATES. $388,387 000 compared with 1932 So. H•rDOr a1v.s .• cmt• MeH n.2• I . l.1~lol G. MetceH, 7021 Wl'ltlllll' $356,191,000 for the previous AY9., w111111er-9060:! Year ID •--••• or 9 Oj per l hll IM/Slnns 1$ being CondUClltd by 1n ' W\;I "C • " lndl"ldUll. cent F11cal 1972's new sales ~onrot o. M1tu11 rd Tl'll1 11•'-11 lllltd wllll t1111 County reco re~rese1,ts the 43rd Clerit r11 Orenge County °"' "°"'· :rr, 1•n consecutive year in which WILl.111.M E. ST Jo+iN, COUNTY • Cl.ERK, By B1Yerly J. Meddox. sales bave 1ncrer.sed over the ~tnu Previous year Publlslwd °"'""' coe11 0.11, Piiot, • Deo:.emtitr '· 11, 11, is. ••n :r:in-n PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING llOS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lt>ll "'• 8Nrd or SvoervlMn °' Ol"•noe C°""'ty, Cell!wnlt, WUI receJY9 Sllled bids UP lo 2:DO o'clOdl: P.M. on Monde.,, ttle ltlll d1r of Declmber, 1t11, lfl tllt oftlce of the Ct"" of 1111 801n:I of s-- .,._.., '"' floor, C-tr AdmlnltlrlllOn Bulldlng, 5U No, Syi:ernore SI., t.enr. ....... C•lllomllo, ., wfl k ll Urn9 Hid bkls Wiii be Plll>fltlr ........ end reed IOI" IM fllllewlng; W. E. ST JOHN Countr Ciel'll .,_. n.etllc.IO Cieri! ol 1111 BOlrd of Supervl-. of Or•noe CGUnfY, Clll10ml1 By JIJnt Al•••ndlf 0ot11111r ,.IJblltlltd Or•IW• COiltl Olltty ,.llOI, OK.,,.,,,. •• 1, I, f, 10, 11, 12, l.J. 14, IS, 1'7t """ j •• Wall Street • • • Fifteen out of every 100 Americans tqday own stock. > li~ely We couldn't prove it, of course, but it that the percentage is even greater • 1n the Or- seems here ange Coast area .•. and it's growing every day. That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago, to be the first newspaper in Orbrige County to bring its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high speed · wire services. We're still doing it in every home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. Wall Street's computers "talk to" computers DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate • In the of 12 more than 1,000 words per minute. It takes only move the entire New York and American minutes to Stock Exchange reports from the ca n yon s of Wall Street to the typesetting machines of the DAILY PILOT right here on the Orange Coast. And when the use technology finds a way to beat that speed DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the it to bring record, first to When it comes readers "today's action today." to financial news, the one that means business is the DAILY PILOT I ·' ) . It • • • • • .,..~ • .. • • .. .. "I .. • • M-~---~---~-~-~JUOBM,._._~1SM---~-~-~--MM111DlP.•M"11lfl•~---------, 'Tis The Season . . • ... But What's The Reason? In fact, here are 5 good reasons for shopping early: 1. Stretching out the Christmas shopping season gives retailers a chance to fundion efficiently. When clerks are less harried, shopping is more pleasant for everyone. more 2. Many retailers offer their really special "specials" early in the season to public to shop early and to help alleviate the last-minute "panic" buying. encourage the 3. Just in case your favorite Christmas gift merchant has underestimated your enthusiasm for the season, a lo.nger period of shopping gives him a chance to re-order popular items so he doesn't have to disappoint shoppers later in the season . 4. When you take more days to shop you can do the iob more thoroughly, visit more stores, I compore prices and quality and be more so tisfied with the gifts you finally decide to buy. • 5. And there's no secret about if, the Christmas shopping season is the biggest sales period of ' the year for most retailers. Support local merchants now and you'll . help make them I enough profit to keep their prices reasonable all year long. (And prices will never be more reasonable than they are now.) This 11iessage presented as a public service on behalf of our friends and yoµr&, the retail merchants of the Orange Coast Area, by the DAILY PILOT Watch For Special Sections Filled With Early Christmas Goodies in the I • -· '' '\ ; , i I ' ' I ! ! l l I ! i l i I I ~ l r I l l ) ! ! ' ' , i ' . • • , • J2 DAILY PI LDT .Skippers Triumph ForCdM Corona del Mar High School skippers continued t h e i r domination of interse:!holastic sailing competition Saturday as Skip Beck, Phil'Green.and Don Wllttson sailed their team to a 1+2-1 series in the Southern California Interscholastic S a i I i n g Association R e g a t t a on Newport Bay.· '111e regatta was sailed in Shields Clas.s sloops in light winds. Summary: 1. COM HIGH SCHOOL (Beck, Greene, Wattson) 1-4-2· 1, 7Yi pis. 2. NE WPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL -(SimpsOn, Mais) 1-3-3-2, 8~. 3. CATALINA ISLAND SCHOOL (Rose) 3-2-1-4, 9~. 4. UNIVJ;;RSITY H I G H SCHOOL (Mark Gaudio I i+a- 1, Ml. 5. cosrA MESA HIGH ~SCHOOL (Smallwood ) 4-2+3 13. ' II :100 Get Yachting '!!raining Nearly 700 persons received direct instruction in California International Sailing Associa- tion programs during the first nine months of operation, ac- cording to the organization's quarterly report. The programs included 25 appearances at clubs and associations throughout the sta te. MOl'lday, Otetnibtt ll, 1972 f,. 1'1. BOJd Armadillo . Can Be Housebroken It's now an established fact that blacks are more suscept.ible to frostbite than are whites ... NO. THAT extremely swift beast known as the fisher doesn't go fish- ing, ever • . , OUR PROPER JOB CLUB S<CTOtary lim Helen Flatt and -Sydney .Sharp as onetime .members of the Memphis Opera 'lbellter ••. OIJlEST PURE BREED of cal Is !be Ab}'ssinlan. Youngesl, the Rex ... CONFIRMED Aue> is lbe claim thaj professional b a· s s players and drummers do indeed tend to become moderately bard of hearing. • IT IS THE MAN in the construction business who is apt to switch jobs most often, that's widely known. Recent studies ....,..,. firm it. But they slx>w the salesman and the barber run a close second and third among the job switchers. It's still true the average working man, whatever his age, stays on one job orily 3.9 Years. _, • FATHERS IN WAITING -In the . waiting room for expectant fathers 'at a San Francisco hospital, I'm told, hangs a small hand· lettered sign which reads: "'lbere are 1,035 holes in each tile, 510 squares in each light, 16 scre"!s in each fixture." HORSE RACING, that's the No. 1 sport, some say. Because more people pay money1 to see the ponies run than .to watch any other game. No, football, that's the No. 1 sport, others contend. Because more people follow it on television. Not so, swimming is the No. 1 sport, many claim. Because more people participate in it. Take your pick, sir. WHAT'S SHOPLIFTED in the month of December average out at $7 per item. That's overall. But what's shoplifted in the month of December by store guards aver- ages out at $25 per item, studies show. THE CLEAN ARMADlU.O -Q. "Can an armadillo be housebroken?" A. Can indeed. Feed an armadillo one meal a day about 9 p.m., treat it right, and it'll tum into a dandy af. fectionate pet. YES, THAT DOG PERFUME, lmown as Kennet No. 9, is on sale in a New York sporting goods shop again this year. This leaps to mind because a ·client asks if I ever acquired another dog s i n c e the sad departure of ofd Smoky. Certainly did. Three dogs, in fact. A coop le of dal· matians, named Barney and Ben, with looks. And a border collie, named Molly, with brains. As for the notion any of these superior beasts might wear perfume, no, not soon. The ladyfriend and I have not yet Wbogganned down to siirh 11: depth of senilitly. Maybe later. Address mail to L. M. Bo yd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New· port Beach, Calif. 92660. "CISA directors felt the operating costs for reaching so many people were well within the range or expectations and.'========o;============='I are pleased to report that the educational and training prir grams will continue." the report said. WITH THE SUMMER months of frenzied activity fading, CISA is restructuring its program to meet the needs of the winter yachtsmen. A ful1 time lecture program in the evenings is now available to interested salling clubs. The format of lectures will be similar to those conducted during summer, but now all of CISA's appearance time will be chaMeled toward this ef- fort. The unpredictable winds and weather, and the multiplicity of sailors' interest during the winter has prompted the board of directors to mothball the 420 symposi um programs until the weather wanns again in the spring. GRANADA HILLS 1&00 Clt~tswort" 51. l!ORRANCE $ep!ilve0a i111d Hawt!\ome WOODLAND HILLS 21500 V1t:tory Blvt LAICEWOOD Carson SL and Paramount Blvd. RIVERSIDE 3~20 Tyler SI. IUINA PAik Be.ich and Orangelha!Pt SANTA ANA 3~0 South Bri~tol St. ORANGE Garllen Crove Blvd and M!nc~ster Open weekdoy1 9:30 to 9:30 -Sund11y5 10 lo 7. THE '' O·BIT'' BUSUNE ALL IT NEEDS IS YOU I T • • • all you need Is a reason I For Jnlormatlon or bus schedules call "The Two-llff llu1 Line" at 547-6004 or wrtte to UI at 1126 E. Washington Ave., Santa Ana, 92701 I -· • • • • ANAHEIM 4+4 N. Eucl14 (714) 111.1121 exeitement es tee ' ~,-;, </" .~ ~;_;.., 0 ... /j/ hy estee lauder On Christmos Eve she'll unw rap the delici ous luxury of Estee . , . the firs t super perfume that cloaks her in enchanting, lirlgerirlg fragrance the moment jt 'touuhes ·her skin. Let her expflrience it in .man.y captiva ting ways . Estee Super Spray· Cologne, 10.00. Super Cologne, I 0.00. Dustin9 Powder, 8.50 • Body Lotion, 8.50. . Cosmehcs, 17 NEWPORT "'7 F•1hlo11 fll•H 171 4) 644·1212 HUNTINGTON IEACH 7777 Ed l11t•r AY•nue • 17 141 192·JJJI 0.8~~1;E, MALL OJ ORANWE lJOU'N, Tu1fin Sfr••I 17141 •-••~1111 s SHOP 9110 A.M. to 10:00 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY. SUNDAY ll iOO A.M. to 6:00 P.M. ,I ' I . .. I ' ............. ,/ ' CERRITOS 500 Loi c,,,1101 Mill tl 1-l) 160.0411 ~ • I I I e a b 0 I • v s t 1 r a 0 t l , I . • I • 0 • ' ' • : p • ; t . ' \ ! l I . . . • • . ~.. . .. • • • • • • • • •I • • Wante,. • . '-S'omeone to Listen ' Stories by LAURIE KASPER feelings and do role playillg. ot .. OtlilfY ~ .... '""' --'lbere also are required to spend time Even the community college campus -outside the class counseling in the 1tu-- which bustles with We from dawn into dent center. By cowuellng thtlr !ellow the dark -can be a lonely place. students, Ms. Harvey explatned, Jt Is If one kzloW! few othen: aod is yet un-easter for the students to develOp the familiar with the "system" there, prob-skills needed because "tbO rapport 11 lems of ll'onspo<talion, finances or Jove almost lmmedlately there." loom even larger in the student'• life, But the counse11 • .,. is m,_ than 8 class easily blocking his educational goals. ...oe 7" .. learning experience since It seems to He may stay in tchool and face failure - as well as the continuing frustratloo oC benefit both the student counselor and bis problems. He might also dedde the the student counselee, only solution is to "drop out." The idea for the class actually Or, he may oeek help. originaled when a student tutoring on A coonselor Is wlgned to each studen~ _campus reallied that those he was help. when he enrolls. But they &eem difncult Ing ...,.. bringing their problem! with to get to, cubbyholed ill the heel< part of them to the tutoring sessions. Re fell ill· an administrative office where an ad-tqutpped to help them in um way. vance appoinbnent Is usually required. Now, M$. Harvey says, her peer But there ls another, easier altematlve counselors can be of help with in- -new this semester -at OCC. formation regarding fmanclal aids, Now, all the student has to do Is walk tutorial service, or campus involvement, to the student center. referrals to staff members, getting STUliENT HELP There, at a table near the fireplace in the loun'ge, sits at least one other student from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m, most days, waitlng to help him. He'll be greeted with a cordial but in· ionnal invitation. "Hi! can I help you?" The otter dOesn't come from just any helpful student. He, or she, Is called a peer munselor, one of 25 enrolled in Psychology 125, Peer Counselor Training, taught by Moota Lee Harvey. It's being offered for the first time this semester. Acconllng to the catalog description, the course offers '.'a practical tntrodu~ tioa to the knowledges and skills that will enable students to serve as peer coonoelors. They will explore the full range of g u l d a n c e services avail- able through the c o 11 e g e, and will develop limited skUJs useful in the counseling relationship." The listed texts are simply the college catalog, schedule of classes and student handbook al~gQ. students are as.sj.gned other readings. In class, they discuss counseling ethics and techniques, examine stages in the counseling contact, talk of their reactions to rounseling as well as their personal through registration, petitioning classes, locating a place to live or just a friendly . willingDess to listen, conlldenUally, to problems of fellow students. Some students come to them simply because they want to talk. Most of those who comei the instructor and students lay, are seeking information. But beneath their request they say, is usually a problem. CONFID&NTIAL No~ of the counselors )V(lllld cite speciftc examples of the problems b~t to them because "It's con- fidential." But they say it can be an)'lhing. Pam Moffet~ a 22-year-old In her &ee· ood semester. wasn't surprised at the problems of-her fellow students, just at "how deeply it affects them." Some, she said, seem to have completely run out of answers and others give up wtthciut Jryillg. But her experiences have "made me realize all of us are basically the same . • • WbateYer you _ think a b o u t personally, most of it is shared." Pat Hammond, another peer counselor, also has become more aware of his own feelings and been able to relate to people better. "Now I know it's alJ right to ex· preu how I'm feeling ... You can't be yourself," he explained, "unless yoo're totally yourstU." He lint went .to , Coast because of the compu1'r facility but since found that he llkea psycholot!l' and~-now considering continuing his edbcation to be a counselor or therapist. · Pam, too, is a psychology major unsure of her future goals. But she likes the class because she is actually able to c:ounael and help people. HELPING PEOPLE 14·Yoo never really know if )!Oil helped someone," she cautiooed. But she thiriks she bas. "I like helping people. It's very rewarding to me that I've been a heJp to someone else," echoes Alice Goss, tfho shares her sophomore standing with her son. And, she added, "It's helped me ex· pand my vision and I like this." She's -a sociology major who aJso has thought <>f counseling in the future but has made no plans. "Whether I use it speciftcally or not really doesn't_ matter," she uplained, because "basically it's understanding people." Peer counselors like Frank Doe mer (right) are trained to handle problems of fellow OCC students. Human Service Field Growing ''Today, more than any other time, there is an increue in need · for tbl j>raraprotesstona.I in a v a r.I e ty of Careen," according to Moota. Lee Harvey, counselor and psychology m. sln.lctor at Orange c.oast College. To prove her point, she pulls from her files a reprint of a speech enUUed "the Paraprofessionals Are Coming! '!be Paraprofessionals Are C.Oming!" and a copy ol a !acuity bulletin asking "Where Is OCC's Place ill the Crisis ill Higher Education?" '!be two recap facts and figures of col- lege puates who can1 he placed In ' jobs even though the need for trained : penonnet exists. 1be problem is the lack : ol practical (vocational) training ln the : colleges coupled with potential em- ; pioyers' budgetary consideraUons. • , ASSIS'rS AND ASSUMES : But a paraprofess.ional, Ms. Harvey et- , plains, is a per30b who bas an initial • em'lunt of prof~lonal training which : enables him to wort alongside the pro-, fessional , assisting him and often even ,.. .... -of bla -A• -licensed vocational nurse and paramedic are two etamples she cites. But what she is intereste.d in is the h1lm;an services aide. She and her fellow faculb' members are "hoping to have" a -year Assnclale ol Arta degree pro. gram at OCC nen fall to prepare tbla kind ol paraprolesslooal. Such a program ls no longer new in education. lliJrlng 1980, there was just ooe ill operatloo ill the United States but this fall there wero 17ll. "'!be need Is that great for people who lulve the personal • qualities ... " Ms. Harvey said. The program, she ezplained, will give a per>Oll training ill psycbology, human relations and counseling so.at the end oC it he will be able to move, into a variety of settings and function to a belpillg rela· tionship. School counseling services, social service settings, family serviee centen, mental health clinics, the probation · for Lbe program. deparlmel_>l,aod ~ Oftl<O .,.. ·-«. . A penon going through this program, the aettiq_aa 11k>'name a few." wbere:1ucb . ..&llp~selor thinks, will have an ad- a person might be employed. VBQ.tage over the person with a bachelors degree. SURVEY "Often we talk to someone with a And · aJthough they haven't -really bachelors degree in psychology and he surveyed the community about the need has had no clinical training to develop yet, the)' will because "programs are not skills for working with people." His is instituted just because the faculty thinks primarily· an academic background, she it's a nice idea." explained, and he doesn't receive the They are, however, collecting job of. practical training until he's at the fers. Huntington Beach ~l Q!_strict, graduate level. for example, bad a job with a descrfptlOn The: paraprofessional course differs in "abnost identical to tbe training we would · that it is specifically related to a career. provide." It called for two yeani of col-Students will receive the practical ex- lege with an emphasis in the behavioral perlence in training as well as in- sciences and would have paid a salary of temships both on and off campus. $551 . 1be practical aim may force higher The program has not··been approved by education to change but she also feels it the administration yet. Before tbey seek may serve the stuc!eot as a testing this officially, they must have the okay of ground for his choice of career. a course in group processes and Whatever he decides about the field, dynamics. 1ben, with the oew peer she said, "He found something out that counseling class and the ·other. psychology he might not have found out until four or courses, they'll have the package ready five years later." I . Santa s Job Adopted By AUJSON DEERR Of .. DdY ...... 'teff "Dear Santa, I bave tried to ho a good boy. I would like you to bring me a bike. ; Thank you very much for what you can ; bl'lng me. P.S. My footer sister helped ; me write this because I don't know bow ; to write." · Many letters like th.ls one are Jost in · the shuffle of holiday mall. But this year some of them are being routed to Santa via a Huntington Beach , Post Office Bai. It belongs to lbe Orange 1 County Adoptive Parents Association. The bicycle this little boy gets may not be a deluxe model -or even new -but 1 It will he a bicycle, and perlulpe the only gift he gel! this year. "Adopting" foster children f ~ r ' Chris!ma! was beg\111 by the OCAPA about five years ago. Directing letters to Santa to the P.O. ho1 began this year, so that the group hu a means of finding out what fo.ster children want for Chrlslntas. members look to tbe needs of foster children. Members provide s t u f f e d animals and dolls for little ones' birthdays. Two playrooms equipped with play therapy equipment for the hard-to-place child Wett provided by the group at the Orange County Adoption A g e n c y facilities in Santa Ana. PROJECI'S Proceeds from annual ftlnd-raiscrs are donated to the Easter Seal Rehabilitation Center for Crippled Children and adulls. Throughout the year, members speak to teenagers and expectant mothers about the possibility of adoption. But at Chrtstmastime, a d o p t I v e parenta turn lh<!lr thoughl! to their most precious gifts, theJr cblldren, at a Mason tiult's desJcned eapoclally for children. Their IJr:ocbdre states their 1 .. 11np for the -and year round. 0 We are adopt.Ive pll'ents who reached out and took our children Into our mn1 ANSWERS and hearta. '!be boa4 belween our Each cblld will get a return Jetter frorn cbiklren and OW'Oelveo la llJmg and Santa Claus. ....,ble. Adoptive parenta follow the letlm up "We feel """" IJ'alltucle to the parenl! with a pbone call to the roster partnl! to for their decision and trust, for they gave .1et correct ege, size and penonallly of us the opporfunJIJ to ' cnai. a eecure the child. Then a OCAPA member Is CO<> family enriroameol foe 'oor c~a' !acted to he Santa I~~ one cblld. Cost of growth._ _ _ 1111" ii tailored to W•wt members can al· "'Ibey .,. .. adopted but ,_ they art Jford. our own, 1s we are their parent&; not C There are 115 chlldrtn to bay lbr ' because we helOlli tocether lepUy, but 1lready, chairman Barbtra Kopptl el'-because we belo;:.g together lovlnc:ly." plained, and the Jlst k,.PI growing. And at Cbrlatir.ao their love utendo to Christmas lan'I the only thne OCAPA foster homes Jhroughout lbt -Y· • • • STIPHAHll, JINNIFIR AND HIATitlR TRIM TllEE ·, I • BEA ANDERSON, Editor Molldllr, Dtc:-Mr 11. 1m ,. ... lJ Green Tongue New Leaf Turned DEAR ANN LANDERS : Your florist in Chicago must have been making fun of the idea that plants flourish when people are nice to them. I got that notion when he said he only speaks to his plants when they speak to him first. Here's my experience and I swear on my ~andmother's grave, may her soul rest in peace, that it's true. I could never raise plants. I just accepted the fact that l didn't have a green thumb. A friend suggested that my plants died because they were lonesome. She told me to move them by the telephone so they could "get in on the ~versations." l did it and it worked like a charm. The little scrawny buds bloomed by that telephone. Pretty soon I had so many luxurious, bushy plants I decided to give a few to my mother. Al that particular time my father was drinking a lot. He used to come home gassed and roam around the house. Within a week every one of the plants died. Si.1 months later Dad went to AA . Mom asked for some more plants as an experiment. I gave her three. T o d a y those plants are magnificent! SHAMROCKS IN MICHIGAN DEAR ROCKS : Tbank1 for teUlng It. And wbat a story II b. I Dew AA 1avtd people, but I didn't realize they also nv- ed plants. Glad you wrote. DEAR .ANN LANDERS ' All adoptive parents must decide whether or not to tell their adopted children about their origin. You have repeatedly urged the parents to state the truth early and not rlak letting the child learn It lrom an outsider. I qree wholeheartdly. stW another problem arlset -lhe child'• curloslly about liJs . natural parents. Many adopted children start asking If lhey can see lbelr "real". mom and dad. They bulld up romantl< Images and sometimes become -.....i with Ibo idea that lhey must flnd these "woo- dorlul" people. Thi• can be avoldOO by preaentlhl an objective picture of lhe parents wheo lhe child Is young . Oo not use the worda Hreal parents" -say, Instead, ''the man and woman who gave birth to )'OU." "Real parents" suggest another warm I and loving mommy and rladdy exist somewhere, and an emotional at- tachment begins. If any adoptive parent doubts this, Jet them ask any 5-year-old why Mr. X is Johnny's daddy and he will list for you all the physical acts this man performs ror the boy. To a child, his father and mother are the people he can depend on · to give him day-to-day love and care. - WILMINGTON SOCIAL WORKER DEAR l\'IL: Your theory sounds sensi- ble and may accurately be termed "preveadve medicine." Thanks for writing. DEAR ANN LANDERS' Our neighbors are nice but they are procrastinators. For example: Their Christmas ligh13 ~ ' ~ .. ' ·~ "j were up through June. An old junk car was in their front yard for seven weeks. They stopped painting their house halfway through the job because they ran out oJ paitit. We 've explained that they are cheapen- ing the neighborhood. They keep prom- ising to improve, and they do -for a while. But then they revert to their old ways. ls it possible for a leOpard to change Its spol!! -DIZZGUZZTED. DEAR DIZZ: A lf!Optrd1 no. A bumu, S()metlmu. PetpW: can and do cbaq:e. bal I talpetl tbt hmdame•lal problem la that yoor eef&hbort wa llobt. Doa't ex· pe<I ""Y mlrad<t. Yoar best bet, 11 Ille -.1, ~klol blo<k, Is to i• OV<r and Jotlp -do wllol aeedt to he -Cin drugs be a friend In times of "streas! If you keep your held !otJether can they be ol help! Ann Landers' new booklet "Straight Dope on Drugs," l<ll"'ates the £act ll'Om the fiction . Get It ~. For each booklet onlerod, oend • dollar bill, plus a loog, oell-tdcltaoed, _,pod envelope (I! centa pootqe) to AM Ltnden, Bo1 3146, CblcoeO, Ul. IJll854. I J4 DAILY PILOT Benefit Dreams Told Premiere performances or "~tan of La litancha., will make an educational fund and expanded cowueling services possible dreams for two area organizations. Llfe Lines of the Right to Life League or Southern California will sponsor a benefit premiere of the film Sunday, Dec. 17, in the Fox Wilshire Theatre, Los Angeles. A champagne reception will precede the 9 p.m. showing. Orange County ro<:hairme» for ticket sales are the Mmes. ~ohn Hardy and · 8 .0 b er I CieJnicky, both of Fountain Valley. Proceeds will go to e1pand the organization's counseling work with µpectant mothers as well as needed medical care and financial assistance. 'nle film version of Doo Quixote's adventures will have 11.t Orange County premiere Thursday, Dec. 14, at 7 p.m. in the anedome 20 Theater, Orange. ~ the event will be the H&tbot Relorm Temple of Newport Beach. Cbairman of the event is Mrs. Arthur Samuels of Santa Ana. On her committee are the Mmes. Len Levy, Barry Spiegel, Ronald Marcus and Raymond Berke. Others are the Messrs. and Mmes. Yale Berltin, Stephen Berliner, Bernard Rome, Arnold Silverman and Judge and Mrs •. Morrie Matcha. Your Horoscope Tomorrow Gemini: 'Use Gentle Pressure TUESDAY DECEMBER 12 By SYDNEY OMARR Man:r born under Aquarius are brilliant, progresslve and capable of perctiving future trend!. These persons are drawn to Leo, harmonize with Libra and Gemini, have much in common with Aries and Sagittariu s. However, Aquarius should exercise cau- tion in dealing with Taurus and Scorpio. When it comes to making financial ar- rangements, Pisces seems capable of aiding t h p Aquarian. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Don't reach too far afield. If you do, be ready to pay for privilege. Key now is to utilize material at hand. You are capable and others know lt. You will be gl veo more re spon sl b 111 t y. Accept challenge. TAURUS (April ZO.May 20): Friends may have misgivings regarding investment. Heed your own ccunsel. Get rid of deadwood. Prepare for new period ahead. S t r e s s In- dependence, originality. Leo can play prominent role. Highlight creativity. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Obtain hint f r o m Tow-us message. Be ready for new startll in new directions. ~late, partner may not be seeing issues too clearly. Know It and do some personal checking. Accent is on career, ability to advance. CANCER )June 21-July 22): FolloW bunch. Your intuitive . To avoid ~isappolntment , prospecUvf arid.es ar~ reminded to have their weddin~ stories with black and whi te _gJossv ohoto- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that Ume will no1 be used. For engagement announcements It ts Imperative that the story, also accompanied by. a bla_ck and white glossy picture. be sul> rrutted six weeks or more before the wedding date. I! deadline is not !llet, onJy a story will be used. intellect work! overtime. You are able now to perceive what is to occur. A~t is on k>ng· d l s l a n c e communications., special writings. You have unusual allle!. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Di V-e r sl f y. Em phas.lze versatWty. ReJaUonshlp is due lo lntensffY, Budget requires checking. Reach money agree- ment with mate, partner. Young person is going through period ol self--deceptlon. Re- spond in mature manner. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Go slow. Be thorough in checking apparent minor mat· le.rs. Security could be at stake. Know this and insist on solid base. You get ba~king from those with experience. Expr.ss willingness lo loam. UBRA (Sept. 2.Hlct. 22): You gain more freedom . Don't abuse it. Be aware of prom· ises, obllgaUons connected with relatives. One who wants to communicate should be heard. Change OCC'Urs I n employment area. Don • t neglect health. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Overcome lemptation to be extravagant. You can please lov~ one wilhoul be i n g foohsh. Consult f a m i I y member before purchase of any luxury item. Strive ·ror more underalandlng at home. Taurm, Ubra persons are in- volved. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): See in light of ac- tuallty. It llUIY _,, u lhl>Uih details have been bandled. But 11 will be necess1ry for you lo review facts. Sbarpen sense ol. perception. See beyond the obvious. Obtaln sfsnlllcance at secreL CAPRICORN (Dec. D-Jan. 19 J: Extra respomlb!Hy is in· dicated. You may be getting message on wrong w I r e. Means take care with in- terpretation. Ideu that eeem perfect could lack substance. Know It end give yourself more time. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. J8); Finish rather than begin project. Find ways of reaching more people with product, message . Friend may not be too practical about y o u r money. Laugh at your own foibles. But protect possessions. PISCES (Feb. 19-Man:h 20): One who makes promise may not intend to keep it. Assert your needs. Don't r 0 0) yourself. Maintain independent stance. There is room at top -but you will have to mate your own way. Leo could be in picttlre. 1F TODAY IS YOUR BffiTHDAY you travel, study and experiment. You are in-- terested in wide variety of subjects. You teach, share knowledge and you will be more fulfilled in 1973 w:ltb September lndk:ated as yoor outstanding month of the com-- ing year. A champagne reception will feature motion picture and television personalities as well as sport figures. TIL_TING Wt_NDMILL -Life lines of the Right to Li I e League of Southern C~!~rrua will attend a Sunday, Dec. 17, benefit premiere or "l\1an of La Man- cha in Los Angeles. Orange County chairmen are Oeft to right) ?times. John I-lardy and Robert Cielnicky. To help fill requirements on both wed· ). • • • • • •, • a • a a a II!_• a a a • •-• • ~ din~ and engagement stories, forms are I • available in all of the OAILY PILOT offices •. ''INCHES•A•WAY'' •. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staf! members at 642-4321 . • • '-------------_:_:___Jj• MINERAL WRAP METHOD • C C I d • HOLIDAY oast oup es Recite We ding Vows,.F==;;;;;;1: SPECIAL DlllfleV : $, 0 OFF With Tlob Ad • • • • GREENHALGH- VanDRUFF Denise Anrt' Van Druff became the br ide of 'Thomas Lynn Greenhalgh d u r i n g ceremonies performed in !he linitarian Univcrsalist Church, Costa Alcsa. The Rev. Itobcrt Ross read the rites ror the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Van Druff of Huntington Beach and the son of Mrs. Barbara Ray of Costa ilesa. Attendants were M is s Shelley Rifkin, Miss Bunny David, Phillip Young, Sam Young and David Van Druff. MRS. GREENHALGH MRS. PARRISH The bride is a graduate ol Edison High School and is at· tending Orange Coast College. Her husband was educated in Los Altos. They \\'lll make their home in C.Osta ?i.1esa. - ANAHEIM Anaheim Cent.r NEWPOIT HACH fafhlon ltland 0 "?. _ .... d <>,., ;ii' -{ <!> <>).,, clogs .. _ 6'" ... · h ".i . em p atic . . . '1.u "° dramatic . . . "l - by Edouard Jerrold ·%~[? ,..o), I ; PARRISH-JENKINS iii ~I • 5 INCH LOSS ling for the marriage of AIR STEP-IERNAROO • M·-'·"e DeVusser and -KIMEL IEOW.t.Ros FIRST VISIT • • • The Costa Mesa home or 1'1r. and Mrs. Calvin Smith was the setting for the mar- riage or her daughter, Sus.an Kay Jenkins to Tom Leonard Parrish. Judge J, E.T. Rutter officiated. .1.......-;..u -GERlfi:RtcH -• Robert E. Leonheart. PF l"L YEA~. ICEDS IGUAltANTl!l!DJ • O.nu wur b'/' o.n..1n Jrl .... The Rev. Donald Gander "-°'~' ,_ • Ulno) lllC11£S-A-WAY • performed the rites for the ~'" a.. .., ct1111... • 1799 Newport Blvd., c .. 1. u.10 \... _ _, • d h 225 L 17ltl St. • """ aug ter of Mr. and Mrs. c-"-_ ..,_2771 PlfOH[ 645-8BgQ • Henry A1. DeVusser or HUD-ll~~~~~~~~~gi·~~~~~~~~~~~O:.~~~~~~~~: tington Beach and the son of "• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1'.1iss Julie Lynn Jenkins was the maid of honor. 'The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Parrish of Newport Beach asked his father to be best man. George Jenkins was the usher. The bride is a graduate or Newport Harbor High School and attended Orange Coast College. Her husband attended OCC .end the Church CoUege of Hawaii. The newlyweds will reside in Iiawaii. LEONHEART-DeVUSSER Sts. Simon and J u d e Catholic Church was the set· Mr. and Mrs. Bert E . Leonheart, also of the same city. Mrs. Lynn Gillelle was the matron of honor, a n d bridesmaids were Mrs. Henry DeVusser, Mrs. Ray Munoz and Miss Patty Leonheart. Melody DeVusser served as flo~ girl. Ron Farris attended as best man. and ushers were David McBride, Clay Morgan and Robert Corona. The newlyweds, b o t h graduates of Huntington Beach High School, will reside in Huntington Beach. Santa Slimmed J\.lany pictures of Santa these days are in keeping with the c urrent medical preachment: don 't get too fat. The National Associatio n of Greeting Card Publishers says Santa has been growing smaller and smaller - perhaps from sliding down so many sooty chimneys. The very first Christmas cards depicted Santa as a hearty, chubby old gentleman. ~le's still rotund but not what doctors , would c a l I grossly obese -as he was in long ago pictures. ONE-WEEK SPECIALS! DectM~ 11 to Dec1n •• 16 CO.t.sn!NE VITAMIN c ' 500 mt• AKobrk AcW 100 TABLETS R.,ut•r $1.69 JOO TABLETS Regular si.tt SPECIAL $ 1 e29 SPECIAL $2e99 ACMI JUICllA TOR R .. vlar tttt.ts VERY SPICIAU $99e95 VITAMIN E -D'ALPllA •00 """'· '00 SPECIAL e .. CaptulM, ... 5'.95 ~.99 MIU I. Eff HleH l'aORIH Tht very best theft 1 .. I LI. (1' Q.) R .. ular h.75 2 Lii. (a2 a .) R .. ular UJS 4 Lii. ('4 ea.) R .. ul1r $11.fS SPECIAL $2.49 SPECIAL $4e49 SPECIAL $7e95 Coastline Health ' Foods TUSTIN 1094 lnlne lhr4. N••r S•w·On .544-71)4 COSTA MUA HllltNll 1.,_,. 271 I. 17t" It. _, WOOL & RAYON 72" WIDE FELT All ,the fun colors for Christmas decorating. 37 REGULAR $2.98 YARD. Yd. DEEP PILE VELVET For the glittery parties of tho holidoy season, elegont at home wear, perfect for dress up. 98 Rayon 39" wlct. Yd. POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS T exturi2od box stitch on a heavy quality 100% polyester. Wide range of colon including winter pink. Machine Wish Tumble Dry S8"/60'1 Wide NEW FOR '73 Plaid & Solid SUITINGS Twill weaves in great color combinations. Dacron Polyester/ Acrylic V1lu11 lo $3.98 yd. Mach W11h Tumble Dry 54"/56" Wid• Yd. II HOUSE OF FliBRICS always first quality fabrics Se.,. C... .._. -l,fstol •f S•n Diet• Fwy c:.... .... -141-1116 • H..., "--I 7t+i •t lrlatol Seeto A11e -14J·lll1 ,.,... P...ti C.itNr-L• 'allfl1 •t St•nton .... ~ -121"'6JJJ ..... .... _ 12111 ltoolrhur1t ln•11I +• Vo11'1l -SJ0..1142 HM••'""-""t"I•• C....-Ecll119or •I •••th 11....,,, H1111flntlo11 .. tch -lt1 .. 01J -,• ' ' > ' Parties Sparked Fifties Dance Minion Vlej00111 wW dance to the mualc of the 'IOI during the community'• a n n u a 1 Chrtslmu Ball rrom I p.m .. to 1 a.m. Saturday, Dec. 18, in t he Montanoao Rocreatlon Center. A part o! the tradl· tlooal Five Nlghll o I Christmas program lponlOl'ed by the Mlulon Viejo ActivlUes Committee, the ball will !eeture mualc by the llrllters and entertainment by Sl<iles and Henderson comedy team. Alpha Delta Pi Mn. Raymond McGraw's Huntington Beach home will be the setting for t h e Christmas bullet luncheon of Apba Delta Pl A1wnnae of Orange County at 10 a.m. Thursday, Dec. lt. .. Those attending are asked to bring a gift for a geriatric pa- tient at Orange C o u n t y Medical Center. OWLS OfDcen' Wivea L fl a g u fl members and guests will meet in the El Toro Offlcen' Club Saturday, Dec. 11, for I Chrtatmas dinner dance. BSP Kings Night Out la the theme selected for t b e Christmu dinner of M u Upolloo Chapter, Bete Sp Phi 117:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16, in the Cypr<SS home ol Mrs. John Murray. Husbands wW be honored during the pa;ty. HB Bethel Install$ Reflections was the theme .. sel~ed by Joye Crosby for .. her imtallaUon as honored 1 queen ol Job's Daughters, <" Bethel 321 of Huntington Beach. ' She la the daughter or Mr. .. and Mrs. Cbrles Crosby of Huntington Beach and a senior , and song leader at Marina • High School. Elected to serve wtlh her ., are Robin Londeree, senior ·• plncwww; Kathy NoiJllC. guide; • Cathy Reed. Junlo< prlncta, ' and Beth Dykes, manhal. 12 'til xmas m Presents "MDI ONLY SALr' Select the gilt for your bes{ f!rl Tu11. Evo. f2/12 8 p.m. to 11 p.m . .... _w..,,... . ......., ......... .. .. the MOMENT Ill • IOtb Stred Newport Re11ch 17 .. tm ~---·""' I' ' ' ALL ABOARD -Waiting their tum for the Cruise of Lights sponsored by the Huntington Harbour Philharmonic Committee are Mr. and Mrs. Jim Andrews and their sons Jim, 15, and Jell, 9. The cruises begin Wednesday, Dec. 13, and conclude Friday, Dec. 22. Harbour Homes Lighted For ·Christmas Cruise Chriatmas lights wW be turned on in Huntington Harbour Wednesday, Dec. 13, "1111 the beginning or the tradltionlll Cruise o! Ughts which benellt1 the Orange COUnly Pbllbarmoalc Society. Under the dlractloo o! the Huntlngtoo llarbour Pbllhar· mon1c Committee, boats will 1 eave the Hunting· ton Harbour Salea Office on Warner Ave. every half boor from I to 10 p.m. through Friday. Dec. 2Z. Committee members aboard each boat will polnt out the prhe-winnlng decorations and other . ..,,,,.. d interest. eel by Miss Estelle Brisker, ' profeaor of interior design, Call!ornla State University, I.oog Beach; Mrs. C e Ii a Baker, retired judge, Orange Counly Municipal Coor!, and Floyd Cornaby, professional artisl and heJld or the art department at Fountain Valley Hlgb School.' Tickets are ~ for adults and $1 !or cbildren under 12. Reservations may be made for parties ol 31 or more by call· lng the Pbilhannonic Com-mittee office at 84&-3489 or ssi.. 1811 between 10 a.m. and 4 C9rd Custom One of the nicest things about sending persooallzed Christmas cards is the pleasant CU!tom of adding friendly written messages on many. But don't cover all the empty space on the card with your message. If you bave THAT much to say, write a letter. Fifteen trophies will b e awarded for the belt tradi·fp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;wf tiopal, religious, con- temporary, whimsical, original and most artistic homes. thoae belt using llghts, and those whlch are the best tribute to Christmas and the best done by I youth. Judging waterfront homes will be Yale Gracey, art direc- tor, Disney Studios; Francisco Lombardo, set designer, CBS Televislon'1; "Cannon" series, and Frank HardcuUetJ>Uade operations chalrman, l'OW'Da- ment of Roses. Interior homes will be Juclg· ........ & ..... • w __ ...,,_ .. , rw H•11, .. T...,....., , .... w-••••M • Lifetime ·-... In Hii'liii' "C...ter COSTA MESA 549-2501 . • OPIN 1 DAYS / How to make Money (look beollllfrd) Mike It look hlutU111 by wearin& it ia 6• j.-.nlry, Yoor eoiM or ourt, ~n be tet in 1_. k•f"lt &old 4 ... 11111, 1iul _,. 1 namher of dlleraat ,..,,.., .nec.lr~Cff, pH.d1nt1, bnoeltt" ... Coi• j._1try CIOtlti•a• 1• be Hen ••• _..,,.. *"ift!'Wh.,.. Md .. ic .. atfti ,,.. ol.J atftt. C.•f iD, 111d ... Mr eo•plltl Mltctiea, to4aJ'o '"J'hc store• Confidence Built'' II HUHTtN•TON CIHTR • _,,,_ " .............. Hl·Htl ' I -- • • • 1, ' ' • '.' 'I ' . . DAILY l'!\.oT J 5 Wet Festivities Get Dry Cycle NATALIE SCHUCKMELL M.D., F.A.A.P. Vli she~ To /,nn?unce The Opening Of Her Offic• For Th• Prtct ice Of Pediatrics. NEW YORK (UPI) -Tllo edict thll holiday ""°n la u alWIJI: Eat, dtlnk and be merry! But at a party eat mort and drink lesa lor the ultimate In merriment. lf you drink more and eat lesa, you may be in- volved In the ultimate In grid -a fatal auto accident. The "eat more and drink less" suggestion ls the AAA's (Automobile Association of America) ttdpe !or holiday parties that end 1afely for guests who must drive. Aimed al ...tuclng alter-par- ty accident.I cauaed by driving under the lnfiuence of 1alcobol during the holiday ....... the program Is called "Finl a Friend -Then a Host." Trying to tell party goen not to drink lf they are driving or suggesting that party givers throw only "dry" parUes Is unrullatlc. I t doesn't wort. But suggesting that both the giver and the goer exercise moderaUon can result in mak· Ing parties merry and safe for all concerned. drlnkl,. Never, never offer "one for the road." -Have available a good &election o f non·alcohollc beverages. 18 I 24 Culver Or., Suite "G" INine, Calif. 92664 By Appointment Only Pho"° 652-8111 -Begin offering desserts and coffee at least an hour or more before your guests will be leaving. Coffee Is not a cure for overindulgence. Butl-----=--:c============- when drinking coffee, guests are not taking on more alcohol. -TactfuD y ar r ange transportation for any guest who may be drunk. It's good planning to m a k e Br· rangemtnls in advance for a "safety" car dri ven by a non. imbiber. If the roster of roadworthy drivers is low, call cabs -lf you can get them. tf you can't, the safest Course is to let them sleep it off somewhere on the premises. Have plenty of cof· fee on hand for when they wake up. Shut off the drinks if you mu.st, for all those who get rubber legs early ln the party. Some arrive that w a y . Tactfully, don't serve them. Wouldn't you rather be call· ed a party pooper than a ho.,tess who contributed to slaughter on the hlghway ? One approach ~ an ef· feclive one, according to the Triple A, ls to enlist the tup- port of the hollda_y boot and hostess. For It IJ the parly lerVes the drinks wOO can be s t diacourage excessive drinking by gueata wbo will be l----------------------~ driving home -by replacing the offering of drinks with some attractive alternatives. Working on the· host's side are food and time. HoslJ should serve good food and plenty of It throughout the evening. A well-planned buffet offering a variety of tempting snacks ii not only fun for guests, but a !Int step toward a safe holiday party. Ealing before or during the cocktail stage can help the concentration of alcohol from building up In the blood stream and keep guests on an even keel. And U .the driving guest limUs hhnaeU -with en, couragement -to one drink per hour, time will enable the system to ablorb the alcohol at an even rate. So, if you're called upon to be a holiday hostess this year, here are some Ideas geared to the e.xproessway age: -Allor oervlng the !Int drink, lS guest& p a c e themselves. Don't force ad- dlllonal drlnb, nor 8]lOl1d the evening 0 freshening u p ' ' ) • • CollectthisweekS packof 10 new''Picture Perfect'.' MenttRocipe s , Beel Stroganoll Baked Stulfed Port< Chops Bettan'1 Chicken Beef Pizza Fruit Stuffed Port< Loin Stuffed Zucchini New Encl111d Boiled Dinner Chicken cacciatore (Hunter's Style) Baked Ham With Raisin Sauce "' Baked Fish f illets in White Wine WITH AtN G"SOLINE P\JROl"5E ·r ., STANDARD STATIDNS ~,.,,CHEVRON DEALERS iii • • Otler including p1ic1 may 11ary al participating Chevron ~1l11rs. tro~ v~llt, nu~loyfabr\c.. rt2d1 v.>hltea~ blue plaid O\e. bu1toll\ hlc:tzev- c:oort:flnc:de wi+h. SDlid color t'\ublov P'A"+ wi t11 co..tt~i~ rla\/y we.lo be..l't· ~a.vy,yed or white_ • I I -- •• - " • • • .. • r . • • • . ' • • • I I • . l ! • I .. . ·~ .. • • :.. . . . .. ''· I J 8 DAILY· PILOT Moodat.-11,1972 LA Title Chaiices Dip After 24-14 Loss ST. LOUIS (AP) -The St. Louis Cazdlnals ended a Sunday bex,by using I tougb , .. ~line def.... and -bi& ploys to stop the Loo Angeles Ram.< 24-14 In SI. Louis Sunday. Winning al home oo a Sunday 10< lhe first time since Nov. 29, 1970, the Ca,rdina1s, 3-&-1, climbed out of the cellar fl the National Football C.onference's East.em Divi.sim. The Rams, M-~ ent<red the .game with a good shot al the Wealem Dlvlsloo crvwn, but they lell SI. IAluls Ill third place beh1nd Sao Frandl<o llld Atlanta and ·with just an outside d>aaoe 10< the d1Yl1loo cbamplomblp. The St. Louis deleme stopped the RAms three Umeo lnsld• the five-yanl line on fourth-down plays, when the Rams went for abort yardage instead of field goals. On the first ol the three short-yardage failures, the Cardinals took possession on their own one-yard line. Quarterback Jim Hart, elevated to his old starting assign- ment Sunda;y, hit rookie receiver Bobby Moore with a 91-yanl pass pt., oo the first play. Moore was stopped oo the one- yanl line, but nmntng back Donny Anderson canied the ball in oo the next pt.,. "I tbougbt l was in, but lbe olfidal said my knee hit on tbe ..,..yan1 line," Moore said later. "l don't know how my mee could have bit down when 1 was Jytng 00 my hack. Jl Wal I good Call, and Jimmy Hart made a beautlful pass." Cardinals coocb Bob Hollway llld be called the pa., play. "That's 100<1 foot· baJI, because you know the Rams were ..pecting the run. They bad tv<ryooe slacked in there." '!be 91-yanl play ,.I a N~tlo!ltl J'oot· ball League record for the longest pass play from scrimmage without a touchdown. Defensive back Norm: 'lbompeon ac- counted for another st. Loula touchdown, LA'S JIM BERTELSEN (41) GETS SHORT YARDAGE IN WHAT TURNED OUT TO BE A LONG DAY. Denver Roll~ 38-13 Chargers Victimized By Breaks, Broncos DENVER (AP) -Neither the Denver Broncos nor the San Diego Chargers will believe that playing at home is not ad- vantageous. The Broncos proved more adaptable to the freezing climate of Mile High Stadium Sunday Jn PoSting a 33-13 victory over the Qargen ln a Nationa1 Football League game. The game wasn't even close as Denver. converted t h r e e Owgen turnovers tnto touchdowns in rolliDg to a 21..J halftime edge and ~ bulge after three quartUs. Yet Ulla i5 the same Broncos team that was rouied 37-14 when the teams met ll week! qo in San Diego. "The breaks we haven't gotten before were with us today," rookie Denver coach John Ralstao said, and that fact Bench Is OK After Surgery; No Malignancy CINCINNATI (AP) -Suri""" 're- moved whal they de:9cribed as an "ln- llammatory 1 .. ioo .. from the riCbl !uni of CinclnnaU Reda catc¥-Johnny Bench tbl.s moming and indicated there was no apparent malignancy. "'nle BUJ'l'l'Y, including frozen section of the lesion, Jw oow been completed and the chest b being clmal.'' Dr. Goorge Ballou, Reds teem physician, said In a atatement llsol<d sllgbtly more thlO two houri after Bench -3Ur(ery • .. Etaminailon ot the lesion reVealed no alstence of a.)lllilpanl 1u1n .... but did reveal tt was an tnflammatory Jealon," Ballou llid. "Test.I are bemg nm on Ulla to deter- mine the cause.," he Mid. certainly played a big role in the Bron. cos' domination of the action. A1though San Diego held the statistical edge in tot.al offo?nse, 33S-257 yards, and also ran 78 offensive plays to the Bron- cos' 44, Denver had consi!tently better fieJd posjtion and used the breaks to good advantage. An interception by comerback Billy Thompson got the Broncos rolling to their first touchdown in the opening period. Floyd Little scored from two yards out, but the previous play perhaps let the Chargen know what they were in for. Joe Dawkins, skirting the right side from the JO-yard line, fumbled the ball at about the eight and the pigskin bounced forward untouched, going out of bounds at the two. Late in the period , Broncos punt.er Billy Van Heusen kicked a ball from the Charger 43 that appeared headed for the end zone, but Ken Criter caught up with tbe ball and batted It out of bounds at the one-foot tine. The Chargers then moved 82 yards, with five Gary Garrison receptions ac- counting for most of lhe yardage, before running out of steam and having to setUe for a field goal. Denver came right back after San Diego fumbled the ball away on a punt return at the Charger 25. Joe Dawkfus ran it in from the four witb f :29 left in the hall. Some two minutes later, Charles Greer, seeing his first acUon as a punt returner thi! season, str!aked 65 yards with a punt and the Broncos had a 21-3 lead. Swollen Heads . . Only Menace, Says Csonka NEW YORK . (AP) -The Miami Dolphins, one step fropt unprecedented pro football perfection, worry mainly about being caught daydreaming. "The only thing that can beat us," said Larry Csonk.a, the muscular fullback, "is getting swelled heads." ''That's right," agreed Larry Little, the 265-pound all-pro guard who opens the boJes for Cson.ka and the other Miami runners. "We have the confidence to win them all ... But you get caught taking anybody lightly in this league, and you 're whipped." There's never been a tW learn in Na- tional Football League history. No team since the 1942 Chicago Bears, who were 11-0, has gone through a regular season unscathed. Miami's American Football Conference East Division champions thumped the New York Giants 23-13 Sunday fOr vic- tory No. 13 and need only to beat the Baltimore Colts lhis Swiday In the Orange Bowl to complete a perfect season. "We're proud to be 13-0," said coach Don Shula, wbo molded the Miami powerhouse. "We were worried about the 13 jinx, and all those other jinxes.'' Miami ill ooly the fifth club in NFL history to win 13 ln a season. Shula'a 1961 Baltimore Colts were one of the other four. 1 Shula broke into a grin, like a mao who doesn't believe in jinns. "Next week •e have BaltJmore," he said, "and we won't have any trouble getting up for that." Shula resllzes thai the COits-Doiphin series has known devout bitterness since he quit at Baltimore in 1970 to move to Miami as coach-vice president-part owner. Earl Morrall, s t i 11 the No. 1 quarterback -although Bob Griese is back Crom an ankle iDjury -looped a 34- yard scoring pass to Paul Warfield and hit nine of 17 for 171 yards. The 36-year-old Mottall, a former Giant, fonner Lion ind form« Colt, has been magic for Shula. COunting their association at Baltimore, Earl ls 36-6 as a No, I quarterback for Shula. ' when he plcbd llJ> I fumble bf Jim Bertelsen, the Rams' root1t nlnlW!s -. and carried the ball 51 1vds let his t<CClld -wn of the you! "Eve~ WU around the ball wheo I picked lt up, 11 said Tbompson, who iwas awarded one ol two game balll, a1oog with Harl 'lolfbe only penon I saw was quarterback Roman Gabriel, llld I doll't think he coold bave caoghl me, even II he . wanted to." Hart cOno.cted wllb wide rece1- Walker Gillette Oil a 30-yanl -'IW aootbel\ touchdown, and klcltor Jim Bak• )<m added I 4l·yanl flefd goal, • • After 20-Q Victory • SF 1 Step Aw~y . . . . . From Taking Title SAN ·FRANCISCO (AP) '-The Sao Francisco Den are coe step from win- oing the Natiooal Football League's <lllly unclaimed di\'Woo tille -the ooe lhat got away from the AUanta Falcons Sun- day. """' . "'!be defense played great in key sltua· tioos. When ii c:ame dowo to their taking the lblllg and getllng the game, we dido't give it to them," said defensive tackle Earl Edwards after the 49ers shut out the Falcons 20-0. AUanta coach Nonn Van Brocklin described the Joss, which knocked his team out of the National Qmference West lead, by saying, ''Their offmse didn't hurt us. We just didn'l put any points up there. "AU we needed was one touchdown. We bad our -chances to win. We just didn't do it." The 4.9ers' defense seemed to be con- stanUy testing the FalOOD1, who could have taken the first divisioo title in their seven-year history with a victory. Atlan- ta averaged 6.8 yards per rushing play en route to its zero point total. Sao Francisco clung to a 6-0 lead -on Bruce Gossett's two first half field goals -when the defensive unit made a suc- cessful goal-line stand early iD-the fourth quarter. Ken Willard later plunged for two touchdowns against the frustrated and perhaps demoralized Falcom . The biggest cheer at Candlestick Park was for the St. Louis Cardinals. 'nle lowly Canis upeet the Loo Angeles Iiams 24-14 in SI. Louis, and ·-that was announced the crowd ol 11,214 knew the 49ers bad a chance to regain the lead in the NaUonal Football League's wildest division race. "We already knew what we bad to do," said San Francisco coach Dick Nolan, when.asked if the Rams' Joss was the in- . tloo his teem needed. splj'B .. the "We've been in this same pomhoo last two yeara.'' 1111 added, ~ the 49en must win again 00. the final weekend ol the seuon to assure tbem:selves-of-tlle NaUonalcCoolerence West title. The 49e.n:, 7..S-1, need a win or tie against . the -Vikings here Satunlay to caplure their third straight NFC West cbampl~p. In 1970, the 49ers advanced to the pliqoffs by ~l)n_g OaldanctJ11:!!>e-f"mal weekend oi the seuoo. Last year, they had to down Detroit Ill their last pme. Uthe 49ers lose 8aturday, the Fllcms and Los Angeles Rams will liave 'a shot at the UUe Sunday. 