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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-19 - Orange Coast PilotI I I ( . ; • , .. . ' anes, .. . --• . . .. . • F"f!n Zone Building Bid ,. Bites Dust in Newport :TUESCl'A Y AF.TERNOON, D6CEMBER 19, 19t2 f •> • ..: • ~· ... ,-.i! . '· ' .. , ...... , ·. ~MO.lM.4SICTIOtd,•MemS f • ;' ,_ --· . ·. -~ ... ,. • • • Top 3 Laguna :; •• • • • SchOol • Aides I I And ihe War Goes ••• . . - • Fired Despite l Ne Fun ~rt .:.~j,oots Zone Plans __ Strong Show Of Support • R<verslng an earlier decisioo1 Newport B<lcli city councilmen Monaay night turned down a controversial, \i2b-deosity condominiwn on the site of Baffioa•s Fun Zone.· Councilmen heard more tha'n three houn of debate befon! voting 4 to I to "table tndeflnltely lbe JAK Cowrtruction Company p._J to build lbe 47-unit project. Coondhneo voting for the tabling ac- tion told lbe developfr Oley did not want to aee ti~ for lbe bl-acre site on Palm Street lltogetber. • But thty did say more· study should be J!iven to alterdattve commercial develop- ment -Including )loaible revamping of ,lbe Fun ?.one -a< lower-Oensity residen-!ial ..... ~ . Mayor Donald Mcinnis, Vice Mayor H.Ward Rogen, CouncUman Milan Dostal and Q>unclbnan John Store voted for the tabling action wblle COUncllman Richard Q-oul, Carl j{ymla and Paul Ryckoff .\'Oled against .It -tbougb. for • different reuons. ~~ al~~~-.!.i"'::~ totl>ekill ""~ The <.'(>uncil action was taken to court by Balboa Ferry owner Allan Beek. The judge ruled the council had to bear it again and make a new decision. Last Apollo Splashdown In S. Pacific SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) ' The last Apollo came home today, ending with a splash ln the South Pacific seas the program which put 20th century man on the moon. ' . Apttrican astronauts Eugene A . Ceman, Harrison H. Schmitt and Ronald, E. Evans returned to earth at 11:24.a.m . Psr after compleUng the last, longest and mo a t sclenUfically·producUve mission of Apollo lunar exploration. commercial are.a in Balboa. , Croul felt the proj<cl should be approved Jn its en- tirety. "We have got to sit down and make a decision, gang," O'ool salci. "We have beard the opinions ot everyone in the 'world on thl.s one. We have already made a decllion so why don't we stick to it?" Helicopters from the recovery carrier Ticonderoga quickly hovered over the Apollo 17 craft and Navy frogmen . leaped into the water to assist the astronauts in· to a life raft. The seas fOO miles southeast of Samoa were genUe; the ..,_ SOUTH VIET TROOPERS TAKE COVER IN GROVE AT EDGE OF VIL.LAGE NEAR SAIGON As U.S. Slept Up Air W1r In the North, South Vietn1me10 Continue to Slug It Out on Ground Croul was referring to a 5 to 1 vote by the council last summer that overturned a planning O<Jmmlssioll denial of the pro]· ect. weather perfect. The spacemen were to be plucked from the raft and taken to a red..c,arpet, brass hat welcome op the TJC()flderoga. . Three Planes, 8 Men 'Rat Pack' Girls Held in Robbery Evans told Mission COOb'Ol two hours belo,0 the planned bomeO<Jming that all equipment aboard Apollo 17's O<Jmmand ship America was "stowed for re-entry." Evans, doing much of the work·for re- e11try as compiand module pilot, also said that he w a 1 ready to dump .fhe Lost·. in Bombing. Ra~ service module, a portion of the SA!GoN (AP)·-U.S. planes made the . spaceship which supplies power and ox· heaviest attack to date on the Hanol- OAKLAND (UPI) -Three teen-age ygen during most of the mission. Haiphong &rea during the night, but it llrll, known as the "female "rat pack," Earlier, his crewmtites, Ceman and,. a tao was costliest to the United States. •ere held today on charge1 of roJ>befY S<:lunltt, per!Qrmw J nJne.IOCOnd ~ket ).'be ·u:s. "COminand reported two B5Z Ind ·a,..ult. • • • • .. ,. · · riling ' 'wblCb put ~ on !""!eel heavy bombers and an F111 flghter- Ofllcor1 sal<tthe lrlo of 15.~nd ·IS.~ear· CO!lrse'tp~'t§a;~ ~Ill • bomber lost and eig!lt American filen oldl _. auleeqs In a-doieo :muQlngs . '\'}.'h<i born iru rich! ·o..lhe mdoey,, m!Sslng. Hanoi said sl• of the missing bl WblCb elderly penona ,..~ the: vie· repGrted ~ tbe mbUan com-men -the crew of one of the 8S1s -~ijcf~ •• J ' • , were captured and presented at a new1 ~· at-', Apollo 11-Js :i1iO flDll iµji,t. In a ,135 conference In lbe North Vietnamese -, "'1ilUiOn -;~a~ created' te . bo o st ·, capital a few hours later. (See story, · '-~ ·~ .m cairlOd out u a Pace I). ,,..._....,.....,....,.-----. ijtlllc esploiatton for jD -· :nie Seven other Alnericao airmen were m tads tllr~'1UN, ,n.o· ;;;.liii; ........i In Thailand, Ille U.S. Commancl -!~ ~ lllllu:~"~ ~ Iii ' llalll. -~.~ ,, Ddlii.~ ~ ~t°'f[ l ~ ' .. l *rth Vietnam charged that nearly 100 t ·;~ .... ........, ..,, A I !dot oi ' clvlllm "I!"" killed or W<>Wtded In at-''tbe~··fu6cm 1'il~ 111 Neon! cargo lacQ on Hanoi and llB suburba. of moon samples, more thin 1,000 pie--But lt said President Nixon's attempt tures lal<en on the i-. and abolrt two to bomb II Into submission would not miles of film taken from moon orbit. force it to accept his peace tenn1. Also on board are samples of 1n orange Hanoi claimed that three BS2s and dust whtch lcleQtlsta aay may nvol\l"' three fighter-bombers were shot down ~;,..;~:l:;p,.;;;;;.,~..;;;;;...1-~ Ilion~ thlnldriS .about-lunor-1voh1Jlori, Bild aid a nmnbcr of. the n1e11· were cap- . ., ,. •1 I , ' I .. ,. ' . ' . -· ·" •• • ' " I tured. The U.S. Command said it had no additional losses, to report for the time being, leaving open the possibility that olher American planes may have been lost but the 1eBrch for lhe crewmen is still under way. It was the heavJest loss in a single day that the United States bas suffered aince resumption of the bombing or North Viet~ nam Jut April. • Althoogl\ lt,85Z& have been losfin the 71> yean . ,America'• biggest bombers bave been ftl'lnc In the Vietnam war, on- ly one of them was downed · by enemy Ore, on N ... u. The magnitude of "the attack wtth which the United Slates resumed lbe air war north of the 20th parallel was un- dencored by Indications that more than JOO 852• were used In lbe raldl. Scores of smaller fli!"t.,..bomber1 from half a ®'en boeea In Thailand ind ,.veral 7th Fleet carriers In the Tonkin Gulf Ibo toOk pert, U.S., officials (See BOMBING, Pqe 11 .. Three-car Crash -Kills Y ~uth, 21, Near San Onofre A young Bakenfleld man "as'·ldlli:d and bis silter badly Injured Mond1y In a three-car crash near the San onorre Nuclear a.neratlng Station. Highway patrolmtr1 from i h e Oceanside olflce said Tommy Baldwin, 21 . suf!ered Jatal injuries when his north- bound car collided With an auto which wa1 ruunUq travel, after a Oat Ure on the San Di.tO Freeway. Baldwln'a 11Jter, Denise, !!. also of Baken6ekl,i' IUf'fered 91!'Vtre" cuts and bruM and to d a y was described in aatill'act<!rY condition 1l San Clemente c.ner.1 llo.,ltal. . The 1:111 11,m, crash took place after Baldwin loll C011irol and alammed Into a car atarttng to enter lbe !raffle ~ • from the center 1trtp near Basilone Road, patrolmen Aid, The driver of thal auio was unhurt in lhe colllalon. Moments alter the Initial co!Usion another auto alammed Into the second car as well. 1'be driver of that car .was not hurt, ellber. offlcen Aid. By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of a. D.a1Y Plkt 119rf Despite a strong showing of citizen support for the Laguna Beach School system, the BQard of Educ.aUoo l!onday night voted to fire its three top ad· ministrators. Superintendent of Schools William Ullom and assistant superlnlendeftbl Dr. Robert Reeves and Dr. Charles Hess. in separate actions, were told tbelr coo. tracts will not be renewed when they eJ:· pire on June 30, 1973. . Each motion of oon·renewal was made in curt fashion by Trustee Patricia Gillette and seconded by Trustee Gerald Linke. Board president William Thomas joined with the two other members in ousting the top administrators. Trustee Jane Boyd, a longtime sup- portee o( the administrators, cast the sole vote to renew lhe contracts. Tnlstee Nonnan Browne was absent, vacaUoplog in Mexico. More than 200 persons paured into the high school auditorium to watch the meeting, with scores demanding an ex· planaUon of· the action after the votes were taken . Each member of lhe majorit/ bloc refused to respond. Prior to departing to the high sc.bool cafeteria for an executive (closed.) session. Thomas allowed ZO minutes of testimony. There were no statemPnt.! made critical of lbe per(ormance of Ullom, RteYea or Hess. "Why do lh(ee people tell me I can't (See lJU.OM, Pap I) Oraage Weadter Hazy sunshine Is the way lhe weet.ber lady sees it for Wedn~ day, wllh 1Ughlly cooler tempera- tures. Highs tn !be 60s. Overnight lows will be In lbe'IOs. Night and m~lng low log Is upected WMnesday. INSIDE TODAY Twlve Vf4r1 ago, Ralph Rat· Ii/I dlacqt><ttd he couldn't a/· ford a Chris-Ir<• fa< hfa three claughcn1.J so he grabbed a dozen orange cratu and mccU hfl °""' Chrfltmaa .Ulag•. S•• S""1/ on Pogt 28. t..M. ~ ' ... _ . ·--_... M --. ... .,.., ...... httlMlllll•ltflll u-n ...... , .. ,. .... .. lltal"f • llM ...... 14 AIM~ IS • j Jarfloring Fagiti·ve Ex-Stanford Prof . Arrested h,y FBI MENLO PARK CAP) -Fired Stanford Prof. H. Bruce Franklin, 37. and two otben were arrested in raids today on federal c:harges of harboring fugitive coovk:t Ronald Wayne Beaty after an aµ_tbusb escape· tram Chino In which a t*ieon-gu•rd was shot dead. the FBI .aid Franklin wu arrested at his ?.fcnlo Park borne as simultaneous aJTeStl. were made on Bruce Warren Robaon, 23. and ~1orton Newman, 30, at their bomel in Mountain View and Menlo Park. A we!"l'ant on the. charge was issued 101' Charles Woodbridge Noble, .agents said. Fl'OlllPegel BOMBING; .• reportO<I. One seaiQI' AtPer{car. official said hun· dreda or ~\~took part in the raids and some tilrge.ts 1·1n the Hanoi-Haiphong io· dustrial complex were attacked for the first time 'in the war. U.S. !pokesmen said the two BS2s prob- ably were hit by SAMs, the surface-to- air -milsiles supplied to North Vietnam by the SOvlet Union. One B52 Wtnl down 30 miles northwest ·of Hanoi with six crewmen missing. the command said. lt was the fll'3t B52 to crash on North Vietnamese territ<>ry. The other B52 limped back to Thailand, like the BS2 that was downed in November, and crashed 100 miles southeast or the Udorn Air Base. Its seven crewmen bailed out and were rescued. The Flll crashed about 50 miles southwest of Haiphong, the U.S. Com- mand said. and its two crewmen were listed as missing. It was the fifth of the controversial bom'.>ers lost since they returned to combat in VJetnam nearly three months ago. A high-ranking South Vietnamese of- ficial said the renewal of air attacks on Hanoi and Haiphong after a two-month suspension "is an effort to show _the Americ'an determination to negotiate from a position of strength and also to persuade us t h a t the Americans will never let us down and we can trust them and join in signing a peace agreement." · The White House said the bombing was ordered bf. Nixon to "cope with another enemy buildup" and forestall a possible _ enemy offensive in SoU:th Vietnam. . . , But some senior U.S. officials In Saigon said there were no indlcations that North Vietnam was preparirlg for a large-stale offensive although it has be g u n its -trad.Jtiornil dry season supply buildup to 1' stockpile its forces in the south for next _·year. The Saigon command reported only ':fl North Vietnamese and Viet Cong attacks in South Vietnam during the 24-hour period ending et 6 a.m., the lowest number slnct the first week of North Vietnam's offensive across the demllllarized zone ln April. President Nixon halted the bombing and all other military operations above the 20th parallel on Oct. 22 as a sign of good will when it appeared that a pe~ce agreement with North Vletnam was im- minent. Following presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger's news conference report last week that bis negotiations with Le Due Tho of North Vietnam were deadlocked, and bis charge that the North Vietnamese were to blame, the United States resumed the mining of Haiphong harbor Sunday. A spokesman said Gobert A. Seabock , 23. also was arrested and booked for in· vesHgallon of murder in the San Bernardino County escape two months ago. Beaty, 3$1 was arrested Dec. 11 after a high-speed ehase across the San Fran- cisco-Oakland Bay Bridge at the Oakland end when two patrol cars blocked eastbound lanes. With Beaty was Jean S. Hobson, 44, a Venceremos ac- tivist. She is bel1 ... 1ed to be Hob$oo's mother . An FBI affidavit filed in San :raocisco today with the U.S. 1'.1aglctrate'1 office said Belt~ recited the details or his esca.pe which led to the an:ests:: -It said Beaty admitted formulating tbe escape plan v.·itb the help ol VtDceremos members. / It Qlloted Beaty as telling agfnll that Jean aJfd Bruce Hobson drove him to a mountain cabin near here on franklin's instructions. Beaty stayed there a month with BruCe Hobson ... 3Jld...Mrs. :Hobson brought supplies, the FBI said. Franklin then instructed Beaty to stay at Seabock's home, where Newman pro- vided food and acted as a lookout and Seabock p,.ve Beaty $1,000 ·and phony identification papers for t h e names Stephen Hurley and Daniel Collins, the affldavit aaid. . It said Beaty fold the FBI Franklin then provided a car for him and Seabock to get to Ft. Defiance, Ariz., but the first week of December returned here where Noble g~e him and Mrs. Hobson clothing 1nd a r· with ammunition. FBI said t.he harboring charge agains\ Franklin and the other meant "giving\aid and c..omfor' to a fugitive from j~," but glive no details except that Beaty-r.~:::~::1y was the fugitive . At Franklin's house, a man who answered the telephone but refused to identify himself said about 15 or 20 FBI agents armed with shotgunJ and tear gas canisters surrounded the residence a lit- tle alter 7 a.m. He said a.; the door was opened on a chain, agents ::;ma51>ed into the house and arrested Franklin, who was just waking up along with his wife anJ children. The FBI ' said a number of San Bernardino County sheriff's depuli{;S helped in tbe raid, along with Palo Alto Police. Franklin, a radical activist, was fired from Stanford last January by President RicbarQ. Lyman after a faculty fround Franklin guilty of encouraging ·campus ·diml: •ion. ,Beaty, a convicted robber; WBJ freed Oct. 6 by three armed men and a woman who ambushed Beaty's two unanned guard> as lhey were taking him I<> a C(.lurt appearance from the Chino Institute for men. 1 · C"uitra Jesus Sanchez, 24, was killed aqd guard George J. Flllgerald wounded during Ule ..?SCape. Officers who arrested Beaty and Mrs. Hobson said Beaty was toUng a loaded revolver and Mrs .. Hob& its carry:..'(( a loaded handgun In ber pune. Found in the car were dD assortment of pistols, shotguns, su art;u;~ ... I.'. :.mmwlitioo, officers .Ille[ Mn. Bobloo, -4<,i_had long been active in the V'"enceremoe 'n\tolutfonary group, which Beaty joined while in priJon in 1971. Mrs. Hobson ran wisuccessfully for the Palo All<> City Council \J May 19?1. Franklin and the othe= I<> be or· raigned befOI'! a U.S. ate ·later in the day, with the exce on ol. Seabock, who was immediately taken to San Bernardino County. UP'L T.,.,..,. Frc>MP .. eJ ULLOM ••• have the lUnd of edlloatlon l nn for Illy cbildffil," angrily asked Mrs. Thomas cutkomp o! Soutb Laguna. "! ...... 1 Ille fact that three people )'1th no ~ In tcbool COD mUa ~ dodlilllL • "Air.,. Id al P\!1>!11: ...-i. I •m r'llDOft 0:0-c:bUdreD from .. Kholb,'' doclared Mis. Gall Gutoo, .. omployo « T<t> al die World El•montary, Sdlool g wotUil acll~ In \he~ • ntell ~ ··-~'<llllott. IDil Llillll. ~ -GUI wt Ille atd al. Ille :Ill-~::~~~°: tbl~··-llDlle. r 1iotb uDom and -....... ~ ~· right to a public bearing o1 the r<!uons for their dismissals. l:tess, howevu, demanded an open dlscus!ioo of the reasons for his dismissal. .. My nm concem Is "' the cbildffil of this community. l tblnk the upresslon of tbe community has been well put this evening. I appreciate it," said Ullom, pdor to the vote. His eommtnt wu followed br,.• '!me motion from Mrs. Glllelle that not be 'rehired aod that • rqtalored let~ Jn. formlaa him o! !be tonnlllaUon be 'lent from boud president 'lbomas. A slinuor vote came on the quesUon of the rmewal of RM\lea' contnd. Orange County lo .find any fault In my past action, .. said Hess at the outlet of ~~~~~~~~~-+he-bellrillg...,..bta.contraCL..~~~- Tom Van Zan ..from one oC only three XB-70 bomb-"I'd like to know the reason! for not ex· It's a Bird? One of the abstract metal birds in a bank branch at the Transamerica pyramid building in San Fran- cisco is inspected by Kathie Streit. The stainless steel and vanadjum--sculptures· wer,e~created-by ers ever built. On.e crashed and the third is in a teMing my contract," he added. Mrs. Gillette noted tbat under the Education Code. a board1 Died 'DOt cite Truman's Kidney No,v Functi.~ning Doctors Report KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) --poctors treating Harry S Truman said today the seriously ill, former President's kidney function improved and he was aware that- peop\e were around him. "l~e follows people's movements with his eyes, but has not spoken to them ," said Research Hospital spokesman John. Dreves at a morning medical briefing. ''Kidney output has increased during the last 24 hours," be said. "He continues to receive adequate nutrition even though protein intake remains curtailed." Dreves said Truman, 88, had his sec- ond straight restful night and "seems more alert this morning." At 7 a.m. PST, Truman's blood pressure was 140 over 60, pulse 80, respiration it and temperature '¥1 degrees. . Late Monday night, Dreves said Truman's kidney function dropped to less than 10 percent effect.Ive. • ., Dreves added, "10 percent iB the critical point. Below 10 perce!lt )! J!l- adequate." He said he could not lie more specific" Reporters asked bow the 88-year-old former President was able to hold on day after day and Dreves said, "That's just President Truman. I ' can't define that." . 5 Officials Indicted .. ALEXANDRIA. La. (UPI) -A federal grand jury indicted former Louisiana Commls.sioner of Admlristration W. w. McDougall and four fonner slate · lesislators Monday on charges stemming lrom alleged kickbacks of 127,650 in the state's insurance program. McDougall was former governor John McKeithen's closest adviser and aide. ·museum,. N. Viet Talks Boycott ' Hinted Due to B_ombing PARIS {UPI) -North Vietnamese chiel negotiator Xuan Thuy said today his peace delegation may boycott forth- coming negotiations on a Vietnam cease- fire because of tbe resumption by the United States of "the fiercesi attacks ever" against North Vietnam. Asked about prisoners of war, Thuy said: "Every Christmas Mr. Nixon voices concern fro prisoners. but every Christmas he bombs North Vietnam and for this reason the prisonen are oot liberated." Questioned if Hanoi would refuse any further negotiations if the United States continues its bombing raids, Thuy replied: "If the American party continues Viet- naqtization, continues to send weapons ind military oersonnel. amtlnue5 bomb- ing and esCalation of ibe war, then the United States will have to bear full responsibility for Its a'cts." l: .. iJuuncer Knifed At duh Improves Thay v.·as asked at a news conference if he agreed to meet again with the chief U.S. negotiator, Wll.liam J . Porter. •·we fixed a date for a new meeting, but in the present situation I will have to Jet you know ~ there are. ~·o_ing ·tO be new technical talks," 1buy salCI. Thuy said his delegation would also decide in the near fututt whether it v.·ould attend the 171st semi-public negotiating session in the regular Kleber Avenue talks scheduled Thursday. Thuy's statement clarified earlier reports that the Hanoi delegation decided to break off the technical·level talks in-- definitely because of the resumption or bombing raids. "North Vietnam wtD .not bend to any foi:ce or,, pressure,'' Thuy sajd. "We are atlacbed to peace, but peace With honor and full rights for oUr country." · Speaking thrrugh an Interpreter Thuy blamed the United State.$ (oi' sa~taiing the draft cease-fire C:tCCOrd "just When both parties were getting ready to sign." He said it was not Hanoi whicb demanded modifications in the accord as stated by White House aide Henry A. tqssinger, but Washington. Kenneth Mock, a 2$.year-old bar Thuy said on Dec. 13, the AmerfCans presented an entire new list of modifica-bouncer who had his throat cut during a lions to the accord, affecting the draft 1o brawl at Costa Mesa's Pier 11 club Mon-all nine chapters ...:.. -146 -clauses day, was said to be improving from his altogether. knife wounds today at Orange County Thuy said : "These xnodlfications were Medical Center. generally questions of subs'taoce and Medical officials said the knifing vie· were contrary to the basic international tim from Anaheim was in "satisfactory" rights of North Vietnam." condition following surgery for a Meanwhile, Kisslnger's top aide, Gen. punctured tbora:r and numerous slash Alexander Haig, met with South Viet- wounds on his arms and shoulders. namese President Nguyen Van Thieu and Mock, of 7D24 E. La Palma Ave., Cambodian bead of state Lon Nol today became involved in a figbt with a youth on the status of the stalemated Indc>- early Monday which spilled from the In-china peace talks and the renewed U.S. side of the Newport Boulevard night spot bombing of the North, viewed in Saigon reuons for firin& an admtwtntlve emgloye. EarUer in the d11ci11.._, 1be bad ·stated: ·"Due ~ la not neceuary under thele condlUons." Under prodding from Ullom, boanl pruldent Tbomu aid Hea ....Wcbi't be rehired beca..0 "It probably em· compasses a lot of thln25-like eccmomy -perhaps we don't inow e•erytbing yet." "That's bard to accept," said Ullom, "when the budget bas Increased 22 per- cent under this board majority. "I question whether we need a doctor in charge of our business office. It's very hard to define this when you put it on a performance level," said Thomas. Hess noted he was savlngllhe diltrict more than his annual sala"")' each year. "I've worked under this board for 33 pretty d;lmn bard montl>• .aD<1 I think I've earned my mooe,. Wben·the boanl has to a~logize for a lnistake I make, they won't have to fire me: I'U resign. "My perlormance wiU stay the same whether I'm here sl:r month! or six days -no matter what happens tonight," Hess said. m. llnal •'OIDarb were groeted ,by a motiOn lrom Mrs. GlUeite to teTminate his contract. It was adopted in a similar 3-1 vote. Drug, Sµspects Held OxNARD (AP) -Sberllf's deputies said Monday that four persons arrested Sunday on ·narcoucs charges smualed a kilo CU pounds) of P"'< bet<>in Into Ven· tura County every two weeks for several years. ThiMy ounces of heroin, valued on the ltreet :.t more than $1 mUUon, were seized, deputiOI said. HEW Official Resigns Post WASIDNGTON (UPI) -John G. Veneman ii leaving hls post as undene<retary of Health, Educa- tion and WeUare and wW be suc- ceeded by Frank Carlll<d, the While House announced today. Navy Missile Fired Knew of Hoax? into the parking lot. as a negotiating tactic. Witnesses to the incident told Police Haig arrived in the South Vietnamese that Mack's assailant produced a black-capital 12 hours after the United States handled knife with a four to si:r: inch resumed heavy bombing of North Viet.. Veneman, No. 2 man 1t HEW since the beginning of the Nixon adminlstraUon, planJ to return to California. II was roported be likely will run for lieutenant sovernor. VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -The Navy sa)'I it launched a Bomarc missile here Monday afternoon which was used for alr·to-llr target prac· tlce by planes from Polnt Mugu Naval Air Station. The CQM-lOA miulle was flown southwest to the Pacific Missile Range. Pair Say Impersonation 'Obvidtts' OIANM COAST IT DAl lY PllOT 1'M ~ CN1I o-.IL Y ~ll.Of, wltfl M!tdl II comWNd flw N_,.,...., .. pUblilflMI W "*or..,.. C..tt "*411hlrll ~-s... ,. ••• 9dlllots .,.. ~llMll. MotMll•'I' 11Wo9glt Frldly, l9r C.1• Meu, Newpwt ~ Hlll'ltl,,.,.. 8ucll/1"11unt1,,,, V1llly, l.eflll'll 11.-ct1. trYIMISalllllle..U ~· 1M QlrrlliMI S.n J"11t OPlttttM. ......_lllltlt reifaiiil 9dlt1-k MlltMd .S.klnllYI f!W hnol'/$. Thi pt1riclptl Pl*!llhlng plent II •I JJO Wnl e•r $tt"99t, c..11 ""'""· Cl11*1'1Jf, m1'. l1ll1rt H. W11d P'tttldtltt--.. P'UOll~ J1ek a. C11rlty Vlcil PrHIOtnl Ind ~ti MeMllf Tllnl'I•• )(11¥11 ·~"' Tholl'IPt A. M11r1thln• M•lllOlrlt CdllOI' Ch.trl11 H. Lnn1 llllch1r4 P. Nill HNf"ll' Mlnl9lnll Edltlrll -c.tt M-1 230 °""'' ..., S"-'! flll'fll'Plll" tHdl1 aD N-..rt ...,...,.,.. l.AollilM IMth: n2 ,_, ........... H ........ ltldl: 17'1t htctl ~ ... °"""""' at ,..,.. •• Clftlllw 11-4 Ti f ;t II (J14l '41-4121 Q tnlMll .Uuc:rt. ... '41-1671 .,,.. ~ .,... tt.ltl .. ~ 1..0 4t2..t4H ,.,._ ,..,. ~ C-.ty c..r-fflu -1111 ~ 1'11. Ol'9MI c ... 1 Pl!Mllfllllt ~-NI lllM 11trlel. lllwlrttl..,1. ~ """" or tt'WrtlMINntt ,,.....,. MIY 11 1•.-.Clllll WI"*" .,_.., ,.,. ...... tf C19'1'flltlt' ....... ~ d• ....... Nici ti Ctltt MIN, c:tu~111. ~-:w c•""' n . .s ffllltflll\'1 _. Miii U.11 nwitfll'l'I ft'IUftWY _,IMlllM .... "'°"tlllY, ' ' SEATl'LE (AP) -Both defendants In a federal fraud trial have testified that their alle&ed victim, former Newsweek contributing editor Karl Fleming. knew he was involved in a hoax before the transadUart•u completed. Donald s::· l\lurphy and wunam L. "Jacr". ttWIS look the stand In their , :-defense Mciiilay In U.S. District Court. • The case was to resume today and;. possibly, go lo the Jury late thI.. af. ternoon. • the government contends Lewis ob- lained SSQ,000 from Fleming for an ln-tervlew-~lth Murphy, who was pos)ng as D. B. COO]>er. That was 1he name slven by a mtin who htJ•cliiid a Northwest Alrllnf9 .,,jeUiner and disappeared al~r bailing out Of the tiina 727 with $2()0,000 ransom on Tha.nksgivlhg Eve 1971 . The impci'IOnatlon becamP obvious during some 12 hours of taping and fllm- Tug Feb. 23, Murphy teoU!ied. "1 made ao many mlatakes, I even SUNDANCE KID'S ' SON, 72, DIES MTSSOULA, Mont. (uPI) -Robert Longbaugh, 72, l!Oll of the lamed Wutern outlaw known 11 usUzxsan« Kid" died Monday In a fire In ·~ old !OUNtory hotel. Fire olflcWI &aid one ' olber pmon, John Schon, ap eldorly blind man, al.lo .. .. killed Wben name 1wepl tho Priess Ho .. J. .. . The · reot of uie hotel'• 34 retldenu, many of them unlvenlty atudcntl, eSCllped without Injury. thought he knew it was not true," the SO.. year-old Bremerton, Wash. 1 and developer said. "When there was a prob- lem, he (F'leming) helped me.:• Lewis, 33, of,Sea~ Wash. testilicd Jie received an andnJDlOUs phone call from a per1on he belle'WMI to be the hi· jacker. Lewis said he -received three" three subsequent cat1s totaling eight ~ and• was mailed three $2() bills with serial numbert included in the Hat ffom the ransom paekage. He said he approached the Bremerton Sun with the story but a reporter wanted mor~ substantial inlonnation. Then he an11Wered an ad placed by Fleming in a Seattle newspaper seeking an interview with "D: B. Cooper." The "hijacker" never phoned baok, Lewi! testilied. • ' "I told Fleming l had this story, butt was not going to be able to get D.B. Cooper I<> talk (with him)," Lewis testified. "I told him, 'I can give you every detail and notes that wo 1't quit.' " But he said Fleming told him he had to have " a body .•. somebody to personally interview." And Lewis said he told Fleming thett were "several lndl•ldaals quallned to play W. part" ~ showing the joumallsl a ptctuie ot Murphy. Earlier, Murphy's ttsflmony revealed the apparent involvtm.ent of Lewis' f1ther, 53-year-old Seabeek re 1 l tor WllUam B. "Bill" Lewis, In Ibo ocheme. Murphy leJllfied that Bill Lewis drove him to a motel Feb. 1$ for Flemlna'a flr1t interview and 1coompaflled, him to the oetond lfsslon elshtiday11tt>t. · Murphy leJUfied he ~lved ~.ooo for poshta as the hijacker, with the re· malnder spilt between Bill and Jnck Lewis. · blade and slashed him repeatedly. nam above the 20tb paralleL, ~-'--'--'--'--'-~-'-=-'--~~-'-..:.::.:...::....:...::....:=.::::.:::.::::._;_~~~:;===:;;;::============:::!c WOULD YOU BELIEVE- THAT THERE ARE STll.Ij COMPANIBS . . ' I • • • • • ,. . . . . . . . . . • • • • • ' WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS THEY SELL PERFORM 1 WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON SERVICE 1 WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE PERFECTLY 1 WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY 1 YES, "VIRGINIA," THERE IS AN ALDEN'S! (TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.) ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placutla Ave. COST.( MISA 646-48381 HOUR$: Mon. Thrv Thon., 9 lo 5'30-PRI, 9 lo 9 -SAT,, 9:30 lo 5 • • I , •• ' • , s 1 OAIL.V PILOT :J .- Beek 1he Dair With ·Lights and Holly • ... •· • • ' • • I " • Lagunan Richard Druebl, 26, gets with the Christmas season in a big way as Jack Jacldkh of Jack's of Laguna decks him out in the latest · festive hair ,iyle. The creation. is complete With lights (that work on School Comes To Leisure World Seniors They arentt working for degrees and they don't se( foot in a high school, but ~ \~ :o res~ents of Leisure World in l l.iifu!a t!illf\(f' lit!ive in-1!he ~ult Heath Ex posed As Cartoon Fan LONDON (UPI) -Friends ol Prime Minister Edward. Heath let the cat "'!t of the bag today. They said he loves to watch ·••Tom and Jerry" cartoons. They said Heath asked llldes to obtain a supply of "TO and Jer· ry'' ca:rtoone to watch over the Chrlslmu bblldays at his Chequer~ . couqtry retrea~. 1 educati"' J>l'Gll''!!ll of. %;1'\i\1ip ,Unlon . ~ High sCb001 Di.stri<lt. . They said. wheilever ~ prime li'lini!W lw , some tree tune, he tri.es to pot hb feet up and watch the zany adventures of the famous cartoon cat and mouse. l ' I I It's a caSe of. the schools coming to the students in the 5addleba<:k Valley retire- ment community. Aii of t~ more than 40 classes are conducted .in~ World's three 'clubhouses. The prpgram has practically reached its peak at the community, "Ith aome classes so popular there ate Wll,it\hg }jjts. Most interested 'persof:ts havi been ac· commodaled, said Leisure World Educa· lion and RecreaUon director Stan Cigar Institute Making Smoke Over Train Ban Bennan. NEW YORK (UP!l -The Cigar With the completion of Clubhouse 1''our, ln!titute of America has protested the scheduled for April, the program will be ban on Cigar and pipe smoking in Amtr&k able to grow, be said. _ club cars - a prohibition that came In addition to social demands, one 1 about aft.er a complaint by °'fl Justice main reason for building the fourth Warren E. Burger. .. · -\.-In letters to Burger, outgo 1 n g clubhouse was to have a bobby -.ip Transportation Secrttiry Joli! Vplpe and c¢nter. · . , Amtrak Praidmt RqJer-Lewis, the in-· Of the classes offered, arts and crafts stltute S!lid . M'*'<lay, "the ·protest of are the most popular Berman said. Justice Burger made pt.iblic and acted These include sewing ~inting sUtclr.ry upon so arbitrarily by the Amtrak • ' ' ' !)UU>lllleIDeot casts clgar0 8Jld_11I smok- ceramlcs and lapidary. tng in a moat undeslted upr. -• Other courses Include Ca Ii r or n i a •uro quote William 14 a k e peace history , French, Spanish, English end Thacker'!;y, a cigar is 'a kind companion,_ a genUe stimulant, an amiable anody:ne, a cementer of friend.ship.' creative writing. Craft activities are centered in clubhouse one now, but space is limited aad residents wanting to work alone on projects usually can't do so wtlbout in- terrupting a class. When the program began ai Leisure World in 1966, 400 persons ebrOlled. That number has grown basically in p~ · portion with the growth of the develop- ment, said Bennan. "These are people wl¥1 have been working alljheir lives," he said. ··~ow they have "ftme where their creative talent comes out. This program allows them to be creative." The program'!! ''principal" is Bob Wllferol, an olflcilll in the adult educa- Uon dlvWoo of the TustliJ District. When the Saddleback Valley Unified District takes over the operation Of the ochoob in the area in July, 1971, the J,£lsure World program also will be under the new dlslrlct's wing. "I« thiS' Spirit, ·we ask for an im- mediate reversal of Amtrak's decision and that cigar and pipe smokers be given their equal and full rights." Santa Ana Picks . New Police Chief Raymond c, Davis will be Santa Ana's new police chief effective Feb. 5, City Manager Bruce Spragg baa announ ... 'ed. Davis, 40, is presenUy bead of the rt· man police force at Walnut preek in the S8n Francisco l\fe&. His )ianta Ana starting salary will be f21SOO a month. Tbe new police chief bu he"tl in Mw enforcement for 18 years lncludirig 10 years oo the Fullertoo police lorce. He left there in 11164 to tske the Walnut Creek position after riaing to the rank of captain. , It runs on a semester basis, like reglilar o<bool years, 8nd a summer acbool next year ls being considered because ot new clubhouse room next 1 April, Bennan said. "It gives people oome benefi! lf9m.lhe ! t1xes they don1te to the acboor pn>gra~. Spragg said 83 law eufo;cement <>l- ficers appUed tor the Santa Ana post. lt became vacant when Olief Edward Allen retired OD Dec. 1. • Everyooe hero la taxed," Ulllainell ! ... Bennin, "here they get IOl'l'lelhlnJ in I retum." r fte next Hm~r start! Feb. 1. 11>e f reaponee to fue program in general has ' been very good, aatd Berman, although t be added that the cooveolenal and avatbblitty are prime reasons for that, 1 Otherwise, traospOrt.ltion ii~ a problem 1 for some, he 1aJd. • "Uthe c1&sse1 were at tbe hlib IChool. 1 maybe 100 would go." • ·' Nutk Girl ·n~ues Engl~!' Ey ebr(JW• LONDON (UPI) -Christmas lhoppera gaped when a shapely £i'1 lbouUng "I'm 21 l I'm 21 1" 1ttlpped nude.and danced around tbO lllllue of Eros in Ptecadfily c~ Monday. A policeman thrtw his cape around the llr! and led her away. Police declined to identify her. batteries), Christmas ornaments, a garland and holly wreath. The hair style won first place in the Christmas Fantasy competition of the San Gabriel Valley American Master Barber and Beautician Association. It DAILY l"ILOT ~ wt .llldc (........., look Jacklich two weeks to figure out the electronics 'for the hair style and about 45 minutes to do the Christmas styling. Judge Intends to Deny Farr Pl~a LOS ANGELES (AP) -Newsman William rarr spent his 23rd day in jail today while attorneys studied the con- sequences of an. appeal decision handed down by U.S. District Court Judge Robert J. Kelleher. Kelleher ruled on Farr's appeal of his . -conlemt>t o.f court conviction late Monday but the decision was not made public tiecauae attorneys in the case had ·not been noUfled, icourt sources said. However, Mark Hurwitz, Farr's at- torney and Deputy County Counsel William Stewart said •after a meeting with Kelleher Friday that the judge ' in- tended to deny Farrr's petition for a writ habeas corpus. Hurwitz said he planned to fly to San Frallcisco today to appeal Kelleher'h a~ parent refusal to free the 37-year-old newsman pendJng a hearing on his con-1 ten1pt citation. of habeas corpus. was found in contem9t of court by Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older Nov. 27 and given an indefinite jail sentence. The conviction stemmed from Farr's re(usal to say which of six attorneys in, Farr, a Los Ange1es Times reporter, the Charles Manson murder trial gave him tnronnation for a story in violailpn of a court-ordered publicity ban. The attorneys have denied under oath they gave Farr material for the story . Farr has C(lntended that revelation of his sources wo.uld violate his professional ethics and his ·conscience. Meanwhile , in New York the Overseas Press Club of America Monday ':lfged Fart's immediate re.lease: · "This is not just a fight for the rights ol one ma,n but tor global press free(fom," the OPC's Board ol Governors said in a resolution. Make · It a "'Family Gift'' for Christmas ... Choo se Yours From Our "Family of Fine Cars'' Lincoln Continental Marquis ••• • • • Comet ••. ,_ Home Of 'nle New cu , , , ~ .... l' ... ell" ' .. 1973's ORDER YOURS TODAY! ' OPEN EVE RY NITE TIL NINE •Orange CoU1Jt~1 1omu, of Fint Cart9 ohnson&son -. -. . l : r, ( I l I ,\," . ., . - . L.Oll!,,\11 • ., • 'f•• r.11 1 ( · 11 ; v .• 2Cll HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • 540-45830 I ... !\lark IV Ca pri ... • •• Montego •.. Dome Of The New Car , , , .. ,..,...,. r ... .,,. .. • - 1·1 ' I • ' \ ' 4 DAILY .PILOT Tut1day, Dtctmbtr 19, 1972 ~ ~Mandate ' fro Rebuild I ~ HOIJ~E 'OF CARDS DEPT. -T)le ~wn folk of Laguna Beach today &re ~!ting at a school system that has col· ~psed. Not too rnahy months', ago, Laguna1s school district was being lauded in educati,pna} circles as innovat~e. forward-IO'okin,g ~ flelible in meeting the needs of Children as individuals.' · 'lbOo: lbree trustees got elected to the five-member board on what might be characteized -5 a "bac_k to basics" plat- form. They ~pparently S?-W it as a man- date. , ' Tragedy Stnke' · • • The w.i f e and il)fanl daugbler of SeQ.-elect Joseph R. 'Biden .. Jr., (D-Del.) were killed Mond4y 1n·a traffic accident near WUming!on, Del. Blden's two other children also Were hurt in the wreck. At ·1e1t is the Senator-ele<t and ht• Wire, N'ealia. At right is 18-month' old Amy.., w,!lo was killed in the cr~h. -~ttac!Whe-in-----• novattve programs, supporters or the H • p · t 6 A • · system came to the defense or the ad.' ano1 resen s irmen ministration. The new three-member board ma- jority, camera store o"""r Bill Thomas, retired Navy Capt. Gerald Linke and retired teacher · Patric"ia Gillette, stood finn. After all, they had a mandate. In retaliation, the school supporters started a recall against Linke and Mrs. Gillette. In the end, the two retained their board seats. rr WAS A CLOSE election. A handful of votes decided it. Voting analysis in- dicated Laguna was split almost by neighborhoods; the high hill sections and center or town voted for recall, while the private communities, Emerald Bay to the north and 'Ibree Arch Bay to the south, the their nearby neighOOrhoods, supported the incumbents. · Lagwia Beach became a town divided against Itself. Anyway, the recall was close. But the incumbents had another mandate. The three-member board majority issued some statements ·about healing old wolmds, joining together and moving ahead now. LAST NIGHT m:EY· gathered at a . meeting and joined together in firing the s c boo 1 superintendent, Dr. William Ullom, the assistant superintendent, Dr. Robert Reeves and rthe b u s i n e s s manager, Dr. Cbarles Hess. Clean sweep. Merry Christmas. All three men are honorable gentlemen ' and good educators. They created a modern school system in Laguna Beach. They will go on from the Art Colony to do important things elsewhere. All three simply got caught in a house of cards. A divided community pushed on it, and it collapsed. IT IS TRAGIC when a good school system get.s torn apart by petty to\vn politics, factionalism and, in some in· stances, actual vendettas of hate. All of this may be good fun in municipal politics. BuL in school systems, you are fiddling with the educatioo of children. That's what a school system is supposed to be for. At any rate. Laguna 's new three- member school board majority has now given itseH a new mandate. No longer do they have a mandate to criticize or fJDd fault. No looger-'ts the mandate to sweep out. Now the mandate is to rebuild. · NOW, EVERV111ING they do will he of the.ir own creation. It will be their ad- ministration directing the school system. It will be their budget control. It will be their curriculutlhflnd their tax rate. It is also their community that is divl".'.I· ed and with their actions in the months and years ahead, they will either pull it together or further push it apart. ctearly, they have critics out there waiting lo see how the job will be done. The rrumdate to build always proves a bit more difficult than the mindate to tear down. On Radio After Capture · SAIGON (AP) -Six crewmen from a B52 shot down Monday in a raid over North Vietnam were presented lo a news conference in Hanoi only hours after their capture, said a Radio Hanoi broad- 1:ast. • The broadcast was barely audible. Phon~tic spellings of the crew's names follows : -CAPT. ROBERT Rowlin Sirson, 25, of Georgia . His service number was given as 214 48 8424FR. . . -Capt. Richard Thomas Kingston, 31 , of South Dakota. Service number 25o 662 660FR. ,. -Maj. Fernando Arexand~, 43, of Texas. Service number 454 36 3155FR. -Capt. Tim lnkton, 34, of New York. Service number 112 30 4927FV. -Capt. Henry Charles Barron, 26,. born 'in Weal .Germany. Service number 138 38 S463FV. • -Capt. Charles A. Brown. 26. of Illinois. Service number 025 34 9616FR. THE NEWS conference, reported by a woman, said : "The pilots were afraid and they all bowed their beads wllen they faced photographers at the .news con- ference." Only Barron and Kingston were permit· ted to speak. • · . In a brief statement, Kingston said: 111 was shot down by a surface to air misslle on Dec. ~8. 1972 in the vicinity of Hanoi, North Vietnam. I balled out safely from the B52 I was piloUng and I am now de- tained by the Vietnamese people." Barron said: "I was shot down on the morning of Dec. 19, 1972 w hi I e participating in a B52 bombing misskin over North Vietnam. After.· being ca~ tured, I have.received wonderful medical care. "I WANT TO send my wife and · children best wishes for Christmas:· Together with my wife and chlldr~ and all the people on earth, I pray for tfli! war to end soon." The difference in dates given by King- ston and Barron raised the possibility that two B52s may have been shot down over North Vietnam. The U.S. Command refused to comment. POW Familws Express Criticism and Support By United Pres,s lnternallonal Families of American prisoners o( 'var expressed bewildennent, criticism and support Monday for the administration's resumption of bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong. The key reaction, however, was bitter disappointment. Ever since Henry A. Kissinger's "peace is at hand" speech in October,' DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlivery of tht Daily Pilot is 9uuantt'<I "'4111Nr·'rldar: II YW clo "" IMI,,. rou• IHIM:• If Si• •·"'-• c•ll lofl'll I'"'" Clll"I will ... ~ It ,.eu, C•lll ,,. t•k..i ..,,.;1 7:• ,.m. S•hl ... f ..... S•lldll'l ff ,.. ... "'' rKt\¥t .,..., C...., bl' t •·"'· Slt•.-•f, ~ I '·"'· 5-•r. c•ll .,... • '''' w111 tte ..,..., ,. .... Clllt It• Ilk ... Vftl~ It "·"'- T tltpllonts Mast Or•noe I Ccun!y Arns . , •4Z·4)21 Narlfl-1 H ... u11111an Buch lllCI Wts!mlruter ... , .... 540•1220 San Cltmtnt1, C1pl$1r1no BMch, • Sin Juen C.pll!r1no, DaM Palnr, Solltll Llg1,1111, LlllllM N~1191 4t2-4"420 relatives of POW's had anticipated happy Christmas reunions with sons, husbands, brothers and fathers. The breakoff of meaningful negotiations and the renewed . bombing turned joy to gloom . -MRS. ROBERT C. DA VIS, Willingboro, N.J., whose husband Is misslng in \"let- nam, artiCulated the sorrow of other famJlies over the. course of e.ve.nts. Mrs . Davis said she had "no hope" !eh. "l felt that a settlement was close. Now it's off in the distance again." Her respOnse was echoed by Mn. John H. Carey, Jeannette, Pa., who aatd, "we are very disappointed. We were very hopeful." ( MRS. CA!\EY, whole ..,;, Navy . Lt. David Jay cirey, was . C8ptured in August 1967, "said she WU sUll undecided on what eUect the resumed full-scale bombing would have on any possible Sf.f· Uement. Mrs. John Hardy, Azusa, C3lif., the wife of Air Force Capt. Jolm Hardy, abot down over North Vietnam in October, 1967, said she agreed with the resumption of bombing "if Nixon wants to bomb." .. Northwest ·Rainy, Windy , Columbia Overflows With Ice Jam; Snow in, Midwest . . \ SHn,,..,..,., Tides I TUll04Y S«Ond t11ei. ............ f :2'o.m. 4.0 sa.. loW ...... , ••••. 2:S111.rn. 1.t WIDllllDAY '•'"'"'Of' .............. 6:lf1.m. 7.l l"lm IOW_.1.•"•••···• ... 1:521.m. 2.0 Slcond f!lt'l'I ........... 10:11+11.t"fl. 4,1 SiteMC lclW ............. J::tS11.111, 1,f 'YOU Section' There'• aomethmc tor YOU In the "YOU Section" of the DAILY PILOT OVf!rf SUnday. aiecJt 111 f)el'IODll appeal ror you and )'Olll't, I I Comments on Bombing Paper's Ques~ion Move BJ'l)e-ledPlaa N-per tdltorloll ""1lllleitloc 1X1 Pnlldeal -·· decl•loa to -the bombing ol North Vl«nam were dhldscl In their ·-ol the -"""'"'· Some-the _,, .. laion wblle others ~looed the el!lcley ol -bomblng-11-1 -of-acbievlni .,..... oelllen!ent. Here ii 1 110111pllnjf ol ecm- ment publilbed M-y and today: tlonabla wliotber IWioi'• clever and Wp- ""7 MfOll•IOrl can be.bombed bock In- to --ia1b ••• and II th..-e is lllD ba!>e o1-. -_. dickering, '-bill ~ = tat .... Uszslzh 411111: "&no though \hit -llDIJ lo -•• round of 1«1"-lo Alliertca and In the· ~fli!IOVW.-llllcelulMay sua1•~ tMt .u. Amllican pubJlc will = lbe....,.. of the North and the fJf ill llortlcn rather than llmply surTeDder....... ' .. <Mt ... Su-'nlDel: }"J'be American I puf>!lc w..t. an eod ol ltt 1n..i-In Vietnam and It -It ,_, U peace wu al band two-ago, lt lliould lie New Vitt Tlmol: "The bes! hope for .,lit band now. Only a --foukp peace Ii> --since 1954 bas -wouldJusUly a ....,.pllon of bombing. ~ -by 1 ball Of American Thal ls'wby we view lllCb a """'!'plloo boml>I •• , 11 Is not llkely lo hasten - with the blttemeu In our heatll that and coold lndeflnltely postpone -the Pope Paul deacribed." 'J.,t and .lair' qreement tbal Henry New Yirt Doll)' Newt: "It wia a 108! • Kli!lneer 1iaa aoid Is the Prtsidenl's ob- of America's will, pure ·and ~.and jectlve.11 • Ml.' Nlxoil's response was fist ancfplain: · ·M' .tspellS 1'rtmDe: 11We find it hard U.S. oir power wtII not be· leubed, In-to ,.. how Hanoi will be made more dellnltelywbilellaqoi .da'fllleeooaflnat, amenal>le by a,U.S. oir ·ol!enirive. Mr: cl~f, JIODorable ~:" way Nt.on 'W often opoken ol the Importance lo peice ·and ,per,n...Dt · .from :ol living the 'l\ku (OVenlDlelll a · bombing Is open to North· Vietnlm ·any 'chance.' How gre'at, how cerllln, .how ttmo It IS ready for a rftl -effort. -1&11 Ind at whit Coit does liO Intend that Until that day comes, the --· chance to be?" n't eipect .immtmlty tr.om ~attack while Nullvlle ,.__.: "SO the air war , prolooging the conlllct." will l[e ,reoewecl and the Parts talks will . Clmland Plata Dooler: "With the go llaclt io the original.. status of neal'-peace coming apart, America once stalemMe, while the N i x o n ad-· again Is laced with the \IDl'leaADt pros· mlniltrallon c:oatinues lo. play charades peel. ol President N-'1 swinging to a with the American people." · bawk!M line on Vietnam .•. II ls ques. 1 ~·'Oropalan: "WJielher ~be • (To S1nt1 Cl1ua, of course) ~· ' r<1wnptlon of U.S. Aerial attacb m the North. coupled with the !allure ol lllnol'a lut.dilch inYlllOO latmebed in ~prU. will qaln brlni llallol to the _. llblt wllb the lotenl[on of endinc the --fl I fllihiy ~ti)'· queslioo. u lt -not, l'relldenl Nt;ion mllll find otbor -~a~J'erican patllclplllclll In lbe . McGovern Blasts Bomb Escalation WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Georre McGOvern says President Nixon's renew-' ed bombing of North Vietnam will lengthen the war and stiffen .the enemy"s resolve. • · McGovern said Monday thoit the lilxon admlnlstration "ha;-chosen a cciurae !hat can only keep our young· men • down in an Asian jUngle ~ ~ prisoners loclced away In Asian cells for still another Christmas." The South Dakota Democral said, "It 1 defies all reason to suggest that the , ·North Vietnameie will aliandon their ~cause now -after a generation of. ltru&-1 (le -stmply bec'ause we ~ bomllln( the North once agaV!." : Chrislm~s is a time for little f~lks (bjg ones, too), and what is Christmas without Santa Claus! So Mission 'Bank invites you to bring your little folk in to say ''h~ll§~' to §lanta· Claus ,at the C..agu'na · Beacli-of.lice· of the ba!Jk on Friday, December 22nd., from 12:0(,l Noon to 6:0Q P.M. Th!!re'll be can(ly and cookies for the kiddies, and coffee and-copkies for Mom 'and 1Jad. Santa's loo.king for all·of you, -so coin.e in and tune up your "Ho, Ho, Ho","just in time fpr Christmas! By the way, you maywanttp open your next year's Christmas Club Account at Mlssjon Bank. I -• . M.18810N BANE IOO Glen!'OYrt • Lliglfna 8-h, Catlfom)I 8295f • (114) 497·17'16-491-1771 . ' ,,,,,..,,,.... r,0,1.0. • M09lfl'9 1-.1 to no..- .. . • \ J • I _, • • . -' . . • • • Legislator Urges Pay Hike Veto T~y, Oeumbtr 19, 1972 DAILY PILOT /J Hey. Doc, Get a Car State a 'Time Bomb' Chino Gangs Feud SACRAMENTO (AP) -At leMt one lawmaker II uraJng Gov. Ronald Reagan to veto the 10 percent pay increase C.llfomla legislators voted for themaelve.s Jn the waning houni of this year's session. Assemblyman Floyd Wakefield, a RepubUcan from South Gate, called u po n Callfomlana Monday to send Reapn lettera and .Weivams urging him to reject the pay hike. Wakefield said the pay raise wu worked out behind closed doors with the usual oom- mlttee procedure bypassed. e Store Plekets SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - "Human billboards" of. United SAN BERNAl\DINO (AP) -A cjoctor who bealll) riding a horse-drawn carriage a year ago to dramatlze the oefld for clean air may have to return to his motor car -after he gets out of the hospital. Dr. Donald R. !Aul· ienhlser's c arr I a c. e was demolished Jn a colllaton wlth one of its gas-powered com· petitor~. The Si.year-old pbysl· clan was reported in good con- dition at a hos~ltel d .. plte back and chest inJurles. Witnesses said Loutunhlaer wa1 Sitting in bis ~ed wttege talking lo ftleod• when it was hit by a car driven by Raodail R . Blacklock, ·20, Sunday. Two horses bltdied to the carriage were uninjured. Farmworkers Union members --------- have begun picketing freeway ramps to protest nonunk>n let.- tuce s:ild at Safeway "stores. ( BRIEFS ) Ex-Angels Pair Enter Guilty Plea Union members bearing -sig ns which said "Farm.workers thank you. No on Safeway" slood at en-UKIAH (AP) -A former trances to freeways here and Hell's Angels couple on whose ranch two slain motorcycle in other cities Mooday. ,,,., .. , members were found UFW llJlOl:emoan Fred Ross ~• charged Safeway aells nonun-have pleaded guilty to possess-- ion Iceburg lelfuce and said it Ing stolen property, and an of. was chosen as a boycott target flcial said they will conliooe because It b the naUon's testifyin, about the gang. lar~. grocery chaln. George Wethern, 33, pleaded • Aid Restored guilty Monday to po....,ion or LOS ANGELES (AP) -Full stolen guns found al bis ranch Medi-Cal benefits w e re near here at the time the restored Monday for ·about bodies of two G e o r g i a lQ,odo aged , blind and disabled motorcyclists, Thomas "Big _,. who had been dis- qaallfled because of 8 20 per-Tom" Shull, 24, and Charlie -SOc1aJ Security Jncnaae. Baker, 30, were found Oct. 30. Superior COurt Judge Robert His wile, Helen, 29, pleaded A. ·Weob rw<:tl th!ot the state guilty to accessory t o Oapartment of Health Care poasesslon of stolen proper!¥. Services must restore the aid The :Wetherns ,..,.. given becaUJe of recent federal suspepded sentences but were legislation. The Judie said he • retwiied to the oounty jail hued bl! decision !IOlely on pending transfer to protective the new law, signed by Prest-federal custody. They have dent Nixon Oct. 30. been granted Immunity from · h other prosecution in return for Reagan Says Quake Measures Taken SACRAMENTO (AP) - Gov. Ronald Reagan aays Cailfomla's earjhquake 1ltua- tlon Is llke a ticking time bomb, but the atate ls' moving lo c:ut IOllell of life and prop. erty the nen ,l!,me the earth heaves. 11'1 lnevltable that the earth wlU tremble again under the Golden State, just aa It did Jn the llQll earthquake and fire wblcb laid wute to SaD Jl'ran. cisco, 1 SS-member Governor's Earthquake Council t o I d Reagan Jn a report released Monday. Reagan endoraed the panel's 26 rtc0mmendations -!IOme of which would require im- plementing legislatloo -in- cluding requirei:nj!nta: t b 1 t California cities adopt earth- quake disaster plans and that IChoolB be ordered to condUct dlauter traq for cblldren. THE PANEL alao l'OCOlll- mended more research on bow to. protect ,public utllHles 1uch as eleetrlclll' and gas service in earthqUU:e dlsaaters and preparation of "aelsmlc prob- ability mapa" ao give Califor- nians a better idea of where an earthquake would be most likely to strike nezt. ' ' Th ~ 'recommendatoons should be Implemented with ail possible apeod," Reagan said Jn accepting the report. "The situation la analogous to preparing for the uplOllon of one or more gigantic hidden time bombl. We're not sure 1'beft <Ir 1fh!N they'll Co ott but Wt -thal they U'I tJoldN." , Fuel chairman JIDlel G. Staroa. Reagan'• .....wy of CAUFORNIA ~~==n:i "The council bas cooducted "'-------~ Ill work during ~ put - -tha with the knowledge that damaging earthquakes T S h wW continue to ocour Jn the · ax, C 00l state and thal a great earth- quake, l!ICh u the Ullll San ~ ... ;.es:..;:::ysaidstrike Financing The San -wth-~ab ~ 0::, 00li::n !i Bill Signed deltroyed lOOll of the city. A Firm Okays $58 Million Land Suit Settlement um quake Jn Long Beach left SACRAMENTO (AP) -I~ peraoils dead. On F.eb. 9, Gov. Ronald Reagan and the llm an earthquake rattled Democratic leaders of the through the populous San Aasembly went their separate Fetrumdo Valley north.-est of ~cal ways today after . Los Angeles and k1lled M peo. formal -1i,ntng or the $1.1 pie, Ill of them at two blllloo school finance and prop. bospltall. erty tat relief blU wblch they cosponsored. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Boise Cascade has agreed to a 158.5 million settlement -Jn. clu<llnc IZ4 million Jn refunds -in a aeries of sutll.Jnvolving mountain recreational sub- divisions, California Atty. Gen. Evelle J. Younger uy1. · Under the negotiated terms, Boise Cascade will repay the 124 mllUon to purchasers of lots, spend IZl.5 million more on administration and maintenance of l:be. projects and $13 million to complete unfinished work. • · Younger said Monday tllat no trouble was anticipated in gairung court approval frwu. federal coorts Jn san Fran.. clsco and Reno aqd .BUperior coirts in four Callfoniia COUDo lies, trust fund to assure fllfllllnent of the agreement tenns. SEISMOLOGISTS at t h e Reapn signed the massive Callfomla l n s t i tu t e of tu bW Monday in Los Angeles Technology In Paaadena aay with Democratic Assembly California bas abcl.it JOO earth-Speaker Bob Moretti and atate ''IN AN agreement like this quakes a year of magnitude S Supt. 'of Public Jnstrudion we have no desire to ~ a or greater on tbe Richter scale Wilion Riles topping the list of defendant Into bankrujilcy," and one ol-magnlhM!e -T or ltate officials joJnlng the said Younger, taking COIDI· greater about twice every cen-Republican governor ln the zance that the company liad buy. ceremonleo. had finllDdlll dlffic:u!U ... · The San ll'l'anclaco quake b '!be bill gives local school• George Mc<bm, vice -~ estimated at about I . S their blggert .. ver in<r<ase in dent of Bobe Cascade and although t h e Richter 1Caie state 1Upport and cub the general manager ol. its realty had not been deviled when tt average bomeowner's prop- group, said the setUement struck. The scaJe, devised by erty tax by about Sl40 a year. ''will avoid lengthy and·-ly Or. Ciarles Richter <>f That b paid for by a one cent litigation and will provide Caltech, measures e n e r g y per dollar increase in the sales Boise Cascade and property released. by an earthquake. tax and a 1.4 percent hike in owners alike a fair and speedy Ezperts say damage can oc-bank and corporation tax way of setUing outstanding cur in populated areas with a rates. land sales clalms. . moderate quake of over 6 NoW Reagan's top taz ad- "Moot importantly, it 'Rill Richter. vlsers are working on hJs pro- •troogiy protect the Interests Reagan'& earthquake oounctl posal to give most of the and vaJues ol the vast ma-is compoeed of federal state state's estimated $700 million jority of our property owners, and local dlsaater o~lciais surplus back lo taxpayers Jn who are satisfied wlth their jot along wlth npretenlallves of an looome tu cut or rebate. ~a," he aaid. .' the &enenl ' public, private M ore t t I a n d o t h er BE ADDED that ·the joint • H, e explained dlabu.........,b busiileia and linlvonlties. Democratic leader! are talk· agreement on a stete uoction '"'"1''"" --.. ~· . . against ''second bomeA .land ""'IS from the aettlf:Qlent 1be p8ne1 also recom. Ing about other new programs salepracticesandclilztnclass are included in reserves mended an information pro-the surplus could buy. And actiqns filed by subdivision lot created earlier this year as gram in the news media oo they aee an income tax hike , buyers marked a first. · part of a l200 ml1llon OX· bow to llUl'Vive eorthquakes, not a ,cut, Jn the future il the '!be state Initiated action In ~be deductedchargfroe mand•~~ m<n .....r& on earthquake state Supreme Court rules Contra Costa Superior Court -··~ eogineer!ng to develop aafer that the Reagan-Morelli tu chal~ Bobe Cascade's eal'lllngs. '!be charge, be lald, structul<I and .... ,..,..t of bl1I hasn~ done enough to S....t.JZ• ....... mtcr: If': c..11w.. ... ...., .................... ...., 111111 .... "°" T• TU,, Ci111t "11r, •• °""' ...... ~s. .. -i.s-~s.. ..... ...,. __ ..,..._._,a, I :as.a lllllPrinollillslf-llol,··· ~ 11ow Tllll s;to9Sllll,-1111111 ,....... '"'""",...... ._ .... ..,... c....r- ~Cllllh's­ Chb•I: lltlll Tllllf w hied. H111 -~ _ .. __ .. _,., __ .... ............. """.........,. ..... l(Y[RAIU; Tt1 c.ller lllil: ....... lions '44-1700 S.25 6.75 I.ts s.u 7.41 7.ts s.u Q/f~a/tm • Motl.,., s-. t testlmOny about the Hell's SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Angels. land aale5 and development mulled primarily from llOlle the clam aafety J>l'Ot!flll1S of equallJe the d I f f e re n c e s _,..1 KAO\ CMIOM4 Police say the1 have yet to filld a motive ll(Jqe slsying of Jllll,. G. La'!; a popular an-tlf6verty '"°'* fol!Od shot to dllt.b tn his dir. \ practioe.!, and the dvil class iCa~~;ICaile~~~~decl~slon~~to~d=l....,.::~the~~sta;;;te~~and'.:_~fe~d~e~r~a~l'.__;be~tween~~Call~~foml~a~'s~ri~c~bes~t-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-FOUR llJ!l,.L.'S Angela are actlolls followed. I· IJnue Its r<alty huslneos. ,___ and poorest school districta .. Charged Jn the dl!itl>s of Shull Tho stata 111!1 1 alleged the , • and Baker. Wllliam ''Wbispes-, Iota -. aold> by "ques. ;. Ing Bob" Pifer, a Hell's Angl!l'""111mlola sales tldmlrj••'ml ..,., ;.; dying of throat cancer, has that " ~-ml ...,.. 1' testified that they were pleUon ~raid not ~ strangled and beaten to death been met -:i;~ after a 1971 drug orgy in the Jay Llnderman, d~ "io' ... ,.. gang's Richmond clubhouse, tomey general who handlicl •• then taken to the Wethern negotiations aald the fJrm will ' "" ~. 54, ,...., ~ dead =~~~ .. ~~~ ., . ' . . ~ -. ~ .. =yre~dbeen ldlled l,y a .!kallber bullet Jn the neck, aulhoritl,. aald. ranch for burial. deposit 132J million cash Jn a our dl'e.SS shir~ ~ve. a tAote c! 1etsuve.. --- 's • In homes all across the land, more people give, more people receive and more people serve 7 Crown than any other brand. And f~r good reason: that smooth light taste has convinced millions of Americans that they can Say Seagram's and Be Sure. s0agn.m's 7 Crown. lt's.AinerioolJ whiskex. , I \ • ' G1'~ka~ ~rfczc+ witk a blaze\"' at\d tie or op~"' neck ·Ur\del" c:\ cl~'5ic. swcntev- OP'-r-::!T 's rl~ :seE?t" Sl.(C\<el"' , It\ bu tto~ dowl'\ GAN.,.. skews 1+s riewest bLl"ttoV\ doW.-\ i I'\ ('.( i"el' tu red cl\e.vrOV\ -we"ve. lhe c.la~sic. ' fur"' ~ve-ry occasio"' i II\ ~ict-blue 44 fashion island, newport center 644-5070 -- '" > 11 - '. _, ·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---I , • • • • I . I .I j • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Regent s Too Remote . It has been said that being apllOlnted to the Board ol Regents ol the University ol Cififornla II the clo- thing.In America to knighthood. Unfortunately, there's a smattering or truth In the statement. ni.. typical appointed university regen~ a survey reveals. ls "white, male, in his late 50s, well-educated and financially very successful ... He is appointed by the governor, subject to Senate ccmlirm.ation, for the impressive !erm of 16 years: In addition to the 16 regent.I so appomted, there are eight , ex«.ficio members of the board, including the gover-- nor, who serve as regents so long as they bold their st.lie titles. Members of the boards of trustees who govern the state universi ties and colleges, also appointed by the governor, serve eight-year terms. With each passing year, there ls .mor6 ,Validity lo the question: Do these men and wor:qen trulY represent the taxpayers of today who are pa.Yi!lg for the µnlve¢· ties and colleges, and the stpdent& w!Waltend them? In a bygone time when less llian ~!i ~C<nt. of ·the populat!QJI went on to bighe'r Oilcu~ otjlese were usually t8e children of alfluent hmilies who probably ' were well re,>resenled by regenti iOaiO<en: .. Today, 70 percent ol Califotnja) ldgh school gradu· ates go on to college or university.,.With student Iman·. cial aid now commonplace, they come from all economic levels and include all minorities -and . botli sexes. . A system of selecting regents wliicb . -ms to elim· tnate all but the rich -along with D\osl women, min·' orities, teachers and students --seems increasingly outdated and less and less related to ttue repre5'0nta- tion. Afany recommendations have been made to improve the balan«: shorten the terms; split the appointive power betweil the governor and the. Legislature; ~.up a commission to present a broad spectrum of qualified nominees to the gov~mor; include studenll and leach· ers on the boards. All these and mo.re warrant llOrlous cqpsl.deration -the foremost being shorter temls. The gap already Is · too wide. Tho governing board5 ol our lnstltuUons of higher learning mmt be made m<>H representative ol the people Ibey serve. · Secrecy Breeds Suspicion ' On the subject or higher education, a· Sacramento columnist re«ntly was advised by the University of California that ill employment Contract with university president Charles J. Hitch is "not a publlc record." The inquiry was prompted by persistent rumon that the llilcb contract includes, in addjtlon to an annual saJarr ol $5ll,000 (more than, the governor of California is paid~ certain emoluments far excaiding those granted most university presidents. • · The·. journalist bad. suggesled the best way to scotch ibe rumors would be to disclQl!e the actual terms cit the contract . 11 , He w.. relerri<I to a section of the government l"de which precludes disclosure of, employment con· tract matters that could coilstitu.te an lnvasiop or prlv· acy. 'fbe section, in fact, specifies such records as "per- ~nnel, medical or similat fil8'" ,but says nothing about concealing expenditure of tu dollars. ~ • All st.lie contracts involving \be spending of pub- lic funds are public J:1>00rds. So are the salaries and other e~olwnents given an public university professors and other employes. It -Is altogether likely that the total compepsation received by President Hitch is tot&lly fair. 11 is'tot&lly unfair for the university to establish a speclf.l rule to con«al the terms of this particular contrac~ Ospecially at a time when the holder ls Seeking $400 million to run the university next year. • ' GJSHER ' ' • ' • I I " How Nixon Policy Some Flaws , An A•swer to Congestion \ I • °' •• In Selectwn Let Indians Down O:f Judicia'fy ·Free · Mass Transit Viewed • W ASJUNGTON The N i x o n AdminlslratiOO, while promising the In- dians more authority over their oWn af- fairs , bas worktd secretly to keep them subjupted. We have dug out the evidence from thousands of docu- ments, which the How do you get a judge to fine a city JO<' pollution, when the jl!<ile depends upon city -votes for reielection? It's something like ezpecting a policeman to issue a warrant to a fellow cOp for lit-terin~ Or spitting on the sidewalk. fnin.i.stration and supervision of BIA 1 was leicturing in- f\mded. ftOll'BmS lo the tribes.',' Iowa not . long ago ••"* INDEPENDENCE for the !Jr when . 1 b" !horny Iodlans stripped from government """"' .....,.., 'th 'l,tleSliQD arose. Sev· • ;; ....., <i·coarse, woold be un,.-,= "' rol alembers ol lhe "' 11Wi'-rftl 'emi., lumber and otbet Ill-" ~late Air Pullullon files and turned over to us. Indian Commls-.. , . le~ )bat llavi; encroached Oil ~ Qo!>l{l!l Commission, · ... -:.n.tet aiilt.11911 nghts. ~ It •their monlbly sioner Lou is Bnice ~ tried, the documents_..;.. • show, to lulflll the promises made )to , "JD<Jli! •·nshlng and bunting !real;)' mJO!lng, complained ' :i~:_bjVe been ignored too ~" U.t,.it was bard to clean up the Iowa declaml' Bruce. "Indian people have air as long as state judges refused to eeo harassed when they attempte1 to fme .local communities for violating the the Indiarui. But almost invariably. Ii.. · was overruled by Assistant Interior Se· rotary Harrison Loesdl who Unes!ed tllc Indians and favored tfM:lr exploiters. Last week, President Nixon ac>:.: the reslgnations of both men. Th~ p -,,,. dent praised Loesch bnt nffr 1. word of appreciation for Bf"Ui..•. APPARENTLY the Co1 ,n1issionr.r, himself a Mohawk, m'tde. the misl-ke of taking the President Rt his word in 1'70 when he promised the tndi~s a "policy of self-detennination." Bruce started setting goals for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. ·In a Nov. 2tl, 1970 memo he reported to then-Interior . ' Secretary Walter Hickel: "The primary emphasis by BlA in 1971 will be on asslstlng Indian tribes to gain a greater' degree of control over edUOl· tiooal, economic and social development on their reservations. This is being acbleved by changing the BIA Crom a management to a servle&-Oriented organization." exercise lbelr treaty .•. rights." Under "open-burning:' IawS. iis regime, the Commissioner vo'l)'ed, "There's something wrong with the "necessar;t action will be taken t~ honor courts," one of ~-ioners was °'le treaty rights-guaranteed m the quoted in the pa . "Ibe judges are negotiations whlCh toot place over 100 afraid to go aga· the ta1payers for ·ears ago."• political reasoras." He wu referring to • fie flluded to the Adminstration's ----·--------.., ;ractice ol putting Colinnerelal lniere3ts ~ , -~ ahead of Jndian ngh1a, rererr1ng to this SYDNEY J HARRIS cauUously as "conlllcta. ol Interest . . . . ' • _· within the Federal govermnent." _ _ BRUCE WAS AU() concerned over the fact that only 18 percent of Indian youths attend college, as cc:mpared with 50 per· cent of whites. "Tbe number i>f Indian youths who enter graduate studies is disturbingly small," 'be added. He in· tended to mate '""' lhat there wuuld be more "doctors, lawyers, engineers and other professionally trained Indian people." With less firmness, Bruce urged more assistance for Indians in .urban 1bettos. lhe stat< districl court juq..; three olher commi.'8iouers agreed Iha~ by [all. io,g to fine the cities, judge, are not m- furclng stat< law. . ' TO DAT!!, Ibe papers reported, "only one or 20 open-burnhlg ca.oel refemcl by the oommlllion to the Iowa ~ general's oifree fol" prosecution. bis resul\ed in a line qain,st Ille city." Three years qo, QJuncll,Blulls was tapped r., $JOO, which tJ almost a love-tap. · EOITORIAL RESEARCH Most of the dty-s commuters still drive Once upon a time, the min wbo"·, trl~ to board a bus or a subway without dep"'111ng the required fare mjgltt have been detiosited al the local police llta,ti<al. With one tiny excepUcn -.Commerce, Cillif. -this might s,till bapperi in ' lmy city or town In tHe 11Dlt.i States, - eve< In the not too dlalaol MUre, tlie ...,. their can to work; only 7 lo I percent paying mass transit' .custOmer may be ·tUe advsnlap of the free bus rides. It patUJll oo Ille baOk' (O<' doing his part ilh , bas been atllJed, however, that the ex· -g automobile ·congestion , and perience of, small city Is not a~le pollulloo. ~ ' · , -II 'large .metropolllan areas. ~g. ~ ' • . • 6*rp<iioo and the lriquency ol buses • rr MA y NOT """"*" Iomomiw.ot'i -~ f!lc!ors to be -· nexJ day, but Olal\Y ~ lf!ol ,. ·'Ia~ for example, •·Mek·long no-: lhat free masa tranSlt la P""'i,;'tl: prao,. Ure.,,..l.laf streetcar~ experiment lut tiql and even qecessary. It wootd hr wlnter rftu!ted in an tn.crease of almo6t pooslble In New York, In the vi ... ,a1 , filtpeftentln lransil rMttrsbJP-'!be IU!o- Bronx l!resident ROOerl AJ>r-t. l!!'·lavy,,· clogged Italian capital, heartened by Ing a 13 weel<ly surcba!ge Oll<Cltf Ja. 1 auch an·mllluslastic public respoose, put come taxes and a 1.8 per cent ,tu ~ a no-fare program into effect on AprU 30 buslness profits. rt wouJd be practfcal-m with the understanding that it might altn06t all urban areas where present become permanent. Qut within two mass-transit systems are a mess. Fares montbs;-the debt·riddert city !tad 19 increase, passengers tum to t be return to charg~ fares because It could automobile, deficits rise and service not sustain the losses. They bad deteriorates. And it may be necessary to amounted to $2.5 million. ,_ break this cycle of cause and effect in order to make cities livable again. Opponents of tree transit ask bow financtally bard-pressed cities c an wldet write the costs and questioo whether it is fair to tax non-tide.rs for thi3 service. llespit< these arguments, the possibility of offering no-fare bus and subway service is being studied in New Yort, Los Angeles, C b i c a g o , Phlladelpbia, Washington and several ojber large cilles. COMMER.CE, a California city or 11,000, provides the nation's only loog· term ""P!rlment wlth free transll. !ta no- fare bus aervlce lor the past 10 years bas not exactly been a resounding success. . SOME AMERICAN jellies, 1Dllble or unwilling lo .ellmlnat< all tranoit fares, have tried "!"uclng them. In lfll, Atlar> ta lowered its fares fu,ml 40 IO 15 cents while Denver reduced hs from fO to SS cenb during rush hours and Crom 40 to 2S cents at other timea. However, some feel Iha! such baltway measum ere actual\y counlerpn>ductlve. Penmylvanla Gov. Milton J. Sl!aJ>p told a ....,.,..-aub- committoe 'liit Febnlary lhat no-fare service inlgbt be more practical than reduced rales. "I think If YoU get low cost fare, you will fmd that the operating cost. <JI cbecklng Ucke!s would probably be IP'l!"ter than the amount ol money you ~ be Ial<lng In lor oollectlon." ' ' • , 1 The Department ol Transportation has ' · esUmated that a nationwide free-transit program would have cost more than $2 bilUon in 1970. This figure did not include 1 addl'Uonal expenses needed to cope with increased ridership, improved services or adci.itional equipment. Some authorities calculate thal a comprehensive system of , free mas3 transit would oost $10 billion a year. PROPONENTS believe that t h e ., benefits would be more than wor1h the I cost. '!be lit< ROl>en A. Aleshire, former 1 -live director ol Ille l:jatlanal • As.odatlbo for Cooim11'11ty DevelOpment, argUed ~ "The o:>st of air pollution, auto ; deaths, land and resources !or highways, J leisure ana . productive lime, people's houses.· liva and communities , unemploymen~. and racial polarization , must all be charged iJgainst ithe present ' system." When all the factors are in the ' equation, he added, "the benefits of free mass transit-. far exceed 'the cost." Perhaps so, but would no-fare mass tran8it really encourage the majority of auto drivers to forsake their cars for the toe.al bus or subway? 1 Free rides would doubtless encourage \ more transit ridership, but Its effect on I 1utomobtle congestion is far from cer· , tain. No-fare programs coupled w:ith im· • provemt.nts in existing services, pro--• bibittvely bigb parking ntes and ex· tended auto-free zones might well be the \ ....,... lo the city planuer's dream. But I such plaol will ~t a great deal of ' .-y, and 1Dltll city, stat< and [eder&i govenmients are willing to spend it, urban mass transit will ~ it diWcult to lure motoristl away from their cars. While America's love affair with the automobile has soured a bit, it is still far frOm over. In the stilted language of government communications, this means the BIA should stop managing and start serving the Indians. Bruce reported, ind...