HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-12 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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J~ry ·Finds Man
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G_11~:!!Y i11 Newp!)r-
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--=-Q_u.rgla17~--llape-~--
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.. ... ... . .,. ., . ... ,.,.. .. ,,~,·.1, ~ . -.·. -11· -LlnkP~ohed . ' •
Second· T~p -OH~· ·.
Astronartt FixeS-
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• Moon Car Fen.der r · .,.._:t ·1·-.. ~ -UPl.T ......
i~.,.j~~'Coiiieoltion-W¥·f~.1<>...wm..to ·port this ' ~~-.lft.r-iif:l'~'~ ltldlli!doover-tbe-llile-dalillg.1 lallding acci-SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -silo. w--• the ·--·--'th •~-~. ' .l!ath•pilotl lbOiril-~ Slftly. A ·si!nilar ·accident occurred ~= ----~ w• -· 1 lll<1nth.aboardthe ' e · ' : · ' " Apollo!Tsexp~,wboba~~~u~ ,.-~~remlrt•''lhale:thlt "
" · . ', ~. ~, t " same of the Y~,-{rocks.~·~lnoon,\' 'tilack'itUd. ;jfi .. feany mt.a•""'"· It'll '"'" -\~•~t . I • ·' ~ out~ Ul ••~-~-._-tO ' ' -'6 " • • • • • • • ""' • -l ~-1' ' move ·~• · u.::u· ~ """'61 ' ' It ,.,. 0 halt1 ~:; ci.-..1 ...... to d t 'L -~1 .. • , .., ... _ ·.~".. ·i """' -. search an ancien~· avalaoc~ faP the !:,'.~ US, a . ............,... . ~ U .. ,., t • to' ~ rtJ,. D • oldest lunar· material. , Mission Oio'-' '"""" ted theni ~.Jm ~~ J~ . ,,,,: .f;,~eff,. .res an:'~=·r.t·~:,'~Pa~~ ~l•<!,'\;lmf,dimtancfa-~ol·,p
, ~ '..t~ 'l• ; -: .. ' • • .. .. .. .,. ... • form a makeshift fender for1 tbelr lunar c~~ ot tnsula . off their. l~ ~
. 'r .. ~~ • ":J3 ·~:--:" .:: ·:·~·-· :~n ' ~~:k~:~f~~u8ff:w~all:'~~(~ .s~iredena:;,m t~flrstsevm-~ · . lfi-r ;,fea:n . .;,it&~it.ECC~.Rt .. related stories, pictures: Pege 4). 1!:' := f~:::~.c ~.i , t , . . , i.;' , 1 , • • The right rear fender fell olf Monday ~t'.nUtt were ,iven an extra hour' sleep
• ~. .. , , ". . mgbt and the unprotect~ whee I tO\)iy, ~elayinipl!e start·of iJielf.ilOCiiii<I :\¥~~;;.i.l.Jd iiwiluudon',Beach llltl), ',j.~ ;n uie n~...;.., of his iililne moon walk until 3:03 p.m. PST. _
· «,lllnia-'wu killO<l ,llOOda:i a1-J ~· • therinewent'off. • }·ur y Convic· ts Their driving target today'ls-1,1,111111-, .,.~ ••-a --"'-~~ he .. · · f<JOt.lll8h mountain, which theY',~ the ~ •~ • .....,,.0~ -· ll·year<J!d slJt..-told police 'Ille · •-•th M--" 4.4 miles from the -IMI. Cling c B accld!mtally dlscbarged· lilto,llis 'wu ln the'ldtcben when she heard the ~L pb;j'ographs Indicate an·av81anche
•11'1i-••• -• -· • .. -·(llir!ihot •t· abolit. 2 p.m. She said she ln Newport ~·ppe, ·. tumbled down the s111••o~·trie .. . li\lli>P>n· ·Beach ;r-sold ~ • Noiied into. the, · uvtnr room· and saw J>ei '""-"' -SI .... A depaalting '.at the ·;b&le . . ' .. }1iim -rr:--"'"":" w -. ., ..,... , ". biolher. silting,· o onn.: the, !loo•.·, , · · _.._ ral 1•·•-.......,. • ··· ·:..-, r " ·''' · • tiild•ollloeis ~ ~stoQd_up Burglary·. Cas~ ,...W'~tt ... ".! .-~~~'= ·-• .. " .. -•·" ~ and told her t.o call an ambulance d r;;-the·~~~ "' ITUDian's Vital1 beeooie; he had · shot himself In the ( .. ' n'1 tlqt.''thla ~ 15 . boil ~· lie• then ...-around the 11 .'loek an orance· coani,..·&ipeiior . potentlal for -pllng .....,. Old -.1 ro0m and ·oul •tbe lront 'door where lie Court Jury )11$165 minutes today to find on.the moon_ perbapo dating badt u ' • Uf~.._~,;f<'.'.· < Cl~~~' t;: 1i_ ;.a)·; '0r parolee Wal~ Hampton Jr. guilty of billion years to the Vl!ll' orlcin·" .
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To T1·affic
In Drugs
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t • ROSEVILLE (AP) -The nude bodi
of two young men have been u~
near here, El Dorado County Sheriff
Pernie Carlson reported today. --i;: ~ Tliefvictims may h8\7&• been murderecf
in conhection with the narcotics traffic
he said. I
~ ! ·catil§on ·said tbe · bodie were-fOund01iii
. , ... ~"·-~-,l>l',,,si<I!',. ·~·
Luneman Road near the hamlet o(·
ReScue, no.rtheast . of _Sacramento. An
.autopsy was be ing conducted i rf
Placerville. ·~
The two appeared to be in their 20Sfl
Carlson said, but otherwise there was Jlf>-··
Identification. .. . . 111 'He "61.id 'there may' be a link '1>etwiefi'i
the bodies and two sets of bloadsoake(ffi
men's clothing found in a SacramentP.-;.
su burb Monda y. ,~
The clothing included a heavy wool-lirl'!' ! .~ jacket and a wai s t -le n gt f!
windbreaker, authorities said. 1 1
•William Miller, a spokesman · ror lhf:!I
sacramento County sheriffs office, sal(l;'
both jackets contained numerous holek!
which may have been caused by bullets.'~!
Carlson,_~d the/ l;iodies we~ founst la.tk'. 'sund.y nig!ft B'e 'sakf be. .. is working:
1closely with Sacramento ofDcers on the--,_
,CME!. '\
..-I ~ . .n.e~ ... olothiAQ~inUuded'lwo P.Qiriso . r • ~~--~·; 1~"9U!il.'iJr,..... . ...,.. 'l''i::::.. raping and assaulting an attractive ~(t'a lraloed polol)l\'o.~lbould
.-..., •f'':""~t "'<'•) , >.. ,_111V1~ .. ~~.;::~..., _ _,. f ·'·'l<' <>too• deLllar~e. \ help piClc out ·the ~-iodm. llut , , . -, " ~·· 110fti'._..,..........,. •· Thejuryfiledbacklntq~udgeKe~th ! d~tlon oi thelr ,tx~oMe will • .-. ' ; Ml!Iiir.,,a'~,<t;.ll!~l!an~'~ Lae'• courtroom to a!Jo .retum a guilty ! •~to wa11--~" •'-·are~--• to n ··\-J ,;C._;._~:
(Ste l!Ob!Es, p;,g. %) • •
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, :'<~~,«. £" . .-11.~··•"t; .... "~ ri ' r-~~v~lp~~tal'tiut verdict on charges of burglary filed ._ =forli~t:,~~~·JCU r~ ,. r , .~ .. ~·M1!1ll~i'K , ••-r.1· <811P~l ~'Tli!l<idli~llS1 ~'o •--1_.x..:. '"•ra "llun-.-..;: agaillst Hampton by. the man who ! n eem.n aad Schmitt ~-;the old ~~·daliii'u~•.'.t)'!IW.ef•'llob}'U ,-._,,, y nc -.:i:--u,, wu&""" errlployed hlm on· a construction site ad·1 m.,erial ,...., will ha""',. ... -. ............ their ~ ~:..:.1..1'-'-~.,-d ·Orange CQast ·
·~· bW" _;!Iii ~~~~"mid ; -~~1~;~·~1r.;ag; Ja.,..,f to the victlm's home. \ Ji 'o'n iJ,b~· Al>ollo ~fill in .,...,..... ',,,.,u.oAm> "''·a; ay
.:!.M . . ~ .• 1 ' '" ~ • ,.,,,...-:-r r'P'll'., iiiterekted fn 'wiirrm llamp\Qn asked for nmnedtate sen-I ~lsslni ChaPters 'fn 'limar ~: basio-in· ,11!~.SY<tney, Aus\rilia, sun
"1'1"':',tlildl .0.. ~ll·1:""Pf1,.'•'"llh hll. '' .,,., ' • • · · ; · tenClng. Judge Lrie sentenced him to.five allf the veey :early aad • .tlle, v.;y late. !'4.er , a " Week .o( , unfavo(able t·,·~~'' . .1. • • ·,. " ·-.'·· , ~ ~C;",:.~ys~ w!": years to llfe In state prison Of/ the Rol:ks returned. by five eorller Apollo weather. Weatller p1e· rraWd · f0li1@f ~1· • , ...... w'f. ~ ~'!afd: ,.. '·~ pnr burglary conviction wlth rape and assau1t mObn landen have ranged tn age •
ol tae IJI, ,old ~f',~clOnf}!:;~'>l-~·.f!>O. , · . , . sentelic<S beld over until he completel , ~~ 3 bllllon and u bllllon years. 1. It should be a litUe warmer on
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J'.:T ~:;~i:.:':~~ 1/!';o~ Ai• • Cr-"':: Kill M , U.::a=~'s state prison file will he 1 J:::ih...t~.:'n ':!:'fralti , _o_., • .,1~;c, >"! •.;. • ..; -.,• ~~~~:'!'~,~~~ U:
Dr. Elbert C. Cole, --of the r illllI 8 :80 reviewed When lhemW..~1 i: .S,.1Doilltl)1Niltll!lr'li . '5'(US_ \'..an . eep 1 along tl\e ,Orru)ie Coast. Lows to-~M'l11t_,~, -t>-_'1!.'i I _.lR-i.i j • ,~If ~ '"'· ,. ) • :' ~dbdip~:~~Udget"ta'~'I ru !Jig . ~j on Mr nm m:anion while he •i • ' ' hight Wi11'.dip down to 41. ,.. ~'f'WM'·· UltlAH ) ... Slletlll'• ileputles Plan' dlcated. -"I 0 IO -...... tbe -111...... • B' 11 6' . ' ~ urlhe'1,19N to....-, H," the Decltodayto ...... rthebodyotTnunan But the fact that Hompton WU on :~"'l'it1ahlpAmorlcl. -ut Not irien ·INSIDE TODAY 'f-
,aJd. " ~tt, 14, P!ttatiurg,'lilllOd In the ,.reclr;' perole from an llSS!'ult conviction at the , i; 1 , , , · 1 •• " ... • ~ '1 · _. The growlno 1.,.., ......,_,,, r
>Tnrman Is to bnprvve enou0 to of a .....U .,._in nlqe.t <.'GOllltJ1I Umtof.the~lall•Jlli,<17~mahrlt 1l ~ "r ___ .,,-1,-"''I t ,.,.,,"~·'Mills tUPif '11 ' • ·e-bolh.,..nred ot""IJOd<·J>faWelf:· ....... m.: !'t'"~·~ ~·~= ~~ ~. ~ ~ ~{i.. ~!a~: ~~ ... =.i1:, ~~F • Lio llllltnJ.m.ents · ~ ~~· ~ ]IOelllns :: '.in .&i. .... 11/Ua b~ • io ..... ,;,, ,.,_,, ... _, -9Mi. n• ..... f M • · l · .._._. ,. h o C1is•-cto~ffil Iii< ""l!On _ ..__.,.._ --·· o-on I .., .. 1'<111\ en-liclall "'1d. -"'l.k F '.& • 1 Mill llil'l'I altboagll'll ls a .er-Oct ll'IP¢e-•tyl•, Wiling ....,,0 the
...... tllll _..., lillD ID -to Qdlo, Hampton'• vtclim, the mother of three ' .i>-11 en ro111, ~ll'()~an~ , for ·-14 be -"Peepln1r Tom." MtiD!l'I communes and eon-
iGadllloa .....,,dlAly, Y-ehlldnn, Identified the tall, bUlky • • · Tbl ~ eit of -"~-cltiding that they have some .,
vllal:':flilDIJ:l"""~-=.~ -•uv..,rw-.c ', delendantUtheDWlwho foreed hi>way I F'lfPl'--•aluodbytboowoer , .t ~•-,ect •·-by lbe i4ltl . ·---!~~ 1 lbe ~ -,_""' ~''" "'"""""""--•'Me_ Into hlr l.ortsriur Avenue home and 1t ,flP15 wn rrtoloa MoadOJifrom an M~ &lpreme()ou(t1f<>oday In the ng qMOlitlts. Sl""J °" 1'011< ="""' • ~ 1 CEFT rapad lloP -ill-lront r two of those" 11\n:rall ~ at O.... '"Cotlrrty appei! or "l•iliiii Grii<IF ffiiii! "11.,.,. 20;_ il~il ardl tal ---~ N . • chUdren. 1lirixrt, lheriff't omcer, Mkf. ,. , ~:" : Mwlff ,. •
• '1Hil bloid ~ rernllned Hampton'• 111-pound victim needed 14 1• The 1* WM reporttd by Franklin year priSQD. sentence tor u,tpul under c....,.... 21~• :::=:,,/':_ 1:
normal -· Kidney lurictlci!t l!lteboo to close a head wound opened l'Kelth NoNdt, M. of-. The motel the state's "P .. pl~ Tam" Jaw,· ~ " _,, •-• Mlqul.-.,.--A whim.Hampton struck her with a heavy ·o~r ~ de'puUa um tbe tnetnsments ·-e ••as:• " :::-..,_ ... !tl~ ' wU fed tbroqh a tube ·~·t !i bedroom lamp. were,'rtmo\'tllf rm the --a of 1..L.. 11..t.f. Greeo, ~tended' lhe, •l.ltute. '1pt1ttlshea =---= : T.i..obMI tt ) '
bb ooee to hU -tcb~H'e t~ She told the jury that she was Pline. a--~ ..,.. males fOfr 1n ac tivity non-G"lmiDal for =::-'1
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1 ,.:? =::-~ ·~ lllVen ~ to ~help tdm ~ • fl reputtdly choked and beaten by her DepUUa Ilk! the '"'"*" IDl1 have c-.. i..... .._ _ _. ,~ ......... -··• .... 1 Z:,!:-,,•lftf"il 1! ::.':"':..::"" 1•1: ._ aill 14 -the llralo "' lili heart. tx!ra •• assailant before Hampton fled when the had ....,._ ~ to Uri lll'ertilt 'lllefe ·-; -•ver--...,_ ~Pl<r -:t:"'Z.11.: ,, ,
i.i,od '*'1 -· ! 1 vlcttm'S alltor-Jn.~w ~"lthe ~:7~ WU .. ,~• :r m. ! ~ .-oD,~·~~-m("I, .. ,_" ..... iilJ-llO"lll~'llilJWP•. •& •t•llll••rt111•'"'1~::::;:_::~::::::__...:; __ _.,..;
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Na.,y Ship Has Wotnen on Decla Kissinger,
Red Meets SAN FRANCISCO rLTPI) -Tbe Navy Ont of the women sailors was working
ho6pita\ ship Sanctuary steamt! dout of a tl!ltphone from the bridge.
port today, witl1 a \\'Oman sailor on the The Sanctuary is the Navy's first ship
bridge and others on the decks. ending n to add women to its regular deck crew.
seagoing tradition that dates back to Today's departure was the first tum of
wooden shi ps. -sea duty for the women, a one-dny
The shi p pulled away from tht Naval shakedown cruise outside the Golden
Shipyard 15 minutes late. Gale following extensive reconditioning
But Navy Captain Bruce Gair, whose of the ship at the shipyard.
job is to get ships in and out on time, did Tbe crew has lived ashore during the
_not attribute this to the presence of 60 shipyard work, and the women moved
women in the crew. aboard just before the sailing.
• "They did a good job," Gair said as the Tk\e women 's quarters on the ship, a
! Sanctuary got under way. veteran ol World \Var II, and Vietnam,
2·t1to11th B1mt
Escapee Nabbed
On Bay Bridge
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A convicted
robber who escaped from the Calirornia
Institute for ~1en at Chino in a day~ght
ambush in which an unanned guard was
killed and another wounded has been
.captured by police on tile San Francisco
Bay Bridge.
Offieers identified the rfian as Ronald
Homes i1i Valley
Su ff er Blackout
At Coldest Time
About 200 all-electric home ere e
without power in Fountain ·uey Mon-
\Vayne Beaty, 35, who they said escaped
Oct. 6 as he was being driven to a court
appearance in San Bernardino.
Apprehended with him was Jean S.
Hobson, 44, offtctrS said.
The arrests Monday ended a two-
month seareh for Beaty r a D g i n g
throughout the Southwest.
Sgt. Richard Abbey said police had in·
formation that Beaty might he driving in
San Francisco. Officers wailing in un-
marked cars spotted his car entering the
freev.•ay in downtown San Francisco, and
other police and California Highway
Patrol units converged on it in the mid·
die of the bridge, Abbey said.
Abbey said Beaty was carrying a load·
ed revolver and tha a loaded handgun
was fQl.U'ld in i>bson's purse.
Offi so-said a sawed-off shotgun,
. liber pistols, two gas grenades,
an M·l carbine and some ammunition
aiso found in the car.
However, ' the pair offered no
resistance, police said.
Wtre little .dUferent than the men's 11tl·
cept for some modlOcalions such as
doors on the women'• showers," ac-
cordlng to a Navy spol<esrnan.
The short cNlte " expected to slve the
Navy i1s first opportunity to find out how
male and female sailors get along at
close quarters on a day.Jn and day-out
basl.s.
In preparing for Its coeducaUonal
cruise, the Sanctuary set several Navy
"firsts." -
Lt. (Jg) Ann Kerr of Rio Del Mar, was
the first "line" offieer oo board a Navy
shlp. Technically, a line otncer of Mr
rank could command a ship in an
e.mergency U superior officers Vt'tl'e ln-
-llated. ·I!-. a Navy lpobsman Aid a
regulatkm prtve:nt1 a woman "from tak-
ing the con."
Miss Kerr, an attractive, petite blonde,
Is the ahlp'a adminl1tratlon officer and
said she "baa had no naviaatlonal
I.raining at all."
AMellese Knapp, 2l, a seaman ap-
prentice from Delavan, Wisc., is one of
two women on board "striking" for
boatawain's mate. Miss Knapp goes
about her duUes wearing a hard hat but
"never forgett I'm a lady.
"I even like It when male sailors belp
mt lift tlllna•." .... said. Adm. ,..Arlene '8. Cuerek, head of the
Navy nurse corps and Its Iona woman ad-
miral, wu the maln speaker at tbe
Sanctuary's recommlssloaing ceremonies
lut moolh.
She warned the assenibled mate and
female sailors that there was "no men's
Navy, no women's NaVy -but one
Navy."
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Intensify,
PARIS\ (UPI) -Dr. H~ A.1 Jan,.
Inger held almost no~ Deiiotial!n(
.... io.. tbday In ef!orttllo end tb6~
nam w1r, and French Fon11git 111 r I
Maurice Schumann predlcled the
would come by Jan. 3.
Fronch cltploll)IUc llOOlr<U 'l'l'ke o( ·a compromi~ on a key polrlt-.wllbdrrfa!
of North.Vietnamese.
While Kisslogt_r was meet.1131 w;th
Hanoi's Lt Due Tbo, both the North. V~
namese and the Viet Ceng re~'tnd·
fer by South Vi-.itse Presil*!t
Nguyen Van 11ileu for a Cbri.stmu
cease-fire . whloh could be prolooged In·
definitely and which could bring· home
the American prisoners of war.
Kissinger met this morning with the
~t .!<Pre5e1!!8Uvea to the Tban-
day semipublic Paris peace talks and
they ·were joined briefiy with a group or
technicians from both sides who are
believed editing a cease-fire agreement
In stW another meetll!I.
Theo all joomeyed to a \'1111 In
suburban Parl.s for the main ~g
between Klsslnger and Tbo.
The KJMinger-Tho talks began at 3
p.m. (I a.m. PST).
11lrte hours liter, Kissinger end an
, aide toot a brief moll thniuCb lhe
&ll'deo "#bile • rainy, misty nlPl en-
veloped the Parla rqloo. ..
Tbey then resumed the cooformce
behlDd the tightly clooed steel lbutlfn of
Scbamllm, wbo bu. been In clole con-. tact. wltll both 9kles, niode Iris
statements during a luncheon speech to-
day. He said be believes the United States
will achieve . !ace in Vietnam before the
new U.S. CDngress convenes.
"A aettlement Is likely and JX*ble,
be said. "I confirm I IUD not a
pessimist."
In Wa.•hlngtoo, P=ident Nlllon mtt
for to minutes wit: Gen. Alexander M.'
Haig Jr., Kissinger's deputy, and review·
ed cableo from Kissinger, ocoordini lo rr... Secretary Ron.: · L. Ziegler.
day on one or the coldest nights of the
year, a spokesman for Sout hern
California Edison Co. said today.
Blackouts on Lanvin C o m p a n y ' s
Tiburon homes began about 6:30 p.m.
Sunday and continued through about 8
a.m. Monday, the spokesman said.
Officers said Beaty was booked for in·
vestlgation or murder and escape and
Miss Hobson for investigation of murder.
MAP DETAILS ROUTE OF ANNUAL NEWPORT HARBOR CHRISTMAS BOAT PARADE
Festival of Lights Starts N8xt Monday and Runs Through Dtc. 23
"The President remains in close con-
tact with Dr. Kissinger," Ziegler said.
Ziegler would not say immecfiate1y
whether another negotiating session
...,Id be held Wednesday.
"It was very cold all weekend, so peo-
.ple left their heaters on constantly and
didn't allow our transformen time to
cool oU ," explained Leonard Smith,
district superintendent.
"By §un~ rughl, some of 1hem
started to go ~ton us," Smith said.
The problem was complicated, be said,
by Christmas lights which caused an ad·
ded power drain.
Som2 of the homes were without power
as long 8s IO hours, Smith said, whil e
others experieoced blackoots for less
than one hour.
• "'It was a complicated situation, ~because some transformers that weren't
:: actually out had to be de-energized while t repair work was done," ~th·l!iaid. t The homes affected were built in 1969 r and had not experh!:nced major probleni:s
~ before, Smith said.
' Smith added that Edison had night t crev.-s out Tuesday to prevent a repeat of
t the problem.
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~Bandit Holds Up
tBowling Alley
! A man who told a woman cashier he
t was armed took $2,760 from a Santa Ana
.-,. bowling alley ?\1onday, police reported. c Cashier Denl!iel Probert said she was c approached in the alley's parking lot as
t she was going to the bank by a man t described as five.eleven, weighing about
fi 175 pounds, with black I.air and a black I mustache. He handed her an envelope J containing a note reading, "You're being
( robbed. I have a gun in my pocket." t The Pacific Bowling Lane, 2015 W. l First St., c~ier handed him the day's J receipts in cash and checks. He fled on
I foot. "'
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DAILY PILOT
TMOr-.. CM1t DAILY ,ILOT,1wtltl ~
la ~ ftle N....,l"rfta. II .....iltflc:d 111 .... °"""" Coatl '-*'llrllnt COm!NnJ. s..,. ,... •tt• .,.. ~111Nd, ,,.,.,,,y "',..,,
l'rldly, fw Cotti MHI, N_,,..... k id!,
...,.......,_ aud1/F1M111111 V•lleJ, lallVllll
hKh. lnlnl/$idllltbtct lll'ld $1n Cltnlttlt1/
6M JWM C1plllr.,... A llllOll r19lotllll
•fflM II PVDlltllld $11Ul"d•VS eM Swid•Y5·
TN ,,IMIMI ,uO!l&l'llftt pi.Int 11 11 3JO Witt
.. Y ltrfff, c..:11 M-. C.lttor""· mi..
Rob1rt N. W11J
~11111-tr11 lfld Puoll111er
J 1ck It. Curfiry Vke Pntldenl ... lhrltt'll ~
Tho"'•• K11•U .....
Thom11 A. Muri-hine
MMl!tlflt 1!11/lor
Cheri•• l-1. loot g1ch1'4 I'. Nin
Mthltnl M.,,.,... IWllll'I
Tala,•111 1714) MJ..4121
Cl 11fW .Moall ... '4W11
They will be transferred to the San
Bernardino County jail where two
persons are in custody in the ambush ..
Beaty's prison escape came after two
cars foreed the J:M" In which be was
being drivenlJ>court off the road. police
said. Three men and a woman, armed
with pistols, severed Beaty'l!i abackles
aod bandc>llfed his guanls, police said.
The assailants then killed one of the
guards, Jesus Sanchez, 24, and wounded
tho Other, George J. 'F!tzg<[<lld, officers 'saft:I.' ~ •
Later, it was diseovered that Beaty's
scheduled court appearance had been
postponed.
San Francisco Bay Area activists
Andrea Holman, 18, and Benton Douglas
Burtt, 30, are being held in San
Bernardino in connection with Beaty1s
escape.
Burt and Miss Holman, the daughter of
SlanfOl'd Medical School p r o f e s s o r
• Halsted HoliMn. surrendered Oct. 23 to
tho FBI. They ha .. been charied with .
unlawful night to avoid prosecution in a
federal warrant that had been is.sued for
them. ·
Both have denied any part in the am-
busl><scape.
Newport Woman
Sues Over Fall
A Newport Beach woman who claims
she suUered serious injuries , when ahe
was thrown from a "spirited mare" at
the Irvine Equestrian Center has sued
the Irvine .Ampany for $500.000.
Mrs. Patricia Lou Lindquist eha.rges
the company with negligence in permit·
ting her to use an animal that was
allegedly unsuitable when she visited the
center, 7385 Pacific Coast Highway. c.otona del ~ lar, last Feb. 19.
Mrs. Llndqulst states In her Orange
eounty. Superior Court lawsuit that the
an~_.reared and bolted as she tried to
mount 1t.
-Cuban Refugees-l:'"and
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Waving, clapping
the ir hands and shouting "muchas
gracias," 85 Cuban refugees landed in
r..1iami Monday aboard the f Ir st
"freedom flight" since the Castro
government suspended the program la1t
May. "I've waited five years to join my
relatives," one elderly womar. ~Id tn
Spanish as the refugees filed off lhe
Eastern Air Lines prop jet.
--~~~~~~---
Convicted Capo
Official Retains
Seat on Cotmcil
.. '
San Juan Clpistrano City Councllman
James Weathers -convieted of assault
charges late last week -retained his
seat on the council ~onday after City At-
torney James Okazaki. ruled the local
businessman's sentence constituted a
mls~r.
The action came at the beginning of
the city council meeting and after a
weekend of study by the city attorney.
Okazal! aaiil Iha! after consulting with
several specialists in criminal law be
determined that Weathers technically
was found guilty of a felony charge In the
incident involving a loaded shotgun and
sheriff's deputies.
But, the lawyer added, the sentence -
amounting to fOur months' worth of
weekends in county jail and three years'
probation, was a misdemeanor sentence.
"With that in mind, J have been ad-vised_ that Mr. Weathers can legally re-
tain his polition," Okazaki said.
WeJ1thers, who had strong support '4'ur-
lng Ifie court proceedlogs from !euow c11y
councilmen and city staff members,
ent~ a plea of guilty to a charge of
assault with a deadly weapon stemming
from a family dispute early last IUIIUller.
Sheriff's deputies said they arrested
the councilman at his home aftef he ap-
peared with a loaded shotgun and refused
to surrender the weapon.
TEXAN RECEIVES
DEFENSE POST
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Niron today named Texas oilman
Wlll!IDt P. Clements Jr. to be deputy ~ of Defense, the No. 2 spot in
the cllplrtment.
Cleibents, 55, will succeed Kenneth
Rush who previously was appointed to
the State Department. '
Clem.nta Is chaJrman of tho board of
Sedoo Inc. 'Of ~aa aod has had no
previous government experlence.
Priest Re111oved
He Rernarried Witliout Permissi.on
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A 16-ycar-old dlvorted Epttcopal prim has been
removed as pastor of St. Edmund's Owreh in Pacifica for remaJT)'in& a Bev·
erly Hill•"""""' Without ptnnlulon.
A spokesman for Blahlp C. Kllmer My..-1 of Grace Cithedral said Monday
the Rev . Robert Hoqard "ex-<0mmunlcated hlmldl" and bad _been pro-
nounced "blhlbtted" -fori>ldden to WTy out prteeUy fWJCtiont.
''IJl'l'rll. SUCH TIME as be Is mle«d as 1 pi:lest In COOC1 standlni by his
nwn b~. he cannol by canon law officiate In this or any other dloc.,. In tbe -,;n8JICIUI COllUl)WllOO, .. said BlabOp MYtrs.
Father, n_.,i said he was married Sept. 10, 19'11 to cftvorcee Shell•
Slan-, wbo hU a youn1 daaghter, IS monlha aflcr the prlttt'a llnl wife filed
for divorce.
' RE..li!D HE AND hll wife deckl<d to "pr<sent the cllurcl! ,.ttll I !alt••·
compU an! !hon l!ilPo for compwlon."
ParlahlontrS wtre said to be upset over the action.
Open to All
Harbor Yule Festival
The Communists In rejecting Saigon's
e.all for a holiday truce Injected II new
issue into the troubled negotlatiooa -
tbey demanded for the nm time that
Thieu join the United States In signing
any cease-fire agreement. . ; " . ,
Will Statt on Monday
111Ieu baa said be would never sip an
acconl tbai ~ oot call tor lritblranl of the Nottb Vletrunnese. ; ~ i . I'
' F,....Pfi,,el
The Newport llBrbol-Festival of Lights
boat parade will start Monday night and
is open to any skipper with a decorated
vessel.
The chamber of. commerce-sponsored
event will : ~art at the Balboa Island Fer-
ry terminal at 6:30 p.m. and at least 50
tioats will cruise the entire harbor every
night through Dec. 23.
Telephonic Thief
Gets $5,000 Fine ... -·~
OAKLAND (AP) -A Palo Alto man's
expertise with computen bas cost him ss,ooo -the fine .imposed for a "crime of
U>efuture" i.Jephooic theft of data from
a competitor's computer.
Superior Qiurt Judge Harold B. How _,..t.lfllih Jeffrey .WMd, :.!, on pro-
bation for three years Monday , saying :
"I feel that your company is just .. 1
culpable ea you, and for that reason and
because you have now been branded a
thief throughout your indu stry, I'm not
going to impose a jail sentenee."
Truth or
The chamber has pl:i:.lnted ap-prc..J:imate times the spar caravan
will pass choice vlewlnj, spota around the
harbor to make it easier for onlookers to
fin(. a comforta~le spot to waU;b from.
Chamber Manager Jack Barnett said
there are many pls.ces the parade will
paa that are open to the public for view-
ing, including the wallcs alone Balboa
Island, the Marine Avenue Bridge,
Mariner's Mile restaurants, the Balboa
Pavilion and others.
Barnett said a new feature bu been
added to this year's parade -floating
choral music.
A large cru iser bearing three cbolrs
fll!rlllhk .n.ay from the pande 8Dd
anchor in the turning basin. Barnett said
tbe singers will present Christmas carols
and songs of the season for the en-
joyment of shoreside audiences.
The parade ls schedul< 1 to end at 9: 15
p.m. each night and Barnett said
decorated,boali can join in or drop out
anrwhere along the parade roui:e.
He said a committee boat will be out
each night to lnfonnally judge the entries
but there will be no great emphasis on
prizes. Small plaqu~ • wW be awarded to
the best decorated boata..
BODIES •.• ·
of jean-type ·-. boot9 of the harnesa type, ablrts, socks and a sl<epmg
bag, Investigators said.
They were reported found in the
garbage can of a car waatt north of
downtown Sacramento.
II would be the third double slayin, In
the Sacramento area in a week.
A woman and her daughter were killed
in their Sacramento home last Sunday.
Two Sacramento union official> ......,
shot to death at their offices the follow· in& night.
Prison Cohabitation
Proposed in England
LONDON (UPI) -Renee Short, a
member of Parliament, called on tlie
government Monday to provide "love
Oats" for long-term prl.son irunates and
thelr wives.
She said imprisonment for 10 years or
more without normal sexual ouUets is
"brutal and damaging:"
Consequences?
Somelim" the truth hum! We havt lost an occosion•I sala by not telling •
whet he wanted to heer.
customer
Wt might point out that 1 customer would be better off to pay • littlt more for our
rubber podding than buy 1 cheeper, mushy pod that foels like you aro wollting on belloons. Tho
1'belloon" pod hurls the eorpet backing, causes str1tching, and ruins seems. Also, this podding
often fleltons out ofter 1 while.
Addition1lly, we might tell you tho! some carpet fibers are mort practic1I than othe11.
A fiber that works in one texture, won't work in another.
'
Foel froe to call for odvice. All of our 11les ~pie have hid extonsivo uperionco in tho
sorvice ond of this busino11 -ind 1fm all -tho most important thing wo c•n offer, that no
elst does, is service!
ALDEN'S
_,,..,AllEJS-e-QRAl!E5
1663 Placntla Ave. -' COSTA MllA
646-4138
HOURS: Mott. l])_ru Tllun., t to 5'30-Plll. t tot-SAT., '130 to S
i
D
p
G
G
F
Deck the Halls • • •
•
)
1-.,. Dtct-12, 19n 5 OAJLV PllOT 3
-T raffic Woes Studied
Alternatives for Coast Freeway Sought
By THOMAS D. ELIAS
end ARNOLD FIUEpMAN
Now that plans for a JOO-mile freeway
along lhe Southern California coastline
have been torpedoed, state highway of-
Ucials are rroplng for a different solution
t,. the inc.teasing traffic problems of the
region's beach communities.
The Legislature's acUoo last summer
in scrapping the long-planned Pacific
Coast Freeway through Los Angeles and
Orange Counties has even prompted the
state Highway Commission, champion of
Calilomla's massive freeway system, to
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
FOCUS .
move in a new diriclion for solving the
SouthiaDd's coastal traffic bottlenecks.
Commissioners last m0nth asked the
local 'governments along the coast of the
two counties if they would like to Join
with the state in restudying their
transportation difficulties, this time ex-
ploring all types. of solutio~ except
freeways.
headaches. The same would apply in
Orange C.ounty for a proposed large-scale
amusement park in the Upper Newport
Bay area.
To accelerate finding a n e w
transportation solution, the llighway
Commission has called for the coutal
citit! and counties . to decide within slx
months what they want in the way of a
coastal transportaUon study.
Until then, Moe bas reported, the com-
mission won't even begin to consider
unloading the property it bought for the
ill-fated freeway.
That involves 191 parcels of land in
~ialibu, Long Beach, Newport Beach ~
Huntington Beaclt for which 1be state
paid 121.6 million, according to the
highway division office in Los Angeles.
An in-depth StuUy of c o a s t a I
transportation problems was originally
adVanced via an Assembly bill which
died recently in the Senate Fina~ Coin·
m.ittee. Yet that bill, alfUJOted by
Republican Robert H. Burke of Hun-
tington Beach, applied only to lhe Orange
County coastline and, significantly,
wouldn't have e:rempted freeways as a
potential solution.
Highway Commission could complement
ooe another or even be combined.
"It makes no sense to 1 tu d y
transportation In one part of Soutbem
CaJifornia, such as the coastline, in ilola·
tion," said William 0 . Ackerman,
SCAG 's director or transportation plan-
ning. "But some are&! clearly tequire
more detailed study than others and I
wouJd say the coastline is one of those."
The statewide plan mandated by the
successful coastline initiative in lut
month's general election may abo have a
bearing on coastal transportation. But
completion of that plan is three years
away.
Another time factor may invOlve
disposition of the hlgl>j>rlced beach
parcels the Division of Highways is
holding from the freeway pro)ect.
The commission noted last month it
has to trade or auction· off "'the land
unless the concerned local governments
or SCAG "determine any regional needs
for the rights of way for . . other
transport.a ti on needs or public use!."
Among other public uses might be
parks, which Newport Beach city of·
ficials say they wouJd like on some ol the
$16 million worth of property the
highway division is holding within their
boondaries.
Pat Nixon serves as the tour guide for a press pre-
view of the Christmas decorations in the White
House. Here the first lady staodS in Cross Hall,
decorated with holly and artificial Christmas trees.
It represented a signilicant departure
in policy and attitude for the pawerful
Highway Commission to adhere to lbe
antl·freeway sentiment e v i de n c e d
throughout the coastal communities, in
the Legislature· and by Gov. Ronald
Reagan, too.
The coastal situation, though, is
already being surveyed as part .d. a
million-dollar study of the entire region's
transportation problems which t b e
Southern California AS90Ciatioo o f
Governments is conducting.
It's cooceivabl~ the SCAG study and the
one contemplated by Moe and the
Of course, freeing up the land for parks
or other public uses unrelated to
transportation wouldn't much help the
ever-increasing coastal traffic con·
gestioo.
Gunman Slay-$ 2
In Night Club,
Then Escapes
Blind Rapist~ Moreover, 'it's an o,bvious e{-
lort by the commissioners, actipg on
the advice of-state Public Works Director
James A. 1'1oe;, ~ face the,problem from
t.bt rl:!alistic~stpndpolnt that the coastal
!leeway is a dead idea.
Saddleback Valley Unit
Seeks 'Orderly' Growth Sig htless Man Foiled in 2 Tries
But what kind of alternative solution
will emerge .and what will become of all 1 Rayford and the woman both worked at tbe pn:iperty the Division of Highways ·
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The band
played, psychedelic lights flickered and
everyone was dancing in a Filipino night
club ca.fled the ltugao when a tall man at
the bar pulled a long-barreled gun and
announced : "I'm going to kill all of you."
He turned and fll'td Monday at a
nearby cab driver and a bartender and
shot both dead.
FREEPORT, N.Y. (UPI) -A blind
man who allegedJy tried to·rape a-woman
at noon oO a street corner has been
charged with sexually abusing another
woman in a ladies' room.
Karl Rayford , 21, of New York, was ar-
rested Monday and charged with abusing
a 2>year-old woman at the State Voca-
tional Guidance Center in Freeport, L.I.
Charles Barnes,
the center· bought up in the path of the freeway
The woman told police that Rayford route may be uncertain for a long time. walked into the ladies' room Friday and All that ·remains from lhe two decades About. 30 persons -including land the policy plan and its eventual adoption
molested her ~ ~.. ~ -.r."' 1 • . . . . d developers, housewives, merchants and into a new area county general plan may
Raytard.bad,been released on persOriil · orplannil;lg,_,-.,YaDce and a(iqWSltiOD an scientists -will meet together for tbe
bot:vJ .. ~tyrday. Then, be was charged ~cl\lal ~on '!!!.: theacr Rouo!teun-1 first time tonight at UC Irvine, marking ta~~reHaerdyeemarasn. said Monday that she
with-trying t9 rape a woman on a 'street .,reeway pro~ .... are __, es the beginning of a long-range effort to in Queens developed property scattered through bring orderly growth to the Saddleback is busy this week preparing a f~ding a;: woman's. 10-year-old daughter parts of~ two counties and a 6.8-mile Valley. proposal for submittal to Sacramento by
screamed for help while 10 people on the hunk of completed freeway between Ox· All e:rcept one representative of the Friday for flSCIJ year 1973-74.
sidewalk "just stood there and watched," nnArdddiandt~lint ~ ~rJien~~ Mission Viejo Company, are residents of Although not sure "where. the group
police ••'cl. One man, ho-·er· , was y, a · e the va1I f h'ch the will t to wUI be •---'--.. ....... scheduled for coostructkln nOrth or the ey or " 1 Y ry · by then" in the puu.uUIJg process. Theo he hit the harteoder In the la<e
with hia gun, cut off the cab driver's
right ear, and fled.
wrestling with Rayford when police ar-first link in the late l9'10s. develop a pohcy plan. Mrs. Hardeman said she is projecting
F Pl rived, police said. wt...... · ed the t Funded by a 10· int federal-state grant of and geoera1; .. ; .... proJ'ect activities for the ormer anner' Raylord wai being held ·without hood in 1...;;;;. .. ~to =i:.. more ~ $39,tl!IO, the study group is one aspect ol a grant appli •.
Girl Flees Nude
From Rape Try
the Nassau QJunt1 jaiL miles beside Southern California's scenic univenity-community project, the SACC Of the current year's $39,000, about
Succumbs at 82 "'· . Bla . ..., 1 ~:,~~:'oilc.~. ~ =:-:~r.o.::11ng eoun-:P:m~t i~ '"H~u~~!:ti.!iede.:l " . ~O,ytet 8ts .r e Jlespl .. the Ude ol 1._ay opposition The study group, heailed by ~Id plan-welfare and 113,000 from the state's nue
Cbaries . 11,..&.l a lormtr Orang• ; ·lfASliiNG'ION (UPI) _-lie-Atomic "w'IH8f~ Its l:restlhl!s :i\iii', llO ooe nlng consultant Ed Haworth; Will' meet 'I fund. ·
County planning comm1SS10ner and resl-Energy Conulussion says the Soviet 19.ttllctintlog tbe need toriolVe' tbl' traf-every Tuesday nia:bt (beginning Jan. 2) Tonight's meeting at 7 o'clock b
de.i;it of Laguna Beach !or 24 years died Union may have made its 13th and l4th fJc .jam1 besieging many beach areas. for at least seven months, but probably organizational only. The group members
OAKLAND (UPI) -A ~yeaN>ld
hitchhiker stood nude on a comer waving
frantically for help, but p a s s i n g
~ ignored ber, police have
reported.
Friday. Private .services were held underground nuclear aJ>tosioos of l972. And sud) recent coastal dev~ts more. were all invited to participate by SACC.
Saturday. The AEC said it maasured one test over as the lara:e new Alcca bou~g p?oject Ada Mae Hardeman, UCI extension of-Interests of developers, businesses.
Mr. Barnes, 82, lived at 761 Oak St.. the weekend that measured in the 20 to near ·Pepperdine Unive.rsity~s Malibu ficlal and university coordinator of the homeowners and environmentalists are
compensation and pensions, $22.7 million 200 kiloton range. campus figure to intensif)' 'the traffic project, estimates that development of represented, Mrs. Hardeman said.
nursing home at the time ol death. ] p;;;;;;;:;;i;;;;;;;;iii~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iOiiiOii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iOii;;i;;;;i;;;;;i;;;;;;;iOiiiOiiiOiiiiii;;;;;;iiii;i;;;iOiiiiiiiiii..iiOiiiOii..i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iOii,..iOii;;;;;;~
Mr. Barnes was a former branch
manager of the Willard storage Battery
Company of Los Angeles and worked
with the Laguna Beach Community Chest
In addition to his county responslbilltles.
The Borkeley woman said Monday a
man pve her a ride from San Francisco
and drove to a deRrted warehouse area
where he !weed her to UDdresl. She said
!he fled, lea•i"i her clothea behind, when
the mu tried to alllck her.
He is survived by his widow, Mabel B.
Barnes; stepson, George Reary ol
Hawaii; stepdaughter, Mrs. Mabel Dean
of Fountain Valley; sister, Mrs. Dennis
Miller of La Canada; four grandchildren
and lour areat·grandchlldren.
A reoene poll<e ollioer noticed the
naked woman after !he had stood oo the
C(l'1W!f J.O mtmtes. He gave her a coat
and called Oakland police.
Reporter Offered Coffee
-With One Frog ~r Two?
By JO OLSON O! .. ~,..,...,.
Oii, THE llAZAllll8 o! being a newspaper r<J!Orlet'.
5ornetimel you get into something you wish you hadn't, and sometimes
thlnt!• get In that you wish hadn't. Like !rogs in your co!lee.
'l'blt's right -froeJ in your coffee. Not too bewitching a thought Is it?
But ;wait. It wu a wttcb who put a frog in my coffee, so it really was a
bewitching act.
If You're ready for thl.s one, read on.
. I'm Cllm!ltly doln« research fot .a story on wltchcra!t, so the obvious
starting point was to Interview a witch. I located a cooperative one, drove
to ·her houoe, lllzed up the altuatlon, decided I could handle it (no black cats)
and lalocl<ed at the door.
I waa lukewarmly gi'eeted, -led at the kitchen table and o!!ered · collee.
Being a collee drlllker and kind o! thirsty, 1 accepted. What I should say Is
that I nevtr tum down a cup o! co!lee.
TliE INTEllVIEW PROCEEDED and I sipped coflee between jotting
down nocea and quoteJ. About a third ol the way through my coffee I hap-
pft,ed to glance into the cup (you never stare into your cof[ee mug, do you?)
' and uw a green !ro('a head sllcklng out o! the coffee.
My lace probably turned green and I almOl!I crooked, but I quickly
glaeced ap ot till Wlld1 to -ff ahe waa watchli>i me. I hate to mako a fool
of myaell In !Toot of anyooe.
The wilth wun~ watching. I put down my coffee cup; pushed it aside
so I -~ -lnaldo and with straight lace, kept on aslclng questions.
A rn Mllft1l'l8 later Ille uked ff I -""' more coffee and I said no
-• -1ettJns "' that 1 had -the &os. We played thl• aame for a -· tbon I ended Iha mtervlew Ind eilled 'In a normal manner. On Iha WIJ' to my .,.t appo.lntmeDI , l •tarlA!d wondering •ba\ ltlnd of
wlld>eo' 1>mr l had -elven -LID. ~-d<iwnen or Juat blaill< coltee -.r1111"'1"1l'llt In IL u-ny I nover WOrtJ=1bou1 thlrkind o! thing becaaae l
!lltervl<w t&o nk:eol peoplo Ill the -Id. Bui co!fee which stares blCk can /r'
a rMI eye opener. ,..
I started thlnkhis •bout 10 the strange people In the world who do weltd
and wondrous thlnp. I was ala<! I had ,.:aped unocathed and voWed to be
mon careful wbeo> lntenlowlog such o!l·beat people 11 wltchea (though she
claimed to Ito a benlan witch).
'l11e ftWlrol of thia reportorial anomaly might be: neV«' drink wllchot'
bnw µn1.., you hove a -ol what'• In the polloo.
I • I .
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,. DAILY Plllfr ___ l ____ T_u""1_,__Df<f_m_ ... -'--1_2_;_. _1'17_2
, Jus t South Viets Pursue 3 Red Battalions . ~ (
w ith
T om
urphi n e
Send Thi s Bo y
•
To Congress
OFF ANO RUNNING DEPT. -Thcv
threw a Jillie Republican bash last nigh't
over at the NC\.lo'porter Inn for our ne"'
39th District Congressman Andre"' J
Hinshaw , who is currently preparing to
step down a1 our Orange County assessor
and move inlo the big leagues in
Washington, D.C.
The party was fun but that wasn't its
principa l purpose. There was a small
matter of mont!y .
Hinsha1v, you "·ill recall. ran in the
JLme Primary · and put the boot tv
Oxtgressman John G. Schmitz. w·ho then
flitted off to the American Independent
Party.
~In the final round last November.
Hinshaw then dispatched Democratic
challenger John Black of Newport Beach
to handily win the 39th Congressional
seat.
THING ABOUT AtL this is that it
doesn't co1ne free. It costs. Hinsha\\'
pretty ~·ell covered the nearly $65.000
spent on his November victory. But there
is a small matter of the $50,000 it took to
whip Schmitz back in June. So that \Vas
the whyfor of the Hinshaw banquet.
They fillL'<i 1he Newporte r's ~1onte
Carlo Room at $100 IH!r plate in an effort
to eva porate at least a portion of
Congressman Hinshaw's ca m pa i g n
deficil. I didn 't cou nt the house but if you
figure}! on th<' sarc side 1that there were
2S t.aSl es and eight rolks al each, that
wou ld come to some $20,000, less ex-
penses. I suspect there were a lot more
than that.
INDEED, T11ER E WERE enough GOP
him inaries on hand to start another con-
Yention. I heard there was a Democratic
busboy who Oed the place in absolute ter-
ror.
Anyway , I don't normally visit places
where the steak runs 100 bucks . 1'-1ost
places where I dine you can buy a
partnership in the joint for that much. So
I attended under auspices of Jim
Gilstrap, the noted Harbor Are a
petroleum experl
Chip Cleary. who ran Hinshaw's cam-
paign. also ran as master of ceremorties
and. we late r learned, will run our new
congressman 's Orange County ofrice.
Chip does a lot of running.
MOST OF THE l\.fAYORS were on
hand, including William Fischbach of
Irvine; Jack Hamme tt of Costa Mesa :
Donald Mcinnis ol Newport; and Art
Holmes of San Clemente. Also County
Board Chairman Ronald Caspers and his
wife from Newport: Supervisor Bob Bat-
tin of Santa Ana ; Supervisor Ralph Clark
of Anaheim and newly elected Supervisor
and ~tn. Ralph Diedrich of the Th ird
Dist rict. Alos aboa rd the head table were
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vallerga. Qe who has
long been Hinshaw's sidekick and is our
new assessor by supcrvisorial decree :
The place was wall-to-wall politicians.
DURING THE $100 repast,
Congressman Andy \vorked his way
around the dining hall and was most
gracious in victory. Later he told us h~
found a house in Washil'lgton but not the
first offering which was an $84,000 cot·
tage .
"l figu re the assessor back there is
fostering high prices." he quipped.
SAlGON IUPll -Soolh v;etnamese south or Hanoi Mondoy, Haool Radio atalnat North Vlellllm In the 21 boun below the DMZ In South Vietnam's mlht1a1n~n decimated a 250-nlan Coin-said. The U.S. command, which has nev-~ at noon kldly in a drive to stem norihemmolt QuaD1 Tri Province.
mWliSt batt~lion, trapped a second and er acknowled&ed the use c)l pilotleD riillttliy tramc~ for SOUUi -• TtiieftetdOffiCers n1d many of the 750
chased a third i11 S\Yatnps 40 miles west plants over the North, had no corn1nent nam. fresh North V"tnamete IOldSen in the
of Sulgon. rit'ld ofricers said today. on I.he report . Spotesmen said ll of the raids were latest fl~ west ot the capital carried
In the alr v.·ar, North Vietnamese an-near the Dtmll.ltarized 7.one (DMZ) white hudterchJel1 with a red roee and
tlnircraft gunners shot down a U.S. TJI E COl\UlAND said U.S. 852 scparatin& the two Vletrwns. Another 11.x the le&eod .. Hero of the Liberation ol the
pilotless drone airplane about 50 mUe.s bo mbers flew 13 three-plane raid! waves of the giant Jets· bombed just Capital" lnlcrlbed on thtm, Indicating ~--------~~~_;,~~~-~~~~....::.~-=----~-=------'-~-~~~~-~-~
Ul"tT .......
ASTRONAUTS KEEP UP BUSYiPACE ON FIRST VENTURE OUTSIDE LUNAR LANDER
Gene Cern t n (right) U~s Drill While Jtck Schmitt Sets Up Experiment
Mother's Day TV
'Abortion Show'
Prompts Warrant
PHILADELPHI A (U PI) -An arrest
warrant was i~ed Monday for a Los
Angeles psychologist who the state sakt
perfonned 11 "experimental'' abortions
before a television camera last Mother's
Day.
District Attorney Arlen Specter saJd
the warrant was issued for Dr. Leroy
Karman. inventor of an abo rtion device
known as the "Karman Super Coil."
SPECTER CHARGED K a r m a n
performed abortions "on no less than 11
women out of a group of 20 women who
were brought by bus from Chicago."
The district attorney described most of
the women as "you ng. black and poor ."
He said they were unaware the opera-
tions y,•ere experimental and had not
been informed ahead of time that the
abortions v.·ere being filn1ed by a crew
from television station WNET-TV in New
York.
According to the \\'arrant. two of the
women became seriously ill from the
abortions and a third had to undergo a
hysterectomy to stop persistent bleeding.
THE "KARMAN Super Coil" was
described as a long, thin plastic device
which gradu ally unwinds itself after
being inserted into the uterus. The coil Is
removed after a period of 12 to 24 hours.
UP'I T'"'*"'
'THERE HE IS,' SCREAMS APOLLO WIFE BARBARA CERNAN
Family Wt tchn A1trort11ut1 Debark From Lun1r Lander
Wirks Astronauts Set
For Busy Day
On Moon Surface
TV Coverage
Of Apollo 17
'Off and On'
By JAY SIL\JUltrrr
NEW YORK (AP) -One thing wa11 ac-
complished by man's sii:th landing on the
moon : It gave the nation a brief respite,
30 .minutes at most , from daytime quiz
sboWs and soap operas on network
television.
But cowboys and comedy: held a finn
grip on the CBS television entwork dur--
ing prime time Mooday night as Apollo
17 ..-.Uts Eugeoe A. Ceman ancl Har-
rlsm H. ScbmJtt were out taking their
first stroll m the moon.
CBS HADN'T PLANNED to interrupt
shoWI scheduled for prime evening time.
ABC and NBC had, and they gave
view~ the fITSt look at the clear.
remai-kably sharp color television pic-
tures from the moon. Bu you had to look
all the time, lest you mlM them .
ABC made the !nillal showing at 5,20
p.m. PST. It broke into its regularly
scheduled "Rookies" program for a one-
minute live picture of the astroo.auts and
the American nag they put on the moon.
NBC followed suit at 6:03 p.m., in-
te[N .. ing tho start of Its Monday night
movie with a videotape replay of essen-
tially the same scene shown earlier on
ABC.
CBS' fare here c:lwing the initial stages
of the lunar walk was "Stand Up and
Cheer," which began at 4:30 p.m. PST. It
was fellowed by the network 's
"Gunsmooke," "Here's Lucy," "Doris
Day" and "BUI Cosby" shows.
11IE NETWORK fma11y covered lbe
walk live and with tape replays in a
special report which, Hke NBC'•, began
at 8:30 p.m. PST. ABC's final report
came at the end of Its r<gU!ar Monday
pro football game.
F.arl.ier in the day, all three networks
inlemlpU!d regular daytime shows to
eover the successfol 11: 55 a. m. PST
lunar lallding of the astronauts.
The networks then used simulated
depict.ions of the landing and the interior
of the spacecraft Oiallenger. T b e na'
tioo 's space agency hadn't planned live
televiskm transmissions from the ship
during Its descent.
Both NBC and ABC went on the air at
4,30 p.m. PST with equally good »
minute . report> Oil Ibo laPd!Pg. They bad
hoped at that time to show live television
pictures from the moon.
Delays in setting up Challenger's
camera fon:ed the two networks to fill
time w:lth other material, then interrupt
regular programs with a total oC th ree
brief reports.
BUT m E nu. material wasn't dull.
NBC's half hour included good studies by
correspondent Roy Neal of four Apoll-0
astronauts who quit the space race after
returning from tbe moon.
The first man oo the moon -Neil
Annstroog -was aJooe in refusing to be ~interviewed. He also was vislbl.y annoyed
at the NBC crew's trying to film him at
the quiet college campus where he now
teaches.
they had the lq-term -of ""
lacklng Saigon.
UPI COIU\ESPONDENI' Donald A.
Davis ttpcirled from the Sll(IOCHl'U ha~
tlefield that goVemmenl' mllltl.amen. were 1 chasing North Vietnamese troops who
eaeaped a deadly ambush Moodtly just
llOIJth of Tay Ninh ProVlnce caplial !2
ml les northwest or S.lgoo. lo that I
llgllling, fl Communists were killed al a
cost of just three South VletnamMc 1
wouoded, D8vts said.
A defect« from the Ommwnlsl racks
tipped off South Vielµmne aulhorllles
aboul the movement ol the North Vlfi.
namese troops, olficon said.
Lt. a.... Nguyen Van Minh. Ctllll·
maoder or all troops In the 13-proylnce
SaJgoo area, .told Davis today that only
ooe of three North Vietnamese bat-
lalioos Involved In the major tn>op
development from the Cambodian border
area to South Veltnam had been engaged
in combat.
MINH WATCHED today as Tay Ninh
Province · chief Lt. Col. Le Van 'I1lien
maneuvered his 600-man mllitia force in·
to posit.ion to cut off the other two 250-
man Communist battalions.
Attorney Never
Filed Divorce
Papers for 200
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Two hw!dred
oouples who thought they were divorced
are not .
And after up to 40 years since their
supposedly legal separations, they are
going to get a chance to reconsider.
IT ALL STEMS from a Cee collection
method used by V.L. Hash, a laWY.<r who
picked up ccnsiderable walk-in business
at his office across the street from the
courthouse.
One of the town's best known at·
tomeys, he is known to have filed many
divorce cases without receiving the 6ling ree.
But bis niece, Virginia Hash, herself an
attorney, recalled Monday that be always
cautiooed his clients :
"You're not divorced bntil this decree
is filed and Jt's not going to be until l 'm
paid."
THAT COLI.EcnON method was used
widely in the Depression, his niece ad·
ded. but is Crowned upon by the legal
profession today. ·
Hash died six years ago, and Miss
Hash was named a coexecutor ot bis
estate.
Going through his papers, she !OUPd 200
divorce decrees which had been signed
by judges but oot filed with the derk of
the court and made fmal Some date
baclc to the 1920!.
She Wd she assumed It wu because
her uncle was never paJd.
To clear up the estate, she proposed to
SUperior Court Judge Laurens Henderson
that be file all :ZOO nunc pro bmc -in
other words, doing today what should
have been done yesterday.
The judge said fine but ce rtain legal
requittments wruld have to be complied
with first.
FOR ONE '111ING, the plan would have
to be approved by the state Supn!me
Court. Miss Hash filed a friendly appeal ,
and the court on Monday set a Jan. 2
heariog.
Hinshaw is off to a good start in
Washington. lie was one of 69 new con-
gressmen v.'ho had to draw from a hat
£or an off ice. Hinshaw cased every one of
the offices in advance. No\v acquainted
with the real estate. he dr ew 26th choice
but got the same office he would have
v.·on if his draw had been number 10.
Specte r said Karman would be charged
with -perform ing illegal abortions and
practicing medicine without a license.
The district attorney's office said
Karman admitted demonstrating his
device but denied performing the abor-
tions.
--
SPACE CENTER, ·J-Iouston (UPI) -
The timetable of Apollo 17 is shown here.
All times are Paciric Standard Time and
subject to change. 65 Haiti Refugees Dock
Obviously then . llinshaw felt of the
early-draw winners. oaly nine new con·
grcssmen selectl'd good offices and the
-01her 16 picked bummers.
Clearly, Hinshaw is a methodical man .
We can use some of that in Washington
for a change.
SPECTER SAID WNET-TV officials
told him they will not turn the films over
to Jaw enforcement offi cials because this
\vould constitule a violation -0( journal·
istic ethics.
••& ~.:~
--~A& ~ ... ---',ets
They must have torgottan
something/'
Midcontinent Cold, Wet
It's Minu s 20 iu. W yomi11.g -But 78
11.S. S111nmar11 MAi.0.i.t.t WIAT"l t $1 t¥1CI POll CA$T •• 11.a I St "-II • 11
in Florida
Su11, Moon, Tide•
TUISOAY S.Cond lllOh ......... 11:25 •·"'-4,4
h<Oflll IOw ..... ' .... ' 1:0ot "'"" "' WaONISOAY Flrtt lllOh .............. 2:1t•.m. •:D
Fll'O '°"" " .... " ..... ':E •. m. i.1 S.CW 11'9h .•..... ,U! p.m. •· Se(OM low . . .... 1: p.m. 0.1
Svft •llQ •:!4 1.m. kh •:.W p,m,
MOOl't •lwl ll:U t.m. Stft ll·lO o.rn.
Temperature•
Hl9JI ~ l'r • .. ' " 1 .H ,\ .~ .. ~ ·" ~ ii il " n .. -~ " :1l 1~1 Clf't i t~:.,F,< ~ ... •• =~ ·" s:·~:· ~ " n .. r. l1f'lllrM Cl!o; ff ·~ •!•o111a • il CM ~ .I: " . •
~PrA~ ii . n
\ ~ ·" ..,
TODAY
3:00 p.m. -Second tour of moon's
surface begins. Television of moonwalk
starts at 3:31 p.rn.
3:'5 p.m. -Ceman .and Schmitt start
drive toward South Mas!lf in moon
rover. Along the way, set up explosive
charge to be detonated later.
4:01 p.m. -Ceman aod Schmitt begin
collecting samples at base of South
Massif.
6:21 p.m. -Cernan and Schmitt arrive
at next exploraUon site, near base or 300-
foot high wall called a scarp.
7,25 p.m. -Schmlll and ~an
survey crater surrounded by halo of dark
material.
8:08 p.m. -A!tronauts begin drive for
fl1>3l samplln g site this moonwalk. Stop
along way to set up another explosl\l"e
charge to be used for seismometer
read.Inge.
8:39 p.m. -Schmitt and Ceman take
core .sample or subsurface material at
crater 2,297 feet across.
DAILY PR.OT
DELIVERY SERVICE
DtliwtfJ' of the Dail7 Pilot
Ii 911Afi¥1lttd
,.....,.1'4'rWft'I If "" ..... INft ,_
.....,. ., 11• ,.-.. c.i1n """' .,..... c..,. W111 .. ........ .. ,..... c. tnll , ... _ .-Ill ,,., ...
letwMY .... .........,,, ........ .., ""''1 .. _ yeo,r t..... iW t tA, $1lfff1y, ti' I I.Ill. "°"'''' <IM 11111 I W..,-wi M .. .,..,,,, .. 'fM, C11i. .rt IM.M 9fllll II •·"'-
'
In Miami on Small Boat
POMPANO BEACH , Fla. (AP) - A
battered and leaking 56-(oot sailboat
grounded oo a beach near luxury con-
dominiums today can'}'ing 65 Haitian
refugees, 12 of whom said they bribed
their way out of jail to nee their ~tlve
land.
Police said the refugees, "packed like
sardlnes" on their aart, included several
elderly women who were ill and a 22-
( IN SHORT ... )
year-o ld woman who was five months
pregnant.
Yvon Bruno, who uid be was the
leader of the group, reported that the
refugees fied Pon au Prince, HalU, 'Nov.
2l alter hts lather bribed tho captain o!
the guanl at a jail to free Bruno and 11
other "political prtaonera."
e Debbie Goes On
TORONTO (AP) -Debbie Reyoolds
lost Mr voice Monday niaht, more than
300 ol the audience wllked out and
demanded their IPOMY hack but the
Bo>adway·boulld revlyal of the.Jlluslcal
"Irene " played lor the other 1,00l5Uck:et
holden .
The atar'11 underttudy, J~nie Sell, said
she was not ready to fll\ ln1 so MJa.s
Reynolds walked tltrouab her part
speechless and did not appear Jn some
scenes .
The show, which Sir Johll' Gl<lautl io
dlrect~g, movet to New York Stmtfay.
e Contrart H .. sle
BETllPAGE, N.V. (AP) -Grumman
Ae~ce Corp. says it will not f\J.lfill a
contract option and buJld 48 more Ft4
Tomcat jet fighters for the Navy unless
tile contract tenns are renegctlatcd .
The company stated its Poaition Mon·
day after the Navy announced tbat It was
exercising its opetion to buy the planes at
no increase in price over the tenns of a
1969 ,contnct.
Noting that it already has lost flbout $1
million on each of \he 86 awing-wing
supersoruc F14.s ordered so far, Grum-
man said It had told the Navy that it
"refused to proceed under the optk>n."
"On the advice of counsel, we ftt.1 that
tho optloo docs not comply with ienns or
the contract or with CODllUllonal
aulhorilation and Ullt It cannot be
legally enforced," a spokesman sald.
e Perett l\'allld
BUENOS AlRES (UPI) -Former
Argentlno President Ju.an D. Ptron was
oflered the pmldentlal candidacy ol hts
JuaUcialisla Nalional Liberation Front
WIY but wlll reMUnCe the llOllllnation
aDd leave for Pararuay W~ a
Peron sppolu!sman said today. '
Peron, wbo roturned Nov. 17 alter t7
yeatt..ole~J>•M'<d from runnlna ror
prcs10efil anyway by a rutaeitce re-
quirement Imposed by the nillna military
junta.
cario. lmbaud, • Jusllclalllla leader,
told newsmen outs.Ide Peron 's auburblln
home aft~r leaders offered him the can-
didacy MOPtlay nlaht that Peron had
promlled to atutly lt "with ,.,..,._
\'ponsiblllty and trandetll'." l
L •
a
j
a
·'
·-·--.... ,•--..,.. . . ' . •
I
I
. • -
Sciewtists Write State •
Martin Divorced 'Angels'
Trial
Closed
·creation Theory Hit i·==
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Enter1alner DeUI Marii. bu
betn granted a dlVOI'«, ending a !3-year maria(• to
former nmei Jeanne llieper. STANFORD (AP) -Don't begao in shaUow wat.r among
put Adam and Eve and the the shores. • • "would be
Gardeft-..qf Ede,. OD the same changed to read, "life may
level ai p arwtn's Theory of have begun in the shallow
belore he publlshed th e
historic Origin ot the Species
by Means of Natural Selection
in 1859.
tM .. .,.., c-.r
Cfttl ,__., Ct ......
,... 111i11 nt~uu
Martin, 16, appoot<l<I briefly< Monday -· SllP"flor Court Judge Jack T. Ryburn and said that "-Uable
dilfermces" were the cause ot the treakup. Mn. Martin,
41, did not •tleod tile hearing.
0.ua.urD (AP) -llnce •IJlll> tbe publlo an11 the,.... ...,., exCluded from t be
IDlll'ller trl.al ol lour Hell'•
1n1 '· ,,.....,. tt. ........ "'" ....
... 1714J " .....
Evotuuon, 19 Nobel laureates water .... " MARK OF THE PERFEGTIONST ~ ~ Mn'"'O
are pleldlng with t b e In a covering letter to the I . ~
Martin eoriler aoked for, and wao granted, a _,ate
trio! en properly ..Wemeol and support. Thal trial Is ' by Saperlor Court
California Board ol Education. ljoard. Dr. Arthur Jtornberg, • • lldleduledforJ ... 11. '
Martin tiled for di...,,. wt Valmtine's Doy .after 1
_,ation In December !tell. The couple married ..
Sept. 11, 1949, after Martin diwrced his flnlt wile ol nine y-, Betty McDonald. Martin bad four children by tba
ftnt marriage and -by the """""'·
Wllllam J . Boyes.
Juice _, -bla 1maplabwl_altel>_
Ing ID cbamben with -i
lot bothlldes. llealso-the
jury-with·-to nturn ,,,_y,
In a letter tdthe board Mon-Stanford University professor The only self-w1nd1ng
day, tbe Callfori>la iicieetists of biochemistry, wrote that on h h n
n vived again tbe 113-year-old the wnmissioo·· middle-road I c ronograp '.".;.
controversy be1U11 w hen-recommendation "seems in-1' n th' e I
Charles Darwin published his nocuous, but it was clearly m
Possibility of Perjury
Probed in Farr's Case
o. two dQS laot week
Judge Ha)'<I had ordered
llJl"CjalOn and tbe press to
viic!8te tl)e courtrooln where
the Hell's .Aqels an being
tried ID the llaY,ln( ol an alleg-
ed -dealer !tom Tex· as tut May.
l•jurell ... -theory o! mon's origjn. The ~~to ~i!~y':""'!.:°' ~ world ;+:
::;i sc::O::: = alternate to evol ution." w th at ~ Actor Jason Robards,
49, suffered major fac-
ial injliries during the
weekend when his car
hit an eril~ent.
day, and tbe subject of man's . THE TWO, .said the scien· knOWS '-1
origin may get a revised treat· tists, cannot hve together in ("')
. the same book because the the 2 m~. Bjble't l"l'nion "is clearly not rn
,
11~00 'theory' . is not c:ientific but religious." day =-i
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
The Los Angelt1 .County Bar
Asaoclation bu llBked the
district ottomey and the stata
attorney feneral to Investigate
t>O"ible perjury In the .,_ of
jailed newsman William Farr.
At the same tlme, the
association urged Monday that
attorneys who gave Farr
material for a Manson family
story come forward and
ldeatlfy them¥1ves.
The Los 1'.ngeles Times
reporter was sent to Jail two
weeks ago for refusing to tell
Superior Court Judge Charles
Older which two of six at·
tomeys -three defense and
thrtt prosecution in th e
Hop in your
car and come
as 9ou are!
Th.a Imperial ..
folks are
waiting for you!
"'1>eri8 Ba*
Costa Mesa
Harbor.Blvd.,at Fair Drive
(714) 979-1000
\
·111anson trial -gave him the
material. --
. . .em•EAn••
SAN FRANCISCO •('AP) -
General Telepllone & Eleo-
tronlcs Co. will lj(lpell a
ledsral ,Judtie'a ~· t!lat It
mUll divtst ownership or the
firms making most. of Ille
equipment... used by GTE
bued on sc1tJ!Ce and·does not ~~. states that God •
Ellshe beloog In a science textbook," ~ated the earl)I and monlh rg wrote tbe N.obel Prize -ererythlng on It in six days, w .•
ners; adding their prestige ·to aild .. tbe sixth day created ~ and
a list includ!N , the NaUonal ~· ~
MIS• in•a1 Academy o! Science and a ti'Charles. Robert Darwin, Ille U Wheth er half-dozen other professiooal Ush nfituralist, amassed ~
. societies. .actual evidence !or 20 years gr there'll
"Each attorney has a duty,
particularly l.!I a member of
tile bar and an olllcer ol the
court, to come forward ii he In
fact furnished the statement,"
said Donald K. Hall, presldenl
of the bar association's board
the trustees. ( )
1 :nee•-.-...·-..] RELIGIOUS !un-~ be a
. . BRIEFS version or the origin oi me ORDER full moon . iarcu damenta1tsts' waot the Biblical I ~
• placed side by side with ,,.. • Dllkloes
AT HEARINGS before be LOS ANGELES (AP) -Darwin to the new science TURKEYS Movado's Astronic. Th e extraordinary high
was jailed, Farr told Older the telephone o p er a t In g Com-Jurors who have waited four texlbooks the board will se-frequerlcy sel fwind ing chronograph with ~
material came from two at4 panies. months to judge D a n I el lect this week. for I moon phaslng. ~
tomeys but be would not Mark Crane of , Chicago', Ellsberg and Anthony Ruuo in The scientists want only CHRISTMAS _· Add to that, the world 's most thorough aut°" mI Identify them. -GTE attorney, announced lhe the Pen•"""D Papen trial get evolution discussed in science __ _ __ · I d T II th d th d t d
tbe ~ '"'!:'.... that tbe textbooks, arguing It ls the mat1c ca ~ ar. e s e ay, e a e, an -n The bar group. ""d the appeal Monday Imrnedlotely wurn .,...y Y are sole sci·entif'· ·-•··•lion of GRQl:ERIES the month,. Plus split-second stopwatch and rn
..... A.1. tYVtf"IW" bet" e" n after U.S. District eourt•Joog·e j"-m more n; IW.4~ t cho 1 t. :o :.wu-.. ~ .... ~..: ic: ... .,.;> . life's origins generally ac-WINE l:-:: a me er ac ion. =~t,;plainlo.t ~8f!~~cates~tbeat-l~~;e~: ~~~~ ~ ~.~:i!3r:.S. .DistrictboCourtdec· 1 .. ~ge cepted in the world. LIQUOR Y.J Astrofiic by Movado. Self.winding. Case. ~itl
J U ,,,.J&.lW ""&''"""' ,.. ,,._,~ matt • w ... '"}-I a Last month, the State Cur4 1 s. ... 11"J1. .., • c-§ lndfvidually tested to an underwater depth of
need for an investigation into tt<;~n~ tried the cas'e in m iii the case Monday, ricu1um Commission tried to } Manniftgs 8"f 330 feet In stainless steel $350, or 18K yellow
J>OSSible purjury by the county Honolulu. lt wu initiated by ruled lbat ~w jurors would be satisfy both factions by draw-1 Excellent Produc• :~ gold S1950. The kind of daring innovation ~ ~· ~-Attorney lntenltlooal Telephone & ~·panel niembers Md ing up a compromise proposal 1 -----that hap pens once In a blue moon. ~era:,. E~Ef r~~ ;e;;:r :;.:;~ :r'h.i~ c:id ::;·r: [i~~ ~lib~·~;~;:; COAST "':l:.!:~ .. ":~M;;,:.-r~::.~i:-·-' I
vestlgatlhg possible perjury in been Influenced by, publicity Darwin's thiory to simple SUPER MARKET w SLA VICK'S
tbe case at the l'<'j-t of SACRAMENTO (AP) -duriDg the !OUMD011th break. •-"•tlon. I
District Attorney Joseph P. CoblliervaUonllts are J111ipg EDsberg, 41, and Rns!Jd:, 35;" ...... r'liij the statement, 0 Life I-Je\vclers Strice 1917
Buach. Gov. Rona1d Reagan· ti>. veto~ are charged with espionage,-begaii. ln the seas," would be for H ... hiwry·C•I ~ 18 FASHION ISLAND I
In a letter to Younger Nov., one of two "wild rlvera"J>i]ls compiracy and theft in con-clianged 'to "most scientists 673-3510 NEWPO R~11~.~~•HH~=444·lllO
30, Busch described the case on bi.$ desk. saying it ctmlalm:. necUon with the leak. Lo oews bell eve that life 'may have ~~ 0 11e11 MOl!d•y thni s.1u!'lll1.,. 10 •.m. ,. ,,. 11.lll.
BJ 8 "perplering problem." 8 loophole that could )Ud..Jo media of to~ docunwtnts begun iD the seas." And Wll!t locellonl of: Torrence. 0~1~, LI Cfl'r!los, U Hl rlll" ..
"The sil lawyers involved building of a high-rise dlm1 en detailing iorigins of the Viet-Darwin's theory that "the pro-i 3347 !.COA'ST HWY. Alw : S•n Die!IO end L•1 ..,. ... ,.
have insisted that they were tbe Eel River. • mm war. • habillty is very strong that life ORONA DEL MA A"'.i!~•ro MARK OF THE PERFECTDNSf
not Ille """""' of the The object of their ir. is SB•-.-~--------~--------1
disclosure,'' Busch w r o t e • 4 by Sen. Rando1pb Collier, the
"Bill Parr Insists two of them Yreka Democrat who
were." reiir-its 11111i1t of the tef.
r11ory where a aertes of free.