'nle FalC<lllS, 7-<;, finish against Kansas City and the Rams 6-6-1, play Detroit. The Falcons lost the ball three times on fumbles, once on an interception and wasled three Jong offensive drives. The 49en had a virtually emr -free game. The running attack bad a 9e&!On- high 210 yards, as quarterback Steve Spurrier chose not to throw much into the tricky winds. . "It's the quarterback's job not to make big mistakes and Jet them win the game," Spurrier llid. The di\•-bu ll8d a new leader four weeks in a row. ' ... _ SF'S GENE WASHINGTON MADE THE CATCH AFTER BllNO HIT. Sorgery was (IOl'fonn<d by Dr. Luis GonzaI.., Bench's perlODll docU>r at Qlrill Holpltal. Ballou IOld lbt 11111'(1!11 bad been Jes com~' than aatlciPoJed. "A 11J1e of Incbloo was uaed IO that It was oat .....,.ary to cut Into prvmlnent back nacle and It WBI oat -ary to remcwe • rib," be Aid. 9.3 Trio111ph Ends 40-year Drought All of -tltinp, borrlng-compllca· Uons," lie aakl, "would l.ndicate • qUick,, ...S COfllPltlC recowry. It i. antidpoled lie will be In the hoepltal ... ..,. to 1'11 dl)'I." While illdlcalfnS 1bert WBI .., IPPI"" ont msllgnancy, Blflilu llld llMl tests .. the --will raqoiire ·-72 houri to complett. "'Ille 1....., -of Ute lesion did not IWell .... QC"J'." he aakL ~· HOUSTON ( API -The Pltbhorgh Steeltra tnded fO ye.an of frustralloo with a f!3 victory over Houaton Sunday and they can thank the Jolbal toe of Roy Gmla, the mol1e of a r o o k I e quarterback and tile craalting rush of Mean Joe o-. AU had a hand Jn lhe Sieelen' clinch- 1111 at I ea ti a lie for the Am..-tcan Footl>oll Confmnce'• Central Dlvlslm crowo and their first trip to the playolla In the team's history. Gerela provided the polnta with field goall.of 24, 19. and ll 1arda. Skip Buller got Houston's only points will! a :U.yanl tiool. Rookie quariorback 'Joe Gilliam 'of Tcnoeasee State, who had thrown only lour p&1S01 all ..... n. came off the bencll In the ""'°"" quarltr when T•rry Bradlhiw wenrout with a dtalOClttd ' !Jocer on his puslng hand. GUUam coolly maneuvered Plltshill'gb to two llllrd>quarter field pla lhat lllUred the s1 .. 1m of their wlnnlngesl stason In lbolr hbtory al JN. "I'm alwaya prepared -that's my Joh.'' Gillllm aaJd of hit praeure performance. ''rm sorry to 1 e e Bradlhlw hurl but I Wll glad for the op- portuolty. My Idea wu just to keep cool and not make mistakes." "l just hate to ,.. Houston meu up a good quarterback ll.k• Dan Pastorlnl," said Greene. Who IBCked Putortnl '"'' tbnel for 3Z yards in lOllel. "They've Just Sot to pl him IODle protect loo." Pltlabur&h leads the AFC I n quarterbocl 11cka . wilh 39, including Greene'• 1 .... Sunday against lhe Ollera. The OlleJ? beid Steelers rookie eensa· lion Franco Harril under 100 yanla rushing for lbe first time Ill six -es. Harris oUU 1ot enough yalds to 10 over tt.J 1,000 mark for the aeuon, to become only the !llth rookie evor to acblevo the marlt. Pittsburgh look a 3-<l IMd Jn the first quarter when Gere111 1' former Oller, kleked ' 2f.yord field goal. Houston's Skip Butler matched It wtt.h • !f.yanler in \be llOCond quarier for the haJnime deadlock. • Gerela added Oeld flOOI• c!I 39 and 13 \>anlo on Pllbb\lrgb'a fint t w o poueuiooa ol the third quaritr. ,.,_ WILT HAS IT HIS WAY. Lakers' Play Called Scary By Sharman LOS ANGELES (AP) -If coach Bill Shannan is !rightaied by his Loa Ab- gelea Lakers, what should the rest of tbe NaUooaJ BasteCblll Asaodalic:n think? Jack Md:lpskey, c:<ll!Cb of lbe Pwlland Trail Blazers, says, "It's like two dif- ferent workts, playing against the La.ken and playing against anyone else la Ute NBA." The Lakers took Portland apart 137- 101 Sunday nigh! foe their 17th victory in 18 games. "We're playing so well now it's scary,"' said Shannan. "The last two weeka we have played as well as we did any time last year.'' added !lie c:oacb wlme delmdlng MIA champions had a S3-pme winninl streak Ibis time last ....... 'l1>e Laken rao their .....,.. total to ~ and hold I m.pme lead ..... the Golden State Waniora 111 the Pacific lJi. visi(ll. Shannan, li\DUflll, was enth\lsiast!c about control of lhe boanls aa Ute ~~ individually outnllounded l'<l1Jand E In 31 with Wilt <llamblrlaln pulllne In If In 35 minutes of playlng time and 8- Hairston 16 in lMI mlnutea. "When we have Happy, Wilt and BD1 Bridges in l think .It's Ute beal. rebound· log !root line Ill ~etbell,.. SIIai'mM said. . Including teem rebounds, the LaJren had a 75'40 rebounding advantage. "'"" .... 1111) L• -....... nm • • T • • T ..... . '" " Mdo\lllJa.n 1) ,. • .. -l ,., I H•ll"lbl ' .. " .... ' .. • O..mt10H'M ln ... " ...... ' .. " -" .. .. -M ' .. ' -2 7·'IO 11 11.Smllh ' ... • ·-... " C:Olvla ' .., " .... _ . ,. " G.Smll!I ••• " ....... • •• 7 --7 M • ..... • •• • ....... . .. • -... • ·-' .. • ...... ,. ~~.i. .... .C 2'1..a I JI IM3 ISi' ........ ,. •a >t-)11 "' --AttllllOMu -141 .. a:ri,,. •-111 Pasarell Topples Tiring Gonzalez For Top frlze NEw VORK (AP) -Topoeeded Charles PasareO of Pue.rto RI co overcame tired Pancho Gonzaiei of Loo Angel .. 4-6., &-2, 1-2 and """ lbt ...... singles UUe llomday In the 171.tJIO a.a. AlrTennll·-l Top--!eci Virginia Wade of Encland took the women's championship, bo#lng Rooernary Casals of San Fraodsoo W, &- 3 . Pasarell, in tamin& the $10,IJQO top prize -lbt biggest ol hi& pn> .. ._ _ !pot the fint aet oo a aenllce brealt ill Ute s«ond 1ame, then took char1e In Ibo -ood set when the 44-)'ear-ol~ Goma1'I wilted. Pasanll clinched the secood stt wbea ilomoles aimmltted three conaeeuttve double-faults In lbe •ighth 1ame. The third Mt was Ued 2-:S, before Pa.-rell won the last four game,. Gonzale~ lost the alsth game when he milled an overbo«f shot and dropped the elthth game and tbo match when be li1ade two tn'Ot'I.' •\ • "• ) ' • .. " • . • ' .. ' . • • ' • Cheeking Banquet Trail . . .. , Packers Take Title With 23-7 Victory Dive Lockman walked away w~ a trio ol awards at nit Pack Is back. picking off another pass at the 1"' .... • • • ( " . • -· Dootmbt< 11, 1972 DAILV l'ILOf lT l 'l:bund•Y night'• Golden Wost "We deaerve the cham-CIW1 Bay II. ..,;. ' College ~uet hoDQr~ the pk>nsblp .. ' Green Bay coach "They're a good teamt'' Vi- Phil111delphla is now 2·10-1, failing to win a home game tor lhe first time 1lnce 1942. "'* coun,ey, Wl\t<I' pol9 and Dan Devine said after hi• kings coach Bud Grant un-~ teama. ' p k had derstated. "We give them a Lockman not oatr, received ac ers gotten Just that fumble and an interception ••· aJ b -the cbamplONhlp of the Na-"" molt, v aa e player. tional conference Cent r a 1 and they turn both into scores. " tropl)y ¥ the croa C<1W1try divlsloo, their first ti"· since You can~ do that against a ;; team, bUt al10 wu named the WI;: rood team." mQlt inlplraUonal and ' the OO when they we<e In the DETROIT AT BVFFALO - BALTIMORE AT KANSAS CITY -Len Dawson fired two touchdown passes and Wend ell Hayes turned Jn his best rushing performance of the season as the Kansas City Chiefs e n de d Baltimore's three-game winning streak with a 24-10 victory. } captain. . Vince Lomhardl ero. Quartuback Greg L a n d r Y I '1 .:J;ilC!ie .White wat. selected ia1 Here's a capeule rundown on ~----'a-1 with Ron Jessie on • • . ~ Sundt. y'1 games: UIJU~l.O;\I -wat.r PoiO' tam's mcot. a 37-Y.t<d scorinJ! pass for Valuahle plaYtt whUe Jim GREEN BAY AT MIN-Delro1t In the flnaf period and ~' ~k ~A -the bruising run-salvaged a 21-11 Ue with the and Kw'! Westerfeld shared, ninll of MacArtbur Lano and Bullalo Bills . the R..U.. ol the year awt<d. Jobn BrocldqJton and a filed-But the lie fell short of the And Marie Manslleld and Al ap defense rallied the Pack vlct«y the Lions needed to Dawson's pitches and Hayes' running took the Chiefs on a 66-yard march with the second half kickoff, breaking a 10-10 halftime tie. Dawson's first touchdown pass, a 13-yarder to Hayes, came in the fading seconds of Hoopa were ~ captains. from a balfthne defldt for a stay tn the . rurming ror the l.n ~, Enrique G~ U.7 Vlc\Orl' over the host Mfn.. central Division championship .. Wll ll!lect.i 11u11Je< of the -Vikings te' lock up the of the NFC. • • )'eaJ' and Eric · Poetoehena CenlraJ dlvtslon NFC tllJe. O. J. Slmp!Oll, leading the recelved the captain's troJ)hy. The P11cl:ers were down 7-0 American Conference i n the first half, which was mar- red by fumbles, interceptions, penalties and a blocked kick. \<• • • • ·'' T • fll"' at halftime but came back rushing, .,clded 116 yards 9n with 17 points in the third the · ground ' to set a Bills' period to ice the declalon in season rushing record of 1,150 bitter Minnesota cold weather, · yards. wi;:· :ic;•:Y r1:i~hei;hit~! sotal'·Conferenee Claatnpions Bill ~ring?nan and Mark El)enholm shared the most val'l&ble player award !or fQotball at tile Dana Hills High fall athletic banquet Saturday. Springman and Mark Foster were named varsity team ca~ , 11111. while other v11r.1lty foot- ball award.I went to Bob lptres as !Utter of the year, • Boler Torres as most in- ""'8tiooal, Brian Davil as . ,Cllltllandng back and Mark Po.'Sier as outstanding lineman . Eric Browning won the fresbman f®tball most valuable player award, while vanity cross country awards -to Marlo Alareoo for inoet valuable. Bruce Tobey 'for most Unproved and Runar Bowman for m o a t ifl.. l)llrallooal. "" Costa Mosa llJih's Vllr.llty IQOtball tum will he honored with a sports award banquet toolght al Costa Mesa Country Club. Festivities get Wlder way at 6:30. included In the program IJ the naming ol captain, moot valuable and most improved players. ... San Clemente Higb's fall spam awards banqud IJ Ila~ ed lo< tonight In the school cafeteria beginning at 6:30. Included In the football and = country program IJ the pmentatJon ol most valuable, captain and moot Improved awards. I ' 12 'til xmas m 6-a. the MOMENT Presents "MEN OHL Y SALE" Select the f1lt !or your bes f:irl Tuoo. Ive. 2/11 I p.m . to 11 p.m. --·-& ......, ........... k the MOMENT 112 -_. Sireel N•WJIOl'I Beach fll-lT77 two degrees below zero. CH IC AGO AT PffIL.. Lane, who rushed 19 tlmes A D E L p R I A -Coach for 99 yards. set up Green Abe Glbron of the ChiCago Bay's first score on a 36-yard Bean hedged when he was field goal by CbelW' Marcol. asked tt he was looking for a with a S7-yard nm. He also quarterbac.k in next month's bullied hi& way In for a NFL playtt dnlt. touchdown from the three 'lbe question was prompted later. by the Bears' 21-12 victory Brocklngtan wried 2 4 · over the Philadelphia Eagles times for 1U yards, making with the help of only one pass him the first NFL playe< I<> complellon. rush for more than 1,000 yards "You have to realize that in each of his first t'A"O these great young seasons. quarterbacks are not going to Rookie defensive back Willie do the job in one year. Buchanon bad a big day. He However, if a great young col~ intercepted a· Fran Tarkenton lege quarterback's name is on pass and returned it 25 yards the board at the draft, I've to to set up Lane'• score, then got to take a look at bird." tJi<otlled a MinneSOta drive by ,Bobby Douglw is the Bears' quarterback, but he would infer to run l'ather than pasa. He is the top Bears' roslY.!r with over 000 yards. Pro Grid Standings ••• --.... Chicago gained its fourth victory against eight defeats, anappln( a five-game losing streak. In ao doing, the Bears lost a strategic position in the player dnft I<> the Eagles. American Conference West. Baltimore is 5-8 in the AFC Golden West College's w.ater polo team recently East. won the-Southern California Conference title and NEW· ENGLAND AT NEW finished third in the' state JC meet. In the bottom ORLEANS _ Quarterback row, from lef~ a.re coach Tom Hermstad, Frank Jim Plunkett threw t w 0 Browne, Jim McAdams, Ed White, Larry Robertson, Ken King, Kurt Westerfield, Pete Eich, John Maltby. In the third row are Pete Noah, Mark Mansfield, Marc Cardenas, John Perkins. And In the t are Fred Lammers, Scott Moore, Mim'• and Al Hoops. 1 touchdown passes to receiver Hal ~ngton. 1n the second row are Rich I..eonis, 1 Reggie Rucker in the fadin g ---'--"--------------'-.:C:.:.:C.:.:C------'----------7"----'.i;-- m.lnutes or the first half and the New England Patriots went on to defeat the New Orleans Saints, 17-10. The victory was t h e Patriots' fITTt after nine eon· secutive losses and gave them a 3-10 record while the Saints fell to 2-10-1 and stayed in line for pro football's number one draft pick. 'The game was billed as a duel betwfen Plunkett and Archie Manning -pro foot- ball's top two draft chQices a year ago. Manning attempted 5 2 passes, a Saints record, and completed 24. for 2M yards. But he fumbled once and was intercepted three times. Plunkett, meanwhile, com- pleted 16 of 24 for 209 yards and one interception. They're R11nning At Los Al LOS AJ,AMrrOS -Two former workt cha mpions and two t or m e r All-American Futurity winners head a list of t2 horus that ·have been nominated for the $10,000-ad- ded Inaugural, the opening night feature at Los Alamitos Race Course where t h e Horsemen's Quarter Horse Racing Association presents its 55-night meeting beginning tonight. HB Classic Huntlngtoo Beach High 's Oilers, fresh from three QJn· seculive victories. take on Ramona High's Rams tooight In the lelltU<ed tilt of the 48th annual RUlllington Beach In· vitat!onal heskethall loum>:· ment. Tipoff for the clash Is 1:30, which follows the Monrov ia- Villa Park tussle at 7. Sunny Hills and Edisoo opened up the tourney with a 4 :30 engagement at Hunt- lngtoo Beach. No. 2 seeded Long Beach Wilson, the defen· ding champion, drew a byt!'. In the first round. the opening round comes into focus with No. 1 seeded Corona del Mar (4--0 ) meeting Arcadia at 8.:30; Newport Harbor's Sailo<s c~ with Huntington ·Beach's junior varaity at 7: and Servite and Tllslin colliding at 4:30. Wu- ren draws a bye in the first round. Coach Elmer Combs' Oilers, bounced early by La Habra, have come on strong with vie· torles over Beverly Hills, Servile and Sunny Hills. Combs shuffied his deck after the opening loss and lhe combination of juniors Jim • Weir, Qoug Rabe, Radii Con· treras and Scott ~along with senior guard \\'yQ; Neill. has proved an excellent choice. Too, the Olleri have Dave Melson ready on '\~ bench. Axelson, In a rell role, sparkled ln the triumph over . Swln)< Hilla. • HuntJngtoo· Beach's forte Is lhe last hn!ok, high-low post o!fenslve i;:ystem and tough zone defense. Contreras is the leading scorer for the Oilers. hitting 1n double figures eacb time out and has a 14 .7 average. W 1. T Jlt'f, rt. 01" ,.~lam! ll D 0 1.000 3tt 171 N.-Ycrl Jt1$ 7 $ D .513 :Ml !1~ l•lllmort s a o .as m "' lllff• 3 ' I .»0 2ll l60 lffW Eft81111'1d 3 10 I .Jll 171 «II I amonica Duels Namath In Monday Night Finale Allred and Charlton's Charger Bar, the reigning world champion, and George Chittlck's Kaweah Bar, ~ lent of that honor in 1968 and 1970, were nominated for the Tuesday the second haH or - Pro Cage , Hockey He 's exceptionally quick and is a major asset to the offense with his sharp passing. Tho right price on tht right co1r 350-yard dash along with H•A HML former All-American Futwity •••'-c,..,.__, ........,. •• .....,. ml~ ~1\ ~ Winnen n-•·t W--.. 1-and Anllllk Dl'fllMll Svfttkl &, ~ 1 , ~ ~ \bi~'ll ·-._ ... ... _ ..... OAKLAND (AP) most of the last two seasons Tonight's last Monday night with injuries. He has thrown game of the National Football for 2,413 yards and 1 a League ~ason could be the touchdowns to help make a last hurrah or 1972 for Joe winner of the team which Namath and the New York finished 6-8 1n 1971. Jell. The Jets are one of the The Oakland R a i d e r s 1 highest scoring teams in the already in the NFL pl~ffs · NFL, 'with 341 poin~. but have with their 8-3-1 record, are allowed 274. The Raiders have Oto TV Tonight C ... nitel7at6 favored to heat the Jets, 7·5, and kill their hope> or making the post-elght·team cempetitioo. New Y0<k almost dropped out ·of the nmni.ng last week. It took a fourth quarter come- back and Bobby Howfield's sixth field goal ol the game, with no time left, to beat New Orleans.18-17. out.scored opponents 312-211. Quart erback Daryle Lamonica of Oakland is the top ranked American Con- f e<ence passer, Man Hubba<d is challenging for the in· dividual rushl.ng title with 941 yards and Fred Biletnikoff went into the weekend as the AFC's leading receiver. The Raiders' balanced of- fense is averaging 1~ yards a game rushlng, 167 passing. ~ ,........,. W L Pct H ~BAUD\· Mr KJd Cbarg h""' ft I .... l'tlll~ 5, 'TottMe 2 · e. H"" YOl'll: 2'l ' .m l -...... 1. c.11toml• • 1...._ New 11• l"WrKll• Round.Ing out ' the list of e111111o 1 21 .2l0 16"'1 Vara111Wr l, Detroit ,, ti• ~ ,... Me, o.•.L . nominees are Fred A. Ne-Pllllec191Plll• ' 21 .100 21\'I Chlc.,ci 5, Mlnnnota t l4U w111111,.. ...... ~ tt11t1 C:1llfrlll Dl'fl..... St. \.GI.Ill 5, Alllrlfl 4 ,.._.. '5M41• mann's Can Jet and Master '''"'"°"' lj 13 .w -.• ~-~~,.~-~~-~~-~·ld~---~iiiiiii:iiii:iiii!iiiiiii:iiii:iiii:ii~ Rocket, Mi Id red Merrell's At1et1t1 u 1' .5o .,,II .,,_ I A lA) I A Cln-HWlfm 11 15 ,aJ , Come '3U., A. R. ~via u::: 0 ..,..1nc1 , 21 .:ioo 1 der~ Robert W. Moore's Mr. ._..,,,. c: ... ,._, Jet J, Moo<e, Stephen G . Mlflftlt D,,.., ..... C:h(C.,i:t It I .704 -Wasley'a Plunder Bay, Green· M1tw111kN 1• • .67' YI field Plantation's Rough Stull K.c . ..omeiw ,, 1s .s11 s Delroll U 14 ."'2 6 and Jess L. Burner's Savan-P1c111c 01 ... 1ilorl nab SWinger. • Los .1.nve1es 23 " .&12 -GolcMfl Sl•ll 17 10 AJO 6 Charger Bar has earned ri-mx 13 11 • .f33 11 v, over $200,000 and was named =;.., 1 : : ~~! l~~ world champton by t b e ,.,...,.. oa-Am-~can Quarter H 0 rs e K.e.-om. ... XI, ..1.111nt• 111 WI GoldM Sllfe 101, Clrnlend 100 Association when she streaked. s..ttte no. '"'-"• 102 to seven winl in seven st.am ~., ~ ;:;.::::,lltd 101 in the summer of 1971 at Los No ""'",.:IV::.- Alamitos. 1;::;=::::::::;~;;;,===;;:;; GWC Hosts Bakersfield GRAND PRIX $122~ MO. Air Cllld., ,._, wl...,_., fltt wlll., VlllYI MIP, .l.M-l"M •I-, r11ny wflll., WIW, MMll ., llllckltf -h. 'M ""· .,.... ........... Ml .,,., ... •rtwllltl '"" T & 1... °'1lef" -for ~rtlttl .... ........,. U .,.., 11<1/h .,. IH"der. INC:LUOllfG J YEAtl/H .... Ml, W.1.IUtAHTY DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 24tt ....... lh4.mt .... Dr .. C-.M ... LU.SI DlllCT -PACTOIY AUTHOlafD DU.UI MflL.fll't. I :• II 11• e S.U. & E'ftnlllt'I •r """· FllD DORAN -546-1117 "Only in the fourth quarter did we play at all like we are capable," says coach Weeb Ewbank. "If we're to beat the Raiders, we'll have to play like that for four quarters." Lamonica's ~g targets, including Biletnikoff, rookie Mike Siani and tight end Ray Chester, wii..1 be working against a Jets' defense that ranks last statistically in the Golden West Co 11 e g e ' s A CHRISTMAS GIFT FROM PENNEY'S TO · KEEP YOU AND YOUR BUDGET IN SHAPE. Namath has gone all the way at quarterback for the Jets this year, after missing AFC against passing. basketball team seeks its fifth The Jets are second to victory of the season tonight powerful Miami in the AFC when the RmUers tangle with Easl If they win here, they'll vlslllng Bakenfield College at play Central Division runner-a o'clock. up Cleveland, M, tn New York Coach Dick St r j ck l in' s Sanday ID • came whlcb Rustlers ( 4-3) are fresh from will determine who gets the a llf.78 win over San Diego conference's wild card playoU City College. Wednesday spot. L Golden West faces Sa n The Raiders clinched the Bemardlno Valley College at =f.~_., .u 0'1W cod. 3 Uno AFC West, their fifth division 12:50 · p.m. in the opening Deep Sea Fish Report NOW • ' ~ J::rf~;;. 1~,~ tiUe in si:1 years, last week by round of the C h a f f e y . rto -.ita r. c.1 wu1 1 beating San Diego. tournament. 4i nU aid,' Cflfl t I 11119 i;::=""''===';=============:;:;ll 0 -• =ren1 131 rod! tod. WHY PAY 4 'ILf'\ll!ll !.. ,,, ~'-'"'' w11119 ~ .. ~i;'IMlto, •OCk cod • .,..., --lfrs: :..mKktrtl. ~ ... ~ 11":;.:!Jt ~ -· ~~:~'!.~~~ .. .,. -· MORE FOR LESS? 14 AC''llJIN RECORD GllAH PRIX 89'~ tu 99'~ tu PLEASI NOTI THiii AU Sl'ICIAL SALi PllCIS HP!CIALLY OHlllD IT IAi.m.tl FOi THI CHRISTMAS HOUDA Y NEWPORT CYCLERY 2116 NEWPORT BEACH &75-1700 IMll•wu...,.. -- 59 88 "JUST SAY CHARGE IT'' MEN'S 26" 10 Sl'EED RACER Built for speed and Nliablllty. Side pull fnMlt and ncr caliper brakes, racing style llHt. JC PENNEY WE KNOW WHAT YOU'U.LOOKING FOR EWPORT IEACH FASHION ISLAND • ' ·. . . '. . . '·'"· ..... ~ . DAILY PILOT Monday, Dt«mbtf ll, 1972 DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS VES1 1 SAW MIM P\.ILL TMAT OANGUNG ROPE, !IUT ME DENIED IT 'M-{EN I ASKED. I \:l-,i+,.ll by Chnter Gould by Tom K. Ryan El.ECTION ? 1lt1' oNf' IN WlllCll l 51\Al.l. llf' RLJNNING- 1'6AI NS'f yt)U. WHAT El.f:CTION?! MUTT AND JEFF AND YoU SWALloWED IT? FIGMENTS NANCY WHERE'S THE STORE SANTA'?- t WP-NT TO READ HIM. MY CHRISTMAS LIST WE DON'T HAVE A SANTA THIS YEAR ···WE'VE MODERNIZED 'THE STORj; TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Reptiles 5 Add flavfit to 10 Me1tic1n hot sauce 14 Bump into 15 Reverence 18 Chinese 52 French delicacy 55 Reprosenta· tive 59 Tending to join together 61 Auto seillPort acceuory 17 RiYerof 62 Siouan China language 18 Answering 63 Extrudes 20 Mo.I 1lool slowly 22 -·-· 1wiu 64 Give oH 23 British title 66 Proceed 24 Simple elong 25 Showing rrttle 66 Certain emotion years 28 Swinpin• 67 Disencum· seed: 2 worrlt .... 32 Deface J3 Ettablished DOWN bylaw 1 Partly open 35 Moo1 2 "--of These 36 Beverages Daya" 38 Mr. Runyon 3 Fruit .a Be foolishly 4 Welk fond 5 ---·-wheat 41 Nauowatrip9 6 Poetry of wood 7 Institute: Saturday's Puzzle Sotv&d: 21 -end: 44 Not found Conclusion ln1quently 24 Fruit 47 Team symbol 25 Break up '49 Experimenter 26 Score ·51 Sanctuary 27 Mountain nymph 52 Marine 28 African """'' cinima1 53 Observe 29 Mother·in-carefully law of Ruth 54 Al once: 30 E11.press Archaic ~YDIO YoUWAIT SOL.ONG? SOMEHOW IT'S JUST NOT THE SAME PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER by Al Smith '? • by Dale Hale ........ __ "''"'"' "' """'' "'""' --by Emie Bushmiller • 'THE LAR6E5T DINOS~ 1lW :EYER LIVED Ull>G 'THE BRONOU115 S uRPRISED TO DISCOVER THAT ROCKY SILVESTER \5 CALLIN6 FROM TOWN, ASSEY IT ••• IT WOULD BE INCONVENIENT TO SEE YOU TODAY, MR.~../. SILVESTER! STALLS AT HIS REQUEST TO MEET HER! l DOOLEY"S WORLD SALLY BANANAS GORDO ~ llAMJ.COO:. F/!LL Wm! WU AA!o FATSO f!!i:'i ~ 7NArMISS DO/llJ'tclS1);1' ~ PILES IT DIN/ &0560 J.IWOIEO Ol>I }//S 8.ACKSlot:f JN 11/' :: ~-:· -·.· -----~~-". .. =, ~~~: t~ .. · • :Z FJ..IPP/:P ovmc: JUS1' IN 71ME/· ·-MOON MUUINS : ANIMAL CRACKERS llOW l.ON9 DOES k1' TAICE 'TO ,;;er A. D!<tf.l I(. ~ ! AH! LOOI( l1 AT •HA:r-11 j, !I • ·-- Iii~ (()\) lHWi::JN<i; OF sernN<a A 'TIME-LIM!'!"~ ... by Charles M. Schulz ,,,.......,~-~~~~--'-, IT COIJE>lED A LOT ! by Harold Le Doux THEN I'LL WAIT OVER UNTIL TOMORROW, MlSS SPENCER! LYNN H"5 SPOKEN SO Hl6HLY OF YOU, I'D LIKE VE.RY M UC H TO MEET· YOU! '· i 11'SGOING 'TOBeNICE ;o H.Ave 50ME«l01> NEWS FOR A "' ,C..:.HANGf •• ' "-{.. ' •·' by R09er Bradfield By Charles Banottl by Gus Arriola Tiie UAP J.S IN OUR FE/;T/ by Ferd Johnson I IQIC#I IT'S<SOOl>1 BeC,All$i IF IT \/IEIOE T/IAT!!AI> \/IE \/IOULC>Nfr BE HERe. by R09er Bollen •3 Voice Abbr. audibly 46 Sea: French 8 Policeman 31 In lhet place 46 Sasitlor 9 W11111d awty 34 Fired 55 Sh<H! buy&r's concern 56 Comedienne "This b perfect for my husband -be11 never ft8l' it anc1 lt goes beauUfully with my blue slacks.'' m"d 10 Conquered 37 Sieved 48 Literary style 11 Leave out 39 Having no 50 "The men i1 • 12 Emotion smelllng -1": 2word1 13 Obsefved 01gan 61 Now'• 19 Feminine 42 Plain comp11nlon name plinlh I 2 ' " • ' 7 • ,.. 11' " • II " .. 21 n - " 'll I,, " ---" ,. •• ,_ •• " ., "' .. • ~ " -" " "' .. -.. --·-" . - •• -Hil'l8S 57 Eittremaly dty SB M11ke1, 11ftet laites 60 Patt of tbe loo< •• 111 .. . Ill " " " .. ,~ ., .. ' " ~ -' " " w MISS PEACH • /v\A"°CIA MASON -A~s~~~'S· '~~INtr 'F l~ANC..5' ~OM PA NY MA;j~H& WAY'-.-MlNl-1 1:.·~ G oT· -"'\ONt!'.Y Pll.OIJ&..6.Al\4, 00'/0L.CMAl<E MONEY MONT\!. fl>IANCIA L-wos' ? ON MON5Y YOU 1..El'll> ! F1$CAI--t"ROC..CJiLE'~ ? WITHOL.CT INTEil!E<ST? 1 1 -re1..1.. us yo1.-1R. ~AD s-roR-Y l WI< SPEC.IAl..IU: IN J,...OAN~ ! WliHOUT INT~Rf~T !! \ by Men 1WrTHOUT INTflrEST' ~IMPLY M!AHS ~UI! ~TORYSO~l~ Ml STIFF. PERKINS by John Miles ' • DENNIS THE MENACE • ' I I 'ti1f ... WHKr A GJ''.tl!.'' • r (, i I • ' SA pl "G D "Cb firs cho Va On Ju "H na so ag s p SAYS WHO? -Burt Warner gives Pat Warner a piece of. his mind in a scene from the c o m e d y "Goodbye Charlie" at the Placentia Playhouse. Christmas Cantata At College Tuesday Daniel Pinkham's "Christmas Cantata" w i l i highlight the Christmas con· cert program by the Golden West College Singers and Madrigals Tuesday at 8 p.m., in the community theater. Directed by G e r a I d Schroeder and supported by a brass ..-nble, the program is being presented rree to the commuQity with seating on a first come basis. Selectioos by the SS.voice choir will include R a I p h Vaughan Williams' "Fantasia On Christmas Caro ls ,'' Michael Praetorius' "In Dulci Jubilo" and J. P. Swe;elinck's "Hodie Christus Natus Est." Accent Mixture Mars Drama of Russian Life By WU.LIAM GLOVER NEW YORK (AP) -The Chelsea 1bealer Center, a self-appointed rescue mission for neglected dramas. is ministering now to Isaac Babel's "sunset" with an un- fortunate Babel of accents . matinee premiere Brooklyn playhouse dissipates the frail Davor of the piece. at the !urtber period 'Goodbfe Cle4lrlie-' Comedy Misses Potential in Placentia By TOM TITUS Of .. DMW ,.... Slaff One of the many problema facing a new community theater group irtruggllng to establish Itself Is lhat of lden- tlflcatlon, of letting t h e clliZenry know 11'• around. If the word does not get out suf· llciently, you find yourselves playing to audiences of 10 or 12 in a theater capable of ac- cornmodallng a few hundred. This, along with malady generally known as the "sec- ond Friday blu'"" and lhe "GOOD•Y• CKA•LI•" A. C8IMdY b'I' ~ ,._. .. rod. dll"9(.Nd ~ ll:atld¥ K-. P'"OdU<ld fly Plllllls l!Nd... l'OI Cnolle, bV N · -~-""M"~ -Pl-1 Ft Mod S.twdaYTo l!..'!....~, at I ~..SO HIOll ~':°~·AV..-,, PikM' Ila. THI! CA.ST ~r1~lr: ··:::::::::···:::=:~ R1ntv Ma'rt,:{lna ..••. Marv L"'"" Sl'IH Ft•MY S.lltlNfl . .. . F~ E"ll~ i--· ······· ..,,_ rvl,. ........... IMmlt McKltldl" Mr . .illf"IMf . . . . . . . • . • LMrv K no competition or· a basketball game on the same school grounds, takes Its toll on the Placentia Playhouse's pro- duction of George Axelrod's bright little comedy "Goodbye Charlie." The ingredients for success are all there -an ~xperlenced director, a husband and wife acting team with impressive credentials, and a couple of juicy supporling and cameo roles. Yet only in the latter area does the Placentia com· edy really approach Its poten· tllll. Director Randy Keene has mounted an attractive but Lily Guests ENTERTAINMOO sluggish production in which many of Axel.rod 's hon mot.s fall by the wayside because of the failure of what is essen· tially a two-character cast to punch lbem home properly. Additionally, the absence. of sharp pacing lengthens lhe evenibg considerably. AXEi.ROD'S TALE or lhe pl1y. home oa 1M1et. Unfortunately the tempo for OF mE FOUR cameo roles the &how must be set by lhe ln the open!ng scene, only one male lead, and Burt Warner is is given....any -individual clarity not up to par 1n tblJ regard. the We<!py F r a n n y Warner appears tot a 11 Y Saltzman. played beautifully detached throughout the play, by Florence Ehlers. The walking through his role as others succ1unb to the leaden though It were a line rehears· pace set by Warner at the al. and never taking a Orm outset. grip on his character. This is puzzllna:--particularly in such Te<:hnically, the show has Its a capable actor, for whom 8 drawbacks, principal among shot of directorial adrenalin them a multistage light panel w o u 1 d h e I g b t e n h I s which provides some jarring perfonnance considerably. transitions. The stage Itself is What the leading performers adequate, but the decor is far lack in st.age sparkle, Mary too spartan for the character • LyM Shea displays in abun-who supposedly occupied it. dance. As Charlie's I as t "Goodbye Charlie" com- mistress now being blackmail· pl.etes . its three-weekend run Ii ed by the female version of With final perfonnances Fri· r1 her lover, Miss Shea un-day and . Saturday at El derscores the rich-bitchy Dorado School in Placentia. nature of her character and C!rtain is 8 o'clock rather zings YirtuaUy every line than the traditional 8:30. !~~~ poetic justice revolves around a woman chaser shot in the act who is reincarnated as a girl, and who then flips for the one guy who couldn't go for her, knowing all a b o u t her/his past. It is a fwmy play, much funnier than it would appear in the Placentia Silewt!': 7:00 ht-bro Smk.d R.,.. O'N"I ''WHAT'S UP DOC?" -Abo- production. Pat Warner in the title role RAQIJl!L "WELCH"" comes across very well in the .,a.a.a~ CITY ticklish assignment of portray· ........,.... ing male mannerisms con-~MllRB vincingly. While she loses ~ some good laughs by not ~ Mm=OR -0 playing for them, Miss Warner c.t. ~ Mott.M 2:00 builds a fine character and ex· I~~~~~~~~~~ eels in her drunk scene late in A 1"'11* O• Sllhf .... Ol.,.,k 5'1 c-., "SNOW JOB" Jean.Claude Killy ~only ....... lllCIBl&IB The Russian author set his narrative about bloody father- son rivalry in 1913 Odessa against a richly orthodox synagogue background. A measure of llnguisUc distress sets in with intrusion of such slangy un-Slavic words as "hooligan" into the Mirra Girisburg.Raymond Rosenthal translation. We seem nearer the Shannon than the Volga. Andrew Jarkowsky speaks the lines ot the 50n who ruthlessly usurps the household with crisp British modulation. On the other hand . the actress known pro-:\ininn~~B~rrnl~~~~~!~~~~il fessional.ly as Despo, babbles her ambiguous involvement with ripe Gre c ian in- comprehensibility. • The cast assembled for tbe production's 'Ibursday ---CtNEDDME 2D'. "-... ....-. r ~··~.l ---CtNEDDME 21 •. ... ... =:""::::::¥• r..-~'T'~~ ---.. ,. SrADtUM·I .·.· ... ..-1:il"m:9:: •• -.----· --.... SlAOIUM l • .. ... ~ ...... ,.:-~._ ---~ ... STADIUM ·3 .: '" .-:!l.!t!'ll.:r::.-• - -' -'1T• ln between are various ap- proximatioM of Yiddish. in- tonation. Robert K a 1 f i n directed with llOOllllllllbUlllc conslstency. --Jltllto CMllHll "DR. ZHIVA.GO" lb(..,... ...... -, ........ ..,...._,. WiMff .. I ~ Aweril ~IDDLaR OM TM• llOOI'., fT't TM• ... TOP Ofl WOMo••TAIMMalll'I WALT Owt•Y'S "OUMIO" a "LOIO"' O.Wle H-"IUTT1al'LllS A.R• FREI:" & "THERl'S A O!lt.L IN MT SOUi"'' "TNa DAJtWIN ADVENTURI" • "TDRAI TORA.I TORA.I" hlll 10) cw,...,_ '"TH• \'Al.A.CHI PA.l"•llS .. (kl • ,...., CWtt. ~ STADIUM ,, : .. .. .-!ll.:JtY.•~ "Tffl. •OSTON ST•AMOll.R .. t•I • I C1N. NO RESERVED SEATS. SPlCIAL CH!LOl!:(N "S 'llUCl ONLVS1·SO f)I C£PT fPllOAY • S• TURO•Y (\lf."llNC:S. ~ "fiddler onjk· on the 5".reen WINNlllf 3.ACADEIY . AWARDS G 1 ..... OVtrl 4111 SlftMll w .... 'inti HMdrtlt "•AtN•ow IRICIOI" ........... "'2t1MOTaU" iMll 111 C•lllrl ,.. ........ '"'•'!:l!'l!l!I' I Sidi ... Hitt! "THIS IS SIC llNO" ,_ C .. llM IClll1 "'SNOW JOI" ... Ill Ctlerl ,,., .....ccr alAOI -.+ .... -. ~ .. , "'• 1oi. •• o•. MIN J THE NEWEST OF THE SKI EPICS "This Is Skiing" IPG) .IU.N CU.UDI llLLT "Snow Job" WATCH FOl ""Pm AND TILUE" JM C9"W!l ·l:llle ~· • "IARON ilOOO" lll1y Miii ..... • ll•lfY Orh "THING WITH 1 Hl•0.5" 111'0) Hllar""'5 JI-rited """ "IS TH••I 1EX A .. TllOlll 01.•TH" "PUTNIY SWOll'I" ltll'I hi CtlOrl IXJ 103 FM -Fashion I.land Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR I' ' EXClUSM ENGAGEMENT ,,..,~.~~•11111 •c1••'; .-'\\,.ail 111 ~··· .. ~. ·"9 ~· ~ .......................... ~ .. ~.~··········' llll'l"fDJWl!8 .b ARI! PIU ,;ff_ 1!!!11 -~y "THERE'S I GIRL IN Ml SOllP" I CHRRJ.D BRllNBCIN "TMI MECHANIC" [pq;--- BURT LANCASTER 'ULZANAS RAID' 1 BARBRA STREISAND ~UNMt' ·'°GIRL. DAILY PlLDT J9 TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS ABC 0 6:00 -Monday Night Football The Oakland Raiders take on Joe Namath and the New York Jots in Oakl&nd. • KHJ CJ 7:30 -"The L-Shaped Room." Leelle Caron as an unwed mother in this 1963 drama, with Tom BtlL KCET ll:l 8:00 -A Conversation With Earl Wax- ren, The former supreme Court chief justice talks about a wide range of subjects. including bis long career on the nation's highest tribunal. CBS D 9:00 -Hm's Lucy. Ruth Buzzi guests as an ugly duckling member of Kim's drama dub a whom Lucy and Harry adopt as their project for ~ personal improvement. NBC 0 9:00 -"A Shot in the Dark." Peter Sel· '4 lers turns up in the darndest places to prove Elke Sommer innocent of murder. George Sanders is aJso featured. TV DAILY , LOG Mondoy Evening DECEMBER 11 N'OlLO 17 COWEIME Al ..,..,,...., b t1111ftd • eMtlJI wltllout. Mtlce, Ir. .. J MtwNb, tor Cftlrqt .. 11111 flclll ...... 17. m Slftri .. MwMtur• Ill .... fD @ llMW!Df ...... OWM'· ttlrow ~ NIAii,.., ldlfl stir In the ttltllWoft rtcftilM el Horm111 Corwin"s 1931 i.dlo ~· 1bout an attempt tD destl"OJ camt• ~"" ·-a;)- '"'II 0 Ill CllJ Ill - t.3011-.., -.... -is In dlll(lr of loslna: her job Mil • ..... ,.. "Thi Miii" O (l)(IJ l!J-MtM "' fooW New Yori .1111 n. 01kllnd R1ide11. het" IWMtll•art. Dr. hi.II" lnrtra. becluse of a11 111tiq1M car. @ ..... .,.. ..... (lJ"' -.. ...., Vlll 0111-OWi .. WIW Wat m TM flllltstilnes m.._,, • .,... [SJ Clrmcoll"'n fE Ml Duka EN-* fJ!l Hodlfpoclp I.Mp 9 •"""1 RfD .,,,,. u"" .... --lill ConWJ 1\1Hl5. Eli) Actil1 Tlllltre mn,....., l:lll ()) CIS !kn Wi ller Cronkite a "'" criffh: .. m...,,_ Q)llllipr• ....... IDl "" ........... c.no m 1W1111 Tlliltp '""' m_.....,_ a--II!>,,,._,,... IJlUIOo- l:OO e om-a.-: ......, OldW l*'l . ..._._ .. __ m-om-0 Miss WtfW' No lnform1tio. 1vall1bll frY the llltwttrk rt prea lime. 0 Ctl• Fll*n Sptdal runt ii U.S. Marshal Q.,iorf C1.,WI,. m11•...,-llli .... 0. , .. QIWlm ....i m SecMstrl .. " cw. fDlllllU ti F"""-AnfJf aftel lvith's llulltlft&. M1tllltu ltllls tM mGMJ $or M millrlss 111~'1 ,...,... l!Jlodo-m-t!ll--lll __ .. ... 1~30 (l) ............. ..... ....... ro--o Wlllll'1 .., u.r m•...,""' 111·-·-IDI ""'' ""' l'Bfflt' ...... OT•• A::11u•ct1 er ..... 00 111e--m--ID!"" ·-Ctoof a---mu"" Ill--m_...,.,...., .,._ ............ a_,.._.,. .... a;i .............. m...,._ 11:00110 0 CllJ ID m- Cl)(IJ ®1 - 0 ...... -rn--o_._ .. __ (dr•) 'ro-Donlkl Si-JlkDll """'· m,,....,~-m_...,_, ..... , ... > '5S -Brodtnd Crtwlord, &.. °'''""· ll>l - lll .... '"-fli)l lHC@:I .... c.-t .... 1isslnu 11111 Blroque CMstlMl music pertonnt4 bJ 1 MllCt ~ ol Callfonll1 111IJ5ic.llM.. ll:IS@EW.CtlllS L«I 8 ([1 C..... A ftOtociM pna . of rn111ud1n );nown n ''TM Dot 11:30 (]) M~: ~ff tilt.._,__. Soldiers" ••rs ¥'11\ltlnct iplllSI (1ctv) 52-.hl•n ht.rs, JtfhlJ Hu. Mitt Dillon for th1 u.ecutiOfl of Ol'lt ter. Ill of t11el1 rnemb111. D · MIC ..... ., ...-: rel (% GI tt.pn'i lllt.-111) "A SJtet I• 111 Deft" Cm.JHOm> m hr1J ..... ·~tier Sellers, Elkl Somrnec. m-... ...., rn -, ...,..... ....,,. ti!) Ill! I IHC@:I A C.WrudM (d11) '61-Keenln Wyft11. W'1111 lll1 WMM FonMr SUpnilM 0 llloril: (C) 1ht ....,. (lft'I Coult Chief .Mtict' tllb 1bout 1 '56-1t111 Rimel!, Comtl Wiidt. wldlo nnp ol subjeds lt:dudlftl 1111 m Tt Teti tl:e Trttti lofts '""' on t11e Col.lit. ED Mn 1:::::."... U"' II (IJ CISIN -tC) ......... _.. .,.: _ ......,.. (mus) (COii!.) Torn Court1MJ 1M "°'If u.. io-r Schnficltr 1111. 'lO--AI Joi• louist :>!tsllf, 0 ............... s.." (drl) UI OAflll ll CMr1t1 'J7~udette t.ollltn. m_,..,.._ m---m- 9:90 II ()) """'' LllCf Ruth Bml Junb a •11 o&IY dud.lift( Mtmbl't U:JO ID ...W. ....., .... (com) "51- of 10m'1 llkallll Club whom Lucy )Dan Blnllltt, &afJ MtnilL • ... Kiri)' ldopt IS !Mlr p!oject fOf II) c...tsf .... peflOl'llil lmptMIMlll .,, __ @ DI olftlalM« 1:10 Cfl ..... 0 ())(»"' -••• ..., SNdl of 81ue" Tttry's 1)'8$1sht h 1:15 D ..... l1T11>1"ltd from llyin1 111U wflln two 111nmtn blf'l1 on );Illini -. tty to assn:sln•I• blm. 1,3011 "'°"' ..,.. ,_ Tnil" C-l '4$---formt TucMr. m-!Ill-tC) (IW) -~ ....... I• .. ) '6t-llp Mift111d, J:OD II MIN: "T1l9 ..,.. (llt') •51 8eM Tllflwr. -Mtf Zttterll111. Hlftllrt t... Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES 1"'m""' --l*'l '4l -Wilt« nti11r.W. lolllft ....... 1~0..,1111 c-1niti11 .. (4r1) ,._ lclMlt S..,. Mnule LI~ t.00 m-• ...,. 1"'> ·14-0 """ -• "' """ fk110tY Peel. (dfl) '41-IOOI ~. ~ t.•O ltl "1l:I •1 'ssl......,. wan.tr. (1d'll ·~TrroN Powtr, P'illff S:OO(l)(C) ~ .... "•lsuwc"' r.t lllll'iL I (oorn) '&4-.'9n:y L1wb.. IO:OO (f)"fM ""9cW .... (Mr) 1 Ol(t) "lldllll 11 • ....... Mo -ltytftt HoMd.IJ, Mll'J Ptaca. tilll'" (CM) "6 0..M W.0.,, D .,..IJ. llrt" (dtj) "2 TOll!fl!J ~"' . '""'· "°"' ""'· -•:DI BICJ ""-~....-""'° t""'0 ....... -(WOI) '11-'iO-'Ctm ...... lofllo ~ llrblrl 8rltton. Willlrll PerNr. •:it(J)llMa 1IMI ..... I I I I t /: ) Je DALLY PILOT MoncllJ, -11, 1'172 ' . . ' Everyone Hai Something Th.t Someone El$e Wants DAI.LY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS .. you Ce n Sell It, Find I+, Trad• It With a Want A~ The Biggest Marketplace 011 the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results Gener1I ~-Sllt/d, ~-~··. REALTORS . 2828 EASI' COllST HIGljWAY CORONA Dl!I. MAR. CAUf. 644-7270 * Cameo Highlands. • • I •• . View Just remodeled 3 bedroom1 2 bath, dining room (or family room), fireplace cheerful built-in kitchen with inviting SUNbECK for your e,ntertainm·e nt pleasure, o~rlooking the canyon & vie\v of the ocean. One--of·a-kind. Just reduced to ............ , ........ $65,800 . * Two Stdry .•• ' . : • Room to Roa1n 4 BE.DROOM, 3 bath ,home. HUGE rumpus room that will take your pool table. 2 brick fireplaces, . built-in kitchen, large yard & room to store your boat. VA NO DOWN. . .. . '.. .. . .. .. . . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $39,950. AU STIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES . 644-7270 Gene ref Gener-. I * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. BIG CANYON C.C. $152,900 Ne\v -Luxurious· Lovely! Rustic charm in this custom home w/4 large bdrms., family rm., formal dining rm., 41> baths, 2 air- cond. units & 3 fireplaces. High cathedral J,.R. ceiling, 2 wet bars. Situated on a huge estate-like lot with a view of golf course. 1 PINEHURST LN. OPEN DAILY 1-5 (iener1I Gentral A U'1tll()UI: li()MI: THE GRAND DAME OF OUTRIGGE R DR. This 3 bedroom Lusk-built home is in beau- tiful condition, with lovely wall coverings, patios, a sunny breakfast nook , handsome dining room and owned by one of the nicest ladies in NeW)10rt Harbor. She has wonder- ful views on life -and her home bas a nice view of the Pacific. UNl9 UI HOM IS O• COIONA DI L MA R, 675-6000 A llftht of Morlor1e M°"" U,._.l()UI: li()Ml:S REALTORS CORONA DEL MAR • OPEN DAILY 611 ACACIA On the ocean side of C~ast HWy .. a most com· fortable & immaculate home, with enclosed, formal patio, plus a small bachelor unit to help pay your way. Only $61,500. The area's top professionals arc at your service. 675-3000 ------_,. .. Ge nerel . H _INCOME _ BACK BAY Exclusive µ1tl114J $27,250 ~yahOrN Dr. Hilft,e $610. Monthly BEAUTY Mesa Verde 3 '""''°"' bedrooms. Sl)f.Clous &l pOile-.,...,. , 8 Unlt ""~!•--1 · Cheerful living room • 11riv beach· a ............ 2 th• i:sid':.'"oi',{:'n 't~n ~~ Elepnt 3 BR & lamll)' home 5 BR + Pool hMd"""• . ft.re P ta e e. ba'i: , .... /pa~ aide M 11 h on quiet cu.l.de-aac l1l area u . lnt rqted tn Bullt-l'n kl tcheh, nr1 ·'wl,lrplc for ' lax!J!il ::aaao:s.ex~~ of fine homes, features ~OU• .1~%"me, t!autlful swim~ , diahwuher. Patio. Freahly . bosiible. $64,500.: ~ 1y 148 500 hie firepl, OW, bltins, ming pool and rett' street pablted lnaide & out. L1ke Wells. ... ~ on -iNCOME -~ndagstonemueehntry, lush.!!!~ ln Me&a Verde~ plei'se call !!L~~.:.i Jt;.""-'ntf.1_!.& .COLDWELL. -·- $170. Monthly more. -·-· a"Qout thlJ one. HUge, atep. .,.. • ......_ .............. _, i.w. RealtorS 6N-4aO ~1w 2290 Redlands D_r., N.B. down family room with 550 Newport Centl!I!' Dr. TARBELL Two houses on SO' x 100' lot, CALL 642-1771 fireplace and Wl't bar, Ceplatrano l!Nch -~~lty~~de~;· se~'~;· Qmu /ormal dining room, 3 ba.tbl. ~.. It/' Price $54,900. P ho n e E·Z· Y terms. Only $23,650. "'21 546-2313 for· appointment. _::;;,~"'=~=;;::;;'- Hurry, hWTy! ~ -INCOME -. .'nm Jl!:s:AI; $345. Monthly ~~--"----iS l:A,TBRS CAPIS1RANO RANCH HOME 4 Horses O.K. 1-Acre"-ter- rif~c views. 5 BR. plua fam rn1.. 36' pool, 7' jacuul. l Units close to shopping • Corona del Mar OPEN Tl."!lPM room to build more. Priced to sell before January. Only 132.500. CALL ANYTIME 646-ma 54>3413 There Is a reason 18 years &a.me location Lachenmyer Realtor 10 UNITS EASTSIDE $145,000. Consistent income ot $1660. All Individual bou11et with garaget, on l acre. Call for details on how to buy. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION __ _:_.:._:....::.;:.::c::...__ Don't touch a thing. move riJht ln! SPllJ'kllng 4 bedroom, famil.y room , 10' x 18' enclosed patio, all builtin FANTASTIC • SPECTACU-kitchen with new vinyl floor. Close to schools and LAR • SUPER. There are all major shopping. $30,750, not enough words to des· Very low down pavmt For cribe the view thla home details call · · Corona del Ma r 3 spacious b e d r o o m s · -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;I Cll.eerful living r o o m , • hand90me fireplace. built-in SHORECLIFFS kitchen, dlshwaaher. Patio. Rare Opportvnlty Freshly fl&lnted ~de &: $69.~ Delivers view , of o~I. Like new carpeting. Jr. ocean & canyon plUB 2 BR., estate park-like grounds. den older, clean, well cattd ~1720. tor' expandable hom e. TARBELL ,2%.'i Harbor, Olsta Mesa LITTLE ESTATE Ve acre $25,500 Excellent ea 8 t s I d e loca- tion-cute 3 bedrm-2 bath home, Big trees, · huge lot-private seclwdon, best buy on the market at $25,500 see It -you•u Jove It -Red Carpet Realtors 546-8640. $30,900 4 bedrm .. dining room, entry hall, custom ceramic tile, indirect lighting, natural wood cahlnets., prime home -area, ~1720 TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa MeSa Nothing comparable in CdM. Bob Yorke . COLDWELL. BANKER Realtors 644-2430 833-t'l700 550 Newport Center Dr. IMMED. POSSES. Move right in • lovely 2 bdrm, home, move-in cond. Frplc., stove; Iota of tile. Nlctly decorated. Dbl. ear· age & on an R·2 Jot. MORGAN REAL TY 67U642 675-6459 P~ESTIGE BEST AREA 4 BR.. fam. rm., form. din., quality <.i>ts. drps, wall coverings; lush landscaping, sezving bat to __ J)!ltlo. You own the land. fl'J,50(), Gary Knox COLDWELL. BANKER Realtors ~2430 833-01'00 550 Newport Center Dr. ''Our 27th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtorsl;G;;;;•";;;;0 ;;;;'•;;;; 1 ;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;Ge;;n;;•;;r•;;1 ;;;;;;;;;;:;;;= 2111 San Joaquin Hiiia Road Ne"!'f' ot offers. 3 bedrs., 2 baths, Call 5«)-1141 Open Eves. large living room, dining room, large Jot. Presented at $89,950. . •. HERITAGE * 4 UNITS * Near Town &: Country in Orange. Big l BR. 2 ba . owner's unit w/(rpl + 3 2-BR. DUPLEX-BY OWNER_ 708 Larkspur, remodeled & ready to move in. Shutters, beautiful new kitchen, bath A carpet. Open Sun 1-5. 166.500. 6'J3.l&i3; 615-7616. NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 JJnJa .!)6£ Felnrlow 646-1111 ltnytlmol REALTORS -GEMMi--G9ne,,,, 1610 W. Cout Hwy., NB. REALTORS 642-4623 IRVINE TERRACE PRESTIGE WATERFRON1' HOMES $53 750·..-VIEW i.ong, low A oeelooed 3 BR .. ~port Beech 2 ba., with trplc.: near 42x118 FT. LOT * R·2 * CdM SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT JUST REDUCED and ... on the ocean side of the hwy., plus a jewel of a cottage! This outstanding offer- ing has space for an extra large second unit. Shown by app't. only. $59,900 53 Li nde lalo Drive . HOME WITH WAS $34,9;0. NOW $33,950. Elegant 5 bdrm., 4 lh baths; on lag00'1-New with VA no down term• or 4 Bdrm carpets, drapes & wallpaper. Lovely garden POOL 95% loan. Big family •!zed Beauty & 1 sli $ home. 4 bettrooms. 2 bath!, NEAR BEACH Be titul custom bull ho FuhlOn Island. M~ in 4~ 3 ba . ...._. tdinlngme January. $59,500. Ru ss lKUluuMI, . u11Ji, . F\ynn lik""°"!::~~~ ..... --COLDWELL, BANKER e ,, .... "'f ....... 540=17'""'. Realton 644-2430 833-0700 CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS 644·7662 Gener1I General arge p . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212,000 PLUS DUPLEX lamily r 0 0 m. firepl1ee, $41 500 F C I I I I ti 1-·ted on lar•e ~---Jd" thake roof and many extras. ' • . or omp e • n orm.t on ~ta Mesa tof with'~~ ~~!., cul~e-cac n e a r Immaeula.te thruout. Lath h On All Homea & Lots, PINH Call: -~ · •--1 -"· for 3 more units. Investor's CAIL ~ll51 Open Evei. Pl&l.6 er ......... , new crptg, up.. _..:2!155=..:.H::ar,_,bor=•..:Co<ta""'"--'M::et1""-. BILL GRUNDY REALTOR delight with loads of J)Oten-graded, like new. Fonnl , tiaL Home need$ remodel-dining -patio. Choke Joe. 341 Bayside Dr., Suite T, N.B. 675-6161 J.ng, 80 bring your hamme.r Xlnt terms. To see drop in ONE 8\.K TO BEACH and paint bt'UBh. Call us for a.t Live in a quaint, 9 yr old TARBELL 550 Newport Center Dr. BY 0 w n e r • Spelctacular Smlasa Hill Jorwer view trorn thla Jwcurious, new 4 Bdrm. MMin. home. Sep.. dlnlna room. $99,950. m-1010 53tFltl50 won't laat long. 645-7221 PLUS have your own ---------1 Gener.I G.n.r.I comolete details. but huny, !!!!!!!!!!!!l!!~~~!!!!!!!!!'l.-1_133_w_es1~e~U~ff~Dr!.....:.,_N_.B_. seaside home, 1 blk to heh Cotta Mew HOUDA Y HOMES!!--------I·-------546-5880 !Open Ev".) . WIFE bu•iness at home. Zoned DELIGHTFUL EASTSIDE 3 BEST FOR THE FOUR GREAT HARBOR Most Channing INSPIRES Harbor Hlghlonds eommercial. 1162-SJJS Bkr. bdrm home wlbeautitul Jn. LEAST! VlEW HOMES WITH IN H • T INSURANCE fJnt time on the market! • --~~---terlor ·deep Iba& erpts, lrg • TERESTING v1r: ouse rn own ABSOLUTE LOVELY ·•~••d•d _,. $25950 ...,,.,. nrept for that cozy Need a truly spacious and FERENCES Custom home • one of only Executive -Weatcllff 3 bed., remodeled · l Bdrm, large · , Christmas. Dining area • all roomy home for your large l. MaMive ~ story 5 tow built, separately from PRIVACY 21 b1thPI •"•manicured ~mer iant. A truly-mU'lt'"'5ee! Beautiful 3 bedroom. Elegant builtin kitchen. &.Z to buy · family? This gorgeou.s 2 bedroom, 3 bath, sunken Jiv. re~t of tract. Located on ot. us carpets, w·apes, Ooee to .Mariners SCbooL fireplaCt'!. Large fa mi I y submit tennl -$29,950. Call story, 4 bedroom beauty will ing room huge pool fee quiet cul-de-sac lot. Ad· N~i:u:eac~. 5 Bedrooms bulltins, dining room • prl-Only uking $39,950. kitehen, bullt·tn range, oven ~. SOUTH COAST fill the bill! Huge pie shaped Janel. S'79.9oo. ' jacent to a beautitul' goU -• Onnal Dining vate yard with heated pool! GINNY MORRISON & dishwasher. Beautiful cREAL==T07RS'i'i-. -----, ya.rd with patio, loads of 2. Lovely one story 4 course .. Outs tan d 1 n g Room· 2 Fireplaces · Large Priced l1y eager owner at '*** -REAL~ patio and a park·llke yard. ~ 2 Housel closets and storage spaces, bedroom, 2 bath, -at ........_ la.ndscaptng front and rear HExeated. Swimming Pool • $61,950 -Submit your •* •. l!m Mela 54(}.-1720. Both only $31,- d FORMAL DINING ... --~ th lnkl s tensive Wood n....1r1-. 0 -alty Company tenns? ! w wv an ner location next to"'""""• w1 . spr eris. uper a.<>o. ....... <& ~ • •Verd Dr 11'•-' ROOl\T! Lovely Garden lee land S88.500. r-" spac1011S master bedroom. and Landscaping • 2 Years GOT THE SMARTS? e · ._.... Xln'l ft:ntals or live in l . k. h Lo Jy -~ t I Young· You Own the Land -Ra '* * Costa Mesa {Rent the other) 2 BR e ach. itc en with eating nook. 3, 1'lamily oriented two story ve g(l,l"l.,len a r um Und $ 8 0 Then use them. Dream your -•,. •* 557 .,_ It's 2050 square feet of sheer 4 bedroom, 3 bath, !rnAP'k:};n.; e,1n,-~!~g doobyrt. lo1tsn 1 oelr eglo..,m er • 0 0 0 • Call own color scheme in this * . ~ Private yards, see tint-at Plea··"~e at o•ly .,7 200 l. -.---... wu Anytime, 646-0555. beauty now under con-14 <Open Evenings) 2955 Harbor. Co.ta Mesa 428 Hamilton St., then call: """ " .., • · poo near new elementary th•o .. •hout 3 ~·--and c. •••1060 Jn 'NUFF SA I D ? ? CALL hool M4 500 • --~"~ ""'ctlon at No. 23 •=•• }' I l I POUNDING SURF $25 950 ~ H le-..!. SC •• • . 2 baths. Original owner paid ••• 1-. Lane in Big ca~n. Be the -·'-. I .. OPEN HOUSE DAILY 4. ~ No. l one story, $36,500 tor It 6 years ago. II~ • first owner and be a winner. Brand New Surfaide Duplex· Beautiful 3 bedroom. Elegant * CO&ATS profes1uonally decorated 4 Now only $40,~. A fan-· LoisMIUer642--8235. ($12) ~ Peninsula location! Plush 2 fireplace. Lara:e family M-rAMto 4 PMQnly . bed.J'?Om. 2 bath, out1land· tastic home and Investment. J,• .•! .· • . HELLO bed 2 bath tDQ1 unit• kitchen built In rana:e Magnolia, C.M. WALLACE mg view, fee land. $102,IXX>. Hurry call now. 842-2.535. iilllM··-, : beat' c~ drapes: & dishwasher. S:a: ~le E, b4l br, 2 ba, pool, REALTORS call 6T>-1225 --· ----~ PENINSULA ·--~-~ + ~-. beo-cell· n•tlo and • ~·k·""" y-~. ~-' ""' I, epts, drpl, ~ ~ iUll:MOIA.l'I' 0' ltl( (QtWIU. (Q, .l.JIJI .l.W Ing~-• -eu] -• ""l720 _. ,_.,. <u:u bltnl, tel calla 10 am-8 pm 546-4141 ll!ITJIB RJl:AL $23 000 2 BR 1 BA 64U23S ~·-GOOD BUY -DUPLEX • apecta ar view! ~ ' lo M. $411500 Ownr w-t31.0 l""~,!'(,JO!'pu",s".nt"E~L·~r·'"snt"iedng!!!!•,.,>,..,. I g .. •.].J .· •.(.:. 9BeaiSc<ll'fNhl~lP=iaoal1PM SJ s:S~~:eJu:' r;r;~ I: !!!!!!!!!!!$"3"0","9"0"0!!!!!!!!!!! ~~:Xto~~_J~ ~:~~r~ $C~: i 10<% WFfn eof:i:. -~~~~ei!!i ~I you rentera to get Jtarted. 4 bdrm., dining room, entry great bachelor unit. Can see -:1111!5 Harbor, Oolta Mesa 140'x69', R·2. Prin. only. Carpets &: drapes thruout. hall, custom ceramic tile, nd ba ••9 900 Contact J im, 64~3509 or Fashion Shores ........ ,.,, .. ,COl ..... CO. Just R-... uc•d Huge ldlct>en with ... Indirect lighting, notural oeePanETa E ByA .. R .. R. E~TT· ~, ' * FOR LEASE * 67~3031 . wu range. Country atmospllf're. wood cabinets, prime borne ~ IB"Y:;--;h=.-=.,-,,-_-:3-,9=--=1""'aa"" O"" ol those "most "k"' $2000 I · Call now. orea, 540-!720 REALTOR '-Luxuey apl on the boy!ront. v••= n~, r, about" homes actually WELCOME TO --Slip avail 3 Bdrm1 2 starter home. S750 dn, '2'25 com"' on the marl<et. Askod MARLBORO BIKE TO BEACH! JUST 642-5200 $27 ,250 btth~ $550.mo. yearly " ~,:.Jf1·f!IO· ll33-ll03, • .,., aboutbecauseofilll location REDUCED BY ANXIOUS ...,.....------3 spacious bedroom s o.o,.. Wiiiiamson South of Hamilton Stree!. COUNTRY OWNER! Formal living Realtors 5&-0465 --------· Cheerful living r 0 0 m. RNltor BY owner -The lllf1t'S1, CM you picture a 1800 sq. and l-...i'l& )'OW' horse to this~ room and dining l'()()m. Open Evea. 2955 Barbor, O>Sta Mesa Sell Idle ltem1 ... 642·5678 handsome li.ftplace, built-hi * 548-6570 * nicest, le a & t expenalve, 11 .. 4 bedroom, 2 bath home neat ... 2u~m rane~• le SUNKEN FAMILY ROOM! kitchen, dishwasher. Patio. IJ\gl·sty 5 BR hrn 1n Mesa with a real tile fireplace, .___ eozy brealdut nook in ""-shly paJnted tn&ide & $5.3,750 -VIEW del ~-$38,500. 549-1857. ,,.,,uc on large lot. ect h r ldt~ -.... J t "' all eleclric kifl'hen, i'lepar· far the family who wanU c e !I ••uen. ... ._ a: an $@ ~}A. lt tr <lut. Like MW carpettn&. Jr. Newport Beach MESA Del Mar 2 Br, pool ate service porch, a heavy animals &: w\de 0 Pen size bedrooms. Laundry . '(} -. "C Q. 9 estate park·llke grounds. Beautl/ul cu.atom built. home. sl.ze lot. $33,950. By owner, shake roof, lush lartdM:ai>-space11, Located jUlll a few room. Covered patio open!! I-' J.J \:> 54()...1720. ,) 4. bedroomt, 3 baUu, dining 2869 El Rio Circle. ·ing, quiet cul-rle-9ac strt'lf!t blocks from Nl!WPOl't Beach. to SPARKLING POOL! The Th p f 'I L h B / / h room huae tatnilY'nn park for only $34,9.-,01 You """" New on the marl<et. Call ., -home In th• area. • UZI e WI n I e ui f. n C uclcfe uu yard, brk, ~m ~•r Sflorea call now. 842-2535. qu1 5880 ck, Call fatt. 660303• O horrono• i.n.,.. of the 546-(Open Evea.> four xrambled wcrd1 be-PRIVATI BEACH: (9 TIDI: REAL~ low to lorno r.,, """'~ -.... 2955 Harbor. Costa Me,. GREATLY REDUC llD BBl:Al&RS I T I D A N E I PRIVACY PLUS 60' On the bay, thl• oulalan-OPEN ·n. tPM E Re.a 2955 Harbor, Colt.a Mesa dina lot, with a whittJ aancty I I I II I t XECUTIVE A s~ NEWPORT HEIGHTS beach, ba1 !wot been redue-w..IL ..... Beach Prestigious community offer• .... 950 ed; 149,tlOO. Ex c I u t 1 v c "'" •v CH ARMING ultimate In eeclusion, 'Thil ~6• neigh•~--· & eat •--· 6 lleclroo1111 .. I W y 0 0 0 11 , home learurea moder n 4 BR. + mald'• or l!U"' rm. Oonta'ct'aiii'B.n':..n •~·· P I BAY FRONT PIER arc hitectura l design ~-.,, 0nanelina'ullt 1.?Ji•bag earp0• COLDWELL. BANKJ;R 00 ope&-<pacloul k tt e he " , iu11tandl bu.Y I• Realtm 6'4-243tl ~'t1.mM Re•lly Company TAKES TWO I I r I voulted "'"""'"'' lcetllng., N'pt Hit. llelll'l' tuTYI 550 Newport c.n1.ro..;--· WALK TO BEACH! Wrought In The Vlllego of . . _ • sunkon Roman bath, Uri• BALBOA BAY PROP. . ~ ene:;;,~ew!;"'~ Herbor View Homes 75' BOATS home ha• bcco Mglccted * 642-7491 * Huntl ........ loech •·-pl Wed try F "'~offer a 2 Bit •·n home 'Mt.it n "one or o kind," I R I B A N I i Mo k t k h and needs ~ cletlHlp. COUNTRY LIVING r-111 en . am-, V1'" ..... .._ with all • mmo angoroo-oo er Ow1* u. realistic. CaU tor $25,500 All •L-Wo--Py room. 6 bedroot111. deco'l'tted Wflmagln.nllon. water uvnt uuiu(l j I I I r = two babies out of her pouch •PP?tnbnent. Red Carpet . ~ n•• $oArk11na blue ......... , wlth Lowest price pre sent Iv the nlluUcal appolntrMnlt. • d Id "H · .,.,._,.....__ "'---~o Thi ' I l • 3 Far Chrrf lllde, LOW care y.r;'.d: A few available in Harbor v~ The vtew 11 unequaled and,!! on IO : ow many t1rne1 .._._ .. ~ · t>J~ne .. ~ ton••at.La~ alot lliilGi atePt ,0 park and greenbelt! Priced at 153,500, r<.rf. the 10Cl\tlon e.xclustw. 3 1 r-------~, kove I told you 1o 1top ea ting EASTS I DE with .ii't':"cm.s available. Comet in this a. l l u r 1~ 1 A88UME $27,000 GI LOAN. ~ obowl:1 -lletlf bcdrooms~ustf:lar~e RABNE R "'clcers --?" · SPANISH DELIGHT .1.,1 pelnted and ready to ........,, Wt've aot it.all ~. ~~.. t: ... ~. (. L1l ~~ ~~~i~ ~~~I ::;l==l =·===r=l=~.,;~~ .. ~E:~·~~1:~~~i~,~:~~::,,~-:.m~,:.~~~?~~~:'~f~::~ -~,,h.!.:E.21•.;s:;~ ~·m:•.~b·,~a-~~u'~ed1clle"'K~ eauA-sH~ ~~;i-... · :~.,,~:r.:1otl '42-1235 644-6200 oorat only $l3S.COJ. -PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN s • .,_,........ bed • ..., ... ...... 1HISE S UAR S m••ler 'u It e' qu~t THROUGH A 132,1!0. 817410. OWNER must sell. 4 ~·A#*ua-¥.i~ cul--de--1ac st.rfft, Spanh1h ~ ~ llednn• • ...,., IM•• """"· E) UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE l!lTERS I I • I I I •O'Ch wtY to courtyhd '"' DAILY PJLOT 91aa -Al. family room. tln.'fNaee, brk, om! wt!. !flM ., --1"o""'G"'El,_:;AN~S~W~!'!R ___ ..JL-.J.-I 1 :2'~~':1::; ~t~ !f~: WANT AD 1£t~W l.14,500. >•Hm. SCRA SSIFIC TIO s.... 11· °'11 Red c.....,i, 642 5678 ' __ !,...!!![: J<eed a "Pad"T P11ee an ad! Sell Idle ;1ema ... 6'12-5618 Claullled Ad• , • , 64Uo618 M·LETS ANSWERS IN CLA A N 7 00 fu>ahon ~. • Cl•ggl(lod Ads ... 642-5618 --~--~------------------ • i J ' ti 1. I • !. ! I ! I ' • . / ' I • • • • I "' f ... • ~ ' t ' • • ! • ;,. • (. • • • l t .-' • ,. .. ; .... · . -:· ' -' . . • .. • ~ '• • . " .. ... ~~­! •\ ' ;. I . '· '. i :., . ; ' : ..... . l-,• : . ., , ' ,_ ' ,_ ·- •J ' ' •I •• • .. • • • • I DAILY PILOT 21 :~ ,~~~~,----.. ---! -..... l~I -..... l~I -.... I~ I -·· l~I -..... l~I ---J~I I~ I ---I~ I ---I~ ' '· j;H;;;""';;;;;";;•;;;"";;;' :;';;;';;";;;";;;;;I Huml....... IMch Hum"'91111 a..ch lllGANT It's Liie o,.Mg 4 BDRM • rlr• 1h.rp, A Pt-ilt Nla pa(f a.c.h Pre-Grand Opening Sale! MANSION br\ fpl, 11 crptd, al EloeeuUve -beautllully .. -dn. s BR, Doil!• • $"" 000 Jandocaj><cl Lol'p trl-low] • ~ prntSae ho m e . terms, ""' 1 • home ioCa~ In moat VA NO DOWN Tbetr m 0 • t praUp:Jus leirwin realty inc deJ!rable ara ln Hund~ :;:'~ 1: .. ·~~ 968:.+405 fl!,~~~~!:! Uv rm., firepl, tmJ din rm., ;;ya .• bedrooms, tormal tam rm., IJ'I bdnn1 W/CX· I ...... __ .......... 1 dlrlf~ room. tamlly am. in cept'ly' • lrl · hlllller, au I' JdtcbDn plua •--family u!)lnded tlilc blHn eppl'1. 0 $23,000. room. Wllh ....;;;;::;;.,. 6li % )'ti new. Move In ffX' 3 BR, 2 n • dbl 60'X100' loan. Call MT-tmo. <llrlltmu. A mutt. to mm--_un. W· ...,. • Jl"l<ed below mk1 Jot, iclila • lil\J> r cloio! by. ~ · ~ Call for-' . =~=.:!i.~ •Th*mL Qwnmhtp ii cbe&per .UOM't'.!!!' remenblp.. Call now 1----l' • . . . r :. • TT 1 . · 1 CONDOMINIUMS ·-$51,495 --Lofty livlng awaUs you! ' ' hll 4 BR. fam rm. etc. 2'700 llG-2f!!6 ---I OWNER aaya, "tell mw", I .. It ol Jwnuy. $49,900. 3 Br., 2 ba, !rplc, patio, c:rpt, CALL &G-1418 PATT I bltna. Boat entr. By owner. ~ pays all bu)oera costs. 11.IXI .,_. ,.... In. Big 4 BR, 2 BA. -below mkt. $28,950. X l n t in- door/outdoor entertainment bonle. Beaut. waterlall A fishpond, """""'1 OO'xl2' patio, aprlnk.len front &: rear, lra: kit/lam combo, W/W C!'pU &: drpt, dbl Jtat. VA ~ts le5I than rent. SN ~J cw ......... ·-... Act swiftly to selecl your own Newport Beach condominium. Visit the temporary offices of the Newport Crest Information Center, f WALKER REALTY. $31,700. 963-2713. PUBLIC N<mCE • . I ; . ' ' • ' • • ' ! j I i • • • • • • j ' . ' ' • • • l ' ' • ., • l •• ' . " "" • • . • • ' . . . . ~ 1. I ' ,_ I • I . ' .. · ,- ' ' ' ; . ' ' -.... : -• "• ' • ' I • ,. ' !--.< ''. I ·-' , .. .. ' I~ '. f PUBLIC N<mCE ...... ........... 0r.,.. COMt o.n-, l"\klt, ,......,,..., f1 Ind Owe• ,..,.. " n, 11, 1m ms-1' PUBLIC NOFICE I conveniently located at 2400 West Coast Highway Suite 8, Newport Beach. Open Dally 1 O <J.m. to sunset. I' fU.4471 (=)MMIH $31,500 4 II 2 IA Ca l i f. p a l m tre es everywhere. Ideal aetting for • the charmer. Large bdnN with lots of cloeets. t.uxmou. baths. Fantastlc kitchen with modeTn bullt- ina includblg dishwuher. Modern in ewry way. Seller will pa;y polnts tor FHA and VA. -......... •'',f~,~ :11 ELEGANT MANSION !.oYely -story. 4 BR & tam nn · I: fnnl din and bright and cheery klfch. ·That'•-not all! All crpts thruout even In bath, ~ paint • wallpaper. On a big comer lot w/block wall fen- ce A: c»v' d patio. $47 ,500 See today. I' ,,, ,,,,. R,',11 E: t1te 531•5111 ( =1 531·5111 REl'OSSESSIONS For Information and locaHon of tbeE lllA I: VA homes, --KASAllAN * EMERALD BAY * Ocean View Lot. $50,000 TED HUBERT & ASSOC • 34TI Via Lido NB 675--8500 Lido blo PRIVATE BEACHES; Tl!NNIS-&-CLUB - Lido values: 1. Charm. 3 BR. on St. to St. $71,500. 2. Two story 4 BR., F.D.R. & beams $76,500. 3. Bayfront w/pier. 3 BR. Best PuY! $1#,500. Oi.arlene Whyte. COLDWELL. BANKER Realtors 644-2430 833--0700 550 Newport Center Dr. +CHOICE* NOrd Corner Lot 5 Bdrma., 3~ baths plus din rm. plus Jge. sundeck. '"'·"°" LIDO REALTY RMI Estoi. 3377 Via Udo ~·pt. Beach OWNER wants a c ti on . * 67$.JllllO * SbarpeR 3 BR ln Hunt Bch., BY Owner jtmt remocSeled clme to bNcb. ONLY new blbl °kiL. 4 BR, beaui $39,5(». can for . de:tana. ~ • redueed -11 a. o o o . f:tt.~PAm WALKER ~orm-1166. imn. I ~L;;1....,;;;;;;;;;;1s1e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 17141 645-6141 lndu1h'l1I P"'POrty 161 Hou-Unfvrn. :IOS HouMo Unfum. ENTERTAINING??? M~ 'l:;:".;;..~~t :30: ---"-1------l·N_ .. _'!'..,,'.Po'-~-------I You wiu ..,.,.-., 1n this • 83.H1<7. LANDLORDS! THE ILUFFS BR., ......i D.R. home. M t I D rt SUPER URGE FAMILY oun • n, IH ' We Spoclallze In Newpert 3 BR $350 MO RM• w/wel bar • s:n::in -Resort 174 Beach • Cororul del Mi..r • • • • ~ Dramatic "Trl·Lev~" tnd trpJ .l pool table. SEE IT A: Laguna. Our Rental Ser· YOU'U. BUY rr. Bud LOT in famous I.Ake Havuu, vice ls FREE to You! Tl')' imit, cul de aac loc.s.._ ~_r. Autin horn-.? of the world famouA Nu-View! pool. Deluxe fee.tum . mme COLDWELL, BANKER London Bridge. Located NU .. VIEW RENTALS ocean view. Avail. 12/15. ll.ealton 644-2430 833-U'lOO clo11e to all schools &: cl !,y. 613-4030 or 4~3248 "' 550 Newport C.enter Or. $9(.00 or will trade for Costa ~il~·~ l!!!!!!!!!!!l"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I Mesa or Newport Beach In-Balboa Peninsula 5r. ; ¥. Moduf•r I I ~co~m;.•gpro~p,._. -~~"'·,,...,---i ~;":~';;ii;;;:";,:;:;;;;;; :Sf 11 p,..Bullt Home1 .. 120 e RENTALe Palm Springs. BAY VIEW 1 BR, w/w shag ".•' '-'-'--------1 N A/Port 3BR '"A htd crpt'g, drp&, paint. All new, •· "1 , :... :. ... -= · Yant Ga.r. noo yr 1 y, ~ rca ty Buildln& a New Home'! poo , w enu, ... ,., mo . 642-8029 Want to Save Money? Christmas avaU. Ca 11 I :--~-....-=----,.14 V''"la do l Oro Try Modular Magic! ~47 Corona dal Mar ""' .., RACINE HOMES BIG BEAR Lake. OUr lowly OLD CdM 3 BR 2 BA 3 ~~~ 213:426-ID7 3 Br, 2 story mountain home ' ' liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I in winter v.'Oflderland. Dec. trplcs. 1 yr lse. $350 mo. H•rbor Vl•w Home 17th lhni 25tn. 6T.Hll9l 4 BEDROOM -yearly --lr;;;i (TI4) ~2979 Costa Me.. lease $475. mo. Avail-~ Real Estate Wanted 114 • PiflNt RANCH _ Cozy 1 Br. able December 15th. * I'\ I k C h * Furn. All ulil Incl. !ll8. REALTOR, 6"-7270. Mobil• Hom11 vU c as ALA R•nl•I• • 645-3900 For $.tie 125 WW buy .~ property. AlJ e NEWPORT HEIGHTS! 2 VIEW . • • 2 Bedroom s, I 1·-'""--'--'-----1 cash within 1'2 hrs. Call Br. Fncd yrd. Tr ees~ 2 Bath, d en, yearly Motor Home Rentals o.ud1am1 pe• IJ,35. 1ease 01 $375. Realtor. ALA Rontal1 e 64s.39110 644-7270 SALES & LEASING LRG. 2 BR, firepl, dbl lull service facility Danmar Motor Homes BROKERS INC. garage detached, covered y ~ A R L Y Rentai-Unlum'. patio, lrg yard., One child Vacant Now. 3 BR. 5 houses OK. $225/mo. Ph: 642--0596 from the beach. Newly .-•-'~..,.~~'171~·----~· • painted. Large brick patio • 531-6800 962'"51 3 BR, 2 BA , •love lncld. All Utll Pd. lZ1 34th St. llliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $225/mo. Children o k , N .B. Phone: 213: 542-5'l72 or PRIVATE party wants small Large yard. 979-5327. 714 : 613-5562. home w/lnoome units in 2 BR house Sl.55 mo. $50 --°''l'H""E~B"LU=FF=s,.---1 Rial Ettate. I r:ill Corona df!f Mar. In area cleaning. No dogs, no ch.ii-4BR,2%BA General ~ Dec. 23-JO. Write R.B .Scott, dren. 646-5317. CONOOMlNIUM I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;,;iiiiiii;;I GeAI oera! ea~· Lc408° '> HSE for rent, 3 BR. 2 BA, Desirable floor plan, 1rg II tos, • '""u;; 1rg yard, a,wered patio. Nr enclosed prl patio, , \Vlk to '138-'4S7:1. Estancia H.S. Avail in Jan. schol.s, atctts, '° pal1t, $400 Apartmontt For Sale 152 WANTED, 3 or 4 bedroom, 2 can 540-3886. mo, By owner. 644-0335 bath home, eastslde loca-EASTSIDE 4 Br, 2 Ba, trpl.. UDO Sands S Br, 2 Ba, * 20 UNITS * tlon. Must be clean. Large bltn&, dshwhr, new crpt & fri>lc, lge patio. $.l50. lse . $195,000. ~~~ ~p~$45~ paint Encl dbl gar. Close to ~River Ave 646-7586 furn., immac. Sbc 2-BR, 14-1 Pri party. Principles only. schls. No pels. 645-4220. NEWPORT Shores 2 Br, den, BR, B & B units • $29,250. 557-4023. $215. Clean 3 BR, 2 BA, htd 2 Ba. pool & club privt Nr. dn. 6 x Gr. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim pool. t.rg. game rm.r'rpl.c. heh. $300. 213: 681-1278. RED CARPET Realtors mtns. w/w carpet, drapes. EXF.C condo ln Blutta. 2 sty [ I~ College Park. 545-5438. 3 BR, 2\; ba, 2 .. tlo, l'1lk fhwW 5 BR & Fam Rm, frplc "Bar + xtru. $450. mo. 561-2490 . 151 I '·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii~ Harbor" Nr schls & shop'g. South L•gun• 1 --..:..-"-----I~ Avl apprx. Dec. 15 . Business 1335/mo. 838-63U. NIGUEL Shores, 3 hr, den, 2 Opportunlty _ ~00 2 BR cute fenced cottage. ba, new home w/compl elec POOi avail. $200/mo. 177 "'E. kit lncluiJ. ·refrig. ln lovel,y 22nd St., C.M. 642-3645. gate controlled community. 240 Avail for leaae Jan. 1st. $425 a Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fenced per mo fnclds Ul!IOC. dues. yard. Dbl garage. $230/mo Shown by appt. 494-6483. including water. 549-2646 * 3 BR. 2 BA, dbl gar, bltns Houses Furn. or incl. dshwhr, frplc, fncd Unfurn. 310 ynl,$200.613-3825. 1 ~-~~--~...;.~1 3 BR, 2 BA. fenced yard. Family only. $250/mo. • Agent, 837-1271 • 3 BR, $200. 2124 President Place, lrg fenced backyard. 968-3538. 2 BR. 1989-C Char.l e. $145/MO. No dogs. 642-2259, 646-7017 • Corona del Mar 2BR. 3210 Seaview, l blk from big Corona. Adults.. Furn or Unfum. $350 or S300 per mo on l yr leue. Pouession Jan L Owner, eveir: 213:282-5252 Westminster 3 Br home. $235. Eutaide. 2 BR, Den, 2 Bu. \Jnf\u'n New crpta &'. treebl,y pain~ S!:iO er t..uxunou.iy turn Frplc. Dble pr. 646-7168 $290. Beaut. yd. R9'J-'nm HuntingtOn S..ch Condominiums "" I ' I · 1 ' 111 I I' If 1 ! . . . I I ---111·11l11r Unfum. Huntington llffch NICE clean 2 BDRM t.ownhouae. l % ba, bl.tltl, W/D, W/W O'pl3 & drps . $180. To see call 962-8781 Newport BMch TRJ-LEVEL 2 BR, 3 BA. frplc. Ma&Dificent view on Back Bay. Full hltns. $425. 6 mo. J.ae. or monthl y • 871-m81, EJtt 36. DELUXE Townhouse, 3 BR, 1~ Ba. Crpta, clrpe, blt·lnfl. lge pvt. pei&, dbl gar. Nr. So. Coast Plua.. 979-9184. Duploxff Unfvm. J!O SPAC 3 Br. 2 Ba, 2'11 car gar. Ocean vu. priv bch prlvl. $3fiO mo. Wkdys aft 7, 67>-3203. BRAND new unlt1. 2 Br, l Ba. Quiet atrect. $%15. m-2948 or Mrs. Eutrv 615-6000 Costa- I I •. • DAIL. Y PU.OT "6orlrday, DKtmbtr ll, l m ll!l I ... -.. --H~l .__[ ..... _ .... _u ... ---"I~ -·-l!J! -1~~1----J 365 Apl. Unfurn. 365 Aplt., Busl-Ronlol 445 1 Found (lroo ..ttl .e I [ -... -H~JI --·"'"-I~ I l•ilili--.... 36.S Apt. Unfurn. 1D_vp;..l_•_•_.,_u_n1_u_m_. __ 350_ Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Ae!· Unlu•n. 'N~•!!"l"'~:!:rt!._!S..~t~h~---l;::F::u::rn.";;~o=r:-U~nf;,;um;.;.;;;..· .;3;..70:1AVAll..ABLE Mar. 1st CdM, ~type fem,, bilk ool-;., Coste MeN ~ Sq, tt oonlt!r litatt. t.r vk'. CoarMn Grove BlY. I· Genet' al Cotti MeM Costa Meu Huntlnvfon kach General New VIiia Paul• 2 Hr., 2 1-"llll H.'1. Fan1Ul<'1 \\1t>h.vmt· Prettnt tenant, C,Jnnell & & Colden \'Int. 89U284. LA MANOtA Cha.J:tin. 100 lin. fl. display '-lALl'': JrUh Setter tound Ill IMMED. OCCUPANCY New 3 Br aptii Slro. nw. EL CORDOVA APTS. From $14S HARBOR GREENS OCEAN and HARBOR VIEW Bruld..'New Dtrluxe Untts windows, to It. flie~ Col1d W. Colla Meta.~. ~nt now lor .)'OW' coo-Hwy., 65 n. 11\de atrecit & Packag~. 2 new nlgl'lt '°"°"' Dbl garage, d51Jy,·&hr 334 Pot•thtnd Circle, 11.B. 1 &. 2 Bedrooms Furnllhed & Unfurnished Sha& <'pl/drJlil, putlo, beam e,cll., "arqes. atnictM>n allowance of 1 1tarden1 pe.rklnc, «>c IQ. n. Oeecrt 54M-f18 _ ''wtt.r• Cqenlality ino'• lree rtnt 1 BR. 1 BR Al*> or1'ct suite. 650 -I· It . be. · SlMlA Dish washer · Shag Carpeting . Walk ·in Clos- ets. Forced Alt l·teat • Extra l.arge Rooms • Reauliful Game Room • Heated P ool • BBQ 's- Enclo~ed Gar<lges. Quiet su~oundlngs and t losc to shopping. (Nr liarbor & Hamilton St) From $180 62'.! flamUton, C.M. Prevallt~' It den 2 BR'i A: 3 BR'• 35c. Rtnted w/Jtore ur Loat SSS E!Ogant apartments designed F'roln '$1.M. I>Ulwahr, e:nci seporat~' Mastcr11, ::::::..--,..~-:7--· NEW 2 Br, l'ifi Ba trlplex. Bltn rallg(', frpl , rrpt. ctrpg. No c hldrn/n o (l('t11. $190/mo. 609 201h St. HB. 6'r.l-04 7.l . From $130 lo $215 mo Bachelor' e I Bdrmt 2 Bdrm• • 3 Bdrmt $e(> l\.1gr. ~tr. & Mrs. Hoban 54R.2(X;2 whh a Maater 's touch, su· 1ar, 1wirn'1 pool BBQ'• ll.taltDr, ' S.lt Buckl• perb house security, exch.1· J>eti acceptable. NµR airport (21 16x~' Sllwr, cre1t ahai>ed with live Vcriw.I Ues Club and ~ ns ScoU Pl., C.M. l tDret ln bUAtling: ahop It llU'ge black lnilll\11 -latat Adult Living · Na Petl. 2 en, new AU Bltns. !ke to approc\ate. 1813 Viol& Pf, COliltu. Mesa. pool wlth unlque Aqunbu.r • h oenter1 .Ooeta Mesa. For "Y' : crossed with a "T'' fountalns and formal ga~ Huntington BNc leue mronnalion call Tom plus small ''B". Low in $140 Mo. 2 BR. Bill~. crpllt, m,:., trplc, patio & lndry fllcll. Couple & 1 111111 1·hll!I ok. No peta. 80-46tH. 2077 Charle St., Cost• MeM 642"'470 I \'t °' 2 Full Balht D•n• Pol'1t dens .. All part Of the South BRANO NEW A.ndrewt, 5 4 6-9 5 5 6 Of value, xtra hl&:h In .end· Coast's finest apartment . ·"537::;..·1:;46:;.1;:·-~---= mental value. One of • HACIENDA HARBOR F<0m $154 M1uner !UZe IX'<lroomi> y,·I 1----------- tugh bean1 l't"illngs, l:il'j(e <JCl::AN blurt, 1 BR, w /w living rootn y,•,gas ur 1·p1s, drape11, n>frl.i, stove, wood, burru1ij? fi.N!plw.!1" "''!ihr/dryer, $250. 1no, pref t.:011\'enlent tuundry arcn n1lddle as!(', rciircd l'OUJlll'. OU klt<:htn. Enck>sc<l pa· Aft 5 PM, call 496-000'.t tios, 2 1>'\\'hnm!ng pnols, community. QUO VADIS Ill lndustrl•I Rental 450 matching pair, can not be 1 Bedroom/studios from $195 Luxury Gardutl Aptl. replaced. Reward. Call Newport Beach DELUXE 1 & 2 BEUROOMS Furnilhed & Unfurnished 2 Bedroom from S305 Bach~!J 1 • 2 Btl'a. 670 Sq. Ft. 3 pbue pwr. $95. 645-ll.C &ft 5 p.m. er Model& open 9 A.M. til dusk ~ to $1.&.)' 1280 sq. tt. llO & 220 pwr. 60-5678 Ext. 323, (8 1012:30 •BEACON BAY • l·leated P ool -Garages -Shag Carpeting DiSh\\·asher -.-\11 Utilities Paid. Htd Pool.Jaeuzzl·Saunas Pvt. ottlot, plent)' parldrc. Or 1:30 to 5.) Re .reatkm Room & More! C. JJQBERT NATI'll£SS. GOOSE. Vic 3 BR. l be., eltt ktt. rel. Dishwhr, cpts/drps. Garden. NO PETS. ~ Mo. yearly leRSt", incl. utilities. 1-IOPE GERRIE !<try u.t.'l'4•U::O sauna. recrca I ion fnt'lli· cH;.;u;;n;.;t;.;I n.;:gl:;.;;•;.:n...:cB.:.oa:.<;.:h;__ Adults Only -No Pets JUtr. C.P.f. 542-1485, LOST: PiET ' BRING IN THIS AD" S.A. .;, Waroer ... ll!OO IQ " Central f.:r~ H.B. ASK ABOUT FREE 1:11hs & 1~ sq tt, rear I LO=ST~Aig~ban=.;-Hoc-und-.,-,-, ;:;bl:::onde=,I 646-1204 Westminster Adults Only -No Pets 241 Avouda St., Costa Mew ·---- VILLA MARSEILLES SPAC IOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. Ii~. Se<·ur1ty guard. No pclli. Models Opon 10 tit 7 pm 2700 P e terson W ay, CM NEW APTS.! HUNTINGTON BEACH ON THE BLUFFS AT NEWPORT DECEMBER RENTI loading. Paul Ch r i a I vie. Center St., c . M . l899'J !"lorlda St. St7-S448 557-7900 Bl<RS. Reward. 644--2484; ~3911. LOVELY 2 Bit, bltns, erpts, drps, gar. lnclt), l'hl1dr..·n 1 welrornc $150. SJ0 -69G:: FUrnlshed & UnNrnlshed t'ro1n Ne\.\•pol'\ Blvd., turn 111 ('Ii blk. W. ol Gnrllekl · RENT M·l. 1125 sq. ft. $140-BLACK La.b. fml. 7 mos. Nr. llospilel Rocd i ! block and 84!:ach Blvd.) MO. 1355 Logwi, No. 6, C.M. llarbor & \Vllson. lteward! ""'""",, . I Adult Living Dish~vasher color coordinated appliances Plush shat carpet . mirrored wardrobe doors- ind irect hgbting in kitchen . breakfast bar · hu ge private fenced patio -plush Jand~ca~ ing • brir;k Bar·be-Ques . large beated pools & lanai. Air conditioning. n r Harbor Blvd & A.d•m• :1 8'-dmom, $144 All Ulllltios Paid Carpet nnci Drapes Built·IM & Refrig. Covered Pnrktng above Pacific Cuast !hi')') to I BR .. 1 blk to beach. Shag 6Ta-5tl6. ' Da)'S 675-1700, eves 67J.8844 entrlillCc. 900 Cagney Lane. crptg, drpa, lndry tac. $135. $90 -NE\V units in f'.oslA LOST nr Mr Mikes, (;old N1•y,•po11 B'acll, Ca. 92GGO. 2l'.! 14th St. 53&j352. l\.1l'SR. charm bracelet. Generous I -u·~•wrt I~ 546-0370 Garden setting. Con- veni•nt to lerge shop- ping cent•r. Telephone: <TI4) IY.5·0060 S.17-13'16 or 645-6177 PARK NEWPORT ' -11 .... 1 Rentals wantod 460 ~·~-~an1~. "~4~-""~"~~~I APARTMENTS EXECUTIVE FAMILY 11-1 I•••••••••• nC'crl 10 lease 4 or 5 BR. Instruction . ,.....-3101 So. Bristol St., Santa An• 557·1200 ADULTS COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. l & 2 Bedroom apartments t BLK to heh, 1 br, I MANAGING AGENT On the East side . Only 1 year old Apts. Furn. 360 on the bay house or Condo. EastbhtfJ/ Rooms -400 \\'1-s1c.liff area. Horne !!Old • Luxury apartment nving ov· . e.rlooklng the \Valer. EnJO.Y ROOMS $18 wk up w/kit. ~i~i ~-6~~yoUl'll. By Jan No Pets. the VILLA YORBA Schools & instr uctions 575 &42-9622 $750.~ health spa, 7 swinl· 1~'°~"~~~u~p~ap~t~,·~2;s~76~N~e~w;·1,~~··~~~·~~~~ ming pools, 7 lil h1Nl ten· port Blvd., C~1. 548-ll75S. (So. on Beach Blvd. oH San nis courts, plus milt-s o( WEEKLY or monthly 1 blk 1 [jJ TENN IS INSTRUCTION • Diego Frwy, t blk. beyond b. cl trail . sh f • I • Group or lndiv. X l n t r~inger to Stark, E_. 10 icy e s, putting, · u · to beach, call 67Hi210 or Ptrlonah Chrlstrnu gift. ~. M'·'aga, turn ~-"t). Deboard, ctoquct. Junior l's 61l--0440 Ask for Bud. 1:------~~~ . -u '"&'' from $174 50 mo thly also J GuirAR le Bua Inatuct., b)' klds/pcls OK 'til July ls!, "!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!'!!!J!!!!!!~!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'l!! I In nicely landscaped setting $115. 64G-40Il. ~ Swimming pool, built-ins Ba&boli Island Apts. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn. 365 carpets & enclosed garages -H~u-n-t-1'n-g-to_n_•----,-h--Corona del Mar 1''rom $160. Stop by LOVELY 3 Br. 2 Ba. Steps i;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2311 Elden Ave. to beach. Beautiful & modern. $300 util, winlt'r LaQUINTA HERMOSA lease; .$tOO mo., yearly . _ .. ,.,_ LI Moderate Income ., .. _:,_ n ; NICE nn., E1side O f. Kit., D-1,.,,,. oat Musician. •~ ~ Qualification and vu•:un..vm plarui anrl privil. $65/tnonth. 548·1967; .riv .... Winton. ReaJtor 615-33ll Span1,.., ....,untry Estate ·v· ing & Spacious Apts. Tt'r· B•lboa Peninsul1 raced pool; sunken gas ~-~~!. 2-~tor;r town ho.uses. Elec· .,.3 p.m. 67~. Personals 530 _per leuon 847-1066. • Luxury 1 br apt. tr1c kitchens, private pa . 1s -'-''--"====--- ON TEN ACRES COMl"ANY REALTORS SINCE 1M4 • Adult or ba.Jconies, carpctlni:. dra· ROO~ for rent, ma~ * lilNDU SPIRITUALIST * e Dishwashers pcries. Subterranean park· wor~ man, no drlnlung. Let this ad ~e your • Choice of 2 color schemes i..ng w.ith eleva lon. OplionaJ Convenient loc. 64&-&'.110 whole outloQk o.n life for ~ 1---1[5) LARGE l BR, 2 BA, lurn. g:;· Unbelievable Living - upper dupl<X. I blk , to 1 BR. FURN, $18S ti.-ach, 2 blks 1narket. \ rly I 2 BR. FURN. $215 rental, monthly lse. $325. Apts. furn./unlutn. Lell54! Fireplace / priv. pa.lkls. Pool.II TC'nnis Con1n\'l Hkfsl. 900 Sea Lan, CdM ~-2611 t MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) • Custom carpeting maid service. Just nor th of Hotels, Motels 410 bett~r ~fession.al adv;ice • JaCU12i Fashion Island at Jambot'l.'(' on life. Lie. Readings daily. I ••••••••••I e Heated pool and San Joaquin Hills Road. WEEKLY rates . Waterbeds, 10 AM-IO PM. 492-9136. 673-4400 214 15th St., 673-4500. 2 BR. Studio-Furn. $240 e $25 Wk & Up On Ocean Lovely Bach • l BR·Rooms Maid Service • Pool · Util Pel 1\LL UTILITIES P AID Adults No pets • Call 675-8740 • (4 blks S. or San Diego Frwy STUDIO $115, J BR. $175. 2 on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt BR M'1C -..... 10 16211 Parksi~ 1..anf'.) ·_....to~· (7141 847·5441 • Dead-bolt locks Telephone (114) 6#-1900 Color TV, Kltchem. 1 bloc'k 492-9034, 312 No. E! cam1no How's Your Budget? • Only $140 per mo. !or rental inJormatlon to beach. Newport BeacR Real, San Clemente. Great, when you get your BAHIA PUERTO * 2 WEEKS FREE* Travel..odie, 642--8252. P~OBLEM Pregnancy. Con- money's worth at the Ven· 2810 17th St., H.B. v· d-' M Guest Home 415 lident, s y mp at he t 1 c ftOOMY ."\ Bedl'oom, 2 bath. dome. Handy location with 53&4815 or 536-9535 _ IJtQ. ~ esCI pregnancy counseling. Abor· if'Ound flOC!r. $3501 P'bed· month lots or nearby activities for * FRESH AIR ADULT GARDEN'llOMES 1 Hon & adopttOns ref. AP-plus spacious room lhc kidA ... plus play and IRVINE AVE. AT MESA CARE. 642-4436. upstairs with private en-1 d * p · t Roo * trance. $200 pr n1onth. Both poo area. Insi e: Walk 3 blocks to Beach Move in w/deposits only riv• • m PALM & CARD READINGS units next to park & tennis, * 1500 square feet l..rg 2 & 3 BR. Ap11. Newly l Br. $160 2 Br. $200 for Past. present & future. LaQuinte Hermosa call Balley 673-8550 ~t. * 3 Bedrooms decorated, w/w crpts, drps, ~ay & ~ight Security, Pool. An,bulu1ory Lady or ?.1an Advice & help In many mat· SML bachelor/bachelor"C'Hc 2 Bdrm Studio, l~t BA. 1''urn. * Big living 1'00m with bllJ\11, except re:frig, $16f & Fountams. Rec. Bldg, \V , <..;oOO, nui.rltlous Itood, ters. 213: 694-1350. Fully Uc. l'M==""""='°"'-"""=":"'c;'Y7"""~675-4-"-=600= I ·====:c:::::::::::::::::::~ Coron• del Mir I• in old Cd?lt, ret."Cntly con· $240. 2 acres beautiful park· 21 B~RMea1r, B8s'.c!225~~:s· fireplace $235. No singles, no pets. exer cise rm, billiards, ~I· Nice, c~1~t~1pbcre. PREGNANT! Think 111 g st:ructed. Furn incl TV, like surroundings. Sunken &,11 ·6~nS2 · Yours, lrom $195 ... a new 536-17ll. or TV. Ea. Apt. has du;h· * * Abortion'! Know au the limited cooking tac, S95 per pool, BBQ's spark 1 i n g life at DUPLEX·lrrunac. 2 Br. cov washer , retr1g, shag cpt , &: !acts first! Call Llie Llne, mo. Avail until late June. s pa 11 i s h f 0 u nt a i ns , 2 bedrooms each. Bltins, THE VEN DOME patio, new drps, crpt, bltrui, I prt paUO or deck. 545-4855 24 hn, 541-5522 557-3227 or S'r.>-8576 aft 5 or Townhouse Living. carpets & drapes, choice priv. dbl gar L ove I y y arly Beyl t PRIVATE Rooms • Men or wkends AlJ... UTll.JTIES PAID JocaUon. Leaae JD) pr. 1845 Anaheim A\·enuf! grounds. Water & ardener e • ron Women. XI n 1 nutritious SWINGING SINGLES Coste Meu Adults, No Pets 1nonU1. Call 673-8550 RLTR. Call Mrs. Phillips 540-0181 pald Resp marr~ed cpl. 3 Lovely new unlurn. apts. mealt. Complete cart'. Ph. CaU Jim, 2 to 8 p.m. 16211 Parksidt' Lane SPAC. duplex, 4 BR, 2% BA, DELUXE (aduits). $165. No pets. 3 &., 2 BR., 2 ba. each. Pier 642-9'l18. 539-3122 WEEKL Y~ONTHL Y !TI4) 1147-5441 sep dini.JJa, close to heh, ten-APARTMENTS 842-3276 & &lip. Many extras. lmmed. R t I to Sh1 1 430 COUPLES PARTIES 14 blks S. of San Diego Frwy $ 3 6 5 occupancy. en • s r Call Phil, 2 to 8 PM E'XecUtlve Suites on Beach, 1 blk \V. on Holt ~109Fk. Im 0 · Ail' Cond. Frplc's . 3 Swim· NEW beach apts, @>-21st St. Call: 673-3663 6._73-8086 Eves. 1--;;-Ul share-=-OOme w/~ 53>-3344 20IO Newport Blvd. to Parkside Lane.) ming Pools • Health Spa . 4 blocks from ocean. l BR ••v Coste Mell SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 bath, Tennis Courts . Game and $155 mo, 2 BR $195 mo, 3 ingle "'10man & )'OUili chiJd ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. $l4S Sl6S w/frplc. CdM High School Bllllard Room. · BR $265 mo. Manager + babysitting. Walk to Phone 542-7217 or write 642.-2611 Bachelor Ir. i BR, iiatlos, area .. $215 Mo. Avail. 12/15 l BR. From $160 wanted. Tobin Realty, Inc. school. $125 + ¥a utit. P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. STUOlOS It. 1 BR'S frlllc'"• priv. gan.gea _ Hal Pind\in Rltr. 6'ZS-l19'J l BR. a. Den From $185 84fr3371. 536--4995. Social Clubs SU • FREE Unena Dtv\ded be.th a: lots ot * GREAT VIEW-2 BR. • MEDITERRANEAN MOVE-m TODAY FML to lhl' turn. 2 lk 2 Ba. •FREE Utlllties closet!. Rec hall, pool & Frplc, bltns, aundecka. pool 2 BR in spac. 4-plex. $139. \VESTCLIFF 2 bdrm l~ apt. w/same. Poo I . Don't Be Alone • Full Kitchen pool tables, aauna baths. $210 up. 644-6344, 675-3535. VILLAGE Pool. Kkls ok. See Mgr. ba., to~. bit-~,' pvt. ~C!-1. $100. 5 4 5-6 3 5 5, For the Holirla_yi! e Heated Pool See for yourself. 17301 2 BDRM. 2 car covered park-2400 Harbor Blvd,, c.~I. 17371·8 Keelson. l blk W. of patios, adults only no pets. ~507 DISCOVER e Laundry Facililie11o Keel.!On Ln. Cl blk W. of ng. Pool. $210 incld'g tn4l 557-8020 Beach Blvd, oft Slater. Avail. Jan. L $.225 per mo. GIRL 28 .eeks fem to ahr :Z Discovery e TV&: maid serv avatl -Beach, 1 hlk N. of Slater). water. Ph. 61ft.1727 RENTAL OFFICE 968-7510 or 847-4260. 54$.7533 BR apl on Balboa hie, rent TI4-8J5...S885 e Phone Service 842-7848 OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM SEACLIFF Manor ApU. l $112 ea. telephone 833-1670 10.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimo I LRG. 2 Br, beam ceil., crpt, Cost• Meu e NEWPORT e $135-2 Bedroom, crpts, BR. $143.50. Pool1 Crpts, _bet. 8 & 5, 613-3493 alt 6. 1 Anawerine Service/ Equlp./Mobll• Phonot *DIVERT·A-MATIC LA LINES ONLY $55/MO SA VE OVER .$1500/YEAR Divert calls After Hours To Any Phore-$25.50/Mo * MOBIL.E TELEPHONES $1.25/Dtlyl 4/12 Channel PTL Comm Systems 979-1234 ~oyaittlnt 14 year oJd tugh school g.1rl will babysit whlle .YOU do Ouistmu shopping. Roberta fi46.-0818. WILL babyajt hourly while >"" go .hopping, Moo-Frt. Nr Harbor Hi. 63&-{)692. Carpenter LARGE OR SMALL All types wock. CUt doon, pariel, remod, finiah. trame, repaln, etc. 962-1961. MINOR home repaln. Phun- Mna · carpentry • paintina • tile. Call 540--6560. World'• Best Carpenter Small Jobi e Referencu 1714) 645-7588 AU.. types ol Carpentry, big • ...a11. 536-1648 CHRISTMAS SPECIAL tr':fil.bl~.dAd~.di:I·~~ 3 BR, 2 BA. 1% blk to beach. e APARTMENTS e drpt, child a.k. 17431 ~~~::s·A~8:,b·A~~lafu~ F~~~ l~~e. 11~i;e roo~i. ~-·'""·--·---~~: * FREE RENT * Nr Hospital. $210/mo. 17676 Clubhouse w/pool & tennis 2450 Newport Blvd., CM Queen St. 142..0589 ,0~"'=";o'"°"~;;."'°'";i548-~~""27'''--,--,-j.!cSl~OO~mo><>:..· -~'"!"713o>:_· ---$10 OU on 1 Week's Rtnt Ca-n "'" "~"" crts. Water pad. $245 mo. 1 &: 2 BR. Furn & Unf.N -~= l BR 2 Ba ~.~.~. $30 Ott 5 W k, 0 ~ t "''"" ' oou-.u;:ir,,. ""'1837 aft 5 PM Ch ' r..""' • • "'u"""""'' 1'~E~1.ALE roommate to share JOHN 'S "·-t & U "·'·t 2376 Ne°:port :v:.. (~ * 1 BDRM. FURN. .,.._ . ildren's Sections. WALK TO BEACH Bltns, dishwshr, trpl. Blk to 2 bdrm house Costa Mesa. Found (free ads) 550 Drl·Sham~ fr ep~..,.,.s:f.'. 548-9755 or 645-3967 AdUlt Apt. Near lake park. 2 BR Stove, refrlg, crpta, & ~~T~.fm~·J_BSo New 1 & 2 Br, cpt/drp, Lido shops. $laO Yrly. ;646-=-"21"00°'.'----~--~~ ch.guard (SoU Retardants). Beaut. endoeed patio & dY,....anl AtNtaooh.pe~~· F1"'°"'150 Call 646-1038 dswshr, trpl. 316 16th. Gib Walker Rlty 675-5200 Garages far Rent 435 FFNaDwnSmallrol_E,a~':_und ..... flnlall Degreasers & all cokll' I N "' ~M/ 1035 · ... · 1 --~~-,.,.c=--817-~7. 2 BR. y •• ~ ... -1mo. '' u•"""• ~ ..... briKhteners .le 10 minute 1000 SQ. IT. -acious liviJt&. pro · ope · • ....,.,mo. "Ao,.,....., ** 3 B l V: b ** ~ """V ...,.. 7ll brown & white & -•••-" •· 12th St 536-7447 ~~=o:~~·~~~~=~ r., 2 a. blk to Ocean. P at Io . Garage lor rent ·~-· bleach for white carpets. 2 Br, l% Ba, dlx mob. I ==="'~''7-'--'-:CC,'-~~ e AVAIL Now·2 Br, 1% Ba, Large, newly de<.'Or . encl 2 WEEKS FREE RENT! 1 Garage. Adults, no pcta. .9UI Palm 8.!L!L~ ~l=pbl~m~~· i:b~e? Save )'DUI' money by saving !:°ebr w/w pl~ a~~~ CUTE l Bl'aiJ duplex:. Avail. retrig, bltns, new &hag crpt. patio, bltns, crpt, drpl, Br. Frplc. Nr. bc:h. $15.5. 67J..8Cl!8. 53&-4618 °" ~" d ar me extra trips. Will clean pool., Ma• .. ~m di'-No. pe•· now. Sm prlv. yard. Fresh paint. Pool. No pets. Close to eveP>rli..i...... $110 Call 539-1661, 9-5 pm. I B~l "· uni Pool G ! ""--on hea . ~ Care living rm., dining nn. ~ • uuo: a ~ ..,. Small child OK. Ref's. $145 · '"" A,_, ........ 06 wkdays. .....mm ty ara&e or .,.......... Center 530-110.1. hall 11' A 17 ~ $175/mo. ol $e1UOrt1's, 2359 Mo. c..., .......,.. ar _.,_,........ ,~"=-'='="=~==--=--mo. 880 Cent.er St., CM. Call .::==------1185 See t 801 Do · 1959 MaDl1 A Qilta M ' · · T\Y rm. ·""· NwpL 54&-6332 .._.....,..,... """".._.., -e TROPICAL POOL e aft 5:30 pm wkdys, all da,y NEW dlx 2 br dplx. Cpt, a m· ape ve., eaa FOUND small brown puppy, couch $10. Chair S5. 15 yrs. HOLIDAY PL ...... MEN -Small beach hotel. 2 Br •tudk>, 1 ~ Ba, frpl, sprl wlmds, 642-8340. drps, D/W, bltna. srrs. 218 ingo Dr. or call 644-2307. Manaaer, Apt ~ beagle size, vicinity 17th St., exp. Is what counts, not ~ ~tt,1 k$8S/"~w., Rooms strcue. Gas &: wtr. pd. 145 Knox v 111 e . 5 l 6-1633, Sen Clemente EAS'J' Costa Mesa. SirWle Costa Mesa. SU-1660 ask for method. I do work mysell. DELUXE Spacious 1 BR ..... ...,w ......,...,....... *LA PARISIENNE* 53&-:Z:S.U ____...,.. gaill.ge for car or storage Kathy, 646-5363. Goodm.531--0101. furn apt. $135. Heated Pool. $115. -~ED 2 Bdrm. LREG. 182th :"o .. 179, ~Call,6'.~. 2 BR., 2 .8..!: Furn .l Unfurn. -Cl.EAN""'-==-,-Br--a-pt-17-35-.~on \VE ~ at . <:;asa ~ten~. _$25 Month. 613-6488 Eves. FOUND prescription aun Cement, Concrete Ample parking. Adults, no °' "" ..,, .,.. $190 & _,.,,. Fi.replace. Htd. GraCJOUS hVlrlg UI qwet Off R I ... Near. stores. Clean stve, prlv lncd yard, kids Pool. Adults. Beach IUvd. across from aN!a \1.-ith ocean vu 2 BR ice enta ....v g}a.sses in parting lot at PATIOS.PLANTERS pets. C Realonomics, Bkr. 61~ OK, no pels, w. side, 97S--1268 VW Agency. Gar. No dogs. 2 BA, co lor · eo-0rd t ashion Island,~- 1965 Pomona Ave., .M. Liguna Belch 6T.l-""'_,n,::1B""--. -~~~~-Across from Golf Course 540-4879. cpts/drps/dswshr & n..nge. CORONA DEL MAR FOUND in Ba,ycreit area· All Concrete work. Brick, 1 BR, Furn, 2 lrg, closets, " trg XH.32 Santa Ana Ave. LARGE l BR nr Htg Lge din area, open beam Approx. ~ liQ. It. office Male black .t tan CoUie mix .slumpstone wk. 894-3533. queen size bed, priv dress-BACH nr bearh Sl.35-$155. Col o:-~e~~tra.Close 11:RSo~f~ EXTRA LARGE 1 BR $155. Harbour. New sRag, gar., ceiling, prlv balcony, rec & spa~e tailored . to your dog appro.x 4-4i mo. 548-7226 CUSI'OM CEMENT WORK ing rm. xtra lrg roon1s, encl tv. 1435 N. Coast • Open Coast Center. Adlts, no pets. Utils pd. Refrig, range, cpl, dehwshr. $150 mo. No pets. laundry. Adults no pets design. Full security bldg;. MALE Beagle found tn I Drives, WALKS, patios. gar w1stora.('. Adultso"' .. , ""'~ ,,_ '""" 494 25 08 6""---"A"" A<><>"""" 492 ' ' 1v1amplo parklng Pool d-~-Don 64° "'14 ·~ .c.v.:s. v,.,....,..,,, -$155. 557.5529 drps, Hid Pool. Mature +.r,)'t.J• ...,.,.-~, --0464. Ask Jor Chri~tine College Park area. 549-4338. IC\:JUI, • ~ • 2ontFu11erton, C.M, Le1~d'o' lolo 2 BR, 2 BA, crpt, drps, bltns, ¢.,~s. :~fan!~~ no 1 rf7 2 BDRM beacR alp~;. 2 blks Aptt BOYD REALTORS 61'5-~30 YNG male gray/wht cat -C~ WORK SPAC. ' BR. beam ce"'-. ·---------W11hr/dryer hookup, patkl, Monrovia, 64H267'. from ocean. 1...,. mo. F ., U f 3 CORONA DEL MAR Very friendly, Flea Collar. n ntes. uu.8 .. gar. 1 child/no pet. s170. Respora:ible young couples urn. or n urn. 70 . , ;.V~""''~Ll="'°C:::'":,;H:olg~h.!'.644~0~l:o39:._ * 516-3141 * much 11torage. Attrac. lum. 1 Br turn. Utila paid, garage, 181 H Del Mar ~8 QUIET.DELUXE welcome. 536-4935. ·-408 Sq. Jo't. Suite. lnuned·1 Walk to lhop'g center. 1 Adult. no pets. $185. mo, 1 ~~·~--~--~-1 & 2 BR. APTS. B•lboa Poninsul• iately avail. 45c Per sq. SIAMESE cat, female, found Child C•re $154.50. 536-5114 or s.tz.27M. yrly, 673-<JS.n. $140/Up spac 2 Br, & 3 Br, Pvt P . H d ~i BEA~ 2 8~2 ~ ~Ix rt. Ample parldng. Secured in CdM area. &Th-1964 evea LI 'd •-·· 1% Ba, pool, cpt/drp, bltns, . aUOs * t • ruu s poo rrr ..,..,., w MODERN -3 BR, 2 Ba Npt bldg. Ask for Chrb:tlne. & wknds. C ....,,. care niother, full *SHADY ELMS-POOL* Newport Beach plygrnd. 1996 Maple, No. 1 Nr Shop'g *Adults Only dep. 2320 E1orlda. 536-3976. Bch Duplex. to shar e BOYD H.EALTORS 675-5930l'F'°NC,DC"'.'=o.an"'--.. -.~dul~t-oa-t~Vl-c: tin1e, wkdJs, age 3-6, : =~ldebl~~ up 4 BR, 2 ba., 2 car encl 642-3813. lmM_ San. Ap"t. Anllla Av.,~'J ~S~~· WALK to ocean, 2 BR, newly w/stra.Jght male. Frplc, PRIME Costa Mesa medical 18th & Pomona. ~ till ~lHe & Springdale. "·•-· LG 2 BR ts ,._, ... .....,...,.,.... dee cpts, drps, bltins. bltns. dshwsr ':1i blk to all 1 11·00 ~,__,.=·.,..------177 E. 22nd St., CM 842--3645 park:'g, w, ., ...... ,.Avail. now. • new ' cp ' .... .,s, Colllktel! child 53&-6155. beach. $00/mo. Yearly. space, now av ab e with · · . C')ntrector 3 BR, 2 ba·turnlsbed Stepl to $165 mo. 2 Children. No 2 BR. upstairs, bar, bltns, 61'5-7877 lmmed occupancy. New ST. Beman:l, p a J 1 sad e s , -:-;:;:--::-:----:--- 1 BEDRM., l BATH • ocean $215 pets 309 Monte V 1s t a crpts, $165/mo. Util Pakl. 2 BR. Partially furn. Close to · "pts, •-• ••••c 2 y, •= -0, -o ~Tl. .. FURNISHED-man on I y. • ·• ••·• •· •• ·' ·• • · 135 Alben. Pl." Call Mr. ... ..... t"" "' .-...· _,.,.>VO _..;30! Eutside C.M. Ph: eves, 2 3 BR.BR, 2 1 BaB p"' ·: ·" ·" • ~I ~"""~3963=~------White (213) 595-4436 or aft 6 ~~Oro :40~ Ca 11 *n:iw~ ju!;Bji· L~· ~~I !Hease ~!"1097· Phone Mr. Need a "Pad"? Place. an ad! 673--4577. a, erun ...... ....,.. e BR.AND NEW 2 Bedroom 962-317'J · · . • • • .,. • • oegee '1Qlr eves. Call Gu-5678 We Have Winter Rentala: Upper Apt. No pets. Adults 'p"m~·~~=·'-------L•nun• a..ch ma, dshwllU'. $225/mo. 9'Z9 DESK U bl $SO'l ;iiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiittlliiii;iiiiii;ii;iiiijjjii 1 BR, SU> & Sl«l. 2 BR, Will Take Studtnta Only. Ph: $48.-6128 evea & CliARMING 2 BR Duplex. -.::•--------W. Balboa Blvd. (213) space ava a e .I ' $165.. S/Pool. IcSeal for ·•--....__-~--"· Avail. -knds. 1165 Newly redec ...... k like La eas·• A t --=~1183=.'--------mo. Will provide furniture ~-~-•~• Ch b St. ,,...., ...,._..,41 ..... "'""' .. d ~di UNIQUE runa ue. P · at $5 mo. Answering service * * * * * ~ l.JiH urc CAIJ.: 673-3663 * SHADY ELMS_ POOL * ga r en surroun ngs. Wide ooean vk!wt, acres of Corona dtl Mir avaUabl.J. 11875 Beach Blvd. • AdUltJ Pooilide $140 up = adults on 1 y, gardens. Close to beach & ~SP..;A_Cl_O_U_S...;..2..;.;.B;;;R..;.;_be_a_m_oo"'ilJ1~fo~nU~ng~t~on~Beac~~h=· ~-~§J. ,------------------""' ~ 2 J!R· A~~ Pool. e Children next block · flhopplng. 2 BR., 2 Ba~ lge. cell's, Pool. So. of flwy. DESK space. av&ilable $50 pets. :60tm.f8' A ts. no 1n E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 SPACIOUS 3 br., 2 Ba, ~i 1i!~':""agechi.nde~;: $193.50 Month. Adults . no mo. Will provide furniture 1Ml Pomona. C.M. BAatELOR. 1 I: 2 Br ~~drpl. 1~/t. Adults,~ mo1alc tUe, shutters. K:JU pets. Broker &W-'848 at $5 mo. Answering service w~/furn~ avuapll .. Had"u't~. ~~ F~o-_;"--. Bum, 0;=_1689, tut. C t u---available. 222 •"'orest Ave., Fum. a.ch. & 1 Br. Ex• .,. .. ...,,. ·~11 .,...,.-Mo. partially tum. Ma 01 a mw-Lquna Beach, 494.9466,. coptionelly nice. 2110 NEW 2 Bdnn furnished apt ter St. S45--8!165. Rea. 64&-4939. adults only. Also avail . .;;.;.;...,;..... _______ l,~~~~~c..=:'.!:!~"--l l Blvd C M. $350 mo annuttl lease. 511 ~'="'=-;"'--'O~-=""'~~ "THE GABLES" aoon, other luxury apt1. $250 $27 &: UP. Incl utll. Some Newport ., • W. Bay· Newport Beach. $160-:Z Br, J ~ Ba. 2 Br. 1~ Ba w/ gar. Adlts. to $650 mo. By app't. only furniture avall. 2333 E. NEW 1 & 2 BR'a from $190 to call !lll6-U.l2 days (San Townhou!I(?, Crpts, drps, r-ts •-, bltnl •-~ .~ .4::94-<663.c..::=·---~~~ Coast Hwy., CdM. lnquin! • Bernardino) or 8 8 3-2 9 4 3 gar. 2649 Orango, Apt E, ..... ., ' ...... ' • ...... ~ ,.,.. SUlte 1-1. Ph. 639-8351 or $2'1). Nr. bllach A: ahOp K· CM u~lll09 w/ patkl. Wtr pd. 63&-4120. 2 BR apt, w/w cpl, drp11. kit. MS. o:A•A U4 E. l>th, CM, 548---0137. evenlnp. · .nv-· 2437 Orange Ave No. D $160. furn., oce.an view, close to 1 -""'"'°~~:..· ------ NICE I br d•'• Quiet Se 3td Gtrl needed fOr 3 br LARGE 2 BR crpt1 drps, BR e.-·• lo very nice beAch, on the PIMlCRlU (: OFFICE rental or desk ...,.. ' .. __ In p N I ~ · 1 · .._...., ... V''v. pat ' nd Id All •·-DI by prqa. 1 Adult over . town1™' ark ewport. nr E11anclll H. achoo1. Older new crpts, drps. All elec. grou par ng. yr. UYll IP . space. Handy lo """'' ego No petL MS-1021. $122.50/mo + S91 ref. pref. $135 67J.8145 eves. ~p. adults only, n 0 round, SUKI mo. Mr. Brach, TO 1n llMll(... Freeway, Laguna Niguel. Trader's Paradise lines times dollars e $135 • Nkely rum!.shed 1 ~t!J3~n,gtl~l t.~ LOE 1 Br. Pool. Nr ghops. chlldrrn or pets. $125. 49+-744'!7!:·------:r1:::.!!:.::.. r.::83:::1.::·1:::400=.· ------ Br. Apt. Adults. 132 W. nc. 83:HlnRI. Ann. Adlts, no pet&. $140 utll pd. !5'S-:::::.::JS:::i.:==---=-1SPECTACULAR view 2 & l itrt•lll• lrilfl tufl'lblflll AIRPORT Min View, 3 offi('fl AN~SAP~::1:>:10::NES'=.:", -val~l~l~""'. ,,,,70,_,..,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,..,,. ___ J Wilton CM. 645--45.'ll. 1884 Monrovia. 548--0336 ** BEAUTIFUL 1 &: 2 BR. Br., 2 Ba. blk to beh. New • w1ttrf1U1 cru te • suite, crpts, drps, A/C, llonda 350 SL, val ss00, '66 SEAU1'IF'UL y A ~t A 11 ~ PLEASANT lower 1 Br pool 2 BR lov.oer duplex • 1 blk lo NEW 1 A: 2 BR's from $l70 to O:intemporary Garden Aplll. From $280 lse. 494-3383, rtl1i1n.11e1tl111IOI'1our &u-8350 evn, 548--4757. VW Ca.mpcr, val $ll50. •n ?~~~ ~~~ 'd;!er•:5 adul•-no ;r,o,~U "'.'1. 1884 be•~ Yrly ~~ winttr ~ $1!10. Nr . bcaC'h &: ihOp'a. Patios, frplc., pool. $155-494-2339. txtr•·t9KkHlt I· or 2.Ctd1oon1 Bu1ln1s• Rental 445 F ~ ·~ F -ndl'~. ~de ,....: .... I ~ pa or -mo. J..JU 46th St. iX'I: 114 E. 21Jth, CM. 548--0lJ7. SUIO Call 557--03Cl2, Meaa Verde 1111rtme11t rrOM fl6S. 0tc0t1IOI'· 01u van, ...,..... f!q. or prop, .. v uun ''"' ,,. _., Nov 24-:16 or phone ....._ · · 11111 fvf11ltlll't PKU111 ''•jl•blt . IDEAL "··ta M,.. loc. photo cq, furn or? 675-7877 truck or 111 645--48.12. 'I BAOIELO~, $145 213J"2M.4215. 2 BR. Adults, no pets. BAY rvR leut, new Townhou9e 3 DELUXE 2 &: 3 Br, 2 Ba. 2)00 F11"11w ltd., Co.ta Mtw. Ofo/!iitore~l200 IQ'. ft. Daya, SIS0,000 lal TD, pays SJ.345 ORANGE Co. MOW\IAiJ\ bfx: $50UCJ 5r57 1761.tft, Nr SJ>:ACLJFT Manor A pt 1 ~~ ~38'1 W. ~~ :· crpts. ~· Encl pr, $160 ~· Rental Htotlt! M!-2300' ~3437 MS-7398 eves & mo. at 6%~. Trade for Ranch ~ Acrtaa;e. !deal A • • Bachclor a pt, util pd. Y ·• · · South Coast ~· ~ht! Ole., 3095 M.lce A ve. TILE EXCf!'ING wknda. ' h0n1e, yacht or t ~ltatton, spa, church,. l BR. Furn. Apt. SJ«)/mo. $148.50. Pool. 1525 PliictntJ" 2 BR unrurn. Crpta, drps, • · 546-1034. PALM MESA APTS. FOR lease c .1 centnril loca· Darlin&' Ret.lty frontier town. Trade tar No pet, ot children. at Ave., bk about our dlY.'tlunl range/ove!l. reh1g. No peta. 2 Br., 2 Ba., crpts. dftll, Newport BHch M1tlUTES TO NPT, . BO!. tk>n. l86&-67 J>iu.k Ave, C.M. 499-4588 , exc. home, dtsm? 838-t6$1. On!ter st., CJ. M2-M4&. ~2682. $l40/mo. ~l4M. bltna, encl pr/patio/yard. l ~::.:.:J~.:...::;::c;;,:___ FURN. OR lTNFURN. 1150 sq n. All or pa.rt. Ph! HAVE 2S' Owens powcr 2t,iA, Sub divtded, levtl: 1 BR furn apt. $105. FURN Apt, 2 BR. 2 BAs, SPACIOUS 2 Bt, 2 Ba, nr. -~ SJ~5 4 6 -O 4 6 9 ; OCEANVIEW )'tarly duplex. Un!:>ellevnbly 1a~c apt~• 646-8811 AGT. cruiser tn!O & clf.'ar. Value tor lot, Jti desert, 29 Palma, 2531 N~ Blvd. 11Undeck, 2 Blks to ~ach, school11, shop'g le frwys. No • 0 2 BR, 1 ba.. $250. 64+-t780 OT huaa pool, ~1c·.1x~1 "l«"I b.I· SMALL Sbo stlge loal· $!'i000. Eiccilange tor 3 or Clear, Valu• •PP"* $2500, Call &0-e> )!rly S250. U111• pa Id . pets. $165/mo. 919--013"4. 2 BR, c:rptt, dl'l)S, blt111:. 60-3639 :.:~· ~d@,~~·ped~:::. 111unt1 lion. flxtUZ-:i l::i1. !l3M Via 4 hdrm horn~. Ask ror Carl, 1or Motor bQllt, 14• up A Le .. ,.,..., 2BA. Clc:D $150 LARGE 2 BR, carpets &. 1.~t:f room on premlM"t t.R=G=3=-B-R.--2-BA--N-repl-81·N,GLE'. • Fm._ ll50 Lido, N.B. Back of llluc 544-4015, evtt $44-6144, lrlt, nice, 546-9!l12-·n~A _:6 tic-~ pl"l!f. fnt11n1 ~ -Ytntly Ocen.nfl'onl. 2 drape1. Nn •Ing 1e1 . $156/mo. G 4 6-6 9 61 or bllinl. Adl tl, nr llolta HosP'. 1 BEDR'M. f'ru~; SlGO Dolphin. Call tm-8140 2 Rn + 2 Studio apta, Palm ANTIQUE llclgh. -;:,;~:; ok.•• me. RR. 1 BA. Deck. Ciar. Bit· $130/mo. C.U 548--7:1)9 646--1246 JriQ/ . CALL &12-4.'m. 2 R&ORM. ~)°On\ $1~ !'pr\nJt1, nr lhoJ>!I & AChb. Stunlevant A: Larabee N.Y, Huntington a..c.h In!!. fll7'-f!OOR, i Bil. Duplex. $1'15. Crpt'd. I NEWLY decor l BR, l % ba YEA Y: •Br. t101L<te; 2 Br. llnrut'll Ap1s A·1n1J Jo't11111 SIO "Wf.'('(I It & Reap" S:li,500. TRADE 26M t-qty. l!IOO'a. Fnd In barn at Intf't"- \VJNTER. 2 BR $225 • .C BR. child Ir sm.UI pet ok. :d~tsPvk~tJo'i:JoCi~~~· apt. on waOOr; 3 Br. 11,pt ... ev. 10 $15 Lt~SS. rron1 ll'Clllllmtl lo truh ror inr-. br hme. OrangtJ Co. COIU'lt, Pa. (l«lst.) Trd fld 181!,' OOiaft vu, Pl 4 '!'>ftltT UT5. Bach. Sl25. Nr be.ach 645--4718. 56-.167T 'or S..3l9t • ABDEY REALTY 642-:n~ Yoo'rf' 1·1,'l:ht, thcy'fi' u11di>r turn thorn lnto 'tUh &16·392S Ltichenmyer RUr. boot or? 531-3374.lfel.7SM. p4. 114 D pet mo · ABBEY RFA l.TY 64,_.3850 NEA'°'" °"T"°10"°1o_an_/,-Cl'[>ltl~,......,..l ~B"'°R. NEW 3 BR. 2 blth Duple~. V.rittd! 1561 P.l~sa Or. CA1l. OAll.Y Pil.oT 213:08-1"1 Sl!U l4le Items now! Call aar, $115. Blck Bay 8J't'I.. Fut remits art Just ti phOTle Oround Door. 211 33rd St. (a blks from Newport Blvd. f CLAS.c;tnm ...•... 6C$78 * * * * * 1l Sell kDe lltm11 ..• MV.:A178 &D-6679 Now: 'liq) Dalmnr, 21.:i.cr.:.1.9568. call away.~ =$2!5='""'=·-Y.::euly=>e·;..m.-=="-.'----"S<G-=9860:::::. ___ 1.---------' ii••llriiilll••m••••••irill••oii ' ' , , . I I ' ' ' . y H F I ' • p l p a N T Tl • • Mondq, Oamber 11, 1972 DAil Y PllCJT U 1-~-...1~ l....__ .. ...,_ .• 1__,l[Il] l.___ .... ~,_ .... __,l[i}] I e:e11211111 l[IT I l[H ~I ~"""''~' ·~l~[JJ;/~I ~-~· .. ··~)~[ff~/~I ;;;;•;;;:.s. ';;;;;" ~ll§J;;/;I~·;;;"-· ~~~ lloctrlcol Help Wanted, M & I' 71 0 Hete Wam.d, M & I' 710 t{elp Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, Mi. F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710~Wanled,M~11! Fumlt""' 110 ,_J_ewe_l_ry~----•-IJ_1 ELF.CJ'JUCIJ.. I REPAlR I "CXXP"l'lNC a~1kM1• H OU !lF.lnlT.PDVCompan-NATtONAL m. optnln&. local RETAJL S a le 1 , Exp MEXICAN CobUaJ bdtm WANTED; REMODEL I ., )'h. Opet-. tot tuU time dilhwUhtrl CONSUMER Ion. MUitdl'lve. No llJlOk· bntnch omcei in ~tiab'I Sale~ F/nmt:. Apply ln SEXTANT f\lm., made in Mexico City. lutuoned le"'°. IMM211. buoboY1, coolco. Mlllt be ai LOAN OFFICER ""-Call-. Vle)>llaM Pl. '"'" "''"' """"" ....,..... Statlooe.... RESTAURANT ~.~ hdbnl. 2 oigh• :'.!'~ • ELECI'RlctA.N, llcen.ed, leut 18 yra ol q-e. Co&oror Exdllaa oppcr. ln eo.tt HOUSEKEEPER, llve In, 5 2 rnen a: 2 wo~n ._ .. uuna lo 4229 Blrch St., NB A•k for at ... ...,., ... clll!St or drawers. -~~-~----~=• o l d wriot ....... bondt/d SmaJl jobt m&int K 1 t ch• n, San Juan Nna Jor exDtt ClOOlumtl' d&¥ wk. Mon.Fri. Own leam OW' bu1lne11. Rct.t as Sytvla West. Ala), Iona low ~t bt-nch Mfscell•neou• 111 l ,.pa.in 541-m.' Caplatram, loin otnett. ~ Im· Udo t~'ft ~ 0,,.0 to ln~egrity & re1pons. nct?d· RN Now lnttrvlew inn w/lld 1u1d spindle back. l;i.;"----------1 ' ~· Mo&U. 'Home ~-. _,., Vf.ro6't(), ed. Call 542-4153. .... Mcxic40 pa.lnllng11, WtlJI AtAGNAVO" srerw lhea.rre Gtrdenlnt ACCOUNTANT rtl'd. Xln't HOUSEWORH -Part time Nun:ina ~Una Room For E>eperltnced dcoorationl, I am P & & Zl" Color TV, AM/FM ncC .I: ...i ... -momlnp. Mon. thru 1'""rl. . .., Medical team leader h andbklckt'd, handloomed d' Ir rd= 90" 2 BOB'S GAROF'..NtNG FEE PAID co .... ...,..., $40 Own ca.r m7344. Nur1e Attenda nts 3-ll:30 pm Deli Personnel . 1-"'ry Cook1 dra~. Gold low tufted n .lO ~ • A LANDSCAPING Newly C!"tllted poaiUOn in benefits, Pltue enll ' ' All lihlfta. Acute hosp. exper. Conlact J>e1'$)(1f'lei 0 c p 1 . \Vn.ltri·tis t.1gr. _ WaltreS!U!I back tofa. 499-2742. cushion aota, 31TI Residential I: Commercial CO!!l acoountlflli dept . Rod Lewis lNHALATlON TECHNICIAN required. O>r1tact Pt-l'90!\N!I Mon. thru Thun., s.-1 pm. Ho11tes!!l'll • Bll.s Boyi POOL Table• _ Freleht Irvine Indumial w/wt.U e&t(lblliihed firm. (TIG~~~711 Da.Ys/PM'a full t Im e · IJeopt. Mond11y thru Thun g.. Fowit•ln Valley Community Coun ter Gi rl$ . Dishwa.'lhers °t:'R°?M,ci :'~nu~ 1'wn damaged. All su. $49 to Comp>exet. Desree or J001e college n.c-...-.i111•le ! ii::J~I Ne~ri s!1a~h~ g 4 pn1. f'ountain Valley O:im· Hmpital, 17100 Euclid Ave., .1• •as · r e reaser, $ t g 9 . ch r I at ma 1 !M-4299 after 5pm. cowit~f'd. Other I1'ree Federal Savings . n1un~ty Hospital, l 7 I ~O Fount. Valley. 979-12ll. Phone or api)ly t.1on. thru. mirror, Good ma~~ G~ Lay-A-Way. 639-M2l. FR.ONT yd. lawn aerv. no R&UFTceH RY"°AN .... AGENCY 2300 Harbor Blvd, CM INSPECTOR Euclid Ave., r 0 u n l a In RN all &hilta, Utime ICU. Solt.. between 9 & s ~":h 89'J.4619 . . BRADBURY ~pe $250. mu, back yda alto, weedln1r, F.qual Oppor, Employer Valley, 979-12ll. Pacifica Hosp, 1R79 2 · . Rani Etchings: Goya =. yd cln up, tree lrimmlna, ~~IN~ = COUN1'£R Ir! Hn. ll·'t ~~:~c:~~~ PEOPLE GREETER Delaware, H.B. 842--0611. 630 Newport Center Or. ~~le~~r, :O~f· Dali S195, PicU»O 115. Pvt. hatillng. Free e•t. Let Ul@ M Beat cJ ~ 2939 E' rella.ble. Apply In person, ~dies, part-time dally, 10 Sa les Newport. Beach 644-7804 exceptklnall)' ':'o 0 d co!.: .-o•"'Y,o,·~535-""5=~-·~~--~• prQfeulonala do It. 962.8611 ACCOUNTING CLERK ~ ffurv, ~ del Ma1 MacCregor Yachts, 1631 t1l 2. No weekends. No 8C!ll· Representative needed for dition. Colt Sl25. Saoifice KITCHEN c ab In et• • PROBLEM SOLVER LocaJ manufacturing fl.rm ::.L P!acentla, CM. Ing. Xlnt Wagt?I. C.entral Ora.nae County territory. for $39.50. 642-c.;76. formica counter 'ii/ a . Prot gardener. Tree v.wk, noodt vemtile gal to han· ~ a ~ ~ rau7e ~ are~~terv~ 56 yr ~I~ company.~· TRAINEE OPENINGS MOVING : Mwt sell best of. Harden Enterpriaea, w. thlnnln&, pruning ... ~~· die AIP I: A/R, lite tyfl~. 5,o..t;m or J.f:t .,!_ocoe. ' Woocirutt A~ Dow~ ~mm1s11 ons, bonus o~cr We wiU train you to become [er takes, 9' sora' & club 18th St., C.M. 60-2842. Cleanups. George,..,...,.....,,.. Stnrt $450. Call Sally Hart, ' ~· ~ PER.5C)NNEl " · fringe benefits. For appoint· a branch manager of one of chair w/oUom lilre new ADLER 21C elec typewrittt, EXP. HawrJlan Gardener. ~. Coastal Penonnel CREDIT CHECKER CCD\IV"ES•,Arc~irv PIANO Player & Dnlmme~. mcnt call 00-7960 Ptir. our IKl(l branches. A schedul-~1731 after S'Pm. · carbon + silk ribbon. LUce Complete garden s er v . Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, Exper pre.rd. O>sta Mesa ~II\.,. 'l'Vo..JU"C\-• Apply in penon, Carrol s t.feyers. ed lralning program will 8 , 1 "th clUng 5 , new $.250. 9 ft Sofa. $8)) Karrialanl, 64&4676, 6-12-1337. CM. area. Ca 11 co 11 e ct Sales ft.tanager to $1lK Bar, 810 W. 19th St., CM. SALES Qerks & Cuhlers, give you training & ex· 1 80 a 'A'I mat new, Sac $200. 644--5.516. i ...:====::...01===~ 213/881-5«JO. Jo~ield Service Rep 1o llOK some exper. Apply i n perieoce in office manage-ovesear, neVf"t u ~ e d · 12:icl8 Bldg MUlt move! Gener•I Serv cea Account!-Clerical POLICEMAN person. Che'cker Auto ParU, ment, budget counseli"8. ~~~7 velvet. $ 2 8 5 · · ··.-DELIVERY of DA IL y Sales Order Desk lo $900 ..... _ ........-u.w Wood const, wired, erptd. PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, to Abo\lt' require knov.·ledge Salary $872 -$1071 111 E. 19th St., C.M. ,,...,lneAS promotion and . Cost '2400, Now $ 4 7 s, UNORGANIZED? C l e a n your karage, build ahel ves, Household work, •111.ulln~. Your Price! Ron 645-5686 Sue 548-4797, OIR1STMAS li&:hts not up? Ree.eh fO!' the phone. Call Handyman Ir lite up your borne. ~9723. Haullng $KIPLOADER Ir dump truck work. Concrete, asphalt, sawing, breaking. 846-TilO y ARD. garqe cleanupa. Remott treea, dlrt, Ivy. Orlvewys. grading. 847-2666. Hou1ecleAn1ng RUTH RYAN AGENCY 1792 Newport, CM IWIJ...4854 17931 Beach, HB 8'7-9617 Apt/Condomlnum Developers Newport Beach baled equity capital firm with many large projecia throughout the U.S. requires ex- perienced Individual to develop major FHA & con- ventionally financed project. RetponsibWties w i 11 in· elude: • Site selection &: ac. qW&IUon • Project planning & pro- of lndus/Comm'l adhe1lves Lateral entry only. Height 645-ni4. personnel supervlskin. Ex-WET BAR-Won on TV. ~3075 newspaper carriers. Re-Purchu. Ord Followup to -•-s·s·· POST 8 1 ccllent · l'mployee benefits VaJued at $450. Best Offer ·°"'="'°·=-,,,.---=--quires the use of a Station • ....,, uun. · • : as c. and regular 68.lary in· 847-4574 •IEIJU,()OM Glau Boxn Wagon or Van. Contact Mr. "°"" Presently employed Calif. SECRET ARIES based mfg to )'OU Made to order H •--1 •-W t n .... Sec'y/Advertiai!!8'. lo $650 P.O. Apply before dee. 13Ui. creases on your pro-*** Sola il matching love Lowe•< -1·-,. w-r --_; St~ :fm~ es ~ ~{~~~l 0o~~Sat~ S600 Personnel Dept., <tfaller), The Irvine Compa ny greAPPROVED FOR ~~~,;v:m~~4'o~160" Wood s~Wties, 893-15i2.'' DENTAL ASSISTANT Sun &. 3 wkdysl S550 l0200 Slater Ave, Fountain Veteran1 on the job 21" COLOR TV, good work· Chalrside, alt down. 5'4 or Girl Friday/sh to $550 Valley. Has 0 Pen in g for 2 t I 1 be flt RATIAN, blue/green Doral. ing cond. -%. rollnway bed _ O\lt'r. Exper~nced. 5 day1, 8 A/P, lnven Conll'Ol $460 secretaries: ra n ng ne 1· 7 pc Living room set, good practlcally nu Golf club, to 5. Salary open. 640-0300. Clerk Typist/Purchase S460 PACIFIC FINANCE cond. S75. 963-2414 c8 rt, bag. 64G-IDt3 Newport Center. Prod. Control Clerk $400 Radiology Constr uction Secretary 1m Newport BJvd. BEIGE naugahyde sofa bed 44 Sq .• ...111, gold "Ylon I-ly·Lo ==~-""-"'~"-~-~-IMed Frnt/Bck Ole $450 up NUCLEAR Med. Tech. full . Cos!a Mesa ~2233 & chair , S50 lor lxlth. Call ,. ... DENTAL Aaal.ata.nt for front Dictaphone Typist to $425 or part time in expanding With 1n1n. 3 Y:s exper. ~rk· Equal Oppoi·tunity Employer after 7, S40-328J. carpet. Xlnl cond. Call olOce, X·Ra.Y• Ir Prevention Figure Oerkl'I'ype $375 dept. Prefer e>:pericnce. Ing wlarehitects, proJecl ~aft 12:80. instruction. N011-11mOker 18 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM Personnal Dept. Hoag Hos· designers & project MAPLE table, no-mar top, & ANXIOUS to sell Newport to 28. 64+-08ll 642 1470 pila' Newport n -·oh managers, typing 70 w.p.m., WAITRESSES, Full & 4 chairs, good condition, $30. Beach Tenn ls Oub • '"' ""'"' · sh 90 w.p.m. p/time. apply, Co Ion y 548-2338 after 4. Membe-"p. •---. DENTAL Aaistant. Exp'd in -----R I E t t 5 I h ·~· ~•• X-raya & oral evacuation, ~ ea I a e a es Financial Secretary Ki~ c en, San Juan WHITE vinyl hlde-a-bed, 1' -· ',AN, !TOcl•RSaning-P~, ".".'.~bo!~ FREE With min. 2 yrs exper. Ac· CH~strano, 27142 Ortega good condition $50, 847-on. c~.1Wt[ 1:ll S::Ooo! ""''"' COUPLE need& work. We e Zorung, environmental I: will clean your h o m e utilities requirement thonJUKhly. Exptt. C 11 I I e Interim &: permanent ce • "~" , -"" curate 70 w.p.m. lyping .. ,. I I pl la"°" ~· ~-DENTAL-Orthodontic assist, wife team OK. Car I: phone (heavy !llalistical), sh WAITRFSSES 12) Mexican _ewe ry 115 ~"'7o.~;o--,· .. ~;-=~,..=- A:lj 00-«l. Exp'd. 846-923S a must. Call s.l2-65r58. LlcenM T r11 lning helpful but not neceSMzy: food also 1 Hostess. Exp'd. WEDDING BELLS • • USED BICYCLES 64&-6730 after 6 pm. financing c 6-8 pm. JOBS Limited Time Only Excellent corppany beneCits over 21 . Apply mi Coast W 't be . . f • & AU types 642-1272 Dent11I Al1l1t11nt URGENTLY NEEDED Famous license ........... A now & working condltion.a. Hwy, CdM. on nnging or me e Secretaries ......... ..., Caall 6.!14 ~-SS n\y gal, 30 must sell beaut. BALDWIN' Splnet piano $850. prof. Carpet Cleani"9 • Architectural & builder Alao windows & floor care. i:~~ growth potential: Call Dulch 53'1·1508. 'J'ravel required. Salary bfts.. Newport Beach 646-2615 available thru Tarbell Com· .... _.., WAITR.E , exper. Co!fee ~ carat diamond ring Hia Antique carved Sp ant 1 b DENTAL Assl.atant-Exp'd, : =trl~ Operators pany. Applicants fully re-BetwHn I 11m & 12 pm Shop. Apply in penon, 1:30-I: Hers wedding ~. chest $500. 642-HIO. chairslde. F/time. X-ray e Billlng Clerk Typist imbuned upon qualification. 