HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-15 - Orange Coast PilotI
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Va Is Wrecla Nativity
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Display at Cpast Hon1e
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IXOll
Geese or· Gu'.lls?
Plane Victims' Identity Unsure .. Tbe Air Calilomla plant which made an emergency tum to Orange 000..
ty ~ Wednesday !Ugli, m'ay have swallowed several ..,. IU1la ill .,.., of
JJl)it .... l!!il r-... Mid ...... ' • ~ I
OMNGE CUOlft1 ·DINclo!' al Ariiolil!al -Br hm lliit lie -.... I ·-.e ..... WS1J _ ••• .., ........,._ llUllL,"We WlllJl!lr-
lor ... ~" Jla._ukl. ,...,.,. .-. .. ~ WllV ...... 1 .. ~'
'!:lie ploDe, l'llilil 11'1 to Su. Joie Md oww. ..... ~t,Mt l!et Mt
ibe vp,er lllQ' ..a,Jmt prior to Mdns power to cut jot -wl!oe tt ran
Into ihe flock of birds.
M \IE'!' MADE' a tum over ihe ocean and returned to Oranp County
~ *1'e the pa1Y'l8ers weM! transfeJ'!Cf to another jet for their flight.
• -Jlaid .reporta ,tbat lire broke out In ihe engibe wlik:h -sii<:ked
in the birds1 was not true. "When the birds hit the intake a fan blade was
beat "8Ulillg tt to JJCrape . .., ihe eqlne nacelle and sparks new but ihe pilot
cut th&-and there was no lire.1'
11·.,1~ CoDisioa
Driver Killed as Truck
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Sln:edded by Fast Train
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By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of .. Oelfr Pli.t .....
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FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 15, 1'172
' VOL 65, HO. 150, 4 SECTIONS, Jt f'AGES
era
U'I Tt....,._
Civilians,
Military
·:~Cet Hike·s
u1 4· "
WASHINGTON (VP!) -President
NIJIJn' today -• 5.14 percent pay
increue.!or. .1)16,(l)O civilian government
J'Ol'l:ers and a 6:69 percent salaO' boost
for rall'2.4 million membeFs of the anned
servires.
The increases will become enective u.
first pay p0riod alter Jan. I, the Wbi1'
Hoose said.
The civilian pay raise bad Ileen
postponed lrom October aa an •1pti-Jn..
fiatlon m9ve. The military increase is
new.
The across-the-board increases were
ordered by Nixon on the basis of -recom-
mendations by Budget Director Caspar
' Weibberger and ti)e chairman of Jlle.C!vil
Service Commission to proniOte ~
parabillly with privale indoslry oalary
ratea. They will cost about 12 blllloo.
The President at the same ttme1 ~
=~n~~~ai!e~t80to a:i~
The driver ot a ·large bread truck was
ldlled lnltanUy this morning wbe!l his
vehicle collided with a passenger train
which was traveling 90 miles per hour at
ihe point of Impact on ibe Jeffrey Road
crossinglnlrvile. ·
Willl!, aWI dazed, at the stopping paint of
the train, about 1.5 miles away from the
impact on Culver Drive.
Traffic lnv.estigator Gary Barwig of
Costa Mesa Pollce Department said the
collision ruptured a fuel tant and air
hoses. Both signaled the !rain's !all-sale
system to con.e to an .emergency stop.
EVANS FAMILY HAVE EYES GLUED TO TV AS LUNAR LANDER L~AVES ,MOON
Mrs. J•n Ev•ns, Fl•nked by Jon, 11 (left) 1nd Jaime, 13 at Nasau-Bay Home·
for the three-month delay, in pay ad-
justments, holding that his "would be
neither fair nor justifiable." ,
He said that such an increase would
~result in paying federal employes nigher
salaries than the comparable Workers in
private enterprise are receiving. Costa Meaa police ollicm Identified
the dead man as Charles L. Schoonover
Sr., 46, of 14951 Sand Canyon Ave.,
Irvine.
The Santa Fe train was bound for Loa
Angeles out or San Diego and was car·
rylnC about 125 -ers. all ol whom
felt ihe shock 'of the collisloo. Nooe -
iajured.-
Willis Sullivan, 57, of Sahta Maria, con-
ductor ol the four~ar train, ~ .. ~
-'gators that , be fell jbe •implCt bill
did not Immediately lmo)l' wbat·oc""'"' "I didri't know anythlng about it,~· Aid
Orange
Weather
A few hlgh clouds, bul ~
1unny on Saturday, ls the W'1 the
·we&therlady oees It. lfJsha of • at
the beaches, rising to 71 l.nllnd.
Lowa tonight 45-60.
msiDB'·TiiBA'Y ,_.,
What· ....-e th• !Op JO .....
munity theater P.roductiona; of
1972 In Ora1111~ County? Tilt...
DAILY PIWT" drama critic
0Jfer1 hf.a evaluoCion h' toda11'1 Weeke11.dtr section.. .. 1
Jj -i==~·g " . K4"I ft ...... n•
M J W•1M=-Jt~ ,
The impact was SO forceful that it
sheared the bread truck Into its major
components, scattering hot do g s an~
bauburger buns and jagged pieces or
metal down the track.
Manger s~ene
Adults Vandalize Coast Display
The truck's engine was ripped.fram its Baby ,JeltJI wu lwrled fr.om. his
mounts and landed next to the ·tract manger on the front lawn or a Harbor
Jt1ore than 100 yards away. It was sUll View mus home Thursday night. Mary
bot to tbe touch one boor aller the, 8:40 and.JO<!?pi\.and\the animals loo •• ,
a.m. collisioil. · · 'The life-sbed figures in the Nativity
A conductor on lhe train said be felt a acene of the John Lorenz family, 2727
bump and suspected a collision bad oeo. wavecrest, in a .six foot by six foot set-
curred "when It went bangety, bang, Ung, were overturned by vandals.
bang, bang" underneath the coaches. Mrs. Lorena: >sald this morning that
He said the train was running 00 neighbors saw the desecration and say It
• scbedule and had made stops at Del Mar DI lhe workiof a lfOUP of adull!J who and San Clemente before the accident oc-curred. spring from a car and then racpd away
The train continued IU: westbound moments liter.
joumey at -9:Wa.m., using only Its front 11You wonder what goes on ln the
engibe. A fireman on lhe train said., I be -of pee_ple like thal," Mrs .. Lorenz
· Mrs. Lorenz said erecllilg,ibe Natlvily
scene "has been a family project ever
since we've had it, about 10 years."
She.Aid Ibey "J::? q, Corooa i\,el Mar 11ro·, year.''lige -mw"Jlnio!r anc1
never bad any prdbtema back east. "rut
last. year 110mebody put the llgurea, In
somewhat lewd positions/' she saJd. l•
"It just kinda tal:es ibe ·Christmas
spirit out of youi' heart " she said. ·•'If ' " yoo can't expose what the true mearung
of Christmas la, that's pmly · bod: Jr
Cbrlslmas Is just shoJll'lot1 and parties
and such, we're·1n a pretty bad atate.
"But this manger scene. ts our lr'.\Jc
meaning," she laid. "It'a sad thatt· it
doesn't mean lhil to somebody." , .
""""'1d engine Wat dJaab)ed when diele) said today.
fuel leaked out of ihe ruptured lank. "We're a ChrilUan family aOO lhe s· ' G" I \ • lnYelllgaton at lbe JJCene aald lbe manger JJCene 11 ibe first thlni lbat goes m g er s II'
tqln ~.~,oi!!1s,8Jl~~o.-llO,~ • -.,e~nar/i· lbe aeljl. -.~ •, ·.. " • , • " -1 .. ~.•w-"" ,, ... .!' throUlth me 1 efl:allied' lil~Uoll ""'~ "This la Cluiatmas," she saJa. If you H Jd • Th f tbal thls w.. consldered_normal I n d .,.,,, bring out ibe real meaning or e ID e t
proper speed. Chl'illmu, whal ls ,lcttl" _ ,
' ' " NOR'l'llAMPTQN, "uo. (lJPI)
• _ 1 Shatt Belafonte, 11, dluahter of singer
l11Af5 NICE MOSIC •• llUT IF Experiment Fa bu Harry -· bas pleoded iano<Jent in l lllE~E 'IOU I'D ~$ Nortbam,Ptoa Dla1rici Court of stealing a
?116 . Olli.~ 9 1111'5 I FOLSOM (AP) -A sludenl who plan-blllcher kl)lle. i"":::;:;:-_,.._'llXI~~~· nod "' opend Ille CbNlmaa holiday• Jodee Raymond•R. a-Clllllhued the "> ,... Htor In a -uporlmenlll caae Thll1Wla1 wlthoul llndblc until Jtme
aubmarine laboratory drowned be!Ote bU 14, 1913, In a ...... llooary ,_re, lie
plallned -rlmenl pt undtr way. A also chatpd ber $15 In COlld OOlla.
Nie ....., •llld tbt )'<Mith, Stan Mias Belaloote, a lre1hm11 llodeol at
Monlp1lery, 11, aJ1118'911Uy drowned · Ham)>'hlre Colltp, 1Jleaed11 1oo1t the
Thunday when hil portable air system knlle rrom • ~·· department ..... Ill lallad. -.Jladley Oil Oc~ JI,
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Rcwiited Apollo·
Astronauts Set
For Voy a ge Home
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -
Three American astronauts, tmlted again
after the Apollo program's final and
most bountiful moon·landing eXJlE:dfUon,
lingered in lunar orbit today surVeying
the surface below for still D'ltOre
knowled ge. (See related stories,:pi<:turt,
page;8,) • I ' I '1' I 1
<Jone was· the~ laRf!ing. shi'Jt'"Chllenp:r,
which carried Apollo· 1711 EQgene A.
'"Ceman and Han:ison. H:" ~t1to ·the
surface for 75 ·hours and theo1 •returned
.them safely to lhe • auwnand ··1,h1_p
America and .reunloo •with l,lonald • >;.
.Evans. / ':.. •• _. ·
1 Ill the-early mom)ng ""'"' ~~ was tbrust away n:om ~ CQmlltR.~ .1'li' and a radib · siP.J from .Mlsllon • ,eonirot._~ ~er~ !Dio ~ tAo•.t,{
·>•TO<!jf, 8ncfW,Jliitlt ~-·~ llftt)l' Jftcy '>tlrt their journey-·~· tbe
astronauts' task was MJ. probe. the IDOC)n
with cameras and aoi>biStieated seming
devices. They were In an orbit 69 miJet
above the surface. . . ~
Ceman and SchmJtt completed man 's
most successful moon vblt ever late
Thursday when Ibey rock~ off Ill'
lunar surface with a ~. cargo of
llJOOll uinples and film. •
Included In the "aled hen; al 11mples
were two core Jubel 11111' -1 bap
!Uled with a my•teri-...-anp soil
which may be the 1oUnRst 'Junar
..mples ever collected. ~\lsts believe
Jhe color!lll '10il may be a prciJluct of one
(See APOIJ:.b, Pop I)
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m Increases are across ibe board l\11<1
amounted to a cost-of-living· hike. ~y:_
affect persons making under $38.000.
In a. rilessage to Congress,. Nixon_.llUd ~t "the American system of career
civil service is b8:sed on the principle or
rewardint merit."
He added, "I am p1eda:ed to continue
striving "> mike-it an tYefl more ef-
CC!ftive, ~punsible part oC~our ~.vem
ment. One· way of acbiev.ing this. is lo
maintain a sa.Jary scale for ·civil servants
that is just and comparable •lo that
received by equivalent individuals in the
private· sector."
On. 14ooday, Nixon's chie,f economic
~n •. George P: Shullz, anoouoced
"a freeze during the 1973·cllendar ,year on
1salaries. or "executive. level"· federal
emplnyes, including members> o f
Coogress Md the · judidar;y.
But Schulti made It clear at that•lime
'thAt tbe delayed federal J>llY'hit.,lo•.lho.
lower cate1ories would 10 forward.
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Sieet Plant ' . ,
I;l last Kills 3
WEffiTON, W. Va. (APJ, -
ntree persoos wert ktllcd ana 14
Injured today in an exp1-. Ud
lif'! at Weirton Ste<I DivlsJoo"....,
coke plant on BtoW11'• Ulall4,., tlie
ObJo River near here. , ,
The cause of the ta:flliilm w
nqt ,hnmeillaie11 delmiiiae4,
'A company ~-illo
Injured ...,. palt al • ..... ~Co.. cniw. . "'
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:! <DA!L'I' PILOT s Fridq, -15, 1972
!20 Anaheim Students Held f on Drugs
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Stare Sex
Education Anaheim Pollc:e Ollel Dlvlcl Ml<btl
srud today th•t the orreSI ol M pe,...,.,
~ Including IO high achool studenls T1wr>
~ day oo drug sales charges, was only the
~ beginning of a drive tb curb drug use
, among teenagers. ~ lie sald undereovcr agents enroUed ns
: students on the campuses of various
; schools in the 26-school district would
: continue their investigation.
-FDA Okays
\Methadon e
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j For .Addicts
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" WASllJ,NGTON (UPI) -The Food and
• Drug lldminis'tfatlon today approved for
the nm time the use of' the synthetic
narcotic metbado&e for treatment or
• heroiJI lid~. but only under •lrict
: c..-neftr before opplied to any
: dnlf
: ,,,.. Jlt>A lpproval, In the form or
regulaU.. pu~ In the Federal
. Regbti,r, reflocted nine years o f
• researcb on use of the drug as a heroin
, substitute at 400 to 500 methadone clinics
across the country.
The regulations, in effect, license the
drug for use in such heroin-treatment
programs, but only under strictlj· ~on
trolled conditions.
Use of m?thadone for other medical
purposes, such as tfeatment of severe ~ post-operative pain; w.ould be subject to
the same controls.
"These are rather unique controls," an
FDA spokesman said in an interview.
•·The drug is approved -but never
before have we set up restrictions saying
what pharmacists can sell it, what physi·
.· cians can prescribe it aod under what
·conditions.''
The regulations will restrict marketing
of the drug solely to hospital pharmacies,
approved maintenance programs for
· heroin addicla, and certain other outlets
~ primarily in rural areas.
Designed to crack down on diversion of
' methadone to Illicit channels the regula-
tions will be phased in gradually beg~
• ning today and become fullt effective in
six months.
Methadone is a synthetic narcotic
similar to heroin with unique twin prop-
erties: at low doses. it curbs the crav·
ing for heroin and thus, in effect,
substitutes for U; at high doses it blocks
lhe eflect of such opiates.
In methadone maintenance programs,
: · :patlents are provided with sufficient
• :doses to meet their needs to get them oU
: :expensive, illegal narcotics.
: : Under the new FDA rule!, methadone
: patients will be given. the drug daily at
: approved clinics for the first three
: 'months or their treatment.
: . If they !bow good progress, they win
: 1>e allowed to take borne supplies to nm
: them two or three: days.
~\ Joan Ba ez Gro11p
:~ Arrives in Laos ·: .
·• VIENTIANE. Laos I UPI) -Folk
singer Joan Baez arrived here tod2y en
·: route to Hanoi and said she hopes to get
: a chance to sing for American prlsor.e;·s
: 'of war in the North Vietnamese capital.
Miss Baez, with guitar in hand, was ac-
: companied by three antiwar activists in·
: eluding Coluplbla University law profes-
: sor Telford 'faylor, a U.S. prosecutor at
: the Nuemberg war crimes trials after
: World War II.
: The group is carrying 500 letters from ~ relatives and loved ones to U.S. prisoners
·: of war in North Vietnam and plit.ns to
:: bring mall from the POWs back when the
; four rttum nut week.
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OU.N•I COAST IT
DAILY PILOT
l ""9 °"'"'9 d.t DAll.'f PIL#f, tr1trl "'9111:11
........... !he """"~ .. pUMllhlld bY
• !he ~ C.... P•l•lllltll'll ~. a_,.
I' ,... ........... ,i,lllltl• ..... ,......,. llllWOfl
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,r..,..,, .... CM!t M.... Jil-...rt IMCll.
i I ~~':..":~ndy::':"~lt';:.,i:
l , S... J-. c.t,llrrtM. A 11rtsr. nt'°"tl 'l edll*t .. Plllllllhml lfllloll"llryto ... 1....0\'S.
Tiit ptlndpel publl1lllno oltfll It ti llO Wtal
~ .. y lltwf, CMte MH.. CtUtomlt, not.
J ftebert N. Wet4 '~ ,.,..kl ...... 1"111111.,..
._ · Jeck •· C11rl•y
• vie. l'Nlldtnl ...... °"*•' MIMllt ! n..e1 Kttvll
• l!dHor ! Thfm•• A. Murpfiln•
4 MtMl ... Mllllr
"' Cti1rle1 H. loot -Jchtr4 P. Nt!l ! AMll!t!!I #Nelflrlt l!ill!Jeft -
\ i
. At the same Ume, !lthool SUperin-
-Kenton WiDet Aid dnt& 11>0 by
11..tonl! has decreo>ed conslder1bly in
the pa8l two yurs. 'Ille di8lrl<t e .. p11ed
384 students for drug use in 1970 and only
22 so far this year.
tnrolled at Los Alomit08 Blah Scbool to fllll!r In lwo man learns made the arrests
gather evidence In !hot cKy. following a slit week lnv'5tijiatloo,
Most ot the arrests 'Jbunday were In Lot Alamitol and atUde!'lts were ar-
made at S.vanno and Loara high 1thooll. . rtslecl In 'thtlr hom" laie ot night, a
Charges include4 ule and possession of __..method of operaUon similar to adult drug
marijuana and dangerous drugs. raids: ,
The Anaheim arrests followed the
massive raid staged by Los Alamitos
police less than two weeks ago when 27
were nabbed. A female undercover agent
The Anaheim roundup differed rrom "There will be more arrests," t~ cl_ilet
Los Alan1itos in that students were called said. "We have warrants for two more
from their classes during school hou.rs. adultll and several juveniles." H.e added
handcuffed and taken to the poltct sta-that house part~ wot114 be the target for
tion. Chief Michel said 39 plainclothes of· future raids.
Crosby Croons
Yule W hiter for Se nior Citi zens
SAN FRANCISCO {AP ) -The 6enior citizens at the Laguna Honda Hos-
pital here "'ere dreaming of a "White Christmas,'' and there to help them do
it was the great crooner himself, Bing Crosby.
!\10RE THAN 600 PERSONS -some of them in wheelchairs -jammed
the convalescent center's audllOrium Thurs:day \0 let the 68-year-old Bine's
rare public appearance take them gently down memory lane to Christmases
past.
Crosby went through a number of Christmas songs, including "Jingle Bells"
and "O' Little Town of Bethlehem" and then asked U there were any requests.
FROM ALL PARTS OF the auditorium tiUes were shouted by those who
could remember and cookl still shout. other mouths opened but no sound
cameoul
It had been so long s1nce Crosby had sung the "old ones" he occasionally
forgo& a line or two , but it didn't matter. Each song brought whistles, cheers
and applause from those able to express themselves.
Nude Girl , 18, Alerts
Officers to Abduction
ATLANTA (AP) -A young girl, ab-
ducted with her soldier companion. dove
nude from the window of a car to attract
the attention of police after fighting off
repeated attempts lo rape her, police
said today.
The IS.year-old girl apparently suf-
fered only shock and bruises and
scratches.
11er 23-year-old friend received head
wounds when beaten with a club and
pistol, according to detective Beryl
Compton.
Neithel' victim was identified.
The detective said the tYr"O-hour ordeal
began early Thursday as the couple le.ft
,KOCE Program
Features Sc1imit z
Three Eveni1igs
A KOCE, channel 50 program in which
Congressman John G. Schmitz Is in-
terviewed by Orange County newsmen
will be aired three evenings this month
beginning at 6:30 p.m. Monday.
Schmitz, who wu defeated in bis
primary bid for renomination u the
Republican candidate in the 35lh District
by county Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw,
discusses bis plarui for the immediate
future in the half-hour program. Schmitz
was the American Independent Party's
presidential candidate.
"Focus Orange County." hosted by the
noncommercial station's Jim Cooper, will
be replayed at-8 p.m. on tf'bundays Dec.
21 and 7.8, on channel 50.
Underground Atlanta and the soldier was
asked' tor a match by a man.
As they reached their car, the same
man appeared again with a plstoJ and
forced them to get into the back seat.
Two other men .got in and they drove to
an alley where· the girl was ordered to
strip.
The soldier began fighting the three
men and was clubbed, then forced to get
into the trunk of the car. Compton said
they then drove tO an empty gafage
where the girl's c.lothes were torn off and
the men attempted to rape her.
The men put ber back in the car and as
one drove,the other two made several at-
tempt! to rape ber but finally rehttned to
!he garage where the ordeal cootlnuecl.
One man v.·as quoted as finally aay1ng:
"We are going to get a shotgun and we'll
use it when we get it, too." ' l ~Y put the girl in the car and q.rove
otr, .(;omRton saill. At J11ltl~pdlnt. Ill' A"id·
tbe gtrl slw a police car; klcied a !DID in
the face and jumped out a window
screaming.
Police Sgt. Eugene Robinson gave
chase to the car as the girl ran to some
woods, forcing the vehicle into a guard
rail several blocks away. The three at-
tackers fled.
Another patrolman, alerted to the
chase, found the girl in some wood3,
weai:Ing only a sock, and took her to a hospital.
She told police about her escort In !he
lrunk and be was then freed.
Man Gets 7 Years
Fro•P .. J
APOLLO ..•.
or lhe moon 's last volcanoes.
After transferring the precious lunar
treasure into .Amelica, tbe astronauts:
cast off Cballenger, .freeing it fo r
destruction in the cause of science. The
lander, which cost $40 million, could not
ru~ve been returned to earth with 'the
command sh.ip.
"It seems an unfittinc finish to a super
bird," said Ceman, durina: his last
moments aboard the cralt hi had Oown
to a near-Perfect landing Monday in the
moon valley or Taurus-Littrow. "But it's
got one more joL to do."
On radJo rommands frqm earth,
Challenger fired its rocket thrusters and
sent itself speedlng to an impact near the
Taurus-Littrow valley.
Force of the impact-equivalent to 200
pouDds of TNT -caused a seismic shock
which e x c i t e d quake-detectiozf ·in-
strwnents left on the moon by ApoDo 17
and by previOWI Apollo minions: The
readings will be studied by scientists on
earth,
In a spectacular lunar departure,
Cholleoger popped oil it! Pat-topped land-
ing stage amid a shower of debris and
soared upward into the black lunar sky
over Taurus-Littrow. The craft's yellow.
flamed rocket was visible to television
watchers on earth for about SS seconds
before it vanished from the view of a TV
camera left on the moon. The 'pictures
were excellent.
The craft sped into orbit, carrying
Ceman and Schmitt to a rendezvous and
safe linkup with the America.
Truman Weaker ,
Fails to Respond
To Medication
KANSAS CITY (AP)-Barry S Tru·
man, aemi-<0llSCi9us and unable to SJl!eak,
''tailed to nilJjood·li> medlciitioo lndafand
doctors ufresse<J coocem about his
wea~ kidneys. 111.
The former President sle~.fitfully'and , ~-·¥>-iy, PIG'~ all Ille timo. , I, ~an ot Research HO!l'ital and
Medical Center said, "kidney output eon·
tinues to decrease in spite of rnedica· tlon." " '"'
For the second straight day, Dr.
Wallace Graham tenned Truman's con-
diUon "very serious."
The 83-year--old Trwtian waS admitted
to the hospital 10 daya ago, suffering
from bronchitis and lung congestion.
Sljppage in Truman's kidney function
was noted Wednesday Wtiep. doctors
observed signs· of renal· ~.
which lll>Y Wd, meant bis~ ,were
not purifying blood properly.
Thursday, actual <M1tput of the kidDeys
decreased and the doctors Wd the
kidney condition Was "of concern and is
belng watched very closely for ~e."
At 7 a.m. PST Truman's vital signs
were pulse M, blood pressure UMiO and
temperatdre 99.8.
The 1tudeoll ....... lo AmMJm, •U did~ In Loi Al~ ...,..oi In age lroin 14 to tf,,...... weo;e 1\rls.
QUef 141~ 8licl llllJ, otildenta .....
Clllled from ~ .., ICbQo1. officials and turned over In waiting ollloers.
auaes were not dtarupted.
He said 1he handcUrrs were used
because it Is ~I pollcy to
handcuff any peraan being transported
as a suspect lo a mi8de1M1110r or felony.
2 Suspects,
:2 Patrons -.
Die in Bar ..
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Curbs Set
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sex eduotltlon
In ~Ufornla scboolJ wJIJ come under
tighter rcrul•llon und..-• rtf91utlon
adopted t.iday wttboot dtball bf the
Staie Boan! of Educotl011.
Adoptloorol tbe eet of ruldellrm foOo,..
ed • meeting Tbu1sday nl~hl .. !bm •
board subcomm!Uee beard brtellY from
·opponents to the measure. i'
ooe -~ W&111e Lamlllt al the Orange .coun~ Birth Cailrol
instltute,/loc.. said •If\ Ill' in\ertln af\er
the board'• action tbet !he rulel wlD pro..
vlde ''ammunJtkm for' inthnldatkln."
Lanml contended 'hal a ....U. vocal
minority of parents \JI most dlalrlota go
!n front or local -to -... education. and the new rules wtU1 give
tbem "ammunitkln agalmt people wbo
want frank, open sex ipstructioo." ~ _
Especially ol1ei11\ve to Lomant was LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two bar one section of the rules that ltatu. that
patroni folincl deod after olUcen fired ti "llarmlui eftects of P"'"'"li~,1:i etc.,
obo'-'" bunts to kill two ro'""-may and a code of moral• be emilh with .. -..,... no derogatpry , llillruCjlon ieloll•• to
!lave been killed bf atny police ahoil, • rel\~ beliefs and etbl~1. ·lld to
police lieutenant said today. """"J!Ol''"l!' betfels and lcatlilnr." • •
Detective Lt. Robert Helder s · • Lamont said be tried to get tlie bolrd's
"that's one of the possibilities. We subcommittee to change fbe word •:premartlal" to "lrresponsib)e,. but bls know some of the buckshot from ·ou de iliggesUon was rejected. . ·
did enter I portion or the wln<jow thil The rules on teacher irllnlng, porentaI
leads Into the hatl!room" wbere the nolillcatlon and outside speaker re-
cus~' ~were found;
• Be said 8ulops\e8 ha(. -ordered
and the "enth ee'se,is t>etni turned over
-In Ille dillrict altoni<y .for • --lf t!iere n.-1ny misconduct by officers.
This would be done e v e n if patrons
hadn't been shot. ..
One dead gunman was identified as
Kenneth Ray-; Fisher I 20, or Los Angeles,
Helder said. A customer killed in the
barrage was ldentilied as Leonard J. Of.
tray, se, (I[ Lol.AngeJes. .
The lieutenant said Identification of the
.two other vicUms would have to come
from fi ngerprints.
Sixteen persons were 1ying on the floor
of the small restroom in the Ol{Jce Bar
after belnJ ordered lhere by the gunmen,
Helder said.
He said eight offictrs opened nre
Thursdoy night with their shotgun• when
two young men brandlahlng a plllol and
8 sawed-Off shotgun ran from the front
and rear entrances of the bar in the
city's southwest section.
Both men disregarded police orders to
drop their weap:ins, he said, but neither
man rm a shot at officers.
Helder said there had beeJI 1bout 25
tavern robberies in the area in two weeks
and that silent alarms have been in-
stalled In batt'to alert olficen when a
robbery is 1n progrejs. one of these' sum-
. moned pollce to the OfflCe Bar Wblle the
robbers were inside, Helder said.
Helder said the robbers u s e d
pillowcases to carry customers' wallets
and receiptl from the cash register. 'Ibe
amount of money was not Immediately
known.
Arsenal Sold Off
FRESNO (AP) -Some 20 nn .. and
pistols, thousands of rounds of am-
munition and a quantity of spare patis,
all from the estate of the late William E.
'Mioresen Ill, have been ao\d at auction
here. A Northern Callfomla IW1 firm
submitled the high bid or 121,000 Thul-..
day for the weapons, part of the arsenal
seiied by federal agents at Thoresen's
San FranciSco home aod 1n warehouses
at Oakland and Berkeley.
quiremeota grew out of a controversy
eailier this year when homosexuals 1p.-
peared as guest lecturers ot aex edllcl·
tloo classes In Son Francbco and Marin -· At an earlier meeting, mff member
Henry Heydt said the districts Involved
romplied wtth current 1 e g a I re-
quirements.
But board member Gene Ragle of
Roseville sal.d the course at Redwood
High School in lhe Marin Coooty town of
Larkspur appeared to be "a do-lt-
yourself course in copulation."
One section of today's resolution stltet
lhat local school superintendents have
veto Power over outside speakers used tn
"family Hfe" or Set education courses.
Another section requires parents to be
notified by mall ol sex education courses.
State law gives parents tbe right to pull
their child out of a sex educatioo class.
Also included in the guidelines Is 1 rt
· quirement that each district set up a
rornmittet to review all the materiall us.-
ed in sex education classes. Tbtn the
committee would let the local board
know what tbey think ol the motar!als.
In 1969 tbe board ls8ued broad -guidelines covering teacher !raining and
Slotlng !hot sex education clu9eli should
be voluntary rather qi&n mandatory.
NIXON, CAMP A.lGN
AIDES PARTY ING
WASHINGTON (APJ -President Nix-
on and his top campaign aides have been
pm1ying ror tbe past three nlghta with a
select group from ·a.round the countrY
who helped finance and promote hll ~
election.
The total or 117 guests Included labor
le8den, prominent Democrala for N!Jton.
reglonol finance cbainnen and beldl ol
organil.ations ranging from "a e n I o r
cit1zeos to veteran groups.
Cocktail receptiom were held Tuesday,
Wednesday and ThursQ.y with the PreJi-
dent and Mrs. Nlxon at the Chrirb:nu-
decorated White House, followed by din-
ner across the street at Blair Houle. The
N!Jtons did not attend the dinnora. Interviewing Schmitz are Jim Dean,
executive editor of the Reglllter; 'lbomas
Keevil, editor of the DAILY PILOT, and
Howard Seelye, political writer for the
Los Angeles Times. "
'
TUCSON, Ariz, (AP ) -A Picacho,
Arii. man has been sentenced to seven
years in lederal prison after being found
guilty of trying to exort $270,000 from
Trans World Airlines by threatenlni to
bJow up a plane. Wallace A. Sbackellord,
50, was sentenced Wednesday by U.S.
District Court Judge James A. Walsh. LAMPS-PICTURES -ACCESSORIES
Sunday's Best .
Cousins on 'Life,' Sign
Mixup , Mystery in Pilot
Another great magazine is dead and
magazine man Nor.nan Cousins, newest
columnist to join the DAILY PILOT
lineup of star talent. says the govern·
ment helped kill Life with escalating
postal rates.
That's one of several artlcJes, photo
features and columns you'll find among
"Sunday's Best." Here 's a preview ol
some other things upcoming for Silndny
DAILY PILOT readers:
SIGN SCRAMBLE -It's possible that
some signs are more confusing to
mororists than the rules they're trying to
convey. Sign study almeJ at reducing
visual polluUoo o.nd lncrea~log un-
derstanding Is the subject of YOU section
Tople ss Beac1i
Se t in Brazil
PORTO ALEGRE, Brad\ (UP[) -
Poliei! chief Djalma Monte de Rocha
says lbat women tn the whlUng port of
Tramandal can go topleu on the beach.
But on?j under certain condlUons.
They must prove they are at least 21
yean1 old, Wld lbey muat remain in ao
arta set askle only for them. \';O men e1tl
vlJlt any be;icb where women ao toplm~
lt was not de Rocha's Idea. Nor was it
L suggested by the women. Jt came fro.m
Barce1ino Betker, who runs an Ice cream
S\and.
lead ·nory by Stall Writer Rudi
Niedzielski.
LAGUNA mGUEL MYSTERY-Eerie
sight of lights burning all night at I.he ap-
pare.ntiy empty $24 million North
American Rockwell "Ziggurat" in an
uninhabited valley was part of the in-
trigue that caused a Laguna IDU! woman
to wonder enough about the never-oc-
cup ied building to visit it and write about
it.
YULE GIFTS FOR NEEDY -
Christmas is a time !Or shw ing and If
you want to give to families in need, the
YOU Section will list agencies to which
you can take food, clothing, toys or other
gifts foi diMrlbuUon t
CABOT ON COVER -Sebastian
Cabot, host of the show which will
change from "Ghost Story" to "Circle of
Fear" etirly in January, IJ featured In
cover story of TV WEEK.
STEALING FROM BLlliD -A new
power group Is crowbahlnc tts way into
a domlnllot position in Wahington. The
Hthreat" comes from blind people who
man candy-snact-news atandt tn k>bblee
of federal buildings. Von fforfman tells It
Uke It la In "Stealing from the Bllnd."
JIEWCOPTER LADY -She'• only
rour feet, II lnc:het t.11, bul )'ou can bet
Orange County'• first ana only woman
bellcopter pUol hH 1 head ' $tar! li1 ber
determination to make a Jltlng u •'«>m·
merctal chopptr driver. She'• .. Holly
DouglH, granddaughter 'ol Do 01 I d
Douglas. lre -founded the Doual18
Aircraft Co.
PRE -HOLIDAY SALE
It'• the little thing • that can m1lo tho dif.
forence. Stop by t od.iy and view our fino
selection, now speciolly priced. If It's for 1
gift, or for you personoNy, you'H find just tho
thing to enhance any home for tho holiday.
•
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MLY HI.OT'...,, ,._
SOUTH LAGUNAN WAS AMONG 3,000 ON NEW DELHI PILGRIMAGE
Giiiian Galloway, 12, Now Modit-; His Life HH Changed
Boy Sees Guru
Coast Y outlt Goes w New Delhi
By FREDERICK SCHOEMERL
Of ... D.i~·,..... Staff
From small babies to octogenarians,
they gathered in New Delhi lo celebrate
the religion of the teenage guru, Maharaj
Ji, the l.4rd or the Universe.
Among the 3,000 followers who
gathered with the guru was 12-year~ld
Gillian Galloway of South Laguna, a
small blond·haired -lad-Whose life has
bee.n changed through meditation. "'
The son of ~fr. and Mn. David
Galloway returned from l1lle moa~long • pilgrimage Sunday.
The goa l of the phiWttophy of Maharaj
Ji, says the seventh grade student at
Thurston Intermediate School, is perfect
knowledge.
Knowledge may be atained In four
ways: through the light, the music, the
nectar and the word.
It is a difficult philo8ophy to un-
derstand. but young Galloway gives it his
all nonetheless. .. ,,,. lighl is tbe light tbat shi..,
within you. It can be seen even in a dark
room," he eq>lains. '"lbe musk: is the
celestial music of the body. 1be nectar
isn't something you drink, but it ends up
within you. I can't tell you how, but it's
actually there."
The word is what the followers
meditate on. Gillian calls it an
"unspeakable word" which is different
for every follower of Maharaj JI.
Giilian, a native Jlf El Centn> wi.e.
temper&lares soar to 120 degrees aboVe
zero. spent much of his youth in
Fairbanks. Alaska, wwhere the extremes
ere about 200 degrees the: other way. But
the trip to India was a new high for the
12-yeaM>ld.
A typical da7 began at 4 a.m. with
three -hours o meditation. At 7 a.m,
foUowen atarted "satsang" or a b6ly
discourse on the knowledge. Break~st folJowed al mid-morning and
usually COD!isted of rice and dahl, a
green yegetable . .No meat was served.
Occaskmally, a buffalo milk was serv·
ed, but Gillian says 1t wu "terrible."
The remainder of the day , be said, was
spent in service to the ashram ~
nagar, or love city. Chore.I ibcluattd
washing clothing, haircuts, construction
of buildings and upkeep of the arotaMls.
The !,000 penons from throughout the
world slept In leots, laid out aroU{ld the
~tral ashram, P! temple. ~
It took some dOlng, Gillian recai.ied, to
convlnc. his parents that be """111 )nake
tbil trip. "At first they . were Worried
about diseases like,ftysen tuy and that no
one would be around to wa&cb otAet tne.'' ,
Part of the latter probteal "'8 aolvttf
by a 2.f.year-old ftlend who aCQOmpani«l-::i~n lo New York, where opecta! er jell departed lo carry the
followen lo New Delhi. The roomd tr4>
fart-Wl!IS $430.
'
Stomach Pumped;
Suspect Cli,arged
CINCINNATI (UPI) -S.m r ...
denon, 40, who allegedly sw1llowed 18
"dime" bags o( heroin when police were
closing In on him, has Mltn charged with
unlawful posseaston of narcotic dross
alter bis stomach was pumped out.
Jn a legal first here, vice squad men
obtained a sean:h werran& to examine
the conlen ts of Fenderson'• 1tomacb.
It wu pumped and labonlory tesls
deWcted the pruence of morphine or
heroin.
•
But after leaving New York, Gillian
was on his own.
He proudly points out that no tragedy
befell him.
Now that he's back from the montb-
long pilgrimage, Gillian is fielding the
expected round of questions from fellow
students and teachers about the trip.
He's also meditating two and a half
hours a day.
It won't be long, young Galloway says,
before he's ba;c)I;. to hit fal'Ol'lte hobby ~
collecting, trading and caring for snakes.
In past y~. u a ownber ol tlie
Southwe~em Herpetological So c let y ,
Gillian has acquired many exotic snakes,
includlng an emberyse rat snake which a
friend looked after during his trip to
India.
"You have to be very careful with the
palsonous ones. They're not dangeruis to
catch, but when you keep them -weU,
sometimes they escape."
Coin collecting and karate, once im-
portanl hobbies, have r«e<led lnlo the
past ... I still like the coins, but I'm not
really attached lo them. U tbey disap-
peared, I wouldn't be said."
As for' karate, Gillian says it's "too
violent" even if it had to be used. "But I
may practice it to stay in shape.''
It'll take more time to develop t h e
plillo19Pby, Gillian admits. "I can see
impuri! thouebts -J'm still pretty at-
tached to material things."
Gillian maintaim Maharaj J i • s
teaching are better tban other meditation
phlloaopbies now in vogue.
"The world ti much better than tbe
mantras cliant.ed in transcendental
meditation. 'lbolle words are external
things that can be ellmlnaled."
Material thlpga, he says, are like toys
to a child. "One time, the toy won't be.
there and tben be ha:: lo find something
else .
"But if you have the knowledge, you
don't have to loot for somethiog new,"
Gillian explained. '
Maharaj JI, accardlnl to tbe yoothlul
medltationlst, became ilie leader at tbe
age ol 1 when bls father, a guru, died.
''Really, be was content to be a
rniscbievous little boy, but a voice came
to bial and aa1d "yolJ ue be' and 'you are
to· continue, you 1te the one.• "
Now 15 yean old, Maharaj JI bat
traveled worldwide, attracting large
crowds, to spread the word to devotees.
Gillian says he'll aprea.d the word, too,
and looks forward lo the nut pilgrim·
age.
SEC Officials
Give Testimony
WASfilNGTON (UPI) -The chairman
of the Securities and E:rchaflie Com-
mission and his assl5tant have tesUlled
the White House advised them not to give
a House subcommittee 1emltlve flle1
regarding tbe 11T we.
The chairman, Wllllam Casey, who bas
been appointed undenecntary ol Slate,
said Thunday a White House counsel
!old him that becallae the rrl' cua WU
under lnvestlgaUcin 'by tbe JusUce
Department and the SEC, the ftles should
be wlUtheld from c.o,r..s. r
Also In • talht>OQY belO{e the -
C011!'1'erce lnvesllptlona 1ubcctrunlti..,
Cbarlts s. Whitman, ea .. y·1 encuttva
ass!Jlant, lllld . the files contained
"polllloally 1<nOltlve" Information. H•
did not say wNiit the Information was.
•
Frida~. Otctn1btr' 15, 1CJl2 s OAIL V PILOT $
Ut110r Law
You Can Touch,
But Don't Drink
Orange County may soon let you take a
botUe Or a stx-pack along ror that picnic
in a park or day at the beach. Eut don't
bother un1ess the looks of the label or the
fumes turn you on.
State law will still forbid you to con-
sume any of it.
Unlikely as it may all sound, that's the
way the laws will have to read, say
Orange Comity legal advlsers.
It seemt the COunty Counsel's Office
bas ruled that a COWtty ordinance forbid-
Entertainer .
Carlin Has
Case Dropped
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Disorderly con·
duct . charges against comedian George
Carlin were dismissed in Milwaukee
County Court after the judge ruled
Carlin's "seven heavy words" did not
cause a disturbance during a
perfonnance last summer.
Carl.in, who appeared at Milwaukee's
Summerfest, was arrested for using
seven profane words during b I s
performance last Ju1y. The lllT"'..Sting or-
ficer obtained a misdemeanor charge
after an assistant county cfuitrict at-
lomey r<!used lo issue stale charg<s.
But Judge Raymond Gieringer of Lin·
coin, sitting Thursday in Milwaukee, said
Carlin's use of the words was en-
tertainment and had not caused a
disturbance.
Carlin, who used what be called the
"seven words you can't say on
television" during his show, was not
present for the trial, but one of his
recordings featuring the same routine
v.·as.
Gieringer said promoters of Sum·
merfest knew the comedian was a night
club performer and should have known
that off.color ma terial is used in such
performances.
"There are very few night club acts
which have fairy tales or Aesop's
Fable.s," tbe judge said.
When Carlin's reeord was played, the
judje and court stall laugbed u tbe
oomedlan warned tbe ,...., words could
"infect your IOUl and curve your aplne."
Two amstant city attorneys were sub-
poenaed, and lettlfied that Catlin got a
standing ovatloo after tbe performance
and cauled no disturbance.
ding possession of alcoholic beverages in
parks or on beaches Is illegal.
They say the State of California is lhe
govenunental agency which bas the right
to say who does what with booze.
Aod while the state outlaws drinking at
beaches or parks and such pu1bic places
-unless otherwise posted -it doesn't
say anything about bringing it along for
the ride. _
Anyhow, the county attorneys have
~lared the local o r d i n a n c e un-
constitutional and Hafbors, Beaches had
Parks Commissioners this week, on a 4
to 1 vote, recommended to county
supervisors that the county ordinance
dealing with liquor be st-ricked from the
books.
Harbor Department officittls, however,
noted that they still plan to enforce the
exlstlng law until it is changed.
Under the law now, the county bans
consumption, possession, transportation
and sales of alcoholic beverages on coun·
ty beaches or in parks.
They said the proJX>sed change in the
county law will make It confor1n to state
rules, forbidding consumption only.
Commissioners indicated they don't
think too much of the confusing nature of
the law, and indicated they 'll look into
\vays of making drinking legal in some
parks -or in parts of some parks -
sometime in the future.
In the meantime, however, according
to Larry Leaman, assistant director of
the Harbors, Beaches and P a r k s
District :
''Beer parties celebrating the illegal
drinking ban are still illegal as far as tbe
police are corlCeflled."
Supervisors are not expected to act on
the drinking code changes until after the
first of the year, Leaman said, not that
that'll make any difference.
Teen Sties Over
Broken Romance
DAILY PILOT SllK P ....
GINGERBREAD HOUSE LOOKS GOOD ENOUGH TO EAT
Alisa Ann W hisler Makes Yummy Inspection Tour
Employes Help
Hospital Staff Builds
PHOENIX. Ariz. (UPI) -A Phoenix
teenager wants $998 in damages fr om Ule • .r----...
police department £or breaking up
Big Gingerbread House
en poking their heads The more she talked the idea over wi th
other staff members. lhe more interested•
they became, adding their own idea$.!
Cabinet maker Tony Tarantino built the
six.root·square structure v.•it R the help ~f
hospital ,emp loyes and Jim Willoughby.
the hospital's gardener, took charge nf
adding candy, frosting and lollipop
decorations.
romance.
Greg Moore, 18, said in hi s sui that he
and Lana Disser. 16, were rrested
Thanksgiving on charges of p<j>sessing
marijuana and her parents no forbid
him to see her.
The 1uit said Moore and Mis · Dlsse r
were arrested as they approache table
in Wasbington Part where several er
penons were smoking marijuana. e
uld neither he nor the girl smoked ma
Juana.
and walking in :ind
out of anv.;;iJ.(1, colorfully~ecorated
house of make-believe gingerbread in the
Mission Community Hospital !obby.
Inside its masonite walls sits a small .
revolving ·!'ec and the walls are
df'COrated with bright Christmas wrap-
ping paper.
The hospital 's admitting nurse, June
Pollack, first envisioned an old..fashionP.d
gingerbread house to sit on her desk {or
a holiday decoration .
Anyone ~an go see the hou se between
JIJ a.m. and 8:30 p.m. daily through Dec.
30 al the hospital, 27802 Puerta Real,
l\tission Viejo.
In just 2 year s .••
ou tselling ever y
European car
(except on e)!
•
LOOK WHAT'S STANDARD EQUIPMENT ....
e RADIAL PLY TIRES e FRONT DISK BRAKES
e FRONT BUCKET SEATS e FULL CARPETING .. e RACK AND PINIO N STEERING
SEE ·ONE . • . TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE , , , TOD AY!
llmM Of Tiie New Car , • ,
"6eUea l'••e•"
•
"'Oranoe County'1 Fam ily of Fine Cari-
ohnson&son
' Llf'.Ltll ~\J l\, t I; I \ I f \ ',
cour;,\ll
2121 HARBOR ILVI>. COSTA MESA • &40-lie30
'
nome Of The New Car , • ,
"Golcle • l'•Mrlt"
•
•
OllL Y PILOT
~uper County
~vernment?
SUPER GOV DEPT. -Ronald W.
Caspus, the flnancia1 whiz from Lido
Isle who leads our Orance County Board
ol 1Supervilors, appears to be cootinuing
hi' campaign to get us freed from the
ch:Rins of small government. Specifically,
Ran doesn't seem lo care loo mucb for
ciMes.
Caspers repeated his theories on. the
~Jed only y.stenlay while speaking
ore about 100 shakers and movers in
o re"gion· up at the Orange Cowity
f'Qrum of Town Hall ip Anaheim.
Our ~ board chalrman got
tlying on'the'tbeme that lots of things our
cities are dqing. like Ore and police ~
tection,, & IOrt of county super ". gov~
ment oould do 1 lot better. .
· RE ENVISIONS a government panel of
about 20 representatives to run things.
one rep for about every 150.000 'or so
Orange Coonliam.
It is presumed, then, that what is left
of municipal government. if anything,
would be around for lesser tasks like eon.
trolling architectural standards or maybe
picking up litter in the streets.
Well, Mr. Caspers' governmental
theories are certainly interesting. or
course. Y:hen he got himseU elected to
the Board of Supervisors. bis elevation
came without any experience in local
government. Which might explain why he
puts the knock on the job citi es do. But
oh the . other hand, it may be he just
tltiinks big.
IN fACI', you mighl take as an ex-
ample of regional government his own
Fifth Supervisorial District. which covers
most of the Orange Coasl from Newport
Beach and Cost.a Mesa southerly to San
Oemente. Right now. the Fifth District
gets lots or attention from the whole five·
merilber board. Tbat's because here is
where the action is. We've got the growth
and the boom.
Some old-timers along this coastline,
however. can well recall when it wasn't
ever thus. We were down in the coastal
sticks. The big action was in the central cooncy. .
So it was that the Fifth District
supervisor, whether he was N. E. West
or Heinz lCaiser or Ben Reddick or Claire
Nelson. bad to fight for every CQUnty
dime that got spent along the coastline.
AND THEY WERE BATTLING
against four other votes from supervisors
who were looking out for the central
CQUnty.
By the time AJton Allen got the job, the
boom was on in the Fifth District and
things began to swing the cbastline's
way. Mr. Caspen has enjoyed the same
warm climate since he's had the job.
BUT TlrtiES CHANGE. And om! of
thcese years. thejr 'might decide to tear
down the central CQunty and rebuild it.
Not a bad 'notioii. you know.
And the Fifth District might find Itself
outvoted 4 to i-.once again when the new
streets and other projects get passed out
up at the County Seat. Then we might
wonder how great regi9nal government
is.
So me other Wrong Thinkers. of CQUrse,
might simply suggest that local town
govern ment is our best government
because it bas a better chance of being
responsive to its people and thei r needs.
'l'hey ml~t also point a finger at
Sacramento and say, "There 's what big
government has done for you, folks ... "
THESE SAME WRONG Tbinten
might pu.t Mr. Caspers' super-guv theory
jn reverse,.suggesting that actually, as
cities take COfllrOI or more and mort ter-
ritory, there is less and less need for a
county government, save for operation of
health, welfare and justk:e sector.s.
Indeed, tt seems the kind of local con-
trol you lilte may depend a lot on where
you sit and view it from . ~ Caspers, of course., sits at the
County Se4~
He's Quite a Boy
22 Rescued
As Vessel
Goes Down
MIAMI (UPI\ -1'16 Coast Guard
reported the reacue today of 22 meo who
abandoned the alnk!ni 1 .. ild>1er Liocoln
Expms of! the Ol>ast of l'ilerto Rico
Thunday.
Five of the crewmen were rescued
from a life boat shortly after the S83-foot
ves,.1 broke In two ancl irent dowu. 'Ille
othen, w e a r i n g life jackets. were
picked up from the water durin& the
night.
A Coast Guard rpokaman said the
search was continuing beclUle there was
confusion OYer how many penons wert
aboard. Earlier reports indicated the
ship was manned by Z2 or 2.4 men, but
Bahama, 1;1nes or Miami, the ship's
owner, said tddly it believed all aboard
had now been rescued.
'"!'bat's what we understand, tl!t!y're
all OK. All we knoW is they 'bad Lrouble
and got off the boat fast';"· tbe-linea otfi.ce
manager, Mike Truyao, sakl.
The Coast Guard Said the Lincoln El·
press sank about four mDes off the north
coast of Puerto Rico, west of San Juan,
about 5 p.m. Thursday.
The Bahamas Lines also owns the
Layla Express and Johnny Express, two
ships sehed by CUban aulborttles !or
allegedly being involved in coooter·
revolutionary activity. 'lbere was 'no m.
dication that poUtical strife played a role
in the sinking ol the Lincoln Express.
The Coast Guard district command in
1'1iami said lhe Uncoln Express WU car-
rying 5,000 toos ol iYJJSUlil rock from
Santo Domingo to San Juan.
Poliee Suekere d
•
'French Connection' Drugs V ani.sh
• • Barger .Flap,
the 1'lOVlt-lie .. -.. rUer ':;.Le::; IDll4, cbar(es he clllregmled
'pOl!Ce procedum lllCl faUed to -In
eome of Ibo evldoft<e -l..,iudl!!&
naraillca -he 11lhend In dnlC euea.. No ellqltloll ·1w ever been mode.
l>o1'0Ver, that Epn ooaage4 In u\y 11-
,Jepl n&rcoUca dullnp, and Ecan bu
,.Id be WH llinll>IY avoiding red tal"'
wblcb reduced Ills-elfect1veneas u a '
poUceDWL .-
'Ille stolen heroin w• )Jori-of a 7S-J>OW>d lblpment ..-In • police nld
hb. 25, 1181. It ...... onµiaJed tl\IO tile
United Stote. I-Prance poa.d In
--1> of • lllloliioblle-u -hall ol aD the lieroJn CClll!lleated bJ the deporllllel1\ Ill 1111 and bid been hOkl In a voult In the .....,...ty dlerl<'• ol-
ftoe at police beodquc1.en-'Ille llltft wu dllcovend dlrlllC an audit lut
montll. -' -Murplly aakl the 'llltlt oc:cumd
~ belon I"' wben a property•
clerk P" the herein to oomeone claim-il>I to be I 4'\ecllve. 'Ille 11\BD aaJdl he
wu Plcilnr tt up for the district l~
torney's olfke In aionectkln with a proo-
@Uon.
•
'
Conductor in Hiding
WASlllNG10N (Al') -Ranier to find Efforts to bear the conductor's venlon
than a pod 11-t c1pr Is the train or the incident !ell Oat. Al the S"l'mne .-1or wbo 1old Oi1tf Justtc.t Warren COurt; prua ollicer Banning E. Whlttm,-
E. Burser that the ooJy way to elC&pe too said Burger considers lbe Incident
cipr llDDlra w11 to I" to" lllOther cai. cloaed and w<iul.d not tell the press what
.. Paul Jess. 18·monlh·old boy of Perth, Australia, has eaten. a highly
poisonous snake and is apparently none the worse for it -though
the snake did oot recover. It \vas a baby dugite, and because of its
small size, probably did n't possess much venom.
1be ftVe srirvivors-aboard. the-cutter
Sagebrush said the ship juat began split-
ting in half and all pboard abandooed
ship safely. s. ... In ~ searcj> area were -le wilb . winds gusq to IS.:IO kDots, ·.the
'Ille -, -.--trUrtbe chief justice and his wife weri
aD4 where be la, but a spokesman told a on when they ran into the offenslve ciga.c
rePQrter that the copd.uctor did not care smoke Nov. 23.
to be interviewed.
"I don't wan't to get involved," the in-
visible conductor was reported to have
said by William Clmitz, director of pub--
lie relations for the Penn Central. Cwlitz
added that the incident was considered
"very mm."
2 Americans Held Coast .Guard said. · '
Canadian Lets Plane Land Al fll"St light of day an Intensive ln-
temaUOnal aearch team went iqtQ action.
Amoog the croft involved in .Ibo .,..,..11
were the Sage Brush, SS · Amourra, ~
ROJ\1£ (AP ) -Two Americans were
amoog 28 youths held in jail tOOay for
Police investigation oi violent leftist
rioting 2nd fire bombing that turned cen-
tral Rome's old streets into a bat-
Ueground Tuesday night. The Americans.
described by police as students, gave
their names as Brian Cox. 23, from
Houston, Te~ .• and Lee Davis Kennedy of
After Mixe d-up Hijacking
~ Seatraln Delaware, SS Wacosta, two
Coast Guard HU·16 choppen , ooe Coast
Guard plane and a Navy_ rescue team
helicopter and the HMS Sirus with
be.licoPter. The U.S. Coaat Guard cul~
Il turned out t() be' Important in one -re-
sped, at least. Burger sat down a few
days later and wrote to 'I'ransportation
Secretary Jolm Volpe. 'Ille complaint
swiftly led to a ban on cigar or pipe
smoking in Penn Central's Metroliner
club car between Washington and New
l\ION'iREAL (AP ) -An armed young
Canadian estranged from his pregnanl
\11ife surrendered to his father and a
psychiatrist to face hijacking charges
after ordering a jetliner "first one way
and then the other" for 101n: hours across
eastern Canada-'Mlutsday.
Larry Maxwell Sta'nford. 21 , of Saint
John, N.B., released 57 persons unharm-
ed before he wa19d: of a Quebecair
BACifl at the end of.. a looping fight
from Wabush. N~ 'lat landed in Mon-
treal, went on t0 Otiawa end then return-
ed to Montreal. . ....._ 1
Armed police waited in a paftel truck
B52s iii Reco rd
Num bers Attack
En.emy Buildups
SAJGON (AP) -U.S. B52 bombers
flew a record 16 missions against North
Vietnam Thursday and today. the U.S.
Command announced. Nea rly 50 of the
eight-jet bombers dropped about 1.400
tons ol explosives, most of it just abo11e
the eastern end of the demilitarized zone.
It was the eighth day ol heavy 852 Rl·
tacks on tlie area where heav y c<ln·
centrations of North Vietnamese troops
and trucks were reported last week.
A B52 misalon normally consists of
three planes. 'Mle highest number
previously fiown against North Vi¢.nam
was 15 on Nov. 22. the U.S. Cordmand
said.
Most of the missions in the North
between noon Thursday and noon lcxUl.y
hit an area 22 to 43 miles southeast of the
Port. of Dong Hot 'But two others hit in
the area of the Mu Gia Pass into Laos
and the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
'Ille U.S. Commaqd reported 16 other
B52 missions were Oown during the U.
hour period, including lwo against
targets in the DMZ, seven again!t
targets in Quang Tri Province, be.low the
DMZ, and seven elsewhere in South Vlei·
nam.
Point Whitehorse was en route to t be
scene. Yori:. al the tail of the jet until a government \Vest Covina. plane brought the youth's father, Johnl-------------------------------'------~-----
Stanford, from Labrador City, Nfid., to
meet his son.
Dr. Bruno Connier. a Montreal
pSychiatrist. also talked to young Stan·
ford, who during the flight earlier had
asked to be flown to Vancouvet, on the
west ~t, ~and to Wimllpeg, in mid·
canada .
"He changed ~mind every ·minute,"
an· official said. "-'Dle plane went fast
tben lb ~"'·-... ' -, one w~. e-~ ..... ~ _,.~ r.~ .
.&Joward ....... tie !i!>!••'!!i!i-·~ wll~ persuadi,Jg'Slanlo!:d lO l.,i!lle ~)alie return to MontreaJ from Ottawa and to
summder.
"Apparently she convfficed Jiim ~,'was
a sick man and should see a doctor.1' 8JI'
official said.
Quebec.air Vice President Andre Liz-
ote .said Stanford pulled a J:2..caliber rifle
on the station manager at the Wabush
airport, in the west Labrador part o[
Newfoundland, and forced him to get oo
the plane with him.
The plane landed frrst at Montreal.
where during a 7~minute stop the youth
let a stewardess and the 52 other
passengers get off. Then it fl ew on to Ot·
tawa with . Stanford, Miss Cote, another
stewardess, the pilot and copilot aboard.
After 15 minutes in Ottawa, they return·
ed to Montreal to await Stanford's father
and the psychiatrist.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
DrliY!rJ of tht Dally Pilot. •
JM,M,,..~ • ....,l If ,..., tit .. , ff••• ,. ......
!Nfier 9f t•• ,,. ..... ull -,.,., ~ w111 .............. ,....~,..-···-"
1:• •·"'· s...,..,, .... '-"r. If .,.. ......... .. ,,_ ~ .,, ............. , ... -.
"""-f, Clll ..... • an 'tftl ........ 19 ...... (•Ill .,.. ....... 1111 ....
• Ttll!'pllonts
' Fresh~y .c;ut .:troos,
Merry Ghristmas
priCes. · .
II you're looking for a big . ,
beautiful treelhls ___ us.
You'll Ind Sootclt Pine Ind W11'821i
Douolm~wa.rill:m"""ln ·
varloiJt slZ8S and "'-to.hold
all your favorite omemen1L
Scotch Pine
4• ... 5•
7'-8'
99'
-
7.9'
11.'9
Westem Douglas ,Fir
2'-l'
J'.4'
5'·•'
1'·•'
9'-10'
12'-14'
1.59
2.5'
il.19
S.19
7.1,
1•.1'
'
"
~"""'Yother YOrletllf to cltOOH "*!'-: ...
'
Southeast Floods Feared
Th u11.derstorms Hit Louisiana, Mississ ippi
-I
A..,._tlc ..... 9row1n9
in a ceramic: ,lenter makes'
"' an ettrac:tira additfon to any
1urroundin91. T ariffic: 9i~.
6'.'wt ur
'CHRISTMAS
POINSETTIAS
&" Pot 1'1111 l loom 2"
<;uatom Flocking
available in
white and color1.
•100 "I l'OOT
•
•
'
(
.. '
•
Darwin 'Demoted'
Stat.e Board Downpla~s Theory in T ext.s
SAa1AMEM10 (AP) -'lb• said be woolof ,t~ve N1tlo111l AcadeDIY ol Scleoc:e
Calflonla -Boord ol the doctrine .~~~. ~ urged the hoard not to Include ~ rtjectlnc p I e a 1 tlon inserted In the tells dw< '-Ille doctrine ol 1oec:W .,.. ..
lnln ..,,. ol tho notion'• top lion lo the texts. Wended for
-· bu voled to . use beginning In September -..rac1e DirWlii'i lbeo/Yor •n1s11 ,.11, ..,..~. 1971. --
ovoltlftan.1n""' science texts OMt •ll0'°9"' t 't 'Darwin's theory, put forth In fol: a.a mllllon children. C It 1 t 1859 In hl1 hJ.\lbric "Origin of And the -left tbe door ..,.,, r 1 11 • the Species by Natural Set ...
open Thursday lo possible U!Otlld like eq•al Uon" hOlds that man and other
later teW!itlng of tho texts for tfMe.' species evolved from alplpler lnclllllooi GI tho Blhle-<Hientod _ _ _ _ _ _ _ lorma of Ille. with tho ape<les
~id!==,~·~ ~pt:1n: :-..:
owl · whk:h ..roved.
WMAY I SAY, wl:thout
apotocY, that we Christians
would like equal time," board
member Eugene Ragle of
-.ineaald.
BEIJEVERS IN fhe doc·
trine of special creation say a
creator designed man and
other species In their present
forrn. ·
Dogs Find
Surprise
SAN DIEGO (AP) -
Marine dogs trained lo
sniff out marijuana turned
a sutp'ise inspection at
San Diego's county honor
camp into something of an
~mbarrassmenl.
nte dogs found some, all
right -in the safe in the
Donor camp director's of-
fice.
There was none in the
beds or lockers of the 26
men convicted of various
~rimes in the past.
The marijuana whJch
l h e five dogs smelled
Wednesday through the
metal of ~ Bennett's
floor safe had been con·
(iscated earlier, Bellllett
a plained.
• • • • r
'"d?· 0.Umbe< 15, 1972 D.\ILY PILOT J
Three File Suit
To Free Newsman j
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Los Angeles HeraJd.£1•1•Mr.~
Three newsmen have filed a photographer, and J-A.~
Superior Court sult contending Barker, a KABC ne..,._.. !
that Ia Angeles County is '
spending public funds ;Uegall y FARR WAS jailed after bej
to keep newsman \Villiam refu.sed to dlscloae the IOlllU
Farr in jail. of a story he wrote two years
The suit, filed Thursday , ago about the Charlu Mamon
contends the money is being "family.'' ~
illegally spent because Farrl,:;;=====-==--=:;-•
was jalled ln violation of bis
constitutional righls.
SHERIFF PETE Pitchess
was named as principal defen-
dant.
Superior Court Judge David
V N ·IT£D
STAT'ES
NATION Al.
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
)
. • . .
. The hoard -editorial changes stressing that
Darwin's theoriY. ls apeculaUve
and Dot fact. 'Ilia! ~· Will
be ·r.quired In bulC -tall lntoQdOd f o r tin-
derprtnen . tbroogh •lahth
gradera before the atate will
"Oii, YES, 1 will, without
specific references to the
Biblical account or to a
creator," said Dr. John Ford,
a San Diego-ph}'5ician who ls
the board's vice president.
Asked by reporters how the
hooks coold dl!cu.s the doc-
trine of special c re at Ion
without referrini to a creator
or God, Ford said: "Evolution
as taught In schoola today Is
antitbeistic and is just as
much a rellgibn as other
religious ideas."
As presently written, on& of'----------
A. Thomas ordered Pitchess to
appear in court next Wednes-
day "to show cause why
Farr should not be released.
But Thomas refused to issue
an immediate restraining
order freeing Farr.
NOW OPIN " -the texts saya thls about the
origin ol Ille:
11lt ls koown that 11!~ began
in the seu."
Aide Named SATURDAYS
9 to 1 P.M. •
Under a rewriting example
proposed to the hoard, that
passage would be changed to
Mrs. Ben Kraut of C.osta
Mesa bas been appointed
cba.irman of the P l t z e r
College. Parents' Association
for Costa i1esa. She will serve
11.S liaison between the college
and parents of local students.
Farr, a Los Angeles Times
reporter. ha.s been in jail for
18 days on an indefinite
sentence for contempt of
court.
MON ... THUIL 1 M •.M.. •
fllDATS 1M P.M.. •
.... _
That's Shoe B i%
b<ly tho boob, • .
Boaid ll)e11lbers will have
veto power ~VtJt. the rewriting.
At least. one hoard member
Nineteen California -based
Nobel prize w.inners and the
.-
re.ad:
"Most scientists believe that
life may bave begun in the
sea."
The suit was filed by Rudy
Villasenor, a retired Times
reporter; Mel Leroy Lieder. a
(714J 140..Slll. ~ ...
S.. C..n '1ne. C.... M-
D. DEAN HEISER
Actress Ali McGraw rests her weight on one foot as
she has her Eihoepi;.nts and handprints imbedded
in Grauman's Chinese Theater Thursday. Miss Mc-
Graw is the first person in three ye¥5 to be so
honored. She wrote the phrase 'Peace and Love'
in the cement. ·
Dense Fog .Causes 23
Car Pileup; 18 Hurt
Mercedes-Benz announces
precisely the ~d of model change
you expect from Mercedes-Benz.
LIVERMORE lAP) -An unable to stop on the ice.
icy pass was cleared of Debris was scattered for a
wreckage after more than 29 half mile.
cars and trucks smashed up in Officers said the truck
dense fog, injuring 1! persons driver was trying to s\op for
including two men burned three cars whose occupant.a
from hydrochloric acid that were waving him down.
was spewed over the highway . Valley Memorial Hospital
"The cars and trucks were here reported treating 15
laid out like a train wreck one persons !or facial injuries,
after tbe other." said Highway fractures, lacerations lmd the
Patrol Sgt. Edwin Main. "It two persons for the mlnor add
looked like a bomb expk>ded burns.
on the roadway." He said it The hospital said Claude J.
was a miracle no one was kilJ.. Maddix of Vallejo WU ' ln
ed. . • ~ coodition with f,.,e ,.
"People were still scream-~Bd Med inJaries ~ Steven
ing In the wreckage. while cars Qlljle<Of San Francisco W)l In t
kept piling into them," a ., • condition with mu!pple, .
driver said. es.
The eastbound lane of
MODl!L CHANGSS at Mercedes~
I Benz att inspired not hytho trends
a(fahion but by tl>e thrust of engineer·
=~~Ill~~ Sida lw ....._ ..... ilie 2IO Sedan-
wilboat •lfC!C!linl lhQ: body ODt inch or
11Q!>llillg tO'ibe"\iigh«it hint of •tyliiig ' . rridtery. •
The technical improvements that in·
spited this chaJllewili ~tho 280 funher
a pan I.ban ever .. from othcr~cars in its clas·s. ·· ·
.... '
automatic transmission, or for power-
st«:ring and power brakes, or for an
electrically · heated rear window. Tbc7
a(C all part of the 280's base price.
Even air condirloning falls under the
heading of standard equipment-You'll
count four separate outlets on the in-
strument panel-two for the driver, two
for his front-seat passenger .
Comfort DOI foigottoa
The painstaking Mercedes-Benz engt..
necrs found one subtle way after another
Mercedes-Benz motor can:
Interstate 580 in Allamont
Pass connecting t h e San
Francisco Bay area and the
Cent ral Valley were closed for
five hours Thursday as crews
cleaned up crushed vehicles
and !Pilled truck cirgo that
included the acid, p&jnt, glue
and paper product.. Criticized
Should you invest your $8,968• in
the 280 Sedan? Study i11 engineering «-
lincments. Weigh all tl>e facts. Mmurc
this car's perlonJ}ill<Oagaimtyour need!
-then decide. ..
M1rc1d11-B1nz 280 S1dan itn'l j~to cha11ged car; ir'r an imprwtd car.
from $1S,182• to $6,439•
Mcrcedcs·&M otren • ••sl· ninac of
mode II. Here arc suggnted retail priat
foc 7 of the most popular 1ype:s:
The Highwiy Patrol said the
crash QCCUrred after a tnrck-
tralltt jackknlf~ acros,, the
hl11hwav. Vehicles be bind 1 blinded by .the fog, were
Police Hold
Custodian
In Murder
NORWALK (AP) -Richard
Eugene Juarez, an IS-year-old
school custodian, was booked
for investigation of murder
Thunday in the stabbing
death of an h o n o r student
who had been trying to defend
another youth beln1 attacked
by a gang, officials said.
Six other youths were hook·
ed. for investigation of assault
with a deadly weapon follow-
ing Wednesday's knifing al
John Glenn High SchooL They
were turned over to jd'Venile
aulhorlUe1. Their ~ges ranged
from 14 to 17.
LOS • ANGELES (AP)
There is "no factual evidence"
to show..,that year-round
si:hoola would provide better
educaUooal apportunily for cl·
ty students, a school dlstrict
staff study says.
TllE STUDY, r-ele11ed
Tbukday, coocludod that a
year-round J>l'QWUll WQUJd in
fact create a ·"substanilal"
financial drain on the district.
"Despite t h e optlmlslic
claims ol proponent& ol year-
round school plans, ft have
•found no basis, in theory or
practice. for ~ any significa~ advarUie 1rom a
switch to a year-rou.nd frO"
grain, the stud1 says.
"There is no factual
evidence to support tlJe cla1m1 '
for improved 1 e~a r n l n g ,
remediation, acctleratJoa or
COit saving,.. ·
For\)'·seven &&loll ' I D
California .,. ~ ..
y,....roun.i ic:hedul ... -... fi<!als say UIO schootS will be
using the program by "-1
year.
THE YE,l.R·ROU,N.l>. , .,
program alloW,t itbools~~ '•., ·t
• house more ~ "bi'·uolnll
• staaPred . -· .111tli .. aborter_, more freq1ieof; llCI·
Jlemarkable,..,, engine
Theengin= hid !he 280\ biggest news
W>der tho hood.
Fresh from a long laboratory incu·
bation is a new 2.8-litre dowb~
luad-azmshaft engine. Hemispherical
combmtion chambers, 2-stage dual com·
pound carburttor-this loving})' assem-
bled Six COUid be mistaken for a high'·
perfonnancc apom car ~ngine. (NOie
that it revs up to 6StJo rpm.)
t'The crankshaft is something of a
masterpiece,'• reports Britain's Auiocar
roominess: the 280 matches them for
interior space-and actually exceeds
them in trunk capacity.
Those $8000 .. luxury" sedans are
impressive standing in a driveway. Bue
compare driving them with driving the
280 Sedan, out in the real world.
You'll discover that the 280 twirls
through a turning circle or only 36.4
feec (about the same as a little VW 1200
''Beetle"). Those larger cars don't.
The 280 nips into parking spots those
heftier sedans have to pass up.
And you'll slip through holes in city
traffic where dreamboats dare not go.
Full,y independent suspension
Let others brag about how big and Ot·
nate their cars are. You can brag about
bow well your 280 Sedu handles.
'' ... t/u most cme1tollabl1 lsi1ll speed
11d.ari Ww ruud.''
That was MOU1f Trtttd magazine's reac-
tion to the 250 Sedan; and the 280's han-
dling is unchanged.
This is bccaute ita superb suspcn-
--• full sion is unchanged: a iour-whecl, y
piapzine, "running in seven main bell'-independent system with a -diagonal·
inp,_and every one of the twelve webs pivot rear swing axle. Ga:rpressurized
inoorponting a counterweight.'' The .. shock absorben and anti-away ban front
goal: low engine vibration.. and · rear are standard components. Also
. The men who designed~ engine standard: 175 SR/14 radial-ply tires on
,~.for tffeilncy instead-of brute pow.. wheel rims Slh inches wide.
•er •• Y~ ~ the running' $1DO(M:bncss you The engi.neen fitted an additional d'~ fMm 1 cir o'f thh c,lass. Some--shock absorber to the 280, in an unusual
The vicUm, Francisco
Vffiela Jr., a stralgbl A stu•
dent and captain of the soccer
team,. was slain In front of the
scl)ool:cafeterla when be tried
to defend a 19-yeat-o•ld
griduate of Glenn Hlgb. tiona . ,. ' 1hiJ!l°l4u may not cxpect'ftom I car of spot-the ateerillg system.,
" this· c"tU:s: the 280 engine's 'ttatrai.ned
M¥Wt"'"""' ...
What do doctors recommend tor•ts in pain?'
Doctors all over the aMlllUy 4ispenae mr 50,000,000
of these tablets to-their patietta ed Jllf.
There al'!I many medication~ ••
1>h.f,•i<"ian or denti1t can pre-
tcnbe for pain. Some Qr"* n.ar·
colic, many arc avtalloble only
on prttcriptlon. But there I• tu'9
1'4in reliever, available without
pft'l«rlptlun, docton diaptJnM
iig&ln and apin ..• Anacin.
appetite for gasoline.
As agile as bdocc
• That engine can be lighter and less bulky
than those used Jn other $8000 sedans
becauoc tl>e llO Sedan iuelf is lighter
andleslbullty. ·
/1 ii· .. ...,;-n., faa IMt IM .,, 3
doftttuK •'JawY'.ud41U "" ... at llait
Aajf o .,,. -, ...i ....,_ ii. fw/I 3 Jui
'-· ...... 280 SHoit. ;s,.., ........
11tot ,~ ... '"°" ,..,, v.a ,,.,; .... -Yet tbe aua balk ol tbelo loqu can --·-ollllllwtbla-lmte>d. of squa.nderina_yo•ir motley
on hollow sheet metal and styling that ii
IOOn pasi, you ilrwn it ill fuadalDClltal
engineering with the 280 Sedan.
The body of your 280 is an all-welded
steel structure so strong that a separate
frame is redundant. That body is the
frami::.
Precious weight is saved. Enormous
strength is built in. Bolts won't tug loose
over t1'e miles because there are no bolts.
1!i73 do1M1t.k lux ury KdJn
Merct'dft·Bcn1 2IO Srdln
280 offtr11ht luxury of t!ficitn/ ii:t.
Run a finger over the finish. You will
fttl why it took several hours to paint,
bake, and polish to that high gloss.
Numerous outer body. seams were filled
and made invisible before painting.
When you buy an $8,000 automobile,
you deserve such fastidious touches.
1'·wheel disc brakes
You get four-wheel disc brakes on your
280 as standard equipment.
Consider that 1he front brake discs
measure almost 11 inches in diameter,
vinUaJJy the same size as the front discs
on the famous Mercedes-Benz 4SOSL
sports model. The 280's brakC3 arc pow-
er assisted, of course ; another standard
equipment fea turt!.
4-speed automatic shift
Your 280's automatic transmission is llO
quick-shifting that e\•en sporting drivers
have expressed surprise -and 1pproval.
You can set it in DRIVE and leave it
there; you can also shiJt throuah the
forward gean by hand.
The padded shift levu sits within
easy reach on a central console. (lf you
prefer, a column shift lever can be fitted
at no extn cost.)
You are not charged extra for lhil
450SLCCo"P<'
4)0SL Coupe/Roads1er
180SE 4.SScd111
lllOCoupe
280Sedan
220SecUn
220 Oi~l Sedan
$15,11.1
SI 1,761
SIO.J71 s f,614
' 1,961 .......
' •6,4J9 ..... ~._..,,....,..--"'·~-
--....... ..i --· Ir.,. a.,,.illlll "'1l,,
-....... -d -"--la<.
to make the 280 an eminently livable
machine. f,
You sit high enough to see the !'Old
ahead. Large glass areas enhance visi·
bility. )'our body is supported firmly in
seats' built around a network of coil
springs, not cheap foam rubber.
You needn't fumble around to find
_the headlight dimmer switch or wind-
. -shield wiper and washcrconuols. They're
a fingertip away in a pod on the left U
the steering column; you can work thc.m.
without taking a band off the wbed.
Mon: than status
The new 280 Scdaii is plainly nor$8196S•
worth of bigness, or styling, or stltus.
Buy it and you buck the trends of the
"luxury" class bcad-<>n.
Your satisfying reward: ownership
of a precision machine engineered to
outlive trends. One test drive will coo.
firm your wisdom in choosing it .
Arrange with your authorized Mel'>
cedes-Benz deal~r to take that test drive
soon. For more useful fac ts about the
280 and other models, clip the coupon
and tnail il today. You will rec:eiVc a free
color brochure. r--------------......
120 W, W•r11•r Av•n11•
11 ®J im Slemons Imports, Inc.
I Se11te A11•, C•llfou1i1 •2707
l'lebt' send roe your full<"O IOf" brodn1rt I o( lhc 1'.terccdn-Bem tnOlor <"M f..
,_
-~ • "'' ·-., .... ,._ -
Each yMr, doctors give over
60,000,000 Anaoln tablet• lo
their palienU in pain. lf doctors
thlnk enouih aboul Anacin to
dl•JKlnae all thftt tablellJ, what
better N!COnimendaljon can you
a1k whtm you Ire h(p.1in?
Jim Slem9ns Imp orts, Inc. UO W. Warner Avmue, Santa Ana, Ullfomla 92707 Phone:71 4-5'6-4114
You aee, Anacin contain•
more of the pail) rellewir doe-
. -
'
)/ "
f
..
"
•
..
!.
8 DAU.. Y PILOT EDITOBIA.I.. PAGE
Parking
San Clemente's buslne&S community, regarding on·
street parking as a matter o! pure survival, has rallied
lo defeat proposal& by. a traffic consulting firm lo
streamline El Camino Real traffic with new signal&,
le!l·lurn pockets and red curbing.
The controversy is a textbook case.
As a rule, businessmen and landlords \\1ho in the
past bought their own parkinc Iota have enjoyed suc-
cess becawe customers have a place to park their cars.
Heavy pressure by San Clemente's "Jotleas" merch-
ants bas staUed the implementation of the traffic plan
indeflnltely.
Meantime, a citizens' commJtt~ bas been !ormed to
seek a solution to the heated conflict.
The only one available, however, l.s a municipal
parking dl siricl With public lots financed by business-
men and their landlords.
That has been tried before, and ii has failed.
Easenlially the combatants are merchanla who in·
sist they can live with the status-quo and traffic safe-
ty experts who insist that they can make El Camino
Real a 8:3-fer, more efficient thoroughfare.
And at this stage, the merchants seem to have the
upper hand.
Planning City Spendin~·
Organization of a citizen's committee to look at
Jong-range city budgetary matters is under way in La·
guna Beach . This approach, setting a course for future
city spending, is a good idea and one overdue.
or Safety~
citizen Interest and Involvement in the total composltk>n
of the budget Is lacking.
Membership o! the committee should ·be broad. A
special e!!ort should be made lo bring in those who
have critici!ed past spending plans. II Is easy to crlU·
else from the outside looking In, but involvement some-
times .brings Increased understanding and support.
The work the group does In planning a long.range
spending program !or the city will certainly be welcome.
All-year School Fracas
Although the board of trustees bas not yet formally
admitted it, proposals for an aU-year school program in
the Capist.uno Unified Sch!>OI Dlslricl ap~ar lo be a
dying Issue. · • ·
In light of expressed opposition at school meetings
only the boldest of optimists could believe that a pro-
fesalonal poll of parents in the c;tistrict would show suf·
ftclenl support for the idea to keep children In school
nine weeks with three weeks' vacation on a 12-month
cycle.
The recent fracas between school officials and angry
parents opened some wounds that Wilf not heal over·
night.
Some Ql>Rervers b.a,ve said that one sore spot is the
brusque altilude exhibited to parents by board Presl·
dent Robert Hurst, ·whose patience see.pis to wear thin on occa.i;;ion . •
Parents fighting all-year school before trustees re-
centl:v left the board meeting seething at what they
termed heavy-handed conduct by HUrst.
'
I
•
·, Too frequently, the budget is an item of passihg
concern in the.. public eye and the matter is presented to
the public in a solid form after _most major deci.s\ons
have been made. The council can pick at e,penses and
wrestle with a tax ·rate, but' too fl1ten a f~ measure of
Trustees \Viii soon have to "generate massiVe support
~n the community for passage of the February bond
issue. ~
Bui unless more friends can be brought into the
camp, that support might not materialize.
'I guess I could slay the dragon with this, sire .. ~he might ·
Celebration
Of Christmas
A 'New' Idea
FNEY J.HARRI~
Christmas w.isn't celebrated as a
festivity for the first thousand years of
Cbrbt.endom ; during that tlme, perhaps,
people spread the good feelin& over the
whole year, instead of !queez.inl it into a
couple of week! and then reverting to
nature the rest of
the year, as we do
now. • • •
An "extemporan·
eous" listener is
someone \\'bo is busy
lhlDking up his re-
plies while you are
still talking. • • •
We look back on the past with loniln&
_ because it can't be changed ; U ii the on--
Jy part or our lives not subject to
dangerous vicissitudes. • • •
UNHAPPINESS DOES not so much
CODSist in not getting what we want, u ln
not wanting ;t after we get it. (Thi! is
why happiness does not consist ln fuJfill·
ment of our wants, but In satisfaction of
our needs.) • • •
It ls impossible to write a book about
humor that is funny, and no genuinely
comic writer has ever tried it -all the
books dissecting humar are composed by
grimly sober pedant&. • • • •
The paradox in reading Is that unleu
you read enough you can 't even u~
derstand your own tbouihts -but lf you
Dear ,
Gloomy ..
Gus
A li(eguard i.>loer b one lhlng, but
a Laguna Boacti·Taj Mahal With
the Pacific Ocean 11 a refi,ecting
pond Is another. Recycle our quaint
Laguna....,,
-B.D.I.
Tllhl .._..,... rtflfcfl rMMn' .,..._ Mf _...... .... " .. _. ... ,, ,....
,..,,. "' ...... "' ......., 0-. .,..., ''"'·
conUnue readlni be)'Olld the optimum
polnt, you turn from 1 th1nklna reader
to a mere memory bank. . ' .
BAD BOOKS &men!IY ..U """'° copies than 1ood bootao !Or the simple
and human reason that ba"d boob tell u1
what we like lo hear, while Cood bootao tell
us what we oar bl to hear. • • •
Science arises out of play more than
we realize ; we all know that utaonomy
came from astrology, and chem1&try
from alchemy, but few know what
modem mathemaUcs and probability
theory arose when a gambling aristocrat
asked Pocai to calculate the odds on a
popular dice 1ame. • • •
THE MOST incisive piece on politics
I've read in a long time -and "lllch quite transcends partlaan political dif.
ferences -is Kurt Vonnegut's essay on
''winners and loeerl" 1n the November
Issue of Harper's maguine. • • •
Though they will atreaUOUlly deoy It,
moat men doo't care: much for a woman
with a highly-developed sense of humor ;
they would rather be with 10tneone dull,
who will adore them, than aomeone
bright, who ml&bt tauih Bl them.
Expdtriares By Choice
LONDON -Once an American
businessman is settled in England, it can
be dlfllcUlt to persuade him lo return
~ home. Nearly every major U.S. company
with a branch In Britain baa found this to
be so. In fact, a growing number of e,.
patriale American e.xea.itivea choose to
quit their jobl rather than go back to
oorpcnte betdquarten.
A NEW EMPLOYMENT agency,
American Manaa:ement Retourw, has
been helping lo find jobs !or thele reluc-
tant rep1trlates since lut summer.
Emy mooth AMR sends out anooymous
resumes to more than 1,000 companiu.
TI>o •1eocr cbarg.. no fee for 118
sen>!ctt: ll IUpporU iU.U throup .....
tributloal from Amerlcan and European -· AMR I' dltteted by Kenneth Brown, 1111
American · who rttlred u Bethlthem
Steel's European npresentaUve !alt
March and decided be did not want lo
return to the United Stat.I. Flnd!ng jobo
for Americans tn ~uoo i.s not euy,
be ,,.ya, becallle 'MOii U.S. execuUvH
cet a.Uow1rtct1 for education and bou.9lnS,
p1us YtM11 trips borne." Encll•b ...,,.
ponies oiler 111bolaatlall1 loWer waaea
...i r...., perqu1111n.
IRJTAIN'B ENTllY Into the Common
ilorbt m JID. I lllO)' WelJ open up DOW
-Illes for Amerlem> expatrlotu.
"Aii-Amtrlcan who lmow1 the tu l)lltem
In Vranca, the tabor l1w1 ID Germany, or recb>al pl8MlJ>i In llal1 could bav• •
Joi to tJlter'" Brown told Editorial -•rd! Repotll. -· Br!Uah 1>·~-b Jiecomlni more mepllve to
the Idol " --callllillllla -jobs thll ~ ...... than ~ !ltd to the
company poyroll.
( EDITO""Rrll
RESEARCH J
Although thett are no re 11 a b I e
1t1Ultlcs on t})t number of American ex·
ecuUves working ln London, t be
American Chamber of C o m m er c e
estlmatesi around 2,000. In a 1970
ourvey of fl1I U.S. suboldlarlel In Briteln,
the chamber found that nurly three-
ciu-rten employed no Amtrictm at all.
Tbele nrma employ Br!Uah manaaen
partly heclu3e local execuUvo taltnl bat
Improved and partly becauae It maltea
for better community reltUOM.
EXECUTIVU wbo flay 1bn>ad !or
more than three yean are the OOH who
!Ind It mott dlfflcult lo return home,
IDdultrlal Manacemeat m a I a 1. I n e
repor11. M111J of them feel that thelr ~ proopecll In tha home olllce
may have 1-ned dur!D( their 1bolooe.
11The reaUy smart boy11 wbo 'merely UM
I EunlpMD JJOlllDt U ,..i m»tber 1'11111
on the WIJ lo the top, -nol llay for more Ulan three 1ean," tbt mapline -Wbil< lllOlt Americalll wbo wish lo re-
main 1bn>ld cite lhe "quality ol 11.fo" u
1 rea!!Oll, they probably ore mounted
al&n by the prestl&e thal accomponlea an
ovtneu Job. Since an American often t1
seat abroad to direct all or pert of a
111botdlary, he comeo lo be known 11
"Mr. Company" lo Europe. "lt'1 not
easy." observet Brown, "tor him to
retum to Peoria or New Yorti:, when be
muot Ill hlmseH bock Into the encuUve
hltrlrcb7.''
die laughing.'
s
. • The Smuggled Broken Treaties Papers
·D~cuments Support Indian Charges
WASHING TON -The B.roken Treaties
Papers, which were smuggled out of
government · files by wrathful Indians
during their occupation of the Bureau of
. ~an Affairs building, have been scat·
.. leted ln secret stashes across the Unilecl
Slat.a and Canada.
We have had ac-
cess to them. We
have AJJo been given
a message for Pres!·
dent !llxon. "TeU the
President," we .were
aaked, "that Indians
do not want the
docmnentl any long-
er than-it takes to
duplJcote and Index ll10!n so that ovetY
tribe ln America CID educate Itsell to the
• double-<Ieolliig ol the federal government
and find ways to forestall it."
WE BA VE INSPECTED tboaaand3
upon thousands of documents, some
almost brittle with age, others fresh as
today's headlines. Tbey tell a shabby
story. ·
Some documents deacribe multimillion·
dollar land deal& In South Dakota's Black
HW1. Others reveal hoW the White House
played politics wlUI Indian rights.
There are alJO poignant papers, like
the account of an hKUan' woman whose
foot was broken by the police but was
left to spend the nl&ht In jail untended.
But above all, the documents indict the
~rd £or championing the downtrodden.
The Indians spumeG the money and
voted to show us the Broken Treaties
Papers.
THE FBI, meanwhile, has been
bureaucrats who hav~ pretended to help searching up and down the country for
Ind. ha 1 he the stolen documents. Ex~ for one the ians but ve o ten exploited t m small seizure in Oklahoma , however, the
instead. Indians whose forebears foUgbt documents remain in Indian hands. lhe cavalry have been reduced to battling
the bureaucrats. It bas been a tawdry We learned they had hem broken down
tedious war without glory. .: into several caches and bidden in diverse
. . . .,.mUona at the far ends of the Unil«I
LIKE THE C A V AL RY, the. b(rr. States and canoda. Some we,. aecroted
eaucrats h a v e mnonelessly .dri~ in automobile tnm.U, ... JA old phonograph
the Indians deeper into-their reattYa· C'88e9, In obscure comers of private
Uom. The stolen doo,oner>ta ~ homes. Others were ata.sbed 1n reinate
evidence that Indians bare been cbloted biding places on lndlan ....,.alioas.
out of their land, robbed of tbe.ir water . My 8690ciate ta Whitten Oew to
rights, d~prived of the.Jr fishing .strealm Pboeni:1 for the rmt tryst. At uie airport,
and bunting grounds. Indian security men one jump ahead of
M. in any war, the statlatics are grim. the FBI told him to wait on a comer
I.I.Wan life expectancy b 47 years com-away from the terminal buildinr. They
pared with 71 for other Americans; the hu!tled him by a devious route to a motel
Indian unemployment nte is 45 percent where some of the Indian leaders were
compared with S.8 percent for the nation assembled.
at large; the averare Indian family
struggles along oo $4,000 a year, less THE INDIANS wouldn't talk about ,the ,
than half the $9,M'l median for the rest papen ln the motel or even lnaidi!. their
of the country ; and finally, the Indian cars _for fear of FBI bugging. Furtive
suicide rate is twice tbt natlooal rate. meetings were arranged, instead, at a
Ever since the lodi.ans ransacked bowline aUey, a coffee house and on, a
government files and clrted off boJ:es parking lot.
full of documents, several newsmen have Nett day, Whitten was instructed to fly
tried to get a look at them. Some offered to another city many hwldreda of miles
money for the story; we offered only our away. He was met by one of the leading
Indian milila.Dts who quesUmed him
closely. At last, Whitten wu given four
dowments and qudtloned. again about
their meaning to find out what be knew
about lnd1an matten. 1ben, for lZ boun.
he was deserted.
Tbt following morning, m a n y
thousands of documents were delltered
to blm. The door o( his room was bolted
and a tough Indian security man planted
himself in a chair pua:hed against the
door. A! Whltten waded throu&h the
popen, Indian experts helped him with
the unfamiliar tribes and names.
EXCEPT FOR protecting our eourceo
and ~ lbe hidbl& place.t ...,,..t, we
have bten placed under no restraint by
the IhdilJll. They have made llO attempt
to tell us what lo write.
In future columns, we wlll describe
bow the lndlans pulled the great.st docu-
ment heist in history right under the
noses ol the FBI. We. will also reveal, in
detail, the content& of the Broken
Treaties Papers.
Footnote : The Indians, In their black
hall with the beaded batbanda, looked
tough and grim. However, they DOt only
tumed oot to be friendly but they
laugbed easUy. Once they left Whitten be-
hind to work wbll~went out for a beer. When Wbl!Wi y complelned, one Indian erack : '' ou know how
whites go Cl'I!)' when they drink fire-
watar ''
Sad Story of a Grand Sexperiment
The blossoming public Interest in sex
therapy could lead to but one inevitable
result.
There they wert", tbe new 1e1
therapists, from Masters & Johnson en
down, featured on the covers of national
magaiines, writing
books end appearing
on radio and tele~
slon to tell faacinat·
ed audlenca bow
they cured their pa·
Uents of sexual hang.
upo.
'l'he way they did
It In Ylrtually every
new 8eX clinic In the
land was to teach their patient.a How to
Do It. This technique, Ibey aald, worked
woodet11.
11>e ramJflcatlons of all this were flnt
~Jud by the noted educationalist,
Dean Hiram Sltarewe 111 of Skarewe
University.
"AS REL Ev ANT educauonallstl,
gentlemen," the Dean grimly told an
mneraency faculty meeting, "we 11ve
failed dl&mally In preparing our student&
for life. We have taught them how. to
weld an 1utornoblle, bow to awing a 1olf
•11 Oe•r9e --~
Dear Georp:
Why are lbe days ,. much
shorter In the winter than to the
oummer and U I write lo my
Cooir•mnan would II help! G.U.
Dear G.H.:
No. II would probobl1 just poM
lhe t1me faster and make the dtyt
~ even shorter. Anyhow, it
wouldn't do much aood -It'• not
solely the jocteyJna around ol
Oayllfhl Slvlnp whlch mak••
IUllllMr dap lonpr than winter
dayt. lt11 thlt colc! contracta and
heat upuida; n11urally, the col-
der the 1W011, 1he shorter the
dayo.
I
( ART HOPPE J
club and how to recite Etru9ican poetry.
"But the one single 11.1bject we hAve
never taught them -and the one in
which they will engage ln for most ol. thelr
lives -Is How to Do It.
"No wonder our alumni have hangups,·
No wonder they are flocking to expensive
sex clinics in middle age to learn. Our
duty is clear. We must alp the problem in
the bud by teaching then! How lo 1)o It
while their leaminJ abillUes ue at tbe1r
peak -in a word, while they're sUU ln
school."
THE DEAN'S propooal set off an
acrimonious debate. In an aie tted.~ated
to relevant educaUon, no one, of course,
dl!puted hb premfae. The debate WI S
over whether the course abould be gJven
as a lab science or u part ot the P.E.
program. It was finally decided that it
was voca!ional in nature and w11
therefore included In DrivE:r's Ed.
The popularity of How !O Do It 1028
and 10'2b was instantaneous. Every stu.
dent signed up. Faculty reports were
glowing. ''The ardor with which students
do their homework!" said one profesaor
,with awe. "And when it comet to Onal
exams, they're all fully prepared."
mE SMASIUNG success of the r."" gram was widely heralded. Every col ege
In the country rusbedl lo emulate It. And
IOOD, How To Do lt waa beJng offered In
the nation's high schools (for juniors and
aenion only).
Naturally, the government stepped In.
"We'll never reduce the high rate of ac--
cldents in America's bedrooms and
motel.I," said Congressman Homer T.
Pelllbone, "unlU every pracllllooer b
teated Wild licensed."
The blil was paned and woe beilde Ille
poor eager young 1waln who couldn't
produce a ve.lid Uctose.
Panorama of America
A panorama or America In transition
-a colorful kaleldoscoP'I of this country
d<c:ade by decade since 1!70 with a
sweeping look at Amertca'r folkways and
mor., -all of this deocrlbet the lavilbly
lllUJtrated AlnttlcQ Ceo11or7: Ill Yeor1
of Cbu&l•I Ufe Style, lo Ammc. by
R>Jph Andrill (Amttlcan Heritage
PreR, fl!.15).
With • profusion ol pbolographa, 32 col·
or, eoo black and white , and a viv1d ac--
compao)'lng text, Alllfrl .. a C..tary
wesent.a a b:eathtakln1 overview of what
Ille 1nd Uv!nc have been like In the
Unit«! Slata ln the pool 100 yeon.
Andrtat Writ.I ol lbe Wild Weal and bow
It wu tamed ; U.. daya of easy money
and booming bdslnea (conctntr1tlng on
11.1ch notable mer¢bandlalng tycoooa I!
Aoron Mootgomery Wan! and John
(THE BOO~ J
Wana~erJ : the •--In buY1!'1 habit& er the years; the cbal1'nl'" and
ellecta f wau and Coli! wan: the lnnl~
llM1 f blcyclea lo motor w:a and bow
It all ed f01hl0111 1od t?l•eilll\i; the
G•Y Nliiette1, the lloarln& Tweallel and
the Grtat Depreulon. 11'1 1D hen> In one
magnificent p«cbp ,_; lnftntlonl,
poUllcal event&, lnnovallonl, aocltly and
gad&ell. • 1 Ralph Andris! I& the author ol ._
D<ath: The Lut DOyo If Ille l'lllm fa.
dJ1m and baa edited a number ol'
volumes or Amcrfcana.
CAROLINE HARKLEROAD ,.
But arrests were few. For almost
ovetnigbt America had become a nation
of expertl superbly trained in How to Do
ll And hanguP'I became a thing ol lbe
past.
TO PREVENT confusion between
graduates of different schools, t})t teclmi·
ques were of course numbered by a
Wllvenal standard.
"Would you like to one, three, fourteen
and fony-six tonight, dear!" a n:manUc
husband would Inquire. And as both
parties were experts, the results were as
predictable as turning on the cold water
faucet. And about as interesting.
"What's on television?" the wife would
no,." reply, more often than not, with a yawn. ,
Once apln, the future of the hmnan
noe seemed threatened. It was saved by
a wlJe President who acrapped the
""""'"" Jrogram and banned the te~hlnl How lo Do It oourses by
an)'bo<IY atl)'11here.
"Some lhlng1." the wise President
&aid wllely, "are more fun to learn by
dohig.''
MANOI COAlf
DAllY PILOT
1tob1rc N. W ced, PtlbU.thtr
Th0m01 K eevU, Editor
Borboro Krefbkh
Editorial Pag1 Editor
The tdltorl1.I PA!te of lhl' O.lly
Piiot aecka to inform l\nd 1tlm1.t·
lat• readers by prttcntlnr: Oils
new1peper'1 Ofllnlon1 •n~ com.
mental') on topics of tnttkiit and
•hcnlflcance, by provtdln1 a forum tnr the expreulon of our reader1'
•jlinlnnt. and by Pt\'lfntlna lht
J vr"4 vl<1WpnlnU1 of lnfof.m.ed ob-
M'rvt'rJ; 11nci •ll\iknmtn on topics ut thl' day.
Friday, December 15, tm . -
• I,
n
i
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d
t
(
a
t
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0
q
t
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t
f
'
L. M. BOJd Building
Bonds
Studied
U.S. Vocabulary
Irvine city llaff members
are ett1mattnc cortl to the cl· DownSincel952
ty mtld • joint powor. ,
autbortty l)e eatablllhed to Average Amer!can'a vocabulary ID 1~ was COl'f:ll~er·
ia!ue bond1 tob.llld a ~.ooo, ably larger than~ average American's vocabulary this
10.~ foqt dual purpose year. Identical word tertsJ glv.en then and now to a 1Uf-
bulldlnJ adJIOllll te the pro. flclent 181Dpllng ol clt!Jens, l">V• tt, definitely. To what
POffCI CUlver>Moulton school do yo11 attribute tills drying up ol the language? Tele-
in Walnut VIUege. vlsioo? Poosibly.
Councllmon Heney Quigley this week, reported to !he run YOU'VE llEAD al>out the grut Knblol eruptloo, the
councll the Idea which has . blast that ~ the South Paclllc In 1880. Just lo give you
been COlllldered by the city-' some notion ol its enormity, tt Pllu!'s Peek had blown up
1rvJne Unified School Board with the same for<e, everybody in
UlllCll eommlttee. Qulc)ey North America, everybody not deaf, • Jlnd CouncU-.n Gabrli!lle could have beard the rumble, but
Pryor meet recuWV with a ~ clearly.
mlnorlly ·of the ICbool board, GENTI,EMAN CLIENT says be
lncludltlg 'l'lultee Sb a Z: on can't understand why we drink so
S1tteDo. much coffee inasmuch as the ho1other
Councllmen unanimously ap-~try Eogland was "' devoted lo proved Qulgley'a wga:estion tea. Jt wun't ao devoted. Not until
that James Harrington, city . · about 125 ~ ap di d England's tea
admlnlstrailve services dlrec-lmjiorts outwe!gb its lncomlng oof!ee alllpmenta.
tor, pre~e a rouch mtlmate -
or the coaJa lo the city of reUr-NAMES OF CAll·-Q. "What'a aa IPaomotof?"
Ing t h e boads the alngte. A. That was another of those fancy monlkeri suggested
purpose joint agency mtcht !Qr the automobile back in the days when tt mcilt common-
issue. 1Y was called the hot'lelesa carrlag,. Other names for the
CURRENT THINKING m ear were autogo, aulotinet, autovIC', cablne, carleak, gas--
the mobile, ~tor. clneque ai>d vlctorlne. the project auga••la joint authority would bond ta build GE'ITING HARDER, as you may know, lot a couple
the facility wblcll would in-I<? find & mnall turkey just .for themselves. Wby Is clear.
elude a -t auditorium , Bigger the bird, the more meet In proportloa lo-· Hall
music pracUce rool'l\.'J whldl a 12-pound turkey l§ waste: Growen Certa.lnly don't want
could convert lo dressing lo setlle foe that.,Qoo't blame them.
rooms and 1 atege area whlcli FOR FUTURE REFERENCE, get it right: You only
might . be divided f o r address ·the Queen of Eni!land aa "Your Majesty" the r1111t
classroom use, Qula;ley said. lime she says hello to you. Thereafter, just "ma'am" is 'Ille city and t b e ocbool dislrlcl then would oommll proper. A British correspondent with conslderalble ex-
themse1Vf9 te lease back the perlence among the diplomata told me that.
buildinl and maintain lt. Costa BOW DO YOU account for the fact the avenge man
would be dlvtded between the blinks once every three seconds while the average woman
two public agencies oo a blinka once every four seconds?
ronnu1a w111m recoantze• the ' amount ol. use of the facility Addrtss mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875~ New.
each would have. Port Beach, Calif. 92660.
~Umen John Burton and E. Ray Quigley Jr. _.iered '====~============='1 aloud if the eatabllahment o1 ... ------
viewed by the public as a way tbe joint authority might be ffONON--~·-·o .. NG
of getting around the re-
quirement to bold bond elec·
tions which applies both to the CUSTOM TAILOIS PllM.AMINf IH tNnA N4A
city and the school di.strict. ...., 1•1 ...... c.-.... I SALE
Henry Q!Jlgley said that with 1 2 'iUiii '135
the recent record voter..ap-~ ...-• tt , ,.._
prova1 of the school district's
'50-milllon bond issue, trustees
feel ~y have a mandate tG
provJde the fac~tles needed.
THE PROPOSAL, H e n r y
Quigley esplained, ls ooe or
the few ways the city might
financially help lbe distrtct.
Besides prov:idi.Dg UPiraded
muJUpurpo.se room apace for
tbe proposed ochooi, the clly
would have evening access to
a meeting faclllt:·
WGllM t iSltlHIS C<lMPOO', M.l.C,
AMUICll 'fllM!SUY-A klJID, M ~OOF.
I '
' -
san•r•.• f AU SAll ......
0..W.1-lf ·····" .. De.r.. W-' • , , .n U 0. OllfiMt .... ......
111• ......... ••••• ... '' ..,. ........... ...,.. ~ ....... ts .. 11111 W-' . , , •••• ti S• •WI nt ANT llll
c-i--. .. ' .. ' . t2 .., • ANT STTU COPllD , .............. 110 7t
SW... ,,,. • ., .... 10 •, • fUI ALTPlATIONt
...... _,.,. & do.11 m ~ •AllT M ,... f1'1fll IMPOITU I ..,,,, M
WOOLl lU • 1111n . , ..,._.y -...
"':~·..!cA.:.::.':': .':::'J.':-:.=t.:." ,.,,., ~ 11..#. -........ '-·
·-· .. hti.lf ........ .._ ,._... o,c, ~ ,.....,_ ......... ._,,..., .. lllf SMlfw'll Gollf, ..... ,
•
till
$ 5~~ Qt,
•
Frid&)', Dtctmber 1.5, 11f72 DAIL V PILOT
Tree Cut
Areas Told Diet Drugs 'Snake Oil'
The publk: is prohibited
from cutting trees on all na-
tjonal forest Jaruis In Southern
California except on areas
designated by the Southern
caurornla Christmas T r e e
Growers Association.
For information about these
areas, contact the Cleveland
National Forest office, 3211
Fifth Avenue, San Diego,
92103, 293-505«!.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
H a r v a rd UnJvenity nutri-
Uonlst Dr. Jean Mayer has
described nonprescription diet
aids as ''a rhythm method of
girth cOntrol'' that doesn't
work, aimed at c1h u b b 1
Americans worried about their
sex appeal.
Mayer w a s particularly
critical Thursday of manufac-
turers of over-the-<:OUnter diet
pills, saying they comprise "a
'"8ke oll type ol induatry."
But be appertnUy was
'referring to the vast array of
drug store items promoted as
quick weight loss aids, 1ucb as
candy-type appetite redi.¥:ers
and fad diets stressi ng co n·
sumption of grapefruit or
bard-boiled eggs,
THE PROFESSOR, who fre-
quently serves as a govern-
ment consultant on nutrition
matters, made the remarks at
a hearing by a Senate s~ll
bwlneP 1ubcommhtte which
ii lnvt1tlg1tlng drug industry
practices.
"The facl is that none of
these methods1 worka for very
long," Mayer testllied.
As for the many kinds of
pllla available, he said: "I like
to call It the rhythm melhod of
girth C<lllll'OI."
"I don't see that any of
them (pilla) have any use
whatsoever," said Mayer.
THE ONLY REAL way to
•
·'
Deane a HO mes, JB3D.$ ~uu.
"
hmovative Christmas interiors
created by the Art and Home
Economics Departments of
lose weight. aald May<r, lo to
eat a senslbM! d1et and eftr·
cise properly.
?\layer said mort of the
es timated ao u'llDlon
overweight adult Americans
are ''only dimly aware" o1 the
health risks of obesity~· -
cardiovascular d i a e a i e .
diebetes and other ailments.
"The primary moUvation
fo r weight loss is a cosmetic
on e rather than a health ooe,"
he stated.
CorOIDil del Mar High SchooL Corona del Mar
D~a Hills High School, Dana, Point
Estancia High SchooL Costa Mesa •
Newport Harbor High School Newport Beach
University High School Irvine
A competition for cash awards
to the Student Body Council
Models open from 10 a.1DJ1lllttldnsk,
ds1ly and Sunday to January 5th.
CltJ ol --
'
.. 8 DAIL V PILOT
Poetry
Blossoms
In Space
SPACE CENTER, Houston
IAP l -Apollo 17 astronauts
Eugene A. Ceman and Har-
rison ~I. "Jack" Schmltt had a
surprise for Mission C.Ontrol
when they awoke OD the moon
Tuesday.
Schmitt offered his version
or "The Night 8 e fore
Christmas":
lt's the week be rore
Christmas and all through the
LM .
NOT A ~TURE was
stirring, not ev'et_ Ceman.
The samples were stowed in
their places with care.
-
FridlJ, --ll, 197Z
'
cemenLeave Apollo 17 ,_
Continues
In Orbit
Expensive Trash
SPACE AGENCY, Houston Mauro, Doacartes ...S TauriJJ.
SPACE CENTER (AP) -(UPI) - A dozen men In Just Llttrvw cost a total of fl30
With moon e1:plorer1 Eugene .12~ days littered lhe moon million. They will aerve a
A. Ceman and Harrl1<>n H. with a half billion dollars useful purpose sending back
Schmitt back in the command worth of junk. data to ac1entlsb on Earth un-
module America with Ronald They threw out their waste til they nm out of power fJr
E. Evans, the Apollo t7 bags, discarded their boots, are destroyed 1n the txm:me
astronauts sleep until early and bombed the lunar crust. moon weather.
afternoon today and then Much of the $517 .28 mffiion Five S4B rocket boolten,
spend their work day on worth of trub left -behind by price tagged at $100 mllllop,
photographic and scientific the Apollo expkirer1 is u:-alao were 1purpoeely crashed
assignments while continuing pensive precision equipment on the moon and the three
in lunar orbit. that could be used again if it moon buggies, valued at $1
Here is the timetable for to-could be recovered. But no one million, were abandoned by
day and Saturday, all times is expected to go back any the lunar roadskles.
Pacific Standard: time this century· In the sis: lunar e1cunions.
TODA y Some of it is now piles of which began 3'tS yean ago, the
1:23 a.m. ..... The three tangled metal, sUch as· the si1 as t·r on all ts , sbed their -
as\,!Ol!J.Uls start an eight-boor hloar landers -costing a total · backpacks, which ' cost a total
resflieriod. of $270 million -which splat-of $3.6 n:illlk>n; left tasef .,
lo ~ • " --• · t.red agaln.<t the lunar rock. refledors valued at $2 mDllon, '-a.m. -""er aw-emng ~ · · k · nd U -ooo ~·of and eating br:'fiakf~ \he' as-•t.R: su: ,science pac ages in a cast o ......,, W"'-lll,
1roo3uts wit 1'Peftd lhelr-1< l-'the~·;;;dust;;_;;o;:;f ~p;:;la;:;ce;•:ll:k:e:Fr::;:a;;::•;ssort;:;:;;;ed;:;:;too;;ls;;:.;:;:;°"\iijm-J ln hopes that, with you, they
soon would be there.
And he in his hammock and Big
day with ~P!i)c and J
scientific experlftlfrl{ cwlgn-
ments. I in my cap
Had just settled our brains
for a short lunar nap
When up on the comm roof
there arose such a chatter,
Kevin Steen, 12-year-SATURDAY
old cancer victim on 7:23 a.m. _ End or rest
his way to greet Apollo ·00 17 str k pen .
. a onauts, ma es 3: J3 p.m. _ Miss,ion, Control
stop in San Diego to 1oses radio · contaCt as com-
check out jetliner con-mand module America moves
I SPRANG from my ham-trots. Kevin, of Care-behind moon.
mock to see what was the free, Ariz., was told 3:33 p.~, Whjie oat' of radio
three years ago tliat he contact, Apollo 17'1 rocket
matter. had only three months engine ts fire\{ to push the ~: :io~ breast of the to live. spacecraft out of lunar orbit
and pla~ the astronauts on a
Came the cluster of objects path for their return to earth. as if in snow. Arid what lO my wondering La T. 3:45 p.m. -With a suceessful ·st 1•1• p engine burq, MWiion Control eyes should. appear . regains radio -acl
But a mlnlatuno rover .. nd 3,46 p.m. - A television 'th. e .. su·ry
eight tiny reindeer. Ex ·n d ~-~ .. Arne . ... And a little old driver so to e camera •-v 1'~ rica is ORY CLEANING turned on for pictures of the liv~ly and quick, -lunar surface as t h e GIANADA MlllS !800.CM$wllrtli St'~OllAIKI ~ ~~ llawthofne I knew in a moment it must SPA"E CENTER (UPI I -f peed f "' spacecra t s s away rom WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Vicltlr)' Blvd l.AklWOOD Cason SL <111d Paramo1111t Blvd.
be St. Nick. AJ; 'Apollo 17's moon lander the moon. llY£1SIDI 3~20 Jyll':I St. IUINA PAii Beach and OrangethGrpe ·
1 heard him explain as over 4 18 Ed r h SANTAANA 3900SoothBristolSt. OlAIME Carde~GroveBlvd.1nd ~ter
the hl.lls 1..·-did S"""'d blasted off, President Nixon : p.m. - n o t e ne -~ telecast. Dpt11 weekcl•y• 9:30 t• t:30 -S.R•••• 10 to 7,
"Merry Christmas to all and praised the astronauts as ----::;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil;;::--to you all, Godspeed." possibly the final lunar ex-
When be finished, Cernan plorers of this century.
said, "'11lat's the first time I beard that, and I've got to say "As the Challenger leaves
that's beautiful." the surface or the moon, we
SEE SANTA
DAILY 10 to·9 CAROUSEL COURT "People always said we are cons:cious not of what we
ought to have a poet in Jeave behind but of what lies f:' ~ ?Ian
space,'' said Schmitt. before us," said the presiden-ooafll oasf
To which Ceman replied, "I tial statement read to Gene -
yet." Evans. ·
.Of fet-s
you a ~ .. --~. .
touch o · Sca.nd l'a
fot" th•~ Cht-i 5trna~
Season •...•
\Ne have
·a New
~hip rnanl
'oF antiQ.ue s.cl
fi-om the 01
· Countr.Y Awa'1~in
:your selectaon.
All I< inds oF qoodie5 .
ancl qad9eto:. fot the '.
home, and CLOGS for men,
omel\ .t children F tom $q~s
ffARfEIT
~Il~~~
SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS
-\IP
•
'
don't think we·ve made it Cernan, Jack Schmitt and Ron~---=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--·-·-------------------
.J
A little buys a .lot of
famo .us brands for shutterbugs
under the Squiggly ® Roof.
4 DAYS ONL V, \
FRIDAY THROUGH
MONDAY.
40AYSONLY.
'FRIDAY THROUGH
MON DAV.
·,
" 154.8'8 78.87 '
MAMIYA /SE KOR
1000 DTL CAMERA
SS mm. II 1.8 lenS with dela/ed action
lime end SllUtter speed lrom110 111\XX'.l
second. Singte stroke f~m ad~
Automatic met exposura ~nter.
MINOLTA Hl-MATIC F
POCKET SIZE 35MM
CAMERA WITH CASE
With flash and case. Electronic
shutter and CdS electnc eye. Qolblg .... __
grOond 112.7 lens.
iDAYSONLY.
FRIDl\V,THROUGH
MONO,Y.
#10
KEYSTONE
EVER FLASH•
Instant-loading and bu111 In
ele(:tronic strobe light.
4 DAYS ONLY.
FRIDAY THROUGH
MONDAY.
GAF HOME MovirouTm
Super 8 camera with t/.1 .7 zoom·
lem.CdS~ectriceye_..,...
Dual 8 pn>jeelor willl f/1 ! zoom
lens. Xl"x-40" t&ble SCt'9\.Carnlh ~ case. 650 watt light. a.; loo, <Oler
movie ftlm encl proc J 61 iQ.
o,.n WffkcMJI l :SO to 10:00; S11nd1y1 10 to 10 • GIAMAPA Mius 11000 Ch•l•••lh Sl • WOOOIAND MIW 21500Y<l"l1¥1. ••IVllSIDI 3520 T~IJ
) !
I
!
i
·~
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40AYSONLY.
FRIDAY THROUGH
MONDAY.
•J
(
KODAK CAROUSEL•
780H SLIDE PROJECTOR
4-inch 113.5 lens.:A«:epts bl"
slides In 80 and 140 slide trays.
Aulomacfc Focusing. Reri'lote
IOfWBld and~ Brig~tneoo con1rol. With f 40 Side :ray.,
•
•
H~ntington . Apartments ,Par W ~y
By TEIUIY S. COV!U.E servictt ~ provlde1 (police,
., lio - - -fire, public worb).
Aparlmenta pay their way In II began as a simple
Huntln«ton Jleli<l! .OO 1lngle economic survey of mobile
lamlly Dame1 don't,'OC<Onllnlf' 11omee. but the planning •WI lo ,a 30-~ 1'Po!l islued by espanded It Into an economic
tbe ~Uy'plannhll del><\rtment. survey of various forms of
110TRER FACTORS, rather parliop;I, apartments came ample, Slade cbecbd the
than economlelf lfe I lovoJVeG I Olft: Qll top because they $UppJy ~police Jog for two months ,
In those declllonl," Harlowe , D10l'e property tax lo districts broke the number of police
, e.rp1alned. ' than hoOJeS. They even auppty calla into perct!lltage1 by
Haitow aal<I the ~" more pi'Operty .tai per chlki° • resldenUal type: then divided
staff hopes to devei~ i lmllar ! 11pr¢Uced., the cost by tt19se percentages.
Flgur<a In the report sbow residential livll!g;
that bo'me1 actually coat city -The reP>rt lists specific
gov~ent J(OS ~ acre revenue an<J, cost figul'f!s for
more .. U1an they provide in • single familf homes, mobile
revenue. homes, f o u r p 1 e x e s , con-
statlstlct on commercial and The, report outlines the
Industrial projects; li b l c h • methodt used by Slade to
could be ~ for master-plan-develop certain figures which
SLADE POINTS out ln bis
report t,hat futW'e revenue
!Ou~es. could c h a n g e
drastically, especially with the
outry against property taxes. ning vacant land. . as a rule aren't kept.
"We'd tlke to build an On the police costs, !or ex-A ' lil~ty apartmeot domlnlwn~ and apartment
complex (SQ untts-per-acre) complexes of various densities
actmny pull ~ per acre, up lo the1 most dense at 30
per year illlo the city coffers units per acre.
aboVe wbat It costs In city It also compares the costs
ecooomlc model'ol·the city,"
he said.
Slade's report conlradicts
some assumptions often made
about apartments and homes. sedfc<s. and ._ of each type for
~ ~ .. school districts.
ftt JIEPOllT WU written
by ,JIOoi ,Blade, an asalJtJnt
pia-, -meye4 tbe v~ tYP.111 'of ttveuue the city re<elWll (property tax,
sale1 tax, other taxes) Ind the
Apartment foes baVe said
FQR THE ELEMENTARY blgb< density pro)ecta require
ocbool-lll•trlds; all 1YPel of greater police enforcement,
develop-ts are •. financial thus .cosung lhe city con-~ sideable' cash. k>ss .. ·except mobile hemes, , . 1 which produce· few cblldren• mE P£1\-ACRE C08t ot
~oMhe high school district, homu.'(Ove. to the a-ere) anJ• a1J 'rtsldential developments, ah. acre · of 30' a~rtments for e~cept aingle !amity hm!\es police.protecl!Qn Is far apart ;
and fotlrple:xes, are a flnanclaJ . $285 tor the homes tn a year,
gain. '!be bomet and fOU!Jllex-' II -~, the-· ~rtrn ts the • ~ the. high hool district ,.,. '" ••• en ' · es''U.9\ sc reporl'.says. , ll321!0f acre ·more than they ' · ~" . bring·tn.. Slade's report says. . llo!'e~er •. the. ?venue gain-~
. Sipde'( report indicates that ed ~ the ~tty fto'm an acre of.
an acre of single family homes apa;tments: more, than of~sets
(five Per acre) costs all the costs m_ pu~llc services,
schools a total of $l s more while,.. the c~ty mcome from
thin the reVenue bi-ought in homes, does nol;. ~-
m that acre. On a comparlsod basi.;>. ftre
· Oil the other hand the ~ protection w a s. constdered
. aqe apartment com'plex with equal for all types ·of con-
30, ;units provides a revenue strucUon. boost of $96 in a year Homes and fourple'Xes re-• quire· riearly three times the
ALL OF SLADE'S statistics ~blic works serv1~· as all
, are hued oa studies of pro--Other developmen~ .. primarily
.._._ ~ within H because of the need fQf ~ ,...M un· streets, sl~s and. 'llghtS;-._, the IJn&lm He surveyed •·· housing tracts, mobile home report indicates.''.-• .' , .; ._ ,,
• courts and aporjmeot com· · · ' plexes to determine t b e IN THE · stllOOL com·
average number of children
"Al.IAICP It ......... ftt fllt#lllf .. tw
' • Slllllft ..... II• "' 5'f p!), tilflKllltt'
-W'tll 11•--Wltw IMt .... "'
........ It c...... ..... -"lllel 11111n1
...,._1111 llCYIH ftt .....,...., Ill•. ter
"'1t 11 ......... .__ fwl, ..-Ill NII
··---~~ .. ., ...... l"llttr Wiier wlltl "ARIAICa" 111111 \19111' 1"'1111 ., • .,.
cl.a• .... frftll wttMvl -""-1 MHlltt
...... ....,.. : •• ·Diiiy~
· -$.1ot.tS' . . . .
· HOLIDAY KOL
. ~ Jl/2" Nl\I"
ORANDA GQLDFl~H
7'k .. $)9.tS
KOi FOOD
4Z'% PlOTliN
B,ANKAMERICARD ..
. Pacific Goldfish Farm , .
' 14700 SOLDENWEST, WESTMINSTER
CIOlllll .,..,...,,. (~ ...... Sall """ •,_.yl o,.._, .. , ...... 893 7105 o,.. s..Hr ,12·5 ,,. • ' -
tl;JY produce, costs of city
services and types of revenue
they .provide.
City planners say the report'
backs up what they have
always said, that apartments
are more flnanciaUY. beneficial
'lo the city than ~-
XHOTr1 --Mflkes Pollat Dick Harlow, aulstanl plan-
ning director, said today the
report wouJd be submitted to
the P I a n n i n g Commlssion
Tuesday for review.
Professor Raymo n.d
Yu.. of Montreal, dlrec·
tor of International
Acupuncture Associa-
tion, demonstrates his
techniques on 1 e f t
cheek of subject.
The report gives oo recom-
mendation on what to do about
apartments, homes or trallen.
'
~5
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~~'111tsioudryand
~your hair al the S&'l'le time. twligtlt yo! _.ru1, .
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I •
19.95
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PIBRQ JDBllQ . ~ '\ GUtPack ,
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---.-
pop-up toaster features -
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'.
15.95
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styling comb
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hot-cool switch
Ideal gift for men or women.
A must for today's longer
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9.95
Panasonic
ste~spray
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Oeiu'9 "-·m"1" '"'"'will' linget•tl>" fll>rie-. Tllton°110io)llllo.
I
'tis
the
season
.I
to be
a jolly ·
shopper
•
DAlLV PILOT
,......._ ___ _
at
Fashion
Island
FASHION j ISLAND
.. • •
NEWPORT CENTER
PKlfic Coatl Highw1y-Betwffn J1mboru Ind MKAtthur
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• Five
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and
Panasonic
A little
buys a
lot of
Christmas
under the
Sql:ligglf
Roof.
~~
. • r ~
•WA IMUll&OOOCNbwd ~ • WOOILAH MIW 21SOOV'ICUlrJ lift. • llYIUIDI 3S20 lrtw •••• ,. AIA3900 ~ 8ridol SC. • fOllA"'1$ltl"*MI ~ • Lllalll Clrsoa SL ""hfnoult llwt •••••• ,, ....... OrM1ttllrOP1 • ~"~"'"aw.~ .......
EXTENDED CHAfSTMA88TOAE HOURS WEEKDAYlt:30 to10:00· SUNDAY 10 :00lo10:00 ,.
1 -
r
• .. '
J.9 DAILY PILOT Frldl)', Otctmbtr 15, 191.:!
Caspers Offers Refined Consolidation Plan
ORANGE COUNTY
By JACK BROBAC&
Of lflt ~lff Plflft ll•tf
ANAHEIM -Wilh his
Iheme. ''Government's Failure
To Respond " Ronald V.' •
C1sper1, chairman of the
Orange County Board of
Supervlaor!, ThW'Sday offered
refinement of long~held belief
that municipal and county
governments should be con-
solidated.
"We are missing the boat
TB!
entirely by not aggressively
consolldatlng the many units
of local gov1tmment in Oranwe
county, Callfornla and na·
Uonwide," the superviaor said,
In a speech here.
"With Californlii 's 58 coun-
tie s, 407 cities, 1,140 school
dlslrlcts and 4,501 apecla1
districts we are be Ing
smothered in ovl!rlapping, in·
efficient units which produce
O·BIT''
BUSUNE
ALL IT NEEDS IS YOU I
T
••• all you need Is a place to go I
one result -the frightening
growth of government."
tit: SAI.0 the result Is red
tape and high taxes amounting
to 43 cents out of every wage
earner's dollar.
Thursday, Caspers offered
a new wrinkle to his con-
solidation plan, a super board
to govern the county and cities
with one "councllvlsor" per
200,000 population.
"I think we could cut-the
number of county and city
en1ployes 25 percent while
doing a far better job for our
stockholders. the people."
He pointed to the now·form-
lng _Council of Governments
which he said was moving in
the direcUon of consolidation.
Tile proposed COG. would han-
dle matters which a r e
regional, rather than local ln
nature, those which cut across
municipal boundaries such as
transportation, air pollution,
sanitation ...
AS AN embellishment,
Caspers suggested that county
government could be made
more efficient by seeking
guidance from outsi de the
organization in a setup similar
to the legislattve analy st
employed by the 11 t a t e
Legislature.
"On an international scale
this could be likened to the
situation where President Ni.x·
on , too, had to go outside of
the official family organization
and use Henry Kissinger for
such an all important task as
ending the war,'' he e:zpla!ned.
While he emphaslled more
efficient government, caspers
also covered a wide range of
subjects iJJ. his talk to Town
Hall at Disneyland Hotel.
'SMOTHERING UNITS'·
Su~rvl&Or Caspers
said is the aversion to say
"no" When it is appropriate,
and the "continuing devotion
to trivial or non-policy ques-
Uons which takes time from
the real issues."
EXPANDING on the failure
to eval uate them, he said:
"This problem may be the
result of not agreeing as to
whom we are responsible -
the individual v o t e r s ,
homeowner groups, special in·
tere.st groups whi ch run the
Club Seeks
Yule Gifts
gamb i t from La I U·n a C.Onttnutna the theme that county government oCftce In
Greenbelt to motorcycle dubs, board members sbou1d face Wa&blngton ls admittedly ln-
et.b.oic tactJons, labor and In-the real luues and not deal creulng cosbl, It Is neceuary
durtry orgonlullooJ, 16 city because !he counly 11 being
governments and 11 pec 1 a 1 with trivial Items, Cl!pers ihortebanged on revenue thsr-
dlstrlcts including school!." 1ald: inJ and other rederal grant1.
)le .charged that all such -He would gladly Ill" ¥P . groUps' have one resounding "WE Sl'.MPLY n-iust stop his ~ob tG mttucture coiliity
slmUarl.ty. selfishness, but ad· be.laboring the time con.sunUng and city governments.
ded he did not meaw to be hearings on how many dogs a ->. gk>bal airport tt Camp
derogatory. · person can have ln his home , Pendleton, blocked by the
On the tack or abtl'ty to say or when a piglet becomes a Marines and San Diego Coun-
"no" he gave as an example, pig and wtietber the air pailu· ty. will need an act of
the case of the Orange County . tian director ii a good guy or a Congress betore it gets off the-
League of CitJes which last bad guy." ground. County govefrunant ls
week, "Uslng their own new In answer lo questions, the working with Orange County 's
n1ath, accompanied by an ap. board chairman aaid: Congreaiooal delegation to
parent ~Watis£actioo' over -Although establishing a get such an act.
their cut of revenue aharlng,1--__::=:::::::....:==='.'...-=--"'--"--------
act.ually asked for one-half of
the county's allobnent.
"TIUS AFTER Bob Tboml! I
( co u n t y adrninistraUve of· I
ficer) I 11\0ught had clearly I
demonstrated the countywlde r
regional aspect of our ac-I
tivitieii," Caspers conUnued. ~~
He said a recent manage-I
ment seminar had revealed' to I
him the real desire ol depart,..
ment heads for clear policy I
rrom the county Board or I
SuJ>E;rvlsors and a more clear. I
cut positioning or the county ·
adminlatratlve office and its I
role. I
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'Ma ritime' i
Deadline Set l
One entree at our
reDllar ..fll'loo !lo .......
anil the Second Mtree ·gmls
I when yo11 p,..••l'lt thlt co11pon -'t't!id
S11ndty thni Thur.cley 'ffl Dec, 221
Many acitlne: en trees from $325 to $5.75
'I
Candidates for the I
Galitornia Maritime Academy, I ·
a three-year training program I
ror offiCi!rs of the maritime I
industry, must apply as soon I
as possible to the office of 7lsl
TRABUCO -Members of Assembly District. I
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the Orange County Women In Cand1dates must be U.S. I
Const r u c l ion will take citizens, 17 to 21 years old,
Christmas gifts and books and high school graduates, Un. I
play equipment to Joplin Boys married and have taken the I'
Ranch in Trabuco Canyon college Entrance Examination I
Salurday. · Board test.by Morch . 1973. I
Donations· or books or games For· more information, con·
He criticized government for
its failure to evaluate the
relative weight or importance
of the programs and the
groups who present them as
they relate to the entire
sphere of operation: what he
are stlll needed. Contact Ella tact the district office of I
van Benthusen .at 543-5153, Assemblyman Robert E . I County Heart Pat Rich al M0-81133 or Badbam, 1648 Westclifl Dr., 1 Kathryn Clay at ~7'137 lo Newport Beach, W-7101 , by
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G M have donated Items picked up. Feb. 1, 1973. roup to eet 1~-----'--'-----~~~---~----~---~
For information or bus schedules call "The Two-Bit 8u1 Line" at 547-6004
or write to us at 1126 E. Washington Ave., Santa Ana, 92701
MGA BS-135 Bedtlde Theetre
TV/R•dlo/Digltll Clock Sy11em
Comb1n1ng a remole I J-diagonally
measured monochrome TV ~creen with
an AM/F"M/F M·AFC radio and deluwe
illuminated dlgit1I cloclr. w1n1 a 24-hour llmer, this 100% Solid State elec1fon-
fc1 inMva!lon is 11\e embodiment ol
MGA ingenuity, ·quality and conven-
ience. A 21 11. mulll·cable co rd con· •
n1c11 the Master Control Center with
!hi aep•rate TV Picture and Soui'ld Canter. Llslan 10 TV or radio through
el1her 11)(11ke1 system, or lhrough pri-
vate earphone Doze 011 to TV or ra-
dio: wslr.1 up the same way, or 10 an
111rm. M1sry Black sun1h1eld Included.
NOW ONLY
16995
...... lH.ts
\
MGA CS-197100% loHd State COfOt ri with the
"FAILSAFE" ohllete and ,.mota oonlrol
ONLY
27895
19" ~lc!ure m•11u,..d diagonally. Her•'• the mos! popular Color
TV s1~.e backed by lh• dependability of th• advanced "FAIL-SAFE cha1sls which empl0ys Integrated clrcuUt lns1ead of heat-generating lubes. Plus, II features a deluxe remo1e con-
trol unll for both VHF and UHF,· pushbt111on UHF tuning, a r~marka~le 4 s!ages of 1.F. ampllflc11ton, AFT and Color Lock. Ifs MGA •baldest stop Into the new era of Color TV1ecr.nology.
'
ONLY 49995
401 Mol11 Street
H•ritllltfClll leach 14YAll£ Goldenwest & Wesner
Huntl119fOn leach
Sales Only Senlce alld Sales 2 .BIG
LOCATIONS 842°5596 l 536-1561 .
~---~~---------..------=-t'<O.lel:M~~-
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Or maybe our $100 minim'"" """"""-'"'
low cost auto loans?
How about our 5%
Golden Passbook Account?
Are extra banking hours
the reason?
Possibly our drive-up
tellerwindo\VS? )
/
Whatever the reason, we're growirig by leaps and bounds.
Our smi ling tellers and prompt, efficient service seem to be
just what our Orange County customers are looking for.
I
Hours: Dally 10AM to &PM
Friday operi tlll 8PM
Drive-up windows open 9AM
ANAHEIM
Llncolri & Beach
821-5410 1,
COSTA MESA
Harbor & Fair
979-1000
SANTAANA
17th.&. Bristol
835-0151 ' .
Soon In the City of Orange '
Join us.'\\\! JDJ1st be doing something right.
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For The
Record
Dbsol•tfons
Of Marriage
AllBUCIU.E lo SON
WESTCl.JFF MORTUARY
U7 E. 17111 SL, Colla M-
IM fW • BALTZ-BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
C..0. del Mar l'IMlll
Colla Mola IM 1111 • BELL BllOADWAY
MOR'nJAJIY
llt Broadway, Codi Mna
IJWlll • • Mc<.'OllMICK LAGUNA
BEACH lllOllTUARY
l'lllLqWMC.,..R4. _ ..
• PACIFIC Yll':W
MEMORIAL PAllX
C..etlt'J Mtnury
Clllpel
R Potllle View OrlW
Newport -· c.tu....., -• PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL nJNKRAL
HOME
'1'11 -Ave. "_ .. .,_ • llMITllll' MORTUAllY
.t tr! Malo IL H---IM••
Anaheim
Man Gets
5 Years
SANTA ANA -Bu1rl
Frsnklln Fiedler bu -sentenced to five yean to Ille
In ' •late priloo In Onnce
County Superior Court ..uon
that clooed the IUo CJllllned
when the romalns of a 'll1IUn man Were found Jn a cave
neor Lake ELlbn.
Judge Wlll1lll)1 Murray Jm.
pooec1 the term on Jl'ledler, ss,
alter the Anaheim man plead-
ed IUllty to -degree . munler chorps · OemmlnC
from the killing June II, 1m, of Montier CbalO . Bladdonl,
oJoo known u They Blacll, 18, of Tustin.
FIEDLER, llleven Dnln
Johnaon, 28, Torrance:, and
Gregory Ow.en Paine, H, I.mg
Be•~. ' were arrested 15
lllClttlu alter tile slayln1 of
·Black when Jollllon -beld
on unrelated ch8fles -brag-
pd ibout the killing to fellow Inmates In Orange County
JaU.
An lnfonner's message to
jailers led diltrict attorney's
lnvestlpl<ln on a probe that
ended with the dl.lcovary ol
Black's body under a pll< of
rocks and rubble In the Lake
Elsinore cave.
Jobnooo waa shipped to
slate priloo last month to
begin 8e!'Vlnl an ldentlcal
sentence of five· yean to life.
He pleaded guilty to second
degree murder and bursJary.
PAINE WAS IODtenoed to
one year In COUDty j8ll ud
three years probo\!On alter
laWJl/en ~ that be played
a more 'nilnor role in the kill-
ing of Black. '!be Long Beach
man provided the .gun and
--cer used In the slaying.
Fiedler and Jobnaon Id·
mllled that they II# Black
tbrou&h the bock of the bead
while the trio WU drivl!lc in
Iha Torrance area. 'Ibey then
l,._ied the body to Lake
Elllnore and dumped It In the
cave.
Awareness
Program
Q1i ~;q~y
ORANGE - A '1Celebration
of Commufttty Awareness"
wl!I be lllged by the Peace
and Fn!edom Party Sunday
from noon unw s p.m. In w.
0. Hirt Park, 'IOI S. Gta.11
SI. here.
Sponoon slate they are of.
ferlni the event In an attempt
to "Nllve the -ol frulth.
t.lon ud alienation Wbich 10
many feel due to their laola.
tion, one from another • .,
They promlJe "no ezceaslve
prop&Janda ootpourlnp, just
good feelinp ud I cbonce fat
all to freely and creattvely es-
P'ftl tbemlelves."
LuTy Kallenberger ,
chalnnan of the Orange Cow>
ty Centl'al Ccmmlltee of the
party, said adllllaslon II tr.e,
rock music wtll be offered ud
there wlll be hot dogs, drinks
and a:~ai tor cblldren.
Yule f.arols
To Be Sung
SANTA ANA -Christmas
caroll daUng bock to the 11th
century wtll be perfonned
Saturday by the Santa Ana
College cho i r to ac-
companiment by a brw
ensemble, string instnunents •
and a barpslchord.
The free event will begin at
I p.m. in PhiWpe Hall on the
college campus. The publlc LI
Invited.
Dance Plaw:ied
Fol"Servicemen
SANTA ANA -All county
servicemen and lllrvlcewomen
are lnYlted to a Chrlalmu
danco at I p.m. Saturday at
the Dllabled Veterans Hall,
201 S. SUl!lvan SI.
The event Is spomored by
the USO CouncU of Oranp
County and the Tultln Aral
Women'• Club.
Cancer Facts
Available '
Information about vartoua
upecta of cancer control Is
available at the. TustJn office
ol Iha ~ Cancer
Socloty, 11311 E. Irvine Ave.,
-10. ..
FlllfBAY'
1n the 1q.11A11m1
WOMEN'S SWEATER SPECIALS
11Xl"1aylic. "-1actline-washable Two styles. bulloo
front orptaln. Both while and colorful crnbrOldery
tr1m. Womerfs Slle!I S.M.L 6.99
SLEEPWEAR SP~CIALS
YOUR CHOICE: PAJAMAS,
SHORT OR LONG GOWN
1CX1\. cotton llannel. Machine-washable P1,-.1ty P<tSlel
prints. Misses' sizes34 to 40.
..
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2/54
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___/ BOYS' SKI SWEATER SPECIAL
LITTl£ BOYS' 2.99 BIG BOYS' 3.99
100% ICrylic. Machine-washable. Big assortment patterns and COiors.
Little boys' sizes S(2/3), M(4/5), L(617): bi\l boys' sizes S(B/10),
M~2/14). 1.(16118).
Friday, DfctmMI' 15, 1972
GIRLS' KNIT TOPS
1.76 SlZES J.<;X
1.8Ss1zEs1-\4
100"ocotton knit. Mach1nc·wash. no-Iron.
Whi1e. gold. navy, red Jr lilac,;.
GIRLS'
BRUSHED
DENIM
PANTS
1.89
SIZES J.6X
2.39
SIZES 7-14
100':b cotton. machine--
washable. Boxer style with
elasticized wais1band.
Contrast color patch pockets.
Bring your
dry cleaning
to the
Treasury.
Su its, coats,
dresses
cleaned
and pressed.
Only 99c
, .
DAILY PILOT J
• • • •
MENS SWEATER SPECIAL MEN'S SHIRT SPECIAL
9.88
Cardiqan In a luxurious blend ol !iO"o virgin alpaca/
~virgin WOOi. Blutt, brown or gold. Sizes S,M.l,XL.
3.98 ' l-
100':• polyeSter. Mach11'1e-wash, no Iron.
Handsome pnnls In variety oi colOfS. Sizes S,M,L,XL
• tlAIA•• 11&1 llOOa-wwti St.• WOODLAND MllU 21500 V'1ctory 11¥4.• llYtlSIOl3520 f'tl• e SANTA AJIA 3900 S4Ultl lrl1tot St.• TOllAft<l s.i'* Olld lt• ........ e &AUW0o0C..-.-~1• Cllld ,._ ..
IUDA PAii lloctlW Ol-m'll'*'°'Pt • OlAlttGordtrl GrWt 11¥4, W Moldit1.1.r
EltTENDED CHRISTMAS STORE HOURS WEtKDAYS 9:30 to 10:00 . SUNDAY 10:00 to 10:00 ,
•
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I z DAIL V PILOT
Ford Bronco 'Dangerous,'
Family. to Get $415,000
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -
The Ford Bronco is an
"inherently dangero.us" vehi-
cle, a federal court jury here
has ruled, and the Ford Motor
Co. has been orde~ to pay
$~ 15.000 to a Utah ran1ily in·
volved in the crash of a Bron· ...
on collision on U.S. 89 in cen-
tral Utah the previous Augu.::1t.
Bronco wu UMD.fe ln handling
and directional conlrOl and the
car's design defects were in
part responsible for tbt fatal
actident.
THE C0~1PLA.INT stated a
1970 Ford Bronco. driven by
David J. ·SUrber of Anaheim,
went out of control on the 1'1!E JUDGE instructed the
highway. crossed into the Qll-jury to rule against Ford if
coming traffic lane and ran in· they believed the company .1
to the Julander car. negligent in the manufacture
Fan1UvClreu Hnsband
netectol'
lnvented
LONDON (AP ).,. HOU!ewlfe
Sylvia Sbnnetl r e c k o n 1
· suaplcfoul wives ought t6
know the truth abollt two-Um·
1ng husbands.
She has invented a "truth
detecto,r," a plastic pendulum
which swings towards the area
where the husband is. Donald B. Julander of
Marysvale, Utah. and his four
children brought the suit in
October 1970 after Mrs .
Julander was killed in a head-
JuJander, bis two sons and of the Bronco. a four-wheel
two daughters, were critically drive utility and recreational
injured. One child suffered vehicle, or even if in spite of
permi.pent brain damage. careful manufacture, the Car
The Sulanders contended tbe was judged to be unsafe.
''If he ~)'s he1s working late
and the Jl"'dulum swings
town, you know he's two-tim-
ing," ~ Sylvil, 51.
· Allied Sur gical Appliance Co.
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iiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!I
CHRISIMAS TJME
iROGER'S
GARDENS
is Living Chr;,;;t mas Tr ees
Unmarried
'
Fa ther
Seeks Son
KI DS IJKE
Ul'~CLE LEN
She plans to • market ~he
device at $8. 71>.
P.O. Box 93, Plttsflold, Ill. 6...-..
• INDOOR WINDOW 'SHOPPING
SEE OUR ALL·NEW CHRISTMAS OECORATIONS
South Coast ?tua . .
Only at Wards, Huntin~on Center
7777 Edinger -Huntington Beach
OUR IOOTH ANNIVERSARY YEAR Even if we weren't in the garden business,
we'd recommend live Christmas trees. It's
so nice to have a growing memory of a
happy holiday; deck ii with outd oor lights
next year! Colorado Spruce, Scotch Pine,
Shasta Fir, Grand Fir, from 3 lo 6 ft.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Michael Neal is an unwed
father involved in a different
kind of paternity suit here.
There is no legal dispute
over whether Neal fathered a
nine-month-Old boy put up for
adoption by bis mother, Neal's
former girlfriend.
6 HOUR SALE-REPEATE~ BY. REQUEST
a nd Hol iday Tri rnmings
.• Our patio department is glittery, golden, silve.r,
crystal and a myfiad of Christmas color1 1n
trimmings for tree and home .
Glitter silver butterflies ·····-··············· .. 45c ea.
Golden Peacoc.ks -·--····-··-··-······---.. ······-··· 98c ea.
Silver Snowflakes ···-··-··············-······-····-·-9tc e•.
Crystal Chandeliers ............................ $2.49 ea.
Old World candle trees -a music.al ornament
with wooden carved figures that rotate around
a tree when candles burn.
and Ma rvelo us Gi ft Ideas
Naturebilt Boxes -a trea1u r• case of sea flora and
shells arranged undar glass -from .................... $7.95
Mis ter Santa place mats ............... ........... . .... $1.25 ea.
Poinsettia print napkins ····--······--·-····-·· .. ····-······ $1 .00 ea.
Christmas China Cache Pots for ferns and hous• plants,
from ·····-···--·-·---······-······-·····-······-··-·····-···········-·--$1.50
Candles and centerpieces, from ····-····--········-········ $1.00
El Cid Glassware,······--··-·-······-····-·······-·······-··· $1 2.00 set
plus Tea Car:ts, Garden Bene.hes , Flower C•rts, Baker
Racks, Electric Garden Tools •
a1id Brown & Jor dan Furniture
We have a brand new shipment of tables,,
chairs and ch•ises in •II the new colors.
If you 'd like Brown & Jordan for your own
home, order now and s·ave at least 20 1 •. T.)ie
prices go up in '73. We'll hold your order and
deliver it in the Spring, if you wish; or usa
your Christmas money •nd enjoy it now!
Come in and see our 9reat new line of Wicker-
ware .. , dramatic accessories for your interior
end exterior dee.orating.
and, of course, our Famous Hanging Gardens.
Brow1e in our Christmas 9ardi ns while we wrap
your gifts, free· of cherge.
2221 Fairview Rd.
Costa Mesa, Callfornid
Phone 642°8686 Open Dally Except Mondays
The 27-year-old musician not
only admits to being the boy's
father, but also ts balling In
court to obtain custody of bb
son -and winnlng.
ONE DAY 9:30 a.ril~ lo 4:30 p.m.
SATURDAY, DEC. 16
SUPERIOR COURT Judge
Jack T. Ryburn, wbo _declartd
Neal the baby's legal father at
a .hearing Nov. 22, has ruled
that Neal ls entitled to custody
if be can prove be is a flt
father.
**+ The ruling could establish
new rights for natural fatben,
who up until oow have bad no
say in the fate of
nonlegiUmate dilldren.
Under an 1851 Califomla
law, only the natural D'l91J:aer
has the right to gi~t
for adoP,tion.
and BEAUT IFUL RINGS
A hearing on Neal's fitnets
ls sdleduled Jan. :13, alter be
undergoes a court-appointed
psycbiatrie examination.
MEANWHILE, 11IE baby ""
mains in the care of uniden-
tified adoptive parents who
took him into their home a few
days after bis birth.
Neal, who writes songs,
sings and plays the guitar,
earns $125 a week working at
a movie location comp8{1Y. He
lives in Hollywood with his
mother and }'OWlier sister and
wants to make a home for the
baby there.
. MEN'S-WIES'
-CHILDREN'S
RINGS
The adoptive parents have
declined. to discuss their feel-
ings, as bas the baby's mother,
who was a high school student 20~ 25~ when he Wll!I born. She sto~ I o FF :1"e:ffi~i~f.'1i:~ . ' . 0 0 0
"adamant" that the baby DQt •
be placed with him. MANUFACTURER'S REPRESENTATIVE SALE ON
Neal said he feels sym-
pathetic toward the.adoptive ENTIRE RING AND DIAMOND COLLECTION OF
STONES
GEMS
DIAMllNDS
parents, but a_dded that adop-
~~~,L~:;.~~~] s5100,000 llVENTORY
~hl~·m~andii:iwiaints~hl~m~."iiii.J~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-ijiiiiiiiiiiiiii ii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Now LEASE that speci~I car of your choice ·at
a payment YOU can AFFORD, from -
Orange County's No. It Buick ·Opel Dealer!
NEW 1973 CENTURY LUXUS COLONNADE
EqvlpjMid wilt! hirbo hydr•m•tic tr1n1 •• power 1to1ri119, r.dio, W/S/W
tit••, tl11ted 91•11, t ir conditio nh19, ind po••r disc br•lt11.
New 1973 Buick Centurion Sport Coupe New 1973 Buick Ceatury Station Wagon
f
I ""' New 1973 Buick RiYisa
•'
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Eq11ipp1d with turbo·hvdr•·
m1tic lrt111.1 pl"'r· 1tr.; rtdio,
tilt whl., W /S/W tir11, tint-
ed 9lt11, t ir cond., pow•r
wiitdows, ltt1kt1, ttlf, t Utt.
h~ttrior, •ti'•to-betieh ot b11c· ~.1 ••• t.. . •
I '\ y .. , fM4f .,.. " ... ., .. .... ,
, ............... h .it, •• -I
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MONTH + TAl
Eqvlpp.d with t11rbo.hyd11•
m1tfe tf•nt., powor 1t1ori119,
rtJle, w/J/W tirt1, tint•d
91•11, air con4. 1ttd pow•r
cll1c lwtlt",
s..1733 .. !: I • , ...
Eq11lpp.d wlfli t11rbo.hytlr1•
ll'lttic frtn1., pow1r tt1tri119,
rtcUo, w/1/w tlr11, ti11te4
tl111, t ir coricl,. tnd power
cl J11 hralt11.