11ow1ng'r1v ... -be off Murder Rap · ttti:..to:..hullden
Red '· ~ . ,.,. ii ea\~~="11· · ucea · c1a1 that 11eqan vet0 OolJler'W bill and l!ln SB 107, the rival
STOCKTON (AP) • -A wild ri..ts me.uure aulbored
murder charge has been drop-by Sen. Peter Bebr (R·
ped against a lreckle-lactd Tiburon).
member o! Charles Ma118oo'1 e Are•lteet QldU clan1wbo bad been accuaed in ,
the slayiog of a :youiqpnother. _ SACRAMENTO (!\f) ;
The charge agajnsl Lynette Gov. Ronald Reogan ..,... ...
"Squeaky0 Fromme of Los has "with rel~ · ..
Angeles Monday waa redoced copted tbe restpt1oa)1 ame
to being an ace_,. after a Ar<:bltect Fr..i Humiliit' to
munler. Her bail wu ..i at allow him to enter prlvat.
'5.000 althougb Los Angeles 11racUce after five years with
authorities want her on an the state.
armed robbery c o m p I a I n t Reagan ·said in a newt
there. release from hiJ office Mon-
A prellminary bear t n g day the ·~year-old Hummel
scbeduled Monday for Miss had remained on the job
Fromme and lour o the r longer than be had originally
persons still charged 'With the p I an n e d at the ad-
murder was postpoiled to Jan. mlnlstratlon 'I request. a. The olben are Mlchae! i...1-----------------------------1
Moofort, 24 and Jamet T.
Craig, both traDsientS;
Priscilla K. Cooper, 21, San
Jose and Nancy Laura Pitt· man, 24. THE
" O·BI!'''.
BUSUNB
(
ALL IT NEEDS IS YOUJ
• • • • an you need Is a quarter I
IT'S A GI FT
LIDO SHOPS C ASH DRAW IN G
FOR CHRISTMAS SHOPPERS
$1000 IN CASH
TO BE GIVEN TO SIX LUCKY PEOPLE
1st PRIZE -$500. PLUS
5 ADDITIONAL $100. PRIZES
COME IN AND GET YOUR
FREE TICKET
ORA WING DECEMBER 21 st
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WIN
-BE A WINNER
-SHOP LIDO -
AllfllMy't C-... SllM s.'Wfce • Atli1Mo11'1 e MM• 111, l.tll. • ._.
ef .._.. •• ---.............. aww.11 .... '-'" • ............... ~~···'· ..... •*•" ..... L.nt1M. Jr. e H ...... Trnel e Udo ......_ e LWe TNwl • I .. rW
..... • hrt O' Call, Ps1sd1111 e 1~·1 LWe C.... e ......... ....., a., e Sec.tty,..... N.,.._I ._. e TIMi .... "-e W.
Lklll .,,_.. • r:a..·1 U. Arce •
... Tiit oe..-.. ,.,.... .... ·-,.,., Cllllct ~
SUPER FUN PACKAGE I
IPfltJ«JS, l"t AnotllflWISfWAMt HO MOtll.1 ' ow, ,. "~'"°'""'".. ....,..
' ••
For 1nlorm1llon or but schadulea call ''Tiie Two-Bit 1u1 Ufte" II 147-°' wrlll to 111 111121 E. Wahington Av1., S1nt1 Ana. 927111
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"
AT TH. INTllAHCI TO LIDO llLI
NIWPORT IEACH
'
• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAi. PA.GE
Up swing
The Orange County Transit I)istrict's new bw:
lines still are ra_nning in lhe red, but patronage on U,.e
South Coast lines i.i1 up an impressive 195 percent over
last year and tbe ouUooris healthy. .
A net operating deficit was expected in tlie first
year, with inauguration of a fta t 2Xent fare, regudles,,
ol trip dibtance along with free transfers and free Jides
for children. . .
The trick in developing a solid public transporta·
tion system, as officials realized, was to get enough
decent buses covering the most-needed routes at reason·
able intervals for a reasonable price.
This accomplished, it's a m.atter of getting tbe pu~
lie accustomed to using the service. That now appears
lo he happening.
The tran&it district will be pUtting on some new
buses in Januacy and adjusting some schedules to avoid
long stopovers for transfer customers from Laguna
Beach, Newport Beach and Costa Mesa at the Fashion
Island and South Coast Plaza ipterchange points.
As the service becomes better known a,nd more
-access points are provided, ·mote reSidentS un'iloubtedly
will discover that a ride on the •'two-bit bus line" beats
fighting traffic and parking.
The Washington Shuf fie ·
President Nixon's reshuffling of cabinet and other
top government positions has been received with polite
apathy. As one Washingtonian put it. 11It remains to be
seen whether he's cleaning house or jwt rearranging
the furniture." ,
The fact that only three 1J1en Crom. outside existin'g
government ranks were brQught in und~ the·reorganiz-
ation would tend to support the furniture rearranging
thoory.
There have been a number of departures from the
White House staff itseU -which had grown from
1,992 employes in the first year or th~ Nixon administra-
Bus Use
lion to a !t<>Pping 2,594 -bltt apparenUy most of these
people h io been moved to other ·_poN within the go•·
ernmenl
Titer has been a gttat deal of talk about a new
economy,, and three of tbe new cabinet appointments
went to men known for their skilla In . money manag&o
meal Cabinet members have become office managen,
rather Ihm policy maken, under l'reoident Niton.
So far as the real power is conC<!med, It will con·
linue to he wielded by tlte President's trusted personal
advisers, like Henry Kissinger and George Schultz and
by a hall-dozen others who are not answerab)AO .to Cong-
ress ~r;::~~d Douhleb\Ik
During a recent invasion CY! what looked -and
smelled -suspiciosly like smog along the Orange Coas~
reporters checking official sources of informatio.o
stumbled into a new area of -bureaucratic bungling.
The Air Pollution Control District's Gpen buinlng
forecast senice advised telepboll8 callers, via tape, that
burning pennits were available. .
The recorded massage of the APCD's health warn·
ing service announced cheerily "no health warnings are
expected in Orange County," a comforting assurance for
heart and lung patients who must check before indulg·
ing in o~door exercise. But a direct call to an APCD engineer elici\00 ,the
in!orma on that the stuff in the sky was indeed smog
and tba he~ warnings bad been in effect for several
hours. t ve morning. ·
Wh t a t the recoroed mesaagea?
We , tbe burning forecast 'is hosed 'OD infonnation
from Angeles. The health wanting tape would he
chang, at 5 p.m. to reflect the current condition.
By en, of course, our eyes and lungs ·woJiid ha)'e "
been le · g us the ~ facts for several hours, while
burning as conlinumg merrily -:-' ilrtd ,Jegally.
'
'Ilon'tget 8() pani.cky ••• y oµ're owy a teeny bit pregnan t.'
'~ It••'-Protest.. Readjutlnent of :Lou
' ' Tales R eveal
Differences
ln N ations
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
.S. Beating Br~nt of U.N. Budge't
Changing salt water to fresh water
ooce was hailed as the panacea for the
~Id's water supply problems -a kind
of )Iida' touch for arid areas. Congress
pesaed ~ first Saline Water Act in 1~.
autborWng $2 million for salt water CQrl·
version research. Desalting -primarily
~: dl!tillation -remained pro-
hlbitWpJJ 'ei.pensive for large-scale ap.
pllcat~ 'liowever, and the process's
prornj1e'*"1ed to fade from public view.
But ii· ~1·not disappear altogether.
Research !1¢ development CQntinued
under'* tntfrior Department's Office of
Saline'W•tef (.OSW ), created by the 1952 act~ Today •1er desalinization may be
the , .. ;. dl<lhe f1lture .
Begidnlng Wednesday, the OSW will
sponsoi a 'three-day nationwide con~
ferencO oo COOpen.Uve Desa1ting Studies,
the lint' ol Its kind, hosted by tlle Orange
County1 Water Dl:Stri<:t in Anaheim. The
conferMce will bring together people rrom aome ot the more than 350 water
desalting plants no... operating in lhe
United States. whlch range in capacity
fn>m 15,000 1allooo per day up to the 26-
millioo gallon plant In Key West. F'la.
With Jftile fanfare and less publicU7,
w•ter desalinization has progre-JSed
ropldly In the past 20 years and now SUI>
plirl mlllloas ot Americans with potable
'!"IN·
CONl'EllENCE participants w;u hear
,....its ol jolnl 'OSW lludiff conduCled
wttb 9'ale and niunJclpal waJ.er resourct
p1une..., cue blllorteo ol typical pl•nt _._ onc1 I" oopects...r fod,rnl llld
for ..... idpel da&Hing ()lMls Imm ..,,_and Urblln DeileJDpment Dopart-
....,i, ..,........ llomt Admln tstraUon
_., .lceQom.lc Development !d-
..........., olllclall. OSW' Dlr6otor J.
&, O'lleora Nid the most Important
_.i ol the conference would be the
''11• •aota eicbln(e of JnfonnaUon" u-conducting •ilnet!ring.
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH ..
cost assessments O(,desalting's potential
and those actuaJJf operaling the plants.
Conferees will alf6 ,visit Water Factoty
21, a "v er t l c.)1.11 tube evaporator/
multistage flash rbodule" now under cm·
slruction at Santa Aoa , Calif.
The space-age description of the new
desalting racHity •vividly ll)u,,trates the
field's potential. The latest technique is
"reverse 05mosis.," a membrane process
now being perfected by OSW azK1 major
chemical companies. But even distillation
(used by 95 percent of lhe world's 800
ptaots) is constaiit1y getting better and
cheaper, Its cost'ha> dropped !rom .I.40
per 1,000 gallons id 1960 to as cents per
I ,IKXI today, and iS down to as low e's 65
cents at some p!Mts.
A RECENT international development
which may give desalUng e boost Is the
dispute between the United Staiet and
M'exico in California, Artz.ona and M.ex•
ico. Me.1Jcan Ptesldent Luis F.chewrria
Alvarez. In Wastilngton, D.C... lut June,
told Presldtnt ~iron that tbe river wu
too salty when ll hit "'hi& country's
farmlands, Jn violation ol an old treaty.
Nixon JPromlRd a "ju.st, permanent and
definitive" solutkm to the probiem1 wblcb
many scleoUstt believe can only be «Hr
llnictlon of a ltllge (Up to 31/J nt1llioo
gallons a day) J!!Otolype dcsattin& ph111t.
But perhaps the mod fa vorable omen for
lhe future ol deloltlnc came when Ibo
OSW be)d a grouncl-breaklng cmrnooy
for Water f'actory ~l Jut January. There
to praise the facility. alma with the
usual iovemment dlpltarles, was the
naliooal pmideot of \he Sierra Club.
Witll envlrnnmentallits cxi their side, the
water deg1Jttts i hould have nothtn1 but
smooth .... ahead. I
, .
rubbed !lW most of lhe time. didn't have batlifuoms in tbelr boUaes,
(
' ) ·WHEN YOO WENT to cburcb on SAA· G"ndda,d. aod bad to waJ.k to a Ul!)e !iut ' HAL BQrvT 1'.:' • • • away At the eod ol the bactyanl anJt1me ' . ' .. ....,, ~· ap the, ll!lniBtera .... talt\!d ·-tbq bad to flD! l11 bet -the -.. _ ,. ... bow bani the devil -~ loo, two feet deep they dtl:foled moot (,I the
, . our llil~, bow bot _tl!!'_C<Jlli Of 11!11 ~.lbe:Y dl<!n~ r..u, baV.: to JO•
rj8'1t1 aod'for ooly '3, too; biil ,lf ~i .~~~-3"!!..!-, -~Jr..U:-0 ~1'01 all.·Oral leutnot>lgbtaW!IY. were real tick witb ~ ,ar!9C8rilt , llUAJOJI .... _, ..... itUU--" \ll'4".I , , . ~
fever.or dlpbtberla !bor. -·t IDlllh ~-the poor dart iloull4 li0 dWelt In I BEAR 11fAT men bad to -~ ln>m
be could do about 1i l\iany, Moot of~. 'Afflca. ~ · '. .. , 50 to !!I bOun a -k.'¥''""1"" lft·,U-~ then came in bloe ~ Yes, and )'Oil boned J.00'·-·witb .Sood old ""1w. Grandp<. •Tell ·me, .JOU
lalted llow)l-and dkln't domi!Qb:llloi!l st .... ,or·a'f'!l:Dace lni•"" -,~,., • ta,Y olcl nllCll', clltl )'lilt' rea9dolng
'Jo ~ good old dayi' W<•ilif · bad to; l:'eep allo .. JiO& aiil.\t\'~ thal•'°'Y llllld!?, No wailder . cilln-
. ttgllt ~11 tba• .. ~~f!!· :W dal JotW, aDtl u.e "'°' 111110 "1•.lpiit ~, .... 111e· ~lift i-w 11> ..., ·Ute.llley~intbe&riPlf111 ' , ,htl/ Of tllif.-1111~ ltaGlini'OUI the -sbe'T.,..... Ille rue In f\ortl 'of
soake, and men wore blidl Wltfle ....t'• .-. , • ' your cl!U· All .Illa~ bard wwt, "1lln :rou
so attfl with starch that iheit tleCb M!rO And howl aboUt ill,tboie p<ople ·W!to ...,. )'llllllC piust have ~ )'«l1j>retty , ' . , .~ , ,:·· . , ' . ~ 1oo:i old d.,.; I -r, tJIO
• . ,, · ·__/ !iijii_~ to fall and even Jll!Olilt ;11bo
G• I. " ' f" J ' >-• •, h w • Jv · had.,aved ,up lf!t!lr -all, lieir Iii• ems 0 ~·,:-~ · 11.e , m· had to .,,...i·thelr -;,iy ·~· 1n ~
. , • .· ~IN~ ', lio1J .. ·, OOU.OotCwntyfamt.~:dJcjnf1eta
· , , .' t Soclal; Secui:ily Chea· fniltl, tile IO"Om; . , , , · , .. • • ment •Y."'1 mo.ui, ,.. help In pa)'lni "I st"'\ed tltll book . .,hen 1 w,u six , , , tbei/ alcblu bll\l··YOll.llo,iilolilb, daq~
yean old. I did not, of,...,,., ~that • r. · ·" ~aGraod~" , • "· t ,
I wu becoming an antltolOIM/)11•\tltat'l• ' THE , BOOKMAN• . •So, w1>1, , 1<>f djlar 9ld lnad,
would spend 51 years collecllni ,,_ -· 1 do ,_"lo .., -l!ad old dap
verbal gems of wit, inslaht. ml "1adom, · "tllo flDOd ~ dayr! You're 1ttelJ y«i particularly those used and ldved by . , · . , mana&ed to lite lltrou(b theJnl •
iews." , ,,~does not o,hallll, th< material. cxi ' •
TllJ8 'INSimrr Into bJJ monWnenla1 band. Rosten'• crltlr\qn: ''I ba .. <ttled to
work 11 provided by the author of lncludela,,,!"'1Yb -~ •= ~ 'wlll Jll;ll<e L<o Rostm'• Tt-"""1/ of Jf)llll/\ you · -• ~~. or • •
Quotatiom -A Dozzl<mnt of ._.!QO, IN rrs MOlll!: oc1toi,.r1;; luitJ,' \lie'
Proverb<, Folk Sovllto•. Willl<Uml, -CCX1"1i!t a IJitlltiry: ol H.....,,
fMIQht<, llaoiml, lllld If~ '-Aramaic lUl<I Yldclfoli i "°"11'; .~
COU.CU<I °""' 51 Yem, r.n111r • lnllllallll( lleltml; ilulde ·i!Obo'.,
rro!Uloted or R.willft, 4'\d 0.... 'llit ~ met lhO ;t"kitua; ,lilllrall!!qal.
•lallcd .nth lrQ!tU, """°"""• c • d vlpettei ol the utllolt ~-Pd .a ,
rr11th (llcGrow·Hlll, •to.95 ), btbtto1rapby tlta~ u 11 1 ~ u
OomP"bemlve u It ii, lltlo ._. mllbl . .be tlj)O<tod.. · , , • · lloaWt'a ~uury 11 lllvtd«l:.lnlo
• G ..... Iba• 500 .......,_ Cllego-___ " -... e rllt, fl-om >\dam atld Adultery to women
Dear !Jeorp: aad Wonblp -~ Badttlor1,
My (lrl flieod aoll llllUl!ed 'When -· llrHma, Flatter)', God. Gllllt,
•
O~llY PILOT
. ~N Wctd: ~r
'~ I ~.ll:Of9'\o.t J(°'(!ft;U 'tduo,1 t
'1 I ' , • ' . ' . ~l>fi"' Krdbf<1' •• EdUorlcl PagJ Edftor
~· .
I 1lan> ~t her w1iori ' she 1ffart, her ~I Lite, I.ov1, Sex, Sin, $ulcide, mini aldrt. Whit rltoUid I do! v .. ny • ind Vk!e. In llJe, humor, or ,
TED &:,-1>tcal wlldom, lbeR bu oever
The edltnrl•l PAJl:t of 1he btllr
Piiot tee~• to inform •nd 1tl1'1'1u•
l•te ~•dGrt bl. er"fll!:nUnt this
ntWIPfiper'• OJJTnlora &l1lj -tom·
men1aey vn topics ol lntdctt and
111gntflcanei. b)' pro\lldll'IC a r~m
tor t.he l!~n nf our rffden'
1>1"rilon1, Md by ~ntln1 \he di vel'N vlewpoln~ or lnfonMd ob-iierven and 1poke1men on toiHet
of the! day. Dear Ted:
Ignore her for a CWl'io ol da~
and stare at other mini skirts. That
will do It.
~ boot lite thla .
'nto Tt'•GIU'll la a aelectlon of the boOt club of lhe Jewlllt Publlcallon So-
ctety ol America.
\' CAROLINE HAJIKLEROAD
Tuesday, December 12, 197:1
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• I t • • I •• ·!·" ~ I
:-· ~ ••• "" ~;. ' • •
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~Natural ' ...
'Ble:·., n'. :1:·1 · '"·1: · · , , rt .\ , . . .
i ~ . ~ ., "I ' \ .. ~ ._ .·. : ... l , •
\ ~'·~·ralfyif~ .~}:':·~~.
'saleni's; iini!!Ue' blend featuies -na!Uial
,.Jiehttiqr; "i\i:lhl> kind .rria<11,.;rl laliora-
tories. •Ukli',bur su~ tobaccos, our . '··~o1···' . II ' v-"I '' menuo ,os ·natura y grown. "''" ·--a
tasie that's not harsh or ·liot .•. a.!a$ie as
r\aturaflt-cool .and ~ as ,Spri!J8i;me. ' . . . ' • '-·~' I • ., . • • I • • . • •
i.
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• DAILY PILOT '-· -u. 1tn -Why Legal Coitn~ilwo1nan-?
--ol tldl _.. ...... -cl ... .. ,..,,. _ _,_will
iooeln ---bee8w Qf. lldkla. )
· -"ft .......... lie I few
weeU belcn ~.. ~an
detlrmlDI' ......... !! ... bow .ind bow -GI :a.1 n.._., -
• . . .
w9'1ht.
. , '
a... tlllll llllr == .......
, -iiil~ illlllll; •11t.•· , .
,
n.. sm pefprKlbl method for the
entlrt ~lflll'ly to lose nitht ... under ....
.strict su~ of Meet...! Doctor.. . ' . '" mlllloD-a-
allglillT II'*' • • -.; •.
he aeld. lllllnlJ ... at die ~-
extra Wort -la inon review. •
• ULI. 111\0ADW'AY
llORTIJAllY
Ill -•lt, Colla Meoa,
LI NGI • llle<lOllMIClt LAGUNA
llAal -TIJAllY l'I• ._ Clo1ll ltd. ..... • PAane VIEW
-GlennS.llamb
oald Ibo -pay -bad the 11n1ntmoua endonement oJ
~II In the lkampus
l)'lb!m.
'"ftlll program, by lm-
pl.-tng the merit principle
at II additional points cl
review In our salary atructure
will .,.ally aid the Calllornla
State Ullhonlty lll1d eon.,
In obtalnl~ and keeping quali-
ty faculty;' Dumke aakt.
A spokesman for the
trustees said the evaluatbl'Of
!a<u1l7 members ~ II
\Dado by commtt~' o I
-aoaderillc coJJeaiue1. fl II foiloftd by I nVl"!' l!r
admlolltn....,,and flnallf lJ>:
proved by 1111 campua lftal-
clenl. '
aoNO~RONG
-~--";:;;Pl=Dll:;;.:;fl;o;I• •II M•• .. IN«A N4A
•,.., Drtft '2°ihfi1'il IAll ~&pal =-...., ..... . e '"'-.... -i IAftWll ... ............... ,, ·---
A&.,mallA··:r L -""' """ -~~"'"'" ...... , ........ ..... ....... "' '""''ij ..... --... c:.:::·::::::: I .,,,,, .... .. = .... ,... , ............. 11 ... I ,. •an "''"' .......... , ·-.-n:R1111 ..... ... __ ..... •ea_ ....
• POOO fHHS! IMl'Ol\'ll "'· M •illl-l•W• MOR'ft1Alt.Y lll'OOl.INS • r11m _,_, ,... ., ,.... s.:. -h;',,"._.i ,._us.at• .. w.o•" ~ 1Ut2 MACMmlUI llft. .-Mt( .. • IMfl'A MM
....... llllcll . ··-~•1¥11 ........... ,_..,.
·1-____ .. _11_•---:11.-~~....;:::.~""'~~;;..;~-··-':f---';';'; ..... •""•~;.;.;;•~:0---'-;o;~-·-~::= .... ~~~~..i
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LINDORA..,
MIDICAL CUNIC l ==~ .... 4'4 Win l n• Ml-3740 .. ' •:: .......... ....
41 I--~I , .._.._. w ... ~
Wlltf HWUI
' • ••••••• _,.
• • • •• _, ..... o. ••. , ... --··-
WHAT DEATH BENEFITS ARE AVAaAIU 10
DEPENDENTS OF VETERANS WHO DIED IN
SERVICE, OR· AS A RESULT OF A SERVG
CONNECTED DISAllUTY 1 ,
~ EU6ENi 0 . IEleHON
• •
:12;: = ... ,., " • 0 F1sa ........................ . -•••lt9salte ............ ,IJ ',,._ ........ ~ ... .,__,,,,.., •• ,_ ... _.. -•• P 'Seo
•. , •• •1'..t ....... -....... ,.. ......... r-
C1 II ............... =l'J ..... 4 ti .... ... ___ ,. __ ----.. ---
=-·~:.1,,-:.;:t;,t;,ti,-:r: tP1::,"; = I k ...
'",.. .... 4 ........... '-" ...... ,............. • ' ••• , .. , .................. ....... . ,
Balt:-Bergeron Fuaeral Bonte
co~~~i;:s· 2 LOCATIONS co•c:"J..:::i MAI
.... , .. tu . ...
Mutual
u
·: ... ·-
•
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... . '
-:
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in)'
"'°"' \•11~
love
lello
hip
:that
le\:
~<it Ii
l'!I
.elto .
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19;
f
. . • . ' ... • • , 1 , .. . .. ! ' ~ .
" ..
,., . . -
L. M. Boyd
::Army Once Had
3rd Lieutenants
· .'. : Father ()( tbls young lady owned a rod and gun slore ~ )'ai.rsoo, N.J. So she opened a how-to-fish school for. WOl!'OO: On the theory that '!though most girls go to col-lell~ "' find husbands, they'd do better to go flshlng. our
Love and War man approves. lt's widely known a patient
fellow who. likes to fish makes a superior malrimoniaJ
1Jllle.
AN AVOCADO is as common for breakfast in Brazil
as is a glass of orange juice here-
abouts ..• QUITE TRUE, Lima, Peru,
was the <rlginal home of that bean
of. the same name . • . lfO OTHER
TOWN is so juvenile as Singapore.
Half the pQpUlation there is under age
20.
A oi.A.1.rA.JOKE service, that's
what the Dutch Telephone Tumpany
f c in Amsterdam .has started. Exceeding·
• r Jy popillar, too. So popular, in fact. the phone [inn is now
' bullding a whole lilirary of taped wittlcisms. . r
! ;THIRD LIEUTENANTS -Q. "Does the Russian Anny
haYe first and second lieutenants?"
A. It bas senior lieutenants, lieutenants and j~or ~lieutenants. In<identally, the U.S. Anny .used I<> have third
i lieutenants as well as fll'St and second. Not even many
j military' men realize that. P06Slbly because I<> the mUltary
•mind now anything lower than a second lieutenant is hr
conceivable. 'lbird lieutenants fought in the War of 1812. ~ ~ AM INFORMED THAT barkless dog ()( Central Africa i known as the Basenji is pretty noisy, after all. It yodels.
,1 Imagine that. Such a sidekick might have done more ~or
1 Roy Rogers than Trigger. No, too fiip. Anyhow, despite ~reports to the contrary, the Basenji does go woof occas1~
: ally, too. '
THAT CHRISTMAS bloom known as the poinsettia is
~. please note. Said to cause somewhere in the
neighborhood of 12,000 deaths a year, in fact .
~ OYSTERS -The marine life boys claim oysters eat
mly when the moon <Shines . More specifically, when the t moon passes over the meridian oo which said oysters lie.
And , too. when the moon passes over lhe corresponding
. ~meridian on the other sid.e of the earth.
:, MORE THAN 4,000 years ago, Greek healers admin·
:i.,stered shock treatment to ment.al patients with electric
ls. That's the remarkable claim of scholar who has made 'f study of ancient medical treatments. Most imaginative!
•; Address mail to L. M. Bo yd, P. 0 . Box 1875, Ne'ID-1i>ort Beach, Calif. 92660.
You Can Make Gus 'Talk'
.. Gl09J!!Y Gus ls. not "! . , he'~ you. Wbi!ll. SOl!letbing
·ppeaa. ~ :rour community' (or In the Wlll'l4 at large)
i,tba1 makes you feel you've just got to make a ~mment,
Jet ·pus be your voice. He's been sounding oU on behalf .
~'icl. DAILY flt.OT readers for years. See what your neigb-
]>ors are saying nut Lime you read the DAD.. Y PICOT ed--
1torial page. Read Gloomy Gus.
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aluminum-clad stainless steel skillet
Gleam ing stainless with aluminum
clad bollom for even cooking. Com-
pletely immersible. lOY2" si ze. 27.99
12" large family size high dome 34.99
12" buffet size high dome 37.99
stainless percolating coffeemaker
Peres coffee fa ster than you can boil
water. All stainless sieel does away
with bitterness. Brews 2 to 8 cups 24.99
2-4 cups 19.99 2-12 cups 27.99
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may co so. coast plaza, san diego fwy , 'it 9fistolr cost• mesa, 546-9321
-' . shop Mondly thru Saturday 10 to 10, Sundey 11 to 6
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T..W,, Decenjier 12, 1912 DAI LY PILOT 9
give stain less
F arberware for
cooking magic
the large open heart.h broiler rotisserie
Smo keless, spatter-free cooki ng. Ai r circu-
lates around meat, sealing in nutritious
juices. A wonderful way to prepare fowl,
ro ast, ham. 1 O"xl 5" bro iling surface 54.99
hand y shi sh ka bo b allac hment 11.99
open hearlh broiler alo ne " 34.99
BY/'xl 2" broi ler-roli sseric 39.99
8 Y,"x 12" broiler alone 23.99
f deluxe opener/sharpener
Pierces cans automatically.
Cut edges are rolled b,ack
for safety. Stops automati·
call y when cutting Is fin·
ished. Once you get used
to this convenience, you'll
never want to use a man ..
ual opener again! Gold or
avocado. your choice 15.99
toaster with 9 color control settings
Two-slice toaster with 9 seIIin gs for per-
fec t toastin g. Snap-out crumb tray fo r
easy cleaning with handy reheal sel-
lin g. A greal gift idea. So quick. 13.99
!!mall appliances 74-al/ 19 srore«
order by mail or phone f..1:\ 1).3515
DAILY PILOT s r,....,, -u. 1972 .
Nixon Shakeup
Seek Raises
Next Year
DlrMtor of ..... .......
Lo.,... 1""1 .... Welt .... St.
Loi A ;sle1t C•••• 'ftMI
(J:lJ) 67~1J70
DEWIE AIR·CONDITIQNP COACHES
. . ' ' AIRPORT ·BOUND? • DIRECT IERVICE
To Los Arigel .. lnt'I Airport
from Orenge County Airport
-·--.......... 00 •7:00A.11.Md1NOA.._ .. .
-12 ... OOWflRllnl QINJlll'f.11 )Ii: ....
=~=-:-~·-T-ama,.· -o.cat-(714) 77M2l0
~!~~~~~'!!:...-. "
8\lbelclllrt ol Cfii 0 ..... ~ Cll!Jro -
DIRECT • IEUULE • ECoMOMIW
personal
radio pager
• .
TONE or VOICE
' • LOW COST
• NEW CO .. ACT
.POCKET UNIT
• MONTH te MONTH
IENrAL IAlli •
I I ' \ 1 1), , ;
I ' 1 1• I ' //',/
' JI I ...... _ ... __
OVER 11fE COUNTER COMP-1,ETE NEW YORK STOCK UST
MUTUAL FUNDS
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Momfay's €losing .Pri~ibplete New York Stock Exchange List
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Market P1ices
1.-' ' t' I • 4 •
' I '0 E · 'K 1, ... ,. n ven. ee · ·
-~ '
. ::; NEW YORK (AP) -ijlock market Prices"1iel,tl. · to;,• falrl>: ev~n keel Monday. ahowinc iltlle enthu•
sipsm to either advance.o~<l~ine. ~ .. . ' . <: "The market Js digesting Its PlDI as It ~ ·~.•g," said Larry Wacll.tel, an!JY!t With• Bache 4'
.. ':; He pointed out that mid·Ootober •prices had ..
r:ben sbatply. . " .
.,: "The short s are vecy nervous over ithe possi~ll· :
• lt:t: of a Vietnam cease'fire," be added. I • ' I !
. ; And be poled that the •market t~k In stridtc" : 14' announcement that hesident Nixon planned t~·. ; lieek an •~tension of. price. and wage controls beyond
~ tb!lr upiraUon date next Aptil.
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DAILY PI LOT
Morni!!g__
Pill Seen
A s Peril
WASHINGTON (AP)
Many univen:lty he a t h
centers are prescribing a can,.
cer-eall!lng drug as "moming-
a!ter" birth-control p i 11 s
without warning coeds of the
risk to themselves and their
possible offspring, R a 1 p h
Nader's Health R es e a r c h
Group has charged .
"College women are being
used as guinea pigs, without
even the most rudimentary
observance of professional
standards and informed COI14 sent.'1 ~ organizatioo said
Mooday night In a letter to the
NalioQal· Stctdeot Association.
1'llB U S II: OF diethy~
-..i (DES) as a !<>'1-
coital p 111 is not approved
by the FOOd and Drug L,..._,
.\!tminis tration, the repo r t
says, and may increase the risk
of cancer in women with a
•cone11e women
ar.e a sed ·as gaine a
pfls • • • without
professional · staB•
dards of informed
eon~llt.'
family history of breast or
genital cancer.
Jn addition. DES ls not 100
percent effective in preventing
pregnancy within 72 hours of
sexual i nterco-urs e and
daughters born to mothers
who toot the drug face a risk
of developing vaginal cancer
at puberty, it says.
THE REPORT mentions on-
ly the Universities of Michigan
and Pennsylvania where DES
is prescribed for birth control,
the latter in the ca se of rape
victims. But it quotes an of-
ficial in the Center for Popula-
tion Research of the National
Institutes of Health as saying:
"Most university h e a l th
services are giving the morn-
ing..rter pill" .
About 100 young women
whose mothers took DES In
the 1940s and 1950s to avoid
~ have developed
vaginal cancer, the report
says.
'!be FDA has banned the
synthetic hormone in animal
feeds effective Jan. 1 because
residues have been found ih
edible tissues.
"THE Sl'ORY of the morn-
ing-after pill gives chilling wit-
ness to the recalcitrance of
the FDA, the medieal pro-
fession and the drug industry
to learn from tragic ex-
periences." say Dr. Sidney M.
Wolfe and Anlta Johnson of
the Health Research Group.
They urge the FDA to re-
quire new labeling and ad·
vertising warning against the
use of DES for birth control.
A GREAT
GI FT IDEA!
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, .... ...,..,, tllll,..,..,. ..................... lllltt **1 YOU NO'.D A lllltSHOTI Ii ,._,.. 2...,
.. d9MS ........ fAml .............. .,.... ....... ,. ,,,. .. -... . ..... -......... ... --...... ...... ........... ; .. ~ ........ .. _ ..............
........ ..i.. --·----·-.................. \' ................... --.. -.... _, ........ ,.,
.. ab:J..._,.... ... ., .:, ... -. ....... ..
..... Cf lll!"'J .... ~Ul.'o). .... . iiiiiiir.'l!!i·:.. \.....: --.. _,. SU RS HOT r.o._..,...,.., .,,,.._.:.._
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Tuttday, Dtcllnblr 12, 1'172
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'hi ~
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... aewaen by r. g. INarry®' ..
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• .Prflfy '.sq ft : , •• , our mechine-'!"ltsi;j,ble ,
sliPpers tJiOt reelly· pemper his .,feet. _Soft ,
cushiqn in59les; "softly lined, quelity work-
(!l•nship in livery pair. Choose ·A. the ~uff< ,
in cemel/brown ·or novy/9qrd,' 5:00;; B. the .
plush espadrille in ·. •v.cx;odo1 .. ~imel, ~op,ier, : •
· navy, .. red,· &oo. ~ ,
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•ft sllppers hy •aalster®
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Jllco1IJPIJPV lliCIDilficdICID~ •
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Pampering footgeor for his quiet hours.
A. The "Funster" in soft deerskin with leather
sole ond vamp, I S.00. D. The "Pod-About" ..
oil deerskin wiht luKUrious acrylic
pile lining , 18.00.
deerskin by royal erest®
Truly luxurious gifting ... The Jester style
slipper , geared to his leisure life ot home.
Soft. from top to· toe with supple chamois
lining, cushion innersole, flexible chroma
bend sole. 15.00 •
Men's Shoes, 57
• • ANAHEIM ... NIWPOIT HUNT/N6TON llACH OlANet ~All OF OlAN5E
444 N. l..tW 1714) IJMl21 47 '"6ik>11 ltl1M 17141 ...._121i 7777 Whlfl't A••H9 17141 lt2·JJJI JJOO •H. T.nti. StrHt 17141 "l·llll
ClllUTOS
100 U. Ctttf ... Mall f21JI l.0·0411
SHOP •ilt A.M. +.•tltOO P.M. MONDAY THlOU5H $ATUlOAY, SUNDAY it A.M. ••I P.M.
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• • • • I~ I I f . " BEA ANDERSON, 'lidltor'
""*-"• ~ 11. 1"'1 . .. ... : It I
Dangerous. Cycle
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·MQ Riders,
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm 25 and ex-beautifully wrapped by the senders and
padlag O<ir lll'll• dill<!. List bl&bt my ~ not by ~store or sbop. •
buabud, who ls a physidan; came home
late alter working in the hos;ital
emergency ward. I have never seen him
ao upoel. His clothes were SRl•ttered with
blood, <T"I tboogh he always W.ru In a
lab coat. ' ' . . .
So please, Ann, tell people that before
they condemn a bride, to conslder ill the
~bllitles. Y,oar suggestion ~t . a
person whO has not had a "thank you"
within six. weeks teJeiihone ind. Mt If. the
gill was received; i. 'a' good ~. I wish
. '
Tbe patient, be told me, was a 14-year-
old boy who bad been riding a motorcy·
de.._ be --by>a,car .. His
spinal colamn"bad -.......i. HO' bad
tire tracU over his neclt. His bead was
beabed In and his lace mutilated beyood
recopltion. The boy died OD the
operating table in spite o1 the e11oN ol those three aeoders of .. besuUlul
two surgeons who dld everything they ~#. would call_ my •~··"·r. _ could to save him. 511.w .... ,...._ M<m!ER OF THE BRIDE
MY husband shook his bead and saiH, /
'1No clilld of ours Wilt 1ever ride a ,-p~ MOl'&iB: hrMfl .,._ tltey
motorcycle." 18!' tlllt -9oJ ... b -ta-
! ........be"'1 bow my Owi. (other -Ille.-wlD -11111 • ...
(alJo a pbylklan) forbade me to ride on ! .~ .. dlll11••• "* -ilDd
a . .-.,,.1o with a bo7fll .... Jiu! I'• ~·· ~ al lllM-A ' lldit wllo -"'E' tides __ , bli bock. l ..... " -a .... ,,. -..... tho;Ugbt my fatbtt~W Ill o&dr pet Wbof w*b d11en'el to be ... .....,.,,.. .
dldn't what he. was taWnc about. •
Alter lteing my husband's agouy DIAB ANN: Are thft lllJ flclll'llJ to
tclllgbt over a boy he didn't~ know, lndleate llow.....,...,. city people get
I've chaaged my mind a b o u I ltmi cancer lhMl -a.,. people clilo to
mo1ort7des. I hope all )'OUJIC people who the r.ctor)' -and -from
.. ad this will u.m to you: -MltS. automal>llea! I -lo -_.. I
STEPllAN K., Mootgomery,. Ala. ma1oe an "-1ant daclPn -BARTH
DEAR MR&' It.: A me .. mm tlle OR CD02ft _.., --" . ,.,., ......... . -,._ 1mfoct -a .... ,Dill Z Oil C1 II ,_ lw Ills __ ... _ .. __ h ' _ .. _ lllzll,..
DEAR ANN LANDERSi MY mwly·
manle( claollder II oae ol ,_ opoUed,
la17, ftrtllless, ~ tl1-lnd
-who did not write • ,.. ....
for -woddltl& tlfll •ltlloq&b ....... Jllan1e4 !oar ......... • Hor aame II ..... llladly 11'*'1 with ·-I -lo bat Ibo ...,,I hail> tt
11eca-Ibo ljooani have tile '1\lhtett
ldoa who -tbo fffta· No c•nll """ encloled. ' •
Ille ...id not .,.... Ille place ol ,.._to --Ibo llftl wrt I
-..... II -....... L J' f, A1'1p __ ....,. .. __ .---.... -· ... "'' see ti.._.• ··q n trP'-.
&M evtd1111 Ji&d111t.,.. ....... 11
yia/, -··~ • Illa -iw--.......
1 I l• .-. """11111 ,.... 11111 -
tbe danpl' .... ..i,..-i .. dD. lead
the boolllet, '" Alcoltollom -no,. oad -. ......... ,...,......ed•••
to tbo DAILY PILOI'. .. f
'!'
"-the · ..., · Items for this
ecololkal year are~~'olblre window" and
111'111 oets """j>lete with Irrigation
'Y"-onc1 ~~-blocu so c:hlJdren oan Check Uie ..,... ... -lime for Reda. . . ,
-niJe·ol "" 1tlectlon applies to '~ llboppilli In general -the fll'ller the better. Dani underestimate
'the leornbig age. .
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' .. _ -·· Lib.bis alhotedt.Oll? ' :· ~" · .~ Wllldlei •wbo.; ! :1
...,,nheless admitted that. the dlijf . 1·i ·
Wyef ior dol1a ii• .man. ~·we now Mve . "
llllle.&lrls In· our ..,..._,..,farm·toys, , • !:::!:±~-':::!::::!::~
bui.kting lfJtl -mk:roiM"8o It ' ' I ~
It all -bid. io liis '~ ol toYs . r
ling DilnlOlurlzed ~ repreeen a .,,, ', ~.,'I :
And having already c1-Ille . l,IOO
toys for the 1m calaloe fJ<m -the · • :
lto,000 avall1bl~ <ID the world· market,
Waddle, an affable bechelor, will send
Christmas checu to his nepbewl and
nieces.
. ~
Gemes with TV them"
are en inside
' diver1i11n.
Children also ere
requesting 1)'10t'9 ~ys
end outdoor projects
that relate to nature.
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Early school age is a good time
begiiiriing craft sl<ills or m4t.chi:
games about colors and
Playing It Safe
• ·.Santa's pack may be ·staffed with safe toys but what
happens after the pniamits are. opened?
Dr. Jay Arena, Immediate past president of the Ameri-
can Academy of Pedlatrics, takes up the campaign against
accidents that cause more than one-third of the deaths in
l.o\o.14-year age bracket. ·
· Toys are implicated In some of the accidents, bicycles
most otten In the fatal ones, ac<ording to tire Food and Drug
Administration. ..
Dr. Arena advises• parents to be aware of the strains
and stresses associated with childhood accidents. Facton
and times to be especially care!ul:
-Hunger or fatigue, particularly the hour before meals,
during late afternoon or before bedtime.
-Hyperactivity.
-Illness, pregnancy or menstruation of the mother.
. --O>ntinually tenoe relationsllip betwoon parents .
-Recent subOtituiion of person caring for the child,
such as from mother to sister.
. -Sudden change in environment, as in moving or va·
cation time. · · ·
-Molher is rushed or too busy. Saturday Is the wont
accident day. Between 3 and 6 p.m.
These Critical situations often are combined or come
In quick sequence In the rush and exullation of the holidays
when toys are new and most subject to tesj)runs.
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Horoscope: Sagittarius Invest 1n 8 . -Golden Needle's I
• s~ "' tJe """
• Talents
, _J.~ DAILY PILOT TwesdaJ, -U, 1972
WEDNESDAY
DECEMBER 13
11J SYDNEY OMAR!t
..,.,,. il -lo late-night
, ~ and Leo
natives "take the cake." Aries
creates Dopood sandwichta
and Taunuo select! '61ld
chunks of meat Pilces prefers
dellcate fish dishes and
Capriarn will Miiie Io i
--t do doctors recommend
for patients in pain?
loctors all over the country dispense over 50,000,000
of these tablets to their patients each year.
tor1 recommend ~.Ulan any
other lea4lnl: tablet. .
caYlar and bard·boiled"tggS as
I mid!)igbl repa$l.
ARIES (Marci> 21·April 19):
Easy ways •~ blocked. Pot.en.
Ila! ind long-range views
dominate. Live YQUr own life.
Those who advile and espej:I
you to consent must be
awakened to facts. Self-in-
terest now must be your key.
You will comprehend.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Advice from friends could
leave sometJllng to be desired.
Your own views should be
first. foremost. Strive for ad-
ded independence. Be warj in
connection wtth n:i o n e y ,
valuables. Do your own ac-
counting for nO)'"
GEMINI. (May 21.June 20):
Aoctnl is on your public rela· 8AGm.uuus (Nov. 11-
lions, your ability to perceive Doe. 21): Invest In your own
1'harts-..e<1•ct.""$mn1p=1>0r-ti!~ol3, ahill!ICJ. Old.,. tn-
don'I commit yourself. dlvldual lends helping band.
~ added respomibllily . IJBl\A (sept. 23-0ct. 22l: llrilbl_ ~ -In area Journey may mutt 1'I llio _.,..ty"dej>msed. You are
unexpected. ~pone 191ik-d I of renge PR>lec\. You requln Id-lie or unmual surprioe -
ditional matcirial, inlonnaUon. pleasant veriely. · '
Know it and re1pond ac-CAPIUCOJIN (Dec. :o.Jcm.
cordingly. T-indlvlduaj It): You con complete assign.
figures promlntn!iy. Be fie>. ment and receive recognition
ible. for effortJ. Some ideas need
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): revision and more time to
Study Vlrgo message. see develop. Tiptoe tbroogb welter
situations, persons'~ as they of confusion. steer clear Of
really are -don't deceive disputes among relatives.
yourself. Wishful lhiniing Is AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
your ·adversary. Emotion 18): New approach ls
tends to take Qver from logic. necessary if you are to realii.e
Be prepared. A void basing ac· flJll!nclal gain. Key MW is .~
lions on Im~. slriV< for originality. Old
inetbo'ds will not suff..e, x..,,1w;:=~~!-----L------i= up wt.tit times. S t r e 1 a
sbowrilanahip, creativity. ' • PISCES (Feb. 111-Marcb 2'):
• You can oyercome pdda. Key
ts lo ~ broold>. lglpwllol JOU will .p\ lw:iing .,..,. 11>-
IUaJ oppoo!Uoa • .MUillo -lie~ aBJ. lie~. !(..,p follll lrl ,.,urteJI, Y•
... ""' rfclil poUt.
IF TODAY 18 YOIJI\
Bll\TBDAY yo<n"l!-o-e-n-ny
survived test. You ere due lo
reap some ieWarda.: You are
a 'Irani, direct lndlYlcWJ. You
usu.ity mean what :rou lll!Y
and SIJ,; what you ~ You
abhor l!ypocrlsy. In 1m, you
wlll ."""!>lete ~l proj-ect. August will lie )'OW' most lljplficanl moalll ol _...
Year·
perfect for holiday wear
C,..,m
100% Polyester, 45" wide, Reg. $3.98 yd.
NOW ONLY 3.27 yd. I
these prlca gooc1 !hru Dec. 17,'19'72
r Golden 'needle FABR1cs
Ttiere are many medicationl a
phyaician or dentist can pre--"be for p&in. Some are nar-
cij)tic, many are aivailable only
OD pre.cripdon. But there ia one·
jlin reliever, available without ~rip~ doctOn diepenae
•in and qllin ... Anacin. rEach year. docton give over
000.00Q An.o.cin tab!eta .to
patien,fa in pain. If doctors
Headache a'Dd dental pain is.
relieved incredibly fat; minor
pains of arthritis are depend·
ably eeaed for hours: even the
aches and pains ol colds and ftu
respond to Anacin. So the ten•
aion and depression that can be
caused by auch pallLwill be re-
lieved toO. And millions take
Ana«;in without atomac:h upset.
Home aHairs could· dominate.
Family member Is !lying to
tell you -•thing. Learn by teaching. rMeans s barer-----------------------~-----IAft ON Jll.U' etm .. l'OI -
ini enou1li about An.:in to
Me all these tablete, what
r recommendation can you
when you are in pain?
When you're in pain, why
don't you foUow the practice of
so many doctors and take the
tablet a doctor might give you
in his own o.ffice. Take' Anacin•.
knowledge. Examine motives.
hllllches-·-"-P! "'!~---
ity. If enthuslaStic, you beoe-
ijt. . Ja_Jhe E>oldrtims? 11111 IN YoUl UPI -DOllNe Ol1t _,Al. IAlll
ou aee, Anacin contains
of the pain reliever doc·
-~ ~~1
Christmas J
Sweaters !
In Large Sizes 42 • 52 j
~-·~~-ii.\~~~~
·say
''Merry
.:' Christmas11
~warmly with •
t luscious sweater.
Chooseorton
'
or wool
In m•ny lengths
•nd loob
''""" u.oo
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s..nday Shopper? ......... ,
Hw11w:rtw .._.
0,. 12,. i
s...... .. ,-·tnza1 ,•,... • ---Otlter Gih Sug9estwns --.. e P4NT Hm 1· e DllSSIS e IQllS
• IUPi . e 'PAlfnS ·• 11.CKfSD e "°Wl!S. e PANTT HOSI
LAYAWAY • •IFT IOXU • Gin ClmflCATU
't ~~:'sHALF·SIZE SHOP
COSTA HUNTINGTON Ml!SA BEACH
1105 NIWPOtlt 11&.YD. 14 MUNTlftetOI!' CIH1ll
(Nerriief11tttsm.t,. tNext te llorUt lfot.I
~ fULLDTON -224 0,....,..r ,. .. ._. Or•gltH!'JN & H....,
Hfftt: MH •• P.,I. 10.9 e Sot. tM e s... 12.1.
Bankanoericcrd • Materclsal'IJe
CANCllB ·.(~une 21.July 22).
Let other& bandle mm mat-
ters, d~ails. View project as a
whole. Perceive po~. Ap-
plies to personal as well os
business affairs. Now YoU cal
look ahead to holiday visits,
gift se1ecti~. :
' LEO (July ZS.Aug. 22):
Slight delay should DOI be
cause for undu1e
discouragement. Key now is to
look for openings. Pick and
choose. Be selective. Be aware
of how mate, partner handles
money. Advise in careful man-
ner.
VIRGO (August 23-Sept. 22):
Lie low. Obtain hint from Leo
message. If patient, necessary
changes wiJJ occur. Gemlni in·
dividual could play key roil-
~
FRANCIS-
'\.ORR J ·
FINE STATIONERY
L.til'"-"_.Li,....
Oli'.5K ACC&SSORl•S
l"ICTURE l"JtAMl!S
PHOTO ALllUMS
ll!J i .CIAU 11511'.lf I U-1111
CIH•A tU IAl ·CMYElll:lf PAllllS
. /';\.
nre rt~ :xrLOoN'' ,,
. LTD •. -·
The flne6t clothes
fM children trom ,thft best
Amerclan & European
designers.
,~ ....... l d~11~1,,r.11, ., .. .,, .. 1
elolld,.,.M•t Ol•rc I~ lhe ""''"'••ii
Fashion Island
NewPQrt Beach
64f.8808
Town ·& Country
Orange
.(lH) 558-9595
lfnntington Harbour
_(711) 843.1666
C:HRIITM.ff S SHEJPPIN6
M.ff EE E.ffSY
•• ~ •• ..
:t ·~ .. ..
~ • .. : .. • .... • • ~-.. • • • ,.
> • • • •
• • • • •
Employe'e1, cwiomns and friendi
will really appreciate ,.. __ "t--.....
thu compleuly diffnen1 gif1!
Tasty, unique gift packs with our oum label
from the historic, old Balboa PaPilion
• C:wlomconned (1 o:.)Alboeore-Tur;iafrom S1or1W1
'
• Sharp CMddor CMese Spread from ihe fomow
· ~DoiryCo., W--.iin(J lb., 40::.)
-. (7 ozl)C..Albkore ..... $3.SO
. Qoct. <Will• ...... "$3.00
COiitbln1don: 6 C.. Albacore
ond I Crock a.fdlr ...... $6.SO
\
....
Wrile-or call:
400-:Mojn SITeel,
.Balboa; Calif.
(114) 61J·$l4$
~
PNllLllll
Try Mini-vacation . lfl4!I »'*-11-. flUI -Nny, OlfY't • ·-
AU. WOOL -llR ....
No time for a vacation? TWm SPORT COATS
The Assistance League of Laguna Beach hall the answer !or those
longing far an escape but unable to get away for more th.an one day
at a time.
AU. WOOL www1IUI 2 PAIT, SUITS .,::;
It will s po n s o r six minl-vacatioas in Los Angeles beginning
Wednesday, Feb. 14, each of wbicb will feature a theater performance,
lunch and shopping.
_.....,._llr°Otltll OUTSTAM-
YAUllS NOT SHOWN Hm
LOOI POI. THI SALi Td &,IAYll Those participating will travel by lwrury bus to Los Angelos, shop
at a Beverly Hills swre and attend a matinee performance at the Shu-
bert Theater in Century City. ROY ·s1:Ru11 . ~~~·t •
FORMERLY OF PASADENA The first excursion will include shopping at Saks Fifth Avenue,
lunch al the Beverly Club "'1d ·.a performanoo of Pirandello's "E;m·
pore< Henry IV" starring Rex Hamson. 270 E. 17th St. • HU""" Sciuore . .---ciiota 'Mou
-0... 642•.l,611 • I U ~· The bus ride home will. feature good cheer, music and a no-llcot
bar, according to Mrs. Daniel-6cheyver, chairman. ' '
,_Subscribers_may_participale In as many or. as few !)(_the plannild
act!Vlties;-Mf!i. SC!il'yv'er aaaea. · -·-•c. "°' ~--_ -
Cost of the package ls $125 per penon, net lllCIUdlng luncll or
beverages. Reservations may be made with Mrs. T!iomas Jones or La-
guna Beach.
'Sno Job for Santa
Yul·e Love His Ideas
By DICK WES!'
~l\i!llNGOO~· (~I) -As a fu!t1lc seril~ Ibis column
h8S been helpmg readers gel
--for CJJrlslmas. By ~ lime, II l"'U have
Ollowed instruct.ions, you have
already taught the partridge
to roost in the pear tree and
inoculated the turtle doves qalliit parrot fever.
Both of whicll are giant
alrid<s towsrd b r Ing in g
Clnislmas under control.
And here are some other
tips on decuations, food and
gifts Uta! wjU stand you in
good stead durill( t h e
holidays.
Oiain cards -Why r isk
overlasing your heart . and
other vital organs addressing
Christmas cards to yom-hun-
dreds of friends and:relatives?
• Ju.st send seuoo's greeUngs
to five of them in the form of
a chain letter, asking them to
pass It along to five of their
friends and relatives.
Eventually, the message will
get around to everyone on
your Christmas card list.
are going lo wine! up with an prevented by coating the tinsel
extra )e&. Wllich can lead to will! shoe poll>h. s.. -... t. I 1 -,• • _ "-". · • ~l<:i. • jurisdletlOniJ disputes and 1"'P""' •-. ..., ~I
other unpleasanln.... wltlt 11+,....i H8""' _ Y..., ""'"""'"
Plan ehead! Adopt. another ==========II O..lv the Yttt• C.nt.r COMbitt•• th• b•119flts of th• two •m•ti119 child bef: Chris sell •v•t.1t1s of Yot•• RAJA for the "'kid, HATHA fot.Ati• Ndy.
ore !mas or -~ RAJA YOGA. like m•tic helps you d9fflop your powers of con.
one of )'OUI' present cblldren to • · . · centr•tlon •fMI •wer•11eu. HATHA YOGA htlpt: to q1,1ickly lluild
a passmg Gypsy. • lt.•ltliier, "'°"'' .,1..,ou1 bodv. n ... two ,.._,, Yog•1 loin.cl
Artificial realism-You can .1' I to,.th .... ,.. the p.tf.ct comlM11•tio11 for th• w •• t.rn 111•11 •nd
add a touch of authenticity .to .. .. S.nt• nz: wo'"•" of •flY •te·
an artillcial Olristmas tree by ~· "PASTEJ.S M.I., Account•nt, N•wport, t.ech, s•icl, "TWt ls th. fi"t tint• · I lb aJ I'.,. IM•n •bl• to rel•• In *""o v••rs." H. D., En9in••r, legun• trimming t wi re snow ,. • 1o ':/( l••ch. ,..,,, "I 1l•sp two hours I••• •M f••t beff•r." R. J., •t
and icicles. & 1· 111nc1,,, N•wport h•ch, s•Yt· "Mo,. .... ,..y, r,,. 11•••r Hr.cl 11ow.
First, spray the entire ·tree •nd conc11tr•tion i• 1t1uch lmpro.,ed," M, G., Hou1ewif•, l,.,ine,
with your favorite n as a 1 ·PlAIDS'' ••Y• "I won't n .... without Yog•. r .... g•iHd joy •n(j lnn•r decongestant mist. 11. p••c•." a~ Then, instead of using a con-W.., • c ... te Mi. FrM Dnaz..,,...._ -t fW ot1t wt.tJt ..,... ~:°se~:,: ~~ ~ sn!!ii , .. TOP DRAWER •. =:::,'::~.~· '" .. ..-............ ~
food freezer. 221 "'"''" ··~ l\' FREE DEMONSTRATIONS
This will chill the branches i< -. W_. · TOMORROW, WED., 10 •·•· le I ,:...
sufficiently to congeal the --I week cl• .... thlrt next Wt4 .. Dec. '° nasal mist produclog1...... · ~-·~ •t t :MI •.m. and 7,_."" snowflakes and ice formations. ·'1* · · :J:o; TOGA CENTER. 445 L 17111 St.
Yule logs -Air po1Iut1on:i~~~~~~~~~L~C~OST~A~M~IS~A~C-:;;-;;:r-;:111~1c:1r;w11e;· ;:s•~.l~M~":n~Zl~I~ regulations lien the burning o!I:
Yule logs In many areu. U,
i-ever, l"'I plug up .the
chimney wllh a llulled moose
head or some other omtruc-
tion, the smoke will remain in·
doors.
Tinsel -E1cessive glitter in
Christmas deooratloos can be Suckling pigs -Tradition
demands a suckling pig for
Christmas dinner but that
doesn't necessarily preclude aJ--,;;;;=:;;:===="\"-I little variety in the menu.
This year, instead of the
same old suckling pig with an
apple in its mouth, try serving
a suckling pig with a tangerine
In fts moulh.
Odd legs -Hardly anyone
wears stockings any more, so
most kids hang panlybose by
the chimney on Olrls!mas
Eve.
lf you happen to have an
odd number of clilldren, you
w~w..,
Slits ' " 2t :blJ ' CNtt lfWJ C-lfslM•r .,._
Doll•r For Dotl•r -
Th• Fh1•1t
Wom•n's W••r A••il•ble
Your ch•rg• •ccount
W•lcom• . ..,.,.. WllllMI ....
. ·---~--.... -----... .._ ---
44 flllhlon llland, newport center 644·5070
' ;-
---,_
..
..
'
•
Mail Chauvi .nist
\I"~
Cancelled Out
By ERMA DOMBECK
Every year, I have
conducted a campaign to Help
Stamp Out the Chrisbnas
Newsletter.
It is my conten.Uon that if
the authors are lying about
their activities, !hey should be
ashamed of tbemaelvet and lf
Ibey are telling the truth, I am
too jea1ou! to care.
I; don't need to know that
Fem and Freds' ~year.old is
a guest conductor with the
Cincinnati Sym~y or that a
40-yea.r-okl scbdOlmate of mine
W8! a write-In J:lomecoming
. queen at the Un\veraicy.
I would rather open an
envelope and Re an illegible
scrawl that says, "Do I tnow
· you1" ll!a•-to-recelve _tbrea
s in g le-spaced type-written
mimeographed sheets telling
me the hour-by-hour a<:Uvlties
of I~ Zapp family.
Readers over the years have
expressed the same sen-
timents over the cold, iJn-
personal new sletter. In
retaliation, I have written a
general newsletter for people
who want to strike back. You
may personalize it by filltng tn
your own names.
DEAR CHRISTMAS
PERSON:
Well, I have been taking iron
for over a year oow and I
don~ feel incredible at all. The
only charige 1· have ex·
perienced is that my sup-
porters rusted.
The kids are fine . Nothing
has changed with •-~-
since I wrote two years ago.
He-is-lli!Ltn_tbO l!!!!!Llll"!de
and is In the upper 85 pen:ent
or his: class.
is using dental
AT
WIT'S
END
floss .OW. They grow up fast,
don't they? It seems Ute only
yesterday when he w a 1
brushing without a Ouorlde.
We all went camping last summer. The Oles and mo.a.
quitoes were bad, the facilities
inadequate and the people
unbearable. Next year, we are
going to b6ok the camper up
to a car and take It out of our
driveway.
---was in the school
spelling tiee iilif ail! -quite
well. She inlsspelled terse in
the seventh round. ---
says hello. It is bard to believe
that guppy has been With us
elght years. Their life span Is'
supposedly only 15 months.
sayi she needs
company but where do you
find someone who wants to
share a Dixie cup?
I bate been busy. I went to
a Sarah Coventry jewelry par-
ty m ~pril and bought a
ladybug Jritb a· sapphire navel.
I was also given a
dishonorable discharge a!I a
Girl Scout cookie captain.
Nothing serioos. I confused
their ream!s with the Cub
Scouts' transparent tape . and
the Campfire Girls' peanut
brittle.
---waa toilet trained
on his -birthday. It saves
on laundry and-bis -football
uniform. Happy· Holidays.
Write ••• whoever you are.
Parties Packaged
Clubs Tie Up .Week
Garclenen
P.1embers of RRrbor ViN
Hills Garden Club will hove
the rare opportunitJ '.of ~
ing a ~a.....,..~ted
for the:Joill'lfaf ~·
for the 1 p.m. Christmas deSllfl and gift ei:cbangc for
meniers of the E m m i.
=tersco~ ~ ~~ed:~
'l1le group will meet at i
p.m. Thursday, Dec. 14. ~i
• l"r" •• ~
Women's Sleepwear . -. "
'. ' A. Brush8d ·Shirt
'ini
8. Brushed gown
C. Bruihed cleisic pejames
Sale I .
$296 ..
WOMEN'S P.LUSH
CHOW SUPPERS
SAt.E 1~ The llJ'IUP will meet at b:30.
p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 20, in
the home of Olet Michaels,
Irvine. He is co-owner of
earl's Flowers, Corona del
Mar.
Christian Women ·
Christian Women 's Club of Newport Beach will meet at lovely Colored pl111h upper on •
11:45 a .m.. Wednesday, Dec. 1oft pedded vinyl 101•. So fluffy
Secretaries
13, in the Airporter Inn for a
111
_..,., ___ ,. •nd warm. Sii•1 5·10.
holiday luncheon and pro-t ru• m ~~ cwz::w•w21<tJeZ • m
A Ti.nsel T'tme party is
!!Cheduled by Harbor Area
Legal Secretaries at 6:,. p.m.
Wednetday, Dec. 20, tn the
Newport Shores clubhouse.
AF Moms
Madrigal Singers from Sad-
dleback Higb School will
enterWn Flight 19, United
Statos Air Fon:e\ Mnthers
when they meet at • _e·~
n.Jnday, Dec. 14, in Hyde
Park Mobile Estates, Santa
Ana.
CM Women
Costa Mesa Women are col-
lecting food for-baskets and
gram.
Auxilia,Y
Dr. and Mrs. John such of
San Juan Capistrano will host
the annual Christmas party or '
the Orange County Chiroprac·
tic Awdliacy Saturday, Dec.
16.
Harbor View
' Corona del Mar High School
Madrigals will entertain the
Harbor View fills Committee
of the Orange County
Philharmonic Society Tues..
day, Dec. 19, at 10 a.m. in the
home of Mrs. Milton· Pat-
terson.
gi£t Items which will be·p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; donated to the Indian Center, II
stanton. Contributk>ns are to
be delivered to the clubbouSe
between 10:30 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 14. They will
be taken to the center on Sun-
day, Dee. 17.
The club will have it!: 8Mua1
Chrlstma> bnmch at 1 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 15 in t be
clubhouse. Q>sta Mesa High
School Choir wUI entertain.
MY Library
Newport Harbor Theater
Guild Juniors will entertain
during a children's Christmas
party at 10:30 a.m. Saturd.ly,
Dec. 11, In the Mesa Verde
Branch Library. .
A play, enUU~. "Rave a
Happy Measle" will be pre-
sented.
UDC
Mrs. L. A. Arneson's Santa
Ana home wlll be the setting
JEWELERS
Se¥011'1 en« \Ions Center
H1111tin9tet1 l••th
lrookhur•t & Acl1m1
961·2212
KERlWi PERSlAN , RllGS-
MENS PERMANENT
PRESS SPORT
SHIRT
Scile
'484
Fortrel polyest~r cotton
broadcloth prints and sol·
ids. 141/J 16 1/1 .
Mens Double Knit
Po~ester Slacks
or Jeans ., ...
Wash•ble flares never ' need ironin9. Solid colo~
with wide l'oop~and roomy
pockets. In sixes 30 tct 40.
ACj)UA NET'
HAIR SPRAY,
SALE ·11r
e I J.¢Z. SIZE
e R.E&. OR. SUPER. HOLO e KE:qS HAil NE.Al ,.
I
PRICES EFFECTIVE
TUES., DEC: 12.
S.t•l., DEC. 16th
&-FOOT
SCOTCH
PINE
OR BLUE
SP-R.UCE_
TR~E
•
So green and full, you can hardly believe it isn't
real. Pre·shaped · lon.1.J.leedled , branches are
flame retardant! Strong ~tal stan~
111*GfiiWli*8 t W 'W'
'" . LIGHnYIGiu
PORTABLE COLOR TV
T• •carry It fnlm ....... to;rM..
Yoa needQ't be• hel.vyweight to lift'
tbiahlrdermeportabte TV. The wu.
nut pmined cabinet blends with any
room' dl!loor. Pedact for den, bed(OOID,
kitcbea, playroom, anywhere ip the
~ 10" diqooally 'lneasuted
' SALE .$1 88
• •
• •
VISIT SANTA DAILY IN OUR
TOY DEPT: MONDAY THRU FRI., 12-3, 4-7,
SAT., 11-6. SUN. 12 'Ill 5
FAMOUS IUND WATaflS* •
WALtuil"! IElllUS"! HElllOfl
SALE
We'eaa't meotioa all t.be Dllll*o W yw'ft ree•
oi;niR-t.hem whea yw Ila! them! Jf.jewel. 21·
jewel, 14K rokl cue ••• 'lfOIQllD's di od...tlm,
men°11 coleti<lar, loU .Dore.I
" ..
·Beginners
CYCLE -n-.:E
'6 88
FOR A6tS 2-4.
EASY TO STEEL
SUPEl WIDE TU.CC
UWIT I
'<
A real rally type
sports c:yc:le • ' •
THE BIG WHEEL
by MARX
rktwe• .......... ln.TY ii.,.,:;'":;.,:•='""::.-==--l!!Ti!~-=--=-----D Hes 9reat cool features: adjust. eble cont'our seat, pedal drive
power, low.ilun9 suipension for
stability. long hom handle-bars
·SALE
12 .ROLL
DELUXE WRAP
·-" 12 Rolls Total:
6 Paper, 3 Foil,
J Tissue. Total
130 Sq. ft.
SAL.E t177 -AA
GIUT 'l'. .. POWU CUlllD
CllOPCTCll'•.ua .. SIT . •• ,
Set up over and under raceway a:nd
watch your Cbopeycle"' cyde, &~
'round the counoe. Incl..i.. ftPue-8 Fat
. Ttaok'" layout, -pbmt>"' _,,_
er, Chopcycle ~-.
IPANA TOOTH PASTE
SALE 3 for $1
• St•1111ow ffofflle forll'lule . e W1Ht1u1• 1114 fffi9M1111 ,. •• , t.eth • . ..... .........
aan
for qu1c.k" positive turns, rear
racing wheel slicks for traction.
Full front fork for quick turns.
, .........
: I . : ~ ~ ... ,.: . .• ,,..·
M-111111,,,
ALUMINUM FOL
SALE 28C
t .JJ YDS. 11 II INCHES
EXTU STlENGTM
-·
•N• IMl'Olt\ l:IU a, C-H .......... ._ ... _
. " M*I"" Dtfly lt11N1a. , .......... .,.
811-1848 ., Br.ookhurst At Adams
I
. '•
' • • j
Pardee Labels Volleyball:
Cowboys Coach
Se·H~righteous
Kor~n .. V.S.
Tilt Tonight
The Balboa !lay Club ...u.,Hll
team will be•e a belabl ~ '
over the Republlc ot Korn nat*aJ
tum lnn1$bt II EdilOD RJcb Scbool
when the 1... teams collide at ap-
WASHINGTON (AP) -Coach George
Allen aald Monday tllt Dallu Cowboy•
used an illeglli play to cut dQwn bla
Washington Redskin llnebac~, Jact
Pardee, in last Saturday's NaUonal 'Foot·
batt League game.
Allen said flanker Lance Alworth mov·
ed· forward· -when he went ..... motion, _II·
opposed to going backward, and then
Filnis: Show
Concepcion
Wasn't Out
charged into Pardee bel~ l1tt hall -••• 1~P"X~·:'~ .-'u.;'
snapped. Rlpubllc Of Korea and 1 U .S all-
"lt'• ·-•thing d'3i(ned to hurt a Illar OOlt"-1, J10t1 the J>l'4>Cl'&lll
player and I don't tblnk 'll'• needed in under way at 7 with the .,.,,., . ,.,,,. to follow:
football,'0 Allen inalsred. • . ne KOl"MD wo n'• team flniO..
Pardee llld his Injured left knee was ed tbJ.!d in lhe ~wilcb. Olympic
still -· bid that he Upected to be Gl,Dlea while the men'• <OD~
reaciy ' for the playoffs. In a rare ou•· was a lellllnl c:oateoder. Maey ol , • ~ O!~ will be with tllt. burst, he bitterly crltlcjzed Da1111 coach team at -tonJPl. , ,
Tom Landry, -T1te Kotto!if are pl'-Ylu five
"That'• what com., from tbe all· maic:hea In tbil country ·witll· pr..
righteous TOm Landry, whtils llOUer·thaq eeeds tlOinl to tbe defflopmenl of
-thou and all'(OOCI," tho Star quoted ~,u~Olymr~~-
Pardee as ,oaylng. night al PliUley Pavilion cm tbe
Earller In the week in an interview UCLA campu1.
Landry had sa!il that he did not tubacrl~ "We're taller than \hoY;f' Jim to "win Keane ol. the BBC team aay1. ·11But } -at-all-costs" pblloaophy. ,,_, are well disc!·"~ and ex-Christianity and pro loolba11 are veiy --, ...-
1 compaUhle," he said. "U you're vicious lrelilely good at lllayln( delenatve
and want to hurt people, that'• bad.,, :~~· It should be a very fut
• A spokesman for the NFL Aid Iba!, u •-;;;,:_ BC m all ·such-sltuattoos-, the-l••M"'-·~ B team baa been I I -·· bolstered·wlth-the-adtlll-ol-Joltn~ NEW YORK -World Series films rev ew r lms of the game before issuing Alstrom this aeuon. Alstrom
showed Mooday that Clncin®.U shortstop any comment, but added thal no action I yed ~th Chart "--· •-~ against Dallas -·"d be -~~. '·'He P 1 w• --• Dave concepcion was Safe at second base "'vw ...... ,.........,.. season and was named · mott
Jn a close play in the seventh inning of (Allen ) can criticize officlatlnf all he valuable player in the national
the first game of .the lm Series against wants to, as kmg as be doesztt ," the tournament. Re .ii a five-time Al)..
the Oakland Atblettcs. .• spokesman said. · Amerleon volleyball Illar.
The films,· shown for the first~ time, 1be play, which was · · for the first Abo added to the roater for
clearly disclosed -in slow motion -time: in the Cowboys' 34-M-vlclor7 cxift.. tonight's actkln ~bl· ......... a slsted basically of a crack•'·• bloc' • by •• ,_, ' that COocepclcn slid under the tag ol Alw«th, ~ la sent In ~~·. • member ol the Monica team Oakland shortstop Bert Campaneris. "1IV '""'"'"" and one of the top "''-In the Allen ··" "· ~"'"-used the play ·-,..,_. Umpire Mel Steiner of the National oaiq wrt: """'_,,.~ ......
i..ague bad <alled out Concepc~, claim-al least four times in the ftrsl ball, In-Tbe matdlea · ore open to the
.,., ,_ Ing that COrnpanerls had taW Con-. c!Udln/f • touchdown run by Cllvln Hill general publlc with t t c k eta
JE'l'S RECEIV&R-J~ROME·BARKUM FINDS to A TOPSY-TURVY WORtD ·AGAINST-OAKtAND. '-~-•cepcion.oo.1be. ~lmet. ' . 00 which Panlee bruised • ltnee. Pard,. ~1.-~-cbr--IOnlibL -·
Joe's on Target
Siit Oakland's
tJji Top, 24-16
.SAK.LAND (AP) -Even in defeat, ~ York Jets' quart~rback Joe Namth
.... knack for upstaging .other football~·
~ ,, '
'ti.roe. was ion· tar~·,~11 -Mght," Jet11;~
ceach w .. 6 Ewbank said' MObday night
aAv· Namath passed for 403 yards in a
»,19· loss to ,the Oakland Raiders that
Wied the -Jets' bQpes of malting the Na--
Oonal Football League playoffs.
"He has these kind of games," ad-
mitted RaiclerS t'08ch Jotm Madden. "but
I {eel our guy was pl'<ltfy good too."
Oakland quarterback Daryle
Lamonica. throwing a lot less than
J'l!!lnalh, passed for 202 yards and two !.'i~owns in the na!~Y. televised •.
~ders fullback Marv Hubbard and ! receiver Don MaynaM:I were two
r play~rs , whose fea~ w e r e
rshadowed by· Namath's passing
show.
Hubbard gain~ 11$ yards to become
the ninth 'NFI. ;nisher to bit the 1,000.
yard mark this season. The 35-year-<ild
. ~rd ca_ught '!even Namath passes
31 yardBr and reltt'hett an all-time
L bigb of 632 career receptions.
"N&lbing takes the place of winning,"
aynard said later. ,
nie loss • left the Jets at 7-6 and·
.,..erinica,ted their chance of winning the ~ · an Conference's wild card playoff
rth. The Raiders, as Cban:i.pkJns ot the-
BLOODY, MUDDY STEVE TANNEN REFLECTS BATTLE STRAIN.
e West, are t.3-1 and headlrig .1oward •.
playoff opener on the road against . c h · s B • c
"'.'';gh, ~ possi~ly. Cleveland. on oac ees ' urning ar:
The Raiders kept lhe Jets out or the . '
zooe after Namath hit tight mid Rich }' ·
ter on a touchdown pass play cover-R al . . It' m· . il. , 49 yards in the first quarter. That e izes S . s ; · run y S
e put the Je~s ahead 7-3. , , . .. ~
Two interceptions near the goal lin~ ' . •
lped the Raiders... , I• ' t • . • • .
"He had~ Suctess •ll'flinst our zone. Be.Jketball co~chtng sud'denl¥ beca~~ c~~,!~ _.ws 1-ll and ~lf..
we used 1: -Uiree-rhan rush and he th~ fartiiest th1ng . from J1111 Stephens ~we at the tllret area tJtm'en.
pretty good success against that m~d as the Marina . Hl~h ~ach wa~ fary·.:""9 ~r 1tbool and furtbef 'tftfo "• saic;t Madden. ' dr1vln~ .home after ios1ilg 'lo Katella Rr:i-. can he pined by caUiai· 13UUf.
11slnt, he didn't RUt it into the end zone da~ night. , "' · '· A '~lie· I• ~.iated at Utt city ~I lol." , '"~ sa~ a wrec~ed ca; abl&ze~-.tben W~ Al&'M at 7:11 fer' .. lenstt'd
Urilonlca put lbe baJI into the end zone rfahzed 1t was his familf's Veh1e1e. He parents ad voi.teer coacllts. .
a perfeet•st-yard drJ.ng toss to Fred stopped aad raced around trying to glean * ·
•llrollld the Raldm toot'& 16-7 lead •
tllt-l!Ulrlerj and I pllSI lo Roy ' t"~ In tlto fourtb •quar!er produced a ~
)'lll'd touchdown play and the final , 2f.
=i':k1and quartertiack also called
Hubbard and other running backs fur
yards. Tb.r!Alt · taJntd 36 yards
hlng.