4 pm daily. 2Ai33 W. O:>aat white/ycllow gold. Save S75. FOR Sale. Reel McLean HOUS& OF CLEAN ro on quallllca"°"" & ''" certificate req'd. 56-9475. T-·lne 540-4450 New or experienced sales Hwy., N.B. (have biU of sale Ir <Pl'""· Lawn Mower I: ~A-. $125. u..-people. Openings available. SECRETARY a-..._ .... Anaheim 533-2322 Complete training program. . in WHO WANTS TO WORK? antee of quality from local Xlnt oond! ~. FWr, wtndows. crpt, y..•all&, perience. Write Oagsified f yrs. In area. 642-6824. Ad No. Sn, % Dail Pilot MESA Cleaning, carpets, P.O. Box No. 1560 Costa windows, noors. tte!. Resld/ ''c:1::""':;:c• ;cCalo="o-· 0'92627='-· ~-­c»mm'I. _557-6742, ~-411.1. ASSEMBLERS, apply at a:ate-. 7 am, MacGregor DINNER COOK NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Future management oppor-Openings Newport & Seal DRIVE A CAB! jewelers). Asking $285. D~GNER Raggedy AM N' Ee"'D"encecl Tempo Temporary Help !unities. Call M•. Slo·-al Bea.ch for exper. secre-CHOOSE your houni, ~'Ork They'N! reaJly very hand· Andy's Giant alze. 4• tall • BLU DO. LPHIN e ' -· ""'" to '°"""U be r · good •·· n\S Vla Lido, NB J~O':»~le;:e~eek l~!~: 832·S440. A,pply In J.>eni?n oo1'ss Men or' wome~Ca~: ~:n~:'es & & a wk ends fu; ~ns""'."64"'°2-<l889;;-.,,·.,-,c:--,,.,-,'"° I *D I SH w A S •I E R, ex-ting new customen for the TARBELL l055 No. Main, S. A. slightly handicapped. VtJ, app'I. NO CHECKS . CASH O~=E~ !mi"~~ DAILY PILOT. -.•-1, not a Rm. 201 Betwn ,9 am & 3 pm retired. Age 21 to 70, sup-ONLY. perlenced. Apply lo Chet ~"16 REAL TO So. Calif. 1st plemenl your income. onvei-;~;,;;;==~===~ 6J3.9264 after S. berare 2 or af ter 5pm, Bahia newspaper route and does RS National Bank a cab 6 hrs or more a day. TU!lQUOJS_E JEWEI.t;:r GRA y Pen:lan Lamb eo&t. Xlnt Houaecleanlng Yacht Corp, 1631 Placentia, By Day. Own Transportation CM * 831H&i8 • • Corinthian Yacht Club, 1601 not tnclude collect!"-' or Receptionist to $650 Eq al 0 E 1 Apply in Pl"rSOn Yellow Cab Genume Indian, *>me old w/_..,., mink collar, 3;4 Dedlcaled Cleaning Help Wonted, M & F 710 Bayside Dr., C<n.1 A delivering. Transportation ls Fee Paid u ppor. mp oyer Co., 186 E. 18th St., Costa pawn", squuhes, brace1ets, o·-.., provided. We work four 1 Mesa. hlshi, l e t I s h e s etc. length, perf. cond. s:J0..5583. * WE DO EVERYTIIING * Reis. Free est. 646-2839. HAULING & cleanup by exP colletr:e 1tudent. tge trk. 5.'H-lMli or 534-2164. Maintenance FLOAT MAINTENANCE Paint & drY rot repair. 13 years experience . SU-2757 R.E. Whittemore Pointing & Paperhanging CUSTOM PAINTING InterlE:cter. Untum. inter. spec. price. Ftte ~ con- sulting &: est. Uc. Ins. \Von't be underbid. ~. No Wutlng · * WALLPallA~~'~•·* When you c ~- 5'.'1·1444 64&-lill L.M.B. PAINTING AT YOUR SERVICE WINTER RATES LARRY BO•ILEN 546-1926 PAINTIN'G & PAPER.IN~. 19 yn. in Harbor area. Lie & bonded. Ref• turn. 642-2'!56. INT. & Exler. Accous.. cell· inp gpra,ycd. Uc., I.ns. Local refJI. 645--0llll. Chuck. INT Ir EXT painting, paper banring, naturt.I w o o d llnWdng548-7005. PROF. PaJnt\ng, al80 roofs, accous. ttiL inter/exter. Lie/Ins. Free est. 645-5191 . INT & Ext painting, ceilinga ·sprayed. Unfurnished spec. price. 546-7887 aft 6. APT. Interior Painting, Car· J>'"l shampoo, cleanlng. Reis. lnL 60-7059. P1111oter, Patch, Re pair * PATCH PLASTERING All types. Free estimates Call 5-lO-M25 Plumbing DRAINS tmelogged • $7.50 Sewer line to 100' . SIS * 549-2502 .. PLUMBING REPAIR No job too small * 642.-3128 * S•wlng/ Alterati"'11 Altoratl0<1o--642·584S Neat, accurale. ~years exp. Televi•lon Repair COLOR TV Cal·Tronlcs 769 W. 20th, Coata MeSA Service Call StO. 64&-0t12 Tllo Repair Work A Remodel At Reasonable Prtcea. Call63H945 ASSISTANT Cook, ambltrous young man to assist chef in steak house operation. A~ ply in person, The Barn, :an Harbor BL, C.M. 10 am- 1 pm. Mr. Lewin. DOUGHNtM' shop, nite shill, hours after school ands on Push co, needa pussy cat to SECRETARIES . Wholesale prices. 63Xl w. POft.TABLE typewriter, S.C. ',~emale, ageM25 '°0o"· Ahpply Sa.turd.a1. We have ornings =? oft:ic:n!! .. 1~'1s Su,..~..: * 1 0 EE * WOMAN over 35 for kitchen CsL Hwy, N.B. 646-"'1317. Sup@r sterling model, excel n penon, r. ug nut, for Fountain Valley South .-... .. Q 0/0 FR & counter ~wk. Days, Con. cond. S75. 962-5460. 135 E. 17th St. C.M. Huntlnif.on Beach areas on· if you meow to Kim, tact Chris or George. Ltke to Trade'!' Our Trader's i iii;ii;; ... ii;;;iii;;iiiOi;;;;iii,.. I y be f 833-2700. Alao }'ee Jobs. Llz Relnder'1 Agency 847 3694 ASSISTANT manager A: malntenance couple f o r large complex in C.OSta "'fesa. ELECTRONIC ly. ou mwit out o Dennis & Dennis Personnel 4.500 Cam"''" Dr. I:~~·~~· ~~~~~~I Paradise column i2I for you! Need a "Pad"! Place an ad! school b)' 3 PM t o .-- cl "· Experle11ee; Ageocy of l>vloe, "'82 5'&·2U8 Nowport Boaoh [§] f e • •• • • •. ••• •••••••• I wn Prior It Y. a.1lchelaon Dr. Sec Sales I I RECEPTIONIST retary• -TECHNICIANS KENTUCKY Ft:led Oticken Shine in buSf front of!ice, Min. 2 yrs e.>:per. Very good'l.~;j;j;j;j;;;:;;;~J •. needs male A t e m a I e w/ray of typing It gems of ~skills. Sh Pttf'd, not j! Utime & p/time belp. Apply public rel&doni:. S a I a r y ., • .,2-tdi0~.;.~~.1:!.~saEq. Cuala. Antiques Electronic checkout & ~ aft 1 PM 81 2929 E. c.oast $500, Call Helen Hayes, .......-""""' uv .M,I ---~------' ble shooting of R. F. lest H CdM S40-f«i6, Coastal Pel'9Clnnel Opportunity Emp. i.,.., J-•1an ~ .. .., . H-··-~ equipment. Previous exper.liiOwyi;ii';;;iiiiii"iiiiii;;;;;;;;;;iiii ""'"". , 2190 l~arbor Blvd .. SECRETARY .with recent Chatt &'Cttn.IO\lber uC...~ &: understanding of aolld Keypuncher S460 C:M life A: dl&a.bllity lnsurance Present a. O\rimDaa Sale o1 AtrrOMOBILE Le a Ii n g S a I csman, Experienced, Pi-tanag<>mcnt Opp, Guaran- ty, Car, Medical Ina. Ralph Williams Lea&ing, Inc. (7f4) 638-8410 (213) 748-8411. AVON REPRESENTATIVES EARN MONEY Call For Appl. state DC &: RF circuitry Asalstant Bookkee"r $500 R---a..nlst experience tor 4 day wk. American Indian Jewelr)', desirable. -p•nll" Starting salary up to SSfiO. Dec . 16th & 17th Recept/Secretary S500 Day or night, Full or part Phone Mn. Ladenburger, IO AM _ 6 PM, both dlQ'S For an ad In Woman'• Wortd ~~r~tary $~ time. No exper. nee., WC 547-6437 Zuni-Navajo.Santo Domingo Call Mary Beth 6C2..$671,. ext m Induatrlal RelaUon1 For new car payments. Chrlmnas presents, College costa, Vacatlo n a ln February. Call DOW for detatla. !i40-7041. (714) 4_94.9401 Tax Secre+...... $575 tniin. No typing, oo S/ll, Jewelry wiU be oUered for _, olc. Apply in "'·'"'"· Aoy SECRETARY salo In quanllty. Holldoy Th-..._, You.I Easy C-Advertising Sec'y $650 aft or eves at 2930 West TO Inn, Westwood, 1O7 4 o • -IV -r- Engrng Secretary to S600 Coast Hwy. NB. SUPERINTENDANT Wilshire Blvd. 6 blocks East m BARMAID, part time, ap- prox 32 hrs. c.Jl betwee" 1J) & 6. Ask ror Sam 962-0022 BEAUTY OPWTOR PART TIME Guarantff + Comm. Montgomery Want Beauty Salon 192-6611 H.B. BOAT BUILDERS Exper. venatile men needed for quality sailboat manuf. Carpentry, plumbing & elec- trical tak!nt w/rupervhory capablllty. Westsa.il Corporation 1626 Placentia Ave., O f 642-8961 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Equol Oppo•. l:mp~ EXECUTIVE SECTY DENTAL RECEPTION Fut growing HunUngton Beach Prevt"ntive Practice hu opening for girl with ability to assume N?sponsi- bility ln addition to being intelligent, creative, enthu- siastic & cheerful. Salary open, Future unlimited. 22 to 35 yrs pttrrd. 84&-0654. EXPER'O cable TV un- derground ln1talle r s deair!d. 1'ra.1nl'e considered. 6 4 2-3200. Teleprompter. E q ua l o p pcrt u nlty employer. Typist S425 R ptlonl t t $450 of the San Diego Freeway. Maintenance man to $S50 ece • 0 OF SCHOOLS Suite 708. For tnformatiov }~ree & Fee Positiona Wi!.ei traiy ·~uk:s ~(1 ~ .. · Top exee. sec'y skills. Prior call : 2 13-7 3 2-8 6 o s or ) I ' NEWPORT Newport Beach fir:;;.~" The school dlaL ore. e>:per. de· 888-1248. Personnel Agency lightest of typing ok here. strable. Attendance, at night Master Charp a.ccepted 833 Dover Or., N.B. Abigail Abbot Per90nncl board meetinglng s~ d. 80-.laJ ANTIQUE Victorian chair, 642-3870 Agency, n'.I \V. \\'a.rner, w.p.m . typ · 8.l'f range spinet desk. Dining nn set , LEGAL SECRETARY w/good akilla I: experience. 644"'4610. *MACHINIST • Hone Operators Verticlc • Drill press (8 e Grindt>rs e 2 AC\V It S 0.uclc:ers e P&J Chucker Opers. e Hydraulic Assemblers • Turret Lathe ()per. • Maintenance Mechanic Day & Evening Shifts Xlnt Fringe Benefits with Overtime Suite 3'.19, S.A. 557-6122. S~S898. Application dead· 6 chn, hutch & table, RECEPTIONIST line 12/14/72. Send resume mahog & antique white. Dry to classified ad no . 553 c/o sink CU!lt made, Gone with for apartment complex. Ex· Dally Pilot, p. o . Box 1560, the Wind lamp, antique oak perienced. Lite oUlce work C.osta Mesa, ca. chest, s.ma.11. 6 Pc silver & typing. Part time. Fri caster set, antique china, Sat & Sun, 11 to 7:30. $2.50 SECRETARY/Assistant to silver & bric-a·brac. pee "°p"'h· .. , 0370 director of Sales & PAINTINGS, prtv collection. '\ • ~ Marketing. Must have typ. Early CalU Prominent 191.h RECEPTIONISf, A/R & ing & S/H & _ht; able ~o & 20th Ce~. American payable exp. Inter Mon, assume respons1b1Uty. Th11 Artists. Abo J mp or tan t Wed, Fl1, 10-12, $2.30 hr is a career position. Salary wood block prints, 8C!'Olls, start. Plush O>w, 3001 comm ens· w I ex P · 11 am to 5. 15th, 16th, 17th. Redhill Bldg 1, Suite 108 71~979--0660. Prlv. prty. 2133 Seville Ave., Resta'urant TONIO'S fNo phone calla please) I L ' SERVICE Station Attendant Balboa, Ca. on peninsula. w/exper. Top wages & ATTN : Collectors ! comm. Apply Chevron Sta· ChristJruts Platea, 1st Edi· Hon. 604 So. Coast Hwy, Lag tions BOB'S Exxon, part time help W8J1led, 3003 Newport Blvd, C.0.ta Mesa. Interview 2 to 5 ~m dally An exc tin9 new ewry s G ~-u.~-1 tn Associated Rest1ur11nt FACTORY ... ~" ·~-·" "'· •. 2321 So. Pullman. Sonia Ma OPENING SOON Beach. Many kinds. 530-7486 SERVICE station attenda~t, CASH Register NCR, very part dme. Exper pref d. I'an". Early 1900. Mint cond. Management Trainee 210 Newport Center Dr. BRAKE Align & Tune up TRAINEES Good Potential F•shi on lslend, N'pt Bch Mech. E>:p necessary CaJIWESTCLIFF~· Schmidt Seeks Salary + Comm. Good Co. e WAITRESSES benefits, 548-9383. No Exper. NecelWlry Penonnel Agency e HOSfESSES 2M3 We!lt.cllff Dr., NB e BARTENDER BUSBOYS.18 )T!!I or older. VOLT 64$.2770 e BUS BOYS ~ply i:s,pe~ ~ !:~: Jnst•nt Personnel MAID WANTED, part time, • KITCHEN PERSONNEL Newport Bch. Temporary Service for motel v.'Ol"k, Newport Apply ln Person 3848 Camno•• Dr Suite 10& Be b, -3463 Mon. thru Fri. 11 am to 3 pm. Bu.lness Ofc. Mana111r .--·• ac u1.,... • • Newport Beach 5t6-4741 M A I N T E N ANCE Man, An equal opportunity Personnel Dept. Monday .....,.;> .. ""'... -o~ Lowetl Osborn E n co 1~ 67• ••73 c.-n • 19001 Brookh t """· .roe ' ~rvice, UI'S ' e INTERIOR DECORATOR H.B. e Speclali:r:lng In Antlquet SERYJCE Station Attend~!. Reas. pricea 979-2811 S.A. P/time eves & wknds. Lue =::::,=""=-='.:.:.:=c....::::.;'I mecha.nlcal exper. Neat ap-* ANTIQUE Desk, unique S- pearance. Apply AM, 2590 type rolf top, S900. Newport Blvd., C.M. fi7l..9008 or 546--5441 SllAMPOO girl &: assistant Appli•ncea 802 Full time Salary & com· minion Apply In Pef'llOn ELECTROLUX the world's ' Hair West 3305 Newport fine1t vacuum cleaner. ~ , Blvd., N.B. the all new automatic !41'-'i'~ model, 12Cfi w/pawer noule The fastest draw ln the West. Don't (Ive up the shl~! & rug washer attachmenta. Horsplta.1 exper. Contact F.qual Opper. Emp&oyer •xp'd, 2 •-·-a .~ l•- 1 ...,..,..,.,""..,pl!!oy!!<!!r!!!!!!!!!!!! thru Thurs 9-4 pm, rountain ~-apt bldg complex. St6-<l619 H I··• rnY Cook, exper. only .......... Valley Community osp ""-'• abltl only. Start $2.~ per hr. MANICURISr for Newport 1noo Euclid Aw., Fountain Cottage Cbffee SMp, 562 w. Beach Mena Hair Salon, Ad. ~.Pilot Classified ~~11~t~~~~~P ~°£.749~p::t'::t~~~ ti:1; '-· 1lfMiMI 1Tf4--r .... VaJley. 979--1211. 19th, CM. G46-2TI6 CASHIER. exper. for rorree FULL ctlarge bookkeeper ~hop. ltotel Laguna., 425 So. Newport Beach area.. Wrtte Cout Hwy., Lag. Beach. Classified ad No. 497, Daily CLEANING woman for Plkrt, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Newport Center office bldg-. Mesa, Calif 92626. Nlte work, bondable, pd. -G~e.-'~l ~Ofc~.~P~u~b-.~R~o~l­ vacaUon • ins. -40 Hr. wk. O'eatl~! Thia can be "jum- 6"-0006. ping off spot" to grnater ST tilings if you have writing MANAGEMENT trainee - Q:illege grad, ambitious. ag- greuive. Starting u.lary to $100 a mo. Call Don Was· 1nrr, 544-9000. ~IATURE gal, Prr CM Jn.a. Office. Exp. not nee. Fll· Ing/type &: ability to com· munlcate a mu5t. Days 8.15-3437. or eves arc made by our '"f Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 lxlnded repre11entatlve& on a :.:.;;;,:;..;.;.;;;;;;.;;,c;,;..,;.. ____ ,_ __ -'----1 no obltga!lon baala. Alto, co. Three for you _ all wi~ AUTO SALES TRAINEE 702l Knit this dashing, ca.bk!d cape to make a Pi feel llkt a storybook heroine. Send htt oU to school ln a wann, anu.g-fitting cape that loPft evt>:rythlng. Eas)'--knlt Pattern ro'l2: lhort, long cape, 1lze1 4-10 Included. SEVENTY ·J!'IVE VENTS tor each pattern • add 25 cents lor each pa.Item tor AJr a.1a1J and Special Handt· '""' •"""""' 1hmklaM delivery wilt take ~ lbreoe CLERK TYPI ability. Variety or clerical. II I JI PURCHASING DEPT. Nowpon a..cfi .,.. •. St11rt $400. Abigail Abbot i'tl"'90n· Ptrrchaslna or rMt'I control net Aiency, 230 W. Warner, I ~mj;mm;;~;~~ expcr. helpful. 80 w.p.m. Suite b, S.A. !557-6122. Medical $1aff .S.C'y Min. J yr hospital cwpcr. Xlnt M.Jary A f r I n g e" benefits. Cont11ct Penonnel Dept., Mon. thru Tbu~. 9-4 pm. FounWn VAiiey Com· niunlt)' lio.splt.al, l 7 t 0 0 Euclid Ave., Fount. Valley. 97S-12l 1. At Mt! •f th• l•Hl119 lulc li: O..l."hiPI hi 0••"'9• Cou11ty, w•'r. •ll•rl11t • St l•1 Trt l11i119 Pro9rt111 th •t't 1ece1Mf te 11e11•l expandlng Its local sales nersl Swerve seaming cal'V\"I force -n1<"n & women in· a smashing tunic that ~ tcl'l'Sted, plc>iue contact WI pant.I plus dJ'tog version that at thls sddreas. 1229 \\I, 5th (.'Oes ~verywhere. For knits. Santa Ana. Printed Pattern 9336: NEW 12 CU F1' Seara b'OltJ~ M\111es' Sizes 8, ].{), U, 14, 16, refrlg. Good cone!. S100. or 18. Sl!e 12 !bust 34) p(lnl$Ult make oHer. 673-<1819 or 2 3/8 yarda 60-inch fabric. 675--7429 8£Vl!NT1'·P1VI: CENTS PHILCO WAS II ER &: tor each pattern -add 2S DRYER ccnta for each pattern for weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooka, the DAILY PILOT. I~. Ni<dlecl"aft Dept., Box J63, Old CbelR1 Station, New York. N.Y. lOOll. Print Name. A ........ Zip, Pltlerw N•mber. jl elec. 1unowr1ter. Ptfust Mvt1 GENERAL OFFICE Job Wonted, Mole 700 top e1;..\Co1 !ldlla. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Detain -Dowdy -Brain - Barrt:n -IN bED M'.amma kiJ\l&roo took her two babies out of her pooch and said: "How many times l\aw I told you to 1top tatJng c:rackttw tN BED?" Job Wanted, f'em1ie 702 C.11 For Appl. IndustrlAI Relations (714) 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES L"9U"• Beach F.qu>I Oppor. Employer Expanclinl local nnn needJJ Individual who likes variety. Start $365. Call Sally Ha.rt, ~. O>utaJ PellQnncl A .. llCY. mo Hubor BlY<i .• C.M. GENERAL OIMce typl"8 Iii· 1"I A phone. Exp"d dealttd. Apply at M5 McConnlck, O>cta Mesa. HOUSEHOLD 1"lp S ....,.. I~ a wtf'k. Own trutp. N"pt Bcb.64Hlll. Cook-Broiler Min H O USEICE£PF.R. 1""'"'ln, r I ' prtvate room. TV, SXO e.e_r Day Mii • w crea expcr. mo; snne-EnaJllh pttt'd. NEED help at home? We In Irr, food Optfl\Uon. CAU ~ have AidC'I, Nu r 1 ' 1 • Chet F'rf'<S. C1l4l 6'4-l700. HOUSEKEEPER, Udo J1le, •louaekeepera. Compank>ni, COOK .. FRY (baby), m.ture, En,t:IJ!tl'I Homemakert, U P J 0 h n • Full or Part Time. apeakJne. Own trana. Refs. =54'1:.:...:-6=':..· ------H.B. 536-9044, or aft 7 pm, Pvt nn '-blth, 6f5...37C. 213-4..~3070. Sell Idle lltm• now! Call --· • Sell Idle 1lem1 .•. 00-5678 I ltfEDICAL Aaslltant. ba.!llc lab .l X·r&y, 5 yt'I back of. flee exp. Lawton School, 623 w. 17th St., S.A. 5tt-tm. MOTEL maid, Mon-Fri . Preler mature p e. r 1 o n • Laguna Beach. C9H:521. MTST $600 A wee bit of exper. will q"'llty '°" ~ this "'°!. J.(lvtlv lrv1ne offl ce111, rri.odly relaxed •tmosP-r-!Of\ heneflt,. Abl""nil Ah. bot Ptt!90nne1 Apncy, 230 \''· \Vp.rner, Suite 209, S.A. M7-6"l22. tt's a breue. • • teU YoW' Items with taae, uae DtUy Pilot Oua1fted. ~ To loi11, you '"111t be • , •• ...,, trowth-orie11t•cl '"'" er worno• who '• lnl1re1t.G 111 .. t lu1f • t•l•t "job", but o SALES CAREER.. ~;1, 111 +r•l11in9, you'll " •••• ,,,., '"" I CO'"P'"" ''' 111d 11po11 co111pl•tlo11 •I our pt-09r1m, you will 9red111t1 to • lull CO'"tl'llnlo11 bt1h. 011T Top s.1 ••• 111•11 •r• f11 fh1 $10,000 • Y•tT •t ktory. lcl11lly, you will ht'"• •-• 11IN 1ip1rle11c1 • f!Of 111ce111rlly lfl the 111to111•tlY1 fl•ld. Howe,...r, the will I• 111ccoH •IMI 1r•w wlHii •ttt COMP•Ay It tct111lly Imo "''''"'· 1. tcftlitlMI .. O\lf ovttfoMUrtt .,,,,.,ftl """''"'· ..... offtr 1 teMpJot. frll'lf• lio111(it tt••k•t • l•cl11tl i119 l.01plf1ll11ffe11, life l111vrtH 1 1"4 '".,.., To fUI •111 111 1p11llc1ffe11 111d l11r11 l!IOf"O tbout ti.w yo11 Clll 1•111 •ur t.1111,.1111 Mr. JIM Cht'"b1rl1i11. DAU~~ DUICC< 979.2500 MOMDA1' ""9 wntta DAY 111WD ll f A.M. & ~l NOON lor sale Alr Mail a.nd Special Randi· * M&-7621 * Ing: othMw!se tlllrd<laa CORNING Wtlrt slip In delivery will to.ke ~ rangl'. bro.nd nc:w, ~!Ill In ..vttks or more. Send to shipping c:n11to, S 4 5 5. J\.1arl&.n Martin, the DAILY 675-5750 PILOT. 442. rauern Oflpt.. · 232 West 18th St., New OVER 200 wuheni. dr~~. York, N.Y. 1011. Print retrl~ton from S39.95. NAMZ, AODRF.SS with 545-07*>. zrr. m£ and 8TYlE ~ 1 YR. guam, del I: In-NUMBER. stall. Late mod. all cycle SEE MORE Q u I c k Kenmore washer. 83&-1778. Fuhlonl and chooee one • O?SHW ASHE;RS, wuhers, ctryen, reblt, R'\l•rn A r1~lv'd. 139-Tm: St&--5%13. _ F urn iture 110 p&lttrn f~ t:rom our Sprtna.summ~ C.tAlog. All •faesl Oruy 50<0. INST ANT SEWING BOOK !lf!w today, wear tomorrow. fl. MATCHING wlvct anf!IJI, TN.C\T'ANT 1' AS ft t 0 N formlca tllble "-rh"irs &. BOOK -•T11ndrod1 of mite. 6'15-7942 after 6 pm. f'Ulhlo1. rl\cU, Jl. sorA '!1'=. :Wv. 9' Ncied a "PJ.d"? Place a.n Adt 963-tm c.n w S8'11J, ::::;:::::=~ loiuslrtcd Ad• . . • 642-~m. I N Jo: £ D L E CRAFI' '72! Qoch('t, knlt. l!tc. n. directlOn•. SOc. lMCant l\bctame .... Buie, rancy knoll, pat- ........ $1.IMI. IMt.a&t ~lllM 8oelr - Learn by pk=tural Pat· terns. S1 .oo. Oom--Olft--mon than JOO l1lb! $1.00. ----$1.00. II llff1 •11 Boots • SOc. .,.,._ or lJ l'rtle .,...... !!Oe. Quiff llGoft I .. 11 •tfllms. ""'· M.-.m qllllt a.et I • ll()c, q.111. ,.. ......... u.,.. 0 15 be&utlNI paHM'llL ma. ,, . • OAILV PILOT M-,, -11. 1'172 • .__I _ ... _.0_,I~ l.___-.. _ ..... _,l[I I ...=.=.. l~ I ·~~~l ~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~I 'lfiJ ~' E_:'.: ....... ~]§1~1 ;;[ ~-;; ... -~]§1;1;';;_:;_~~~~ I _..... l§l :;;I ..... _ ... _ .. ~1§1;;;~1 ll:aq:zudelli .._ Boeh, Sell 909 -Hoo.... ~· 96S Aulol, Imported 970 ·-._...... ~::...=u=·=---.;;"°;;: Aulot, u-1 "° * AUCTION * ~J~. ~~51<>~~ USED BOAT SALi! S.le/R..,t 940 '69 cm:v. VAJl.3 -. IMW MAZD4 IUICIC CONTINENTAL S tlne1, 2 Times, $2.00 11· J'bM FuntitW'll altettd, box trained. Kltew·trlr ••.• $'P.JO. RtntAMotorHome ~whee.ls A J)&Mltnc., ___ _!!!,!! _ _.._~--~~~~~--1---.!!~~~-- & A.,,iiancft 644--0139 all 6. Hobie H', !air cond .. IS10. IOI' you r Vecetlon 56-ml. USED IMW's '69 Buld< 2 dr Eliclrt, Top 1971 LI n e o I• Contloontal I A"~~. ~ ... 1 ... CAT lovers: hom"-i...du, ""° Hobie 16', (air rond $USO. * ·-•-i * '67 F ORQ VAN C!k ...... , .-.. Coupe. Xlnt cond. All Ex· -~ ..-• ......,., :"" p.m. .............,. ... .., 1-lobie 16'. 3 Demo., $1450 up -~ • ..,. .....-'6' 1~ ......,... -Windy's Auction Barn neutered beauty. Rm/tan, Cl'-21, ~ ~ A •-1 p ~ ~ ----=....;:',S0-~1560~-~-·I tna. $4100 or ~ offtt. T\arr. 644-0211. .,.,..., w-.. ~ .... ~ uto -rv ce, erll ~' Aum Wented '70 *2 CADILLAC Call 64<-<440 w .. kdl,ys. :11!15% Newpon, CM 64&8686 LITTLE rotl• 2 mo. old pup, Cllppcr !16', 3 "'°' · · $4450. j---;:-;--..-:--l~~~~~--'~~6l!!J '11 2IOO SEDAN CORYAIR ;;"'"" Too,y',Blda Mat'! & 1 ~Id'"" dog. A pul ~~~~.!:,d~~~nbnt w-~. Undersea! •73 Olds ' Cutfau CREVIER BMW tmQUE l~ms: New for . tmas. ~7853. All tht?se a.nd new boats s-·ial SaJes • Service • Leul.na: handcrafted ltema for sale. c•NTLE I '"" u---Supremie MO w •-t St 0 ·nt An i_. Zodiac pune $5. Cute "' °""'6 f e m a I e Available at lkible Newport, "Pr-event Ruxt & Corrosion" -• ""' US...-• a stuffed toys $3., Christmas Gerntan Shepherd, 2ll years 17o0 \V. Coast Hlwy, 64.').)'.)62 Aaaustnr dust & water tl,sht Auto Trans, Air Cond Vinyl ---=-=-='=~1~7,..1 __ MERCii)ES IENZ ftYel $4., Crochet Ponchos old. 963-+109. 32' Sloop, PC Ous, recent undcrbody "Includes steam Roof, , CAPRI · YOUR ONLY FACl'ORY AU THORIZED CADILLAC * '6.1 CORVAIR MONZA. body xlnt, make oUer. MU.!!11. sell ! 646-4145 after 5. FORD $12. 842-1988 recond. $3000. Fully equip. 6 chm)g" $22.50, Regular $90,16 1964 220 'SE Me;.,,..1 Benz ~ fn box, Goldak (1l('la1 ~ HP oqtbrd. New cush, mil $33.50. (All Ford & Lincoln + tax prr mo-. * CAPRI !9n, like new Air/Ccnd. Xlnt cond. Belt DEALER 1900 FORD 8-pasa (buntcy locater. Pwr edger & [ ..., ,.. -] 'L.J covemodr.I \Vil! tradlle ~-~"}90ate ProdlicGtU•)ST AFSON 36 mo. O.E.L. R&H. -6,00o miles. $2600: ~-res. 6'G-3948, bus f:'es~ ~~ otCoca~. S Q u l r e, Pfs, P/b, rottuy mower. \\'ill dis· _ . ~ e car or .e · 0 •.r11 • lmmedlete O.llvery Call TI4/968--9168. 11'U<71'10. Sal!...Le · ·-•0 im.,. P/wndwx, P/11Cat, radk>, oount all. Near ne"" sm. ~m;m;m;m;m;;::~~ RACING Sabot 2 aa.lls. Xlnt LINCOLN-MERCURY LEASING 1972 Capri v~. $100 I: Take . MG as.ma:. heater & air cond. $825. bar sl7.e retrtg .. used 10" • cond. $215. 16IOO Be~ a t Wa rner ALL MODELS Over· p avmeni.. Call Rick, • 613-1229 radial arm l&W, 646-1455. I _c_.,_. _______ ss_2 • 84&-l«M * Hunt i"'ton Beach AND_MAKES 646-5141-;n·5. Ul69 MGC/GT. Prtvate P8l't.Y Nabers ·n Ford Cntcy Sed, 6 Pl.SI A LYLE HAlGl.f ORIGINAL P"'RSIAN '·' HOB.IE Cat 16~:"°8 old. All "Hom• of the Viking'' Southern Ca&forma" CAPRI 1972. low mileage, 4 must ldl! Kuni ucellenL c-~--•ta .,,...g .. full p .... T •• iilr, ~· oU painting, gold frame, "' "-'ttens, CFA reg., raclJll gear. ,.-..-. Ex, cond. M2.aa44 spd R&H $2D> SaO'iflce · $1,450. o ay 8 UlllllllU'i xlnt ~· Musi ae ,,_,..,. 24" x 36" "Fall" SCi!ne $125. Shots, will hold for Xn1as. SlliOO. 5'l5--81Cl5. l Na I ' e8Js-19Sse 979-8750: evet &13-9121. 2600 HARBOR BL. 993--0993; aft 5 613-1824 Wonderful Christmas $75. 892<2910. e LIDO 14 e VOLKSWAGEN s P ec la I . st tiona COSTA MESA FORD '67 Sta Wag., alt, auto t ·~ ~18 engino ov.,ba>•ls 40 hp 1971 Capri, air oond, au10 MGB 541).9100 Open ... ~... •= pream · <M<>"'UO • Dogs 154 $400. Call 557·1ll16 S240, lSOOcc s:z8s brake Bank Leasi• deluxe interior, «J,CXX> ml. .68 CAd ~ · ~ ~ns., rad~, opu.7V· FLComUOR 1 ESCENT 1 Fixtures, Boah, Sllps/Docks 910 rel~ $Z7.95 + parts, •'ft Must Sacrifice 961Hi517. MGB . '69 Conv. wire whla, brown. • ... ~-'>-·.~~~ c,69~L"'=roperty='°'•"'--· ""'.~.=-,'c4·,-d,..•"'HT=, p ete ""'amp. from AKC, COLl.lE pups, 11 wk&.. sedans only, incl. replace 2001 Michebon Ori DATSUN f[m N t I ~ ~ ....... ,.. .... .,..,.,_,.. • $4.95. Genl Surplus, 1658 Sable & white. Christmas** SIDE TIE Avail. Near shoes & machine drums, (CornerolMacArth~) I---------·I tn;k,·/ba~. Pvtr~'. ~~~~ $2275. r/h, fact air, A!.f/FM, vin Superior, Col!lta Mesa. Delivery 530-0287 Lldo. Dock power & water. Beach Automotive Center, Irvine, Calif. 92664 962-1210 aft 5 top, pbfps, $lfi00. 847-3298 FUlL barrel complete beer AKC SA1rlOYED Puppies, 14 Call~ aft 6 pm. 842-oo92. TI4/833·8620 '2U/627-0367 ·n MGB ~ SK mls Rlbr '69 DeVUle eon~. CLEAN! '56 Fair~. 2 dr., Hrdtp, tapper gywtem, rSrig, C0-2 wks.. will hold f 0 r V-O~LKSW--A-G-EN--,-.-,-,-,-. I, REW NEWPORT FMIMPX/ Abarth Exh $2950, .OFFERS. Dave• rfh, auto trans, orig o~. mech. &-door spigot. $110. ChrLStmas. ~ Boats, Speed & Ski 911 en"'""' overhaul• 40 -hp ARD t Call 54tpe71-H b , ~ 675--19'12 or 49Hl615. "like rww"! $375. 837-6646. Ted 54&-7988, 646-8289. MALE Irish Setter, 16 tnO:!I. si«iu"'" 1500cc s.285 brake e c. . ""'' er 1..a: * PRIVATE PARTY * 1970 FORD Country Squire Miscellaneous old, shots, AKC. Female 20 F't Se11. Ray 200 series. 1 rel~ $27.9S +' parts, DATSUN '67 MGB, only 35.000 miles, '70 Cadillac Eldorado Sta Wgn. Xlnt oond. Pvti Wanted 820 Seiter 3 mos old, AKC. ye~~· 445 CI OldsmobUe ~ans only, Incl. replace WILL PAY OYER must aell. $1000. $4.'D). 675--7429 pty, beat otter 673-1993. 84&-39'.M. pack:a·J.et engine. EqulP_Ped shows & machine drums * 6'1W464 * **'69 EL DORADO. VERY for "''"ng & wator aklmg. • K II Now n..... PORS'CHE ·n LTD Country Squft, ·PRIVA'l'E PART" \\'ANTS TO BUY PIANO FOR MINI Schnauzer pups, AKC, Fully equipped tan d 0 m ::~Automotive Center, e y Blue Book ln-r-· NICE. ~i;1.=. PIS. P/B, A/C, xlnt cond. trailer. This outfit Is like -=~=·'--~~-= For late model, clean, 84H162 after 7 p.m. 7 wks, will hold till CASH Christmas. 644-7895 or now. Originru 00,1 $9200. VW Moton, oompleJely reblt. lo-mile•-domes-NEWPORT ·n PORSCHE 914 CAMARO JEEP Sacrifice $50Cl0. p h 0 n e Inst. & Guar. $290 &-up Ex· "" •-BEACH 6000 miles, xlnt cond. loaded WANTED quality dollhouse. SPRINGER Pups, M & F, 83().~. changt>. Also see us for tics, imports , trucks or \\'/extras. day 846-2211; 1--..:;.;.:.;.;,;.;;..:;.;:..;:. __ ---------1 Approx ll"x25". AKC, 7 wks, $75. to $100. MUST r.ell 14, Sid boat & Tune Ups &-Valve Jobs. ca mpers. 1000 W. Co.ast Hwy. eves 962-2759, 962-4369 * 19n Carnaro Rally Sport 1963 Scout, 4x4, mechanical!~ 6-K>-1786. 644-1592 Hunt/Show/Pet. L v I w h Trailer. Vince Automotive, 1300 K Call &nd ask for Buyer '45•64QO IMMACULATE "rtl 911-T. xlnt cond. $2250. good, Best otter. Boe'fO or balance board 496-4536 531-2164, 548-8995 ~77~ve.. Costa Mesa, DAYE ROSS One owner. See at Oes:lgn 673-4800 or M&-0731 536-8522 * Call 675-5750 * ~!:~r~ 1~ ~~. ~;rman 14' SKI BOAT, good cond. McADAMS Bros. auto body WE HAVE THE ~~ ~ = Center CHEVROLET ''!,hl~~. ~ ~~ Musical Instruments 822 539-7392 ~~Belt offer. Call & painttng~mplete paint PONTIAC NEWEST OF •n Porsche Tarn 911.S. ml., $33Xl. 53&-0348 aft .5. -.-SS0--,-125--"'. PW¥""'"'o'"'re<1-Sp-n-·ng-. Jobs & minor den"' $85. DATSUNS IN AM/FM. M 1cJ;e11 n,. '73 Monte Carlo GUITARS-Guild & Lyte 66-7460. 161.'l Placentia, INVENTORY FOR Saorilic<o. 6G-O!TI. REAIDNABLE Price. er SPllilit>ls. Nr. South CM 240I Harbor Blvd. S Cpe 644-7344 ~~~1~:: "Lit· [ T-11"41 4,=No-·..,-..,Coodye~~.,--poly&~~lu-Costa Mesa 546-m17 YOUR SELECTION ~~ i!i .:;kll= Auto Trans, Air Cond. BARITONE Saxophon e. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~-~~I tires. F60x15 ilnd 15" x 8" WE PA O ff 541-0m $89 88 Everett Scheffer/by Buffet. ~f.Asi~=-$200. AKC Chevy Corvette' rtms, all Of' y T P 0 er, ' + •--• Excel, Aak'g $325. 842..am ==~·~==·'----port S350 inveoted, ..U for CASH TOYOTA ~ per mo. SELMER M·"· VT ~ fl•I GERl\I. shC'p. pups. 7 ma1es.C ::;;•;:.m:i;J>O.:.;;";:.•:;;S;:•l;:;•:..IR;:;•::•:;;lc..:,92;;;:0 $280. 893-6460. lm-Ji!•""'ie;.._ 0 !;._Llivory ... ... "' 2 fmls. $25 ea. \Viii be 7 TOYOTA'S ~ .. ~ alto Sax w/c.ue. Pald $750. \Vks by Christmas. 979-6420. Slide ln camper sleeper. LEASING SeU fnr $400. 546-5147. 9 YR old reg. Pinto geldlng, INSULATED. I II c;, I for used cars I:: trucks, just ALL MODELS Office Furnitu,../ $300. 9 yr old Palomino $295. .......... call us for tree estimates. '73'S AND MAKES Equip. 824 m.,. $300. ye a r II n g 5.11-2304 I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; GROTH CffEYROLEJ Southern ".a"'-i~ palom.lno pinto $150. Will Cycles, Bikes, -ltdftl1Nlbu A typewriter repairman has take oCfers. 546-llTI aft 6 Scoote•s -· Now at '72 Pric-1 late model elC'C typewriters pm. -==c.';,_ ___ ;.,';;;:c~ I RtcrMtlon•I Ask for Sales Manager •~· &-calet1lators, like new, BEAUT Palomino, Syrs well CL 1:\4• Vehicles 956 18211 Beach Blvd. MANY MODELS reblt, guar. 847·9864 days; trained & behaved. Suitable NEW Helmets w/purchase 1--'-'-'----C.:..: Huntington Beach & COLORS aft 6, 53&-0538. for nu or exp rider & for of New Carabela or Steens STREET-Buggy -one of a 847-6087 KI 9-3331 Immediate SEC. chn $8-$23, wood desks sho"'· $400. 646-4753 Mini Cycle or Motorcycle. kind Body, 1800 CC VW. WE PAY TOP OOLLAR 1st National Bank Leasing $20-50, stor cab $40. 867 w. 'h ARAB Gelding, 3 yrs, Repair Sctvice · Pickup & Must sell! Call aft 6 pm, FOR TOP USED CARS I ____ I DeRvery 19th CM, Pierce, 642-3408. $25CI. Taek add it i 0 n 8 1 , delivery. New & used parts 675-0963. If your car is extra clean, I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! AT 2001 Michelson Drive Pianos/Or11•ns 826 .54::>-:.3738=0.· ------& accessories. Used bikes Sports, Race, Rods 959 see us first. DATSUN 2402, 1911, blue, See It • You'll Buy It (Corner of MacArthur) --$75 & up. BAUER BUICK Xlnt cond. nu tires, mag Irvine, Ca.II!. 92664 MORGAN 8 yr old gelding. Lou's Cycle Shop DE Tamuo Pantera, 1 i me 2925 Harbor Blvd. \\'his. _A/C, prl pty, 67S-<l281 TI4~ .213/627--0367 MERCURY '71 MARQUIS Brougham 2 dr, AM/FM stereo, vinyl roof, tilt wh1 + more. Low milel, $3:975.. or ? ~20.52 MUSTANG MUSTANG '66 Convert 1 owner, good condition, $850. 615--11546 OLDSMOBILE Excell ent !ICCOnd car for sale. 1957 Oldsmobile 4 door sedan. Power stee ring, power brakes. Excellent Condition. Only 61,000 miles. CaU 548-7670 eYenings. '69 OLDS CUtlass Su(ll'eme, only 37,CXX> miles. $1465. or best offer 64J.4306 Some training. $150. Call 11322 Westminster Ave ., gm w/ blk hood & trunk, Costa Mesa ~2500 e~. ~ [a.:J 1971 VEGA J.-dr hatchback PLYMOUTH 846-9185. Garden Grove. 10 OJ) · N radia "41111 Mac DQn't buy any r gan until * AKC Mini Schna~ pups, 5.10-5852, 830-7341. ~lfica~n &ew distribu: ~ =~D '!!.vr':t~~ Jm. a~ JOJA ~-~ ~~ :~ 1---------1 ::co~ t~l!>'~er:o;:~; ~ &(~~· C a 11 lkpd Bieri~~ :e" =· ~ g'::; B" '1XlMAXEYP S BUYERTOYOTA int, prl pty. 838-3665. '59111'19EL. !3?:~0· real c&e ~l~~X>.v:at~, ~ ORGAN HOBBY -.. stripe kit, new Nichol tail ""'"' ~ . 1911 DATSUN Pickup, 24,COO 1966 Harbor, C.M. M&-9303 ........w..u~ • a r· conditioning, p'llrT steerlqr A: shopc.Co For information AKC Collie Pups. Ready to Assembled I below w h Is I I -.... Ph <'A~ ..._._ 18881 Beach Blv _, miles $1C75 Firm' URG ry! P/S, P/B, air, new brakes. New tires 1: brakes, ntact: Tom Dieterich-go Christmas. Call after 6 cost. ~mt $119.95, Now P pes . ._,.,... : ,_,_.v.u. H. Beach Pb. 847~ ' 557"-s:i87 · T ENT, must aell, '10 brakes, sbOcks, tires. Must Co.•t ~~~rvke ::r;~~8;1 =IS! '"':....U.::;·::;95.~=~·--="_,.,,IMlle,..-. Trucks 962 Autos, lmpomd 970 * '72 2AO Z. * : 1.e'!:;: :~· see. $850. or'! 968-2'.152 ~~ ~'\ ~ u ~°;1 e ~~ (Russ\an Wolfmmds). Best 'BARG '61 Ford"-Tn Std TnN. Auto/Air/Map. Private Best otter. 495--0120. · '52 OIEVY PU 5;200., 6' retail $1,350 ••.• pri~ Newpo~:~~t!!aHarbor breeding! Terms. 832-7457. Sch:s ~· ;~ Runs like new $1395. • '56 ALFA ROMEO Party. 615-4158 or 6'15-111181. '89 TOYOTA Corona 4 Dr ~~ ~$1~~Ford Sll50. 837 -4739. * PIANOS*ORGANS* SCHNAUZER Pups. "'°"· Schw;nn 24" w/dbl bask•"' Fon! PU w/eamper V-8. FIAT Mlcbolln tires. Sharp .,,.: 646-9249 eng. PONTIAC Will hold for Olristmas. on rear fender $15. Schwinn Eng, runs good. $395 • '52 Alfa Romeo dition! $940. Pvt Pt y l"="='=;::-.,-~-77-,. Hammond, Wurliluir, many T -""" .,..,,.. 20" $10. 646-8297. Fol'd 1 Torr Stake Bed, V-8, ,68 0 ,.T ~ 38000 . (1)63&-2399 · 'TI El C.mtm, air, pg/pb, "' 1964 Red Convertible transportation $250. ~nt others. Pre-season specials, enns. -· $395 e '62 ~ 2Y Stake ~ o.JV coupe. mi. 64~ ~~fbrown int $300), model close.outs. Piano & wme Fox Terriers, AKC, ·n YAMAHA Mini Endum Bed, clean & has new slx>rt ~ sm work on eng. $400 or 70 Toyot• St•. W•t· 1 54&--1653. Organ rentals. Money sav· Will hold for Cbrlsbnas, MX clean & super fast for block 318V-8, 645-ti644. best otter. 536-9918. $950. Bob &42-4810 '70 K~ 9 -·• w .... c · 639-0219 dc11ert or track. $200 firm. ...... ing bargains are here right rooming. · 675-7689 173 Chevrolet i*' JAGUAR '70 .MkII wagon, 4 spd, air, disc b 1, pwr strg, air, IUgg nov.' at : ·n Honda 3.10 Scramblft' Ex-Pickups & Y M pnced to sell, 493-4467, rack. $2350: 833-0153. WalGchs Music City [ • II~ I cellent oo~:·~p;o. Bia s~~ a JAGUAR ·es. 4 dr eed. 18 s .. 4!JS.l'l30. 1962 IMPALA. "'""' ..... South Coast Plaza 54().2R30 -~"'-,,.,. ~ I """" immac., lo miles, wire VOLKSWAGEN work. $15(), 613-5681. call ·-. ... •• Low Pr k:et whls, air cond .. auto trans. after 6 pm. Going Out For Busincss .... silver/grey paint, red lthr --'69 LeMans 2 Dr. Hardtop Air. 1 owner. 24,000 mi. Best offer! 646-3591 aft 5. '68 FIREBffiD, fully equip· ped, extremely good cond. 11400. 67>-5507. RAMBLER -------- *PIANOS.ORGANS ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;~ ~e K!::U. MUi, 90ST, SSELLIS)>d, HOWARD Chevrolet ~ A.M/FM r ad., nu ·n vw Bus, 34,000 ml. nu 1'·57="BLACK=-''-SO'-cbevy~-.~cl-...,-. 6 Best quality • prit'!e!I • aerv. Boeh, Gener•I 900 Ask'g $200. 60-3396. New'°" S..ch int. $2500. 833-9550 bet 8 am brakes & bltd tires, cUltm ~ ~t, good oond. lleawai·Steinway-Baldwln, etc, ::.::=!...';;.o=;;o..._....;:::; '62 Triumph 650cc, reblt eng. ?.1.acArtb.ur & Jamboree BJvd ~ g' pm. lnt, 5 pus w/dbl bed. Im· =~""=~==,..,-- Player Pianos & Rolls 12.ft flat bottom Jnn Boat. 6" fmt ext. Many xtras. 833-0555 __, 1970 JAGUAR XJ6. Perfect. ~17 & aI°:L 6 ~; CONTINENT AL ~nt ~~~ :me~~: Rentals We Buy.Sell Aluminum. 71,2 h.p. motor, P..fust .eU. &t:z-2365. 1964, 4 wheel drive, Willys 14,000 miles. Red. $.iSOO. wkends fer. St9--083J r>aUy 1o.6 Sun 12·5 good condition. $2SO. 63J.92S4 NEW Yamaha 12.5 twin, f>. Panel Truck, bll Chevy 283, Call 6424391 or 642·Z789. l'·sa=""'v"w=·~V~AN=~Ex~~.-·n Cood Sedan. 11,0XI ml, Nu -"'"-""'-'T::.=8~1~R~D~---I FIELD'S PIANOS after 5. -spd. 36,1 mUes. Cost $500; 3 spd w/Warren overdrive, _ MAZDA nd · ... ~ .......c.:... ..... ~ ~ cond, AM/FM. stereo, $5195, Costa. Mesa (714) &f>.3250 c~=1,_1 'cl275=· o:,644;.:.,:2595=.:;;,:af:,:t..:5'-,. ~' 1 24 gears IDtal, new Mks, r' ' '""' .... e.,.M~~.._.ptt~' =:":o>-4-7lOO"c:--,,----.,.,.-BEAUTIF1.n. Italian Provln-Boats, Power 906 t97o HUSKAVARNA 360-8 rad, shocks, 2 new tires, ~BS:n.i· e 0 eri:66 Cont'! Conv. Maroon '70 T·BIRD 2-dr, full pwr, tilt ~ ~~:~1:= LYMAN 18', Inbrd runabout, = ~~IT;.~~· 1st =ed U::~ st 6 :r * AT * '63 vw Bug: new eng. & ~~-~ ~ir. :C~'t ~-~ ~~m":'~2oond, aider trade on tine piano u Klinker blt, '54 model. 69 · · · 493-4765. clutch. Recent valve job. . ' ---~YE~G~A---· 1 down payment. 673-8605 compl. restored, Looks like ' HARLEY Sprint, S:XO. 71 TOYOTA. Hi tux truck, ~\ '/ $475. 5J6.0450. aft 9 pm. 1970 ~ntal. ~· • dr,:,..~ new. Orig thruout w/brand cuh. 8,000 miles, needs R/H Big ,._ '68 VW -•-nd n•.u pwr, ._.,nuv.i -----~---1 BUY a Pla)'er Piano for new gray marine 4 cyl front brake. 979-9328 • ......,s, step LA·sy ' M.!Jl co ' £._... $3400. Pri pty. 3733. ChriDu 'stmu.,;.,.,. Duanv Id LaT. model 80 eng., Dual side 'TI Honda Sl.350 Kl ~~ 15,000 mi, $1700. NOW ON DISPLAY sunroof* '::is * HOUSE Hunting! Watch the ·~te~~A~i ~· ~: pree. ~ 'n&ce ·• controls, Call 675-4696 to see Excellent cond. $495. OPEN HOUSE column. 494-0nl btwn 8 & 4 pm. CM 545-4650 Llnd •-• '61 Dtxlge % Ton Pickup, v. Sales Service '67 VW Bug, new brks, tire• A N 980 at 58 · a .Lli1e, N.B. * 493-1018 • Parts Body Shop e e e & paint. Good Int. Runs utos, ew Autos, New 9IQ **UPRIGHT PIANO, good "19n SEA RAY" * '70 fi:onda 3.10 CB. Xlnt 8• Auto Trans, .Power Steer· 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;::;:;;;;;;;;:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 eond. $300. Call alte• 6. 455 Old• Pacl<·•·i•t. :Ml', 200 oond. 6000 mk'•· 13 95. ingll, Ht•aCovyndou,i>'.,7~·~Ex11' li-arft ]mpnrta-... ') AUTOMATIC gool, $650 • ......,.., II . 979-8798 ~2916 ce en · .-,,, o.u--.Jol • It '67 VW Camper, ~it 1~ w~';P~.£j;;i~ ~~(~ii~ f.f.ns~'.o~m~~ ·m~%~."'~:~~: [8 "~Jo·~~J ,~!l~~!~E .~:::~~: WEEK-END-SPECIAL PlANO, French l'rovmdol SELL! 1971 YAMAHA = Xlnt 1971 Datsun Pickup AUSTIN AMERICA DELIVERY ""''· Lo mlloage, Xlnt spinet, like new. C 1 l l 31' CHRIS Cabin Cruiser, top con. Lo rnl.leage. $475forter Sl525 firm. 6'5-3861 HUNTINGTON BEACH ~oond=o..· !:liOO~·~-:;.;~:,,· ---11 675-0380 aft 6 pm. shape, twin eng. radX>, c5.1&-J66==''-=~~---'59 FORD Pickup, V-8, 4 spd, * 1970 AUSTIN AMERICA· MAZDA '69 VW BUS UPRIGHT Plana for sale. ste1"1!0, depth finder, full MINI BlKE runs we.II, $475. Pvt pty, AM/FM, low m 11 ea g e. Good cond, $~. 644-4447 Private pany. $225. Call galley, many xtras, sleeps 6 31; HP Hardi ... ~ SI must sell 96J.-1752 673-4222 646-3632 or &6--179l in comfort. $9975. 675-8577. Can 11 54·._1.,7 Y """"'· 00. '55 VW Bug, part i a 11 y MUsr Sell, 19C8 Ford BMW 11331 BEACH BLVD. restored, r@Oent eng work. Sporting Goods 830 S~JA~ ~ l~=ro~ ** '69 YAMAHA 100 ~· ~lttcand~~ .. ~o ---------H ....... .._. Needs new trans. 646-4231. CUJB1 outriggen radi HELMET INCLUDED ..,. ... ~~· DC!I• 0 er, ......--"'""· Vlsll our new home! Vt MU. So"'9I flf W--* '69 VW BUG. Xlnt cond. CgO~ding F.xtt~ m ~· e 1 'f!a°J:.i-ecoroer, he!d, :St $200. ~m43 Van1 963 & ,._ 141-UU Car cover, chaJns. Best of. '"'°"'· 8 malched """' $95. tank, Etc. ssooo. 543-2lB4 SCHWINN """' IO speed 1971 CHEVY Short V TIME FOR fer. 675-69<2 ...., 962-5460. 30' OlRIS 1960 T/S, V-8, 185 Varsity, Xlnt cond. Acceu. an, V-8 . 197\'.I VW c:amper, AM/FM, KASIU: soow &Ids, 2lO's, h.p. Buy your wife incl Eves. 540-9f24. ;tt~~ ':!:l.J:'1!.:.t~ DAILY PILOT ~~=-· ::~:ii.xlnt """ Nev. Look bindlngl. """'1mal "'''"nL 1 dkll 19661.o milH?nda J60 cc. Ex!. oond. offer. 8lH.lll. ROY CAR..-I CLASSIFIED ADS Perfect cond. Sfl). 963-6365 Now own 54 2.&-M 7813 ust sacrttl.ce. e, must sell, Highest -~~------Y~K, nc. . e'68 VW B~ Rebuilt en· l :?o7'U~er"-. .,,6""~195~·~~-~ 1965 KAISER mall van, 4 "'ne Good s -St:'~.· Rest•urent1 40, CRUISE" "MC 6 71 cylinder, good cond. $500. ...__., M2Sl"'E. l'fth St. .. ~ •A•• 642-56 78 •· ' Call 494-32si""'. u. l32 n.-u TACO 44 Mlnl Bike, xlnt. &1731!84. ...._ ~ 1---------1 dei..l, S.S., lath, r.dJ. oond. Creal Christmu (Jill. -VOLVO RESJ'AURANT F.qulp. Walk· $14,500. Mooring avail. Pvt 1,,,sco1Sec. "64,,:<..:<;::445,,.~=-·~- !n ........ ," box S'x!O', .... n41675-2381. y AMARA '68 IOOce Trail ., VOLVO IWrli<· pi•..,.. & oth<r 26• FAlRLYNER Twn b;k•. xln't oond. 700 orig. I (~"''• ST'"'-R GA'ZEK~¥.' m1lc equip. 675-100'1 or Chryslc-rs, Good cond. $.1000. mi's. $189. 673-8873. I .l 'i'·"""' J1\ .-'1 •_,; 494-3Sl. 409 28th St., Nwpt Al'JO good Johnson 18, $125. '64 YAMAHA 80, gd cond., .Ula . CLAY 1 PO UIU Bc:h. 644-5084 dJrt ready, good for begin-At "'~ 1 M v-0aif1 AdMf<f QiJcJ. ~ ~.11 rtt -~-1-T-VrRedkJ, HIFI, SKIPJACK 24' FIB~ 4 !ll9~, ,:;"'T''-'S':'l507-, .;84C-7-«l8.=::;1.c__=\ :.A.;.1,,_ tt T lltt0rrlln1 ht fh•.Stton. ,,.._ .,(l)MI) Full I r r;. = To d.Yelopm•ssoge_for_TLtt}do,y, ..,..,. 5......, 836 old. Y equpt. In water, Electric C•r1 930 I J[.._e... ~..-.1..,.,.-dlnntol'l.mbn .f l " 1---.;... ____ ..;..; slip avail 642-1837 aft 5. =.:.;::::;~:..::;:.:.: __ _;.:; ~ .-WUo..... .,.... ... - %ENTI'H • RC.A TV Mle at 22' '56 Chris Craft Classic OWNER Sacrtnx. Great JJt. ~TAUlUS ofp.-Zodloeblrthslgn. ICOVtO On-Coun,...,,, !•...,est ... ._. t •· boa Llke the 3 wheel e.'-C'"". •-Nl. lt 1 /wold JI~"' 61 If ~ I -~ v -• ,....,,-,ec . 1><1Y t. nu, '""' .._. '"' 2T-'-J2Tornoil'O'lf' 62Folth dNJet. All anll. modeJ. tn Must sell. 548-1056. Cuh, very reu. 962-6272. WAYtt 3e.,_,., 330-. '1/wfd • ltOck. Priced below the: db-16' Wood _, .. ,... -hp Motor Homn 1· 5-10.S A A M If .. Young . countttl W/3 yr picture """"' ""' 4M0-7J 5Tolko!M ~A 65Hot0-tube, 1&'. ....... ' It 1..,.. McCuUocb & trlr, S'750 .. ,_..;.Se...;.;l•::.l..;R.:.en..;t:..,_ __ ..;9_;40;: -6YOA> 36llT'ICl(ll't0nt 66~ .,...., 1• 493-4765 1. 7flrMI 'J7Ycu Q'G.Mo SMITTAllUS ~. h 90 or terms to -""-"'""-' ------27• TRA VCO ~MA'f If 1 Mew 31 Md«A 611 &"""*' ~·,." ~ ... mo. Factor)" auth0r1zed Boats, San 909 z· DISCOVERER JIM J tV....,,,.. 398. 690nn't ziec;. aevtce on premitn. ABC , ...,, _ f 10.¥d ~,.--70C..-loltt Ct.lot TV, 0021 Atlanta at cofioNAoo 27, one yr old. aJ2o~·~~~TcJy~ • I~~ ~~" ~~~==J~-;~ Mqnolla, H.B. 961-l129, °"lxe Int. Slip in N.B. $1700 VAN CONVERSJ::>NS CAMCD 1JC...C.••• A3To 7J~ ~ STEREO, dclu.u lST3 Car· or otter, n4: 68'l--7339eves. ~aJe11 e Service e Rental• <-)_IUJ!,111 J;=" ~= ~t.w. -.·a · nrd model, tuae pro-HOBIE CAT 14' * Da I * e:-fllUUZ 16"-'llm oltSNl'lr 76f-41 •••• .! ,, lllmnal ch&Jwer, Jtl'lleJ'I Xlnt concl $850 nmar ftC. ~ 17,.,,,.,. A7 c. I • TT~ -:;. . .... air IUlpfNSon speake-s 220 .,_ ...... , r~-) . 13801 Ji&rbar Blvd., O.G. II,...., ... Yo.. 71 Chol--..... Watt AM/FIC M'P X wo·v.u ..,, ... ,.e 531"800 lt~ AtTn-7'Don't II!"~~ ncelYrr, tape deck. Brand SAB<n,', fibefalau Next to G.C. Datsun LIO 20 ~ 50 ~ '° ~ A4UAIM new A~ wu left wlth NUS. Xlnt cond. ~ J11trn ~= ~~ &,.... ~·· uncl&fmed, Now' ,17 5. $175. 6T.YM)98_~. MOTOR ~~~CORENTAU; ~t! 22Thot SJGocloftl U~ pq.tt ·, ,..,,,,,_ Credit dept. FLIPPER #1 Or. Cn!> Int rontol noet if'i:&-1'1·.S: ~!::" ..... tr.::... :l~""' .!'Jt tm«JOl. S150. 675-Z!Q'J LOW WllllTF.R RATES ~ 26DflaMt 560f Nl1itp11:ai1rtt P'RENOI Pn'.1¥ 5' ~vox 604 N. Jlarbor Blvd. '/IMO 210oi 51vena11s. 17Se~ "8Cll Stereo, ....,· __. Cond. Like ta tndl'r!' Our 'l'Ndfr'a ~ .[I.Ml._» 3htl JI.Mont lllC. /ff.''~ ----~ .. •-p--..a•--_, .,;.n ,.'"''' ~===-9019 ~ wM.• ,,,r_ ..,....,,..... u.ioumn k IBr )'OUI $1000 or bes I oUfl' for eq t2'f'. ~1 "'!!. ••• ~ aood Wlllt ad lo a pod 111> ' 11-. 5 "-IOr S5. C.U.,. FUily oqulp'd ....., llomo: • ~ -~Good .,._ Nc\IIllt .. Sf,'!! t(t 'Wtl:mebt. dl.1 • • • MJ.6f7I Xlot cond. &a-1263. ' I • '73's HERE NOW! Come In test Drive TODAY! Se. It • You'll Buy It .1)f.ul..U W VllYO ' 19881farbor, CM. &M-93o3 OUICK CASH THROUQll A DAILY PILOT WANT AD &42-5678 • BUY A USED CAR OR TRUCK FRoAf GROTH CHEVROLET AND TAKE HOME A SCHWINN 10 SPEED VARSITY 01 R.CJ. 12" PORTABLE T.V. , .. ,,,.,~ 0 1 60,000 BLUE CHIP STAMPS I UT HURRYI THIS OPFIR IS FOR A LIMITI D TIMI. our UllO CAR lot ls Jammed with exCC!ll(.l\'lt t*4 car and truck v1lutt:. Prlet'l 11rt competitive, our aervtce and reputation envied. Come In now while this oU't.r li optn. OPEN EVERY DAY 'TIL 9 P .M. GROTH C ~EV IOLET . 11211 Beach Blvd. Huntl119ten Beech 847-6839 545-8863 I • ' I I • 17 r ! • l c I ; i I ' . . J. w Jt 1 , • ~ b - . .... 7 San Clemente f VOL .oS, NO. 346, 2 SECTl0NS, 24 PAGES ew S(l1t Clemente Get,s $52,893 Revenue Share San Clemente today received its first chunk of federal revenue-sbar· ing funds -a check for $52,893 which City Manager Kenneth Carr said woold go into the bank Im- mediately to draw interest. The funds are for the first six months of 1973 and came along with a message from President Nixon that more cash wouJd be tortoc.-oming at quarterly intervals after next June. Carr said that city couilcilmen probably would not consider the ultimate use-of the cash until a meeting early next year. Several projects already have been discussed, including the use of tbe money to round out the budget for a north-area fire substation on which 1he city has plae<d a top- prio<ity label. other areas suggested by the federal government a r e en- vironmental enhancement. Carr said councilmen might consider us- ing the funds for a parks project aa well. Oemente Couple Claim Lot Sinks; Smt Cites City ASaalleMM ...... '1 ,.,.._ that the city ..... to -for ............. OD ID -1-...... lille riJ bO tried May 19 in oniip c-ty SUperior Qlurl. Presiding Judp Bnlce Sumner set that date for trial of an action in which J. Patriclr. and May O'Neill, 319 Avenida Gaviota, seet a total of $120,000 from multiple c:ausea of actioo. The O'Neill.s name fonner City F.ngineer El;gene Ayers, ~ City Engineer Phillip P<ltrs and Ille con- slnJcllon finn of Dames and Moore as ~ta. 'lbe couple dabns that coostructlon ol Ille Linda Lane beach ....,.. created ccmditioos tbatlil to a Judslide OD their lot. 'Ibey said !Ubsidenoe has redue<d the value of. the building site by at least !30,0.JO. A claim In that amount was rejected by tbe city council. Trusty With One Day Left Esca-pes The prospect of entering the morning chill in San Clemente to wash )Xllice cars apparently was too much for Mark James Haley, 21, of Mission Viejo over the weekend. The traffic offender only had a day's sentence to serve when San Clemente police told him to grab spooge and bucket Saturday and perform tasks which are normal for jail trusties. Haley took the cleaning materiaJs, but jUlt kepi oo going, officers said. The resident of 26252 Papagayo ap- parently fled the civic center area at about i :45 a.m. By then, his eight-hour sentence was less than two hours old. At last reports the assertedly un· tr,ustworthy lrusty was still at large. Orange ·Coast Weather The weatherlady says you can unbutton the top button on your overcoat on Tuesday. It'll be a little bit wanner. High& of ~ are expe<ted. Overnight Iowa, how· ever, will nm fl'Om (brr) 28 to Ille mid 30s. INSmE TODAY 1 Thi toord'1 out agoin that thtre11 QO'ino to be G dettnictfvt earthquake to Son Francisco. Thil ttnt..f tt't: "1chtd1'1ed" /or Jan. 41. See 1torv, Page 5. ...... ,~ ... L.-t ,, c........-. """" " (.......... ..M ""'9Mil MtWt • c.Mlc't '' or.... ~ • <,......,.. " ..,. ,.,, Otd '"""' • l!Mtl .... 1•11 ••tw1at .... ' T•lt~ lt •11twt1M111t 11 nMten 11 ~~ "''' ......... . .., ..................... ,,.,j Mwtt..,e M WMll..... 4 t ' . Marine Hurt I In Freeway Cycle Crasl1 A good helmet and lots of luck ap- parently saved a young San Diego area Marine from death on the freeway through San Clemente SUnday afternoon erter his motorcycle lost control and sent him on a painful dive lhat lasted for severaJ.!lundred feel. Kenneth Duane Shelton, 17, attached to the Marine Corps Recruit Training Depot, suffered painlul pamnenl! bums on most of his body In the high-speed spill In tbe southbound laDes of the San Diego Ffteway near~EJ Camino Real. The cyclist told highway patrolmen that bis oew cycle began to shimmy and be tried to aoctlerate to bring the bike under control, but the wobble only got worse. 'lbe cycle dumped Its rider ahead of a Greyhound bus and olbe< heavy lralli<:. Tllen Shelton began tumblin._ bead- over-beels on the pa~t. San Clemente firemen who gave the youth nm aid said Shelton's legs, anns and bands took most ol the scrapes. 'lbe Marino'• flngorl;po ...,.. ground away, half bis .belmet wu tom off, his boots·were shredded and bis coat was in tatters. Tiie ~ 'lfU ;!Hin to tbe base ...... Ill al 0... Prn'rti.a for trMt- ment of the aipedlcta1 llurts. ' . .. Hunter Survives In WiMerness, Ate Mice, Grubs SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (UPI) -A hunter who survived two months in a cabin by eating mice and grubs was rescued by snowmobilers Sunday after walking for eJghl daya in the wilderness. 'l1le hunter, Andros Mayraclc. 48, of Gravenhurst, Ont., wu reported in ex· cellent condition at a local hospital. although doctors said he .... suffering from utreme fatigue and lost 32 pounds. Constable Ray J. Duguay of the Ontario Pro--.! Police said two snowmobtlers found Mavracic when be stumbled out of dense country near the Batchawana river after waJking 50 miles nonstop on snowshoe!. Mavraclc dJd not sleep during his trek because he feared that If he did he would never awake, Duguay said. The snowmobilers said Mavracic was mumbling incoherently and covered with dirt, Duguay said. He waa so hungry be OJt his nose trying to eat a can of beans the snowmobilers gave him . Duguay sakl Mavracic went into the bush Oct. 1 with six bunters. They went to the Gray Owl Lake area, about 75 miles north of Sault Ste. Marie, where a trap- per friend of Mavracic's owned a cabin. The other six len after about two weeks but Mavraclc stayed In the cabin because be thought his friend would return to check bis trap lines, Duguay said. 'l1le friend never appeared and Ma'n'acic'a provisions ran oot after several weeks. Duguay said he was afraJd to luve tbe cabin because lakes In the area were not sufficiently frozen over to walk on. After mid-October, Mavracic lived on tea, salt, mice and grubs be dug up outside. He aloo obol one partridge and one squirrel during his wallt. "On Dec. 2 be gave up all hope aod put (l.J. hi! snow lboa and started walking," Duguay sald. 11He was warmly dressed and in ucellenl l>llY$c:al coodllloo aod that's appanntiy ·what saved him. We estimate he walked about SO miles.•• Coast Veterinarian To Lead Association Dr. Colden ~;'ljle bead of san Clt111<11te Veter1nar)' Hospital, haa be<n 1nstaned u pmident of. 111e Orlnge County Veterinary Medlcel Allloclallon for tbe cornin1 yor. 11>e local ..i, acllve In San Clemente t'Ommunlty affairs, cumntty .-vu as president of tbe local llolary Club and oo the boRnl ol dlroctoro of the chamber of commerce. ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER II, 1972 • rice APOLLO 17 landing 12-111-n EAR1'H P'ARKIN8 oRen • Leave Luftar Orbit 12 . 1&· '72' \ Rendez......,. Liftoff~/ ... ,,.. Docking \ ' I Launch 12·11·72 &1x170NM LUNAR 09'91T 1&x&9NM OE SCENT ottan A:poUo R..,te • • , ,. UPl,T...._. Tiie complete·route of Ille Apollo 17 filgbt Is lbown this mornine, wilb the P,tsJ; l'llOOll'lnlk ~lo• in !be~·~ '11\DU lllldl8_-'--"1_1_11C>1i_.'"l!'_n_'_J"--..__._J _':_·•~•-•_-__ .,_._a_··_-__ .w_c_mt_'aa_bdul!_1e_•_el_•_llii_iir_s._ Hitchhiking Gal Bluffs Driver, Driven to Work A 19-year-otd Dana Point girl, hitch- hiking to Laguna Beach thwarted an attempted rape Friday by a man who held a hunting knife to her throat in an efCort to fo,·ce her into the back of his van. "Okay, kill rne," the girl told tbe would·be rapist, as the youthful suspect belc! tbe long-bladed knife to her. "I will, I mean i~," the Illltn said, but he was folled when the young woman popped open the door of the van and ran. the incident occurred in the 800 block of Bluebird Canyon Drive of Laguna Beach. The girl had been hitchhiking to Laguna Beach where she works in a shop. GOP National Chairman c,. Robert Dole Resigning W ASlilNGTON (AP) -Republican National Cbairman Robert J. Dole said today be is resigning and that United Na· tions Ambassador George Bush.of Texas has been ptcked-to replace him. Dole, U.S. senator from Kansas, an- nounced his impending resignation as party chairman nt a White House news conference folloWing a 45-minute session with President Nison, but denied any White House pressure behind his decision to quit. • Bush's actuaJ election as chairman of the Republican National C.Ommittee will be up to the committee itself when it meets here Jan. 19, but Nixon's wishes are expected to be followed. "There was some speculation that I went to the mountaintop to be pushed off," Dole said. "But that wasn't the case. I never planned on staying long into 1973." Ziegler backed Dole's venion and said, "At no time did Ppresident Ni10n re- quest that Chairman Dole leave his PoSl." Dole said he spoke to Bush about the job immediately after bis first meeting with Nixon and that be spoke to him 2.::;ain a week ago and yesterday. Dole said Bush finally agreed to the job after both Nixon and Dole talked to bim by phone this morning. Today's Final TEN CENTS oom President Will Seek Extension WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon wW ask Congress to e1teod the current economic controls beyond April 30, 1973 when they are due to expire, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz said today. At a White House news conference, SbtJtz also said the President decided to freeze salaries in the federal executive branch, Congl'ess and the judiciary. Nixon also imposed a companion freeze on hiring and promotions for all federal, civilian and military personnel through • late January, when the 1974 budget Will be sent to Congress. And as an example of the belt-tighten-ing philosophy, Schultz said there woqld be "very substantial reductions" in the President's own staff. Shultz, NiXon's chief eco nomi c spokesman, said no decision bad been reached on how Ion., the next phase of wage-price-~nt controls should last. To help dec ide this question, Shultz said, there woold be a "wide process of consultation" wlth labor, Congress, con· sun1ers and members of the current economic stabilization program. On related. topics, Schultz saidtl)e Pres:i· dent had been successful in holding spen· diDg in the current budget to l2SO billion and that tbe budget for fiscal 1'14, wblcb will be submitted to Coogrels in January, woald be tn balance on a full employment basis. Sllulb said U.. presldenlJal decisloos oo the controls were "mutually interde- pendent and supportJve." He said it re- flected Nixon's "stroog determination to maintain the fight against inflation in the strongest way possible." The pay action freezes the current salaries of all member . or government at the so-called "federal executive level." This includes high-ranking members of government, congressmen and federal judges. It covers salary scales rangiJllg· from $.16,000 to $60,000. · The hiring freeze in the executive branch will last at least until late January, when Nixon sends to Congress his budget for fiscal IS74, beginning July 1, 1973. Shultz said it was an "open quellion" whether the administration would uk Q:ingreu to e.i:tend the F.conomic Slabillzatioo Act in its present form or to modify some of its provisions. But be added: "I'm ruling out just going back to an ~led s)rstem \vith a statement that ev~.one ought to behave in such and such a fashion and hoping that they do." She told officers that arter she ran from the vehicle, the suspect became apok>gelic and said that he would take her to work. He threw away the bunting knife . The girl ran over, picked up the knife and got bact into the van. The man then drove her to the shop as he had prom· ised, she told police. The vehicle is described as a red van and the suspect as a man 20 to 22 years of age with shoulder-length blonde hair. White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, said Bush will continue as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations through the current session of the U.N. General Assembly, 8lld a replacement would be announced later. Dole said he agreed to "stay on in an advisory capacity for a month or two" to help Bush break into the job. Capo Beach Residents Nix 60-acre Annexation Plan Chamber 'Mixer' Set A membership and guest miler sponsored by the San Cemente Chamber of Commerce will be beld Thursday afternoon at the Travt:~ Inn, offis>aJs .,.. nounced today. The ~host social event at 5:30 p.rn. is open to all chamber members and guests. "I find broad support for George Bush," Dole said. "We believe our Teun will beat their Texan," Dole said In reference to Dallas lawyer Robert Strauss, elected cbairtnan o. the Democratic Party &Bturday. Dole met with President Nlxon at Camp David, Md. Nov. 27 amid reports he ·was being eased .out.as part of Nixon's post-election rev a trip ~n g of the Administration and the Republican Par· ty, but Dole denied he was being forced out. Naked Brass? Air Force Recognizes Officer SAIGON (AP) -Whal does an Air Force.enlJ.lled man do wbea be meeta a naked geoeral? He saJulel. An order laaued l'«elllly by Maj. Paul M. Booeman, operations officer ol the 37'/lb Security Police Squadron al Tan Sm Nbut Air Bue, A)'I in port: ''SAIAll'B WllEN YOU REOOGNJZE an officm' even thouch you both, oWcer and nooc::omm1slion olflcer, are nude." An Air ,....,. ~ said lhll WM "intended to ... phula Ille Im- portance of oaluling oflk<rl "1>en r<cognlzed, whetber In or out of unlfonn." lie 1ik1 be did DOI know under what cmun111Doo1 olftcera and enlllled penoooel m1J1b1 encounter each other In Ille nude. THE OllDER WAS A1TACllED to a photo&rapb ol Brig. Gen. Ralph Ho~ land, new vice commander of the 7th Air Force. . , Tbl ..,_i Is in full unUonn. 