,.,.... .. ._.. • 1,HI .... ,_ .......... T ....... pefwl1 ..... • Wll ••• .. ...,., ......._ 1'e ..... 11 9!I
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BUICK•
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A
Se
bea
will
M
Bea
pe
sho
the
T
SE
ste
fo r
col
,The
REL
end
adju
pen ...
FR
real
"' uni
Chri
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OAILV Pl~OT
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi Dandy Don G~s Flying
Ex-gridder Mereditli Takes to Sky iii Cessna. Ads WESTERN ST ATE UNIVEISITY
COLLEGE OF LAW By JAY SllAIUltnT
NEW YORK (AP) -Dandy Don
}der<dlth learned to fly wbe!I he waa the
Dallas O>wboya' quarterba ck.
Linebacker• gave him the leuooa when
the CowbO)'s' blot;kln1 fell apart.
' Now he'• learh.lnt to Oy again, but thl!
time In a lJCbt plan<. It'• all part of a
series of television commercials he's
doln& In a noUooal Jwn-to-ny campaign
sponsored by Ceana Aircraft Co.
The i..on. began In Grand Prairie,
Tu.,' 9(ter be wrapped up bis chores
with Frank Gll!ord and Howard Cosen on
the ABC televblon -k's Monday
night pro football show.
IT'S HARD TO THINK o1 the happy-
go.lucfl7 Meredith aa a pllot. But be says
it'• IOIDethlng ht always wanted to do'.
He made a te14aUve stab at it 10 or 12
yeart 1110, but never.~loed. "<>h, oh! When he comes in marching like a private·
that meap_s he's going to aCt l_iM:e ~ 1eneral all day.'' Is be looking forward to il with white
~""<o:::c:-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-lmuc~es? .. ~'.:!• .. Well, kind of, I guess," be said in an
interview.
"But I'm not really afraid or 'BP. Circus in Town preh<nalve about It. I'm anxiOWI to get It
Doodles Weaver, Ross Allen, done. The only reaerva.Uoo I have ii that A , circus, sponsored by the
Seal Beach Lions Club to
benefit its eye care program,
will be held Dec. 29 at
McGaugj> School In S • a I
Beach.
There f Will be l•o
performances or the two-hour
show at 2 p.m. anc.J a p.m. in
the school aucUtorium.
The circus will feature
and Davee, the balancing
clown. There will also be a
tlghtwire walker, jugglers and
an acrobatic team. .
Admission Is $1 fo1"children,
I: for adults llJld II for a
•peclal family licket.
Tickets may be purchased
from Lion's Club members.
Seal Beach men:hont> and at
the door.
~nt3'~
Big Truck Ban
LONDON (AP) -'!be
Greater Loudon Council said It
intend1 to ban heavy trucks
from central London because
they are "an inherent im·
pediment aiid danger."
~toehlng $ttJff ors
Come celebrate! The ;jieppermint pier
has• shiploads of m1glcal gifts. Elfin-
prictd. Sized for Christmas stockings!
'
'
SET THE FJR_f'PLACE BLAZING. Long·
~temmed woOdcn malches, espec:la/ly food
for lighting firewood. Boxed in bJU:i"8
colOrs to decorate your hearth. .f f9
(They're containers to keep! . , . , I
RELY ON A HOLIDAY DATE-KEEPER.C l-
endrum from England. Perpetual calendar
i!djusts for any mo nth of the year. Props
pencils and pens inside! In white, 249 orange J.nd blJ.ck. 41/2" x J" •.•
->
"' '
GREEK CLASSICS IY THE SLEtGHFUL Hand-
piinted ceramics from Greece! Authy ntic
replicas ~-museum pieces! Vases, ts"owls,
pitchers. M .1ny classical 249•1999 shapes and sizes .•....•...
MAXE YOUR HOLIDAY COOKING FUN.
Christmas kitchen helpers. An assortment
of aprons, oven mitts, potholders and
padded trivets. Merry colors, l DO •OO
witty sayings! • • • • • • • • • . . . • ...
we're working on 1 U<-Ume tchedule. ·
"I'd really like to enjoy flying apd I
think I will. But to COIDjliete tbe com-
mercials on schedule we'll hive to get
them done by the end of the year. So I'll
really ha\le to get on the stick ..rjien I get .
back home and fly every day."
111E C0!\1MERClALS ARE scheduled
~art appearing April l on all three
television networks for at least 13 weeks.
Jn tbe.m, Dandy Don will be shown pro-
Ailing Man Di.es
Before Treatment
. MACEIO, Brazil (AP) -A 63-
year-old man who waited three
months to get an appointment with
the Social Security medical office
in this northeastern Brazilian city
died Thursday while waiting in line
at the clinic, police reported .
He was identified as Jose Seabra,
a pensioner who had been in
greulng from fledgling b1rdman to solo
performer at a Cessna pilol center.
tri-LaMing of Gardner · Advertising
Agency/St. Louis. is putting together the
commercials, which also "'ill appear in
newspaper and magazine ads.
He says Meredith was chosen as Ces-
sna's flying spokesman "because he
looked like our kind of guy. \Ve wanted
somebody who was personable and
likeable, which he certainly is ."
Meredith said his selection "was really
kind of ironic, because two days beCore
they called me, my wife and I had been
literally sitting around talking about how
we wanted to learn to fly."
WHEN WUL HE GET his private
pilot 's license?
"I really just don't, know right now,"
he said. "Probably early ~t year. After
we get the solo dooe ~ ·the com-
mercials done, then I hope to fiy at a
leisurely schedule·& COQp)e of times each
week." '
Has he · been cleared for take off by
Howard Cosell.?
OF ORANGE COUNTY
PlO\l'ISION"'+.Y•ACClEOITEO IY TKE COMMln& C)ll.
1Al IXAMINE15 Of' THE STATE UI Of CAUFOIHIA.
Now •ccepting men •nd women for
•dmission to th e Spring 1973.St"'estw.
• IF YOU HAVE 60 4ccept•bl• units,
• IN 2 YEARS of p4r!.!u'tle l•w ~1ud'f' 13 dt~l•t ptf
w~ek l to 4 hou,. per donl, y<)IJ (Of\ et1n yoUol'
S ':. l, deg<ee; dn d
• IN 2 ADDITIONA L YEARS of p•il·lime low lllldy you
c •n l!d<ll ~c;ur J D. deg••; tnd be<ome
ELIGIBLE TO TAKE THE
CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION
Wllll 011 'HONt fOl INFOIMAT/ON Ol CATALOGUE
800 Sollth Brookhurst
Anoheim-92804
17141 635-3453
APPLY NOW FOR FEBRUARY 5th
DAY, EVENING OR
WEEKEND CLASSES
ST\IDINTS ,IUGllll fOI •EOfWl'f INSU•10 SIUDlNT LOANS
11.~~~~~"::.:.;":o:v:••~•:o:•~v:rn:":::"':_~~~-·
,general m ·health.
"I'm going to take him up on my firstll ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=: ijiijii!jiiii.llOlt> Oight," Dandy DO!f'drawled. i
' Calibrated.
'
GLASS-BELT TIRES
WIDE GENERAL JUMBO 780
GLASS-BEL'TED for tong mileage
--POLYESTER CORD BODY for 1trongth
TIRE
CHAINS
Callbrotod for. smooth ride CAMPERS -TRUCKS
Jumbo 780 .•. the same tire that comes on new 1971 PASSENGER CARS
cars. Overstock because of the automotive strike.
We've got 'em ••• come and get 'em! PASSENGER CARS
WHITEWALLS
Soi• A 7&.13 {6.00·13), lir1 "!lnl 1nd co,,,plGI car .. F1d. Ex. Tax It SI 90
per ll•e.
Size F 78-H , F78·1! (7,75·14, 7,15·1!1
.. , tit• many s!ande1d cars. Fed. E•. ,.,. is S2.S5 "nd 52.61 per tire d1pe11d·
l"g on 1120.
General
JET-AIR® ID
WHITEWALL
Sill£ 76-1' (7.35·1•). lits tnolf lfller· "'•dl1te t••a. Fed. E"'-ta.oi ;. S2.35 p1r the,
Slz• a 78·1! (8.:15-1!)., :1tt1 m•f!Y larg1r CllS. Fed. E~. Tl• Is '2.77 per
111e.
OUR BEST
4 PLY NYLON CORD
e Famous Dual Tread Design
e Duragen® Tread Rubbtr
e Contoured Shoulders
SIZES: 520.:' J to tOhl 5°L711l I
CAMPERS & TRUCKS
SIZES:
800116·5 700.:1 s
950116·5 175116·5
790.:17 750117
12-16·5 10·16·5
70h16
UNIROYA~
GUARDIAN
4-Ply Nylon Co•d
, ......... u
4for
7~~ZxEl3 $1695
JUST ; f,'..1 is~ $299;~ ·~~00
--------------------77Sx1S
COMPLETE
BRAKE RELINE
USED
TIRE
VALUES
NOT JUST A BRAKE RELINE. • • 9 Lots of
Non·Skid Tread
FRAME A BOUQUn FOREVER: Sprilys of
real ' flowers, ar ranged in a shadowbox.
Framed in 6 colors. All hand-crafted, all
unique. Hang or sta nd thein for 199
Ch ristma s cheer! About 2"x3•xs•.
.=-~---....J GIVE A CUODL Y KOALA FWM SANT A.
Here's an irresistible softy -our koala
bear. He's the essence of cuddly, all fuzzy
<1nd warm . From Europe. 6•
•nd 12' s;zes. .. .. .. .. .. .. • 611.811
•
EARTH FLOWERS PRESERVED IN GLASS.
Real owers reflect the season's tidings!
Dried for safekeeping. Arranged on a bed
Of Spanish moss . Choose
9•;.·, 12", 15 .. bot!les .....
PIER 1 IMPORTS
2710 ·HARBOR BLVD.
• COSTA" MESA
ICOIMll HMIOI _. AIA-1
SHOP ,MONDAY "''u SATURDAY 10-10 ·
SUNDAY 10 -7
540-7337 ...
SHOP ll!IGlns -OPEN ''T1L 19 P.M. ' .,
t~ .
•
I
BUT WE QO ALL THIS:
1.1-NIW ......... .
........ ct114 .... h!
J, hlMdkl tH cyllHen •• oll ...... J .................. ,011~
4.ty ....... fl1kl. 4. ,..,.. ___ rer.111 tprlltlp.
3-Piece
s. 11d _. .,. ciu 4 •rH• "'"-· '· hpecJi '"*' ........ i •.
7. A4111t ...... -4 clieck
llMllf'lllKY ll•CMJll•
•• It ... ,... .,.... .. tofltfflle.
WIND 'N •RAIN •SUJT
Year.Round Outdoor Protection
Set Include• . • •
o FULLY ZIPPE~EO $198 JACKET ·~~ABLE
•DETACHABLE ONLY HOOO
MOii U.S. ComOlld Car, Ct~ Brtkf:S Sljghlly Hlg!ler.
RAIN COAT
HEAVY DUTY, VINYL
For Men or Wamen
For Cir e
Offic1. e Horn1 e Full len9tft 1lpper plut 1111p1 e Co11 .. eni1nt c•rryi119 <It• e S'"1ll, Medium, lor9t
I extr1 ltr91
e Air "'"ts l poc••h
Don .Swedlund
I '
c ... p1o10 c:.r
t:St Sloe. ltst I '
•
AS ••• LOW
'5''
111 Sbon To Flt Mo11y Co~
1
•
l
/IJ DAIL V PILOT
I tJ\AS IOP 6 1i!A!N l1'11"H' l.-AB-
l'.11() 1ilfN CAi.\E ft.l1S DOL f'tUN--
Dumping
Of Elderly
Testified
SAN FRANCISCO (AP I -
California's nursing homes
were described as dumping
places. lacking in kindness and
employing inept help al a
hearing held here by the Joint
Legislative Committee on Ag-
ing.
A parade of witnesses at the
session. third of four being
conducted over the state,
( !rfEDICINE )
brought little iri the way of
sympathy for the _problem of
the $1-billion dollar industry. ,
The general tenor was that
about 100,000 of the sick and
elderly are being "dumped" in-
to nursing homes and cOn-
valescent hospitals where they
moslly receive marginal care
from employes who are
"undertrained, underpaid and
overworked."
e Clahns Late
SAN JOSE tAPI -About 70
Santa Clara County
an est hes i o, logists have
threatened to , stop working
l\1edi·Cal patients after Feb. 1
because they say the govern-
ment is paying them too lltUe
too late.
The doctors complained
-that they have received only
one dollar in payment for
every $7 in legitimate bills
lhey sumbitted to Medi-Cal in
lhree moJJths.
A new computerized billing
program being tested here and
in San Diego County was
blamed for the late payments.
e Probation,
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Dr.
Seymour Matanky of
Woodland Hills bas received a
suspended three-year sentence
and been fined ~.500 after
pleading guilty last October lo
Z-4 of 39 co.unts of filing false
Medicare claims.
U.S. District Court Judge
David Williams gave Matanky
the suspended s e n t e n c e
despite a probation office
recommendation that be be
given a prison term.
'"The best sentence would
be altacking the greed of this
defendant." Williams said.
Matansky was convicted of
billing eight to nine visits a
month rrom each of his
Medicare patients w h e n
evidence showed he saw t~
only once or twice a month.
' e Ser .,i<!e Hit
SANTA MONICA (AP)
Sen. Alan Cranston (0-Callf.J
says he intends to re--introduce
legislaUon lo upgi;ade medical
services around the nation by
calling for federal assistance
to local communities for
development of emergency
medical service systems.
0-anstoo, addressing the.
California Public A e a 1 t h
Association, said thousands of
persons die needlessly each
year because or poor or slow
emergency treatment.
He said that accidental
deaths could be reduced up to
20 percent if proper treatment
were administered at the
scene of an accident or
enroule to a hospital.
e Bone Gro11llh
LOS ANGELES (API
Two medicat researchers al
UCLA say they h a v e
discovered what controls bone
growth.
A protein, BMP, and an
enzyme, SMPue, w o r Ji;
1ogethtr to repelr cracks and
breakl In -by genentlng
and ..,.trolling new bone
growth, 1lle reoelldlers Aid ,
'J'l1e discovery could lead In
JO year1 to improve treatment
of bones damaged by ac-
cldentl, birth defec:tl o r
d1lealt, oa1c1 Dr. M1nboll R.
Urlst ind hi1 colJe11u•,
l{Jsbuhl Iwata.
! •
--
ake _._ ...........................
him happy •••
make it
knits
c.
•
robert hroce
classics In lambswool
Sweaters just the way he wonts them. Naturally
luxurious lambswool knits by Robert Bruce , ••
oil mochine woshoble, dryoble. In his fovorite colors.
A. Lombswool cordigon, 20,00 B. Shetlond pullover, 16.00
C. Lombswool v-ned pullover, 16,00.
Men 's Sportswear, SO
..
haggar .
dotibleknlt
Joel knit shirts
'
G ilt knit. he'll put together w_ith eose. Shirl:s by .
J oel of Colifornio of 85 % Amel® triocetote/ 15 '!. nylon
... the oll-yeor short sleeve knfts. Eoch, 15.00, Hogger
!lo res orstroight legs . , , it's his~hoico. Eoch , 100 %
Docron® polye ster in all the populor colors, 18.00,
Men 's Sportsweor , 50
' •
0"-ANGf, MALL OF OIV.NQE
2)00 N. T111tl111 Stt'Hf 1714) ttl-lll I
ANAHEIM NEWPOAT HUNTINGTON IEACH
7177 Etll1t9•r Av•nw• (7141 ttJ:.))31 444 N. E1cli4 17141 IJl-llll 47 F11~lon hl1MI 17141,644.1211
SHO, 10 A.M. f• t 1JO ,,M. MONDAY lH~OUGH fltlDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. •1 6 l".M.
' ' i
SUNDAY i2 NOON to I P.M. '
J
•
'"
l
ClltltlTOS ·
500 Lot C.ffltot Moll 12111160-Hll
pir
ere
act
Leg •
s
M
Ga
q
th
e
land
de ·
Env
Gui
••
•
Private
Logging
Continues
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Uigglng ·Oil California's eight
mllllon acres of P.r Iv ate
timberland will continue under
a 9't of emergency forest
practices rules readopted. by
the $ate Board of Forestry.
By a voice vote, lhe board
extended present i n l e r I m
guidiijnes -which in.muct
private Industry on how to
restock and cut timber -for
another 120 days.
The regulation s, due to' ex--
pire al mkjnight Dec. 26, were
mood.l.seUer, our
romantic -shawld.ress
By Shorbet Originols, o
dolactoblo ·dri# of loce
and soRness in the new
notural color that's every·
body's love •.. to wear
with its ow n matching
showl. 8-16, 32.00. Moil
and phone orders in vited.
Contamporory Coreer, 127
, -
Friday, Dtc:embtr 15, 1972 DAILY PILDT JS
plald·perfect
the party whirl
At their--hou-re-or you rs, try th is
king of casual. contemporcry
da sh ... New Impressions' Icing
sweep of acrylic tartan plaid
topped in solid color acetate,
with on easy cardigan jacket to
loss over all. Novy/wine, 8-16, 54,00,
Mail and phone orders in11ited.
Windsor Misses' Dresses, 49
( ECOLOGY ) :==Skt:=::::::!~;...____,......,.
adopted earlier this year to nu
a void cre1ted when a state
appeals court held the old
Forst Practlcet Act's ad~
tion uncon11tltutiona1.
Three bills designed lo
create a new roresi practiCe
act failed to clear t'b e
Legislature this year.
e 'J'lrkets lsnf!fl
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -
CaWomia Highway Patrolmen
issued 87 tickets \n the first
day of a crackd0\\'11 on com-
muters il1egally using speclaJ
dQcount lanes on the Golden
Gate Bridge, officia l s
reported.
Despite repeated warning,
during the last two weeks of
November, CQmrnuters cOO-
tinued to scoff at a regu~a ' '
which restricts two lanes
the UJe or cars con
three or more occupants. •
Drivers entitled to use these ·
Janes can buy a $1 toll card
good for a month - a beftf
saving over the regular II).
cents-a~ay charge.
The program of s~lal
lanes started about a year' ago
in an effort to eut traffic and
reduce smog by encoorq!ng
commuters to form car poob.
eAlde Na...e••
SAN DIEGO (AP)'
Norman E. Schell, 5.1; who
resigned three monthJ' ago u
director of the Arizona' Health
Department's air "P;>UuUQn
COl>lrol division, haJ been
named chief of the ~i.ng
bureau of the San Dielfd Coun-
ty and city air polllitioo COO· trol ~. · ·"Ibe~e here seem in-
terested In preservtni the en-
vironment," Schell sa.ld ln an
interview.
Schell complained upon quit·
ting the Ar!Jona post that "one
canaot effectively deal with
one's hand.a lied behind blm.'l
• He said his divt!ioo wu
caught in the c......iire ol the
Arizona Health Bo If d ' I
cllaqe !nm a t4llflb to a
llOfle!" pollutlon-<:ol1lr01 -and the public'• desire for
controls.
e s,_e C•rr.si'
LOS ANGELES, (AP) ~
Vast tracts currenUy pro-
tected under the' county's
Envlronmental Development
Gulde would be ellminaled
under a "final open space
plan" proposed by the county
Planning Commission.
Included in the a r e a s
ellmlnated from open space
deofgnaUon would be large
se¢11ona of the Santa Monica
MOW1Ia!n1, pam ol the san
Gabriel Mountalna and 49 ac-
qulaltlon projects Io cat e d
throughout the county.
'Jbe new open space plap.
ellmlnatea: all of the COlDlty'a
land acquisition programs a!I
developed under the 11711
Environmental Development
Gulde.
e 'OK Soug•t
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
'
•
, the wardrober,
sclllptared In Avna• polyester
Three perfect ports lo toke you
through the holidays into Sprin~
.•• Non Scott's elegantly tailored
jockot, penis and skirt, making o
beautiful mix-match in scroll
pattern Avlin® polyester, White
or navy, 10-18, 52.00.
Misses' Suits , 21
the naturals
color the
caftnn ......
The cofton's breezy silhouette
is a sign that natural dressing
is most exotic of all. Let one
envelope you during the holidays.
S-M 'L. By the Company.
Sketched: Rick-rock on muted
cotton stripes, 26.00.
Not Shown: Brig ht embroidery
on natural cotton only, 26.00.
Mail and phone orders invited.
Junior World Dresses, 64 ·
City Council took lnlUaI atep1 L-F~>~~-"'c-~~ lo exompt the Loo Angel'"
Harbor District Iron>
provlJkm of P,,,P. IO after an
of!lctal lald the llCt could bl
d!Julnlul to area b\lllnelael. ·
'Ale oouncll lnltructed 111<
Harbor Dep•rtment to
prepare~ Ill\ appllcaU.O to a
"llOl1al conunlulon lo et•
elude the harbor dlotrlct from
~nnlt rtqulrtinlntl hwolving
malnlonlnce and repair work.
Prop, 10 nq1dnl permlll
fa< ""1lfructlan along tbe
coosl.
JllcJn}PTIP~ IJh@Ilftailca1d}W % . L1Ilo.® IlDIRID<ID ........... ~~'-/
ANAHllM Nlw'°Rf 1 HUNTIN$tON I EACH ORANWE, MALL 0, OlAN&E CElltlTOS •
444 N. lt1tll4 (114) IJS.tlJI 41 fethlo111 hl•ttd 11141 644·1212 1111 E4lflf•r AYelttl• l71411•2·1JJI 2100 N. T111th1 Slrett 17141 t•l-IJll 100 lo1 Cttttto1 Mtll l21JI 160-0411 ' ' ' SHOP ti.JO AJA. t• 10100 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH SATUltDAY. SUNDAY 11 A.M. tt I P.M. \."
I
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-
I
r
I
I·
•
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<
l
•
FridaJ, Oettnib« 15, 197i
Seal Beach
Extension
Fi11is1ied
An extension of First Slreet
in Seal Beach, providing ac-
cess to the city beach from
Pacific Coast Highway , was
officially opened by Mayor
Frank Sales this week.
•
Sales of Tahle 1 Win es Sk yrock et
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Consumption or wine co.ntlnues
to skyrocket but increasingly
so~ted American pa18tes have turned fronl the
Sl"ett tatte of dessert wines to
the dry, iltitely flavor of table
varieties, aays a wine ex-
ecutive. ·
distributor ror the Chrlstian
Brothers Wines and Brandies.
WELSCH SAID that recent
sales figures smw table wines
accounting for more than 51
percent of alt wines sold in the
United States. Sweet wines
con1prise less than 2S percent ·
of the .fotal, be said.
dessert wines slW held a llight
sales edge "but from then M
·table winet have moved
ahead far more strongly than
dessert wines," Welsch aakt.
HE ATl'IUBUl'ED lhe gain
by table varieµet to the in-
creasingly eduC8ted taste of
American consumers.
Lale IJguret Indicate that
ahlpments of table winec Ulla
year are nmn1nraome •per-
cent ahead of a -porable
lime period In Il71, he aalcl.
Sales said the new portion of
Ole street, running between
Central Avrn~ · anCI the
highway, ~·1n reduce the tr a f-
l fie flow Ol!r lhe other .city
streets in fhe older sectiOn of
the city and provide another
accets to the beach and the
"l\eppfted sales figures for
California premium t a b t e
winea, thus far in 1972 , in-
dicate that table wines are ad·
vancing )lJa times faster than
dessert winea," Jack Welsch.
exeCµtiw -v1ce president or
Fromm & Sltbel Joe., said ..
"It used to be tbe other way
around," Welsch cootlnued.
"Fifteen years ago., 1 d~
wines aCCQUnted for mort than
62. percent of all the wtne sold
In the United States, and they
outsold table wines 2 to 1."
"At one point, Americam
had never been exPo;Sed to
table wines, •1 Wel$clt said.
"Now we are among the most
cosmopolitan people of the
world, with a genuine ap-
preciation lor line lood and
fine wine."
The IO willtrl .. co...-.d lo
the report -.,,.,.. ,\lmaden,
Paul Masaon, the! Chriallan
Brothen, Berillfer, Weibel,
Louis Martini, .,.W e n t e ,
Beaulieu, Lorbel and Con-
cannon.
"BASED ON FIGURES
already reported, we can ei:-
pect these 10 ·wloeries to ship
111h million cases (27.6 mlllion
gallons) ol table, des!ert and
Sunday is
Fl1t1BAT , 1 . . .
. W"I T....-.. L<>og Beach Marina. Welsch's firm ts worldwide As late as six years ago,
in the 'f,f.!ltlij®I
PHOTq fl,AP -Eliza
Simon<1. IQM11er Play-
boy 'bunny, has been
!ired frobi job ·as juv·
enlle officer in Silver·.
ton, Obi0 •. 5he'-~~~i~S ...
beeaUSll 8(?3llty 'P~ · •,
h.as re~p(>flared:~t.: ·
ly. Qffldals den1"1Ml'i
ll>e-.Ori f~ her.if,.,. ~; t!ley ~ge>-
~aiiOB., ··~ 1.:lo •I ' • ' 'I~ .. -.~"' ·, •• , . Rij· ~,er . 1n'tt
. ~ '·'{
Selected:' , -.:':
'
' '
"'Kraut' ·'
.
From Wire Services
Presidential aide Henry A.
Kissinger has been named
"Kraut Character of b
'Vear" 'by the · National Kraiit '( ;)
Packers AssociatiOn. · '
Calling Kissinger a "colorfdl
character in many ways," the
group said "his name is con-
( PEOPLE )
stantly being associated with
world leaders as well as a long
string of lovely ladies."
The kraut packers group,
holding its amual convention
In Rochester, said it will send
Kissinger a ooe-year supply.of
sauerkraut.
*· Apollo 17 astronauts Eafene
A. CuUn and HarriMll H.
• Scblnlli-ilave been · granted
hooorary lifetima-lnlfllbership
.Jn the Auto Body Association
of America In · ncopltion of '
fender ~ wort m the lunatcraf:t'. FtOYer while oo the
moon.
Reg , Predham, president or
the oa,tjonal organization of
auto body repairmen, an-
nounced the award at his
repalr shop In Neptune, N.J.
• .Predham , said ibe
0$lr<ioaul8 -woWd be seat lBpel pm; and membership
certificates.
' ~ty c:ounct.n Wayne B.
Qiarp of Long Beech has beeil
named in a ~million breach
of cooJ:ract suit filed in small
~lain)S court by entertainer
Lee SU>l.
· Silva, a Montel"6' Park
musician, accused the city
official, owner ol Ille Brass · Peruiy Inn; With falling to giVe
him two-Week notk:e before
termloatlng hb employment,
as agreed upon. ,,. * .. Martha MltcbeU and Walter
J. mckel will be among the
guests Saturday at a White
House dinner honoring pll!t,
present and future members
of President NQ"on'.s cabinets. ~ i!ilr.clie~,t ti!fa = ;"'; or ·,.. Nhons 111nce her hui-
band, former Attorney
G<neral John N. Mitchell,
rislgoed under her ultlmatwn
as the President's re-election
cami,Wgn director.
U. Gov. Ef Relwb has
no t.nunecliate pians to move
lrom hia suite of offices in the
e a r t ~.qua k e-prone state
Capitol, his top aide said.
Offloes just above
Relnecke's are being vacatect
in the next hro montha under
order ol <the Joint Rules
cc.nmU«M b e-c a u 1 e ol
engineering report rwamings
that the buiidillg might C:ol-
lat* Iii • -... u.-.... .-lliq-. . ,
1""" llU betct -· ~tlon Reinecke might
-\nave fnlm hll ......r lloor ol·
. lleo :]Ult ~ tllA' Scoiale
c:hamber.
Millea r r r. ,j •• ,. '. the
Unlvenlty ol Cblcalo'• 'ln-
tcrt•w'trtlill7 knolr1I eoanomitt
will ......., opepbea.r) ...
IUrgtll'J' Way at St. Mary)
Hoeplta~ in Rochester, Minn.
P'rledmln'• olflce rtleased
• ...-.......i .. -q1IOjed the ..._w ppesw as aayln·
"'lfio ........ ., tbo operatlo lo It ,......, 111 occkislon • ,
my r1lbl !111a<J. Results
lhll .,. """" been ,.
ctllont aad have I•~'
pt0dat1d 1 comjlete cwi
the ulfu tbal l have be ,
eiptrienciu,g."
. '
UVING ROOM
. .,
4DAYS
ONLY!
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REMNANTS lb BAGS . 104
REDUOIONS ON REMNANTS l( Ong'' ·n'a1 Out they go for $25 00 . I
Even the Rug Deolerlhos o • ea. (arpef
year-end cleoronc•! Thes•-
ore values to $100.001 All Bags 1hopes, sizes, colors, 1e1<-11' 5" x 13' 8" Green Tones
m-S-Come scrabble through 12x 13' Green Tweed Shag
the whole selection. You'll 12x 13'3"GreenTweedHi1.o $4 00
find once-in-o-lifetime 12 x 10' 5" Gold Twetd shOg_
bargains like 1he111t: 12 x 14' Gold Hi lo • ea.
121<10' OrongeTweed 12x10'GoldShog
12 x 12' Gold Hi-lo 12 x 11 ' SH Blue/Green Hi Lo
12x12'AvocodoHilo 11' 5" X 8'8" Bei ge/Wht
12x 14'GoldHilo Shag
10 x 12' Avocado -Hilo 12ll9' Green Tweed Shag
12x 10'4" BJue/GreenShog 9' 10" x 10' Green/Whitt
12x 10' G<>ldTweedS-S-
12 x 10' Avocado 12 x 9' Gold-Hi-lo
This greot Americon lrodi-
lion makes o greol Chris!·
mos gih! Genuine, oll Nyton
carpel, double-handled,
multi-c:olored, lnside-~iip--
P,ered-pocket, foshionoble
ond practical.
$8 ••••• 12 x 12' 9~'~reen Tweed 12 x 8'8" GreenTweedShog
·-~~~~~~~-'-~~~-"""-~~~ ..;;C;,;;;AM""P""ER.;..S _________ .,.;1=05
1
BATH 10&
REV AMP. THE OLD CAMP
With Camper-Size
Remnants Just
101
517.00
BARGAIN
BATHROOM
REMNANTS.
$13.00 ...
CREDIT 107
The Rug Dealer
Js Pleased To
'"Exteild _
Credit To All
His Customers.
Revitalize Your Living Room &
Hall with ·Quality Carpeting
A iplosh of color mokes all
!Irie difference beside the
borh. The Rug Dealer hos o
ronge of remnants guorort-
teed to brighten your bath-
room. Try him! Save on reg-
ular values lo $30.001 . .
Your-first pc;iyment isn't due
until Jonuo ry, 1973. No
down payment nece1sary,
BonkAmericord and Master--
Chorge:cords.honored. .
Wall to Wall for . .
~ 133.7.6 Installed!
j. •• ,~, ,., • ' ,.
'$ 1 33. ~ t~Rgl'~ all I For a f i ~e' quo lite; scuiptu red
design ... a practical Tweed ... a captivating Shag .•
a distinctive Hi lo ... a deep, pile Plush. All available
in taday'.s newest coJors, too: Autumn Rust, San Blas
Avocado, Egg Blue, (glifornia Gold, Coachouse
White .. & More 4
The Rug Dealer's one, low Sale price includes
deliuf!rYi removal of old carpet and pad; new
pc:iddin.f:J; con~ientious and expert laying of the new
.carpet;, moving and replacing furniture; all labor and
materials. You won't find value like this, anywhere in
California! (The above price based on a 12' x 15'
living roOln";"tl 3' x 6' entry hall and fine quality
c0rpe1ing,;.educed to $6.09 sq. yd.}
' re9u lar $220.00 Value! $133,75 Completely
lastqfle d \11'tPr~y--~---\_____,rl~~
t ~
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BEDROOM 181
·Bewitch Your Bedro0111
With Room-Size Re-.11a11;ts
$59.00 Each! · .... ·~
These ore volues to $125:00
each
Portiol list
12 ' x 15' Ny lon Shag Blue
11 ' 6" x 11' 9" Polyester Souttm
12' x ~ 2' Polyester Shog Cr!!am
12' x 13' Nylori Hi-la Green
12' x 14' 6" Polyester Hi-lo Gold
12' x 13' 4" Nylon HI-Lo Bl'onlt
12' x 13' Nylon Carved Avocado
11 ' 1 O" x 11' Nylon Shdg Wliito
12' x 14' 3" Nylon Hi-lo Blue Tweed
12' x 15' Polyester Shag Red
12' x 1 1 ' 2" Nylon Hi-la
17' x 1 'l Nylon Corved Bronze
12' x 9' 10" Polyester Hi-lo Go~·
1 'l x 15' Nylon Hi·lo Green
12' x 1 O' Nyloo $14 Rod
12' x 13' 2" NylOn Sllog Rust
12' x 11 ' 7" Polyoojor Sliog Moss
12' x 12' ljylon Slilg -12' x 13' ilyion Hi-lo Y..,
12' 14' 2" NylonTwaotlG,_
12' x l 1' Poly1Sttr Sl1og Gold
12'x O'Nylonl'lusltWhlll
12' x 13' Nylon Corvwd ~
12' x 12' 3" Nylon Shag Rust
'°' 1,,,.._ $30-13'. moro"" RU1 .Dtolw w~I ins Id tht obtit_ c_tm-.
nan! of your e:holct. for a total °""""
loy of......-$94 Y"' '"' iicOlpfl
your bid<-ioc""""u otl -· dtluxt poddine. arid rMIOvol of okf
corpet, This offtr OOod for the !al--
lowing 4 doys ontyt Thur. Fri. Sat.·
s.in.
'II II It
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Ila
lrl11 ... 1 -•• "4 .. erovo ,,., s. .......
Pt.•••1 SSl-7tlL
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nto Season . .
Pnparlng for lhe ninth anqual Christbtas dlnner dance, themed Las
LU<llll deiNavld~ are members o/. the Alla Bahilt Committee of the
Oran11e <iounty Philharmonic Society. F081iv1Ues will begin wfth a
no-hoet ~ktall nour at 6;80 p.m. MoMay, Dec. 18, in the Bahia Cor-
inthian Y1cbt Club. M and dMclng will follow. HiJlhUfhtlng the
..... tng ."'"1 lit the J of. th& Cbrlltmts boat pareae. n a party
mood .,. (left rtahll e Mm..l.. Raymon Paige, Carl Martlq and
Thomas' Baume. ·
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Many H,a-ppy Parti.es
By ALLISON"DEERR
01 file D1lb' Piii! lllff
Planning a holiday party;
Don't have storage space for tureens
and tables, chafing dishes arid chairs,
champagne· fountains and canopies?
The solution is simple. Rent.
''People are amazed at whittlley can
rent," 1 Ms. Nesheim added, "and· often
they see ,things that will make giving the
party more . sJipple than they expected.
Some of our customers have come in for
one item and left with a whole party."
INDtvlDUAIJZED
Today 's rental firms and cooperating She said that the company "treats each
caterers can provide everything you party as if it is the ooly party. Every-par-
need . All you n;eed supply is the guest-cy-u-~ual and different. \Ve have
list. • fun and so do the host and hostess."
Dixie N~, sales/eP.i;sentalive fof Why .rent?
l\ and D Rental,-..aays'"Califomiam have.
become i~ .. · y C8IU8l in their form "It 0ijike1,Jt-easier oii the tmtess. She
· knoWB lllat evefything will be tlelivered or entertaining.: But th1s doesn'\ mean ori ti.m~.· cl-and' ready ,,., Use. She they don't wint to-be elegant or do things ...... "'
!int class oOce fn awhile." doesn1t have to wony about borrowing
two tables from Aunt Mary, five chairs
from the neighbors and a dish from a
friend.
Individualizing your party is as easy as
a visit to any rental store.
"It's a lot eij$.ier to rent a table (or
$1.15 or a chair for 32 cents than to send
hubbY all over ~town to pick up .the •ones
you've borrowed. After the party be
won't have to return anything." p
For lx>liday dinner parties, table and
chairs for a party of I 0 is a standard
order. Parties that overflow ootO patlos
and lawns are accommodated by tenting,
canopies and portable beaten.
1MPRESSIONS
Ms. Nesbelm added that for the single
girl who wants to impress her male
.friend there ts lite O(llion ol rent"'8 sup.
plies for an elegant diMer for two com-
plete witb food and mood music. Young
couples can fl!Jlt items to give their in·
forma1 parties an elegant touch.
Mike 'Bmy, owner-of United Rent All.
Costa Mesa, noted that rentals in the 70s
are booming.
"The trend is away from keeping a
garaie ftill of-lteins you uSe onlj Goce:or
twice. a year.. Why keep it' when ~ cln:
rent i.nexptnsively." ·
For example, it Is muctv leu erpensive
to rent a •. aUver cbaf'mg d1ab. when
you need ti than to lilly II relall. Yciu
don't M.ve to al<>"' It, polish 'lt'ond •teep,
it clean, he said.
"Un1ess you really use a party itein, it
doesn't pay to buy It." • · • '
Most popular items """"' hil YOIJltlir
customers are beer lapper tep, punclt
bowts.,•H<lt_ancl movie projecton. Moiiy
in Gielr lllb rent lelev!s-and ' !!ll'D
.....,W•g. ,... 'ljrolli tltey haie no
repair b!lla.'Jbey jtlll tum·-·ln·lor a
new model.
FOUNTAINS
Champagne founlaln!J ate. popul~ with
every age l?OUP, at every tind o~ ~·
~ ' ' ' .,.. r •
There are few prpblems· with anbl~
customers. Occulqnally 'tltere .. are In-
cidents like the catered ~· recep-
tion where the foontaln w.nt I"!)' and
sprayed tlte ·boslela', gown, tho ·weddlllj(
cake, and wblte tablecloth; wtlh '(ilrik
champagne f'JllCh.
And sometimes there are CU$tomer3
wbo forget that items sb:>uld be ·returned
in the cond.lUon they are delivered. ODce
his firm bad to pick up 200 place aetttnp
from a dinner reception ClODilPlete wttb party food . . • • .
There are UDUJual requests. One
woman called to a.st A and D Rentals if
she could rent "a bOdy." ·
"~lale or female?" she was isted.
"Male, I suppose."
"What are you 10"'8.to.dO With'~!"
Reply Somet imes
' I
By BEA ANDERSON
Of ... DMlr l"tltt Stiff
R. S. V. P.
What do these four letters stand for ?
Frayed nerves and a waste of food,
time and money, say many hostesses.
Why?
Because so ma.l)y people ignore respon-
ding to an invitation, and the percentage
continues to grow.
"Either they don't know any better or
they simply don't care," assert tMte
wbo have been sW<:k wilh a lot of food
after a party.
And II doesn 'I niake any dil{erence
what lite wordlni Is . on an lrivllatlon.
"Recretl" or "acceptance only'' get no
better reopoose. ...
There'• • lot or wort tp preparing for
• a fll1'l1 of any lize. No ltot1ea wants to
be caUllll mt of food, but on tho other
hand abe ddbn1t want to bave too much
tithe!-.
11'~FOOD
-party foods are (!ttlohlble. They won't freeze, Consequen&ly there's 1
tremendous wute.
If the hosless elects to have the party
catered ahe might come a little clooer on
tho -·-of food.
lfo ..... r. U I lot of people den' show
alter Ibo)' ht"......,... (wbldt llopp...
oil 100 often, they 11y) ahe 11111 bat
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/ 8 DAILY PILOT Frlddy, OtctJflbtr l S 1972 ' ' ' .. .. ,
Baskets Hold Survival ~KeY
• '
By JO OLSON
01 1M Gau.-,IMI SMff
Br\'!lis Buchanan comes bv
her ·bas ket weavi ng talents
noturally.
"I "'as a Hopi in my last
life," the Santa Crui resident
explains. fingering one of the
exqui site pine needJe baskets
she ls completing.
A-trs. Buchanan was featured
in a one-day workshop ln ·
basket weaving sponsored by
Subud-Newport t1s a benefit
rnr its cultural , religious and
11elfare activities.
A lecturer Jn wilderness liv-
ing and pionee r survival. ex-
pert gardener and talented
bas k et wea v e r. ~1 rs.
Buchanan is one or the rc\V
Caucasians to learn from the
Ind ians their intricate techni-
ques of transforming branches
and needles into baskels ·and
art objects,
She was born in Lincoln.
t-;eb. ,tO parents who took her
to 'rl states as her faUler , a
traveling salesman followed
his ltineraiy. As an only child
and a child who moved r~
quently, she learned early to
make nature her playmate
when there 'vere no othen .
ANIMAL FIUENDS
"I used to get up eBrly as a
rhild to .see which birds got up
first and "'hich ones sang to
each other. There were never
any children my age .so t
made friends with t h e
animals.··
She soon found lhat she
could transplant planLi; that no
one else could, and that she
could communicall' \~ i t h
nature in a very Wl usual way.
"Kids used to follow 1ne
ari und and 11a tch, and I USC'd
lo go to scout camps \1™1
leach naturl' classes.
"1 learned basketry fron1 <111
Indian neighbor in Lone Pine.
Neb. ~1 y mothe r was afraid to
let inc go to the Indian village
to study."
Her br eak in to the formal
education "'orld carne one day
while she "'as Yial king on the
campus of the University of
California. Santa Cruz with an
Indian Criend. showing him th~
native plants.
Her baskets ""ere in her car,
and when she got in lo go
home. a student saw the
baskets and suggested she
take them to the Ertenslon of-
fice and offer to teach a clB:ss .
INDIAN LINK
"lndian lore had to be tied
in witti p\oo'eer survival, V.'hlch
t had studied for years." she
said.
\Vhile living in Ben Lo mond,
a sec luded wild erness area
near Santa Cruz, she became
interested in how much foqd
really "'as available in the
woods.
Referring to gi r! and boy
scout handbooks she got tier
first clues. and then found that
"the boom on natural foods
was on.
l\'l rs. Buchanan s t a r I e d
cultivating v;eeds along "'ilh
veget::i bles in her garden.
much to her neighbors'
dismay. and began offering
passers-by edible weeds if
they would help he r with her
garden.
h-1ort studies in basketry
roUowed her g arden ex-
periment.., with such teachers
as Elsie Allen, a Pomo Indian
rrom Oregon, and soon Mrs.
Buchanan wa1 skilled in mak·
ing all three kinds of baskets :
woven , twined and coiled.
YOU'111S DON'T CARE
··older Indian women teach
basketry just to keep it alive,''
Mrs. Buchanan noted . "Indian
youths aren't interested."
Her studies also have led
her mqre into wild roocts, so it
was appropriate that her con-
tribution to a Thanksilving
dinner in Santa <::ruz was a
huge salad of lettuce and wild
greens.
A typical "walking salad" of
weeds from the Santa Cru2
area would include dandelion,
lamb's quarters, m a Iv a,
chickweed, miner's lettuce,
J>Urslane, wild lettuc~. sweet
woodruff, pig weed, o r a ch ,
filaree. wlld carrot, strawber·
ry leaves, plantain, wild
radish and wild mustard.
Mrs. Buchanan, who holds a·
masters degree from San
Francisco State College, now
is fea tured in UCI Extension's
\Yildemess Llvlng class.
She belleves that "people
should get back to nature by
using nature's gifts" and that
"it is lime OO\v for modern
science and technology to
blend with some of the basic
principles upon which hu man
life is bound .'
.. ·ro avoid dlsappo1ntmen1, P,rospect~ve
brtdes are reminded to have their wedding
stories wi th black and white ~lossy ~holo
graphs w the DAI LY PI LOT Women s De-
partment one week before the wedding.
'
Pictures received after th at time \Vill not
tie used.
For engagement announcements It is
intperative that L1e s1ory , also accompanied
by a black and \Vhite glossy picture, be s~b
mitted sis: weeks or more before the wedding
da te. U deadline i.s not met, only a story will
• be used.
To help fill requirements on both ·wed·
ding and eng agement stories, fqrms are
availabl~ in all of the DAILY PILOT oU!ces.
Further qUe$tions will be answered by
Women '~ Section sta!! members at 642-4321.
lntelluda
At !be end o( u long 111\rd day
-1\ &Jd1>1·in "Jnlerlucle .. Or·
gan can offer you tl1e ultimate
in n:ln 'tation ... and I.he prioe
i.!I ::i ref re,.lting
$995.00
515 NOUll MAUI, SANTA ANA • 547-5151
' Brysi1111Rhonon1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
181 Replace your built-in dishwasher
now with a
Kitchen.Aid.
... and SAVE!
INSTALLED
PRICE only $28995 *
r'!NcUioES: normal replacement labor and KltchenAid Custom Dishwnhe.r
•Front panel extra
announcing the
!El new KitchenAid
Trash Compactor with a 30 day
. money-back guarantee
dl1plays her
collKtlon of old
Indian baskets.
She 11 .,. .1ccompllshed
we1Ytr who learned
her craft from
lndl1n1.
Engagement
Announced
Mr. and Mrs. RObert K.
Jackson of Fountain Valley
have announced the engage-
ment of their daughter, Valori
Jackson to Stephen Fox, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Fox
of Midway City.
Miss Jackson is a graduate
of Fountain Valley Hi g h
School and cumntly attends
Southern California Coll ege of
?\1edi ca l and Den t al
Ass~tants.
Her fiance, also a FVHS
graduate. is a student at UCI.
r;:::::~ .. !
• JEWELltY B
1 SALE J -and a chance to
win one FREEi I .. ~ .. i
' easY' Seeitdemonstratedandget a II ~ ~~~ I It S • ticket to e.nter the free drawing. i • DIAM~ I
KITCHENAIO TRASH COMPACTOR e Lt•HTllS
Will BE GIVEN AWAY AT THIS STORE ; e MINS JIWILlY :
l-~-K_it_ch_8J1..;:_A_i_d_i1~b_u_ilt_b_e_H_e_~_N~o_t_ch_•_a_pe~rl__,I 25%·0FF! ~
TV & APPLIANCE a WAYNE ORR ~
HARBOR CENTER I JEWnER g J
2300 Harbor Blvd., Co1l1 Meu ;l: !~
L
3JJ E, 17ltl St., CotM M ... 540°7131 ......... ,_ .. , -·
h~ W•ll I Cled • .,..,.. lj
!fJ;t~-------fj, '1
\ &ys' s l~p weo.y .•.
faja~s
s\:::: i -type o v
bt.ttfo.-t f'rot'I t
s·1zes 4-20
"
l
robes ... .:
corduroy _. r~d o~ · ·
n~vy w'rtf-\<owtYastiHa -tY1 11\1\ . J
ietry cl o-k.t -
yellow1 bl1.te,, vJ\it~
tar+aV\
·sizes 4·2.0
\ l
\
\ . ' ·@)~o(~l@J@l~
44 fashion island, newport c;enter ~-5070
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FROM Fashion Island
N ewport Beach
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STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR·····--I
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Remember, T-a-1-k Is
A Fou~-letter Word
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You are a
prude and it shows. What's thls hang-up
}'Ott have about words ~af? You
should have out11rown It lonf ~go. 1 wag
surprised to see that you aqmit in !print
that certain wordJ make · you un·
comfortable. '
I k.now some ve ry ricb and socially
prominent people woo c o n s I d' e r
themselves refin ed and highly cultivated
but they use "''Ords lil\e "nigger" and
·'kike" as part of their d a 11 y
voca bularies. It comes as natural to
them as brea thing.
Yet when ~ hippie who truly Jovel
humanity and considers au of mankind
his brother uses a four-letter Word. the
backB &Ciffen like ram.rods and the
women have to be revived ,rlth smelllog 1
saJtS. 1 I I
I'd rather hear four-letter wOrds from
a hippie any day than l.lsten l9 a bigot
spew his pn:!judices. Wouldn't 'you, Ann
Landers? -WITH 'IT IN FORT
LAUDERDALE ,
DEAR W,: Who aaya I ·~~lo clioose
bttwee.n two mlserable altenatlvet? I
reject botb.
j I , F
DEAR ANN LANDERS: ~We were
disappointed in 'your answer to '"l'be
Gimp.'' You Indicated that! "jbli in-
sensitive clods in the world". ceonot 1:11):
changed and tbe ampule< ~ cooldn't
handle his problem . had ob~', ly failed
to make a "complete adjus nt.."
A person with your en mo us
readership is in an excellent· ·tioo...tg
help change the attitud~ "the in-
senslU.ve cl<Xb" ·and belleve tne, handi-
capped persOOs and their. famJUes need
all the help they can get.
ls i.f 8.!}kifli too mucl1 of S&Call~
"normal" people to adjust a Utile and
show some kindness to those who have
lost a ·limb. or their sight,· or have
distorted speech due to deafness or
cerebral palsy?
Dr. Howard Rusk brought this forcibly
to our Attention during 'Vorld \Var J[
when the veterl\flS were coming home.
He pplnted out that many veterans had to
retutn to hospitals because of emotional
1 problems created by the community's
lack of sensitivity and understanding -
especially if they were disfigured ot bad-
ly crippled.
True, handicapped persons must team
not to be hypersensitive, but we need to
educate the community lo feel more
comfortable around the handicapped.
They should oot stare and gasp, nor tum
their heads a"·ay as ll the sight is too
horrible to look at.
None or our immediate family is
disabled, but we have experienced tbe
aanle reactions which "The Gimp" ex-
pre~d when we have taken Ollr handi-
capped friends to public .activtties.
Once ¥>e were asked not to bring a man
,,
• ~ .. 1, ... ·~· •• '
into a restaurant beca~ his presence
makes the other customers s1ck.
Please, Ana, Jet the CQmmwUty know
they have a responsjbWty to keep social
contacts. available to people w}W) ba\'.e a
physical, mental or -emotional "dif-
r.rence." ,I&" -MR, Ali!> MRS. HENRY W. , , EXECUTlV·J!
DIRE'CTDl\S Of OUTLO"OK ,
LONGWOO~. ,. , •
DEAR . J·'l' .. Uv1 &1._ ... .n.-.... ~wmon1
~-1·=!"'11. Bow~ Rmk'• plly, "A
World t0 Core Flf' ( -1. ii
I fuclu!'oC •htery ti ~ lo
11111 eeaalr)'. o;, a... u 1llY •cudlolate .
for ubKMod and Ute boot" ll • mD1ilfor
io1I ,eopfe w~ 'mall foee '!Ke Willl I
•'Y•l<al -~·' • '• • • \ \ '• . . .
DEAR ANN J.ANDj!:RS: I wii\t lo
tliank that woman wbO. wrote abou\·IA< bOD It waa lo taie. a VfCatton' wltll Jjer
bulband -1, IOIJIY drl"" who Jllllios,a .~ wreck Oji\ of ,!>er.· I have tie ,...,kind of nut 'lliey must.lit lir'oifim.
I've l"'Pt, begged;.pleaded; tbrealened-
but riolbing get& thi'ouah to him, He says,
"l am a fine driver .• You 're qazy."
I am going to have that column
plasttctzed IUld ·toJ>ed to lhe dashboard' of
our car. Even lf be ~so•i ~ any at-
tention-to It, U wlll~atri me · torn!citt. to
kr.ow l am not alone. -1 ALSO VIC.
TlldlZED IN LAKEl..ANI> ,
DEAR ALSO: I llad ao fdf• 10 mny
wlvet are petrified p1ueqer1 wk•
their 1tu1bands are at Ult wUeL I recetv-
td ever IDI letters frem womu tlaa11kinc
me , bletSlnC me ud 1aylu1'1 uGlad to
know rm not tlie-eaty one." U 'mliery·
loves ct1mpany the wtves or lousy driven
are far from lonely. ThaU:s to all who
wrole.
Planning a wedding? What's right?
What's wrong? Ann Landers' Completely
n~w '"Ibe Bride's Guide" wiU reliew
your anxiety. To receive a copy, send a
dollar bill, plus a long, aelf·addressed,
stamped envelope (16 cents posta1e) to
Ann Landers, Bot: 3M&, Chlcago, Ill.
60654, '
It's not always easy to recognize love,
especially the first time around. Acquaiot
yourself with the guidelines., Read Ann
Landers' booklet, "Love or Se1 and Ho•
to Tell the Difference." For a copy, m,U !Ip cents in coin tnd a toog, otamped, ilell·
fiddresSed enVelope wit h your request to
the DAILY PILOT. '
--=:=::L.I TT 0 N===---
MICROWAVE OVENS
Nobody knows more about microwave cooking than Litton. Nobody.
SEE THE NEW UTION MICRO~VI! OVlN I
with Utton's exclusive MICRO-IROWNER(j)
STEAK GRILL at Davi~ -lro.wn's
COOKING DEMONSTRATION
by Litton's HonMI Economist
'---"SAT. DEC. 16 -NOON TO ·4· p'.M.
DAVIS 8ROWN -COSTA MESA
Now yolf can use your Litton microwave o¥en for 95 9/. of your e¥eryd•y cook·
in9 -without the use of your conVentionel bro lier or griddle. With the 'tttton
Micro-Browner, you'll h1¥1 light, 9olden brown p1nc1kes and French toa1t,
c;ris p hash browns, seared sfHks end chops -foods with results never before
possible in a mi crowa¥1 oven.
Your mic;rowava oven and \itchen remain cool, yet you enjoy the appetl1ln9
appeal of con¥antionelly broiled foods. The Litton Micro-BroWl\•r pro¥1 cles t he
capability for browning, 1earin9, 9rillin9, incl' frylng -durl~9 microwave
cookin9. ~ \..
Litton's exclusive 1 Micro-11rowner joins th••• other Litton mlc:r,wave oven
firsts: e Pushbutton automatic defro1t • 8rl9ht, eesy0 c;\ean ecryllc l"tlir{or
• Ler9est interior of any coLntar-top microwa¥1 O¥en . Come to our dernoft-
stratlon ~nd taste the differi c:a the Litton Micro-Brown er makes in 1 micro-
wave oven. ..,. • . l
Liii/i y PU.OT I ~>
It's in the Cards
Ecology Seasons Greetings ·
-. By· GAY PAULEY house , .. "
NE\V YORK {UPI) -Their Hale Wt:nt on to describe the f~---------••••••••lliimll
creators-probPblY thought lit· _proce~s by which a picture
tie about · ecolQBY when they was run through the press
made tM early Christmas from eight to as 1n1u1y as 17
cards, but they used nature thnes, each tilne rl><:civing an
J.""l -t Sclfo-'1
' .
Announced
motifs Ubeially. added shade or color.
Bolh flowers a,nd animals Original s111nple books of the 1
111ere favorites for cards as old Prang firm are ('On~idered ,
early as the tai&os when valuable today and sought
ramlliea exchanged greetings after by v:irious libraries.
before the .Chr~mas card The card publishers ussocia-1
became a universal custo m. tion says two outstanding col-I
Thty were called "album" lections are with the American
r ' {-.. J
c1rd1 and great-grandma Antiquarian Soc i e Iv in l
pasted quanUUes of them in \Vorcester , ~1ass.. ond the j
her album. Fine Arts Departn"IC.nl of the
1bese were decorated u·itb Boston Public Libfary . I : .. · -~ l.1,t ~ -;_,..>
colored pictures of flowers. \\'htn the a s s o c i a t i o n • ~
birds, butternJes, landscapes receritly moved its New ''ork .1} .}1:; -
and seasca·...,.. headquarters rrom Rockefeller 'j~. t; .. , ~ \ ,-l,. ..
The bi&' p';;b toward ~ay's Center to tbe Pan · Am if!,~ ~"E ... /1b •
phenc:lnenal card business. 35 Building, it uncovered dozens ! ·t ,;' ~:.~\ 4,-,. :
billion cards sent th i s of rare cards n1ountcd on i"' \ . t. .
Chrlatmas and ·New Year's panels. ~ ~ ...... · •, " • ·: ~ alone, came'from Louis Prang. Association director Harry , a'-~ / ~ ,
often called ttie father of the J. Cooper Sflys ttie cnrds are ,-S'llf ," . ·
American Christmas card. typical of those of the Vic-~ ..,._ , ,
10 sleep_
to dream
of beiiutiful
things ..
in a Lant
of Salzburg
11g1uiture
grilnnv 90wn
of softest
cotton flan-
nelette •• red/
multi-
sizes
small
1ned1um
l;irgP.
Sll
I th. I~·-p torian era but he h;is not ~ a ..... ~·~ • "' ·~: .. n. -· rang, a d . • , • , "' ., ,. '-I" ,, .. ~ Fellowship awards German irnmlgrant. was tum-etenn1ned whether any are • ~ ... , rr • *.. 1· ,
t"" int out art rod t' d Prang dei-,igns. ''f"', f '. 1 ~ ,.; ; d ~ were: ,prasen..., to t b re e rep uc KmS an The collection, hO\\'ev•c. 1'n-t · " ''" '·' · · •~ates of Costa Mesa :/x.;aln ;~n~m his print eludes cards decorated \vllh ,·,·.~~.~ ·1 ~,~',·.~;. L IC_' _1~1l·l""-,'"l'l' _
. ' '
•
1
~ Memcrial Hospllal during the Then came the day In 1874 PranR'S favorite !lo11'er n1olif l -': .-,. ~ r· , _ .
•, hospital's Christmas: party in when a novel idea V.'as -Killarney roses. '1' $ ~ "" i:'. 1 _ .... ~ I..... l. ~
: ' tbe Ne......,.pf•r Inn. presented him. • ~ i. "' ~ ~ "I""... ''·'-,. $ .lJ-.rf •• .: \ w1-sTC:Llf I l"'l~l\i"A
' Cited wtre or. Frank R. Di According to the National s k s . . I \· :._ f' .~. ,• )/!11Al'C>t\-t\llNI <J\J1:1
Flore of ... meilici --•J «ssoct1tionofGr~u Cacd poo pints , · •'••'· . , N-"1'<><1<•!'<.>-•'-"'• > ~JC 8 11141 ' Publishers, one aCco t has it ~ ,... ~ · -\
~' .~ ptesident of the aux-a woman· employ In Boston. drums on Christmas trees arej J 1~. ' ' , 1 ·11L 'i ~!' lllary, and'Tom Halligan, an Another sayit •l! was ,Original hangovers fro1n pagan ,,,_, ~~ !· •
f: :P.trs. Alexuder h-lacGillivray, that the .suggestlon ame from The Lin hams. bells and I ~\·~ ... •;.\!' ¥~ I"' OPEN EVE 1
, ; employ'e. ' · with lM wife. of his London cutoms. The little noisemakers -" 1; •• ·,;·,,r ~~-J ~ :,.,",•.''.'
1 Presentltiona were made by agent. , ,,... i .... '-" • ·
Ralph H. Ca 1 t I e t 0 n ~ ad~ Wbicbevfl ~man deserves ,~:~~~~i~~;p;;po;;s;;ed;;;;to;;;;w;;ac;;d;;o;;II;;e;;v;;il~~~~·~=~~~~=i~, ~=~ l~·~"~!:::~;~~~~ f mlnistrator, and Dr. Alan B. the credi(, Prang was quick to ·
Barton, chief of slaU. lhe possibillties of in-
The recipients were honor-;~~se.i~' ~b~usiness if he printed ' '
' ;'
I :,4 o " erry Christmas" on ot their "devotion to p ent small oral-dOCorated cards. service, willingiles,, to ssist chffrl'~1y wbeneve{ t need He experimented with his
arises and dedication and British customers first, for it
1--• lo ••-•-· 1 1 .. was In Englnnd where the u, ... y ~n::-UUllP ta · world's first Christmas card
appeared In 1843. Jn 1875.
For A Caref!r ••. NOT JUST A JOB
BE A ''WOMAN IN WHITE"
BtCQr11e o Aled1cal or Dr11ti:1l As.ti$til11t i11 4 or 7 t111ut1/1,t.
• . Tr!!,nch Styl,
·1· . !I • "'
Prang tried the cards On the
American public.
Within five years. he was
' • '' « u
"
• N
, ,Tl\1!, \«ni:h Coat for boys and ~'¥"flnen haibeen shortened '°' just 100ve 1the knee for
5prlrig. One of die newest
versions: denim. P o c k e t 11 ,
hardware and zippers accent
t,he' easy brayado of this style,
turning out five million cards NEW CLASSES STARTING
a year abd employed 300 peo-J•nu•ry 5 . January 22
pie. l ifetime Placement Ass1J1once
"To my mind," wr o te 1ctJOi11t!IDC* R.1\' '$and AIH1cat ~1Jon,,.-1 t•a n """" ,,. "''' '\. '-
Edward Everett Hale in 1889. r::::r::,'' din1ool lab. & .1-1aY 1rainin11 '" i "'"'"'" \
~t!0i;i·~~.'~~~~g ~~~i~~ ~u...:.:.. 623 W. 17th, SANTA ANA 541-4461 ,,-l VET£•AN'S I ENEflTS AV ... llAllf ~ .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::___~~::::::::~-~
·'\« r I • ' .. ,,
' -' ,. • 1··
,
' \
•
"· '•
..
\00% pri~ ~#iev"'
300~ da,o... i l'\<Suict +1 o~
ll\e. ~se d'*"'"" u5~
to \1.A.S1.1.l~tc. ~i ~ .9ct (V11e11-t-
\s -t~e f;~~+ 4Wlli 1'1 ob+ai~~e. a ... ct wil~
provide.~ utl<\to:>t 111.
lct:.+: ~-" vJo.v-Mtl-\ Cl4td
coM{Orf. The l00'7o 1'1YlDI'\.
~ell Is ~pyoof,
breQf h able ON\d
c.orri f~t¢1 y L-Ve.t"6l1ablE..
PACIFIC
TRAIL
the Jacket people
44 fashion island , newport center 644-5070
--~------------------~~----
I
J
•
DAILY PILOT
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Aquarius ~ Thoroughness .Key to Success
SATURDAY
DECEMBER 16
By SYDNEY OMARK
collt.>el and pay; you will make
general gain, posslbJy through
one born under Can ctr.
TAURUS (April 2Q.May 20):
Go to source. Don't dally with
middlemen. You have much to
ofrer and powers-that.be are
well aware of your potential,
Act In dlrect, confident man-
ner.
• to what you know. Aquarlao travel and variety of. ex· mcssagei aDd calls. Gain I.I In·
could play key role. Accent 11 perteooes. dlcated through written word.
on se:rvlce, wo:rk, general AQUARitJS (Jan. 2--Feb. You perceive and Jearn.
health. Get t.Qlether with one ll): Wbat 1011 prevloualy·took GtmlW, Virgo peraons are in
who shares,... jour ,.ln~rests -for grant6d needs cbecklng. pl ct Ure. Refine techniques. a~ problen1s. Make con-_.. Act. accord~ly. Be aware of tF ef;~D . y ti \'OUll
cillatory gesture. details; Be wlUlnfiu:to make "' VIRGO {Aug. 2J..Sept. 22): BIRT . A. Y you a serious,
HA•• ITALIAH -.... ~lib -··~ 1!/H/n SAL~ll .' c•iiisf'ias cboi1£s"'
Virgo serves, is health CQn-
scious, perceptive, u s u a I I y
busy and much concerned with
doing enough to please others.
Natives of this zodiacal sign
are physically attracted to
Capricorn, often m a r r y
Plsce9, can have stormy rela-
tionships with Leo, unusual as·
sociations with Sagittarius and
enjoy spirited discussions with
Scorpio. Virgo goals do not re-
n1ain the same. The Virgo
person changes. ask.s, tests
and is seldom satisfied "'ith
status quo. Some famous
persons born under Virgo in·
elude James Coburn, Arthur
Godfrey and Jacqueline Bis·
set.
Cycle high ; judgment, ln-
tultion are on target. Adhere
to principle!:. Slick to in-
dividual style. ~lake new
starts. Accept challenges. Set
your own pace. Be a self·
starter. Emphasize personali·
ly .
Good lunar aspect coincides CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. revisions. Tborouc ess now dedicated, analytieai. Basic
with journey, correspondence, 19): Good lunar aspect now is 8 key to success. Obstacle change this morith benefits. In /) • \"'/\__ /J. ITALIAN DELI • BAKERY
communication with one at a coincides with special reJa. should ~ regarded 13 ht&.lthy 1973, you will travel, find' greet· oLucct JJsli RESTAURANT
d Is tan c e . Crystallize tioMhip, creative endeavor. challenge. er means ol ex Pre 1 s l n g lt11 Adl"11 •f M.anolle, Huntington Beech,
philoaophy. Find out where deaJings wlth young persons. PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): abilities, talents. EmoUonal °"' "tM 11tr1H1 DHI o,..,11-r111 c:u11 ...... 11111 ,.. 0 ,,.. ... ,ff, 21 yu"
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Emphasis is on v.'hat occurs
behind the SCi!nes. You may be
dealing with officials o f
hospital, institution, special
organiz.ation. Be aware of
subtle nuances. Discretion Is
necessary. Maintain low pro-
file.
you want to go -and why. -Soc~c!Jia~I _:"~11'._v~ity~a~cce~l•e=ra~te~s~. ~S.~i/.cc~en~t~1~cn~~-~~tions~~·~·w~i~th~~br~u!is~e~is~be~a=ling=·=Kno::::.w:_::ll~and=~=="=•~•=l=Mt~M=.=' .. ~'='~""r:::·=IO="'~'=C=l,..~<=M=•=•=·'='="=-4=4="~~ Seek answen within. I-ready for chang~. possible ne!Jhbora, shot' trips, special be grateful.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
ARIES (March 21-April 19 ):
~~;ent ls on security, personal -. essions. valuables and
:~me affairs. You can 1nake
~fitable contacts. You can ..... ,,
CANCER (June 21.July %2 ):
Accent now Is on how to turn
"'ishes into realilies. Key is to
agree to creative changes and
challenges. Get out or emo-
tional rut Friend is willing to
aid. Gemini, Virgo individuals
~igure prominently.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Emphasis is on achievement.
Outline goal. Take direct path.
Your concern with what could
be termed the "unknown"
comes surging to forefront.
You delve deep for answers .
In so doing, you make
discovery aboul> indiVidual who
means much to you. Rela-
tionship is put to test.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):
Pl~y waiting game. Accent is
on legal loophole. Key now is
to £ind new ways of achieving
goal. Marriage, joint efiorts-
these also are spotlighted. Let
others show their hands. Be a
keen, shrewd omerver.
SAGITTARIUS . (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Maintan poise. Stick
R.R. Popes Celebrate
62 Years of Marriage
DEBORAH ANDERSON
October
Rites Set
1'1r. and Mr. Robert R. Pope
of SeaJ Beach celebrated thelr
62nd wedding anniversary dur·
ing a brunch with family
members.
Attending v.•ere their sons,
daughters and in-laws, Mr.
and Mrs. Rob R. Pope of Long
Beach, Mr. and Mr8. W. Sterl -
ing Pope -of Newport Beach
and Mr. and Mn. W. R.
Heathman of Saugus.
Designs
Deficient
CHICAGO (UPI) -Twenty
l\I:irine Lt. John D~llion home and playground
'l'homton of Quantico, Va accidents annually make every
claim Deborah Jo Ander n s day a day for caution in both
his bride during ceremonies places. " 1 '
The honorees also have six
grandchildren and six great
grandchildren, all of whom
reside ht Southern California.
Mr. and Mrs. Pope were
married Dec. 13, 1910 in Los
Angeles. They resided many
years in Altadena, t h e n
Newport Beacll and Saugus
and in 1971 n1oved to Leisure
World .
Mrs. Pope, nee Ne 11 i e
Frances l\fahar. is a native of
San Pedro and is the daughter
of Cora Etta Price and Johtl
Charles Mahar who were ptom-
inently identified with t h e
communily life of their era in
San Pedro and lVilmington.
Mahar House, a Catholic ,
Youth Organization center and
1'.fahar Street. in Wiln'l.ington
have been named after the
family.
Pope was born in Kansas
and came kl California in li'i3.
He was in the lumber and
service s t a t i o n businesses
before his retirement. scheduled next October in the Some of the accidents, ac·
U.S. Na_val Acader:ny Chapel. cording to a repctrt trom the
Annapolis. . . American Hospltal Associn-
The future bridegroom 1s the tion, may be preventedl l;-=-=========;I
son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. hr h ec1· f d i ANDLESI Thornton of Huntington Beach. t ?~g ;corr ion o es gn C
fie is a graduate or J·luntington defi~ie~c.;es. For example,
Beach 1-ligh School and the modi{ymg co~trol kn~bs .on
Naval Academy in Annapolis. certain elec~r1c stoves which
CANDLES!
His fianccc. daughter of ~1r. are ~ easi!f turned m by
and Mrs. Richard Anderson of brushing against them.
Ashtabula. Ohio. is a graduate Another example: setting
of Edge"·vod High School, standards for children's cribs
Ashtabula, attended Columbus so that the i!!lals are not so far
College of Ar1: and Design and apart that a baby could stran·
now is majoring in art design g\e \Vhen its head "'as caught
at Kent State University. between slats.
·'
pr•holiday
INVENTORY
CLEARA~CE!
~6 50% OFF
MISSION CANDLE CO.
1J1S L ... 11 (1111111 Al tett. M9M
-tYow\ i:::eV\V(iarl<.. •.•
OOV' V\ewes+ swf'Qter
..
• •
·-:
f· , -
' • ' ' . : .,
~· • ' . •
• • • • r i,
I
•
tla~ ICoMed i"' tlie V10.1uYo.I woo\
Colors of oft-vJl\'it-e, bYow"' a11 d
c ka r-coo I . I+ 5 -f~~ fee Ii 11\'j o-f-
Cop~ VJa".je ll\ . L.lJeC4v i + eve '<Y -
v.;l.1ev-L ;f o v-eve~ •
·'
13 SPARKLING
DIAMONDS
425°0
~CARAT
TOTAL
329°0
Show your love with
.. DIAMONDS
YOUI t OIOICE
2495
TWO FOR HER
ONffORHIM
IH 14kWHrTIGOLD
FIVE BRILLIANT
DIAMONDS
HERS, 118'0
tts,29"·
THREE RINGS TO
MATCH YOUR LOVE
IN 14K YELLOW GOLD
-MATCHING
DIAMONDS
WEDDING BANDS
HERS -86'0
HIS-89'0
-~n ...... HERs-2697'
ttis -527'
HUNTINGTON CENTER HARBOR SHO~PING CINJIR
BEACH & EDINGER ,' .2JOCLHARIOILB.lj'Q;
HUNTINGTON BEACH COST·A MISA --
892-5501 545-9415
OPEN DAI Y 10 'Iii 9 P.M. 1
MASTER CHA.ROE • IANICAMllllCAllD
I
t ·I
~CARAT
TOTAL OF
DIAMONDS
329°0
FIEIN OPAL
SURROUNDED WITH
FUll CUT
DIAMONDS
l l« YELLOW GOl.D WITH
3 SPARKtlNG DIAMONDS
296"
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTI AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
NANCY
WHV HAN£> ME 'ltJUR CAMPA16N ~11CAA11JRE?f YM VOUR OPPONISNT!
NO, YOU'RE
EATING AT
HIDME
T~c!~Y'~ -~.~~,~·~~ .. ~~~LB f ~
1 Greek lener
5 Fem•lfl 47 Group
1nimat1 48 Resolution:
10 Car1ie Abbr.
C.C. -49 En --·
Surtrage 50 WiHN'(i119
l111der 53 Oriental
14 Preposition dyn111y
15 Brief and 54 Armistice
1evere 58 Bea Lillie,
Hi Irish b111!e tor one
cry 61 Hou1ehold
l 1 Inclined 1cce1sory
101dwav 62 P1ogno1tic1-
18 Engli1h tion
c1th11dr1I city' 63 Town -··-
20 V1por 64 "You don't
22 Kind of tool savl"
23 Voices 65 Co11-of·liv1n!il l2 M1t1do1'1 39 Autoist'• 24 Vio~ni11'1 ilem 'l nec•ui1y •cce•torv 66 Gel rid of 13 ~h !mils 40 Prolonged 26 Menu Item 61 Establiehes suff•rin\l• Z1 Canedl1n DOWN 19 -··-River: •2 Liberated province 1 Drinkiru;i On11rio 44 OJ!Y9en JD Ogr• ..,. .. county . ,.,.,_,,.,
34 At ••rtler 2 Cou~ d' ···· 21 Pl111 :46 Needing time 3 Author'• 25 Becomes l)fOmpt 35 Cenadlln cr11tion Wfllflcn.d action Coneerv1ti\le ' Nol hidden 26 Dqoro¥1YI-'47 Mediler-35 Pe1m le1f: 5 lrilh nlm• 'I7 Crut• · -·-· nine•n retort V1r. pr1fi11: 28 --Gr.en• <49 Crai• '31 Geit II Former nam• 29 Pus~uo so lll1f'ICl$1 38 Rspresent•-fOI' Novi 30 "Hoot --!" 51' Cupola
tive Scotia 31 Breakfast 52 "You Aid It\" 40 ····Of !he 7 Altera.don ·~ 53 European tilS. MOt 8 Smelf: Sullbt 32 C mot th• olmpect 41 Thosein 9 Vlsutllxe I ~ '55 Pleld wl1h power 10 Heevy 11rong 3 'Uet inQ . 56 G1rment '42. Decree IOJHlf
1 3 .f.:~ .. \ 57 Ceases 43 Brl1tlelik1 11 Touch 59 Frozen w11er
p•rt Clo lng1'uid 60 Before ' '
' , ~ '
1
. I ,,
l '.
J 5(.A\88LE l . ,,, ...... "iJ ': . ·-~. ~ .(( ~.·;
. . -' . . '
,' ' . \'
JUDGE PARKER
-..
PERKINS
by Clllster ~Ollld
ANO,... !<ID'S • • IN ~SILO ! j'
by Tom K. Rya11
1'M !!ANK\Nfr \l~Vl~Y ON· cROSs~s.·
' '
I I
• "
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by Emie Busluniller
... 'j cm
DOOLIY'S WOILD
SAU Y BANANAS
(
.
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
A-BUIM'!TIJ !
~-~!
/(( ~)\
:<:'
•• ·'
. by Charles M. SclUlll
MISS S:PEKCER SUGGESTED THAT I
Grf 11'4 TOUCH WITM YOU, MR. l>ltlVE~!
SHE SAID YOU'RE REPRESENTING
MV WIFE!
"· by ....
by John Miies
Friday, Deetmbtt 15, 1972 DAILY PILOT l
by ROCJef' Br•Ml~cl
• '
-1NsrNUJ OF N/lt/1
tw.s:4~-
1T.ACJ(JiRS 7 iHl1'I Al.U
THAT HOM~ /N -
TO T>IE SCJIOOL ~D
ANP ~ PAIP 811'
7Hi!' l'OUNP
• •
By Charles Barsotti:, .-------. '4J~ ~~~' -~~
.WI:;. ~lL FOIUIOW, s ..
'M!. ·~Y'S''flll!D ·'
'' " • •
by Roqer Bonen
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,;;fi'*
••1-.·t udtntud )"OQ, Berbtrt ~11 I aerved eblcke•
1 -tbls .dry, yw'd colilplaln."
DENNIS THE MENACE
[
' '
22 DAIL'f PILOT F"d1Y, °""""" 15, 1912
,Condition
Dt·ills Begin
For Trojans
LOS ANGELES -Coach John McKay
uf Rose Bowl-bound Southern Cali£ornia
stressed physical conditioning as the Tro-
jans returned to the practice field for the
first time In two weeks.
The. football squad worked out for
abou t 90 minutts Thursc!ay in sweat
suits. Only one player, All-West Coast
middle guard Monte Doris, was held out
of the practice. Doris sat out the Notre
Dame game with a bruised knee and is
not expected to &tart practicing until
t-arly next week.
Ohio State. the Trojans' Rose Bowl op--
pooent. is slated to arrive here next
\Vednesday.
r\she1: PlaC'es 15th
HONOLULU -Costa Mesa's Barry
Asher finished 15th in the $35,Wl Hawaii
lnvitatlonal bowling classic Thursday
and pocketed $1,150 for his efforts.
Asher finished with a record of 17-19
and totaled 7 ,565 pins.
Dick Ritger, Earl Anthony, Mike
McGrath, Larry Laub and curt Schmidt
gained the finals. Ritger had a pinfall of
1,103.
No Meeting for Bavasi
NEW YORK -E. J. "Buzzie" Bavasi,
president of the San Diego Padres, paid
an early -morning visit to the office of
baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn today
and departed without seeing the com-
missioner. There was no indication that the widely
publicized meeting dealing with the
possible transfer of San Diego's National
League franchise to Washington, D.C.,
would take place.
"I djdn't come to talk about moving
the franchise -I wanted to talk to the
commissioner about something else
regarding the minor leagues," Bavasi
told the commissioner's aides.
Grid Coach Named
NORTIIRIOGE -Gary Torgeson, 30,
an assistant cotich since 1965 at
Northridge State, was named the
university's head football coach Thurs·
day, succeeding Rod Humeniuk, who
rosigned .
Torgeson, who played center and
tack1e at Northridge as the school's only
winner of four football letters, is the
Pttatadors' fourth head C08Ch. He played
for and served as an assistant to Sam
Winningham, and was an assistint to
Leon McLaughlin and Humeniuk.
-Humeniuk's resignation was annnunced.
Thursday after a 6-5 season.
Osteen llonored
NASHV1LLE, Tenn. -Los An8eles
Dodgers pitcher Claude Osteen has been
named Tennessee's outst.ru'14ing pro-
fe'!SioQal athlete or the year by tbe
state's Sports Hall of Fame honors com-
nUttee.
Osteen, of Caney Springs, Tenn., lt!id a
20-ll record last aeason.. 'Ille award was·
anoounced Thursday.
He will be "honored at a banquet in
Nashville Feb. 15.
Purdue Seeks Coach
WESr LA!' A YETIE. Ind. -Punlue
University continues its search for a pnr
ven big-name football coach to replace
Bob DeMos!.
Hayden Fry, released as coach at
Southern Methodist just before the final
game against Texas Christian Dec. 2.
was interviewed Thursday [or the vacant
Purdue job.
A 1949 Baylor graduate, Fry spent 11
seasons as the SMU coach, compiling a
4MG-1 record. His best year was 1966
when the Mustangs were S..2 and cham-
pions of the Southwest Conference.
DeMoss resigned earlier this month
and was named assistant athletic direc-
tor at Purdue.
World Golf Mark
~O -Fresno City College track
CO.ch Bob Fries took 38 minutes and 12
~this week to shoot 18 holes ln 81
strokes.
Fri~ 42, says that his performance
was a world record si~ Jim O'Neil. of
Sacramento last month claimed a world
record when he shot a 99 in 47 minutes
and 17 seconds.
Smith Offered Post
TULSA -Oklahoma State University
football coach Dave Smith has been of-
fered a similar position at Southern
Methodist Universily in Dallas.
Smith lmmcdlate17 left for Danas to
discusa the offer. A highly placed aourte lit Dallas sald the comm.Jttee thought it
"was 99 percent certain" that Smith
lfOIJld ac:oepl.
Glare of Ice Arena·s Frustrate.s Shelley
NEW YORK (AP) -Show buBlnes5 is
no buslneu for a figure skating cham-
pion with tender pride. says Ken Shetley,
the latest ol America's Ice kings to turn
to the glare of the big arenas.
"Jumping frorn the Olympics to the Ice
shows can be very frustratlni.'.' the soft·
!ipeaking, 21-ycar-old skate Whiz {rom
Down ey said today. "You can bet
that 99 percent or the people ln the
stands don't know a double a1el rrom a
sit:r.spin.
"And the Sat.urd ay matinees can be
maddening. You're out there skating
your bem:t oot and the kids are aU yell-
lng: 'Bring on the cl~wns.' The kids a lot
o! limes make up moat or tht audience
and they like the fluU, the animals and
the fUMy stufl."
Shelley, the first figure skater In
modern history to qualify for both the
singles and pairs in the Olympic Games.
wa! in Nc1v York l'hursday to receive the
Gustavus Town Kirby Sportsptanship
Award from tht' Boys' Athl~ League.
Also honored was lleggle Jones, the
light middleweight boxer from Newark,
N.J ., who lost a controversial deci.8ion to
Russia's Valeri Tregnbov in Munich !rt
the Swnmer Games,
Shelley is the current U.S. men's
slnglcs champion and, with Jo Jo
Starbuck of Do1vney is three-time wiMer
of tbe n~Uonal palrs title. Tbe two pla~
fourth in the 1968 Olympics at the age or
16 and took the bronze medal in the
\Vorld Champk>nships this year lit
Calgary, Canada.
Ken and Jo Jo recently signed a three--
year contract with lee Capades, the tour·
ing lee sbow which opens at Madison
Square Garden Jan. 9.
"Yoo work harder preparing for
•something like the Olympics or the World
Champloosbips end the )X't.SSUJ"e 11 far
greater," Shelley explalned. "Show
rout.Intl al'fl oot as dlfHculL You don't
lry tho8o dllilcult lcapo and jumpo.
"Even II you did, molt ol tbe crowd
wouldn't know what you were doing or
appreciate k. So you just try ID project
and grlb tbe crowd'• !aocy.
"You get a Utlle sick of. It at times.
The same routines over and over -and
none o( them challenging as in the OIYIQ-
pics."
. Shelley, as a stat"t>f the lee Ca pad es,
tbust skate nil.le times a week, three
~ on Satu'18Y and twice an Suoday.
~ t,:asoo IJ 1 '3-week grind.
Sh&ley ~llned to eipose terms or hls
contract but be should reap some of the
thousands or dollars spent to make hin1
one Qr America's Olympic stan.
''It cost my dad about '10.CXX> a year
for me to train," the fonncr Cal State
(Long Beacb)~dent said. "for skates.
ice t~e. coec g illlld so forth. Most
never get it ck. I'm lucky and I am
glad I can pro t from all tha.t 's been put
ioto ~."
Schaus Gu~s P~rdue •
Ex-Lakers Boss
In Trojan Classic
By Tbe Associated Prtss
Fred Schaus, who left Los Angeles and
pro basketball last year, returns to the
. ' city tonight as coach of Purdue, one of
the vi1itiDg teams in the Trojan Classic.
The Conner Los Angeles Lakers coach
and general manager will be sending the
Boilennakers (3-1) against Western Ken-
tucky {3-3) in the tournament opener at 7
o'clock. Auburn (1-2) will face host
Soulhem California (2·2) in the second
first round game.
Winners meet Saturday night for the
championship.
Southern caUfomia's leading scorer
Clint Chapman and three other forwards
won't play in the Trojan Invitational
following suspensions for a 11 e g e d 1 y
vit>lating the team's curfew.
Coach Bob Boyd said Chapman,
MOnroe Nash and Bruce Clark have been
assigned to the junior varsity for
violating the midnight curfew <1fter
Saturday's 76-66 Trojans loss to
Alabama.
Boyd said Thursday he will reconsider
the suspended players1 status early next
week.
Chapman, a 6-foot-8 sophomore. was
averaging 13.3 points a game. Senior
Nash, 6-5. had a 10-spot average and &--!
junior Clark had played in one game.
Freshman forward Bob Trowbridge, 6-
8, will join the varsity tonight, giving
USC four forwards.
Soulhem Cal, ranked No. 17 In tbe
country last week, has lost its last two
games to drop from among the top 20.
Las Vegas at llawaii, Portland State at
San Diego State and University of San
Diego at Arizona State in regular games.
Tb~ Santa Clara Broncos, 2·2, will play
Utah in the opening round of the Utah
Classic tonight.
Almost all major West Coast teams
will !J>lay Saturday night. Top attractions
will include Washington at Kansas State,
California at HOuston, San Jose State et
Stanford, Portland and Loyola and Oral
Roberts at San Diego State.
Spitz, Gould
Accorded Top
Europe Honors
LONDON (AP) -Olympic '3V.'i1nr.1ers
Mark Spitz of the United States and
Shane Gould of Au.stralia 'A'ere voted 1972
Athletes oft~ Ytar by Associated Pre!s
writen and newspaper readers in
Europe.
Spitz, %2. of Carmichael, Calif., won a
record seven gold medals at the Summer
Games in Munich while the l6-tcar--0ld
litiss Gould won three.
GAIL GOODRICH PACE-S LAKERS AGAINST BOSTON'S CELTICS TONIGHT. ' . .
Meanwhile, Oregon and the Un}versity
of San Francisco, two impressive early
starters, will be in tourney action to the
east.
Five of the other men in the Top 10
were Olympic gold medalists, and the on-
ly •other American WM tenni.s star Stan
Smith of Sea Pines, S.C., who -v.vn the
Wimbledon title and was star of the U.S.
Davis CUp team that beat Romania.
Cage Powers
'
Clash · Tonight:
LA vs Celtics
INGLEWOOD (AP) -A fast-breaking,
pressuring Boston Celtics move into tos
Angeles tonight for a National Bastetball
Association contest that just might be a
preview of the championship fm.als oe.xt
May.
Both teams lead their NBA divisiOJns,
but the Atlanti~ Division Celtics, 23-3,
have a percentage edge .. over the Pacific
Division La)j.:er.i, 23-4.
Boston beat L.Ds Angeles last· October,
112-104. But Wilt Chamberlain, a summer
holdout, was not in shape then, and Gail
Goodrich was out with a groin injury.
The Lakers have won 19 of their past 20
and have oo eii:cuses now.
U the Celtics take the championship
this year, they will dd so withoui bask&&·
ball's traditiona.1 big, dcmlneerirlg center.
Dave Cowans, the Celti~ pivotman, is
only 6-8 but uses s'peed and ag-
gressiveness to compensate for l~ck of
height. He is the NBA'• No. 3 rebounder,
behmd 7-1 Oiamberlain and 6-11 Nale
Tbumiond. ·s~ as a tradition for the Celtics Is
\yplfied by forward Paul Silas, a team
leader and rebounder with the Phoenix
Suns last season.
Silas, normally at 2.l5 pounds, trimmed
down to 215 for the Celtics'' .sixth-man
slot. '
"I may have lost a little strength under
the defensive boards," Silas admits, but
"J feei' 'better physically, mentally and
psychologically. I can jump a n d
maneuver better and have much better
control of my body.''
Taxes Block Way
Bidder Seeks to Revive
The Ducks, 3-0, will meet Colorado
State in tbe Kentucky Invitational. The
USF Dons, 4--0, open against Anny in the
Kansas Jayhawk Classic after winning
the Cable Car Classic in Oakland last
weekend.
Other West Coast unbeaten tearru in-
clude Washington, 5-0, and, of course,
UCLA.
O.ntarioMotor Raceway
The Huskies have beaten Ohio State
and Grambling among others. Guard
Louis Nelson, with a high of 36 against
Grambling, is leading the Husky scorers
with a 25-polnt average going into
tontght's game at Wichita State,
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A bidder seek-
ing to revive the ~million Ontario
Motor Speedway finds $340,000 in overdue
taxes blocking the way.
Ron ~ulac, a proressional pol ii ical
campaign manager from Long Beach an-
nounced Thursday he planned to resub-
mit his bid ;i.nd take .jnto account the
back taxes which Ontario city officials
want any new operator to assume.
Beaulac, principal in a I i m i t e d
parblership ca1led Victory Enterprises,
met Wednesday night with Ontario city
officials and Frank Colella, president of
Wooden May Miss
Fh·st UCLA Game
LOS ANGELES (AP) -UCLA basket·
ball coach John Wooden is expected to
return home from a hospital Ibis week·
end. but a spokesman says he may
miss his first Bruin game in a quarter of
a century.
A spokesman at St. John's llospital in
nearby Santa Monica said Thursday that
Wooden's condition r em a in e d w1-
changcd. He was hospitalized with whllt
his physicians describe as a heart con-
dition.
llis No. I nationally ranked Bruins
meet UC Santa Barbara Saturday ni~ht
at Pauley Pavilion. lt would be the first
game Wooden ha s missed since becomlng
UCLA's basketball roach in 1948.
Ontario Motor Spced'A·ay Corp., a non-
profit corporation appointed by the city
to operate the speedway.
The board was established after
Ontario ~1otor Speedway, Inc. announced
it would de£ault a bond interest payment
or about $1 million.that was due today,
Annual payments totaling $2 million
have been required for the municipal
revenue bonds sold to finance the racing
planl east of here.
Details or Beaulac·s proposal were not
divt1lged but he contended at a news con-
ference that the previous owners in·
curred the taxes and that they should
pay them.
Net income for the past six months ror
the defunct operators was between..,J1ne-
half and one million doUars, Beaulac
said. But the city said it was told tbe
revenue was used to pay off Joans to keep
the speedway in operation, mainly for
running of the California 500.
The UCLA Bruin> are helng coached by
assistant Gary Cunningham while John
Wooden recovers from a heart condition.
They appear to have an easy assign-
ment Saturday nigbt at home against UC
(Santa Barbara) in search of their 49tb
consecutive victory. ~sno State will be the host of a four-
teaftt tournament that opens tonight.
Washington State is at Montana , Nevada-
One other bid bas ~/received by1he
city but that offer, from John Cooper and
the original operating group,· was Te-
jected by John Nuveen and Co., Chicago.. ,
based investmeent firm representing the
bond holders.
The city-appointed corporation haS
been keeping the track open for such ac-
tivity as the testing of Pamelfi ·Jones•
1973 model USAC championship car'. ltJ
limited-budget ope.ration 'M:luld not be
able to stage spectator events such as
the $200.000 500 stock car race scheduled·
March 4.
Unpaid t1:txes include $215,000 in prop-
erty taxes due last Monday, $93,000 ln in-
ventory taxes due last August and $25,000
l.i street assessments.
Second to Spitz in the balloting was
Lasse Viren of Finland who won the
10,000 and 5,000 meters track events at
lif~ich.
Others. in order are Ard Schenk of The
Netherlands, a triple gold medalist in
speed skating at the Winter Games in
Sapporo: Emerson Fittipaldi of Brazil,
v.'orld auto racing champion; cyclist Eddy
~ferckx of Belgium: gold medal winner
Valery Borzov of Russia in the 100 and
200 meters at Mwiich; Smith ;e\Volfgang
rdwig of East Gennany, tb4ft'irst nou-
rican to win the Olympic pole vault ;
p Keioo of Kenya, Olympic stee-
tlOChase gold medalist and Franz
Becienbauer. of West Germany. capatin
Of the Gennan socCer team v.·hich won
the European Nations Cup,
Second to Miss Gould among tbe top
women was Olga Korbut , the hussian
gymnast who captured the hearts of the
world with her outstanding perfonnances
at Munich that b ght her two gold
medals.
QB Charge~ Raci~l Harassment
ATLANTA !AP) -Eddie McAshan,
Georgia Tech '• black S<nior quar1'rback
who wa1 .suspended before the Tech-'cltorgia game, told 1 civil rlghta prole8I
illeeHog Thul'ld.ay-nillllt the Incident hap-
ptnt!d because ol racllm.
McAlban, however, had sakt lmmedi~ •te'1 ofter the Incident lhat diacrlmlna-
.tian wu not involved. • 4"Jtiere wa! never any d1JerlmJ111tion
._ lbe Tech coacboo or players " be
a.aid urlJrr. '1'n1t just wun't true.:'
Bui he uld Thu~ ,nliht that he had
•
IUflered "four 7ws of harassment and
ttstntment"' at Tech and that the final
Jnsult came when the Tech athletic
depaJ1mcnt refused to give him more
than the legal number of four };uest
tickets tor the oec: 2 game aglllnst state
rival Coorgla.
He said he had In the past. been given
as many as six llcketa for his use.
Tech coach Biil Fulcher was quoted as
saying from Mmnphts, where Tecll Is
preparing ror the Liberty Bowl agalnsl
I
•
Iowa StRte: "None or our players cve.r
was given more Utan lour llckets to any
game."
McAshan rCPortedly hnd requested 10
tickets for the Georgia game. Under
regulations of the Natlonnl Collegl<itc
Athletic COnfercncc, each player is
allotted four tickets per gamr..
McAshan, of Gainesville, J.1a., failed to
show up ror practice three days IJCJorc
the game with Georgia. and was
suspended arter talking with Fulcher.
I ,
...
.Molher tsilk with Fulcher last week
ended In the black quarterlmck re-
maining under susperoion for the Liberty
Uowl gan1c.
Until Thursday ni ght, McAshan had
declined to stty why he failed to show up
. for practice t.!xcept to say that It wu for
"pcrsonul reasons.'·
A1nong th<>Se atlendlng the J*ola!t
meeting at the Mt. Moriah Ba ptist
l'hurch \\'as the f{ov. Ralph David
AbernHthy, president of the Southern
Chri!'.lllnn lA'ildl'rshl p COnfe.re.nce.
•
' \IPI Te...._
GEORGIA TECH QUARTERBACK EDDIE McASHAN .
DAILY PILOT
In SC Tourner
Diablos, Host.s ·
MV Bags Dream Game: Oiler s-CdM Oil Citr-
in 53-50
Gain 2nd Round
Defending champion
Gllnesha gave notice lt was
the team to beat agaln this
time around, while Sa n
Clemente, Min ion V I e j o's
Dlablos and Pacifica moved
into positions to CQntend in the
opening round or the San
Clemente Kiwa nis Invitational
basketball tournament Thurs-
day.•
No Co11test:
Giants Roll
By Artists
Ganesha High's basketball
team blasted out in defense of
its San Clemente Kiwanis
basketball Tournament title,
crushing Laguna Beach 94-54
Thursday in an opening round
game at San Clemente.
Cleve Porter, the Most
Valuable Player in the 1971
toarnament, showed t h a t he
tu..dn 't lost a thing in a year as
he led the aptly named Gianti
to an easy win.
Porter, who is listed con:
servatively at S.5 in the pro-
gram, poured in 30 points as
Ganesha outshot, outran and
outrebounded Laguna Beach in
an impressive exhibition.
'nle game wasn't In doubt
a fter the opening minutes as
Ga.nesha worked a full court
press and fast break to in-
timidate the Artists early and
roared to a 30-16 first quarter
lead.
The Art ists managed to keep
pace in the second quarter,
but Ganesha's strength was
evident again in the third
period and coach G a r y
Fu1kerson was able to go to
bis bench early.
Stephan Garner. Gary
Gregg and Tom Anderson all
managed to reach double
figures for Laguna Beach, but
lbe Artists found Ganesha's
man-to-man defense difficult
to penetrate most or the night.
and Porter was' ever present
to block shots.
Andenon had 14 points for
the night an<t Gamer 11, most
of them cormng on medium
range jumpers in t h e first
hair. Gregg came off the
bench to tally eight of his 10
points in the final quarter.
U.llM •NCll IMlfll ft pl I
G"M' j ! ,,! ~olle~ ' l : KT:'HJ?l.tch ~ 0 6
Gr9q0 • f ! " McM•nua 1 ~
.:::.:-~ DI l ..
TOT•ll 22 1 1 .W k-by ov.n.n GaneUI• XI 16 U 72-'1• UQun. hKh 16 17 ' 11-54
Ganeslia pounded Laguna
Beacb 94-54 In lhe
tournament's opening game,
and IB succee<ling games
MISB!on Viejo nipped Costa
Mesa 41401 Pacifica tripped
Estancta 44-39 and S a n
Clemente handled Saddleback
69-59.
Mission Viejo is scheduled to
challenge Ganesba tonight at
6:30 in a battle of teams that
have both lost only once
previously, and San Clemente
will take on Pacifica at 8 p.m.
in championship b r a c k e t
semifinal games. •
Consolation play this af.
temoon saw Costa Mesa tang!·
ing with Laguna Beach at 3':30
and Estaocia facing Sad-
dleback in a 5 p.m. game.
The tournament, the Sixth
Annu~ such affair will wrap
up Siturday witll a three
game "slate featurfug the title
game at 8 p.m. All games are
being held at San Clemente
High School.
Vikings
In 80-58
Victory
AlJiAMBRA - M a r i n a
Higlt's basketball team sought
the 'flfth place trophy today
agaliist Centennial in the an-
n\Jal A I h a m b r a basketball
t00Tn4ment.
Marina's Vikings. second·
seeded in the tourney, re-
bounded from a disappointing
loss to Pasadena Wednesday
to soundly defeat Arroyo, 80-
58, at Alhambra High Thurs·
day.
It was a team effort all the
way with coach Jim
Stephens' Vikings having four
players in double figures.
Marina also played one of tts
better defensive games of the
year and received a fine re-
bounding perfonnance from
Bob Losner.
Losuer and Bill Fick shared
scoruig booors for Marina
with 19 points while Mart
Ford canned 15 and Ron
Swanton hit ·tl.
TberVJ.tings-1.ipped to a 2%-14
first quarter leod . and ...,.. . tn
command the rest of the way.
M..tnl {IOI
' ~ '!· ,, !!
1 I f ~i
I ' ~ j g ~ ' 0 D 0 l o 19 l• 21 10
Storw t1¥ ONl"M" MMM l'2 11 21 lt -IG Arttl'fO 1• 21 1 16 -SI
4140 Win
Over Mesa
By HANK WESCH
Of .. 11111rv , .... si."
MJke Bowen hJt a rree throw
with four seconds left In the
game to pull Mlssion Viejo
past O:ma Mesa 41-40 in an
opening round game of the Spn
Clemente Kiwanis InvitatJonat
Basketball Tournament Tbufs.
day.
Misslon Viejo managed to
score only four points in the
final pertod. but It proved Ao
be just enough to registet itl
second victory of the year
over Costa Mesa and ill fi(th
victory in six games tills .. ....,.
Trailing 11·'!1 In the llnal
two minutes of the tbird
quarter, Costa Mesa suddenly
caught life and rattled off J%
straight points to gain the lead
with time running out in the
game. \
n.. Orance Cout aru11
pt<p bul<etball bltUe of
giants II on tap tmtght In the
flo.alJ ol. the 44th annual Hwit·
in&tm ll<adl tnvltaUonal
tournament Corona del Mar, Orange
r.ounty•a No. 1 team, unbeaten
through aevtn pme11 c:lashea
with Huntington B e a c h 1 a
OUm wllh tlpoll 1lated !or
8:30. At stalce II lhe tourney
cmwn and perhaps lhe No. I
ranking In Orqe County.
Other games include Lqog
Beach Wllaon and Wamn at
7, Ramona and Arcadia at 5:30
and Monrovia and Tustin at I.
Tritons
In 69-59
Hoop Win
·San Clemente 0.utclassed
Saddleback 89-59 in an opening
round game of its own
Kiwanis Invitational Tourna-
ment Thursday at S a n
Clemente.
An It loot jump shot by
Mission Viejo's Rob Fergt190R.
tied It at 4MO with 56 seexlnds
left to play' and for the neit 50
seconds both teams tried to
give away the game wlthout
success. Coach John Baker's Tritons
Mission Viejo wound up with scored 14 points in succession
the final shot before time ran in the fll'St quarter to take a
out. and Bowen was fo.u,l.ed on 16-2 lead and then ~ to
a drive along the baseline with their second victory in five
four seconds remaining. games this season.
The 5-10 senior guard hit the · The Tritons, eip!oitl.ng a
first of two free throws. and height advantage over Sad·
although Costa fi.fesa managed dleback abowed a w e 11
a desperation hall-court amt organized fa5l break on oc-
at the buzzer the game be-casion and got consistent
longed to the .Diablos. shooting from four starter! to
The two teams played even-control the game from start to ly throughout the first two flnlsb
periods as the score was tied Saddiebact recovered slight-
or the lead changed ' hands Jy trom the stunning first
nine times before Missk>n,Vie-quarter blitz as B a k e r
jo pulled to a 23-19 advantage. substituted heavily Jn the sec--
Bowen, Mark Maurer, and ond 8 n d fourth J::: but Bill Halley handled theoscortng . -. load as Mission Viejo str!ated even with llie su ltutes in
to its 10 Point advantage Saddleback came no closer
before Costa Mesa !Jlll'ged than seven polo.I.! from tbe back lead at any time m the game.
~ Mustangs had .Jlif-San Clemente's over a 11
ficulties with Mission vtejo's balance proved too much for
box-and.one defense for most Sa~dleback in the. game: Four
of the first three quarters, but 1'.'rltons starters hit for double
thelr own aggressive man-to-figures, led by 6--2 . senior
man started to pay off in the forward Dan Nau with 18
rrnal stanza and John Cum-points on nine field goals.
mins Mike' Berry and Phil Nau was equally effective in-Sala~r started to dom:Inate side and outside against the
the defensive boards and plug Roadrunners mne defeme,
the middle. and senior forward Bill Ken·
Salazar led Costa h!esa's ney and jlDlior center Ted
scoring with 11 points, in-Kalota both contributed good
eluding the fittal period go-work on the beards.
ahead scores. Berry also hit The Tr it on s ' rebounding
double figures. superiQrity was especially evi-
1 MlnMI '/tt'Jt (411 dent jp the opening period,
"''"""'°"' fJ " -: .~ when they put up 22 shots to
H•llev ), j •, •, just hall that many for Sad-R°'*•HI ~~~, •1 I i ; dleback.. Tol1t1 I J f 41 Ill C..,,....11 Cffl ft -' ..
(Ml• MM.I 1401 .. It of ,, ~=.,..., 1'! I j 11
~~~Ins ffit~=~ 5 lj''I
11"'"""1""' 1·1'4 r=n•n flol S.lll.lf 1 11 Wl'tlM ! ! 'o ~.';~'"' l l A St•WO
Tol•l1 Sto111 by OVll"Mnlt 110 .IQ ~l:E:' J ~ 1j J
Mtaslon V11lo t 10 14 1-41 Seen w ONrten
Cost• MIU f 10 12 t--.MI S.odlel:Y<:k 6 ll 15 :!11-5'
S.n Cll'!Tlel'lll ll 14 16 21-lt
Mariners
Gun Down
Estancia
Pacifica pulled away ln the
final quarter to defeat Estan-
cia 44-39 and send the Eagles
into the C00901ation brac!Cet or
the San Clemente Kiwanis
basketball tournament Thurs-
day at San tiemente.
PacifiCa•s MariWs behlnd
the shooting or guard Bob
Skaggs broke a JS.-35 deadlock
with seven straight points late
Jn the final period as Estancia
dropped its third of five con-
tests this season.
The Eagles, who had diffi.
culty shooting over a Pacifica
zone most of the evening. bad
taken a 33-31 lead midway
through the final period, but
were unable to bold the ad-
vantage.
Estancia came out on top of
a rather sluggishly played
first half with a 17-15 ad-
vantage. Both teams played
deliberately in the f i r a t
quarter as Pacifica took an 11-
10 advantage, and play came
to a near standstill in the sec-
ond period as neiither team
could penetrate the opposl·
Uon'1 zone defense.
Marty Mikkelson, a M
senior who was a football
quarterback, led Pacifica out
of lhe doldnnns w1tb eight
points In the third period, but
Tim PirUe hit !or stx points
for F4tancla in tht 11me
period to kttp the Eagles
c1 ....
Mikkelson and 6-J Jim Lldd
Wtte able io penetrate Enan-
cla's tone durln( the Cl'llClal
spurt In the final quarter,
however and that was the dif-
ference In the Ulne.
OAILT PILOT f'MM., Pa--~I
....... '"' J""] ~~ II ~~ '
f.'r.\'1 ldtt "" ~ rlt 1 1 I
COSTA MESA'S JIM SWAI N PRO.TECTS BALL FROM BILL HALLI Y. J~11fc~· -1t !1:~
• •
c.ocb Elmer Comllo' llilJt.
tJogtoo Belcil n .. i. the ~
tt1t Item In Orlngt <:ouocy,
ulde !tom the unde!cat.ed Sea
Klnp.
The Ollen, vnnnbd and
apparently overlooked Ju the
mldat of a rebutldlna ...,..,
have spun oil llx alra1ght wlna
with their rapid attack and
po<e a serloul threat to
Corona'• No. I ralln& In the
county.
Combo ba1 lour juolon in
the attack and the com-
blnati-On of Raul Contreras,
Jim Weir, Dave Axelson, Scott
Rankin and Doug Rabe bas
~ a 6-1 record. Bu& Rabe
JS out with 1 knee lnjury so
Combo will be going wllh Jim
ftel.
Can this young group stop
the Corona juggernaut ?
Combs says yes, and cites
good defense and second and
third shots on offense as the
key. "We have to control the
boards," says Combs.
It's been the Big Thrl'e ai
Corona del Mar with S-3 guard
Casey Jones. M forward Jeff
Wharton and 6-2 forward Matt
Keough taking turns with their
moon lhotl from outaide and
fast break layups.
Corona II Polled and con-
fident Ind that's alto so~ of
the tnaredlenta Huntington
Beach poissnse:t, says Coroua
del Mar coach Tandy Gillis. '
"Elmer's kidl are confident, ·
they shoot well ind they get
the ball to the open IT\D.n. ~l's a
lot of offensive ability."
Opposing Huntington's rapid
atlack will be Corona's sticky
man-to-man defensive
pressure while the Oilers use
the Combs' trademark -the
1·2·2 zone with an occasional
press.
Tri11mph
By GLENN WlllTE
Of ,... °"" ..... • ....
llunllngton Beach HI.ah'•
surging Oilers bigged their
sixth straight game.of the em-
bryonic season as . t h • y
outlasted Long Beach Willon.
53-50, Thursday ntghl Jn the
semifinals of the Huntington
Beach Jnvltaliooal basketh&D
tourney at the winner's gym.
CdM Grabs 7th Stra fg ht;
Blasts Warre n, 62-4 7
Coach Elmer Combs' forca
led from wire to wire Wt they
had cause for hasty breathing
at the finish as the Bruta.
nearly overhauled them.
Wilson, 1 9 7 1 tournament
champion. rallied from a 5'Mi1
deficit with 3:51 left in the
game to pull within a bucket
-52-50 with l : 15 remaining .
llowcver . the victors went
into a nUty stall nnd were able
to run the clock down to 18
seconds before the frustrated
intruders committed an In·
tcntional fou l.
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .. Dt1W PMlt Slltff
Corona de! Mar Rlgh's Sea
Kings blitzed to their seventh
straight conquest Thursday
night to set themselves up in
the llnala tonight In the 44th
aMual Huntington B e a c h
Basketball Invitational tourna-
Kings used the other portion of
the Big Three to perfection as
Jeff Wharton added 18 points
and Matt Keough 15 in staying
undefeated.
There wasn't any fuming
point -t~e Sea Kings simply
went out and ran off a lead of
11·2, upped il to 29-13 ;.riiith 2:22
left in the half and sat back
and waited for their conquest
to become official.
The Corona del Mar man·to-
See CdM Page !f
Dave Axelson responded by
making one of two free throw
tries nnd victory was only a
for malit y.
ment again.st the host Oilers of
Huntington Beach.
Victory'over Warren's Bears
Ttwnday was methodical as
coach Tandy Gillis' Sea Kings
breezed early and coasted In
62-47 winners at Huntington
Beach.
Newport, Chargers Fall
Out of Tom·nament Play
Combs got yeoman service
out of his reserves with Jon
llanour and Craig Ahrem
doing well. They scored a
dozen points bctwcrn them -
all in key situations when
Wils6n would make a run at
overtaking l!untlngton .
The only apprehension or By JOHN CASS r 0ra County' N °' .. ae1rv •• ,..,. WOl'l')' or nge 1 o. Newport Harbor. and Edison
1 quintet was ·the status. of High School basketball teams .
guard Casey Jonea U be gri~ gaVe away too much in the
ped his right knee following 8 early goings ~net fell by the mid-court colllsion In a ,.. defensive play during the third wayside in the 44lh annual Huntington Beach Invitational quarter. tournameol He limped off the court in · , pain but minutes later be was Coach Dale H a g e y s
back In action and apparently:, . Ne~ Sailors, n a r, r o w
will play tonight close to full lo~s to Orange County s No.
strength 1 quintet, Corona del Mar,
Jones: an AU..ClF AAAA Wednesday, lost to tall Tustin
rirst team selection 81. a 'I'hul'3day at H u n t I n g t o n
junior, led his talented mates Beach,~. .
in scoring with 19 counters. Jn ·.And the Chargers of E~i~on
addition to Jones the Sea High dropped a 66·53 de,c1s1on to MonroVla. The two winners -k fI: * collide today at 4 p.m. to set·
c.,_ -.i wri 10 tle fifth place in the 16-team ~ '•' tu w11n1m1 •' ,' ,,• se p. J-_.! • • 1 ci.r1. 2 o Newport Jed only briefly at ~ ' ) ~ li 3-2 in the early stages and fell ~=· i ~ I t behind in the ID-point range
Toi••• Sc.rt h' ~~ 12 62 for the most part due to the
COf"anl de! Mar 11 11 ,, ,, -u fine·~-rune -~ of Tustin'• W•""'°' I I 13 IS -41 :uuu nvl"&
•
•
forwards. Dave Trotter and
Don Daniel as the pair com·
bined for 38 points with their
insi de work.
NeY.·port made it close in lhe
closing moments, cutting the
gap lo 65-'3 with 2: 17 lo go on
Curt Spreen's five-footer. and
again at 67-65 with 1:35 left on
Spreen's layup.
NeWpOrT M•rtllr f4SI .. ft.ftp O'Ftahertv 1 J 7 7 .Allman 2 1 O A ·sch,,.,lot o J 1 l Renn1r 2 O D c Ct;irk ?QO• SllrHn S 7 s 17 t101na5 ~ ' 1 H Weodw•rd 1 0 2 c Swlt~· 1 • s b Tol•b 21 21 11 6S sc-b'f QINl1e,.. Ntwl>Ol'I lO 18 11 ?1 -fS Tus11n 12 2l 11 1a -10
EdllM fSJ) 1 '~'t':
I t ~ J
• J t 15 t l l ?
1 ~ i 1~ I 0 J 1 :muun
k-"" Qv•r1• ... Elllsoll 10 JO U 19 -53 ~viii 17 It 9 21-"6
Ahrens "'as particularly im-
posing. He had two steals,
seven points and made several
deflecti ons of passes to break
up Wilson's offense.
Huntin~ton Beach's defense
- a bright spot in each game
thus far -forced 21 turnovers
and kept that r ele ntles!I
pressure on the s p u n k y
Bruins. Wilson shot 34 percent
from the field while the Oilers
hit 41.3 percent of their field
goa l tries.
Despite the low scoring out-
put. Combs had three players
in double figures. Ji1n \Veir led
the way with 15 while A.'Celson
potted 13 and Raul Contreras
had a dozen.
""~""'~ 1u1,
Conlrrr11 s ' R•nkln o, O Weir l 11.xtlWI 6 1 T"' II 1
Ahrlm ! ', "~' Tot•l1 n t SC'ON: by OIHrte"
'l ! ' ,i
~ " ' d
LI Wiloon • 11 lj t• -5' HUTtl. 8HCh 17 I I '1 -SI
Quarts
NOWSM!!
' •!.!'.~ .....
~en it snows,
itpo1•rs
• • ,
•
•
I
/
J4 DAILY PILDT
In Cage ToUl'Dey_ Gauchos
In 72-55 Pirates, Rusders
Suff er Setb acks Hoop Loss
ALTA LOMA -Colden
We~ and Oranp Coast col-
leges have a wet:t. to htal
• their hastelball wounds after
bolh arfa schools were ousted
from the annual Chaffey
Invitational Thunday.
GWC's Rustlers toot it on
the chin from r u g g e d
Pasadena, 74-57, In the cbam·
pionshtp bracket while OCC's
Pirates ware dumped by Cbaf. fR, 'lt-'n, in a consolation
game.
Golden West returns to ac-
tion Tu~, hosting the
Chapman JV while the Pirates
have a return engagement at
ChaCfey Tuesday,
Coach Dlclc Strict I in 1 s
Rustlers held a ·three-point
edge over Pasadena (%7-24~
with three minutes left in the
haH, but the Lancers outscored
Golden West, 11>-0, and held a
34-27 balflime edge.
Golden West trailed by five
(53-48) with seven minutes left
in the gam~, but the Rustlers
were forced to speed up the
tempo of the game and that
resulted .in some eas y
Pasadena buckets.
By HOWARD I. HAND\'
Of .. Dmlr,... ....
Marlt Dekkar paced the Clint Chapman and Bruce
Rustlers with 18 Points wblle Cari, a pair of refugees from ·
Cary Orgill hlt 11 .oo Taras the USC Trojan v • r 1 it y
Young bad u . basketball team, led the.junior ,
Pasadena, now 9-l for the varsity to a n.56 vtctory over
sta!IOn, faces R 1ve r 111 de the Saddleback Gauchos
tonight whtie East LA takes on Thuroday night In ,_league
LA Harbor in t~ other action on the Mission Vlejo High court.
semifinal tllt. The l'!'O players, suspeoded
Pasadena'.s Larry Pounds earlier in the week for curfew scored !8 while teammate Kevin Ho·"' bad 16_ vk>lations, scored 13 Points
7 • between them to start the
In the Orange ())at game, game and give the JV1 • 1S-t'
Chaffey produced lb ftnt. vie-edge afttr five minutes. Coach
tory of the year (the Panthers Roy Stevens' Gauchos never
came into the game with an 0-recovered..
7 record) gettio8 the winning Chapman was a sophomore
basket with 28 seconds to eo. varsity starter before the
Orange Coast had two abots IUSpension and Clark a toJ>o
in the remaining Ume, but flight reserve. Chapman hit 21 ·
both bounced off the rim. the points and Clark JS against the
final with just one second left. Gauchos giving them 36, half
Chaffey dominated I h e ol lhe team game total.
,t>oards with g..7 forward Brian Another Trojan topbomore,
Kovach doing most of the Jeff Reinke, scOred 12 J)Oints
scoring for the Panthers with in the second half and 18 for ,
31 points. the night for runnerup honors. ; OCC freshman forward Tom p t n-be~-·. e e .nu ''°• a reserve, ii:· Crunk led the Boes with 23 was the Gauchos' high point l'*'
points wbile sophomore guard man despite playing only
John Seymo\ll" had 20. Rod about u minutes « tile second .
Snook also WU in double half. He had tbe bot band from ·
figures ~11). • · outside the key wblle be was
. T~e P1tates had a 34-32.edge in the action, hitting 13 points.
. 1n field goals, but Chaffey won But he aJ&o picked ~ four-~ ga_!11e •.t the free throw personal fouls in 71h minutes
line, outscoring the Bucs, 15'9. cit the second half and went to
ln other tournament games, the sldellnes for the ne1t eight
Dana Hi11s,
Barons Top
Cage Foes
LA Harbor downed Fullerton, minutes 7~. Riverside edged Ml San Si.rte~ Dennis Murphy was Top Jtf-rlin Boo•·-d Antonio, 6S.fil in overtime, and sccnless in the fll'St ball but .. Ke
East LA polished off San· amnected from outside in the
Diego . Mesa , 107·92, In the l!eCOlld half, contributing nine Mel Smith of Newport Beach recently caught thU
championship hrackel • points. During the second 20-981J.pound black marlin while fishing off the shores
In other consolation games, minute period the Gauchos of Austnlia. Length of the f i s b was 14 feet, 3
LA Valley defeated Grossmont played the JVs' on even terms, inches.
Dana Hills and Fountain 77--68, <;YJ>ress 'edged San trailing by only one point, 36-~--------------------Valley high schools each earn-Bernardino, 7U8, and Citrus 35
ed victories in tournament tri pped Glendale, 7U4. The Gauchos forced %4 USC
basketball games Thursday Go1Nfl w .. , 111J tumoven drring the game but
night, Dana Hi!~ ripping St. 11u11 '! i 'f· ~ the taller Trojans forced most
fi1ichael's 66-21 in the Lennox b'iki~lr i g i J of the Saddleback shooting to
Tournament and the Barons ~~~ 1 j L lll' the outside and controlled the
bea"-Ri h tti "°39 . th Tgt~I' 21 1 .._ _ _,_ Ith he uug g e _.. in e H11Fflll'M!: P•Udeft• :u. GWC uucu"\16 w~ater igbt.
Santa Maria Tournament. o,.... c.... 1m css1
Both "teams adv·-~ lo "" ft "' .. "'m. ~ -f 1•
All\.'l:\I ti!~r '13 I I ' !!\~-~ • 1 , ~
Checking Out .Area
Prep Award Banquets
second round play· C•lll'lk 1 I • N ~r....,_,.,. 2 o ' • Gary Blume and Doug Fa·
Junior forward Mark Schrey i=n l 1 j if ;'A1~ j 1i ! ~i bian _were named the most
paced Dana Hills to its second ~~1""'• ~ ~ i i Ir~ ' 1 ~ vaJuable athletes on Marina
win of the season. gunning in Yertiev l o f 2 R~ie' 1 1 ~ 13 High School's cross country 24 . •· 12 fi Id oa] Tot1t1 l4 f ' n Tot11, 2S s lt J 1 pom~ on 1e g s, H•1n1rn~: c11111~v ~. occ :n H1tt11mt: use JV :M-10. ss and water polo teams.
while Bill Springman added 10. .., Blume, whose ninth place
The Dolphins play host team finish in the CrF finals led
Lennox tooight in t h e T p f t T M · to third I semifmal rowld. Game time is WO er ec ~ams anna a pace team finish, also earned most im-8:~00ior Dan Malone and 6--11 proved runner honors.
center ScoU Reider combined Bid f CIF T •ile Cross Country to lead Fountain Valley to its or . f, Vmfty -Most Valuable:
win. Gary Blume; Captain: Ken
Malooe, scoring·comialenUy LOS ANGELES __ bl•• But St p uJ .lb Martyn; Mosl Im pro v e d : throughout the game. finished nv .,. · a , WI a rock· gary Blwne; Most Inapira-
with a · Jame-high 23 points school football teama with ribbed defense that has given tional: Ken Martyn.
Varsity
Q\ptaln: Chart.. Cemlcky:
J.iost Valuable : Merle Peters;
J.iost Inspirational: Jim Poss.
Junior Varsity
Captain: stcve Grabelin :
J.fost Valuable: Rick Poss.
Froot>Soph
Captain: John Turner :
Moot Valuable; Dennis Varga.
Outstanding runners : Senior
Merle Peten; Jonl<r: D a I e
Quiggle; Sophomore: D a n
Prince: Fresiiman: Harold
Brackett.
while Reider scored 10 of his contra.sting offensive styles up only 42 points this year, Junior Varsity -Afost
16 markers in the fourth will settle the CIF AAAA valuable: ""--Cadra·, Capl· CdM di · · ~--pl-·" •-lgh wil l be a clear cut favorite ,Lqlll quarter. v1s1on uMQU v.uoauP M.111 t ain: Richard Miller; Most •
The Barons trailed 26-23 at at the LoJ Angeles C.Ollieum. Qver a Western team that lost _ Improved: Vic Allen. • •
the half, but took a three-point Western and St. Paul. both to another Angelus League foe Fro s h • So p h -Most Continued From Page Zl
lead after tbeee quarters and 12-0 and the two top.ranked -Bilbop Amat -37-21 in the Valuable: David Wells; Cap-mao pressure forced 2:1 War-1
nnt the game away in the team.! in the divisioflt collide r--1-, ....... -r. lain: »...._ Sholar·, Most r• t a for the cro UlWWI -· ,,_ °"" ren turnovers and the shooting foorth pen"ocl. Fountain Valley a wn. The~----Ill be "tbout lmpro-': David Mayala. St Paul the Angelus r ............ ..-...,ua:nt w WI ¥11:1\1 was crisp, especially in the plays host Santa Maria tonight · • ~--Waler Pele first half as Gillis' crew raced at 8:30. champion making Its IOCOlld ' dual1JUlPC)lebaclcAlanOabon, Varsity -Most Valuable: ~ ad
Dana Hills coach Tony -·~~ m. the flnals (the who twisted a knee in to a o>V""19 vantage. v-c cr·rdsmc---· w~-· ••tf .. -• Doug Fabian; Captain: Pat I that the •·-v•. Stilbon wasn't especially im-Sw~ en tied El Rancho 2fO.. ~u • ..,,. squca.a.er cwer Brennan; Most Improved: n span oXd LWJgs
pressed with the plhy of his 20 m 1968). has J)OUDded out Anaheim last week. Osbon bas Jeff FA.wards. connected for 5.2 percent (13 of
first-year team. "Not when the yarda~e with lropman rushed fer more than 1,00ll Junior Varsity _ fl.fost 25) and overall they clicked
you consider the competition ., fullback Bill Wargo (1.* yards thil leaSOn. Valuable·. n., Hormell·, Can.. for 43.6 percent (24 of 55). he said. ' · yards) and the infrfquent but Westem a1ao showcases a lwu ,. Corona del Mar's offensive
"We played poorlv the first effective passing of Pat defenae tbat is difficult tq lain: Chris Erickson; ~fost attack consisted of the outside
half but the second haU was a Degnan (~ of 145 for l,331 move against, although it will Improved: Chris Erickson. jumpers fro m Jones, Wharton
diffe rent story. If v.·e play well yards). ' be considerably weaker Fr 0 sh -S 0 Ph -A1ost and Keouah, blended , with the
I think we have a chance of Western has made good U9e without Osbon at hl1 defensive Valuable: Eric Ekberg; Co-layups oJt!'the end of the fast
beating Lennox and making or the multiple ttUents of AD· halfback post. Captains: Matt Qualls •and break.
the finals." CIF quarterback Bob AL'Osta, other tlUe games tonight : Eric Ekberg. Warren kept the score
•
a 200-pounder who ean nm AAA respectable with aome fine ~ t;> (1,395 yards) and pa!IS (978) Santa Maria VI Loa Altos at Westminster High School outside shooting from Ken
, ~ with nearly e qua 1 ef-Mt. San Antonio, College. named Merle Peters as its Stamey and meve Beason. i 1a fectiveness. AA most valuable cross country Stamey finished the night With ~ ~ Temple City VI Nell at runner while Charles Cernlcky 17 counters.
10 53 Citrua College. earned team capllain honors. But for the Bears, there was i; = li HB Tickets . A The awards were made litUe sol~ as they fell below
l
Boron. at Puo Robles. Wednesday at the high sohool. lbe .500 mark at 4-5. Huntington Beach Hi ghl----------------'----.::.... ____________ _
season basketball tickets are
now on sale at $12 per reserv·
ed seat for seven home games.
They can be acquired by con-
tacting Ralph Brown at 598-
3024 or Jack Fiskoess at 9Q..
O'llfl.
~,d
t.11 ~a ~ IUIAofC..
t..o1 ~\IV
~t'A...._
44 fashion Island , new Por t center 644·5070
J~, Prep
Wrest~
Results
Over Los AJam ltos
Monarchs Roll
T o .86-69 Win
..... W.t {N) t•) C._t .. r
J, llt -L!!lfWY (Cl dK. Kahlet (Gl, a.
IJt -AMmoto IGI plM9CI Mir CC I,
1!0S.
l:M -Vawll.MI {0) Oll'I"* ..,_kW
lC>, S:U. lG: -lllC!!O 10) plllllM H1r9rew IC>. S:lf.
, lJO -l<Ol'IY (0) OlllMd ll'otlfleid tCI, l:e .
1~ -l.OPU {Ol wvn by twr.11,
1., -""'"1#1 !OJ pinned Subf IC l. ••. l :». • . 1n -aniokrneft (CJ de. 1to111111 {OJ, ,_..
lPO -Mltl)fr CGI M., Medlrwl !C),
21·10.
Hwr -Svter 10) d...W WOii t,.wil11-ltt1 1~1, a or..,. CMll l2tl Ufl S.l'4ac1t1111
sJll -J-(Ol OK. VellQUel tlO,
t. 111-Tlnole ISi dee... ltoriCIC {0), I).
ts}~s-1 Far-111 fOl •· Mtnclmll
1:i "":. lf3=. !O(s'J •:i,_,, Blevloe:• "i·•;:U~ 61 -Ill ~· FW.,n!i5 • 11..J.
'" -9111\ ! -ev 11. .l.'!'. -t GK. I'-iS , +.O. .,.,. -JuerQ [SJ wvn bY ~ t.
-·-1tt) 111) Clleffey t:~~ -Ju_, ti Plmtd Mey IC,l,
2• l'H -.__., ISi dee. Aork • (0), 5-
l:W -.... , Ill (0) pfllfled Bollec•ff cc I J :.ct. 2 -BletK CO) pll!Md Heror1v. "I ,, it NOOl'I CO) P1MM Shtfllt!d !CJ,
I ''ff~ l l•vtoc• !01 WOii by forlell,
1 i6J -Lawl1 ( I lllnnN SW! IC). :3, IC) tnr!I-(01 dr.w wfft! Brocio;m•n
..
By OEN!l(JS CMIPBELL
ot .. Dall1 'lllt Sllff
George Herold scored an
eye-popping 37 points and
keyed u second.quarter out·
burst as Mater Del mgh
School's basketball t e a m
rocke ted past visiting Los
Alamitos ~ 'nwrsday night.
Sloppy ball handling put the
Monarcha on the deficit end or
a 17-14 first.quarter score, but
the shooting « llerold and"
Oreg Grten overwhelmed Los
Alamitos In the second perjocl.
With Herold popping In 15
points, and Green-eight, Mater
Oti raced to a 39-27 lead at the
end of the second quarter.
That duo, in fact, scored all
but two or the ¥onarchs
points in the period. John
Adams got those t~o with a
driving layup at the buzzer.
Bencfet (0) dee. Medino (Cl, It·
The Monarchs came out
gunning to start the second
half and baskets by -who
else? -Herold and Green
'· Hwv ~ F~ 1c1 -bY tone11, quickly upped the margin to
G.,,... ~'::' llJ) M ariM 43-27.
tt ~ cG1 DlllMll Meeon-From that poinl on Mater 111,iah!.._tM~ :t!r.c. CGGJ p111 LMJttt• Dei coasted, and Los Alamitos
5''f\'; _ Moot"e tGGl 11ec, hlMIO !MJ could nev~ get closer than 15 ''tio _ cii1en 1001 _ by tortea. points to the Monarchs.
133 -H rko cM&!ri LY11• IGJ 11~. Jt looked like a long night ...1.:i. -Pllllan I ' 11ec. Pickett CMI for Mater Oei when the Grif·
lfi = ~'tk~Kr~G/o1~ fms jumped to a quick 11)..2 2·1611 -McG1n1.., 101 dee. Sit._ !Ml lead as the Monarchs had dif·
'°i\s -H•uttbekl\ IM ,1Med McC••t ficulty getting their offense in
tG f 3:21. gear 1'1 -Fr•w• !GI dK. VorC]lf!O J:1S. • Hvr -t...-. 1001-. h'trf• lMI Bui Herold began finding the ... J..., versi~ range, his teammates began .~ \':..\ ::C. K~....V: cGi to hang ooto the ball and the 1.... margin began to dwindle. 111 -Bf:tl !Ml -b_r forfltl1. !G'i1 4:u,st nev M o!Med ven Artc1e1e A· 6-3 senior, Herold got
cd-:01:i. ZlmrMI',_, !Ml de(-. Whlleker altnost BJI 0 £ his baskets
a lot of them on medium 1¢
long·range shots. The outM
was his second lowe!lt. or \&e
season. bringing hL' averaa:~
to fin even 2:0. 1.'·
.
Mllll llAC, .
lliCTllC , ·-· 1.---jat 7l4 ..... 1
n1 -~"' fMJ 11ec. ~111 •5. underneath, constantly work·
•. 131 -111.i: IMJ '*· Zin• 1o1 s. ing his way along the baseline ••1e1a cuhin1 •~llmtnts ,
u~A~ khMlmr CMJ-.. ...,.rtcton ·for layups and short Jmnpers. 1!9!1McCIJll.DCH ~_
ISi -Murt11 CG> dK. leiDlll'f !Ml The game marked the third .... ". 11.0. I
,,Jts -McGu1G11 1G1 Pll'l....t LuPCMI\$ time he bas been over 30 and TONY'S BLDG
1fs -MunH11 IM\-0v forfeit. hiked his average to a spa rkl· • (,J~l -Bore11r IG P!n....t Todtm1n j 24 MATERIAL, INC.
Hwv -MoOr. IOI -by lorlalt. ng .5. •i~•" Green finished with 16 points 2111 "--""1. 0.111 Hllll I • , ore.,. lffl ,,_.,,..... co'A rS:.o~ml• 1 1 p1f'IMCl1 s1ncn.rli;;a;;n;;d;;, ;;ln;;co;;;;n;;tr;;ast;;;;lo;;;;H;;ero;;;;l;;d,;;goi;;,t;;;;;;;;c;;-;;;;;;";;-.-·--Ml-;;;;;;";;;za;;;;""i llD -YOUflll IOJ Dlnntd C1rr !OHi '"ll; l~Jni.i T111Wne1 !Q!ilfrtw wlttl Hlltlff
12G -Beqq ~) •. Oevi. IOHI a.5. ,Jr!) ~33~rlo (OJ pillnld Velencie
133 -Mecldttt' tOJ DIMtd c-1 IDHl 1:~
lll -8-1 I (0) P!Med ltellllfMI IDH1 '-"· u -~ (0) i>l.....cl .. _
!OH :44. I 15• -S..Urt fDHl pfltf*I Gorltoll (01 l :r~ -Smltti fDHl e1r1MC1 P'--1kv I (01 2:30.
17$ -Fklrm CO) -bl' flol'f9lt lt5 -WIN'ltlm tOI wn111111 co1u,. IOHI •:1,.
IDHH'fl:IO. ·-(~_"I'.'* Abne!T'I
YOUR SUPPORTING
GIFT GUARANTEES " YOU MORE 1NCOME ~
-(iA, Yu c• eccr•....,. ...W, ._ ... , ·r1 .,.., ....................... , .. Of'Mll9Jrmr~ .... ,,, fo'fM.~• lt»il dee. Contrerw
111.l -<Y'OoNMI lDHJ 'Nl)lt b\' '"rn.le. 111 -Cler• ID) dee. Herrl• !OH) ). I.
....,... • ·-...... cw ......... s.... c...t c.....,. HOlf'ht''
MW "Utl .. Trnt "°tf"9111. w Wrfte er
CALL ML JIM HIND
110 -Remos P.a) won b~ forfeit 117 -Smlttl I DlltMd M""rv /OH ),
Ill -DlllCl'I I won bv lorftll. ·~ -BOl!wMr 0 ) Dl~Md G1mmon COH .
c•ll fOf -.111 hidey.
499-1311
Ext. 200
1 -s.toclt1' 101 Dll\Nd Oc1mDC1 !OH!. lil -P1rr IOl dK. l!llMworltl IOHl ·~·s -Cnoll'I to1 Dlnntd OeH••n (OH).
Its -OtJ011et fO) won bv torholt. Hwv -Cll1I 10) -bf lortelt.
•
T
SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
11172 Coost HllJhwer. 5"ttr L..t-, Col.,.,. tJ•n.
•
WORLD' JASTEST
HORSES RHIRN TO
lOS AIAMITOSI
.
NOW -Feb. 12 J Mof1.1hru Sat. 7:45 I 3 Exactasl
• • .
SomeOI Th*........_lllcloldt,,.. -.11. ·12
8 w p I ·-............. .. 30 • 3 319,171
8YOU 81N> " ' 3 , ,.,.... --,. 13 •• ; aot,117 --30 13 • l • , .. ~. --:n ,. • , ...... ·~ ,. • 2 1:00: AU.Mrroa ANGIL 10 • 2._ , ......
CAWllllYOH • , 2 ,40,,,15 WHA'TMIMYTOQO " ,. • 2 '10t, 174 IOMI ICINDA MAN 11 -. • • ~-·-_,,,., .... ,. • • • "·°'" 00 CHICICll QO " • • 0 68,Nl ·""'""'DIN~IDO . • ~ 9 1 0 '80,810 . -
--rd ~-lllltdning. ror .. ___ ..... w_ (213)431-0922
Of (714) Ul-4471.
Tic:Mtl l II 1fon11elo11
(:113)4'1-1'81 or(714)1ff.12M,
•
• •
!
~ I
-.,
•
.
'
b
I
•
Cliecki1ig Soutlila1ul Slopes
Road Co nditions Icy
'
By M. R. SNOW
Of Illa Ollly f"l .. I Still
Stranded people in the
Southland slopes during or im-
mediately followlng a big $'!-Orm is becoming a common tli!og.
''That's what happened to
liilhdreds at Mt. Baldy and
Angeles Crest as result of one W the earliest ski seasons in a
fong tim e.
:'This writer and o th e r
Sources, including the
lfighway Patrol and the Auto
Club of Southern Caltfornia
~arn motorists heading for
the snow scene lo carry
C!'.'hains.
·~ rcw pay attention. and wind
. p a ying the l>ipcr.
nfor,unately. most of them
· lhe •now bunnies who
up skiers on the slopes,
re importantly. on the
ieadingin and out or
ountalns.
road condilions usually
in the early morning and
1te afternoon hours. But this
f; no sssw·ance because, as it
Bas just happened . a sudden
I
storm c\n develop into icy nod
cfangerous going.
Erle Poulsen is the !one
Southern Calllornia, lhat ·ski ,
tourlllg ls 4,00> years old,
orlglnatlng ln Norway. He ls
now attlllated with California'.s
newest area, K;lrkwood Celifornia n competing for the Meadows ln the Lake Tahoe
United States Alpine team in area. '
the current Alpine racing in Waarli emphasizes the safe·
Europe. Poulsen. who hails ty of aki touring by pointing
rrom Olympic Vall~y 111 the out that despite dally training
Lake tab..oe l!r~. 1_s one of the 5000-man Norwegian Army
foqr Far Western sld stars on didn't suffer a slngle injury. th~ squad. The others are .• Ski equJpment ls much lighter
P.1ike LaUerty of Eugene, than for the ordinary sport,
Ore.: Susan Corrock o f With Jamlnaling process for
Ketchum, Idaho; and Susan skis stai'ted as early as 1814 in Pet.e~son of Sun Valley: ~dab?. Norway.
Off1c1ally the compet1t1on. is waarU notes that ·cro~S'
the 1972.73 World Cup series. country racing is another ¢e
Look for cross country alid
ski touring to be accelerated
during the current season. Big
strides were made by both of
these sidelines a year ago and
now e\lery area not only is ex-
panding thelr~ams, but also have h' ed eran and
expert instructors r r 0 m
Europe.
Knut \Vaarli. a Norwegian.
told the Ski ,\Vriter~ of
spo<t, and Norway-hi..-~
it through the years by holding .
events for the blind and han-
dicapped.
SNOW TllACkl1 ·-\lallty "''"* I• sf•rl ....,_111111 111 111,..Wll llH cllalrs Weclnntlty, T., c,..,.d fer II• '
•re• II.it ... II J.1111, •1111 olfkL•I• Wiii 1lop Mllllll lkb ts wlMll 4,.. hlYO
llffll Mid ••• f'lt O'COllMll It.ml IMvW I• Klrll'#Md ·M4MINt• lrom 91dtor
f'1u , •• TM J111ll•r r•c• c•mp •I ""!! .a1• " Ml for DK. :&Wl , with "'° a b f9r rM 11¥• t1ay1 ""'' Mt .•• N•w tqlll•rnlfll 111 Nie Fl-'1 01trm1·
!Jori, Ml f'll¥flllllonliMI 11111 tpOrl. Tllo:
..... ., •• fll!ilre NII --1•1rtlf1H wltti 1kllnt fir 24 )'el l'I .•• Sill llto!Mell
moy bt ""4ofll rCIH -11'111 • MW I ~~Cal Hosts Pomo1~a
il ~thern California College Vanguards. travel to Pasadena 2bsta Mesa will play a pair for a s1n~e gan:ie. then
eekend basketball games participate in an eight-team
1111mbtr '""""91 .i l)lt ll'Olllldtl llu
"" MllpMI. " hp •• .......,,nod 111111 llrltl'I IN protldM Ill 111 part1 ..
lllt:lr bolllft b1r1 lhlllr MN1. Th11 rn.tY " IM hltnl crllO .. , Yol 0 •11.1,..,
Fr-, If •ltllf for 11111 wttlt'I WOl'M c.,. r1c1 .... ,..,._ s .... v.
Hff't •i:n.:.: cr.11~-:
Goklrni,.. -ooor111..GT.i1v .., 1..J
foot of -· Skiing r•t.d goixl. .
. tournament t h e r e that e taking tin1e off for the weekend. ,...
A~ll:i -~ MllllQ •nd dall,, ~ s.:.mi -~JO lllCCeil.-11 skiing dilly °" l.J '"' of IMW. rrTstmas yacalion period. Leading scorer for the
The fi rst encounter U>nlght Vangu.ards is R~sell Dickens
.with Pomona College and who is averagmg 12.6 per
~tlltday night will be Fresno-game with Pat Quinn close
eific with both games in the. behind at 12.4.
S-l=or•I -0,ll.,. Ollertlloll 1terll 11C1 S•lurd•Y, OOOd o nullent °"
1.J '"'of-· s"°"' v1u.,, -Good 1t1rno on :M fool bllH,.oo.fl dll/¥,
GrNn Y1Uov -~ ta OXC911'fll lkll~ d•llV •lor!lllQ doy Ind COii· 111111 llQ through Jin. { bu! dosed
Cllr 's:"· ~MM of ·11'1 19111. Hol 'f Hiii -Dall'I -•ltqn on 1·2
nguards gym . Tipoff each The Vanguard s are 6-2 for f~t o ~1•· no dltlns r9CIUfrod. 1/1 Uf!li 01Mr1t l'tA,
Tlblt MOllnllln -OPOr•llnQ Wod1111.._
d•Y ttwOllQh sv:11v ~ 1·1 '"' of IOOW. a:r'~''li.1~ -~ ~llnii an 2·3 let! of •-· O.llV OP<lflllan.
n ght is at 8. the season and hold a victory
Following the Sa I u r d e1 y, in their own tournament and
ht game, SoCal will be idle the consolation title.Jn .the re-
u til Jan. 2 when th e cent Redlands tourner. Cl'Oekff' Alda• -Good lo t.llCtllOnt -1Jdlna an 2..J ·1091 of '"°""· OPOr1!1na d•ll¥, no chains rocwlrtd. ,
BOB HEUSSER
PRESENTS j
I
!
I . ! :
!
SUNSET FORD'S
FOOTBALL
FORECAST
We t hought last week that every-
·: thi ng in the play-off picture might • f fi t neatl y into place after another
• week of games. However, the nlme
: .. of the game i5 pro football, 50 it
didn't turn out that way,
Four division champions have
been named ... Miami, Washing-
ton, Green Bay, and Oakland t ..
and Dallas is the NFC wlldcard
team. Pittsburgh will be the AFC
Central division champion, So-it"5
a case of picking just two more
teams.
To 5peculate properly (and poi·
sibly more confusingly!), we'll as-
sume that we forecast bo th games
correctly, putting the Rams back
on top in the NFC West. If the 49-
ers lose to Minnesota lri their f in.el
game next Saturday. The L.A. Rami
wi ll tiave won th• ch11mpion1hlp.
Our pairings for the NFC pl ay-offs
read his wr,: Green Bay at Wa5 h·
ington, and Dallas at L.A.
That 5eems to 11 g r e e with our
speculation just one week ago.
Cleveland is our wild-card team.
Therefo re, Oakland will play Pit-
tsburgh, and Miami will play Clev•
la nd.
And at thit moment, we think
the Super Bowl c h a m p I on will
emerge from the winner of the AFC
championship g11me IMtween Miami
and Pittsburgh.
Saturday. December 16
Mia mi .............. 24
Minnesota 20
Baltimore . . .. .. .. .. .
San Francisco
13
17
Sunday. December 17
Washin9ton ......... 31
Oakland ............ 27
Cincinnati
Gree n Bay
.26
..... •23
De nver ............ . 31
27
24
13
Pittsbur9h ... .
Dallas ...... .
St. Lo uis .... . . . . . . . .
Los An9eles . . . . . . . . . 30
Atlanta ............. 23
Cleveland . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Bllffalo .. .. . . .. .. .. .. 7
Chica90 14
Houston ............ 10
New Orleans .... ---· . . 9
New En9land . . . . . . . . 17
San Diego . . . .. . .. .. . 16
New York Giants . . . . . 20
Phlladelphla . . . . . . . . . 10
Detroit .. .. .. . , .. .. . 27
Kansaf City . . . . . . . . . 20
New York J ets ....... 2)
Take Yaney
fn Turn
Off From
,Freeway
·:. ~·· "NM 112
Whltewil' Design
GLAS-BELT
. -
WAITEWALL
NO
TRAlll·IN
NUDID
IASTRAK
(78-14$ 45
Only "k• ,1111
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l7f.14, 171-15, f71-14
Only '2695
...... ""8'11 ...... '31 H I ~... S••H 17f.1S ~' n f.lJ ..
r1,1 r...i. &. tu Jl.71 N p .21 ,...11,. ._41"'.., •I••·
. · TIRES for YW's
560-1s $13•s llackwalls
1'111• $1.1S f,!.'I'.
r rlday, !Hctmbfr 15. 1972
The tire that originally
e.arned the name ...
RETREADS ON .SOUND TIRE BODIES
ANY SIZE LISTED
2 $22 fllus Fed.
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735-14
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815-1 5 845-15
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7 75-15
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11 • SM:•lty nr. 1 .. "''' ''"' ..... , ,.... -•••• ,.,.1 ..... ,_, .. ,,., HtlH wMI• ,,,, .. ., ...... •f
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Now that you know a cheapie battery
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high power, Delco at a real savings!
ONLY $14ss
-"'OST AMERICAN CARS
COMPLETE
INSTALLED
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pecial
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4 PLY·
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7.75-14 -8.25-14
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155SRl3 5.6().13 $31 .95
165SR l3 6.00-13 $32.95
175SR l 3 6.50-13 $33.50
165SRl 4 6.45-14 J3.95
175SRl4 6.95· 14 $34.50
155SRl5 5.60-15 $35.50
165SRl5 6.00-15 $38.95
'I•• ,Ood. f" Tao •I 51 .~J •o
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3 WAYS TO CHARGE
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"660-15 8.25-15 9 .. 536.45
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ANAHllM IHI &roelh11nt ............. ·635-1170
WESTMI NS TER: 71)$ Wt11ml1nttr II••· .•• 89S.l521
GAR:DIN GIOVI l50!IW11tmlfl•Jtr ll .••.. ,.893-3595
llAWAllAN'URD!NS " 11tiJ Com• 11. 165-0227
HUNTINGTON llACH 11411 ""'II' .. ,,• 536-7571
SANTA AHA' llS N. N.-................ 1394700
'I
!'Wt fed. r.. r ... of $1.92 lo $2,9" por th.
WH111WAU ONl Y 2.95 MOlll
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ABSOIBllS I • ........... ,1 .. ,.... I
... ~ J ... ,, • ., -. .,..,. 70( I '"'°"'. '-· •:~.r I
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• ~ll ottbiltt• JI, ifn .. • .... ------·-----
SANTA ANA 11lLW. Wtmtr An.
TUSTIN 121 t lat Strott ......••. .'~ .•••••. S44.94l1
COSTA MESA·
NIW!'ORT llACH 1221. 11th SI ......... 642-4131
CORONA .,, w. ''"St ...••••..••.••••••• 735-6010
SAN CLEMENTE •21 H .. ~ C11111M lt1l • , ••• , 4'2·~543
'•
-JIG CAIL V PILOT
23 Enter Marina del Re..y_ ll:ic~----~-
'~itll the :5tart or the two
b1cnr11al t.lar1na del Key to
l'ucrto Vallarta ruce stiU
nearly tv.·o n1ontti. away, the
sponwrlng Del Rey Yacht
Club reports that 23 firn1 en·
tries arc already In hand.
Co1n1nooore Henry Snyder,
general cna1rman of the race,
said th!'.! entry deadline is Jan.
10. The race is scheduJed to get
under way Feb. 10.
Al the rate which entries
are being confir1ned, the club
is expecting at least 46
partici pants in tbe l.125 race.
There v.·ere 26 ~starters in the
hwugural race ln 1971.
The mln1n1un1s established
for this year's race are an
international Offshore Rule
Mark 111 rating of 25 feet plus
ERICSON ACTION -William Widnall at the helm of Appledore (10895) oul-' either a minimunt waterline or
26 feet or an ""L" factor of· 28.
The race will be handicapped
at its full length or l.125 miles. ntaneuvers
1nonwealth •
J. S. McNamara Jr. lo take the start in their match lor the Con1-
Cup orr l\1arbelhead, f\.la::;s . E-39s will also be the boats used in the Applications of 31 oilier
skippers have been approved
and invitations mailed lo
the1n, Synder said. A number
of them competed in the re-
cent Los 1\ngeles to Mazatlan
race .
1973 Congressional Cup.
Ericso11s Clean Up ...
In Sailboat Racing
Ericson yachts -
particularly the Ericson-39 -
are setting a lorrid pace in
sailboat ~·acht racing.
The record of the E-39s is
reminiscent Of the Cal-4Ds of
Jensen Marine a few years
ago.
Ericson-39s ha Vf' scored ma-
jor \•ictories on both coasts
and the Great Lakes during
the past year. Stars of the
class are Nemesis in Southern
California. Chiquitn in San
Francisco. Camelot on Puget
Sound. Neat Package in Flori·
da Wildcal on LDng Island
Sound. Madcap on Massachu-
setts Bay, Omega on Lake
Harbor Yule
Race Onl v •
Local Actio11
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's Christmas Regatta is
the only yachting activity
between San Diego a n d
~1atina del .Rey this weekend.