"Look at our !ltaLlst.lcs, passing and ~~.'' J..amonle1 said.dater, '·'and you Ula~. T~e's no set key they can
•)>!! us " ~th'. left the game
1
bfleOy after suf·
· a tllgbt ankle inj'11')'. fte waved a
in ~recintioo as heJbjiped off the
to thie loud cheers of Oakland faris.
T1'm ho came hack to pass the Jets
Into Ool1and territory In the final
.. ol ploy,
"I never lhoucht the game was out ol .. be uktr--' ~
:..:.:~; l : l=::
... --4 • ~ Htmtlll (Howfl11f
11,i;1 • ~ ,_.. """" L~•
·=~== .. -tM!Wi:' ,. , ..... . flY:-,0, ............ I °''· -(Nj,.,., .. ,... ,... ~l(t ili.nf• 1
._..... -~~ H~ 11.u, totuer ·=1111111 w.-.... •1tt. Jj.'1, • ~1111 -... ........ .,..,. 7-111, '*" * 'ill o.l!i.N, Ill...,. S.flil" l!'nltl!
"" l·'4 ---· n..1> i,, IW ~IQ M>174. • ~
WHITE
WASH
Information ·'as to the welfare of his wife
and three · chfldren.
'But they had already been removed
from the wrt:ckag'e and were ~pltall2ed
wilh assortal· &;juries alter the hkUn
•~!dent near Marina lllgh In Hun•'n
Beach.
Today they'n: blck, home and
StephiJ\S saya they're, lucky to 1Ull be
alive. '
AJIQlher weekend aulo inJellap put
Laguno Beach High oroa OOWlll)' 111at
~arl . Wtber In S.n -Diego'• Unlveralty
""'pilal. Ho· !Uffered .. r1ou1 Injuries
afti;r a .....,. _..,.,hop and a<COrdJna to
his ~·'ttn /.filler, Weber had Ilve boura o!,MgOty. •.: * ..
Batletiilt ,.. kids ,. aeulna • •bot ..
tbe arm la the University Hit~ area. 1'e
,.recrea&loo dtpartaeat 11 ~ tt1elller
hty1r and glrl1' basket"'1, rree of
. Eafly ...... 0rance Counly P"'P
ba!ietbOll raUngs 1lhow Ooi<lliil daJ Mar.
Katella and Mirlna as tbe top three, in
that order.
Mirlna 1ba,:i played both, looing to CdM.
18-611 and to Katella, 71-65. "farina coach
.JJ"' Ste•s says he' rates Katetla as
!he, \oughest liecause the Knights have
,bettez size, put more prqsure on you,
have good ball .handlers end shooters.
You wo\ider' how k:ateila can even be
included in lhe ' bona flde ratings,
however, since the Knights ~awe become
more or less en all-star ttaJ11, thanks to a
couple ol. rblgh · 'c1ass transfers rrom
n<arby West'"1 High in f.Mllelm. . '• * ' Mound tho hoiit:
Wonder what qalliUlcallo• pl 'l'Om
Hawldnl 1111.._ac1q job wtlli ~
•• ,. .... 1
where Will Tommy Protllto be
toachlng next year? '
Good' move b7 tbo PK!flo4 Coefereoce,; -1 wheo It ¥Vied la allow ltl manben to _,... bi tllt Notlolal , ,
, bn•llolloll IM1ketb0ll ......,. la New
York In addllloe to hrvtnc It• champlol
lo Ille NCAA pl1)iofl1. !
Now If &he circuit woald do tbe aame ~
thloJ In lootbell -111111 ii let ltt membert
go lO ot.Hr ltowlt bet~ tbe R6se Bowl,
It """Id be 1 totally pod 1bow.
-
The oot was the first of the lliiiiili aiid •illltd ln-1be-game anet u;epjay-bu~ . Adulta will be odmltled f« $3 and
thwarted a Cincinnati thttat. One oot thej~ not play in the -ad haU.' children for $1,IO.
later, Pete Rose walked and JDOYfd to .inc Wubington Star-News quoted
second oo a wild pitch and Joe Morgan P~ee, the Redskins left linebacker, as
walked. Then, Vida Blue, wltci !lad saying the Cowboya set up strong to the
replaced starter and wirmer Ken right with tight end Ml.ke Ditka or Jean
Holtzman fcillowing the walk to· Rose, Fugett lined up on the side along with
retired Bobby Tolan on a rout pop, endfng ·---Walt Garrison, who ls set as a wingback.
the inning. Blue then blanked tbe Reds in Alworth goes in motion.
Dolphins Once
Worried About
Bellig 0-13
the eigbtb and ninth innings, preserving . "As the ball ls snapped, be (Alworth)
Oakland's ;J-1 victory. is coming forward right at my knees,"
Player Figlits
Pardee said. "It's illegal for a man In
motion to block Jn on a man on the line."
Allen said it was the first time he ·had
seen the play used in four or five years
CINCINNATI ~ Al Be a u·c ham p , "It's a cheap bklck/' said AJJen. "It's 'a ' starting linebacker for the Cincinnati very vlc1ous block. NEW YORK (AP) -"The good old
days are now/: said Norm Kvam •. the on-
ly llartlng ollenatve riCbt tackle the
Miami Dolpilln.t beve ever -
Bengals of the NaUonal Football League, "John David Crow used a ploy !Ike that
was charged Mooday night with aSlj\Ull---agptnst-Doocon Jones and clipped him
and ·batieryi)n a parkina' 'incident outlide when I was with the Rams" .said Allen
a departinent store here. "He told bis coach be didn-t' want' to do ii "Only the Dolphi.'ll 'orlilnall' can hilly
appreciate our 11-0 -My penonal
goo) once wu to ploy on a .500 pro teem
bel<>tt I retired. Now lt'a a drum ol -
ning them all.''
Dave Harris Jr,, a tow truck driver any more.
who stands , 5-foot-7· and weighs 125 "U the officials had seen it and called
pounds, said "TbiJ big bruiser -it, it would haw~ been an illegal block "
Beauchamp -took off bis coat, grabbed . said Allen. '
me by the shirt, picked me up and threw Only t\\'O ortaiMl Dolphins remain ac-
tive -the 250-pound Evans and wide
receiver Howard Twilley. Karl Noonan,
another holdover wide receiver fnm
1968, is on tbe taxi aquad.
me to the ground.''
Harris said he had been called to tow
away a car blocking the store's loading
dock area. When Beauchamp showed up
as Harris was preparing to tow away the
car, he _told Beauchamp be could pay a
required $10 fee for his efforts and the
car would not be towed away.
Harris said Beauchamp refused and
assaulted him.
Drug Rap Out
-BUFF ALO -Harold Fox and Dick
Garrett of the Buffalo Braves were rea<l.y
for -action against the Houston Rockets
tonighl after being cleared of ~ctrug.
rela,t.ed charges in a suburban court.
1be two guards of the Natklnal Basket·
ball AssociaHon team appeared in the
Town of Amherst Qlurt Monday night to
face charges that dewelOJ)ed from their
arrest in Fo1's apartment Sunday.
But '1Ustice Sherwood M. Bestry ac-
ting on a motion from the Erie ~ty
district attorney's office dismissed the
misdemeanor counta "for Insufficient
evidence and In the interest of justice."
Fox, 23, bad been charged with main-
taining a criminal nuJsanet, while Gar-
rett. 25, wa,s accused or loitering for the
purpose ol obtail)ing ~rugs.
CSLB Wins, 934i9
BOULDER, COio. -Seventh-ranked
C.I Stale (I.enc Beach) State, with six
players scoring in double flgut<s,
sw~~ the University of Ciolorado 93-
69. Monday night in an interwectlonal col-
Jeee baak:etbill game.
--"""""' 20 polnta to lead tho '-Beach 1lCOrln( porllle.
GleftMcDonald had 17, Oiymj>lc star Ed
Ratleft hit 16 and Leonard Gray H.
Wooden Impro~es
LOS ANGELES -UCLA , haskctblij
coach John Wooden was expected to be
released today from St. John's Hospital
where he has been under obterVation
since SUnday night for what doctora aaid-
wes a £astrolntestlnal upset. ·
Doctorl! said "It's nothing serious and
there Mi no pain," a UCLA spokesman
saldMoodly.
Hoop Rankings
., AtMC•A.fft ... .. ,..... ........................ .....
1.\ilo.A, H (.,I .. 11,ft.~, +f 1H ~. l"lotle: II,. .U .. ll. M.._-1. M ii
J.M1,,,... M .. '~"I ... n ... ~.H Ill .. ~.1• n a. M"'"-1 ... M 4111 If. .......,., ,,_. '4
•.fll.~M .. HM I&.~-. t.f ti 1, lAllt telCl fl~ M 111 11. I~ Y"'"9< j.I JI
•· s.,rr. """""'' .. m "· Mldlfttl'I, •1 a: .... ~... ,,, ,.. ,,, MMIPh.lt ,, ... , " d
11). Orll 1. M !If JO, ~ft •t1i., a.1. ,, Oftllr l'llltft' NCtMni VOie, II•• 1""'81flo c.i1r1 Ai.Nw. <•111Wnll1_ -~tner111141.+, M\l9n1, 1"111rriwtl, OWftlt, ..,_, llllf!M ...... J9d!Mnwillt'i
l(ttlhldl'I' ,..,,.,,.. Ol'iflo "'"' 0..1•~' ,..,,...,.. $f1 JeNilt IM.Y,J, It, l.o\llt. "'" 1tr1ftclid,i : """ C1rotl111, UK,,,,.,.,.._ TllfllllltH, l•hol!. 1"1ao. Vlrtlll!I, Wnfllnettil.
Beaten Rams
Are Burned Up
-By Chemical
"We used to omy about going 6-13 Jn.
stead of tS-0," drawled Evans, a native
ol Doona, Tei. wllo played collece bllil at
Teua Cllristlan. "I wish all tbe llllS
originals oould be bel't to enjoy It."
Miami alopped put the New Y0<k
Giants 23-tS in ,1he mtMI Sunday at
S Yankee Stadium. putlin& the Doiphlm T . L 0 UIS (AP ) -Playen for one step fn>m tbe f1nt lf.O ...... 1n Na-
botb -the Loo Anreles Rims and the ttonaJ FOOlba11 Leque history.
St. ~ C8rd1na& complained Sunday BaJUmore'• ,.bulldinl COlta .. the
about a chemical placed oo the field to final regular se.-i buM1e Sunday at the
ktep tbe ARro Turf from ~ during Orange Bowl. •
tbe pine. 61ln a way, our success was overnipt, ''
'Players from both teems suffered Evans said Monday while remalnlna: in
bll1111 from the chemical, a fertillur New Yock to film a teleTlalon com-:~urea which bet a blgh nitrogen merclal. "But, you can't oay thal you
Jack Teele, an executive with the saw us sufferln& ltM tbnlulb tta." .
Ram EVIN! wu cftlled by 1i<Mllton and •, can>e into the Bl( Red locker made the ·Oller nnt team u • JIM ._, to protest ... ol tho chemical Ide Tben be pl ked by I= the Rima' 24-H Jou •· the roo . wu uc Miami in
Card w the upomlon draft u the pro f-1
1no ' f1mlly ..... the lollowinl .......
1be cbem1cal apparenUy • penttnted "That f1nt Dolphin traJnlnl eomp ns
the players' .unlfonnl and caUled skin ir-a beauty," MY' Evans. ''There wre a
rltatlon. In many casea, it lefl open lot of fiabU, tometlmes endJn& In UJ ~· ' throwlnc Jello •nd a&te at one anolber at
t just ate us aU:ve," Clrdlnall the tral:ninc table. We decl4td to tlrow
linebacker Terry Miller aald aftu the the food since tt wallll't fit to eat."
game. Miami bepn with a 11-11 record In llllS,
RIJOJ players repcrttd to their impnwed to t-10 and then to M-1. It •!>
trolnlq camp Mondoy with IO'llpel and peared c 0 a c h a-,. WHIM had the ~· "'""1 second ~. llkl Ra!U Dolph .. on tho Incline whoo tbe 1169 wainer G<orge M-.
"You coul~'t evm kneel on that llaJd ~ ~ ii teem111 we -W tum
::i"""d," L 1111ee11ngd. the boat 111m u.. Ille -to .,...,.., lnjuri. killed
-111," -ncalled. "Some111lnc l1M 26 "Muy ol oor pbiyera were tJumed 111111 p1qw1 were fereod to. --Our
blltlerl1I." ptol ~=Illa llnl1I to -" Some of the Clrd1nals complained -~~·~ ~ ' all<!r tbe game, lncbldq llnelMcbr-Tel' ·-""""'-w • i.10.1 -ry M111er who Aid llller SUnday's and WU.. wu l1red. _. Joe a.bble
<ODtest that the cbemlcal "just •te ua .,.,0c1 Don Sltula. fl1m • .-i job allvt." u Baltimore Colts' cooch to mold Milllll
Beo1der tho-..,...,-the treotment.aJao,_ln=t=o=a=winlle=='=·=-='-----made the field 1llck -and wlth It the
ball.
"I've never blamed ·a field before "
said Rams quarterbllck Roman Gabriel,
"but how can yau plif with a alick ball?"
Gabriel cited a touchdown pass clrop-li<!il 6!'. ture-handed Jock Snow in the end
zone and said "tbe aalt soJuUoo was
re-1ble for oor fumbles and • ......,. ,._." . _ .. ,...,... ..
BtU -U, C&rdlnai• owner, 111<1 the mau.r -.Id bl -!(•led.
Tllo -loal WU p1oc:ed CID the fleld •
by tbe Q'ric Ollller Rodn ........ I
llaolaN Of tho -.... A
IOld ti 11111 ... lo ........ llld ...,,., CO!Dplalntl .....
Illa 11111.
"ll'a auppooed lo IJIO]t lllQW Ind lea on Illa flcld, and It'• Olle ol the few thlnp ,.. _ ... that .,..,I be hannful to Altl'C>
Turf lllC1 illa.ftrt," Ed Jucbs of Civic Clnter ult . '
Tbt cboml<al Is approved 1i1 tbe
Momanto Cllemlcal Qi., which maae
Altl'C> Turf, but cardinal• .,._n1
1peculoted tha,t Civic Centtr may beve
put too ml"h· on tho field Jll'ioi' to SW.. day'• pnlt.
LA.KERS,'-CHIC.4.GO
IN TELEVISION TIFF
CHICAGO -The Lot Ani<les Laken
are olf and nmlllnf again t!lli , .. son and
HaJ>P1 -Is ap1n among tbe ha!> pltai ol the troupe that faca the C111ca10
Bulls tonight In tllt Wlnciy Cit7,
1be I.Um haft -If fll their Jut II
11m11 'Ud load llioir dlYialon "1 Ill: ~ .. ~ ..... -~~ ftat. ....... ._.. ...... dillC Nllr...I 11~0 MtOclalleil
dllqlona Taal&lll'• ...... Wiii be teM.laad o1 • ... -a-i a. u.-.. tllt 1881 ol the anhappJ IA-ovv 1'Wlrdl for a t!Ue !Mt
..,., hlb qreed to a new contract
with tilt club.
Lake,. ....,ra1 mo~ Pete NeweD
&MOOlloed that~ I -1 lmni
have been -Into 1 lbree-yeor tonlract altM nqollatlooa wllll ti.
playtr'a 1pnt.
' '
•
,
I
F-V'S--SCOTT REtDER-(45)_GEJS-T~~.--
. Tallest. in Coun't,y
. .
\
.
T-.--U,19n
Keep~Up . f<d~on, Oilers Triumph
With Ar -. : · --
Ban e ~ I~ HB <;age To11:rntiment
qp. ~ i 1 I By BOGER cARi:saN ' bounding agallllt the taller .rim Weir scorecl from every
Of .. Olf1¥' Plllt lltft , I • BUI Kemey and Jeff E<ltson High'• Charaers pull-Lancers. .. angle In leading hla 11..,.
Sc~ • fAll !f"lrl'!J aw 'fl\ernoon to adVlinQe 1to tbe &lnny Hills cut the -111t> janilr -In 30 points to
Hurlbut walked off with top ed off a first round upoet of The wlnne,.. 'biggest lead tington Beach mates to their
honors, at Ban Clem~te ;. &illlly HUI.. ,Hl&h Monday w"\ J8 with 1:8 left before fow1h slralght victory . The M
baoqu!t 'Mo1t11y lll!Jlt at qulhertinllla Of the fflh an-somewhat. destn>y any chance Ramona's
achoo!-cateterla; -,,...-., r-'""lruat Huntington Beach Invita-Edison comm It t e d 2CI Raau bad of an upset. SPORT~
Kenney was named captain tlonal basketbaJI tourney. turnovers Jn the "ragged test Ramooa made It interesting ~
and most valuable player on The Chargers of coach Dave and connectrid on~ of M from iD the early stages shooting to '---------~
the football . learn w h ll e Mohs handled the_IAn<orl• or thjl Detd lot'31.t percent. ~-a 13-9 Jead L1te in the first
Hurlbut .,.., given otmllar SUnny H'ills 63-51, and It wasn't ny Hjll.s was held to 3Z.l per-period.
bol)Otl by the cross country really that clo~. cent ,.. 11 for 51. But then Weir and mates
team. In .other tournament action The balanced EdisoO olfense Dave ,\xelson and Wynn Nelli F-· Monday the host Olien of was led by ceeler Dan beglll\ hitting with consi>tency
Vanity -Captain: BUI Huntlngtoo Beach breeJed by Wlnchel1 wlih U C:!>Ui>Iers. Six ancl.suddeoly'tt wair18-t5 with
Kemiey· and John Ftllpolf; Ramona, Tl~!. and Monrovia Chargers had aeven~pGlots l :ll lelt in the hall.
Most Valuable: Kenney ; Most took the measure of Villa aP~ pr.. matt. . 'Ibe advan~e swelled to 5"1-
lmproved: l4nce Swigart ; Park, 5!H7. U tiler<! was a lurning Po~· 36 with 5:36 to go on Doug
Most Insplratiooal: Jim Tonight's play features in the pme. 'it came ewl'Y · Rabe's three-point play be£ore
Hawkins; 'HJtter Aw a rd : Orange County's No. 1 team, when Mobs uolWhed fhf fldl · ~ Ratn$-cut into the margin
Otarley Dargan. Corona del Mar, against court pressure op StinnyJHllls. whea. coach Elmer Combs
... Renegades
In 74-65
Cage· Win
Sojilomore -Captain: Do!v •Areotiof tbePaclfic League Even wbin the Labcors' 'litarted subBtltutlng .
• Mellor and Larry Pooclno:' in' the 8:30 'nlj!ll!Up .. ~wlilCh CQuld solve Edilon's def .... it Rlmcina cut the Oilers lead By 'RON 'EVANS I
MQSt Valuable: Stu Fraser: follows NewPort Harbor and pn;ivecrfUtile a1 tbe·fosers bur· · to '2-55"wllh 2:45 left berore a D9lh-1 ff
M&st Improved : Bill WesUall; Huntington Beach's junior ri~ '\beli"" shots and . 1o.st waiting game ended Ramona's Bal~:.~ er~rs :nd an
Most Inspir8tional: Vince varisty at 7, and the 4:30 w:Mtever tempo they like be.st. slim chances. Herman. ~ ~ . ~If: i,tween a inconsistent offense proved to
Frf:Shman -Captain: Stan 'Tustln..1 • ' • t '0
1 r be GoldeD West College's
Malhi.· Most Valuable: Brian The dbargers qualified to For Coa8t. Area ' downfall Iii a tenacious
Wood; 'Outstanding Back : meet defendihg ch am Pion bas II et tif 1'1 team from
Wood: Out.tapdlng Lineman: Lon« Beach Wilson ·l in BetenO,!d'Col!eie topped the
Bill Limebrook. l f . Wecliieid&Y'• ,7 ,o'clocl: .. \<lit w z · . N RUIUen 7H5 -y night.
Cnlt1 Country ','while lllontovia . and '<Rm-• . rest .. ng ews Tbevilllbi(ll .e~eg.ades
V 't Capta' J ff tinoton Beach collide In the " capltalbed . .. QoldeQ, wes1 ars1 y -tn : e a:3b'game. tumoverl. to bftit
·Hurlbut and Tom Zanotti; , E'.diSon's triumph Wat! f,rig-tiaht g.m9:1n.Jbe'fm:f:re:
Most Valuable: Hurl~t ; Most gered by a full court zone University High's Trojam Ut a dual match. mioutes. ' · Impi:ov~: Steve Keith; Most defense -that forced ~&mny wrestling team 'placed fourth JI"' The ~. ~t the eourt at
Inspirational: Jim Lorden. Hills into 29 turnovers -Jo in in an elgbt·team tournament Mission Viejo l:Qgb wrestlers halfUme.tiecl it.31, and it look·
Junior Varsity -Most the decisive first hfll wlien the Saturday at University with 63 placed Highest i'rhon( Orange ed as though the RusUers
Valuable: Fred Johnson; Most Chargers blitzed to a SZ..!1 ad-points while Dana Hills finish-County schools.entered iii the would make .-tunaway of. the
Improved : Jim Welch. vantage, 1 ed seventh with 191h. Keonedy tournament t b Is game with. a acoring spurt in
Froob-Sophomore -Moot · &lnny Hills' las~leed was 5. Jay Hollett copped the lone weekend. The Jltabloo ·_,, ~Ing._. minutes, ol lb< Valuable: Tom Robertson ; 2 in the early .goiqgs as the individual champiombip far fifth of 15 schools corppeting half'~
Most Improved : Sb a'!" n Chargers, now on a-,tJD-ee. University in the 9$.Pound as West Covina won the GolClep West c:Wlcored the ~ -~~~--~~~.~ V' toot-.tbe p1ay away in every Ray Hale (145) and Rick Bill Morrow of Uij? Diablos lead, but 'Bdenffekt liliind
· COsta Meaa High's water department,inel•udl.n·gre-Handfield (191) finished sec.. was a gold medalist, taking the deadeye shooting of
polo team1-will be booored -"k--'~ -:t orid for'1he Trojans. · -the-1~-category:-sllver fomml Jeff G.-i, kept
with an awards b In q u e t N Five other Trojans gained medalist from Mission Viejo pecking away at die RUstlers'
tonight at the school eafeteri4. "•'........, ._.T 1m-' 1 third place, including Steve was Jim" Low (154) while third lead.
'It starts at 8:30. Coach; T~-~:?1~rera• : ' f 11 ~ .. (iOlj,. GUY ~ ~t pl.aces ~ garnered by .Dan G~ wbP took game
ry Bowen's Mustangs lltu$<l<f ~ • ! ' 'I o::~Daii.Jldler (Ill) ~-lll!l-(185), Russ Price (191) ""'""' lmori wllb 24 lnts .
se«>nd In the tough I/Vino •, ~:..;,, j l j' ,! w ·• 'llJ8) ...i Mark-Moore anll John.lfazurklewltz (133). kep!, ti>; lll'Al!«ll!ltllbO.i'~ess ':iibui
B . • 16 ~1 I A _ .. , ~e and advancedi.t. the.,·f~ ', • ' (17$). • ,,,. "!llPllllil~di<!liti•l.ltupatse t,~, ·arons,, .. . ~ . ·ce .. ;r:~1~.inals or . the:.,;~:F· ·-~=~iiit~1;~" t~~=·~~:r:. ~~~=:n~ey~i:e ~~~~\~minutes
f ,,,,. ,,,1~ ... ,· · · pion.ships and the Barona Jefrst.Cll.lrUedthecontest
• 4 1 I' ' Laguna Beach High, School l!ll'-cu>.,. " ., 111 , ! finished. seQODd as a team in at 81 for l:be-'<Ru.d.lers, but a ?./'.Ey' e, (I_ ) hy··, Colleges ;i~~e.'.."':nig~~ a7a~erat i: ~" '1
1 ll !! ::.: va,t~ Down ~ ~~~ment in =~"!.~;&~/:w:..::~
school's cafeteria. , W•Y • , • • Cbampiansbips were earned away for ~d.
t , , All three teams -varsity, E ' I · l g F -65-41 by senSOr Les Becher at 191 Two more Mb by Ed
, junior varsity and frosh-90pb Tot•ls 112t 2l J ~ pounds ao:l 1unkn Joe Yomg Holliwell widemd the margin By DENNIS CAlllPBEl'i. physical toll on his body," ex-·u be hooo ecf t th pot -" -,,. · (95' -~ ~· ~•--1t and the u_._._ gained ...:.. WI r a e Sunn., w111, 12 t 12 '11-S1 lrolt.., 't r • -fl ......, ~ """'l:"• ... ~ .. !f ,_ o.uy P111t ¥'" plains Brown. luck banquet. / £•1-lii • 12 .a......., ... , " · _ M 8 r'I F• .... ~~:,... , -· .. · ·~ tlfte uncootested baskets as
• Wben..soott ·Relde.r was ·e " "S.·. muCh ·~: ... Is ,..,..., ·· 1 l•· .; ... : ·~1 • 1 ·1 ' i.kwoat.toa+11 ~· ... a-.FoUnta.lnVabey Golden W'esrs pressing '~; a.~ 'lnos!nruirl, l1e' • a>oim!Jate!! l?J!,~'li/ic(Y !ii$~"" ';JU-Jany. waf¢1s -baj:ted~JJ.~!,,'!;.'::.n~" ,'p" . 'u· OOp , llld-ram,.,ID linblie!lwood -ID'I polilts ~~th.filled to e. cover wr
played on Foun(ain Valley ' grow'tbattbeilddedbuidenol ~ nl\!ll• •~mu>< C ¢1 IMI win ..... U.. to•awa¥t.~·flll), --valuable pla)'er On eosi. Mesa , · J*l junior varsity tn · other 'J'oUntatn' V a 11 e 'i 'IJle cOntat ·was a close one
.l!jgb · Scbool'.s No. 2 · irosh pracUces seetJ!S to make them High Scho\>l's football ' team · ~ the !Int round of the AIJmn. wrestJ.rs to ' p(oci! Included lroin lit8rt _t0 finish. Jn tho
beeketball team. Or al least more susceptible to Injuries Monday night at•, the Summaries bra -etball toumainent John Moore, secoad at 112; llrlt half, tho 100re·was tied or
be played some of the time. and iliness. Mustangs' awards banquet. Mobday.. • ~ Dave Moran, second at 145; cbaaeed1bands seven, times as
_, .. ; .. "" .. I
DAILY PILOT
Rangers
Blitz, 5-1
, ~-
CIF Girls'
~et Soores ·ll
Orange Coast area plam were shut out 91 li1lr CLF ·
iennis championlllllps l
week.
Only three girt. reachedm quarterlinalo: Ully VIII
Corona def Mar ..
~llminat.ed by Kim Nll9lon of
Rose Hills, 1-3, while ~
Mlsslon Viejo doWJles team ~
Judy S!epelvitd! aud Dlrle!at
Madewell 1olt to hm'f9'a l>falvln and Audrey Frank.el . .,
Beverly Hills, -J-3. .-:,,.,
' .r.:Gr.,." ·:r: ~~.;$~~\\,/> r=i:.1. "" 4.J.. '''" .. How times have changed. "Scott hes had leg injuries Other players· honored on P"mlMMlli Bill F1Ck with 12~t8 and Mike Finklea, second at 175. both teams bad ,trotJ:ble con·
Now Or·~·e ~ .. n'ty's·'"'lest each year ti.At have kept him the varsity team includeOiuck Edison ,.,., (+o u 0u1111• ~h.Lomiet ,wfth llJNtced,the tfolling the ba 11 and Standm' gs ''''" """" ......,... ..... IJ.;:t GI < p1a· > st av"* n'> , 11> 11anv MAL-·•"···k, A~.1 .~"-&·vii._ ~ • 1..., .... ~--high schooJ. pl.ayer at ''6-tl, from running in -practice. Ht aspy ea 1'1 ' e 'I e G.ttv nu ~. 1201 cr1• .in:?..t alL-mtd= from.~ ,, _.p....,p Fives a,.... any vua!M:. •' J
Rekitr is the ddmlilaat force loses 3tamina and it'!_·bar.d lot TE!fegis (imprinl~) and .DaY!, &.~, ,'~,,",> n•> G·· i l',l,~ ~~,"',," -...-...., "' \r)"' ~....., i St Clair wu high point man I'" . (1
on what may be F<luntain a guy,.6-11 to get it bSCI::"'' .. ' Newstead ~most mo: ..... ,.., ~ Aick Roeser. or Golden Welt Wilh 19, most .., , ~ 'd sp'•ational ) ' kol11'19 ~ -Edison: •"'9f'ra 121, Marlu&"1 •"-•ive defense ·In A • OO•IOme fancy-·-· the w t il!rrt, " ' Valley's best.ever team. Ret er's biggest handicap is .. . " ~ntfll'kl (1); Halttlrnt ICOl't: Lt QI.lift. -~-• -ction ' _ .. ....,. ~ Caf'Ollria lt 1 ,, •
The tallest man on a tall lack or physical strepgth. He's V" ta ll-2f, farced. ·the Moors int.o COO-~et, 'while'-·~y high-=kY ll l 1~1
team, Reider is averatrina 13 added 20 ~ls I~ last rN'ewport ·ijarbor High' s E~ 14U 1Js1 1.111 Amlp tiJJ181 lomoversas the Vikings --W:..._, __ ,_ H' h School JCOt1nc glilnls"'Taras Young ....,. v!n 12 15 ~ ~.~o• ~~ • i ~. t Le I ' ,,.. ' ''' ·----i'umped. oot to .. a quick, 26.a o;;DWu•uo,,... ig and G•-n-1o11 '-·"' 10 and •• M9mohl1 '° » -~ points per game despite being year, "ana e needs about 20 ""'nse ~e water . po o ~ f4) F 14i ~ flrst.qarter lead will visit Lowell and Est.ancla · -J "•&-""" u. 1P1C1~ ;-' 11 "°°
double and triple-teamed pourxls more iI he's going to championship team will be Padeft C•I c <!l _Lonoarl• Ten men ICOred t M . 'RiU travel to meet La Quinta points. ...._ _._ ''" ~lL-14 11 :f3 it
every time he touches the ball . pl~y college basketball," says J:iooo.red -~,!fl an awards bair ~11~ Ill) g :~:1 .:=, scbedUied·"to playo~ !:!!!.8,; in PG'P basketball actlon 1 • ,. .,12 Dll!M._ la U := ~ "He's showJl tremendous Brown. • ~ i quet touig .. ~ ·at the school . Sco<'lng 1utrs -Ed!IOll: lllfln'• 111, .... ""& •-"1-. e:::!0 • ' 11 J-Hli
improvement s i n c e his wn sees a co ege career ca e r1a s .... --e a : . l n. H•lftfmt -.: 1.o& AtnlfOI. n.11. a:at p.11£ 'Id 1lii seO:iii:l"l'OOM--Bolh garna begin at 1. " ,_ "'-.....,... "fllW Bro • n r le . ,...,.li:ilf -t 6 30 :n""'*""""' {4), Lot. AmltOt. Ltt>mtn P.lld!!:P team Wednesday at -~ ~ I 14 10 ,..,.. .....
freshman yesr," says Foun-ahead ror Reider if he im-. ' I• ~ of ~actlQn, -westniinster -will try to ! ! .,......... .._ {l
lain Valley coa c h Dave proves his quickness to the • '--··--· "-..J. ~-8 ~ ~ ,' I, J • ~van;.,oei1n .. ;tt
ball th 0 C R d --. '"'' ... . _, hi LIU\UA.'CI ..,..,... UV!.11 ....-' v ...... = Brown. , streng and endurance. ..s 1 .. 4 11 sboWiog in the ·wesbJU.Dster.. #rm. t.t· ts 1 u o.;..,-.t·"" 11.t
"I hope he can continue to . <'He'sbooalways been a real . range 08_ st,, . llS ers I. "l ! !' 'I Marina -...,It last -.i:-~iiiiiiiiii;;' niii"'~11o.;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-i:ii;i "iii;iii;;ii~i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~'
Show the same improvement ruce s ter wilh a good ~ , ' •' ' ,• Santa ,Apa elimluated ~II
h has 1 the st nd · touch," Brown says. "He can · l Lio Tl ' ~TienWi.ll b~~V: as ~:b shoot from around 15 to 17 feet Jn B k tball T i l 1~ ·~79W;tq try tO mate it f
or' more ' thb yeer .. -a very accurately. as e . ·. ourney \I."= l I I i I --•-'-·t La "'""ta ,4 (. • "ff he --•1y t .. y:;:.. -~ 25 15 17 •• &........ ~ ·"~. ..., senior.' ' = goes o wor. ., -w alter downing Laguna Beach, ,.,
Reider has encountered the he could play in lbe Pac-8. It ALTA LOMA -Orange return at 9:30 Thursday morn-J';:~~rl:::~"'~'::;;:;~'l;; "'!~ 'l;l~:::';;:;' ;;;;;60-50;;;:;' ln;;;lts;;::;la;lit;;;ou;;:Un~g:. :;;:;;;II
11 same n....J.._ terns of mo s r· depends on how much he fills Coa 1 I E t LA ' d ~'!:., --.1 ,__ s aces as an mg: athletes whose coordination, wt ...-...°""" ·1mueb he im· "-td w ts s ph~' ll '' uv en est rnee a n T ,,_. Harbor, Pasadena .and strength and stamina haven't' proves .,,o.ca y. .un A U · Bernardino in the opening , kept up'With their growth. 1 pparen y,•LRe.ider's poteir r,ound of the annual tilaffey· Riversi4e are the favorites in ~
"WbeD a penon is growing tial ia as e.vident to college th toumam t. • 1
that fat It take.1 a tremendous scouts as it is to Brown. He's C.Ollege ln'lltational basketball e en ' '4ready rec e i 'fed inquiries tournament Wednesday. ' Here ate the pairings:
from stJCb big~ime beskethell The OCC-East LA tilt is set 1:30 a.m. -Orange Coalit
Schools as Washington State, tor 9:30 Wednesday momlng vs. ·East LA ' Area Surfers
Sink· Riv~
Cal, Utah, Santa Clara , Santa with the 'Golden West-San 11:10 a.m. -FUllertm. vs.
Barbara and USF. Bernardino game set to start LA Valley
· With a 3.4 grade point at 12:50 p.m. 2:30·p.m. -LA Harbfr VI.
average in the classroom, U OCC's Pirates get by East Grossmont
Reider is scholastically eligi-LA, they will meet the winn* ,• ·s,!!:50 p.m.-;Gokle9 \test Y.I.
F.ouptaiif V~Uey pnd Marina bl.e ror virtually any school he of the Chaffey-San Diego Meu Bernardioo
annexed victories ID the open-wants to altend. game Tburaday night If 9:10. 4:10 p.m. -Pasadena vs.
ing round, of surflng ~m· · currently, Reider is un· If the Bucs loSe the first round Cypress
peUtion for the Huntipgton dergolng . tbe frustrat\lll . e•-tilt, they will J!)ay again at 5150 pJn. -Mt. San Ao!Qnlo
Beach dls!t:lcl,higil._~)loo,ls .In perience known to almost 2:30 Thursday ,aflernoon. • .. J vs. Ci~
a pilQt In, ter-schQol competition ·every exceptionally big man 9o1den ·wt.St, it It w;.ns,. will 7:30 .p.m. -Riv~ vs.
."-!. •·-~ on a high school team:'''Ibe taee the Pasadena!Cypress GleodaJe. . ·• o~:tain Y:Ji;; ~PP¢, the oposition js assigning two and victor at 5:50 Thursday night. 9:10 p.m. -Chaffey vs. San r.· even three lii,en to gul\l'd him. If the Ruall•rs !Ole, they'll lllego Mesa first five pta.ces in lde eatin&, , "But he's?Jearning .to'.handle.,---~~---,---:-------,,...,.----1
i, WesbnJnster' 430-216 whl~ tt," ·Brown ·says. ".lfe's' very
Marina e d g e d HUntington Unselfish and could be sCorlng Beach: 444-415. Edlson drew a bye in fi'rst a lot more t~an he~ ~·" Brown thinks lhe' double-r o u n d competition. Com-teaming will end as hfs junior
,petltjos,l isi/ion ~ cJub ~\·et '1forw ... " s, 6-5 Tim Hill ,and tH the pt... lime with -fu ure ,.. Mpea of placing it on a varsity Dan Malane, develop 1 their ,)o\/~ \filli OI! 11n~t1on.,', · '. \'~~tai;; Valley's .:nty tack
..._.,rn v111ey ao. wa1tm111111r 2*' seems to be overall quietness,
• 1. °"""' J)'.f.' "..::;fllf/'l "'-' allhough blickcow:t t1ifns Tim tlt#1J~ro.!.:.,.;.,. cw1 •r 1 'f° 5' and Chris A~. ¥b ,W, so
t<Mrtr.a• A41. H\Mf!M+Dll 8Mdl 4U ' far have beth 8ble to handle
• 1.' "~ !Hf1 2., \l\'l!'!!I' Jilli. f I tilp_1~rl _ 11:~ the
1 ~o1~J:' ,M'J?i. .r. ~m·,. 1• • .., .oervrni r.,.."C each ..
. GRAND PRIX' .. I
'1·22· 77' Alf ~ .. ,,..;., .....: !lit 1!1M ... .....,. ..,. ""''"' ..... ,.., ;ir·· !!'r!, ~ . ... ~ ...... t4 -. .... ....., " •• • •"'a" llmlltlt 11111t T '& ~ MW ,., ' " Nrll•I dtllY"'f. •u ..-. .,.,,_ 1111 .,..., ,,
•' ' MO, IH,j.UOINO.f YIAll/ ... M ,_.,, WAlllANt'V
~!2 ROSS PONTIAC 141t ..... ., .. ~ •• c... ,. ..
LWI DlllCT-fl4CT0n AUTttOIJZID DU.UI ,..,,,.,,, •1• tt ti» e 'l•t. a ....,... 1, ~.
NID IOIAJf -MMll J
J
•
-
. ' ---
•
•h
I COME ' ' ' T
INTO '·
"BIG "' 1
MONEY" 1•
BORROWING U P T 0 • $10,0DO hocurod by rNI
a n d p•rtonal pro party I l>
. . could be the souMl•st;
L C. HICKS money mane.g9f'fteftt Mel:-
. 1~n you make. this yNr I'
Proparty values continua to incrMt• and chtnc*' are 1
that you~hcima is valuitd at•a lo't more than your pns ..
on! mortg19,, HOMEMAKERS can show you h-t.{
convfr+ this difference (which i1 yovr "equity") intol
816 MONEY right now. '1'
NO l'OlllTS NO COMMISSIONS!
Ju1t think whet you c1n do with up.+.. $10,000. /Wd1
on •n extr1 room or p.1tio. Group your cl.Ms eM
c:lt•n thtm up •II et once, which m1y leeve' you wftlt .
ONE 1mell'.r monthly p1ymtnt th1t your budget Urt "'
mor• t11rly h1ndle l1ltnost like 9.tting 1 r1is• I• your'-peychoc~). Te~• care of other "116 MONEY"~
et !h• serM timt. Pleil• telephone mt .,. vlait 044r'' office now. ..,
HOldMAlllS'
L~N & CONSUM• jg DISCOUNT CO.
A Subtidlary qi •
IQllll .!I~ lENDIR. • '
17611--
""""'-.... -· ftM1) • __ ,
•
} •
,I
I
fl Ja DAILY PILOT
DICK TIAC:Y
r.......,, °""""' 12. l9n
, TUMBLEWEEDS
YOU ARE
CHAU.ENGll'G ME
10 AN E~ECflON
Fffi otll!F?!
BIJT, DOC, I TELL.
! ')t>U I GOT A
' Fl FTY CENT PIECE
INSIDE OF' MEI
PLEAScGET
\TOUT!
FIGMENTS
' ••
u ..
'.NANCY
TODAY'S CBDSSIDID PUZZLE
ACROSS tf1 Not Yesterday's Puule Solted:
1 Sl!ip 1w1y entangled
~6 Fl'\lit 50 St1te: Abbr.
10 lu11urious: 51 Kind of look
lnf01'mll 62 Mak11
14 Molten rock changet
15 '"The mouH 56 Smartly
' ---tt<1 draeed
• clock" 80 Formal poem ~IS Prepoailion 61 Chri1tm1s
)7 Populate too deconiion:2
• heavily words
JIB Evidence or 64 Marine
inju1y animal ~ Ni11.es 65 A moment
:Z1 Oriental 66 Leave in a :ZJ Essentill oil hurry
!z6 Nepal n1tiv1 ff1 Distance:
~7 Place for car· Prefl11 13 MulicaJ 44 M•tuni by
L ing for aged 68 Cen1ers of lnstn.Jment pacing: 2
f.!J_ Rot•led •Vthorily 18 SonofAd.m words
G4 Goddeu of e9 Dlschitrg11 22 Emined light 46 Form of I discord DOWN 24 "Wh•t ·-I" water ps Urge :2 1 Work 25 Doublastar 48 Sillmt-:
• words rnonotonou1Jy in Leo Me11ic•n
lime 3 AK-square books 49 HofS8 ~ Period of 2 Overh1ng 27 Learns from range
Feminine 4 Cowboys' 28 A Ford 52 Musie.1
n•me genr 29 Muscular symbol lnaset:2 S Rivhtnow 53 Wnpon J words 6 Conode powet" 54 Container
1 Receiv9d 31 Lawful:Sl1ng 55 Dryup:Var. 7 lnMcl 32 Wear awey 57 Coins of ~ Carne to Ml 8 Govern Afghanistan
, end 9 T1lk 33 Not current 58 German river
!43 Nlkol1 -: non1en1e: 2 36 Nation el 59 Former ....ien
Electl'lcal word• leegue VIP
9eniu1 10 Pertaining to pleyer 62 Thoroughly:
44 Athletic mai1 39 Heating Comb. form
• gtoup 11 If ever venels 63 Perform on
.S Nelldlework 12 Asterisk 40 Ignores thes1age
\
10 11 12 1)
..
•• •
ll :n "
•
" "
' by Tom K. Rya11
HAW! HAW! HAW!
HAW! YOU MUST !Je CRAiY!
l!Ef-rfR WA~ rfi:W, CZNc5J?/i~f ,,Jr.
,
THE'RE YOU ARE,
JEFF! HERE
IT IS!
PEANUTS
by Al Smith
"THATS NOT THE
ONE/ nlE ONC I
SWAL!.oWED I
Wf>Sl897 '
by Dale Hale
f WANT
TO KISS
ALL. MY
MON EV 'GOOPBVE '
. . .M 50MEllllJ I e:a '1IW'
fill I lOOff"~~ P, M"-'IOO l;)Ool llW' I lll'AH?
I
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
:l"'LI. N HON6fl"
W~ YOU 611lL+! ~·M Nor fMI •11r-
LOOICING Fii.LON
N ~i WOll&..D !
PERKINS
s:J..
FA!r l'iraM IT,.:tll'A!!
DOOLEY'S WORLD
SAL~ Y BANANAS
it ' 0'7civt tP<e
.Qwrl.,:t6 $f'llf) SrilL !
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
' ' .
ANIMAL CRACKERS
. BIMl1V' ~· ~ ~PIT ... f
SUMl'ITll !
(((. . ~
' )
A· BUMl'ITIJ !
A· BUNPITIJ !
r(( ))\
7>":¥.11~
• •• •
•
By Cllarles lanatti ..-------.
by Gus Arriola
N~ .'711/<Tf
. .... ___ _ ---
by Roger Bolen
~ u..;.:::_~·~~_.._~~.,_ • ..111._......_~'~·'.~J_.)o.l\U.....i._..lll:JJ;,.--'·;;Bw~::!.:;/S./.~
by Charles M. Schub ,....,.------.-.
~Y,WIEll
YOl.I Piil' YOl/1'•
~fl.F CMWN,
P,ICP'li Trey TO
NW YOU UP.
by Mell
by John Miles
THE GIRLS
~ I ~
DENNIS THE MENACE
~
'
•
... •
TONIGHT'S -
TV ffiGlllJGHTS
KHJ a 7:30 -"Tiie Notorloua Landlady." Did
Kim Ncwact do In lier hmbelld or didn't she? ni.1•1
wbat Jact Lemmon llld l'red Alllire Fnder In th1a 1112 CCllDldy.
KCIT e 7:30 -~. . e cameru
91111 u.. lludloo Ill ndlo llatlcm m w.W. Loh·
;:.. -'. ~ .. lhrouib their ~~min· show
NBC a 8:00 -"'l'be Snow Gooae." A Illy or-
pblll jolna ID embillenld artlll In carmg for a snow
,_ wwaded ' by hunters on Hallmark Hall of
r-. Rldllnl Barria and Jenny· Agutter Illar.
ABC e 8:30 -"Punuil" A brilliant political
-.m111 pllDa to dootroy a major city. Ben Gl> an. E. G. Marahall, William Wfndom and Martin lilllmarefeatu""1.
CBS • 10:00 -Doo Rlcklea;\Allve and~· "Mr. 'W-th" he9dl up a vanety and y
.,.,ial With Alllle )(eon, Juliet Prowse and Harvel
1tonun, liollg with Cllll~ appeannc:es by Dan • trnM• Don Adami and Johnny Carson. . '•
I
TV DAILY · lpG
·Tuesday
Evening
D<CQl1l£R 12 -
ANU.117W .,, .......... ..... ___ .. ,_.., ..
_ .......... _17.
MllJ' Weflt t&mtL .,., .... ,,._
111-
\
12111BCIJ• '* _, (C) •a
........... (l'lllll)l.Mltltfllkt,
Ridllrd AttellllOfeUlll. 111 Ho1111 ttll
Clalr1 Bloom stir,
1.1111r'fa~MMla.ll ....,. Cllerlil Bniwfl 1114 Ills
pliilolOphltal buddr, U11us. ltlllldl
the Chrllmn 1111011 once 111111 Irr
__ .,...._(do) '63-
0111rd1 Hepper, llllR '--. ··---·--st1rchiftl rer 1t11 1111 111111'11111 of U:IO ID .._.: (C) .,.,... _, ...
!ht yuletiil ltllOll. ,,,... lz' t .. (IM) '52........W.
GT•• •11111• Qliiiler, JI• MtlOll. 1 G CIJCESTu;:111wa ..,
"Ttll ""' Hiid Nllnt" Hol•nd plota l:Ot Cl) D ..... " "' "' °' "' °""'"""" "'" 1:118-: (C) -ff'<-> '!I dlllCtof .of '...... _,,_ S1efllft1o '"" tleCM•lct. 1---· CIJ-=--Z:IO·---·""" 1·5r=-::.-:.....-·-· ..... -tc>""" -....
ca, """' -.. . ("") 11 -·---("'I '--·· -<
I
.... • • • j • • • • • • • . . . . . . . . . .. ' .. ·•. •ily-.Ji,~ ., ... , .. ,,.J'l,r'•,J'J,; ••. ,~ •.• .. '
-,....,,, Dtttmbtt' 12, 197w: DAIL V PILOT , •
•
Uneven 'Nativity' by Irvine Chorale
\. . . .
..
''LOIO"
STARTS WED. -c.---'" ''THE NEW
CENTURIONS"
·,
Shr't9 Wellr 11•9"
"SUllllD Oii •a•
_... (I)
"McCAii AND
MIS. MIU.II"
THE NEWES"!' OF
THE SKI EPICS·
'1llis Is SU."
Af•• IP&J __ au,
"Siii 19"
BOXOmCEI OHN PAOM ,12 NqONTOtf'MDM.Y
.. ' .! . .'. -· " • CtNEOOME 20 '. .. ~~~
·---. . w·~: .... _
. '. ,. ' -· ' ., ' -" . '
"" O•m --· .. _ -· Jlflll~I ......... llOW •lllD91 ..
.... -=r.-LI" ..... 111c...,1
ltltlll Cltl
can attempt to come to teems around the audience was the ed those of us who recaU the to see if the dance veral
with '11...aud to the Nativity.'' bift aach aetUng of a choral msgnlticent .supporting included in the Loe Ange s
Fer all t.baf. Jt ftl a oDe poup we have seen for a long choreography provided by the repeat performance of
prMmtlUon of tile R4llphlChl time. It added a new luster to Iaguna 'Beach Civic Ballet Irvine Master Chorale's j'
· · to the Nativity," """' tbol, wrr ..,......, tbe splendldiy dell~ wotks Company In the Irvine Master,•======;;!;;
reOeeted Wbtit tb1a erltJc " Andrea and G 1 ova n n l Chorale's 'jCarmina Burana"1'
11.11pected before he mtrered Gatirielli, a Juster that was or blessed memory.
the ""°""' hill -tbo pUln 'CerWnly. onbanced by tbe cluins oo dance" who shall and ltJnplo · 1ac:1 tbol Aid• Dawleso ~~ ,.....k ol lhe ancler needed more time to -wv-• remain anonymous to add
give bis ft1hlgbl the lluwlinl! Wtnd Orchestra ol C SU • !heir tnterp<etotion to Ute
and pollJb Cllol ftl Vf!r'f dole Nortbrtdae. Respighi was ltke asking the
at the -hour. Bot, looking back on the Three Stooges to follow Fon-
But how can ~ aay thlt, 1n Relpighl. one can not help teyn and Nure yev.
Bound for
SAN FRANCISCO?''
. . butinett, pa.asure
• . weekend, Y•c.tlofl.
Stay at Nob Hill Motel.
Ill lalmell, to 1'\naii w!lo gOI reOectlng what the overall It will be interesting indeed
out of a slok bed to joumey to reaction would have been ofl1;========'===;ll
=.c:'iY,.:1 ~..,.;: ~to°'::e~ u:" ~
'· • C:..; .... llt lee-*' I e M..,..._..._
NATIONAL GENERAL
THEAT!IES =·~~~-=-to htm jull 1 few -qo c;aperlng and poinUess gam-
in !hat complu, lntrlclle bollng ol the dancen who toot[~~~~ii~ii~ Relplglll I the 1\189 11 this point of the ... .. ...,..
FOR ALL !hat, the l1llnc · II -witboul a doubt, the ·
'Alesaoc. llllllt baft been -""-accompaniment
--al the -' ~~ by this criU II
NOB HILL flllTll
16JI hcHlc: ... , ....
S. ~· -71W160
polnl ol bll OCC maoert by· ever ·~ ~· the splondld . performance of wu 111 lncl'edlbly Inept II·
bll dwpl In their cbanii-tempt by lhe choreographer to
tnal1 , . tad "Mtllltc of the add a loollet concept to a score v...J:.-::;;;q,,.... !hat doesn't even need it.
" llJI grouptng of the chorale rr PARTICULARLY shock-
'All in the Family'
Leads Ratirigs Again
' ' ~
CANNES FILM FESTIV!t. Wlllft£\!I
~Brs1 f1llll By. Ht• Di11tlGl'R
... ~ .... .,,aJWM~ .
I ~r,;,·:· I
• t I "A'ftllM~ .. -e .. ce .P .. •• 1 ''Tor•I Tor•I Toral I _.._.. ·liw.
DUNEDIN F1a (AP) ABC; "Iroa!slde" NBC" "CBS ... 111 ~ 1•1
CBS' saga 'or h ~ Thundaf Nlatt Movies.". and ... ~ ."!,.··.··:..--. •=:::.s ) 1 un, WWW !?!:
"AD to the Family," tcpped '"!be Mary ' Tyler l\loore ~ 'flm-
Sbow'' CBS. IHllW -~Ef:~~~,,.~"'.:~;;o;;.-,~.~-7-~-... -,,1b;~;:;;~~'"~~~·;;,·=::Jb1 ~;:;·~~,;;:--~·-:.......;;;;;;~=,d
-J>Olllton oo lho.Nel!Mn.raltnp "-• ,:_
were the "NBC Sunday .... c.... • ..,. Myltery .Movie/' "ABC Sun-?i7J. COltOff.\ DIL MAa.
day Night Movie" and ABC11
"Tue.day Movie oC ·the Week."
The nai 15 llhowl, In order
of tbeir rankings w e r e :
"Maude" CBS; "Sanford Ind
Soo"' NBC; "Wonderful World
of Disney" ~i "Hawaii
Five-0" CBS: "Mamll Welby,
M.D." ABC; ''Oaltty Olltty
Bang Bang" CBS; "NBC Mcm-
day Nigh\ Movies": "Bridget
IAves Bernie" CBS; "Mi111
Teenage America" CBS ;
''Adam 12'' N'BC'''
"'GnDIU"'P" ~; 1"nte ~t
' ot-• '"·TMa I• TOP Ofr .... .,.,, ... ..,,I'
WALT DIM•Y1 .......... ....-
---,, SIMI/Ill! J .. -.... -"TH• DARWIN ADVaNT\lltl" • "'TOflAI 'TOAAI TOlll.AI .. • ... 10) ....... _
"TMI VALAOll 'ANas• (ltl .. n.r~• .,,.. '°"°" f'f'11AMLllt" (It)
~ .... W1•11'21 .... ,..llltlll .. MtOlll.AtDelTIOllt w • • 101111Mllt.9...._Y•lll•t1111JDe1Teooe ...... ., ... ,.... ..................... ....., .. _,.._, ...... Al,,_,.... .... ~ .. -
'
N.IWPORT 11A9'M
llriatol <'•lludoil •• c.,,,.....
SANTA ANA
4th St. ind
Newport Fwy.
TUSTIN
rt.cl Hiii Neor S.nt1 Ano Fwy.
103
FM !XClUSMINGAOIMINT
~only
llm•r , lllCIBl&l B ·_ j
~.~':'!"!.~•11111.-~~... \t,.•""·~······-•"""'·'· ~········~·········~ ..... ~ ............. ~ ~Bl ~
1!!11 -l'1I c$
"THERE'S I GIRL IN Ml SOUP"
I CHllllLD
•AaNllllN
"TH• MEHllNIC"
p
- F aahion I.land
Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
• ' -
'
H DAILY PILOT
Town Up in Brieks
Woman's Ilka Sparks Ecology Movement
CHERRY HIU., N.J . (AP} -Six accepted the scheme - to beeome prob-Board.
months ago, Tilly Spetgong, a !e!'k>lls gal ably the fi rs t in America wi th a brick 1n Councll anted up $2;000 to buy 34.,000
with a goofy idea, walked into a City · nearly every toilet. extni.-hard beige .bdcks, the kind that
Council meeting carrying a brick. Coun-The idea is that the ~lck wUI ta~ up .won't break up in any kind of water and
eUman Steve Morgan ducked under bis space in the toilet tank, dls placfng a enough for every toilet ln the town's
desk. small amount of water that ls .not .. 11,0(IO pomes.
"He must have. thought I was going to necessarily needed for flushing. Two -Week.ends ago, 175 persons -
throw it." she said, "but all I wanted was "ll was a wacky idea that got peop.Je mosUy teenagers -distributed 27,000
to put one in tc every toilet lank in town.'' laughing, and a!S() made them aware that bricks, two to a house. They fini!hed
The unusual proposal to. save wa ter people pollute and people can con~." Saturday. ·
1tunned council, but it Was approved. said Mrs. Spetgong, a 44-year-old mother "T'ne kids were so excited, they were
And it so convulsed this residential com· of two who used lo raise chickens and on fire because thia was ooe way they
munity of t.s,000 acr9SS the Delaware oow, admittedly, "raises the dickens" as could get invol.ved in ecology," said Mrs.
River from Philadelphia that it swiftly a member of the Conservation Advisory Spetgong.
Here's Looking at You
Steven Piert and G<orge Driskell, both University
of Idaho students, carved this cedarwood sculpture
as a Christmas present f<r the city of Moscow Oda-
ho, that is). The work stands seven feet high, eight
feet long and four feet thick.
Jesus. MoveinentJ)ra §·Spme .Sn¢~:rs ·
' I ' • "< I( I
But Shows a Few L~ting Qimlittes
By GEORGI! W. CORNEIL ,,, __
NEW YORK -Both brickbats and
boaguell are tooled. regularly at the
yoUag "Jetu1 people" these days. 'theY're both lll1el!ftd at as a shallow lad,
and praia<d as a aportllng bloom of
renewed , faith.
Some church analysts suggest that a
dash of both elements _.is involved.
Despite the mis:ed ingre dients ,
however, a rf'.llgion reporter who criss--
mmed the land, bippiNtyle, visiting
among the counlry's approximately 800
"Jesus oomnumes" coocludes that they
have lastln& qualities.
$OME SUGllTEK ASPECTS of tier
movemenl """"' likely to wear off and
.
disappear eventually~ says Hiley W!ird,
religion editor of the Detroit Free Press,
but "something Will live, too."
He says the maiMtream of· the activity
, bas substantial potentialities for the
future, out o1, which "something big and
new might emerge" ~ch as a
"churchless, ce.lebrative religion, with
both liberal and Conservat!Ve wings."
~ddiUonaUy, some of the new youth
commitment already is being channeled
into old-line denominations, be .""YS. adjl-
ing that this may "bring fenewal ,and
rebirth to a pale, tired and dry churchly
Christianity."
Others have speculated about such
possibilitl<S, but Ward, In a -Issued by Assoc:iaUoo Presa:, '-rhe Far-Out• -
Samts of tbe J~ COrtmwnes," cites
Pet Poreupine~.
Paper Says Save 'Em From Winter
OFFENBACH, Germany (UPI) -
They eat anything. kill pests and remain
chummy with the family. So, the
newspaper Offenbach Post suggests, take
a P;l"CUpine borne for the winter.
Esther Gilruth,
Space Pioneer's
Wife, Succumbs
SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON (AP) -
Mn. Esther Jean Gilruth, wife of Or.
Robert R. Gilruth, a U.S. space piooeer
and former chief of the Manoed
Spacecraft Center, died SUnday night
after suffering a heart attack at her
home at nearby Dick~ Tex.
Mn. GUruth'• d.aughler, Mrs. John
Wyatt, ii a resident of Huntington Beach,
A native of Canada, Mrs. Gilruth was
IO years old and had been married to ber
~-busbaOO !or 15 yean. lllld Mn. Gilruth'• lister was
wilh lier when she collapaed. Dr. Gilnith
WI& Ihm In MJsslon Control, wat<:hing
OjJ<rallGm ..._ung the moon mlaaloo ol Ajdo 17.
-Dr~Gilnllll ..,..ed as director of MSC
!or JO ,_. and -. INtniment>! In the c1o11p and development or \be highly
~ ~. Gemini and Apollo
1pece J)l'Olrama. lle re1lped last year to bocomO direct« or penonnel develop.
ment for lhe NIUopal Aeronauticl and
8-Adrn1nlltrltllll.
In addlUon to 1111' bUbork, sister and dluchttt. Mn. GUruth is survived by
tine crandcliJdr«l, a ll of Huntington t°h.
< • '
The newspaper said recently that
winter weather could kill b a b y
porcupiries and allbou.gh it was normally
again.rt the law to trap the prickly
animals, it is more important to keep
them alive than obey the Jaw.
"Here,'' said the paper, "js bow to
keep your porcupine in your apartment:
"Fill a cardboard box with hay, dry
leaves, peat or rags and place the boJ:
against. a wall so that the porcupine Can
build a dugout like hamsters do.
"Porcupines eat anything. You don't
have lo give them their favorite food -
mealworms. They a1so like to eat raw
hamburger. eggs, cheese, fish or fruil
"In spring many of the porcupines,
who have meanwhile. grown big and
stroog, remain friends of the family even
a!l<r Ibey bfve been set free. The
animals settle down in the garden, make
themulves useful as pest lighten and
regularly come to see their hosts for
food ."
Jeal.ous Wife
Causes Crasli .
BARCELONA, Spain (UPI) -A
woman ..-ang from the back of
her h~b&M·s car and attacked
him. He lost control and !He ar
crashed Into a lhop window In
downtown ~. the of!lclal
news agency CIFRA reporta.
ClFRA 1ald the hu •band 's
mlstresa was slttll)g with him in
tht. front seat ot Uie car.
The wile bod hl~den In the back
~ surprile the oouple.
specific enduring fact.ors to back his
case, including:
' -OU'll!IDERS SUCH AS !!IJSINESS
tycoons and Professiootl evaogeJj,sts are
bankrolling tbe. movement. · ·
It is traiiting an "army of new
leaders," unoi-dained laymen chosen by
the groups themselves, and who are
developing varied new styles o f
leadership.
-The emphasis placed on "small
gtoups," which have the mutually sus-
tailtlng power of close-knit families.
-'Ibe7 exhibit a "wide divergence of
individiial' religious expelience." •
-'lbeir .highly mjpionary charac-
tef"i!ti~ combine to ~ an exclusively 1
suPPof"live network among the different
groupo.
' -SINCE THEY PRESENTLY eschew ''poll~~ activism," , cODceotrating on
personal religious 'benefits, the move-
ment avoids irritating society and thus
grows in a generally favorable cltinate of
socia1 aCceptabllity. j
However, Ward cites hi s t or I c .:i 1
precedents of similarly persona1 pietistlc
upsurges, such as that of John Wesley
and oCbers in the 18th Century-;' that even-
tually broadened into movements of. wide
social '~ru. '"lhf Jesus "people become bi-and tri·
cultural," re, says. "TUmed off to
society, they oeverthelea begin to look
fairly .straJ&bt. Girls groom their hair Im-
maculately, boys shave, etc. They
speak and witness in straight churches."
As for their sexual habit!, they
subscribe to the nonnal "middle-class
standard$." expecting chast.ity and
celibacy of the Wlmarried, and fidelity In
marriage, Ward says, adding: "The
Jesus people try to put down sex, preten-
ding if IS not very imp«tant, when Jesus
is all."
WHll.E THEY ARE INTENSELY
devoted · to Jesus in an "Oh, wow,
Jesutl" fashion and fascinated with the
'Bible, WJrd says "they are Jong on zeal
but short on Biblical knowledge." He
says they are not fundamentalists since
they doo 't codify their beliefs.
Also, Jn persooal habits, be adds, they
differ he\ fundamentalists.
"Jesus ......,ie do not worry about
smoking or drinking."
Ethiopian Emperor
Meelll 'Shaft' Star
ADDIS ABABA (AP) -American ao-
tor R.1d1"!! Roundtroe, In Ehtiopia ~
film ti. mOVie «shaft ln Africa," had an
audlenOI 'Slturday with Emperor Haile
Selassie. '
Shooting began Monday In the Ethio-
pian Red Sea port or Massawa. Othe'r
planned locatlon1 are AddJ• Ababa, the
ancient walled city ol Harar In eastern
E!hJopla and the ~ town or Arbo Mindi In !ho 101llhom part of tho coun-
try. I
;
. --....... ,; ......
' ' ~ .:. . ' . .; . '
rhis is where shqp _l:i{1.i.Q.g:'
stops b·eing· 'fun.1 · ; . ·: .. '. :' -
If you've. ever thou9hf about. Cloin9
a little shoplifting, .thi.nk e,~fo.
Thin~'how '\asy it;i.s .to c)~t C,a)191it.
Think" h.o.w you'd answe•, the· qi.es-
. · b ' 1-' r • lion on every 10 epp tcetton'!
' • '1 ' ' ' •
'Have you !'ver Heen arresteil~ If
so, expl~in .. .' '·. ' ·.
ii-• • I ,•
Think h'ow ;.....· to th~' pe'o' iU :you
• ' . , i j
kno *,' the ' p '~pl~ ~o~ }.~ve:"onCJ,. .Y"'•
even to youtself ..ll.. ,ydu 'f'" !ii'ver
be the sa me: person 09aiii:, T' , .
' ,, i' ' •
Think about it before you do some Christmas "shQplifti1g
j ~ i . ' ' • . '
• ' h I
These thoughts brci\igh-t: fO Tyou as a
'4 ' • • .. ~
DAILY PILOT
.
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t
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f
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I
QUEENIE PUBIJC NO'llCE l'llBIJC NOTICE
•
R'epor.t Req,ui · ·eQ ·
•
O_nJreeway.· : tj>b
-·
WANT
UP
ON
YOUR
CLEAN
out?
FOR
FAST!
FAST!
<'I I • • •• I .. . ..... . . . ""
•
DAILY PILOT :lJ
llAll"Y Pil"OT
~LASSI.t.,IED
-•
l~I -~-]~
Gener ii
Exclusive Listi~
Mesa Verde
5 BR + Pool
tr :you're interested in a
laral! home, beautiful swim-
mtng-pool-11.Nt-,reuy str'l'l'I
In MHA Verde, please caU
about tlri8 one. Hugi!, step
down family room with
fireplace and v.·et . bar,
fonnal dining room, 3 balhs.
PriCI! $54,900. P ho n e 546-2313 for appointment.
•
THBRB:AL Bln'.~l'SRS
• OPEN Tit. 9PM
Macnab-Irvine
Realty Comrany
LIDO' ISLE
BAYFRONT
4.5' or £lll'ldy beach • beauU-
ful master suite on upper
floor • plus 2 BR . 2 baths
General • Gener•I
A. U!llllOOI: OOMI:
HI THERE !
Caught you reading a Unique Homes ad!
Don't be embarrassed; thousands do it eve ry
night. It's a release, an ~xpression , it's fun !
And honestly, we enjoy writing these ads -
it's like taJlting with you ! Glad you enjoy it
too !'
Unique invites you to have your next real
estate afia'ir with us. Whether buyin g or
sellin g, the Unique people, the service, the
.r esults will delight you . Look at aU the others
on this page , then think of us - aren't we
l,Jnique?
ACTION!
· den . DR & terrific kitchen
w/b~akfa&t ll.re8.. Valid
reason for sale • $225,COO.
{S14) I U ,_.J.flUJ:,,tl()Ml:i
CALL
DAILY
PILOT
IFIED
DEPT.
D
D
I
R
E c
T
--
6
4
2 -5
6
1
8
Macnab-Irvine ON l'Dfl'OF ,.,.~L ESTATE MAR KET WITH THE
NICEST PEOPL~ SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES
642-8235
OOZING
COR:ONA ·OEL ,MAR, 675·Em0 • MESA VERDE,
541:5'9() J ~RT BEACH,645-6500 •CALL US
4 Bdrm Beauty
NEAR BEACH
$41,500.
---------
IOln \I I Ol\11 \ . . .
Immaculate thruout. Lath A
plaster walls, new crptg, up. Macnab-Irvine
graded, like new. Fonnl 642-1235' 644.6200
dining • patio. Choice Joe.,,.~. !!I!!!!!!""""""""""""'" 'ii"' """' To ... drop ;n VERY SPECIAL
1733 W~jk°'·· N.B. HOME
POUNDING SURF Hanl lo """ In Corona do! Alar. 4 Bedroom, llh bath,
Brand New SUrf&lde Duplex · family room and absolutely
Penin!Ula location! Plush 2 priceless view-on fee land.
bed., 21ba.th custom units · This one ""m't last long at
best carpeting, drapes, $89,500. Call NOW ti73-i8550.
nakfu,t ·+ bar, beam cell·
Ing •• spectacular view-I
Builder uking $91,CMX.1 • 10%
down or try a trade!! •
THBRB:AL
EST. TBRS OPf.'!'+Tn. 9PM
-
$30,900
~I I 1 I 4 bedrm., dining room, .entry '~-~~~~~-~~~~'! hall, custom ceram.tc tile, Indirect lighting, natural
$27,250 = ~~· primo homo
3 spacious b e droom•,
Cheerful living room,
handsome fireplace, built-in
kitchen, dishwasher. Patio.
Freshly pa.lnred lnakle le
out. Like l'M?\Y carpeting. Jr.
estate park-~ grounds.
54()-1720.
TARBELL
TARBELL
2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa ·
Harbor Highlands
Hard to find 3 bedroom, 2
bath model wilfl front court
J>l:llio. Separate spacious
family room wilt\ wet bar
and fireplace. Close to
ri.tarlnen Park and School..
Quiet N~ neighbor-
hood. 144,"16.
C. F. Colesworthy & Co,
640.0020
2956 Harbor, O;:lata Mesa
What Do You
Need for
Oirlstmas?
If it's a 4 bedroom hon1c \Yhh $53,750 -VIEW
2 baths, here it 111. This Newport Btach
home •as de!llgned lor the Beautiful eu1tom built home
large family. New shag car-4 bedl'OOtl,15, 3 baths, dining
pets, modern ~llchrn wit h room, h~ family rm, park
all bull!·ln!. Pr!Ced to .ell llkc ylll'rl, br1c, ~113).
at $29,500. Cftll 847-6010.
®THE REAL
ESTATB:RS
OP£N "f ll 9PM
TARBELL
2955 iltllrt)or. Cc@lta Mes;i
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ 51/4•/o FHA
_TS_O_F -LOT-S Vnoant, "'odY I°' the Mii· LO day11. Only $156. nm. PtTI .
Some view homeslt~. M>l1\t' 3 BR, 2~i BA cooOO ""'pvr .
R-3 for lrw:ome uni!~ . .tnnll"' )'IU'l'I &: dill gar. $25,500.
C-4 for commel't'ial. Al.J.. UKR. '67-4.1~.
v.ithin Harbor Arca. <A.II tor BUSINE$S IS GOOD,
more detail•. NEED SUPER
PETE BARRETT SALESMENI
-REALTOR-$25,950
642...5200 Ori.uli!ul 3 btdroom. Elegant
1~-~!!!-~!!!-~!!!-~!!-~!!-~I rire~c.!. l..Aril' f " m i I y --$-:5-,95-0 _.., kit n, bulll·ln ....,..., ovon
·& ·· &. dl&hwuher. Beautlf\d
Beautitul l bedroom . El~1nt ~lo and a park·like )'a.rd.
fireplace. Large t a m·11 y 1720.
;TARBELL kitchen buUt.tn range, ovtn A"~ <ll!hw111her. ~autltul
f>t'tlo and A l)llJ'k·llko ynrd. ~.1720. .' :1&36 Harbor, Colla Mcaa
TARBELL:
I
OWNER mldt tell. 4
Bedrm11, mir IMna: room,
family rootn. tlrd'pla.Cf', Wk, 134"'10. !WIH7:10.
G.nenl
Keep the Kids
Out
from under your feet. This
4 bedroom home h~ large ~aUOn 'room for "tfie kiCIS
to run around at Christmas
time, Form81 dining room
plus larp family room, 3
car .gatage. Priced at
$52,000. Call 847-6010.
r..m~~1 l • OPf.N 'Tit. 9PM ~
$27,250
3 rpaciow: bedroom s .
Cheerful LMng r o o m ,
hand.90me fireplac e .
Bui l t -in k i tchen,
dishwasher. Patio. Freshly
painted inside & out. Like
new carpeting. Jr. e1tale
P•riHUto _.... 541>-l:r.!J.
TARBELL
2955 Harbor, eo.ta Mesa
SELDOM SEEN
HONEST TO GbsH: -TRI~
P. LE X FIXER-UPPER.
Prime location. M a k e
money here! $43,1'.0J.
~
One of the Bic)gles
A 5 bedroom, 2 $1"01')' home
.,.,'ith a family room and en-
closed palio. This 11paclous
home ne1t1 on a quiet cu.I·
rle-aac within minutes ot the
beach. Priced al SJS,500.
Lel's !Clive your problMJ.
Polit haste! 646-TITI.
$27,250
i specious b edroomis.
Cheerful living r o o m ,
h111'Kf90me fireplace. bu ilt-In
kitcht>n, dl~hwashc.r. Patio.
Fkuhly painted In.side &:
out. LI)«.' new CAJ'J)ellfl&". Jr.
estate J>Mk-lik<' ground1. 5«>-1720.
TARBELL
2956 Harbor, Costa Mest1
PENINSULA PT.
Attractive 2-1ty. 3 Bdnn. I.:.
den, 2 balha. Frplc.; en-
closed paUo; 2 car glll'&gl'
\v/door ~her. ~ Blk, to
or-can. $69,500.
Cail: 673.-3Qi3 675-8025 Eves.
associated
BROKER S-Rf.fti l TDl1S
ZOlS W llalboa 07 J .J~t>l
$23,000 2 BR, 1 BA
Sunshine l'ICAn &: reed.¥ tor
occupancy, JusL 11a:hl for
yoo renteni to l(t!t 1t.r1.ed.
Carpets & drn.pc' thi;uout,
llu.ge kilchen wlth Rat!
Nlnl{e. Country at.mo.phtte.
Call now.
....... ,,! • • ' I I • I , .._.,,I''
$53,751 -VIEW
Newport -Beautiful custom buUt home. .c bedroom•. 3 bAJhs. dlnlruc mom. huae ramUY rm. P8Jil
like )'lrd, bric, '4G-l'r.I>
TARBELL
2955 Harbcrr, Colta lle.M '
*FOR LEASE*·
Luxury apt. on the baytl'orU~
Sllr 11vt1U. 3 BdmU,. 2
baths. SS50 mo. )'.early
George Wllllemson
Reeltor /
*RM70 '
Nl'f'd •"Pad"? f'lace an ad!1
\
•
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JI DAILY l'ILOT
Everyone Haa
Somet~iii9 T~at •
Someone Else Wanta
Cameo
.--.-
. 644-7270
* Highlands •••
•
.•• View
Jusl remodeled 3 bedroom, 2 bath, dining
room (or family room), fireplace cheerful
built-in kitchen with inviting SUNbECK for
your entertainment pleasure, overlooking the
canyon & view of the ocean. One--of..a-kind.
Just reduced to .. .. .. . .. .. .. . .. .. .. . $65,800
*·
The area's top professionals
are at your service.
Two Story .•.
· ' .•• Room to Rohm 1 _Geno;;;;;;'•;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=
4 BEDROOM, 3 bath borne. 'HUGE ruinpus I•
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.
AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES
' 644-7270
General General
* * * * * * TAYLOR .(IQ.
42z118 FT. LOT* R-2 * CdM
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
CORBIN-MARTIN
REALTORS 644-7662
lachenmyer
Rt ,1 lto1
I Oln' I I Ol \11 \
: HERITAGE
flE ALTORS
· HERITAGE
h'f Al lf)R'-'
-
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
HOME wnH
POOL
PWS DUPLEX
I ... ,,
CLASSIFIED ADS You Coft S1U It,
Find It, Trad• It
With • Went Ad
...... •
'
OAILV PILOT J3
--~-~-~~;/;! ;_;-~-;;-~ ilmm-.--...-.e_.