1 More than 200 residents in the Capistrano Beach area have signed peti- tions opposing a proposed 60-acre an- nexation into the c i t y of San Juan Capistrano which comes before county officials at midweek. The restdents expect to present the documents to the Local Agency Forma- Dana Hills Boosters Begin Sale of Trees The Dana Hills Booster Club and Pa rent-Teacher-Student A!Jociation began their first Christmas tree sales project today from a lot next to tho drive-In theater in San Juan CapL!trano. Athletic team members wW joln the boosters to stafr the lot from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. All proceeds from the tree sales wi ll assist the booster projects at the new hl&h ochool. which Is scheduled to open at the end of .:1u'l.!Jtmas vacation. ticn Commission (LAFC) when the an- nexation of the acreage near Del Obispo Road comes up for a public hearlng Wednesday in the oounty seat. 'The parcel, presently being used for farming, was included in a previous larger aMexalion attempt involving nearly 300 acres seaward or the mission community. The LAFC, however, rejected that merger. The C. fl.1ichael C'.ompany proposes to merge the land with the city to streamline sanitation aervice to the pr4r posed development on the land . The city ha s endorsed the idea. But the residents, along with the Capistrano Beach Community Assocla· lion, oppose this latest move, charging that the merger would rob the county arett of potential lax revenue lf it in- corporated into a new city. DAILY PILOT AD PEOPLE PLEASER DAILY Pu.oT dassllled want adl are peopi. pleum. See this : OUlTAR-E1ea. w/c1ae. Xln't cooa. PalirSllO. Sell •175 or bit oCr. Amp avail DX·IDX. The gull.at was sold as 9000 u the ad •ppeared which pleased both Ibo ad- ve:rtiler and the guitar'• new owott. It )'OU have oomelhlng to sell, dial dim$ llWm. !I'll be a plea1Utt. l • ,. DAILY PILO T SC Black Ban At Lodge Loses Bid WASHINGTON !AP) -A Moose Lodge todny unanimously Jost a U.S. S\lprtmc Court appea l designed to keep Qlll Negro guests. Without further comm<'nl, the court said the appeal by the Pennsylvania lodge failed to pose "a substanUal federal question." The Harrisburg lodge \\'&S ordered last JuJy by tbe Pennsylvania Supremt" Court to serve black guests. The dis pute centered around K. Leroy lrvis. a black. v.•ho is majority leader of the state House of Representali\'es. In its appeal , the lodge said by the same reasoning the dining room cf every private home in the country, would be open to the public 1f guests who 'A'ere not members of the family were served once. Last June, in a 6-3 deci sion, the higb court ruled Lodge 107 1A·as not required to serve Irvis or any othe1 Negro just because the club operated 'A'ilh a liquor liCt'nse from the state. The Pennsylvania court's ruling the follo'A·ing roonth stemmed from the same incident. In 1968, lrvis and a group of other legislators went to the lodge for dinner. It is a half block from the state Capitol. Irvis was re{u$'ed service.. The liquor license argument was based on the theory that blacks cannot be bar· red from places whose operations depend on state officials. Tilat was rejected by the Supreme Cou rt. The Pennsylvania court r u 1 e d , however, that by opening its dining room to white nonmembers, the clut became a place of "public accommodation'' under the state human relations law and would ha\'e to serve black guests as weU. ln another case, the father of a slain Kent State University student was turned down today by the Supreme Court as he tried to sue the state of Ohio for damages. Arthur Krause. whose daughter Allison was kiUed in the camp~ disturbance r.tay 4, 1970, was barred by the Ohio State Supreme Curt last Ju1y from suing the state without the consent of the Ohio Legislature. Krause, of Pittsburgh, argued in an ap- peal that this violated his rights under the federal Coostitutioo. The high court dismissed the appeal "for want of a substantial federal question." Miss Krause, 11, was one of four stud<nt.s killed when Ohio National Guardsmen opened fir< during campus -against the U.S. incursion into cambodia Woman Prepares For Clemente Oiamher Reins Directors of the San C I e m e n t e Chamber of Commerce are expected to elect their first woman president in the organiultion's hi story at a meeting Tues- day, then settle into more than a dozen~ appointments cf new board members and committee chairmen. Local rea1tor Bertha Henry, who has served as director and treasurer o{ the chamber, will assume the top post of the organization. Betides the selectiQo of a president, directors also will be asked t o acknowledge tbe appointment by Mrs. Henry cf seven new directors. The noon session will be held at the San Clemente Inn. Other ma}or items on the agenda in· elude a report from Director Dan Phllllp- bar Oil the screening of 16 applications for the post cf executive manager of the chamber. The selection process was authorized after directors accepted the resignation o! prese;1t manager Robert Evans early last month. Evans remains in his post until year's end. DAILY PILOT 'l'M or.,... CNll OAILY P'ILOT, wllll Miki! i. Cl9rftlllrlllll Vie N.--.P'rn1, .. llftlllftlill _,. Ii. Or ... CN1f hltlllll'"9 c.,...,..., S..., rift Mii• ,,.. Mllsllld, Mtt!Uy IMMtfl ,tllMy, .... C•I• Mn.a, .. ....,... ••ad!. ~ hkW'-'•ln V•llty, U.-.. ~ 1,.,in.1s-.11NU; • ·S." C""*"-1 ... J-c..H11r...,., A 1Jllfle "''-' "'""" .. ••"'*' S.tvnll.,. ..... lvnd.t'I". T,.. "t11c:1,_1 "'*1111'1'"9 '""' It •I »II Wttl ..., .,,.., (;1111• M9w, Cllllomlt, ntJIL l111t1rt N. w ••• Pmdt!lt 111111 P'Vlllltl'ltr Jeck l . C11rl1y Viet ,.,.1111n1 aM o.n.t-11 MllllllW lhom11 k11•il ..... Tito'"'' A. M11rphhro M""""" Uilor CJi1rlo1 H. Looi l fch1'4 P. Hill AatlllM!t MIMl"'9 Edltws S. Ck I Pe Of"- JOI H1rtt. ll C1ml"' l11I, 92l72 ..__ c." 111 .. , m ~=r '"'"' N~ lftdli ml N ao..i-e Hiii!!.,.._ ~: IPUS hlctl ~lrd ~ h9dl: m ,._... ,._.,. 1111 s' • tn4t MMJJ1 Ci•1IAl4 .Wu1fl 1111 '4JM7t ,_ c.._... "'' ••=•••••1 f1' ••••• 4tl-4411 ""'""''"'""""" 1tflr-°""9f ,_, .. ,. ..... , .. 1 ........ c.,....,.. ,.. -..... lltllttr•llilM. ....... -Mr • H¥tl'l1MtMftfl W.flt _, .. ,~ wlflllV'I ...... ,,.,. ........ .. '*"""""' -· ...... c ............... c.i. ....... (:;ill.,., • I J"""'' ilt e11rrltl' 12.41 ~, .., ... u.11 ft'lellfJllY• '"'r"'" _ ................ fM!lf1illJ', (, • Touch11 Su"fect Supervisors Eye Own Pay Boosts Orange CoW'i ty supervisors face up to the touchy subject of raising th~lr own salaries Tuesd11y. Bolstered by n.-comrnendations from the Grand Jury and the Orange County Chamber of Commerce, the board mt'mbers 1A1ill. in an open hearing, discuss increasing their current $17,SOO.a· -year pay. Tht opei:i discussion contrasts with a rkised door meeting two years ago dur· in~ which super\'isprs informally decided to raise their pay to the level of municipal court judges -$29,000 a year. The move, news of which leaked out, led to a p u b I i c uproar and retall movements against •. three supervisors. The furor later waned. The Grand Jury and the chamber of rommerce have since recommended that the supervisors raise their pay to the n1unicipal court level. Informal discussions have indicated that $25.0XI to $27,500 a year might be the figure they 'A'ill agree upon. This despite the fact that many county of· James Brown, 2 Others Arrested Dtu·ing Scrape KNOXVILLE. Tenn. (AUPI) -Enter- tain ·-James Brown and two associates were arrested early today after a con- frontation with Knoxville po 11 c e, authorities said. Brown. charged with disorderly con- duct, was released after posting $250 bond. Charged with disorderly conduct and assaulting police officers were Freddie Holmes, Brown's manager, and Oliver Dyer, a Brown aide. They were released on $2.750 bood. Police Chief Joe Fowler said the three lingered around the Knoxville auditorium after a Brown concert Sunday night. He said coliseum seeurity guards at- tempted to get Brown and his aMOCiate! tO leave the premises. Fowler said security officers even· tually got the three outside the coliseum. He said " lighl broU out in the parking "" -police on\-Be 61 not know what provoked the light. Clemente PTA Set to Sponsor Whale Cruises Annual wha1ewatcb cruises available to tbe public from Dana Harbor will begin early next ,year !pOOSOred by the San Clemente High School Pareot·Teacher· Student Association. The weekend cruises will start Jan. 6, 7, and 8 at the height of the southward migration of the California gray whale hen! .. The mammals come to within a few miles of the Orange Coast on the migra· tion to Scammon.s Lagoon in Baja California . Boats will leave the dock.! of Dana Wharf sportfishing at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. each day of the cruises. A guide from San Clemente High School's science department v1ill accompany guests to ex· plain details of the migration and other students will serve as guides. Reservations are required and are ~vailable by calling 496--9566 or by writing "Whale Watch," 34972 Calle Fortuna, Capistrano Beach. Clemente House To Go Up for Bid An expensive San Clemente house own· ed by the State Division of Highways will go up for public auction Dec. 19 as o!· ficials open sealed bids for the dwelling. The residence, declared surplus state property, is located at 106 and 106 Y.i Calle de los Caba lleros. State aides said the minimum bid price for the smali residence on the large, ir· regularly-shaped lot is $50,000, and a minimum deposit of $3,500 would be re- quired before a bid could be declared of· ficial. Cashier's checks, certified checks or bank or postal money orders will be ac· ceptcd as a deposit, they added. Tbe bids will be opened at JO a.m. in the diviskln 's Los Angeles offices. Robert Brewer Last Rites Held Funeral services were held today for Robert L. Brewer, SO. former Santa Ana ncwspaptnnan and city councilman . Mr. Brtwer died Friday at Tustin Community }lospital of p n e u m on I a followlng a brief· lllnes1. In the early IHOs he was a cohrmn1st on the old Santa Ana lndtpcodcnt t1nd served as a city councilman from 1958 10 1962. He was a veteran of World War II. f ficials are paid $32,000 or more, some as hlgh as 142.000. J..os Angles supervisors are paid $36,000 a year and San Diego County leaders recently increased their pay to $22.000. Hu"ible Sued By Opercitor For Gas Wars An oil company was sued for $850 millicn in damages Friday in a class ac- tion filed on behaU tJf all Enco service station cperators by a Garden Grove man who charges the controlling Humble Oil and Refining Company with multiple breaches of contract. Enco operator Carl Murdock claims in his Orange County Superior Ccurt lawsuit that he and all other Enco operatives are the ooes who eventually have to pay for the cost of gas wars ordered by the Humble group. He claims that the commissions they have a right to expect from the terms of their contracts are e&lso cut by the fact that they have to make good a mounting number of thefts at service stations. ~1urdock claims that service station personnel operating on a commission basis are also ezpected to pay for the cost o! promotion.al activities, including the heavy advertising that backs up a gas war. Murdock states that his lawsuit. calling for $850 millioo oo multiple causes of ac· tion, represents. more than 1 , O o o operators working under Enco signs. Repeated inroads by the company into the commis.1ions ensured by their con- tracts have me.ant that many operators have to work far beyond a five-day week and have been reduced, in some in· stances, lo pay checks that work out al less than the state minimum of $1.60 an hour, he claims. Autonetics Gets • Missile System Computer Deal North American Rockwell's AutoneHcs division in Anaheim has been awarded a $9.8 million contract for production of 105 missile system computers, ~g to Ai.;tonetics Presi dent M. D. Margolls. The contract with the Air Force calls for production of the master computers for the SCRAM (sbort range attack missile) program in tm74. The missiles are designed to be carried by B-52 and f'B·lll jet aircraft now used by the Air Force and by tbe S-1 now being developed for Air Force use by North American, Margolis said. The mast_r computer is installed In the SCRAM carrying craft to monitor status of the system and to program the mis- siles for guidance to pre.selected targets, he added. Eatery Employe Stabbed by Trio A screaming kitchen worker at an Anaheim restaurant thwarted a robbery attempt by three bandits early today, but nearly paid the price of bis li!e ror it. Alfredo S. Covarrubias was plstol·wblp- ped and seriously stabbed in the chest during the incident at the Jolly Ox, 950 S. Ox Road, police said. The would·be bandits -two carrying pistols and one armed with a lmi.fe - then escaped on foot. Inves tigators who said they did not im- mediately determine CcvaJTUbias' ad· dress told newsmen he was taken to a hospital for treatment of the stab wound in his chest. The victim was seriously injured, but police said be is expected to survive.. County Crashes Oaim Two Lives Two persons died in separate traffic accidents during the weekend in Orange County, the county coroner reported to- day. One was a Huntington Be8ch woman. 11elcn U>uise Schabatka, 45, of 16M2 Marie Lane, died Saturday night after sbe was struck by a car while attempting to cross Knott and Monroe Avenues In Buena Park on foot. The driver, Timothy Shipman of Anaheim, was ·not held, police 58id. Jlobert Cushman, 44, Upla nd, died Sun- day night when his cir craahed Into a parked truck on the Orange Freeway north or Lambert. Street In Fullertoo. Film Producer Dies !,OS ANGELES (AP) -1 James H. Nicholson, 56, producer of "I Wu a Teenage Werewolf" and other films, died Sunday. Other films be produced In-- eluded "How to StuU a Wild Bikini." "Drag Strip Girl" and "Beach Blankeet Bingo." C, Lunar 'Di"ining Rod' Rendering shows how electronic beams of Apollo 17's lunar sounder system will probe moon-down to three-quarters of mile-from lunar orbit to aid in developing subsurface geologic map to pinpoint be- low·surfacc metallic deposits and water. Peace Talks On; Chou I Reportedly Optimistic , PARIS (UPI) -White House adviser }fenry A. Kissinger held ooe more secret meeting with Hanoi negotiators today and . a French radio station quoted Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai as saying a cease-fire agreement might come in two or three days. The report coincided with Washington dispatches implying there ba:f been more progress in the talks than indicated in pessimistic reports thought to have originated from the Viet Cong represen- tatives. Kissinger and several aides sat dO\\'Tl with North Vietnamese negotiators Le Due Tbo and Xuan Tbuy in a heavily gua rded villa of suburban Neuilly·Sut· seine for their seventh meeting in eight days -the first time their sessions have lasted so long. Tbe conference got under way at 3 p.m. (6 a~m. PST) as the French radio station EW'ilpe No. 1 quoted Chou l\S tell· ing newsmen In Peking it was possible that the Americans and tbe North Viet- namese would reach agreement "within two or three days." 1be talks extended four hours. In Washington, the White House said the l'A'O would meet again Tuesday after· noon, with technical meetings being held in the morning. Ambassador William J. Porter, the chief U.S. negotiator at the regular semi· public Paris peace talks, sat in on the Kissinger·Tho conference for the first time. I i I Ta And, perhaps significantly, North Viel· namese deputy Prime Minister Le Thanh Nghi arrived in Paris Sunday from Hanoi \Vith Nguyen Van Kha, the man who played a large part in framing the Geneva accords. Nghi wou1d have sufficient rank to sign any agreement which would have to be signed on the American side by Secretary of State William P. Rogers. Rogers flew home last Friday from a NATO meeting in Brussels disappohlted that he was unable to slgn the ceasefire agreement this weekend. In \Yashington, U.S. officials dis- counted some reports from Paris that no gains had been made in cease.fire negotiations the past week. They acknow1edged that it woold be premature to expect an imminent brealrthroogh which woold wrap up the agreement for 1lgnlng. However, tbey said reports of a deadlock were not true. The Provisklnal RevoluUonary Govern- ment. the potitical arm of the Viet Cong, was described by some U.S. officials as using much the same type of tactlcs on Communist side as Saigon has on the other side in an effort to extract mu- imum advantages from the negotiations between Washington and Hanoi. Today 's Kissinger-Tho meeting follows the longest· known session of the talks history on Sunday, when technical ex· perts mc.t for more than six hours, 8J>' patently to work out the technical wording of any cease.fire agreement. Police Nab 3 Marines In Anaheim A trio of Morine Corps enlisted men allegedly cornered durlng a t1re shop burglary led Anaheim police on a not-su-- merry chase among nearby orange groves early SUnday, dodging lawmeo's bullets occasiooally. One suspect among the three faclng burglary cbarC's today suffered a minor wound in the shoulder. • A pursuing police officer also was In- jured when he fell into a concrete-lined flood control ditch while sprinting after the alleged burglars. Officers aboard the Anaheim police helicopter spotlig.hted the suspects finally in the orange groves below, resulting in their eventual capture. Investigators Identified the servicemen facing burglary chal'geS today as Edward L. O'Connor, 20; Randy G. Litton. 20. and Donald R. Sobeski, 19, all of Palm Springs. Police said O'Connor was the suspect slightly wounded by a bullet fired during the pursuit. Officer Rudy Moranda was the policeman injured when he rell into the ditch while chasing the suspects in the darkened orange grove. Investigators at first cornered their quarry in the Capital Tire Sales store. 2020 E. Howell Ave., but the trio fled before of!icers could head lhem off. The pursuit through the orange groves continued for a total of four hours before the Marines were captured. Electric Power To Be Discussed On Oiannel 50 Orange County's future electrical power needs and their possible effects on aj. pollution will be discussed in a special program of Focus Orange County oo Channel 50 tonight at 6:30. 1be program will be repeated at 8 p.m. Thursday on the Coast Community College District station. The hall-boor program hosted hy Jim Cooper will review Southern California Edison Company plans to expand the nuclear generating plant at San Onofre and the plans to enlarge the steam plant in Huntington Beach. Robert Beck, Orange COUnty divt.sion manager for the Edison Company. repraeata the company's concerns over possible power blackouta by 19'75 oo the program. James Sol!lmo Oraoge°Collnty dittdor !or Stamp Ou! Smog (SOS), an en- vironmental group, explains hls group's opposition to plant expansion on the Channel 50 production. Records Destroyed HOIL YWOOD (AP) -Fire al an RCA warehouse here has destroyed nearly a million phonograph records valued at more than $300,000, a c om pa n y spokesman says. T1ppe11 El1ctric Sll'l..th To, R•ttt• wirii co11tl11.,.011t cle1alt19 0¥1P1, Moclel )J.lll2 ••••••• , Sift.ti T •PP•" 611 llt11t9• with cCH1tl"u•ut cl""'nt •••"· Mocl1I Zl2 1002 ....•.••.....•••.••••. S16t.tl Tepp111 lloctNc llt•rtt• with co.nfln. •ou1 cle111l119 0 ¥1tl, Model JI ·2112 • ous c1ean1ng· R . nge. TRJ>HID . l ' WBIJIJ JIOU 11/lVB JlCBIJICE Mewl '" ... f9f • C1artaa1• C ....... 0... Ill -, tW of,....'" .,... - etoc.tfk, .... ., ........... tdrl. ,,_ --,... .... ,.,,.. ..... wtfl ...... ,,... .. .wy ....... .....,. • c .. ,.... •• c1 .... , o... • .._ ..., ..., .,.. .,...... .wa.'" We. A.a4 .... .,.. ~ ••• ..... .,.. cea .n ., • ......, -... Of c ............. ,.,,_ .......... ,......, .... ,..,.,.. ..... c... ....... c.._..o-. 1815 NEWPURT Bt YD. Downt~wn Costa Mesa -Phone 548· 7788 I I I ' ) • • ., , • ' I ~ ' . . (OR THE BRIGHTEST CHRISTMAS EVER ••• tHOOSE GIFTS AT THESE FINE SHOPS ••• * Sav'On Drug * Richard Bennett, Ltd. I ' * Market Basket * Rion Harilware . -. ' * Jean Dahl * W estcliff Shoes * Dick Vernon's * Bank of America 1( La Galferia * Hickory Farms * Dr. Lou Roy Elder * Cobblers Bench * Montgomery Qeant;rs •one-stop' shopping a.t its finest! • ' . * Veta's Intimate.Apparel * · Charles H. Barr Jewelers * -Playboy Hair Stylist8 • * The Storekeeper . * Westcliff Plaza Bar~r's * Humpty Dumpty Children's * Darrell's Dedrick Tux Shop * Paper Unlimite<... * Halliday's Men's Store * Westcliff Plaza Shell . ' DAILY PILOT I • AVOID THE WRAP RACE SHOP ·NOW! FREE GIFT. WRAP At Most of-Our Stores VISIT SANTA MONDAY THRU flUDAY, 10 A.M. TO NOON, 1 TO 4 P.M. & 6 TO 8 P.M. -SATURDAYS 10 TO 12 & 1 TO 5 P.M. -SUNDAYS 11A.M.TO4 P.M. ,\ \ . - ' • J O DAILY PILOT SC I Farah's the Target personal radio pager • TONE or VOICE • LOW COST • NEW COMPACT POCKET UNIT • MONTH to MONTH UNTAL BASIS • 11""'1(1! !lll/~i' r/\ll!ftll I I l'Hfl',f \ff!~l {f .. ,'""_,., __ PllBUC N<ma; .-- COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST ' ' I .. =---- • ' '1 \ ' •• •• •• •• •• •• •• ~ ~! ~· ~y NY •• "" "" "" ... "" "' NC "' • •« •« "' NA NA .. "' .. ~~ •• .. , ... ••• "' ~ "" • eC· ~-•• •• ~ ~ ~· N E NY o. p Po •• •• .. .. .. • •• .. , "' •• .. p •• p .. .. p •• p p p • p ~ •• p ~ • p p p p p • p •• • .. .. p • • • • • • p p p • p p p p p • p " p ~ p ~ p p ' p • MOl\daf, DK:tmbtf' ll, 1972 Monday's Closing PriCes-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Market Price s 'On Even l{eel' NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market P.rices held lo a fairly even keel Monday, showing litUe enlhu· siasm to either advance or decline. "The market Is digesting its gains as it goes along," said Larry Wachtel, analyst with Bache & Co. lie pointed out that mld·Oetober pr!Ct?s had risen sharply. I l ••·~~~-DA_IL_V_P_IL~i • 2 DAIL V PILOT .Skippers Triumph For C'1M 1 Corona de! Mar High School skippers continued t h e I r domination or interscholastic MondaY, Dtctmbtr 11, 1 'fn ~, L. Jfl.-BOJil'' Armadillo Can Be Housebroken • ulllng competition Saturday as S~IP Beck, Phil Green and It's now an established fact that blacks are more NSceptible to frostbite than are whltes ••. NO. THAT extremely swift beast known as the fisher doesn't go (~ Ing, ever . . . OUR PROPER JOB CLUB secretary lists Helen FlaU apd Sydney Sharp as °""Ume meinbeTa ~ the Mempllis Opera '!beater •.. OLDEST PURE BREED ~ cat is the Abyssinian. Youngest, the Rei: ... CQNF~D • Don Wattson sailed their team to a 1+2-1 se~ in the ~--Southern California f Interscholastic Sa i 11 n g ~ AMoclation R e g a t t a on · ALSO is ~ claim that professional b a s 1 players and drummers do indeed teod to become moderately hard ~ hearing. Newport Bay. The regatta was sailed in Shields Class sloops in light IT IS THE MAN in the coostrudloo business who Is ~ winds. Summary : apt to switch jobs most often, tbat,a widely known. Recent studies recon-- firm il But they show the sa.1e.sman and the barber run a clooe oe<OOd and third among the job swildlera. It's still true the average wockiug man, whatever bis age, stays oo one job ooly 3.9 years. • I. COM HIGH SCHOOL (Beck, Greene, Wattsoo) 1+i- 1. 711 pl$. 2. NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL -(Simpson, Mais) 1-3-3-2. 8~. , 3. CATALINA ISLAND FATHERS IN WAITING -In the SCHOOL (Rose ) 3-2-1-4, 9%. 4. UNIVERSITY H l G H SCHOOL (Mark Gaudio) 2.+3- 1, 9%. 5. COST A MESA HIGH SCHOOL (Smallwood ) 4-2-4-3, 13. 700 Get Yachting Training waiting room for . UJ>eCtaut fathers at a San Francisco hospital, I'm told, hangs a small hand- lettered sign which reads: "There are 1,035 holes in each tile, 510 squares in each light, 16 screws in each fixture." HORSE RACING , that's the No. 1 sport, some say. Because more people pay money to see the ponies run than to watch any other game. No, football, that's the No. 1 sport, others contend. Because more people follow it on television . Not so, swimming is the No. 1 sport, many · claim. Because more ·people participate in 1l Take your pick. sir. WHAT'S SHOPLIFTED in the mooth ol December average out at $7 per item. Thal's overall But what's shoplifted in the month oC December by store guards aver- ages out at $25 per item, studies show. THE CLEAN ARMADILLO -Q. "Can an arinadino be housebroken?" A. Can indeed. Feed an annadillo one meal a day Nearly 700 persons received about g. p.m., treat it right, and 11111 tum into a dandy af. direct instruction in California fectionate pet. International Salling Associa-YES, THAT DOG PERFUME, known as Kennel No. 9, lion programs during the fll'st ls on sale in a New York Sporting goods shop again this nine months of operation, ac-year. This leaps to mind because a client aska if I ever ~;..... acquired another dog s ince the sad departure ol .. old cor...;...,6 to the organization's Smoky. Certainly did. Three dogs, in fact. A coople of dal- quarterly report. matians, named Barney and Ben, with looks. And a border The programs included 25 collie, named Molly, with brains. As £or the notion any " appearances at clubs and these superior beasts might wear perfume, no, not soon. associations throughout the '!be tadyfriend and I have not yet tobogganned down to state. snrh Ji deoth oC senilitly. Maybe later. "CISA directors felt the Address mail tQ L. M. Boyd , P. O. Box 1875, New- operating costs for reaching so port Beach, Calif. 92660. many people were well within l~=::==~====:::==i~~~~=:;;:~::;=,::;~~I the range of e.xpectations and are pleased to report that the educational and training pro- grams will continue," the report said. WITH THE SUMMER months of frenzied activity lading, CISA Is TUlruc:Wring its program to.meet tbe needs of the winter yachtsmen. A full time lecture program in the evenings is now available to Interested sailing clubs. The format of lectures will be similar to those conducted during summer, but now all of CISA 's appearance time will be channeled toward this ef· fort. The unpredictable winds and weather, and the multiplicity of sailors' interest during the vlinter has prompted the board or directors to mothball the 420 symposium programs until the weather warms again in the spring. GRANADA NILLS 1800 Cnalswortll St. l!ORIANCI Straitv!d~ arid H~l'l!h~e WOODLAND HIW 21500 VictortBl~d LJ•IWOOD ~St.~ Paramount Blvd. llYllSID[ 352!1 Ty!e .St. I UINA , .... 8e.:n arid °"~~thorlle SANT A ANA 39JO South Bristal St. ORANGE C.defl Grave 81~6. ~Ml Mncilesli!r Op11 wttlllll•Y' 9:30 t•9:30 -Sv111l•y1 10 to 7. TRI O·BIT'' BUS UNI ALL IT NEEDS IS YOU I T • • • all you naad Is a reason I '· P'flt lnlonnatlon or bul ochedules call "The Two-I~ lu1 Lm." at 147-I004 or-to UI at 1128 E. Waahlngton Ave., Santa Ana. 92701 · .. • I ANAHEIM --444 H. hell" 17141 13&·1121 < ' • • • he of exeitement es tee . ' • by estee lauder On Christmas Eve she'll unwrap the dolicious luxury of Estee ... the first super perfume that cloo!s her in enchanting, lingering fragrance the moment it touches her skin. Let her experience it in many ·captivating ways . Estee Super Spray Cologne, I 0.00. &.per Cologne, 10.00. Dusting Powder, 8.50. Body Lotion. 8.50. Cosmetics, 17 NEWl'OlT HUNTIH,.TON IEACH OR.ANGE, MALL OF ORANGE _M_F • .ttle11 hl•ittl 7777 Edl1t9•r AYor'IW• 1 2100 11· T111tl11 Stroot -1714) 644-12 12 .(7141 lt2·JJJI 1 1714) t91·1ltl SHO, t 1JO A.M . to IO:IHI P.M. MONDAY THkOU6H SATURDAY. SUNDAY 11 :00 A.M, to 6:00 P.~. ' ... - ' ClRRITOS 500 lo1 C•rrlto1 M•ll f21JI 160°0'411 • ' I I l I ' 17 -. • ,. .. . Laguna Beaeh. Toaay's Final ... r';,'· ' .. ~.-: .. VOL 65, Ne;>. 3'46, SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ,, ew 3 lssues · Top List In Laguna ' Nude statues, lavatory supe!"Vision and appointmimt of a new atl".!~tic director at the hlgb school are a few or the matters to be considered by the Laguna Beach Board of Education Tuesday. The meeting -the fll'St since last week's recall election in which trustees Patricia Gillette and GeraJd Linke re-- tained their pasts -will be beid at 7:30 p.m. in the Education Center, 550 BJu. mont St. Bni<e Hopping, chainnao of the Kalos Kagathos Foundation, i.s requested an CONDITION WORSENS Wllllom D. Mortin -appearancebef'ore ttieDOifdlO apptala decision that his foundation 's Jogo may not tie used on the cover or a water polo awards banquet program. Ex-Laguna Mayor Martin Reported In Poor Condition Fonner Laguna Beach Mayor William D. ~itid was· reported in "poor con- dition" today in the .blteosive care unif of Sooth Coast Cornmu?\lY Hospjtaj. Maitin, • pronilnent etric ... 'bad ~ steady progress alter fllllnc tn bis ---....... lrocturlng liJs sbll. He .... remov..i -the in-tenaive care ward FridaJ. t Sooth Cout ~ital aides said Martin was ret.umed to intensive care Saturday. They aaid a o!rQl<e had l!!lt the Festival of Arts director, former mayor and councilman and well..tnown dean of Orange County politics partially paralyz- ed. The logo is a photograph or a statue of a nude male swimmer created by sculptor Donald Hord of San Diego. In a letter to the school board, Hopping said he will p~-esent Dr. David Thomason of the UC Irvine Classics Deoartment to discuss "the cultural history' and social implications of the male nude in athletics and sports art." On November 10, Hopping was in- fonned by the high achoo! that the logo would not facilitate the educational ~ gram, and would create some dissension with the public. The Jetter was signed by George Qu'ey, water Mio tMdl; Hal Akine, at,hlelk ~. aild Donald ~ prlDciJlll. Hallllfll will llao be ~ at Tuesday's meetbW to-Oeltvet a written report on superviskm of the lavatories at the high school. 'lbe report was requested by the board Nov. JI. In the personnel portion of ~be agenda, trustees will be uted to accept the re:dgnation of Hal Akins as athletic director and appoint t>miaid Cawthon to the position. Tonight to Be Coldest _ Recent nlgbt frosts tn the Irvine, El ' Toro and San Juan Cnpistrano areas of Orange County have not seriously damaged large quantities of fruit but growers will eye the thermometer tonight warily. "U it goes much below 28 tonight for very long, all w~ can do is pile another blanket on our beds and pray," a 1pokesman foe the Irvine V aJencia Growers Association said. William Hackel, NaUooal Weather service forecaster in Orange, predicts tonight will be the worst of the current series of below freezing nights. He looks for temperatures in the 0 mld- 20s" and colder in the sheltered areas of San Juan Captstrano, the Irvine coastal plain aod El Toro. Winds through Santa Aria Canyon are Upected to spare fi'u.it crops· iD Yorba Linda and.Placentia, he said. If no winds stir up the air In the aouth county grow· tng. areas. however, frosts may well do severe damage tQ'tb~ V~encia croy_. Valencias, not due to tie harvested until April, are in the .most "critical" stage of . their develOpment now, a stage when the Coa1t lt'eatlter 1be weather lady says~ )'ou can Wlbutton the top button on your overcoat on Tuelday. )I'll be a Utile bl! warmer. lligbs 0£ 55-65 are expecied. l>vemigbt ioWs, how· ever, wiB • lllll' from (brr) 28 to the mid 39s. l I ' '. fruit is most susceptible to frost damage. Depending on the depth of the blanket of frost laden air over &be groves, wind machines can help save the crops. Bu~ ll the celling of air is toe high, lbe wind machines are of UtUe use. Along with the forecast of low tem- (See DAMAGE, Page %) /' Laguna Athlete Critically Hurt In Mexico Crash SAN DIEGO -An outstanding member of the Laguna Beach High School cross country team Is in serious oondition today at University HospiU,I here following a traffic accident Satur- day between Ensenada and Tijuana. Karl Weber, considered one of the ·top distance' runners at the high school, received massive head injuries in the ac- cident. He underwent five hours of surgery Saturday night for the removaJ of two blood clots from tbe brain. Today he remained in the intensive care unit. Weber along with -five other .athletes from the high schuni was traveling to Ensenada when the car spun out of con- trol on the rain-slick pavement. The car rolled four times. ' 1'one of the ponengers was seriously injured. Attacker· Given Indefinite Term SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A woman Who shaved her held aod attacked a co- worker wil)I a Samurai nrord haa betn given an indetwmlnate state pr1aoo sentence at her own r•q.uest. MarJn Colmty lluPe<ior Court Judg~ Samuel W. Ganltner il1lpoMd the ...,_ ten<:e on Frances Gail Slmpoon, 21. Min Simpson pleaded guilty In Sep- tember to the critioal Aug. J siallblnc of Nonnan Wiliiall'.ll, :JO, of Tamalpois Valley, her fellow -ker at a «ramlct company In 3ousamo, .,. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1972 • rice OAIL Y ,ILOT SMff , .... SPOTTY HUMOR? MICHAEL AND THOMAS FLYNN FIND SISTER LORI'S CONDITION .COMIC ______ T_h_e_T_r_lp:...l_•l_•_Posed_ to Pl"9 Rubella Clinics Scheduled in Laguna Schools Tuesday Hitchhiking Gal Blufls Driver, " Meas ·les Vaccinations . ,.,,...,.i I ' -..... -. . . , Driven ,to ,W qrk Sc~duled for Laguna A 19-ye8r..old Dana Point girt, hitch-Vaccinations for Gennan Measles hiking to Laguna Beach. thwarted an (Rubella) and Red Measles will be given attempted rape Friday by a man who at LagyJltl. Beach schools Tuesday and.- held a hunting knife td her throat in an the Laguna Beach Free Clinic Wednes· effort to fooce her into the back of his day. van. Vaccinations are for children from 1 to "Okay, kill me," the girl told the 12 years of age and they need not be would-be rapist, as the youthful suspect students at the schools. heh! the long-bladed kriife to her. The clinic will be in operation Tuesday "I will, l mean i~." the rruin said, but at the following times : he was foiled when the young woman -Top of the World School : 8:30 a.m. to popped open the door of the van and ran. 9:30 a.m. · The incident <X'Curred ·in. the 800 block . -Aliso: '10 to II a.m. of Bluebird Canyon Drive of Laguna -St Cstbe · • 11 15 to 12 15 Beach. The girl had been hitchhiking to p.m. · rine s: : a.m. : German measles is not a serious disease in children, but ii contracted by pregnant women, the disease can cripple or kill the unborn, child. School age chlldreo often transmit the disease. Permission slips are available at the schools. Further information about the clinic is available from • Nita Kemp 494- 5947 or Shielry Hess ~. The project is sponsored by school PI'As and the Laguna Beach March of Dimes Rubella·Rubeola Clln.ics. TEN CENTS oom . President Will Seek Extension WASHING TON (UPI) -President Nixon will ask Congress to extend the current economic controls beyond April 30, 1973 when they are due to expire, Tr.easury 'Secretary George P. Shultz said today. At a White House news conference, Shultz also said the President decided to freeze salaries in the federat executive branch, CongJ:ess and the judiciary. Nixon also imposed a companion freeze Oil hiring and promotions for all federal , civilian and military personnel through late Jimu_ary, wbea the 1971- budget will be sent to Congress. And as an example of the belt-tighten- ing philosophy, Schultz said there would be "very substantial reductions" in the President's own staff. Shultz, Nixon's chief econ om i c spokesman, said no decision had been reached on bow Ion., the next phase of wage-price-rr.nt controls should last. To help decide this question, Shultz: said, there would be a "wide process or consultation" wltb labor, Congress, C4Jn- sun.ers and members of the current economic stabiliJ.ation program. On related topics, Schultz saldthe Presi- dent bad been successful in holding spen- ding in the current budget to $2:iO billion aod that ~budget for fiscal' 1974, which will be subinitted to Ccqrea in January, WaOtd De in balance on a tun employment basis. Shulll aaid :he -1dentlol decisions on the oontnils "!"~ "mutually -de- pendent and supportive." He. aajd it re- flected NiXon's "strong determination to maintain the fight against inflation in the strongest way possible." The p_ay action f~z-es th~ ~Urrent salaries of all member . of government at the so-ealled "federaJ executive level." This Includes high-ranking members of government, congressmen aild federal judges. It covers salary scales ranging from $36,000 to $60,000. The bfring freeze in tbe executive branch will la!!t at least until late January, when Nixon sends to Congress bia budget for fiscal 1974, beginning July 1, 1973. Laguna Beach where she works li'1 a EJ ·M 1 to 2 . -~: -p. The Free Clinic, 460 Ocean Ave., will She told officers that after she ran hold the vaccination clinic from I to 4 from the vehicle, the suspect became 1 apoioge. fie and said that be would take . p.m. o encourage parents to bring pre-2 Trustees Beat Back school children in. her to work. He threw away the hunting knife. The girl ran over, picked up the knife and got back into the van. Tbe man then drove her to the shop as he had prom-Costly Antiques Taken in Theft Laguna Recall Drive ised, she told police. The vehicle is described ~ a red van and the suspect as a man 211 to 22 years of age with sbouldef'>length bloode hair. Vandals Destroy Christmas Lights Christmas light vandalism kept Orange County Sherill's officers busy in several cx.mmunitles during th6 weekend. Marksmen armed ·with BB guns shot out lights at homes in Mls&ion Viejo, Laguna Niguel ~ s6uth Laguna and damage to Christmas di.splays was reported In two of those communltiei. Deputies repeat~ an em;lier Warning that maximum penalUes, including heavy fines, will be sougt.t tor apprehended of· fenders. Charges Dismissed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tho federal government has dlsmlssed charges against a Superior Court judge's son in coMection with the . alleged illegal Im· portaUon of 35 pounds of hashish. DAILY PILOT AD PEOPLE PLEASER DAILY 'P!LOT classUied wpnt ads ant people Dlioasers. See thio: ·• ' Glln'Ail-Elec. w/cue.· OOlld. Paid '360. SeU'" bot ofr. Amp avail ID· 'I1ie IUliar WU IO\.., U -appeored Which pleased vertllor and the )l\liiar's .,.,.--~""Ee_ you have ~ to acll, 642-5678. It'll be a p!eaaure, Ill ' Antiques and art objects valued by th.! owner at $2,150 were stolen during the weekend from a South Laguna home, Orange County Sheriff's officers said. Deputies said burglars broke into the ~e of Robert Gra;.: Meeks, 41, at 31071 Monterey Drive, and carried off antique snuff bottles, ivory figurines and several valuable water colors. Investigators said the intruders broke Open a rear sliding door at the hom e l\'hile the occupant was aw&y. · The -Valuables · were taken from the owner's den. Laguna Beach Unified School District Trustees Patricia Gillette and Gerald Linke have survived an attempt to recall them from office, a N!COUDt of the recall baHots has confirfl!ed. Figures fo r the e1~ion nuctuated back and forth as the election workers made a precinct by preclnct recount of all the ballots cast in last Tuesday's election. Final conflnned figures for the recount are as follows: For recall of Linke: 2,.S Against Recall of Linke: 2,832 This is an increase of 21 votes over Linfe's six-vote mar'1n first counted Tueoday. * * * llllom ·Hopes to' Sit Down And 'Talk' About Future '· Laguna ' ach Superintendent o f Schools Wllfiam Ullom -~ man caught in the middle onut week'J recall elec- tion -said today be hopes he-cao "'sit down and talk" with the achooJ board about bis !Uture. "I'll be W.hlnc IO tallt and'to see what unfolds," Ullom said. "lf we do that, the children and the <Ommunlty will be tn belle< sliape." • 'I~ ~·1 electiol;I, trustee& Patricia Glil~~·and G«aid Lhll<e were retsine<f ,on-·the ~-lloard . .Both ·11ave hetrr Clllical or certain innovaUve programs de\'tloped under Ullom'i odmln111raUon. He assumed the 1uperlntendent'1 post in 1964. ' Ullom said he met Frid•y will) the personnel •t"1dards committee of the AB.!Oclation ol C.lliomla s o h.o o I Adl;ninisttatioru: seeking direction on what he should do. Members of the committee, Ullom said, encouraged him to seek "low pro- file" discwsioos with the board. Ullom aald he did not expect any action :>n his contract. at Tuesday's mectinc of the Board of Education. ' His contract currently is set to expire June 30, tm. Trustees must take tM:tion. not to renew the contract by Jan. 1, att he wlU automatically be rehired for ... ad- ditiooel lerm. ' The am~ hold.• true for the cootr•ctl pf assistant superintendents Robert Reevca and Cbarle11 Ress. · "I assum there may _be some evalu.a· tioos," Ullom said. 1bo.1e would be haodled.ln executive (clooed) ......,., he 1dded. For recall of tiirs. Gillette: 2,747 Agains~ re&.n of Mrs. Gillette: 2,847 Mrs. Gillette's margin retaining her position was 100 votes. First reports had indJcated her election count margin was 72 votes. But during canvassing it was detennined that 28 votes had not been counted. The Registrar's office finished counting of tbe ballots Saturday afternoon. The recount was requested by four persons identi!ied with the recall move- ment, not in support___Qf_ Linke and Mrs. Gillette as officials previously reported, Chief Deputy Registrar James Mayer, said not all the figure changes w~e due to miscountings, but may have been votes first rejected because part or the balJot was not properly marked. "Maybe a portion of the ballot was spoiled. Well you don't count 'that part, but you do counl the rest," Mayer ex· plained, Final figures tor the candidates are as foll ows : Lucille Whitaker: 2,761 Francis Crossen: 1128 Michael Sagar : 2.997 Mrs. Whitaker and Crossen were seek· ing the position of Linke .. Sagar 90Ught Mrs. Gillette's ofnce. None will be seated due to the £ailure of the recall. '"'''4 ',,,,,, ... ,,,,, ..., DAILY PILOT LI Mondal', -II, l'ln --------- DAILY PILOT Slaff ....,. Dress The Part Students of El ll-1orro School will present the annual Christmas pro- gram entitled "Christmas is ... " with songs from around the world. The program begins at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Kindergarten and primary yo ungsters will sing. The school orchestra and chorus will perform. Randi Carlson, left, is dressed in Dutch clothing and Susan Tsuji in Japanese garb. Board President Asks For Calm After Tumult Laguna Beach Board of F.ducation President William Thomas Friday issued a statement calling for calm and reason in the wake o( Tuesday's school board recall election. · '11\e statement read : "With the school board recall election behin · us, I believe that now ls the time for all cOOcerned t.o calm. down and try \o Rep1 ln tocus the overall picture or educaUon in Laguna. "I wish to make clear that the board is not out to Oestroy the schools or the faculty. The primary aim of the board 's direction Is to make objective evaluations of all programs, and to improve those found lacking and build further on those proven to be effective. This does not mean a return to abso lute traditional type schools. The board wants to be certain we are getting maximum return on the com- munity's investme11t in education. To achieve this result may well mean a greater challenge to facuJty, students and administration. It Is my sincere hope that the community will clase ranks and Topless Dancer Held in Murder SAN JOSE (AP) -A topless dancer has been booked for investigation of murder in the falal shooting of her sleep- ing husband, the Santa Clara County Sheriff's affice reparted. Deputies said Lawella Nolen, 21, a Newark night club performer, had an argument with her husband James. 28. a oovelty shop operator after she returned from work Thursday night. Investigators said Nolen broke off the argument, retired, then was shot with a . %2-caliber rifle as he slept. II OU.Neil COAST La ' DAILY PILOT 'nle0...11119 C.0.1t MILY PILOT, wllfl W"1dt h cmnblMd tM N._,.ra1, 11 l!Vbll1hft tiy ... 0nngt: CNat l'VllllM'llne eomp.n'f. ~ ,.,_ edttian. .. pubUWMd, Mondtr tto~ ,,rtdrf, for Cls!t Mast, Nirwport IMdl, tftlntl...,_ l~/F-111111 V•tley, Ug""' a.tdl,, l....,.Seddl~ tnd Stn ClenMl!lt/ San J!Mn C.Pll!rt..._ A 11noi. rwo1at1tl 9dltlon " pufl'l!Mwd S.f\lnl•'fS end SVnd•ys. n.. rfMllMI Pllbllltllfll pl1nt •• •t m w.tt ltY $trect, 0-tt M_, Callforntt, fl'M. Robert N. We•d ..... ldeftl tnd l"llblltller Jtc.lt It Cvrley VD"""'*"'' a.I'd OftMnl M1ftf9W . Thome1 k'•tvil E41tor lliofll•t A. M11rphin• MMll(llfll fdl!OI' O.rfn H. loa1 Rlch•r4 '· Ntll M111tnf MIMllnt •dlt.n ...... -...... 222 fo,..tt AYOllllO M•mot A.Mte••1 P.O. ••• '''· •2•1z --QIM M-: :no 'Nett • .., StrMt ·=lhecflt ll1i "~ .,., ..... .,, "41111 a.edit Hll'$ l•dl levlwt<'d .... tm JN Hor9I El Calllllio R•I ,., '' n 17141 '42-4J21 Q IPlc4 A4h«l'' D '42•1171 .................. ;, ....... : Tlllf' I tf4,f466 ~ 1m. °'..... C-1 ,wtllllfl!'ilf ~. Ho ....., ,..,,_, IHUflra!-, __ ... _...,. ... edVlrt"-lt '*'9111 "'-'-te ~ Wllfltlll atNCllt lltl'• ,...... ... .,,..., ....... .__, cM ,.., ... Hid •t C•I• Mrt1. ~ ..,._,llllltfl -. c1n1et n . .s ........,L" ln011 N.lt. !Mfllfll'll mltltwv .... , •• UM """ll'llJ, help us achieve this goal." In last "'eek's balloting in the recall election, trustees Patricia Gillette and Gerald Linke retained their seats on the school board. Marine Cyclist Lives Through Freeway Spill A good helmet and lots of luck ap- parently saved a young San Diego area Marine from death on the freeway through San Clemente Sunday afternoon after hls motorcycle lost control and sent him on a painful dive that lasted for several-hundred feet. Kenneth Duane Shelton, 17, attached to the Marine Carps Recruit Training Depot, suffered painful pavements burns on most of his body in the high·speed spill in the southbound lanes of the San Diego Freeway near El Camino Re al. Th~ cyclist told highway patrolmen that his new cycle began to shimmy and he tried to accelerate to bring the bike under control, but the wobble only got v.·orse. The cycle dumped its rider ahead of a Greyhound bus and ather heavy traffic. Then Shelton began tumbling head- over-heels on the pavement. San Clemente firemen who gave the youth first aid said Shelton's legs, arms and hands took most of the scrapes. The Marine's fingertips were ground away. half his helmet was tom off, his boots were shredded and his roat was in tatters . The ~farine was taken to the base hospital at Camp Pendleton for treat- ment or the superficial hurts. Girlfriend Says Peters Appeared Normal to lier Prosecutor Pat Brian put Cig Peters' paramour back on the witness stand to- cla} and got the admission that her lover had never shown any signs of mental ill- ness in the nine mon ths that preceded his killing of his parents al their Hl!lltlngton Beach home. Pressing his pcint over repeated and vigorous objections by defense attorney Barry Tarlow, Brian asked AMe Bartholomew : "You ate with Gig, you slept with him, you lalked with hJm and you kntw him intimately in those nine months. Right!" "Yes, that's rlghl," the attractive Scripps College graduale replied. , "Now then, did be ever at any llme show any signs of mental lllneu?" Brian asked as Tarlow's repeated objectlona wcf'fl .overruled. "No." Miss Bartholomew q u I et I y relllied _ Brian recalled the 23-year-old glr! who shared Peters' long sojoum In a Snn Diego C(lunly desert commune for ti:stimony that will , he aald, be • vital pt rtion of hl1 argument that Peters. 23, was sane when he murdered hll parent.I AJirit 21. 1971. • .. Dole Otlt GOP Party Head Quits, Bush In WASHINGTON (AP) -Republlcen National Chairman Robert J. Dole said tochty he is resigning and that United Na- tions Ambassador George Bush of Texas has been picked to replace him. . Dol e, U.S. senator from Kansas, an- nounced hls impending resignaUan at party cha1nnan at a WbJte House news conference following a 45-.minult session with President Nixon, but denied any White House pressure behind bis declsloo to quit. Bush's actual election as chainnan of the Republican National Committee will Over $1,500 Raised for Games Trip · More than $1,500 has been raised toward the $2,000 needed to send an at- tractive 19-year..old Lagunan to the Warld Games for the Deaf in Malmo, Sweden next summer. "It 's a beauty of a hometown," com- mended Mrs. Dan McFarland, expressing her appreciation for the donations to the fund to send Lee Ann "Bobo" Johns to the games. On Friday alone, $500 was pledged to the fund by members ar lhe Laguna Beach Rotary Club, following an appearance by ~iss Johns and a former classmate, Melinda McFarland. Miss Johns' excellent times in several swimming competitions have made her eligible for the world games, but it was feared a lack of funds would prevent her from making tbe trip. Money kept her from attending the na~ tional t,rials In North Carolina, but she has been offered a place on the 145-mem- ber U.S. team for the finals in Sweden, according to Will Hitcbcock, wbo is coordinating the fund drive with lbe McFarlands. : student at Golden West College, Miss Johns was on the homecoming court there and also was a homecoming princess at Laguna Beach High School. Further information on the fund drive is available by calling 494-4736 or 4K- 4569. Checks may be sent to the Bobo Johns Deaf Olympics Fund, Laguna Federal Savinp and, Loan, 260 Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach. Electric Power To Be Discussed On Channel 50 be up to the committee Itself when It meets here Jan. 19, but Nixon's wishes are expected to be followed. White llotJse pre.., secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Bush wiU continue as U.S. arr.bassador to the United Nations throuiih the current llOSS!oo of the U.N. General Assembly, and a replacement would be announced later. Dole said he agrted to "stay on In an advisory capacity for a month or two" to help Bush break into the job. "I find broad support for George Bush," Dole said. "We believe our Texan will beat their Texan," Dole said in reference to Dallas lawyer Robert Strauss, elected chairman o. the Democratic Party Saturday. ~le met with President Nixon at Camp David, Md. Nov. 27 amid reports he was being eased out as part of Nixoo's post-e:Jection r e v a mp l n g of the Administration and the Republican Par-- ty, but Dole denied he was being forced out. "There was some speculation that I went to the mountaintop to be pushed aff," Dole said. "But that wasn't the case. I never planned on staying long into 1973." Ziegler backed Dole's version and said, "At no lime did President Nb:oo. re- quest that Chairman Dole leave his post." Dole said he spoke to Bush about the j::ib immediately after his first meeting with Nixon and that be spoke to him r .ain a week ago and yesterday. Dole said Bush finally agreed to the job after both Nixon and Dole talked to him by pboDe this morning. Hunter Survives In Wilderness, Ate Mice, Grubs SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (UPI) - A hunter whO survived two months in a cabin by eating mice and grubs was rescued by snowmobtlers Sunday after walking for eight days in the wilderness. The hunter, Andros Mayracic. 