The traditional initational
event win be sailed on inside
and outside courses Saturday
and Sunday with clear but
brisk weather expected to
prevail.
Only competition in San
Diego will be among the P-
eats in South"'·estcrn Yacht
Club's Tabasco Se r i es
Saturdav.
On s3nta Monica Bay King
llarbor Yacht Club's
Christmas Reqlltta for cen-
terboard boats will follow bv
one week a similar event ror
keel ~ts. Also on Santa
l\fonla Bay. Souht Co a~ t
Corinthian Yacht Club will
hold its Jntraclub Regatta.
There is no aCtion schedulf'd
bv anv of the vachts clubs i'l
the LOs Angcles·Long BeAch
area.
Muir to Vie
In Rio Race
PORT ELIZABETH . South
Africa (AP\ -Do\\·nie l\luir.
international yachtsman from
Newport Beach. announced
Wednesday th at he would
enter his yacht. Waitere. in
nell'.t month's Cape Town to
Rio de Janeiro oceitn race.
The 31·year~ld Callfornian
said he bought the 31-foot
cruiser six years a1Zo in New
Zealand. He said he would
have a New Zelander. an
Eni;tlishman and a South
African woman on his ere"'·
which departs for Cllpc To\vn
Thursday.
l\lichigan, and Sundance On
Lake liuron.
The victories hal'e t>een in )
both class racing and offshore
con1petition. The boat will also
be the vessel chosen for the
Congressional Cup match rac·
ing series off Long Beach in
J97:l.
f\·1ost recent E·39 com·
petition was for the Com·
monwealth Cup of f
Marblehead. Mass.. won by
William Widnall. The victo ry
nets him a place in the 1973
Congressional Cup.
Ron llume's Neal Package
was the winner of the Lipton
Cup in the 1972 Southern
Ocean Racing Conference off
Florida. The boat finished
third in Class D and 15th in
fleet in the entire series .
Torn Tobin's Nemesis from
San Diego Yach Club has the
most imoressive record. She
w:ts the ov,.rall winner in San
Die~o Yacht Cluh's Rumsey
Series, NPwport Hllrbor Y"cht
Cluh"s Callforni::i COii.Stai Race
and the Eric<;nrt·39 wai; desigo-
ed bv Bruce King of ~ewoort
Bea<'h . He is also the designer
or other vachts in the Ericson
line. ·
OCCWhips
UCLA for
Team Bertl1
Orange (.(last College skip-
pers won a berth in the Pacific
Coast Jntercollegiafe leam
race competition lasl Sunday
by defeating the L1CLA lean'
three straight races o n
Ncv•porl Bay.
OCC helmsmen were Den-
nis Durgan, Grif Amies, Gordo
Johnson and Bruce Oeiesque.
UCLA skippers were Bill
Neufeld. Ed Feo. Kim Gage
and Jeff Kischman.
OCC bceame the fifth team
to compete after the first of
lhe ye ar for the PCIYRA team
racing championship. Others
\\'ill be use. defending cham·
pion: UC Irvine, San Di~go
State and llarvey ~1udd.
This Sea.gull's
Done Fishing
BRIXliAM. England (U PI 1
-Members of a vacht club
say they saw a fish kill a
seagull.
They said when the bird di v·
('d Wednesday to grab a fish in
Brixbam harbor. the fish
grabbed the seagull. pulled it
benealh the water and drown·
ed IL
'"' 811C•·" ~ (l"ltlt lrripllrleof 6 k\'tlfl) e Cllt111t • VflM6'NI
• Al•ll • M ....
-... ,.. S-Jn .-
.. a. .. ..na • ••Jn -=,.,;i,,..n ,,..., """"' IJll•· tan•• •111'\'!ion .. "" 69" llv•rw Cllrt.i,,..1 Ew'' ...
Nur 51•1•• ne•l IO
a..c11 111.i.1c..
11•11 BeKI! 111¥11
HVl"tll"'l<On 8-.cfl
142.0741
GRA ND PRIX ' ~ 2277 = =-M .. _..., ~~ .:,l".:..C'T W hdltl ...... 14 lftt. • .,.,. ..,_ NMf tit
... HA ._ ... .,,.,~ """ ' & L. °""' -.... ..... "'"' ....,..,,., .,,. .... llf!llt (ti\ .,.....,..
SUPER SOUND
SPEAKER
SET ,.._
C••a .. 1c ...,_
S Warts . "'""' 699
CAUBl'RETOR
AIU t:LEA!\Ell
For Mo•!
o-11ic Co,.
A,...,r Populo•
IMpOrh 1~~
•
NYLON FOAM
SEAT <.:OVERS
Solid
Split &
8..ck .. S.o! 399
HEll<!CLES HEA YY llt;TY
LIFETD1 E
Gt:AILINTEE
SHOCK
ABSUIUIEllS
G~o"'"'•e<I For l~•
Lili Of
y-599 P••••~• c.
30.000 :'111L E
llltAK ~; SllO t:S
3~.? .. , ..
•••
STARTE RS
Clwytl« , ........ ,c.,..
Mot..-1
P1od~¢t•
Hitl'-12~?
CHJJCXEIC
11.~1·'-
1.-1t.ff
CAR RADIO
Suih·ln
SPotok.,
Voice Or
Mu~ic Swilcli
5\rdc Rule
T~ni"'il 15!?.
CHE CKER
ANTI· FREEZE
Prot•ch Yo...-C..-
From '11'1nl••
Cold ... 1~~
FULL ACROSS •'LOOR MATS
179
'~ ll EUCt;LES
LEVEL
LIFTS -~ ·-Keeo1 'I'-I Ride S..001h
& Yo11< ..
~ loocl L•"'l ..... µ,,,
Al l'•fr's
l'fl 'In
l j.oat'A. If/,,.;.," f 11!?.
GENERATORS
•1111
l!.1'(.l/ANt.F.
AM•rie1111
Cui 10~?
ALTERNATORS
Arnerlc•n c ... 1699
Among lhe appllcantl art
Art Biehl't 35-foot Wltcbcrafl,
winner of the ~1azaUan race.
Biehl won Class B Jn the 1971
inaugural of the P u e r t o
Vallarta r11ce ln is Cul-37
Quaw.
All of the class winners in
the 1971 race are expected to
defend their titles this year.
John H o l i d a y ' s Ericson--35
Holiday from Long Beach was
the overall and Class C winner
in 1971. BIU WillQJl's Rucal.
Class A winner. and Bob
Lynch's Sirius II, fir&t to
finish, are already committed
to the 1973 race.
The yacht club has modified
il.S previously an no u n,c e d
policy on penalties for failure
to answer roll call. Race
chairman Morlon Bloom said
a five·mlnute penally wo.uld be I
added to a \'essel's corrected
time for each time it wilfully
fails to answer roll call.
"It Is expected that each
boat will have adequate equip..
n1ent aboard." said Bloom .
Kickoff dinner for the race I
is scheduled Feb. 8 at the Del
Rey Club. I
FREE '-'" CREEPER
Wllli
TOOL SET
PURCHASE
Wll•Jfl ... -.... ia ... ..
I QUART
DOT-3
DRAKE
t'LUID
Eot< IF Atteclw•
To Do1h Or """-99c
Early f\rm entries are : II. L.ahalna YC : Querida 11 Flood, st. F'YC; Sandpiper
Alea:re (PJ ·43 ! J o hn jColumhi:i·~l Jarneis Fcuers· tSS·OO) Denn Bl'own. Sbt!': ~1oAlester. SDYC; Agincourt. tein. OHYt:: H<1gti1n r (62~fl S u n g 1· Intl ( t: a I·~ 9 1
t Er I c 1 on -3 5 J Lau~ence s\oopl Loug Beach YC Syn· ~fel'"o.pollttltl YC; Spirit (61· Brad~y. CYC: Alice, (Ch:l·.391 dlcate; llascal (58 feet , yawl) foot yawl ) Robert O"B~en
Paul Loveridge, NHYC; Barca Biii Wilson , SB\'C; Robin YCY: Sirus ll <&1-feel sloopl
de Oro ~Cal--48) Enrique (Erlcson--46) Carl Robinette, Robert Lynch. NHYC ; Viva
Braun, Acapulco YC ; C.<Jncerto SBYC; Robin (Er!cson-461 Ctui (Ericso-39) Tony Qn\i.
(Columbia-:>7) Irving Loubc, Carl Robinette. SB\' C : CYC: \Vesterly (CAl-40> 'BOb
Richmond VC; D aka r Samarkand (S.S-5$) J am es Crant. Anacapa YC:. • ...
t Newport-4.t ) \Viii lam GQodley, ll;oiiiiiio;-...,;;-;;;-.;..;;;;;;;;;;;;-._..,; _____ ... ,_-.-.-.;i~~-'l
DRYC; Dorothy {Columbla-57)
Robert Beauchamp, NHYC;
Duchess ft::al-36) M i k e
11illroan, Sierra ,5 a 11 i n g
Associatloo; llayate {5$-40)
Stephen Valen.ti, DR Y C :
Qb..o;ession {Columbia·52J Dick
\Villiams, Metropolitan YC;
Odd Coup I e (Ericson..15)
Ronald Lee, DRYC.
Others art Pericus
(Ericson-fl ) John \Villiamso.m
The right price
on the right car
lB'EV!EUU.V
POFISC:HE AUDI
LHM New tlf "'°'1CI•
"1"4 ,..,. Mo. O.t:.L.
IUJ Wlllfllr. llvllll .... w..-ty Hiib
...... 6U-)tl4
MINNEY' I
SHIP CHANDLERY
Sextanb -Ships Wheels
Nautical looks -Ships Lamps
flNE SHIP MODELS
Marl•• Prl•h -Ship Clocks
Hatctr.boords
"
...
L•rt• Sel1c:tlon of Nautical ~Decorator 1tom1 & Gitto ~J~
O .. IH IVl!:HINCIS -TUii. THll.U U.T, -"Tlf-,1 .. •
MINNEY'S SHIP CHANDLHY.,,,,
2537 Wast Coost Hl9kway '
548 Al 92 HIWil'Oll.T 81ACH _, INl•I T1 Ory 11:-Cll ll.H l•11r•flll
SA VE 30% • 50% A.UTO
PARTS
THE WEIT'S MOST COMPLETll
DO-IT·YOUR8ELF
A.UTO CENTER
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU
DECEMBER 19, 1972
CHECKE R AUTO
SPECIAL
101 PIECE TOOL
SET WITH FREE
CREEPER
Drop FC.-v", Full)' Hor~ And T '"'perM
GUGrontH<l, Tripi• a.-Pl.i..t
AUTO
SP OT
LICHT
P1..,,
IMo
Ci'°''"' '"""'
cr1,.. o. .. ,.
•
""'""'
SPRING
RETl'RN
KEY
CHAIN
99~,_
99~,
5,000 MILE
GU ARA NTEE
REBUILT
SPARK PLUGS
99~ ..
4 PIECE
ENGINE TUNE.UP
c-p...,; ..
T111 ..
R1•t1• Stwt.r
Tialrit Light Vocuu• T ,,,.,
9,!9
CAR OWNERS
DELUXE KIT
2999
1.11-.U \~, Ml:.l:llA~ICS
TOOL CHEST
6 O..ciwe•I &
\)llliry Trar
H.ovy Gu.>t•
(on$11'\ict;...,
3999
CUSTOM
BROME
HEELS
14x6 ,, ..
,.
1't-SOLID; -~· -· STATE''
DWELL
TACll
POINT
I TEST.EH
For'~
& I Cr.lind.r
Vehlc •• 11.,.1 ••
.:~.~'
1999
BLACK FOAM
STEERING WHEEL
Pop.ii•
Sit••
10.12.14
1 .. c1 ••• ....
$1.00
699
HORN
KITS
5 Pl t:CE
SCHEW DRIVEll
SE T
S Moll P~w\m S•••S ...
•:: Ph•ll•r! ... " 1 . • ' ••• 6 •••
8"'5 16'" s.c .... c1. .....
w•tiondl••
1~?. 11! '··
.' 4 ')
CHROME ,
LOCKING NUTS
P101te1 v-
Ch1-Wke1 11
lock,"1 Nut
Foti Al l 3~.?
"'' Coro & T<uc~1
TlJNE·UP KIT -
• '
'
'. "
-·
1~ •·ooT
CHAMOIS CHECKEH AUTO
LIFETIME .,.,.
BA TIERIES '"'"-'""
/For-Ir Autolh•)
MOTOR CHAFT
TUNE-UP KIT
.JPBCIAr.
11.,, .. , ,,,
c..-w •• 1111111 Ace:•••...,
99 ~.-
2-999
SOLIQQX 5000°
PORTABLE
WELDING KIT
......... ,~ 1999 TM llfeti111t Of y-p,.,,,,, Cor EACll'
r., 0-.1111 lrrllfi• Gl•t•
aac;uu.11 . •. ,,
""°'' -
1699
s?.? i.~ ....
CAR
MIRROH
MIXIEL 185
E11r T •
1111111!1
199
MO. INCLUDlliO J Y•,~'!~N~ .~I. WAllltAHfY
' DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
24" ......... •,_.,Dr~ C....M ...
~
-' .
Ill I' l('f ' It Jl(ll' PHONE
645-8264
I U I EAST 19th STR~ET, COSTA MESA $TOH HOUU:
Deity t ... t
WU DtllCT -,ACTOIY AUTH.QlJtlD llUW
... .,,rt. l tJI " ~ • ... ..... ....., ..... , ... ,,..
NII DO~M -14WO') .
'
. -· ----·-
• JUST OFF NEWPORT BLVD -BEHIND MESA THEATRE S..doy t ... '
tn /,, ,~, I , . .. ~· ......... .
DAILY PILOT
•--PUBUCNOTJCE l'U8LICl:l<ma: PUBLICNOTICB PllllUCNOTICE __ Records.a1esNo Chrysler Increase -~(TfTIOUS I UllMllS PICTJTIOUS lll'lllthl PtCTJ'fKh.11 lvtlMIU l'TCTltlOUI IUSllllSI NA.Ml Sl'ATIMllfT IUIMI ftAT ... IMT .. AMI ITATIMllfT •NM ITATl'.MaNT
Tiie "Ott-"'11 '*-I• delftg Dvtlnt14 Thi fali.wtftg lllffOll .. ...,.. .......... '"' ~ .......... .... dOl"f At Am ..i:r ••. ...... ....... : ,..,. ~ --'" c1o1,.. encan , l>OM l(H0i..Z AOllEtlTlllHO COM• SUNOlll:Y SUPl'lllltl, f4) G•.Cldt •.t.111~ HIWPOlll:T Tl.tiolHtS SHOP, 1 llll6IMu tt:
•"'""'"· tOO C-ene, I.Int. Htwport s1 .. Foun\el" 1111\e'f'rC .. ll, "* ,.,._, Htw11art • .._. lwctl ""° WMITES ... ECISIOlil Oll:IHOIHG, )014 tiilfto Cttlt. t1MO ttup CM Mw11t1. fCJ Grtcktt St., Met\: I , llflott, I.wt l"Mll ,.__,, I HtlleffY, ..., .. AN. '210il .1.00flotld J. k11o11 .. c.,.,,."' P9'N'lt•"' lfeMty, c.111 "* """*" hlch ,_ w1111.ni J. Wiiii.. 1111s trooUwr11. American Marine Ltd. of p ' p l s d C ' R t °'""""· "',,.., ••M. ·-· '"" ..,_ • ...... -"M "'" •· ""''" "" ·~· ··-· '""'"' •"'"""' N•-Beach. baa r-~"" _ r•f'e ane u.spe1i s 01npany s eques , .fHdl. (;allt. ""° 10\dl\/kl~I, Mewport IMCll""" -It. J, l•ken<lllt, 2'1tl $91111\0ff Or,. ~,..,,, ,..,........ _ ~
"rft/1 bu.1"'"'' 11 111•no tONw:lwd by • HllP e. Mlr11a Tiii• Ml-1~ 11tJ11111 (onaup.ci bV • °"'"" "'°'"''· .mrz record ules and earnings for ~...,..11°"'. " r1111 _.,,_, """ w11t1 n-. ~ ,.rt~P. t1111 i..1-1s Mine toftduc:i.4 w • t'· first half ·-•··:· -. ' ·I Chft Sm•t c .. rlr; of 0r.,.... Coufl'Y on; N ~{IL I, •lllotl wtMrllllt,. IJ'; CJllM:IU .,.;' "" ' V1«'••1lcle111 21,1rnw•LL.11oMe.JTJOH111,couN· Thh•hlJtmtntftltd wtr11r11tctr.mrr W1u1.,,,w1111. Sales ot '7.l n in· WASIUNGTONtAP)-The dally dectslon llst. The Chrysl'r reque5l c overs
.'(hit 11•i.mti•• tu.q w1111 111e coun1., rv '1.IJUt, 1., e-riy J, MadlilOlr, o.,.u.. c1n et or.-Ctl.Wltr (Ill: o.c. ,._ 1t1i. 11111 '"'°"""' flled w1111 111.t c-1y creased 69 percent and ear"-Price Corn m Issi on has s uspension ts for an lndefi'n'1tc •conomt'c cost lnc-•se•. ,! ... k ot Or~t COo,1111y tn: M~ t,, ty, WILljAM E". ST JC»lf'I, COUNTY Cltrk of Orlf'ltlt Counly on : Of(. 1'-Im, ,.-"' ''"'
\tW •Wh.LIMI •. •T JOHN, COUNTY ,21,n CLllill:I(; IY ._.., J. M6ddoJI, °"""'"' ly •.....n~ J, MaddoK. Depuly C*illllY lnl(s of $21.761 rose 113 percent suspended Chrysler Corp. 's re-period.
CL.EaK. IY l 1ver1y J. M60dcul, O.illUlY-l"ublboNc! Or•• Cw11 O•H1 1111'!.I.! Pttat Cltrk. ov•• the -espond'•• -•loci t t · ~ b -· I · I I Tl E F t'I I • ha •tt6tt ~ember 1, ,, H, n, 1m nu.n l"Ubllll* Or•llM Cot!• oant iJlllM, ••r .., ..... , ... ..-ques o raise prices y an 111';: comm 1&1011 sa d t .I II 1• a rea1.11y s 0•~no• <oa•t 0•11Y '"11o•. o.am11w 11. 21. :tt. "" •M '-•rv s, P\lbl!IMl:I Ot•nu• <o." 0•0Y P!lvl , lasl year. Per share earnings average 3.04 pert-en! on Its wants clarification of company •-•-·t 1' •· 1Sr 11' 1'12 mi-n PYBYC N011, CE 1913 W7·72 1~t1tr u, 27' 2', 1'72 •net J•nu:,.72.~ rose from 11 cenll to 20 ctnts 1973 passenger cars ii 11 d data submilted to i· .... ify 1'"-b1..-en granted. a pr"'-,; uuua on "'""' uc-1973 m odels to cover the PUBLIC NOTICE ,1crtJiO"' ellsiN•ss POBUC }li'OTICE on a laregr number of &hares trucks, lncrCAse.
i• ·~nAt'IMINT PUB"C NOTICE t tandln U '"· II I · federally mandated equlp-•1cT1r1ous 1u11Nl!ss 11w f!D4ldwlnt -.,..IOii 1, dOlrtt 111.11"'-' 1 ,,,.. ...... ou s g. OUM: eor er pr ce 111-
.. NAMI ITATIMINT ••; ' ' I. NOTICI TO Clll!OITOlll TH E COAtMlSSlON an-c:re.aics granted to c 0 "'e r ment.
t low(nq pel"IOl'I " doing Dl.lllMH SJGMA' $Al.ES, """'· 1Stl'I ''·· Ho '1. SU'l\Olt COURT OJI TN• NOTICI 011' UtTINTION TO ...... nounced the 1uspenslon in a federally -uired safety and Asked about how J..V.tr the 1: Htwciort 9"<h. C.Ufornl• nuo. ITAT 011' CAllll'OllNIA 11'0& -~, v ...
coti1TtNENlAL MOto-sP0111 c1.u1, °"" H-•fll. IPO w. 1t111 ,,., ND. '1, TN• ouNrv o,. 011•M•• •:.vl:lors•AJ..• 0" ALC0tt01.ic Motor Home oawentence statement in its pollution equipment, t he suspension would last. a. com· 17795 H,... Sky Plrk Circle, lrvfnt, N•WJIOtl tMch, C.H~..ftWO ' ••• A·7U•• .
C1llfonll• 92'6~ Tllll IMIMll .. ~ Alrldi.lcMd lw aft l!.11•1• of HE,Nll:Y •1t•J<tKl..IN SMITH, TO WHOM IT 'M.Y CO~E~ l), "" mission spokesman said it Is C11!for11la IWIOhw11'11a (wpor1lloll, lo lndl\tlcll.lal , :I 11'9 -.-•1 HINllY I', SMITH, &Ubltd ..., I t of '" 11·
ca111-11 all'flOr•tloti, Po. l oa '""· DEAH HOWMO ' ~-'" • ...,."' un .. ..,_ ---J F I not known. The Internal
<oU• MIM, C1U!ornla ti.» Tl>I• "'..,.,.,,, fllld .... tfll coi:lflty NOTICE ll Hll!"lt&.IY GIVEN to HM "'5ed .. tdfr"Mw ... :,iot'e• I• .... !...~ .• ·"", '"':!' thl Sales Told u· st orget t r~11 btnl.,.u 11 <Ofidvc:1t11 bY • cor· c11r11 ot Or"""' c-ty '" Otcame« 1:5i crMlton of 'ltll •bn'e 111111111 ~ ~ -... •lmhal,.. bfw. Revenue Service will be called tllon Im WILLIAM £, IT JOHN. (Mlty tMI 111 ....--NVllll dllm1 19'1\fll;I 111f ff'~ •I tlle ~Ml. d.Ktlbld II lol·
C.lllornl1 Motor1rn1 CDl"JIOf"•lloti Clerk, by ~y J, ~ ~ M14 .....,., ar• raqulrtd to !!If rMm. ._.'32 W"t lrtlt Stnff r-o ... in lo do an in-depth audit o(
• C1Hfotnl• tO<'"Pft•llon • Ml llltth tlllo McetMrv Y'l!Udler1, 111 rM offlc:• "~ t. ll.ldl k.ifft"u:n_ ""'w E Ind $TUNl:T H. ,,,.E.$, P'*'hllad Or•• COl•I D•ltv -~~o:t1 of !tit cltftc.,""' aboYf ~Hllad c:a,irt,.,,. ..... Md If .... ,,,, ~ "" -~ ""'i Xect.ltive ~ies Inc., lhe. cosl.8 51.!bmitted by c.. ,.ttMMn, 0«...r:.er t. u , tt. "'· 1m • :D11Jon to -1 "*"· w1111 n. 11t1eftM"' ....,, -A••belm •···• motor bo-C d H lJ, G t R ' Ch I
of 0r to11n1y' on ~bfr --ot Mt" -,"°'....,., l"lUNICEn a. of •n 11<:vho11e i....,-.,. ltctnM '°" manufacturer, has reported MJ
T~"-r' llled wltl'l t.,. Coun-~··111 ttM lfflclw~ It 1111 offkl ol Akllhollc: lriff'IOf Control for 1-l'Q ,,.. ·U1:1.3CU """' ar 0 ers e epr•.nve rys er.
. ,, -PUBUC NOTl~ f't.VNKl!TT. ~12 oi1 ... •"-· .. .o. Boa tlclf\llt.l tor tl\e$a pt'Wrl1""1 •• to1tOW1: ................ sal,. and earn1·ngs for ft·JllJl 2ff, Hlll'lllntton BNcl'l, Cilllorftli 1'2641, OH UJ..E GENERAL lftUILlC •~v11.1
1c11.,.. "'_..,._.. P1crn.1ous •u1u111ss W111c11 11 111t "'~ ot w.111111 of .... PllEMtsisi the fl.seal year ended Sept. 30. LOS ANGELES (AP I "forfet about mak;ng the P•'J" Ai p JlJ It....,_ IMCll llW. · NAMI $TATIMlh Ullden'9nfd In 111 l'nlll1WI pert1fnl1'1111 to s.m« CQl'PGl"lllon •1ny ays ,,..'"'· c.11f1n111 MM' TM 1011ow1nt ,.,_ ••• c1o1.., tht ,11111 of Mid M:-ient, wltl!ln IOur 'llbll•lltd Otanv-coeit D11ty '"11o1, Sa.let for the year were Some credit card banks have meri' if you want to. ·
t1 •1cn11 m..-1 11111 :su..wu b~1rn111 i1: mon111s ,,,.,. 111t ""' pt1bllca11on ot 11111 ~ 15' 1911 ~71 •is,556,000 compared with 'th ~-1 I ti "We know bow e.•tra ca•li -17S-OC MAll·lUND EJrn£1tPfUSl!!S) ...... nott« o-.....iR come up Wl a .... IU s mas me .~ ""°''Md °'~ co.•1 o.ur '"u°A s111111 ""'" Founf.1~111y "'°' J o.itd Dlc:..-nbtl' 11, 1m '7.028,000 last year, re =uug offer some of \heir customers alw.ys comes in handy around Too MtlCII?
•rnotr 1' is. "·· nn »It>-A?.~!nf~rn~!f1t1 n,.~ t--• ~N.;:111~~1s•~ !t~1TH PUBIJC NOTICE an lncreaaeof 164 percent. Net will find hard to resist : just thi5 time of year. So \\'C're
PUBIJC N<>nCE Mwv M. Forlllu!ld. lt1' LaSl11'• Av•.. °" 111e •IMIYf n111T\td dtctdent income rose to $1 ,401 ,000 from "forget about" this monlh's saying that you can ignore us,
F-llln VllltY tl:M ' • ,LURITT & ~LU"llllTT PICTITIOUI IUSINISI '426.000 1r(the similar period ---MOTICI TO CltlbrToitS Thi• 11t.11!nt111" Mlll9 conoucttd DY In-' 411 OIM Aft. P.O .... Ht NAMI ITATIMINT credlt card bill. and Ule the money for \\IAS~llNGTON (AP )
su,.11110tt <OUlt'f o, THI dlvldu••~.r~r• J, M•..c""' • ... .,..,....._ &N1:1t. cA "'"'* 1111!1 1o11ow1ng Ptr-11 doing bt11lnti1 one year ago. But the banks then1selves something more important:
ITATI 0, CAllllOllNIA "~· Tftl1 1tatl!Mnl fllld '#Ill! the COii~ !~ :"f.'ttttrt.. •1:. \VOn't rorget about it. the Holidays." Rep. Ella T. Grasso, (I>
Wdtll ~o~ .. f:UOttANG Clerll at°'',... c-tv on; ""'"· 21. 1 ,.ublti11111 or•ng• co1$t D•llv Pno1. ASSOCIATED T 1: AN s c R 1a1 Ho PUBLIC N011.CE Ope more thing: "There will Conn.) has charged that the
llllt of HA1tol.o J. P'INN!GAN, •Ito ~~L~:j~~~ =TY ci.u: ~~""-ll. n, 2', lfl? llld Jinu:,.~.l; ~~;--rci:;. lllJ Oubll" SI. Ca.II Mnt. NOTICI 011' INTINTION TO INOAll "JANUARY'S billing \Yil\ in-be no, late charg'e if you elect Arm}' paid an extra $180,600
k 11 HAllOlO J()ttN FINN&GAH. ft11•7' S•ril'l Addll'lllln 31l!I OW!Jn St. Cost• IM TMI U.L.• 011" AL.COM~IC Jud lb t dhold ••ltd. Pu~ or.,._ coast Dally PllOI, ---IMw '2626 ~ r ' ••Ylll:Aolt C e e amoun car ers to .defer your payment," the for munitions fuses in '4'hal
c: 11or1 of 1111 , "°""' nem.o ~nt . "# IMJ¥1dual r TO WHOM IT ""4Y COHCEllN: ,..1 =-•~-h f t 5 appears lo be a reward for ICE 1s HE1t£1 C)IVl!N to IM DKti 1, •· •• tt. 1t12 lW-7:1 PUBL!C N011CE TM; wsin.u is belnt concklctld try •n $tO!en\bw 1, tm were urged to forget about. sta.tement says.
•II Pff'1CIM ~'l'lnll "',"'* ""''"'' t11t PVBiJC N0'11CE 1 m» 1 sin.ti Addel'lllll-s11111m lo .. _.. of 1111 ~ac>----tl'us an llUQ""st c arge. o . ''However. the usual finance
... 0.Clldllll '"' ~to llM t .... m, ~ • HOTIC• OP' IALI! 01' llAL Tllh P111<n1nl "'"'.with IM C011f11y piled lot",_ nott,. II l!tf"tby "'"'" !NI thl percent~ equil to 18 percent charge will be "calcu1ated by incompetence."
ot tw'~..,.~" ....... .,rtu::.~~~ \flll1CTrTIOUS •us1N111 '•Ol'••-r: .. ·s~:~=T• ••t.E ~r~.0:.,.~1T~,..t,.r:::, 1~..:!7y =~.,~':n.i:..~1'::°'~~ annually. multiplying the period rate He said the Army bought
1o ,,_, "*"~~: .,. .... ..., llAMI ST"Tl!MIMT In ..,. Supetlo!'" C-1 of tN Stat• ot CWk. · fo00W1: "laster ~··ge bt'lls mat'led tlm .. the balance ~ th1's ·10,000 fu ses from "· Hamilton l!lrl. "' thl 11 ti.. office TM folloWflll .-Is 11o1111 bullneu ~lltornl• fol: itw Cflll)IY of u. A-tet. •!lnl 1101 l"l1c:enlll Awi .. Cot" Meta n "-"141 new "" un::
ILLtAM L. u11A e. P. w .. 11ttt1 H : __ .J:h-in tM Ma,.., o1 t1111 .E1t1t. o1 F1teo l"lllllllhed or.,. c""'' 011ty PU11, ,.IH'.....,,, "' wctt tni..r1on, "" I.ft-dur;,.., December carried this month's statement." Watch Co. in Lancaster, Pa., S I, Vl1tf P~ •kif., COiia ~~ CAllPtT CLEANING. 201~1 00\JGUS IASSE .u Fltf:O o BASSE Dlc:90'lbtl' IS 22 2' lfn and Jinvory 5 6"tMCI 11 1~111 lo tr.. Oep.t,.._,,I .. ..,
M • c.. "611 ll'lllctl •• the plao o1 Hane.·._... LeN. Hl.#lllnDlon 11a1:11. ...., ,1 " 0 ·i.use o.:.aac1 · 1th · ' ' ~ "' Akllhol lc IM""'1tOI COllf ... tor ISWll'Ke special computer p r i n t e d BOILEU DOWN this means for $1 ,2I l. 700 when it could
...... ot 111e In •II mw.,.. ca•Jf-~ : Netkll ·1. '""ffl '''""' 111f1 11)1 un-°' •n lllcolloHc: .,.._.""' UcanM I• message: "No payment is due 11n1ne i. tM 1111i. GI' ~kl ~'· J..,,. Douo!•• CrOl!klil,., 20u1 H1rbcN" Hnl9Mlll wHI 1111 11 P•lvt .. Ml• to,.... ---11c1n1111fortn.e·pr9n111n"1o11o1111:. it will cost the card.holder a have bought them from
In ._ rMllitll •ll•r"" tlr11 publ\c.t. Tlstt "*"' Hunllnoto. INdl. mw Nthnl •ni:I ""' blddlr. sub!Kt to'. eon-'PUBUC NOTICE On Sit• ...,. this month. Read enclosed f1'nance charge for the month Ingraham Indu s tries in ";°" 11111 "'"c:.I hlS ...._. 11 b11r11 c:onc1ut1ac1 try .,. nl"l"l\llon of 11111 su,er1or ~ °" or Harwy '· tanctiei f Id •-d •-•1 " ltd NWMl'IOlr :n, 1m lndl'f'klu9.I. ··-... ""' .. , .. DKemblr 'ttn. •I -P'llbllthtd Or..nqe CCIII Diiiy ,,Ito! 0 er ... r e~ s. ( ~. . al 8 B . tol Conn r 11 03t JOO llOll!llf H. FINNEGAN Jolln DouOl•I C-.hlfll ,....··Dffl« t)f ~"it JdtoilGn AllOl'nly ' . DfHrntllr lJ, 1'1'1 uc;n 1be "inclosure states in bold 0 l.S ..... cent , eqUtY ent l-0 1 ris • .. or ' ' .
, E•tculol' Tt.11 •lalfmtlll fllfd wl .. the ,_IV •I LIW '° Eltrl A . L" kKll.. SU,1110& COUIT OP' TNR , percent onnually A $100 Mrs. Grasso said Jn a letter ~ ot 11w wi• ot ..,. •bow 1111'Nd cim. ot.0r1,. COUlllY Oii: Nov. 11, 1911 tOI02. CounlY °' L.~111 siite ot 1T-,l'• Oft c•1..1,0&Ml'4 '"°" PUBlJC NOTICE type, "We'd Uke lo have a · to Deputy Asst. Army .., c1tc9dlnt WILLIAM !. St iQ+IN; COUNTY Cllllk. caufomla, aft "" rlllht, !In• ,:-i in1.,..,,, Tlf,_ couKTY Oii" ottMoa word with you about the pay-Master Charge bill wou1d cost
.,,.,LIAM L. DUllANTt: •r 1.....,.y J. Maddoll. o.pw1y. °' Mkl "dfcffllld ,1..,. ",,.. ot dNth •nd .•• •e. A. l*"' the holder an additional $1.SO Secretary Vincent P. Huggard Dt'. ' '"' $11'911 • "1U14 It HM right 11111 Ind lnltrlll Ilia! ""' NOTICI 0 MIAltl .... Of! AM ..,. •• ~ l'ICTlTIOUS IUSIN•SS ment o( this ·1tatemeJ1t .. h b . h f f v ..... ,.ubU"'td <>r•ntt co.•t caHy ll'llot, ~1111 o1 1aid dtcNact ,,,, 1e:qulrM bV •D:ilPnlTION ll"OI: ll'llOIAT• o• NAMI STAT•M•n Al · 1 g 1 tl ,.1 says for "Forg etting it." t at uy1ng t <' uses ram c 1 c1. nm OIOllftbilr 1, 1 •. u . tt. 1tn 3211.n _,,.__ .. l•w • ollllr....i,. oll'llr ll!in wttL AMP SICONO COCHCIL. l'OI The to11ow1ng Plfton 11 dolrlO btl•lnt11 50 in ar e e ers : L'k M t Cha B k Hamilton al 117.31 each rather
T 'cno........ ' 1 ::.1ikin 'f, 11111of 111d dtct•-.ed 11 It.VOCATION ANO INVALIOITY o .. ··~ "Forget it!" 'I e as er rge. an -
• lw IUC:-'11 PllBJJC t.JOTJCE :ih. ~ of dM h, In Incl IO 11111 .... (~1111 ,lltST (OOICIL ••D ISSU~llc• 0, {1) COSTA MESA OISPOSAL. co.1 t2l Americard is making a than Ingraham at $ 1 4. 7 3
,. ii ..,, ~..-nbfr 1, •. 15, ,...tTITIOUI sust• c;..11111 stat• ot caui,,..nia P1r1lcularlv TIM'-' • OISP"OSAl co .• m1 or1ea L•ne, <11111 in sma er s 1 m 1 a r o er to its 'ma es a s m o our com· ff Drll!lll Coe1! Dally Pllof, ~:r It ;:;;.ny 1llullwd In thf COUftty of LITTlltS-TIJTAMINTAllV fO .. ITI• lllVINE OlSPOSAL C0.1 (3) NEWPORT JT (.'()N11NlJES · ll · · J ff · • k ha f
1 , 3U6·72 ~ -• followl io..w1t ·' ~.im~oa f'AUL c11tAC1, D9ce1Md. it..11, ca111. f'l:616 print that the customer may cardholders. petitive market economy." < -Thi for ·~· ITA.,.Mllll I dflc;i:a~ ~Ion ot' ""' i.nnarnad :IOOl ·j ~9J·1cE "ts' (t-IEREIY OtVEN Tl'l1! wunam F. VtloY (In lndl'llclUllll. 20111-"--------------------------------------
( ' PUBLI.C NOTICE 11. "fl"'lllO 111"°" .11 ,1lluol 1141•• loci! •trill In Ille CllY ol wi1tmrn1ier. '~~ Of'A.-lce, N1non11 Trlllt "I~ S•v· sumen, So. El Mont•. c.i1t. t17D
'" 1j . , ...... • -• t o C • 1-1 Countu of Ora-Sllte ol Cillfol'Ola I. A-'lftlll'r 1111• (lled l'lllflln 111·1mtncl· Ttll1 but!ntsl fl btltl(I concllK:lld try 1n ...,, "' ..,PP!"• SI nt1 ,.Y ., .,._, ' fO, lliltlflon .40r Pl'lbllf of WU and St· lndlvlclu1I .
I' NOTICE TO ClllOITOl:I lrVlnt ,a!W .. SutM 302, f,O , nato llllolnfnv lol IO of TrlCI 4" on ti.. 11'! ~ Cl!dlcU, fOt' f'#Vl<ltlOll Ind lnvallcllty WllUim F. V1tov ~ IU,llltoll: COUllT Oii Ttll , .... -.,, -.~ux., ·~ I c1uror-:. ~.11~,1• : ... ,_~.a::, ·Mr;::,r: o( nrtt Codldl Wiil 'fW )UUll<Kf ol L.111trl Tl!ll 111l•mtnl tllld with II!• County tTATI oll' CAlll'Oll.NlA ~ n I c:orp61'1 on, •<>• rvlM hd., SU1tt n ' Tttta""nltrY. 'tt pellll_,., IWfrrenct h Clift t)f O<"lftSll County on : Dl<;.tmbtr U.
: "41 COUlfTY 0, OUM•• l50. lwstln, C11/lllrf!l1 ;-::-°"'.~"et ~kl ~1~·1y Q~ ":' ... ~'i!~ ....tlltlt "' meoci..for 1.u•tti.r ~rtkulara, Ind lf12. WILLIAM e. ST JOHN, COUNTY
..; MO. ,.., .... , llll• lll.lllnn1 I• bllll(I ccnduded try • ,,., arOtr 9f the .Olrd Oi SIJPH'VI_.. at ltlll" thl ""'lind Dile• t)f *''"' ll'lt CLl!:ltK, ly 8f'ltrlr J. Mlddolt, DIPll!r. e.talf et HOOE A. THOMAS. D«1•1td. 'DfJIOl"l11M Of" COullly wttlltd 11-tof Mme 1\,11 blefl Ml tor Dlc.1mbtr 1'.. 1171, 1"1211' ~TIClf IS HEllEIY OIVl"N hi the lltonltd G. llM«lrffWK. .,.:~tcDrdfd ~~II ''-1gf"ln looll 11 t;OD a.m., In lhf c:oul1room el 0.C.•11· ll'ublllMd Ori• C1111t 0111'( PHol, c:r41'1Cn of IM lbCl'if MrMlf dK..,..,I ,.rtslOtnl ttfl '• ., of Olfldal Recordt. 1...i mtnt Na l of Slld court, at 10D t1.ic Dlc:tmber IS, 22, 2', 1'72 and January S, t1Wf ~ llaYlllO t\1111\l IP!MI !hi Tl\11 1tat-I flied wltll thl C°""IY tyl...i nwtllfrty of ""' uiltl<"lr pro-Cenflf' Or. West, In IN City of Santa A111. ltn JUl.7:1 wll -rtq11lrtd 1o n11 ftltm. Cltrk of Dl'Mlllf c-ty on NO'I. 2:2, 1m ., ...,.,.....1 11 of kl lat C•lllorl'll1. w11t1 IM nk'tlMrt _ _.... In ""'otfla WILLIAM f , St. JOHN, c-ty Cl.,...~ ~~;i thl"".,.ll llfll ~":at, !"net O.hld ~I, lf72. PUBUC N01'1CE
of ... clfr\ el ll!f llMNI H>ltlled court, or 11....n.,,.,. ll'olddox. Deputy I Thtl ~of-lei I Oof Tratt No. W. E. ST ~pHN,
to "'prlMl"lf ttle"'i will! !Iii' MCHHry fl·l1'1 •-.. CO" • W tml ttr C Ir C-ty ~ ~ri. to lhf uno:w1f1111td at 16161 ,ubllahld Ol"Mllla COit! Dalty Piiot, IJS, "' 1 " " nl ' ...., Ll .. ftOt..C, MINHil.SON & DINSMOOll PU•L.IC MLUllMGI WIL.L. •• HILO I Y t.~y·St., Hll!'llngton 9NCh. CaHtornL1 N~ 1l lfMI 0.C:~r \, I, IS, :.~=..:.:•: ~··~~!g.''13":; Alttl'MYS 11 UW • TMI COSYA MllA ,U.NNINO COM-
t?titl, whldl I• 1"9 llllcf el MIMll ol im :tm-72 Ml1Cltl..-~ In tl!oi O'llk• t)f lht UI I . 17'111 SI .. Slflt 111 MllllON AT "TMI CtrY MALL, n "'" ~MgMCI In 111 l'lllltln lllttllnl"ll (OUll!y lllCtlfdtr of Wlcl County nol ln· CM!I Mfsl, Cliff. t1'17 OrlW/, Coslf Mela, C.lltornl1, 11 •:30
to M1•fll of wld dt<:tdenl, wll'lll" "'9r PUBLIC N<mC~ cl\lllfd lft tr..ct No. "'· " ~r rn1p Att.nlttl ,_ 1'111"-•·'"· w 11 _. a1 poUlbla ttw•1l1tt'" on
•lttr "" ""' Pllblklillln t)f thl1 '--*' In looll )2, P191 4l of Publl..r..d. OrlllQI (OISI DIHy l"ltot, lllltd~, ~ ,,., 1912.
.. I l'ICTrtlO\SrtlJI MIKIU.MOUI M:'.:i'' tKCll'dl of wkr Dlc:emOlr IS, 16. 22, lfn :M~n llf:tOWcllllll lhl fllllow'll'llll appllc:t!LOllS' ltd Dlc:lfftblr t. 1"2 ........ IT-' I. 1-llCfllfMll ,._It NI. Z:l·n-llfalll1CI!! S. TH,..,.•$ .._ .. ,~ Orlnctl C°""ly 1' vac;llfll by O!"del'l-------------1 •. IU. tor S.,...al1 "'oltotltd AllYll"ll•lnll , .. .......... The ld'loWlnl ~· r1 buslnt!i1 t)f lhl Bolnf of Sypervltor1 °" Mid ~ .. ~utrlx at thl ~m ai· ,. , , 0r...,_ c-ty, whldl oortlon 1111 Mrt~ PUBI.JC NO'tlCE 1nd/w Cllartff T. Sart1L1, 17AO $Uperlor IJ..!!# lhl •IMNI Nl'lllld dtcfdeftl "OAO ION.STkfNis, 't IJiTEO, u. trly t)f lhl H•l«ty p<olOftlllMon of tN Avt.,.Coela Miia, C"lllf., tor Ptrtr1h1lon M .. ~&1ca MOOlll I"' 1o clflllnue lo u11 1n •~1•111111 1l;n °' .. I E. N...--..s.t1 Ml "111! &a11ttwi"h' 111Jf of Mlcf lot IO ~Krlbatl • .... ,,._,.,, 10 ....,tart ad\rtrllil.. "' 4f 1· FAd41 MM Stlllr9. M E . Norrntndy, atoovt '""' ..,. C ... r, CtNi.n.11 n.15 Slnll Ant '2101 T~ of Mii Cl.i'I In llwM _., f1f S.u .. ••IOlt COURT 01' THI COiia Maw blnl-n Ind to Pf0!1<1 A lw IPC:91rill I 1 tr 11i1 -ltd ltd ti Ion Oof I ITATI Oft (Al.ll'OllNIA l'Olt publl(", 1*"11« 11'1111 commvn!ly In. Or.-. CMsl •O.Llr .. llel, Tl'l 1 llW"'" lllO bV • ""' Unf ttflll on con Miii w 1' Tiotl COUNTT 011" 0-ANOI lorlftltlon llldn wllf'lln ltie balHldtrlft; , 1 1• -2f lt12 llll·n Hmlltd 11trmtnNP. Ten PIT c«it of 1movnt bid 10 bl Mt.,._,...,. of the cl ... al coa11 oY.eSa, wllh tht II•· • ~ o.a. ' Frldl to\. 5'lltlt1 dlJIOllhod Wiii! bkl. '' Thll ll•lllMnl Hlad with !I'll Cwnty •1111.,,. otftt"• lo .,. In W!'l!l119 Ind wm NOTICE ~" NIAlllNCI o .. Pl"flflOM l!Olllry Kl"IM to bf loCllfd at IUD • PUBLIC-NOTICE c ~ I •011 'llOIA.TI Of' W'IL.L. AHO 11'611 Superlllf" Ave.. Colt• Mffl, C1ttt. Tiii• ~ C1••k of ora,.. aunty on: N"°'. '""' 1t71. bf rte• Wiii •I Iii. •!Ornald oftlCI' .. , I")' llTTllll TSSTAMINTAltY •llclu lo bit~ "1'" to tour l!oun UNIVERSITY ~r.,:.twirly J, MldclO;(. o.iwtv C-.ty :!.".'!:~:;.'': :'..'i';. Plleillc•llon he~·•nill Esl•lt of LILA F. SHANNON, lllO MCI! ltYetllllf bitlnnl!lf ,, <lat•. Dllrll'llll
, •• ,,, ••• ._, ····-•••• l'·tlJ.11 Ollfd 11111 13!1! dlY II\' Oeolmb411"'ttn. kriown •• MRS. lllA F. SHANNON, 1111 bll•Mf of ...... Ill houtl !I'll lr;flf!I tt.~ .. r~-;l,w,.NI., .Z.-. ~ ••• T~~. .... ..Utllll,... 0.-anot COil.t 01Hy '"llol, Ma.-.1r1tl..••t".ild ~Clv.=.e:.' MRS .. LILA F. ::i~:.l~n":"irz~~·•thtboltorn //" , T' •.
°11 Jinua.rv f , !fJl, ar 2,00 o'clock .. M, Otcernbtt'11, lS, tt, 2', lf12 3317-7'1 Oou91fl 81ua NO)ICE IS HE~EBY GIVEN tlllt I. llM IXC911M Hl'Mll NI. za.1:t-1111 l"IEW~ltT IOUl..l"VAllO •I hi -th Iron! tntrll'ICI °" ..... alcf • l!!l1CUI0•1 °" tile £11019" ..__ ' I • WIOll "'' , ... ~. O::OITll Mr•• CA •z•••
0
-
c-courtllouff loctlfcl In the PUBUC NOTICE of Mid DKldlrll YIRG NIA McOONAl..0 ~• fltad Mrlln 1 117, ....-au · 1m1, '""'" ... ' • It '""" p1Utten lot" Probal• of Wiii 1nd for Coela M111, Calll., for p1rmtulon 111 L k f b' ~ 200.;'.,_k of Wat! Santi Ant 11..,,., ~ · 1111 111u1nc1 ol t.eiltn T11t1ment1ry 10 the cvnl!l!ut lo opor11'1 1 1lorl'llf r1nt tor 00 Or II .. UI U
lfomlfrtv W111 Sl•tll s1r111J, In S1nt• IH-OC ti Elm A-petitioner rti.renu to which 11 ~ 1or boll1. 1r1Her1, e1mPfl"1 anct olh.i-In-I N l 19 h S 4111, Callfotnl1, SECUlllTY PACIFIC NA-l'lcnTtOUS •UllNISS \.t!ll ... tJI. Clllf. ,_, turt ...... P1Mlcvl1n, •nd lhll 1119 1tmt 1rid cld~n!lll In addition lo canllnilln:ll 1'1'11 fufly lftc:tJic typrM"itlr mllnl'• lflCtric return, lllCtrt"C ii ewport t t. AL. 8ANK, •• INIV aPP0111tld lnnt" NI.NII ftAT&M•NT Tll1 1111) U1-Jtn pilCI ot tllarl .. 11!1 lllmt 1111 bHn 111 u11 t)f 1111 rt11denc .. lor rnldenflat ""' cfNll of tnnt dllld Ck:tobff' I. ...... A...,_., lw IQC111of'1 · o '"' I 210 v"-'' tlbullt0'1 olectr' '· k ; I · h·'f 1 .__,_ ,_ 1,,,,,_1 c llirlowl llld Tiit fol Pll'IOtl !1 doll'llll DUSlfllll ftubllllltd OrllllM CNll Dilly Piiot for J-rv f, 1t13, 11 t.00 1.m., In 1111 PllrJIOM1>, m;a I .._.,.,, • , IC !MIC tpli;;I, I ectrlC tn $plCe. ~-~. ~ 11· ~n courtroom of Depertn"tenl NG J t)f Mid Cost• Mna, C.111., In I C2 la!it.
'"tanY L,... I••'-.... -·on ~~. . CAllSUltfIOtt" ELECTRIC SALES .. Dlc:lmbfr 15• 1•· n. lt'2 court. et' l'OI: Civic Cenltt'" ori¥e Wat!, In F111" turll'llr lnfor"'lllOll on ..... •b!Dw Olymp1'1 Typewr1'ter at $179 .50 14.-1470, "'boolc ·~ PIOf1•-... • -,••• !. t•l!:VICf, 26001 CaPf DrlYf, ~ 11!1 Clty Oo1 S.1111 Ana, Callhlrnl1. 1ppl k:aU-. 111~11'-SUS Of" Clll al
It -•11 ""' "'"c• 0 -·· Ntfl)ill. ~I• nm PUBUC NOTICE °''"" a-n1111r u , 1tn 11w offk:1 ot the P1ennll'llll °"""""""· R t)f 0..111111 Covnl'(, C1tllcrnl1. bV IMl'flf k\YM!tnenlt, lno., • C1Uteml1 )tlllL.IAM E. " JOHH, lta.n 200. 11 Fllr OrlWI, (Oii• Ntlw. Sharp Calculator at dis' count pr1'ce 79,50 ·:;µ..;~cMl•utt In tnl twlfl'llMll « c~, 2'0lll ~Pl Dr'lvt. u,una --· County Ci.,,. C1lltlmf1. __ _
p of Gtlllgatl-MCU•fd H~*lot"nl• t'UT1 ~ orott:•• GAll DN•ll COST~ MESA-al. Nolle•°" o.1au111nc1 Elte'loti T u is 'concluCtecl by 1 COi"· 1'1CTITIO I •us1N1ss m-o \Ila AIW:mlll"• PLAHNING COMMISSION · Tot $259.00 to "'*t Dttd ot Trv11 MYl"I DMn Pori NAMI lfAf!Ml"T L.-.-Hlllt. CA nut H.J. WODd, Chlln'Mn
::._rc_Jr ·=~ .... to:i!:~:,:1 =: =1!!"J 1~:!~MENTS, tNC. 11~hl tollowlna ,.r91111
11
dOlnt 'ou11-!~".:.':~,._. :ua.;~~~=:..:.rv A REAL BON US FDR CHRISTMAS ~ ordllffon, wltl Hll 11 P\lbllc: ave:-Stc:l'tl•,..., · ' HUNTINGTON J'itOPEllTll!S, L.fO.. Pllbll.ntd 'o.. c 1 Ollly '"HOol PW1'4l.Md Orant1 (Oii! Oally Piiot
110<\' l'llt hlghell Dlddlr ,.,,. ,..... 11111 1t1t1rnM1t -fl'" ..tll! tr.. c-MDI Warllll" ·-· HUfllll'IO!On IQC/I, Dlcltrlber IS 1~~ 1,n' ~ Dlc9inlbfl' 15 ltn 3'51-11 111 In lawful ,,_.,. of IN Vtlllfd C1llfoml1, '2647 :::::=:c_:::_• .:::_.:::_::::_ __ ,:=::,c:_o.c.c_:__• -----------------------------------------------..... Amtrkl al lime of , ... wl!llOUI ty Cl1ril of Orange County on Ole. S, 1t11. WE5fEllN OIVEltS IFtEO Et:IUITili.S
' D"YID L IA•O, """· IN'" '"--ai ·-iir.!"'"""' ir.:========================================================::;i :. =~.:x:.":;i!.'=~ 11.M S... MIOlkl I~, Stlltt ,_ c~.~ .W-Horii! ':f• 11 bad~ .... , conwiy«I to Incl -l!tlcl by l..M ......... Calli~ ,.., BfWlrly Hlll1. C-'lforllf• "210. .
-cMld t)f l!"USI, In Ind " the -} -'·11114 Tlll1 buslnn• 11 bllno ~ bV I 111 Oril'l(HI County, S!llti Oof PubU11'1ed Or1110t! CN'I 01Hy Piiot, Umlltd pal1-lol\ltl c•~11, c111er111fd '" Dlc:embfr •· u. n at, 1tn ,,,,,.,, w-esTl!:1tN orvE1ts1F1Eo She works A ir California's new SKI DESK. Attractive she is, person-=s.u1111 .. 11riv d ltlt ol 11'11 liQUlllES, It.IC. si.r1y uJ ttet ot ,~, PUBUC NorICE 01v1c1 s. Latll• able she Is, tool But unlike other "bunnies", she's an expert at get-
111wu1ertv 1!2 lff! OI L.ol lilt at Priikl9nl I T HI h SI kl I f 0 Co l)1et Ho. *· 11 Pf' """ •KorOfll in •mo T1111 s1~1 111tc1 wllh '"' countv t ng you to the ahoe/ g erra s s opes rom range unty. ~.u~~::._ U .... ·r;;:.1c,1!, 1~ ~~~:1g: cC.t':lJ.:r.\ ~ ~~Lt,~ :'.'°~T~~N~c~~ '~1!~~ Specially trained, Jill Edwards, has a wide assortment of convenient.
ntv •KOCdw o1 Mlc1 covn1y. n• couNrt o" oit•••• 1v '"''rly J. MM11o.o. DllMllY-4e0nomlcal Air California Ski Packages to offer you. 1trftf ldd,..M i ncl oll!f• common · Mt. A:-14'19 f-:t1•'1 rod f
c1 bf(! •boY-1 '• pUrpor'9d •0 119! P"o1t '•o•AT• °"" w1LL AND .. 01 Dl<;.trnbtr •· u. , 21, 1•12 uni.n AIR Cl,<.LIFOa~IA'I. Air Califomla'a SKI OUR VALLEYS p ackages {for as many dav. as 15 ENI WllllOfl llrHI, CoJ11 Mna, L.ITTlllS T•STAMINTAlllY . d n ,_
9 1''=!n•fMd rrvsi.e d!ida1tn. any •k~,':i~g~ wm~~~ ~~t.11t. PU UC Nori~ OWN,. you want) to BEAR, HEAVENLY AND SQUAW. SPECIAL CONVEN-
dt nation, It •nv. ol , ... ,NI P•OOl'IY NOTICI Oft MW11110 011" i>tTITH>N .. llbllilled Or•r;r C°'sl 01Uw Piiot, Int IJO ng Ill
111'l:ity tor •nv 1ncor·~·· ot .1he 11r"1 NOTICE 1s t11!:1tl!:IV ~1ve~ t11e1 ,,rnnou. euso~iss VERY SPEClAL IENCE PLUS charter packaQes from Orange County Airport to South
Mltltiu 11111 • ....,. commpn o..1onaitot1, 11 M••Y•llN wtnkltt" h•• "t11t>I'' "'"'" • llli1-MAMI n•T11111NT Lake Tahoe Airport. Or, If It's 1'ust Information you want on the l1lfl •llOMI hlrllfl. lion fol' '"rOOlte of Wiii aild for kllUlnet Thi followl1111 _ _.. .,.. doing !
s.cld Mii w1u 11t "'u. 10 ''' int °" 1...tttn T"11'""''"' to 1111 J1111t,...., Mln111 11· .. ., aa· t and moat economical way to get from Sacra t A irport ~l:.:'~1~~~ 'i!.:'!':.ci~O:..:..U:: ~ ... "' • .11~,"tt.e~'!nill~ P!;.'T~.:~'1°'Nt.=; ;~1'.:~!11~, ••• , ... ,, e 1es men o , dffT t)f tr111l1 Ill SUtnl upendtd undff DI hffrl"ll ltll M-1111 bwn Ml lor ,..,,_,, "'"°' T•W..1 s. 1tcry.i Pc* tha gateway to your favorite 1jahoe/High Sierra ski resort, Jill
tht{lerm• °" wld ctMct °" '""'· "°' 11111'1 Dlc:ember », ,,,.,, " t :ao '·"'"' 1n ,... t•bl•i .._ 111 41, ,.oo1 T•'iE\i'' c-knows and witl be glad to make rt9'1dl and M,11U1 rtmil"I"' 11tl11elpal ~,....,. t)f Otolrtn1tt>t -"'°-' of .. Id ftntnlll '""°' f~H I •• l'ool ot the not• 1tc111"td br Miii c1Mc1 ot 1n111. ~, 111100 ci...W:. eant.r ~wi _...,, in Tabla, .,. w. 11111 sirtet. C• Mesa, your arrangements. Calf her.
wittl kl!fl'fll lfom J-I, 1•11 11 In ... II 1111 City-of I.Inti Ana, <alltomJI, c.tlf'llrnla ~ T I h '"'"" 1nc1 ot ""' trv11 ,,,.1tc1 by Mkl °''"' 0ttctrnw 7, 1tn . · G•rt M. Gooc1111, m1 ,,...kwat• e ep one ~,%~-I, 1•n ~·AM..! It JoMN, ~ .. Hunllngloll Btadl. <•ilfonU ~ Sl!CUlllTY .. AC1FIC MILO'· wi'Iri:u,,_ L'f'ld• l. Goodal•. m1 lrNkWlltt 1714 ) 979-9700
,, NATIONAL IANK 0 ,. ••st....,.. 4.,. c1"'i.. H""''"''°" e .. , .. c1111orn1a AIR 11 T>'Vllft _. .... ' o ' ~ Iv Ltwl• w McMurnn wgj. C ,_,,. , • ma ~ ~:::nt ,. .... lllNI 11111• :111 ! c~ l ~ .' ~~':\''-I• bfl"9 'oncl1Kl1ld by M ••uFORNI~
p· l"'td 0r-. c~ 011tv '""°' p . Orflioii Coett Oi'ltt "''°'· OAllY M. GOOOAL.E IOJ ....... ~ bf• ,, u . n. ltn ' Wf-71 ~-·, ,, ls; Im f.l».)1 ™• •l•lfl'IWnl HIM with the Counly ·-
Clltt. tf Oranot COUntv on Die. s. 1m 5 j Sa t PUBLiC N CE PUBUC NO'l'ICE WIL.l1AM s , s1 lOtlH , CCMll'f c•.,rt. "" m • erv ng cramen o, ~ ,
•tttr J, .. rot""'·°"""''"' ll'·nm SquawV•lfeyll.J San Francltco, Oakland,
•: NOTIC• INYITINO llOI · • S J Q ' p I 8 '
c ,,, ca11tom11, wrn '""'"" 1H1.ci bids uo • 1• .. . P..Nc: "" Mond•r· Dtctmw 1' is, · 19' "11 San Diego and Orange Coun y. 4 NOtlCE IS HEltEl!IY OIVEN lft1t 1111 B'I'" ~~Nitort Of Orang• Publ11Md Dr~ Co.11 D•HY stl:~ r an 088, Ot8r10, 8 m pnntQS,
1n11 11t11 d•r at Dtcl"nlltr. lt7:1 In 1111 ol'lk• o1 ""C11r11; of •01'1I of su,.,._ OTI •':t' JtPI floor, CoUnt._ Aclmln111r111an B11lkllnt1, JlS No. S~amort St,. s.n11 PUBLIC N CE An C•t11tr1111, 1t vmicli t1tN Mid bid• "'HI Ill Pllb!lc:lr Clf)lll9CI 1n11 rHd fOfl -----~~------
111• HOWlnG! . lllCTITIOUI •UllMISS • .> Orinv• CO\lfltl Mldk:RI Ctnlff' NAMI nATIM•'Ml ""~---..i.=-•• 1 f.cutt Unit A, torocllllonll'I; Tiit followlng pel"IOlll ar1 llol111 ' ~ Pr91tcl p,jo;.:i1....-...1 t1usll'lft1 u: HeaY9nltVilf9t
c1+. ~: ::!' =tonto 1:'1: f:ttw ~le~ ~1-;i~ .. ~ll~ ~ d; ~11v,l.~N:~·!IOOr~·:ld ~: .. ~
Ad"'l!llll'rlllotl lulldlng, SU Ho . .S<rt1lnor41 S,nt• ~AN C.lffomll, Ca.II ,,.,...., (•Ill. mu ..
<t"., Ml"IRlllm "''91 fllt1 tor 11111 pre ICf 1'11¥1 dtt«l'lllntd bV lhf 80•rd Mkrllll A. ltlb:o, 61D l"olnl L.Om1 Dr., \:,'--~ t' -~lll'-
of "IWffvllOn try ltllOhlllon 7).112. I Qlp1 of h '" tlll 11'1 ... •Ilk• ff HllllllllOlon INcll, Calif. ""' ~I .... ,. ""llll'll °"!I'll 8o8rd °" luPtnl-.. Mkillll J. SINky 1tlt "°" MtfllllOl\1 lkldtrl' alltnllon II Cll!M ti SietJollJ 1no.J:t71.S of 1111 LlllOr COO. wtllf;tl N.-...,otl IMc .. , C1lll . ..,.... wll ,......1,, thttr1 II 1w1rdfl IM ~ to ~ Ml ..._ thin i.lkl ,.....,11 lllr Tiii• M1111111 I• btlnct concfucttCI .,, t
Olf .. tatt of Wlfll Ml letlfl fll Ill ..,.n., worlt"*I •nd mfdl.loftl« tmolot9d pa,tntnhfp.
In .... ICVflon If ll'lt PfOCIOlllll e1111tract. , Mttfllel A. II.loo ?-, OM tnll ~N lll'lltf 1'llt "'"...,.uinv r111 of Watlt lhl• ti. 111111 en1 Tl!l1. tta..._I tlilill wll~ 1111 C-ty wolilhil tllM In lllCIB of livhl "°"'1 In '"Y -Ultl'lll1r MY 11111 fir S.ll#rlllye, Clark ti Ot•lllll CoYll!'Y loll: lffv, ti', 1t71 ~'fl', 1nd •• lllltdl'(I, lt!llftl ltllfrWIM l'IOltll •w ltU !Nn •IOI\! flOllrt Wit.LIAM I . IT .IOMN, COUHTV CL.1111(, "'M .... ,.It •flllt " ""' ,,.ctlon °' lllf '°'.-ot"' ,I ..... , tlll nlllnblf ., •tVll1¥ '· ""9cldolc. DlolWtv of ... ,. "' •llfll. • "11ln kl! ~ must 11111m1t wtltl 1111 bit • MflftldWV <dlldt cffftfltcf try l'\ibllll'llll Or.,..a CNll Diii'\' ,.llat,
o ~tlbll blnll fM" 1 ltl0dlr'1 'Olfld ~ 111'.t.oli lo lllt ..,..,. DI 11\f C-ty l>KlmW 1, I, lS. 1J,, 1'71 ~
of nt1 Ill 1n •~ llOI 1tM !NII II.,. t«'t.nl of lllt Wiii< Md It I .....,.,.,"1-------'------j
111a :1N l>kldlr wi11 .,,., 1111o 11!1 ..,.... Contr•C'I If Illa ~ " • ..,.,.. 1111n. PUBUC NOTICE
In _, of lath.I,. ~ .nler Into 1tl(fl CtlltrllCI, lllt Pl'llftldl flf llMI chtU !----==-=-~---' wlU bf lol"folllfd 1#, In c: 19 ., 1 liond .. lfll l'lfll IVfTI ll'llftol wlll M loHtfttlt M ll~IOUI IUS!lt511 Onflffo wlf'.Dunty ot or-.. .i... , ,
... l!tcti bid '" .. ' " .,., .... ~ fWlllll* w -~ty ., °"""" • • ""TIMIM1 ( the 1vc:c:fl&lul bldltlr Wit Ila """'lrtll IO tvl"ffl'11. al 111'111 of s TN fllllW[.. Pl"*"' l'f Clolnrl ~. I ont WO""ll)' bond Mllc:fl llllN IWOfttl 1111 ~ alld ... hll"lf IMIMM .. ;
·. I 'Df IOr '°"' of 1111 •mtUnl of *'t Ctlltrtc:t, lfil 1cpot'd•rc1 wl!rl '"L.AYIA.LL. "" HIWPl#t ikvll'llrd, llM OOWl"llllWlll toot. Ind Olll lllf'tly bClncl ln ""' •l!IOUllt OI , ... Of 1'llt NtwPOr1 •flel!. C•llfofnll ..,..., COl(lr1c:t, g~rlnltlll'IO 11!1 1~1thll.ll JMW1or'lllllKI ol lflll COntrtdl Nici benll1 to ltot.n W!ll~l'll lldlr Jr,,-ll*I hu!ll
bf ll'JI lpPl'OY911 or ... '°""'' C-111 •nd lllMlrlnt• Adll'll!litlrltor " Otlolllf l~t St., Nf, "'· Hl/lltl1'19ton Sin °'llD O!Wf, llKl'I. Catlfoml1 .,,.... ../
c . .(. '_tllt 1oen1 of IWll"'I'-' ,.......,.. trit rltlllt • ,.rift! 111Y or ti! 11111.t. lcJt.111 A19111t J~' J,., '4.ll '14"" ... ~~tllY' M:tlllt 1111 IOWllt O!'ic'I 11111, •!Id to ••i... any f"!Orlf!lll'T Or.ntt. C•llltrnl•,... ~~4J.'fi.Oi~'Q'f'~~,'IOAllO 011' $UPl.ltV1&011l OP OllANOl .COU Tli\ ~l.. ;~~~:=~-lllt Wooderftt, l===========·-===::;:==i:==:;• t:O~I~ . ._ • .,.. W,. Jrr_
DiHS ~ .. lf11 W. I , .ST JOM!f . Tllll •l•ltrllln1 "ltll. WI'" JN CO\lnly < v · ~ C.unty Cllit Miii fXoOtflclil Cltf'll. e1tr11 of OrllVI COt.tfltV t111 Now, t, lt11 ,...
j of 1111 i!!~t!" IUlll"l.0'1 QI :~AM '!t I! JOHM, COllll!y Cll#k. 11\1 tt ALI Or•• .......,-, Cl111wn11 J, _.., Ot9llty
•Y JVM Nt.llll'IGtr °"' ll-rt• I 11 Ol1IUl'f' P'illlfllhlf Clt"aflls CMll O.lly ll'llo!, ,llD!hMCI or•• c .. tt o.11, ,.1101, O.C.ltl'lbtr' 1, 1, •· t, ti, 11, 11, u. ll. u , 1m N~ 14 Wiii Oi<Mllbtr 1, 1, 1.t!~ .Q».11 1•n IH...,1 ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~-!
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rd lu I roit It 1 l:i1n1 lhflt
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r
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l Jfl I 11 I ~fOIV!S J:.lll
1vl1 ~11 il un11cl !1:11 th
h~ un~ r tl11 ~Jdt: cf It
1,el1 11t sters Rehaggle
Bi,Is W ith Growers
r.t RI J\r,\\11 \I -The
T
r• 111
Ill! \l!l il\1 111
11 s conlr:icl~ "1th
1 n gr 1 ('rs 111 C:ih!orn1 1
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th ~l1:1lt: ror .11.n orgo1111z<1t1on<1I
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1 , rn . .tt l~ 11cl lht cli:cbiun
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t 1 tllSS 11f !ht: f fill lahQr
ltl tr n b1 1cii1 n1s t1><1mster
tf c al~ 1ncluchng Prcsidenl
DIS EN CffANTED
WI TH MUTUAL
FUNDS IN KEOGH•
Wll~I C4n llf .... lb<ll"'I 111
[~M llAllT Y .. NCE
TEAi\t:STERS
UFW AFL-CIO
C40-711S CoGN~tfJ C1ell•I Con1Ullifflt1
CHOOSE A REALLY SPECIAL GIFT
THAT WILL PLEASE YOUR RIDER
' From Our Complete Sto(k of
MOTORCYC LING SAFETY
ACCE SSORI ES EQUIPMENT
and outstanding selection of
RIDING APPAREL
W« lu;1ve h•lrnen
d~n~ slut
boon •!Id ,, .... 1 .. ...,.. ••-• ... d chll
•
Sere tfl• ell -.. 191J Sn•kh ...-.. dbjtt.y M
A.11tflorl•d Su111kl O..Jet Sotn & SH-tk e
' AM
o,..
TIU I
MON
Sot9•m
•• JAMES LTD
Listens to Landers
Nearly Everyone
f
•
OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST
"
• "' =· .1 "' .. •• ~· ~! • •• .. HY lli' ••• ••• ••• ·1· "' ... ••• ., ., -·~ •• •• •• • • .. :~ :r,,
"" Nol No NO! "' "' • "' •• •• "" • N • ..., ••
N • Hrt
·~ "' ••• "" ~· ~ 81.1 ~· ""' rn
' • ..
I
'l
~
•
. Thursday's-Closmg· Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
•
Sag in Stocks
Said Seasonal
NEW YORK (AP)-StDCk market prices sagged
again Thursd1y but anal ysts said the slu mp was
merely a seasonal technical adjustment that ma~
an Insignificant dent in the market's sustained
autumn ~vance.
'Bradbury K. Thurlow, vice president in charge
er research for Laidlaw & Co .. dismissed the re-
treat as "year-end folderol" due to backing and
filling.
"Some people expected I:lenry Kissinger to
come back with a Vietnam peace treaty in his hand,
an_d when he didn 't they started selling," Thurlow
said.
•·
•
---~-· .
s OAILV PILOT
)
I
I
I
) DAILY PILOT
Court Orders $2 4 72 Automohi
• ~I ... ' ~. ti... ( t .. ,.,, \., .. ,., 1•• ' f'••'# ~ , .. \;
wJ: TO N I ~ ref~.~~' Id an~:.:! llowevet~i.·'~1
"ll .;!.. ·t~Alnna m'°""' .Jr Pot }>' ,. told them ·~·~!""· Supe~rt j I unue<1al.!er ·.tillmtatioo.re",~' " us •· '"• 1\l whlchl'\.' life. they ' ve air I air cond)~I · 1['1¥, ~b_rr~\'IO... ~=~~ that;~g couple Lowelt, ~direct~ f • rt ordihd t'~fund ~-:-cUti~llf; In thelr , 1~' and uve 1Milj f j .'o.d:"Gtl
titled 10·' 3 refund 0 Center _lor Aut~·Safety, bid . buy~'haK 'tlie car ,0, ri ll!I Opelillfllon· agoo. ' ldi1J9Umony at I !Ut .{ '•·
:.: • the declSJOf'l was •·a StgnJhcant • . THE the OpeJ doe.a not otmC· wftti . 1 W"SH!lit'I $2,(72.89 . they paid for an victory for one consumer" eight months befc;ire·sumg. In JUDGE o~red the factory-instaUed aJj)\J +?iY
• 11 automobile sold to them two based on the misrepresen-the past, he said, this .bas dealer to refund tile mooey dJUoning · , · .. ln~t". ~--: years ago_ "under false· tatlon. usually been limited to-90 aodt.oldtheMortonsto'rilum ' ~l ·. ·•
MJlllf!!l' ~ ~ · / representations." days. the car. THE SEARS i
over fW. 'Jl_,,.. ·~(\y:; Lawyers said they had not BUT IT OOES not, he said_, Judge Joyce Hens Green Mautlej! Mclntosh, pf°etldent conditioning not o ,..,
the Htl.4~-"a...wt• 1 ,,;. heard or a similar rUllDg in· "establish what we want, that ruled this 'week that a or the au!& ®alershlp, said, wort, but atAo ru y, , tr-' ~"!f" ~'"'l',_. ~~ volving an au I o mob i l· e, consumers can get their salesman fpr \Vllson.Mclntosh ''We plan to appeal the electrical system, , ... IPJ6!.fie
the Jri5Rlency of tlie"" · ruted although it is a long establish· money back because a car-ls a Bu l ck Ope I made d~ision to the D.C. COurts of wu tokt. 'geafs an 'fiioperative Jiartll'\g"
Mine Workers union. ed principle that a consumer lemon. .that it can't be fix. "misrepresentations ..• of A'PPeals." 'Sean rewired the car and light,' a loose ~t seat and
1.filler. the 1'1iners for has a right to have his money ed." fact" when be told Da1e and Mrs. Morton said the relnstalled lhe air conditioner, other comptaffits. Democracycandlda~.saidhe -=-===:::::::=::=.c.::====""-~~~-=-~~~~~~'--~~~~~--,,--~~~~~~~--'--'-'-~-'--~~--':..::._::..::.::.::..:....::::::..._:..::.:_.:..:::::::::::..;:::_:::_:::::::::::::..:..._::::::::_:::::.:'.:::::::.::~~~~
~wld begin sweeping reforms
in the trouble-tom union as
soon as possible.
"\Ve have won the election
by a comfortable margin,"
said the 49'-year-old retired
coal miner from Ohley, W. Va.
The 1atest official vote tally
from the Labor Department's
closely guarded counting room
gave Miller 52,403 to 4-0,966 for
Boyle, the union's incumbent
president.
e Camp11s Probe
BATON ROUGE. La. {AP I
-A special st ate in·
vestigating comn1iltee says
it's up to" local authorities to
determine possible personal
criminal liability in a student·
(IN SHORT: .. )
police co n Iron tat ion al
Southern Universit y in which
two young blacks died.
In a preliminary report on
the Nov. 16 shooting. the
biracial committee said the
fatal shot came from an area
where six men had gathered.
"an area where sheriff's
deputies bad deployed."
But the report did not say
specifically that the shot
which killed Denver A. Smith
of New Roads. La., and
Le<Jnard 0 . BroY.'n of Gilbert,
La., was fi red by a sheriff's
deputy, nor did it identity the
six men in the group.
e Peron Derllt1e1
BUENOS AIBES {AP I -
The ~·ay was open today for a
new political order in Argen-
tina following back-to-back
statemeots by Juan Peron that
he would not be a candidate in
the ~larch presidential elec·
tion and by President Ale-
jaljdro Lanusse that be would
retire in ~lay. 1
Person. Argentina's dictator ,If-from J946 until the military
overthrew him in 1955, took
himself out of the race in a
statement given to newsmcti
after he took a plane to Asun·
ciao, Paraguay, Thur s d ay
nigl>t.
e P-tagon Tried
LOS ANGELES (AP\ -
U.S. District Court Judge Ma tt
Byrne, disclosing a new in·
cidenl of electronic eavesdrop-
,ping involving the defense in
~ ,Pentagon Papers trial,
says jury selectk>n cannot
be~n before Jan. 3.
lJ:j\an almost identicaJ replay
of an incident which stalled
the trial for four months, the.
government submitted to the
judg~ on Thursday a sec_ret
report on the conversation
overheard but refused to tell
the .defense who or what was
heard oo the tap . . e SM'• Dome
; LOS ANGELES {AP\ -A
j&.year-old girl wandered safe-
1>\'home Wednesday, ending a ~ch by deputies a n d ·
bounds of n'earby
T' oa foothills.
" girl, missing since
'I\lesday. spent the night tn a
vacant\ house a half a block
from her home., police said.
She had reportedly run away
from home after a scolding.
e Watergate
• WASHINGTON (AP\ -A
·rederal judge has ordered the
Los Angeles times and two of
its newsmen tli surrender tape
recordings of\ an interview
with a tey figure· in the
Watergate break-in case.
The subpoeoas, authorized
by Chief U.S. J)ist. Court
.·Judge John J. ~ca , were
served Thursday 'Qn t h e
Times' Washington reau
·.chief, John Lawrence. and
reporters Ronald J. OS w
and Jack Nelson. '
e Prlt-Fl9ht
~ ..
PONTIAC, DI. t AP) -A
dlnlng-llall flght at Pontiac
state Priaon ha> left one In-
mate dead and six othm In-
jured. One prtaon olridal was
treated for Jac<rajjonS.
warden John i>elr l lll
de$Ci lllod tbe Incident Oii
Tbincl•Y niCht II an "lnmate-
venu.iomlite tUalr between m-. o1 tbe Vice l.Drd•
and Dlaclplft otttet Sarti•"
rrom Chlcaao .
•
' e n.:~trun~~l
" ...
•
BLACK & DECKER
l / 4'' VARIABLE
SPEED DRILL
Squ ... it cmd you get from no
n..-1 up to 2250 RPM. (Now
that oxpla!Aa ... rythh>g doou't
It.) G.t Pop or tho kid a good drtll
th11 year. Or gi:.-e Sit one. alnc•
ab.e's with the •omen.'a llh gang.
. . . ---·-:.7·--4 ...
BLICK' DECKER
DRILLBIT
SBIRPENER 1999
JlUl drop a dull bit In and lt
abarpo .. It up juat llb a
-1 -...... Good tool II thoro' a a
lot ol drtllbig goillg on.
9-PC.
SCllEWD'""Rl"'V'"'ER""
SET
.27c
II the burglar ... , thls he'll really
get mad and 1tea:l the dre11er you pu.t
the box oa. &Mp. th• d<N8bter
lrom borrowllljf your good oarrlllga.
CHROME
111E
CIU1£R
517
I ... theM all OT•r and ... l'J' eat has cc
attcbr ::r!': "Fight Sm"fnRldo a •~•". So w come ther Ye a c(?
... .. ~.
BLICE Ir DECKER
71//'UW 1999
Walka right thru 2xb (Wh., JOll
... the 11-feet t\ baa. you11 wonder
where to get lhoe1 for it}. .Antl..lddr:
back clutch. aawduat •lo<U to tho roar.
11-PC.
COMlllllftOI
WREIClllET
597
CYC:LllG
UGI
97~
IJHJ. bcrpoack. 'l:lio
kiddo ..... put hla
·booka la It. or carrr
cm. appi. tor the ......... ~-* (at 15c ....i.. he'd
boHor-.)
. .. . : ~.
BLICK Ir DEC• t:a
1/tBP
ROOtER 3411
No la 11 lua-iooL Yoa can
mab moaldlziaa, roat-pallolaa oa ;
odgeo, do lnMcmd acrol1 work. A lot
ol q1lalllf lol tho plloo.
It'• callocl "llWICh bowl" boccnuo a!l~r
about lour d'rtnb tho boot alwaya gola
aappocl bf hla.Wlf9. P1Mty c:upo cmd II --1.
ITPOO. TBEITMtMT
n..~s.
ao-tho
....... ref
-~ ltlM-..i. -.(Lol·a-.-·plata o1-1cimoa. ---ol-.a.o1c •.. )
•
•
n.o.n:c
POMP
297
Hook It• IM <111111"" bouglil -
thla ad """ It'll -ply .. bllgo. ..
pool. or a ballohll> "11 ol gin la ibod -·
REYOLVllG cmo:u
-= TOUI ll!&OICt
Tle!Cuslw
,_.Cisnlw • lea .. Cn•
1~
l'IRE~ ••sm
·217
Kot bad. In faot. I didn't think wo bad
OM1th9t worlritd .o well for may
)llloo. No iloo.-. cm• It liGa a ""II:"' i.-. f1rlloh:
WEll*f:t, c•n
fEift'
Wutorpioolwltla 3917 0-, aobljWopol• =$-~· .. ... .,_ _,... .. a..a_
at ...... It ..,. .
•
'
•
• • . -' .,. . . .. ... • .. • • ,
\
•
Frldly, DKtmbef 15, 1972 •
Chris.tlnas · Aflo ,at: Boats Parade • Ill
>
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
•• Of .. INllly Plitt ....
....
basin, a large cruiser carrjiing several
choirs will break away Crom the re.st and
\OuUined in spark.Ung llghts, with masts ancOOr ln tl~ basin ... <;hamber Manager
strung like towering Christmas trees; Jack Barnett' ~d. the 'cbolrs fi,ll give a
ll)Ore thon 50 boats will join lnjhe annual Coating COllCi!rt\liom the·boat's deok. ~t J!arbor .lloatihg ··FestivaJ of The rest o1 ·11>e llOats -anc11!aktt·ts
l:Jgtits. parade. . l I ~ -. ·hoping mori wl.U join the• parade aa it
The Newport'Harf.eor Chamber of O:!m-goes along -will go fti'ound Lido Isle
mefce..spoMOJlld e1:ent, which· , starts ' and up the Newport Channel, pa"ing the
Mgnday foi-·a. slx~l&ht run, is oPen 10 · Lido Isle Yacht Club at 7:.ff p.m, an<i,the
aoy skipper · wnq .. w~~ to get. in ~· • Udo Isle bridge at 7;50td.m.
along : the way to shoW off his decorabMI On the way oUt, ~ bOats will pass the
craft. Newport Hatbor Yacht Club at &:OS. p~m.
1The earavan of lighted boats is·d!le to and will cruise past the •Balboa Pavilion
cruise the entire harbor starU.gg at about t bout a 25 a a : p,m.
6:30 p.m, at the. Balboa lsland ferry The boats will ·go oilt into the harbor
tennlnal. entrance and then turn back to end. the
A number of good viewing spots will be parade at g;lS on Balboa Island.
passed and the Chamber has made time
est-im .. es· when the parade should reach Barnett s4id some of the boats ,~s
each P.Oint. year will be-8.liirnated with mechari.lcal
, 1be decorated boats will cruise up lhe " displays1 and Christmas figur~ and a
Balboa Island Channel, turn around &t committee boat will be.out each night to
tbe Marine AVenue bridge and then up to informally judge the entries.
the Reuben E. Lee Restaurant 'at about He said ~ is no big emphasis' On
6:55 p.'m. prizes but the' best;decorated yachts will
The parade will the~ turn up the Udo Win plaques.
Channel, passing t~Balboa---Bay Club . · Barnett also Said that boats can get in
and Mariner's Mlle restaurants starting the parade for a while and then drop out
about 7 p.m. ' any time ther wish just to say they were
\Vhen the caravan naches the turning part of the Festival of Lights. '
Cal State ' .. • • •I~-Ho.liday
, ..
Cbncert , '
In the Christmas spirit · will be
members and guests of the University
Choir 'and Orchestra, CaUfomia State
Univefsity, Fullerton when a holiday con-
cert takU place Friday and Saturday.
The concert,-which features the worts
of'Handel's "Messjah" and a pctpourri of
qmm:nas motets and carvls, ~ the first
in. a !!rrles of six, sponsored by. the Cal
S&ate,cFuJlerton music department.
'Tbewerfomtances will begin at a p.m ..
iifthe·Llttle 'J'IJ<ater oo ~ QIF -campus.
'nle series begins tonight and. con-clUdes May 24, 1973 with ·atperformance bf the UQtverslty Singers and Ordltstra.
Maicir ..O.k. feat•l'<d during the ·sen~· • a~ tile "Lord 'Nel90fl Mass" by IJ,aydrt;
Leonard Bernstein's ' ' C h i c h e s t e r
PSatms;". 'the "'Mass in c· Mioor" by
Ralph Vaughn-Williams and the "Mass in
A .Major" by ~-B!!njamln Britten'•
"Cantata Mlsericordtum" will also be
featured. -· · -. ~· ..
Participating in the concerts will be
the 110-voice University Ololr, the 100-
voice University Chorale, the 86-voice
UniversitY Singers and the 60-piece
Symphony Orche!tra.
• Conducting duties will be divided b,l'.,
Dr. How' rd Swen, coordinator of
graduate studies· for Cal State'•· music
departmen!, aild ·David Thorsen, a loun4-
ing member of the music departmeat
and direct6r ·of choral activities at ~ uni.versj~. Swan, wti> was condlJctor Of
the combined Glee Clubs at Occidental,
College flir more than 30 years, cooductk
' the · Unlverilty Chorale and Chamber
sqigers, while Thorsen conducts the
,. -••
• ..
' . ..
•
Fred Wllf <,.tio also directed) and Robort T..,ier
•re •bout to pUt It to Martin Fuchs in • scene
from ~""'"nsttr Community Theater's "A Funn'y
Thing Hmpptned on t~ Way to the Forum."
'
.,
' .
\ . .. Patric!•;~ Mtd wn . ...._
_l"m 8~~ i~ Irvine
Community· 'nr.ater's
"Who's Alral~ ol Vlr·
ginla w.tf?,'':dltetted
by Alircu:t FletC her and
Art Go rdon.
Un'irnsity Slng~n and .the University
Choir. I ...
Tbfee of the perf'onnances in the ·
Sefi~ will be in .the. university's Little
Theilter; while ,one will be in Plummer
Audtt.orium t <Fullerton Jr .. C o·t leg e,
Fullerton. Th• Bem1teln work and a µe-
'Funny Thing' Top Show for 1972
qOiehl Mass b)r 'M. ~ne w!U be g1v~ ll. the year ending. in otii.oge County
in the ' Uhtted : Methoclist Church Of community theater call be,b6Jted 'dow'n:to
Gftr~ Gry":e· r ' , • • one all-encompassing generaJ.lzatjon, it
r$eason tickets for the &eries wJU be on might be this -ii was the ye ar that
sftle. lh~ tooight at the university, Af· comedy made a comeback.
ter-ttflif tickets may be purchased only tor The previous 12 months on the local
illdlvldllfl CO'f'rlB· ' r ·JitrQ,rD'la~ about the concert playhouse circUit produced some lm·
an(l '1 aeaaon ticket .,prices ts pressive heavy dramas from many coun-
e by calling the music depart· ty theaters. Indeed, when 'the Ume of ~lL .. . tttkontng came a year ago,~ of the top
i • • seven productions of 1971 were aerk:Jus
• * ' • • plays, headed by the likl!I of "Death of a
One Day E:xliiliit ' ~":;:"wiih an eruaordlnsrlly fine
• '' ~ artlstic year to follow Orange County's Fo•f>~•eS• Prfn-Produciog .,.... (arni the Westminster ~,.,UA ' . ·"? . ' Comlnuoil}< Theolerih partlcui&r) Jitl>"ed
1-~ • ·• ' that ·1U111.0611i.ori•-'not. be dlvorc-• W'ortct .of old """l•r• "1d modem 'iii from !Ulh ~Y -.-ct that a good
art!Jtl '1Udt as ' Albrecht, Dum, Po,'10 • tunny play, K It'.• '6o<l enolJI)!, can ltand Pica..,,· J•C<JUC.! ,CaJ1otC..,.i1 Cleora<& toe.to toe wltb 1,l!Ood,aetlous productloo ... Rpuaul\t will he f~l ~ a ~Y -'l'hus, u -W. collilnn lltlveU. llJ eil!)lth
p,_taUon •ol oi:t1illllj-)lthiJsnipit, II)-round of c\IOlce• for tjle top 10 11tow1 or
tagllo9h" IDd ~~ _ prfnll! lo the year, .-or the tpp four i\lrned out
taJ<e ~'' at ~'AM, Olllige. to be -'dlel. ,' , • nill• 4 'vaJuea ,)I\ d¥jlt' fl~· ' ·
will be dllpl1~·1ror11)O1.m. It 4...,. •ni. W •H m I 1u.t1 r ~with' ill.. ,.Ibo Foyer cf, the new llmMilitlel two ol tlie ~ bJr pmludlono on a l!Jt
l'Jl14inc al the colle1e. j that lncludflls ll\'111 lbui... .....,,., take
over the mythical "theater or the year"
accotactt earned last year by the Irvine
Community Theater. The latter group
operate! under a partial handicap· this
time around since this columnist ,directed
the 'last three JCT sho'jl, l h u a
eliminating them from ob j e c t I v e
analyiis. However, the Irvine group's
other lyo 1972 offerings both found theit
way onto the high rungs of the DAILY
PILOT ladder.
TOM TITUS
lntermlaalon.
pre.,.slve dl:am~t.. "SWnmer and Smoke"
at the LaJUna Moulton Playhouse, under
tile dlrect•on. or Hap Qfaham. .
ANOTHER COMEDY, and another big Which brings us to this newspaper's one for WeStminster, takes the fourth
choice as the nmnber1one produCUon nf positk>n _ "The star Spangled Girl,"
the 1year thaod lbe director who will Orange O>unty'a best three-character re_ce ve e 1972 DAILY P t L 0 '.I' corr.edy since Mary Eastman'!! uLuv" In Di~ahed Productfon Award. For hll 19&7 Soodra Evans directed t h e ou1$1andmg production · ol the musical • .,. · 1 . , · comedy ''A Funny Tbina Happened on · r•ei:tm niter 11bow, with a l~te assist
the Way to . llie ·Forum" for the from Dorio Allen . weotmlnster eom111unny · The'ater _ Three heavy dnlmas which, for one
which lncl\lded t>it1og over a oupporllng minor flaw ar another, did not fully
role-midway Into retiWsal _ the• laurels reali2e ·their potential, but dellnltely
this yur I" to dlre<tor Fred Weit. ea rned a r.lace In the top 10, rotlo-tl1_Thcy ~ ..,. · are '1Who 1 Afraid of Virginia Woou1" at In lne flrft nui,,.._up position Is the lrvlno Community Theater directed
IUclwd An<le~n·1 IJn .. aculata pro-by Aaron Fletcher and Art Gonion; "The
ducUOn of the comedy with a twinge ol Night of the t1uana'f at tht. Colt• Mesa
drlllll, "Buttf'l11ya Are P'rtt," tor the Cl vie PlayhoUH. cllrected by Martbe:Ua
San CJcmtnte C.ommunJty ~ter. Third Riu .dall, and '1Qit on a Hot Tin Roof" at
place honors 10 to the yeer'1 most Im· the fluntlngton Beach PI a y h c us e ,
t'
directed by Jean Koba.
Completing the 1i!lt are Irvine's
musical farce "111e Amorous Flea,"
directed by Irvin Kimber, the Santa Ana
Community Players' compelling "My
S~-eet Charlie" dim;ted by Norman
Boodman, and two comedies -each a
collection·ol four one-acta -which must
be rated a tie for IOl.b. They are San
Clemente's "Lovers and 0t h er
Strangers''. directed by John Ferzacca.
and Santa Ana 's "You Know J Can't Hear
You When the Water's Running,"
directed by Lee Howington.
In the honorable mention category, "<f
must list lhe original comedy "Swingin
Slttgles" by the Santa All& Play ,
Laguna's "Teahouse ol the A st
Moon" and "Strance 1t«11ellow1 both
versions of "Forty caratt" ~~' guna
and Costa Mesa, Md O>pa Mela'•
revival or "Blithe Splrl(." I ,
' I / NEXT WEEk the li>oOO(flt shills to In· ~vidual excellence~a column an·
no11nce1 the wtnne.rs the eighth annual
DAILY PILOT · ilhed Ptrfor·
mance awardJ~ln community theater.
. ..
'Lo•iM 1M.roc In the LagUM
~Mou(ton Pl1yhou~'s "SUm-':
mer •nd Smoke," dlrected by..:·
H•p-Gr1,1ham. . •• !:
TOP TEN
I. "A Funny Thing Happcoed
l~...,Way .to the Forum
W~s~ter Community 'lbeat
2. "ButterOICs /..re Free,'' •
Clemehte Community Theater. !-t-. ·
3. "Swnmer and Smoke,"~ .. ·
Moulton-Playhouse. 1
;:
4. "The SW Spangled Girl,• •
Westminster Clotllmunity Theater.;'·
5. "Who's Afraid al Virglllla'
Wooll1" Irvirte Comm un I t
Theater. 6. "The 'Night ol the 1~'1
Q>sta Mesa ,Pf'v'lc Playhouse. :· l ·::
7. "'Qit on.a Hot. Tin Roof,"~
ington Beach Ps!Yhouse.
8. "the • Amorou11 Flea," l
CoOU®!'it)' Theater. .
9. ''MY Sweet Cbarlle," ~! ~na qmmunlty Players. ' .;"
10. ttio). "l<> .. n and <!tller::
Strangers," Sa,,. Clelllftlle ~::
trlunlty 'l'heater. "You KpoW l~:
Can't Hear You When the Weter'•~
Running," SAnta ·Ana CommUntll
Players. . '
I
I
I
• j
•" • .. r ••
• •
•
'
..,._:;OAlo::_LY:....:_Pl:,:L;.OT:_ ______ ~ndiJ', D«trnbtf 15, 1972
WHAT .TO p ,, . . 01 1 ~. ' iympUin . .
' . I
arousel
j " ' Mc.11
CJIAMP~_l,mnll.0.. CJirpule.I of Cha mpions, presented
1by Sou~ c.urwru• AcrOblUc :Team \SCATS). features
'C.Uty !Ugb\I "141 ?O Olhflo lll:l IYfllllBSts at 8 p.m. ;n Ui e
Anabeim ConvenUan Qfftler. Also 1ppearing are Kim Chase,
Debby fDll arid Kyte G•yner of d:iita Mesa. Tic kets, $2 gen-
eral admission, $3-4 reserved seating. 635-50Cl0.
open from 10 a.m., sponsored by the Cultural Heritage
Fow1datlon, featuring a Victorian Ol.ristmas with continuous
n1usic, t.'fltertalnment, decorations.
Mexico tradition. Candles placed in paper bags, lllled wllh
sand, llght the way for Ute Christ Child.
DEC. II
County Mall . 1~ I 1 ~ . . ' ....... .
LAS POSADAS -,m.t """' iJ.. ~'~' custom portrays lllo. l •. r •• r il'MarY Ud' ;i~ 1111•
Bethlehem. Celebfati'"' concludOI wltN tradltlOMl lftaldng
DEC. 23
CHRISTMAS CONCERT -Free Christmas music conoert at
Uie Pavilion, Los Angeles Music Center from 9 a.m. lo
9 p.m. (Live on Channel 28).
PUBUC DANCE -Music Made Famous by GleM Miiier,
played by Tex Beneke and Band, featuring Ray Eberle and
The Modemaires and Paula Kelly. Anaheim Convention
Center arena and grand lobby.
• oC pinatas.
THROUGH DECEMBER DEC. 16 · 17 "4'
CHR IST!\1AS CELEBRATION -Pasadena Art !i.luseum,
411 Colorado Blvd., Pasadena. Saturday: Appalachian Folk
T:iles from 2 to 5 p.m.; SWlday: ~lummers Play and Tr~e
Light ing , 2:30 p.m.
DEC. %3
"Tl-lE NUTCRA£KER" -The Los Angeles Junior Ballet
Company presents "The Nutcracker" in the Wilshire Theater,
Loe Angeles, at. 2 p.m.
DEC. %1 • !! APPLE HARVEST -Oak Glen's Annual Fall Frolic in
Riverside County: A visitor's shopping center (cider, apple
pies, cheese, old-fashioned candies, homemade pastries).
Two ZOOI, two trout-fWting ponds, miniature gold mine,
nature walk! and picnic grounds. Located north on Beau·
mont Avenue, from Beaumont, or north on Oak Glen Road
from Yucaipa.
"M!'SSIAB" -Dorothy Chandler Pavlllon,
Mu.sic Center. 8'30 p.m. Tlckei. $2.7~.50.
Los Angeles
DEC.U THROUGH DEC. U
FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS -Outdoor entertainment will be
pre9ented through Dec. 24 with dally presentations from 11 :30
a.m. to 6:30 p.m. in the l\.iusic Center Plaza and Los Angeles
DEC. 17
VICTORIAN PARTY -Heritage Square, (off Pasaden a ·
Freeway al Avenue 43). The hi.sloric Hale House will be
LUJ\.llNARIAS -Galaxy Drive, Newport Beach. Newport
residents along Galaxy Drive do their annual Christmas
Eve thing -light up their homes in lhe Albuquerque, New
Early Birds Get
Musical Special
Compcsers Arnt Nordheim
and Knysttof Penderecki :
planlsb Vlad imir Ashkeoazy.
Daniel Barenboim Id Alfred
Brendel and mu11 nislorians
WWlam ?it:i llt ;h and
Lawreoce Morton "'Ill be
among the many gl.M!&s in the
Los Angeles Philhannonic's
new serla of Friday Night
Specials.
These specials are given
/ from 7 to 7: 45 p.m. before
'La Traviata'
On Coa st
!\1ail orders are being ac·
cepted for the Western Opera
Theatre's production of
Guiseppe Verd i 's ·'La
Travlata" scheduled for Jcin.
19 in the Orange Coast College
Auditoriwn.
The Western Opera Theatre
is a touring subsidiary of the
ramed San Francisco Opera
Company.
The opera which will be
performed in English, is slated
for 8: 15 p.m. Tickets are pric-
ed at $2 for adults and $1 for
students. No reserved seating.
each Friday evening concert
this season. They include
recitals with .soloists and
chamber groups, and in·
tervi.e\\'S and discussMlqs with
composers. conductors and
performers. They are Offered
as a bonus to everyone
purcllasing a ticket to the
regularly-scheduled program .
Among the featured pro--
grams will be tonight's session
on composer Olivier Messiaen
including a talk by Michael
Tilson Thoma:i: and excerpts
rrom the composer's piano
works played by Edward
Auer, On Jan. 12 Ernest
Fleischmann will give a talk
on London's musical life now
and duf'ing Egar's time; on
Feb. 2, Susalllle Shapiro will
play harpsichord music by Per
Polesi and his contemporaries.
Other Friday Night Specials
include pianist V I a d i m i r
Ashkenazy ylaying and. lalking
about the music of Scriabin
Feb. 23; Penderecki o n
Penderecki, April 6; composer
-Arne Nordheim on Nordheim,
with examples of his own elec-
tronic music, April 13; and
William Malloch previewing
Mahler 's Sixth Symphony,
April 20.
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·giant si1e Navels, big Avoc-;dos, giant size Apples, Royal
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see, come save! But , we can wire flowers anywhere until
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Is Cathy Williams, center, really a lady in dirtress?
Will the pirates. Mary Lou Gilbert and Sean Fair·
cloth, capture the fair damsel? Find out for your-
self when the Huntington Beach Children's Theater
does "Pirates or Buccaneer Bay" at 10:30 a.m. and
2:30 p.m. Saturday in the Huntington Beach High
School auditorium, 1905 Main St.. Huntington
Beach. Admission, 50 cents.
-SCATS PRESENTS -
•'
GYMNASTICS CAROUSEL
OF CHAMPIONS
OLYMPIANS -MUSIC -GYM WHEEL
DEC. 15th -8:00 P.M.
ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER
CATHY RIGBY
I
Gr1nd L111d
Singers
Sptdal Ount 1972 OtymplaMI
Kim Chaff, Debbi• Hill, Dogmar Hl,,tno•
,.., Call al 70 Alf Olrl Gy-
lolancie ..._.,Vaulting Kenei, Unev•n 1a,.,
FTM b9rdM, ONUp and lrtdJwi~vol ,_..,,...,.
"9c1eeh t. Htilp letMI SCAT GYMNASTS on o
W.W WI• C•Mp•ttltoft and lxhfbftton Tew
.... Seats $4 1114 $3
G1u11il Atlnrls1i111 $2.00
Ticket lnfOlllllfian (7141 6SS-SOOO
1k:lr ... rnrlt.ltle at Anahtlm C..11:den c.ntw,
Alf Uloerty, M..tuat 1 nclce-ApncNo.
• DON'T MISS llllS <tMEI •
(Stt WHAT TO DO, Page 331
14. Chri•tma• Carol'
Radio Turns on Nostalgia
SundJy night listeners to
radio station KRLA are a
nostalgic lot. Tastes runs from
Count Basie and sounds of the
big bands to the classic
••Christmas Story" with the
voice of Llonel Barrymore.
DEC. 17
The Small One -Bing
Crosby and Tommy Copk
dramatize a Charles Tazewell
story in the style of The Lit·
Uest Angel. From the Dec. 15,
1946 Philco Radio Time pro-
gram.
Amos 'n' Andy (Dee. 24,
1941 ) -A program broadcast.
less than three weeks after
Pearl Harbor features the
beautiful explanation or the
Lord's Prayer by Amos as he
tucks his Uttle girl in bed.
The G r e a t GUdenlecve
(Dec. 1949) -Throckmorton
P. Gildersleeve tries to outdo
a young intern in the busineM
of gift-giving, but bis values
are restored in the children's
ward of the Summerfield Hos-
pital
DEC. U
The classic broadcast of
Charles Dickens' 'A Christmas
DEC. 31
Big Bands On The Radio -
The big bands never sounded
better than oo those latenight
network shows from 1929 until
1961. Series is narrated by
Charles Correll and his son
Richard.
remotes from ballrooms with Chapter One dwells on the
glamorous names: Th e early careers of Freeman
Aragon, Meadowbrook . Sa voy , Gosden and Charles Correll
and Palomar. Here, for New through lheir start. on Chicago
Year's Eve, are tw.o eI· stations in both straight and
amples: blackface roles. The series.
Count Basie _ (September, some fi\'e Wl'eks long, will contain many rare and in·
1938) Fine, fine sound, great tersling programs by the twn
arrangements (most of them boys from the Fresh-Air Taxi
never written down ) and Company, with guest ap-
vocals by Jnrtmy Rushing. pearances by members o[
Artie Shaw -(April , 1939), _t_he_;r_ra_d_;o_cast.
Buddy Rich's drums spark a
great band. Voc:als by Helen
Forrest and Tony Pastor.
JAN. 7, 19'13
The Year In Review: Just
as everyone is bringing you a
wrap-up of the year just pa.st.
so does KRLA. Review is of
1935 and 1936, from vintage
Mutual broadcasts. Gabriel
Heatler hosts.
JAN. 14
1be Story of Amos 'n' Andy
(Part 1) -'Radio's All-Time
Favorites' were features of
12 NOON 10 8 1' M.
THURS .• fRI.. SAT. & SUN.
SOUTHERN
CAllfOllNtA"S
MOST UNtOUE INDOOR
MARK£TPL AC£ FOR
"4 .. NOCRAF1£0GlfT ITEMS.
Vi:~~~f! =::~ '·"lo'i:o'llSiIBi:OIP' ~~ Warren Abbott, veferan CBS .,
engineer, for tonight's TtlfCITT •
rebroadcast. This is the pro-a.-.. • <11 41 6)t.mo
gram from Dec. 24, 1939. Mer· SOUTM coAsT PlAtA Q~ft
1514 'West 'Broadway
<..Anaheim.Ca.
1714)772 ·0144
ry Christmas, e n e z e r Eb l=~·~M~~~ .. ~·~·=·~·~"~' ~-~"~"~·-~·~··====· Scrooge! ----
f'w Cllriatlllll1 -
111""' ~llltl
Jii frffk.11 ""' a _ ... 111 W"' CMlt H~y -'4JM1t
o,.,, FREE 0 LIV ERY ,,..M.
1 ••r• i. tM H~ Arff 11 "·"'·
People used to pay, $5,000 a voyage to enjoy the wond ers of the
Queen Mary. You can do It for about the price of a movie. From
the enormous engine room to the towering bridge, you'll see this
incredible ship as no passenger ever saw her. You 'll also take a
fascinating voyage of adventure ?nd discovery through Jacques
Cousteau's Living Sea, a complete attraction in itself. It's all on the
Queen Mary and you're welcomed aboard any day, rai n or shine.
I
I
I
. .
•
Fantasy on Parade
. . . -
Frldl)', Ottt1nbtf 15, 1972 DAILY PILOT 33
Alf Aboard for Children's -Party
Who 11y1 lhe<e'a no splrll of Chri..tmas
present? ·eomeo nut Sunday, from all ln-
dicotlonl, It will maleriallre hertaboula
Jn a vision lopping Scrool!•'• beack>n en-counter.
should prove tufllclent to ~p even the
most bype}-actlve kiddie. busy for hours.
There wW be a can>ivll, complete with
many rides, and a number Of tents or-
ferlng varlolll kinds ol conUnuous en-
tertainment.
Out 'N About
'
Beoauae Newport Beach'• good ship
Reuben E. Lee wlQ boat what ..........,
lb be one of the largest &illdren's
Chrlstmu parties ever staged.
These latter Include cartooo showings,
perronnances by the well-khown Mitchell
Marionettes and appeararw:ea by the tany
comedy team of SkUea and Henderson.
NORMAN STANLEY
And all thanks go to the oommunJty-
minded operat.ors of Far West Services,
Inc. -the Orange Count y-bas e d
restaurant cba!n=t la the boat a'mong Its nu r us dinin g
establishments the country.
Calling upon the lull _..,.., Of the
Santa Ana beadquartm olllce. these
spirited restaurateurs will launch the
holiday season with an event local
youngs,te:rs won't likely forget for a Jong
time.
To proYide an appropriate setUng for
the party, the parking lot adjacent to the
Reuben E. Lee will be transfonned Into a
gigantic Cbristmes wnrlderland.
And the activities scheduled therein
WHAT TO DO.
(ll'rom Page S:)
DEC. IS
In addition, every child atten<png will
be treated to a llOIHlop round ol games,
prizes, balloons, soft beverages, popcorn
and slurpies (a variety ot mow-cooe).
lllghllgbt ol the lesUvitieo will be San-
ta's arrival courtesy of Newport Beach's
finut -u the Jolly old genUemai Join>
the party via a Police Department
helicopter. .
He'll than proceed to his special throne
room and -assisted by a retinue of col·
orfully-costwned helpers -personally
greet all moppets to entertain Quistmas
wishes and proffer-a gift with candy.
The proceedin~,,laklng place lrom
noon to 5 p.m., Sumay, will be free to
every tyke who can crawl, toddle or
• •
wait.
The Reuben E. Lee is located at 151 E.
Coaatt Hlgbway, Newport Beach.
NEARLY 100 dedicated gounnets at-
tended the recent dinne r of the Orange
County Wine and Food Society at the
Stuft Shirt restaurant in Newport Beach.
Olnne.r menu and Wine selectiQn for the
occasion were under the supervision CJf
society chairman Theodore R. Peterson,
and vice chainnan R.idtard V. Jordon.
Hora d'oeuvres of Nova Scotia 'Ullmon
and quiche Lorraine were accompanied
by apperitlls of champagne (Taitllnger
Bnrt) and klr (creme de Cassis and
• Matinees on Satarday and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. For ticket in-
lonnation, call (213) 626-M51.
HOLIDAY CONCERT -COmmwilty Chorale In Christmas
concert. Works inClude "Nutcracker SWte" directed by
Warren Peterkin. 1be free, 8 p.m. coocert takes place in the
Golden West College community theater.
THROUGH JAN. &
LAS POSADAS -Padua HWs Theater, Claremont. Annual
preseotaUon of Olrlstmas in Mexico. Houra: 8:30 p.m. Wed-
nesday and Saturdays; 2:30 p.m. Wedneeday, Saturday and
SUDday. Reservatiooa (714) 62&-1288. DEC. II
HOLIDAY MOVIl!S-Costa Mesa Library presents a dooble
feature at 10:30 a.m. The tradiUooal "Christmas: Carol" will
be shown at 10:30 a.m. Dec. 16 and the annual Children's
On1stmas Party takea place at 10:30 a.m. .
• DEC. 11
ClllllSTMAS AFLOAt:.:... Maln Channel, Pon of Loo Angeles,
San P~edro~tP4!!.£arl!de o!Qe<:..-~ted bc!!lla.
DEC. 17
JAN. 1
ROSE PARADE -84th Annual Tournament of Roses Pa·
rade. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena. 8:30 a.m. Grand Marshal
Ad.or Jolm Wayne leads the parade ol 60 floats, 21 bands
and equestrian units. Parade, this year, blghligbts the theme
"Movie Memories."
JAN.1
SKJ SHOW -New Ye&r's Day Ski Fest. Mission Bay, San
Diego. Annual water ski exhibition.
Poullly Fumel.
Potage St. Gennain was 'followed by
filet ol sole meuniere, accompanied by
Sancerre 'M. .
The entree of roast saddJ e of lamb with
beamaise sauce was se rved with pulftd
fres h chestnuts, to·m8to proveocale, ttut~
fed mushrooms, b<alaed !'Ol•ry, wl>ole
baby carrots anO zucdiinJ Flott:otkw..
The wine was Hermitage Si2.ereanDe 'M. ...
Champagne sherbet was followed by
brie cheese and water crackers with
sautem Lavergne '67 and crepes apricot
for dessert. ·
Courvoisier V.S.0 .P. was .served with
after dinner coffee.
Norman L. Goss, chairman of the
board, and Warren Roberts, president,
Stuft Shirt RestaUNDts, were on band to
welcome society members and tbe1r
guests .
Nureyev Dances
Tchaikovsky
The National Ballet of Canada's p~
duction ol "The Sleeping Beauty," au.,..
ring RudoU Nureyev, will have Its world
television premiere at 7 p.m. Swlday OD
KCET. Cbannel 28.
KCET will present two rebroadcub of
the Tchaikovsky ballet as a holiday
season special: Monday, Dec. 25, at I
p.m. and Saturday, Dec. 28, at 7 p.m.
Disneyland's new "Fantasy on Parade" will
premiere Saturday down the park's Main
Street. The traditional holiday s .. aon pag·
eant, which includes Christmastime's most
famous personality, Santa Claus, will be show-
cased daily through Dec. 31. It villi be staged
at 2 daily and at 9 p.m. except Dec. 24, 25 and
31. Holidlly park hours are 9 a.m. to mid·
night.
COMBINEi> CHOIRS -Newpol'I Harbor Lutheran and Our
Lady Queen of Angels Catholic churches presents the Crist·
mas porlloo Of the Mesmah at 3 p.m. In the Catholic church,
2046 Mar Vista Drive in Corona del Ji.far. A free-will offering
will be taken.
DEC. 11-17
FREE RIDES -Landsailing, sponsored by American Land-
sailing Ol'ganizatioo1 takes place Saturday and Stmday at
Mile Square, Brookhunrt and Edinger, Fountain Valley. Free
rides. 646-8IM5 for information.
TlllloUGB JAN. 21
JAN.I
FILM SE~ ON ART -"Museum Without Walls," series
of films on Picasso, Goya, Giotto, Le Corbusler and others,
sponsored by School of Fine Arts: Committee ror Arts. Sci-
ence Lecture Hall, 8 p.m. Fridays, Jan. 5, 12, 19 and 26 and
Feb. 2. Series tickets flO, lllngl&-admfsslon tickets $2.50. For
information call Fine Arts Box Office (714) 833-8617.
JAN. I
CHORALE CONCERT -Coast C<Jmmunlty Symphony Or·
chestra will perform in Orange Coast College Auditorium at
8 p.m. Orchestra, soloists and choir will perform "Beatus
Vlr" by Vivaldi and "MagnlOcat in D" by Bach. Admission
11.50.
Nureyev will dance the lead role of
Prince Florimund with the Natklnal
Ballet's Veronica Tennant in the role of
Princess Aurora. Ca rabosse, the wicked
fairy, will be pla,yed by CeUa Franca, ·
artistic director or The National Ballet.
Botb Miss Tennant and Mlss Franca
starred in the television version of
"Cinderella."
Taking the great Tchaikovsky classic,
Rudolf Nureyev has added bis own
dramatic dance patterns to the original
choreography of Matius Petipa, the fam-
ed choreographer of 19th century Russia.
~ Lafayette '~ ~French Restaurant~
THE FINEST IN
FRENCH CUISINE --COCKTAILS
Op.. 7 Nlg~h-5 to 11 P·!"·
PlemyOfPartd ... '
Your Host: Edmond-Your Chef: Pi•rr•
1ZSJ2 GAIDEN 4JROYE II.YD.
GAIDEN GIOVE 537°5011
496-5773 -499·2626
'-...-.:,t'l'ld'
· • t~~n Ti)ousr ~ GOURMET DINING
OYSTER BAR • COCKTAILS
,RISH LOCAL LOISTIR
\ Ca ... late .,.._, SS.95
BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, Tues .• Set.
ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR
· 4 to 7 p.111. Mon . thru Fri. '
Fod'-Dow ltt' M ...... 1, 12:15, Ylntndey.
Open Sewn D•y1
3Z102 COAST .HWY.
!•IC ....... V•hY ,~)
LAGUNA NIGUEi.
SO\JL MUSICAL -"Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope" at Hun-
IJJ!gt.ln Hartfard Theatre, Hollywood. Performances Tueo-
days tbrou&b -.rs at 1:30 p.m., Sundays at 7:30 p.m.
I
Peking Duck or
other gourmet dishes.
Place order now.
L ... U) EAST 17TH .... COSTA~ I ----------. ~·p····· ................. . . ... .
MR. MIKE'S • • • • HOUSE OF PRIME RIB •
ERNESTO'S '
ITALIAN
VILLA
FEATURING HOME1COoKED ITALIAN DINNERS
WllllfNll SPfo;;IALS e, COC:llTAJLS
· -Ol'IN 1 D4'JS -Sund'ay~Ut.d•y-4 to 11-Fri.·S•t ." to 12
I'' N~T ..... 'rir .,. ... ,.... ... I . ·~~ ......
1132 N. EL CAMINO ~EAL .
SAN CLl!MINTE 492-3012
MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW
FOR OUR
Gala
New Year's Eve
... Party
CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT
PAR TY FAVORS, SPECIAL MENU
'--~-·~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-'I• Special Coupon Offer Fun For Everyone
FROM 7:00 P.M. ON
ORANGE COUNTY'S Rd
I NEW YORK STYLE .
DEUCATESSEN e RE$TAURANT
H@OHMAN'3
featuring
Kosher Style • German
lrallan Foods
in our Dining Room or to t1kt out
COCKTAl't' • WINE • BEER
BAKERY -CATERING
VISIT OUR COM PLETE_ DELICATESSEN
AND BAK ERY WITH IT'S UNLIMITED AR-
RAY OF DELECTABLE F 0 0 D S FOR
YOUR GASTRONOMICAL PL SURE.
--OPEN 7 DAYS -
Sun. lhru Thurs.-TO 1.m. to 9 p.m.
Fri. 1nd·S11 • ....:10 iJfi. to ldnlght" •
AMPLE PARKING
428 E. 17rlt STREET
COSTA MESA 645·8900-
• • PRIME Rll DINNER • c..___ •
: C-1111 wltli -p or ....... $2 95 : Cllolce of potero.1 or rice. ;> ~ . .
1 (Rttul•r $1.fSJ •
V .. i. Ll'nNy 111111 nwtc11y, OtcMlllef' 1.f.H, • • ... ...,._ ~ ......... ,,... ... ,.,. ,.rty, • • 209 Palm, Balboa 675-5774 • • (tt ttle ..... ,,,,,., U...llltl • ••••••••••••••••••••••
NO COYER
MICllSll
MEXICAN RESTAURANT -
NO MINIMUM
37 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTIR
ANNOUNCING THE NEW BuniJ Raum COCKTAIL WUNGE
"FIND YOURSELF CLOSER TO
THE BEA.RT OF. MEXICO"
' (
• 296 E. 17tli·STR£B'l'.• _,...,... __ _
HILLGREN SQ,
COSTA MESA
PHONE 645· 7626
OPEN DAILY at JI a.m. '
I
J
j
Real
Cantonese Food
eat hara or
take home
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
111 2111 Pl., Newport Blach ORlolo J.9540
o,.-, .. , Are...i hit, 12·12 -Fri ..... s.t. 'tll J ....
~elected California .
, or Imported Wititl
Broiled Salmon Steak • . • $3.00
Every Monday Nite: Lad~s wi lh EscOrt * Pricl on any menu. item with This Ad.
OPEN DAILi'
11 :30 A.M.
LUNCH
DINNER
SHIP AHOY
)1727 SO. COAST HWY., SO. LAGUNA
' {NIAR MONARCH IAY) 4"·3900
--Cllalf':
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IC'ltUlfl:
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IMMtlonl ~1700
#~ofll!t-
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•
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• '
•
~-l DAILY PILOT Frldo;, Dtctmbtr 15, 1972
.... YU.I I AIEA'S llST ,
COLONEL SANDERS' RECIPE
Kutuek~ fried Ckiekea •.
TAKI OUT ONLY
. sa e---:-:=
DINNER ·aox 9 '
3 PIECES OF CHICKEN . 9t
CoL1 SI-. Maish9d Potato6&, Rtg.
Gnivy & Roll Sl.29
...... Jiloleiow-.
THRIFT BOX
DANA POINT
34122 Pacific Coast !-My
Ol!lro Point '2629 I
' Reg.
SAN CLEMENTE
';OO S. El Cll"*-r.t san Cl9'1'18'1t6 9:2672.
'
IN THE GALLERIES
Holiday Art Ushers in Season at Bowers Museum
DOWERS M~VM-txhibit ul .scllool children's Holiday
Ar\ from across U)e county. Evidences of talent. joy, an·
gulshed rendering, intrOspeet and frivolity. Through Decem·
ber at Bowers ~1useum •• Sauta Ana. Open 10 a.m. to 4:30
p.m., daily. Cl....i M04day1.
HATCH DECK GAILEllY -2630 #C Avon St., Newport
Beach. Jtours: t0 :30 a.m. • 5 p.m. Tuesday through Thurs-
day: by appointment MOOday, Friday and evenings. 642-
7575 or 552-7673. Watercoiors by Ron Knudtson and acrylics
by Robert Scbepe,
~IUCKENTIIALER CID(l'ER -119 Buena Vista Dr., Ful-
lerton. Hours : TUesday.Sunday, l-5 p.m. Olde Country lloll-
day Faire take.! p\ace'through Dec. 23: pillows, quills, orna-
ments; stuffed animal$, jcwerly, crafts, arts, foods and
sweets.
PURCELL GALLERY -Art and Education Bldg., Chapman
TEMPLf GARDENS
~NeSSResta~ra11t
RICKSHA
COCKTAIL
~~~:.~E.
Featuring Exotic
Tl"Opical Drinks
'
luncheon & Dinner Daily
IUFFET LUNCH 11 :J0·1 :JO
Molldcry tllru Friday
1500 ADAMS (at Harbor!
COSTA MESA
540-1937 540-1923
THE NU·TWO
Paul O'Brien & Watt DoJan
Wed. thru Sun.
SUNDAY BRUNCH
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
&TuFr Slf IR[
llSTAUU.MT
College, SSS N. Gtaaell st., Orange. "Propullloni ... a series
or contemporary paintiogs on canvas by Jerry Slulplro of
Costa Mesa. Hours: 9 a.m. -o p.m., Mooday tbrollih Frlda.y.
LAGUNA BEACH MllSEUM OF ART -Art AucUon, Suri
and Sand M9tel, Laguna Beach, 1-4 p.m. Dec. 3. Catalo&Ue
admission $5. Auctioneer RJchard Challis.
SPACE MUSEUM BUILDING -Calilornla Mu"um or
Science and Industry, Exposition Park, Los Angeles. salon
showing or the paintings of Aldo Luongo through Jan. 31 •
JACK GLENN GAILEl\Y -2831 E. Coast Hwy., Corona
del A1ar. One.man exhibition of sculptures by Guy Dill.
Hours: daily from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
FINE ARTS GALLERY -Santa Ana College, 17th Street
and Bristol. "Monuments of African Sculpture," a 50-plece
exhibit with works from 17 private and public coUectlons
throughout Southem callfomia. Open weekdays from IO
a.m. to 3 p.m.
PEPPER TREE FAIRE -1514 W. Broad\Y!Y.L Ana~lm.
Christmas Festiv opens Nov. 16 and each weekend there-
aner until Christmas. Open Thursday , Friday, Saturday and
Sunday from noon unW 8 p.m. will feature wares of South-
ern CaJifornia Artisans. Free admissk>n. ' NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -2211 West Balboa
Blvd., Newport Beach. Major retrospective exhibition of
paintings, large watercolors and Chinese ink drawings of Reg·
ina'.ld Marsh , an important American artist active from ·the
late 20s until his death in 1954. Recent paintings by Jeqold
Burchman in the entrance gallery.
NEWPORT BEACH CITY BALL -3300 Newport Blvd., New-
port Beach. Hours: daily, 8 a.m .. ~ p.m. On exhibit through
December, figurative acrylics by Bernie Zalusky of corona
del Mar.
CALIFORNIA MUSEUM -Science-Technology Education
Center, 700 State Drive., Exposition P a r k, Los Angeles.
Youth Art Exhibit consisting of 45 drawings by students
•mITL.f.l•I
MCXl.C."'N ~~ufliti;
grades !through 12, r<rI<ctlng Ultlr visual lnle11>noiallo111 ot
Maalcao culture, Ja~ culture, chlldren'• ,stories by Leo
Politi or Otcar Wlldiiia Flll')' Tales. •
CROCKER Clf!ZIU'!S BANK -2iMIO Harbor lllvd., a.ta
Mesa. Bati!C and fabric resist-quilted bY Dmna Frlebe!W-
bauser through December.
DOWNEY SAVINGS ANO LOAN •-860 E. 17th Sl, Colla
Mesa. Oil! by Mlllle Wlnliler and Marian Ries ·throuih DO-
bau.er through December.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE COUNTY -llllO
Ada.ms Ave., Costa Mes2' Oils by Virginia Coggin thnNP
December.
GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -2iMIO Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. Porlralts by Ben AM through Oeoember.
MUA VERDE UBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive, Coll&
Mesa. Oils by Lois Duilnam through December.
SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 E. 17th St, Cosla M ...
Oils by Margan! Sherick througll December.
TRANSAMERICA TITLE CO. -17V East 17th st., Cosla
Mesa. Oils by Moody Lytle and Helen Patzer through IJe.
cember.
CHALLIS GALLERIES -1390 So. Coast Hwy., Laguna
Beacb. Paintings by Shirley Weekes. Dally 11-5, through
December.
GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -llOO Newport Center
Dr., Newport Center. Oil paintings and drawings combin-
ing collage by Mimi Shacon ol Newport Beach. Through
December.
JIM JONES -371? N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beacb. "Oeslgned
Realism" in oil painungs by Raymond Sipoa of corona del
Mar. On exhibit through December.
AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Bristol st., Coota
Mesa. Oils by Doris Neeld through December.
BANK OF COSTA ltmA -Harbor at Baker, Costa Mesa,
Oils by Merle Calhoun through De<ember.
Concert:
S~rooge
Look Out
Fine Italian Cuisine Coek&ails Favorite tunes of Christmas
along with many well-known
classical songs will be sung by
!he Santa Ana College Choir
during its annual Christmas
CollCi!rt at 8 p.m. Saturday in
Phillips Hall Theatre.
2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY
673-8267
Reserv1tiOns
THE BLACK KNIGHT
RESTAURANT
Director Bruce Brown will
conduct the 3(1..volce mixed
choir as they sq carols and
anthems dating from the six·
teenth century to the present
'Jbe public is invited to the
free concert.
r PIZZA HO~E ·DELIVE~~~; .. ·:~~
HAVE CHANGED A LOT
LUNCHEON DINNER
Mos. tin Fri. M ... ..s.t. I to ll
'11 :JO to J:JO Soday 4 N 11
Featuring a complete t1ew menu of 1teak$, lob-
ster, seafoods, Prime Rib, and other entrtes
Including the house special, Beef Master Com-
bination platter. 1
INTIMATE DINING
COCKTAILS • DANCING
SEAFOOD BAR
ENTERTAINMENT .
Open ·Dally 10 A.M. to 2 A.M.
Lunch 11 :30 to 3
Popu~:c~and JERRY LAMBUTH
A brass ensemble will ae-
company the choir during
several of the songs. A short
cantata, "Du Frledefurst Herr
Jesu Christ" by Dietrich Bux·
tehude will be accompanied by
8lrinlls and harpslcbord. Othet works on the program
Include "A Boy is Bom", by
Benjamin Britten. "Vltt.oria,"
"Virga Jesse FJoruit," by
Bruckner and such favorites
as "Good King Wenoestas,"
"0 Come All Ye Falth!ul,"
"God Rest Ye Merry
CenUemen" and others. '!be
audience will be invited to sing
with the choir during many of
the songs.
• SINCE THE
OLD DAYS
Now Me •n Ed's mobile ovens speed deliciolt5
pipin&·hot pizzas to your door in minutes.
For prompt serv;ce phone 646-7136
(Newport Beach/Costa Mesa-17th and Tustin) · ti
or 847·1214 (Huntinston BAch-B<ich and HioJ). Jf/
Get the Pizza with PizzP.~~ ~ ~ ·
GtnQ-u-Qltj :_' --~~-
' " l:HRISTM-RSi 5iHBPPIN6
M-REE E-RSiY
Employees, ~iomers and friends
will really appreciate , __ -'to---...
lhi• compt.tely dilfettnt gift!
Tasty, unique gift packs with our own label
from the historic, old Balboa Pavilion
• Custom canned (7 oz.) A lbacore-Tu11a frorn Slarkist
• Sharp Cheddm-Cheese Spread from llui famous
Kauluiu11a Dairy Co., Wi1consi11 (I lb., 4 oz.)
6 (7 oz.) Cans Albacore ..... SJ.SO
lotJ< Crock Oied4ar ....... SJ.00
Combination : 6 Cans Alb•corc
ind I Crock <lleddar ..•... $6.SO
Write or call:
100 il1oi11 Street,
Balboa, Calif.
(714) 673-5245
•
11 -~ PMlblDll
..
-SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MENU -
HAPPY HOUR: 4 to 7 e MOft -Ffl.
with Hot Hors d'oeuvres
Now •PSM•rlng
MICKEY And Dl.(NE
Tuu. thru S.t. -I p.m. to I •.m.
OANCING
3010 HARBOR BLVD.
(At Baker) Costa Mesa
Reservations: 549°0319
•
Hey Kids! The Greatest Christmas
Party You Can Imagine-FREE!
Bring your folk s to the Reuben E. Lee to
see Santa's breathtaking arrival. You
won't believe your eyes !
Enjoy the special ChiiJren's Show by a
host of entertainment groups high-
lighted by Skiles & Henderson .
Surprises galore-games, prizes, bal-
loons, pop co rn , slurpies and carnival
rides.
A really sensational party you can't
afford to miss at the-Reuben E. Lee,
Newport Beach Sunday, December 17,
12noon to 5 P.M.
330 EAST 17TH STREET
COSTA MESA 642-2304
GALA NEW YEAR'S
EVE PARTY
Malle l....,watloe Now ,
$15 ......... .
hKl•MI Dhl!Wt', lottle .t
ChcM!poog• -4 hrty ffton.
RON SHY Frld•y & Sdurd•y
DecemlMr lS.16
OAILY LUNCH SPECIAL
CORNEI OF PARK AND MARINE ' IALIOA ISLAND 673-4530
Relaxed •nd C•sual lntim•cy
~~M~
ANCHOR INN
HOUSE OF SEAFOOD
NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH'
11 :JO to 2:30 Tues. thru Fri.
Nightly Dinner-Cocktail• 4 to 11 p.m.
Sunday 2 to q:]O pm-Closed Mond•y1
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Luodl-Mon. tllru Fri. 11 o.m. to 2:30 p.m. ..
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open da!W throuih Ille Holiday in( al 6 p.m. · •
....00 l D c I u ~ I P 8 bolh tralnloC ... Jona, bear and ...
lmu Daf and New 1bowa and l<anto and 1amural
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houn are 10 a.m. • 8:30 be greeted by Santa and hla
s.std .. exclUng dally tiger ~Fjul Folk belpen through
, .. In Secluded
Aliso Canyon
CHRISTMAS DINNER
Served from 1:00 P.M.
' Roast Young Tom Turkey
Prim• Ribs of Bf"ef
Ro,1t long Island 0Yc.ldin9
New York Cut Steak
Gl11ad Baked Vir9ini1 Ham
·. , , complete wfth all th-.-
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Monday through Friday
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Sunday through Thursday .
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DINNER SPECIALS
Choic• of So11p or S•l1cl
l •k•4 Pot•to or Rico Pilaf e Girlie lro•d
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THURSDAY -Pr imo Rib ..................... -·--··-$1.40
FRIDAY -Beef Stroganoff --·········-···········--··-· $Z.t5 SATURDAY -Tournedos of Beef .................... $3.25
SUNDAY - 2 Lobster Tails .............................. $5.10
Ot-an9e C:ou•t11'• Top Entertainment
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The Or'tln1I HOMyDrl,,_ with
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l•nqu•t f.•cilltiH up to 450 People
16712 •IAHAM AYENUI IAt W...,)
HUNTIN•TON IU.CH 1714) 144·1116 {JJJI m.1914
•I
Frldoy, °""'""' 15, 1972 DAILY PILOT 35
Portrait: Woman I Love
EDITOR'S NOT£ -Th<
r><rf<ct kw< •""11: A
µrince, a king, gtvea
his thront for the w
he love1. Adtta RO{ler1
Joli·11s, journalf.tt, '&00$ se1it
to Britain iti 1936 by Wil-
liam Randolph flearst to
cover the momellt. Here,
she remembers, 4' the
story passed again befo1'e
her eyes in a medal pre·
view of "Portrait: The Wo-
man I Lotie." It wilt be
seet~ Su11day, on ABC's Du
P011t Cavalcade of Televi·
sion.
By ADELA ROGERS ST.
JOHNS
Associated Press
As far as l can remember I
had never been more excited.
-JllOl'L.flllger.~..and. in a._ :way_.._
more terrified than I~ at
DlQ.f_Qent, in this prl>jecf
room, wailiilf1ort g ts to
dim. Then ~it was dark and
there were the words •.•
TV DAILY LOG
TV HIGHLIGHTS
KABC O :00 -"The Night tbe Animal& Talked":
Half-bour special witb lyrics and mUJlc b)' Academy
Award winners Julie Styne and Sammy Cahn.
KABC 0 8:30 p.m. -"A Christmas Carol": Anl·
mau.t holiday adaptation featuring the voices or
Sir Michael Redgrave, Alister Sim and Ml<:hael
Borden.
Friday
Evening
DECEMBER 15
ANW1 11 CO'iOMl
M llf'llllll I r tr---Mfld-1j .....
wlltlMt ... bf Ill tllll'M ......
for Cllltllllllq CM11p tf til A,1111 17 ..,.n.
Saturday
Morning
O(.C(MllOI ll
7:008 (J)----=~~~~~---·-.... l!ll ........ _
7~ II hdr'• T,...,.. _________ ....., D g,n. 1tt111t1
•:00 a Dom mm -e """'' """
(])@) -0 Cil (I) -"" "The Woman I Love.''
Could they do it?
Woul{l l see again, in
reprodijction, that greatest
love story or our lime -
CHAMBERLAIN AND DUNAWAY MEET IN "PORTRAIT"
0 ro.dtr111 (() TY I C11w109
(I) Ctt S..rt QI UMlt Ruu
perhaps of any time -t~c God save the King." But J had
Kin,ll of En,1tland whom hi~ also sat beside hlm as he rose,
people called the Kiniz or lifted his glass and said the
Prrimise and the American · long·hallowed words ," ...
woman 'Wallis W a r f i e I d ~ntlemen -the king -" and
Simpson fcir whom he had .r•we rose to respond to thme
broken that promise and a~ words.
dicated his throne? He had been king. saluting
Dlfferenl for me than for his younger brother who DOW
those others humming around was k.ing, and even as the
fn the vast studio outside the words of the title began on the
projection room walls, the screen I was remembering her
productrS and directors and as she smiled at him, and
press expertsj even the actors lifted her glass to him.
who played the king and Mrs. -History, as I'd seen it ln
Simpson. London, in Nassau, as I'd
In London when he still wore heard it when be said to me,
hi5 crown, when c rowds "J thought they would be hap-
followed blm with love and py to have me marry the
hope so intense it hurt, when woman I loved," and when she
Parliament and the prime said to me, "I was the other
minister spent s I e e p l e s s one most concerned as he call·
nights, when she was stoned in ed me in his last s~h as
the streets and had to flee to king, and as he said then, I
France for refuge, when at had tried to persuade him to
last he made one of the most take another course, I did try
famous speeches or all time -to persuade him not to leave
nowhere, even in Shakespeare, his throne. I went away so
is its superior : that he could go on serving
"I find I cannot do my duty them. but -he followed me.''
as J would wish to do without And as this thought was on
the woman I love." my memory-screen, th e r e
I had heard it, of course, and before me in the projection
the magnificent words at the room screen was the terrace
end " ... now we all have a at Belvedere, and walking side
new king -God bless him', by side between the rose trees,
CALL NOW
FOR
CHRISTMAS DAY
RESERVATIONS
TICKETS NOW ON. SALE
HOTEL LOBBY -CABARET LOUNGE
GALA NEW YEAR'S EYE PARTY
Featuring the Skiles & Henderson Show
Phono l»-2770
~irporter qnn _
crro,#,al' 11700 MAC ARTMUR BLVD. -flt I". (°"5111'1._ ._ 11rport) HEWP'OkT
0 Wild Wik! Wut 18 llltwles: "A11bl&ll It Ciunill m The FllllbtOMI ..... (ns) '5a-Scott lradJ, Mtf•
the king of England and the And I couldn't -I didn't ID llllMr Pylt USMC · II• Dun. '1.llekJ Sdtf"' (mys) '41
woman he loved. like -I could not ln any wise {fj) Tht frtftdl Ctltf -OorvthJ Umo111. lrl•n OonltvJ.
find in the Duchess or Windsor G) Ml oi:ct lnilllOrtdt Oil MllW Roten' Itel~ I round myself much moved G Hod~:iocl"' Ledrt t:OD e (J) E•p ••nr to be ba ck in those amazing the womao I love any more IHI 111,,.,.,, RfO Dim " hltht
ts B t r this than when I'd found her in n:o. .............. 40 -'* ' momen ... u or me, w:I',,.,_ 81"eWtJMDub'I
screening turned out to be a London as Mrs. Simpson. I m nr11 Sll:tot•• D ()) (i) n. oa.o.u
deep and personal experience, found_~r all.the tblngs that 1 .5:JO (i)111p11•1 tt1,..1 Q)c.u.try.llaic.
totally une1.pected, and it most dislike m women -and fJ llowlt: (Cl (10) "Tllt Lldln' I.II OJ) s.u.. stntt
lifted from me a sense of guilt that bore me the most. M•n" (com) '61-J•llJ L1wb. .I:• B (() .....
-the only real blot on my Clothes, jewels, hair style, Cil en .... e a m n.t llHlllkats •
own view of my years as a cafe society -I had not (11 Mlf'I lritll• SMw D CI> (I) al UC Slftnllf a.
reporter. As the king, young understood how he could love m I INC!All Piwdil Me: (C) "llftr IMl ... ""1 irtll
Richard Chard Chamberlain her; and no men could hl.!I ID Clll111'1 IJllM Mlet Ult s..-.....,.
gives whal ils a line peof E~=.. <'!I~;_ Mnlecl, '~ ~:...""::~~ ""=~~-::!""-performance, as good as any ea1.Waa, ... ..uy-VOK -.,.., a;,lolllM Clr10l IJ ~"hi.,""" (llllS) 'h
actor could possibly give -Woman I Love?1No no : a c,... Acm -. GMlwlr. "1tW:"' Cd""* 11'"
for can anybody be a king as As I began to write I knew fiil Acti1ir nutre OJ 11Wt: (C) "Qvlle'--. fr.-
Edward Vill WBS king and my only way out :WU not to m Det 42 1'111 lilt" StMlt" (wtl) -Tony M1rt.lt,,
emperor, without being born write about the woman I saw m Uttle RllClb (Jll Otdlk C..pallf
to Jt? Perhaps I am not too -Imustsomehow,someway •7:00IJ CD DmlNM f.l!)Mbtlt htrn' Nfi&hbort!M4
good a judge, for I was lucky with all my heart write about 8 leril( ftf Dtlln la Clllt" II T1rdt
enough to spend many long the woman he must be seeing: !Il Trutll tf CleulillltOCll t:JO U Sclfff·Dol
houn with the real king he Love can transfonn -can (!)Circus . D ®I fD TH llrkllJs •
portrays. beautify. a WMt's.., U.1 (J) l11111U:""""" ... Soulll
ml ..... ~-Q l]JTHI"""" Faye Dunaway shows you Now, in this projection.-. WtrW rr:. (])Clrtloll Cn!nl
"The Woman I Love," for room, now on this silver \ ~ ...w. m lUl S.• antt
whom any man ever bom screen, now before my eyes I m n. u..i, NII a s.. M•lll
would give up any kind of an • saw how right I had been, how e o Allllf 1""' C.. .. ..... IUDS 9 ~ rn hrltW
empire he happened to have. truthful I had been able to l~ 9 llMlt: "l:lG ti ,__.. 8 {])Cl) a.dcW
She shows "The Woman I main -for there in front of Gm lllllr Den, QI flllttr MMI
Love" so that you can un-me was the woman he saw all m.,... ._ lltll fJ (I) lellill 114 i1t ,...... 1
derstand all things about love. tbe time. There wa.s the 7:398 Clftlll 8 llWt: ..,..,..., C..11sr
This is not a performance. M woman he loved warm, sweet, D ....,,.._ SC.,. : ~~ ~ ,._.*'51 ...._
you watch her on the screen fillt;d with a veritable glory a MM: (2\r) "lnllll D1cW" _.. (dr•) 'SO-lid.ii lobilllQI.
you know at Jong last the and witty in mind, beauutul ~Tl,'"'-",., ,.."",".,,.rey Boprt. IB 1ap11 Slqtai Wiiie
world can be well Jost for love. beyond words in the slim, CJ.) 1lll ~ (iJ) Eldrk C..pur
This was my amazing ex-vibrant body aod lhe glowing, D ·-I -(t) ~ m --_...,, -perience, for I had never radiant face. "Wletied ......, 11 a.·_ <-> tl:Ol 8 Cl) 1"I ~ i before been convinced that a If the people of England bad _. .. ...,
man could have done lt for seen the Mrs. Simpeon be saw 'it-JG ltmrnon, Rick KtlM.
love of Wallis Simpson. and that Faye Dtmlny shows =~':Net b 111P1
Here is what Faye Dunaway US. she would have been queen CD CII .....
did !or me. And It ils vitally. o! England -be *ould still mi. - • -
important. When I went lo ha"'beenonhlsthrone.Andl ll:l<ll N--Nassau to see the Duke and can understand DOW h is mum.i..... (l) .... "'91 ...
Duchess o1 Windsor, as lhe amnement lhat his people, &Jn.-. O CJJ lllF...,_
king and Mrs. Simpson bad hls Parliament and prune lf)TMMtlmF..., IDM-Ui
become, I was in dire distress. minlstml, did not want her for t:aO II (I) SDllnJ •M a.. @D all z...
As' a reporter, I have queen. Foi" ii she had. been Q lJie;,SMftnl IM Ill e1.1CNuw.
always believed the ethic that 'Ibe Woman I l.oVe, as Faye 0 (I) (I) QI I WCWI T ll t IHI nts WM hi "-rlllW
you ,must tell the truth, the Dmaway shows ber to us -lllcM IM Wmb , .... (R) ll:JD (j) l!Wt: "'llltrtMll o.c,elt"
whole trulh, nothing but lhe !hey would have understood ho m -· -• Cil .. .-. .,...,_ ·--trulh, or you !oriel! the right couldn't live without her. Tbey m-.... ·-= (C) ..... -....
lo free press which Is lhe first would have weloamed her u Ill aJJ •-..,. lo -9 111--· of the Four Freedoms. Here I que61. IB er.. AMII,,....
was on my way to write, at What a man sees in the G> ...._ Afternoon
longlast,tbe!Jrstslocythey'd womanbeloves-lhat'swhat tll-: """......, _, __ (l)~wr .
aUowed coocerning this world we must alwi.y-1 try to wr UDaCDTlll lltClt ...... u.wu w.9;;.:-'
famous love affair. derstana. o rn wm1mc141A Ctdlt-l wmn.1.._
APllUO 17 QWWll
.. ,, ...... ,., .. ltllt9d .. .... ..... ................. ..
................ 17,
Qj) TM Mt C.NmiM n. ..... llllli tin. ....
Peter Of oole. Sophia ~ren and James Coco
dream The Impossible Dream' in an Arthur Hiller Him
m =~i.. 1 .... -n. ....... (wtl)
fl!)Qb ... "'--= l:OOIJ ([)is,.-..: (C) car) = :.-: "'~
'"nit Wnlun" (c::om) 'fJ-Ou11 12:JOBIMide,_..
M1rtin, S.lltl lltJp. Janlct lull. 0 ())19....._ lla,ni ~ O!!ll m-.""' ro -0 Cf} (I) ril) I IHCW I LM k • Oi•ill., Ml
••• ...-.(Illa 9 ..._.._. m111o• .. -.,_ .....
Starts
TONIGHT
TONIGHT AT 7:30 10:1& TOMORROW 1:31 4:30 7:30 11:1&
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY FIESEllVEOSEAT FJIGAGEMEfff ,OR a .. ou, DISCOUNTS CALL ,,,., UZ..1111 '
' ' I I
llllllldlll'lul& 'I'·---~·-
•• ,.. a..,. .. _ :
P')<!t--(1) U:4Smt1J"'i.o .. 1-1W 1!11.o _,.. 1:00. Cl)"' -an.-011111 ....., -" lTi> Dr-. a ....... _ ...... _ 00 ""'" ...... -..... a•-o-<Cl -.-..,. 1.., 19 t"ll m -i!j • ,,.. ; """ -~~o"PREMIUM WINES =='""' * Pres. John Lennon's E 0.. .. i. T•• "One To One" me.• L.-NI•
8 (1)@ 0 I18CWI J I• I m1111cM
......... , ... 0. ~ .. l:JO ()) ¥llCI "Acrkalt•• .
O.T..on. c...rt 1J .... : (C) "flft ....... o .. lllWf P'mnb I a..1911 ... ,,,., hMi•• • ·-----: ID Hw DI Wt Ill fMI ""' It ...... DllM11..... ·
TMN? QI....._: •J.,..tq WI'"
f.B llCWltrt H II Cltlt a) Nft. Ci.MM II till Wffl
fl!).... Z:OO llJ ... , ..... m tw s..m a 1111t11tr m "'•* 40 m to!lllllU m 1111,... " * s.. !Bl Altl Mdlllla IO:JCI ATl!k Itel fl') _...., J:trMt m ":tlcNl JllldlH m c.. .....
~ llU Mtrm' Mnllf OJ T1lfl Wllll 111 Ptt flltfMI
9 """: -to .. -Z:lO ffi...,_ Ill--· 0-UIA 11:00" "am till 111-C'l ,_
C!l Cll 9 -ID""""''""' e ... ..,. -llll"" •-(i) -'"" m _.., tllA D """" .. _ -•:ao rn _..,..,,..(od.111 ._ GI Tnitk• t.:1,111"' CJ ltwWlll 11111......, ID "'"4t: ......... ...,UIW' 8 11• Act1et
(hor} '60-GtnNn bbltl. (j) fihirir. "U'*-TtrrM" Jof1t.
~ HllW., ,.... Kornrd·llln.. •
(!') ..... , .. _ -.,_,(C)"""'•"'-m JaMld ....-1••> 'S4-TJTOn1 rww.:
lt:Oll"IUSC,_ 0 -: .......... ~ "'* l~lO fJCll .. -..,... .... -('woo) ·-., -
"""' Mllh, llont ""'"°"' i!O---'
llJ l'ltD_..... ·-= -... -(J) .... tc> ... ... ...... Ill" (di•) 'Q -Clltf ......
r.t11mJ-..""""·"'"' e n.-:
fW., Aid"" Mtpbcn. tlJI lb1NNI :
I CJ] Ci')" .... c.t -" --ltollll-. t;711 "9 Tniftl CJ F•1l l11£tt •
lHI ...,~,,_.. IDMll'lll:.....,..LMa ....... •
U:JIU-<Cl "C,.. """' """"'' I <'*>........,~C-•hf. """°'c,.,. t 8 .._ "Ul't t.w" (drt) 'll n l~d 111-... ! __,....,, t. hblMM ff'\ fllllllp ...
·---...... o .... •(M) ~ """"'"' ~ Tloot JW11 l ._,_ 1:41 8 (l)llO -
I
.
' ,
•
'
' I
H DAILY PILOT FridaJ, °""'""' IS, 1972
'
.Artist Is Caricatured in 'Messiah'
HENRI (SCOTT ANTONY ) ON STATUE
By 11101\lAS PALMER °' .. --..........
Molt o1 the films ol the
comparaUvely short career of
Ken RuaeU have a lot to them
-l110Qd, omotioD, political
t:0mment, J.n!orma.tloa, en-
tertainment , whatever he's
!!')'Ing to sell.
The critical and popular
qumel is not with Russell's
perception or hia imagination ·
or even his choice or subjects.
But as a filmmaker, he deals
in commurucaPon, and at this
point he orteo stum~Jes.
The unconvenUonal direc-
tor's latest film is "Savage
Messiah." a fitful expression
or a life philosophy, wrapped
in a rather uninteresting
rsonal relationshl between
crea ors.
It is bued more or less
faithlully on the life of Henri
Gaudier.-Bneska, a French-
born sculptor and painter or
moderate repute, born in the
last decade of the last century.