1
1 ....,_ .. _ lrtl I ,.. ...... _ lrtJI -~,,. ...... I~ I ....,_, ...... l~ I ·--·~ ll!ll .... _.. .. _ lrtl
~ Unfum, 305 Hou .. 1 U"""'n. "'°-"""" Unfum. :135 :;Aptt.=;...;..fu;;;rn:.;;;... __ _;360::::. Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unlum. S6S Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apll., AP"··
lllend L.,una INclt ""'!e'!'.' lolch •c :::;°":;;;.•..;M;.;::•::;•____ ci.norol 0.norol Cotta Mota 'Ul'll. or Unlurn. 310 Furn. or Unfurn. 370
4BR.~,,.,,~-2 BR. lvle .. .-;;;J'a TRl·LEVEL 2 BR, 3 BA. WEl!KLV-MONTHLV DELUXE HUfttl"""'1 Beach Huntln9ton Beach
"f' ~1-J!.•Y~. °""'' ~1 ~~'ti~ "':us."; -lixecutlvo S..ltH EL CORDOVA APTS. APARTMENTS
ln1ul1 ~ rt •---II o mo. lei. O< moot h I y. 21111 Ne..,.rt Blvd, p,_ $145 Air Cood • Frplc'1 • 3 Swim• :;,;;;;_WP! ...-.; . 871..m, Elct 3&. Cott• Ml:H . 1 & 2 ledrootns mine Pools • Health Spa • HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FINEST
THI .Luw SMt• AM 60-Hl1 Dishwuher · Sh;f, C•-ting • Walk·ln C101-Tonnt• Courla · Game •od . rr;o • STUDIOS & I BR'S -r• BUilard Room.
3 IR $350 DELUXE TownhOuto R • et&, Forced Air eat • Eltra Large Rooms • 1 BR trom mo ~~~~~~~~ ~--·~-• .. ~, -··'~ 116 BL o,.ta, -· J1.':,.: : ::::g =. Beauutul Game Room • Heated Pool • BBQ'• 1 BR. • 'o.n })om 11&1 w•-~ ..,_g ,.... 1'< &:;,. .. "° dlil ,.,. II• ,,,, E•cloud Garages. Quiet surroundln:fu and MEDITERRANEAN uolt, cul de sac loc., nr. So. m • .:.. ~~·. . • ; ..,. Kitchen c1"' sho ·-.. ~-ose to .JRPb>i. (Nr Harbor & Ham ton St) VILLAGE c=;Hocean~llvl"Jowuxa. ~A"v!\'t""°iiJ:'' ' :;.::;:::::;::;..;:.:.:;.;:.:;;;......;;::; • Laundty Faclllli<> Adult Llvl119 • NO Poll. .,_ II bo Bl d C
1 • • TV le maid aerv avA" 20n Ch1rl1 St., Cotta Meu 642-4470 """' •r r v ·• .i'ot.
Spanish Country Estate Living
2 Acres. Be3uti!ul {latk·like surroundings.
Sunken Pool. Sparkltng Spanish Fountains.
• Spacious Rooms • Separate Dining
• OUT on )'OUr Ea.rt Spac.
him BacheiQ.1'. AU util Incl.
ie. ALA Rontolt e M5-J900
. :§1( SPAC 3 Br, 2 Ba, 2\-i car
pr. Oee&n w, priv bet\ prM. 1310 ..,, Wltd,t all !,
~-
..., lTI41 557-8020 e Phone Service VILLA MARSEILLES RENTAL OFFICE
*30 WEEK A UP SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM
• StudJo • I BR Apts Furnished & Unfurnished Now VIiie Paula • TV &. Ma1d Service Avail Adult Living 2 Br., 2 Pull Ba.
• Phonto Service-Htd Pool Dishwasher ~lor coordm' ated ~pita' nee" • 1-·amuies Welcomr BRAND new--unlt1. 2 P!t..,1 • t'hiktren a Pet RCtlon .... .., P Shag cpt/drps. patio, Ul.4 Vt.ta de1 Oro Ba. Quiet atreet. ~· 2376 Newport Blvd., CM Plusb shag c.arpet ·mirrored wa be doon-beam ceil,, garages.
. Newport Buch m-294t or Mn. Eut,,. S43-91SS or 645-3!167 Indirect lighting In kitchen • breakfast b8r • From 11so
6"-1133 ANYTIME 675-«lOO -$120 month I: up. huge P.rivate fenced patio,. plush landscap-622 HamUton, C.t.1.
• \Valk in Clo sets
• Home-like Kitchens & Cabinets
1 BDRM . Unfurn. $165. Furn. $165 .
2 BDRM. Unfurn. $165. Furn. $21$.
TOWNHOUSE 2 BR . 11'.! Ba., 1400 sq. fl.
Unfurnished $200.
ALL UTILITIES FREE
Walk to Huntington Center
Adults, No pets
EASTILUFF Hunllllf'O• -!\. This ad •""" ror $5 on ttnt. !ng • brick Bar-IJe.Ques • large heated pools • See Mer. ~; i.r"· Hoban
e MOVE·ln Today! 2 Br. se~-te houJe, .. ----• ' " * $U PER WEEK* & lanai Air ~ndltl l 1~---=-=<=----~~ -~ Encl ,, .•. ' ~--· '" on ng. · · tl"n.11......,·-•-··h-"'~~ ''"' cor. ~ larae 4 bednJom 0< 3 ~den. !-ED. OCCUPANCY & Up. Pool & maid service. 3101 So. Brl!!!>J.SJ,J:'onta.Mtc _5J1..l200 -t~:;~:::=-=·-:.:..;·-==·--1 lA QUINTA HERMOSA
pet&. mo:---FamllY-room-pt . --mw-1 Bl' apt, $250 mo-Kitcharw.&v.ail.~ OLOWE.L BANKER & CO
ALA Ronteli e M5-J900 Jonna! dint,,. room. Oom-Dbl aaraae ~"'" · oomer Harbor l Victorto. • MANA~ING AGENT • NEW APTS.! 16211 Parkside l11ne, H.B.
2 BR houJe 1155 mo. l50 plete privacy with •ncloted 334 Portland Ctrcl<, H.B. Huntlneton -h HUNTINGTON
cle&nlna. No dogs, uo chU· rear and front yarda. Lovely "'"81U ~ . 714: 847·5441
ctr.n. 646-53n. • ...... Available llecember . 1115 • nss Apt u I 365 A u I 365 BEACH
f.ASTSlDE 4 Br, 21Ba, trpl, 15. No pell. $f75 per month. NEW 2 Br, l;t Ba triplex. Bac~lor & 1 BR, patlos, l_._._n_u_rn_.____ et. n _urn. (4 blks. So. of San Diego Frwy. on Beach,
1 blk. W. on Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane). bllnl, dahwhr. new crpt &: 'Call 6?3-6568 or 546-3688. Bltn range, trpl, crpt, drp1. frplc s, priv. Baragft • Co"'n•· d.I #Mr Cott• MeM Ai l tmit'1:i ~~d · ~t. Encl dbl pr. aose to H•rNr View Home No c b 1drn1 no pets. Divided bath • Jots of I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimJ
sicblL No pets. 64.5--4220. • BEDROOM -yearly $190/mo. 609 atth St. HB. ~tsbabrec hall, ~~ 11 'ii'uili.!m ai: ZS.~~
, Clean 3 BR. 2 BA. hid Jeue $f75. ·mo. Avail· 6J3.0473. See ror eay.:::,'l:: 17JOi ~·. HARBOR QR£ENt Covered Porldno Apt. Unfurn. 365 Aph.,
POOi. I.rs. aame rm. F'tple. able December 15th. Westminster Keelaon Ln. (1 b1k w. cf G•rden Httlng. Con-N rt Be h
1Ntn1. w/w carpet, drapes. REALTOR 644-7270 Beacb, 1 blk N. of Slater). fluml·•~ & 'lenient to l•rge sho~ ewpo 1'
ffum. or Unfum.
CoUep Parle. 5'5--5438. 1 • LOVELY 2 BR, bltns. crpts, 842-1848 -
• ~ BR. Stove, refrig, YE A ft LY Rental-Untum. drps, gar, lndey, children CUTE l·Br. duplex. Avail Unfvrnllhect ping C•Jlt•r.
''.IV,kl<!t/pet/llngle• Vacan t Now.3BR,5bou>e1 ""loome l150. 530-6963 Now! Small prlv. ya~·. ON TEN/ ACRES the YJNloLAPetsY.ORBA
CON * ,., •lll from the beach. Newly 5.10-2033 '" Apt>. !urn. un!urn. Leue From $130 to.$215 mo -painted. Large brick patM>. · Small child OK. Refs. $145 Fireplace / prtv. patios.
OCEAN and
HARBOR VIEW
SE • 3 BR. 11,it BA. Bltns,
C'l]>lt, drpe:, kids ck.
llACON * '4Ml11
BR cute fenced cottage.
~ avau. f4DJ/mo . 117 E. ald St., C.P.1. 60-3645.
S Btdroom, 2 Bath. Fenced -. Dbl gange. l230/mo , ~lna: water. ~2646
LGE: 2 Br hom•'. crpts. drpo.
.....,, "'""'·· !ncd yd, C"· ms. 11)-ld1.~. ' "1 s BR. 2 BA. dhl gar, bltns
tDcl. dlhwhr, (rplc, fncd
• $1111. 673-382S.
3 BR. 2 BA. lenoed yard.
Family only. $200/mo.
i * Aaent, 837-1211 •
3!BR, PX). 21'4 PrHl.i.nt bs1:" fenced-·
2¥ Bil 1989-C Charle-1
D<!i/MO. No do&a. T IC-.2259, S.-7017
31 Br home. $235. Eutaldr.
e!'ll crpl• • frnhl)' ptainted.
c. Obie pr. 646-2768
-h
All Util Pd. 127 34th St. Mo. 536-t900 or 133-12)6 Poob Tennis Cootnt'I Bkfst. Ba·•-1ort e l Bdrm• "~-c I I --213 ·-• MEN Small 900 Se Lan CdlM °'' 2'U ~ 142-9'22 ........ re ont•n a ity N.B. ruunoc:; ;.,,,....m or I 119) -beach hotel. a • IJ"t":• 2 8d • , Bd p '•Ill" nt: 6'B-!1562. -.,.nm1ntsforhflt Apts $85/mo. Rooms !MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) rm1 rms (So. on Beach mvd. on San reva • Pnirc1ru ,._....
THE BLUFFS . $21.50/wk. 536-7006 11h or 2 full Bllthl Diego Frwy, 1 blk. beyond Ele~ant apanments designed UYll "' cf•
4BR,2'1SBA $ll5 _FURNISHED 2 Bdrm. ROOMY 3 Bed.room, 2 bath, F.dln&er to Stark, E. to wlrb ~~aster's :,ouch. s1u. TD 1n llAMl ...
CONOOMINIU.l\f Ap p Near stores. Clean ground floor. $350 pr. month Master size bedrooms w/ Malag~. turn right I. ~ -use .sccur Y, exc U· Ovtr SOO ttU trtt•
Deslftb1e floor plan, Ira ts. ur~. 360 Realonomics, Bier. 675-6700 plus apac1otJS', 1 bedroom. high beam ceilings, Iara:e Moderat~ Income s1ve Ve1'S81U.es Club and ind 10 boutcltr.oound ---•-~ rt ... ~ Wik to ups•-•-with private •"-living room w/gas or Qualification pool ~Ith unique Aquabar, 1trt1m1 wltll tumbllnt: """"""'°'""" P .....,"-l S.lbo. Peninaul1 lBR, ocean vu, gas & Yr'l.ler i.au.. ,,... '"'--· fountains and forn1al w11trt1lls cr11t• • scbo1s 1tore1, " P8rk. $400 d s 1 4 0 trance. s:m pr month. Botb , ... ooc1 burning u.-.:place. * FRESH AIR gar. r111.111111111111: tot your
mo BY owner 64fir!35 p · p e r m 0 • units 11(.'Xt to park & tennis, Convenient laundry area den.<i .• All pan or th e South 11ttl·sp1Clou1 1. or z.0101oont . ' · LARGE 3 BR. 2 BA. furn. '213"°"'::<36-::::1843=c....----call Railey 67l-85?0 AICI. off kilchcn. Enclosed pa· Walk 3 blocks to Beach Coasts . hnes1 apartment •Plrtftltllt. Fr0111 ,165. DKOl'•tOI'• * BEACON BAY * upbe.... 2dubplex. 1 blk to L B CORONA DEL MAR'S BEST lios. 2 s1vimming pools, Ll'g 2 & 3 BR. Apts, Newly comn1un11y. . . 11111 tur11lturt l'•tbt:•• iv1illbl1 • 3 BR., 3 bl.., elec. klt, ref. &ch, lb market. Yrly ~uni ••ch sauna, 1'e'Creation !aclli· deoorated, w/w crpts, drpa, 1 Bedroom ~lud1os fron1 $195 2300 fllrYltw lld., Centi Miu.
O-i s-h w hr-.-! cpd/.U.pes; rental, "MOnthly--lse. $325. u:>eATION a Bedroom, ~ ties. Security guard. No bltnl, except re.frig. $16f & 2-Bl'dt'OOn1 fron1 $.105" ] l"honi: S45·2300. Garden. NO PF:l'S. $525 MO. 214 351.h St., ~. BACH nr bea<'h $135-$155. Col bath, sparkling new. Agent pels. $235. No singles, no pets. Modl'ls 01~n ~) A.i\1. Iii dusk -....=-7~==,..,..---1
yeW,leue, lncl . .utllltiea * FURN. BACH ELOR tv. 1435.. N. Coast -°ro" ~6'07l>-~m5~.~~-=~--536-11ll. ~ LA ltlANClfA HOP GERRIE Rlty 64S-4«JO $125/mo. yrly, includin& ~=· 6'7f4367,.,4 9 4-2 0 8 2 BDRM. 1 Ba, $225. 1no. un· Models Open 10 tll 7 pm DUPLEX·lmmac. 2 er. ccv ~n~~cv.·f~l°:!u~nl:n.
3 BR, 3 be, pvt eoune view. uUI. rum. Can see n1ornings. 2700 Peterson W11y CM pa~, new drps, crpt, bltns, strucUon allov.•ance or 1
See to apprec. Avail now. Call 67&-5172 * * StudiQ., nMl' beach, cou. Call 675-7182 ' pr1v. dbl gar. Love I Y mo'.11 (l'ff rent. 1 en. J BR
$545 mo. 557-stOO. e $25 Wk I. Up On (}c(!an pie OK.' 1ll!J'.' UUI furn. 2 bedrooms each. Hh ins. nr H•rbor Blvd & grounds. Water & gardener ON THE BLUFFS & deill, 2 BR's A: 3 BR'•·
LIDO Sands J Br. 2 Ba, Lovely Bach. 1 BR-Rooms 494-7413.. carpets & drapes, choice Ad11m1 paid. Resp. ma.rrled cpl. AT NEWPORT fo~rom St55. Oshwshr, rncl
trplc, Jge patio. $350, lse. Maid Service. Pool . Util Pd L"do I ~.. t t location. Lease $200 pr. (adults). $165. No pets. -.. gar, 1wim'g pool. BBQ'•
5600.Ri'1ft" Ave &t&-7586 e Call 615-8740 e I lti n1onth. Call 673-&'i:JO RLTR. 546·0370 °8:::12::-"'1"-"6'---~~--F N t Bl d t Pets acceptable. -TOD Hroom•P•.t•clwpollonc d '1·1· urnblockat '"-'"--"""! ns S Pl NEWPORT Sbore12 Br, den, STUDIO $115, "l BR. $175, 2 1 Br furn. Utlls p'atd, garage, SPAC. duplex, 4 BR. 211.i BA. MOVE-JN AY U'l•-AJU con .. C.M. 2 Ba:: PoOl &: club prtvl Nr BR. $235 to $300 1 Adul $1B5 sep dining, close 10 bch, lcn-1 '!!~!!!!!!!!]!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l2 BR in tipac. 4-pll'X. $139. above Pacific Coast Hwy) to Huntington Beach
bch $3oo. 213· 6811278. • P.fanha.U Realty· 675-4600 1
1 ,,!:. ~ts. · mo, nis, park. S 3 6 5 / ni o ·I ~ Pool. Kids ok. See Mgr. entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, ----''------. • . -yr-y, Ql.T"UD.ll. ~I091. T' T St u 17371·B Keelson. 1 blk w. or Newport B--ach. Ca. 926li0. BRAND NEW
Newport 8-ch ime 0 1P P Beach Blvd, off Slater. Telephone: (71·1) &15-0060 ;;.S;;.an;.;t;.;o;..;.An;;;;;a;... _____ 1Co1t11 MeSli SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 hulh. Your apartment in a French 968-7510 or 8-17-4260. QUO VAOIS Ill
1000 SQ, FT. gnciom living. 4 BR: 2 ba., 2 Cl.! encl w/frplc. CdM High School Country G&rden . yet M"&r -="-"=-=-=~~--=~~~~~~~--I I..wcury Gs.rdcn Apts.
2 Br, l~it Ba, dlx mob. paric g. w/lru.try. Avail. now. area. $275 Mo. Avail . 12/15 shopping and activities. $l35-l hd t PARK NEWPORT &chctor, l & 2 BR"s.
home. w/w crpt, auto ! BR, 2.ba.-turnlshe:l Steps to Hal Pinchin Rltr. 675-439'1 Impeccably managed room, crp s, APARTMENTS $135 to $11..i
* $51rBONUS. 6 yrs. nu· 4
BR, 2 BA. crpts, drps. So.
S.A., nr schll, ~Jbops.$250.
&CANT -walk lg 67W760 or 96i.!!!02.
ch. S Bi, 2 'fiA,, * -l BDRM, ~ a;rport
dlhwhr, compl turn. Htd oc..-ean •.••• , ••••••.•••• $275 personal private. T w 0 drps, child o.k. 174311 Htd Pool.Jacuzzi·Sauna11
pqot f.1at.ure adlll. No petl. 3 BR, 2 B~ ••••••• ,, ••• $285j C:ot;;;ta;;;Me;;;ta;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; bodrooms, den. !J baths. Queen St. 142..0589 . OD fhe bay H.e .reatlon Room &,,More!
$175/mo. 4 Seuons's, 2359 2 BR, 1 Ba, Penin ••• , • , $250 l • patio picture-book'. Jatt'hn. · · . Adults On1y • No Pets
·~·"' Cl I " all w/l!repla<e and pool. $200. ~. 811 c • ~pereo-.c"'°=· "'Ph"'"-~==""--t-lnl, flrepl, hrdwd Hout00 Furn. or
oars & lush carpet&. Unfurn. 310
NWpt. 54.\-6332 We Have Winter Rent.ala FirePlace and other piWlel l.wtW')' apartment living ov· BRING IN THIS AD & CHJUSTMAS SPF.CIAL. WW Take Students ADULTS From $19S adult sectio · NEW beach apts, 426-ll.st St. erlooklng the "'aler. Enjoy ASK ABOUT ,REE
CALL: 67>3863 Qn. the East skle m $155 fn<!• 2 BR $~95 mo, 3 ming pools, 7 Iii hted len·
• $1t>-ofl 1 Wk'i Rent · On1y 1 year old I845 Anaheim Avenue BR $265 mo. Tobin Realty, nis l'Ollrts, plus mUes of 18992 Jo"1orlda St. 847·9-14S * ~RENT *
Also Oceanfronts Avail. 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments THE v· ENDO"En. 4 b_!ocks from ocean. 1 BR $750,0Cll heaJth spa, 7 swim· DECEMBER RENTI
• $JO-Off 5 Wk's Rent In nicely landscaped setting Ca~ll~Mn!!!;·..;P~h!'_!.ll~ll~fll!._,;,M<J.0~~7_!c81!1-'l::;n='·c:S:.:16-:..::33:.:71:;._____ bicycle tralls. putting, shut· (~ blk. W. or Garfield
C __ ._ ..... __ do_l_Ma_r ____
1
m6 Ne\r.·~...!,lvd., C.M. Swimming pooJ, built-Ins -rteboard, croqu et. Junior l 's and Beach Blvd.I
2BR. 321.0 Seavtew, 1 blk Q'f7~1 carpets & enclosed garages e NEWPORT e WALK TO BEACH from $174.50 monthly; also 1 1 BR., 1 blk to beach. Shag
/mo. move in now.1 -------....;= I
kr. 9112-15611
!rom big Corona. Adults. * SHADY ELMS_ POOL * From $1611. Stop by e APARTMENTS e New 1 & 2 Br, cpt/drp, and 2-bedroom plans and crptg, drps, Jndry lac. $135.
Jo'urn or Unturn.. $350 or $300 e Adults Poolside $140 up :tlllE1denAvc. 2"'50 Newport Blvd., Cl\t dswshr, frpl. 316 16th. ~tory town house~. Elec· ~ t4lh St. 5.16--0352.
per mo on 1 f. leue. e Children next block NEW 2 Bdrm furnished apt I & 2 BR. Furn & Unr. ,84,,,_7·.::395::::7·c_ ______ 1 Irie kitchens, private pa:Js
Po&aeak>n Jan . Owner, 177 E. 22nd St., CM 60-364.5 $350 mo ano\lal lease. SU Olildren's Sections. 2 WEEKS FREE RENT! 1 or balconits, carpetln&. dra-Newport 8e1eh
eve'! 213:282-5252 1 BR, $130 le: $140. 2 BR, WCal!. ~·~~~-Beach. ALLMUSTUTSlELEIT!lE>'Sr.PIAl.281D Br. Frplc. Nr. bch. $155. lperies;hSUlbfcrT&.t "'aon i?""'l·l---'--------
xlnl cood, 2 Ba. Full)r Conclomlnluma
d a: drp'd Executive Unfum borhood. Walk to 3 • 320
'Al mi. to ocean. $300 Cotti Meg i?">· .... 968-5056. MONTl(:ELLO
CONDO.
l{BR Howie, 2~ BJb, Ooean. 2 flail redec. ():)Qples only _e. mo. 968-1801 &ft 3;30
ADULT SECTlON
BDRM., SPUT·LEVEL
IMMED. OCCUP.
1'25. PER MO.
644-7210 'RL TR.
BR. 2 Ba. Air/cond. •• ~ SHARP, J BR. 2BA. condo
BR. 2 Ba. alr/cond • • 1285 nr pool I: tftU:l.la <Uttta.
Bk. 2 Ba. air/cond. • • $.110 55>-3389 or S40-7226 BR. 2 ba. Atrium •••• UtO N'-..J BR. 2 BL Atrium •••• 13115 1.L_..,........_ __ .,........_ __ _
•Bk. 3 Ba. lam. rm.·· $415 YEIJU.Y teue. NEW 2 Br, 2
Ba. on Goll. Coune. $300 mo. Call 675.-2030.
Ml11lon Vlelo
$165 S/Pool Ideal for _..._... ._,... (San . Call 539-16GJ J !}..) pm. ng wit e eva ors. pt10na
bachelors. 1993 Church St. Bernardino) or 883-2943 Ca\1646-1038 wkdays. nlald scn•iC(•. Just oorlh of L1·ve
54H633. ·•:::v;oenln:;::gso;:.·--,,..,..,,,.-...,-.,-Fashion lslan~ al JanilJorec 3rd Girl needed !or 3 bt ** 3 Br., 1 llz bll. ** NEW dlx 2 hr dplx. Cpl, and san Joaquin Hil ls Jload. ~· 2 BR. A~itl Pool. townhse in Park Newport. L.aq;e. newly decor. encl drps;-...0/W, bllns. $175. 218 Telephone t714) 644-1900
si<Go lhopa. A ts, no $122.SO/rno + S9I ref. pallo, bitns. crpt, drps, Knox v 111 e . 5 3 S-7633, for rental information b• pets~ .... ~ CM depos. Move in 12117. Eves '"'"""'""""""""'""""" Close 10 everything. Sl70 536-26a2. -*'""2"w~E"'E"K~S~Fo'iRo'iE"E='-*~ IQ ' ............ na, · · ~1673, 08,yl ~l40l Lyn... 1· n"Kl. 880 Center St .• CM. Call LARGE l BR nr Htg ·
Fum. Bach, & 1 Br. Ex· ne. 833-011ll. Ann. Mle8liBJlll ZI ~t 5,30 pm wkdy•, all day Harbour. New >hag, g.r.. Vista del Meta
cepti.n.lly nfce, 2110 knds, 642-8340. dshwshr. $130 n10. No pets. ADULT GARDEN HOMES
Newport atvd., C.M. srs:i:~~=~.~j0~~: ~~tit~lw::~."'~i·~~~ *LA PARISIENNE* 675-3439 IRVINE AVE. AT MESA •
NEW l &: 2 BR'a frQm $190 to maid seni., pool. The Mesa, ti I 2 BR., 2 BA. F~rn & Unlurn. KING-SIZE Attractive I Br. Movl' in \VI deposits only fr $140 ·-N be h hop 415 N. Newport Blvd., N.B. r:u~sg'a~~ne:~'~ .. A'du't~.-pll001 &Ad$225l. Fireplace. Hid. 8Jt-ln11. Deapcs. Carpets. IDBr. SI60NI Se 2.Br. $200 om -· r. ac &:: a 'g. ~ '"''l!i "' oo, u t.s. $:136 8"7-5384. ay & ghl , cur1ty, Pool. 114 E. llth. CM, 5C!Hll37. . • no pets. 151 E . 21st, C.M. 979-1268 . Fountains. Rec. Bldg. w/
NICE 1 br dpbc:. Quiet. Sepr. 2 BR lo""-er duplex • 1 blk to * 646-8666 * Across trom Golf Course BEAUT. 2 Br. 2 Ba. dlx exercise rm b1lllartls l"OI·
by garaees. 1 Adult over 30. beach. Yrly or winter $225 Ch1rming 2 Br, $165 .20432 Santa Ana Ave. pooliide nr heh. $155 low or 1V. Ea. 1Apt. bu ·di.sh-
No pet.I. 548-1021. or $250 mo. 130 46th St. See Duplex. Newly redec. Encl EXTRA LARGE I BR $155. dep. 2320 F1orkla. ~:?976. washer, refria, shag cpl, &
PLEASANT ~-er 1 Br, pool, Nov 24-26 or Ph 0 n e patio. Attached garage. Utils pd. Refrig. range, cpl , WALK to ocean, 2 BR, l"IC!wiy Prt patto or deck. 545-4855
adult.I, no pets. UtU pd. 1884" ;,:;213~f285.42o=.::;15::;·==""".,-,= Park·like garden surround· drps, I-ltd Pool. Mature dee cpl!, drps, .. bltlns. 2 BR. Yearly. P'.l()/mo. ·~
Monrovia. 548-0336 WUiITER. 2 BR $225. 4 BR. lngs. Mature adults only. Adults. Infant ok, no pets. Consider child 5J&.615j. blk to Ocean. pa 1 i 0 .
BACHELOR, ulil paid, $145 $215. Bach. $125. Nr beach 54&-6920. \l/alk .to shops, 18 8 7 2 BR. Partially furn. Close to Garage. Adults, no pet..
mo. S5(t cleanina:i fee. Nr ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 e TROPICAL POOL e Monrovia, ~7. park. $140/mo. Call ;;"'3-8088;;:;,""''-'·=,---~~-
0CC 1: UCI. 5S7-Tl68. 1 BLK to bch, l br, 2 Br studio, I'h Ba, frpJ_1 sprl QUI ET-DELUXE 979-1070 Mr. Smith. OCEANVJEW )'1!:arly duplex.
1 BR. Furn. Apt. $140/mo. kids/pelJI OK 'til July 1st, strcue. Gas & wtr. pa. 145 I & 2 BR. APTS. L1gun1 Belch 2 B~i.2, be. $250. 644--6780 or
No pets or children. 820 $175. 646-tOTI. E. 18th No. 9, 548-USS. Pvt. Patios * Hid. Pools 642-~
Center St., C.M. 60-5848. PARTIAU.Y furn apt., 2 BR, LRG 2 Br. $150 Car Drps, Nr Shop'g * Adults Only UNIQUE Laguna Castle Apt. ~YEA,RL~:;e;'.,y~,-"°4°"n..'"."'hmne,---;~2~B~, ..
1 BR turn apt, $105. nr the Bay. $200 month. atve, priv fncd yard, kids tm Santa Ana Ave., C.M. Wide ocean views, acres of apt. on walrr; 3 Br. a.pt.
2538 Newport Blvd, sr.,._1355. OK, no pets, W. side, Mgr. Apt . 113 646-5542 gardens. Close to beach & ABBEY REALTY 642-3850
Call 64• ~-Apt. Unfurn. 365 _s_n-_11="-· --~---2 BR t • b bl shopping. 2 BR .. 2 Ba.: I.le· ll""'"l}J;1V • ups n1rs. ar, tns. rms. & storage. Custom S Cle
}«. sunny 2 BR. C&-D, $150 •-i•-a Peninsula DELUX extra 1rg 1 BR. apt crpts, Sl65/mo. Util Paid. w a I lpape'l's, . chandeliers, 11n mtnte y 1,.,. married pref. Infant IHI Ullil In 4-plex, Close to South 135 Albert Pl. Ca11 Mr. 10Aalc tile shutters ••ui
3 DD 2 D.t -.1-. ... r..-·t c t Adi•-White (213) 595-4436 or aft 6 n · · · _,...WE care al CaML Contenta. ~ ~ ......... .......,, ok. ~. BALBOA beach cot'•-s -.... ......,. en er. .... no pets. 96:l-3172 Mo. partially turn. Mature Gracious ltving in quiet
OakWOOd Is $1 million ln
re creation. Swimming
pools. Hea lth cl ubs.
Saunas. Tennis oourls.
Billiards. Indoor golf dri._
Ing rarige. Sand Volleyball.
Whlrlpool Baths. And rots
mo re. A res ident tenn is
pro and activities director
who plans free Sunday
brunches and barbecuea.
Starting as row as $1"40.
Sing les, one and two ·
bedrooms, furnished and
unfurnished. Sorry no
children or pets. Models
open dally 10 to 7. ::!,~ ':!t~2 ~: 1"m ia:~ * COMPLETELY furnished bachelor $100 uul'incL $lS5. 567-5529 pm, "TI-IE' GABLES" adults only, Alao aYftil. area with OCt"Hn vu 2 BR UHll7L 1 BR. Apt. Adults only. 673-4987 2 BR, 2 BA, Cl'PI. drps, bltns, JJOOn, other lwruey apta. $250 2 BA co I o r ' 0>0rd
$l25/mo M2-360l ~'--""'-,....,,....----Wshr/dcyer hookup, patto, 2 Br. 1;1 Ba w/ gar. Adlb. to S65p nlo. By apJf l. only cpts/dri)s/dsw~hr & t'A!'""e.
TOWft.'Mute Uftfum. ·ns · · · Corona del M11r gar. 1 child/no pet. $170. Crpts, ~rps, bltns, fncd yrd 494-4653. Lge dln srea. open tie:m
BACHELOR apt -UUI peld. UJ.,H Del Mar 54&-8'178 w/ palto. \Vtr pd. 636-4120. 2 nR apt, \V/w cpl, drps, kit. celltna, pi1v balcony, rec &
Hunttnron ~h ~~e:!~'k.~OOW./mo. * GREAT V?EW·2 BR. * LG, new 2 BR. cpta, drps, 2437 Oran&e Ave No. D $160. furn., ocean view, clmie to laundry. Adults, no pet.11,
Oakwood
Garden Apartment•
mJc. bltnlti«.~~ $16S mo. 2 Chi4.flen. No 1 BR. Carport, priv. patio, very nice beach, on <the 492-2259, 492--0464. ;111R. 1~ bL •••••••••• ~ NICE dean 2 B DR. M Put a little "loot" ln your up. ' · pets. 300 Monte· v l 5 ta new crpts, drps. AU elec. around parkinc. All yr. t Em. 2 Bl. , ••••••••••• $3(111 townhouse. 11"' ba. bltnl, Levi.-..eu those baubles for 2 BDRM. 2 oar covered park· Si&-3963 Resp. adults only, no round, $190 mo.-!\Ir. Brach, Apts.,
Newport Beach
lrvlne and 18th
IMS-0650• 842-81 70
-·------
I BR. 2 bl.············ $S2$ W/D, "'f/W ~ a drpt. ~: Call ClalaWed ~ier. ~·m!fJ, incld'g l-.~B-RAN~-D-N~EW~-2-.Bedroo--m children or peta. $125. <19+-7447. Furn. or Unfur". 370
t Bit./ ba. Broa4moor S3IS ,SllO:;;;· T,;0;,..;:;;;;:go.:=;;1!781;;=...==:;;:======;;:_.:;;::;:=;=::;:;;;=== Upper Apt. No pel1. Adu.It• 543-!322. SPECJ'ACULAR vifw 2 .l 3 I~ f Bk. bl., fam mi · ··• StJO "' Only. Ph: 548-6m ~• A: 2 BR Stove, fl!fri&, crpll, & Br .. 2 Ba. blk to bch. New • 81lboll P•nln1ul11 Mil* ,A 18• ad h•11 wk:ndl. drp1. Attach. pr. Fenced From $280 Jse. 49+-3383, !~;;;;;;;;;;;;;· iiil~I . r ' I d1711~~' .( _ !) -CfrQ.• * SHADY ELMS_ POOL * Y.... No ' pets. 1150. 494-1139. MODERN • 3 BR. 2 BR Npt ~\!::o I.' ~).. 'b p p e Adulta Poolside S140 up 548-~. Met• Verde Bch Duplex. to 1 hare Rooms _. e Odldren next block e AVAD... Now-2 Br I% Ba w/atraight mAle. Frplc, ------"'----=
REALTY T/;e Punle wi#lt the Bui/# .. /n Chuci/e 171 E. 2'Jblt St., CM 642--3645 ~·-~~~: ;:1~ =: Df~P~.2 J.003 u":.' Je~ ~:·ti .. 111~8o8;'nU:.• ~eic...I~ ROOMS S18 wk up w/klt.
niv. Park Center, Irvine o•earro• a.tt.n of the $160-2 Br. l~~ &. 6'\5-4Dl ore., J09S Ma~ Av c .j ..::675:::>-c:'lmo;:,::..·-~-~--$.'lO wk up apts. 2376 New--
Call Anytime, ~ lour ICJOfl'lbled word1 ':. 'it.;~ Townho\l.w. Crpts, drpi, * * BEAUTIFUL I A 2 BR M6-10M . * NEW • J BR, 2 Ba, Avl port Blvd., CM, ~ ~ houn: 8 AM to I PM low to form fovr lll'tPle wordi r;:!Jj,u gr· 2649 Orange, Apt E. Contemporary Garden Apt!: Newport S.ich now to Juflf'I 30. F'rplc, bi t· WEEKLY or mon_t_.hl,yl....1 bh; t:BP 2 ba U t p rlc If I S O C D E N I ·~ ._,,, M. 543-11)9. Pa tloe, h'plc., pool. $155-l":t· d5hwMr. $225/mo. tJ9 to beach. call tn~O ct Cul--, • n v a o LARGE 2 BR, l'rpts, drp11. $l80 Call G.57--0302. Yearly·Bayfront \\·. Balboll Blvd. 1213) 673-()440 Ask for Bud. ;~ D~xt Av~ J:~; i I I I I If ·. ?~~~ nr Eslancia Ill M·hoo l. Older 2 sR crptl d~ hltn!I' 3 Lowly new unfurn. 11p15 694-1183. NICE nn., E11ldc CM;. Ru:,
5SS-831<1 sat 6' 51.ln. • • • • • • . f. prel. S135 61J..8I45 eve•. lndry' rooni • on Preml.H° J & 2 BR., 2 ba. each. Pl~~ Coro"• del #Mr frlvlL $65/month. 541967j
loach I :r I ~T 1 Br· Pooln. Ji.r lhopL $15;;/mo. 6 4 IJ . 6 961 or It slip. !itany ex1ru. Im.med. SPACIOUS 2 BR.· beti,-__. ·l p.m. 673-@19. P 0 W O H I " tll, no pet.I. ..., utll pd. 646--1246 ocC'upancy. • et'U' Pool So • r ii'IE'.I ROO~ for rent, mature ~ m1:. ~.=~ g:t I I I I' 1' N:, ~~~;•=70 to NEWLY decor 2 BR, 1~ ha Call; 67J.3663 maose Eves. SW~ .. Monih. Att~tt • ~ =':fe~ ~lnl·
_._ . _ . • $100. Nr. beach~• 'g. studio. J?vt p&tlo. Child ok, pe.tt; Broker 644-484 ,.._: 1 For -· 111 E ._"" -. no pets. sieo. 'DO Joun. ,. _ _. ..__. • QUIET • ....._, n. oorto 2 BR. Apt. Hup dtclt. • _,,.,, ""'"'· • 545--3621 or ~ ._.,1 ,.....,._ aenlaJ empl~ man. Ott
_....,, N U P E R I ~ Chotuigi1i-lp,''Shtwo1 2 BR. Mull>,~11. BAY SllilQPapac2 br/3 bl-111 b& Tl!£ f!:XCITINO 11• pu!<ll!I. 64&-l!!lll.
-
~3 llr;.!:i °"'an1.'" I I' I I ,. a good-looker bl/I rofuood to ~ 387 w. pool, cpt/drp, bltn, Jllnmd. PALM MISA AP'U. Hoi.11, Mot.It 410 ·~••· •, 1 _ Bay St .. CM. 6'6-0013. 1996 M l . N I ._, Qdld/pec. w m•rry 1n 8().yeer-old million-2 BR •-~ d -· 0o•if. e, ~· ••• Wl:S'J'Ct..D'lo. •2 bdrm. l~ MINUTES TO NPT. BOt. ,.,._.,..,, y ntn . Watetbl!dt. NU-V!IW RINTALS -olro. That pro-s•-'t Ind.. WI•-•· -•"· rpo, -...... o. 5" HH2'73 b& ............... bllolna,' pYt. FURN. OR UNF\lllN. "•~ " ... a I T O M p I R I pendent, ldeolistl<: ~;. -.· ,.,....,....., ·~· No pett. 1 BR. •Pl· •I ·-• .. ,i.;: adul" only ,,. peta. Unbeltevobly latte ""' , ~ ~. •w=.; = ~.IR ... DIN I I I I I I .,. 0 •--.... ~. ~--kl• ·-d $1t)/mo. •
1
. ttfria, S~/mo. See, nt w. Avall. Jan. l. $225 pr.r mo. '"" pool, Jacuz::J tlect bit· Trt.wl:-"::-, • \...OITI '" ~ SPACIOUS 2 Br. 2 &., nr. 18th St. No. A or call 548-153.1 Ins, 1hq crpta, d"rpt, Pl.ml ~"-"::=~:::;o.:::...;:.;c==~=I
IDiTT. STYL by 11111~ in the "''"'nl 'NOtd 11ehool11, lhott'I &: trwy1. No 646-6391 evea 01' wlmds. SF..ACLlFF Manor Apt 1 etc. AduJtt, no pm. Guest Hom' 4,S
2 Baths. BuUl·ln you dn.lop)rom t.tep No. belovt. pell. $l6Wmo. m-0134. 2 Dr 2 Bl crpt/dtps enel BR Sl 43 50 Pool ~I SlNCl.ES f'rom $150
htn. W/W Carpets. • PR\~T£s~UM$Qll~!£1~slt'lllt$ IN 11 I' Ii 1: I' r I NEAT/cle&n/crptd 1 BR. g 8 r Ip & i I o/yrd. ' $163. drpi, bltni. Rarb. d!spl. f~ ~ =~g~~· ~ !?: p~~;1n~ ~n~ .nu~~
.O.W. Arn $335 _Montn "' ~ _ . . • • _ • g~r. $1\6. Back Bay aria. 54&-0469 or S6-IH91 John. PlacentJa Ave. Arlt ahoul IJnfum Ap~ Aw1J Froro.~1~10 mealll. Com~te ca.re. Ph. MISSION RIAL TY • 280 O.lmor, 213-GE·l·9'!68. 2 BR, l \I BA. stud '·. oor dbcounl. Jt4.2682. 10 SIS LE:SS. .. ~-
* 4'Mnl * UNTSCO '0~8l,E .. ~,'!2v,1 um as I j I I I I I ~ ~~--··· "'' ~""' :l BR, new All BltnL See to $160/mo. SSll' W. Uth St, NEW 3 BR. 2 bath Duplex. You're riithl the)''rt IU)cter. VacandH ('t'lllt monert ftliflt
l BR. 2 BA. 2 S&oey. ~ Apprttlate. 1813 Vlola Pt, CM. 675-(IMI aft 5 pm. Cround Door. 211 !Std St. Pf1ctd! 1561 "Mest Dr. ~r bftuM, 1pt., *'°"
-vi.... s:m mo. lit SCltA"-' LITS ANSWERS IN c• ASSIFICATION 800 °"'' M.... A good -.....i 11 • ll!i<ld , .. 12'1!1/mo. Ytarty. ~!M tl bll<s !!Om N..._ Blvd.) .bOlfl .. etc. lhnt a Dolly p ' U!!\,lall. -~ ttn-lll4L _...;;.....;;...;.:,....;;...::.:;..;:..:....::..:.:====:..:....=,.....::..:.::..:....:.:;..;:.;..:..;.;...:=-=.:..:.._ • Wout ad rc•ul!A ... ti-lll veatmtnt:-1"-· S<ll ldl• lttnu •.• M•"'678 !411-118111 Cluatned Ad. MWm. I
• ..
'
..
I I
I
.!! DAILY PILOT
are worth training for
• TRAVEL
• ADVANCEMENT
• SEC URITY
AIRLINE
SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Learn l·IO\V You Can Qualify
Call 543-6655
610 E. 17th St., Santa Ana
ACCREDITED SCHOOL
dVa.liQna ~J.Od&JJiDn of
<J,.J • ..J 'J,"'-f ~
Business
Careers
SECRET ARIAL
Legal, Executive. Medical Secretary, Steno·
grapher, Clerk-Typist, Receptionist.
·ACCOUNTING
Bookkeeping, Accounting Clerk.
DATA PROCESSING
Keypunch, Keytape .
Day & Eveni ng C lasses
Approved For Vetei:_a ns
Free Pli!!-cement Assistance
Extended Po ym~nt Plons
541·2673
MTI BUSINESS COLLEGE
21 00 N. Main St., Santa Ana
Uuest Home 415 Office Rental
* P rivate Room * roe
Ambulatory Lady or ?\Ian
Good. nu1ritious Food.
~ice, cheerful atmosphere. * Call 5'13-4753 •
Rentall to Shire 430
Garages for Rent
S27 & UP. Incl ulil. Some
furniture avail. 2333 E.
Coos! Hv.)'., Crlhl Inquire
Suite 1-f. Ph. 639-8351 or
61:r5444.
Business Rentai1
• • •
•
• This variety of fine school& (-~-1 Schools and · could introduce
Instructions
you ~o a new tomorrow. c ..... n1, c-t!'-
For lurthr ••lonn lllo• r•gording th Daily Pilo4 PATIOS.PLANTEll,5 ~
Schools end ln1truction Directory. All Concre1e work. Bnar.
slumpstone wk. 8M-3:iJ3, CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 PATIOS, wal,lc,o, d"Yl~. Saw, '------------'"'!'-.---,' break, rc~mov .l replaCll
What is this child doing
that disturbs us? Nothing.
And that's disturbing.
It's a small world for this small guy.
Too young for public school, his world
Isn't much bigger than his yard.
So he runs out of things to do quickly.
Which means he learns about things slowly. Plly.
Because he could be attending one
of the finest pre-schools in the country.
Sunflower Early Achievement Center.
Where he would discover the world of
science, math, reading and creative arts.
(Not by force-fed Information. But
through discussions, acting, and other
interesting learning experiences.)
Chances are, he would even discover
the greatest th'ing of all. Himself.
Our school is open all year long.
So children aged 2 to 6 can be enrolled
anytime.
So drop by ••• if your child isn't
doing anything.
Sunflower Early Achievement Center
251 5 West Sunflower Avenue
Sanla Ana. California 92704
714 /540.,i750
A member of the U.S. Financial Group
•
READING
IMPROVEMENT
SERVICES
EXCELLENCE IN PRE-SCHOOL &
KINDERGARTEN EDUCATION
Individualized program
of instruction
Diagnostic testing
and Evaluation
Licensed
Educational Psychologist
Credentialed Teachers
27601 Forbes Rd .
Suite A
Laguna Niguel
830-2800
--
• Music e Science
• Sociol Growth
• Creativa Arts
• Literature
• Dey Cart Age1 2·9
e fvO, A Y2 Day
• Trained Staff
• State Licensed
HOURS 7:00-6:30
5th & M•rguerite
Corona ct.I Mar
I s1s.4022 I
Visitor• Welcome
·--
concrete. _yest. f
CtJSI'OM CE~ W0Jt1' Drives, WAU<S, paUo1.
Pool decks. Don. 64~14. :
CEMENT WOJ\K
R&nbl Mll('S, * 516-31 41 *
Contrector
JACK Taulane -Repa!r
ni.mod.. addit. 20 yn. ecp.
Uc'd. Mi Way C.o. M7-0l36.
El9Ctrlcel
ELECTRICAL I REPAm !/
RElo10DEL I ~ yrs, expet ..
lence. 645-62ll.
El.ECTRICIAN, 11=
bonded. Small jobol,
It ~pain. 5C.H2()3.
BOB'S GAROENDiG
& LANDSCAPING Only the Yoga Center cofnbll'lllS t he benefita of Residential It Commercial
the 2 amuina; systems (If YOOA. RAJA fbr the Irvine Industr!.al
mind. HATHA tor the body. RAJA YOGA, like Complexff, •
magic, helps you d<'velop your powers ot concenb'8.-557-.4299 alter 5pm.
tlon & awareness. HATHA Y~ helps to qu~ckly 11 -~P"R"o"'e°"LEM SOLVER ,
build a healthier, more vigorous body. Why not come Prof. gardener. Tree wor.k,
to the free demonstration & find out what Hatha & thinning, pruning. shaplfll.
Raja Yoga are all about. No obligation. Plan now to Cleanups. George, 646-589.1.
stop ln tomorrow. ,,_ detMnltre....._ tpmol'row, EXP. Hawaiian Cardenet,
WMltllllley et 10 a.m. & I p.m.~ wk. cl ..... •tart Complete garden 1 e r 'f •
ne.t WM .. Dec. 20 •t t :30 Lift. , 7 p.m. Kamala.rli, 64S-4676~1337.
YOGA CENRI
445 E. 17th St.
COit• M-.. '46-1211
Interested In •
A Real Estate Career?
IN ' FOUi( WEEKS
PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM
LICl!NSING PREPARl\TIONrOR
• Real Estlte SaleSlllell & Bl'llkers
• Employment Assistance For -"
Graduates With
Leaamg Brokers. •
• Day Alll EYeling Classes-
• Bruter Referral Program
• $110.fal Coarse ' For Information-Brochure
FrM Guest l.cturt
Newport, 325 No. (Old) Newport Bl..t.
548-1192
EDMOND F. JACKSON
'
Gener•I Services
UNORGANIZED! CI e a n
)'OW' garage', build shelves,
Household ~\ Haullrig.
Your Price! Ron 66«186
Soc 54&-4797.
CHRISTMAS light. not up!
Reach for the phone, Call
Handyman & lite up )'OJI"
home. 546-97?3.
Houllng
SKIPLOADER I: dump truclc
work. Concrero. ~
sawing, breaking .. ~nln
y ARO, garage cleanups.
Removc treu, dirt. ivY.
Drivewys, grading. 847--.
Houseclunlnt
Prof. Corpot CIHnl"I
Al.so windows ,it;-floor care.
Call Dutch 537·l!illt
HOUSE OF CLEAN
F'oor, windows, ttpt, walls,
J_ yn. in area. 642-6824. •
MESA Cleaning, c.arpe:ta.
' windows. noon. etc. ResldJ
romm'l. 557~42. 54Mlll.
Xlnt Houseclean!iw
By Day. Own Tranoportallon ............
DedlcotM CIHni,,.
*·WE 00 EVERYTHING' *
Reri1. F'rt!e est. &16-2839!
HAULING & cleanup by exp
college student, lge trk..
534-1846 or 53+-2164.
Maintenance
FLOAT MAINTENANCt
Paint & dry rot repair. '13
years (!Xperlen·ce •
543-2157 R.E. Whltlemo~ ....... _ Instruction
fiiKl Pointing A I t!!J p • .,. ........ 1 ...
1 ';;;;;;;;;;~~~1 :;~~--~~·~1 CUSTOM PAINTING I ~ InlerfD"ler. Unfum. inter. (!roe odsl 550 School• A •pee. price. ~ color con-
instructlons 575 lJl.llUng &: est. Uc. Ins. FOUND in Ba.ycrest area. \Von't be underbMI. ~
Male black &: tan Collie n1ix TENNIS rNSTRUCTION • No Wuting
dog approx <t-8 Ino. 548-7226 G~p or . lodiv. XI n t * WALLPAPER *
YNC male gray/wtlt c&l -Ouistmas lift. 5l&-9368. When you call "Mac"
Very friendly. Flea Collar. GUITAR & Bass Instuct.. by 54S-1444 646-lm
Vic: Llncoln High 64Hll39 ~I:ina,!~.M7_~~~· $3.50 L.M.B. PAINT. JNG-
BEAGL.E type fem., blk ool· 1 :; .. !·~~~~~!-!!~~~! AT YOUR SERVICE lar, vie. Garden Grove Blv.
& Golden West. 89'l-6284. . LAaWv~~L~~1926
MALE Beagl• found ;n [ · '" I~ College Park atta. 549-t338. S.... and......... PAINTING & PAPERJNG,
. . 19 yn. In Harbor area. Lie
~L"'o'"'------"-s ••••11111·~-1 :.Z.~""· R•I'• tum.
CHILD's pet collie, lge sable Ans~rlng Service'./ INT. &: E>cter. Accous. cell·
& white female, lost vie Eqvip./Mobile Phones lngB sprayed. Uc., Ins.
Baker & Bristol, C.M. Local refs. 645-0809, Chuck.
Would like lo ... OW' child *DIVERT·A-MATIC INT & EXT palnfuw, oai>er
happy again In time for LA LINES ONLY $55/MO hallging, natural woo d
Christmu. Please help. SA VE OVER $1500/YEAR finWilng 54&-7905.
Reward. 545-7497, Divert Calls Alter Hours 0 ~ Ung
'MAKO" Male German Shep To Any Pbone-$25.50/Mo PR li . Pain , al80 roofa,
'Mix. Narrow head, * MOBILE TEl.EPHONES ilCCOOI. eel.I. inter/cxter.
browntblck, white throat, Sl.251Day! :flU Channel Uc/Ins. Free est. 645-6191.
iost nr Falrvtew, betwn P'Il... Comm Systems 97'!t-U34 lNT &. Ext PQ.illtlng. ce~
Baker & Adams, CM, Babyslttl.-ap~. llntumlahed ~
5't5-321B Reward. l --''---·~.:..----1 pnce. 54&-7887 aft 6.
VllLL babysit hourly while APl'. Interior Paintlne. <tu'
you go shopping, Moo-Fri. pet shampoo, cleaning. Refs
Nr Harbor Hl 646-009'1. ,.',,"',,·.,.642-_1_,059,.-·,..,-~<"'"-,-I
14 year old high IJChool glrt Pl••ter, P .. ch, R.-Jr
will babysit while you do
S. A. Cntry Club area Fri
betwtt 12 & 5 PM female,
poodle/tenier, grey wtsm
blck streak M back. AM to
"Tasha". 540-9529 eves.
Ouistmas 1 hopp i ng . • PATCH PLASrERJNG
Roberta H>-0!18. All types. Free estimatll
Call "40-682S
Carpenter Plumbing
•
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I
J.
'
..
--·
"
''
,.
,. ' '·
n
•
•· '
~ •· -
:1.
·" ~ •.
-1.
·' ' 1;
t
·" ,• r,
' ' . ' . . . . . ..
•
r......,.-12,1m DAILY l'!LDT 25 .. ...... li"1;:•• J(IJJ t Ee'; t llIJJ I l!Ill [ l!Ill 1 ~ .:..[ _ ..... -· . ..:;;] ~~-,
Hole Wonted, M & , 710 Hole Wonted, M & I' 710 Help Wanlod, M a I' 711 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Halp W..,.od, M & F 710 Antlq-eoD Mlsctll•-•• 111 Muslc:ol ln1trument1 822 Pla,,.../Organ1 826 '
J[Il] I I ~ I tl ... , ........ r ,. ;s c •di& ....
AJJCT. Q.£RK -ln~ DENTAL ,A9:1ttant-l::Q'd, JOBS RMI l1tat• S11Jts Indian Tradttl • 1-low&rd PJilLCO Stl!'rro Coruponen1 KUSTOM 100 Amp. pad<k<J
posltN>n in Trust Audit MO-chaltaide. F/time. x:.n,y U1tCENTLY NEEDED FREE SECRETARY Cha.It • Olrlstophcr Cales for Sale. Many Outstllodlna Na~. Grttn sparkle,
t*i of F1nanclal Orpn1u.. certtficate req'd. MIS-9f15. e Secretaries Openlfl&I In Newport & SH.I ~M!llt a Ou1semu Sale of Values at Cost + 10%. Br.aut. ?.lwit a.et.' s:m.
tlon Mln 3 yrs. hullMl9 • Keypuneb ()pen.ton Beach or exPtr. aecrc-American Indian Jewelry. Prices starllrlli: at l69.915. Ml-tll84 DQn't buy any r izan un til
e)(p: Mils( have good lldlls D~pe_~~K : ~~~&~ Tvnllt LkenM Tr11Cnlnt tarleS~ ~A~~ 6• J~lh both daY!I Philco eok>r TV, 1 BSR A.MERI~ Ran d 11 1 a nd you cnn play! Noa-playf'n< ~.flal.tre' work .l t)'plns. • BLUE DOLPHIN e b'vloo-~ l -".-540-"'50 limlt_td Time Only Apply Jn Pen;on Zuni·NavaJo-Sanio Domingo <'~en k 8 t~k players. Trumpet w/au,e, V5ed only .,.,,tJ1"0me lo attmd tree v."Ol'k
; ~~ . 3356 vi. Udo, NB Anaheim m.lS22 Famous UCtlle coune now 1055 No. Main, s. A. Jewehy will be oUtred tor AlliO good 5clecUon or ro-1 iscbool year, $-W. Call aho1>11. For lntormallon
Apt/Condomlnum "Ii D I SH WASHER I u-NEVER A nx AT TEMPO av&Uable thru T~U Ccm· Rm. ~~C":.1~:~: 3 pm sale in quantU;y. Hollta,y trl~. MO:b a.t JO\"' .We 55i--7015. Cllntru.1 ~~1~2m85iretcrleb
Denloper1 Perienoed Appl.Y t6 "a.t 1Tftnpo T mponu")' Help IMUU'· Appllcan111 MJ.y re-N•tklMI Bank Inn, . Weatwq:ld, 10740 s:.,;;~ run::..~:::: JUST in liroo ror Christrnar.! Coast Music Service Newp:t Betlch butd equity befOl'I! 2 o'r after ~pm,_."Blhia lmbuntd upoo qua.Wlcation. Wlllhire Blvd. 6 blocks Easl or! 1'~~one Re~1v1..,, Sac. att-0nt!an, llkt' new. capital tlnn wtth many Carlnthlan y tbt Clllb 160! K~ $460 New ot experlebced aales Equa.l Oppar. Employer of the San Dlqo f'reeway. r.w "'t> t.20 bass. rnntello. Asking Newport Blvd. at Harbor
large projecU thfOUa:bol,rt a ... -1-Dr aCdM • ~~Wit &keeper $500 people. 0pelll.naa avJJlabJe. Suite 708. For2tnforma605tlon IRES. TONE STQRE $150. Pakl S300 &ID-?:i26. CD1ta. 1-leso the U.S. •require a a• ~-" ~ i500 Complet.e tralnlng prop-am. SECTY -~pt . .Accls pay call: 213-73 -S or BUY a Player Piano for
perlenced individual to Dry cl'Al}ing. Mature lady Le Secrttary $650 Future mabageme.nt oppor-Ir recv. Exp•a. lnterviewil SSS-1248. 4T5 E. 171h St., 0 1 Office\Fumiture/ Christmai. Dav i d T.
ORGAN HOBBY
eeenw~,J;f1'~ .!i.=t :iy. :~efive~~~: ~~t~1kr,, $3 ~ =· ~ Mr. Sloan at ~isn~ed, Frl l 0-1 2' SCM ... l .. A°""IM• LacceEptTedS HENntt=i: mp I et e Equip. 824 ~p~ D Grace La ..
ResJ>OMlbilltlet w l 11 ln-pe,y, fringe benern». 'Call Ac:fvtr11i:1lta Sec'y ~ TARBELL SERVI<:£ station attendaxlt, • bedroom .-1. cane head· A typewrl1er repairman has UPRIGHT Piwio for anl<'. • elude: 968-2843 Tltes thru Frt 2 to 't'yptl( SC25 part lime. Exper preI'd.. board (YelkJw) box spring late model elec tYJ>ewrlteN Pri $150 CaJI
• Sl~e &election A ac-8 pm. Malnl:enance man to $550 REALTORS Lowen Olborn Eneo ANSWERS & matt~. l'lt'arly new, & caJ.cula1on, like new, 646-~ o~l791 · .quW~!., 1 ...... 1.-6 . Bek Ofc".Medical $400 Service; 19001 Brookhurst, matching chest. ms. Lady reblt, guar. 847·9864 days; S 1 Good 830 . ,....~ p .... ..,.... pro-Fl'M a Fee Polltton1 R. E. SALES H.B. Second Whoop Prune Sdiwinn 3 sp. bicycle good aft 6, 536-0538. por1 ng • .~ environmental • n r,.,.....1c HEWPORT EarninP of moo or more SDlVJCE· Statton Attendant. lmport =. STUPID -1"'""100 ·64~781· 4Ampex stereo, SEC. chn $8-$23, "'OOd desks SKIS. Head standards. 150~1.
utilitlet requirement U.U.lftUn Pe,.....-..1 Agency per month ii euy the P/ttme eve. I: wknda. Lite amua Pi gossip: "She · 7 r.n-50. stor. cab $40. $67 W. Salomon bindlnp, s 2 o.
• Interim. A permane!rt TECffUll'llllt' ~ DOwr Dr.: N.IS, ~I: ws!f'Un,~= pe~ A~· J!~.al..!J?;. was a iOOd·looker but re· * AUCTION * 19th CM, Pierce, 642-3408. ROAA~nol Strato 170 11.1 ,
tinanclnc • nl""""1 6Q.3170 ..,16" --· wv n.ia ~ fused to marry an 8Q.year-Fine Furnlture marker bind ing!, $ 3 O . . e ArdUtectW'&l A builder I ~~~~ i:tl&b advtttisiDI Newport mvt1., C.M. old. millionaire. That prov~ le Appliances Plano1/°'91ns 826 548-7467
aelectXJn ,1 ouqget, !pt.ti ot floor time, SHAMPOO gtrt. -" assistant llhe s indepeD(fent. ideall1hc 1 c:=..,:c;::==-~-d""· -, --1.....:. ~h --11a1· L ... I S.C,..-tery borius pnwram_, monthly Full .t•-·~~ , -m· d ~mm.. AucHona Friday, 7:30 p.m. *PIANOS.£..nRGANS* SURFBOARDS -, No UlgS. ~ ....,.,. ~·0 ..,v .. , II"""''' · Electronic checkoutf &: trou· __.,_, in 11""' 11< ""' an ~•vr · Wi d 1 A t' B JI{.... P atrlllo Path 1''1nders· Rl'd Travel n!qU!red.. Salary tu. bit! &booting' of _R..;F •• test ~ BackP'oundCall "-alneExper, contesfl, m,,....._ ' SW'. mJalon A · Person • INTERIOR D'ECORATOR 1n y s uc ton arn Hammond,. Wurlltuir, m.any 6,7 .•. $40. \\'hire 7.7:.; $.W.
cd on quall.f1catlpnl & ex· eqW t ~ .....,,, Pfhl. Call. for am>'L Lou Hair West 3305 Newport e S..-ializt in Antiquea ms* Newport, CM 646-8686 otl¥lrs. Pre-season specials. ~7467 perlence. Write Clasaltled &: =~ia.nding of~~ WESTCLIFF Sana:eiinano. r BJvd., N.B.' Jteal-rprices 1IG 97S-2Sll SA Behind Tony's Bldg l'otal'l model close.outs. Pia.no &: -"'"-"'"-----~-Ad No. sn. % DaU PUot rtate DC & RF circuitry Pcnionnel Agency ' }.lirwln N•lty inc. . . . Organ rent:nls. ~foney sav· KASTLE !IOOW skis. ZIO's,
P .O. Box N0;. 1$60 O:>lta desirable. 2043 Weatclltl Dr., NB 968~ ,, , , (24 Hours) ...,..ANT· • II 802 Indian Jewelry Sale Ing bargains are here r i&:ht with Nl'v. Look ~!~~~s.
Mesa, caJU. 9"$17. MS-2770 · ~• "'Pf anc• . RWU!ing Bear Sllvenmtlth now at: Perice! l'Olll.I. $NO. ;io.,...,,,..:;
Call For Appt. * MACHINIST ,· ~eceptlonlst RES11AURANT ELECTROLUX tho wodd" RESERVATION PRICES Wallichs Music City 357 Magn,m, 6" ..,,,,I, A/RRefvab .. Cl•rk todustrial Relations _....1. Day or' nJabt, Full or pert finest vacuum cleaner. &:e ~Jtm~IA~JQi,~~ South Coast Plaza 54fl.2&1() target stk11. $15"., 30 Cal. ~1-1
10 Key adder. Ute type • Hone Operators Venlcle ttme. NO'rexper. nee., we -1~-~-1-!he all new automattc Carbine. $<i0. 644-6928. NIGUEL • Drlll pn!ll (B lnio. No typing, no S/H, nqn•w "• model, 12(6 w/ m:al 1252 N. Gta""'ll , *PIANOS.ORGANS Ptnonnel Agency (714) 4f4..9401 e Grindera ~ etc. Apply 1n person. Any For Experl.nced & rug washer :erdlrrienta~ &: Katella, ~· Hul"l')'. Goinc Out For B\Lilneu St:; Restaurant, 832
•. ~ Forbes, Rd. TELONIC • 2 ACW il S Olucken aft « ~"88 at 2930 West For a free home ~ call SHAG carpet, brown & gold, Beat quality • prices . serv. 1---------I
• t.apna Nil\Zd e P&J Oludcer Opera. Cout Hwy, NB. • ~~ ~ ~~ 50-4749, Appointments Day 35 liq )'dj. nee.rty new $2..SO wai-Steinway-Baldwin, ete. RESTAURANT Equip. Walk·
I Al-1477 ·INDUSTRIES • Hydnullc Aaaemblen 11,ECIPTIONIST u-.·.,.._ Bus --or eves .are made by our )'l. Foam pad 24 ,. yd&, Pla)'ff Planos & Rolls '" reaot>I" box 8'xto'.
• •. M"'!':!:"te'-~ .. ~~-Je ftJr ~t .cOtnple:x. Ex· .-q• bonded repnieentativel on a $6.00 Mink s_tol,e, ~utumn Rentals ...•.•. \Ye Buy-Sell Refrig. pie CUE' & otht'r
. LfllUM S.Kh Day ...... 1r.f;;A1 .. ~~t. perieftctd. Lite omce work Counter Girf:ar· • Dishwashm· no obl.Jgadon basis. Also, co. Haze Sl:iO. Girl s Brae, u Daily 10-6 Sun 12-5 misc equip. 675-1007 or
; ASSDfBI.ERS, = at Xlnt Fnna:~ ... ittneftta • ~· Part time. Fri e:xpmti!\g Im lQcal sales is. $15. M<r2591 aft 6 pm. FIELD'S PIANOS 494-3521. 409 28th St., N\\'PI . f.~t ~;i'sn i!tace11r:i:. Equal Oppor. Empl~r with OYertlme Sat •Sun, 11 to 7:)). $2.50 ~1.orbea:~ ~0~· 5thN fOl'tle -men &: women fn. POOL table, AMF, full lli2ie, Costa Mesa CTI4> 645-3250 Sch.
•• CM. . ELDERLY 'A.a.. ,..;f• ~in (No }>hone calls pleasel per t.>ur. tettSted, pleue contact us A-1 cond, $150. Woodsman BEAUTIFUL Italian Provin-
\ .._~ ... -• .._....,-~ Interview 2 to 5 pm dilly Ph, 546-0370 630 Newport Center Dr. at this address. 1229 \V. 5th 1 n d i an CY c I e '6 7 clal Hammorxl H-182 organ TV, Radio, Hi Fi, ~~·.iw,, ~ °' helper for lite hsekeeplng & ,Garrison Hydraulics, me. Santa An(l. (disassembled) reblt eng, for sa.Je by owner. \Viii eon-Sterk 836
• maintenance coup for simple cooking. car req'd. 2321 So. Pullman, Santa Ana Newport Beach 644-7804 12 cu FT Sears frosUess $150. E>i:ercbor '·S I Im sider trade on fine piano as -="-"------1
j. large complex in Cost& Room il board + $225 mo. 5 MACHINIST Restaurant refrlg. GOod eond. $100. or master", A-1, $15. 644-0420. down ~nt. 673-8605 ZENITH & RCA TV sa.14! at
'I · Mesa. 60-89'10 da.)' week. Call; 6'B-273C. Journeyman o~. Salary TONIO'S STOP! HERE IT IS ~~offer. 673-o819 01· STILL in box, Goldak metal * * UPRIGHT :PIANO, good ~'!~ Al?:,'!,~'.s ~~~
'a .. ._ EXPER'D cable TV un-open. Trm'lln Co., 1980 Lake An exciting new Uwry's GUYS & GALS locater. . Pwr edger & cond. UXJ, &ii after 6, AUTO SALESMAN dl!rgr'61.Jnd i nt ta 1 l er a St HB. 536-3621). A'societed Restaurlnt W Openfnp to traVel West-PHILCO WASHER & rotary mower. Will di&-9'1S-8798. ~~~:C~3be1;' ~~
Full ~-Tt --'~A-des!red. ~oomidered ..... :~ w•........,..... .. 0.,.. ti ern U.S. &: Hawaii. Jl.·Just .DRYER count all. Near new, sm. WANTED· Piano . ~ l or r...-~ me _,..,, 6 4 2 -3260. · Teteprompter. DUUU . .iw' ,,LU, _. • me, OPENING SOON be sin&le &: 1B·23. Assist In for sale bar size refr1&., used 10'' . · ·-.,mm ._.......... tube, 1 yr parts &: yr ~-· ~~~~ E qual opportunity t'ac~~34:ark. NeWpOrt 210 Newport Center Or. promotion & onl« dept. No * 546-7621 * . radial arm saw, 646-1455. ~~Pl.'!.ifrm.= up ;~:· ?a:o~ °!.u1:i:i~
c.tt or ~OTOi to employer.· ' . Fashion Island, N'pt 8,e:h ~2 \Vk training _~ CORNING .. Ware..-. .. shp 1n ·A-.b-'iLE HAIGH ORIGINAL PIANO Fmich Provine! I service on premises. ABC ' " TED'S · TORS -MAID_work.~ exchanp-for Seeks aram • .4.ll tranip. fum. range, brand new, still in oil ~nflng, srold tr&me, 1 • 1. C 1•1 C.C.lor TV 0021 Atlanta at ,. FACTORY apt. %376 Nwport Blvd', ·c .M. e w,,.,.._..,...~.,. Earn $1004150 wkly & up. shipping crate. $ 4 5 5. 24" x 36" "Fall" scene $125. 11P net, ilce new. a · • 968-3329
.-2>14 Harbor, Costa Mesa Ph. MIH755. e HO'STESSES3 Salary + honutea. See G. 675-5750. Wonderful Ch r Is t mas 6Th-0380 alt 6 pm. Magnolia, H.B. ·
•' . 645 664t MA INT EN ANCE Man, e BARTENDER Bluethman, Gasll&ht Motel, OVER 200 washers, dryers, present. 646-0818. THOMAS tranilstor. 2 key STEREO, deluxe 1973 Gar· TRAIUft~ exp'd, 2 dll;il a week, large e BUS BOYS 1777 Beach Blvd., Buena "'~ratnn from g.,9.95. WATERBEDS _ King SSS. boards&: foot pedals, •S380. l rard model, lal'i'! pro-
AUTOMOBU..E Lo •~• i.ft a: nu..J apt bldg complex. 84&-<1619 • KITCHEN PERSONNEL Park, lo-6 pm. Wed & TI1urs S45-0780. Super twin n r::. Complete )'I" old, like nu! 646-7654. fessional changer, Jen.'*n -Sa I esrna.n, Elcperienced, only ~ air suspension speakl!!'l'S, 220 MallagemeDt Opp Guaran-MANICURI81' ,for Newport Apply in Peraon · $80 l YR. guarn del & in· w/pedestai. ba!Ded mat· WURLITZER Mahogany Watt AM/FM Mp x
't;y Car ~·j Ra.1 h No Exptt. Necessary Beach Mens Hair Salon, ~fon.ttiru.Fri.llamto 3 pm, TAU. young man, no long stalL Late mod'. all cycle tl"esaes, linen & pads. Spinet. Beautltul f inish. receiver, tape deck. Brand .: wmiur;. Leul~. (~) VOLT M6-27J.6__ An equa,I opp>rtunity hair, living w/parenta. Full Kenmore washer. 83!r1778. 548-7467 $375. Call 54&-4338. new & guaranteed, MU left
-. 638-UlO (213) 7 U. Instant P•rtonMI MANAGEMENT trainee -'11ttilp1oytr time incl Sat & Sun. e DISHWASHERS, washers, PORTRAITS for Christmas, * SPINET PlANO, 1 year unclaimed. Now S 17 5.
-" u ' College grad, ambitious, ag. N~ FB!vdlsh MMl<N 8 et, 2800 dr.:, -bit, guam •-blk le wh. w/b'ames, $5. old, xlnt eond. $350. Terms. Credit d e pt . , • ~-~ ·me, ap-Tem(JOl'al'f Service aa1ary R.N. --~·· •• ~ ,... rr 32 hn. Ca'll between 10 3848 Ca.mpUS Dr., Suite 106 grtsdve. Starttrc >on W to ' · · de v'd. ~T620; 546-521.S. Pastel $10. Variety of frames * 53&ll82 * 893-0SOI.
• 6. Aok to< Sam 96Hl22 Newport =· $46-4741 :.:...• ~~ Don as· 3 ~ ~ ... ~.~-~ S:: TRAINEE OPENINGS =.~-,;!I,° ;n :.!,;P~ ~~:. 830-<5'2 Jane Jen. ••••••••••••••••••••
( , Kiin¥ nerDIJOR Equal . Employer MATURE pl, prr CM Ins. tol Conv Hospital 546-1966. We ~_tratn you to become Near new $125. 642-0022. TWIN u rollawl,Y bed, $3). ..
KAUI I Ul"l.M ~ ...... , 'C' .......... ,_ ........... ..__ Oftict, EJi:p. not ~. Fil· RN 3 -n, fUll .i~ Ii:......... a .. &D,;l, manager or one of Pr of Andirons $10 Port. • ~ .......uca, _.., w.•n::, ing/type .l ability to oom· ' .., ~.. _.., our 8)() tranches. A echedul· REFRIGERATOR, 5 .years a--1 t..--'ter · I 30,
a PART TIME 'f~ ~~ = =i: a mlllt. Days ~;:;~afretoa~ ;tvetra~~ ~~ ~.·~:mn! .. =.two ~ty~t~r tbl $15.
Gu.r ..... + Comrn. Inn, Jamboree Rd ., perience ln office rnanaee-DLX model Wblrlpool _~.,,;:-·-::,,,..--,..,,,~1 ... _ -•-· ui_,i ~~~~-6f4-,170l~( MElllCAL aectetary l re-RN all &hlfli:, f/timl ,JOJ, ment, budget oounae:ltng, washer & p!lildryer, $15. SlNGER 99K se wl'!i_S * ll'dlll or appt. eeptloniat Good typist. Padtica Hosp., 187:92 business prormtion and Sm. rebig. $1Gl 6'1l-4.369. machine attachments Jnoo
FRY Cook, exp4!r. only.Swing Exp'd only w/aome knowl• Delaware, H.B. M2-()61L personnel auP,erVi.skm. Ex· eluded $3). Murray trlC)'CI~
INuty s.&on sblh only. Start $2.SO per hr. edge 0( back oUice. Bu,,y S.&.s cellent employee benefits Furitlture 810 m. 96H329. --
• CXINYDll9IT -MWINO OU!OE FO" THE
CAL ON THE GO.
• 1 Cottqt O:ltte;? SOOp, 562 W. G. P . Htg Beach ILl'Ca. Representative needed for and regular salary in-FLUORESCENT FlxtUl"N, 19th,~. 847·25f't. Orana:e C.ounty territory. creases baaed on yoor ~ GdRGrous ~ oak Complete w/lamp from ~11 H.B. GRANDMontER can give MEDICAL Assist. 2 yrs min. 56 yr old company. Salary, lttU· table & six red velv~ chairs $4.95. Genl SUt"plws, 1'858
_ BOAT BUILDERS love&: playmates ~me expor. Front & back ore. commiuklns, OOnus.lother APPROVED FOR $499. Wrt iron/wood Superior, Costa Mesa. •
For •n ad In Wom•n'a Workl
Call Mary Betit 641-$671, axt :UO
Exper. vmatlle men needed day/nite. Meala: & gd care. 'TYll" 40 wpm. X-ray exper. fringe benefits. For appoint· Vmrana on ""! iob etiand@ller J?50-Gold/white FUU. barrel complete beer t· tor quality ..Uboat rna.nuf. EXJ>eT & i'ebs. M&-5469. pret. Ale 2540. F. Vly. ment call 642-7960 Mr. tralnlftl 1Mnef1ts. bureau & night stand $15. tapper system, refrig, OH
So Feminine! Best lnveslme111s
. ··C..-try,ptwnblno•eJoc. HOUSEKEEPER. lJve.ln. 96H669 Meyen, PACIFIC FINANCE 49Hl25. · """h. & -,,,..,._ lllO.