--ed, that be bad already started to Implement the President's declared policy. This seemed to he precloely Ille kind or program that the President had ad· vocated. But instead ~f supporting Bruce, the White House undennlned him. One of America's le.a.st-liked Indians, John Crow, wu Installed as deputy com- missioner. Bruce remained the !ront man, but bis powers were transferred to Crow. With the quiet backing of tbe While -· LDeoch and Crow blocked Bruce at almost every tum. If a cltrr.en is found burning lea"" In some communities, a squad car arrives in no time with a sum.mom, wbiCb ii swirtly followed by a court appearance and a fine. But when the city does the same thinJ __ on a far larger scale, the:re ii nobody wllllng to blow• the •blatle on It. This mate. Air Pollulloo Control somellllng•ol a cynical joke. A. Pers~~al Prestige Test "When ·tribes have .expressed a deslrt," he stated "negoUationJ ha ve \a.ken place to turn over tbe ad· The Wonders of America America '• greatest and most beautiful landmaril, parks, points of lnterdl, and vacation preu are depicted in 300--odd ii· lustratkml -some 100 in color -ln a giant volume worthy or its subject : Tbe Americu Hertiage 8ooll of Nataral WOllden (f18.50; deluxe edition, 111.00). THE TRAVELER who goes from Acadia and Cape Cod'a beachet ooulh, to C2llncoleque'• clelipUw pooy farms lo I Dear Gloomy Gus Cauld be the moon la made ol n111y eons lmleoil o1 croen cbet,., bul Jl'1 not loo likely. Man bas on17 just i.r.i, M'rived oo Ibe -· ~.B. ..,... ............... ,......... .......... Fiii tf11' ... If ..... utrtr .... ....................... p ..... .. ( THEB~~) Murphy Island to the Dry Tortugu -or south and west lrOlll Ule Adirondacks to Pisgah lo the Greal Smokleo and on to Hom Island, then ·north to JJSe Roy1le and Sleeping Bear Point and Starved Rock -that traveler bu borely begun to sample this MUOn's n a t u r a 1 magnificence and lnflntalJ varied acene. He bas yet to croa tba Mlallaalppt, going west lnlo blg:i.=-CGUDlly. This book, by a seledlon of both famous and Ul-pa!ntlng.o and clrawlnp by tori!' eaploton and by 13 panoramic mapa In cokr, oO'en a summatlod ol Ibe 1'bole. · UPDATED extensively alnce lta 1183 verslon wbJt:b IOld IOlne U0,000 copies before ping out ol print and lnlp1rtn1 reviewers wttb such comments •s "magnlfieent " "IJOWll'fW and com-oelllna.'' .. .;.w,. lmprtalve.'' Nataral ll'oadtn llaa been written by con- tl'lbulors ~Y lemlllar with the country and hlltory lhey desoil>e· 11 presenta the reader wllh lhe whole wonder of the Ametlaan one, u It was and sa much ol It •till la . CAROLINE I!AKLEROAD . ( JW, BOYLE ) You can't fall down as long aB YoU are- going up. . THE SPECIOUS argument of one So tt'1 Ibe betlel' it>art of wis!tom new judge -who decllned to line two towna a and tbeo to pause • total of 12,«IO -.... tbal li would "not and take -of be lair" for tupayen lo haft lo pick up )'OUl'8ell and your the bill for viol11ioaaJl>il were. the fiult career. One o1 the ' ber loft ."*I; ezcept !bat In her of city officials. But, surely, Iha! Is the best ways to do this 'Jli>oll;Cr .... joii ''" wearing a duhlng quickest way to ,.. tllat -.. toa oot i. lo check your ~ ..i the bas wrllten llCr06S It "I of office thole officla1a who are den!lict pl'e8t.ige. that IDY• P.: ,ou, hero" in red Upsttick. \n their duty. The taxpayers' pocketbook L UcaJ ·and somewhat Real estate values a:o up when you is the nerve-center of the electoral mYthlcar guage by move Into a new oelgblXi'tiood. system. Wblcl1 Americans Your page.long biography In "Who's Qur form of government In the U.S. Is Judie each other. Wbo In America" Is prlnled In capital su~rior in many ways ~ European or c:ounc, you could hire a team ~ et! lettel"I. regunes; bul we still lag disastrously In fldtmi:Y and paychologlcal ~ lo go u the~-ol ft the subordination of_ our judiciary to the oter ~·Ind, make an estimat~. 'But that you aren't yet -YOUJI rm, pollUcal procesa. If Judges cannot be tru-...,uidl;t. weeks ol Ume and tbOulllnds you~~~ olba,~e desl~tloned the kind of1 ly Independent In !heir declalons, then the '· . pe--uce sta f!rY you wan trll:::lte ~stem of dlvkllng aulhori:tila ol dollan. wi., wan .. lo be out olbe~t when you do take over the belm. · UJ that much for an a5ent can ,. egated lo the civics lextboolu, le mike perfectly well · · WBBN YOU w ALK up lo Ibe water the executive and legWaUve branches " 1 cooler the gq ll!'Olmd: It start to mtlle usurp a vital part of Ibe judicial lunctlon. YOU CAN MAKE '/OU own' lllpnetlt <i~' tlvely beoiuse ' you're OUR PRESENT aystem pt selecllng )'1ll/l' prutlge by laking ~ • -to tbem tjl_e •JOl<e ol tnd oomlnatlnii ~ lilhot tbrQl!gh 90<>ur recent'1lchle,.menta and lii!iinl.,; Ille· , . T wllh eq>edlency, venality. It la OOt > How? Well, here are• few su~ Your teenage chlldret'' ya lislen lo the heal men, but most available, You are undoubtedly winning lrltlids, you wllh relpOCI -orld'.-do who are cbolen by tbetr parties; and doing well on your job ,and ~tlnii • whit J1011 t<D !hem. these, too oftto, .,. aifo available for good oommunJty lmprusJOn U: 'lbol'1 the brtihl lido ol tile slllus pie> 1ookinJ the other way at offenses. Dandelloos and cnbgrw don't I"'!' In tare. Bow al>out Ibe -lido! . your lawn becauoe you're so n,lcO a 1111 Wall, you can be Jftlly IW'O yoar B G they don't want lo cauae YoU "1'J -· pr<lllp bu lil(ltlld to 1111-point If: r---W eot'!Jt! Your old friends loyally say ,..'re the You an llfll ao dlll!Md In the penlteo.. Dear G<orge: • Co[Jee aroundl .,.. a 1ood llOll oupplement and wlll belp 1lckly planll to Dourishl J.J. Dear J.J.: Oee. What a swell answer! Now, If l just hid a question lo go wllh IL I only man they know whole _.. Usry yoa"alrNl'1lme In Illa! the Inmates ha.ln't gone to hit bead -,.)lut Ibey oecrelly bate your gula anrway, becawle. tNe blue frlendl c111 fora;ive eacb other anytbln& except 1uceess. YOUR WIFE keej)I • candle burning nlabt and di)' 1t each aide of the framed photograph of you she has hUDI In her bedroom. Yoor mlstre91 doel the aame thing In Quotes Hfdor Jtfl•......., Ar1e1 t l1e COllt1l1, S. F. -"A man, ii be believes In oomelhlng, whether It'• polo or guidln& his nation, shouldn't gl Ve ln to adversity. Belle! 11 Ille bacl<bone ol the lu1ure." - won't let you belong to its alumni associaUoo. Yoor wile keeps a pholo of IM!r high scl>ool neelbearl on ber bedsllje night table. TU PllE'ITY waitr... 1t Ibe beauery wbatt you -luncb alnya 1r1 .. lo get the homely wallral lo aerve yau, When Ille ulber wbo taltes up the of. ferlng ~-oervlces pas,.. you, , he plueU • dollar blQ rr.m the plate , himself and quietly Piiia It Into the , oulllde breul pocUt ol your COOL , Your molhlr omd1 beck your ,letters · unopened and unnad. Your QI uuDy mittakea you ror one 1 ol two olller .JlllYI· Man, YoU just don't need belp -YoU need ...... Barbara. Krcibich Ediloriol Paae Editor The edlW lll ~6:<': nf the Dt.11.Y Pilot .:ks to Inform •nd 1trmu· btle l'tA~ by 1~n.t1n1 th.11 ~ new1papet't opinions i nd ('Om· mentary 11n 1upl('t of lnt t mt 1nd alsnlnce.nce, b)' pn1vldln1 a fe1rum !qr in. expr'\'11\0rt Qf O\lr rttdftn' opln uni, 1nd bf f>S'E!ll'ntfnJ tho dJver"IO "'""'JJOlnls or lnformi:!d ob· ...._rvrn artJI sp01te1m11n on topics ot the d11.y." Tu .. day, December 19, 1972 . . L. lfl-1:'~ . . . ~Y $e. ~rnriks . ~~can ··steep Tight Almost nobody ever spends more than 25 minutes at a time In unbroken m0tl0ol"'8 slumber. Except·the holiday drinker. Which is why tbe·drinker iS even atiffer·upoo aris- lng, whenever., than upon reclining. Leave those muscles inert r~ mere than half an h>w' 1 sir, and they die ~ little. J>ON'T BELIEVE I'd r""'8Jlile America's only stork, the Great Wood Ibis, even if ooe such flew .Jn to ~ on this typewriter. Still, .find .k noleworllly lhat tlils •big bird fs aald from time lb lime to flY• upside down. Remarkable. Know' of. oone other that does that. REPORTED awhile beck !lull . a poll _amoog 2S iporls editoJW, reveeled that game wllereln they found the moot Intelligent pla)"'1's was foothell. Client asks, "In wbat game do these experts· find the least ilr telligent!" Boxing and baseball,'lhey.said. A.tie. MEN'S •COLOGNE -Q. "Would· Beau BrummeD bave worn men's cologne?'' _ A. ~ver. SU.ch ointments were1oo the market m. QM1 England. Bui Bnnnmell 1!¥md'....., olleesive._ "Ollly,llne linen and ... ~•...._wata'IJllllis ubl,lil!cre.d.-. • ,~ I , .. • l ,-. '!'Bf: ~·~ ~ while, K1'm and tan are U....iy c0ien1ha't'~ ""Ike nor'!~-. .. · ~11•, I. rl! ' ·' i.,,, REALIZE '1'1115 come6 ~ 4q years late-, but it·~~~ ported lhat Johnny Weissmuller ~ elephants, •Jiiii( can't stand them. ~ · · WRY DO YOU suppose the municipality ol Boston 200 years ago pa~ a law that .made;it illegal to take a bath except'wlleo prescribed by a pby~cion-. , .... . HANDBAGS -If the lady Is under five foet two lnche. tall, ber handbag .ooll)ll to be oo more than 10 Inches long. If she's between five feet tw.> and five feet.six, ~ PlJJ'8' sbooldn1 be more than 12 Inches Joog. But.if. she ~ loftier than five feet six, that bag can be •·much as ·lf inches Jong. Such is the claim of a reoownedJeatber goods designer. APPROXIMATELY 50 species of. wlJdllie will becOme extinct this century. Frightening, isn't it? No, mQbe not. Approximalely 50 species of. wildlife became erlincl ·lut century. Likewise, aoother 50 the previous century. Amj still anothe< 50 the century beftre that, too .. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. B°" 1B75, l'/..,_ port Beach, Calif. 92660. 'I I There. is an Importance that only diamonds can state.1They matter, in the way she 'fylls. in the way she looks. Diamond eorringo in 14 karat gold: A. In yellow gol~. $195. 8. Yellow gold · Buttercup, $100. C. Geometric style in · yellow gold. $250. D. Twenty-diiinond . dangle clulter in white gold, $595. E. Yellow gold rose, $150. Do Som,thing B11utlfu1.,. c:!Nrl• .......... ....,.. _ .,,.,_ ... ....... tHllA~ .. MNt ... CIWl'9t, ... . SLAVICK'S, J'ewelers Since 1917 19 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -'6<14-1380 Cllrl1tma1 "--' -.. .,...., ...,. ....,..., .. ··"" " •:• ....... AIM;_ Mn, OltOO •nd \.llt VfOo'I. Wrtll tocttlOnl tfl Tf'N'l!)Cl.,Drll'f .. IA Ctrrlrot, U Htbr1. • • • • • , . . • . . • . l, " ··~.~l"J ··· Give" his-wordtob'e o lift wit~ the~ iresh, new. gift ti.es. Liebert; designs of luminous pblyester. olwoys look superb,-unm116!14:·Mony j great potterns to under- scoFe sport . coats,.· suits. 7.50 · '" by do•·•~·~· :t lie. collectors dote on designs from Don Loper ••• alwoys original, elWays smort. Foshioned in ltoly of uncrushable' polyester, distinctive p~ttems he'll wear with pride. 6.50 • I • • .. • • DAILY PILOT • • .. • 1es for the ~olle~tor . . lty Ully daelle ... ' ....... .... .,. . Give him o do shing Doche! . Certain to:-be,\.o favo~ite:-' ••• o hondsome design from Lilly herself on fine imported Swiss fobric'; Choose from mony attrac· _live potterns thot hove greot ropport with suits, blozers. 7.50 from wemltley ••. Dashing companions to his current shirt crop ..• ties of Wemlon® polyester that keep their crisp, Un· .crushoble look, even ofter wa shing! In o ronge of , srno'rt po.Items. Eoch ~ W8'mbley tie comes .with ' o COior Guide® for eosy .. , . color coordination. 5.50 • lty elro of ealUol'llla TiO:s for good sport! Boond t<rscore witp-fa11s crf golf, tennis, footboll, boseball , , • +-ies Woven in his fovorite sports motif on 1(\0% polyester. Adds off- hond dosh 'to his sport coats, 5.00. ' Men 's Furnishings, 7 NEWPO•T · HUNTINWTON •EAC H ORANGE, MALL OF ORANGE CfUITOS AN;\HEIM ,, 444 N E1t1114 (71'4> SJJ .• 121 41 f•1hlo11 hl•11cf 1114) 644·1212 1111 Eclin1•r Avt1111• 1714) 192.))JI JJOO N. T111ti11 Sht•t 17141 991·1)1 I ... 500 Lot Ctrrif•• M•ll ll1J1 IM).0411 • ' • SHOP t :loA.M. to 10.00 P~M. MONDAY THROueH SATUkDAY. SUNDAY 11 A.M. to• P.M. ~ . . ; ' , ~---• • " ,, .I I DAil V PILOT For The Record IHssolt1tions Of Marriage AllBUCIW! 6 !ION WB8TCLIFP MOll111ARY C7 E. 17tl St., Clltll Mell ... "" . ' BAL17'BllllGllRON ' nJNERAL ROME C-delMar -Ceell Maa lalOI • • BELL lllOA~WAY MOll111ARY 111 lrNcloq, Collo -UMlll • llloOOllMICll LAGUNA BEACll MOR111ARY 1'111 2-ea.,.. 114. -u • PAcmC VIEW MDWIUAL PAllJt C..21121 Mtr1UrJ Qopel . --Vlow lime Nu ... -· Cllllonla -• PDS FAMILT OOLOl'IL\L PUNKllAL ---" ... • ' I t1r • 19 WJtw al.rvuv ., .... 3 '=r- ' 1••.wt Elephant On GOP Banner ORANGE COUNTY Schools to Benefit Effects of Tax Revision Bill Told By CANUACE PEARSON Included In ouch ln<ftaaes ant lhe ,_Jy-un!fiod districts Ill ot .. IN.llf rlllf ..... Savanna, Centralia, Yorba LlD-*'Ill .. --~-•-he--" ....,.,_ ~ w~~, -··-• SANTA ANA -In gtaenll, da, Garden Grove a rrd that he is~ a more detail--~-• ··~~-is In Orange Cyprtaa, The Founlaln Valley ed anal-•· ~~ -· ~ ...i Ocean View (In Hun-,_ now. County will bonent !run SB tJncton Beach) School To l!nd out the possible 90, the 1tate Leslalsture'I Dlltrlcts also should do lalrry benefits for Irvine, Saddleback latest ellorl towards -1)1 well· because o! SB 90, Koch and Tustin Unllled School tax«:hool finance nivilloD, an esthnated. Djstricts, said Koch, the Orange C.ountl)' Department of M e d i um-wealth districts amount that the1r taxes would Education oftlclal sakf today. may gain five to seven percent have been without unUlcation Fred Koch. a 11 0 c: 14 t e in income over last year's and their wealth today will Rep. Hosmer ~ty-.J,!:. ~i! 11:".tl~tod~ch by SB 90 ~;:.:,,.!d. computed and ..... 1.-1. 'I1>e bill removed most of done a preUmlnuy -'""-ol will be t he basic aJd for the override that district OIANADA MILLI llODQ ci.tsworUI, T09U.NCrSIJIMdl ... ~ WOODLt.ND M~t215tXI Ytay LA«tWoo.en. SL lllill l'PMPiial BIO'll. Se Off• lhe elf<cta ot the bill al&Ded "wealthier" school di31ricts ls lee Monday by Go•erpor ~ be said. The N-t-Me,.; trustees can levy without It ~" •---the 1~~-11on -~,.-voter approval, including those «IYlllNlllS20 fylet $l IUINA PA«IC• Mii Otqdbfopt IANTA ANAJ900 Sorilll Brlstol $t OUNGIGat\111 ~ llwt 1111 ~I# ww -~ Unlllecl School District a n d J W program amounta beb1od ud:a the Seal Beach School District, for retirement and community Mwrt'*-' n unty :,:.eai:.::i:~ .. ".'°"' 'll!i:/ ~.:108i:;'· up lo service runc1s. What do doctors recomniend ~-p~!:r!8: ~,:=;:~; :i:;~~l~~~ Spiro Invited forpatientsinpain? """""'1onal field office In arrive, • · I"""" U the ha ~ 000" ANAHEIM -Vlce-Presl· Doc aJI th " 00() West Orange County early In renenJ, low wullh ~ ~f :h.:t' c0astol dent Spiro T. Agnew wlll be tors Over e COUntry dispeMe OVer 50,000, neiit year. distric:taa:,._ .. _ wtn,-~-~.!. -to 1~5 ICl>ool dlstrlcls will remain Invited by lhe , Chamber or of these tablets to their patients each·vur '!be ofllce will be staffed by ·-...... -w ., lhe same because they already Coounerce here to play In a ,_. Carlos Gallndot 29t Hosmer percent over last 7ee11 .tn-had more mcney than most celebrity golf tournament May There.are many medications a tors l"l!COmmend mciet than any aid. Galindo ts former ex-come, Koch aald. inland districts, Koch said. 5 ~nd 6 to help fund the p~sician or. denti1t can pre-other leadin1 tableL ec:utlve director of the Orange Ux!al d1strictl that' may be What the effect will be on chamber's building program. scr!~ for pam. Som_e are nar-Heartache and dental pain ia County Republ1can Centra11-~:;;jjjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-i,:-'--colic, many are ava•lable only relieved incredibly fa1t; minor on prfl(:ription. But there is one pains of arthritl• are depend· CommJttee. This fall Galindo pain reliever, available without ubly eased for houn; even the also ~ged W 11 I jam ME• RRY CHRISTMAS pl"ellCription, doctors di&Pense achegand painaofcoldS and ft11 Wenke s unsuccessful cam· again and again .•• Anacin. reepond lo Anaicih. So the ten- pf.fgn tq..unseat First District ' Each year, docton give over aion and depnitaion that can be Supervisor Robert Battin. FROM ''THE GRANDEST MALL OF ALL" so.000,000 Anacin tablets to caused by 1ueh pa.in will be~- Hosmer aald be decided to their P1tienta-in-pai.A. lf-doct.o'* lieved too. And millions take open an office in the Hwr think enoqh about Anacin to Anacin without stomach upeeL tingtoo Beach-Fomita.ln Valley r' , ...... ~oasf ?Ian dilpellMI all theee tablet.II, what When you're in pain, why area alter redlstrtctlng placed ,... KJ.11 better recommendation can you don't you Collow the practioe of ask when you are in pain? ao many docton and take the 40 percent of the voters in his __ _.:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~~--1 You aee, Anacin cOntains tablet a doctor might give you 33nd: Congressional diatrict ln more of the pain reliever doc:-in his own otDce. Take AnaciD.•. Orange County. The remainder of wt.rs .-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...,...,..,~~~~~-,-~~~~~~~~~~-. repreaented by the Long Buell Republican are In Los Angeles County. Fullerton Seeks Grant For Center FULLERTON -The City CoClllof5 bON bu agreed to ap- ply for I $1;tl2,000 stale grant on behalf of publlc and privale organlzatlona to finance pro- grams of the Teenage ~Center. 1be c e o t er, temporarily hooaed 'In facilities nl die Finl Umted Methodlst amdl, 111 N. "'-"" ~Ye., 1Ji8!!0 a :~~-: ,.,.uio belften 14 and I& yearo with emotional problems at Mme .... at at W!bool. The coater has beell planned by the Orange County Depart- ment of Mental Health, the county Probation Department, the Fullerton Union High School District and several private organizations. County Studies Park For Placentia Area PLACENTIA L a t e ment. Placentia Pm. a propooed 3&-Supervi!or Robert Batlln oP-•-~" •-~ ~ pooed the Lake Placentia Park acre ~ty -· q ~Dtl proposal pointing out that the lllUdled by COWJty olllclal!. north Orange County aree The cities of Placentla, Brea already bad many regional and Fullerton have aated for park!. $180,000 to bead off private The board asked the development of Ille property Regional Parka Ad v II or y which II partly In the city and Team to develop criteria for a pertly In county territory. fwtd-lharlng pro~m. Bui Supervilor Ron i I dl,--.. .. i;~~~-i­CUpert bu qualloned thel $LI mlll!On prl<e lag on the facility and Kenneth Sampoen, director of the county 's Harl>ors, Beadles and Parka Dlllt1cl, aald the figln In- cluded acqut1ltion am developmenl The leotaUve plan calla ror the -to malnlaln the park -and li it is purcbued and developed. Sampoon said the barbon, btaclles and parks district budiet had but $130,000 for local park assistance. He aald ~ a pcmlble 80lutioo mUtht be lncreu!pg the d l • I r 1 c;J • • budiet by Increasing the lax nto to 2$ centa. This would ftQU1re legislative act1oo. , Supervlson also wori!ed .about setllng a precedent by =nc one group or dues In aCQU1.sttlon and develop- ment. f& WU noted that Newport Buch, Seal Beach and c,pr.,a ant also In· tereskd-In, county llnanclal grants for local park develap- ORDER ----:TURKEYS ... CHRISTMAS ~ ----• OROCER!ES WINE L!QUOR St .... lft liry I ( .. f Monnl1111• 71fff Eic'el!ont Produce -- --- .· COAST SUPER MARKET .., ..... .....,,.c.n 673·3510 3347 E.COAST HW't ORONA DELMA IU."'*--'I SUPPORT U>l'Ol.A VNIVERSITY & MARYMOVNT cor.r.EGE Your t1x cfitductlhle 9ift, l•rg• or sm1ll will further the c•u•t of prlwtft tduc1tion, lnttrt1ted? Write for Yttr End Givin9 brochure, or S•nd your check or money ortltr to: ...................... ~ ""1 . .t Wttt IM St. ... _.... Callfwolo ..... 1111• ,, .. ,,7, 1, I --· I wld ... wake stylH , • , even for those late, late calls. Like the STARLIT!• telephone . , . the dainty high-style phone with a dial that glows. It's ideal for her vanity or · night table for alter-dark dialing, or jus_! as a friendly soft night light (with adjustable brightness). Bedroom or breakfast nook, kitchen or rumpus room ..• every home should have a second phone, a step-and work-saver for your greater pleasure, convenience. and security, Wh11rever your need, whatever your taste or decor, there's a fascinat ing selection of styles, colors and special-purpose telephones In General Telephone's Extension Extravaganza. • : I • • • • • • • -• : • • : -• -• • • • • • • • : --• • • -• • am.tu• ltltpl'\ont pult tn. WOr1d • r!Qhl In lht pelm ol your hind , , • i h1ndHt. dltl Ind recall button. Make : cell 111tr can wHhOut Hftlng down tht : phone. ColMI 1n wt11t1, orten, tyory, : yellow, pink. bllgl, or tvOCldo. : : : • l#jij 6El1ERAL TELEPHOnE CHllTPttOR -1 real m•n·typt die.. orator phone for lht llvlng toOm. NI tptclal ~m. desk or tabtti. Modtrn 1tyllz•d Instrument MndtOMt~ -.t In • bl.ck Mather chttt wtlh w1tnut trim , , • In eMYtd walnut • • , ot tvtn with • urdOnvlt 110M hunting ecene lnMI on "" tldl • . • • • I : • • -: • • • • • ' • • I I ' • • • • • ' • -• • • ' • • : • • --• • -• • • --. : t • • : : -. . -' • • t • • • • -. • CAM>UITICIC PHONI • • , tht : ~ n1w0 f11hlon old ·l••hlon1d : s phone •tvltd right out of th• f • rotrlng t-Ntnllt• rn Blick Bottom : : Bl1ck, Whlfl1npoor Whll.t 1nd • : R1u1m1tau Red. Eicc.pt "'*"''" ; : did IWI)' Wflh lht Hl)lrfl1t big • : old bell box. I • • ' ' - CllADLOHONlt ..• Otntrtl Ttlt· phone'• veryrlatt ..,0,d ln toptllt· Uctttd tlyllng -Mtdll1rr1ne1n, OreclM C.meo, Broctdt, Antique White •• .l tY rttbltn<ltnt with gol4' trim ¥tf ringttWiffll. Convtrutlon plecet right oul of 1notntr WOfld. Open 8:30 AM until 5:00 PM. Call our business olllce . --········----··~ Y:~--.~.:.----·~·-.. ·---· ···---~-·~··---------- ' ' , ·- r c c: • I • ' I I - . . . • I . . .. . . . ' , ' '•· 0-'IJLY PILOT f • - I 11 .. -0: ·- , • 1. Monkey pod glmt fork 81111 apoon A full 28' long to "!"'Ill on the gou<n*'s wall. to toss a gljlnt salad. Unique gitt. 5.97. A little ' • b s a lot . Gf hristmas ' ' . • under the· Squiggly ® Roof~ 10 ··gre~t gi~s to give.~ Eactlunder • J ... 2. HMckMftecl gi.nt GUP 81111 •aucer A cofleo drinke<'s dellghl Hand made and hand painted in 8 colorlul patterns. 1.79--~ . 3.101/2" high pedeatal bucfvase Frosted glass in four delicate shade, three floral patterns. 3.97 S. Sil)ging bird in gild9cl cage Looks almost real. Happy linle bird sings at 10-12 second intervals. Battef')' operated. On'"°ff switch. 5.88 ·~. 4. Mini chocolate or cheese fondue Stoneware pot, holder candle. 4 forks with rosewood handles. 5.975et ·$10r. .. ,o·pefl • i • ' Revolving serverwith glass trays. gleeming chrome accenf$.' I I • ' ' I I every ·· night till . 11 :00. . -• • • - . ' .. 12'.' diameter. 4.99-• --- 8. Elegant wine fount O~uait cut glass decintw on wrought iron SWld. lnctudee ice cbillqr insert. · 8.87;. t ·I • 10.10ill•ce cofl•• Mt Ceramic set in earthen-tone brown. Includes covered"coffee pot, creamer, c:cwet'9d sugar, -4 mugs and storage rack. .. "Tavern-at)te ~ llghtwolght aluminum lookl liM pewter. s-- tlll'O<lgh glass bottom. 14 oz. capacity. f I j .. ,I the , 99~eac11 6.97 e tlAMIA n&I llOOO C..... I..• WotllMI IW rnGOVittiry .... e •tvtllltl 3S211 Tyler • UlllTA ANA -Solltll 9titliil St.• TO•IAJKI s.,.lffdl .i KlwtllOtM • ~9'1Wtol CetJOfl St.• ,..;..t llW. • IU l•A P411 911Cl•01111t"-" 9 OIA•I C.lltlft 1\lf.af ...... I • ; Optn •••Mt•r•t:30 .. 10 C'"""'"•• ... t :aott1 -.. .. I I '• . ,, • " • I J 8 DAILY PILOT 1 ..... ,. "'""""' n. nn ' Passport ~Oc Phone 15 More Po.,,.nds of Heroin ·Missing CANDLES! CANDL ' I Of Teen Toll A~ked Inspector Edward F. catty said 40 kilos -or 88 pOunds - of heroin were se ized . !,hefts, doubted the accuracy of c.arey•1 npo,rt. "He wun't down at the SCf,Pe," Guido satd l#n<llY- p ....... lhlay ,..,. 1l1er ~ m1 .. 1o1 INVIN1'0IY ,, 1rom t11e Jl/<>petty c1eit•s o!· CLl!ARANCE~ /\'arrow Escape Rog'er 'The. Saint' Moore, starring in a James Bond spy movie, was almost attacked by three alligators during a filming session in Kingston, Jamaica this weekend. Small City lmpoun.ds Big Airliner ATLANTA (UPll -Of- ficials of suburban College Park impounded a $3.7 million jetliner Monday because of Eastern Airlines' a 11 e g e d failure to pay the city SM.000 in back taxes. City marshaJ T. 0. Smith paSted the attachment papers on the door of the OC9 Whisperjet which was un- dergoing engine repairs in a huge maintenance ~ngar at the Atlanta airport. To Remain? WASHINGTON (AP) Rather than dirty up the clear skies of the Southwest, the Interior Department today su~gested that power plants using the region's coal shou1d be built near ~ Wies needing more electricity. A new report said that car- rying coal from remote areas of Ari1.ona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and Nevada to populatiOn centers elsewhere in the country would cost about the same as building generating plants in ..4 t h e Southwest. Y There is pending before a federal appeals court i n Washington a ~e which could make the suggestion mandatory policy. EDvtronmentalists are press- ing '1he govermrient to In- terpret federal clean air laws as profllblttng sta,t.S from allowing the air ta become any dirtier even in areas like the Southwest where the air quail, ty is better than minimum federaf 1JOllution standards. Longstanding plans 'for the southwestern plants w e re cited Jn the court case. But no matter where the flOl'er pfanta are bull~ the report concluded, the central problem ls finding better aJr · poll ution equipment to reduce tbelr smoke. Guru Held NEW DELHI (AP) -Prime Minister Indira Gan d h i : s government has liJted t h e passport of l\1aharaj Ji, the teen-age Indian guru who ""ants to personally dis pense his "peffect know I e dge '· around the world . i\1aharaj Ji is the spiritual e Cleme11ts Suit I 'C ~ I pension. e Air Strikes i WASlilNGTON (AP) -1 Gen. John D. Lavelle told con- ~en last summer he Hiscussed unauthorized air • strikes on a MIG ~1eld a~ I on enemy trucks with Gen. Creighton Abrams before be ordered them. According to the hearlng transcript released .Monday, the ousted U.S. air com· mander did not testify that Abram s, then commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam. and now Army chief of staff, a~ proved the raids. Left His M~rk DUBLIN (AP) -Parish pI'iest-Charl,es Troy,. who died at 16, · left a proalglous ex· ample of his enmity for drink: A& a university student he refused to quaff fro1n the Irish lnlel'vmity Footbafl cup whtn bi& team won It. Pressed by his collea'gues. he booted the cup, leaving a dent it still carries. HONOioNG CUSTOM TA1l0l5 H~ IN IAH'l'A AHA i...,,.2...,.•_.-:o:.....,,...~ ...,""c.C::'."i'~1-""3s;'i SALE . ~--·· $ ...... IAftlPTOIK °"°"'"' ......... ......................... •WlmAMY ... • ANY ITYU C°'9Wt .... AlQIAftONS ~I DIRECT SERVICE ' To Los Angeles Int' I Airport from Orange County Airport Elpfet.sVl•S.nDl9gbFl'ffWQ' $4 00 •I 7:00 A.M. 1nd 10:00 A.M.-ii plot 12 other convenient Chll4Nn s.11 y, ''"" .... '"d•lty Sublldl•ry 01 CbtorNl/01Nnt1lta11 COtp. ' However, only 72 pounds aOO 15 ounces of heroin were turn. ed in. according to a police labora tory repart -thus, a difierence or 15 pouods. • Deputy Chief Inspector John Guido, who heads t b e department's investigation of Robins' Trade I cARev, REACHED while vacatk>nln,g in Fort Lauder· dale, Fla., said his number of pounds confiscated was just a "round figure ." Of tbe heroin confiscated In the Bronx raJd, 57 .pounds ' lice. Moll of It had been · t replaced by a flour mixture. ......,. ,. c'*:M tl"lfft In lddltlon, another 2! or 24 UP so' 0/ OFF flOlll1df ol heroin ,.lted In TO . /0 ·, , Brookl)'n in <»nnecllOll with tbe same case WGS reported MISSION CANDl.£ CO; missing. 'l1le ml.saing (Ml pounds had 11'S U,.11 I.it Al c.et• M .. an eatllnatod worth of fll II,,=='=-='='="=.,.=·=-'=='=~ mW Ian'. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiii~~·l -., SEE SANTA . DAILY 10 to 9 CAROUSEL COURT developed whi/11 you wait/ Because Santa iil:.es to know how his \'OUng friends anl grciWllfg, he'd tlke to have a picture taken wilh them. You11 .ger-a FREE copv. beautlfully mounted for a Chrlstma1 surprise for naa1 .. ALL THIS ·AN13 FREE CANDY FOR THE CHILDREN TOO/ t •. -Jof..fi-t:he :fun " DecemlHr 1.s. 20 and 21, 1·4 PM ) • t KEYSTONE SAVINGS - UDLH•~nH Ronald W. Caspers, Chairman of the Board W•t1111u1er Anlllelol omc.. Airport Ollllt• 14011 Beach Blvd.. 5.55 N. Eueijd, .UOl J.(acArthur Blvd. DIRECT • RELIABLE • ECONOMICAL 893·2491 772·74~0 a»-Ole7 • BLACK & WHlTE PORTABLE TV Here's an idea to make their next camping trip a Jot more fun. Sony TV-740 with a 1-inch diagonal picture and v1eighs only 9 pounds, a great way 10 odd portob1P entertainment and excitem~nt to any ccrir.site. /I l! solid state. Non-glare screen. Personal earphone. VHF and UHF antennas. Sturdy charcoal' gray cabinet trimmed with chrom.e. Give them more fun in the great outdoors with Sony. I SONYe SONY DESK RADIO to a student Sony'a TR • 1824 haa a n•w angle! It tll!a toward you ao that you can happily lace tho mush:, · or newe, aporla. Sony rolld alate circuitry and 2~" dyno!lllc apeaker produce r ich aound.,. Choou white, red, b!CIC!k, with block ,..,., •1s•• SONYo TRINtTRON" PORTABLE COLOR TV Looldnq for a very special gift for thaf·spe. cial person in your lilet Give him or 'lier a , Sony KV-1510 Trinilron Color TV' With the big 15-inch picture measured diaqonally. Trinitron' s one gun/ one lens system means color that's sh~r. brighter more natural than you've ever seen before. Solid state for years of dependable service. With VHF a nd UHF antennas plus personal ear- phonl!, Walnut gi-a!n hardwood cabinet trimmed il). chrome. Make somebody happy. Take a Sonv KV-1510 _color TV to hearL $39995 SO!f'.Ye SONYFM/AM , D!OIMATIC 'LITll1MI' CLOCK llADIO. TfM.q20W.81g dodt num.rol• Illuminated bY specially~bladc llght•ystem coll.cl •Jit•• firne". Numbtfs glow vivld!v. 3-woy alarm •ys.. iem; blg·speoker and · powerful ovtput tone. 1n bec:lu!lful modem etib!Mt. SONYe " , ' 25 l' e•r• of lntegrltfl & De ....... Mlltfl' COSTA MEsA EL TORO HUN11NGTON BEACH Saddleback Vafley II T-•4 ... ,,.._.,- jMat ti ... -94t) r>.lty 10 .. t , .... to-• 411 L .. ,.,.lf••M'tl It. ....,, .......... .. '646-1684 837-3830 ,.......;,. v,,,.y . ............ ~ ....... .---.... fM11t .. Wc!iy Mkt.) Dtiltr '°"'· ..... ,.,.. 962-5528 . BLACK & 'WHnE PORTABrlE"TV . Make their next trip lots more fun with a Sony TV- 11 2. l 's a great way to entertain the family.·Sonf's'. optional auto /boat battery cord or rechargeable J:Sattery pqck me~s exciting. TV entertdinmerlt fo the whole trip. 11-i nch diagional picture, non-glare ' . screen. \All solid •tate. Earphone. Charcoal. gray/ chrome -trip:J.. ~ •l3ps . SONY CLOCK-~DIO Aitythlng o blq clock radio con do, Sony'~ 6RC.23Al q:m do t6<>-but In !eae than 5 square lnchee~oi space-Wak1a you up to a ny program YoU wa!'!t. ~ $1991 SONYe " ·' RADIO DISPATCHED _FACTORY AUTHORIZED TV & ~PPLIANCE SERVICE PHO!'ll 548-3437 ~illlWllWIW!lVlll~-~~~111~~ .. Mf~llMWl-twltMtwi ,,r • I ' , ., ( I . I , , Tutwlay, Decem~ 19, 1972 DAILY PILOT I Meditation Taught Clnss Designed to Figlit Drug Abuse Sunday is Flltl&AY MIAMI (AP) -The Dade County School Board pays 135 per pupil so 20 teen-agers at Miami Springs High School can relax wtth their eyes clos- ed. They're l earni ng "transce'ndental meditation," a subject school official! hope will help prevent drug abuser The pupils -' juniors and seniors -Meet Ove ~mings a J;fJlk unoer the leadei'shlp or Donald ·Davis and Timoth y Jon~lwo1 disciples of India's M8hdrisht Mahesh YogL ! , -... - THE • • " ·o·BJT'' • BUS LINE All-IT REED-S IS YOU I T ••• all you need Is a place to go I ' . ' . 'tis the ' ·zi .... ~ ·-r.7 •'< . ---------..... .. to.\b:~ .. . \}i,' I a jolly .• season shopper ~---, I at Fashion Island j ISLAND NliWPOR'l' OEM'l'Jllt hclftc eo.tt H..,_.,_ .. ....,. JamborM •nit~ • THE MAHARISBf popped into prominence a few years a~o when he became the spiritual adviser to the Beatles and Mia FarTOw. Hy Rothstein, bead of health education for tbe s c h o o I system, said the meditation program was tried as an ex- periment. "We read several journals which gave it pretty high marks Jn terms of drug prevenl,ion," he said. Dr. Herbert Benson or fh e Harvard Medical Schoo I reported that 95 percent or the drug users be interviwed said they stopped using drugs aher they began practicing t r a nscendental meditation, Rothstein said. The students-none of whom school officials said are known to be drug usel'1i -are taught to concentrate on repeating a "mantra" -a syllable or word chant -for 20 minutes twice each day. Davis and Jones said eacf) student is giVen bis own syllable.. which is kep\ secret. -ON» / MANTRA used that has beCome famous is the "orp" sound popularized by poet Allen Ginsberg. With proper inalruction In concentraUng on a well~boSen mantra, the meditator can achleve a quiet, completely relaxed but wakeful state of mind w~ich improves mental and physical health, Davis and Jones claim. Ralph Sanders, a student taking the course, describes the meditative state a s "de6c>er than sleep, but more fulfilling. It removes more of th~ tension and stress than sleep," he said. }Wthstein ls skepUcal of the claims that meditation has · any marked physiological ef- fect. TOTAL COST of the pro- gram paid out of t b e school board's antidrug funds is $950 for one term, including $35 for each pupil and a $250 in· structOr's fee. "Thi!I is an activity which fnvoJvts self~iscipline. It in- volves improving one's self· e:warepes!, ~f·)~tlty and 'self-image," Rlthstein said. "'Anything new has a 'halo ef- fect' for kids. We waiit to ~ . fl this halo ef(ect has any car- ryover for their behavior." 'Brought Us Together' Operations Make ~ .. COFFEE MAKER WITH FREE COFFEE MILL A TASTY GIFT IDEA FROM NORELCO ' Automatic drip filter coffee maker with re- usable rlylon filter. 14~.~ ~ 8-cup coffee moker .. , .....•..• 28,88 Family 'Strong' LADY NORELCO SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Two of his children have had kidney transplants and two others may need them, but Robert Paulk of Stockton says ""it'll end and we'll be stronger for it." .. "At first, we just felt sorry for ourselves,'' Paulk said. "But it brought us together. Either you make th,. best of a situation or it makes the worst of yoU." About four years ago Robert Jr., now 23, fell ill. It was )e;p'ned 2-'ii yeiirs ago that his brothel'-, \folrty J~y, now 22, had the same ailment. (MEDICINE) Paulk had his family ex- amined and discovered that Darrel, 20, and Zanda.17, were losing their kidney function, too. "We don 't really know what causes this disease," said Dr. Oscar Salvatierra, a surgeon who performed transplants on Robert Jr. and Monty Jay. e Charge Hit LOS ANGELES (AP) -A _ Los Angeles physician charged with violating a federal drug control law says he conunitted no wrong in prescribing barbituarates as a treatment for heroin addiction. Or. Richard Siggers disagreed with m e d i c a I authorities who say use of barbituarates in heroin treat- ment only shifts addicts to barbituate addiction. "Isn't it better to use barbituarates to get Off heroin than to stay on heroin ," he as- ed. caused more deaths in the first eight mon ths of 1972 than heroin overdoses, the San Francisco Examiner reparts. The artrCte made these con- tentions: -BarbilUfrates are legally available only with a doctor's prescription, but millions of pills are funneled into a thriv- ing black market. -Pu.shers obtain i l I i c i t barbs from "diversion points" along the lines of legitimate production and distribution by the nation'& drug companies and phannaceuUca1 houses. -The maJor !IOUfCe of blackmarket "red~" on the West Coast is the so.called , , "Mexican Connection." e Surplm s,en ---· ' SAN DIEGO (AP) -~ :'-f'M " •· state's top health official says California's hospitals are both too costly and in some places, too abundant. · "It has become a great con- cern that hospital and nW'sing home facilities are ovet- building and that charges are getting out bf hand," Dr. Earl Brlan , head of the state Health and Welfare Agency, said. Brian addressed a meeting of the American Association for Comprehensive H e a I t h Planning. Office Work? /Vore/co • TRIPLEHEADER ·~---------,.,., . '· HP 2111 NEW LADY NORB.CO TRIPLEHEADER The first Norelco Tripleheader for women. The same close shaving rotarysystem as C'Ur famous men's Trlpleheader-with a very feminine design. The lady Norelco Tripleheadergives close and comfort- able and fast shaves-for both legs and underarms! The features of thl spectacular shaver are : • Super MicrogrooverM floating heads • Self-sharpening rotary blades $ • On/of! switch 1 gaa • Coiled cord • Elegant royal purple and lavender styling Siggers, 47., was indlcted by a federal grand jury on charges of ylolaUng the 19'ro Fedora,\'.' ~ Cootrol Act, ,.--,IL.. s~{.py '-' • )saulng pres<rlptions for'no legitimate purposes." ·Drltg~ .... YUMA, Arl1. (APl -, The Yuma C!lo!Dber'ol Commerce is urgmg eo oi ita:·counterpart.s in botder towns f r o m Cali!ornia to Tens to expresa their concern to the federal government about drog 1mug- gllng. John T. Underhill, chamber president. said letters have been sent to chambers in the border towns, asking thetn f.to write t h e i r congressional delegations 'about the problem. 'lbe Yuma ch$mber last month imposed a moratorium on promotion of Mexican toorism and business in an ef- fort to force ofUcials south ot the border to take action on ' tbe drug problem. e Ot>erdoses Cited SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - , J!trb'tiilrate , overdoses 1have • ANTHO"Y ICHOOlS HAllOI CINTJI 1M .. .,._ C•tw C..1• MtM, Calltwll .. ... ln41 t7t41H . In) I. ,,__,., fl, o\uMtni, (oat. nlM "· 1114J n•~uoo - :·~Hop in your -car and come as you are! , Th e Imperial folks are I waitin g tor you! ~Bank COiia Me1a Herbo(Blvd. al Fair Drive (714)~79-1000 NQRllCO ' 40VIP SHAVER WrrH NEW ADJUSTABILITY Nine settings. Super micro- groove• !looting heads, -·pop up sideburn trimmer. Self-sharpening rotary blades. OUR 100TH ANNIVERSARY VEAR • NORELCO' SOVIP, THE RECHARGEABLE SHAVER . . Nine closeness seltings. Shoves up to 2 weeks on one single chorge. Cine for troyeling, storage. Wards, H11ntlnqton C1•Mr 7777 .Edinger - Hlllltlngtoll 8-h . . . I r I! DAILY PILOT Pillllp Girls and Boys There's a 1973 Calendar for Everyon e NEW YORK (UPI) -The pinup girl - baru than ever in some cases -and even the pinup boy account ror a good share of art on 1973 calendars, but there's something for everyone trom vin- tage truck buffs to gardeners. A noticeable trend is the lncluston of blacks in new .picture calendars, follow· ing the lead of the advertising and greeting card industries. said Louis Davidson of Calendar Inletn:\- liooal of New York, a leading designer of quality calendars. Newest entry on the retail market Is a calendar put togethery by Evelyn carter, a Detroit housewife, and called "Eve's 12." It features photographs of nude but modest males for the woman who wants to assert her right to think of men as sex objects. for its tasteful ,ea]endar mounts every year. It now distributes 600,000, some lo CU5tomers overseas. It takes a tem- porary staff three months to fill nil the requests. "We sl!lrted wilh Pelty ,glrls (palnled by artist George Petty) but switched to photos by Peter Gowland, the famous Los Angeles photographer, about 10 years ago," saiQ Carl Keck of Rl~t!. "We slick with two piece bathing suits and poses that are not sqggeStive .. , Gowland's tm ·girls came out nine Carg~_ Plane Pact .Award ed • WASHINGTO!f (AP ) -Tbe Air Force bas uiured con- ceroed membort of Ille HOUR that political ~ssure was' not !nvolveu in the \Wv<! of Cf>l- lraell for devtl\'Pllll and des\gnlng a new type. of cargo plane. The contract.I for two pro- tolype medium-range abort taklH>lf and landing (STOL) planes were awarded t o McDonnell Do11gla1 Corp. and Boeing Aircraft Co. of Wheat- field, N.Y. THE DEVELOPftotENT con- tract was for $200 million. P. -· (R·N.Y.), Lt. G<n. Jamtt T. Stewart expltined that one racior 1n awarding the contract was a decllloo to stay with a more. convent19nal thrust 1yiWn rather lban swltcb to a new syttem ~ Bond Attack THE il!EJPCAN CALENDAR has come a long way from the Aztec calen· dar stone, wlllch one commercial firm is copying m paper this year -updated, of course. MORE EDUCATIONAL JS I he Liberated Woman's Appointment Calen· dar which lists an event in progress blondes and three brunettes. Where have I===== au the ~ gone? At a briefing session Mon- day arranged by' Jl<p. Henry Calendars can be comic. educational, impiratiooal, titillating, crusading and practical. They come in all sizes and shapes from oldfashiooed wall calendArS to calendar diaries, notebooks, addreu books and desk accessories. Although the retail sale of calendars is on the increase, about 90 percent or ralendars sllll are distributed gratis by industrial and commercial finns to thier customers and distributors. These often have set themes and change little from year to year. Some firms have cut back on free calendars because of the high . cost of printing, according to industry sources. One is Monsanto, whose · calendar reproductions of modem artists such aS Picasso and Seurat are worthy ot fram- ing and much .sought after. A WEIL-PRINTED CALENDAR ~1ith art reproductions costs well over $1 each if printed in Am~rica. Consequently, many such calendars including Monsan· to 's are printed in Europe or the Orient where costs are lower. Japan Airlines' superb calendar photo album of rare porcelains, sculptures, bronzes, textile, lacquers, p o t t e r y , enamels and screens is printed in Japan but is still costly enough to warrant a $3 price tag. ''I won't say there is rmer printing in Europe, but for the same price we get better quality than in the United States," 'RUa Ba,,..,....tla ums the last' of the r e dhe ads 011 · pb111p r ale11dars. towa~ women 's rights for every date along with photos. cartoons, quotalioos Md poetry. Philip Morris' Virginia Shms Book of Days has a similar rormat but a lot more wit. · The unblushing great-granddaughter of the Gibson Girl is cavorting in the altogether or near-altogether on 1:173 calendars. Playboy 's annual contribution follows the 1972 Playboy Magazine trend toward more uninhbited poses of its Playmates and. less 3.ir-brushing. ' "On the whole, I'd say the pinups are not much more daring, but there are more of them this year," said Jack Rob- bins of Encore Sales Corp., a big ~1anhattan commercial calendar firm. ''They are very popuJar in small towns, in garages and shipping rdoms. And it's the small. towns, too, that st.ill g'o big for religious calendars with scenes froin the New Testament -the kind morticians give away." RIDGE TOOL CO. of Elyria, Ohio is loyal to the pinup girl and the demand "TheY. died out," Gowland said. ''Rita Hayworth waS the last. Everybody in California wants to be blonde. It's even hard to find brunettes." HALLMARK, WHICH ' OFFERS 36, callendar designs, has one in the fonn of, a culinary, almanac with meri'i'-!il.' fWs, l''ine seJections and cooking hfnfs', and its garden almanac has gardenin& charts and · horticultural advice. 't'Jlei'e are Hallmark calendars plumping 1or. ecblo- gy, picturing dogs, cats, horses l(nd ba· bies, and providing weekly ho~pes for every astrological sign. · Vintage car calendars have been t61 ... lector's items for a d~ tlnd International Harvester comes ,along with a 1973 truck calendar ranging !rom the '1916 Model F Snoop Nose to the 1961 International Scout. ~ ' Almost no calendars have. a patr:!otic or historical theme in spite of the ap- Proaching U.S. bicenteiinial but American Cyanamid Co .. pays tribute to Experienee Michell of Plymouth, !•~ass., the first tanner in Americil. ' NORMAN ROCKWELL'S ANNUAL contribution to calendar art -the Boy Scouts of America •. µ.len<Jar -is a handsome portrayal of 'scouts-~a~ astronauts saluting against a background ol rippling American flags. The Girl Scouts apPQintments calendar has heartwanning pictures of young scouts at study and play. Both calendars are racially integrated. Berrigan to Go Free Nixon.Aide ' Catholic Activist to R esearchBlacks From Wire Services Barring a change in ideas and determination, the Rev. Phllllp Berrigan will resume his social activism and fight against war after his parole from a federal prison Wed- nesday. with his family, including his older brother Danie~ a Jesuit priest who is also an activist. • A bust of "layor Sam Thrty bas been tlll on ~nent disJl!ay at <;t,be Los ).1ngeles Convention ·<'.enter. A 72-year~ld actress still active in the theater in lf.aly married a »-year~ld poet and painter who pledged to make her happy. The bride is Paola BorbQni, ~ ·woo in 1922 shocked an Italian P'"'OPLE' in a comedy. The bridegroom assigned to research the needs £i Keeps Post WASHJNGTON (UPI ) - Tbe White H®Se an- nounced Monday t h a t Dwight L. Chapin, 32, descri~ in some reports as a cont.act man in alleg· ed ll<pt\l>ljoan efforts to sabotage of Democratic p r e sJ4WJtial campaign, will reliain as President N i x o rl""1:~tments secretary. ' '!:\ ' rig~r;:ter w81ar0:! tenmspeeific~fy. (_,---"'*'---''.,, -.. ]. audience by baring her bo.som or blacks after he is released is Brano Vilar. It was the first from the pri!On at Danbury, marriage for both. She said ~---------•11 Conn. The bust, scul pted by police she decided to marr y The 49-year~ld R o m a n Sgt. Lee Kirkwood, w a s "because of the pressing Catholic priest is a member of ·unveiled by Yorty's wife, solicitations of Bruno and the Josephite 'Uftler, which is Betts, in ceremonies at the because my mother did not dedicated to helping blacks. center·· like our living together without He is to return to Baltimore Yorty said funds for the bust marriage." Jan. 27 after spending more had been donated by "in-Miss Borboni's mother is than a month on approved terested citizens" as a tribute 102. Christmas leave in New York to him , * Family Cirrus by Bil .Keane ''Now t~ey've even moved CHRISTMAS to o Monday." • ~fayor Jostpb Alioto has bowed to tradition and mailed 8.000 greeting cards at a cost of Sl ,605 in San Francisco city funds, says his aide. A spokesman for the mayor said the project "is a long-ac- cepted practice in the mayor's of(ice which goes back through many administrations.'' The cards, which do not mention Christmas, say, "Best Wishes for the Holiday Season and every Happiness throughout the New Year ," • Famed heart surgeon Chris- tiano Barnard and bis wif~ re- main in the intensive-care sec- tion of Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Tour, South Africa with injuries suffered in an en- counter with a hit-run driver. Doctors at the hospital said that Barnard and his wife, Barbara, are making,•tisffC"' tory progress in themrfioov.ery fl'<lm bact and chest Jnjur!es suffered when knocke4 down by a truck. · r They said the pregnancy of Mrs: Barnard, who> is ex- pecting the couple's1 ~d child, 11"' not-· ' . Fibber Set For Return ' Tif Radio ,, NEW YORK (AP) -Fibber McGee Came out of retirement llt a press conference held by Johnson Wax, which sponsored "Fibber McGee and Molly" on radio throughout its 1935-52 ex· istence. Fibber wiU da commercials for the company. FIBBER ~cGee, w h o s e name is Jll]l Jo~an, and Throctnlorton P. Gildersleeve., whose real name is Hal Perry, did a skit for repo~ers and 18 actors and actresses from radio days. Manny Segal, who did sound effects for the sho.w when it started at the ·Merchandl&e Mart in _Chicaio, did sound ef- feci8. . . . ..._ . ' " A •. R EP R B SENTATIVE from ~the · city government gave Fibber ~ .a. tey to the clly im.r Fllibef gave 1111,n a key to his closet. · Somebcldy announCed that Fi~ iS DOW 78. . "Hoi,J the p bone ! •'1 In- terrupted Fibber McGee. ' He il!Slsta tbal the truth Is 76. • Downey Savings . . Announces The .. GRAND OPENING OF .~TS NEW . HUNTiNGTON BE~CH . OF_fl~~ _ Located A+. i0002 lrookhurst at -The tomer of Adams 1 I You'll earn the highest Savings & Loan interest S • rate available. Choose your account from any of :t::::== the high-paying accounts below: . • 5% SI 01 MOil NO TIMI! IESTllCTIONS SSOO 01 MOU J MONTHS . $1 1IOI 01 MOU 1 YIAI 6 al Sl,111 01 MOii /0 ....... 5l-% 2 ~d-JUST LOOK AT ALL THE SERVICES ENTITLED YOU A$ ,.. . . .· JI ' • T ,. ;.· ORDJ;RS ·, F R E E CHECK CASHING f R E.f NQTARv 'si:Rvt:E ,. . .. ' ,. ~ . . )' ·· · f R E'f ,r•usT 'oHo Nerf COUECTION WITH EACH $1,000 ACCOUNT A C,OSTOMER: .f RE E 'PHOTOCOPYING FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX WITH A $500 ACCOUNT f B Ef TRAVE••ll~ "liECKS UP TO $2,500 ,.,. . 3rd-"S~FETY" -YOUR MO NEY AT DOWNEY SAVINGS tS INSURED TO $20,000 . " 4th~ NONE BmERI . ' "SERVICE" -THERE'S 'FROMf ashion I sland Newport B each ,. STEREO SO·UN:DS OF 'THE1 HARBOR I • • • \ • • '" . ·~ ,,, .. I ~j•\I l ... - • ~ · l • ,, •• l ' . ' • < ' , : .HER SIGtsJAIURE .. Fashion Limitless "' ' " By lllAlllAN ClllU8TY • •t; •• NEW YORK -Fashion creator Poul-.,~ 1 ''' lne Tril'ft -w~ clotheircost-·u much- """"1" _,as real jewelry -was lamentlog that the 1 et··~, success ol deaign ulllmately retts In the . l ,., -times Inept bands of bo<ed • • f'! salespeople. "'"~~ -., "Ob, bow 1 wish atore penonnet would ..-ellablltb dimtnsloned --n~ wilb cllenta," says Paiillne, wh<> -· • , ' , the perils th'!! .can haunt the point of sale. O:>ntinUm,: "~ a woman ii spen- ding on a high tfctet Item, it must be a tborougbly enjoyable uperienc.. 8ut she should also be made •wale that what she's buying Is a cle~er Investment.'' Trigere, lamoua for her Impeccable , bias cuta and nonlad, lon,..uved clothes ·. whlcb are Instantly recocnizable, bu two new ideas that ihe wanls to put on the ap11~, 1m, faahkln, map • . lnateljd of lhirlHklrta -whlcb beve ftooded Ille fublon merket -·she's mat-Inl now"""""ted !halllota that are like • , ,-..ic pantsuit wilb aleevea .. A malcblq • ' 11kiJt wrapa OD over the maillot to ...,_. • !lytlme -. ' -~ bas to be gi'eatly slmpl~ for 1lQrllen," llYI: Pauline who'a 'dotog · l lf' ,belt "*. efloitloiis dreaalng. 'The modern spring coat '-ellber ?"'Vtrlllblo « In doolJle.faced wool -IS s I! tasual·!'G'llllm llyle that ls noochalantly alippea on 'like a sweater. But -ond here's the twist -it comes with two coordinated - One pink coat, for ewnple, Is equipped with an unlined wool jersey daytime dress wilb dropped aboulden and eased skirt. But Jt ·a'llo coordinates with a specifically mated pink confetti print chiffon wllb swirling altlrt and tel-In waist. You can imalioe that the· chiffon screama 'party! Pauline'• !aalllon theory ln a nullbell: \ Trigere's pink wool cape is coordinated in the· la'fered ·look fer· I s1>rirrg. · "I believe In clot.hes that m thoroughly Interchangeable. Women are on the move. 'Ibey dm't have time to hwit for Ibis to go with that." hours bralnstmnlna R111ona wllb store penoonel. Actually, she _, need the The Ideal way ol dreaalng ls to buJ educational support abe tblnb abe needs. coovertible clothes on one spree. Thus Trigere clotbel &peak for tbermeJves. it's possible to do all aorts of fashion lricu with the least possll!le effort." Diytlme materials ln her spring ool- -. . , lectlon are mostly thin. my wools lbat Pauline, a perfectlonlst, doesn't desijp! weilh fuJr OUDCel to tbe oquare ymL In an Ivory .JalM. . Pau!iDe puts bl(, droopy ablrtsleeve1 She'• ~ oroonc1 the coon-oo dresses wtlb areat circular sldrtl that izy· ml •l'll<8rilli In ttorea that carry IJi!l lleduotlftly. Tbe -are nrm ' her Uoe. Cllmtt -·t the ..Iy ..... WI¥>~ ,,,_ btlng too bulQ' and too welgbty. aban! dialogue wltb ,~•!.J )OTr ' .. ••rJ.tbe..,..dreaeU1e1Da -.iill>- P1ullne calls early morning or after-der lllliel nezt flll," Ille NYI. Men. c ·an Cling Alen are wiser sbopper1 than they used to be, says consumer affairs writer Betty Furness, becallle liberated wortinc women have fOl'Cfd them into the market place. Men are less prudlah than they used to be, lingerie buyer. say, possibly becluse or the aexual revolution. At any nte, more men are appearing at underapparel counters to buy for the women in their lives. Unlike the bashful blusher o f yesteryear, the new breed steps up·lmow· Ing the me of his ahe. her color preferences and fashion penchants. But does be IOlow about stslic In llJlierl• and bow he can select to spare the .......,. • lta discomfort and llQllt• tracUv..-? Chanca ... be -'I, becauoo; tliere lrl I .,.a,l many -wbo <!<>n't bo'rellber: • • Some labriCt, the ll7loril and acetates 'Ill< eumple, are -.. electricity pivDe thin. others. So' are WdDeft. EVt!ll the lime ol _,lb can 8ilect I wama's &ljDpertp:. Sta lie is 1POl'le ~m c:ool, dry· weathei\ but II can be bad at any time. A stallc- cllarged fabric cllnp to tbe-legs like bamacles and clutches m o St un- becomingly. It 10meUmet· cractJa DOillly and shocks. It vel'f often rum., the lines ol the dress wom over such underiPParel, eipeclally U the rabrlc Is soft and~- A man can't buy his woman an aerial to cut down on the atatlc, bol he can be sure tbet. the linceria he ,purcllilU bu the oerlals built·ln. An anll-etatlc fiber -uot cllpg (or collect lint elt!ler) ~ on lnlftilleot ls added to the nylon polymer to ICI u a conductor ol lhe electricity. For mu1mum effect Ill andlnoOar.J llllould be -ol ID!HililC llberl. Thal 11 wllJ ~ ... -...,• .. c.veflll to ... anli«atlc lllllerlall .., all paN of I ....-apeet«I lo ""111 electricity, ll1dudlnl tace and er.de. '11lwi, u he i. am buylna or 1u1.t ronow.: Ina the lnatrucllOlll ol the womon In bit Ille to "plek up 1 few _.i tllqa," he will be -to purchue tho completa packap of non-cllna u-,S. 'lllol'I Iba beat ""I to liVe Jiir I surprise -llllteod of a shock I ' , • • I I ' I . • , ... to 1. • • Daytime dre11 . is disguised ~ with 11 long overskirt for evening. ,,_ __ Guide • ' .. ,,, ......... --· .. ' .. _ • .... _, • I· • i BEA ANDERSON, Editor T11ta.1, ~ lt, 1'12 P ... 11 Steps Once Removed Relationship Sorted DEAR ANN LANDERS: 'Yith regard -whlcb means you're cotng to laave • Uni to the question asked by "Stumped" as :o lime changing it. the relationship of Jim and Tad after Try 1ubstltutlng contrastllll melltal Fay and Pete were divorced : "Stumped" Images -8 desert lttDe, a camel. palm . . he . ... he ha tru1, a blllterlq ID, mDes ti MDCI. 1s wrong 10 l belief 1.1w.l t Y ve a thirst -oop1, better foqet tllat Me, It ste~brother, Allen, ln common. Jim and might supesl a drtak or water. Well Allen are maternal half-brothers since establbbed bebavloral patterns are lllf. they share the genes of a common mother, Fay. Tad and Allen are paternal half·brolhen since they~bare the genes of a common father, Pele. Tberefore, Jim and Tad are NOT related genetically, irrespective o I whether Pete and Fay are married. Of course. they are no longer ste~thers after Pete and Fay are divorced. - M. GROSSMAN, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF GENETIC!, URBANA, ILL. DEAR 1'1.'G.: Tbanb for IUllCl'ambllng t.lae eQI-Y oa.r letter rcmlDds me of the com.meat made by aaotlle.r Fay, 1'tl1s Emtnoll, ••• sbe divorced Ellloi Roosntlt. She ukl, "The uddett paJ1 of Wt divorce 11 tbl\ I am losing a woit- der;hal motber-to.law." DEAR ANN LANDERS: I feel sorry for anyone who Is so Inhibited that he can't urinate In the presence of others, but I'd gladly change troubles with the man who signed himself "Bashful Kidneys." My prohlem is just the op- posite. J 'm a woman, 33. and all my life I hive suffered from "Suggestible Kidneys.'' Whenever I see a water fountain, 1 pic- ture of a river or a lake or hear the IOWld of a dtippng fauce~ I have to head for the ladles NOfll. lt'1 gotten so bad that a joke about Nlagara Falls ls enough to aet me off. l've aeen a urotogllt, a kidney apaclalilt and 1 gyneoolC11lll. Tile)I oil 11y nothlna ii l>hY1Jcolly wrong wllh me, lhat It's Pl)'dloloCICll and I'll just have to o......,e "· 8ul nobody tells me HOW. All)' tUQtatlont! -COMFORT STATION 'CONNIE DEAR CONNIJI: It -11 tr Ibo trraallc meek*" ii 111omatJc ficalt to alter, IMlt It cu be done wUb dete.nninatlon. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Here's a 1,t • .-ter that will be different: It's for all ttme women whose husbands are out ruMing an>und. They talk about the Other Wqman . Well, I'm the Other Man. Not HER lover, but HlS. Le.I bad been --- ~ .. ' ·~ , staying with me a few nights a week, telling-his wife he had transportation problems. (He works In a city 80 miles from bit home.) i Just found out that w 1J cheating on me aod I feel a etrana:e sym'petby for his wife . l took yoor advice althouah when r wrote to you, I didn't let on that my 1weetheart was a IU1. I threw the bum out. I'm writing to say thank you and to sbar• the two lessons I learned. First: A cbee:ter is a cheater and he'll cheat m everybody. Second: Just because a hu,. band isn't interuted in other WOIDCR doesn't mean he's faltbfuJ. RECOVERING IN DllRllAM OBAR RE: 1'lwlk yoo for~ - M11Ybe lllere 'o 1 Lldnt -la ~ IOmtplace. U your liubalMi ll de•,.., llrll, be 1Ual1"1 tt'• wtlll • - A no-nonsense approach to txlw to' deal wllh We'• moat difficult and moot rewardiol arrancemtn&. Ann Lenderl' booklet. "llarnqe -Whal to Expecl, • will prepare )'OU tor better or tor.--· Send your~ to Am Llndn In .. of the DAll.Y PllDI', lftdGoN II - In coin and 1 looc, oiampod, ...... dresaed envtlope. • • ,, ' I • I .. .. "'· , • Comp Fire Girls Provide a Merry Christma s Jf'enalties Foil Game Piaf.ls By ERAIA BOMBECK The greateit thing that can happen to any book is that someone reads it. Tb& second and third greatest thlpgs that can ha,ppen are they either make a movie out oI it ... or AT WIT'S END a game. When Bil Keane and I came over for bus fare to the Social out with our book as Security office. frustrated parents of Ir )'OU roll a one, you land on teenagers In "Just Wait Till 0 Teenage Teeth" (braces, re- You Have Children Of Your tainers and upkeep ). H you Own," J knew the movie bit roll a two, you hit "Car for was out or the question. (Julie Teenagers" (insurance, gas Andrews, who is the only one and original cost). who could have played me, and If you roll a three, it's RDck Hudson, who i5 a dead 11Prom Night." a f o u r , ringer for Bil. were both tied "Graduation Days," f i v e , up In TV series.) "Records ;" six, "Nothing to Well, the book now ls out in Wear Ever:" seven, "Shoe!;" paperback· (Faweett) and still eight, "Dating ;" nine, "Food nothing has been done In the for a Growing Boy;'' and 10, way pf a game. "Medicated Soa·ps and 'Mle ~ seller "Wheels" Ointments." · . h;ls a game going called "Beat lf you land on 11, there 1s a Detroit," in which the player , question mark. That means tries to make hls new car hold you can draw a card from the up for 50,000 mil es before It center and hope for an Iocorne break! down or you go broke, Tax refund, a quarter in a whichever. one happens first. lounge-chair, six redeemable Another best .seller, ''The bottles in the garage, or a Godfather," Is out in game child who gets, married at 11 fonn in whlch the players are and leaves home. MIM•M"I WSA• Mht .... ... •• CM9t ....,, ......... -.,._ Fe1lufin9 Dr1IJll -Co1t1 Sulh -6own1 • Pe nl1iHt1 lo11tlq111 Y1ur ch•rt• ICCIU"' •tic•"'•· INl'til>O Mfli.w tiw.. DECEMIER health needs o.c. 11 ..... Des. J1 ..., • 1J 0.. MYLANTA LIQUID .... 1" 1.91 JO 0.. LISTlllNE ANTISEPTlcr ~.:\· 99c Nancy Boda adds her contribution to Salvation Army Christmas baskets collected by Orange Coast Cam p Fire Girls and Blue Birds. Other holiday projects for the youngsters are caroling at local hospitals, making of tray favors and sewing for the needy. musclemen, loan sharks, ex-lf you pass GO, you get to tortionists, hijackers a n d use your own car on a Satuf.. bootleggers, all packed In a day night. handsome violin case with When you roll a 12 on the purple flock interior. . dice, a light goes on,. a bell 6111 Os. ,...., sa.. llOMO. SILTDI ~1; 87C Women's Future By LAURIE KASPER Of IN Dalty Piiot Ii.ff "The time is short and the time is now. If you and I are going to do something, we need to go about it.·• cellor M. Norvel Young had urged her audience not to become a part of a negative movement ifl which half of the population is mad at the other half . . "to work for good ends without negative means." Mrs. Helen Young's words to women attending a workshop called • 'New Decisions for W om e n · • DIFFERENT FUTURE !because one has to make a She began the opening decision before taking a direc-speech of the work.shop by lion) by its sponsors, the placing everyone on a com- Laguna Beach Branch of the mon ground. "At least all of American Associoti on 0 r us' race the ruture knowing il University Women and Pep-will be different fron1 the perdine Universi ty, could be past." used as militant words in the Most ol the womeo appeared femini st movement. to be 'homemakers who had But here they were not. devoted their time to their Just a breath before. the •husbands and families. wife or Pepperdine's Chan-And of encouraging a hus- Your Horoscope Tomorrow band to develop his capabilities and seeking to provide opportunities and even denying something to children, she said , "It seems to me this is the role of love ... (because) ... real love seeks to do what is best for the person beloved." But. she said, a woman should also love and respect herself. It is a Christian thing to do. she said, as shown in the comma ndment "Love our neighbors as ourselves" and means to do what is best for oneseU Knowledge is a part of love, she said. "So, ir you really love and respect yourself you really want to know yourself." She suggested the \Von1en Outlined study themselves and take a ··constant course on yourself," writing down goals, potentials, priorities and things they like abo ut themselves. SPECIAL TIME Mrs. Young noted that Solomon wrote io ,tbe Bible's Book or Ecclesiaste's, "There is a time for everything under heaven. . . " And she called this "a special time ... when we need to be thhlking what the future h o I d s for ourselves." Coupled with the fact that today's famil ies are smaller. she noted that the average woman now Ms her last child at the age of 26. By the tirne she is 32, her cblldren are all in 9Chool and when she reaches her mid-40s, they are all in college. But this average woman, she said, lives to be 76 or 77, leaving "13 years or so of an empty nest. "And what are you going to do with those years?" the ask- ed. She suggested the women look at their choices, consider their talents and continue their education both , b y reading books and taking formal classes. "'Mle choice is yours ... the opportunities are terrific," Mrs. Young said. But she ask- ed them to look positively at serving humanity 's needs "to give more than we can get." l visualize our parent-rings and a recording informs teenager game as a pair or you, 0 You have just landed 00 dice, a deck of cards. and a college. You are bankrupt." board called, ' ' H ELL 0 The way I see it, "HELLO POVERTY." POVERTY" could save a lot Each parent starts out with of people from an early mar- $700,000 and tries to go around riage ... or a later one for that the board 't''ilh enough left matter. To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have t heir wedding stories with black and white glossy phot&- graphs to the DNLY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received aflA!r' that time will not be used For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black an d white g!OAY picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline Is not met, only a story will be used. 100 C.,.. -lot 1.U. NATURAL VITAMIN E .... , .. J.39 MUllNI FOi THE EYES .... .. , •7c F.D.S. Sl'IAY • 0.. • ... 84c 1.54 ALL REXALL VITAMINS & SUNDRIES 50% OFF! We lnftit Y1• Te c .... ,. O•r Prlcn & hnke Cancer: Innovations Prove Successful To help fill requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories, fonns are available in all or the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be a nswered by \Vomen's Sectlon staff members at 642-4321. Pelletier's PHARMACY NIWPOIT MIDICAL PUZA 107 PlecelitM, N..,,,.,. ..... II Tel, '42-1117 WEDNESDA Y DECEMBER 20 By SYDNEY OMARR Aquarius breaks records. sets precedents. These persons are not so much concerned with what occurred in past - they are interested in setting marks for future. Life could ,be. difficult with these natives. ARl ES : (March 21-April 19): Full moon position now coin- cides with decisions made in colUlection with home, securi- ty, marriage and business partners.hips. It may be dif- ficult to face facls, but it is necessary. Private conference is due . TAURUS <April 20-~tay 201: moves which bring greater flexibility. However, certain duties exist and really sho.uld not be ignored. Strive for balance. Close relative plays key role. GEMINt {May 21-June 20): ' shell. See and be .seen. LIBR.\ (Sepl 23-0ct. 22)' You can break through bar· riers of restriction. Key is IQ maintain steady pace. Be thorough. determined. Find ways of rebuilding, rein- forcing. Contact one i n authority. Bypass red tape. Sky is the llrnit. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 211: messag!. Don't volunteer. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. 18), You will have "'work Coats Shaped ~."""' ... ~ y;,~~r.>~ .. ~.i>lr. with material at hand . ~· ~~ ~ ~, f. .. ~;om:s o~ ~so::~~n: te!8f~ Coats for spring and sum· ~-.·. c hr1· stmas ._f:; materialize. Depend on your mer will future fuller shapes. 1i=:t r o.wn resources. Take one tep raglan sleeves and rounded \_but seldom dull. Forces tend to be scattered. You are tempted to make Money, actions based on im- pulse -these are emphasized. Realize necessity for com- pleting what you start. Aries could figure prominently. One you took for granted may not take on aura of glamor. Change of attitude draws to you different persons and ex- periences. Look beyQOd the immediate. Welcome learning expe r ienee. Deve l op philosophy. Open mind -and lines of communication. at a time. Shortcuts"wil not shoulders, report fashion co-1 t suffi ce. ordintor at the Wool Bureau. . G ~,-~ .·· owns · Finish rather than ini~ti.;fi,;:i'."]r'==========;[ i ject. Get message !ti' ' J Lar S · 40 52 "i ·. Secretary Selected Mrs. Eugene Maynard of · Co1ta Mesa has been named Secretary-of-the-year by the Oran1e Empire Chapter. Na- tional Secretaries Association. Now executive secretary to the president of B o y I e Engineering. Mrs. Maynard began her career In Denver as a bookk.eeper-ttenographer. She earned tbe Certified Professional S e c r e t a r y certifica te in 1966 and was honored for' her educational and profess i onal ac- complithments. Mn. l\-1aynard will participate in the Outstanding Secretary of Southern Califomia Contest sponsored TOP HONORS Mrs,. Eugene Maynard CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Innovations prove successful. Strive to exprtss what you feel. Others wUI relate to your style. Key now is indi viduality. Full moon po.sition stresses perso nality, s pe c i a I rela- tionships. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 \, Indirect approach serves your purpose. Means take ring roads rather than straight path. One who seems above reproach may actually have plenty to hide. Know it and do some dilcreet inquiring. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Lunar position now coincides wit h analysis of what you SAGm ARWS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): Adjustmenl in home. domestic area is indicated. Your voice can play important role. Talk soJtly but with authority. If interes~ in music, pursue study. ~fate, partner talkJ money. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lie low. One in authority i;nay be in mood to reorganii.e. Your position is enhanced if you are an apt pupil. obserVer. ·pbtain hint from Sagtttartus m.... persons. with S'h di ,;.. n ge 1zes • _ r ArlC!s, especially in financial es' neam1"ng .,, r area. Accent now ·is on ... ....~ *·~..4iit.G.,. ~"'~, 1'>. creativity, romance. specula-Ja .\tl~!\r< ·.7\1P.\'.\i,~.t,;;""1!· A17\f"'·'f~1'J1-~m.:~P'1~°'*'* tion. Don't play games where VJ t emotion! are involved. T -· J s , l. IF TODAY IS y 0 u R ~ay eit(O BIR111DAV you mQve with /JesigFJU deliberate speed. ,_leans you -~~ , actually set your own pace. F,amily altuatlon dominated ' 1 X !:. tch thl1 ilest September. You are YYa • sensiUve, receptive, perhaps cold en the outside but akin to a rOaring furnace inside. January and October are like- lv to be significant for you in li?l. want. what can be obtained. ----------------------11 Social aftair could lead • to Practical givers choose cozy-warm granny gowns. Romantic givers chOOle 9lamorou1, l•c•y nylon gowns. Both a re yours at H11f-SJ .. Shop, from 7.00 meaningful experiences. Koow l ~--------------------...., it and emerge from emotional MESA F~ 30 yeaf's we have serwd Orange County. by the Los Angeles Chapter of ---• .NSA In April, and In May she• • .,..,-.,..----===-==== I ,; will compete In the C.Hrornia t*:...,·••MM ••Ml! Sunday Shopper? .. n.m. •• HHK.tm ..... o,_ 11 .. I Divisloii Secretary--Of·the-year I SPEC IAL ) ij conte!t. i HOURS ! ' i _/B I CURRENT ,ASHIONS •• DISCl)UNT P'RICES I I ~ ) p / OP• W ... Nltn 'tfl I s • .-., ,, . J u11tll Clwht•• , .. ~ U¥b.'ll: ~ \.&. .._. • 11*.W;& i4"' THE LI' RED ~· ·•b BALLOON LTD. ' . . ~.:..r.1='11 ...... ThC' finest clothe» tor chl.ldren frfJffi thr "''!It Amttlcan .l European dl;'llfncrt. -'?'llUf. r:" • !ti• ...... .t.111tor•llt ••••••I ~i.11.i .... • ........ 1h• ..... ~1 ... 11 Jlunttn1ton Jlarbour (1111141-t!M To"11 & c..llitry Otange (ltll 551-1595 Evvythlnr. elepntbutH Pl!ct . .Iii $tlko , watchts ar•1 alllomailon.made, so you pay only tor ·the tlme~e. not the time It took to l'nake lt. Come chooll a lady Seiko tor your f1vortte lady. lWNOM-WIWln-foOk 11:>1cftn-tonl 90Ml•t>lt tw.cel•t. ~ltow ctM, 111t dleJ. t96.00 Schroder'., JEWELERS Ill I. 171t It. c ......... -641·1141 Ott•t • J•I .... •m1111rh11nl CM!tr 'Ill t, SUNl11 lt .. t ltllflAm.,IU,..i -Mltltl' Cll•,._ .---Other Gitt Suggestion• --... • r.&HT su.-rs • DlllSln • 101n e SWIATllS e PANTS e ILOUSU e IUl'S e rANTY HOii U YAWAY e •1Pr IOID e •tR CllTlflCATD ~~~sHALF·SIZE SHOP COITA HUNTINGTON MESA BEACH 1101 NIWPOIT IL~D. 14 HUNTIN•TON CINnl INertt. et 1 M "'-tJ I M_,. r. ._.., Ir•·• 'ULLl lTON -114 Or....,. M.&i--.t o ,_,..ho,.,. & Hetkr H,•tr•1 Me•.•Frl. 1 O·f e hf, IO.• e 11111. 1 J.t . Bankan1erlcard • JtJ1111tercharge I • I I I l I •' I I ! I I • • • • • • • • • . . , f • • , 1, • , I ., I , > i . . I ' • O.ULV PU.OT J 5 W~ding Bells, Silver Mixed , "°1'.CI TO c:al!•rTOn lllOTIC• OP MA-w.&.'1 IAiA ..,_ •l'UtOll couaT Of' TMI RMGll 4. ~. ti ti. ~lnhlf W' ~lftOVf IUll•«M ITATI Oii C.U.l~lllA fOI R ... Nlll •• 'a ·-~ IU..... M ti • llAM• ITATIMA'llT TMI COUNTY 0. (MLUllll ~ No.1 • TN '~"" ,..._ Lt dolfll 111191- NI Mcnt IY wtNUt ti "" ,_.~Oii l"""'° tfl ., "111UC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PIJBUC NO'l'ICll COSTELLOE-SAGER SI . John the Baptist Cltholic Church, Costa Mesa was the aettlng for the marrlagt of Wendy Kay Sager 'and James Andrew Costetloe. WILLIAMS.SABIUCH St. John tho 0 Iv I n e Episcopal Churcll, C..la 11 ... was tho oetUng !or lho mar- riage ol Judith Ann Babluch and Air Force Lt. Jeffrey Neill Wllllams. Their parents afe Andrew The Rev. John p., Alhey II Sager of San Mateo, Mrs. performed Jbe rJter for tbe carol Burge-Sager, Co§13"datrgtiter -llli': and Mn. !Ii,.. and Mr. and Mn. John Edward A. Bat,iudl of Collljl Cioatelloe or O,sta Mesa Mesa and the son of Mr. and Ml Debbi M • Mrs. Clifford 0. Williams, also ss e eana was the of Costa Mesa. maid of honor; Mrs. Chris Bridal attendants were the Miller aerved as brlde!mald; Mmes F<dwaro o Babluch, Kevin Cootelloe was tho best Mici..'eJ Goldstein 'aod Tony man, and ushers were Greg Lake' and ·the Misses Detra Orris, Brian CoateUoe and Babluch Kathy Cozza and Ancly Sager. Sandi I ' • nie bride is • sraduate of ovan, 'Costa Mesd ... Hla:b SclliQI and Mart Wasser: was best man, MRS. COSTELLOE 'MRS. HOLLINDltf IE .... ti CottA 9l.AINE McGUlllE, N~•M!Otf lf, rm. In !tit ~IHI O & M TIU.CO, ... Nt• .... COllA •• MtGVlllE, ••• COllA c_., ielltn °'.... ,_,, Jyd~I IDUHV«C, c ... "'9M, c ...... ~ McGOt•I. HI C<Mto\ iCCM.Ei McGUlltE Dhtrkt, COl,llltY of Or-..,.._ lllM of °"'~ & 'Mllltr, lllC.,. 1 C~ dl90MMd. Ctlllwll!t, 1IPOll I l\ldll'Mfll ... ttred Ill Cffpe(I~. alll HttW .... ~ NOTICI ts HE.ltll!.l'I' GIVEN I~ !hi ,,...,. et Relflift A. Kf1'11itf. lllCI H•rry ,., Ca.it MoaM, bllloml• cl'tldttor• OI IN 1buv9 ftl,,_ ~n1 .c:..-DW, DI.\ 1(....,., $111 & ICWW II lllb ..,.._ I& CINIUC'*f W 1 t"'· ,_., ... ,..._ he'llftll ,i.1 ... tMlntl""' luoem-1 u.clil•• ...... 1 ... 11 11: .. 1 .... ld (IOttllOll. .. 1c1 Moldlnt ..,., r9q11lred IO ui. tMm. G ... 11 .. AM l(lfll, ll:Olllrt E ... JCI AM Lto J. o.nNim. wtm ""_..,., llWC:tl«I. In 1111 llfflc. H11111..-, .. j~I dilfjolcin • .,_."9 • ,,........, " ,,,. cllft: of IN ·~ "''''led ,.....,,,, Ml Nlanc:t of MSJ.JO l(f\fally M °" ~•IO TN• •I·~· w•• '"" wim IM ~y to .,_. n-, W1111 1t1t _._...,. I~ Ol'I thl ...,,. of ti. l...,,_, of Cltr1< Of Or-~ <-ty '" ,._.,, 11, tf7' \IOUdltr1, to ""' WICNralgfled 11 lhl ofllC. 1110 ... ..::11H011, I lllW i.vl..:I llllO'I Ill thl H_I,_ O. (...,..,. ti lllt 1ttot...,._, WITTMAH AND tlgl!I, II"' lfld tnltrt1I of Mid lllOltrntnt HM Wlilllln ._....,.._ ....... SCHMIOT, Atllll"lll'fS 11 L-, W kn ci.blllfl In Intl P<'~IY In IM County of Stnll Mlllkl, Ctlt ..... 11111 ,...., Mltllll Dr1w. HIWll(lrt kkt!. Cllllornl• 0!"1"9'1 •••• ,. " C.tllfornl•. dacrl!JIO II ™"''*" UU) ...... nN0. wllldl 11 ""' pltct of M l11t11 Qt IOllOWI: ""'"' ni. ~ In 111 m1tltrl ...... 1lnlt19 Lal 1' of Tr.ct No. ..a. .. ar.own Oii l'vbll9"90 Or*"O'I c,,..t Delf'( ..ilof, to !ht "''" of wld ~t. wlmln toYr 1 "'"" lhl<'.ol rKWci.cl In 8ooil 2'2, Ol<tmblt 12, It, 2', 1m tnO J1~ 1, monltll 1Htr tlw nn1 putlollaillori 111 this Peo-1• to If liw:killve, Ml$C91'-oul lf73 ).W.12 llOtlct. M-, r«ordl ol Mkl Or.,.. COU!>ly. °"'° ~ 11, lt72 C°"'"*"Y knowft ••: inm RObl.00. AOIERT LEO MC GUlllE Ml•llon VftJo. C1Ukw"nl1 PUBUC N<YflCE E119CVIDI" of IN Wiii NOT ICE IS HERESY GIVEN 1'1111 °".1------~------ol 1111 ,..,.... lllmfd McfGlnl Wtdnfto.y, J.,...-ry 10, Im, 11 10:00 WITTMAN ANO ICHMIOT ll'dOCk A.M. 11 Me~'I Oftl~ • Jtl,. ... ,....,...,. 11 Lew CourlhouM, lOl<t C,_,. Y•lley Partw1y, lllOTICa TO CA•DtTO.I 146 SN M19M1 Drt"" Ci ty ot Ltgl.llUI HIQuel, C-ty of 0rl&'lll', SUl'IAIOA: C9UltT OP T"• 111 ...... ._., C11lfwJll1 nut Sltlt of C.lllor,,ft, I wlll tell 11 publlt ·~~~·C~~·:rrc::.ti': Tiit (TIIJ..... 1111e;tloll ,_ tht ...,._, bidOt!", tor c•lfl In ,.._ A44ID ~ ... ........ -ftwtlll ~ ol ,.._ Unllld St1tea. olll 1111 l"IMtMd Or... COMI C.Jtv l'ttot, r19111, rfttt Md ~I If w ld JUOQment l!"1t11t ff ll!LAND L. 811:0Wff, aho ~ I,, :a6. 1,71 11'1111 J_,ry J, 9, dettton In fN 1boW "9Crlbad ll'f"Dpef'ty, know!! II LELAND LE•O" llROWtrl . 1m aot-12 ., .. 1Ni1Ct1 tw«lf " _., bl lllCftUI'\' ~ u ' to wH1ty M14 utcVt1on, WI"' 1c:crwd In· NOTICE IS HEllEIY OIVEtf lo tM P~• •c NOTICE '-"1 ... c.fl a«t11°" o1 1t11 ,...,. -.-• ..,,, Ualld 0.1..i ~ 14 Im ""' •U "'"""' 1>1vl119 delt1'15 191111111 Ille ~I k111t1 OrlllQI i::OUftty MJd IM<tdeflt ............. flie """'°"' ''~no:s.:=:;s Dlfpl.ARD 0. Wl~KlRSON :ii:. "i~ .:=":.t\:. i::.i: The .........,.. PWMft 11 ..... bvtlMM ;r:., °R~nly lo Pl'"fMfll '"""'' Wllll IN lllCIM"rr M l o.uty ' ' vouehen, lo fllt illldeo 11 .... II "" ilf'llw TilANS<PACU'IC MAIUNf. CO. 011' ..... A. I(.,._ fftn'Y 4. I(...... of hlr 111111"_,, JOSEl'H·~. 41'llEllERT, Lawton Den.tel Collep. Her and ushers were Michael huabapd lJ a aram.te of ~It, }lrad Fowler e.nd 0111S and Orange Co a 8 t Lis. Jeffrey Shaver, Wllllam College 8nd now attends Jeffery and Dennb Moe. Calllomia State · University, Tbe ·bride, an elementary Long Beach. They will reside teacher in-Orange, ts a In Tuitin. graduate ol Costa Mesa Rlgh Campbell in the Church 0£ -sic at C8JllGmla SW., UniWr-· Brethren, Santa Ana. sity, FUil~ They w.iU re. Parents.of the newJyweds aide. in~ Ana. • ~ WILLIAMS · ARMS'{RO.NG-BO)'D Ne'Nf'Oil:T IU.C:H. .. w. ""'' l'lliilitfr • 1501 Wal ~la 8oUlrllrd. lvl1M1'k. HW( •• ~ ..... ""' ,., v• ........ ·-C1U1wn11 '150,, """'"' I• llW plKt of JtffN11 Jotwi Gordoll. 211\ CIMt st,, ......, callfwwl• 1M11t""' ol tht uncters'9ned In 111 m•tten u.1.• _..._ n---h No.'· Nolwpart Medi~ Pvlltl"*' Or••" con1 Olllr l'llot, P1<11lnff$ ro lht 111111 ol Mid dec:.0..1, DQ!Ner Pcua, Laguna ~ ,..., ..,_ II 11111111 ~ W an o.c..nriw lf 2' 1m ililld J•-rr 2. wlltlln tour monm. 1ttw tflf ""' ,...1;1o11e1. HOLLINDEN- HUMPH~EY Karin Elaine Humphrey became the bride of Michael James Hollinden d u r i n g ceremonies conducted by the Rev. Howard Jamieson in the Tustin Presbyterian Cburdl. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Leoo c. Humphrey of Westminster and Fountain Valley Mayor and Mrs. A. B. Holllnden. Bridal attendants w e re Cheryl Wal bring, · Li n d a Seaberry, Ellen Emenoo, Jeri Metz and stacey WbitUe. Joe MacKey was the best man, and usben were C. H. Lan- caster,· Paul La Blanc and Joe Ba;;:. bride is a graduate or Westminster Hlgb School and now attends G<ilden West CoUege. Her husband is a graduate of Founlain Valley H I g h School, attended. West Point Military Academy, and now is a junior al Cali!omla State University, Fullerton. The newlyweds will reside in Foun· taln Valley. Scbool, orange Coast College and California Slate Univeni~ ty, llmg Beach. Her husband is a graduate of CMHS and earned an economics degree at UCI. They will reside in Tustin. RODMAN-HEAVISIDE Robert Mattison Rodman Jr. claimed Susan Ann Heaviside as hli bride during Mormon ceremonies conducted in the Carillon, Twin Fall&, Idaho. The bridegroom, son ol the senior Rodmans of Balboa, asked bis father to be best mao. Mrs. Ida Heaviside is the mother of the bridt who was attended. by her sister, Miss Carol Heaviside. The newlyweds will reside in Salt Lake City where the bridegroom is a senior and Sigma Alpha Epsilon member at the University of Utah. The new Mrs. Rodman graduated from Brigham Young University. RUCH-ltROWN Joyce Annette B r o w n became lbe bride of David Al· lan Ruch during ceremonies performed by the Rev. Joe Golden Needle's s~ o1 ae 1fluA Nl'µJJV• V ELOIJHS reg. !.n.1.11 yd., '8" wide J\'o tc 2.47-3.27 t1d1 These pri~ good lhru Dec. 24. 19il Golden '11eedle FAe••cs SOUTN COA•T PLA.ZA • CAltOV•EL LEYIL °"" fYlllMCll .. &UMllAV1 are Mr. and M~. Delmar E. Brown of Cost.a Me.sa and Mni. Paul Rueb ol Santa Ana. Bridal attendants were Mrs. Dan Brown, Mrs. Stephen Dublin, Mrs. Wllliam ·TaJbott, Miss Cindy Kudelka and Tracy Paulsen. Best man was • Steve Dublin; ushers were Dan Brown, Louis Paulsen, Tom Mt'Clung, and ring bearer was Scott Bales. The bride iS a graduate of C..la Mesa High School, Golden West CoUege and California Pr 01f es s ion a 1 College. Her husband is a graduate ol Sanla Ana High Scbool, Chapman College and now b working on bis masters in mu. He ctic Hosting 'Dinner By CAROL MOORE Of r111 Diiiy 1'1191 Sllfl Gourmet columnist V em Lanegrasse, who insists that a compalfy dinner can be ready in an hour, used a chafing dish to prove the theory at Lido Isle Woman's Club. For starters, be sliced a hard-cooked egg, placed it on shredded lettuce, d au be d caviar mixed with sour cream over the yolk and sprinkled on chopped chives. The caviar had been rinsed with lemon ju.ice to lessen the fishy taste. •· 1 use lemon juice regular- ly where a lot of people use wJiter, such as in wiping meats. because it really draws out flavor,'' be said. "Of course, it keeps cut fruit from browning." That was proved as he prepared F r e n c b Quarter Bananas, a specialty from his New 0 r le a n s background. Caramel sauce bu b b I e d temptingly as Lanegra.Sse sug. gested adding fresh peache! or strawberries. Asking "What's m ore romantic than a candlelit din- ner for two?" he nambeed the fllet mignon entree. "Gourmet lsn't necessarily synonymous wlUt lots o f HAMS I " .•• S. .... ttWllMmstTH "II ..... -... ORDEll NOW FGR CHRISTMAS e Roady to Sen• -Hooey '1 Sfko Glao e lffo1Fer l 1 ..... NoPre,.... ... • lolportff c---• Dollc<lt--s.MwldMITo &o 1100 LC... Hlw~••t• C.,. .. M• -67Jo.tlll 1911Ct ... lflC..........At ..... MI DO IN THE EVENT OF AN EMERGENCY DEATH OF SOMEONE IN MY ·FAMILY? by EUGENE O. BERGERON ........ liKC ..................................... ' t1f.., .... ...... -'ca• '11Aa. ......_ n... II M ._...., ,_. ,. .. ~ Eia ...... •..,..,. .,....,................................... .. ....... ..... .,.. ............................... ,, ... , .... A,._.._ ............... WI-.._. ..... .....,.._..,, _ _..._.. ... ew ................. =· = ,_,.. ...... ,. • ,.... .... ..., ....... ........ .............. .. .......... ,.., ........................ .. .................................................................... 'l -............................. a..w ............ _ .... ..,., .. ..... -sa..w ....................... ,.. ....... ., ..................... ...., •l•mal ,..,,...., ... .,, B.U~·Bergeron f'aneral Bonte COSTA MISA 2 LOCATIONJ CORONA .... MAR MW4H -611-MIO I • JONES-SESMA ' H!lrbor Assembly of God 01Urch, ,Cosla Me•a was the setttn·g for the marriage of Victoria Margaret ljemna .... John Rusoell Jones. The, Rev. Galen ' F. Hertweck performed the rltei for the daughter of Mn. ,ROOert B. 5'oma of Cosla Mesa and the late Mr. Sesma and the "°" of Mt. -.nd Mrs.· ~ T. Jooes, also of Cosla Mesa. . • Attendants we r e Ms. Barbara Gautney, Mrs. Philip Clsfj'om, Mn. Bea Bird!, Miu Chris Haubrick, Ro1!in Bircll, Ron Jones, Randr Jones, Pbi_llip Ostrom, Bea Birch and Bud<ly Birch. The newlyweds will reside in Costa Mesa. • .a....1-.t... 111111~ 1tn • ' ' "9l·n !Ion ot this notlc1. Wlll tJle lett.lnl"for the ~ ..i.:.,,..Y Jofirl OOnlM Oiled Now...,blr 21, 1t71 I . t , Tflll .......... ffled Wltll tM COi.Mt\' PUBUC NOTICE CHARLOTTE J. WIRTH ring ceremony 1 n. t D & ctert o1 Or_,. CllVnty ew1: o.:. 1s. mt, MmlnJ.tr•t•lx of llW: t1,.re n-~--,, aad 'wtl..LIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY of 11>1 1bovt ,,.me1;1 dlc:.O.nl INll ....... .,oan Armstrong CLERK. • ., Thfr• M.. w.,., Dtputy. •!CTITIOU1 IUSINl!SS JOIEf'H •• •R•t•••T J ·• Antho RI bard · ff2IM MAMil n'ATSMIEMT 1517 wnt """""'"' •1..i. ~un ny C • • """"'*' Or.nge C011t O.llr Piiot, TN loUQWhlll pPf"IO'l'U; i re doing •wH•k.. cattt. tl5Dl P•~• o( th lo--....1 .. O.C....-lf, 26, 1972 1nd J1nui1ry 2, t, buslnat 11: Tit: l21fl t'lt-UN , ............ "t"" e DeWy...-J>UO 1'13 3aJ.n YORSA SHOl'PINO CENTER, S600 Arlonlfy"' AdMllll1tr1trh1 ........ _°',"and ••-.... .i .. _ _. M Senl1 AM (.,..,_. ROid, A1111\elm. hbll1hld 0r•"9'1 COis! Dilly l"Uol, ..,..,,...,,. • <DUO. J\OQa°l ' Cejllor~I Ol<tmbtr '· 12. lt, 26, 1972 33211-n .1..n1..._ 0 f Huntington PUBUC NOTICE TOf>A-lOl'A RANCH, 1Nc., m Sou111 :..c=.:..cc..c:_...:c ____ _ ·~ ........ .,.. ) ,..._ strwt. u. Meetes, ca1u. 90011 PUBLIC N011CE Beach and Mr ud Mrs JObn f'ICT"fT.OUS IUSINass Al..IEXANDeR HMGIEN, m SllY•r, ------------• • HAM• ITATllHllNT Spt,fl'" lloed, llllfll119 Hiiis, C11tlornl1 1· Richard of Downey. Offtcl8nt TN fl>li-1118 P'"Oll$ .... dolno CHAllLOTTE HAAGEN, n1 SH.....-"~ZJ:..~sA:~:.i:::· -buMMll 11· Spur ltotd. llolllllO Hllll E111t1~ Cilll. was the Rev. Roger Walke icou AssoctATES, 1901 0ow strMt. ALEXANDER HM.GEN, 111. m The 1o1i-1,. Pff'MI'+ 11 dolno i.w...,s ol ··-Irvine u l t I NtwpOrt IMcll. C.llfor'll• ,,... su-Spur ROid. Rollln; HUii Ell•tn. 11; •ov•·· •••• 'TO "' ...... MIC n a r a D 1. DoNld M. ICoH, '°' VI• Lido $Oud.. c..llf .. ... .. " , .. MfWPClrt e.cti. C•Ulornll nwo CMARALf HA.A.GEN, m s11-swr 8oultw1rd, ...... Ctlllorn.I• 92'21 Olurcb.. 2. Rktllnl C. Elliott, ff U11cM lllt1 llOld, llOHIJ"Q HH11 at .. , C.111. W"'ltm Dl..,.,.slflld Equities, Inc., ..,__ Debra V•n Steen-N~ 9HCfl. c 1ntoml1 ""° Thi• Dusi"'" 11 conducltd by 1 II"" GtMr11 P1r111tr. w North FOOll>lll ~ _. , 1 Let c. s.mmt., 94 l.Jftde hit, trel ~Ip. 8oult'f'1rd, .. Wl1r 11111.. C1Utorn!1 bergen and Tom La.ppm were Newport hKrl. c•11tom11 nMO -A1tx1...w H1-oen 911'210 maid of honor and best 4.. D. I". Mlcldlfml .. 11 Kalf MoOll Tiii• ltllement WQ flied wltl'I me c-. Tnl1 111111""'1 I• bll"' conoucltd DV • --bride . ....... •• mante of. Orlvt. Cot-cltl MM. C•llklrril•"'" .... Cllft: af 0!"•11111 County on Otc.-mber Hmllfd ::,'.~.~: o•v•••ll'IEO Ill!;: IS a 15-' _..... 5. E...,... a.vi .. 2'00 ""°"""' ~. IS. Im. arln 'gh •-•--1 .. A• CDl"«M dll MM, Ctlltornll '262:5 ~ NIWMAN, EQUITIES, INC .. Gtntrof l"•rl,,.r M a Hi .xuJU and ....,, i. Tl"'°"" L. Strldtr. Int l"ort ISIN•U• a MARSH, Atty1. Dtwkl s. Le.II•, l'rnl~I attended Golden West College. .AlblM, N--1 9"dl. C1lllornl1 9'1'60 ,., Wal lllltfl 1.....i, 1•11• •1 TN• 1i.1-• flltcl wllll "" c ......... • T''' '"···'-• .. mN!Udtd .... I-·· • --C II--Cltrk ol O!"il• COIHllY 1111 NOY. 71, ltn Her husband is a graduate Of pa~:-uy ..-' 1 m.:c WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, C"""IY Cltrk, by Don Bosco u;nh School at-Tlrnatl!y L... Sndtr l'22ml e ...... 1y J. Mlddoll, 0tpu1y """&H. • ' Tiiis lllllmllll WIS fti.cl wltll !hi C-... ~,.... 0 ' I O •I >O• "'"' tended GWC and now IS stu-... ci.nt o1 Or'"llt c .... tv. c.n1ornl• ori ""' ••1111• ... oe, 1 Y 1• DM>C •• Otctmber ,,, u , ltn '"" J .. •Ulry 2. '· PVO!lslled Ot•noe CHtl D•U~ .. 11<11. dying at San Diego State o.ctmi;;il_,l';-E ST JOHN 1973 l-l71·n Nov1m11er a 1nd Otcftnblr 5, 12, 1•. University where his bride will COUlllY c1 .. k . PUBLIC NOTICE 1•n :im.n enroll in the spring. 81 ,......,.., J. Mlddoa". r.fi"~ ---=:===-c==::----I Publfslled O!".ngt C011I 0.llV Piiat ll'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS Dlc:tmbtr 5, 12. If, 2', ltn 3J.M.72 NAME ITATllMEN'J 1-------------: TM foltowl1111 perM1111 art doing business PICTIT10U5 IUSIMllSS 11: NAM• ITAT•MENT PUBUC NOTICE LAKE FOREST SHOPPING CENTER, Tiie lollowlng .-• ...,, 1r• dolno bllslnen 24301 Mulrltf!ds &oultverd, El TD!"o, Ii: NOTtc• 0,. MAQllAL.'S •AL• C1llfornl1 '2630 LANGLEY .ASSOCIATES, 11'111 Dov• N .. f -Topt T<191 Rtncll, 1 Ctlll. corp., SSS SlrHt, NtwpOrt llNOI, C1Rfornl1 '2t60. PUBUC NOTICE MEL G£1llHGER, Pl1lntl!I v 1 . SOum Flow9r Strlft, LOt Anoelts, Doftlld M. Koll, et VI• Lido ioud, ROSEGLEH COHSTAUCTIOH. INC., 1 C1llforfll1 HilW'pOrl 8 .. cll, C1lltornl1 '26'0 CiUtornll C11t11 .. ~tit. All•'"°" H11go1n, m Sliver Spur Rkl'llrd C. Elliott. '6 LlnOI 1111, JUDGEMENT DATE: S10tto11btr I, 1972 ROid, Rolllrog Miiis Etilltn. Ca11lwfll1 NilWPQrl 8ucll. C11lfornl1 ~. 8Y Ylrlvf ot '" fQCUtlori l•IUfd on Cl>a~ HlfOM. m $11Yrr Sp;.ir LM c. S.mmt1, ,. UnOI 1111 •• Seclltmbilr ,, ltn by tM Ml.iftklpll Cour1, Road, RoHlne Hiiis E'""t". Cllll. HtwPWI llte:Cfl. C1Ui.tn.I• 9166CI. Hour' Defined sauces. Good c o o k s cOn- centrate on basic flavors, use wbatever'a necessary for enhancement and know what they are doing." As a sample of gounnet in· genuily, he steamed peas lhe French "ay, wrapped in let~ tuce. leaves to provide the moisture. PEAS A LA FRANCAIS 1 head lettuce 1 (tlklunce) package frozen green peas 1 teaspoon sugar ¥• cup buUer 12 Jiny white ook>ns Parsley sprig Salt and pepper to taste Line saucepan with lettuce leaves, at le a s t two thicknesses. A d d p e a a , onions and par&ey. Toss with seasooings and ball the butter. Cover with rest ol lettuce leaves. Add no water. Cover sauce pan. Let siJn- ot SOUTH Ofl:ANGE COUNTY JUOICl~L ~ H ...... Ill, m sn-SpUr o. P . Mlddlemlt, 11 H•ll ~ Drlo;e. DISTRICT, C-IY' o1 ~. St1l1 of ROid. lltolllng Hiib EltlllH, C1lltorn.l1 Cot-dl'I M.lr, Collltor!\11 '26lS. mer for at least 15 niinutes. CallfOml•, upa11 , luclgnlMlt 1n1 ... ec1 1n c111r111 ....,._ m sn..,... $piJr ROid, Ev.,.,n 01vt1. J90CI Slftd-Lilnt. L. tilYW o1 MEL GERINGEll: ill ludDmtnl Roltlng Hltll E1l1tel., C.Ufornlt Cot-dl'I Mir, C1Ulornl• 9262$. Chee .. the process. When peas cndl!Oni end flOllrill ROSll!GLIEH CONS-Thi• llull-11 coni:Mlc1ecl by. ll'Mf"ll Tlmotlly L.'Slrldlf", 1'30 Pllfl AlblM, are tender remove parsley TRUCT!~. INC., • C1lllDrnl• Cot· Plrtntrlhlp. • ~I lelcll. Cillllwnla t:ziMO. ' cior1Hon 11 judgmlnt dlibton, aMwlng 1 At.under H-11, 1"1!11 bwlftftt I• ~ bot • Oflltl"lll and lettuce leaves. Toss peas "" M1tnct1 °' s1,tc.30 ..::llHUr -"" ~·· ,.,,.._. ""'""fi!i..n,., L 51 111tr with re.!t Of butter and serve :'° .. ~ ";-ti'!: ::v:: ::;:"!: rsC::iitNll~~ltSM, Atty1. Tiiis lllNmtftl .,W.,, rftltd wllll 1111 Coun· in 6 portions. tflol tl""'t, ""' .~ l"'9r1SI of wld ludD· Ml7 W..t Md Slrtlt, S•lll 111 IY Clttll ol Of.not Coun!y, C1lllllfnl1 tn "*'' dfbklrs In""' proptrty In the Cwn-L• ........._ Ctll ....... ,_. =\"" 1, ltr.t. FRENCH QUARTER IY' °' DrHclf, 51111 af Celllornlt, <Hsc:rlb-1"1111 .~ w11 n1ec1 wim IN Coul\-WILLIAM E. ST JOHN. ..i 11 fotlqws: c-ty Clttll BANANAS um 1 Ind , llf Trld 5515 loeli.c& ,, ty Cit"-ol Or•noe COlfflt'( Oii 0.C•mblr 8 8"'erly J M900Clll. °"""' El Two aoed Ind Mulrllndl. IS. 1971 W • ,._11"32 2 tablespoons butter or w:,~~ IS HEReev GIVEN ""' .., -.......... -... ._ ....._.._ ........... PubllllMd Or-.ge c-1 Delly Piiot , Jll!IUlfY l01 1f1l, at ll·15 rvvn "' ... ,.,... "°"' . ..,..,,, i ...__ ' 1• IJ "' 1tn JM7 ri Jnaf'garglne o'docll; A.NI. 1t C-111o11H, Mlf'IMl'I Of. 0.C.mbtr If, 2', lffl Ind J1nutry 2, t, -.""blr • "' • •• . J 01.UlCe brandy fie., 3014 c.--Vllll"f' l'•rt1w1y, CllY ot 1973 :Mn-n Llcil.llUI Htgutl, C-IY"of O!"-. S1tllt of 1 teaspoon cinnamon C1Ufof"fll•, I wm NII et public •uclton kl PUBUC NOTICE 1 quart frmcb vanilla ice ~111:SJ,. ~ ~.:.''!'11 ~ ='.l---.=.~CT~IT;,.;.:.~.~.;.~.~.;,;,.:..---1 ---~.o~T~l~C~.~T··.-•,•."·~C'O~l~T-:--:----cream tilt• end lnt ... .st ot said ludgmtnl NAME STAT•MENT SUf'•RIO. COURT Ofl THE dlblor1 In the I~ dllcrlbld PMIP"l""IY• ..... ••1-0,. -'' '"'' •·-•••, ST•T• OP t•LiPOONI• ... Melt butter in saucepan or or 111 mucti ,,,.,..,, 11 m•Y bl """"ry 1,', ~ ,....._, .......... TH• couNfY °" oHNe• h fin dish Add nd to HlllfY Hid ,_.KllllOfl, wtlll KCtUtd In-L & V WELDING, MFG ' •75 fllf, A-14111 c a g ' ' sugar a ..,.., and COlll. Gavtrnar SI CNll MIN C•llfoml• IEll•ll ol H. J. l(lJMl!ll, SR. OtailMd. oook over medium beat until it O.l'ld OK!lmbtr 14• 1tn. '2'27 ·• • NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN to '"" -...t.... _.11..... Dlorlllon: SOvth Or111111 COlltlly Lt(lll.trd J 8•f'blr 67J Gowrnar 51 ct111Uor1 of tht •-111med <:lladtnt ...,g.,,.. to car&usciu.c. OILL.AltO 0. WILIC:lllSON COiii Mesa, C111,_n1.,' 11U1 " 11\at 111 Pfl'Mllll 111¥11111 dalm1 t01ln.t t11t Cut bananas in half and then Mt~I. °'"•''"'• County Tiiis t1u11na1 11 bllng conducllcl w iln teld dlclclltlr ,,.. rlQUlrld '° tlll tlltm. · er ,...,..,. • IUff", Jndlvldu•I Wltn It'll MCnHf'I' """""""'' Ir! tflit offkt quarter. Add bananas to pan, Dtpvty L.«..rd J. Barber of me dtrk ot tt. •bow tf!Hli.d -1. or tnrnina occasionally to-coat •-111111 1 '"., Thia 1111-1 ftftcl wr111 111t c-tv 111 ..,_, """"'· wltll tM '*'""'Y -~.. ' JllrtT L ICIY, Cllf"k ol O!"ilf\09 COU!lly on Dfc:...,.,ber 15 vwclltr1, lo 1111 11110etilglilill II tM offk"I! Add liqueur of choice. Sprinkle l'lalMIWS ... ......, 1'77, WILLIAM E. ST J~N. County Cl~ ol Ill• ltlotlll'I' .. HERLIHY a HEllLIHY. 'th inoam p br"'...N 11-Senti MMIU II...... by Bavtrty J Meddo_., °'9utv 727 WKt 7111 Slrtet, Sul19 , .. , Loi WI c on. our ~, .............. Catt*"" . . l'mn A""'4H, C•lllon!I• 90017 wlllcti It ""' over all and when heated ig-l'l.*illltlld 0r-. Coe•• Dell., Pllol, ,.llbllll'lld °'""" co.11 o.Jtr Piiot Sli.c. 111 Ml-°' tM ~ In •II . • • Ole"'*' 19, 2', ltn •nd J-•rv J, Dlc...,.,titr 1, 2' lt7.I •nd Janllll'"y 1 f m1t11n pwtMnl"' to tflf "'•'-" 11111 n1te. 1m :wu.n im ' ' • • dloOfnl, wtlllln flM'" ....,... 11ttr 1119 > -••· ••-••• ~-·-sauce J.t61.n llr1! pullfk•llon o1 1111• notlol. UCIWO UGUMl'e ~ PUBLIC NOTICE O.ted Dlclll'ibtr 1, 1'1'.I over ice cream and serve at PUBLIC NOTICE H.J . icvMEll, JR. · 8 r1· E_.Kulor et llW: Wl11 of 1111 once m po IOOS. "'CTITtOUS •USIMISS ..... fl• •bow nlmed dtmdtnl. NAM• STAT•M&WT IUf'••IOR COUAT 01" THIE HERLIHY t. H•ALIH'r ~Tl'll fdlowfnl penon 11 doing war ... , STAT• 01' CALIPOAllllA PO. 1'11 WM! """ ''""· 11119 , .. ~ Ii' TH• COUNTY 011' ORANG& .............. c.llllrllt •n PUBUC NOTICE . ST ..... CO I U I L D E R S • 10666 Ne. A-1'"2S .,...: (1111 m..ert• Wntmlmttr "'""'"'· Gardin Grow, MOTICE OP HEAltlMO ON .. fflTION A"-""tp ' fw !!9""".,. "·I~ '''°' C1ll1Dmll fli,11 l"Olt P•o..t.Te Of' WILL AND POii ubl tlwd "'"* .,Giii .,.. •• • 8tfflll'd j, sp..,,.ttr', ·I D''' LETTIERS TaSTAM•NTAAY Olcl-S.ll,1f,2',1f7! Da-72 Ho liday · Meetin gs Wfttml111'9r A-. Glf1tlll Grow. Ell1!9 of •OSA WAltDLOW, Otc:HMd. Cellfomlil. NOTICE IS HliREl'I' GIVEN lhll This b1111MU It (.(lllOuclld bY I OOHHA F. !i"RADLING 1'111 flied Mt.in C.lllomla corpor1110ll. I Plllllon tor P~ of Wiii Ind tori-------------R1lpll e 9'mlrd, IH .... nce of L.ltttrt Tnl•rntnlill""f' to pell· "ICTfTIOIJS 9UllNUI Prt11dlnl of !lDnt'I'". ~ to '*"kl! Is INid9 tor NAM• STAT•M•NT ltr!Ynl & SPtnRler fllrt!lw pert~ Ind ftltt me tlm• 1nd Tiit lvllowlng "''°"' er• doll'IQi Tiii• 1t111mtnl w11 filed wltll the Coun-pl.K• of ht1rlng !ht 111nt 1>11 bMfl Ml tou1lrwu '" PUBUC NOTICE Activities Varied . . in ty Cltrtl of Or•i'lllf COUflly Oii ()I(. 11, for J1n111ry 2, lf13. 11 t :OO 1.m., 11' ""' C.ALDWEl..LS' C,.NOIEI, l'3' Ntw Bll L 8 Sale a dinner meeting tomorrow 1m courtr_,, " 0tpel"lintl)1 No. s o1 wld MKAr111ur, HfWllWf e1..::h. c1ntorn11. ~ the Jolly "~er Inn An-·-1m Pttln c-i, ., 10D Cl¥1C Ctflltf Dl"ll'I WMI, In JI-D. WDDd, 11'2 lrYlrw. T\llttn. H lid .t H born f th •-a • ilU'l • l76'0C tM CllY of S1n11 AM, C1lltornl1. Ctlllornl• menotallay,retardouseed,• EleTooror , 1•, She will report on the status of THOMAS L. •OOU•Mo••· A1tw. 01i.i ~ 1), 1m. MWM e. woOd. nn 1r111rw, Tutlln. . '"5 •I Wllfllllt!OI Sift., Ullt UI W. E, ST JOHN, C1ll'-l1 women ,accountants m a 1..11 ......_ c111tent11 ""' CounlV c1.-1r. Tt111 bull,.... 11 COllChlclM bY , gener1t spoosortng a bake I a l e number bf European coun-Publlllllcl O!"ange C1111t Delly Piiot. OITll!R, MILU.llD • tUCHMMI {Mrlflfrlllfp. through Friday, Dec. 22, at the 0.Cfft'ltllt lt. 2t. ltn Ind Jlfl\ll'Y t. ••••• , STIWAllT It'. 5UCHMAMI J-0 . Wood tries. 1973 ,_.1'.I tM WMt llfll Str.lf 9"" Mayfair Market in Costa, ----,,.,,cL-===---I-----::;;:;--;:;-;:;:::;;;:;---111111 ""'· c11ttwn1a '27tl M..-... IE. Wood Mesa. Proceeds will go toward 1· PUBUC NOTICE T111 Ml-M47 Thi• 111ttmtn1 ...,., f11tc1 w1t11 C-'V PUBUC NOTICE A,..,..,, tin l'1ftt'-t" Ctwrk of 0!"11t11t cwn1y .., ,._ 71. expansion ot the home's voca·1---========---·i---====-cc===---Publl9hlcl °'"'""' c-1 Deny P1ta1, 1m tiooal training program. l'KTfTtOUI 9 Ul&ltBI f'ICTITIOUS •USINbl DKlmbw ''· llO, 216. lf71 ,.,.71 SMITH, ltntl.llV. CULKllllS m .. The ·----·-I MAMI: n'AT••WT NAM• ITATIM•WT OTI ·-•• ' -uuuc ~ we comes The Mowlnt ,.,_ ar• cto1111 Tiii foltawl"' --1r• clolnt PUBUC N CE .. , _ __,.. ...- used dothlng furniture and llullnfU. n : ww-11· 1J1HA •m ""'"' '"""" • COllVEHIENT fOOOS COMPANY, THE OuNEI. 16232 l'•lftt CCIII "l(TITIOUI 1us1 .. •1s Le., ......... CtH .. fl747 appliancel. Pick-up may be !Mil ~· ... _. T \I I' In ' """""''' """'l111110r> &-.di. CtlKwn.11 ,...,.._, lTATIM•ltT Tlh tUJI J».ltU arranaecf by calJing ~J!fl. C.llfomll ,. Elehf ... , CorportlMn, ii Cllltlll"nll Tiit fol--..,_ 19· '°"" tlulJfllU N PWl~.Orlllft ~ Dll51Y l'ltfl, D . Derlnfl A. COdilr, IND S.nlt R-. Corpetlltoft. 11, ~ ""° ...... ..,._ , 12, It. ~iii vaney TttM-..,.,_ II mndlfdld "' • Cl!lfTVllY SERVICE co .. Cl SWiii lm :nu.n A ccountants Lou1t o. 1"1111ear1.1211 At11n1,, H...,. c..i1Jom11 cor"°'•'IDIL ~. '"'"'· P.o. 8oll Jioo . ffnrtCWF IMcfl ~ J-Mlc:Eeclltm. l"rflldent A......U.,. Clllf, ftll2 · PUBUC NOTICE MiSS Eunice Stockman, past """ H....,, I', 0. lox 1"'6. Newport Tlllt ti•..,.,..,., Wll ftlM wllll llW c-. Dl'f'!'IPIC I~ CO,, t CMlfDrnl• president of the Loe Angeles ~~ -..--., 3165 Ptcllk ~ ~'::_ °' °'"""" CounlY 11'1 Dlclmblr t:::=. ~,=.-=."'"' ""-.1------..,,--,.------ Chapler of the .1.-.....iAA.. COM! Hlo!MIYI e.r-Oii Mir m25 ... ,, Tiii• ......_ .. ~ ..... Cot· •tCTtflOUS •utlNhl n&U1>11'-'CW "fllll bull_. I llotiflO Cilflduclld bV 1 m« Plll'"lllCWI. lllAM• ITATaM•NT Sociity ol Women Aecountanta Joint vc,P ... "'=" lftU. AfilO LIVIN•, "'""' o~,-.~M~P~ICC INV6STMENT co. ~ ~ ...,... an ~ will speak to members of the 'NI ···*-'" fllld wltll mt C-IY' m ••• """'"'ltfffl ,.._. bV Jollll I'. •1u.. llANCHO SAA GllltO•HMO. ... Nft>. Or Count ChaM-d"Pl"" Cllrlt Gf OrMWi c-iiy Oii: otc. 1 lf11 U. ........... C1Ufel"lll1 M17 P•nldtnt __. c....t Ori ktllt NI. ltS ange y ..... ~ -uoe •v 91\ll:'U.V J. MADoOX 6-.rtv PUllll.ned Or'"llf COii! O.lly 1'11111, Tlllt •tal-1 "''' tllld wltll"" c-. ,_., "' .... ' ~ ' CCM,111°"' Cltrll. • OK-Imber lt, ,., 1m Ind JllNlfY 2. '· IY Clff11. of Orll'IOI C°"""7 1111 OK""°" "=Ul~r~·,~ •... {.oltl " NTUI 1m • ,..,.1'.I u . 1m, l'lllltlltlff 0!'111111' Coest Delly l'Hol VOllC. JfllWUMJI;-H=, ~ C=N<t I~.. , =-mjiliurrri'ltiiO"•;i .°""~~-~ .. ~-~·;;:"~·~ "··~ ... ~·~m~=---'""~·~n!j PUBUC NOTICE :.'"=~~~"Na. IU (ellloml• COl'llCW"lllol'I. 1•17 Wntdlff • UFF~L ' PUBLIC NOTICE 1---------.,,.---1 .... ""Cc:C•H ....... _ r.~~I'-No. 200. N..,..,n 9Hcll. ' 11------=-==------, NOTIC• TO <••DITO•s ,..,4 Tiii• Minn• I• Mlr>O conctucltd b'f •n UPHO Y S,,., IUl'•RIOll COURT 0" THI f'ubll~ OrtrlOI CNtl 0.lty l'Hol, ""',..':"""'_,.. ...... tuoc:MllOll tfhlf lhlfl ' MDTtce 1'0 CA•DfTCMlS ITAT• OP CAt.lllOANIA HR Dtctmtlfl' It U. lf7J 1111 J 2 " W... T• .,_ IUl'•RICMl COUAT Ot' TNI" THI COUNTY 0,. Ol.AllG• ' • ll'llltrY ' 9• l'rtd I', Nllll'I STAT• Ofl (Al.ll'OAlllA PO• ........ ,.wt 1tn ~71 Thi• ... ....,.,., "1..i wllll Ille County n. ... THI COUNTY OP M.AlfO• 1!1111t ol GERALD G. GIST, Dlc:Mlld. PUBUC '10TfCE Clfl'k ol °'""' CeunlY' tfll Nov, t . !tit. lfn ..... ..... ... A-Mm MOTICI! IS HEAEIV OIYIN lo Ille I W1Ll.IAM I . It JOHN, C-IY Ottt:. c... ..... -.......Ut E:"•'-of JOtfN k , Y•STllE, •• ~N cr.Gll01'1 of ........... IWWl"llCI __,., ., 9f'f'll"ly J. Mteclol(, DIHty. nm I:;:::::::;;::::=====~ KAY V•STRt, eke JOKN VES I, NI 11 ,__, 1>1¥11111 dtlml ..,.11111 tM llJ,.•AtOll •c:T OiJ TNE VlaTUt ANO SCHKk I.IT'S BE FRl.ll.Y U JOU have new fM'iShb«I • know or·~ ~ to our ma, pleaN ~ u. -tblt "'e mq ect4nll • ~ ~ko«M and Wp them to beconw acquainted ln their now 1urroundlllp. 0.C..tld. Mid ...,.,, alt ,...ilnct ID n11 lllfm, • --. 1'11 w.ICflMll Dr ....... -HOT!Ce 11 Hl:RSIY· GIVEN ID Ille wlllt ,._ ~ry ~ 1f1 11o1 otlkt STAT OP C:ALl....,..Nl.A POii N__. IMCll. Clfll crWllDrl el 1M .._.. -""" OICldttrt ti fN ~of "" 1bW1 lftltlltd CIU'f, DI" TM• COUNTY OP OllAfilOI ._;;;;. _. U. ' ""' "' ,..,..... 111• dlll'llt agetMI -'° """"9111 ........ wltll mt ""'"'"" ..... .,.,.. """"""'° Ol'll!M COlll OIUy """ Mlcl llltClflflt -,...,.,... to flit """'' voucl'lln, i. trll _,..Wfnell tt tM ltw fllOTICI O" H&ul ... Of" l'nlTICHI ,....,.._ • Mii DK"'*" .I, ll. 19: wHll ... ~ _,.,.. In tM tfflC9 ~ 01 IAJINl!:I ICMAG JOHNSON & llOA l"RO-.ATt 0" WJU. MIO \...ST• ....... ~ n af ftll d«tF. .. W11 ....... enHlllO ceurl, W KINMIDY. IS2S ~ ...,,......,.., TSAI OP AOMHlflTUTIOM WrTH 1'7ll . -· ti .,...-,t "*"-¥14111 till ,_...,., ......_.. 91K11. C.nlerftla ftl,U, -.t11et1 h TH• WIU. ANlllUtlD • Y'IUC._., ,. ""~ .i ""oHtc. ""'o&1c1 o1 ~.,"" ...-.i,.11111 lfl e..111e o1 MAAY E, MA•w:s, °'""""'· P\IBUC NOTICE of Mr.._,..,., ~llAtfft A. Ol..DMEN 6 t11 fMltln ~IWnl! ID 11M1Mlftl11 11111 NOTICE IS HIREIY OIVCM illlt KAYl------------- DAVID .. TINOt..llt. us. Or"lf!Ol A-. ~. WttNft ..,. Mllfttltl .,,.. "" HAYES HOWELL .,.. "* hlrllfl • .,.... •ICT"IOUI 1111111ns ~ ..... ~ twlP• """"di IS 1111 fll"lll JIWllUMorl tf 11141 -~ !loll IOt P,_.Hi Gf Wiii lfld Jw ISWllW;I "'-ti~ ol lllt .... ,................ D.-PIO I 11111; n , Im. !I~-~ ............. _·-... ~_... ...... Tl• ---ITAT:--NT - """"' ... ""'""' ti tl'll ..... JANI; CHI' AMl.l(A -· -........,, WO!llt1 twr "'°"* ..,., 1111 NATIONAL TllUIT ANO IW1fllr O«tkul.,.. lfld ttllt 1111 H-Ind at: Writ~ ol,,... fWllol, IAVIHOI MIOClATIOH pl-=rot ,_.,,,. "" -llh""" • INOUITfillAI.. tll:Okalt.S 11•1 Dlflil DIM•• 'S. lt1' •y1 l"lillf """"'"' IOI' J_,o, t "Im. 11 t :OO •·"'-• h1 tM litltlMM Clfll" Dflyt, """ 111. Jf'ffFw .,._ 11 ''*"""' If "" ..... tf iM C#'f .i 111 Cl'lk Centtr Drlw W.1, Jn Jlfl!fl TilliMM ~ • 'Ill .. ~,:;7 J. ICUTT, Trwt OHkW ~ of ~ Mt. J f/f ..._ Clll'°'1111 """'- MARCI J. IMOIRIOLL tlliOW t1M*1 **""' "" CllY' of ltnlt ,,.,,., Ctllfwm1. ~ ......,..., ~ c.u•n111 nMI SI. ....... 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JWrllfrl t. t. 1m "°'"" 1m ...,,. ~ 11. 11. ,, 1t1t :uv.11 ,,,,, • • , MlW'i \ .. • . • I .I J - l DAILY PILOT ·LA, Buffalo Mix It Up, We st Out BUFFALO -The Los Angeles Lakers. leaving guard Jerry \Vest and forward Happy Hairston at home to recuperate from Injuries, open a two-game road trip against the Buffalo Braves here tonight. West. 34-year-old All-Pro. suffend. a alight hamstring muscle pull during a practice Sunday aod Halrston's strained tight kne€l. is slill bothering him. ·The Lakers game will be broadcast over radio station KFI (640) tonight. It will be a delayed broadcast. The Lakers, who play in Baltimore Wednesday night, expect West lo return to action Friday night when the lean\ bosts Phoenix at the Fonun. "It's just a slight hamstring pull ," general manager Pete Newell . said of West's Injury. "The doctor felt at would be Hetter if he stayed here for treatment rather than risk a~ravation in the cold weather back east.' It was not known , however. "'hen Hairston Y.'i\I return to the lineup. "The leg has not responded like u•e hoped;. it hasn't straightened out yet," N'ewell said . Fry !\lakes Move IRVING. Tex. -Hayden Fry, who lt:d Southern Methodist to a tie for second place in the Soulhwest C.Onference this season only to be fired , is the new head footb811 coach at North Texas State Uni- versity. His ttppointment to succeed Rod Rust at the Denton. Tex., school 'A'aS to be an- nounced here today in a 2 p.m. news con- ference at Texas Stadium. where the Eagles played their football games in 1972. ' Fry, \1•ho coached at SMU 1 l years and compiled a 7--4 record in his final season. applied for the North Texas job after he lost out last week in a race for the head coaching job at Purdue. Lefebvre to Japan • TOKYO -The Lotte Orioos of Japan's Pacific League said Tuesday former Los Angeles Dodgers' second baseman Jim Lefebvre Is to arrive in Japan by Feb. l to join the Orlons' baseball training c"amp ·in Kagosblma, southern Japan. ' The Orlons said the 28-year-old Lefet>- :vre, the National League Rookie of the ·Year ia 1965. agreed to the Orions' offer in a telephone conversation Tuesday morning. . · n>e Qrions declined to dtSClose con- tents of the contract but it was estimated 'Lefebvre wUI receive about $75,lXX> a tear. Japan's highest paid baseball play:?r. Shigeo Naguhima of the Tokyo Yomiurl Gianls, reportedly makes $146,,100 a y~ar. It was also reported that the Or1ons will pay $100,lXX> to the Dodgers as trading money. I Bowl Coaches Named MOBILE. Ala . -'Ibe New York Jets' Weeb Ewbank will coach the South team and the Buffalo Bills' Lou Saban y,·ill direct the North squad In lhe 24th annual Senior Bowl all-star football game in A1oblle Jan. 8. SelecUon of the veteran professional roaches was announced by the Senior Bowl committee Monday nl&ht. Ewbank v.i ll be retumln~ for his seventh tizn~. Saban for his third. Rae Trojans' MVP LOS ANGELES -Quarterback ~fike ,Rae .... ·as named wirmer nf the Mike l'i\cKeever Memorial Award as the L'niversity of Southern Cslifornla's most valuable player Monday night a.t lhe Tro- }ans annual a\\·ardll dinner-dance. Center Dave Brown received three 1wardll -mOst inspirational player, mOflt playing time and highest grade point av!rage among seniors. Named outstandl~ back was fullback Sam 0..Mingham, who also was hono~ed as a ~aplain along with defensive tackle John Grant. Grant and Young Yi'ere honored '.is out•anding li.nemeu for the nation's top- rank"ed football team. Webster Rehired NEW v6RK -The New York Giants or the National Football League rehired Head Coach Al ex Webster Monday for the 1973 season. No contract terms Yi'ere disclosed . tt will be the fifth one-year pact for Webster, 41. who brought the Giants OOck from their diaastroos +.10 record of a year ago to an U mark this sea!On . lie aid no chana:cs In his coaching staff arc planned. I Reade rs' t ilot Corner ,.; I [)elr Mr. Wh te, Tbb ts Just a note to think you and four sports staff, partlcuJarly Mr. Roger CarllOO, for your floe coverage of our Joali.11 tea!TI· l The lilJlllon Viejo 11/lh Sdiool fl'llAh i.-,... • .,., pn>Ud ol lhtlr ... ~plllbm"111 this ,....., and """' 'Proud beyood wordl kl ... their own °"..., and tbolr te1111 In print. In thf.t day wllen UeploC b071 In othletics i.-.. ttruale your 1111 and - paper art a tretnenaOu1 hiJp ln the are:• ol Ille &icfdlebact·Vtlley. '!bank you 1galn Oil bohOll ol 111)11tll and the tiam. ' BID Slllltb Fn>oh COICh f _,... I'll Be Tougher Ne~-t LOS ANGELES (AP I -Tommy Prothro thinks he knows what y;ent wrong wllh his l.os Angel~ £tams foot· ball team and hopes he won't be the third National rootball League roach this season to be fired after a losing effort. The head coach of the 6-7·1 l:tams said Monday .. l reaUy don't know." when ask- t!d if nc·d be back for a lhird year with the club, }!e's on a five-year, S00,000 1..•on- tract. .. I really don't know y;•h.at "''ill happen but I think 1'11 be baclt. next ytar.'' Prothro &dmlned that llklag over 1 team that was already a winner wtder George Allen. was most difficult. "roltowtng a winning coach was som1..otblng I told myself I'd neVer do," said Prothro, who came to the cli.lb after several successful seasons at Ofegon Slate and UCLA. Allen's system was what Prothro in- herited and he admitted, ''Yes, there were some players wbo misted some of my techniques. Maybe r wun't noal)I tnOlllh but I'll be IOUghe< nut year. We have only two hlttua on lbe defenll•e Wiii and Ill& othen ""' juat grabbers." He dld.n 't name names. Ooe major probl<m !or Prothro WI se~ Was at quarte.rbeck. Roman G1brlel's .. rly seasoo col· lnpood luna lollowed by 1evere tendionlUs llmlled the Rams· ollenslve plans. And that •as a major blow since Prothro openly admits he's a ."blg -play" coach. With Gabriel unable lo throw Ill& long GEORGIA TECH'S GLENN COSTELLO CBELOWl FALLS ON LOOSE FOOTBALL. Svm·e Talks About Winning Title in '73 SAN'· DIEGO (AP ) -Harland Svare. like the rest of the San Diego Charge rs' organization. has a strange sense or lim- ing. Owner Eguene V. Klein set the style with his timing of a mldseason an- nouncement that he had hired Svare to coach tile Chargers for another five Na- tk>nal Football League seasons. ··1 made the decision," Klein said, "while riding down the elevator at halftime when we were trailing. 24-0." The Qiargers players followed the pat- tern, cons.istenUy rolling up huge ya rdage totals between lbe 20-yard lines before fumbling, missing a field goal or throw- ing an interception. Then on the season's final dny . while the Chargers were stumbling lo a 24-2 1083 to Pittsburgh and their first last- place finish, management aMowiccd tbnt ticket prices would go up next year. So in a way it wasn't surprislng Lo bear Svare talk Monday about 1973 cham- pionship hopes for a team th.at finished with a 4-9-l record in his first full season as coach. "I don 't think we're discouraged," he said. "I sllll think our team feels very IJlucb that we are a cbampklnship caliber team. We're not there yet. but we do think we can do it nelt year." Altl:r' this aea900, Svare may be ~nk­ ina on the ~w of averages. The ChBtgers twice had fumble" run back for kMl& tcMachdowns. three times in· curred penaltle! while !he opposition wns mi~sing a field goal -once It 1."0st them a touchdown in a tw~point loss -lo!!l two games In the last two mlnut1?1, bo1h times dominating the statistics, anU even lost a chBoQe to .win a game when on Oakland' player apparently talked an of- ficial out of as sess ing an ungportsmanllke conduct penalty on the finnl pl.1y. San Diego turned the boll ovl'r 48 !Imel\, losing 20 rumbles ond t .I 111· tercepUons. Quarterback John llodl. perhaps the NFl:s bet in 1971 . wn s booed lhl1 year, and Svare himself wi:i.s the target of deriAlve "five more years" chants lrom tho stands. Vet the San Otego derenst was murh Improved after a rash of trades that brought Deacoa Jooes, Llonel Aldridge and others. The nmnlng game, d~plte the obseoo-· of l>Jane Thomas and the dlJCOntent or Mike Garrett , wa9 the team's be .. t s\n('(! the days ot Paul Lowe ind Keith Lincoln. In addition, n~ext rent's schedule 1~ con· sid<!rably toll • "I don 'tftlli y know whnt wc'ro going to do to cut down tu.movers, hut we're ..,r»g t~ ~clhlng ." Sva" ••id. "We'U • drills In getllni the ball t~ > y, and we'll work Villh pt'Ople ""° ~ breaklns pau n>11tt1 orr. . /"' • Liberty Bowl Thriller 3rd String Quarterback Too Muc)J for Cyclones f.1EMPH1S !AP) -Jim Stevens, who started the 1972 season as a thlrd«rlng quarterback at Georgia Tech and ended it by engineering a heart-thumping 31-30 victory Monday night over Iowa State in the Liberty Bowl, said he just hoped to be a reserve. "I just wanted to do my job and establish myself as the No. 2 quarterback behind Eddie," Stevens said as he un- dressed in Tech's dressing room after the game. Stevens. t\\"O was named the game's oul3tanding player for throwing three touchdown passes, was referring to Tech's regular quarterback for m~t or the season, Eddie McAshan. who \\'as suspended prior to the Yellow Jacket'>' last game of the regular season for miss· ing practice. ··1 just tried to do my best ," he said. "Really, I was looking forward to nert year when I knew I'd have the chance to be No. I." Tech. \\'hich finished 7-4-1. scored what proved to be the decisive touchdown with 11 :28 left in the game on a ,three-yard pass from Stevens, a &-foot·!, 190-pound junior, to third·stri~ fullback Kevin McNamara. Bobby Thigpen kicked what turned out to be the winning ertra point. But Stevens later fumbled as he pitch· ed out, Iowa State's Larry H. u n t recovered on the Tech 33 and seven playi; later Cyclones quarterback George Amundson rifled .a five.yard TD p85S to !lplit end Ike Harris, ntakir,g the score ,,J_ 30 'A'ith 1: 36. On a two-point conversion attempt, A1nundson. bothered by Tech tnd. Beau 8ruce. hurriedly threw beyond lbe end zone and the sp>re sLood. ktrt ~ Qfftft,.. 10"'' Mtf' Gto•;I~ 1K h 1ect'I -FG, Bo~ltty U I• 1 I " l ' -J) 1 1 -JI IOW• -H•••'-· ,, , ... from Amul\dMWI (Golcl- 1"'1 •1<•1 lowt -MOO•R, 1 r1111 !Ooed[lt'I kl<kl Ttet'I -11~. t .,..,, ,,...,.. lttvt10s lkkll 11111.'dl 1.ch -l'wtk,,.., u '*" l~1trcts1•lool 41,.,...._ ·~· tow1 -J°"", '3 ltlO;ttf •th.Im 10-lwi kkk I ,...,. -HHIV. :rt otH ffOllll llnWll rThir811"' '"'' •owt -FO, Goldi...41 TIC~ -M<"tl'lltl't, ~ p.t.r ff-.m I,..._ f1hle- Ptfl kk kl • ...... -"'"'*" J .... "'91'11 AlftU!ldtofl (I*• ltlltod\ 11.11..-dlt'let -it.ft!, llatlttkl fl!f"ll dowrit II 111~tt -Y••°" PftUll'IO .,.,Ol llth,irn y1•G1 P11M. :=In loll V•ll:ll P11M1Hrtd 01. Ttcll ._,It, 11 11 ···1· ... !" " " II I 11.1i.1 I0·1'·J ,.,, .... I I . .. h1-ivld11~I L1•a..- •w1t111t -IOWI ii.it. 11.mll!ldtoll l>Jt, ~· lf-.IOJ c;.oitil1 f1t11 , kt\1111111 13·•· Hlf~ II·• llte~ -lowt l!lf., H1rrl1 ._ .. , ~ "'51 ~I• Tfdl, On!\ ~. •~t"'°" J.". P1ttlllt -loWt 51~14 .... ,....,...,_ lf.1'<' 1$.J Ytn:IU GIO'<alt T«ll, ttev-12-1~1. IP ytr:f .. JOHNNY MAJORS ''Stevens executed almost perfectly."' Tech coach Bill Fulcher 1aid after the game. "He was super, superb, whate ver you want Lo call it." He hit 12 of 15 passes for 157 yards and scrambled twice to keep Tl'Ch drives alive though he netted only nine yards ru.hlng. lowa State's Johnny Majors. who ao- nounced after the game he will take th(! head c1><1chlng job at Plttabl.lrgh, said !here was never any doubt aboUt a:oing for two after the Cyclones' last touchdown. "On lhe play selection, I talked with An1und10n, the coaches ln the presa box, the coachet on the atdeline and the receiver we Intended to throw to. ''We thouJ;ht It· would work si nce Amundson11 run• on the sprint.out had worked and we tbou&ht the ~lv•rs would get open because they were giving him room to the outtlJe. The receiver WAS covered momentarily and the rush was a IUUe betttt than wt had expected ... ./ College Cage Poll ' ., Y ear--Prothro 1 -Ind nol [ut etlOUlh lo be tlto sprln1""'1 qulrttrbaclt PlolM> Ukea, Los AllJeleS ,_ lo running. •1wa will take a long, hard look at oune.lve1 ••• a look at every phase of • our football operuUon," a11iys general manager Don Klaetennan &fter Sunday's :11-11 ~io. lo Dttmlt. Meanwbtl~ owner Carroll Roeenbloom aald: "Prothro ls an ercellent eo1ch but he dotln~ have the right at1lstants." Thus Prothro's status is sttll Wlkowu and hard to iUtsl. Meanwhile, flnal aeaaon 1taUstlc1 co. finned two new atars oo the Loi Angeles roaler, rookie running batk J I m lleJVIJen and punter Dave Chapple. Bertelsen gained 58 t yant. rushlag on 123 oarriea, returne<I 16 punts lor 2112 yards, caUlht 2:tl pa11e1 for 331 yanl> ud returned four kickoffs lor aa yards. ,,,., means he a~eraged bttter than aeven yards every time he touched the bell. Chapple won Ill& Natlonol Football Conference puntini: title with an average ol 4U yanls per kick . Say Southland Coaches New Foul Rule Causing Problems LOS ANGELES (AP) -Southern caufomia's basketball coaches say the new non-&booting foul rule is causing problems but that It Is basically a good idea. The rule states that on the first six non shooting fouls in each half, the team that is fouJed takes the ball out of bounds rathef than shoot free throws. 'Ibe rule was instituted to speed up play and reduce the parade to the foul line. "I had hoped Ill& rule would speect up the game ." said U>yola coach Dick Baker. "But bealuse of all lbe fights on the court last year, some of the offici!ls are not watching the ball oo the fouls. They make sure the players are settled down. That doesn't speed the game up at all." Coach Bob Boyd of Southern California said he bad "no real strong feeling one way or the other" aboul the rule. "Most people seem to have accepted it because they have heard that possession of the ball is worth 1.5 points. ",But I have seen some slight con- fusion. A player will get fouled and he'll go to tbe free throw line. I haven't seen any excessJve fouling . though." • Coach Bob Miller of Cal State (Los Angeles\ disagreed. ..I was in favor of the rule last year but this year, now that the rule is ln. the first four fouls of every game have been to Raymond Lewis." Miller said Lewis, the natlon's leading scorer with a 34.3 point per game average," is the target. In one game, llo)'mOnd had tlto ball lour Umes in tlto first two minules and 'l1 seainds of the game and the KUY guarding him had four personal fouls. "Any lime Raymond gets Into range of his shot. they foul him because tney kriow he can't score then." ~tiller also noted. "We 've heen to the foul line only Ill times in sl:t }lames. Last year we went to the foul lirte 30 more times at this stage of the sen son." DiCk Fichtner of Occidental College said the rule probably ''has made my players start thinking subsconsclously that free throw shootina: Is less im· portanL Last year, we hit 7' percent Trom the line as a team. This year, with the same playen, we're hitting JUlt 62 percent. Dolphins Favored STATELINE, Nev. -Harrah's Tahoe Racebooit listed the unbeaten Miami Dolphins Monday as 11-point favorites over Cleveland In one of the National Football League pleyolf openers next weekend. . • The Dallas Cowboys and Snn Francisco 49ers -were rated even, while the Pittsburgh Steelers were made one-paint favorite! over the Oaklan<t Raiders and the Washington Redsklna wtiie made 44:- polnt picks over the Green Bay Packen. Oakland ls et Ptttllbura:h and Dallas at San Franclaco ln Saturday games. Green Bay goes to Wai hlngton and Cleveland is at Miami on Sunday. ''We're IJletlding as much tlme pn1c- ticing shooting free lhrow.t but mayhe the rule Is making for some laxness men· tally." Baker said most o( thf first sir fouls In his Loyola team's games bave been under the basket ''And that's no good because we have' only one out.U-t»unds play." , Miller said he doesn't want his team fouling al all early in the aame. "We try to conserve our fouls. I tell our players if they get more than seven fouls ln a ba!f, they're goon.a work out the next dly evto . if it's thelr birthday." Coach John Wooden of UCLA has said he Is opposed to the new rule, which be calls "the profit foul." because he 1ays it could lead to vicious intentlonal fouls: when players are close t.o the basket. USC's Nash Quits Squad; 2 Others Back LOS ANGELES (AP) -Afonroe NRSh. the man around whom University ol Southern California coach Bob Boyd had hoped lo build another winning b.ukolhall team, hasn't contacted Boyd and ap. pari!ntly has quit the team. That was Boyd's analysis of the sit\Ja.. tion Monday as he gave the status of hla lhree temporarily suspended forw1rdl - Nash, Bruce Clark and Clint Chapman. "I have not heard from ~looroe Nuh and until I hear otherwise. 1'11 have to assume he has qult the team," Boyd s.9.id. He added he wait a bit mlffed that friends of Nash hadn 't Lold him what wu up. The problems began last week In Tuscaloosa, Ala., when the thrte playera mls.sed a bed check and were suspended. They did not play Jn lhe Trojan Clu8lc, won by Southern Cal with victories over Auburn • .,,., and Purdue, 79-71. "In making a decision like lhal," Boyd said of the suspensions, "you try to avokl sensationalism. All that happened WIS thal they mlssed what we consider a very realistic curfew. I have talked to Bfuce and Clint and they feel that tht> problem is over with.'' Nash. however, may be the key man to this Trojan team. As a freshman, the 6- foot.S forward scored 14.8 points per game, grabbed 131 ftbounds in lt games and hit 50.6 percent of hJs noor shots. Back operations tQe past two seasons have slowed him but he has played weU ln siX garn~ll for Southern Cal this year, averaging 10 points and grabbing 20 re- boundS ln part-time dlity. In announcing that Nash may be gone, Boyd also said he was uncertain about who wou)d start at a:uard when hil Tro-1 jan!I plfy Fordham here Wednesday night. UCI Faces Midwest Foe; Clash With 49ers Looms '-• Coach Tim Tift \1n't contemplating any changes In his probable starting lineup for an e11rly week engagement with Cen· tra.l Iowa O>llege tonlght in Crawford Hall (I). But It doem't mean he won't make a change or two before Friday night when the Anteaters rctum to bla:·tlnte play In the four-team International City c;la::islc At Long Beach Arena against Loyolti Unlvershy 11t 1. Fotlll pol.nt of that thinking II ft.JI Scott Ma&nuson who Ms been sidelined with an alt&clt of bronchitis for the pest two games. Magnuson worftd ailt wit h the Anteaters Monday 1od wlll 'Nit up lor loolghl'• a•mt but wlll not 1tart. "He t .. t 17 pounds while he was •ltt1" Tltt uy1, "We won1t want him Lo Overoo It too earlJ. We are ·~ng be will be rotld)I to play Friday al h ho miaht get In the game tonlt:bt or 11 little whJle." What abOUt Centnl JowaT \ "They run 1 llttle tricky off111se," Tlft 1ay1. ''We'll use a man-to.man defense to try and stop IL" Tift will renew a coaching rivalry with Jack W•lvoonl, formerly al Volley Chrl!· llan High SChool In Artcola. When 1'1ft was at Domingue& High In Cornp!M, his teams pltlJled U-ol w l.lvoOrcl. Central towa ta paced by high-scoring senior for-ward, Dani Snoap {6-3 ). Snoap led the Iowa Conference last y1ar with a 24.5 average per game. Blgaest man In the •tllrtlng Uneup for the visitors is ft..5 earl Nichols at center. He's a 110phomore. Tilt w:tll be startlflg his two •uJ;>C:r sophomore stan. Dave Baker (1-8) lpd Jerry Maras (M) on the front line alobg with Howard Hawkins (8-2). Btkt!r 11 averaging 18.0 points A game for the first six Anteaters contests while Maras is hlt- Ung 15.2 per lilt. · In the backcoutt It will be Harlan Pett and Oary Eubanks. Pe<t I! •Yeraglng tu poln11 1 game. When MagnlllM "'tu"" lo lull action, be wtll probably replace Hawkins ot a lorwaril posllloo. £ubank1 took over at a 1u11rd pott when 11w.ral ol the v1rtlty 1i.i,1 wtr. IUlpe!lded for a pair of gamt1 In llawaU and has rtmalned U:itre 1lnce their return . "H• II do\111 ... odequ•te Job lor UI and . at Um91 11 bettor than that:• Tiii say1. "Richard Clork, 11lhotlgh he Ion'! scor- ing a 1otf has he})>ed 01 a grt11t d~aJ cotn• Ing oil the bench. HO'• doing weU In ie- boundtna l!nd r think ht'• b<tuir oom1n1 orr the bench right now." I .. I ; " . • . . ;, . ' . •, ' . . Ex-Dodger Moon ·Now Cattle Baron SWING "THROUGH" IMPACT • By HOWAAD L. HANDY .... Miii' .......... Wallace Wade MOiOll., • the man who made moon abota famous be.fore advent of the apace program that ha1 1ent men to the moon, Is now a genUernan rancher and com- ing cattle barui In Siloam Springs, ArkanSat. Durinc h~_htyday Jn pro- leaalonal baseball, Moon WU I resldent outfielder with the Los· Ana<Ies Dodaers durlna their days In tho COllleum. SW1ngJng lrom the Ielt aide ol the plate, ba had an un- CllU\Y ability to pop the ball ovv the short lelt lleld .-n tor home runs and In 1959 led tho' llQdgers to tho World championship b e f o re the larpat crowds ever to ·witness World Serles action.\ After 21 years ln pr'o- feS!kmll baseball, Mo o'n retlred to his native Arkansas lit year1 ago tll *°me athltUc director and bueball coach at rural, in- tcrdlminaUonal John Brown University. Dqes ba m)ss tho pro- f nslonal baseball front'! "You can't play IS long II I did and not miss It," Wally said here over the weekend •·hile vhltlng UC lrvioe with the John Brown basi:1tball team . "I miss the playing but I can't say I miss the travel and all thllt goes with that end of It." What aboul Siloam Sprloga ard his re'ldent ~a there? "I like it very much. It b a small school a11d community. I went lookln1t for 1 small · tOwn to Mittie down." When he moved to SUoam Spring• with wlfe Betty and WALLY MOON the couple's five chlldren (one boy, Wally Joe, and fQUr daughter!!) he had a modest 40 acre place with 15 head of cat- tle. .. Today that burgeon i·n g ranch ha.s grown. to 400 acres and 88 bead with part of his holdings iO Ark.ensa! and the rest ln neiftiby Oklahoma. "I really enjoy my farm. It's a great outlet for me in addition to trying tQ make it pay for itself. It's an in- triguing situation. Ther e's always 90mething to do . "Right now it 's a bee.I cattle operation with aome r.egistered animals. ln the next five years, I hope to be into a registered breeding 1ituation. "I've been learning slowly and I'm not a coWbov 11lthou•h we have horses on the ranch. They are foi-pleasui:e and are Retzlaff Calls It Quits, Khayat Fired by Eagles PHILADELPHIA !AP) - "Mr. TOie has given me com- plete authority. I'm golog to run things my way. U tttls baby doesn't grow up U me;ans 1 haven't fed It rlgbt. lt wUI be my fault.11 Pete Retdaff, May, $, 1969. five-year 28-41 -1 record of his predecessor, Joe Kuharicb. Tennessee walking horees. "But when I'm tending cat- tle, I prefer to walk and feel 1 can get more done this way." Looking every bit as trim as the first day he stepped onto e professlQ.nal baseball diamond and carrying the same weight, Moon Is an active out- dooraman even though greying a bit at the temples. lie wants lo get his cattle herd to about 200 head, then 1oln universily preident John ' Brown , Jr. In breeding for show purposes. MQOO became associated with the John Brown group whlle he was playlnlil: In Los Aneeles. Soulhem CJ!llfomia MiUtAry Academy of Long Beacb and r a d I o ·· staUon KGER of "that ctrv are hoidtng!I of the universlt;vo . Pi1oon's colle11e c 0: ach in g rounterpart and a n o t h e r Dod1rer teammate C a r I Erskire. was i?\JeSt soeaker at John Brown's last sports ~n­ quet. Erskine is baseball coach at Anderson, llldl11na Collelle but the two schools h.ave yet to meet on the diamond. Wally admits it mav be a future possibility but aays Erskine will have to bring his team to Arkansas. When he isn't coaching or serving as Rlhletic director. chaslniz cattle that h a v e straved. or servlnit 88 father to his five chil-tren. he flnrls tift'e to be a IO-handic11noer In Tht u,. ol &top-1C1lon photo- araphy has done a arot deal for our understandln~ d the e~f swlna. However, Im 1fr11d it has also caused ua to become too ••position consck>ua.'' When 1 1otf1r sees 1 picture of a protesslon•I at the top ol th• bacMlwln& or at Impact (II· luslratlon #1), he subcon· sciousty assumes that theswin& should finiah al that po>ltlon. I'd like w remind you that the aolf awlrc Is just that •••. • SWING. It 11 fine to obHMI lOOd plaJ,lfl 1! key position$. But (l"'I"' _ yourMH to swine. THROUGH lhoH 'po1ition1, not Jost TO them (llluatralioo #2). •• Newport Falls Sea Kings Bag Easy 62-39 Win R01f and do !lOme bunting and Bv ROGER CARLSON percent and with 4:58 left in fishinS{. Of 1t1t °'"' P1i.t s11H th •· "We 11re locflted 1n a kiOO of Corona, dE;I Mar Hlgh 's Sea e game were uo;:hind 54-21. mount11irinus area end the Kings made bash of host At that point the Sailors had bass flchflill i~ exCf'llent." h~ Newport.• Harbor M 0 n d a y connected on four of 31 from says. "I also like to hunt quail qight, 82=39, In non-league the field for a frig.id 12.9 per- and• go south a tlme nr tWf'l basketball action before 900 cent. each year to hunt ducks and fant . , Corona del Mar, mean.,hile. geese. There are deer around It. W.>s the Worst defeat In -didn't mlnd lht; teinperatu~e a but I don't hufit thein." Nt~'s history IG Corona bit as the red·bot· Sea Kings How h.11s his GolftP.n Eagle8 de1 • M.af as the Sea K~s blistered the nets for 46.7 per-ba~ .. hall te11""' fiired? raced 1o their eighth victory 1n cent (28 of ~ attempts). "We have been in the NAIA a ~D, starts again!lt New-At the half it was 29-17 and re:i.!i"n"I tn11r1~mcnt e11ch of port wbl_Cb dates back to tf!M. the only thing Newport had lhe 1As' twn uc~ .. c;. """ ln•t ill There wasn't any turning going for it was 6-1 forward t~ fi,.!tl i:!R ........ ln the l'i"'h i'l-point and it might have been Jim Swiek. Swick had 10 nlnir !Ast vcar." he recalls. "[ worse ei:cept the Sailors were points. including two of think "''e had'thebest material able to cash in on 23 of !3 free Ne\\·port 's three field goals. e8f'h vear. though.'' throws to keep it somewhat Corona del Mar's J e f f Waflv Joe is R so.ohom{lre at respectable. . , Wharton was the leading .Joh'l Brown anrl plavs the out-Coach Tandy Gillis No. I scorer with 18 counters and field as well as reserve rated (Orange County) Sea cam, out wlth S:58 still to ealchtr. With an el'rollr"'ent nf Kings whipped out to leads of play. Casey Jone~ got his ~st onlv 700 (cn-e<lncation~I \, the 8-1 and 16-5 ln the early going with ·5:20 to go and u Points school ca" ill af!rord to lose an ' and the margin simply eon-· While Matt Keough wis pulled 111thlek with the OOckground of tinued to widen as Newport with 4:49 left and seven poJnt.s. Wallv Joe. shooters were as cold as the A'lCi. it c11n ~r11r<"'lv ,.,,,.'"""' gym1 they are forced to pl8y For a while In the first half. Kt11mpholz Top.CIF Poloist Corona del Mar lil&h's Bruce Ktumpholz has becon1e the fifth Sea Kings water polo athlete tn the last &e!ven seasons to bf na1ned player of the year 1n the Cl~, Southen1 Section. Krumpholz shares the honor with Judd Robin.son of Downey while the co8ch of the year Is Downey's BUI Sexton, who led hlJ Viking! to the CJF clwn· plonshlp. The Orange Coa!lt area's power · lD water polo l.s reflected by four first team selections and all three goalies are tro.m the area . Nam,ed to the flrat team are 'Newport Hatbor'.1 Jeff Duyn- dam. (goalie) and Jim Young, aJor,g with COSta Mesa's Mike Hollflter and Krumpholz. Coata Mesa's Brett Ros! is the secdnd team goalie and Mlsaion Vlejo 'a Dave Dla'mond eamtid third team laurels . · Other area stando.uts Include Newport Harbor's Keith Wall and Edison's Pat Moorhouse on the second team, and Newport's Rocky Beek and Costa Mesa's Dave Lund on the third team. First Team Goalie -Jell Duynd1m (NeW90rt Harbor). Others: Jim Y11unc (Newoort Harbor), ~flke BeJU.i.tr (Costa Mesa). Bl'llce Krumaboli (Corona del M.-rl, ~rry Wahl, l'.'rai't Schwartz (SUMy Kills), Frank C'.orrtin (Lakewood'. A I ~ :c Aguirre (La Puente), Judd Robinson. Robert Arnold , John Shanahan (DownP-v ). Second Team Goalie -Brett Ro11 (Co,:a l\1e1a). Others : Joe ''arqas (Los Altru1), Keith Wall (Newport Harbor), Dor. Solcer (Sunny Hills), Jason Wheaton (Palos Verde:; ) . St.ewart Craft (Cre11centa V11.Ue\'), Cliriton Dodd, Den11is ~1orales (Downey. Pat Mnnrtlou&e IEdlit0nl. Doug Fnintom (Los Amigos ). Gat>rlel Esper a z a lLa Puente). Third Team rASille -Dave Diamond <'-Union Vlelol. Qttu•rs : r.nr'' Anderson (Cabrlllo), Rod Strachan (Foothill \, R fl n Peters {Monte Vista), Pobert J1idge (Downev). Rockv ~k ·(NewnortBarbnr. Don Rf'0 !<:er, ,John lv1111s (L11li::ewrOO\. Da''' Lund. (Co1l11. Mesa), Everttt Uchlyuna (Muir. Tutsda;, Dfef'rllbtr l'f l'f72 DAJLY PILOT 17 64-83 Trlmnpb HB Comeback Trips Griffins Dy HANK WERCR Of ..,. ~•v •ti.t Slaff liuntlngton Beach scrambl- ed to a 84-6.1 victory over a gritty Los Alamitos team to advance to the quarterfinals of UM! Anaheim Holiday Festival basketball tourr.an.t:nt before a small turnout Monday al the Convention C.enter. ~lmer COmbs' winning Oil- e.111 had to iOOJ'f; the final ei"ht poiDtl ln the game to trip Los Alamitos , but they mana;:ed to pull It ~ on a field goal by guard Raul Contreraa rrom 14 feet out with just 23 lle(Onds left in the game. COntreras' shot capped a well played and exciting game whJch wa& close µelrly all the way. , HunUngtOn Beach o(;!f.ned a si:it-polnl lead midway through the second quarter and Los Alamllos gained its aeven- point edge before the final Oilers f1urry -but In bet"M·een the two teams matched shot • for shot. For bQlh teams there was one shooting-star and a lot of helpers. Contreras netted 23 points and Griffins guard Glen Myen had 28. Myers was 11Jghily seMS.tiooal ln the sec- ond period, scoring all but six of hiS team'a 21 points and finishing the half with 19. Contreras, meanwhile, was consistent all night hitting on jumpers from the comers and drives and contributing an ex· ccl\ent noor gome . Trailing 51--49 after three quarters Los Alamitos spurted to a 63-56 lead with 3:20 left In the game on some nifty shooting by Myers and the free throw touch of guard John Moore before the Ude turned in Huntington's favor. Drawing fouls repeate.dly in tr * * the late minute" the Oilers drew closer and when Wynn Neill hit a layup for the first J1untlngton field goal of the period with 2:33 to play, the score was tiJ-60. Single frte th.rows by Jim Weir arid Scott Jl.ankln cut the lead to one with 1:23 to play. Then Los Alamitos tltrt" the ball away twice and took one ill-advised shot before Con- treras' game winning basket The Oilers are scheduled ta play Kenned y, a 12-e1 winner over Foot.hill , in a 5:30 game tonight. Mater Dei In 86~5 8 Victory Rei'tlalra baby not only didn't fiouriah in the next four years, Jt sank Into a comatose 61Bte. The 4GoyeaM)ld Retdaff, once the sports idol of Phllodelphla, an All-Pro tight end. the guy with the All- Ame.rican Image, eave up Monday on his baby -the Philadelphia Eagles. Would you believe that the Eagles undtr Retzlaff were wt1rse than under the much maJ.ilncd Kuharlch? In four yean of Retzlaff, the Birds were 15-37-4. In the season which ended Sunday , Philade,lphla tied for the see- ood worse re~ in the Na- tional Football League--2-11-1. Khayat joined the Eagle"' staff as defensive line coach before the 1971 seasoo. After the team lost its first three gamea last.. year, TO;W tired heod COacb Jerry Williama and promoted Khayat to tbe job. The Eagl .. bounced back to loite A cnt1ch Rn-4 io•1i1..,,;,.; in although the margin was itlr,.,.tor of thf' r~rirhilllio!'I fir i II !"-s ·1• I h swelling, Corona appeared to 11 a ·~ 81 ors were e g t be in trouble due to fouls . • Wol111ce \Vade Moon, either. for 39 from the field for 20.5 Coast Rangers Win; Fa1nily Night at UCI Jones and Keough each had lhree, but they settled down in the second half and managed to escape any further dainage rrbm the refs, Laguna Beach, Dolphins In Tom·ney Play Tonight Retzlaff reslpied as Eagles' general manager. In reality, he got out just Ahead of the copr. Eagles' owner Len Tose probably would have rlred him einyway. Toae bad his knife sharpen- ed yesterday. announcln1 that he had accepted Rttzlafrs resianallon, and fited head coaclt F.ddle Khayat and hll entJre atarf. "I don't want to sound smart, or glib," said the Eagles' owner, "but I want aomeone who can tab t1'e present playe rs and what we get ln the draft and bring \JI a Wirmer." When he took over. Retzlaff said the Eagles had a ireat ~eal of "llCtentlal, a lot of tilent which hadn't been developed, player• out of po.!11· Uon, a ber's phlloJOphy. He promised to tum around lhe GWC, Bucs In Action to finish 5-7-1. and prompted Colin West and captain front of the goal and the the owner to predict his team Brtan Gallagher scored goals Rangers' captain scored to woo.id fight Jor the division ti· to lead the Coast Rangers to a give Coast a 2-0 edge. tle this season. They didn't 2-1 victory over the Phoenix Phoenix: SCQred its lone goal and Khayat paid the price. Saccu C1ub Sunday in soccer late 1n the acUon after the Both Khay at and Retilaff action at Boyaen Park In Rangers had dominated play. were working on twc>year cca-Anaheim. Coach George Harrison was tracta, a ~ward handed out In , Neither team was able lo pleased with the Rangers a dressing room at Yankee score in the first 40 minuet.I of performance, especially th1t Stacfium ln New York after the the game with West breaking of goal keeper Sandro 1'huroel f:a&le.• fml1hed the l 9 7 I the ice on a drlving shot from and Gallagher. season with-a re50Utldlng vie-18 yard!! out. Y' tory over the New · York The ball went back and forth Something new has been ad· Giants. Tose indicated he had with neither team able to ded to UC Irvine home basket- setUed both contract&, but score for the balance of lhe ball ga'lles this season. refuaed to disclose the details. half. Family night!! are in vogue Both Khayat and ReWaU Midway through the second aad &tu.rday night it will be played for the Eagles, helping half, Phoeplx missed on a North Irvine area tamUles the club win the 1980 NFL ti· penalty shot and the Rangers who will be able to wltnesa the tie. Khayat came here-•.as 1 went on offenao. game with JGhn Brown defensive tackle on the taxl Tom Morrison, a former Cal Unlver1it,v of Arkansas for a squad. Later he played with State (FUiierton) star. drilled minimal f2 rate for the entire ' the Washington ReilSklns and a perfect pau to Gallagher In family. Unlahed hfs career w 11 b Families li\•lng in North BMlon In the American Foot-Irvine need onlv to ldentlf;vo ball Loague. He coached with Basketball themselves at th• uc1 ticket New Orleons before joining window to get the special dl1- the Eagles' staff. count family rate of $2 for the Ml•M SCH.OL t' Rel!latf'Was p u r c'hlili 1 e d AMMI"' ttw_,,.,, en ire group. r Detro K~°!2· FOOlhlU ~ ,,. rom lt Jn 1958 for the 111:'~~ l."'"" ... "'°' A1e1¥11101 tJ ,- Golden West and Orange tJOO waiver prtoe. A fullback ~.':f~.n· ~""'~:\t• Ticket• for the UC Irvlne- Coa.lt colle1ea retW"n to at South Dakota State, he was !~1,_,,y~•11~1.vr~py::'11. Tr' Loyola ooener In the lntema- baskttball action tonl;ht In 8 converted into an end and In 0«i:,-., <·A'::O..., &tonal City tournament at o'clock Hits. 11 year• caught 452 peaaes for • r11.1 it. ':&.r Long Beach Arena Friday The Rustlen rrom Golden 7,412 yards. Ht rell~d the w..n .. , c11".oml~" 113, Por11.i111" night are currently on 1ale at Wett with a 5-5 &ea.son r«Ofd tilth best pass receiver In u1•h •"-D•Pat~ioi the UCJ athletic office In foUowlng a Ion 10 Puadena, lea~ hil:tory. _ otn~r n, st1nfor0 ,, Crawford Hall. bolt tfie O\aiman jw\lor u:,~~!\1~fll:~~~~'ir11 l'·..!2 The four-team, two-day af- varilty while OCC'1 Plratu ~N...,,-~~&~~'1':~1~,i H fair Will nlatch htl~t Cal State trajtl to Charity. Lions Battle ~ i·lll'~~ .• _,,. "" M u(lonl g Beach) and l.ong Island ·i ·ne Bua, alao 5-5, have viii••· ~"Y •t n ver1lty 1gt1ln8t uch other A___, -MT~ !, ~.Min, II Jn th nd Fri' -~four In I row ..viLlt the Lak -"~f. •'*1~~ .. e HCC same uay lJtt defc1l a , .. 71 setblck b> ewood Five 14 . .~~ • C• 'sl. l~~n,:..11etl night at ' with the wlnners O'l!Uey. ,_ si,~t.""' 11 • .,. • meeUn~ S'turday for the , &th Qt-anp Coast and SM-· Weaimlnlter High'• LiOnll ~P:I""' ' , i:;i:' ~7.,~ championship. dlebect (S.7) hive a•mes set try to "get lntc the winning eol· ~-~. t ;_•. ,, Tlck,t1 are $3 for rtserved Wednetday night. OCC treks orM t,~ili·' " IA se"ta nnrl a for Jenera! ad· to COiiea• of the Dttcrt while umn tonlgltl whell Ibey play " ;:w miaal.,,. Th< UCI nWe< •111 be s.ddieback hosts Cyprus at hoot to th< Lak•-Lanoen optn from a to 5 dally thl• M1aaim Viejo Hlfh. Jn a non-leque bultttl!lll Ult.' ;;;i;fiif;lif,'jlii;;l'r..ii;i~i;ii~iii.:lii:::ri:;;;/t.;i.'\'lii;--"-...i~iiiii.;,._,_ ___ .,. Jn othtt JtmlDr . coll<a• ll rats Wider way at 1.11 vllltl Son Dioco Mt1a l'rlday are M for !he yOllfli -· pmei lbla ""'· Goldtn Wtst Coach llollll &nctlwn'a hootl GRAN PRIX nltllt and I rl Y I I I to The leading _.,. fct Southwestern 8atlll'l•Y evtn· Wtllmlnstet ii Gary Andrtwa, Inf. OCC lJ at l)oma !iltur<lay whq hi• aveht1ed IU points ,nl,lllt 11al!lll mJ Hondo. In fOljf pmN. "' 22" ri'f?.-;~:_:.;,:;f: I . o ...-"'P"'L="'s=--es__,..,,,J-11 -1 ,..~ -Ji.T".T:" ..... -... M ... lfl. ~0. lNCLliOl:rn'iA"lr. :t"l.:;.~ I Mi. w . .i Hore i:=,. d't.2-~• .-DAiii ROSS ·PONTIAC . . 118 W, lllt!!Jt.,.;."lii.-11 · "1lfil Ctr. ""_.,.,~Mr~. c;..,. ... , -& "°"!I.__ i.¥OI ltOa 1 ~IDllllCT--P4ClOIY A\ITMM!Zlt OIALll I( "•Ml M ..... SW. f .. 1 .0. 'rout ... , ._ Jj llM.'"""-ti• • t.a e Mt. • .._... ly ,,.,., -h-. 11 .. 4 ''Oii.iT" UMtoN. "°'-& PltD DOIAN -14MOIJ 11~~..-._;,;;;,,;;;;;~~~~--I lt was the ninth straight win for undefeated Corona d~ Mar, still far otf the school repord of 24 ln a row set in the 11167-68 campaign when BW Bloom's quintet breezed to a 23-2 HaSOn. Prep Mat Results _,._,. __ FRIE SUPER BOWL TICKETS I 'f ORDER YOURS TODAY! , 1000 "eautlful Stick-on LABELS Perwnallaed • Stylish • Efflde11t Ord•r Ftr Yeurfflf or a Friend· M1y b• ua•d oft •11••l•it•• 11 r•turn eclclr11s ltb•lt. Al10 very heitJy •• lcl•ntific1tion leb•l1 for m1rliin9 p•rson1I iftm1 such i t. boolri, t•cordt, photo1, •+c. l1b•ls ftick on 9le11 incl mey b• used for m1rliin9 hom• cann•d foeid lt•m1. All lab•I• •r• print.d with 1tylith Vo9ua type on fine quelity whitr 9utnm.ed p•p•t. , PILOT PRINTING 1 -----------------------~ ! , • • -· r , I " .. " ". " ,,, . , I ,., I • I I I • I I -... .- t_a DAILY PILOT Fultion Island G1·eat W este1~n's . Newport Beach civic and business leaders Jo.ined the of· ficus ol Great Western Sav- inp and Loan Association Monday al ribbon euttJng etremonie1 openi/lg the bank's Businessman Eyes Sale Of 9 Stores SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Negotiations TePortedly are underway for the sale of all nine San Francisco area White Front stores to 39-year-old businessman Paul Maris. "li1y accountants are now sitting down with those of While Front," Maris said. "If the deal clicks, I hope to run all White Front stores here by Jan. 15." Maris, who said he also hoped to buy two White Front stores outside the area, said the stores would continue lo sell g e n e r a I merchandise, "mostly hard goods." Interstate Corporation, New York-based parent company of the White Front chain, an- nounced last week it will close 21 of its '11 West Coast stores after the first of the year. A native of Priladelphia, Maris owns an electronics firm in Kobe , Japan, and fonnerly owned radio stations in Cincinnati and Cleveland, Ohio. A year ago he purchased the Alvin Duskin Co., a gar- ment manufacturing f i r m here. 011~"" rousn 1? '[Htl r f I [ l'HO"l SI 11\'ll'[ '"< GRUBB & ELLIS REAL TY FUND Ill • fu s.ri• bi 72 e fq Aetter<td Ced. Hew e ......... IHKtlo• • u.ltM U.Wllty e D5"nffk_... -4 Pr•,...... .._ ......... GRUBB & ELLIS COMPANY 4300 CAMPUS DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH J:Jt '·"· -W1 t a1My, Doc. 11 -4' n~. he. If Sp1c1 it l l"'ittd Off•Mn9 Clrcul•tt will b• dhtribut•d 11 011 ,,..,;.,,.,. Cfllf c.n.ct ,.. .... ••'""' (7l4) 557.7900 'fWt ; ... t1..t c•Mtitv .. 111 oft1r to ,,I/, Th• afft1 it m•d• by tlio Offorl11t 01"C11f1,'ont.,. Th• 1•1• of v11lt1 It ll111lt1d to itwttt•rt wl!o ,,,·,.,J4.11k of C•liforni•, who''' II Y'''' of •9• •nd """' • •of wd oiclvth<1 of 0~11Jty 11'1 th1lr rt1ld1l'ICI, ho111• f,r11 !tl!l119t ., •~ol>!IH of ot 11111 $20,000. 1116 who1• h1dh•ld111t 9rou h1cOMO lc-WH wltfi 1pov11, jf .ll'lfrrl.dl It •t lt11t 120,0001 or ,.,.,11fa11 of''"' ll'lcOmt wl<.ot• not WOf'th 11 •t l•••t 1100,000, o:rcludv• of .q11lty IJI tttldonc.-. homo f11tf1i1hlf19t or 111to111obll1t. . ~ . .. COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST OVER THE COUNTER • " ~ .. • l. . -.... It I .. .. : !- , ' ' ; I '·. ' I Monday's Closin~ Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange Li st • .. I ' Briefs ) • t • DAILY PILOT . 1 ,. Tahoe Site Proposal .Gets Studv .; SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -A prop!Oal for f e d e r a l ac- quisition of 10,000 privately oWned acres In the Tahoe Basrn has been announced jolnUy by the Fibc•board Corp, and the U.S. Forest Servl1.-e. The deal, proposed by the San Franclsco ba~ forest products company, involves about S10 mill\on through Forest Service exchange pro- cedures. It would increase federal ownership in lhe basin from 115,000 acres to about 125,000 acres. Aqpproval by the Forest Service and Agriculture Secretary Earl Buti is re- quired prior to acquisition of ( ECOLOGY) the 10,000 acres. located near the north end of Lake Tahoe in Placer County. The tract in· eludes key land from the Nevada Hiie near Brockway westerly to the Truckee River. ' e l\'ew A9etaq1 SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Ronald Reagan bas sign- ed legislation creating a state Department or Transportation. The bill also orders the department to come up with ' new state transportation plan. The department. which will come into being July 1. 1973, will combine the present departments of Public Works and Aeronautics and the Of. flee of Transportation Plan- ning and Research. Reagan sakl the plan "Will give California a coordinated transportation system that will better serve all the people now and in the futlD'e." The bill was sponsored by Assemblyman Wadie Oeddeh (0.Chula Vista ). e R-d l\'b:ed LOS ANGELES CAP) -The city Planning Commission has handed the controversial Laurel Canyon Freeway a death blow. The commissioners voted, 4- ·1, to cut tbe freeway from the city's master plan of highways and freeways. Both the.Legislature aDd the City Council had ruled against the proposed route. but under lhe city charter only the Plan- ning Commission can change the city's masler plan. The freeway would have ex- tended from the Golden State Freeway to the proposed Slauson Freeway. e Danger Cited BELMONT (AP) California's tasty and scarce Dungeness crabs might be. p;cking up disease -carrying microbes from s e w a g e - polluted coastal waters, says a United Nations consultant on marine pollution. Dr. Rudolph De Girolamo. cbalnnan of the College of Notre Dame biology depart- ment in Belmont, said pollu- tion might weaken the era~· resistance to disea$e and thus decrease their numbers. The extent or shellfish con- tamination, De Girolamo said, should be investigated ,lJn. mediately to determine If a human health hazard exists. e SmO!J Chamber RIVERSIDE (AP) -A smog chamber for use in air pollution control research bu been put into operation at UC Riverside. The $281.llOO facility. the university says, ls the first of its kind. It Is designed lo simulate conditions In polluted urban atmospheres. A major use will be lo test the effect In the at- mosphere of existing and ~ poeed laws reg ulating automobile a n d stationary IOOrce emissions. SEIKO :::: ,, .... .Jlo,,Ja JEWELERS S•••fl'1 olMI Vo111 C.11+.r H11"111111 .. ,. looclt ,, ... l.lff"tt & MoMI ,, •• 2211 I 1..-.._;~---·· -" I l/N·8ROOK Christmas Special! BEANBAG CHAIR ''fhe Perfed Off; for Anyo'ne-Any Rooml'' •Top quality leatherette beanbag in your choice of colors -just right for relaxing, • Pick one up for each member of the family-they'll love 'eml SOLD ELSEWHERE FOR $19.99 WOWl$9!J SAVE $10.001 1/2" Thick Regulation Size PING-PONG TABLE TOP • Two piece table top-mokes into regulation size: 5 ft. x 9 ft. top. •Tough particle board with official green finish-invite a Chinese foreign exctiange student for dinner! -REG, $8.99 $599 SAVE $3.001 • DIE-CAST ALUMINUM MOUSING fllll NO-YllT .... MIDGET CHRISTMAS "Set of 15 Assorted Mini~ture Lightsl" • Colorful, assorted bulbs have petal-type reflector. • Push-in replaceable lamps- complete with two spare ·lamps. • If one goes out, the rest stay lit. " ••• HANDl.I STAYS COOL l SAFm LOCI CONTROL YAL'lt: 3" IALI .. ICa -· THIOHH -., DIC. ~. 1972 .-m• 9055ClllfWAVL ----PWAJ LIN·-WILL A -MONDA,T, DIC. 21, atallTUI JNIT "' ••• INTAKES 11with A Free Motor & spit111 • It's from Char-Broll", so you know It's the best -and the best bar-b-q buy this year! . • Eliminates wood-carrying, lighter fluid, charcoal and messy ashes forever! • Complete with post, no-tilt base & permanent lirlquets -AND a free motorized rotisserie!! • We stack everything you need to Install it yourself. REG. 5109.99 WAWf SAVE 140.001 nv • DIAMt:Tll I-~ IUSTPROOF I . ••sr I Outdoor 4-Pc. llLUMIMA TED NATIVITY SET • 18" blown plastic,.3 dimensional figurines in glowing colors-complet~ with full-color lithograph carton used as background. • Cl Y, electric interio~ illumination-U.L. listed. • Share the true spirit of Christmas with.your fr iends and neighbors. A $5.99 VALUE WOWI SAVE $2.00 .. No .. 1373 ' • ' • , • • ' -' " -· •I( -, • H ' • •• •I I • ' .. '. ' t; •• ' ... " ; • , •• . ' ~ J ' ·' . ' -' I ' ' •• " • -~~ ~~> ~~- 0 ~· ~ • .. • '"; 5 1 s hoe~ i.h~re. w1Ll be, ~s +h•s ~.,,._ I . HO~E FOR PEACE IN '73 ·-Lisa. Sandviken, 8, ·Huntington ·eeach- . TO GRANoi:J.•s HOUSE -·Kristin Szabo, Cost~ Mesa -* ~ ) \ "' * >f • • * .. THE . RTn9- • ... 1 ll }\ Jt - IS F,or Chrfstmas wrapping. For the benefit of ecology-minded readers and the ecology itHlf, some of whom reportedly are wrapping Christmas gifts in newspaper this year to conserve paper, the DAILY PILOT has printed this page in color . ·its unique design, thanks to the art .. istic ability of Uncle Len's friends, could make it the most popular gift wrap of the seasCN'I. -===-·"·-·-.----------~~--·::. . ·.,.. .. :----... ... _) • - MEANING OF HANNUKAH Karen Sue Gilbert, 7, Corona del ~1ar • . %J DAILY PILOT '""""· Dt<tmbtr 19, l9n TONIGHT'S Theaters Furor Over •Maude~ TV mGmJGHTS Announce Anti-abortion Unit Asks Equal Time KHJ 0 7:30 -"IA!gend of ~ Lost." John Wayne and Sophia L<>ren are teamed in this 1957 adventure moVle. ABC 0 8:30 -ABC Theater. A slory of two ybung b I a c k children caught up in gbetto life ·~ called "If You Give a Dance, You Gotta Pay the -Band." CBS IJ 9:30 -11Your Money or Your Wife." An imaginary plot turns into the almost perfect crime in this new comedy for TV. Ted BesseU, Eliz- abeth Ashley. Jack Cassidy. NBC D 10:00 -NBC Reports. The health " crisis in America today by the poor and rich alike \ is examined in this documentary entiUed "What Price Health!" KCET Ill 10:00 -Playhouse New York. A year· end report on movie and the theater in 1972 is p~sented. "TV DAil¥ LOG Extensions E x t e n d e d performances have been announced for two Orange C.oast Uving theater producttons which w e r e scheduled to close t h e i r respective runs over the weekend. South co a s t Repertory's "Mooncblldren," a cor:iiedy of com munal life among American rollege students. will resume Wednesday and play £our extra performances lhrough Saturday at SCR's Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Afesa. Q.irtain is 8 o'clock. "Dear Friends," a drama by the Irvine Commu nity Tb.tater, clos8d temporarily ·~turday night, but will return tor a single special performance in six weeks, on Saturday, Jan. 27, at the Humanities Hall Playhouse on the UC Irvine cam pus. By JAY SUAl\Bl!rr NEW YORK (AP) Tonight's "Maude" ahow on CBS probably won'& cauiie many prolesls. It isn't about abortion. Maude's over that now . She had her abortlon in an episode broadcast last Nov" 21. But the uproar lrom that !bow is far Crom over. Il's still simmering and could lead to a wiique court test or whether · "fairness" is required of a television comedy show -or """"""" anY entertainment show - when it deals with con- troversial issues. The possibility first arose when a formal complaint about the way Maude's abor· tioo was presented was mailed to CBS. The complaint came from the Holy Name Union: of RockvUle Centre. a local Catholic group to w h i c h lawyer Eugene M c M a h o n belongs. CAUSE OF FUROR 'Maude' Bea Arthur hear their complaints after coalition members picketing the CBS building here but· tonholed him as he walked to his office the previous week. Tuesday tht Band"' .l.n ende1rin1 story ot !