The story traces his life with
Sophie Brzeska (they ex-
changed names rather than
being married), a Polish
writer twice his age, from
their meeting to his death
after a brief career.
Technically it is hard to
fault Rus.1ell. He manipulates
his subject, no matter how
'Crucible' Offers Discount
drtal')', Into 111111Jllng visuals.
And there II welgbt7
memorable scripting.
But sadly, ''Sa v age
Messiah" is most forgettable,
due mainly to the excesses
Russell regularly Indulges in.
The framing and lighting of
still life scenes in a dairy are
artistic to the point of near-
distractlon. The t r o u b I e d
artist's works and Sophie's ad-
monitions are profound.
But the lead character Is
caricature and that keeps
Scott Antony from really
becoming Henri.
Or rather Anthony's nne
performance, n e a r I y as
energetic as Dorothy Tutin's
as Sophie, was over directed
w became a
storybook rascal.
Included in his message as
always are tits of satire and
criticism of modern society,
often bo.-dering on
anachroni!m.
But when Henri talks of
screwing the establishment,
one knows it is Russell zeroing
in on the conventions of the
197Qs as well as the painter
vf>kln of history.
'Jbe responsible and reserv ·
td (ah& would never allow
thtm to ,partake of marital
pleal!lures) woman and the
carefloee, h:nmature t a t en t
represent a touching picturt,
their paeifllt JUestyle hill·
tressed against the lnsensiUve
society into wblch they were
thrust.
Bui the Jdeals he expresses
boldly in bis art and piquantly
if briefly in words are oo
match for · the status quo.
When the world weDt to war,
his Insight melted with the
Lide ol popular thought. ·
Patriotism is a high ideal,
be said. Where ar~ all the
brave young men? she asked.
There was no one-lbere to
answer fief questKm.
Extremely colorful a n d
spontaneous diaJogue, whether
in playfu.l rousting, of whi'?h
the.re is an abundance, or m
private outrage, moves tJi1s
film up from the level o~ a
mere biography to somethUJg.
of a sermon.
upbraiding those responsible Musi' cans
for the situation in London.
As a struggling artisl, Henri
and his mistress live a meager 'Spi•n•ted' and dull but hopelul existence,
with her writing .and-his ex-
uberant optimism supporting Christmas music will fill the
them. air at the Disneyland Hotel for
RU!Sell succeeds in message four nights beginnihg Saturday.
and entertainment in several The programs will take place
scenes, one a b a w d y , on the boat dock d. the hotel's
boisterous dinner brawl. marina. Student discount tickets are dergaard, and Ford Rainey witch hunts. There are t y p i c a 11 y Tbe Anaheim Pops Chorale
being offered by C e nter featured in the large cast. !J'he Reserved student tickets for Russellian moments: the will-kick Off the-geries ..with
Theatre Gr 0 u p, as a CTG·Ahll\a{ISOn production is "The• Crucible" can be ob-sharp pounding of artist's Saturday night at 6:30 p.m.
Chr. 1: th h J the second in managing direc-tained at the Ah ma n 5 on hammer on stone accompanies The Singing Christmas Tree of
istmas poucy roug an. tor Robert Fryer's 1972·73 Theatre box office in advance colorful expound in gs on Western High School will per·
1, at a redutro price of season at the Ahmanson of. or at !he time of the creators and what they create. form at 6:30 p.m. Thursday
$3.50 for performances of Theatre. perfonnance. "The Crucible" ln a rowdy and confusing while the Carousel Oioral
''The Crucible," st ar r i n g ''The Crucible," regarded by plays nightly except Sunday at scene in a nightclub, Henri en-group, fonned by Orange Coon·
Charllon Heston, and no"' critics as one or the famous 8:30 p.m, wlth ma tin e es courages his mate to get on ty musicians, perfOrms at 6:30
playing al the Los Angeles Pulitzer Prize -winn i n g Thursdaya[JdSaturdayat2:30 the stage "'and jDin the suf-p.m. December 22. '11!.e
playwright's finest w o rk s, p . m. There w i 11 be fragettes -Vote for women ! Chamber Singers of Brea 01·
Music Center:s Ah m an s 0 n documents the hysterical days performances on Christmas There is a little of yesterday inda High School will sing at
Theatre. of the Salem, Massachu setts, and New Years Day. and a lot of today in Ru ssell's 7 p.m. Dec. 23.
Arth!lr Miller's cl a s s i c·. ---;:::::;:::::;::;::;;:::;;=.:;::;:;=~:;:~;,~l--[F=====~~~~~~~~':':=====
drama, winner of the Tonyl RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENTS WHY PAY Award for Best P lay when it NOW PLAYING
was first presented on
Broadway, was directed by TICKETS NOW , MORE FOR LESS? Joseph Hardy and also stars
Inga Swenson, Jam" Olson. AT BOXOFFICE ·OR BY MAIL and Beah Richards, with
Donald Moffat, Gale Son-
-----OBOBCBC.
SCOTT
STACY KEICB
• ROBE!!T CKWOff.
IRWtN _,,, """""""'
TBEREW CBNtomoas
-.. ,_., JCISEPH WN.eAl..JQ1 ~-
Also OIHI' SMrtff
"THE BURGLARS"
COflt. Sot. aitd 111. ffoM 2
•
•·---"""'"'""ui.--.1 LUJMG1.11te:""' .... -:.11-o..c. ---11.-.0. l(VllOlY ..,._\I a11 -lllJ!-al:I
--... -~-DI W.~ ~YL OllNfGl.CAl.W.12'61-~-1
Tkkot• .r'° •ts ... ca1 .. M11:1r .. eo~ tJ7 So. Hrn at.~ •H
Mutual Tld:•t "'9Mln (l'M,... MA 7•1241 f•ir "'"Hl 1~tlc>n) ....
-W•n;ch~ M11lli Cltr Sto<H & tillertt Tic•H Aloncl<rs ,,,,_,. 411-J55l
Jt'4llfltS!N llMEkHF
RECORD GRAN PRIX
•• 8995 -
+tax 99'~ tall
PLEASE NOTE THESE ARE
SPECIAL SALE PRICES
ESl'ECIALL Y OFFERED IY RALllGH
FOR THE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY
N l E NEWPORT CYCLEltY ear Y veryone 2116 NEWPORT BEACH 675-1700 Listens to Landers ,k, • "" ,_ lljiiiiiiiii~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--....................
NOW AT POPULAR PRICES!! ..
er 0~e
NOW AT 2 THEATRES
CALL FOR POLICY
c. .. ..., •-"'"1·•· '""'· AND SHOWTI MES 0rffltl ~ &S:l-3381
' -..
I-
•
UndlrdOll PrlCll
~TRY ·IT ~
YULE LIKE IT
SPECIAL}. DK!. 1 through DEC. 24 UNTIL XMAS EVE
STORE MORbAY-SATURDAY: 10:00 •m to 10:00 pm
HOURS · •SUNDAY: 10:00 am to 6:00 pm
~
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with Oi;a mond C•rtridge ;1nd B.tse. Two Sinyo 360p Bass-WilYe Speiilcers.
CONVERT ANY 2 CHANNEL STEREO SYSTEM TO 4 CHANNEL
Four-Channel Oecodtr·Amplltl1r
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or FM Stereo 8!"0.ldcist.
REG. UST •9700 $179.IS ..
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SANYO DCA 1500X QUADRAPHONIC D!CODER wllh built In Amp-
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4-Ch.utnel .sound.
NOTE: If you purcha .. bolh of the •bove SANYO System to m•ke • comp~I•
Qu•dr1 honlc s •left. our s l•I Combination Ice 11 only s1n.001
SAVE UP TO 70% 01 SPEAKERS!
Harman Kardon -Electrovolce -Pioneer -Westek
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Tue A·25: 6 inch speaker in walnut cabinet ....... Rag/List $39.95 -$[6.90 .,
Bedrovoice UA: Coaxial reflex system .......... Reg/List $39.95 -$16.90 •· ~
Westek KR.S: 8 inch coaxial speaker ............ Reg/List $39.95 -$16.90 t
Sound One S14A: 2-way 12 inch system .......... Reg/List $89.95 -$29.90·
H1rman llardon HK 50: Omn i-directional system ... Reg/List $99.95 -$39.90
Pioneer CS·ESOO: 3-way 3 speaker system ....... Reg/List$149.95 -$97.00
Quad/4 Channel System at less than 2 Channel prices
COMPLETE
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SYSTEM --
PIO NEER QX8000 Quiidraphonic 180 wa:1t AM/FM ReceiYer, GA RRARD 408
Record Ch.tnger )Vi1h Im ~nd Diamond C•rtridU. •nd Four 2-w•y Spe.tkers
w;th 8 inch woofers and tweeters. • ... OYER t700.00 *l94 OO
l,;-,.;;;,-;;;,.·;,.; llZOU RECORD
.. ~.~~~J CHANGER
•&9
REG.
$114.50
Au tom.ttic Ch.tnger with Antl-sk.tting.
d•mped cueing .tnd l.tse.
SCOTCH'TYPE 150 REG. $5.20
8137
ICOTCH TYPE 20S
REG.s22• $1.40 1800 fl. - , .. )tttl
1.0 Mil Polyester
baclcl!'I
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DIAMOND ELLIPTICAL
CARTRIDGE s,511
OW! CU AHMT!l AH llll'lltl WUJ Wl llll • W'I Clllllo T0tn -lllQO UYAWAJ l'Ull a I!!!!!!! Wt.STU S.f. dU.£Y _ lOllC IEACH ~~:",.::t r-liiiiil Pio~ Go<qe • Corlll 11 Moy ON ...... 11 u.-0 • 3371S.o..rtlol Cl!iholllp• 27251'1t.Cst.Hwy 111-llto 139-2211 91J.17JI 434.olll ....... . ~ I ... .....
3:: PASADENA TOlllMCE NO. IWOOO COSTA MESA g Old Bir OM I'm., ~ = ON Aoti.i. S11oi
!lll 123 S. R........ 171I07 Ho ..... I. (If Llohnllio) 2490\l'llt""" ii , !'.' 449.2533 370-l!lll l (714) &42-9531
SUNDAYS: 101m-6pm -WERE
'· j
Uve TJieater
Laguna Has 'Night Visitors'
"Amahl and the N t 1 b t P.acl!lc Group 'l'bP.aitt toruaht dmha cltr"IP11 out a thtee-
Vl<or&" and Sat~ a-. !:XI p.m. In w'eekend engagement for the
CompleUl)g Ila two-weekend the ~'~ 11 ~ l n g to n Beach Irvine Community Theater
rul\..wlth performancts tonight Playhouse, %110 Main SL, tlun· tonight and Saturday at 1:30 ·~ a,30 p.m. and S.tul'\llly and • ~QilQn B~a~h. R,...,atiol\,I p.I)). Ill the Humanities Hall
SUnday at 2:30 p.mi is 1'.hil SM-«46, • ' ~ Plilytflllse on lhe UC Irvine
Christmas opera ~t th~ "Dear Friends" campµ.s Reservations 646-
Laguna Moulton P4'f~, Regina!d )lose'l r oc i a 'l -.3171 1
606 Laguna Canyon Mad, · \
Laguna Beacfi. Reservations
494--0743.
"MooncbUdren''
Closirlg out an abbreviated
run with perform a nce s
tonight, 5alufday and Sunday
is this South Coast Repertory
comedy-drama 'st 8 p.m. in the
Third Step Theater, 1827
~ew_portloBlvd., Costa Mesa.
Reservat ns 646-1363. ~
';'!be P~ple or. Spoon River"
Two special performances of
Edgar Lee A1astres' classic
commentary will be given by
Dance Gro~p Backs
Corrimun~ty Clwrale
The Golden "{est College The idea of a song version of
c.ommunity-Cboral • baekl!d the "Nutcrackeru was con-
by a dance ensemhle, will ceived by Harry Simedne,
feature Tchaikovsky's "Nut-staff arranger of the Fred
cracker SUite" in a Christmas Waring Pennsylvanians. It
concert at 8 p.m., tonight in rapidly became one of the
the communi~)! iheater. · favorites or the radio audience
f.h~· ,pro~k 1 free! and a most requested number MOVIE RATINOS ditlorull,mllsl~ the ~&le at coocerts. FOR PARENTS a.-. ·_, U~'tb& · · · ' of , M~. Carol Caniglia, dance
YO ~~/ , Peter~ Wl~ll; · ' e lei '1lnstntctor at Golden ~,i;.st , UNG ~ " , Faure's ' ' . ~ (s College, has choreogralli\00
_TM0•1«11 •• o1,,,.,., ..... al•1t ."q(ory ~ !O): . !.• Lu several sections of the suite ,,.1.,,11•11o<i1r,,...,,,.Mflr.•:~·-~olli Stmfl!s -',CliQir.':\'~g," for the program. Dancers will
lll0•
1
• COl!IMl IOI •1••mg br '""· • j• ' pdpU!at~1~Al~ B\irl Cl.roll..-'.' include J anet Maybrier, Leigh
., 1ch8lkovsky wrote tli e Nelson, Gianna Diluzio, JoAnn
All "'El A0111 in10 '·Nutcracker" originally as a Shibata, JeaMie Beam, Peggy "nnl ""51tnett ~ ballet inspired by a fairy tale Mohler, Agnie Frey, Robin
of Hoffman. Had it been Myers, Sydne Sherman, Janis li::ifi1 M.l l.Ctl AOt11TifO ordinary music, it would have Taylor, Laura Gantenbeim, ~ Pwtniti ;-~ been long gone through oyer Marlon Trainor lllld Jooooe
--------------------
® ., OllE llllD(l 17 AOWITIUI
(Agt 11"'11 ~•Y ~"'I'
In cfl1"" tl"HI)
~a M-~-"""'" --e» ...... -........ ,"'°-"'"'""' ....... ,_
---·
DRIVE-IN
SUPU SWAP MEETS
,FOR fUNI PROFIT!
BARGAINS GAlOREI
t"nlay & Sunday~ hy· )
IA.M.to4P.fi · .,.
•t OtAIKl rJ fl&H•rt.,~
' '
fltYPIOl" '••e•ay al l e..,on St.
51S.l516
Sant• An• ,, ......... .
Ch111m•~ A••· -
GlOllOIC.SCOfJ
HOJOITAl l•GI
P\-$ • hf'11Tpel~t
fOU !PG}
w1e..111u1.& P'4,trUltPA
plaYing, but it has become a Pe{l'eault.
standard piece in' orchestral
repertolre and, year after
year, it holds the favor of au-
dience~ ~~ut the wor.llf.
2 GREAT
INRRTAINMENTS!
Jtnnlfer O'Nell
Gary Grl"*
"SUMMER-OF '42",
-Als.o -
... ""~ ~< . ".hillo-'Cllrl.1lo' . . ·'i!CCA• a' ' · ·MIS. 1111ua·
---ClllEOOME ?O ' '
IL .. '!::"'....:!..l..:.J!~,_'r_' o.l•.J ---Cllt/OOMI ?I
' .. ~...:.~l-=~~ ---~ .... ~ S !AO/UM ·I ,,,;·
IL .--!a.,...'-=Jl._':C" __
The Newest Of
Tho Ski Epics -
W1rren Miller's
"THIS IS SKIING"
Aho nk TI!rlller
Jen Cto.dli lilly
. "SNOWIDB" ''-",' r• IP'Gl
c;.,.t. s. •. fro• 2
IE•c~ Or•11111 c-ty
·--S.t t: ...... IMlll. htor O'T_. -5-llla t.ll'Oll
'"MAN OP LA MAMCHA"
••clulrn •11111tt1M11!
..... ,.. ""'"" St.i1 WlllMt If I Ac ... my Aw•1111 "'IDDl.•R OH THIE ROOF"
a .. ,.,. c. Scett "THIE HOSPITAL"
&tr! R1ynok11
"fl I.Ill''
llollllo H1-
"llJTTERFLllES ARE FREE"
&. "THIJll!'S A GIRL
IN MV IOUI""
Cll1tln .,.,._
"'TNIE YAU.CHI PAPERS'" !RI ...
"TMIE HAMMER"
.. ,..., . ........
Ry111 O'Mtll
"WHAT'S
•
UP DOC'" , ..........
CIMllhit
'TM~=,.,. ,.,
' ' I.
. ' l
• r.
Pianist Chooses
• -!...,.•, ,•. ~ T -Mixed. Program
Gue!t pianist Frank Wasko
will be presen~ed tn recital
Sunday under the auspices of
the music department of
Chapman College.
tor or music de~ree in piano
peformance at I n d I a n·•
University where he once was
a student of the reknowned
concert pianist Sidney Foster.
.......
•
Friday, Otctmber 15, lq72
~'TANGO" ... A ~~uas. ,~-'i~ .....
A .:!!D~~EN " . . . cti..-r w.u.,
M .. 11,.. A11
DIC. lit thr11 DIC. 17t\
I'll,. SAT., SUN. I P.M.
' •
DAILY PILDT J7
Coast Wise
Coattwile, no one II more
roast wtle than T o m
Murphjoe. Jfe '1 the DAlLY
PILOT'S roanagin& edltor and
virtually a lifelong resldeot of
the Orange ~st. Check out
his column, "Just Coasting,''
11n almost dal\v feature of the
DATL 'V PfLOT. Warning; .it
could be habit for1nlng.
There Is no admission
charge for the program which
begins at 8! 15 p.m. in
Memorial Hall Auditorium at
Chapmllll, 333 No. Glassel!,
Orange.
lie Is. the recipient of anl ~~~~~~~~~~~~==========~ award from the National
Foundation on the Arts and
Humanities. has studied at
•
:.-
Mae West, creator of
that American institu-
tion, the sex symlx>l,
will be immortalized at
the h1ovieland Wa x
Museum as "Diamond
Lil" in a scene from
the 1933 motion pie-r
ture, "She done Him
Wrong."
"Wasko, a member of the
mwlc faculty of Calliornia
State UnJversity at Sacramen-
, .is a candidate for the doc-
Ba Ii Dancers
At Pavilion
Tanglewood and was among
the national finalists in the
Collegiate Artist 1 Competiton
at the 1968 MTNA O>oventlon.
"Three Sonatas" by Scarlat-
ti, "Andante Favori" by
Beethoven , ''Andante
Spianato" and '' Grande
nio1onaiBe, Opus 22" by
Olopin, uTwo Preludea" by
DebuMy and "Sonata, Opus
26" by Barber will comprise
the program.
Dancers and musicians of N'TION'L GENERAL Bali will appear for three "' "
performances, only, in ' the THEATRES
Music Center's Pavilion on.,,_ __ -:~~~~~!!!!;~ Jan. 29, 30 and 31. 1
Mail orders now are being
accepted,; at the Music .Ccnte.r
for this lavishly costumed
troupe of 50 which will appear
in an art which, essentially, is
a daily part of their lives,
steeped in ancient ritual and
celebration.
Opera Marks
50th Season
The overwhelming populari·
ty of KCET's new series. on
the Chinese exercise sport
"T'ai Chi Ch'uan," ha s
resulted in the station's adding
a Wednesday 8 a.m. repeat of
the week's Monday night seg-
ment.
The program is telecast four
limes each week on Channel
28. It also is broadcast Mon-
days at 7:30 p.m., and
repeated Thursdays at 7 p.m.
NOW
SHOWING!
ANTHONY QUINN
YAPHETIOTTO
--. .aruiFciday.s_at .8._.a,_m.._ ____ __ ••
'
t
.. .. ' .... The Futid\'IS. here$,
THXl138
Now-·
SHOWING!
Gene Hackman
Ernest Borgnirle
Sheilaf'Wint9rt
in
ANTHOKY QUINN • YAPHET KOi 10
wi1h AMTHONY FRANCIOSA l;~"!, RALPHS•:;:=~•DSAID
Executive Producen ANTHONY QUINN Md BARRY sH£AR ScretnpL.y b)' LUTHER DAVIS IR[ -I BwdupontheftOW!byWAU.Y,F'ERRIS~~RRYSH!AR -.,:;..-:::.,~"" COl,OI A~n.MOW.•~t.llC. tldArtlltl
,... SMOWllG JtOWI
S.1111 A~ Fl•wy. M1t1 CNpmfA
0r.,...1.541.eo11
CO.Mitt ........ ,
"SU•H llAST" (I)
rLAlA I
SMOW UMIS
2!Qt.4i00·6!0o.I11 S· •r 1 S
(
Ice skati11~
everyday.
MESA VERDE SHOPPII'.G CENTER
2701 Harbor Blvd. at Adams, Costa Mesa
Tel. £7141 979·8880
'· • .1. :
·\ttil a bdlillis
Qrt OiOiaodmmts
' CEal 8. 0.MILLE~ -THE TEN COMMANDMENTS H!Si!ii
BR'fHNER · BAilER·ROBJN5oN D£&Rl.o PAfilD£iK ~ 1ii>t siiTt .USO,.
GE::=',.r:J ::-*::
2nd AT BOTH CINEMAS
JOHN WAYNE· MAX VON SYDOW
HAll:LTON HESTON -SIDNEY POITIER
SHELL{" WINTERS
(40MC4 ~11,\1~"6
THi; l.ilu:A'.TEST
SIOKi
l:."'\'ER "IOLD
IN THIA TRI #I
ACADIMY
AWARDWl••lR
llST ACTDI --
2114 TOI' flATUll
BURT REYNOlDS "FUZZ" RACQUEL WELCH
NOW AT BOTH CINEMAS
IH T .. I[ W filTM INSll!" Cl!NTlr ..
::(lfu.~2
Wl[.TMIN.TI[ .. a l GO•OIN -•11
1£TW(Ell :::°=:,-:,•~-:. &91:_4_49J
2ND~AT CW # 2 CHARLES ~ONSON
IN ''THE MECHANIC ' ' GOLDIE HAWN
EILEEN HECKART
EDWARD ALBERT
CHARI.••
•RDNllON
"TH• MllCHANIC"
OUT~ ' ,...,. 01(,0 ...., 21ul CO MIT
Charles Bronson in ''RED SUN'' (PG·)
EDWARDS
HARBORc;:i:-2
2 Milli M!UT" Of JAN DilG.O'l .. l.
.LAMES GARNER · KATHERINE ROSS
lhevonly
llkifl 1e1r nHl&lers
Robert Mitchum io "WJIATH Of GOD" 2nd TOP HIT
I
'
J
NEW 1973
DUSTER
COj:IPE
..
... ..
NEW 1973·.
SATELLlTE COUPE .
NIW '7l
CHltYSLD HEW ·!Oldl
HO•ID'AY
USED CAR '5pfc1Ai.S
rtrnent ..,,.,1cotnff
Atlas S9rt"iC• Oepl . ·11 Chrysler Corpo~•· honors a d
• U;i ing service -·~ . ion vehi(\es req r. . . 1e1s ~;~
work. Regard ,warranty d We urchase • wher• car was p . BankAmer1·
•honor Master Ch1rge, . E .
h American x e1r·d, Clrt• Blanc e,
nd Diners Club • • •
ptffS I .
/
. . .
4 Door Hardtop
lux~rJously Equipped
. " . ,. /
'68 PONTIA'C·. BON~Vilft:E v .. ,. ..... ' T,..._,. lladi., 'All'
Cond., l'.S., P.,J:, .... W., Ven'
Low Mltll. •CWQM1U) '$11!9 •. :.
' .
.'70·P.L;l'~puTH'
. FURY II .
4 Dr., led .. ; ~~:,, .... T., rectlt; h~IM'; ,.$., WSW, All'l 1'™1-
s 1 iis ,
: . .
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' PILbT ·AOVEIITTSER
.•• >.,'
•. )
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' --.-'
~ I
••
•
'69JOYOTA
4 DOOi CIOWll
Lictnse Ylft«
:'691MPALA . .
COMP-LnE
PACKAGE ' .
\
DKKWILSON·
• i Wsr· "'""' --
..
•
•
" -
•
-
··~""l NEW
I
• FrldilJ, Deetmbef 13, 1972 DAILY PILOT 39
FORD MINI MOTOR HOME
RED -E -KAMP CONVERSION
'
· CR\JISE-0.MA TIC TRANS ..
POWER STEERING.
POWER BRAKES,
V-8, ENGINE
800xl510PLYTIR£S, -
70 AMP. BATTERY.
1 TCIN CHASSIS,
EXTRA COOL.NG RADIATOR
SLIDING CARGO DOORS,
FIXED TYPE PASSENGER SEAT,
RADIO,
OUTSIDE MIRRORS,
TINTED WlNDSHIElD
(E-34GN848193)
l
"
.j DA.ILY PILOT
Everyone Has
Something That
Someo ne Else Wonts
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
' The Biggest Marketplace oo the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It •
With a Wont Ad
--------- - -----------
[ -"'-I~ _ .. ,..... l~ [ _,.... l~L~,·-I~ I -..... J~[ -"'-I~ [ -··-l~ [ -··Wt ............ l~ 1.;;m--~iiiiiiiiiiiiii--~l~----~--~~1 ~--~·~--~ 1 ;.;;--~1 :;;m;;~~
IG_•_n_e_r_e1 _______ G_o_n_o_ro_1 ______ .\;Ge;;;;;";;';;r;;';;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Gtnt;;;;:;;;'°;;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Gener411 General Generil General General
, DO YOU DESIRE? BARGAIN FIVE UNITS ** ** ** TAYLOR CO.
CORONA OEL MAR -$115,000
Spectacular vie\v of bay & ocean from this
charming traditional custom-built home. 4
Bedrooms, 3 baths & forinal dlning room.
\Vet bar in cozy fan1ily roon1. BBQ & cook-
ing center in patio i)ear lge H&F pool.
LI.DO ISLE FAMILY HOME
Spacious 4'h bedroom, 3 batl1 home with gnte
lo storage area for your boat. Immaculate
throughout. Lovely private patio for fan1ily
fun. 40' Lot, street to~da. Near good
beach. O\vner \\"iU help fi nee. S79,500
LINOA ISLE LOT. $65,000
A real choice Taylor Co. 1 xclusive. Build
your own luxury home on this island of finer
homes & yachting. The last available lot.
''Our 27th Year"
WESLEY-N.-tA-YLOR CO.. Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Raad
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
General General
42x118 fl. LOT * R-2 * CdM
and ... on the ocean side of the hwy., plus
a jewel of a co ttage! This outstanding offer·
ing has space for an extra large second
unit. Shown by app't. only. $59,900
CORBIN-MARTIN.
REALTORS 644-7662
General General
MAKE AN OFFER
O\vner back East -wants action now!
Country Club home, BIG CANYON. Bring
this a d. #11 Hermitage Lane, OPEN SAT.
& SUN. 1-5 . $115,000. Paul Quick
IRVINE TERRACE -OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5
Neat, clean 3 BR .. 2 ba. home on a quiet st.
Large lot provides privacy. In town, be-
tween Fashion Is. & the bay. $79,500. 2000 ·
ALTURA. Russ Flynn
LIDO BAYFRONT BARGAIN-$144.SOO
Best buy on water! lmmac. 3 BR., 3 ba. &
hobby rm. Pier & slip for lge. boat. Inter-
esting Joe., view of \Yater thru lawn & trees.
Charlene Whyte
ALL THIS FOR $37,900
2-Sty. 3 Bdrms., 2\0 baths; bright. cheer-
ful garden home; greenbelt Joe . in UNI·
VERSITY PARK -want to know mo re ?
Call "Chuck" Lewis
ARE YOU A BIG FAMILY?
Looking for a bigger home in Corona del
Mar? "'You must see this 6 bdrm .. 4 bath
family home \\•/lots of style; large )"ard .
Only $91).500. Jim Muller
EARTHSTONES
highlight the interior of this highly
decorated 3 bdrm., 2Y2 ba. home. Nicely
landscaped plus pool. Short escrow O.K.
$67,900. Howard Wells
OUTSTAND ING BAYFRONT
67' Of Spectaculat frontage -elegant 5,000
sq. fl. home -120' boat .slip -our CQrist-
mas special !or only $2j5.000 ~ FEE. Bill
Bents ..
SPACE FOR LARG°E BOAT
Prime location Lido Nord Bayfront home.
4 Bd r•l?<i -pool table size lamily room.
Spa~iou .. 1naster suite with fireplace.
$265.000. Eileen Hudson
' VA LUE -SH ORECLIFF -VALUE
View thru canyon to ocean. Clean 2 BR.,
conv. den expandable home in prime area.
1..owest price for older home, in many
months! $69.900. Bud Yorke
PRETTY AS A PICTURE
E nd you r search for a lovely 4 bdrm. Lusk
Jiarbor View Home. You must see this
truly deligh tful borne -onl y $79,500. Gary
Knox
ENTERTAINING ? ? ?
You will love lo in this 4 BR.. formal
D.R. home. SUPER LARGE FAMILY RM.
W /Wet bar -BBQ -frplc. -pool table.
SEE IT -YOU'LL BUY IT ! Bud Austin
CAMEO SHORES -OCEAN VIEW
4 Bdrms., 3 batbs. OO'x2001 Lot. Fam. rm.1 dJn. rm. -vlC\V of canyon & ocean. Cust.
built. Large master suite. Private beache!t.
$142,500. George Crupe
133.0700
644-2430
S50 NEWPORT CINTER Dll,, N.8.
NOTHING'S MISSING
F'rom this picture but you. Set in an ideal
Cameo Shores location, with sparkling pool
-heavy shake roof-sliding glass. 4 Bdrms.,
3 baths. Ocean & pool view from the living
rm., with its' lge. frplc. Cozy family rm . has
blt·in bookcases & co lored TV. Everything
is in move-in, immaculate condition & beau-
tifully decorated. Practically new refrigera-
tor, washer & dryer incl. -3 car garage,
too. $125,000 ·
111e an.•a's top professionals
are at your service. 'IL.,..'! I I I
ft B~Y~~ .. ~.~~~.~ .. ~.~.~ ~~ <:, '"' ... ., ' •IU
Gen~al General
ofl11cfa _9J/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT ,HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Lindi Isle Waterfront ·
Just completed -modern 5 bdrm. 4lh
bath home with family rm., game rm., iorm-
al dining rm. & malltlificent 25 ft. water-
front living rm. w/!rplc. & wet bar. $285,000
5-3 Linda Isle Drive
Elegant 5 bdfm., 4\0 baths; on lagoon. New
carpets, drapes & wallpaper. 4 Fireplaces.
-Lovely garden & large slip ........ $212,000.
101 Linda Isle Drive
Lovely 5 BR., 4 ba. home with downstairs
waterfront mstr. suite & Jge. game rm. or
study. Mexican tile floors, beam ceilings,
quality constructioll, slip . . . . . . . . . '155,00fl
For Complete Information
On All Homes & Lats, PfHM Cl.ll:
BILL -GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Baysldt Dr., Suitt 1, N.B. 67~161
General
ATIENTION INVESTORS
Owner re-investing upward, says "sell",
$20,000 Price .reduction on top Corona del
~far income property, South of Hwy. 6
Spacious 2 bdrm. apts. plus a 3 bdrm., 2
bath home & pool. Call !or details & app't. w see. $175,000 .
Q: Orange Coast
REAL ESTA11! 644 4141
2600 E. Coast Hwy., Coran• del Mar
; 1: I :! .. •: ~· .:
~
.. ' heJ this •uctr llllrectory wf .. ,.. ........... .
yo119•h ............ AH ......................... ..
.,. 4-cra.t I• ........... ..., ..... llsla; .....
wti.N la tMay't DAILY PILOT WANT ADS., ,..,..
&howl .. .,_ 11o ..... .., Mi. °' .. ;..;' _. .....,.-..
lltt nc• ""--'I .... tWI co'-... ,,....,, S.
•r4ef • SIMMlsy.
HOUSES,. fOR SALE
2 BR. •nd Family Rm. or Den
330 Morning Canyon (Shoreclifls) CdM
644-2430 (Sun. 1-5)
3 Bedrooms
2000 Altura (lrvlne Terr.) CdM
644-2430 $59,500 (Sal & Sun 1-5)
3 BR. and F1mily Rm. or Den
2030 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB
641>-1550 ,112,900 (DAILY)
4 BR. ind Family Rm. or Den
#11 Hermitage Ln. (Big Canyon ) NB
644-2430 $115,000 (Sat & Sun 1·51
**1653 Bayside Dr. (Yachlsman'sCove)
CdM 67&-1935 (DAILY)
5 BR.-..... .F•m.lly Rm. or Don
**#46 Linda hie (Linda Isle) NB
""tU.z.8235 · (Sal I< Sun 1·5)
**#3 Linda Isle (Linda 18lej NB
· ·UU235 -(Sat & Sun 1-5)
tt#M Linda hie Dr. (Linda l•le ) NB
644-2430 (Sunday 1-4)
LOTS FOR SALE
**1653 Bayside Dr. (Yachtsman'• Cove · · Ci!AI . 671>-11131l (DaUy) 1
* , ... ** w.-... ..
~·· w ... ., .. ,,...
for Actl·on C II 642 5678 -DaU,, Piiot Cl•ulfletl . • • • a • I oRAklGE coAIT's BEST
. JI,_,~~,-_ ~ ~~/ • Your Own Home '°' EASTSIDE n._-.;>*'"4 Chr"'"'"' 4 BR-Family ~·--·-:.=:;'."f&~, $295 COSTA MESA 7""'"~ ANOASSOCIATES • B/I Gas Kitchen wllh Wow! Quiet tree Jlncd sir~!. IN\ll·:sT<lR'S PAHADISE • 5
REALTORS Dishwasher? Portico entry. 4 queen !lZe Scp<~l'flh' hunH'li lll'Sllcd in e Nearly New Ca.:rpeUng! bedroonis. St!para1e ram-on th1o; hlU;t' lot. Ureal t«x
2828 EAST~ HIGHWAY e Covered Palio PLUS ily roo1n hosl1 erarkling shrlter an1I Po I e II t l a I CORONA Lar&t' Play Yard? Swedllih fireplace. LH.rge ~r""'lh. J•;;H'li uni! 111Uh
DEL MAR. CAU,. e YES -YES -YES, Call yard with giant child's play. ~·purate g<1rag-1" yard and
644 7~0 Anytime. 6'1&-(15$. house. ONLY S295 BUYS Iai.lhdry al'ca. LJ.>W of
• £I' • OUered for $31,850. Jtome for qualU1ed buyer. Ac! privacy, oonvenience artd *"'
is Unoccupied. fast. l'"ull price $29,500. Call n1osphere . ..CALL us fRr lull •
* RECENTLY . &15-0303. • .... 1 .. ""'"• 111,SOll.
I OIU.'l , I Ol '11~
RE AL''"''
Charm, Value, Comfort . • • • !~~~~~,D Bat•
. . . . . in this Condo :i;..m~ve Brick l',ireplace.
-BACK BAY AREA -3 Bedroom, 2Y.. e Country Size Bii Gas
bath, buHt·in k1tcben, stone fireplace. FAMI-Ki tchen and Lota. of -~=-=-==--='~,.--
CALL ~1 51 Open "'i.\>et.
~·HERITAGE ..,. REALTORS
Bock Bay Area
CUSTO~I BUILT !'i
UcdJ'(.lon1s, 3 baths, tnmi}y
rm. oftlc-e, many, 1 n1 a n l ..
xtras. Swln1min,( pool +
wading pool ~.500.
Cabloots. BACK BAY LY ROOM, community pool & REC. ROOMS e Extra i..,... Front Yanl.
including billiards. Fee land close to every-• "°"'lbly Build AddlboMI BEAUTY
thing ..................... , ..... , ... $34,500. •Unlt1•1:.~ tor ~.~. ElPganl 3 BR & family home
0 "'' ~ _,"""' on quiet cul-de-«ac in area * • Call Anytime, 64&-0555. of fine hon1es, fea~ dou-
ble flrcpl, OW, bltins, 3 Bedroom Home
& BlueHaven Pool
encloled palin, !!101"U1:e for
c1u11pcr & boat. Nc1v tile &
l'l"JllS. new pain! lnslrle &
out. l\fCl\'l' in tr•<lay. $26.500.
Roy Mccardle Realtor
1810 Ne\\'flOrt Bh·J.., C.r-.1.
. rn 1 g and much 1nore. $39.!EO. Need Roon1'? . . . . . m ~'""""" '""'" lush "''""'
' 4 .BE~RO~M .' 3 b;th ~om: ~~~8ru~pu!11 .lt:Jm cfilQntuRedlanc1s Dr .. ~~,m
room that will take your pool table. 2 brick sussiocAltl' Of THE co&.wtu co. Ill
fireplaces, buill·in kitchen, large yard &: "21 ~'.'°In u.. '~re yo~r ~·t: .~A.~~-~;m: IMM~QJATE -I I 4¥ 'Ii 1.,, ............................. , * POSSESSION M-1 or C-1 Ontu 548.7729
if qualified, possible nlOve in Corner lot, fully lmpnwt"'d, ~
AUSTIN·SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES NO~ and ""'me lugh ~ 1 21 1 balance loan with 7i,J% Jn-uvut ng on tY>'O stnee11. 21.f
I ~~-~----6:..4:..4:..7~2:.:.7~0-~-------1 terest, with a payment of ft. on Baker hy 101.5 ft. (21, ----=-'fr
General General $1M per month including all 7n . sq . ft.) Prime develop. CI::mlll I 1
I ~;iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil outside n1aintenanre and ll'\('n! area ol Cosr.; Mesa. B 11 pool facilities. in beautiful Near Newport Fwy, on and 4 drm Beauty
roll ing hilJ..s.ot Laguna. This off ranlp. Preemtly zoned NEAR BEACH
3 bedroom. 2 bath property M-1, could be Cl. PT'ice $ 0
will mAke • fine home lor $5l.SOll. cau 546-liOO. 41,5 0.
l\fl.)'Ol'IC. call us to see. Only INVESl'MENT DIVISION lrnm1tculall' lhruouL l.'l!h r
$25,500. ~ ~ plaster \Valls, ne\\' cr11tg, UJl-1
•
'Tim 'REAL graded, hke Ill'\\', Fonnl I
*'
CO&ATS BSi:A!l'Bidi dining -1;a!iu. Choil'e J<x·.'
OPEN l.NTIL 9flM Xln t terms. To i;cr Jrnr in
· WALLACE Entertainment Center 8;733 \\'estC'liff Dr .. N.13.
A UftttllClUI: HMI: Rl!ALTORS Spectacular dream! RambJ.1 ____ ,_~;.;'?-1."I~==
. 5414141-l'lll T bedroom Haolenda on THE VERY BEST!
A RE'°"L TOR'S REAL TOR (Qpon.Evenl"lt) 3 separate prime Penn. lots~ t...,,,..,,..,,....,,,....;;,,..e I Ultra modf'm thruout, 4 car Execu1h·1~ . \\'cstchH 3 bl"d., Now this owner knows real estate! In Her-
mosa Beach, Redondo and San Diego; in
Newport, all -he knows is-hiS -home and the
marketing reputation of Unique Hornes. He
and his family are proud of their 4 bedroom,
21h batl1, pool home with excellent decor.
It's a Unique floor plan that is private, ele.
gant, yet functional. At a realistic $79,500.
1! garage huge rumpus room. 2 bath 1111 n1art1('W'M 1-orn Builders Loss ! steps 10 bay & surf. ap-101. Plush ,.,,rJl('t:i, dr11Pt>ii.
Your Gain •I praised &t lt-vel value of builtins.. di.rung ruum L µri-
$128,000! &'llt no1o1., build v1te yard 1\'1\h II(' at rd pool!
2 • Story later!! J>ril'efl by 1·:1grr own,·r SGI.950 -Submit y Q LI r
CLOSEOtrr • Oq ,H 0 M E l;a Al tt'rn1!! !
Ol'JL't! VACA'Nti~Gotgedbs UHIE ~ 2-STORY BA R GA I N'l r:~~ Cro<k!ine Ur.~. Si.p ijiji]i!i . p ., n .,,,
UNJ9Uf HOMO OF NIWP'OIT llACH, 64541500
A lltlet of N.._ CtMf
dowtJ livlna" room.and FAM·
ILY ROOM. 4 queen size
bedrooms. Laundry. Builder
say1 $36,500 -Btrr YOU
01-'FER WHAT Y 0 U
TH.IN lC. Hurry . lt't tbe ~
one .'call~. •
.,
U fllij ICJU i: tl()Mt=S . $27.~50
3 !lpactous hrdroon1s .
~rful Jiving r o o m .
handsome f lrcp la c e.
Built -in k i t c hen.
d1,..hv.·a~h· r. Pa:JO. 1-'rrshlv
paintctl inside .fc oul. Likt
ncv.• ~rpet1ng. Jr. estate
park'-UKe grounds. 540-173>,
. .. REALTORS . ' ·---I OR I \ I L 111 \0\ ~Gen;;;;'r;•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·G'~•-n~er_•_I _~~~-
PARK SPANISH
ELEGANCE
Fantastic four-level Span11h
style Hunllngton C r e st
home, 2830 11q ft of gracious
living, 4 bedroom, 21,., bath,
large open living room with
firoplace. formal rlining.
separate laundry r o o m , ~rx40' patio plus ~pacioua
basemen! f1tmily ' rumpus
room with fireplace. This is
a home you mus! see 10
believe. $53.500.
J6)8,. co:Ts
~WALLACE
REALTORS
Open Evening$ .....
• 962-4454 •
MESA VERDE
PA.CESmER
5 Bedrooms, 2¥.i balhl of
pure delight are ff!Btured In
2 storiel'I of this all liveable
home. Sit tn your beaulUully
paneled living room and run
your toet through the new
lush •har carpeting while
you view the fireplace and
your Jdda are playing in Uw.•
huge park-like yard. Just
.one bloek trom the Bnlearie
School, a.nci prtced at only $48,!KX>. Call 546-23Ll
•
THBRB:AL
&Sl:ATDS OPEN 'Tit. 9 FM
CORONA DEL MAR
2-Stol')' lamlly home
Ott ocean aide of
Coa~t ~llghway. Only
3 Years old, with
l bc:drooms, lamlly room. d~ room, lhM carpet
A opt!l'I beam celllfl&s.
172,SOll.
HARllQ"
COM,.ANV
RF.Al.TORS
SINCE 194<
673-4400
EASTSIDE REPO
Anyone ~n l>W"ChW tttlt
IOVei'nmtnt rtJ>OUeNJon
wilh s btdroomt1 2 '-lhl and larae yard for only
.f!OOO doWn. "ror..J ptymcnlt
only 1223 per month!
' ,. ~
HUNTINGTON 1;;;;·~ .. ;;;;;;-
5 BR + FR + DEN li8THE REAL
$56,850 for 10 UNITS ~ESTATERS
TA RB.ELL
2953 Harbor. Costa r.fesa
NEWPORT ISLAN D
INCOME Yu. '"' ~:.~;~~o,;'"" 11 . ~::S,o~i. ~~:;;;:°"'~N~·r~L ~'"'~: I
ho • 1 Grl'al. 1.-ornc1· locatJOO: !ge. you ught this beautiJul Con11istent Income of $1£16(1. PENINSU A p 2 bd ~mi;, your coat "'.001d be All individual hoU&e!I with L OINT nn., frpk., 11
; baths.
$56,850. Owner assigned to garqes on l acre Call for DUPLEX with l·bdrn1 un it; Ideal
Northe-rn Calif. and must detiUlJJ f:.n how to· huy, 2 Bdrms .• t ha!h each unit. hon\e & l~oin!' k'i·up.
sc.11. Irleal for J&rge family, Compl('!ely rl'dccor. insitlc: Sfi6:500· 1 • \\11th 2600 sq. It., on quiel Live in upper-101 ... er leai;C'd I Cn\\. 673-366.1 613-~ E\tS.
M.il-de-sac. ~"ull pr; e e Newport $265 month. Hard !Cl find '
$52,950. Plell!!t' phone •t du pl t.' x , this localion.
54fr-.2313. $72.;;oo.
Fairview : 673-?.6&3
'4Ul11 Illa""
O w1\t1<111P.111
(Utytlmtl
'
DUPLEX WITH SLIP
Ownt'rs wlll leave nearly 11.il
their furniture, rerrtgerat-
Realtors · 646-T111 0111, etc. Great buy! 3 Up,
THJCREAL
EBT~f&RS N Tl. 9FM
~ Westcllff Drive 2 down. $99,500. oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii""' Ope" ·till 9 PM HOPE GERRIE RLTY.
64>4400
IMMEDIATE BEFORE YOU DO p~~S~!~ON THAT DO THIS
Don't tooch a th1 Dial and lnquire about th.la 5 ng, movt-bedroom home It i 1 rli;tht In! SJ>Brkllng 4 deJlnhUuU .. ___:_led wtlh bedroom, family room, 10' 11 ~ Y ~""' • 18' cnc-losed patio, all bulltin shl'lg carpeting and dna!)eS
kitchen with new vln.vl U\r'Oughout. Large back
floor. Oose to schoohi and yard with COYl!tt!d patio.
all n1a;or shopping. $30,750. AUumc low intemt VA
Macnab-Irvine ,
Rewty ComJt<ny
ONE OF A KIND
Lusk Harbor View South: ::I
or 4 BR.. 2~" bath.!!.
Separate bUlllird·slxed 1-'R.
~t bar. Ron S~rn1M
642-8235. IT·l4l.
~ssociated .: .
IROKE~S-REA~TORS
Z025 W Bolboo 67).)66)
TARBELIJ
W,i.j 1-lnrbor. el'Ktl\ ~1e'8
4 PLEX-HURR Y!!
4 lxh·m., dini~ mom, entry
hall, rust om ("c-rnmir till!
ln<llrrrt llghl.ing, OJl~
"'t'Od c11blne111, prln1fl home
r\rtn, 5-l!l-l'Tal
TARBELL: For details ca.f.I Joan with (M¥menl$ Of only 64~1235 644-6200
MO·ll41 Open Eve5. $225.00 ptt month. 847"'°10. e""'"'"'""''""'_"'"..;,"'
(9 'l'HS;HALij BE "HOME" -29S5 u~ho•, t.,,,. """ HORSES • HORSES ? ll$tf'I. FOR CHRISTMAS ExoepJion&I, 1.,,, oom• on
L..t; Jn thl9 dl'ilghtful 3 bedh.1oni 110098 k>L Nr ~c1~slrian
, • ~ HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
OCEAN-HARBOR pl .. den "°""" Y1t11°ll tovu ~p.~ '"', 0~1rl, :':
the large kitchen wttn ~ OOQ DUPLEX broakl•!I botr and ••mlly ' . Macnab·lrvme &rand N Surfside nu..i.. t.reL loc::ated ln. IP'tlt Hu,._ •wpott Mesa Realty
Rtelfy Compe.01. l"i1' ""'lt Ungton Bttt'h locaUon. C.11 350 E. 17th St., C.M. BIG CA.NY • PenlnJWa location! Plush today tor an a,pt.JOfntmcnl to &t)..4911 : 5*-2T.U evtt. 2 bed., 2 bath c111tom units It .1 •-~ .... "-" a1k for 't'om ~ Elegant new Ivan Well• • beat c~, dnpea. tee. won MU1 at ....,.,.w. -
CUll«lt "°""' ... , ..... ..,. ...... , .... bar,...,,. ctU· -,."_'-<lOlll,;,.;,:..· -===;;;::;;;,;;;~ WESTCLIFF-
llth fairway. Dr a rn at I c lnsr • 1pect&eular v\f!wt ~-~··MP]i'! Warm tradiUool\l 4 &drmA • IWlk.en LR, : llU'P FR Builder ukfttg $91,000 . 10% _ _......... 2~ be.iii I~~. In 11lllt
w/nt bat • outllandtnj: 00-Tt or try 1 tr9dell it;4·• ?X'l"'!ibilt"taol.I. --~ret
•m nn. m•<lt!•tll VIEW. Sl91,50D. IT·lll. Iii 1 \.Ml. ll&Cd brlclc h'pl~
OWNER mull "'ti. < M '00!, U,,.... ;t
RA!altort Mtr11U ~ Sedrm1, rear llvtps room. $7',500. :111C3 \YtttcW! Drive 6424235 *'421111 ~ family room, nn1pltl.,., brit, BflL GRUNDY RL TR.
= : .. .i I I H '· l'l l
--~0pc=n~1~11_1 '°"' "'°"~"'--;;;;:;;,,.,....,,,..;;,;;,;;;_11~~~~~~~~~ I S34,rioo. M()--1120. 6754161
IV
•
H
• --; .
I .
DAILY PILOT 4J
I -.... l~I -.... I~[ _ .... l~ I -.... l~I --.. ·I~ I __ .. I~ I H~I -J~I _..,_ I~
~But;;tl.;;111-..:~ Gonorol Coron• dol Mor Huntlllglon-
YOU CAN SEE I'~ AVAILABLE; WOW I
FOREVER ! BUY ME!
FANTASflC • SPECl'ACU· Oolatandl"" loc:atioo, !Our ONLY $18,950
LAR • SUPER. Thue are bedroom, l.u8k" Harbor View for this lh4rP 2 bedroom 2
not mouah word• to de-Hilla:. Surrounded i;y former bath home with pool, club-
acrl bt Ule. vlew tbll home inodel ,home1o Optn Houae. house-, &nd other r@Cl'@i·
ottun. 3 ~.' 2 baths Sat. and Sun. 1:5 p.m. 3601 tklnal facwu.e.. Clole to
h1.rge living ro6m: dlnln,j Park Often pr1ve. Call ahopplna:. Only WiQ. down ~ large lot. Preacnfcd 6'T'".r1225. · lO anyone. Call us for de-
al ..,,,seo. P.\n:I' ~~ (Open E...,.)
I' I E**-: 1llli~lll
-"'J;;U::;:L:::Y::=4;;T::;Hc=::-= """0' .. ''" "" ......... '"'
lnd•J>eD<tcnco o.,, '" Prime Income * VACANT * when you Inv~ In thla p-....v FANTA.$TIC BUY
wtit lnvesior'1 litarter at • -r-• • J Only $24,650
$32,500. lncome 13.s month· rono clel Mar RomanUc frplc:. Gleaming
ly. CALL ANYTIME Fine plexE.'l !n Blbe Ribbon lI.W. Doon. Bltna. 3 Large 646-3921 54s..•••l Corona del Mar. Two brs, corn. lot. Boal gate.
-bedrooms each p r I v a t e New paint in/out. Must be Th~ 11 a reaaon balconle'.s quality constnic-sold within ~ days. Low
1ll yean same location tlon, wi.u-to-wall carpets down, FHA-VA te.rms.
and drapes. Your money Call Day or Night
will rolurn you a substantial SCOTT REAL TY
dividend. Call now for 536-7533 Lachenmyer
details and 1 bow In g · liiOiiOii;;O;iioiioi.iiiOiiOiiii
1=======1 673-8550. Only l7S,OOO. $25 950
$U,0002 BR, 1 BA ~ ~ • •
Rcdl!ur
Sunshine clean 1; rearly fnr .111B llRAL 4 BR vacant· 8 Yrs new, lrg
occupancy, just right ror &d l~t&RU master suite w/pvt BA,
you l'f!nters to get started. _ OF'£N Tl.. 9PM _ wl w crpts & drps, fml lrg
Carpets & drapes thruout. liv rm. klt/(am rm conibo,
Huge kitchen with / .1':'.BS VACANT I 11 hit-in range, dbl oven, eat-
range. Counlry atmosphf're. OWNER MUST SELL ing bar, oversized dbl gar.
Call now. ONE BLOCK TO BEAOi Xlnt loc, see. today!
Realtors 545--0465
Open Eves.
$25,950
2 BR. & conv. den, wl'l I' baths downs1a..irs + huge
rump!" nn., bath & wet bar 9._~_ ... Jl,71 ( -i MMlOJ upstairs. Q u a I I t y coo-___.. -
struction, with hdv..'d. nrs .. I""""""'"""'"""'!!!!'!!'~"' lath • plas"r walls, elec. REPOSSESSIONS
Newpoo·t-
Pr9-Grand Opening Sale!
·-$51,495
CONDOMINIUMS
lofty living awaits you!
Acl swiflly
to select your own
v~~ie=~~0~~r:!"o~~he
Newport Ct'1!st lnlormatlon Center.
conveniently localed at
2400 Wes! Coast Highway
Suite 8, Newport Beach.
Open Dally 10 a.m. lo sunset.
(714/ 645-6141
HouHI Unfurn..
'?Pertunfty ~ Coron• ct.I Mir
Ne~ Hol .... 1 luolneu P,.,.rty 154
Vl-OlllAN TWO um; TOTAL • "' · 11>4•x2)9• CHOICE l.OCA. N6WPoRT BEACH TOWNHOUSE TlON II li n-Ai. CllAllMtNC Ia11ie studJo • WI -~-·· .... "--r--·--••• f'rn ho "···-•• ~ dble F.tbtm tbJrm with mid-town ZONED BUSINESS. PRO-IU&IUJll .._.._...._,_,. ·' 1 me, g.uT....,e ..,, ••
converueoce. Warm )'OW' FESSJONAL OR 0Ff1CES f1nest t qu ip mt" n' & ga1' $300 mo. 673-U9T.
toes be10tt the tlOwiDI' $17.500 ea. TE.RMS write: waterftont \ncitUon. 35 Yr. Coste MeN
frplc. ill the beamed ceU. KANPAK, 1993 Kihei Rd. old oompaey. Spai;:t1 avail. 1.:.:.;.;.:;..'-"'..C:.-----
famJly nn .. or otier a tout =--·_1 _Ma_o1_,._H~•-w_au_· ___ 1 ~ILr~ifuet1NtY'JtLTR. • OUT on yo1•r Ear! Spar.
lo your IUtfbl ln the formal Commercial !w·n Bacl»·k>. . AJI utll ln1.:I. uvt.,. nn. Thlt 4 BR., 2 ba. P 1,. '75-6161 ss;.
beauty bu a illtlan extras roper!? ~ 1---------IALA Rentals e 64$..3900
~ .. "'500. •"')' _pllce ... -"'IRST TIME M"•lc '10"'· grow;"S ' -~ r Co" ho ' e ~tOVE-ln Today! 2 Br.
OPEN SUN 1•.• uee a p, !('rm.I . • • E I K'"• • ~.,. OFFERED Drtsti &hop, dancr: ituctio l"ncd ynt. nc i'.ar. ...,,1
4M-16th Pa.ACE 4 Stores In ¥rl Alplui. &!t& f.~u1"11iture store, fast ~ale ApdLA'· R'o'~ials • '45-3'00
r -w;:-i ....... 9 ..... 1 -113 ~ HOLLAND Bui. Salu tL~~· . ) ~~ owl;;:' v.·fl~ui)' 1716 Orange, CM 645-4170 SHARP 3 BDRM, 2 _ __ 159'P at 8% for 3D ~a1'l!. CATTLE 1 n vestme n t Bath A1 es a Verde
Agent '15-i'l2 5. Co n s u 1 ta n t·All income home. Close to schools
'"'9 E. <»&SI Hwy., CdM'. CLEAN, LEVEL, Jev<ls. Good profit "°'p'"tial & park. $265. per mo.
* '7•59-* &. tax advantage. hone rd ~ -:READY.~-~": including ga ener. ** $32.tsO ** 3 CJ Co M O TREAT ~o""'11 lo H•PPY Call LARRY 546-5880 • BR. + ..... ,1 or __ rm. Acres • ata et.a. n .,-
fCl&IQ ........ Baker off Bristol $2.50 per Chrialmu l'ntertainment . . Sl-30 -2 BR. StoVf', reftia;,
Peclcy paneling, shag carp. Sq. Ft. Commercial Depart· . flee "Pe1e N' Tillie" star-I ~ar. ktd!I pet/1ingll!I.
Moat outstanding bUy in "~"' '"''"" Re Ito rlna \VJilter ~•latthau and I BEACON * ,.. "l 11 '• N'pt Htl. Belter hu,n')'! menl ~ a r. ~1 Burnett. __ -
BALBOA BAY PROP. Condominiums /
I <. 160 51250. leases beer Bar &. $165 · 3 RH. 11'! BA. Blln11, * ... _7491* ...... d k d k r-.. Cafe, fully equlpt & ready I crpls, t'P~. 1 ~ o .
S•n Cletnente SPACIOUS 2 story 2 BR. l~~ to go. SH.n Clemf'nte are<1. BEACON * 64S-Ol11 ,
---------1 BA. Blt--tn.s, rrp1 c. Separate t92-2'!26 or 5!f6..24ID. S H A R P CLEAN 3
Love to Prune & Garden! ea.rage. Pool, recreation INCO?ilE TA.X c LIE N TI BEDROo'M L a r 'g e
Thia ls lt Jiltt painted t!K· room, laundry f.acllitlea. BUSJNESS. Call Ed. Per-d h.l.d' k terior-3 BR, 1% BA in Quiet adults onlr. No ron, 642~ or &12-1171. yar , c l ren o ..
Shorecliffs. Nice oondltlon. children under 15. 2400 EDUCATOR supply store· I $210: per mo. • no fee.
Owner-agent. W/20% dn • Eldeh, C.M. 963-2181. $21,900. Own. ill, So. Cst Plaza ai-e<1. I Heritage, Realtors. 7% Int, 30 yrs. W /10% dn · 7% Int. W110% dn Ir: ro~"o Prine. Only, Ple•H 15,000/bst olr. 557-12Mit 540-1151
2nd, 7~%. Attract. 2 BR, 1% ba, bltns, Money to Loin 240 L-R-G-.-,~-B-R-, -i;-,.-,-,.-.~bl
$38,900. lge dbl garqe. Montlcctlo. garage detached. covC'red
Eves. 492.-7833 C.M. Freshly painted &: 1 t TD L patio, lrg yan:I. One (•hlld
BY owner: sacrWce. 2 BR crpt'd. $21,500. Pia call s oans OK. $22:1/mo. Ph: 6-12-11596
vi 2 wknds 552-8049. or 642-1771 . ~sun~. oce~ ew~ Duplexes/Units 6%% INTEREST EASTSIDE 4 Br, 2 Ba, frpl,
finance. Ph. 49Ul638. ••I• l 162 2nd TD Loans bllnJ!, dshv•hr . Jl('\V crpt & S•nt• An• pain1. Encl dbl gar. C10fle to
----------Several choice apartment lb.vest rates Oraru~e Co. SCh!!I. No pets. 645-42'10.
.,,,.._ $25, 950 3 BR 2 BA ':,';1~1 ·c~r;:, ~.re.:: "WE euY ro·s" sm c''"" ' ~"· 2 BA. h••
C II pool. Lrg. game rn1. Frplc.
l,·101 3 •-•-m EJ~ant bll-lM .. F .A. heat, corner ~~~ · -1~1. ~·~r 675-~-. For information and kK:aUon fircP. ee. Large f a m 11 y ... vw,,.. " ~
en, built-In range, oven OPEN SUN. 1-5 o( these rn> &. VA homes. --
& dU.hw'-""r. """""'"! 317 ,POINSETTIA coolacKIA· SAllAN : ~_::.::::::::,::::._ __ ....,.;;:.:::-:::~=.---Another 2 story beauty with ei&hl difierent ren1al.1. a Sattler Mtg. Co. Bltns. v./1o.' carpet, druJ>L>s.
c ountry atmosphere In-6Ta-7225. 642·2171 545-0611 1 C.Ollei;e Park. ~a-5438. cludbig lotJ of towering trees.. Bdrms are a 11 Serving Harbor area 21 yr:s. ~1ESA de! J\lar, 4-Br .. lam
o.psta.ltl and tully ca.J'Wted. 2nd TRUST DEED WANS rm, crpls, drp11, I s e
~ mnd a park-like yard . $69,SOO Laguna 8uch Newport Buch
l . --*-D~U~P~LE. x * Real Est••• "U644 1 -~------*' NORTH END-* A Christmas Ultra modern kitchen In· \VW Buy Trust Deeds S 2 7 5 J m o . v.· I o ption.
eluding dishwasher f o r * BROKER 642-7491 * .c_541Hl867=oc=c.· -~=--=-c-.,.,-·I
So. of Hwy. 2 &: Den plus new BY Owner -F'rancbcan 2 2 BR. now being h .. ill. A Fountains, lge, 4BR, 2 BA, Home with 2 bdrm. apt. & D-'I ht ~ thednl1 u rm. ""''' a pt. Walk to ., "
TARBELL'
Mom. A must see to ap-3 Br home. $235. Eastslde. 2955 H bor Costa Mesa real good deal for ~ tam nn. w-ca ce " beach & shopping center. ';I a.r • -=1-$71 500 shag cpl, landscpd. $41,500. See this beautiful two story
Sellers • Home 0Wner1 MORGAN' REAL TY 10 percent dn. 842-BOOt. ~ v~m1:1'°-::~.~~ condominium near Hoag predate. sUastOIAIY Of TH( (OlWllL co. NC\.\" crpl.<1 & freshly painted.
THR..,:E • • p 1 r 8 t e ...._,..lllnt 1r;ei F'rplc. Obie gar . 646-276.>; We have buyers for 3 to1d5 673-6642 67.s.6459 \VALK TO BEACH, 4 BR.. Priced at $75,000. 1';°'81P0~· ,.1,tcls .... r:: .. ••Y, •• 0•0'"'•
Bdrm. homrs, Easts f' L/R, DIR, hug1• F.P., * SHARP * '" ..... ., ........ •
area C.1\1. or Npt. Re h. Con· DUPLEX-BY OWNER lwau1 alriu1n entry, drc1tm 2 Bdrm ., 2 bath home buming fireplace. !IC!paraie
tact us 1oday. 708 Lal'kspur, ren1odeled & kitchen, 11ti\. n'IOn1, pntlo. w/de<ikll & patio. Only 3 dining room, and ~parole
· d 1 • · SI '' c , .• ,, "o··-den. Privacy alxrunds. 21,~ 1ea Y o n1 .. vC' In .. 1u l'l"S, an assumo.-~nrv·~~1. )'I'S. old. Pi·iced for im· 400 E.17"~, FOR All heautilul ne\\. kitchrn. ba l_h BY Oivner 3 Rr 2 BA.· cov. inedlatc sale. $38,000. baths and com PI et e I Y c... _ __............. _ UW &: carpet. Open Sun 1-a. 1 ·lkl ·di 1 * MODERN * n1odern kitchen and only 30 -~ .. -~ $66 500 673-1658· 67~ 7616 pat o, wa ng. stnn~ n steps to the pool. Just on _ • .. • • • • • ,>-• school & s;ho11n1n['", u1Y'"rnded 3 Bdrm., 2 baths: bigh beam niarket and only $37,500. A£ • : :.. BY 0 w n er. Spectacular tile & cpls, S.12,liOO. 962-2856 cel11s., lots of glass. 3 Will not last long. Call
Spygl!lS! Hlll forever view Decks. Compare this at 646-7l7l NEAR MARINERS from this luxurious, new 4 Irvine $41,500. .
=··"l!lf:-:.,f
South Lagun11
BY owner: 3 BR, 2 BA.
secluded. ocean view, \Valk
to schools, beach & stores.
499-3140.
SCHOOL Bdrm. Me<lltt . ho .... Sep. ENGlUND
SQUEEKY Q.EAN remodel-dining room. ·$99,950. ~~~~~~~~~~~~11~ -!~ ea-1Jiroo-.ir,g1ill<Mn•""'" 19 ,,,.,._ ·-CON'l'EMP..O ___ --REAL-ESTAT --$39,951'.l. Submit all offen . Cost• Meu I~ the name of this _mt>dcl. & 318 ntALIA --·-
BKR. 557-4130. 1t features a gra~Kllll s1?e ::::..:.:=°"'=~~==
BUSINESS IS GOOD, Wide eotryway, rear oncnted li•· DREAM
NEED SUPER '. mg m-., bdght & cheerful COTIAGE o~ I kitch. & 3 nice bdnrui. Al-SALESMEN I . r-·: • Lrnctive price of $31.750 in-.is waiting for you: 1-ccV=E"'R"Y.,.-SCA-RCE '~ hf'n you !lC't' this ~at hoy eludes the Ind & lls location privacy & disti!CI charm,
•n. Costa M~ on 11~ 72 foot .nr. UnlVM":sily Parle Shop-\Vith this 3 bdrin., 2 ba!h
HONEST \TO GOSH -TRI· 1o.ide lot, you II ~ rooin for pl~ Center means it \.\'On't home. close to school, shop-
p L E X FIXER-UPPER. the boat and k1tl"I, too. It last long. ping & beach. Large side
p r I m e locatlon. Make has 3 bedroo!'"s ruid a large yarn, fenced in back .. ard , • ., 000 covered patio a n.-1 owner ~ money hctt . ....,, · may go G.I. At $25.SOO trs a with slorybook garden. Call
-
\\<hale of a buy. Don't watt :i3,500~bruster. 0 n I y
_ ~-... too long. 646-71.tt.
Yr, tw,~1"'• ~II ~THE RKAL VO 1,,,,,_
IEW 'ES'lATICRS "SINCE 1961" .,,/TO~u,,,I/
$SNS,750 -, -:f_ h OF<N 'TL •PM )SI W<'Stocn """k Bldg. REAL ESTATE ewpor D9AC Cntvenlty Parle, Irvine · 1190 Gletineyre St.'
Beautllu1 custom hullt ~!11e EASTSIDE -$29 950 Days 552·7000 Ni9ht1 49-1-9473 S49-0316
' I ' I I .
: I " I I ! I I
·-· --I I 1•1illi11'
4 BEDROOMS
FAMILY ROOM
POOL
(banning custom b u i I t
h<lme, dining rm., large
family rm., 2~~ bath&.
Modem bltn I.stand kitchen,
bltn. deep freeze. Beautiful-
ly deool'ated le landscaped
& a covered patio beside a
sparkling pool. $5%,500.
CALL Ci) 646·2414
'li'--11 AL TY
Ne•r Ne•p•rt P••t Offh:•
4 bedrooms, 3 ~~hs,n dinin~ Country si1.e yard, deep ~ag/•.==·==·=====~ Lido Isle
room, huge l_amll) ri ' par l'fl>tg, corner stone firepl, li . ---------HARBOR VIEW HOME like yard, bak. ~rral. t.iet1ut dee. Sparkling bltins CRAMPED for lpiice? * CHOICE *
& double detached garage. Thi& 5 bdrni., 3 bath home Is N d C L Hard-to-lind 3 BR, 2 BA, avail. tor $66.SOO. It'll highly or orner ot horn~ al this price. Call upgraded, has patios & 5 Bdrms .. 3~ baths plus din Sl"I? tlilil great family home!
5 BEDROOMS &. 3 BATHS TARBELL
Mobile Homes
For Sale 125
Mutor Home Rentals
SALES &. LEASING
full .service faCillty
Damar MDtlr Hines
•
531-6800
FURNISHED nioblle home 2
Br, 1 ~ 'Ba nr Beach & goU
<.'Ourse, Adult park. No pets.
536-1706.
GOLD Medal 24xiiO 2 br, 2 ba
+ den, porch xtras, nr fwy
& shops, reduced $3500. prln
only H.B. Adil Pk. ~7.
8'x42', awning, ftlrniture.
Adlt pk cloae in C.?11.
557~ or ~5266.
homes on II Jot. Live . ~ • * HAPPINESS* * i~ enjoying your friends. in one, rent the others faJnily 111111 "Pelf' 'N" Till ie-'"
to ~y your rent. Only Houses Futnished 300 12 of home, 1 BR. npl, crpts,
100!. down • owner will dl'!ffl, kilcill rurnisht.'<I, yrti .-.;, carry 11 second T.D. Balboa Island patio. 2-10 Flov.oer.
Older couple headlnv l·F_V_RN __ 4_B_R_._Ba_y_!ro-,.-.-S3.i0-.-. 2 Br .. 1 ha. Nice b.>usc, yard,
for · ftMrt, must sell. Winter. 642-1670 Day 5 , gar. Stove. $195 m o.
962·5511 BKR. · So48-8647 Eves/wknds. 64&-9303, Dick or Jerry.
Income Property 166 Balboa Penin1ul11 Fountain Valley ~c..:...:=c:~~~-1 -~~~-'-~~1
1'AX SHELTER
50 UNITS
1639 M
32 UNITS
$3$ ~1
15~ do1o.•n .. Westside C.l\t.
FOR INVESTOR
GOOD MGMENT
SNe/Exchange Up.
673·5Zll, 673--7610, &la-2379
CN'llr/Brk
INVESTORS
TWO 4-PLEXES, xlnt return,
only $47,500. each. $4750.
down. calf 842J.il8, •a• 111n Bell.ch Dlvd., l·l.B.
OCEANFRONT 2 BR
w/garage &. patio. Util. JXI.
$195. To June 15th. ~1632
Cost• Men
Q U I ET nel1,'1lbor hood ·
SC::(1an lte J BDRM., 1 BATH,
FURNISHEJ).man o D I y .
Ealitsitlc:. 646-3928/673-4577.
Huntington Bach
4 BR, 21.l baths, ram rm.,
frplc., bllns, incl cls.hwshr.
$285 mo. 968-~.
Huntington Beach
IMMED. OCCUPANCY
Nl'\V 3 Br $25(). mo.
Dbl garai.:c. dshwshr
334 Portland Circle, ~l.B.
5u.a1u
IA1alk to wlll(e1·, sngls -Bach I ~~""~""~'!:"!~~~I
$90. Also $110 sngls. Util pd. 3 BR. xlnt cond, 2 Ba .. Fully
Rent..,A..Houte 979-8430 crpf"d Jr drp'd Executive.
l19UM S..ch nei.'(hborhood. Walk to 3 schls. ~~ nil. to (X.'ean. S300
2 BR, full yard, 6 blks Crom n10. Im!. 968-5056.
ocean. Assume lease in1· 3 BH, I bath, $215. mo
med. Jhru July 1. 1-2 ! Vacanl, cau Arlene at
chlldren ok, no p e I s .
1
Hon1cflnclers Riiy 89'.t-4477
$250/mo. $100 dep. Ref's. & eves 84'1-5.198.
497-2843. 2 BR, shag, drps, bltn ~-
Newport Bffc:h Lge fenced yd, dbl garq:e,
OCEAN FRONT Pa-ef~r mature cpl. $210.
nlO. 673--0618; 962-447L
545-8424. SOUTH COAST decking & a great greenbe:lt rm. plus lge. !IWld.eck. 1 a-famUy rm .• sunken 2955 Harbor, Costa ~lesa REALTIJRS . ......... $'19 500 -..g.. 600 Blk \\I, Oceaniront. Attr. I -'='-"==..o:~-;--1 -"'""'"'-'~'.:.· -----locatiOn. See lh1s one!.........,.! LIDO REAL TY living rm., forma1 dbtb1g • 3 BR. 2 ha. furnished. Year-
NEW BEACH DUPLEXES
Deluxe 4 bdrm up. 3 bdnn
down. Various Newport
Beach locations. Pr 1 c e d
from $77 ,000 . Don
Thompaon, Bkr. 646-7414 or
64tH);l2.
.f Br. Condo. Crpts, drps,
bltns, refrig, pool &. clubhse.
$22.i. 548-1405.
Custom Duplex Mesa Verd• i"· red h·111 . -33-17~y~;·_;_jc1o_:i._7300_N_''_'*·~S.~ac-h_ ;::: : ~f.tire~:ed we~ ~_!!tat,,' I r-.i EASTSIDE. 4 ~x, 2 BR ~leLGRnlorovRL~ On large k>t -Choice l...ocation. lst time on , . landsca~. $$$of extras. _,._, . ~ units. $5!ll per Income. 161
.... , .. 1th room to expand niaritet. 3 large bedroorps Fee land $74,950 644--0777 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~jjij;j j~~ooo~rtl80~.,...~~"'g"~~l~ll~Al>~l~: R~~~~rJ~~~ If.! lilk. to ocean. $69,500. Large Jiving & formal dln-Mes• Verde • Bob Obon, · \VATEff.FiONT • PIER &
George Williamson ing. 2 fireplace. Lu s h REALTY 1---------__ H_A_R_B_O_R_V_l_E_W __ Acre1199 for sale TSO 18 UNITS, BeUtkl\\,er. $185 M. FWAT -3 BR, formal din-
Re•ltor carpeting & draperies. Huge Univ, Park Center, Irvine FLEXIBLE 3 BR, 2 ba -sell, Save SJ5,000. Owner moveJ. ing rm, 2 baths, wJw crpt.,
3 BR Hou!le, 2% Blks. Ocean.
Ju.st redec, Coup.lei only
$235. mo. 968-1802 a.ft 3: 30
3 BR, 2 BA, bllroi. 5229. per
mo. Childn!n & pets OK.
AGT. 962-Wn/546-11103.
* 548-6570 * covered pa~io~Attractively Call Anyfune, &tJ--082{! lite or -option. J. Locken. HOMES SJC s.t x gross. TI41842-JG70. firepl., dbl garage. Yearly
--",,==="°'--·1 I a" tl s c a r d . Broker, Office hounl 8 AM to 6 PM Bl!'atty, Rltr, 83&-634l,eves. 2 BR + conv den. 2 full bas. lnclutffi•I Pr-rty l6I lease only. FurnW\ed $500 f ,l;;rv;;;;in;;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~j ENJOY THE 5."17-7398. _ ...... ..., ...... ..,,,..,.I N rt•--h Country 8l7.e kitchen , Ho.,e Country _,..,. mo. Unfurn. $450 mo. No
HAPPY HOLIDAYS RACQUET Club 2 story 4 Br, ewpo -c Din-rm, Liv nn w/frplc & pets. Pete BarTett Realty. SEE 'PE:l'E 'N TILLIE" 2 Houses 3 Ba, tam rm, formal dining vaulted -111...... Luxurious San Juan Capi.straM ~ acre · * SAN DI EGO * 642-435.3.
th HARBOR View H o m e 1 ' ... ~... estates. 10 acres. Entire bl..i.. !l2S 000 D ;8 JL--I I d L Bo only $32,000 nn. tUe roof, huge master pul hf 2 BR + carpets thru out. ExteMive p......,....rty ia b U'i 1dab 1 e. lnd~trial ''6· • n. NEWPORT Heights area. 2 ; a -s an Xln't rentals or liVt" in 1. suite. Owner._ ?rin. only. ~n. ~U ~~ tmmed . patio, Land!lcaped. By Own· Q;rllie alopea with view of Total $506.000. Prlmt Joe. bedroom, 1 bath, garden
IF yoo like qldePJ& chnrmlng {Rent the other) 2 BR each. $44,300. 832-7059 Qceup. Fee land. Open 1-5 er, A.8klng $54,500. 644-6973 valley. This borie CDUntry 20,$)0 Sq. F't. Triple net furnished lease only $275.
bomes this 3 Br, l 'il Ba is .Private rants. see first-at Turt!• Rock·Broadmoor daily. 2024 Port Provence BRING 'CHE KIDS property bas room for 22 lease. Prine. only& o",,@ no sma1t children, or pets. I' for you . Lrg rrns It dos. 428 Ham!1lt?n st .. then caU: No. 4 play, By ov.'ner. 833-2389 Place. 644-6249 aftei:noons. Near the bea&i. Charming s homes and ready tor ~~clei ~g·r, Calx92625. '. BRK. 640-0020.
Polll. el(pllll. l blk to bay. 642-lOOO if interested. L• un• Beich TRIPLEX BR. 3 ba., den, formal din--buildipg Or hold ftlr in-\Valk to Water, SUO. Also
Pl furn. Sll.500 Owner * OPEN ROUSE DAILY * 1;;;;9;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Ing. Used hl;ic::k accents. vesin\ent. 3 ¥room cider Rul Estate C.i\I. i\lob, 5115. Also Beach
673-1488. U AM to 4 PM only t• JN~h~8!r'~ BR~=£ ---GEMM---home on p1:operty. Price Exchange 182 $125. ALL UTIL PD.
Coron• del Mar EAJ~,~~~~ia,2Cb1'i. I IRVINE COVE lot. "Green Belt," Won't 1610 w. Coasl llwy., NB s~~~~ION BEAUT lri-le\'CI !!'<~home. R1nt-A·Hou1• 9794430 ' ' 1 · " 1 r. a, poo • last! $48,500 Bk.r, 6~156-REALTORS 642-t623 3 BR. ii\' nn, fain rn1, din Newport l1l•nd FOR PEOPLE frp c;-cu.st b I, cpls, drps, 0c V ' r.-~ Sch bltns, tel calls 10 am-8 pm ••n iew Duplnes near the ocean FINESl' A most beauUfu1 •...,. JIRAL rm. 2~1: ba. Best Htjj:
WHO ENJOY lo dn, $39,500. Ownr 642-8.110 114 Riviera Way Miles I.anon, Realtor home on the waterfront Slip ~ ._ klcation. Trade for sintllar NE\VPORT 18tand. Secluded
Laguna Beach * 673-8563 *: toe ---L :,..-w w. San Fernando Valley or 1 Br house. Bayfront pier & FINE THINGS B~Owncr -3 1~.l~~ OpenHouseSunl-5 N rt Betch :n.60~nboa~~~tl&eBeac~: -~-..!! -Manhattan Sch area . ~ierC~~· $225 mo.
2 BR. 2 Ba. Air/cone! .•• S265
3 BR. 2 Ba. alr /cond •• $285
3 BR. 2 Ba. a..ir/cond .•• S31D
3 BR. 'l ba. Atrium ••• , SJ«>
3 BR. 2 Ba. Atrium •••• S365
6 BR. 3 Ba. lam. rm .•• $4751
'1.l11h ~PPliil .
-::.. ' -1lP11 liur
"SINCE 1946"
1st \Vestern Bank Bldg.
Univenity Parle, Irvine ,
Doys 552-7000 Nights
nu. Corona de! Mat home szE,1::::. ~.;:';,. 833-llro; 3400 Sq. ft. of ;,,.,.11.,. beao· •WwApoLK TO BEACH Owner. =-. TIME FOR R96H665.I E I II W 1~ 114 HouMs Unfum. 305 features a penoramk: view eves oo-p12. ty . rich smooth Del P!JtO, 2 HOUSES $45,008 FOR ACTION H s II •n -_________ 14i,s BR. 2 bo, Univ Park oU
of the ocean and Bay. BY owner -The largest, .!!08.ring cathedrnl ceilings It ... pools A: tennis from this On 25 x 95 ft R-2 }Ot, • • • * ft •-L C h * Oaner1I CUiver ··nr. Avail Jan. L Spa~ 4 t>ecLr:oom home In nicest, I east expensive, glass galore to lush green 4 BR. 'l~ ba., lge. llv. rm.. l~ Blka to ocean on 29th St. DAILY PILOT TllKA GS 1---------633-~ ext !!6 wkdya:
mave-1n cond1t!'>n w Ith ~ngl-sly 5 BR hm in l'\o1esa grass. 3 BR &. Den. bit-i n k:itch. with dining OM<i'ER, 67M875. WU! buy your property. All LANDLORDS' o'""-0:-°='93'-'l.c• "S.~•=•=-o'""='"·c_~~ I
modern convenienc::et1 and de) Mar $38 500 54~1857 atta. $42,500. l0o='-n7•1~.,'-' . ..,'-"",,.-"-c.t"he--s"01,.-p·! WANT AD cash within 12 \11'1. Call .. SHARP :l BR, 'l BA, Gll"l'IMI
older charm. Sparkling pool, . ' . . 145 r•-····-·' Doll CAYWOOD REAL TY .. • We S"""'lailze In Nev......,..rt new. GT-ca l loc. near pa'k.
f-la·•. $1~,ooo. • .... BY owner _ 5 BR, 2~'-be.. ,....,__,.... a1-s ..., • "List" It In classlued, Ship CALL 642•5671 ~-~ ""' nu ...., ~,. .,.. * •••1290 * t ~-"-··Ill!••~ .,... Beach e Corona del M1.r e m3/Mo. Call Larry or r,:intmmlt only. Ca 11 Needs work. U450 dn. o:=:;:;:;::;:-===;;;:;=:;;..C:::"=~=~'"=~==;:;·~==~·=~..:O==::;;:;====::;;:;= ·~ ~ ~•-um E Charlotte R L-I:: Laguna. Our Rental Ser-Dorolhy, 5'16-:-iSSO.
73--8550. M&-9™ . .,....,... ...... v e ~: RA!altor Sin~ 1~,.. I vlN"'v111 FREE to Yoo ! Try BRAND nu 3BR. 7BA. ~ialTHR RRAL~ $24,500 Cottage In the trees, 2 Please Call: 644-ll50 C.t?Q-0 if\1L .C _ /)"C li:4hQ.• NU.ViEw RENTALS ~~;-n~;e·1e~~ot c~I x'R:1• 9-:&Si~1t&A8 ~; .. 1~~69ri&-~ ~l"""'l~~~~~!',..9 P\!;;1 J.'ot.J ~).. ~ IJ<J•p 6n..mcl or f!M-3248 83.1--0719 ORN '' •PM <>::y• J<m. OCEANFRON-r-T' p / L It B / / h / BROKERS INC. ~lrv-l~n-e ______ , MESA d•I Mar 3 Br, Pool COMMU TY n• UIZ • wifn # 9 uj #· n C uc/r • HOUSE + APT. sb:e lot. $33,950. By cwner. NI 962-1151
South of llwy.; rem<ldeled 'l 2869 El Rio Circle. LGE. family home, ocean-Q R.otron99 lt1ton of th• 2 BR. 1 \, b!l .• -.. s.2251126.'i
bdrm. houte wfelec. blt·ln D•M Point front neighborhood. 5 Bft., 3 ~IW! 1ero....w.d words 'b.
kitchen, plus a modern 'l ba., I-luee living rm . , low to fOfm four simple ,
bdrm. apt. o\lt"l' the garage, FOR SALE by Owner fan · w/(rple. Formal din rm . H E 8 T 0 D
leued at $250 month to help ta.Uc view. 4 an .• 2 DA. Lge. v.-ell equipl>@d kll<:hen,
PfL)' the ow.rhead. Priced to tarn rm, w/w cpt, bllns, ce-ntnlly IOM1.ted. R«:rea·
sell at $64.500. frplc. Lndacpd A new'" tion rm. Over 3.000 IQ. ft. on
IONFS REALlYINC. ......
(714) 873-9210
v one level, aw'l'OUnded by decorated. Clotie to schools, nice garden A patio areu.
Churehta &: be a c b e ' • A very tuncUona.1, well
49341511, for awl planned home. Room for
Huntlngllo~ BNch pooL 192.500. *" 499-2800 * $23,990 3 BR ~
Slw.'P ..t11~ ~. Fill ~~
la In the 11.lr and leave1 are _... .. .._...°"'""' l-~M~U~S"'T"'""'S'"E"L"'"l l.--J e.orywhert, ....,~ ·qW<Jnt. • l"reshly painted., A oeUer Oceen VIOw -"8,fllO $7,500 DOWN Mys 11tll with all terma or Lft.rac i..$t31. t 'BR A: den on
tins <1rte loo many bof'n(!I! aubmlt $3.500 00\vn and take 111; Jots. Slldlnt doors from
I SYLIK 11
I I ,. I I I ,.
I RE H I M I ~· ' 1--.-1 -.-1 -..1,-.-1 --i Coiendor sc/01man• "Th/1 is
•· -"'· -"'· -'-· --'·'-~ o rore calendar. It features a
I lplctvreofaglrlweorlng-." C 0 Y D U L ,
1-.,.--,--.,,,-,-..--.---i 0 Campi.,. ... "'""'!~~.~ • I I~ I I I by rnu,. .... _ -· ---. . . "'°" d9YtloP ll"Oftl ... No. 3 MilO'lll'. 4 Bdrm., pool, ocean A: can· owi:r -..itA k>&n. w 11 h den 10 t\IDdeck. Bltn., l1land
)'Oil view•, 40 ft. llvtna rm., J>l\)'mCntt of '19-t We'll type kltch. Ca.rPtttni, lovel,y pat.kit. Cmn~ ttt, tbow It to }'OU. df'•!SCJ. No betti!r buy l11 f9 PRINT NUMBERED l ETTERS
open Sun. P.M, 'n ' all lhe "villaJc." IN THfSE SQUARE
'15 ROCKFORD ,.D. Ml!»ION nEALTY 4Jl4.m!I
University Re•lty Vacanclea COit money! Rlnt • ~.f i=lER: LETTERS TO
3001 £. Cit. H'wy. 673-6510 your houH, arit.!.' 110N
!!<lb lhe 0(6 1tott. Buy tho ll>•llon • -bldg., tlc. lhru •.bi.11y"1l<>t SClfA~ClTS ~SWERS IN CLASSIFICATION BOO -"""· °""" Ewo Cluslllod Ad. -'-------------------------
'I
• '
PRIVATE party wantit small
home w/ineomc unltJ In
OJronA. dc1 Mar. In area
Dee. 23-30. \Vrile R.8 .Scott,
General Delivery, Loa 4aW.tt1'COITAMEIA AltOI, Ca. 94022; 1408)
73H8T1. NEAR SOUTH COAST l ~~~~~~~~l ·Pl..AZA 4 bednn & I ; ] ['Al lam, bltins, enclosed
. ~ patio. $255. per mo . Buy, rent or lease w/
option. Herltage, Real--
2 BR. 2 B..1. .. ......... $300
3 BR. :! ba .... -........ S!l25
4 Rlt 2 00.. Broo.cl1noor S38b
<'\ BfL 2 ha. h1111 rtn , •. , $400
ired hill
REALTY
Uni\'. Park Center, Irvlnc
'Call Any!lme. S.U.M:20 omce hours s 1\M. to 8 PM Buslneu tors. IHG-ll51
Opportunity 200 EASTBLUFF 3 BDRM. 2'o BA, """''mt. '
LAUNDROMA.T St.pe.rate hou-te, U n u 11 u a I $300. mo. V!I= m.
W
"'
D F luff lnra1t 4 b(.'droon1 <tr 3 & den. ,----,"r-~=.~---• • Id ry, - ' Fanilly room plus large for· I La9un1 Buch -Fo typ, l11undry mAI din\111 room. Complete & c ... l'ti"I MrYiee, Co-privacy With enC'lol!C<I rear 3 BR, 2 BA. 1 $t(iry, 180
rona del Mar on c .. 1t and lront :y.(1.1'(1.s. Love:b' d~ vk'w. $335 . nl(). lit
H $22 • Includes garden. Ava.liable Ocetmbtr Met last.~. 613-l&U. .1fY~1.;,,..\1. PETE &,r:~~~ G ''h. L•rn• Niguel
BARllETT lllAL TY lelboe lslend . YEAIU.Y 1 ..... NEW 2 8!z..! * '42-4US * --·-· ... · Ba. on Coll Coo,.,., ....,
A"" daY Is Ille BEST DAY lo FOR 1 .... chlJ'mlng Balbo& mo. Call Im-ml.
run an ad1 Oon't dela.Y. • l•land boult, ma~ ettrai Dally Pilot Wan\ Ada mwe
.<:311 toc!y 64~ ~. m-:m• bergaint cam. -
•• .. II
t
2 DAILY PUHi
(
1~!~-~~-~J~~~-~~-~~~~E~~~~-~l~~l~-~-~·~·~·~l ~;1 ~r -~-~-~~-~l~~!~·~-~~-~1~~1--~1~1-~~-1 ~1 -~~-1~
H_.,.._,_._, _u_n1u_m_. __ :io_s.1.D_u_p_l•_•_•_•_U_n_fu_rn. __ 3_50 Apt. Unfurn. 365A£t. Unlurn. 365Ap _,_t_._U_llf....;..ur_n. ______ 365;.;.;..Afl=·-Un;.;.;.fw;.;.;.,.,..,·._--'116.;..65;..1.A.,.f'!_·_u_n_fur_n. ___ 365_ A'it";,,. 01-Unfurn. 370 ~;,,. or Unfum. 3711 1_M_._,._,1_o_n_Vl~•~lo ___ ~l !~~u~n~t~lnvton~~~Be;;..,~h~~~1 iGe~n~•;r•;l;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii;Ge~n•~r~•~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ;N;•;wpo;:;;rt~Be~ec~h~;;;-~N~,.~·~'JMl;;rt;;l~1~1~c;h;;;;i;ii Huntl,..ton e.ach
2 UR. I BA. fun hom• in o..I~ WHY PARK NEWPORTIRS l-2-BD_R_M_,._d,-twoo-a-pt-, pool-,-,llo-::=:.:.;:=---....... :-'::=:=====I Joolh\lh1 w/vlt'w. h.tichal'I IMMED. OCCUPANCY El CORDOVA APTS. -atlftlen bun&alow w/frp\c.
M. M0<\ooll Bier 58&-3650 Now 3 Br .,,., 12!0. ""'· From ,145 STAY HOME ON Adult .. $210. 846-02S9.
N t Be h Dbl garagt, dllhwllhr ,. WALK t J BR, '" •wpor ac 334 J>orlln.nd Circle, H.B. 1 & 2 Bedrooms 0 oc.u.n. new..,.
THE BLUFFS 5 •• •1u o· h h Sh c t· w lk in c 1 WllKINDS. dee opi.. d..,., ....... -is \vas er • ag arpe ing · a · os-Con!ider dtll.d 536-Q5.S.
CAREFREE LIVING !:'!.wport B .. ch
ets, Forced Air Heat • Extra Large Rooms · WOULDN'T YOU? !(!NG-SIZE At1'ru:tlw 1 er. Beautiful Game Room · 1-leated Pool • BBQ's--Bit-inf. OrnJ)t's. Ca1:pc11.
Enclosed Garages. Quiet surroundi':fts and $130. 847-5384 .
I lO •• · (N H bo & H · to St) It's all be"' for you to enjoy Seturdays and CE 2 c ose ~.opping. r ar r am n S d d all k 1 NI er. CrJ>J>, """'· Adult LJ.,ing. No Pets. un ays an wee Ong, too. range, OYen. gar. 1'o pets.
. IN NF;\VPQRT'S \'!'.:.Aft round beach t'l"n tnl
A\VARD-\\IJNNJNG 3BR illJp!t;x. 1 blk fron1
20n Chorle St., Cost• Me1a 642-4470 $750,000 health spa 7 swimming pool s, 7 light. 1140/mo. 98><522.
VILLA MARSEILLES ed tennis courts, bicycle trails, putting green,
COJ\t :\IUN ITY lK"ach. $300 nm, 673-54TI. * 3 BR, 2 Ba. tri·lrvt l S350 Westminster
• 3 BR, rlen, :l·~ly $400 ,.---------
• <I BR, 2i., be. vacant $"25 LOV'EL '\' 2 BR, blt.J~. ,·rpt!!,
• 3 Bil, 2 l>u . Vlt'Y.' S500 drps, a:ar, lndry. children
• 3 BR , 21 ~ ba.~"New" $525 wetcon1e $150. SJ0 -696 3 * l BR, 2~ ba., t'!ustom $.525 530-2003.
Furn, •v•ll. to $600 Mo. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
Short or long term {(~ I Apwunentt tor Rent
[fist t Y J3i:if ,_A~p_t•_· _Fu_._._. ___ 360_,
if':') r eall)' Balboa Island ..... ;
z,u4 Vista dcl Ol'O I Lrg. master bcdroon1, u!ll
SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. shulfleboard, croquet. ·Spacious lunlor l's
Furnished & Unfurnished from $174.50 mon!hly, plus 1 or ~bedroom
Adult Living plans and 2-story town houses with 2 or 3 bed·
Dishwasher col or coordinated appliances rooms. All with electric kitchens, r,rJvate baJ.
Plush shag carpet . mirrored wardrobe doors· cony or patio, carpeting, draper es. Subter·
indirect lighti ng in kitchen . breakfast bar . ranean parking, elevators, optional maid ser·
huge private fenced patio . pl ush landscap-vice. Gourmet food matket, ·dry .cleaner,
ing • brl~k Bar-be-Ques . large heated pools beauty salon on grounds. See beeutifuJJy fur·
& lanai. Air conditioning. njshed models today,~a.m. ·6 p.m. Other
3101 So. Bristol St., Santa An• 5574200 times by a pointment. Just n h of Fashion
COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. Island at ~ J oaquin Hills
MANAGING AGENT Road. '"""°" Beaeh pd. Su"'1..,k. Wuhrm. I ear 1!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!1!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!"""!!!!!!!!!1"11!!!!!!!11!!!!!!1!!!!!!1!!!!!!~ PAR NEWPORT T NTS &14-1133 ANYTIM E gW". '"""'· NeW"ly """" APAR ME
EASTBLUFF ''early lease. $ 2 o o I mo .1A _ _,p_ts_._F_u_r_n_. ____ 360_ Apt. Unfurn. 365 on the bay
Separate house. unus ·I 1 • 1-,UR.i'l". Balboa Costa Mew Corona del Mer lep~ (71•1 644-1900 for rental Information. large 4 bedroorn or 3 & en. --·--
Family roorn plus H/'11'.e . 67~~~10· \Vinter re& Furn •. Bach. & I Br. Ex· SPAC. duplex, 4 BR, 2~ BA, ~.tpf: Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365
formal dining room. Com· . 1 n II I 2110 scp <ijning, clOlle lo tich. ten-
't · 'th cl BAY 1 B f Cl cep 10 • Y nc•. ,,,·,. ~rk. 1 365/m o . Costa M• .. p ee privacy v.•1 en . r urn. ean. N t 81 d C M r· ----------rear and front yards. vely $140.. mo. Yrly. Adults. ewpor V ·• • · 64()...1001. I----------Cost• Mew
e VIEW e
OCEANFRONT
2 BR, 2 RA. Lease. :Pt1ature
Adu ltA, no Pilla. El@va tor to
bead!.. Pool, Security. 31.755
Coast Hwy .. S. Lagunn.
• 499-2835 •
Mes• Verde -----DELUXE 2 &: 3 Br, 2 Ba.
Encl gar, Sl.60 up. Rental ore., JOSS Mace Av c.
MG-1034.
Newport &.•ch
OCEAN an,I
HARBOR VIEW
''Where Congenlallty
Prev•lls1'
PIN!C .. ll!.IC LIVES UP TO ITS MAMI •. ;
Ovor 500 ''"' 1nd 10 1~1m1 cro1t1 • re\llltng Mtlill;. !'OOd deekl, to.wo p1illos, 11\ding glaaa doon, bring tho High S,.naa
Into your apacloua f. or !·bedroom ;arden 1p1rtment. f rom
$1155. Oocor1tor-tln1 furniture p1ck1oes 1v1ll1Dle.
230() ~1l,vl1w Rd. Jn Coste Mes11. Pnone: ~5·2300. ---------~-~------,-1 Apts., Apts.,
Fum. or Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370
garden. Available ember 673-9097 Avail Jan. t -;t. Huntington 8•ach SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 bath, $18.'l per mo. Lfoase. 2 BR, 1 2 BR. with or wlthout den k 1· N t $47 th BA Townhouse. Attached frplc. I* Ba. Encl patio, :>. o pe s. r mon . Balboa Peninsula v.·/frplc. Cdl\f lligh School gar + n""k'g •tall. Swim"< gar ~ 11~ &14 ~ Elegant ap,.rtmenta designed I :::O::C::C::::::=:".::::::::::::::::::::::=:::====;;;== with a Master's touch, 1u-
perll house security, exclu·
slve Versailles Club and
pool with unique Aqua bar.
fountains and formal gar.
dens. All part Of the South
Coa.<;t's finest apartmcnl
Call 673-6568 or 546-3688. S145 • $165 area. $275 Mo. Avail . 12/15 °~-I '°''=c-'-,'°""",-"'"7-'· =~~~~· =,-· ~ l\10DER.i~ . 3 BR , 2 Btt Npt Bache,lor & . 1 BR, patios. l·lal Pinchin Rllr. 6/a-4392 pool & grounds main. 3BR, 1 ~~ ba, 2 car gar, f111lc, .... 1 tenance. Crpts, d r p s . VIEW 2 Bedrooms Sch Duplc..x. to s h a r e .. p cs, priv. garages · *GREAT VIEW-2 BR.* Children weloome. Mesa nu crpt & drps, no pets,
2 Balh .. d l ' v.·/straigl\t mu!.~. F'rplc, Divided ba!h & lots o( Frplc, bltns, l!iUndecks, pool Verde North area of C.P.1. 548-8909 eves Ir wkends. • en, year y bl lns, d1;h.,.,·sr i ~ blk to closets. Ret: hall, pool & $210 up. 644-6344, 675-3535. 567-2678 or 838-1700. NU Luxuriou5 2BR. 1BA lease o! $375. Realtor, beach. SISO/mo. Yearly. pool tables, sa una bath!!'. wall/wall ,.;...t, o p e ~
644-7270 67:>-7877. &-e for yourself. 17301 2 BDRM. 2 car coverOO park-Mor• Room.Less Money beams, 642-9855 or G4M857.
Keelson Ln. !1 blk \V. or ng. Pool. $2'10 incld'g COME al ~ • S25 Wk .I: Up On Ocenn Beach, I hlk N. of Slater\. "'nter. Ph. 675-1727 · Sf'e ll re ga.\Jf:'h $125 ?-.fO., 2 Bclnns. Harbor View Home Lo.vely B;~1·h . I BR-Room! 842-7848 npl! Llke living In a home Near shopping. CJean. Maid Service. Pool -Ulll Pd SPACIOUS 2 Br., 2 Ba., open for $140/mo. 2 BR, 1% BA, Real ics B 4 BEDROOM -year~y e Call 675--8140 e MEN -Small beach hotel. beam, priv gar. Avl approx. 2 pr:l<i places, prlv patios & onom • kr. GT~
lease $475. mo. Avail· BEACH Apt. Beaut. closed Aptft $85/mo. R o o n1 s IX'c. 10. 673--0937, ST:>-4873. rec·areaa. Wll!On Gardens, 2 BR Crpts, drps, bllins,
able December 15th. porch & patio. 1 Br Uiil incl $21.50/wk. 53&-7a:56 Costa Mffl on \\'ilson St., W. of Harbor Private patio. Garage. Cou·
REALTOR, ~7270. Open house. 207 E. Balboa Sll5 -FURNISHED 2 Bdrm. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ---~&t&-~2846=---pie pref. S48J.i7ll.
OCEANFRONT Lg Blvd. Bnlboa 1 Near Stores. Clean. • ** l B •Yz b ** LRG 2 BR. l'A Ba stud.kl .1 4 &h,n ~\ rx'\V Realonomlcs, Bkr. 6Ta--6700 HARBOR GREENS r., e . Shag, bltins, pool. $100, utll fanu Y · ~rni, Corona del Mar IBR & t Large, newly decor. encl pd, 1978 Maple. 645-5647. Yrly. Dave 6 7 5-1 9 7 2 , • oc~an vu, gios wa er patio. bltns, crpt, drps, ·
49Hl6\j. 2 BR .. 1 BA. Util P<l. $200 f ~.~-$J~! 0 Pe r mo . CJ05e to everything. $170 NEW, quiet 2 Br., cpt, drps, ~ 1 .<w • ..._.,.,..,. Furnish.ct & 880 "-!ncd rear yrd, gar. ~ BE ACON BAY. 3 Br ., 3 ba. mo. Yearly. Mai ned Cp .1--------~-U fu I'--_. n10. ......nter St., CM. Call 2048-B Garden Ln. 54&-376.1.
all elec kit, fpl ; no pets All R<'f's. Avl now. fi75-361 3. Laguna Beach n rn s,~ aft 5:30 pm wkdys, all day
util pd. $~RMI o. lse.,~,.00 Costa Me,. !--=---------From $130 to $215 mo v.'knds, 642-8340. $~~f\.'lo~ 2 ~'~r crppe~·. H~o~peO;;iG~'~"~"~~ty~~2~'3;:,;"l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;:;;~j BACH nr bearh $l3a.$155. Col Ch•rmint 2 Br. $165
NE\VPORT S'hores 2 Br, den. NG tv. 143a N. Coast • Open Bachelors e 1 Bdrms Duplex. Newly r@d.tt. Encl call 64&-fi296.
2 Ba. pool & cluh privl. Nr. LIVE LIKE A Kl Eves. 6Th--4367, 49 4-2508 patio. AllachOO garage. D•M Point
Och. SJOO. 646-2'118. At Budget Prices! eves 2 Bdrms • 3 Bdrms Park·like garden sumiund·l-----·-----
3 BR. 3 be, pvt (,,'OUrS<" \'iC.11'. 1112 or 2 Full IS•th• l.ngs.:..-M .. a~~ adults o.nly. OCF~_ l!_lufl, 1 BR, w./w See to apprec. Avail now. J.~URNISI.JED · Lido-Isle 543~..., pt •-~1 t
UN'-uRNJSHED c S, .... ya, re.11· g, s ovc, 1545 n10. 5.17-9409. t.faster size bedrooms 1v/ VERY CLEAN a--··t -•· I d •= COZY Lido fi;\e back vie1v h' h •-'ling 1 t"'L" ... ..,.. w,...,, ryer. ~· nlo,
C
'
frpl 75 r 1g .,.,am ce1 s. arge w/2 .ni1-•-·-L-.J.--..... 496-5003 * Pools apt. p . c . I I to ,. . I .................. U<:l.ll1JU••.., •
San Clemente t 1 t .~::~ ~" .. w !~ ..... ~. Ha• •·-'i"•• & LOVELY ':::::...::;.:;;.;;'°";.;..----1* ENCLOSED beach. Responsib e a< u t .. vuu ........... '6 .... .,..,_~ uw 'U.''6 Hunti--BMch
•sEAUTIFUL 3 BR. 2 BA GARAGES only $195. Util inc. )Tiy. Convenient laundry area SHAG CARPETS. Vacant 1---'"'z..•--·-----
formal din., fam rm. enclsd Evening aft 6 & wknds off kitchen. Enclosed pa-now at $170 per mo. Call NEW APTS I
trium on Shorecliffs Golf * CONVENIENT 1'7673-<~~'"'~·.,...,~"""---Llos. 2 swin1ming pools, 1 "'""°'"'""''·~"'6-<.l"""='<l=. -==~ •• Coone' Lse $300 m o. TO ALL BEACllES Newport a.bh sauna, rQCrcution faclli-l:.'"XTRA LARGE 1 BR $155. HUNTINGTON ,.,.2013. FROM $1-40 MONTH-·~--~...,,,,~---""· sec,rity """"'· No Utils pd. Refri<. """'" opt. BEACH 4 BR, 2 ba., 2 car encl pets. drpi;, lltd Pool. Mature
S•nta Ana ADULTS PLEASE park'g. v.·/lndry. Avail. no\v. Adults. Infant ok,, no pets. 2 Bedroom, $14-'
V LL POMON 3 BR. 2 ha furnl..hed Steps to Models Open 10 til 1 pm \Valk 10 shops. l 8 8 7 All Utilities Po"td Houses Furn. or I A A ' · !"' .• Monrovia, 66-4267.
Unfurn. 310 PHONE 642·2015 3~~~~ ii~··:::::::::::: :~1 2100 Peterson Way, CM 2 BR. UJ>$lairs. bar, bltns. 'ii~~ W: =·s
(1760 Pomona Ave.} 2 BR, l Ba, Penin .. , .•. $250 nr Harbor Blvd & crpts, $165/mo. Utll PaJd. Covered Parldng We Have \Vl nter Rentals a..i 135 Albert P l. Call Air. Gar,--ultlng. c-WiU Take Students -•ms \Vhite (213) 595-4436 or aft 6 U9ll V'lr
Coron• del Mar
community.
I Bedroom/studios fron1 $195
2 Bedroon1 from $30;)
?tlodels open 9 A.l\1. til dusk
~~
ON THE BLUFFS
AT NEWPORT
~~~i~~wpo~~lv~l tu~~
above Pacific Coast H \.\')' J to
entrance. 900 Cagney Lane,
Newport B"ach. Ca. 92660.
Telephone: (714 ) 615-006()
* 2 WEEKS FREE *
Vista del-Mesa
ADULT GARDEN HO!'lfES
ffiVINE AVE. AT MESA
~1ove in w/deposits only
1 Br. SlliO 2 Br. S200
Day & Night Secur ity. Pool,
Fountaln,s. Rec. Bldg. v.•/
exercise rm. billiards, col· or TV. Ea. Apt. has dish-
washer, refrig, shag cpl , &
prt patkl or deek. 545-4855
Y Hrly·S.yh'ont
3 Lovely new unrurn. apts.
3 I:: 2 BR., 2 ba. each. Pier
I:: alip. Many extras. lmmed.
occupancy.
THE EXCITING
PALM MESA APTS.
FUN IN THE SUN!
Minutes to Newport Beach
Un believably large apts. Decorator furnis h-
ed Huge Pool. jacuzzi, electric built·i ns, shag
carpets, drapes, sauna & more!
ADULTS-NO PETS
SINGLES . . . . . . $1 SO
1 BDRMS •..... $160
2 BDRMS. . . . . . $180
Unfurnished Apts. Av•il•bl•
From $10 to $15 LESS.
YOU'RE RIGHT -
THEY'RE UNDERPRICED!
1561 MESA DR., COSTA MESA
5 blks. E. of Newport Blvd.
546-9860
Apt•.. I Apts.,
Furn. or Unfurn. 370 I Furn. or Unfurn.
Balboa Penin1ula ! Newport Beach
* NEW • :I BR. 2 Ba. 11vl now to June 30. Jo'rplc, bl•-
ins, dshwshr. S225/mo. 9'.l9
\\'. Balboa Blvd. \2131 ....1183. 2 ·BR. 3210 Seaview, 1 blk WEEKLY-MONTHLY Also ~anfronts Avail. 546_0370 pm, 96l--Jl72. venient to l•rge shop.
from big C.orona. Adults. ~executive Suites CAIL: 613-3663 .. THE GABLES" pll'lf center. Call: 673.J663 673-8086 Eves. Corona del Mar
Live
big Fum or Unfum . $350 or S300 2080 Newport Blvd. N Pe
per mo. Ofl 1 yr lcnllt'. Costa Mesa 2 Br. 1% Ba W/ pr. Adlts. the YILOLA "v·oRBA Po$Sl'S!lion Jan. 1. Owner. Crpts, drps, bltna, tncd yrd
'v.' ~3 .. 28""5252. 642·2611 H , y B d t? w1 patio. wir pd. """'~· "~ STUDIOS & 1 BR'S ow 5 our u 9 8 2437 Orange Ave No. D $160.
1,Ne"""-wpo'"'-'-rt_Be_a_c_h ____ 1• FREE Linens Great, when you get your HAPPINESS ls en j o y Jng 142~9622
LIDO Sand!! 3 Br. 2 Bn, e FREE Utilities money's worth at the Ven-your giftx of life, family, (So0: on ~~h 1Blblkvd. ~ Sand
$350 I I NEW 2 Bdrm f1ID1ished a pt dome. llandy location with '-'---'·, a tu"·ey d>'•-r ·-·! 1ego ,-• "'~· · uo::yon f""'IC, lge patio. · St?. e Full K tchen ..,"" fil i 5U .,...,,11.u:> ,.., ... "' ..,,.. Ed' to Sta k E t ·,. """" ~ mo annu ease. lots of nearby activities !or th~ antics of Wallor Mat-inger r • · 0 5600 River Av~ 646-1""" e Heated Pool IV B0 y Ne~t Bea0 h Malaga tum right) · .. -~.--· ... · the kids ... plus play and thau and carol Burnett In • · Westminster • Laundry Facllitlel> CRll SSG-4832 days <San pool area. Inside: "Pete 'N' Tlllle." Moderate Income :.:.::;:;.:=.:::.:.:.:..----e TV & maid serv avllll Bemardlno l or 8 8 3-2 9 4 3 * ,~ 1 1 Qwtlification
!urn A . · ,,_ aquare e<! l BR. ""'-, pn·v. patio. LUXURIOUSLY · e Phone Service l,,'c"='"run"°'"'"·~-===== * -Bedroo ~~" e L I br t I d " m11 '""w -ta. •-All elec. uxury ap . steal at $290. "·e \.>et, carve I--,-====":""""':-NEW 2 BEDROOMS B' ti Ing ·-.. , -•~ e Adul wood crystal chandelier, *30 WEEK & UP · · • * ig v room with Resp. adults only, n o t m~ wall. 2 BR. den e Studio & 1 BR Apts 2 baths, double garage fireplace children or pets. $125. • Dishwashers
892--7853 e TV & Maid Service Avail Yearly Le ase, $300. Yours, Uom $1!!5 •.. a new 548-1322. • Choice of l color schemes
e Phone Scr.-ice-Htd Pool 427 E. Say. A\'e., Balboa life at • Custom carpeting. Condominiums • Chii"'"" & Pet ·-!lo· .. 64.5-1160 THE VENDOME • AVAIL Nov.-2 Br, 1~ Ba, • Jacuzzi Unfurn. 320 ....... ""'" " retrig, b\tns, new Iha& crpt. • Heated pool
associated
AR OK £RS-REAL TORS
;02~ W Botboo 1:.1)0 )66)
ADULTS ONLY
PET OK
Deluxe 2 BR SUG
2 Baths. D ishwas h e r .
Fireplace. Ptivate patio.
Pool
3l3U Santa Ana Ave.
WESl'CUFF, :l bdrn1., 1~,
ba., townhoUSe. blt·ins. pvt.
patios, adu1ts only no pet.,.
Avail. Jan. l $225 per n10.
548-7533 I-_;;.:.;;.;.;.;;;.._____ 2376 Newport Blvd., CM $29.50 Per Wffk & Up. l SR, 1845 Anaheiol A\enue F'resh paint. Pool. No pets. e Dead-bolt locks 54ll1,~:>S orh&t&f>.3967 2 Bfld & bache~;'1 ·~WrM TV, Call Mrs. Phillips 540-{)781 _64"'>-4220'°"'==="""',..,.""'=· I ·Only $110 per mo. NEW.,, 2 BEDROOMS
UN morll up. mill scNrv., ..-..... ·B"1 " d N""e' DELUXE ** BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. BAHIA PUERTO 2 baths, dooble garage, Costa Med
MONTICELLO
. CONDO.
ADULT SECTION
:l BDRM., SPLIT-LEVEL
lMJ\fED. OCCUP.
$225. PER ~10.
644-7270 RLTR.
This ad good for $5 on ren t. 415 N. ewport v ·• · · ContemlV\...,'"" Garde A ts Y8'il'"' Lea•• 1~·. 646-9681. APARTMENTS ....... -.. n P · 2810 17th St .. H.B. Y ..... ....,, El Puerto Mesa Patios, frplc:, pool. ~ "'~" ~015 or ·-9535 427 •Y Ave Balboa l BR lower dui>lex • 1 blk to Alr Cornl • Frplc's · 3 Swim· $180. Ca.II 551--0302. ...,.,...., .....,.. · 645-146()'
1 BR's -$130 & UP beach. Yrly or winter $225 ming Pools . tlealth Spa • * MOVE IN TODAY *
U fu & F or M1<11 mo. 130 46th St. See Tennis Courts • Ga.tne and 2 BR, Cl'pU, drps, bltns; ~139 A MO. n rn. urn. -ll ..,__ lndry room on premises. ~ C H 0 I CE OCEANFRONT,
All Utiliti•s Peid Nov 24·26 or p h one Bi iard • ........,m. $155/mo. 646-6961 or Spac. 2 & 3 Br. in +plex. large 3 Br, 2 bath on
Pool & Recreation 213/28f>.4215. I BRl BLt·oFromFro$160 JOI: 646-1246 Several avail. ALL EX· Seuhore D[". \vftarage.
1959 M 1 A CM \VINTER Rental-1822 w. · "' en m $ e>;J TRAS. Pool. rec bldg. Kids F'place, forced air heat, E-SIDE 1 br, conv. den. ap e ve.. Balboa Blvd 3 Br 2 Ba MEDITERRANEAN 2 BR, c:pt!, drp&, bltns, quiet wek'Ome. From $13!1. See $450 yearly only, 673--3434 or
Frplc, bltrui, pool, rec. facil. Also garages for rent $250 mo til ·June is. Wil i neighbor hood, nr park & Mgr. 173TI Keelaon "B". 1 675'-33J2
$175 mo. 642-1550. BACHELOR apt, $13;)/mo. take students. Ph: mor n-VILLAGE shoppg $160 mo. Adults, no bllc W. of Beach Blvd. ott
I I + dep. Util pd. New shag jn..,,. .548---0279. pets. 675-1573 Bin". Slater. 968-1510 or 847-4260. SE.A.CLIFF l\lanor Apts. l rv M t' N r & ho • ~·=.~·7'~=""°'=--,=-2400 Harbor Blvd., C.?.f. l l40 2 b !3 BR. $143.50. Pool{ ~,,, crp g. r. rwy s Pg. ~ 3 $300 l ln41 557-8020 up spac r br I~ pa * FRESH AIR ~·•
NEW-w -•out S quar e 998 El Camino, Apt 1, CM. NEW Br. apt. . year y. RENTAL OF~CE pool, cpt/d11>. bltn, =· drps, bltn.a, garb. d spl. 1525 ., 54&-0451 Private party. D a)' !I · S' • 1996 M 1 Placentia Ave. Ask about townhouse. 2 Br & d1111, 2 · 64HJ667 or c v c n I n g s OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM ap e, No. I • • · 13 Walk 3 blocks to Beach our discount 548-2682.
Ba, over 1100 sq ft. CC"ntral UNIQUE opportunity for ma-61:>-0041. 2212 College, No. 5 .. 64&-073 Lrg 2 Ir: 3 BR. Apts. Newly '"=~--,~-~--
heating A: A1C. paid c::i ble lure gentlenian. Lge bed/lo1=B°'L"K"'-'"'•-"'bc-..,.-h-,-1...,.b-$135. I BR. Apt. w/ stove 1 decorated, w/w a-pis, dtps, BALBOA Penin Pt. 1 blk
TV. A: pool. Avail lll fiJ. silling rm., kit ., bath, pvl k\ds/pels OK 'ti]' July i:i: GIG ANTIC I BDfu\1. N!lrlg. $125/mo. See, TI7 w. ~· ~~ce~~non~:. ~ro~ ~o.~ri'~ rm.~~:
$245. mo. 14683 Golden Glen entr, ref§ reqd. $l~ mo. $l75. S46-407l You Bet \l's underprlced~ 181h St. No. A or call 536-l7ll adlts. Eves 6-9 pm or wknds,
551-2406. Util pd . E-8ide. 54&-63SS. · That's wh,y t apt .,.,.-on·11=646-6.19'='-='o."'='=.':c°'o.wc,laxU=::;·c__ "="""°"·~--~~-673-1194. FUR Leue-Avall lmmM. * •25 PER WEEK fc WINTER: Bach. $l25; 2 BR. fast Jong. Cpts, s, stove 2BR. stove. refrig. -••. DUPLEX·Immac. 2 Br. cov
B d ~ $275; 4 BR $275. Nr. beach -r tlo -d -t bl•-· WF..sTCLlf'F 2 BR I BA New 2 R: crpts. r-ps, & Up. Pool & maid service. ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 & re.frig. Lots of g n lawn. drpe & utll's. Adlt pk. pa • ,.,.w fPl!I, .... r • \Jiii, • -' =wse~ g~l1't~24~· Kitchens avail. Motel Tahili 2 BR on the Bay cpt drpd ;;:~~~a~~~on Ave'. (, =: 5 .5 7 -6 I 3 • or ~:.b\va~:· & L~~ ~d::no nu pe~:1 · A ~r:~li
' . . romer Harbor &. Victoria. rum or unturn.' yea°i-Jy ai Blk E. nf Newport Blvd. & LRG 2 Br $150 Car paid . .,~. manied cp1. l'°'l"n=-$1"'-'907-/~mo7'0-"'~'-,"""'8.~"'"'-o-
SllARP.1 '• Bt R .. 2BA 00, ndo 1 Br. furnished apt. includlng , ~l""='im"ioc,. 67i=&-~1~355~".--=~ 1 Blk So ol •••• " M \ · Dtl>s. (adu1Hi). $165. No pets. VERY nice 2 Br. Apt. Ym rly nr poo ennis cour s. utililies. Close in. N 01 ~ ' ~ ...... · stve, priv fncd yard, klds 842-3216 552-8389 or ~7226 children or peb. $110/mo. Apt. Unfurn. 365 642-8690. OK, no pelll, W, side, i t. Mi h f H U &1$2752-,,.,•Prl7 v11tc part,y. iDaY•
T •-·-Unf •35 "-it ••o-~ f S 00 Park~Like Surrounding '~"='~-71=78_._~--~-711 • nort o un ngton ..._... or ev e n n gs ownnvuse urn. a ...... .7t,,......,., at : pm. B•lbo• Penlnsul• , , Be.a.ch. $140. 2 BR. BltN, 1 :'67'iH641""-"'"-,.-==~~
H I I B h * SHADY ELMS -POOL * 1QU21ET& 3 DBERLAUXEPTS DlELUX eic~~ 1 BR. apt crptl, drpg, pool, play-yard. 2 BR.. Yearly. -$200fmo. ~
unt ng on HC e Adults Pool.aide $140 up OEl..\.P{E Duplex, 2 Br., l ~ · n 4-plex, .._._, lo South lndry facll &: carports. Cpl blk lO Ocean. pa 1 i 0 .
e Children next block Ba., mt-Im, car, drps, P..1 Patios * !ltd Pool c.oaat Center. Adltl,. no pet& &: 2 sml children olc-. No dul
NICE clean 2 B DRM rn E. 22nd St. CM 642-~ enclad gar frplc lnunclry Nr. Shop'g * Adults onJy nss. 557-5529 pell. Call 842-4004. ~~~ A ts, no pets. lownhouM!. l V. ba. bll.M, • N t" 000.1949 ~·-)""'" B•ch Apt• ··~ W/D, w/w crpf~ k drp11. FURN. 2 BR. Apt. Pool. m i. o pc s. _.... · ,u..,., " . . e TROPICAL fOOL e BRAND New Deluxe 2 BR NEW 3 BR, 2 ba.1h Duple)(,
SPACfOUS 2 BR.: beamed
ceil's. Pool. So. of ll\\·y.
$193.50 1'ton1h. Adults m '
pets. Broker 6"~1848 I
Costa Mesa from $140
LA MANCHA Oakwood is $1 million In BRANO NE\\' DELUXE UNITS recreation. Swim ming
Rent Now for your con-pools. Hea lth cl ubs.
struction allowance ()f 1 Saunas. Tennis c ourts.
month's 1'"ree Rent. I Bill iards. Indoor go!f dri'I•
l BEDROOJ\1 · S 1 BEDROO?.t & DEN 1ng range. and Volleyba!l.
2 BEDR00?-.1 Wh irlpool Baths. And lot;
3 BEDROOJ\I more. A reside nt tennis
From $lii pro and activities d irector
Pets Ac:ceptabJ~ I who plans free Sunday
Dish .... ·asher. E 11 c 1 0 s e rl brunches and barbecues. garage. S1vi n1ming Pool. I Bar·B-Qucll. Start ing as low as S140j
642-2007 T78 Scott Pl, c~t Singles. one a nd lwo ..
Fountain V•lley -1 bedrooms, furnis hed and
unfurnished. Sorry no
SHAKEWOOD children or pets. Models
Largest 2 BR's In town. 10349 open daily 10 lo 7.
Slater Ave. nr. Brookhurst
& SD Frn'Y, Fill. Valley. Oakwood
tTI4) 962-4481. e Priv. adul t
areas (familit?5 too!) e; Bnl-Garden Apartmenta anced ~wer kitchens e 4 Swlm'g Pools e Outdool' Newpo rt Beach
BBQ's. • Indlv. priv pa!io!I' Jrvloe and 16th
• Shag cl'pls. I 645-0550• 642·8170
Huntington Beach OCEA.N'FRONT .2BR. Blllnei
refrig, dck. carpeta, gar.
Sl25 yrly $250 to J uly 13.
&G-8908.
CASA MONTERREY
I & l BR. 2 BATHS
Furnished &. Unlurnishl'ld
All Uiili1ie11 Paid
e Channing Fl.replaces
e Spacious Rooms & Clo~ls
e Gym, Bllllards, Pool11.
• Putting Gl'eens
6551 Warn•r, Hntg Sch
847-1.526
I [ I~
Rooms 400
BR . .Cool beach pad • 1 or 2
guys. Kitch. Priv. $20. Wit
each. 2026 Meyer Pl .. C.M;
!Off 19th at .. McDona1ds".)
DIG rr!
SJSO. Tn 8Cf' call 962-8781. Close 10 lhops. Adu\ui:, 110 Coron• dtl Mar Martinique Apts. :l Br aludlo, l 'ii Ba, frpl, 11prl Condo. Near P.O. at \Varner Ground floor. 217 33rd St.
pell. Sl60/n1.J. '777 Sanh1. Ana Al'e., CA1 strcase. Gas &: wtr. pd. 145 &: ScuJpin. Pool privl. Incl. $275/rno. Yearly. 673-9558 I """"~"!!~I"'!~..,..,., Duplexes Unfurn. 350 194.1 Pomona. C.t.f. Mgr Apt l l:\ &46-55U E. 18th No. 9, 548-1168. In $230 rno. lcMc. See at BRAND NEW
A'ITR.AC qulcl nn 8t buth.
l'l'lOI prvll. Pvt resid. Nr
Bacli: Hay, CM. Bus or prof
v.•otiu111. SlOO/n10. fi46..8502.
DELUX prl entrance, ba,
maid 11ervtcc, no 1JmOkcrt.
Cosla ~1e.sa, 67 5-031 O\
!>1&-7197
C del M CORNER TRIPLEX· 2 Bt. ...__""! e BRAND NEW 2-Bedroom l&l·A COO Cirele) 84z..30.'ll. YEARL\': 4 Br. house; 2 Br.
orona " t'1v. 1mt<>. Furn 1165. ~ llle81i8Jl(J 21 Upper Apt. No pel> Adult• WALK TD BEACH ::i;Eo;; 'i:~#r U'i:-~~ry ~~~ Ail~I
SPAC ~~r., 2 811.,rllt\ bceohr ~j Sl50. 247 E. t8th St ~ M"'I• T\VO. 2 Bdrm ........ Sl85. ~.Ph: 548-lil28 fvell & New 1 & 2 Br, cpt/drpa, LRG 3 BR. 2 BA, tlrepl., Bache
1
t135or. to' &
11
!,B 's.
pr . ..,..-.,,an w, P v =~~·~~----Beautiful apta. w/prlvate ' dwhr, frpl. 316 1 6t h . bll Adi H H ~ "-'vi. $350 mo. Wkdya art 7, NEW l & 2 BR'1 fi'Om $190 to ""l>'o g ~•e -• ·~ * SHADY ELlt1S -POOL* 847-3957. 1 ns. ts, nr oag ttoap. Rid Pool.Ja••urzJ·Sau••• "'' ~1• N be h • ~ ON TEN ACR"".. ,~ s, a • ._ ' .,......, ' J250/mo, CAU. &U-4387. ..,,. """ 615-3203. ._. v. r. ac ~ s It· .c..> Lush gat'lkn Httlna". Adu 11, • Adult. Poo'8lde n40 up R• rea tlon Room I: More!
C I. u.~-1l4 E . ~ St., , Apta. furn./unfurn. Lease t E. 21 C e Cb11dr~n next blodc LRG 2BR, rmtt, new crpts, AduH " Only • No Pet• ot ~ 543--0137 n-i. _.,, lol ro pets. 1~ 11, .M. E.!:f bltil\5, Cose to beach. · ~ ....... c~ I ~··· pat · * 646-8666 * 177 22nd St., CM 60-3845 Adultg, no pets.. $150/l\fo. BRING IN THIS AD &
LG'E 2 en.. Nice & ~to:an. * COMPtETELY rumlahed ::1SeTe~ ~~r~:~ New VIII• P•ul• NEW 1 & 2 BR'afrom S170 to Ph: &0-0596orS0.1m. TIME FOR ASK ABOUT FREE ~ ~ privacy. W~ttr 1 BR. Apt. AdultA only. M • • A---H ) 2 2 -·'I 8 SlOO. Nr. beltch & shop'g. NEW dlx 2 ........ 1,. C;p,t, DECEMBER RENTI
pd. Adu lt& Nr &hop'I· ~125~/~m<>~-~l~33l;_.:_F~k>~w:"~·;-c=M=.,!l !a~eA!'!rl,hur~nr~~~~t!!'!!!wy~ f'a~·,i~~ ~lcor~{e !~L,.E37 •. 21th St., CM. drpl!, O!W bl'lna~'SJ.75. 218 lll992 1' .. lorlda s t. 347.M411
mo. nn Pl a c e n t "· ~7883. Sha~ t'pf/drps, paUo, "Mr'V~ K n o xv 1!1 e. 5 3 ~7633. QUICK CASH (\ii blk. w. ot Garfield
S48-0051. N1CE 1 br dpb:. Quiet. Scpr. ROO~IY 3 B~room. l btt.tJi. lk'tuli cell., garaa:et. LARGE :l BR! c~p\31 drpl!, .~"3&-"=2662."""--~~="""°-c-I and Beach Blvd.I
LAROE 2 BR. Dupkx, cpts. by garaget. t Adult 0\-tt ¥!. ground noor. $350 pr. month Fmm tl80 nr EstaneiA H 11Cnom. Older NEW lgt: 1 BR-dlihWJ.hr, HUNTINGTON C a r d c n s dnl.~_, ~lM, w a .h e N. No pet.I. 548-1011. = 1::0-~U: i!n:: 622 llo.mllton. C.M. pret. sm 67U1'5 evts. w&br/dryer hook.up. Nr THROUGH A Apl!r. Hell a t Bolaa. Chica.
dryer, t -lt~rage. 0 PLEASANT lower I Bl', pool, •·a•~ ·~ p nonth n -th. &-e MJ;r. Mr. & Mn. l·loban 2 BR. Adult1,~tt. BAY beAch. No petA'. $1 7 5. M&-132.l. Com .... re • Sec ,2!!tl. fli.a, ..,...., -'"Ult> peW. UUttU""' •ooA u · ........ ~ r 1 • Q(I MS-_.., MEADOWS 381 W "'"--8 ~ WE 2 BR. c0mpL ~. Monro;,\:~ ..... .H>O'• units nm to uerk A tenru1.1 --,~.,:;:;,,-:-:='=~~-• · _,......,, evea. what you're missing. Fr.
Prol cpl .., pol.C. __ !1_75 mo oall JlAll'IY S'IW560 Ao<. e NEWPORT e , _Bay_.__.S_t.~, CM,__._S<&-<I0'73.~-~ NEW ~ BR, 2 a.. lrplc. DAILY PILOT $llO .1:.;o. df. e, ts. 5flt6BZ3. 1 BR. Furn. Apt. Slll/mo. UNIQUE 28R, modem •pt, e APARTMENTS e 2 BR unlurn. Crpu, d:rpt, dahwsfuo, wshr/dryer hook~ DELUXE. Apt . prlv. pa1kl. ~ Jt, l'f • -No pell or children. Q) tunk~n t· rm OOOa.ii vu 2450 N~r1 BMt., CM ranae.lovt>n, rdril· .No pet&. up , Nr bt_te_'!· No pets. $m. MUliC, 8 pools sauna, tennU;,
'Jl;:;:Ntw I 8r Ea.stalde. Ctnttr SI., C.M. ~ W/W crp:~ dzi;., no dot:ft; 1 • 2 DR. Fum • unt. $14(f/mo. 90-1«;5. MEJ...3978" •~.... $100. Spa.~IOU• p (Jo 11 Ide
O'pta, ~v Yfd'?Q*HJ, ~. sunny 2 Wt, CAO, $150 $7l5 mo. Lea1e. 6~3281 Chlldttn's Sectton1. SPACIOUS 2 Br1 2 BA. nr. 2 BR ']"Owphou'M!, \Vasher/ WANT AD Sunptow $1~. 84&-0259.
E. JSth, ; f9f-l Yng married pttt. fnl1ln wkend' or tl.f't 6 pm. MUST SEEi rr. $128 achool•. 'hop'1 • tnvya. No dr)'tr. PaUo, frplc, bltln•. 1 BR., 1 b1k to neach. Shrur:
ROOMS $18 Wk up w/kll.
$30 1~·1c 1UJ a.pis. 2376 New-
port Blvd .. CM. 543-97111.
NICE rm .. E /slde CM. l<iC.,
privil. ~/month. MS-1967:
7~3 p.m. 673-0289.
BALBOA Pt nln. $80. Pvt ri;l
trance. Fnm rm 1&: 'J'V. No
sn1oking. STJ..44.19. ~
UV • ?ifONTJIL'I', 1 blk. 10
Beach. Call 673--6210 or
673--0410 ask tor Bud
e QUIET. ti()le 1n. For c<'l!Jt: gent~! employed rna.n. Oti
st. parldng. 646-1598.
Hot1l1, M!>tels 410
~1 patio; pttf couple ok. 646-D. 2 bedrooma ~h. Bltins. AU.. UT'ILl'MES PAID PtlJ. Sl&l/mo. m-0134. $185 mo. 962-6846. ~· ~ ll'llfr)o lac. SJ~:
1--r--=~·.-UlG. Oean 1 BR. Pool. ror c:tu'pl!tt it drape1 choice Cnll ~1039-2 BR, l '' BA. ~tudJo, llEAl1T. 2 Br. 2 Bl, dlx 642•567_8_ ~ >Ith · ~.
_...._ adWtJ O'Vt"l' l$. S12S utll pi!. ktenUon. ~11Ae ~ pr. Sell ldla llt'm1 now! Call $160/mO. S51 t\ W. fh SI, pooltlda Ill' bch. $155 low I\ «ocxl wut 8& la• lifOOd 1n-SrU kOe llmu , , • G-12-5673 ~ or 64$-3$94. n1nnrh. CAif 673..£155() RLTR. 64~ Now! CM. ~18 aft 5 pm -d(l(>. 2320 Florld1t. 536-3976. \.utment.
WEFJKL\• n 1cs • water~
Color 1V, Kltchenf, t blOI. to tM!ach. Newport ~adi
TraYeLodge, MH252. J
The f(lttelt dNw In thew~
.. ·• DAJJy Plk>t O•Wfteol
Ad. W-'""· ..
\ ' ' '
I •
Buy .a
er
to
Border
' . Bargain
' • • ·--·-•
F'rlday, Dtcembtr 15, 11)72 DAILV PIL~T ,J:J --_ .. _ [!JI,. ·-.. -11'J I -J[j]I .... -l[g) I ~=:~iiiiiiiiiiii.:;~:1::~=~=~~: I ,,_ __ ..... __ . P•inting & """"' Apt,., ....... ., """""' m 'l'urn .... Unfum.
Huntlft!!!! -h Huntlnpton S..Ch
HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FINEST
Spanish Country Estate LiYiAE
2 Acres. BeautUuJ park-like sutrotlndings.
Sunken Pool. Sparkling Spanish Fountains.
• Spacious Rooms • Separate Dining e Walk in Closets
• Home-like Kltcllens & Cabinets
l BDRM. Unfurn. '165. Furn. ,165.
2 BDRM. Unfurn. '165. Furn. '215.
TOWNHOUSE 2 BR,1¥..Ba., 1400 sq. IL
Unfurnished '20(). .
ALL UTILITIES FREE
Waik U> Huntington Center
Adults, No pets
IA QUINTA HERMOSA
16211 Porklldo L•no, H.B.
. 714: 847-5441
" (4 blks. So. of San Diego Frwy. on Beach,
1 blk. W. on Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane ).
;.._ 530 Fovnd (INO ads) 550 5t.':;~lonl 5751.-;._'_,.;...._"9-"-----l_P_•'-petr_r_ho_nt-"-ln~g---I *I~• SPll\mJAUST * 1 _.::;;::.:..;==;......--"-\ BOB'S GAltllEN!NC ·· ~·~ U ,. • LANDSCAPING CUSTOM PAINTING Lelwho'thlaootlookod Ollcb•11'P,~ fO . ND GUITAR 6 Baa Inttrct., by Rctldertt1&1 Is r omn1l'r(•l;Li Juter/Exlf"t'. lJrifutn. lni.er. "' u: ""'" ..., 1_,. ... 1 ProfuM1onal M u • I c I a D • •-.1~ lnd trial · F ooJo better ProlrtainMI advice · a Sift that U1 mellll .. ""•u $3.50. per lcuon, 847-1066. "" .. Cbmpll"x.'!. hP''l'. p~. n tc l' con-
on life. Llc. Reo.41np dally. and laatl.ng . a Ch~rmat 5S7""4291J flf!et 5pm. ""'1"0~!1!!1 ._ ~,-_.e_srtb.ld.Y,<.;;,~: 10 AM~lO PM. m-9136. me:mbenhlp or a gift Cl'r· ~ .. ,,., .... ,:,., O'l...-vvw
492-90l4 3U No. El Camino tlll.cate to the Or1mge Co.it.¥1 [ je<=l FRONT ,Yd. 1111\'n :s1.'rv. $10
Real, ~ Clemente. Y .M.C.A. 642-9990. ~ • llepllrt ~ nio., bacll Ydll 11 I ii: r. ,
GIRL requirea ride from,1~~~~$i;§~:-V~~ 11;·;;;;;;;;;;1 wt!edlng, yd t·ln up, Trt-.• B8Jboa !A. ~ O.C. AirDoriJOERMAN Shepherd puppy, =t.bng, haulins,:-. l'iX>I' t'lit.
Center. Leav'g around 8 2-3 mos, mottl~ color, A erf S.rvlce/ =:=o'==·~~===-am, returning around 5 pm. found at Signal OU A-. Ga. nsw "I~ PROBLEM SOI VER
Will sl\are aU expenaes. Call Co. Pncilic Coast H1way, Equlp./Moblle Phonll Prof. gank·rier.' T~(' work,
833-1670 btwn 8-5 or 673-3493 H.B. 336-6521 (.'JC!. 260, ask *DIVERT-A..MATIC thinning, ri.n1111ng, •. ~~1:lpi11g.
alt 6. fol' Pete. LA LINES ONLY $55/MO CleanuPlf. Lll"lfi:t.", 611>-J.1193.
YOU owe it to )'OltnteU to aee HOUND type pup. Tan SAVE OVER $1500/YEAR General Services ~ Jolly Good Olriatmaa enter· w/white. Found Civic Divert Calls After Houn
tainment. YIJU'll get It In Center, Santa Ana, 12-12---72. To Any Phone-$25.50/Mo UNORGAKIZED? C I ea n
"Pete 'N' Tlllie", starring JU at the A.n:lmal Care * MOBILE TELEPHONES your garage, build slwlw~.
Walter Matthau and Carol Center 531>-7781. $1.:l>/Day! 4/12 Ouumel Household ~'Ork. lla~l!n.g.
Bumett. FOUND: ChUd's prescription P'n.. Comm S)ilterrui 919-1234 Your PriCf'! Ron &-15-5686
MALE, 33, 5'10 oonsmoker Kiuaes, betW"'eo TuM!n & Babyslttint Sue MB-4197.
enjqy1 dancing &: •port• Santa Ana Ave's. (vie. or QIR.ISl'MAS lighls not up?
wets fun-loving modem KaiAer School area), Costa * LJcenHd Reach for the _phone. C11ll
No Wastln1t * WALLPAPER * \Yhe n you c1'1ll "Atac'"
~.1~+t 64fi..1711
INT. I. Exter, Accou11. Ct!ll·
lnl;~ sprayed. Lie., In.~.
Local ref!f. &1:,...o,qog. Chuck
PROfo', Painting. al&0 rool1'.
accous. C\"ll. lnter/exter.
Lie/Ins. ~·l"f'e c>st. &~5191.
INT & Ext pai11tinR". celli11;.1 sprayi'd. Unfurn!tihed spec.
price. 54&-781J7 nll 6.
INT & EXT pa1nt1ni, pa~r
hanging. MtUr&I w 0 0 d
tinishiflJ.l'.. 543-79ffi
Pla•ler, Patch, Repair female !or c ompan"y. Mesa. 548-3590. 8 b •Jtt * llaodyman & hte up your
"'" -Sm be a y·"' e~ holtlf. 546-97Zt * PATCll P LASTERING ....,._ FND. all ·straw rry Day care for 1 child. Infant · All types. Free estimates
PREGNANT? Thinking blonde Intl terrier. \Vt>ll . 4 yrs. Full time. Prefer Hauling Call aitl).6825
Abortion? Know all the mlddle·aged trained. Vic. 1~· 0 r k 1 n g for teachcrs.l'-':;..;;""'<...------
facts lint! Call Llfe Une, Gothard & Warner, H.B. Fenced yard & 2 playmates. GET RID OF T lf AT ,P:..:.;lu:.;m:.;;:.bl:.;n;:g,_ ____ _
24 hn, 541-5522 Can't kttp, 536-7863. Hot lunch, linacks. Vista UNSIGHTLY TRAS~I & 1·
RIS. rnEE Es T DRAINS uncloggf'd • $7.50 PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-FND Blk & white TertiPr -View School Di.strict. FY. DEB • St...,icr !inc to lOO' . $15 fident, s y mp at he t I c type puppy. Male. Vic. Just south of Edinger ofr COLL. STUDENT 54.li-Got28. • 549-2502 ..
pregnancy CO\UIM!\lng. Abor-Beach & SlateT, H.B. Please Magnolia. Nr. San Diego YARD, garage cleanups.
tion & adoptioDB ref. AP· identify 842-2038. Frwy. 557-4861. Remove trees, dirt, ivy. PLUMBING REP1\IH.
CARE. 642-4436. FOUND: Black min. Poodle, GRANDMOTHER can i;ive Drl.vewys, grading. &17-2666. N~ .io~2~3f28s~all
40 yr. old "Outdoors" man vie. of Tustin Ave. & Walnut love & playmates anytime HAULING & cleanup by exp
wants to meet girl who llke1 Pl., Costa Mesa. Call & day/nlte. Meala & gd care. college student, lge trk.
hunting & water IJX>tls, Identify. 548-3590. Exper & refs. 645-5469. 534-1846 or 534-2164. Every classified want ad in the DAILY I~ [ II &l 548-al2. FOUND: Fem. approx 7 MOTIIER or 1 will babysit SKIPLOADER & dump truck
,...... """ fl:Wltlll ,,-SWINGING SINGLES moa, Gcnnan Shep & Collie, infants &. toddlers, my wock. Concrete, asphalt, PILOT •ppears in every edition every Ill ~iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiim~~~: I ~i;;iiiii~-~;;;:;~~ Call Jim, 2 to 8 p.m. B!k &. Brown. Vic Darrell & home, Laguna Bch. sawing, breaki ng. 846-7110. day. That means your ad . will be seen 539-3122 Wil10n, C.M. 6-46-2004.. 494-5.'>14· Hou1ecle11nlng
Sewing/ Altereti.,ns
Vicki'1 OriginaJi
Prol. designing, l ailo~ &
reslyllng. 645-4325.
d __ J.J G t H 415 Office Rent•I 440 COUPLFS PARTIES FNO small white male poo-LIC'D mother for ~ yr.J;.:.o:·:.:..;.;,.;:....;._;:o... __ _ in papers deHve...d to homes an 50tG ';;Uff;;;;;;;;;;;";;me;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;. Call Phil, 2 to 8 PM die w/blue oollar W. olds. Meals, fenced yd . Prof. C•rpet Cleaning
Alterations-642-5845
Neat, accurate. 20 years e11:p.
Dressmaking & Alterations
Designed lo suit you.
b rd I b d • CORONA DEL MAR Slt-3344 Rhlnettone, vie Lake & Heller Pk/Npt Hg ht 1 . Al.so windows & floor care. from newir1cks from o er o or er * Approx. ll100 sq. ft. oH:lce pfilr &: CARD READINGS Mandon, H.B. IW7~. 64.5-6547. Call Dutch 537-1508.
aU along the Ora.nge Coast •.. all the * Private ~oom space tailored to your Tells Past, Present & Future FND, male Saint Bernard • ENJOY TllE HOUSE OF CLEAN Laguna Hills 586-5888
for design. Full security bldg. (213) 694-1350 Fully Ile. vie. Newhope & Edinger JiOLIDA YS *
1
all way from Ambulatory Lady or Man w/ample parking. ALCOHOIJCS AnonymoU!I. ~...fxrn8th Please idenUfy, See ''Pete 'N' TlllM'' ~~. ir:~~~·sf2'12.,~ s,
Good, nutritious Food. Ask for Chrls:tine Phone s.2-7217 or write · \YJLL babysit hourly ~·hile MESA Cleaning, carpets,
Nice, cheerfuJ .atmosphere. BOYD REALTORS 675-&130 P.O. Box 1223, C.osta ~1esa. LONGHAIRED t ~· o-tone ~ go sho~plng, Mon-Fri. windows, floors, etc. Resld/
Television Repatr
COLOR TV Ca l-Tronics
76!1 w. 20th, Costa l'ifesa
Service Call SIO. 64&-0112
Seal Beach
to
San Clemente
You
Get
It
All
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
Costa Mesa
Newport Beach
Laguna Beach
Irvine
Saddlehaek
San Clemente
Capistrano
(Plus the daDy
newsrack edition)
For One Price
With A
.,
DAILY PILO T
Classified Ad
Phone 642·5678 ..
YOU CAN CHARGE IT, TOO
:-.--. ... --
* can 548-47S3 * New Water1ront Offices Social ClubS" SH grey caWound Sat.1219 vie Nr Harbor Hi. 646-0692. L"Omm 'L 557.a742, 548-4111. ln the ISla.nder Bldg. 1.;;.;;.;..._.;._ _____ I Bushard & Talbert. 962-71.33 ![II]
l l.50 And ...,.... Month aft 7 pm C Xlnt Housecleaning I ll fJ\N Don't Be Alone · arpenter By Day. Own Transportation ~!Miit Prime Location · For the· Hollda_}'ll GIRL'S bike, v i c i n i t y 8 •. -------341 Bay1ide Dr., N'pt Beach DISCOVER BarbadOI ill Mesa Verde, CARPENTRY all pha8es, e:i&:· * 83&-004 * -
GAL to
5';:r $87 %~S:~ Bill Grundy Rltr. 675-6161 Discovery Costa Mesa. Call &-identify. pertly done at re880nable Dedicated Cle•ning
Rentals to Shere 430
~~l2. . . DESK space available $50 TI4-835-6885 2l3-387·l393 54(}-4197. rates, Fast service, 968-?914 * \VE DO EVERYTHING *
mo. Will provide furniture after 5 wk-days, anytune Reis. ,.~ree est. 646-2839. BEAUT 4 BR hse In Fount. at $5 mo. A ................... service Travel 540 lost S55 Sat. & Sun.
1
k'
1
c L F. A N I N G w~ men VI --~ 1 (18-30) ......... .,...... . FINNISl-1 woman oo 1ng t'r < y; '"=" pet110n · availabl.:?. 17875 Beach Blvd. AlJ.. types of carpentry, big housecleaning or cooking $3 available, J\i atul'f!. own
968-4910. Hunlington Beach. 6424.'m. Bel( Buckle or small. 53&-1&18. hr. 6,l6-280J. transp. & I u n ch· Ex-
Job W•nted, Female 702
YOUNG man to share 2 BR DESK space available $50 Sliver, crest !haped with ll""'"C"'=;;-----pcriC'ncl'd. R70-R>14·1
apt. San Clemente. $80 + mo. Will provide furniture SET SAIL large. black initials. large C•rpet Service t Painting & EXPERlENCED A i d e s -
'ii utilities. 492-4028. at $5 mo. Answering service TAHITI "'Y' • crossed wlth a "T" Paperhanging keep house. earl" for elder-
G f R nt 435 available. 222 Forest Ave., Grand 3 Masted Schooner. plus small "B". U>w In JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery . ol;:cY·:.:"~2-~1'59,;":c· __ =:;-= •r•fll or e Laguna Be ch 494-9466 cnw & guest sh. costs. value, xtra high in senti· On-Shampoo free 5TI· APT. lnterior Plllnling, Car--. . ,
1
Call
10x20' a ' · (213) 371-123' mental value. One of a 'Chguard (Soil Retardanljl. pet shampoo, cleaning. Refs. Sell idle itei~s "°"· * Gahge for rent, • $27 ·&: UP. Incl util. Some matching pair, can not be Degreasers & all L"Olor In11. ~-'Tre9. 642-5678 Now.