,-trlceJ ta)erit w/~ privalle ~ TV, $.100 ~r MEN for early AM SAID Clerb & Cashien, 17'7'8 Newport Blvd. STORE fixtures for sale, Ted 548-7988, ~
-aapebllltJ; mo .• IOUl.e English prerd. newspaper dellYttY to ,~Apply in a.ta Mesa stS-2233 wall ftxturu, R0?1d4?las, & A'°""'T"T'"'N"""', "'c*"o'°II'"'•"'c"t°'o"'r"'•"'I
Weltlall CorporatJon 962--4283 homes In N'pt Beach. $250 · · Auto Partll, F.qua1 Opp:&: twdty E:mptoye:r other misc. store ~ Christmas Pla tea, lit F.cM. 1826 ,JJ!aeentla Aw., CM H 0 u SEKEEPER/Compen-mo. (part tlme). L.A. • . St., C.X ~ Store sign (p~ption), Hons ,·
60-3981 k>n.. Muit drive. No smok· Times. &o-4800. ,645-Q4, ' WAJTRESSES, FUlJ & 3127 E. Coost Hwy, CdM, Many kinda. 530-7'86
BOB'S Exxon, part ttme help tni. CaJ1 962-52M. MOTEL maid, Mo D ..,yr l . p/Urne. apply, C ol 0 n y 673-8UO POOL -Tables _ Fftlaht
; """""· 3Dll Newport Blvd, HOUSEKEEPER, IM! In, S Prefer .,..,... ~ 0 n • SECRET ARIES K 11 c h • n , San Juan Whtt. Vinyl dam...,J. All "'· 149 m > ~ Mesa. day wk. · Mon-Fri. Own Laguna Beach. • Capistrano, 2714.2 Ortega Couch, 7 Ft. · S 1 9 9 . C h r I s t ma 1
,_-r.-~ .. -~-:_n .. Na· tram., Udo Isle, 675-824& NATIONAL co. opening local The lrvlM Company Hwy. $50. * 642-0022 Lay-A-Way. 6J9..8623. ......,-., ......., ur-..... ~ HOUSEWORK -part ttme branch olficeii In Mlaskm WAITRESSES (2) MeJ,lcan WET BAR>Won on TV. B~BURY Seascape $250.
Uonal Pub. Co. has opentng · M thru Fri Viejo-Dana Pt. area neecb H · !Dr 2 food alao 1 Holte-.' Ex;p'd. Valued at $450. Best OflB ~Rare Etchingll; Goya $225, for 7 yoona people tree to moS40rrungOwns, on~ ... .,.... • 2 men & 2 women willing to as 0 P e n 1 n g ,,._.. n. Apply -•-·t •• 7 -74 Dall 1195, Pl--175. PvL traW'I U.S. &: abroad with · car. ,,.......,,,..,.. learn our buAlnela. Refs u aectetaJies: v•... .;w.u ~ O"t. -.,J .... ....,..
:r. wUque bullnea group. No JNHALAnON TEOINJCIAM to inteartt1 & rupons. ne«f.. Hwy, CdM. , ***Sofa a: matching Jove pcy, ~-
-exp nee. Exp. paid training Da,ys;/PM's full t I m e . ed. Call 5C-4J.53, Construction Sfteretery WAITRESS-Dinner hou9e' ex-seat never used. Both $160. 55 GAL. Aquarium. Complete
program. Transp: furn . Pttaonnel dept, Ho a 1 o1 Wltb min. 3 yra exper. worl<· perlence pref. MUii be ovtr u.UUy home, 968--7910. aet-up. Omate stand, filter,
Above avt:n,g'l'! earning. H08pitaJ,Newport Beach. : tfrlSim ~~ w~';, : J.nr: w/archltect.B, project 21. Apply 1n pef'90n only, 84.l MAPLE table no-mar top le air, beater, plant&, rocb,
Must ho able to lea,. Im· l.w"'ECTOR 'tt mid ~-end ol "-• pro le-ct W. 19th SL, C.M. 4 -•·•-_;, nditlon. $30' aand. $69. 54&-7461
red. For interview call; "at"' 51 er ~· -rnanapn, typing 10 w.p.m., w~ exper. Coffee ~;;·:;;;; f ' KITCHEN cab In et 1 a 1 ~1 523--3SZ3 10-5:30. Boat Aaaembly A: Gel-Coat. Jan. Refa. Ml'r'l'm. sh 90 w.p.m. ~. A in penion, 1:3(). _...... 7, tonnlca counter Io pa .
.,. CLERK TYPIST ~us lnlpecUon exper &: NEED older woman com· Financial S.Cretary 4 pm , 2633 w. Cout. WHlTE vinyl ~-....:\1, Harden EnterprlseJJ, 815 w.
I" tl'.'hable. Apply In penon, panion, Llve in, for elderly With min 2 )'I'S exper. Ac-Hwy N B rood condition $50, 817-4081. 1Bth St CM 642-2842
Old line co. hu ope:n~_(or MacGregor Yachts, 1631 .,.,'Oman. Ute duties. F~V. curate 7o w.p.m. typing ·• 'M:: , MATCHING velvet aofas, ., · · ·
flharp Kai w/good i:e"in Placentia, CM. 962--0173 (heavy statistical), 8 h \VHO WAN·rs TO WORK . form.lea table Ir. chairs & METAL 3 drawer office
..t. akllls.....Creat ben4!llts &: ~ PBX 1 helpful but not necessary. DRIVE A CAB! mile. 675-7942 after 6 pm. desk, $50. 138 E. 18th .&\·•
, chance to advance. ary I I •-y· it.:~ Excellent rompany benefits CHOOSE your hours, work C.M • . ~ $476. • Call Jan Pa Ke, ·· nsp rn-v teW ~ 4 worki conditions for yoonelf, be your own MATCHING maple table, 6 548-4485
.,. ~ Coastal Penonnel ~ PER,SONNEl Fee Paid c:fl 644--3319. boss Men or women. Can be chrl, and buffet. $55. Stereb 121d8 Bid&: ~fust move• !. Aaency, 2790 Harbor BIVd., C'CD\~('......,rc1tt.V"'V Gorgeous ofc caterblg to n-I 012 slightly handicapped. Vts, AM/FM $25. s.1&-97U'l Wbod consl wired crptd.
Cld. .;JUV~-,.,.,.,.;;.i.,._1 wealthy client& seek• at. P9tw"n •m • pm retired. Age 21 to 70, aup-BDRM aet, dble bed, box Cost $2400,' Now 's 4 7 5 '.
·" ,•
I'
'•
-., ;
Coco's
LAGUNA HILLS
Ho• I mmodlate Oponinl l'or
WAITRESS
Evening Shift
Sales Manqer to $1ll<: tractive recepUonilt. Fun plement )'OtJlglncome. Drive SPfl A: matt. 2 nlte stands,._83Hrn""';f,-;';i';u-,;;::;;--;;:::=illil rteld Servtce Rep to SlOK poaltlon for friendly lndlv. c-...__ Sales a cab 6 hn CC' more a day. Good cond S30 642--0280 Jt: Sain Order Deak to $900 Call Ktm, 833-7100. AJso Fee ....,.,.. ••-1 • Apply in penon, Yellow Cab . ' . HEIRLOOM Gius Boxeis
Atxwe require knowledae Jobs. Dennis .t Dennis Per-Min. 2 yn exper. Very good Co., 186 !:. 16th St., Co&ta. HEAVY glass top coffee mfa to you. Made to order.
of tndUl/comrn'I adhesives aonnel A&tncY ot Irvine, lYPlna akUla. Sb Jll"tfd. not Mesa. table, with KOkt leaf bue. Lowest Prices. Wett Cout ~~~P ~ !~ $800= Dl2 MictM"J.:>n Dr. =~c::.. ~ WOMAN or man from Jan. 1, $15. S.29'J4. Wood SpecialUel, 893-1512.
/Gen'I oW.. to PEOPLE GREETER. Qpportwtll>' Employer. •teady lob wrapping small SOFA bod, bunk bod, doubt• 44 Sq. yd&, gold nylo" Hy-Lo -packages and maintainlng bed, dreuet. cbab's, refrig. carpel Xlnt cond. Call ~r~c-;dyi ~e (S&t. SMO Ladles, part'"1:hne daUy, 10 SECRETARY with recent ~ Some Polish or 64~7670 aft 5. 540-4032 aft U:~.
Girl J'tki•"/sh to $550 Ul 1 No weekends. No sell· life A: disabWty insurance C2:iecboAlovU knowlegc 1n COUCH &: 2 chairs, good oon. ANXIOUS to sell Newport.
A/P, I~ Control S460 ing. Xlnt wqet. Central uperience fer 4 day wk. l'Wilnl ~ axne typtr:w dition, SIS. Beach T e nn Is Club CI~ Typlatl'Pu:rchue StfiO Oran&e Co. areL Interviews ~~de~~· n e c e SSIU'7· Dependable, Call 54g...1569 Membership. 840-0510.
Prod. Control Clerk $460 dally, Mr. Wood, ll:J6t 547~ ne111. Lacuna Be a c h , '•welry 115 CARPET 1a)'et' hu Sbap .l l\.1ed Frnt/BCk Ole $450_ up Woodruff Ave., Downcf· 494-3'm 9 am or 7~ pm. JU.Lows, WW tell at cost
Dictapbone_,°!'U~-to S425 PIANO Plsyer A: Drummer. SECRETARY WOMAN oYft' 35 for kitchen WEODING BELLS... pl1111abor. MHl.82
) I
I 9164
SIZES 8-18
Fi~re Cllh(~{'[;. YJ5 Apply ln pet'IOll, Cam>l'.s TO &: counter work. Days. Con-Won't be rin&ing tor me Ir DESIGNER. Raa@dy Ann N'
-· 24001 ~! ~P~~llota 488 E. 1~j~inc) Bar, 810 w. 19th st., CM. SUPERINTENDANT tact Qrll or Qeorae. my Kal, so must 1el.1 beauL Anclv's Giant size. 4' tall
Lacuna Hllll OF SCHOOLS 8'7-3894. "' carat diamond nng, Hll $1S. 642-'a. Soh and feminine $ilhou·
In, 11f .,.i_ 11T ... -r ...
<At the El TOJO off ramp. ~ PLUMBER Top exec. '11«.'Y skllla. Prior &: •rera wt'ddlna' ban4', O'KEEFE and Men1tt dlah. ette a.s a result of arched
S.O . .freewty) JANFI'ORS--Part time offioe Expc!r. In all ph~~• of llChool dllt. o!e. ax.per. c.Je.. I~ white/yellow Sold. Save ST5. washer. Good oondlUon. $75. teams. Gives you a 1.;;;;;,.;;;;;;,,;.~°"!~~Uclelllllngl .w!I, L 8 Ii!! n a plumbt"tl El Toro. slrable. Attendance at ntcht • ta Illa ftrt.. CM.ve bill of sale & ~-633-9* ancr 5. deliciously lree, OoaUng f~l-
COOK & kllchen 1-lelper . iguel & Mlssk>n vlejo IGUEL -'d, Gil .. "" . V antee of quality from loC:fl.1 . 1..,. Sew thls trendsetter Meaa Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 ateas, HuB'b & wife team board mee '"~-· """""' jtwelm>. Asking $2!5, GRAY Persian Limb toAt, ;:t.1 Ctnter St. 04.. 5'&-558$.. O.K., c~ A: phone a tnu1L P•r...-1 Af•ncy w.p.m. typlnc . ..-.-, range '?'he)"re really very hand· W/lf83 mink cOl!ar S/~ Printed PJttern 9164: NEW
l-Betwn Tam &. spm. c.n ~. ~ l'orbea Rd. fl35.$898. Applicatloa dead· ......... 800 tome rings & a good buy. length, perr. cond. ~. Mlslli'!l' Sizes 8, 10. 12, 14, 16,
, OOUNTER Gltl . P / Hille JANITORS .. Part time of· ~,~.1Ni,uet li ne 12/Jt/'12, Se'bd ttl\lme ~ 546-5710 eves & wkend11 for DRUM set, metal bunk beds, 1SI Size 12 (bUlt 341 takct
I , must be relia~ wui nee clc~.' f\ll"A, husb A: """',_,..--•477 .. ..,..,..., 10 claalfted ad no . 553 ~o ANTIQUE Vktorian chair. app't. NO CHECKS • CASH belly bo8td, ant19ue trunk 2 &/g yards "5-ioch fabric.
.::.. -·· ~"· btwn 8 am •10 wife 1eam Ok.'-~z:..~ .. phone Dally PUo~ P. o. SOX ' ~lnet desk. Dtnlnar tm Met, ONLY. + much morel 5.~156. ·
UlUllo 'T • Ult. Call ~ COllta Mesa. Ca. 6 ctn. hutch It table, I n .,..... ' 1'iE\IENlf·1"1V!: CF.NTS ~ Am. VNTft~ CLUB 1 m · ---------\ •,..!!!!1!!!!1•'""!11!!!"'!'!'111! mo.hoc 6: a.ntJQue white. 0ry TURQUOISE JEWE'""":~ Nl:JM\. new, fltm box 11orill2 tor each pattem _ add z -DONtrrS. :mto Santa Ana JANtTORIAL help needed, POLICEMAN SECRETARIES ~Ink eust m•de, Gone with Cerld~ IndlM. tome old & mattresa. $50. 138 E." 18tr\ l'Cnts for ~•ch pattern for J . experience .. ~ PartCall ~ S.lery $172 .. $1071 Iha Wlnd lamp, 1.ntique oak pawn • 9Cfuuhct, brae'f'l<"ts, C.M, M&-4485. Afr Mail and Special Hand)· ~ 38 manqe 30 nlte ~wk ... ...,. L&lera.l entry only. l:iela:ht * 1 OOO/o FREE * cht1t, •mall. 6 Pc silver bllhl, f et I ah e" etc. Ml1e.tl1neeus I~; otherwbe thtrd-clUR
u:nlta. Of, apt + sallr)>, •1 cr 4:sc:M, 9'79-~. m!n. 5'8". .POST: Buie. LLt ~nder' Aceney cuter Id, &nUqoe china, WhoJes&1e prlCK. 6200 w. WantM 120 deltvft'Y wtU take lhrff 530:-Sm or W : 3$WS88. JANITOR. mablre. Mesa PruenUy employed Calif. COO Cun 1 Dr litwr & kic--a·brac. SCS.9?60 Cit. Hwy, N.B. MH317. weekt or more. Send 10
CREDIT CHE'CKER ' V.,,,. Conv. 11•'!'·-.J!! P.O. Apply before o.c. lltl1, 5<6-M N::pori B<ach PAINTINGS, prtv coDectlon. WANTED ' Lad~• o Id PRIVATE PARTY WANTS Morlan Martin. the DAILY
Exper prol'd Coot> Mell Center St, CM. -Pml Dept., (Inlier). Early Calli. Prominent 19th ._ diamond wrls1 TO BUY PIANO FOR PILOl', 442. PaHttn °'J:" C i 1 l l . t betwn f am 11: lp!!. .10200 Slatft' Ave, Fount&Jn SOCRET.\RY I ~ A 20th Coentury Ame11can watch A pocket watch. CASH 232 Welt Utb St., tw _., area. a co ec JUNIOR Salemen: lQ.15. Va.Uq. Fot 4 girt oftioe. Math Arttsm.Ala>lm.portant S•ml • m..ms York. N.Y. 1011 . Print ~· Eam -P"' -~II"· ~"""!-~ of~ ""'°" bloctc prtnto, ....US. FOR Sal., -"'· •P. Bongo or INi'lnce board :~JO:::Ss~ • DELIVERY ol DA I t. y Un1 new etlllornas fdr tbt POWER ~ Mldllne bull -1t-, U am to 5. 15th, 18th. 11th. ~ $t'Ol; aell a:«:». * Call 87'5-5750 * NuMll:a. • ~ PILOT, SONDA~LY~ DAILY PILOT. Thll Ii not a ()porotor. I'm-I\ Montwla 3020 °':ewPQrt"Bt..s, N.a J::\".,;,..,._ ':pens.vu~!""" 48'1-1231. alt 6:30. Mullcol l..-ti ffi SEE MORE Q u I ck ~!l" r a -·ilon -roull an! -Av.,CM. &15-7447. 675-:mtll • · Moch-... 116 FuhloN IU1d chooo!e one "'"'""' me \lit o .,.,. not ltlcludC'l colJfcttrw or OAK clu1 (fl rocld chr ,._, ' -.. ; Waaon ot Van. Contact Mr. dellvtrlna. Transp0t18.tlon ii SE'CRETARY/Aulgt.nt to t11t1..-e aU xJnf. Oak':.,~: BlAJE brocade t.IWson 2-GUITARS-Guild & Lyl• i-..!!,~..SU~ ~. ~ t'· II~ Seelty, 330 West 8Jl' provided We work tour Radlolo&V director or , S&les , A twtn J,;ii bcdll, brall crib,. cuahlon quilted aora. Good REASONABLE PrlCP. 2fif~ !'>(le,
St., Cloata Me8tl· hours aricr achoo! and I on NUct.EAR Med. Tech. fl.Ill r-!Rrlt:etb:lr" SIH. M.ust._ baa"'bl•t:yp. chn. nlte ~and, bevtJed cond. Mlr3tn 644.1344 IN-A -~a BOOK f• DENTAL fu'\,JnL Ex.p'd In 8'~· We hive~ or part tltnf_ ill expanding ll1i • ""' • -to l B . .,, .,.,," .. , x.-... I: oral .vacuatlon lor FoUntaln Ve.Jley -& 'SouTlJ deot Prect cxpcrlcnca. IWUme reipc:mSlblllty. This mirror.1 mpcu1-. e 1 o ~ Mltetll•MOut 118 BARITONE S-a x o Phone. illf:1! today, wtkr tomonow. ~ ' nun11Mfl{on Beach are•• °"' Penionnel Dept. Hoa.a: 1~08· m a CRft!fl" posit.kin Salary wholesale, • • I e • m en t ~"vtrett Scheffer/by Bullet. fl. ~ • ly. You n1u1t be out of pltAI, Newport Besch. comme nt. w'texp . sampltl. 8y aept.e.TS1'1. SAC'R.lnCE belll.lt Aulurnn Excel. Ask'g $325. 842--l<m INSfANT FASHION
.'
OENTAL-OrthodortUc RMllt, ~ by 3 PM to Vacanclts COit rrumt)l'l &nt 71 .... 979-(l660. CASJI Re£lcl'r NCR, vtry Hue mink stole. $150. SELMER MIU'k V1 E nlit BOOK -liundted.1 of
Mai 20-40. Exp'd. M-9235 ~~te. li:x'Ptrltnc&J yoor h:Nlilt, 1,pt., ctore Vaeandea COil money! ]\lnt rat'1. F.arly _1000. Mlnt cord. Perfcd. C'Ond. 5.11~. alto Sax w/a..r. Paid ~. lashJoi. flCtl. ll.
c.tll 8-8 pm. ~n Pr Io t It 1 • hide., etc. thru 11 Dalli Piiot )'OUl' ~. apt., at.on SZI&. 673..-n NEED CASH • $1500 grey Sell for S-00. $t6.5147. Need 1 "Pad"T Plaoe an ad?
Dt'ligbl l]Jd and llOO
doubly with warm. matching
~"· INST ANT CROCHET with
or without s~ Uae knll·
ting V.'01'5!1?'d, big hook. Open
s:hell~Utch pattern Is V'l'.ry
easy. Pattern 7185: men·11;
sizt'1 36-42, boy'• .f-14 Jn·
eluded.
SEVENTY·nvl: CEXT8
ror l!ach patttrn -add 25
cents for Heh pe,~ for
Air Mall and Speclal Randi·
Ing; othlrwtee thltd-cJ1111a
dallYfty will take tbree
weeks or more, Stnd to
Allee Brooks, tM DAILY
PD..()"I', 105. Netdleo-aft
Dept, no. 163, Old Cheltea
Star.on. New York. N.Y.
10011. Prtnt Name.' A~.
Ztp, Plltlenl Nmnber.
N EED L Eat.AM' 'T.!!
Crochtt. kntl. etc. Frt_.e
dlrecdonll, "°'· (flllWtt MM:rame llaot.
Buk, fancy knot.I. pal·
leml. n.oo.
lutul Crocltet Boot -
LHrn by pictures! Pat· t~. $1.CO.
OC1t11p1eW1 IAltPt Otn 9ook • more than 100 llfts -
SJ,()(),
C'ompkm Att)wl Booac -
11.00.
18 Jiffy Hllf boot• • SOc. IJ.c'M)k ttf ll Prt.e ..,..,... ...
50<.
QulH Rnet J -18 D&fb!irnt.
00,,,
MUHUm Q\111t Beet t •
SOc.
Qullta for 1'eda.1'• u.bti -
15 beautlful pe.ttm& S>c. D.fttal Attlttant Cla.iained Ad. Sell ldle Items ~etc. thnl a Dally Pilot A SoOd wut ad II a aood Jb. ""=' ldJ tot $400, Att Fut mults 3 1 phone C&ll ~ '• fewport B<ldl '64&-D Netd a "!j!d"! Place an afll .-1 C.U S!M!l!jNowl l1td M. -· 1, . ,call=''-'"'1'=-· ===--------------
'
OAllY PllOT·
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·540·9100
Open Eves. & Sunday .
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7
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•• •
•
•
I Today's Ft.al San Cle1nenie
~apistrano EDITION ' N.Y. Stoeks
VOl. 65, NO. 347, 5 SECTIONS. 60 PAGES ORAN<* COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1972 TEN CENTS
C,lemente '. ·Meets Tonight on Parking Crisis
~ of San Clemeilte'• business
• COlllli1UDlty, city -andr trolllc-
pattiog · coinmisalonerS. wW meet in
council eUmbers tonilht to begln .a new
quest for a solutioq to San Clemente's
conunei'claf parking -·· . But thus far DO one seems to be able to
P.redict the "outcome, of tooi&bt's 7:30
o'clock sessicil. , ·
Ccuadlniell ordUed the meetlog at Ille
end of a leQlllU' ahd olteo Dery debate
Iasr week: aS DuSinessmen to the man op-
P01M p1ma lo 1«kurb par1o of El
Camino Real. •
the laaue 111 tbe extent of San
Cleo>ente's offlclal commitment to the
TOPJCS tralfic safety study which
quallfles lhe city for federal gtsnts for
projects such as slgoal mOclemization
and lel~tum pockets.
~alt'~iat=. ~ not what
The lell•tum pocbll along El Camino,
baye caused the lou!lesl howl and too
•
petition signatures. the first spot pcopooed for lhe·red curbs,
In .oroer to l!Uitall the pockets which the llr<!tch bet_. the Greybouhd bus
cause fewer slowdowns and accidents, stations and Avenida CabriDo.
the curbs .near the intersections would "I really don't know what to expect as
bave to be posted oo i::.:;~· . lar as a turnout for tbe meeting;• City
And that, insist the essmen, would . Manager Kenneth Carr "1.d earlier th1J
seriously hurt downtown business. week. • e
Mayor Arthur Holmes told the Such meetlnp In recent moolhs bave
merchants last week that he bopes they been marked by ~ed oolnp(aiats and
all will join In a new citizen's committee general -ol Ille jlfOlllems ol
and meet with officials tonlght lo stsrt a finding suitable llJlllCOll for ""-area
-for sullable ol!-Btreet parking in parkirig Iola. ·
•
. And such cltizem . committees·. have
sprung up before in past years, but the
out.come has remained, the aame.
l>arking .districts have failed in the
past, say some parking co'mmisiioners,
because absentee busi.Dess owners would
not endorse added eXpeoses.
'Ibo city bas · sleijlfils!)i maintained
that, tupayers 1n geperal ahould not bear
the costs !or tbe business meters.
·As. the 'issUe stan<&_,at Preseftt, yet
another parking district wiU be coo-
sidered. and the TOPICS plans being
drafted by a Pomona consulting firm will
be completed for the proposed stretch of
El Crunino.
But the desi gns for the controversial
tr&ffic. changes will sit on a shelf in-
definitely -until the city and the angry
business community can find, in lbe
mayor's words, a "workable and
satisfactory method of alternate park· " " 11\g .
n 1vver _os:,es en er
C-e-cal.d ·T·t·tonlght
Growers Escape
Freeze Disaster
De!pite dipo of l1ienn9meten In c!trus
groves in Oraoge County to the llMtgree
mark early· IQ!lay, no ma~< damage to
onng~ or lemons was reported. 1be
CQ)d wave ia forecast to cqntlrme.
leemeth · Rice, spokesman for the
li:vlne Valeocia G~n .. Aaaoclallon,
!.id helow·lreezini marks were reeor<led
aol)' ID 11\t lower elevllliom Md.for -. . .
ellOIJi)> periods of time to bave minimiz·
ed crop damage. .
Bill]Balhgate, a citrus rancher near
San uan Capiat1'8no, also logged 26
degree temperatures ~ before dawn
toda~. Smudi•· pots and wiod machine$
saved hil•grova, he said.
. 'Ibo National ll;ealher Serviee's Fruit
Fi'Oli f~ul!"' --·.,.i early Wedo
,_,!ML.Iii ..... ~ wlll -... · ~•f€dl•, • diud ••·apeet.ed
··-ilo 111o-.....-1n11e lo s. Jym Cltlll*• _,· .,.._ ....
Councilman
To Stay On
San JUID Capistrano City Councilman
James Weatben -coov~ of usault
char;el late last 'Weelt -retained his
seat on the counctl.Monday after .City At-
torney JllDK OUW1 ruled the local
buSlneam•n's -sentence c:omtituted a
mlldemeonor.
TIM! actJoo cime at the belinnlnC of
the cttY eotJncll meeting and after a
wtet!nd of midi' hythe city attorney.
Otafakl aid that after comultinc with
.......i opeci•liftl In crlmtDal law be
determined • lhat . WeaU.0,. technically
..U I-gulllJ of a 1eJoot charge In the lnddirit iDVolvtng • loaded ~ and
shertll'1 -ties. But, the ta..,... added, the aentence -
~ to "'"' -tbs· wwtb of weekebda ln eoon'1 jail and three yoan' probltkm~ wu a""'JJ:ilBderneanor aentmce.
'lWltb ~ mhiil, I~b1Ve.-hHn 1<b
vl!ed that Jlr; Wealjlera can locally r ..
tsln hla poilllon," Okazaki said.
Wealllen, who bad Mini -dur· Ing the court proceodlngs from ltuow city
councilmen and city staff members,
ent.ered a plea of guilty to a charge of
asallll with a deadly weapon ai.mmtng
from a family dlspole early last IUDllll•r.
dimqe . .
1'boiie .i-, Ille Nali<llal Weather
-Aid toda7, .... noi upected to drop rain llq the Oraoge Coiit but will
result in~"°°'* flurriel1 in the mountain
areas of SOutbem California above the
3,000.fool maik.
The coatlnuing f...ty weolher along
the Orange c.oa.t ~ residents ol
San Juan Caplatrono who left Monday
night's City Couocil meeting to find their
cars coa~ frost. Lacuna raidents,.smne as close
as 300 yanls to .the ocean, reported
flOlll<d car roola esrty today and
Newport Beach .drtftn discoftred coats
of toe on windlllleldl at daybreak.
Winds below· caeyms spared many in·
land CCMmly residmts' gardeoa from frost
damage and contributed to the minimal
damage most citrus growers reported to-
da>1-. .
Either wind or cloud cover can keep
temperatures from hovering below freez·
Ing. Four houri of below 3%-<legree
,...!her can damage fruit. ''But If it goes
down to lll, it doesn't .take long to kill a
crop," Rice noted.
* * * . -
Cold Nips Sta re
Crops; Damage
Not Yet Known · Sheriff'• deputies said. they -the c:otmc!lman at blame after..lle ..,_ -· .• • peared wllh a loaded 1hotp1111nd relused SACl\A:MENTO (AP) -Umea!Olllll
to iumnder the weopoo. cold Im nlpped aeveral Callfomts fond
(. •·.
Two Nude Bodies
F ountl..:. Victim s
•
·Of Naroo Traffic?
ROSEVILLE (AP) -'Ibo nude bodies
o1 two )'Ollll(.iooo hive -unartbed•
llOl1" ~. El .Dorado County SberUf
Jlemle car1son (eported today.
. 'Ibo -..., 1ao .. beeo munlel'<d
In coonetllOn Wiiia UJe norcotics traffic,
· he aald. , eari..a llld the •llollta were fGund In
abelow ........ ~ by -side, aloog
Lunman Rold oear the hamlet of
RllCUI, northeut of Sacrameato. An autopl)' ,,.. bellil conduded 1 n Placemlle. . .
Tba two ._.i to be In lhslr',•,
Carlaoo aid; but Olhirwlle then -no ~Uflcallon.
He aid then lllllJ' be • !ti< --Iha bodltl and two -of -ed men's~ found In a..,._
suburb Mondly. '
The clotbbw Included 1 bea'Y -.iit>-
ed Jacltet and a wal1t ·l••1.th
windbreaker outhorltlal 11id.
William ¥Wei:. • spokesman (or tbe
(S.0 BODIES, hp J)
~ .,
. crops, the Department of Food and
,&grkulture oald today, b6t the extent of
the damage could DOI be immediately ....-.
Oranrea . have dellnltely beeo hurt, meinlnl :bat prices "will go up, a
&pot...,.. •id. Early reporta from the
field 111 that quality will go down, and
..... of the crop "Nill be lost:
The. worst citru1 damage will probably.
be in Fresno, Kem and Tulare COUntles,
where ~ ol lhe -ls growo ancj where llie ~ ldt llO. clegr<t!ll •over
the ftekend, lhe IPO!<ei!mln 11id..8ut it.
takes tn or three ,CM;f to detetmlfie• the
acilllll domqe In plan! cells.
Tem~im. lllinlt to 17 ·del?.eea In
5a"""""1to and san Joaquin. Counties,
and bit 17 and llO 'doll'eel oo lllCC<aive
nl(htl In Butte and Glenn Counties, the
department oald.
Artichokes .ln tbt CUtrovllle area In
' (loo caoP LOIS, ..... J)
••
Astronauts
To Explore
Avalanche
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
Apollo 17's explorers, who have picked up
~of the youngest rocks un the moon,
move out oei:t iu their moon buggy to
search an ancient avalanche fer the
oldest' lunar material.
But ~fore that, Eugene A. Ceman
an$f Harrison" H. Schmitt prepared to
f~ a makeshift fender for their hinar
laXl so they won't be showered with the
~la\:k dq,t of Tauru1>Littrow valley. (See
?elated stories, pictures, Page 4). "~ tight rear lender fell off Monday
nllJa&. and the unpn>lecled w b e e I
showered the astrmauts , with dust.
prompting Ce.man to remark: "I bate this
black stuff. It's really irritating. It'll
tUe ·us half a dozen Sundays to dust
off."
Miss.Ion Control instructed them to im -
provise, using clamJ?S and a piece of
cardboard or insulation oft their lunar
ship Challenger.
" ' .. , / f J ~I"., '' ' 'I ~
• ' 1 ' • . I ! ""· • ' • DAJL ...... re&.Of llllf ,...
Bone-tired from their first seven-hour
lunar excursion following a perfect land-
ing on Monday. astronauts Ceman and
Set.mitt were given an extra hour sleep
today, delaying the start of their second
moon wa1k untU 3:03 p.m. PST.
Tbeir driving target today is a 6,000-
foot-h!gh mountain which they call lhe
South Massif 4.4 miles from the landing
craft. Photographs indicate an avalanche
tumbled down the side of the mountain.
depositing at the base materials from
perhaps several lunar age periods.
FRUK Acc ioENT MOHDAv' iNluii1b 5Al'i.'l:LEMENTi·:~,45~C:AR 'BACXEO U..-llLUF.P. ··
Horbert L. Eggl•lon, 80/l1°CarrMd From See no on Streflillar;-Ho Suff•orw CUii aM011l111w .
Clem.entean llu~t ' .
Involved in SpecuicUlar Crusk
An elderly San Clemente man suffered transmission into reverse and the car
an appareni-lll!lllth•prohlem" at11ae. _, "-then-lunged backwards for--2110:Jl>ol ...,
of his Jaree sedan· Monday afternoon,..aod retracing Its runaway route.
a sublequent spectacular crash left him It finally backed up lhe bluff IDd came
with cuL!I and ,bruises. • to~ standing on its· nose, tilted against
Herbert L. Eglestm, !O, of 1118 Moote the sheer cli!C.
Vista had been driving north on El Several witnesses were driving nearby
CamJoo Real, ]>Olice llld. whon lie sud-at" _the time of' the · miahaj>, but -
denly lost control of the car. miraculously, officers said -no otber
The auto-careened along the muddy cars were invo~. ·
hlgbway ihoUl~r at'hlgh speed for about Eggleston sufie:red superficial face
400 feet beneath the Palisades, cuts and some bruises and was taken to
After bwnplng an outcropping, it made San aemente · ·Genel'ai Hcilpltal for
a shi&r'P' r~t turn and slammed beadoo emergency U:ettment and tesll to
Into the blitffs. · • • · detennine JI he suffered·• \lea!:l seizure
The impact ~ aw.arentJy caused Ea-His condition Qtls mom.in& Wai descrilr
gleston to shift ·Uie a u t o m a t i c ed. as satisfactory.
' ,1, '
Sia.tuS;·~ Horse"
Stables Sp·ar~
Schmit~ a geologist who bad a field
day on the moon Monday, said before the
ntght that "this avalanche is our best
potential for sampling very old material
an UM! moon -perhaps dating back 4.6
billion years to the very origin."
Ca 'A! ... .-, • Schmitt's trained geologist's eye shoold . . PO. 0JJJl!jC. US, 8
0
lOD_. \ help pick out the elderly rocks. But . detennfnation of their exact age Will ~ auerted·· I!!'.!9r conditioha at three have to "alt until they are rfJumed to
Y-et .=..:Jiotse_· · • aiiliies In -slii~"';:JUiil~·~~eawathth for laboqtory"analysis. -~un:u If Ceman arid Schmitt collect the old Clplstnirio stirred discussions Monday material, they will have fulfilled their
amoog 'clty .Cou.oCttmen, Wt 'tlll)s r,t. no gotl on this laat Apollo missi~ fill in ~·Ha COflle ftom the panel missing chapters in lunar history, basic.
1he lsfle ,began . with a _..ium ally the very early and the very lste, lriini ,CltY.Mana«er DOnotd Wel!lller who Rocks returned by five earlier Apollo asseritd .that -tbree. stabli!i ·~ Jl'.oon landers have ranged in age to· be violating aorne county cOdes between S billion and U billion years. fOIUl!l!lni the keeping of'.Uyal?c~. ' -Whtie Ceman aod Schmitt slept today.
'·W•ldner' dld ,no!:pa~hae the th•ee (~ the aJm04t.forgoltep man of Apollo 17,
c1t ·• 1tU a!)oiat nioe · · ih"an lillt 1s.. APO y • • , LLO, Page !) said .he helltv~ ,lllllt ()iange Couuly
Animal Coiiirol ol!ldals dO not baye suJ. npent.1.e~al too!S 'to enlcirce the ,.guiac
tloqs \ • . Weidner said that problems , wtth
maoure; lack' of drainage in s'ome stalls
and the asserted use of trailers as U\flng
quarters are among the cooce'rns .
Oraage C:•••t
Crestlite President Ask!i
For Ext~nsion on Ramp
Stable. .owner Robert Co n.w a..y ,
represonting the lnOuentlsl Capla!rano
Valley Horaemen's AasociaUon, aald that
·• most of 'the stable oWtien' In the city are
niernhers and are wortbw bard •t keep-
ing their operatlolis at a b1(h level.
Weailler
It slwluld be ai Dttle warmer on
Wednesday, according to tbe
weather service, with blciis of 18
along the Orange ,c.oa.t. Lows to-
night will dip .down to 41 .
The president of the Crestllte A1·
gregate Products plant Mooday asked
San J .... CaplsfrlnO city COIDJCilml!Q lo
grant one more year's eitension to a
permit anowiog operation of • loading
ramp in the city.
Tiie Initial pennlt •ailowlng the 'ramp
near tlao Santa Fe -laa Is oet to expl~
at thll yur'a ...i. P~ cit)' -• Ille actMty have
come with -ci-compi•lnla about
--dist """' lhe openatloo. le ~ Monday tokl cr .. tli P-Kl!llleth Teel that they would
mUe 1 dtclslon on hls request at thclr
Dec. 18 meeting. The delay, they added,
w11 set tO allow residents Interested In
1the laaue to address tbt,oouncll.
Along with ·the request came an offer
lo the city from Teel for a 15,000 bond
whidl U>e city can cash In· at the end ol
next year -If the eztension were
granted. .
'Ibo official of ihe minlni !inn 5!1ld
that the romp ls . needed lo complete
CresUlte'• 'IOl)g-tenn. """Ira~ ' w_ t t b
-fl~ . ..... lhe 'Jlglth!<ig)at pellets' filr' hllb'rlae ""'il!!Uctlon o0 twd bank bulJdlnp: ' • •
Strikes and otlaeo Pl'Obleml ln,Arl!ona,
he added, CIUlld tlae oid<r lo run pul
t111S-oe..mber'1 deadline.
City ~r Dooa1d • WeJclncr 11ld
lhat he bas bad only two complllnta In
recent m0othl ... , the opefatloo of tl\e
ramp.
Teel aa1d 11'"1 he bas IJ'I! only one ~ a
cit&.en cxncetned over "e.'fl8p, and that
mailer -cleared up l..,.U.telY by tilt Crestlite ...... . .
,
...
'"lbere are a rew, however, wbo ·don't
seem to want to improvt,"'be admitted.
And . those owners, be added, are.. not
rnemben.
.t ..
Sail ing Equipnient, . . .
·~ike ~toleq _~· ~P.6'
Sallboot equipment and•1 ljlc1do, .19Jnllf
valued by, the owner.at ~. wtre iloleii
llODday nlglll from a C<iplllnno beacb
l>Ome.
0rup County sl!ttlfl'I ~ Aid
the ' Uaell wu reported by WUll~m Ray
McConntll, 46, of 350ll Beldl Rood. Tber said . thlevea <111 ahnlyih a chain
.and lock COIJ/binatloo to pjn eiitrY to, tl\e
car port where the equipment qd bk:\'·
cJe were storea. •
INSm E TGDAY
The growing Je1111 motiembit,
both 1neeTl!d at end prnta•d,
waa analuzed by a jovmoliJt
w h o crli1-CT0.srect the Mtion
hlppie.11vt., 111.tiUng '""°"" th• nation'• commu'nt.s and con·
clltding that U..y hall< ..,,..
latlllg q..Ut!cr. S'°'1f °" l'Qgt
:io.
. .
•
' 1 DAILY P1LOT -SC
\ Skirts Ahoy ...... P ... J
APOLW .•.
Rooald E. Evant\. noel'9d • detailed nport oo 8*r !&ti excan\on wblle he
orbited Ill mn.. above .!ht moon In com-
IDlllll eblp -'-a. . W 011ien Sailors, Ship Sail
Mlaim Qm&rol CGH+••k•lll' ~
ADeo radioed that Schmlll'• on.t!JHjiot
analyals belped &nlOlld 1C1eo1JJts ..,,,.
elude that the lhJn dark material cover·
Ing the valley floor at Tauru.Lltlf'ow is
SAN FRANCISCO CUPll -The Navy
hosp11al ship Sancluary ste.ame doot of
port today , Y.ith a "oman sailor on lhe
bridge and {llhers on 1he decks, ending a
$1'.!1go1ng tradition that dates back to
Tria11gula
'lnvc1des '
U tcili School
NORTll OGOE;.;". ttah t A Pl -Guards
am1ed "1th au1oma1 1r.: "·ea pons policed
the corridors of i\orth Ogden Junior !1-igh
School for the secon d day .today 1~ a
frighteningly realistic lesson m hfe with·
out freedom. . . Troops froni u1e m~·th1cal foreign
po"·er of Triangula 1n\·aded the school
l\fOndav niorning shortly after classes
commCnced and itnposed a stiff order on
the surprisrd pupils. . . Thr "1n\•as1on" l\'3S the idea of Pr1n·
cip..1\ C<irl C. Ot>You~g. lie sa~~ he v.·~.~ respondin~ to l'01npl:unts b~· a flagboy
"'ho told him 1nany o( his fellow stu~~ts
appeared apathetic during £1ag·ra1smg
cennonies each nlOl'ning. . .
The soldiers were real -disguised
volunteers from the 683rd Artillery Unite
of the 1\rmy llrserve.
"We're not thro"'ing rocks at com-
munism ." DcYoung said ~londay night
after the first day of aulhorit~rian rule at
his school. "\Vhat "·e are tr}'1ng to teach
is a simple love for American freedom
and a respect for some of its symbols
such as the flag ...
The "enemy" guards wear black .
triangular patches and re preS£'nt a make-
believe dictatorship.
DeYoung said the pupils have not been
told \\.'hen the harsh role will end,
although secret plans are for its con-
clusion Wednesdav with a "patriotic
assembly" to whiCh parents will be in·
vited.
Brusk military trials were held
throughout 1>1onday when s tudent s
violated a tough set of rules handed out
by the occupation force .
Among the rules were requirements to
sit at attention all day and to stand at at·
tention when reciting lessons. A~
violators always were found guilty.
Punishment typically is a cleanup detail.
"We'll give you a chance to plead your
case before we find you guilty," said Col.
Clair Frischknecht, commander of lhe
invasion force. at an assembly an·
nouncing lhe school takeover.
All ot lhe teachers and about 10 per·
cent of the students were given black-
and-white symbols, identifying them as
privileged members of the ruling party or
Triangula. These are given ~peclal con·
siderations such as supenor meals,
DeYoung said. .
• He said parents wei-e told Saturday 1n
• a letter about the experiment but were
asked to keep it confidential. Two
parents asked tha t their children not be
included in the program.
Students reacted with everything from
skepticism to near revolt.
"1'11 go along if you let us put the
: American flag back up," said one ninth·
• grader.
: Manzo Appointed
~ To Harbor Board
Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim
has named Santa Ana attorney Frank
Manzo to the Orange County Harbors,
Beaches and Parks Commission.
~ Manzo will succeed Martin Usab, also
of Santa Ana. who has served on the
commission since 1970. Usab said
:' business pressure called for his resigna-
: tion. He \s the founder and head of
-; Dynatech Corp .. a computer component
• manufacturing {inn in Santa Ana.
; Manzo, who maintains offices at 900 N.
, Broadway, is an associate or Supervisor
Robert W. Battin. They have quarters on
the same floor of the Crocker Bank
• building. • • • • .
!
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Editor
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wooden sblpa.
1be ship pulled away from the Naval
Shipyard JS minutes late.
But Navy Captain Bruce Gair, whose
job is to get ships in and out on time, did
not attribute this to the presence of 60
"'omen in the crew.
''They did a good job,'' Gair said as the
Sanctuary got under \\'By.
One of tbe v.·omen sailors was v.·orking
a telephone from tbe bridge.
The San<-tuary is lhe Navy's first ship
10 add women to its regular deck crew.
Today's departure v.·as lhc first tum of
sea duty for the W'Omen, a one-day
shakedown cruise out.side the Golden
Ga1e following extensive reconditioning
of the ship at the ~ipyard.
The crew has lived ashore: during the
sbipyard work. and the women moved
aboard just before the sailing.
The women's quarters on the ship, a
\'eteran of \Vorld War ll, and Vietnam,
were little different than the men's "e:z·
cept for some modificatio~ such as
doors on the women's sho\\1ers,"' ac·
cording to a Navy spokesman.
The short cruise is expected to gi\'f! the
Nal'y its first opportunity lo find out how
male and female sailors get along at
close quarters on a day·in and day~t
basis.
In .preparing for its coeducational
cruise, the Sanctuary set several Navy ,;firsts."
Lt. fjg) Ann Kerr of Rio Del f\.1ar, \\'SS
the first "line" officer on board a ~avy
ship. Technically, a line officer of her
rank could command a ship in an
emergency if superior officers V.'f!rt in·
capacitated.
However, a Navy spokesman said a
reQllation prevents a v.'Oman "from tak·
ing tbe"fOft. ..
M1ss Kert, an attractive, petite blonde.
is the ship's administration officer and
said she "has had no navigational
training at all."
Truman's Vital
Signs Weaken;
Prayer Recited
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -The vital
body signs of Harry S Truman today
became "unstable" -his heartbeat and
breathing quickened and his temperature
rose.
Townspeople praY<d for the recovery
of lhe 83-year-qld former President.
"People feel that even if you have to
cheat St. Peter, he's not ready to go,"
said Dr. Elbert C. C.ol~, preacher of the
Central United Melhodl<I Cburcl>.
"He's a rugged guy who's hanging in
there and he's going to make it,'' the
pastor said.
Jf Truman is to improve enough to
recover, bis. doctors said his weakened
heart mun gel stronger. Bui they said
his heart was beating irregularly because
of his age and that would keep him in
serious condition indefinitely.
"His vital signs became sOmewhat
unstable during the night -his resplra·
ti on, pulse and tem perature increased,"
said Research Hospital spokesman John
Dreves. "His blood pressure remained
wtihin normal ranges. Kidney function
remains adequate."
Truman was fed through a tube that
went through his nose to his stomach. He
was given oxygen to help him breathe
and to ease the strain on his heart. E:ztra
medication helped him re1u.
From Pagel
BODIES ...
SacramentQ County sheriff's office, said
both jackets contained numerous holes
which may have been caused by bullets.
Carlson said the bodies were found late
Sunday night. lie said he is working
closel y with Sacramento officers on the
c ....
o..JL'I' f'ILOT Sl•H l"IMN
Gregorian Claann
Members of San Juan Cap_istrano Junior Women's
Club judging committee display Gregorian copper
V.'are that will go to winners of the annual chamber
of commerce Christmas decor contest for homes
and businesses. Entry deadline is Friday afternoon.
Judging \\ill be Friday evening. From left to right
are Debby Thurin, 3, Vickey Thurln, Blythe Welton
and Jean Reynard.
Chin() Esc~pee Seized;
Got Away in Ambush
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - A convicted. was found in Miss Hobsoo's purse.
robber who escaped from the California Officen also said a sawed-off shotgun,
Institute for Men at Chino in a dayligbt two .45-caliber pistols, two gas grenades,
ambush in which an WJarmed guard was an M·l carbine and some ammi.mition
killed and another wounded bas been also found in the car.
captured by police on the San Francisco However, the pair offered n o
Bay Bridge. resistance, police said.
Officers identified the man as Ronald Office{" said Beaty was booked for ln-
Wayne Beaty, 35, who they said escaped vesUgatlon of murder and escape and
Oct. 6 as be was being driven to a court Miss Hobson for investigation of murder.
appearance in San BemardiJJo. 'Ibey will be transferred to the San
. Apprehended with him was Jean s. Bernardino County jail where two penocm are in clislody in the ambush.
Hobson, ti. officers said. ' Betty's prison escape came after two
'Ibe urests Mmday eaded a two-cars' forced the car lb: 'Wbld:t . be was
month l!08rdl for Belly r ••C I n C belnc drl ... to court off the road, police
thrnugbout the __, ~·· aald. 'lbree men and a -armed sg1. Rlcban! A1111er ta1t1 polioO·'lui! in-with piltots, severed Beaty'• ahtctle.o
f tion that Beaty might be driving in • and handcull<:d his guards, police said.
s':u,rma Francisco. Offleers waflinC 111 un-The aaallantl then tilled one of the
. , .... ~ the guards, Jesus Sanchez, 21, and .wounded
marked can spotted bis car m--. the Olber, George J. Fitzgerald, officers
freeway in downtown San Francisoo, and said.
other police and Calilomla HJ&hwaY Later, ii was discovered that Belly's
Pal~ units cooverged on It in the mid· scheduled court appearance bad been
die c( the brldge, Abbey said. poslpo11cd. . .
Abbey said Beaty was CBIT)'ing a load-San FranCISCO Bay Area activists
ed I and that loaded handgun Andrea Holman, 18, and Bentoo llougl~s revo ver a Burtt, 30, are being held in San °
f',....P,,.e l
CROP LOSS. • •
Bernardino in ~n with Beaty's
Ex.Mayor Remains
In Poor Condition
Kissinger Holds
Nonstop Parley
With Red Envoy
PARIS (UPI) -Dr. Henry A. Kiss·
inger held almost nonstop negoUating
sessions today in efforts to eftd the Viet-
na m war, and French Fore.lgn Minister
r.taurice Schumann predicted the end
would come by Jan. 3. ·
French diplomatic sou rces spoke of a
compromise on a key point -withdrawal
of North Vietnamese.
While Kissinger was meeting with
Hanoi's Le Due 'nlo, both the North Viet-
namese and the Viet Cong rejected an of·
fer by South Vietnamese President
Nguyen Van Thieu for a Chrisl.mas
cease-fire which could be prolonged in-
definitely and which could bring home
the American prisonen of War.
Kissinger met this momlng with the
pmnanent representatives to the 1'IJun..
day semlpubllc Paria peace talks end
they were joined brielly with a group of
technicians from both sides who are
beliflved editing a cease.fire agreement
in still another meeting.
Then all journeyed to a villa in
suburban Paris for the main meeting
between Kissinger aOO Tho.
The Kissinger·Tho talks began at 3
p.m. (G a.m. PST).
Three hours later, Kissinger and an
aide took a brief stroll through the
carden while a. rainy, misty night en·
veloped the Paris region:\.
They then resumed tne conference
behind the tightly closed steel shutters of
the low-roofed Communist villa.
Later, Tho, who acted as ho.st in the
Communiat-owned villa in Gif sur Yvette,
15 miles southwest of Paris, escorted
Kissinger to his car at the end of the
4~hour meeting and gave him a Jong,
Monterey County """' burl. but the
department said no dollar value could be
attachi!d to the damage until the crop is William D. Martin, former Laguna apparently cordial handshake. --· . Minor damage was suffered by
avoCadoes along the aouth coast, the
deparl1'f.Ot said.
There was "some loss" to vegetable
crops, and the harvesting of broccoli and
cauliflower was delayed.
About 400 acres of cauliflower we.re
Jor•. in t~onf.Newarrarea of
Alameda County, the department aaid.
Beach mayor and Orange County ciVic Schwnann, who has been in close con-
leader was ~ still in "poor con-tacts with both sides. made his
dition" today ln the Intensive care unit at statements during a luncheon speech l1>
South Coast Community lfospital . day. He said he believes the United States
The 79-y~ar--0ld Martin l\ad fallen in his will achieve • ~ace In Vietnam before the
garage about three weeks ago and frac-new U.S. Congress convenes.
tu.red his · skull . Hospital aides said "A settlement is likely and probable.
Marlin may have suffered a stroke and he said. "J confirm I am not a
that.he il-par-tiaUy..paralyzed~. -----pessimist-.!-'
, very )'Otlni and !hat the irialerlal beneath
the upper layer 1pparenUy resulted from a volcanic lava now.
"The surface around lh1 landln• st\e b
generally an undulaltng plaln,'1 Allen
reported, "It is tomewbat ~r and
with • gl'Ult< llDOID1l ofo ""'*1<n thao
was expttted by the llSlnmliu\e.
"There are a lot of small oraters with
glass on the bottom and many boulders
ranging from about a Soot io IZ feej in
sile, all of them OOVerfld' wlth the dull of
tbe dark manile."
Allen said what when Ceman drilled In-
to the surface to gather subsurface
material, be "hit hard material several
times and seemed to reach. very hard
material at the seven-foot depth."
· 111e commwilcator said the e:zplorers
collected 29 pounds of rocks, Including
three of foolbiiU size and snapped 129 col·
or and 197 61ack-and·white pictures dur-
ing the first expedition.
"Sounds like they got a lot of good stuff
done and that they've got a lot of good
information already," Evans commented
at the concl usion of the report.
"I think that's a safe conclusion."
Allen noted.
Scientists at MissiOn Control were in-
trlgiled MOOday as they followed the
reports of the first geologl.lt Oil the moon.
Ceman and Schmitt 's final driving e:z.
pedition on Wednesday, scheduled to
start at 1:33 p.m., will take them to
another large mountain named North
Massif in search of more ancient
material.
After blasting off from the moon,
'Jbursday, they wUI rejoin Evans in
America for two more days of lunar orbit
science before beading for borne Satur.
day.
Splashdown in the Pacific is scheduled
pext Tuesday.
Suspect Convicted
l1i Newport Rape,
Burglary Case
II look an Orange QJlmty Superior
Court jury just 65 minutes today to fmd
parolee Walter Hampton Jr. guilty of
raping and as.saulting an attractive
Corona de! Mar -.. The jury filed back Into Judge Kenneth
Lae's courtroom to al.'I> return a guilty
venllcl on c!wg.. of ~ hlOd
against Hami>!Oi> by the nian • who
employed hi'm on a ~ aite ado
jacent to the victim's home.
Hampton asked for lmmediale sen-
tencing. Judge Lae sentenced him to five
years to Ille In state prison on the
burglary conviction with rape and assault
sentences held over until be complete11
that term.
Hampton'• state JX'i900 file will be
reviewed when the burglary sentence has
been completed, Judge Lae's ruling in·
dicated.
But the fact that Hampton wa1 on
parole from an auault conv~ at the
time of the rape last July t7 makes it
hlgbly unlikely that he will serve less
than the minimum five yean, court of-
ficials said.
Hampton's victim, the mother of three
young children, Identified the ta\I, husky
defendant as the man who forctd his way
into her Larkspur Avenue borne and
raped ber in Iron! of two ol those
cbildnn.
Hamptoo•s 1111-pound victim needed 14
stllclles to close a bead woond opened
whem Hampton struck ber with a heavy
bedroom lamp.
She told the jury that ahe was
repealedly ,choked and healeo by ber
assailant before Hampton fled when the
v.ictim!s-aister-in-law-entered-tbe·home;----
The bloody clothing included two pairs
of jean-type trousers, boots of the
harness type, shirts, socks and a sleeping
bag, investigators said .
They were reported found 1,1 the
garbage can of a car wash north o(
downtown Sacramento.
Flight Instruments
Taken From Airplane
Flight instruments valued by the owner
at $1 ,075 were stolen Monday from an
alrcraf\ parted at Orange Counly
airpo(t. sheriff'• efficen aald .
Truth or Consequences?
It would be the third double slaying in
the Sacramento area in a week.
A woman and her daughter were killed
in th eir Sac ramento home last Sunday.
Two Sacramento union officials were
shot lo death at their offices lhe follow·
ing night.
The° \elli ' was reported by Franklin
Kelth No!lact, 58, of Anaheim. The motel
owner told deputies that the instruments
were removed from the panel of his light
plane.
Deputies said the intruders may bave
had a duplicate key to the alrcra!L There
was no evJGence of forced entry.
Priest Be111oved
He Remarried Witliout Permissi.on
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A SO.year-old divorced Episcopal prtest has been
removed as pastor of SL Edmund's Church ill Pacifica for remarrying a Bev·
erly 1-UUs woman without permission.
A spokesman for Bl!blp C. Kilmer Myers of Grace Cathedral a.kl Monday
the Rev. Robert lloggard "ex~mmunicattd hlmatlf" and had been pro-
nounced "inhibited" -forbldd<n to cany· out pr\catly runctlOOJ.
"UNTIL SUCH TIME aa he Is mtored as a priest In good standing by hla
own bb!q>, he cannot by canon law· officiate In lhla or any ether dk>cete In
the Anglican <0m munion," aald Bishop Myers .
F11her-Hoggant-.. 1d-be w..-.nan'le!f Sepl 10, l971 lo divorcee SheUa
Starr, who bas a young daughter, U monlha"after the priest's lint w\fe [lied
for divorce .
HE SAID HE ANO hla wire decided to "present the cl1urch with • !ah ac-
compll and then hope for compaulon."
.Parishioners were said to bo upset over the action.
I •
Somelim11 the truth hurts! We hove lost
what ha wonted to heor.
an occasional sale by not ielling a customer
We might point out thot a customer would be better off to poy 1 little more for our
rubber padding than buy a cheapar, mushy pod that feels like you ore wolking on boNoons. The
"balloon" pad hurts the carpet backing, cause1 stretching, and ruins seams. Also, this padd.lng
often flottons out ofter a while.
• · Additicinally, we might teD you that some corpet fiberi ere more practical than others.
A fiber that works in one texture, won't work in another.
Feel free to tall for advice. All of our sales people hove had extensive 1Jpari1nc1 in tit.
service end of th is business -and after all -the most importont thing we can offer, thot no
else does , is service!
• ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES .
166J l'lacentla Awt.
COSTA MIM
646-4131
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., f .. 5:30-FRI., 9 .. 9-MT,, 91>0 II I •
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L. M. BofJd
._Army Once Had
3rd Lieutenants
Father of this young lady owned a rod and gun store
In Pater&oo, N.J. So she opened a how-to-fish school for women. On the llleory Illa! although most girls go to ool·
lege to find husbands, they'd do better to go fishing. our
IAYe and War man approves. It's widely known a patient
fellow who likes to fish makes a superior matrimonial
Plate • . ..
AN AVOCADO Is as common for breakfast in Brazil
as is a glass of orange jWce here-
abouts .•. QUITE TRUE, Lima, Peru,
was the c:riginal home of that bean or !bf: same name . . . NO OTHER I TOWN iS so juvenile as Singapore.
[~ ~'.1£ the population there is under age
J A DIAL-A.JOKE service, that's
1 what the Dutch Telephooe company
in Amsterdam has started. Exceeding·
ly po!1'Jlar, too.;So p6pular, in fact. the phooe firm Is now
# buildlD.g a whole library of taped witticisms.
~ TIDRD LIEUTENANTS -Q. "Does the Russian Ariny ~ hate fmtt and second lieutenants?"
\ ·A. It has senior lieutenants, lieutenants and jun!oc ~·lieutenants. lncidentally, the U.S. Anny used to have third ~ lieutenants as well as !lrst and second. Not even many l military men realize that. Possibly because to the military I mind now anything lower than a second lieutenant is in-
t concelvable. Third lieutenants fought in the War of 1812.
$ AM INFORMED THAT barkless dog ol Central Africa i known as the Basenji is pretty noisy, alter all. It yodels.
Ji. Imagine that. Such a sidekick might have done more .~or
t RoY Rogers than Trigger. No, too flip. Anyhow, despite t reports to the contrary, the Basenji does go woof occasion-
\ ally, too.
f THAT CHRISTrttAS blbom known as the poinsettia is
• poisonous, please note. Said to cause somewhere in the
~neighborhood or 12,000 deaths a year, in fact.
I
?-OYSTERS -The marine life boys claim oysters eat
•only when the moon shines. More specifically, when the 'moon passes over the meridian on which said oysters lie.
: And, too, when the moon passes over the corresponding
meridian on the other side of the earth. ! MORE THAN 4,000 years ago, Greek beaters admin-
t istered shock treatment to mental patients wi th electric
~eels. 'Ibat's the remarkable claim of scholar who has made
a study of ancient medical treapnents. Mort imaginative!
. Address mail to L. Ai. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New-
2>0rt Beach, Calif. 92660.
You Can Make Gus 'Talk'
Gloomy Gus is not us ... he's you. When something
l happens in your community (or in the world at large)
that makes you feel you've just got to make a comment,
<l!et Gus be )'O!lr '(Oice. ·11t's been sounding off on behall
cl ·DAILY PILOT readers for Y'lll'B· See what your oeigl>-
bors are saying next Ume you read the DAILY Pu.err ed-
itorial page. Read Gloomy Gus.
r
•
aluminum-clad stainless steel skillet
Gleaming stainless with alumin um
clad bottom for even cooking. Com-
pletely immersible. 10%" size. 27.99
12" lar~e family size high dome 34.99
12" buffet size high dome 37.99
stainless percolating coffeemaker
Per es coffee faSler than you can boil
w,11er. All sta in less steel does away
with bitterness. Brews 2 to 8 cups 24.99
2-4 cups 19.99 2-12 cups 27.99
m•y co so. coast plua, so n diogo fwy. el bristol, costo "'"'"· 546-9321
shop Monday lhru Saturday I 0 lo I 0, Sunday 11 lo 4
l
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r,...u,, °""""" 12, 1972 DAILV PILOT 9
give stain less
Farberwa.re for
cooking magic
the large open hearth broiler rotisserie
Smo~eless, spatter-free coo~in g. A ir circu-
lates around meat, sea ling in nutritious
juices. A wonderful wa y to prepare fow l,
roast, ham. 1O"xl5" bro ili ngsuriace 54.99
handy shish kabob attach men I 11 .9~
open hearth broiler alone 34.99
8 Yi"x12'' broiler-roti sserie
8 Yz"x12'' broiler alone
39.99 .J
23.99
\
deluxe opener/sharpener
Pierces cans automatica ll y.
Cut edges are rolled back
for safety. Stops automati-
cally when culling is fin-
ished. Once you get used
to this convenience, you'll
never \Vant to use a man-
ual opener_ agai n! Gold or
avocado, you r choice 15.99
toaster with 9 color control settings
l\vo-sli ce toaster wilh 9 settin gs for per-
fect toasting. Snap-out crumb tray for
easy cleaning with handy reheat sel ·
ling. A great gift idea . So qui ck. 1 J,9q
:.n1,1JI appliances 74 -.ilJ 11 ~tore~
order by ma il or phonP i\1 '\ (,.·11.15
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J e DAILY PILOT SC
WASl!INGTON fAP) -The
lQP tn mm ln the National
Highway Traf1Jc Sa f ~ I y
Adm.lnistraUoo. plan lo leave
their govermncnt poots as part
of President Nixon's shakeup ot the Executive branch.
Douglas Toms. 41, dirtttor
of the NHTSA, which is part of
the Dep artment or
Transportation, said ~fonda)'
4.7 Million
Seek Raises
Next Year
WASHINGTON (AP)
Some 4.7 million workers will
be seeking wage hikes next
year in new-contract negolia·
lions or under "'"age-reopen-
ing provisklns in existing con-
tracts, the Labor Department
said Monday.
A total of 4.9 million
workers will get from 4.4 to
5.3 percent in deferred wage
hikes negoti<itied earlier, said
the report by the .. Bureau of
Labor Statistics.
Some "1orkers, principally in
trucking and railroad in-
dustries, will get both deferred
increases due under previously
negotiated contracts, and will
be seeking additional wage
hikes under new agreements
to be bargained later in 1973
the bureau said.
About 2.4 million workers
"'ill t>e seeking new cJntract
wage hikes and other ben~fits
in clo~hing. rubber. electrical.
paper. trucking, airlines ,
te l ep hone, telegraph.
longshore. meat-cutting. auto-
manufacturing and farm-rm-
p!ement industries. it said .
Now ••.• Plastic Cream
Invention For Artificial Teeth
that has re•olutioniRd denture
1"tM1n1.
Now. for the first time.scienceoffen a
plastlc cream that boklsdf!ltl!ffll at
nevubeJore--forinaanelaaticmem-bnne that M/ps-111114 1.W.. ta th
Mllirol li1JMU 11/""" _,.,Ji. If • a
Wlique diKOVUJ called FlxODll'ft9
l t lets you bite banter, ct--bet-
ter, eat mote naturally. Flxooun
Jai;ti tor bour-. Relisb me»sture. Dentures that fit are H!lelltial to
he:iltb. See your denti&t. re_1ularly.
Get e~J-to-11$E. f'lxooeNT Dentun Adbelive Cream.
SUPP() RT
LOYOLA UNIVERSITY &
IHARYMOUNT. COLLEGE
Your tax deductible 9ift, large or sm•ll will
further th e c•use of private education.
lnterer.t"ed? Write for Yeer End Givin9
broch ure, or Send your check or money
order t o:
~-.
IM~tor of Es-. "°9let
Loy.lo IW. "' Ww IM St.
Les A ....... "c.tH.ntie 90045
121J1 671-1910
DEWIE AIR·COIDITIONED COACHES
AIRPORT BOUND?
DIRECT SERVICE
To Los Angeles lnt'I Airport
from Orange County Airport
E_m .. n DtogaF-s~· 00 .. 7:00 A:if. and 1Dll'io A.M-...
plul 12 othl'fcoinmlllftt Ct!M• f.11 ~""' _,.. ... ...,
:.,.~_-m4)~2lo flft:li, :!!~!.°.!!!!~~ '!!;.!\~
"""""""'"' ol Ctlto!MlllrJ .-..0. Corp.
DIRECT • REUABLE • ECONOMICAL
personal
radio pager
•
TONE or VOICE
•
LOW COST
•
NEW. COMPACT
~KET UNrT
• MONTH "' MONTH
1119n'AL IASIS
•
. "' f )
HO'i l
httHJ ii
OVER THE COUNTElt COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST
NASO Uatings ... Mondoy, O.C.mbor , I, 1m
MUTUAL FUNDS
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T utMby, Dtctmbtr 12, 1 m
•
Tuesday's Closfug Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
• Profit Takers
Dampen Mark~~
NEW YORK (AP) ...o. Stook llljlJ'ket W1cm edpd.
lo1'1tr Tuesday In a generally drifting market. • •
. . : Analysts put the blame on general profit tak·
Inf and technical considerations. . . .
· .: The market has reached a "congested area1" a
red.stance lev el "where it is havi~g a barrt time
malting headway.'' said Robert Stovall, analyst with
Reynolds Securities, Inc. ·
I
sc,_ ___ OAJLV PILOT 11
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J2 D~LY PILOT
Morning
Pill Seen
As Peril
WASHINGTON (AP)
Many univenlly h e a It b
centers are prescribing a can-
cer-eauslng dnJ8 BJ "momlng-
arter" blrth~nlrol p 11111
without warning coeds of the
risk to themselves and their
possible offspring, R a t p h
Nader's Health R e s e a r c h
Group has charged.
11CoUege-women are being
used as guinea pigs. without
even the most rudimentary
obsel'vance of professional
standards and Informed con·
sent," the organization said
Monday night in a letter to the
National Student Association.
THE U S E OF diethyl-
. stilbestrol . (DES) as a post-
coltal p i 11 Is not approved
by the Food and Drug
Administration, the r e po r t
says, and may increase the risk
of cancer In women with a
'Co Del(e w omen
are u sed as guinea
pigs • • • without
professional otnn•
clards of Informed __ , ..
family history of breast or
genital cancer.
In addition, DES is not too
percent effectiYe in preventing
pregnancy within 72 hours of
sexual intercourse and
daughters born to mothers
":ho took the drug face a risk
of developing vaginal cancer
at puberty, it says.
mE REPORT mentions on-
ly the Universities of Michigan
and Pennsylvania where DES
is prescribed for birth control,
the latter in the case of rape
victims. But it quotes an of-
ficial in the Center for Popula·
tion Research of the National
Institutes of Health as saying:
"Most university b e a I t b
services are giving the morn-
ing-after pill ...
About 100 young women
whose mothers took DES in
the 19405 and 1950s to avoid'
mlscarriages have developed
vaginal cancer, the report
says.
The FDA bas banned the
synthetic hormone in animal
feeds effective Jan. 1 because
residues have been found in
edible tissues.
''THE SfORY of the morn-
ing-after pill gives chilling wit-
ness to the recalcitrance of
the FDA, the medical pro-
fession and the drug industry
to learn from ~gic ex-
periences." say Dr. idney M.
Wolfe and Anita J of
the Health Research Group.
They urge the FDA to re-
quire new labeling and ad·
vertislng warning against the
use of DES for birth control.
A GREAT
GIFT IDEA!
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TllHl!ay, -12, 1972
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hai!)s
afoot
l or. · 1Din?.
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wnel'8 lty · r. g. harry®·' -
·\p~tty\'soft_· .... our machin• washobloc ·,
sli~rs f!i4t really pamper his· feet. SOft.
: cush1" insoles.~ soft.ly lined, quality wor~:. ;
' manship in ,every. peir. Ch09se A: tho St:uff.
in camelJb~wn or .navy/.90ld, S.00: B. f:IMj. •
plush espadri"'t in avocado. camel, copp.r,
'/ I • --.!t IM. .,
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·t n_•_"'f.• "'?,.·.....,,
. " 1 ~
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1. ~-i... ·~
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Ji;! ••
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80ft sHppers •Y mil•lster®
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Pampering footgear for his quiet hours.
A. Tho "Funster" in soft deerskin with leather
sole and vamp, 15.00. D. The "Pod-About",
all deerskin wiht' luxurious acrylic
--pileJining ,..U.00.
deerskl• ~y royal e ftst®
Truly luxurious gifting _. .. The Jester style
slippor geared to his leisure life at home.
Soft from fop to toe-with supple chamois
lining, cushion innersole, flexible chromo
bend sole. 15.00. . ' . Men 's Shoes, 57
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~lli®Ilfiail•
ANAMEIM N£WK)R1 HUNTINGTON IEACH ORAtJG-E, MALL. 0" OAANel •
444 N. liKncl 17141 lJIJl111 47 F•tli~ 1.1.11c1 1714) 644.1112 • 7777 Ec11111,, A"'•nue 17141 ''2·Jll l 2100 N. Tu1th1 Sh11t (7141 "t·llll CIUITOS
100 L .. C.rtlte1 Mtll 121JI 160·0411
SHOP tsM Ai.. to 10100 ,,M, MOND"-Y THROUWH 'SATURDAY. SUNDAY Ii A.M. to 6 ,.M •.• t
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1111a Beaeh Today's Fl•al
EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOL •. 65, NO. 3'47, 5 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESbAY, D,ECEMBER 12, 1972 TEN CENTS
Lagun~Planner·s Reject 'Village Faire' Bids
By JACK 'CRAPI'ELL °' .............
' • • ' I ' ·A package ol .......ts 'for. var!~
and specW ~ts Deeded to iiulld o 11.5
million al!<>PPIJJI colnpiex cal)t!P "Village ~Ire" r.00>«1 a pacUJ• of denlals
=t.:i.the Laguna Beacb Planning
Sii:, eeparate ~ for relief from
city ordinatlc;es were met by four denials.
A'pPr<>vals were !Or construction of a
parking structure In a residential R-3
\
zone and to .......ii Into an aru UDder
a clly lUey ..
.&bald ~ ardiilej:l lor \11111i•
Faire, told the .-rellel lnJm
ordlnancei applying to flonl yard ae~
bacb, an locreue ol tbe mlnirNID\
hellbl ~~ and .. -In
the -sliD Itta were needed !or the 11">1"<1· . ," .
The !l<OJect had prevloualy -befo,. the commlSoion wilb s!milM roquests
for the proposed l'peclalty shop develop-
•
-ln lbe 1100 block of South Coast
lllgbway on the . old Allen Oldunobile
ag-y· property.
~ sa!I! the • project, which as ' pluned bu pltCbea roofs, exctedod lbe
~ reqodremeot by only· a foot llld a
b.ilf; ·and. tbll' w&. due to the slopin&
pioperty. • •
"'Our only altefnativea are a Oat roof,"
Goldman aald. The city statute woold perm.ii the · mecbanical e q u i p m e n, t
normally hidden by a pil<bed ·roo1 to
•land atop a oat roof, and J)OS81bly U·
ceed the ieJ&ht limit.
Commlsaloaer Rocer Lanpilear noted
the design review board (Board of Ad-
justments) -............ the arcltM«-tural treatment of lbe development and
may Dot perm!& a (lat roof.
The architect ~ allo asked· for com·
misAion blesslng'oo a possible OYerlap of
required parking-spaces. , .
.
He maintained that since the bank
wt.icb may be a property tenant would
not OP,fl'ate at the same ~un as peak
restaurant operation~ t~ere would be an
acceptable sharing of parktog.spaces.
, Goldman said his design a~ to
.retain the cha.racter of .the ~ity.
.and that numerous concessions had been Jll8de rogardlng the <levelopnieat of the
area' to create a complex that would be
pleasing to the c0mmliility.
Roy Childs, former owner of the Pot-
tery Shack. rebutted that premise and
saJd with a critical parking shortage now
existing in the area. no relier shc!uld be
given.
"lt is a misconception that you can
have an overlap of parking," Childs
said. We wouldn't,be 'doing the applicant
a favor , just reducing his chances-for
success. Let hlm reduce the building in
the area," Childs said.
I
oon 1vver oses en er •
()~ T·••tmtiglat
Growers Escap~
Freeze Disaster
Despite dip! of lbermometen in cilrus
groves.In Orange County to tbe 26-degroe
mart. early today, no major damage to
oranges or lemon& was reported. 'Ibe
cold wave is forecast to cootlnue.
Bill Bathgate, a citrus rancher near
Sao Juan Capistrano, also logged 26
degree temperatures shortly before dawn
today.' Smudge pots and wind macbinea
saved his groves, be sald.
1be National Weather Service's F'n!lt
Frost f.,..,..i for tmlgbt and early Wed-
nesday 111dlc;ates the recent cblll will cm-
'tinue. However. a cloud.. cover expected
; As tronauts
To Explore
Avalanche
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -
APollo 17's explorers, who have picked up
some of the youngest rocks vn the moon.
move out next u, their moon buggy to
search an ancient avalanche for the
oldest lunar material.
Keaneth Rice, spoilellnlD for the
Irvtne Valencia Growen. ASlocialioD,
8814 below-f::.:ewere rocorded cmi, ._bit·-. IDGJor 1bo11 ....., jlotldda at . to hne mmltnl>
ed ~.I •aae.,, -+ •-lido tbe --·-It Sm J\18" -~·_ay ,..,mt crop ---· ··• ,
But before that, Eugene 'A. Ceman
and Harrison H. Schmitt prepared to
form a malr.esbift fender for.their lunar
taxi so they won't be showered with the
black dust of Taurus--Littrow valley. (See
related atories, p~ures, Page 4).
Tbe right ,.., lender fell oil Monday
~ and the unprotected w b e e I
llhowmed the -•ts with dust.
prompting Ceman to remark: "I hate this
black stuff. It's re.i1.lly irritating. It'll
take us halt a dozen SUndays to dust
off."
' ' · ,._ ...... , the Nllilaa<ii Weotllif "
Senfce llid today, are DOI apeded to
dlOp rain along the Onage Cont bdt wW
result In anow llunies In the mountain
areas of Soutllem Callfomia above the
Laguna Beach
Siar A thlete
On the Mend
A star Laguna Beach athlete -
serioully btjured in an automobile ac-
cldeol near Enseoada lasl Friday -aliea4Y. bai bis algllts set .. ielllni back
Into tradt and field compeUllon.
"His flnt words were,,'Wben will I be
able to pt back Into track,' " Mn. Oscar
Weber; tht mother of 18-year-<>ld Karl
Weber aaid today. He's out of the In-
-.. c:ani-uoll llld may be borne for
Q>rillmas.