=:=========:;'JI two J'OUnl Black chlldren cau1ht II It gained impetw Dec. 1 when McMahon and three men1bers of an anti-abortion group called the Long Island Coalition for Life met private- ly with Dr. Frank Stanton, CBS' vice chainnan. They registered their pr~ test. then asked him to present their group's views in the context of the "Maude" ' show on two s u ccess ive Tuesdays, since she had Ullked about getting an abortion on Evening DECEMBER 19 L<I B Iii BE IUll - W ®l -gr......, 00 ;et Sllllrt Qwtld Wllcl Wat m Tiie fllltston1s &J "9Mt rytt USMC EE Mi Dulw b1niort4lt ED HtdPJIOd1• i..ct11 eD °""'' aJ Thttt Stoo11s ~P in 1hetto life. Billle Je1n (Do• n• Biy•n) and fish (l11ry flsl'I. burn), lfl lnends ..• aclijatty, they ire nel)'thinl to 1ach oll\11. Wiien Billie .llln U•U up money to visit her l11tier. flsh is ri1M there h4!lpin1 tier. And wllln Bil· l1t's money 1•ts stolen, it's fish who aoes alter It. m MARK SPITZ * GUESTS WITH MERV m Mm Crlflln Sllow m Im Moyers' kumal el La Mlldid1t1 41 la lloH1 9:00 0 Oji @m Tht lold 01111 A roun1 h1mophlU1 victim 1rrive1 1t C11lt l:JO ({)Kot••'• Heron tn$1ltvte for 1n 1ppendectomy but 0 Movlt; (C) (90) "Wltllt Christ-his problems extend beyond th• •••" P1rt I (mus) '~Ina: Cm· physlul with 1n overprGlectiv• by, Dinny Ka)'t. Rosem11Y Clooney. mother and 111 unresponsive l1th e1. (jJ CBS News W1lter Cron~it1 Diana Muldaur, Charles Ciolli ind t1i Min Crfffln Gtne Mdrusco cues!. at AlldJ lrtffitll G1 SlfMI tit Mwtntur1 di Clllpl'• 11!.end I S!l~lllf' I ~sun, I" -m Joln111 Carson Sh9w EI!)= .. Llnu e!>C...11 Club a>Dtt4Z l'M t:J08(J)CIS Tltlldlf Movie: (C) m UtU1 Rnuls (IO) "'f11r MlfltJ or You1 Wilt' tcom) '72-Tld Bessel!, E:!:~th 7:00 II (]) 0 l!D Mews Ashley, Jack Cmidy. An lm1,m1ry O lowllnl 19' Dolt.rs plot turns into the 1lmosl perfec1 (I) Slllri ti Adftwtur1 crime. when 1 :icflpt writer ta Ila O Wlllt's Mr Ulttl rt"tnge on 1n actrm by •rtlin1 m 1 LMI l.lfCJ' her into I kidn1ppln1 sd!11111 Ind ID I Drelll ef MINil then turlllnr fiction into tact. fE la hfltl .. hr 1J TOlllllJ' Pnt11n Show fD1111 fl"llldl CINI ' IJ (llhn tEl E blf TillM Clfl ..... ..,... f.El llact .ltllfMI Ui) Adwlltlr1 C1..., IE hYlsta Musklf ED-,._ IO:OI 7,•llD '"' cot , "°" ...,,, ~,. DEATON CORPORATION o, "'""' * pr .. ents ~dwln o Pollet s.r.,.. "Shldaws'" The Newmeri nerratinc mysterious diu,purmce of 1 "What Price Heatth?" 110up ol sllf'ltH•rs tourir11 tilt 0 a·m Nit Rtporb ''Whit ustte.Hke home of 1 reti red sllp Price Mttltt!?" Tht Ml'th crlsil - -. -:..<..-..:> SrAotuM 1 '•· .. ~~-~ ----.W ltl SIAOIUM ·3 . '~11 -~ __ .. -.... SIADIUM I . The Future is here. THXll38 IE•clnrw. or.,.. C-ty RltMl"¥ed S..t 11111 .......... 1. Peter O'T•lll -Sttill&t Llt"M "MAN 01" LA MAl'ICHA" "-'-""" "THE HOSPITAL" .... -"PUll" -·-"IUTTERl"Llll5.ARE P•el• ' a ''THl!tlE'! A GUU. IN MY $0UP" ''THE TEN COMMANPMl!NTS,. ... "THE lllLE,. c111r1 .. •-''TNE VALACNI PAl"l'.RI,. Cit! ... ''THI NAMMElt" ac:llw luda SilllOll Loclle end -~ 111 AmeriCI today ti, O.n Palmer to 1 use of stolen tlM .,,,-poor a -.,ell u ·Ille V11J --:;;;~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ )ewels ind sio.t-poisoatni rlc:li "ii thoroulh'1 cumlned. e Mfflt: ... _.. Wife" (fin} ...... .. .-.u<.'.t'W • -.. '48--GlfJ Gr1rtt, Lcntt• Youni. 8<1l Ci) di MHm Wllty, M.D. (i)T1 ltll .. Trvli ' '11illlllf fl Hlrbs" FCHmet thUd (.I) f111111f Clmicl NA Chri:st11111 star M1rpnt O'Brien 11.11S1s a 1 Drum" prNiiem·plliued Mf'WlflM wilt O Millle9 $ MM: (C) (Dir) who ..,es en • crm dirt te ll'ft "Lt111d M ttlt Lnt" (ldv) '57 lltr mmil11. -.lobn Wl'J'Tll, Sopllla loftL 1J llNil larlolf ,,__ ~....,..,.. 14!111m CD• c1e11, S1itw at lUI "" fB ....... • II Clell mm"""' m""""" ... '"" ""'" "" fE la Mldil Ge-. The1ttr 7Z-Yt1r End Rtport" ID-• ·-,._ ellodo .... 1111" GD Fatlwal ...._. m 01n11tth R m ~ ., ..... tl:J Pnpntt IWH 10!118 Tiii: kt (E It II WrlttH ....... Mctit1 m M•"" '""" ' m ~ ...,.... 1:00 IJ CIJ M•lldt Thinks to " ho llilO. D a llJ. m ... yestment m1dt by !heir tcc:OUl!t. (])(I) a News int M1ud1 ind Walter become 0 0111 step Beyond 111r1·owner1 ol 1 lf!etio t1n1m1nl 00 Marsllll Dtllln ind find 1 blldl 1n111 picktti111 ill 0 ~ ...., Mt llftfl I Ill" front of lhtlr home. (d111) '6t-01udt Dauphin. 0 @} m 9o1111111 ''The Buckel at Trwtll or CeftMllMnm 0oa·· Jlmie burs In lnsh un11 m Tfll Adwllturt tnd btcomn tm~ Ill I _. fB CMW 114 Ar-.ltrtq EXCLUSl\o 1 1 lflt,~G~ I rJ 11£' I HVl [l \f fl' Er.'GAlif \11 '.l' ) ~ter $0phia James OToole. wren and f.oco l dream Tue Impossible Dream in an Arthur Hiller Alm ~ ... Manof~ bMancha" trovtfsy O'llr 1t1t dots w. CMll· i1:u m c-.. 14 [/~===~;::;;;;~==~=~~=~~~~ tnhip. . 11:JCl lllJ)C8S Lltlt Mwir. (C)""" O CIJ(j)(!llo>o •""• ,,. -,....,. (dn) .... A• .DEL ,1. :AC() ill "RX: Q\rlst .. I" Dr. NollM MY, Ymtt Mllllitla. has to oct amlt"" whM I Pf" Dale....., ClnH Dtw 11111o1111 r'mic: wht ,,_,... 111 D (I) Cl) ID .. Cm1t S1111 I ChristMll ..... lht 111• Ttll .. ,,.. ;"~.;;'".:.,"-WIO Dm--..... _ ,,,. WEDNESDAY NIGHT* C9 ""1 MnMI . r-ft) ...,._ CWlfe (11111S) '3'-8ln1 CfvlllJ', Fra• -,_.,. 1_. ''Sfl. s., SM'" dsb G11t. g:.i • Alfrld Hltdloldl PMlllb m • .. """" m ttv1UJ ••• e-m ....,: (2111') .._ ...., 12:10 m ~= IC> .,. .. r"" 1111" ..,.. fton1) ·41---... Jui.tn. (111ia) '~J1n1 PowtR. ""' ,_,_ t"°CII DIJ"'"' • l:JOll_ tt>._ ....... l :JO fJ (J) .....W ,.,... W, &t!KO uni* (wt•) ·~p Hamler 1111 .io,t. VII hltll ...., I -' •1nd·111d·wfft INM Clll -..... (I) llftn DPtrftOfS Who pt e.ulht ..._.. HO m All-Nipt ,_.. ....... "-P two of Hit lilit!Hb molt poilM'll;ll t.r Ml," "lkt Ill lllit ...... . -.._,..,.. IJ(J)(j)(!) AIC ...... "H J:OlllM--I ... -YOll Gi'#t 1 Oanct, Vou Gotll f'IY (drl) '57--0I,_ 8oprdt. Wednesday DAmME MOVIES . 1,111 m""' -.._. 1"'1 .,. 4.1u11a H•""· Dmrl Md-. t"90-·-(Wa) .......... C.Mrt, bloll "°'lllL a--!*'> ~1-Hu.,..,., IOfltt, ltttl OWis: ~:n s1:wneax": actually gotJ.en As an alternatJve, McMahon said , they sought two haU hours of prime evening time on CBS to present their stand against abortion. He said the Holy Name Union complaint had asked for the same Uiings. Both complaints. he said, cited the 1'fairness" provision of the Federa l Com-1 munications Commission act, A000f.RTCHARTOFF'-_....._... """"""°' l&ZWBW 01 •Yu~ ,_ ...... JOSEAt - ~-ALSO---• "THE BURGLARS" BARGAIN MATINEE Wednesday, 1 p.m. FRff REN:ISHMINTS ADULTS $1.00 NlTIOlfll GENERAL THEATJIE.S 2 ·4 -~·li1S -1Chl5 EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ANTHONY QUlllll YAPHET KOTTO Plus SHORT SUBJECTS ._ .. GB« HACKMAN ·--..i111~ IORGNINE RED BUTTONS CAltOl lYN!Y I ••CIJ-" -c.ct. (dnJ .,._,,.. ...... (C) .,.... -"" I 1-1 'IO -'""· ...... """·-· 9 .,... ••t;:' (corn) '49 -W-ftlQlll,.U,nlght to Nt out. Al Dot Toco, Wedu11fSJ nigttl. .. Taco NtgM. You get sl1 tltlJ Oel Taco1 for Juel 11.IOI Thlt WedM9d.,., drh"e thru for • ,...., "29 -JOll-'lfor;ot. At prfcu , ... ·u find hint lo llML --< NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA 11======.I Brl11ol (P1llsadH) 11 41h St, ind Grow, Grow •.. I -4rttr Gtf1oft. beth flflor. t:OO. (Q 'l\i/ ............. ..... ... (...,) -.. ""'' 11111, Joflll forrrtht. '"° ro -.. 111!11 •tt1" ! • C•mpus Newport Fwy. How does your garden grow? You can get hinta on TUSTIN Red Hiii Ntor Santi Ana fwy. •• I how to moke It gi:ow even better bf reading the flome nnd Oal'Wen Pag'e t very 5aturday In the DAILY PILOT. as opposed to the FCC'a "equal Ume'' provlsloo Lb.at applies only to Pollllcal i11Ue1. IIB SAID the leUer from the Holy Name Union, the first step In a possible 1ppeel to the FCC, cited the fairness d~ trlne "on the grounds that abortion is a controversial issue and that they the pro- ducers or "Maude" b a d re~ted only one side." Tiie letter alao cited a federal recuiaUon that, ac-- c«dlng to McMahon, "soya that ii you make any attack on • any identifiable group or person, then that group or J!erson bu • rlgbt to ralrn ... time. "We contended that wben you make an attack that wtpH ou t the life of an unborn child, you are attacking an iden- tifiable group." '"' WlllKI "Tlll MECHAHIC,. "MA.ONIFICl'.lfT 1 RID•" {R} Ctllr ,,..,i.. """" c.dl 8 . DeMilWI ''Tl41 TllN COMM.llHOMINT5"(0 ) "ORV.TlllT STOltY IVIR TOLD" IOI lf'<t Mardtt" Al NIIMI "'tlllGHT CALI. NU•SIS,. "'TMI MOT IMIX" ...... c.tlrl ,., He said Slanton prornlsed'l :::::::::;:::::::::::==========::::::::::it= the coallUoo group a reply in I' several weeks. The Holl Name Union, he said, still is waiting for a reply to its _ formal Jetter or com plaint. CBS DECLINED to com· ment on the matter. II CBS turns down either group, McMahon said , the next step is a "fairness time" petition to the FCC. If that ls blrned· down, the next move may be an appeal to the federal courts, he said. "What we're trying to do is certainly not censorship," ex- plained Mrs. Rita McDonald of Wantagh, N.Y., who has five children and was among the group that met with Stanton to protest Maude's abortion. · "But lefs pinch the con- science or the people who aM producing this stuff ," she said. ENDS THURSDAY ..,.. ....... n .. ep1c "THIS IS SKIING" .... ............. lilly "SNOW JOB" STARTS PllDAY w--"PETE 'N TILLIE" STARTS WEDNESDAY 2 1 op Holiclay farrtlly filrrts i11 Color, Rat.cl 161 "T .. Royal H""' of the Sun" -•110- ""Softg of Norway" Both in Color WORLO PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT I --· FOR A JOLLY GOOD ·CHRISTMAS I Walter Matthai• B~t LIDO NOW0000 I er Ac ti i"llANC"I •Q ll~I" I' ' I o'' • l\D If you steal $300,000 from the mob, it's not·robbery. It's suicide. SHOWING NOW! ,f ANTHONY QUINN'· YAPHET KOi 10 ~'ACRDS.SJlD."STREET" ..,, ANTHONt FRANCIOSA ;;~ /R\-..:.T'-.:-_ fj. COLOI lfttitotlArllllt ORA~GE CO·HITI "SUPlt llASf~ ~II -·-'"""·-~ PLAIA ISHOWTIMIS! :z,(l().,,oo.H0.1.ts.10.1s ~ .......... 1111 "IT IS A MISSING CHAPTER FROM 'THE GRAP£S Of WRATH' AND OF EQUAL STATURE." -Judith Crist, New Yori( Magazine ·: .. IT Will MOVE AllDIEllCES-llNE THEM 1RULY, 'THAT IS..,,AS RW ALMS DEii HAVE. The 111t11111111111 WHlllrhll ... tllis siary a1 llllll.c1 -' lrll• ii Ille llirth al Illa C1111clall111as • 1111 .a..· -auliot,J<ael. Ne~ Yorl<er Magazine INDOOR WINDOW SHOPP-ING .. SEE OUR• i\LL·NEW CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS I South Coast· ?laza -·--.. ' ,. --- I I I I ) t ! I . ' . . . . . . . . . . ... ' . I ' ' • '· 'I) • I COtlledles, 'Musicals Decrease Movies 'in th.e Black' During 1972 I By VERNON soorr HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -In motion pictures tm was the ya.r of "The Godfather" ·" which ls expected to afford the Academy Awards a nominee it ean't refuse. in lhe lt73 Oscar competition. · But more than any single lUm or trend during the past year, and it will overflow into 11173, has been ~ ruing Ud< of pictures with predominantly black cas~. Never be(Qre have ao many films catered to minority au- diw;es. Some 50 movies were in pri> duction, on the dtawing boards or in release slarring black actors and ~esses. · SHOWS AT MATINEES ONLY · IOTH CINEMAS SAT. 12116 THRU THURS. 12/21 ·AllSEAn75< '" HARIOI SHO"'lHG C[Hffl· I tuBERT flttttD -. Cl l•J2 U.ltld FMbltt lyMlult, lie. Tt~Ofl•ao IU.llOMAl GIM(IW.. ~'' AMONG THE bits: "Blick Girl," "Lady Sines the Blues," 0 Blacula," "The Legend of Nigger Charlie,'' "Buck and the Preacher," "Slaughter," "SuperDy,"' 'Sound er ,'' 11Trouble Man/' "Tl\e Man" and "Across t10th Street." In 1973 moV!egoers can look forward to HBJack Caesar," "Shaft Goes to Africa " "CleopaJra Jones" and sequa'1s· to ''f\lacula" and "Slaughter." Increased employment of black perfonners is a mixed blessing, ao far as the bla<:k commwllty ts concerned. Junius Grtffm, /','.resident of the Beverly Hil Hollywood branch of the National Association of Colored People, IJ parUcularly crttlcal of the quality of black films. 1'1'11REE PR four of them are worthy of consideration as iood movies," Griffin said. "The others are ju.at plain !rash and filth. "BliCICShave been m:ade- part of their own degradation -from Stepln Fetchit to Super Nigger -is more de- meaning than gradual prog- ress toward artistic ex· cellence. "I'm not a black nationalist, but out of this whole thing there are .too many Hollywood blacks seeking a deal instead of an idea1. -4'Fi.lmmaken; both black and while, never slop to think we constitute 40 percent of total ticket receipts in this country because the inner cities are where most theaters are located. dimini.sbed in most Grade A "Brian's Song" which, alter feature films during 1972 and showing on t he tube, was show a tendency to continue lo released to theaters locally as do so In 11173. well ., ln Europe. But vulgarity and profanity Television, In fact, bas will be as much a part or become a part of motion pic- movies in the coming year as ture economics. tbey have in the past. Realism Says producer w a 1 t e r is the key, and directors are Seltzer, "You make a movie dead set ¥gainst using sort today with a particular budget language When the situation in mind knowing that the sale calls 'for "four letler words. to televlsiori aometime in the There was a general growth future will help defray a large ol occult films In the past ginal .. twelve montbs1 the most sue-~rt of Your ori . cost. cyssful of which Wa5 "The NEW N A M E S , 100, Other." developed in 1971 and 1972, Corntllg up Is "The Ex. will blossom on lhe screen in orcist," from Wllllam Blatty's the new year. A sampling best:selting novel. would hl:1ude Jeff Bridges, Ellen Burstyn, Uv Ullman, AS THE OLD year came to F.d.ward Albert. Timothy Bot· a close Hollywood film pro-Desi • -·· J aod Liza duction Was healthler than it toms, ruucu. r. · had been In a decade wit~ Mlnnelll. some box office bombshells In The day of the million- the offing: "The Poseidon doUar·a·plcture star ap- Adventure," i • Qk tab 0 m a parently is over if 1972 is any Cr\lde," "40 Carats,'' and indication. "The Way We Were." Stars are now .accepting Lucille Ball will make her moderate salaries and a first important film in 2{) percentage of the net. profits, 11 It any. Richard Burton who years when c.ameras ro on once cOmmanded 11 mlllion "Mame," proving·she is one of .a handful or performers who per film made less than a quarter that ' much in two can cross the movie-television disa.strous f 11 ms, "Ham- lines with impunity.. • mersmith-rs Out" -a n d As the major s t u d i o s "Bluebeard." become less powerful the in-Even steady John Wayq,e did dependents are carrying an in-not fare so well with "Tbe creasing burden of movie out· Cowboys ... put. In a recent week 25 of the 59 features in production were I N C Ii E A S I NG L Y so. independently made. . phist'icated audiences are r' T ....... -19,19n DAILY PILOT TEVt MCQt.EEN/1.,1.1 M.<icGltAW ~.-THE Gl,.AWAY-Ji f....i:,r AA•~!$ ~•JlAllON COSTAf .. H1•JG MJ!f J()HHSOf$ AL LrnlEllll ""IJ SAUY STRUTHEH A~-!q,f.)< St'."ROfNf'tA' llY AA~ !tfl H!I.(. 'RC,,,. ]>'{ M)\lfl av .l'»l n~. l.lUSIC ~ :· ~ .111cv f', 11-.;,. Al'C/f~IEll-bROWER F'RCOJ(;llON · f'l!OOLCEO h1 D.\VIO f()S1fll 4ND ~'ITCHUt l>f<f~'{I R 'll'lff.1· -' l!Y VJ.I j>r(XINl'A!! 1 •_·1 ;-, ·~ <,Y.•'l-110.'.!!J· 'U:H';'\..'U.(.1'1"· A NAliO'.At GENtl'W.. Plt11..Jl£S R'.LCASC ~1PG1----1 ~4.:"..i';,,-::.:..9 NOW PLAYING AT AU 3 TNUTllS ------c:m:P SUlNA PARK DRIVE JN Lincoln A_,..,.• W. of Knott 9....,,. PMt • 121-4070 "White kids who don't come in contact with blacks are misled by what I call blaxs- plollat.ion pictures.'' !.'lotion picture comedies are staying home more than like- becoming as extinct as lavls!) ly watc~g television,· unJess musical spectacles. T h e a motion pfcture proves itself ~rmer are done endlessly on worthwhile. l;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiij television situation comedy Glowing reviews don't turn • NUDITY AND blatant sex and the latter have become the trick. Today a g09d motion too expensive to ftlm. picture makes money on word THE COMING year will see of mouth praise. Such was the more crime, melodrama and case with "The Godfather" action-adventure p I c t u r e s which made a million dollars a Hope Show utilizing situations and day for the first month of its violence that are forbidden to felease to t6eaters. television. Soper pietures will continue ALL NEW! Number One Conversely, more and more to encourage artists and other motion pictures -or 90-creative men to make films. minute or two-hour duration -'Ibey are increasingly less "'Ptful, sa-eflJ.Ymlerlui, st()')' of till! life of """11 StraJSS! I R • are being produced solely for profitable, but when a "Love R Utf.ngs television consumption aod Story" or "Godfather" hits the theater release abroad. jackpot rewards are counted NEW YORK (AP) -Come-The best example was in the millions. dian Bob Hope's one-hour NBC· _ _::::..._:::.=.......:=::'.CC:__,;:,___:_ __________ 11 2nd ALL Walt Disney FEATURE special topped the naUooal television ratings for the week ending Dec. 10, A. C. Nielsen Company ratings made public Monday showed. ~ • Olristmas specials, ~th origlnalJ aod repealJ, 4lso scored well dW'ing the Week, accoun1"!g tor eeven of ~ · week's 20 h~"f31ed l!\OWI. ' 'I11e top 20 ShoWs, ill order of their standings, were: "~b Hope Special" (NBC), "All in the Family" (CBS), "Bing Crosby Christmas ~al" (NBC), ''Fr..osty t.b"e Snowman," "The Grinch That Stole Christmas" and 11Perry Como Winter Special,J' (all CBS), "Ironside," "The Llttie Drummer Boy" and "San· fonl anll Son" (all NBC), and "Maude" (CBS). The other winners "Marcus Welby, M. D .'' (ABC), "The Homecoming" and "Rudolph the Red-Nosed R<!indeer" (CBS). Flip Wil· son" (NBC), "Bridget Loves Bernie" (CBS), "Adam-12" (NBC), "Tuesday Movie'" (ABC), "Hawaii Flve-0") and "~ Tyler Moore" (both CBS) ~nd "Wednesday Night Movie" (NBC). CBS News scored t h e highest rating points for Its coverage of the Dec ... 6 launch of 'Apollo 17 lo the moon. n' came bl 23rd in the ratinas of some 68 network televlsion programs rated by Nielsen that 'ftek. NBC's coverage of the Apollo launch cam~ In 31th plate. whlle ABC'• coverage was rated • 63rd' in oVerall popularity with television au- dieru:.s. ,,., .. DEAN NANCY HARRY KEENAN llOllCE JONES • OlSON • MORllAN • WYNN • llllSEY _,,_ ....... --... • ttamM II.~ ... 11--,- ~ Tiie Afrtt:a• UH ":ii"" ~SHI s .. ,.... .. ---··· ·•··-- ::~w~&Nji;~~-~~:: · ..••.....••.......•.••. , ..... . Plus This WaltDiraey Featu.eeue STARTS WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 20 At All 3 Edwards Cinema$· Matinees Daily Greot Holiday Fun • -. ·z · . ACAD(MT AWAIDW .. 11 lllT ACTOI --lmO C:0..0~ -- 2IMll T0' flATUIJ SURT REYNOLDS "FUZZ'1 RACQUEL WELCH NOW AT IOTH CINEMAS 2ND ATCW I 2 CHARLES BRONSON I< "THE MICHANIC . :~·····~: • • EDW ARDS <.I\ t. \i \ t .f \ n R HAR~Oll A I A[iAV~ t..OSTA M[~A • 979 414' • • • • PlVS ·'Peler s.ners in "THlil'S A CllL IN MY SOUP" EDWARDS HARBOR c;";:1:A 1 "'10" •~VD AT ··~so" '' c ,,. •tU. 1••·ot1J . " •GOLDIE HAWN EILEEN HECKART EOWARD ALBERT CHAllL.•• •llllNllllN "TH• MllCHRNIC" ......... ,. WTO,HIT Dlweitl'CJ.-;.,. W11111PllOJ.C!OIS - eAReRA OMAR STREISAND · SIWl!F ~j~~t ··~~GllN. IUJllQ!.,,Wl'lllOll• ALSO ·IAgRA 5TREISANO IN ,.OI A CLEAi IAY~OUWIEI ....__.... iii-==l f:OWAROS <.l~t\111 f\lfR HAQflt)I .lo 1 A' ..... ( (l~TA l.Af ~A ?''• 4 14 1 • • • G•DR8• c . 9()011 .__. I Mauldin's Own Favorite • • • Still Relevant • • • Two wars latar, em Mauldin's cartoons still wy it all for the guys who are "up front" doing the dio:ty work. Mouldin once selected the cartoon above as one of his own fav0<ites.Jiom World WK l l'.!~'Up Front" series. He soid: "Once I thought I did a very funny cartoon (obout) on old-time covolrymon shooting hls i"P . . , It has simplicity; it teUs • story; it doesn't need words. It is, I believe, the very best kind of cartoon." Mouldin is still doing some of the world's "vtry best kind of cartoons." ,A few strokes of his tolented pen can moke some of the most biting editorial commonh to be found on today's issues. II you're looking for relevancy, ~I M~uldin two wars lal<tr (frequently feetured in the Doily Pilot). · . Look at the Editorial Page of the • .DAILY PILOT ) t ' . . ; ... . 24 DAILY '1LOT r...,..,, °" ..... 19, 1972 ' MUTI AND JiFF FIGMENTS NANCY TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS 58 J.w•lry it~ 1 Mountain•ah 59 P~ofthe Yesterdsy'sPunleSoNed: 6 ~ing l'Y• 9 Dfomedary 61 Mlddl9 Ent 14 Stat• country 15 Fr•u'• 62 Social group hulbllnd 63 Mounteln of 18 Turkish city Europe 17 Phillies.or 64 W .. ther· E11pos msn'1 devict 18 fliYtf of 65 Perfume Runia ingred'-nl 19 Begot 66 Getrldol 20 lnMf: 67 P111- An1tomy catchers 22 ASMrtment DOWN 24. Smehd l Mor• r1tione1 28 Mils Acl1m1, 2 Of aheep 9t af 3 frtflch 27 O\ljclc lncomt 21 Counecttve 4 M1al 30 Gottlng. 5 Not fOfW1rd M1rf1ce 6 R1ttletr1p 33 Vl'fY b9d 7 Buff1lo of 37 Vlrgini. --lodil 38 C.lt out 8 R1iltiYH 39 Bird ! Convtrt9d ..0 StstutOf)' ifl«1 rnarwr '11 Animel noM 10 "Au rwa"I" 42 Buns--11 tJsp1ne• eplller ahip nsme 44 Aggreg1t• 12 Compsu <Mi CPAs, in points: Abbr. C.ned8 13 T1k1 on oM Except c1rgo 47 R911rd hlghly 21 Sllghtftt 49-ChoH 23 Cont•lners 63 Shoft·llvld 25 D1yllght· 67 Cornmitt8d 1 1o1vlng 1Jme: ciirne Abbr. 1' 28 Where moneyiare kept 30 Long narratNe 31 Kind of hygiene 32 Omit 33 Euge09 -: Socialist 34 Kind ol dw1H1ng 43 Partoltht .,.,, 45 VacatiOMr'I vehid1 47 Roman goddew 48 Plan! 50 HolybOok 51 African I antelope 35 Crtclt across 52 English sand form1tion1 53 Gtologlctl oooch • 1urf1Ct 38 Bit 37 Gumlhoe 40 City of Quebec 42 N 1tr1tiv1 54 Lind deV9loper'1 ___ map 55 Archaic Vtrb 56 Cable 60 Oowncas1 • SMILE A LITTLE SMILE WILL NEVER HURT you PEANUTS • • • • MISS PEACH • • • • • .. . . JUSr /llE. IN Matf, FU.LAS •. :AHO l'Vt 60T1Mf FHU<GTIOS ISN'T M'f LLO<Y OIW! by Al Smith I by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller THAT ONE DID NOW~ CAN'T 5E.E A 1l!IN6 •• SI.I ~ IM SHUT OfF FROM E lillRLD ~ l.U.f5 ~ • • 0 • • • fS.--1, • DOOLEY'S WORLD GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS .· • • • ' ' I I \ / ' • by Charles M. Schulz ~.:..;;:: -• LET'S HEM IT 0 • • FOR 11lf. SNOlll !! • • • • • • • •· • ~ • • -.,.-• • ~ • ,----_ by Harold Le Don: by Mell -llUT !~A, I", ~ >ru 1AY, YOU INTIENP 10 ~ '----.. Call/NG-Ml!ft'; Wl<O -• -..a._ I ' I t • ' - WILC YOU TAI.IC TO! ---- .. • • • ... • • lty ........... 111 1Ml'UfA~ lllf61i/ S11fNINN' l/NDllf -~"'"1111. - by Ferd Johnson lty ...... lale• ... ),, .(S~ .. ] ' THE -Gilts DENNIS THE MENAC • I . t .. ' • • •l I ,, • • ~ Jl , d ' n • "" " ,f I I ; s a I in t c t s p • CORCO REFINERY IS PART OF INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX IN PUERTO RICO Exports Ropon Waste Output of Co mp lox I• &quol to City of 540.000 • ,.,, ............. ~ RESEARCH TEAM TAKES WATER SAMPLES FROM CROWN BAY, ST, THOMAS Black Water Visible at Lower Left Is R1w S.waa-Pumped in S.y Caribbean Islands Fall Prey to Pollution For the Puerto Rican and Virgi'n Isla?M:Ur the 11eaming uw for more ;obs, better pay, a betttr way of life. Sa the government lured 1ndustry to the Caribbean, and while some prom- isf!S have come tru, the spectt"r of air and water pollution •talka the Islanda of the Sun . B• BEN FUNK A-I•• l"rw Wt'lter On tbe sooth cout of Puerto Rico, sulphur dioxide smoke belches in· cessanUy from a forest ol smokestacks in a petrochemical complex. Riding the trade wtnd!i: to the northwest, It shroud,, the mountains· in acrid blue mist. Filling the eanyons and pouring through tbe posses; the clOU<l., reach tbe large city ol Ma-. IO mllea away. "Tbe big deyel-sari4 '~ts/ pmnbed ua IS yeon *-thal IJ>O~ttoo of one pelrochemical complu Iler< would generate 100,000 jobs," said Dr. Maximo J. Qnme-Vivas, d:lainnan of the Untvenity of Puerto Rico Deparlmellt ol Marine Sciences and the island's No. I polluUon flgbter. on this island, our natural resources aren't worth a hill cl be.ans. We have no mineral reS>W'Ce!, no fore.!t reserves, no great plaim for agricu1ture. All we have is people, !KM> to the square mile." Douos ol rellnertes ring tbe l,70o.mile long Caribbean, recelvlng i<ude oil by tankers from Africa, South America. the Middle Eut and .....,here for low-cost refining. Now plans are under way to funnel huge amounls ot Alutan North Slope crude oil to 11().<quare mile St. Croix When ibe controversy over the Alaska pipeline II settled. The ~ada Hess OJn>. of New York has i.nci'eased the siz.e fA. its St. Croix refinery 11 limes to 440,000 barrels daily in anticipation of Alaskan oil. It also has tried, umuccessfully so far, to obtain government pennission for a pipeline across Costa Rica . · - ~i.. " THE VIRGIN ISLANDS Comervation SocieLJ demanded In a pelitlon to tbe ..,........,t that tbe residents ot St CrOix be given the r1ghl to decide on further lndllSlriallzation thal "'can so drasticaIJy affect the qualky of life on lbe island." It a1'o asked the U.S. Environmental ~ Agency for a full investigation. No environmental im. pact statellleW have been filed . The Virgin lslands Rerlnery C«J>. wants to build on Sandy Point, a peninsula iinged by sand beaches that jut out into blue Caribbean waten to enclose part of the harbor at Fredericksted. one ol tbe cleanest and prettiest towns In the Caribbean. The easterly trade winds, tbe VlRC coo- ter.ded, would carry lls no11ous gases away from the town. But Larsen said his tests proved that both winds and tides are et:tremely variable at Sandy Point and Frederlcksted wouJd be doomed to catutrophJc pollution. Tn Puerto Rico, the first refinery was built by COROO on the south coast near Gua)'Mllla to p~ 20,000 barrels of Venezuelan crude oil dally. 1ben Union Carbide moved In alcingside CORCO, Gull Oil eslabliabed a compJei near San Juan, Philllpo Petroleum al Guayama and Sun 011 al Ybucoo. Together tbe rums now refine 373,000 beJTeb daily. A> toalc wastes poured Into alr and water, the CO~nlon carbide area gradually turned into an industrial wasteland ringed by pollution-killed trees. Hot oil efnuents pour through two discharge canals into the Caribbean. Driven by trade winds ·and ocean cur· rent, they now westward in a stinking black stream, hugging the shoreline. Nobody swims on this coast, nobody fishes. CERAME SAID untreated wastes from the CORCQ.Carblde complex cover 20 million square feet of Tallabea Bay bot- tom to an average Utickness of almost two feet, weighing 1.3 billion tons. "The efnuent.s are highly toxic," he said. "In portiOD$ of the bay, OJ.:ygen has been totally consumed." A study .performed for the C.Om· moo wealth Deparbnent of He a 1th concluded that the waste output of the comple1 was equivalent to that of a city o[ 540,000 inbabltants. Inside the complex, roaring fll"el reaCb skyward ln>m cracking towers u waste gases are burned by statelllte lDdatrles feeding oil byprvducts of tbe nil relinlng process. In Guayanllla, a city of ie;ooo just downwind, the heal ol the !lames can be felt. Ten miles westward along the coast, Cerame parked his car at Guanica Bay, once a resort area of spectacular beauty that was destroyed by a chemical plant. Disc.barges by the firm have left the once clear, sparkling water as black as ink. It is so acid it corrodes nalls on boats. The llnn that did tbe damage pock<d up and moved out after the 17 years of tax freedom given to all inoomlng In- dustries. Now another finn haa taken over the plant and resumed limited operations. As Cerame climbed out of his car, he was spotted by a group of fishermen who quickly surrounded him. He is a hero to the fishermen. He agreed to act as ex- pert witness when 12$ of them filed suit against CORCO..Union Carbide for Ir· reparable damages to their fi.shing waters. 1n its ruling, the rourt said, "These are. malerlaliallc camlderilionll )bat upoet Ille apirtt, o1 """"'· ·IMll <the riabt or Ibo f1Jbeml"1 must yield to tbe aecessllies of Puerto Rico's Industrial development." The Puerto Rico Plannin& Board says that while some few people mJght be hurt by lndustria!Wltloo, tbe vut majority ot the Island'• residents benefit from tt. To prove Its c I a 1 m, the hoard points to f l g u r e s which !8Y per rapita fncome in Puerto Rico wu lt,714 In 1971-72, up from 11,574 for the pre;ceding year. STUNG BY perslstenl altacb from r.erame and hla associates, a grwp ol i&- dustrial plant ownen calling u.e-Ives tbe Guaypao C<>mervation Aaaoclatlon. commissioned an envtruunenlll ltud)r of the area surrounding the COR.00-Unioo Carbide operaUon. "During recent years," said the report that followed, "there have been com+ plaints concerning the role of indU5lry in degradalion of tbe envln>mneS , , , Much of the indictment bas rome from fanatics. None has to date come from government enforciDg agencies.," But the report went Oil to la)' that .. ei:. cessively blgb and •mbealllly leffla..ol various air pollutants" tziltelf Within tbe complex, !bot lf&lel' poi!-leoe!s wen _, bliJI, ll1d !bat tbe quaJJty ol alr In tbe cllJ ot Guayoollla wwld !all to meet U.S. public bealth standanls. Das the Right to Pollute!) "AS OF THE LAST rtpOrt to the CB . • 1 governmenl for 1971, tbe sum total of all .. raz1 jobo ... ated by all the pelrochemlcal In- dustries here, including e:a:ecuUves, was 3,153. Somtbody owes us '11,000 jobs." But tbe Puerto Rico Planning Boan! ·c-....,.,d to neeti tor jofu, o N r natNral re• •••rtt• • ...,..., ..,....,,. a "'" .;, ' '"'...... ' claims 110,000 jobs have been mated in the past 15 years by the pett'Ocb:mic1l industries and other ~blesses whlch sprouted because of the oil boom.. · Dr. Edward 1.. TOWie of st. 'M>omu, president of the Caribbean Conservation AJsoclaUon , adds that, ''Tourism is our basic ecooomy. It hangs on clean water, beaches, sports fishing and sailing. But a wide area of the Caribbean is beaded for eovironmen1&l disaster. "SL Croi% gets oil !Pills lwo to tme times a week when tanken bit 1ub- merged objecta or crash Into deco. The big 1pllls gel tbe publlcllJ. but It'• tbe constant day.to-day 1eepige that is ruWng our waters. You ~bl call it death oo tbe installment plan. ' People lucky enough to have Jobe ""' happy with the industrial revolution.' For lhe fint Ume, they have lltUe concrete block hornet that will not blow away In a hurricane. They buy used can and TV sets. But, despite the migratory valve to New York and other cities on the malriland, Puerto Rlco'1r rate o f unemployment Is stitl stuck at 30 per· cent. MANY ARE DEEPLY worried aa they wttneJS tbe paalng of a genUer way ol life aee the beauty of the aea dlsappear 1n cloudJ ot silt and toslc 1111<>kestacu utte<ly alien to Caribbean landscapes. Desplle, wamillp by c:ruaadtrs like Ctrame llid Towle Uiit tbe fak ol <tho tslandl .rests on Pitching to clean en- t<rpri!Jd with llfdt« po)'l'Olls, llland governments continue their competlUon for 31111 more beavy lndU5try, ottering tax ·incentives aad low productk>r\.COltl. When Puerto Rico'• Qptratlon Boolltrap w81 launcbed,two docad,. ...,, Teodoro MOICOIO was nam.!'I tbe tint bead of tbe Ecooomlc..._. 11ve~ Admln1*1tloo. He lali<led , Ibo lint petrocbomlcll compks, atablllhed by tbe Commonwealth 011 Rellnlnlr Co., (COl\CXl). Today M-II C6RC0'1 ~ of Ibo boord. ' "Puerto Rico hal o Y<r1 IJ'IVI IOclo- economlc problem," be Mid · In it\ IJI. tervlew. '1We don't want a dead en+ vtronment1 but' we have to do a Jot or comji<Olnlling. We bave 19 live with ln- dQltry, "Compared w It h tbe nood for jobo RIO DE JANEIRO (UPI) -Guana- bara Bay, ooce a yachl&man'a paradise, now is oo lull o1 'aludge that propellers b,.ak oo the speeding ~lanes that skim the waler from Rio de Janeiro to Niteroi. In sao Paulo Jut summer 150 children died of d~ration, believed caused in larg~ part by contaminated drinking water. Sao Paulo Slate distributed chlorine ditect.ly to poor families for a makeshift, self-service sanitation plan against polluted drinking water. Bathers on the white sands of C.Opacabana or Ipanema beaches sun themselves beside large sewage ~e canals that empty into the beach and leave large patches of dark, brackish water. From time to time tbe beach Is coated by oU spewed from passing ships. TONS OF FISH DIE annually from polluUoo. in Rodrigues de Freitas la1oon ln .Rio de Janeiro. ODly 12 yean ago Brazil's new capital of Brasilia was in· auiurated beside an artificial lake. It Is • ·~r.;?;;,?11~· WOllKlllS OATifllt TONS OF DEAD FISH IN 1110 DE JANllRO Sludge, Dirty Air and Wolff, 011 Sllcb Woy of Lllo In lfHll ' now so. polluted It is unfit for swimming, and Its llsb are dying, In the Sao Paulo neighborhood of Em Peros some 40 persons a day are treated by a clinic for lung illnesses resulttng from dust coughed up by a cement fac- tory. The sludge, the dirty air, the ooo- taminated water, the wrecked beaches, tbe dead llsb, and the oil slicks are port of the price Brazil is paying for Its rapid indumializaUon. Il ls a price Brazil i. wllllng to poy. There iJ no federal anUpollulloo law in Brazil. 1bose ,.tegulatlons that exist are limited fnostlf'to the ind111trial states of Guaoabara (greater Rio de Janeiro) and 5ao Paulo. BRAZIL HAS ADOPTED the poslllon that if pollution is necessary to modern- ize, ll will pollute. Interior Minister Jose Costa cavalcaJ1\l has repeatedly made this position publie, and Brazilian delegates to the world con+ ference on the environment held In Brazil has iulopted the position ,,.., if pollNtion i• netts•...., to modern· ••e, it teill poll•te. ' Stockholm last June made the same point. According to Cavalcantl, it is the rich, developed countries wtuch pollute the moat, and it la they who should pay the major price for pollution control. Poor countrtet can not afford It "It is precisely economic growth lhal haa allowed developed countrlet to make great advance.s tn the erradicatloo of mass povtrt:y, Ignorance, dlae.ase, and as llUCb ii•• • blgh priority to ... vttonmenlat COllllderallOl'll," cavaJcantl said l'tCelllly, "A country that mis not yet reached mlnlmum ullsfactory levels of these euenUals Is not In the position to divert con1lderable relOW'cea In favor of en- vlronmenlll protectlm." A Bmlllan dlplomot put It this way. "Brull has a rlghl to pollute." '""' naUODOI altllude ii r.rlectlng on a local level. WHEN OOMPIAIN'l1 !bat !lib ..... dying In Brullla'a lrlJlldal lab were bJ'Olllhl to the attention to lhe city'• Su11¢nle!>dent of Wai.r and Sewagt, Lucio Gomlde Lourdaa, hil ,.ply waa, "'lbcre doea not u.lst an aquatic body betide human actMly thal ii not polluted." Tito beatth secnotary ol Sao Paulo State -tbe ll)O>'t lndustrlalixed area In Brazil -lamented recently, ''We do not have local pollution standards. 0 Yet the rise in human and industrial filth Is producing a steady chorua ~ com· plaints that may force authorities to cbans:e their ways. A Health Ministry r<pOrl recenUy deacrlbed tbe air pollulioo In tbe ctly ol Sao Paulo as ·far above the "acceptable level of air pollution limits." In Gruter Rio de Janeiro, the pollution cootrol division of the Sanitary. Deport· ment regularly fines factories IDd bus companies for failing to meet local slaQ+ dards. Stricter regulations on tanken aod petroleum storage tanks in Guanabara Bay have limlted the otl slicks, and tbe state government ha.s prunised to er- radicate eventually the favelas lbaD+ lytowns tbal ring .. .,. parts ol the bay and use it as a backyard sewage canal. The president of the Committee to C.Ombat Pollution in Guanabara Bay, capt. Luis Oscar Moss Goulart, womed recenUy that Brulllan pollution ccmtrol was "very deflcleul" Yet at the same Ume even be opposed applying tbe same standards to Brull-as the more lid+ vanced countries. He said these were 'too sophisUcated for Brazilian Interests. What is important b that we find na· liona1 solutions for our pollutioo.11 COPACABANA BATHIRS JOINED BY SEWAOI CANAL DITCH Doric, Bracklah Wotor Co-. Ouahlng Out NH• Sun LOftra ' ... I I I I I 1: I DAILY PILOT Clean-cut Easy Rider T uxedo -clad Cyc list Protes t,s Park, Ban By JACK CllAPPELL .... .....,,....,,... thousand, ii all his a,.Uoo mem- berships were counted. AbouL a .yeer ago, Mente Brewer, an avid motorcyclist, got himse.U arrested et O'NeU Park above El Toro. "Well, bring them on, we'll be ready," Brewer quoted the guanl as saying. economically preventing dellluctlon or property by "a (ew motorcyclists. 0 "THE REASON the signs were put up is because ol a recurring problem or use or motorcycle in the park, all the parks," said LaJTy Leaman, chle! ol operatlool. He wu riding a motorcycle and wef.T- lng a white dinner JICl<et, tuxedo panis, and petent leather pumps at the timt. (llloloreycles a .. not allowed in O'Neil Part.) AS 11lE WEEKEND roDed around, Brewer said be began wondering Just how he would be treated, aive.n the bad stereotype many people bold of motorcyclistl. Caman ....oun1ec1 ... talt ol bow ... cycllst drove his bike througll ""' lent or a surprised camptr. IT WASN'T 8! if Brewer didn't1 know motorcyclea wert not allowed m the park. He lo>ew. ·He had qeeo to the recreation spot the weekend before and wanted to camp. So he 4ooned a dinner jacket, shined his touring cycle UU II gleamed and rode up to O'Neil Part ''There were more COPo thero than you rould shake a atict at. They'd heard there was 1o4n& ·to be a gang war," be said. "U you want to put a !on:e or pOUce in the park, you can P""'"'' all malicious ads. Thia could ·he as destru<llve to the partuthe.-ltMI!. .. _ lcllvtty In the part can The pant at the entrance directed his attention . to a , sign reading "No Motorcycles," Brewer said during an in- terview. damage the port. the ••nupbtro, · Qie J'eUOD wby patU exist, H JMm l D ~ • He boogbt his Uckel and rode in past the phalanx of peace ollicers. • . BE 8AID the pmb ..,._ did not 1be guard said U Brewer went 1n, he'd be llftSted. Bre)fe? said be didn't t:ave time· to be anested right then, but that he could c<>me back next week. ''THEY LET M1li rlcle arOund !or about bold lo the oullaw -llereotJpe. 1$ mionte~be!o .. they arrested me," the • a,.... llld lllonl .l:t."° pi-ID the cyclist. said, county other U. pub.. Iha( a Actually he was just given a citaUon. cyclJst can legallfpu1·11p llld·amp !or M~=~sa~ i!,he Wor~~ then. and believes f19W, the ban o~es is unfair, and he said he intended to bring the matter mto the courts where things could he ltaed up. "It is wrong: to cl~ a campground to -the nigbt.~Tbat's wrong, he"8.ld. a person because of his mode ol. Brewer finally had hill' day 'in court lut transportation. 'Ibe motorcycle does week.. nothing wrong. He fought off one attempt by the "Jessie James was an outlaw, but, they district attorney's offict to dlsmlsa the didn't ouUaw the horse because he rod' charges. ooe " Brewer sakl. "?be guard asked me, 'How many are in your gang?' " Brewer said. • The Orange County Harbors, Beaches, and Parks Department. r e c o g 11 i z e s Brewer's view, but, officials say a total ban on motorcycles is the only way •of HE WAS FOUND guilty in the Laguna Niguel Municipal Coo.rt. He was rme $15. And, Brewer, a reserved-loo\ing, bespectacled fe1low replied several An appeal may he med. ' DAILY PILOT lllff ~ Sex Revolt Passes Up OM Ireland PARIS (AP -llloro than ' any other European country, the sexual revoluUor\ has pa,ss- ed Irelaoo by, acconling to a survey. Checking on 1! countries, the European busi n ess magazine Vision said it found that Spain and Portugal were also outside the main curJ'!nts of permissiveness, but to a lesser extent ban Ireland. IN A CHART touching on five areas -sale o f pornography, abortion, me ol birth control plDs,, tution and hom'osenall!Y-1'te1ind was the only country that made eveiy area illegal. Sweden was alone among the nations checked permitting activity in every area. RALPH RATLIFF AND HIS ORANG£ CRATE SCRAP CHRISTMAS VILLAGE 't•I .. Y_Nra Atlo Ho Dtd.11'.l H1Vo 1t>o Money for 1 T,... --'~~~~~~~~ Spain, unlike I r e l a n d , permits use of birth control pills with a prescription. On the other encl or the scale, Denmark, wbich Is parmiaalve in four of the five areas, !orblda prostitution II U Is the woman's only source of in- come, the magazine reported. He Made Village Of Crate Scraps Junior CofC Loses Battle SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The San Francisco Junior Chamber of Commerce has lost a court battle to use that name. Ireland and Spain were the on1y two countries on the chart !hat prohibit bomoomial acts. V IS I ON WROTE: "lre- "lrelancl still treats IJomosex. uality with fl mixture of chart· ly and prudishnesa. Private 1iaooos ... Ignored. Caaes which become public ~re pro- secuted tmder another beading and those involved are refer-- red to a psycldatrist. In 196$, Ralph RalliU bad retired from the Navy and wu working in the kitchen at Orange C.OUnty Me dJ c_ a l Center. He didn't have enough money to buy a Cbristmaa tree for his three daughters. RaWff, a man who like to build things, grabbed a dozen orange crates and sat down to construct a Christmas village. "I JUST CALL it my village.'' he says• atil1 dispiay- tng the same orange crate houses be put together 12 years ago. 1be daughters are grown ,_, but the Ratlif!.s, who live at '1811 Commodore Circle, Apt. l, Huntington Beach. have lour adopted dllJclren. There Is a t... In the house this year, but the plastic soow- cowrod village Is prominently dl>plaj>ed on the porch. "NEIGHBOR KID!l like lo eee it. but we have a band.s-oCf Polley about touching ·II," J\aUiH aay1. "I used a ham- mer, saw and point lo put It tosef.her." After eadi Christmas. he tal!e• don the separate buildings and packs them any in bol:e1, preserving the Ylllage for another year. R Includes a church, a ICbOol. community center and .. era1 bouoeo. '!!le villaae lm1 bulll to all)' opedal Kale, )larinee Open Recruit Office fto ....... Corpo bas ..,.,,. ......... --the ,... .. Ootmlr7 Sboootng Ollllr• .......... Beich. - Olllot ._. .. I a.tll. to 5 = • a" lb r oaab -~ID ... No. 11111. ,,.. ,.,. .... Country ai1111~11 ........ 1 .. ltlMalrd1 saL but would roughly fit an HO gauge train set. RATLIFF SPOITED the village with plastic C.81"$, tree' and a tiny train. He also painted a mountain scene on a cardboard backdrop. There are about 16 buildings up, and another six for which there simply is no room. ·~Jt would take •up tbree- !ourtha ol our living ~' he says, "if I put the whole thing up." It served him well for the Christmas of 1955, and b e plans to keep using It as loaf as it will survive a new Ou1.stmas. Culminating two years of litigation, U.S. District Court Judge Charles B. Renfrew granted a permanent in- junction which forbids the organiiation from using that name or any of its diminuitive forms. The ruling said that by con- tinued ~ of the name after withdrawing from both the na· tlonaJ and state J u n i o r Chambera of Commerce, ~ San Francisco group was in- frl.nglng upcm their trademark rlghls. "In Spain, where· there is often a wide gulf between the Jaw and its a ppt icat ion , homosexuality Is punlsbahle Jand still treats bomoses:- Calendars Out Girl Scout calendars for 1973 are on sale for $1 at the Girl Scout Center, 1820 Mum Ave., Costa Mesa from t a.m. to 4 p.m. Moodays througJi Fridayi. Sehool Bolds Faire Bit of· En~land: From Song to Jousting By MICHAEL GOODRICH for lntere,ted visitors to The youngsters did their own . research on t h e renaluance and then cleclded which aaped ol the period ln- lerelled them. Of ... DlllY ..... ,, ... The queen bad just been carried to her seat when the town crier mounted the stage dressed in a colorful tunic and announced, "The glove ii up." It wu the •Igo ta be(lin the morality play "Everyman" being· staged as part of the McDowell Elm!entary School Renaissaoce Faire. observe. lo addlllon lo the blood let. Ung dt!mOllatrallons at the medicine booth, one could hav~ his fortune told <>s-lelrn=. 'MIEY TllBN-dlvided Into the merits of using powdered groups and constructed Ille cow's eye and bay leaves to different projectl that were cure any spectat afruction. shown, accordlng to Mia Near ye olda linoleum booth, Bruno . block prlnUnga of coats . ol · Younpten r r om the arma dealgned by studenl& younger grad.. Wire alao were bein8 d1'trlbuled. shown through the !alra durlnc SEEKING 'l'O crell• a 11111• the afternoon and treated to bit of merry old England, IN AN<m!Ell comer, one the morality plays and the ... rly 150 ... ..oi and eighth !ound • guUlotlne with the tunes or madrl(al ........ grlder•ol the Foyntaln Valley' bllde perchad ID !all on 111 The 1'11 event el Ille ..,. elementary achoo! put on vlcllm !or crimes committed lertalmnent calenUr w • 1 phlyt, aaoc 16th cenlW'Y ' qalnll the lllClDlrchy. , parUcularly °"joyed by tllo ChriatD)U sonp and even Girls with llowert..and rib-younpton. It .,.. a loultlnl gave a lake dem<>n11rallon on boos In their hair strolled Ille , conlest !toling lhe otAftcth o1 blood lettlng to remove evil llreel& of the faire observln( the younf men of the ltltt. aplrlll. . the gonda of merchanta. ParUcl"8(t In the CCflleSI All thl1 was conlalned In an "'!'be Idea ol the !altt is to U!ed liallt to Ir)' and push open spaCe cla ssroom a( the lncorpor1te the aspects of their oPPQDent over • llne tn IChool featuring the 1lage In music, art .... history Into one tho center ot the flo8•, a leu the middle or the !alre with projecl." Nld Mc Dow oil violent replica ot Ille real var1oua shopa and eshlbltlon1 t-Krlo Bruno. renalUIDCO Joutllnc CCfltell1 . I • ' • DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED • l'lle •wea Sltltrle 1t1 ... 1cet..,_ee _ T .. fho•••• c-ai • r••-NZ""1• CWN -·· -· 1 ;;;;;;TW~O~ST;;,;;O~R;;;;Y;;; iiiiiiiiiii1iiiOiiiUiiiNiiiim Gener i i UP 1111 YOUR CWN oyT? FOR FAST! FAST! ACTION! CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED DEPT. I A L D I R E c T -- ,6 4 ·2 -5 6 7 8 Minion "Is" -WANTED- ••• CHILDllN ••• DREAM MACHINE EASTSIDE '""' ~. 4 bedroom $145 000 beauty «11 be the allSWel' • • Possible This Impeccable 4 bedroom. Thi• hQml!: ii a Mother'• 2 bath home wHh a beautitui Helper! 6 ~. 3 bflba, ---.. ""'"" ~1'!::' ..J::o,., ~ =i to your dr'eaw tot ~ ConllbtMt tna>me of $1860. perfect home. Situated on All Individual houlel wlth an. ovenlud lot In a Pfilo< ,......,, on 1 acre. C.U Jor area of doe bome:a. lnakle detaib on how to buy. With c:tiarm. 'lb~ Mme ii ~ Wp tamlb'. Hum! located on a comer lot with Th1I ~ Of home ll fantastic 1andlca~ in a ~! is enhanced by C U I t 0 D\ drapes, shutters, de1-pl8G entry and luscloul ttUck carpeting. Many tamiQr ~. Uvit:iel at the SWIM & RACQUET CLUB formal dining room, too. 'rrs ™· MACULATE! rusr RE- DUCED TO $37,450. quiet lmpresalve CALL ANYTIME ~~ 950.Pr\\':n .!:'. ~ HI 4543 ot Po1"1w _,, 80-2535. ' Tbere Is a ttuon OllfW 1'4 t • IT'S RM JOW MC»I 18 Yt8l'I Mlm Jaadcm • COATS '& ·wALliAcE , REALTORS --1514'411"44141- (Qpon E-"'9sl ' ' r~nnx] I _..,,.,-![~ Class1fication I 00-124 I --l~ Cassification 125.149 I -== ... I~ Clemficetion 150-184 I -I~ ct.ssification 2Q.O-i 6o_ !Mr•lmll ~ THE !IEJ\L I ~l_ES1ilTE~ 0 -rHE KEAL _ LS !.'I! fHS --, • Fix• Upper • 11ne Units located .. large -Calta Meta lot with room for 3 ..more units. Investor's dellibt with loads of poten· tlal Home need& rei:nodel· ing, 90 brin& your hammer and pa.int brush, Call UI for complete details, but hurry, won't last long . -10pe~~1.I .~.·HERITAGE REALTORS Macnab -Irvine Realty ComlNU>l' ~ Tropic•I Par•-dise ~ I -""-j[ll!j Boycrest CUTE CONDO -. Lush landscaping. Cath"'1'al ' $2 ·CS.ssification 300.l:iS ceilings, Hideaway Iott. 3 -3,500 BR·s. • 2·s1?ry tall !lrepl.ace. Beautiful ~ bednn 2 bath I ·-.. ~-JfW'] Handyman s garage. Ivan townhouse , built-ins ...-,..,-Wells btlilt. $82,000. Joyce Fireplace forced air heat Ed1und "2-8235. (T18) ' Best tenii.a avail. $1.125.00 Clauification 360-370 moves yoo in, immediate occupancy. Cal I Red I •-11..-1 642-1235 644-6200 Cupet ,Realton 546-8640. _ . · 4 PLEX-HURRY!! Classification 400"'465 PENINSU' • PT Good Location. One • 3 Br .• I -1~ -• Two -2 Br. & ooe I Br. Amin 1c1m111t1 od Attractive 2-aty. 3 ~· & Good occupancy on I Y . . •. den, 2 baths. Frplc,. en-$64,lU'.l. Low down. Hurry! • :.. cloaed patio; 2 car garage Iii I CIM11fication SC)0..61~ ~~ ~;r 11 BU<. to - ,__,. ·~ Call: 673-3663 m.8025 Eves. , .~ Clon iflcolion 525-515 BRAND NEW ' I-...,._,,._. 117)1 ONLY : t~~~d-now • . ~ vacant, owner must sell haa O.uiflc.ation 550Ji55 step down living rm. vaulted cathedral be a m I I~ c-Del Mar• ,.mnp, •paclo"' modem . -tfon ~ Ho-And lnco-kltc .. n, detux "'•• carpet, . . separate laundry r o o m , CleHificetion 57S..610 Locate. on the ocean aide of beautlful borne, pt1et:;d 10 · the h•shw&,y on an ex1ra sell Call Red Carpet, I -l~ wide Wt. Spacloug two bed· 1 ;iiReiiialii-iiiiiii516iiii-<164tl .... iiiiiiiiiiiO I ..,.,... · rqom. 2· btth hom~ plUJ de-I ' • -tacbed bo<helor lncome LA COSTA Clesslfiut•on ..._.., unit wtth ncellenJ rental VIEW LOT -$17,500 I ~lfJI .......S. J\111 redeco<ated • .BeautlfUl \Oow lot ovttJook. _ !!_@!§JJ ?! . . move in condlt»n. '63.950. _Jrw: LaCosta -O>untey Qub. -C. '· CilN•Wlhy & Co. For further lnfonnaUon c:all ClouilicaHon 700.710 640-0020 Mary Lou Marlon ' COLDWELi,, BANKER I •d ,,.,, 11ei..1 VERY SCARCE Rea1550~ ....... ~e~ V llONEm' TO GOSR • TRI· ~~..,;...,"!"...,!"" .. I Cloulficoti .. toG.&l• PL Ex nJ<ER..UPPER. C-tom Du..i..ll P r l m e kicatlon. Make •~ ,.... .. I ... ... ...... ~ -·~, 143.000. with°"~~ ~~ ~ IJlk. to ocean. $75,000. Lachenmyer ... ' . ' associated BROKER:.-REAl TORS l02S W 6~11;.," t7l·Jt.t.J * 4 UNITS * Near Town le Country' In Orange. Big 3 BR. 2 ba. owner's w/frpl + 3 2-.BR. --GE,111M-- 1e10 Wt Coo.at Hwy., NB. REALtoRS 6'2-4623 The DAILY Pll.OT . ' ORANGE COAST'S I ~jj';I ~ °":":.;~~:· 0 • .,111 •• 11.,, ,00_,12 1u1Lo•$2R1s.500b1 L1GHT MAKE THE woRLD I d ··GO AWAY·· 0 I ' .....___,_ ![•I ........ ,. .. ... ,ite ....,,... Privacy 11 the key word to ea 1ng I ........... locatk>n near bflck bay. dCIOl'ibe this JMlel)' 5 1.oned J\.-.2 poulble R-4 BDRM home, large comer Cl.tasificitlon 91 5-949 varlonce, eklttfk\t 2 bednn lot. Prime klc. 01\b' &liking M k I hoUM! ce.n bt 1'el'jled for llAll CM BKR ~1 "M a I I '§) ll50-Sl75 per mo. Submit ~.~. ' ~ ~-. F e p ace ~"-;.. ~ reuon.n.ble ~fferl Call Red Havt IOITle'lhlna YoU want to . . Carpet, Rea ton ~. tell? ClaMlliec,1 ada (1o tt Cla,1ific•tion tS0.990 W4nt •d n!fillbl ... 642-5618 well -ciU NOW M2-5878. I . . I ' I .. ' . ' ~ I • • • t • , • DAILY PILOT Everyone Hes Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Cen Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad 'The Biggest Marketplace on ·the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results I~~~~ [. -torWo ][&j'._2'.•"'WI 0.neral O....ral ~-5-«4 -'faut;.~ llllASSeamS RE~LTORS 282e~CCIUTHIGIMM <:OllONA DEL MM. CAUi'. 644~7270 " * Room to Roam . two Story 4 BEDROOM, 3 bath home. HUGE rumpus room that will take· your pool table. 2 brick fireplaces, built-in kitchen, large yard & room to store your boat. VA NO DOWN. ...•....•••..•..••..... ' . • . . . . . . . • . . . $39,950. .}.l,!STIN-S!.\ITH_. ~4R,,N, & ASSOCIATES 72 . 0....ral \ .. o.,....., * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. 0....ral BA YCRES'.f BEAUTY -POOL A fine home in a fme area, center of New· port beaut!(ul. Behind wroµght iron gates, you enter an Italian marqle entry, bi;inging Yl"/t, to,.'!,,l'l"1<~)!1liV!Jli.l'l'l.IJI..)! '1-.w;y~~l!;­P ace area, jUSl e-lliing-ror--ih~1 iilghts .. Many amenities that we-llCA!t. show you when you make lm.appJl to view. Offer-- ed at $61,000. CORBIN,-IMRTIN REALTORS. 644-7662 _,,,Mo --- General 0....ral ,. i.,_u:u:~ ABSOLUTE ELEGANCE Tot>-Of·the-!ine. Dover Shores 3 bedroom wjth gardens that will mesmerize you, a pool that will relax you, 1a · porUco that makes you want to entertain and cafch this, a sunny 'kite.hen ·thaf makes you want to lin~er over the dishes. Now thl\t's absolute elegance!. And it'..s ~asy to see! Ahd recognize the value at $137,500! UN19UI HOMD OF NlWPOIT llACH, '41"'500· A Jbt11tt or lclrt......._. U!lllillClU~ tt()M~S REALTORS O.nelal 2 UNnS -CORONA DEL MAR ,\bsolutely immaculate. & nicety decorated, with delightful enclosed luncheon patio, plus a, ~elot unit to help improve your invest- ment. $61,500 Gefteral Costa MoN HOUDA Y HOMES Family Home Four great Harblr View Camper/Boat hom., with inter..iing dJl. 1..,,,..,,,_ Access 1. Massive two •&tory S bed-$29,950 buys ttlis roomy 1700 ~· 3 bath, ~u~n. llv-1111• ft., 4 bedroom, 2 bath 1og room, huge pool, fee family room home with a land.. $19,900. " p_rivate office. Room 'for 2. lovely on~ story 4 bed· campers, boats, or what· room, 3 bath, 1reat-cor-evei::. A perfect home for a , ne:i: location next to park, large acti~ family on Jove- feei land $88,500. 1y R.&Ieigh Street in Costa 3. Family o•ientep. two ?tOl')', Mesa. can 613'8550 1 ~bedroom, 3 ba.tf'!i,,1~-OPEllrlLt •. rrs Fllil 10·• N1CE1 rng pool, neer new ele- mont~ ichoql. 11}500· ' 4. ~lass . #1 one st&y, Plllfessionall.y decorated 4' bedroom, 2 bath,. out- r,:i;,~ -,,, fee land. EASTSIDE. -$29,950 Call, 675-Z Country size yard, dCep shag · crptg, corner stone tirepl, · :~ + . • • beaut dee. Sparkling bltin• &iil ~}n?~~ 1u&s11>1.ttl'l Of ·JHt c0Lwn1 co. 2 Houses BARGAIN Both only $32,ooo • Xln 't rentals or live m 1. 4 BR-Family !Rent !hi othe.) 2 BR each. $295 Private yards, see first-at 428 Hamilton St., theft call: Wow! Quiet tree lined street. 642-1060 it Interested. Portico entry. 4 queen size * OPEN HOUSE DAILY * bedrooms. Separate tam-. 11 AM to 4 PM only ily room hosts crackling 337 Magnolia, C.M. Swedish ty'eplace, · Large EASTSIDE, 4 br, 2 ha, pool, yard with giant child's· play-frplc, cust blt, cpbl, drp6, house. ONLY' $295 BUYS bltqs, tel calls 10 am-8 pm f'?r qualified ·buyer. Act lo dn, $39,500. Ownr 642-8310 Wt. Full price $29,500. Call Huntin9ton Beach -645-0303, $16,900. Newport B .. ch Pre-Grand Opening Salel E•wflent CO!i\'fllt1D .... 1 P'INncint CONDOMINiUMS · ·...----..... Lofty Uving awaits you! Acl S\Yift\y to select your own Newport B8ach condominium. Visit the terTiporarv offices o! the Newporl Crest lnlormalion Center, conveniently located at 24QQ Wesi Coasl Highway ~ -Sult9B, 'Newport ~aCll. bpen Dally 10 a.m. to sunset. 17141 645.6141 IOHl\I I Ol\O \ 1 BR CONDO, just right for • ~" ,_ older person. This home is ..._ c..i-. , ... --. . ~ . ) . in excellent cond, crptz & ;::-;:====-.....:.-..;:;:;::::;:::::::::::: ___ _ drps like new, cherry kitcb Irvine Lido Isle ~R~eacf-7y~·, ~For~~U~n-its~ & din rm. Prke also tnc1---..,-----1 ~-"'"'"-"'----­ relrig. wshr & dcyr. Min Turti. Rtlck Broodmoor * CHOICE * Newport Boach 4 BEDR010MS FAMILY ROOM POOL Otarming cwitom b u i I l home, dining rm., large family nn., 2"' bath!. Modem bltn l.sland kitchen, bltn. deep freEr.te. Beautiful- ly decorated & landscaped & a covered patio beside a ·-· pool. $52,500. CA.LL. Ci) 646•2414 91f.~- Nt11ir Nt•••rt P•1t Of,lc• * BEACH SPECIAL 3 BR. 2 ba., 2-lltory. High beams. Needs aoqie work, but pri«d right at $33,900. CAYWOOD REAL TY * 541'1290 * Newport Heights * * $32,950 * * 4 BR + Maid's or guest rm. Pecky paneling, shag carp. Most outstanding bu,y ln N'pt Hts. Better blllT}'! BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642-7491 * -- Mobile Homes For S.le I~ 125 Motor Home Rentals SALES & LEASING full service facility Danmar Motor Homes 531-6800 The area's top professionals .are at your service. Corner lot will hold six units $850 down Paymts $173 675-3000 in area of other new units. pays all. iaeai for slngl~ No. 4 plan. 8Y owner. 833-2389 Nord Corner Lot . Located West of Santiago person, close to shopping. Leguna a..ch 5 Bdrms., 3% baths plus din g:er c:=;e W<i: ~~~~ To see call. OCEANFRONT rm. plus ~;',Jx,undeck~ 8'x42', awning, tUrniture. Adlt pk close in C.M. 557-6134 or 83!r5266. Trailer for sa,. Gener•I · 4 Bedroom, 4 bath home. Beautiful decora· tor furnisbln~s included. Large, covered pool with roll;bac -roof. . ............... $245,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ~loan. Price $24,960. can I' COMMUNITY LIDO REAL TY ~1600. . LGE. family home, ocean· 3377 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach ~~~~::oVI:~,' 531~5111 '=111:_5l_D_• ~~t ~~~00= s ~~·. ~ ....... * ... ;;;67iiJ.ii7ii300 ..... *....... Rell &t•t•. I rai -----w/frplc. Format din rm. PRIVATE Gener1t . ~ CHARMER Lge. well eqwpped Jdtchen, Beaches, Tent:tis, Club 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii;l;I ' ' 23 ft living "'°£ c.ontrally locatod. Recr<a· Lido Values: 1. Charming 3 I ' n,,ths beau ~m lion rm. Over 3,()((1 sq. ft . on BR:. on st. to st. $1l,SOO. 2. ACl'fffl! ~r .S.'9 . 150 . · ..-• ~ · ~one level, aurrounded by ..._ __ -.... 4 BR. F Dr .' __ , ·r4 s'ToR'n ' SPACtOUS:rID 1dfllW8.tryh~~, . ,nice garden Ii: patio are~. .awv-•hJ· ' ·" ·• ~ • . " tUe en "'t"'.. ...t nal beams. $'16,500. 3 Btwyfront .f bdnn. wltlirfsXl.8 LoW ~ :l' • ... ~ very Cuncllo , well w/pler; 3 BR. Great vaJue ,., __ ,._ .-. ""'--. _ ......... , r ...... ~-· ~..,,. '"' pt.nned honie. Room tor l" 500~ V land In Alpha Beta Center -uu.i~ ...... &AC<.: n::u \.JU,d.; :ioo-'nlillll pool 192 500 $ '"• · rec $HK,11'.:r! -$1100 a month. blt·ins; 3 car fnl.l'Me. Fresh-'• · · • · COLO , BANKER Owner will carry 1st T.D. at ly ~tafiri A-out! A really •. •. '"·' * 499·2800 * Realtors ~.20'.I 833-0700 8% tor 30 years. Agent - 0ne0,ramily home. · • ·tt· ~ l""sso""N"•"WJ>O""'rt""Ce"n"t•.,'.,°' .... · ""I 675-7225. 1'I RGAN REAL TY ' ;;;;;, ,....,,._~ """- 67J..6642 675-6459 ~"ll'14~ Me V _._ Commercial scvrti~~. sa er-. Property 151 Balboa Island -,...,.. ........... ~ --'-'--'------! MOBILE HOME * 535-8915 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1,-Nowport BHch OLDER & cbaqnlng 3 Br $}1~00.0. RURA• L CHARM ~~1:,;J.~RJ' ~! FIRST TIME 675 6161 l'Ar be., new ci-pt, treshl,Y 3 LRG BR fml din rm, bltin -Beatty, Rltr, 8381341 eves. OFFERED GenerJil • paintJ.'d. Owner, 673-1488. elec Rid, plenty of cup-This 4 bdrm., 2 bath family 4. U. ID"' &'L ,.:,..__ '·I u -boards, w/w crpt.s & c;!tps, home is close to everything, New~rt Beach 4 Stores In an Alpha Beta Builders Loss ! Your Gain! 2-Story CLOSEOUT -ONE H 0 M E ONLY! VACANT! Gorgeous 2-Sl'ORY BARGAIN! Crackling fireplace. Step down living room and FAM· ILY ROOM. 4 qUeen size 5"' """!!"" u. ~". FA ht. 8 Yrs ,new, lrg dbl but at ~ eame time g_tve;: .,._,.. center. $13,:llO gross -COSTA MESA lfbUsE +APT gar, comp fnt'd & ldscpd. you the f~. air feeling ~·~-~~r ~ ;::.;:_ Gener•I GenweJ. ' Paymts less than rent with of country hVlng. Spectac· NEAT & SH I NY LOCAnoN South of Hwy.; remodele<l.2 $1~ d Xlnt Joe on cul· ular family room wann & Portofi.no model, Harbor Agent. 675-722 5· FIVE UNns ......, COLWELL bdrm. house w/elec. blt-m ,!AA.I. n. d can 'Ro WI N LEVEL 77,000 FP _Near South c.oast 1 nlii kitehen' plus a modem 2 de-sac st, walk to schls & 1c:ozy t!ll$85. 000 n I· View Homes. 3 BR., 2Y. CLEA 1 1 • •hoppinu 1ams ba's. Shutters & used brick Plam. Alm0'1 new only 3% .EASTSIDE CO bdml. apt."""'" the garage, -~· . ' . trim outsido. Light & brlght READY.., yn. old. G= income 9540 • leased at S250 month to help I' ~I.an lo . .d $ 6 9 0 0 0 based upon 3 bedroom COST A MESA Merrill Lynch recommends pa,y the overhead. Priced to co I'!I insi e. • · 3 Acres -Cl Costa Mesa. On 1$250), 2 bedroom ($185). the common stock of our sett at $64 500 Kathryn Raulston Baker oU Bristol. $2.50 per ., bedrooms. Laundry, Builder says $36,500 • BUT YOU 1 OFFER WHAT YOU After fixed expente8 and ~~R~~~~ -~ company as a buy. They · · ' · 162-4471 ( :=.) 546-110• REAL ESTATE Re~~~WE~-~:~ Sq. Ft. Commercial Depalt· ~~e:Jl~k:b~~l on this hUge lot. Great tax !!r~~ce1:11:;fi~ll~9fa -----1190 Glenneyre St. 550NewportCenterDr. ment 645-4IKO Realtor . wbkh is 13.82 cash plus shelter and potent i a I real estate industry. They ~ '-'UICK CASH I •494-::94~13~iiiiiiiiiiii~549-03~~l~6 I ~~j5ji~~;"'j~;;;';~ I Condominiums mINK. Hurry • i\'a the last one -call 645-0303. I 01:1 \I I (I I \II\ • < . $4.98 .equity buildup. Total growth. Each unit with are 1mpreued with our REAll'Y INC. T Ii HARBOR View Homes· for sele 160 return 18.80. All this and the .separate garage, yard and strong growth feCQrd and · Your eqUity in 24 hours. call Irvine Cove -View popular ~naco 2 BR + -''--'"'"-'----...;..01 ap~ance of a single fam. laundry area. Lots of the eound business-like way ES't ~ for immediate appointment. This immac. 3 bdrm., 3 be.. & den. All extras. Immcd. CONDO SPEClAUSTS -~!. resv tdenceW~ntact Rich-~~~Te~~ 1~dfu11at-we do business. If an In-. I _ (TI4) 973-8210 I CAU..968-4456. den hon1e overlooks 1 the . 2..,~~-.!'eeProlavnodnc. e0~1.n 115·5. ~ VED8NJ1 ~=i'.~e~ _ ...... an--=• •· ,......, ... ...,....,.---~ .... ~ ,.., vestment IN US ls a good • finest priv. beach n the· --rw:• r ELMORE~CO. detail.a. Asking $76:500. buy, how about an invest· ~~ueeo area. Quality thruout is 644-6249: Eves, 644--0396. ONE'!' WE'VE GOTTEM REAL ESTATE DIV. CALL 540-ll51 Open Eves. ment wrrn us in one of ' shown by many fin e TRIPLEX ~~0~1.J3 • riJ 3 A&L 4 645-4()1) • the local income properties ASS 1 0'1at.ures. $195,000. Ed 1 e .TUST LISTED! -Newport AREAS. From $ 2 7 , 9 SO . we have for Sale'!' Call SPYGL , son Heighls, All 2 BR, 60x122 SUBMIT OFFERS. 1arwin MESA VERDE PER $Ml 904NTH 615-7225. SPECTACULAR M3~ SPE0 L1.NLTE5R Re~!°.!;WE~:~~ tot, "Greon Belt;• Won·t tta11y, inc. 96H«15. Forever view from this 5 BR. Yi. 550 Newport Center Dr. last! $48.500 Bkr, 673-6756. Duplexes/Units POOL family home. You own the for new V.A. & FHA loar.3. 3 Br., 2 Ba in Harbor s_•l• 1'2 One ot "Mesa Verde's most l't:!s~·1ti~~~il land. Carp, dril'i•. 2 trplcS. lf you are.paying ~ore you Ocean View . $31900 Highlands, 2 bllc1 from -"-"-~-----'! •·' plan f tur -3 car garage. Corner loca-are throwing away money. . · ' Marlnets ttem. 2040 Beryl. Several choice apartment popular illNr s, ea • tidy little starter home with ReaJ.h• Coml("" tion. Just reduced. $ll9.{Xl0. Call now for details. Large 2·Sty. ~. J'.iR & den on MS-7020 By Owner. Ca11 for all the aide ing 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and 3 buge bedrooms and good ONE O~F A 1-NDI LaVera BUrns , Leadership RE 842-4466 1 ~ lots. Sliding doors from appt. ~~~ ·Cam:i ~~en"'· 1750 59,· tt. of fun. Lush shag sized yard for children and OOWWEI'..L BANKER · CO'ITAGE den to sunc;ieck. Bltn., lal!Wd -=:"'io---7."-,.,.,.,,,.. ~ carpeti, cement driveway, pets. How about getting Lusk Harbor View South 3 • NEW ENGLAND t y p e kit.ch. Carpeting, Duplexes oear the ocean eight dillerent rentalsi Call electric garage door opener, your fami)¥ out ol that or 4 BR., 2% baths. SeJ?M-Realtors ~2430 833-0?00 • 3 BRs, cozy fa m rm., drapes. No beUer buy ln Miles I.anon, 'Realtor 6~rp:l. · water softener ahd tWo fire. apartment and into ')'OW' ate bllliard-illzed FR., wet 4 Bed 2 5t0 550 N~ Center Dr. 1orrill din rm., ad d e d all the "village." * fm:.8563 * ~ ~a:· ~t: ~ ~~ own home for Puiatmu. ~f)Ron Sherman ~· room-. ry DUPLE~-BY OWNER :;xt~ltin~.in Pe~::~ MISSION REALTY 494-0731 liJ~ •• SundaY dinner .. the built· y I Ex~:U:: !, ~ 1!!.~t"'""'· -She'r' & ~,..:·• "';~:!::~' e~ "wee<1 tt • Reap" FOR ACnON. • • *." .. · .. In gaa Bar-b-<J. Fun awaita : ~tttf;Ii'B. '11~~t[• . bedroo • ........, 0 move 1n. u ters, an . . From b'e1Wft8 to trash c• ACSIFIED AD -·--, !or onlf $39,500. Fun awaits Realtors s.nu -··-·· ............ with all four ms up. beautiful new kitchen bath 962-5511. c1:2 them into cub ~ f 'for m0re infonnation. 3:143 West.cliff Drive atainl. Walk one hloCk ~ ~~~t. 0pen ,sw1 1-5: OPEN BEAM ' """" '1• • • •• •u•S.or1itTOftttttoLweu.co. Ol'ENnL t·· rrs RJN 101E NICE/ Open 'tlU 9 PM park, tennis cou.rtB and podt ~· 673-I658; ,675:.7&.lG.' · rm w/clr· ' DAILY p........,.~ Az.5678 HOUSE Hun.i-'!' Watch the "'il!liiiiiiiiiMiiill Assume VA loan with.total feeling, Irg ram CLASSIFlED ....... 642-5678• ...... 17 •i 1-21/z ACRES *BILBOA ISLAND* monthly ...,.,ents.of ·1'53 ·coRONl'·DE t-MAR--fill!•• fireplace, 2 BR, 1 ~~=====:::======~==;O:P:EN::HO:U:S~E:co::;lumn.== lflirj =~=-~~':"" 2B;P~u:;BR. $89,500 E1Jt~;:::: H~.~~~!~.,~..., 1, ~~ 1d:o%.~:~:' C.~-0 j).,.,_ J)-C ~c:..· .:=-11 =i1==-:1P e Fireplace, Electric Kit· 3 BR. Plus 2 BR. $79,!bl I I you like bright red shag Leadership RE 8424466 p~ J.'QfJ ~).. ~ p~p · $23.000 2 BR, 1 !IA • t.:i Atmoophere with ! rut~\:~~ ~:1J:l ll•Jlllll!f!ll ::'if'~· i!i:'hi,?~ :!Jt REPOSSESSIONS T' p I ·i'h lh B ·11 l C' 'I \ SUMb•ne clean .l reody lo• Lake View 6 Units $110,000 Ji@iil:'li & l'J'&t ' ljllll11en'. Only FOi' lillormatlon •nd location ne UH e WI e UI • n I nUC1< e ~ui;:~~· l:~e~: • Po8siH eslblft Split for Several' BayftonHtsA!225RD'OOOEStoTY'350,CDl . --=:: :::iia: $94.IOO 1 o1 these FHA &: v ,\·homes, earpeta I< drapoa thnlOUt. om e~ · HARIOR VIEW COLD~ BANKER contact . ·, Huce · kit-with ,,. • can Anl'lime, -REA. LJORS Rea11on --833--0100 KASABIAN :;:,'lf'~""try a-... 5113 Pad! Ave., Balboa bland 1~~~ ::!:ith ~~ 'i!il! Newoort Cente• Dr. R ... I Estate 962-6644 -, -~-. . -67~216' garllie, ~e ,lot &: fruit Cost• MeU VACANT -Ride )'Our bike to > A NEAT trees with (!l"Oatocean and R. ~, 2 Br ~-·· ~·h the bc:h. 2 BR, $19."™1. harbor view. A stor)'book .... .,.... .uu ..... _....._ SCOTr REALTY 536-7533 home with that chatm that'• redec<>ratcd, both w/fralca, ' · Open Elles. UTTLE l'ACKAGE 00 hon! to !Ind. Ownei: will I'll 1ot. Quiet nbmd •. N•. I 1 wn.p(ie(I up tor Ouiatmas take 109' down paynient. I achoola" ghppna. Excellent1-;;;";;;";";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;.1 M·I ·ZONING En,.rtalr.-nt c-, · SpectaCll!«f cb'fom! Rambl· 3 Bedroom tiouae, fireplace, inc 7 bedroom Haclenda on 1 75' :re lZ" lot. Very good lo-3 separate prime Peno. k>tl! cation In area of many new Ultra modern thruoot, 4 car blllldlna•· Alking $21, 1111. -~Pill -· E terms. at to A INl'f. ap. , Cll~5880 . !Open Ev,..) r.!~ at ..i.. o! I 28.0001 Rent now, bUild attill I · HERITAGE IH /\LTfJRS 1,.._-~I B.w@- 2 FOR I ~ INC01'1E -1--- and waJttna Jot yOU, Jldll lneqme. $43,500, 642-9096.' I~ l!lMie \or the young Dllll'-BY Owner. 3 Br, 1 Ba, lncd , WRAP UP rkd M older cou.pfe WhO yd, cov ~do, · $1'!!0 dn. lbll ll)lckNI: hOu~ for )'OUr want a amaller h6mt1, fca· Rt&Jtcn 6*7Tll lDS/.mo, $23,500. SD-U03, wlte on ChriatmU. She'll turtrw two bedroom•, uvtng »13 Watclitt Or:lve e\18 ~2312. ~ the slle ot the 3 bdrms room, larp kftcbel wtth Open 'tUl 9 PM BY o,mer _ The· larplJ., and the extta halt l)ath u eadnc lft!L 1.«&ted on nlceaf. J ea 1 t eic:pe..tw ~ tht low m1tnt~· --Jot. Priced at CAMEO SHORES "'i1.C1y ·5 Bl\ hm In M...: °""' tandocapt\11 leavina 121.IGO. 114'1.eoJD. OCIANFRONT <!el liar. 13!,IOO . .$49-00.. ttnie for awbnmtng, t....,1,, O'llW JH.I • 11'1l'fM10 a.-, DUllllw Blue Pacttlc. ViO'W 8Y 0wntt ... S BR.,. bl. tte. Pricc!d It only $53,5(X1 of '°""' " Jetty. J:iepnt I N-w611<. , $1 do. lncJudinc tho '"!"· home with he&ullM poo<000. 127,950. CIS!-lla:I, • e" 8 red ···11 Private b ... C-h • $350, • ~!YIM. I ~:1~ BANJ<m P4.l!OO °""" tn tho"-2 ~ -1 ' ''"·I !HF RFill ' ~-'111 I i'.SJAil:RS '36,000 Ooe ~ bedrm and one 2 bedrm, ~mt .r..,e n ta 1 location , ownert are amdou.1 Reallon &<+-2l30 833--0100 BrL 140" • er , a-~ Prill FOR ACTION. • • ~\~ ~ii-!'&". ••!l!O-N••li.,,.li•"'"eenttt_,.°'...,· "'I ...,. MS-mm-mi Jbn. unJV. ,..:"~~. 1,..100 lllcomJ $4M. """" at -daJ lo ,_ Biii' DAY 10 Call --CALL 642-5671 -CalJ !rMZll. A-want Ml~ a SoOd L,. NII an adl -·t !ftlt.>I. • • Olflce -•hi lo 6 PM 1 ~Carpet, RealtoT1 , -· Wan• ad rtwlta , • • fC..S8'7tl \!Wb'ntnt. .can toda,y ea.arrt. .. - I TADNU I I I' I I I; Ip DI D IO RI I A softlo wllh grll: "I'm . _ _ _ . . gonno rough if thi1 winter. :=======-..., I'm turning my electric blanket ~--..-T--.r-T--.~ A Comp\elo tM <hocl!• ,-d I W 0 D S I K ldownm-• ''"" 1$ I I I r ;: U.':lr!::. ~1 :-~. 6 PltNT NUM6ERED l flTE llS IN 1 'C:r" Tl-tESE SQUAR:ES • UNSciAMBI.£ ABOVE lffiERS TO Gff AN!iWE~ I SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIACA1ION - .. -. . . , . ' 28 OAJLV PILOT r-.... -19. 1m __ ... Hil I 1~1 ~1 --=~·1-··---~l!t1~1.~_ ... _1 ·-lrtJI.__ -_-_; ...... _,lit] I -hr-I~ I.·-·-.J~ ------ Condominiums Condomlftl-l4ouMS Unfum. 305 Ho-furn. ..,. :Apt..=:...;,.Fu:;:rn..:;:.. __ ....;:360:=j::A!'li:::,· .,:Un::::;luf'ft.::,::..._ _ _.:365::;:!%!;':..:U~n:::f:::u:,:rn.::,_ _ _:36:;:'5::.jAjlll., AplL, \;:;:' 0 :':':•;;;'";:;::;;;;;;;;;:;:';;;IO;;;;;:;:'°';;;;; .. ;;;;;'•;;;:;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;'";;;;; _Foun __ 1._1_n_v_._1_i.., ____ 1 _.:u:::":::'u;;rn..;;;. ___ ..;J:;:1.:o co11a -i~a..~~-~:er~ol~iii~~~~~a.,~,.~r~•~I =iiiiii.;·--~~P~v~m.~or~U~nlu~m.~m~~P~v~m~.~·~r~U~nlu~m.~~m~I 4 BR. 2\0 batho, tam nn., Coron• del Mor WEEKL Y-MONTHL y Huntlft9fon Beoch Huntington 8-h WALNUT SQUARE trplc., bit"'· Incl dllbwsbr. 2 BR. 3210 S.•view, I bl• E .. cvtlvo SullH VILLA MARSEILLES 1'85 mo. OOth1&3:>. trom bi< Corona. Adulbl. 2ot0 Nowpdrt Blvd, Huntington Beoch Furn or unturn. $.ISO or S:JOO Cost• Mo.. SPACIOU~I & 2 BEDROOM APT. per mo. on 1 yr ....._ 642_2611 Fundshod & Unfvmllhed HOLIDAY SPECIAL IMMED. OCCUPANCY "°"""""' Jan. L Owner, STUDIOS & 1 BR'S . Adult Llvl"I Nrw 3 Br $200. mo. eves 21.1: 282-5252. • FREE Unl'ns Dishwasher color coordinated appllances • LAST CONDOMINIUMS PHASE THREE • No Closing Costs e FrH Upgr•de C•rpet • lmm.diate Possession • $1000 Mov11 You In Santa Ana Fwy. to Culver, right about \4, mile to Walnut (1st road on lefl), left I mile to ''\Valnut Square"; or San Diego Fwy, to Culver, left about 3 miles to Walnut, right to HWalnut Square" or call 714/5514041. Dbl "'"aae. dahwshr • FREE "tlllt'--Plush shag carpet -mlmJred wardrobe doors. Condominium• u ·~ Indirect lflgbting lo kltcheo • bre·•fast bar • 334 Portland Clrele, Jf.B. Unfum. 320 • Full Kltchim b" I -and I .. ~,,,,.~5;;;36-1;;1;,;81~~"'! I c;;;-;;;;-----• Heated Pool ugo private enced patio • ph14h l scap- r ~ Cosla MtSI • La.Wldry lfacllltil!• ing -brfck Bar-8-Ques -large heated pools VACANT-Prestige 3 BR. 21------:-::,-,..,.--• TV 1c maid aerv uvail & lanai. Air condltlonJng. BA. shag crplg, fncd yard. e Phone Service 3101 So. Bristol St., Sant• Anl -557..aGO Marina High dLst. PXl n10. COLDWELL BA CO "1&-0136. ADUL ON Unbollovebly Beeutlfvl u•u•G' NKER & • •BR ·•·-d bltn VAL D'ISERE Garden Apia. '"""'""" ING AGENT ' , ... -.. rps, range. 2 BDRM., SPLIT-LEVEL ~fenced yd, dtii ganag.e, IMMEO. OGGUP. Adults iii no ~ts. ~ttll Preler mature cpl. $210. $Z5. PER MO. ~~al~tt45, syeRam & Corona del Mar ht, Unfurn. 365 mo. 673--0618: ~n. ~7270 RL TR. ate , poo ec. Rm.1-....;.;;.o...;;.::;...;...;;;... ___ l":;;i;;.:i;;;.;...;;;;;~;.:;_--_;;::::1 ----~ ------ 4 Br. Condo. Crpta, drps, l-lno ~wu:U. ,s.1a 11rom·2 Bd1nn138., * GREAT VIEW • 2 BR. * Costa MeA bltnl. ttfrl.g. poo.I & clubhse. _. ·_.;..._______ s~ fr urn.am p · Frp~~lc~·~blt'"'.]'·~·'""~:-~·~pool~I ·~~~~iii~~~·! $22S. S48-l405. NE\V Walnut Square Town-6'2-8610 ; anons, ]210 up. 644-6344, 615--3535. 2BR. bltiru<. $200/Pcr n>o. house. 2 B" & don, 2 Ba., ~--ivf~7.i· '";;:-;d,UjtBO;;JY./~Co~st~o~Mo~ .. ~---HARBOR GREENS ~"•-n & ""(S OK. ACT. UOO ft ._, Nr.w apta for a ta onJy. O..O.UUl-oc: r-0\-.'r sq. ·• cenu-.... Balconies fire I be 962-Hn or 516-3103. heating .& A/C. Washer/ • paces. am-How 's You r Budget? $229 ~-·er tum & own Iaund rm. ed ceilings, wood panellng, 3 BR, 2 BA, bltns. . per Y>-1 carpetln.g, dn,pes. Recrea-Great. when you g~t Your Fuml1hod & Unfvml1hod HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FINEST Spanish Country Estate Living • 2 Acres. Beautiful park-llke surroundings. Sunken Pool. Sparkllng Spanish Fountains. • Spacious Rooms • Soparate Dining • Walk In Closets • Home-like Kitchens & Cabinets "' l BDRM. Unlurn. $165. Furn. $185. 2 BDRM. Unlurn. $185. Furn. $215. TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, l 'hlln., 1400 sq, ft. Unlurnished-$200. ALL UTILITIES FREE Walk to Huntington Center Adults, No pets IA QUINTA HERMOSA 16211 Parkside Lano, H.B. "'91 Ettm, ]{ ~) mo. Children ,t,, pe111 OK. paid cable TV&: pool. Avail lion bulldJng with pool. money's worth at the Ven- Ge....i Hluet fwAlnl AGT. 962-4471/51G-al03. 1/1113. ~ mo. 14683 Gold-Furn & untum. Bachelor & dome. Handy location with l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~ c ______ _, • J BR. VACANT. $240 mO. ;:en'-'G::;len=•.::55::1:.;·2406""i-' ---,..:; l bdrm.s. from $135'. 140 W. lots of nearby activities for Ii 166 •••••••••• Nr. &Qlf l"OUl'Se, Ask for Townhou~ Unfum. 335 Wilson !Just West or New-the kids •.. plus play and From $130 to $215 mo 714: 847-5441 Income Property 300 Stev<', R92-4~77. port Blvd.) ......... 1 area. "~side: Ba~elor1 • l Bdrm1 1-----.:.....-'----Houses Furnished H I n. h ·~ -TAX SJIF.LTER __ ;....._;....._...;;.....;.;;.;: unt nffon u.