$20/mo, Costa Mesa. Call furniture avail. 233l. .. .E.. ---··----·---~r.T=.-· Rewara.--brtghU!ners &: 10 .. rnlnute · ••••••••••
543-5531. Co8't Hwy., CdM. !""""" ..$.'2142 .it s p.m. or bleach for whlie carpets .•••••••••• GARAGE for rent $35. •per SUlte H. Ph. 639-8351 or ..-Ex 323 (S 12 30 Save your money ~savinR S "--la ..,.... 11:•.t• 642·,..;uo I. , lo : ~ W cl month. East 20th L • ......,.. v1..-..rrn. aJ me extra . can
!ilea, ~1264. PRiSTIGE OFFICES; Air· I or l:30 to 5·l llving nn., ining rm. &
M S. le rt .. drp · nd Liit Md,_.. ST. BERNARD puppy lost hall $15. AJty rm. $7.:IO, EAST Costa esa. 111g po • c 1• s, air 00 ' -nr. Costa Mesa Hospital. 4 couch SlO. Chair $.5. 15 yt!. garsge. $2.5 Mo. Call Eves. daily maint. Exec . bldg. mo. Has stomach disorder, exp. is whal counts. not
675--M88 64()-1837 833-8350. .....1 l 550 JX!eds treatment. Has method. I dp work n1yscU. Office Rent•I 440 STORE -h'ont office , 500 sq Found (frM ...,s anyone seen? . Please call Good ref. 5.ll--0101.
ft. Dntown H.B. corner will FND Bk &: white bnl kitten early ai,n. 6 4 6 -7 2 2 2 Cement, Concrete
renovate. 53&-6666 vie Westcl1H area, 642-U29. REWARD . . PROFESSIONAL Suite ready
A CONVENIENT SHOPPING ANO
SEWING C:UlOE FOR THE
to go. ,Heil at Bolsa Chica,
H.B. $275/mo. 846-1323.
400 SQ Fi Newport BIYd.
cen~ Costa Mesa. Carpet
&: A/C. 6424230.
9UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
CALL 642°5678
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Marketplace
4 or 5 oWce suites. $350 FOUND Dec. 10th fem.· blk I.DST; Antique filigreed Admln/Prof W /ltltch/bath 'th D Sliver bracelet set wU,h PATIOS-f'LANTERS
Aii Concrere work. Brick,
slwnp!ltone wk. 894-3533.
CAL. OH THE GO, 6D;;i;gj!
cat vie Gwyne r · • small dlamo~-• 2 11~ 180 Rochester, CM, m-.3988. 546-7308. ......, "" r ·
BUllnOll Rentat 445 Tustin. 838-95T1 or. phJre1. Much sentimental
For an R In Woman'• World
Coll Mary Beth '41-5671, ext 3JD
FOUND Ure earner with value. Reward.
Store or ouice in H.B. avail cover. 1r"Vine & Dover, 675-8439 or 675-3Zll
ian. 1, 500 sq ft will Newport Beach, 646--4547• PLEASE help find Moon-
renovate. Bldg being FND • Male Samo Ye d shine, 5 mo old kltty, blk
remodeled. CUstomer prkg, B'rookhurst & Garf i e Id , w/sllver stripes, Tues. vie.
Acrosa from City Hall on 839--0436. Chula Vista DP. 497-1771
PATIOS, walka1 drives. Saw,
break, remove & replace
concrete, 548-8668 for est.
Newest Arrival The Knit Capel
busy comer. ~ LAGUNA Beach, p u p p y , btwn 9-5, ask for Robin.
OFFICE STORE black, Whtte on l'IO!le, neck & 33952 Chula Vista. Reward.
Newport & 883 Center 2052 chesL 494--M30. .SEALPOINT Siamese male,
Newport Blvd., CM. Util. FNI>-3, 4 mo old male Htaky 2 yrs. L05f: vie. 17th le Santa
pd. Pkn&'.. 640-1252. w/pink l!ltrip on nose. Vic: Ana, Costa Mesa, SUn. eve.
IDEAL Costa Me'la loc. Costa MeM 54&-G687. Blue velvet collar w/rb.lne-
CUSTOM CEMENT WORK ~ Drive~ ' WALKS, patios.
Pool deckB. Don. 642--85]4.
CEME!'IT WORK
/JtsnbJ rates. * 516-3141 *
Contractor
JACK T!lulane -Repair
remod .. addit. 20 yra. e11:p.
Lic"d. fl.ly \Vay Co. 547~. Ofc/store. 120J sq. ft. Days, FOUND Oobertnan female stones. $50. Re w a r d !
835-3437, 548-7398 eves & vicinity Huntington Beach\"°5<8<;069~::;:;;"· -.=-;;:;;;::-,=
wknds. 53&-1'?21. REWARD, Lost Collie, 1 yr. Driveways
FOR lease C-1, central loca· FNI>-Sml white ahaaY dog. Tri color, blk, white. tan,H ::;A,;,VE;_;:.;;.drt;..o.;ve;.....w_ay--,.-poire<l-. -o,\-,., -~nf
tion. 18fi.5-67 Park Ave, Chf. Flea laf.. \fie. Estancia answ Ringo. Vic. Beach before CO.lits are too ex· • o•. o•
1150 sq I~c"¥1 or part. Ph: I ~H~ig~h"'Srlt~::.·c'Cal"'O'l.CSS::.7;,-94"="'39".:;:c ~&ask ~~~~c'tor HB. oemive. Average aealet ~·· 0.0• •.'
646-88ll . FOUND· Airedale dog male, ' , $14.50. 638-8380 or fi73...3264 . ' •. o • SMALL Shop, prestige loca· · ' FEM Siamese Cat. white flea o
0
••
tion, fOOures avail. 3355 Via Balboa. 873-1288 collar, White w/blk mark· Electrlcal •'. • o".o
I.Jdo, N.B. Back of Blue ln&1, Beloved children's pet.1-C...--C!AN----,.--•. , :o O • Dolphin.' call 673---8740 FOUND: Ba.aet Hound, vie Vic: ~clitf. 5 3 6 -4 0 8 9 ELECI'Rl . !tensed, •• 0 0 • _o
Santa Ana A~ le \yllaon, Reward. bonded. Small Jobl!I, maJnt. o •. , 0 •
STORE for leue, on 17th St., C.M. Call 64i-ti&17. • ........... Reward, Black Fem. & repairs, 548-5203. o: .o;'! 0;? C.osta Mesa, 500 !q. It., I ~· I ,'F'-""'1?=-"-'"'-=~--C\YM I 0 o · 548-C438 or M2--5150. t"NO sweet lrn puppy. QJckapoo. Laguna Niguel, enc ng ·;., ,•o •, _
Trained. Good with ehlldttn child's pet 831-22'14 or •. ,<> o· .0.o· lndustrl•I »ent•I 450 vie. Bal Pen 775-3377. · S44-7575. REPAIR redwood fences & o ()'. • o • • •
i;; gates, 70 yeani experience, • • • .o •0 ••0·~ J\f-1 space w/front office, UNO: St. Bernard, on REO.blond Cocker Span. lost 537-2926 or 893-8076 aft.er 5 ,C> • 0 • •
large rear door. 1300 sq ft. Palisades, 546-7308 or Dec. 11 In C.M. Sad pm o' o'•O
Sl70. mo. 1781 Whlttier St. 77. Christmas w/out him. d J ·.O ~·~;c
1850 sq ft 1T1'7 Whittier St, LE puppy, male, ~r. Rewarfi. 642~39. G•r en "I
0
• , o,.
Costa Mesa. Days 642-1485, Way i: St. Anni, REWARD l<lst Sat U..2-72 EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. • o;.o u~ for Lyman. Beach. 494-1403. Lrg rat 'male rrtsh Setter. Complete garden s e r v . ? .'. 'q
670 Sq. Ft. 3 phase pwr. $95. fOUN tft'Y U.bby, youna: Needs medication. 549-3612 Kamalani, 64&-4676, 642-1337.
1280 sq. ft. 110 & 220 pwr. male t ·o.c.c. 546-7308 or1=:•::"o:'o-· ==c-c-;--;;--.,,=
Pvt. office, plenty parkina:. PEKINGESE, old & btind
C .. ROBERT NA1'1'RESS. ICK CASH male. LoRt vie. Center St , IUl:r., C.M. 64?rl485. C.M. 646-1093
$90 -NEW units In Costa "LO~;:,ST;;,., :;6,:,La;':";dO':,.,,-, 0Rings.;;:. =-;0e=o.
9090 .
10-18
121>-201>
l\fes~7_1346 or 645-61T1· t ROUGH A 13th, Vic. Albo Beach area. :Laguna;;:;;;:::·;"';w;""';;:==:83:1~--0:u~~;,:..;================;;;;.I ~~ ~.':. i:.~ DAILY PILOT
"Weed It &: Reap"
From treasures to tra!lh
turn them Into cub
CA.LL OAU:.Y PILOT
CLASSIFIED •..••.. 6Q..5678
•
Rent•I• Wontocl 460 WAN9 AD
Sl.f house· or duplex ln Hntgn I
Beach. 2 BR, for yng cple 642-5678 w/baby. January ,
213: 261-1506.
UIU. ~.2Jri'l ocr.n'I.\~
Trader's Paradise "" 11f ,..;..., 11f .. -r-
lines
times
dollars
ARRIVE on the 1973 K'Crl<'
ln what seems a fashionable
bluer wit but turns out to
be a superbly wt!IU"ablc
drcu plus jacket. Fine for
knits.
Printed Pattern 9090: n ;w
Hall Sizes 12~, 141/e, 16!f,.
181,, 3l'i-i!. NEW HRlf Si7.C'I
12~. 14~. 16"Ai. 18~. :!11~.
NEW Ml.ssa" Sizes 10, 12, l'---------------""'l 1<. 16, I!. ~ 811!JRM'ff-11V£ CENTfll 1 VAC. 2 acres Yucca VaUey 101' each patte.rn _ add 25 CORNER lot, 29 Palms.
ftead,y lo build. Clear Val.,
IJ>Pl'UX. SlDOO for tishlng
boat. 15' up motor trailer
~ T Ownar &M-2017.
TRANSISTOR orr.n, lull
l!lbed 1p~~t 2 manuW w/
Lee lie gpeu:er. Gd cond.
Trade fot iood piano of
equaJ vaJue. 847·7017.
IRISl-1 Setter, fem . Show
tn.lned, trophy winner, S9
champs. Lovet chJJdre:n.
$300 value/Trade Jor Pluo, cu or T 982-4788, F. V.
ANSAPiiONE$, V,J.I tl50. "lO
Honda 350 ~ vi.I $500. '66 vw Camper, val 11150.. ·n ram van, l9l0 eq. For Pl'OI>.
PhOIO eq. film ort 875-'N77
Like to tndt!!IT Our Trader's
ParadisG col1mn la tar rou! s llnet
I dat• tors i..aa;
I
· nr wa.trr, 3 ml from cent of -ntl f(1f" etich f)lttern lor town nr Wl'lt. Estate lim1. ""' I rn1 for truck, eh.:. CJS .. u)). Alt Mall and ~lftl 1.iand ·
mil. Rily, f>48.ll68. Chrll. lllR:: otherwise thtrd-ela,q;
de.llvtry will take threti wru. trade top quail~ oil weeks or more. Send to
Pl.intlna1. landscapes, Ml&· Mlrlln Martin, the OAtLY
.Ct.pet, Illy alu ror any. PrLOT, 442, Pattern Orot.,
lhlna of valuie, nttd amnll 232 West 18th St,, Niew
utll. tn1Jer. 49U092. York, N.Y. 1011. Print =o=RAN='°a">:~eo=" . ..,M~oun-""IAlo"""I MA.Mil, ADi>Rl!'.88 with
Ranch A Actieftle.. ldoa.l IJP, 8ftE and 8'TYLE
--· !ltJMDa. syndication, apa. thun:n, SEE MORE Q u l c k lrnnt1rr town. Trade for oxl"C Mme, desert! 83M651 FUbkn11 and ctiooAc one ·~ pa.ttrrn ttM from our
C·2 LOT, Z 'lll73' on Newpl SPl'lna-8\Jnune' Cats.log. All
Blvd, C.M. Clear. Tnde for .t1ne.1_,NST-~ !t.~o BOOK Improved praperty, LEON ni", ~"'"'~
VffiERT, .RE>.l.'R)R. MW totfAil, WCU' tomorrow.
M.l-oMr' or 613'!!1 SI.
TR.Al>E $1,000 ~· in 1-t tN!tl'ANT • '°AS l{ t 0 N
lA BOOK -Hundreds of I 2 bdrm., '* ba. . e hm. r-·••· 1·~· I yr old In S.A. Irr S bdnn. ........,,. '"'... •
hm In H.B. '"'-Tobin NC!C!d a "fflt''t Plt1ee ~! ... llty. .... N6&'ll .. 2. Call f(J'Sn,
,
7268
{,qAEia'B~
"'hirl here. t here.
everywhen' ln this grea t
cape!
u ·s a re1tl "jiJry knit" to
make. Smart cabl4!a add
dash to ln!tanl·Knll cape
thal'ii the perfccl weight tor
lruvt'lin~. U&e bulky yarn,
big nei>dlcs. Pattern 7268:
!its 10-18.
SF.VENTY·FITI': CEN°M'
for rach pattern -add 25
cent!! !or each pattern (or
Air fl.lall and Sp..<CIAI Handl-
ln.e;; ot.herwil!C thil'(l~laBJ
d<•live"ry ~·Ill tlllre three ~·eeks 8f. mow . Send to
AliCC' Brool\s. the DAit .. Y
Pit.OT. 105, Needle~!
Dept .• Box Jt;a, Old Chel!e"'
Station. New Yorll:. N.Y.
100U. Print Name. A1h.Jft!li1,
Zl11 PAllem N11mhfor. ~~ j.~ E D L F: CRAfoi' '72!
Crocht't, knll. clc. F ree
dil'l'Cllons. 5(1c.
Jn9tanl l\1aeranW" Boolr:,
Basic, fn.11cy knots, pat.
ll'm!I. $1.00.
ln•lllDI (lrnrht!t Book
: • .1. .. ,m by pictures! Pill·
tl'flllJ,. $1.00.
Compldf' Instant Olfl Book
-man' thttn 100 aths -
$1.00. ("1lfttplet" Afichan Dook ~
$1.00.
16 .11rr1 HUf 8'10k111 • !!De.
Book ol 11 PrlMl Af1llllll111.
5tlc.
Q11\lt Book I -16 PAllln'nl.
SOc. ~IUllOUl11 Qalll Boot I ..
!!Oc.
Qallla for ~·1 U"ln1 -
15 beautiful pallerna. ~ •
L
'
'
•
44 DAii. V l'ILOT
I , ,. » I l[jJ] _,...._ J. l[Il) I ~~\~~~~~~~
Job Wanted, f..,..lo 702 Help t;aotod, M & F 710 ~ WMlod, M & F 710 ;H;;•;;l•;W;;:••;;t;,;od;';M;&;;;;F;7;1;•;1o;lp;;;;W;"";';od;;;';M;;;;&;l';;;71;;1 Help w-. M & fl JM C.Wol I ' lon11 111 Ill ~ L ~ WOMAN ....-35 Jor ldtdlM !'f'!f!t!'."'! .. PHILOO so-Compo1-.11t * "UCTIOll NJ.. CHARCE OOUNTDt Girl . p / time, •COTEL • DE.SK 0£RK/ A oouottr 'WOr1t. ~ (lee.. ._ n..1-..: 0ut•-'--..1"--,.., ---"BOOKKEEPER mWlt be> rcliabl<'. WUI CASJllER. Expu. ?al u a I ~--....__._ -._,,. .. ~ CANNON 178 ~ ..-.... ~ -..._..,~ l _.,. lfltlOAV 71• ~
C •. ~ ~ .. 1 OPE NING JANUARY, lt73 :;-:-7• .,;;:.•~ ~ Goonm.,. . ·~ L" ~1 -~· _..._ ~.!~...\:!'!'a(+~· DICI Mll ll I Heavy acct~, Ute t)'p, Ru• tral:n. Apply btwn 8 am&: 10 koow N R ~. A.,l'V n ,,.. .._ :J. ~ "' ""P• w• ... -.,.... ... , __ .,... ..... ~
"'taxea. Matw-e, boni.btble, am. COUNTRY C L U B penion onty. Airpol1tr lM GOOD ••~•R1T•N HOSPITAL :::::r.: A..._ to 210mm moat -..11-:. -1V BSR ....._ Rt •--. -~ ...w ~ \VOULD UM • rttpanmn11e ltt111.•M• n•non eltctroale mw • ~ "".i":":-JOlll• : ,_. ,.liable, all office funct;.n., DONUTS. !m10 Santa Ana Ho<el. !rvlno. -Orange County lady lamlllu w/lnfant Jor llUb ~·•t .. 1....,.. ...., l~!--IUle -TV'o, au :;:
no 11Upervil1on .ftCl · Wflnt in-Av". S.A: HOUSEKEEPER. live In, 5 NO\\' accepting ApplJcatlons at period1c bf.b)'cltUna b'l ·OW eon ~"i.'. • A Iara-alumt. sAla ..... caoo ot ft-~ 1-dr)itl' ...._
ft:l'dtln& job, money lil.. .... ~n-CPLE"'()ver 26 ma.nage ~ di,)' v.·k, Mon-Fri. Own 1120 SoUth Lemon CdM horM. Good 1 Pl)'. mJn • tJlcludM de• ~: •, i. at lo!~-~ ~ *""' fl~ !!,!:
duy. Lagu™' art"a p~I. units, O f, apt + ge.lary. trana., Udo Isle, 6U.8248. .. ...__1 C Ill 91IOS 644-0210. ...._ k1• pod~ allele llfc• !J" or A,.. -~·.thliil. '<"IYet cU..--. ~
49Hi66S. 53<>-3333 'ot z13, 393-8589. IM"ORTANT J uBS """~ m, I , ' ;r':w.,'"• .illliJf 'iiiQJ.cu ~/~ . ..,. Ex-'-•all. cooktall t:;:lll NEED help at home! \Ve .. · Phone 95MOIO optleal 111•-Mlllt ""Bi' or -l'iniloftt , Jte\'cilvh:w mOdee A; NVCH · I h8.ve Aides, N u r 11 c s , C R£DIT UNION Shaklee Diinrlbutora share $350. .,..._ _ Ice. ilY's
l-keeoe"1 CompaoK>.,. , .., & oojoy &<logy & Health R.N. L.V.N. l • JI~] i.ia • Savl'IRl.;.,,..I ST-OllE A
Homemakers, Up j o h n , bcnc!lls. We trllill you. Nu rs• Attendants -Unit Clerks •d • ,umft.,,.. 110 415 ;, .....,.l7lb s•, CM " '· 547~ -Needs Your J-lelp tree, for P lime or Clill'~r All Shlf . -~ .. S ain-4 pnl, Moll lhru 1'"\'I oppor. Re•d>·! Call 5411-5253. Alt S.rvices -ts lJV Rm Mt, 2 Bedroom Mtat .... M&-3644 ' COME .BROWSE AROU'ND JAPANESE yoonc adulls ar-
rivlbg 1.lS ~ homes.
Auiat 1n fantll,y etc. Exch
room a board. 541-2519. -Holp Wanted, M & F 710
ACCT. CL.ERK -Interesting
position In Ttuat Audit teo-
tkln of f'lnn.nclal Organiza-
tion. Min. 3 yrs.. bua1ness
e.xp. ~fust have good skilla
in figure V.'Orlt & typlna,
PH: 644-4.160.
ANCIENT
MARINER
T•king Applica tions
For All Restaurant
P •rsonnel
Apply In Person
301 No. Tustin Ave .. S.A.
Mature pe~ must have
fcdt'ral credit WlK>n expel'.
Call Mr. Tllompson
1714) '*3410
PACI FIC MUTUAL
700 Ne"'1>0rt c$nier Dr.
N<'\Vport Beach
equal opportunity ftnploycr
-DELICA~
Busboys &
Dishwashen •
Apply in Person
HOCHMAN'S
DELICATESSEN lo
RESTAURANT
____...,. An Equal Opportunity Employer • ...._ 100 -"""'· c:olor 1V ~ l lll75\I Newport Blvd. ' .,nt= · delk, wuher,. '1:1:.'• ·U -* * 8'lllnd T"""'' BlJI&, lk IRYINEPERSONNR Holp Wantod,MloF710 HolpWa-,M&F 710 Indlari +.a.ten -~boot -• 'Plt.l'Al.ffOLI Y SAi.ii 0.l&Mea * ccO\rorESi;,•r-<•V-V "--'----':.....--...· --a.au a~ ca-"'""patio-tin • -,, ' 1/11lf'll • • GE lll~
-"""'"-""-"""'-' MULTILITH opco~lor. full SECRETARY/Aaistant to Pre ... ta(l>rlalmuSai.J>I i ...... AD ·.,-.No,-!J unllll,CIJICIC ,. -~~ ~::1~367~x~6~~ ~~-·~Ult~~~ ~~tI~~=· G=:~:-~1 I~~ ==-~ ~ nt \ ·•
Sl!c'y/ Advl"i:1isi1w to $650 MTST/Gen·1 Olhce to $600
N .. ~TIOhNAL!lico. ~'"'=1!_:tl ~ ~:.-~ Zunl-Navt!Jc>SantO Domil1lo' Low 1W.: Fcrmal' dln rm. Velvet. · T6Cu._ Etc. iililllll-•ue
..... anc o ces m need~ ii a .career poldtlon. Salary Jewelry will be ottered 1-0t 1et . Amerlc•n. Ot 67Sa1llO ·' W1nted 6MI.
Viejo-Dana Pt. area . co m rn e n 1 . w f e x p . aale In quantity. HolidaY ~ ~ platJ 3:28 Marine A.ve.; Sal. taL 4 · " ::::' 2 nll'n &: 2 Y.'Omen willing to ne-979--0060 ln!J, Westv.-ood, 1O14 0 vdvet io1a A low..a. !50 s. Cout llwy., t..q. Deb-WALNUT Coltb!rnp dilil
learn OW' business. Reis as · S50IJ Wilshire B!vd •. 6 blocta Eut t.roPt. etc. 538-f&Cl. ca~t A matdl'[. .... :.in~~~ neea. : ~~ ~t:::~ $800 S!u:~~~o~Ud~ GORCD>US Sp&nllb oJ .ART.CIW'TS.olPTS =wt.~/dll ~~ N-··s~~rCarriers . * Recept/'I'yplat $475 call: 213 -732 a8605 or ~Asixredvelvetcba.ln Pa!ntiQal 4·~ De--ai..'et11attY{'stt1• ---..--'"~ * l000/0 FREE* 883-12<'!. $499. Wtt Iron/wood -I»' QM ... ••....,. bo -• ~-JANITORS-Pa11 time oflice BO S & GIRLS Muter Ch8l'le accepted Chandelier~. Gold/whke ~ · ~ ¥W• allvine l'fUVATE P~TY W ·
cleaning, eves, Laguna • • 10 yrs & older Liz Relnder's Agency buruu A mpt atand $15. tbose special A diftefent TO BUY PIANO R
Nicucl & >li,.ion Viejo DAILY PILOT 4500 c.mpus D•. SCRAM LETS 49H025. . . 'slit """'''"'~ All alus . CASH areas. I-lush & \\'ire team 546-2118 Newport Beach ~ HOUSEnJL fu:rnl.ture, mo\11-prices frcm .$15. up. Call 835-$J7t :l
O.K., car & phone a nlust. SECRETARY Jna1 2 BR tett maplt!, 496-351&:-wetcome Master* WANTED: S T R IN G
Call 532-6558. Routes Open With recenl Insurance exPer. ANSWERS mahol· lJv nn. t>lnette. Q.arce or BankJ.meticard. SASS. reuonable.'
J ANITORIAL help needed. San Clemente Dictation. career position . Sat. sun. IO AM to ~ PM. StUdio opeft Dec. l5lh thru Call 64&-3B&S zot~ l"-:,~~o~ 0~cy .. ~~-~~! Call Mr. Busby !<>.: .. ~-~.~.k·!:1~1~~7-Mrs. HQ1bed-suty1-Miuer-~Acada Ave. ,OW; •K ' t 1 " .... 'ef'-..=~~
.-uc:i• ....... 5 "' • .,.. "V'lol • Ckxidy -CW1HES .. ~ ~ ._ ' . .....,..,,"'°" .. N t: o'm,P let e. • . *·pall"'_,---..-,
Girt Joliday/sh to $550
A/P, Jn\·t:n Control $460
Clerk Typist/Purchase $460
Prod. Control Clerk $400
Dictaphone Ty11isl to $425
Figure Cll.'rk/Type $375 488 E. 17th (11.t llvlnel CM
642-1470
12-1 '" ,,,,._., 91!Hl6i>Z. e e 492-4420 e • SECURITY GUARD Calendar -.., "Thia ••v= _...,... -alO. ·~ell.' --~ ' ' ' ··!!1
JANITOR. n1utu1'\!. ldcsa Must be t00ro11ohly cxp'd. Is a rare calendar. It 1ea· ftll 1hturea. aoaooi... '..{ tdlnt ta.etlQwJ.:.bd(:,'-ait._J _iC.tit'l~rlll o V I C II 661 OPPORTUNITY -p I time -e --•--,•~ ,..-L""~ """9 T"'T,... Ao /Condom" en l' on v. osp, Own uniform. Apt+ Salary. tutts a picture ol a girl ._..._ •:-(~-·~w-) 6;1 mattrea, ~ly I new, ; • -I ...,.t 1num Centei· St , 01. 543-5585 money while your children 546-0370 wearing a.oTHES." .-..:: _.. ~ • tclrlfta "'cheSt $315' Lady •
Developers DELIVERY oJ U A IL Y bet\\'n 7 an1 & Jpm. art' in school. Be alert, in-3127 E. Cout Hwy, CdJ4, ~winn 3 ap. ~ ~ CH'RISTMAS SPIC N~ Beach based equity np~1::°,!;,.sUND, cAamY.00!LYR.~ J OBS telligiint & i:eb•il~~ assuCallrne SER/ VICETo.Stallon Att1endant A~UEd-"~nncllairoet,' fi'B..tllO cotld.' $50, ·Al:r.lpex stereo, S PC. CROWN DRUM·.-r.
428 E. 17th Street
Costa Mesa
Equal Oppor. Employer
capital ftrm with many .... .... '"° URGE~'Tl.Y NEEDED res Pons 1 1'-"'"' w exp. p "'-ages comm. u.,...,., -.. ..,,.....,. bl OOFA 6 mo. old, yellow IQll. $100. 645-'m.4 £¥:ttllenl oond. &ale priCe
large projects throughout ii:: ~rc~a~. ~o~ta~ta~i: • Sccretru·~s ~~'at~ecricx!ct~ Div. of ::P~V:~ r!';.~.604 ~A :butch .:tnte~O:, traditional style, puttbuM! lndlMI i--:...-i-. Sate $]$. Call 644-1396. a.
the U.S. requ i r es ex· • Keypunch Operators ............................. 1 Ink -·J-Gone 'th at Ra)pb'1 fer $G5. Seu. __ , J perienced individual to J-larry Seeley, 330 \Vest Bay e Industrial OPTOMETRIC assistant -11 l."\Nt~ e, WI $200 M5-34ll. RunniJte Beu Silversmith ROGER'S DRUM Sf.T ....
d--lop -·~· FHA & St. Costa i\1csa. . Cl k ~-· --Ll . SEXTANT tM Wmd lamp, antique oat . n<c>in:onvATlON PRICES .. l =· ...... • • ....,.... -con-~!.~filing er .,,."ll!i~t.,. •A::n t.tust ...,.,... ve m area.. cbell, small g Pc silver OOUNTRY 'P'r.eneb d~ nu ~~ ru,. SAT ~ .. " ble skinned,• tom&, ,
vcnllonally flnancOO project. DENTAL ASSlSTANT u •·-~~ MatW"C. 847-8910 alt 10 am. RESTAURANT · ~~-· "-'"'~ .,~ · ~ 1 lloor drum. emu... -'cl billtleH w i 11 in-Chairside, sit do\vn. 5'4 or Anaheim • 533-2322 ~-set; ~ ........ s?;i 'aet, 6 --&ra,-$150. CiD ROSAµE'S~QtJES • 5 Zy11p1n cymbah.
elude: ovC'r. Experienced. 5 days, 8 NEVER A FEE AT TEi\IPO 1ij>=l0r, 8:1~ lio~~ silver I: bric-a-brac. 54.S-4!M-8635. • ~ N. GluaeU. Clll Z13: ~3952 aft 8. I ~a!.1 selection & ac· ~ 5. ~1(:1'Y open. 640--0300 Tempo Tcmporat"Y Help Av., CM. 64:r7447. Now Interviewing Lee Rhoads 5~Dr-t;!, .9 ~ w/mlmr &: Kattlla.: ~-Hurry! KUSI'OM 100 Amp. ;3. •:~planning & pro-l00cENT'°'°"WJ>O°'AL-0'-"-~;;;.,=1="=~7hah"~.-.-,,~.,~t. ~o~.::i1e;:t:~eek~~~ Real Est•te Sales For Experienc.d Antique Clocks UJ, ~-ccmer aroup~ck~~ ~~llll~ree!'ee~l
• Zoning, environn1ental & 2 openings, 2 days a \\-eek ling new customers for the FREE Deli Personnel • ~ Cook.I EXCLUSIVELY BLUE • brocaM Lawson ~ SUrplus stock , reduced 50 548-1994, r it:
utilities requirement ~ta ~ 4 days a week BAil.¥ PILOT. Thl8 is not a \Vaitress t.:lgr .• \Vaitreases • Sold • Repairtd ~J.~· IOfa. Good percent or te,sa. Many it@ml, JUST In time 1or ChriltJDM!
e Interim & permanent Irvine, 70. n~s~per route and does LicenH Tr•ining HO!!lcsscs Bus Boys 260 Victoria, CM 646-9749 mM· ~'Q · make offer. Plus radio, .TY Sac a.cconl1an, like °'*
financing DENTAL Assistant. Exp'd in ~t include collecting or l imited Time Only Counter Girls • Dl&hwasher~ Hrs Sat/Sun ·~ .10 Pnl., ~,\J,; ·2 _Dieeee P'fth teat equip. 20Cll Harbor, O.t 1:7.0. basl. Contello. ~
• Architectural & builder X-rays & oral evacuation, delivering, TrnnsportaUon is Weekdays 1 pm til 10 pm & blue, ~t l!V. rm. tbla. SHAG carpet, brown & gold, fl50, Paid $)l): 54(}-2!.\a •. selection. 548-&W4. provided. \l.'e work four Famous license course now Phone or af)ply !\fon. lhru GR.ANDFA'nlER clock by BE'llt otterJ ll3CM05$ 35 1q yds,.neirty new $2.50 AUITAa• ft •• 113 & L
Long term growth pot·cnlial: hours lifter school and 8 on available lhru Tarbell Com· Sat. between 9 & 5 John Crucefix, Guild of UJn.. BEAUTIFUL'Qvelvet: t • yd. FO&ID plil 2t 911 ydll,-" -• Tnlvel required. ~ary bas-DENTAL-Orthodontic assist, Saturday. We have openings pany. Applicants fully re-don Clockmakel'fl, Circa llOfa w/m•t 5' Joveseat. $6.00 Mink Jto!e., Autumn REASONABLE Price. '
ed on qualifit•ons & ex-~£j 6~~. Exp'd. 846--9?-35 for Fountain Valley & South imbursed upon qualification. 630 Newport Center Dr . 1720. V'i en n a Regulator, New $285 · 1 Haze $150. Glrlts Bike. as Mot-7344 ~
perience .• \\'ri ClassHied -~D~l~N~'N~E~R~COO~K~.--· I HI """yngton Bea,chbeare"", '""1 peoNcwplco.'opeex~:!e,n~v~l~I~~ Newport Beach 6#-7804 Circa 1890. 2 French car-DININ. G . aet .tabl 6 11, $15. S.Sl aft 6 pm. KING tenor saxophon!,
Ad No. 571. !JO Dall Pilot Y· ou mus ou o ·-oe ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!O!!!!!!!!!!!• I riage Clocks, Circa 1870 • 1'QOm , et POOL table, AMF. full me, cond, fKlO or otter. _E.O . .Box No .. 1560 .Costa Ex~rienccd school by 3 Pl\.1. !J ~mplete training program.Sl!lR ""T n-1B90. All good time.keepers. chU's. bullet,~ A-l cond, $150o WoOdsman aft 6pm. •
Mesa,Calif.9'..1627. e BLUEDOLPHINe pattiC:ipatc. Ex perienc ruturemanagementoppor--..---u:saer, exper. er Call '546-'1MS far further ~~--Indian C ycle ,671 PSeaeLud..,;,,Drwn81t. ~AUTOMOBILE L e asi n g 3355 ViaLldo,NB ~iven pr1ori~y . ~~.Call Mr. Sloan at ~f!~~m!i;.a~~~ detalla. . \Vhtt.,~I (cilsuttmb&ect) ftblt ena, Sl l venparkie. ~Plat
~~~-~emc~· ,;Ppe· ~~· DISHWASHER TARBELL h"vinc. N.B. J.2 pm. PAINTINGS, E~~n. Couch;,7. I. ll!iO. ~-'',Sli m condldon IDJ. 5'3-21S2., .. __ ~~· Kcypujici,,.. $460 ........................... -1 Early Calli. r~~nt 19th ISO. * ~ muter', A-~ $15. 64+-0m * * Baa>lpol with -~~l\~.~.iwi~~ !or MI hours. Apply In per· Assist~ Bookkeeper = REALTORS ~. =·p~ DIN~G Rni .t'A amt Jd.A'M'ENTIONi Be~~~tl.l'\ll t.ic1?W chantu, never U11C!.
638--8410 {213) 748-&tll. !!On, Snack Shop No. 9, 3444 ~~=;ctary $3 hr TRAINEES wood block prtnts. ac:rol1& fet, refh:i, J80, Bunk be<k. :t':'m~ ~ ~ SD). 49IH999 ·
HAHYSITI'ER needed days. E. C'oa!il ""''Y" CdM. An Ta.'I: tl.n'Y $575 R. E. SALES 11 am to 5. 15th, 16th. 11th. nu, no mattreuea, ~ ~ kM! ~ llriW drl Off F
2 girls 21 mo. &: 3 yn:. Hun-equnl opportunity C'mployer. Advert.ii Sec'y $650 Earnings of $1500 or more Priv. prty. 2133 Seville Ave., 962-8186 {OIJly) 10 AbQies left. $UI 95 ice urnfturtij -"!
tington Be~h J.;..a. Call ,----------Typist $425 pt!r montl\ is easy the Balboo, Ca. on peninsula. DESK ~·. 1 ~ dn.wen, ea. lf.,.....,1 Him'yr16'+-J&. l!'!f: . •
al 5 841 ~r--1 • Larwin way. \Ve furnish h ve..., -'-' a>ndlUon. w -.·# ter . -v::J •.,. dy t.faintenancc man to $550 HVUSEFUL exquisite an. _:-:_ 56•-,~-• . . -.. Pc. ~--...u--1 ..,.....,. .,...,,. t.':t!. --_, .,_ Dry cleaning • Mature In listings & !IClling tract refer. "'"..... .,..,.,, • ~-..a ~-._,.. .-...... --. -. ..... BABYSI1'1ER. t11on. thru for counter sales. F.-.:p'd Bek Ofe: 'ical S400 1·a1 leads. High advertising Start Work ....,.., tlques, cablnets. paintings,. a-. · lrown,_ uphol P.Jd. Q;. S»-50, cab $-II. 1IJ 9 ,
Fri, 9 to 5:30. Your home. only. !\fust Jive in area. Top F/C Book per $650 hudgC!t, Jots of floor time, """...,. tapestry, crystal. eve 1 • O.r ... Sele 112 'llan11 8olf c:IJdll, l ~rf --CM, Pierce, 8ft..34ill1. 2~i Yr old boy. 979-i825 alt pay, fringe benefits. Ca ll Ex<.>c. Sec' and dev S700 bonll8 pt'Ogram, monthly 639--0085 • irons, bl.s'--A ~ sas:, nJI.L aiae metal dice dlillc
6. 968-2843 Tues thru Fri 2 to Exec. Seer t to s700 contests, medical Insur: For RESI'ORED antiques, oak PARKING LOT s ALE . 5'9-MlS. •/matchine won '~l ..
BARMAID, part. time, ap-6 pn1. Secretary j 1 $550 paid. Call for app't. Lou lamp table $95. Olerry-mar-Home I OUice tum. Dec 16 NEW compliete Encylopedla Chairs lDcL tm. 9lkl-tl5T!I
prox 32 hrs. Call between 10 ~~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•I Aceounting Trnc $3Th Sangermano. G. B. INOUS~ES hie top serving tbl $125. Call •-Dec 11, t a m -4 pm , BrltaQ.nlca $250. R o u njl ... w~ , & 6. Ask for San\ 962--0022 ELECTRONICS Operations Supervisor larwin realty inc. fDr appt_ 6'13-5616. $110f18(ftd by N' e W•po r t t:rmlca din..'table iao. J.811& ,--""""'~ 1 _
BARTENDER -BL u E TECHNICIAN S&:L, La. Jolla l 700+ 968-44£15 124 Hours) 5 Brass Cub Registers. Jtarbor Sailor ·~· To be Dew~rry AVt. 551.:.oG> or ,
BEET $35 per shUt. Call Me<j,!!T;::·~o.silionsS550 REAL ESTATE -Woodl.'n butter chums. R.laS. lH!ldEqulpmattn:m1r::ty-Oftlct 562--1772. ~l )VU_!~[t
fi73.-9904. NEWRORT SALESMEN • Why not work Distributing Areo-Hydro Pruula dishes. Tbl w/c w B!vd M M Proceedi ~i Price Sale on all rea. tags lke .......... • tea ..
Boat Manufacturing TROUBLE SHOOT TAPE Pers onntll Anency In the hottest area Hun-Equipment Locally . . feet 53'1.S1l6 to Newport H!:hr Sdar A Cluistrnaa i t e m -1 · WUl J:!. chmlb of · Ou.lity Assurance TRANSPORTS IN UNIT &. • ti ng ton Beach/Fountain ' Luftwaffe Ace General Band, Ca1tfotaLa Tour P\md. AMlstance Leliue Thri.ft the • meter
Inspector SYSTEMS TEST. 133 D~!70r., N.8 . Valley, and let us train you! Ernst Udett 2 vuet SAT. ONLY 10 to 4 . Sh:ltp. -~ St, N.B. Sat ~ ~ei!tJn,1T:;Ji
Penn. position in the quality 1-0MEC -7 Call Phil Mc Name e ' No Ex~r. Req'd Estate Sale 642-5449 Telescope, ataned cllaJn, Dec. l6lh Onlf. .. ' & octave ~ Plano. ' asr;urance dept. Must be '""""""'"!""·lil~""""l" I Vil.LAGE REAL ESTATE, As We Train ANTIQUE table lamp, TU-typewrlttt", TV, 55 pl. Olk WATQ.,,~, -"Kb:!&: a baby needs care,•. a
familiar w/all phases of LADY, pt·time."to care for 962-4471. fany era, beautiful ornate ban'el, i.me'b!r' ham ....,., SIDei" ~ SSS-Complete Wann~ ft>me •ht tmi frbels yacht construction & invalid lady .. Some lite RECEPTIONIST scroll work, 540-Tl&S. , bicycle, 1'llher stereo con-;;~~ ... ~ .:: creat.e liittatenY. A .n-
--h&rdware.-Expe.r. in aero-DATASl-OR DIVISION ~plng. \·recd car. Beautiful new modem olfice ANTIQUE roll-top desk -I: llCHc, IJilique file cabinet. 519-tcn .. lo\t.e llU'\. fl1eueo till
•pace quali1y u.urance 1511 E. McFodclon •"""',..... lovccy penonaJ-$30n·$410 Per Mo. cllair v.., good cond ean cedar _, a mil<. m _11,.. .. ,. ..w n.. work &: procedures prefd. S •-_705 LITE presa \\~ on elec-ity. Great variety spot. lt 675-0iu. · Gary PL, Newport ee.eb. FUJ0tUtSCENT nxtura:, (titest hi lh1a nre .a
Knowledge of sailboats anta "'"a, 71.. tronic parts. Day&: ;s swing Bonus every 3 mo's. CaU NEIGHBOR'S Garap Sale ~· w/b.mp from •"'lnbd" plano. It wtll .a.
req'd. Send resume to, or 714/135-1043 shift. Xln't conds. Steady Sally Hart, 54().8)55. Coastal Annllances I02 Sat. Sun. l8tll I: t'lth. vW $US.~ Gfenl · ~us. 1658 beJp II J'OU ba"1' .._. a
contact R.E.J. Poole at ELDERLY lady nds ll~in employment. N.B. 642-1817. Personnel Agency, 2700 Har-~ Dune BllaD', TV Rdrfc. 9-aa, O:ilti. Ilea. llD&ll ·~liiln 10 .-,.
Columbia Yachts, 715 1-lc-helper"tor lite hsekeepi.ng & LVN bor Blvd., CM. Call ELECI'ROU1X the world's $5(), B~~. Tea cart. ROYAL portablft typewrtttt =--~ dellre1 P~and~I~. Mi~j
Connick Ave., Costa Mesa. simple cooking. Car req'd. 3-11 Charge Shift. Employee RECEPI'JONIST: Mat u r c finest vacuum cleaner. See Maple bed. table1 rup. S30 Euy e.Jec. mower $C5. . . .._. «' ~
F.qual OpportwUty Employ· Room I. board + $225 mo. 5 be nefits includini group & woman prefd fOr ins. ofc, the all new automatic Slide Jll'Ojecl. Mucn more. Lamp • lbade•$8. Foldinl ,..,Chia: lllb. A* i>r er m/L day ¥."eek. Call; 673--1134. life ins, va_c pay, holidays starting Jan. 2nd, 1973. 5 776-8551 model, l2m w/pawer nozzle No checks, pleue. 8332 ironing boanl '6. G Ollta
BOAT BUILDERS EXPER. cable TV un· & top wages. Bayview Conv. Day wk, 10 am-3 pm, hrly ' It rug v.uhcr attachm81U. Bryant Dr, H.B. 847-3'11 Wea St. S0-739'J m'f
Expel'. versatile men needed derground inst a 11 er s Hosp. 2055 Thurin Ave., wage. Mrs. Evans, 646-7904. 5 t 10 6 For a free bJme trial call 3 CoutChe9. ta1*! a H.11.KY ~ wool carpetln&
for quality sailboat manuf. desired. '1"ralnee considered. Cftr. S.l2-3505. a · a.m. -p.m . 542-4749. Appointment8 De.>' child'• cholt'a ~ JOr,r Mi ~ ' • · 1 .. ~-ntry, plumbing & el~· 6 4 2 -3260. Teleprompter. Restaurant or eves are ·made by our d-.-:. COftl' \a · ' -·" __.. ~ ..... ..._ 'A-A~adn Doo ~ , ~ ~ fP.l'an Willi -~ -•--· Equal Em LVN, r em a 11.', relief O IO'S bonded renl'f'Af!ntatives on a ...,.~ __.._ & Dmc DI "'-""" ~ ,n . .,.,.,...~~ , )'OU· can Jiliui! No~playerl trical talent wfsupe.v ....... ,. Oppor. ployer. ~upervillor, 3 days/wk, J T N :=tfmi"bUis. Allo, co. :=!. .. Cit':°'Sat/Sun,9-S. ~~bead OOud, $50. -we1come~oattendtreeWark ~
capability. pm·ll pm. Call 49HKJ'75 for A .1. Lawry's its local sales ..._ u1r1u.ro. llhopl. For infor;matlon 1 West.sail Qirporation FACTORY ll]lpl. n exc1 ing new TRAINEE OPEN.INGS •--men & women in-HOT wheel cars & tracks, ATTN : Col l ectortl O>ntact: Tom Dk!t:tridi 1626 Placentia Ave., CM Associated Restaurant ....... ..., slot & tn.ck. hi ft. 10 642-8961 LVN OPENIMG SOON Wf: will tr&in you to become wrested. please contact us _.. = • mllc ~ SA'J' Ouistmu Plates, 1st Edi· fa..2111
TRAINEES J-11 & ll-7 5$.3061 a branch manager of one ot at lhll addreu. 1229 w. 5th rSUN 2131 san Carlol Ln. tiona Coast Mutlc S.rvW ,
BOAT CARPENTERS * MACHINIST 21 0 Newport Center Or. ,... !<JO bnmcbeL A ocbcdul· Santo Ana.· Coote Meu., ~ Many ldNla. 536-1486 Newport Blvd. at H.-M~~:...! yrs exper. FinVi~rl Fashion Island, N'pt Sch ed train1ng program. will PHILCO WASHER 4 GARA"E •-•-M l POOL 'hblet -Ftelcht , Cost& Meta
....... }""nll')' on hoe.ta. \ I No Exper. Necessary • Hone Operators Vertlcle Seeks give you train1n& & ex-DRYER y .-u:: OV DJ'. datnaied-All as $49' to *"1·~...,.." 'coM.ider camper expcr. 4 e Drill press (B I; e WAITRESSES perience In office manage-tel' sale Everjthlnc. very· reul 1715 S 19 9 . C h r 1'1tma1 "'"v•Jl(-
day worlc: wk . Apply S.4. VOLT • Grinders e 1-fOSTESSES • ment, budget cu.maellng, * 546--7621 * Port Sheftleld, Harbor View l.q-A·Wa,y. ,639-81121 Hammond, WurllUl?r,
Mon-Thura. Instant P ersonMI • 2 ACW & S Oluck<'rs • BARTENDEP. business promotion a n d 'CORNING ware slip ill f{prnes, NB.~ 81\AD,BURY' Seuca $250 others. Pre-8euon Colum bia Yachts e P&:J Chuckct 0Pl'rs. e BUS BOYS penonncl ~ Ex· e brand new itill in GIRL'S BR rum. 28 HP out-Rare Etchinat: ·cJ: izs; model ~ti. Pl&lld ~
215 lt-tcConnlck AvC!. Temporary Service • Hydraulic Asfemhll!ts e KITCHEN PERSONNEL cellent employee beneHls ~ crate ' S 4 SS, brd, sports toys, ml8c. Sat. Dall $195. l>fcUao $15 Pvt. Orpn rentals. Money ••1
Costa Meu N~...,.camn ae""'ochOr., Sui~061 .. ~ e Turttt Lathe Oper. Apply in Person and regular salary In-""""'""'"" ' SUn 9 to '3 4627 F-airftekl, 0.., .:~~';.' .. ~-. ' ~ b&roJna are bere rtliili
Equal Op E loy r /f "' .. ,..... ..... • Maintenance P.Ied w.nic creases based on .......... ""'-0 '"""'""' "'--~ -ODI. '#• ~ • now at: por. mp e m Equal Oppor. Employer n.. .. & Ev . Si .1.. tl1on thru Sat. 10 am to 3 pm .......... . .1~-... -FRIGIDAIRE, Cl'Ol8 t.o p .....,,""" .,.,.,..:a, FOR lm-tlw ............. W tl-L-._ J • t'M.:i °!18~~ ~ erJ File Clerk Trainee XWw1~ilJ!f1ts •\n e.i:!Jo~ty .. Af.-PROVED ~o,:., :=rst ~~~is. llk~_;a = ~ ~t~ ~~ -::n.11:~ ~ 9ortti.c::; ~llStC ~·1
Oleta Mesa. "-'YZ·m.lght end the alpl\abet, (No phone calla .pleaae) Veter am on or 846-4241 after S. Mite. 960 eyenne , , J>i!oel .. $7.50. Hrmr *.D
BOOKKEEPER w/exper. to bul this is lhe beginnirig or Interview 2 to 5 pm d.Uy R. E. TRAINEE tralftlnt benefits. OVER 200 wubua. ~ Wkend. 2 . TIRES 100:d3 $5-$3 12 ., ~ ~
work in public accountantA; your career. Great benefits Garrison ilydraulics. Inc. R. E. Broker It Developer, PACl,IC FINANCE refrlltffatn from· $31..95. ~CE ~ .4"Sat. \.~ '=:*" pn. $&S Flibi!iJ ~:J: ~ lti
office, F/tlme. Some typ-& fun group. Call Tracy, 2321 So. Pullman. Santa Ana will train & sponsor tor l'nB Newport Blvd. 545--01m. ' J lllh.~ MM 1'CllCO ~r; • Juret .. 19c . tQ 990 ltiwal~~, ij~
tng. MIJ.-7040. 833-2700, Dennis & Dennis MAID \\'O rk in o:clwtge' for license. Call betwn 10 am • Cotta Meta 548-2233 $!K) 1 YR. guam. del A ~ FouJQln VaDet • .._ 979-l , r "'-f,,. · ~ ~ I. ri.Ollt ,.,
CAREEll -TRAVEL Pt'r"90nntl Agency of Irvine, apt. 2376 Nwport Blwd. C.M. J pm, 545-ll.24. F.qual Opportunib' Employer 1tall. Late mod. all cycle 16459 24th St, ~rmt Bach. 55 GAL. Aquarium. Cotnple!• Rent.all «r. ,·, •• Wt-Bl.11
Guys, Gall VJ--23 Sl:ngle Na-2082 Michelson Dr. Ph. 5'18-9755. R.N. Kenmore washer. 83&--ln&. Clothel ataH S.l, )doer, eet-up. Omatit stand tuterv Da!Jy 1M Sun
Uonal Pub. Co. has opening I FRY COOK, exper. w/ MANAGEMENT tra~ _ 3 to U. Mon tbru Fri $38. WAl'I'RESSES. Full A e DISHWASHERS. wuhen, mirron, etc. Sat I: Slln. .W, heater, plants.' rocQ: nELIYS PIANOS
for 7 young peo~free lo refs. College grad, ambldoofi, ag-per shift. Santa Ana • Brls-p/tlme. appl.y, Co 1 on Y drYen. ftl)lt suam. . I: .... lry iii laD4. '89. 5CBl-7461 Colla . Meca (tt4) 66 :~~,!..a group.w~~ I ~~'.TRESS, C!Xpcr. I\'/ greulve. Starting ga.lary to tol Conv Hospital 546-1966. ~IP~~~• 1115:{' ~U: delv'd,-·?-~; 54H2J!, FOR sale: Diamond Ml._-• HEmLOOM 'GlaAB Boxei ~'a~~PlallO a
exp nee. Exp. pakl training Benton's Collee Shop, 133 S. $l!XXJ a nio. Calli Don \\'ag. RN 3-ll &: U-7. f/tinl(l ICU. Hwy. KENMORE a 11 to,m at i c JftlsoJ· · ~' •ll ,.._ -~ 100· Made to order. DllJIJUlui ,
Prucratn· Tnullp. furn . Con!lt lhvy .. Lag Bch. lnp:er, 5'l4-9000. Paclfica Hosp., 18792 waaber, 3 apeecL 3 ternp. 491 .. l231 an.C·XI IAWtlt Priot11. West Coast ftile'ht • Mut Above Ave~ earning. --------MANICURI~ Ior Newport Delaware, HB. 84~. WAJTRE$--Dlnnerhouseex-Neer new S:tb. ·6Q.0022. , ' ' • Wood Spedaldet, 893--lSU. to be appi'ed9\ed. SIJ>-tileef
ble· 10 le11ive FULL TIME MAN over 18 Bench Mena Hair Se!on, Sal•~ J)C!l'lence pref. MUil be over REFRIGERA'!Y'lO 5 )'1!'lll'I SO. Amtr. collection of hard-BE.A.UT NOdtale china, let'V tm. Call .....U. ~ For lntervi('\\' _ nf'Cth.'IJ. L lJ" friendly, 646-2716 21. Apply ln penon only, 843 .. ...,~ made rbWI. 11 K I01d4ile tor S. atra call mnr .,,..,_. Plilno
Jl).6·00 ihave a ppearance & ~ needed ~t Ro~;ntsg,~ty t~tC::. \V.19thSt.,c.M. :X:*::"'4~-=-two toaPJftC.~ tiirw~~.>Oa.J:"--. ... ~ D e •ld T
• . . will ' to accept directloM. Mt)'Oko'1 Musaee Salli11. 56 yr old company. Salary, Food ~~ Blue 2 ~ ~kl'/freezer Ml•!!!'-!!'!! 11,i ttH133 I• . °"""'--2911 D Ance ~·~
f I/ Coco's . er·s IJc:d & ~ d~~ Over 2L can &0-6168 btwn cornm\Mlons, bonus & otMr Beet, 613-99(M. avocado. Xlnt ooad, movtna. CRAt· Prian lJlmb coal, O'XEUJ: .. Mtnttt I ... 91!9 . tll
..__,. \} discussed~ · ary 0 10--5. fringe benefit&. For appoint· ANTED Uable maid $100. 9"""7491. •1,,.Y .anis COilar S/4 f'Ulll, U. DN, ~ 2 ~ "'-,.
\ calJ 53Hi890 for lflPL MEDICAL. .cretUl' I n:-ment caU 64.2-1968 Mr. ~ml hoift. reXlnt workbW WEST1MO B OV8E dlx !erjO!f P!'f. CIODd. l!fis, daft"' T1 p ew r lttl', PrMtte party. ~
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LAGUNA HIL LS GEL COAT TOUCH-UP· "'ptlonlirt. Good typ1 ". Moyen. i:ondl""'9. 490-155'1 automatic elec dr1tt llloe SACRDJ~ ~ Alt-'*"1m; · '*'1132,. 16-l'ltt o £xp'd only w/.ome k:IO\•:J. SALES Oerlcl A Cuhien. I 'S HAZE ? new, coppe!• fl5. ~ ffm Ii** ...._ SU0. CALORIC Gu Raiwt' 3f', Kahoa••t H•• Immediate
0,-int For
WAITRESS
£wn1na Shin
eoa~a:r=rtr e<tp of back office. Bu8)' 90me exper. Apply In WH I R L Kt:LVINATOR lt.ft..t>&nd Pttllddllld.55\..... LlbhlM',$100.Joam.c.pB ~ Bei.utllW flnl1ti .
642-05J2 ~?~?. JHg Bench area. person. ChL'cktf Auto~ ~I~ e;~~ ~lfu: dcxr refria'-, Tu:rqooile. * HOTPOINT ,._ drwr, uMd ~~ = ~ 1 Call s..a3l.. r Jd
F'.ciuaJ oppotluni1y empluyl'l' r.JEDICAL Sccn!tnry-lt.ctept . ~~~i. l9tb St., ··t~e-charre'' live.In tor Call 61HUL 3 -:r· $15.~ lfRAIN tlWe • W/'l'na, 80 ~~coacJ.PIANO, 1 ~,
GENERAL OfFICI tor radloloR)t oftlce. Expcr. !W\LES.\f.EN·Mll.fl1Ctlc Sl'1"-new IUXW')' home In Irvine. LATE mOdtl au to. washer• IOfa ,... ere, lO ~ .. I' ebDct't * -~
Creal varlely spot. Good w/IM.. bllllna'. 1nMCrip1kln ltull time . pert time.. !:W:1')' Pt1v11te querlers, PRllo, t:lec. dryer. A.,J c:Ood. fa AREA RI& .-t. 2 larnJ19. race OU'~ S2$. •'181J!. '!'-I !
phOoa' votc.-1: Ut~ eccunte neceta. Exper. w / 1 BM but:lnct1 man a pr<llPfd. phone, prqe, etc. UberaJ l'I.. 646--5848. J aUppcir ._ USID alCYCLIS 8!tt ~TON!:tnet.cbont
typlfW. Sa:~lary to $4111). Cd M'1'9T prtf'O. Located in 'l'eniflc commltclon 4 comptnSaUon. &fr. StUcn, C•mtrM &. ..,..,., ~ ·• -. Jan p-OWtal J<!,B. -lol"appL ..,,,,. _.,,.. -54fM>14~ da)'I, 561-3.171ev... Equl-IOI GIRL'S s .i """'°' Bllll All -so.un --· ~
P.,,.,..,.i -. llllLL F-. 5 rn min sih:st.w., ,.,q,.ttic..... WHO WANTS TO \!'ORK! -= l20r Sl&ll'IS -nltt, i MINK --IAlle ---lcl ijill9I
bor·Blvl., ' ~lnturnlture,cue~>od11. ~ comm a 1xi1U DRIVE A CAB! A.ftGUS3upref'SMovleCam-kP,iP •• nnch mlink JO.*bt lllil!le· _ 1t _
Litt. .. .... Many beneti Do mt no SEt!t.ETARY-'I)'pl#t ~ tor )"OW'le)f, be )'Ollr ,O?Vn tor, $100. C0r bolh-rW .••. lk'm .. bomt ..... A """' ~••erl l llt. t~ l Armatrong, tlQIJl.tt_ excellC!nt typtng' ""' boAS Men or women. CJ!! be -.no before 2 PK. r .. .,. ; a...... ,.--JJI or~
0-r.t -Qnat Mtlft· !« iOP mao. -Ill•. 91M1!5. CHOOSE yoor houn, wont era wl-. lent A ~ OV/Jr -~ A ---$400. -l!~::'='==,;-..,Orpn,-.-..o'iM'
,,...., 561«i2. ''"""· -tie _otttce Ill~~· l"'""lf •ped. Vb, C-. °""" ilii llJWllJ.--H • w I ha r • .. WUILITZl:ll "!"O'
Cllt'.JI( A ltllcho• l!Bper. -MO'l'EL makl· Mo n ° F ! l • frWO, ~'19. ~m•nt ~' ...;.;~\)!-ii; '$31, l8Mm ~~ U"" bilot. · .,. N' 'l'lioo. ~-t.t,o a .... Ve* Ccmt. H011p, 1181 •1' P.rtter m•ture Per ' 0 n -SEffi -Rbpt. Acct• pay a Cllb 6 hrs or mor.i a ti_,-y---oott mOrll1I ltlnt ~ Mf..tS,lt. 1 Ilse. ~ taJJ,,.;i!Md7;;;';;=~1::!?.J!~~ ~ SI, •C'M. 548't\ll:I, ..,,. Laguoa Bet.ch.-. •~ Exp'il. ll11All'Yle .. Apply 1" ~n. Yellow Cali -)'0!11' -· oPt. -iURHl'riJiil cloth~:;' ID.••· ' 19 LIKE...,. -; __ ,apm. , 1---#.J'>Otl wantadttat<>Otlll> J\I \WO. tr! 10-12 . Co .• 11GE.l6thS1 .• 0>lta -.. e1c.llfta-Pllol --. .. ,m~ ., ........ ~~ --. .• ,.ant Id ....ul~ , .• .ta.Yll ..... vtclinent. . ~feM. Cldllned Ad. ~ I buph! pl!!!! .: ... , a.lMI. J
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I
5
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a
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0 ~[
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[ ;...._ I~ =·-··i L MIN male poodle. l\1ale rac-
1 eoon, (tnmlly pet) Mankeyl
1 (male &:. fem w/cagt•)
, Ribblt &: guinea pig, While ~ettl c11.t-rree. 642-3022. '
GROOMING t. .Boordlng. li ;;.;.~· TenQcr lovlnj: CB.f1!· • 546-2848.
AIR Clleclcered rabblll 15;
Obeckered doll $3. Frtt
-· 541).9965,
Pttllan male kitten.
Shot>. CF~n, $00. '
154
AKC,
II •
•• --....... ![BJ .___[. ~---· ~l!il( j~[
> ·'
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FULL l'RICE
GMC TRUCKS,~ TON TO"tTONS, SPRINTS, SUIURBAN.
·-· ' .•JIMMYS, VANS, REN.TALS
Alt0.Y,,lrtli!O 6f v+. ·Ca,..,.... • ~r Hemet Mini Homot .,con-
nrtlont.Al llt DI~ P.r'-Nohtly -·Our "'""""'"'Ill
..
.. -•
FrldlJ, 0tctm0tr 15, 1972 OAILV PILOT .f5
][i) [ TrlfllpOrtttkift
Motor Homa
Salo/Roftt
][i) l
940 Trvcks .
'67 DODGE '72 STAR
TREK
Get 'Em Rolling
this spring. , .bl!re la a Ian.
ta.stic opportunity to get one
ol those hard to find 195!1
Metro Va.n1 with the fn..
ternadonal 6 eyl. 18m 612"
and can walk lhe length or
CHEV. DUMP TRUCK, lt'
bed, 4' high sides, l'l('W eng.
• tin!:&, SJ400, 6'11-900.>.
1960 FORD Pick up, 6 t-Ylls
Ton, Stick, Engine exrel,
$250. 673--7536 afl 6
ClJ1'10m Sportunan, 108"
wh~lbut, Sundl•l CAmllfk", vs, Huto1natte: ecy,lo\lf
milc1, btnu tondlllon
MINI MOTOR HOME V•ns 963
many extras
$$$$ $6495
PLUS T&L
th.ia van upright, and inside I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;
l.oo! It cornea with spare G E tires & tubes, :xtra pa tank, it ' .., Rolling
son1e 12 volt equip and a lot lhis 1prlng:: ... ht•re ts a fan-
of If.Ive. can 548-8404 and ta11t\c opportunity to get one
ask ror "Olester" of !hose hard to find 195&
Howard Chevrolet
Newport Beach
MacArthur & Jamboree Blvd
13:Ml555 360-VS eti;t, on a Ood~
chassis, auto tran~. Pio\'~· ---------steer & brakes, roof air
cond. It dash air 1,.'0nd. Very
low miles, (Ser. No. 60!Nl88).
'67 Chev. !/, Ton
Metro Vans ~·ith the ln-Autos Wanted 968 tcrl'll!.tional 6 cyl. 18m 6'2" I :.:=;_==.;;..--..;...I
$649.SO ON. Pick up, VS, '4 speed, radio,
healer, (851MJA) Only REWARD
56995
$105.20 mo.
for 84 mo. Ca.sh price incl.
tax & lie. is $71lM.75. Def.
pmt ptiet-is $9493.86. APR
ls 10.23',0 On r.;>proved
credit.
$1395
Howard Chtvrolet
Newport Beach
MacArthur Blvd &. Jamboree
83:Ml555
iuid can walk the length of
this van upright, and lnsidc
too! II <.ume!I \\'Ith spare
llrt's Si lubes, xtra gas lank,
50me !2 \"Olt equip. and a lot
ol love. Call 548-8404 and
ask klr "Chester"
WILL PAY OVER
Kelly Blue look '""""!!!!!!!,6"4~FO~R'!!'o"""""" i For lat• model, clNn,
WINDOW YAN low mileage domes-
6 eyl, ill<. Eng &: tires gd tics, imports, trucks or
PLUS TAX & LIC.
$699.50 DOWN
$11366
842·8803
E1'~~~!R·
CHEVY '60, g• bed pick-up.
Nr new ha.ti, st arte r ,
dislrib., lmnt tires & brks.
$325 cash. 644-7468
'53 ~ntlac ambulance, good cond. !!est offer.
4!&-1607
$595. 536-8891 campers.
,66 OIEV. Van. Cherry Call and ask tor Buyer
"'""" Cprd • ...,.1.,,, rebu DAVE ROSS eng &: radiator, Stereo
.~t~::;' s""" Van, windows PONTIAC
2408 Harbor Blvd. neNTER
18801 BEACH BLVD.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
* '65 OIEV. Fleetslde 1,l T.
P/U. Low mileage. $800.
Call 646-2561.
all around, conversion top,
hVy duty equip, Eves or
early AM. 1/714/337-5435 Coste Mesa ~17
'58 Ford pickup truck, ~.I. ton. , '67 FORD VAN
$400. 646-0622 WE PAY TOP CASH 499-1607
ror used can &: ll"Ucks, just
call us for free estimates.
·General----·9
.
GROTH CHEVROLET
David J. Phi11ips Buick-Pontiac-
Opel Proudly Announces the
Appointment of E<l Enochs,
Executive Representative
'70;
'72
'70
SPECIAL PONTIAC
UECUTIVE CAR
1972 GRANVILLE
ltn th•ri 5.000 milt1, C111tom l11terior,
b0/40 1e•I, F11U Power, i11cl~i119,
Fectory Werre11ty. Stk. •P254, Sele
Price -
$4795
OTHER USED SPECIALS
MERCURY COUGAR
Local Car, -l owner. (539BZSJ
DATSUN 240Z
One ()Wiler, Lc>w miles,
1-lag wheels, A1'1/F~I. (132FLEJ
IUICK ESTATE WAGON
Full Power, Air Concl.
Factory \Varrantr. (058AQEJ
::baviJ J. P/ii/ApJ
52795
54495
53195
BUICK -PONTIAC -OPEL Inc.
310 Broadway, Laguna Beach
546°1975
G'REA T r IJSED CARS
'72 CHEV NOVA ................ $2050
'~}'I., reclla, llMlff', low. IDW ml .. 1. (0$1GllX)
'70 PONTIAC CATALINA ......... $1495
V·I, i>W". llHrlng, radio, evro. lreM., l'ltel.,, priced belOw w'wle. !ClOlf•l
'67 BUICK RIVIERA ............... $1595
V-1, pwr, 1t11Vlng, tee. 1lr, pwr. br1kts, -tlrts, recllto, pwr. wlndOws. 111to. "'-·;
Wl\Ht CY'1., ,,....,, pw'I'. -h, t11c..i1et1t COl'd. (V0Y06tl
'70 VW BUS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1895 '70 OLDS CUTLASS ... ·. . . . . . . . . . . $1995
• c;yl., 4 IPlf«I, radio, ti.It•, lmrnec11lal1 condl!IOn. UOMFXI V-1, P•r. llHrlng, fee. fir, radio, hMt.,, I 11rul wv1"9s. f60tAG ll
'71 VW CAMPER ................ $2795 '67 DATSUN 1600 RDSTR •.......... $895
• cyl,, 'll)Md, radlD. llH!lr, f1ctory 11\f,ttllltd cemoer. (.s&JOSW) 'cyl., • tfNltd, lust 11"' br.-.nd 11ew. (\'0054)
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'63 VW BUG ................•.... $695 '69 FORD GALAXIE 500 CPE •...... $1195
• cvl., • 1pftd, radio, lle•t•r, lmmec:11!1t• Cond. (\'US.SOU v ... l>WT. •IHtlllQ, rlldlo, •1110.tr1n1., h<lai.r, OOCd lraMP11rll!lon. 17WllMYI
'66 VW BUG ..................... $995 '66 VW BUS ...................... $995
• cvl.,' •PMCI• drlW It, yov'tr Ouy 11. (18P7U) • cvl~ sllCk tl'l!ll. (SBL.n•I ~-'------~~--~-
'68 VW FASTBACK .............. $1195 '67 VW BUS .................... $1495
4 cvt, 4 """9(1, rldlo, lleettr, try 11, ya,i'll UNt II. (XEVtUJ • cyl,, 4 ~. tUl'lrOOI Hlul! moclel. f\'JGl37)
'70 VW FASTBACK .............. $1495 '64 VW BUG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $795
'cyl., 4 ..,...., rlldkll lloNi.t, n~ *llllfll car . -v cleen, t•11£MJ !OltP57at
'71 VW SQUAREIACK WAGON ... $2395
' (yl,, -11,.. rMlt. ..... tnfla,, ....... -· .. """ llt• -· J .GK114)
'60 VW BiJS $5f5
'71 VW SUPER BUG .............. $1795 ·1 '60 VW BUG .................... $AVE
JUI! 11111 r-. 114'0JOI ' tyl,, 4 '"'°' Mli.,, 1M OD(ldi., {kOVl:UJ
LARGE SELECTION OF BUSSES, CAMPERS & STATION WAGONS
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\
.. • • . .
46 D"l V PILOT friday, Otctmbtr 15, lt>72 _,,,_ §JI -·-l§J I ..... "'-l§l I -.. .. "'.. l§l I _,,,_ l§ll -·-l§J 1 .. _,,,_ l§l I _.... I~ I _,,,_ I~
Autos Wanted 961 Autos Want.cl 961 AutM, Imported 970 Autos, 1""'°""
BMW
970 Autos, lmporttd
CAPRI
970 Autos, Imp• 1"teil
DATSUN
970 A-. ":! ! ,... . '"'' , ... 970 ~··fl"' ~
VOU<SWA51tf· • Cash For Clean IMPORTS WANTED tnree County's BMW MERCEDES •NZ TOYOTA
TOYOTA'S Used Cars & TOP t BUYER
BTU.. MAXEY TOYOTA Trucks 18881 eee"' B1, :.
'70 BMW Good &el~1-ion or
used BMW'•
"12 Capri V6-2i00 Spt Cpe. 19'11 DATSUN 240-Z. New 19T1 JIERCEDES Benr .,_
AUtom., tllr, d@oor group, tires. good concl. Ertra.t. SE by pvt pty, Auto. all 11ereo, aide moldings, stl'l!I $4.(XX). Mtr2524 ot 968-9386. pwr, air, AM:iFM 1tereo.
'71 vw
Olav. Radio, comole, ndlaJ
tires. only 17,000 mU..,
under W.-tory warrant.)'. Howard Chevrolet ll. &a.ch Ph . 847..&555
Newport Beach Autos, tmported 970
MacArthur Blvd & Ju1nhn!'l'•' --'---'-----
Z)J2 2 rlt. 4 eyl, 4 1peed,
AM/F~t radio, alt, buckt•I
scats, radlal tires l919Cl11J
Only
heltl'd tires. 7400 n\Jles, In t900 DATSUN pl CK.Up 1250 be.low Kelly Blue Book. '73'$ ~·arranty. M~. MANY EXTRAS, call ~ 1..:615-40'10=::::,-~---ClfROEN 8!l"HTI6, evas 1194-1~ MB '68 250 Sedan, air, .... No at '72 ... _ . I
Beaull.ful yellow tlnllb (Ui8-
FTDI. 833-4556 BMW $2395 --------' '6S DATSUN, sta.. Wag., 4 ..;\M/FM, nu radials. Xlnt W , • •"!!•• $1895
Citroen Maserati spd, ""w t....,, Excel oon-Cond. Bell oU". Prl pty. MANY MODELS'
Vi11!1 our new bome! \VE PAY TOP DOLL1\J{
}"OR TOP USE:O CARS
Jr your cur is extra clean G
ste us first .
Howard Chevrolet
Newport Beech
.\lacArthur Blvd & Jan\borce
833-4555
CREVI ER BMW
Sales • Service • Leasing 20~ \I/. I.st St., Santa Ana
835-3171 AWARD WINNING
LUXURY CAR
tlltidn, S9f>O. 114&-2514 646-B3TI. & COLORS CREVIER BMW
t!l68 Datsun Sta wagon, Good 1964 220 SE Mereede• Benz Im--~-208 W. 1st St,. Santa Ana
oond. Sacrifice $18 o . Air/Cone!. Xlnt oond. Best .....,"""' 135-3171
•IM-2828. otter f'ef. 61W!KS. bu.I D.Uv'ery ·n super Beatie, Beau.utJl BAUER BUICK •
2".J25 Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa 979-ZiOO I
non« g1.., op ""' sh'•' ROY CARVER, Inc.
·io Bt-.lW 2002. 4 speal slick,
Michelin Radials, Pf B ,
AM/FM, eves, 545-6547.
'68 Datsun 510 with air &. 642-it10. AT 1lght blue finllh and onb'
Road & Rallye Motors many extras. $900. S44-7S13, ~ MG See It • You'll Buy Jt $1395. '66 VW SharP El
Radio, Heater, 4 Spd, P.S., l-"'pv::.l.,;P;<ly:,,_· ~------+------Blue Finl!h, Mag Wheels
'72 Bavaria
lo Shore Re!!ul~! 6'12-567!. Costa Mesa 546-4444 "List" it in -;:ln.s.'\ilied, Ship I 234 E. lltb St.
Any day i..s !he BEST DAY to
run an ad! Don't delay ..
.call tod.a.y 642-5678.
Factory Air Cone!. Stereo Orange County'• Oldest Dlr. FERRARI · I .. _~. $595. i;.cs.-a;44.. Radio (ITS OK> 1609 Pomona Ave. '62 M • Dependable, runa ....,Y •70 vw SQUAREBACK. $6595 Costa Mesa TI4-M.\·S559 .65 275 GTa Red w/Blk int. good. $4605u.-l390 JIVMI 1unroof. autom, am/tm, Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used
1971 OPEL WAGON
Autorn•tic h••nrni11io11, factor y •ir co11ditiol'li119, r.dio, h••l•r.
1941 81(Y\
1968 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 1 H•rdtop. \I.I, a11to. lr•111., f•cfory air co11ditio11i•f • power
1teeri119, pow•r breke1, radio, h••f•r, L•11d4u top. Uc~11 No.
XC Pllb,
990
ROY CARVER, Inc. CORTINA ~~'!.:'irnii ~.~ PORSCHE 111111' ~!:.·11~•~
234 E.'17th St. -1969--c.---10-.-, .. -,-lon-w-··-go-n, Steve, 64&-5119 or Tf4-4ll0. 1966 flarblr, C.M. 646-9303 494.6312. 4 Cosla ?i.1esa 54644.\4 •• u , • '10 vw u.... Utli...1u.yakl.ii.
.,.. """'· 1195.. Jbh"'' RAT PORSCHE 1962 Model 60 OU(SW -· --.... '69 BMW lf<XI Beauli'"1 ·4~92'=~"""""'.·~·92-<853.~~---1:::-:::--:-:::--::-:-:---:-AM/FM at.,,..;, all ma1ni V AGEN Cond. NeW paint (!'one'% Orange Finish, 2 Dr Sedan. -. ..u 8 · . ......is, ort~ -·•·t lmmac bm), tape, d~-,,,...25 llOO RadW. Tire Sha A 1 DATSUN '70 Fiat U"I pider, llll', .-...• Semperit ra • UI''"· ,
0
'
G s. rp 11 o, m a g s , c a r c 0 v e r . in & oul. ust tell. $1750, VW l3Sbp, Vl!fY ftist. 3700 mi. Make oUer. 644-3993 64~. crmany·s Finest. SACRIFICE. Xlnt cond. 528--4548. ml'1 on eng. M111t sell this ,68 VW Kombl Bus. new
i199-4367. '63 1600 S new eQline, wk. Take best oft e r • tires, bed, gd con d ,
ALFA ROMEO NEWPORT radlab, clutch, meta1llc 1 ,;673-=3Sll.~-~-~ oespera<c! 11"10. Offer. JAGUAR peacock blue paint, many '68 VW Camper, Xlnt cond, 1 83.1-:n.10. Alfa Romeo extras. $'l350 or o f f e r owner, Jo mll~qe, nu til"el. ,60 VW R&.H. Good tires,
1969 RAMBLER RO\Wf Cp~. 6 cyl., •u+o. Irani., pow1r 1t11rln9, r•dio, h1•t•r, ti11t1d $1266 ~ :_~_'i_.''_w_h•_•_' '_'_"'_"_' _L'_''_'_' _''_'·_'_''_''_'"_''_"_°'_· _w_"_"_'_"_•·_x_u_•·-------ue
: :~~ <p:fM~d~.~~~ll""' No. ZA DlOS.
51366
DATSUN 1970 JAGUAR XJS. Perfect. 821-8749. Radkl, $1115. 'Beat oUer, R In •-24,~ miles. Red. $U500. 1966 912. 5-epd, Sharp. ~2636 or SM-<1535 wi¢aya =· ~oo~ns x L ...,_..,
Call 642-4391 or 642-2789. AM/FM, all reblt, new 1967 VW camper, no eng. .!:!!""-"'v~O°'L'°'V'"'=o -
Now Open
In
NEWPORT
BEACH
MAZDA
*AT*
LAST
paint. SmJfofr. 673-3045 1.008 VW Camper, pop top Ket!p trytftg. •Ide tent, $1495. John'• __ ...,. ____ _
PORSCHE '66, 912, Good 492-4669, 492-4853. VOL YO
condition. Kool abocks.Beat 1960 V 0 CK S WAG EN
oUer, 541-0UJ. Karmann Ghia. Go od
1970 Porsche 911·T ~-·car. 127~ '73'$
HERE NOW!
1967 BUICK SKYLARK
Cp1. v.1, •ufo. lr•nl., f4ctorv •ir conditionin9, pow•r rit •ri111,
pow1r br1k•1. r1dio, h•al1r, l•nd•u top. l icen$• No. VEZ•74,
51066 ~
1000 W. Coast Hwy,
645-6400
WE HAVE THE
NEWEST OF
DATSUNS IN
INVE NTORY FOR
YOUR SELECTION
PllCIS GOOD THRU DIC. 17, 1'12 0...T
ALL PRICES PLUS TAX • UC.
Fu ll Foclo~y E i~ped ~it~ Solt Roy
--jt-;;..· '""""' , I. Em1ss1on Test, 3
Speed Fully Syc ized T ronsmission,
Bock Up lighrs, 2 Speed Wiper, Vinyl
Jnlerior. F!ow Through Ventilation.
Order Your~ Now
'71 CADILLAC Eldorado
Coupe, looded. The owners cor. 699-CAV.
'71 YW Camper /Bus
4 Cv!.. 4 1p11d, ••dio, h1al•r. fullv
c1rnp•• 1quipp1d. l!i38A J
'70 YW Bug Conv.
Auto. tr•l'l1., w w fir11, "'"'••I t0Vlf$,
h••l•r, radio. 1810 ACCI
t70 MERCURY Marquis
4 Dr .. lull power, oir, 363·AGE
'71 VEGA Coupe
4 Speed, radio, healer. 0420BW
'66 FORD Mustang Cpe
V-8, 4 Speed, rodio, haoter, 961 OMP
" APPIOYlD CllDIT
for e11ly 41 mo11tti1, foll co1li
pric• is $2240.00 J11cl. Tex &
lie. Deftrrtd...p•f"l•ltt ,ric• ii
s21n.64I i11d. l11hrt1t, lox &
l ict111t. A111111•l P1rce11t•t•
l•lt II l0.97
$5988
$2188
$988
$1988
$1388
$1088
NO\\/ ON DISPLAY
Sal" Parts
'69 Spyder Conv. Xln't cond.
Neat Christmas gift? $2350.
Call for appt. 646-0742 or
642-1331.
BRAND NEW 1973 MONTE CARLO
NOTHING DOWN
.$81 -69 ~~NTH
' Ofl APl'IOVID CllDIT
PlUS TAX
& UC.
RJLLY EQUll'PED WITH 350 V-8, POW-
ER STEERI NG, POWER DISC BRAKES,
BACKUP LITTS, SHOULDER HARNESS,
CALIF. SMOG, PADDED DASH. ORDER
YOURS TODAVI
'69 DODGE Coronet
for 011ly 41 1R011tlt1. f11ll C•$1l
flrice ii $3162.40 i11c l. tox &
lie. Dtf1rrd P•f"ltlt firlc1 I$
$3921 .l7 i11cl. i11t1r1$f, t11 &
lic11111. 411110111 Ptrc1oto11
lote 18.97
Station Wogon, V-8, automatic, ps., oir. 677-AFl $988
'69 PL YM. Roadrunner $888 Coupe, V-8, 4 Speed, rodio, heoter. YQR-794
'69 QODGE Super Bee $1188 7Coup1. V·I~ •uto. tr•n1., pwr. 1tr., vinyl
roof, vi11vl inf•rior, r1dio, htr. IYPW Olli
'67 CAPRICE Wagon $688 V-8, outomotic p.s. oir, UTU· 701
'65 IMPALA Wagon $588 V·8, Automalic, ps. oir. RFG·695
'68 RENAULT 4 Door $488 4 Speed, rodio, heater. WXM-751
ALL PRICES PLUS TAX A LIC. GOOD THRU DEC. 17, 1972
f>.spcl. $4700. lm-:1640 19'70 VW Squareback, Blau.
.. '72 PORSCHE 9lt. Map, ex-radio, Semprit tires, runs
tras. Lo m Ilea. $ 3 9 5 0 · excellent. $1700. :Must Se!I.
646-1151 or 968-9966. 536-71l86. Came in test DrlYe
• • • AUTOMATIC
ROTARYS
IMMEDIATE
DELIVE~Y
HUNTINGTON· BEACH
'68 Porsche 9J.2.15,000 ml. '68 vw Bug Radio very
Konl 'a. AM/FM, chrome good cond. Must sen.'
whla. 83&--1088 aft 6 pm. 962-84.10
WILLVW JlUyld foryour ·Ponchel Callor 1962 VW BUG, re b u 11 t
pa or no -engine good shape $396.
Kent Allen, 837-4!m. cafi 91i2-7439 pri, pty:
'66 Porsche 912, ~blL Sea '69 VW-Sharp• New ttre11
Blue. $2900. 492-6966, AM/FM radiO. 548-2975 at
TODAY!
See It • You'll BU)' It
~LIAN W YOLW
-546-'1lJ3. 64>-1417. PORSCHE '70 914-6 cyl. Low 19116 VW Converttb.le 1966 Harbo~. C.M. 64$.-
mile1. $4650. Private ~ }\ed. and cute! Mmt Sell! VOLVO •n ata win -·Ail,
Ph: 64&-0075.. _ $5.1Q/off.er_,_61$.:539l radio, auto, top eanief,
17331 BE~Cff""Bl:VD. ".°RSCllE '68 912. Xlnt oond. * .69 vW BUG. Xlnt oond. $3!00. Aft 5 pm, 546-J'llO.
69 e~, many extras. car cover, chains. Best of-1966 Volvo -Michelin ttres.
36.<MX> m1. Pvt pty. 547-4305 fer. 675-5942 eves. Runs good. Xlnt bod)'. $600.
MAZDA
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
Dr5190 eve11. '661 PORSCHEnd 91::...i!.1395. 'SO-VW Blll wf'65 engine & ... ~.""'~='A:O:T;:.wgn'°='"""122;;-,-:,:::u--;t:;:-= X nt co ., no e._"" or trans. Runa greaL $400. uo ~· seats, 968--0738 or 557--0388 673--761.3 or sn-.'ra>S.. battery, Drive It .. You'll like tt $900. 67",..711 .
TOYOTA SUPER -... VW BUG. * 1S'l1l VolYO station w .....
--------1 SUNROO~ :fr'rW 168 w/canier. $1600.A:all
TOYOTA Corona, late '69 '68 VW-Auto, new engine & ~3871· .990 4-dr. lmrnac. 17 ,500 ml. paint. Runs I: looks like .A ·;.;;"'"'=:...U;;..;.Md ____ _
Ori& owner. 6f6-f719. new. $813. 552-i.,e& -
'6'l TOYOTA, CORONA. 4 dr, '69 VW auto stick sbltt eocx1
new paint. "J'«y Sharp! rood $goo '
$550. 644-2139 • * 9o-3ll0 *
·n Co~ Mark . u. 4 dt., ·12 vw van, 9 pass. Tape dk,
automatic, nu tires. brks, AM/FM 500) mL Make of-
Sacrllice, $1500. 645-M90. fer. ~ =:..:::.=-==--~~-~ Vacanda cost money! Rent '69 VW Bui -Good cood.
howle apt., atore 36,000 mi. Orig owner. Ask-~ .. •le. tbiu a~ Pilot 1'W $lU5. -N.B.
Claa,,Uled Ad. Sell Idle ltenu '1t VW 'B& .eor.IJtan.
now! can 642-5678 Now! new tires. <inust eell.
'5.1 PONTIAC ambulance,
good oond. '58 FOl\D li-•
P .U. &.1607 • J
IUICK
'66 RIVIERA \
Cpe, Full power " la<lolY &Jr. ""*· ..-... ..,,1 lal<oior,belp.xlorlociiltil<
colttrutine bUc intertOr.
8110895.
990 Autos Used 990 Make offer. 8fG-.t996 .;cc.;.;;:.-'-'=---';.:..:..:.;=.;;;';..;;.=---= '69 VW Bm. CU.tom inter.,
$1046
SANTA'S
SPECIALS
AT
GARDEN GROVE DATSuN
'67 CHM '57· FORD
Ill AIR PICl""P v .. , "'9, lraM, Nlr, rail. Siii ..... !., l\ Mil. I .....,
pwr. st-'61, t ...,. M11111a. Mtttl ..it. (U'J04) •• •• ..
• ...-1 tint e•r, CTVl'WI $491 $845
'71 DATSUN '69 M. BENZ
PICK-UP Aull, fT'-.. IH. •Ir, ,_,., lf-fnt ' MN' .. I .... ,, .... ltMIM, llteler, flat !Nd, A·I 1t 9ntJ • • • CIOSJal cancl. Ul124HI
$1995 $2991
'70 DATSUN '68 PLYMOUTH
PICl-UP VALIANT
ltlCIHI, hlllfff, I lrMt lftll 2 ._., ~ .,..., r-.......
•111 ...._, Ctl( HC) llfff•""'· cwvaw $1491 $841
'70 DATSUN '69 PONTIAC STATION WA&ON UMANS • ...... '"''ff ..... • ..... ....... ,, ..... Mc...,,~ DM»r. ll'MllXJ •.• J .. I Mlllf extn,...., cxwa,.. $1599 "" '
'70 DATSUN $1691
'72 DATSUN STATION W.&•OM
AllfO. tf'iln..., lte. '':he=-: rtM, tldll, llNtv. ( I PICloUP ' $1595 t!:"' Mlftr, I NII ""' ncaao
'67 JAGUAR $1895
XU '71 DATSUN coupe, • rMI .,.....,.. oc••·
'"' ""'"' $2495 ll .. lt, ,_..,, ( .... TOI
$17.9 '72 CHM '&1 DATSUN . YIGA
I ... , llhfl, 1 l'MI "'*'t'f , ... IO='f. .. -. , ..... ,
$1891 llafll,....,,.......,.T.,.
""
'65 FORD ,,91
'69 DATSUN MUITAN•
....... "'"""' r.... ....,.,. ltr. 'tti.J..... ......... • I:'' ........ = ..... ... $195"' ...,, I I •
$1099
S.. Our Lor .. S.loctlon of PU'•
Compofs ond Dlhor l'lnil Con
Garden Grove Dabun .
1•i IMrltor llvil •• Gardon o,... * 5~1255 *
S.. it • you'll buy II newly rtblt. eftEi~. Good
oon<1-iim ..... m 11t ~
'66 VW Bug. Xlnt co~.
Ve'ty Clean! $fj'l5. . * 96)-83'1'1 *
l• TOYdTA
'69 VW bqg, good cond. Auto slick sh!li. 19511. 1966 Harbor, C.M. Jl4&.91ill
1133-7363 'it Buick LoS.W •'II VW -Good numtn& 4 door,. automatic tra-.1'1r
cond. $400 or beat offer, · C!Ol'lditlonin&, Ult ateul"I
873-(1227 aft 5pm wheel, 11'1.Y on gray. Ex·
19'11 super Beetle . $1550 cellent tranlportatioo. XJR.
Days: 838--7400; 133.
Eves: 499-4167 $866 ,
''5 VW BUG S.. II, you'll buy II
$500. Call 543-7391
'70 VW Xlnt cond, $1150
• .... 673-'16U
• eVff 673-1268
1'70 VW Bu.
l·pua, 11895 * ~ 1966 Harbor, C.M. &M.9.W
Autoo, Imported 970 Autos. lmfl!rttd WO . . .
NEW CAI TRADE-INS
•
1971 DATSUN 240Z $4275
A111torn1tic, Air, low Mltff, (564 FVF)
1972 DATSUN 4 DR. $1999
Oily 7,500 Miits. A11to, & Air. . j
1912 REllAULT R·12 S. WGN $2795
Orily 2,500 Mll1s. Aufomttic.
1970 LINCOLN MK II $5195
Sli....,NM Fte1lt -Fully Eq11l1t,.cl.
11971 VEGA
Coupe. ltecllo, He•ter, 4 Spoed.
1970 M. BENZ 2BOSE $8700
Coupe. A Coll1cfor1 lt•M•
1971 M. BENZ 250 $599~
4 o.., S.Wt11 wlfft Air. $599~ 1972 I.. IDIZ 220
L.11 T\•11 12,toe Mll11.
1970 M. BENZ 250C
Po~l•r C.u,. Me4el wfffi Air •
1988 ll BENZ 280D _
Cempl•te lt1~11Ut Motor.
JiiltEMONS
1IMPOITS, INC.
121 W. WAlt .. lt SANTAANA ~I
•
,,
• •
( ""'" for '*
I Auto1, UMd 1_...._;:..;~:.....-_.:,990.:.:: Autos, UMd 990 1,A.;..uto.;...;..•;;.•...;U"Md----'990....;.l.A_u_t""°'"'-'U;;;Md=--_;990:,:::IAutoa, UMd 990 Autot, Used 990
CADILLAC CADILLAC CHEVROLET ' CONTINENTAL _...;.F_A_L_C_O_N_.:..:; BUICK
l ''8 Spec. Dix. 4 dr, fact air,
ps/pb, xlnt <.'Ond. SJ.495:.
&15--4751 639-2170.
'89 El· Dorado. Blk vinyl top,
teal blue body, bl:k lot.
Loaded -All X1TaJ1. Need a
quick Mle. $3400. George
YOUR ONLY
FA<:TORY
AUTHORIZED
'69 CHEV. I '69 Continental 1'1ark III. '6-1 FORD FALCON
Bl 2 d . Xlnt cond. NtfW tin.•1. F'ully $DI or best oUrr. ~ayne. r, a~tomor11' loarl<'d. Stereo laPt' de«k. 9fiK..-OL'i2 or 6'6-14li
ti;uns, power 11li:er1ng, V8, f aclory Air. Sllvl'r Grey FIREBIRD a r cond. Low n11 lc11. Green I v.•/blk vinyl top. ?riv part)'.
on w-een. •6863. $3 950 213· 592-5971 I
78 NEW
1973 BUICKS 962-5.'ill .
'-:--:--C_A_D_l_L_LA._..:cc __ '68 cad. 0evme, Firemi.t
1._ brown, Radl&la, speed con-
'64 Cad CdV, nu t!ros, rnuf-trol, FM alerro $2215.
fl.era, brakes. run pwr A Uc. M8-67361&42-447tl.
Good cond. SfiOO. 84~1073 -:"''="='=~"'=-,,.---* * '69 EL DORADO. VERY
Vaconcle11 c.-mt money~ Rent NICE. Blue. $345(),
CADILLAC
DEALER
~est 1electlon nr Cadil-
lacs 111 Orungc Couruy.
Sales-Leaalng.
s1066 ~·-c~0~· R=v~·A~1~it--.," ,.,"b'"'· R&H. ''"'Y' 10".
See It-You'll buy it! I 350 cng. Hatt to sell. hut ~e41l l •1..:• I 1960 CORVAIR ' _n1u11l. $1,t:m. 962-15.10.
UllUI Good lransportatlon. Days I FORD
892-4716, eves 894-142!1. ·--------
In Stock For
Immediate Del ivery
AT NO PRICE
INCREASE '3988
)'OW' house. apt., 1tore ===-'*;,:837:!!:-9'1~7c;•'=~= bldJ; .. etc. thru a Dally Pilot '65 CAD for J&.le. BEST OF-Clasailied Ad. Sci! Idle lten11 FER TAKES!
' Nabers YOLYO CORVmE ·11 >"oNJ entry Sod, ir.,.,,
C d"lla S"IU wag., full p\\T, air, r th, G I C 1966 Harbor, C.P-1. 646-9303 1---------1 xlnt cond. Mtt'>l sell ~ $2295. 1960 Corveue • l\1lnl cond. 2600 lfARBOR Ji L. * 1968 lMPALA-XInt cond. New white paint. Hect! upbol. 993-0993; aft 5, 673-7824.
+T•t&Lic:.
150 V-1, 4 BAR REL CARI., TUll:BO-HYORAMATIC, POWER DISC FRONT BRAKES, AM
RADIO, WHITE WALL TIRES, FACTORY AIR COND .. TINTED GLASS, CLOCK, DELUXE
WHEEL COVERS, BUMP ER STRIPS, VINYL TOP. REMOTE MI RRORS, NOTCH BACK
FRONT SEAT. SER. # 12216, ST OCK # 8149.
now! Call 642-5678 No1•! Call MEr3793.
-, Autos, Jmported 970A •-::ut:coc:,-', 'i1m:::..:po""'r1"'ec17'--~97=0 COST A J\1ESA Completely equipped. $1400. 2 tops. 3-llpd. 283 l'nw. Nl'vt•r '67 LTD Landau, 4 dr, facl.
,,
540-9100 Open Sunday --'673--4800"'-"'="'' ~===--raced. S!"!;x}. 6 7 5 . 3 9 1 'l instld 11lt'l'CO tp. rlh. nir, I
•
DOT DATSUN
DEALIN' DAYS!
'67 Cad Cpe DeVifie CHRYSLER , an)1ime; &14-4620 d(lys J\lr. O\\·ncr. $900. 833--0780 days. I
Vinyl top, full J)Ol\'l'r. fact Kohler. _,_49C'3---'7'<6=:,;c•cc""':=...· ---~
air, leather interior, while '68 Chry!der Neiv Yorker <I '68 Corvette Sllnm-av CJk'. I 19TI 1''0RO Countty Squire,
side wall, elc. TWR14.1 Dr !IT Beautiful Jii.::ht spd, full p1vr. $2200 or b~! air, FM stereo. radials. $1266 yellow finish with Tan ofr. 49'l-86l'). SJZ)O. Days &t4-64iW, eves
S I 'II b 1 I lntcrloc, Auto Trorut, P .S., COUGAR 831HOOI ee t, you uy t P.B., P. Seats, P.\V., Cruise e ·69 FORD LTD-Auto, air,
CLOSE OUT SALE ON· 1972 BUICKS-
NEW-DEMONSTRATORS-EXECUTIVE
CARS OPEL G.T.s in stock , •••• ,.,.
'72 CLEARANCE SALE 1\a." l·•~j Control, Factory Air, split .69 COUGAR . Excellent con-yinyl top. 'l'i()"lop shape.
-
lUUIA UllltO Bench Seat. Reclining Pas .. 1 · R.11-l•IOO OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY DlLIVEU
TOYOT.A &>at. AM, 1'~1\f Rudio Pirelli "lion. Exira!! $1900/best of.
1'ires, Driv!'s like ne~v 1149-J. fl"r 6T:rl!l29 r·ono '67 Sia \Vag., air, auto 645-6644. trarui.. radial lirc.'S, $695.
--------NEW DATSUN 1200 -
1966 Harbo1·, C.l\.I. 646·!1:'.0.l DODGE _!1'iv party. 644--05..lO. '72 Eld d Hl69 CHRYSLER 300 2·dr. '69 LTD Brougham. 4 dr I-IT, ora Q 1''ull power •'-' air. Pvt 1972 COLT, fo1· salc/takf' r/h, rnct uiti, AM/FM, vin
0111llf'r. $1500. 6 4 5 - 2 G 4 O over pymnts, Trade for Ul!Cd top, pb/ps, $1600. 847-3..'>!18
2·DOOI SIDAN
SICHldard eciulDITltnf l11Cludn l\eolll', def...,.ler, wt>!~ll trr.,_,
""""'91 OVO!'ds. loctln, 1101 IOl'lk. J --'· ot! 1vrocl1rtJ ''""'· GNI 'T1Udl more lndudlno owr :II mllrt oer vollon. Serlol i:lml,.
CLEARANCE
'RICE ---------DAT~UN 510 WAGON
Rolls Royt:<' Triu)l'-ill, full
Po111l'1 .. 15.000 rnill•s
$7295
ROY CARVER, Inc.
234 E. 17th SL
Costa t.f P!la 546-4444
CA MARO
1933 Chevy Cttn1aro
V~. aulo. P S .
.John's 492-4669.
C.HEVROLET
'68 l\tALIBU convert -Auto, el!:.. Eron 6 cyl. Orig
Fully IQ\lloord with AM radio, toltty front d!sc bt<*ts, 11..r~-01o11ner:-xlilt. All n<'w hO!les, ~~:~O:.~t'.'fo1~~~"'· •Mlt 'll'llll "'"' 1-mu._ •x~ tires, carburetor. Unc.'X-
pectedly getting co. car. CLEA RA NCE $2429 Mu" ,.,11. Dee. Retail Blue
PRlc r Book s101J. Ai;iking sm.
i; ' _ § .,. Drive to appre cia t e.
- -- - - -- - -"'551'"'-44=-'"68"'-=--~--
DATSUN 510 4 D S d '72 Chevy Kin~s1vood Es!ute r, e Qft wagon, PW>', cock, tilt whl,
Pully e<iul-d ••lh 0111omaHc Ire ...... AM rodlo, aof<tlv front 61.5C nu Ures. Best 0 f f C r • brotu. llnttd ulou, lu~urv IKICKtt HO! .. wtlll• woll tlrw. Loli' 673-4978. rnt~ exrcu!ll't car. 5""1ol " :JoM23r. ~~-------3 TO CHOOSE FROM ·w Chevy hnpala Super Sprt, p/b, p/s, 1leeds 110mc work.
CLEARANCE $ft~8670 :'.~~:--0:,~;,,11~,·s ""'"
PRICE If -tran.,m.; R&JI. Best ortcr.
' -6'4-7677.
All ,RICES + TAX l LIC . "·70~K-"in-.-,.----.-pn-,-,-"-."-g.,
..:-g~i
Brand New 1973
HORNET HATCHBACK
ORDE'J YOURS TODAY
$2599
disc brl<s, pwr slrg, air. lllgA:
rack. $2350; R\l--015.1.
·n Chev. Tpwns1nan WnA".
Full p1\T + air cond Xln't
ronO. Lo n1i',;, 673-1010.
1968 IMPALA, white w/vlnyl
top. Sharp. $1295. G7:Hi007
or 537-7680 Pvt Pty.
'67 El Camino 38.'l, $1195. Call
Ni les 548-5484. D a y s
6#-2465.
'72 MATADOR
STATION WAGON
3'I V4, W.oti G,.111 Slcla, l"1'9t1'1lvm Tittl, Air, l".S., '· Dhc •r•ltn, L11111•1• llKlt, >nl 5•11, AM/FM s .......
$AVE
. FREE BICYCLE WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANY NEW 1972 CLOSE-OUT CAR
Offer 0.-Thrv. Otc, tt, U7'.I
• '72 & '73 GREMLINS
1972
AMIASSADOI
BROUGHAM
\.'-41, \.'lnyt Top, Alllo. Tr1<1t .. cu,IOrn ltJdl· vlou.I Reclinlng SNl1, W/5/W, Vlslbll!l t Gl'OUP, P.S .• Powe.. Oltc 8rHft, Till W~. AM/fM Mijlllllex 51ffeo, \.'lnyf Molcllnt.
tA.2A&5nlllM). Extc11tl"9 Oltnon1lrelor\ LH• lllltJ •.000 rnli.a.
$4399
Levi Gremlin
Now In Stock
Immediate Delivery
BIG SAVINGS ON TRADE • INS ! II
'70 HORNET '70 AMBASS. '69 PLYMOUTH
2 Or. Air, ••C•ll•nt eondi-SST Fury Station Wagon
tion, f66l AFWJ Full Pow•r, Air Coni!., Full pow•r l f1etorv ,;,, P•rftc:t f1M lly e1r. 1849·
AS&I !YET 12ll
$1795 $2295 $1995
'68 YW Camper '64 GMC '69 JAVRIN
Ivy now l 11¥11, Xc1lt11t 'Ai TON PICKUP SST co11d. l •rg•r f11clory •11-
gi111, 117 7 DFE I Eire11ll~11t'to11cfltio11. ( l26· ~ Spct R1114v to 10. IM·
262 1 1]61941 $1795 $795 . $1695
54&-6746 ' V\V. ~36-736 1
CONTINENTAL '72 "°'" Com·icc w/Campec FALCON shell, still under 12,000 mi. Warr. S\94[). 551-4275.
19?0 CONT. Cpe full pwr & 1969 Falcon fu!ura 1111;n '61 FALCON FUTURA·Good
n1r, nc...,v tires. Orig. Owner V8, aulo. P s, P/h, air. cond. $200. Call after 5 pn1.
S:i200. 1147-0597 NPw brk!i & hat\. Tires 642-9-149.
CONTL '71 MK 111, blue, ok. l 01vnt"r. $1350. 673-1875. l ."'69"'-'c='N"r"n~Y~Sq-u~ire-\~V-ago-n,
wht. lo~, lo mi. Pr. ply. A good want ad is a good in· air. a111·fn1, radials, Ex-
F'ull equip $6500. 675-7085 vestment. cell<.'111 shape. 842-9227 H.B.
Autos, New 980 I Autos," New 980 Autos, Used 990
PRE-CHRISTMAS
CLEARANCE
NEW&. USED
USED CAR SPECIALS
*100% Money Back Guarantee ! .
S966 FULL $66 DOWN PRICE
TAKE YOUR CHOICE $36.46 MONTH.
'69 Plymouth
9 PASS WAGON
'69 Olds 88 · I '69 Mercury Cyclone I
2 Dr. H.T. V-1, Auto. IT•111 ., 2 Or. H.T. V.1, 1ulo. tr1n1.,
f1clory 1ir c:ond ., full pow••, f1c:tory ,;, cond., P.S .. P.8.. V.8, 11uto. tr11n1., f1clory 1ir
P.S., P.8., r1dio, h11&fer. !XTf. r1dio, he1ltr, tinted gl1u, l111-cond., P.S.,.111dio, l".iter. 171 5
522 ) d1ulop,!S l7AFV) El .M l
5U It '9111 611., llfllf. 1116 "'·" ii '9111 pymr. fir 30 ""''· on •ppr, c:•l'dll. o.fllr'" pyml. prk• l11H.IO lllCI. I••·
•M c•rrvlnt cll.l1'9'ft. ANNUAL PERCE!llTAGE RATE 11. 11 ....
s1296 FULL Sfi6 DOWN PRICE
TAKE YOUR CHOICE $48.54 MONTH ·~ .,
• '70 Chevy Bel Air I '70 Ford LTD I '69 Dodge
S-4•11. V-t, 11uto, h1n1 .. feel-H.T .• V-1, f1ctory e i' cond .. SUPER IEE
ory 11ir cond., P.S., redio. he11I· P.S., P.B., r11dio, htaltr. whil1 2 Or. H.T. !294 ANDI 11r. 1526 BFEI w•ll tir•t. 1600 OLS !
I" Is tol•I dR. pm!, .. ,., S41.l~ 11 tot•I rno. 'yml. t•r » 111 ti. tn 1ppr, (rtdit. DtlttTM pyml. priC1 HJ:rl.M Intl
II•, lie., •II Clrryl1111 clllrgtl. ANNUAL Pl!RCENTAG£ RATE 11.ll~e.
'67 CAMERO '70 TOYOTA '66 CHEVY
COUPE STATION WAGON
R1dio, h...... ...i11yl in ltrior. '4 1pd., r1dio, ht1!tr. (214 AZJI v.1. r .. clory 11ir co11d .. P.S .. r•·
tTQN 9771 dio, h••'•'· {185 ASEi
57.66 5666 5366
'67 MERC -'66 FORD Yi TON '67 FORD
STATION WAGON 2 DOOR
v.e, •ulo. lr•ns., f11clory a ir PICKUP
cond., P.S., radio, k•11t11r. (UJA F11clory Equip!. IUJ9261)
V.a , •ulo, tr•n1., P.S;, rl!dio,
28b). h'"'"'· tUJE 412)
$466 $666 5366
•tt "°" 11'1 .. , llllstJ.M •lltl ''" pUtCM .. M -tt """. 1.HCl•h. """ INY ~hllll "" c•r W!lllln 41 holWH l~rn ...... ~ ... ,_,. rte•h'• yOllt """"' Hck. s,.1a1. ttM '1111 DK. 11·7L
BUY WHERE THE SAVINGS ARE !
'
. ALL NEW 1973 OMEGA
JUST
$2466
ONLY $166 DOWN
ONLY $63.24 PER MONTH
I 41 MOHTHS
$166 i1 tot1I dn. pyrnt. •11d $6).24 is lot1I mo. pyll'll. for 41 mo1.
on 1ppr. c:rtdit. 011f11rr.d pymt. price $1201.52 incl. I••· tic., •II
c1rryi119 ch1r9t1. ANNUAL PERCENTA6E RATE 10.91 '/..
DRIVE IT HOME TODAY!
VISIT OUR LARGE
RECREATIONAL VEHICLE -'
DEPT. NEW GMC TRUCKS
LARGE SELECTION OF
USED VANS AND TRUCKS
ALL PERSONALLY
SELECTED FOR YOU
-Phone Us Now For A
5 Manute Credit Check
If you are new in the s~ate e
If you owe on your present car e
If you are new on the job • If
you have little or no credit.
PHONE 54()-9640
let us tailor your fln1nclng to your personal nfftls.
----~--·' ------· ------r l ~~ l!ll l t1a rl ic ir £3c111IC'\'il re I , ( :1 isl e! M< ·~; 1 !j '"1 C)
' --~ -- -----------
I
·,
•
-
I
' I
. . '
" OAILV PILOT Frid.V, -15, l'm ~~~,~~~
CADI c
YEAR-END
INVENTORY CLEAUNCE
' SAO
OVER 70 CADILLACS
& Select Trade-ins
TO CHOOSE FROM
TREMENDOUS
ONCE-A-YEAR
SAVINGS
Just a few Examples
OUt '72 "442" COUP!
lv,..,;_. c.11011 l deo• ~·d•oo,
I0< .. 1' oir co•d•!iool•1, loM •-
1 5,000 •• , ... ··-· ·-·l•t. po•-•• di1< b<o • .,, aulo, '"'"'··WSW,
,; • .t -• .,.,1 bo<~•t ,..,i., AMI
P• rodlo, _, •-""' wi...I,
•-' •i-1<. ob<ol•"'~ t.....,111.1. 11 •5EOJI $3777
MllCUllY '72 MARQUIS
·--·•""" ' deOt ~ ......... lo<•.,., olr co...iillool•t. "'II poow.r •loyl •••. """' ,_i.,., -11. 1i11 .. ~ .. 1. ....... -••• ~ .. ""°'' ......... .
""'• .. ,,I•"'"''"' l6lll•Pl J.b-
1olu101, '*"°"''"'" ltMh io ••••• ..... l it ..... 1.,, .~,. -l••d .,.,,.
SALi PRICE
CAD. '71 II Derllth c,..
1-ti.-11,300 ..,ii-.. EM1•i•l'"'
I••-l>lodi, ltlock .!n1'1 I••. ,...
l•.,ht< 1 • ..,i.r, full -•,..1!•tM.
-t.<k•, lilt -,., .. ,.,.;, ·-·-;.,, ..... 1~ .. ,, fl ... i.... \S...
;:::091771
SAi.i l'lllCI
CA91U.AC 71 &IOUGHAM
lu•uri .. o fl"-..-ltlt ••"-'' 1 ..... 1._, •-,., .r, cMdlti..,.
•••• • ,.,, .... lull ......... 1 ........
"ith ""•I co,.forl _., oll -· ,,_ .. i!h '°" ..... k. 6-IKb.
htltl ... 11 .. 1, 1111 .... -.p1.
1t..,rin1' ..... 1ute11 •lotonl lnol•
& """ (102EHI) SALi PRICI
CADIU.AC 72 UOUGKAM
l1 ... ,1 ............. -. '"".,., •i•.
,,;.11 "''· tull ......... ; .... i. •. d .... <••'°" -to. ole<-, cloor IMb,
.... i. ...... 1 •• 1. ""'" ... ,., "'"· C611U C). 1,.1, ,,._ eo;,..,. ol
""'·'·· p ......... (odl11ef'1 "-' -·· $6777
CADIUAC '72 llD. DI VIW
L•u •flOll 12,000 ..;i.,,, focl•I')' •i<
<••di!l ... i .... ~·· foll ""'"-..... .. ,;., ..-illt ••I ..,.,/wt _,,_ •ltirl
lot>, I.II "-" , .... o ..,;rh •01>t
O.d. -· !.d:o, , .. ._ control, 1r,h+ ..,.,; .. 1, '"'"k i.u, ., .. , _...,.
<••<•l•abl• ••"• "" thk -••lfl· <•nt ...,,..,obil•. l~7'1flA)
SAi.i l'lllCI
CADIU.AC '71 Im. Df YIW
7 "' ,_.,.k-of a l..._ AU
... 1tk ,...,.,., ... ~111 ... 1,.., "'"
... ....... i..1 ... , ""'""' •• ,_,,.,
loMri•, , .. ,~, -l•<i<S, rill I. .. ......... -In,, cnilM ...,,,.i,
9"., e!c. Se<. I07UO. Ao 19w •·
$4999
CAD. 7 1 11 DOUDO
(ao-ll>ie. 1--li,000 .. 11 ... . , • ...,, .. , cM4!1i...1 ....... ., ... 1
• ........ blod< wlrh ltl•k '" .. •lcli "'II , ... i..t._ lnlwl•, f•ll
~ ..... AM/fM •-, till & .. i..
oco•ic ,,..,;,.., -· oil HI~•• c..tlHJ« .,,, .. & •IMektt.!y ,,..,..
,.,.., fre1h Inside & O•I. (S.r.
.;;:0105•1 $6333
1970 CADILLAC DEVILU'S
CADIU.AC '70 ltOUGHAlit
'-lil•I fl,.•IH _,..i.i wUtl l•ll
i-M• lo-i... d ... I .... I.rt_,.,
'tl•yf .... htll P9-, lllt & Mle-
....ic •-I••, •-. «ul• -
... 1. llt~I -''"'· _, ell ••lteo· (OJ3ADYI
$3999
CADIUAC 7D n DOIADOI
S.,.1el ......... be•. fKf<>O" ...
.. oc1111 •• 1 ...... _,,..,. ..... It -~-.. 1.-i... 1 .. 11 ... -. ,i. .... ....
IMlu, «•I• , .. ,,.., lnlnk •-·
vi..,-1 .... All l•-~lc>t. & 19w
leufl .. u ..... , .. 71QO) ......, .. ...
SAU l'lllCI
OTHIR SIUCT TllADE•INS
llHCK 70 CtllJf-·le .......
t .. , IMt ... p, le<*f •Ir -· ~i!leol•t, "'II ,.._, Yl•J'I 191>,
lull •l•yl 1.,.,i.,., l ilt -hot,....,,, -••Mr o1o1... ••II"• ' ;..1 Mo•lihl. (MIAEPJ
S2:t3:t
JAGUAR 1971 Y·l2
2 + 2 CO\IM ,.,,,.,, eh -.tit1Mln1, _., •t-r1.,. ...... ....... "-·· ...... ,~ .... -.... ; .. ·-h. -· ,,..., 19• ,.,19ot-, l07IOIMJ
$6777
POUCNI 'U 1600 CH.
'--,.... 11... ..... Mly _I ..... wltlo t -4 _ ..... .
•iM ...... -· -· ...... "" -& •1-I• l•llJ __..... """" $2111
CADlli.AC '61 llD. DI VfW
'•'"''' .ir ·-••ion!,,., 1 .. n ,,._,
vinyl '°"' lllU i..-le!Orio<, tilt
& '*~' ·-1"9 AM/PM ""''•·
-· fVOrt77) lllw" M -& ~.1 .... 19 "'11, _1 .... $2222
CADILLAC '61 ll OOIADO
,.,,_, ol• ,,,.,1111..,1n1. 1\11! po-,
:.':.~,.::!! ~-:.~1111~'*&1.,M1=
, ... r1.,., otc. !21SIS1) $2777
MDC. , .. IT. WAGON
' -c.i..., ............ -· ""· ,,_..,., .i, -11;..or"!~.""""' ~. i..,,-••d. l.od..it 1.iw1•11 $2222
.... ,........ ......... ""'.....,. 1i..17-72 IMtll • ,._,... c.. ,.,.,,... .. """'" ..,._
Nabers
Cad ii la~
2600 H11t.or Blvd.
Costa Mesa
540-9100
Open Eves. & Sunday
•
I · ---I~ I -·-I~ I ---I~ I -·-l§l I ---I~ I ---l§J I ---I~
Autos, Ullld 990 ... -. • .......... 1-.....-.------•-. ~ "° Aut.o, u... "° ~ u... "° .Aut.o, -FORD MERCURY OLDSMOllLE PONTIAC
~. ~:.'!' ... ";.i' .. aou::r~ '69 MERCURY '" ow. v11t1 crv1 .. , .. ~.-~--• ~-Vl! 9 pus waaon. VB, 1utomatlc, P/w, .. WJt, P/seat, radio, ....,.,vi. ....... ierey. • auto--_. __ _, _,_ -•·
heater I: air cond. 1825. matic, power steering. A power MCW'!n(, &I.I", n.,..,
1229 .........i ........ 1..... •---priced undtr wholeWe. 613-• ...,.... ...... -.. Cu:•u car. CWAU660). ()nty
1956 Ford Faidane, good CYOD871). Only $1495
eoglne, ...,.. no oil, radio, $1195
heater. Great tre.nsportaUon Howard·C,..vrolet Hower,d CMvrolet car, $150. 837-11153 o 1' Newport Beach
BOB TERRY'S
BUICK & · OPEL
.DISCOUNT CENTER
YOU CAN ORDlll .A IR.ANi> NEW
'73 BUICK CENTURY HARDTOP COUPE
11.IGHT NOW FO• OHL Y
494-2ll6 after 6. Newport Be•ch ~tacArthur B.lvd a: Jamboree
1983 FORD FALCON Station MacArthur Blvd &.J amboree --=~1)3~~15~55~~-w•~, ttcn., 642-461.5 alter 5 ____ 13_M_55_S __ _ ~-·· -FIX'l!R UP'ER'
pm. MUSTANG 1003 Dido 811. Fact.ey air,
__ .;.M_ER......,c_u_R_r ..... __ 1 ..... 68 MUsrANG. 2ll9 c u. ~~· :-......... N~ ""'l '69 lfk-js JN., rfh. auto trans. wsw, engine fn &'QOd a>Gd.. Need.I
lllCll 'I" pwr 1trng. Jteally clean! l carburelOr. Trade for good
$1295. Call Bill, aft 6, or quality eoousttc er t!!:ectric
4 Dr Sedan, Faor.ory Air l~-~::::>,,,;1133-=-'3'198~'-· ~--guitar. Call SU-9651.
* ORIG Owner. Mui( ae1l
th1a week. Sacrifice' l9'l2
Firebird, Formula 350. fin.
maculate Super Load@d:.
w/lactt:it'y xtraa. Call tar
oompl<!le clel>ill .., t1t1a· 1 0(
a kliJd be"ty! 54S-«1&8.
"IO Grand Prix-Xlnt mad.
Full power, stereo All/nl,
vioyl .... RoJly --.. 644-26116, De,ys 61W1l1.
'2988~~.,;,.
... .w 4AN1
TOP VALUE USED CARS Cond. Exceptional Cond, 1!16'1 MUSTANG P/S, ""'o PLYMOUTH ,
(ZNL524J trana. R/H, Vinyl top, nu l---------$1795 brkll & battery, Beaut cond,
I .,...,..., $995. lll&-l>l8 "'" Plymouth VIP 4 dr, T·llRD 71 BUICK -·------·'"' ... ' •
ROY CARVER, Inc:. -~~~-~-vio.v• ""''· ndlo. beater. a1r --196l----.. ~--~-.-'66 Mustang, auto trans. Air, condil:iQnlng, pwr iteerlng a: •Ul.l.lUC.Ouu.-..i
--Zl4-E.-lTlh--Sl. P/s......J......owner .. 60,(0) mi. brtl.m. New tires il-brakes, $250 1513 Orange, CM' 70 BUICK LA SMU. C-.. ......, SM.. Powt........,, ttMrt .. I
...... _...., ..... .,..,. ..... etc. lltN c ... 1 ..... cs.
ln't 4341 . Costa Mesa 546-4'44 c•:::9511:::.,. ;:.;548-:::.,,;m=.;:;•·==--xlnt cond & just 52,000 ~~-·~642-'"66c=..,=o;..•,,___~ '70 COUGAR "67 V8 FAS!'BACK, good miles. Kelly '"••••led **'69 T·Blrd. "'11 equtp. cond, 1 owner, service rec, re ta i l Sl.300 ••.•• price ment. Good ~nd. $1900. can · '67 VOLKSWAGEN ,,_ ... ,..,......,...u......,clMa.
o.e, 4,000 _,... .. ce111ph"" ..._., ...
.,_ ClllMJ Cpe. \13, automatic, power radials,_'9'15, 494-5236 .s,,11::50:::·__:::83::.1-1239=:.:·----675-5744
steering, air, vin.91 roof, ==.="'"':;.. ='=-7"~~--·-llL AM/FM ....... radio, (381· OLDSMOBILE MUST .. u = Fwy All YEGA
ANP). Only 1----------extras. Lo mi. Like new. ----------11 ~2495 1!11Q Torooado, >lnl. every _Vc;ery"'"'""""°'"· ;:;67>':::..=193.l.='--'12 VEGA GT Hatchbock -
·• xtra, 36,<MXI mi, emerg sale '66 PLYM. Fury m, 9 Pass Brown. Xlnt cond, .Lo tpL How•rd Chevrolet below book, 493-5$4. Wagon, air, Good condition. Holly 979-1633 or 615-1181.
$995
TERRY BUI .CK D. C. INC.
SINCE 1933" Newport ... ch 1965 OLDS Starf.ire. All c-=--='-'""·'c.vo.... -'-' _.___ ·n VEGA, lo nUieaeet air
?\facArthur &: Jamboree Blvd power equipment, uxi. PONTIAC cond.Jtionlng. Xlnt coQd.
13:Ml555 ' 54<Hl144 $3)00. 511&-3499 -; 5th & WALNUT, HUNTINGTON BEACH
RCURY Colony Park 1966 Cutlass, VS, auto, P/s, '68 FIREBIRD, ful1Y eQUi,,t-'71 Vep Hltcbback, autoo
. Wagon. GOOD bucket seats. Red. Xlnt ped, extremely good corid. rad». allVer w/blck int.
E. 1650. 548-1621. con<!. !550. 968-2545. $1400. 673-!5501. $1450. Priv prty, . ..,._
5l6-65f8
' 990 Autos, Used 990 Autios, UMd 990 Autos, U..ct 990 Autos,UMd 990 .Autos, UMd · . 990AutDs, Used
ALL MARK'S and CONTINENTALS
Are Now Being Offered at
APPRECIABLE SAVINGS
'71 Continental
COUPE SALE PRICED
SPARKLING exterior finish with immaculate interior. Landau, Luxury equipped
thru-out. Full power, auto. temp. air, AM~FM stereo, tilt wheel, power door locks.
Driv~s like new. (809'll0)
Step Up_ To LUXURY .•. $4575
'69 Continental
Excellent Selection Of Previously
Owned Mark Ill's and Mark IV's
HARDTOP COUPE
BEAUTIFULLY maintained inside and out. Equipment with landau, power steering,
power brakes, power windows, power seats, radio, heater, facto'ry air cond. (641.FYV )
'71 El Dorado
SALE 'RICED
Luxury equipped. full power, factory air cond , 6 way
power front scat, .Jandau roof plus many more luxury
items. Priced for quick sale. 16934TIQ41663)
$5675
'70 Malibu H.T. Cpe
1 OWNER-20,000 MILf.S
THIS benutlful car is like new thruout. The best of care
is reflected in seeing and driving V~. auto. trans., radio,
heater. power sleering, power brakes. factory air cond.
Landau roof. (ZSJ488).
$2675
'69 ~lercury Marquis ·
4 DOOR HARDTOP -SUPER SEDAN
In11naculatc inside and out. Full power including 6 way
seat. ractory air, Aftt~M stereo radio, Landau roof. This
beautiful car !!how1 excellent care. CYXW 397)
$2275
$2775
'71 Mark· III
EXCEPTION.ALLY CLE.AN -25,GOO MILES
Fully Luxury equlfped including climate control air, full power including 6 way seat,
AM·FM stereo, tll wheel, landau roof. See and drive today.
'68 Cadillac
SIDAN DE VILLI
ATTRACI'IY.E thruout, tun. power equipped with factory
air, 6-way seat, door locks, tilt A te1e wbttl. landau roof.
Excellent tires. (XTA354).
$2375
'67 Olds 98
4-DOOR HARDTOP
White \vith bur8"\lftCb' interior, full power, factory air
cond .• landau. cxtl093J. Sale priced
• $1075
'69 Marquis Brougham
HARDTOP CCK.1PI, -SALi PRICID
EQUIPPED with the finest equipment lncludin& tull pow-
er, 6 way individual front seat.8, factory air cond-. A!rf~
F?ll stereo radio, tilt wheel. landau roof. (323DRB).
• $2375
$6575
'70 Sedan Deville
EXQUISITE
Beauti[ul inside and out. The best of luxury, full power,
climate control alr, 6 way power seat, landau roof. See
today and drive. l480BEKl.
$4175 . -
'67 Cad~ Hardtop Sedan
llST IUY
BEIGE "'ith parchment interior, full power, factory air
cond. IT\VP400L
$1675
'70 Mercury
COLONY PAIJ( WAGON
10 passenger. Beautifully maintained. Fully equipped in-
cluding factorY air cond., power steering. power brakes,
lugp.ee rack. (982 BlM)
SEE U~E ..•. TRY ONE • • • • BUY ONE .••• TODAY!
•
Ramo Of 'l1te N"' Car • , • "G9r._ r_,.,.
• ,,
• • ••• . . . . . ..
'
DAJL Y PILOT 49
·e:::0 '73 .iDODGE
SWINGE R
SPEC IAL
2 DOOR HARDTOP
Full Fact ory equipped
Ord er Yours Now
~
$199 DOWN $65 MONTH FOR 36
MONTH S $2 088 Slt9i,101aldft.,j .. 1.1os;, ........ p,..,.. ""l .... he ..... FULL 'oj''"'"l"'ll '"°''"'""-'· '• ' «•d•I IOf 36 "''" O•ltuod
-• PRICE .... '"" "''""' ... ' lot•t11t ANN.JAi. ,llCINIAGf
t.t.1(9 .....
Fully foclory equ ipped 109" wheel
bose.1/2 Ion , coil,,springs, front &
reor, 26 gallon fuel tonk, duel jet wind-
shield wo~hers, fresh oir heater wi!h
defroster.
LARGEST SELECTION OF -
VANS .
IN SO. CALIFORNIA
IMMEOJATE DELIVERY
'72 DODGE MONOCO
Auto. Irons., power steering, power brakes, electric windows, air condi1ioning,
speed conf~I. rodi6, ~!er. (S~~OZK)
$J~:opw~~10~ A ~O~TH FO R 36
MONTHS
s31 ·aa . ~~~~E
1199" 1010( dn. py•ll.
\ 104 i1101ol ma. p1m1. •Kl
rn• ht9'1H & oil <Ol')'""I
tllOJ~I on ~r. Cfido1 lor '.I~ mos. 01terr1d 'p~mt.
p•Ke \1';43 1111;1, la• l 1,.
,e~•• ANNllAL 'fRCIN
TAG( RAii 10 10"•
BRAND
NEW 73DODGE
~ '.. ,'. CHARGER
2 DOOR HARDTOP
Fully Factory Equipped
. .. · Order Yours Now .. ' ~ , ~-.. '.
$J99 DOW,:$7:fA ;MO~ftt~· :· · 1 ~~~l~s
$ 2 2 8 8 PF~ILCLE ., ........ ,. . .,., "' ;,
'°'"I""' Pl"''""' "''· "'"'''·• &oll«•r~""l<l'liloljl>Ofllllll''
Cftdr! !or l• "'°'· 01fl"td
Pl'"' pr.u t 1•11;.,.1 •••I.
k..,.., •NN.141. Pl.C:tNIAC.l
Ull 10,,7.,..
I
TAKE
.YOUR
CHOICE
'72COLT
2 DOOR HARDTOP
Aulo. trnns., radio, heater, whitewall tires,
reclining seats, lil t-steering wheel. (4 l 9F.A.X)
'72VEGA
HATCHBACK
4-SPe~d. ra dio, heater. {Ser. II
1V7782U347430 1)
'72 DOD.GE
CHALLENGER
· 2 -Door Hardtop.' Fully factory equipped. low
mileage, (196FFH} • "
5199DOWN
$4fAMONTH
FOR 36 MONTHS
S 199 11 Iola! dn. pym!. S•2 !11okll mo.pl""I. jntf. fa•, hc1n1e & ull con1-
,..., chargt• on oppr. credit 10!' 36 mo1. o.!err!ld pymr prife S 1711 Ind.
!P~ & locen•~. ANNUAl P£RCEN1AG£ MAT! 9.90 ~.
'71 PINTO
'2·DOOR
Rocfi91 bifater, bucker' seals, plus fully Joc1ory
equipped. (031CBO)
• • I I I • •
'71 COLT
.. 2·DOOR
• h ' 'I Ridio, ecitw, deluxt wheel covers. fl f Siter-
.. -I. (1 SOCPI)
•
'6~MUSTANG '69 CHEVROLET '69 TOYOTA$ 2 DR ~T $1088 3•6v.~~!~~~"',;~ $788 .~~~~~ .. , 788
V-8, Rodio, ~ter ond bucket stols. (XI H729) rodio, heoter. (YQ0759).
PULL PRICI · FULL PRICI FULL PRICE
'71 FORD 2 DR.Hardtoli 2 CHEVROLET '70DODGE
VAN ~~ ... ~.~~;~,,~!!un $1388 K;~,w!~,~!,!;!,.,,.w. $3188
rod10, heater & wsw. er s!eering, radio, heoter, luggage rock, whit• Fully factory equipped including 6 Cy!., $1688
fU woU fires, disoppeoring 1a11 gate. (414Elf} F LL PRICI slick shift. {93909E). I
-,7-l_D_O_D_G_E_$_1.......;,;;,6-88 '69 PLYMOUTH$ ..........,....__""l':,:-=70~M:-:A~V~E="=~~IC~K~--
~~~~!,~~"'''°w" . WAGON 688 Rodioo~h:!.~~~equ;pped $888
. , ,
stee ring, rodio, heorer, whittwoU fires, {YWT91 1)
plus much more (009DFD) . PULL PRICI E..,i,...i w;th "'io""" heo11<. (689EOSI PULL PRICI . .PULL PRICI
'68DODGE
1/2 Ton Pickup
WE
A~PRECIATE
YOUR
BUSINESS
I
~~:!.r ~~: $ 7 8 8 :~!;~;~ .. 1
_, $1088
, V-8, auto. trans .. poww sttering, radio, heot-(Ol41G0010!622) '
tr. (XS29l9G 162466)
'
•
I
' .
I'll IB BE HOME ~
FOR CHRISTMAS
IN A
NEW FORD • t bMpt l'llitori I
50 GALLONS FREE
GAS ·
10 MAKE THE TR(P
~
WHEN YOU Bliv YOUR
"!EW 73 FO.RD AT
, ·:fHEODORE )IOBINS
FORD .
'
•
. . ' SEE . US BEFORE YOU BUY.
You Nll~ ·"Ike O~".'· ~c ..
0lfr.SWYlco A11il .Your
N,ow Pinto Watch!
•
............... 'lllt.'iffr,1m
PUT .
A-
WAGON SALE
• .
I
, ·'
,.
'
. . '' ..
T ·BIRD SALf:
• AVAILABLE-'70 to '72 · MODELS 20 AVAILABLE-'62 to '72 MODELS
J '-.&•;$34~6 S.-w/.._... ~l '71 T·lln '· : .... ,..... ......
....... wlM .• lfft5, .1,
coM., lew lllfla. Cl 25·
CCMI
fOUI -CHlftOLlr -..,_.. -TOYOTA ·-Y.W. ,,.,U.TIUll -MDc:llY
..,. w ..... YI. -.. •• .,,., ·rz $349 ..to. ........ Ndfo., ...-...·wc..a ..
P..S_. .... Miles.
CIOO 1161
·.
BEAT THE
'73 PRICE RISE!
WE HAVE A BIG
SEL(CTl~N OF Nftf. '73
CARS AND TRUCKS ·•T -. ~. WERE PRICED IEFORI
DEC. 1 PRICE INCREASE.
YOU GET
-I • • . . .
EXTU\: SAVI,.~
WHILE THEY
LAST! . '
•
•
llAND NIW AS OF
S.lf'T, 11 lti, 1972 I
ou1 ~·.1 WARRANTY
IS c;c>QD AS GOl.D FIOM
COAST TO. COAST ! -. .
• • ~ .1 .. lwM1 yo.~b11y -_!·-LI 0., wi.;,W. .,J;,, A-1 'W;;., ..,.. ~ ~ r .. ·0 "" ~-, -'" r•11ty, t•u le1¥9. your worri1• Oft your Forcf't>,.t. '
1r'• door1t.p. t1Mo'i. whv11. ,
I { it ~
For th1 first ')0 d1.,/...or \,ooo Mil11 your Ford
D••I•~ 9u1rllnt111 to pay 1001. for 1ny m1ior
"P•ir..' . • t ' 1' ' ~ . .. ' . ,_ -.. ' ---~-
. , I -.' l For the n1xt '24 mol\thl, your Ford Do1l1r lv1r1n•
te11 1 15 '.4 di1cou11t on Np1in 'cov1rlld under the
new A·I W1rr1nty.
Yo.u 91f A-1 protection wh1n you'rt out of town
tool In •••iv Stele of the 'Union you'll find p1rtici-
p1ti119 f ord Ot1ler1 who will pro'"p!ly and court•·
ou1ly honor th. 24 111onth · pro1ri1ion of your A· I
Wert1nfy1 •
C01111 '" 1vr 11'9ctioR of ;...,1 -;.,,,,.t.~ Ms~
.. " tod1yl 'We',. A·I W1rt111iy he1dqu1rt1n In
thlt 1r11 ••• tho clfflerihip wh.~ you~• yotir
-tries on ·•• cloonteP. > •
'.
"
'67 CHEV • .'iMPALA 2 DR. H.T. '67 CHE.VY CAMARO .
Radio, hea~ei:? ·~tomatic, 'vs, ~6 H.T., V-8, r•dio, lie•ter, 4 spd., s...295
power steer1n9, ••r cond., good Good Miln. I VCK~l 11 I .
miles. ~I ffloosl I " • " • • • '71 MAVERICK
1 door. R1dio, he•ter, 6 cyl-
inder, body side mldgs., wsw,
wheel covers, low miles.
l722COLI
..
. '67 COUGAR XR7 ~496· 'Ful1,pow~, eir cG'od,, vinyl roof,
·'" good mtr•s. IVGAl92J --------------~~ ..... ·~·~ --·--~~~~~~~~--~ 69 LTD H.T.
Radio, heater, automatic, pow-
er steering, •ir conditioning,
9ood miles. IZSS4l81
TRUCKS •& VANS 15 TD CHOOSE ·fROM
Example: '61Dod9e Sport Vin. 51l96 R,dio, h•11ter, •utomatic, good
:._miles: l'teU•t11 ~-r::-
t6t·TOYOTA .LAND CRUISER '67 ·'FIAT150 .
.\i WhHI Drive, 6 cyl., Good $4 79-6 Rodio, HNter, 4 1pd., Good
Liles, New P•int. l674DZKI I . ~. . Miles, 1uos·o1s 1 • . ,
'696
'63 MERC. STA1JON . WAGoN
Col. Prk. Full power, air cond.,
good miles. (OJW 5071
'
5496
'65 ·MUSTANG· .HARDTbP .
57.96
167 MERCURY MONTCLAIR
2 Dr. H.T., R•dio,·He•ter, Auto.
Tr1ns., Power-Sfffrin.g, Air
Cond., Good Miles. IV.06186)
C!71 ----·--· __ ,...
PAii$ -·-7•· f,_ ..... ~ 1 •.•• ,. ......... .
I
5896
17
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c v
b
fi
f
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San Cle1oenie Today's Fl••I • •
Capisirano ' EDITION N.Y. Stocks
.•. .
VOL. 65, NO. 350, 4 SECTIO NS, SO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEM BER 15, 1972 TEN CENTS
Laguna-Clemente Ra.ids Net 6 Drug Suspects
A joint undercover narcoUcs operation
by Laguna Beach and San Clemente
police resulted in arrests of an alleged
heroin pusher and five suspected users
rounded up in Laguna Beach early this mo'rnlne. ,·
Ott. Sgt. Nell Pureell said two of the
five arluted on susplclon of being under
•
the .influence of a narcotic sWI had blood
oozing from their arma where injections
bad been made.
Two tiny children, one 2¥4 and the
other 3'n feat's old, were taken into pro--
tective cuitody from the home .where ar·
restS were made, Purcell said.
1bomas J. Hille, 22, of 34111 Pacific
•
Coast Highway, Apartment 17, Dana
Point was booked into San Clemente jail
on suspicion of sale of heroin, possession
of heroin, possession or marijuana and
being under the influence of a narcotic,
Purcell said. No bail was set.
Arrested In Laguna Beach at 136 High
Drive were: Raymond C. Arzate, 29;
rain .I
Girl, 15,
Hurt Badly
In Crash
A small car carrying four young Dana
Hills Hlgb School students went out of
CClll!rol, lkldde(I and flipped alOJli •
dtl"ertod stretch of Avenfda Pico 'lburs-
dv a!temooo leaving me girl l>adly In-
jured and her c:om,pam""' shaken-up.
The accident occurred along the llttle-
traveled strelch.of A•enlda Pico at about
1:40 p.m. 'Ille IDOi! ae!loullY Injured
among the two young boy! and -girls
WU Melody !Jay Shores. 15, -Uvd
abolnl I tiaot In Dalla BOrbor with. bet
Near O'Neill Park
Caspers Poses
~ew Airport Site
Frustrated by Marine and San Diego
County officials, opposition to a Comp
Pendleton ltrport, Supervisor Ronald
Caapera of Newport Beach baa come up
with a new proposed' lite in the southeast port of the county. _ _
He aald oo a tour of the Trabuco Can-
yon ar:ea be spotted a .. larfe ezPan.te of
leveled terrain oo .the 1i-abuCo Plain
which mJchl be • good jet aill>Orl site.
The location ls dlroctly .nil of the
ccianly's' O'Neill Parlt and just west of Co!O de ~ a. prt•,ate, ~
faclllty. ''
The property 1s owned by Rancho
Viejo no~ and west of the site protested ·
vigorously u did residents and city of-
ficials In San Juao Coplitrano and San
Clemente ..
The two communlUe!I would have been
in or near the takeoff pattern of the BeJI
Canyon Airpott.
The site proposed by-Olspers, although
ll miles from El Toro Marine Corps Air
Station, would mate oome flJghl path
coolllct .]rith that facility. It llao bu a
hlll;ldleap of ··~ ~ tlif'!Clll' tatheeut. ' -
David K. Williams, 21; Joyce E. Baust,
27; Charles P. Beckers, 30; and Tonya L.
Tarrant, 2.8. All listed the High Orlve
residence as their address. HiUe was then taken to San Clemente and pla1..'ed
under arrest there.
Officers then went to the man's Dana
Point apartment, ana assertedly seized a
•
small quantity of marijuana.
Officers then went back to the High
Drive residence and took the five others
into cwitody.
Purtell said there appears to be a
slight increase in the number of heroin
arrests being made in the area.
"It's gradually on the increase in the
south part or the coWlty. We will attack
heroin as vigorously if not more so tban
we did with marijuana and hashish," the
detective aaid.
He said that there "definitely is a con·
nectien between heroin use and other
crime, 0 because heroin users must ralse
money to support expensive habits .
• Ill rv1ne
Passengers
Feel Jolt
At90MPH
By RUDI NIEDZIEUiKI
Of .. D•l1' Plltl Staff
The driver ()f a )arge bread truck was
killed instantly this morning when his
vehicle collided with a passenger train
which was traveling 90 miles per hour at
the paint of impact on the Jeffrey Read
crossing in Irvine. •
Costa Mesa police officers identified
the dead man -as Charles L. Schoonover
Sr., 46, of 149511 Sand Canyon Ave.,
Irvine.
~clrl and ..,;... clrl 111 the ""*-" the-~ff! tliO-i.tdl ol .. •
~· H Ul!'dod"' - - -tbia .nllecl °"'. r 'v~~~-i.~Neli! ~....,... lilt la)ll the-• vicini-
ty •the Bell Canjoa)lirpol"$ which was
auaeilod-ltt· ~ IWii!> Al Pinions Com-
r~-~ be bad asked llollert 111fiTn~ ,...,. dlNdDr ·~
lo !'fl!dl ~ I 'illlt if-.. '"""'""' sue. lit :Sb ,.. ..a, Alla& be Ud .
The · Santa Fe train was bound fer Les
Angeles out or San Diego and was car·
eying about 125 passengers, all of whom
felt the shock ol the coJlisio& New waa
tnjiired. ,
!'lllls Sullivan, 57, ol -llatfa, con·
ductoi' of the four-car lraln', told in-
veotigators that be felt tlit lmpaet but
did not Immediately kn6w what occurred.
~ Mid tbtl ~ !tll.Ort ~ Mcje'ri11, H,' ol 11721 Sur, Dona
Polill,--ed only.-.
The driWr Of the ear·wu ldeallflec! by
police as'Gary Neil Tltamai, II, of ll3ia
Seabrt&bl Ort .. , Dea -. Another
companlm wu not lrnmadla&ely iden--
lifle(I.
Officers said Thomas told them be wii
forced to take eY1Sive actloo .when two
can beaded towant him from the op-. . le direction. posl
Immediately after the accident the two
boys freed themselYes from t b •
wreckage.
Wblle Thomas stayed with the badly
Injured g)rl, the other young couple
i>eglD walking down the rood toward San
Clemente Hlch Sc:ltool.
pany report In 1919. -'
When the Pal'IOllS "'port _, made
pcblic, homeowne~ sfuups. In Mission
DOI JOI -11ble ta lludy tbt !>nJposal.
~ said be still fOeis that camp
p e • d le,. f ~"' the ideal loc9tlon for • large. lei'~~ 11 will
tab an ad ol eoacr-to ... n:ome the
Marine oppooltioo.
Saddlehack Trustee Asks
Change in Site of Trial
A passing employe from TRW
Systems, police said_. stopped nnd sped
the )'Vlltlis to the high school nurse's Of-
fice for llelp.
Saddleback school board member Alyn
M. Brannoo will ask a Superior Coor\
· judge Jan. 19 to move bis trial on
bookmaking charges out of Orange C.W..
ty.
a week. They aaid the trus~ accePted
heavy bets on football and basketball
games and on one. occasion, the outcome
of a tennis final between Rod Laver and
Ken Rosewall. MIA Shores was ta.ken to San Clemente
G..teral. Hospital aod placed under in·
temlve care for -treatnient of a skull
fracture, broken jaw and other 5'!\ltre in-
juries. Her cooditlon this morning was
"fair " llW'leS said. ,,,.; olhOr three atudents all were lal:en
to ·private pbysiciaos by their parents,
contacted by school authorities. •
Fiesta Sponsors
Consider Change
In Future Par 3de
Sin Clemente's Fiesta la Cbriltlanlta.
-!llr years 1111'1dlllonal .celebrltion of lbO first Christian bapUsln in CalJfornla
-wtll be dissected and heavily eumlne<t
In coming months by Its ~· Wliile no one ih ~l-tpOl\IOl1N
"'-her of commet'L"e wQald pndlol !Iii '
dealh of the fiesta , they hove ._ • that it abo6ld be totally eyamlnlcl to let
The Saddleback Community College
District Trustee bas not revealed In bis
petition for a hearing before Judge
William Murray the ruson behind his re-
quest for a change of venue. ·
But court officials who handled the
documents believe that Brannon, 41, feels
that publicity stemming from bis arrest
and the subsequent Orange County Grand
Jury Indictment mates It Impossible for
him to receive a fair trial in this area.
Brannon's co-defendilnt, used car sales
manager Robert Emmett Kelly, 34, of
Newport Beach, bas not joined Brannon
in the request for a transfer of the trial
scheduled for March II.
Brannon was aITested Aug. 28 after he
allegedly attempted ta enforcl! set·
tlement of a gambling debt from a man
idOOtified by police as a regular patron of
the achoo! board member. Arrestfug officers allege Brannon's
bookmaking operations in the Harbor
Area produced takln&s of at least '2$,000
Kelly was arrested si:1 weeksJater
after a wealthy Newport B e a c h
businessman told police that an eight-
Inch bunting knife was burled into bis
front door as part of the pressure
employed to collect gaming debts.
Police assert the victim told them he
was gambling at the rate of $1,000 a
week in an operation allegedly headed by
Brannon. They said ttlls information ob-
tained from the victim led to Green's ar-
rest.
Contractor, 65, Dies
ATHERTON (AP) -Robert B.
Rothscbild Jr., a contractor whose firm
built the Marin County Civic Center and
a University ..of. California art musewn,
died 'lbursday 11 65. Rothachlld collapsed
of an apparent heart attack at his home
here and died later In a hospital.
I
If cblnges should come abOu.I -
p!iJt!cu!ar!JI In th'!l!!ge__annual ~.+,--A general memberahlp meetlDI ww oc-
sel oome!lme . ...laJeltnw7,_m1 !ho
Fiesta will be at the top of the .,-. .
Crosby Croons
In receQt years .._ • !er the nal1!de have soared and otbet probilms have emerged as well. oulao1ng chamber manapr Robert
Eva said this week that be -a
keen Interest In freSbenlng up the ...,,.W
calibration during a recent membenhlp
meollng. .
llome supettlonl Involve scrappinJ the ,,...... enllH!l.
· tllin olbera b&Ye suuested changing
the date of the umual celebration to ,..
If ll could -ate more Jnterost.
Last year the parttdt beCame a cause
telebre o( the MUwar movement when a
grwp of Vietnam Veterana Aclinat the.
-War lnSllted that they bad tbtl rtghl to
march In the 1orp ~
$opertot tourt acttona !ollowtd; the
(l!tt nBSTA, Pip I)
• ••
Y-Ule -Whiter f Qr Senior Citizens
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -'!be aenior«ltlum at the Laguna Honda ~
pita! heft were dreaming of a "White ~1stm11111 and tbtre to help them do
it waa the great-crooner himself, Bing Crosby.
MORE THAN "' PEllBONS -oome ol ·tbem In wbeelchairl -jammed
the eoqvale-t oenler'• auditorium Thundly to let Ille 111-yeaN>ld Blng'a
rare public aJ)Jl'ill"ance take tbetn ceotly down memory lafte to Chriltmsaes
past. :.. .
Croel>y wtnt through a number ol Chrlstmsa .,..., tncludillf "Jlllgl• Belli"
and "0' Little-Town ol Bethlehem" and thetl uiled If there wen any roqueats. • l'JIOM ALL PARTS or the •llditorlum uu.. ...... -by thooe whO 1could remember and could ltlll. ....,,t, Other IDOUlha opol!Od but no oound
came out.
11 had been .. long 11nce C!ooby had """ tlie "oi4 ...... be ..... 1 ... uy
forgot a Uni or two, but II didn't metier. Each ~ brouiht whlstles, cbeera
and applauoe from thole Ible to Ufl'* lhenllelvea:
..
.. ..
. . . •
Lighti .. g Vp De S~g . . . ' .
The lights on the. National Cbrist!D•• Tree were tested at dusk Thur ..
day, n!Sulting ih tlii,. moody pbotol!rapb showing the tree near -the
Waabiligton .Monument. The angle of the picture seems to add to the
height of the tree, .... though it's only just over 70 !eenall.
.
Ci vilian, Militar y Pay
Raises Okayed by Nixon
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -President
Naon today erdered a 5.14 percent pay
Increase ror 1,318,000 civilhln government
workers and 'a 6.69 percent salary boost
for all 2.4 million ·members ef the armed
services.
The increases will become effective the
first pay period after Jan. 1, the White
House ·said.
1be civilian pay r'aise had betn
postponed from OCtober as an antl-tn-
flatton move. The military increase Is
new.
He said that !llcb an increase would
result in paying federal employe1 nigher
sala ries than the comparable workers in
private enterprise are receivin •.
The increases are across the board and
amounf,ed. to a cost-of·livlng hike. They
affect persons making under $3f,OOO.
ln a message to Congress, Nison a8.id
· that "'the American system of career
civil service is based on tbe prtnciple of
rewarding merit."
He added, "J am pledged to continue
strtvirig to make it an even more ef-
fective, responsible part of our govern.
menL One way of achieving this Is to
"I didn't know anything about it," said
Wlllia, still dazed, at the stopping point ef
the train, about J .5 miles away from the
impact en OJJver Drive.
Traffic Investigator Gary Barwig of
C'.osta Mesa Po!Jce Department said the
collision ruptured a fuel tank and air
hoses. Beith signaled the !rain's fail-safe
system to con.e to an emergency stop.
The impact was so forceful that it
sheared the bread truck into its major
components, scattering hot do g 1 and
hauburger buns and jagged pieces ol
metaJ down the track.
The truck's engine was ripped from its
mounts and landed next to tbe track
more than 100 yards 8way. It was still
hot to the touch one hour after the 1:40
a.m. collision.
A conductor en the train said he felt a
bump and suspected a collision bad oc-
curred "when it went bangety, bang,
bang, bang" underneath tbe coaches.
He said the train was running an
schedule and."'-d made stops at Del Mar
and San Clemente befere the accident oc·
curred.
The train continued its westbound
journey at 9:45 a.m., using only its front
engine. A rireman on the train saJd the
second engine was disabled when diesel
fuel leaked out of tbe ruptured tank.
tnvestigaton at the scene said the
train was going approximately 90 mph
through the signalized intersection but
that this was considered normal a n n.
proper speed.