48, of Gravenhurst, Ont., was reported in ex- cellent .condiUon at a local hospital, although doctors said he was suf[erlng from extreme fatigue and lost 32 pounds. Constable Ray J . Duguay ol the Ontario Provincial Police said two snowmobllers found Mavracfc when he stumbled out of dense country near the Batcbawana river after walking 50 miles nonstop on snowshoes. Mavraclc did not sleep during bis trek because be feared that if he did he would never awake, Duguay said. The snowmobilers said Mavracic was mumbling incoherently and covered with dirt, Duguay said. He was so hungry be cut his nose trying to eat a can of beans the snowmobUers gave him. Lunar 'Divining Rod' Rendering shows hoW electronic beams of Apollo l 7's lunar sounder system will probe moon-down to three-quarters of mile-from lunar orbit to aid in developing subsurface geologic map to pinpoint be- low-surface metallic deposits and water. Astronauts landed today. Supervisors to Consider Raising Their Own Pay Orange County supervisors race up to the touchy subject of raising their own salaries Tuesday. Bolstered by recommendations from the Grand Jury and lhe Orange County Chamber of Cammerce, the board members will, in an open hearing, discuss increasing their current $17 .~a­ year pay. The open discussion contrasts with a closed door meeting two years ago dur· in:: which supervisors informally decided to raise their pay to the level of municipal court jlidges -$29,000 a year. The move. news of which leaked OUL Jed 110 a p u b 111! uproar and recall movements agalnst three supervisors. The furor later waned. Satellite Operating In Circular Orbit VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -The largest and m~t advanced of America's weather satellites was in orbit and operating well today, the Na- tional Aeronautic s and Space Administration said. Nlmbus-V, a 1 ,573 -lb. weather monitoi:ing observatory, was launched on a {wa- stage Delta rocket here late Sunday night and weril into a circular orbit, a NASA spokesman said. The Grand Jury and the cblmber of commerce have since recommended that tbe §!!pervlsors raise their pay to the munlclpaJ court level. Informal discussions have lndicated that $25,«Kt to $27 ,500 a year might be the figure they will agree upon . This despite the fact that many county of- ficials are paid $32,000 or more, aome as high .. $42,000. J.os Angles supervison are pal~ $36,000 a year and San Diego County leaders recenUy increllsed tbelr pay to 122,000. Search for SF Pairs Abandoned SAN FRANCISCO (APl -The searclt for two llOcially prominent Sao Francisco BayAreac:ooplel __ _ cruiser was foiind beached on a iinall Mexican island has been dbcontlnued . The Coast Guard said It ended the . search S.turday alter scouring 89,000 square miles for Peldmont socialites Mr. and Mrs. Jordon Carlton and Oakland architect and yachtsman Rollo Wheeler, heir to the Stauffer Chemical C:O., and bis wife, Barbara. , The search for the Carltons and Wheelers began after they and their two crewmen aboard a s~root chartered cabin cruiser failed to return Nov. 28 from a cruise ID the Gull ol California. Orange County's future electrical pawer needs and their pos.sible effects ~n ai. pollution will be discussed in a spectal program of Focus Orange COunty on Channel 50 tonight at 6:30. The program will be repeated at 8 p.m. Thursday an the Coast Community College District station. The half-hour program hosted liy Jim Cooper will review Southern Cilifonlla Edison Company plans to expand the nuclear generating plant at San Onofre and the plans to enlarge the steam plant in Huntington Beach. r--------------...... -----------........ --------- Ta • Robert Beck, Orange County division manager for the Edison Company, represents the company's concerns over passible power blackouts by 11175 on the program. James Somers, Orange County director for Stamp Out Smog (SOS), an en- vironmental group, explains his group's opposition to plant ei:pansion on the Channel 50 production. Frost Flmhes On 2 Stations 'Tis the season orange _J"~n and gardeners alike wonder a lot about trost. Two Orange County radio sta- t.ions and KFI in Los Angeles offer the latest lnfonnation on expected f.rosts each night durlng the season. William Hackel of Orange ls the National Weather Service Fruit F'rast Service forecaster in this area. His predictions are part of the statewide report heard at 7 and 9 p.m. on KFl. He also prepares a report limited to Orange COunty temperatures. It Is alred on KWIZ at 7:05 and 8:05 p.m. and on KEZY at 8: 10 and 9 p.m. nightly. FroMP .. eJ DAMAGE -... per1tures, the ceiling ouUook tonight Is not good. Only wind or a cloud cover CM ease tht threat of the rreeze. Since frosts became a regular nightly occurrence, the lowest temperature recorded in a county grove was last Saturday morning when an lrvlne theremometer dipped to le, Hackel aald. .. .. .. N•wl '" •• ,.. • e .. 111aas1 c......, OWi a._, lW ef..,. ,.. wwt _ a6Mtrk, .-. at....,. t .. elMtflc. IW --.,._ .... ,.,,_ ,_.. wll...,. p:'lllll-.Y ....... lecw e C1•'a I I C~ 0... ..... ..., ........ ........ ..a.,....-.. AMI-*•.,... cr..lat 11mfM .. ,_ .. ta W ....... lllh.t. Of ........... ,.,,.. .......... ,......, ..... ~ ..... c.. ....... c .. 110.... C MPllllOft CALll"ORNIA'I LAl•llT COO .. llA't11tll "1 1 tar A9IOCllAT8 YOWMI llfYIUr •C. aU'flHO OIOU'° '#tTM nt• VOt..UMI aU'l'UtO ..,.,,.. ...- Ill ITORll 1015 NEWPURT BtVD. ComtmYR Costa Alesa -Phone 548-7788 ' l I 17 I • Sadillehaek Today's Flnal • EDITION N.Y. St.eeks VOL 65, NO. 346, 2 Sec;TIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1972 TEN CiNTS Builder to --i . - Ask Street Realignment, 'Freeway' By GEORGE LEID,U. Of .. Del~ ,..., .... RealJ&nment of tw~ major traffic arterlea In the dty of Irvine and a P"" poled "freeway" running northwest from El Toro Road and terminating at the Irvine city limits will be aaked Tuesday by proponents of the Canada Foothills developmenft. • · The blgbway changes will be con- $1der<d during the hearing before tbe Orange COunty Planning Commission at l :X> p.m., at 4.00 Cvic Center Dri=ve~-l'p"'l>nned"' community, and shifts two West, Santa Ana. larger streets In tbe futurt Irvine in- Developera ol the l,lllO acres lying east dll$trtal park near El Toro MCAS. of the city ol Irvine and El Toro Marine Although the proposal would Impact ci- Corps Air Station are aeekfna: an amend-ty of Irvine streels, no notice to the new ment to the county's muter plan of city was given either that the amend- arterl.al highways. nient ·was being dnwn or that it would 1be amendment adds a "mass transit be beard on Tuesday, planning .direetor corridor" of freeway width, deletes two Bruce Warren said Friday. secondary highways from alignments on HoweYer, because the new city 1s properties owned by' the 11 persons concerned about other possible lmpacta see.ling approval of the 30,000 person of the Canada Foothills development, ' I councilmen directed a ptaMina: com- missioner to atteod the Tuesday bearing at wblcb the c:ootroversial development i5 espected to be approved. Irvine Mayor William Flscbbacb ab- stained from the Council diacuasion of its views on the proposed development because, u an attom'ey, be bas done legal work for the .proponent V. P. Baker and the water dlat,i.ct which would serve the area. . He said today he was not aware of the proposed change in the highway plan and added, "I would not support any proposal which would negatively impact our city." Irvine plannen and tpOkesman for the county road department were not available for comment this morning, however, the DAD..Y Pn.oT learned tbe "freeway" route is not presently being considered by state b1gbway planners. . A spokesman for the State Division of Highways in l..()s Angeles said there an presently no proposals for any new freeways in Orange County inland of tbe Santa Ana Freeway in Irvine or El Toro. When county Pla.npinl comm1•Dxlen: reviewed the envU'Ollfl)elltal impact statement for the Canada FoothDJ1 prot- ect, however, H. ~er Howell, at tomey for the 11 landowners, said ltudlea: of transportation needs in the SaddlebKt Valley suggested need for a new freeway. Howell said then such a freeway might likely affect property in the northeni por- (See FREEWAY, Page Z) LeaveL.-..r 0(!>11 12--72 Freeze Extension Nixon Wants Economic Control-S Kept _ fA .. TH PA .. llt ... ORBO ' • • ' • WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon will ask Congress to extend tbe current economic controls beyood April 30, um when they are due to expire, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz aald today. At a White House news conference, Sh1,;ltz also-uid-the President decided to freeze saJaries ln the federal executive branch, Congi'e!ll and the judiciary. Nixon also, imposed a companion freeze on hiring and _promotions for all federal, civilian and military persoonel through late January, wbeo the 1971 budget will be sent to Congress. And as an example of the belt-tighten- ing pbiloaopby, Schultz sate! there would be "very substantiaJ reductioos" in the President's own staff. &1x170NM LUNAR OR81T '\&s&eNM De8CENT OltalT Shultz, Nixon's chief e c on om 1 c opHeJDWI, said DO decision bad beeo • AlffJDo.ftat1te • • ,' I -, Dole Resigns If(iJJ . ¥%'.·~. -;, Georg'J Bush-In The complete route of the Apollo 17 lligbt is shown this morning, with the first moonwalk planned for In the map. The lunar lan=din=· :::g:_.:.too=k~pl:.:•:.:ce:_:l:.:at:.:• _ _:.3:.::4:.:3_,p:.:.m_. _to_d_a,_y._I_t_w_a_s_t_o_l_ast_a_bo_u_t _ae_v_e_n_h_o_ur_s_._ WASHINGTON (AP) -Republican NaUooal Chairman Rober! J. Dole said t..i.y be 1.9 reaigJllng and that United Na- tions Amfidor Gedrge Bush of Texas bas been ed to .. place him. $345,000 Orange Blaze Probed; Arson Possible Truswes to Consider Dole, U. aenator from Kansas, an· nounced h Impending resignation aa party cbalnnan at a White House news conlerenee loUow!ng ~ 45-minute session with Pmldent Nixon, but ~ed any White House pressure behind bis decision to quit. Irvine Cleanup Project Bm6's actual election as chairman of the Republican NaUooal Committe. will be up to the a>mmittee itself when it meet.a here Jan. 19, but Nixon's wishes are expected to be followed. A fin! that did an estimated 1145,000 In damage to ao Orange sporting gooda firm Sunday is belnl! Investigated today. Cblel R. D. Johnaoo of the orange Fire deparbnent's r~ prevention bureau said "the posaibllity ol arson has not been rul- ed out" In the lire al Sports 100 Pool Table, 110 W. Lincoln Ave. Johnson said the fire broke out in the warebouse at about 2:30 p.m. One of the owne:ra of. the firm, Eddie Adamaon, wu In the building at tbO lime ad be Bod ·a frieod apparenUy·trled to ftglll the blau. '"111ey said they gave IP aod tried to, call "'· but the phone was dead, ,. they had to nm down the street," John.ton ex- plained. 'lbe fin! Investigator said t h e warebowe was completely• invoJved in names by the Ume the fll'lt units ar- rived. Firemen !ought the blue !or about 20 minute before containir.g it, but they were. unable to save the building and its contents. Johnaoo said Adal1l30n aod his Partner. Wally McCorma~ valued their Pl'l>perty at !300.000. Iii aamUOn to the pool tables, the finn olao distributed plaol!e· swim- ming pools and .Wlmm!ng poof "'1PIJllet. "Tiloy aald they do not have 'any in- surance," Jobnlou added. 'lbe building Which WU aJIO destroyed was Insured !or '4$,000 by Ill owner" Wendell Porter ol Or..... lie said. Johnson said there wtre no 'lnjuriea reported In the 11r.. ' ' •4 • V ~dais Destroy Christmas Lights ' . Clr1lbW llchl --ltllll Qr-. OJuaty -· olll<ora '""''In """' e<.m-• mrm, the -nd. A request by the city ol Irvine for cooPeration in a countywide cleanup Jll'Ol'BlD will be discussed by Irvine Unified School District trustees tonight at Ink Study Class Registration Set In Mission Viejo Registration ls now being taken at the 5addlebac1': Valley YMCA for a new class -In ink study to begin In January wilb in- structloll by a Miaslon Viejo artist. The coune will cover use of lnk, ink with water and ink 'With witercolors in ' artworks. Bev Thayer, treasuttr ol the Mission Viejo · Aasoclalioll of Arusts and Cl'afllmen, will teach two aealons of the ~. one tor four weeks every Monday lrom I lo 3:30 p.m. beginning Jan. a and a second also for tour weeks on Tuesdays beginning Jan. I from I to" ll:30 a.m. Mrs. Thayer atteoded 0 e o r g e Washington University, Corcoran School of Art aod bas exhibited palntlni• In art abows. Clsaael will take place at the Y Service c.nior, lllSI Orange Ave. In El Toro. RegiatrallQD deedline II Jan. 3. For more lnlormation, contact the Y at 8YMC.\. I DAILY. PIWT A.D PEOPLE PLEASER • Met-armed wtth BB -tbot DUI lllitll al -In -Viejo, •" topna Nlpel and -~-iod darooae to ~ ~ wu • '1'11e lultar -aold u aooo ,u the ad reported In two of t-commanltlea. .. appear«! whlcb ~ both the ld- Deputlel repeated an earU. warning vertiaer and the pltar a now _,.,., U that tDOlDttli1 -'Ilea, Intludlll( hli'l' you ha,. oamelllflll. to oall, dial direct ftnes, will be aougtJ (er approbeoded or--lt'D be a jlleuure. lcndera. ' ' 7,30 in the multi-purpose room of El Camino Real School, 14736 Sand Canyon Ave. The clean-up program will take place in May, 1973. City Human Enhancement Director Paul ~rady is asking for school district ' ideas.fer the campaign. Trustees will also bear reports by two archltects, Rober! Tbomaa and George Knowles. A proposal by San Joaquizi School District trustees to include names of board members of bolb old and new districts on plaques on schools built this year is on the agenda. San Joaquin School DistTict will go out of business Juoe 30, 1973 and the Irvine, Saddleback and Tustin Unified Districts will take over July 1, 1973, under terms of a unification electim Jast June. San Joaquin and Saddleback trustee Joe Petenon receoUy suggested that plaques tradiUonallf placed on the front of schools sbould include names ol all governing boards during this transiUon period. Toolgb1'1 district meeting will be the only December sesskln for Irvine trusi..a. The nest meeting will take place Jan. a. White House press si!cretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Bush will coo.tinue as U.S. arr.bassador to the United Nations through the current session of the U.N. General Assembly, and a replacement would be announced later. Dole said he agreed to "stay on in an advisory capacity for a month or two" to belp Bush break into the job. "I flnd broad support for George Bush," Dole said. "We believe our Tuan will beat their Texan," Dole said in reference to D&llas lawyer Robert Strauss, elected chairman 0: the Democratic Party Saturday. Dole met with President Nixon at Camp David, Md. Nov. 27 amid reports • he was being eased out as part of Nixon's post-election r e v a m p 1 n g of the Administration and the Republican Par- ty, but Dole denied be waa being forced out. '"Ibere was 90IDe speculation that I .went to the D10W1talntop to be p\1$bed off," Dole aaid. "But lhat wa.m't the case. I never planned on staying long into 1973." Ziegler backed DoJe's ,version and said, (See DOLE, Page Z) Naked Brass? Air Force Recognizes Officer SAIGON (AP) -Wbat doea ao Air Foree enlisted man do wben be meets a naked general? lie aalutes. All"«der laaued recently by Maj. Paul 114. BooemM, operalloos olllcer ol ~ -,9ectlrtty P.olice Squadroa at Tan Son Nhut Air ~. says In part: 1' l· "" • ) > • both . "ltlM7ll!lmftlll! Wll ~-~·-·-'~you ' -tllll .. ,..,.... ID ...... the Im- ....... --:--. II or .. ol anflonn." . '* ---dr«an•-dll'oOILiirl..u.ted ~ mlChl encounllr ncb other In the nddL TlllC oaon WAS A1TACBED lo a J>hotolrapb of .Brig. Gen.· llalpb Ho~ ,!Ud, "'* •i<e commaoder ol the 7th Air Force. Tba -i is In lull lf!ifOnn. reached ,.n how loflt. the nert phase of wage-price-rr.nt controls slxlli.Jd la.st. To help decide this question, Shultz said, there would be a "wide process of consultation" with labor, Congress, con- . sun1era and members of the current economic stabilization program. On .. lated topics, Schulix said the Pml- dent bad been successful in holding spen- ding in the current budget to $250 billion and that lbe bud&et fo1 fiscal 1974, which will be submitted to Congress in January, would be in balance on a full employment basis. Shultz said ~he prtsidentlal decbions oo lbe controls \Vere "mutually interde- pendent and support.Ive." He said it re- flected Nixon's "strong determination to maintain the fight against !ollation in the strongest way possib~." Tbe pay actioo freezea the current salaries of aJI member . of government at Uie so-called "federal ezecuUve level." This includes high-ranking membera of government, congressmen aod federal judges. It covers salary scales rang.tna from $1fi,OOO to $60,000. The hiring freeze in the ezecuttve branch will last at least until late January, when Nixon sends to Congress his budget for fiscal 1974, beglnnill( July l, 1973. Shultz said it was an "open qlle!tion" whether the administration would ask Congress to extend the Economic Stabilization Act in its present form or to rr.odify some of it,, provisions. But be added : "I'm ruling out just going back to an uncontrolled ~m with a statement that everyone oucht to behave In such and sucb a fuhion and boplng that they do ... :No CoUJJtyCrops Damaged -- Yet;-Forecast for Colder Re<enl night frosts In the Irvine, El Toro and Sao Juan captstra.no areas of Orange County have not seriously damaged Jarge quantities of fruit but growers wlll eye the thermometer tonight warily. "If it goes much below 28 tonight for Cable TV Plan For Basketball Games Weighed ' A proposal by the Community Cablevision Company to imtall equip- ment for live television broadca!ting in the University High School gymnasium in Irvine wil1 be discussed by Tustin Union High School District trustees tonight at 7,30 at Tustin High School The Tustin Unk>n High School District include.s University and Mission Viejo High Schools. Channel 3 officials want to broadcast University basketball games. They estimate it would take two days to trench, bacJdlll and install the two-way cables. There would be no cost to the district or the blgb l!cbool from the propoul. University technical education students already produce a weekly irogram at Otannel 3 and a team ol students has been filming some football games for the cablevision station. Trustee.o tolilgbt will also discusa the rewiring of the intercom system at Mission Vi&jo High Schoel. Actor's Home Burns SHERMAN OAKS (AP) -Actor Beau Bridges' 175,000 blliside home bas been destroyed by lire. The house was in names when firemen arrived. Bridges, not at home at the time, b the son of ac- tor U.yd Brldges and Is a rqular In the detedive series "1be StrOelJ of San Francls.."'O." • very long, all we can do is pile apother blanket on our beds and pray," a spokesman for the Irvine Valencia Growers Association uid. William Hackel, National Weather Service forecaster in Oranc!t predicta: tooight will be the -8 of the curmit series of below lreellnt nights. ' I He looks for temperabns ln the "mid· 20s" and colder In Ibo --.i -of San Juan Capistrano, Iii 1nitoe ~I plain and El iroro. Winds through Santa Ana CoJ11011 are expected to spare fr1llt CllOPll .. Yorba Linda aod Placentia, he Uld. Tfbo Wbidt stir up the air In the -"""""Jli>w- ing areas, however, froits rJwt 1"11 do severe damage to the VaJericla crop. Valencias, not due to be harvested until April, are in theJnOst "crJUcal" stage ol their development now, a stage whm the fruit is most susceptible J.o fl"Olt dlmaae. Depe-g on tbe deptb of the blan1el of frost laden air over the groves, wind machines can help aave tbe crops. But, U the celling ol air is too bltb, the wind machines are of lltUe use. Along with the forecast of low tem- peratures, the celling outlook tonight is not good. Only wl.nd or a cloud eovpr can ease the threat of the r...... I . Since frosts became a r<gillar nightly occurrenct, the lowest temperature recorded in a county grove wu laat Saturday morning when an Irvine theremometer dipped to 28, Hackel said. • l't'eatller 1bc weatherlady says you can unbutton the top button on your overcoat on Tueaday. It'll be a litUe bit wanner. IDgha of IM5 are espected. Overnight lows, how- ever, will run from (brr) 21 to the mid 30s. INSmt: TODAY The word'I OUI oO<D1> lllat there'• ooina to be a dC1tnlctfff earthquake m San ~ • Thia time, tt11 "xhtdt&kd" /or Ja~. 4. SCI llor'fl, f'otlo 5. :::.. ': =-....... :: -cuu1111• »lo! ........ -• CllWtt " ~ ~ • =""...-, = ...... :.~ ...... hie ' ,.. .... , " .............. ,, ,....... ,, ~-"'" ...... . ......... ~--P-4• •suu1 14 ...,. ..... I ) • % GAILY PILOT IS MondaJ, -u, nn Police Nab Lost Hunter Rescued 3 Mar ines ..._-Lasted 2 M-onths ,.Ate M,ice, Walked Miles In Anaheini A trio of Marine Corps enlisted men allegedly comered during a tire shop burglary led Anaheim police on a not·so- merry chase among nearby orange groves early Sunday, dodging lawmen's bull ets occasionally. One suspect among the three facing burglary charges today suffered a minor wound in the shoulder. A pursuing police officer also was in· Jured when he fell Into a concrete-lined flood control ditch while sprinting after the alleged burglars. Officers aboard the Anaheim police helicopter spotlighted the suspects finally . in the orange groves below. resuJting in their eventual capture. Investigators identified the servicemen facing burglary charges today as Edward L. O'Connor, 20 : Randy G. Litton. 20. and Donald R. Sobeski, 19, all of Palm Springs. Police said O'Connor was the suspect slightly wounded by a bullet !ired during the pursuit. Officer Rudy Meranda was the policeman injured when he fell into the ditch while chasing the suspec ts in the darke~ orange grove. Investigators at first cornered their quarry in the Capital Tire Sales store. 2020 E. Howell Ave .. but the trio fled before officers could head them off. The pursuit through the orange groves continued for a total of four hours before the ?.farines were captured. Electric Power To Be Discussed On Channel 50 Orange County's future electrical power needs and their possible effects on al.. pollution wiU be discussed. in a special program of Focus Orange County on Clwmel 50 trolgbt at 1,30_ 1be program will be repeated at 8 p.m. Thursday on the Coast Community C:Ollege District station. The half-hour program hosted by Jim Cooper will review Southern California -Company plans to expand the nudear _..... 9lm>t at San Ooolie and the plans to enlarge \be steam plant in Hunti_ngton Beach. Rohert Bede, Orange Coonty division manager for the F.dison Company, represents the company's concerns over possible power blackouts by 1975 on the program. James Somers, Orange County director for Stamp Out Smog (SOS), an en- viroomental group, e:a:plains his group 's opposition to plant expansion on the Channel 50 productioo. Irvine Housing Unit Reactivated The lrvine housing citizens advisory commlttee ba.t been reactivated by the city couocil and will meet at 7:30 o'clock in city hall, 4201 Campus Drive. Councilman Henry Quigley and Coun- cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor will meet with members of the committee in the pubic session. The volunteer group is expected to determ~ how the city might best in· ventory its housing opportunities. Such infcrmation is required for the city's 1eneral plan housing element. 'lbe group also ls expected to make specific recommendations to the council on ways housing for low and moderate locome families may be provided in the new city. OUN6 1 COAST Is DAILY PILOT ,,.. or_,. ~I DAILY PILOT, with ~ It ......_. fht Hirw.Pf"ftl, h ~lthtd tw .. 0r.,.. ea..-l"vblhlllna c°"'""'· .._ ,.... .. It.. .... pull!~. Mtrld1y ltlnugh 1"""1, fw Cost• Mtw, H""""1 Seid!, """"'-'-k&dlll"-l•ln v.u..,, L~ .......... , ..... ~ ... Sell 0..-i.i fin JV<tR (lplf!r-. A 11!!gl• rt;lo!\si Mltllfl II pWlllMd S.lurdl""' tllld Svnc11yL ne lllfk.,.I llU01klllna pllnt tt .. UO Wtt.I lff ltrMt, C.I• ~. C.lllol"l'lll, "'216, l•"•rt N. We1d .. PrtMIMnl 1o11111 Pvou...,.,. J•c~ It Curl1v Vkf ~ lolllll Gtftffll,........ Th..,.11 K11•il .. ,,...___ Tito••• A. M1Hphin1 ~••rtw CNMc H. ~ l J01N P. N•ll ,...,.._ MMttlrll 11111~ °"""' ca.t9 MIM: »t Wftl hy Sir.t ........ "-dl:UJIN..,.,....._. L*flM ..... , nt l"IO'ftl ,,_ ...... ....! 11111 9l9dl ...... trll .... Oiet tt•li l -......... c......111. ... "' ,o 1 en•> .. Mm a n • .W.••tt •1 64J..N11 ,_ P sis Al '''*""'"'" •. ,., .. ..,..... C&lt: .......... °""" ~ ........ " ....... . .. -...... ....., .. .., ....... . .,._,...,,_,. '"'"" _., ............ .._I ..... ,_. --,, ...,,..., ........ . .................... c.. ..... cal.... ........ ..., ~,,.... fl . ., .....,., _. ..,. u .11 ~· ... uoarr --· ' DAIL V l'ILOT Stiff l"IM" Dress The Part Students of El ~1orro School \viii present the annual Christmas pro- gram entitled "Christn1as is ... " with songs from around the world. The program begins at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Kindergarten and primary youngsters will sing. The sc hool orchestz:a and chorus will perform. Randi Carlson, left, is dressed in Dutch clothing and Susan Tsuji in Japanese garb. Peace Talks On; Chou Reportedly Optimistic PARIS (UPI) -"White House adviser Henry A. Kissinger held one more secret mee~ with Hanoi negotiators today and a French radio station quoted Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai as saying a cease-fire agreement might come in two Ol' three days. The report coincided with Washington ~td;lea implying t be r e h.a1 been mote'\)~:. hi ~ talks than indicated in pessiinistic rePorts thought to have originated from the Viet Cong represen· tatives. Kissinger and several aides sat down with North Vi etnamese negotiators Le Due Tho and Xuan Thuy in a heavily guarded villa of suburban NeuilJy.sur· seine for their seventh meeting in eight days -the first time their sessions have lasted so long. 'Ibe conference got under ""'ay at 3 p.m. (6 a.m. PST) as the French radio station Europe No. I quoted Chou as tell · ing newsmen in Peking it was possible that the Americans and the North Viet· namese would reach agreement "within two or three days." The talks extended four hours. In Washington, lhe Wbite House said the two would meet again Tuesday afttr· noon, with technical meetings being held in the morning. Ambassador William J. Porter, the chief U,S. negotiator at the regular semi· public Paris peace talks, sat in on the Kissinger-Tho conference for the first time. And, perhaps significantly, North Viet- namese deputy Prime Minister Le Thanh Nghi arrived in Paris Sunday from Hanoi From Pllfl" J FREEWAY ••• tion of the planned community zone. The road department map of the pro- posed amendments shows the new "mass transit corridor" intersecting with El Toro Road about one-quarter of a mile northeast of the future Portola Parkway intersection. From that point, the cor· ridor runs northeast to the Irvine city line, meeting no other highway, since the amendment proposes to shift Valencia Avenue about a half-mile further into Irvine. Besides the Valencia shift, the pro- posed master plan amendment moves part of the future Baker Parkway Into the city and Its zoned lndustrial park. The new city would thus be responsible for developing the major arterial· highway which Is one or only two north- soulh routes proposed to serve the 30.000 residents of the Canada Foothills development other than El Torn Road which forms the project's southeastern boundary. El Toro Road already serves the nortberty communities of Mlssion Viejo. That leaves the 11 property owners seelUng approval of I.he Canada Foothills aimm\Dllty with ful l responsibility for dedlcatloo of rtghls of way for only one major north-louth route -Ce.mida R4Uld, and ooe east·wtst route , P o r t o I a Park•ay. Records Destroyed HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Fire al an RCA warehouse here has destroyed nearly a million phonograph n!COrda valued at more than P>OjOOO, a c om p a n y Jpokesman says. with Nguyen Van Kha, the man who played a large part in framing the Geneva accords. Nghi wou1d have sufficient rank to sign any agreement which would have to be signed on the American side by Secretary of State William P. Rogen. Rogers flew home last Friday from a NATO meeting in Brussels disappointed that he waa, unable to sign the ceaaelire agreement this weekend. ~ Jn Washington, U.S. officials dis· counted some reports from Paris that no gains had been made in cease-fire negotiations the past week. They acknowledged that it would be premature to expect an imminent breakthrough which would wrap up the agreement for signing. However, they said reports of a deadlock were not true. The Provisional RevoluUonary Govern· ment, the political arm of the Viet Cong, was described by some U.S. officials as using much the same type of tactics on Communist side as Saigon has on the other side in an effort to extract max- imum advantages from the negotiations between Washington and Hanoi. Today's Kissinger-'nlo meeting follows the longest known session of the talks history on Sunday, when technical ex- perts met for more than six hours, ap- parently to work Out the tectmical wording of any cease-fire agreement. Autonetics Gets Missile System Computer Deal North Americ an Rockwell's Autonetics division In Anaheim has been awarded a $9.8 million contract for production of 105 missile system computers, according to Ai.:tonetics President M. D. Margolis. The contract with the Air Force calls for production of the master computers for the SCRAM (short range attack missile) program in 1973-74. The missiles are designed to be earned by B-52 and FB--111 jet aircraft now used by the Air Force and by the B-1 oow being developed for Air Force use by North American, Margolis said. The mast .r computer Is Installed in the SCRAM carrying craft to monitor status of the system and to program the i;nis- siles for guidance to pre-selec te<t targets, he added. County Cra sh es Oaim Two Lives Two persons died in separate traffic accldt':nta durlng the weekend In Orange County, the county coroner reported fo.. day. One was a Huntington, Beach woman. llelen Louise Schabatka, 45, of 16$42 Marie Lane, died Snturday nighl after she was struck by a car while attempting to cnm Knott and Monroe Avenues In Buena Park on foot. The dMver, Timothy Shipman of Anaheim, was not held, poUce said . Robert Cushman, 44, Upland, died Sun- day night when his car crashed Into • parked ti'uck on the Orange Freeway north of Lan\bert Street in 1-'"'uUerton. SAULT" Bl'E. MARJE, Ont. (UPI) -A hunttt who survived lwO months in a cabin by ••ting mice and grubs w .. rescued by ,nowmobUen &.mday after walking for eltlht day1 In Ibo wilderness. The hunter, Andros Mayracic, •s. of Gtavenhurst, Ont., was reported in ex- cellenl coodltlnn 1t a local holpltal, although doctors sakl he was suffering from extmno fatigue and lost :12 J')llll<b. Constable Ray J. Duguay of the Ontario Provincial Police said two snowmobllers found Mavracic when he stumbled out of denJe country near the Batchawana river after walk1ng SO miles Hitchhiking Girl Thwarts Rapist Try A 19-year-old Dana Point girl, hitch- hiking to Laguna Beach thwarted an attempted rape Friday by a man who held a hunting knife to her throat in an effort to ro.·ce her into the back of bis van. "Okay. kill me,'' the girl told the "-ould-be rapist, as the youthful suspect helC: the long-bladed kiiife to ber . "l will, I mean I~." the mCl.ll said, but he was foiled when the young woman popped open the door of the van and ran. The incident OC'Curred in the 800 block of Bluebird Canyon Drive of Laguna Beach: The girl had been hitchhiking to Laguna Beach where she works in a shop. She told officers that after she ran from the vehicle, the suspect became apologetic and said that be would take her to work. He threw away the hunting knife. The girl ran over, picked up the. knife and got back into the van. The man then drove her to the shop as be had prom- ised, she told police. The vehicle is described as a red van and the suspect 8.3 a man 20 to 22 years of age with shoulder-length blonde bait. Two Murdered- At SF Tavern SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -T w o persons were shot to death early today when an unidentified man swung open the doors of a downtown bar and emptied his .22-callber pistol inside, officers said. Pollce said the man, who fled on foot, had been involved in an argument with several customers in the lfugao Bar and Restaurant before he returned with the gun. Police identified the victims as Freddie Emelia, 32, and Wayne Hughes, 42, both of San Francisco. Both were shot in the chest, officers said. nonstop on snoW1hoe1. Mavrar:lc did not sleep during his trtt because he feared that If he did be would never awake, Duguay said. The snowmobllert said Mavraclc was mumbling incoherently and covered wlth dirt, Duguay ,.Id. He was so hun&fY he cut his nose trying to eat a can of beans the snowmobllen gave blm. ' Duguay said Mavraclc went into the bush Oct. 1 with si:a: hunters. They went to th~ Gray Owl Lake area, about 75 miles north of Sault Ste. Marie, where a tra~ per friend of Mavracic 's owned a cabin. The other six left after shout two weeks but Mavracic stayed in the cabin because be thought bis friend would Touchy Suflject · l'l!tum lo check bis frap lines, Duguay aald, The friend never appeattd and MavracJc'• provlskms ran out after several weeks. Duguay said he was afraid to leave the cabln because lakes tn the ma were 001 autnclenur frozen over to walk on. Alter mid-October. Mavraclc 11...t on tea, Ill~ mie<I and gnibo he dui up outside. Ho allo sltot one partrldae and one squlrttl during bl• walk. "On Dec. i he gave up all hope and put c . his snow sboe9 and started walldn1," Duguay said. "Ht WU warmly dressed and In e:a:cellent physical condltion and that's apparently what saved h1m.. We estimate he walked about 50 miles." • Supervisors to Consider Raising Their Own Pay Orange County supervisors face up to the touchy subject of raising their own salaries Tuesday. Bolstered by recommendations from Five Cycle Ouh " Members Handed Terms for Orgy UlNG BEACH (AP ) -Five members of a motorcycle lllll have been sen- tenced to prison on kidnap, rape and sex pel'\lersiQn charges in connection with a three-<lay orgy last March at a local cy. cle shop. Superior-Court Judge John A • Arguelles sentenced Hessian Club Presi- dPnt James E. "Crazy Jim'.' Allan, 30, to consecutive terms of one to 2S years for kidnap, three years to life fo r rape and three years to life ror forcible sex perversion. Allan was also given a con- current sentence of si:a: months to Ille on two counts ol assault likely to produce great bodily injury. Other club members and their sen- tences were : Linda Mae Bagala, 23, three years to life foo one count of fon:::i- ble sex perversion ; Kenneth Ray Bates, t1 , two oonsecutlve terma of three years to life for tv.-o counts of forced se:a: perversioh; Earl Kermeth ' • Ma c e ' ' Leibelt, 26, two consecutive terms of three years t..i life for fwcible rape and sex perversion, and Richard "Rabbit" Rizzone, 23, six mJnths to U!e for sex perversion . All are from Long Beach. A si:a:th club member, Bella F.dwina Morris, 29, of Costa Mesa, wu · com- mitted to the California Institution fo r women at Frontera for 90 days of psychiatric testing prior to sentencing. the Grand Jury and the Orange County Chamber or Commerce, the board members wlll, in an open hearing, discuss Increasing their cum!Ot $17,500-a· year pay. The open discussion contrasts with a closed door meeting two years ago dur- in~ wblcb supervisors Informally decided to raise their pay lo Ibo level of municipal court judges -S29,000 a year. The move, news of wblch leaked out. led to a p u b 11 c uproar and recall movemenls against three superviaon. The furor later waned. The Grand Jw-y and the chamber of commerce have since recommended that the supervisors raise their pay to the municipal court level. Informal .n.cuss1ona have Indicated that $25,111111 to $37,IOO a year might be lhe figure they will qree upon. ThJs despite the fact that many county of- ficials are paid $32,000 or more, !Ome as high as $12,111111. ''°' Angl" supervisors are pal~ 138,111111 a year and San Diego Coonty leaders recently incttased their pay lo $12.111111. Frot1tP...,1 "At DO time did President Nixon re- quest that Cbalrman Dote leave bis post." Dole said he spoke to Bush about the j'b Immediately after his first meeting with Nixon. and that be spoke to him • .. ain a week ago and yesterday. Dole said Bush finally agreed lo the job after both Nixon and Dole talked to blJn by phone this momil!g. r ·-----------------------------------------1 Ta 1 ,. .. ,y .. -.... caallnsa•a I uo...r.-.•w.,,....,...,._ .-Mc, .-. ... _. .., ......_ "" --.,... .... r.,,.. ,... wt11 ...,. ,. 1 a:M, ..... ..,._ e: Csnlkas• C ....... °"* ~ ..,., ... .... ........... ,.. ...... Afl' .................. , I ltt ,,.. ...... ..... ...... Of ...... -,.,_ .... .,.,.. .., ............... c... ...... Cl1 I so-. 1111Man· ... CAL.11'0JtMIA't u. ••• ,, cooPl lUTIVZ! •UTtlfZ •ttOUP Wmt TMI YkVMI IVT .... fill O'--tt ITOIU 1815 NEWPCRT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7781 ________ ....,...._.....,... ____________ _ • • , ' ' . ·1 c I I \ I '17 . . . .. ~ ., • - Today's Final N.Y. St.eeks -VOL 65, NO. 346, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES 1 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY. DECEMBER 1), 1972 TEN CENTS Valley Movement Seeking Flood Protection By JOHN ZALLER Of -~lty ,... ... '"'" A movement ls afoot in Fountain Valley to pressure Congress into speeding up work on nood protection for the area from tbe Santa Ana River. Officials from both the city and the school dmrlct are Saying that they are finished wJiting Idly foe action and that they will now spearhead a drive t_o "knock on doors and pound on desks in WaBblngtpn ' lo find out where the roadblocks are," as one city oUiclal put it.· "I was out on lhe river levees with the sandbag crews in 1959 so I know what can happen from just a ielaUvely small fiood," said Fountain Valley Councilman Ed Just. · "Waiting unUI 1995 for !lOmeth.ing to be done is just !oo long to wait.'' According' to estimates of the U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers, the homes of 900,000 Ofange Counliana could be swam~ ped in tbe worst flood of which the Santa Ana ls capable. The average frequency of such a flood is 200 years, but the Army: stresses that it co'Jld come any winter. In the event of such a flood, Fountain Valley and southeast Huntington Beach would . be among the wors~ bit areas. Water depth would average four to seven feet, according to the Army. 'In addition, a much lesser flood , one with an average frequency of 50 years, could bring an average watc..: depth of 20 Jncbes to low-lying parts of the same areas. ~ "U the Federal Houaing Autherity (FHA) cbose to do so, It eould refuse to finance any of the homes affected," J ust said. The Corps of Engineers was expected to make recommendations on bow to cope with the problem after a five-year study that was due ln 1968. How~ver due to lack of financial support from Congress, that report is not now e:s:pected until 1974 at the earliest. The Fountain Valley School District took inltial action last week in adopting a Stl'ongly worded resolution u r g i n g Congress to provide more money for the study. It also sent copies to every school district and city councU that could be af- fected by a 200-year flood with a cover letter asking them to take similar action. The Fountain Valley city councU is already considering action on its own. ~1ayor Al Hollinden said he will take the initiative in trying l<> organize the pubUc agencies involved to spDnsor a united drive in Washington. "We've passed resolutions before," Hollinden said, "and they don't seem to have done much good. What we need is a group that will knock on doors and pound on desks in Washington to find oot where (See FLOOD, Page 2) 'We • IS Here'-Cernan Challenger Touches Do w n 'Smoothly' on Moon: MILY PILOT ,....,_, ...... ~ KIMMY HILSTON, i-oNE COLD CHRISTMAS 1$l!OPPER Fountain Vallay y_.i.r Was Not Alone 'ro<!Oy NoCountyCropsDamaged Yet; Forecast Say s Colder Recent night frosts In the Irvine, El Toro and San Juan Capistrano areas of Orange County have not seriously damaged large quantltito .of lruit but growers will ,,Ye die tbenbometer "!night warily. "If it goes much below 28 tonight for very long, all we can do is pile another ~lanket on our bedl and pray," a spokesman for the Irvine Valencia Growers As9ociation said. · WllJU;fn Hackel, Nat.ional Weather Service 'forecaster in Orange, predicts tonight will be the wmit of the current serleo of below free21ng n!ghll.· He iookJ for temperatures In the "mid- 20.<" Ind colder In the sheltered areas of San Juan Caplstratio, the Irvine coastal plain and El Toro. Winds through Santa Ana Canyon are expected to spare fruit crops in Yorba LiDda and PlacenUa, he said. U no winds stir up the air in the aouth county grow- ing areas, howeVtt, frJ>sts may well do acvUe d~age to the Valencia crop. . Huntington Ti'Wltees WeigJi 2.75% .Boost ' I Valencias, not due to be harvested until April, are in the most "critical" stage of their !levelo~ now, a stage when the fruit is most suaceptlllle to!ros~damage. Fros t Fl.ashes On 2 Sta tions 'Tis the season orange ranchers and gardeners alike wonder a lot about frost. Two Orange. C.Ounty radio sta- tions and KFl In Los Angeles offer the latest lnfonoa,llon on expected frosts each night during the season. Wllliam Hackel of Orange is the Natkmal Weather Service Fruit Ft'()St~ Service forecaster in this area. ms predictions are part of the statewide report beard at 7 and 9 p.m.,on KFI. He eJso prepares a r<porl llmlttd to Orange County U:mperaturea. JI is aired on KWIZ at 7:Cll and l :Cll p.m. Ind on KEZV at 8: \o end 9 p.m. nightly, SPACE-CENTER, Houston (AP) - AmericanS landed on tbe moon tod11y ror tbe sixth and perhaps final time in this century. Apollo 17's lunar craft Olallenger touched down smoothly in a rugged box canyon for the start of a thre&day-search for knowledge. "You can tell America that Challenger Is at Taurus-Llttrow," flashed the word lrom the moon. T~ time on earth was 11 :55 a.m. PST. Nixon Seeks Longer Curbs On E~onom-y. ' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Preoldent Niion will uk Congress to e>tend the current economic controls beyond April 30, 1973 when they are due to expire, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz said today. At a White House news conference, Shultz also said the President decided to freeze salaries in the federal executive branch, Congl'ess and the judiciary, Nixon also imposed a companJon freeze on hiring and promotions for all federal, civilian and military pel'900nel through late January, when the 1974 budget will be sent to Congress. And as an example of the belt-Ughten- lng philosophy, Schultz said there would be "very substantial reductions" in the President's own stafi. Shull2, Nixon's chief econ om l c spokesman, said no decision had been reacl1ed l'.'D bow loflt, the DeJ:t phase of wage-price-rr.nt controls should last. To help decide this question, Shultz said, there would be a "wide proceM of consultation'~ with labor, Congress, con- sun1ers and members of the current economic stabilization program. On related topics, Schultz lllid the Presi. dent had been successful in holding spen- d'ng in the curren! budget to $250 billion anJ that the budget lot fiscal 1974, which will be submitted to Congress in January, would be in balance on a full employment basis. Shultz said :he prl!Sidential decisions on the controls were "mutually interde- pendent and supPQl'tjve." He said It re- flected NlJ:m's "stroog detennination to maintain the ligbt egainst Inflation in the strongest way possible." The pay action freezes the current salaries of all membe1 of government at the so--ealled "federal executive level," This includes high-ranking members of government, congressmen and federal judges. It covers salary scales ranging fropt 136,000 to $60,000. Astronauts Eugene A. Ceman, a Nav~· pilot on his third space Oight, and Har- rison H. Schmitt, the first American scientist in space, guided Challenger over lunar mountains and down to the crater- pocked Door of the canyon called Taurus- Littrow. "We is here," said ceman moments after landing. "Man is we here." Ceman and Schmitt came to the moon ln lhe last Apollo to search for rocks and data to fill in.as yet not Wlderstood cha(r DAILY PILDT Si.ff PMtt TAKES VALLEY CROWN Junior Mis1 Linda Reck Fountain Va lley Crowns Coed, 17, As Ju nior Miss Linda Reck. a 17-year-<Jld blonde coe<l. was crowned Saturday night as the Foun- tain Valley Junior Miss. Linda, a senior at FounWn Valley High Scbool, was chosen on the basis of t:er talent, paise, $Ch01arship and beauty. Sbe won in a field of 12 contestants. First runner-up In the competition held Jr. the Los Amigos lllgh School auditorium was Jan Jeffrey while Lisa Speir and Lynda Gillespie were the se- cond and third runner-ups. The new-crowned Fountain Valley Junior Miss lives with be( aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Regis Quinlan, at t<Ym Slater Ave. A 2.71 percent pay raise for prloclpals aod dlltrlct 1d111inl1tr1lorl Will be con· aidmd at Tuesday's mooting of the Hun- Ung~ lleach Clly (elementary) School Soard. 111e p~ raise II the same amount teadlers ,ec.Ived alter p r o 1 on g e d nDgotiaUent earlier this year. The regular trustees' ~ine11 meeting will be held at 7:1111 In the lllnry of Dwyer School, ~502 Palm Ave. Peters 'Seemed Normal' Girlfrie nd Testifies in Do uble Sl.a ying Trial DAI LY PILOT A.D 1!!'~8~.J Prosecutor Pat Brian put Gig Petm" PEOPLE PLEA.SER :;~0~.i!:i:.~'::!n~':: , had never shown any •i«M of mental DI· DAILY PILOT classified want eds are ness tn the nine months ihat pn!Ceded his people ple-n. See lhll1 =of hil pareota at their Hcntlngtoo GIJITAll-Elec . .,,..,., Xln't . "--'~bta ..... _. ovor -•ted and cond. Paid •. Sell '17' or n-··· ....... ··~ bot olr. Amp ovoll DMDJ:: ',;proits objectlolll by defenoe 11ton11y Barry Tarlow, Brian 111ked Anne The guitar 'l'U IOid u -1 u the ad . Jjorlbolqmew: appeared which ~ both the • "Yqu lie with Gig. you slept with him. vertlaer Ind tho pltar'• new _owner. ll ~ "y.a ta1'"41 with him and you knew him you have oomelhlng to ae11, dlaI direct Intimately In U-nine month&. atpl!'' eo-n. It'll be 1 pleasure. "Yes. thpt'~ rtgbt1 11 the: attracUve Scrippa conece .,._fe replied. .. ' • "Now theit. did he ever at any time show any signs of mental Wness?" Brtan asked 11 Tarlow'• repeated objecUona were o\ttt'r\lled. "No," Miss Bartholomew q u I et I y replied. Btten n<alled the IS-yellMid pr! who shared Petera' lone sojourn In a San Diego CounlY desert commune for leotlmonJ tbet wtn, he lalcl, be • vital p<·rtlll!I of his argumeiit that PIWI. II. wu ,... when be muidered bill parents'" April 21, 1971. Ballt aides believe tbat,the·taau• will go to Ibo Oranp County superior Court jury Wedneeday with Tarlow araulng that Peters' mental state et the tTme of the k1lllnc ...... -the lfgal definition or ""dlmlnlli>ed ca;>aclty." Tarlow, obvlou&ly angered at the te.stlmooy obtained by Btten this morn- ing, asked Mia Bartholomew In croos uRmlnktlon: "Anne, do you believe that Gig PeU:rs II a prophet of God?" The llrawberry blonde studied the question for several minutea in the bush- ed courtn>om . "I tblnk he MoWI a lot ol thlnga that ollltt people don't know;" she then replied •• Peters lemed lorward ·in hla wt.:elchlllr to catch the answer. Peten Is confined to that wheelchair as the mull of f!1jurtec he rtcelved a year ago In an earlier Superior Court trial on (!lee PB I ERS, Pap I) ters of hmar history. They will spend 73 hours on the moon, make three ex- plorations covering a total of 20 miles in an electric car and gather about 200 pounds of moon s11mples. They will also erect an atomic-powered "science station which will study the moon fo r years after they leave and take hun- dreds of photographs . The third member of the crew, Ronald Evans, was orbiting the moon in the com- mand ship. Castle Quits Administrator P.o~t in City _ • ... Brander CastJe, 5' assistant city ad- ministrator of Huntington Beach, the past 11 years, will retire Jan. 5. Castle has been with the city for more thar. 14 years, starting first as city purchasing agent, then moving up to the assistant adminisb'ator's post. Prior to his arrival in Huntington Beach, Castle spent 18 years in Alaska working as a merchandise broker, sales representative and operator of a restaurant. After retirement; he....simply plans to take life "slow and easy," while main- taining a borne in HunUngtoc Beach. The city is already ,..king applicants to fill his post, lhough there will not be another assistant administrator. The final descent of Chall""ier started at about 50,000 feet and the astronauts quicldylearned their Olgbt path waa high and siigbUy off course. As the fleeting .spacecraft <h:;ppped toward lhe moon , Ceman, at the coiitrots, and Schmitt, reading numbers from in on- board computer, corrected their coUrse. They .had fuel and room to hover, se- lect the exact spot to touch down \See APOLLO, Paie I) LEAVING CITY HALL Huntington Aide Cutle Family of School Coach Hurt in Beach Accident The wife and three young daughters ot Marina High basketball coach Jim Stephens are in good condiUon today following a near-ratal traffic accident Friday night. Mrs. Susan SU:phens said today she was driving borne from Marina's game against Katella High about ll:IO p.m., when another car slammed into the rear end of her car, shoving it across Edinger Avenue, near Beach Boolevard, Into another car. The Stephens' car immediately burst Into flames, whlJe Mrs. Stephens and two of her daughters scrambled out. A third daughter was trapped in the back seat, but was pulled to safety by a passerby. The girls, Cindy, 11. Stephanie, 8, and Charges Dismissed SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The federal government has dismissed charges against a Superior Court judge's son in COMection with lhe alleged illegal im- portation of 35 pounds of hashish. Cheryl, 3, escaped with only mfuor in- juries and were not burned, Mrs. Stephens said today. Mrs. Stephens suf- fered bums on her feet and face. 11te car was destroyed. The car which rammed into the rear of Mrs. Stephens' vehicle took off after the accident, according to reports from witnesses. Coach Stevens arrived at the accident scene, east of Beach Boulevard, in a separate car about 10 minutes after it happened. .. Coa1t lt'eatlaer The ,..atberlady says you con unbutton the top button oo your overcoat on Tuesday. It'll be 1 litUe bit wanner. llJgba of 11Ma are u:pected. Ovemlgbt lows, how- ever. will run from (brT) 28 to the mid IOI. INSIDE TODAY Tll< word'• out ogohi that thcrt'• aotno to be a 4ettf'Mttioc eorthquoke In Son l'nmclleo. Thi.s time, ft't "1ched1'1ed" for Ja'ff.. 4, Set •toru. Pao.« S. =::... 1: =-lallln 11 ~ ..,.. ................ - a... ,. .,_ c:..tr ' • II '""' ... 11 o.... liltlkft • ..... ...._.. •n ....... ,,.. • ""*''..... ,. • ...,...._.. 1t ,_.... ,, ,.... , .. ,, ....... 4 c: 1tt ..... I ._. ..... 1>11 111lfl M ..... -t \~ ' ,Z DAIL V PlLDl " Black Ban Planners Weigh High Rise Future At Lodge , Loses Bm WASHINGTON (AP) -A Moo..i The future or high rise hotels and o'her tali structures will be di.sett~ by Hun- tington Beach Planning Commissioners at their 3 p.m. meeting Tuesday. Commissioners will inspect a proposed ordinance which outlines construction details for high rise, designates certain Laguna Voter Recall Coant Stays Same Laguna Beach Unified School District Trustees Patricia Gillette and Gerald Linke have survived an atte mP.t to recall them from office, a fC{'OUnt of the recall ballots has confirmed . Figures for the election fluctuated back and forth as lhe election workers mad e a precinct by precinct recount of all the ballots cast in last Tuesday's election. Final confirmed figures for the recount are as fo1Joy.·s: For recall or Linke : 2.805 Against Recall of Linke : 2.8.l2 This is an increase of 21 votes over Linke's six-vote margin first coWlted Tuesday. For recall of ~1rs. Gillette: 2,747 Against recall of ~lrs. Gillette : 2,847 Mrs. Gille tte's margin retaining her position was 100 votes. First reports bad indicated her election count margin was 72 votes. But during canvassing It was determined that 2.8 votes had not been counted. The Registrar's office finished counting of the ballots Saturday arternoon. The recount was requested by four persons identified with the recall move- ment, not in support of Linke and Mrs . Gille tte as officials previously reported. Chief Deputy Registrar James Mayer. said not all the figure changes were due t-0 miscoontings, but may have been votes first rejected because part of the ballot was not properly marked. "Maybe a portion of the ballot was spoiled. Well you don't count that part, but you do anmt the rest," Mayer ex· plained. Final !igur<l! for tbe candidates are as follows: Lucille Whitaker: 2,761 Francis Croueno 128 Mkhool Sopro i.wr 1 Mn. 