•c Huntington Beach • 1500 square feet 2 Bdrms e J Bdrm1 (4 blks. So. ol San Diego Frwy. on Beach, I blk. W. on Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane). SO UNITS Lido Isle I ;l;;;rv:;:l;;;no;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;:;:;;:; NICE clean 2 BDRM * 3 Bedrooms 1Y.a or 2 Full B•th1 ''!'""~"l"'""""""~~!!!!'!'-1!!!'!'"!'"'"""""""~1 -$145 _ $165 * Big living room with rA U 1 .,. $639 M \VINTER RENTAL: Until townbouSe, 1% ha, bltns, Bachelor & 1 BR, patios, fireplace Muter size bedrooms w/ pt. n urn. 365 Apt. Unfurn., """" 31 UNITS June 30th 1973 4 BR, den, i ~~-~ ~ Ai.r~con~ .• , f: ~~·r::. c~~~~ !rplc'1, prlv. garages -Yours, from $195 • .• a new high beam ceilings, large Huntington Buch Newport Beach $395 M 3~~ BA. $450. per mo. OR 1 3 BR' 2 Ba· 8. 1r1 00:!t_ • • SllO Divided bath & lots of lite at Uving room w/ga.s or 1---':.;.;:.;;....;.;;;..;;,..;.,. __ l'-"""'"'-'"-';;.::.c.;.o;..... __ 157F8R1'iNi~s1~o~M . BR, ~~Jn.BA~:z.rr 3 BR: 2 ha: ~1~:i :.:: $340 Duplex•• Unfurn. 350 ~(ts.;.brec ~I. ~u: THE VENDOME Co"OOd lburnl~~place. • MOVE IN TODAY*' * 2 WEEKS FREE* GOOD MGMENT mo. * 642-53XJ * ~ :~· 2 Ba. Atriwn .... $365 Costa Mew See Lor ea~W:, 17301 lB45 Anahei~ ~'enue ounv:i~C:tn. EooOlled ~~ Spac. 2$1f'3 Aar":?n· 4-plex. Vista. del Mesa Sale/Excf\ange Up. Newport Beach , 3 Ba. lam. rm. •• $475 Keelson Ln. (1 blk: W. of Call Mrs. Ph1ll1ps stJ.OM tios. 2 !Wim~lng poo_ls, Several avail. ALL EX-ADULT ·GARDEN 1-fOMES 673-522I, 673-7670, "5-2379 LARGE 2 SR Duplex, cpts, Seach, 1 blk N. of Slater). DELUXE sauna, ~reation ractli· TRAS. Pool, rec bldg. Kids IRVINE AVE. AT MF.SA Ov.·nr/Brk WATERFRONT · PIER & drapes. bJt-ins, washer, ~?848 APARTMENTS ties. Security euarct. No welcome. From $139. See ~tove in w/depoalts only INVESTORS FLOAT · 3 BR, formal din-=r$l.f5:1"1~~· No HUNT 1NGT0 N &!ach Air Cond _ Fl'plc's. 3 Swim-pets. Mgr. Itm Kee.Ison "B". 1 1 Br. $160 2 Br. S3XJ T\VO 4-PLEXES. :or\nt retum. ;:P7.:1· Jbl ba~~~~~Y 2BR. gar, patio, pref couple =~. Be~is..!:L81r.e:, ~ ~ ~e~~ Spa and Models Open 10 tll 7 pm ~te~· ~:i~! :l~~.u ~fa~~~~~ :~n. ~~rki2.~:f8~· S47Sl. lease only. Furni&bed $500 No children, $145 548-8835 on beach $100 mo. (TI4) Billiard Room. 2700 Peterton Way, CM 1--,~==~""''i-~'=""' exercise nn, billiards, col- mo. Unturn. 14511 mo. No "SINCE 19<6" . Huntington Beech 83>-7422. 1 BR. From 11611 * FRESH AIR '' TV. Eo. Apt. 00. dIBh· M ,.Am M pets. Pete "Barrett Realty. lsl Wl!stern Bank B1dg. MEN -Small beach hotel. 1 BR. &-Den From $1&5 nr Harbor Blvd & Walk 3 bloc.ks to Beach wuher, refrla, shag cpt, • .... WALKER .... 642-1353. · university Parle:, Irvine Apa SSS/mo. Rooms MEDITERRANEAN Adams Lrg 2 & 3 BR. Apta. Newly prt patio or deck. M5-48SS -u-WAU< ID Water on all. I Br Days 552-71100 Nights IMMED. OCCIU2SOPANCY $21.50/wk. 53&-7006 VILLAGE ~ n dccorat«l. W/W crpto, -· NEW ••• 2 BEDROOMS l71TI Beach Blvd .• H.B. Bach $95. 1 Br dplx vu Sl.2.5. New 3 Br apts · mo. 2 BR. & 1 'l3R: Furn or 540""U370 bltns, except refrig. $16! & 2 baths, double garage, 1S UNITS. &llflov.·er. $185 M. 2 Br bse $175. Util ;wi. Dbl garage, dshwshr Untum. Pool. l blk from 2400 H bar Bl d c M $23.5. No singles, no pets. Yearly Lease $2.65. Sa 115 000 0 --~ 1 Rent·A·H-·.. 97" ••30 2 BR I" ba , ...... ,,.....," 334 Portland Circle, H.B. PH "~"-• ...,.., ar v ., . . 536-lID 427 E Ba Balboa . ve , . wner ""'v""'. -1ro. . ..,. . . . • . ,..,,,~ S~lll ocean ; ~. ln4l 557-8020 I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!/ · . y Ave., 6.4 x gross. 714/842-3670. 2 BR. 2 Ba ...•••••.•••• $300 $115 • FURNISHED 2 Bdrm. RENTAL OFFICE 1 · WALK TO BEACH 645-1460 Houses Unfum, 305 3 BR. 2 ba. ······· ····· $325 Near Stores. Clean OPEN 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM New l & 2 Br, cpt/drps, BALBOA Penin Pt. 1 b1k Industrial Property 168 =="'-===-...::.::.14 BR. 2 ba. Broadmoor $385 Realonorulcs, Bkr. 675-6700 ~I lS. ADULTS dwhr, frpL 316 16th. from heh. Beaut. mod aplL * SAN DIEGO * Gener•I 4 BR. 2.ba. lam rm···· Ul?O I Laguna BHch .., 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments 847-3957. 2 BR S2:10, 1 BR $1~. yrly, Tndustrial bldg. Sl~.000 Dn. LANDLORDS! r I '·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~I BACH nr beat'h $1JS.ll55-Col You Bet it's underpriced! Only 1 year old 673-ll!M. 8 eel h•11 Apartments for Rent GIGANTIC 1 BDRM. On the East skle Lido Isle adlts, Evea 6-9 pm or wkndJ. Total $506,000. Prime loc. We Spt>elallze In Newport ' I tv. 1435 N. Cout _ ()pen That's why this apt won't In nicely landscaped setting UPSTAIRS 2BR, 2BA, crpta, 5~.-.~c"-1"om-zn_t_o ____ , 20,800 Sq. Ft. Triple net Beach e Corona de! Mb.r e Apt F 1..:" Eves. 675-4167, 4 9 4-2 5"0 8 last l~ng. Cpts, drps, stove Swimniliig pool, built-Ins dl'f:is, trpJc, Adlts, no pets, [ · lease. Prine. only. Chvners & l..agUna. Our Rental Ser-s. urn. -eves & refrig. Lots of green lawn. carpebl & enclosed garages S275 lease, 673-3824. 1 & 2 BR near beach & 640-0330. P.O. Box 409· vice Is FREE to You! Try Unlv. p~~r. Irvine Balboa Island STI1Dl0, near beach couple ~15v•.'20'dJ8!aguJl'e'rt'oAndAulv",·. 00(1 Fro23mll$Ell60d. StAop by Mesa Verde town, g~e lndry. cable Corona del Mar. Cal 92625. Nu-Viev.•! o,,,,.,..... OK $130 uu·1 !urn ... -"" ,. en ve. TV, $150.-.$175. 4&-1319. 310 Gall Anytime, ~ · · · Blk E. of New....-Blvd. i. ~ .J Real Est•te Wanted 114 NU·VIEW RENTALS Office hours 8 AM to 6 PM 1 Lrg. master bedroom, util I ~---'*-''94-"=-'-1413"=-*"---.....,.. DELUXE 2 & 3 Br, 2 Ba. _Dc=l-'m"•"'-· --,----I * Cj>ulck Cash * Will buy your property. All cash within n hrs. Call . I BROKERS INC. 9'2-1151 Private Party R-1 lot. 546-<>3l5 673-4030 494-~8 ~~~~~"!'~~"' pd. Sundeck. Wuhrm. l car N t Be• h ~2~ So. ot Bay, C.M.l Encl gar, $160 up. Rental Apts SHARP 3 BR, 2 BA, almost gar. space. Nearly new. ewpor c =''-"~·~~--~~-I Ofc.. 3095 r.tace Ave. Fu·;..,, or Unfu"'. 370 new. Great loc. near park. Yearly lease. $200/mo. BR., 2 ba.., 2 car encl Parle.Like Surroundine 54&-1034. $255/Mo. Call Larry or =673-'659c.;,=c.·~-~---park'g. w/lndry. Avail. now. QUJE'T DELUXE COMfl'ANV ~~y~ .. ~,..,1-y-°"B"°e-y'fr-ont--,- Dorothy, 546-5880. Balboa Peninsul11 3 BR. Z ba·fumlsbed Steps to 1, 2 & 3 BR APTS REAL'roRS 3 U>vely new unturn. apts. • HouMI * Aptt. BRAND nu 3BR, 2BA. ocean · ·· • · · · ·· · · · · · ··· $27'5 N ~at!"5 ** A~~~-Poo! SINCE 1944 3 & 2 BR., 2 ha. each. Pier Townhouse, a lot of xtraa! • S25 Wlc & Up On Ocean 3 BR, 2 Ba ••• · • •• • · •• • ~ r. Pg '"" on Y • 673-4400 & slip. Many exlras. lmmcd. * 145 .. 0111 * For yrly lease call Ron, l..nvely &ch· I BR-Rooms 2 BR, l Ba, Penln •••••• $250 Aho Furn Bach. Apts occupancy. m w.1tth COSTA MESA 83.l--0719 Maid.~ce ~..O ~til Pd we:mv;.J1ein~~~tals Martinique Apts. IEXT~!!'RA~'!'LAR~~G~E"1!"!!B!!'R":1155~.1 Call: 673-3663 673-8086 Eves. NEAR WUTH COAST 1 L_•~g~u_n_o_Beo_c_h____ 1 BR, oewly decorated, $165 Also Oceanfronts Avail. J"!!! ASMpt Ulta Ana Ave~ Utils pd. Rebi,1t, ra.rige, cpt, .PLAZA, 4 bed.rm & fl~SO. LAGUNA 1 Br. yearly. 673-959! CALL: 67l'-3S63 .,. Ziwis. 1~1~: noMa:::. · associated fam, bltins, enclosed ocean view. Prlv patio. UleStiB.AU 21 Walk to shoP>4J. l 88 7 t. ..,., $19&-2 Br. •pt. Beaut. oc.an lBR !um, wint•r. \0 blk ID Mom'OVfa, 64!>-<261. pa 10. "-· per mo. viev.· 1 -"'-k beach to 7(1/73 $150 mo 1WO 2 Bdnn 1185 ---::;:ITTCG:<ru:ES"'-·i-=======~ Buy, rent or lease w/ $300 ~ 2 68';'" + den z Ba. • · Beaut~ul ap~. ··~iPnvat~ ··T~IE GABLES'' option, Heritage, Real-ocean view. Frplc. C213-{i95-479l ... _._ patios, garage, pool, spa. 2 Br, l ~li: Ba w/ gar. Adla. Newport Be•ch BROKERS-REALTORS lt.l5 W Balboa 67l•l66) Costa Mesa THE EXCITfNG PALM MESA APTS. MINUTES TO NPT. BO:I. FURN. OR UNFURN . UnbellevahJ.y laree apts:., huge pool, Jacuz:tl' elect bit· ins, .shag crpt II, drJ>I. aunt. 'etc. Adults, no pet1. -SINGLES From $1!iO 1 BE'DRM. Frol'Q $160 2 BEDRM. From $180 •-rs. "" ""1 NU-VIEW RENTALS oron1 dol -r Luoh g·~en sottlog Adul1' D'!>b, drp., blins, tncd ynl [iJ ~ ~= NEW 2 BEDROOMS ..... ., . ' I tl \Vt pd 636-4120 I • 673-4030 or 494·324.§ 2 BR I BA U il Pd •'Inn • • • no pets. 151 E. 21st, C.M. w 7 pa o. r N. I · Balboa Island · · t • -.... 2 baths, double garage * 646-86li6 * 243 Orange Ave o. D 160. . Laguna Niguel mo. Yearly. Married Cpl. Yearly Lease, $300. DELUX extra lrg 1 BR, apt FOR leue charming Balboa Re('s. Avl row. 675-3613. 427 E. Bay Ave., Balboa $185 per mo. Lease. 2 BR, 1 ln 4-plex, Close to South financ'-1 OCEAN ancl HARBOR VIEW Unfurn Apts A ... au From $10 to $15 LESS. You're rlght, they're under- priced! 1561 Mesa Dr. (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) Busineu Opportunity 200 NEWPORT BEACH Marine Contracting Firm Finest equipment & waterfront Joca1Xin . 35 Yr. old company. Space avail. !or boat sales A: repairs. BILL Gf!UNDY RL TR. 675-4161 Mu.ale store, growing Coffee shop, tenns ... Dress shop, dance 11tudio : Furniture etorehfa.st aaJe HOLLAND DUI. Solos 1116 Orange, CM 645-417U 'CATTLE Investment CO n s u It ant-All income levels. t.ood profit poten .t: tax advantage. Phone I 644-6289 ' · $1250. leases beer Bar & Island house, many ectru YEARLY leue. NEW 2 Br, 2 Cosio _._..___ 645-1460 BA Townhouse. Attached Coast Center. Adlts, no pets. ~'Where c:r,eniallty •~ mo --1574 Ba. on Goll Coune. $300 m.N gar + park'g stall. Swlm'g n« 551 29 -· .,. k U 1 BR ,...__. --55 Prevai s" C d I ._._ mo. Call 675--2030. O $29.50 Per Wee & p. . pool & grounds maln-orona e m.r Casa de ro 2 BR & bachelors. Color TV, tenance. Crpts, d r p s . NEW 1 & 2 BR's from $170 to Elegant apartmenta de!llgned 2 BR, frplc. Adults, no pets. $250/mo. 417 Poinsettia.. See Sun. 10-6. Wkdys call 00--0899. Costa Mesa $95 -QUIET RETREAT • I Br. Nice ya.rrl. Pet ok, BEA CON * 64S.0111 SlliO -SPACIOUS 2 Br, Stove, crpts, drps, yard for kids/ "B"EACON * 64s.oll1 SHARP, CLEAN, 3 BEDROOM. La r g e yard, children o.k. $210. per mo. • no fee . Heritage, Realtors. 540-1151 Newport BMch ALL UTILlTIES PAID maid serv., pool. The M,esa, Children welcome. Mesa $190. Nr. beach & shop'g. with a Master·s touch. su· Compare befor-e YoU rent 415 N. Newport Blvd., N.B. Verde North area of C.M. ll4 E. 2Jlth St., CM. perb house security; exclu· THE BLUFFS CAREFREE LIVING . , , IN NEWPORT'S AWARD-WINNING l'OJ\IMUNITY * 3 BR, 2 Ba. tri-level $350 * 3 BR. den, 2-sty .... S400 * 4 BR, 2'12 ba. vacant S425 * 3 BR, 2 ba. View , ... S500 * 3 BR, 21Ai ba. "New" $525 • 3 BR, 21Ai ba., custom S525 Furn, •vail. to $600 Mo. Short or long term custom designed, featuring: 646-il68L 557-2678 or 838-17'90. 548--0137. sive Venailles Oub and • Spacious kitchen with in-2 BR lower duplex -1 blk to More Room.Lats Money * SHADY ELMS -POOL * pool with unique Aqua bar. direct lighting beach. Yrly or winter S2'25 COME see a real garde'n e Adulta PooWde S140 up fount&ins and formal gar- • Separate din'g area or $250 mo. 130 46th St. See apt! Uke living in a h>me e Olildren next block dens. AJJ part of the South e Home-like storage Nov ~26 or phone for $140/mo, 2 BR, l \~ BA, 177 E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 Coast.'1 finest apartment 2131285-4215 community. • Private patios · 2 prlcg places. priv patios & 2 BR. Adulta, no pets. BAY 1 Bedroom/studios from $rn5 • C'lo8ed garage w/storage WINTER Rental-1822 W. rec areas. Wilson Gardens, r-.fEADOWS APTs. 387 W. z Bedroom from S305 e Marble pullman Balboa Blvd. 3 Br. 2 Ba. on Wilson SL, W. of Harbor Bay St., CM. 646-007J. Models open 9 A.r-.t. til dusk • King-sz Bdrms $250 mo ti! June 15. Will 64&-2846 R ~ d • ~· •·~-•-" d •· Pb 2 B unfurn ..... vts. rps. ~ .-.....,. • ......... "'°"""""" -sur--:"e ~· : morn-** 3 Br., 1112 ba. ** ~/oven. re trig. No pets. ~ ~eel with plush land-p, · Larti;e, newly decor . encl $140/mo. 968-1455. scapmg. NEW 3 Br. apt. SJOO. yearly. patio, bllns, Cl'Jlt. drps, Adult living at ita best Private party. Days Close to everything. $l7U Huntington Beach LARGE I BR $190 642-6667 or even Ing s mo. 880 Center St., CM. Call 365 w. Wi~:,:ets &12-lgn 675--0641. aft 5:'.I> pm wkdys, all day NEW APTS~! TRAILER $100 mo. 1''1 wknd•, 64U340. HUNTINGTON *30 WEEK & UP deposit. l BROM, adlts. Nr VERY CLEAN apartment • Studio I:: 1 BR ApUI beach. Cats ok. Eves. w/2 spacious bedrooms 2 BEACH ON THE BLUFFS AT NEWPORT ""'""° PINECREEK ••• over 500 tall treet and 10 boulder-bound streams with tumbling waterfalls ttffte a relaxing setting tor your spacious 1~ 2-bedroom apt. From $165. 2300 1'~airvl~ Rd, O>sta Mesa. Ph: 545-2300. Huntington S..Ch BRAND NEW QUO VADIS Ill Luxury Garden Apts. Bachelor, l & 2 BR's. $135 to $1&.i Htd Pool.Jacun:l·Saunu Re -reaUon Room I: ~tore! Adults Only • No Ptlli BRING IN THIS AD & ASK ABOUT FREE DECEMBER RENT! 18992 Florida St. M7-9448 (% blk, W, of Garfield &,st ~~ {? really Cafe, fully equipt & ready e CHRISTMAS all year! 1 to go. San Clemente area. BR Co Furn s~ 492 ........, co" """' . aep. ti.age. . """ ., .... u or .-rNUAJ. ALA Rentals e 64>3900 2414 Vista del Oro V & e Avail 979--9755. baths. Has bulltins ' & 2 Bedroom, $144 e P ne Servk:e-Htd I WINTER: Bach. $125: 2 BR. LOVELY SHAG CARPETS. All Utilities Paid • Children & Pet aectio $275; 4 BR $275. Nr. beach Vacant now at $170 per mo. OVER 62 ??? ~?~mr~ :r'imCM ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 Call agent. 546-4141. RETIRED??? rrom Newport Blvd., turn at llospital Rood (1 blocf. above Pacific Coast Hwyl to entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, Newport B ~•ch, Ca. 92660. Telephone: cn4J &15-0060 and Beach Blvd.) $165 MO, 1 BR, deuplex, part furn, gar, patio, back ynt, !rplc, blk from bch, 5.16-9796 1 BR .. 1 b1k to beach. Shaa crptg, drps, lndry tac. 1135. 202 14th St. S36--0352. EDUCATOR supply .tare-Newport Beach SU> month & up. Apt. Unfurn. 365 Z BR. upstairs, baJ:. bltns, carpet and Drapes -:;-:;"::..;===:e;::---1 crpta, $165/mo. Util Paid. Built-Ins ~ Re!rig. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS Own. lll. So. Cst Plaza area. e NEW YEAR'S Bonus! 1 64f.ll33 ANYTIME $5,000/i»t ofr. 557-1246. Br. Stove, reftlg. Sml pet. -~~=-"-~--El Puerto Mesa Cenlstreno Beech 135 Al.,rt Pl. Call Mr. C...red P"'*'ng Mo I • -· 240 Util Incl $125. ney 0 ~n ALA Rentals • 64>3900 VIEW . , . 2 Bedroom" 2 . Bath, den, yearly lease ol $375. Realwr, 644-7270 J;. White (213) 59&-'"36 or aft 6 I BR's -$130 & UP SMALL hou.se, adults, no pm, 962-3172. Garden tettlng. Con· on the bay 1st TD Loans 8:t::' M3e .B,?R~erd~ Unfum. & Fum. pets. $110, has .stove no1's"'1~="".=2""B"'R"° . ....,G"ar.,. . ....,s"to-.,-.· I venient to large shop-. Newport Beach w • Luxury apartMent living ov· :..;;:;;;;::;;;"-;::.:;:c;;.;... ___ I All Utilities Paid garage, 34565 Via Verde, nerrig. Couple 1 child ok. or Pl"SI center. erlooking the waler. Enjoy Pool & Recreation 496-0091 Palisades. older penon. No pets. $50 No Pet<c. $750,(0J health spa, 7 11wtm-Live big -6'1< % INTEREST ·2nd TD Loans Lowell rates Orange Co. "WE BUY TD'S" S1ttler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 54s.o611 Serving Harbor area .21 yn. 2nd TRUST DEED LOANS Will Buy Trust Deed1 • BROKER 642--7491 * Mortgages, Trust Deeds 260 HAVF. A VY.RY MERRY Xfl.1AS ComolidMte )'()Ur bllli1 into jwlt one payment with a 2nd Trust Deed. c..JI 71C/6"1S-4494 Bkr _ ... _ I~ home. Close to schools & park. $265. per mo. Including gardener. Call LARRY 540-5880 1959 Maple Av e., CM Corona del Mar clean dep. Ref's ttq'd. the VILLA YORBA ming pools, 7 II) hted ten· Harbor View Home iiiiiA!ao~~·5"'~'"~"~fo~rire~nti;;;;;: /iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii/i54S-p;;~7231~·:-N6;;;:Tiii:;-l\iBa, nls cowU, PIWI miles of 4 BEDROOM _ yearly BACHELOR apt, $135/mo. • ~ .. A!Lbl Now-2 Br i. ... 1,, Ba1, U2-9'22 bicycle tralb, putting, abuf- + ctep. Util pd. New shag .. tt ... ~· tns. new 8·-crp · fleboard. croquet. Junior I'• NICE 2 Br. Crpt, stove, able December 15th. 998 El Camino, Apt 1, CM. -645-of220 ~~ Blvd., !._1: ~ and 2-bedroom plans and lease $475. mo. Avail-crpt'g. Nr. frwy & shop'g. ~ FreM painL Pool. No pets. COO San DJego Frwy, So. on from $174.50 monthly; also 1 garage & i8lF yard. $1~. REALTOR 644--7270. 546-0451. $140 up epac 2 br/3 br l'wii ba ~16er to ~ • · .., 2-story town houses. Elec· lat & Last plus deposit. • ' • • • • • • • • • • pool, cptfdrp, bib\, plYStrnd. Malaga, turn ri&ht). trlc kitchens, private pa.'-:is Resp. maITied couple. See OCEANFRONT, Lee new nus Coupon Good For $10 ON TEN ACRES 1996 Maple, No. 1 .•. 6@:.31n3 • I.::.uxury 1 br apt. or balconies, carpctin&:, dra· at 428% Hamilton St . family 4 Bdrm. Din-rm. OFF Motcl-Apt. Rent. 2376 Apts. fum./unfurn. Lease 2212 College, No. 5 ... 646-4273 • Adult peries. Subtertanean park· 642-1060. Yrly. Dave 6 7 5-19 7 2, Newport BI v d, CM. Fireplace / priv. P¥.Uos. 2BR, atove, refria, crpts, e Dishwa5hen; Ing with elevators. Optional 2 BR. Rana:e, crpt'd llv rm 1;. 494--0615. 645-3967. Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfsl. dtpa & util'a. · Adlt pk. • Choice of 2 color schemes maid aeJViee. Just north of hall. Drps Jn liv rm. Shades NEWPORT Shores 2 Br, den, • • • • • • • • • • 900 Sea lAn, CdM 64"-2611 llSO/mo. 5 5 7-813 4 or • Custom carpeUng. Fas.tiiOn ls.land at Jamboree Oakwood Is $1 mlllion In on all windows. Gar. tncd 2 Ba. pool & club prlvl. Nr. UNIQUE opportunity for ma-(MacArthur nr Coast llwy) 839-5296. •Jacuzzi and San Joaquin Hllls Road. from $140 'area. UCI bus route . bch. $300. 646·221R. ture gl!nUcman. Lge bed/ SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Ba, nr. •Heated pool Telephone C714} 644-1900 recreation. Swimming "A"""""' "•IL.•"•" alttln kit •-th t •Dead-bolt locks for_ ... lnlormaJK>n pools Health clubs ~v-<1""'! or .,.,v-1.4.'io. 3 BR, 3 00, pvl course view. g rm., ·• ""' • pv ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 bath. schoola, •hop'g It trwys. No e Onl)" 1140 pet mo. "~ ·-·= 2 ' · r-.fEM del Mar. 4 Br., tam See to apprtc. Avail now. en!r, refs reqd; $125 mo. ground aoor. '350 pr. month pet.I. SI6S/mo. 979-0134. BAHIA PUERTO ·c.STCUFF, bdrm., 11;6 Saunas. Tannls courts. rm. crpta. drps, 1 s e SM5 mo. ~7-9409. UU I pd. &.!de. ~. plus Sf'lt'Cloue l bedroom MESA Vertie Condo, 2 Br, 1 St 8 bo.tlotownhouse, bJt-ins, pvt. Biiliards. Indoor golf drlv- $ 21 SI mo. w Io ptlon. S..n Clemente * $25 PER WEEK * UPll•ln wtth pr1vat~ on-&. dahwhr, &bag crpt, pool. ~~th 53&.-H~ pa 1, •dullt only, no pets. Ing range. Sand Volleyball. 519-0!67. I: Up. Pool & maid Mirvice. trance. PX> pr month. Both Pref. adlts. Sl90. 546-m81. or Av..U, Jan. l. $225 per mo. Whltlpoot Baths. And Iota l::ASfSlDE 4 Br. 2 Ba, frpl , BEAUTIFUL 3 RR, 2 BA Kitchens a\11.il. f.lotel Tahiti un1;1"s.""11xt to Pl!~ .. •Atennl1, NEW quiet 2 Br cpt drps '1, .. Mlh. north$140 o1, 8HRuntlnB1~l;;;!l43-='{1;3.===-~=....,.-=.,. more. A re1/dent tennis bltrw, dahwhr, new crpt & formal d\n., fam nn. encllld 1."0rncr Harbor & Victoria. ca ey 673·~ 1(1. tncd, r-ear yrd ·•gar' $185. °""c ·11_ • 1 ...i:.. ·~· WESTCLJFF 2 BR, 1 BA, pro and activities director paint. Elw:I dbl pr. Close to atrium, on Shorecllffs Cnlf NEW l l 2 BR's h"cHn $190 to BRAND NEW 2BR 2BA apl. 2048-B Carden i.n. ~: crpll, ..:....,, poo • t""Y-ya · ctrpt, nu crpt, ttrepl. h 1 schls. Nn peta. 645-4220. Coone. Lite $300 mo . $210 N be ch & ihop'a F'irepl, M!U clean qven. IOOry facil I: carportt. Ctil Adlt.-no pets. Av a 11 w o P ans free Sunday ~Xl33. · r. a • · $300/n'IO. lease. No pell Ot' $135 Mo. 2 BR. w/w erptg, A 2 sml chUdrtn ok. No 1/l-S190/mo 642-9848. brunches and barbecues. * Sl-IAOY ELMS -POOL * H f ~~~-... ~· ~ S\., CM, chlltfren. Eves: 64+-0tl.5 bltns, no chlldrl'n or pets, pell. Call 842-4664. •J't'ft -•-2 A Y-"" Sia"lng as low os $140. •Adults Poolsidl! $140 up OUMS urn. or ........-vw1. ACT. call 64&-Q9$, 2 BR Townhou sh I vn.nY ru\.~ Br, pt. '""" 1• • 01Udrtn next block Unfum. 310 BEAUT FURN 2 BR 1175 se, wa er $215. Pr!.vate party, Daya Singles, one and two-177 E -... .. S CM 642 'lll!.lr: Utll ~ Hid pool Adi'· unop SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 Ba"·i. 2 BR. Q-p~ drPI. blt~lnii:. deyer. Patk>, lrpic, bllln•, &t2-Ql67 or even In g' bod t - Fumlahed 300 . ........ t, ·....,--B lboo I nd -. .... 1•-• "'M HI h :-":.'"'·i Private patio. Garage. Coo-S1!5 mo. 962-6846. 8'15--0IMl. rooms, urnJahed end 1,.. _________ 1 nJRN. Bach~ Apt&. srn 1 Is a peta. Also t u n furn . w u.,.c. \.A.I ;; ::>cNK» plt.1 pre.rd 548-6m """"""=,,,..,==-;; unfurnlahed. Sorry no .. '~-1111-,. A: Up, No ctilldren or pell. * WINTER * ~~. llrtff. S275 mo. Avttll. now. . . BEAUT. 2 Br, 2 Ba, dlx 2 BR. Yearly. ~/mo. "' chlldrcn or pets. MOdels -,.,.. 2129 Elden Apt I . CM. F Bach A I B E Hal Plnc::hln Rltr. m.-4392 APT. 1 Bdrm .• drpl1.... c:rpta. poo!.1de nr bch. $lM low blk to Ocean. pat i 0 . 3 BR. HOU91! .•••....... P'?I um. • r. x~ LOE 3 BR 2 bn frplc f{lll'l.P· No pets. J49 .t-. Bay. dep. m Florida. ~ Gal"ll«itl'. Adulta:, no pets. open da lly 1 O to 7. 2.BDRMCOU&p. "Nm, 3 Br home. 5m. E&ltakte. 3 BR.110U89 ........... $240 ceptlonally nice. 2110 _; .. -... b'ltns s.'yv1ew' S13S. GG-0343. NICE 2 Br ~-drpo m-. Qa.............., ~ garap. Yr "50 • New Cl'Pta I treshly Pflliiled. 2 BR. HOU91!! .•...•...... $2!0 Newport Blvd., C.M. S:"~'f "'1\"'~. $ J 25 /mo : $12S MO.· 2 BDRMS. nnp, OVf!n: Pr~o peta'.l;B;,RAN~o;;D;::new:,,,,,-ocean==1nm=t"oon=· ~- Caople ciftb'. ~. Frplc. Obie &ar· 64&-2768 3 llR. Apt ·•· .•........ $225 QUIET 1 BD apt, quiet mid· ~. Near ahoppiQ&. Clean P«l/mo. 962--Clm. do, 2 BR. 2 BA. bltns. 0.tden Asamr.tmenta L .. UM BMc:h 2 Br., l ba.. Nice houae, )'II.rd, * YEARLY * die age tenant on I y , beffroom_. ench. BlflrT!! RtalonomJcs, Blcr. 675--6100 ' SR. ~udJo. PaUo, yard, refri.i, W4*her/dl')ler, yrJy 1~::...;.;;.;....;;..... _____ I pr. -. SIO\'t.. $195 m o . 3 BR. flOU!le • • .• , , ...•.• $475 Downtown ~3927 , T c&rp@tl It dri:pt8, cho\('(' "iEW l BR. xtn. l.R", 11 yd. No ltrlCf· SJ!,O/mo. Infant ok, leaae. $42) inonthly. 675-'/691. Nftporl Stech f130-U11L PO. t.ra. Bach. 1 641H003, Dick or Jerry. 49n. 8Ay1ront .......... $00) ' location t• -s-kid -t o<~d•r -plo no ........ Avl Je.n 1. fG.-4549 ... .--•• 3 BR. 2 bath Dunle•. lrvlneind11th blk l)eRch, Full kitchen. lB 2 bl ft'lcdyd f nl IBr.Apt •••• , •• , ........ $195 BACHELOR. utU pa.iii, $145 · .. n,... 111N ~lr 8 v• pes, r-v ,.....,. ,,.,,.,. 64&·0650•&42•8170 tl0-SO. LAGUNA 1 Dr. r, • • am o Y· 2 Br. Apt ................ $200 mo. $50 clea.nlf\R (el!. Nr 11'lrln1h. Call 673-8.'l:iO HI. r prcf'd. 64&--9533. LOVELY 2 BR apt . Bltna, Ground Door. 217 331'd St. nr~an vl4!iw. Prtv N"t.llo. S250 mo/ntJ !cc. ~t, Dnn, Hante~ ~altor• 67S-2&i6 OCX: &UCl. S.~7-7768. 2 DDRtit. 2 ror •'l'l"t'l'f'<I pnrk 'lEW 3 BR. l~ i.. Condo. crpts, drps, pr, potk>. Sl.00. ~mo. Year~ I'm~ OCEANFnONT 2BR, Bl Una, ~f'RO , N.8 . 3 83IH030, 503 Pa Ave, Balboa Island vacancies ~I money! Rt'nt ''tC· l'ool. $'210 lnclil'i Oh\. rar garage: c1u·p., 546--8196 or 962-67G.1 OCF.AN VT.EW yr a r J y relrlr, dck, carpels, gar. Ur. 2 &. ffl)lc. Winter. 2 BR Newly rOOaxi.rated. Any day la the BUI' DAY to )'OUI' houw. 1p1., •l11rt.• 11./\ll•r. Jl'l1. G'T!i 1727 drps, bltns srio. 97!r163.1. z BR, bltln llOV<', Prl pa!kl, Duplex. 2 BRl A~JJA · $251). $326 .yrly $250 to July 15. NU~VIEW RENTALS new erpt, trpl~ Nice ,Yd. nm an adf Don't !»lay •• bl"& .• ~e. thru a DfJUy Piiot /I~ wnnt an 1i. n JCOOrl h1 l')t1Jlv Pflol W1t.nt Adi Mvt <":rptS I: drnpes. $140. 1!Kn ~7fl0 nr &1~=·=='' ,-i:".i':'-;:''H:'=c;;;:---,"' 11'<0.l0:..:.;:;::::: _ _; ... :::.... __ 491=-''.:324!:.;:.!.-ll::225=.;tno=:;·:.;A;.:voil;..;';..1"/8"'.'-642-=.::9996:::; .~) todl,y 64l-5S11. Cla1MUlfd Ad. 642-5671. VClllJ1'1(!nl. b:U'J(lllrul galore. Ala~ Apt. c. 531-3684. CIUJllOt'lt Acbt •.• 00.-5678 Ntl't.I a "P•d"? Plat.-e •n.., i I ' I • DAILY "LOT l~-~;;:;I~~,~[ ;iiiiiji1Mtjmi'""-~l[Sl~1 ;;I -;;;;'"";; ...... ~I~;;; [ -:--1 ~ 2Jennid & !. ,,,,., 1[11] I .__ l[DJ _,.... 1[11] iii;I iiiii,,,,.,iiiii ••• ~' '•J -<IOO l'oilnd (frM odl) 550 C.arpentor P~nll"t'& I "" Htlp Wo nted, M & F 710 Htlp Wonttd, M & fl 710 Http Wtntod, M & f' 710 Htlp Wonted, M & f 711 0 """"""' .,LJenni.1 DEWX 11<1 . .,..,...;., ba, SML. black A tan remalo All 'l'rJ'* or :;,e:r•lry CUSTOM PAINT ING DENTAL AS$1STAN1' SmANT __ ,. _,_ ·--~ ~-/ •-~ Sm·' ~-~•-, Ill down. 5'4 or .. _ ~·~ .... N•~. ..... w ""''· -··Michigan O< ~ ·~--1~ Unlu I ~-OPENING J ANUARY, 197J °"" Meoa, 675-0310, Ave ......... Gelotor & ~1&48 ·-~ter. rn. nter. Personnel Anncy ove<. Experienced. 5...,,, 8 RESTAURANT ' 548-719'1 cautomla St. Will nol 1<1 Ctr ... ~-rvl•• ~~· ~· ~. ,. coluor ~~ i;v · to 5. Salo.y open. 010--0300 GOOD SAMARITAN HOSPITAL -MONTHLY 1 blk to ·-lch .. _ ,..... --.... • 11 ' c. ........ Ne ....... ,.. C.enttr -• ::..:.: :.....· • ... i)'OOt! Cl iic:r. Won't underbid.~. I "'l"'"' • Orange County llca<h. Call • ......_o O< FOUND vlclnlly ot Uni"""8i-JOHN'S Qu1)el A Upbolstcry nine DENTAL Receptlonlst, Now accepting A~plications al Now lntervtewlnt 673-0UO ask lot Bud ty Park Alpha Bela Irvine Dzi.Sb&a.\poo tree &.'Ot· No Waatlng previoul eicp nee. 546-2448 ROOMS $18 wk uP wlklL m black ;. ... v, part' doxle'. chaUlltd=CSoll. R<allta~lalorl. * WALLPAPE R * h'>m UOpm-<:~m only. 1120 South omon For Experlenc:M wk up ap«a. 2316 Newport W"U ~ !162-8365. t•-; 10 mhi'utt When )'OU call "Mae" DENTAL Asa:lstant. Exp'd In An•h•im, C111Jf . 92805 mwJ., CM.~. SCHWINN "Pea Picker" bleach-;;; white CllllPfit.t. 548-l444 646--lTI.l CLERK X·~ & oral evacuation, Phone 956-4080 Deli PcMIOfU\tl • Fry Coob \Vaitrel!o! MIP' .• Wa.itres:1e1 llOtilt"flltef Bus Boys Counter Girls • Diabwashen: Hottls, Motels 410 tound vicinity """'°" High Save roll' money bY ,.vtng P•~ Paln.,.)l':•· ~,~:.:: A~o"w"n1!,1"19 1••,1$85m•10 1..:.548-8844=D:,:l::,S· ~H~W~A~S~H~E~R--R.N. L.V.N. achool. c.au I: ldt<ntify by me extra tripi;. wiu clean LI fl F~--'"" ~91 lh Nurst Atttnd1nta -Unit Clerks WEEKLY ratea • Waterbeds, serial no. 96).4'f93. U•'•• rm., dinl"" rm. & c ns. · '""' .,,. •. U'JJ"V.l • Fabulous ·p~r In well Cob' TV, Kitchens. l block FEMALE pup Terrier TYJlfl Juill'fi.m. AnY ·rm. $7.50, INT le Ext painting, ceilings known m;n.rl. 'c.'O. awa.iU: All Services -All Shifts Phone or upply Mon. thru Sat. bot'4'eell 9 &: 5 to beach. New])Ott Beach in a red harness Animal oouch no. Chair $5. 15 yn. spra)'ed, Unfurnished spec. sharp ind1v. Will ·aasht con-for AM houn. Apply In per-. TraveLod&e, 642-il252. Cate Center, 534-3561. <>r exp. ts what count.II, not price. ~7887 aft 6. troller. Great btnefits & ad· 1C1n, Snack Shop No. 9, 3444 An Equal Opportunity Employer 630 Newport Center Dr. Gunt Hom. 415 SJG..1'181. method. l do weft myteU. INT It EXT ""'"ting "" vancemcnl here. .-E. Coast HWY, .. CdM. An N ri Beach ""7804 FOUND Germ&n Short hair . • hanglng, natural wood Good ref 531-0101 · ....... ' ,...per Call Pru ............. 833-2700 equal opp(ll'tun1ty employer. Help Wa nted, M & F 710 He lp Want.cl, M & F 710 • .,•.,w"po""""""'"""~""""'I poll\!;~, """'ng male. Hun-Cement, ConcreD finishing. 548-790S RESERVATIONIST D OMESTJC WAITRESS J~... Couple-Thoroughly exper. LIVE-In Housekeeper, cam PRODUCTION m * Ungton Beach area, PATIOS..PLANTERS APT. llJ.terlor Pain~. Car. Thi~ .spot ii perfect for a cook. Must have top refs. ol 10 r,nos old b&by. Mother -~ food anQ cocktail, ue Kf...(l]47• u Con t k Brick pet shampoo, clearung. Refs. smiling person who seeka Salary open-commensurate recup. g from surgery. Ap.. CONTROL LEADMAN Beet, 673--99Gf. SMALL black/white terrier Aslu.mpstoC: ewk~-35.}3. ' Ins, 642-7059. public contact in a ca.aual w/exp & ability. Send prox 2 mos. 673-0092 aJt 6 Required t<> setup original WHO WANTS TO WORK! *-1'.rivato Room lo• Ambulatory Lady or Man Good, nutr1tious Food. H.B. shopping center. Dec. PATIOS. walks, drives. Saw, Ple•ler, Patch, Repair atm<>SPhcre. resume to P. o. Box 2'78,1,P.::m:=... ------~ phu1ning, prod, schedules, & DRIVE A CAB! 17 Call 842-7751 ask for ... __ ,_ ._ 1 Call Jo,, ........... 833--2700 Corona de l Mar, ea. 92625. LVN, fem a I e, relief f'ltatus repo~, relative to CllOOSE yuur hours, work; .. Nice, cheerful atmOsphere. * Call 548-4753 * Olga. Ul"'a., remOYe °' rep ace * PATCH PLASTERING · · 3 day / k 3 manufacture of small elec· for YouneU be your own '°"'~~--~--. -~ concrete. 548-8668 lor est. All •-Free estimates · RECEPTIONIST supervisor, 5 w ' ITT:' n1echanlcal assembli!!S· b<>u Men or'women. can be MALE Brittany Spaniel vie. CUSTOM CEMENT WORK "'c;U 54().6825 Beautiful new olc of profes-ELECTRONIC ~~~t~ pm. Call 494-al75 for Mrn. of 3 yrs Pincodu 1 cfl0n slightly handicapped. Vts, l0!•!!!!1 '"''"'s'"h'"''"''"'430""' Adams & Beach, H.a 101 Drives WALKS patios. fessional grollp seeks perky, ~~--~----ront:rol exper. t e retired. Age 21 to 70, sup- Renta s to are J.ily Circle, H.B. Pool ~ks. Don. 6.u..sst4. Plumbing auractive individual for ASSEMBLERS LVN manufacturing or electro pleownl your Income. Drive NEED male to share 4 en. FND: Poodle In El Toro Vic. CEMENT WORK DRAINS uncl<>gged. $7.50 front dW spot. Ideal IX>-3-ll & ll-7 549.3001 mechanical .~rnbly. Rt'~ a cab 6 hrs or rnorP a day. bowie & util. in Hntg Bch. 12/16. Please id en t J fy, Rsnbl ra1es. Sewer line to 100' 4 $15 sition.for fun loving person. MACHINISTS. ply to O~ed :d oooBo55 Apply in person, Yellow Cab $80/mo. 962--6668 S37"'8662~ * U.3141 * * 549-%502 * Call Marion ••• •· ••• 833-2700 Both Day &: Nlte shill open-1560mr:lo •0. ~st~ Me~. ·eauf gie&a~ E. 16th St., Costa 0 ~ R. 1 ••s BLACK long hair kitten Ass em b I e r s n eede d ongs. 4 day, '" hr wo"· wk. ·::='--~----~-! ar-lVr en -F· .. -• vlcinl~ 01 •-•-·and Conl•octor PLUMBING REPAffi G I Of T I ~ ·~ -uunu v uvu"' enera C r• nee w/soldering exper. Some Some overtime, Med to Jrgl .,~~'!"'!~"'l'"'!"'l'"""'IWORKING n10lher needs EAST· side Costa Mesa, 125. Highland, 54lh1036. JACK Tauie.ne _ Repair No_.. ~":,all start after New Year trainee positions o Pen · size machlries doing inter· 1 · Real Estate Sale s relaable babyaltter, M·F. month mISR Setter male Sat _.1.:11 20 Great spot to learn ofc pro-Perm. employment. estiog short run opera.Hons. FREE 2:»5:30 in rny home. per * $.Q..~7 * t2n6, vie. t7tb St.,' Cos~ ~~·M:W.,t. c.o. >s47~: S~wing/ Altereti.,Cs cedures., Friendly co. seeks C 11 r A t ApPly in person, Elder· In-Warner & Edward s , M Call 54o_-... ~ shatp attractive individual a or PP · dustries, Inc., 2101 Dove St., children 7 &: 9. 842-1796 GARAGE for rent $35. ""''" esa. ~. Dreltl-Altoroto'on· u•5145 all bb 833 2700 Industrial RelatioM alt•• 6 pm ~ · id ... -.r C De Y ••• .. ••• · N.B. LicenM Tralni-~~~~-~-~~~~~~I month. East 20th St., Costa GOLDEN Retriever -e~ Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. ··• Me&a. 642-1264. tify. 562-9700. PLANS.Houses, Remoda:·, ====="""=="! MEDICAL (714) 494-9401 Maintenance Man Limited Tim• Only EAST Costa Mesa. Single FND Bk & white fml kitten Room Additions. $50 up. Dre=111t: ~:~::_ons ASSISTANT Exper. all around handyman FamoUs license oounell c:'w ller"Chlldle 11~ I garage. $25 Mo. Call Eves. vie Westcliff area. 642-1129. 5.57-0626 ' 557·9695 , ft-•-ft Hills 586-5888 A ssist Baby Doctor TELONIC & gardener for new exclu· available lhnl Tarbe m· V lost 555 Drlveweys T 1 1 ion· Repelr or. has busy practice. Liking INDUSTRIES ....... Refs a mwit. J!'M.11..114, imbursed upon qllllillication. 675-&188 640-l837 L«l.5"'"'"' slve apt complex. Gd saJ. pany. Applicants fully re· ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;~1 · Off!•• Rontal •-• •v s , I I""-• b'l'N to ~·t _, "'~ _ ,,,_ or c lllW.cn • a 11.J .-~ GER TRAINEE New or experienced sales Belt Buckle HAVE driveway repaired OOLOR TV Cal-Tronic.s them at ease most impor· Laguna Beach MANA people. Openings available. Antiques 800 CORONA DEL MAR Silver, crest shaped with before costs are too ex· 789 w. altb, Costa Mesa tant. Greet patients. answer AND SALESMAN Complete training program. ::;;;;;>.::;;:.... ____ .;;.;;"I Approx. 1200 sq., ft. office large, black initials • large tiensive. Average seal.es Service Call $10. 646-0412 phones, keep appointment Equal Oppr. Employer for fast growing Tile &: Horne Future management oppor-SCRAM-LETS 11pace tailored to your "Y' • crossed with a "T" $14.50. 638-8380 or 673-3264. sch~ules in plush ofc. Improvement Center. Na· tunltles. Call Mr. Sloan at de•ign. FuJl security blda. plus small ''B". Low in Fencing Call Lee ............ 8.13-2700 EXECUTIVE SECRE7ARY tionwide expansion program 832·5440. w/ample partdng, , value, xtra high in sentl· 111•1 DENTAL RECEPTIONIST. offers xlnt opportunity for TARBELL ANS.WEIS Ask for Cttn•tine mental value. One of a REPAm redwood fences & ..__ .. _,_ ... _,,_,,.. __ _. t' SECRETARY Intelligent & creative in-advancement. Earnings • BOYD REALTORS 675-~30 matching pair, can not be gates, 20 years experience, -· Santa's Surprise dividual wanted for over $10,000 1st year. Phone Legume _ Daunt _ Droop replaced. Reward. Call 537-29'26 or 89:HI076 after 5 Fee Paid permant'rlt managerial pos\. 645-1126 or apply at 2221 REAL TORS 645-2142 aft 5 p.m. or pm A beautiful way to start the tk>n with progressive office. Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa. =~_:;:;::;;~::=..--·I -A\V= ";~1Y:M"l'm &C-5678 Ext. 323, (8to12:30 Gardening Job Wanffd, Femalt 702 New Year. Growing firm Future Urniled only by in-MANAGEMENT trainee -~~A=~ not work gonna rough It this winter. New Waterfront Ottloes In the lalander Bldg. $150 And $.100 Month Prime Locatkin 3C1 Bayside Or., N'pt Beach BUI Grundy Ritt. 675-6161 or 1:30 to S.) NEED help at home? We ~~s attractive.friendly .in· itiative .& ability to assume CoUege grad, ambitious, ag. in the hottest area Hun-I'm turning my electric MALE Weimaraner, CdM BOB'S GART>ENING have Aide'&, Nurses, d1"'.1dual for their exe<;titlve responsibility Salary open, gressive. Starting Ralary to tington Beach/Fountain blanket down to MEDIUM." area, flea col. Approx 2" & LANDSCAPING Housekeepers, Companions. office. Great opportunity to ~. $1000 a mo. Call Don Was-Valley, and let us train you! n'C"_.,,.,RED .. ..tl-.... oak lJC8I' on right hip. Looks Residential A Commercial Homemakers, up john', expand w/co. EXPER. cable TV un· lnger, 5#-9000. Call Phil Mc Name e, ~iu .... ....,......., younger than his 9 yrs. lrv1ne Industrial 547~ Call Pru · •··· •• •· ••• 833-2700 derground inst a 1 le rs MASSEUSEI) needed t VILLAGE REAL ESTATE, lamp table $95. Oerry-mar-. DESKWgpaUl ~~valldc afumlble .. ~ Answers to Zola. Please ~pa!tlexes.5 Also Fee Jobs desired. Tra1nt'E' considered. Miyolro 's Massage SaJ!n. 962-44TL 1bl~ toap"p~~l $125. Call mo. tAV•• '"'" retumorrelease:Reward. 557~ er pm. HelpWanted,M&F710 MEDICAL 642-3260. Teleprompter. Over2LCall&tH168btwn RECEPl10NIST: Mature o .vo..---~. at S5 mo. Answering service G. Duncan. "4-7518. FRONT yd. lawn serv . .-io !'-'---'-----'----Equal Oppor. Employer. ,.5 I'd I · I ANTIQUE roU·toP desk &: vallabl I-0 -h Bl·~ ,. An A-el In Who'to K / -'~~~·-------~ woman pre or ms. o c, chair. Ve---~•"·-a J, '0"'Dl:'ac vu. * Lost. SMALL GOLDEN mo., back yds also, ACCOUNTING CLERK -.., ' coo -um 5 •; """IUI...,. .. Huntington Beach. 642-4321. LAB. t..rg IE!"a.ther collar. ~Ing, yd cln up, tree Local firm needs agile 28-1 Needed for this froot office "' F~Y • exper. w MEDICAL Assistant • Exp'd, ~:;ti~i. J1Qn~~'pm hrty cC:::all=,.615-0==lll:::·:__ __ """"' DESK gpe;ce available $50 Neighborhood of Hamilton & trtmmlng, hauling. Free est. for A/R & A/P. Only lite spot. Lovely ottice & friend· ./ ~Ai.TRESS per w/ Primarily front office· J\.! Ev 646.?904 AppliincM 902 mo. WW provide furniture Harbor. Missing severa1 !J62..8612. h .... ing. Good ,,_,_ aptitude If staff seeks like Individual r ' ex · Salary open, NB area, Send wage. rs. ans, · • ---' '-J.-'"'&'""" 1 pho Schedule res. resun1e & references to at $5 mo. Answering 8'<l"Y•ce days. (xtra toe on paws) EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. will land this fine op. 0 ~er tnepatls. ts Benton's Coffee Shop, 133 S, Oassilied Ad No. 572, c/o Restaurant available. 222 Forest Ave., BUI • 642-4954. C.Omplete garden s er v. portunity. Call Helen ~s, CallapptsTracygree enSJi2700 Coast Hwy., Lag Bch. Daily Pilot P. o. Box No. TONIO'S · Laguna Beach, 49'-9466. WW.. lady who called about Ka ma I a n i , 6 4 6-4676, 54<Hi05.5, Coastal Personnel • · • • • · • • • FUU. charge bookkeeper 15&), Costi Mesa, Calif. OVER WO washers. dryers, refrigl?rators trom $39.95. 545-0780. $27 &: UP. Incl util. Some Collie w/whlte collar ·pl!le. 642-1337. Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., Sein Rep to $700 Newport Beach area. Write 92626 An excit ing new Lawry's furniture avail. 2333 E. call back. lt i!t my dog. PROBLEM SOLVER "C:::.M=. ~=====--Renov.rned manufacturer of Classified ad No. 497, DallyME ~'=o°'ic=AL~~Se,-<:re-tary,.--.llece==pt. Associated Resteurant $80 1 YR. guarn, del & in- stall. Late mod. -11 CYde Kenmore washer. 83lrl'f78. Coast Hwy .. CdM. Inquire 80-443.S. , Prof. gardener. Tree work, ACCOUNTANT office equipment is intro-Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa for radiology office. Exper. OPENING SOON SUlle H. Pb. 639-8353. or LOST • Lady's diamond thinntna. pruning, shaping. Heavy in bbkpng, all taxea, ducing a new product. Sharp Mesa, Calif 92626. w/ins. biUing, transcription 21 O Newport C enter Dr. e DISHWASHERS, wuben. dryers, reblt, euam. It. delv'd. ~7620; 541H)218, REFRIGERATOR. Admiral dbl door, runs well, gd cond. $80. S'lS-7234. I Rent Wltihor1/1Jry9n 675-64«. w r Is I watch, Omega. Cleanups. George, 64&-5893• individual,. partnership, attractive individual w/ GEL COAT TOUCH-UP necesa. Ex.per. w I IBM Fashion lslend, N'pt Bch PREmGE OFF1CES; Air· \\<'/inscriptioo. REWARD! Gentr•I Services corp. Penn. position. Call gceat sales ability 110Ught. Experienced MTST pref'd. Located In Seeks port, c:pts, drps, air cond, .=6'1H758=0'-"00'----=-c 1 or write, WBS, lnc, 642-0212, Expenses, comm. & man· Boat Manufacturer N.B. 642-M64 for appt. •WAITRESSES 833dallr_,. maint. Exec bldg. UJST: Laguna area, Brown IT needs to be done! don't 563 W, 19th SL, Costa Mesa. agement advancement here. 642--05'2 MOTEL maid, Mo n -Fri. e HO~ES ~. & white Sprlngu, Male, R&-walt Wltil Jan. Get t done Call Lee . ·• · • • • • • •• • _833-2700 Equal opportunity employer Prefer mature per 11 o n • e BARTENDER '. '!!...~ ,;..tticel V:/kiui~~ l;~wanI~·~·~494~·~3.150=·~~~~~ 1~ '~;:'.· ;;;c=-all -H"a"n'"'"d_y_m-=a n ANCIENT CASHIER HELP wanted for manager Laguna Beach. 494-3521. • BUS BOYS ~•~r.•v 3988 ~ Local <>fftce' ol ~ll JcMwn tralnee & attendant -NEED te l ephone fn.. e KITCHEN PERSONNEL llkl Rochester, CM, 979-' STUDENT WllJ.. DO 'RINER firm seekt: .spontaneous in· Service station. 6 9 6 2 terviewers, work fr o m Apply in Person 400 SQ FT Newport BIW, II' htruc';.. II~ J ~G) • anytime~~ MA dividual. Must enjoy meet· FAillger, HB home, hours to suit your Mon thnt Sat. W am to 3 pm NEW GE washer & dryer, $2. Wk. Full maint. * 639--~ * eentet Oxta Meaa. Carpet L . at redrive1 ' reas., nes' Ing people. Lota of variety HOTEL • DESK CLERK/ schedule. No selling. Call An equal opportunity avocado. $2i0. • AIC. 642-030. ;aat,,,,,e'd"'-'·""'=..067>-c:;::.'.:17 ::: 01 0:.·__ &. room to grow here. CASHIER. Exper. Mu al 968-6384 betwn 9 -4• ''"'!!!!!,,,;e;;;m~p'!!loy~er~~'"''" &14-2649 Bu1ines1 Rental 445 1:.;H:;:ll;.uO:,:nt~------Talcing Applications call Tracy ........ 833-2700 know NCR 4200. Apply in Newspaper Carriers · --G-.E.-'G"'AS'""'o"'a'-YER=-- Schools & F All R st t pe""n only. Ah'portu Inn BOYS & GIRLS R . E. TRAINEE 185-0FFICE STORE in1truct1ons 575 ~SI~Y CJ~ A~ o r Per.!n!iran SECRETARY Hotel, Irvine. 10 yrs & older R. E. Broker '° Developer, 2~t!d. Xlnt oond. N=rt "m°::., CC':t~r ~: GUITAR & Ban ·insb'Ct., by DEBRIS. FREE E s T . WelNcomoyln The HouHkeeper f /time DAILY ffLOJ ~~nse~ tei::n;i~'0r G.E. ELECTRIC DRYER. 1252 Professional Mus I c I an. COLL. STUDENT 548-6428. Apply In Pel'80n ew ear For Conv. Hosp. 549-3061 3 pm, 545-1124. GOOD t'ONDfflON. $S0 pd. Pkng, 646-• 13 50. -Jes.on. 847-1066. YARD, ....,...,,,.. cleanups. 301 No. Tustin Ave., S.A. Cnll.§e you'll have a lot to --·----~ Routt• "-n • ll 7 I/time ICU Call 968-5742 BALBOA Island comrnerc. ' ..----~ irt. I look forward to here. Tai·~ -----""t-RN 3-U • • • • space. $150 Mo. to $475 Mo. ~~.~~ 847_~: BARTENDER BLUE ented sharp Individual ID\nt..IE IX'h~l"'Vr..lh.ICI San Clemente Pacifica Hosp., 18792 Cameras & 801 . Hardeety Realtors 615-2866 [ ll5J BEET $35 per shift. Call sought will use MTST. Won· fif\..¥11"1 r~~1~ Delaware, HB. 80-0611. Esulpment 503 Park Ave .. Balboa laland ---'!!lf~:IG ~~!'.!" ~ 673-0004. Callder!Jul firm. 8,,.2700 SERYICES•"'-"""'-' Call Mr. Busby SALES Clerka & .~['· cANNON FTB csi; mm Stan· STORE for lease, on 17th St., -., .... 1846 or 534-2164. CARPET installer, own ° '· · ··· · .. ··' · • • 492 AA20 • • llOme exper. .nt>l'£,f n dard U Jena) wttb doubler M ~ It. ·~=:~""'"°'"='~=-=::;:-I FEE PAID ..,.. per&011. Checker Auto Parts, Costa esa, wu sq. • SKIPLOADER & dump truck tnick w/belper. Cs.rpeterla, Director of Recreation PAINTING in exchange for 111 E. 19th St., C.M. &: lM>rnm to 210mm mom 54&-4438 or 642-5150. Answering Service/ work. Concrete, asphalt, 645-3020, ask for Gary. Life of the party type sought Exec. Secretary 10 $800$650 motel a:pt 2376 Newport 645--82&1. 1~:, M ~t n n Jn ~ Industr ial Rei't,tal 450 Equip./Moblle Phonu sawing, breaking. 84&-TilO. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE for this super position. Or· ~;etary . . to ~ ruvd., C.M: S48-975.5. SALESLADY uni "' accesa. E.'Cccutive Manager -San ganize fWl activities plan ::sec y/Advert1s1ng lo $6501-==~=~~=~-non tripod· & large ahtmi-, · M-1 space w/!ront office, large rear door. UXl sq tt. $170. mo.· 1787 Whit1ier St. 1850 ,. tt 1m Whittier st, C.OSta Mesa. Days &G-1485, allk tor Lyman. Rentals W•nt.d 460 PROF ~'Oman sgl, no pets, 2 *DIVERT-A-MATIC Housecleanlng Oemente, $12,000., expense parties etc Bright ~ttrac· A/P, inventory contrl $460 PART or f/tim.? help · ApPly Exper. win;r~· h 1The num case. lncllldes de~ LA LINES ONLY $55/MO accoWlt, auto mileage: send tive pet.son ·needed. Clerk Typist/Purchas $460 in person, Kentucky Ftled Show-Off, aa on ing kit, tripod access. slide SAVE OVER $1500/YEAR. Prof. Carpet Cleening resume D. J. Philippbar, Call Debby ........ 833-2700 Prod. Control Clerk.. $460 Chicken, 693 So. Coast Island, N.B. vle'Wer & slide projecio, Divert Calla After Hours Also windows & floor care. Box 338, San Oemente, Free & Fee Positions Hwy, Laguna Beach. SALESMAN. magMtle tigns. optical filters. Must Se I To Any Phone-$2.5.50/Mo _..,.,;Call::;:;,:D:;;u:otch"'=5.1=.c'·=IS08~.-:-:-92672. BOOKKEEPER 488 E. 17th (at Irvinel CM PmME housckt't'per, 7 am-Terrlflc comm & bonus $350. 548-1395. * MOBILE TELEPHONES HOUSE OF CLEAN CHIEF ACCOUNTANT F /Chorgo $750 642-1470 11 am, 5 day, wk, own ~""'°"~~ul~•':,,· .:cm-<~755~·==-ARGUS Super 8 Movie Ca $1.25/Day! 4112 Channel F'oo lndowa crpt alls A young & rapidly expanding Fl?e Paid ~~ transp, Call 496-9866. SECURITY GUARD era wl zoom lens A pro~ PTLComm Systema 979--1234 r, bi '642J3824w ' N.B. real estatE' develoir Fabulous oppor .. for smart JANITORIAL P/Tlme. 5 nite PHOTO Copy Multi Line Must be thoroughly exp'd. !or, $100. for both. 1 yrs. area. ' ment co. need& you to fill Its individual . seeking . career per week. Laguna, San Cle-Service Technician. Sa1ary own uniform. Apt + Salary. 492·1'242 before 2. PM. Babysitting DEPENDABLE lady to do no. 2 accounting & finan-spot w/maJQr co. Will han· mente area. caJI 968-2244. + Commis8ion. Exp'd prnl. ~O Furniture 110 housework. Steady one day cial position. A.dv&neement die books thru trl.al balance. JOBS or will train. Lou Bisbal, / R BR apt, Air/cond, not (!Ver l --'---w..----4 yn, 2nd Ooor. Must have ample closet & liv rm area. NB &rell. 644-6570 ( thru 6 GRANDMO"IHER can give love & playmates anytime daylnlte. Meals & gd care. E:x:per & refs._.~. _ LIC'D mother foi;: 2-4 yr. olds. Meals. fenced yd. per week. Own trans. to controller expected. Your Very friendly grollp. URGENTLY NEEDED 979-2333. Sec:retery ecept. GLOVE leatber-1ike sot.a 6: 642-2314. responsibility & exposure Call Jo ......••.... 833-2700 •Secretaries •..:~=~------Fee Paid/Al.!IO Fee Job!t. Love seat. FonnaJ din rm. pm) SM house or·duplex-in-itntgn Beach. 2 BR, for yng cple w/baby. January. 213:E2-IS06. ' HOU~ORK wllLc<ro!l' ~ whole_ spec» Alao Eee Jobs . e-K-·•"'""'h ,,.__tors Braim & beauty + t<>P lkill• s e t • A me r l can Of Own ...... ..,v. $3 pet' • lnlm of corp. mane • G I F id $750 e Solderers/wire wrap / , __ . Sal ••uuL111110vUI\:' ~. · ~-. hr 1· lal at .,~-v~·· PRINTING wins this cream puff ~ foln~_ .. .,_ ._ .. ,_ pl""' e 642-3148 e fairs. H yrs l'l!'al estate ac· a r IY e BWing CJerk Typist · . · sition w auto U<:Jtlgner. • velvet g _ Jr,"" ~~ counting l partnership tax-Fee Pa.id Irvine 540 .. 41so ary $550. Cail Helen Hayes, lampa. etc. ~ Heller Pk/Npt H g h t s . MESA. Cleaning, carpets, 645-6547. ~'indows, lloon, etc. Resld/ WIU. Babysit while YoU shop comm'I. 557-6742, 548-4111. I,, I nr go to holiday parties. Xlnt Housecleaning '9raon.r. Roberta. 646-0818. By Day. Own Transportation 1~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;.~ I ====...:::"""---I * _. * It QUICK CASH Dodicotod Cltonlng Perton•I• 530 *\VE DO EVERYTlilNG * Refs. Free e1t. 646-2839. * lUNDU SPJRITUAUSf * THROUGH A Let thl11 nd change your Melntenance whole outlook on lite tar lhe I =='-'-'--- better Profeulonal advice YACHT cleanine. Complete on life. Llc, Readll:a dally. WANT AD weekly cleaning Inside &out 10 AM·lO PM. 49Hl36. by local exper, business, 492-9034, 312 No. El Camino 963-2838. Real, San Clemente. 642 5678 The faatellt draw In the We!!I. -Ad. 64M6'l8. p~~~1::i~~l :;::;::;::;:-:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;..:.;:·;·:·•=-;Da;U;y;;;Pllot;;;;;;Cl;..,;;;llied;·, facts first! Call Lile Une, 24 hl"S, su-5522 PROBLEM Pregnancy. Co~ ftdent, 1ym pa t he t I c pregnancy CounSetlng. Abor· Hon A adopUona ref. AP· CARE.64)-4436. PALM I< CARD IUWJ!NGS Tells' P11t, Prt11tnt 6: FUture (2131 1194-1350 Fully Uc. ALCOHOLICS Anonymous .. Phone 542-721'1 or write P.O. Box 1223, Costa Meta. Social ClUlll m Trader's Paradise lines ' ·times dollars aUnn f'Xll(!r. req'd 'alo_ng Tinsel & trink. eto .deco. rate Anah~m 533-2322 PRESS 54(Mj005, Coastal Penonnel ... Kn Bull ~ , -r Th t lll "' A -Harbor Blvd 8' Couc,, ....,, et, ...... '"' with business I accounting yoor ltte. ls posl IOl1 w NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO gency, ••~ ., bar 1foob,. ~{both. lamp education, Salary comn1en· light up ,vour life: Great Tempo Temporary Help OPERATORS CM.. w/table i>IM:, no. Oilld' surate w/exper. Send variety & opportunity here JUNIOR Sales en · I~l5 Secretary $650 bod, $SO, 1Jv nn. Chair, szs,, resume Classified ad no. for sharp go.getter. 1''un E $20 $40 m 'eek get · Experienced. Good Skills 675-0511, ~'ro8. 554 c/o Daily Pilot, P.O. firm w/great benefits. f am . cust=~ for th~ Fee Paid/~lr110 Fee Jobe: BERKLINE platbm fQCker, Box ~.t.. Com Mesa, Cal· Call Kim .......... 833·Zl'OO o~';'~ILOT Th' I not a lmmedlete open-WESI'CLIFF xlnt cond, mahblanY/haua:· ifomia tr~26. Aleo Fee Joba newspaper roUte ~rJ does Inns for •xr..r lenced PenK1nnel Agency ahyde JSO, 963-3384. COMPANION; active Christ-FILE CLERK not include collectina or • 1043 \Vestellft Dr .. NB Ian lady, mu!t have car. No ex.per. necess. Beautiful de.livering, Transportatlon is pressm a n woman. 64.J..2710 ~~A~~-· box. Live in lovely Leisure World ottlce seeks bright eager provided, \Ve work I.our T Sec:ret•ry/Recept condllion. 988-8670 home. Assume responsibility to team Individual. Nation· houri after school and 8 on --... NITE SHIF I de•• 79 ~ old Aunt $ah·""'"" We have ornl...,.. for Cotra Mtsa sallboot man-"pc n-.. ....... m ~t incl 3 mo .. or a -#" • al -. Great place to meet ,..,,......,. .,... Good~ ~1 ~ --not bed-ridden. $350 mo pha "" for Jo"ountaln Valley South SINGLE COLOR 111Acturer. uvnt uu cc old klfll·&lze bed, $150. all expenses paid. Ref.. friends. tluntlngton Beach areas on-60'' HARRIS appeerance. ffiM r.x«-typ.. 6f&-9586. erences. 4M-l021. Call Debby ........ 833-2700 1y, You must ~ out of Ing, 60 to 70 wonts per min .• oo""'UNTR:,,,:::;:::Y~,...--m:h~"dln,.-. -nn-1 K school by 3 PM t o LSJ, req'1 ·min no td\rthnd, for lnio caU Call COOK CL.ER participate. ExperlenceJ 5 yr.a exfMrlence 6'2-0:)42. Equal. opportunily ~ chn. $150. . }"ull & Pl llme. · Happy Holld1ys l boys &'lven prior It y . employ~r. c.,,r. J" Wonderlul !Mg• allice of ... 968-9641. DAVIDSON 700P SECRETARIES RholELAI.~. ~~tor-lhe SS82 Warner, Hunt. Bch. tionaI f.inn seeks sharp ln-1 ~~~::;;:;:;:;:;::;J PERFECTOR ......,. .,..... ~.t.. s.e Manage• at• 2 pm. dividuru tor underw""'''' 1 ooo;. FREE * cnndtoon. $41). 841--. COUNTER Girl • p/ttme, trainee. Friendly people Keypuncher ~~ Req'• minimum * . o BLUE brocade LaWIOD muat be reliable'. Will train. here beautiful benefits. As!ilstant Bookkeeper 2 yrs e xperience Lb: Relndcr's Agency cuahlon quilted .,,._ Good Apply blwn 8 am & 10 am. Cfl11 jo ............. 833-2700 ~~~r;;c:tary $~ 546-2l~'i00 Ca~~~·&ach :cnnd:::::::.·.:549-::::..31::.c:;'.1~----i OOUNTRY CLUB DONUTS. CLERK Tax Secl'<IArY 1575 MUL Tl-2575 2CJ0.10 Santa Ana Ave .• s.A. ••-··t Aho·' Hero Advertising sec'v ssro &/OR CHIEF 15 SJOCRETARY-Typlat rtceP. M.ehinery • ~· 9U 1 R ' I I tlonist exC'f-llent lYPinlt re-1=;-:;:::::::::·===--J OOUNTER Lady, p/tune. Natll'lnally known finn will Typist $425 eq I m n mum Ired orthodo de om ~ ... • or j~us.&: ~1~5: train sharp lndlv1dual on Maintenance nian to $~ 1 yr e•perience ?~tne." 54&-5170. n 00 CHA~lders ..... ~-,..!_pll et 84~7•_.,...,, teletype. Advance to man-Bek Of~ Medical .-::J.. .. _ A nd ...... ._ •• .,_ ....,..,. .,,,..... agcmf"nt here. Must be F/C Book~et:i1>er -DAY SHIFT SERVICE Stauun tte ont w/aCCC!ll'I, Plug in!O bou~ COUNTER girl Fry cooks frfendly. Fabulous l>et1l!fltt1. &xee. Sec y/lt1.nd drv $100 w/exp. Top ~/oommi cul'M'll. No need lor spe~ P/Ume or F/time. Day~ (Ir Call Kin\ .••••••••• 833-2700 Exec. St.-cr<:tary to!~ DAVIDSON 700P Apply C'hevron Station. 004 clal 2'Jh." wirintr. Alto Vtct011 nights. Jack In the Box, 385 Set.retary .-v So. Cout Hwy, Lag. Bch. Cutdna a Welding OutfltJ 11 F.ast 17th St., Coli. -Mesa . PBX Accou11t\ni Trne $375 PERFECTOR SURVEYING instrument $85.50 eomPlete. ().mm Don't Be Alone ,._ _________ ;_ _______ _,I "'"-'11t Union Ass I & t Rn t G reclous Operatlorui Supervi~r Req's m in imum Repairmen & helpen. CaU Service Co., 2072 Placmtla..i }~or the HoUd~I ..... "" 1 SltL lA JoUa S700+ 2 yrs ex-rience In penion at Keul~l A FMer Costa Mesa. '688'10-~ DISCOVER ANSAPHONES vat 1150. '70 * Cloulc Jtop * ~·.t::·Hi::: ~ Good Morning Med Bkk~r/S<c'y $650 ~ Comp .. 1371 s. Oii"" St., Lor 1-~,...,...,......,_~- Dltcovery Honda aoo ·s1.,'val $500. '66 Surrey Top/ flat bed. ·u,,.. DELIVERY ol 0 A IL y t RinK}' Dl"I)', 2 Rina Ftte & Fee Pos!llon11 Martec Angeles, An equal op-n~ 2.lJ.387-3393 VW camper val Sll50. ·n usual, eye catching. $1200 PILOT SUNDAY ONLY to Dingy. Screen tho calls • NEWPORT . portunlty employer. Mlscella"""' 111 Trow! 540 Ford van, $iiilo eq, For prop, value. w; IJ'Nle '°' boftl. new.....:per carriers. It.. ~~i.~":::J:;{ Sharp Pon onnol Ago~" USED BICYCLE$ ':.;c;.;c:;. _______ , PhOto tq, turn or! 67S-787T 548-8532 .,.... s I -~............. .......... ••• Do Dr N R d t1"on TIME FOR " ' ...... the , .. ot a "'on CaU Jo ............ ' 833-··~ -vor " ' ' epro .UC All typet 612·1!71 GIRLS 3 SPEED i:EAsED commerrlaJ, CM. Wagon or Van. Contact Mr. 6424170 '-"UICK CASH · ~ ·' • $450 Net, ••t opeodoblc. Harry Seeley, 330 w .. t Bay CALL 1,,.....,, ..... ...,,...,,...,,...,I ..,. w~ com~Cll _......, SET SAIL Allpcoblkellkenew.Ttatle Owner wtn ·help tlnanct!. St. eo.t•Me... LVN IRC THROUGH A mlte,2.1' ~·~~TV. TAHITI .. tor 10 •peed. Want TD'a, hcluse Ot clear D00ALr-Ortbo chair anlst.", 833-2700 3-lt Ch&J'Re Shift. En,ployee • SSO each. U Grind 3 Muled Sc-er.. * 963-ll6' * land. ~1655. 2 openlhi>. 2 d•Y11 • ..... ben<llfs includina ""'"P l 15n P ltcentl• Aw DAILY PILOT MJNK~. Like ""* · oa"""1 ~ ._ (l'Qut afl. oosts. BEAU"l'InJi.. tri-lev l exec. ORANGE Co. Mountain Costa Meta, 4 day• a """" 2082 111..i...rson Or, llfo In• v•c pa)'. l'lollda.ys Newporl Beach,C• ranclf\ fnlnk lO-lldn slDle. (111) 371-1239 homc.Bootlltglkhloc .. Ran<h ,\Acreage. Ideal lrvl,,.,54Wl70. • lllWIV .i.topw'a(cs.BayvlowConv. WANT AD 08!,_crl1~~-"' tfol\. 1'rade """' w. San ~lcatlon, IP&. church, tnine 110llP1.. m Thurin Ave., F.qual Oppor. EmplO)'CY' m/I 642 5678 .... ,, URbn. ...... """" _ .. rr rern•otdo V•Uey br Man· !ronUt'I' town. Trade for I.Ike to tndcl our 1\'adt!t'• CM ... ~. CALL • Andy'• Gi.nt m.. 4' tail FllMl resultll enr just t. Pbont hatan Bch. 962-5866 ,. l!!'Xeo home. Cl~? 83M85l Plltlld_-column 1• fo~I c1r1u1noo Ads , •• G4U678 Wanl ad results . &t.i-!.f.l'TB $15. "2-M89,. • call away. 5C2-SS7I. ••••••••••••••••••-5 llnesf 5 dAyt klr 5 bu \ • I • DAILY "1.11T • • a BIKE 20" Hufty 3 spd. Xlnl cond. $25/CAMPER SHELL 8'><30" $150. 515-1231. ACOfftW~ 9EWIHC GUIDE fOR TilE GM. ON THl GO. For •n ad In Wom•n'• Workl Call Mary Both '42-5671, ext 330 Sew and Crochet Jiffy Trio! -a..,..,,,"-u ..it Oii MAJL TV, hello, HIPf, Stereo I . 836 --- • 17 \ • • • 17 • • San t;Jemenie Today's Final • t;a , EDITI ON N.Y. Stoek8 VOL. 65, NO. 354, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES • ' • •I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1972 TEN CENTS .. Two B52 Bomh~rs ·Lost in HeaVy Viet Attacks SAIGON (AP) -U.S. ·planeflnaile the heaviest attac.k to date on the Hanoi.- Haiphong area durlnr the night, but It a!;o WU costliest IJI tht United States. Th~ U.S. CMunand reported two &2 bea")" )>ombers and an Flll fighter· bomber, lost and eight Ame.rtcan fiiers mls&ln(. HBf191 said six of the missing men, -· the qt.w of one of, the B52s - were captured and p~pted at a· news conference ln the North Vietnamese capital a 1ew houri later. (See story, Page 4). Seven other American airmen were rescued In 'lballand, tho U.S. Command said. North Vietnam charged that nearly 100 civilians were killed qc woundOO in at- \a;cks on Hanoi and its suburbs. B4t it said President Nlmn's attempt to bomb it · into subl)lilaton would not fo~ it to ilccept his peace terms. Hanoi · clilmed lhlll three B52s and Water, Annexation - C~ UD C i}m en Set ' ' ' . For . Light Meet San ·Clemente city counruJ.. Wed- nesday face a Usht, pre-bolJday agenda which wW 1nclude ·waler projects and an l).acre anneutioo in the PaJisades area. 'lbe agenda follows a pattern almost Three•car Crash / KilJs 'Y ou!h, 21, . Near San Ortofre ' A )'OOllll Bakenfield man w,. ldlled and hls sister )Jadly injured Monday Jn a thr<IO'<ar cruh riear the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. Higbway 1 patrolmen from t h e OcearuJlde office said Tommy Baldwin, 21, suffered fatal lnjuriel when bis north· bound ear collided With an autb which· was ~.sumlng travel after a flat tire on the Sah Dfego Freeway. Baldwin's sister, Denise, ta, also of Bakersfield, suffered severe cuts and bruises and t o d a y was delCribed in satisfactory condition at San Clemente General Hospilal. The 8:05 a.m. crash toot place after Baldwin lost control and slammed into a car stlrtlng to · tDler the trafllc lanes trom the center strip near Basilone Road. patrolmen '!Ski. . Tbe driver ol that auto was unhurt m the colllsloo. Momenta after the Jnltiat collision another auto slammed Into the seo:>nd ~ ·car as Well. The driver of that car was not hurt, either, officers said. Laguna Vistrict Trustees Fir~ Administrators ' . traditiopal during the: Christmas season with only a few major items scheduled. 1be water matters include pn;>posals by City MmJaeer Kenneth Carr !or the hiring of a consultant to draft details of a water transmission project from the city limits to the new.San Onofre State Park. Yet another water matler involves a report from Carr on 1be possible building ol'a new water line tb the :m.w &ystems · pianl1at the O!ld ci A-..Plco. On · tbe anneutioo 'rnmt. 00omcJ- wJ11 bear tjlo '""""111. " • ~ being - <tlcted -.. bout • -mldenta 8IOng Cal1tlpo Capistrano ~,;, the cltr proposes to annez llO acres. The 18nd stretches from the San Diego Freeway nearly to the edge of the Palisades and .has been proposed for development as a major condomin.iurdi project. The county Local Agency Fonnation Comntlsslon has decided to act on the city proposal on Dec. 27. Other items include: - A recommendation for approval of a tentative tract map for a fiV&Ull.it coo· dominium project at 124 Calle Patricia. The proposal comes from developer Byron Marshall of Long Beach and bears a strong endorsemellt from pla?lning commissioners. -Another endorsement from planning commissimerS for the city's seeking cf official exclusim of some high-density parts of San Clemente from provisions or the Coastal Initiative. The city planning staff is completing a map showing areas which might Q\lalily. . -Considering imposirl.g a fee f~r staff review of ,en vironmental l m p a c t statements which are required by the city for some developments. The amount of the levy was considered two weeks ago, but councilmen postponed any decision witil the staff could survey the amounts charged by other cities in tbe county. - A request from tbe Usteniog Enrs Hotline group for olflclal city en· dofsement of the project, a blessing which officials say would belp the (inar,.. cially ailing effort to receive fund gt'anls. three fighter-bombers were shot down and said a number ol the Oien were ca~ tured. 'lbe U.S. Commend saJd It had no additional loaes to rtpOrl for the time being, leaving open the poaslbllity that other American planes may have been lost but the search for tbe crewmen ii still under way. It was the heaviest loss 10 i single day that the United States bas suffered slnoe resumpµon of Uie bombing of North Viet• nam last April Although 12 B52s have been lost In the 711 yeara Amertea's b!Qelt bombers have been flying In the Vlelnam war, on- ly ooe of them wu downed by enemy fire, on Nov. %3. Tbe magnitude of the attack with .which tbe United stares resumed the air war north of the 2<lth parallel was ~ dencored by Indications that more than 11» mi. were used iii the raids. 'Scores of smaller fighter-bombers from half a dozen bases in Thailand and \ • several 7th Fleet carriers in the Tonkin Gull alao took part, U.S. 'officials rt ported. J ~ One senior Americar. omctaI said hun- dreds of planea took part Jn \be raida and some targelt In the Ha..t-Haiphong In· dustrial co'mplei ~ere ,ttacked for the first Ume in the war. . . U.S. spokesmen said the t~ B52.s pro_b- ably were bit by S~s. t,tle $ll'face-tc>- 'air missiles suppll1 to North Vietnam Ill DAIL.Y PIL.9T llltf ...... Signing Vp Gov. R<>nald Reagan signs caat o!· Mission. 'Vlejo's Daniel Moren<>, 2, during visit to Orange Countr Children's Hospital. Governor and, .Mrs. Reagan made a pre-Christmas visit to the facllity in Orange Monday. Daniel is recovering fz:om a broken leg~ He wasn't !tire-who the Reagans were and when bis mother told him they "are important people," be covered bis face with bis pillow. Mrs. Reagan signed.cast, too. , Rape Suspect ·Fooled? Lawyer Says He DUln't Know Girl Was Only 17 South Laguna Disposal Company owner Thomas Trulis' Jawyer today urged an Orange County Superior Court judge to dismiss rape and se1 perversion charges against the defendant on the grounds that he was "acting honestly and in good faith'' at tbe Ume of the alleged offenses. Attorney Tom Ludlow ·told Judge Claude M, Owem that Trulis, 38, gen- uinely belieVed the attractive 'Fountain Valley blonde with whom he allegedly had sexual intercourse last Jtwt. 3 was 20 and not 17. Ludlow said the asserted victim ad· milted benett that Trtillsr bad been surprised wben she told hlib after the allered olfenaes bad been c;cmmitted that , she was just two .,eeks away from her lath birthday. \Vere Universal Studio executives k>oklng for the kind of talent they felt she poS8essed. Imondi again failed to show up in court today for trial A warrant has been issued for his arrest while Trulls 'remains to face charges ol rape and aei- perverslon in what iJ now a1nonjury p~ ceedlng. If Judge Owens de.-Les the· motion for dismiaaal, Ludlow will put Tnillll Into the witness box as the :t0le delenee witness. By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of ... Dalt'I ,. ........ DeSpite a strong showing of citizen support for the Laguna Beach School sfstem, tbe Board of FAucaUon Monday night voted to fire Ila three top ad- ministrators. Superintendent of ~ Schools Willi~ Ullom and auistant superintendents [Jr. Robert Reeves and Dr. Charles Hess, in separate actions, were told their oon- tracts will ·not be renewed when they ex· plre on June 30, 1173. Resurfacing U~~ Way A·wng North El Camino Police said tbe victim told 'them that Trulis and Eugene fmondl Jr., 15. told her before she 111bmltted to tjieir auual advances In Newport Beach, that Ibey Suspect N ahlied Again on Heroin Possession Rap Ludlow lfllled today that Ille alleged vlctlm WU 0 no ltranger" to ttie. kind of sexual pervenion allegedly comlnitted by Trulls. The lawyer told Judse Owenl thet \he alleged victim bad portlclpated In' that kind of coodllCI with her bo~ and wilnlieri!Mlnend. . Proeeclllor, Frank Briseno today told Judge Owens that be will let hill eaxe stand on the tranaertpt of t b • prellmlnaey bearing jn municipal court and will not offer fllrtber latlmony In Ttulll' trial. Each motion _of non-renewal was made ht. curt fasbloo by Trustee Patricia Gillette and secooded by Trustee Gerald Linke. Board preakleitt Wllllani' Thomas 'JolneCI with the two ot~r \ll•mbers In 'oultlng tbe top admlnbtrators. · Trustee Jane Boyd, a longtime sup- P,rtee of the administraton, cast the IOle vole to renew the contracts. Trustee Norman Browne was ablent, vacationing In Mmco. Mon than 200 plflOOI pounid Into the high scbool audltorlom to watch the meeting, wJtb acorea demlllding an e1· pluatloo of the 1etlon after the VOi<• ·were taken . Each m.-mber ol tl>e 11\1\iOrltJ bloc ,.fused to respond. · Prior to departln1 to the high ICbool ea(eterla for an e1ecut.lve (cloted) .. 111on, Tl!Omai illom 20 ·-11 1 ti. ltfstfmony. ... ' There were no atatenw:nts1 mlde er!Ucal of tho performance ol Ullom, RNves or Hea. I Workmen for the SUily Mlllilr paving lirm tbls wetik. 1aunched a major resurtacing project along 5an Clemente'• North El Camino Real -a job with a lit· tie something for everyone. lvben the fl/Al,000 job Is completed, North El Camino will. olfer two new miergen:cy parking strips for motor~sts .• bicycle1. trails (or cyclists and 1. a little more peace· of mind · for resiaents of Colony Coves. City Engineer Phil Peter said the proJ· ect -half of it paid for by the county - will be ·completed by the l!l1d of l/'ebnlary. The majolr upense will be a new con- crete crlbwall along the baJe of the 1bunplng Pallsadeo It the odse of Colony Co\>el. The lif.foot-hlgh "U..,Oln.Jot1" attU<> 'lure will reoemble the exlsllnf wall built ,Jhere last year. ·· • II la llopool. tltot tllt nil •ill holp rttaln Ille IOl1 aloll( Ille bl\dll 11111 Nop 1\ f!<>m lilppfng. -tlild. . , Alona with tho wall. ti\' coalr•ct calls !or Installation ol a -po...S -Ider ' I ' on the tnalnd side of El Camino as well as a ne\' ~m~rgenpy strip on the seaward 1ide. Both those strips will double as bicycle paths -installations supported for years by local school and homeowner groups. El Clfmlno'tsWlllely used by cyclisls - most of them high school students rldlng to and from school. Previously, the only apace lt\'ailable to the cycllsta was tbe inland lhoukler, 1enerally loaded with rocks and dirt (See CAMINO, P11e I) HOOK 'IET! 1 HOf'( Ni~ AllEIPJ$ IPUZ£ Tl'tY IWIE Clll' 5 oWlltl A\'15 TO 5HOP/ l -- • • ' • Anned with n e w warrants charging pos!eSBioii of heroin . for 1ale, San Clemente police Monday returnee: to a Laguna Beach residence and rearrested a man busted last week for alleged use of the deRly drug. David K. Williams, 21, was an-ested during lbe dJnner hour at his reskJeoce at 1:11 High Drive and booked lnlo San Clemeote city jail. WUllaml WU among.. Iii persons ar.. r-Ille last wet!< In · • hr04&enct' nreee at I Dana Point apartment lfld: the ..... lliah Street location. At that !line the Dana Point man, 'l'hoinot i, Hille, a, of 14111 Pacilk: Coaxt Hlshway. wu the onit auspect ch1rged with -!On for uJeo. Nll'COtico agents llld u.q Initially ar- rellld wnlillns ,... ""rlodly btJna under the Inn-ol Jilioln. S..boequent coatac:tr'wlth tbe Dlstrl<I Attorney•~ ofllce '!;!"lied In I new com- plolnt char&lng Ibo mon 1tTloll1 ollenle. / , "It. ls I IUJM;anUal cue," tbe deputy district attorney commented thlJ mom· Ing. "f thlnlc' the !ranacrlpt ipeau for ltaelf." ,, ''We hl'vt to protect the naive and the Immature from the Ukes of this man," he tokV Judge Owens, gestwing to1farda (See RAPE, Pap I) Santa on Telep'hone To night, Wedneaday Youne1ter1 st.Ill In need of a few more Wordl wtth Santa Clau1 can reach blm tontpt and Wadnelcfl1 tvenlnl by tiltpbone, courlel)' of the -. Cout Ja)'CMI. Tio! (1t m1111 will be av1llable ror pbone· ca(ls from 7 to I p.111-talJb 1venlng a~ .Wl1L •• • by the Soviet Union. One B52 went down 30 miles northwest of Hanoi with six crewmen missJna:, the command said. It was the first ~ to crash oo North Vie tnamese terrltorf:\ The otber 852 limped back to Thailand, like the BS2 that was downed in November, and crashed 100 miles southeast of the Udom Air Base. Its seven crewrpen bailed out and t were rescue4. Astronauts Close Out Safe Trip ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (APl -The last Apollo came home from the moon today, splashing down safely in the South Pacific to end the American p~ gram which put 2Qth century man to the lunar surface. "America is stable one in the water." signaled a nearby helicopter moments after the spacecraft landed right side up. American astronauts Eugene A . Ceman, HarriJoo H. Schmitt and Ronald E. Evans returned to earth at 11:24 a.m. JJ>&'t). with a smooth. splaahilOwn Jn gentle. South PaclfJC seas 400 miles aoulheast ol Samoa. Thslr return ended the laat. longest ana most sclentincaUy·producdve of the Apollo lunar missions. Helicopters Crom this prime recovery shlp quickly hovered over the spacecraft bobbing in th'e water. Navy frogmen leaped into the water to attach a flotation collar and to assist the astronauts into a life raft. The spacemen were to be plucked from the raft and taken to a red-carpet, brass hat welcome on the Ticonderoga. The detcent toward splashdown was seen oo television ln the United States with spectacular scenes taken by a camera aboard a hovering helicopter. Parcbutes. red and white streaks: of coloi: agaimt a blue sky, bloomed as the craft descended. They were quickly seen by white-suited sailors lining tbe decks of this carrier and a cheer went up. "All ls well aboard," reported Evans. Tbe craft, dangling under Its three straining chutes, dropped steadily toward the water and -then ap!ubed. Unlike son'ie previous ApOllo endings, the spacecraft remalhed upright. The astronauts could be beard laughing aboard the bobbing crall and then Evans exclaimed, "Hey, there's tbe chopper ISee APOLLO, Pap II Ca stro in Mor occo. RABAT. Morocco (UPI) -CUban Premier Fidel Castro stopped over Jn Rabat today on his way to Molcow to ii.- tend celebrations marting tbe 50tb an~ niversary of the !ormalJoo ol tbe SOv~t Union. Premier Ahmed Olm&n met Castro at the alrport and eocorted him to a Rabat palace. Weatller Ha2)' sunshine i. tbe way the wea&her lady sees It< for wecme. day. with slightly cooler tempera- turea. Highs In the 80ll, QvernJcbl lows will be in the SOI. t'tght and morning low fog Is e>plCled Wednelday. 1 INSWE TODAY Twelve weor1 aao, Ralph. Ra £>. Uf/ diac01><Tt<I M coul<fn~ of ford a Chrlttma.r Ir« for Ilia di.rte daupA.tn11 JO he grabbed a·dozff oronac craw and made his °""' Chrlttma.r village. Sft 1torv on Paae ZB. LM • ...,.. 1 ._ . ~ .... -. --. ............. ..... Jal•: I I tw:t ...... """ ........ _., I """"' ,. ................ IJ ' J -... --.. ................ --. ,_. ''"' ............ " ·-. - --I -·--_.., ..... 2 DAILY PILOT SC MesanHeld -In Beating I . •. ~Of Tot, 2 Police arrested a 21·year-0ld Costa "Mesa truck driver ?i.1onday on suspicion : of shaking his girl fri end's 2-year-old : daughter until he broke her foreanns and "the dlild became unconscious. '. 1be man, identified as Russell "Rusty" . Von Taylor of 518 Victoria St.. is in city ·jail today accused of felony child beaUng . Police allege he tdministered the violent shaking as a punishn1ent to little Dana Maxine Gendreau because she had been crying. Officers became involved in the case when Mrs. Betty Gendreau and her boyfriend sought treatment for the girl at Hoag Community Hospital. Investigators said that tbe girl had black and blue marks on the bacb or her legs and the insides of her wrists when she \"/lS admitted for observation. She was a1so said to have a fresh red mark en her chest and fractures in both forc- anm. Mrs. Gendreau, who shares the Vic- toria Street address wllh Taylor, said her boyfriend administered 1n0utb-to-mou1h resuscitation to the girl when she became unconscious and appeared to have swallowed her Wngue. In a written statement for Costa Mesa '.police, Mrs. Gendreau alleged that Taylor had given the girl frequent disciplinary spankings and shaltings. From Pagel APOLLO ... right there." A helicopter new over, a few feel above the craft. and black-suited frogmen plunged into the water. The astronauts could be heard congrat- u1ating each other and laughing happily. Two helicopters poised like sentries over the downed spacecraft as the swim· men attached a flotatioo collar aroWld the blunt end of the cone-shaped craft. At the home of EVan!I, near Houston, the astronaut's wife and two children watched tbe return of Apollo 17. All three cheered at splashdown and lt-year-0ld Jon, with moist eyes, said only "Wow." Mrs. Evans popped a champagne cork and propooGd a toast: "Here's to them ." RAPE .•• From Page l Trulis in the rear of the courtroom. "I ask you to look at this man, consider the fact that the victim was not yet 18 and ask you, your honor, to determine if he was acting honestly and in good faith when he committed a series or sex acts with her." Revised Trash Pickup Schedule Announced 'tbe Solag Disposal Company tOCay an- nounced a revised trash collection schedule to be in effect in South l.aguna and Dana Point during the holiday seasoo. Trash collecttions will be held Saturday Dec. ·23,and Saturday, Dec. 30, Instead or Monday , Dec. 25 and Monday, Jao. 1. Oil CurlJs Loosened WAS!IlNGTON (AP) -President Nix- on has moved to bolster the nation's strained fuel supplies by permitting inr porters to start using their 1973 oil allocations immediately and by lifting import restrlctioru.: on Virgin Islands petroleum prorlucts. The twin actions were announced Monday by the White House. OUN•I COAST IC DAILY PILOT Tht: Or..,.. C..1 DAILY ,ILOT, wlflt MNc1t i. eomblrll'd I'" N_,.f'rat. " Wllll"*I )It IN Or ...... CNJF ~lolltlllnf ~y. ~ l'llhl ..i111ons 1rt ""°'!Med, MW•\' tt!rw;tl Friday, lw COii• M..-, .,.....,., ltKll. HIMllNlell lndll~i.i.. ..... IM\I. ~ Mdl. lrvtr.llS-.ltiNU. .,..,.._. (.........., S.n .1-c.,i.tr-A •lftt.. rttion.1 tdl!loft .. Pl.lblltlled a.h!l'lill\11 .... Surlcl•'f'· 'fti. pt1ftcl.-1 ....,. ... .iflll h •t llO WtJI .. ,. '''-'• Ott• M.IM, C.llllN'rli., f:M». ••M'I H. WoN f'ra.o,nt •1111 "''*"..,_ J••k Jt. C1i1rl1., Ykt ,r..W.I _,"-'.ti~ Tii•11111 Ko..tl ..... T\or1111 A. M11r,t.i11• MINtlnt Editor CJi1tl11 H. Lo•1 1:1th1r4 '· Nill AMlllM'll Mll\HI"' l•I,.,.. .. ci. ..... Offk. lOS Nd ll C1ml116 Jt11I, 92612 --c..M ~: »I w~!:ri '""' ......... lo9Cfl: »aJ H livll'<trG Hlllll"-"" ... di! 11111 •tfdt IOV!ft1nf UfllM llodll :m ""'*" ,,,.,.,. M•fa•• Cn4) '4l_.Jl1 a M:s4 _.... .. I U t42·1t7' S. C:......._ Al 1.,a1w1t1.i Tc .. f• I I 4t2 ...... zt .. ..,_, .. ,...,.... """ arw..,. C"Mll """""""" ~. ... ...... '"'Ill 1111111r111tr1t. .... lit mttw w ~)lfrMflpt .... " .,.., ... ~· .......,. ~Ill ,.... ...... .. """"""' ..... . ...... dell ............ c.t• .... ~ ••• • ....... .,, CllMlr ·""' .......... , _. _,. U .11 "'*"""' """""" ............ "*""'"" I . . '· DAILY PRAT S!lM """9 Getting to Know You 'New Esctlltltl0tt' Russ Criticize Bombing· by. U.S. ' MOSCOW .(Ul'll -ne Soviet \Inion' _rllory of the n..nocrauc Repabllc or loday coiidtmned rtlii!wl!<l U:S. •Ir Vletlll!D. strikes agalnst North Vietnam as a move ''Tbb partlculo.r d e c l s I o n of to preswre 11aoo1 into 1 p••••oleltlement w JShlnCtoo nqronUy disagr... ,.uh aod warned that Kremlln leaders are .numerouJ protestations made "1 the \J .S. "llving the moot ..nous ·cooslderatfon" leadus about their wlah 'to ... k multJally to lbe sltuatloo. acceptable solutlons lor the remolnlng A statement by Tass the off1elil news uncoordinated problems.' agency, said "Tass ha~ been empowered . "No pretexts, invent~ Jn a ~id to to declare that the governing clrc.les of JU.SU()' the brutal bornbu:ig, can hide the the SoVlef Union are giving the l1lOll fact that we are laced wlUt new og- serious consideration to the 11ttuatlon grtaslve actions which the USA ls taking created by the stepup in U.S. mUJtary ac-agllnst a soverelga state. tlon against the DRV. .. '!be soviet J>eO!lle, the t•tement said. "Tbe new escalation of military open· are 1ndlgnant UI tion of tions by the United States agaiMt the the new pJra en by the ORV can only be regarded as an attempt American. military. They demand Im· to bring pressure to bear 00 the Viet-mediate stoppage of the actlans and nal!'ese side in order to compel it to ac-speedy aigning of the agreement on ~ cept the American tennl for a Vietnam Pina:~ wat and restoring peace to V1et- 'settlement. '' . nam. 