0r..,e Coan
The aCl'OS&itbe-bbard increases were
ordered by Nlxo~ an the. basis of recom-mendation.! by Budget Directer Caspar maintain a salary scale for civtl servants ...,ea.tiler
that ii just and comparabl,.e _.:to::_t~ha~t'..-1-----"--------t-----,-_ Weinberger_and.the.._cbainnan er the Civ:iL
Service Conunissien to promote com-
parability . with .private., lnd111try aalary
~tes. '.Ibey will coet about $2 billion.
The President at· the same time turned
down a reeommendallon of an additk>nal
pay incrtue or 0.38· percent to mak\_ up
for the three-month delay In pay• ~d· jllstmeots, holding that his "would be
nelthet fair nor justifiable."
,-
'
(S.,nlAl!ES,----ir • •• A few high clooda, but otherwise
Capo'~ Pina ta
Party Saturday
San Juan ca'piatrano11 foarth annual
pinata party for younpteil In the COO)·
munlty will take place at the downtown
mlnipark Saturday anen-.
Sponsored by the chamber of 0001·
merce, the I p.m. party will be open to
chUdren nnglnc In IP fr o m
pmchooim to ti-In 11xth aracle, and
all wUI hlvt 1 ~ to break a tracfi.
t!0110l Melican pinata Oiled with candy.
Mr. and Mn. Santa Clalll -por\r~ed
by a well.known local ..-iroteur and
his wire -will PIU' a •lsll to the party as
well.
-
SUMY on Salurdoy, ls the way the
weatherlady ,... it. Highs of 1$ at
the beaches, risina to 70 Inland.
Lows tonight 4>-IO.
INSW E TODAY
What ..,;,.. th• top 10..,,,..
munflt/ l""•ter productlolu of 1972 In Orona• Clllmltll The , ,
DAILY PILOT '• d,..,lllel . erlti<
of/trs his euahMdon in todov't
Week•tt.dt,. aection.
.
'
•
OA.lLY PllOl St
Geese or Gulls?
I
Pl.ane Victims' Identity Urisure
2 Suspects,
2 Patrons
Sex Education Curbed
Tbe Air Calilomla plane wblch made on emergency 1"111 to ~ Qiun. (
111' ~ W~ lllght moy hlvt twallo....S MYUll IOI &Ulla In ..,. ol State Board Okays Ruling Without De~t.e
. -
!Is lei q1lltl nlher ll>ln wild 1-.
ORANGE COU!'lrY Director ol Avt.tlon Roberl Breanlhan 111d he -
pect.s that the blrds were common, ordlRIJ')' 1e1 plls. hWe will De\'tl' bow
for aure though." he said. ''They were pretty well chewed up." .
The plane, ~·ughl 657 to San Jose and Oakland, wa.. about. l,SOO feet over
the Upper Bay and Just prior 10 reduclng p<>wer to cut jel D<JlJC when it ran
Into the !lock or birds.
Tll~ Jl-.'T rt1ADE a tum over the ocean aod returned to Orange Colmty
Airport where the passengers were transfered to another jet for tbelr flight.
Breshnahan aakt report.a that Ure broke out in the engine which sucked
in the birds was not true. "When the birds hit the intake • fan blade was
bent causi ng It to scrape on the engtne nacelle and aparka flew but tM pilot
cut I.he 1notor and there was no fire."
:~No Viet11am Peace Word
:i Expected Before Y uletime
•• \\'ASHING1'0N (AP l -President Nix·
(In has n() plans at !his 1in1e to make om
announcement on Vietnam befo r e
Christmas, the White Hou.se said today.
:Tru1nan Weaker,
.F ail,s to Respond
To Medication
KANSAS CITY (AP)-Harry s Tru-
nHln, semi·consclous and· unable to speak.
fa iled to respond to medlcatlori today and
doctors expresS<'d C{lncern about his
weakening kidneys.
The former President slept fitfully and
continued 10 receive OxYgen all the time.
A spokesman at Research Hospital and
Medical Center said, "kidney output con-
tinues to decrease in spite of medica-
tion."
FOr the second straight day , Dr.
Wallace Graham termed Truman's con-
dition "Vt!:ry serious."
: 1be 88-year-old Truman was admitted
to the ho!pita1 10 days ago, suffering
from bronchitis and lung congestion.
Sliepage in Truman's kidney function
·was noted Wednesday When docton
! ~bserved sigm of renal impalrment,
which they said, meant his kidneys were
~not purifying blood properly.
-Thursday, actual output of the 'cidneys
, decreased and the doctors said the
: Kidney condition was "o( concern and is
, being watclted very closely for .ch~e."
At 7 a.m. PST Truman's vital tilgns
· were pulse 84, blood pressure 1%4-60 and
temperature 99.8.
Fro111 Page 1
~~RAISES ...
:.: received by equivalent individuals in the
::private sector."
:: On Monday, Niton'a chief economic
.. :spokesman, George P. Shultz., announ:.'ed
:: a fret!e during the 1973 calendar year on
:: salaries of "eiecuti\le level" federal
: • employes, including memben o f ·-Coo&ress and the judiciary.
::: But Schultz made it clear at that time
:-: that the delayed federal pay hike for the
:~lower categories would go forward. ..
:: 4 Named in Murder .. ..
:: SAN DIEGO (AP) - A man identified
:: by police as president of the Aremen
:~Motorcycle Club and three others have
::been indicted by the San Diego County
::grand jury in the slaying of a llell's
::Angels "hanger-on ."
:· The body of Edwin Lee York, 35, af El
~:Cajon was found N()v. Z8 fn the trunk of
• an aband<lned car. He had been shot four
: times. There was a gash in bis head.
:: The next day police arrested James
:: David Wiley, 28, Identified as head of the
:·nval club and one of two men injured in
:: a gang fight at San Diego Stadium during
::a benefit rock concert Nov. 12 . .. ;...::..::;.;._ _______ ...., .. ., .. . ,
Presidential press secretary Ronald L.
Ziegle r said Nixon met again Thursday
night and this morning with adviser
Henry A. Kissinger. just returned from
the latest round of secret peace negolia·
tions fn Paris.
Kissinger also is consulting with
Secretary or State William P. Rogers,
Secretary of Defense ~1el\•in R. Laird,
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs oi Stilff,
Adm. Thomas H. ~1oorer, and in-
telligence chief Richard Helms in in·
dividual meetings, Ziegler said.
Kissinger and bis top assistant. Gen.
AJezander Haig, brieted Rogers for kn
hour and a half late Thursday.
But the White House spokesman had no
further travel plans to announce con-
cerning the Vietnam negoUatlng, such as
a trip by Kisslnger to Salgon or a
meeting between Nixon and South VJet·
nam's President Nguyen Van TbJeu.
There are contJnulng Washingtoo-
Saigon differtnees O\ler peace propasals.
The sum total of the press aecretary'a
remarD left an impress.Joo that tbe
peace negoUatJona are pretty much at a
sumdstill. -
He declined again to cbaracterlu the
status of the negotiations beyond saying
"negotJatiorui: have taken place in Paris"
and "we will stay in tooch with lbe other
side (North Vietnam) th r o u g h
messages."
Asked about the possibility of a
presidentlal statement to the public
before Christmas, Ziegler replied:
"There is no plan for the President to
00 that at this lime."
City Manager's
"
Salary Increased
San Juan Capi.strano City Mana,.r
Donald Weidner's wages will go up after
New Years Day -by $1,000 a year.
Clty councilmen this week unanimously
granted the increase ln salary and auto
allowances.
The raJse will bring Weidner's wages
up to $17,500 a year.
Several months ago councilmen ap-
proved a five percent, across-the-board
increase for all but two city employes.
Weidner and the city clerk's poat were
excluded from that package.
Wiring W ortb $1,500
Taken in Capistrano
Copper wiring valued at more than
$1 ,500 was stolen Wednesday night by
burglars who broke into the premises of
a San Juan Capistrano electrical con-
tractor.
Orange County Sherifrs ufficers said
the wiring was takE!D fron1 the Steiner
Electric plant, M2:40 Camino Capistraoo
by intrude:n who smashed locks on the
chain link fence and a door to gain entry.
Deputies said the burglars must have us-
ed a truck: to haul away the hea\ly rolls
of wiring.
Sunday's Best
Die in Bar
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Two bar
patrons found dead after offictrs fired 17
shotgun bursts to kill two robben may
have been ldlled by stray PoUct shots, a
police lieutenant said today.
Detective Lt. Robert Melder 11\d
''that's one of the possibilities. We do
know some of the buckshot rrom outside
dld enter a portion of the window th at
leads into the bathroom" where the
customers' bodies were found.
He said 1utopsles bad been ordered
and the "e.ntirt case ,is being turned over
to the district attorney for a dete:rmina·
if there waa any misconduct by officen.
This would be doQe e v e n if patrons
hadn't been shot."
One dead gunman was identified as
Kenneth Ray Fisher, 20, of Los Angeles.
llelder said. A customer killed in the
barrage was identified as Leonard J. Of.
fray, 36, 1•f Los Angeles.
The lieutenant said Identification of the
two other victims would have 10 come
from fingerprints.
Sixteen perSQns were lying on the floor
or the ~I restroom in the Office Bar
alter being \rdered there by the gwunen,
Helder said.
l{e said eight officers opened fire
Thursday night with their shotguns when
two young men brandishing a pistol and
a sawed-off shotgun ran from the front
and rear entrances ol the bar in the
city's southwest section.
Both men disregarded police orders to
drop their weapons, he Slid, but neither
man fired a shot at officers_
'Belle of 90s'
Painting Judged
Best at Exhibit
An oll palnllng ent!Ued "Belle of the
Ninetie!" was selected as the best in the
show by a panel of artists judghii the an·
nual winter erhJbiUon of the San
Clemente Arts and Q'afts Club.
The winning art wprk was created by
Roberta Hansen of San Clernentt.
The honor was announced this week as
the exhibit began at the duo gallery at
the San Clementt Cmtmunlly Clubhouse.
Other wlnnen and their ~tlo111
included: ,
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sex education
tn cauromia achools will come under
tighter regulation under a resolution
aclop1ed today wltllout debate by the
Sttite Board of Education.
Adoption or the S<t of guidelines Collow·
ed a meetL"lg Thursday night when! a
board subcommittee beard briefly Crom
opponents to the measure. °"" opponen4 W1yne Lamoot of t he <>ranee Cotmty-l>al<d Birth Control
InsUtute , Inc., said In an interview after
the board's action that the rule! will pro--
vide "ammunition for Intimidation."
Lamont contended that a small, vocal
minority or parents In moot district. go
In front of local boards to oppose sex
education, and the new rules wUl give
them "ammWlltk>D agalnat people "ho
want frank, open sex Instruction.''
Especially flffenslve to Lamont was
one section of the rules that statu that
"Harmful effects of premartiaJ sex, etc.,
and a code of morals be emphasized with
no derogatory instruction relative to
religiwa beliefs and ethics, and to
parents' beliefs and teaching."
Lamont said he tried to get the board's
subct:lmmillee to change the . word
"premartial" lo ''irresponsible" but bls
suggestion was rejected.
The rules on teacher training, parental
notification and outside speaker re-
quirements grew out or a controversy
earlier this year when homosexuals a~
peared as guest lecturers at sez educa-
tion classes in San Francisco and Marin
counties.
At an earlier meeting , staU member
Henry Heydt said the districts involved
complied with current I e g a 1 re-
quirements.
But board member Gene Ragle of
Roseville said the coune at Redwood
j{igh School in the Marin County town of
Larkspur appeared to be "a do-it-
ypurselr course in copulation."
One section of today's resolution states
that local .school superintendents have
veto power over outside speakers med in
"family life" or sex education courses.
Another secti()n requires. parents to be
notified by mail of sex education courses.
State law gives parents the right to pull
their child out of a sex education class.
Also inch.lded ln the guidelines ls a re-
quirement that each district set up a
KOCE Program
Features Sclimitz
Tliree Eveni,r-gs.
committee to rev~ all· the materials ut-
ed In ,.. edtlcatlon ""'""· Then the committee ""'11d lei I !be loCll board
know what they think ol the JD1lerlals.
Woman's LetteJ.·
Sparks Probe
Of Road Safety
A lotter by 1 San Juan Coplslrano
woman warning of eitreme danger to
pedestrians along a secUon ~of Del Obispo
Road hu spar'ed I Study by the
en&bieoring lllafl of the city of San Juan
C.plstra!lo.
Yvon o. Hechcher tbi! week told city
councilmen that tbe section <J( the
recently widened highway In tha area or
• produce stand near Mareo Forster
Junlor High School was posing an el'·
treme peril to pedestrians, mostly
XoUDl!'ters.
Col,mcllmen agreed that a problem
could txlst and onlered City Engineer
Jack Kubota to conduct a survey of the
area to see what could be done.
Several councilmen suggesttd the
possibility or a crossing guard at the spot
during peik periods.
One part of the woman's letter drew
particular praise from the cwncilmen
and city staff.
•ilf special costs are involved, l would
be pl .. sed to partlclpatt," Mr a.
Heckscher said.
San Diego Gas
Pays $124,029
San Diego Gas and Electric Company
aides announced today that the utility
ha! paid l124,112t to the County of Orang•
recenUy as Us first installment of prop-
erty taxes for die fiscal year.
The large sum, however, is dwarfed by
the utility's total property tu bill for its
holdings in four Southland counties.
The entire ta:r package paid earlier
this month ~ mounted to •1t.e mllllon.
The large-st portion went to San Diego
County.
The smallest dribbled toto Imperial
Coun1y's coffers, a total of '270.
In 1969 the board ll8ued brWld .,..
guidelines covering ~chtr training and
stating that sei: educaUon m... tbould
be vo!llntary rather thin mandllor)(,
Fro"' P.,.e I
FIESTA .• •
chamber won; the veleranii
demonstrated on the aldeWalk.
A rew wcek:.s later the chamber wa !I
compeUed to Cort over hundreds of
dollars in legal fees u _p1yment fOt the
viclOry.
The year before. the routtng 1f the
parade was at issue.
A group of Soulh El C&mino Real
businessmen mobilized and immediately
launched a campaign to ah!C\ tho plrlde
route to cover their section of town.
The p>an eventually fizzled and the
dissident group blended into Ibo cJiaml>er
membership.
Evam often has insisted that~· e
-although the real all<nllQ or
the July celebration -Is allo COStl·
iest h<adache.
Addmalng director& this week; &vans
urged the group to launch a steady and
intense study as soon a.s poatble on the
character and potMtial of the· celebra~
tion.
''rl's got lo be ,...lved quickly,
because all the groups we rely on ln the
parade already are making up scbedults
£or Ute fiext edltion and We*ve ahudy
giveo them a tentaUve da.te for the
parade."
Soon after assuming the post wltb the
chamber, Evans. attempted 10 brvadln
the bue of spon90rSblp foe the amnul
event. ·
Preliminary attempts were made to
form a separate association -a:imlla.r to
that operatin1 successfully la San Juan
Capistrano -to orglllize the enllre parade packaae.
The onus, however, !I0011 fell back on
the chamber's hired staff and a handful
of committee volunteer&. ·
And lhat wwt, Evans haa 11ld
repeatedly, amounta to about three
months or llllried staff lime committed
to 1 parade, wbile the m t of ~r
chamber business waits.
1 Dead, 1 1Hurt
In Arizona Try
At Prison Break
Na1c1a Schorg, structura1 1an<1scape; A KOCE, channel 51) Jll'Otl••n1.1n ~1cb Joan Baez Grpup FLORENCE, Am. <AJ» -An 1~
Mellla Howant, marine; Art Drielsma, Conuessman Jolm G. Schmillr If In-tempted brelk ln>m the Arilonl Stole
general watercolor,· William Mi!C'Arthur, tervlewed by orange CoWltY news!nen Prllon by a Taft, CaJJI. man and two
stroctural watercolor; Ruth G&d, allll will be .aired lhreo evenlnp thll month Arrives .. in Laos other "desperate pooeJe" with put beginning II 6:30 p.m. Monday. records of Oeelnc lnttltutlons ended with
life: Sandy Martin, J>Qrtrait; Rene SCbmJtz, who was defeated in his one of theine:n dead, ooe injured and tbe
Snodgrass, contemporacy; Olgl Stearn; primary bid for renomination as the VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) -Folk c.JUomian In bolalloo.
pastoral· .landscape; Jane RO z e I le • Republican cahdldate in the 35th District singer Joan Baez arriYed bert todly en Frederick Maocm, 30, ol St. Lou:lt, was
student-oil. by county Assessor Andrew J . Hinshaw, route to Hanoi and said she bopes to get killed Tbunday .night as he and another
A total of 103 entries were 11.1bmitted discusses his pl8Rll for the immediate a chance to sing for American prisor.era inmate atteq1pted to_ overpoftl a tower
and 75 of the selected wortm ate cur-future in the balMiour J:.: Schmitz of war In the North V-Clpital. guard, llid WIN!en Bud G<met.
renUy on display at the gal1er, from l to was the American In · Party's Miu Baez, with pilaf ha hlDd, wu ac-The· warden said Macon and Paul
4 p.m. each d•Y· No admlllloo ls cbarg-presidential candidate. coml)anied by three antiwar activists In· Jqeson, 28, attempted to OVfll1)0Wel' tbe
ed. "Focus Orange County," ~ed by the eluding Columbia UnlvenitJ law proles-guanl arttr he bad beet dlttncted by ~ercial station's Jim COoper, will aor Telford Tl)'lor, a U.S. prosecutor at Nk:t cox, %1, ot Tait.
C.Onrad to Head
Apartment Unit
be replayed at 8 pJV., on Tbursdiys Dec. 'the Nuernber1 war crimes trials after Gomes said the guard beard the two
21 and 28, on channel 50. Worta Wir!I. climbing aome cooler ducn.wt on &ht
Interviewing Sclnnltz are Jim Dean, 1be group ts carryin('SOO letters from side of the tower Ind turned and ltred,
executive editor of I.he Register: 'Ihomas relatives and loved ones to U.S. prisoners -wounding Macon fatally.
Keevii, editor of the DAILY PlLOT, and of war in North Vietnam and pllDS to He aaJd Jorgeson eltber fell or jumped,
Howard Seelye, political writer for the bring mall from the POW1 bacl< when the suffering two broken ankles In the ll){oat
Los Angeles 'Times. four retum next week. drop.
San Clemente realtor Don Conrad bas '_::::.:::!::::...:==--------'-'--'.------------...:...-----------
been chosen to head the Apartment,
Hotel, Motel AuoclatiOll for the coming
year, "7lth Al Filger Sr. serving as vice
president Of the acUve organlzation.
Conrad head! a local realty firm and
has served within the chamber <Jf com·
merce amt other service groups.
Other olltcera named 10 serve through
the year and to be inBtaUed 1t en armual
ban(fuet next February are lten Nosier,
treasurer; Beth Nosier, con-esobding
secretary; Lyn Fairbanks, record1ng
secretary; Jim Col bum, cili.ctor mid
toytle Davl<J..., director.
LAMPS-PICTURES -ACCESSORIES
PRE· HOLIDAY SALE
It's tho little things that can mike tfte dif.
ferenco. Stop by today ind view our fine
11lectlon, now specially pricocl. If it's for •
gift, or for you personally, you'll find just tho
thing to enhance 1ny home . for tfte holid1y.
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DAILY PILOT
l1W or.,.. c.t DAILY ,,Lor, Wflfl Wflldl
b UlllMMll IN N-,~ i. PVlll...._. l#Y
""' or..,.. C..tt "*IWW!I ~ .. ....
Cousins on 'Life,' Sign
.
~ •• 11 ~· "' ~
. .
rtlle: illltttnt .,. M!llil'IN, ,..,.,...., tl\ ...... llc
,rl!Jt'I, tor (At1 MtJ•, Ntw,ol'I l•.c:ll,
11-.11..., aucwF-•1n V•tl•'f', L19-~.,.,,._,._....._ .,.. ·ht! ci..-i.1
S.n JWlll C.plil'11M. A •1"9•• r"ltnal
Hltt.n b ,_,.1~ $tluf'd1'1'1 Wiii Sw.111,._
TM .-IMINI ~'-1111'111 •llnl h 11 llJ Wttl
ll't llrett, Clollt ""-9. C..Wlor11le, ntlt.
k•~rt H. Wee4 ,, .. ..,.. .,. ,..,.uwr
J1cli II. Ct1rl1y
Viet ,rat.t.11 efall Ctntrtl """"lfff
Tho1t11r IC11,,// .....
n ...... ..,.. "''""''" .._..'"' ... ,,.,
01ffft H, L111 Rlehtnl r. N•ll
Aullltlll Mtflllffll ••1 ....
5-;C ...... OMce
JOI Nd Et C•111i11• 11111, 92671 --C..At ~I nf "'"' •1r Jlffll """""'hlO\I -,,.......,. 111111-1 .,..._ .... 1 1rv1 ~ ,..,..., .... ....... ....., . ...,., """""'
Tlf 1' ln•l Ml-4111
cs •• ••• rt , u '41.f&n
Mixt!p, Mystery in Pilot
Another great maga1ine is dead and
magazine mafl Nor.nan Couslm, newe1t
columnlsl to join the DAILY PILOT
lineup or star talent. aaya the govern--
ment helped kill Life with escalaUng
past.ill rates.
That's one of l!everal articles, photo
feature! and columns you'll find runong
"Sunday's Be1t.'1 Here's a preview of
$Orne other things upcoming ror Sunday
DAILY PILOT readers:
SIGN SCRAMBLE -It'• Po"lblo that
some signs ani more confusing to
mororists than the rule.a they're trying to
convey. Sign 1tlldy atmeJ at reducing
viauaJ pollution and tncre11lng ~
derstandtng 11 the 1ubject of YOU atcno1'
lead story by Stiff Writer Rudi
Nledzl•lakl. . ,
LAGUNA NIGUEL )!YS'J'ERV-Etrle
sight or light. burning all night •t the •i>
parenUy empty 121 milllon North
American Roc~wt11 "Ziggurat" in an
uninhabited valley wa1 part of the Jn.
trigue that cauled " Laguna Hiiis woman
to wonder enough about the ne'f!r«·
C11pled building lo v\s~t It and write'1boUt
It.
YULE GIFTS FOR NEEDY -
Chrislma1 is a time for shaz lng and U
you want to give to families In need, the
YOU Section will list agenclea to whltj>
you can take food, clothlng, toys or other
gUts for distribution .
CABOT ON COVER -Sebastian
Cabot, 00..t of the •how which wlll
change from "Ghost Story" to "Circle of
Fear" earl)o ln January. 11 featured in
cover atory or TV WEEK.
STEALING FROM BUND -A new
p<>wer group 18 cniwbanina Its way into
a dominant poettion In Washington. The
"thrtat" comes from blind people who
man candy-anack·MWJ ltat"1s in lobbies
or Cederal bulldlnga. Von Roaman tells It
like it l• ln "Stealing from the Blind."
HELICOPTER LADY _ -Silo's only
four feel, ll Inches tall, bUl )'OU c1n bet
Orange County's first anti onJy wom11n
helicopter pilot hu 1 heMf 11M1 In her
determination to make• livirW II I com·
merclal chopper drlvet. She't Holly
Do1l3lns, vanddaughter of Don 1 I d
Dou1lu. He founded the Dou&las
Aircrnlt Ctl.
DR£Xit,,...loliRITAGi-HENRIDON-WOODMARIC-ltARASYAH
INTERIORS
winDATS I SATUIDATS tiOI"' l tJO MIDA Y "TIL tttO
NEW~ORT IEACH e
17U WHTCLlff DA.,
642·2011
LAGUNA IEACH e
141 NO-TH COAST HWY, ....... ,
TORRANCE e
1),49 HAWTHORHI I LYD.
J71·111t
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,., .. ,, 0.um)5. j DAILY PILOT
Record~aJesNo Chrysler Increase
AtAmencan
I PllBUC N011CE PIJBLIC NOTICE
American Marine Ltd. o!
N ewPort Beach, bis reported
record sales and earnings for
th• flrst half ended Sept !O.
Price Panel Suspeucls Co1npa11y's Request
PUBLIC NOTICE l ,ICTITIO~ 1u11N•11 PUBUC NOTICE
'ICTITIOUJ •1J1IH•ll The foiJ!t:' ~~~~ INtlM'M •nut ' NAMI ITAT•M•llfT ••: NOTICI TO Cll•OITOlll
lollowtl'lf W-11 GD111111 ""1!11H1 llGMA U.ll!S, "° W. lSttl SI., N• 62, IUl"l•IOll COUllT 0' TMI!
••· N.wport kkll. CaUforMI f'!MO. ITA'tl 0,. CALl,OllNIA l'Oll
CONTININTAL MOTO.S,OlllT Ci...ua,. -~" ltow•rf, ... W. lnt._~1.'f No. U, THI COUNTY 0, O'lAMG•
PUBLIC NonCE
NOTIC:I 0111 INT•NTION TO INOAGI
IN TMI SALi! 01' ALCOHOLIC llt"VEtAO.ES l71tS "'" lky ,.,,k Clr(lt, trvl~. ........ lffdl, C•llfot'l'il• ,._ ,.., A·1fl'ff
I C•lltor'llt ~ Tllh bo.MIMll If. ..... con!WCIM .... "' ltttN ot HINllY FRANKLIN SMITH, TO W"OM '' ··v co•°"c,-.. IJ, "" C.Hlot'11I• M9ter'MM c.,_.•llol\. • ll'llllvlllNtil •lao k.-n HtNRY F. SMITH, ,, ..,.. : i C•llfwlll• corpor•llon. , o , tOIC IC, OEAN HOW•ltC DecHMcl. S...tlltcl to 11-not of "" ne ..... I P· l Cftf• MM4o, C•lllor11l1 .UM Tiils 1lltwnMI ffllllf with !tit C-ty NOTICf IS HElllllV Gl\IEN 10 The pll.O for, llO!kt II l'ltr.ri~ ;I-11111 1111
, Tllll MIMU It eotdUcl.O Dy t ew• Cl.nt of Ot•• C-.IV 911 ~tltl' S cr.cllfOtl of the tbcMI Mlmtf dec:ltlltftl Undlrlill'llO Pl"OPOMS 10 NH •leOl'IOlk 111¥· 1 por1tlotl 1972 WILLIAM f , ST JOHN, ~ lt\ll 1ff ~ ,.....i,. cl1lm1 t(llllMI the ~ •I Ille "'"'"'-· dlkfl'*I 11 lol·
Sales of $1.1 mllllon lo·
creued S9 percent and earn-
ings of $21,761 rose U3 percent
over the corresponding period
la..t year. Per 1hart earnings
rose from 11 cents t.o ZO cents
on a laregt number of shares
outstanding.
Motor Home
Sales Told
i c1111orn11 Motor1m• c.,w,11.,. cierk. ttJ .. _.., J. M6d0oll, Dlputy Mid cltcedll'lt -reQUll'ld to 1111 lhtm. iow.W w l71t! Slrft! c 1 • C•lllOtl'll• WOll'llloli '·flirt WH'll ..... 111/C-l ... 'T \IOlldl«s. In the offlCI "' • OS • Miu • ITU...llT H. l"fiTl!llS, 1"\IDll•hld 0r.,,ge cot1it Dtlly l"llol, or 11'11 et«tt of"" .oow .,1111111 court."' PltH'IU"'' " auc:h 1nt..,11on. the ""' Executive Industries Inc .•
I l"rKldlftt O.C.l!lblr 1, U, tt. 29. lt11 wt-11 to pr-..t tllwr!, wltll 1t11 MCtUWY dwiJoMCI 11 •~YlllCI 10 •t.e C>ei>trtmnu Anahelm·based motor home 11*"""! .... , 111 ... wll~ th.I (Mil\' WOi,IChlr .. tie tM ~MCI •I ffM offlcl Of Al(ohotlc &lvwloOI COl'ltral for 11-n(I
WASlllNGTON I AP I -The
Price C ommiss ion has
suspended Chryaler Corp. 's re-
Q)Je&t to raise prices by an
average 3.04 percent on its
1973 passenger cars a n d
trucks.
T H E COMMISSION an·
nounoed the 11UBperuiion in a
ooHentence statement ln its
dally decision list. T h e
suspemion is for an indefinite
period.
The commission sa!d It
wants clarification of con1pany
dota submitted to justify the
increase.
Unlike earlier price in·
creases granted to c o v e r
federally required safely a11d
polluOon equipment, t he
Just Forget It
Card Holders Get Reprieve
I ~Y of °".,.... c-1r Oil DKemNr PUBUC NO'nCE If 111r 111on1m011, l"L\JNKETT & ~c.:e.i·~~ :::+:: .~1~:., !or m1nufacturer, has reparted
• l"LUNKEn, '11 ~--..... P.O. IOll OH $ALE G6NERAL ll"UILIC record sales and earnings for
• llllchel'f H•...... P·Zlln Plc:TITIOVS llJSINlll :1c11 ~ni:,on ~M( Of ~:.:s~· Of~ 1"11.EAllSES) the fiscal year ended Sept. 30. • lJlJ ........ llffll llW. NAMl ITATIMl!NT lllllMl'll1'11d In •U !Miter• perl•lrilllO to s.mw COrP<W•llon LOS ANGELES (AP) -"forget about making the pay·
, G•rflU. C•H....W• tt1•t The 1o11ow1nt Dlf,_ •r• 001no the "'•'• or Mid deadel!t, 11W1111111 tour l"ublli11eo:1 °''"" cot1it oiuy '11°'· Sales for tbe year were Some credit card banks have ment if you \\'ant to.
: T•h ,1t1:~01 11111 121"44M M1::,~~~ND INTIRl"tuse s, ..,, L• =~ •tt•r the 11••• pvti11c111on of 11111 01c1mt11r 15' 1912 l44A-1' $18,556,000 compared w it b come up with a Chri.stmastlme "We know ho\Y .extra cash
• l"uill•n.t oi.no• C<1111 011iv l"not. si.11. A.,.,. Fou!IWJJ ve11rt t27lll °'~ Ole.Im• 12, ,,11 $7,0'l8,000 last year, renecting offer some of their customers al\\•aya comes in handy around ~ 0tcemC11r •· 1.1. 12. 29, 1111 .tJI0..11 a1mr1 J. MtmllW. "21 L•SNll• IN&:r: ALIEl':TA SMITM PUBUC NOTICE an Increase of 164 percent. Net 11 r· d h d • · I r So · JI ""'·· FOUt1t•h1 va11ey nJOI.·. e•..:utrt• o1 1111 wrn wi in ar lo res111t : JUSt lhis t me o year. \\'e re ~ PUBUC NOTJCE M•rv M. Fon1unc1, lt24 USt•H• Av.., of"" 1b0vt 111meo1 dec.i1n1 ine<>me rose to $1 ,401 ,000 from "forget about" this month's saying that you can iinore us,
; F-1•1n v111iry moe , ,LU=TT a ,LUNfC•TT •1cT1T1ous 1us1 N1ss $428,000 Jn the slmllar period credi't card bill. and use the monev for
CJ1tyaler r equest covers
t conomic cost iocrea.!ltl.
THE l"IR•t already has
been eranted a price boott on
1973 n1odels to cover the
federally m an d 11 le d equip-
ment.
Asl<ed about how long tho
su1penaion would last, a com·
mission spokesman said it is
not known. 1be Internal
Revenue Service will be called
in to do an In-depth audJt or
the costs s ubmJtled b y
Chrysler.
Army Pays
Too Much?
WASHfNGTON (API HOTICI TO c••DITO•S TM• lllltl"9U I• 111( .... cOlldUCled bY """,,, •••·• p .o. lllr i•t NA.Ml ITAT8MINT I _ dlvl.duelJ. HvtttlflttOI hHll. c• ttJ.41 · one year ago. B th b •·-h I •0"1clhl"g more ·1mMr\ant· 1u,•••D1t cou1tT OP.}"' Barbi•• J. M•rcheJe-Tili in•> DM17I Tnt 1ouow111111 Pt'""" 11 dolno butlMu _ oc,.C:'-cc-cc===----I ut e anlUI t emse ves " " rr · Rep. Ella T. Grasso, ([).
st•T• OI' CALll'otuoa o• Tn11 11111m111t n11d with the C01111t., A'*"'Y• fir ••tclllth< 11· PUBLIC NOTICE won't forget about it. 1he Holidays.'' F THI COUNTY OP OllANO• Ct1rk ot Or1nge Countv Oii: No~. ,,, ,..,, ,111111111t11 Or~• Cot1st D•Hv Plllll. ·ASSOCIATEO T 11: AN s c R 1 B 1 N o1_____________ One more thing: •·There will Conn. l has c harged that the
•II or HA:gL:·~~":i:~HNl!GAN, 11,o ~~L~,;:,~r,.;:.~; =TY CLIR)(,, =.,,.--15• :n. 29• 1971 •lld Jtnu~~-:; ~~6VICE. 3133 Oublln SI' COllll Mll9. NOTICE 0' INT•NTIOM TO INGAOI JANUARY'S billing will in· be no late-charge if you elect Army paid an extra $180,600
•1 HAlllOLO JOHN FINN!GAN, PU•7J $11r11h Ackltmlf>, l133 Dubllll SI., Co1t1 IN TH• SALi 01' ALCOHOLIC ) d th ( d!Jold ""· J v 'ullll"*I OrW191 coe11 Delly ,not. . PVBL!C N~CE Mn•, m26 11v1.•.1.G11 cu e e amoun car ers to defer your payment," the for munitions fuses in what
OTICE IS HElllll&Y· GI IN to thl ~ 1, 1.'ll, v. H72 2251·11 • v•• Thia 1>1.11•11e• Ii tttff!O cotlducttd' 11y 1111 s.cittm!Mr 1, 1m we re urged to forget about, statem ent says.
i ltor• ol '"" •bclW 1t11"*' Ol<ldeftl ' lndlvl4ult • TO WHOM lT MAY Cm+cEll:M: • f appears to be a reward for •U ,...~M"'lf'llil dto•m•·•Mln1t,.. --PVBIJO NonCE 1 mn .· s.'r•h Mc1em1n su1:1111:1 10 ,_, "' thl u~ .,. plus an lnterest charge o l.~ ''However, the usual finance
dlcldlftl .. r•!Silo I ll 1119n'r. .I frfOTlc• OP IA-LI 01' ll:IAL This •)•I-I flied with "'' Coun"' piled tor. no!ICI II hlrlbV t lYll> ""' tlll pe-t -·al to JS per cent ha ill be I I ( d b incompetence.'' •111 1111 ..... rv \!Wt Ill fhl' offtu . 'llDf'••TY AT P'llllVl\_TI SALE "Cllrk "Or11>11• (OllnlY (II\; OK. 1• .. ttii llftd9nli!Md P'OllDll• IO .. ., ·~le ........ ' .. _ c rge w ca cu a e y Iii 111r1 ci.ni o1ttlt·•bfft111t !\Id court.« "'..CJ'P.°IOUI 1u11N1ss N1. SOP inst er. a-•Y J. MiddoJI O.,,uty CIUllty Ol'it•-on. 1t thl premhn, <11Kr1bld •• , annually. multlplylng the per iod r ate He said the Anny bought
.,,_., tllttl\. Mtll 1111 111t1tMry -1 ITATEM•NT '" tl'll '""*""" Court of the s1111 ol c rtr. followa: . M l Char b'/) 'Jed the bai th' 70 000 f f "-H 'I •· io t:M, """"'!orlld •t thl Clfflu The 1t111oW1ne Ptrtan 11 c1o11111 Ml-cilltrurnle. w 1'111 '""'IY " Loa AllCl•ln. • P~ 2101 Plklllttl •~• .. CCIII• M.,,. • as er ge 1 s ma1 times new ance on is , uses rom uic ami too
WILLIAM L. ;,ou~NTe;. l:N Wiii 'ltth ••: '" tlM Mllll'll' o1 Jiii E1t111 or l"llED · PvOUM!ed Or•• coe.i Dilly 'llol Pur1U11n1 1o well lni.rition. the VII-during December carried this -month's statement.'' Watch Co · Lane te P
• Vitti ~lorlll &ldg .. CCIII-OOU''S CAll:P~ CLUNlf\IG, 2010 OOUGLAI &An• ... f.11:1!0 0 . SASSE Otctmblr u, 22, 2'. 1972 •ncl J•nu.rv s: dtr•llntd II •POIWlno fll IM Dlptorltnlfll spec1'al co'1ler pr I n led • • in as r, a .• , c1. t'H '#fllch it, tilt pYce ~ Htl'W 1111 l.IJle, HunllMIOn IMCll. •NI~·,. 0 I.USE o.i .. 1111 lt1l a.ut-n ol' Alcoflollc a.¥traot Control for 1uiat1C11 W b for SI 211 700 h •t Id s1-ol'lfllt 91111 1n 1n""'ltlt'I c-iu.·""6 Nollci '••''-'°"''01 ...... »Mi ttw 11,..· o1.,, •kCll!olk blVer~ 11c. ... 11 !or message: .. payment ls due • ~JLED DO N tis means • • wen I COU
1111111"" to u.t "''"·"Mid ~. Jlfll\ .DDUDI .. croNll'llt•, 20u1 M1r1111r dtnlorlld .,..111 11111 ,1 '"''"''" .. 11• to ""' ___ tk_..1 fol''"'" Pf'l"'I-11 1onow.: this ,m onl • "-ad enclo••d ''· will cost the cardho1der a have bought them r r om ~,,,. 1t11r ""' ,.,., ~Ttao 1s11 Llftl. Hut1tlnoton 9u1:11. "™' "'°""' 1nc1 11111 ~. 1ut11..:1·"' C'Ofto' 'PUBLIC NOTICE °" s.ii a.tf' n.c: -. h Ingr ha f d t I · of !hi• tl6tlt4 Trilt IMk'ltf.I 11 llllllt corldlX1111 w •11 """'11°" If Mid ~1er court. on or M1rwy J. s11ncher folder for det•'ls." finance charge fo~ the moot a m n us r es in )O•tlMI NO¥-blr 21 , lt7t lndl..Wu.I. oltw lhl :um diy or Olcfmbi!r 1tn, '' 'ubltfhtd Or•nP C<111I Dilly l'llot .., [ I 5 t J t t 18 Bristol ~--for $1 031100. ~ •o•t::•T H. PINNEGAN Joton Oouol•• CrOl'lkti111 ""' offlc• of Ge«9I • JohnllOl'I AllorntY O.Ctmblr u. 1m l+t2-n The enclosure states tn bold o . percen , equ1va en o • '-'UIU•-· • • ·
" E•IClltwr T~ .. 11-1 tlled w11h t111 c-ty It i1m "....., , ...:.. &ucJi. '"'•••ott cou11:T o• nt• perCi!nt annually A $100 Mrs. Grasso said in a letter ~ ol Thi wm o1 lhe aoow 111/Tlld c11ni or Otano• COUlllY on· NO¥. 21, 1m ~-c~ llf u.. ~ft .. sl1i. °' · STAT• OI' CALlfO•NtA.i~• -1 PUBUC NOTICE type, ..f~e'd like to have a ·. ~ OICldlftt WILLIAM I!. ST JOHN, COUNTY CLflllC, c111~1 •• 1!1 "" rlg!tl, lltlt .~ lnltr•-' '~·· COUNTY 01' OllA110.I word l1tn you about the pay-Master CHarge bl~ ~ou1d cos t to Deputy Aut. A r m y
••LLIAM L. DV•ANTit: 1y ll\l•rtr J. MllddOll, Dtp.rly. o1 Mkl ~-,,the II,,.. ol' 1111111 •"'II • N1. AJ4471 , · the holder an additional $1 50 Secreta..., Vincent P Huaaard
i ltlll l"-f 1'21'74 ... !hi rl~I !Ill• •!Id ln1.,11t NI tlll tlOTIC.it:'OI' ......... tJ' 'AJf AM•H~ l'ICTITIOUI •u••••ss ment <A this ~tatement ., .. . . .. . •J • --
,........., .,... P110U1hld Or•no• tot11I Delly Piiot, '"'' of .. id dtce1wd lln •tQUlred Irr ID l"ITITION POii: f'ltO•ATI 01' NA.Ml STATIMllfT Also in la-e letters it says: for. Forgetting II. that buying the fuses from a1-. C•. t:uV o.c:Mlbtr 1, 1, 1.s.-22. 1m m1-12 :..,.,,""'of tew or othtr'Mt•• 01.,., 111.,, WILL AllD s•coNo c:oo1c:1L. '0111 Thi 1011ow111111 .-11 dolr.g 11U.i111u •e L k M t Charg B k Hamilton at $17.31 each rather .._I 1714) '46-llM or I ldclltlon to th.II ol' uld !Mctllld •I ttlV~TION ANO INVALIOITY 01" u : "F.orget it!" I ~ as e~ e ,_ an • .., ••tdlor PVBLlC ·l'iOTICE the ~11111 °' °"'" ln end TO ,111111 c.rtein l'llfY"COOICtL ANC 11s\JANC• o_. 111 cosTA MESA DISPOSAL co.; 1i1 JN\)Es Amer1card is makmg a than Ingraham at $I 4, 7 3
n.t °'*"" Cot1•t 0111., Pn111, " • ,..11 prop1r1Y 111U1111<1 111 ,,. couniv o1 L&TT•1t1 TISTA.Ml NTAllY TO '1T1• i11:viNE oLSl"OSAL co.; n! NEwPo11:T rr CONT in smaller s I m I I a r offer to its "makes a sham of our com-
blr 2~ Ind OICtmtllr I. I, lJ, PICTI"'"""' •usllillll Or•noe Sllll Of C•ll!or-nfa PA•lltllllrly TtGNU • CISPOSAL CO., :tt'1 GrlCI Line, Cosll
1 n4'-n NAM• n&TIMIMT dl.e;rcb.ci •• followa 1o-w1t ' • Ett•t• of FAUL c1RAc1, oecua111. ~·· c1n1 n6H print that.,lhe.~~qmer may cardholders. petltive market economy." The foflowl net. I dol b I Thal portion of• lllif ullfl•mtil, SCIO NOTICE". IS MEAEBY (;IVl!N Thlt Wltl!•m I', V11o\1 (•n lncll¥ldu111), 30~1 -_:::.::_:__:..,,.'!!_c:.__,, __ L _,..,;_ __ _:_ __ _:__:___:. _________ .:__ ________ _:_ __ < • PUBIJC NonCE ••· "° Pl • ·"" 111111111 toot .rrMt 111 the City ol W••!!'l'llfltllf, l•l'lk Of ,,,,.,.,lt•1 N11lor11t t r11111 •l\d S.v· S..rn•n, so. El Monti. C111l1. 91733 ! > 1. E IK---·~ I I COm ' 112tl CCl\lflty of Or•no• Sl1t1 ol' C•llfo!'nl• lnet Auocl•l!oro l\jls ljkd ~..r11,•11 •mll'IO.. Tiii• 1>11t1111111 It 11111111 cond\/Cltd J)y In #" qu ,..,,..,,. ..,... •• U 1""Y• o1 1 Lot 10 of T 1 4U thl .ni ~ ... lion ~or Prtlobt~ of WJ 1 lfld S .. lfld\vk111•I t Nl'flC• to Cll•OITO•I lr'lfl111 91\111:1 lvli.t''°2., Ti.#11< '2680 adl 11 'Ti ric Oii r~ ~ Co111tll, lof r~1llott 11\d l11v1lldlty Wlllltrn F. \11toyt ~" ..-'IU1"1•10111 COUllT 01" TH• nl DOii•~~···~ c·~~r· :. fn1~:;,1• ::::~600.:1 'MT::u~':,.,,. ol"!Jr'lt Cocllcll •!Id tor 1$,Ull'iCI ol Lolllr• Thlt 1l1!1menl ntld wllh Ill.I C9Vllly .. TAT• OP CAlll'OllNIA l"01l ,S: er-: C II • F f2'80 ·• II Mi pi Ill t~ otllct of mt COUllty TIS!•IM(ll•l'Y fll· All\11-r, r•l•rtnc1 lo Ctll'll of Or•not County Ofl: Otc•mtllr lot. THI COUNTY OP OllANel Th( ~ n. 1• fOrTI • Olld\lcfld b ll:~W Ol llkl couf!IY Incl 111 v•c•ltd Whldl 11 ~tor lurlllll' parflc\ll11r1, •!Id lt12. WILLIA.¥ I!'. ST JOHN , COVNTY ( frfO. A·76Ml I ir--1 11111'19 c Y • tly orciw 01 !hi &<11fd ~ S!A*l'VIMltl of tn.t tfll t1m1 tftd Platl <II llnrtno !hi CLt!.ll:K, Illy lll1111rly J , M.octoJI, Dll>uty ~11111 llf HOO& A. THOMAS, DlcuMd. COt'plll'll Oft O Coullly 11 csrtlfll'd CllPY llttrlOI lllN hi• !Mm ut tor Dlcemblr H , 1t72, PD034 fjoTtCE 15 HERElllV GfVIN lo !hi R-'d G. L1~MU• w;~~ICOl"dld Mirth 14. HSol In Book •I 9.DO 11.m .. Ill the courtroom of DINrl· Publ!1hld Or•not Ca.11 DlllY l"llol,
tor• or !ht 1tlOVI! """*' OK161ftl l"rllldtnt 2 P "" Of Off1 Iii ltteOt'd., Incl rnenl r.io S of Mid court, 11 700 Cl,.lc O.Clr!'lber 15, n , :tt, 1972 incl J11n11•rv S
, J i.::l>ll'tolll N"tno c11lnU 1Gt!111t tM Thll sl1'9mllll flled wllll IM County I::~ ~herly or J.e' e.sterly pro-C•1111f' Or. Wot. 111 1111 City ol' S1nt1 A111, lf7l ~11
IOt(Jl j•rw tMIUFrwd 1tO flll lhtm, Cl«k cl Or1"!1 (Cl\lflty on NO\I :12, 1m the MM I II of Id lot Calltoml1 .~ VV\IChl,., Ill IM olfle1 WtLLIN'A I!. T. JOMN, County Cl«k llv ~J'~!¢':he _1 /:r1 ~11e':"eoi, :C, Plied ti.cemlll!' •· 1m PUBLIC NOTICE
tM clffk of tM •DCIVI llftlltlld (Olol!"I, Ill' a.....rty J, Mlddmt. Otpvty 2 Thll ,....!Ion ol Loi B of Trl>Cf No W E ST JOHN, pr1Mnt t11em wlTll tt11 111C..,.ry I'· l•U ~· C-ty CNMI • IO thl. unc11Bl1MC1 II "'" l"ubll-11ed Or•not COlltl D•I" Plkrt. l5i, ln ,.,. City "' Wnlmlnsltr, c-t. Lll",OLO. HIMO•R'soN .. DINSMOOll ,UILIC M•AlllNGI W11.L 1• H•Lo I Y
SI , ,Huntt,..11111 a..dl. C•llfwnll NQYMlblr 24 •fld Dlclf!'lllttr 1, I, I!. ~=d:•i: ~l~~:0.11113~ AttwM" If L.1W TH• COSTA MllSA l"U.NNING COM-
whlch 11 ..... pl.ct 11/f bus!-of Im ms.n Ml-'1•-"'"" In It'll office DI thl "" I . """St., 11111t 111 MISSIC»il AT TMI CITY HALL, 77 F1lr lll'ldlnlOMd 111 •II l'Nlltr1 -'•11'1111111 ,,_1 County ll:tcordlr"' Stkl CounfY, not 111-c .. 111 Miii, Cliff, '2'11 Ori,,.., Cost• ~. C•ll fornl•, 11·4·:io 1111 .. of .. Id dtctdlrlt, wlt11111 tour Pv1n.o1-C NOTICE ckldtld 111 Tract Ho. '61 , 11 1111' IMP Alf«MYI. W 1"1Hl11Mr p.m. Ot' 11 -11 POl.illlt lhft•fltr 1111
1flw "'*' publlc.ttlotn Df 111/t rtclnled In l<1<1k ]'), PllOI a of Publllhld Or11191 COll\I 01Uy PUol, Tllltd1y, l>Kember 26. 1972. PIC'nTIOUl &USll&ftS M*91'-MJllll rwcordl of Mid OICemtlll' 15, I,, 22, 1972 Jo!U.-72 A.191rdl1>11 the followll'lll •pplle11llOOU!
Md ~ f. "11 NAM• -·--C .., lind ' tld ..., Onftr 1. t-l•u,tt.111 l"-11 Mt, J:'E·n·
•• .. Tttlct: s. T~OMAI •• Otlnot oun., •• vK• -· 12•. IOI' Str\1111 Pr•tc1'1d Ad-tblno .i: _... The l<lllowlnf pt(1llft i. 'fOll'O llUlllllM of It'll I Nrd OI 5-fvl-I ol' 11Jd •• 1 ancutrl• o1 thl Ill 11• ~ , Ortnve C-"f, ...tllch llOl"ll011 lln ~ PUBLIC NOTICE 1ncl/Ot' Clllrtn T. Sif'\1111, 11.io Svflerlor ~ .t I'll lb0¥e "'"""" dec:IClent OllO l'l\llSlMiEHti.• (lMIT'fO, Mi 11'1Y II lh.I 111.iy proiorig11!1111t1 or 1111 A"9 .. Cosll Miii, C11lll,, lot -mlulon
,... 1A&,tcl MOOtl .. I.· E. Noo ,i•ld,, ..... ~tllJOl -ttlll(ly lllll of w ld Lot 111 dlt(rlltld I.... lo tonHll\l't IO UM M tJl$llftt 119"
_ • ·,-~U F...O. MM Stlllfl, Lli E. f\lorn111\d'y. •boll•. C U T o• 11rvc1ur1 TO ,.,Clf.c:I ldverllllno tor -Jll«, Cl ;-s~i. NII '21'01 Ttmll ol 1111 c•lfl In ltwtul _., ol SUl"lll:IO• 0 R THE COfll ·i'MW bUllMIMS •nd lo proltct r fl!l!r' ....... -. ~ · 1 .__, ___..••fwd ST.I.Tl OP CALll<O«NIA 1'011: woilc Mrvlc• •lld coml!MHlllV I,.. 111114 0r-C:.i C1lty l"llol, Th1 ---hi'.llltlfla-W • !f'!IUflltoldSl1!11,0t1conllr1111l~ol$1o11, TNlcotlMTYOPOllANG• fo!'""n'" alldtn Wlltlltt the bOl.ltldllrln I+ 1$-n 29. l'fl Dl•n Omli.I ~ Tittl pit '"'' Of ernounl to bl NI A•7tnl ol' lhil'Cltv ol' c..+t Mtw, wllh the sit· ' • F,... M. 1tlv1 cllOOllltM wllll bid. NOTICE 01' H1.i.•1N• o, ,IT/TION tlOlltrY ~ to Ill tocelwd at T7«1 PUBLIC NQTI. CE Thi• 1111t1Nt1t n1ec1 with the COl,lllty 81d1 or on.rs lo i. Jn wrlth10 tlld wit! FOii:. PaOIATI OP' WILL AND POlll SllPl'lor' Av.., C~t• M .... Clll'-Tiit• Clerk of Ol'tnM COunl\' on: NO"• 20, lt7J. bl rwc.!Wlld •I the tfor'9"1d ol'llte II '"'f LITTl•S TllTAM•NT.U:Y 1lldel to 111 aMw11 tllrM to fouf' hours -+---",f-~._=,,.,~----1 ~rtr:."erty J. ~l(. PIPolty C-ly =:~!';.": ~;:. pu!Jllc•llofl ... ~ lfld Esi•l9 ol' LILA F. SH1'NN()f4, •lao 11tri 1.,..\111111 l:llOln11lno ., dirk. Ourl"IJ
L NOTICI 01' TaUSTll'S IA-LI! ,.llM1 D•Md fhl• 13111 d•Y ol' Dlclmlllr 1'72. ·-1$ .Mll:S. LILA F". SM.t!NMOft. !hi t11l1nc1 of Ille 2• houlT 1111 ICl'ftn ( .... D Itta Publltl'lld OT1no1 COllll Dlllly Plkrt, Mero•rll L. Ill.ISM •ncl f~m1rly knowt1 11 Mll:S, ,.t:/LA. F. Wiii r1m1I" nMll'f roll.0 11! tilt bollom
11 J1~1rY ,, 1m. 11 2:00 o'clock l".M •• o~blv' 1. 15, 22. 29. 1tn :m?·n 0oug111 ee... 9 ~6r'fc~· ~··~Reev ~N 11111 "', • .c:z::· i~:.~:0:7,.:...,...n ft .. :r:e·Jf--
• Ille -Ill front 1tt1lrtncl of Ill.I old Ew..:11tora ol' Ii!' i'llill VIRGINIA McOONALO 1!11 l\IN lltrtln 1 121, lot P1ul II:. Wllll•m•, 3Jl1 Idella,
"91 Count'I" Courtnou .. locli.d I" !lit PUBUC NOTICE .. _ 0,1 'J'~..,, petition for Problt. of Wiil ind tor C01t1 M111. c11111 .. for ptl'mlulon to , .. Wocll of Wftl S.nll A.1111 Blwl., .,.._.,.. • o , • • t'--rs Ttsl•mtnlo"' to 1111 cor1lln111 to o"'''' • Jlor•o• y•rd lor C ly WOii Slwlll StrHI), In S.nll .. •Im AWlllM llY nee .._, ''" • • . ..0... C•lllornl1, S&CUlllTY l"ACtl'IC NA· 114« LMll ltlCll Ctlll 11112 ptfllloner rwftrlftCtl II which 11 .,. .... lot tlcll•, tr1llll'1, Clmlllfl ...it oltM!' 1,.. "?iQNAL I A.Nit, 11 duly •l'JICllnted 1.,,,.1,. PICTITIOUS IUSINllS Tll< lllll Q1.tf7j fudher perlft11l1r1, tnd that !he lime •nd cld<l!n!tll !n addition lo clllltlnulno the typewriter means; tflCtriC flturn, fiectrit
t.40er the dlld of trUll dllld Oclobll' I -._1. N~· ITATl!Me:llft ... ...,...., I« l•Klltorl pl.a ol llnrlno thl ~ h11 bM" 111 "" ol 1111 r""°""ctl for rnldenr111
Fully electric
Ubulators,
UNIVERSITY
r!f!-. q ,..,. .... "' ~-
••• , NIEW~llT llOUl.n'A!\l)
!;OITA N(IA, ~ t l l l7
look for bit Mui U
at Newport l 19th St.
"'* C1Y ThDIN• c. .. ,._ ,n.f fie _,.. ~ 1, 11o1no Mlnnt l"ublllllld ori1M1i Cot1it D•llv ,11o1. ""' Jl'l!U~•rv '·"''"· •' t :OD •. m., 1n 1M purl)Clsn, 1oc•lld •' 21• v1c1or11 s1.. electric hick spice, electric half space. • low otdtd OCt ••:. 4 Dltllmbl 11 It. n. nn ~n court,_,, r!rNnl No. l ol Mid Cool• MHI, C•llt .. 111 ~ C2 Zone.
L-rn ~ .~~':.o.,,. ":t ~ G"J\,~ETOf; ELeCT11:11c SALES ft, ' • c!Mll'I, •t ,(;Jy c c.,,ter Drlvt Wiit, In For lur!Mr lnform1tl1111 on !ht! lbOY• Qly ' J 't $179.50 • ''" ....... ,,. c-• ~'L.r;.;.~i--;;; "'"· '-' P UBIJC NonCE ':>.~ "'!:: ,';:\"~"'" ::>:.~~:o·~"i::"':::!~"'" .. ~~~~'. mp1a ypewn er at
r of O••• c-rv. C•lllanll•."" iMrht I ... lote ... Ct lltor"I• J.!--1'Wlt.lLAM E. ST JOHN, Room 100. 11 F•lr Drt ..... (Cllll ~. Sharp Calculator at dlS' count pr1'ce 79.50
O! dllllUl1 In "'-IN'Ymllll Ot' -tlOllo 1 C1P1 Drlw LHlllll --· --rr. Cl1r• C11llf<lnl!1. l'IMlflCI ol Obllgill~ 11CVrld -,....._~ ' *'l« ...... , I Holk• ol o.tt\111 Incl lltelloli NI..,., <;11Jfoml•1 n~n 'ICTITIOUS IUSINE $S G• GI: GA ON•• COSTA MESA umtr °'" ol' T""' ""''"' 111111 Tllfl 'l*I-I• !;'OMllClld bY. cot· NAM• STATllMINT tU.Q VII .t.1111...,.... PLANNING COMMISStON Total $259.00 "'~ •• orTthtld tat"" ....... -pcll'f~~MEll:TIA IH\IESTM'fNTS INC Thi follow!,. 111'-II d.o!llCI Ml ~~·."Wt:i11~~1tWJ ~111.::~·~~m~•rv
n•n 111r11 mon!hl hl\111111 ll•Plld tlnce Ooufl••J """" ' • •-= ; An' for l"llittoMr •nd Olrtelof> of Pltnnt1111 A REAL BONUS FOR CHRISTMAS
;:' ftc:Ofd11lorl, wlll Siii 11 puOllc •llC· Slcrwl•"' · ' HUNTINGTON l"ll:Of'EtllTIEI, LTD.. I"~\·•-'',..__,_ Cont D•'\' "llot, Publlsnld 0r1.,1 COllll 08111 Piie! I lo lfll hlefitlt bl-for ctt.11, •' "'°I W11rntr .. ...._, ~on l~h, """~ "' ,,,,_ < j _,,, -Ill l•wM """"" ol the Ulltlhd This 1t•llfNflf Wll flied wllll !hi c-C1ll1ot11111, ""' ~ r . Dlctmblr lJ, 1•. :n. 1911 • ..,..,, Otc:trnblr 1 • 1t11 ...... n fJ/I Nnerlc• •t 11..,. (If"'"·"""-' ty Cllrlt of Dr•ll!ll (Ollllty on Dec. s, ltn. WESTEttN DIVEllsf¢°iED~ITtes.I :==::..:;;;_;;;_=:_.::.:_:_ __ .;::c_::;_ ____ _; _____________________________________________ _
c orwirtlll'llY t~slldor lmollld DAVID L, IAllG, Atty. tNC,, a.ntr•I P'llrl"", • tilJfornl• i;:=============================================:::;==========:;, 11111, po.stll!Oll Ot' lftCU!fl{Wli'lcH, .... IMll MMlk• I /WI., hit• -C0tPC1r11!1on, XII H""fl. P.ciol'ht• !':Old. I COllV9)'1d to llnd ,._ hlld Dy l• ........... Ctll!Onll1 ,_., lllWrl., Hllta, C•lllorillll toll~
Mid dlltd or lrUtl. In •nd II the • l'•tl•M Jiiii bulllllll II IM!ng cOtldU(tllll w • 1r1 Ort!IOI County, Slltl or l"lll!ltillld Or•llOI Cot11t ~Hy l"ltol, llmllld 111rt,,.,1hlp
tlfornlt. detcrlbed II: D«tm'-t .. 1!. 11, :tt, 1m :xin-n WESTEllN OIVllllSIFIED
""'9 5outhl.ltl9r1y 4$ !Hf o1 lhe EQUITIES. INC.
Ot'tll-ll!'ty 14S flll of I II' PVBUC NOTICE D1\l!d s. Liiii•
l""'""'twty_ 1n '"' of LOI lOt or l"rn!dl11t ••ct NO. Jlll, II 111r m•P ,~ '" I ma1 Tllll tlllt""nt 111111 ..... ~ tM c-iv
11, I!"'" 11 Ind 12 ol' SVl'lltott COUlr01' TN.I Cl•tlt OI Or•not COU11ty on Ole. ), tm l1e1ll•-M•pl. ln lht offi~ of llMI STATS 0' CM.l,O•lflA. IOlt WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, covnty clerk,
;::ounty lllKOl'dw ol wld CO\lftty, "TNI COutiT'I' o~ OUlllO• a., l lYll"IY J. M.ckioi, Dtputy. ~hi '''"' Mldr•u ind 11thtr comm<ll'I N• 4.J•n P·21m
]
OMlllO<I. If •"1· ol !he r11l Pr11P1rty HOTICE O' H•iRIMO• or/ ,ITITION f'Ublll hld Ofll"OI Cot11t O•llY Pllol,
tlbld ltlovif LI purp(W'tld to tll: POil l"ll:OIATI CW WILL A.ND ,Oil Otumlllf° I, 15, l2, 2', ltn s.)71-71
JU •111 #lllOll Strtll. Cosi1 Mfu, Llnl!ltl TllfAMEl(tAllY
•tltor" •. I • E1!1hr of WOODtllO'lf w, WlfOCLER. PUBLIC NOTICE he ul\denlglllCI Trv1t11 dlKttlm.o 1ny t k• WOODY WINJ'L.Blt, 0-.Md. 1~111'( tor 1ny !ncOtr9Clnlll ol,llll 1lr"' NOTICE IS Hl!lt,E&Y GIVl.N thll PICTITIOUI IUllNISS ........ Incl olhtr Qll'ltnon Wi10111tlQll, II M1rvrOS1 Win-Ill' lilt• "llld llltfln I PJoll· NAM• ITAT•M•MT ,.1d•~ "::Jr1rn.bl ,.. .. to ,., "" !Ion tor PtOOtt• .iat.;Wllt""""' .. ,,,•~c-Th• 1o11ow1no 111r1<1t11 ... dotno or L1tttr1 Tnt1rMi1' ,11 1t11 Ptl, _,, 11111111 ... 11·
l0tl\0111 IKVf.-f Dy .-Id dMd o1 h'uat rlftrwnct 11 ... MtJI 11 "'* IOI' fvfl!'ll1 1 ci • ..ic l"ool Ttbl•u 2 ct1lllc s11t1
I ludl1111 •JI CCllll. fteS Ind PPll\111 of partlc:ul1r1, •M ""' It.. ll"" ..... plKI poOf T•blH J. NIWP<ltl .... Tll>IH! •.
o1 1r111t1 •II """" 11Cptl\dtld lll'lllel' or M•rlno 1111/cMft)I h•• l)fln "' fOr CtnllltY l"'olll T1blni ~. Rov1r Poot ~"'Mid died or tru11, not """ Dlclm-». ·f~ •' t;OO a.m .. In 1111 T1bles1 ' 11111 Alt PoM Tibtll· , ,_ di and .... 112,J7 ... mtl11lnt prlncl"I ~ ol ~nl N•-:I ol .Mid ttf!lft•lt ;.. T1blftl" I G...io . l"ool
the note NCVl'90 bY Mid dMd Iii '1rull, court. •I 70D cNl'.c:" Ctfti11 Drlv. WM'· Ill Tlbln, , .. w. 17111 s1rtil. Cost• Mt11,
lntwftl ftom JllM 1. 1t12 n •~ wld the CflY 01"$al\11 Mt, c~ C•IJ10ml1 "'" .
I ''" •ncl ol 1111 trust er,.,_ l:IY .. Id O.ttd OICltnoer 11 In, G•rv M. Good•le, t3'11 lllrw~ ... •11<'
.... -~~-· 1 1tn WIL\.lAM e:. SI JOHN, C/n:ll. Hut1tlnol<lfl a.Nth. C•l1f<lnll• ~ ,,_ ' Cllllftty C-11rk .,.... ~ llt:CUlllTV ,ACl!'IC MILO J. ':CtJM Lylld• L. Goocltll. ml Br•·~·'-' NA.lJ~AL IANK U*I •tit A.,., C1''tll Huntl,.11111 Inch. C11Hlotnll
;i Lr;:::"w MtMwllln Mt~·= · , ttW ' A1tJt1~nt1 TM1 l11l E•l•tl Tiii ( . . • • TPlh IMll'llSI 11 bllno cond11tl.i "" "" OfflUI" A~ ~ • lndlfklutl
• l/tll!Jhld, 0c Cot1rl Diily PUOI Publllhld Orlfilll. CiMtf O.lry l"IJot, GA.lllY M. GOODALE
"""-•· 1i, 1rn · "''"n OlclmlMr 11 '• If, 1911 ~ 1'~1• s11.._1 !fled w11n lhl c-rv C1t1111 ol' Or•• CO\lf'llY on Dec. 5, 1t11 PtlBUC NOTICE PUB[JC NOTICE wlLl.IMI •· ST JOHN. CO\lf'ltr c11rk. llV . ltllf'f J ..... ,lift, °"""' ~ ' NOTIC• INVITINO. llDS '·11171 < NOTICE ts HEltlElllY OIVEN 11111 "" &oll'CI of SuiMNllOU ol Or•ntt l"llOll•ntd Or11191 C<111t Dilly l"llo!, ci..tttv, c11Hor11il, win rtclf\le INllllf~up•to tl~:..-e:llO P'iM.. on MO!ld•Y· OKtmllll' •· 1J, t2. 2'. im 3361·1' tr~~111,~•w ,!~· :~1ri/~1,'.'r1on Bu or ~J?~s:i:OO:."' sf, s::::; PUBUC N<YI1iCE
, C111j10rnl1, •t ...+ildl ti-111d 11111• wlll PllbOC:l'f OPll'ltll 11111 ,llH fOf' )---===:::-7'==,---t9llowlnt11 PICTITIOUS IUSINlll
Orlnge Count\' Mld1¢•1 C~tlr NAM• ITAT•MIN1
ACll!e Unit Al~ COllllltlQnlnl Thi IOllOWlttl Pll'ICllll .,. dolno
1 Pl'O!tcf p.iO,, 01'1'~ Olllllllll 1$:
"'"'" ..,. .. Ml Mrtt It bl jllr!Ot'mld "' •ceot'NllOI wl!ll Pl•ns •iw:I IPl(lll· "LAlllMTltOf\l!CI. 1t• l51Pl•nld• 1111& 'tlll'llcl'I l•f now Oii Ille Ill Ille olflCI of !tit C~IY Cllrtl In !ht Co\lnlY Ilda-V, Unit 10., 3001 ltMI Hltl Avt ..
t1l.ir11 .. •ulllllno. 115 No. l'f(ll'j'IO~r· S•nt• AM, C•lllomlt. CCIII• M111. C•tll. ""' Mlttllnlllft w•fl rlltl fir 1111& «I MW Miii Ollll'Tl'll!ltd lry !tie lltCllrd Mlth•ll A. ll:lno, '122 Polttl Lom11 Or., ~11.,,ir.,.. DY tttt0111llon 11>111, 1 o1 'Aflletl It on file 111 t111 otilc• ot Hlll'ltlno!Ol'I IHCh, c11111. ""!7 •
Clri of "" ltOllnl OI ll/Pll"f~ MICPllll J l1111ky ltlt '"°" M1n1~ ..... 111111111111 II ctllld 16 S1cllont 1no-1m.J oi 1111 Ubor Cid• Wl'llch N...,.m BJ.Ch, c1l11.,,... l •
,...;1(1 """' " 1wiN-Ola "" COlll'l'Mf lo 1111'f ftOt -NII Hid """''' per TN• IM!ntll II bllno cOl\idlKllMI tiY I • ,.. .. of -.IH .... '°"" " Ill llllorl<'J, --"""' Ind ft'lld'Wtnlct lmPltrld ... r1~ .. ~ llllCWllon ~ 1hl DtOPOtld Olllltr9Cf, Mktlltl A. lltuo
OM 11111 """'°''If llmll 1111 llttttltlflll r11.. of W.,. lhlll bl Pllld ~y Thll 111~1 fllld wltn the CDllftt'f'
tlmt 111• ~CIM o1 tltM "°""" "' •n~ -c.tll!\Cllt o.r·•nd m Slilll'ltlva. Cllf'll o1 °'''"" CO\llll'f on; ,...,..., n. 1'11 I Yt• 11111 lftll llollNYI, 11111111 ol ....... ltt not.cl, l'W ... lllln lllghl howf'1 WILLtAM a. IT JOt!N, COUNTY CLllllK,
,.., r111 r•t•' ~11 Ill 11111 fr1<tlon or It.. fllrttOlnt r• .. ""'' 1111 """"*" 1~ ll'Vlt'IY J . ~. 0epu1, ""'-19 llgllt. • l'JlU'I llc;fl ~ fl'IUll lllbn'llt with lllt ~'«' • MtllfKl'ory ,Otte* ctttfllmd lly l"Vtlll~ Or•no• CMJ.I 01Uy 1"110!,
1111• -~ or • l>litftr'I ..... INldl lllPbll to ""' --llf Ille C-IY Olclfl'lllW 1, •• IJ, 12. '"' 22 .. n .... ~ 1111 lllftlllllll llof It• lllall llV9 Plf'C'lll ot 1111 twM W II I IJIMlflttl!M ----,"":::;,:-=-::==,,---•)
rlll tltMtt' wlll "'"" llllt "" ~ ConlrKI II "" ""11 It mnw lllm. PVBUC NOTICE 1M -t If ltlhlrt II 9"11r' lfti. 'llCll Clftll'KI, tM ,._, of It'll chldl M ,,,,,..tliil ~. M Ctl• tf I DOnd, 1111 11111 1111'1 ~ •Ill b9 fol'ttlh!I i.1-------------1
Ct\rl\I'( of ~111)11, '!CrTIOut 1011Nl t• ·~ tld llMI W Ofl e blll'llll '°"" lltml ..... "' 1111 C-ty If Or••· •AM• l'tATl:MlffT The 1wteftllllt Mddtl' ...,... Ill ,...,,. It f'l.lmllll, '' tlmt If tllftlno The followlnt ,.,..,.. .,. dllno •~~~t, one ""'tty bDtlf ""lcfl tNrll IN'O!ICI tlW '"°""' flncl ll'MWIAlmeti t11111r!ftt It: IMll M fol"'!~ If 1111 •mllltlrlt ot ttll Clfllnd, "'K--•nce"""" --l"U.YIAl.L. U.t N....-t loulw1nl, If 1111 otwrftl'lllnt Codt, Mid On1 1ur11t bond lro ,... •ll'lllllnt of llllnlo t( 1M Hf'll1JO!"I 91Kft, C1lrtornl• tUM c lrKI, 1"'ret11"1nf 1fll "llllf\11 ,lll'formlMI ff 11'11 ClntrKtl Miii llttlld1 i. l':oDlrl W1tll1m lllNr Jr .. 11u1 llUlft ~'l".' •PPfT'tld..,"" etwit'f c--i ,,. 1,...,,_1 Mrftlniltr•IO!' or°''""' &rfl!flflml 11 .. N1. "'· H1.111t1"'10l'I ~ llltll. 'C11!Pornl• .,._..
• ·~· " """1'1Mn ,...,,. ... ~ rlflll t'I ~1(1 MY ., Ill .... ....,II Awe••I JOMt Jr., Ul2 '"""
•l'tl ~ :n I! •CHP! lt!1 IOWilltt Wlcl bl!! Ind to wtlYI •llY "'"'""'"' °''""' Clll'-°"I• n... !11~ri'i. \ill • __ 1_ ~ Jlris Todd ~\Nlllll, .Mii ~rwl\ 1'1_0llOI• °"TH, IOA"D Of" IUl"•ltvllOlll 01' ORAltGt' CO\Jk'r;f, Q-.I• l'lltllfl~ ~_tllornT1 "4J2 ~~ ----~ ta. ~'12 Vol, f . IT JOttN Thll tt•ttfntlfti llltd wttll 1111 Coll'lt~
, , ~ "'~-...... _ ... ,,. •• ...... Id c11... C1'11l " Ortnte c_,, on •N.., '· 1tn ;), f ;;tt;;,•a•,d 11 5-j~,.. fJ/I ,.. Will.MM I , IT JOl-+N, CINllty ~k, by
'l" I M LI Cr•ntt C-!f, CtiltOrnlt llVll1y J, MIOdolt. Dlou!Y
• • • ., Jlll'l_I "*''""' P•tlll, OlllVIY l'vllll1ntd Or•ntt COit" C•!IY l"Uot, l"~lllf'ltd Otl""' CM•t Oll!y l"llOI, 0Kt111Mr 6, t, I, t. It, II, I), l:t. 1 .. 11, lt7' f\IMl!'tlllt 21 •rid 0.C•ll'llll!' 1, I , lS, »»-n H11 ,,,.._,,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
... Diogo
..
Squ•wV•HtY (i)
Sha works Air Califomie's new SKI DESK. Attractive she is, person-
able she ls, tool eUt unlike other "bunnies", she's an expert at get·
ting you to the fahoe/Hlgh Sierra ski slopes from Orange County.
Speclally trained, JIU Edwards, has a wide assortment otconvanler4.
economical Air Call fomla Ski Packages to offer you.
A ir California's SKI OUR VALLEYS package• (for as many daya as
you wanl) to BEAR, HEAVENLY AND SQUAW. SPECIAL CONVEN-
IENCE PLUS charter packages from Orange County Airport to South
Lake Tahoe Airport. Or, If It's just information you want on the
easiest and most economlcal way to get from Sacramento Airport.
the gateway to your favorite Tahoe/ Hlgh Sierra ski resort, JUI
knows and will be glad to make
yoUr arrangements. Call her.
Telephone
I 714 I 979.9700
AIR
CALIFORNIA
Servlng'S aoramento,
"-@-_.. _.__r.
San Francisco, Oakland,
San Jose, Ontario, Palm Springs,
San Diego and Orange County.
'
'
•
•
21J DAILY PILOT SC
Buel~ 'e111 Up
FTC 01·cle1·s P1·oof
h1 Cru· Acl Clain1s
\\ \~HISG1l)~ 1l1'!1
The ~1X"e1 n1ncnt 01 dt!rt-d 12
.1uto1nobtll' rnakl"r.:!i Th11r:;d 1)
10 b,u.'k up n1ore lh:tn 100
.~d1 cr1 b;1ng c\~ums ran.:in~
rf\\nt r.e11C'r;J.l \tutors .){J\~
m~nt that steel bl'atn~ 111 It:.
\ ejta ore compar,1ble 111
h1gh11 1v gucirdr:t1l" tu
\olks11agrn s claim ol :.ul)l:r
1or ga~ n11le age
The l'ederat Tr:td\' ffltn
rfllS"-IOn said thl." auto m:lkt rti
h:tic 60 d1\:. !O ).lrotlul~ !he
<ioc:unu 1111!1un 10 ~uppo1 I 1h.:-
nchcr t1sen1ents Rut the N1rn
nHl\.ilflll tn1pha.~izld Iha\ It 1.S
n1rrf'h galhcr1nA ln
ror1n<111un .ind 11 is not fihn,.
c111npla1 n1" :i g a 1 n s 1 the
m:inufat!Urf.'!rs nor JS 1t ~ug
~c~t1ng that the} urc l!U1Jt1 of
11olntu1g f eder:ll regulations
\ ()Ll\S\\AGE\I \\ ASi nsked
10 submt! proof th:'lt it~ s u ire
IJ u . .:k sedan get.s abou! 21 mile~
IX'J gallon and that t'Qmp.-rcd
to the .1ver:lge do n1est1c cun1
par! car that \.olkswa~en
sa1 cs the pr1ec .,r 01 er 200
gallons of gasoline in a
years normal dri11ng
r.1akers of \oh u 1 he
Swedish built cur must pro
duce proof of it.s cla1rn lhat
each one of its steeel pillars
holdtng up the cars roof 11;
strong enough to support the
wcu::ht of the en11n.• ca r
The FTC said 11 \\anted
Ford tu pro\(' ns c!aun lh.H
the Pintos r o u r s pc e d
traosm1ss1on nc1 er nt.>eds
lubrka11on for !ht Jlfc ut the
~ar '1
AcC'Ordu1g tv r h e cum
m1ss1on General ~lotors rttll
ads which claimed that the
steel bcan1s uu the st<le of the
Tea11isters Rehaggle
Bids With Growers
BURLINGA~1E IAP I -fhc
rcamsters Union savs 1t will
1 cnegot1ate its contracts with
170 gruwers 1n CahfornLa
Colorado and Arizona set!lng
the scene for an organ1zat1onal
battle with Cesar Chavez
United fi'arm \\'orkers Union
EL~AR l\fOHN director of
the \i,;cstc 1 n Conference of
feamslers saJd the derision
\\/<lS made at a g~n('ral
d1scuss1on of the farn1 labor
situation by various lcnn1sler
offlc1als 1nclud1ng President
DISENCHANTED
WITH MUTUAL
FUNDS IN KEOGH>
W ... I Clll e.. "°"' lllMI 111
Ctlt IAllT VANCE
540-7115
Chavez
For ,j
iH,•rry
.Y 111ns
CHOOSE A REALLY SPECIAL GIFT
THAT WILL PLEASE YOUR RIDER
From Our Complete Stock of
MOTORCYCLING SAFETY
ACCESSORIES EQUIPMENT
ind outst•ndlng Hltct1on of
RIDING APPAREL
Vi• h'N ltel!IWb. booh •11lll tlOffl 111 ..... ••IMl9o •11111 'hll• ,,.... '"" Set rM etl •• 1 nJ S«Mih ••• .. 4lllJI..,. .. ,.,,
A1ttiotl..il l1111hl Deel« S.liet a ~k•
o,..
t A.M 'TIA I r M
MOJlf ,.,._ Fll
'-'· t .....
JAMES LTD
Listens to Landers
Nearly Everyone
•
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST .. ~.
OVER THE COUNTER
NASO Ll1tlng1 fw Thurtd•y. Do<embor 14, 1972
.... ,...
, ... (llfU Miii L .. Lffl C."° ..
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1 Friday's Oosing Prices-Co1nplete New York Stock Exchange Lisi
----------=------illlmt) Peace ~eport
·Spurs Market
. NEW YORK (AP) -A French m lo report
of an Imminent Vlotnam peace .etUement 1av~the
~ market a shot o! adrenalin today, but some
Cl! the effect wore ·off alter the White House dl$-
mlssed the report as unfounded.
u-vietnam is still a very potent factor 1n the
market," said Newton Zlnedr ol E. F. Hutton &
Other analysts sa id that while Vietnam was
rarely the sil)gle most decisive !actor in motivatilng
investors to buy or sell, it was important in terms
o! when they took the plunge.
. "It itiU affects people's timing," in trading,
remarked William Nelson o! Moody's Investor Servlct.
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-.. , M CMIJ "'9 I.ft L"I ("'I,
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DAIL V' PILOT I )
Boyle Out . ~ In Mine' •
' lection 11
Court Orders $2.,472 Automobile Refund
I ' • <
WASHINGTON {AP) -,A ;.iun<led It ht Is aold an item However, be ..lei, "It doel ;Nonna )for1on of PolOllllC, tafMma\l lold them "we'toold 'IK!t ,rter lbe Wlif felJ oil Ila
Superior COOrt Judge bas Nied under la!Je rtl>ruentallon. , live ue a cue• ill wblcb 1• Me. Ibey could bave air coo-1et the air oondlllonlmr In-bndte4. lhe ~ lliad li
that a young couple .,.. .,._ ' Lowell Dodge, director ol CQUrt onftred a ft1unc1 aftw . dlllonlng '= In their oew 1talled" and save 1100. "fl1tre ta)(tn out, Ille eOtirl Jecontl
--the ~ not come w 1 ·~ , • .,. -" titled to a refund of the Centhe""de,..!M,·onAw""'as ,,s., ,1e1,gruy'11·csaldant !he buyers hid the car lor Jm Opel• ·~agon. wasOpeltltl~~ at the trt&l th!Uat aho1n'"the -·aoU~ II.. -·~
U.472.at they paid f<*' an victory for one consumer" eJght mru;itha before Sldng.,ln 11fE JlJDG'g ordered the factory-lnstaJJcd air coo-Wa~. told. tile ortOl)I had W,lll\ffi'l<l'l'O:V (AP) automobile sold to them two based 00 the mlarepresen-the past, he said, tbla has dealer to ,.fund' tl\e money d!Uonlng. other prob...., ~o<ll1¥11na" a
Jmurgeat Cllldldale A~ years ago "under l a I s e talion. usually been !bruted to 90 and told the Mortons to return leaky gas lank, • &Gu-bl&
Miller ' ... w-..1 "ict"ry , representations." days. the car. . TRE SEARS installed afr plagued e\ectriCal s y ! t e.m~, ,...,..~-Lawyers said they had not BUT IT DOES nol, he said, J•"'•e J~ce Kena Gr,.. Maurice Mclntosb, -id<nt C<llldlllon'•• ool ::JI did 1'il. • rt o•n l''i:""''-"'" _,_ over W. A. "Tony" "°""·' ..... ·• ~-.... -~ .,, -...,... .. "·"' ~ --("'"!. heard of a similar rultng"in-"establishwbatwewant.,that ruled I.bis week that a ol the auto dealership, aal<t wort,butalsoru thee-t i ~ aming ....,....,
the 1
court ... red election {Qr volving an a u to m -o b l 1 e , consumers can get their salesmar. for WUson-Mcintoab "We plan to appeal the electrical 1Y3ten1, the 1'COUM tr.itnsmiaStOft, trQoble, with
the presidency of the tlni(ed although lt is a ton8 eatabllsh-money back because a car is a Buick 0 p e I made dectalon to the D.C. Courta ol was told. _ -gears, an inoperaUve parklog
Mine Workers union. ed prlnclple that a consumer lemon .•. that U can't be fix. "mlsrepre.sentaUons .•• of Appeals." Sears rewired the car and light, a loose front seat and
Afi.ller, the Mlners ( 0 rl ~~~~~~~~~~-..:h=•:.• .:•..:r:!lg.::ht:.l::o..:ha=:.v•:..::bis:..:mo=•:::•Y:__.::ed::·_" ________ ......:f:.•<::t'_' ..:"::h::••::..:he=..:to:.l.::d..:D::al::e:...:and::._..:Mn:::::.· _::.M:::ortoo:_::::_.:"::i:d_:t_::h:.:•:__::"':::inJ=ta:::ll:ed:.::lhe:..:afr=..:con=::d::IU::oner=..:· ......:•.::ther::...:com:::::pl.::•:.:ln:.ts:.. ___ _
Democracy candidate, said he
would begin sweeping refonns
in the trouble-torn union as
soon as possible.
"We have won the election .
by a comfortable margin,''
said the 49-year~ld retired
coal miner from Ohley, W. Va.
Tbe latest official vote tally
from the Labor Department's
closely guarded counting room
gave Miller ~.403 to 40,966 for
Boyle, the union's incun1bent
president.
e Can1p11s Probe
BATON ROUGE. La. (AP J
-A special state in·
vestigating comn1i1tee says
it's up to local authorities lo
Jiet,ermine possible personal
criminal liability in a student-
(IN SHORT ... )
poHre r on fro 11 I u t ion at
Southern Universil _v in which
t1\'0 young blacks died.
In a prelintin.ary report on
the Nov. 16 Shooting. the
biracial committee said the
f:.ital shot came from an area
where six men had gathered.
"an area "'here sheriff's
deputies had deployed."
But the report <lid not say
..specifically that the shot
which killed Denve r A. Smith
of New Roads. La.. and
Leonard 0. BroY:n of GHbert.
La., was fired by a sheriff's
deputy. nor did it identify the
six men in the group.
e Pero11 Derlhaes
BUENOS AIRES r A Pl -
The way was open today for a
new political order in Argen-
tina following back·t~back
statements by Juan Peron that
he .-ouk1 not be a candidate in
the ~larch presidential elec-
Uoo and by President Ale-
jandro Lan~ that he wou1d
retire in ~fay.
Person. Argenlina·s dictator
from um until I.he military
o\·erthrew him in 195.5. took
himsell out o( the race in a
statement given to newsmC1
a,l'ter he took a plane lo Asun-
. Cion, Paraguay, Thu rs da y
night..
e Pentagon Trial
LOS ANGELES iAPl -
U.S. District Court Judge 1'latt
Byrne. disclosing a new in-
cident of electronic eavesdroJ>"
Ping involving the defense. in
the Pentagon Papers tnal,
says jury selection cannot
begin before Jan. 3.
In an almost identical replay
of an incident which stalled
the trial for four months, the
government submitted to the
judge on 'l'hursday a sec:et
report on the conversation
overheard but refused to tell
the defense who or what was
heard on the tap .
e She'• Uonae
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
10-year-cld girJ wandered safe-
ly home Wednesday. ending a
search by deputies a n d
bloodhounds of n e a r b y
TarzAna foothills .
1be girl. missing since
Tuesday, spent the night in a
vacant house a half a block
from her home, police said.
She had reportedly run away
from home after a !COlding.
e 1t' atergate
• •. WASHINGTON (AP) -A
'"te<teral judge has ordered the
Los Angeles Times and two or
Jts newsmen to surrender tape
record.lng.9 or an intervlew
;ffith ar key figure . in lhe
.. Watergate break-in case.
: ... The subpoenas, authorized
by Cblel U.S. Dist. Court
_•:Judge John J, Sirlca, were
• served Thursday on t h e
• Times Washington bureau
"chlef John Lawrence, and ,.po;i.,. Ronald J. ostrow
and Jack Nelson.
......... ,, •• ht
' POllTIAC BL (AP) - A
tlDIJllW 'ftabt at Pontiac
-Prilon boo left ooe In-
-dMd and m olhen in-..... ()oe Jll'llDD oftlclal Wll .....,. ... i-a-.
W..tloll Jolm Pe tr llll
..... ,, tbl IDddent .on
tw•DIPl••"IDJN!e-··-• s• drlr~~ ....... "' tilt Vloe &NJ~
.... Dll ll'LI -pDil
.lrol8 Qslerf\
I '
.
ma~tt>r cha1ye BLACK 8r DECKER
1/4'' VARIABLE
SPEED DRILL
Squ ... it and you get from no
nn,up to n50 RPM. (Now
that oxplalna ... rythbig doem't
It.) Get Pop or lhe kid a good drill
thla year. Or Qi•• Sb 0!19. a1nce
•h•'• 'Wlda.tba wom.en.'a ltb gem;.
. .. --.. ·~:.,'-d---. .. .. . . ~ ....
BLICK It DECKER
DRILL BIT
SBIRPEllER 1999
Juat drop a dull hit In and ti
ol!mpena It up just lib a
-1 abarpeaer. Good tool If thore'o.ct.
lot of clrlllbig gobig on.
9-PC. SCREWDRl_VER_
SET
27e
Cuto llttt..thlag. Got pbllUpa and
alaDdmd blls, g<>I a llttlo awL got a l>tg
drl .. r hcmdlo. all In a funky
pla1t1c can.
JI th• burglar .-1 thl1 h•'ll r.ally
get mad cmd 11-cd tb9 dr••••r you. put th• box cm. l.Mpt; th. daught•r
from borrowing yow good •anlnga.
CHROME a•ct
I ... th9•• all cw•r and •••ry car has a atlcbr 1aylag "Fight Smog Rlclo a
lik•". So lt.oW come th91 drl•• a car?
•
BLICE•
7'//' B.IW 1999
Walka right thru 2xh (WhOll fOll
... ti. 111-fMt it bal. ~11 wond•
whore to got .i.-for It~ .Antl-ldck
back clutch. ecrwduat •lecta to tbt rear.
ll·PC.
•
COIODllTl.01'
wREICllSET
Clooocl and o-ed.
Tho r!Ght wr9DCL. aan. the
nut. (TM anly wcrr
thl• nut will JM
aancl la 11 aomobod7
hits m• with th• right
wrach).
ROMU
UIKLIMP 9900
Buy thia OD•.
Don'! buy
ow Ottomml Tornado
lamp. lt'• rough
on th•carp.t. S..
what th.la go9•
for lD. th•
fancy
atorea. outrag•ou1 •
5a1
. .
CTCLllfG
UGI
97t..
Llttlo lmapeack. Tho
kiddo cun pllt h1a
boolr1 la. It. or cany
cm apple for the tNcher
(<n !Sc oath. bo'd
bottor not.)
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BLICK• Dfitit:B
'/,BP · mu1u
34a9
Thia la a lu tool. T .. can
-mouLl!Dgo. rout llOGI ftpu-"l"" ... ~ru-oa
edpt. do fMohaad llCIOll work. A lot 01..,..i11y for the prlc9. ,
. 21-PC.CBmlL
PUllCll IOwL
SET
297
Tho tor.ala la
llO-the -Mftifi•ftbeq
tttho--" U... (1.9t'a .... two
·pbdsolaolauos. ---ol-mw.• ... )
•
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n.o.TEC
POMP
297
Hool< It• lhe ddll yOll ~ --
thla ad -lt11 Mipty a blip. « pool. «a batlllub filJl ol gtai la Mort .....
•
Ton ewa:
TeelCaalw
hltlCaalw • ...... c111w
·1'1
.
nlm~ llSDT
297
!lot bad..la t...t.'l dlda't thtllk wo had
---lood .. W911 lor _, . 1>dce. Thia doef. mul It ha « Sllper 1iras. tlnlala. •
-IEWf
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Laguna Bea~h
, ., EDITION
T .. ay's Fl•al
N.Y. Steeks
VO~. 65, NO. 350, '4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DEiCEMBER 15, 1972 TEN CENTS
'Laguna-Clemente Raids 'Net 6 Drug Suspects
A joint. urtdercover narcotics operation
by Laguna Beach and San Clemente
police resulted in arrests or an alleged
heroin pusher and five suspected users
rounded up in LQguna Beech early this
morning. .
Det. Sgt. Nell Purcell aaid two of the
five arrested on suspicion of betng under .. , ......... .
••
lhe influence of a narcotic still had blood
oozing from their arms where lajections
had been made.
Two tiny cblldren, one 2in and the
other 3~ years old, were taken into pro-
t«Uve custody from the home where ar·
reSts were made, Purcell said.
Thomas J . Hille, 22, of Mi 11 Pacific
•
Coasi Higb,way. Apartment 17. Dana
Polnt was booked into san Clemente jaµ.
on auspicioo of sale of heroin, possession
of heroin, possession of marijuana and
be.in& under the influence ot a narcotic,
Purcell said. No ball was set.
Arrested in Laguna Beach at 136 Hig h
Drive were: Raymond C. Arzate, 29;
David K. Wllliams, 21 ; Joyce E. Baust,
27 ; Charles P. Beckers, 30; and TOQYa L.
Tarrant, 28. All listed the High Orive
residence as their address. Hille was
~then taken to San Clemente and placed
Under arrest there.
Officers then went to the man's Dana
Point apartment, and assertedly seized a
•
small quantity of marijuana.
Officers then went back to the Hlgh
Drive residence and toot tbe five otbtn
into CUltody.
Purcell said there appears to be a
slight inttease in the number of heroin
arrests being made in the area.
"It's gradually on lhe increase in· the
south part of the county. We will attack
heroin as vigorously U not more so than
we did with marijuana and haahi!h." the
detective said.
He said that there "definitely is a con-
nection between beroi.'l use and other
crime," because heroin use!'! must raise
mooey to support e1penslve habits,
• rain I an Ill rv1ne
•
-~~......,. ........ FUTURE IN LIMBO
5-rfMllnd•lll Ullam
Laguna Trustees
. . r :
Will :consider .,. )
Ullom Contract
By FllBDElllCK SCllOEMEllL
Of .. n.llr ,., lt8fl
The Laguna Boach. Board of Education
lilll decide Mondoy night whether Dr. 'flillJam Ullom. superintendent of !Cbools
..... 1961, will remain In the dlstrtct for
an additmal tenn.
• Under a policy change approved In !ale
Jllilo. • 4ocbim iin the renewal of
Vijoni1i «mtract must be· made. by Jan.
)'. Tlle-llCboOI cbler1 co-ct 13 set to ex-
plft Jtme 30, 1!1'13.
The agenda item for a determinatlon
by U. board on the renewal or ncm-~al of the contract was placed on
tMli:enda at tbe request of Board Presi-diiit Wll11am Tbomu and Trustee
Pl:lricla , Gillette. The two b o a rd
.-,hen met with Dr. Ullom Thursday
afttrnoon.
Renewal of the contracll of Robert
-... wlstant superint<ndent of li1-
structlon, and pertonnel and Dr. Oiarles :HllS, assistant superintendent f o r ~· alto wJ!I be considered by the
no contract ...... a1 question became
the Impe\ul fer an bntucCesslul ncall at-
telllpl oPlmt·trusteel Gerald Linke and
Mn. Gillede, tiro bolrd membon ~
bal"' -icrtUcal of Ullom'• ~ -they 8SIUDled .me. In Jlil1.o( tm. · 'Ille recall·wu1au~.followhlg the
meeting In -the majority bloc of Thomu,' Llilke and Mn. Glllette voled to
change policy on administrative con-
lracts. Fonner policy, supported~.trongty by
Trustee William Wilcoxen before he
retlcned from the board, place a mu-
'mmn two-year period on admlnlltrative··
~ell with noowal made on year
bO!ore expiration of the contract.
' Tllo cll8niie•requelted by Mrs. Clmette.
lllll"lu~tly leP"OY9CI In the I to I
dlelsion, allo"1 for contncts to be )et for
a maxhbum -0f four yean, wttb a lb:
months renewal
• ~ C&slldy, preoldeat "' can. c!raed 0-.. for .......,, wblcb
1pmbeaded the ncall alllmpl, ltld be
U]llCll ocores of _..lo Jim -
d..,.s spedal meeting In ~ ol
Ullaln.
Coulcly, In • statement 1dooled by the
CclloemeCI C!Uzeni e x<CUtfve board : .. .,, orge the board to retain Dr. l{llom
and hi• aMOClates In their!'.' "nl posl-
tlona •n<I that Ill concomea panltl jo"ln
ln -king towatd a common p l -pro-
viding an OOlllllndlna educl-1 pro-
rram in Laguna Betclt." ' The jo<ent re ca I I election, the
•latement ,..c1, lndk:aled ..... mc1 In-
-I~ the local ochool oytCJm. but the outcome wu "blrdly declslvt."
tW llltoment re/erred to the JO.vote
! .. DllClllON, .... I)
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Military,
Civilians
Get Boosts
WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon today ordered· a 5.14 percent pay
increase for 1';316,ooO civilian government
workers and a 6.69 'percent salary boost
for all 2.4 million members of the armed
services. .
·'Jbe increases will become effective the
first pay period after Jan. 1, the White
House said.
Passengers
Feel Jolt
At90MPH
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of 1M D1llY ,lie! Stiff
The driver of a large bread truck was
killed instantly this morning when his
vehicle collided with a passenger train
which was traveling 90 miles per hour at
the polnl of Impact oo the Jeffrey Road
crossing in Irvine.
Costa Mesa police officers identifi'ed
the dead m!ln 19 ai.arles L. Schoonover
Sr .. 46, of 14951 Sand Canyon Ave ..
Irvine.
'lbe Santa Fe train was bound for Los
The civilian _pay r!lise had been sched·
uled for October, but was postpoaed u an anti·lnflatlon mo~ and lb&! action
auto91atlcally ~ 1 llmllar mllltary
pay boost set for..lh! same ttme.
$The~~-=-:-' u;:r..~~:"~
-Angeles out of San Diego and was car-
ryln1 allout 125 pasaengers, all of wbom
felt the shock of the collision. None was
injured.
Commllllo8 to prom¢e ...... paraiiifty with pmate lndustty sala(y
rates! '!lley will colt about IZ bllllon. ' ·
Tbell'i-esldent at the same time turned . . . DAllv',a.n twr,....
down a reconunendallon of an ad<!ltlonal ' pay incfeue of OJl6 percent to mate up
for the three-month delay In pay ad-j..-, holding that his "would be
neither 1a1r nor justlfiable."
WRECKAGE oF BREAD TRua aEiilts· remMoNv ro v10LENT -rRA1N-TRucK co~uildN
Driver Killed-In7tantly When Vehicle Collided With Fast Troln •I Irvine Croulne ,
. .
He said that such an lnqease would
result in paying federal emp\oyes nigher
salari~ than the comM,rable workers in
private enterprise are receivinJ.
Saddlehack· Trustee Asks
The-IDOreases att-across the board and · . =~am=~f=~.;~_niey " Change in-Site of Trial
In a message to COnpesa, N"wm said .. -" 1 that ")be American system of career · · "
civil service is based on the principle of . . _. rewardJng merit .. Saddle~c~ :school board member Alyn NeWport Beach, bas ool )oined Brannon
He added, "I 'am pledged to continue M. B~on . will ask a Superior Court in the request for a tr~er of tbe trial
striving to make it an even more ef. judgt! J~. 19 to move hi~ .. trial on scbedu1~ for March U.
fE!ctiv'e, responsible part of our gove,cn. bookmaking charges out of Orange Co~n-Branno~ was arrested Aug. 28 after he
ment. One way of achieving this is to ty. allegedly attempte;d to enforce set·
maintain a salary scale for civil servants The sa~dleback Community College ~lemen.t of a gamblmg debt from a man
that ti just and comparable to that District~ Trustee bas not revealed in his 1dentif1ed by police as a regular patron ol
received by equivalent individuals in the petition for a hearing before Judge the . sc~.1 boa~ member. ,
private sector." William Murray the reason behind his re· Arrestl~g oflicer:i all~ge Brannon s
On Monday, Nixon'l'I chief economic quest for a•change of venue. bookmaking oper~bons m the Harbor
spokesman, George P. Shultz, announced But court officials who handled the Area produced ta~gs of at least $25,000
a lreeze during the 1973 calendar year on documents•beJieve lhat Brannon, 41, feels a week. They said the trustee accepted
salaries of "executive level" federal that publicity stemming from his arrest heavy bets on football and basketball
employes including members 0 f and the subsequent Orange County Grand games and on one occasion, the outcome
Congress' and the judiciary. Jury indictment makes it impo1sible for of a tennis final bet!een Rod Laver and
· But Scbu1tz made It clear at that time him to receive a fair tria1 in this area. Ken Rosewall. .
lhat the delayed federal pay bike for the Brannon's co-defendant, used ~r sales Kelly was arrested six weeks later
lower categories would go forward. manager Robert Emmett Kelly, 3f of after a wealthy Newport B e ~ c h ' businessman told police that an eight·
Serious Con'1ftlon ..
Wounded Thief Suspect .
Wanted in Other Cases
inch hunting knife was hurled Into his
front f'door as part of the pressure
employed to collect gaming debts. .
Police assert the victim 'told tbtm he
was gambling it the .rate of $1,000 a
week In an operation allegedly headed by
Brannon. They said this information o~
tained from the victim led to Green's ar·
rest.
SPCA Fund
~et ia Laguna
A Christmas collectlon of food
and money few the animalJ of the
Laguna Clnyon SPCA has Peen
undertaken by Lagunan Marioo
Grier.
Donations may be m'ade at ·The
Shop of the -Opell Window, 1854 S.
Coast Highway. The collecUon is an
annu.il event.
The shop Is open for donaUons
from 11 aim. to· 5:30 p.m.> dally in-
cluding Saturday and Sunday unW
Christmas.
Caspers Offers
Another C.Ounty
Airport Plan
Frustraled by Marine and 8¥ Diego
County omcta!S, opposition to • Camp
Pendleton airport. Supervltor Roftald
Caspers of Newport Beach has come up
with a new proposed site in the southeast
part of the county.
He said on a tour of the Trabuco can-
yon area he spotted a large expanse of
leyeled terrain on the Trabuc:c> Plain
which might be a good jet airport aite.
'Ille 19--year-old burglary suspect shot
by an lfl.year<11d Laguna Beach resident
early 'l'hunda,y 13 1USpected of three
other buqlaziel and hU an arrest rec-
ord datiol back to When the JOUth Wal
ti, police Ilk! today.
other crimes was assertedly found by of·
ficerl after the shoa).ing. He has been
booked In absentia for suspicion of
burj1ary while armed.
Laguna Approves
Athletic Chief .
The locaUon Is directly soutJJ, of the
county's O'Neill Park and JU.I. wqt of "'°-Coto de Caza, a prlYate recre1ttiMal
facility.
David Mortin Long, reported In
~."aertou cooditJoo'' today at the lntenslve
care' unll cl Soutli COast Community
HoapJtal , was lbot 1n the abdomen with.a
World War t vintage .f5 reyolver as he
crouched in the dorlme.ss Inside )be home
of~· !ti, of 1111 A•teo SL, .
Loni Is . on • parole for a
prevtoial crime, ind was temporarily lly·
tq at a Woodlmd Ort•• ,__ Iller arrtvq In Lapia lloodl _, from
Ohio, ollloera illd.
Police bava been 1J111hl• to spell: with
the burglary llltpecl ._ to Ills -.cl.
Olllcere said Illa youtb bad lived In the
NC"1JOrl Beach and Colll M... 1rsa
bcfm aoinc . ~ _Oblo. »ridiooa 1-( the lt-1Nl'Old lo the
Coman encountered the youth shortly
b@fore 1 a.m. Thursday, The retired can-
dymalr.cr bad been lymg awake In his
bedroom listening to ~he radio when he
beard a noise In the living room.
,,.. whlt6-haired. Jllill QllleUy Pl ~p.
stepped through a J)Ulli8ewar lil\I! ~
living n10m and · woi t0nfr0nled 'Iii• lil*
lhadoWJ figure. -
"l've got a,.&UJI on you/' ·the youth
allegedly told Colnan. 1'b6 octogenarian
reacbtd behln4 ~ curtain, hauled out the
old..45 Ind bl ... the burglar.'
A .!2 ••llb•~J"'~ua pistol held by
the youth ltll ID tbO Door •11'1 'the man co!!(~ Coman t<!tl' police. ~ llilllet nPl>a,.nUy ex-tf W, W )lladdt!d Into >qr ii Iha/ apa~tinent,
de liole i1r the wa II.
Trustees of the Laguna Beach Unified The property 13 owned by Rancho
SChool Di!trlct tliu week approved the Mliaion Viejo beaded by Richard O'Neill
employment of Don Cawthon as interim IL ls an agricultural preserVe used ·for
athletic director 1t tbe high school. cattle grailng. '
Cawthon, a bUslness instructor with The propoted lite 11 ln the same vlclzll..
past coaching experience, replaces Hal ty aa the Bell Canyon airport :Which WU
Aillns In the Job. Akins nsigned t.. suggesled In the Ralph M. PorlOlll Com-
weeks ago '° be inay devote more time pa!lf report in mo.
to steering the vanity foOtball program. . Wheo the Panons report wu made
caw1boor will r.maln 11 atlllctiC' dlrec-· )'!.~ bomeowner groopa In Million
tor uutll 1 committee of teacbtri,"r ld--.: ',., ' CASPEl\S, hp I)
mlnlstra~ 1tudenta and pmllll can• . ,:;
.. 1ec1 a r.rmanent ...-t 'lbe. .~~~-.---.----..,
committee 1 recommendation )'Ill be
made early nexl month.
Fire Suspect F~
SANTA MO!llCA (AP) -A 62-. r<>ld
transient a~ for lnv~gation of
' manslaugher Ill "eonnectlop with • latal
fir& It the C8l!D'I)• l;lofhl this. ~k has
been releued\$, of lnsufllclcnt
· evidence, Pof ' · .
' '
Willis Sullivan, 57, of Santa Marla, con-
ductor of the four-<ar lraln, told In-
vestigators that he felt the Impact but
did nol immediately know what occurred.
"1 didn't know anything about ft," said
Wllll6, stlll dared, at the stopping point of
the train, about 1.5 miles away from the
impact on cUlver Drive.
Traffic Investigator Gary Barwig of
Costa Mesa Pollee Department said the
collision ruptured a fuel tank and air
hoses. Both .algnaled the train'• fail..ale
system to con.e to an emergency stop.
Tbc Impact was ao forceful that Jt
sheared the bread truck Into lta major
components, ~ttering bot dog 1 and
hauburger buns and jagged pieces of
melali down the track.
The truck's engine wu ripped from Its
mounts and landed next to the tract
more than loo' yards away. It was still
bot to the touch, one hour after the 8:f0
a.m. collision.'
A conductor on the train said be felt a
bump and suspected a colllslon had oc-
curred "when it· went bangety, bang,
bang, bang" underneath the coaches.
He said the train wu running on
scbedulc and had made stops at Del Mar
and San Clemente before the accident oc-curred.
The train continued lta westbound
journey at 1:45 a.m., using ooly 113 front
engine. A fireman On the trato Ilk! the
second engine WU dittbled when dlcte1
fuel leaked. out cl the ruplurod tanlt.
Investigators al the acene said the
train was going approximately 90 mph
through the llgnallzed lntenectlon but
that this wu considered nonnal a n d
proper speed.
1t'eatllel'
A few blgh clouds, but otbr.nri8e
aunny on Saturday, 13 the ny lbe
weaiberlady .... It: Highs ol IS at
the l>eachi>. rising to 'IV Inland.
Lows tonigllt '45-IO.
, INSIDE TODAY
Wllol -· lht lop 10 .,.... mumly 111 .. r.r prodtlcllmll of
1972 In Orano« Covntri The
DAILY P/LOT'1 druma critic
of/trr. hll cooluolfotl Jn todar'•
Weekender aecrfma.
I
J
I •
D"IL. Y PIL.OT LB
Water Unit
Announce s
Noise Pla11
A nine-point program to reduce noise
:ind traffic problt!mS stemming from
constn1c1 ion or 1l new water main
through South Laguna was announced
th~ morning by the South Coast county
\Yater District.
Steps to reduce nOise will Include in-
stallation of noise .suppression devices to
all machinery and the creation of night·
time work on instaUation between Dec.
22 aod Dec. 29
Nighttime work \\'ill then resume for a
15 day period, at which time the con-
tractor will return to a normal day work·
mg schedule.
The water district also has requested
:hat the state Division of liighways and
the Callfomia Highway Patrol assist in
the direction of traffic du ring periods of
nighttime consttuction. ·
~1ore than 25 South Laguna resident s
11ttended this week's meeting o( the
water district board to protest the
nuisances and hazards created by the
replacement .. of a deteriorating 16-incb
pipe with a new 24-inch water main.
A statement released this morning in-
dicated the water district will meet with
officials of South Coast Community
Hospital lo work out the best means of
laying the pipe in the highway in front of
the facility.
Winter Festival
.A. pplications
Now Being Taken
Applications are now being taken from
Laguna Beach artists and craftsmen who
wish to e:ichibit during the 1973 Laguna
Beach Winter Festival. -
The Winter Festival will run from Feb.
16 through ~larch 4. Exhibition will be on
the Festival of Arts grounds.
Craftsmen may make application to
the: Laguna Craft Guild, Box 124.f,
Laguna Beach, CA. 92652. Artists should
' apply to: Laguna Beach Art Museum, 307
Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach, CA., 92651.
Application must include participant's
name and address. Spaces will be offered
to local artists and craftsmen first. After
Jan . 15, unlilled spat~s v.·Ul be allocated
to out-of-town artists.
Oub Gives $750
To Library Patio
: The Laguna Beach Garden Club will
; add $750 to a standing gift of $1,000 for
· Construction of a renecting pool tn the
: patio area of the new Laguna Beach
·public library. ·
The new library building, at the corner
: of Park Avenue and Glenneyre Street.
; will open Jan . 12, following dedication
· ceremonies. ·
• The $1.750 gift from the club, said Mrs.
Gerald Hanna, president, was raised at
. several bridge parties and through the
sale of art obiects. She credited the ef·
forts of Mrs . J. William Devaney and
: Mrs. lrving Westwood in the fund raising
: effort.
·.All-day Parking Lot
: Opens on El Paseo
: The all-day parking lot at El Paseo
. Street will be open beginning at 7:30 a.m.
: as a result of requests from Laguna
:Beach businessmen.
: The lot was opened when Main Beach
:Park development was delayed due to
;high construction bids . lt was hoped the.t
:by offering all-day parki ng for 50 cents.
·downtown employes would park there.
; freeing storefront spaces for customers.
DAILY PILOT .
: TM Ofln91 C..SI Oi\ll.Y P1l.OT, wt11t .._
h Clln!IJl• ~ H_,.r.IS. II pUftlllifleC W
• "'-~ CMrt Pvblllhlflt ~?'. S.,.,..
• ' ,.,. edlflDM 1r1 PVbllllled, MGM., 11\rw-
, 1"r\d1y, tol' Col!I Me••, H........... IMdl,
Hlll'llllllllo!I l fft.h/F-l•ln V•llt'f, L1o11.1111
lffdl. lNIN/514dl W S111 a.-'-1
• S_,. J1,1t11 C1pl11r1no. A 1!1'1911 I
I •llJl:lrl 11 11Ubtillled S1l11 llClt.,._
: : TM prlnc:1Pll publlllll"G pltlll Is II UI WMI
' , fl•V Slrttt, ~11 M ... , C1l!lof'!ll1, '162',
' " . ..
' .
" ' .
• ' ' ' • •
\
f'NMP ... l ,
DECISION ••.
llWJ)n by which Linke retained hit
achoo! boanl pool and the 100.wte nWsln wbleb allowed ·Mn. Glllelle to tt-
lllUI ... ...,.... WllMn< . ...... ~ .... ~
declined comment oo t qenda lltni. llolb Mn. Gillette aod Linke al>o have
indicated they have no state1.icnt1 on the
matter.
f<'ollowing the election, Thomas, in
prepared remarks, said, wtth the elecUon
past,. that "now la the tllllt lor all con-
cerned to calm down and lry to keep in
focus the overall picture ff t;<tuc:JUon ln
Laguna Beach.
"J Wish to make clear .that the board
la not out to dcolroy the ocbools or the
faculty. Tile primary aim of the bOard'a
direction ls to make obJectJve evaluations
of all programs, anU to improve those
fOttnd !acting and build further on those
proven to be effective, 'Ibia doe& not
mean a return to abeplute traditional·
type scboola," he said.
Niguel
Classes
Signup Set
Registration for two do!en BJ*!la1 In-
terest classes al the Laguna Niguel C.Om-
munlty Center wlU be hold from t a.m. to
noon "Monday through Friday al the
center offi ce.
Classes, sponsortd by the SOUth CO.St
YMCA. will start Jon. I. Further ln·
formation Is available rrotn the YMCA at
494-9431. I
Classes are as foUows:
LADIES ADVANCED EXERCISE:
Eight-week session, Monday and WedneJ-
day 10:45-11:4.5 a.m., $11
EXEJICISE FOR SENIOR CITIZENS:
Eigbt·week session, Mo,nday and Wednes·
day JO(U.11 :45 a.m .. I ll. •
Sotil Satisfying l'iew DAIL'f' P ILOT PHOTO lly •kfllnl k..iii.r-
'l'Mtee Norman B(owne l41d the DAf·
LY PILOT , he will not at~ Monday'a
meeting ~sr,1te the presence.of the agen·
da item, 'unless something unusual
comes up to demand my presence."
Brown plW to depart on a "three-week
vacation Sa turday morning.
BEGINNERS GYMNASTICS: Elghl-
week S<S$irlo, Monday and Wednesday,
Ages 7·U years, 4:00.5:00 p.m., $12.
\Vhen the sun is setting in the West it creates some
magnµ-icent scenes along the Ora~ge Coast. l-lere
the view was enhanced by trees and sai lboat. 1'he
picture was taken from a hillside by Thurston In·
termed.iate School in Laguna Beach. . Trustees Jane Boyd said she will
release a stateinent on the contract
renewal q11~on at the tlme the motion
is considered.)
INT E RMED!ATE GYMNASTICS:
Eight-week session, Monday and ·wednes·
day, Ages 7-12 )'tars, 5-3 p.m., t12: · ·
JUNIOR AND SENIOR HIGH li(JIOOL
GYMNASTICS: 8-week. sesslon. Manclay
and WednescM)', 7-i p.m.; 1t2.
Tru1nan Weaker, Nude Girl, 18, Alerts
Fails to Respontl
To Medication Officers to Abduction
I Dead, I H111·t:.
In Arizona Try
Tl&-Dl!l AND BA'.flK : Eiglt~Wtek
ses&on, Mondays 7:30-t:30 p.m., •.tt ·
Bl!GJNNEllS GUITAR : EJgbl""'ek
session, Mondays 1-8 p.m., $15.
INTERMEDIATE GUITAR: Elghl·
week session. Saturdays 10-11 a.m., $15.
KANSAS CITY (AP)-Harry S Tru-
man, semi<'OllScious and unable to speak,
failed to respond to medicalion today and
doctors erpressed concern about his
\\'e akening kidneys.
The forme r President slept fitfully and
continued to receive oxygen all the time.
A spokesman at Research Hospital and
Medical Center said, "kidney output 1..'0n·
tinues to decrease in spite of medica·
tion."
For the • .second straight day, Dr.
\Vallace Graham termed Truman's con-
dition "very serious."
The 88-year-old Truman was admitted
to the bo,,pital 10 days ago, suffering
from bioochitis and lung congestion.
Slippage In Truman's kidney function
was noted Wednesday when doctors
oOOer:Yed signs of renal impairment,
which they said, meant his kidneys were
not purifying blood properly.
'lbur>day, actual output ol the kidneys
decreased and the -doctors &aid the
kidney condi.U(I). wa1 "of concem and ts
being watched very closely for change."
Laguna Offers
New Economics,
Math Classes
New courses in consumer economics
and business mathematics will be offered
at Laguna Beach High School when
school resumes follow ing Christmas
vacation.
Trustees of the school district approved
the courses this week.
Among the topics covered in the con-
sumer economics course will be credit,
insurance, real estate, "Lu.es, investments
and problems in obtaining a home.
Personal money records, commissions,
business money management and buying
problems will be explored in the business
mathematics course.
The courses will be elecUve at first,
but may become Teq1lirements next year,
depending on student interest..
Poet Sets Reading
Gene Wierbach, a Laguna Beach poet,
will rea~ works Saturday Md Sunday at
the Post-ResldellCfl Club in San Fran-
cisco. The reading is under the
sponsorship of Philip ~iackeU, director at
the Post Street Club.
Sunday's Bes~
ATLANTA (API -A young girl, ab-
ducted with her soldier companion, dove
nude from the window of a car to attract
the attention of police after fighting off
repeated attempts to rape her, police
said today.
The llJ.year-<>ld girl apparently suf-
fered only shock and bruises and
scratches.
Her 23·year-old friend received head
wounds when beaten with a club and
pistol, according to detective Beryl
COmpton.
Neither victim was identified.
The detective said the two-hour ordeal
began early Thursday as the couple left
Underground Atlanta and the soldler was
asked for a match by a man,,
A5 they reached their car, the same
man appeared again with a pistol and
forced them to get Into the back seal
Two other men got in and they drove to
an alley where the girl was ordered to
strip.
The soldier began fighting the lhre<
men and was clubbed, then f~ to gel
into the trunk of the car. Compton s&ld
they then drove to an empty garage
where the gti'J':; c.lothes were torn oil and
the men a~pted to rape her. 'l'hO men put her ba'Ck In \h, car and as
one drove ,the ·other two made several at-
tempts to rape her but finally returned to
the.garage where the ordeal continued.
One man ..-:as quoted as finally saying:
Principal Gets
Faculty Post
On School Panel
"We ar.e going to eet a shotgun and we'll
use it when we get it, too."
They put the girl In the car and drove
off, Compton said. At one point, be sa1d,
the girl saw a police car, kicked a man in
the face and jwnped out a window
screaming.
Police Sgt. Eugene Robinson gave
chase to the car as the girl ran to some
woods, forClng the vehicle into a guard
rail several blocks away. Tbe three at-
tackers fled.
Another 'patrolman, alerted to the
chase, found the girl in some woods,
wearing only a sock, and took her -to a
hospital ·
She told police about her escort In Jhe
trunk and he was then freed.
Planners Weigh
Ho~ Relocating
' At Prison Break
FLORENCE, ArJi. (AP) -i An 1t-
lemp1ed· b,..t from the Al1mna" Slate
Prison by a Taft, Calif. mari and two
other "desperate people" with past
records of fleeing institulkm ended with
one or the men dead, one injured and tbe
C&lifornian in isolation.
Frederick Macon, 30, of St. Louis, was
killed Thursday night as be and another
inmate attempted to overpower a tower
guard, said Warden Bud Gomes.
The warden said Macon and Paul
Jorgeson, 26, attempted to overpower the
guard after he had been distracted by
Nick Cox, Z1 , ol Taft.
Gomes s&ld the guard heard !be two
climbing some c:ooler ductwork on the
side of the tower and turned and fired,
wounding Macon fatally.
Hes.aid Jorgeson either fe!J or jumped,
suffering two broken ankles in the 20-foot
drop.
FromPqel
CASPERS ...
Proposal Monday Viejo north and west ol lhe site pn>telled
A ,._...1 lo -a house -Vigl)rolllly u did resldento and dty of. Thalla and Glertneyre lo a spot 'at licials Jn San Juan Caplatraoo and San
BJueblrd Park as a Girls' CJub meetfng Clemente.
house will be considered by Laguna The two communities would have been
Beach Planning Commission at 7:30 p.m. in or near the takeoff pattern of the Bell
Monday at Clly Hall. Can)'Oll Allport.
Tile matter Ls a continuation of a hear· The aile proposed by C.aspera, although
ing l&st Monday . The house would be 11 milea from El Toro Marine CO:rps Air
located just off Temple Hills Drive as it Station, would create 10me flignt path
passes the park. The boroe is to be conflict with that facllity. Jt abet bas a
OUTDOOR EXERCISE AND JQG.
GING ; Meets Tuesday and Thursdiy at
Camp J?olpb . Phrsical testlng done at
Recreation Cmter. u weeks. l :J0.10:30
a.m., $25.
· LADlBS BllGINNERS ~:
Eight-week session, Monday and Weilne1-I
day 11 a.m. to noon. $11.
BEGINNEllS MACRAME. ---.session, 9:•11:30 a.m. 'l'Uesday, '11.
Sl'nt:BEKY AND APPIJQUE: Eight·
week session, Tuesday U p.m., •12.
BEGINNERS GYMNAmcs: ElgJlt.
week session, Tuesday ~ 'Iburlday,
Ages 7 -12 years, 4-5 ~.m., 112. _
INT E RMED!ATE GYMNAmCS:
Eight-week session. Tuesday and 'Ibura-
day, Ages 7-12 years. M p.m., $1J.
LADIES GYMNASTICS AND EX-
ERCISE: Elgbl·week aesslon, Tueodly
and Thursday, 7-8 p.m .. Slt.
STJtF:rt:ll AND SEW: EJ&hl·week
session, Tuesday, 7-9 p.m .• ~15.
KARATE FOR CHW>llEN: TueldlJ
and Thtlrsclay 7-1 p.m. Aces &-JJ yqn.
Eight-week session, $24. .
KARATE FOR ADULTS: Tueoday ud
Thursday 3-9 p.m. Ages 11 and up. EJ&ht·
week sessk>n, $24. 1
PAlNTING AND DRAWING : Elgbl· ,
week sdsloo, Wednelday 10 1.m. to
noon, $12. YOGA: a-week aession, Wednesday 1.a
p.m., =· BRIDGE: &-week session, Wednesday 7 :~9:3tl p.m., 118 per person or 1311 per
couple.
BEGINNERS MACRAME: Eight-week
session, Wednesday 7:30-0:30 p.m., $12. ·
BELLY DANCING: Elgtt-week
session, Thursday 7:30-l:SO p.m .• $12.
CERAMICS: Eight-week s c s a 1 on ,
Thursday 7:3~).JO:OO p.m., $25.
removed for pending deveJopment. handicap of 4,000-foot mountains d.lre<:tly
Following the hearir•, planners will to the east. Loan Fraud Alleged meet in a study session. Tentative Caspers said be had asked Robert
scheduled discussion will include: Bresnahan, COU11ty director of aviation, SAN DIEGO (AP) -/rt. federal grand
-Revenue sharing goals and pro-to check lhe feasibWty of the proposed jury was reported looking Into alleged
cedures. site. Bresnahan sald today that he bad k.lck·bacb on loam Issued by the San
Albert Haven, printjP.al of Top of the -Goals format and scbedule or the not yet been able to study the propusal. Diego office of the Small Business
World Elementary Sc!'llil in Laguna capital im provement budget. Caspers said be still feels that Camp AdministraUon. Reported malfe1•1oce is
Beach has been named to the facul ty of --Signalization and parking removal P e n d I e t on is the ideal locatioa for a being lnvestipted by tbe U.S. Oeputo
the lntemational Graduate School of from Broadway at Beach and Forest. lat'£e jet airport but realit.ed that It will me:nt of Justice. W11liam W. Bowlbtl.
Education. -Sycamore Hills moratorium. take an ad of Coob-eSS to overcome tbe director of the a1eney'1 .curtty aDd m.
n-IGSE has no permane.nt campus, , __ ni_e_•_•_lect_•_lree_t_"'l.:.._'f<!f...;-'"-u.;.pd_a_te!__;· ___ M_ann_· _e _op;.cpos;_i_tl!>n;_· _________ ves.:;...Uga=-.llon..,;..:_dl_villao,..::::.c;:.ald:c:.:.'lllundl7==:::;·;__
but conducts seminars and conferences 1 -
at leading universities in tbe United
State.I, Enaland and France.
The toJJil faculty of 2l7 Includes 15
representatives from California.
Haven, according to ICSE officials, _
was selected because of his work in
developing the innovative educaUonal
program used at Top of the World.
Haven will lead senllnars on educa-
tional ·management on weekends and
during the swnmer months. Sessions will
not Interfere with his acliv!Ues as prin·
cipal -of Top of the World.
LAMPS-PICTURES -ACCESSORIES
PRE-HOLIDAY SALE
It', the little thing• th1t can moko tho Clif.
ference. Stop by t oday ancl view our fine
selection, now specially priced. If it's for a
gift, or for you penonolly, you'll find just tho
thing to enhance any homo for tho holid1y, ,,
Cousiris on 'Lile~' Sign
Mixup, Myste1·y in Pilot
Another great magazine is dcnd and
magazine man Nor.nan Cousins, newest
t'Olumnist to joln the DAILY PILOT
lineup of star talent. says the govern·
ment helped kill Life .with escalaUng
postal rates.
That'a one of several A..rtlcles, photo
features and columns you11 find among
"SUnday'1 Best." Here's a preview or
some other th.Inga upc:omina for Sunday
DAfLY PILOT teader1:
SJGN SCRAMBLE -; It's poHlble !hit
some signs are more confusing to
mororists than the ruJes they're trying to
<.'Onvey. Sign atudy aimed at reducing
visual pollution and increasing un-
derttandinl It the subject QI YOU section
lead 1tory by Staff Writer Rudi
Nleddeltld •
LAGUNA NIGUEL !llYSTERY-Ecrie
•ight ol IJCJ!la burning all nJgllt at Ibo ap-
parently empty $24 mUUon North
American RockweU 0 Zlgpr1t" lo an
uninhabited vaDey was part ol the In-
trigue that ca UJed 1 Lag\lnl Hill• wo•man
to Y.'Onder enough about the never-oc-
tup{od bullclln& to vlall II and .,rJle 1houl
II.
•
YULE GIFTS FOR NEEDY -
Christ mas is a time for shat ing and if
you want to give to rami!ies in need, the
YO U Section will list agencies to which
you can take loOd , clothing, toys or other
gilts for dJstrJbution.
CABOT ON COVER -Sebastion
Cabot, bost ol the show which ... m
change from "Gbosl Story" to "Circle of ·
Fear" early in J111uary, is featured in
COVf!l' 1tory of TV WEEK.
STEALING FROM BLIND -A new
power group 1J crowbarring lta way Into
a dominlnl position In W •shlnl!ton. The
"thre1t'1 come1 from bllnd people •ho
man candy-a.nacli:-news at&uda ln lobblta
of fedrral bulldlng.!I. Von Hoffman tell1 It
Uke It Is ln "StraUng from the Bllnd."
HELICOPTER LADY -She's only '
four feet, 11 inc:hes tall, but you can bet
Orange County's first and only wom11n
helloopter pUot bu a head atart In her
determination to make a Uving as a com·
merclol chopper driver. She's JJolly
llou&)U, granddauglltu ol Do n a I d
Doo1lat. He foonded th• Doua111
Aircraft Co.
•
DREXEL-HERITAGl>-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASrAN ---------
·INTERIORS
WllKDAYS I S1UUIDAYS ttOO i. lllO 1 NIDAY '1IL t:OO
1• ,
Nf'/tl'OAT. IEACH e
1717 WUTCLI" D ...
MJ;JOIO
LAGUNA IEACH e
145 NORTH COAST HWY, ., .... ,,,,
TORRANCI e ,
IU4t HAWTHOlHI ILVii,
111.11n
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Saddlebaek Today's Final
EDITION ~.Y. Stooks •
V.OL. 65, NO. 350, 4 SECTIONS, SO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1972 'rEN1CENTS
~ Trustees Give Bu·s System One More Chance
Aile< a stormy public bearing marked
by loud complaints and quiet, collee-
break negotiations, San Joaquin School
Dis!rict tn181ees 'nllnday night agreed w give tbe COmniunity Enterprises
charier bus company one last chance,
but added a to.day contract termination
clause U euvice doesn't improve.
Trustees also instructed the district ad-
minislraUon to begin preparing plans for
a San Joaquin bus system to be im-
plemented in February, if the service
from the Sant Ana-firm ~·t improved
by mid-January. ·
Community Enterprises p r e s l d e n l
Richard Keyur agreed to these points,
which were partiaJIY negotiated (luring a
coffee break, but/he won. bis bid for the
10 percent lncrease in rates retroactive
to Sept. 1, 1972.
Keyzer cited a series or reasons -bus
breakdowns, driver turtM>ver, the low
San Joaquin budget and tight scheduling
of runs by the ~trict -fo1the service
complaints, but blamed the problems
mostly on a "lack of communication"
between tbe district and his company.
The school district has been plagued
with complaints by parents and teachers
since September. Protesters charged that
children weren't being picked up at all,
that buses were up. to an hour late and
that driven are sometimes unsafe. Lru!t
week and Thursday night, a contingent of
school principals showed up to add their
complaints.
One, Ken Anderson from Cordillera
School, said his students were losing an
average or two days of school a month
because buses were so Jate.
He and other 'Principals also cited
numerous instances when they , the
highest-paid personnel in the school,
spent hours on bus duty, standing with
walling children.
Thursday's meeting was the first
Keyzer had attended.
He agreed to another condition re-
quested by trustees.
Trustees bad asked that Florence
Walp, the district transpor¥1tion director,
provide an immediate link between the
district and the-bus firm.
Keyzer said he didn't accept tbe idea
when it was first proposed because he
was worried about who would have
"driver control." Too often, the solutions
to problems are delayed' because parents
or teachers caJI the school distrK:t and
no11he company, he said.
Mrs. Walp is expected to help revise
routes and handle complaints.
A main problem, the president said,
was that lhe district's $350,000 bus
budget was lhe same as last year's,
allowing for no cost,.of.Jiving increases.
The company operates 43 buses In the
I(l(}square mile district. but because of
the light budget , he said. can't afford lo
(S.. BUSES, Page Zl
• • • • • rain I rv1ne .river
Near O'Neill Park
Caspe~s Pcses
•
"New Airport Site
Frustrated by Marine and San Diego
County officials, oppeoilioo to a Camp
Pendleton airport, SUpervl!or Ronald
caapen of ·Newport ~ bas come up
with a new proposed site in the southeast
part of tbe county.
He said m a tour ~ lbe Tralluco Can·
yon area he spotted a larye expanse of
lev.eled ·ierrala on lbe 'l'rabuco Plain
which mlgbt be a 1""4 Jet airport site.
'!'be -ii -clir1cdY -b of tbe count7'• O'Neill Putl .n.! jullt west of
Coto de Caza, a private recreational
llCIHly. •
Tbe pr .... t) .. --bl' -Mi-Viejo -ht lllchanl O'Jlilll
It ls an agrtoultlll'll jkelerVe -1or
cattle graziai ..
The proposed site ls ID tbe wpe viclDl-
ty as. tbe Bell Canym airport which was
auggested In tbe, Ralph M .. Panons Com-
pany report In 1170.
Wbett tbe. Panons report waa made
pcblic, homeowner -In Mission Viejo aortb and west of tbe site protested
vljjorously as did. -ts and city ot-
!lciall In San Juan Clpiltrano and San
Clemente.
'lbe two communities would have been
In or near'tbe takeolf pattern of the Bell
Canyon Airport.
Tbe site propoaed by CUpers, although
11 miles from El Toro> Marine Corps Air
Station, would create some fiight patb
confllct with that facility. It also bas a
handicap' of 4,000-foot mountain! directly
10 tbe eul.
~ said be baa asked Robert
:A~ban, county director of aviation, w d>e<I: tbe feasibility of the proposed
sile. Bresnahan aid today that he ~
DOI yet been able to aludy the propusai.
Six Narcotics
Suspects Seized
In Irvine Raid
Caspers said be still feels that Camp
P e n d I e t o n is the ideal location for a
large jet airport but realized that it will
take an act of Congress to overcorne the
Marine opposition. ·
Nixon Raises
Mi)itary , -Civilian Pay
WASHING TON (UPI) -President
Nlxoo. today ordered a 5.Jf percent pay
increase for 1,3115,000 civilian government
workers and a 6.89 percen~ salary boost
for all 2.4 million members of the armed
set\'.ices.
The increases will become effective the
first pay period after Jan. 1, lhJ White
H~sald.
1be civilian pay raise had been sched-
uled for October, but was postponed as
an anti-lnOaUon move and that action
automatically delayed a similar military
pay boost set for the same time.
The across-fhe.board increases were
ordered by Nixon on the basis of recom-
mendatioal> bl' Budget Director Cospar
Weinberi;tr and the chairman of tbe Civil
Sern!e Commission to promote com-
parability with privale Industry salary
rates. 'l'beY will cost about $2 billion.
The P?eSident at the same time turned
down a recommendation of an additional
pay increase of OJ6 percent to make up
for the three-month delay in pay ad·
justments, holding that bis 0 would be
neither fair nor jusUfiabJe."
He saJd that such an increase would
result in paying federal employes nigher
salaries than the ,comparable workers in
private enterprise are ~ivina:.
The increases are across the board and
amounted to a cosM>f-1ivinS' hike. They
affect persons making Wlder $36,000.
Sex Education
To Come Under
Tig hter Curbs
SACRAMENTO (AP) -.Sex education
In €a111crnia --,.ill come under
tighter regulation under a resolution
adopted today Without debale Hr the
State Board, of Education.
Aoopt_ion of the set·o! guidelines folloW"
ed a meeti"lg Thursday night where a boar<J subcommittee hf:ard briefly from
opponents to the measure.
One opponent, Wayne Laiilont of the
Orange tCoWity-based Birth Control
Institute, Inc., said in an interview after
the board's action that lhe rules will pro-
vide "ammunition for intimidation."
Lamont contended that a small, vocal
minority of parents in most districta go
in front of local boardt"'to oppose sex
education, and the new rules will give
!See SEX CLASS, Page ZI
, .
Truck Hit
ln '90-MPH
Colli sion
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of .... DallY ...... ,, ...
Charles L. Schoonover Sr., 46, owner of
the Irvine General Store. was killed th.is
morning when hls bread lruck collided
with a passenger train doing an
·estimated 90 mph at the point of impact
at tbe Jeffrey Road crossing in Irvine.
Investigators said Schoonover. 1495\
Sand Canyon Road. died instantly when
his Barbara Ann truck smashed into the
Santa Fe train bound for Los Angeles.
The train was coming from San Diego
, and c8nied an estimated 125 passengers.
~ ~ All felt the shock of the colli5ion but train
pei-sonnel said none were injured.
Schoonover and bis wife, Betty, have
oper1Jied the East Irvine country store
since 1911. Mrs. Schoonover I s
po,!tmistress of East Irvine, formerly
known as Myford.
The Schoonovers and their two
children, Greg, 21 , and Deltise, have lived
in an apartment over the store and post
office for the past seven years. The store
building is one or Orange County's oldest,
having been coastructed in 1899.
Saddleback Trustee Asks
lrvine city aJde Paul Brady said
Schoonover was making a delivery from
the store wh'en the accident occurred.
Witnesses who sa wa second train pass
after the accident said the signals were
in working order.
Change in Site of Trial
Saddle back 'ICbool boaid ·m<mber·Alyn
M. !l:rannon will aski a SuperlOr Court
jutlge Jan. 19 to . move hls 'tri8'l on
bookmaking cbarges·oat df Orange Coun-
ty.
The Saddle.back Community College
Disb"ict Trustee has not revealed in his
petition for a bearioi before Judge
Wllliam Murray th~ reason behind his re-
quest for a change of venue.
But court officials who ·bandied the
documents 'believe that Brannon, 41, feels
that publicity stemming from his arrest
itnd the subsequent Orange County Grand
Jury indictment makes it Impossible for
him to receive a fair trial in this area.
Brannon's co.defendant, used car sales
manager Robert Emmett Kelly, 34, of
Newport Beich; ·lMli DOt J01ned Br&nnon
In' tbe 'r'equest for· a transfer or the trial
scheduled fur March 12.
~ranDQn, was BITested .\ug. 28 after he
allegedly attempted to enforte -se~
tlement of a gambling debt ,from a· man
identified by police as a reguJar patron of
the school board member.
Arresting officers allege Brannon's
bookmaking operatiom in the Harbor
Area produced takings of at lea!:t $25,llO()
a week. Tbey said lhe trustee areepted
heavy bets on football and basketball
games and on one occasion, tbei outCO(ne
of a tennis final between Rod La'fet' and
Ken Rosewall. ·
Willis Sullivan, 57, of Santa Marla, con-
ductor of the four-car train, told in-
vestigators that he felt the impact but
did not Immediately know what occurred.
''I didn't know anything about it," said
\\'illis, still dazed, at the stopping point of
the train, abJut 1.5 ffillel away from the
impact on Culver Drive.
Traffic Investigator Gary Barwig of
Costa Mesa Police Department said the
rollision ."Uptured a fuel tank and air
hoses. Both signaled the train's faU-sa!e
system to ron .e to an emergency stop.
The impact was so forceful that it
sheared the bread truck into its major
romponents, scattering bot d o g s and
bauburger buns and jagged piece> or
metal down the track.
The truck 's engine was ripped from its
mounts and landed next to the track
more than 100 yards away. It was still
hot to the touch one hour after the 8:40
a.m. collision. •
A conductor on the train said he fell a
bump and suspected a collision had oc·
curred "when it went baJgety, bang,
bang, bang"~meath the coaches.
:An· Oranae County Superior fl>urt ar-
raipmen\ J:. being scheduled Wday ror •
Collll Melan jailed with five c»defen-
danll following ·an lrvtoe laid tliit-pollce '1lese put a huge baul of marijuana and Jwilllsb In the bands of unden:over of·
flc«I.
Cltargea of possealjon of marijuana
and dangerous W1op .,. amoog tbe
~tlool filed against Rlcbanl Kent
BizW!ey, 11, 2Mi Redlands Drive, .Costa
Kelly was arrested six weeks later
after a wealthy Newport B e i c h
-------=-----,.-,i-::;c--.,..,..._'il----;1-~--busineJlman told police that an efglit· lmpact-Repo. rts Stalled ~\o:;t=:~·r1~~ Police assert the victim .told tlltm he
was gambling at the rate of $1,000 a
He said the train w~ running ~
schedule and had .made stops at Del Mar
IS.. TRAIN, Page Z)
Irvine Co 1n missio ners Hold Sta'1ements I nadeq uate -· l\lftl<al :barges have been endorled > By GEORGE LEIDAL
by tbe Orange O>unty Grand Jury ot .. _.,, "'"' ,..., O.-Domio Robert Tunnell, It, John Irvine Planning Commissioner< Thurs-
J_o.toh GnlSI, >"221 Nancy Madrieanne day night deemed "Insufficient" the Olbome, 18, a.no ClseY ' Christopher latest of three envlronmenta1 impact
Mom, ta, all of Santa Ana and Larry Don statementa dialing with the proposed
Dean, 2$, of Elsinore. 4800,000 Unkup of·Camµus Drive between
''All alx defendant.I were arrested by UC Irvine and the Irvine Industrial
COiia Meta police 1"•-g city o( lrvlne Complex. .
bid,es wloen Ibey allege Ibey found the Aller nearly four hours or discussion or
....., ae11ing 10 klloo of marljuan'! and tbe road crossing tbe San Joaquin Marsh
'-\5,lllO worth of buhlah, • marl]UaU" and a bridge acrou the San Diego c,...k
Cirtvatlve. Channel commissioners then deadlocked
Amsllng ofllcers said they took toad!d oh a recommendation for either approval
pjstols from U...ee or the male defendants or denial or tbe proposed link or any
durfn& the raid. allttllate.
Commllalonert voted I to 2 w find the.r
Fire SW1pect Freed
SANTA MONICA (AP) -A Oyear-old
traoslent arrested for lnvelllaation of
mamlaUJl)ter In <•r111ecllon with a (Bia! r,,.. ot the Carmel Hotel thlo w .. k baa
lieeD ...-be<auoe of lnJufliclent
ivlcleMe, pollce aid.
Impact ttatement inadequate. Com-
\ miaak:.if Qlairman ltayoe Clark, who
worka for UC!, abtmted hlmH1f from
the htarlng cltinl( a conIDct of Interest.
Unlvenlty officials deem the roadway to
be vital to campu1 traCOc circulation.
Comintasloner1 Wesley Marx, Robert
West and Mrs. Ellen Freund Wf;l'I most
crltJcal of the cl/Y'' envlronm.,lal otudy
I, -
of tbe arterial ~gbway-proj..;t, burten1-
porary chalf!nan Frank Hurd Jol!>ed
thim in the vote clti.Di'the conunWiim's
view the'. report is inadequate. '
'llte insufficiency finding means com-
missioners suggest that the city staU
should gather further data on the pro-
poled hlghway projeCt before the city
councll bearing ·on the impact statement
and highway plan at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
After ·the coosideratk>n of the $3.500
report by consultant Ed Haworth, a mo-
lion by Harry Shuptrine and Richard
Kent to approve the project with con-
ditions covering envirnnmental concerns
<' UCI and Hawort~~failed on a 2 to 3
vote. Commissioner Freund abstained
saying she did not have enough ln-
!onnation to decide.
• Kent then moved a recomn1endation to
tbe L'OUncll urging them lo approve an
alternate alignment , farther east from
tbe boundary or I.be Unlv,..slty marsh
study area. Tbe moUon died for lack of a
second.
Commissioner Marx and Mrs. Freund
then moved to delay the propo&ed OJ·
tension until a proclse plan of bighway1
In the area of the marah reserve could be
drafted. A 3 • 3 vote greeted that moUon ;
"·hlch was supported. by the mover1 e.nd
Commlsioner West.
FinaTiy, a unanlmpus vote to inform
tho councU the commission could ""t
agree on a recotruneodat.lon on .. the con-
troversial erole<!. ended dlacuJilon .o(.
(See CAMPIJS, Port I) ,
,t •
week 1n an OJ>eration allegedly headed by
Brannon. They said this Information ob-
tainert from the victim led lo Green's ar-
rest.
Signups Called
For Snow Camp
Pre-registration !oi-the ,first Sad·
dlebaclt Valley YMCA·lndlan Guide snow
camp at Camp Blufl Lake June 13 and H
ends Friday.
It Is being sponsored by the Broken
U.nce Natk>n of the Indian Guida e.nd
all members of the Guides are welc»me.
The Saddlcback YMCA at 131!1 Orang•
Avenue In El Toro Is organb.1ng olhe:r
winter snow camps, including ithe first
team camp at Camp Avalanche Fe.'\. 17!
18 and 19. Registration wUI be taken ·11U
Feb. 1. It Is open to all oeventb tbro•1gh
12 graders. ·
A winter c.mp at Bellow-11 Lodge at
Big Bear Feb. U and 25 Is ljior)Jo(td by
the Y-Trall Blazen. Pr'"reJistralloo
dl>adllne IO< all memberw·la Fr!dlf.
Orange
We~er
A few high clouds. but otherwise
sunny on Saturday, ls the way the
wf!atherlady ~s it. Highs 9f &S at
the beaches, rising to 70 inland.
Lows tonight 45-llO.
INSW E TODAY
Whoe to«t tht top JC> com-
munitt1 theater productiom of
1972 in Orange Co1111.t111 The
DAILY PIWT'1 drcmo ' critic
offtri his evaluation m todatl'•
W ttkendtr 11ction.
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Two Irvine
Rezonings
Postponed
I r vi n e city coun c ilme n have
delayed nction or two rezonings which
have been under consideration ~ the cl·
ty for nearly one year. Both were among
five res idential rczonings approved by
(..'OUnty government prior to incorporation
of the new city last Dec. 28.
Plarullng Director Bruce W~ St;11-
gested the council set for cons1dera t1on
during its first .,Pleeting in February the
public hearing on the Ayres Develop-
ment Company 32·acre zoning and the
Larwin Co mpany's similar size rezoning
wb.ich i:equires a second reading approv-
al berore becoming effective.
Both matters have awaited rompletion
of the city's policy plan. Planning Com-
missioners will give that plan a f~l
reading Thursday night and the council
will act on it Tuesday.
Once approved, planning consultant Ed
Haworth will use the land use policy
guide for the entire city to judge the C?n-
f onnance of his centr al and north Irvine
precise land use plan. That latter pl.an
affects the Larwin and Ayres properties
along with other parce~s owned by
others including the Irvine Company.
Most ~( the land, however, is not owned
by the Irvine Company and thus bas
never been planned for development.
One other controversial item, the a~
proval of the Campus Drive extension.
was delayed to Tuesday's council
nteeting . , Councilmen will att end Thursday s
planning commission hearing on the
$3.500 environmental impact report
prepared by consultant Haworth .
Uni High Takes
Speecl1 Honors
University lligh School speech team
members took high honors in recent
debate-individual competitions at El
Modena High School in Santa Ana and
Fountain Valley High School .
The Irvine speakers only began com-
peUng thi.! year.
Varsity debaters Sami Tabikh and
David ,Bnmning W9IJ certWcates of
superiority in top ttvel contests at El
Modena. . In individual oratory, awar:d wmnen
were Melanie JUchmond, superior; Nan-
cy Osburn, excellence and Bill Hart, ex·
cellence. -
Steve Dickie woo an excellent rating
for his expository speech on the folk
guitar. Dana Edberg also received an ex-
cellence award in programmed reading.
LAFC Approves
Tustin Boundaries
1be ultimate city boundaries of the
future Tustin have been detennlned and
approved by tbe Local Agency Format.ion
Commission in observance of a state law
to defme a local government's ~ of
influence.
The area sphere includes 13,145 an:es
bounded on the west by the Newport.
Fret:way and the Santa Ana city limit, on
the north by Fairhaven Avenue and the
Orange city limit, on the east by
Fairhaven Avenue through Co \l a n
Heights and on the south by the city of
Irvine. ""
Tustin is the second city to gain ap-
proval of its sphere ol. influence request;
lrvine was the fi rst.
Irvine Finn Awarded
Army Metal Contract
An Irvine firm was the lone bidder on a
U.S. Army contract to provide gun
cartridge metal belt links and has been
awarded a $1 ,828,786 nnn deal.
Barry L. Miller Engineering Inc., 17200
Red Hill Avenue, was the only firm to bid
of three asked , an Anny spokesman said.
OU.Nfll COAST ..
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ROUTE IMPACT STUDIED -Map shows two propo.<ed path~ for the
extension of Carn.pus Drive between·(University Drive and 'Carl-Sbn
Avenue. Universi ty ofiicials. city staff and county road planners
favor straighter alignment al ong marsh reserve. Dotted line shows
alternate which avolds a clump of willow trees near Carlson. Com-
missioners couldn't agree on either route Thursday, but did say en-
vironmental impact report on $800,000 project was inadequate. Coun-
cilmen review both on Tuesday.
f't'OtllPqel
CAMPUS EXTENSION • • •
the matter after three hours and 45
minutes of.debate.
Testimony gi_ven during .the lengthy
hearing indicated the issue most prom--
inently d1scussed in last year'• city
council election campaigns continues to
polarize community sentiment!..
On one side are those who view the San
Joaquin Marsh and UCI's 202-acre study
area as a valuable ecological preserve
v.'Ort.b saving from urban encroachment.
On the other side are those who ,.. the
Campus Drive exten!ioc as being
necessary lo aolve airport area traffic
problema and complete an arterial
highway syst.m planned .me. 1111! lo
rel.ala UCI with the airport ana and In-
dustrial complex.
Among Ibo,. spe~ ag8lnsl the road
project were Angelo Vu.901 of University
Park, Dr. Irwin Alber of Turtle Rock and
former Irvine Company planner Robert
Snyder of El Toro.
Poiotl they made were:
-The project which If approved by
Dec. 31 will he largely paid for by the
county still represents a cost to the tax-
payers and there is still time to
reconsider priorities of highway need.
-Traffic condition! at the. lnter9eetlon
of University Drive and MacArthur
Boolevard which proponents say will be
eased by extension of Campus Drive
aren't really "unmanageable" and dual
left tum lanes might relieve some of the
pressure.
-Tbe city has only one San Joaquin
Marsh and 'bould protect it.
-The timing of the city's decision on
the project bas precluded citizen in-
volvement in review of the EIR.
~tembers of the city's environmental
quality advisory committee were not
adequately noticed about the bearilll nor
did they baVe Ume to study the Haworth
study.