'Wh!.taker and croaen .re aeek- ing the position of Linke. Sagar Jl)Ugbt Mrs. Gilfette's office. None will be reated due to the failure of the recaU. Pianist's Death Trial Postponed A 11even-week delay has been g'ranted in the Orange County Superior Court trial of a former concert pianist accu.5ed of gunning down her husband in their Hun- tington Beach home. Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner scheduled Jan. 27 as the date Mn. Marg~t Young Nee, 51, of 6822 .Sllverbeacb Circle, will go on trial for the murder of Gilbert Nee, 61. She was booked on murder charges June 28, shortly after officers found the body of Nee, a form er colonel in the Chinese Nationalist Anny, sprawled in the hallway. He had been shot in the head and chest . Mrs. Nee rem ains free on $25,000 bail. Records Destroyed HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Fire at an RCA warehouse here has destroyed nearly a million phonograph records valued at more than $300,000, a c o m p a n y spokesman says. ou.N•1 com "' DAILY PILOT TM Or.,.. Cotti! DAILY PILOT Wlftt 'Wtildl fllJ _.,.. Jtlol N_.,, .... h publw..I .,., tit ~ C01t1t l"ubllslllnf °""'*'"'· s.p.. Ntre Hit ... •rt l*b/IUltll, MollO.ly tlnuQlt Frldrt, for Coll8 M .. , .. ......_. IHdl,, Hltfnff""8ft 8Nd\ll"-t•ln V•lley, l81- ltcft. """'*15-cldltMdl 81111 5-n C""-tV S.. Mn C.pllh'1no. A 111191e rwol!IMI •mi.. .. pWlll!led S.tvnl•'tl •rod Swn!N.,.. Tiie pt111c:1sN.I PllbtlalllnO ptt•ll ·11 •I a.30 Wtsl .. , ''""'· Chi• MINI, C•Oloml•, mu. ReMrf N. w,,4 Pr.-.. •11111 l'vl:lllslltf J•cli it. C11rl•v Vke•,NMNnl.,.. 0.-•I MIMetr 1lioM•• K-..il eolttr ,,...,,., A. .M11rpfrii110 ~ .ldllot a.t. H. "-" Alch,,.j '· Nall ,......~ldlton , ... ,., c..,;11. ... er... c-ty f:fltw ............. Office 17175 ltech lo111,.,,,.. 1i1.u1., J..44,••n P.O. ••• 1•0. •2641 --.. L....-loocfl• tn ,_, A....,. ,...,. #iftel :at~::.:,, ... , ........ lelcfti am N lwln..W ... CltfMlttti • ""°'"' II C-lnt •8M t1' 11111 C114t Hl ... l21 d• .. M•lt:I I '42·1671 ,__ ... ~"""' C.-.lfltt r ~1ut__ ~. ffn. ~ eo. .. ~­°"""""· Ne .... '"""' lll\lltt•lllM, .........-....., w *"""'1...,...tt ,....._ I..., .. ·-I I •"'*" ......., ,,.. .... "'.,,.. _. -·~ ..... c:..tl *"'· I ~ ""' W carrilr '2.U .....,...., '9 U.lf ,,..,.,.IYI ""llt_., ....... *-......,,,. I potential higb rise locations , and describes the legal method for allowing high rise. Rather than create a separate high rise zone, the planning department proposes a multi-story suffix, which can be tacked on to any residential, commercial, in- dLstrial or professional zone. A suffix, such as ~15-70, tacked on to a C-2 (commercial) zone, v.·ould mean a 70- foot commp.rcial structure could be built. The city v.•ould ha\•e to zone land for multi-story before allo"·ing it. The land could either be pre-zoned. or zoned when someone asks for multi-story pennlssion. ~ A planning department spokesman said today two areas are strongly considered potential high rise locations. One is the south side of Edinger A venue, across from Huntington Center. The other is the area around Huntington Intercommunlty Hospital Other potential areas include the town lots, where high rise apartment units might develop, and downtov.'n, where high rise hotels are considered possible. The new ordinance also sets up density formulas, specifically for residential zones, to detennine how many hi gh rise units can be built on the property. Planning officials say more units·per- acre can be built on large parcels than on small parcels. This regulation is an al· tempt to encourage the consolida!ion of smaller lots in the Town Ult region. The planning staff, as well as a special citireos committee, has been studying potential high rise Jaws for several months. 1be city code currently has: no pro- visions to allow high rise structures. From Pagel FLOOD ... the roadblocks are, and then to rem<1ve them." Holl inden said Fountain Valley could send its own lobbyist. but it would pro- bably be more effective to unite with other cities. '"There can't be any opposition from Orange Cciunty," the mayor said. "It should be just a matter of investigating the time and energy to bring everyone together." . Hollinden's proposal ts due to come before the city council next week for possible action. In adopting their resolution last week, Fountain Vlll!ey llChool --that flood control protection ought In he provided in time to be useful. "The money is going to have to be spent," said board President William Crane, "so they might as weU spend it before the flood comes rather than af- ter.'' Superintendent Mike Brick said the dlslrlct has Investigated the purchase of flood insurance, but it has found rates loo high. "The danger is too great," he ex- plained. "Nobody wants to touch us." Both city and school district officials urged individual citizens to write letters to their congressmen asking for speedy action. "The city ean't go thi.J alone," said Just. "li Congress is going to act , It's going to have to be convinced that John Q. Public re.illy wants something done." UNtw1fMhtf'9 ....... APOLLO 17 LANDING SITE, TAURUS.LITTROW, SHOWN IN CENTER OF NARROW VALLEY Maior Mountain Fronts, the North and South Massifs, Border f.leld of Exploration Peace Talks On; Chou Reportedly Optimistic PARIS (U PI) -White House adviser Henry A. Kissinger held one more secret meeting with Hanoi negotiators today and a French radio station quoted Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai as saying a cease-fire agreement might come in two or three days. The n!port coincided wilh Washington dispatches implying t h e r e ba'.i been more progress in the talks than indicated in pessimistic reports thought to have originated from the Viet C.ong represen- tatives. , Kissinger and several aides sat down with North Vietnamese negotiators Le Du1.: Tho and Xuan Thuy in a heavily guarded villa of suburban Neuilly-sur- seine for their seventh meeting in eight days -the first time their sessions have lasted so long. The conference got under way at 3 p.m. (6 a.m. PST} as the French radio station Europe No. l .quoted Chou as tell- ing oewsmen tn Peking it was p:IS!ible that the Americans and the North Viet- namese would reach agreement "within two or three days." The talka m.n<led four hours. In Washington, tbe White House said the two would meet again Tuesday after- ......., with t>dmi<al.me<linp ~ bold .. Barking Dog's Owner Innocent Russel H. Smith of 9051 Five Harbors Drive, has been found innocent in a criminaJ suit pressed by the city of Hun- tington Beach over his barking dog. After a three-hour trial in West Orange CoUnty Municipal Court in Westminster, Judge Joe Anderson ruled Smith innocent on a charge of violating the city's noisy pet ontlnance. in the morning . Ambassador William J . Porter, the chief U.S. negotiator at the regular semi- public Para peace talks, sat in on the Kissinger-Tho conlerence for the first time. And, perhaps significantly, North Viet- namese deputy Prime Minister IA! Thanh Nghi arrive<t in Paris Sunday from Hanoi with Nguyen Van Kha, the man who played a large part in framing the Geneva accords. Nghi would have sufficient rank to sign any agreement which would have to be signed on the American side by Secretary of State William P. Rogers. Rogers flew home last Friday from a NA TO meeting in Brussels disappointed that he was unable to sign the ceasefire agreement this weekend. Attorney Fined In Funds Case Fountain Valley attorney Joseph Powers has be<n fined ISOO and placed on two years probation following bis plea of nolo c:ontedere (neither guilty nor in- nocent) to charges 'that be misap- proprialed a client's funds . Orange County Superior Court Judge James Turner imposed the sentence on Powers, 35, of 18399 Santa Carlotta St. Poweni was accused on arrest a year ago of mlsappropr!attng 15.000 turned over to him by a Beverly Hills lawyer who said Powers was ordered tO hold the funds in trust pending settlement of a civil action. It was alleged that the lawsuit was never setUed and Powers kept the money. From Page 1 APOLLO ... much as a helicopter over its pad. "Man, that looks good," said .Ceman moments after he and Schmitt fired the powerful rocket engine of Challenger to start the long, arcing drop toward the moon and three days ot exploration. The approach path toward landing was high and north of the planned trajectory and the astronauts worked quickly to cor· reel their abn. Moments later, Mission Control came in with "You're on the line." "Obbhb," II.id Ceman, at one polnL "1bere'11 the ole earth." O>allenger kepi shooting ovor tbe lunar surface, falling from orbit as the power- ful engnie slowed tbe craft and guided it Inward tbe target. "Come on, baby," said Ceman. "Oh, are we coming in. Oh, Baby." Moments later they pitched over the Taurus-Littrow, that spot on the moon Ceman once called "a beautiful valley," came intO view. "There it 11, Houston," said Schmitt. "On largel. .. "2,500 leet, fUel is good," the scientists then called. "Approad>ing 1,000 feet. Through 1,000. ThrouKh 11111 feet. Through 500. 300 fe<l Ultle rugh. At SGO. Fuel's £OOd. 110 feet. A little forward, Gene. tO feet. IO feel G<tting a tltUe dust. IO feel Veiy liltle dust. 40 feel" "Stand by for toucbdown," said CU-. nan. "Ten feet," said Scbmltt. "Contact. Erlgine itop ... 'filei1 Ceman ..,._, "Oby, Houston, the Cblllqer bu landed." • Preparatlom for the landing w e n t smoothly, with America and Olallqer undocking and separating as planned. Minutes after teparatlon, Challenger dipped like a roller coaster lo within 15 miles of Taurus-Llttrow and Ceman call- ed out : "Hey, we've got the landing site. We're coming right over il "We got a picture of America coming right across the site. SUpertargeUng," Schmitt reported. "I can see Camelot, Sherlock, Rudolph, the Great. Cross" - referring to craters tbey nicknamed ln the area. One of fcur complaining witnesses in last month's case was Michael Brick, superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District. r··-------------...... ----------Ta • ' Lodge 1nc1ay uMnimoUJly lost a u.s; Supreme Court apptal designed In k .. p, oot Negro guests. Wtthoul fUrt)ler c:omment, the court said the appul by the Pennsylvania lodge failed to pose . "• aubstanUal federal question." The Harrisburg lodge was ordered las' July by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to serve black guests. The dispute centered around K. Leroy lrvi11, a black, who is majori!Y leader of the state House of Representa'Uves. In its appeal, the lodge said by the same reasooing the dining room of every ~iv8te home in the country would be open to the pubUc if guests who were not members of tbe family were served once. Last June, In a lhl decision, the high court ruJ.q_ Lodge 107 was not required to ,erve Irvis or any othe1 Negro just becaUSe the club operated with a liquor license rrom the state. 'The Pennsylvania court's ruling the following month slemmed from the aame inctdent. In 19611, Jrvls and • group of other legislators went to the lodge for dinner. ft is a hall block from the state Capitol. Irvis was refused ter't'k9. The liquor license argument was based on the theory that blacks cannot be bar- -red from places whose operollool depend on atate ollldala. That wu rejected by the Supreme Court. 'lbe Penmylvania court r u l e d , however, that by opening ill dlnlni room In white nonmembera, the clut became a place of "public occommodatloo" under the atste human relatloos law ml -Id have to 1erve black guesta u Will. In another case, tbe father of a llaln Kent State Univenlty atudellt wu turned clown today by the Supreme Court as he tried In sue the state of Ohio for damages .. Arthur Krause, whole daughter Allison WU killed in the campus disturbance May 4, 19711, wu barrod by tbe Ohio State Supreme Curt lut July flOm suing tbe state without the mment of the Ohio Legislature. Kra-. of Pittsllorlh, up!d In an •I> f>eal that 1IJls .iolated bla riPtt under tbe federal Oonotltutloa. ,,,. blib court dlanl•..t the mppeal "fcr want of a subatantial ledenl question." ,., ... r.,..1 PETER .•. the same charges. The f9rmer llfepard wu shot in the spine -as be tried to escape from Judge Kenneth Williams' courtroom during the noon hour recess. Doclnn believe the resulting paralysis may keep Peters in a wbeelchair for the ,..t of his life. Peters is accused of atabblng bis fatber Charles Peten, 55, through tbe heart and then stran&llng bis mother Flora, &4, at the family's Uncoln street home. Mrs. Peten wu a teacher at Llocoln School In Corolla det Mar. '"'''"' ETKtrlc Siw..t'h r,, it,.,. wtth cootl1111t1rt clo•11l•t ••••• Moclol J7-IJJ2 ••••..•• Sm.ti l•ppa• &at ll•"t• with e:o11ti1111cttn clte11i1119 • .,.._ Moffl !12 1 l>02 ••••••••••••••••••••• , S16t.tl lappo11 Eltc.trrc 11.,.,, with co11+I•· •0111 c.lt•11i111 ~·· M9'ol Jl-2112 . -· ous CleaftlM" IDAIL'( "IL.OT Staff,....._ J, SHERMAN DENNY ADMIRES HIS SPECIAL AWARD He'd Wilk 1 Mlle for H'"1tlngton Beach Rotarl1n1 Rotarian Honor Denny 'Sh~ugs Off' Club Service His fellow llunlington Beach Rotarians claim J. Sherman Denny, 75, has walked to the post office at least 16,000 times IE' th~ service of his club. DeMy brushes away the claim with a shy rt.mlnd ... r that such a figure "Is not doc:umented. Though It has been a good number." A> t founder ol lhe local RoWy Club Definy'1 attendar ct r e c or d \~ documented -It's perfect over the past U years. R<>tary's blgbest bonon, membersblp In the Paul Harris Fellowshlp. It takes a Sl,000 contribution from the club to enter a member ln the Harris Fellowship. The money C"21 into the in- ternational relationJ fund of Rotary. Denny has gained fame recently as Ornnge County's most knowledgeable weatherman -at least about the local hi'10ry of It. Until 1981, when he retlred1 he w a 1 general manager of the HW1tln1ton Beach Company. Oh yes, they gave him another honor Range 211PHJD. wau mu llllFB . JI ,_,, I H N.wt Y ....... • C .... ••• C ..... °""'at_, lW ef ,_,. .,_ ._ - olMft'tc. ...... _... ... ~. 1W --,.. .. , ............. .., ,. .... ~ ..... ._ • c ....... c ....... 0.... ..... ....,. ... ..... .,..,... .,.. ................................ ~.,.. ...... ...... ...... Of .......... ,..,_ ............. ..,...., ............ c:.. -C-0-. M 'us A.leMIATa ........ " ...... MllMl•tl M (Af,,lll'OllMIA'S lAllOllT COOl'•ll:ATIY• 1uv1N• e11ou" Wtnl TM8 VOL.UMI IU'W'IN• J>OWlf" 01' 111 &TOllll 1815 NEWPllRT BLVD, Downtown Costa Mesa -l'llatie 548-7781 Friday, members of the Huntington Bet.ch Rotery Club honortd J. Sherman Denny for being "J jolly good fellow"' and 1 stalwart member. They gave him one of Tnterna tion11! F'rid.ay - a small, gold st.atuet.te of a !llo_m_ll_Q.,_...,..,_.., ... _ ... ..__,_,.,..,...,.._ ••• _0 ., .. ....,,.,.,_ ....... ..,,.,.._.,...,.., .... oi man walking to the pos1 orflce. • • 4 •• • ' ... I I I .._ -· .... ~ . Mood1Y, -11, 1972 H DAJLY '!LOT 3 Dole • uits Post as GOP Chairman Naked Brass? ' ' Air Force Recognizes Officer SAIGON (AP) -What dou .. Air Force -man do -be meeta I naked 1eneral? ' • He aalutea. · An order Luued reoonUy by MIJ. Paul M. s-man, oper1Uona offkor tJ, the 1l'1th Security Polloe Squadron 11 Tlli Son Nbu1 Air Bue, ta)'I In part: "SALtrrE WHtN YOU IllWOGNIZE an officer even tllougb you both, otneer and ooncomm1aloned officer, are_ nude.'' An Air Force tpokOll1llD aald this waa "Intended lo emphaslt.e the Im· portance of aalutlng oll1cen when rtcopized, whether In or out of jlnllorm." He aald be did not kllOW under what clrcumstancea of!icet• and eollsted penoonel might encounter each other In the nude. Tiil! ORDER 11.18 ATl'ACllBD lo 1 photograph o1 Brig. Gen. Ralph Ho!· land, new vlco commandor of the 7th Air Force. ,,,. pneral 11 In lull unlform. Deaf Swimmer Nearing Goal to Compete in Games Mort than 11 ,500 has been raised toward the $2,000 needed to send an at· tractive lt-year-old Lagunan to lhe World Games for the Deaf in Malmo, Sweden next IUDUJlel'. "It's a beluty of a hometown," com-. mended Mrs. Dan McFarbnd, upressln& her apprtdaUon for the dooali<m lo the fund to send Lee Ann ''Bobo'' Johna to the games. On 1'rlday aloae, l500 WU piedced lo the fund by member• of the Lquna Beach Rotary Club, following an appearance by Miss Johns and a fonner classmate, Melinda McFarland. M1aa Johns' excellent times in several swimming compeUllooa have made her ellgible for the world games, but It was feared a lack of funds would prevent her from maldni the trip. Money ktpt her from attending the na- Uonal triala In North Carollna, but sbe bu been offered a place on the IU<nem- ber U.S. team for the fmala In s..-, aocording lo Will Hltch<ock, Who Is coonliaatln& the fund drive with the McFarlancls. I. student at Golden West Collep, Miis Johns WU (II the bomecoming court thert and also -a """-ming· prtncaa at Lquna Beacb Hllh School. Further lnformaUon m the fund drive Is available by calllD& 111-1731 or lll- '5a. . ~ ' t Autonetics Gets Missile System Computer Deal North American Rockwell'a Aulonetka division in Anlbelm baa betll awarded a If.I mlllioo contract 1,.. pnduct1on ol 106 mlsaile l)'llom comput.ra, -g to Aulooetlcs PM!dent M. D. Margolis. Tbe coatract with the Air PCll'CO calla for poducUoa1 of the muter c«nput.ra 1,.. the SCRAM (short l'Ol1le attack mlsaile) procram In 1m.11. The mlaalles ara dellped,lo be canted by Ml and FB-11) jet •lr<rill nOw u>ed by the Air Foree and by the 11-1 llOW belnl developed for Air .,_ uie by NGl1h American, Margolis aald. The mut .r computer Is Installed In tbe 1iCJ1AM carrying craft lo monitor 11&1115 ol the ll)'ltem and lo program the mls- sllea for · wldance lo pre-select.cl targeta, he added. Checka may be sent lo the Bobo Jolms Deaf Olympics Fund, Laguna Federal Savtnp and Loan, 260 Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach. Marines Nabbed After Burglary, Chase; 1 Shot A trio of Marine Corpo enlisted men allegedly cornored during a tin shop burglary led Anaheim police on a not·so- merry chase among nearby orange groves early Sunday, dodging lawmen's bullets occasionally. One suspect among the three facing burglary cbargea loday sulfertd a minor wound in the shoulder. A pursuing police ofllcer alto WU Jn. jurtd when be fell lnlo a concrete-lined flood eonin>I dlldt wblle sprinting after the aDepd burllars· • Offkors aboard the Anaheim police. helicopter spolllgbted the IUlpeCla finally In the ............ bolow, ....Utln& In their ....,tual capture. lnvesllplors ldenllfled the 1t1 •Icemen !acin( blqlary cbargeo loday u Edward L. O'Connor, SO; Randy G. U1lon, II, and Donald I\. Sobesld, 19, all of Palm Sprlnp. • Police said O'Connor wu the aulpeCI alJihUy wounded by a bullet fired during the pursuit. Officer Rudy Monnda was the polltemtn Injured when ht fell lnlo the dltdl . wblla chasing the ompecls In the darl<eiled ............. , lnveltlpton at flrsl cornered their quarry In the Capllal Tire Sales alore, IO'l,O E. llowelJ Ave., but the trio Oed bel<rt -coWd -thom off. Tbe punult U...U the oranga groves continued far a totaf ol four hours bel0rt the lllariDel wert captured. Satellite Operating VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE <APi -1lle larsest and lDOll advanced ot America'• weather utellitel wu in orbit and operailng welf loday, the N• tional .Aeronautics and Space Administration aald. Nlmbus-V, a l,573-lb. weather monltor1n( oblervatory, WU launched OD I two- atage Delta rocket bere Jato Sunday nlgbt and W<'ll lnlo a circular orb!~ a NASA spokesman aald. 'Classlfled. Material' Ex-CIA Official Loses · Bid to Publ~h. 'Books • WASHINGTON (AP) -By just one . American .Civil LlberUe' Union. ?Ole, a former Central Jnte1llgence Agen-Before going to work for the CIA In cy official loot a chance loday b. the U.S. 19541, MrchetU alcne<I an . ag ... ment $uprtme Court lo filbt ao Injunction never to divulge c1t11Uled Information prtventll1fl him from cubllohlng boob or without the CIA dlrector'1 approval. arUcles containing clualllod CI A Alter Cllllttlng 10 IM9, be aubmllled an m~~A mi~, V1ctor E. Mardletti article to Eoijulre m1plfne .. that the government contl!iided W1lllld dlsclole of Vfenfta, Va ., argued that the Injunction cluallled lnlormatlon about lnlelllience could lead to a 1ystemaUc ICbeme of sources, methods and operatkml. ctnlOnihJp. Needing th• vote1 of al telll lour Mardletti alto· bu ·1ttemplad lo juatlcea lo be he1rd, be managed lo gain publlob .• 1¥>vel 1bput the agency and bu on)y three -Wlllllm o. llouglsa, appeared. oo NV<ral radio and i.Jevlslon wlllllm J. Brennao Jr. and Poller obowt Stewart. The 1ppeal aald the Injunction would Agalnat him wero Chief J11111ce Warreo lead lo •1 IJllemat1C tdlema ol E. Burger, and ju1t!Ctii· 'l'butoQd c.-.hlp wtdch will' auraly .-It In the Manhall, ilyn)n R. Whlll,' Rarey. A. denial ol the flmdl-.,J rltltt ol the Blackmun, Wllllam H. Relmqullt and American -1• lo ho 111ppllo4 with Jn. Lewis F. Powell Jr. lonnatlon 1bout the conduct of their The lnfunc!IOD, IJl)lleld lo ~...:r. 1ovenunenL" the Ith 0.S. Cir<uft 00urt in , , Tbe govemmeul, deftadlnc ,,J rullng, Va., keepo .Marcbetti from ~ lbout1 add 11 Is In acconl with the °iperema aey claslfled CIA maltrtal witbout ,Ibo Court'• "CC1111l1~t rocopltloo\. ol the agency'• oonoent. , need for aecrtCY In tbl -1tlvlty araa• '!be former .....,tlva a11111ant lo the ~ o.lfOlll&n ,,r!Oln and n1t1ooa1 *"'1ty." d<puty d!ftCIOr, of the CIA~ ~at Frlonik>l......i brteh •P?P•rlln 1 the ..,tralnt Impaled by two fel!oral Marchetti were ftled by the Author• courta Is conlrary lo freedom of apeecb League of Amerl<a and die Allodatlon and lo a 1971 rullng that newapapers of American Publlabera. could publl1b porllono of the Pentagon Neither the tlx•JutUce majority nor the Papers. thrte dlnenlen who. -lo bur th• Hla appeal wH backed by the dlopute II''' lbtlr rea-. ~· ' , • Channel 50 R~pol1 Set On Schmitz Lame duclc coogreaman and 1111111.,. ceuflll American Party presldeaUal can- dlda .. Jolm G. Schmitt Wedneadar will tnoe 1 panel of four county newsmen in a taped KOCE, educatlont: i.Jevislon Channel 50, program. Aldea for Rep. Scbmlb (R·'l\Jatln), aald be will dlsclcioe bis !Uture plant d.,.. Ing the hall-hour pn>gr>m· whlcll will air at 8:3» p.m. on Dec. 11, and at a p.m.. on Dec. 11 ind ~- Fonner KNXT neWlml!l Jim Q>oper will boat the KOCE production, "Focua Orange Co\lnty." Others tel lo quiz Schmitz are Tom Keevif, editor of the Orange Ooaat Dolly Pilot; James Dean, execuUve edJtor of the Santa Ana Register, and Howard Seelye, political writer for the Loo Angeles Times, Orange County secUon. Later on Wednesday, Sdlmiti wW ap- pear before members of S1gmll Della Cb! journallam society, Orange C o u n t y Chapter. Al Hewitt, managing editor of the Dally News Tribune of i'ullerton and president of the SDX chapter aald any county newamen are we.loomt.. to attend lbe I: SO p.m. dinner at the SaddlObadt Inn, Santa Ana. Schmitz WU defeated for l'Hlectlon U a Republican Incumbent in the 11th Congressional District by a 11e11 0 r Andrew Hinshaw In the June primary election, Hlnlhaw received a 2,500 vote margin. As the American Party •tandard bearer in November, Schmitz drew one million votes or one percent or the na- tional vote. Schmitz and his family now live In Washington, but maintain a home In Tustln. Once a atate senator, Sclunlb formerly taught phllosopby, blstory and pol!Ucal science at Santa Ana Junior Oollege. * * * Electric Power To Be Discussed On .Channel .50 o...... C<>utlty'• future electrfcal power ~ and their poalble effecta on al. pollution will be dlscusled In a apedal program of Focuo Orange C<>unty on Channel 50 lonigllt at 6:SO. '!be program will be rtpeated at I p.m. 'lllllraday 00 the Cout Qlmmunlty College District staUon. The baU-bour pn>gram boated by Jim Cooper wlll review Southern Cali!omla Edison Compony plans lo ezpllld the nuclear generatln& plant at San Onolrt and the plans lo enlarge the steam plant In Huntington Beach. Robert Beck, Orange C<>unty dlvlalut manager for the Edison ()JmpanJ', repruentl the mmpany11 concerni over poulbl• power blackouta by 1975 00 the program. · James Somers. Orange County director for Stamp OUt Smog (SOS), on m- v!romnental group, uplailll bis group's Oppoa!Uon lo plant upanalon Oii the Channel 50 production. CONDITION WORSINS Wllll1m D. Mortin Ex-Laguna Mayor Martin Reported In Poor Condition Former Laguna Beach Mayor William D. Martin was nported in "poor con- dition" today 1n the intenalve care tmlt of South Coast COmmunlty Hospital. Martin, a prominent civic leader, had made ateady progress alter falling in bis garage three weeks ago and fracturing hlJ skull. He wu removed from the in- tensive care ward Friday. South Cout hospital aides said Martin waa returned to intensive care Saturday. 1lley aald a llroke had left the FesttVal of Arts director, former mayor and councJ1man and well·known dean of ()range c.unty pol!Uca parttally parall'7<: . ed. He'll Help Bush Learn The Ropes WASHINGTON (AP) -Republlcan NaUonal Chairman Robert J. Dole aald lod»y he la mlpin1 and that United NI· Uona AmbwadOr George lluJb ol Tuu has been picked lo rtplsce him. Dole, U.S. senator from Kanlu, an-. nounced bis Impending rtSilnltlon aa party chairman at 1 White lfoute news conference following a 4$-minute lellion with ,,President Nino, but deoled any Whl .. HOU!e prwure behind bis de<lsloo lo quit. Bush's actual election as chairman of the Republican N1tiooal OommllteO will be up to the committee Itself wben it meets here Jan. 19, but Ni.Jon's wishes are upected ,. be followed. White House preu secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Bush will continue as U.S. an:bassador to the United Nations through the current session of the U.N. General Assembly, and a replacement would be announced later. Dole said he agreed to "stay on in an advisory capacity for a month or two" to belp Bush brtak lnlo the job. "I find broad support for George Bush," Dole said. "We believe our Tuan wW beat their Tezan," Dole said in reference to Dalla3 lawyer Robert Strauu, elected cball'man o; the DemocraUc Party· Saturday. Dole met with President N-at Camp David, Md. Nov. 17 amid rtports he was being eased out u part of Ni.Jon's pMt-election r e v a m p i n g of the Administration and the RepubUcan Par- ty, but Dole denied he wu being forced out. "There was &Orne speculation that I went lo the m0W1talnlop lo be pushed off," Dole said. "But that· wasn't the case. I never planned on staying long into 1973." Ziegler backed Dole's verrlon and said, "At no Ume dkl President Nixon re- quest that Cbainnan Dole leave bis post." Hunter Rescued; Lived 2 Months Eating, Mice. SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (UPI) - A snowmobilm .... him. hunter who survived two months in a Duguay ll1d Mavraclc went Into thl! cabin by eating . mice and grubs was bush Oct. I with all bunt.ra. They went lo racued by anowmobilers SUnday after th<? Gray Owl Lake area, about 75 miles Dortb of S.ult ste. Marie, where a trap- walklnr for·eilbt days In 'the wilderness. per friend of M1vracic'1 owned a cabin. The bunter, Andros Mayradc, II. of The other oil: left after about two Gravenbunt, Ont., wu reported In ex-weeks but Mlvnclc stayed in the cabin llent ~ .... _ bee•-be tbougbt bis friend would "' ~ at a local hospital, return lo check bis trap ltneo, Duguay althongb doctors aald he waa wirg aald. from extreme fatigue and lost 32 pounds. The friend never appeared and U"IT..__ NEXT GOP CHAIRMAN? UN Amb1s.wdor Bush S upervisprs To Consider , Own Salaries Orange COunty supervbor's face up to the touchy subject of rala1.ng their awn salaries Tuesday. Bolotered by recommendations from the Grand Jury and the Gr•nge Coubty Chamber of Commerce, the board members will, in an open hearing, discuss lncrW!ng their current 117,llOIH· year pay. The open discussion contrasts with a closed door meeting \wo years ago dur· in'.! which ruperviaon informally decided lo raise their pay lo the level of munldpal court Judgea -129,000 a year. The move, news of which Jeaked out. led to a p u b 11 c uproar and recall movements against three aupenilon. The furor later waned. The Grind Jury and the chamber of commerce have since recommended that the tuperYlsora ralae their pay lo the munldpal court level. lnformal dlacuulona have \ndlcated that ·izs,ooo lo 127,500 • year might be the fillltt they will agr<e upon. This deapl.. the !act that many county ol· ficials are paid $32,000 or more, aome as high .. 112,000. J.os Anglea 1Upervlson are pal~ 138,000 a year and San DJego County leaden recenUy Increased their pay lo $22,000. MARK YAN DOREN, POET, DIES AT 78 Constable Ray J , Duguay · ol the MaY!'llclc'• provlalolll ran out Illa Ontario Provincial Poll-~Ai.1. two 5everal weeks. Duguay said he was TORRINGTON, Conn. (AP) -Mark ~ -f aid 1o 1 the bin beca •·• In Van Dortn, Pulitzer PriJe.wlnnlng poet, mowmobile:n found Mavradc when be a r eave ca use uu.es died Sund nl b th f 71 the area were not sufficienUy frozen ov"er ay g t at e age o . stumbled out of denJe country near the to walk on. The author of "Collected Poems," Batchanna river after walking 50 mllea Alter mld-Oclober, Mavraclc lived on willcb ""1 the 11 .. rary prhe In IMO, WU nonatop on mowsboes . · tea , salt, mice and pubs he d"i up admitted lo Charlotte H u n g er f o rd Mavraclc did not sleep during bis trek outalde. He also llltot one parlrfdgo and H"Pital Thursday for an undlocloled aiJ. becauaa be feartd that U he dldlie would one oqulrrel ~urlng bis walk. ment. never 1Wlke, Duguay tald. "On Dec. I be give up aD hope and put A prolific writer, bis woru !ncloded The mowmobllen said Mavraclc was c . bis snow sboel and started walking," "Don Quixote's Profession," several mumbUoc lncoberenUy and oovered with Duguay said. "He was warmly dreued volumes of poems, an autobiography and dirt, Duguay aald. and In excellent physical oondltloa and a play, ''The Last D•)'I of Lincoln." He wu 10 hungry be cut his nose that's apparently what saved him. We Van Doren lived in the Falls Wlage Robert Brewer Last Rites Held trying to eat a can of beans the estimate he walked about 50 mlles." section of Canaln, Conn. ,IF==::~~~~~ Funeral eervices were held today for Robert L Brewer, 50, former Santa Ana ..-.spaperman and dty coundlnum. Mr. Brewer died Fridly at Tusttn Community HOIPltal of p n e um on I a following a br1el lllnoss. In the early 1-he wu 1 cohtmnlst on the old Santa Ana Independent and aerved U I dty councilman from 1111 lo 1982. He was I veteran of World War U . County Crashes Qaim Two Lives Two persons. died In aeparate traffk acddenls during the -kend In OrlJJre County, the county coroner reported fc>. day. One waa a !111t1Ungton ~ woman. Helen l@lse Schal>atl<a, 15, of 11512 Marie Lane, died Saturday nlcht lfW she was struck by a car while attempUnc to crou Knott and-Monroe A vtn• to Butnl Park m fool 1lle driver, 11mothy Shipman of Anabtlm, WU not held, police iald. Robert Qubman, 11, Upland, died Sltn- day night wbeli bis car ..-.1 lnlo 1 1parked truck on the Oranle Fr<oway ilor1b ol Lambert Street In l'ltllortoc. .Film' Producer Dies LOS ANGELES {AP) -J-H. Nlcbolton, 58, producer of "I Wu a Teenop w ..... oll" and other ftlllll, died Sunday. Olhlr ftlma ht plOCluced Jn. eluded "How to Stuff a Wild Blklnl," "Dr•r Strip Girl" and "Beach Blankeet Blnco." - Santa Oaus Sez: This Christ1nas Gift keeps on giving-Spring Summer, Fall and Wint.er. Atala 288 T• of lta~. Sinplex ecp1•- Abll 104 Gran Prix, C.papole ecp1ipped- l'rllesslnl Atala 101 Ricard, Faff Cllqrafllolo. 67~·5051 2120 West Ocean Front .:.:.::.: ::-=:.. .! I • 1":;. "tfl ClliM • 10 ........ ..... , ........ w ... ...... 'Ill ', .. : • • I -· -11. 1'172 ; ' • • !Supervisors r ·Pass the Hat RICICY TICICY POUTIX -Ba<k In 1970, members of. our Orange c.ounty Boan(ol Supervisors wi5tlully looked In- to their wallets aM found the coo.tents ·wanting. So they startod...,. maclllnery rolling to get themselves a raise m pay. About that time, a large number of our good <OWJly citizens looked Into their wallets too. They discovered litUe there but maybe a couple of dead moths. Most of the3e citizens, unlike the supervisors, couldn't flglD'e a way to get ~ raise. So, when the citizen..(ypes found out that the supervisors were about to fatten their hip pockets, all bell broke loose. 1be result was that the supervisors retreated. Faced with a public uproar, they decided the 117,500 they were taking home was just fute and no sense making a big fuss about lt. SO UNSE'l"IUNG w,. the public noise of .lbot "l!Jile that they've left their ,saiates a1mie "' the two years beoce. ~tbe~~G~~t~~= ;mSbers have ooce again been probing ,Into the --ol their pocketbook& and probably comparinJ the <oolelts with ;thuie ol other Coonty Seat luminaries. , Some of these other officials are even ··suwooed 'to work fof the five board :,.members. · ~......._ ' So while toolrty supervlsOh make t .$17,500, the county's director of aviation, ~for example, makes $23,61&. The bead of building services gets $27 ,156. The road .<commissioner is compensated with '$38,516. The clrlef nood control engineer 'makes the same. Even the ta.I collector • gets $20,623. ' YOU MIGHT CONCLUDE that In our 't cotm.ty, appointed offlclals all mate moll!! than elected officials. Not quite .oo. The ~a!IES!IUr is elected and bis annual r poydleck is 131,IOI. Meanwhile, the elected District Attorney collects 131,532 • In his 11nnua1 llgbt against crime and • DDdie ban. ' Alas, it all ......... clear that the county supeniws are on the abort end ol the payroll line Ui> at'tbe Oaomty Sea~ Aml •.h!J ht\·~ ..... g way beck there. 'nley figure tbal ofter all, they a r e ealleOtially stttin.g as a Board of Direc- tors for a ccrporation worth more than $300 million -which is our county government -and as the shakers and movers ol such an awesome outftt, they ought to be worth a few more bucks to us tupoyers. ONE OF THE REASONS o u r supervi!on take auclt beat In aalary ma~ Im is that 1ll08l people "'" of figure them like a city councilman. 'lbat is. tbeY are part-lim< help and shoold be doLng something else to make money. They should be running the dty -or county -sort ol like a hobby. Well, that may be okay in some little village where the OO<llldl'a irlnclpal °" cupalion is to preside over a railroad mioslng. But a 1300 millioo outfd? That may be another question. To lop ~ all olf, Orange County's l!llpef'Visorial counterparts up in LA County make $36,000 eac:b year and down in San Diego County the supervisors reoeotly boosted their own paychecks to 112.000. No wonder the Cive poor fellows who sit on our board are beginning to suffer in- feriority complex of the wallet. ANYWAY, YOU HAVE to figure the 1'.lpervison selected a good lime of year . to trot out the aalary question again. 'Tis the Yuletide season for giving. Who wants to be an Ebene7.er Scrooge? 117 Re6 Kllld Tip Fi;om Enem.y Aids Vie t Fi~~ • .. ' ' .. • 11 Divorce Pending ... _ SAIGON (lJPI) -~ YlelnaJJ8e milltamen acting m a dp mm a 'Viet °"" deledar lnten:epled • Comml/•lrd -~ lnlm...<:omlwlla toward Salp lodoJ ud killed '" In • bliter fliht · Jaat· 42 miles nori!IWat ol 'Ille <apltal, military -aaid. 'nit l!ibllni brote out nine miles ...u. ol Tto,y lilnb omln<e oaP!t&I ud. -lllll ...... on lite In the ..no.-, Vie>- ,._ -said. llJglrnJ 11 lillklng T11 Ninh lo Salion, Ill milel awoy, WU cut and "W•""' got • the (lommunlst bodies llladed an the road," one South Vletn1u._ olllcer said. Gooenunent cuwdtlel In the first 10 bOurs .of figbllng were tlree wounded, be aald. edS':!'As!:.~=·r=i ":t Stanislas 'Stash' Radziwill has confirmed the persistent rwnot ~t he and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' sister, Lee, will be divorced. The oouple were married in Virginia ln 1959 and ln a Cathclic cere- mony in London ln 1963 after the Vatican granted annulment~ Prin- military apoteanen aald today, wre<:king one of the WI tf.S. Arm,y bases In the war rone and cutting back a Ir strikes througllout the country. But the U.S. command l8id B5Z bombers, wbidl Dy above the ""4tl:er, Dew their beovlest one-day raids In the Saigon area lo more cess Radziwill's previous marriage. · Israeli Spy Ring Broken Moshe Dayan Target of Dangerous Syrian Assass ins By United Press International TEL A VIV (UPI) -Poli<e .. 1d today the biggest and moot dangerous spy ring ever smashed in Israel had plaruu!d to assas&nate government officials, in- cluding Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, in the near future. The disclosure came as the number of suspects arrested since last week rose to ls Margaritt McCausland, I stewardeoa. e POWa Mo t>etr. The clJalrman of Ibo "Reikmber the Pueblo" committee aaid today be bad rec:elved lnfonnatim . that 11$ U.S. servkemen were belng held prisoaer In Laos and that 141. otben bad been moved Boopltal Dibtlng effects of • -sui-t.nod Oct. u. iUck<nbacker arrived In Mlaml fn>m lo POW camps inside China. • AUetul,e Vlait The Rev. Paul D. Lindstrom, c;ba1rman ( ) of the group that was lormed after the MIAMI (pPI) -Oille's Marxist Presi-JN SHORT,,, capture of the U.S. lnleillpace veioel dent lialvador Allende got a tamultnoos Pueblo by North Korea Jan. :13,J!lll, told welcome fnlm Prime Minister Fidel '-----------reporte;s In Banglrat be roceived bll U.. Castro and th<"5and• ol c:beerlng, Oag- 38 with the seizure of 17 Arabs from their formatt00 from 80lll'CeS in Vlentllne. the waving Cubans when be arrived in homes In northern Israel during the Laotian capital. In Sal&'oa Sunday, be Havana Sunday nigbt. night Four ol thooe in c:ustody are said Sooth Vielnameoe """""" tolcH1im Live .,.,,,.,.,_ of the ....t WU broad- Israell Jewa, the ntbeni Arabs. that only m of~ 154 _,,U.S. POWs -<ast by an island-wide hookup of radio m North V--..; would be -stations monitored in Miami. Deputy Superintendent of Poll<e Uriel under terms of the peace !lettlement c:ur-Radio .......,.,.. said """'* at = calli:!t the~ 'PY~ ~: renUy being negotiated m Paris. Havana's Jooe Marti Ai!p11t and alang dangerous that we have come up against the 11-mlle motcx'cade route into town aln<e 191&," the ,..,.11ie lllate..,. boru. • Fl ... Aee IU shouted "Viva .Allende" (Latlg U... •cruk P robe CHICAGO (AP) -lnvesttgalors oon- linue lo sift lhlougb the cilarred pie<es of a United Air Lines Boeing 'm jet whicit crashed in a ne1ghborbood bere Friday, trying lo find the cause of the disaster. The job ol ldenlllying the bodies of the 45 victims eDded SuMay. In some cases. relatives did not recognize victhns, and the coroner's office was forced to rely on dental charts and linl!"JX'inis. Twelve of \be 18 victims who survived the crash remained bospltallzed, in- cluding ooe in an intensive care unit. She Wicks 'TUNNEL. •• ·Lave. --· . ,,_ MIAMI (UPI) -World War I Dying ace Eddie Rickenbacker rema!oed in serious coodition Sunday at Mercy Allende), waved Oillean and Cuban flap and held up signs with slogans ~ "Fidel, Allende, El pueblo 1os defleude" (Fldel, Allende, The people dtfend you), Explosions Rock 3 Cuhait I Aid Offices in NY, Miami By The Asoodated l'fta Three explosions early today damqed a O.ban relugee<>wned lnrvel agmey In New York and New York and Miami of. fices of a firm which forwards parcels from the United Slates lo CUba, pollce sakl. The rim esplosion sballered the office of the VA-Cuba Forwarding Co. Jn .Miami at about 3:2fl"a.m., ~said, followed by blasts at VA-Ollia:a New Yort olflce in Washington lleighta 1and tho Calypao Travel Agency In Queens shortly aft« 4 a.m . THERE WERE "NO reporta ol Injuries. Pollce In Mlam1 aaid Ibey bellewd an antl.COmmtinist refngee --waa responsible for the aplollons, "but we really are Just spec:ulalln& rfCbl now. There are so many anli-Olmmunbt groups operating ri8ht now we coaldn't even begin to say ·who cUd it." lo blow up the bosiness. Both blasts Jn New York heavily damaged the businesaes and --dows Jn neighboring businesaes and apartments. Federal -ts wero invesllpllng ·all three e.plosions. MIAMI POIJCE aald the bomb that wrec:ked the olfu:es of the YA-Cuba <om- pany In Ibo city's LitUe Havana sec:tlm was placed on a window )edge behind an Ironwork grlJI outside the building. The building aloo houses I · CUban refugee clJnJc and offices of the U.S. Im- migration and Naturalization Servk:e, but police said the damage was cooflned primarily lo the VA.Qiba ofllce and an auto belonging to one of the company's owners. ; . . . • Lepl proceedings are under way aglinat actress Rita Hay.. 'l\Wlh f0< allegedly walking out on a .film she was making in Londo'n. Ji. World Film Serv· Ices director Slid the legal ... tlon wu prompted by tbe 'con- siderable l06s cauaed to the compmny.' I'll bet the supervisors don't. So In the spirit ol the ......., yoo <an )Jiii bet they'll give tbem!elves something thi.s time. Poli<e In New Yort said Anarda Fa!-.,,._ of the travel. agency, told them she bed -leJopbooe <aila from unldenllfled _ ... 11o.- "It was a bomb explosion, some kind of lnfemal devl<e set with an electrtcal tfmer,•• llkt Miami Dlstrict Fire Qief Dan Heydel', who added that a police bomb oquad found frqmeota ol. lhe - in the wnckap. The bomb flew out one wan ol 1111 of- flee and wred<ed a c:ar oWned by 1larlo Del Gado, one ol the company's ollk:en, pollee aald. Jlofthy!Js ,Baek Ice Glazes South Plains But Seaboard Has Good Weather; Snow Hits North l.l"Wf4llftt0f0CAS1e kcond Jow i.' ....... ,., t :Ntt.'"· 0,, TUllDAY ''"' NOii ·•··••·•·• ''' 1;1tl,l!'ll ..... 1"1"1 ,_ ............ ., 7:ll01.m. ••• a.cw "'"' " ... ······ 12~2' O.lft. u ... ·--... ", .... ,,.. ... ··-1:" I .I'll. ii" I! .. '·"'· 4.t •WI :-.I.IT\. kit I :It Jl.m, l • Dr. Inoc:ente Larazabal, • Cuban refugee plJysiclan, said be WU uleep OD a couch In the Miami Cuban Allocla- tion'a -<llnlc In the front of the building at the time of Ibo blast. 0 IT LIFTED ME oa the couch and I thought It waa a plane <rash 1"1tll I amelled gunpowder," Laraiabal told p0ll<e through an Interpreter. He aald be did not apeak enough English to <all poll<e blmaelf, ... he teiepboned bll daughter at borne and asked her lo con- tact -.a. ' • 'Pr~'s Off Sa ys Fiseher ' ( • ' 17 17 ' I ' I Orange 'Coast , EDITION • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 65, NO. 346, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALlr.0RNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER II, 1972 N TEN CENTS No Suits Filed -on Trailer Park Violations Newport Beach lw not bad to file court aqlon against any of lbe city's dozen trailer park! to get ~tlon in a cra~down on health and safety code violations. Building offl<er Bobby Fowler !aid lo- doy that the sb pal"b be lbreatened to take to court two'J\'eekl ago have now all furnlalied the ~llmlnary in/onnatton hi! office needs to C8l'1'Y out the lnspectlona. ' uwe~e received up-to.datt regist.t's and all the guy1 have staked out their lots," Fowter said. · "We now begin oor lot-by-lot ln· specl!ons. We will be giving operators a detailed list of corrections as we 10 tbrou.gh the parks, II be said. Fowler gave five day• noUce to the six paRs to · f),lmlsb a lilt of trailer owners and· mlirk oil the Individual lots or be ' token lo coort. Fowler said the city will furnish the park managers With a liiit of the viola- tions found at each of the individual trallera. . He said it will be their responsibility to see that correctiom are made and the ci- ty will' not deal with trailer residents, ln- dividually. "It's the responsibility of the inanager ·and operator to see to it that his par.Jc. is maintained,'' Fowler said. "It will then be bis responsibility lo uk that the In- dividual tenant make corrections or move out." • Fowler said be boj>es "the city will not get involved in any evictions. It's the park's ressiOlflibillty,f' be said. Fowler alto disclosed that the State of Califonila will terminate Jts lease to a Boron man for Sandy's Delu1.e Trailer Park, 2912 West Coasl Highway, as of Jan. l. It was a resident of that park, James campolo, who trigered the crackdown two months 11go wben he appeared before councilmen complaining about living con· ditions. Fowler said he does not know what jllans the state has for the park. • "They will probably want to get oriente<I to the problems and then decide whether to try to correct them or·aban· don the park." he said. 1 The state bought the trailer court , along with several other Coast Highway properties, several years ago when it planned to build the Pacific Coast Freeway. 'l'he freeway bas ~been eliminated from highway pla!is. • oon oes _as1 Nbon Request - -Wage-price Curb Extension Seen WASHINGTON (UPI) -Prtsldeot Nlzon will ask Congress to extend the cumot ecooomlc controls beyond April 30, tm wllen they are due to ezplre, ~111..,-Secnotary George P. Schuln said today. At 1, W)ile """'" news cooftlel)Ce, --llld the l'reltdent <loclded to lteae -lo the federal uecut11· . lnnc:h, CcmfliW• and the judldaey. = .. ':m.""0:.-~ -r:': I~ dvlllm 11111·~ ~­thnticb Illa-Jlltllai')'=lbo lrlt budpt will :.-=: ' ADd ll• ·~ Inc ~. Olld tbore Would be ·;err llll:iUDtial ndactloas"· m the J>J-1·1 ~ ·tilf!. Sllllll, Nb0n'1 chief e coo om l c tpOl:eoma•, !aid .. dec:llllaa bad been reodied rn bow lco,. the nm '!>!>ale of w~l'flnt coatJala lbould list. Jaouary, when N'IXOD sends to Congress hi! IJudcel for flscal 1971, beginning July l, 1973. Shultz sakl it wu an "open question" whether the admioiatnllon woold ask c.onar-to , extend the Economic stahiliuUoo Act ln..ita preseot.Iorm or to modify ...,. of Its provisions. But be added: 0 1'm ruling out ju.st llOinl back to an uncootrolled system with a otatemeot that everyone ought to -.. lo such and such • -and boplnc that lhq do," ~ . . . .,__ A i r Cal Chwf Says Hug~s Rumor Bunk To help decide this qnestlm, si.altz Aid, ~ -id be a "wide plOCeSS ol -1tatloo" with.tabor, eooar .... con-........ and members ol the current Air California l'Mldent Robert Clif- .....mlc siobllla!!on l*<JCnlm. ford todly d~lued u a "wild, wild On~ toi*I, Sdlultz said the Pm!. rumor" reports that l!oward Hughes was d<nl bad been 11U<te111u1 lo boldioc llP<D' goinc to merge Air Cal with Hughes d!ng in the current budBet to '2IO blllloo Ainrest. and that the bud(el fol fl9Cal 1971, which Cllffoid said the Westgate-Cal~oroia will be l!llbmllted to Congress lo Jaouary, Co tloo still ioteods to rOC<ed Ith would be in balance on a full employment rpora P w plans to sell to Pacilio Southwest Airlines ~ said :he pt\!lldenttal docl-(':)ai.i tt -be • federal .... to CID the cootrofa -. "m·~·"• ioten1f>. ·-,lry to -.r• with Alrwest. peodenl and supportive." lie said It re-"Any ,......,. o1H"..._0r Continental ~~~ ~--'I ... _ .IJ-:-.JI-to ......... ....... •-.:-. i11AUA -.... ~1.U.UNI~ tatbtc 0Ytt ~ tbere11 DO truth· to it," nlllntaln the ~ iollatloo lo the Clifford Olld. atnmgest •11 . " "We operate under the P u c '!be pay ICtloo freezes the cumot (Califomla Public UUllliea Commission). ilalarieo of all membei of government al 'Ibey are controlled by the CAB (federal the llC><alled '1ederal execuUve level." C!vO Aeronautics Board). -Thll liidudes bliI>-raoklnc members of "It would lake federal legislation to government, """""""' and federal permit 1~" be said. judges. It .,...... aalary ICales ~ Speculatloo about a possible Air Cal· from i.,ooo to flll,000. -i -.est merger mM over the weekend '!be llirinl freeze In the eacuUva when eluslv~ bllllooa1"' Howard Hughes branch will last at least unUI late was -.portedly making plans lo come to Orange Cowity.-or was already here. Frost Flashes ·On 2 Stations 'Tis the season orange ranchers and gardeners alike wonder a lot aboUt frost. Air California and PSA. have nm.into unexpected roadbloc:b Jn their attempts to Jner(e. '!be U.S. Jusllce Department last week flied suit to prevent tbe deal, charging It would create a monopoly in llO<llHoulh air traffic Jn Calltornia. Cllfford, adnµttlng that the outlook fOT the merger may hove been dimmed aomowba~ said 'the airlines are ready for the fight. 11If we have to go to court, we'll go to (See AIR CAL, Page !) DAil Y l'ILOT ,,.... .., llldlltf 1( ..... AS TEMPERATURES PLUMMETED, IT WAS TIME FOR SCULPTURING SNOWMAN IN NEWPORT BEACH Wendy Polzer, 23, Had Limited Snqw SUpply; It W11 lmport0tj From' Like Arrowhead No County Crops Damaged Yet; Forecast Says Colder Recent night frosts In the Irvine, El Toro and San Juan Capistrano areas of Orange County have not seriously damaged large quantities of fruit but growers will eye the thennometer loolghl warily. "ll it goes much below 21 tonight for very long, all we can do Is pile another blanket On our beds and pray,'' a spokesman for the Irvine Valencia Growers Associiition saJd. · Willlam Hacke], National Weather Service forecaster in Orange, predicts tonight will be tbe wonit of the current series of below freezing nights. He looks for temperatures in the "mid- 205" and colder· in the sheltefed areas of San Juan Capistrano, the Irvine coastal plain and El TorO. Winds through Santa Ana Canyon are expected to spare fruit crops in Yorba Linda and Placentia, he sajd. Uno wlnds stir up the air in the south county grow- ing areas, however-, frosts may well do severe damage to the Va1encia crop. Va1encias, not due to be harvested until April, ·are in the most "critical" stage of '. their l:levelopment now, a 1tage when the buit is most susceptible to frost damage. Depending on the depth of the blanl<et of fJ'08t· Iaden air over the groves, wind machines can help save the crops. But, ll the ceiling of air ts loo high, the wind machines are of little use. Along with the forecast -of ·low tem- peratures, the ceiling outlook tonight is not good, ohJy wind or a cloud· cover can ease the threat of the freeze. Since frosts became a regular nightly occurrence, . the lowest temperature recorded in a towity grove was last Saturday morning when an Irvine tberemometer dipped to 26, Hackel said. Mrs. Hazel King, First Female Realto r, Dies Mrs. Ha:iel Grant King, 3 Newport Beach resident since 1958 and the first woman in california to be licensed to sell real estate, died Sunday. She was 84. Known throughout the profession as "the mother of women in rtal estate," Mrs. King obtained her license in 19'20, becoming only the second woman in the United States to do so. She opened an all·woman office -the Hazel M. Grant Co. -in Pasadena, a short time tberafter. Mrs. King and her husband, who died in 1961, moved to Newport Beach 15 years ago and cqnverted a summer cot- tage in Corona <tel Mar to a large home tbat still stands at 330 Poppy St. Mrs. King opened a small office on Via Opotto In 1959 and worked full.time until she became ill and was forced to retire l.n 1964. Her last home was tbe Glenhaveo Con- valesetmt Hospital in Newport Beach.. ll'wo Orange County · radio .ta- Uons and KFI in Loi Angeles offer the latal iolormatloo OG espected frosts each nlcl)t durlnl the ·aeaaon, W!lllam Rac:n1 of Orange ts the Nattooal Weother Service Frull Frost Service eor--. lo tbls area.