'Fhe statement said, "It ii clear from a White House statement that t b I s represents a resumption of wtdwcale American air raids througbout the ter· Cafe Cashier Rebuffs Robber While animal handler Cheryl Smith holds 'I'awni, Ru ssell LeNarz, 10, Anaheim, :j.nd Peggy Martinez, 12, Stanton. learn about the four-month-old lion cub even though they can't see it. Children were among group of blind youngsters who toured Lion Country Safari Monday as guests of the manage- n1ent. Doctors Say Truman Shows In Westminster • Newport Alters Earlier Decision, Nixes High Rise Reversing an earlier decision, Newport Beach city councilmen Monday night turned down a controversial, hig~sity condominium on the site of Balboa's Fun Zone. Councilmen heard more than three hours of debate before voting 1 to 3 to table indefinitely the JAK construction Company proposal to build the 47-wiit project. Councilmen voUng for the tabling ac- tton told the developer they did not want to see plans for the 1.2"acre site oo Palm Street killed altogether. But they did say more study shoold be given to alternative commercial develop-. ment -including possible revamping of the Fun Zone -or lower-density residen- tial Use!. Mayor Donald Mcinnis, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers, Councilman Milan Dostal and Councilman John Store voted for the tabling action while Councllman Richard Croul, Carl Kymla and Paul Ryctoff voted against it -though for different reasons. Kymla and Ryckoff wanted to kill the project altogether and retain the core commercial area in Balboa. Crout felt the projecL should be approved in its en- tirety. "We have got to sit down and make a decision, gang," Croul saici. "We have heard the opinions of everyone in the world on this one. We have already made a decbion so why don't we stick to It?" Crout was referring to a 5 to I vote by the councU last summer that overturned a planning CQmmission denial of the proj- ect. The council action was taken to court by Balboa Ferry owner Allan Beek. The judge ruled the council had to hear it again and make a new decision. Def enda1its Say Newsman Knew Swry Was Hoax SEA'ITLE (AP) -Both defendants in a federal fraud trial have testified that their alleged vlcnm . former Newsweek CilDtributing editor Karl Fleming, knew he was involved in a hoax before the transaction was completed. Donald S. Afurpby and William L. "Jack" Lewis took the stand in their defense Monday in U.S. District Court. The case was to resume today and. possibly, go to the jury late this al- ternoon. The government contends Lewis ob- tained SJ(l,000 from Fleming for an in- terview with Murphy. who was posing as D. B. C.OOper. That was the name given by a man who hijacked a Northwest Airlines jetliner and disappeared after bailing out or the Boeing m with $200,000 ransom on Thanksgiving Eve 1971. The impersonation becam., obvious during some 12 hours of taping and fllm· Ing Feb. 23, Murphy testified. "I made 4> many mistakes. J even thought he krfew It was not true," lhe ~ year-<ild Bremerton, Wash. 'I an d developer said. "When there was a prot>- lem. he IFlcmlng) helped mt." Lewis. 33, of Seabec.k, Wash. le!:tified he rce<jived an anonymous phone call from a person he believed to be the hi· jacker. Lew;, said he received three three subsequent calls totaling eight hours and w&s mailed thm '20 bUls with serial numbers Included in the 11.st from the ransom packa11e. • He said he approached the Bmnertoo Sun wltb the ~tory but a reporte~ wanted more substantial information. Thtn he answered an :id plactd by Fleming 'ln a Statue nc\\·spaper seeking an interview with "0 . B. Cooper." The "hijacke r" never phoned back, ~wl1 te stified. N. Viet Talks Boycott Hinted Due to Bombing Improvement KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Doctora treating Harry S Truman said today the seriously ill fo~ President's kidney function improved and he wu aware that people were around him. "He follows people's movements with hi.s eyes, but bas not spoken to them," said Research Hospital spokesman John Dreves at a mornlna medical brie(lJli. Mary Beak, 51, outblulfed a would-be -Monday night when the rN.n; !lmulaUng • gun wlUt his band In hla coat pocket, demanded the evening'• receiptl 1t the W-restauront .mer. lhe serves u casbler. "She Just told him there~'! a117 money Ind abe wouldn't it to him if there was," mid e stt. Frank Fisher of /tbe Westmlnlter Police Deparq!nent. "He iot frustrated and left." PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnamese chief negotiator Xuan Thuy said today his peace delegation may boycott forth- coming negotlaUons on a Vietnam cease- fire because of the resumption by the United States cf "the fiercest attacks ever" against North Vietnam. Askeil about prisoners of war, Thuy said: "Every Christmas Mr. Nixon voices concern fro pri10Ders, but every Christmas he bomb.! North Vietnam and for this i:easoo the prisoners are not liberated." Questioned if Hanoi would refuse any further negoUations if the United State• continues its bombing ·raids, 'lbuy roplied: "If the American party continues Viet· nafnization, continues to send weapons and military personnel, continues bomb- ing and escalation of the war, ·then the United States will have to bear full responsjbilily for Its acts." Thuy was asked at a news conference Railroad Safety Program Urged A stepped up program of !alety devices for railroad crossings was urged by Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers of NeWP.Qrt Beach Monday. Referring to the crossing accident which. took the life of Charles l . Schoonover Sr., owner of the Irvine General $tore., Friday, Caspers said at the Transit District Board meetin~ Mon- day that he will ask the Board of Supervisors to authori7.e an immediate study or dangerous crossings. Murray Storm, assistant county road commissioner, said the ..study could be completed iD the 60 days requested by Caspers. Both grade cros,,ings ~·ith gates and grade separations will be c:onsidered, be said. SUNDANCE KID'S SON, 72, DIES MISSOULA. Mont. (UP!l -Robert l.ongbaugh, 72, son of the famed West.em outlaw known as "Sundance Kid" dJed Monday in a fire 1n an old four-story hotel. Fire orficials said one other prrson, John Schon, an elderly blind man, also was killed when flame swept the Priess Hotel. The rest of the hotel 's 34 residents, many qt them university' 1tudents, escaped without injury. Retarded Youths Set Christmas Program A Christmas ·program Involving 106 students of the Holiday House school for mentally retarded young adult• will be held at 7 p.m. Wtdnelday, et the tcbool, tw42 El Toro Road, EL Toro. The public ls Jnvtted to attend season ofrerilll by the day and resident puplls wlil are 18 and older. ' Drug, Suspects Held OX~ARD CAP) -S:ierlff•s deputies aaiC: Monday that four peraon1 arrested Sunday on narcotics c~et mn&ggled a kllo (2.2 pouodl) ol· pu~ heroin Into Ven- tura County every tk wttkl for several yeara. Thirty ounces of heroin, valued on tbe 1treel ; .t more than ft mWlon, were aelzed, deputies said. if be agreed to meet again with the chief U.S. negotiator, William J. Porter. "We futed a date for a new meeting, but in the presel!t s.ituation I will have to let you know ii there are going to be new technical talks," 'I11uy said. Thuy said biJ delegation would also decide in the near future whether it would attend the 17lst semi-public negotlatlng session In the regular Kleber A venue talks scheduJed 'Ibursday. Tbuy's statement clarified earlier reports that the Hanoi delegation decided to break oU the technical-level talks in· definitely because of the mumpti\10 of bombing raids. "North Vietnam Will not .bend to any forpe or pl'eSllure,'' Thuy aaJd "We are attacbed to peace, but peace wj.tb honor and lull rights !OT our country." Speaking through an Interpreter, Thuy blamed the United States for sabotaging the draft cease-fire .econ! "Just when both parties were getting ready to sign." He said it was not Hanoi which demanded modifications in the accord as stated by White House aide Henry A. !Gssinger, but Washington. Thuy said on De<:. 13, the Americans presented an entire new list of modifica· lions to the accord, af!ecting the draft in au nine chapters -146 clauses altogether. Thuy said: "Tbese modifications were generally questions of substance and were contrary to the basic international rights of North Vietnam." Meanwhile, Kissinger's lop aide, Gen. AJexander Haig, met with South Viet· namese President Nguyen Van Thieu and Cambodian bead of state Lon Not today on the status or the stalemated Indo- china peace talb and the renewed U.S. bombing of the North, viewed in Saigon as a negotiating tactic. Haig arrived in tbe South Vietnamese capital 12 hours after the United States resumed heavy bombing of North Viet- nam above the 20th parallel. "Kidney output bas increased during the last 24 hours," be aaki. "He continues to receive adequate vutritiOn even though protein intake remains curtailed. '1 Dreves said Truman, 81, bad bis leC"' ond straight restful night and .. ....., more alert this morning." At 7 a.m. PST, Truman's blood pressure WljS 140 over 60, putse 80, respiration 24. and temperature '1 degrees. Late Monday night, Dreves aald Truman"s kidney function dropped to leos than 10 percent effective.. Dreves added, "10 percent ii the critical 'point. Below 10 percent ii in- adequate." He said be could not be more specific. Reporters asked -the 11-year-<>ld former President was able to hold on day after day and Dreves said, "That's just President Trwnan. I can't define that. .. 1 'Life' Printer Lays Off Workers OLD SAYBROOK, Conn. (AP) -A printing plant that produced 1.7 mlllioo of the 5.5 million weekly eoples ()f LUe Moguine bas annoonced !be Impending layoff of nearly two-thirds of its work rorce following the demise of the maguine. Arthur Prine, vice president of rela- Uons services for R.R. Donnelley la Sons of Old Saybrook, said Monday that layoffs of l!O employes would begin following Ute production of the Doc. 21 issue of Life. Officlalll of LHe llllllOUllCed this month that publication of the weekly mass ctn:ulation magazine would cease alter that ts.ue. Fisher said the attempt~ bery tool; pt ace about 8: 15 p • at the Elbrua Rataurant, HIS! Blvd. • I "You know," the detective said, "Jn these situations where/ there isn't a gun visible J/ more IJ>eople would aay, 'Show me the pa and I'll give you the -.y, ollionriJe get out,' we'd be lnvet111•Unc fewer cases."' I I Frellt Pqe 11 CAMI~O •. ·i which continually drop from tlie blulfs. Peter said lbe new strip wlll be easier to maintain and the wall will k<ep lbe dirt In check in the most troublesome areas. I When the major installa~ are com- plelt., the contractor wlll apPl;y a new surface to the highway from Camino San Clemente to Aftlllda Pico. \ HEW Official Resigns Post WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -John G. Veneman ls leavtna his poat u underseor<tary of i!ealUt, Educa· Uon and Welfare and will be suc- c.eded by Frank Carlucci, the White House at1llOUllCed today. Veneman, No. 2 man at HEW since the beginning of !be ·Nixon admlnlstnltfon, plans to return to Callforota. lt WU re_ported be likely _ ·*ill.run for -lieutenant KOVeroor .• WOULD YOU BELIEVE- THAT THERE ARE S'fllL COMPANIES • • • • • . . . . . • • • • • WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS THEY SELL PERFORM 7 WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON SERVICE 7 WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE PERFECTLY 7 WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY 7 YES, "VIRGINIA," THERE IS AN ALDEN'S I !TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.) • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plactfttla •••• COSTA MISA 646-4838 HOURS1 Mon. Thrv Thun., 9 lo 5:30-FRI. 9 to t-SAT. 9:30 to 5 I I • I I I l \ l • I . • ! Ex-Dodger Moon Now Cattle Baron By llOWAN> L. HANDY Of .... D61tr .... , '"" Wallace w,.ie Moon, the man who made moon ahota famous before advent of the 1pece proJram that haa ant men t.o the moon, ls now a genUeman rancher and com· In& cetlle btn11 Ill Siloam $prlngs , ArkllllW. Durln& his heyday Ill pn> lnslonal bue:ball, Moon wu • ,..Jdent ouUleldor with the Loi Angeles Dodgen durilll their days Ill the Coliseum. · Swlnglllg from lhe Jett aide of the plate, he had an wi-- camiy ablllty to po'p Ibo .ball over lhe short left field 1creen for home run1 and In 1t5t led the ~sers to the World ~mplonshJp b e f o r e the lqest crowds evtr to wltntia World Strles action. After 21 years In ~ feaslonal baseball, M o o n retired to his native Arkansas 1lx years ago to become athletic director anct baseball eo11ch et rural , In· terdtmlnatlonal John Brown Univeraltv. Jl<lOI he m Isl the pro- f eulonal baseball front? "You can't play aS Jong 11 I did and not mlas It," .w,uy sakl here over the weekend "A'hile vlsitlnlC UC Irvine with the John Brown bullelboll team. "1 mlu lhe playing bul I can't say I miss the travel and all that goes with that end of It .• , What about Slloitm Sorlnga aflli hlii nii1ldent role there? "I like it very much. It la a small school and commnl'llt:V. 1 went look1n~ for a small towti to ttettle down."' When he moved to Siloam Spring• with wife Betty and WALL'l' MOON the couple'& five children (one boy, Wally Joe, end fo•r daughter&) he had a mode1t to acre plact with 16 bead of cat· tle. Today that burgeoning ranch ha1 grown to 400 acres and 38 head with part of his holdings Ill Arkansae and the reat ln nearby Oklahoma. '11 t'C!ally enjoy my fann. Il'1 a &r6at outlet for me ln addition to trying tQ make it pay for Itself. It's an ln- trlguin& aituatJon. T h e r e ' I" alwaya something to do. ''Rlaht now It's a betf cattle operation with some registered animals. In the next five years. I hope to be 'into a registered breeding situation. "l've been learning s\Qwly and rm nr>t a cowbov althoua:h we have hones on the ranch. They are for pleasure and are Retzlaff Calls It Quits, Khayat Fired by Eagles PHILADELPHIA CAP) - "Mr. Tose has 1iven me com- plete authority. I'm go Ina: \0 run tilings my way. If thi1 baby doesn't grow up It means 1 haven't fed II right. II will be my fault." Pete Retdlff, May, ~ 1969. nve-year 28-41-1 record of bis predeceMor, Joe Kuhs.rich. Tennuaee walkin11 horses. ''But when I'm tcndlna cat- tle, I prefer to walk and feel I can get more done this way." Looking every bit as trim ea the flrtt daf he stepped onto a profeuloJla biseball diamond an:if carrylng the same weight, Moon ls an active out· dooraman even though greylna: a bit at the temples. He wantl to get his cattle herd to about 200 bead, then join unlvtrsltv prtldent John Brown, Jr. In breeding for show purposes. Maon became associated with tl\e JohJ\ Brown IJ'OUP while he was p1.t.Yin11: in Los Arnreles. Southern OPllfomla Mllit.11ry Aaademv of Loni( Beach and r J d' I o station KGER of that cltv are hQldiDgs of the univer•it.v. 'Moon's colle11e co. a ch I rig --counterpart and another Dodger teammate C a r I Erskl11e; was ~est soeRl<er at John Brown's last sports ban- quet. . Erskine Is baseball CORCh Rt Anderson, tndie:na Colle11:e but the two schools have yet to meet on the dlamond. Wally admlta: It may be a future possibility but says Erskine will have to bring his team lo Arkansas. When he isn't coaching or serving as athletic director, chasinp: cattle that h a v e straved. or se.-ving ss father to his five children. he finds tiJT1e to be a IG-handlcaoper ln io1f and do some hunting and nshh,11:. "We are located in a kinrl of mountAlnous area and the ba111 fi~hln( 1111 excellent." he' says. "I also like to hunt quail end go south a time or two each yenr to hunt ducks and geese. There are deer around but J don't hunt them." H<lw ht1s ·his (jolrl"'n Eagles ba!l""all teat>'\ flll"f'<I? "We have been in the NAIA reglona.l tournament each of the last two .ve11rii nnd lost In the final game. In the ninth In· nln1 last year." he recalls. "I lhink we had the ~t material each year. though." Wallv Jne is R ~mJhomore at John BroWfu'lrvl pl11.v1 the qut. field a!I "'ell as rP.serve catcher. \Vlth an enrollment nf only 700 (co-educational l, the schf'lo\ can ill affr.rd tn 109e an .11th'~te 1\'ll_h tbe backg,.ound of Wallv Jroe. . ' . SWINO "THllOilGH" IMPACT Th• use of stop-aellon photo- graphy hu done a great deal ror our understandin~ of the J.Olf swing. However, I m afraid 1t h1s also caused us to become too ''position con~lous. '' When a &Olftr lltJ I picture of a professional It the top of the bac.k1wln1 or 1t impact (ii~ lu•l111tion I 1). he •ubcon· aciously auumes th1t the swine should finish 1t that posllion. 0 ' I'd like to remind you thlt the 1olf 1win1 Is Just that .••. e SWING. It Is fine to ob .. MI sood pl,119rs It key poililons. But r•mln<S yourMlf to swine THROUGif lhOH pooitlons, net juot TO lhtm (illu1tr1tion 12). ... Newport Fulls Sea Kings Bag • Easy 62-39 Win Bv ROGER CARLSON Of ttlt Dall¥ ~Utt Sl1ft Corona del Mar Hlgh's Sea Kings made hash of host Newport Harbor M o n d a y night, 62-39, In non·league basketball action berore 900 rans'. It was the W(ll'St defeat In Newport's history to Corona de! Mar as the Sea Kings raced to their elghth victory In a dozen starts agalnst New- port which dates back to 196S. There we.sn't any turnlng point and it might have been wone except the Sallors were able to cash in on 23 of 33 free throws to keep· It somewhat re!pectable. oen::enl and with 4:58 left in the game were behind 54-21. At that point the Sailors had connected on four of 31 from the field for a frigid 12.9 per- cent. Corona de! Mar, meanwhile, didn 't mind the temperature a bit as the red-hot Sea Kings blliitered the nets for 48.7 per- cent (28 of 60 attempt!). At the half It wu 29--17 and the only thing NeWport had going for it waii 6-1 forward Jim Swick. Swick had 10 points, Including tW-O c f Newport's thret field goals. Corona del Mar's J e f £ Wharton was the leading scorer w.lth .18 counters and. came out with 5:58 still tc play. Casey Jones got hiJ rest with 5:20 to go and 13 points while Matt Keough was pulled. with 4:49 left and seven point!. Ki"Urnpholz Top CIF Poloist Corona del Mar Hlch's Bruce Krumphol.z ha $ beoome the fifth Se11 Kings water pOlo athlete ln the la st seven seascns to be named player of the year 1n the CJF Southern Section. Krumpholz share!! the honor with Judd Roblnscn of Downey while the coach of the year Is Downey's BiU Sexton. whc led hi! Vlkln111 to the CIF cham· pionshlp. The Orange Coast area's power In water polo J.s: reflected by four first team selections and all three goalies are tram the area. Named tc the first team are Newport Harbor's Je!f Duyn- dam (goalfe ) ·and Jim Youn11, along with Costa Mesa's l'lflke Hollister and Krumpholz. Costa tt1esa's Brett Ro11 is the second team goalie and Miuion Viejo's Dave Dla'mond eamed third team laurels . Other area standQuts Include Newport Harbor's Keith Wall and Edison 's Pat Moorhouse on the second team. arid Newport's Rocky Beek and Costa tfesa 's Dave Lund on the third team. First Team GoaUe -Jeff Ouvndam (NewDC1r1 Harbor). Ottten: Jlm Yeor (Newt>Ort Hetbor), i\1Ike Holl11ter fCo11ta l\lesal, 'Bruce Krum:Dllol:r: CCoron1 del l\1•rl. Ulrry Wahl, C'ral~ Schwart% (SUnny Hlllsl . Frank \.ordin (Lakewood\. A 1 ~ x Aguirre (La Puente). Judd Robinson, Robert Arnold, J11hn Shanahan (Downev ). SttoDd Team Goalte -Brett Rosa IC<w"..a l\1esa). Others: .Joe \r.11rP.as (Loa Alto!ll l, Keith Wall (Newpert Harbor), Don Snlcer {SuMy Hllls), Jason Wheaton (Palo! Verdes ) . :;:•ewart Craft fCre'lcenta \11\lle\·), Cllriton Dodd. Den"i!I Alorale1 (Downey . P'lt M!IOrhnnte (Edison). Doug Frantom (Los A m i gos ), Gabriel Esper a z a lLa Puente). 'l'blrd Team ('r()?!le -DavP ota"'ond IMl11lon V1e\4>). Others : Oarv Anderson (Cabrillo), Rod Strachan {Foothill), R ri n Peters (Monte Vi!tal. Poberl Judl!e (Downevl. Rntk" ~k fNewnort H1rbnr, Don Rc .. ser. John Iv11ns (l.PkeY<ood l. Dave IA!nd. (Cotta Me11), Everett Uchiyama {M1dr. Tut'41r. Dtumber 19, 1'72 DAILY PILOT JZ 64-63 Trlumpll HB Comeback Trips Griffins By llANK WE!4CK Of .... 01/lr Plllt lllff Jluntlngton Stach Kramb!· ed to a 84-63 vi ctory over 11 gritty Los AJamltos teem to advance to the Qu nrterflnala of the Anaheim Holiday Festival ba sketbaJI tourr.an itnt before a ~all turnout ft.tonda}' at the Convention Centtr. Elmer Combs' winning Oil. era had to acore the final ehitht points in the game to trip Los Alamitos. but they managed to pull It out on a field goal by 1uard Raul Contreras from 14 feet out with just 2.1 seconds left in the game. Conln!ras' shot "qpped a well played and excili~me which was close nearly .U the way . }luntlngton Beach opened a six-point lead midway through the second quarter and Los Alamitos gained . its aeven- point edge before the ·final Oiiers flurry -but in between the two teams matched shot l for shot. tor both teams there was one shooting star and a lot of helpers. Contreras netted 23 points and Griffins guard Glen ~tyen had 28. Myers was slightly sensational in the sec- ond period, scoring all but 11ix cf his team's 21 pclnts and finishing the half with 19. Contreras, meanwhile, was consistent all nlght hittlng on jumpers from the cornen and drives and contributing an el· cellent floor game. Trailing 51-49 after three quarters Los Alamitos spurted to a 6.'J-.M lead with 3:20 left In the geme on some nilly shooting by Myers and the free throw touch of guard John Moore before the Ode turned Jn Huntington's favor. Dra'.'•lng fouls repeatedly in * * * HIHlllMllHI 1Ntfl J'4l M 'I lllnt ln ' J ll:1Dt 117 ... _. 0020 f~' j ll' 1;.,,.I..... 1 1 , ~,,! C1rU.on I o 2 ~!f1V10" ~ j l '110t111 16 1 1& " LN AL1mlt• t6JI P~m T, ~ 't I~ ~1lc~:r11MM1 1 \ 1g M091-' 1 ~,', > &ournt 1 0 ' !l~lr' 12 ~ ,. ~· ' 3 J Gllll ldN ~ li!,.,,~ H,,,.,1~~,.~-1\ffcll 1? I~ 'I 1,? -'' L05 Al1mll01 1' ll I' 1' -6J the late minute• the Ollui!I drew clo5er and when Wynn Neill hit a layup for the rtrat Huntington field goal o( the period with 2:33 to play , the score was 63-tO. Slnale free tbrowa by Jim Welr and Scott Rankin cut the lead to one with I :23 to play. Then Los Alamitos threw the ball away tw~ and 100k ooe ill·advlsed shot before Con- lrera&' game winning basket. The Oilers are scheduled to ploy Kennedy, a 72~1 winner over Foothill, in a 6:30 game tonlght. Mater·Dei In 86-58 Victory By RON EVANS Of lflt 01117 PHIH lteff M~ter Del showed i t s superiority In every pijue or the game, and cruised to an 86-.58 victory over Anaheim 1.fonday In the Anaheim Holi- day Festival baa'll:etbatl tournament at the Convention Center. Mater Del's 11-1onarehs met t.ouah Katella this afternoon In the second round. The only problem t h e Monarchs encountered in ztp- plng to their sixth victory in nine games was a case or foulltls suffered by normally high scoring forward George Herold. Herold picked up three early fouls, sat out most of the sec· ond quarter. and left the a:ame with 5:54 remaining in the third quarter and only seven points to his credit. But Gregg Green, Steve Martindale and B r en d o n McCaughey were nlore than ~ able to make up for the loss against the disorganized and cold shooting Anaheim five. r.tater Del dl.lllected an Anaheim zona. defenM , wi\h Green and Martltidale penetrating fttquenlly f o r short jumpers and layups. The J\f011arch1 also drew foula with profJcltncv and caahed in lrom the lree throw line for 20 Ret1larf's baby not only didn't nourish ln lhe next four years, It snnk Into a comatose .state. The 40-yeaNld Retalaff, once tht sports Idol of Philadelphia, an All·Pro tight end, the guy wlth the AU· American µnage, 1ave up Monday on his boby -the Philadelphia Ea1lee. Would you believe lbat lhe Eagles under Reb:laff were worse than under the inuch maligned Kubarich? In four years of Retzlaff, the Birds w9f'e 15-ST..f. In the season which ended Sunday, Philadelphia tied for the sec- ond worse record in the Na- Uonal Football League-2-11-1. Khayat joined the Eagles' staff as defensive Jine coach before the 1971 season. After the team Joiit ita first three games la.st year. Tose fired he>d Coacb Jerry Wllllanu and promoted Khayat to the Job. The Ea11 .. howlcod back And, it c11n !lcarCf'!y ~fford to lo!\e a coach _and atbleti~ dlr'f"f'tor of the f'aDRbi11tles of Wall oce Wade f\.1oon, either. Coach Tandy GUils' No. 1 rated (Oranie bOunty) Sta Kings whipped out to leads or S.1 and 16-5 in the early 50ing and the margin simply cqn- tlnued to widen as Newport shooters were as cold as the gym they are forced to play in. Jn all the Sailors were eight for 39 from the neld for 20.5 Coast Rangers Wip; Fa1nily Night at UCI For a while In the first balf, although the margin was swelling. Corona appeared to be In trouble due to foul11. Jones end Keouih each had three, but they aetUed down In the second half and managed lo escape any further damage from the refs. Laguna Beach, D.olphins In Tourney Play Tonight points. • Anaheim led only briefly in the rame at 8-2. The Monarchs drew even with 5:45 left to play and rattled off five points on a jumper by Green and thrtt point play by lterold to pull away fot good. R<Walf resflned ., Eaglee' gtneral manager. In reality, he got oul just &bead of the oopa. Eagles' owner Len Tose prob<Wy would have fir.cl him anyway. Tose had hJs knife sharpen- ed yesterday, announcm, that he had accepted Reli11fr1 rtSignation. and tired bead coaCh Edd1e Khayat and hlJ enUre staff. "I don't want to IOUDd smart, or allb." said the Eagles' owner, •"1ut r want someone who can take the present players and what we get ln the draft and brlna us a winner." When he took over, Relzlaff aald Ibo Eaglet had a .,..1 deal of potential, a lot of talent whtch hadn't been , developed, pt1yer1 out of poel-. tion, a loeer's phllot0phy. He promJ8ed to tum around the to finish 8-7·1, and prompted Colln West and captain front of the goal and the the owner to predict his team Brian Gallagher scored goals Rangers' c.aptaln scored to would fight for the division ti-to lead the Coa!t Rangers to a 1ive Coast a 2--0 td.ge. tie this season. They dldn't' t.l victory over tbe Phoenix Phoenix scored Its lone goal and Khayat paid the price. SQccer Club SUnday In aoccer late ln the action after the Both Kbayat and Retllaff action at Boysen Park ln Rangers had dominated play. were workiug on ~year con-Anaheim. Coach George HarrilOll was ttact.s, a reward banded out in Neither team was able to pleased with the Rangers a dresslhg room at Yankee score In the first 'O minuet! of performance, especially that Stadium in New York after the the game with West breaking of goal keeper Sandro Thuroel Eagles flnl.shed the 1971 the Ice on a driving shot from and Gtllagher. 1ea.aon with a resoundln& vie-18 yarda out. -· J/I tory over the New York The ball went back and forth Something new has been ad· Glantii. Tose indicated he l'lad with n~ither team able 'to ~ ded to UC Irvine home besKet- settled both contracts, but score for the balance of the ball games this season. refused to disclose the details. half. Family nights are In vo.rue &th Khayat and Retzlaff Midway through the second and sa.turday night It will be played for the Eagles, helplfll half, PhQenix missed on a North Irvine area families the club wln the 1960 NFL U-penalty shot and the Rana:en who will be able to witness the tie. Kbayat came here as a went on offense. game with John B r o w n defensive tackJe on the 1'111 Tom Morrison. a former Cal University of Arkansaii for a aqllad. Later' he played with State (Fullerton) ater, drilled minimal $2 rate for the entire lhe Wuhlngtoo Redsklne and a perfect poss lo Gallagher In femily. finished hll career 'ff t t b Families living in North It was the ninth straight win for undefeated Corona del Mar, still far off the school record of 24 In a row set in the 1967~ campaign when Bill Bloom's quintet breezed to a 28-2 season. Dana HUia liigh School and host Laguna Beach are active in first round play of the 16- team Laguna Beach Christma! basketball tourna- ment tonight. Dana HUis meets Aquinas at 5:30 while Laguna's ArUats play Neff in the feature game at 8:30. nie t h i r d pe.rticlpatln1 Orange Coast aru school, University, does not play unUI Wednesday, meeting Walnut at 4. WiMers and lo8er1 o f today's and Wednesday's games play Thuraday. Title games In the consolation and charnplon11hip brackets are scheduled ror Saturday night. Dana Hllla bas the best record -S.3 -ot area en· trants. The Dolphins, led by Prep Mat Results GWC, Bucs In Action · Boston ln lbe American Foot-Irvine need only to ldentlfy boll Leaaue. He coached with Basketball themselvea al lhe UC! ticket ' ~ '" ,, •. New Otleanl before Joi"'"" window to get the special diJ. ;(,~ .. ,: .. ~,, I~ .. ~~ ",K,."" ,., H.,., -,., ... 1c1 o1"'*" Mt11oc1c 1H1 , ... && '°-,,icktr ~~ .._ tllo .. 4;&St•" Mell lJJt IHI Ptlftlrt• the EIJlet' staff. count family rate of $2 for the 1 -w11Ur CPI •·''"'"" 1c1 >-ts -s1...ck1r 1c:1 "'· 1tcid•IM1 c,1 '!.~•.!! JC~ -_, enure -...up 2. •·\· rrom Detroit In 1958 for the ~, ~u ~~~~ • .a.1..n1'°' ~ Y' .i. lM = ~111\~.'th ~~'';t..)1~ Retzlaff wu pure h 11 e d ~rro l~-•'" · IU = =~cl~~.'?J:i.\:1 rc11 R -~ttw•r;t 1c1~""'1....i1 Cout coll~es retuna_ t 0 It South Dekcta State, he wa1 ifurori;t t w:~ Loyola opener In lhe Intema· ;:J»-L.twl• (CJ,,..,, wftllt '""' (PJ 1~ -Ltwh !Cl olllMd "•'°"1c"- Goldtll West and Orenie •100 w1lvu prtce. A tuJlblck rt. ~:~~"lt 11ckets for the UC Irvin• 111 -•-IPJ lllMMI Dwlfll111 fCI IF1'zl"2!·,._" !Fl •· DllMl111 ic1 baaiet6in lcUOn toDlghl ln 8 converted tnto an Md and In fJ::':lt.. ~i:'" a ttonal City touma~t at ~ 1 1".,: c_1ou,,_M 11',',-.~-~·,'1~0~~.1 .. ~ !F;.,;:..0·cirrtco cc1 oec. 11.,_ 1,.1.,. O'CJOClc tlllJll, 11 feats cauaht '5a pultS f<lr I l«M "'-'Hl' L<l1g Beach Arena Friday r .-...-_,,, """ 0 ... 5 -T!M:lllkvllo ((] lfK, ·~ Tbe Ru.sUet'll from Golden 7,4l2 yatde. He retired the Kt." .. ' c11...-om1~1u. l'orU•fld ts night are currently on sale It 1~1 '~ TllOfftlMl'I !P l die:. ,.,...i tFl s.1. ruth ~ lhe UC! thl ti otn In 1 1 ..o 1St -,..,_1 !Cl dee. "°'1""' 1111 ,.. WMl with a M Muon ntcon1 IJlll!llt pus receiver ln Ultll 1'6. D•tl&L!i. • e c ct tJ ...:. Mtll(IN !Pl dtc. Ol'ril (() S· o.,., -OIYll !C l dM.. Wltlll!Tlt '"' 2- followtog a loss to Pllldena, leaKUt lUstory. e-:rrn· " St=/•. Crawford Hall. ~)!~ -l!~lcll ICJ ollll'IH • ....,,,.. (Pl 1. ho.st tile Chapman junJor M111•kt~1'1~nati' The (our-team. two-day af• 1;1 -~ !Cl drtw wltll 1).VJ -Cac:l1!1 (Fl dtc. lt1Vlcll CCI varsity 'tfhlle ' cxx::•1 Pirates iOll·1~-~~"i~~fl~·f fair wl)l match host Cal state ~~'~'':J.J.;:· tci ol!Wltd cr111 1,.1 rc',","4-:-L•v•••l•yr 1F1 dlc. Joftnloftl travel to Chaf(ey. Lions Battle jlf'I\ i, ~·""'·"· , ...... , 11 Ttc.11 Ml (I..ong Beach) and Lona llland ~·-·Meta (a) Cll) Mlllll*'tf!IA h•tll 't'Z.1t ~~rz-1~·) 1r,~1'T.:Jr.f.:''· Th& Buca. alto w, have •YIM , N, vv Univeralty fl!gaintt edet other -''""., 1c1 .i11_, AM1• \Hl '' -s1~·· -bY ""'•''Ii dropped four In a row with the ~~·.1"'w. ! ft11~1'1/1·.. Jn the second game Friday Jin= 'J:",~f1,;:r.1:.:.i~·1H ) ~ff = 'J;."1 I :=.r ~-fH) Jut defeat • 'lt-77 Mlbeclr: to Lakewood Five .. r~.~. it, 2':l•sl. ri~,:Clttt} night at ' with ,the wlnnen J;lta -C\ll'!llllll'lfl (() -i i.v """''· ~-ff .. meetlna ~turday for the , R-1: c11m111l11C11 1c1 He. "lcltfor.d 121 -c111nv 1H1 o.e. 011M111t 1c1 YMt ey. ~-St\o1.' f,~1,1.~44 ., II: ft!• flf) ftc DllMI M. Both Orange C:0.1t ind s.d· Weatminlter Hlllh'1 Llons ~r. ¥'~'· ci, C championship. ' M. .. 11 • 1111 .. in -Ltw" 1c1 •· "'1n111 tH I ,.. dllbeck ($-7) have ~11 Mt try to cet1nto the wiMlna col· l.~~-· IL1~~~· '1r&:,i., A'· ., Ticieta ar. s:t ror raerved 1 ~1 C: ~::;ct~~=~~~~~~ lft = £:~~n~f~:.i;~ 1c1 Wednelday nilht. occ tftb t..'!... ill ·J, sealJ and # for 11ene.ral ad-J..S _ l"t'tOt l HJ ..c. ·rwtM1c1111t 1c1 11~~-,-,,.'"o.1•1•11. tH, 1 ""bv ~··, to Collee;e ot the Delet1 while umn tonlcbt wbtb they play Ml M~ i\11i1 minion. The UCI ofnce wtll be •y~ _ ~ 1c1 •· •·~ IHI ,. J "" 1c 1>1fllltd "'""'" SeddlelJock lillu Cypreoa •I bolt to tbl Lakewood IAnc<n ~ w!!'I! Opln from a lo I dally thl• '· 1·1 =0""1'1"'' ... ,,,. ·~Ll'L I 7..1:1: 'rr!i ':;. •7:1~1.1•,. Miulm Viejo ffj3h . ln • nM-league bUketblll tUl ~ ~£i:~ 1' week. ,, -:..''.:frtl'YC 1:."f .. ::,:, ':t:J.,;;;. "MY¥ -l'lr•t ICI -.... tort.II. In othet Jllillor colltgt II (ell under woy •t 1 . .lli";;;;;ii;;i;i;;;ii;i;iiil;i;i;ii;iiii;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiii;i;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;; lriFiiiiiimiiiiiiii;;iiii;iiiii;;iiiiiii;;;;;;iiii;;ii;;iiiiii;iii;iiii;ii;iiiiiiii;;; &•me< thll ,...1c, Golden Wut Coacb Dou{ Stocklwi>'• hoN GRAND PRIX FREE SUPER BOWL TICKETS v!Jltl San Dle10 Meu Friday are Chi for lhe young ....... nlibl •nd t ro v 1 I 1 to Tl>t leldlni scorv l<it Southweetern Sltun!ay ev.n-W11tmlnlter ii Gary AMrewa, inl· OCC ii 11 homo Slturc!ay who haJ overaged 18.7 polntl •• ---"" .. , "" a1pt qalolt ruo Hondq. In four ptnH. '122" """ -~M ...,., ,..., ...... WIW, .. .!.i.11 •Mldltt ........ -. .......... . I ·p•o GOU ltJB.LtJ8 ~l Pitt .... ,... lllltMllll -T a L.. Of'Mt ..... .., '"\ 00 MO. r.'1t'o::i'7u:,..i:: .r.."'wf:o~ I !,11. W.;'H"...,-:r1CifttMilrf42.•"•. DAVI ROSI PONTIAC 121 W. ltllolt, otl'leoolill1 VloNC.., 14tt--...... -M- ""I I t11• -t..Utl lfOCI LU.II DIHCT-PMTOIT AtmlOllDD DIAUI L H..m ,...., t. w. t ,. f ,.. '°"' MM • .., Jj -.,.,," ,,. tt 11• • Jtt. a • ......,. •t AHi· 5-11 .. 4 "O•"P MAfMllOllL "-OJ, ra1D DORAN -54Ml11 1i-~_._....;.;;;;;.;;,;;;;;;~;;.;;:;._,.-__ _ ILA~-M.141 4 -, •• ,...,._, , .... -..... -11.C-lo .... _,.. __ ._, ..... HARBOR TRAVEL i441"9LW..M•.,... ..... 675·1111 junior forward Mark Scbrey's 16.0 acorlng average, won two 1ames in the Lennox Tourna- ment last 1\'eek and narrowly missed beating the host.a In the .second round, losing U·59 in overtime. Today After building to a 14-15 flr.t quarter edge aod 4 s -2 a halftime 1dv1nta1e, Green, Martindale and MCCaughey scored all but three polnta: in a 19-polnt third quarter wblle the C.Olonllta «lUld o n 1 y answer with Hve of thtlr own. Ontario vs Saddleback -4 p.m. Aciulnaa vs Dana Hilla - 5:30 p.m. Norco vs Lawudale - 7 p.m. Neff VI Laguna Beach - 8:30 p.m. Wednetdly Walnut vs University -f p.m. Brethren vs Sierra Vista - 5:30 p.m. North B akersfiel d vs Cantwell -7 p.m. Moreno Valley \'S Apple Valley -8:30 p.m. ORDER YOURS TODAY! " • '•alltlful Stlck .. n LABELS Pllrsonall1ed • Stylish • Effl~l•nt Order for YoutMlf or a Frltnd· May bt us•d on •nvalope1 es return eddrH1 l•bels. Alto vtry h•ncfy •• ld•ntiflcetiort lebtl• for m•rklft9 ,tnonaf lt•m• 1uch •• boo~•. rtcords, photo•, etc. ltbals atick oft 9lt11 tnd "'•Y b• u11d for m•rlrlft9 hom• cel'lnecl fot:d lt•rn•. All l•bel1 •rt printeid with 1tyll1h Vo9ut typ• on fin• qutllty whlt.- 9umrntd p•p•r. • r----~::~:::;::::.-;;;:~---1 I p~ """'"" L•MI DI• .. P.O ••• U6t • I CHU M-. CtW. ,... ' I I ---..,.--------! I PILOT PRINTING · I -----------------------J · .. -~ ' • • J 8 DAILY PILOT SC ,. ........... .... Great W este1~n's Newport Beach civic and business leaders joined the or- fioer1 of Gre•l Westem Sav· lngs and. Loan Association Monday at ribbon cuttl.ng ceremonies opening the bank's B11sinessm a n Eyes Sale Of 9 Stores SAN FRANCISCO (APJ - Negotiations reportedly are underway for the sale of all nine San Francisco area Wl11te- Front stores to 39--year-old businessman Paul Maris. "My accountants are now sitting down with those of White Front," Maris said . "If the deal clicks, l hope to run all White Front stores here by Jan. 15." Maris, who said he also hoped to buy two White Front stores outside the area, said the stores \VOUld continue to sell genera I merchandise, "mostly bard goods." Interstate Corporation, New York-based parent company of the White Front chain, ati- noWtced last w~k it will close 21 of its 37 West C-Oast stores after lhe first of the year. A native of Priladelphia. Maris owns an electronics firm in Kobe , Japan, and formerly owned radio stations in Cincinnati and Cleveland, Ohio. A year ago he purchased the Alvin Duskin Co., a gar· ment manufacturing f i r m here. OR~NGE COUNT\ fl \OIOTELE rHONI SECIVI CE 1 .. t GRUBB & ELLIS REAL TY FUND Ill A I"' l 1tete '""''-"t Orr•f!!nd!J GRUH & ELLIS COMPANY 4300 CAMPUS DRIVE lllEWPORT BEACH 7:JO P.M. -W.......,, he:. 11 n4 n •rtdolf, he. 19 , Sp•~• ii limittd Offttin'I Clrc191•n will b• diJ!ribwttd •t lh• '•tnln•n. C•I c.lh<t fot .............. (714) .. ' I 557.7900 .. • OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK S'l'OCK IJST \ ~ I I ! , . I ~· ... i ,. I • . .. . N •• . a ... :;fr( .. ~ ~ .. .. .· .. •" ·' .~ 0 '.§ ·8 : I ~ p p •• p p :$ :~ ·~ :I '.f ·~ •• p •• ;. ' , ' ' ' . SC 'f~esday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List • DAILY PILOT 19 --. I .. ; ' • I I ' ' \ • l I I I • l ' l . • • • : • I • • . • • : • • • • • • J • ~ i • • • 1 DAILY PILOT ·Tahoe Site Proposal Gets Study SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A propeoaJ for r e d e r a I ae- quislUon of 10,000 privately owned acres in the Tahoe Basin bas been announced jointly by the Fibreboard Corp. and the U.S. Forest Service. The deal, proposed by the San Francisco based forest products company, involves aboot $10 million through Forest Service exchange pro- cedures. 1t would increase federal ownership ln the basin from 115,000 acres to about IZS,000 acres. Aqpprova1 by the Forest Service and Ag r ic u 1 tu r e Secretary Earl Bull is re- quired prior to acquisition of (ECOLOGY) the 10,000 acres . located near the north end of Lake Tahoe In Placer County. The tract in- cludes key land from the Nevada Hoe near Brockway westerly to the Truckee River. e New Agenr9 SACRAMENTO (AP ) Gov. Ronald Reagan has sign- ed legislation creating a state Department or Transportation. 'lbe bill also orders the department to come up with a new state transportation plan. Tbe department, which will come Into being July 1, 1973, will combine the present departments of Public Works and Aeronautics and the Of- fice 0£ Transportation Plan- ning and Research. Reaga n said the plan "will give California a coordinated transportation system that will better serve all the people now and in the future." The bill was sponsored by Assemblyman Wadie Deddeh (o..chula Vista). eRoadlllized LOS ANGELES (AP) -The city Planning Comm ission has banded the controversial Laurtl canyon Freeway a death blow . The commissioners voted, 4- 1, to 'CUt the freeway from the city's master plan of highways and freeways. Both the Leglslatllre and the a ty Council had ruled against the proposed route, but under 1the city charter only the Plan- ning Commission can change the city's master plan. 1be freeway would have e:r- tended from the Golden State Freeway to the proposed Slauson Freeway. e Daager Cited B ELMON T (AP) California's tasty and scarce Dungeness crabs migbt be picking up disease -carrying microbes from sewage- polluted coastal waters, says a United Nations consultant on marine pollution. Dr. Rudolph De Girolamo, chairman of the College of Notrt Dame biology depart- ment in Belmont, said pollu- tion might weaken the crabs' resistance to disease and thus decrease their numbers. 1'1e e:rtent of shellfish con- tamination, De Girolamo said, should be invesUgated Jm- mediately to determine a human health hazard exists. e Stn09 Clltlt1t1Jer RIVERSIDE (AP) -A smog chamber for use In alr pollution control research bas been put into operation at UC Riverside . The $281,000 !aclllty, the university says, ls the Ont of its kind. It. ls designed to simulate condlltons In polluted urban atmospheres. A major use will be ID test the effect In the at,. mosphere ot emttng and II"" poeed la1'1 re g ulat i n g automobile-a n 4 stallonary aource emissions. SEIKO l/N~IROOK Christmas Special! BEANBAG CHAIR ''The Perfect Gift for Anyone-Any Room I'' •Top quality leatherette beanbag in your choice of colors -just right for relaxing. • Pick one up fo r each member of the family-they'll love 'em! SOLD ELSEWHERE FOR $19.99 WOWl$9!9 SAVE $10.001 1'2" Thick Regulation Slice PING-PONG TABLE TOP • Two piece table top-makes into regulation sii., 5 It. x 9 ft. top. • Tough particle board with official green finish-invite a Chinese foreign exchange student for dinnerl REG. $1.99 $5?9 SAVE $3.00/ DJf.CAST ALUMINUM HOtlSING Finl NO.TltT .... MIDGET CHRISTMAS '- "Set of 15 Assorted Mini~.ture Ughtsf" • Colorful, assorted bulbs have petol-type reflector. • Push -in replaceable lamps- complete with two spare lamps. • If one goes out, the rest stay lit. - ••• ........ STAYS COOl SAfITT lOCl CONTROL Y.AlYf ... . ' ' ·-- SAU NICa -·· TNllO--·• -· :114, 1•7:11 UN·-W1U. U CU Ill MONDAY, -· ~I,·-· MY JIT ... INTAICU • 11With A Free Motor & Spit1 11 • It's from Char-Broll", so you know It's the best -and the best bar·b-q buy this yearl . , • Eliminates wood-carrying, lighter fluid, charcoal and messy ashes forever! • Complete with post, no-tilt base & pe1 manent brlquets -AND a free motorized rotlsserlell • We stock everything you need to Install It yourself. REG. '109.99· Wnwr· SAVE ~40.001 nu . OIAMITU 1--• autrraOOf POST I Ouldoor 4-Pc. ILLUMINATED :NATIVITY SET • 18" blown plostic, 3 dim.erisional .figurin.es in gloV\'ing colors-<:omplete wllh fuli'color lithogroph carton used as background. • C7 y, electric interior illumination-U.L .. listed. ,, . •Share the< true spirit ~f i:;hristmas ·with your friends and neighbors.. .' ·. A $5.99 VALUE· WOWI SAVE $2.00 . . No .. 1373 I • • • • ' I • • • • • ~ ~ • ' ~ --,. ""'.:=' .. • . . . . . I • . I ' -.{ t ' • " l J . ~ ' _. 1~· - ' ._ • ' ;.i. . ) , ,1 .. •• •! .. • 1' •• I t 1t f • ~ 't I I ' !- ( .f ·'' ' . -I t 1 ., • •• ~l ., ' ' i· I .~ • ,1 )f ~ I ' ~ t • • • • ' • .. • f 17 ' ' \ I , I I ' ' I ' ' I ( ': .. I 17 • • Laguna Bea~h , EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stooks VOL 65, NO. 354, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1972 TEN CENTS - Last Moonship . Splashes D~wn on " Schedule · AB~ USS CONJll!:llQGA.flM.)_.Ceman..llarrlson H hmilt--and Ronald -bobbing In the water.-Navy frogmen ='"Tli. ast poUo came. home fro;-u;; E. Evans returned' to earth at 11:25 a.m. leaood into the water to attach a flotation moon 1toda}', splashing down safely In the ·(PSI') with a s11iooth splashdown in cotiar and to assist the astronauts into a &,>uth Pacific tO. end the American pro-gentle South 'PaclUc seas 400 miles life raft. gram·which put 20th century man to the sotitheast of Samoa. The spacemen were to be plucked Crom lunar surface. Their return ended Uie last, longest the raft and taken to a red--earpet, brass camera aboeri! a hovering helicopter. "AmerJca ls s~ble bne in the water,'' and •most scientilically-productive of the hat welcome on the Ticonderoga. siaqaled a nearby helicopter moments Apollo lunar missions. 1be descent toward splashdown was after the aP,acecraft landed.right side ,up. Helicopters from tbis prime recovery seen on television in t,he United States Parchutes, red and white strea·u of color against a blue sky; bloomed as the craft de8cended. They were quickly seen by whltHuited sailors lln!ng the decks of this carrier and a· cheer went up. "AU ii well aboard," reported Evans. The craft, dangling under its three straining chutes, dropped !"tea<µiy toward Ame.ric&rl ~slronauts ' Eugene A . ship quickly bolrered over the spacecraft with spectacular ·scenes taken by a • una . ' Trustees, Vote 3-1 hi Dispute Despite a strong showing of citizen support for the Laguna Beach School system, the BOatd of FAucation ·MGnday night voted to fire its three ~, ad- miliistrators. Superintendent of Schools William Ullom and assistant superintendents Dr. Robert Reeves and Dr. Cha.lies Hess, in separate actions, were told their,. con- tracts will not be reoeWed' wben they ex· LAGUNA SCHOOL TRUSTE6.BLOC REMOVES ·SUPERINTENDENT AND TWO TOP AJDES . ' • ·' • c ' ' • pire on June ~, 1973. ' Mrs. Patricl• Gillette, Ger.aid 'Link• at~ SO.rd ,Pr;.iCtent :yiilliarhiThomas '' ' ' ' ' ' I • ' l • ' - ' ' Officials Give • • Owri Statement . In: Dismissal Th< following .B41tement was released Monday ,night by th,.. t o p ad· minlstraton of the Laguna Beach Unliled:Sdlool District afte< the Board of &lucation . voted not to renew their con- tracts:. "The action of th,e majority of the board nOt to ixtend the cohtracls Is not based on, past ~rformance or evaluation reports hOr el1*cted future at~ents in their positioris, but a violation of all accepted· personnel practices and the board'I own evaluative standards as recOnliy .. Sept. 5. 1972." The .reference lo Sept. 5, said one of the 01.1Sted _administrators, Dr. Charles Hess, aaatstant superintendent o f business, was to board apprpval oI pro- visloM • of the Stull Bill, which. set up evatqa(tOii standards for d I s t r l c t empld)'t!I . •1Iostiid oflooklng at long-range plan- ning, thll board majority has chosen to move on a short-tenn, day-to-day basis. 11 violates good judg""!'t u.nnaqage- ment techniques,.. aess _said this morn- ing. Ullom JDade similar .remarks during the meeting when he rappell "poor personnef'L practices by the. Nard ma- jority. I think the real Issue here is due ,process." , ' I • ;,I " • ,; ,.,, SHE DEMANDED AN 'ANSWER ON FIRIN~T NONE · · Mrs.'On1yahssa~ Johnson, SOuthl.a9uft1 Mother Each motion of norwenewal was ·made iu cuJ't fashioo by -'Palricla .... Gill tte-~ed ~ .. ' ' r--'d ... ~m .. "............ . ~-• ~ Iii'. u;e·t"' other' members iD ' ousting the toi> admllliltraton . Tnutee Jane Boyd, a t..,.ume IUP' portee of the admlnlftrators, cast the sole vote to renew tbe cOntracts. Tr}i.stee Norman Browne was a~. v~~ in Mexico. . ... ' ' ' ' . More than 200 persons poured into the high sch9ol . auditorium to watch the meeting,' with scores ~g an ·ex- planation of the action after the votes were taken. - Each member of the 1najorit1 bloc refused to respond. ' Prior to departing to the high school . cafeteria for an executive (closed) session., Thomas allowed 20 minutes of testimony. There were no slatemP.nts made critical of the p&iormance of Ullom , Reeves or Heas. "Why do three people tell me I cnn't have the kind of edll,cation I v.-·ant for ri1y children," angrily aaked Mrs. Thomas Cutkomp of South Laguna. "I resent the fact that three people with no children in school can make these decisions." --""AL81L&Cl . .of public_protest,_L Will remove my children from our schools." declared Mrs. Gall Gaston, an employe of Top of the World Elementary School who worked actively in the uosuceessful recall attempt against Trustees Gillette and Linke. Applause broke out at the end of the 30- minute executive session when tTUom again took bis 9e8t at the board table. He adknowledged the ovation with a broad smile. Both Ullom and Reeves waived their right to a public hearing or the reasons for their dismissals. Hess, bowever, (See ULLOM, Page 2) * Horace Wheatly, an attorney for the California Teachd's Association, agreed the issue of due process was involved. Gille.tte · ·Patrols Asked "Since Dr. Ullom has been superin- tendent," said the articulate Wheatly, "tbe percentile or improvement in this .lli§!rlct ~_!l!o.\Vll. a ~ked Im· proYement. The children not only are equal to other children in Calliomla but far beyond. It ls due to the capable administration Of Dr. t.Rlom." --LUgurn;; Trus~~~Cioos Fear for Property 'l'be board, the attorney continued, has adopted certain policies 1n regard to the stull BUI. "If an employe receives a poor evalua- tion -il the evaluations s h o w weaknesses -they sboplil, he po[ntad 'out to the employe and he should he told how to improve. "Dr. Ullom was not extended this courtesy," wtieaUy meued. A,sttiall l>M~ cif•YP.POrteis githereil at ' the home of Mrs. Patricia Gillette folio~ itlg the tempestuous school board meeting Monda.Y at which Supt. William Ullom and top ~I administratqrs were fire4. Mrs. .Gillette. requested extra policei patrol checks of her home In the a~ parent fear for her properly. Thomas said he was apprehensive about possible ~ daml!ge, to. bl;i camera shop in downtown Laguna too. "That was the most vuJgar display of citizenry and I don 't think it belongs in this part of the country or In any part," Tanner said. "I've never seen anything this bad in my life," Yancey said concemlng the emotion-packed school board D!ffU.n, at- tended by more than 200 penam. moat of whom lllpported the firtd acbool ad- m.Inistraton. Two Say H~ax Known the water and \hen splashed. Unl ike some previous Apollo endings, the apacecrata remained upright. The astronauts could be heard laugping aboard the bobbing craft bDd Ulen Evans exclalmed, "Hey, the.re's the chopper right there." A helicopter flew over, a few feet above the craft, and black-suited frogmen plunged into the water. The astronauts could be heard congrat- ulating each other and laughing happily. Two helicopters poised like sentrieS over the downed spacecraft as the swim; mers attached a flotation collar around tbt-blunt end of the cone-shaped craft. At the home of Evans, near Houston, the astronaut's wife and tv.-•o children (See APOLLO, Page %) • ire • f! ·; , ; 'f • ~ • .oumo 'L~GUNA ~CHQOLI$ "SUPERINTENDENT, WELL WISHERS ' • I' I ' --· ·Willl0m·Ul1'>m-Still;Able·to Smlle After Bitter Cllm•x Young Lag-µnans Upset By · Schoolmen' s Ouster BY. ~EJµClc SCHOEMEHL they can't answer because they have no Of .. DellY, PIM'"" answer." ~.w.-:a,..yot.mg, prett.Y girl, with long A South Laguna woman, Omayahssam browg, h81i, 'hUff8ild tears In Iler eyes, -'-Johnson, left-her scaramt'ran-din!dlxin as she' embrace<t Laguna B e 8' c h front of the board table demanding an SUperinten<tent of Scllools William Uflom answer on why Ullom was to be fired. 'hiomenls. after ·he was fired Monday -·-n;ougn tuled'..,oltt'" of order, M~. night. Johnson, attempted to grab t h ~ The tiigh school .student was one of microphone from Thomas, and continued many · who sat · througb lhe tumultuous bet demands for an answer. · meeting wbere Ullom, and assistant superlntendentJ Dr. Robert Reeves and Or. Charles Hess were given notice their oontracta will not be renewed. Students aod parents swarmed the stage of the high school auctitorium rolloWing· the meeting to give their sym- pathies and their thanks to lOr.,UUom - the man ·who hat guided tlM •Laguna Beach UriUied School District for the past Ollht years. Teats rolled down the cheelis of many, but Ullom ·smiled, seemqly .. ueved that the long simmering threat he would be dl.mi..ecr by'the maJt>rlty blOc was finally reel -and it waa over. ThGH · tader ·momenta after the meeting were in sharp contrast to the seething remarks shot at the board from t~ more than 200 persons who packed the high IChool audltorluin. "Just who the bell do you think you are," angrily scrtatned' blgb tchool stu. dent Peter OiSAndro, a topbomore who helped. collect scores of lignatures SUJ> porting Ullom H.., and Reeves . "Wby, 'Nbyfn aied out other members of the·-· Silence followed, Wltll Jolle Bem1teln , a UC Irvine student ye:lled out.,"Vou see, For a few brier moments, pan.. demonium reigned, with persons sboutini from their seats: "sieg he 11, .... "t~talitarianlsrn," and ''th is 1 tt democracy?" Board members offered fto' response, , Other students in ibe au die n ct thdeatened a student boycott or claales When school resumes f o I to w I o & fSee YOUNG, Page 2) Orange Ceut • Weatlaer ·Hazy sunshine I• the w•y the weather lady sees It for Wednee- day, with slJ&hOy cooler tempera- tures. High.. In the flOs. Ovemlght lows "'!Ill be ln the 508. Night 1nd morning low fog Is expected Wednesday. ' INSIDE_ TODA. 'l' At the conclusion of hiB comments trustee Patricia Gillette OlOUll<nled "due process Is hot ~ undeo this condition,'• • """""' whldl bfOuiht booo and calcalla from the audl•"'i'· Mrl. G'lllelt.. had n\ade the su<;cessful motions ror the nonrenewal ol lhe con- tracts ol Dr. Ullom, Dr. Robert Reeves, assistant superintendent for instruction, and Dr. Charles Hess, ass Is ta n·t superi'!~endent for business. A luxury car waited ato the curb .tiy Mra. OUletle'a northen~ home , and cl'!*~ed iQ. and al'Ollnd Ii were Jalnes Yan~y of the Taxpayeri Al!Ociatlon, Mn. Tll<roaa Yale Ea11ee,·Paul tanner, and twu other wome.a . SEA'!!l'LE (AP) -Both ,cle/endaniiJ Jn1 1'he".p~mim..it eootends Lewla o1>' , a federal fraud trial have test!ll<d thll~ tolned ilO,ooo from Fleming b' an in. their alteged victim, fonner N'ewswetk · tervJew wipi Murphy, who wu po1inc u · COl\tnbutJ!'I fl<!l.19r JWI lllernlng, lme'{. D. B. Coo'per. ' 'im~£fE k~HA': Twelvt 111or1 ogo, Ralph Rat· 1111 dltcouer<d "'" couldn't af· ford a Chrltinuu tree for hU tl&rec daugh£tr1, .so ht grobbftl a doz11t,onmgc cmtt1 and MGc1C 1111 own Chrlltmos Vlllogt. S.1 I ' i Yule in Jail ~~ht · PAMPLONA, Spain (UPI~ '-Manuol Lari, a tramp, went on a wJndow. &maallllli spree Monday on St. Nlcholllt Stroet ID he would be Jailed .and pt to spencl Cluistmaa In priloo or a ptychlatno hospital, pollce atJd today. Wtl!Uun 'lllomaa, achoo\ boorcI preol- denC, arrived shortly. He'd jutt stopped by for a ''toddy," Tbomas said.. "I think someone should stay with her tonight. You don't know what those peo- pl1:1 w111 dn," Mrs. Eagles aait i... ,... 18volviil lri a hoax lM!fm 1ht Tbat wu the name given by a man tralllaC!tM> wal eompleted. who hijacked a Northwm Alrllnea Donald S. Murphy and Wllliom L. ltUiner and disappeared after balling oot "Jack'' i..wis took the SW>" ln theJr of the Boeloa 727 with •.ooo ransom OD dereZJS< Monday io U.S. lll1trlljl Court. Thanlugtvlng Eve tl71. The. case was to resume tOday and, 'Mte lmpertonallon becam,. obvk>u1 possibly, go to the jury late thl1 af-during abme 12 hours of ta pin& and film- ·ternoon. Ing Feb. 23, Mw-phy tutlfied. - , ~,5 '11\0U PA'/s. TO 9tfllf'! .....lJ J ~,,.,...., ~ !1.1"-- .~ --••• · 1tcn•11 °" Po9t JO, • 1 L.M. ...,. f .._... . --,_., M • t1Mtt1 ...... I --. ---"'--1•n ....... ...,., . -" ..... ~ u -l>U --. .......,.._,.. .. _._ . '""' ,..,, ............. ,. .,...,,.... It ---. -·--........... 2 DAILY.. PILOT ,;' LB St. Mary's Hearing On Agenda ' A cooUnued public henring on the -abate1nent (demolition) of St. Jl.fary's Chapel is one of 42 items on the Laguna Beach City Council agenda set for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in City ttall . City staff members have recommended the building be abated and a staff report lo the City Council states that actions taken by the properly owner "is unsatisfactory and has not resolved the problem ." The city earlier condemmed the historic building as unsafe. and services were no longer penn.iUed to be held in the Episcopal chapel at t2B Park Avenue. The building has been termed a historic structurp within the city. CJiurch groups have attempted to raise funds to save the chapel and restore it. DAILY PILOT Staff~ Sig1ai11g Vp All 4S tor Numa Electors Cast State's .Ballots "Jt>h: m.y pleasure to 8J'U)(JU.OOe ~ votN for Richard NixQn for President," Elec- . toral College eh•lnnan Edward Mills of Laguna Beach declar<d after the formal balfollng. . It was Nlsm 451 George McGovern o. Tbat was the score Monday after califomia's 45 presidential electors - the biggest bloc in the nation -officially CHt their yotes for president. SJnc. President Nl<on liellt McGovern by more than ooe nlUlloo votes in the popular balloUng Nov. 7, presldeaUal electors pledged to him got to cut the "real" ballots In the Electoral College. Everyone knew wbo wu going to win. Anita Cooley, • Noted Laguna • The electors ptbered ln Gov. n.1r111's conference room. at tbo eaplw olld ol&n- ed anal) blue canls belr\na ont ftl!IO: .Ttij!o they did It all over ,~•ln l'lth another set of cal"di bearlnl( .,. n•~ of Viet Prtsldcnt !lelro Apw.' After eoch eleclor llpecl his card, h•w were tallied by Cyd SW..., SI, a protty blonde elector rrom Novato. Legally, the electon could have voted for ......,.. •· Ill Ibey "'"' al~ loyal Republican olllcebolden, plrty oflldals. big clooon to the p.-..IdelltW c:alDj>llgn and graasrooU IWrkert. 1bere WllO't I hint of • defection. Electon and a few oal®bn, IDllllly Reagan !tall memben, 11>Plauded. A letter from structural enginel:n re- tained by the Episcopal Church says preliminary findings Indicate the struc- ture "has very likely come to a stable condition.'' It requests a six-month investigation of the slability of the old structure with placement o! movement gauges in the chapel. Gov. Ronald Reagan signs cast of ~fission Viejo's Daniel Moreno, 2, during visit to Orange County Children's Hospital. Governor and Mrs. Reagan made a pre-Chnstmas visit _to the facility in Orange Monday. Daniel is recovering from a broken leg. He wasn 't sure who the Reagans were and when his mother told him Ibey "are Important people," he covered his face with bis pillow. Mrs. Reagan signed cast; too. Artist, Dies Pioneer Laguna Beach artist Anita Lewis Cooley, mother of Laguna author Leland Frederick Coojey and Lewis Cooley, a Waahlngton Stat< banter, died 1bursday ln Ota-Waab. Sbe wu rr. Now the ballotl will ho oent on witb thooe ot the other states to Waahlngton, D.C., wbere early In January t1ieY wJll be opened by Agnew, That 11 one of his duties as president ti .the U .s. Sena!<. The number ol ei.cton 1! delermloed by the numbei' Of coogreumeo llld U.S. senators a state Is entitled &j) at the time of the election. · The whole balloting ptocosl I n California took 33 minutes. Aa he closed the meeting, Milk ·noted that Bllhough some oonalder the El<C- tonil College archaic, it •wt ·la ~tter than wblln !!>e.J11~ am elecied 6'Jrg• 17~ ·U prelldml Other items scheduled before the coun- cil are: -A recommendation to accept the famous gardens of Hortense Miller as a gift to the city of Laguna Beach. -Will bear a presentation by the Tax- payers AssoclaUon on city financial operations. Rape Suspect Fooled? Mrs. Cooley Orsi came to ~ Beach ln 111111. JU>t married, obe ml lier lxlsband Arthur M. Conley drO'fe by bone aod tioggy through what. 11 now Aliso Caeyoo to the coul. 'l'boq, ~ top -1ar Volf plier ..... pnsldeftl Ille! the--.... ----· . "l.'m '""' we an. lppnclalt Ibo Im- -ta' made ' ln Ibis lltuatlon lhn>ucll the :rean," Milli Aid With I grin, "or JOU ml&bl 111.. ""8d for -. ...... >ice~" -Will receive a report on lbe status of the Jabraus site parking structure. -CoMider guideUDes for spending of revenue sharing luods. Lawyer Says He Didn't Know Girl Was Only 17 Mn. Conley became an a~ painter and singer. lier )llllrtlnp of California flowers were e.lblbited al Gumpo In San Francbco and the Callfornia state Museum in sacramento. Tbt electon pt llG lor a..tr -plus fiVe ~ a mite trlftl ~ They . alio BOl·IOllWlllr pem beu1o( the name ol Roollcl Reagan-an lllllUCC<lllul ltsa pruidenlial candldat.. -WUl consider the recommendation of city engineer of bids for ronstruction and saJe of bonds for the Arch Beach Heights assessment dislrict. Child Beating Suspect Jailed In Costa Mesa Police arrested a 21-year-old Costa Mesa truck driver Monday on suspicion of shaking his girl friend's :Z..year-old daughter until be broke her forearms and tbe child became UDOOnsclous. The man, identified as Russell "Rusty" Von Taylot of 518 Victoria st., is in city jail today accused of felony dilld beating. South Laguna Disposal Company owner Thomas TrW.is' lawyer today urged an Orange Coonty SuperiOr Court judge to dismiss rape and se:s: perversion charges against the defendant on the grounds that he was "acting honestly and In good faith" at the time of the alleged offenses. Attorney Tom Ludlow told Judge Claude M. Owens that Tnill!, 38, gen- uinely believed the attractive Fountain Valley blonde with whom he allegedly bad sexual intercourse last Jan. 3 was 20 and not 17. Ludlow said the asserted victim ad- mitted herself that TruJia had been Frot1tPqel ULLOM ••• demanded an apen. discussion of the reasons for his dismissal. surprised when she told him · after lbe alleged ofieruJeB had been coounltted that she was just two weeks away from her !Sth birthday. Police said the victim told them that Trulis and Eugene Imondi Jr., 35, told her before she submitted to their sexual advances in Newport Beach that they were Universal Studio executives looking for the kind of talent they felt she possessed. lmondl again failed to show up in court today for trial. A warrant bas been issued for bis arrest while Trulis remains to face charges of rape and sex perversion in what is now a nonjury pro- ceeding. lf Judge Owens de:Les the motion ror dimlissal, Ludlow will put Trulis into the ~ box as the sole defense witness. Ludlow argued today that the alleged victim was "no~ stranger" to the kind of sexual perversion allegedly committed by Tru1is:. The lawyer told Judge Owens that the alleged victim had participated In that kind of cooducl with her boyfriend and with her girllriend. Prosecutor Frank Briseno today told Judge. Owens that he will let his case stand on the transcript of t h e preliminary bearing in municipal court and will not oiler further testimony in Trulls' trial. "It 1.s a substantial case," the deputy di!trict attorney commented this morn- ing. "I lhlnk the tranocrlpt speaks for itself." "We have to protect the naive and the immature from the Uk.es of lhis man," he told Judge Owens, gesturing towards Trulis Jn the rear of the courtroom. "I ask you to look at this man. COlllider the fact that the victim was not yet JS and ask you, your booor, to determine if be WU acting ho....U, and in gQOd faith when be committed a series of sex acts with her." She became NBC's Orsi Paclflc co.st contract concert artist tn the mld-19208. As a coloratura soprano and protege of Herman DeVries in Chicago, lhe ap- peared In concert tbrollil>oul the United States. She retired In 113$'1o polnl The Cooleys visited Laguna Beach steadily until 1930 and during sununen would rent a tent In the Main Be"lcb tent city. Mr. Cooley, al'° deceased, retired from business as a hydraulic engineer and the couple moved to the Wnily Spanish land grant home in Tehama County in northern California. Mr. Cooley died in 1957 and Mrs. Cooley moved to Washington state. Until 1967. she was a regular visitor in Laguna Beach. Suspect Nabbed Again on Heroin Possession Rap Armed with n e w warrants charging J)06session of heroin for sale, San Clemente police Monday returMr( to a Laguna Beach ruldence aod rearre.sted a man busted last week for alleged use of the deadly drug. David IC. Wi.lliaml, 11, WU arreeted during the~ hour at bJI reo""""6 II L!I lllgb Drive. and boobd Into San ct.,.. .... cify jail. Police allege be .i;.dmfnistered the violent shaking as a punishment to little Dana Maxine Gendreau because she had been crying. Officers became involved in the case when Mrs. Betty Gendreau and her boyfriend sought treatment for the girl at Hoag Community Hospital. lnvestigators said that the girl had black and blue marks on the backs of ber "ltgs and the insides of her wrists when she nas admitted for observation. She was also said to have a fresh red mark on her chest and tractures in both fore- "My fll'St coocem is to the children of this communlty. I think the expression of the community has been well put this evening. I appreciate it," said Ullom, prior to the vote. His comment was followed by a terse motion from Mrs. Gillette that be oot be rehired and that a registered letter 1 in- fotming him of the termination be sent from board president Thomas. N. Viet Talks Boycott Hinted Due to Bombing Mn. Cooley Is survived by two "'"'· and five grandc\llldren. Memo rt al · services wlU he held ..... the family borne In Red Blull. Sycamore Hills Controls to End Williams WU ...... sis -ar- rested lat. lul week ln 1 "'-1 sweep at a Dana Point apartment and the same High Streel loeallon. At that tlme the Ilana Point man, Thomas J. Hille, zz. ol MIU PIClllc Coast Highway, WU the only IUlpOCI charced with _.,. for aalel. NaraiUcs aaents said they lnlllally ar· rested Wllllams for UMrledlJ belnll under the Innuence of heroin. ..,. arms. Mrs. Gendreau, who shares tbe Vic- toria Street address with Taylor, said her boy[riend administered mouth-to-mouth resuscitatHJn to the girl when she became unconsclous and appeared to have swallowed her tongue. In a written statement ror Costa Mesa police, Mrs. Gendreau alleged that Taylor had given the girl frequent disciplinary spankings and shakings. A similar vote came on the question of the renewal of Reeves' contract. Orange County lo find any fault in my paiit action," said Hess at the outset of the beru;ing on his contract. "I'd like to know the reasons for not ex· tending my contract." be added. Mrs. Gillette noted that . under the Education Code, a board need not cite reasons for firing an adn\lnislratlve employe . Earlier in lhe discussion, she had stated: "Due process is not necessary under these coodltions." Under prodding from Ullom, board president Thomas said Hess wouldn't be Drug Suspects Held rehired because "it probably em- ' compasses a Jot of thmp-like economy OXNARD . ~AP) _ Siieriff'• de~lies -perbape We don't know everything ""-··~· SiiC: MOM&Y tlle~ .roUr'PerSoMMTeSted '~~·~~7sb;..d·; -;.~ept," ~id miom, S~day on narcotics c~rges ~.uggled a " hen the budg t has increased 21 per· kilo (2.2 pounds) of pure hero1.n mto Ven-w e . tura County every t?.'O weeks for !leVeral ce~t under. this board majonty. a doct years. Thirty ounl:<!s or heroin, valued on . I question whe~ we need ' or the street . t more than $1 million. were in charge of our ~mess office. It • very seized deputies said. hard to define this whe~ you put It oo a ' ' performance level," said 1bomas. .. DAILY PILOT TM 0...,.. Coest l».IL Y PILOT, wltll ~ k c:orr,blrMd tll9 N-.,·'""-1, b pvblistlord tty ttie ~ Cl*tt Putillll'llnO ~ny. ~­ ... i. .:lltlillns ••• pUOllthtd, Morid.lr rhrllUOll f111hy, for Cos1• Mfl.tl, N--1 11Ndl1 Hunfl,...,. llQ<:flfl'-ltln Villi,, utuM lleltdl, lnMc/J.addl...,,dl n 1 ... """9nltl SM Juen C1pl1tr1nt. A 11n11te •eo""'-1 tdHIDll b "1bl"'*I S.funltV-end 511nd1n. T,,_ prWl)ltl PllblW.1119 llial!t I• 11 JlO W..t .. y '"""· C.141 M9u, C.tlf'otrll•, ,,,... lolttr+ N, Wt14 P'raldent tnd P'ubl'-'""" Jtck It. C11rlty \llct "-Id.ii Ind ~I #M1119W , Thom•• ket•ll ,.,,,. Hess noted he was saving lbe di5lrict more than his annual sala7 each year . "I've worked under thil board for 33 pretty damn bard month: and I think 1·ve earned my money. When the board has to apologile for a mistake I make, t.bey won't have to Ore me: I'll reatan. "My performance will stay the same whether I'm here Bil. months or !Ji day s -oo matter what bappem tonight," Hess said. Hil final a·emarks were greeted by a motion from Mrs. Gillette to terminate his contract. It was adopted in a aimilar 3-l vote . FromP .. el APOLLO ••. watched the re.tum of Apollo 17. All three cheered at aplaahdown and ll·year-old Jon, with molst eyea, said only "Wow." Mrs. EvaM popped a champagne cork and propoaed a toast-: ''Here's to them." Retarded Youths Set Christinas Progran1 PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnamese chief negotiator Xuan Thuy said I.Oday his peace delegation may boycott forth- coming negotiations on a Vietnam cease- fire because of the resumption by the United States cl' "the fiercest attacks ever" against North Vietnam. A.sttd about prisccers of war, Thuy said: "Every ~ OuistmaJ Mr. Nixon voices concern fro prisoners, hut every Christmas be bombs North Vietnam and for this reason the prisooers are not liberated." Questioned lf Hanoi would refuse any further negotiations if the United States continues its bombing raids, Thuy replied' , "ll the American party cxmtJnues Viet- n~tion, continues to send weapons and mllitary personnel, continues horn~ ing and escalation of lbe war, then the United States will have to bear full responsibility for its acts." 'l'buy was asked at a. news conference if he agreed to meet ~gain with the chief U.S. negotiator, William J, Porter. "We flied a date for a new meeting, but in the present sltuatioo I will have to let you know if there are 11oing to be new technical talb," Thuy said. FromPqel YOUNG ••• Christmas vaca~ _ A tearful Josh Bnlf'lt, presiden t of the Associated Student Body, told a reporter after the m~tlng that be wouJd fully support such a boycott. "I just can't understand It, I really can't. No rtasons for their actions, nothing," Bright commented, his voice breaking. Other parents, during the meeUng. !hcAlted to the board that they would remove their children from school In pro- test of the board's action to not renew the <ontracts o( the three top ad· ministrators. Chrisbnas Program • Slated for .J;aguna A 1peclal program ol Chrtllma• 1011g A Chrl1trnA1 program Involving to& wlll be presented at tbe LaJUna Beach stude!\ts of tile Holld•Y Houoe 11ehool for ChambeJ' of Commute brulclut at 7:4' mentallY retat)fcd mnr o<Iult1 wilt he o.m. Wednelday at the Bot<f ,Laguna. held at 1 p.m. Wednttday, at lhe school, Group singing as wttf at perrofmanct1 !M42 El Toro Road, El Toro. by Bill Gwinn, June Andewl, and Jan The public 11 invJted co attend season , Alexender will be teaturtd. 1'11 usual offering by the day' and resldtnt pupll!I $2.50 brtaltfa!t charge will Include a ~ \Vho are 18 ahd older. tent "was11all" punch. ' - Thuy said bis delegation wOuld also dee.Ide in the near future whether it would attend the 171st seml"j>Ubllc negotiating aeuion In the regu!or Kleber A venue talka scheduled Tlllnday. Thuy'• 1tatement clarified earlier reports that the Hanoi delegation decided to break ofl the teclmical·level talks in- definitely because of the re>Ulllptioll of bombing raids. "North Vietnam will not bend to any force or pressure," Thuy said. "We are attached to peace, but peace 1'ith booor and full rtght.s for our country." Speaking through 8D Interpreter, Thuy blamed the United States for sabotaging the draft cease.fire .11iccord "jUlt when both ~·•.llere 1etting rudy to slsn-" A building moratorium oo developinent In the Syc:amor. Hills .... of Llguna Beach wW not be extended put ill ex- ptratlon today. Llguna Beach Plannbii -rs meeting In a study -Monday nlg)>t, decided that ....,ii -,..,.. available to the city to IUlde develop- ment there in a deslred manner. A plan f0< development of Sycamore l!llls by N•wport 1nxe1tments Inc. called SUblequent l.'Olltacla wllh the Dlltllc:I Attorney's office ruulted In a new com-- plaint charging the more llUlous off-. Stack.8 of Plywood Stolen in Niguel for populaUoo of $,000 new l<lldents and Staclcs of plywood valued by the aome commen:lal development. own<n at i:rn ...,. stolen Monday n11ht In other ac:llon, the commiismers from a Laguna Niguel CC101tructlon 1lt<, agreed to call a speclli public bearing on Onmge Coonty Sheriff's ofllcen aald. ller>allUtUoo and ~rking a Ion g DepuUes said tbe lumber, the property Broadway aod Beach Str<et and. F....,t of the Klein Cooltnlctioo Oompony o1 Avenue. Changes would lnYOlve poaible · Anabeim1 wa1 taken from a boullq lite lo'8 of_a ... t_» ~ •~·~ _ _ .•LWindwaol Line and Qoajack SU...L WOlJLD YOU BELIEVE -- THAT THERE ARE S111.I, COMPANIES . . . . . . . . . . • • • • • " . . . . WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS THEY SELL PERFORM 7 WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON SERVICE? WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE PERFECTLY 7 WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY 1 YES, "VIRGINIA," THERE IS AN ALDEN'S I (TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.) ALDEN'S CARPET~ e DRAPES 1663 l'tac:etltla An. COSTA MISA 64Ml31 HOURS1 Mon. Thru Tllurs., t le 5:30-PRI., t le 9 .:_SAT~ filO le S ~· , 7 ( I I ; I ~ l t 7 .. • • . .. ' SaUlilebaek Teday's Pl•Jil ~DITION • ~.Y.S~ vo i:. 65, NO. 354, 4 SECTIONS. 38. PAGES . / ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNtA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1972 TEN CENTS Et to.ro ·Will Get New High School by 197 4 • -----By CANDACE rBARSON Of .. .,...., """' .... A new high tchool wHI be opened In El Toi:<> In Septenlbel-, 1974, II ev"'7\hiag planned by trustees of the Saddleba>k Valley Unified District "faUa Into place," Superintendent WUUam Zoa aald Mon- day. , Dl&lrlct '"'ii' Monday night chose already.ctrawn •for a hiJ:h ·school jn· Cerrllos by a teda Davb-Duhalnie of ~m t~ modify for the El Toro fit~. . As soon as1 a contract is .signed with Davb-ll\lbalni,e, changes In the campus plah school desigJJ wlU begin. Trustee. ~decided to re.use an· a~eptable design to •J>el!d the loOC , process of building an estlmatld 14-t million high school. • But no p!Anolng or design!Iig will pro- ceed beyond Feb. 6 unless the oew dlatrlct'a l'-8 million local bonds , -fl8 million state apportionment electlon. is) succesafµI. · ne, special bond election will need 8r Sip!Rfl 11 . • '". . ~ - t--,.a vow from district voten to -. ~ Zou, who has delloed •· l!ilh acbool u tlie district's moot powJiii ......,. need, Mooday 1tre11!d &bit no building would take place without a succeaS!uJ vote on Feb. 6. Tho llltvi>Duhaime deslp .... chooen on a 4 ~ l vote by--· Dennis Smlth. Yibo favored' a more iMoYIUVe, 1611 deslln -ted by Porter.Jenaen of Con:ida tlel Mar, was the sole no vote. But alter the vote was taken, Smith ,. .I .... ~ ---... Go-I. llow4 Reaon~ of Mli;ioil Vlejo's Daniel Moreoo, f; d rilll to Oruge County Chllclnn's Hospital. u d lllnl. llnliii made a pre-cl)rilltma1 vlltt lo the tacjllly in Orange' Monday. Daniel Is ~covering from a broken leg. He w-'t sure ,.bo the -anr were tnd when bis. mother \4ld him they' "ore Important people," he' covered his face With his -pillow. Airs. Reagan signed cast, too. ~--------------~-~ Child Beating Suspect Jailed In Costa · Mesa Three Planes, 8 Men • Lost in Bombing ~aids Police arrested a J;t.year-<1ld COsta • Mesa truCk driver Monday 00 auaplclon SAIGON (AP) -U.S. planes made the heaviest attack to date on the Kanol-of shaldng his girl friend's :t-year-old Haipliong area during the night, but It daughter unW he broke her forearms and also was costliest to the United States. the child became unconscious . The U.S. Command reported two BS2 The man, Identified as Rll5Sell "Rllsty" heavy boinl>efs and an Fill Ugbier- Von Ta;lOt of'l511 vktona ,$t., is in city. bomber lost and eight Am~rlcan Oi!rs jail today accused' oflelany cruld beating. missing. Hanoi said six of the m~og ~\cOillegene-..niihilsteted the men -the crew· of one of the ll52o - Viol I _t!