Supporting the extension of Campus
Drlve from University Drive to Carlson
Avenue in the lndustrlal complex were :
Clifton C. Miller, UC! physical planner
and member of the march oommlttoe ;
Robert Hennessy of the Oranie County
Fire Protection Department; Todd
Nicbolaon, executive director of the
Greater Irvihe Industrial League, and
~rdoo JOoei, Irvine Company engineer-
Sunday's Best
Ing planner.
Some of the polnb made by them and
by city staff Including city Manager
William Woollell Jr. and Planning Direc-
tor Bruce Warren, were:
-'n-affic projectlcioa In the airport
area are exceeding expectaUons more
rapidly than expected and campus Drive
could eue cangestioo at MacArthur
Boulevard and Univenlly Drive.
-Al the c:onMia del Mar Freeway i5
built and when it i5 llni!hed. there will he
no left tum (or -trafftc from
MacArthur onlo Univerllly Drive. 'lbat
means the Unlversity maintenance cren
will bave no dlrect acc<SI lo the bult of
the UC! campus.
-Circuitous routes used by UCI
maintenance lileD leamg the Jambom
BoUlevard (north <8JllllUI) fad!lty bound
for the mala ~pus, eo1ts the university
135JIOO a ~ In lime lou and extra
guollne. ·
-Development of Town Center would
he buteoed "by a dlretl link lo the
airport area.
-Qukker "1d less cosily fire prot.cton
would result.
-The 8-foot elevated roadw3y would
provide a 1>uffer along the eastern edge
of the UCI marsh study area and a fence
to keep people from vandalizing the
marsh.
'nle impact report suggested highway
Mlse. w!ilch might interfere with classes
touring the marsh wu the most slgnlfl.
cant Impact. Speed llmlla and buffer
landscaping or native plant material! -
such as the willows the route wtll
displace -were suggestions for · euing
these concerns.
CommissioDera noted the following was
needed to make the impact report mean-
ingful '
-Exploration of alternative ways of
linking UC! with the airport area.
-Discussion of the Impact of this one
roule with that of others suggested for
the area, namely California Avenue and
Untverai\y Drive North.
-Dlacusslolla of allemala·ways of buf-
fering the marsh ,....,.,. other than by
coostrutUon of the roadway.
-Further 11tatemen1 of the ecooomlc
irnpacl lo .note wba\ would ba~ lo the
county funds II the city -t approve the project for this yur.
Cousins on 'Lif e,'-Sign
Mixup, Mystery in Pilot
Another great magazine 18 dead and
magazlne man Nor.nan Cousins, newest
columnist to join the DAILY PILOT
lineup of star ta.lent, says the govern-
ment helped tlll LUe with escalating
postal rates.
That'1 one or several article8, photo
features and colu11'1111 you'll nnd M\Ol}g
"Sunday's Best." Here's a preview of
1001e other thlnp upcoming for &.inday
DAILY P!LOI' readen'
SIGN SCRAMBLE -11'1 po11lble that
1C1IDe signs are more confualng to
mororisl.S than the n.:les they're trying to
l'Ollvty. Slgo lludy aimed at r<ducina
vlluAI pollution and Increasing un-
dmW!dlng 11 the subject of YOU J<Ctlon
--lead a1ory by Slaff Writer Rudi
'Nledzle!UL
LAGUNA NIGUEL MYS1'ERY-Eorie ~&hi of llahll bumll'lf all nl1ht al the ap.
pmoUy empty $24 million Nortlt
American Roctw@ll ••Z1ggUrat" In an
unlnbablted \lalk!)' was parl of the ii>
trigue thtt CIUK'd 1 Laguna 111111 woman
-to wonder enough aboul the nevtl'-OC"
copied bulldln& lo vl•ll 11 and write aboul
11.
.
YULE GIFTS FOR NEEDY -
Christmas is a time for shru ing and lf
you want to give to famllle1 In need. th'e
YOU Section will list agenclea to which
you can late fOod, clothing, toy1 or other
"lfb for dlatrlbutlon.
CABOT ON COVER -Sebasllan
Cabot, bolt of the lhow which w\U
change from "Ghost Story" to "Clrcle of
Fear" early In January, ii featured ln
cov'er story of TV WEEK.
STEALING FROM BLIND -A new
power group II crowbarring tti way into
a domlnanl position In Wlilhlngtoo. The
"thrtat" comes from blind people who
man candy-cnackcnewa 1tahd1 In lobbies
of lederal bulldlng1. Voo Hoffman tel11 II
llk4-lt 11ln 11Steallng from the BUnd .11
llELICOPTER LADY -Sbe'1 only
rour feet, '11 lnchts tall, but you can bet
, Orange County'• first and only woman
helicopter pilot h11 A head 11tart in her
determlnaUon to make a living as a com·
mtrtlal chopper driver. She'a Holly
Douglas, granddaughter of Don a I d
DouglH. He founded the Douglas
Alr<rall Oo.
r
Boundaries h•pi11 Dbtriet
Of Newport
·Hold Firm
New School Plan
Costs ' Slashed
Newport Beach may never reach any
farther Into the hills above c.orona del
Mar, City Manager Robe.rt L. Wynn said
today.
And Wynn aald any east ward an-
nexaUon. referring to Irvine Company·
own«! coastal property southerly of
Corona del Mar, may be a hali-dozen
years away, lf it ever comes.
"lntel'Jfttlng recent council actiofts,"
Wynn said thi.s morning, "I see the pres-
ent northeast boundary u we have it
now."
Wynn's remarks were apparently in-
tended to let bott. the Newport~esa and
Irvine Unified Sebool Districts know tbal
l! they wanted to make school boundaries
«>lennlnous with city boundari.,,, they
C9Uld go ahead and make their changes
now, without worrying about redrawing
maps again next m·onth or nczt year.
Whether they'll serve to prompt the ~,
districts into action isn't certain,
however, since the Irvine District and
the San Joaquin Unified School District,
which it E rep!acing, have both balked at
deannexing any more of their boundaries
to the Newport-Mesa District.
Present school district boundL'ies slice
across new residential developments
above Corona del Mar. 'lbe new Spyglass
Hill tract is bisected by the Newport-
Atesa and new Irvine Districts, which
\viii for ce some children to be bused 14
miles to school, while others can walk
just around the block, figuratively.
The Spygla51 tract, with homes valued
at an average of $100,000 dollars, is eyed
by Irvine officials u a reven~rod;,icing
area, and they are DOI Inclined to lei jt
go.
San Joaquin School Dlltrlct trustees
Thursday nighl decided wba\ lo do about
the overbidding on site 11. the camuo
Drive School In Mlsllon Viejo but not
before one man In the audience stage..
wblsperod at ooe point In the dbcuaaloo ,
"And these people are running a school
district!"
Trustees qufbbled for an ll<>ur-and·a·
half about which item& to remove from
the archltect.'1 original plans for the
schoQI lo mate II fall wllbln the •u million stat ... uowed bud(tl,
The n .. bid! rocenUy ftC<ived on the
project av.raged •1.1111 mil11on, wilb a
few up tl' $1.5 mllllon.
Ccmcem centered around architect
Ralph FlewelUng'I suggeatlon of remov-
ing 90 portable panel11 «hJch wouJd leave
only half the schoOI capable of being clo&-
ed off into self-contained classrooms.
Voting unanimously, trustees finally
decided to rebid the school with more
than $168,000 in deletions suggested. by
Flewelling and at the same time put out
a separate bid for the 90 add.ftional
portable paneb, the rost lo he paid out of
already-aold bonds now in the county
\reaswy.
The bids are basically inseparable to
the trustees, who also voted that if both
bids were not successful, a new plan to
change the school design !iOuld be
adOpted. (If the bids are otay, con-
s!ruction could start in three mooths,
Flewelling said.)
This change would move the sidewalks,
in, cutting out about on.e classroom's
worth oC space, and allottmg the money
for that room to lhe panels.
Rel Neri.Ion. ualstant aupulntendent
of business, assured the trustees two or
three times that the bond monies cou.ld
he used lo buy lbe panels, which an
movable and can be pJaced: to. ~te one
~~er a sale1 of tn:dltio~
But -trustees Joe Peterson and Gratlan
Bldart had their doubt1. Peterson laid
he 'd "hear<! a lot of other lblngs said -
but .... them happen. ..
Bldart abstained the firs\ tbne the vote
was taken because ~ "•~ to a.st a
question and I WU cut °'6"
Dameron bad the vote ""9Cfnded and
Bidart aald he wll)led either both bids
approved 9r none. The other trmtees
agreed.
Earller In the discussion, Flewelling
accepted full blame for the overbkldln&
saying h~ though! \hat aonie of tbf eat,.
features could make it through on the
low budget.
"!goofed," he staled, Oddtn!J .tbat on
the last six jobs he'd ~ hi'lbi'ii...a,
bids came in under the. ~ by an
ave.cage of eigfll P.el'CtJlt. 1
llt addlt!OQ to 'lite .pouels, hll ~
delellom lnclllded ~I flamlrll ,,,on the
celling, 1 lea sophlstlcaled>loulllfo,111em
and cdlln8. omission of 101110 -walls and planters, installation of a mUltt-zone
versus a more expensive central air-con-
ditioning and minor revisions in 11.gbttng
and alarm systems. ·
KOCE Program
Features Sclimitz
A second new tract, an extension of
Bren born.,, la wholly within the Irvine
District whlle within Newport Beach city
limits.
Wynn said the problem of overlapping
boundaries of all soru of school districts
and other agencies la one that baa Wilg
confronted Newport Beach and various
other communiUes.
From Pagel _, Tliree Evenings
Tbooe distrlcb, within the city limits,
range from the Santa Ana Unified School
Dlstrict lo the Balboa Island Street
Lighting Dlstrtct lo the Costa Mesa
Water District
Wynn said bis staff i5 trying lo prepare
a map for councilmen showing all tbe
various boundaries. -
"But I don't know what to do with it,"
Wynn said, "It's too difllcult to reed."
"It's full of dots and claahes and ci?cles
and all sorta ol diffemrt things," be said.
Wynn said the overall problem bas
been the !Ubject of much debate and
Ql3CUSSion over the years but officials
have so far failed to come up with any
brilliant Ideas about wbal lo do about iL
' Fro111 P .. e I
·SEX CLASS. • •
them "ammunition against people 1 who
want frank , open sex instruction."
Especially offense to Lamont was
ooe secUon of tbe already-existing rules
adopled by the board In 1919. The sec-
tion, which will also be a part of tbe
new guidelines, states in part _ that
"Hannful effects of premaritalaex. etc.,
an da code of morals be emphasi.r;ed with
no derogatory instruction relative to r~
ligious beliefs and ethics, and to pa'rents'
beliefs and teaching."
Lamont said be tried to get tbe board's
subcommittee to change the word
"premartial" to "irresponsible" but his
suggestion was rejected.
BUSES ...
staff backup driven when problems oc--
cur. Keyzer emphasized throughout the
three-hour discussion that his company
needs specifics -bus numben, stop
locations, times and if possible, bus
drivers' names, to trace down the causes
of problems.
About four of the company's bus
drivers came on their own to the meeting
at Los Alisos lntennediate School and
said that they are trying lbelr best, but
"are re ally pushed hard" by the
schedules, which at all Umes call for cne
bus to be in two places at the same tlme.
Superintendent Richard Welte to]d
trustees that the costs of leasing or
buying buses and the ~ry main-
tenance faciJities would be high and rhat
the action might penalize the new unlf.led
districts which will take over July 1,
1973. The state allots special money for
new districts that wait to buy buses untU
after becoming operative, be said.
Trustee DeMis Smith said he was not
optimistic about the possibility of im-
provements now and u.rlier accused the
company of "being party lo· the virtual
destruction of a large part'·or the eduta·
tiooal program."
Board Cbainnan Robert Dameron said
he was impressed by the "mass upris-
ing" of the principals. He aai4 be would
judge any improvement by what the
principals say.
In a survey taken by Dr. Welle, Iii!!
majority of the prlnclpala rated the
seNice now as "poor."
LAMPS-PICTURES -ACCESSORIES
PRE-HOLIDAY SALE
It's tha little things that c.n make tho dif-
ference. Stop by today and viow our lino
selection, now specially pricecl. If it's for o
gift, or for you penonelly, you'n find juit the
thing lo enhance any home for the holiday.
OREXEL..-l-IERITA61>--1-tENREOON-WOODMARk-«ARASl'AN
INTERIORS
WDIDAYS 6 SATUIDAYS t:OI .. l>JO
FRIDAY 'TIL ttOO
• . '
·-
A KOCE, channel 50 program in which
Congressman John G. Schmllz Is in·
terviewed by Orange County newsmen
will be aired three even(np this mooth
beginning al g,30 p.m. Monday.
Schm.Jtz, who was defeated in hi1
primary bid for renorninaUon u tbt
Repuhllcan candidate In the 351h Dlslrlct
by county Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw, mscuss.. his plans for the Immediate
fun;,. In the balf.liour program. Schmit.
waa the American Independeot Party'•
presidential candidate.
"Focus Oranie County," booled by the
noncommercial staU00'1 Jim Cooper, will
he replayed at I p.m. on Tbur!dayl Dec.
21 and lll. on channel 50.
lnlar.iewing Schmllz are Jim Dean,
executive editor of the Reglater: Tbomu
KeevU, editor of the DAILY P!LOI', and
Howard Seelye, pollUcal writer for the
Los Angeles Time"
ll't'Otll P,,.e I
TRAIN •••
and San Clemente before the accident °"'
curred.
The train COD\lnued Ill -journey at 9,15 a.m., usfn& only Ill front
engine. A fireman on tho train aald the
second engine was disabled when die:lel
fuel leaked out ol the ruptured tank.
lnves\Jgaton at lite ac:ene Aid the
train was going approximately 90 mph
through the signallzed lnteraectloll but
that this was conskiered normal a D d
proper speed.
NEW,ORT BEACH e
J727 WESTCLlff Dk..
"42-101t
LAGUNA BEACH e
J~S NOATH COAST HWY.
4t4otlll
TORRANCE e
2J4"4t HAwtHORNl ILVD.
•••·111'
J
!
,-
.... _
T hat's S hoe B i%
Actress Ali McGraw rests her weight on one foot as
she bas her sboeprints and bandprints imbedded
in Grauman's Chinese Theater Thursday. Miss Mc-
Graw is the first person in three years to be so
honored. She wrote the phrase 'Peace and Love'
in the cement.
Dense Fog Causes 2.!J
Car Pileup; 18 Hurt
LIVERMORE (AP) -An
icy pass was cleared cf
wreckage after mere than 23
cars and trucks smashed up in
dense fog, Injuring 18 pel'S()ns
iocluding two men burned
from hydrochloric acid that
was spewed over the highway.
"The cars and trucks were
laid out like a train wreck one
after the other," said Highway
Patrol Sgt. F.dwin Main. "It
looked like a bomb eiploded
on the roadway." He said it
was a miracle no one was kill-
ed.
"People were still S<.Team-
lng in the wreckage whUe cars
kept piling into thel!l," a Jruck
driver said. ·
The eastbound lanes of
Interstate 580 lo Altamont
Pw connecting t h e San
Francisco Bay area and the
Central Valley ,...... closed !or
five hours 1btl(Sday as crews
cleaned up crus?led, vehicles
and spilled -~ cargo that
included the acid, pain~ glue
and paper~.
The Highwar. Patrol said the
crash occurred alter a truck-
trailer jacklaiftd ao-as,, the
hi~way. Vehkli!s be h Ind ,
blinded by the !or. were
Police Hold
Cuswdian
In Murder
NORWALK (AP) -Richard
Eugene Juarez, an 18-year-old
school , cu1todian, was booked
for investigation • of murder
Tbunday In the stabbing
death ol an b o a o r student
who had been tryJog Io defend
another yooth be\ng attacked
by I gang, olfic:iais aaid.
'l1te vlclim, r a n c l s c o
unable to stop on the i~.
Debris was scattered for a
half mile.
Officers said the truck
driver was trying to stop for
three ca.rs whose occupants
were waving him down.
Valley Memorial Hospital
here reported treating 15
persons for facial injuries,
fractures. lacerations and the
two persons for the minor acid
bums.
The hospital said Claude J.
Maddix of Vallejo was in
critical condition with f11ce
and bead injuries and Steven
Chase of San Franci!co was in
se~s coodition with multi e ll>Jtliles.
Year-round
School Bid
Criticized
• LOS ANGELES (AP) -
There is "no factual evideoce''
to show that year-round
school! wO!J]d provide better
ed~calJonal opportunity !or ci-
ty students, a sdx>ol dl!trict
stall study says.
THE Sl'UDY. re le..a_s e d
Tbtll'9day, concluded that a
year-round jll'Ogl'&m would in
fact create a "substantial"
financial drain on the district.
"Despite t he optimistic
claims of proponents· of year·
round school plans, we have
found no basis, in theory or
practice, for eipecting any
significant advantage from a
switch to a ~aM'OUDd p~
gram, the study' says.
''There is no f actual
evidence to support the claims
for improved learning,
remediation, acceleration or
cost saving."
Forty~ven scboolJ 1 n
California are currently oo
year·round schedules. State of·
ficlals 58Y 100 schools' will be
using the program by next
year.
' Sb< olber youtht -e book·
ed for lnve.tlgaU,. of assault
with a deadly weapon follow-
ing l'ledoeaday'~ knifing at John Glenn lllgt\'Scbool. They
'lett turned °""' 1<>1 juvenile
authorities. IT ages ranged rrom 11 to 17.
Villela Jr., as alght A stu-TUE YEAR-ROUND
dedl ml captalil ol the soccer program allow• ichol/ls lo
team, was 11~ in front of lbe house more students by using
ocbool ca!eterja hen-he tried a stagg-schedule with io deferxl alt year-~ld shorter, more frequent vaca·
.craduate of G,. High. / lions. --Wbatdq doctors recommend .. 'b]>atients in pain?
Doctors all over tile coa1tty dispe• over 50,000,000
of these tablets to their patielts each year.
Then" are many medicaUona a
physician or de.nt1*t can )Jrt·
--4" 1eribe for JMin. Sine are Mr·
cotic, many are ivallobl" only
on preeicripdon. But there i19ne.
psin nllever, avallahlt wil .. ut
pnllCriptlon. docton di1peftlt
apin •nd qaln •.• Anacin.
Eac:h )'Mt, docton (live over
60,000,000 A.nacin t.fib1tt. to
the tr patimtl .in. pain.. If doctors
think enouah about Anacin to du...,. all U-tabteto. what
bolt.tr recommendation. an yo11 ult when you •re In pain?
tort recommend !DOit than •n.f olhfr leading tableL
Head.ehe and dentil pain ii
tolleved incredi.,.y fut; minor
peln1 of atthrfU. ate depend·
ably eAaOO for houn: even the
ache. and P•int o( colds and Bu
1'fllpond to Anacin. So the ~n· 1ion and depft!llion that can 'bt
ctUHd by •uch pain will be ..
lieved too. And million1 take
Anac;in wi~ ~ upeet.
Darwin 'Demoted'
State Board Downplays Theory in Text.s
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The 11id be woold aUempt lo have
C.!Homla State Boan! or the cloctriDe ol lj)Odal cm·
FAocatlon, rejecting plea 1 tion Joserted In the text. dur-
from IOml of the nation's top _ _ - ---__
ICienUJta, has voted to1~--~
clow!lgrade Derwin's tbepry of 'lll•ff J ••ff, tcltfa.
avolullon In new oclence text.. OMt •-•-v that for l.S mllllon children. r-..., '
And the board Jell the door -C Jori• t i • • •
open Thtll1doy 1o possible -•Id . like eq11ar
later rewrttlng of the text. !or time.'
.Inclusion of the Bible-oriented doctrine of special creaUon .... -.. _,.-.. ,._,, ___ ., .. -...... -.... _,, ___ ,._,.,.,.
side by side wtlh the theory of Ing discllS!ioos of the changes.
evolution. -
"OB; YES, I will, without
.
NaUooal ~ OI Science
urged the board tlOI to Include
the dodttne ol. 1pedal crea-
tion In. 'the · t-, lnteoded !or
uae beginning, In . Se)!t4'mber
1974.
Darwin'• theory, ·put forth 1n
1859 In bla h!JWrlc ''Qri&ln or
the Speoles by Natural Selec-
Uoo" holds thal man and other
spede1 <Wived from ,simpler
forms of !He, with the species
best adiipted to tlie e"' vlronmtnt being the One.
whlch-ed.
"MAY I SAY, without IPOloi\'1• Ulat we a.n.tlans would uu equal time,·~ board
member Eugene Ragle of
Roeevllle Kid.
specific relerenc<1 to the BELIEVERS IN the doc-
Bililical account or to a trine of specta.l creation say a
" 'd ttealor dellgiied man and creator, w Dr. John Ford1 ther __...._ • their
a San Diego physician who Ui rorm. a.,.,.. ..... an present
Dogs Fi11.d
•
Surprise
SAN DIEGO (AJ')
Marine does trained ..
sniff out marijuana turned
a surprise inspection at
San Diego's c:oonty honor
camp Into something of an
~mbal'l'86Sment.
The dog.s found some, all
right -in the safe in the
llonor camp dlrector'a of-
fice.
There was none In the
beda or lockers of the 26
men convicted of various
cri mes in the ~
The mariiwm31 whld!
the five clop smelled
Wednesday through lbe
metal of. Lee Bennett'•
floor aale had been con-
fiscated earlier, Bennett
explained. '
DAILY PILOT IS
Three File Suit
To Free Newsman
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Three newsmen have filed a
Superior Court suit contending
that Los Angeles Cow:ity is
Los Angeles Herald-Enm!Mr
photographer, and Je1111 A.
Barkt>r, a KABC newswrlter.
spending public funds illegally FARR WAS jal1ed after be
lo keep newsman William refused to disclose the IOUrte
Farr in jail . of a story he wrote two year•
The suit, filed Thursday, ago a boot the Charles Manaon
contends the money is being "famUy."
illegally spent because Farr!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;
was jailed in violation or his
constitutional rights.
SHERIFF PETE Pitchess
was named as principal defen-
dant.
Superior Court Judge David
IJN I TED
STAT.E'S
NATIONAi,
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
I RANCH
The board onlered editorial
changes stressing that
Darwin'• theory la ipeCU!ative
and DOI fact. '!\at diange ,will
be nqulred In bulc science tens Intended I o r tJn.
derg~ throqgb elghlb
graders before the state will
buy the boob.
the board's vice president. A.s presently written, one ()( ~---------'
Asked by reporters how the the fexta says tllla @!>Out the
books oould discuss the dOc-ori&Jn of lile: ~
A. Thomas ordered Pitche.">s to
appear in court next Wednes·
day to show cause why
Farr should not be released.
But Thomas refused to issue
an immediate restraining
order freeing Farr.
NOW OPIN
trine of special c re a t I o n "It ls known that life began
wiJhout referring to a creator in' the aeas.,.
or God, Ford said: "Evolution as taught In ediooll today II Utide!' a rewriting .wunple
antitheistlc and Ii just as =:1.!i.i ~ ~ ~
Aide Named SATURDAYS
9 to 1 P.M.
MOH •• THUU. 1f.I P.M.
FllDAn 1M P.M.
Board members will have
veto power over the rewriting.
At least one board member
much a religion as other read: ,
religioNi' • us .jdeasCali!. •: . 1.n-.1 "Most scientists believe that
meteen orrua • ~ life may have begun in the
Nobel Jriie ~rs and th& ' sea."
Mrs. Ben Kraut of Costa
Mesa has been &PPointed
chairman., of the P i t z e r
College Parents' Association
for Coat.a· li!esa. ·She will serve
u liaison between the college
and parents of local students.
Farr, a Los Angeles Times
reporter, has been in jail for
18 days on an indefinite
sentence for contempt of
court.
The suit was filed by Rudy
Villasenor, a retired Times
reporter; Mel Leroy Lieder, a
17141 140-1111 . U.MMI 1a1
So. c..., ...... c.... ....
O. DEAN HEISER
' 1
Merce.des·Benz announces
precisely the kind of model change
you expect from Mercedes-Benz.
MODEL CHANGES at 'M~rcedes';J
1 Bcnzareinspirednotbythetrends
of fashion but by the thrust of engio«t·
i.ng """'°"" One such~ becomes
olliclal today: the Mercedes-lleiiz 250
Sedan has c,volved into the 280 Sedin-
without strc'tching tl)e body one in<!i ot
atQOlling to the aligh1at hint of styling .
. trickery. .
The technical improv~ !hat in-
spired this c~ will set tbe280 I unher
apart than ever ~rom. ochu Pz-s in its class, ·« • I
Should you invest your $8,968• in
the 280 Sedan? Study its engineering,..
finements. Wejgb all the facts. Measure tJVs car's perfon!Wlaagainst your needs
-then decide. •
Remmable new eagine
The mgineen hid the 280's biggest news
Wider the hood.
Fmh from a long bboratory incu-
bation is a new' 2.8-liue dOlbl....ootr-
head-amuluzft engine. Hemispb<rical ·
combustion chambers, 2~stagc dual com-
pound carburetor-this lovingly assem-
bled su. c0ulabe mistaken-for a higb-
performance sports car engine. (Note
that it revs up to 6500 rpm.)
"The crankshaft is something of a
masterpiece," repons Britiin's Awocar
Mtn:uln -Bcm 280 Std an Un.'1j1Ut oduut11d ca r: its.tm im,ro111d car.'
·roominess: the 280 matches them for engineering with the 280 Sedan.
interior space-and actually exceeds The body of your 280 is an all-welded
them in trunk capacity. .. ~ steel structure so strong that a separate
Those $8000 "luxury" sedans are frame is redundant. That body is the
impresSive standing in a driveway. But frame.
compare driving them with driving the Precious weight is saved. Enormous
280 Sedan, out in the real world. -strength is built in. Bolts won't tug loose
You'll discover that the 280 twirls over the miles because there arc no bolts.
through a turning circle of only 36.4
feet (about the same-u a little VW 1200
"Beetle'1). Those larger cars don't.
The 280 nips into parking swts those
heftier.sedans have to pass up.
And you'll slip through boles in city
traffic where dreamboats-dare ·not go. 1971 dome•ric lull\ll'J xd.an
Fully independent suspension·
Let others brag about how big and or-
nate their can are. You can brag about
"'how well your 280 Sedan handles.
mapz:i~ urunning in seven main bcar-
inp, and every one of the twelve webs
incorporating a counterweight.'' The
JOI): low engine vibration.
1 The men who designed this engine
aimed for 1fficinu:y instead of brute pow-
er. ,You get the running smoothness you
exPxt from a car of this class. Some-
thin1 you may not expect from a car of
this clus: the 280 engine's restrained
appetite for gasoline.
As agile as before
... • • rlN mosr ctmrrollabk lligll ipttd
11da11 we'vt Usttll." • That was Motor Tnnd mag azine's reac-
tiorfto the 250 Sedan; and the 280'1 han-
dling U u~hanged. '
This is because its superb suspcn·
lion is unchanged: a four.wheel, fully
independent system with a diagonal-
pivot rear awing axle. Gas·prcssurized
shock absorben and anti·1way bars front
and rear are standard components. Also
standard : 175 SRL14 radial-ply tires on
M"heel rims 5* inches·wide.
ZBO off1r1 iii• li.1n1ry o/ 1ffecitni 1ir1 •
Run a finger over the finish. You will
fttl why it took several houn to paint,
bake, and polish to that high gloss.
Numerous outer body scams were filled
and made invisible before painting.
When you buy an $8,000 automobile,
you deserve such fastidious touches.
4-wbeel disc brakes
You get four-wheel disc bnkcs on your
280 as standard equipment .
Consider that the front bnke discs
measure almost 11 inches in diameter,
virtually the same size as the ftont discs
on the famous Merccdet-Benz 4SOSL
The engineen fitted an additiopal
shock absorber to the 280, in an unusual
spot-the steering system., -sports model. The 280'1 brakes arc pow-
er /assisted, of coune; another standard
equipment feature.
automatic transmission, or for power'
steering and power brllcs, or for an.
electrically · heated rear window. Thef
are all pan of the 280's base price.
Even air conditioning falls undertbe
heading of standard equipmcnL You'll
count· four separate outlets on the in.
strument panel-two for the driver, nvo
for his front·seat pa/ger.
Comfort not forgotten
The painstaking M~es-Bcnz enai•
neers found one su6dc way after another
Merceda.-Bem: motor can:
from $15,112• to $6,439•
Mertedcs-Bcru: olfeni 1 vu1 nince ol.
models. Hae ire 1ug1e1led retail pric:a
for 7 of the mo51 populn cypn:
4WSLCCou~
4.50SL Coupc/Roadsltt
280SE 4 . .5~
280Co\lfllt
2805Nan
llOSedan
220Diewl~ ....
SIS,lll
Sll.761
SJO,J71. s 9,1514 s 1,961 ...... ......
........ c. ... """"'-·••d..;..o1.._ __
--.. _ .................. if ... ,. c..,,.i .. 1971, M<, ............ _ .............. , ••
to make the 280 an eminently livable
machine.
You sit high enough to see the road
ahead. Large glass areal enhance visi.·
bility. Your body is supported firmly in
seats· built around a network of coil
springs; not cheap foam rubber.
You needn 't fumble around to find
the headlight dimmer switch or wind-
shield wiper and washer controls. The( re
a fingertip away in a pod on the lefr of
the steering column j you-can work them
without taking a hand off the wheeL
More than status
The new 280 Sedan is plainly not $8,961•
worth of bigness~ or sryling, or at:M.-.
Buy it and you buck the trencb of the
"luxury" class head-on. ·
Your satisfying reward: ownership
of a precision machine e:ngioeaed to
outlive trends. One test drive will con-
firm your wisdom in cboosihg it.
Arrange with your authorized Mei"
cedes-Benz dealer to take that test drive
Soon. For more useful facts aboiit the
280 and other models, clip the coupon
and mail it today. You will receive a free
color brochure.
r ----------...
~-Tl"nllcngine can bifig tcr and leas bulky
than those used in other $8000 sedans
because the 280 Sedan itself is lighter
and ks< bulky.
4-speed automatic ahift
Your 280's automatic ttansmlslion is so
quick-shifting that even sporting drivers
have expressed· 1urprise-and approval.
You can set it in ORJVE and leave it I
there~ you can also shift througb the
forward gem by band.
Jim Sl•mon.1 Imports, Inc.
120 w, w.,,,.., ........ \!.
Sa11t1 A.11•, Califdn1le t2l'D7
P~ue 11end ~ yoor full-col« bndlure
of 1he Mertedrt·Bciu mo1or c:ua. /r is n ntfintait1t fact tltat tht top 3
domn~ nz.a..,,y• std.om all wtith at ltast
luzlf a ""' """'' and ..,.,.,, a full 3 fttt ro.,.,, 1/uzo "" 280 Stdmi. s. .... '"""""'
tltat 1/tcy ""'llloJ' A.,. V~ ,,.,;-.
Yet the mn bulk ol these fatau cm
' -_.. •-cl&bowtlwaaua
Uw:M,.,.4: ""'"rtlh1tt rt•r uu""'i""
Instead of squandering your money
on hollow sheet metal and styling that it
aoon ~ you Uewst it ia. fupd•mcotal
The padded shift lever sit1 within
easy reach on a centn.l ci>nsole. (If you
prefer, a column shift lever can be fitted
at no extra cost.)
You an: not charged mn for thl•
.. -
··-·-----------........ , _________ _
a., __________ _
Sow·-------"''----
T•.,..~---------
Jim Slemons hnports, Inc..14<lw.warntrAwnu•;San11Ana.c.tiEomJ192101Phone:114-s•6-41u
You Me, An•cln contain•
>non or U.. pci.ln. teUewr de».
When you're in pain, why
don't you follow the pniccJct of
.. many doclon aJ¥I tau tho
tJblet • doctor 1nl,:tit slve ~u mm.owno8Scie.1"•Atutcin~1 ---~---------------------------------------_:----------------~
1-I .. •
• •
I
I
• '
• DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE •
Pressing
Armed with a little wishful thinking, the Saddle-
ba ck Valley Unified School Board is forging ahead on
an amb,itious project: construction of a nc,.., high schoo1
as soon as poss ible.
Trustees too k their first steps toward that end this
week when they viewed already-completed architects'
plans for hlgb schools elsewhere in California. All the
schools are new; two are still in stages of construction
and one was recently finished.
The idea is to choose a good ready-made plan and
skip the usual steps of designing a school from scratch.
The design process, district Supt. William Zogg esti·
mates, could take an extra eight lo 12 months. Even at
the quicker pace, the school probably won't open until
September, 1974. The new campus is needed now.
The only high school in the fledgling district, Mis·
sion Viejo High, ls severely overcrowded, with 3,000
students wh ere 1.800 were planned.
By using portable classrooms and an extended day
-at the least a serious inconvenience with yet-lo-be-
determined effects on education -Mission Viejo High
officials are making do.
Saddleback Valley trustees are to be commended
for attempting to meet the problem head-on right now,
long be!ore they take over o!ficially July I. 1973. 1'he
majority of the board insisted on including input dur-
ing this planning from present high school stall and
students and from residents. That.· too, is applauded.
But it would be wise for participants in this plan
not to forget its "iffine ss." Trustees say they will start
construction on the school "when" the district's Feb. 6
$28 million bond and $18 million state appoin.\,ment
election passes.
School Need
Is "ii" the measures paS! In the special election, then
the high school, along with other district needs, can be
built.
Saddleback trustees are forced Into this early plan-
ning and bond election In part because bond Issues at-
tempted in recent years by the soon-to-be defunct
Tustin Union High School D1Strict have failed .
Zogg, former chief of that high school district, is
experienced with planning and building such schools
and is publicly confident that this rush will work. A de-
cision is expected in January and alter that, It's up to •
the voters.
Festival Sparks Interest
Perhaps it's too early to predict the outcome of the
Irvine citywide arts festival being planned for next
May, but interest ·shown in the project by many in the
new city portends a bright future.
First, UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel C. Aldrich Jr.
invited the na.scentcitizen group -backed but not dom·
inated by the Irvine City Council -to a Sunday get-
together on campus. He pledged the use of university
facilities and invited residents to share in the arts offer·
ings of students and faculty.
Later. an or$tanizationa1 meeting at Rancho San
Joaauin Intermediate School drew more interest from
others who have a stake in Irvine's future -business-
men in_ the indu.striaJ comoJex, high school students,
housewives and representatives of arts or2anizations.
•
'
It's common to be so positive about an election
\vhen faced with needing the support of at least t1vo-
thirds of the area voters. But realistically, the question
A permanent non-profit corporation is hinted, study
committees are to be formed, and two leaders. Mrs.
Donna Andrew and Mrs. Paiee AnaJora, welcome the
help of others vet to be involved.
The venture promises to be a worthy platfonn
for the new city's many cultural potentials. 'I guess I could slay the dragon with this, sire. . . he might . \ die laughing.'
Celebration
Of Christmas
A 'New' Idea
~YDNEY J.~ARRI~
Christmas wasn't celebrated as a
festivity for the first thousand yean of
Christendom; during that time, perhaps,
people spread the good feeling over the
whole year, i..""}Stead of squeezing It .into a
couple of wee.ks and then reverting to
natu~ the rest of
the year, as we do
now. • • •
An "exttlllporan·
eous" listener is
someone 11:ho is busy
thinking up his re-
plies while you are
still talking.
• • •
We look back on the past with longing
because it can't be changed; it ls the on-
ly par1 of our lives not subject to
dangerous vicissitudes. • • •
UNHAPPINES§ DOES oot so much
consist In not getting what we want, as in
not wanting ~t after we get it. (This is
why happiness does not consist in fulfill·
ment of our wants, but in satisfaction of
our needs.) • • •
It is impossible to write a boO'k about
humor that is funny, and no genuinely
comic writer has ever tried it -all the
books dlSS«tlng hum« are compo.oed by
grimly sober pedants. • • •
The paradox in reading is that unless
you read enough you can't ev~ un-
derstand your own thoughts -but if you
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
The jets flying over my house
make so much noise I can't bear
myself think. Why, three Urnes
they've .interrupted me while I waa
writing a complaint' letter to El
Toro.
-F.R.P.
Tiii• .. ...,. refhctll ,........, ~ ""
~ ....... -........ .,_ "' ,...,. "' ~ °"" D1MY Pw.I,
cootinue ,.ading beyood the optimum
point, you tum from a thinking reader
to a mere memory bank.
• • • BAD BOOKS generally ..U more
ct1pies than good books for the 1lmple
and human reason that bad books tell us
what we like to bear, while good books tell u., what we ou1llt to bear,
• • •
Science arise.s out of play more than
we realize; we all know that astronomy
came from astrology, and chemistry
from alchemy, but few know what
modem mathematics and probability
theory arose when a gambling aristocrat
asked Pascal to calculate the odds on a
popular dice game.
• • •
THE MOST incisive piece on politics
J've read in a long time -and which
quite transcends partisan political dif.
ferences -is •Kurt Vonnegut's essay on
•·wtnners and losers" til the November
issue of Harper's magazine. • • •
Though they will strenUOU!ly deny It,
most men don't care much for a woman
with a highly-deve.loped sense of humor;
they W<Juld rather be with someone dull,
who will adore them, than someone
bright, who might laugh at them.
Expatriates By Clwice
LONDON -Once an American
bwJinessman is settled in England, It can
be difficult to persuade him to return
home. Nearly every major U.S. company
with a branch in Brltalo has found this to
be so. In ' fact, a growing number of e"t·
patriate American executives choose to
quit their jobs: rather than go back lo
corporate headquarters.
A NEW EMPLOYMENT agency.
American Management Resources, has
been helping to find jobs ror tbete reluc-
tant rtpatri8lel since last summer.
Every month AMR send! out anonymous
resumes to more than 1,000 companies.
The agency oebafles, no fee for Its
service.s: h support.! Itself through con-
trfbutionl from American and EW"opean -· AMR II directed by Kenneth Brown, an
American who retired ;i.s Bethlehem
Steel's European representative lait
March ad-ckdded he did not want to mum to the United stat ... Finding job9
for Americans in his posltion ls not eaay,
he 11y1, becaUIC "most U.S. executives
get allowances for edt.lCIUoo and bouslng,
pilll yearly lriPo home." English oom-
ponles llller subataotlally lower wages
and lewtt perquisites. • • l • lllllTA!H'll EN111Y into tho Commo!I
Marbi '"' Jm. I 1111)' W<ll open up hew
-rtunttilt for American expatriates.
"An Antori<aa wbo llnows the tu ayatem
in F~. the -laws in Germany, or
rttioDll Plamtoc in Jtaly could have a
toe' to ofter," 8rOWD tol F.dltorta.1
8-'Cil Roports. -11ott, Brill.lb
litd1odl,JT~Da'tl~Ve to the !du of _.....,. ....,r1an11 -Jobi>
!bit ~ """' tbon -lied to the -ypo,..u. . I
•
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
Although there are no r e I i a b I e
stallstics on the number of American ex-
ecutives working In L<lndon, t h e
American Chambe r or Commerce
estimates; around 2,000. In a 1970
survey of 270 U.S. subllldiaries ln Britain,
the chamber found that nearly three-
quarterr employed no Americans ot al~
These Jinns employ British managers
partly because local executive talent has
Improved and partly because It makes
ror better community relations.
EXECUTIVES who stay abroad for
more than three years •re t~ ones who
find It most difficult to return hom e,
Indumial Man!femtnt m a I a 1 i n e noportS. Miriy lliem <trthat tl1e r
promotion prospedl ill the home office
may have le11ened during their ablence.
0 The really smart b0)'1, who merely use
1 E""'P"ID polling " JUll another rung on the way to the top, would noi 1t1y for
more than three years," the magazine
nolet.
Wlrlle most Americana who wiah to n-
mlin abroad cite the "quality or ll!e" ••
a reuoa, they probably are motivated
a1to by the prestige that accompanies an
oveneas job, Since an American often l.s
aent abroad to dlrtct all or part of a
aublldiary, be come. to be known as
"Mt, Compihy1 ' tn Europe. "11'1 not
e&11!' obMrves Brown, "for hlm to
retum to PeorJa or New York, where he
mlllt lit hlmloU hadt into the executl•• •
hlerardiy."
58
The Smuggled Broke.a Treaties Papers
Documents Support Indian Cha~ges
W ASlilNGTON -The Broken Treaties
Papers, wbtch were smuggled out of
government file.s by Wrathful Indians
during their occupation of the Bureau of
Indian Affairs building, have been scat-
tered 1a secret stashes across the United
States and Canada .
We have had ac-
cess to lbem. We
have also been given
a meuage for Presi-
dent Nixon. "Tell the
President," we were
asked, "that Indians .
do not want the
documents any long-
er than it \J]l:es to
duplicate aliftnder them so that .every
tribe in America can educate itseU to the
double-dealing ol the federal government
atJd find ways to forestall it."
WE HA~ JNSPECl'ED thousrmds
upon tboua8nds of documents, some
aJmost brittle with age, others fresh as
today's headlines. They tell a shabby
story.
Some documents describe muJtimlllion-
dollar land deals in South Dakota's Black
Hills. others reveal bow the White House
played politic! with Indian rights.
There are also poignant papers, like
the account of an Indian woman wbo.se
foot w&s broken by the police but was
~eft to spend the night in jail untended.
But above all , the documents indict the
(iACK ANDERSON)
bureaucrats who have pretended to help
!he. Indians but have often exploited them
instead. Indians wbOse fo~ars fought
the cavalry have been re.du to batUing
the bureaucrat.s. It has , wdry,
tedious war without glory. •
LIKE THE CAVA i. RY, the ,bur·
eaucrats b a v e remorselessly dflvtn
the Indians deeper into their reservat
t1oru;. The stolen documents contain
evidence lb.at Indians have been cheated
out ol their land, robbed of their water
rights, deprived of their fishing streams
and hunting grounds.
As in any war. the statistics are grim.
llJdian life expectancy is 47 years com·
pared with 71 for other Americans; the
Indian wiemployment rate is ~ percent
compared with 5.a percent for the nation
at large; the average Indian tami1y
struggles along on $4,000 a year, less
than halt the $9,867 median for the rest
of the country: and finally, the Indian
suicide rate is twice the national rate.
Ever sirice the Indians ransacked
government files and carted off boxes
full of documents, several newsmen have
tried to gel a look at them. Some offered
money for the. story; we offered only our
record for championing the downtrodden .
The Indians spumed the money and
voted to show us the Broken Treatie.s
Papers.
mE FBI, meanwhile, has been
searching up and down ,the country for
the stolen documents. Except for one
small seizure in Oklahoma. however, the
documeots re.main in Indian hands.
We ieamed they had been broken down
Into several caches and hidden in diverse
locations at the far ends of the United
St.ates and Canada . Some were secreted
in automobile trunks,· in old ph>nograph
cases, in obscure comers of private
homes. Others were sta.sbed in remote
hiding plate!! on Indian reservaliom.
MY associate Les Whitten new LO
Phoenix for the first tryst. At the airport.
Indian security men ooe jump ahead of
the FBI told him to wait on a comer
away from the tenninal building. They
hustled hlm by a devious route lo a motel
where some of the Indian leaden were
assembled.
THE INDIANS wouldn 't talk about the ·
papen in the motel or even in.side their
cars for fear of FBI bugging. Furtive
meetings were arranged, Instead, at s
bowling alley, a coffee house and on a
parking lot. '
Next day, Whitten was instructed tt1 fiy
to another city many hundreds of mlles
away. He was met by one of the leading
Indian mUitants who questioned him
closely. At last, Whitteo was given four
documents and questioned again about
their meanlng to find out what he knew
about Indian matters. Then, for 12 hours,
be was deserted .
The following morning, m a n y
thousands of documenl.s were delivered
to him. The door of his room wu bGlted
and a t<iugh Indian security man planted
himself in a chair pu.thed against the
door. As Whitten waded through the
papen, hldian experts helped him with
the unfamiliar tribes and names.
. ' EXCEPT FOR protecling our oources
and keeping the bldi>g place• ...m, we
have been placed upder no restraint by
t~ lndiarui. They hive made no aUempt
to tell us what to write.
In fulure colwnns, we v>'iU describe
how the Indians pulled the greatest docu-
ment heist in history right under. the
noses ol the FBI. We will also ~. in
detail. the contents of the Broken
Treaties Papers. -
Footnote: The Indians, in thelr black
hP.ts with ihe beaded hatbands, looked
tough and gri m. HotA·ever, they not only
turned out to be friendly but they
laughed easily. Once they left WhJttea be-
hind to work wbilf~ t out for a beer. When Whitten oomplained,
one lndi.an· crack · "You know bow
whites go crazy w n they drink f~
l\'ater." ...
Sad Story of a Grand Sexperiment
The blossoming public interest in sex
therapy could lead to but one inevitable
result.
There they were, the new sex
therapists, from Masters: & Johnson en
down, featured on the cover1 of national
magazines, writing .
books and appearing
on radio and televi-
sion lo tell fascinat-
ed audiences how
they cured their pa-
tients of sexual hang-
ups.
the way they did
it In virtually every
new sex clinic in the
land was to teach their patients How to
Do It. This technlque, they said, worked
wonders.
The ramifications of all thls were lint
recognized by lhe noted educationalist,
Dean J~lram Skarewe III of Skarewe
University.
( ART HOPPE )
club and how to recite EUmcan poetry.
'1But the one single subject we have
never taught them -and the one in
which they will engage in for most ol their
lives -is How to Do It.
"No wonder our alumni have hangups.
No wonder they are Docking to expensive
sex clinics in mJddle age to learn. Our
duty is clear. We must nip the problem in
the bud by teaching them How to Oo It
While their learning abilities are at their
peak -in a word, while they're stlll in
school."
THE DEAN'S proposal set oU an
. ecrimoniom debate. In an age dedicated
to relevant education, no one, of course,
disputed hl.! premlse. The debate was
over wbetber the COW'M should be given
as a lab science or as part Qf the P.E.
program. JI was frnally decided that It
was vocational in nature and was
therefore lncluded ln Driver's Ed.
The popularity of How to Do It 101a
and 102b was iratantaneous. Every stu·
dent signed up. Faculty reports were
glowing. "The ardor with which students
do their homework!" said ooe profes90r
With awe. "And when It comes to final
eum.s, they're all flilll.y prepared."
THE SMASlllNG st1ccess of the pro--
gram was widely heralded. Every college
in the country "rushed to emulate it. And
soon, How To Do It WM·belng offered in
the nation's high lcbool.! (for Jwtlon and
tenlon only l .
Naturally, the IO'Y'emment stepped tn .
"We'll never re<luce the high rate of ac-
cidellta in America's bedrooms and
motels," said COngreasman Homer T.
PetUbone, "until every practlUoner J.s
tested ~d llcen.sed."
The bill was paued and woe betide the
poor eager young swain who cciuldn't
produce a valid license. 11AS R E't EV ANT tducaUon allsts,
gentlemen," the Dean grimly told an
~mergency farolty meeting, "we 1ave
failed dismally in preparing: our students
for life. We have !aught them how to
weld an autotnobUe, how to 1wlng 3 golf Panorama of Amerka
,----lt1t Gi!Oi'fll!er:;=::..:=.--+.-pe.....,IHll-Amerlca -lo transilloo
-a colorful kaleidoscope or thil country
Dear G"Ollft' decade by decade 1lnce 1870 with 1
Why are the days !JO much I I k t • I • I lkw and shorter In the winter than In the sweey ng oo a nmer ca r o ays ,. mores -all or this detcrlbel the ilvlshly summer and ii I Mile to my Illustrated Am.erlcu C..tary: IM Vean Congresaman would il help? ol Cbaiaeloe Ufe m,tei. tn Amerk1 IJy
G.H. Rlolpb Alldrl.lt (American Heritage
De:, ~tHd probably just pau Prt11, llUl).
the time fa.st.er and make the days With a prolW1lon of photographs, 32 col-
sttm even shorter. Anyhow, Jt or, 600 black and while, and a vltrid ac-
wouldn't do much good _ il's not companying .... ltxt, Ampitu CtntDrJ
solely the jockeying around of presenl1 a breathtakln& overview of what
Day1t1ht Savings which mal<es Ille and llvina havo been llJ<o In the
summer daya tonger than wmter United stai.. In the ;ut 100 yean.
d•)'I. It'• that col~ oontr1ct• And Andrtlt wr11'1 o< the Wild West •nd how ~at txpands; naturally, the col-U w11 tamed ; tha days of easy money
dcr the season, the shorter the and booming buslntu CconcentraUn1 on da such notable merchandising tycoo111 .,
Y•· Aaron MonljlOmeY Ward and John
(THE BOO~)
Waoamaker ): the dia.,es 111 bu1lnl
habits over t1ie yean; the challmtl'" ind
e.ffectt of wars and cold wart; ·tlte traMl·
Uou from bicycles to mQt.or c1n a.od how
It affected r11hion• And 1r1vellins: tho
G•Y N1 .. uos, Jhe ~ Twenliet and
the Ort11t Deprculon. lt'I Iii bore in orle
maJlllillcent pacu1e -taventl<im,
polltlc1l eventl, lMovaiJom, tocJety 1od
gadgell.
Ralph Andr!I\ LI the author ol Liq
Deatb: Tiie Lui DoJ• If tllo flal11 !Jl.
dlaoa and hll edited a numt,r or
volumes or Americana. CAROLINE HARKLEROAD
\
But arre11ts we re rew. For almost
overnight America had become a nation
of experts superbly trauled in How to Do
ll And hangups became a tblng of the
past.
TO PREVENT confusion between
ll'aduates of dlfferent schools, the technl·
ques were of course numbered by a
unlversal<f!andard.
"Would you like to one, three, fourteen
and forty·•lx tonight, dear?" a romanti c
husband would Inquire. And as both
parties were experts, the results were as
predictable as turning on the oold water
faucet. And 1bout as Interesting.
"What's on television?" the wife would
now ttply, more often than not, with a yawn.
Once ~aln, the future of lhe human
race seemed t~atened. It was saved by
11 wise President who scrapped the
licensing I.. rrogram JIRd bPnned ·the
teaChlng o How to Uo lt courses by
an)'body f.IYllllere.
0 Some }JWigt,.. the wise President
said wllelj, •iare more fun to learn by
doio(C." ~
I
t O~ANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robtrt N, Wetd, PubU1lter
Thcmw KetvU, Edit.or
Rarbora Krelbfch
Edftoriaf Page Editor
Thct edltorlal peae ot the Daily Pilot llttk• to Inform and 1tlmu-l~tt rt"ders by pre1ent1na thl1
new1pa~r'• os:lnk>n1 an~ ooni·
mentary o11 topics of lnt~t and
1ignlncance, by provldlna a forum.
tor tht exp~lon ot our roadera' 1plnlona. an4 by pre1enllng thf'i
r.llvi•r.t vlt'Wflirl nu ot lntormM ot>-
llM'f'Vfrt and llf'IOkf'fmen on topics
11( the.> d1ty.
' Friday, December 15, 1972 -
I
..
, Hun1ingio~ Beaeh
Fountain. Valley
VOL. 65, 1110. 350, <I SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR NIA •
• •• •
•
Today's Fl•al
• N.Y. Stocks
~RIDA Y, DECEMBER 15, 1972 TEN CENTS
• rain· i s rv1ne river
New Guidelines
Curbs Tightened
For Sex Study
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sex education
in California schools will come under
tighter regulation under a resolution
adopted today without debate by the
State Board of Education.
Nixon Has No
Announcement
On Viet , Talks
Adoption of the set of guidelines follow-
ed a meeti.:Jg Thursday night where a
board suOCommittee heard briefly from
oppoDJmts to the measure.
One opponent, Wayne Lamonl of t h e
Orange County-based Birth Control
lnslitate, Inc., said in an interview after
the board's action that the ruits will pro-
vide "ammunition for intimidation."
Lamont~ contended that a small, vocal
minority of parents in most districts go
in front of local boards to oppose sex
education, and the new rules will give
them "ammunition against people who
want frank, open sex lllstruction."
DAIL T PILOT llafl PIMl19
WASHl?\GTON (AP) -President Nix·
on has no plans at this time to make an
announcement on Vietnam b e f o r e
Christmas, the White House said today.
Presidential press secretary Ronald L.
Especially offense to Lamont was
one section of the already-existing rules
adopted by the board in 1969. The sec-
tion, which 'will also be a part of the
new guidelines, states in part that
"Harmful effects of premaritaf sex, etc.,
an da code of morals be emphasized with
no derogatory instruction relative to re-
ligious beliefs and ethics, and to parents'
WRECKAGE OF BREAD TRUCK BEARS TESTIMONY TO VIOLENT TRAIN-TRUCK COLLISION
Driver Killed Instantly When Vehicle Collided With Fast Train at Irvine Crossing
beliefs and teachin~." · Ziegler said Nixon met again Thursday
night and lhls morning with adviser
Henry A. Kissinger, just returned from
lhe latest round or secret peace negoU;;-
tions in Paris.
But a French radio report that a
Vietnam cease-fire will be announced
wiUtln • ----prices zooming today.
At 11 a.m. PST, the Dow. Jones 8V·
en,e of -30 -industrials wu ap t.14 ·to
1029.10. Tile blu&<blp Jndlcalor had
slipped more than I points.
Lamont said he tried to get the board's
subcommittee to change the word
'·premartial" to "irresponsible" but his
suggestion was rejected.
The rules on teacher training, parental
notification and outside speaker re-qulmneeta gmr oul of a controvel'I)'
earlier this year when bomoselrua1s ap-
. peared as pilt l@fl&AI Ii .. ~
11on classes .1n San Francisco and Marin
counties.
Civilian, Military Pay
Ra.is~ 'Okayed ·f.J¥'·N~:On ··
'i'be announcement WU by the private-
ly owned radio station Europe No. t. The
station said it got its tnlonnatlon from
_a "high foreign personfaUty" but gave
no details. '
Kissinger also is consulting with
Secretary Of State William P. Rogers,
Se<:retary of Defense Melvin R. Laird,
the chainnan of the Joint Chiefs oi Staff,
Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, and in-
telligence chief Richard Helms in in-
dividual meetings, Ziegler said.
Kissinger and his top assistant, Gen.
A1exander Haig, briefed· Rogers for an
hour and a halt late Thursday. ·
But tbe White House spokesman had no
further travel plans to announce con-
cerning the Vietnam negotiating, such as
a trip by Kissinger to Saigon or a
At an ,earller meeting; staff member
Henry Heydt said the districts involved
complied witb current I e g a I re-
quirements.
But board member Gene Ragle of
Roseville sctld the course at Redwood
Higlt School In the Marin County town 0£
Larkspur appeared to be "a do-it-
yourself course in copulation."
One section of today's resolution States
that local school superintendents have
veto power over outside speakers used in
"family life" or sex education courses.
Another section requires parents to be
notified by mail of sex education courses.
State law gives parents the right to .pull
their child out or a sex education class.
' WASHJNG'l'()N I (Ul!IJ> -President
Nixnn loclaY omelj>d' a 5.14 ~reent pay
inc~ for'l,316,000. cltUJan government worke~ and a 6., Percent salary boost
for all 2.4 milliQn member& of the armed
services. , ,
The increases w8I be,come1teffective the
first pay period alter Jan. 1, the White
House said.
'Ibe c;lvilian pay raise haq been sched·
uled for October, lbut was postponed as
an anti-inflation move and that act,ion
a~CJ.!D8~ delayed a similar military
pay. boOSl set for, ~ same time.
The across-the.ooar;_d increases were
orde,red by Nixon on the basis of recom·
mendations by Budget Director Caspar
meeting between Nixon and south Viet-
nam's President Nguyen Van Thieu. c: h c
'I'tiere ~ coDUiiuing W8Sh'-tn"'••~"!"'~-l----roao:i y roo-lao:!
Salgdn differences over peace proposals. i:'.!11 • i:'.!IJ
The. sum total o( the press secretary's
remarks left an impression that the
:'.';l'.1~1~'01i•li0n• are pretty much.,· Yule .Wliiter' for Senior. Citizens
Huntington Pair
Die as Camper
Loses Control
Two Huntington Beach resid~nts and a
Riverside maintenance worker were kill-
ed Thursday afternoon when a camper
driven by the Huntington Beach pair
spun out of control and plunged over an
embankment on the Riverside Freeway.
Highway patrol officers listed the Hun-
tington Beach victims as Margaret Ruth
Usry, 19, or 904~ Madlyn Ave., and
Harold W. Acker, of the same address.
Also killed was Charles Rorabaugh, '11,
Riverside. -
. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The senior citizens at the Laguna Honda Hos-
pital here were dreaming of a "White Cllrlsbhas," and there to help them do
it was the great crooner himself, Bing Crosby.
MORE THAN •• PERSONS -some of •them in wheelchairs -jammed
the convalescent center's auditorium Thursday to Jet the 68-year-old Bing's
rare public appearance take them gently down memory lane ·to Christmases
past.
Crosby went through a number of Christmas songs, including "Jingle Bells"
and "O LitUe Town of Bethlehem" and tbm asked if there were any r~uests. .
FROM ALL PARTS OF the auditorium titles were shouted by those who
could remember and could still shout. Other mouths epf!ned but no liOWld
came out.
It had been so long since Crosby had sung the "old oftes:• he occasionally
forgot a line or two, but it didn't matter. Each song brought whistles, clH!ers
and applause from those able to express themselves.
Huntington Project
' feJ.,be,:g<'!)~ the chairman of the Civil
Service Ci/tpinilaioo lo· J'IO"'Ole com·
Jl!lrability .1'ilb, Qill\;ll<\" iJ)dl!slry. sala.ry
rates. 'l'l\O~ w¥1 COOllJaiiOul. j2 billion.. ·
Thei Preildent )'It" ~e. sarlJ, ·tiO'Ht.turned
dpwo a i:ecommendatlon of 1an additional
pay increase of 10.36 percent to make up
for the ·three-monfJi delai. in pay ad·
iistmenls, bqkllng that bis ''would be
neither fair nor justifiable."
He said that such an increase would
result in paying federal employes nigher
salaries than the comparable workers in
private enterprise·are reteiving.
The-increases are across the board and
amOWlted to a cost-of·livirrg hike. They
affect persons thak:ing under $36,000.
In a message to Congress, Nixon said
that "lbe ·American system of ~r
civil service is based on the princ~le or
rewarding merit." .
-He-added~ledged-to-oontioue
striving to make it an even more ef-
fJ?Ctive, responsible part of our govern-
ment. One way of acfl\eving this is to
maintain a salary scale for .civil servants
that is •just and comparable to that
rece.ive;d by equivalent individuals in the
private sector."
On Monday, Nixon's chief economic
spokesman, George P. Shui,.z, annouoced
a freeze during the·1973'calendar year on
salaries ·of1 "executive level"· federal
employes, including members o f
Congress and the judiciary.
But Schultz made it clear at that time
that the delayed federal pay hike for the
lower categories would go forward.
Fire Suspect Freed
SANTA MONrCA (AP) -A.62-year..,ld
transient arrested for investigation o(
manslaugher in connection with a fatal
fire at the Carmel Hotel this week has
been released because of insufficient
evidence. police said.
Blghway Patrol ofrlcers said Miss Usry
and Acker were eastbollnd on the
freeway at 2: 10 p.m. when they ran into
the back of anoµier car driven by
Wllllam Bromley of Hemet.
Acker then lost control of the camper
and It lunged across the center divider
striking Rorabaugh who was working
Laguna Tre_e Lover Hired
there, officers said. / The camper then plunged over the
freeway embankment. Miss Usry died io-
stantly, Acker died later in Riverside
General llospllal.
•
llunllngton Beach plans lo hire Laguna Bigler bas d~gned several of the
Beach landscape architect Richard city's parks, incluOing the to-acre F.di$)11
Bigler to supervise the city's removal of community Park.
2,500 street ash trees. City officials want the ash trees
Big]er will be paid $5,000 for work removed becaU9e their lhallow roots 1ro
covering the next live years, according; to damaging sidewalU~ curbs, and ptten.
City Administrator David Rowlands. The asb trees are eight to · 10 yean old
One or h~ nsslgnrnenls will be the and stand !O lo 40 feel tall In many
ccmpletlon of an environmental impact areas.
report oo tho ma~ve tree transfer proj· Tho publle 1works departmenl l!i• P""
ec\. posed a• '1.4: inilllbn program tO remove
Ile will also tal<e llllrarect pllolQlr.l~,__~lhe"~, 1rees; repelt the sldewall!J and
ol .U the ash treet lo dttermlno wblc replace the ash t r e es wltb
ones are healthy and can be moved to the younger, smaller evergreen pines. ·-
central city park and netghbOrbood Tbe program ls»e<Juled over five or
parks. __. slx years.
"He's a well-known tree lover," Orla,inally, the public works depart·
RoWlands said. "And the program will be ment proposed destruction of the ash
in hla hlr1d1 80 It's done right.'' trees, but the cltY couOO.l ordered "all
•
those that can" to be moved · to city
parks.
"We will probllblY only move the worst
trees the fir1t year1" ROwbfuds explained
today. "We may bavei to slow the ~
gram down' In· the klteresl of doing it
right."
Bigler Will determine which trees can
be moved lo the parks, and be. will ,.t up
the phasing licbeclule fo.,tree removal In
each neighborhood.
Not all lnles In a neighborhood wlll be
mov«I •t one time. Only selected t~
are upect«l lo b1t shifted. ·
The city will probably hire a pn>-
lesslonal tree mov!ntl firm 'when tho wor~ otarts. ralher lhan allempt It with
the city 's liml(ed equipment, Rowlands
said.
'
P olice Arrest 3
Th~~t Suspt'!Cts , :r..
lb lluttmi~.:.
Huntington · Beach police Tblliaday
raided a 1home in the city and arrested
!hr~ ·~~~J~Y allege fltt r~nsi·
hie f r' aperaUng' a bur1lary .ring !!Jal
rang'Cd•from Los Angeles'to San Diego.
Later in ' the cOordlna~ til"id, officers
picked Op .a fourth suSpeet in Anaheim
whom they claimed served as a fence for
the trio, taking the stolen goods and iell·
irig tHe locit"to othn:.
Officers identified the b u r g I a r y
suspects as :
-Robin Lilly, 18, of 7931 Cypress St.,
Huntington Beach.
-Keilh LaVey, 28, and his brother,
Dennis, 24, both of 10842 Trask Ave.,
Garden Gnwe.
-John Akln1, 35, of 23431 Cornet St.,
Anaheim, the alleged fence m the opera-
tion.
The arrest of Miss Lilly and the LaVey
brothers came at her Cypress Street
home about 4:30 p.m. Officers said it
ended an intensive t w o • w e e k in·
vesligation by Huntington ·Beclch detec·
lives Brian Moore, Arden Beavers and
Robert Sutherland.
Miss Lilly and Atkins are being he1d to-
day in Orange County jail.and the LaVey
brothers are in custody in Huntington
Beach.
Moore said the investigation was based
on license plates spotted at the. scenes 1>f
recent burglaries in Los Angeles, Hun-
tington Beach and Yorba Liilda. although
he acknowledged the trio is suspected of
several more burglaries in Orange, Los
Angeles and San Diego counties. ·p
All four suspects were· charged with
burglary, . possession of n a r c o t i c s ,
~ion of narcotics paraphernalia and
being Wider the influence of drugs.
Atkins was picked up by the team of
Huntington Beach and Anaheim po~.
He claims they found about $2·,000 Worth
of property tentatively identified as the
loot from previous burglaries by ring
members.
included among the property recovered
from Atkins . home at 2343 Cornet .St.
were television sets, pistols, rifles and
jewelry.
Police also assert they found a quantity
of heroin in the Anaheim home, which
they valued at more than $1,000.
;
Teen Sues Over -Broken 'Roman~
PHOENIX, Arli. (UP!) -A ifb.coij
teenager wants '991 In damagl!:I from the
police department for breaklhg up 1
romance . -
Oreg Moore, II, said in b1J sult that he
and< Lana OlS1Cr, 16, wert arrested
'lhankiglvlng oo charg.. of posseuing
marijuana .and her 4parents now forbid
him to !lee her, Th! suit sald'Moore and~ DlS!U
were a~sted as they approacbe(t a table
In Washington Part where 1evef•l other
pe....Jna• were SJTI\\klnc' marlJUina. lte
S!llci'nelUier he·..,.llie girl smoked mari-
juana •
l
Truck Hit
In 90-MPH
Collision
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of I'll• DfitJ Jllllel Stiff
Charles L. Schoonover Sr .. 46. owner of
the Irvine General Store, was killed this
morning when his bread truck collided
wit!" a passenger train doing an
t!stunated 90 mph at the point or impact
at tbe Jeffrey Road crossing in Irvine.
Investigators said Schoonover, 14951
Sand Canyon Road, tied instantly when
his Barbara Ann truck smashed into the
Santa Fe train bound for Los Angeles.
The train was coming from San Diego
and carried an estimated 125 passengers.
All felt the shock or the collision but train
personnel said none were injured.
Schoonover and his wife, Betty, have
operated the East Irvine country store
since 1966. Mrs. Schoonover i s
postmistress· of East Irvine, fprmerly
known as Myford.
The Schoonovers and their two
children, Greg, 21, and Denise, have lived
in an apartment over the store and post
office for the past seven years. The store
buil~ing is one of Orange County's oldest,
having been constructed in 189CJ.
lrvine city aide Paul Brady said
Schoonover was making a delivery from
t~ store when the accident occurred.
Witnesses who sa wa second train pass
after the accident. said the signals were
in working order. -
Willls Sullivan, 57, of Santa Maria, con-
ductor of the four-car train, told in-
vestigators that be felt the Impact but
did not hnmedial<l,y know what occwnd .
"l dJdn't know anything about it,u said
Willis, still dued, at the stopping point of
the train. abJUt 1.5 miles away from the
impact on Culver Drive.
TreH!c Investigator Oary Barwlg ol
Costa Mesa Police Department said the
collision ruptured a fuel tank and Air
hoses. Both signaled the train's fail-safe
(See TRAIN, Page %1
Truman Weaker,
F dils to Respond
To Medication
K)NSAS CITY (AP)-llarry S Tru-
man , semi-conscious and unable to speak.
failed to respond to medication today and
doctors exp~sed concern about his
\\·eakenlng kidneys.
The fonner President slept fitfully and
continued to receive oxygen all the Ume.
A spokesman at Research Hospital and
Medical Center said, "kidney output COO·
tinues to decrease in spite of medlca·
lion."
For the second straight day. Dr.
Wallace Graham termed 'rrutJlan's con·
dJtion "very serious."
The 83-year-old Truman was admitted
to the hospital 10 days ago, suffering
from bronchitis and lung congestion.
Slippage in Truman's kidney function
was ·noted Wednesday when doctors
observed • signs of renal impalrrnent,
which they said, meant his kidoeys were
not purifying blood properly.
Thursday, actual output ol. lhe kidneys
decreased and the doctors said the
kidney ~iUoo was "of concern and is
being watched very closely for change."
Coast
Weatlter
A few high clouds, but othenri.K
SUMY on Saturday' ls the .,,.., the
weatherlady sees It. Highs ot 15 at
the beaches, rbtng lo 70 lnllnd.
Lows tonight 45-Sll.
INSIDE TODA.'l'
Whot u:ttre the top 10 "°""
mun,tu thtattr production. of
J 972 in Orange Covntw7 The
DAILY PILOT'• drama critic
off•rs hll 1ooluaUon in 1*W'•
Wetkendtr section. ':I'
~1.r~ ,.I_ "' 11.d t~ ,. ...... lit ... u ...... =,...,... 1: !:!":f ... .,
' '
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,2 DAILY PILOT ____ H __ 'ridaJ, --15. lffl •
'In 1'Joon Orbit
•
Apollo 17 Crew
Huntington .
Merchants
• Rejoin Ill Space Get Gift
SPACE CENTER, Hou s ton (AP) -
Three American astronauts, united again
after the Apollo program's final and
most bountiful 1noon·landing expedition,
lingered in lun ar orbit today surveying
tbe surface below for still more
knowledge. (Sec related stories, picture.
page 8.1
Gone \\'as lhe landing ship Challenger.
u·hich carried Apollo 11·s Eugene A.
Ceman and ~la rrison H. Schmitt to the
surface for 75 hours and then returned
them safely to the command s hip
America and reunion with Ronald E.
Evans.
In the early morning hours, Challenger
was thrust away from the command
ship. and a radio signal from Mlssion
Control sent it crashing into the moon.
Today, and for most of Saturday until
they start their journey home, the
astronauts' task was to probe the moon
with cameras and sophisticated sensing
devices. They were in an orbit 69 miles
above the surfnee.
Cernan and Schmitt completed man's
mcist successfu1 moon visit ever late
Thursday when they rocketed off thi?
lunar surface with a record cargo of
moon samples and film.
Included in the sealed boxe.; of samples
were two core tube! and severa! bags
filled with a mysterious red-orange soil
\\'hich may be the youngest lunar
samples ever collected. Scientists believe
the colorful 90il may be a product of one
of the moon's last volcanoes.
After transferring the precious lunar
treasure into America, the astronauts
cast off Challenger, freeing it for
destruction in the cause of science. The
lander. whic h cost $40 million, could not ·
h~ve been returned to earth with the
command ship.
'"It seems an unfittine finish to a super
bird," said Cernan, during his last
moments aboard the craft be had flown
to a near·perleet landing Monday in the
moon valley' of Taurus-Littrow. "But it's
got. one more joL to do."
On radio commands from eanb,
Challenger fired its rocket thrusters and
sent itself speeding lo an impact near the
Taurus-Littrow valley.
Force of the impact-equivalent to 200
F~ Curtailed
In Their Use
Of NatUI·al Gas
Seventeen major industrial users of
natural gas scattered throughout Orange
County will not be supplled by Southern
California Gas Company for at h!ast
another week, allhougb 12() other in·
dus trial cl!S tomers were returned to full
service today. ·
liervice to county . oil .'conipanies, steel
mllls and cement plants among other
heavy gas users has been curtailed due
to the recor<f..breaking residential usage
• in response to cold weather. (See related
story, page 4.)
~. W. Hutchison, central area district
manager for the gas company. said today
that the company is "at the end of the
curt8.ilment period."
lie noted that a new record for gas
consumption was set De<:. 10 when 3.2
billion cubic feet of gas were needed to
heat Southem California homes and of·
fices.
Jn anticipation or increased use due to
cold weather, the gas company identifies
firms it lists at "interruptibles," Hutch·
ison said. These firms have alternate
fuels such as oil or propane to giv.e \hem
the heat they need during shortages.
One such firm is the Conroc.k .Compe.ny
Plant in San Juan Capistrano. 1 The first 11 days of Decemb.: set a 44-
yea.r record for cold.:. temperatures,
Hutchison noted.
•
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• •
pounds of TNT -caused a seismic shock
which e x c I t e d quake-detection in·
struments left on the moon hy Apollo 17
and by previous Apollo missions. The
readings will be studied by scientists on
earth.
Chief Told
To Give Back
Seized Films
Westminster Pollce Chief Walter Scott
got a "return the materials or join Bill
Farr" ultimatum Thursday from an
Orange County Superior Court judge as
Frederick and Kay Loar of Huntington
Beach piled on the pressure for the
return of their spicy movies and
photographs.
Judge Robert L. Corfman included the
reference to jailed newsman Farr in
ordering Sc<itt to return the Loars' 20,500
sex movies and 30,000 photographs or cx·
plain in his courtroom Feb. 9 why he
didn't comply with the court order.
Scott and the District Attorney's Office
are pinning their hopes on an appeal that
will be made berore the California
Supreme Court.
But Judge Corfman has made it clear
that it is highly unlikely that the state's
top court will be inclined to overturn the
ruling issued lait month by the "Fourth
District Court of Appeals in San
Bernardino.
The San Bernardino justices upheld
Judge Corfman's ruling that Scott was In
contempt when be refused to return the
I.oars' stock of sexy materials to the ac-
quitted couple.
Loar, 35, and his wife, 32, of 4062 Hum-
P,ldt Drive, had been cleared by a jury
in J udge Corfman's courtroom or
obscenity charges sterning from the
seizure of the materials by Westminster
police May 25. 1971. They are valued by
the Loan at $500,000.
Loar claims that Scott is refusing to
return the materials because a n
estimated 2,000 movie'i"eels are msssing.
lie states that the information came
from Westminster police officers but
refused to ldeotily bis sources.
SCott rejects the allegatiOn. He states
that he is retaining the Loars' movies
and photographs in his va ults '1because
they are pornographic despite what the
court had, to say abou\ them."
I _ DAILY ,llOT Stiff l'tlttt
PIXIE AND FIRE l!l"GINE HE)IALD NEW ~ADJNTO HUNTINGTON CENTER
Just I" Tlmt for Chrlstm11, • New Strwt for S1nt1 and Shoppers
Santa Mollica Councilnian
Named to Coastline Panel
Santa Monica City Councilman J ames
Reidy Jr. has been appointed to an
Orange-Los Angeles county regional
coastline commission after a half-hour
clased meeting by the execaU.y_e com·
mittee of the Southern California
Association of Governments (SCAC).
Committee chairman Jack Green, Hun·
tington Beach city councilman, said the
meeting Thursday was closed to allow "a
more uninhibited discussion of the can--
did3tes."
Marina Student
Body Largest
In Beach Area
Huntington Beach Union High School
District trustees were told this week
that Marina High School is the most
crowded campus in the district.
A rating of the crowding at each of the
high schools was compiled by District
Special Assistant Glen Dysinger to
determine which schoOls will have more
students shifted to them with the
freshman attendance option to begin next
fall.
Fountain Vp.lley, Edisoo, WeStmlnster
and Huntington Belich High SclloOls
followed Marina in the ratings.
Each school was evaluated by dividing
the total number of students into the
square footage of classrooms and other
support facilities such as cafeterias,
libraries and gymnasiums.
However SCAG 's counsel advised the
executives that they could not meet
behind closed doors under provisions of
the Brown Act which allows public bodies
to meet itl · executive session only to
discuss personnel matters.
1t also requires that decisions be inade
in public.
Green said the selecUon or Reidy came
after two tie votes wit~ Long Beach City
Councilman James Wilson. The third
vole was 5 to 4 in Reidy's favor, Green
aaid.
The Coastline Initiative, Prop. 20 a~
proved on Nov. 7, set up the regional
commissions and one statewide com·
mission to oversee development along the
California coast. The commissions have
pcnnit po\vers over 'coastline develop-
ment.
Still to be chosen for the l2·member
regional body are two elected officials
and six qualified public members.
Fu1id Started
For Fisherma1i
Friends of Newport Beach dory
fisherman Allen Knight h a ve
formalized their efforts to start a
colleefTon for his wife and four liv·
ing children.
Knight Is still missing at sea with
his 3-year-old daughter Patricia.
Gig Peters Jury
Gets Tliree-day
Break From Case
Jurors who must decide on Gig Peters'
state of mind when be kilied his parents
at their Huntington Be,ach home began a
thfee..day break today at the secorid
Orange County Superior Court trial of the
former lifeguard.
They wW return Monday to Judge K~
neth Williams' courtroom for instructions
that will preeede their retirement to the
jury room.
Prosecutor Pat Brian asked fo r a
verdict of first degree murder Thursday
in a ha rd hitting fin al argument which
condemned the defense theory that
Peters, 23, was suffering from diminish-
ed mental capacity when he killed his
parents April 21 , 1971, as "pure
whitewash."
Defense attorney Barry Tarlow in his
tum condemned Brian's vigorous pro!!·
ecution as a "per900aJ issue in a case
filled with red herrings."
Peters is being tried for-the second
time on charges that he stabbed his
father Charles Peters, 55, through tbe
heart and strangled his mother, Flon.
54, a teacher at Lincoln School in Corona
dcl Mar.
Citize1i of Year
Nominees . So":p~t
The Westminster Qlambm' of Com-
merce is seeking nominees for its annual
"Citizen of the Year" award.
Anyone who lives or \vorks in the city
can be nominated. even if nominated in a
previous year. Tue deadline !or entries ls
5 p.m., Dec. 26.
The Westminster Chamber office is at
1449i Bea"" Blvd .
'4
Santa came to the ltuntlngton Center
early, Thursday, riding on a Huntington
Beach fire truck .
His gilt to the center merchanta waa a
brand-new l!llfrance to the huge jbopplng
eom,plex. The entrance, .. acrosa from
Golden West College on Gothard Street.
wu opened Thursday. after nearly a
fOUl'year waiting period. ·
Public works officials expect the
$230,000 Gothard Street entry -it's a
hall-mile long and called.Center Drive -
to relieve traffic jams on Edinger
Avenue.
The city spent $123,000 on the short
street. The rest of the money was put up
by Los Angeles County Land company,
which owns the vacant land behind the
shopping center, and the Huntington
.Beach Company, which owns Huntington
Cen ter.
The Los Angeles firm plans to build
more stores on the vacant property
behind Huntington Center.
\Vheeler said the was a fOlU·year
delay. in building the side entrance to the
shopting center becaUse previous owners or the vacant land had not put up the
money for street improvements.
Earlier this year, the Public Utilities
Commission refused to grant a street
crossing over the ~uthern Paclflc
Railroed Line, but that decision wu
rec.ntly reverted by tbe PUC and that
allowed the city to open the road.
FroM Pflfrf! I
TRAIN ...
system to con.e to an emergency slOlJ.
The impact was so forceful that It
sh~ed. the bread truck into its major
components, scattering hot dog s and
hauburger burui and jaged piecet of
metal down the track.
The truck's engine was ripped from its
m0W1ts and landed oext to the track
1nore than 100 yard! away. It wu ttill
hot to the touch one hour after the 8:40
a.m. collision.
A conductor on the train said he felt a
bump and suspected a collision bad oc-
curred "wben it went baagety, bang,
bang, bang" unt:emeath the ooachea.
He said the train was· running oo
schedule and had made stcpe at Del Mar
and San Clemente befcn: the accident oc-
curttd.
,The train conllnued Its weatbound
journey at 9:4~ a.m., uslDg only IUI front
engiile. A ftreman on the train aald the
secood engine was disabled when dletel
fuel leand oot of tbe ruptured link.
ointeattg-.O at the ..,.no said the
train was goln& approximately 90 mph
through the sllinalluc! intersection but
that this was considered nonnal a D d
proper speed.
'
Arsenal Sold Off
F ou1itai1i Valley
Scliedules Trip
To Santa Country
The rating of the five schools will serve
as a guide next faU. when incoming
freshmen living in the attendance ·areas
of the more crowded schools will be
allowed to attend a less populated' cam-
pus.
Mrs. Gary L. Black, a Newport
Beach police meter maid and
friend of the Knight family, said
people have been asked to send any
contributions by check to the Allen
Knight Memorial Trust Fund, in
care of the Bank of America, 3444
Via Lido, Newport Beach.
Winner of the top citizen award will be FRESNO (AP) -SOme 20 rlDes and
announced during the Chamber's in-j~ pistols, Lbousands of rounds ol. un-
The F'buntain Valley Rec r eation
Department will sponsor a Christmas
party and a trip to Santa's Village as
part of its yuletide activities for children.
The Christmas party will be held from
10 a .m. to noon Saturday in the Com+
munity Center. All children should bring
an ornament to help decorate the center
tree. Santa Claus will aY6 be hand to
give out treata and he.ar wishes.
The trip to the Sky Forest Santa's
Village near Lake Arrowhead will take
place on Dec. 21. Buses will iJeave from
Fountain Valley High Schoof at t a.m.
and wW retum aroubd.4 p.m .
Children under 8 years old must be
accotnp8nle(l by an ·adult. eost for the
trip is '2.7£ for• chlldren and $3.'50 for·
adults.
Referees Needed
In Huntington
Do you like to wear black and white
striped shirts? Blow a whistle? Take
command of yoong boya?
Huntington "'-each is looking for
volunteers to serve as refereea for the
boys basketball program.
Officials are paid up to S2.40 per game.
All work will be on Saturday mornina:s.
Applicanta must be at least 16-years-
old and have a thorough knowledge of the
game. Applications will be taken from 2
p.m. to 4 p.m. at the city gym, 16th
Street and Palm Avenue.
•
Thus students from Marina. and Foun·
tain Valley would have the ftrSt option to
transfer to another school such as Hi.m-
tington Beach High Scbdol which is the
least crowded campus.
Dysinger said letters would be sent to
parents in January to explain the new at·
tendance option. Following the letters.
meetings will be conducted with parents
and students to explain the program.
April 1 will be the last day for students
to exercise their option under the plan so
that staff and other personnel changes
cai.. be made to correspond with the shift
in students. according to Dysinger.
New students or special exceptions will
be considered after the April 1 deadline,
Dysinger said.
Dysinger said the district Was hopeful
that the new system would bri'ng about a
leveling off of student populations
without having to cmstanUy change
school boundaries. . ' '
4 Named in Murder
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A man identified
by police as president of the Axemen
Motorcycle Club and three others have
been indicted by the San Diego County
grand jury in the slaying of a llell's
Angels 11hanger-on."
The body of Edwin Lee York, 35, of El
Cajon was found Nov. 28 in the trunk of
an abandoned car. He had been shot four
times. There was a gash in his head.
Geese o r Gulls~
.Plane Victims' Identity V1isure
The Air California plane which made an emergeney tum to Orange Coun·
ty Airport Wednesday night may have swallowed several sea guJJa ln one of
It! jet cngl.nes rattier lbaD wUd geese.
ORANG& COUNTY Dln!<tor of Aviation Robert Bresnahan said he su ..
peels that I.be bfrdl were commoo, ordinary tea gulls. "We will never know
for fNl'e t.bough," he said. "They were pretty well chewed up."
The plane, Flllht 867 to San Jose and oak.land, was about 1,500 feet over
the Upper Bay and JU31 prior to rtduclng power to cut jet ndise when It ran
Into tbe Dock ol blnfl.
. TRE. JET MADE a turn over the ~ean and relUmed to. Oranae Counly 41rl>c>rt. where iJ\e pa....,1er1 were. transfer<d to another jet for their nli!llt. llrelliitlliin Hid roport. that fire broke out in the engine which sucke<I
In the birds wu nol true. "Wiien Ille blrdt bit lhe intake a fan bltde was
"bent causing ll to tcrapo on the engine nacelle and sparks flew but the pilot
cut the motor and there wu no fire."
•
stallation banqud!J Jan. 6, at the Mesa munition and a quantity of spare parts,
Verde Country Club in Costa Me68. all from lhe estate of tbe late Wllllalll E .
Kn ight and his ~young daught.r
were in his dory Tuesday on their
way back from Huntington Beach
when, apparently, the little girl fell
overboard and Knight died trying
to rescue her.
Tunahoat Released
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The !Int
American tunaboat captured by Peru this
year was rele~ Wednesday, the
American Tunaboat Association said.
r $ 7
LAMPS -PICTURES -ACCESSORIES
PRE-HOLIDAY SALE
It'• the little things _that can make the dif.
ference. Stop by today and view our fine
sel ection, now special~ priced . If it's for a
gift, or for you perionally, you'll find juit \h•
thing lo enhance any home for the holiday.
DREXEL-HERITA9G-HENREDON-WOODMARK--ICAAAST»I
1td11111
INTERIORS ·
WDkDAYS & SATURDAYS 9:00 to 1110
NllDAY 'T1L 9:00
'Iboresen m, have bef.11 aold at auction
here. A Northern callfornl.a gun firm
submitted the high bid of $21,000 Tburs-
day for the weapons, pvt of the al'lellal
seized by federal agents at Tbort1e11.'1
San Francisco home and in wareboulies
at Oakland and BerU!ey.
NEWPORT l&ACH e
172:7 WISTCLIFf Ok.,
"42·2011
LAliUNA IEACH e
141 NOJ.fH COAST HWY.
4'4-4111
TORRANCE e
2Ji4t HAWTHO•NI ILVO.
Jfl·ll?t
'
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Frld.ly, Otcembtr 15, 1~72 H DAILY PILOT
Caspers Reveals Airport Choice =
lftavells Plan
County District
To Softe.n Water.
By JOHN ZALLER
tif .. DtilW P*I ...,
The Orange County Water Di.strict
unveiled plan> Thursday to build a 115 to
$25 million "water softener" to purify In-
coming Dows of the Santa Ana River.
The unit -to be koown Jecbnlcally as
a "demineralizing plant" -will be built
Ut the north county area, probably in
Anaheim, according to Don Owens,
manager of the district.
But in making the announcement in
Lawmen Seek
'Grinch' Thief
Orange County Sherifrs officers
dispatched to the Costa 'Mesa area
Thursday night Immediately dub-
bed the assignment "Operation
Grinch."
For the intruder who forced his
·way into, two Mesa D r i v e
apartments hacl only ooe objective
-all the wrapped Christmal
presents he could find.
Deputies said he carried off m0rt
than· $1,000 worth Crom the
apartments of lab technician Karen
Marie Oluich, 26, and school janitor
Bernard Kent Nilson, 25, at 1561
Mesa Drive.
Investigators saJd the method of
entry was identical at each apart-
ment. The front door knob was
twi.!lted oU with a vice like in-
1trument, they said.
Wounded Suspect
Sought in Other
Burglary Cases
The ti-year-aid burglary suspect 1bot
by an 88-year-old Laguna Beach resident
early Thursday ,Js Mpeded of ,three
other burglaries and bl.s ID an'llt rec-
onl dating bad< to when t!Jo;Jl!Udl WU
II, police uld -y.
Dovld Martin 1.Mg, ttpOl'led In
''serious condltiOn'' today at the Intensive
care unit , of South Coast Community
Hospital, was shot In the abdomm wt.lb a
World War I vlDtage ,45 revolver u be
crouched In tbe darkness Inside the home
oC Gordon Reg6ni Coman, 88, of 261 Ast.er
SI., Laguna Beach.
Long is ~Y on parole for · a
previowt crloie, and was temporarily liv-
ing at a Woodland Drive residence after
arriving io Lagma Beach Sunday from ~
Ohio, officers said.
Police have been imable to speak with
the burglary o.upect due to bis wound.
Officers said the Y"tlh bad lived In the
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa area
befor< golnjJ to Ohio.
Evlden<» I1nklq the 19-yellMld to the
olber crimes waa usertel!lY foond by of·
ficers . after the shooting. He has been
booked in absenUa for suspicion of
bur!Jlary while armed.
Coman enoouotered the youth •bortly
before 1 8.oi. Thursday. The retl'red can-
dymaker bad been lying awake In bis
bedroom lislening to the radio wben he
beard a noUe in lhe living room.
SuttdaJl's Best
Anaheim at a national symposium on
desalinlzatlon1 Owens aaid the new unit.
sbould linprove water quality throughoot
"the oounly's huge underground weter
bUln.
Known as the Fon:bay Fectory, the
newi plant will· purify up to' 50 million
gallon& of. low quality water daily and
relurn It to tbe ground In the Anelleim , area.
It will complemen~ Water Factory 21 in
Fountain Valley, now under construction,
which will by 1980 pump 30 million
gallons of desalted and reclaimed water
into west Orange COUnty's IDlderground
reserves.
The two .units togelber will make lbe
Orange County Water District a pioneer
in the nation for water quality manage-
ment, Owens predicted. .
Up to Mt percent of the costs or lhe new
Forebay Factory abould be borne by lhe
federal government, Owens s a i d .
Constructkm. should be complete in three
to five years if all s:oes as planned, he
added.
Tbe new unit would take in water corr
tainin& an average 815 to 1,100 parts per
millloo of dissolved s&lls. It would
release It at a level of 1bout 200 part.!.
To the average 1 family of five,-Owens
said this improvement in water quality
woul4. save $227 per-year in mooey that
is now spent for water softeners, bottled
water, and rotting pipes and water
beaten. He aaid this figure was compiled
after a detailed water district study ol
mot'! than l,000 homes. ·
Water flowing into Orange County in
the Santa Ana River ls water that has
often been used two or three limes by
cities in the Rivenide-San Bernardino
area. Owen ssaid.
"lt's pretty low quality by the time it
gets here," Owens said, "and if we want
to serve high quality water to our
customers we don't have an alternative
to building a large-scale plant like this to
clean tt up."
The Forebay Fact.cry will have its most
dramatic impact in the north county area
where some waler exceeds 1,000 parfS
per mlllJoo dissol'fed aall.•Tlil Is blghfr
than U.S. Public Health drinking water
slandai:<ll recommend.
1 lBut Owens said it will a1so have a
significant impact downstrum where
Cosla Mesa, Rmlilngtoa Beech, and
Fountain Valley pump much of their
domestic water from the tmdergrouod
.basin.
"The low quality water takes a tittle
lcmger lo get down to those artas,"
0wens wd, "but it c1oes get there. The
Forebay Factory should glve us a solid
quality control over the whole un-
derground basin."
Countian Dies
Mter Arrest
LAS VEGAS (AP) - A Garden
Grove man died of an apparent heart at-
tack 'Ibunday three hours after he wns
arrested here on a warrant charging him
wiib felony child molesting, poli«! uid.
Detectivn identified the man as Billy
C. Grabam, If, of !:JOO Blue Spruce SI.
They Aki be was arrested in the
downtown area. booked on a warrant
i.uued by an Orange Counly Court, and
put In the dty jall
A jailer noticed Graham lying on the
floor of bis cell and l<llt him to the
hospllal In an ambulance. He died In Ille
emergency room, detecUves said.
Cousins on 'Life,' Sign
'
Mixup, Mystery in Pilot
Anolher great magazine •is dead and
magazine man Nor.nan Cousins, newest
columnist to join Ille DAILY PILOO'
lineup of 1lar talent, says the govern, ment helped kill Llfe with tteataUng
postal ratea.
Tbat'1 ooe of several . artlclea pboto
ftatures and columns you'll J1od ttrnmg
"Sunday's Best." Here's a ~view ol
some other things upcoming k¥' Sund•Y
DAILY l'lLOT readers: '
SIGN SCRAMBLE -11'1 poalble that
aome signs are more coofuatnl to
mororlsts lhan the rules the)"ro tryJoc to
convey. Sign study aimed at reducing
vfsuol polluUon and lncrea1lng ~
derotandlng ls !be subjed of YOU l<Cllon
leod atory by Staff Writer Rudi
Nledzlelskl.
LAGUNA NIGUEL MYST!:RY-Ecr1e
sight of lighta burning all night at the ·~
por.nlly emply 121 million North
American Rockwell "Ziggurat" tn an
unlnhablled valley wu part of tho In-
trigue that caulltd • La(Ull• Hills woman
to wonder enou&h 1bout tht neveM>C>
cUpied building to ~bit ll and write about
t~
•
YULE GIFl'S FOR NEEDY -
Quislmu ls a Ume for slwlng and II
Y"t w~ to give to famJU.1 In need, the
YOU SiCllon will u.t qencle1 to which
)""' can take food, clothlng, toys or-other
gllla for distrlbulloll.
CABOT ON COVER -SebasUan
Clbot, host or the show which will
change from "Ghost Story" to ''Circle of
Fear" early in January, is featured In
cover story of TV WEEK.
STEALING FROM BLIND -A new
power group Is crowborrlng ita way Into
a dominant. position In W asltlngton. The
1jlhreat". comtl from blind people who
MID c1.ndy-tnack-new1 1taud1 1n lobblea
of federal buildings. Von Hollman tells It
lib It Is In "Stullng from the Blind."
HELICOPTER LADY -She'• only four feet, 11 lnchel tall, but you can bet
Oran*" County's first and only woman
helicopter pilot bu a bead start In her
determination to make 1 llvin& u a c:om-
lilmlal cbopper driver. She's Holly ·
Douglaa, granddaulbltr <( Don 1 l d
Douglas. He founded the Douglas AJrcron CA
Soul Satisfying View
When the sun is setting in the West, it ~reates some
magnificent scenes along the Orange Coast. Here
the view was enhanced by trees and sailboat. The
041L Y PILOT PHOTO '1 ltldl9N ltMlller
picture was taken from a hillside by Thurston In-..
termediate School in Laguna Beach.
Sup ervisor
Likes Site
h1 Tr ahuco -
Frustrated by Marine and San Dleeo
County o(ficials, opposition to a Camp
Pendleton airport. Supervisor Rooakf
Caspers of Newport Beach has come up
with a new proposed site fn the southeast '
part or the county. ·
He said on a tou r of the Trabuoo Can-
yon area he spotted a large expanse of
leveled ten-ain on the Traboco Plain
which might be a good jet airport site.
The location is directly south of the
county's O'Neill Pa rk and just west of
Coto de Caza, a private recreational
facility.
The property is owned by Rancho
1'-lission Vleja headed by Richard O'Neill.
It is an agricultural preserve used for
cattle grazing.
The proposed site is in the same vicini·
ty as the Bell Canyon airport wblch was
suggested in the Ralph M. PllNlOn! Com-
pany report in 1970.
When the Parsons report was made
prblic, homeowner groups in Mission
\'iejo north and west of the site protested
vigorously as did residents and city ot·
ficials in San Juan Capistrano and San
Clemente.
The two commwiitles would have been ,
in or near the takeoff pattern of the Bell . KOCE Pro gra m
Features Schmitz
Tliree Eve ni11gs
24 Arrested in Anaheim I Canyon Airport.
The site proposed by Caspen, although ,
I l miles from El Toro Marine Corps Air ·
Station, would create some flight path
A KOCE, channel 50 program in wb.ich
Congressman John G. Schm itz is in-
terviewed by Orange County newsmen
will be aired lhree evenings this n1onth
beginnins: at 6:30 pm. Monday.
Schmitz, who was defeated in his
primary bid for renomination as the
Republican candidate in the 35th District
by county Assessor Andrew J . Hinsha\v,
d..i!ICUSSeS his plans for the immediate
future 1tl the ball-boul' program. Schmitz
was the American lndependent Party's
presidential candidate.
"Focus Orange County," hosted by the
noncommercial station's Jim Cooper, will
be replayed at 8 p.m. on Thursdays Dec.
21 and 28, Oil channel 50.
Interviewing ~ls> are Jimr Deari,
executive editor of the Register; 1110mas
Keevll, editor of tbe DAILY PILOT, and
Howatd ~e-. J>OUtical writer for the
Los Angel.. Ttl!les.
Drug Raid; l\'.lore Expected conflict with that facility. It also bas a
handicap of 4,000-foot mountains directly
to the east.
Anaheim Police Chief David Michel
said today that the arrest of 24 persons.
includfhg 20 high school stud~nts Thurs-
day on drug sales charges, was only the
beginning of a drive to curb drug use
among teenagers.
He said undercover agents enrolled as
stude'nts on the campuses of various
schools in the 26-school district would
continue their investigation.
At the "same time, school Superin-
tendent Keol(ln Wines said drug use by
students has decreased considerably in
the past two years. The district exeplled
384 students for drug use in 1970 and only
22 so far this year.
The Anaheim arrests followed the
maWve r3¥1 staged by, 1..4>$ Alanti~s
police less tban two weeks ago when 27
were nabbed. A female widercover agent
enrolled a.t Lps AJamitos High School to
gather 'vldence in that city.
Mo3t Of the mests 'MJUrsday were
made at Savanna and Loara high schools.
Charges included sale and possession of
marijuana and dangerous drugs.
The Anaheim roundup differed from
Los Alamitos in that students were called
from their classes during school hours,
handcuffed and taken to the police sta·
tion. Chief f.olichel said 39 plainclothes of-·
ricer in two man teams made the arrests
following a six week investigation.
In Los Alamitos and students were ar-
rested in their homes late at night, a
method of operation similar lo adult drug
raids.
"There will be more arrests." the chief
said. "We have warrants for 'two more
adults and several juvenlles." He added
that house parties would be the target for
future raids.
The students arrested 1n Anaheim, as
did those in Los Alamitos, ranged In age
from J4 to 17 years. 1\01,.0 are girls . •
Caspers said he had asked Robert
Bresnahan, county director of av1ation, :
to check the feasibjlity of the proposed •
site. Bresnahan said today that be bad·
not yet been able to study the proposal.
Caspers said he still feels that Camp .
P e n d t e t o n is the ideal location for a
large jet airport but realized that it will
take an act of Congress to overco1ne the ·
t.1arine opposition.
Weapons Test Kills 2
CHlNA LAKE {AP) -An explosion
killed two civilian employes and injured
another at the China Lake Naval:
Weapdns Test Center, a Navy spokt1man ~
said Thursday. He said the workers had
placed two ounces of plastic bonded ex·;
plosive inside a dye assembly and were·
pre~lpg it,for a test wbtn tile bla1t ~
curred Wednesday, ::
In just 2 years . . • ·
ou tselling every
European car
'(except one)!
.,
LOOK WHAT'S STANDAR D EQUIPMENT ...
e RADIAL PLY TffiES e FRONT DISK BRAKES
e FRONT BUCKET SEATS e FULL CARPETING
e RACK AND PIN ION STEERING
SEE ONE. •
D"""">r Tllo New Car • , •
"G•lfle • Te11do"
'
• TRY ONE • • • BUY ·:oNE , , , TODAY!
•e>ra.ngt Counrr'• TomUy of Ftnt Cart-
l. ( l I I 1 • ' I {
"
name or '!!le New ~, ,
"Ge14-Teeedl"
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-.
' ' I ' I
. •
I
L
...
--_.,.. ..... ~ -·---·. ---'
4 Do\ll. Y PILOT
$ope~· ·Couniy
~vernment?
ISUPER GOV DEPT. -Ronald W.
~'!"'"• the fmancial whir; from Lldo
l e Who leads our Orange County Board
o Supervisors, appears to be continuing
h campaign to get us freed from the
c of small government. Speclflcally,
' ~n doesn't seem to care too much for
c~ies.
/1Caspers repeated his lheoMes on the
sfbject only yesterday while speaking
t>tfore about 100 shakers and movers in
~r region up at the Orange County
t"};>ruro of'Town Hall in Anaheim.
!Our e$f:eemed board chalhnan got
[lying on the theme that lots of things our
ct,ties are doing, like fire and police pro.
tdCtion. a sort ol county super ... govem-
~ent could do a lot better.
" HE ENVISIONS a government panel of
about 20 representatives to run things.
one rep for about every 150.000 or so
Orange Countians.
lt is presumed, then, that what is left
or municipal government, if anything,
\vould be around for lesser tasks like con·
trolling architectural standards or maybe
picking up litter in the streets.
\Veil. Mr. Caspe r s' governmental
lheories are certainly interesting. or
course, when he got himsell elected to
the Board or Supervisors, his elevation
came without any experience in local
government. Which might explain why he
puts the knock on the job cities do. But
on the other hand, it may be be just
thinks big.
FridlJ, Otco-15, 19n
.. ,..,........,
He's Qui~ a Boy
.. Paul Jess, 18-month.,,ld boy of Perth, Australia, bas eaten a highly
poisonous snake and is apparenUy none the worse for it -though
the snake did not recover. It was a baby dugite, and because of lts
smaµ size, probably didn't possess much·venom.
Canadian Lets Plane Land
After Mixed-up ffijacking
•
22 Rescued-Poliee ke •
As Yessel 'Frencli Conriedion D~gs
•
Goes Down
MWll (UPI) -Thi Coell Guord
reported the.....,. toda~D mm Wbo
•-Ibo lloklPi· r Unooln ~ o1f I"-coast Of Rleo 'l'bundly. '"'\ •
l'lfe. ol the crowmea were mcued
from a Ille boal lborlly aftor the a3-loot
-~ lo two and ,...t clown. 'Ille Oll!On, wear I• 1 Ille jackets, were
picllled ap from the water durlol the •. ' A <lout Guard spot_.. 1114 the
aeareb WU eootlnq)ng fleca• there WU
ooalUalcm over 00w mony -wore -..cl. Earlier reporia lndlcaled the
lhlp WU nwmed by ZI or 21 mm. but
Bobama Lloel ol Miami, the lhlp'1
ownor, said ·19day 11 believed an aboard
bid DOW been reec:oed. •
''11ml'I 1'btt. we underttand;' tbq're
all OK. AU "" -la they blld -ad IOI off the boal lilt," tilt llDn olllce
-Mike Tnlyao, iaid. TIJO oi.at Guard Nid Ibo I ....... Et·
-unit lbout loor miles oil the -b coast ol Puerto Rico, -ol l!an Juan,
aboot 5.p.m. Tbundo!'. • . Burger ~lap .
,,,. Bobamas Lines alao ..... the
Layla Express and Jo!Jnny ·Eiriress, two
ships scl7.ed by CUbarl autboriUes for
allel!Ocny being Involved in coanter-
revOlutkloary activity. There was no in-
dicalioo lhat political strife played a role
Conducwr in· Hiding
in.;:: :l::'tu:.i: =~ ~ in WASlllNGTON {AP) -Hanler lo fmd than a good fiv"""11 cigar Is the train
Miami said the Lincoln Expms wu cal" c:ooductor wbo told Chief Justice Warren ·
rying 5,000 l<lll5 Of gypsum rock from E. Burger lhal the only way to escape
San.to ·Domingo to~ Juan. cigar smote was to go to another car.
The five ~aboard the cutter The Penn Central Railroad knows who
Sagebrush said the ship just began spilt· and where be Is, but a opoblman told a
ting ip . half and all aboard abandoned reporter thilt the conductor did not care
!hip safely. to be Interviewed. ·
Seas in the search are& wt!tt mode.rate "I don't wan't to get involved," the in-
with winds Rusting to 15-20 knots, the villl>Je conductor wu reported to have
Efforts· to bear the conductor'• version
of the incident fell nat. At the Supreme
Oourt, press officer 11aJ1nini E. Whitting-
ton said Burger cooside!ll the incldenl
closed and ~ not tell the press wha t
train the chief jllllice and his wife were
oo when they ran into the offensive cigar
. -fimoke NOY. 28.
2 AmericaD.8 Held
' . Coast Guan! said. ~ WU!lam Qmlll, dirtctot Of pul>-
At lint light of day an lni.nsive In-lie reJjl!\.!!11 for the Pem Central. Qmllz• ROME (AP) -' TwO' Americanl w.re
. temational search team went into action. added th~~the incldeat was -A1.1A-.1
A .~ -h • 1~ ·· ·~ .• -, -= among 21 youlhs held in jail today for mong WC' 11.:I"cu.1._ m.w !.~ m ~ seart.u "very u were the Sage Brlllh, SS Amourra, SS 11 turned out . poU..--1nvestlgaUon al vlnleot leftist
Seatrain Delaware, SS Wacos~, tWo sped. at leUt. B rioting and fire bombini that turned cen-
Coast Guard HU·16 choppers, one Coast days Jater and Tramportatioll ttar-Rome's old-streets into a bat--
Guard plan~ and a Navy rescue team Secretary John Volpe. tleground Tuesday night. The Americans,
helicopter and the -HMS Sirus with ~7 fed to a ban on. described by police ai students, gave
helicopter. The U.S. Coast Guard cutter smotmg lo Pem Central'• their names as Brian Cox, 23, from
Point Whitehorse was en route to t be club car between Waablngton Houston, Tex., and Lee Davis Kennedy of
IN FACT, you ltlight take as an ex·
am ple of regional government his own
Fifth Supervisorial District. which covers
most ot the Orange Coast from Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa southerly to San
Clemente. Right now. the Fifth District
gets lots of attention from the whole five-
member board. That's because here is
where the action is. We've got the growth
and the boom.
MONTREAL {AP) -An armed young
Canadian estronged from his pregnant
wife · surrendered to his father and a
psychiatrist to lace bijacklog charges
after ordering a jetliner "fim one way
and then the other" for 1011.1 hours across
eastern Canada 'nrursday.
at the tail of the jet Until a government,_scen_e_. _____________ v_or1<_. __ . ________ ;,.,~_w:.:.:.est:.:.:.Co:.:.:.•i:::na.::... _______ _
plane brought the youth's lather, John•-
Some old-timers along this coastline.
however, can well recall when it wasn 't
ever tbu!I. We were down in the coastal
stick!I. Tbe. big act.ion wa!I in the central
county.
So it was. that the Fifth Di.mid
supervisor, wbetbtt be was N. E. West
or Heinz Kaiser or Ben Reddick or Claire
Nelson, had to fight for every county
dime that got spent along the coasWne.
AND THEY WERE BATTLING
against four other votes from supervisors
who were looking out for the central
county.
By the time AJton Allen got the job, the
boom was ·on in the Fifth District and
things began to swing the coastline's
way. Mr. Caspers has enjoyed the same
wartn climate since he's had the job..
BUT TIMES CHANGE. And one of
these years, they might decide to tear
down the . central county and rebuild it.
Not a bad notion, you know.
And the Fifth District might fmd itself
outvoted 4 to 1 once again when the oew
streets and other projects get passed out
up at the County Seat. Then we might
wonder how great regional government
Is.
Some otller Wrong Thinkers, of course,
might simply suggest that local town
government is our best govemrnent
because it bas a better chance of t?eing
responsive to its people and their needs.
They might also point a finger at
Sacramento and say, "There's what big
government has done for you, folks •• !'
THESE SAl\-1E WRONG Thinkers
might put 'P.tr. Caspers' super·guv theory
in reverse, suggesting that actually, as
cities take control of more and more ter-
ritory, t e is less and less. need for a
county mment, save for oj>eration of
health, Uare and justice sectors.
Ind , it seems the kind o! local con-
trol y like may depend a lot on where
you and view tt from.
Ron pers, cf cour1e, !its at the
County
Larry ldarweU Slllllfo!'ll, 21, of Sainl
John, N.B., releaSed 57 persons IJllharm.
ed before be .'nlttd ol a Quebecair
BAClll at the <DI lit a IOODllll Dlgbt
from Wabash, Nfid,. that ~ In Mon-
treal, went oo to-Ottawa and then return-
ed to Mootreal.
Anned police waited in a ~ Inlet
B52s in. Record
Numbers Attack
Enemy Buildups
SAIGON (AP) -U.S. BS2 bombers
new a reconi 15 missioM against North
Vietnam 'lbursday and today, the U.S.
Command anJ)(U)Ced. Nearly 50 of. the
eight-jet bombers dropped about 1,400
tons of explosives, most of it just above
the eastern end of the demilitarized zone.
It was the eighth day of heavy BS2 al·
tacks m the area where beayy con-
centrations of North Vieb:iamese troops
and trucks were reported. lut" week. •
A B52 m•saton narmaUy• CCIDlilta .of
three planes. 'Ille hlgbeat .umber
previously flown against North Vi-
was 15 on Nov. 22, the U.S. O>mmand
said. .
Most of the mis8ioos In the North
bet"""1 noon Tburoday and noon today
bit an area 22 to U milol-thealt Of tbe
P«t of Doog lloi. But l.l!o othen hit In
the area of the Mu Gl!l Pus Into Laoe
and the Ho Chi Minli Trlll.
'Ille U.S. Comnwuwl reported 16 other
B52 mluiorw; were .Oown during the M--
bour period, lncludinl two aplnlt
lariels in the DMZ. ,.ven aplnlt
targets In Quang Tri'Province, below the
DMZ, and seven-elsewhere in South Viet-
nam.
Slllllford, from Labrador City, .Nlld., to
meet his son.
Or. Bruno Cormier, a Montreal
~chiairist, also talked to yowig Stan-
ford, who during the !light earlier had
asked to be Down to Vancouver. on the
west c:oast, and to Winnipeg. in mi<l-
Canada.
. "lllf•'dioqed llis-mlld •very lliJnllle."
an Orficia1 ~'.~"l'tilj ·l!~ wera nm
Wl!' ;way .. li!On the olllel'.-.,.,
°'ileward ... ~~-~led
with perS11!'!i~~· llt . plane rtturn to i~·ftazi Ottawa and to . surrender. ~ . .,
"ApparenUy she COl1'iriced ·him be was
:ff~:i u:'d. and shoult.Jee a ·doctor," ~n
Quebecair v.,. President Andre Liz·
ote said stanford pulled a .22-callber rifle
on the station manager at the Wabush
•airport, in the west Labrador part of
Newfoundland, and forced him lo get on
the plane with him.
The plane landed ftrst at Montreal,
where during a 75-minute stop the youth
Jet a stewardess and the 52 other
passengers get oH. Then it Dew on to Qt.
tawa with Stanford, Miss Cote, another otewanless, the pilot and copilot abqard.
Alter 15 minutes in Ottawa, they return-
ed to Montreal to await Stanford's father
and the psyclllatrist.
' ' DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
~li¥tfY of tht Dally Pilot
is guarantttd
~..W..,: If _,.... M Ml II•~• ?fwr
...... llf ,, ....... ull aMI .,...,. C., WIM ............. ,... Cdt .,.. ...... .rll ,, . ...,... .............. .....,,.,.. ............ ,_...., .,., .... ~.w•....,
......,, ul .... I """" d ........... rw.c..•---.... .,. ....
Tffe,hOnts
Southeast Floods Feared
Thunderstorms Hit L~uuiana, Mususippi
-C•llferwl•
"' ...
...
:I{
=tr~F~ .. !i&~;:=
I .)
' ' ""wtA1Hlt t010CAST.
I
' r-
Freshly -cut trees,
··Mer..Y Qhristmas
prices.
If you're looking for a big
beautiful tree this 1a11DD, oome ... t11.
You'D find Scolcll Pine Ind W11191n
1>oug1a Ar aulsln 11 tr.. Iii
various sl2"S and~ to llOld
all your favorite ornaments.
Scotch Pine
4'.5'
7'.81
7.99
11.tt
. Western Dougtas Fir
2' -11
)'.4'
""5'-6'
7'.i'
9•.10·
12'-14'
1.59
2.59
4.19 ' 5.19
7.19
14.19
AH many other vorieties to choose freM.
' • 'CHRISTMAS
POINsmtAS
6" Pot filll lloorn
2"
Cu.atom Flocking
available in
white and colors.
sl oil PU POOT
JCPenney 1119••• .. here 91191'Y-' FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH ONLY
•
·-• I -
I
•
•
l
•
I
i
'
That's Shoe Biz
Actress Ali McGraw rests her weight on one foot as
she has her shoeprints and bandprints imbedded
in Grauman's Chinese Theater Thursday. Miss Mc-
Graw is the first person in three years to be so
honored. She wrote the phrase 'Peace and Love'
in the cement.
•
Darwin 'Demoted'
State Board Downplays Tl~eory in· Texts
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The aaid !'"_~ attemP! to have
Calllomla Slate Board or the ooc:mne ol -lai crea-
Education, rejecting p I e a s tion Inserted In the tull dur-
from aome of the nation's top __ -- ---_
ecltntiatl, haa voted 1 o -------d:ad• Darwin'• theory or 'May I ••fl~ tcltJa. ~:•:., :.m.,::·~~~:c· texts 011t acpoi .. 111,
1
that
And the board left the door tee h r • t an •
open Thlll'Sday to poS8ible '"011ld like equal
later rewrltlng of the texts for t·ime.'
Inclusion or the Btble--0rlenled doctrine of apecial creation __ ,.,. ___ ,.,._,.-,.,._,.-,.,._,.-.. ,._,._,._,.,._,._ ..
1kle by aide with the theory of iog discwalons of the changes.
evolution.
"~Y I "SAY, without
apology, that we Christians
would lite equal time," board
member Eugene Ragle of
Ro6evillesald.
National Acade!llY ol SdenCe
urged the bol!'d DOI ~ loj:lode
the docVlne 'of opedal-.....
lion In the IUtl, lntmded !or
use beglnnlng In September
197t
Darwin's 111<011', put forth In
1859 in hi• hi!toric "Origin or
the see<:iea by Natiiral Selec-tion" hold! that man and other
species evol'tjed from simpler
forms of ur •. with tile apecies
hest adapt«! -to the en-
vironment being tbe ones
which survived.
BELIEVERS IN the doc-
trine of special creation say a
creator designed man and
other species in their present
form.
Dogs Fi1ul '
Surprise
SAN DIF.GO (AP )
Marine• clop trained to
sn1U out marijuana turned
a surprise .inapec:tion at
San Diego's (.'OllOty honor
camp lnto something of an
?mbarrawnent.
n1e dogs found some, a.II
right -in the safe in the
honor camp dlrector's of·
fice.
There was none in the
beds or lockers or the 26
men convicted or various
crimes in the past.
The marijuana which
t h e five dogs smelled
Wednesday through the
metal ol Lee Bennett 'e
floor safe luid been con·
fir.l:ted earlier, Bennett
explained.
1 The board ordered editorial
changes streaslng that
Darwin'• theol')' la speculative
and not !act. That change will
be requinod in basic science
texts intended f o r kin-
dergarlnen through eighth
grader• before the state will
"OB, YES, I will, without
specific references to the
Biblical account or to a
creator," said Dr. John Ford,
a San Diego physician who is
the board's vice pre5ident.
Asked by reporters bow the
books could dlscu!s the doc-
trine or special c r e a t i o n
without referring to a creator
or God, Ford saJd : ''Evolution
as taught in schoola today iS
antitbeistic and is just as
much a religlon as other
religious ideas."
As presently written, one ot ~---------~
buy th• books. •
Board members will have
veto Power over the rewriting.
At least one board member
Nineteen California -based
Nobel prize winners and lbe·
-.
the texts says this about the
origin or i~e:
"II la known that life began
in the aeas."
Under a rewriting example PfOIJQoed to ·lhe.. "®<d. ,that
passage w.ould be changed to
read:
"Most scientists believe that
life may have begtln in the
St!a."
Aide Named
Mrs. Ben Kraut of Costa
Mesa has been appointed
chairman of the Pitier
College Parents' Association
for Costa hlesa. She will serve
-'iS liaison between the college
and parents of local students.
DAIL v l'!lOT IS
Three File Suit
•
To Free Newsman
LOS ANGELES (AP l -
Three newsmen have filed a
Superior Courl suit conte.odi.ng
tbat Loi Angeles OJW1ty Is
spending public runds illegally
to keep newsman William
Farr in jail.
The suJt. filed Thursda y,
contends the money is being
illegally spent becau5e Farr
wa5 jailed in violation of his
constitutional rights.
SllERll-~F PETE Pitchess
was named as principal defen-
dant.
Superior Court Judge David
A. Thon1as ordered Pitchess to
appea r in court oext Wednes-
da y to show cause why
Farr should not be released.
But Thdm as refused to issue
an Immediate restraining
order fre~ing Farr.
Farr, a Los Angeles Tin1es
reporter, has been in jail for
18 days on an indefinite
sentence for contempt of
court.
The suit was filed by Ru~y
VIiiasenor, a retired Times
reporter; ~1el Leroy Lieder. a
Los Angele& Heralcl·EDmlner
photographer, aod JUUi A.
Darker, a KABC newnrtter.
FARR WAS JoUed "ofler 116
refu i5ed to dl.,:tose the aource
of a slory he wrote two years
ago about the Charles Manaon
"family." .::
V N ITED
STATES r
NATION AL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
NOW OPIN
SATURDAYS
9 to 1 P.M.
MON.•ntUIS. '1~1 P.M.
FllDAYS 1M P.M.
(714, 140-1211. Lec-.4 .. i s..c.... ...... c... ....
a.ti. Viet,.,_......,..
D. DEAN HEISER
I
Dense Fog -fuuses-2-3-_:
Merce.des·Benz announces
precisely the kind of mod~l change
pyou expect fr9m Mercedes-Benz. Car Pileup; 18 Hurt
LIVERMORE (AP) -An
icy pass was cleared of
wreckage after more than 2.3
cars and trucks smashed up in
dense fog, injuring 18 persons
including two men burned
from hydrochlorie acid that
was spewed over the highway.
"The cars and trucks were
lald out like a train wreck one
after the other," said lligbway
Patrol Sgt. Edwin Main. "It
looked like a bomb exploded
on lhe roadway." He said it
was a miracle no one was kill-
ed.
"People were still scrtsm-
Jng in the wreckage while ...
ktpl piling Into them," I ~
driver said. ·
The eastbound lanes ·ot
Interstate ~ in Altamont
Paaa coonectlng t h e San
Francisco Bay area and the
Central Valley were closed for
five hours Thursday as crews
cleaned up crushed vehicles
and .spilled truck cargo that
Included the aeid,. paint, glue
and paper pnldqcts.
The Highway Patro! u.id the
crasb OC<UrTed an... a tzuck-
trailer._Jacklmlred BCTOl.'I the
hll(hway. Veblcles behind ,
blinded by the fog, were
Police Hold
Cusf,odian
In Murikr
NORWALK (AP) -Richard
Eugene Juarez, an II-year-old
9Chool custodian, was booked
for lnvettigaUon or murder
lbunday ln the stabbing
death of an hon or student
who bad been tryin_g to defend
anolhtr youth being attacked
by a gang, officials said.
Sis other youtha were book-
ed IW -igatlon of aosault
"1th a deodly -..apoo follow· Inc 'Nedneaclay'a tnlllng al
Jobn Glenn High SdJool. They
.,.,., turned owr to, Juv1nile
authoriileJ. Their 'Jea ranged
from lf to 17. I
'{'1'le victim, )' r a n c i s co
Villel& Jr.1 a 1traJeht A ttu·
deol and Clip\aln of !ht -team, .... ilaln in ltonl of the
IChool cafeleril wheo he tried
to .. defend rlt·year--old
sraduate of GJ.nn l!igb.
unable to stop on the ice.
Debris was scattered for a
half mile.
Officers said· the truck
driver Was trying to stop for
three cars whose occupants
were waving him down.
Valley Memorial Hospital
here reported treating 15
persons for facial injurlee.
fractures, lacerations and the
two persons for the minor acid
burns.
The hospital said Claude J.
Maddix of Vaj.lejo was in
critical condition with face
and bead injuries and Steven .~~f San Francisco was In
tertoUs condition with muIU.• lrijuries. 'V"
Year-round
'School Bid
C.il:icized
' -LOS ANGEUES (AP ) -
There is."no factual evidence"
to show that year-round
sdlooia Would provide better
educatiori.al opportunity for cl·
ty studenti, a school district
staff study says. ·
THE STUDY, released
Thursdp; .. coocluded that a
.,..~ program would in
fact create a · "substantial"
•financial drain on the district.
"Despite, t be optimistic
claims of proponents of year-
round--sehool-)>{ans,--we-have
found no basis, In UJeory or
practice, for expecting any
significant advpttage from a
s"'itch to ~ ·year.round ~
gram, the study says.
"There i5 ob factual
evidence'\o·sut)port'tbe claims
for im~· te·arning,
remedlatlOO. , acceleration or
cost saving.••
c:;~rty-seven schools I n
omia are currently on year-round schedules. Stile or.
flclals say iOO &Ch>ol• wiU be
using the program by ...t
year.
11IE YEAR·ROUl(D
program ~OWi ~I to
hOUse more otuden\I by uolng
a staa!'ffil schedule wtth
aborter. more frequent vaca-
tions.
f MllVTlll<nlnl
Whatoodoctors1Jtommend --10rpqnts 1n Pain?
Docton all over the coaatry dispense over 50,000,000
of these tablets to their patients each year.
There are many medic.liou a
phyaidan or denU.t can pre-
.cribe Fbt_ pa.In. Some ani n11r-
colic, mai~ are avail•hle only
on prl!ICripdon. But there is one
pain reliever, av1Uable wltht\lt
pretCription, docton diepenee
a1aln and apln .. , An111ein.
Etch year, docton Jiwi OYf!r
150,000,000 Anacin tablet• to
tbeirP.tientl in pain. If docton
think en~ 1bou' Anlcin to dllpenee alf thole tablet., what
i,.tte.r reco1.1uJ10nd1tion Clfl you
Allr whfn you are in pain?
ton 1"eC01'1'1l'Mnd moat than any
other lee:din1 tabl4it. Headache all dental p&Jn iA
relieved inc.redibly fa1t; minor pain1 oC art.hrilit are depend-
abl y eal!M!d for houn; even the
aches and pain• of colda and flu respond to Anacin. So the ten· aion and deprea.ion that can be
caultd by tuch peln wllJ be re-
lieved. too, And mtlllol\I take
Anacin without. .tomaeh u.pteC.
M' ODEL CHANGES at Mercedes:'>
1 Benz arc inspired not by the trends
of fashion but by the thrust of engineer-
ing -=· One such change becoincs official today> the Meradito-Benz 250
Sedm his evolved into the 280 Sedm-
without stretching the body one inch or
-.'ltoopinJ to the &lightest liint of styling .trickm-. .
The technical improvements that in·
spired this change ,willsetdle280further
apart than evcr·from other cars in jts
class. '
Should you invest your $8,968* in
the 280 Sedan? Study its engineering re-
finements .. Weigh all the facts. Measure:
this car's performance agaim:t your needs
-then. decide.
Remarkable new engine
The cnginccn hid the U• biggest news
under the hood.
Fresh-frotn· a long laboratory incu-
bation is a new 2.8-litre douhle-ov~
Juad.amultaft engine. Hemispherical
combustion chambers, 2-stagc dual com-
pound carburetor-this lovingly assem-
bled Six could be mistaken for a high-
pcrformance sports car engine. (Note
that it revs up to 6500 rpm.)
°'The crankshaft is something of .a
masterpiece," reports Britaib's Autocar
Nn.1111irw bHStl dawblt owrllead &anullaf tJ.
magazine, "running in seven main bear-
ings, and every one of the twelve webs
incorporating a counterweight." The
goal: low engine vibration.
The men · who designed this engine
ii med. for efficiency instead or brute pow-
er. You get the running smoothness you
eipect (rom a car of tbis class. Some-
1hing you may nor exPect from a car of
this cla~s: the 280 engine,.S restrained
appetite for gasoline.
As-agile-as before-0
That engine can be lighter and less bulky
than those used in other $8000 sedans
because the 280 Sedan itself is lighter
and less bu!fy. •
It ir a( m;ittttrint fact that the top J
domaric "llmtl)'"' sedans alliwi11t at least
Ital/ a ION moni, and mtaJllf"I! a full 3 feel
lonttr. tllon tlu 280,S1da .. _Sca111 wo'i.ur
that 1/uy"" rh.., hu1• V-8 tnBiHU-
Yet the cx111 bulk of these larger can
llCCllll mono a IDlllCt of show than aua
Aferc1d1s-81nz 280 Stdan isn't jusl a changed car; ir's an improwd car~
roominess: the 280 matches them for enginttring !ith the 280 Sedan.
interior space-and actually exceeds The body of your 280 is an all-welded
them in trunk capacity. steel structure so strong that a separate
Those $8000 .. luxury" sedans art frame is redundant. That bOdy is the
impressive standing in a driveway. But frame.
compare driving them with driving the Preciou5 weight is saved. Enormou5
280 Sedan, out in the real wo1:d. streD.gth is built in. Bolts won't tug loose
You'll discovct lhat thC 280 twirls over the miles because there are no bolts.
through a turning circle of only 36.4
feet (about the same as a 1itile VW 1200
.. Beetle"). Those larger cm don't.
The 280 nips into parking spou those
heftier sedans have to pass up.
And you'll slip through holes in city
traffic where dreamboats dare not go. •
Fillly iiiilependent suspension
Let olhers brag about how big and or-
nate their cars arc. You can brag about
how w~ll yo 280 Sedan bandies.
•'... mo11 controllablt ltiglt 1~ed
It t'W ltlttd."
That was Motor Trmd magazine's reac-
tion to the 250 Sedanj and the 280's han·-
dlin1 is unchan&td.
This is because· its superb suspen·
sion is unchanged: a four-wheel, fully
independent system with a diagonal·
pivot rear swing axle. Gas-pressurized
shock absorben and anti-sway bars front
and rear arc standard componen1s. Also
standard: 175 SR/14 radial-ply tires on
wheel rims 5'h inches wide.
The eogineen .fitted an additional
shock absorber!to the 280, in an unusual
spot-the steering sys tem.,
U1tellaN11d: lflldl1't1Ullltt ,,., ltu#>l"'l"-
J nstead or squandering your money
on hollow shett metal and styling that is
SOOD p&.\K, you i"Nll il in_ f\UlCluntntal
280 offtrs rli1liu:11ryof11fici1>tt 1i:1.
Run a finger over the finish . You will
fttl why it took several hours to pain1,
bake, and poli5h to that high gloss.
Numerous ou1er body seams were filled
and made invisible before painting.
When you buy an $8,000 au1omobile,
you deserve such fastidious touches.
4-wbeel disc brakes
You get four-wheel disc brakes on your
280 as standard equipment.
Consider that the front brake discs
measure almost 11 inches in diameter,
virtually lhe same size as the front discs
on the famous Mercedes-Benz 450SL
spons model. The 280's brakes are pow·
er assisted, of course; another standard
equipment fearure.
4-speed automatic shift
Your 280's automatic-transmission is so
quick-sh.if ting that even sporting drivers
have ex~res~ surprise--: and approval.
You can set it in ORlVE and leave it
there; you can also shift' through the
forwud gean by haod.
The padded 1hiftt lever sits within
easy reach on a central console. Of you
prtfer, 1 column shift lever can be fitted
at no txttl cost.)
You are nOf charged extn for this
automatic transmiss1on, or £or "°"""
steering and power brakes, or for an
electrically · heated rear window. Tbq
are all pan of the 2801s base price.
Even air conditioning falls under the
beading of standard--cquipmcnL You'll
count · four s.eparite oudetS on the in-
strument panel-two for the driver, twO
for his front-scat passenger.
-Comfort not forgotten
The painstaking Mercedes-Benz enai•
neers found one subtle way after another
Mercedes-Benz motor can:
from $15,182" 10 $6,439"
Mttcedn-Beru offers 1 '"' ranae ol
models. Here 1n 1ug1u1ed reuil prica
!Of 7 of the mott popular types:
450SLC C.OUrc
450SL Coupe/Roldlia
210SE4.5$Na11
210Cou~
210 S~
210 Sedali
220 Dinel Sed1a
$15,IU
Jll,761
Slo,171 s 9,614 s 1,961 ...... s '6,otJf ....... ~ ....... ....,..--.. "'""""""-.-
·-., .. on4 -"-II °"" C..,.. ... ..,.,. -""""'·8-• Noni. "-iu. IK. ""
to make the 280 an eminently livable
machine.
You sit high enough to see the R*f
ahead. Large glass areas enhance Yisi-
bili[y. Your body it supponed fi.rmly irt
seatS built around a nttwork of coil
s prlng-s, notchccqrfolittrtut>l>Cf.
You needn't fumble around to fine!
the headlight dimmer switch or wind-
shield wiper and washercontrols.Tbey're
a fingertip away in a pod on the left «
the steering column; you can work them
without taking a hand off the wheel
More than status
The new 280 Sedan is plainly not $8,961•
wonh of bigness, or styling, or suns.
Buy it and you buck the trends of the
"luxury" class head-on.
Your satisfying reward: ownership
of a precision machine engineered to
outlive trends. One test drive will con--
firm your wisdom in choosing it.
Arrange _ with your authorized Mer-
cedes-Benz dealer to take thlt test drive
soon. for more useful facts about the
280 and other models, cJip the coupon
and mail it today. You will receive a free ·
color brochure. / r------------·--..
I ®Jim Siemon• lmport1, Inc.
120 W. W1r"1r A'•"•• ---
S1!'ll1 A"•· C1ll~ar•l• tJ701
"°Plr•K 1tnd me: your (uU-cok>f bfoc:haN I ofthe,\\n<:edc•·lkru matorcua.
I ·-... ~----------Ci11------------
L::?:--_~~~~JI>--~~
I
Jim Slemons Imports, Inc 120w. warner Avenuo,Sant• Ana,Ca111omI1.92101 Phone :-714-546-411' ·
Yqu. aea, Anacin con ta Ina mo" or the pain rellover 4oc-
When you're hi pain,•why
don't you follow the pr_pctk.-a of
to many docton and take the • tablet a doctor mi1ht ,live you-..-
fn h~ ewrt o~. Tilke Anactn~ 1---::---;-------------------------------------------------------~·-----.,...---' , .
'
\ • • •
,
• DAD .Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Care for ·the Future
Environmentalists and developers alike owe at least
a nod of thanks to the city of Huntington Beach. City
council men have adopted an emergency ordinance es-
tablWtlng guidelines and procedures for the submission
of environmental impact reports.
The emergency nature o( the Jaw was intertded to
avoid a 120-day moratorium on impact requirements,
passed by the state legislature.
While hundreds of California cities were clamor.
ing Jor such a rnoratoriu1n, Huntington Beach city
staff and city councilmen were ready to move ahead
and implement the spirit of the state's 1970 Environ-
mental Quality Act.
Councilmen are aware that this is a city where
environmental concern has become a number one pri·
ority. In the midst of rapid urban sprawl, the city's
residents have demanded greater care in the town's
future development.
Co uncilmen couJ d have taken the easy way out of
the environmental controversy and hidden behind the
moratorium. But they had the courage not t9.
' Help for Poor Readers
Teaching a child to read proficiently is one of. t~e
most valuable things schools have to offer. Yet it is
well-known that no matter how good or expensive their
programs, all schools do fail to reach substantial nwn-
bers of children.
The Fountain Valley School District is one system
U1at is at least making an all-out effort to be successful
with every child.
ln most schools a child who once falls behind
usuaJly is doomed to spend the rest of his life as an
inadequate reader. But in Fountain Valley there is ho.pe.
boys, participated in the reading clinic program. Prior
to entering, they were ave raging fJve months ol reading
progress for a JO-month school year. In the first year
of reading clinics, they averaged 11 months of progress.
This record speaks for Itself. Fountaln Valley 's school
system is once again to be commended for pioneering
a program that is unique and succemut.
Dc!t th of a Doryman
Forever, or so it seems, Newport Bearh has capital-
ized on the men who make up Its colorful dory fishing
fleet.
They are an important part of the seafartng char· ·
acter of this city of sleek sailbo~ta and powerful motor·
cruisers. They'~e a little part of what is special about
li.ving in Newport Beach.
But it seems everybody has profited but the dory-
men themselves. •
They scrape a living together, toiling from three in t~e morning until sometimes very late ln the afternoon.
First at sea. and then on the beach selling the day's
catch.
For only the second time in the history of the New-
port dorymen, a tragedy has l>efallen the fleet.
It could not be a sadder tale than one of the death
of a 2S..year man of the sea and his pretty three-year-
old daughter. They drowned Tuesday off Huntington
Beach.
The friends of doryman Allen Knight have started
a collection for Mrs. Knight and their four other children.
.'\ dollar or two, or a toy, would be a meaningful way to
cele brate this Christmas sehson.
. -
Each of the district's 17 schools Jfas three reading
clinics. and they are aimed squarely at children who
have the basic mental ability to read well, but who for
some reason have not learned.
Last year about 1,000 children, 80 percent of them
Others with feeling can help, too. By sending a
check lo Mrs. Dora Knight, 224 N. Newport Blvd., Apt.
2. or by bringin~ a toy by the fishing fleet at the New-
port. Pier any time after mid-morning when the boats
are m.
'I guess I could slay the dragon with this, sire. . . he might
die laughing.'
Celebration
Of Christmas
A 'New' Idea
~YDNEY fHARRI~ = Christmas wasn't celebrated as a
festivity ror the first thousand years of
Christendom; during that time, perhaps,
people spre8.d the good feeling over the
whole year, instead of squeezing it into a
couple of weeks and then reverting to
, nature the rest of
the year, as we do
now. • • •
An .. extemi}oran·
eous" listener is
someone who is busy
thinking up his re-
plies while you .are
still talking. • • •
We look back on the 1past with longing
because it can't be changed; it is the on-
ly part or our lives not subject to
dangerous vicissitudes.
• • • lINHAPPINE~ DOES not so much
consist in not getting what tA·e want, as In
not wanting it after we get it. (This i!I
\vhy happiness does not consist in fulfill-
ment of our wants , but in satisfaction of
our needs.) -• • •
It is impossible to write a book about
humor that is funny, and no genuinely
comic writer has ever tried it -all the
books dissecting humor are composed by
grimly sober pedants. • • •
The paradox in reading Is that unless
you read enough you can't even un-
derstand your own thougblii -but if you
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
I'm disappointed nobody bas seen
the positive side of the Fountain
Valley flood danger. We could be-
gin to be a genuinely water-
oriented community every winter,
whlch might help jack up property
values again after the fl<lOd de-
stroys them. -J.R.
n.11 IMflllre nflldl rNl!fn' ll'lew.. M l
MC.tUMltf .... et .. -· hM ,_ "' ,....,. ,_ Cl__., ....... IHlllY 1'11111.
•
continue reading beyond the optlmwn
point, you tum trom a thinking reader
to a mere memory bank. • • •
BAD BOOKS generally sell more
copies than good books for the simple
and human reason that bad books tell us
what we like to hear, while good books tell
us what we ougbt to hear.
• • •
Science arises out of play . more than
we realize; we au know that astronomy
came from astrology, and chemistry
from alchemy, but few know what
modern mathematics and probability
theory arose when a gambling aristocrat
asked Pascal to calcul8te the odds on a
popu1ar dice game. • • •
THE MOST incisiv_e piece on politics
I've read in a long time -and whlch
quite transcends partisan poUtical " dif-
ferences -is Kurt Vonnegut's essay on
"winners and losers" in tbe November
issue of Harper's magazine. • • •
Tiiough they will strenuously deny it,
most men don't care much for a woman
wtth a highl y-developed sense of humor;
they "'ould rather be with someone dull,
who will-adore-them, than-someone
bright , who might laugh at them.
•
Expatriates By Choice
LONDON -Once an American
businessman is settled in England, it can
be difficult to persuade him to return
home. Nearly every major U.S. company
wllh a branch in Britain has found this to
be so. In fact , a growing oumber of e"t-
patriate American executives choose to
quit their )Obs rather than go back to
corporate headquarters.
A NEW EMPLOYMENT agency,
American Management Resources, has
be<n belpln( to llnd jobs for these reluc-
tant repatrtates since last summer.
Every month AMR ICDds out anooymous
resumes ,to more qian 1,000 companies.
The agency charges no fee for It!
services; It supports Itself throu&h con-
trlllutlonl !rom Amerlcon and European
bUslnessts.
AMR 11 directed by Kenneth Brown, an
American who retired as Bethlehem
Steel's European ttpresentatlve last
March and decided he did not want to
rdlU'D to the United Slota. Finding jobs
for Amtrlcana in his position ts not euy,
he sayi, because "most U.S. exeeutJve1
gel allowanoes for flducation and hou&.lng,
· plus yurty trips home." English com-
palet offer aubltanUally lower wages
and ft:nr perqulsltet.
BRl'l'AIN'll ENTRY Into the Common
M.lrkt ila JIO. I moy well open up new
oppommltles lor American expatriates.
"An American who knows the taz 1y1tem
fn Pnnc:e, the tabor laws In Germany, or
rqlaoal plannilll In Italy could have •
lot lo offer," Brown told Editorial
-R<portl. Furlhermero, British .,..inea ts becGmll!c -. l'l<fllllve ta
the Idea ol rotslnlnt ....Wtsnts -Jobs
that pey more t1JaD ~ tied IO. the
-poyroll.
•
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
AJthough there are no re 11 a b I e
statistics on the number or American ex·
ecutives working in London, t b e
American Chamber of C o m m e r c e
estimates; around 2,000. In a 1970
·survey of 270 U.S. subsidiaries ln Britain,
the chamber found that nearly t~
quarters employed oo Americans a\ all.
These fi!:a! em ploy Britlsb managers
partly be!llite local executive talent has
' Improved and partly because It maku
for better community relations.
EXECtJTIVES who stay abroad tor
more than thrtt years are lhe ones wbo
find Jt most diff\Cult to return home,
Industrial Management m 1 I a i I n e
reports. Many of them feeJ thlt their
promotion proapectl in the home office
may have lessened during their ablence.
"The really smart boya, who merely use
a European poottng ., Just another ruJ1i
on the way IO the top, would not atay for
more than three yean, 11 the magazine
notea.
While most Amtrt~·who. wish to re-
matn abroad cl~ the ' quality of Ufe" as
a reason, they.'j>robabJy are motivated
also by the prestige that accompanies an
overseas job. Sin~ an American often Is
sent e.broad to direct all or . pe.rt. of D
subsidiary, he comet lo be _known as
''Mr. Company'' In Europe. 1'It'1 not
tasy," obeervea Brown, "tor blm to
return to Peor ia or New York, where he
must fit himself back Jnto the executive
hierarchy."
..
H
'
The Snauggled Broketa Treaties Papers
Documents Support Indian Charges
W ASlllNGTON -The Broken Treaties
Papers, which were smuggled out ' of
government files by wrathful Indians
during their occup8tkm of the Bureau of
Indian Affairs building, have been scat·
tered in secret stashes across the United
Slates and Canada .
We have bad ac-
~ to them. We
have also been given
a message for Presi-
dent Nis:on. "Tell the
President," we were
asked, "that Indians
do not want the
documents any long-
er than It takes to
duplicate and Index them .. lllat every
tribe in America can educate itself to the
double-dealing of the federal government
and find way.s to forestall lt."
WE RA VE INSPECTED thousands
upon tbousaDds of documents , some
almost brittle with age, others fresh as
today's headlines. They tell a shabby
story.
Some document11 describe multimillion-
dollar land deals in South Dakota's Black
Hills. Others reveal how the White House
played politics with Indian rights.
There are also poignant papers, like
the account of an Indian woman whose
foot was broken by the police but was
left to spend the nlght in jail untended .
But above all, the documents indict the
bureaucrats "'ho have pretended to help
lhe Indians but have often exploited Uiem
instead. Indians whose forebears fought
the cavalry have been reduced to battling
the bureaucrats. It bas been a tawdry,
tedious war without glory.
LIKE THE CAVA L RY, the blll'
eaucrats h a v e remoneleMly driven
the Indians deeper into their reserva-
tions. .The stolen docwnents contain
evidence that Indians have been cheated
out of their land, robbed of their water
rig hts, deprived of their fishing streams
and hunting grounds.
As in any war, the statistics are grim.
Indian life e1:pectancy is 47 years com-
pared with 71 for other Americans ; the
Ind ian unemployment rate is 4S percent
ct1mpared with 5.8 percent for the nation
at large; the average Indian family
struggles Rlong on $4,000 a ye~r, less
than half the $9,867 median for the 1rest
of the country; and finally, the Indian
suicide rate is twice the national rate.
Ever since the Indians ransacked
government files and carted off boxes
full of documents, several newsmen have
tried to get a look at them. Some offered
money for the story; we offered only our
rect1rd for championing the downtrodden.
1 The Indians spurned the money and
voted lo show us the Brokeo Treaties
Papers.
TIIE FBI, meanwhile, has: been
searching up and down the country for
!he stolen documents. ~cept for ooe
small seizure in Oklahoma, however, the
documents remain in Indian hands.
\Ye learned they had been broken down
lnto several caches and hidden in divel'5e
locatiOO! at the far ends of the United
States and Canada, Some were oecreted
i.a automobile trunks, in old phonograph
cases, iq obscure corqers of private
homes. others were stashed in remote
hiding p18ces on lndian reservations.
My associate Les Whitten flew to
Phoenix for the first tryst. At the airport,
Indian security men one jump ahead or
the FBI told him to wait on a comer
away from the tenninal building. They
husUed him by a devious route to..a motel
where some of the Indian leaders were
assembled.
TllE INDtANS wouldn't talk about the
papers in the motel or even inside their
cars for fear of FBI bugging. Furtive
meetings were arranged, instead, at a
bowling alley, a coffee house and on a
parking lot.
Next day, Whitten was instructed lo Dy
to another city many hundmis of miles
away. He was met by one or the leading
Indian militants who questioned him
closely. At last, Whitten was given four
documents and question~ again about
their meaning to find out what be knew
about Indian matters. Then, for 12 hours,
he was deserted.
The following morning, m a n y
thousands of docwnents were deHvered
to him. The door of his room WllS bolted
and a tough Indian security man planted
blmselt in a chair pushed against the
door. As Whitten waded through the
papen, JndJan experts helped him with
the unfamiliar lrlbe11 snd names.
EXCEPT FOR protecting our oourceo
and keep.lbg the. bld.ing places secret, we
have been placed under no restraint by
the Indians. They have made no attempt
to tell us what to write.
In future columns. we will describe
how the Indians pulled tile greatest docu-
ment heist in history right under the
noses of the FBI. We will also reveal, in
detail, tbe contents of the Broken
Treaties Papers.
Footnote : 1'>e Indiana, in their black
h.£ts with the beaded hatbands, looked
tough.and grim. However, they not ~y
turned out to be frieDdly but. they
laughed easily. Once Ibey left Whitten be-
hind to work while they went out for a
beer. When Whitten ~gly complained,
one lndlan cracktd:' "You know how
whiteai go crazy W'ben they drink fire-
water."
Sad S.tory of a Grand Sexperim·ent
_The. blo!!soming public interest in sex
therapy could lead lo but one inevitable
result.
There they were, the new sex
therapists, from Masters & Johnson en
down, featured on the covers of national
magazines, writing
books and appearing
on radio and televi-
sion to tell fascinat-
ed audiences how
they cured thei r pa·
Uents of se xual hang-
ups.
The way they did
it in virtually every
new sex clinic in the
land was to tea& 'their patlent! HCM to
Do It. This: technique. they aald, worked
wonders.
The ram ifications or all thia were first
recognized by the noted educationalist,
Dean Hiram Skarewe III of Skarewe
University.
"AS RE LEV ANT educationalist!,
gentlemen," the Dean grimly told an
emergency faculty mee ting, "we 1ave
railed dismally in preparing our .students
for life. We have taught them bow 10
weld an automobile, bow to awing o. aolf
~--B11 George --...,
Dear G<orie '
Why a.re the days so much
shorter In the winter than In the
summer and If I write lo my
Congressman would it he.Ip? , G.H.
Dear G.H.:
No, It would probably Just poss
!he time faster and make the days
seem even shorter. Anyhow, It
wouldn't do much good -It's not
10lely the jockeylng around of
Dayllaht Savlnp which me.ltea
rummer day1 longer Lhan winter
days. Jt's that cold contract! and
but upaJl(I!; naturally, the col·
cler the season. the llhorttt tile
days.
•
( ART HOPPE J
club and how to recite Etrusc~ poetry.
"But the one single subject' we have
never taught them -and the one in
which Urey will engage in for most of their
lives -is How to Do It.
"No wonder our alumni have hangups.
No wonder they are flocking to expensive
sex clinics in midd1e age to learn. Our
duty is clear. We must nip the problem in
the bud by teaching them How to Oo It
while ~heir learning abilities are at their
peak -in a word, while they're still in
school."
THE DEAN'S propOSal set off an
acrimonious debate. In an age dedJcated
to relevant education, no one, of course,
disputed his premise. 'Ibe debate was
over whether the course should be given
as a lab science or as part of the P .E.
program. It was [lnally decided lhat It
was vocational in nature and Was
therefore included in Driver's Ed.
The popularity of How to Do It Hlia
and l02b was instantaneous. Every stu-
dent signed up. Faculty reports· were
glowing. "The ardor with which student!.
do their homework!" said one professor
with awe. "And when it comes to final
exams, tkey're all fully prepared." •
THE SMASHrNG success of the pro-
gram was widely heralded. Every colleae
in the country rushed to emulate It. And
soon, How To Do It waa bWli offered 1n
the nation 's high schools (ror juniors and
seniors only).
Naturally, the government .stepped !n.
"We 'll never redLJCe the high rate of ac-
cidents in America's bedroomJ and
motels," said Congressman Homer T.
Pettibone, "untll every practiUOOer is
tested and licensed:-"
The bill was passed and woe beUde the
poor eager young swain who couldn't
produce a valid license.
Panorama of A·merica
A panorama of America in transition
- a colorf··J kaleidoscope of thb country
• · decade by decade alncc 1870 wilb a
sweeping look at Amerlca'r. folkways and
mores -au of. lllil de1Ctibe1 the lavishly
Ultatrated Amtrlcu Ceetury: toe Vear•
ol Changing LUe Styl& tn America by
R>lph Andrl1t (American Heritage
Press, $16.~).
With a profU3loo ol photographs, 32 col·
or. 600 black and white, and a vivid ac-
companying lext, American Century
presents a b:'falhtaking overview of whet
Ille and livlni have bem Uk• In the
United ~tsle1 In the pa1t 100 yean.
Andrtot writes of the Wild w .. 1 •nd how
it was tamed : tbe days of easy money
... and boomin11 buslneu (concentrating on ·
such ~able mcrchandlllng tycoons as:
Aaron MOntgomery Ward and John
(THE BOO~)
Wanamaker); the cbanfes In bu.Ying
habits over the years; lbe challenget and
effecta of wars and cold ••n; the tr1ns1·
tlot1 trom bicycles to motor car11oCf haw
It affected fashlona lll>d travellln(; the
Oby Nineties, the Roartna: Twenttm 1nd
the Great Oepreaslon. lt't all hero tn one
ml'gnlflcen t i>Jckage -lnvenUou,
polltlcal evtnLI, lnnovatiotll, IOcltty and
gadgets.
-Ralph Andrlst t1 the author ol Loac
Deatb' Tiit wl D_,. ol IN Plalm 1"'
dians and bas edited i number of
volumes of AmcrJcana .