Weber suffered masaive bead Injuries
Frtctay wbOn·the car ln whlcb he and four
lrlendl spuo · oul of control and rolled
four Umes. The accident oc:aired 20
miles north of En'"""'a in a heavy
rainstorm. Weber .flnlolled ;p Soulhwn California
(See IN~Y, PlfO I)
P la nners Seek
P ossible Lag una
3,00&-foot mart. I
1be continuing frolty weather along
Ille Orange ·c.ut llirjJrised residents of
San Juan Caplstraoo who left Monday
nilbt's City Coundl meeting to find their
cars coated with frost.
Laguna Beacb resldellts, some as close
as 300 yards to the ocean, reported
!rooted car roofs early today and
Newport Beach drivers discovered coats
of lee on wlhdshleldi at daybreak.
WllKls below "¥'"'"5 spared many ln-
lllld oounty residenla' gardens from frost
damage llld contributed to the minimal
damage most citrus growen reported to-
day.
Either wind or cloud cover can keep
~ from bD'fe1'lng below fre<z-
tog. f))ur houri of below !Z-degree
weather can damage fruit. "BUt if it goes
down to 20, It doem't take long to kill a
crop," Rice noted.
* * * Cold Nips State
Cropi;-Damage
Not Yet Known
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Unseasonal
Bicycle Trail :11'1~~~;::: r:i:; f:
Lquna Beach plllUllng colmnlsslollen Agriculture aaid todar, bot the eatent of
Mooday nlllit recommended tbat the Cl-the damage could not be Immediately
ty Coomcll retain an Ulllll<d sectlOn of asaesaed.
Laauna CNl)'OIJ Road rtgbt.of·way for a Oranges have definitely been hurt,
-1ble future bicycle trail or '"81 stop. meaning ~t prices will go "1'• a
'lbe·actioll "'"came rin rtsppriH to a re-1pokemnan said. Eirly reports from the quest from 1be State' Dtvbion of ,._ W do -~ Hlgbwars tbat the dty mal:o recom-field aay -quality w· go wn, M™
mendatlons ., poulble abandlllmeot of some of the crop ·Nill be lost.
the cadyon road segnlent. 1be worst cit(US damage will probably
11>e section of pavement in quesUon ls be in Fresno, Kem and Tulare Counfies,
on the east side of the paved roadwaY' at whez:e. much of the crop ls grown and
the ~yon '1<>8d' City limits ln pie -the meratl')' hll 20 degrees over
Sycamoro HUis a,.., the weekend, the opokesman said. But It.
•11t seems to me that we buy property takes two or three days to determine the
for tbele purposes,'' Roger Lanphear actual damage to plant cell.a.
aaid · • Temj>eraturel uni;· to 17 degrees 'In
U 'u;e rigb~l-\'8y weri abandoned, ad-Sacramento and San J-"1 CGunUes, Jaooo~-'f DWMn woold rt<elVe the and bit 17 and :Ill •degreM on .-ve
property. nlabta In Butte and G!!!"" Countlea, the
In other llC!ion, tbe platinlng-com-department liicL _, ArUcbobll•ln the CUtrovllle .... In
\ -Sol .,.... to ·Dec. II study -a -, County were burl, but the
• fonnal llClion oa a "'!'*' to. IDO)'e • de~ laid no dollar value could be
home from the comer' of Ca!alma at allacbod to tbe damage unW the crop Is Thalia streets to Bluelllnl Pork for uae aa a ll)rls club "*tlDc plaet. barvelled.
--Oave IJIUlllimoul aptn•al to a report Minor damage was llllffered by
accoptlng the awsrtl-wiMlng gardena of avocadoes along the IOtlth oout, the
Horlemle MiUer, 213U Al~Vlew Te1Tace. deportment aald.
111r1. Miller offered to dona~ the gardens There waa "-. losa" lo veptable
to-the-clt,y..u a 1U'L;;~;--;-;;.;;';,;;;;:';~~'.T.:'-and lbe-banMIJnc ti koeeOli aed ~ W1W-Jan. I a padlop al caullllowtr wu deloyed. ·
requests by the Assblance ~ of About 400 acres of cauUOower ~
LagllJla. Beach to allow -al a lor' In the Fremont-Newark orea ol new lodge at 147 Catalina Stree~ Alameda County, tllo department aakl.
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' . .. . _, -. "' . ., , " ' .. · . ., · · • rt· , · · · · ~IL' ~ ....,~ ......
THIRD ~NNUAL STORYBOoK ~AUDI WILL .110Lt IN -LAGUNA 'BEA~H SA'l'iJROAY
Jason Arnett, 2, MakM.iSure Th!l't,.Decor of,Saitta'a.HouM ii in.Ap.pl'•'pie.Onllr.~ i .' .
• ' I j !,.,u J ' •-"•1' 'p""\·' . ' •• . t ,,,. ' • I '\; .•;f f f "' •'1• 1 . t ' • ;-:) t -•
Laguna· Beach Boyt() Take t~ird s~ryb,ook
Pqrade R eadied
Lie Tes t in. Burglaries In Lagurra Beach
Mission Control instructed them to im-
provise, using clamps. and a piece or
cardboard or insulation off their lunar
ship Challenger.
Booe-tired from their first seven-hour
lunar excursion following a perfect land-
ing on Monday, astronauts Ceman and
Sct.nlltt were given an extra hour sleep
today, delaytog the start of their second
moon walk until 3:00 p.m. PST.
Their ·driving target today is a 6,~
foot-high mountain which they call the
South Massif 4.4 miles from the laoding
craft. 'Photographs lndicate an avalanche
tt!mbled down the side of the mountain,
depositing at the base materials from
perhap! several lunar age periods.
Sclurutt, a geologist who had a field
day on the moon Monday, said before the
flight that "this avalanche is our best
potential for sampling very old material
on the moon -perhaps dating back 4.6
(See APOLLO, Page Z)
Ex-Mayor Remains
A lie-<letector test (polygraph) was to thro~Jlway_a_pair..ol.gtoves~ . .-_ EJ>trles for,lho--~-Storybo91< -In-Poor-€ondition
scheduledlodayforaJS-ye8r-oldLaguna -J!in~z said ~_ypu1b 1 was,~m a . Parade ,mqat ~~by , 4:40 .. p.m. .
Beach boy sµspected of1nvolvement in 8; middle. ij\come family and ~t ~f!G st~len :Wed~a_y a~ the;~ tumed1 m to William D. Martin. former La~a
ber · f. • -bur .. 1, • • • the property' had been recovered. the Laguna Beac.b Cliamber of Com· Beach mayor and orange County ctVJc
nurn ? nunor -gaanes in However, most of tlie burglaries in-merce office 20$ N Coa!t HJ bwa leader was reported sull in "poor cql-
Temflle ffi.lls area. . . volved theft of cash, he sa:id. •r _ ' · , g y. . d.ilion" today in the intensive care unit I t ~ youth was apprehended Sunday The Polfl(rflph test was sch~uJ&t to be 'l'he lf!ll'l(de,, ~red b~ ~ Jun~r South Coast Community Hospital. eve~ by Patrolman Arthur DeLuca given at the district attorneY's office in Woinen's~CJub and 'tbe ·Mennaids-ot the The 79-year-okl Martin had fallen in his
Who believed the youth b~ exited a Santa An1t. Cflamber . 0£ Conimerce, wifl staft . ,it garage about three Weeki 1gO and frac-
residenbe at 1360 Terrace Way. noon $itUl'daY in fniot.pf ·santa•s house tured his skull. Hospital aktes said . _The ~t . door was open, and a , . , ~ ,, r _ : ~· • ( ,, ~ Marlin may have suffered a stroke and : tiiChroofil. window had been ,smashed, ''1" N d1 T>:__ -1!' .oo ~: Avetl96-·bf somtt: .. Plast that he is partially paralyzed. I
op<lR >Yjth a ,heavy, plank. The )'<)11th •• .l 'WO u e •DtJU.le.s> ·lllgbway.. . . .. ._ . -'. I
n\1Hntaine4"be was only walking thrqugh, · · · · tiincli.O lri>m 3-jtan of aie ·fu 11
~rJ~iBeacb Del. Af~x J~enez said F oun. d-Victims ,yean of age may parlicllJ!te In the
that some 25 recent burglaries in the parade and judging of best storybook
area appeared to have similar patterns. • costume.
The boy llM maintained rus lnnocenoe Of ·Drug Traffic? Free tickets to • movie at South Coast of any wrongdoing. Theater wlll be given to the parade Police saki that as the youttt was being . apprehended, he attempted to nee from PLACERVILIE (AP)-The nudr. bod· characters, Results of the ju~gang will be
the· arresting officer. A nylon stocking ies of t·wo young men have been unearth-annou.nced following the movie.
was found in his pocket and he attempted ed near here, El Dorado County She.riff
Author's Release Set
BURIJNGTON, VI. (AP) -Pearl S.
Buck, the Nobel• ~wiming author,
will be relealed from, the hospital Fri-
day. lllsa Buclt•~ wlio lius fn DeltbY
Danby, '"tared lbe hospital Sept. H and --~ pll-bladder surgery Ove days
later. ..
r11 llA~ Mr~Pf'IHG
LltT etc• TtttRE AAE
OllV 12 SHCPP'IN& Alil5 LEFT! . '
'
Bernie Carl80n repcrted today.
The vicUms may have been murdered
In connection with the narcotics traffic,
he said .'
Carlson said the bodles were found in
shallow groves, side by ~ along
Luneman Roaa near the hamlet of
Resclie, · ~ of Socramonto. An
autopsy was being conclucted I n
Placerville. 1 The two a~ 'lo be In their 20s,
Carlson saJd, but otherwlae there was no
identlflcaUon. · ' Ii• sale[ tltere may be a link bel"een
the bodl., and two 1ets ol bloadooaked
men's clolhlnl. found In a Sacramento
8Uburb Monday. -
The clothing lncludod a heavy wool-lin-
ed jacket and a waist -le n gt h wbiilli:Uliii, iOOiiii'llles Nici.
William Miller, a 'PC*esman for lhe
Sacramtf)to Countr. sheritr1 omc:., sail!
liolh jacitets 'tootalned numeroui Mies
which may have been cau.oed by bullets.
I, • .·
Women's Group
To GiveParty
•
A champagne party will'b'e bi!ld .by 'the
·Laguna Beach cbapter ol NOlllinal
Organization !or Women (NQ,'R) al I
p:m .
A panel diJcusston on tbe pis or
NOW, will be dlrec~ by Joy ~.
president or the 0r.,.. County brand>,
'nle meeting Is open to women In·
teresi.tl In tbc movement toward equall·
ty, wbeO!er It Is just Idle c:urlollty or an
lntenae desire to ~ ..... llolores
Ferr•ll, prost~I on gO.ts and po1->
ol' the loci! chambcf. '
'Relltt'Vatlom are e.m.t01ed'and may
be mide by calllng 494-W.
•• I
Oraage
Weatlter
It should be a UtUe warmer on
Wednesday, according to the
weather service, with hlgha or •
along the Orange Coast. Lows to-
night will dip down to 41 .
INSmE TODAY
Tlie growtng Jesm ~nt,
both sneered at and proiled,
was onalttzed b.11 a jovrnali#t
to h o crlss-cro.tsed the "4tion
hippie·1ti1t., vltlling•among< Ille
t~tton's commuti~s 'dlid qm. .
· aluding thot ihtv have tome ·
laatlng qualitiH. Slof'!I °" Page 20. .
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1,
•
DAILY PILOT lB
Skirts Ahoy
W ome~ Sailors, Ship Sail
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The Navy
boopltal ship Sanctunry steame dout ol
port today, with a v.·oman sailor on the
bridge end others on the decks, ending a
seagoing tradition that dates back to
wooden ships.
"The ship pulled away from the Naval
Shipyard 15 minutes late.
But Navy Captaln Bruce Gair,. v.·ho~e
job ia to get ships in and out on time, did
Tria11gula
'Invades'
Utah Sclwol
NORTH OG DEN, Utah (AP ) -Gu~rds
armed with automatic weapons . pob~ed
the corr idors of North Ogden J unior ~1gh
School for the second day .tod~y 1~ a
frighteningly realistic lesson 10 hfc V.'1th·
out freedom . Troops from the mythical foreign
power of Ti'iangula invaded the school
Monday mor ning sho rtly af~er classes
commenced and imposed a sW! order on
the surprised pupil s. . .
The "Invasion" was the idea of Prin-
cipal Carl c. DeYoung. He said be was
responding to complaints by a "nagboy"
who told him many of his fellow stu~~ts
appeared apathetic ?uring nag-raising
cermonies each morning.
The soldiers were real -disguised
volunteers from the 683rd Artillery Unite
of the Army Reserve.
"We're not thro wing rocks at com-
munism " DeYoung said ?i;tonday night
after th~ first day of authoritarian rule at
his school. ''What we are trying to teach
is a simple love for America n freedom
and a respect for some of its symbols
such as the flag."
The "enemy" guards wear black
lriangular patches and represent a make-
believe dictatorship.
DcYoung said the pupils have not been
to ld when the harsh role will end,
although secret plans .are for .. its ~o~
clusion Wednesday with a patrtohc
assembly" to which parents will be in-
vited.
Brusk military trials were held
throughout Monday when s t u d e n t s
violated a tough set of rules handed out
by the occupation force.
Among the rules were requirements to
1 sit at attention all day and to stand at at-
tention when recitiog lessons. Accused
violators always were fOUDd guilty.
Pmiisbment typically is lo cleanup delail.
"We'll give you a chance to plead your
case before we find you guilty," said Col.
Clair Frischknecht, commander of the
invasion force. at an assembly an-
nouncing the school takeover.
All of the teachers and about 10 per-
ce nt of the students were given black-
and-whlte symbols, identifying them as
• prlvileged members of the !'Uling party of
: Trlangula. These are given special ~n
f siderations such as iuperior meals,
' DeYoung said. .
1 He said parents were told Saturday in
. a letter about the experiment but were
asked to keep it confidential. TwG
' parents asked that their children not be
included in the actiyjty,
t ,
!Bandit Holds Up
!Bowling Alley
: A man who told a woman cashier he
'was armed took $2.760 from a Santa Ana c bowling alley Monday, pJlice repJrted.
t Cashier Dense! Probert said she was
• approached in the alley's parking lot as
\ she was going to the bank by a man
included In the l'l'Olfllll.
st.-11 ,..ct.cl wtth evtr)'lhlnr fnm
lkeptidam to near revott.
"I'll go alooa If )'Oii tel us put the
American flag 6ack up," said one nlnlh-
grader.
not attribute this to the presenct of 60
women in the crew.
"They did a good job," Gair sakl as the
Saoc1uary got under way.
One of the v•omen sailors wu worltlng
a telephone-from the bridge.
The Sanctuary ls lhe Navy's first abJp
to add women to its regular deck crew.
Today's departure v.•as 1he first turn of
sea duty for the women, a one-day
shakedown cruise outside the Golden
Gate foUowing extensive reconditioning
of the shi p at the shlpyard_
The crew has lived ashore during the
shipyard work. and the women moved
aboard just before the sailing .
The women's quarters on the ship, a
\'eleran of World War Il, and Vietnam,
were little different tha n the men's 11e1-
cept for some modifications such as
doors on the women's showers," ac-
cording .to a Navy spokesman.
The short cruise is expected to give the
Navy its fi rst opportunity to find out how
male and female sailors get along at
close quarters on a day-in and day-out
basis.
In preparing lor its ooeducational
cruise , the Sanctuary set several Navy
"firsts."
Lt. (jg ) Ann Kerr or Rio Del Mar, was
the fi rst "line" officer on board a Navy
ship. Technically, a line officer of her
rank could command a ship in an
emergency if superior officers were in-
capacitated.
Howeve r, a Navy spokesman said a
regulation prevenls a \.l.'Oman "from tak-
ing the coo."
Miss Kerr, an attractive, petite blonde,
is the sh~'s adminlstratkl'J officer. and
said she "bas had no navlgadooal
training at all." ·
Suspect Con~icted
In Newport Rape,
Burglary Case
lt took an Orange CoUilty &lperior
Cowt jury just 65 minutes today to find
parolee Walter Hampton Jr. gutlty of
raping and aimulting an attractive
Corooa de! Mar bou!ewtfe.
The jury filed back Into Judge Kenneth
Lat's courtroom to ,aJso retunl a gutlty
vmict on ~ges of bUrg!aey IUed
aptnst• Hampton · by the man '!Ibo
employed him on a ~lion site ad-
jacent to the victim's home.
Hampton asked for Immediate sen-
tenctng, Judge Lae sentenced him to five
yean to lire in state prison on the
burglary conviction with rape and assault
sentences held ovef' until he completes that' ,term.
Hampton's . 'State prison fili will be
reviewed when the burglary sentence has
been completed, Judge Lae's ruling in-·
dicated.
But the fact that Hampton was on
parole from an assault conyjclion at the
lime of the rape last July 27 makes it
highly unlikely that he will serve tw
than the. minimum five years, court of-
ficials said.
Hampton's yjctim, the mother of three
young children, Identified the tan, husky
defendant as the man who forced his way
into her Larkspur Avenue borne and
raped her in front of two of those
children.
Hampton's 118-pound victim needed 14
stitches to close a head wound opened
whem Hampton struck her with a heavy
bedroom lamp.
She told the jury that she w.as
repeatedly choked and beaten by her
assailant before Hampton Oed when the
victim's sister·in-law entered the home.
.
DltilLY l"ILOT Stiff PMf9
FREAK ACCIDENT AIONDAY INJURED SAN CLEMENTE MAN AS CAR BACKED UP BLUFF
Herbert L, Eggleston, 80, Is C•rrlecf From Scene on Stretcher; He Suffer.cl Cuts ind Bruises
Cle111entean Dort
Involved in Spectacular Crash
An elderly San Clemmie man aulfmcl
an apparent health problem at the wheel
of his large aedan Monday afternoon, and
a subsequent spectacular,crash left him
with cuts and bruises.
Herbert L. Eggleston, 80, of 108 Monte
Vista had been driving north on El
C3mioo Real, police said, when he sud-
denly lost control of the car.
The auto careened along the muddy
highway shoulder at high speed for aboul
Truman's Vital
'
Signs Weaken;
Prayer Jlecited
~.CITY;1do, (UPI) -11!1' yitat
bOdy signs "' lllny s 'l'llm>an tliday became 0 unstable" -his heartbeat Ind
breat.hlng quickened and his temperature ,,,..,
Tow~ pra,..i 1or the recovery
of the 88-ye8r-old fonner President.
"PeopJe feel that e_ven if you have to
.cheat St. Peter, he's not ready to go,''
said Dr. Elbert C. Cole, pnacber of the
Central United Methodist Cbur'CIL
"He's a rugged guy who's banging in
there and he's going to make It," the
paator sald. .
If 'l'llm>an is to fmpnwe enou&b to
?e(.'OVef, bis doctors said his we0ened
heart q>ust get strooger. But tlley &aid
his heart WU beating Irregularly hecauae
of hia age and that would keep him in
seriom conc:Htioo. indefinltely.
''His vital signs became 80mewhat
unstabl'l during the night -1hls ruplra·
tion, puJse ind tempuature increased."
said Reseattb llospital spokesman John
Dreves. "Bil blood pressure remained
wtihln normal ranges. Kjdney function
remains adequate."
Tnnnan was fed through a tu be that
went through his nose to his stomach. He
wrus given oxygen to help him breathe
and to ease the strain on his heart. Extra
medication helped him relax.
400 feel beneath the Pallsades.
After, bumping ae outcropping,, it made
a abarp right tum and &lammed headon
into lhe bluffs. -·-
The tmP.ct then apparently eallled Eg·
gleston to shift the, a u t o m a t i c
lrarwrn.iuion into reverse and the car
then lunged backwards f<r 200 ltet -
retracing Its nmaway rou~.
It flnallf backed up the bluff and ~e
to rest standing on its nose, tilted agilnst
the sheer cli ff.
Several witnesses were driYIDg-oearty
at the time of the mishap, but -
miraculously, officers said -no other
cars were involved.
Eggleston 111tfered superliclal face
cuts and some bruiles and was taken to
San Clemente Genel'al llolpittl for
emergency treatment and testa to
determine I! be lllffend a heart ..u.ir.,
Ills condition this morning was dercr!b-
ed as satis"tactory. ~
l'l'OlllP .. eJ
INJURY •..
. CIF distance running competf~ions this
year, aed ts described by track coach
Len Miller as "one of the top distance
runners.''
The young track star -a cross coun-
try team captain -is receiving care at
Univenity llolpital In San Diego, follow·
Ing five hours ol aurgery early SUnday
lnllnllnC to remove two blood clots Jrom
bis brain.
"I bad been so tense, it looked for a
while like he 111l&bt lose all un-
dentanding, but today he's fine,"
reported Mrs. Weber.
Her son, along with high school
students Greg c.omerly, Mark Miller,
Afike Benson and Danny Jacbosen, were
en route to En3en1da to do some
Christmas shopping when the acclden t
occurred.
All five boys were transported to an
Ensenada Hospital in the back of a
pickup truck by two Mexican brothers.
There they spent the night and each was
released SatW'day morning.
Have Sl1arp Eye
Fo1· Figures?
City Needs You
The Laguna Beach Planning Com-
mlssion ls on the lookout for residents
·with sharp pencils. and a good eye for
figures, the numerical kind, to serve on
the new city Budget Committee.
The group will be concerned with long
range studies of budget I or m a l
simplification and clarification, capital
improvement budgeting, a n d com-
puterization, according to the directions
sent out by Mayor Charlton Boyd.
Short range duties woUld include
recommendaUons for the upcoming fiscal
yur municipal budget.
1be citizen committee would provide
increued resident representation on the
drawing up of the lutun city spending
plans.
Commissioners declined to determine
an exact Dumber of ~ben oo ttie com-
mlU.., preferring to sift through the ap-
plicants and then m a ~ e ' r<COlll·
mendatloils to the City Coanctt.
Persons desiring to serve on the com-
mittee may contact Jackie Washburn.
councll secretary, at City Hall for ap-
plication information.
Laguna Realtors Set
1972 Yule Break.fast
' . The annual Christmas b r e a k f a s t
meeting of the Laguna Beach ~ of
Realton will be held 8 Lm. Thursday In
the El Niguel Country Club, 31000 Crown
Valley Parkway, Laguna Niguel.
The meeting wW be the last of the year
foe the reallon aed will include the ln-
stallaUon of the 1973 board of direcWra.
LA Inmate Escapes
LOS ANGELES (AP) - I s a a c
Magdeleno, 30, a county inmate, was at
large today arter he and another prisoner
escaped by climbing hand ove r hand
down a flrehose they hung ou t or a
lightwell on the 14th floor of the Hall of
Justice', sberiU'a deputies s a i d .
•
p,....p ... J ·
APQLW .••
biUtoo years to the vvy ortctn."
Scfnnlll'a trained IOOtogiJl'I 4111 ahou~
help pick ""' the elderly ~ But __.., _ _.•will
!lave to wait 11!1111 they an 1tla1wd to
earth !or laboratory IAalyals.
JLCeman and Sctunlit tollecl the old
ma terial, IJiey wut hav~ !ulfllled ,their
goal on lhll last Apollo mbolon-to fill In
miMinl ehapten in lun.,.._hlttory, bulc·
atty the very early and the very · late.
Rock! i<lumtd by five earlier Apollo
tr.OQ!\. ~ra baYe ranged in age
between bwton and u billton ~·ra.
While ..... """ Schmitt llept today, the almoo!·forgotteo mon of, Apollo 11,
Ron&ld E. Evans, .-!ved a detailed
report oo tbeiJ" f1m excarslQ.n while he
orbited Ill mllel above the m<>oll tn com·
mand ship America.
MissJoo Control communicator J09eph
Allen radioed tbt Sclunllt's oo-tbMpet
anaJysls helped eniou><I sctentbts -·elude that-the tbio dark material cover,
ing the VaUey Ooor at Taurus.-Llttrow is
very young and that the material beneath
the upper layer' apparently resulted from
a valca.nic lav-a Dow.
"The surface aroumf the landing site is
generally an undulating plain," Allen
reported . "It is somewhat rougher and
with a greater amount of boulders than
was-expected by the astronauts.
"There are a lot or small craters wtth
glass on the bottom 4nd maQY boulders
'ranging from about I foot to lJ feet in
site, all of them covered with the dust of
the dark 1111btle."
Allee said what wbon c.rnan drilled In-
to the surface to gather subsurface
material, be "hit hard material several
times and seemed to reach very bard
material at the seven-foot depth."
The communicator said the explon!rs
collected 29 pounds of rocks, including
three of football size and snappe<t 229 <ol·
,.. and Ill'/ black....t-whlte plcturu dur-
ing the first upedtllon.
"Sounds like they got a lot of good stuff
done and that tliey've got • lot ol good
information llreedy, •• Evans coD:unented
at the cooctlllloo ol the report.
"I think that's a sale conclusion,"
Allen noted
Scientists at Mission Control were In·
trigued Monday as Ibey follow!d the
reports of the first geologist on the moon.
Gty's Basketball
Coaches to Meet
A mee.Una for coaches in the Laguna
Beach Recreation Department'• Boys'
Basketball Loque will be held at 7 p.rn.
Thunday at the department olficea, 175 N.Coul=. · .~=.rm .:i""~~ Coache• are still needed for the blU.t •
ball teams and may contact the depart-
ment, t94-112t. ext 47, for further iD-
fonnaUon.
The !<;ague has two divlalo111 for play.
A Pee Wee section tor boys Ill the fifth
and sixth grades meets saturday af-
ternoons at the high school· gym. A
Juniof league for boys in the aeventb and
eighth grades meets Saturday mornings
at the high ochool gym.
Free Bus Rides
Start in Laguna
Fre< Laguna Buch bus -wiU nm from today tliroug)i Dec. JI u port
of a citywide effort to -patronage
of Laguna Beach shops a!!d atorea.
All S«vice In the oily -. will be
without char&e oo all routes, including
the Leisure World an d Monarch Bay
ru ns.
Fre< bus service lnsttad of free park-
ing was a suggestion of d o w n t o w n
husfnesamen. The parking lots a( Et
Paseo street will allow all-dly parldng
for 50 cents during the Christmas seuon.
described as fivH leven, weighing about
( 175 pounds, wlth-black :.air and a black
7 mustache. lie handed her ar, envelope-
• containing a note reading, "You're being
~ robbed. I have a gun in my pocket."
• The Pacific Bowling Lane, 21)15 W.
: First St, cashier handed him the day's
; receipts in cash and checks. He fled on
• fool.
Kissinger Holds Almost Truth or ( . • ~
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DAILY PILOT
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ClltfflttW UM mlfllnlt.
•
Nonstop Talks in Paris
PARIS (UPI) -Dr. Henry A. Kiso-
inger held almost nonstop negotiating
sessions today in efforts to end the Viet-
nam war, and French Foreign !ii1inister
J.1aurice Schumann predicted the end
would co me by Jan. 3.
French diplomatic sources spoke of a
compromise on a key point -withdrawal
of North Vietnamese.
While KJssinger wa s meeting with
Hanoi 's Le Due Tho. both t,he North Viet·
namese and the Viet Cong rejected an of-
fe r by South Vietnam ese President
Manzo Appointed
To Harbor Board
Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim
has named Santa Ana attorney Frank
Manzo to the Orange County Harbors,
Beaches and Parks Commlsslon .
Mamo will aucceed Martin Usab, atoo
of Santa Ana , who has served on the
commiaslon atnce 1970. Uaab said
buslneu preS8ure called for hia rulJn•·
tion. lit JI the [OW\der and head of
ll)iiafecll Corp~ COll\puter ~mponent
manulac!urlng ltrm In Santa Ana.
Monio, who mf)ntatns offlcu at 900 N.
Broadway, is an aaoclate of Supuvlaor
Robert W. BntUn. Tfley hive quarters on
the u me floor of the Crocker Bink building.
Nguyen Van Thieu for a Christmas
ce .... nre which could be prolonged In·
definitely and which could Lring home
the American prisoners of war.
Kissinger met · this morning with the
pennanent representatives to the Thurs-
day semipublic Paris peace talks and
they were joined briefly with a t!l'OllP of
technlcJans from bolh sides who are
belJeved editing a cease-fire agreeroent
in still another meeting.
Then all journeyed to a villa Jn
suburban Parls for the main meeting
between Kissinger and Tho.
The Klssinger·Tho talks began at 3
p.m. (6 a.m. PST).
1'hree hours later, Kissinger and an
aide took a brief stroll through the
gardee while a rainy, misty nlgbt en·
veloped the Parll region.
They then mumed the coalerence
behind the ttahtly cloled steel shutters of
the IO\HOOfed Communllt ¥1111.
Later, Tbo, who acted u hoot In the
Commwlisl-owned villa In GU our Yvette,
IS miles southwest of Parit, escorted
Kilolntr<r to his car •t the end of the
4\t-hour meeting and gave lµm 1 long,
apperently conttal handsholte.
Schumann. who has been in close con-
tacta with · bolh 1tdcl1 made his
statemenls durina ilunchcOn spe«h to-
day. lie said he belt.vei the Uolted Stat"
will achieve • ~ace in Vietnam before the
new U.S. ~ngress convtnt1.
"A settlement II ll~ety and probable,
he tald. "I conltrm I am ~not a
pessimist.''
I
Consequences?
Somelimts the ~h hurls! We have lost an occasional sale by not +.Ping • customer
what he wanted lo hoar.
We might point out that • cu.tom er would be better off to pay • 5ttlo "'°"' for our
rubber padding than buy a choaper, mushy pad that fools lile you ero waliclng on balloons. Tho
"ball0011" pad hurls the carpet bacling, cau1os stretching, and ruins soams. Also, this padding
often flattens out after • while.
Adclltionally, we might tell you th1t some carpet fiben art more practice! than others.
A fiber th•t works in one texture, won't work in enothtr.
FMI /,.. to call for advice. All of our soles people hove had oxtonsivo exptrionco in the
service ond of !hi< business -onil ofter oil -tho most important thing wo con offer, that no
else does, is HrVict!
1
AI"'DEN'S
CAR~ETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lacentla Ave,
COSTA MISA
64M831
HOURS: Man. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5'30-PRI, 9 to 9-SAT., 9:30 lo 5
f ' ' l
-
•
Today~s l'lnal Saddlehaek
EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
voe 65, NO. 347, 5 SECTIONS, 60 PASES TUESDAY, OECEMIER n. 1m TEN CENTS • •
' .f ' Foothills Meeting ·
Irvl!le COUncllwoman Gabrielle · Pryor ')'he development by 11 property No noUce of tbe bear g oo Ille
'and pouUtly, a ;city ,planner were ex· owners would. provide homes for 30,000 hiJhway' plan changes wa& given to
peeled lo atlebd today's county plaMlng people in the El 'l'orci foo~l!llln~rvlM despite tbe fact tbat the burden of
commluloo hearUW oo· the Canada City· of lrYlne 8llll't!ie Mirlne Corps Air retpOnSlbilliY of the new city. \
Foolhills df,velJ>pg>ent wblcb H appnived statloo, . , Further, OU!' of the new a\ignmenll
mlgbl ..quire COllllructlon ol a new It wu laarned Motalay that should the shifts Bak<r Parkway off ol pnipi!rty
freeway, through north Irvine. ·project: be approved several amendments now .owned by the C&nada Foothllll
Mrs. Pryor .,Id abe is "very con-' lo !l>e, c;ountY. Muter Plan of Arterial developer• and onto property owned by
cerned" about the possible Impact of Ille Hlpway' would be requhed Including \be Jrvlne Company, Although lhe
Z,!OiH<re· itevelopmeOt 'tbe COW>ty plan-shifts' of two maj<ir' arteries oolo land ioadway wouid prlmirlly aerve tbe. new
nlng commIMlo'I apjiears ready to• ap-fonnally redeM,CI by lrYlne for e<· development, tbe lrYlne Co mp a n y
pnive, • ' ~slon. · ,. pruumably would be required lo ..
..
dedicate right of way land.
The propooed h I 1 b " a y plan
amendments ,. alao delete other roads
pr<1e11Uy Included In the county plan.
Finally, tbe amendmen! sbciws a
"DIUI transit corridor" from El Toro
Road northwHI lo tbe• future city limlll
of lrYlne.
County roaCl' plannera. suaeat thls
freeway ·would lollcally crooa tbe
nortbem part;of lrYlne and .link.up lrilh
lb FllBEWAY, hgt: Z)
MoOn ·Car Loses Fender
. ' . .
Astronauts /lxpl,gre Ancient A~alanche
I . •,
SfACl!l CENTEll, Jloultoo (AP) -
Apollo.17'1 uplor<ra, who bave picked up
-of the y-.eat ~ ult the JllOOD, mo.. out nesl Ju tbelr mooo buaY to teareb. tan ancient avilancbe for the
oldeJI limar material. '
. Bur. -lllat; ·D!pne A. 'Ceman and ~ H. Schmitt prepared to
f011D ,a ma"'91>1fl finder for lhelr lunar 'tu! so Ibey ,...., be showered with the
'black duo! of T~"""°.Y!lrow valley. (See
related storleo, plclurel, Page 4).
Peters' Cooch
S~y~ Defendant
, . '
.'Well Disciplined'
The rilht rear fender fell off Mondsy
nllht and the unprotected w b e eJ
showered tbe aatn>oauls with dust,
prompting Ceman toremark: "I bate th1s
black stuH. It's ~Y lrrltatin1. It'll
take us half a dozen Sundays to dust
off." '
-Control instructed them to im-pnivlae, using clamJ>9 · and a piece of
cardbOord · or lllllulation off tbelr lunar
ship· Challeqger. --
Bone-Ured from their first seven-hour
lunar excursioo following a perfect land·
Ing on Moocfay, aatrooaub Ceman and
Scl.mitt were given an e1tra OOur sleep
todity, delaylng 'tlie start of tbelr second
moon '!Valk until 3:03 p.m. PST.
After MlssiQn \)o!l~ played lhe eerie
stralnS of ~ WalJlel''• musical
~c. "'Ibe Ride of ·the v altyries:," lo
arouse lhem, ~ responded with
some music of bis own·
"Dum, dmn;-da, dum ~. da, da;-da,
dwn," said Ceman. ~-
. ""'
''.Good moming," said ScbmitL "It
was great ' to get_ some rest."
Their driving' target today is a 1,000-
foot-high· mountain, which they call the
South Massif 4.4 mUes from the landing
c;ralt. Pbotognpbs lndicste an .,alancbe
lt!mbted down lhe side of tbe mounbin,
depositing at lhe baae matertaL. from
perbaJ>9 sevent bmar age periods,
Si:hmitt, a poJoPt who had_ a field
'Clay on themoon M'oiiilay, Aid before lhe
--.; (See APOLLO, Pap ZI
His School No Citrus Crop, Damage
. Not!'ike S~"f Despit~ 26-degree 1C9ld 1;.,.recev~•rk~~=
---
NliW FR~EWAY S~ESTED ·-Orange County Planning Commi&-.
sjoners today learned bow.Jiiii proposed Canada Foothills development
of, 2,QIJO, acres l\l!3r El Toro might affect the county's arterial higb·
way ,muter plan. Map based on county road department amendment
propooal adds ' ~way-width "mass transit corridor." Bold dashed
lines show changes in the old plan. Bold dotted lines show routes to be-· Ugbter dubed'llnes'afe routes not changed by the amend·
ment .. Shaded area .is city of Itvine .sphere of influence and triple
line rep~sents · bowidai'y of the new city and its future industrial
park. " .
< -
' '
•
--, . SUpertnt~t, abou! bflb. ·sdlooJs
By TOM BAJUZY ~ ' · : . , . being . mil "like stit " Was Dot ~ , • • T •
.... ..., ...,.. ... t Despije dips o1 tbennometers 1n citrus The National wea~r Services Fruit meantg· . to bis ori·m.tr1et·• . r:'"'
9mllnllon _ lli;ill SdlOol'• ,.;m. ..., ... 1n ~ CmDJ 19 the »dr&ree FrOlt forecast for taaliJbt anc1 ear1y·wec1-lll*W~· · · .,. • cfi· 7 "· "l M ll mill ·-"!'!if ncalloiflbot Gle .. -!ioafdJ,...,.,...dam•la ·PlldaYlodica~lhe .... t~~~.' ,•.;«i'f't--' , ' '. l~Jte .. , l to U ~ ... .._ !~ ... ., ~ .. oftngel ' Gr )emtm wU .,.,rted: Tb. .. ~-~!lie· a wf I co~~ ,, : ,_.,_ flntl .. • ~o;:·~id' ii' ""'~,.....,.., ..... 1:' ~ • ~V""i?'i
..... G(..~ Jn. eokt~ll .. ..,tiamrt"Uf. W~llUU lftlS"l'OJD WO:NIU> ~ De'W, :"':" ..._,,·~, ;.-z.::; ... : '" ' , ~ -"'t r ·.,_~-~In-r r It 1lofj ·•'me lw tbe· ~~ •• may Pl1'Wlll ·~ ~111 "'9-· ' "· • · 1 '' J ... ,
• ~~ jiNblEwww • lllelr ·-·--. A-~· _,_._.._.the N "-·· w• --·~ : 'A7.bn.~· '" n· '.l'A .... mi·ng' Si"gn -cl1llall said ti la a ._ wts were 1ecordeci l.1-,......_,. ' •uuaw -. ' "l.claa.'t-knOw why' · , to-ran 111 f...11 ·
Ooaeh Dllw Gettf told an CJnnie oaJ:t .: o:; _. ~oatkm and for tbort Service Aid' !\Idly, are. not ezpec!ted .Jil . bllh i<boiOI Uke sUr (ptj-.)..'" ' ~ 9••'* Court jary tbet,must ""°""'PIN* ol•lillle to bave mlnimlz-~": ~:l'"~~.:!itatn -O. U"nlversl)y 'ff l·gb ....,..,,.,. _. tmlty at the time.be ed crop""-"-of Southern Calli mi bo . tlio · faetillf'members mi!IC!Oilstrued this
kllllll bll pennts that the~ was Bill Batbpte, a dtrus r1mchu near areas 0 a 8 ve to mean their eampUl ... aitd..1 are
cblml by tbe acbool'•.11111to1118'1 water Sait Juan "-•-~ alao 1-•ed 26 l,000-foot .mark. · · · about ready lo "skin" ]1lm Corey
polo •-I ·-·'" .....-M-· ~ Tbe continuing ~ weal4er .along . • ,...,.,. u 11 -.--· delree tempentum shor!ly before cfawn the Orance Coast surprised midenls" of said. . , .
O>icb Jl<l!1, watcbed ke"11y from today.' 8niutf1e poll ·and wind macblnes San Juan Cap-wbo ldt Moocfay It didn t refer lo the ll'Vlne ~
Peters' r\ let*' by tbe lolt(-balred, saved bit ...,...,.be Aid, nigbt'• dty Cooindl meeting to find .their ~·be almolt 1igbed ~y. ~
bMtdlcl · defM~. a110 tedled that cars COl&ed with lrost. ~ ~e ~ just convin~ .them. -wia bit penanal choice u the -valuallle p111er 00 the water polo 'I" Lall\llUI Beach residents, some as close
_.i that -· . c1. ,wo Nude Bodies f~~~ Ylfds ~~~~Inda· rtjlllrtedand A paquo ..._., .. tbe 1-1 ae-•~-ca" '""!"' ·~•Y Y, , .... -=-.-. ...... In the acltool' Newport BeaCb diivers dlacoYered coats = ~G.itr ~ Jl!ry, s Found-Victims oi lce'Cll Wlndsblelds '•t claybreak. •:i,....,..be -a llne.nample of an Wlnila below canyoos spared many in-~-athlete,'' Getty said. ''And land county resident&' Cardena fn:m.fl"ost
.... -I talbd· lo ..... It *"' O'E Dmg T' raffi ? damage and -lo the nditlmal "-t Ibey •'-'--~ be wal an excellent .l . , . , , IC. dama1e most clirus _.,. r<P.lrlOd . .,. -......... cfa'y. ' ..I • • ~It . lb~ '' · 1 • · ~ · PLACERVILIE · (AP)-The nude IJod.. Either wind or cloud cover can keep Tiie alleptloo Iba~ Peten, 23, killed bla plnU;·111 ·tlieh''Hatlqton Beach lei of two young men bave been unearth-temperst111e3 from hovering below Ir=
-oo April' II, tWll is no Joocer ed near, bore, El Dorado Coonty Sheriff inl· Four hount ol below SI-degree
dl ... ded In lite delmdanl'• lleCOOd B<rnlO Carbon ............ locfay. weatJier can damage fruit. "But U It I"" mWder ·....--down to 20, It doesn't taU long to kill a
lrtal. · · Tbe victims may· bave been murdered crop," Rice noted.
Baf tbe jury will.have to rule on bis in connection wJtb the narcotics traffic,
stale.of ---he llabbeil Charles Pelen, 511, 'llnucb uie -and alranll· he laid.
ed bls.motber, Flora, M, a tMcber at Carbon said llie bodies were found in
Llltooln Sdtool In Corona <!el Mar. shallow tp'aves, side : by aide, along * * * Col,d Nips State
. ' ' ' '
Trustees Accept
Off el", to Beam . . . ' . '
Uni High Games
Tustin Union Hllh Scliool District
tnlstees Mondsy nigbt acceP.ied tbe offer
of Community Cablevision Cor;npany to
install' a live television broadcasting
cable in' the gymnaslun. at ·umverslty
HJ1h School In lrYlne, at oo cost to tbe
district.
J>roooaitor PaU!lian~-procluc<d a 1-man-Rolll near the bamlet of -~lo counter} earlier
leltimoay that Pelen WIS already show-Reocue, -of Sacramento, An Inc sJcns ol ment,.i llress. wben be aerv· autopsy wsa being conducted i n Crops; Diimage
Not Yet Known
Officials at Channel 3 m Newport
Beach plan to put in conduit and cables
for a ~way cable link, In the gym lo
televise basketball games and. other
school events. (See P!it:D8, I'll! I) Placervllle.1
!
~hool to Get .
Intercom System
An lntercvm .,.tem, ailowinl 'ataU at)CI
-· ta ' ... tlicl efdt ulJter quickly wll be imtalled tbtli ,sdtool'< year at
Mlaslon YieJo• HJcb School,' •
Tultln • UltlOn • 11JiJi • SClt6ol Dtatrict
tnlateet ,Monday nilbt awarded a ·con-
Iract OD Ute job lo iianniio Engineering,
"Inc., ol J.ol ,Angeles. lbe lo" bidder at ... 817.. 'i '''
The only other bidder OD tbe project
was Otto K. Oleaon Electronics of El
-•• t .fll,ntl, . Wort will 601!ln almoll lmmedlately oo
the plans fot Jnlt411alloo, '
,.
Saddleback Trustees
Study Pupil HoU1ing
'l'lte two appeared lo be In their 20s,
Carbon Aid, but otherwite there was oo
identlllcstlon.
He aald there may be a lint-between
tbe bodies and' two acia ol bliiadsoaked
men's clothing found in a Sacramento
su6urb Mooday ,
Tbe clolhlng lncloded a beavy wool·lin-
ed jacl<t and a w'al1t ·lengtb
~. lllllborlUes aald.
WiWam Mlllei, a J.lll*mn•n for tbe
-Coaoty slierur1 olllce, said bolb jackets cantalned ,....,..., boles
which -ban been calllOd by bullets.
FBI. ·citesr ·Maoi1ts
WASllJNGTON (Ufl) -:rile FBI laid
Monclay the Revolllllonary Union, a coall·
lloe ol Maoilt tp'OllJl'I, 11 _.attng In •10
atates; dedlcated lo deatroylng Ute
gomiunent and creating a Communist
ooclety. Jn lb annual report, the FBI did
not name the ~tales nor did It elllmate
tbe lllllllbor of -
Saddleback Valley tlnlfled School
'1llstrlct truotees will COllllucl a study
oe11ion on pupil bouainll tonight at 7:111 In
tbe IDUllc room at Lot A'll101
Dtlermldl•ta Sdlool lo 'El Toro, ......__,., ,,_-fiiino-..md--blilt~ '
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Unseasooal
cold hu nipped several California food
Cl'OJ>9, the Department of Food and
Agriculture said today, but the· extent of
the damage could not. bo immediately
The proposal was mad" lo· Ual Hllh
principal Vic Sberroltt, but referred lo
dlslrict trustees because suc,h acijons re-
quire their finA1 approv.al.
The work 11 eqocted lo taU t1'<) 4f4y1,
Cablevision officials told Sberrettt Ibey
woold try to mako the Installation
without disrupting students.
aueised. • • ted Oranges bave definitely been hurt, M Appom meaning 'bat Prices will go up, a anzo
spokesman Aid. Early reports from tbe -
nc1d .say tbat,quality will 10 dowo, and To·· Har. bor Board· some of the crop •Nill be lost.
The wont citrus damage wm probably .
be· ·in Frelmo, Kem and Tulare Counties, Stq>ervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim
whe,re muCh of. tbe crop Is IJ'OWD and has · named Santa Ans attomey Ftank
wheh! ·tbe mtrout')' bit' IO degrees over Mamo · to ·tbe Onnge County Harbors,
lhe weekend, lhe Spokesman said, But ii. Beaches and Parks Commlssi,on.
taru twp « thrtt clay• lo determine the Mllll!O I.ill suCce<d Martin Usab , also
actual dama1e to plant cells. of santa Ana, who bas served on the
Tempentum· sank lo 11 degrees In commission •Ince 1970, U11b said
Sacramento and Sal' Joaquin Counties, business ·pressure called for hls resigna-
and hit '17 and 20 degrees on successive tJon·. He is the founder and bead of
nl1hts In Butte and Glenn Counties, the Dynatecb Corp,, 8 COlllJIUler compootnt d==~ 'T:,d. the Castroville area In manufacturing 'firm In Santa Aha.
-7 """"'"' _,. hurt, but the Manzo, wbo maintains olficel at IOD N, ._.....,., Broadway, ii an am>date d SQpetvilor
clepol-lald IO dollar value could be Robert w. Bottin. They bafe quarters oo
•-to tbe ""-• unUI the crop Is the same fioo< of the Q:'ocker, Bonk ~ ._ was suffered by building. '
.,.._ ~ the IOI.Ith coast, the ·
-In the oew dlairlcl u · -u 1-lblt and will look ..., IJlllcal
~¥.-toa" ~ vegetable -singer-Wini 'Fliir'
-.,._ lllld the .batYeoting of bnll'COU and '
caulllloww wu delayed. . LOS ,\llllELl!ll (Ul'i) -Goopel.alnger. .1.irdtltects' plm tonl&hl. Los -Alla
Intermediate llchool 11 11 •1n 111oor ~Ave.
' '
About a llCl'll QI caulUJower were Clara Ward wu tn talr cood1Uoo today al
Jor• In the Fremont-Newark area of UCLA lledical Center alt4r oullerlng a
Alameda County, Ille department aaid. mloor ltroke at her home Jut weekend.
Irvine ~ty .~olb!ien. lonlgbt .:wljl be
~ to ,UJ>bold t\leir zoomg ad· -ior·· SlllD remov"Ot Older al· f""'-PrUle 'n.o..'--t Com ~.... y ~............ pany
since' tbe 'ftrm's Willriut· A•t!llile "-com-
.peliloi, Paceietter Homes. Is reluctant'to
remov~ lb -1onnillg, nellhborlng bWbOanl. ' .
The) matter! Is cf the 1 agenda for
lonlibl'I ~ sesi!on which ·bej!lns at
7<llll'ln dlY·ball, ao11:ampus Drive.
The cblel diHermce between the
legalities. of &>!'-t.., Jli&m, ,I"!' the ex·
plnljon ·dalell if the -11-1-d use
pennlts wbidJ allowed them to be put up
In the firot pla!'e. Tbe permit tor tbe
Board Approves
State Aid Plea
For: New School
Jrvlne Unified School' DislriGI Irustees
Mooday nilh1 adQpted a reoolulloo In
SUl>IJOl'I of a San Joaquin School Dlslrict
applicaUon Irr state aid lo build 'another
elementary school In Univertity Park. 'Conotructloo oo lhe !lchciOI, known as
linivinlty Park Il ,or Vllla'I' Park IV, is
ten!aUv<ly sChedule<I lo, begin in April,
~Unified wi lib over.operation
of achools in the area "from San Joaquin
JuJY I, tll7S. " San Joaquin trustees last Wednesday
voted to,aeek 1/.1 mllllon In.aid from lhe '
state allocatlob board for the Irvine
ocbool and 11.6 mi!lloo foe an elementary
school in Laguna ilills.
Approval Is "espected a Imo s I
automaticall~ because the d,l 1 tr I c t
qualified for the two elementary 1Chools
ai le"I .mOotba ago oii the ballla of tn-
creasea ..i.ilinents.
The ~. Univenity Park school is
beJne i>lllll\ed for no llpdenb, IO recuJar
claslrooms and two klnder1arten areu.
I ,, •
-· smaller Presley sign has expired.
Pacesetter has until April, 1974 to
remove Its bigger sign. Both sigm: violate
new county sign laws affecting properties
near freeways.
Last month, councilmen continued the
hearing on the sign issue in hopes 90me
law setting a removal date for all such
billboards could be drafted .
Preparation of such a law would re-
quire a shift of recentJy set priorities for
the. plannlnR~ent, tbe stall sug-
gest.. Zoning · strator Mike Harm
(See SIGN, Page ZI
Trustees Favor
Uni Observatory-
A preliminary proposal to build an
observatory for astronomy students at
Uriiversity High School met with good
reaction from Irvine Unified School
District trustees Monday ni who
l'nalnly-questtooea o such a
project.
Trustees instructed district Superin-
tendent Stan Corey to geL additional in-
formation on costs of scientlfia
obServatories.
The Idea was pr<1e11ted lo the board by
high school faculty members. Corey said
today he would report back in the near 1 future.
Orange Coltst
Weadt"r
It should be a little warmer on
W,,dncsday, accord Ing to the
weather servlQe, with, highs Of SI
along lhe Orani• Coast. Lowa I<>
night wltl dip down to 41.
INSIDE TODAY
Th• arowln~JelUI -~ both sneered (It and pmiled,
wa.t anblt1ted bu a journalist
w h.~o crl.1Fcro1.ttd the nation
hlJ>Pi•·•tvt< • .uwna """"'9 the
nation'• comm1me1 0-t\d. cott,.
.. 1udino thot 0t•v """" -)JlrliJJQ qualiU••· Story OTI Poae
2Q,
"
I
"
,
2 DAIL V PILOl TuHda), Ot«mbtr U , 1'72 'I '
"United Way
Coat Goal
Optimistic
Buoytd by a tote.I of $475,SBO in col·
lection1, H1rbor Area United \\ray
Chalrma11 Ed tl irth predicted r-.1onday
that the communities of Costa f\.1esa,
Jrvine and Newport Beach ~·ould reach
their goal of raising '50',000 by early
next year. "·
Final tallies taken Monday night show·
ed that 94.3 percent of the overall goal
had been reached but there was consid-
erable oplln1ism amon:; United Way
workers that it •.1dll reach 100 percent or
possibly more once all lhe collccliOns are
in.
The deadline. orlgin1:11Jy sel for Jate
November, was extended for the re-
mainder of the Year to 1neet the goal.
said ~lirth, \\•ho doubles as mayor of
Newport. Beach.
1ifore than 70 percent, 9r $326,288, of
the tota l wa s contributed by the United
Way's corporate and employe di vision.
Of these the building, development and
rea l estate divisions gave $37,235, Major
contributors were the Irvine Co mpany.
the Grant Company, VTN. the Don Koll
Coinpanv, Dean Construction and Rinker
Developinent. f
,. Retail employes donated $30,324 and
were led by the May Company. Financial
emp\oyes contributed $2w.500, represen-
ting a 105 percent if'ICrease over last
year, largely because of new donations
by Pacific Mutual Life, Avco, Imperial
Sa\'ings and California Federal.
Biggest employe CO:ntributor y,·as the
Industrial and service divisior. \\'ilh a
total of $127.025. Leading firms in this
category were the DAILY PILOT,
Ph ilco-Ford. Celesco. Hyland
Laboratories. Xerox. Schlage Locks,
Aluminum Forge. Re1nex. Container
Corporation and Air Californi:...
The con tribution fro;-:1 lhe Newport
Beach co mmunity ·Nas $36,558 with
businessmen kicking in the greatest
share, or $2,542. The Costa Mesa com-
munity contributed $6,571 and the overall
leader there was also the business
division with S2,81U.
Costa Mesa city employes were ac-
corded the special distinction of tMYng the
moat generous donors in the U.S. on a
per capita. basil. Their •verage con-
tribution of $38.91 exceeded last year's
record of $37.118. by the municipal
employes of Milwaukee.
The city of Irvine had collected only
$1 085 or 25 percent of its goal by Monday ni~t. A concentrated push during the
next few ~ is expected to OOost the
l rvine tot al.
The special gifts dlvisK>n is also ~
ging behind with only SS percent of its
$75,000 goal collected . John Far~er,
division chairman, however pred1cted
that his group would actually exceed ill
goal. · Jn the government and edu cational
division chai rm an John Nicoll reported a
'total ~llection of $01,800 which
.. represtnts ~ percent of the goal.
DisUnguisbed contributors In lhls divi1ion
·were the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District employes who gave H,800 more
. than they did last year.
Jaycees Collect
Indian Goods
Irvine Jaycees are collecting boo~.
blankets beddirig , canned goods, electric
beaten 1and toy1 for diltribution to Z2
Paiute tndian children aged 4 to 18.
All goods donated to the drive by Fri·
day will be delivered Saturday to lbe In-
dian village near Bridgeport .
Jaycees Pat Bonner and Pat Mullaney
aaid the only source or heat fn the shacks
and trallen in w:·1.:.h the childreJl llve are
wood-bUrntn~11 stjve1. ~ Jaycees w a so try to gatl'ter fir.Wood
to deliver to the homes. Cash danatlons
are also welcome. For information about
the drive, call Bonner at 551-6415 or
Mullaney at MJ-5811.
• ~ .
I • • • • ' I '
OU.N&I C04ST IS
DAILY PILOT
.,,_ 0r-. c-1 DAIL'( PILOT. wilt! ........
k ~illl'd floe N-.P ..... k pUblllhed try
lllt OI'.._ CNtt Pwlllillltll'W CM!Hnl' .......
nle .. 111aris •r• Plllllk hld. MandaY tllraugti
fr-.,, tor CKi. Mna, Ht'#JIOr1 IHc.ll.
.... ..,..... ICKJ\l,,ounttln \ltllty. L ......
&..c:ft. lr-IMIS..fllfltN<JI ~ Stn ~cl
k11 J1M11 Ctr:illtrtlle. A slntl• rtOIOnlll
tdlliM k ""lll"hM .. h!R•rs 91'111 Sund•ys..
Tiit prllldfoll .-ii.it• Nnl It ti 3311 Wini
''' S.,_., Cntt M.... C•liflll"ltlf, t261'.
t••trl N, Wted
Pr .. IOMI 1,..:11 P_,llWltr
J1tk R. Curlty
Vkt ,.,......,., tlld Ge...-11 """"""
Their111 keey/I
El ller
Th•~•• A. Mt1rphl11• ~""''"' •.. .., Ch111rlt1 H. l••• ltl1htr4 P. Nill
AN!al&nl Mtnltlnl l:ll10r1 -· C..11 M"': D WW:!!~ ltntl ~ lt.c!U nSJ N -~ Ltfljfllll hlctll m ,.,..., ~~tl!IO• &uf.111 lNJt ·~ ......,.,. ltfl C......-.1 at Mwitt 11 C.lftlM ....
Ttf.,bsr1 C714J HJ.4Ut
C'-lfle4 MMI' 'Al MJ.Nll
In C......_ Al D1,c11 ..... 1
, ....... 4fl-4420
CliiW'iM. ltn,, Ol'lllfl Ctlt.t ..... IMnt ~· ,.. -·-11$. llMW. .... . ........ -::. .,. M_..11~ Mrtlfl
..., • •• u:"' wtl!lwl '"'"' •· ...... .. ......... .......
,,_..., ~ ....... ,_ .. II °"'* Miff, C.llftr'Ma. ... ,.'"... "" c.,.,..,. ... .., ~' " """ "''' lftMlllW1 Mlfflifl"r ,..,. .. ,._. 11.45 l'IOll!lllr. I • L..~~~~~~~~~~~-'
•
t;Jementean Hort
.. lnv~lved in SpecUJ.cufur Crasli
M~ ... Clawr • ,... .. .... ..... !!!oM!
of hJs ge lledu i="' allomoon, and
a subsequent 1paclile:ular crub left Mm
with cuts and b-.
Herl>ort L. E&gJmon. 811, of 1\111 Monie
Vlota had been driving 11111'111 on FJ C..,.., Roal, police llld; when.he IUd·
denty lost cootrol or tbe car.
The a~lo -ned aloog the muddy
highway ohoulder al l>tgh speed for about
fOO feel beneltb lht> Pallsadl!a. .•
After bumpbl1 1n oulcropplng, ll made
• aharp rteht turn and •lammed beadon
Into the bluffs.
The impact then apparently caused Eg·
,..-gleston to shift the a u t o m a t i c
Citizens to Plan
Irvine Festival •
trvlno clli2en1 pl1nnl111 a MoY n td IO
citywide •!'II fe1Uvll ·WIU meel •I 7<46
p.m. Wedneoday In llancho San Joaqulp
Intermediate School, 4881 MlchelsOn
Avenue, University Park.
Working co.ehalrman Mrs. Donna
Andrew will present a report O:_D the prog-
rea or the planping effort.
b_.,ltslim ~ ,....._ .ud .._ Cllr ...... . ........ _
retracm.· Ill NDIWIY nllle.
• -It rtnally b...,..S ilD th<: bluff and came
to rest standing on lfa no1t, Wted against
lhe sheer cliff. ,
llevvol wllneslff wve 'dll~l•I oe'lil>Y •t the . Ulne ot lhe mllh1p1 but . -
miraculously, ofr.Jcers said -no other
cars were 'involved.
l:ggleaton suffered supernc! ~
cuts and $;!me bruises tnd w• en. 'o
San Clero•ruo General HolpJ ll ~·
emergenc)' tre•trnen t and teats \o
detcrmJne if'he suffered 1 heart eeburt.
His condition this morning wa.s descdb-
ed as satisfactory.
....... P~J
APOLLO ...
flight !hat "thla avolanche Is our beat
Potential for sampllna very old material
on the moon -perhaJ)ll llaUna bock u
bilUon Y"" lo' lht> very orialn."
DAILY PllM "'"hllft •
FREAK ACCIDENT MONDAY INJURID SAN CLIMINTI MAN AS CAR BACKID UP BLUPF
Herbert L. Eggl .. ton, 80, Is Carried From Scene on Stretcher; He Suffer.cl Cuts and Bruis..
Vivian Hal~ Ktlth • N ... n and Al
VanderSchans will rePQrt on activities of
their committees: scopo and concept,
events inventory and public relaUons and
finance.
Schmitt's trained geologist's eye ahould
help pick out the elderly rock&. But
determination of their exaot age will
have to wait until they are returned to
eart!Ji for laboratory analy1is.
11 Cel'Qln and Sclunitl collect U.. old
maletiol, they will have fulnlleq their
goal on this last Apollo mission-to fill in
missing chapters in lunar history, basic-
ally the very early and the very late.
Rocks returned. by five earlier Apollo
ll"Jlcii 1andera have ranged in age
between 3 billion and 4.2 billion years.
Suspect Convicted
l 11, N etVJJort Ra.pe,
Burglary Case
It took an Orange Counly Superior
Court jury just 65 minutes today lo ftud
parolee Walter Hamp lon Jr. guilty of
raping and aasaulting an attractive
Corona deJ Mar housewife.
The jury filed back into Judge KeMeih
Lae's courtroom lo alto return a guilty
verdict on charges of burglary filed
against Hampton by the man who
employed him on a construction site ad-
jacent to the vicJlm 's home.
Hamptoa uked for Immediate sen·
te.ncinl. Judge Lae sentenced him to five
years to file in state prison on the
burslary conviction with rape and auault
sentences held over until he completes
Uial lenn. .
Hampton's state prison file will be
reviewed when the burglary sentence has
been completed, Judge Lae's ruling ifl.
dicated. ,
But the fact that Hampton was on
parole from an assault convict.Ion at the
time CJ( the rape last July 21 makes it
highly unlikely that he will serve less
than lbe. minimum five years, court of-
ficial• sald.
Hamrton's victim , the mother of three
young children, identified the tall. husky
defendant as the man who fofced his wa y
tnto her Larkspur Avenue home and
raped her in front of two of those
children.
Hampton'• 11&-pound victim needed 11
stitches to close a head· wound opened
whem Hampton struck her with a heavy
bedroom lamp.
She toki the jury that ahe was
repeatedly choked and beaten by her
assailant before Hampl.on fled when the
victim's aisler·irrlaw entered the bome. '
From Pflfle J
PETERS ...
ed as torpedo man in the U.S. Navy.
Psycbtatrlat David Thomasin! toc!Jy
confirmed that he was the medical f)f.
ficer assigJ1cd lo examine the AWOL
Petera. when Ule defende nt was sent to
him from the USS "Narius" In San
Di~go.
tbom11iDt said he waa told that Peters
had advised !Uperior offi cers that he had
been OJ\ ·LSD, marljuana and mescaline,
that be.could not "morally tolerate" the
military and was a consclentldua ob-
jector.
But Thomasin! said he found Peters to
be "a calm , assured and alert" peraon
who was in no way mentally disturbed by
the drugs he Hid he !lad liken.
''He was not Plythot.lc,'' 'l'bornaslni
testified. "And I sent him back with the
obsarvaUoo tbal we he was perfectly
capt.ble, In mental le~. of being
punished for the allegation of unauthoriz·
ed absence."
Wltnene1 called by defense attomey
B1rry Tarlow have indicated that Peters'
addiction to drugs befoR and during his
stay in a San Diego County desert com-
mune may have affected his motlvalion
to the point that he' was not mentally
competent when he killed his parents.
Witnesses In both tr1ti11 have testified
that Peters warned everyone he met of
"the comlna revolution" and that the
predic~ holocauat would "awcep away
the weak S.nd the dying."
Peters' 13-year-old brother testified
that Peters told him within moment• of
killing their parents that he had dlspoeed
of them because "30,000 Red Chinese
were about to lnvade lhe 'COWllry. ''
· P~' first trial ended when he at-
tempted to e.c1pe from the courtroom
®rio& the" noon.hour rece11.
LA Iwiiate Escapes
~ ANGELES (AP) -· 11aac
M11d•lri. 811, • coun(y lomiic, wu 11
l•11e lod•Y •lier he and another pr"°""r
61C•Pld by climilJ\g hand over hand
( down I !lrtllote they huna OU[ Of B
llgblwell no tho lllh floor or !he 1!111 of
Justlcc, sheriff's deputies 1 •Id .
. .
./
l(issinger Holds Almost
Nonstop Talks in Paris
The arts festival committee, endorsed
but not officially eslablished by Irvine ci·
ty eovernmenl, hopet to draw participa·
lion !reni city tcboob, UC lrvtne and lh6
tndust rlal-buslness community ln the
city's first cOOrdinated arts effort. While Ceman and Scbmltt slept today,
the almost-forgotten man if Apollo 17, ....... p_,. J llonold E. l!:vw, '""'1l'Od a detaUed
report on the.Ir ftnt exCW'lioA while he SIGN orbited 60 mlleo 1bov1 tilt mooo ID com..
PARIS (UPI) -Dr. Henry A. Klss-
inger held almost non.stop neaoUatlng
sessions today in efforll to end the Vlel·
nam war, and FmtdJ Forelln Mlnllter
r.taurlce Schumann predicted the end
would come by Jan. !.
French dlp1omat1c sources spcke of a
compromise on a key pcint -withdrawal
of North Vietnamese.
While Kissinger was meeting with
Hanoi's Le DuclTho, both tht North Viet-
namese and the VM,t Cone rejected an of-
fer by South Vietnamese President
Nguyen Van Thieu for a Christmas
c..,..flre wbich CO<l)cl be proloo(td in-
delinllely and wlllcb could brine borne
lhe -prilo--ol -. Kllainger met tbta morning wllb the
permanent re-tau,.. lo tbe 'flmr>.
day 1tmlpublio Paris .pt1ee talU and
!hey wero joined. brte!ly wtlh a &roUP of
iecl1nlclat\I . from both tides who are
believed eclkinc • -flre •-•nt in ttill another meeting.
Then all journeyed lo a vllla in
suburban Parla for the main meeti111
between KiBlt1111er and Tho.
The Kiulll(er-Tbo talU beaan al s p.m. (6 1.m. PSTJ.
l'rotrl P .. e l
FREEWAY ..•
• • • 'I'hrH hout1 later, Kistinge.r and an mand ship America.
aide took a brief stroll through the urges councilmen to uphold his decilllon Mluion Control communicator Joeeph
garden while a ralny, misty night en-to remove the •ten• a1 the permltl ex· Allen r1dJoed that Schmitt'• on-the-epot
veloped lhe Paris ,.glon. pire. a!ajy1ls helped l(rOUnd scltntll:ts .,...
They then resumed the conference Several other hearhlgs achtduled for elude that the thln dirk materlal cov""' •-hi d th 1 h 1 1-~ I h tl r toni11ht's meeUng are expected to be con·
l.l'C n e t g t Y c UMN alee 1 u ers o tlnu•ed. ing the valley floor at Tauru1-Littrow is the low-roofed CommunJst villa. A zoning appeal by the Ayres Construe· very young and that the material beneath Later, Tho, who acted as host in the d h fl t dee" · Communist-owned villa in Git aUr Yvette, lion Company an t e n• ISJOll ~n the upper layer apparently resulted from
Ille Larwin ~--"""" -~· both ut I · I llo 15 miles ooulh .. ~ of Par'-, oc: .... rted ....... ~.., lh a vo can1c IVI w.
"'"'"' 16 ..._... north Irvine, aw•lt comple on of e Kissinger to hla ~ar at the end of the city's policy plan. The planning co-,n. "The surface around the landing site is
1lh·hour me.ting and gave him a Jong, mission Thursday night is expected to generally an undulating p!aln," AUtrt
apparently cordial handshake. give ils final approval to the plan. reported, "It la somewhat rougher and
Kissinger's pel'Qlal plane Jaod¢ at Plannlna director Bruce W~ aug· with a greater amount or boulder.s than
Orly Airport toni&ht, and ai~ ottJ.. gesta 1he two resldtntill ...-lnp be p.lt was er;pected by the utronauts.
cials said his departure for Washington over to the CouncU's Jan. 13 meeting !O 411'bera an a lot ot amau craters whh
may be imminent. ' consultant Ed Haworth 11\llY be certain glass on the bottom and many boulders
The North Vie tnamese delegation an-his precise land use plan affectinE the ranging from 1boUt a foot to 11 feet in
nounced t~y wouJd rm;et again Wednes-Ayrts and Larwtn properties conronns sUe, au or them covered with the dust of
day. w:lth the clty't JIOfley ·p}ut;--the dark--mantlt."
KlMln&er's departure was con.firmed ReaoluUon of lhe Camput Drive u:· Allen uld whlt when CerMn drilled .to-
by American sources, but it was not tension also ii recommended for delly. to the turface to &athcr sublurface
immediately clear whether he would The plannlnl commlllllon Tbunday wW material, be 11btt hard material 11ver1r
firsl •!lend the Wednesday meetina. review lhe draft env-tll Imped ·lbw and ...,mtd to l'tlCb ...,.. 11an1
SchwnaM, who bu been in cloee con-report prepartd by COOl\ll\lnt Haworth material at the seven-foot depth~ tr
tacll with both sidea, llUlde his and make • .......,....llon lo the eoun-Tbt communicator said the explorers
•l•lemenls during • luncheon speech to-cU. Counollmen could act an the pn>-1 collected Ill poundl oJ rock.I, lncludirui
daf. He said he belle ... the United s1111s Deo. 19, in lime to meet lhe year end three or !ootbaU a11e tnd 111~ Jlt eof-
w11 achieve • !Ice ln Vietnam before the deadline for county rundlna: or campus or and 1t7 bl1ck...nd-whUe Pfctures dur-
new U.S. Congrea convenes. Drive: lnt: tht rtnt Ul*UUon.
"A selUernenl Is likezy and probable, Other matters lo be c:onaldered tonl&ht "T•Sounds like !hey 1ot a lot of 1ood lttdf
he aald. "I conllrm I am not a are: done and !bat lhey've got 1 lol of pod
pesaimlll." -City •tall ulary rtCOllllMndaUons lnlormallon alffiley," Evan.o commenled
I" W•abln&ton, Pruldent Nixon met for the calendar year be11Mln1 Jan. l. at the cancluakln of the report.
for 40 minutes wit.:. Gen. Aleunder M. -An array of traffic safety concerns "I th1nk thlt'a a 11fe conelualon,"
Hai& Jr., JGtsin1ter'a deputy, and nvlew· including se tting a SG-mile-an·bour speed Allen noted.
d "' ...... :. .. v1-1.... .......-.111~ limit an Culver Drtve, scboo1 cross•alk Sclen"-L'I t M' 1 "-·trot •· an extension of the Garden Grove e ca..,.es .uwu -.er, '"'"'"""'' to I .~ ··• f ...., I J.5! on ~ we.re ur "'"" Socrelary -·. L. Ziegler. otedl in Uolvera ty PM. and -uUoo o irll!ued Monday ., \)ley followed the freeway. No plans for this, however are "The Prllident remiinl in clOle COO· the CuJver Drive at 1ifichelson Avenue reports ot the ftrat COOIOCllt on tho moon.
currently belni formulated by state tact wllh Dr ......... .,, .. Ziter Aid. problem. Ceman and Schmitt'• llllal drtv~ u -Divlaloo of Highways planners, a Zi I -.. · """'lion w~--~ -~" spokesman for the state office has said. eg er would not uy edl1tely ........, on 9'Wf_....,, -..""'"' to
u-.=,uJa .... -•'I certain she whether another . MJOUallni maioll S l G De th •tart at 1:13 p.m., will tut lhein to ..... .... would be held w_,. mugg ers et a anotl>tr i.,.. mowrtfm namtct North would · tt'today'i bearlnG, d""" •he Tilt Communllll in fliectlng Sal&<>n's MwU In ...,.h ol more ancltnl
has no directive from the eotincil to do call for a holiday truce injected a new DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania (UPI ) -m.atertal.
"'1· _,_, t•-·· issue into lhe troubled nqotiatiolll -Fifteen por"'11 have -..,lenoed to Aller btaalin& off lrom the moon, • .,,. COUllC ··-nearly a moatb ago they demanded for lhe finl lime that death f,.. clove lilllUUllna. the Zlnllbar 'nlundly, they will ,.join Evana in
erreclively told lbelr planning com-Thieu jolJI lhe United Stal" In al-ing ~v·--··t &MO""~ •-••v. The ·-Amerlc1 lar two more :tar.• of lunar orbit misalonen to "mind their 01'n blainess" 0" .w _.......... w~ -.... -·-when the commlaalon -··•t oounou a~ IJlj' cwe-lir< qreement. llOllllcemelll , ... !ew dolllli 0 !the trial IClence btlore lleadlni or home Salur-
....... r Thieu bu said he would never ol&n an by lhe People's Court, b\11 111d thll the d1y.
proval of 8 l'OIO!utlon llllllni more al· accord that did not call for withdrawal of de!andlnll -II K~1111 and lour Tan-Splashdown in Ille Pacific ls odlecluled
tentlon to enviromnental impacts of the the North Vietnamese. •••••·• p1··•~ ft•U , ntltt ........... "
Canada Foothill• development. Ii~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;·-;;·;;-;:;;;;;•;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;;-;~;;·;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;-.;-Among impactl of eoncem to the com· I
mission were the roadway requirements
and the potential for need of a new
freeway.
Cooncihnen voted to rewrite the city's
letter to the county commlalonen 1sk·
Ing onJy that Irvine be notified of any
chongea of land use propooed near !Is
sphere ol lnflutnce or city limits.
Tbert rem11bw emnt quation al city
haD toda1, whether that dlrtctJve re·
~uirad "' l!llo'!ed 1n lrvlnt pl&Mlng
commjlllOl\er fo carry that letter lo the
heartns today.
It that wu the council's !Ment, plan-
ning cornmiaalon chalnnan Wayne Cluk
said he had not received any direction to
attend the hearing,
Meanwliile, key cily sla!£ . huddled
shortly bet°"' ,_, l°"'l' lo a-lhe
legal lmpllcatlon1 of the proposed new
hl&hway pl1n.
City Allomey Jame• Erickson, parlner
in the Santa Ana law flnn of Rutan and
Tucker which also repre1enll the Cinada
f!'oothUl1 developen, wa1 to meet with
pla~lng director Warren rq:ardhli Ute hearing.
A COUflly road department aide said
the bearint: was advutlled In a cen1ral
county newspaper, the aide noted.
Basketball Clinic
Slated in Irvine
A basketball clinic for boys and i(rls
ages 8 to 11 will be sponaored Saturday
from 9 11.m. to noon at lhe University
Hl&b ·School gymnaallDO ~y lhe Irvin•
Recrealion Department. .
The cllnlc it free. Parents are in\l\tcd
lo lltand. Parllelp1nta allollld drlll lor
pl•yln1. l'or more lnlonnallon. e11l ll'roome
Ooylt ll Ille city cl ltvln•. llWMO.
f
Truth
or Consequences?
Somellm11 the truth t..rtsl Wt have loot
whit he w1nttd lo h11r.
1n occ11ion1I ,.1. by not tellin9 a customer
..
W1 might poi~t out that 1 customer would be better off to p1y 1 Rttlo moro for our
rubber ptdding thin buy • chlfper, mushy pad th1t fHls llkt you or• willing on bell-1. Th•
"b1lloon" ped hum the Cl•pot backing, C1u11s stretching, ond ruin• 111m1. Also, this padding
often fl1tt1n1 out after 1 whit..
Addltlon1lty, wo might teH you that some carpet fibers •re more pr1et1C1I than othe ...
A fiber lh1t worls In ono texture, won't work in 1nothtr-
Fttl 1-to c•ll for advice. AJI of our ulos p1opl1 h1v1 had 11l1nsiv1 11p1rt.nc1 ln tho
strvict end of this business -ind ofter 111 -th. moot lmporlont thing wo can offer, th1t ,,.
else doe1, i1 1ervJcel
'
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1H3 l'hlo911119 Aft.