_l_ •. _ non'Isbm 1 t 111~1 WPre canti•..M.and nre..vnted at a ne:.vs en . SDHlll8 89 a _.. en ° ue coilf~~iri ttie .. WOi\h Vletnarpese Dana Maxine Gendreau because she had _capital a tew hours later. (See stpry, been crying. Officer\. 'became involved in Pap -4). • thi ~ when Mrs. Betty Gendreau and Seven other American airmen were her boyfriend sought treatment for the rescued in Thailand, the U.S. Command girl .at Hoag Communit)' Hosp · sai~ri \ii«nam,eh~ged that ~~ 100 Investigators sald tba\ the. girl had civilians were killed ' or. Wound~ Jn at. black ~ blue mar~ on the backs of her tacks on Hanoi aDd Its suburbs. leis and tbe.Jnsidel pf her wrilt& when . But it Mid Pnlident Nlzoar1 attempt sDe 11as admitted fdt obae,rvatlon. She to ~mb 1t ·futo submiaioa would not was also aakMo haV. a frelh nd mark· force It to •ecept Ill.I peace terms:· on ber chesl and !r11ttures in bolh fore-Hanoi clalmed that tliree BSa. and arms. three lighter-bombers wen allot down Mrs. Gendreau, wPo shares the Vlc--and said a OUinber of the fllen wete cap- ~·Street address irlth Taylor, said-her lured. Tllo U.S. Command aald ii Nd no bo)ofrtend administered JhOUlh-Jo.mouth additional loaaes to npoi:t for ~ time 1 :.ouscltatlon to the gtrl wben she became being, leaving Qpj!li ttie -1bjllly llJlt w\consdoos and appeared to have other (>merican pJanea",may ~been 'swallowed ber tongue. lost .bot . the aeardl for the cre·11nien Ia ~~--.--..-.,...•· ....... still under ,way. It was the heaviest loss in a single day that the United states has anffered since resumption of the bombing of North Viet.- nam last April. Although 12 B52s have been Jost in the 7'h. years America's biggest bombers have been flying in the Vietnam war, on- ly one of them was dowiled by enemy fire, on Nov. 23. The magnitude ' 'cf the attack with which the United:States resumed:the -air war north of the :&0th ~Ilel was un· derscored by indications that mote than 100 B52s were used in the raids. ~ . Scores of smaller .(ighter-bombers from haU 'a dozen baaes in Thailand and &everal 7th Fleet carrieri in the Tonkin Gulf also took part, U.S. officials re~rted. One senloc Amtricac. official said hun- dreds of planes took part in the raids and aome targets In the Kanol-Haipllong In· dustrial ,complex were attacked for the first time in the war. U.S. spotestn<n Said the two BS2s prol> 1bty ...,,, hit by SAMs, the anr!ace-to- air miaailes suppfied to North Vietnam by the Soviet Union. _,, ·-. ' " Electric Bill Sparks Row N~ ~ P,r.lf!,-·Gr~':"P,. Edison at Odds _Over ·$8,000 0., pp of ·mid.its In the New A Rdssmaor: j:Orporatlon ...,....,.... WOMd clevelopmeot In 1.1,.... 11111s '" uid the developer 00!ully OOlllplied with In the dart over an ,........, electric bill. iii ollllpUcm; dellvered e.trylhlng It ~ WU suppoted to.11 P.Jnce Dec. 4, the lH -walkway The opotesman suggeated that tt may 1Jibta tn the unjt-lwo orea ol Ille -r Corporatlm lroct have - -on by Soutllern Calllomla £dlloa (SCE) Company. Somebody -!her< If UWt --t who -owes the company 18,000 ll!id Edi.lot> representaUve \'-81'1u!: So SllC polled the piq. • • The Moulton Partway l!otbecn!nera Aaooclatlon No. 2. conttolliq C for the homos, contends that the -CorporaUon, apeelDcaJl1 Ito ,•lllldllry, tbe Oald•wn Development Cllqroralldo, omu._,. . .. , be a legal matter between t b e homeownm In the 214-111111 condominium development and SCE, but not the COi' poralioo. 01 a fl0,000 bUI, the association memben A)' Urey pUcl 12,000, but don't owe tbt rllt ,becluee it la a "rental fee" and 1111 --for It irere made by OUlawn Wllb SC£ five days before the -· toall ... tto1. •11 don't know the timlng of datts, '1 'Blake Aid, "but the C1¥1lttt<:t we have la not wttb ,Oak lawn Homes." ID noorby IAllun World, also a Rossmoor development, lbe tlettriclty CU1lrict Is signed by Oaklawn, Blake said. ID New Wotld, oontncts are signed by the bomeownera group. (The ~inal ! .. NEW WOl\UI, Hp ii emplrdlted that the staff and board would now "pull toeetber." - The new dlstrid.'s only blgh acbool, Mllllon Viejo High. is overcrowded with 1.000 lludenls housed In a building deslglled r..-l ,llOO. Last week, trustees,' representativeS of Mislloo Viejo !Ugh and of a cilliens pupil housing committee saw three. presen- taUons of plans by architecu. Written in- put from high school staff and citizens was given to tlie board. In addition to the Porter.Jensen and the Davia plans a dealp was shown by McDooald and As.ooclates. StaU and conununity input favored Davls-Duhalme or Porter-Jensen designs. A few persons sugested re-using tbe Mission Vlejc>Univerdty High plan. Although Smith argued at length for the one-building, open space loft concept as presented by Porter.;Jell¥fl, saying that it woud put the district "on the map," It proved too noo-Lra.ditional for the board. Trustee Vince McCullough, who said at the beginning of the meeting that he wouldn't vote unleu a plan could be okayed by at least a 4 to 1 vote, called it "too risky" and said the Davis plan wu a good compromise. The Davi! "campus concept" means , differ:ent disciplines being housed in separate, but close, buikl!ngs . .zogg, who said be could accept e.ilher Porter or (See SCHOOL, Page Z) Astronauts Safe 'America' Spla~hes in Pacific ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (AP ) -Tbe last ApJllo came borne from the moon today, splashing down safely in the South Pacific to eod the American pro- gram which put 20th century man to the lunar surface. "America is stable one in the water," signaled a nearby helicopter moments after the spacecraft landed right side up. American astronauts Eugeoe A . Cernan, Harrison H. Schmitt and Ronald E. Evans returned to earth at 11:2.5 a.m. (PST) with a stuooth splashdown in gentle South ~aclfic seas 400 miles southeast of Samoa. Their return ended the last, longest and most scientifically-productive of the Apollo lunar missions. Helicopters from this prime recovery Saddleback Pen'diepel ~, Swap Feared "What a lot of people are afraid of, is < . that in the next seven months, thi! will tum into a three-di.Strict 'personnel swaP. meet' with 'the three superintendents trading off people." Dennis Smith, Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustee, Monday thus expressed his concern a~t the im- pending election of personnel from outgo- ing districta for district staff in the new nnllled dlstrlcta. While Saddleback trustees Monday said they would s up po rt Superintendent Wllllam 7.ogg in the final personnel selec- tions, the majority urged that a p~ cedure for allowing staff input be ••lablisbed. S8ddleback, Irvine and Tustin Unified School Districtl!I were created in a unification election last June. They became operational July 1, 1973, at wblcb time the San Joaquin and Tustin Elementary and the Tustin Union High School DIStrlW go out of business. Districi-Jevel staff from those soon-to-be defWJct areas are guaranteed jobs for two years after July 1 in the n e w dlstricta. January bas been set as the month when personnel can start declaring their first and second choices of districts. Staff in individual schools will stay with the schools. . Trustees, especially Smith and George Henry, urged that the teaching staff be allowed some input or advice-giving role in the process of selection, in the event that two or three persons apply for the same position. Henry said that Zogg, most recently superintendent of the Tustin Union District, "would almost surely give preference to someone be knows better without the input and reaction of. district people." _ _ Zogg, who said open screening was Un· possible, was be11lant about what kind of involvement could be attained, calling the personnel matter "sensitive." The three new superintendents, 7.ogg, Irvine Unlfied 's Stan Corey and Tustin Unified'• Dr. Elwin Clemmer, will meet together for the first time Thursday, said 7.ogg. The lint order of busln<ss then will be detenrilnlng a method for penonnel to apply to tbe new areas with "dllnlty," 7.ogg streaaed, 1dding that he woul'd then -poaalble pn><edUm for lltaff jn. put with his fellow anpedn-t. ship quickly_.hovered over lhe spacecraft bobbing bi. 'the water. Na Vy frogmen leaped into ~ water to attach a flotation collar and to assist the astronauts into a life raft. 1be spacemen were to be plucked from the raft and taken to a red-carpet, brass hat welcome on the Ticonderoga. The descent toward splashdown was seen on television in the United States with spectacular scenes taken by a camera aboard a hovering helicopter. Parchutes, red and white streaks of color against a blue sky, bl.oomed as the craft descended . They were quickly seen by white-suited sailors lining the decks of lhis carrier and a cheer went up, "All is well aboard," reparted Evans. The craft. dangling under Its three straining chutes, dropped '1eadily toward the water and then splashed. Unlike some previous Apollo endings, the spacecraft remained upright. The astronauts could be beard laughing aboard the bobbing craft t&nd then Evans exclaimed, "Hey, there's the chopper right there." A helicopter flew over, a few feet. above the craft, and black-suited frogmen plunged into the wa~r. The astronauts coUld be heard congrat- ulating each other and laughing happily. Tw9 helicopters poised like sentries over the downed spacecraft as the swim· mers attached a flotation collar around (See APOU.0, Page %) Dial-a-Cl uh .. liirk lJse'tl'1'1ione-on Bandit.& • . .&N DIEGO' (AP) -The "°""e booli _,,! aay what to do II two wouJd. be robbers cut the receiver cord while you're trying to dJaJ for beJp, so Nancy Jacobsoa Jmprovlsed . THE zt.riAR-OW t IU.pound clerk for a combination dry cleaning store- gas station clobbered the two rpasked instruders with the phone receiver Mon- day night and sent them fleeing. She was worklng alone when two men -one with a knife -walked lnto the atore and told her to open the cub register. '.'I TOLD THEM I wouldn't," she said. "I knew I had to do.somethinc." She n&abed to the wall phone and dialed the operator, bot the man witb the knife slashed through the receiver cord. So she grabbed the wire and clubbed both meri with the receiver_ Irvine Studies City Plan, Campus Drive Extension Irvine city councilmen tonight will con· sider approving an $85,000 contract for completion or a city 11enend plan and will mull the controver1ial Campus Drive ex- tension and the city's land use policy plan. Councilmen meet at 7:30 in city ball, mt Campus Drlve . Added to the lengthy discussion eX: peeled to result from the three key city issues may be debate over the renewal of the contract for ctty legal services with Rutan and Tucker of Santa Ana. Coonctlman Henry ~Y said today he cannot 00jusllfy'0 the city employing James Erickson when a partner ln tbe aame f Ir m ~reaenta the Cenada Foothllls developen. "Everyone I have talked to indicates the Canada Foothills development will have ...-m!latlve lin"""]51Ct oo U:ili city," Quigley said. He said that although H. Rodger Howell -the city's first legal adviser - works ror the same firm , as does Erickson. "we didn't even get the re- quired notices that thla development was being proposed adjacent to our city." Twice before Quig'ley has voltd agaiRJt contracting with Rutan and Tucter, but was defeated oo a 4 to 1 vote. He said he. will urge councUmen to con- sider contlnuln1 Rutan and Tllcket oa i month-to-month basis unW the city can seek other legal firms to handle the city'• tJuslneSI. 'I1le Campus Drive exten.aion lnvolvu hearing by councilmen of the· .,.. vtronmental lmpact report, plannl.Qg com- mlstloner1 uld Thunday was "l.nlUf· construction funds. At issue with the project whkb has been delayed more than two year1 aince county officials first drew plans, Is the balance of environmental concems relating to the San Joaquin Marsh a-nd tte ·need for relief or traffic congesUon in the airport area and •«ess to UC Irvtne and Irvine Town.Center. The council action tontght on tbe hiring of Wilsey and Ham urban planning con- sultants of South Pasadena Is to llnallae the contract with the firm aeJected more than two ween •BO by ooundlmen. The contract provkiel the firm •,ooo f0< the year-l0t1g effort leldlnc to • city IS.. COUNCIL, hp I) Orange Weatlaer Hazy sURJhine Is the way the weather lady sees It for w .. day, with sUgblly cooler tempera- tures. Hlgha In the eoa. ~' lows will be In the tlOo. Nfahl and morning low !og Is upected.- Wednesday. INSmE TODAY Twefoc wean -Ralph Jlat. Trusteel were alto conoemed Monday night with the cmdltioo of the aehools they wUI be handectfrom the San Joaquin and Tllstln Hlgb Distrlcls, partlcularly In the • ..., of carpeting, basic equlpnient and •library -· ' • Oc:leot. 11 Iii/ dll<oUCl'fd ht c01'ld~'t of ford a Chrfltmai mr /Of" lilt thrH cfa1<9hten, IO he flhll>hd a doun oron(Jf c:rotc1 Oftd .....te: fllt own Chrfltmai vlllaQf. S.. •to!'ll on PO/I~ 26, Although a unanimous motion dfdn~ refer tu a catalogue or cornP'f&Uve ln- ventoey .of Items. trusleo Dtnn1s Smith .. td that w .. Ifs lnlenL ' 1 3'he motion, to be MOt to San. ·Joaquin and Tustin Dlstrlcta, UprtJIH~ cmcem that the aehools he In ''lubatantlalb' equal concllliOfl .. that of the llCllo!>ls to be .... ce1....r by the other 1"1Uied dtettlcta. •• llePflcling on addltlona! Wonnatlon they receive toni&ht, councllmfll, nUght find the report adtquate' and approve tl)e MOO GQ8 project. tr the city qtay1 ·the ;;;i,.Ol' and br ldfle prior to the end·of the. year, Irvine's 1bart of the cos~ it ex- pee_ted to ba aboul lli!0,000 with the re- mafeclcr coming" fro~ coun\y Arterial lllghw•y Financing Proaram ..,cl •bridge, L.M. lton 1 ........ -== ~··=:..5 .. ~ ='---= .w .,....,,... ..... : ............ / ..... .....,, ... _. tMI T..,.._' • ,,..... •it ,........ -,.... ... ,._. . ....... . ,.,._, 14 ....... -. .... ............. ,, ....... ~- • I 1 (, I ,., • 2 DAILY PILOT JS 3Educators .Dismissed In Laguna Oeapite a strong showmg of citizl'.'n support for the Laguna Beach School system. the Board or Education ~·londay night vo.ted to Ure its three top ad- ministrators.,,..- Superintendent or Schools \Villiam Ullom and &ssistanl superint endents fir. Robert Reeves and Dr. Charles Hess. in separate actions, were told their ron- Lracts wiU not be renewed when they ex- pire on June 30. 1973. Each motion of noo-renev.·al was made in curt fashion by Trustee Patr1e:ia Gillette and seconded by Trustee Gerald Unke. Board president William Thomas joined with tbe two other members in ousting the top a!lministrators. Trustee Jane Boyd, a longtime sup- ,poMee of the administrators, cast tbe sole vote to renew the contracts. Trust:?e Norman Browne was absent, vacationing in Mexico. More than 200 persons poured lnto the high school auditorium lo watch the meeting, with scores demanding an ex- planation of the action afte r the votes were taken. Each member of the majorit; bloc refused to respond. Prior to departing to the high school cafeteria for an executive (closed) session. Thomas allo\\·Cd 20 minut es of testimony. There were no statemP..nts made crllical of the performance of Ullom. Reeves or f.Jess. ··\Vhy do three people !ell m'! I can·1 have the kind of education I ~·ant for n1y children," angrily asked !-1rs Thomas CutkOfDp of South Laguna. "l resent the fact that three people with no children in schOOI can make these decisions." "& an act of public protest, I will remove my children from our schools," declared Mrs. Gail Gaston, an employe of Top of the World Elementary School who worked actively in the unsuccessfuJ recall attempt against Trustees Gillette and Linke. Applause broke out at the end of the 31} minute exei!utive session when t:llom again took his seat at the board table. He adknowledged the ovation with a broad smile. Both tnlom and Reeves waived their right to a public hearing of the reasons ·for their dismissals. Hess, bo\vever, demaMed an open discussion of the .rea.sorus for his dismissal. . "My fust coocern Is to the dilldren of this community. l think the expression of . the community has been well put this evening. I appreciate it," said Ullom, prior to the vote. His comment was followed by a terse . motion from Mrs. Gillette that he not be .rehired and th at a registered Jetter in- forming him of !he tennina!ion be sent from board prcs.ident Thomas. A similar vole came on the question of the renewal of Reeves' contract. Orange County to find any fault in my past action," said Hess at the outset of the hearing on his contract. "I'd like to know the reasons for not ex· tending my contract," be added. Mrs. Gillette noted that under the Education Code, a board need not cite reasons for firing an administrative employe. Earlier in the discussion, she had stated : "Due process is not necessary under these conditions." Under prodding rr6m Ullom, board president Thomas said Hess wouldn't be rehired . because "it probabl y em- compasses a lot of things-like economy -perhaps we don't know everything yet." "That's hard to accept." said Ullom . "when the budget bas increased 22 per- cent under this board majority. •·1 question whether we need a doctor in charge of our business office. It's very hard to define this when you put it on a performance level," said 1llomas. Hess noted he was saving the district more than his annual sala-:-1 each year. "I've worked under this board for 33 pretty damn hard month.:; ancl I think I've earned my money. When the board has to apologize for a mistake 1 make, they won 't have to fire me; I'll resign. ') I OUNQI COAST 1s DAILY PILOT Tilto Or.,_. CeMt OAllY ~llOT, w11ti Vl'!llcll k ~ .... N•-~ k pWH.._ by .... Or•noe CM1t Putllltlllflt CDmiP91tY. Se~· "''" 9Cl1tlon1 ••e Pl.Obli.11e11, Mond1¥ tt\ro\l;lll "~T• for Cott• M1S1, NN'POf't kecll, HW!tlnglM 8~l<:llfFOU1111ln V1Uey, Lfl9Wlll -..cR. lf" .... /~otdldNKk ai'id Sin Ownitnll/ Siii J111ri C1pl1tr-. A llntle '991on&I .. /Tlof\ II WO!l~btd ~I" 9llOlil SundAy~ r .... pr'"-'INJ Pllbllll!lllO Pltfll 11 11 :Ill) ~I .. , SlfMI, COllll ""-• C..lilomll, flt:lt. Ro~trt N. W1td f'rt11d..,I •lld ltVDll"'~f Jeck It. C11rl1y Yk:I Prplcl1r11 Ind "-t•I Mtlll9W Th''"'' KteJ"il EOllor Yho'".at A. Murplrii111 Mllll91'1111 l!Olfor C••rl1t H. lo11 lticf.1rd P. N1tl AM\1J1111 Mto\ffif!9 Edllor1 OHk" Ciltll ..._.I nt Wnt ... Slfttl ......_. lltc;lll :am NllWPWI ._...,,,.. Uo-111C11: m ,., .. , 111.._ """''"""" tuctt: 1111S ~ ......... ,d a.11 c..,_..: as """"" et c.."'i..o. '-1 ,. ...... , •• (7141 '42.4121 . ct ........... ,, ... '41·1•7• s. a.-... Al ,., ........ : , .... , ••• 491-4421 -.,.,.,.--~"""" ttl'1. OfMllN CDMt hblllflMI ~... ... ,,..._ ......... """"''""" ~ .......... ·-·1-tt. """"' fN)' N 1#1 I h :M "llJIOvf ..i.I """ ......... If..,.,,.... ..... . ftc'9NI CIMt ............ 11 c.tll M.a. CIHICrlllt. ~-,,, c1nitr NM "*"9llr1 11'1' ~I N.li """111"' m1n11ry .. lnlllf ....... f!IO!lllW. DAILY PIL.OT Sttff ..... Getting to Know ¥ ou ~-Russ · Criticize Bombing by U -~~ Moscow (UPI! -Tbe Sovlel Union. , today, -co.a......i ,..._ U.S. ·air attlkea aptnst North Vietnam ~s a move Jq pr..,ure Hanoi Into •· ~ oettlemeot .~warhtd that Kre1nlin leaders are " Ing the molt aerloua cOnslderation" , tO situation. A llatemcnt by ta.a, the offlclaJ newi agency, said "Tass bas bee:il empowered to d~re that tlle governing cirtles of ljl6 Soviet Uhloo are giving the most ~ cooslderaUon to tlle stlllatlon o;realed by tlle mpup Jn U.S. mfli"'1r ac- tion against tlle DRV. "The new erilation of mllltary opera- tions by the United Stai.. ag'1nst lhe DflV can only be rogarded u an attempt ,to bring fJl'essutt to bear oo the Viet· .o&lf'eSe side in order to compel ft to Jc- cept the American terms for i Vietnam Settlement.•' The statement sald, "It 1s t:lear frOm a Vl_hlte House statement that t b I s represents a resumption of wide-scale American air raids throughout the ter- rllory of the Democratic Repubtlc of VleJnam. ' . fact Ui,1 •• ate licit! with ,,.;, 11· gress1 .. actibM which .tbe USA Is W<lng aplnst a ~ref8n 1taie." 'Tbe Sovlel Poolil•, the al•~I said. "are· lndlgnan\.'lo l!jeir.contfemoallon ol t¥ l(.W p!J'.U. acti unc!etlabn by, the American mllttary. Tbty demand lm- mediale stoPl>oae of the acllont and 'M s1J!i>Jn& o1 t11e ..,...,.nt on stop- ping lbe wat aad re.storing peace to Vll t- nain." Tfuee·car Crash Kills youth, 21, Near San Onofre A young Bakersfield 'man WIS killed and bis sister badly inJjired MOndoy In a three-car crlllh oeor ·the San ~ Nuclear Generat11111 Stadon.' ~Y ·patnlmon from lbe While animal handler Cheryl Smith holds Tawni, Russell LeNan. 10, Anaheim, and Peggy Martinez, 12, Stanton, learn about the four·month-old lion cub even though they can't see it. Children were among group of blind youngsters who toured Lion Country Safari Monday as guests of the manage- ment. ,, '~ partlcular d e c I s I o n of Washington flagrantly ~ wllh numenius proleJtatlons made by the u.s. leaden about their wish to seek mutually acceP.(abfe aolutlons for the remaining wicoOrdlnaled probfeim. Oceonsfde ollJ<e Aid 'l1lmmJ -· 21, suffered fatal fnjurlet """' bis - bound C81' collfded with "" ..... ,,_ was mwninl travel afttr • Dat Ifft on "No pretexls, tovenled In a bid to justify the hnltal bombing, cao bide the the San ~ FttcwoY. ' Rape Suspect Fooled? · Fn•P.,.el NEW WORLD • • Baldwbl's sister, Denise, 11, Ibo of Bake¢1efd, sulflftd ...... cull aod · bruilel IDd t 0 d a y WU deacribed ln satlslaotory t»tidtiloii al San Cemente General Roopital n\o l :OS a.m. ~ toot place Iller Baldwin lOst am!n>I lad alamn.i Into a car illartill to -tbe 1n111c Janos ~ the -*'11> near !'a'lltme Roeil,potrolmenaafd. Lawyer Says He Didn't Know Girl Was-Only 17 Dabts """' ord4lred by OU!awn, Slate said.) The other two homeowners' associa- tions in the New World area, Moulton Parkway Homeownen Associations One and Three regularly pay sbnllar, electric bills and are ~to:date on payments, 'lbc driver ol that auto wu unhurl In tbe ..wston. South Laguna Disposal Company owner Thomas Trulis' lawyer today urged an Orange County Superior Court judge to dismiss rape and sex perversion charges against the defendant on the grounds that he was "acting honestly and in good faith" at the time of the alleged offenses. Attorney Tom lAldJow told Judge Claude M. Owens that Trulis, 38, gen- uinely believed the attractive FOWltain Valley blonde with whom he allegedly had sexual intercourse last Jan. 3 "'as 20 and not 17. LudJow said the asserted victim ad· lhitted ber'self that Trulis had been surprised when she told him after the alleged offenses had been committed that she was just two weeks away from her lath birthday. Police said the victim told them that Trulis and Eugene Imondi Jr.. 35, told her before she submitted to their sexual advances in Newport Beach that they were Universal Studio executives looking for the kind C1f talent they felt she possessed. Imondi again failed to show up in court Parents' Group Slates Meeting Parents Without Partners' l'bri.stmas meeting will feature the topic "spiritual values for Space-age Man," by Henry Gerhard starting at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the ~ion Viejo G<ilf Club. Dr. Gerhard iJ Jl'l<(or of tlle Laguna Canyon ChUrCh of Religious Sclence. Single parents are welcome to attend. The general meeting starts at 8:30 p.m. and is followed by refreshments and dan- cing to live mus1 c, Further information is available by calling 837-3319, 494-2025, 493-6089 or by writing. to Box 1222, Laguna .Beach. From Pagel COUNCIL .•. general plan by next December. After interviews with four firms, Wilsey and Ham emer ged as the coun- cil's favorite on a 4 to I vote. Councilman Heney Quigley opposed the cboiet saying he favored the "vision" offered by Perplana Associates of Lo.s Angeles. a subsidiary of William Pereira Archlt.ects of Newport Beach . Councilmen could decide to continue action on the lengthy land uae policy plan document. The policy list prepared by consultant Ed Haworth, and drawing on suggestions by au of the cltlzem advisory committ.ee presented Jn June, was a~ proved by the planning commission only last week . Councilmen have Indicated they want more time to review the draft. From Page l APOLLO ... tbt blunt e1ld of the cone-shaped craft. At the home of Evans, near Houaton, the astronaut's wile and two children watched the return of ApoUo 17 . All three cheeml at splashdown and 11.year-old Joo, with moist eyes, said only "Wow.'' Ml'll. Evins popped a cfuunpagnc <Ork and proposed a toast : "Here's to them ." Yule in Jail Sought PA!>!PLONA, Spain (\Jl'I) -Monuol Lara, a tramp, went on a window· smashing spree Monday on St. Nicholas Slrttt IO he would be jailed and l•t to spend Chriltmas in prbon ar a paychlatrtc bolpltal, polite "'Id Joday. today for trial. A warrant has been issued for his arrest while Trulis remains to face charges of rape and sex perversion in what is now a nonjury pro- ceeding. 11 Judge Owens de.i.;es the motion for dismissal, Ludlow will put Trulis into the witness box as the sole defense witness. Ludlow argued today that the alleged victim was "no stranger" to the kind of sexual perversion allegedly committed by Trulis. FromPqeJ SCHOOL .•. Davis, said the latter is flexible , com- bines open space with study corridors <i.s opposed to just traditional classroom space. One of lhe buildings in the Davis plan is called a "world of work," Zogg said, and is designed specifically for training and guidance in vocational education. The building itself would occupy about nine acres of the 40-acre site located west of El Toro.Road on Toledo Way, the only site owned by the soon-to-be defunct Tustin Union High School District in the Saddleback area. During the trustees discussion Monday night, It first appeared that George Henry would be the boldoot wte. Henry s&d lhaJ be couldn'l agree wilh building a school before developing a district pbUQBOpby towards its operation. Henry asked when staff could be ~ volved in plaruti.ng or even hired for the new school. Zogg said staff involvement on an architectural building committee would take place immediately, that a principal would be hired betWttn July and September of 1973, and that depart· ment heads, assistant principal and a librarian would be ~red after. January ol 1974. The main criticism leveled at the'. Davis plan was toward the. physical education ·and gymnasium facility which was separated from locker rooms. Zogg said perhaps some major redesign could take place there while other planning went ahead without delay. The 2,000 seat gym would be redrawn and expanded to accommodate 2,500 students, estimated as the school popu1a- tion, trustees sa id. lrvirie Holiday Hours Annou1iced Irvine city offtee! will ht:! closed Friday and Monday and again on New Year'.s Day. The City Council will meet at 7:SO tonight as scheduled, but may vote to cancel the Dec. 26 meeting. Planning Commissioners meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday but have alfeady acted to skip their Dec. 28 meeting date, Jn recognition of the holiday season. Tr.ash pickups normally scheduled for Mondays In Irvine .will be delayed one doy, according to clUttns assistance of· fi cer Richard Dorris. Irvine schools will reopen on Jan. 2, of· nclals of the San Joaquin £1.ementary District and Unlvcnlty lligb School &aid. Retarded Youths Set . Chrisbnas Program A Olrlllmas program involvln& JOI •ludentl of the Holiday ROUte IChool for mentally relarded young adultt will be h<ld at 7 p.m. WedneedoY. al the echoo~ 234<a El Toro Rood, El Tero. The public is invited to attend M!&.t011 o1rer1ng by lbe a11 and ..lfilenl puplll who 11re JI and c.lder. The lawyer told Judge Owens lhal the alleged victim bad participated in that kind of conduct with her boyfriend and with her girlfriend. ' Prosecutor Frank Briseno today told Judge Owens that he will let his case stand on the transcript of t b e preliminary bearing in municipal court and will not offer further testimony in Trulis' trial. "It is a substantial case,'' the deputy district attorney commented this morn- ing. "I lhlnk the Jramcripl speaks for itsell." "We have to protect tbe naive and the immature from the likes of tl1i.s man,'' be told Judge aw.tu, gesturing towards Trull.s in the rear of the courtroom. "I ast yoo to look at this man, consider the fact that the vic;tim was not yet 18 and ask >:ou. your honor> to determine if he was acting honestly ind in good fa ith when be committed a series ol sex acts with her." Raih·oad Safety P1·ogram Urged A stepped up program of safety devices for railroad crossings ..,.,.-a:; urged by Supervisor Jtooald W. Cispen of Newport Beach Monday. Referring to the crossing accident which took the life of Charles L. Scboooover Sr.. owner of the Irvine General Store, Friday, C&spen said at the Transit District Board, meeting Moo- day that be will ask the Board of Supervisors to authorize ao immediate study of dangerous ~ings. Murray Stonn, assistant county road commissioner, said the study could be completed in the 60 days requested by 'CMpers. Both grade.crossiogs,itilh &ale• and grade separations will be t."OllSidered, he said. Blake said. r Blake contends that bomebwners association No. 2 dld sign a contract with SCE and that SCE worked with the residents for seven to eight months to try to get the bills paid. After a 13 moolh delinquent billing facilities charge accrued, and the homeowners IWOclatim voted to DOI. p&y the bill, the lighls were cllsamnected. "We bad quite a number of meetings where we explained all tbe nmlfications of the walkway lighting and what's In- cluded in the charge," Blake sakl "They feel they shouldn't pay 11." The residents, led by association PrJSi· dent Lee Rose, say that !lie cuitract tbat increase! by $10,000 the expenses shared by bomeoW!'lel"$ were not brought to the assoclatJon for consultation. Homeowners purchase their home with agreements to common ownership of pools, outdoor lights, green belts to be maintained through monthly payments to the associaUon. Rose said • Rossnioor should tiave purchased the llghls and deeded them to the assoclaUon, which would then main· tain tbem. Rose said residents don't quarrel ovv- electrical consumption blliJ, but don't want to pay for the IJgbts themselvei. 'Ibe homeowners are worried about the pcssibl.e increase in vandali.ml and pE'lty thefts and in auto accidents with the darker neighborhood, an association spokesman said. They are considering legal action against Roosmoor, tlle spokesman said, as well as demonstrating at some of the corporatlons' local com:truction sites "in an effort to obtain a eettlemeot from the developer." • J,leanyjlile, Blake s&d, the llpts are stiU off and will stay that way until the bill Is paid. · Moments alter the Initial colllston another auto alammed Into the -car as well. The driver of that car was oot hurt, either, officers Aid. Franklin Named Presiding Judge S.liro s. Fraotlin of Costa -bu been elected pmfdlng judge ol the Orange County Harbor Munldpal eo..rt effective Jan. %. ·Franklin, U, WU appointed to the..,., ly created ,ludpthlp laal April by Governor Rooald Repgao. His elecllon as presiding judge was onanhnnus, court of· ficials said. FranJdln replaces Everet! W. lllctey. His duUes lnclude uslgnment of ca1ts to the •!her three courls. Franklin was gradual«I from Newport Harbor High School In llK7, took his bachelor's degree from Pomona College in 1961 and his Jaw degree from stanford University in 1951. He ls former prul- dent of Jbe Cosla Mesa Chamber ol Com- merce ancf of the BOard of F.ctuCith>n of tbe Newport-Mesa Unified Schoof District . Carpenter's Tools Stolen Fro.m Truck Tools valued by lbe .....,. at aboul 1500 were stolen Monday nlgbt fhJm a truck parked Jn lront of .. El ,.,.,, carpenter'• home. Orange County Sberlfr1 officers aid lntrudt!'! at the home of Mkbael Everett Wllllama, ZI, of -Elniod Lone, took lbeJockod.loolbox from .the -of hls vehlcfe, cut the Jocf< and canied off the tools. WOULD YOU BELIEVE- THAT THERE ARE STll,L COMPANIES I • • • • • " . . . . • • • • • WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS THEY sa.L PERFORM 1 WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON SERVICE? ' WHO WANT E'\IERY JOB DONE PERFECTLY 1 WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTE~RITY 1 YES, "VIR91NIA," THERE IS AN ALDEN'S! I TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US. I . " ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 '°*entla AH. COSTA MIU. 64Ma31 HOURS1 Mon. Thru Thun., 9 fo 5'.30 -'Ill. 9 le 9 -SA.•;. 9:30 to I I ., ' . " I ( I f v le Boniingion Beaeh Fountain Valley. VOl. 65. NO. 35'1, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' -Today's Final N.Y. St.eeks TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1972 TEN CENTS Beach · .Property Owners' Taxes to Decrease Property owners In the . Huntington Beach Union High School District can ei- pect a 10 cent per $100 as~ssed valuation decrease in their tu.es neit fLSCal year due to the passage or the state school finance bill. · In a scbedllled press conference Mon- day afternoon, high school officials re- vealed that lt)ey eipect the district's tax· rate to drop from $2.92 to $2.82. Robert Martin, assistant superin· tendent for ~iness and educational still preliqililary but concluded that lhe owner of a $i0,000 home wou1d realif.e about a $10 <Secrease in bis property tax- es. Marlin did point out, however, that state and local income to the district wou1d be decreased about $145,000·under the new financial system from what wou1d have been raised under the present tax program. . "We don't.expect to try and raise funds from other SOIJrces to compensate for • - ' . . this," Martin said. But he did indicate the .district might slow down some of the innovative programs which had been put iµto effect in the past couple of years. Tbe stale scbool financial bill, wbieh was signed into Jaw Monday afternoon by Gov. Reagan, is designed to reduce local property ta1es aa a means for school support while raising sales taxes by one cent and upping bank and corporation taxes. . Under lhe new school finance system, the Hunflngtoo BeacnUn!On Hfp>lChOOI District will receive a boost of $482 in its average dally atteodance funds from the state. The slate will also lncrease allowances for the Educationally Mentally Retarded (EMR) and the Trainable Mentally Retar<!e<I (TMR) programs. The. EMR program will be increased from Sta,890 to. $20,400 while the TMR prolram will be upped from $15,260 to $19,800. .. Io tum, a11-permtss:1ve--iue1 ucept earthquake safety and rtre marshal sare- ty measures will be eliminated. The dlslrict is currently levying 10 permissive taxes including the EMR and · TMR programs. Funds for these projects will come from the general furxl. in the future . . The bond interest and redemption fund tax levy will also be continued by the district. • The bond levy of 33 cents per $100 assessed valuation and the 10 cent earth- es Ill Two B52s, Flll Lost Capsule Council Action Here in capsule form are the major actions laken a.tooday night by the Huntington Beach City Council: • ., ·.;:·. .. .. . .. .. .. • ·.::: ·. •, ·.· ·.·· ... .. .·•. . 0 CHINA GULF OF TONKIN ' MILES 150 ""'~ BOMBING RESUMES -Han0i radio has reported devastaling air at· tacks against the city and the U.S. Command confirmed it bas re- sumed bombing against the Hanoi-Haiphong area following the ap- parent stalemate of peace negotiations in Paris. -~ -. ., . -, Truman's ludneys Better; Condition Still Serious KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -IJocton tr<atlng Harry S Truman &aid today the _.1ous1y ill former President's ltidney f\ibction bnproved and he waa aware that people were around him. Cafe Casliier Rebuffs Robber In W estrninster "He follows people's movements with bis eyes, but has not. spoken to them /' said Research Hospiuil spokesman John Dreves at a morning medical briefing. "Kidney output has increased during the>last 24 hours," be said. "He continues to receive adequate nutrition·even•though protein intake remains curtailed." Dreves said Tntlll$D, 118. bad his sec- ond straight restful night and "seems more alert ~morning." At 7~ a.m. PST, Truman's blood pressure was 140 over 60, pulse 80, respiration 24. and temperature 97 degrees. Hanoi Raids Heaviest Yet in War SAIGON (AP) -U.S. planes made the heaviest attack to date on the Hanoi- Haiphong area during the night,· but It also was costliest to the United States. The U.S. Command reported wo B52 heavy bombtn . ...i · an Flll fig\ller- homber lost and ei&ttt American fliers m!Jsing. µanoi said six ol the mlsalng men -lbe crew of One. of the B,52s - we.re ~aptured and presented at a news conference in the North Vietnamese capital, a few hours later. (See stories, Pages M .) Seven other American airinen' were rescued in Thailand, the U.S. Command said. Nort h Vietnam cliarged that nearly 100 clvlllans were killed or wounded in at· tacks on Hanoi and its suburbS. But it said Presidetit Nixon's attempt to bomb it into submission would not force it to ..ceept his peace terms. Hanoi claimed that three BS2s and three fighter.bombers were shot down and said a nwnber of the fliers were cap- tured. The U.S. Command said it bad no additional losses to report for the time · being, leaving open the possibility that olher American planes may have been lost but the search for the crewmen is still under way. It waa the heaviest loss in a single day that the United States has Suffered since resumption of the bombing of North Viet- nam last April. . AJtbough 12 B52s have been lost in the 71i~ years America's biggest bombers have been flying in the Vietnam war, on- ly one of them was downed by enemy fire, on Nov. 23. The magnitude of the attack ·with which the United States resumed lhe air war north of the 20th parallel was un· '" derscored by indications that more than 100 B52s were used in the raid:; ... Scores of smaller fighter-bombers from half a dozen bases ln Thailand and several ?th Fleet carriers in the Tonkin Gulf also took part, U.S. officials reported. One senior Americar_ official said bun· dreds of planes-took part in the raids and some targets in the Hanoi-Haiphong in· dustrial complex were attacked for the first time in the war. U:S. spake!lnfen'said the two B52s pro~ ably were hit by SAA-ts, the surface-to. air missiles suppUed to North Vietnam (See BOMBING, Page !) .. ' . TOWN LOTS: Allowed the building ban on the Town Lots to eipire and authorized the planning department to work wilh builders for the coordinat.ed development of the. area. HARLOW: Appointed Assistant Planning Director Richard Hark>w to the new post of executive assistant to the city administrator. · SPRINKLERS: Gave preliminary approval to a new law requiring inside fire sprinklers in all new high rise structures and high density apartment complexes. Pt.ANNERS: Authorized an internal reorganizaUon in the planning de- partment and the immediate addition of three new planners. POLLtrrlON: Ppsed a resolution urging the California Water Quality Control Board, Santa Ana Regioo., to initiate steps to clear up the pollution in Huntingloo Harbour caused by regiooal dritinage systems. GAS STAnONS: G'a .. lliiar apPn>vai iA> a new service station law which pla<ea ...,.._pb>J and arcltitl!ctllraJ. ntlos ·~ fadlltles. PAJID: Doubled the fees dot..,.,.;.·.muil 0 poy the dty for parb. Ex-Stanford Professor Held in Beaty Escape •• MENLO PARK (AP) -Seven persons, including fired Stanford Prof. H. Bruce Franklin, were arrested by the FBI in Callromia and Ari:.ona today in con- nection with the ambush-escape from Otino of fug itive convict Ronald Wayne Beaty. Two of them, Robert Allan Seabock, 23, arrested In Palo Alto , and Bru~ Warren Hobson, 23, arrested in Menlo Park, were booked for investigalion of murder. . The others were booked on charges of harboring Beaty following the escape in San Bernardino County in which a prison guard was shot dead . Besides Franklin, 37, arrested at hls Menlo Park home, they were Morton Newman, 30, arrested at his home in Menlo Park; Dr. Harry Bishara, a public heallb service worker in Ft. Defiance, Ariz.; Bishara's wife, Lorraine, and Michael Goldstein, also of Fi. Defiance. Seaboc.k will be brought to San --•·• Bernardino County, sheriff's deputies there said. They said a bold has been ptacm on Hobson. A warrant on a harboring charge was issued for an eighth person, Charles Woodbridge Noble, FBI agents said. Sherift! deJVJlles in San Bernardino said. a large Amount of weapons were recovered in Palo Alto at Seabock's home and in Ft. Defiance at Bisbara's home. Beaty, 35, was arrested Dec. 11 after a high-speed chase across the San Fran- cisCo-Oakland Bay Bridge at the Oakland end when two patrol cars blocked eastbound lanes. With Beaty was Jean S. Hobson, 44, a Venceremos ac· Uvist. She is bell~ 1ed to be Robson's mother. An FBI affidavit flied ln San --rancisco today with th-:: U.S. P.tagl'ir:te's office said BE:Jt: recited the details of his escape which led to the arrests. It said Beaty admitted fonnulating the escape plan with the help of Venceremos members. It quoted Beaty as telling agents that Jean and Bruce Hoblon drove him to a mountain cabin near here on Franklin's Instructions. Beaty stayed thert a month with Bruce Hobson, and Mn. Hobson brought supplies. tbe FBI said. Franklin then instrUcted Beaty to stay al Seaboct's home, where Newman pro. vided food and acted as a lookout and Sea bock gave Beaty $1,000 and phony idenlificatlon papers for t h e names Stephen Hurley and Daniel Collins, the affidavit said. Mary Beak, 51, outbluUed a would-be robber Monday night when the man, ·stmulatlttg a gun with his band In his coat paeket, demanded the evening1.a receipts at the Weslminlter restaurant Whert abc serves as cashler. Park Dedications tt said Beaty told the FBI Franklin then provided a car for him and Seaboe:k to get to Ft. Defiance, Artz., but the farst week ol December returned here v:here Noble (See FRANKUN, Pare !) ' .. . "She just told him there wasn 't any money and she wouldn't give It to him lf there was," aakl Detective Sgl. Frank Fisher of t h e Westmlmter Police Department. "He got frustrated and left.'·' Requireme,nts Doubled SUNDANCE KID'S Fisher said Ill< attempted rob- bery toot pince about 9: 15 p.m. at Ille Elbru• Realauraot, HOU Beach Blvd. • "You know," the detective 1aJ<1, "In ~ situations •heoo lllll'I l>n't • gun vlolble II more -'• would ay, ·-... tbe lltll .... I'll give you tbe money, otbKwlle gel out,' wa•d lie lnv1!811ptlnc fewer caaes." 87 TERRY COVILLE Of lie D1111Y Pl• SMft Hwitiqton Beach city councllmen Mooday douhlod park dedk•tlon re- quirtmenta for dc:velopen. They o••rrod• the objectlons or apokeanen for Ora"ie County labor and eoas1JUClloo. '""'"' wbo &aid the inovo -plico a hea.y load on ,Ibo clly't taxpayen by. tUljlg too much properly oil the tax roll~ Tb& new law 111pproved by councllmen requlttt each ,..ldellllal devtlopor IA> g1 .. tbe city nve ..,.. of land tor e1cll '------------' I l ,llllQ resldonla his J)ll>ject will geoerate. ~ . I SON, '72, DIES Instead pr land, the developer can give and now head nl CEEED, a building ln- lhc city t ash equal IA> Ille price of fiV<! dultry oqanlzatlon, also opposed tbe In-• MISSOULA, Mnnt. (UPI) -Robert acre1. The 61d standeNi was 2.5 acres. creued perk fees. Longbauah n IOll of the famed Western "Speaking against parks is like speak· •'Thf:re 11 no evidence that five IC:rU outl8w ~'as "Sundance Kid" died i"i agaiJlll motherbooo11" began l'i!ler J. , aro liee<ltd," r.....-. """plained< Monday In a fire In an old fouNtory Remmel, 1e<retlrY•...,urer of Ult em. "Bued oo the lateat atudiot, lWO-lll<k· hOtol ' tral Labo( CoctncD ol Orange Coont)', ball 1ett1 per J,llOll peoplt 1t deemeil Fifa olllclalt iilld ... other rim.n'. AFL-CIO. . adeq\lala. Jolm Schoo, an e)derl7 blind •min, al90 11We'~ DOI ~"8)1111 this 4s I wronl "Thls Will be a le.Vert burden OD all Wll tilled When flame swept lhe Priess • decision, hut w. dqn't let! YOll fave Huntington Beach tupoym. It will llol<I enough of the ~an opportunity IA> forevtr remove an ovtr11 llrJ• amount ,....; ...i of the hotel'• 34 reeldento speak. Form· a cGmmlttee and le\ H al land .,_the tu folla!' ll1fll7 ' of them unlvenlty -nls'. study the propo&al. • . F.....,.. alto uld the -!cos eocaped' without Injury. Gilbert F~1. former chief nl wfll 111al<e local bollden unable IA>• com· public relatlona !Or·ltle lrVlne Compaoy, (lee PARKS, ,...,., .. , ' qoake ta1 combined w:tth the general LU rate of $2.39 established under the new state guidelli'ies brings the new district taX" rate to $2.8!. Superintendent Jack Roper also pointed out that district taxpayers would receive another tu reduction within two years when the earthquake lax could be eliminated. Roper said sufficient fun'd!I to complete the renovation of Huntington Beach High School would be collected by that time. Astronauts Close Out Safe Trip ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA !AP ) -The last Apollo came home today, splashing down safely in gentle South Pacilte: seas to end the American ·space program which put 20th century man on the moon. ·•All is well on board," reported the astronauts moments after their e:one- sbaped command ship, Amerk:a, splash- ed into the ocean 400 miles southeast ol Samoa. Helicopters were there to return them to the. recovery carrier Ticonderoga, 2.5 miles BWiY· Astronauts Eugene A. Ceman, Har· ri.son H. Schmltt and Ronald E. Evans tttumed to earth at 11 :25 a.m. PST after completing the last. longest and most sclentifcially-produCtlve of the six Apollo lunar landing missions. Their adventure, which included a Uiree-day moon ex· ploration by Schmitt and Cernan, began at 9:33 p.m. Dec. 6, with blastoff from Cape Kennedy, Fla. '°'polio 17, traveling more than 24:000 miles an. hour. blazed across the Paclftc skies moments after it collided with the upper reaches or the earth's at· mospheie. Moments later, ·two drogue parachutes pulled out the main parachutes and three orange and white mushrooms of cloth snapped lnto the wind, slowing the racing spacecraft and starting Its final descent. Views of the last moments of the Apollo program were-televised to the United States by cameras aboard this vessel and from helicopter! hoverin& nearby. . America smashed into the blue Pacific at about 21 miles per hour and the astronauts happily reported moments later, "America is stable one 1n the water." This meant the craft landed right side up. Helicopters from this shlf. quickly hovered overhead a n d b &ck-suited frogmen leaped into the water. 'Ibey at· tached a sea anchor, a flotation collar around the spacecraft's J?lunt end and In· Oated an orange llf . raft. The astronauts could be heard laughing and talking excitedly. "We all reet,good, we all feel great," the spacemen feported at ooe point. "'SOUndo Ille ti-l\l)'S (Ille swim- mers) are doing a auper job out there," said one astronaut. While the aplasbdown came only 1.5 (See APOU,0, Pa1e ll Orange Coa1t Weatller Hazy SUllAb.lne is the way the· weather lady sees It• for Wednes- day, with sUgbUy cooler tempera- tures. Hlgba In Ibo llOI. Ovtmi&)tt lows wlO be In the llOll. Night and morning low fog Is expected Wednesday. INSmE TODA'\' TtDtl.,. lf"an ago, Ralph Ro~ lift dlscovtrtd h• coulil•'I Qf· ford a ChrUtma.s tree /Of' hf.t , three claughttn, 10 luJ grabbed o dottn Of'Ongt cro:k1 and mode hit oum Chrirtmar t>illao•. Sea 1tor11 on Paoc 28. ~ ..... I f -I ·-..... =:~ ~ ....,.., ,, .... • ...,,,.,...,, IH) ,,._.. ,..,, ...... ._. . ... ;a M ..,._ Q • I -.... --M ....... ...._. ..... --I """' ,.,, ............ ·-. ---. ---........... "'--~~_2'T ....... ~!'.::;·~D=11=1~1•:•~19~,~1~'1~1~~~~~...., · Electo1·s ,Z DAIL\' PtLOT 'Otvner• APf!"ove'· .,,.._P .. el GiveAll 45 To Nixon "Jt ls mf pleisure to .announce 45 volts for Rlcbard Nixon for President," Elec- loral O:>llege chairman Edward ri111ls ot t Laguna Beacl:l declared after the fonnal ballo~. It ,... l&oo 45, GtorJe McGovern 0. That was the score Monday after C&1ifomla'1 45 presidential electors - the bipest bloc in the nation -officially tall tbelr_vgtes for president .) Sloce President Nixoo beat McGovern by more than ooe tnillion votes in the t popular balloting Nov. 7, presidential"' ~ electors pledged to him got to cast the •·real" ballots in the Electoral College. Everyone knew who was going to win. 1'.be electors gathered in Gov. Reagan's conference room at the Capitol and sign- ed small blue cards bearing one name: Then they did it all over again with anotb.er set of cards bearing the name of Vice President S~iro Agnew. After each elector signed his card, they were taJIJed by Cyd Buisson , 23, a pretty blonde elector from Novato. Legally, the electors could have voted for someone else. But they were all loyal Republican officeholders, party officials, big donors to the presidential campaign and grassroots "'orkers. There wasn't a hint of a defection. Eledtlrs and a few onlookers, mostly Reagan staff members. applauded. Now the ballots will be sent on with those of the other sta tes to Washington, D.C., where early in January they will be opened by Agnew. That 's one of his duties as president of the U.S. Senate. The number of electors is detennlned by the nUmber Of congressmen and U.S. senators a state is entitled to at the time of the election. The wbole balloting proce.s.s I n Califomia took 33 minutes.. As he closed the meeting, Mills noted that although some consider the Elec· toral College archaic, it still is better than when tbe nation first elected George \7ashlngton as president. Newport Alters ~Earlier Decision, Nixes High Rise Revming an earlier decision, Newport Beach city COllllcllmen Monday night wrned down a controversial, high-density condominium on the site of Balboa's Fun Zone. Councilmen heard more than three hours of debate before voting 4 to 3 to table Indefinitely the JAK Construction Company proposal to bulJd the 47-unit project. CoWJcilmen voting for the tabling 8C) tion told the developer they djd not want to see plans for the 1.2-acre aite on Pahn Street killed altogether. But they did say more study should be given to alternative commercial develop. ment -including possible revamping of the Fun Zone -or lower-det'Wty residen- tial uses. , Mayor Donald Mcinnis, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers. Councilman Milan Dostal and C.Ouncilman John Store voled for the tabling action while Councilman Richard C.roul, Carl Kymla and Paul Ryckoff voted against it -though for different reuons. Kymla and Rycl!Off wanted to kill the project altogether and retain the core commerclaJ area i.n Balboa. Crout felt the project should be approved in ils en· Urety. "We have got to sit down and make a decision, gang,'' Crou1 sai<i. "We have beard the opinions of everyone in the world on this one. We have already made a declsloo so why don't we stick to it?" Crout was reh!rring to a 5 to 1 voWby the councU last summer that overturned a planning comml.ssioo denial of the proj· ect. The council action was taken lo court by Balboa Ferry owner Allan Beek. Tbe judge ruled the council had to hear it again and make a new decision. OUMI com "' DAILY PILOT I • HEW Official Resign.s Post . WASHIN<;TON [UPI) -John G. ,..._.. .. luv~poot u undenecrolAry of l!'.dllca· tioo and w.u.r. and w11 11o _. -by ~Fronk CarlUcd, the Wbll• UOU1e lllllOW1Ced loday. Venema11, No. 2 man at HEW since the bo&lnning ol tlle NbtM admi.nlstraUon, plans to return to California. It was reported he Ukely wUJ run for lieutenant governor. Defendants Say Editor Kneiv of Hoax • SEA'M'LE (AP) -Both derendants in a federal fraud trial have testified that their alleged vlctim, former Newsw~k contr ibuting editor Karl Fleming, knew he was involved In 1 hoax before the transaction was completed. Donald S. Murphy and WWiam L. "Jack" Lewis took the stand in I.he.tr defense Monday in U.S. District Court. The case was to resume today and, possibly, go to the jury late this al· ternoon. The government contends Lewis ob- tained $30,000 from Fleming for an ffi. terview with Murphy, who was posing as D. B. Cooper. That was the name given by a man who hijacked a Northwest Airlines jell incr and disappeared after ball.i.Dg out of the Boeing rn with $200,000 ransom on Thanksgiving Eve 1971. The lmpenonatlon becamf" obvious dW'iag .IOme lJ hours of taping and !Um-.. lng Feb. 2.1, Murphy testified. "I made so many mistakes, I even thought be tnew tt waa oot true," the 50- yeaN>ld Bremerton, Wash. 1 and developer said. "When there was a prob- lem, he (Fleming) helped me." Lewis, 33, of Seabed:, Wash. testified he received an anonymous phone call from a person he believed to be the hi· jacker. Lewis said he received three three subsequent calls totaling eight hours and was mailed three $20 bills witb serial numbers included in the list from the ransom package. He said he approached the Bremerton Sun with the story but a reporter wanted more subatanUal information. Theo be answered an ad placed by Fleming io a SeatUe newspaper seeking ao interview with "D. B. Cooper." The "hijacker" never pbooed back, Lewi! testified. Beach Builaing · B~n Abandoned The~ is no kloger a blllldlng moratorium an any section of the Hun· Ungton Stach town lot.I. City comcllmen ·agreed Monday nl&ht to Jet .the 91).day moratorium expire on f'ro•Pegel FRANKLIN. •• gave him 11nd Mra. Hobson clothing ind a rifle with ammunition. Tlle FBI said the harboring charge against .FrMk.lin and the other meant ''giving aid and 1.omior lo a fugitive fl'{.<m justice," but gave no details ercept that Beaty : ··• ·:Jy was the fugiUve. At Franklin's houJe, a man Who answere4· the telephone but refused to idenlliy hlwell said about U er 2ll FBI agents anned with ahotgtmJ and tear gas can1ster:1 surrounded the residence a lit· Ue after 7 a.m . He said a.; the door was opened on a chain, agents ::mashed into the house and arrested Franklin, who was just waking up along with his wife anJ children. The FBI 'said a number -ot 5aD Bernardino County abetiH't deptJti(!I helped in the raid, alonl!"Wlth Palo Alto pOUce. ' Franklin, a radical activist, was fired rrom Stanford last January by Presid~nt Richard Lyman after a faculty froWld Franklin guilty of encouraging campus di.!.ru~ lion. Beaty, a convicted robber, was freed Oct. 6 by three armed men and a woman who ambushed Beaty':.i two unarmed guards as they were ta"°g him to a crurt appearance from the Chino I.nmtute for men. Guard Jesus Sanchez. 24, was killed and guard Gtorgc. J. Fitzgerald wounded during the .!SC&pe. Officers who arrested Beaty and Mrs. Hobson said Beaty was toting a loaded revolver and Mrs. Ho~ ·as carr: .. 0 a loaded handgun in her pu<se. Found in the car we:'e .m assortment of pistols, sOOtguns, gas greni:. '.-~ ..: :mmunition, offlcers said. Mrs. Hobson, 44, had long been active in the Venceremos revolutionary group, which Beaty joined while in prison in 1971. Mrs. Hobson ran unsuccessfully for the Palo Alto Oty Ccundl Lt l\lay 1971. Franklin and the others were to be ar-- raigned. before a U.S. ~ate la ter in the day, with the e•ceplKlll ol Seabock, who wu immediately taken to San Bernardino Coonty. the ittommendat!on ol Planning Di,.... tor Ken lle)'llOlas. Reynolds told councilmen his stair Is ready to move ahead with plall$ for a •u millJon • ........,t district to im- prove the llreell and uUlltlea In hall the area whldl w.u W!der moratorium. "We hava talked to nearfy hall the property-owners there and they generally approve of our parking: court concept," Reynolds said. Tbe parkJng court involves blocking of! some ol the streets with trees and other landscaping, thus creating end-of.the- block guest parking. All of the area Is 1bDed for aparteotl. ' • Under the aDesmntnl dLstrlct, property ownera would pay !or recanstructfon ol the atreeis, undel'l!l'Ollll<lln all utility lines and lmprovelnent of the utility serv!ees. Reynolds estimated the cost per SO.foot lot at about $5,000. Even wit.bout a special assessment dlstrtcl, he said prop- erty owners would have to pay part of that just to fix the run down slreets. The building ban bad covmd the area bounded by 17th and Golden West Streett, Palm A venue and ~adflc Coast mghway. The proposed assessment district would cover haU of that, from Palm Avenue to Orange Avenue. A similar assessment district might be appLied to the other hair at a future date, Reynolds said. He told councilmen that construcllon in the other half, closer to the ocean, would be U>wed anyway by Proposition lll, the COlltliDe inltlaUvt a p p r o v e d in NOvember. Reynolds told the coondl that· city policy js to obtain the approval of 60 per- cent of the affecteg property owners befGre establishing a special assessment district. He said be felt that would be no problem. The 90-day moratorium had been im- posed Dec. 18 to allow planners sufficient time for a thorough study of the Town Lots. City Administrator David Rowlands, however, told the councl.1 tbe staff was unable to complete the master plan study for another two to. three months. Reynolds offered the a s s e s s m e n t district as the solution to the problem of ho\. best to develop the town Iota. DAILY P/LOT l'lit,...... ' GETS NEW P!>ST Huntington Aid• Harlow Aide t9 Beach Planning Chief Gets New Post Richard Harlow, 35, assistant planning director for Huntington ~ach, has been appointed executive assi.stant to . City • Admlnistrator David Rowllltlds. Harlow will take his new post Jan. 8, filling one of two key assistant positioils to Rowlands. The other e1.ecutive assi!- tant is Floyd "Bod" Belsito Wb4 al!uc,tJ is W<1rking in that capacity. Rowlands ·anoounced Harlow's r pointment Monday night. . llilrlow joined the cltt Ill U60 as! • planning akle. He was IP.PO.; .. tan! planning dit<Ctor In lllet, liehligin- der Ken Reynolds. His current salary is $1,790 per month. His new salary has not been set, but the range for the executive position is $1,563 up to $1,943 per month. The two executive assistant posts will take the place of tbe C'Ul'ttnt assistant ci- ty administrator position. Brander Castle is retiring from that job Jan. a. Harlow will handle long range projects for the city, while Belsito will be involved more with the city's day-to-day opera· tion, according to Rowlands. Harlow holds a bacbe.Jor's degree in social science from Cal State Long Beach. His major was public ad· ministration. He ha~ a wife, Sylvia, and four children, Richard, Jr., 13; Debbie, U ; Laura, 5; and Kevin, 4. BOMBING ... I!)' the SqYltl lloloo. '!be l'tll erubed about 50 mild ""'thirest ol Ralobona, JM U.S., Ol>m· .._.. qtt.b9oen1ssnwn lllll!d • m[ .... n -Ibo 111111 cl the controvmlal bom:Jert Jool ~ they ,.turned to •comllat In Vlalniln nearly , lhret monlb1 ago. A blal>,rankln3 South Vietnam•,. of· jlcja\ uJtl', the "''¥'1'1\1 of •Ir attack'! on llaool aid Ralphiina alter a jwo-mO!lth auspens~ ''la au eUorl to ,lhow the American detennlnatloo to nr10tiate lrom 1 ~tlon of strenStb ll)d alf9 to peroua<IO , t11 t b a t the ~ will never Je\-US down and we cuJzUilt O)em And join In llgnfng I pelotl'~·" The l\'lilte ll-Aid Ille ~ .... Ordered by Nlron 'to "cope W&b another enemy bulldap" and fomtaJl .a possible enemy oUenslvo 1n South "/lelnam. But IOm& aepior U.S. o!Jlctala ill $al&on said there wert no lndlcatfooa that North Vietnam )VII ~paring !or a larp.tcale olleMivf, altht!1111b II has begun !is tradltlOliiil dry aeaaon supplj .. btilldup to slOCkpUe ill fOfc:eJ in tbe aouth (or next ~ear. The $a!Roo CODllllflld reported •1111 3T North Vloiname,. and Viet Cone 1ttaw In Soulb Vlebwn c1urtn1 the %4-bour pert¢ eod!ng at 8 a.m., the lowest nwtiber since the , ljf1t ~ of North Vletoam'a offensive acrou the demilftarizied zone in Airil: ~ President Naon halfed tho bomblng and all oilier military ope<atloal above the lOth parallel on Oct. 2S is' 1 algn of guod will when It apoffred lbaf 1 peace agreement ,.ith Nort!i Vie~ 1'• im· FollowJnl · idTloer lfeory mlneot. ~-·. A. Klasin s news to~ .report la•t w~·'that bla •nerotiatioi!l•wlth L< Due nio ~ 9f North Vietnam we rt deadlocked, and· bla cbarg~· that the North ~ese .Were to blame, the Uni!(<( 31,ates re91llDed the mining of Halpbont1 l)arbor Sunday. ol~.r-~~ ~='!~ ~.~, Jt,wu. Ibo nm Bii to ~lit Noilb ~ teirftorl. Tlli other-·~ bl.:k tO '111111ond, Ill&" ' lhe ; ' Im 'tliat wu iiownid In Novbber, and crastied 100 miles southeast of the Udorn, Air Base. Ita seven crewmen balled out and were rescued. f'l'OtllPf11Jel APOLLO .•• miles from this carrier, Jt was not tuown immediately bow close the landlni was to the BCIUal aiming point. Wtaring white coveralls ond 1ennis shoes, tbe astronauts ooe-by;<me climbed out of the ljJllCOC!"llt and stepped into the orange We raft, assisted by three frqpnen. Trash Executive Seeking Dismissal in Rape Trial An older sect!oo of the town Iota, closer to the downtown, has been left out of the moratorium and the studie& because it is more heavily de'f'eloped, and slngle-fami· ly homeowners there bad i'lreadY op--PoSed the parking court 6"" any ·other changes in their status. Laguna District Truswes Fire Admini:stfators Realtors Host Area Children Twenty-one children f r o m disad· vantaged families Jn the Huntington Beach area will be the guests of honor Wedl>esday at Christmas Breakfast sponsored. by the Womeo'1 Council of the Huntington Beach·Fountain Valley Board of Realtors. ,Sc;lnnltt, the po)osilt Who ..... lf!o first U.S. lclent!st In apace, came ftnt. He war·~ed by' Evilnl, I -former· Navy comijat Pilot wbO once .er.04 on tbl• ve!Sel, and then by Ceman. the gray· haired c:ommander and three-time space flight veteran. A wb1te chopper hovered overhead and a ha.stet chair on a rope was lowered to the ran and the astronauU, one by one, were pulled up Into tbe helicopter for the st>ort fi!ght to the decks ol this carrier. South Laguna Disposal Company owner Thomas Trulls' lawyer today 11r11ed an Orange Coonty Superior Court judge to dismiss rape and sex perversion charges against the lhfendant on the grounds that he was "acting honestly and in good faith" at tlie lime ol the aDeged ou....,. Attorney Tom Lodlow told Judge Claude M. Owens that Trulia, 38, gen- uinely believed the attractive Founlain Valley blonde with whom he aDegedly had sexual iot.ercourst last Jan. 3 waa 2.0 and not 17. Ludlow 'laid the aaserted vicUm ad- mitted berattf that Trulla bad been surprised when she told blJD after the alleged olfenacs had been committed that she wa1 just two weeks 1way from her 18th blr1hday. Ponce lald the victim told them that TruUs and Eugene Imondi Jr., 35, told her before she submitted to their semal advances ~ Newport. Beach that they were Univenal Studio executives looking for the kind of talent they felt she possessed. Imondi again failed to show up in court today for trial. A warrant bas been issued for bis arrest while Trolls remains to face charges of rape and sex perveraloo in what is now a nonjury pro- ceeding. If Judge Owtnt de.i:es the mot.Ion for dl!lniual, Ludlow will put Tru1ls Into the Three-car Crash Kills Youth, 21, Near San Onofre A young Bakersfield man was killed and his 1ilter badly injured Monday in a three-car crash near the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. Highway patrolmen from t h e Oceanside office said Tommy Baldwin, 21. IUl!utd fatal injurtes wheo hll north- bound car co1Uded with M auto which was resuming travel ~fter a flat Ure on the San oteeo Freew1y. Bsldwtn's sister, Denise, 18. alao of BakerafJeld, IUffered severe cull and brulRI and l o d a y was deacribed in uUsf~ 'condition at San Clemente General Hoepltal. The 1:05 a.m. crash took place alter Baldwin lost control and 1lammed Into a car starlln( to enter the tralllc lanes from the center •trip ne1r Baillont Rood, palr<>lmen oa!d. Tbt· drlftl' of tbat auto wu unhurt In the ..W,loo. Momenta otter Ibo Initial collision another auto alammed lnto the ICCOOd car aa well. The driver of that car wu not bw1, tither, crucera aid. witness box as the sole defeme wi~. Ludlo• •araue<I today that the .U.ged vic:thn was ''no stranger" to the kind of semal perversion allegedly committed by Trulis. Despite a at:ftllg sbowiog of citizen 'The lawyer told Judge Owens that the support for the Laguna Beach School alleged viclim had participated in that system, the ·Board of EducaUoa Mooday kind of conduct with her boyfriend and night voted to fire its three top ado with her girlfriend. ministraton. Prosecutor Frank Briseno today told Superintendent of Schools William Judge Ow.ens that he will let hl!I case Ullom and assistant superintendents Dr. stand on the transcript of t be Robert Reeves and Dr. OlarleJ Hess, in The breakfast at the Sheraton Beach Inn will include a visit by Santa, a pinata breaking and glft.5 for the children. Following the breakfast, the women realtors will take additional gifts to pa- tients at Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa. preliminary hearing in municipal court separate actiCIJs, were told their con· City Manager Chosen and will not offer further testimony in tracts will not be renewed. when they u:- Trulis' trial. pit< on June 30, li73. LOS ALTOS lllW! (AP) -Bruce~.-·~tt is a substantial cue," the deputy E.acb motion of noo-reoewal was made Lawson, rT, assistant city manager of district attorney commented this mom-ill cwt fashkn by 'l'ruNe Patricia Belmont, was cbosen by \be city council lng. "l think the tranfJcript speakl for Gillette and seconded by Trultee Gerald Monday as the new city manager of Los itself." Linke. Board preside,nt Wllllam. ~mas Altos Hills. He replaces Mw I Frttschle, "We have to protect the naive and the jobled with the two other membtr1! in wbom tbo COllllci1 fir<d alter almost four WbilHUited aallon lined the decks, taking plctar"' and straining for a look at lhe last of America's Apollo heroes. Study Session Set By Valley Council Fountain Valley city councilmen wUI hold a special study ...,ion tonil)lt at 7 p.m. to hear a preaentatlon on the Orange County J!f"J1be1t. "Rll<l'l!tu!U: Ofilble"'O>unty 0,....)lelt co0nllnator, will meet with coundlmm In the city's Community Seivlces Building to discuss _,..,,. to plans to mate an open space area along the Santa Ana immature from the lites of. thiJ man,., hf ousting the top administra~. . years in the position. told Judge Owerui, gesturing towarc1s.~~;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;::;::;::;;;:;:;;;:::;::;::;::;:;::::::::::::: Trulli in the rur ol the courtroom. I River. "I ask you to look at OU man, consider the fact that the vlctlm waa not yet 18 and aak )'OU, your honor, to determine if be was acting honestly and in good faith "'hen he committed a sertes of sex acta wilh her." FrotnP .. el PARKS ••• pete with otbor projectl and there oould be a severe Joss ol work for local con- struction w<ll'kers. An angry Mayor Al ceen replied that the matter had been carefully considered and a large, public committee bad been con!ulted. 1·r don 't like to be falsely accused of actlng capriciously or arbitrarily," Coen replied. Mrs. Prim Shea, a member of the council·appointed Goals and Object.Ives (GO) steering committee, 1aid a sub- committee on parka bad interviewed about 2,000 people over nearly two years, and the consenRJt wu for more parka. "How many ol lhose %,000 peepl• had c.conomlsta to tum to when they were sold the program," challenged Remmel. "Thia 11 raally upllltJoc," fUmed Cow> cllman Henry Dukie ... Do -you live In thl1 city? We've been dolnc our job, pttlng with people-for two 'years. Jt'• an insult tO my contcl"""' ond to the city." Neither Remmel nor Ferauton ,are HIUltlngloii Beach -ta. but both said they repreaent workers who Uve bl the city. Councilman Donald Shipley, a 11 o 11\J')', added: • "1111• city has bad <two _.i elee- tlo!ll OD thlJ tubje<:t ODCi-&i>I ...,,.)le!Jn. Ing support !or ti. I just fO ape When I hear out11de people oome "fa and say we don't know whit we do." ! WOULD YOU BELIEVE- THAT THERE ARE STILL COMPANIES I • • • • • • • • • • . . . . . . . . . . ' WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS THEY SELL PERFORM 1 WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON SERVICE 1 WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE PERFECTLY 1 • WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE . INTEGRITY 1 YES, "VIRGINIA," THERE 'IS AN ALDEN'S! (TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.) ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 .Placelltla AYe. . COSTA MISA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 lo 5:30 -FRI.' 9 lo 9 -SAT~ 9130 tG 5 • ' r....,.,, 0ec.-19, 1972 H DAILY PILOI' 3 Beek the Hair. With lights ·and Dolly ' ' • , ' Lagunan Richard Druebl, 26, gets with the Christmas season in a big way as Jack Jacklich of Jack's of Laguna decks binf out in the latest festive hair style. >.The creation ·is complete v;llb lights (that work on N. Viet Talks Boycott , Hinted Due to Bombing PARIS (UPI)' -North Vietnam.,. cf11e1 oegotialor Xuan Thuy, ~ loday ~ peace ctel<UUoo may bqyuitt.lonh- opil>lllg oegoU~ OI) a Viel!>i'Jn cease- ... n'!ll 1*.~u,oe 01 u... rellll!'l'tl~, hv the " Uruied 'Stat" c!. "1t~, nercert j(tack.s ~v~r" agalnlt l'ortb Vlelnarq. 1 · Asked about priseners of ,war, Thuy sa4:1~ "Every Cbrtstmas Mr. Nixon vojces concern for ,prisoners, but every Olrlitmas he 'bolpbs Nor111 Vietnam and * * *'. • Soviets Condeinn . . ,. U.S. Bombing Of N. Vietnam for this .. reaSOI! the prisoners are not liberated.'' . Questlcioed il. Haoot vrouldJ.J~ any further oegoUalions If the United Slates COOiln\18J /ts bo!P~iDI ] ~ l '1>ily replied:· "If the-An?eiican-pariy_pmlinues Viet- n&mization, continues to send weapons and military pmonnel, C011tlnues bomb- ing and escilation of the war, then the United .Slates wlll have to bear full respilnslb)lity for Its acts." I . 'lbUy was asked at a news conference if 11e,agnec1 ie-meet again with thei-cbief U.S: nocotlater, Wllllam J'. Porter. -~~\O.lor a new ineeUng, but In the preael!t situation I wilf r@ive to lei yPil know U ~ are going to be ,new technlc& 'talk!i." Thuy said. : Thuy said bis deler:allon would also decide in the near future whether it ... would attend the 171st semJ·Pll:blic MOSCOW (UPII -The Soviet Union negotiating session in t.he regular lQeber toda~ condemned renewed U.S. air · Avenue talbScbeduJed Thursday. 1 strlkes against North Vietnam as a move , Thuy'• J statement clarified earlier lo pr;essur< Hanol lnlo a peace oettlement ~reports 'tbet the Hanoi deleplllln 'decided and .. arned ll)at Kremlin lead,m are fo break oil the tedmlCar-!Ovel talks' in- "gtvjng the !DOit serious cooslclOrllllon" del!nlU!I.\' 1-ule of the l'OIUlllptioo of batteries), Christmas ornaments, a garland and holly wreath. The hair style won first place in the Cb.tistmas Fantasy competition of the San Gabriel Valley American Master Barber and Beautician Association. It . ·-I DAIL y ,,LOT ...... w JMll'c'-"'lt I took Jacklich two weeks to figure out .the electronics for the hair styleJ and about 45 minutes to do the Christmas styling. Judge Intend~ to Deny Farr Plea I.Os ANGELES (AP) .,-Newsman However, Mark Hurwitz, Farr's at· William Farr spent his 23rd day in jail tomey and Deputy County Counsel today while attorileys· studied the coo-William S•wart said , after a meeting wllh Kelleher Friday that the judge ln-sequences of ap appeal decision handed tended to deny F&IT?'s petition for a writ down by U.S. Distrtct Court Judge habeas corpils. Robert J .. Kelleher. • . -P:"ellebtr-ruled on Fi:rr's appeal of his H~tz said he planned lo fly ~ San contempt of~ cOn iction jate Monda Fr~nc1~ today_·~ appeaj Kelleher s ~p- 'bUt 'the dec!il!On • .,,,;,Y oot made publi~ ~J1i;refulljl 'ill rrer lh• '7-Y.'~ becauae attome)I in the case tiad not · ne..sihan pl?nding a hearing on his con- . been-notified, court sources said. ' -tempt crtil:IOii,.. of habeas corpus. was found in contempt of coo rt by Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older Nov. 27 and given an indefinite jail sentence. The conviction stemmed from Farr's refusal t.o aay which of six attorneys in Farr, a t.Qs Angeles Times re~rter, ·the'Cila*'s1 ~~Pr ... 'j'iaSgsve him lnfonnation for a story in v10Jafion of • a cow:tc<>rdered publicJty ban. The attorneys have denied under oath they gave Farr material lor the story. Farr has contended that revelation of his sources would violate his profess:zons ethics and his conscience. Meanwhile, in New York the Ove as Press Club of America Monday urged Farr's immediate release. '"This is not jwit a fight for-the rlehls of. one man but for 1tobal press freedom," tbe OPC's Board of Governors sajd in a resoh.:tlon. ' ~ake It a "Family Gilt" for Christmas ... Choose Yours From Our "Family of Fine Cars" ' Lincoln Continental ... Mark IV ·. lo tlle situstlon. •' "bomb~ rllds. . , A.1tatemeofWTiii; UiO Ofliail"news "Neith ·Viotaain wlD ,llOkbo!ad-to~y--'--lr==~-.