· Peters 'Seenied Normal' Mrs. King was active in many local , state and naUooal groups unLil her death. . Sfte was a rounder's member or the Women's Council in Real Estate, a charter member of the 1.onta Club and an honorary director or the State Board of Realtors. Services for Mrs. King, who leaves no survivors, will take place Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the Weslcliff Mortuary Chapel, in Costa Mesa. Bis ~ .,. part of the statewide "1>ort beard It 7 and I p.m. on KFI. lie also prepares a report Umiled lo Orange County temperaluret. It Is aired on JGV1Z at 7:115 1nd 1:05 p.m. and OG KEZY at I: 10 and 9 p,m. nlghUy. • --' Girl~iend Testifies in Double Slaying Trial 87 TOM llAIU.EY Of .. Del" ...... ...., Proaecutor-l'at Brian put aii Pet.n• pafamour back on the wttneu ttand ~ day and cot the 1dmla$loa that bet lover had never ahown any slpo of mental Ul- neas lo the nine _,lbs lhat pr-... his = ~. partDtl at lhelr Huntington Prtniol hlf point over npeatec! and ~ objectloal bl' delenae attorney Tarn, Brfao uked Anne " oo at. wltlLG11,700 llept wltb b!m, you talked with him and you knew him iotlllll\talY Jn II*" nine ll10tllbl, Rllbt!" "Yea1 tblt'1 ri&ht," the attricUve Sctlppo Colleco lftduale rtplled. • "Now then, did be ever at any time show any slgns of mental lllnessT" Brian asked u Tarlow's repeated objections were overruled. "No/' Mlss Bartholomew q u i e t 1 y replied. , Brian ,...fled the 23-yoar .. ld git! who shared Peten' loot aojoum lo a Sao Diego County desert commune for lestlmooy lhtot wlll, he said, be a vital pr:rtlon of bll argument that Peters, 1', was saoo when be murdered bit parents 1'Jll1I rr,1mc- Both oldeo bellevo tllot tbe-lslue wlll go lo the 0r..,.. County superior Court jury Wedneocla1 with Tatlow arguing that Peters' mental state at the ttme of the ' ldlling comes undet the legal dtflo!UOG ol "diminllbed ea;iaclty." Tarlow, ~ly angered al the testimony obtahied by Brtsn this morn- ing, ••keel MISI ~rtbQJ9f0eW In cross e1amination:' · "A'nne; dO you belle\le that Gig Petm I.I 11 prophet of God?" The strawberry blonde studied the question for aneral minutes !o the bust> eel courtn>om, , "I think he knows a lot o! tb!nlls lhal other people don't know," ahe then repli«t-u -Prttta-1e.aneG lii'Wardli\ !Ji• wt.e<lchalr lo caloh the arilwer, Pete11 ls confined to that wheelchair u the re1t11t of lnjilrlec be recttved a year ago in an.. earlltr Superior Court trlal on (See ~.Pap II t. DAILY PILOT AD PEOPLE PLEA.SER DAILY PILOT classified want adt are people pleasers. See this: GUITAR-Elec. w/case. Xln't c:ood. Paid 13!0. Sell ll'IS or bit ofr. Amp avail ux-un. 1lle lulJar._was sold as _, as the ad appeared which p eiiii<I 60ih the aol- vertlse.r and the guitar'• new owner. U !'Oil have aomelhlog to ,.u, dial direct 642·567& It'll be a pleasure. ' I Astronauts Land For Last Time SPACE-CENTER, Houston CAP) Americans landed on the mom todly for the sirtb and perhaps final lime lo this century. Apollo 17's lunar craft 02allenger touched down smoothly In a. rugged box canyon for the start of a three-day l!Al"Ch roc knowledge. "You can tell America that Clallenger is at Taurus·Littrow ," nubed the word from the moon. 1be iime on earth was 11:55 a.m. PST. Astronauts Eugene A. c.eman, a Navy pUot oo his third space flight, and Har- rison H. Sc:bmilt, the first American tclen~ in apace, pkled Cballenpt cwr lunar in01D1taliil and down to the critter- pecked floor ol the ...,,.. called TaanJs. Littrow. "We is here," said Ceman moments after landing. "Man i! we here." Ceman and Schmitt came to the lnooo in the last Apollo to search for rocks and data to fill in as yet not understood tbap- ters of lunar history. They will ljlOod 75 hours on the moon, mate tbrel ex- ploratiops Ci>Vering a total af • mnes in an electric car and gather about 200 pounds of moon samples. They will also erect an atomic--Poftl'ed science station which will study the moon ror years after they leave and take hun- dreds of pholographs. The third~member of the crew, Renald Evans, was orbiting the moon in the com- mand ship. The final descent of Challenger started at about 50,000 feet and the astronaub quickly learned their flight path was high and slighUy off course. As the fleeting spacecraft d!opped toward tbe moon, Ceman, at the controls, and Schmitt, reading numbers from an on- board computer, conected their course. They bad fuel and room to hover, sea lect the exact spot to touch down - much as a helicopter over Its pad. "Alan, that loou good," !aid Cernao moments after he and Schmitt fired the powerful rocket engine of Challenger to start the long, arcing drop toward the moon and three days of exploraUon. The approach path toward landing ..., high and north of the planned tra}ectory and the astronauta worked quickly to cor· reel their aim. Moments later, Mission Control came in with "You're on the line." "Ohhhh," said Ceman, at one point. "'nlere's the ole earth." O>.allenger kept shooting over the lunar (See APOLLO, Page !) Oraage Weatlter The weatbulady says you can unbutton the top button on your overcoat on Tueaday, It'll. be a llllle bit warmer. Hlglts ol 5M5 are ezpec:ted. Ovemll!il lowi, -ever, Will run from ' (brT) 11 to them~ !Os. INSW E TODAY The IDOl'd'I OUI agcrin lllol th~~·· Qotno to be: a de1tnu:tit11 tarthquokc tn San Ftcmcilco. Thit timt, it's "ach.edultd" fpr Jan. 4. Set atoru, Pagt 5. ...... II a.IMllllwt I• ~ . ....,... .. -=--..,';--..'"="-."":: -~. -1·--c~ 11 ......,. .. ,, ..... ~ ............... 11 ........ ~ ... ,.......... " lw•111M1111 It ~ ff " ...... 1 .. 11 ..... t ...... "'""' . .__.. ..... "''' ""'lltlJI M Wlirtil -4 • I• IWlY PILOT N Mesa Panel Jndustry Park Plans Expected Plans for a new concept In Industrial industrial tracl ever developed in the ci- parks will be unveiled before tht COsta ty. h b The tract is proposed for location south Atesa Planning Comn1ission tonig t Y a of the San Diego Freeway, sutheast of Newport Beac h dev..:.lopment firm work· Red Hill Avenue and northeast of ing on a $-4 million project near Orange McCormick Avenue on 50 acres of land ~t A~ recently annexed to Costa Mesa. ~ o( \he commission will con-Planners say the project Tepresents a sider granting a wne exception and a radical departure !rom nonnal industrial tentative tract map for the Don Koll complexes because its co mp o n e nt Company project ·.vh'.?n they meet at 6:30 buildings will be owned, not leased, by p.m. 1n ci1y council chambers, 77 Fair tbe tenants. Drift. "We believe this to be the fint ffi.. Arnold F. Hamala . chief of advanced dustrial condominiUI"" in the country and planning for the city of Costa Afesa, lhe Don KoU Company thinks it will predkted today that the 94-unit complex become a prototype for othen," 18id would become the largest multi-tenant Hamala. "They think it might become a new rage." Under the condominium s y s t e m , M L d building owners would enjoy tu ad· oose 0 ge antages which are not available to leaseholders. Parking areas, landscaping 4 and other servic.?s such as perhaps a L B •d com puter and a sandwich shop, would be oses i "common:· and, their cost shared by the condominium tenants. Though the project will be located im· 0 Bl k B mediately o.1djacent ~o the airport, it will n ac an not cater exclusively to aeronautlc:s- oriented industries. Envisioned is a va· \VASHING'l'ON (APl -A ttoose Lodge today unanimously lost a U.S. Supreme Court appeal designed to keep out Negro guests. \\1ithout fur ther comment. the court said the appeal by the Pennsylvania lodge failed to pose "a substantial federal question.'' The Harrisburg lodge was ordered last July by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to serve black guests. The dispute centered around K. Leroy Irvi.s, a black, who is majority leader of the state House of Representatives. In its appeal , the lodge said by the same reasoning the dining room of every private home in the country would be open to the public if guests who were not members of the family were served once. Last June. in a 6-3 decision, the high court ruled Lodge 107 was not required to serve Jrvis or any othea Negro just because the club operated with a liquor license from the state. The Pennsylvania court's ruling the foUowing month stemmed from the same incident. In 1968, lrvis and a group of other legislators went to the lodge for dinner. It is a half block from the state Capitol. Irvis '!'~ refused serrice. Tbe lkluor license argument was based on the theory that blacks cannot be bar· red from places whose operations depend on state officials. 'Ibat was rejected by the Suprome Court. Tbe Pennsy\van\1 court Tu l e d , howeveT, that by opening its dining room to white nonmembers, the clut became a place of "public accommodation" under the state human relations law and would have to serve black guests as well. Jn another case, the father of a slain Kent State University student was turned down today by the Supreme Court as be tried to sue the state of Ohio for damages. Arthur Krause, whose daughter Allison was 1'.llled in the campus disturbance May 4, 1970, was barred by the Ohio State Supreme Curt ta.I July from suing the state without the consent of the Ohio ~~lature. From Pagel PETERS ... the same charges. The former lifeguard was shot in the spine as he tried to escape from Judge Kenneth Williams' court.room during the noon hour recess. Doctors believe the resulting paralysis may keep Peters in a wheelchair for the rest of his life. Peters is accused of stabbing his father Charles Peters, 55, through the heart and then strangling his mother Flora, 54, at the family 's Uncoln Street home. Mrs. Peters was a teacher at Lincoln School in Corona del Mar. OUN•I COAST • DAILY PILOT "Ole Ol'wngt C..SI CM.ILY "ILOT, Wllll wtlidl " _....., 1llt "-'"r..s. It PUOllshfd by fM ~ c..it ,._.I.it .... ~.~ rete ~ •r. PlllllblMd, Mon!Hy llM'ovgll .. ,....,, tor C.0.1• MeM, .. .-port hKl't, *"~ ~"1Mcfvl'-1t1n v•11rt, ~ 1.-cf!. lrvfnllkdaltlMdi: •rid kn Cltmtnkl Son JvM C.1'11tr•no ,.. tlftlllt •'91o!wl •1t1tn It lllltllhMd S.tutd.IYI ..,, 5uncl1ys. n. ,..w:.,_1 pubfb.hln; Pltnl It •I UJ Wnt hy Strw!, Cati• Mft.I, Ctlltomll, 9242'. riety or "clean" industry including elec- tronics, assembly and manufacturing. Assistant Planning Director Richard Dahill ~aid the floor space of the buildings will umount to approximately 592 ,000 square feet. That represents about hall as much floor space es South Coast Plaza. Accused Rapist Denies Entering Victim's House Accused rapist Walter Hampton today denied that be ever entered the Corona del Mar home of a woman who bas iden· tified him as the man who beat and sex· ually assaulted her before two of her three YOWi( children. Hampton, 31, of Oakland, testified u the final witnes.! before an Orange Cowr ty Superior Olurt juey that will tater to- day mull charges of rape and usault fil. ed against him that be was called baclt to Oakland oo an emergency last July 27. He denied in Judge Kenneth Lat's courtroom that be left bis coostructlon job oa Larkspur A....,. and "'1loed illlo the nearby house of the vlctl.m before. hitchhiking a ride to Los Angeles Inter- national Airport. The alleged victim, 31, has told the jury that Hampton repeatedly beat her, once with a heavy bedroom lamp, before he raped her while her 8-yeaMld daughter looked on and her 6-month-old baby lay nearby in its crib. Hampton today rejected her story and l<lld Ute jury that the ooly time be had ever seen the alleged victim was when she passed by the nearby construction site. He also denied that he removed a number of valuables from the home of his employer before be left. Police said they found the va1uables a m o n g Hampton's beloo.gings when they ar- rested him in Oakland. Hampton today told the jury that Newport Beach police threatened to kill him when he returned to Onuige County. "I told them please don't shoot me," he told the panel. The jury will go into deliberation later today after final arguments from o~ posing lawyers. From Pagel AIR CAL ... court," he said. "But there is · no way that a merger between Air California and Hughes could ever happen," he said. "It's a wild, wild rumor, like the one that Hunt Wesson Foods, which owns some bus companies back East, was going lo acquire us. "That would take approval of the Interstate Commerce Comm.lssion," he said . The PUC is expected to act next month on the Alr Cal-Airwest request that has been opposed by the commission's own legal staff, on grounds similar to those in the Justice Department complaint. A, ,.._.,.. .. _ l'Mfl APollO 17 LANDING SITE , TAURUS.LITTROW, SHOWN IN CENTER OF NARROW l(AllEY M-ior Mountain Fronts, th•. North and. South Massifs, Border Field of Exploration Peace Talks On; Chou Reportedly Optimistic PARIS IUPI I -White House adviser Henry A. Kissinger held one more secret meet ing Ydth Hanoi negotiators today and a French radio station quoted 'United' Drive Appears to Fall Short of Goal Indications are that the Harbor Area United Way will almost -but not quite -reach its goal of $504,000 when the results are tallied tonight. Merritt Johnson, executive director or the agency serving Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and Irvine, predicted this morn- ing that the final tally would be around $475,000. "That means we will be 94.S percent Of the way toward our goal," be said. "We had hoped to bave a final tally to- night but tt looks like ii may DOI be as final "' we tbougbL We're still reaching for our big goal and will therefore keep the campaign open for the remainder of the year in the rmn belief that we can reach .lt." • -~ 'Jbose persons who have not yet con- tributed were reminded by Johnson to contact the Harbor Area United Way at 6f.Z.-07SZ or to write to P.O. Box 12.84, Newport Beach, 92663. Johnson added that the Harbor Area United Way was closer to meeting its goal th.an any of the other four subsidiar· ies of the Southern Orange Cotmty United Way. ' Collection estimates for the others-- the Orange Community United Way, the Santa Ana·Tu.stin Communty Chest, the Orange Community United Way, the South Coast United Fund and Ute Laguna Beach Community Che!t-were not avail- able this morning. Newport Trash Pickup in .Alleys Will Start Again Newport Beach trash truck!: will start pickup31 in the alleys of Newport Heights again, now that reconstruction work there is finished, a city official said to- day. Staff Engineer Ken Perry said crewa are nearly done repaving the alleys but there has been some confusion among homeowners just where to put out the trash. "While the work has been going on, it has gdne out front," Perry said. "Now that it is finished, it can go in back again w!.ere it has always gone in the past." Perry said some pickups have been missed be<:ause hall the people put !rash out front and half put It In back. The alley reconstructlon, which In- cluded lnstallalion of new sewer and water pipes in a 12·block square area of Newport Heights. bas been In progress since early summer. Chi nese Premier Chou En-Lai as saying 11 cease-fire agreement might come in tvt'o or three days. The report coincided with Washington dispatches Implying t h e re ba~ been more progress in the talks than indicated in pessimistic l'<POl'ts thought to have originated. from the Viet Cong represen- tatives. Kissinger and several aides sat down with North Vietnamese negotiators ~ Due Tho and Xuan Thuy in a heavily guarded villa of auburban Neullly-aur· seine for their seventh meeting in eight days -tbe fint time their sessiom have lasted so long. The conference got under way at 3 p.m. (6 a.m. PST) as the French radio station Europe No. I quoted Chou as tell· ing newsmen ln Peking it was possible that the Americans and the North Viet· namese woold reach agreement "within two or three days." The talks extended four hours. In Wiifilngtm, lbe White Ir"lllR said the two would meet again Tuesday aftu- nooo, with tecbnlcal meetings being held in the morning. Ambassador Wllllam J. Porter, Ute chief U.S. negotiator at the regular semi· public Plrb peace talks, sat in oo the ~Tbo coaf_ew>oe 'for the first time. ~ . And, perhaps significantly, North Vlei· namese d<puty Prime Minister Le Thanh Nghi arrived in Paris Sunday from Hanoi with Nguyen Van Kba, .the man who played a large part in framing the Geneva accords. Nghi would have sufficient rank to sign any agreement which would have to be signed on the American side by Secretary ol State William P. Rogers. Rogers Oew home Jut Friday from a NA TO meeting in Brussels disappointed that he was unable to sign the ceasefire agreement this weekend. Corona del Mar Power Failure Still a Mystery Southern California Edison Company officials still aren'l sure what caused a cable failure that left 1,CKXI Corona del Afar residents without electricity last Thursday night. Power was cul for about five boors beginning in · the early evening and Edi.Ion crews had to conduct an a· tensive search to fmd the source of Ute problem. "All we know is we had a failure in the underground system," said operations manager Leonard E. Smith. "And when the lines are underground it is a lot harder to find the problem than overhead lines." Smith said the failure is the second in a month in the same system, the other coming in' mid·November during daylight hours. "lt could be something in the cable itself but It is lmpoosible to checlt the whole length without digginf; II up," Smith~ &aid. "All we can do ts oh<clt the transformer terminals evtrY eoo feet.~· Smith did not speculate as to Ute exact cause of the specific pow-er failure but said the Tain may have bad something to do with it. "U the cable was . faulty to begin with and water got in, that could certainly cause problems," Smith said. "We are going to be keeping a ck>ee watch oo. that entire area for a while." Oklahoman Convicted SAN BERNARDINO (AP ) -Ruble Charles Jenkins of Tulsa, Okla. was coir victed in Superior Court of first-degree ml!l'der In the death ol Roland Hannon Runions. 'Ibe prosecution cont.ended that Jenkins, 51, shot Runions in the desert north of Needles after Runions tbrtaten- ed to tum Jenkins in to police for a series of robberies. ,.,._p .. eJ APOLLO •.. .. surface, falllnl !tom orbit ., the power- IOI ....... llowed the craft and aulded 11 1 towud the tirael. "Come on, baby,'' ••Jd Ceman. "Ob, are we eomlng tn. Ob, Raby." , Moments later they pitched over the , Taunu-IJltrow. that opot on the moon I Ceman once called "a beaut(lul va.Uey/' 1 111bere it 11, Houaton," aald ScbmltL j "OD target." "2,500 feel, fuel is good," the oclentflta tlten called. I "Approodtlna 1,000 feet. TIU'olllh 1,000. C lllO-feet. Thn>UCh 500. IOO feeU • h. At 200. Fuel'1-good. 110 feet. A Jlttle orward, Gene. 90 feet. 80 fett. Getting a Utde dust. 60 !eet. Very little dust. 40 feet." "Stand by for touchdown," aald Cer- nan. "Ten feet," aaid Schmitt. 11Contact. Engine stop." ~. u n L. Then Ceman announl,;\N. va.y, Hou.ttcn, tbe Challenaer bu landed." 1 J>reparaUOlll for tlie landinC w • n I l!MOthly, with America and Oitt'uenger • UDdocklnl and eeparatlni u planned. M.lnutes after aeparatioo, Challenger ' dipped Uke a· roller coas\er to within 15 miles of Taurus-IJllrow and Ceman call- . ed out: "Hey, we've got the landing alte. We're coming right over IL "We got 8 picture of America ccwnlng right across the site. Supertarptlni," Scbmitt n:parled. "I can see camelot, Sherlock, Rudolph, •the Great Cl'ols" - referring to craters they nlcl[named In the ana. Eatery Employe Stabbed by Trio A ,.,.amlng · kitdien worker at an Anaheim restaurant thwarted a robbery attempt by three blndlll early toaay, but nearly paid the price ol bis llfe for It. Alfredo S. Covurublas was pls10~wltlp­ ped and tteriously otabbed In the chest during the Incident at the Jolly Ox, 950 S. Ox Road, police said. The would>be bandits -two carrying_ plltols and one anned with a knife - then escaped on root. Investigators who said they did not im· mediately detennlne Covamiblas' ad· dress told newsmen be was taken to a hospital for treatment of the stab wound in bis chest. Tbe victim was seriously lnjur<d, but police &aid be Is eqiected I<> lllll'vlve. Edison Company In Mesa Office 11te Southent Clllfol:llla Edi-Com- pany opened Ill new Ooota M-Newport Beach offlc< today at S90 E. 17th, Coata Mesa. Located on the corner of TustJn Avenue and 17th Street, the office was placed near the boundaries of both cities ao that Edison customers from both Costa Meaa and Newport will fmd It. use eonveolen~ accordq to James E. IWmedy, manager ol the local branch. He &aid the ofOce will handle bill payment. and usist customers In mak- ing applications for eJectrtcal ....vie.. Tbe company clooed Ill former ol!lce at :mt San Joaquin lll1ls Road, Newport Beach, tut week. Tep,.11 E ec+ric SIMOftl Tep"-•• wlfft co11tlfl-• cl•1•l119 •¥11'1, MM•I J7°1JJ2 •••••••• SJff.tl T1,p111 St• Rt!HJ• with co11tll'l11e"' clM1ti119 M•fto Mocl•I 232 I 002 •••••.•••••••••••••••• $169.tl T1p,.11 El•chlc R1"t• •Ifft COfltflto 00111 cl•111!1'1g o"'•l'I. Mod1I 11.2112 ···············-······ sm.t1 Rob.rt N. w,,d ,. .... lltfnt .... f"llbll.ncir Jtck l. Curley Yb Pnl."'9nt Ind C.--•I ~ 2 Trustees Beat Back ousCleaniM R . nse raP.ffln. Wllt:O FOl1 B/IFB aCilOlr:B n."'1' K1•'tfl E:clltOI" TitoMtt A. M•rphi"• M9Mllflt~dlrw L Pifer ktlet N"'9rl Ind! Clly bnor .... , .. , .... ()Mee JJJJ Ne'qeri h11l•••r4 Mtlfitt AiUm11 ,.o. le• 1111, 92661 --Ctlllt .,...: -... .., Sir ... ~ a.ctllt 2ll """""" A,,.,_ ........... 9-dl1 11"1 ...,. .....,.,.. ... c-...., .. ,.._ .1:1 CMtlne .... ,.,,,, 1 r cncJ 64J.4JJ1 a .., .w •• n ,.. aa..1•1• ~ tm. Or-.. c-t ~~ • ... ..... ...... l!llilM ......... .............. ,~--­ ...., II ••Mal w""""' llf«lllf ,.,.. ...... ., ...,,... ......... ............... c--.. ............. ....,.,. "" ~ tUI .......,,,, Ill' 1MM U .11 ~I M11t1wY ..... , .... taM IMllt!llY. Laguna Recall Drive Laguna Beach Unlned School District Trustees Palrlcla Gillette and Gerald Linke have survived an 1tte:mpt to recall them frQm offk!, a recount of the recall ballot. has confirmed . Figures for the election nuctuated back and forth as the election worken made a precinct by pl't'Clnct recount of all the baUot.i-cast in last lfuesday's etect.IOn. Final confirmed figures for the recount are 111s follows: Fo·r recall of Linke: 2,805 Against Rtcall of Llnlte : 2,m 'lb~ is M increase of 21 votes over \ Llnke's sii:·vote margin first counted Tuesday. For recall ol Mn. Gillette : S,71'1 Agalnlt recall of Mrs. Gillett<: S.117 t.frs. Gillette's margin retaining btt position was 100 votes. Flrlt rtpOrll hid Indicated her eleeUon count margin wb 72 votes. But during canvasslng It wu detenn~t 28_yola.hadJIOt been counted . The Registrar's office finbhed countlna of the ballot! Saturday afternoon . The recount was reqoeated by four penons ldenUfled with the recall move- mtnl, not in support ."-Unk> and Mrs. Giiiette " ofnclAl1 previously reported. ( ""'' , .. --· c ........ c ....... o,.. .. _, .... .,,...,.. ---~ .............. .., ........... __ ,.. ... ,.,.. ........ ..., iataaa•Mt ...._ ..._, • C r•••• Cl1 I I 0.-dew ..., ... .... .,.....,. .... ,.. ~ ............................ ,.. .......... ..... ...... Of...._. -,.,.. ......... ,.. _, ......... ~ c... ...... Cla ·10-. ........ tAL.li'OilNtA"I L.A&:OllT ...... ., ... &UYIMZ z•ouf' ••TM Tit& VOLUMI •UY!•• '°"'&" o~ 01 lTOkU 18f5 NEWPORT. BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -"-~7788 ------------ ( ) ' \ I I l l I ' \ I I J I ! " 17 .. .. ' ... .. ' • 0-, - Orange Coast Today's Flnal N.Y. St.oek11 • t . VOL 65, NO. 346, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1972 c TEN CENTS St~ent Tightens Mesa ·Police Security By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. DlfqNlthlW One summer afternoon, a determined woman wbo wouldn't talk to anyone loWtr than The Man Upstairs sprinted post U>e deJJt officer and Into Chief Roger Netb'a second story office at the Coeta: Mesa Police Facility. She burst Into bls staff meeting of cap-• lalns and lieutenants, totally d!Srupting ii and demanding to air her never-ex· plained grievance. 1bis episode landed her In a Jail cell on suspicioo of dl.-.fg the peace, althoogh ii "1U almost i p.m. and the staff meetlng wu aboUt over. Tb1s epllDde -indlr<cUy -also tsnd· ed Jim Bropn, 14, In a new job. Security meuuns built Into Ille 1967· constructed, ultra.modern police station include cJoeed clreult teitvision , bQ,t still leave a few things to be desired. • The T'i camera didn't kee~ the lsdy from her\ unscheduled appointment with Chlef Neth and subsequently with the jail's booking officer. ' All it did was catch an action shot of Dest Officer Sam Arnold trying to vault over the front counter to catch her. 1 Nobody ever did find oot just what she wanted to talk about. Recently,. however,. Ll. Glenn Walter, wlJo is In charge of building se<urity and maintenance, began .tallting alioul how lo prevent similar sifuatWns. The next irate Citizen might come charging In with a bomb instead di just some bombastic complaint, Walker figured .. He talked it over with Orange Coast College architecture instructor A r t Martinez and the result was a class proj· ect. -an es:erclse to ·devise a better police lobby security system. No problem es:ists in the j'" section - it ~udes electronic .~ lock!, alarm bells and similar features -but the critical area Is the front door. A reception area ill included, with seats for!tt:Straught parents wailing to pick up errant juveniles; public restrooms, candy and cigarette machines, interview booths and a small pressroom. A lot of traUlc circulates through here. including upset citizens of uncertain stability. , .Martinez' OCC architectural students were assign~ to design security im· provements that would 1preserve the open efficient atmosphere, not creating a grim, fonress-like Image. His class came up with U dHferent renderings of plans to make It tougher for the public to roam Into unauthorized areas. Not only u~tairs adrninistraUve of· fices are eff·liihitJ to casual viliton, but easy access. also now exists from the ~ by to the downstairs, including pistol range, squad briefmg rooms and the radio communlcatkms center. !See SECURITY, Page I) .oon 's-e ,· ' Me•• Panel Industry . Park Pla~s Expected · P1ans fer a ne'w concept in industrial parill wlli be unveiled before th<. Costa -l'illllllinC -tooighl-by-1 Newport Beach dey,iopment firm work· in& Oil a $4 milJlon project near Orange County Alrpot1. Memben al the <OlllDlisaioo will - aidor P.Dl!ni &· """' ~ and a 1en1auve. Incl map · fer the Dan Koll ~ pro~ft1" tlleJ-ot l:IO p.m. ill city council cham.,..., 77 l'air Drift. Amolil F. Hamala, clilel al advanced Planners May OK Mesa Sign Curbs The g<>al!ead signal is expected tonight from lbe Costa -.0 Pla!mlng Com- mis!ion for development of a new ordinance aimed at eliminaUng "sign blight" ln all areas of the city. Basia for the new statute wW be the »- page Costa Mesa Si&U .Stud)' Werking Papers which are ICbedul.e for ac- ceptance by the commission ot l :IO In ci- ty council chambers, T1 Falr Drive. Arnold F. Hamala, Costa Mesa chief of advanced planning, said he believes the commission wlll order the staff to draw up a new ordinance using the principles (See SIGNS, Pace I) p~ing for U>e city of Costa Mesa, predicted today that the -it complex would become the Jariest multi-tenant ~ial tract ever developed In the ci· ty. ~ tract is propooed for location llOUlh ol the Sali Diego Ineway, sutheasl of Red HID A-n1 -of ~ "-Oii ii ·-ol. land _, ainmd1o Colla ...... n::.;:p.,u:,..1111~~~; -.. becala 1ta'To: ;-=-~~ t balldl .. ..,111plli-P will be owned, aot leased, by the tenants. '"We· believe thll to be ~the fd'St in- dustrial condominiW" In the country and tbe Pon Koll Coqipany lhlnks it will become a prototype for others," said Hamala. ''They think it might beeome a new rage." · Under the condominium s y s t e m , building owners would enjoy taa ad- vantages which are not available to ieuehoiders. Parking· areas, landscaping and other services such u perhaps a computer and a sandwich shop, would be .. common'' and their cost shared by the condominJum tenants. 1boug)I tbe project wlli be located im- mediately adjaoeat to the airport, it will no& cater uchllif'ely to aeronautics- cWieilted -.l!lnillaood ta a va- riety ol "clean" ~ Including eiec-troolcS, _, and manufllcturing. Assistant Planning Director Richan! Dahill oaki the n.... apoce of the buildings will amount to •rproximately 592,000 square feet. Tba represent.! about half as much Ooor .space as South Coast Plaza. Pawprints Clue Mesans Recover Car at Swap Meet Pawprlni.., not flllgerprlnts, led a Costa Mesa coupleto the recovery of a stolen automobUe at a rwap meet in Santa Ana Sonday. 'l1>e telltale sigm were Jett behind by a cat which bad wandered acrou aome fresh asphalt and jumped on the car's hood just before his '65 Ford was stolen a week ago, Paul Gillespie said today, car wu stolen from biJ house when the keys were inadvertently left In the door ooe night. Control DAILY ,.ILOT ....... h' ll:lcMnl K•W AS TEMPl!IAt\iRES>fi.~ETED, IT·WAS TIME •fOR .ScULPTURING SNOWMAN IN NEWPORT BEACH . .Weftlly:Peb ar, 23, Hod Limilod ~w'Supply;·lt Wot Imported From Lake Arrowhood · Frost Flashe s .On 2. Stations 'Tis the season orange ranchers and gardeners alike wonder a lot about frost. Two orange county radio sta- tiohl and KFI in Los Angeles offer the latest ~tion on expected frosts each night during· the ·season. William Hackel'"of Orange is·the National Weather Service Fruit Frost Service forecaster in this area. His predictions are part of the statewide report heard at 7 and 9 p.m. on KFJ. He also prepares a report limited to Orange County temperatures. It is airOd on J()VIZ at 1:05 and 8:05 p.m. and on ·KEZY at 8: 10 and 9 p.m. nighUy. • NoCountyCropsDamaged Yet;. Forecast Says Colder Recent nlght frosts in 1 the · Irvine, El Toro and San Juan Capistrano areas of Orange eounty have not seriously damaged large quantities of flilit but growers will eye the thennometer tonight warily. "U It goes much below 28 tonight for Very long, all -we can do is J>lle another blanket on our bed5 and pray," a 1pokesman for the Irvine· Valencia Growers A.ssociatiOn. said., . William Hackel, Nallonal WY!ll'r Sen.ice lorocaater In ~. prid!Cls tonight will be the worst o~,lbe current aeries. of below freeilng nights. · He looks for temperatures in the "mid· 20s" and colder in the sheltered areas of San Juan Capistrano, the Irvine coastal plain and El Toro. Winds through Santa Ana Canyon are expected to spare fruit crops in Yorba Linda and Placentia, be said. If no winds stir up the air ln the south county grow· ing areas, however, frosts may well do severe dainage to the Valencia crop. · VaJeoclas, not due to be harvested unUl April, are in the most "critical" stage of their development now, a stage when the fruit ls most susceptible to frost damage . Extensions Seen Depenclinc on the depth of the blanket of frost ' laden air over tbe groves, wind macbi~ can help save the crops. But, If the ceiling of air is too high, the wind machines are of little use. The C11t track&, pJua 11 key on- Giiiesple'a rinl that fit the 11!"1Uoo ot the car, helped put two 17-)'0IM!d youthe in jail on an auto theft charge. Nixon Will Ask Continuation of W age-price Curbs • Along with the forecast of low .iem- perafures , the celling outlook ton1ght is not good. Only wind or a cloud cover can ease the threat of the freeze. Gillespie, 44, and hlJ wife, Marianne, were ju.st pulilng in at tbe Harbor Drive- Jn Swap Meet when they 11w.;a car Ot· ting tbe delcription of ihO stolen vehicle. 11My wife asked a woman to get the marshal who made the arrest. We were ~vinced It wa oun when we 11• tboee cat tracill," said GOleople, who ope<at.s a rental read1tnl qeocy at Ill W. lttb St. The .. u-taugbl •leuth added that tbe I Hl~A'd It 1 I \\I WASHJNGTON (UPI) -·Pr..ictent Nixon will uk Ocqrm lo exlao!I tile currenl ecoooinlc Controls beyond April 30, 1173 ,.,, they aro clue lo '•plre, TreaSUJY Secretary George P. Schu in said tod<y. At a White Houte ne"1 conference, Shultz also aaid the Prtaldent decided !<> rr-e aalarieo Ill the federal executive branch, Cong!-and Ille jodiclary. Ntzoo also tm_.i a C0111D1DioD lre<ze oo hirin& and promotlonl lar all federal, civlltari IDll mllitary pe1"'"*"'1 throqh late JlllUll'Y, -the 1174 bud(Ot wlli be -lo eo..r-. """ .. Ill Ullllllle ot tbe belt-t!Pt .... ... ~. Sc&u!tz Aid there -id be "->' lllibltantial ...... ! ..... -· tbe Pnlklent11 own Dff. 1. Shultz, Nixon'• chief •••••mlc spoke.man, said no decWon luld been J'ffched on how lon• the nt1t phue of 1'1~111 oantrol1 ohcolld !Mt. To help decide this q-loft. Shultz said, then would 1oe a "wide -of ) consultation" with labor, Congress, co~ sun1ers and members or the current economic1stabillzaUon program. On rtlatod topics, Schlllti aaid the Presi- dent had been oucce..tuJ in holding !pet\. d'ng in the cumn! budget lo 1214 biillon an<! that the budgel f01 fi>Cai 1174, which wlli be oubmltted to Coogr'Oa In January, would be In balance on a full employment buts. ' Shultz said :be PM!dentW dec~ION oo the C<JO!roll -. "mutualb' lnterde-v - U.N. Funds .J>Iedged ,.CANllEIUIA (UJ>I), -Aumllia wlll contriJiute •• ODO to the Unitod !!•lions fund fW -'-aetl-and '120,000 to the ~tlonal P!moed PartntlJood Fedenlloo, Primo Minister G 0 u g h WbiUaai Aid. :nm · ta the first time Au.stralia agreed to Jlrovlde f\lnds for .ln- ternallooai birth ·~- .. pendent and aupportive." He said it re- flected Nixon'• "strong detennination to maintain the flghl opinat inflallon iii the ltr'Onlelt way pc.U>le." The pay action fr<ezes the current 11larie1 of all membet of govemmeniaai the to-called "federal esecuUve level." -Includes blglt-rautnc memben ol government, ~ and federal judgeo. It covera salary acales ninglng from 131.000 to ll0,000. The btrinc rr-In the executive branch will Jut II leaat unUI late January, ~ Nllon -lo Congress hil' budc<t lar ·fiacal lf74, bectnnln& July i, um. Shuhi ldl Jt ... 1:1\ •lopen que1llon" whelher the odmlnlltra~id aok Coqrm tu exleDd -Ibo-Economic Stabilisalion Act In ltz -I form or to n:odify oome of Ill --· But he· added : "I'm rullnc oot just going beck lo an llllCOC!lroUed ayotem wlth a ltatement that neryone ought to behove In luch and ouch a llohlon and hopinl thal ·they do ... Since frosts became a regular nightly occurrence, the lowesl temperature recorded In a county grove was last Saturday momlng when ao lrvine tberemorneter dipped to 2', Hackel said. DAILY PILOT AD PEOPLE PLEA.SER DAILY PILOT claulfied want ads are people pleasers. See lh11: GUJTAR-Elec. wtcaae. Xln't cood. Paid !350. Sell 1171 or bst ofr. Amp avaU m ·un:. The guttar was sold as IOOl'I u the Id •weared which pleased both the ad· vertlser and the guitar'• new owner. ll yOU have aomethtng lo ,.u, dial direcl &4Wl71. It'll be a pleaa!rt. 'W e's Here'' Astronaut Announces SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) Two American explorers today l'Dllde a bull's-eye landing on a bouldeJl.strewn volcanic valley of the moon where they, are to conduct a scientific treasure hunt for missing lints In huw biltory. Man's sixth moon landing, and the last ooe planned in this century, was \oaed at 11:55 a.m. PST at Apollo 1'1 utronauts Eugene A. Ceman Ind ~ H. Schmitt skillfully gttided lJl!lr tunor llhlp Challenger on a, ioal. &lldlnl noot Oft1' mlle-hlgh ---"lbe Challenger·. has landed," Ceman "'°"iec! .. the ·~· • .,. the lander aelUed lnlo the blacll: o!mt ol a bOJ: canyon named Ta~urow. "-We Is here. Man,• we1 is bere,.,': ~ ad- ded. + I , "f' For geologist Schmitt, he lin& 'IC:ien- tist to fly in space, ft was the ridsatioo of a per.t00al dream. Emotkmlly, be said: "This is the majestic momet er my life." / "You can tell America the Qilllenger is at Taurus·Llltrow," Cernlll told Mission Control. He wanted the word of tblir IOcceu passed to their crewmate, Rcmld E. Evans, flying a solo orbit In command ship America, 60 miles overberd. ' The moomnen plan to remaip I:. NCOl'd 75 boors at Taurus-Uttrow, mUbig three outside excursions in their quest for lunar secrets. Most of the first ex· ploratJon period ill to be spent aettlng up a science station. Schmitt could hardly C<JOtaln hlmae1I (See LANDING, P ... I) Students · Sing For Patients Twenty students from TeWlntle Middle School will be providing some holiday cheer tonight for paUents at Costa Mesa's Beverly Manor Convaletcent Hospital. . The students, members of lfl h'f4 rtrumental music group, will perform at the hospital on 340 Vicloris St. at !:IO p.m. 'Ibey will wind up their teries of performances at local cpnvaltscent bospttals and reUrement homes at 1 p.m. Wednesday with a concert at the Bethel Towers, 666 W. 18th St. ! Oruge Weadter The weatberilldy saya you ca unbutton the top button on yooar overt0at on Tu~_l .. ft'U be a litUe bit wanner. lliPI of -.,. expected. Oveml&hl ion, how- ever, will nm from (brr J II lo the mid :ios. INSmE TODAY The word'• oKt GQOfn tlMat tMrt11 going to be a dt~ 1arthq\take tn San ~' Thil time, if1 .. ,chtdwled~ /or I®, 4. Ste 1iM11, Page & • -" --· i: -I -----• -" --• ·-" -''"' --• = ...... ; -·-• --" ·-1 .. 11 -. ............. • ----··-" --• '~ I • DAILY PILOT c M oyni,,nn Gets Post iii India WASHINGTON (A P) -Pre<I· deal Nixon Joday annouoa:d the nomination or Daniel P a t r I e k Moynihan , Harvard profes.sor and fonner presidential adviser, to be U.S. ambassador to India. .,. P.1oynihan , ·~. will be replacing Ambassador Kenneth B. Keating , It former RepublJcan~ senator from New York. who resigned to cam· paJgn for President Nixon's re-elec- tion. Presidential press s e c r e t a r y Ronald L. Ziegler aaid Nixon was "gratified" that Moynihan is re- joining the Administration. Air Cal Chief Says Hughes Ru1nor Bunk Air California President Robert Clif· ford today dismissed as a "wild. wild rumor" reports that Howard Hughes was going to merge . Air Cal ~·ith Hughes Airwest. Clifford said the Westgate-California Corporation still intends to proceed with plans to sell to Pacific Southwest Airlines (PSA). He said lt would be a federal case to try to merge with Airwest. "Any thought of Hughes or Continental taking over -there's no truth to it," Clifford said. "We operate under the P U C (California Public Utilities Commission). They are controlled by the CAB (federal Civil Aeronautics Board). "It would take federal legislation to permit it," he said. Speculation about a possible Air Cal· Air"·est merger arose over the weekend "'hen elusive billionaire Howard Hughes was -eportedly making plans to come to Orange County -or was already here . Air California and PSA have run into unexpected roadblocks in their attempts to merge. The U.S. Justice Department last week filed suit to prevent the deal, charging it would create a monopoly in north-soutb air traffic in California. Clifford, admitting thal the ouUook for the merger may have been dimmed somewhat, said the airlines are ready tor the fight. "If we bavt to go to court, we'll go lo CC)Urt," be said. •;But there is no way that a merger between Air California and Hughes could ever tiappen," he said. "It's a wild, wild nnnor, like the one that Hunt Wesson Foods, which owns some bus companies back East, was going to acquire us. .. That would take approval of the In~erstate Commer~ Commission," he said. The PUC is expected to act next month on the Air Cal·Airwest request that has been opposed by the commission's own legal staff, on grounds similar to those in the Justice Department complaint. Edison Company In Mesa Office The Southern Cali£omia Edison Com- pany opened its new Costa Mesa-Newport Beach office today at 390 E. 17th, Costa Mesa. Located on the comer or Tustin Avenue and 17th Strf!t!t, the office was placed near the boundaries of both cities so that Edison customers from both Costa Mesa and Newport will find its u.sc convenient according to James E. Kennedy: manager of the local branch. He said the office will handle biU payments and assist customers in mak· ing applications for electrical services. The company closed it! former office al 2071 San Joaquin Hills Road, Newport Beach, last week. • DAILY PILOT f n.ar._. Ceett ~IL'!' PILOT, wlfll 'llflldl I .. °""°"*" !tie Ntwt-Preu, b Mii.,,.. 11y I 9" or.,.. c:io..t l'\llblltfl.._ °'"""""· ~ ' .... """" .... ll•ollllllNd, Mord•., ......... t P'rtdey. Tor C.11 M-, Htwp111 a..... I ~ hklll'"-l•ln Vallt-y, ~ I a.di, 1"'"'-'s.ild~ ... SM c---..., I iWI Jv. C1"*Jr•rw. 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'"°'* llfWtnt'-.. ...... ,...,,.,.. .,. ......,,....._.. ....... r::! .. , ..... ~·· ................ . ......... ~ .... . 1 =.,~.;.'J:.-':.,.,= ~ ~ .. -=' ~·~·""'"""'' nlll\ttry ) J • Mon<1.,, °""""" 11, nn Gig Peters' Girl-'No lli Signs' By TOM BARLEY Of llM °""' l"tlM INH Prosecutor Pat Brian put dlg Peters' paramour back on the witness stand to- day and got the admission that her lover had never shown any &igm of mental ill- ness fn the nine months that preceded hls: kilt ing of his parents at their Huntington Beach home. Pressing his point over repeated and \·igorous objections by defense altomey Barry Tarlow, Brian asked Anne Bartholomew: "You ate with Gig, you slept with him,. you talked with him and you knew him intimately in those nine months. Right?" "Yes, that's right," the attractive Scripps College graduate replied. "Now then, did he ever at any time show 1ny signs of mental Illness?" Brian asked as Tarlow's repeated objections ~·ere overruled. "No." Miss Bartholomew q u I et I y replied . Brian recalled the 23-year-old girl who shared Peters' long sojourn in a San Diego County desert commune for testimony that will, he said, be a vital pc: rtion of his argument that Peters, 13, was sane when he murdered hb parents April 21. 1971. Both sides believe that the issue will go to the Orange County Superior Court jury Wednesday with Tarlow arguing that Peters' mental state at the time of the killing comes under the legal definition of ''diminished ca,,acity.'' Tarlow, obviously angered at the testimony obtained by Brian this morn- ing, asked Miss Bartholomew in cross examinaUon : "Anne, do )'OU believe that Gig Peter3 is a prophet of God?" The strawberry blonde studied the questJon for several minutes !n the hush- ed courtroom. "I think he knows a lot of things that othe~ people don 't know ," she then replied as Peters lectned forward in his wt.eelchair to cat~h the answer. . Peters ill confined to that wheelchair as the ~sutl of ~juries he received a year ago m an earlier Superior Court trial on the same charges. The former lifeguard was shot in the sp ine as be bied to escape from Judge Kenneth Williams' courtroom during the noon hour recess. Dodors believe the resulting paralysis may keep Peters in a wbeeJchair for the rest of bis We. Peters is aocused of stabbing his father Charles Peters, 55, tbroogli the heart aod then strangling his mother Flora, 54, at the family'• liboo1n street home. Mn. .Peters was a teacher at Lineoln School in Corona del Mar. ' · From Pagel SIGNS ... outlined in the study. .These consist of two main elements: First, that all new signs in Costa Mesa be no larger than necescary to be com- prehended by a motorist passing by at a ~~ma! _rate of speed. Second, that all ex- 1st1ng signs not meeting this requirement be phased out. The ordinance will go the city council for a final decision in January. Also_ o~ the tabl~ for .tonight's planning comm1ss1on meeting 1s a proposal to reduce the parking standards in Costa Mesa's industrially (M·l) zooed lots. "Right now our parking ltandardl are twice as high as those of any other Orange County city. With the reduction we will still have the highest standards but not quite as high," explaineJ Hamala. The reduction , he added, is being recommended because a survey of recently-built industrial complexes show- ed that only half of the spaces were bing occupied If planning commissioners approve the change in requirements a I 000 square foot building would require three instead of the fonner four spaces. Another item on tonight's caltndar redefines what kinds of uses are aJlowed in M·l zones. Under existing regulations only manufacturing operations are allow- ed in such zooes. The broadened M-1 definition is meant to include such uses as corporate head- quarters, research and development, packaging, and assembly. All of these ex- l!>t on M·l-roned parcels tn Costa Mesa but are presently considered non«>n- forming. TONIGDT PLANNING COMMISSJON -Regular meeting, Clly Hall, 6:30 p.m. CHRISTMAS CHOIR FESl'JVAL - OCC choir and chamber singers with nJne high school choirs. Auditorium, 4 p.m. and 7: l:S p.m. DANCE LESSONS -Depl of Leisute Services offers round dance lessons at Wilson school, 801 W. Wilson, 7::JG.10 :30 p.m. $1.25 per session. TUESDAY, DEC. ll 0CC CONCERT -Dana L. Rees, celli.11t, Music Studio No. 1, ~1 a.m. SQUARE DANCING -RocreaUoo Center, Fairgrounds, 8-10 p.m. $1.25 per lesson. • Peace Talks ~n;Chou 'Optimisti~' PARIS (UPI) -While Houle advise/ Henry A. Klsalnger held one more secrel mcetin, with Hanoi oegotlators today aod a ,..._,h radio 1taUoo quoted ChlneOe Premier aiou En-Lal u A¥tnc a c:rue.fln> agreemelil mfibl come ID two or three days. The report coincided with Washington dispatches implying t he re had been more progress In the talU than fndlcated in pessimistic reports thought to hav< orijilnated from the Viet Coog represen- tatives. Kissinger and several aidel oal down with North Vlelnamele negotlaton Le M Due Tho and Xuan 'l'hu1 In a heavily OOse Lod guarded villa of suburban lleulll)"tllr" ge solne for their sevenlh meet!q ID eJal>I days -tbe first time their -. have L B "d )Uted S0 long. I oses i The . conierence got under way at s p.m. (6 a.m. PST) as the French ra·dio station Europe No. 1 quoled Chou as tell· On Black Ban ing newsmen In Peking It was possible that the Americans aod the North Viel· " namese would reach agreement "within two or three days." The talU extended WASHINGTON (AP ) -A Moose -roor11ours- Lodge today unanimously lost a U S • · Supreme Court appeal designed to k.;,p In Wuhlogtoo, the Wblte House Mld the out Negro guests. two wo~ld meet agam '.fuesday after-~ithout further comment, the court ~~':~~cal meetmgs ~g held said the appeal by the Pennsylvania g. . . lodge failed to pose "a substantial Ambassador William J. Porter, the federal question." 1 chief U.S. J?'gotiator at the regular semi- The Harrisburg lodge was ordered Iut public Pans peace talks, sal In oo the · July by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court Kissinger-Tho conlmnc:e 111< the lint to serve black guesta. The dlspule time. cenlered around K. Leroy lrvls a black, And, perhaps aignlflcantly, North Viet· who is majortty leader of the stite Hiluse ..._ deputy Prime Minister Le Tlilnll or RepreoentaUve1. Nghl.arrlved In Paril SUoday from Hanoi In Ila appell, the lodge said by the with Nguyen Van Kha, the lllOll - same reasoning the dlolng room of every played a large part In lramlDc the private home Jn the country wqu1c1 be Genev~ aQ.'!.Orda. open to the public U guesta who irere oot Nghi would have -I nmk to &lo members of the family were served once. any agreement wbkll wauld have to be Lasl June, In a H dOctsloo the high siiDed on the Ameriao liife by court ruled Lodge 107 was nol ,:.quired to Secretary of State Willlam P. Rogers. serve lrvls or aoy otbei Negro just Rocm flew home last Friday from a because the club operatedWllh a liquor NATO meeting In B....U dluppolnted license from the state. · that be wu 11111ble to sign the ceasefire The Penosylvanla court's· ruliD( the agi:oemeol 11111 weelreod. following month •temmed from the same lncldeol. In 1968, lrvls and • group of other legistalors wenl lo the lodp for dinner. It Is a ball block from the state Capitol. lrvls .... --• The liquor license ariwnes>I wai liued 00 the theory lhal blackJ cannot be bar· red from ~laces wbose operallons depend on stale Officlalt. That was rejected bf the Suprome Court. · Ttte Pent11Jlvmia~ .court ,. r u 1 e d , however, that by opening its dining room to white oonmembers, the clut. became a place of "public accommodaUon" under the stale buman relations taw aod would have to serve black guests as well. ln another case, the father of a slain Kent State University student was turned down Joday by the SUpr<me Court as be tried to sue the state of Ohio for damages. Arthur Krause, whose daughter Allison was killed in the campus disturbance May 4, 1970, WU barred by the ObJo State Supreme CUrt let July from suing the state without the consent of the Ohio Leg=.slature. Mrs. Hazel King, First Female Realtor, Dies Mrs. Hazel Grant King, a Newport Beach resident stoce I951 and the first woman In Caliromla to be licensed to sell real estate, died SUnday. She wu 84. Known throughout the proleaslon as "lhe mother of women in real estate," Mrs. King obtalned her license in 1920, becoming only the second woman In the Unlted States to do so. Sbe opened an all-woman ofnce -the Hazel M. Grant Co. -in Pasadena, a short time thcra.tte.r. Mrs. King and her huaband , wbo died in 1961, moved to Newport Beach 15 years ago and converted a mmuner cot- tage in Corona del Mar to a large home that 111111 staoda at 1311 Poppy St. Mn:. King opened a small office on Via Oporto in 1959 and worked full-time until she became ill and was forced to retire in 1964 . Eatery Employe Stabbed by Trio A """&mini l;ltcbm worter al on Aoal>ehn ....-..1 lhw~ a robbery allempt ii)' three '°"'!J eoilJ today, bul nearly paid the price of hh fiie for iL Alfredo S. Covanublas WU pistol·whlp. peel and seriously stabbed In the chesl durtog the incldenl at the Jolly Ox, !lllO S. Ox Rood, police said. 1be --blndlts -Ml carrying pistols aod ono armed wilh a knife - Ihm eocaped .. foot. lnvtSU&aton -said Ibey did oot in>- medlately determine Covarrubias' ad- dress told newsmen be wa.s taken to a hospltaf for treatmenl ol the stab wound In his chest. 1be victim was serioualy injured, but police said be ta upected to iruntve. DAILY PH.OT ll•ff ....... CHIEF NETH, ASPIRING ARCHITECT BROGAN DISCUSS PLANS NHd for Se<urlty Brings Re-dnlgn Problem for Mou Police FronaPa9el SECURITY ... Staff members evaluating Martinez' student's work chose the plan submitted by Brogan, utililing heavy safety glass panels to seal off certain sections beyond the reoeplioo lobby. "We want to get on with it right away," says Lt. Walker, noting Brogan'.s plan will p1reserve the open, airy look of the modern architecture. If you come in to.report that someone j lmmied your car trunk in a shopping center and stole all the kids' Christmas presents, you don 't want to feel _nke you've been locked up. '1bJs is the coocept aod phil""'PbY of the present station design. Aspiring archltect Brogan, a Costa Mesa ftSident., ill currently employed as a draftsman. Ills police fadllty security plan may earn him an A from OCC's architectural course aod a reguisr poycbe<k from the city ol Colla Mesa. "We waat to hire him as a comUltant " e%plalM LI. Walker, D01iJ1i complttid blueprints must be drawn from Brogao'a rendering. Oklahoman Convicted SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Ruble Charles Jenkins of Tulsa, Okla. was cco- vlcted in Sopertor Court of fint..ie,r.e mi.:rder in the death of Roland Harmon Ruoioos. 1be prooeculioo COili.oded lhal Jenkins, 52, ahol Runions In the daut north of Needles after Runloos lhrea!tl> ed lo luro Jenkins in lo police for a series or robberies. 'United' Drive Appears to Fall Short of GOal lndicatlom are lhal the lllrbor Area Unlted Way will aJmoot -but DOI qUite -reach its goal of $504,000 when the resuJts are tallied tonight. Merritt Johnson, executive director or the agency serving Costa Meaa, Newport Beach and Irvine, predicted Ibis _,,, ing lbal the final tally woUid be around '475,000. "That means we will be M.S percent of the way toward our goal," be said. "We had hoped lo have a Ooal tally to. nighl bul It looks lite it may not be u final e we thought. We're stlll l'ffl'hmg Cot our big goal aod will tbett!Ol1' bep the campolgn open for the remainder ol the year In the firm belief lhal "" can reach Jt.'' Those perlQDI who have' not yet C()l)o tribu\ed ...,.. reminded by Jolmoon to contact the Harbor Area Unlled Way at 642-47S2 or to write to P.O. Box 1284, Newport Beach, ~ . JohMoo added that the Harbor Area United Way was cloeer to metting ita goal than any of the other four subsidiar- ies of the Southern Oraqe County United Way. Collection ..timal8 for the .u.er.- tbe Orange Cammunlty United Way, the Santa Ana·Twliln Communty Chest, tbe Orange CommwUty United Way, the South Coas1 United Fund and the L11uno Beach Community Oltst-were not tvail- able th\! morning. The fourth major item on the planning commission agenda is a zone exception request by Newport Purchasing Corpora- tion for permi!:sion to construct a IO-unlt mote.I at 2M0-82 Newport Blvd. Her last home was the Glenhaven Coo- . valescent HospitaJ In Newport Beach. FronaPqeJ LANDiNG .•. as he gazed out ChaUenger'a window after landing. "Boy, are we golng to haw 90me nice boulders In th.la 1rea," he reported en- thusiastically. "Ob, m111, look at that rock over there. It's absolutely in· credible." He aaid he could hardly wait lo start the nnt excuNiOO later bt the day. "I can see bouldu tricks on the moun· tains. J can see CamtJot and Poppy and some of the other aaten," he said. "ThlJ ls IOl1Hllhlnl everyone'• got to do ooce Ill b1J life." Ceman, uked about the view 11 he steered the l11111r ship In, replied : "Aller pitching over, I wu too busy just lrylof to miss those rocks . I didn't want to hll them." I Mrs. King was active in many local, state and national groups until her death. She was a founder's member of the Women's Council In Real Estate, a charter member of Ibo :i.nta Club and an honorary director of the State Board of Realtors. Stnlcea for Mn. KJnr, who leavee oo survivors, will tal<e place Wedneaday al 11 a.m. at the Westclllf Mortuary O>apel, in Costa Mesa. Marines Defoliate, Cause Heavy Smoke A hu1e poll or lll!lOke to the northNst ol Colla M ... Joday didn't ruult from an lndualrlal plant fin or plane crub, ii WU just the U.S. Marines delollalinfl the vegetatloo oul that way. H ... I '" c.-... • C..e111• ca..1 .. 0.... .. _, iW el .... ·,..--....._ ... ., ...... ,.,.....SC. n.t--,._ ... T...,_ ,_.. wM ..... ,.. •Mr dML ..._ • Cu1rtaca• Cle .. 1 0.. •"-__, ... ..._ ........................................... ,.._ ... ,.,... -· Of __ , __ ..,.,.. ____ c- ..... c:r '10..... MIMllR Of' CM.ll'OttNlA'I ........ m COOf'IUTIW IUY•• HOV, ... ':llh'Mt .. "'°'"'" Of' , 1M ITOllU .. ' .,, ....... · .. DUlt(aP , , , ., r• .. , ' . ,. . .... , ... !M!venl curious cal1er1 prompted an ln- vKllpllon and orlldals erpl<tned the • :.1.=u...:nsa:'u =11::': ::! JB15 NEWPOIT ........ BLVD. llawntown Costa Mesa -Piia• 548-7788 ..._ ... E:W. Ana Marlne Corps Air StaUon. IQo:i••-•••M11•.,•-•n•1<••w.., .. w.,,.,,.,..., __ .,.,._,.,..,_.,,._.,.,. .. ., • ., • ..,.,..,.,..,, .. ,.-.,.,. ....... , ...... ..,.,.,, .. .,. ......... I \ I I I I