COSTA Mlllo
--64M --
11<1u1111 Mon. Thru Thu,.., f 19 IOO-,llJ. t to 9~1AT .. tilO 11 I
'·
f
.,
/ '
..
' Bunii.iqe&en Bearh
Founi&in Valley
Today's Fbud
N.)'. St8cks
t
VOi,. 65, NO. 347, 5 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ' ORANGE COUl;lT"f, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER -12, 1972 TEN CENTS
. • I .
Huntington SChoqls Seek
ex MICllAEL GOODRICH °' .. ~ ...........
Trustees ' of the llilotlngton Beach
Unloo High sebool lllotrict will be tn-
fonned tonight that each of the district's
•Ix schools iiave decided to pursue au.
year school ~· • ·
The report on all-year school will be
given hf_ district administraUve aide ..
Glen llyilnger w~ lbe board meets at
/ . la. 3 P-redictfon
7:30-p.m.-ln the Westminster High School
cal~erta. '
.ACJX>rdlng to Dystpger, a citizens com·
mlttee at each school has endorsed a
volunteer quinmester program to begin
in June 1973.
Student. could cboole · between 1111 all-
Year and a !rad!Uooat system. ·
The committees have been studying
the merits of all-y..:ar schooling for about m mooths, be said. ·
K.issinger . Holds
.
Nonstop Sess-ions
PAiilS (UPI) -"' Dr. Henry A. Kiss-
inger held almollt noostDp nerotiattng
..-. today In eBorla to end the Viet·
nam war, and Frtocb Foreign MlDlster
l.laurlce Sclunnann predicted the end
woul~ t0me by J~ 3. .
Frinch-dl!119matlc --spoke of a
compromise on a key point -withdrawal
Beach Coach
Calls Pe~rs
Intelligent
of North Vietnamese.
While Ktuin,ger was meeling with
Haml's Le Due 1bo, both the North Viet-
namese and the Viet Cong rejected an of-
let by South Vietnamese President
Nguyen Van Thieu for a Christmas
cease-fire which -could be prolonged in-
definitely and which eoold bring home
the American prlaoners of war.
Kissingl!r met this momlng with the
permanent representatives to the Thurs-
day semipublic Paris peace talks and
they ,..... joined briefly with a group of
teclmicia.ns from both sides who are
believed edltlng a cease-fire agreement
In still another meeting.
1ben all journeyed to a villa in
suburban Paris ror the main meeting
between -· and 'Ibo. The Kissinger· 'Ibo talks began at 3
p.m. (6 a.m. PST). -
By TOM BARLkY Tlll<e boun later, ~ and an
-• , .... ---·-. aide tool!: I llrld • -· throuib 'the
......... ...,. lll&b -·· -garden while • ~. misty nl&bt ... mini -• --Ola .......... ~~ . Petcl .. "a ~Qr wen: "Ibey then woeif Ille conference
dl•:lpllneol llblole ol --ID' behind die tlobllJ -.I steel sbuttm of
telllpnce" wbo ....,. -any II> the low....r.il Cinnmunist Tilla.
cllcatloa of -I problems during their Later, 'lbo, w~ acted as host in the
.-latloa. Communist-villa In GU sur Yvette,
Coicb Duane Getty told an Orange 15 miles southwest of Paris, escorted
County SUperlor €ourt jury that must Kissinger to his car at the end of the
8000 nde oa. Peters' sanity at the tirQe be . 4~bour meeting and gave him a Jong,
kllled hli patmts that the delendtnt was apponntty cordial handshake.
cboeen by the 9Cbool's 1968 to 1967 water ~r's penooat plane landed at
polo team u its captain. Orly Air!lort tonJcbt, and airport olfi-C!>ocb Getty, watd>ed keenly from ctats sald his departure for Washington
Peters' wheelchair by the iong·balred, may be Imminent.
bMrded delendan~ also testllJed that The North Vietnamese delegation an-
Petera wu bll persomJ cboioe u the 0011Dced they wool<! meet again Wedneo-
most valuable pllJer on the water polo day.
squad that seasop. Kissinger's departure , was confirmed
A plaque ~ tba booon ac-by American IOUl'Cel, but it was not
corded to Peters iJ today in the school's immediately clear whether he would
loclcer room, Getty tolil the jury. first, attend the Wedoeoday ~ing.
All-year Program
Dyaln.ger ~ the principals at each
sclJOol will k out the !lnal caots,
minJmum enr ments and ten~Uve
calendan •: Jan. 9 board meeting.
Trusteeo"'witt then decide whether to
pursue the year programs oa the
basis of the lnl,gnnatlon.presented by the
prtoctpa!S and pysinger.
Fa!JowiJ)g ~· al by the trustees,: ~ and • _rt.s·at each bilh oc!IQol
will be pollei detennlno tbelr _Interest
in the all-year plan.
ACcordin ... to Dysinger, dist~ otficials
will not require a 7C percent approval by
tPe teacben !'\Qd community ·before set-
ting up a program. .
Rather the:,· will look !or approval from
a sufficient r.umber 9f sttidents to begin
an all·year program oo ~acbt campus.
The 70 percent approval was recom-
mended by the state Department of
Education for the implementation of
elementary school programs. No quota
has been set for the high schools.
Dysinger said that earlier surveys at
some of the hlgb schools bad Indicated
that nearly a third or· the faculty ·
members and 20 percent of the 'Jtudents
wett interested l.r. the alt..year schedule...
"When you have a drastic change,
you're lucky to get 10 to 20 pereent of
those involved to participate," Dysinger
said.
Dysinger also said there is a possibility
lhat students C1>Uld transfer to a school
with an all-year program if their school
showed insufficient interest.
Under the plans being considered, each
school y.;outd continue its regular calm-
dar while the all-year studenls operate on
the quinmcster plan .
The qu.inmester plan divides tbe school
year into five pertods with the students
att.ern";n-four on a staggered basis.
Harbour Review
Impact Report Eyed by City Panel
By TERRY. COVllLE
Of ... D911y Pllet Sgff
Writers of a. 106-page environmental
Impact statement ror H u n t in g to n
Harbour Corporation claim the com-
pany's proposed 2'Jl townhouses and 3.87·
acre lagoon will cause litUe adverse ef·
feet.
The report, submitted last week, is now
under review ~ bf a fiv"'man city en-
iroruneotal committee, as well as by
members of the public.
' The document does admit there will be
some adverSe effect in terms of in-
poputatli>n. It also admits the
ved oaygen level in the lagoon wilt
UPI T......... w the amount desired by the state
but says it will be normal considering the
SPACE REPAIRMAH· enclosed -nature or Huntington Harbour.
... ronaut Eu,ene C1rn•n tpe report . does say the 22 O
I townbowies. will' have -no iimpect r on
water pollution in the Harbour channels. MObn Ca .Lo· . -~~ ~tffi:tor · 0 t · "!"
.. I :!~ ' , ·. ·"~~,~ "' ~ • C' ... , , complole." .• ,1,: ,e . r .... ~ ernan .. .:.. ""ir,.tll"""" to,the c11y·1cr.,_ iae ' • q · , . .filil ~ta! Impact~
G:v s It a Look °'" .. r review and 1nput 1rom .-. ... a; Severm explliined. . · '
Copies of the Huntington llarbotJl-'docu-
ment are aVailable for public re9iew at
the city clerk's office.
SPA <:ENTER,. Houston (AP)
Apollo 's eJ,Plorers, who have picked up
some o the youngest rocks vn the.moon,
move t next i11 their moon buggy to
search an ancient avalanche for the
oldest material.
But re that, Eugene A. Ceman
and H. Schmitt prepared to
form maiteshift fender for their lunar
taxi so they won't be showered with the
black of TaunJ>-Liltrw valley. (See
rela sl«iEo, pictures, Page 41.
The ght rear lender fell off' Monday
night d the wiprotected w b e e l
showe the astronauts with dust,
prom Ceman to remark: "I hate this
Severns. said he ,expects the;,Huntlngton
Beach Environniental Council to make
some comment on the impact statement
this week .
"The envfronmental council ' lwl soll1e
expertise we don't and could be very
he1ptul in evaluating the statement,"
Severns sa1a.
A storm of controversy has swirled
around .the proposed CO!l!truction ot the
lagoon and .townhouses, a $20 million
proji;ct. .
final report to the planning oommis!ion
and city council before building permits
are granted for the townh6uses.
Severns sakl the cit'/ 'has not yet
determined the accuracy of the report , or
what recommendation wili be given on
the project.
"We'll probably make our finding in
the last week berore the public review is
up," he predicted.
Power Bla~koo1
Valley Homes Dark on Cold Niglit
About 200 all-electric homes were left
witOOut power in Fountain Valley Morr
day on one of the coldest nights of the
year,· a spokesman for Southern
California Edison Co. said today.
Blackouts on Larwin C om p a n y • s
Tiburon hQmes •began about 6:30 ' p.m.
s...da1 ·ana continued tllrolJgh aboat a
• t@!l!V, the-•> = . 'r-'.,"!!_!?' veq_~~~ 119 '"" !!!'! ""' t""1r ..,..... ,., J 7t11J:o~ Clllio'l:ailow -Uaoda!_,,7 . to aiol . olf." hpi•hMid rAoaard Slnilb,
dtstrlct'lllperintendmt. •
"By SUnday niPt, oome of them
started to go out on ua1" SmJth said .
The problem was complicated, he said,
by Christmas lights which caused an ad-
ded power drain.
Some homes y.•ere without power
as g as 10 hours, Smith said, whil e
ol rs experienced blackouts for less
th one hour.
was a complicated si tuation ,
because some transformers that weren't
actually out bad to be de-energized while
repair work was done," Smith said.
The homes affected were built in 1969
and bad oot esperlenced major problems
belor., Smllb said.
Smith added that Edison bad aigbt
crews out Tuesday to prevent a repeat of
the problem.
Huntington Teenager Dies
In Freak Rifle Accident ..
Huntington Beach police said Kirk
Thomas Miller of 4-05 8th St., Apt. A, was
sit ting in the living room of his home
when the rifle went off. "[ thought be WU a fine eumple or In Schumann, who bu been in close COO·
• 1all-al'CMbf athlete/' ~tty llid. 11And tacts with both sides, made his
other teachers I talked to made it clear statements during a luncheon speech to.
that Ibey thought be was an eacellent day, He said he belJeves the United States
black stuff. It's rully initaUng. It'll
take us half a dozen Sundays to dust
off."
Missior. Control instructed·tbem to ifl'I..
provlse, using clamps and a piece of
cardboard or insulation off their !Wlar
ship Cllallenger.
The Huntington Harbor Property
Owners As9ociation has particuJarly o~
posed the lagoon, claiming it'will create
stagnant bodies of water which ~JI lower
the water quaUty in the rest of the
Harbour.
A l~year-old Huntington ~h High
School junior was killed Monday af-
ternoon when the .. 22 caliber rine he was
cleaning accidentally discbatled Into his
stomach.
Truman's Vital
Signs Weaken;
Pray ers Given-
11is 11-ycar-old sister told police she
was in the kitchen when she heard the
gunshot at about 2 p.m. She said she
rushed Into the living room and saw her
brother sitting on the fioor. atudtot, 11 will achieve . !ace in Vie~ before the
The alleptlan that Peters, 23, killed aew U.S.~ convenes.
bll parmta Jn their Huntington Beach "A settlement ts likely and probable,
home on April 21, 1971 ls no longer he said. "I conflnn I am not a
dilputed , In the ·defendant'• secmd pessimist."
murder trial . In Washington, President Nixon met
But the Jur.y will have to nlle on his: f91' 40 mimltes wit: Gen. Alexander M.
state of mind When be stabl>ed Cba_rles Hat1LJr., Kissinger's deputy, and review·
Pet.en, 5$, tbrougb~tbe heart and atrtng:I· ed .cables from Klsslnger, according to
ed hls motber, Flora, 54, a teacher at Press Secretary Ron.:· L.1 Ziegler.
Lloooln School In Corona del Mar. "'The President remains in close coir
Prosecutor Pat Brian today produced a tact with Dr. Kissinger," Ziegler said.
witness to c o u n t e r e a r 11 e r Ziegler would not say immedlately
teltlmoo}' that-Peters was already show· whether another -=iating session Ins sips of mental streu wlien he serv· wou14 be held W .
(See PE'l'EllS, r.s. I) The Comil)untst; In rejecting SaiBOD'I
Huntington Kids
Can Call Santa
Santa aaus will spend his evening
boun nexl -· taltlng by telephone with theJcbildren or Huntington Beach.
call for a holiday truce injected a new
issue into the troubled '&egotiations -
they demanded for the first time that
Tllteu join the United States In signing
any cease-fire agreement.
'11lieu bas said he would never sign an
accord that did not call for withdrawal of
th<. North Vietnamese. ,
Bone-Ored from their first seven-hour
lunar excursioo, follpwing a perfect land·
ing on Monday, astronauts Ceman and
Set.mitt were •civen an extra boiif sleep
today, delaylng_tbe..start.of their eecond
moon walk untll 3:03 p.m. PST.
Alter ~ Cootrot played the eerie
strains of Riclw:d Wagner's· musical
classic, "The Jlide' of tbe Valkyries," to
arouse thein., Ceman responded with
some music of his own:
"Dum, dwn, da, dum. dum, da , da , da,
dum," said Ceman.
"Good morning," said Schmitt. "It
was great to get some rest."
Their driving target today hi a 6,0QO..
roo~high · mountain which they call lbe
South Musil 4.4 milts from the landing
craft. Photograph.9di'1icate an avalanche
tl!mbled down the side of the mountain,
(Set ·APOLLO, Page Zl
.
Huntington Harbour Corporation plans
to install an intricate system of pumps to
constanUy circulate the water, and to
keep the lagoon's water level steady and
unaffected by tidal flow.
The entire proJ~ is ~ on the
undeveloped, northeast side of Hun-
-tington Harbour, near Edingei; Avenue.
Steverns said the public bas until Jan. 7
to study the bnpact statement. After
that, tbe city committee must submit a
The Jaycees, the ·recr.~t10n depart·
ment and General Telephone Q:>mpany
~ helping to bring Old St. Nick's jolly
voice to local scllool children.
Flyers llstlng the lime and number to
call will ha cllatributed this !'eek to all of
the local elementary schools.
, 'Committ.ed-. to Tax Cut'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald First Graders l.ltapn said -y that "I am com· mitted" to a state locome tax cut, even it ~· taxes tater have to be, raised ai:aln. · G • O tta The Republican governor said be would ive pere make Ms ~poaa1 to the Legislature
80metlme nm. year.
Slity-four first grade atudenta from But he aid It'• too early to· say now
Lark View School will iw-it an operet· just'bow mucb llale budpt surphd will ii, "Christm'.u in 0.. Cira»," at 7:_, be available 1nd how big a 'cut could be ~t, hi· tho Hontlqjon Beadl Hip made.
SCbool auditorium. He told a Capitol news conlermce he
It'• part of the annual Lark View looted Into the Idea of cutllng the otata
Otrlstmaa program. The !oorth grade aales tu ~ rojected II becauae ol prob-
cbolr also wUI perform tonight. lema of admlniltratlon.
-The-rtrst--·11,-.AIJ,.._-llolpn tmowladflad tbat-~h:
Ryadale ond P.at Mtllff produced •od Legislature might have til ralaa taxes directed the Otrislmao ~-•£U.O again to meet an expect,. U.~. 8Upr<me
Landi• directs the fourth lll'adO choir. ' Court n1tlng r<q11lrlng the stale to lake
Tbe procrar:n ii open to Ute pubUc and over a sreater 1hare of the costs or loe&l
there Lt no admission charae. education.
,
•• l
'I
I
"I would rather take the chance," Md it would be belt<!{ to bee! up the .present
grant a tu cut now, he safd. gold-domed California Capitol building
'l1'e alternatiye,· be said, is that the than to build a pro!)OSed new highri9e
Leglstature· -d ""' up the rest of the reptacefll"!11.
budget &Urplus on olher spending pro} He aal\!. the columned century-old
ects. · stnlcture ti "one of the most handsome"
The current bu4get surplus Is about bµUdlng• aroond1 aod lhinl<o!ri! W011ld be
1700 mlDloo:)lut Uf recently passed l~t· biott<!r and c,beaper to remt0rce 'the old
bllllen tu lblft ..Id school finance pO.n buUcllng and continue tt as Uoc head·
Rea1an "'"'*''ill u.., up about 1451 . quarters for the Legislature.
mHtlon ol lbe -...... Earlier th~ yeor, Seo. Randolph Collltr
The GovtfM' sold he bad not chan1ed said he plans to ~ neit year that
hll "cat, 1qtaeae ind trim" attitude the state spend $90 rotUion for a twtn-
abotlt govemmeot spending, evon now towered new Captlol, Ill mOlion for
that the state Jiu emerged from six repoln that 1'<Uld permit the old
years-'lLcootinued171lwac"'•"l-1Pmrob...,t.nm"':a..,.., _ _.w,.U'!'d"!lnc~lov,l:<lllllt>tle In Ult ia
"The slate 1boul~ not suddenly.think, and ll mlllloo lor a ntw governor'•
now that U b "'11 tl • deficit position, mansloll. .
that It' can allord to expand the 111.e or The •oocl•I ltclslall" space ...,,.
aovemment at a.D," he Atd. mitt whtCh the Yrtk1 Democrat heads
On another subJ<cf Reagon aald today (Ste REAGAN, Pap I)
' .. '
KANsAs CITY, Mo: (UPI) -The vital
body signs of Harry S Truman today
became "unstable" -his heartbeat and
breathing qtdckeoed and hiJ temperature
'°''" To~ple prayed ror the recovery
of the 13-year-old former President.
"People feel that even lf you have to
cheat St. Peter, he's not ready to go,"
said Dr. Elbert C. Cole, preacher of the
Centro! United Methodist Church.
"He'a a rugged guy wbo'1 hanging in
there and he's going to make It," the
·pastor said.
JI Truman is to improve enough to
recover, hl1 doctors 11ld hit weakened
heart must get stronge:-. But they said
his heart was !Je!lllng irregularly because
of bis age aqd that would keep him in
leriOWI coodltlon indefinitely.
"His Vital sighs became aomewhat
unstal>le during the aigbt -his resplra·
Ubn, pubc aDd temperature increased.'' asld lleaearcb Hospital spokesman John
Drevet. '1Hb bkiod pressure ttmained
wUbln normal ranges. Kidney luoctlon
rtmalnl adequate."
Truman was !eel lhrougb a tube that
went th(ough his ..,. to Ills •tomach. lie
was given oxygen to help him breathe
and to ease the strafn on hls heart Extta
medlcaUon helped him relax.
FB I Cite8 Maoists
,
She told officers her brOtber stood up
and told her to call an ambulance
because he had shot himself in the
stomach. He then walked around the
room and out the front door where be
collapsed .
When police arrived. they found Milll!r
lying on the porch receiving assistance
from a Seal's ambulance attendant.
Miller, a junior at Huntington Beach
High, was rushed to Pacifica Hospital but
was dead on arrival.
He was described by a Huntington
Beach High ScOOol spokesman today as a
youngster who was interested in working
with his hands.
He enjoyed working with cars and was
active in the school's metal shop pro--
gram, the spokesman said. ,
It should be a little warmer on
Wednesday, acco rd i ng to the
weather te.rvlce, with highs of II
along the Orange Coast. Lows to-
night will dip down to 41.
INSIDE TODAY
The growfng Je1m movement,
. both fnttred at and prof.sed,
UIOS Offilllf.?ed by a joµtrtalist
w h q crias-crollStd.-the t!Qn
hippie•1i11Le, oi4ittng1 among the
nation's commime1 and cmt·
eluding that the11 h.ave 1ome
lasth1a quolitie-1. Story on P-aoe
20.
J
2 DAILV PILO_J _ --~'---'-Tutldl1=;;:__' ____ .;...._12,..;__1_'7_2 '
Marina Coed New Junior Mis11 Pa1ek Nears
Reality
In Beacl1
Aftrr an eight-year delay. the city Is
nearly ready to build a I().acre, $250.000
cun1munity park 111 nor1h Huntington
Beach ne:\'.I lo fo.1arina fl ig h School.
The parks and rccrl'ation commission
will be asked Wednesday night lo start
thinki ng 11bout an architect to design the
proposed Mari na Community Park.
By TERRY COVILLE
Oii .. ~ PSW fMllf \
A fW'IJly lhlllll bappooed IO Clrolyn
'Fact on bu way to an etiv!ronmeDlalllt
mettl!>s -&be eotued Ibo HLJIJllnilOa
Buch Junior Miio coolat and ..,. !L
"I'm IJ!W Iii a cli•e. I didn 't expect It
All I.he girls were 90 talented," aaya the
modes~ t1·yeBMld Marina High School
coed .
Her entry Jn tbe contest was a
surprise, to her.
She was walking across the Marina
campua one day in early November, on
her way to a meeting of student en-
vironmentalists, wbeo O..ve Garofalo.
the Huntington Beach Jaycee ln charge
-0f the ccntest, stopped her.
1 "Do 1"" -~.,....., .. be alkod. lier~ ol Ille II aummed up In
"Prelty pd, .... ~ • fairly OoJhlo _,, "! bellm! In
"Mu> -~ 1"U • D • fT" pltdlecl ~Yiol, jllll belar ,.......,, dolna wllal
Garotalo. "ll't a """' ft1 IO -I otber .,.,.. •Mil. I lllJll " ho .. IUD and !tarn ii PIODll." • , 1lliie .. time."
-She -IO Ibo ••hmqmtil meetlllfl , Sbo U... u ..U.. )lie, fWed with new
for about -mmlle, wllea Ibo nlplDi ~ ..i 1llOeiia new friends.
Junior Milo, C..tbf llartln, Uilted her In-In . 'llopet 10 attend Redlands
to nlolnloa Ibo o~ iJlrlt iritb Garofalo. U vuslty when &be f graduates. She "Tbea I-wound up talkin& 1 ~plt of wants 1o be a tMcher.
my friends Into joining," 11)'1 catolyn. "I lo\oe tho llt~ and ideas of
She woo the crown Dec. 1 In com· children. t llke a e."
petltloa with II other high llCbool eoeds. Even In picking bot -14 the new
The Junior MW Is picked based OD a Junior MJJJs alma fo~ mosi challeng·
combination of pol'", charm, beauty, inf, Sj>e likes lo llld snow or waler,
talent tDd h1'h scholullc achle;vemeot. tDd adds "It mlghl a little radlcal,
Carolyn put It all together, topped Witb but I like a-.a lillfi and arthery,
a grade polnt ·average ot 3.89 (4.00 ls also runn.lng and 1winunlng."
straight ''A"). Her atyJe is to touch oo several sub-
jetts of tntmel, -~ lo lull one thing.
Pollllts caplurt her -1ientloo OJJl,v dlll'-
lnt t)le ·-tlectkli, atld .........
llberilloo llptJ'Q Clll)' • -· In-terest..
"WGmen'a lib ll okay, but l'm not
really an advocat•. Sometimes the
women are too drastlc In their reactions,
though they baV<! brought Improvement
in certain meallW'eS.
"I don't agree With burning bras. A
woman should be fem1nJne at times. out·
doorsy 1t others, whatever she wants.
We play different rol~."
A conversation betWeen Cir<ilyn and I
her mother Jssomewbat like • ,ttandup
(.'Omedy rouUne. Mrs. P'ace ls proud of
her motber is somewhat Uke a standup
'
In ll)OdMI eontndldloos. example:
"Wt couldn't ask for a lovelill'
. daaclllor."..,.. Mn. Fac6. •
"lloD\, OltlPll the v1ollu, .....
warns C&rolyn.
· "I'm n>turally pre)lldlced. Sile'• kind of
thougbful," conttnuea Mrs. Face.
.. I make rny bed,'' quips carotyn.
In January, she will try for tM 1t1le
Jun!Or Miao crmm. Car.lyn la the lourlh
straight Marina coed to be in the state
contest. ,
SllO'd like IO follow the loot.Bteps of
Jackie B<nlncton, wb> ,woo the 11t1te
and natlonol crown in 00.
But she'1 modest, and lltlll amued &ht
won In HuntiJl&ton Beach. "\Ile hope b.i start ,~·ork on it after the
summer Little League baseball seaso~."
Norm \\'orthy. parks and recreation
direct.or. said today. .
Re!tidents in that area ha\'e complained
for several years about the lack of. a
sui table park. The ci1y has owned frve
acres for the post eight years. and
reC'entlv acquired another ffve acres.
The io..acre site sits on the nortbeast
corner or Edinge r Av,enue and Graham
Stieet. adjacent to the high school.
Chino Escapee Seized;
Got Away in Ambush
No Citrus -Crop Damage
Despite 26-degi:ee Cold
A branch of the city library and f~r
Robinwood Little League b a s e b a 11
dia monds currently are on the la.net .
Worthy sa id th e new communit y park
v.•ill be designed to include part of the
Little League fields. In addition, th e !iO
acres of 1.1arlna High athletic field!: wUI
be available for some park use. .
•• ,\1ith the coope ration of the h1gb
school. \\'C might set the Little League in-
fields on our park. and the out~elds on
high school land." \Vorthy explamed.
The fences "'hich now separate the
park land from the hi gh school grounds
\1·ould be torn down. if high school of-
ficials agret'. .
'Vorthy ~aid some lighted t~nn1s courts.
soft ball fields. multi-purpose courts and a
picnic shelter '4'0uld probably be placed
on the park land.
He estimated the cos t of such develo~
ment. as \1·ell :is turf. at nearly $250.000.
'Vorthy said the branch library would
remain. at least for a few years.
"In the future. "'e mig ht build a corh·
n1uni ty center there si milar to the ones
at riturdy and Ed iso n community parks,"
\Vorthv added.
l\tarlna would be the city's third com-
munity park site. The others art the
compl eted 15-acre Murdy facilit y. and 4(}..
acre Edison Park. now under con·
struction.
Navy Hospital
Ship Has Women
On Its Decks
SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) -'l1le Navy
hospital ship Sanctuary steame dout of
port today. with a woman sailor on the
bridge-and others on the decks, ending a
seagoing tradition that dates back to
i wooden shi ps.
• The ship pulled away from the Naval ~Shipyard 15 minutes late. 4 But Navy Ca plain Bruce Gair, whose
: Job Is to get ships in and out on time, did
~included in the program .
; Students reacted with everything from
'" skepticism to near revolt.
; "I'll go along if you let us put the
; Amer-icen flag back up," said one ninth-
:. grader.
: not attribute this to the presence of 60
! women in the crew.
: "They did a good job," Gair said as the'
•Sanctuary got under way .
:. One of the women sailors was working ~a telephone from the bridge.
: The Sanctuary is the Navy's (irst ship i to add women to its regular deck crew. ~Today's departure was the first turn of
~sea duty for the women, a one-day
~shakedown cruise outside the Golden i Gate following extensive recondilioning
: of the ship at the shipyard. .
: The crew has lived ashore dunng the i shipyard work , and the women moved
4! aboard just before the sailing.
~ Tbe women 's quarters on the ship. a
I veteran or World War 11, and Vietnam,
:; were little different than the men's "ex-
! cept for some modifications such as
r doors on the women's showers ," ac-
' cording to a Navy spokesman. l ~_;;~ _ __;....;. __ ~~~-
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DAILY PILOT
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SAN FRANCISCO CAP ) -A convicted
robber who escaped from the California
Institute for Men at Chino in a daylight
ambush in v.·hich an unarmed guard was
killed and another wounded bas · been
captured by police on the San Francisco
Day Bridge .
Officers identified the man as Ronald
Wayne Beaty, 35, v.·bo they said escaped
Oct. 6 as he was being dri~n to a court
appearance in San Bernardino.
Apprehended ~ith him was Jean S.
Hobson, 44, officers said.
The arrests l\1onday ended a two-
montb search for Beaty r a n g i n g
throughout the South~·est.
Fr-om Pagel
APOLLO ...
depositing at the base material.II from
perhaps several lunar age periods.
Sclunitt, a geologist who had a field
day on the moon Monday, said before the
flight that "this avalanche II our best
potential for sampllng very old material
on the moon -perhaps dating back 4.6
billion year1 to the very origin."
Schmitt's trained geologist's eye should
help pick out the elderly rocks. But
determination of their exact age will
have to wait WlUl they are returned to
earth for laboratory analyai.a:.
II Ce1'1W1 tDd Scbmltt mllect the old
material, they will have fulfilled their
goal on this 1ast Apollo misslOJJ--to nu in
misllloi chapt<n in lunar hlltory, bule-
ally the very eatly and the vory late.
Rocb returned by five eartier Apollo
n-.oon landers have ranged in age
between 3 billion and 4.2 billion yean.
While Ceman and Schmitt slept today,
the almost-forgotten man of Apollo 17,
Roor.ld E. ,EVllll, received a detailed
report on their first excursion whlle he
orbited 60 miles above the moon in com-
mand ship America.
Mission C-onb'ol communicator Joseph
Allen radioed that Schmitt's on-thHpOt
analysis helped ground scientists con·
elude that the thin dark material cover·
ing the valley Door at Taurus-Littrow is
very young and that the material beneath
the upper layer apparenUy resulted trom
a volcanic lava flow.
"Tbe surface around the landing site is
generally an undulating plain," Allen
repo<led. "It is somewhat rougher and
with a greater amount of boulders than
was expected by the astronauts.
"There are a lot of small craters with
glass on the boUom and many boulders
ranging from about a foot to 12 feet in
size, all of them covered with the dust of
the dark mantle."
Allen said what when Ceman drilled in-
to the surface to gather subsurface
material. he "hit bard material aevera1
times and seemed to reac h very bard
mate rial at the seven-foot deplh."
The communicator said the explorers
collected Z9 pounds of rocks, including
three of football size and snapped J29 col·
or and 197 black-and-whJte pkturts dur-
ing the first expedition.
"Sounds like they got a lot of good ltUfI
done and that they've got a lot of good
inlormation a1ready," Evans commented
at the conclusion of the report.
"I think that's a safe coocluakm."
Allen noted.
Scientists at Mission Control were in-
trigued Mondsy as they followed tbe
reports of the flnt geologist on the moon. c.rnan and Schmltt's final drivtng ••·
peditkm on W@dnesday, ICbedu.led to
start at 1:33 p.m., will take them to
anothtr large mountain named North
Massif ln search of more ancient
material.
Aft<r blasting oU trom lhe mooo,
Tburaclay, Ibey wW rejoin Evan& in
America for two more days of lunar orbit
science before beading for home S.tur·
day.
Splashdown in the Pacmc Is acheduled
Dell Tunday.
•
F"""Potel
REAGAN •••
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~report !ndk:.Ung tt -.Id c.JI
-,60iji fl mWion.IO rijiitr tho Old bulldlna
enough to cootlnuc 1:. present uae .
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Enc!oeera bave wmiod Jb<t the old
west w!ni of the Capitol might mme
crashing down ln a moderat~ere:
earthquake.
Sgt. Richard Abbey said police had in·
formation that Beaty might be driving in
San Francisco. Officers waiting iD un-
marked cars spotted his car eritering the
freeway in downtown San FraaclJ<o. and
other pollce and" Calilomla Highway
Patrol units converied Oii It In the mid·
die of the bridge, Abbey sald.
Abbey saJd Beaty was carrying a load·
ed revolver tDd that a loaded handgun
was found lo Miss Hobsoa'I purse.
Officers also aald a .. wec1<>11 shotgun,
.. two .($.ea]jber pistols., two gas grenades,
an M·l carbine° and some ammunition
ai..o found In the car.
However, the pair offered no
resistance, police said.
Olllcen aald Beaty was booked for In·
vestigation of murder and escape and
ltfisl Hobson for investigation of murder.
They will be transferred 10 the San
Bernardino County jall where two
persom are In c:ustody In the ambush.
Beaty's pri8on escape came after two
cars forced tbe car in wbicb be was
being chiV<ll 10 court oil the road, police
said. Three men and a ....,,.., armed
witb pistols, ........ Beaty'• &baclde!
and handcuffed his ruardl. police sa1d.
The auallaota then killed one of the
guards, Jesus Sanchez, 24, tDd wounded
the other, Geo111e J. Fitzgerald, officers
said.,
Later, u .... discoven:d that Beaty'•
-court appearance bad beeD postpooed. •
San FJ'IDcitco Bay Alu activists
Andrea Hofman, 18, and -Doqlas
-Burt~ 30, are being held in San
Bernardino in connection with Beaty's
escape.
Frot1tPflflel
PETERS ..•
OAtLY "l\.OT IMff ..,_ HUNTINGTON'S JR. MISS
Nol Just a Pmty Face
Gunman Sl~ys 2
In Night Clllh,
Then Escapes
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The band
played, psychedeUc lights flickered and
everyone was dancing in a Filipino night
club called the lfugao when a tall man at ' the bar pulled a ioDg-l>arreled gun and
annouoced: "I'm going lo kill all of yoo."
He turned and fired Monday at a
nearby cab driver and a bartender and
shot both dead.
' Then he hit the borteDder in the lace
with his gun. cut off the cab driver's
right ear, and lied.
Witnesses among the 70 patrons at the
Mission District dance hall a n d
restaurant who gave th1s aCCOWlt to
homicide inspectors told them the vic-
titns apparently were shot at random .
Despite dips of thennometers tn citrus
groves in Orange Couo.ty to the 26-degree
mark early today. no major d~mage to
oranges or lemons was reported. The
cold wave is forecast lo continue.
Kenneth Rice, spokesman for the
Irvine Valencia Growers Assoclatlon,
said beJow.freezing marU were recorded
only in the lower eievations and for short
enough periods of time to have m.lnimiz-
ed crop damage.
Bill Bathgate, a citrus rancher near
San Juan Capistrano, allo logged 26
degree temperatures shortly before dawn
today. Smudge pots and wind machines
Either , wind or c~d cover can keep
temperatures from hovering below freez·
ing. Four hours of below 32-degret
weather can damage fruit. "But It It goes
dOwn IO 20, tt. doean't take long to kill 1
crop," Rice noted.
* * * Col.d Nips St.ate
Crops; Dainage
Not Yet Known
saved his groves, he said. SACRm.IENTO (AP) -Unseuon.at
The National Weather Service's FM.I.It cold bas nipped several California food
Frost forecast for tonight and early Wed· crops, the Department of Food and
nesday Indicates the recent chill will COD· Agriculture aald today, but the extent of
tinue. However, a cloud cover ezpected the damage could 'lOt bo inUnedtately
to move lnto tbe areas. from Irvine to San assessed.
Juan Capistrano may prevent crop Oranges have definitely been hlat,
damage. meaning ·hat prices will a:o up, a
Those clouds, the National Wealber spokesman · said. Early reparts from the
Service said today, are not expected to field aay that quality wUJ go down, and
drop rain along the Orange Coast but will some of the crop ·.•II! be loot.
ult · fl · In "·-,.,;,. The worst citrus damage wUI probably res m soow ume.s WIC moun.-..___ ... '-7"ln ~-K d Tul Countl f Soulhe Calif: · bo the U\': r • ~, em an are ts, are~s o m om.ia 8 ve where much of the crop is grown aod
3,000-foot. mark. wbe the hit 20 ..._ --tin . ._... ther aJoo. re mercury -=s·~ over
111';: con wng UV:)~Y wea g the weekend, the spokesman. aaid. But it.
the Orange Coast swpised residents of takes two or three days to determine the
San Juan Capistrano who left Monday actual damage to plant cells.
night 's City Council meeting to find their Temperaturts sank to 17 degreet 1n
cars coated with frost. Sacramento and San Joaquin Cowtl.es.
Laguna Beach res.idents some as close and blt 17 and 20 degrees oo successive
u 300 yards 10 the .;,.an, reported night& In Butte and Gleim Counties, !/"
frosted car roofs early today and depl1'lDH!Dt ..aid. · • • • · ~
Newport lll>a<h chi-·~ coats Artic:IJokes Jn the cutrovllle arta In
of Ice 00 wlndshle!di at daybl'1l01t. Monterey County were bun, but the
Winds below canyma tpared many in-department aald no dollar value could be
land county resldeuts' gardeas trom frost attacbed lo tho damage until the crop i.
damage and coobibtlted to the minimal ~-damage was suffered by
damage IOOSt citrus growen reported to-avocadoes alone the south coast, the
day. department said.
There was "some losa" to vegetable
c:rope, and the 11arv .. t!ng of broccoll and
cauliflower wu delayed.
lnspectora aald Ibey were aearclllng !Or ed as torpedo man in the U.S. Navy. a man whom some patrons sai<I had been
Ps)'<hiatr!st David 1bomasloJ today lo an aJ11111MDt earlier at the club.
Manzo Appointed
To Harbor Board
About 400 acres Gt cauliflower were
lo'.°' in the Fl'emont·Newark area ol
Alameda r.ot111ty, the department said.
confirmed that he was the medlc&I of· The victims were ldeotlfied as cab Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim Christmas Carols Set
ficer assigned to eumloe tbe AWOL driver Alfredo Emelia, :19, tDd bartender has named Santa Ana atl<>mey Frank
Peters when the cldendent was sent to Wayne Hughes, 42. Manzo lo tbe Orange County Harbor>, By Camp F;-Gii'' ls him from the USS "Narius" In San Beaches and Parka Commission. ~ ~
/ P.fanzo will succeed Martin Uaab, also IJieio. Rickenbacker Better of Santa Ana, who has served oa the Hundreds of Camp Fire Gins from Tbomasinl said he was told that Ptter• commission since 1970. Usab said H\Dltington Beam, FOUritain Valley and
had adviled superior officers that be bad MIAMI (AP) -Capt. F.ddte Ricken-business pressure called for hi.I r$igDa-Westminster will slng a hil parade of
been on LSD. marijuana aDd mesealiDe, backer, the 82--year-<ild World War I lion. He is tbe founder and head __ o Ou1ltmu carob •t 7 p.m., Friday, in
that he could not "morally tolerate" the flying ace, II reported steadlJ;· Improving Dynatech C.rp., a computer compooent the Huntington Center Mall.
-""·-••• as a -·M-"-·· ·• at M'"1t<ll'lal Hospital, where he is manufacturing firm In Santa Ana. The girls m slnlrilll! lo draw at""tlon
uauiw..,. auu w ~ llll"" recovering from a stroke. "He's an Manzo. who maintalns offices at 900 N. to the Marines eofps' annual Toya for
jector. aald '-A.__.. to amazing man," said Dr. Job n Broadway, ls an associate of supervisor Tots drive. lndividuala who want to beB~~ -=·~ ':net ~~~a Handwerker in reporting Mooday that Robert W. Batlin. They have que.rters on donate toys for needy children e.an leave
who was in no way mentally disturbed by Rickenbacker 'lid been taken off the the same floor of · the Crocker Bank them at the shopping center during lhe
the drugs he aald he had tUal. 1-=;crl~t;l•;•l;;ll•;t.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;bu;l;ld;in;g;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;Chria:;. ;;ta;;s;;Ca;;ro;l;p;;rogr;;;a;m;.;;;;;;~-"He wu not psychotic," Thomaslnl I
testified. "And I sent blm back witb the
observation that we be wu perfectly
cap;.ble, ID meow terms, of being
punished for tbe allegation of unaulhorl>-
ed ableoce."
Wltnesse1 called by cldeme attorney
Barry Tarlow bave lndlcated that Peten'
addlc:Uon ~ drup belon: tDd during his
stay lo a San Diego County desert com-
mune may have aff,ect.ed his motivation
to tbt point that he wu not mentally
competellt whell ·he killed his parents.
WltneSlfs in bolb tralla bave tes\fled
that Peten wanied everyooe he met of
"tbe comln~tloo" and that the
prodlcted uat -1d ".-p away
the weak and the dying."
Petert' 1:1-yelll'<ld brother testified
that Peters told blm wltbln moments of
kllllnf their pareni. that he had dlapoeed
of them because "30,000 Red Chlnese
were about to iovade the country."
Peten' 6nt trial ended When he at.
tempted to MCI~ from t.be COUJ1room
during tbe DOCJO-bc:iur recess.
A deputy shertff's bullet lodged In the
defendant's spine and produced .paralysis
that may keep him ln a wheelcba!t for
the rw of his me.
Seal Beach Police •
Set Auction Saturday
Bicycles, IUrlboardl and O I b e r
W>Clalmed slOlea property ....,,..red by
the S.al Beach Police Departmeot will be
put oo •uctloo at 10 i .m., S.Jurd.ty, in
the ctty paRJna lol. ltb -and Cenlrll
AveDP.N.
lt<lJU for-aale-wtll be-00 di>play II t ,30
a.m. 11ie oollce dep&r1ment will accept persona~ for aUctlon. aales, with
proper Identification. roe furtbor 1n-
fonn1t1on phone the j>Urclllllng agent at
(%lll 41t·W7.
'
Truth or Consequences?
Sometimes tho truth hurts! We have 1 .. t an
wh.t ht wonted to hoer.
occasional 11le by not teffin9 • customer •
Wo might point o~t thot a cullomer would bo better off to pay • ~ttlt mor. for our
rubber podding then buy t cheoper, mushy pod thot fHls like you tro wollting on belloons. Tho
"bolloon" pad hurts tho carpet backing, causes 1trotc~in9, ond ruins sHms. Also, this padding
otten flottens out ofter • while.
~,
Additionally, we might teff you thot somt corpet fibers •rt moro procticol thon o!hers.
A fiber that works in one +.xture, won't work in •nother.
Fool fJ'ff to call for odvict. All of our sales people have had extensive experience in tho
service end of this business -ond attor all -tho most importont thing we con offer, that no
else does, is. service!
ALDEN:s
CARl'ETS e DRAPES
' 1663 Placentia Awe.
COSTA MESA
646-4138
1!9UllS: Motl. Thrv Thu1'1., th 5:30-~RI. th 9-SAT., 9:30 h 5
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•Jnvasi I I
-'I
Teaching Love , Free&m
NORTH OGDEN. Utah (,APl -Guards
armed with automatic weapons policed
tile corridors ol North Ogdon Junior Hlgll
School for lbe eeeond day todiy in a
lrlghtoningly realJBtk: lesson in life with-
out freedom. Troops from .lbe m)'lhlcol t.reign
· poftr ol Trlangula invaded lbe acboOl
Monday morning sborlly alter ci....s
commenced and imposed a stiff order on
the aurprloed pupil>.
'lbe "invasion" was tile idea of Prin-
cfpal cart c. DeYowia. Ho said he was
responding to complaints by a "llagboy"
who told .htm1nany of bis fellow students
appeared apathetic during nag-raising
cermonles ~ch morning.
1be soldiers . were real -«mguised
volunteera from tho 68Std Artill~ Unite of the Anl>y BeserVe. ' • -
If ,.We're~ not throwing rocks at com-
munism," DeYoung said Monday night
after the first day of authoritarian rule at
his 1ebool. ·"What we are lr)'\n&, to teach
is a simple love· for American freedom
and a respect for some· of its symbols
such as the fiag~"·
~ "enemy" guards w.ear black
trlangu!ar patcheS and represent a make--
believe dictatorabtp.
DeYoung said the pupils have not been
Near Sacr8Jllento
.....
told when the bani> role will tftd,
although IMJCl'et plans .,. r.r Its "°"'
clustoo Wednesday with a .. patriotic
assembly" to which parents wUl be 1"'
vited.
Brusk military trials were beld
throughout Monday when at u den t a
violated a lo!!gll set of rules banded Qllt •
by the oocupatlon ·for<e.
Among the rules were requlrements to
sit at attention all day aod to stand at at·
tentlon wben reciting Jesaons. Accuatd
violators always were found guilty:
Puntshment ll'plcally Is a cleanup detail.
"We'll give you a chance .to plead )'OUr
case before we find you guilty,'' said Col.
Clair Frischknecht, commander of the
invasion force, at an assembly an--
nouncing the school takeover.
AU ot the teacherS and about IO per·
cent of the students were given black·
and-white symbols, identifying them as
privileged members of the ruling party of TriaJ>8ula. Tbese are given special Cl""-
~/!!:i';' sai~ as fUPE!rior meals,
He said parents were told Saturday in
a letter about the ~ent but were
asked to ke<p it confidential. Two
parents asked that their children not ~
included in the activity.
Bodies Found, Linked
To JV <J rcotics Traffic
PLACERVILLE (APJ-Tbe nude bod-
ies of two young men have been uneaz1h.
ed near here, El Dorado County Sheriff
Bernie Carlson reported today.
men's clothing found in a Sacramento
suburb Monday.
The clothing included a heavy wool.Jin..
ed jacket and a waist·length
wir.dbreaker, authorities said. The victims may have been murdered
in connection with the narcotics traffic,
he said. William Miller, a spokesman for the
Sacramento C.Ounty sHerifrs office, .said
both jackets contained numerous boles
which may have been caused by bullets.
Carlson said the bodies were found in
shallow graves, side by side, along
Luoeman Road near the hamlet of
Rescue, northeast of Sacramento. An
autopsy was being conducted i n
Placerville.
Carlson said the bodies were found late
Sunday night. He said be is W(lrking
closely with Sacramento officers on the
case. Tbe two appeared to be in their 20s,
Carlson said, but otherwise there was no
Identification.
The bloody cfothing included two pairs
of jean-type lrousenl, boots of the
harness type, sbfrts, socks and a sleeping
bag, investigators said. He said there may be a link between
the bodies aod two sets of bloadsoeked Tbey were reported found in the
garbage can of a car wash north of
dowri.town ~ento. Bandit Holds Up
BowJP.!g Alley
It would ~ Uie third double slaying in
the Sacramento area in a week ..
Girl Flees. Nude
From Rape Try
A man who told a woman cashier he
was armed took c$2,760 from a Santa Ana
bowling alley Monday, police reported.
Cashier Dense) Probert said she was
approached in the alley's parking lot as
she was going to the bank by a man
described as live-eleven, weighing about
175 pounds, with black :.air and a black
mustache. He handed he r ar. envelope
containing a note reading, "You're. being
robbed. I have a gun in my pocket."
OAKLAND (UPI) -A 20-yesr-old
hitchhiker stood nude on a comer waving
fra'ntically for help, but p as s i n g
motorists ignored her, police have
reported.
T,he Berkeley woman said Monday a
man gave her a ride from 3an Francisco
and drove to a deserted warehouse area
where he forced her to undress. She said
she fied, leaving her clothes behind, when
the man tried to attack hex.
1be Pacific Bowling Lane, 2015 w.
First st., cashier handed him the day's
receipts in cash and checks. He fled on
foot.
Reporter Offered Coffee
-~ith One Frog or Two?
By JO OLSON
Of tM C>al'l't Pl ... SNff
OH, THE HAZARDS of being a newspaper reporter. .
Sometimes you get into 110mething you wish you hadn't, and sometimes
things get in that you wish badn't. Like frogs in your coffee. .
That's right -frogs iD your coffee. Not too bewitching a thought ls it?
Bu.t wait. It was a witch who put a frog in my coffee, so it really was a
bewitching act.
If you're ready for this one, read on.
I'm currently doil\g research for a story on witchcraft, ao the obvious
starting point was to interview a witch. r located a cooperative one, drove
to her house, sized up the sitw>tlon, decided I oould band1e it (no-black cats)
aod knocked at the door.
J was lukewarmly greeted, seated at the kitchen table and offered coHee.
Being a coffee drinker and kind of thirsty, I accepted. What I should say is
that l never tum down a cup of coffee. ---~--.
THE INTERviEW PROCEEDED and I sipped coffee between jolting
down notes and quotes. About a third ol the way through my coffee I hap.
pened to glance into the cup (you never stare into your coHee mug, do you?)
and 88W a green frog's bead sticking out of the coffee.
My lace probably turned green and I almosf croaked, but I qu~kly
glanced up at the witch to see if she was watching me. l hate to make a fool
of myself in front of anyone. e
'The witch wasn't watching. I put down triy coffee cup; pushed it Mide
so I. couldn't see inside and with stra,ight face, kept on asking questkJns.
A FEW M1NVTES later sbe asked il I wanted more coHee aod I aaid no
thanks withoul letting on that I ltlld· a.en tb6 lrog, We played tbia same for
a while, then l ended \he Interview and exJted in a nOrma1 manner. ·
' · On the way to my next appointment I atarted wooderlng wbat ~Ind of
witches' b,.w !'bad been g\ven -LSD, up))«s, downer> or just black aillee I
wflb a frog in It. UsuaUy I never worry about tbia kind of thing beca-I j
Interview the nicest people lo the world. But coffee which statts back cin be
) .
a real eye opener.
I started thinking aboul all tbe strBQge people lo Ibo world who do-wel>d
and wondrou.s things, I wu glad I had eacaped unscathed Olld vowed to be
more cmlur wliim lntemew!rii iiiCli'Olf.1iff peop e as wtfa«l~~--
claimed to be a benlJm witch).
The moral of tlils reportorial anomaly rnlllflt be: nover drink wltcbel'
brew unless~ have a notion or what 's i'n the potioo.
.. '
H DAILV PILOT 3
Traffi c W oe;S Stl;ldied
Alt,ernatives for Coast Freeway Sought
' UPIT .......... Flo.,er Clalld
Pi;etty jis a f I o w .. r, Robyn
Evans clons.Jw·blkini for a day
in the 'Sydney, Australia, 8un afti,-J.' week of unfavorable we~ .•
Mesia Studen ts
To Test Plastic
For Bike Trails
By THOMAS D. ELIAS
and ARNOLD FRIEDMAN
Now that plans tor..a 100.mile freeway
along the Southern -talifomla coastline
have been to!J)edoed, state hlgbway of·
!iclals are rNi>lnfl for a' d1lftmil aolution
t" the increa1ing traffic p'®lems of the
regJoo'1 beach (lOIMluni~.
The Legislature's action tut summer I in scrapping the Jong.planned Pacific
Coast Freeway through Los Aogeles and
Orange Counties bas even prompted the
state Highway 'Commlssion, champi<m of
California's massive f~way system, to
S:OUTHE.ml
CAIJFORNJA FOCUS
move in a new direction for solving the
Southland's coastal. traffic ·bottleneeks.
, Commissioners last month asked the
local governments along the coast of the
two counttes U they would like to join
with the . state in restudying their
transportation difficulties, this: time ex·
ploring all types of solutions e:i:cept .
freeways.
It represented a significant departure
in policy and attitude for the powerful
Highway Commission to adhere to the
anti·freeway . sentiment evidenced
throughQut . the .coastal communities, in
the Legislatw:e and by Gov. Ronald
Reagan, too.
Moreover, it's an ob v lo us ef·
fort by the commissioners, acting on
the advice of state Public Works Director
James A. Moe, to face tbe problem from
the realistic standpoint that the coastal
freeway is a dead idea.
But what kind of alternative solution
will emerge and what will become of all
the property the Division of Highways
bought up in the path of the freewa y
route may be uncertain for a long time.
All that remains from the two decades'
of plarining, advance land acquisition and
actual construction on the Route 1
ScienCe students at eosta Mesa's freeway project are 255 acres~ of un-~ High School have developed a developed property scatfered through
rec:ycltt<f ,i>lastic material which they partS of the"two counties and a 6.S-.mile
believe can be used as a bike trail hunk of completed freeway between 01>
surface at about one-half the cost of nard and Point Muiu in Ventura County.
aspbalt. 'Additionally, a 4.S.mile section is
Oran(e County Greenbelt Coordinator scheduled for coostructloo north of the
Rod Sackett ol Cost. Meaa said the first link in the late 1970s. ·
studentS wish to test the materiai on a When first conceived, the coast
Santa Ana River levee trail between freeway was to wind for more thitn 100'
Hamil'90 und AUanta avenues between miles beside Southern California's scenic
Huntinaton Betcb and Costa Mesa. beaches from nOrth of Oxnard to San
An eiisting. bicycle trail extends from Juan Capistrano in Orange County.
Hamilton northward to 17th Street in Despite the tide Of freewa'y opposition
Santa Ana. which ftacbed tu-crest this ye111, DO'-one
Sackett asked the students·to irepare a is discounting the need to solve. the traf·
proJ>O!lllfor tbe ·proJ«t to be submitted .fio~ b<fieglng many ,~.~
to the Jmrd of SuperviSors for apprQVal. Apd ~ ~t ~~ .deyT."~ts
If approved, the ·.1ort will be done under as the large ~w Alcoa licfusmg project
the IRIP'rvision . of the Orange County near Pepperdlne University's . Mali1!"
Flood Control Disbict. ---eampus fJgure to mtensify the traffic
headaches. The same would apply in Highway Commission could complemeot
Orange County for a proposed large.scale .. one another or even be combined.
amusement park In the Upper Newport "It mai:es no sense to st ud y
Bay area. transportation In one part of Southern
To accelerate fmding a n e w California, sucb as the coastline, in liola·
transportation soluUon, lbe HJgbway lion." said William 0 . Ackerman.
Comm1ssltm baa called f<f' tJ:ie· ooasta1 SCAC 's director of transportation plan~
cities and countiel to decide witbin six ning. "But some areas clearly ·ttquire
months what they went: in· tbe way of a more detailed study than others and I
coastal traosportatioo ltudy. would say the coastline is one of those."
Until then, Moe bas reported, the com-The statewide plan mandated by the
mission won't ·even begin to consider successful coastline initiative · in last
unloading the property it bought for the month's general election may also have a
ill-fated freeway. -bearing on coastal transportation. But
That inyolves 191 parcels of land ln completion of that plan is three years
Malibu, Long ~ch, Newport Beach and away.
Huntington Beach for which tbe state Another time £actor may involve
paid $21:6 million. according to the ' disposition of the high--priced beach
highway division office in Los Angeles. pa rcels the Division of Highways is
An ilHleptb stucJy of co a st a I holding from the freeway project.
transportation problems wu originally The commission noted last month it
advanced via an Assembly bill which has lo trade or auction off the land
died reoenUy in the senate Finance COm· unless the concerned local governments
mittee. Yet that bW, authored by or SCAG "detennine any regional need$
Republican Robert H. Bqrte _ of Hun-, for the rights or way for . , other
tington Beach, applied only to the Orarur:e transportation needs or public uses."
County coastline and, significantfy, Among other public uses might be
wouldn't have eiempted freeways as a parks, which Newport Beach city of-
potei:iUal solution. ficials say they would like on some of tbe
nie-coastal $1tuatim, though, is $16 million worth ol property the
already being surveyed as part of a highway division is holding within their
mill.ion-dollar study or-the entire region's boundaries.
tranSportation problems which t he Of course, freeing up the land for parks
Southern California AssociatiOn o f or other public uses unrelated to
Governments ls conducting. transportation wou ldn't much help the
It's conceivable the SCAG study and the ever·increasing coastal traffic COil·
one contemplated by Moe and the gestion.
Apollo Recovery Ship '
Two Co1_1nty Profess ors
Hold ~ourses on Ve ssel
ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (AP)
-Leading a new Navy educational prir
gram, this Apollo 17 reeovery ship for the
first time is serving also as a Ooating
university.
Two professors from Chapman College
in Orange, are conducting courses aboard
for officers and enlisted men seeking
credits toward college degrees.
The program on the Ticonderoga got
under way in July. In August, similar
courses were started ·on the Ranger,
which has five professors in residence, on
Ole nuclear-powered Enterprise, and on a
supply ship, the USS Flint.
Dr. James W. Utter, W'bo recently
retitect after seiving as profeiior1 -0f
history at Chapman ainoe IMS and is now
profesaor emeritus, ·has -t studentl in two
clasaes -American B·ittocy, and
"Changing American ·values" which
deals with racial issues, among other
things. The two-hour classes are held
four days a week , and the elght·week
courses offer three semester units -
regular fulltime residence credits from
Chapman C.Ollege.
Dr. Young C. Kim, a graduate or
Korea's National University at Seoul with
a master's degree i.n English from the
University of Hawaii and a doctorate in
English from the University of California
at San Diego, has 30 students in three
classes.
They are studying English composition,
at two levels of instruction, and the \bird
coorse ofCers an introduction to
literature.
ln order to avoid work interTUptions,
some classes are split between early·
morning and nigbt·time hours. Emergen-
c;-call&, special drills, the noises of •
busy ship occasionally interrupt classes
under way ln ready rooms, but the
students and faculty make every effort to
compensate for lost time.
Mercury MONTEGO • • •
Montego NX Brougham 2·Door Hardtop •
• • • Built Better to ride Better
--../ -.
SEE ONE. • • • • •
'
•
l\lontcgo 4-Door Sedan
the personal size car
with the ride
of a big car.
.---LEASE,--
spec1a1111 In Full I
Mainttnan~ Lta•l"fll
. BUY ONE. • • TODAY! .
.,Orongie Coqtv'• ''"""' of llnc cart-·~
Rome Of 'l1le New Car • , , ........ .,_,, ...
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l{ome Or •Tiie New ear , , ,
~o • ..,.,. I'.__ ..
)
I
'
4 DAILY T Tu<1d41, -U, 19n
.Just South Viets Pur.sue 3 Red -Battalions
"\"\ I
"'"" Tom
urph.ine
'
Send -This Boy
•
To l:ongress
OFF' A.\'L) ltUNNING OEPT. -They
thre\v a linle Republican b..1.sh las1 night
O\'l'r al the Nr11·portrr Inn for our new
39th District Congressman Andrew J.
Hinshaw, v.·ho 1s rurren1ly preparing to
step down as our Orange County assessor
and move in10 !he big leagues in
\Vashington. DC.
The Party 1,1;is fun bu! !hat 111asn't ils
principal purposl.° The re v.·as a small
matter of moner.
Hinshaw . yo'u 11·i1t recall. ran in the
June Primary and put the boot to
Congressman John G. Schmitz. v.•ho then
flitted off to the 1\merican Independent
Party.
In · the final round la st November,
Hinshav.· then dispatched Democratic
challenger John Black of Ne.,..·port Beach
to handily 11•1n the 39th Congressional
seat.
THING ABOL'T ALL this is that it
doesn't come frc1! It costs. Hinshaw
pretty 1\'e!I ('Ovcrcd the nearl y $65.00'.I
spent on his i\o~·enlber victory . But then~
is a small matter of rhc 550.000 it took to
y.•h.ip Schmitz back 111 .June. So that was
lhe Y<'hyfor of !hl' !linsha"' banquet.
They rilled the NeY.-porter's f\.1onte
Car!~ P.oom at $!00 per plate in an effort
lo evapora1e ;n 1ea~t a purtlun of
Congressman ll inshaw 's camp a i g n
' deficit I didn't C'Ount the house but if you
figured on 1he safe side that there were
25 tables and eight folks at each. that
1\·ould come to some $20.000. less ex-
penses. I suspect there were n lot nKlre
than that.
INDEl::D. TllEHE WERE enough GOP
luminaries on hand to start another con-
vention . I heard there was a Democratic
busboy who fled the place in absolute ter-
ror.
An yy.•ay, l don't normally vi.sit places
where the steak runs 100 bucks. 1t1ost
places where I dine you can buy a
partnership in the Joint for thal much. So
I attended under auspices of Jim
Gilstrap. the noted Harbor Ar e a
petroleum expert.
Chip Clea ry. who ran Hinshaw's cam-
pa-ign, also Tan as master of C:t!rmtoni~
and, we later learned. will run our new
cong ressman's Orange County office.
Chip does a lot of running.
MOST OF THE ~1A YORS "'ere on
hand, including Will iam Fischbach of
Irvine: Jack Hammett of Costa Mesa:
DonaJd Mcinn is or Ne"•port; and Art
Holmes of San Clemente. Also County
Board Cb.airman Ronald Caspers and his
'vife from Newport : Supervisor Bob Bat-
tin or Santa Ana ; Supervisor Ralph Clark
of Anaheim and newly elected Supervisor
and l\Irs. Ralph Diedrich of the Third
District. Alos aboard the head table were
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vallerga, he who has
long been Hinshaw 's sidekick and is our
new assessor by supe rvisorial decree.
The place was wall-to-wall politicians.
DURING THE $100 repast.
Congressman Andy worked his way
around the dining hall and Y.'as most
gracious in victory. Later he U>ld us he
found a house in Washingtvn but not the
first offering which was an $84 ,000 cot-
tage .
''I figure the assesso r back there i:>
fostering high prices." he quipped.
S1\IGO:-O it:PI \ -Sooth Vk!ltJamest SOlllb of Haool P,,tonday, •laool Radio acalnlt North Vietnam In the 24 houri below the DMZ In South Vietnam's
1n1J111anlen dt~imatt.od a 25G-man Com· said. The U.S. oo.aunaod, which has nev-Md1ng •t noon today la a drive to stem northernmost Quana Tri Provf.n(.e.
munist battalton. trap~ a ~ aod er 1cinowlt!dged the use of pilotleil mWtary lrlltnc. beadtd for South Vl~t-The lleld offlctrs &aid many of !he 7~
chased a 1hlrd 111 swamp.! 40 mlles WHI pl&nes over the North, hid oo comment nam. fresh North Vlelnamt.¥e aoldler1 ln the
of Saigon. fit'ld officers said today . on the report. Spokeunm u1d 11 of the raids were latest fighting west ol the capital carried
In Ute :ilr '4-'ar, North Vlt!lname.e an~ near the Dtmlll~ Zone (OMZJ while handkercblefs with a red rose and
linircraft gunnt..'f'S shot down a U.S. TH~ COMMAND said U.S. B52 separallng the two Vletna.rm. Another slx the legend ''Hero of the Uberation of tht
pilotless drone airplane abou __ 1_l!O_mll_cs __ bo_m_b<t_s_n_e_w __ 13_threo-_ __:P_'•_ne __ r_:_•1_·d_•_ .. =v.:'":::-=. of_t:::he.:::cst~an=t-jtll!::~bo:::111:::bed=_::lu:::Bl:.___:Ca:::::pl_:_18_:_l'_'_i_nscr_i_bed __ o_n_lh_e_m_._1n-'-d-'-ioa-'-__.tlng__,
Ul"IT .......
TV Coverage
Of Apollo 17
'Off and On '
By JAY SHARBUTI'
NEW YORK (AP) -One thing was ac-
complished by man's sixth landing on the
moon: It gave the nation a brief respite,
30 minutes at mO!ll, from daytime quiz
shows and soap operas on network
television.
But cowboys and comedy held a ftrm
grip on the CBS television entwork dur·
ing prime time Monday night as Apollo
17 astronauL'J Eugene A. Ceman and Har-
rison H. Schmitt were out taking their
first stroll oo the moon.
CBS llADN'T PLANNED to interrupt
shows scheduled ror prime evening time.
ABC and NBC bad, and they gave
viewers the first look at the clear,
remarkably sharp color television pic-
tures from the moon. Bu you had to look
au the lime, Jest you m!ss them.
ABC made the Initial &bowing at 5:211
p.m. PST. rt broke inf<> ils regularly
scheduled "Rookies" program for a one.
minute Jive picture of the astronauts and
the American flag they put on the moon.
ASTRONAUTS KEEP UP BUSY PACE ON FIRST VENTURE OUTSIDE LUNAR LANDER
Gene Cernan (right) UHs Drill While J•ck Schmitt Sets Up Experiment
NBC foUowed suit at 6:03 p.m., in·
terruptlng the start of its Mcm.ay night
movie with a videotape replay of essen-
tially the same scene shown earlier on
ABC.
Mother's Day TV
"Abortion Show'
Prompts Warrant
PHILADELPHIA (UP!l -An a""5t
warrant was issued Monday for a Los
Angeles psychologist who the state said
performed 11 "experimental" abortiom
before a television camera last ~1other's
oa·y:------
District Attorney Arlen Specter said
the warrant was issued for Dr. Leroy
Karman . inventor of an abortion device .
known as the "Karman Super Coil."
SPECTER CHARGED Karman
performed abortions "on no less than JI
women .out of a group of 20 women who
were brought by bus from Chicago.''
The district attorney described most of
the women as "young. black and poor."
fie said they were unaware the opera-
tions were experimental and had not
been infonned ahead of time that the
abortions were being filmed by a crew
from television station WNET-TV in New
York.
According to the \varrant. two of the
women became seriously ill from the
abortions and a third had to wxlergo a
hysterectomy to stvp persistent bleeding.
TUE "KARMAN Super Coil" was
described as a long. thin plastic device ....
1\'hich gradually unwinds itself after
being inserted into the uterus. The coil ts
removed after a periOd or 12 to 24 hours.
UP'I Tel""'°"'
CBS' rare here during the initial stages
of the lunar walk was "Stand Up and
Cheer," whlch began at 4:30 p.m. PST. It
was Jollowed by the network's
"GUll.!lmooke," "Here's Lucy," "Doris
Day'' and "Bill Cosby" shows.
111E NETWORK finally covered the
walk live and with tape replays in a
special report whlch, like NBC's, began
at B:Xl p.m. PST. ABC's final rep:>rt
came at the end of its regular. Monday
pro football game.
Earlier In the day, all three networks
intem.1pted regular daytime shows IO
eover the successful 11 :55 a.m. PST
--1unar.Jandi'"".ol the astronauts.
The networks then used simul~ted
depictions of the landing aDf:! the interior
or the spacecraft Clla.llengt?r. T b e na'-
tion's space agency hadn't planned Jive
television transmissions from the ship
during Ill descent.
Both NBC and ABC went on lbe air at
4:30 p.m. PST with equally good 30-
mlnute reports oo the landing. They had
hoped at that time to show live television
pictures from the moon.
'THERE HE IS,' SCREAMS APOLLO WIFE BARBARA CERNAN
Family Watches Astronautt Debark From Lunar Lander
Delays in setting up Challenger's
camera rorced the two networb to fdl
time with other material, then interrupt
•regu1ar programs with a total of three
brief reports.
Wicks Astronauts Set
For Busy Day
On Moon Surface
BUT THE FILL material wasn't dull .
NBC's half hour included good studies by
correspondent Roy Neal of four Apollo
astronaut! who quit the space race after
returning rrom the moon.
The first man on the moon -Neil
Armstrong -was alone in refusing to be
in lervicwed. He also was visibly annoyed
at the NBC crew's trying to film him at
the quiet college campus where he now
teaches.
they bad the IOIJl-lerm mlsslon ol 1~
tacking Saiaon. ,
UPI CORRESPONDENT Donald A.
Davla reported from the So i,.....,.. bat-
tlefltld that government militiamen were
chasing North Vietnamese !roop8 who 1 es<:aped a deadly ambuob Moodiy juBI '
soulh ol Tay Ninh Provlnoe capllal 4%
mUes norlhwcst ol Saigon. Jn that I
fighUng, 87 Communists were lcllled at " /
""t of jusl three SOllth Vietnamese
~·ounded, Davis said. j
A defector from lhe Communist J'&llks
lipped oft Sooth Vietnamese authorities
about the movement ol the North Viet-
namese troops, officers said.
Lt. Gen . Nguyen Van Minh, com·
mander of all troops in the 1S.provtnce
Saigon area, told Davis today tbal ooly
ooe of three North Vietnamese bat-
talions involved in the major troop
development from the Cambodian border
area to SOuth Veitnam had been engaged
in combat.
MINI! WATCHED today as Tay Nlnh
Province chief U. Col. Le Van Thlen
maneuvered his 600-man militia force in·
to pasition to cut off the other twD 250·
man Communist battalions.
Attorney Never
Filed Divorce •
Papers for 200
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Two bundttd
couples who thought they were di~
are not.
And after up to 40 years since their
supposedly legal separadons, Ibey .,.
going to get a chance to reconsider.
IT ALL STEMS from a lee collection
method used by V.I ... Hash, a lawy.r who
picked up coo.siderable wtllk·ln bualness
at his office across the street from. the
courthouse.
oDe of the town's' best known at-
torneys, he is known to have filed many
divorce cases without receiving the flllng
fee .
But his niece, v· · · Hash, herself an
auomey, recalled ~Y that he always
cauUorled his clients:
"You're not divorce<I until this decree
Is lilod and il's not going I<> be until I'm
paid."
THAT COIJ..F.CTION method was used
widely In the Depression, his niece ad-
ded, but is frowned upon by the legal
prolessioo today.
Hash died six years ago, and Miss
Hash was named a coexecutor ol. bis
estate.
Going through his p,aper.i, she !DUDd 200
divoree decrees which bad been 'lllgned
by judges but not filed with the clerf< of
lhe court and made final. Some date
back "' the 1920s.
She said she assumed It was because
her uncle was never paid.
To clear up the estate, she propoM:d to
Superior Court Judge LallttllS Heoclenon
that b< file all 200 DUllC pro tune -In
other words, doing today what .should
have been done yesterday.
The judge said fine but certain legal
~ui.mnents would have to be complied
with flfSt.
FOR ONE THING, the plan voould have
!<> be approved by the slate ·Supreme
Court. Miss Hash liled a friendly appeal.
and the court on MMday set a Jan. 2
hearing. Hinshaw is off to a good start in
\Vashington. He "'as ()ne of 69 new con-
gressmen who had to draw from a hat
for an office. Jlinsha w cased every one of
the offices in advance. Now acquainted
with the real eslate. he dre1v 26th choice
but got the same office he v;ould ha ve
1von if his dra"' had IX'en number 10.
Specter said Karman would be charged
y.·ith performing illegal abortions and
practicing medicine without a license.
The district attorney's office said
Kannan admitted demonstrating his
device but denied performing the abor-
tions.
SPACE CENTER . ·Houston (UPI ) -
T})e timetable of Apollo 17 is shown here.
AU times are Pacific Standard Time and
subject to change. 65 Haiti Re.fugees Dock
Obviously then. Hinshaw felt of the
earl y-draw winners. only nine new con-
gressmen selected good offices and the
other 16 picked bummers.
Clea rly, H1nsha"· is a n1ethodic al man.
\Ve can use some of lhal Jn \Vashington
for n change.
SPECl'ER SAID WNET·TV officials
told him they will not turn the films over
to law enforcement officials because this
,,.,·ould constitute a violation of journal-
istic ethics.
ll'l,'d.!>
They must have toryotten
something!'
Midcontinent Cold, Wet
It's Minus 20 in Wyoming -But 78
(J .S. S um111or11 N ... it0w°A1 WI 1UNfl •ttl'ltl fOffCASI .. '"M t •T 12 -II • 1,
l
iii Flori<.la
Sun, Moon, Tide•
TUllDAl' Second high ....•... 11::lS •·"'· l,4 SetOlld 1w> , ••• , , . , • 7:CM "·"'· O.• waoN•SDAY
11'1!'1.l l'tlgh ............. j:lt1.m. •.O ~lrll low ..... .. , .. :311! '·"'· l.I Sftond llith , 1213' p.m. •.O s.tond low . . 1150 p.m. 0.1
Sun ltlMI ''501,m. letl ''"'·"'· Moon ••'" t1:u 1.m. kt• 11 ·:!0p.m.
Temperatures
l
•
TODAY
3:03 p.m. -Second tour of moon's
surface begins. Television of n1oonwalk
slarts at 3:31 p.m.
3:55 p.m. -Ceman and Schmitt start
' drive toward South Massif in moon
Tover. Alor.g the way. set up explos ive
charge to be detonated later.
4:01 p.m. -Ceman and &hmitt begln
collecting samples at base of S:>uth
Massif.
6:21 p.m. -Cernan and Schmitt airive
at ne:s:t exploration site, near base of 300-
foot high wall called a scarp.
7:25 p.m. -Schmitt and Cernan
survey crater surrounded by halo of dark
material.
8:06 p.m. -Astronauts begin drive for
final samplJng site this moonwalk. Stop
along way to set up another explosive
chal'ge to be used for seismometer
readings.
8:39 p.m. -Schm itt and Cernan take
core sample of subsurface material at
crater 2,297 reet across.
DAILY 1'1LOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtliftry of th! DailJ Pilot
i\ guArAntrMt
-·•·l'•lol•ri II 1... H "" "•" ,,_ ,_ rf 11» '-"'·•<•II'.,,. """'' ... ,. .. 1tr 111e .......,., M .,.., Cllb lrf ,, • .., -II ,, ........
~,_.,. ..... h!llNfl If "" H Mt r1'CI! ... -· ,.,.,. ., ....... , ....... ,, .... ' .,,., •-•¥· call ·~ • c•"' ll'ln .. .......,,., N '"'· , ........ '" .. ""'" ,. '·"'·
Ttlcphonti
. .
In Miami on Small Boat
POMPANO BEACH. Fis. (AP) -A
battered and leaking SS.foot sailboat
grounded on a beach near luxury COO·
dominiums today carrying 65 Haitian
refugees, 12 of whom said they bribed
their way 001 of jail to flee their native
land.
Police said the refugees, "packed like
sardines'' on their craft, included severaJ
elderly women who were ill and a 22·
( IN SHORT ... )
year~ld womun who wa!i five mooths
pregnant.
Yvon Bruno, who !18ld he was the
leader or the group, reported that the
refugees fled Port au Prince, Haiti, Nov.
23 after his father brlbed the captain or
the guard at a jail to ITee Bruno and 11
other "political prl!Oners. ''
e Debbie Goes On
TORONTO (AP) -Debbie Reynokfy
lost her voice Monday night, mort lhan
300 OI' the audience walked out and
demtndcd their money back but the
Broadway·bound revive! of the musical
"Irene" played ror tbe other l ,000-tlckei
holders.
The .ttar's understudy, Janie Sell, said
she wa s not n?&dy to fill ln1 so Miss
Reynolds walked lhrough her P"'
s~cchless and did pot appear in i;ome
scenes.
The !how. which Sir John Gielgud is
dircctina, moves to New York Sun<fay .
e Co.,tract Bossie
BETIIPAGE, N.Y. (AP) -Grumman
Aerospace Corp. says it will not futrill a
C!Ol'ltract option and buHd 48 more Flf
Tomcat jet fighters for the Navy unless
tbe contract. terms are renegotiated.
The company stated its position Moir
day after the Navy announced that It was
exercising its opetion to buy the planes at
no increase in price over the terms of a
1969 contract.
Noting thal ii already bas lost aboot 11
million on each of the 86 swing-wing
supersonic Ftfs ordered so 'far, Grum-
man uid il had told the Navy that it
"refused l~ proceed wider the DS?tlon."
"On I.he advice of counsel, we feel that
the option does not comply with tenns of
the contract or with cooaresstonal
au thorization and that lt cannot be
legally enforced," a spokesman 1&ld.
ePeronNamell
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Former
Argentlne President Juan D. Peron wBs
offered the prtlidentlsl candldecy or his
Jusllciali.sta National lJberatJon Front
party but Wiii renounce the nomination
and leave for Paraguay Wednesday, a
Peron sppokeunan said today.