' I
CAROLINE HARKLEROAD
But arresta were rew. For almost
overnight America had become a nation
ot experts superbly trained in How to Do
It. And hangups became a thin( cl the pa.st. ,
TO PREVENT confusion between
graduates: of different !Chools; the teclmi-
ques were of course numbered by a
universal standard.
"Would you like to one, three, fourteen
and forl)'-ai:1 tonight, dear?" a romantic
husband would inquire. And as both
. pArties were experU, the results were as
prtdlctable as turning on the cold water
fauciet. And about as Interesting.
"Whal'• an telemlon?" the wife would now reply, more often than not, wllb a
yawn.
Once IC•ln, the future of the human
race seemed threatened. It was saved by
a wtte .President who scrapped the
llceeslni program and baMed the
teacblng · of' How to Do It courses by
anybody anjlwbere.
"Some tblngt," the wise President
said wloelY;-"are more fun IO )earn by ·
do In.I. JI
OltANOr COAST
DAllY PILOT
Robert N. Wel!d, )'11.blllher
T1tomo1 Kcttnl, Editor
Borboro. Kre ibich
Edilo;Ud Poot Editor
Tht> iedltorial pa~e or the Dally
Pllol geeks to Inform and 1Umu· lat~ N'tdani b>' rirntnUn1 U1i1
ne~·•Jlll.r>er'• oplnkm1 an;t com·
mentU) un topic. of lntefcst ind
•hcrilflcanC!, b)' providing a forum tor the el(J>ttUlon or our rtadtn.'
111inklna, 11.nd by prettnling the
dht1•1'H vltwpnlntt ~f·lnformt'd ob--
M"rvtl'I and. 1pokHmen on 1ople1 or the d1)'.
Friday, December 15, 1972 •
I
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Orange Coast
EDITION
Today' Final
N.Y. Stooks
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VOL 65, NO. 350, 4 SECTION S, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1972 N TEN .CENTS
• • • • rain I rv1ne river
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New Guidelips l J
Cur~s Tightened
For Sex Study
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sex education
in California schools will come Wlder
tighter regulation under a resolution
adopted today without debate by the
~tale Board or Education.
Adoption of the set of guidelines follow-
Nixon Has No
Announcen1ent
On Viet Talks
W ASWNGTON (AP) -President Nix·
plans at this time to make an
nt on Vietnam before
the White House said today.
tial press ...,..tary Ronald L.
Ziegler said Nixon met again Thursday
night and lhis morning with adviser
Henry A. Kisainger, just returned irom
the latest round of secret peace negO\in-
tlolll 'ln Paris.
But I fi-h rodlo ·report that a
Vietnla cieWo&'I di be • I 'Nd
within II 'boors eent stock ,..rlrlt prices
rooming today.
• At 11 a.m. PST,i:c Dow J-. ... ....... 11••· -upUtto
--Tllo ......... IDdlcotor bad
.._ _,, -' polata •.
1'be -• wu by the private-ly owned radio station Europe No. I. The
1tatton said It gOt Its information from
• "high foreign personality" but gave
no details.
Kissinger also is consulting \vitb
Secretary of State William P. Rogers,
Secretary of Defen1e Melvin R. Laird,
the cbainnall of the Joint Chiefs oi Staff,
(See NIXON, Pqe ZI
Atto ey
A Newport Beech lawyer wants an
Orange County Superior C.ourt judge to
act: as referee In a $9,000 pillow fight
between two local needlework stores.
F. Gordon Chytraus is seeking a
restraining order that will halt what be
cJ.aJms ls the defendants' marketing of
"original design stitchery pi 11 o w s ' '
created by Mrs. Eleanor Laraway, pro-
prietor of :.araway's Specialty Shoppe,
!a Marine Drive, Balboa Island.
~ed as defendants Bre Violet Weber and Alice P e. t e r s o n of "The
NeedJeworken," 3011 Villa Way,
Newport Beath. And Mrs. Weber is
furlller id<t!Ulied as the person who
alleiedlY oblalned Mn. Lar1way'• ...,.t
sWabery techniq.., by posln( as a Los
~eles Times reporter assigned to do-a
needlework feature.
Since then, it is alleged, t b e
"Ntedlewor.)en" has been marketing tbe
formerly exqluslve Laraway designs.
Chytraus states he will ask a judge to
bait the practice.
Fund Started
For Fisherman
Ftiends o! Newport !leach doey
fisherman Allen Knight h a v e
lormal!Jed their efforls to start a
COUec.'lion for his wife and four liv-
ing children.
Knight Is .Ull missing at oea with
hla: 3-year-old daughter Patricia.
Mrt. Gar)' L. Black, a Newport
Beach police meter maid and
friend o! the Knight famUy, said
"' people have been Wed to send any
contrlbutlom by dleck to the AUen
Knight Memorial· Trust Fund, in
~•re-of the Bank of Am~, M44
Via Lido, Newport Jl<ach.
Knlgbt and hla younc daughter
were In <bJJ dory Tueldi on their
way back !rom Huni n Stach
when, opparently, the II lie girl !ell
overboard and Knight died trying
to racue her.
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ed a meetl'lg Thursday night where a
board subcommittee beard briefly from
oppoilents to the measure.
One oppOnent, Wayne Lamont of t h e
Orange County-baSed Birth Control
Institute, Inc., said in an interview after
the board's action that the rules will pro-
vide "ammunition for intimidation."
Lamont contended that a smaU, vocal
minority of parents in most districts go
in front of local boards to oppose sex
education, and the new rules will give
them "ammunition agairult people wbo
want frank, open sex instruction."·
Especially off~ to Lamont was
one section of the already-e:xlsting rules
adopted by the board in 1969. The sec-
tion, which will also be a part of the
new guidelines, states in part that
"HarmfuJ effects of premarital sex, etc.,
an da code of mora1s be emphasized with
nd derogatory instruction 1re!ative to re-
ligious beliefs and ethics, ana to parents'
beliefs and teachinJ!:."
Lamont said he tried to gel the board"s
subcommittee to change the word
"premartial" to "irresponsible" but his
suggestion was rejected.
The rules on teacher training, parental
notification and ouU!de •peaker re-
qulremiatl grew eat Of a cantroversy
earlier this year when homosexuals ap--
peued as guest Jeeture"n at sex educa·
lion clasleS in Saa .Francisco• and Marin
countlea. "
At an earlier meeting, staff member
Henry Heydt said the districts ln,.ived
complied with current I e g a I re·
quirements.
But board member Gene ltagle of
Roseville said the course at Redwood
High Scl>C''.>1 In the Marin County town of
Larkspur appeared to be "a do-it·
yourself course in copu.Jation."
One section of today's resolution states
that local school superintendents ha ve
veto power over outside speak.era used in
"family life" or sex education courses.
Another section requires parents to be
notified by mail of sex education courses.
State law gives parents the right to pull
tbeir child out of a sex education class.
Also included in the guidelines is a re-
(See SEX CLASS, Page I)
DAILY l'll OT Steff .......
WRECKAGE OF BREAD TRUCK BEARS TESTIMONY TO VIOLENT TRAIN-TRUCK COLLISION
Drive r Killed lnst1ntly When Vehicle Collided With Fast Train at Irvine Crossing
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Civilian, Mili~ry Pay Newport ~';Y' 8,
. , . . · '· , · . ', · · , w--1 ~ S\lllek Riding ..... .,..
RaiSes Okayeti by NixQTJ In Bi~ycle Li~e
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WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon today ordered a 5.14 percent pay
i[tcrease for !\316,000 civilian government
workers ·and . a 6.69 _J>UCent salary boost
for all 2.4 million mem~rs of the armed
services.
The increases will become effective the
flrst pay period after Jan. i, the ~ite
House said.
The civilian pay raise had been sched-
u1ed for ,October, but was· postponed as
an anti.inflation move and that action
automatically delayed a similar military
pay boost set for the same time.
The across--tbe-board increases were
ordered b,..N"u:on on the basis of recom:-
menda~ons by Budget Director Caspar
Welnber,;er and the cbitinnan of the·ClvU
Se~ice Commission to promote com·
parabillty wilh private industry salary
rat~s. They will cost about $2 billion.
The President·at the same Ume turned
down a ·recommendation of an additional
pay increase of 0.36' percent to make up
for the three-month delay in pay ad·
justments, holding that his "would be
neither fair not justifiable." v
He said that such an increase would
result in paying federal employes nigher
salaries than the .comparable workers in
private enterprise are receiving.
The increa.se5 are across the board and
'amounted to a cost~f-living hike. They
affect persons making under $36,000.
Eikht·ye8r~ld Robert Alleman of
Newport Beach was hiJ:. by a car Thurs--
day afternoon while riding his bicycle
along the bike lane on Eastbluff Drive
near Corona del Mar Hiih School. He
was hospitalized with head injuries.
Police said the woman who was driving
the car told them she had leaned over in
the front seat to retrieve a plastic litter
bag that had spilled its contents -some
scraps of paper_ and an orange peel -on
the floor.
She Mid, according lo police, she didn 't
see the boy until she hit him.
Manger s~ene
Adults Vandalize Coast Display
In ·a message .to Congress, Nixon "said
that "t~ American system o( ::areer
civil service is based on the principle of
rewarding merit."
He added, "I am pledged to continue
striving to make it an even more ef-
fective, responsible part of our govern-
ment. One way of achieving,_ thls is lo
maintain a salary scale for civil servants
that is just and comparable to that
received by equivalent individuals in the
private sector."
The: boy, a third grade student at
Eastbluff School, Wt!l!i repored in stable
condition tHis morning at Hoag Memorial
Hospital. A hospital spokesman said he
had been movedi out of intensive care in·
to the pediatrics unit.
Police identified the driver of the car
as Loretta Mae Green, 38, of 10170 Ascot
Circle, Huntington Beach.
The accident occurred about 3 p.m.
near the high school tennis courts. Police
said the Alleman boy, 152 Amlgos Way,
was riding in ·a marked •bike lane and
was struck from behind. They said Mrs.
Green's auto was in the bike lane when
it struck the boy.
Baby Jesus was burled from his
manger on the front lawn or a Harbor
View Hills borne Thursday night. Mary
and Joseph and the animals too.
The life-sized figures in the Nativity
scene of the John Lorenz family , m7
Wavecrest, in a sis: foot by six foot set-
ting, were. overturned by vandals.
Mrs. Lorenz said this morning ·that
neighbors aaw the desecration and say it
was the work of a group of adults who
sprang from a car and then raced away
moments later.
"You wonder what goes on in the
minds of people like that," Mrs. Lorenz
said today.
"We 're a Christian family and the
manger scene is the first thing that goes
up every year," she said.
''This is Christmas," she said. ''If you
Newport Project
can't bring Qlll the_ real meaning of
Christmas, what is left?"
Mrs. Lorenz said erecting the Nativity
scene "bas been a family project -ever
since we've bad it, about 10 years."
She said they moved lo Corona del Mar
two years ago from New Jersey and
never had any problems back east "But
la.st year somebody put the -figures in
somewhat IeW'.d positions," she said.
"It just kinda takes the Christmas
spirit out of your heart;" she said. "If
you can't expose what tlwl true meaning
of Christmas is, that's pretty bad. If
Christmas is just shopping and parties
and such, we're in a pretty bad slate.
''But this manger scene is our true
meaning," she said. "It's sad that it
doesn1t mean this to somebody."
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· On Monday, Nixon's chief economic
spokesman, George P. Shultz, announced
a freeze during the 1973 calerfdar year on
salaries of "exeeutive level" federal
employes, including members o f
Congress and the judiciary,
One witness said the youngster was
tossed about six feet in the air by the im·
pact.
"His bike went under lhe car and he
bounced off tbe illod and Oew oimoet 50
feet ," aaJd .poUce officer Gary Lee. "You
could see the. big dent in the car where
his head hit it." .
Police did not issue ·a · citatioll at the
scene, but aaid the accident. is still under
in.vestigatidn.
Teen Sues Over
Broken Romance
Versailles J)elay ·Sought
PHOENIX, Ari z. {UPI) -A Phoenix
teenager wants '9911 in damages from the
police department for breaking up a
romance.
Greg Moofe, 18, said In his suit that he
and Lana Dls8er, 18, were arrested
Thanksgivl(lg on charges ot possessing
marijuana and her parents now forbid
him to see her.
N'ewport Beach City Manager Robert
L. Wynn said today lhat he and the IJOn.
. aid Scholz Company will ask city councl.I·
men Monday· to delay acUofl aga.in on
the Versailles apartments. , ·
· Wynn said city o(llclall and Versa~
r_...latlves are teylng to work Ou\
aareementl over condiUons of the con·
trovmioi West Newport project.
He said1 howe .. r, thal thoH -rnenta haven't been reached and that a
traffic aill(jy ordered by counclimlE
not readf.
"We beileve the traffic lludy should
be avallab_le next w~k." WyM •a Id.
ulben We Can get down to A more ~
clwdve understanding between the staff
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and the developer."
Wynn said weekly meetings with Ver·
saiUea officials have Involved "lbe whole
ape<trum o! the problem."
·He ticked off lllbject matters ln<ludlng
demity, height, traffic Jmpact. the build· Jnf excise tax', parts and tr a Ifie sJanal•.
Each of those matters were once agreed
to tn writing between councilmen and
Scholz, but a public furot over Iha• agree·
ment forced councilmen to reconalderthe
entire bluffto'p project 1 •
Wynn said he is "ahootllj& r.-Jan. 8"-
!he next COUJlCU mcellnt,..,. ,IO,_,. la
with a revised agre<~ -eaid it
may not be ready even Ill'" tben.
"'Mlia wtll not go back to the council
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until we are · in • agreemeol/' be sUt.
••Tbey at ill -llU 'it, but tbe staff
wtll have to be able to support IL"
Wynn said if ,there abouid' be ooe or
more points that ho and Vemllles offic-
ials canl10t arree upon, lffi!y will then
present their own opinions to the council.
"We'U !hen let the council decide which
way to go," he aatd., ..
Wynn aald before he even takes the
11.greemmt JO councilmen, be .wants to
take tt lo w .. t Ne1rport homeowners
an~ Pl their ........_ • ·
•1 tlllak !ht .....it Would am>ftOI"• ~ how lhe1 feo~" ,...said. "If
othe:y'r• oppoeed , I'm sure the council will
t11ke that lnto tONtdtratlon.~
The suit said Moore and M1ls Disser
were arrestec:fas they "i~ I table
In Washingtoo Park where several other
pcnons were amokiog marijuana. He
sa id neither he .nor the girl amaked mart.
juana.
l{caltor Arrested
ANTIOCH (AP) • An Anlloch reallor
has been arreated for lnvestfgatlon of
burctary In the $2!fj),OOO to $$00,ooo tho!!
of ailllque allvel'\Yan and other property
fro"' l !Qcal realdence , pOllce Mid
Wedoeldof .. Ra~d Cr~ll. 30, was
•1TC111ed wilh h~ wir. Judith, 29, at
Crandell'• rNI estate office Tuesday.
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Truck Hit
In 90-MPH
Collision
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of tM DtllY ~1191 Stiff
Charles L. Schoonover Sr., 46. owner or
the Irvine General Store. was k.illed this
morning when his bread truck collided
with a passenger train doing an
estimated 90 mph at the point or impact
at the Jeffrey Road crossing in Irvine.
Investigators said Schoonover. 14951
Sand Canyon Road. died instantly when
his Barbara Ann truck smashed into the
Santa Fe train bound for Los Angelea.
The train was coming from San Diego
and carried an estimated 125 passengers.
All felt the shock of the collision but train
personnel said none were injured.
Schoonover and his wile , Betty, have
operated the East Irvine country store
since 1966. Mrs. Schoonover I s
postmistress of East Irvine, formerly
known as lw1yford.
The Schoonovers and their · two
children, Greg, 21, and Denise. have lived
in an apartment over the store and post
office for the past seven years. The store
building is one of Orange County's oldest,
l'.aving been constructed In 1899.
Irvine city aide Paul Brady sakt
Schoonover was making a delivery from
the store when the accident occurred.
Witnesses who sa wa second train pass
after the accident said the signals were
in working order .
1 Willis Sullivan, ~7. of Santa Maria, con--
ductor or the four-car train, told in-
vestigators that be .felt the impact but
~ not immediately know what occurred.
'I didn't know anything about it," said
WIUls,.stiU dated, at the atoppln( point or
the train, ab.Jut 1.5 miles away trom the
Impact on Culver Drive.
Traffic Investigator Gary Barwlg of
Costa Mesa Police Department said the
collision ;uptured a fuel tank and air
hoaea. Bolh signaled the !rain's fail-sale
(See TRAIN, Page !)
Truman W eaker,
Fails to Res pond
To Medic ation
KANSAS CITY (AP)-Harey S Tru-
man, semi-conscious and unable lo speak,
failed to respond to medication today and
doctors expressed concern about his
weakening kidneys.
The fonner President slept fitfully and
e-0ntinued to receive oxygen all the lime.
A spokesman at Research HDSpilal anC:
Medical Center said, "kidney output cor ...
tinues to deerease in spite of medic&
lion."
For the second straight day, Dr.
Wallace Graham tenned Truman's con·
dition "very serious."
The ~year~ld Truman was admitted
to the hospital 10 days ago, suffering
from broochiUs and lung congestion.
Slippage in Tn1man's kidney function
was noted Wednesday when doctors
' observed signs. of renal impairment.
which they said, meant his kidneys were
not purifying blood properly.
Thursday, actual output of the kidne)'S
decreased and the doctors said tht>
kidney condition was "of concern and Is
(See TRUMAN, Page %) •
Orange Coa•t
Weatlaer
A few high clouds, but othc1'1t.e
sunny on Saturday, ii the way the
weatherlady 8eel It. HI.gm of 8$ •t
lhE beaches, riling to 70 Inland.
Lows tonight 4S-50.
_INSmE TODA. 'Y
\Vhat Wtrl th« top 10 com.-
tl\unity theater prod.uctimu of
J 972 in Orange Cowntw1 TM
DAILY PILOT'1 droma aillc
Offen hit evaluation in Codaw'•
\V•ekendtT aecc~on.
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Fun Zone
Developer
Accused
The developer who wants lo build con-
do1ni.nlums on the site of Balboa's Fw1
Zone distorted facts before to city officials
Zone distorted facts before city officiaJs
prominent Balboa businessman chargea
today.
"1 was very distressed to see that the
JAK Construction Company i! continuing
to misrepresent data on the Balboa busi-
ness area in their attempt to secure ap-
proval for their Edgewater Condomin·
iums,'' said Phil Tozer. president of
Davey's Locker. Inc .• and owner of the
Balboa Pavilion.
"In one of their first presentations,
they clairned 25 perecnt of the Balboa
Pavilion ~·as vacant when, In fact , the
area 11•as Jess than five percent and It
1vas only vacant because it ""as due to
be remodeled," Toter said. 1
Tozer was especially critical of what
he feels was a slur · agains t the PaviUon
restaurant, the Tale of the Whale.
"Now they have made a more grievous
distortion and arc claiming our restaurant
is 'rathe r of secondary caliber,' " he
said.
Tozer said the remarks were made in
the environn1ental impact report filed by
JAK Construction.
"This simply isn't so," he sald. "\Ve
have almost 60 employes working full
lime, and we are rapidly approaching $1
million a year gross business.
"This is oor restaurant Rnd banquel fa-·
cility only and does not include lhe many
other commercial ac1ivities that are a
part of the Balboa Pavilion operation."
Tozer said today he ~TOte rouncilmen
·protesting because the statements "kinda
hurt my feelings ."
··1 don't want to get into a fight with
John Konwiser (JAK owner)," Tozer saif.
''but he's stretching things trying to get
condominiums through.
"I'm trying to keep him honest, that's
all," Tozer said.
''He's trying to prove the area's not
fit for commercial uses," he said, "and
that's just not true."
Tmer said the purpose of his let_ter
to councilmen is to ask them to "take a
more analytical look and recognize that
as professional planners your conclusions
should be sustained."
Councilmen Monday night are schedul-
ed to act again on the proPoeeci 47-unit
coodominium project off Palm Street.
They overturned the planning commis-
sion two months ago and approved the
development, but an Orange County Su-
perior Court judge, acting oo an appeal
by Ne)'POrt Beach resident Allan Beek,
told lliem to ftview it again .
The court said this time the CQ.llncil
should have the environmen tal impact re-
port of the developer before taking action .
The E!R, obviously, hes been com-
pleted.
•
I• Moon OrMt
Apollo 17 Crew
Rejoin · in Space
SPACE CENTER~ l{ oust o n (AP) -
Three American astronnuts, united again
afier the Apollo program's final and
most bountiful m()()J)-landing expedition,
lingered in lunar orbit today surveying
the surface below for still more
knowledge. (See reJated stories, picture,
page 8.)
Gane was the landing ship Challenger,
\vhic b carried Apollo 17's Eugene A.
Ceman and Harrison H. Schmitt to the
surface for 7~ hours · and then returned
Planners OK
Garage Pln.n
For Newport
Newport Beach planning commjssioners
Thursday approvl'd a. five-level parking
garage and complex: of small stores in
the Lldo Shops area.
The Don Koll Company parking struc-
ture will exceed the basic 26-foot height
limit for the area by nine feet.
"After talking it over, the commission
came to the conclusion that the public
benefit would be so gri!at that a use
permit allowing a 35--foot building is just-
ified ," said Senior Planner BW Foley.
The 365-car structure, to be located be-
hind the Bank Of America, will be built
of coocrete with a facade of red bricks,
acCilrding to Koll's plans.
He as.sured commissioners the building
\Vould not be an eyesore due to its large
size and that every effort will be made
to camouflage and beautify it with plants
and trees.
CommJssioners also determined that an
environmental impact report submitted
by Koll for the garage is complete and
shows no unavoidable impacts.
The garage parcel is now occupied by
a parking lot and animal hospital. ,
By approving the use permit for Koll 's
garage, conunissionen ,also accepted his
plans to convert a number of buildings
on the nortb side <1f Via Oporto, across
the street from the garage site. into a
complex of small shops and eateries.
Koll owns alRl<l!t all the apartments
and office buildings between Imperial
Savings and ljerqhire's Restauraot and
olans to use all' the existing structures.
PlaQS call for the addition of new build·
ings in only a few spot.s.
Koll told the commission the mall W<lUld
open onto the harbor, thus opening the
view to a stretch of \Yater.
them safely to the command s h I p
America and reunion with Ronald E.
Evons.
In the early morning hours, Challenger
'A'OS thrust away from the command
ship, and a radio signal from Mission
Control sent it crashing into the moon.
Today, and for most of Saturday unlU
they start their journey borne, the
ast ronaut!' task was to probe the moon
\1•ith cameras and sophisticated sensing
devices. They were in fn orbit 69 miles
above the surface.
Cernan and Schmitt completed man's
most successllll moon visit ever late
Thursday when they rocketed off the
lunar surface with a record cargo of
moon samples and film.
Included in the sealed boJ:e.; of samples
were two core tubes and severs: bags•
tiUed with a mysterioUs re<kriJJge aoll
which may be the youngest lunar
samples ever collected. Sc.lentista believe
the C<1lorful soil may be a product of one
of the moon's.. last volcanoes.
After transrerring the precioUJ lunar
treasure into America, the· astronauts
cast off Challenger, freeing it for
destruction in the cause of science. The
lander, wblch cost MO mllUon, could not
h<•ve been returned to earth with the
command ship. ·
''It see.ms an unfittine finish to a super
bird," said Cernan, during his last
moment.! aboard the craft he had f1own
to a near-j>el'fect landing Monday in the
moon valley of Taurus-IJttrow. "But It's
got one more joL to do."
On radio commands from earth,
Challenger fired its rocket thrusters and
sent itself speedinl: to an impact near the
Taurus-Uttiow valley.
Force. of the impact~uivalent to 2®
pounds of TNT -caused a seismic shock
which e x c i t e d quake-detection in-
struments left on the moon by Apollo 17
and by previous Apollo missions. The
readings will be studied by scienli!ts on
earth.
Fihns Curtailed
In Their Use
Of Natural Gas
~vent.een major industrial users , ol
natural gas scattered throughout Orange
County will not be supplied by Southern
calilornia Gas Company for at least
another ~·eek, although 120 other in-
dust[ial customers were returned to full
s~ice today.
Holiday Activities Set
By Newport Rec Group
Service to county oil C<lmpanies, steel
mills and cement plant! among other
heavy gas users has been curtailed due
to the record-breaking residential usage
in response to cold wealher. (See ·related
story, Page 4.)
M. W. Hutchison, central area district
manager for the gas co"mpany, said today
that the company ls "at the elf of the
curtailment period.''
Christmas crafts and a Disneyland trip
will headline the Newport Beach Parks.
Beaches and Recreation Deprtmenl holi-
day activities schedule starting Monday.
Other events will include tree trim-
ming at the Community Youth Center at
Slh St. and Iris A venue in Corona del
Mar and the annual Christmas tree burn
at five locations throughout the city.
Otristmas crafls, which will give child-
Allende Back Home
SANTIAGO, Ch.lie !UPI) -Thousands
or persons waving Communist banners
and Chilean nags chee red President
Salvador Allende when he returned
'Mlunday night from a 14-day Visit that
took him to three C<lntinents with stops in
Moscow and Havana. As he returned, the
largest opposition polltical party accused
Allende of selling out to the Russians.
DAILY PILOT
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I '
ren 7 lo 11 a chance to make ornament!
or small presents ror parents, will be
held from 10:30 a.m. to noon at the Com-
munity Youth Center and froqi 1 p.m. to
2,30 p.m. at Mariners School.
The craft classes cost $1 and will run
through Dec. :ZZ. Department olficial> said
each clua will be limited to 20 clµldren .
Also oo :fdonday .at 3 p.m. in the youth
'center, children are tnVited to joi6 lb the
decoration of the center's Christmas tree.
The event will include decoratton making,
caroling and re.freshmen\s.
A bus trip to Disneyland has been
scheduled for Dec:: 26 for anyone in the
community.
Reservations for the trip, which costs
$4 for children three to 11 , $4.50 for juniors
12-lo·l7 and $5 for anyone over lB, must
be made Saturday or between Mond.-y
and Thursday at tbe youth cente r from
noob lo 5 p,rn,
'I1le Parks, Beaches an ·d Recreation
office, 171.C l\V. Balboa Blvd., allO will
accept reservations anytime before 5
p.m. Thursday.
'Mle buses will leave from Mariners
Park and the youth center at 8:30 a.m.
The final holiday event will be the an-
nual controlled Christmas tree bum. dur-iri which residents can dispose of lhelr
dHed out trees.
Bums will be held at 7 p.m. JM. 6 at
Corona del Mar State Beach, Orange
Street Beach in West Newport. Newport
Pier. Jamboree and Santa Barbara and
at Dover Drive and 16th Street .
He noted that a new n!C01'd for gas
consumption was set Dec. 10 when 3.2
billion cubic feet of. gu were needed to
heat Southern California homes and of-
fices.
In anticipation of increased use due to
cold weather, the gas company identifies
firms it lists at "interruptibles,'' Hutch-
ison said. These firms have alternate
fuels such aS ojl or propane to give them
the heat they need during shortages.
...J.One. SUCh··rum is the Conrock Company
t"lant 'In San Juan Capistrano.
The first 11 days of Decemb~: set a 44-
year record for cold temperatures,
Hutchison noted.
LeMay Takes Place
Among Air Greats
Gen. eurtls E. LeMay of Newport Beach
was enshrined ln the Aviation Hall
of Farr\.e in Dayton, Ohio fdt-p&st service
as U.S. Air Force chief of st.a.ff and lead-
er of the Strategic Air Command.
Le May, .66, and three other aviators
\\"ere honored in ceremonies cmducted
by actor James Stewart, a brigadier gen·
era! in the Air Force Reserve. The others
arc: Gen. Claire Chennault, Leroy Ran9ij?
Grumman and James H. "Dutch" Kin-
delberger.
Geese or Gulls?
' . Plan!!_ Victims' lde,ntity ,..Vnsure
The Alr C.lttomla piano which made an emergency tum to Otani• OOun-
ty Airport Wedn"<lay night may have swallowed tevcra[ sea gun. In, me of
It! Jet enginet rather than wUd geese.
ORANGE COlll'n'Y DIN!dot of Avlallon Robert Bresnahan IBld be ,.,,.
pttt.s that the birds were common. ordinary aea gulls. "We wtll never know
for su.re though," he said. ''11M!y were pretty well chewed up."
The plane, Flight 6$7 to San Jo~ and Oakland, was about 1,500 feet over
tho Upper Bay and just prior to reducing power to cut Jet noise when Jt ran
into the Oock of blrda .. ' . THE JET MADI> a · tllrn,Jlver th• ocean and re1umed to Orange Counly
Atrport where the pa11en1er1 we.re tranale.red to another Jet for thtlr fll&)rt.
Brtshnahan nld nporta that fire· broke out In the engine 'wblcb auCk.ed
In the bird~ wa1 not true. "When the birds bit the Intl.Ike a fan blade wu
bent causinR 1t to scrape on the engine nacelle and 1P&rks flew but the pilot
cut Lhe motor and thue wu no fire:."
•
,
TR.A.IN •••
system to con.e le> an emergency atop.
The impact was so fon:eful that It
sheared the hr<ad· tnick Into Its najor
com-ts. ~tter!nc hot do r • lllld
hauburrtr -and Jagged p..... of
metal clown tM track. .
The truck's engir>e was ripped from Its
mounts and landed ne1t to the trick
1nore than 100 yanh away. It was titil l
hot to the touch one hour afWr the 8:40
a.m. collision,
A conduct()r on the train .!laid he felt •
bu1np and suspected a colllslon had oc-
curred "when it went ba~gely, bang ,
bang. bang" urt{jemcath the coaches.
lie said the train wu ruMlng on
schedule and had made sfops nt Otl Mar
and San Oemente before the accldent oc·
curred.
The train continued ils westbound
journey at 9:45 a.m., using only lU front
engine. A flreman on the train said the
second engine was disabled when diesel
fuel leaked out of the ruptured tan~.
Investigators al the scene said the
train was going approxima tely 90 mph
through the signaJizeG intersect1on but
that this was considered nomtal .a n d
proper speed. ! I
Set1mour and Friend
Eric Ross, 14, used a technique called supergraphics he learned in
art class at Newport Harbor High &hool to paint this IO-foot mural
on his Costa Mesa bedroom wall. The person in the black bat is Sey-
mour, a host for horror flicks shown on television. Eric is a DAILY
PILOT carrier in Costa Mesa.
Saddlehack Trustee Asl\:s
Change in Site of Trial
Saddleback school board member Alyn r.t Brannon will ask a Superior Court
judge Jan. 19 to move his trial on
bookmaking charges out of Orange Coun-
ly.
The Sadd1eback Community College
Dl!ltrlct Trustee has not revealed in his
petition !or a hearing before Judge
\Villiam J\.1urray the reason behind his .re-
quest tor a change o! venue.
NIXON, CAMPAIGN
AIDES PARTYING
But court officials who handled the
documents believe that Brannon, (1, feels
that publicity stemming ·from bis arrest
and the subsequent Orange County Grand
Jury indirlmrnt makes it lmpo!Sible for
hint lo receive a fair trial in lhis area .
Brannon·s c<Klelendaot, used car sales
manager Robert Emmett Kelly. 34, of
Newport Beach, bas not joined Brannon
in the request tor a transfer of the trial
scheduled for March 12:
Brannon was arrested Aug. 28 alter he
allegedly attempted to enforce set-
tlement of a gambling debt from a man
WASHINGTON (AP) -President~Nix---ldenlifi~-by police. as a regular P.Btr<>n of
on and his top campaign aides have been -»the school board member. 1
partying for the past three nights with a Arresting officers allege Branoon's
select group from around the country . · · b Har who helped !inance and promote his re-bookmaking operations 111 t e bor
el~n. Area produced takings of at least $25,00J
Tt:ie total of 167 guests included labor a week. They said the trustee accepted
leaders. prominent Democrats for Nixon, heavy bets on football and basketball
Front Pllfle 1
.NIXON ... ·
Adm. Thom as lt. Moorer~ and In-
telligence chief Richard Helms in in·
dividual meetings, Ziegler said.
Kissinger and his top assistant. Gen.
Alexander Haig, briefed Rogers for an
hour and a half l;\.te Thursday. .
But the White House spokesman had no
further travel plans to announce con-
cerning the Vietnam negotiating, such as
a trip by Kiss inger to SIJgon or a
meeting betweeD Niloo and South Viet·
nam's President Nguyen Van Thieu.
There are conUnuing Washington-
Saigon differences ove r peace proposals..
The sum total of the press secretary's
remarks left an impression that lbe
peace negotiations are pretty much at a
standstill.
He declined again lo characteriie the
status of the negotiallons beyond sayin g
'·negotiatJons have taken place Jn Plris"
and "we will stay in touch with the other
side (Nonh Vietnam } t hr o ug h
messages." ,_
Asked · about the posslbllily of •
presidential statement to tbe public
belore Christmas, Ziegler replied:
"Tb.ere is no plan for the President to
do that at this time."
Frot1tP .. eJ
TRUMAN ..•
being watched very <~:losely for change."
At 7 a.m. PST Truman's vital slgns
\\'ere pulse 64, blood pressure lZUO and
temperature 99.8.
failure of the medication to strengthen
the kidneys was slmllar to ·t.he situation
Dec. 8, when Truman failed to respottd to
antlbiollts Intended to bolster the heart
and kjdneys and was placed on the
critical list where be remained until Sun-
day.
Ft'OMP .. eJ
SEX CLASS. • •
regional finance chainnen and heads of games and on one occasion, the outcome quirement that each district set up a
organlzaliom ranging lrom s e n l o r of a tennis final between Rod Laver and C1>mmittee to review all the materials u.s-
citi zens to veteran groups. Ken Rosewall. ed in sex: education classes. Then the
Cocktail receptions Wen! held Tuesday, Kelly was arrested six-weeks later C<1mmlttee would let the local bGard
\Vedne.sday and Thursday with the Presi-after a wealthy Newport Be a ch know what they think of the materials.
°dent and Mrs. Nixon ~tbe Cbrislma!-businessman told police that an eight· In 1969 the board Issued broad le:l
decorated White House, followea by din--inch hunting knife was burled into his guidellnes covering teacher tn.in1Da and
ner across the street at Blair House. The front door as part of the ~ stating that sex education claaes 1bould
Nixons did not attend the dinners . employed to collect gaming debts. ' be voluntary rather than mandatory. ..:.::::::::.:::.:::::..::::=:::..:::::-=::::.::__"---_.:::~-=...:c..:::.::::.-".:==:..:....:..c:__~---'-~~_:_-'-~~~---'--,v
' LAMPS-PICTURES-ACCESSORIES
PRE· HOLIDAY SALE
It'• the little thing• that can make the dif-
ference. Stop by today end view our fi ne
selection, now specially priced. If it's 'fO;. •
gilt, or for you porsonally, you 'll fin'il just the
thing to onhance any homo for tho holiday.
DREXEL-HJ~TAGE-H ENREOON-WOODMARK-kARASYAN ----------
NEWPORT BEACH e
1717 WESTCLIFF D• ••
..J.JOIO
LAGUNA BEACH e
141 NOATH COAST HWY.
494·611 1
TOR~NCE e
2>Mt HAWTHOANI ILYD •
J71·117t
•
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'
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•
• .. •• •
DAILY PILOT f
DarWin .. 'Demoted'
.St,at,e Boal'd Do-umpl!Jys Tlieory in Textl
SACRA:MENTO (AP) -'!he salcl he would aUempt to havo
Oalllonola Stato-lloatd.-:'of the doctrine ol 1peciol crea·
Educatioo, rejecting p I ea s lion Inserted In the texts dur·
from aome or the nation'• top _ --->--------edentlsti, ha.a voted to -'--~ ~--~ Darwin's 11\<ory of 'ltf•11 I ••II• ll)fth·
evolutjon .in new sclenca text> out apolog1J, that far~ t=bll:tenu., ddor tee Ch r Is ti an•
open . Thlirsday to -Thie te01dd Hke eqval
taler rewriting di the f.nta for tl ... e.'
Inclusion 9f the '.Blbl...n.ated '., :=:,J! ~:Ci:! =1:! ··-: .. ;";"'iScu.,'"---~ .. :-:'"-":i"':. .. ---~Ch .. :;"';'"e"'"';
evolution. .,
·· "OB, YES, I will, without
"MAY 1 SA~-, without specific references to the
apology, that we Christians Biblical account or to a would 11.ke eci.uaJ time,.. board
member Eugene Ra8le of creator," .Wd Dr. John Ford,
R06evllle said. · a San Diego physician who is
.
National Aoademy of Science
urged the board not to Include
tbe doctrine ol special crea·
tion In tho tells, Intended for
use 1beginnil(C bi September
1974. • '
08.rwin's theory, put forth in
1859 In his htsWic "Origin ol
the Spec:i..-by Natural Selec-
tion" bolds that man and other
spe:cies evolved from simpler
forms of life, with the species
best adapted to the en-
vironment being the ones
wtllch survived.
BELIEVERS IN the dot-
trlne of special creation say a
creator designed man and
other species in their present
form.
Dogs Find
Surprise
SAN DIEGO (AP\
Marine dogs trained to
sniH out marijua!UI turned
a surprise inspection at
San Diego's county honor ·
camp into something of an
embarrassment.
1be dogs found some, all
right -in the safe ln the
bonor camp director's of-
fice.
There Wa.!t none in the
beds or lockers of the 26
men convicted or varioua
t:ri mes il),.the past.
The marijuana which
t h e five dogs smelled
Wednesday through the
metal of Lee Bennett's
floor safe bad been con-
fiscated earlier, BeMetl
explained.
As presently written, one of '---------.....J
Aide Named
the texts aays this about the
orjgin of life:
ult is known that lire began
in the seas."
Three File Suit
To Free Newsman
LOS ANGELES (AP \ -Los Angeles Herald·Eum!nu
Three newsmen have filed a photographer, and Jesu1 A.
Superior Court suit contending Barker, a KABC newswrlter.
that Los Angeles County is f
spending public funds illegally FARR WAS jalted--aft6' be
to keep newsman William refused to disclose tbe IOUl'te
Farr ln jail. -of a story he wrote two years
The suit, filed Thursday, ago about tbe Charles ?.Wison
contends the money is being "family ."
illegally spent because Farr·1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-=;
was jailed in violation of his
constitutional rights.
SHERIFF PETE Pitchess
was named as principal defen·
dant.
Superior Court Judge David
A. Thomas ordered Pitchess to
appear in cou rt next Wednes-
day to sh.ow cause why
Farr should not be released.
But Thomas refused to issue
an immediate restra iQj.ng
order freeing Farr. l
VNITED
STATES
NATI ONAL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
NOW OPl.tf
SATURDAYS
9 to 1 P.M.
'
• '
. . The board ordered editorial the board's Vice piesident.
changes a tr e s s in g that Asked by reporteis bow the
Darwin's theory is speculative books could-dlscuss the doc-
and not fact. 'that change will tr;.ne of special c re at i on
be required _~4 basic science without referring .to a creator
texts intenaea , for kin-or God, Ford said: 11Evolution
dergartners tbrougb eighth as taught in 6Chool.! today Ls
graders before tile state will antitheistic and is just as
buy t!)e books. , much a religion as other
Under a rewriting example
prOposed to the board, thal
passage would be changed to
Mrs. Ben Kraut of Costa
Mesa bas been appointed
chairman of the P i t z e r
College Parents' Association
for Costa Mesa. She will serve
~ liaison between the college
and parents of local students.
Farr, a Los Angeles Times
reporter, has been in jail for
18 days on an indefinite
sentence for contempt of
court.
MON.•THUIS. 1 .. 1 P.M. !
UPIT ........
Tlaat's Slwe Bt%
Actress Ali McGraw rests her weight On one foot as
she bas her shoeprints and bandprints imbedded
in Grauman's Chinese ll'heater Thursday. Miss Mc-
Graw is the first person in three years to be' so
honored. She wrote the phrase 'Peace and ~ve'
in the cement.
Dense Fog Causes 2.3
Car Pi'leup;_18 Hurt
UVERMORE (AP ) -An unable to stop on the ice.
icy pass was cleared of Debris was scattered for a
wreckage after more than 23 half mile.
cars and trucks smashed up in Officers said the truck
ttense fog, injuring 18 persons driver was trying to stop for
including two men burned three cars whose occupants
from hydrochloric acid that were waving him doWn.
was spewed over the highway. Valley Memorial Hospital
H11le cars and 'trucks were here reported treating 15
lald out like a train wreck one -persons for facial injuries,
·after the other," said Highway fractures, lacerations and the
Patrol Sgt. &twin Main. .<·'It two persons for the minor acid
looted like a bomb exploded blµ'ns . -
Board members will have .. religious ideas."
veto power over the rewriting. Nineteen califomia • based
At least one board member Nobel prize winners and the
read: ·
"Most scientists believe that
life may have begun in the
sea."
The suit was filed by Rudy
Villasenor, a retired Times
reporter; Mel Leroy Lied~r. a
FllDAYS 1M P.M.
17141 140.1211. ~ .. :
So. CMlt Pl-. c..N' ....
"-'· Vk:t ...... -M-..
O. DEAN HEISER
. Merce.des·Benz announces
·precisely the kiµd of model change
-you,expect-from -Mercedes·Benz.
•
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•
automatic traiismission, or ror "°""'
steering and power brakes, or for an
electrically · heated rear window. They
are all part of the 280's base price. on the roadway." He said it. The hospital said Claude J.
was a miracle no one was idn-~dix of Vallejo was · in ~
ed. . -• ~ Critical condition with £ace
M.. ODE( CHANGE~ at Mercedes-::i
1 Benz arc inspired not by the trends
of fashion but by the thrust of engineer··
inr PJOll<&I· qnc such cba!lgl! bca>mea ' odlail IGC!iiy: the MC=dcs'BeDz ~SO Even air c:ondit\oning falls undtrlbe
heading of · stuJdard equipment. You'll
count· four separate outlets on the U...
strumcnt panel-two for the driver, twO
for his front·seat passenger .
upeop1e -were still ~ ,._~ Md injuries and Steven
Ing ln the wreckage. wbJ.le. carr-1 ~of San Francisco was in "
kepi piling into them," .a tntck ""1oys condition with m~tfple
drivel' said. injuries.. -
•
Year-round
School Bid
stdan bas evolved into the 280 Sedan-.
"flb~t sttctc:!>illg ~one inch or , ·
....,., IO~ '1ilhtcst hiilt of stylillg '
. u:itkerY· • .i j -
The technical irp.provemcnts that in ..
spifcd this change wilhet the280furthcr
apait-than evti from other can in its
clasi.
Comfort notforgotten ·
The painstaking Mercedes-Benz engi-
neers found one subtle way after another
Mercedes· Benz motor can:
from $15,lSl• to $6,439*
The eastbound lanes of
Interstate 580 in Altamont
Pass coimectlng the San
Francisco Bay ma and the
Central Valley were closed for
ftve hours Thul'lday as crews
cleaned up m1shed vehicles
and spilled truck cargo that
included the 8cld, paint, glue
and paper products. Criticized
Should you invest your $8,968* in
the 280 Sedan? Study its engineering re·
fi.nemcnts. Weigh all the facts. Measure
this car's pcrf ormancc against your needs
-then decide.
M1rc1d11-Btnz 280 Sedan ii n't jwt a clla11gtd car; ir'r an improved car.' Merc~es-&au offer1 a vut ranse of
models. Herc arc suggesl~ tclail pm:.
for 7 or the mo11 popular IYJ!«:
The Highway Patrol'said the
crash ocauTed after a truck-
traller jackknife<hoCl'OSS"ihe
hiJ!hway. Vehicles be h i n d ,
blinded by the fog, were
Police Hold
Cust,odi<,r.n .
In, Murder
NORWALK (AP) -Richard
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
There Is .. 11crtactoal evidence"
to show.that.year-round
schools ~ provide better
educaUonal opportunity for cl·
fy sludenti, J -·district staff study says.
THE STUDY, relea se d
"l'hurscliY. Conduded lhat a
yea~ prog;ram would in
fact create a "substantial"
financia r drain on the district.
Remarkable' new engine
The engineers hid tbe-2IO's biggest-news
under the hood.
Fresh from a long laboratQry incu ..
,bation is a new 2.8-litre doub~
hta4-annshaft engine. Hemispherical
combustion chambers, 2-stage dual com-
pound carburetor-this lovingly .asscm·
bled Six ci>uld be mistaken for a high·
performance SPQrts car engine. (Note
that it revs up to 6500 ipm.)
"The crankshaft is something of a
masterpiece," reports Britain's Autocar
"Eugene Juarez, an 18-year-old
school <custodian , was booked
fol' investigation ol murder
'lbursday in lbe stabbing
cleatll .. Cl( an ~ o n o r studenl W!!o hid hetn!!cying to defend
-yoil(J,_ beln{-~cked by·a P,fll, offlciais 118.J.d.
Slx.cilber ~tbs ...... book:
eel tor lnveatilalkl!\ Of aasaulf
wllhadeadly...aponfollow·
1nl ..WedneldaY'• knifing-at JOiin .Glenn Hlg!J, School. ~y
-. limed ~ .to Juvenile authoriUea. ~Ir ag~ rqed:
from 14 to 11.
"Despite the optimistic
claims iii pn>ponents ol yea!'
round school plans, we have
found no basis, in theory. or
practice, for expecting any
signifK:ant advantae:e ~ a
swltch to .a year*>und p~
gram, jhe etudy .. ys.
·!,'There i$,no lfactaal ... vldenct"lo·~eliiilns·l-<'C--1-'1 tar Unwmiil 1 ef t..i1r g; · ~ •. a~or NWt 88..1 ..... _U 'O ~ ' • ... i.-! ..... j -li'9rty-adloo!JJ I n
California are cwrefflly 1 on •
year"®nd.ocl!eduJea. Sta~ ol,
llclols say 100 ocliiols will be •
uilng the pi;ol1'8ln l!Y' .J!<!ll " year. ~
~ vtctlm. rranc·~aco , vmeta J._, a straight A stu· THE YEAR·/\O,)i:Nl>.
dllil 'and caJ>!ain cl the soccer ·ptogram• .allow• ~oOls .to •.
team, "!IS sliln In.front of the . ti<ibse niqre students'bjr Uslq
. '!cl>ool Cllfetetia wbeo he lried a stagered ach8dule wilh
10 defend a 19 -y e a r -o 1 d shorter, more frequent vaca-
• -gnc1UOtc of GlemrHigh: -lions. '---
, .. ~
magazine, 0 running in seven main bear ..
Jttgs, and every oDe of thC twClve webs
i~rating a counterweight.''• .. The
goal:' low engine vibration.
The men who designed this engine
aimed for tfficitncy instead of brute pow·
,; er. You. let the running smoothness you
expect from a c:ar of this class. Some·
thing you may not expect from a car of
thiS-class: the 280 engine's mtrained
appetite for gasoline.
roominess: the 280 matches them for
interior space-and actually exceeds
them in trunk capacity.
Those $8000 "luxury" sedans art
impressive standing in a driveway. But
compare driving them with driving the
280 Sedan; out in the real world
You'll discover that the 280 twirls
through a turning circle of only 36.4
feet (about the saJJle as a little VW 1200
"Beetle"). Those largtr cars don't. ,
The 280 nips into parking spots those
heftier sedans have to pass up.
And you'll s~p through holes in city
traffic: where drt.lmboats dare not go.
Fully independent suspension
Let others brag about how big and or·
nate their cars are. You can brag about
bow well your 280 Sedan hand,les.
" .•• rM most ctmrrollable high speed '"an wt'w rested."
That was Motor 7rmd magazine's rcac·
tion to the 250 Sedan~ and the 280's ban·
dling is unchanged. ... .
This is because its superb suspcn·
sion is unchanged: a four-whee l, fully
independent · system with a diagonal·
pivot rear swing axle. Gas·pressurizcd
shock absorbers and anti~sway bars front
and rear arc standard component". Al so
standard: 175 SR/14 radial·ply tires on
wheel rims 5\.ii inches wide.
The engirrccn fitted an additiO(lal
shock absorber to the 280, in an unusual
~t -the steering system..
engineering with the 280 Sedan. ,
The body of your 280is anall·welded
steel structure. so strong that a separate
frame Is redundant. That body is the
frame.
Precious weight is saved. Enormous
strength is built in. Bolts won't tug loose
over the miles because there are no bolts.
1.973 do111n1k llixurywdan
Mercedn-lkna 280 S~11
280 offtr1 tht lux11ryof 1/fitie,.11i11.
Run a finger over the finish. You will
fetl why it took several hours to paint,
bake, and polish to that high gloss.
Numerous outer body ~ms were filled
and made invisible before painting.
When you buy an $8,000 automobile,
you deserve such fastidious touches.
4-wheel disc brakes
You get fo3wh disc brakes on your
280 as sta)da ment.
'50SLCCoupt:
'50SL Coupe(Roads1er
280S6,.5Scdl.n
180Coupe
280Sechn
210Sedan
2 20 Diewl Stdan
$1S,ltt
Sll,761
SI0,371 s 9,614 ...... ...... ......
....... o.. .. ,....,, • ....., ... <l.$•flf ................ _
"""""· ..... '"" ...... , ....... u • .,. o,.,np. ~ Motud<o·9<u"' Nonll A-'u, I.e.
to make the 280 an eminently livable
machine.
You sit high enough to see the road
ahead . Large glass areas enhance visj ..
bility. Your body is supPortcd firmly in
seats· built around a network of coil
springs, not cheap foam rubber.
You needn't fumble around to find
the headlight dimmer switch or wind-
shield wiper and washer controls. They're
a fingertip away in a Pod on the ldt of
the steerin g column; you can work them
withou\taking a hand of{Jhe whceL
More than status
The new 280 Sedan is plainly nor$8,9689
wonh of bigness, or styling, or 1W11L •
Buy it and you buck the trends of the
"luxury" class head~n.
Your satisfying reward: ownership
or a precision machine engineered to
outlive trend s. One test drive will con-
finn your wisdom in choosing it.
Arrange with your authorized MCI"
cc:dcs-·Bcnz dealer to take.that test drfr'le
soon. For more useful facts about the ""
280 and other models, clip the coupon
and mail il tOday. You will tcccive a·ftee
color brochure.
What do doCfuii reoommena · fi>rpa1ients.in pain?
As agile as before
Consider that t e front brake discs
measure almost 11 inches in diameter,
virtually the $Brnc size as the front discs
on the famovs Mercedes-Benz 450SL
spons model, The 280'1 brakes arc po_w·
er assisted, of course; another standard
·cquipmc~t feature . r-·-------·-----.. '. -
noctm all 8Ver the c:oantry dispense over 50,000,000
of these tablets to thefr patients each year:
There are many medictitlons it
physician or denti11t can 1>re-
1eribe for peln. Some are nar•
cotic, many are available only
onp....,=·p · n.Bu.ttherei1 one
psln rel , available without
preteri docton di1pel\98
•1.aiR and apln •.. Anacin.
Each yu.r, doctors give over 60,000,000 Anacin tablet. to
their pt.tienll in pain. Jf doctore
think enou1b about Anacin to
dilpenle all thee& tablitta, what
bet&tr ,.,._.ndation can you
Mk when you are in pain!
1 You '"• ~acin cont1fn1 -· >Mre of the J)llR reliever doc-
...
Thal engine can be !ilibtci and less bulky
than those used in other $8000 sedans
bccallSC! the 280 Secfan itstlf is light~r
and less bulky.
It iJ .,. ..,;,,.mn1fa<11"41111< wp 3
dcmwtit ••tunry" 11daru oil wtigh at ltast
lef'lf a''°" iftort, ond 1Htaiurt a /11.fl 3 /ttr. io.,,,-, than tlu 280 Stdan: Scaltl fllOttdtr
tltat tluy uu thol1 ht• V,8 ...,; .....
Yet the ex111 bulk of these larger can
seems mono a matter of show than extra
Instead of squandering yObt money
on hollow sheet metal and styling that is
soon pasK, you inOUl it iD. fundamental
4-speed automatic shift
Your 280'1 automatic transmission is so
quiclt·shifting that even sporting driven
have expressed surprise-and approval.
You c:an set it in DRIVE and leave it
there; you can also shift through the
forward gears by band. -
The padded 1hitt lever sits within
easy reachlon a central co'nsolc. (If you
prefer, a column shift lever can be fitted
at no extr8 cos1.)
Yoµ arc not charged extra for this
1
1
®Jim Slemons tmporf1,'1nc.
110 W. Wit11er A.Yeti•• I Se11te A.11•, c.nfot11i• t2707
I
PltlS(, •tnd mt your f'ull-eolor broda.w
of the Merctdc1·Ben1 motor can.
·~·----------.....,., _________ _
"'••-----------.!lutt------~•·---,,,,_, ________ _
---·--------..
Jirri. Slemons Imports~ lnc..12ow. wamerAvmue.Santa't,na,CalifomJ•.927o7Phone:114-s46-411'
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l.\ '> ,. '
..
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DAD.Y PU.OT EDITORIAL PAGE
Ocean Trail Pu·shed
The Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and fuocreation
Commission has decided not to be Intimidated by forces
seeking to block plans for an oceanlront bicycle trait
They have for the serond time approved the pro-
posed master plan of bike trails which Includes the con·
troversial segments that would extend the beach trail
from Peninsula Point to the Santa Ana River.
The panel alreody bas been rebuffed on ce on the
trail -when city councilmen last sumvier refused to
make it part of a parkspriority list being used to form
a non-profit, parks·buying city coporation.
Now the Commission is trying again to convince
councilmen the oceanfront trail is the most. attractive
east-west bicycle route -as opposed to one through
the alleys and back streets as suggested by Mayor Don·
aid Mclnnis and Vice Mayor Howard Rogers ..
The two councilmen say there are too many bugs
and their beach-dwelling constituents would suffer prop-
erty value 1osses.
But the commission apparently feels the bugs can
be worked out and the supposed sacrifice of a minority
is reasonable compared to the benefit to the majority.
,\ll evidence indicates the commission's viewpoint is
correct.
Helping Hands Ready
The \Vomen's Lib movement and its demands fpr
better female job opportunities may have turned the
tables on the males.
plenty o! hands on file for you. Call 642-0474 !or con-
venient service.
And don't forget the boys on your job Ual this
Christmas season.
Death of ~ Doryman
Forever, or so it seems, Newport Beae.h bas capital·
ized on the men who make up its colorful dory fishing
fleet.
The Chamber of Commerce highlights tl)em tn il.1-
brochures. The city government itself even has published
a pamphlet telling their quaint history.
They are an important part of lhe seafaring char·
acter of this city of sleek sailboats and powerful motor·
cruisers. They're a little part of what is special about
living in Newport Beach.
But it seems everybody has profited but the dory·
men themselves.
They scrape a living together, toiling from three tn
the morning until sometimes very late in the afternoon.
First at sea, and then on the beach selling "µle day's
catch. .
For only the second lime in the history of the New·
port dorymen, a tragedy has befallen the fleet.
It could not be a sadder tale than one of the death
of a 25-year man .of .the sea and his pretty three-year·
old daughter. They drowned Tuesday oU Huntington
Beach.
The friends of doryman Allen Knight have: started
a collection for Mrs. Knight and their four other children.
A dollar or t\vo, or a toy, would be a meaningful way to
celebrate this Christmas season.
Officials of the Harbor Area Youth Employment
Service (YES) always need job referrals for young pea·
ple, not just during the Christmas season. The lot 1s
lopsided, ho,vever, this particular year.
Not enough jobs are available for boys.
If you need a helping hand this Ch~s~mas, no
n1atter what the job or the gender, YES off1c1als have
Others with feeling can help, too. By sending a
check to Mrs. Dora Knight, 224 N. Newport Blvd., Apt.
2, or by bringing a toy 'by the fishing fleet at the New-
port Pier any time after mid-morning when the boats
are in.
'I guess I could slay the dragon with this, sire •.. be might
die laughing.'
Celebration
Of Christmas
A 'New' Idea
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
Christmas Wdsn't celebrated as a
festivity for the first thousand years of
Christendom ; during that time, perhaps,
people spread the good feeling over the
whole year, i.."l!tead of squeeiing it into a
(»Uple of weeks and n reverting to
nature the rest of
tbe year, as we do
now. • • •
An "extemporan·
eous" listener is
someone who is busy
thinking up his re-
plies while you are
still talking. • • •
We look back on the past with longing
because it can't be changed; it is the on·
Jy part of our lives not subject to
dangerous vicissitudes.
• • •
UNHAPPINEM DOES not so much
consist in not getting what we want, as in
not wanting ~t after we get it. (This is
why happiness does not consist in fulfill·
ment of our wants, but in satisfaction of
our needs.} • • •
It is im~ble to write a bo9k about
humor that i1s funny, and no getl\lioely
comic writer bas ever tried it ·-all the
books dissecting humor are composed by
grimly sober pedants. • • •
The paradox in reading is that unless
you read enough you can't even un-
derstand your own though~ -but if you
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Is it true that the Newport Beach
Recreation Department is plan-
ning pedestrian overpasses for the
Ocean Froot Bicycle Trail?
-B.S.
Tiiis fNfWN r.fltc1' rNllln' wlfwl. ..t
_......, ....... the-...........
,_ ..t ~ II OIMnlY On., O.ilY Pll9t.
continue reading beyond the optimmn
point, you tum from a thinking reader
to a mere memory bank. • • •
BAD BOOKS generally sell more
copies thiin good books for the simple
and 1human reason that bad books tell us
what we like to bear, while good books tell
u.°' what we ought to hear. • • •
Scien<:e arises out of play more than
we realize; we all know that astronomy
came from astrology, and chemistry
from alchemy, but few know what
modem piathematics ancj probability
theory arose when a gambling aristocrat
asked Pascal to calculate the odds on a
popular dice game. • • •
THE MOST incisive piece on politics
I've read in a long time -and which
quite transcends partisan political di!·
ferences -is Kurt Vonnegut's essay on
"winners .. a.mi losers" ~ the November
issue of ffa!Per's magazme. • • •
Though Ibey wlll strenuously deny it,
most men don't care much for a woman
with a highly-developed sense of humor;
they miuld ralher be with someone dull,
who will adore them, than someone
bright, who might laugh at them.
~xpatriates By. Cho ice
LONDON -Once an American
businessman is settled in England, it can
be difficult to persuade him to. return
home. Nearly every major 1.:J.S. company
with a branch in Britain has found this to
be so. In fact, a growing number of e't·
patriate American executives choose to
qult their jobs rather than go back IQ.
<..'Orporate headquarters. •
A · NEW E~1PLOYl\lENT agency,
American Management Resources. has
bttn helping ro find jobs for these reluc·
tant repfttriates since last sµmmer .
Every month AMR sends out anonymous
-resumes to more than 1,000 companies.
The agency charges no fee for Its
services; it supports Itself through con·
.trlbutions from American and European
bllllnelaes.
AMR Is dlrccted by Kenneth Br!)wn, an ,
American who retired a1 Betblehem
Steel's European repttSentatlve last
March and de<ided he did not want lo mum IO lhe United Stale&. Finding jobt ror Americans In blJ pu.sitlon is not esay,
.be says. becaiisa "most U.S. executives
pt allowance• for education and housing,
plus yearly trips home." English com-
panlas offer substantially lower wages
and le-perquls!l<!t.
BRITAIN'S ENTRY Into tho Common
Morkl!I Oil Jiii. I may well open up new
opportun!Ues for Amerlelll expatriates.
''An American who Jc.nowt the tu SY,ltem
In France, the labor tAaws ln Germany, or
rtelonal plannlng In Italy could ltave a
lot to offer," Brown . l!>ld Edltorfal
Reteardl n.ports. l'\uibKmCn, British
bus1neA II boeomlng mere ~ IO
the klR ol retaining con$UIWtll -Jobs
lhal pa1 mono tbu those lied lo Ult
complllY pll)'IOil.
'
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
Although there arc no r e I i a b l e
statistics -0n the number of American ex·
ecutives working In London, th e
American Chamber of Co m m e r c e
estimates; around 2,000. In a 1970
survey of 270 U.S. subsidiaries in Britain,
the chamber found that nearly three-
quarters employed no Americans at all.
These firms employ British managers
part]y because local ese(utive talent has
improved and partly because it makes
for better commuity relations.
EXECUTIVES who stay abroad for
more than three years are the ones who
find it most difficult to return home,
lnduatrial Management m a g a i I n e
r<ports. Many of them feet that their
promotion prospects ln the home office
may have lessened during their ;ibsence .
"The really smart boys, who merely use
a European posting as just another nrng
on the way to the top, would not stay for
more than three years," the magazine
notes.
While most Americans who wish to ~
main abroad dte the "quality of Ufe" as
D reason, lhCY probably are motivated
also by tht prestige lhat accompanies an
oversens job. Since an American often is
l5eflt abroad to direct all or piirt ol a
[llubsidlary, he comes to be known as
"Mr. Company" in Europe. "n's not
ensy /' obse:rvu Brown, "for him to
, return to Peoria or New York, whore he
' must flt himself back into the executive
blcrarcby."
N •
Tlae Smuggled Brok en Treat ies Papers
Documents Support Indian Charges
WASHINGTON -The Broken Treaties
Papers, which were smuggled out of
government files by wrathCul Indians
during their oceupation of the Bureau of
Indian Affairs building, have been scat-
tered in secret stashes across the United
, States and Canada.
We have bad ac·
cess to them. We
llave also been given
a message for Presi-
dent Nixon. "Tell the
President,'' we were
asked, 1'that lndiaris
do not want the
dcx:uments any long-
er than it takes to .
dliplicate and Index lbep> oo 1bat .... ry
tribe in America can educate itself fu the
double-dealing of the federal government
and find ways to forestall it."
WE HA VE JNSPµ:rEI> thousands
upon thousands of documents, some
almost britUe with age, others fresh as
today's headlines. They tell a shabby
story.
Some docmnents describe multimillion·
dollar land deals in South Dakota's Black
Hills. Others reveal how the White House
played polities with Indian rights.
There are also poignant papers, like
the account of an Indian woman whose
foot was broken by the police but was
left to spend the night in jail untended.
, But above all, the documents indict the
•
(JACK ANDERSON J
bureaucrats who have pretended to help
the Indians but have often exploited them
instead. Indians whose forebears foUgbt
the cavalry have been reduced to battling
the bureaucrats. It bas been a tawdry,
tedious war without glory.
' ' LIKE TIIE C A V,,& LR V, 1!!i .b!lf-
eaucrats h av e remorselessly driven
the Indians deeper into tbeir ~
tions. The stolen docl.undts ~
evidence that .Indians hive t>een clieated
out of their land, robbed of 'their Water
rights, deprived of their fishing streams
· and hunting grounds.
As in any ·war, the statistics are grim.
h1dian life expectancy is 41 years com-
pared with 71 for other Americans; 'tbe
Indian unemployment rate is 45 percent
compared wilh 5.8 percent for the nation
at large ; the average Indian family
struggles along on $4,000 a year, less
than half the $9,867 median for the rest
of the Country; and finally, the Indian
suicide rate is twice the national rate.
Ever since the Indians ransacked
government files and carted oU boxes
full of documents, several newsmen have
tried to get a look at them. Some offered
money for the story; we offered only our
record for championing the downtrodden.
The Indians spurned the money ~d
voted to show us lhe Broken Treaties
Papers.
THE FBI, meanwhile, bas betn
searching up and down tbe country for
the stolen 4ocuments. ·Except for ,one
small seizure in Oklahoma, bowever, the
documents remain in Indian hands.
We learned they bad been broken down
into several caches and hidden in diverse
locations at the far ends of the United
States ~and Canada.,So:roe were secretea
in automobile trunks, ln old phonograph
cases; 1n oMcure comen of private
home!'. 'Others were $.taabed 1n .remote
hiding places on Indian reservations.
My associate Les Whitten new to
Phoenix for the first tryst. At the airport.
Indian security men one jump ahead of
the FBI told him to wait on a corner
away from the tennlnal building. They
bustled him by a devious route to a motel
where some of the Indian leaders were
assembled.
THE INDIANS wouldn't talk about the
papers in the motel Or even inside their
cars fol"\ fear of FBI bugging. Furtive
meetings were arranged, instead, at a
bowling alley, a coffee houSe and on a
parking Jot.
Next day, Whitten was instructed to fly
to .another city many hundreds of miles
away. He was met by one of the leading
Indian militants who questioned him
closely. At last, Whitten was given four
documents and questioned again about
their meaning to find out what be knew
about Indian matters. Then, for 12 hours,
he was deserted.
The following morning, m a n y
thousands of documents were delivered
to him. The door of his room was bolted
and a tough Indian security man planted
himsell in a chair pushed against the
door. As· Whitten • waded through the
papers, Indian experts helped him with
the unfamiliar .tribes and names.
EXCEPI' FOR protecting our sources
and ' keeping the biding ~!!;!,_secret, we
have been placed under oo restraint by
the Indians. They have made no attempt
to tell us what to write.
In future column,,, we \vill describe
how the Indians pulled the greatest docu·
ment heist in history right under the
noses of the FBI. We will also reVeal, ·in
detail. the contents of the Broken
Treaties Papers.
Footnote : The lndians, in their black
hr.ts with the beaded batbands, looked
tough and grim . However, lhey not only
tunted out to be friendly but they
laughed easily. Once I.bey left Whitten be-
hind to work while they went out for a
beer. When Whttten~kingty complained, one Indian crac : "You know how
whites go crazy 'If they drink fire-
water."
Sad Story of a Grand Sexperiment
The blossoming public interest in sex
therapy could lead to but one 1 inevitable
result. '
There the~ were, the new sex
, therapists, from Masters & Johnson en
down, featured on the covers of national
magazines, writing
books on<f appearing
on radio and ,televi·
sion to tell fascinat-
ed audiences how
they cured tbelr pa·
Uents of sexual hang·
ups .
T'ue way they did
it ln virtually every
new sex clinic in the
land was to teach their patients How to
Do It. This lecbntque, they said, worked
wonders.
The ramificatlons of alJ this were first
recognized by the noted educationalist,
Dean lliram Skarewe Ill of Skarewe
University.
0 AS RELEVANT educationalists,
gentlemen," the Dean grimly told an
emergency faculty meeting, "we 1ave
failed dismally in preparing our students
for Ille. We have taught them how to
weld an automobile, how to swing a golf
~--Btt Geor9e ---,
Dear Georgt:
Why are the days so much
shorter in the winter than tn the
summer and if I write to my
Coogresmian would tt help?
' O.H. Dear O.H.:
No, It would probably Just pass
tht t1me faster and make the days
seem even 1horter. Anyhow, It
wouldn't do much good -It's not
J10iely the jockeying around of
Daylight Savings which makes
summer days 1onger than wlnt.trt
days. lt'a that col~ contract! and
beat e~pands; naturallY1 the col.
der the eeason, the shorter the
days.
( ART HOPPE J
club and how to recite Etruscan paetry.
"-"But the o.ne single subject we have
never taught them -and the one in
which they will engage in for most of their
Jives -is How to Do It.
"No wonder our alumni have bangµps.
No wonder they are flocking to expensive
sex clinics in middle age to · ream. our
duty ls clear. We must nip the problem in
the bud by teaching them How to Qo It
while their learning abilities are at their
peak -in a word, while they're still in
school."
THE DEAN'S proposal set off an
acrimonious debate. In an age dedicated
to relevant education, no one, of courst",
disputed his premise. The debate was
over whether the course ahouid be given
as a lab science or as part o( the P .E.
• program. It was finally decided that It
was vocational in nature and was
therefore included in Driver's Ed.
The popularity of How to Do It 102a
and lO'lb was instnntan·eous: Every stu•
dent signed up. Faculty reports were
glowing. "The ardor with which students
do their homework!" said one professor
with awe. "And when it comes to final
e1ams, they 're all fWly prepared."
TIIE SMASIDNG suctess of the pro-
gram was widely heralded. Every college
ln the country rushed to emulate It. And
soon, How To Do It was being offered in
the !l!tioo'~ high !!Cbools (fo_r im'ioni: ind
seniors only). •
Naturally, the govemnient stepped tn.
"We'll never reduce the high rate of ac-
. cidents in America's bedrooms and
motels," said COngressman Homer T.
Pettibone, "until every practitioner ls
tested ~nd llcensed."
The bill was paaed and woe betlde the
poor eager young swain who eouldn't
produce a valid lice:nse.
P ,a nora ma of A merica
A panorama of .America In transition
- a colorful .Jsaleid03cope of this country
decade by decade since 1870 with a
sweeping look at America'r folkwaya and
mores -all of this delcrlbes the lavishly
llluatrated ~u Cenlal)': lDt VWI
of Cha°""g Ufe Slyle.. LG America hy
Ralph Andrtst (American llorlfago
l'reSI, ft6.tl5).
With a profusion, of photographs, 32 col·
or, 600 black ond white, and a vivid ac-
companying 1 t.ext, Amtrlcan Century
present5 a b~·eathtaklng oventlew of what
Ille and living have been like In the
Untied Slates In the past 100 years.
Andrhll wrtl<!t of the Wild, w .. 1 and hoW
It wai timed: the days of easy mooC!y
and boomiog busln<ss ("'!l\Celllratlng on
such ootable merchandi!ung tycoons e11
Aaron r.tontgomery, Ward and John
(THE BOO~)
Wanamaker!; the' cli.D111, lo baying
hablu over they~~· . Uenges and effects of wan and d wan1 tbe tranal-
.. t1011 trom bicycles to otor cm and how
it arlected rasltlon1 ond lravtllina: lhe
G•y ~inetles, the Jloarlng TwonUet ond
the Great V.prelSlon. 11'1 all he\'l lo one
mAgniflcent pack11ge -tnvmttlons.
political events, hmovallons, IOClety' and
gadgets.
Ralph Andr11t Ill the aulltof of IAq
Death: The L11t Dayo of tM Ptalll II>
dtau and has edited a number o[
volumes or~merla1na. ---
CAllOLll'IE HARKLEROAD
•
But arrests were few. For almost
overnight America had become a nation
of experts superbly trained in How to Do
Jl And hangups became a thing of the
past. •
TO PREVENT confusion between
graduates of different schools:, the techni·
qu ils were of course numbered by a
universal standard.
"Wotild you like to one, three, fourteen
and forty-six tonight, dear?" a romantic
husband would inquire. And as both
parties were experts, the results were as
predictable as turning on the cold water
faucet. ~.nd about ~ fu.t{!restlng.
"What's on televisJoo?" the wife would now reply, more often than not, with a yawn.
Once again, the future of the human
race seemed threatened. tt was saved by
a wise President who scrapped the
ll<tnalng program ond banned lho
teachlil1 of. How to Do It courses by
anybody. &nY!'here.
"Some tbings," the wise Prtsident
eald Wisely, "are more fun to learn by
doing."
( OIANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, Pvbti&her
Th(lmas Ketvil, Editor
Borbara Kttibich
EdUorlol Page Editor .
The editorial 11tfl:(" nf the Daily
l'llGt 11tek• to tnfnrm And 1tlmu·
l&tt reader& by prc.:cntlng· this
new1paptr;t opinions a~ · e<>m· mentary on toplct ot lntdt11t and
•ltcnlfic1nc:t. b)' provldlng a forum
for th~ rxpraalon of our readef'fl'
'l>lnlr>na. and b)' Prettntlna tht d Yt l'H Ytewvnlnta of lnform«I ob-
tc!rvtr• ·and •P1>kt1mtn un topics
• or th" day.
Friday, December 15, 1972
•
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• • •
Ora nge Coast· Today's Flnal
• • EDITION N.Y. Stoeks •
VO[ 65, NO. 360, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES • ORANGE COUNfv. CALIFORNIA' FRIDA 'I', DECEMBER Is', Im c TEN CENTS
• •· •• • rain I rv1ne river
Fuiul Started
For Fishermaii
Friends of Newport Beach dory
fisherman Allen Knight · b a v e
formalized their efforts to start a,
collection foe his wife and four liv-
ing children.
Knlght_ia still miaalng at sea_ with
his S-year~ld daughter Patricia.
~
Amburgey
Patriarch
.Dead at 84
Charlie Amburgey, patriarch of one of
():)sta Mesa's oldest established families,
Truck Hit
In 90-MPH
Collision
By· RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of tMI Olllf' 'lltt Slaff
Mrs. Gary L. Black, a Newport
Beach police meter maid and
friend o( tbe Knight family, aaid
people ha~ been asked to send any
contributions by check to the· Allen
Knight Memorial Trust Fund, in
care of the .Bank of America, 3444
Via Lido, Newport Beach.
· died Tlibrsday at the age of 84.
Servi&s for the former coal miner,
dairy farmer and lumbenpan have been
set for 2 p.m. Saturday at the Melrose·
Abbey Chapel, Anaielm, wllb tbe Rev.
Anthooy McGowan of St. Joho tbe Bap.
tis! Catholic Church, Costa """· of-
Char!es L. Schoonover Sr., 46, owner or
the Irvine . General Store, was killed this
morning when his bread truck collided
with a passenger train doing an
't!stimat.ed 90 mph at the point of impact
at the Jeffrey Road crossing in Irvine. Kiiight' an<l his young daughter
were in his dory Tuesday on their
way back from Huntington Beach
wheo, apparently, tbe little girl fell
(overboard aod Knight died trying
to l'e!CUe her:
Mesa Sfaying
Jury Ponders
Seco11d Dav
J
' An Orange County Superior Court jury
went iiito Its second day of deliberations
~ in ;. bld to reach a verdict on the gUnt or innocence . of an attractive
rli-..... ~ed with tbe s!aYbli of ~~ilonei "Joluln)'." ~
1t IS upec:ted that 11 tbe JuiY In Jodge
K..-i La>'•~~~ a ileclsion today oo . . tiled
'88ainst Trtndiad "trml" Crane, JO, it
will be Wed to -Clul'.lil& the weekendl ·
Mrs. c;'raoe is accused ol tbe fatal slab-
bing last Sept. 15 of Marllnes, ZS, ol t76
N.Misaioo St.
It is 8Jleged that she plunged a knife
into his heart as the couple quarreled in
his apartment·over another girl Martinez
hBd been dating that evening.
Martloes' roommate testiflM ®ring
the two-weet trial that Mrs. Crane at·
tacked bis friend after tbe pair bad
struggled ht the )ltreet over Martinez'
new female com~on.
Mrs. Crane teSlified· that ·she hBd oo
recolleclion of seeing a knile untU she
saw the weapon fall from her lover's
•body. Martinez died en route to a local·
hospital.
Teen Sues Over
Broken Romance
PHOENJx, Ariz .• (UPI) - A Phoenix
teenager wants $998 in damages from the
police department for breaking up a
romance, •
Greg Moore, 18, said in his suit that he
and Lana Disser, 16, were arrested
Thanksgiving oo charges of possessing
marijuana and her parents now forbid
him to see her.
TM suit said Moore and Miss Disser
were arrested 8.s they approached a table
in Washington Park where several other
persons were smoking marijuana. He
sald neither be nor the girl smoked mari-
juana.
Series of Raids .-
Lands Drug Haul
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Authorities
have seized more than $7 million worth l . or-me gal dhlgs aod 11m!sted ·u penons
in a 1 series of Los Angeles area dnlg
raids.
Oflicers said Thursday the arrests
stemmed from three separate lo·
vestigaUons of drug activity. '
A Dowoey raid netted 12 poundS of high
quality barbitunte powder worth more
than SS million, iqvettlgators said, and
may have been the largest cooflscaition
of pure barbiturate powder ever made in
the continental United States. Six pel'IOlll
wm ~eo Into custody.
ficiating. '
Interment is to follow at Melrose Ab-
bey, 2203 South Manchester Blvd.,
Anaheim, with Baltz-Berge~n Funeral
Home serving as directors.
Mr. Amburgey is ·a native of Kentucky
and worked in coal mines for 17 years
befOre be moved to Minnesota to take up
dairy fai:ning and lumbering.
He came to Orange County 24 years
ago to retire. Mr. Amburgey's last act.
dress was 1919 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa. His wife of 63 years, Mrs. Rosetta
Arrib.urgey, died last March.
·He is survived by his sons Henry,
Ernest, Sam, Orville, ajl of Costa Mesa ;
Noah, of SUsanville ; and Albert and
Obcar, both of Orange.
The survivors also include daughters
Lola Miller, Kentucky; Minnie Bebnonte.
Indio; LGITine CroswbiLe, Palo AJto; 49
grandchildr<n, 72 greal-graodchildren,
andmie ·~d;
orvme Amburgey Is the director ol communl<au.;. for Ille City .. f Costa
Mela and bls bn1tber 1 Sam, a detective
on the Newpoi:I Beach ·police force.
Ernest Amburgey operates a garage lt
18\b Street and NeWport BooleVard1 Costa Mesa.
Truman Weaker,
Fails to Respond
To Medication
KANSAS CfTY (AP)-Harry S Tru-
man , semi-conscious and unable to speak,
failed to respond to medication today and
doctors expressed concern about his
weakening kfdneys.
The former President slept fitfully and
continued to receive oxygen all the time.
A spokesman at Research HQSPital amf
Medical Center said, "kidney output l'Or.·
tinues to decrease in spite of medica
tion."
For the second straight day, Dr,
Wallace Graham termed Truman's con·
dition "very serious " ·
The 88-year-old rfuman was admitted
to the hospital 10 days ago, suffering
from bronchitis and lung congestion.
Slippage in Truman's kidney function
was noted Wednesday when doctors
observed signs of renal impairment,
which ttJey said, meant bis kidneys were
not purifying blood properly.
· Tb\V'sd&Y, actual output of the kidneys
decreased and the doctors said the
kidney condition was "of concern and is
being watched very closely for chan~e."
At 7 a.m. PST Truman's vital signs
were pulse 84, blood pressure 12UO and
(See TRUMAN, Page %)
'
Six Narcotics
Suspects Seized
In Irvine Raid
DAILY PILOT Slllff ......
WRECKAGE OF BREAD TRUCK BEARS TESTIMONY TO VIOLENT TRAIN-TRUCK COLLISION
Driver Kiiied lnst11ntly When Vehicle Col lided-With Fi st Train •t Jrvine Cr~sing
State Board Decision U.S. Government
Investigators said Schoonover, 14951
Sand Canyon Road, died instantly when
his Barbara Ann truck smashed into the
Santa Fe train bound for Los Angeles.
The train was coming from San Diego
and carried an estimated 125 passengers.
All felt the shock of the collision but train
persoMel said none Were. injured.
Schoonover and his wife, Betty, have
operated the East Jrvine countr.y ·store
since 1966. Mrs. Schoonover i s
postmistress of East Irvine, forqierly
known as Myford.
The Schoonovers and their · two
children, Greg, 21, and Denise, have lived
in an apartment over the store and post
office for the past seven years. The store
building is one of Orange County's oldest,
having been constructed in 1899.
IrVine city aide Paul Brady said
Schoonover was making a .delivery from
the store when the accldent occurred.
·Witnesses who sa wa second train pass
. . after the accident said the signals were Tiah~r ,'-!niw.f ~duettttw'" 'lo)Fotcer ··Settri:ie • ··" inw'ffil.~1;~-!7."oi8anj8Maria,con-~ . '~ o~~ '~ ··'"' ' ' ~ ' '1 ' duct.or of the fouroear train, told ~
1 --· Pay Boos .. "· c .:.1 .. . vestigalorl 11ia1 be felt the 1mpac1 but · . . . . . . ~ qe . did ncit !JnmediBtely !mow what occurred. Degu''--tw· ns·. ;4·dop' ted WASJjlNGTON (UPI) _· Preslderit w;;/..~=.~i:~~1/~'!'!~ .I. J. Ult ~ Ni1:<11 today ordered 1 5.14 percent pay the tfaln, ab.>ut 1.5 miles away from the . impact on Culver Drive.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sex education
in California scQools will <Xlllle under
tighter regulation under a resolution
adopted today without debate by the
State Board of Education.
Adoption· or the.set of guidelines follow,
ed a meeti!lg Thursday night where a
board subcommittee beard briefly from
opponents to. the measure.
One oP.Pone.nt,. Wayne• Lamont Of the
Orange County-based Birth -Control
Institute, Inc., "said in an intervieW after
the board'a action that the rules will pro-
vide "ammunition for intimidation."
Lamont contended that a small, vocal'
minority of parents ·in, most districb go
in front of loca1· boards to oppose sex
education, and the new rules will give
them "ammunitlon. against people who
want fran~ .. open sex instruction."
Especially offense to Lamont was
one section of. the already-existing rules
adopted by th& board in 1969. The sec-
tion, which will also be a part of the
new guidelines, states in part that
"Harmfu1' effects of premarital sex, etc.,
an da code of morals be emphasized with
no derogator.y.. instruction relcttive to re-
ligious beliels and 'ethics, and to parents:
beliefs and teaching."
Lamont said be tried to get ~ board's
subcommittee to, change the word
"premartlal" to "irre!!pOnsible" but his
suggestion was rejected.
The rules on· teacher tnilning, parental
ootifiCf\tion aJ¥l ,outside speaker re-
quirements gmr. Out. of a controversy
earlier 'this ~-When homosexuals .aJ?-
peared as gtit$t '.lectUrers at sex educa-
tion classes in Smt·Francisco and Mllrin
counties. .
At an earlier ll)eeting. staff inember
Henry Heydt said'; ttie districts involved
complied with Curi'ent ~ I e g a f re-
quirements. .
But board member Gene Ragle of
Roseville said the c;ourse at Redwood
High School in tbe Marin Counly _, or
Larkspur appeared to he "a do-i~
_ yourself course in copulation."
One section of today's resolution states
that local ·school superintendents have
veto Power over outside speakers used in
"familf lif~"-Qr Sex.~Ucation. ~s.
Another section I requires parents to be
notified by·mail of sex education courses.
State law gives .Parents the right to pull
their cWld QUt of a sex educ8tion class.
AJso included in the guid"lines is a re-
quireqient that each ;district set up a
committee to review all the materials us--
ed in sex education classes. Then the
committee would let the local board
know what they think. of the materials.
In 19611 tbe hoard issued broad ...
guidelines covering teacher training and
stating that sex education classes should
be voluntary rather than mandatory.
S'lomachPumped;
Suspect Charged
CINCINNATf (UPI) -Sam Fen-
derson, 40, who allegedly swallowed ~6
'.Jliitie" 6ags of heroin when police \fere
closing•jn on lilin, has been charged with •
unlawfliJ . posseSslon of narrotic drugs
arler hiS -stomach was pumped out.
In a legal f,irst here, vice squad men
obtained a sear$ warrant to examine
the coiitents' of Fenderson's stomach.
It was pumped and laboratory tests
·detected the presenee of morphine or
heroin.
increase for 1,316,000 civilian government 'J'ralfic Investigator Gary Barwlg of
workers and a 6.69 .. percent salary boost Costa Mesa Police Department said the
for all 2.4 million members of the anned colliskm ruptured a fuel tank and air
services. hoses. Bolb signaled the train's fail-safe
'lbe increases will become effective the system to con.e to an emergency stop.
first pay pen'od alter Jan. I, tbe While Tbe impact was so forceful Jhat It sheared the bread truck into its major
House said. components, scattering bot d o g s and
The civilian pay raise had been sched· hauburger buns and jagged pieces of
Wed for October, but was postponed as metal down the track..
an· anti·inflation move and that action The truck 's engine was ripped from its
automaticaDy delayed,_ a s)Jnilat military mounts and landed next to the tract
pay boost set for the same time. more than iOO yards away. It Was still
The across-the-board increases were hot to the touch one hour after the 8:40
ordered .by Nixon on.the b8sis of~ a.m. collisioo.
meodattooa by Budget Director Caspar A conductor oo tbe train said be felt a
Weinl;>erger and the clsainnan of the Civil bump and suspected a collision had oc-
Service Commission to promote com-curred "when it went b~gety1 bang,
parabillly wHb private industry salary ISee TRAIN, Page Z)
rates. They will cost about $1 billion.
·.The President at the same time turned
down l..(eCOIDmendation ot an additional pay incn!Ue of o.se percent to make up
for tbe itiree--th delay in pay ad-
justmeola, holding tbat bis "would he
n~ither fait°l\or justifiable."
• He said that such an increase would
result in paying federal emplayes nigher
salaries . than , the comparable workers in
private enterprise are receivinj.
The increases are acros:i: the board and
amounted to a cost-of-living hike. They
affect personi; making Wider 136.000.
In a message to Congress, Nixon said
that "the American system of .:areer
civil service iS based on the principle of
re.ward~ merit." .
He added, "I am pledged to continue 1 (See RAISES, Page Z)
NIXON, CA MPAIGN
AIDES PARTY ING
WASmNGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on and his top campaign aides have been
partying for the past three nights with a
select group from around the country
who helped fmance and promote his re-
election.
The total or 167 guests included labor
leaders, prominent Democrats for Nixon,
regional finance chairmen and heads or
organizations ranging from s e n I o r
citizens to veteran groups.
Cocktail receptions were held Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday with the Presi·
dent~and Mrs. Nixon at the Cb.ristmas-
decorated White House, followed by din·
ner across the street at Blair House. Tbe
Nixons did not attend the dinners.
)
C::o•Bi
Pilot W riter 's
Auto Destroyed
In Mesa Crash Crosby-Croons ~ Fire destroyed the car or DAILY
Pll.OT staf£ writer Arthur R. Vinsel
ThuiSdly J>liht lfuring, a .traffic a<ddeot
Weatlaer
Y 1 -Wl ' f S • C • • or. !Newport Boulevard in downtown An Or~e ·county Superior ·court ar-U~ tf.ter Or enf.Or tttzenS COsta Meaa. .
ralgnmenl 11 being scbeduied today for a !'\>lice Ald 'Vinsel, 11, ·of 131&. Hai'bor
A (IW high clouds, but otherwise
SUMY on Saturday, is the way the
weatherlady sees it. Highs of 65 at
the beaches, rising to 70 inland..
Lows tonlgh} 45-50. Costa Mesan jailed with five co-defen-Blvd.,'1truck1.tbe rear of a car driven by
danla following an Irvine raid thal police SAN FRANCISCO. (AP) -The senior ciU..,,. at, tbe Laguna• !fonda Hos-Jeaai« Lee Paxton, "· or Los Angeles,
allege put a huge haul of p>arijuana and pllal 6ere were drWlllng of a "White Christmas," and !here 'to belp tbem do immedialely before the blaze btol<e out.
haahish in the bands of undercover of· tt was the great crooner himself, Bb:i,g Crosby. ' Vlnile(.sulfe~ a cut on the chin· but
ficers. did not. nqulre bol!'liiltJatlon. The other
Charges of possession of marijuana MORE THAN a Pf,llSON$ -some-af them in wlieelebairi -·Jlimmed driver0w1s not fufurid. "
and dangerous drugs are among the the convalescent center's •UdUcrlum T)lursday to let1tbe.. ee..yeJr:Ol4 Jling'fl Both veblc1MAfere near the Rocbtller
INSIDE TODA¥
lllAT5 NICE MUSIC •• BOT If
I llJERE 'IOU l'P ftll5H 61a'·
allegatloos filed' against Richard Kent rare public appearance 1ak• them ienUy down MOlJ!Ofl' lane to ChrisbiWes sfrci!t mt,nectltfli around 7 p.m. when .~1 B1M(l81ey, 18, 2645 Redlands Drive, Costa past. '· .• ; . , PattM st6ppad tn the extreme right lane
eaa. Crosby wenMhrou1d»• nambe .. ol Cllrlstm" aoog1, lncluding·•Jinl:l~Bells" _ to allow P8"AD of a 'fire tnicl oo ..,
\Vl1ac were tbc top 10 com-
munti11 £heottlr producttom of , 1nz l• 0,.,,,,11< · CounlJil T1lf
DAILY PIUJT't • d,_ crltic
' olfn1 his eooh<at'°" in lodav't
Wceltender 1ection. t 1'116! CINI.~_, 11\..g, =s1
•
,
'
••
Iden(foa l l)larges baye been en~ ud "0.· Utile Town o! Beiblellem" aod then_uked U thera were any requests. emergency-twf,'" •Ccordliil to tbe pdlice by the llraage Ooanly Grillil> r.:;:. '! . rtport. ' against~ Robert Tunne)l, 111 obn FllOM .U.-. PAll'lll or tbe auditorium Utles were ,slJouted<by thooe ·who V1n .. 1 tolll pollce Pax!On sI~•for
Joaeph G • 22• Nancy Madrieanno could ·r<lllCDlbel' and cooJd sliU lhou~,Otber moutha o--' 1M oo sound no •-ttnt-reasoll and that hli did not Osborn• ' aod Casey Cbrlstopher ,,...,.~ ..,... Mo5', lS, all ol Santa ·Ana aod Lany Don came out. I . have u,,.,-fo react .
f El It bad beett" IO' long since' CrOlby' had sung the "old ones" he occasionally Paxtbn's 'car received mo d e t a i e Dean, 25, 0 sinore. f j line . ~-b h'st'"• -··-. b n.:~ ----1 I 1• All &ix de!endani. were arrested by org~ a or t,wo,, but tt didn't m•U•r. tija<h aoog ~u1 t w 1 ..... ~• dam>,ge ut ·~ neW>mf(o)'~ ltlw ,. ...
Costa ,Mosa poU .. w .. ring clly ol lrvlne and applaUS6 from U... al>lo 4. · theniselw<'. · ' tobifb\ d!!•l(llyed· ~ Ille ri(e". ytn;el Ira~·
(See RAID, Pige t) , L.:.· ..:":.... ____ ;_,..•..:.' ___ -_ c .. <-.. ;.)...1 ____________ .J cfted on unsarb 's~ cmn1e1.
• 'J .. '
~
' (
'
kjfi ~:=.:..... * ..... ~ =-~ ' ...
•
'
•
DAILY PILOI
atural Gas
Custome1·s
Must Wait
Seventeen major industrial users of
natural gas scattered throughout Orange
Counly will not be supplied by Southern
California Gas Company for at least
another ' Week, although 120 other in·
dustrial customeni were returned to full
service today.
Service to county oil companies, steel
mills and cement plants among other
heavy gas users has been curtailed due
to the rcC{)nt·breaking re sideotial usage
in response to cold weather. (See related
story, Page 4.)
M. w. Hutchison, central area district
manager !or the gas company, said today
that the company is "al the end of the
curtailment period.''
He noted that a new record for gas
consumption was set Dec. 10 when 3.2
billion cubic feet of gas were needed to
heat Southern California horr1es and of·
fices.
In anticipation of increased use due to
cold '"'eather, the ga s company identifies
firms it lists at "interruptibles," Hutch-
ison said. These firms have alternate
fuels such as oil or propane to give them
the heat they need during shorta ges.
One such firm is the Conroc k Company
Plant in San Juan Capistrano.
The first 11 day s of Dectmb. set a 44-
year record for cold temperatures,
Hutchison noted.
Officers Crack
Burglary Ring
In Costa Mesa
Police claim to have cracked a
' burglary ring which w8' allegedly
re!pOnsi ble for the heist of more than
$1,200 in goods from Woolworth's in
Costa Mesa.
COsta Mesa police said Thursday they
arrested four boys and one adult on
' charges ol burglary and possession of
stolen property in connection with a
serie1 of burglaries at the South Coast
Plaza store.
omcen said one of the boys wu 'In
employe at the store and allowed the
others to remove merchandise from the
store while he WS! on duty.
l1le adult, Robert Ori~. II, of 3146
Killybrooie Lane, was released oo his
own recognizance. The boys were releas-
. ~ to their parents.
. . , Included in the alleged contraband
: were guns, anvnunitlon, sporting good5,
: radios and pewer tools, Police said.
TONIGHT
RETARDED DANCE PROGRAM
Special Chrlltmas Dance Party for men·
tally retarded, Community Recreation
Center, Fairground!!. T-9 p.m.
OCC Fll..M SERIES -"Medicine Qall
Caravan," Fonun, 7 p.m.
"MOONCWLDREN " -South Coast
Repertory "lbeater, through Sunday, 8
p.m. Reservation, ~1~3.
SATURDAY, DEC. 11 •
STORY HOUR -Costa Mesa Library,
568 center St. 10:30 a.m. .
BASKETBAIL -UC! v. John Brown,
Crawford Hall, 8 p.m. ...
"MOONCHlLDREN" -South Coast
ReperU>ry.
DAILY PILOT
n.CliNlllltC... MIL.Y ~II.OT,_. t111k11
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MIM)'. ,._ c.t. ...._ ~ a--.,
....,'"""' ~In \l•lley, lal!UM
a.di, tnt.r(SMl!Wlbldl; Mil ~Ill 0.-.lt/
SM J'* C.,&tr-A llflo.. ,...loMI
. .stti.. if !Mllklltd Sttlli"dfl" end Suncl•YL
TM ,,_.... ~Wllllu pfent 11 •t nl Wtllf
-., Strwt. CO.I• IM... C:.tif.mi., f1'H,
...... ,. "· w •• , Prt11Mnt W P'*IW..
J ..... c.ley
Vke ~ ..... OtMnil MIMfW'
TM1no1 '-••II .....
n .... " A. Mw,hlH ..............
CMrf.r'H. Lfft .arohor4 '· Ht/I AMlilliMI MMllllll 14/IM ---lJO Wo1t l•Y Sttfft
M.rn •• ...,,..;,P.O .... 1N1;t212• ,..--. ....,..a.o, .. ~ ... ,. ... ~ hldl1. Jltt'ttt··-..... _.. --· ,,.. ..... t ... ... c..,,..,..1 • *"" • ~ 111i11t
, ........ 111•• '4lo4Jll
a..Me4 A4Mvt , I 6Q.N71
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..
..
Geese or Gulls? .
Pla1ie Victims' lde:itity Un.sure_
'1111 Alt Ca!Uomla plane whlcb mode '" emergency tlll'D to Or1111• Coun-
ty Airport Wedneodl,y nl8bt IN1 -111r1llowed .. vera1 aea auUs In ... ol 111 Jet qlnea rather thu wlJ<I s-
'
()!IANGB COUNTY Dlreclcr ol AT!ltlon Rob<ri -said be 111&-
pects that the birds were common, ordinary ,.. gulls. "W• wlll never know
ror sure though," he said. "They were pretty well chewed up .''
The plane, Jo"'light 647 to San Jose and Oakland, was about 1.500 feet over
the Upper Bay and just prior to reducing power to cut jet noise when it ran
Into the nock of birds.
THE JET ~tAOE a turn over the ocean and returned lo Orange County
Airport where the passengers were transfered to another jet for their flight.
Breshnahan said reports that fire broke out in the engine which sucked
in the birds was not true. ''When the birds hit t.be lntake a tan blade was
bent causing It to scrape on the engine nacelle and sparks Dew but the pilot
cut the motor and there was no fire ." · ·
Steel Plaut ..
Blast Kills 3
WEffiTON, W. Va. CAP)
Three penan.s were killed and 14
injured today lD an explosion and
fire at Weirton Steel Division's ne.w
coke plant an Brown's Ialand, ln the
Ohio River near here.
The cause of the explosion was
not immedlately determined.
A company spokesman said the
injured were part of a Kopper
Construction Co. crew.
I Dead, I Hurt
In Arizona Try
At Prison Break
FLORENCE, Ariz. (AP) -An at-
tempted break from the Arizona State
Prison by a Taft, Calif. man and two
other "desperate people" with past
records of fleeing instituUorui ended with
one of the men dead, one injured and the
Ci:.Ufornlan in isolation.
Frederick Macon, 30, of St. Louis, was
kill ed Thursday night as he and soother
inmate attempted to overpov•er a to,ver
guard, saJd Warde11 Bud Gomes.
The warden said Macon and Paul
Jorgeson, 26, attempted to overpower the
guard after he had been distracted by
Nic k Cox, 27, o! Taft .
From Pa9e 1
RAISES ...
strivistg to make it an even more c-f-
fective , responsible part ol our govern-
ment. One way of achieving this is to
maintain a salary scale for civil servants
that is just and ct1mpa rable to that
received by equival~t individuals in the
private sector."
On Mondlij', Nixon's chief economic
spokesman, ·George P. Shultz, announ ced
a freeze during the 1973"calcndor year on
salaries of "executive lev el" federal
erhployes ... _ including members o f
Congress and the judiciary.
But Schultz made it clea r at that time
that the delayed federal Pay bike for the
lower categories would go forward .
.Front Page 1
TRAIN ...
bang, bang" uru;emeath the coaches.
He said the train was runni ng on
schedu1e and bad made stops s.t Del Mar
and San Clemente before the accident oc-curred.
The train continued its westbound
journey at 9:45 a.m., using only Its front
enatne. A f~man on the train said lhe
second engine was dlsatiled when diesel
fuel' leaked out of the ruptured tank.
lnv~tors at the 11cene said the
train was going approl'.imatety 90 mph
through the algnalizec! lnters<ctlon but
that Uli!I WM conslderid nOrma.I a n d
proper speed. •
f'roM Page 1
TRUMAN ...
temperature 99.8.
Failure of the medication to strengthen
the kidneys was similar to the situation
Dec. 6, when Truman failed to respond to
antibiotics intended to bolster the beart
and kidneys and was placed on the
criticaJ list where he remained until Sun-
day.
Police An·est 3
Theft Suspects
In H119tington
Hwitlngton Beach police Thursday
raided a home in the city and arrest·ed
three suspects they allege are responsi-
ble for operi.tlng a bulglary ring that
ranged from Los Angeles to San Diego.
Later in the coordinated raid, officers
picked up a fourth suspect in Anaheim
whom they claimed served as a fenei! for
the trio, taking the stolen goodJ and sell-
ing tbe loot to othrs.
Officers identified the b u r g l a r y
suspects as:
-Robin Ully, 18, of 7931 Cypress St.,
Huntlngton Beach.
-Keltb. t.Vey, 28, and his brother,
Dennla, 24, both of 108U Trask Ave.,
Garden Grove.
-Joba• .W..1. 35, of 234.1 Cornet St.,
Anaheim, the alleged fence in the opera· tion.
The arrest of Miss Lilly and the LaVey
brothers came at her Cypress Street
borne about 4:30 p.m. Officers said it
ended an intensive t w o • w e e k in-
vestigation by Huntington Beach detec-
tives Brian Moore, Arden Beavers and
Rober! Sutherland.
Miss Lilly and Atkins are being held ~
day in Orange County jail and the LaVey
brothers are in custody in Huntington
Beach.
A1oore said tbe investigatton was based
on Ucense plates spotted at the scenes of
recent burglaries in Los Angeles, Hun-
tington Beach and Yorba Linda, although
he acknowledged the trio is suspected of
seve ral more burglaries in Orange, Los
Angeles and San Diego counties. -
All four auspecll were cllarged with
burglary, po.ssession of narc o t l cs ,
posse.-.slon of narct1tics paraphernalia and
being under the influence of drugs.
Atkins was picked up by the team of
Huntington Beach and Anaheim 'police.
He claims they found about $2,000 worth
of property tentattvely Identified as the
loot from previous burglaries by ring
members.
Included among the property recovered
froM Atkins home at 23C3 Cornet St.
were television sets, pistols\ rifles and
jewelry.
Police also assert they found a quantity
of heroin in the Anaheim bQme, which
they valued at-more than ,1,000.
Santa Monica
Official Named
To Coast Board
Santa Monica City Councilman James
Reidy Jr. has been appointed to an
Orange.Los Angeles county regional
coastline commission after a half.hour
closed meeting by the executive com·
mittee of . the Southern California
. Association of Governments (SCAG ).
Committee chairman Jack Green, Hun-
tington ' &ach city councilman, aald the
meetlng Thursday was closed to"8Uow j•a
more uninhibited discussion of the , can-
did:i.tes."
However SCAG's COWlsel advbed the
executives that they could not meet
behind closed doors under provisions of
the Bro"" Act which allows public bodies
to meet in executive session only to
dlSCUS!I penonnet matters.
II ~ requires that decisions be modo In pu~Uc. .
Green said the selection of Reidy came
after t.-o lie votes with Long Beach City
Councilman Jame11 Wilson. The third
vote was 5 to 4 In Reldy's favor, GreM
sa id.
Manger St!ene •
Adults Va11.dalize Coast Display
Baby Jesus was hurled from his can·t bring out the real meaning of
manger on lhe front lawn of • Httrbor Christmas, what is tert?"
Vie w HUls home 'nlursdJJI nlgllt. Mary M d th J and Joseph and the animals too. ra. Lortnl sal erecting e Natlv ty
The Ufe-aized figures in the Nativity !ICene "haa been a family project f!ver
scene of the John Lorenz family, 2727 since we've had it, about 10 years."
Wavecmt, ln " si1 foot by 1lx foot set· She saJd they moved to Corona del Mar
ting, were overturned by vandals, two yean ago from New Jmey and
Mn. Lortn1 aakl this morning that never had any problen\.9 beck east. "But
neighbors taw the dl!Jeeration and· 111 lt Jut yw somebody put tbe figures Jn
was the work of a .group of adults who somewhat lewd pos1Uons," ahe 11ld.
sprana from a car and then raced away "ft juat kinda takta the Christmas 11 ffi()ments later. aplrlt out of your heart," she said. "If
"You wonder what goe1 ·on In the rtiu can't tll>OR what the true meanJna
mlndt o! peaplo Uko that," Mrs. Loren• of Chrlaimaa 11, that'a pretty. bad. I!
old today. Christmas Is just shoppfllfl and partles
"We're a Chrbtlan family and the and such, we're In a prtttybad state.
manger teent ii the first thin& that sou "But U1LI manger scene ts our true
up every year," 1be said. meaning," 11he saJd. "!L's Slld that It 11Tbis ls Christmas," abe 1ald. "Jf;:; dOHn't mean this to sornebody.".
'I
•
' '
Asn·onauts
Reunite,
Head Home
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -
Three American astronauts, united aaatn
a!ler the Apollo program's final and
most bountiful moon-landing upedlUoo,
lingered in lunar orbit today surveying
the surface belDw for still more·
knowledge. (See related storiea:, picture,
page a.) .
Gone was the landiJtl abip Cballericer,
whlcb carried Apollo 17's Eu,ene A.
Ceman and Harrison H. Schmitt to the
surface for 75 hours. and then returned
them safely to the ct1mmand s h I p
America and reunion with Ronald E. Evans.
In the earry mornini hours, CbaJl.tnltr
wu thrust away from the command
ship, and a radlo aJsnal !run Mlsaloo
Conlrol aent II craahlni< Into the moon.
Tod"1', and !or most ol Saturday' unUJ
they llart thalr joui'aey llome, the
1atronauts' tut wu ~'~the moon
with camera.s llld IOPRJaU<aled oenatng
devices. They Were Jn • orbit et inlles
above the surface.
Ceman and SchmJtt completed man's
most successfU! moon visit ever late
Thursday when they rocketed off the
lunar surface with a record cargo of
moon 11amples and fUm.
Included in the sealed boi:e:: of samplea:
were two core tubea and aevera! bags
fi lled with a mysterious ftd.orance aoU
wh ich may be the )'OUDlest lunar
samples ever collected. Scientists believe
the colorful IOU may be a product of ooe
•
of the moon's laat volcanOes. -
Alter tranaferrlni the precious IWiar
treasure into America, the astronauts
cast off Cl¥lleoger, lreelng ft for
destruction 1n the callle of science. The
lander, which cost l40 mll1Jon, could oot
luovo been returned to earth with the
command ship.
Lighting llp DC Sky
.. ,_
The lights on the National Christmas Tne were tested at dusk Thurr.
day, resulting in th!! moody photograph showing the tree near the
\Vashington Monument. The angle of the pictW'e seems to add to the
height ol the \ree, even though it's only just over 70 feet tall.
"It seems an unf1ttlnc finLsh to a super
bird," aald Ceman, during his Jut
moments aboard the craft be bad flown
to a near-perfect landing Monday In the
moon valley of TaUJ'Ul.Llttrow. "But it's
got one more joL to do."
Nude Girl, 18, Alerts
On radio ct1mmands from earth,
Challenger fired Its rocket thrusters and
sent itself speeding to an impact near the
Taurus-Littrow valley. Officers to Abduction
Force of the impacl--t!lquivalerit to 200
pounds of TNT -cau5ed a seismJc shock
which e x c I t e d · quake-detection in-
struments left on the moon by Apollo 17
and by previous Apollo missions. The
readings will be atudied by scientist.! on
earth.
SEC Officials
Give Testimony
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The ch!tinnan
of the Securities and · Exchange Com-
mission and hls assistant have testified
the WhJte House advi.!Jed them not to give
a House subcommittee sensitive files
regard1ng the JIT cue.
The chairman, Willlam Casey, 9100 has
been appointed undersecretar)' of State,
sald Thursday a White House counsel
told him that because the I'IT ca11e wu
under investigaUon by the Jwitlce
Department llld the SEC, the files should
be wilhbe!d from Congress.
Al5o in testimony before the House
conimerce investigations aubcunmittee,
Charles S .. Whitman, Casey's ezecutive
a!slstant, said the flles contained
"politically senslUv~" information. He
did not aay what the lnfonnatlon was.
ATLANTA (AP) -A young girl. ab-
ducted with her soldier cornpan.lon, dove
nude from the window of a ca.i· to attract
!he attention of police after fighting <Jff
repeated attempta to rape her, pa lice
said today.
The 18-yeaMtd girl apparen!ly suf-
fered only sboct ud hrulles and
scratchea.
Her 23--year-old friend received head
wounds when beaten wtth a club and p~lol, according to detective Bezyl
Compton.
Neither victim was identified.
The detective said the two-hour ordeal
began early Thursday as the couple left
Underground Atlanta and the soldier was
as ked for a match by a man.
As they reached their car, the same
man appeared again with a pistol and
forced them to get into the back seat.
Two other men got In and they drove to
an alley where the girl WS! ordered to
strip.
The soldier btgsn fighting the three
men and was clubbed, theft forced to get
into the trunk of the car. Compton said
they then drove to an empty garage
where the girl';; <.lothes were tom oH and
the men attempted to rape her.
The men put her back in tl_>t car and as
one drove ,the other two. made several at-
tempts to rape her but Onally returned to
LAMPS -PICTURES -ACCESSORIES
PRE .. HOLIDAY SALE
It's tho little things that can make the dif-
ference. Stop by tod1y and view our line
selection, now specially priced, If lt'.s for 1
gift, or for you person1lly, you'll find just tho
thing to 1nh1nce 1ny home for the holid1y,
D~EXEL-HERITAGl>-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN
• ,
•
the garage where the ordeal continued.
One man v. as quoted as finally saying:
"We are going to get a abotgun and we'll
u.se it when we get it, too.''
They put lbe girl In the cor and drove
off, Compton said. At one point, he said,
the girl saw a pcllce car, kicktd a man tn
the face and Jumped out a window
screamlog.
Police Sgt E\oge"" Robinson give
chase to the car aa the girl nn to tomt
wood<, l«clntl the vehicle Into a l\llrd
rail several blocka away. The three atr
tackers fltd.
Another palrolman, alerted to the
chase, found the girl In some woods,
wearing only a sock, and took htr to a
h08pitaJ.
s~ told police about """ eocort in the
trunk and &e was then freed.
,.,...... P,..e 1
RAID ... -
bldg,. wbeo Ibey allege they found the
group selling 10 kUoe of marijuana and
111.000 worth of hasblsh, a martJuanio
derivative.
Arresting officers said they took loaded
pistols from three of the male defendant!
during the raid.
NEWPORT IEACli e
1127 W!STCLlff DL.
141:-1016
LASUNA IEACH e
J41 NOlTH COAST HWY. ........
TORRANCI e
2JMt HAWl'HOlNI IL~D. ,,,,,,,,
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--DarWin 'Demoted'
' State Board Downplays Theory in Text,J
. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The oald he woold •llell'pl to have
Ca1llomla Stai. Boan! of the doctrine ol 1peclal croa-
Educlltlon, re]ect!nr p I ea 1 lion Inserted In the texta dur-
--ol tbe natlon'i top __ ------ideoum. bu voted to ~
donirode Darwin's theory ot 'Ill•" I •••• 10ftJa.
noluUon In new IClence leJ<tl Ollt •pol09"' t ... t
for U million dllldren. "'" C It r' • t l • • • And tl>f board left the door .,.,.. Tliunday to PoS'lble te0uld like eq11al
1a1er mmtlng of tbe te111 f0< time.'
lnclU!lon ol tbe Bible-Oriented dOctrine ol special creation .~ .. -.. _ .. -,. .. _,. ___ ..,_.,_,.,._,._ .. -,.,._,.-~-"'
-by side with tbe theory of Ing discussions of the changes.
evolution.
National Academ,y ol Selence
Ul'Jled the board ml to Include
the doctrine ol 1pecia! <re>
tlon In tbe tern, Intended for
... beginnlnc In September
19'11.
Darwin'• theory, put !orth in
1859 In hia blatortc "Origin of
the Soe<les by Natural Seleo-
Uon" 'holds that man and other
•pecleJ evolved from simpler
Jonna of Ule, with the spedes
best adapled to the en-
vironment being the ones'
which survived.
, / "MAY i SAY, without
apology, \hal we Olristlans
would like equal time.'" board
member. Eugene Ragle of
"OR, YES, I .will, without
specific references to · the BELIEVERS IN the doc-
Biblical account or t. a trlne of spedal creation say a
creator," said Dr. Jobn Ford, a-eator desi~ ~ and
San Di ph . . wbo ,_ other species m their present Rooevtlle aald. , a eg~ ysic1an a.:t • form.
-Dogs Find
Surprise
SAN DIEGO (AP) -
Marine clop fl'alned lo
sniff out marijuana tllrned
, a surprile impectlon at
San Dlefo'• county honot
camp into IOl'Dethlng of an
•mbarrusinent.
The dogs found some, all
rlgbt -In th• safe In the
Donor camp director's of-
fice .
There was none in the
beds or lockers of the 1.6
men convicted of various
ertmes in the past
The marijuana which
t h e five dogs smelled
Wednesday throtJgh the
metal m Lee Bennett's ,
floor safe had been COii·
r1SCated earlier, Bennett
explained.
•
OAILY '1LOT IS
To Free Newsman
LOS ANGELES (APl -
Three newsmen have filed a
&tperior Court suit contending
that Los An&eles County is
spending publlc funds illegally
to keep newsman William
Farr In jail.
The suit, filed Thursday,
contends_ the money is being
Illegally spent because Farr
was Jailed in violation of his
constitutional 'rights.
SHERIFF PETE Pilchess
was named as principal defen-
dant
Superior Court Judge David
I.a• Allgel., Herild~mlner
photographer, and J.,.. A.
Barker, a KABC oewswrittr.
FAR!\ WAS Jailed alter be
refused lo dlsclooe tbe """"'"
of a story he wrote two years
ago about the Charles Manion
"family." >
(JN JTED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
The board ordered edltorial
changes '1tres1ing that
Darwin'• ~ ls speculative
and not fact. Thal change will
be required In basic IClenee
tats Intended for kin·
derg-through • eighth
gr~ the stile will
buy the books.
the board's vice pr!81dent. . As presenUy written, one cl '---------.....J
Asked by reporters how the the teits says thb about the
A. Thomas ordered Pitchcss to
appear in court next Wednes-
day to show cause why
Farr should not be released.
But 11lomas refused to issue
an immediate restraining
order freeing Farr. ·
NOW OPIN
books could discuss lhe doo-0<igln of life:
trine of special c re a t i o n "It is known that life began
without referring to a creator lo the seu."
or God, Ford said: "Evolution Under 8 rewri~ example
... taught In schoot. today Is propooed to tbe board, that
antitheistic and is just as .. ~ ....... ed much a religion as other ~e WQUld be ~Ml.U& to
Aide Named
Farr, a Los Angeles Times
reporter. has been in jail for
18 days on an indefinite
sentence for contempt of
court.
SATURDAYS
9 to 1 P.M.
MON •• THUU. 1 .. 1 P.M.
FRIDAYS 1M P.M.
17141 S40.IJ1t • .._ ..... Illa
S.. C.-,.__ C.-. M ..
Board members will have
veto power ov.er the rewriting.
At least one board member
-"""' Id " read. ·~"'us eas. "Most seieltlsts believe that
Nineteen California • based !Ue mey have llegun In the
Nobel prize winners and the sea."
Mrs. Ben l\,raut of Costa
1'1esa has been appointed
chairman of the P l t z e r
College Parents' Association
for Cosjla )1esa. She will sen'e
as liaison between the college
and parents of local students.
The suit was filed by Rudy
Villasenor, a retired Times
reporter ; Mel Leroy Lieder, a
...... vic.~,..,~
D. DEAN HEISER
T ... t's Shoe Bi%
. Actress Ali McGraw rests her weight on one foot as
6be bas her 6hoeprints and bandprints imbedded
in Grauman's Chinese Theater Thursday. Miss Mc-
Graw is the first person in three years to be so
hooored. She wrote the phrase 'Peace and Love'
in the cement.
Dense Fog Causes. 2~3
-Car -Pileup· 18-Hurt ' .
LIVERMORE (AP) -An
icy pass' was cleared of
wreckag!: after more than SS
cars and trucb smashed up in
dense fog, Injuring 18 persi>ns
Including two men burned
from hydrochloric acid that
was spewed over the highway.
"'lbe cars and trucks were
laid out lite a train wreck ooe
after the other.'' said Highway
Patrol s,t. Edwin Main. ''It
looked like a bomb exploded
on the roadway." He said it
was a miracle no one was ltill-
ed.
"People were still scream-
ing In the wredtage-whlle eai't
kept piling ·loto them," I trQct
driver aald.
The eastbound lanes of
Interstate 580 in Altamont
Pass connecting t h e San
Francisco Bay area and the
Central Valley were closed for
five hours Thursday as crews
cleaned up crushed vehicles
and spilled trucl< cargo that
lncludtd the add, pain~ glue
and paper ptoduds.
The Highway Patrol said the
crash occurred arter a truck-
trailer jacklajfed acroos the
highway. Vebic1es behind ,
blinded by the fog, were
Police Hold
Cuswdi.an
In Murder
NORWALK' (AP) -Richard
.Eugene Juarez, an IS-year-old
school custodian, was booked
for investigation of murder ~Y In Vie stabbing death' of an hon or student
who had -trying lo defend ~U. )'l>Uth .beilg attacked
'by a' gil\g', olllelals Sllid.
. Six other JQutha were book·
~ tor lnv~tloo of .,..ult
, willi a deodly weapon follolf.
Ill(· ·lf-y'a lmiffug at
John Glenn ·lllit> Scllool They t.,.e,e tamed OWJr to jUvenile
·authorltlet. Tbeir ages ringed
from II lo 17.
t' Thi vlcf1Df, F r I IJ,;C, i I c 0 vUltla' Jr .. a stralgbt A stu-
dml 11111 captaiJI, ol the aoceer
iellll, WH slain In !root 9f the . sc:hool tafetiria when lie tried
to defend a lt-ye,r·old IP:*diiate of cl-Hlah·
tmable to stop on the ice.
Debris was scattered for a
half mile.
Officers said the truck
driver was trying to stop for
three cars whose occup&nts
were waving blm down.
Valley Memorial Hospital
here reported treating 15
persons for facial injuries,
fractures, laceratiom and the
two persons for the minor acid
burns.
The hospital said Claude J .
Maddix of Vallejo ·was in
critical conditlo~ with race
and .bead lnjuri'" and Steven -~;ot San Francl!co was in lortoUs 1ondition with multtpi,
lnjurl... r
Year-round
School Bid
·Criticized
LOS .\liGELES (AP) -
There is "Do factual evidence"
to show fbat~Y:e·ar -round
seboot. would provide better
educational opportunity for ci·
ty students, a ICbool district
staff study says. .
THE STUDY,.s:eleased
Thunday, concluded that a
year-round· llfOIJ mn would in
fact crate a '1substantlal"
financial drain en the district.
"Despite the optimistic
claims of pr_.,i. ol yf8l'
round school plam, we haft
found no basis, 1n ~ry ot
practice, for ezpectiDg any
s.ignificant advantage from a
switch to a year-round ~
&ram, the study says:
''There is no f·a c t.u a l
evidence to ~ lbe $1ia1
for improved. I ea r n µ,g,. '
temediatlc1n: · acceletaUOri or '· ,dost saving." · • ·'
.. Forty-seven .acboola 1 n
California are currO!llly on
year-rourid aehedules. State ol-
Daiab aay '100 schoob '1!111 be
utlng the prngram by net . ' •
·THE YEAR·RO'UND
P"'l!l'am allow• sc:hooll to
bouae more --!! Jw using ,
I xtaggered ochedule with
aborter, more frequent vaca-
lons. ..
~=·~ lU[ mpam.
Doctors all over the country dispense over 50,000,000
of these tabletS-to their-patientnadl ~;-
tori recommend moat than anY other leadinr tablet.
"
Merce.des·Benz announces·
prec~ely the killd of model change
you expect fro~ Mercedes-Benz.
•
' ~ M ODEL CHANGES at Mercedes~
1 Benz arc inspired not by the trends
of fuhion but by the thrust of engineer.'
ing -= One ouch clwige becomes CIGicW todly: the Mez<:edco.Bcnz 250
Sedan bas evolv.d into the 280 Sedan-·
without stretching the body one inch or
...... to the ai/gh1cu hint of styling .ui~· The technical improvements that in-•Pred this chaiige will oct the 280 funber
apan than ever from other can in its
class. t'
Should y·ou invest your $8,968• in
the 280 Sedan? Srudy its engineering re-.
fioemcnts.. Weigh all the facts.. Measure
this ear's perf ormanee against your octds
-then d<cide. •
JWnarbble new engine
The engineers hid the 2SO's biggest news
under the hood.
Fresh from a long laboratory incu·
bation is a new 2.8-litrc dovb~,,....
~ lread-<amsltaft engine. Hemispherical
combustion chambers, 2·stage dual com·
pound carburetor-this lovingly assem-
bled Six ciluld be mistaken for a high-
pcrformance spona car engine. (Note
that it rcw up to 6500 rpm.)
·''The crankshaft is something of a
masterpiece," reports Britain's Autocar
•• ....
magazine, urunning in seven main bear-
ings, and e'Jcry one of the twelve webs
incofporating a countcrwcighL" The
goal: low engine vibration.
The men who designed this engine
aimed for c/fi<inu:y insteeil of brute pow-
er. Yoa get the rumtlng amoothncsa you
expect from a car of this class. Some-
thing you may Mt cxpe<:t from a car of
this class: the 280 engine's restrained
appetite for gasoline. -
As.agile as before
That engine can be lighter and le11 bulky
than those used in other $8000 sedans
bean"< the 280 Sedan itself is lighter
and less bulky.
It u °" ...,..,tri., fact Jhat th< top 3
d01'flltic ''hoonY' s1daru all mtigh at hwt
Ital/ a ton "'°"' and m1asMn" a'full 3 fttt
kmger, rAan tAI lfJIJ Sedan. Stant wondtr
11iat 1hty ""1hou h•r• v,s mginJ.
·Yet cma bulk of thac larger can
....,,. more a 1111ucr Of allow Ihm Cltla
•
Afn-cedts-Bem 280 Se~an i1n'1 jwt o. cltan11d car; it's an improwd car~
roominess: the 280 matches them for
·interior ~pace-and act'Ually exceeds
them in trunk capacity.
Those $8000 "luxury" sedans art
imprCssive standing in a driveway. But
C"Omp&re driving them with driving the
280 Sedan, out-in the real world.
You 'll discover that the 280 twirls
through a turning circle of only 36.4
feet (about the wnc as a little VW 1200-.
.. Beetle"). Those larger cars don't.
The 280 nips into parking spots those
heftier sedans have to pass up.
And you'll slip through holes il) city
traffic where dreamboats dare not go.
• Fully independent suspension
' " Let others brag, about how big and Ol'*
nate their cars arc. You can brag abouc
bow well your 280 Sedan handles.
" ... W mast amtrollablt 1'ig1' spttd
s1dan we'w ruttd.n
, That was MotM Trend magazine's reac·
tion to the 250 Sedan; and the 280's han-
dling is unchanged. ·
This is because its superb suspen·
sion is unchanged: a four-w heel, fully
independent system with a diagonal·
pivot rear swing axle. Gas-pressurized
shock ab!orbcn and anti-sway bars front
and rear are standard compancnts. Also
standard: 175 SR/14 radial-ply tires on
wlitel rims sin inches wide.
The cDJineen fitted an additional
shock.absorber to the 280, i.n an unusual
spot-the steering system.,
' U"1to111M1 iMIJJtrtdntt rt•r JIU/lfJU~
Instead of squandering your money
on hollow sheet metal and •trling that is
soon passd;. yo~ invat it iD. fundamental
engineering with the 280 Sedan.
The body of your 280 is an all-welded
ate.el structure so strong thac a separate
frame is redundant. That body 'is the
framC.
Precious weight is saved. Enormous
strength is built in. Bolts won't tug loose
over the miles because there arc no bolts.
Mm:~lknz 280 Snlan
280 offtrl l111 lw11.wryof t/lfrit111 1iz.1,
Run a finger over the finish. You will
fttl why it took several hours to paint,
bake:, and polish to that high gloss.
Numerous outer body seams were filled
and made invisible before painting.
When you buy an $8,000 automobile,
you deserve such fastidious touches.
4-wbeel disc brakes
You get four-wheel disc brakcs4'1 your
28g as standard·equipm.cnt: ..
Consider that the front brake discs
mcuurc almost ll inches in diameter,
virtually the same size as the front discs
on the famous Mercedes-Benz 450SL
1pons model. The 280's brakes arc pow·
er assisted, of course; ant>ther standard
equipment feature.
4-speed automatic shift
Your 2sq•s automatic transmission is so
~uick-1h1fting that even sporting driven
have expressed· surprise. .... apd approval.
You can set it in DRJVB and leave it
tbt.tc; )'O\LCID also shift throu !L the
forwtrd gun by hand.
The padded shift Jcv~r si11 within
easy rnch on a ccntnl console. (lf you
prefer, a column shift lever can be fitted
at no extra cost.)
autoWtic transmission, or (or power"
steering and power brakes, or for aa
clcctricaUy · heated rear window. Thq
arc all pan of the 280'1 base price.
Even air conditioning falls under the
heading of standard equipment-Yoa'll
counr ·four separate outJcrl on the in-
strument paoc:l-two for the driver. tft.
for bis front-scat passenger.
Comfort not'forgotten
The painstaking Atercedes-.Bc:nz end-
ncers found one subtle way aficr another
Mercedes-Benz motor can:
&om $15,182• to $6,43,.
Akn:edn-Be.u oft'm • YUt nnae ol
models. Herc arc 1u11a1cd rcWJ prx.
for 7 of lhc most popular typH:
<f50SLCC.Oupc $1S,lU
<f~OSLC.Ou~/Roldttcr $11,761
ZSOSE<f.5 Sc•bn $10,l71
J 80Cou~ s 9,614
2tw Scdm s S,.961
JZOScdan S 6,66~
220 Dietel ·SNu! S "6,4J9 ....... eo.,...o#._,,_,,....1111._ -.-
.. ,._, ,,.. ..., loul ,._ W -,. c:.o,,,; ... lfn. '"''"-·•• °' N""' -.C.. LK.
to make the 280 an eminently liftblc
machine.
You sit high enough to see the rPICI
ahead. Large glas~ areas enhance rili-
bitity. Your body is supJ?O"<d 6rmly ia
scats' built around a bctwork of cail
springs, not cheap foam rubber.
You needn't fumble afound to find
the headlight dimmer switch or wincl-
shicld wiper and washer controls. Tbey'ie
a fingertip away in a pod on the left of
the steering column; you can "tOrk them
without taking a hand off the whcd.
Mo"' than status
The ne,.;'280 Sedan is plaioly n0f$1,961•
worth of bigness, or styling, or ltltUL
Buy it and you buck the trends of lbe
0 luxury" class bead-on.
Your satisfying reward: ownenhip
of a precision machine engineered to
outlive trends. One test drive will COO.
firm your wisdom in choosing it.
Arrange with your authorized ~
cedes-Benz dealer to tako-tlut test drive
sOon. For· more useful fads about the
280 and other models, clip the coupon
and mail it today. You will rcctive a free
colo[ brochure.
1----~i=~=:~:~: .. Inc. ffi 120 W, Wer11tr A.,.•u•
'OS•n•• Aft•, C.liforfli• tZ707
Pleese ttnd me your full-col« btocbure
o( 11\e Mcrc:edc:1-Bcn1 MOIOr CUJ.
....... ~---~-''----o.,. __________ _
"""'~----~-'"----
T'•ll--·~--------
'
' "
'.
Theri are many h'M!dlceUons a
phyaidan. or dentist can pn1·
atribt tor JMin. &mt ·•n!! nar·
colic, many ate available only
on pttlC!ription. But there i1 one
pain ftliewr, av1!11ble without
pmttril>Uon. doctors dispellle
apin and ap.ht .•. Anacin.
' Headache aDd dental pain ia
relieved incredibly fut; minor
pain• of .-rt.hritia are depend-
ably ea!Mld fnr houra; even the
•che• and pail'\I of coldt and ftu
r•pond to Anacin. So the Un·
•Ion and depn!IPC>R that can. be
eauted by such poln ~,..
lleved too. And million. take
Anacin without atomach "Pitt.
You art not chaq:cd cxtn for thil
I .. '
Each )'ell', dodon Jive owr
50.000,000 Anacin tablet. to
their p&tlenll in pain. U doeton
think enou,h about Antdn to
di1J)f:ntt all ihete tablets, what better ncommtnd•Uon can you
uk when you are In p.ain?
f You "'• Anacin contains more or the pain teliever doo-
' ..
When you'H fn p&in, why don't you follow the practke (If '° many doctoft and Like the
Jim Siemens-Imports~ Inc. 1·20 W. Warner Avm~, S.nta Ar.a; Califol'l\ia 92707 Phone: 714-546-411' • •
tablet a doctor-might llvt YOtJ , .
in hlt uw.n oftk:t.1'\ike Anacin•.•-----------.,.-~-------,-------:--------------------~-....,,--------------f •
• . ,, I
• • ' •
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QAU.y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Support · for Sign Law
Reaction from the Costa Mesa business communi-
ty to new sign control recommendations has been alow
in coming, except from service station operators.
Last week, the Costa Mesa Service Station Garage
Owners Committee pledged to back ci ty planners in
their efforts to curb sign blight by taking down their
gas price signs.
ironically il is these types of add-0n signs that tend
to downgrade gas stations. The newer types of logos
developed by the oil companies actually are among the
cleanest and strongest designs in modern graphics.
But gas statiOn operators who do not own their own
property -and most of them don't-are not allowed to
choose whether they want gas price signs, announce-
ments of tire sales, and other clutter. The oil oompanies,
In many cases, mandate these sigils a.pd often go so far
as to put them up themselves.
Perhaps the service station o\vners are interested in
getting the price signs down to reduce competition from
cut-rate dealers. But whatever the motiVation, it does
gel rid of some of the signs, and this is a step in the
right direction.
Helping Hands Ready
The '\Vomen's Ll.b movement and its demands for
better female job opportunities may have turned the
t ables on the males.
Ofriqals of the Harbor Area Youth Employment
Service (TES) always need job referrals for young peo-
ple, not just during the Christmas season. The lot 1s
lopsided, h,owever, this particular year.
venient service.
And don't forget the boys on your job ll!t this
Christmas season.
Death of a Doryman
t'orever, or so It seems, Newport Bearh has capital·
ized on the men who make up iis colorful dot~ lisbing
fleet. .
The Chamber of Commerce blgbllghts them in its
brochures. The city government itself even has published
a pamphlet telling their quaint history.
They are an important part of the seafaring char-
acter of this city of sleek sailboats and powerful motor-
cruisers. They're a litUe part of what lS special about
living in Newport Beach.
But it seems everybody has profLled but the dory-
mcn themselves.
They scrape a living together, toiling from three in
the morning until sometimes very late ln the afternoon.
First at sea, and then on the beach selling the day's
catch.
For only the second time in the history of the New-
port dorymen, a tragedy 'bas befallen the lleel.
It eould not be a sadder tale than one ol the death
of a 25-year man of the sea and his pi;-etty three-year-
old Ajaughler. They drowned Tuesday off Huntington
Beach.
The friends of doryman Allen Knight have started
a collection for Mrs. Knight and their four other children.
A dollar or two, or a toy, would be a meaningful 'vay to
celebrate this Christmas season.
•
•
Not enough jobs are available for boys.
U you need a helping band this Ch~s~mas, no
n1atter 'vhat lhe job or the gender, YES off1c1als have
plenty of hands on file for you. Call 642-0474 for con·
Others with feeling can help, too. By sending a
check to Mrs. Dora Knight, 224 N. Newport Blvd., Apt.
2. or by bringing a toy by the fishing fleet at the New-
port. Pier any time after mid·morning when the boats
are m.
'I guess I could.slay the dragon with this, sire. . he might
die laughing.'
Celebration
,./"..
Of Christmas
'
A 'New' Idea
~YD NEY J. HARRI~
Christmas Y.•Jsn't celebrated as a
festivity for the first thousand years of
. Christendom ; during that time, perhaps,
people spread the good feellna: over the
whole year, i..,stead of !!QUeezing it into a
couple of weeks and then reverting lo
nature the rest of
the year, as we do
now. • • •
An "extemporan ·
eous" jfstener is
som('()ne .,...ho is busy
thinking up his re-
plies while you are
sWI talking. • • •
... We look back on the past with longing
because it can't be changed; It is the on·
ly part of our lives not subject to
dangerous vicissitudes. • • •
UNHAPPINESS DOES not so much
consist in not getting what we want, as in
not wanting it after we get it. (This is
why happiness does not consist in fulfill..
ment of our wants, but in satisfaction of
our needs.) • • •
1t is im)X>SSible to write a boqk about
humor that ls funny , and no genuinely
comic writer has ever tried it -all the
books dissecting humor are composed by
grimly sober pedants. ' . . .
The paradox ln reading is that unleM
you read tenough you can't even un-
derstand your own thought::1 -but if you
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
If the police helicopter starts bunt-
ing offenders with trashy, weedy
property there 's a field on the
westside where a few pieces of
debris painted black and white
migbl be found .
-R.H.N.
Tiii• ......... ..tlKh ~ .... Mt
-..irttr ......... --·-"'· .... y-"' ....,. ................. °"" l'li.t •
coollnue reading beyond the optimum
point, you tum from a thinking reader
to a mere memory bank. • • •
BAD BOOKS genera11y sell more ,
copies than good ~for the simple and human reason t ka te
what we like to hear w ~
U.'! what we ought . • • •
Science arises qut or play more than
v..-e realize; we all know that astrooomy
came from astrology, and cbeinistry
from alchemy. but rew know what
modern mathematics and probability
theory arose when a gambling artat.ocrat
asked Pascal to calculate the odds on a
popular dice g!llme.
• • •
THE MOST incisive piece on politics
I've read in a long time -and which
quite transcends parti!lllD poliUcal d~
ferences -is Kurt VC11Degut'1 essay on
"winnefWnd losers" ~ the November
Issue of Jrarper's magazme. • • •
Though they will alrenuoll!ly deny it,
most men don't care much for a woman
with a high1y-deve\oped sense of humor;
.they would rather be with someone dull,
who will adore them, than someone
bright, who lpight laugh at them.
Expatriates By Choice
LONOON -Once an American
EDITORIAL
'RESEARCH
-businessman is settled in England, it can
be difficult to persuade. him to return
home. Nearly every major U.S. company
with a branch In Britain has found this to
be so. 1n fact, a growing nwnber of e.'(· ~ '---.::.---------'
patrlate American executives cboOM: to
quit their jobs rather than go back to
corporate headquarters.
A NEW EMPWY!llENT agency.
American Mant1-gement Resourcts, has
been helpillg to find jobs for these reluc-
lant repatriates since last summer.
Every month AMR sends out anonymous
mumes to more th;in 1,000 companies.
The agency charges no fee for its
services; It supports itself through con-
tributions (rom American and European
bUSlne .....
-AMR ii dlrected by Kenneth Brown, an
Amerk:an who rttlred as Bethle.btm
Steel's European rej>resentatlve. last
Marth and dedded he did not want to
...tum to the United Stala. Finding jobs
10FAm-in11!r-pooltlorrb not ... ,,
he aayt, *•me "most U.S. c1.ecutlves
g•t .U01•anc<1 lor educalJoP. and "°"'Ing,
plUI yearly trips borne." English com·
penlet: offer substantially lower wages
and fewer perqulslt ...
llRJTAIN'S ENTRY Into the Common
Martel cm Jan. 1 lnlY WJll o~ up new
apportunlU.. !or An>trlean expatriates.
"An American who know• the t1i: system
Ia l'noo<•!, the llbor t."1 In Germany, or ...pn.t pia!mlng In llaly could have a
lo& to or(er," Brown t.old EdllOrlal
Raear<h ReporU. FurUimnore, 8rillsh
bUt5btll {1 becoming more receptlve to
the ldeo ol mlalrillll conaullants -JofJ<
t.bat poy more lhai> -tied lo 111t oompany P1110ll.
l ' .... •
Although there are no r e I i a b I e
statistics on the number of American ex-
ecu.Uves working in London, t h e
American Chamber or C o m m e r c e
estimates; around 2,000. In a• 1970
sun<ey of 270 U.S. subsidiaries in Britain,
the chamber found that nearly three-
quarters employed · no Americans at all.
These firms employ British managers
partly because local executive talent bas
Improved and p1rtly becaUJe It makes
for better community relations.
'EXEetmVF..S who stay abroad for
more tbao three years atti the ones who
find it most difficult to-return home,
Industrial Management m a g a 1 I n e
reports, Many of therD reel that theli" ~prooptCll In.,.the bo>m• office
may ba\.Te lessened durillg their ati9ePCe.
"The really smart bof!, who merely use
a European po<ting as Just another rung
on the way to the top. would not stay for
more than thrte. ye•ra," the maglltlne
notes. ...
While most Americans who wtsb to l't"'
main abroad cite the "quality of life" ••
a reason, they probably are motivated
also by tbe preJtige that sccompanlea an
overseas }Ob. Since an Arm.rlcan often Is
sent abroad to direct 1111 or part of a
sublldiary, he -11 to be known as
"Mr. Company'' Europe. "Jt'1 _not
easy," observe8 rown, "!or him fo
return to Ptorla r New Yofk, where he
must •flt himself back Into the executive
hierarchy."
c
The Smuggled Broke.a Treaties Papers
D~cuments Su-pport Indian Charges
WASHINGTON -The Broken Treaties
Papers, which were smuggled out of
government files by wrathful Indians
during their occupation of the Bureau of
Indian Affairs building, have been seal·
tered in se:cret stashes across the United Slates and Caoada.
We have bad ac-
cess to them. We
bave also been given
a message for Presi-
dent Nixon. "Tell the-
President," we were
asked, "that Indians
do not want the
documents any long-
er than it takes to
duplicate and index ~ so that. every
tribe In America can edUCale itstll to the
double-dealing of the federal government
and find ways to forestall it."
WE RA VE INSPECTED lbousanch
upon thousands of documents, some
almost brltUe with age, others fresh as
today's headlines. 'lluoy lell • shabby
story.
Some documents describe multimillion-
dollar land deals In South Dakota'• Black
Hills. Others reveal how the White House
played politics with Indian rigbts.
There are also paignant pape~. like
the account of an Indian woman whose
foot was broken by the police but was
left lo spend the olgbl In jail unlended.
But above all, the documents Indict the
bur~aucrats who have pretended to help
the Indians but have often exploited them
instead. Indians whose forebears fought
the cavalry have been reduced to battling
the bureaucrats. It bas been a tawdry ,
tedious war without glory.
LIKE THE CAVALRY, the bur·
eaucrats h a v e remorselessly driven
the Indians deeper into their reserva·
Uons. The stolen documents contaJn
evidence that Indians have been cheated
out of their land, robbed of their water
righl3, deprivtd of their fishing streams
and hunting grounds.
As in any war, the statistics are grim.
lt1dian life expectancy is 47 years com-
pared with 71 for other Americans; the
Indian unemployment rate ls 45 percent
compared with 5.8 percent for the nation
at large; the average Indian family
struggles along on $4,000 a year, less
than hall the f9,867 median for the rest
of the country ; and finally, the Indian
suicide rate is twice lbe natiooal rate.
Ever since the lndians ransacked
government files and carted off boxes
full of documents, several newsmen have
tried to get a look at them. Some offered
money for the story; we oHered onJy our
record for championlng the downtrodden.
The Indians spumed the money and
voted to show us the Broken Treaties
Papers.
THE FBI, meanwhile, bas been
searching up and down the country for
the stolen documents. Except for one
smaJI seizure in Ok1ahoma, however, the
documents remain in Indian hands.
We learned they bad been broken down
into several caches and hidden in diverse
locatiOM at the far ench of the United
States and Canada. Some were secttted
in automobile trunks, in old phonograph
cases, in obscure corners of private
homes. Others were stashed tn remote
biding places on lndlan reservations.
My associate Les Whitten new to
PboenLI for the first tryst. At the airport.
lDdtan ~rity men one jump ahead of
the FBI told him to wait on a comer
away from -the terminal building. They
husUed him by a devious route to a motel
wbeff some of the Indian leaders were
assembled.
THE INDIANS wouldn't ta1lc aboul the
papers in the motel or even ~ide lbeit
can for rear of FBI bugging. Furtive
meetings were arranged, instead. at a
bowllng&y, a coffee house and on a parking
Next ltten was instructed to ffy
to anotbe city many bwuireds of miles
away. He was met by one ol the leading
·1ndJan militants who questioned him
closely. At last, Whitten was gjven four
documents and questioned again a~ut
their meaning to find out what he blew
aboul Indian matten. Then, for 12 hours,
be was deserted.
The (ollowing momir\i. m a n y
thousands of 'documenta were delivered
tq him. The door o~ bls room was bolted
and a tough Indian ~rtty mao planted
hlmselr in a ch!lr pushed against the
door. As Whitten waded through the
papers, Indian experts helped him with
the unfamiliar tribes and names.
EXCEPT FOR protecting our SOW"ces
and keepinl the hiding places secret, we
have been pJactd under no restraint by
tbe Indians. They have made no auempt
to tell us what to wri te.
411 future cOlumns, v.·e will describe
how the Indians pulled the greatest docu-
ment heist in history right under the
noses of the FBI. We Will also reveal, in
detall, the contentl of lbe Broken
Treaties Papers.
Footnote: The Indlan.t, In their black
11<1' wilh the beaded hatbandJ, looked
tough aod grim. However, they DQt On1y
turned out to • be friendly but they
laughed easily. Ollce they left Whitten be-
hind to work while the,Y went out for a
beer. When Whitten jokingly complalned,
one Indian cracktd: "You know bow
whites go , er~ when they drink fire..
water."
Sad Story o{ a Grand Sexperiment
1 The blossoming public interest in sex
therapy could lead to but one inevitable
result. ..,
There they were, the new sex
therapists, from Masters & Johnson en
down, featured on the covers of national
magazines, wfiting
books and appearing
on radio and televi-
sion to tell fascinat·
ed audiences bow
they cured their pa·
~':~ of sexua l banf· ~
The way they did
it in virtually every '
ne:!.' sex clinic in the
land was to teach their paUents How to
Do IL 'I'his technique, they said, worked
wonders.
'lbe ramificatlOll! of all thls were first
rea>gnl1.ed by the noted educationalist.
Dean Hiram Skarewe Ill of Skarewe
Unlverelty. '
••AS RELEVANT educntlonallst~ ..
gentlemen." the Dean grimly told an
emergency faculty meeting, "we 11ve
raUed dismally in prepartng our studenta
for life. We have taught them how to
weld an automobile, how to swing :1 iolf
---B11 G~e ---,
Dear Coorge:-
Why a'rt tbe day1 IQ m\lch
shorter in the winter than In the
summer and U I write to my
Congrewnan would It help?
G.11.
Dear G.H.:
No , ll would probably jll!t 'pa"
the tlme faster and make the days
seem even shorter. Anyhow, It
wouldn't do much good -It's not
llO!ely the )ockeylng around of
Daylight Savings which makes
·~ day1 longer than winter
days. Jt't that colc! contracts and
ti,.&~ expands ; naturally, the col·
der the lta110n, the shorter the
da11.
ART HOPPE
club and how to recite Etruscan try.
"But the one single subject we have
never taught them -and the one in
which they wUI eng&ge in for most of their
lives -Is How lo Do lt.
"No won~er our alumni have hangups.
No wonder they are flocking to expensive
sex clinlca In mJddle age to learn. Our
duty is clear: We must nip the problem Jn
the bud by teaching them How to Oo It
while their learning abilities are at their
peak -In a word, while they're still in
school."
THE DEAN'S proposal set off an
acrimonious debate. In "M age dedicated
to relevant education, no one, of course,
dJsputed hi.I premise. The debate was
over whether the course should be given
as a lab .science o_r as part of the P:E.
prog1'B17l. It was finally decided that It
was vocational in nature and was
therefore inckaded In Driver's Ed.
The popularity of How to Do It t02a
and 102b was instantaneous. Every stu·
dent signed up. Faculty reports were
glo~ing ... The ardor with which students
do their homework!" said one professor
with awe. "And when it comes to final
exams. they're all fully prepared."
THE S~IASHING succes.s of the pro-
gram was widely heralded. Every college
in the country rushed to emulate it. And
soon, How To 0o-1t wu be.in& offered in
the nation's high schools (for junion and
seniors onl y).
Naturally, the government stepped In.
"We'll.never reduce the high rate of ac-
cidents in America's bedroorm and
motels," said Congressman Homer T.
PetUbone, "until every p~ctitioner is
tested ;ind licensed."
The bill was passed and woe betide the
poor eager YOWll swain who couldn1t
produce a valid license.
Panerama of America
A panorama of America In transition
- a colorful kale.idoscope or this country
decade by decadeM since Jtro ..,,wtth a
sy.·eeplng look at Atnerlca'r folkways and
mores -au or this delcrlbea the lavi1hly
IJlustrated Amerlcaa Ceahar)': JOO Year•
of Changing Ure Styl~ la America Ly
Ralph Andrlst (Amcrlcan Heritage p,.,., $11.111).
With a r,«<ualon ol photographs. 32 col-
or, 600 back and white. and a vivid ac-
companying teit, Aaaertcaa cfiatury
presents 1 hfeathtakl ng overview of what
Ille and ilvlng have betn like in lhe
Unlled Slal<S In the p11t 100 years.
Andrist writes ol lhe WUd w .. t and how
It was tamed : the. days of easy money
and booming business (concentrating on
such notable muchandlslng tycoons os
A11ron Ptfontgomt'J')' Ward and John
(
(THE BOO~
Wamimtker): the changes Ill buying
habita over the yean; the challenea and
e!fects of wars and cold wan; the tranal-
11on rrom bicycles to motor ears and bow
It affected" f51shlon1 and travelling: lhe
G•y Nineties, the Roar1n1 rw.nu .. and
the Gn!at· O.pre.,Ion. II'• *11 ~In one
mRgnlflcent packqe -tnwntlona,
political evcnll, innovaUons, IOCiety and
gad gels.
Rolph Andrill II the author o! Looi
0.ath: Tht La•I Days GI Ille Plainl In·
dlans and h11s edited a number of
volume• of Americana.
CAROLINE HARKLEROAD
But arresb were few. For almost
overnight America had become a nation
of experts S\!1)Cl'bly trained in How to Do
It. And hangups became a thing o! the
past.
TO PREVENT confusion between
graduates of different schools. the technl·
ques were of course numbered by a
unJversaJ standard.
"Would you like to one, three, fourteen
and forty-six tonight, dear?" a romantic
husband would inquire. And as both
parties were experts, the results were as
predictable as turnlnf on the oold water
faucet. And about as mteresllng:,
''What's on television ?" the wife would
now rtply, more often than not, wllh a
yawn. lo
Once again, the future of the hwian,
race teemed threatened. It was saved by
a wise President who .crapped the
ltcenslng program and banned the
teaching of How to Do It courses by
anybody IU\YWhere.
"Some things," the wise President
said wisely, "are more fun to learn by
doing."
HANOI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
Rob<u..N. Wred, P•bl{,hrrc _ _,__
Thomo1 KcrolJ, Editor
Barbara Krtiblch
Edllorlal Pogt Editor
'The f'd ltor\11 page ot the O.lly
,.Piiot lffkt to Inform and 1Umu-
l11e readl'f'I by 1>ttt-0ntlnc thi.
MWIPf'Pff°• l)Jllnkm• •nc;f com·
mt'nt1.I') on \Opln of lnttlc&t and s:lt(nlflctnct, by provldln11 a forum
the expret11lon of our rnde,.·
, j.on1. and by prnonllnc thw
e Vltwpnl'ntl or lnfotiT)id ob.
el'll and 1poke1rMn on toplt'I
It day.
' diy, December 15, 1972
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