Peron, who tttumed Nov. 17 after 17
years or elile, ls barred 'from rupnlng for
president anyway by a residence re·
quli'i'ment lmpoled by the ruUnc military
Junta.
Carlos Jmbaud1 a Justicial~ta leader,
told ncw1men oulllde Peron's suburban
homo after leaders offered him the Can-
didacy Monday nlghl that Peron had
promised to study Jt "with aeriousneq,.
responslhillly and a:randeur."
( <
J
, . . ,.
·orange Coast
' EDITION
•
Today's Final
N.Y. Stooks ' I
VOL 65, NO. 347, 5 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1972 N TEN .CENTS
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
.... DIM¥' ..........
On 'Feb. 11, 1919; voters in the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District ap-
proved a '15.9 mlllloo bond issue that
district officials said wouJd cover the
needs of tt>e district for the next four
years.
On Dec. 5, tm, trustees voted to com·
mlt the. last of that money to a project to
rdutblsb and e>pand Costa Mesa High
School.
•
In the Ye&n between the district ha&
started or completed more than 20 pro,t
ects, most or which are aimed at ex·
pariding classroom space or upgrading
the educatknal program. .
."And,'' says district bmlness manager
Ray Schnierer, "we ez)>ect these projects
will hold us f6r quite some Ume to
come."
Acoonling to Schnierer, the 115.9
million went for:
-Purchase of 52 Portable classrooms
for $1,051,000 which are more or less
permanenily localed at TeWlnkle, Davis,
Llncolo, lllcNally and Harbor View
IChools.
-Construction of EastbluU SChool
for $1,658,000. The school bas a current
enrollment of 678 chUdren.
-Enlargement of Bear Street School to
bring the school up to 350 students. The
project cost $319,000.
-Remodeling of Newport Harbor High
School for Sl,lm ,000. The project in-
. .
creased the sehool 's student capacl!y to
3,000.
-Construction of Jbe district bos
garage at 915 W. Baker St. in Costa
Mesa, for $221,800.
-Additional construction o f a
warehouse aod maintenance and opera·
lions facilitY. at the Baker Street site for
$835,000 ••
-Letting of a $635,000 contract for con-
struction of an Instructional Materials
~ce .Center· as the last phase of the
Baker Street construction ptoject.
-Remodeling of TeWinkle school as a
middle school of 1,300 students for
ll,181,000.
-Remodeling 9,_f Corona del Mar High
School for $2,091,000 to expand it to a
3,000-student campus.
-Conversion . of Davis to a middle
school of 1,300 students for $526,000.
--O:mversioo of Llnooln to a middle
school also ror \~300 for $728,000.
-;Conversion of Rea to a 1,300-student
middl e school for $716,000.
-Construction of the Olympic pool at
Ne wport Harbor High.Sfhool. The project
was undertaken with the community and
the school dlstrict'i share was $395,000.
--Constructloo of the Roy 0. Andersen
School for $1,000,COJ. The school is
scheduled to opeo io September. It will
aerve 500 students from the Harber Viev.·
Homei area of Newport Beach.
-Exp&:lsion or Estancia High School.
!Se• DlsTRICT ~U001!7, Pago II
State Cuts Vowed
Reagan Committed to Lower Taxes
SACRAMEN'ro (AP) -Gov. Ronald
~an ~id today that "I am com-
m.Jtted" to a staf,e income tax cut, even If
taxes later have to.be nised again.
Tbe Repllblican governor said be would
make his proposal to the Legislature
sometime next year.
But be said it's loo early to say now
just bow much state budget surplus wlll
be available and how big a cut could be
made.
He told a Capitol news conference he
A pollonauts
Explore With
New Fender
SPACE CENmJ\, . H"-(AP) -
Apollo 17'1 ........,.., wtio ha,,._pickf<! up
90IDe of tlM )'\II' I rt tocU 1.11 tbe moon,
move oat ant iu their moon buggy to search an ancient 1valancbe for the
oldeAI lunar material
But belon that, Ell8"ie A. Ceman
and Harrlloo ff. Schmitt pr<pared to
form a mUelbift fender for tbeJr lunar
tu! IO ,they -~ be showered with tbe
black dust ol Taurus-Littrow valley. (See
related storis, pldurel, Page 4l.
The right rear lender fell off Mooday
night and the unprotected w b e e I
sbowued the astn>nauts with dust,
prompting Ceman to remark: "I hate this
black stuff. It's re.illy irritating. It'll
take us hall a dozen Sundays to dust
oll."
Miss""-Control Instructed them to im·
provise, usln1 clamps and a piece of
cardboard or imulation off their lunar
ship Cballencer· Booe-tired from their lint· seven-hour
lunar ucunion following · a perfect land-
ing on Mbnday, utrooaut! Ceman and
Scl.mitt were given an extra hour sleep
today, delaying the start ol their -
moon walk until 3:03 p.m. PST.
Alter Missiolt Control played the eerie
strains of Richard Wagner's musical
classic, "'lbe lUde of the Valkyries," to
arouse them, Ceman responded with
some music of his own:
"Oum, dum, da, dum tfum, da, da, da,
dum;l' S;aid-C.ernan.
"Good morning," said Schmitt. "It
was great fo-get some rest."
Their driving large\ today is a 6,000-
foot-higb mountain which they call the
South Maas.If 4.4 :miles from the landing
craft Photographs indicate an avalanche
b!mbled down the side of the mountain,
depositing at the bue lllllerials from
perhaps several lunar age periods.
'
SchmJtt, a geologist who bad a field
(See APOU.O, Page ll
Coast
Wead1.er
It should be a little warmer on
Wednesday, ac,J?ordlng to the
weather 1tr'vict1 with lllgha af 58
along the orange Coast. Lows lo-
nlgbt will dip down lo 41.
INSWE TODAY <hf grou>i/19 1••1# m0Wm<t1t,
both ,,,.<rid at and prafs•d,
""" anall/Zed btl a jo1muzlfst w h o crla1-cro1sed tht notron
hippie-llyZ., vfsl«ng among the
110Uon'1 commttne1 and con·
clll<ltng that they '""'' '°"'' Itu«ng quoUU.1. Storv on Page
20.
L. M. ..,. t Metlllt • ,,
c.ttKlnrl9 J MlolHI ...... l•
Ci..ln.I tl.U -..-1 Mwt 4
Ctftlkl It °"""' C..,, t
C,......,. It '""' 1 .. 11 o.91 Moffc.. • ... ........ 1•11 • ...,_ ..... ' T.......... tt ..... ,, ....... It ~ n
........ l•ll ...... 4
,.,..,_ hcWC -1 Wo:c•u i "''* 11i1r" Mw:uc'" M w.11 ....._ 4
""" .......... ll
·•
I
looked il'lto the idea of cutting the state
sales LU abd rejected it because of prob-
lems ·of adminlstratJon.
Reagan acknowledged that I h e
Leghlature rnJgbt have to raise taxes
again to meet an expected U.S. Supreme
Court ruling requiring the state to take
over a greater share of the costs of local
education.
"I would rathe r take the chance," and
grant a tax cut now, he said.
The alternative, he said, is that the
Board Votes
Itself Raise
Orange county supervisors voted
themselves a $7,~a-year salary
increase today.
They will now receive $24,500 a
year. 11ie..vote tAI S-1, witla Super-__
--CUpen llld Rotiert Battiq_ • di.s..•t1na. _
Calpiit ............. y the de-
-to allow DICn publlc Input on the matter failed.
Battin opposed the Increase.
Truman's . Vital
Signs Weaken;
Prayer Recited
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -The vital
body signs of Harry S Truman today
became "unstable" -hls heartbeat and
breathing quickened and his temperature .....
Townspeople prayed for the recovery
of the 18-year-old former President.
"People feel that even if you have to
cheat St. Peter, be's not ready to go,"
said Or. Elbert C, Cole, preacher of the
Central United Methodist Churcll.
11He's a rugged guy who's hanging in
there and he's going to make it," the
pastor•· H Truman is to improve enough to
recover, his doctors said bis weakened
heart must get stronge. But they said
his heart was beaUng irregularly because
of his age and that would keep him in
serious condition indefinitely.
"HiJ vital signs became somewhat
unstable during the night -his respira-
tion, pulse and temperature increased,"
said Research Hospital spokesman Johii
Dreves. "His blood pressure retnained
wtlhln normal rang• Kidney funcUon
remains adequate."
Truman was fed through a tube that
went throuib his nose to his stomach. He
was given oxygen to help him breathe
and to ease the strain on his heal'.l. Extra
medlcaUon helped him relaL
Legislature would use up the rest of the
budget surplus on other spending proj·
eels.
'lbe current budget surplus is about
$700 million . But the recenily pwed 11.1·
billion tax shift and school finance plan ---
Reagan sponsored uses up about $451
million of the surplus.
The Governor ~id he had not changed
his "cut, squeele and trim" attitude
about government spending, even now
(See REAGAN, Page %)
Kissinger
In Sessions;
End Jan. 3?
I ; ' . ~ . PAR!o (UPI) -• • Henry . ,
i!ll<r./,llel4 aJm\111 nonstop •negotiating
..... ...., ·-to end the~ -
nam-war, ud B'rencb Foreign MiD.1ster
1.11Urlci~ Schumann predicted the one!
would come. by Jan. 3.
DETAILS llO\ITE OF ANNUAL NEWPOllT HARBOR CHRISTMAS BOAT PARADE
FMtl?ol of Lights Storts Next Moncl1y ind Runs Through Doc. 23
French diplomatic sources spoke of a
compromise on a key Point -wilbdrawal
·of North Vietnamese.
While Kissinger was meeting with
Hanoi's Le Due Tho, both the North Viet·
namese and lbe Viet Cong rejected an of·
fer by South Vietnamese President
Nguyen Van Thieu for a Christmas
ceaae-lire wliich Could be prolonged In-
definitely and which could Lring borne
lhe American prisoners of war.
Kissinger met· this morning with the
permanent representatives to the Thurs-
day semipublic Paris peace talks and
they were Joined briefly with a group of
teclmicians from both sides who are
believed editing a cease-fire agreement
in still another meeting.
Then all journeyed to a villa in
suburban Paris for the main meeting
between Kissinger and Tho.
The KissJnger-Tho talks began at 3
p.m. (6 a.m. PST).
Three hours later, Kissinger and an
aide -a brief stroll througp the
garden while a rainy, misty night en-
veloped the Paris region.
They then resumed the conference.
behind the tightly closed steel shutters of
the low.roofed Communist vi lla.
Later, 1bo, who acted as host in the
Communist-owned villa in Gif sur Yvetle,
IS miles aoutbwest of Paris, escorted
Kissinger to his car at the end of the
4\2:.bour meeting and gave him a long,
apparently cordial handshake.
Kissinger's personal plane landed at
Orly Airport tonight, and airport offi·
clals said his departure for Washington
may be imminent.
The North Vietname~ delegation an-
nounced they would meet again Wednes-
day.
~~~~~~~~~~~
· Newport Council
E yes Afrernoon
Business Meets
Newp(,rt Beach councilmen Monday
are going to look at ways to streamline
the way Ibey do their business.
Among other things , they'll.consider a
proposal to conduct portions of their
. regular meetings in the afternoon.
The Newport Beach proposal, drafted
by Councilmen Milan Dostal and Paul
Ryckoff, calls {Qr stu~.atssions to run
from 1:30 p.m/l07-p.in. twi~ monthly
with business meetings conUnuing from 3
p.m. to 5 p.m.
"We would break for dinner about five
o'clock and then reconvene -~l 7:30 p.m.
for public hearings,'" Dostal said.
Dostal said councilmen C9\lld handle
"all the routine matters",·. ~urlng the
afien-t meetings •.
He said he and Ryckoff 6elieve the
study sessions could be ahort.ened by re-
quiring more comprehensive s t a f f
reports on various matters.
Study ~Ions, now cal,led from 1:30
p.m. to 5 p.m. the afternoon of every
council meeting, are. inteqded to erovide
background information for councilmen.
"With mori!~ comprehensive s t a f f
reports, we could put these lten1s on a
'consent agenda, 1 " Dostal said. "U any
councilman should wyt additJonat in·
formation, he could ~II it off for
discussion.
Festival o~ Lights Boat
Parade Monday in Harbor
The Newport Harbor Festival of Light!
boat parade will st.art Monday night and
is open to any skipper with a decorated
vessel.
The chamber of commerce-sponsored
event will : 'art at the Balboa Island Fer·
ry terminal at 6:30 p.m. and at least 50
boats will cruise the entire barber every
night throogh Dec. 23.
Tbe chamber bas pinpointed ap-
ptt.xi.mate times the sparkling caravan
win pass choice viewin(, spots around the
harb9r to make It easier for onlookers to
fi~ a comfortable spot to watch from.
Chamber Manager Jack Barnett said
there are many places the ~arade will
pass that are open to tbe pubhc for view·
ing,. including the walks along Balboa
Island, the Marine Avenue Bridge,
11-fartner's Mile restaurants, the Balboa
Pavilion and others.
Barnett said a new feature has been
added to this year's parade -noating
choral music .
A large cruiser bearing three choirs
will break away f r o m the parade and
anchor in the turning basin. Barnett said
the singers wUl present Christmas cato's
and 11011gs of the season for the en-
joyment of shoreside audiences.
The parade Is schedule 1 to end at 9:15
p.m. each night and Barnett said
decorated boats can join in or drop out
anywhere along the parade route.
Newport Traffic Ch.ief
Quits to Take DC Job
Harbor Area United Wa y
Now Within 6% of Goal
"But this way, we could get all the
essential information, yet be able to
study it oul!ide of council hours," he
said.
Councilmen receive their Monday
agendas and staff reports the Thursday
evening preceding each meeting.
Dostal said he and Ryckoff have
several olher proposals that will be
discussed Monday afternoon. He aald
they'll actually present a foin'-potnt pro.
posal.
Robert L. Jaffe, '": .• ,.ort Beach traffic
engineer the past seven years, has
resigned to take a position with a
Washingt?O, D.C., tORSulting nnn.
Hi.s first assignment Will be to serve as
a consultant for a traffic study com·
mluioned by a local govemment-Cency
in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Jaffe's reslgnatk>ri was announced by
City Manager Robert L. Wynn, "Who
pralsed Jafle's quallficatiohs and his
"understanding of t r a f I i c charac-
teristics." Blloyed by a total ol 1475,580 In col·
Jections, Harbor Area United Way
Chainnan Ed Hirth pledlcted Monday
that the communltia of Costa Mesa,
Irvine and Newport Beach would reach
thelr goal of raising $504,00> by early
next year.
Final tallies taken Monday night show·
ed theit M.3 percent ot the overaU goal
had been reached but there was CONld·
erable optlml1m amon: Utlled Way
workers that It will reach 100 percent or
possibly more once aiifbe collectlonl •re in.·~ I
The deadline, originally set for late
November, was exteii'ded for the ,.
malndtt ol the JO•• to meet the goal,
sala 'lllith-;whO d00blior111 mayoro
Newport Beach. •
More thin 70 percent, o• $326,288, of
the total was contributed by the United
Way's corporate and employe division.
Ol~hese the liulldlng; developmenl and
real estate divlsklM gave '37 ,235. Major
contributors were \he -Irvine Company,
the Grant Company, VTN, the Don Koll
Company, Dean Coostructlon and Rinker
Davelopmeot.
Rflail employe1 donated $30.324 and
were led by the May Company. Financial
emplayea contributed $2..,500, repre1en-Unc a J• perctmt Increase over last
year, lai1eJy bec1'18e or new-don1Uon1
by Pacific Mutual Life, Avco, Imperial
Savin@ and CaUfomla Federlll.
Biggest emplOy.COil~lbUtor was the
industrial and service divlllor. with •
total 01·•111,im. Le1dln11 Ormo In this
category were the DAILY PILOT,
(See UNITED WAV, l'IJ• I
-
Besides the suggestion to c.-onduct
business meetings In the afternoon,
Dostal said be and Ryckoff also will
recommend :
-Problbitlng debate on a matter that
is to be·continued to a ruture meettnr, or
at the .time an otdlna.nce Is "introduced"
and ICheduled for public ~Ing.
-
l'.11 MAKING Ill/ SllOrl'IN6
LIST eECAUSC THERE AAE Oil~ 12 SHOl!'INi A'!IS lEff!
Jaffe, a 1944 graduate of YaJe
University, came to Newport Beach In
IBM from the Wilbur Smith ~nd '
Aaso!:lates consulting firm ol San fran·
clsco.
The Orm be is joining II PADOO-
Voorbeis, Inc., which ls partially owned
by Allen M. Voomeil, the owner of the
firm doing the cumot Newport Beach
t·raffic etudy. JaUe saki they are
separate and dlsUncl organb:otlonl.
• Singer Ward 'Fair'
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Golpe! slnaor
O•ra Wini wu In fair condiiloll today at
UCLA Medleal Center liter aullerlns a
minor stroke at bor home 1111 -k!ild.
• .,
,, ...
LEAVING. NIWPOllT lllACH
Traffic E.,.i-r J-
• 1,
' )
Z DA.JI 't PlLOl •
Cj-c-cold T·t-tmaight ........ -,el
Growers Escape APOLW ...
di)' on lhe moon Monday, Nid before lhe
tupt U1ll ulhll 1v11'inct>1 IJ our best
potentlal for lltllpling very old m•terial
.. lhe --puillJ>I datin. bock 4.6 billion ytOn lo the veif or1c1n:· Freeze Disaster I -··trained~·· f1! lbould help pick oui lhe elderly t<JCD. But
determination of tbtlr exact q:e will
have lo waJt tb\Ul thef" are ~turned lo
Despite dips of 1hermon1e1ers in cllrus
groves in Orange County lo the 26-degree
mark early today, no major dan1age to
oranges or lemons was reported. The
cold wave is forecast to continue.
Ke.nnetb Rice, spokesman for the
Irvine ValencJa Crowers Association.
said below-freezing marks were reeorded
only in the lower elevalions and for short
B each Coac h .
Calls P eters
Intelligen t
By TOrtf BARLEY
ot ... DIJIJ """ Stitt
Huntington Beach High School's swim-
ming coach today recalled that Gig
Peters was "an exceptionc1.lly well-
disciplined athlete of above-average in·
telligence" who never showed . any i~
dication of mental problems during their
association .
Coach Duane Getty told an Orange
County Superior Court jury that must
soon rule on Peters' sanity al the time he
killed his parents that the defendent "'as
chosen by the school's 1966 to 1967 water
polo team as its captain.
Coach Getty, watched keenly from
Peters' wheelchair by the long-haired,
bearded defendant, aJ.90 testified that
Peters was his personal choice as the
most valuable player on the water polo
squad that season.
A plaque reflecting the honors ac-
corded to Peters is today in the school's
locker room, Getty told the jury.
"[ thought he was a fine example of an
all-around athlete," Getty said. '"And
other teachers r ta1ked to made it clear
that they thought he was an excellent
student."
' 1be allegat..ion that Peters, 23, killed
. flis parmts in their Hunlington Beach
_·home on April 21, 1971 is no Jonger
disputed. in the defendant's second
murder trial.
" But the jury will have to rule on his
state of mind when be stabbed Charles
Pet<rs, 55, tlirough the heart and strangl-
ed his mother, Flora, 54., a teacher at
Lincoln School in Corona del Mar.
Prosecutor Pat Brian today produced a
witness to counter earlier
· testimony that Peters was already show·
ing signs of mental stress when be &erv·
ed as torpedo man in the U.S. Navy.
Psychiatrist David Thomasini today
confirmed that he y,·as the medical of-
;· ficer . assigned to examine tbe AWOL
: Peters when the defendent was sent to
• him from the USS "Narius" in San ~ Diego. r Tbomasini said he was told that Peters
,_ had advised superior officers tha t he had
• been oo LSD, marijuana and mescaline,
: that be could not "morally tolerate" tbe
t ~11itary and was a conscientious ob-t Jector.
r
~Newport Woman
~ Sues Over Fall
~ A Newport Beach woman who claims c she suffered serious injuries when she
C was thrown from a "spirited mare" at
... the Irvine Equestrian Center has sued ~ the Irvine ..::Ompany for $500,000.
: Mrs. Patricia Lou Lindquist charges
i: the company with negligence in permit· c ting her to use an animal that was
+:allegedly unsuitable when she visit#the
• center, 7385 Pacilic Coast Highway,
; Corona del · 1ar, last Feb. 19.
; l\ifrs. Lindquist states in her Orange
• Coonty Superior Court lav.·su it that the
, animal reared and bolted as sbe tried to
: mount it.
• • • ' j • • • • . • • • •
• • ' ' ' ' i
' •
f
' I
ORANGE COAST •
DAILY PILOT
TM °"""' Cots! DAIL.,, Pilar. wlil! "'"<II
hi ~ the Mew.Pttst. II Jllltlll"*I by .. °' .... OUt "*Wlln9 ~y. ~
AM illlllt... 11tt P!Allldlld, Moi.iey ~
fl ..... ,. fW 0.1• Mat, _..,..... 9"dl,
...... ,...... ltecfl/Lkoun111n ..... .,. a....-
............... Sidd*"-ck ..,.. llfl 0.-.lel
JM J_, C.plltr-A •Int'-r.QiorMI
........ l!I -'""" SIT~ a!ld 5\Moayi.
1J1t ~-Mfblllll9 pl9"f 11 I T UI Wnl a., Stnilt, C-otta M~. C..litOf"lli., n<.
RoM,1 N. W1.d
"'"ldltll •ncl P11tlllt11er
J 1clt II.. C11rl1y VM l"Nlw..t lflll otn.11 Me/llMI'
n°'"'' K11vil EOllOr Tltom•• A. M11rplriR1
"""""" f:cllllM' L ,, .. , JCri19
........,, hid! Clly lEclllo!'
.... ..,.., .... otfk9
JJJJ NIW,.,-t lo11l1v1,J
M11htM',..,1 P.O. l oa 1171, 92l6J
' --""' MIMit -WW -.Y Str..t "'--... I 2'IJ l' .... 1 AWIWI ........ '-dll ,,.,, ~ ~
... (I .. , .... El~ll: .. I
'hi et r (11 41 +4MJl1 a-•• Mtosr1111 "41-s•11 = l:"~·~.J::: '"""' _. --Miit Pllrefrl .,, .. t•WWC9 WW #ltltl Mr ......... ~ ...... = itlab ,... .... -.. c.t• ,....,.., :a p \U .... , ... urrlfr lt .6J ~I flr1' l'NI fl.If """""""' Mltt1rv .............. ..-.,.
eno ugh periods of lime to have minimiz..
ed crop damage.
Bill Bathgate, a citrus rancher near
San Juan Caplstrano, also logged 26
degree temperatures shortly before dawn
today. Smudge pota and wind machines
saved his groves. be said.
The National Weather Servict's Fruit
Frost forecast for tonight and early Wed-
nesday indicates the recent chill Will con-
tinue. However, a cloud cover erpected
10 move into the areas from Irvine to San
Ju 3n Capislrano may prevent crop
da mage .
Those clouds, the National Weather
Service said today, are not expected to
drop rain along the Orange Coast but will
result in snow flurries in lhe moun tain
areas of Southern CaJifomia above the
3,()()(l..foot mark.
tarth for laboralory analy&Ja. .
If Ceman and Schmitt collect the old
materlaJ, they wUI have fulfilled .lheir
goal on lllls Jul Apollo ml"1on-lo fill in
missing chaptera in lunar history, basic-
ally llle very early and lbc very late.
RocU ~tunted by five earlier Apollo
rr.oan J.andtts have tanged In age
between S bllUon and 4.2 bUilon years.
. While Ceman and Schmlll slept today,
the almost-Corgotten man of Agollo 17,
Roni.Id E. Evans, received a detailed
rtPorl on their tint excunlon while he
orbited SO miles above the moon In com-
mand ship America.
Ml.S!ioo Control communicator Joseph
Allen radiOed that Schmitt's on-th&-spot
analysis helped ground' scientists con--
elude that the thin dark material cover-
ing tbe valley Door at Tiurus-Littrow is
very )'Cung and that the material beneath
the upper layer apparently resulted from
a volcanic lava now.
"The surface around ~ landing site is
generally an undulating plain," Allen
reported. "It is somewhat rougher and
with a greater amount of boulders than
was expected by the astronauts,
The continuing trosty weather. aJong
the Orange Coast surprised resident.! of
San Juan Capistrano who left Monday
night's City Council meeting to fmd their
cars coated with frost.
~I\. "Y "ILOT lllif ...... NEWPORT'S KAREN FRENCH (LEFT!, MESA'S MARGUERITE MARSAUDON TALLY FIGURES
'H•rbor A,...,, United Wey Nun Goll u Fund drtw Goes Into Final Phase
"There are a lot 'of sma11 craters with
glass on the bottom 'a.ad many boulders
ranging from about a foot to 12 feet in
size, all of them covered with the dust of
the dark man tle."
Ft'Olta Page I
Laguna Beach residents, some as close
as 300 yards to the ocean, reported
frosted car roofs early today and
Newport Beach drivers discovered coats
of ice on windshields at daybreak.
Winds below canyons spared many in·
land county resident.!' gardens from [rost
damage and contributed to the minimal
damage most citrus growers reported to-
day.
From Page J
UNITEDWAY ... DISTRICT BUDGET. • •
Allen said what when Cernan drilled in-
to the surface to gather subsurface
material, he "hit hard material several
times and seemed to reach very hard
material at the se~foot depth."
Either wind or cloud cover can keep
temperatures from hovering below freez.
ing. Four hours of below 32-degree
weather can damage t'ruit. "But if it goes
down to 20, it doesn't take loog to kill a
crop," Rice noted.
* * * Cold Nips State
Crops; Daniage
Not Yet Kno wn
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Unseasonal
cold has nipped several California food
Cl'OJl', the Department of Food and
Agriculture said todar, but the extent of.
the damage could ,ot ~ immediately
assessed.
Ora1:1ges have • definitely been hurt.
meaning" 'bat pri~s wiU go up, a
spokesman said. Early reports from the
field say that quality will go ,down, and
some of the crop ·.vii: be lost.
The \\"Orst citrus damage vdll probably
be in Fresno, Kern and Tulare Counties,
where much of the crop .i,s grown and
where the mercury hit 20 degrees over
the weekend, the spokesman said. But it.
takes two or three days to determine the
actual damage to plant cells.
Temperatures sank to 17 degrees in
Sacramento and San Joaquin Counties,
and hit 17 and 20 degrees on successive
nights in Butte and Glenn Counties, the
department said.
Artichokes in the Castroville area in
Monterey County were hurt, but the
department said no doJJar value coutd be
attached to the damage until the crop is
harvested.
Minor damage was suffered by
avocadoes along the south coast, \be
departmenl said. 11
'Ibere was "some loss" to vegetable
crops , and the harvesting of broccoli and
cauliflower was delayed..
About 400 acres of cauliflower were
lo~· in the Fremont-Newark area of
Alameda <'.ounty, the department said.
Roadway Studies
Set in Newport
Specific recommendations for new or:
a!treed roadways in Newoprt Beach will
be rorwarded to the consult.ant doing
llle Newport Beach traffic sluey tonight
by the commlttee directing the study .
The Citizens Advisory Committee on
TransportaUon will meet at 7:30 in the
Corona del Mar Youth Center to hammer
ou;,. its final recommendations .
1 ne ctinsultant, the Alan P.1. Voorheis
Company, will have until Feb. 1. to evel·
uate the recommendations and make its
OV.'?l findings to complete Phase 0 of the
JS-month-old study.
Cii.v Traffic Engineer Robert L. Jaff!"
sairl the recommendations by the com-
miltee will be those considered accept·
able to the community and the consultant
v.'i ll determine which ot those would be
effective.
'S is te r Eiken'
Philco -Ford , CeJesco, Hyland
Laboratories, Xerox, Schlage Locks,
Aluminum Forge, Remex, Container
Corporation and Air CaliforniCi..
The oontribu l.ion fro:.l the Newport
Beach community ·.vas $36,556 with
businessmen kicking ln the greatest
share, or $2,542. The Costa Mesa com·
munity contributed $6,571 and the overall
leader there was aJso the business
division with $2,884.
Costa Mesa city employes were ac·
corded the special distinction of being the
most generous donors in the U.S. on a
per capita basis. Xbeir average con·
tribution of $38.91 exceeded last year's
record of $37 .96 by the municipal
employes of Milwaukee.
The clly of Irvine bad rollecle<I only
$1,085 Ol' 2S pereent of it; goal by Monday
night. A conceotrale<I push during lhe
next few -U is expected lo boost llle
Irvine tolal.
The special gifts divlsioo Is also lag-
ling be6ind lritb only 55 percent of it.s
fr5 ,000-goa1 -coDect>d. -Jolur Flll'lntr,
division chaimw>, -... predicted
that his group would actually exceed its
goal.
In the government and educational
di vision, chairm'1! John Nicoll reparted a
total collection of $61,800 w ll i c h
represent.! 95 percent of the goal.
Distinguished contributors in this division
were the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District employes who gave $4,800 more
than they did last year.
Suspect Convicted
In Ne wport Rape,
Burglary Case
It toot an Orange County Superior
Court jury just 65 minutes today to fmd •
parolee y.ralter Hampton Jr. guilty of
raping ~ assalllling. '% attractive
Corona clel Mar bousewile.
Tho jury filed back into Judge KeMeth
Lae'S courtroom to also retum a gul1ty
ver<iicl on -charges of butglary file<!
against Hampton by the . man. who
employed him on a construction site a(!.
jaeent to the victim'• borne.
Hampton asked for Immediate sen·
tencing. Judge Lae sentenced him to five v
years to life in state prison on the
burgl&ry convictkm with rape and assault
sentences held over until he completes
that term.
Hampton's state prison file will be
reviewed when the burglary sentence bas
been completed, Judge Lae's ruling in·
dicale<I.
But the fact that Hampton was on
parole from an usault conviction at the
time of the rape last July 27 makes it
hJcbly onJllely that be will serve less thiif' the Ynlnlmum flve years, court of·
flcllls aaid.
Hamrto•>'• victim, the mother of U.....
young children, Identified the tall, husky
defendant as the man who foreed llls way
into her Larkspur A venue home and
raped her in front of two of those
children.
Hampton's 11S.pound victim needed 14
stitches to close a bead wound opened
whem Hampton struck her wltll a heavy
bedroom lemp.
She told the Jury that she was
repeatedly choke<! and beaten by her
assailant before Hampton fled when the
vicUm'a: slater-in-law entered the home.
Flight Instruments At CdM Sclwol T k F Air 1 a en rom p ane
Corona del Mar High School oeniors ,,.._
will p.....,l the pl1y "My Sitter Eli,.." F11chl fn!rlnunenlo value<! by the owner
Wodnesday, Thundlly and Friday nigiilo at ,1,01$ were •lolen Monday from an
at the school's l.JtUe Theater. aircraft parked at Orange County
Tickets kir the production, which 11 un· airport. shcrt!f's officers said.
der the dlrectlon of Joanne Black, are. Tbe lea was reported by Franktln
avallable at I.he door. The curtain rises Keith Nol&Ck, 58, of Aoahelm. The m'tel
at 8 p.m. ovmer told deptjties that the instruments
Sheryl Tr!lllor i. 1llllifnt director. were remoVe<I from lhe panel of hia lighl Susan Ptlltgrlnl pll)'s Ruth, Khn Pot.-pl1ne. man plays Eiieen, Judd Hoyt portrsy1 Depullea Hid the Intruders moy have
APPopolous and Dave Arnold plays Mi ll had a duplicate by lo lhe al...,.fL There
Baker. was no evidence of rorc:ed entry.
The project, just getting under way, will acquired by the old high school di.strict
cost an estimated $35,000. It is designed by condemnation, it carries a deed
to expand the educaUonal program while restriction that would force the disVict to
increasing the student capacity from pay a large portion or the pr6ceeds &om
2,200 to 2,300. a sale back to the original owner, the
The communicator said the explorers
collected 29 pounds of rocks, including
lbree of football slm and SDlpped m col-
or and 191 blaek.....i-wblte plctum dur-lni the first expedition.
-hnprovement of the beating system Irvine Company.
at Newport Harbor High School for "But the restriction expires in 1975."
fIO l,000. Schnierer said, "and we intend to hold
-Design of the project to convert that site as an insurance policy as long
"Sounda Uke they got a Joi of good lltu!I
clone and that they've got a lot of good
information already,'' Evans commented
at lhe conclusion of the report.
Kaiser to a middJe scbopJ for $10,000. as we can."
"I think that's a safe conclusion,"
Allen noted.
-Design or the project to convert In spite of the new housing con-
Ensign to. a middle school for $10,000. struction that is going on in the district.
-Purchase or classroom furniture and the business manager says school of-
Sclentist! at Ml&slon Control were in-
trigued Monday as they followed the
reports of the first geologist on the moon.
equipment for TeWinkle School for ficials believe the student census will
$ 000 stay close to the current 26.500 enroll-2~Pu~chase of classroom furniture and mcnt so that these bond-funded con-
equipment for Lincoln Scttool for $14,000. struclion projects "should hold us for
-Purchase of classroom furniture and some lime to come."
Cernan and Schmitt's final driving ex-
pedition on Wedne9day, scheduled to
start at l :S3 p.m., will lake them to
anothtr large mountain named North
Massif in search of more ancient lnateria!.
Frot11Pagel
REAGAN ...
equipment for Davis School for $"3,000. Like district Superintendent John
-Remodeling and expaosjoo of Costa Nictill, Schnierer says it is not likely the
Mesa High School which will use up lbe district will have lo hold another bond
last 11,101,000 of the bond mooey. The election lo finance schoO! coostruction.
total project will cost an estimated $2.Z "We .,. hopeful that the Legislature
milliQD, but scbool trustees, faced with will pass the bills neceSsary to allow us
tbe-end-of-the-bond.-moMyrAJected only to work on a lease-PllfChase ararngement
jec!s for our new schools,' be said. the most Important pro • • that \he stale has emellltd f!Ulll .Or Schnierer points out that the com-With the Irvine Company's downcoast years Of.,conu:Dued .f1scal • probltm.S. ,.;-
pletion of tile Costa Mesa Hiil> S<;bool proJ1c1s Y•\ to be built, Sc!!-1•1"" aald •n "The stare should riot suddenly think,
projecl, the coovenion of ~ and arra,g.....,t wWt ' lht tllndl C<tnpany row lbal It is ool of a delicil Polillon.
Ensign to middle schools and IOIJ)e work whettbY they build the schools and then that it can afford to expand the size of
at Sonora Elementary are yet to be done. lease them back to the district with a government at all," be said.
"But we should be able to finance these purchase option would be 8 good way lo On another subject Reqan said today
projects through a variety of mea11s. The handle the construction of new schools. it would be better to beef up the present
district has several pieces of real prop-"But that's something that's a bit into gold-domed California Capitol buJJding
erty is can sell and use the proceeds for the future," he said. "Right now we're than to build a proposed new hi.gbrlse
capital projects. And there will be a working on finishing these bond projects replacement.
ntum to I.be building fund of moneys us--keeping the promises we made to the He said the columned century-old
ed to lease warehouses in the Sege.rstrom taxpayers four years ago." structure II "one of the most handlome"
projecl, .. be said. builcllngs around. and lllinkl ll would be
'lbe school sites mentioned a.s possible bttter and cheaper to reinforct the old
sale !rems Include the McNally sire. Canadian Ousted building and continue it as lbe heod-Jocated at Newport Boulevard and 19th quarters for the Legislature..
Street in Costa Mesa; a to.acre and a 20-Earlier thL year, Sen, Randolph Collier
acre site on Ellancla Drive 1n Coif/a Over Extorti· on said he plans lo propos<! next year lbat Mesa which will be within a large clty the state spend S50 milllon for a tw~
park, and a llkl:cre site on Golf Course towered new Capitol, $18 million for
Road in Costa Mesa. PALO ALTO (AP) -A federal judge repairs that would permit the old
The business manager also listed three has banished from the country a former buildlng to continue in use as a museum
sites the district owns in Calta Mesa San Jose bank manage!'l who pleaded and fl 1nlllion for a new governor's
north of the San Diego Freeway which guilty to embettling $8,300. mansioo.
possibly could be sold. John Lamoreaux, 41 , a Canadian. Tbe special leglalaUve space com.-
There is one 30-acn! block at Smalley received a three-year suspended .sentenee milt~ which the Yreb Democrat beada
Road and Sun!Lower Avenue and anotler Monday and was ordered to remain out recei'itd a report tndica~ing it would cwt
10-acre site JyJng between the Mesa of the United States for that period. about f4 million to repair the old building
Woods development and Fairview Road. U.S. District Court Judge Robert F. enough to continue l:S present use .
Scbnlertr said the district owns a 20-Peckham abo ordered Lamoreaux to Engineers have warned that the old
acre site between Bay View School and repay the $8,300 to lbe Stevens ~rttk west wing of the capitol might come
Jamboree: Road In Santa Ana Heights. branch of the Central Valley National craabinc down ln a moderate-to-severe
But he noted that, becaU!l'. the~sl;le;;""';;:;;;;;Bank.;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;e;;arl;;;bq;;ua;;;ke.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,-
Truth or Consequences?
So1Mtimos the truth hum! We h•v• lost on occasional .. le by not telling • customer
what he wanted to hoar. '
We might point out that a curtomer 'would be bettor off to pay • little more for our
rubber padding !hon buy a cheaper, mushy pad that fools like you •1'11 wallcing on bo~loons. The
..balloon11 p,ed hurts the Ct!pet backin9, causes stre tching, and ruins seams. Also, this, Pf!d&in9
ofte n flattens out au., a while.
Additionally, we might ten you that some carpet fibers are more practical than othe rs.
A fiber that works in one texture, won't wor~ in another.
F .. I 1r .. to can for edvica. All of our sales people h•ve ho d exlenslva 11pori1nco in tho
,.rvice end of this business -•nd alter aU -the most impor!ent thing we ca n offer, thot no
el,. does, is servici'I
AI"'DEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Plac•ntla Av•.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Tllru Tllur1., 9 lo 5:30-PRI., 9 to 9-SAT., 9:30 lo 5
' I
' l
j
Orange c~ Today's Ftaal-
•
EDITION N.V. Stocks
VOL. 45, NO. J.47, 5 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1972 c TEN CENTS
•
OistriCt Trustees ~Keep '69 Budget Promise
By JOANNB QYNOLDI ' .... ..., .........
On Feb. 11, 1111...:,.en la Ille
Newport·Meu Unllled Diltrld IP"
proved a· $15.I mlllloa bclld -lhll
district olllciall uid -...... Ille
needl or the dlllrlct (Of Ille -. roua yean. . .
On Dec. 5; 1'12. --lo com-.mlt ·!be laal ol that -lo. projed lo
1"furtlilb ud ...-Oolto ..... High
SC\><*·
ID Ille yem betw ... the district has
Mted _. --mo"" than 20 proj-eets. IDDlt of which are aimed at ex-
~ dassroem ~ or upgrading
Ille educational program.
"And," says district bUliness manager
Ray SChnierer, •iwe expect these projects
wW bold us for quite IOIDe time to
come."
According Io SCbnlerer, the .115.1
million went for:
-Purchase or ~ portable clastro<ims
. .
for $1,051,000 which are more or less
permanently located at TeWinkle, Davis,
Lincoln, McNally and Harbor View
schools.
..-O>nstruction of EaslbluU SCbool
for $1,656.000. The ICboo1 baa a current
eoroUmeol of 1711 children.
-Enla~t of Bear Street SCbool Io
brlag the ICbool up lo 350 studeota. The
project cost 1319,000. ~Remodeling of Newport Harbor High
SCbool -for 11,897,000. The project In-
.
creased the school's student capacity to
3,000 .
-Construction of lhe district bus
garage at 915 w. Baker St., in Costa
Mesa, for $2%3,800.
-Additional construct.loo o f a
Wlirehouse and mB.inteUaoce and ope.ra-
tions facility at the Bater Street site for
$135,000. .
-Letting of a·$135,000 contract for con-
struction of an Instructional Materials
5er9ice Center as the 'last phase of the
Baker Street COll!truction project.
-Remodeling of TeWlnkle school as a
middle school of 1,300 students for
11,181,000.
-Remodeling ol Corona del Mar High
SCbool for $2,091,000 to espand it (o a
3,00G-student campus. .
-Convenion of Davis to a middle
school ol 1,300 students for '526,000. .:-
-Conversion of Uncoln to a middle
school also for 1,300 for ma1ooo. '
-Conversion o{J!ea_to-"'.UoolstUd!o!!l" -...
middle school for $716,000.
--Constructk>n ol the Olympic pool a.t
Newport Harbor ffi&h School: The project
was undertaken with the commllllity and
tbe school district's &bare was .-.ooo.
-construction ol the Roy 0. Andersen
School for ·$1 .800,000. The school is
scheduled to open in September. It wUI
serve 500 studenlS from the Harbor View
Homes area of Newport Beach.
-Expans!On o( -.cia High School.
(See DISTRICT BUDGET, Pqe Si
Sign Crackdown Urged
•
Mesa Planners Push for First D1:aft of Law -
By llUDI Nll!DZIEL8XI
Of .. Deity,... ...
Memben of the Costa Mesa Planning
Commission Monday nlght pushed the
plan to reduce atgQ. confusion ooe step
further by asking for the first draft of a
tough new sign ordinince. "
The statute, to be developed by the
planning staff between now and Jan. 31,
would replace an exlstlng sign ordinance
and a cltl council sign policy.
Both o these were termed inadequate
by councilmen in November and suspend-
ed for 90 cloys lo. allow for development
of a new ordinance. No new signs -ex-
cept those meeUog stringent hardship
criteria -.,.. being approved during the
iO-day moratorium.·
Aroold E. Kamala, Costa Mesa's chief
ot advancit4' planning,. says the draft
ordinance will base the size of free-stand-
ing signs on several criteria.
The most important of these is the
speed of traffic as it passes the proposed
'Prayed on Knees'
-Lover Denies Stabbing
Victim in .June Quarrel
Delendeni Tlinldad "Trlni" Cnne to-
day denied tbet llbe plunged a knife Into
the chest of Lionel "Jotmny" Martinez
last June 3 in the dead man's c.osta Mesa
apartment.
Mesa to Speed
Density Report
The Costa Mesa Planning Commission
Monday night qmd to speed up an en-
vironmental Impact report requlftd for a
density reductloo plan oo the city's north
side.
'!be lmpac! .-eport, originally llCl>e1uled
for review in Februr.ry was shoved up to
the Jan. 15 meeUog ol tbe """"'1laioll.
Planning Direcitor ~. Dunn tbld
commission memben the waIUog time
would be reduced by about :IO days
because the report could be completed
"ear Iler than anticipated."
Absence of an environrh.erital impact
report last month prompted com-
missioners to delay the North Costa Mesa
Sketch Plan for to days over the vehe-
ment objectiorui of homeowners. It was
the second 90-day delay.
Members of the North c,o.,ta Mesa Homeownen Association want the densi-
ty reduced to limit construction of ·
apartments. The area Is curreotly
masterplann<d for blgb_ud medium
density development.
Drink or Leer,
But Not Both
..
The attractl'jO widow, told the jury as
her Onnge County Superior Court
murder trial moved "Into Its final hours
that the first time abe knew a knife was
involved in her lover'S collapse was ~
the weapon dropped from ht. body.
Mrs. Crane, 30, aakt llartlnez, 2.1, of
Im N. MlsUan Drift, fell blct from the
kitchen .,... *"1ly alter be had blrled
a chair at ber, "a&aggen!d back four or
five p1ee111 and then fell near the becl.
"I prayed on my knees," Mrs. Crane
told Ille jury. "l_uked him please talk to
me ud I pnyed that the ambulance
would hurry up and come for him."
"Don't you remember holding a
knife?" prosecutor Jim Stotler asked her.
"I doo't remember nothing," Mrs.
Crane replied. "I just remember oeeing a
~ altAjr It caaie out of lilm.' '! •
llrS. Crane bu been -tilled by pros-
ecution witness Eddie Reynoso as the
woman who stabbed his roommate
~ aft<r Martinez and Mrs. Cri"'e
quarftled over a a:lrt Martinez bad dated
earlier tl)at evening.
It ha.s been alleged that Mn. Crane
tried to attack the girl •• she sat with
Martinez in a car parked adjacent to
Martinez' apartment.
The target of that alleged attack has
testified that Mrs. Crane yeUed, "I'm
going to get that bitch," and that
Martjnez had to leap from the car and
restrain the defendant.
Police wbo arrested Mrs. Crane claint·
ed tbaJ she went to the apartmeot later
when Martinez, ·a prominent Costa Mesa
area atblete, wa.s alone and used the
knile to oettle their dispute.
.Singer W~d 'Fair'
, LOS ANGEl,ES (UPI) -Gospel singer
Clara Ward was in fair condition today at
UCLA Medical C'aiter after suffering a
minor stroke at her home last weekend.
sign. No more information than can ac-
tually be "'8d by the molnrlst will be
allowed on the sign.
1be second is lane capacity. Multi-lane
roads require more reaction Ume from a
motofist, especially if he is in the ex-
treme left lane and decides to Il)OYe
toward a Sign near the extreme rl~t
lane.
Another factor is the characteristic of
the area. Signs for a commercial area
would be larger than those in a residen-
Board Votes
Itself Raise
Orange County supervisors voted
tbemselftl a JT,000-a-year salary
-today.
They will ~ive~
year. 'l1le -, witll
viaor -~ and --.cp II II ?!1 1"' ' . I ca.pen• -lo delay the de-cisloll lo allow mere public in~
on the matter failed.
Battin opposed.the increase.
No· Major Crop
Damage Seen
After Freeze
Despite dips of thennometen In citrus
groves in Orange County to the !°ree
mark early today, no major damage to
oranges or lemons was reported. The
cold wave is forecast to continue.
Kenneth · Rice, spokesman for the
Irvine V8Jencia Growers Association,
said below-freezing marks were recorded
only in the lower elevations and for short
enough periods of time to have minimiz.-
ed crop damage.
BiU Bathgate, a citrus rancher near
Sall Juan Capistrano, also logged 26
degree temperatures shortly before dawn
today. Smudge pots and wind machines
saved his grove:r. he said.
The National Wealber Service's Fruit \i'rost forecasl far tooigbt and early Wed·
nesday indicates the recent chill will coo-
tinue. However, a cloud cover expected
to move into the areas from Irvine to San
Juan Capi!trano may prevent crop
damage. .
'lbose clouds, the National Weather
Service Ukt todly, are not u:pecled to
drop rain aloog the Oraqe Coast but will
result in IDOW -In the• mountain areas oli Southern califomia above the
3,000.foot mark.
The continuing frosty weather aloog
the Orange Coast surprised restd<nta of
San Juan C&plstraoo wbo l,,it Monday
night's Oty. CouncU meeting to fJnd their
cars coated with frost.
tfhl and imtitutional area, or perhaps
those in an industrial area.
'liie fourth is the type of busmess itaeU.
Using the Federal Government Standard
Industrial Index Classification Manual,
distinctions will be made between the dif-
ferent businesses and the signs they re-
quire.
Mathematical equivalents and tables
for all of these factors are now being
developed by tbe planning staff. No sub-
(See SIGNS, Page Z)
Don Koll Gets
.
OK for Zone
.... A M.. jj011an ....,._Jil,.._.Filrt1w11 -
~ty All,...,. --
the pahel\I Signal M<llday, ulihl 1!Y the ,.
Costa Mesa .Plamling Commis9ion. . '· •
Members of the commission authorized _L'ld l 'W . s he a zone exceptiOii lo~ the Don Kail Com-: . J2i • er y oman mas S
pany project but delayed for two weeks a ,
tentative tract map for the SG-acre com-
plex. .
The-tract map was continued because
last minute changes had not been sul·
ficienUy reviewed by the plam1ntt· staff
and the commission.
Into Apartment Complex . .
Proposed for location in an area bound-
ed by the San Diego Freeway, Red HIU
Avenue and McCormick Avenue, the Koll
project rtpreSents an innovation in irr
dustrial complex design.
The 98 finns expected to locate there
will own ':.... not I.ease -their quarten.
As with residential condominiums, there
will be 11>-Called "common" areas which
would. Include parting ind landscaping'.
Durfug Monday night's session, com-
missioners also gave their approval to a
zone exception for a 60-tmit motel at 2681>-
82 Newport Ave.
An amendment to the munici pal code~
reducing the parking requirements in in·
dustrial (M-1 and M-2) zones was
likeWise approved by the commission.
TEXAN RECEIVES .
DEFENSE POST
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon today named Texas oUman
William P. Clements Jr. to be deputy
secretary ol delense, the No. z spot In
the department. ·
Clements, 55, will succeed Kenneth
Rush who previously was appointed to
tbe State Department
Clements is chairman of the board of
Sedco Inc. of Dallas and baa had no
previous government experience.
Gardening tools and other debris went
fifing in all directions Monday night, as
a wbman stepp . ...i on the gas instead of
Truman's Vital
Signs' W ~aken;
Prayer · Recited
KANSAS ·CITY, Mo. (UPI) -The vital
body signs or Harry S Trilman today
, becafne "unstable" -his heartbeat an~
breathing quickened and hls temperature
rose.
Townspeople prayed for th~ recovery
or the 88-yeaNlld former President.
"People feel that evet if you have to
cheat St. Peter, he's not ready to go,"
said Dr. Elbert c. Cole, preacher of the
Cenlral United Methodist O!Ureh.
"He's a · rugged guy who's hanging in
there and he's going .to make it," the
pastor sakl.
If Truman is to Improve-enough to
recover, his doctors ,sAia ¥s ~ened
heart must get stronge~. But they said
his heart wa.s beatlngillTegularly because
of his age and that wouJd keep him in
serious condition Indefinitely.
the brake pedal and drove her car
through a Costa Mesa apartment com-
plex storage shed.
Investigators did not e s t i m a t e
toonelary damag<l involved in the 6 p.m.
ac:cldent at 1665 Irvine Ave., but termed
it extensive.
Driver of the. car was idenUfied as
Mrs. Florence Strickland, 77; 1 resident
of Apartment One at the sarne·cornplex. . . "She said she got confused," Traffic
Accident Jnvestjgator Ron Veach said to-
day.
The accidental step on thelaccelerator
instead of the brake sent her car hurt.Jing
through the wall of the structure.
She was emot.ionally shaken by tbe sudden smas:rrop, bl.It otherwise escaped
injury, !XI lice said.
The accident caus..-d slructural damage
to that sectkln of the bullding.
Patrolman Veach said fuse boxes for
the apartment complex's e n tire elec-
trical system happened to be squarely Jn
Mrs. Strickland'• path.
Impact of the crash ripped out the wir-
ing and sent the fu.e bo1es Oylhg, tem-
porarily shutting all ele<trlcal service tD I
apartment tenants. • . I
Weatller
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -C&lifomia
adults stUI can see dirty shows 1f they
drink if they want, but they can't do both
Jlke, and they can still have an alcoholic
at the same time, Atty. Gen. Evelle J.
YoUnger said Tuesday. .
Thls ts the eUect Of last week's U.S.
Supreme Court's CaUfomia vs. LaRue
decision, Younger eq>lalned in a state-
ment. He said the ruUog upholds the
stata Department of Alcohollc Beverage
Cootrol regulation!.
Moon Taxi Loses Fender It should be a little warmtr on
Wednesday, according to the
weather Rl'Vice, with hlgh1 of-IB
aloog the Otange Coast. Lows Ao-
nlght wlll dip down IO 41.
n-. for.bid sexually orlente.d en-
tertainment on the prem!Jes ot a bar or
any place where liquor Is IOld by the
drink. •
Younger lllld the replatlolll deol ooly
with placeo llcellllld to sell ~-
l'M MAKING Iii/ 5110rPIM&
LIST eECAUSE THlA~ ~I OllV 12 SHOrPlll' IWt6 ...,, •
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SPACE CENTEJ\, Houston (AP) -
Apollo 1r1 uplor<n, wbO.have Picked up
• 101D1 of the ~est rocb vn b moon,
move out ngt lu their moon blG1 lo
BearCb an ancient avalanche for the
oldest lilnar material.
But be/ore that. El<aene '" CeJ'Dl!l1 and llorriaon H. Scbniltt prepared to
form • mUeshlft fender for their lunar
tall oo they wO/f't be showe.~ with the
black dust ol Tauruo-Littrow valley. (Sot
relolld 11or1 .. , pictures, Pap 41.
Tb& right .. ar lender !ell oU Monday lll«bt and the unprotected w h e e I
lliowered the astronaull wllh dust,
prompting Ceman Io remork ; "I hate tbls
black stuff. It's ..... ny llrltatlng. lt11 take us haU a dozen Sw>days to dust
olf " Mlsston Ooott.i _lnllructed them to Im-
provise, usinJ cWnpl and a piece of
cardboard or insulation oft the.ir lunar
ship CbaJ1•ng!I'.
BoDe-llred from their first aeven-hour
1111181' e>:cunloa follo1"lnl a perfect land·
ing on Moocs.y, utrOoauta Ceman and
Sctmltt were given an extra hour •~P
today, delaying the It.rt of their -' moon walk until 1:03 p.m. PST. •
Alter M-Control ployed the eerie strains ol. Rlcbud Wagner's musical
classic, ''fte Riie of tbe Valkyrlet," to
arouse them.. Ceman mponded with
some muslc II bll own: .. Oum. dum, da , clum dum, da, da, da,
dwn/' aid eem...
"Good montlng," said SChmltt. "It
... ~t to pt IOl1\e *t."
Their drlvb!g terpt today 11 a 1,000.
foot-hllll mountala which they call· the
South \bmf 4,4 mUes from the landing
mfl. Phoiocrapha Indicate an• av11'nche
•
tumbled down the side of the mountain ,
depoaltlng at the hase materiall from
perbape: aeveral lunar age perto«a.
Sclunltt, a geologist wbo had a field
day on the moon Monday, said before the
fUgbt lhat "this avalanche Is our best
potential for aampling very old materi1I
oo the moon -perhaps dating bac~ U
billion y-to the very origin."
Scbmltt'rtralned geok>gtst's eye ahouJd
help pick out tbe elderly rocks. But det~ination of their exact age will
have to wait unUl they m tetumed to
tarth for laboratory analysla.
lf·Ceman and SChmlll collect the old
malartal, they wlll have f\llfilled !heir
gos! on this last Apollo mission-to fill In
missing chapter& in lunar history, basle-
•ily tbe very ..,1y and the yery late.
• Rocka returned by five earller Apollo
mooo landers havo r~ lo ago
'
between 3 bill ion and U billion years.
Wbl1e Ceman and Sdunltt .~ept today.
the almost-forgoUeo 111"1 of Apollo 17,
Ronl1d E. Ef1D11 received a delalled \
report on their Ora ucursJon while be
orbited 80 milel above the moon to com-
mand ahlp America.
Mla!On Control communlcalot Joseph
Allen .radioed that Sclunllt '1 Oll-tbe<pot
analysis helped ground lclentlJts con-
clude that the thin dark mat«Ial cover-
lna: the valley rloor at Taurus-Clttrow is
very young and that the mat<rlal beneath
lhe uppt:r layer appartnUy resulted from
a volcanic lava Dow.
"The surface around the landing site is
generally an w>dulaU.. pi.lo," Allon
reported. "U It tomewhat rouaber ~
with s greater ·-t or bllllden ·u.an
(See APOLLO, Pl(e 11 •
INSIDE TODA 'l' • TM orotomo 1e1u1 m~t.
both tntll!'ted at and-prait«d,
.,., analvzed by a jovrnalltt
io h o crt.u-croued the M.UOa
hlppiMIJilc, ~!Ung among the
ft;Otion'1 comril.11ne1 and con.-
clud,ng that they havt 1ome
Jotting qualitie1. Sto111 on Paot-
20.
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2 DAILY PILOT c
tate Tax Seen
Gov. Reagan Says He's Committed to Cut
' SACRAMENTO (APl -Gov. Ronald
Reagnn said loday that "I atn coin·
rr.ltted" to a state lnc..-ome ta:x cut, even if
t.zes later have to be raised again.
The Republican governor so.id he would
make his proposal to the Legislature
'°metime next year.
But be said It's too early to say now
juat bow mucb state budget surplus will
be available and how hie a cut could be
made.
He told a Capitol news conference he
looked lnto the Idea of cutting the state
sales tax and rejtcted it because of prob-
leim of administration.
Reagan acknowledged that l h e
'Legislature might have to raise taxes
again to meet an expected U.S. Supreme
Court ruling requiring the state to take
over a gttater share ol the costs ol loeat
education.
"I would rather take the chance,1
"' and
grant a tax cul now, he said.
The alternative, he said, Is that the
-Legislature would use up the rest of the
budget surplus on other spending proj·
""'"'· The current budget surplus is about
f700 million. But the recently passed $1.1·
billion tax sllift and school finance plan
Reagan spon90red uses up about $451
million of the surplus.
The Governo r said he had not changed
his "cut, squeeze and trim" attitude
about gO\lemment spending, even now
that the state has emerged from six
years of continued fiscal problems. .
"The sta te should not sudd~ think,
no w tha t it is out ()f a deficit PoSilion ,
from Page I
DISTRICT BUDGET . • •
The project, just getting under way, will Schnierer said the district owns a 20-
cost an estimated $35,000. It is designed acre site between Bay View School and
to expand the educaUonal program while J ho Road • San An H 1g~-increasing the student capacity from am ree ID ta a e 1'11./J.
2.200 to 2,300. But he noted that, because the site was
-Improvement of the heating system acquired by the old high school district
al Newport Harbor High School for by condemnation1 it carries a deed
$101,000. . restriction that would foree the district to
-Design of the project to convert pay a large portion of the proceeds from
Kaiser to a middle school for $10,000. a sale back to the original owner, the
-Design of the project to con\lert Irvine Company.
Ensign to a middle school for $10,000. "But the restriction expires in 1975."
-Purchase of classroom furniture and Schnierer said, "and we intl'!!nd to hold
equipment for TeWinkle School for that site as an insurance poUcy as long
$20,000. as we can."
-Purchase of clas.voom furniture and In . spite of the new housing con-
equtpment for Lincoln School for 114,000. strudion that u going on in the district,
-Purchase of classroom furniture and the business manager says school of-
equipment for Davis School for $43,000. ficials believe the student censu.s will
-Remodeling and expansion of Costa stay close to the current 26,500 enroll-
Mesa High School which will use up the ment so that these bond-ftmded con-
last $1,101,000 of the bond money. The struction projects "should hold us for
total project will cost an estimated $2.2 some time to come."
million. but school trustees, faced with Like district Superintendent John
the end of the bond moiiey, selected only Nicoll, Schnlerer says it is not likely the
the most important projects . district will have to hold another bond
Schnlerer points out that the com· election to finance school construction.
pletion of the Costa 1.1esa High School "We are hopeful that the Legislature
project, the conversion of Kaiser and will pass the bills 11ecessary to allow us
·Ensign to middle schools and some work to work on a lease-purchase aramgement
at Sonora Elementary are yet to be done. for our new schools," be said.
' that u can afford to el1>ln.I the me of
government at all ," be said.
On another subject Reagan said today
it would be better to beef up the present
gold-domed California CapUol building
than to build a proposed new hlghrtse
replace ment.
He said the columned century-old
st.ructure is "Olle of the most handsome''
buUdlnp around, and tblnb It would be
bt<ter and cheaper to reinforce the old
building and continlle It as 1be bea<l-
quarters for the Legislature.
Earlier thi.. year, Sen. Randolph Collier
gald he plans to propose oext year that
the state spend $50 million for a twin-
towered new Capitol, $111 millk>n for
repairs that would pennJt the old
building to continue in use as a mU5CURl
and $1 million for a new governor's
mansion.
The special legislative space com-
mittee Wblcb the Yreka lJemo!'nl beads
received a report indic3U.ng 1t >Woukl c:..Jt
about 14 million to repair the old building
enough to continue i~s present. uae.
Eriglneen bave warned that the old
\\--est wing of the Capitol might come
crashing down in a moderate-to-severe
earthquake.
Privat.e Phone
Probing Leaks
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
White House acknowledged today
that a privatt: telephone wu in-
stalled for use by two White House
staffers -to investigate news leaks
involving "naUonal security af-
fairs ."
"'81dent pr= S<Cretary Ronald
L. Zie&le< would not say who
autborir.ed the u s e of a private
phone, or where it wu located but
did say the concern regarding the
leaks "reached into the highest
levels of this administration."
He was referring to 1971 news
leaks, a time when the Pentagon
Pilpers and memos regarding lbe
India-Pakistan conflict were ob-
tained by news representatives.
NEWPORT'S KAREN FRENCH CLEFT), MESA'S MARGUERITE MARSAUDON TALL Y''fliiuR'e's"' -
Harbor Area's Unit.cl Way Nears Golil 11 Fund Drive Goes Into FhNI Phase
Harbor Area United Way
Now Within 6% of Goal
Buo)'<d by a total of 1475.5Ml In ool·
lections, Harbor Area United Way
Chairman Ed Hirth predicted Monday
that the communities of ~ta Mesa,
lrvlne and Newport Beach would reach
their goal of raising $504,000 -by early
next year.
Final tallies taken Monday night sho\\'·
ed that 94.3 percent of the overall goal
had been reached but there was consid·
erable optimism amon3 United Way
\4'orkers that tt. will reach 100 percent or
pos sibly more once all the colltetions art
in.
record of 13'1.111 by lbe municipal
employea of Milwaukee.
The city of Irvine had collected only
$1,085 or 25 percent of ii , goal by Monday
night. A concen\J'ated push durlt'lg the
next few ~ks Is expected to boost the
Irvine total. ,
The special gifts division is also lag-
ging behind with only 55 percent of its
$75,000 goal collected. John Farmer,
division chainnan, however predicted
that his group would actually exceed its
goal.
FromPsgeI
SIGNS .•.
jective decisions will be involved.
A sign for a proposed night club on
Harbor Boulevard be'-n Baker Street
and Adams Avenue would be calculated
like this under 1be proposed ..,. stan·
dards, according lo Hamala :
-The 4Smph speed Umlt and the sir
~ne ca~clty would all~ five piecea of
mfonnatian on the sign.
-sinte the club is a co mmercial use
(aCC?nling to the government manual)
and in a commercial area, the sign would
be limited to 100 square feet and a height
of 24 feet.
"But we should be able to finance these With the Irvine Company's downcoast
projects through a variety of m••u•. The projects yet'° be built. Schnierer said"" Co' J N;ps s•~•n district bas several pieces of real prop-arrangement with !be land company U£ " KU-t:;
The deadline, originally set for late
November, was extended for the re-
mainder of the year to meet the goal,
said Hlrtb, who doubles as mayor of
Newport Beach.
In the government and educational
division, chairman John Nicoll reported a
total collection of '61 ,800 which
represent& 95 percent of the ioal.
Distinguished contributors In this division
were the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District employes who gave $4,a» more
than the did last ear.
That same sign would be reduced to a
40 square foot sign with a hei,ht of 20
feet if it were located on Harbor between
Bay and 19th Streets where the rood nar-
l'OWI and the speed llmlt drops lo 35
miles per hour .
-erty is can sell and use the proceeds for whereby they build the schools and then
·capital proj<etl. And Ihm will be a lease them bad< to the district with • Crops,· Damage .-0 lo the building fund of moneys us-puroW. option would be a good way to
---<d.to.la!e..-111..~....l>andle the coostnH:tJ.on of new:.s:bonls.
More than ro pm:en~ or $316,288, of
ll!Ltota! was contributed bI the Unit<d
Way'• corporate and employe division.
All of the sign ordinance parameters
are-only-tentatne, at!alttti11g-to Hlmala.
They may oc msy not be adopted by 1be
city council after a pu~lc hearing ls ilfld
in January.
project," he said. ~ that's something that's a blt in·~to,..-~N,..--,.y,..---.K...------
The ICbool sites mentioned as possible the fututt," he said. "Right now ""'"' Ot et UOWn Of these the building, development and
real estate divisions gave $37,235. Major sale items include the h1cNally. site, working on finishlng these bond projects
1ocated at Newport Boulevard and 19th -keeping the promises we made to the
Street in Costa Mesa; a JG-acre and a 20-taxpayers four years ago."
acre site on Estancia Drive in Colt.a
-Mesa which wiU be within -a large city
park, and a IO-acre site on Goll Course
Qd in Costa Mesa.
The business manager also listed three
s the di.strict owns in Costa Mesa
l north of the San Diego Freeway which
~possibly could be sold.
Ii There ls. one »acre block at Smalley
liRoad and:t:flower Avenue and another
~1G-acre te lying between the f\.1esa ~Woods d elopment and Fairview Road.
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l TONIGHT I "WINNIE THE POOH'S CllRISTMAS t TREE -presented by Mesa High's ~drama dept. Lyceum , 8 p.m. 50 cents 3 adults, 25 cents children. i SQUARE DANCING -Recreation
(Center, Fairgrounds, 8-10 p.m. $1.25 per
1 lesson.
• WEDNESDAY, DEC. 13
~ "TANGO" -South Coast Repertory
• Theater, 8 p.m.
I
I OIAMH COAIT ..
Front Pagel
APOLLO ...
was ~ by the astronauts.
''There are a lot of small crater! with
glass on the bottom and many boulders
ranging from about a foot to 12 feet in
siz.e, all ~f them covered with the dust of
the dark manUe."
Allen said what when Ceman drilled in-
U:I the surface to gather subsurface
material,' he "hit bard material several
times and seemed to reach very bard
material at the seven-foot depth."
Tbe communicator said the explorers
collected 29 pounds of rocks, including
three of football size and snapped %29 col-
or and 197 black-and-white pictures dur·
ing lbe first expedition.
"Sounds like they got a lot of good stuff
done and that they've got a lot or good
information already," Evans commented
at the conclusion of the report.
"l think that's a safe conclusion" . ' Allen noted.
Scientists at Mission Control were In-
trigued Monday as they followed the
reports of the fltst geologist on the moon .
Ceman and Schmitt's final driving ex-
pedition on Wednesday, scheduled to
start at 1:33 p.m., will take them to
another large mountain named North
?o.1asslf in search of more ancient
material.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Unseasonal cootributors were the Irvine COmpaliy.
cold has nipped several California food the Grant Company, VTN, the Don Koll
crops, the Qe_j)8rtment of Food and Company, Dean Construction and Rinker
Agriculture said today, but the extent of ·oevetopment:-
the damage could iot b~ immediately Retail employes donated '30,324 and were led by the May Company. Financial
assessed. cmployes contributed $2..,500, represen-
'~oseidon' Film
Premiere Slat.ed
In Costa Mesa
Oranges have definitely ~ hurt, ting a 105 percent increase over last
meaning ·~t prices will go up, a year, largely because of new donations "The Poseidon Adventure," a movie
spokesman said. Early reports from the by Pacific ,.,utual Life, Avco, Imperial featuring Gene Hackman, Ernest
field ~ that quality will go down, and Savings and California Federal. Borgnine, Red Buttons and Shelley
some Of the crop •Nill be lost. Biggest employe contributor was the Wiitters will premiere in Costa Mesa
Th .t will industrial and service divisioL with a Thursday nighl
Meanwhile plans are being made 10
test the reaction of Costa Mesa residents
and businessmen to the proposed stand·
ants with a survey.
Manzo Appointed
To Harbor Board
e worst Cl rus damqe probably total of 1127,025. '-""'"" filll!IS 111· this The •• rf 1be be F K ......... W<Ll6 8:.w p.m. pe ormance at in resno, K~ and Tulare Counties, category were the DAILY Pll.OT, South c.oast Plaza n theater is being Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim
\\'here much ol the crop is. grown and P h l I c o -Ford , Celesco, Hyland sponsored by the Costa Mesa Jaycees Lo bas named Santa Ana attorney Frank
\\'here the mercury hit 20 degrees over Laboratories, Xerox, Scblage Locks, raise funds for the Toys for Tots p~ p..tanzo to the Orange County Harbors,
the weekend, the .......u.--an said. But it Aluminum Forge, Remex, Container gram and other community service pro]· ·.-~· Corpo tion and A' Calif · Beaches and Parks Commission. takes two or three days to detennine lhe ra lf onu:;i. ects. Admission ls $5. actual damage to plant cells. The contribution fro~ the Newport For Ucket reservations, phone 833-9590 Manzo will succeed ~tartin Usab, also
Temperatures sank to 17 degrees in Beach community ·,qas $36,SSS with or 546-2313. Tickets will also be available of Santa Ana, who bas served on the
Sacrimento and San Joaquin Counties, businessmen kicking in the greatest at the theater prior to the performance. commlssioo siDoe 1970. Usab said
aod bit 17 and 20 degrees on succesalve share, or $%,542. The Costa Mesa com-"The Poseidon Adventure" b the story business pressure called for his resigna-
nights in Butte and Glenn Counties, the munlty contributed f&,571 and the overall of a luxury liner which has been capsized lion. He ts the fCUJder Md head of
department aaid. leader there was also the business by a 96-foot tidal wave. Only six of the Dynatecb Corp., a computer mnpooent
Artichokes In fbe Castroville area In division with 42,884. trapped will survive a daring ucape manufadUrln& firm In Sanla Ana.
Monterey County were hurt, but tbe Costa Me6& city employes were ac-from the ahlp. Manzo, who maitltalns offices at 900 N.
department said no dollar value could be corded the special distlnctlon of being the Don Bull, state director of the COsta Broadway, ls an assoclate of Supervisor
attached to the damage unW the crop 11 most generous dooors in the U.S. on a Mesa Jaycees, said two surprise stars Robert W. Battin. They have quarten on
harvested. per capita basis. Their average con-will arrive at the premiere by helicopter the same Door of the Crocker Bank
Minor damage was suffered by tribut1on of $38.91 exceeded last. year's about 30 minutes before show time. building.
avocadoes along the south coast, the J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;
department said.
11lere was "some loss" to vegetable
crops , and the harvesting of broccoli and
cauliflower was delayed.
About 400' acres of cauliOower were
lo~· in the Fremont·Newark area of
Alameda <'.ounty, the department said.
•
Truth 1
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DAILY PILOT
n.°"""9 C:O.t PAILY l"llCT, wlftl -'!lch
i. ~ fl'le "~ .. lllilbtllfMill .....
Ille 0NNt CO.It l"yblltll~ c:ornc-y, s.p..
,... MttttM •r. '*"'\INd, Monday tll....,.
..,...,, .... c .. 1. Mw8, H""*1 letdl. ""'"°.,_' a...cll/1-l•ln V•llt'f, Uvun•
leldl, IN~hddl ... cll Mid S111 C*'-11!
IM J~" C.olt'""'9. A 111>91• l'f!Oioft81
School Coach Praises
or Consequences?
Sometim., the truth hurts! We have lost an occasional sale by not lolling a customer
what he wanted to hear. J I i
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, .. nMn II ,Wllltttd lftlll'd•Y• •lld su~d•Y•·
TM "'1MIP81 llll"lblllnl pl811t b 11 UQ WPll
.. ,. Slr'9ff, C.W.I• M_., Cl1!hlrnl1, t1'H.
'
Rob•'t N. W•M P'rftldfllt .... PlllllDl>R'
J1clr ll. Curley
Vic* ............ , tnd OfNAI M.,,,...r
Th•Mlt te1.,,ll ....
Thofl'llJ A. Mwrph!no ..... ..._ .... ,..
Ckrhit H. l.Ht llchenf P, Nill .-....nt~MIMn ---
Gig Peters as Athlete
By T0!\1 BARLEY
Of 1111 D•llY f'lltl i llff
Huntington Beach Hi&h School's s~·im·
ming C<lach today recalled that Gig
Peters was "an exctption.illy wel(..
disc iplined athlete of above-average in-
telligence" who never showed any in-
dication of mental problems during their
associ1Uon .
Coach Dllane Getty fold an Orang•
County Superior Court jury that must
JOOn. rule on Peten' sanity et the Ume be
kUled his parents that the defendent WU
chosen by the ICbool's 1916,lo 1187 water
polo team 11 Its captain.
Coach Getty, wal<:hed keenly from
Peters' wheelchair by the long-hatred .
bea rded defendant, also tt.SUfied that
Peters wu his personal choice as the
most vafuabte player on the Weter polo
squad that 1e1son.
A pioque reflecting Ille honon oc·
corded lo Peters 1' Joday In lbe IChool's
locker room, Getty fold the fury.
"I thoutht he waa a flne example of an
all·aroond' athlete," Getty 181d. ..And
other teachers r talked to made Jt clear
that they thought he was an excellent
student."
The allegation that Peters, 23, killed
hi s parents in their Huntlngton Beach
home on April ' 21, l!Wl la no longer
duputed in the defendant's second
murder trial.
But the jury will have Lo rule on his mt• of mind when be i!Ulbbed Charles
Peter1, 16, through the heart and alrlllgl-
ed hls mother, Fiora, $4, a teacher at
Lincoln School In Corona del Mar.
Proetcutor Pat Brllo 1oda7 produced a
witness to counter earlJer
testimony that Pelen WU l1mdy lhow-
lng signs of mental llrels when be serv·
ecf aa torpedo man In lbe U.S. N1vy.
P1ychlllrist David 'lbomasinl today
conflrmfld that he was the medical of·
llctr llsslgned to examine the AWOL
Ptters when the defendent was amt to
him from the USS "Natlus'' tn San
Diego.
Thol'naslnl aaid he wat told tbat Ptttrs
had advised superior oHi,.,.. that be hod
been on LSD, marijuana IOd meacaUne,
that he could not "morally toler1tt:" the
milltaiy and was a COlllclentlouJ ob-
jector.
We might point out that a customer would be better off to pay a ~ttle more for our
rubber p<idding than buy a cheap<ir, mushy pad that feels like you are walking on balloons. The
"balloon" pad hurts the carpet backing, causes stretching, and ruins seams. Also, this padding
often flattens out after a while. r· ,/
Additionally, we might tell you that some carpet fibers are more practical than .others.
A fiber that works in one texture, won't work In another.
Feel free to call for advice. All of our sales people have had extensive experience in tho
service end of this. busineu -and after all -the moot important thing we con offer, that no
else does, is service!
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Plauntla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30_·,RI,, 9 to 9-SAT., 9:30 to 5
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