~""--- agency, said ''Tus·bas beeD etqpOWered force 'Of ~tt Thuy aaid. 11We are "' ' to ,declare that the gOYm'llng circles of at,tacbed', to Pelee, ,but peace with honor the Soviet Union are giving the most and full iighta for our country." serioUs consideration to the situation , Speak198 ~ an in~eter, Thuy c~ted by the stepup In U.S. military ac· ~blamed,~ Un.iied Statea~for sabotaging tioit·agalnst the ORV. the draft cease-fire ..c:cord 0 just when ''.'lbe new escalation of military opera-both parties .were getting ready to sign." UoP! by the United States against the He .said it was not Hanoi which D'JtY. can only be regarded as an attempt · demarlded m~ifiCaJions in the Secord as • lo, bfing pressure lo bear .,,: !he y1ei.. • •ta\ed bY" White, Houee ·aide Henri' A. naD"ese side in order t.o compel it \0 ac-.. 1c}silogcr, .but Washineton. cept'tbe Amerttan terms for ·• Vietnam Thuy aald on Dec. 13," the Americana ; settleme,nt." • Pl'tftni" an. entite pew list of modHica- : Tbe statement said, "It is c fr9m ,a. 'ion! to lbe ~. affecting the draft in White House statement that . t b1l 's all nine chap~n -14' clauses • represents a resumption of wkl&.~teale altogether. f • • American air raidJ throughout the ter-Thuf said: 'These modillcatioM were ritory of the Democratic .Ropublle of -a)ty ').~ of substance and Vietnam. ~ere contrary to the ~!~ international . '"!'his particular d e c I • I on of rights of North V~. . Wulllnglon flagrantly disagrees with .~~~-~"1:'i!.~· ~.~ numerous prQtest8Uons made by the U.S. ·'l~-1\KT ..... ~·me " . I , Jeaders about their wish to seek mutually, nantete P.reskl.en~ Npyea Van Thieu and ' acceptable solutions for the ·rematruni CSlnbodlan head of state Lon Nol today uocoordinated problems. f C!,CI the status of the stalemated I1K» "l'io etexta. tnVented in a bid to Cbloa. "ace talk,s and the rern:-:.ed U.S. jllltifll ~ brulol bombing, can hide the l\Ombing of !~ Nortp. viewed ll1 Saigon fact#-lhat we az:e faced ·with new ag-as ! negollallrig :acdc. gruslve actions which the USA ls taking agaln:st a sovereign state." 1bt Soviet people, the st.-tement said, "ate lndlgnant In thetr condemnation of tht new piratlc $Cts undertaken by the Aillorlcan mililary. They demand Im· modjate stoppage of the actions and speody siilnlog of the agreement on sloi>' =· !!'" war and reslorlng peAce lo Viet- . 'Sabta Ana Picks • ' New Police Chief Roymond C. Davi< wil1 be Sants Ana's new police dllef eflectlye Feb. 5, City Manqor Bnlce SprlQ be3 .......,,...i. I , , )Devil! 48)"t1 pt'tllllt1)' head Of the 87. Re~rded Youths Set '::'~!:•1:~1n~ ' Christmas Program • lialllal lllllrJ will be ll,lOO I lllCllth. 'l1lt -pollc:e .eblef hll ~ in law enforcement . for II years fncludlni 10 A Chrltlmas prosram b!VOIV1Ds JM )'Mn on Ille Fullerton polJ<;e foroe. He 11udenU ol lbe llel\dly H..,.. school for left tllera In 1914 lo take 'tllo Walnut menlllly rotarded J10U111 ldulb wlll be Creek pooltJon after rlJill& IO lhel"IJlk of held II 7 p.m. Wodnelday, It the llCllool, coptaln. ~ El Toni Rood, Jill Toro, Spl"ll Aid G lo• eaforcement o[· The public IS .invllod lo alleod aea"" 11cero ........ lw tbe Sonia Ana pool. Jt otrering by the day and mldent pupils. became-Vacant when Cbiol Edward Allen who are II and Glder. retfr.d on DIC. I. 1. I , Comet ••• " Rene Of The New ,Car .., •• "G•l•n t'e•e.., 1973's ORDER YOURS TODAY! OPEN EVERY NITE TIL NINE 2DI HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA • l40 IGO ~\ Montego .•. Dome or 'l1le Now ear • , , "Gehleal'__.,. ' • • • . 4 OAILY PILOT Tutlday, -mbtr 19, 1972 A Mandate • fro -Rebuild .• ROOSE OF CARDS DEPT. -The j9wn folk of Lagwia Beach today are Jooking at a school system that bas col- lfpeed. Not too many months ago, Laeuoa'a school district was being lauded · in educational Circles as innovatlve1 forward·looking and flexible in m~ting · the.needs of chudrtn as individuals, 'I Then lhree irustees eot elected to the five-member board on what might be characterized as a "back to basics" plat- form."They apparently saw it as a man- date . WREN TllJIY BEGAN lo attack the in· novaUve programs, supporters of the system came to the defense of the ad· ministration. '1'1le, new three-member board ma- jority, camera store owner Bill Thomas, retired Navy Capt. Gerald Linke and retired teacher Patficia Gille~te, stood firm. After all, they had a mandate. In retaliation, the school supporters stJirted a recall against Linke and Mrs. Gillette. In the end, the two retained their board seats. IT WAS A CLOSE election. A handful of votes decided it. Voting analysis in- dicated Laguna was split almost by neighborhoods; the high hill sections and center of town voted for recall, while the private communities, Emerald Bay to the north and Three Arch Bay to the south, the their nearby neighborhoods, supported the incumbents. Laguna Beach became a town divided against itself. Anyway, ·the recall was close. But the incumbents had another mandate. The three-member-.board majority issued some statements about healing old wounds, joining together and moving ahead now. LAST NIGHT TREY . gathered at a meeting 8¢ joined togethe!-In firing the I Cb O O l superintendent, Dr. William Ullom, the assistant superintendent, Dr. Robert Reeves and rthe b u s i n e s s manager, Dr. Charles Hess. Clean sweep. Merry Christmas. All three men are honorable gentlemen and good educators. They created a modem school system in Laguna Beach. They will go on from the Art Colony to do important things elJ!i!where. All three simply got caught in a house of cards. A divided community pushed on it, and it collapsed. rr IS TRAGIC when a good school system gets tom apart by petty town . politics, factionalism and, in some in- stances, actual vendettas of hate . All of this may be good fun in municipal politics. But in school. systems, yoo are fiddling with the education of children. That's what a school system is supposed to be for. At any rate, Laguna's new three- member school board majority has now Jiven itself a new mandate. No longer do they have a mandate to criticize or find fault . No longer is the mandate to sweep out. Now the mandate is to rebuild. NOW, EVERYl'HING they do will be of their own creation. It will be their ad- ministration directing the· achoo! system. It will be their budget control. Jt will be their curriculum and their tax rate. It is also their community that is ctivld· ed and with tbelr ac!ions In the months and years ahead, they will either pull it togetber·or 'furtber push it apart . Clearly, they have critics out there waiting to see how the job will be done. 1be mandate to build alwaya proves a bit more difficult than ,the mandate lo tear down. Tragedy Strikes , UPIT ....... The w l.f e and infant daugbter of Sen.-elect; Jos~h R. Biden Jr,, . {D·Del.) were killed Monqay In a traffic accident neAJ'. Wilmington Del. Biden's two other children also were hurt in the wreck. At left is tbe.'Senator-elect and his wife, Nealia. At right is 18-monlh old Amy, who was killed in the crash. -- Hanoi Presents 6 Airmen • On Radio After Capture SAIGON (AP ) -Six crewmen from a B52 shot down Monday in a raid over North Vietnam were presented to a news cOnference in Hanoi only hQyrs after their capture, said a Radio Hanoi broad- cast. The broadcast was barely audible. Phonetic spellings of the crew's names follows: ~APT. ROBERT Rowlin Sirson, 25, of Georgia. His service number ' was given as 214 48 842WR. -Capt. Richard Thom.as Kingston, 31 , or South Dakota. Service number 250 662 !OOFR. -Maj. Fernando Alexander, 4.1, of Texas. Service number 454 36 3155FR. -Capt. Tim Inkton, 3'1, of New York. Service number 112 30 4927FV. -Capt. Henry Charles Barron, 26, born in West Germany . Service number 136 33 5463FV. -Capt. Charles A. Brown, 26, or Illinois. Service number 025 34 9&16FR. THE NEWS oonference, reported by a woman, said: "The pilots were afraid ' and they all bowe4 their beads w;hen they faced photographers at the news con- ference." Only Barron and Kingsloo w-perinit· ted to speak. • In a brief statement, ~afon said: "I was shot down by a' surfaci! to air missile on Dec. 16, 1972 in the vicinity of Hanoi, North Vietnam. I balled out safely from the B52 I was piloting and I am now de- tained by the Vietnamese people." Barron said : "I was shot down on the morning of Dec. 19, uln: w h i l e participating in a B52 bombing mission over North Vietnam. After being cap- tured, I have received wonderful medical care. HI WANT .TO send . my wife and children best_ wishes for .Christmas._ Together with my wife and chlldren, and all the people on earth, I PljliY for .this war to end soon." The difference in dates given by King- ston and Barron raised the possibility · that two B52s maY have been shot down over North Vietnam. The U.S. Command refused to comment. POW Families Express Criticism and Support By United Press JntemaUonal Families of American prisoners of war expressed bewlldennent, criticism and support Monday for the administration's resump.tion of bombing ol Hanoi and llaiphong. The key reaction, however, was bitter disappointment. Ever since Henry K: Kissinger's "peace is at hand" speech in October, DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE DtliYffY of tht Oaity Pilot is !1Uara11tttd ~f·l'.W..,.: II -ft -"'" P•u• .,....,. 9' l 1Jt .,llt., c•U ·•!'Mii .,..... npy will . ............... c ........ , •• Wllll J;Jt .. 1111. s...,., aN ,_..,: ff ,.. • Ml real" .,_ Qlll' ,ty f '·"'· 51,.....y • .,. I 1.m. , ..... .,, c•• •NI I Hl'r w1n .. rw.v1111 ,. ., .. (l-fll ..... ~ ... ""'" It '·"'- Ttltptlonri relatives of POW's had anticipated happy Christmas reunions with sons, husbands, brothers and fathers. 'lbe breakoff of meaningful negotiations and the renewed bomb!ng turned.joy \o gloom. MRS. ROBERT C. DAVIS, Willingboro, N.J., whose husband is oU.ssing in Viet- nam, artlctilated the sorrow of other families over the course of events. Mrs. Davis said she had "no hope" left. "I felt that a -1ettiement was close. Now it's off in the distance again ." Her response was echoed by Mrs. John H. carey, Jeannette, Pa., who said "we are-very-:disappointe¢-We were-very- hopeful," MRS. CAREY, wilose llOll,, NR!Y U . David Jay c.atey, WIS captured in August 196'7! said llbe WAI atlll undecided. on what efiect the resmned full-scale bombing would have on any possible ~t­ tlement. Mrs. John ~dy, Azusa , Calif., the wife of Air Force C8pt. John Hardy, ·shot down. over }forth Vietnam in October, 1967, said s~ agreed with the rftlmlptlon of bombing "ll Nixon wanll to bomb." Northwest Rainy, Windy Columbia Overflows 'With Ice Jam; Snow . in Midwest '<:.Utor•I• . ~-~~a"ffli ~...r.--~· ""' . ~ '!!!-""' .!J, ~ ~...,.~ ... t tpf /' >qoo .. • NA1IOWM. WfATMI MWICI fOllCAI' t• 7•M 111 •l•lt -12 2017 s .... , Moo-. Tides . -· -""' .,. ,., •• •••• "" •. M. •.0 ~ hW ....... ,, •• , l :Ho.tn. l.t ftDM-.lY a;l"ltflllft .............. !:IS1,rn, lJ "''" .............. :n •. m. ~.• ond llltll •• ,, •• ,..,.I 10tp,m. 4, k<llMI iow ............ J:iso.m. 1.• 'YOU Sec:tion' Thett'f-W., lor YOU in the "YOU SleUOD'' of the DAILY Pll.o'I' ..,_, -.y. Cl!eci< Ill ptrlOllll 1ppe11 for you and-yours. I I l(omments ?n Bombing f ·aper1s Question Move By 'Ille ....... "'"' N-~-......Oll ~t Nlmt's c1oc111on 1o ruume the bombilll d. Noni! V-...,. dMded in their uae•111eot of to. new policy. tlooa~ whether Haol'a clmr llld lllp. pery !lllOllaktn can be -llock in-• to---... 111111~1. sllD llapo ., __ -.......... --. -.,~ 11111 llnil>o." , %111i11 I ., "8Y9 tbCJu&h Ibis_,,. !Uiely lo -I DOI!' ""'"'1 of ncrlmlnatl'"6 In Amslcl aad In the reoucnptloo of U.S. aerial tcllacb m lbt l'{orth, coupled with the fallun ct-·• lut..utcb Im-launched Ip ADrll, will· ..... llrinl 8*ioi to the -.libio -the lntonilall of eaillnc !hie ~ Ja I Saine ondoned lbe Pr-'• dociplon whl1e olbon queotiooed the efficacy of bomlllnc 11 a ,... ... of acbievln( a peace settlemenl. Here II a umpllng ol com· men! publlabed Monday llld loday: eo..r-, tbe ·--lut May ....... tlcol tbe American public will hJibly 1pecoil111vt question. ltlt -· Prell-Ntxon Dlust find --of ~ Amlricao partldpatloa .1n the war." , support the_,,... of the Nor:th aqd the mlhlnll Gf lta -nether than simply sunender.'' McGove111 Blasts •• Boilh ESc,alation Q1cqo s-nme1: ''ll>e American publlc WUll 1111 tad of JU lnvolftment'ln Vletnam1 and. it wants tt now. If ~e WU at band lwo -.... II abould be al band .now. Only a -foul.up would jultlty a resumpllqo ol bomblna . That II why we view such a ,....,.ptlon with the bltlemMs in our hearll !hat Pope Paul dtocrlbal" New Yon lldy N°"': :•rt was a test of America's will, pure aDd llimplef and Mr. N~'s reopoaae wU,fut.and plain: .u.s. elr power will· nol be leashed in- definitely whli• Hanoi dawdles m a final. • cteaMUt~ boobrable aettlelpeot. The way lo peace·· and permaaent rellef from bomblna la °""" lo North Yi.tnam any time II Ii ready for a ml ptat'e effort. Until !hat Clay <»mes, Ille "'"1l1Y 'lbould- n't expect lmmtmity fl1>m attack while prolooglng the coolllct. ~ Now Yllt ,_, "'nit bell hope tor -In lndOoldna ..... llllS4 bel -severely sbebnc by I boll d. Americln bombt ••• lt la nol likely lo ha-. - and could lodeflnllelJ pool--the 'just llld fair' -t tlcol lloDry Kilslnger bu Aid Is the -·• ob-jective." WASHINGTON (AP) ..:. SO.. GtW1t McGowro .,. Pnllnlent Nixon'• -· . ed bondlllcs "' • .Nodb .Vlllnan will mi_., Tl-• "Wt llnd H ·herd lo aee .lcow illDOt will be IPllM!e man -ble bY. a U.S. elr cillenoive. Mr. Nixon bas .oft.a ccjJOl:eoi d. the ln1i>9rtance . leEJClhetc llit WI!' llltl -the _ .. ftlOlve. · \ McGovn Aid MGDill.Y thet the Nixon Mmlri!itnljon ............... u..t can' only k90P our lOlll1I -baaed down In an Allaa JolP!lle ..i - prlloatn locad ·-In Allan eollo for ~I bother,~" ol llvlnC the --Ii 'chance.' How greal, bow eortalll. ....,, lq llld·at w!nat coot does be lntllPd that chance to be?" <Jeveland Plain Deller: "With the near·peace ' coming ap&rt, America once qain la laced with the unpleuant P.,,.. pect ol Proaident Nixon's swlagJna lo a fiawklsh line on Vietnam . . • it ii ques.- Nuhille Tt•!1Mn: "So tbe air ·war will be renewed and the Pana 1a1b will (0 bo<k lo the «iglnll sjalllS of stalm'Qlte, while the NI :1 on ad- ministration CGllllnuea to. play cbencdei with the .American people." -~-°"'IJIM; II~ tbe '""' Soutlc Dobla t>omoenl Aid, •111 ' defies all ...... to --• 11na1 lbt North Vlttnlmeoe l')JI' ·-their ,,._ --after a .~ of ....... . t -almply -..... ""'' ..... ~Norlb cmoe ~·.:. _ _. ___ '.___ (To Santa Claus, of courH) . Christmas is a time for little folks (big on , too), and what is Christmas without Sant1t lausl So Mission B~nk Invites you t0_.bring yo little fol~ in to say ·"hello" to Santa Claus '~· he L:ag~nll · · j3each offl~ of the· bank on. Frid ·, December · 22nd., .from 12:00 Noon to 6:00 .M. There'll be. candy and cookies 'fcir the l<i ' ie!i, and cOffell. anif cool<,ies for Mom and 0 . S8nfa's loOk ng ' . for all of you, so come in all tune up 1our"Ho.. Ho, Ho", just in time for C istmasl By the way, . you maywantto open you next yelir's Christmas Club Account at Missio Bank. ~· ' . · 1 ' , • MISSION BANK IOO Qlonnoyrt • LaOUll• -II. Calllomla H9111 • (714) '417·1719~4'1·1771 ,"-"' P:.D.t.C. • Aw•tt ._.., ..... i'OO • i I < t ,. • /1 " J • I. ' I I I I ! ., 7 ·1 I I I I -1 7 \ orange Coast EDITION • • Today's Final N.Y. Stooks • VOL. 65, NO. 354, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI NIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1972 N TEN CENTS Newport Council Nixes Fun Zone Development Reversing an earlier decision, Newport Beach city councilmen Monday night tllmed down a controversial, hlgh-den111ty col)dominium on the site of Balboa's Fun 1.orle. Councilmen heard more than three hours," of debate before voting .t to 3 to table indefinitely the JAK Coostruction Company proposal ~o build the .t7-unit pt<lfect. . Councilmen ~otlng" for the tabling ac- tion told the developer they did oot-want to see plans for the 1.2·acre site on Palm street kllled altogether. But they did say more study should be given io alternative commercial develop- ment -including possible revamping of the Fun 1.one -or lower-den.sity residen- tial uses. · . Mayor 'Donald Mcinnis, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers, Councilman Milan Dostal and Councilman John Store voted tor the \abllng action while Councilman Richard Croul, Carl Kymla and Paul Ryckoft voted agalnst it -thou1b for different reasons. Kymla and Ryctoff wanted to .. ldll the project altogether and retain the core. commercial area in Balboa. Croul felt" the project should be approved in·its'en- tirety. "We have got to sit down and make a decision, gang," Crout sai<i. "We have beard lhe opinions of everyone in tbe world on th.is one. We have already made a decision so why don't we stick to it?" ' Two B-52s, Flll Lost ·; ... .-· . ·:. .... "{•.: ... ·:· .. , ... " 0 CHINA GU LP' OF T ONK IN ' MILES 100 ... _ BOMBING RESUMES -Hanoi..radio b\15 reported devastating air at- tacks against tbe city and tbe U.S. Command confirmed it has re- sumed bombing against tbe Hanoi-Halj>hong area following tbe ap- parent stalemate of peace Degotiations in Paris. - Council Quits .at 2 P.M.; ----- Shorter Meetings Sought Newport Beach councilmen Monday afternoon spent half an hour trying to figure out ways to shorten the lengtb of lhmr meetings. , Then they came back tor their regular ~ness session at 7:30 and sat there un- til 2:45 this morning doing the city's business. Councilmen earlier in the day had debated several suggestion! by a t~ man councllmanic committee on ways to cul the length of late night gatherings. 'nie committee composed of Coun· cllmen Milan Dostal and Paul Ryckoff suggested starting the business sessions at 3 p.m. and conducting only public bearings durlni the evening sessions. "Another c:oncern," the mayor said "is l don't think afternoon meeting~ would ·give the working man or t h e housewUe the opportunity to attend that part of the meeting." Dostal polnted out that it was as much of an inconvenience for a person if a matter he was Interested in was being c6nslderid at midnljht or 1 in the morn- ing. "But the people do have the option of coming at that hour ," Dostal conceded. .OUly_lqur penoos were .ln~the audience when councilmen adjourned early this morning. All were Irvine Company representatives. Revenue Sharing Hanoi ,Raids Heaviest Yet in War SAIGON (AP) -U.S. planes made the heaviest attack to date on the Hanoi- Haiphong area during the night, but it also was cosUiest to tile United States. The U.S. Command reported two 852 heavy bombers and . an Flll f!ghler- bomber 1o&I ¥<!· .. I-4ID<ri .. ~ . ml•lag. Hanoi aal(! atZ of Qiol_ lllll!illl men -the crew of _.of ~ were captured anil praented at a news confererM!l? in the ~orth Vlfitnamese capital, a few hours later. (See ltbries, Pages 3-4.) Seven other American &irmen were rescued in Thailand, the U.S. Command said . North Vietnam Charged that nearly 100 civilians wele-iilled or wounded-In at· tacks on Hanoi and its suburbs . But-It said Prelldent Nixon's attempt to bomb it into !llbmission would not force it to iiCCtpt bis peace terms. Hanoi claimed that three 1lSls and three fighter-bombers were shot down and said a number .of the fliers were cap- tured. The U.S. Command said It bad no additional losses to report for the time being, leaving open the possibility that other American planes may have been lost but the search for the crewmen is still under way. It was the heaviest loss in a single day that lbe United States has suffered since resumption of the bombing of North Viel· nam last April. Although 12 B52s have been lost in the 71Q: years America's biggest bombers ~:~.e:...~f!.fiY,ing in the Vietnam war,..on· ly one of them was downed by enemy fire, on Nov . 23. The magnitude or the attack with which the United States resumed the air war north of the 20th parallel was un- del'BCtlredDy indicsUons that more than 100 B52s: were used in the raidi. Scores of smaller fighter-bombers from half a dor.en bases in Thailand and several 7th Fleet carriers ln the Tonkin Gulf also took part, U.S. officiala reported. One senior Americar. orflclal said hun- dreds "of ,planes took part In the raids and some targets in the Hanoi-Haiphong in- dustrial complex were attacked for the first time in the war. U.S. spokesmen aaid the two 852..s prob- ably were hit by SAMs, the surface-~ air ~siles supplied to North Vietnam (See BOMBING, Page !) Crpul was referring to a ~ to• 1 vote by lhe council last' summer that overturned a plaru;iing commission denial of the proj· ect. The council action was taken to court by Balboa Ferry owner Allan Beek. The judge ruled the council bad to hear it again and make a new decision. aoth Ryctwff and Kynila favor«! kill- ing the project because of its density and the fact It would destroy what they called "a vestige of tradition." • "The Fun Zone is a tradition in Newport Beach," said Ryckoff. "lf we don't guard these traditional things, we will become a growth-oriented city with the emphasis on economics and I don 't think we want that." Councilmen heard from a score or Peninsula , residents, most of whom ad- Qressed themselves to. lbe advantages or disadvantages or continued commercial og use or the area. ·A number of people told the council the es Ill Newport Council Action Here in brte£ are maj<r actions taken Monday by Newport Beach council- men: · FUN ZONE: Killed plans by the JAK Coostraction Company to build a .t7-unit condominium on the Fwl Zone property. JASMINE CRE EK: Put olf a decision on the Irvine Company's proposed 379-unit Jasmine Creek condominiums after area residents complained about the elevation of building pads. DENSITY CONTROLS: Turned down a proposal by Councilman Paul Ryckoff to stop all residenlial coostruction in projects one acre or larger pend- ing approval of new density controls. FEDERAL FUNDS' Unanimously decided lo spend the city's $184,000 in federal revenue-sharing funds oo capital projects. WATE~N'I' HOMES: Reroned five acres on the Balboa Island chaMel f()[' a 70-unlt condombUum project proposed by. the Irvine Company. Known as The Coves, the project is on the Bayside Drive site the company first ·wanted for its c;ontroversial Balboa Wharf commercial development. ' . " ~ .... mm.'""".. • ... ~ '""""II! -Iii! DeD hill! !hot .~: Bakllio Bay<M'a motol -·ii ccmlilint.-~-tllo ci~ "' property ond Slid -"8 may oontlnue. • ·~ -, , ~ cLwr DlllVE PARK' 6'ked Oronge County SUpervison to come iip with $131MOO II> bUy ·m more loll' on Cliff Drive to enlarge the proposed vltw park theno. AIR WEST LEASE: Sent county supervisors a list of recommended terms and conditions fOI' extension d. the Hughes Airwest lease of terminal facilities al Oranrie County Airp<rt. St.rRPLUS LAND: Asked Assemblyman Robert Badham to introduce legis- lation to force the califomia Divi.sioo of Highways to sell ei:cess freeway lands. Ex-Stanford Professor Held in Beaty Escape MENLO PARK (AP) -Seven persons, including fired Stanford Prof. H. Bruce Franklin, were arrested by the FBI in California and Arizona today in con- nection with the ambush-escape from Chino of fugitive convict Ronald Wayne ll<aty. Two of1bem, Robert Allan Seaboct, 23, arrested In Palo Alto, and Bru::e Warren Hobson, 23, arrested ln Menlo Park, wert booked for lnve!tlgation of murder. The others were booked on charges of --.... harboring Beaty following the escape in San Bernardino County in which a prison guard was shot dead. Besides Fran Ir.Un, 37, arrested at his Menlo Park borne, they were Morton Newman, 30, arrested at his home in Menlo Park; Dr. Han:y Blsbara, a public health service worker la Ft. Defiance, Ariz.; Bishara's Wife, Lorraine, and Michael Gol.d,stein, also of Ft. Defianct. Seabock will be brought to San Bernardino County, sheri.rrs deputies therf: said. They said a hold has been pJaced on Hobson. A warrant on a harboring charge was Issued for an eighth person, Charles Woodbridge Noble, FBI agents eakl. Sheriff's deputi~s in San Bernardino said a large amount of weapons were recovered in Palo AJto al Seaboct's home and In Ft. Defiance at Bllhara's home . Beaty, 35, wa.s arrested Dec. ti after a high·speed chase across the San-Ftan- clsco-Oakland ~y Bridge at the Oakland end when two patrol cars blocked eastbound l&ne1. With Beaty was Jean S. Hobson, 44:, 1 Venceremos ac. tlvlst. Mayor Donafd A. Mcinnis didn't think much of the proposal. First, he said, be didn't lhlnk the council could review all of its afiernoon study session items -.en 1:30 p.m . ands p.,m. Dor y Fisher's Body Located Capital Jobs-Get Priority She Is bell~ 1ed to be Hobeon's mother. An FBI affidavit filed ln San ... rancl.sco (Seo FRANKLIN, Pqe II SUNDANCE KI D'S SON, 72, DIES - ~ The body of Newporl Btach dory· man Allan Knight wtts discovered today by fi•hermen ..,. hall mfle east of the Hunlintlloe Beacb Pier. Huntington Beach Police aald the body was 150 yanfl lrom ahore when It was discovered by fl.aber-men On the boaL Portwiu1 at aboul 10:1~ a.m. 11lat spot was clole to where Knlaht and hfJ S.yeal'Old daughttr Patricia disappeared l)ec1 IJ. • I Newport Beach councilmen Monday night voted to put the city's entire St.94,000 In federal revenue sharing fund.9 toward top p1lorlty c a p t t a I lm- provemenlJ. City Manager Robert L. Wynn told C01111Clbnen blJ atatr bad •lniled out three poulble means of spendin1 the mooey. The !Int, • r'eductlon In the property tu rate, was rejected by coundlmen on the groondl It would hurt city tupayeri In the long nm. WyM oald In his report the money could be ueecl to cut the rate up to u percent but lhet the <111 would have to l raise the taxes after five yeara if the reve·nue sharing is discontinued. A second alternative,, creatloii of an emergency ftmd to uae In the event of un- foreseen calamiUet aucp as earthquake., was passed O\'er without much comment from councilmen. They' aald the money could betltr be a~C ficbt away to get some long- defayed capital lmprovem ... 1 prof•d• orr the poond. Many ol the profeCU havt been held over from year to year bocauae of a lack of f\mdJ, Wynn aald . Som• of the top priority lttms Wynn oald could be uodertakeo with the money include a new pollce lacillty, park and open space acquisition, bettennents to the city's corporation yard or City Hall and street tm.provemtnts. Wynn 181d 1ppllcallon ol the,. fUnds toward ouch pro)ect. would oqate the ne<d for property tu lnc:reaaeo and th111 !erve the pu.._ of •astnr the w b.lrden on city rettdenlt. ~bllc Workl Dlroctor Jooeph T. Devlin listed· 1 do<en major project• In b1s department that could use tho money, incllldJnc •100,000 to -Balboa Island's alleya, $70,000 to build I a!Ol'lll drain on Balbol Boulevard aod '60,00I> for rtplacement of• Udo t11e sewtr • .MISSOULA, Mont. (UPI) -Robert Longbaugh, 72, 10n of the f11'Dftd Wee:tem outlaw known u "Sundance Kld'' died Monday 111 a fire ln an old four-atory hotel. Fire ofliclals utd one o~ pmon, John Schon, an tlderly blfnd man, alto wu killed when flame. swept the Prleu Hoitt. The real of tbe botel't S4 mld<ni.. many ol them unlveltfty atudcnll, OIClped without Injury. , area is already peppered with residential and that the commercial nature of the Penin sula is dying. Others. including several concession owners in lhe Fun Zone, told the council they would be willing to invest in re- vamping Jbe Fun Zone if they could win a good lease from the current owner. John Konwiser, JAK president and owrier of the property, told councilmen they could not in good faith kill the con- (See FUN ZONE, Page!) Astronauts Close Out Safe Trip ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (APl -The last Apollo came home today, splashing down safely in gentle South Pacific seas to end the American space program which put 20th centllry man on the moon. "All is well on board," reported the astronauts moments after their cone- shaped command ship, America, splash· ed into the ocean 400 miles southeast of Samoa . Helicopters we~ there to return them to the recovery canier Ticonderoga, 2.5 miles away. Astronauts Etigene A. Ceman, Har- risoo lf. SchntiU and Ronald E. Evans returned tO earth at 11:25 a.m. PST after completlng the last, toogest and mo.!1 scientifcialJy·productlve of the six Apollo lunar landing n'llssions. Their adventure, which Included a three-day moon ex- ploratloo by Schmitt and Ceman, began at 9:33 p.m. Dec. 6, with blastoU from Cape Kennedy, Fla. Apollo 17, traveling more than !4,000 miles an hour . blazed across tbe Pacific skies moments after it collided wilh the upper reaches or the earth's at- mosphere. r.toments later, two drogue parachutes pulled ·out the main parachutes and three orange and white mushrooms of cloth snapped into the wind , slowing the racing spacecraft and starting Its final descent. Views of the last moments ol the Apollo program we.re telev:sed to the United States by cameras aboard thii , \'essel and from helicopters hovering nearby. America smashed into the blue Pacific at about 21 miles per hour and the astronauts happily reported moments later, "America Js stable one in the water.'' This meant the craft landed right side up. lleli!bpters from this ship quickly hovered overhead a n d black--sulted frogmen leaped into the water. They at· tacbed a sea anchor, a flotation collar around the spacecraft's blunt end and in- flated an orange llf raft. The astronauu could be heard laughing and talking excltedJy. "We all feel good, we all feel great," the spacemen reported at one poinl '"Sounds like those guys (the swim- mers l are dolna: a super job out lbere ... said one as'.ronaut . While the splashdown came only 2.l miles from this carrier, It was not known (Se< APOU.0, Pa1e II Orange Weadtfll' Hazy sunsbJne f1 the way ,U.4' weather lady sees It for WHoeeo day, with 1UghUy cooler tempera. lures. HlgJia In the IOI. QYernflbt Iowa will be In lbe 50s. Nlpt and morning low fog i. ~ Weclne.oday. INSIDE TODA 'Y · Twelve l"Grl ago, Rolph IW&o liff di1covered Ile couliln~ of· /or~ a Christmas tnt·for hto th ree daughttr1, 10 he gnibbfit a dozt11 oronge cratet and mad• hb oton Chriitmas oiU<IQt. S•t st~ on Paoe 2-8. ' • • 4 DAILY PILOT H luMIJ, -19. l97l ' HEW Official Resigns Post i. W"5Jl!NGTON (UPI) -Jolin G. v_.. II le .. lnl hlo pool u ~ o! OHllll, F.cluca- Uon and Welfare and will be sue- .,.._ Cffdf!d by Frank Carlucci, the i White House announ~ today. • Veneman, No. 2 man at HEW ~ 1iince tho btgtnn1ng of the Nl<oo D admlnlstratlon, plans to return to ~ Clllfornia. It wu reported he Jlkely .i will run for Ueutenant governor. £1 ity Seeking -tliff Drive's lJ View Lots ~wport Beach councilmen Monday ~ht asked !or a resolution seeking aid from the County of' Orange to buy the six hmalning view lots on Cliff Drive. '·The city recently bought the option on ~ lots immediate1y adjacent to the old Lutheran church on Cliff Drive and Wants to acquire the remalnlng Jots lo &nsolldate the park site. The Park!, Beaches and Recreation Commiaion r:ecommended the city ask the cowlly to spend Sl30,000 of ils Com- munity Park Assistance Fund to put the down payment and option on the lots. '."After that, the commission said, the ci· fy and county can seek ways or jointly funding the remainder of the cost - '5timated at $100,000 per two-lot unil 'Ibe council asked the resolution be prepared by City Attorney Dennis O'Neil fbt action at the Jan. 8 meeting. The CJiff Drive view park site ls high dn the city's parks priority list and ln-c~udes the church property, which is owned by the state. Negotiations for that parcel .are expected to take many months. Whittier Man Held After 'Wild Newport Chase' A Whittier man was arrested after leading police on what thty described as a wacky and wild chase through Newport Beach and Costa Mesa Sunday . Police said Robert J. Halvorson had been arguing with both h.iJ molber and girlfriend in Newport Beach Sunday before be was observed spinning hi! car in circles at lhe intersection of Newport "Boulevard and Via Lido. Patrolman T.B. Smith said Halvorson sped olf towards Lido Isle, and a postman in a truck saw him coming, jumped out just before Halvorson's auto struck his mail truck on Via Oporto. Ofiicer Smith said he made a U-tum in his squad car as Halvorson came back across tbe Lido Isle bridge and lost sight of him. But he said witnesses who bad been watching Halvorson's earlier antics polnted northbound on Newport Boulevard. He said he gave purruit and saw Halvonon's auto run a red light at Hospital Road and continue north at speeds approaching 85 mllts per hour. All three lanes at 17th St~t were blocked, Smith said. and as Halvorson crossed into the right lane the driver of a Volkswagen stopped at the light a~ parenUy saw him coming and quickly made a right turn. Halvonon sped through the \n- tel"'SeCtlon, the officer said, then ran red llghls at l!th Street and Harbor Boulevaro. , He was forced to a stop at 19th Street and cornered by a Costa Mesa and two NeW?)rt Beach squad cars. Smith said Halvorson was charged with reckless driv.ing and two counts of hit and run. Besides the mail truck. Smith said, Halvol"IOn also careened off a city tree. while spinning circles on Via Lido. \ OIANl-1 COAST N DAILY PILOT n. or-.. C.t °"ILY ,IL.OT, Wftll ~ It __..... tM N._"1'9a,. It l'Ulllilfll.i "I' flll °"""' 0... "*'11111111 ~. """ ..... ....... • ,.. pllblllllld, Mwdty lllfW!lh f'11Mf, .., C.hl ~. N""""'1 lffdl, Hwol........ aHdl/l"-llWI Y1I"", ~ .... 1"""1s.dlllftldl ... 1111 ~ Slfl J-Cllthl-A iloofll r.Dior../ Mltlwl It IUOI~ Sl"""1tl'n 111'11 3.""'°1vi, n. ptiri(.fMI """"" .... p!tnt b 11 U0 Witil a.y ,,,_, C.... M-. C.H'°""f, 7»1'. lo~rt N. w • ..i Prwldlllt *nd fOuOI~ J11ll R. Cvrl•y Ylc9 ,,.'°"'' ...s °""' .. Mlrwaer lltoi.t•• K...nl a11111t ,.,... .. A. M'"PhiM --·~ LP_ ..... .....,_, ._., °'' blo. M __ .._ JJJJ N.-,..ri ... f..,•rt1 M.nil'll MJ,.,., ,.0. h• 1171. t2UJ o.w ...... Onlll M.w! -... .., ,...... LatilM ~ ,. ,..,.,,. A..,.. ..... lnltM IMdll 11115 .._.........,. ..... c.-it1 .. PWtfil 11 CM1N flMI T•••'nsr tn4, "4Ml11 0-WW U.•d I I '4U671 = ml. ~ C-1 ,,.,..,.... ... ,,.... ...,,., ,.....,,....., _..... .,~ ... ..... :r·-....................... ..... . .,.,._, ..... . ..... dill :::: ••• c.. MtM. c.11111111.._, Is~ 8" cwr ... GM SMll'lftlYt • .... "·'' .,.., ""'""""' Man --~ ftftfa Postpmaement Jasmine Creek Project Delayed For the Mh time in three months. Newport Beach councUmen Monday night delayed action on a controverslal frvine Company townhouse project in Corona del Mar. 1be 84.7-a.cre Ja!mlne Creek develop- ment along San Joaquin Hills Road met v.•ith a storm ol protest from nearby residents who claim views will be block- ed, schools overloaded and traffic made From Pagel BOMBING ... by the Soviet Union. 'Jbt Flll crashed about 50 miles southwest of Haiphong, the U.S. Com- mand said, and Its two crewmen were listed as missing. It was the fifth or the controversial bom">ers lost since they returned to combat in Vietnam nearly three months ago. A high-ranking Soulh Vietnamese of· £iclal said the renewal of air attacks on Hanoi and Haiphong after a two-month suspension "is an effort to show-the American determination to negotia te from a position of strength and also lo persuade us t h a t the Americans will never let us down aod we can trust them and join in signing a peace agreement." The While House Aid tho bombing ,was ordered bf. Ntroo to· "cope ·with another enemy buildup" aod forestall a possible enemy offensive in South Vietnam. But some senior U.S. officials Jn Saigon said there were no indications that North Vietnam was preparing ror a large-scale offensive, although it has b e g u n its traditional dry season supply buildup to stockpile its forces in the south for next year. The Saigon command reported only 37 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong attacks in South Vietnam during the 24-hour period ending at 6 a.m., the lowest nwnber since the first week of North Vietnam's offensive acros.s the demilitarized zone in April t unmanageable if the project Is approved. The protests ~ame despite wbat Irvine Company offici&ls have termed "ex- haUJllve hours of meetings" with homeowners groups in the area to work out · tbe problems.. · We ire ~ible for halting the meetings at this point because we feel we were making all tbe conccssioru," said Larry Moore, Irvine associate planning adminlJtrator. "As late as last week, we got a new list from other homeowners of virtually every building that protruded even half a foot into somebody'e slgbt line," ~toore said. 1'111.is came despite massive C\J..l! made already ,In pad and bqilding heights." The homeowners who spoke in ~ .. position to the project presented a list ot new conditions they want to see added to the project if it is approwd. The new conditions include: Do pro- trusions into sight planes. soundproofing of the units to limit tralfic noise, guest parking arrangements, average number of bedrooms limited to 2.3 per unit and others. They also asked tho projtd be built in three stages with no more than 40 per- cent or the development bu.ilt in any one stage. · Moore asked ror the continuance when he saw that co1mcilmen needed more lime to digest all the new material and to give the Irvine Company achance to re- spond to each new condition proposed by tbe bomeo\Wlers. "We should expect much cooperation from the developer in this Cue .sihce the problems are of his own making," 'said Councilman .John Store, wbo has been working with homeowners and company officials to resolve the problems. He said the surrounding tra<:ls, most of which were developed by the Irvine Com· pany, have lots which were guaranteed unobstructed views or the water. He said this matter has to be taken into con- sideration before any action can be taken. Councilmen delayed action on the proj- ect until their Jan. 8 meeting. Freeway Surplus liMPLOYE OF THE YEAR City Aldo Condry OAIL Y '1"-0T ho" ....... OUTSTANDING EMPLOYE Newport S.ach's Pi11len Dondry, Pawn Receive Top Awar~ in Newport Hugo Condry and Dori>thy Palen received the top awards Monday in the first-ever ceremony honoring outstanding Newport Beach city employes. Condry. the city's maintenance superintendent, received a check for $500 as the employe of the year while Mrs. Palen, supervising clerk for t h e city's finance .department, received '300 as outstanding employe_ Both received plaques and checks from Mayor Donald Mcinnis durln& City Hall ceremooies, during which 35 other employes received $100 and $50 awards for distinguished service. Condry, who ha! been with the city since lSU, is oow bead of the division responsible for maintaining the city's pieces of heavy equipment -from pumps and compressors to refuse trucks. Condry's citation reads, in part: •·Jn addition to his management achievements , Mr. Condry bas been a model car:eer municipal employe. He ha! achieved that fine ba1ance of innmse loyalty and concern for the welfare of employes under his supervision." Mn. Palen, who bas been active in the United Way crusade and the city's.credit union , was honored for her "UMelflSb devotion to the city, the citizens ,of. Newport Btach and her .fellow plo .. em yea. . .. She began her career wllb tf>e cjty In 1946 as a clerk-typist ~ now ~ilea all the clerks in the finance CJepartment. Outstanding service awards of $100 were given to Irwin Miller, August Stan· dage, William Jordan, Jack Wirte, Paul Davis, Albert Levora and Katherine Villarreal. Distinguished service awards of $50 went to Robert Whiteford, Ted Kirkhart, Levi Rodriquez, Glen Welden, Nonnan Fleece, Darrell Phillipy, Gerri Shapiro, Ralph Van Houten , John Standage, Leon Hart, Michael Lenahan and Phyllis Fen· too. F..._P .. el EUN ZONE •.. domlniums --of. the ..... lnval· menl 11111 bad beoo made •tru<tf In tbt pro~ Illa lllld .. lllm ......... -lllll llll -.... ........,,.. -not renege on the dtal. Konwl3er also told muncllmeo he In- • .bted nearly $80,0llO In prellrl)lnary Plan5 for the PN>Jecl be.fore the J1wsult to halt it was fifed In October. • , Allegations by some r_.donll , that crime and dru1 u'e 11 running ~~pas!:l In the Fun zune area were put to rest by the ltltlmony of Newport B<•c~ !IOlic< Lt. Ed Clbbarelli. He t4fd councl.Jmtn~the crime tale ln th.:it area ii "tomel#hat Je11 Ui.n any Olher ·reJlOrlinl di.!ttjct In the city," •1¥1 that the dnlg Jl!Obltm there ts "no ,..,.. tban anywhOre else." Rogm told the other t.'Ouncllm1tt1 he ._would-r,alber-tee the m1tter tabled thin anytbfng else. ''l'm caught bttween a rock and a hard place," salcl Rogers, who represena· ~ Peninsula. ''I hive three homeowntrs groups in my are_a. Two oppo.se the proj- ect. one favors it .Md I wish I weren't here." Store said be lll1nka .t FOjeet in tht range of 33 unila could be econotnlcally feasible and wou.ki be lower 1n density than the eldJtlng prqpoat, · · "If the owner was-truly r~ponsive to community feelings, I thlnk 1be could have offered substantially lower densi· ty," he said. ' After the vote-to tabl~ the ariJ«:t. which meano JAK m1'1 go -to the ctrawJnj! board !!>· co,,.. up wlill an fC· ceplable project for the" site, Clool com· ulented. oo tile couitclI:a action .. m reference lo Beet's liwlult. "One man went to court and fOught this and he owns the·ferryboal,'' be said. "He favors increased commercial .use which. of course would lnctuse ttaffic and. iDc:rease ferryboat use.'' "He has 1 verled lnterest in UU u well." Croul said. Newport Football Team Defeated In Area Finals A Newport Beach fourth grade Dai football team came within four points of becoming Soot.hem OOUomia cbampioM in their divWon. President Ni.J:on halted the bombing and all other military operations above the 7.0tb parallel on Oct. 22 as a sign 0£ good will when it appeared tl)at a peace agreement with North Vietnam was }m.. minent. Newport Beach Agrees Also, Lawrence Acklin, Ralph BoodS, Floyd ~1artinez, Harold Siler, Merle ~filne, George Heck, stepben Wilkes, Joseph Hernandez, Ona\ Collins, Jack Brooks, Richard Crawford, Richard cox. James Sinasek. Rebecca Bradbury and Blanche Landis. The Mariners Park Rippe" ended their loog mard1 to the big game with. a ~ loss to tbe Downey all·atar tom at Wheelock Field ill Rlvenlde Stmday. "It was a real defemlve battle, witb the ·Ohly scorio& coming oo two oafetlts," Slld Bob Granger, rtertation pi.perriaor for tho Parb, Beacbea and ll«r<•lloo Department. Following presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger's news conference .report last week that his negotialiona with, Le Due Tho of North Vietnam were deadlocked, and his chirae that the North Vtetnamese were to blame, the United States resumed the mining of Haiphong harbor Sunday. One 852 went down 30 miles northwest of Hanoi with six crewmen missing. the command said. It was U:!e first B52 to crash on North Vietnamese territory. The other B52 limped back to Thailand, like the B52 that was downed in November, and crashed 100 miles southeast of the Udom Air Base. Its seven crewmen bailed out and were rescued. Defendants Say ' Newsman Knew • Story Was Hoax SEAITLE (AP) -Both defendants In a federal fraud trial have te!Ufled that their alleged victim, fonner Newsweek contributing · editor Karl Fleming, knew he w'as involved lti a hoax before the tran&actioo was completed. Donald S. Murphy and William L. "Jack" Lewi.! took the stand in their defense Monday ln U.S. District Court . The 1tase was to resume today and, possibly, go to the jury late this af- ternoon. The government contends Lewis ob- tained $30,000 from Fleming for an in- terview with Murpby, who was p)lling as D. B. Cooper. That waa tbe name given by a man wbo hijacked a NortbweJt Airlines jeUlner and disappeared aller bolling out of the Boeing Tl1 with '200,000 ransom on Thanksgiving Eve lr71 . The impenonalion becatnf' obvtous during some 12 h®rs of taping and film- ing Feb. 23, Murphy tesUfit!d. "I made so many m!Jta.kea, J even thought he knew it was not lrue," the SG- year-old Bremerton, Wash. I and developer said. "When there was a prol>- lem, he (Fleming) helped me." Commisswners Out to Dinner Newport Beach Parka, B<adtts and Recre.alion commlsslonera will meet tonight at 6 o'c.k>ck In city hr.11 to make recommendaUons for their 1973-74 apttal budcet. But such weighty matters 1rtn't IUl>" posed. to take too lone. The c:om- missioner• are expected to ld))um about 6:30 to go to the Anclent Mariner restaurant for their annual Otrlstrau dinner. - Taxpayers pick up the tab for Ole even- Int, a Rec:rtatlon Department otflcWl said, but he noted that comml1akmer'1 are not paid for any of the time they spend on city buslncss the rest of the year. To. Badham's Land .Help The a"'ards program was instituted in June during talks between city officials and the City Employu Association as a me:ans of giving recognition to the people \\'ho keep the city operating. The Rippers nuido II to Ille Sou- champlonshlpo -riding oo big -tn the Newpiji't~~ and Orailat a.may flag footbaD'Pl~fis. NewporJ.. Beach A-1onday accepted an offer by "-ssemblyman Robert Badbam to help get excess state land on the market. Councilmen voted ' unanimously to enlist Badham's aid in untangling $16 million worth of state '1and in the city made excess by the elimination of the Pacific Coast Freeway. Badbam said earlier Monday he would be willing to put legislative pressure on the California Division of Highways if he was asked to do so by the city. Highway officials have implied they wiU move slowly in disposing of the land because they say traffic corridor studies are still under way. They have also said nothing Jess than full market value can be accepted for the land. Several state-<>wned paroels are sought by the city's Park!, Beaches and Recrea- tion Department ror park use, but city aides say they' have been thwarted in developing the sites because of state reluctance to negotiate. The aites include tbe Pacific Electric righ\-o!·Wa)'. jQ.,W.§l NtowPQ!'\, a par;el next to Balboa Coves, the lower Hoag Hospital parking Jot, a parcel adjacent to the Community Youth Center in Corona del Mar and the Cliff Drive church site. Badham said he doubl.s lbt city woold have to pay full value for lbe land, but be .. id he doesn't think any sped& deal• can be worked out tor it. He was reler- ring to the practice of leasing tbt land for $1 per year if lt is used as a park. Badham said he will first coolacl 1he FroMP .. el FRANKLIN ... today with t~~ U.S. ?!agi'1.r::.te's o!Cice said Be ~t: recited the details of his escape which Jed to the arrests. lt said Beaty admitted fonnulottna: the escape plan with the help of Venceremos member!. It quoted Beaty as telllng agents that Jean and Bruet llobson drove him to a mountain cabin near here on Franklin'• iMtructions. Beaty stayed there a TnQJrth with Bruce e.-,, :tnd Mn. Hoboon brought supplies, the F"Bl said. Franklin then lMtn>cttd Beaty to stay ot Seabock'a borne, wbere. Newman pro- vided food and acted aa a lookout and Seabock gave Beaty ft,000 and phony ldtntlfie1tlon pepen for t b e namn Stephen Hurley and Daniel Collins, tbt affldavlt said. --it 13Jd Beaty told lbt FBI Franklin then provided a car for blm and SeaboCk to g~t to Ft. Defiance. Ariz., but the first Wffk of December ~urned bare -r·hut!i Noble gave him •nd Mn. Hoblon <lothlni >nd • rtne wltb ammunitiOn • The FBI uld the blrborlnll charge against Franklin ant: \be other meant "Cl\rinC aJd and 1.~or to a f\lgltlve frc.m justice,'' but gave no detail• except thllt Btaty "' "Jy was tho fugitive. • ' ' • highway people and the governor and, if that dOesn't work, he will introduce legislation aimed at getting the land back into circulation. Missing Mesa Children Found Two Costa Mesa children weren't in enough trouble for searing their parents half to death by disappearing for three oours Monday afternoon. Tbe youths, 8 and 9 years old, were supposed to be at Heller Park. After an hour's frantic search, their parents called authorities. Newport Beach and Colla Mesa palice launched a search. Newport Beach Detective Darryl Youle found the youngsters about two hours later. He said lbey were stealing Christmas lights from the front of a home on 11th P-1ace. From Pagel APOLLO ... immediately how close the landing was to the actual aiming point. Wearing whJte · coverall! and tennis shoes, the astronauts one-by~ne climbed out of the spacecraft and stepped into the orange life raft, assisted by three frogmen . Schmitt, the geologist who was the first U.S. scientis t in space, came first. He was followed by Evans, a former Navy combat pilot who once served on this vessel, and then by Cernan, the gray· haired commander and three-time space flight veteran. A white chop~ hovered overhead and a basket chair on a rope was lowered to the raft and the astrooautJ, one by one, were pulled up into the helicopter for the short. flight to the decka of this carrier. White-suited sailors llned the decks, taking pictures and straining for "a look at the last of America's Apollo heroes. nien, at tbe two-day Southern Califor- nia Athletic Federation champlonab1ps, the Rippers btll a team from Omard, 8-0, and the South Bay learn, IG-0, ,lbt same day to mate it into the floal game. "This is a real accomplishment con- sidering moat areu send all-star team.. to the chUnplonshlpg,'' 11id Granger. "we-sent oo.e ·ttam that bad played to- gether all year." Mtmbers of. lbt team art: Gary Coot, Robert Anthony, Kevin Howard, G•ry Cohen, Mark McLaren, Steve DISlanlsla. Tom LaGnndeur, Bob Nettles, Mite Shepllin!son, Marie Ban<t~ Mal Durl<et and Topher Cramm. The boys were coached by Tim ParstL City Manager Chosen LOS ALTOS HILLS (APl -Bruce G. Lawson, 27, a.ssl.stant city manager of Belmont, was chosen by the city councll Monday aa tbe new city manager of Los Altos HlllJ. lie replaces Mw I Frlllchle, wbom tbt council fired afttr almOll four years in the position. 1 WOULD YOU BELIEVE- THAT THERE ARE STllJ, COMPANIES ' • • • • • • • • • • . . . . . . . . . . WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS THEY SELL PERFORM 1 WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON SERVICE? WHO WANT EVERY JOB DONE PERFECT.LY 1 WHO MAINTAIN COMPLETE INTEGRITY 1 Y~S, "VIRGINIA," THERE IS AN Al DEN'S! (TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.) ALDEN'S CARPETS o DRAPES 1663 l'lac•ntlo Aft. • COSTA MISA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30-FRI. 9 to 9-SAT. 9130 to 5 • ' • • . orange ~oast EDITION I ' VOL. 65, NO. 354, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOANIA • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 19n • Paper's 2nd . . Employ'! , . . Gets Cell · WASHINGTON ( A P I The Waslllilaton llureau el!lef of the Los • ' Dory Fislier' s Body Locat;ed The,body ol Newport Beach do')'· man Allan Knight was discovered today .by-llahermen Oil<\ hall mile east of the Huntington Beach Pier. .. Huntington BeaCh police said the body was 150 yards from shore when it was discovered by fisher- men on the boat Portunus at about 10:15 a.m. That s~t was close to where Knight and his 3-year-otd daughter ~trici~ ~isappeared Dec. 11. • . Angeles Times was held In contempt of ~------------• court today and order<d jailed !or rerus- lng to surrender tapes Qf an Interview two Times reporter:; conducted with Alfred c. Baldwin m. • Baldwin Is slated to he. a prime witness in the trial of seven men accused in the June 17 hreak-ln and allegod hugalng ol Democratic National committee bead· quarters at lhe Watergate complex here. O:Lief U.S. Dislrict Judge John J. Sirica ordertil the bureau chiel, John F. Mesa Council OKs New Dog • C11tcher Law Lawrence, incarcerated overnight and Costa Mesa city cotmcilmen Monday alUlOWlced that the bearing would con-night gave their unanimous approvaJ to tinue Wednesday. an emergency ordinance which em. The TUnes contended the tapes co~ powers the city's three new dOg catchers tained confidential Information protected to go to work. by the First Amendment's guara;itee of nie new ordinance takes effect Dec. press freedom. · 27, tbe same date animal wardens Ted After bearing the Times attorney con-Hoffmann, Dennis Jefcoate and Cliff tend the revelation ot interview tapes Florence take over the dog patrol chores aqd other matmals will "directly erocte from the county. the people's right to know," Sirlca said Councilmen voted in the law with only he believes the information does not a few minor changes. Instead of three merit privilege. animals -as had been suggested In the But he added he was reserving his draft -Costa Mesans will be allowed to right to change bis mind before be hands keep four. down 1 final written decision which could On tbe advice of Mayor Jack Hammett aime in two or three days. local hospitals and phyaiCians further will A ~-~, Tlmoth ~• 'd he instructed to report all animal bites to ·1.uu.es •~wmey, Y vu.e, Sil city .hall in ordfr to ,.._.ent ~ ... ,_ that If the material were pniduced tt . . r-· ...-- • • , I • • ... . • Fairgroun_ds -. Land to-Go-· • • • Up For Sale. James E. Pottertieid, manager of the Orange Co!!olJIJ:o_f<.ln_C!ls!a_ !!!~. "8lcl today that the fair board intends· to dispose of $1.5 million worth of wiused £airgrounds proper:ty as "surplus" by June. 1• The sa1e. to he11i'anc!Iec1 tiy uie eenenii Services AdtninistratJon, will Involve ap- proximately 33 acres aOjacent to the fair picnic· area near Arlington A'f1!11\!e and · Fairview Road. ... Porterfield said thi proceeds of the sale are urgenUy needed to speed the fair toward an improvement program which. will "put a new face on ev~eytblng." "If we're going to make it,"'we're going to have to do something fast," Said Porterfield. adding that the fair board was "a little tired" of patching and pain- ting the old lairgrounda bulldlngs. , "We're ~ renting some of ,lhe buildings we should be and there are otheis which are illegal in terms of fire regulation.!. We want to replace those and upgrade our more m o d e r n by,il~si" be added. The lrur manager pointed wt that some $3»,000 will be spent on the er;- istlng Sports and R«reation Building alone. PlanS are to remodel It into 1a theater.type convention center .\a n d thereby provide an : ~ternailye to the Anaheim ConventioD eeDter for large pibd~ .. • Ill --.------·--... DAILY l'ILOT Slilff llllefl Be's The Worst Costa, Mesa Fire Chief John Miirshall's "complete incompetence in . ~e game of golf'" was rewarded by Maynr ~ack Hammett during Mon· day nlghl's cily cnuncil meePI!g. Marshiill Oeft) scored 172nd out of" ' 172 J)Jayei's during a:recent Toys fbr Fdirview tournament. He was · given a trophy of a goller breaking his club and a resolution recogniz- ing his incontpetence. lll)d scheduling a midnight ceremony at the 18th hole "for the burning of.bad score cards." ' ' woold !111ve. "a drLof""ailthelJ 111111!~. <el· tr;:''!:"'= ~ O:"":J::.i fect.,on the abtlltr news; lut::UMI to _ 00g liceme ~tee from lM-ll'•••t Si lo•· perfonn lls news p...., ~-City olftc:lalj ~ tllol mer-waa Othet proJ<ds -. vama lilifacb .. ~ ailll- ol ... mer~ ~ llll!i'.al'.;;~~ ol ollier ~ Porterlfeld said. which Is fUndameil!al to the ·-~ to beip suitaln 1)1 e granted b)' the nrtt -· ~ -deJlii'tiifelit'• -lllO,lllO lint year budge!. Herbert J. Miller J'r., attorney for Costa Mesans will find that the aew T?nes' reporters Jack N~ and Ronald ordinance represents no s!gnifictnt J. Ostrow, told the ciourt that the First departure lrom animal statutes which ~endment protection of press and have been .on the boo~ previous!)'. But speech freedom protects not only the with three full.time adimaJ wardens in-111!'!!_me~ but~~-peop!~ and thelr stead Qf_ooe-county_dogcatcber on the democracy. job, it is likely the regulations will be t:n- "We're speaking of the public's right, forced to a greater extent. not just the newspapers'." A major change in Olsta Mesa's Truman's Kidney Now Functioning, Doctors Report KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPI) -Doctors treating Harry S Truman sald today the seriously m former President's kidney function Improved.and be was aware that people were around him. • "He follows people's movements with hiS eyes, but has not spoken to ..them," said Re.search Hospital spokesman John Dreves at a morning medical briefing. "Kidney output bas lncrea5ed dµring the last)4 hours/' be said. "He continues to receive adequate nutrition even toougtf protein Intake remains curtailed .. " Dreves said Truman, Ill. had his sec- ond straight resttul night and "seems ?Qore alert this morning." At 7 a.m. PST, Truman's blood pressure was 140 over 80, pulse ao, respiration 2t and temper atw:o fr/ ~f:i:'· Monday night, Dreves said TMJman's kidney function dropped to iess than 10 percent efiective. · animal regulations concerns SC><:alled "non-domesticated" animals such u lions, coyotes, snakes and other lliild animals. Where formerly prohibited, animals such as these are now tJ,lowed pro'f'ided their owners qualify for a permit from the Chiel of Police. Mn. Shelba Marsh, 614 W. Bay St.. ~ woman who bas run into trouble with city hall !or her harbdring of raccooo.s, D100Uys and a coyote, could not he con- tacted today on whether she will attempt to be the first to seek a pennit. Missing Mesa Children F ouna 'bo Costa Mesa cblldren weren't in eoougb trouble fOr scaring their parents hall to death by disappearing for three boun Monday afternoon . nie-youth11 a and 9 years · old, were supposed to bt at Helier Park. After an hour's frantic search, their J>(lttRts called autbortties. Newport Beach and Costa Mesa police launched a search. • Newport Beach Detective Darryl Youle lound the youngsten ahout two hours later. He said they were 1tealing Christmas lights from the front of a home on' 18th Place. The sutiJ;di"¥"pOSs16le dispC1'81 has heen under 'discussion with the Division of Fairs' and E:ipositions ~ the Depar1· AboUt ISO Costa Mesa pprk proponents ment of General Services for aboUt one won a 'promise Monday night ,from month. -, Mayor Jack fiammft• that ..city ofiicials Although not needed by the lair, the Wo\Jld become Immediately Involved in property is conslder.ed choice and JW; _ _.:,_ --- been eyed throogh the years h)i numerous . interested ·parties, according Chi}" d to Porterfield. -Bepting S1,18pect Jailed In Costa Mesa "ll we were an industry. we couJd sell , it tomorrow.~' predicted the fair manager. "But we're not, so we have to go through General Service•. This means that we · have ·1 to offer it to other governmen'tal agencies, such as the city or the county, before we can sell it to private int"erests. '"' Porterfield said the decision earlier tfiis mooth by the lair board to dispose ol the property means that the acreage can now tie appraised and/hrochures printed advertising its sale. "We're expecting tQ sell It by June 1. There'll be ·no problem selling tb~t prop- erty," he' said. . SUNDANCE KID'S SON, ;1i, DiES MISSOULA, Miint. (U!'I) -Robert Longbaugb, 72; son of the famed Western outlaw known as "Sundance Kid" died Monday in a fire In an old four ... tory hotel. Fire offlcials aald one other prnon, John Schon, au elderly blind man, also was killed wben name swept the Priess Hotel. The resl ol the hotel's 14 resldenll, many of them wilversity students, escaped without injury. ·police arrested a tl·year-old Costa Mesa trudt driver Monday on suspicion of shaking his girl friend's Z..yeai-old daug!itei: unlU he broke her forearms and the Child became uDCOniscious.' The mll.lJ, identified as Rusself "Rusty" Von Taylor of 118 Victoria st.1 ls in clty jail today accused of lelnny child heating. Police allege he administered the violeiit shakfng as a punishmE:_nt to litUe Dana Ma~e Gendreau because 11be bad been crying. Officers became involved in the case when Mrs. Betty Gendreau and· her boyiriend sought ireal-t !or !ht, girl at Hoag Community HOIPitll. Investigators said that the girl bad black and blue marks on the backs of her legs and the insides of her wr1Bts ·when she uas admitted for observation. She was also s.ald to heve a fresh 'ffJd mark on her cbf-t and fractures in both fore- '"""· -Mi's. Gadreau, who shares the V\o- torta street address with1Taylor, said ber hoylria1cl admlnlstl!ted mouth.to-mc.oth reoulcltatlon to'tht! llirl when she became UDCODlcious and a~ ~ have swallowed her tongbe . ' exploring the expansion of Tanager Park. The promise was in resporuJe ~ a de- mand by ~eowners and Orange Coast College students tbat the park in the Buccola housing tract be~ up.anded to provide su.itable play areas for more than 350 children. Speakin gin behalf of the park sup- porten, Orange Coast College teacher Dr. Al ~ler told the council that the present 2.5-acre part proposed for the area IOUth of Adama Avenue and east of Estancia Drive does not have enough play' ifea for the tract's children. I Dr. Painter suggested that the city "buy at least a portion" of an adjacent Newport·Mesa Unified School District IC"'1ol site to·utend the park. Original plans for constructlon of a schocil and jointly-used playground have been canceled, according to , C 1 t Y ldanager Fred Sorsabal wbo said he has received unofficial notification that the Ille ml\)' -be declared surplus. However, Sorsabal adtled that ad· diUooal funds for Tanager Park im- provements were not i m m e d I a t;e I y available because most of the money in thlt particular park wne were almed for Conica park. The city n\anagel' said further that Costa Meaa was "COmmitted" to dewlopinc llOme :II acrea of the ruture Fairview Part: wblCh lies within 600 yards of the Mesa Verde housing clevelopmenl .. l think the council muat aet Itself some priorfUei. I do not feel we can 8UJ>- port botl1 projects,:• Soruhll told the au- dience. Tanager Park improvements budgeted (See MESA PARK. Pice ZI })-eves added, "10 percent is the Critical point. Below 10 percent is ln- idequate." He said he could not be more specific. Reporters asked how the 88-year~ld fonner Presklent ,as able .to hold on day after day end. Dreves said, "That's just President Truman. I can't define that." u.s. Loses 2 lia .28~ 8 Men yarts Played 9 Days STAFFORD. England (UPI) -A rour- man team from Stafford's New lM Pub baa claimed a world record by playing car11l''""'top !or nine da)'S and nlabls. SAIGON(AP)-U.&plane1madethe to bomb .It lnto .aubmiulon would not heaviest • attack to date on the Hanoi-fcfrce It to t1ccept hls peace terms. Haiphong area durinfr the night, but It Hanoi claimed that three Bszs and . also wd costliest to the United Stalea. Uu... fighter-bombers were shot down The U.S. Command reported two B52 and aakt a number of the ruen were CIJ>' heavy bomhera and ..,, FIJI filhte~ lured. The U.S. Command said It had no 1 bomher loll ai1d eight American llltra additional loael to report for the Ume _ ....... Hanoi said si• ol the miss'·• helng, leavlna open the" ponlbillty that '"-• ,.. other American pianel may have been men -the crew of one o1 the BAI -lost but lbe aearch for the crewmen Is ...,.. captur<d and presented at a aewa 1tW under way. conftnlice In the North Vlotnameae It waa the hetYlat IOA in a single day capitol, a lew .houn later. (See ltoriol, that t11o1 U-Stala hu IUl!er..t since Pageo M-1 • "-Rtloa ol Ibo bombfni ol Noiih Vlei-...., lul April. Seven ather American al..-...,. AWloulh U Bas have been loll in the -la' Tballand. the U.S. Olmmand fl\ ._._ •~• ~ t born~ Mid " "·~ ---I .., &&~ ~-· -v-~ ~t n<arlf 100 ~ve 6ooii a,laa p Ibo tnam war, ..... =.,,;;==-~~ ~.~.J!h-~~ ~~by eilel!l1 .But It said Preoldent Nillllll a altlnl~ mM -ip II ol 1li9 at~k wlttl ~-. ) .. . which the United Statea resumed the air wa,r north of tbe 2.(ltb par.allel w11 un.. dericor<d by lndicallons that more than 100 B5ls were uaed in the rai<U. Soorea of smaller Ught•-bomher1 lrom hall a dol011 baae1 in Thailand and -•al 7th Fleet ckn'ier• In, lbe Tooltln <Ml lllO took part. U.S. officials reportad, One -1or ·America< official sald hn- dredl ol planet took part in the raids and sooe t.,...i. In the llinoi·U.ipl10nc tn. duttrlal c:omplu were altaCbd for the Orsi Umo In tbe war. U.S. ......... aald the two 8611 probo ab!J were hit by SAib. the _,. air mlaalla auppiled to North.. Vlelnam • • by !lot llo>lel l/nlon. 11ie Fill craabed ' tilOUt • IO miles ·IOI!~ ~I llal......,., !hi U.S. ~,,,. mafi'Ukl. and fta •reiew11Mlil 1"eN • Usted as missing. It was lhe filth of lbe controversial bom,Jt.n Jolt alnce tbey returoed to combat In Vietnam nearly hree monlh1 qo. A hlglwankin( South Vtetnameoe o!· Ocial uld the rtnewal of air attacks on Hanoi and Haiphona after a tw1>1DOOth 1U1penlloo "la ap errort to lhow the Aarlcan determination to negotiate l""'l a · ~ltlon of ttreaath and alto to p.nuade DI t h a t the Amerlcona will fleVI(' let us down ·~ we caa lnlat them and join In llanlllf[ a peaee llrffmenl. •• The Wblte "°""' aald the bombing was onler<d=llUlll to "oopo wllb another "'1111\Y bu " and--tall a -1blo _,y ve In South Vfelnam. ' Bui .... -U.S. ofllcials In S.Jaon ,,..i.s Ibero ...,, ljo lndlcatlon1 that North 1S. IOMBJNG, .... ~ 11 . ' '' ' Today's Ffnal N.Y. Stocks e TEN CENTS • Astronauts Clo se Out Safe Trip ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (UPI) -Apollo 17's last lunar pioneers spluh- ed down safely and right on targefin the SWHlrenched South PacHic t o d a y , writing a dazzling finish to John F'. Ken-. nedy's "great..-new American Cnterprise" .of conquering the moon . "It.'s a beautiful day," shouted mission commander Eugene A. C6nan mOmenls before three orange-and-white parachutes lowered the beat~seared spacecraft America through billowy wblte clouds' in+ to the gentle ocean at 11:25 a.m. (PST), about 400 mile! southeast o1 Samoa. Helicopters from th.is World War n a~t carrier sped to the spacecraft, bobbing gently 3.1 miles away , and car· ried Ceman, Ronald E. Evans and Jack Scflmilt back II• the flight deck and a ir: .. mphant welco.1.ir.jl ceremony after their 1.3-mlllion mile journey to the moon. "This is America and the crew is doing fine," radioed Ceman as he and bis fellow astronauts awaited the arrival of Navy frogmen. "We've all got our sea legs." Twelve astronauts spent a total of 80 hours, 35 minutes on the lunar swface during the $25-billion Apollo program. But the six moon landings were only part of the storyi. There were 11 flights between 1967 and 1972, lnvolvtng 33 astronauts who lOgged 104 daya, 5 hours 3 minutes while traveling 18,010,337 mil~ through space. In Hoqston, Cern:an'a wife Barbara 'flaahed a.thumhl .. p' s1gii·-ibo .... Apollo 17 hftL~-!!~tet. She JJuaod ood ~sed their ......... dalighter Tr..,, •. The tli•lea:s return to Earth •aa a lit- ting fmale for lbe last planned U.S. u:- peditlon to the moon -and perhaps Jts last In thl1 century. It came 11 year's and seven months alter President Kennedy proclatmed the goal of reaching the moon within the 1960s. · The Apollo ... 17 spacecraft was packed witb 258 pounds of some of the )'OWlgest and oldest lunar rocks and aoll yet recovered by man, as well as thousands or souvenirs and five mice whose brains (See APOU..0, Page l)i Bouncer Knifed At Ooh Improves Kenneth Moclt, a 25--year--old bar bouncer who had his throat cut during a brawl at C.O.Sta Mesa's Pier 11 club Mon- ~. was saJd to be Improving from his knife wounds today at Orange County Medical Center. Medical officials said the ltnlfinl vie· Um from Anaheim "as iJ'I "satisfactory" icondition following surgery for a punctured thorax and numerous sluh wounds on his arms and tboulden. Mock, of 202.f E. La Palma Ave., became involved in a ftght wttb a. youth early Monday which spilled from the in- side or the Newport Boulevard night opot into the parking lol Wlin...., to the Incident told police that Mock's~ assailant produced 1 black· handled knife with a IOU< to lb: Inell blade and stashed him repealedlr. Cuat Weu.,er Huy sunshine la the ... , the weather lady -11 · lor Wednef. day. with sllghlly cooler limper• t..... Highs in the Illa. °"""1Jlht Iowa will be In the IOI. Nlahl and moJ111ng low lo( 11 ezpe<ted Wedri<8Clay. ·-; . JNSmE TOD~~ r ... 1 .. v•ars •oo. Ralph Rat. Ill! disc..,.,..d he coold•'t afo ford a ChriilmOI tree for hil three douokttrt, 10 h• grobMd a dozen oro.n.gc cmt11 and made his °"" ChriilmOI l>illoOt. Sta •torv on POii< M. ' L~_..,.. r ._ . ,_ ... -.. --. ............... .... ,.""''',,,., ...... . .... ............ .... l w --.. . . sa~:.1 _._ . .... "''' .... ~ .. ,, ·-. ---. ............. ~ .. ...,.. ..... ,. '' • • DAILY PILOt r .. 1401, °""""" 1,, 1911 Dial-a..(;] uh Whittier Clerk Used Plto~1i Ba11aits Man Leads • • .1111 -1\\'} -no pliao>o lloolr._~ ._;. wbel to do H two_.... be-. ·Cut Ille rtctlver cor.i while y<11'rt ~ 14 dlllfor belp, IO "- J-llllprcvlled. • \ ' ' WiklChase ' A TRB-!t-YBAR-OLD, 124-pound clerk for a comblnetion dry cleaning atore- (U 11!1Joo. tjobbmd the two mulled instruders wtllt the phone -Iver Mon- ci.y ll1jbf Ind ...,t them neeing. •• ~ , A 'Wlllllkr: ma~ '!It ams\111. 1fter leading pa~oo wltlt uioy de3crftle~ u a wacty a wild cbaM thtouglt ll"'1lOl'I l Sbe was working alone w~n two men -one with a kntfe -walked into the 1tore and told her to open the cash register. Beach and a Mtu ~y. 111 TOLD THEM t wouJdn't," she sald. "l knew I bad to do something." She N!hed to the wall phooe and dialed the operator, but the man with the latlfe elulled lhrongh the reeelver rord. So she gr&b!>ed the wire and clubbed both tnen with the nocelver. Police said ljobert J. Hlllvo-'bad been arguing with both bts ~ and Jltlltlcnd in NewpGrt &acli llmlday before be waa •-IPiJtninl JU car m clidb at Ibo ~tlon of NtWJll)rt lloul ... nt ollll VII J,Jdo. •• ·Newport Alters ~arlier · Decisi9n, "" ~ixes Higl1 Ri~ . . , '* Re.....inc an earller dectllOn, Newport 1\each city <ouoc1lmen Monday night '1Jmed down a controverslal. hi2h-denslly .. condominlwn Oi'l the site of BaJDoa's Fun Zone. Councltmon ·beard more than ttuee urs ot. debate before voting 4 to 3 to ..{Ible inde.finitely the JAK Construction Com~ .propoaal i,, build the 47.unlt .pro Jed. CouDcllmen voting for the tabling ac- ;llon told the developer tlley did not want ·to see plana lot the 1.2-acre site on Palm <ilreel ldlled altoeelber. • But ibey did Say more sttidy should be rit.vea to alteml.tive commercial develop- ment -tncbvUng possible reVampirul: of the FUD Zone .-or lower-density resiaen- tlal ..... Mayor Donald Mclnllls, Vice Mayor 'lloward Roaers, Councilman Milan Do!tal and Councilman Jofl!I Store voled for tbe tabUng Action while Councilman ·RJcbard Qooul, Carl Kyiiila and P~ Ryckoff voted against it -though for different te8$0ns. Kymla and Rycioff wanted to till the project altogether and retain the core commercial area in Balboa. Crout felt the project should be approved ln its en- tirety. "We have got to sit down and make a decision, gang,11 Croul salti ... We have heard the optnloos of everyone in the world on this one. We have already made a decision so why don't we stick to It!" Crout was referring to a 5 to 1 vote by the oouncil last summer that overturned a planning collUlliMion dental of the pro~ ect. 'lbe council act.ion was taken to court by Balboa Ferry owner Allan Beek. The judge ruled the coonctl bad to bear It · again and mate a new decision. .. l'rontP .. el MESA PARK. •• for the current fiscal year consist ol bJ... stallat.ion of lawns and sprinklers. But Jami Mancle, a leader of the park pro- ponents, said an activity center, including playground equipmenl for children aged 8-13, is needed a~ well. While city councilmen took no oUiclal acticm m their request, both Mayor Jack Hammett and Councilman W l 11 a r d Jordan sald they would meet with Dr. Painter's group to work out a solution. One of these is likely lo be formation of an aasessment district for the specific purpose ol Tanager Park improvements, as wu suggested by Councilman Robert M. Wilton. City Attorney Roy June said .. such a aelf.tllioi enUty could legally be fanned by the homeowners. Meanwhile, residents of the area ·claim the vacant property ls becoming ll rol- lectlon place for trash. ·"tt's becoming a dump ar'a and tf something Is not done, it will cost the. ci- ty ju!t to 'move out an the trash," said Marvin Obemdorfcr, a member cit the group. A dl!!talled survl!!y cond~ , by the homl!!Owners in their tract showed that 138 out of 175 preferred construction of an acUvlty center. . OWINCOAST ... DAI LY ?!LOT n. or.... C..t DAILY f'IL.01', ... ~ It CClrl'tblMll .. N-...... It .......... 11¥ ~ er.,.. °""' """""'"" ~ ..... ,.,. ... It ..... -......... .....,. ..,..... """''" ""' C.t. M.u, ~ hid!. """'""... ._.....,.._...._ 'Yllley, u.-...... ~ ...... ~ Siii ,,_ ~...._ A .... .,..._., . edlllllln II .1 ........ _....,.. .... Slllld..,.. n. ,,.1nclprtl ,,,,,.,,.., •• ,....,, " ., ,. W..t •• ., s....., ~ .... ClllfM'n ... ,,... k•fftt N. WaH f'rw1W..llftf ...... Jaclr l. 1Ctrlrr. vie. ~ w OMnil MIMflr' TIIOMOI lwrll ..... ~•• A. Mwplii110 MMll ..... o!llffl:w Clt..tH H. L.01 llc•ar4 P. Holl AttfdWAUM91neMI ... c... ..... JJO Wo1t l•Y Sfraat -.nlltf A.1Ur1111 P'.O. ka l l60, t2'2• ---""""" 1t1t111 am ........,. ......,.. l,.lflN -....1 m ""'°'' A...._ "'"'""""' 11M111 1111S ~ ......... -c ........ , -"""' 14 C.l"""'i .... T .. 1,ti 111 171•1 '4Ml21 Ct•.._. Al1ic1Ws1 '42·1171 -., .... ___ _ ~. ... ...... IWtlei, lllW"""""' ......., _,.....,.~~...- """'-• ,....,.c1i ... ....,. .,.... _.. ...... " OIWYfilM ~· _.., cl.-,,..,... -.. aitt. ..... ~ ......,.IM W ctn'lor~ ..... ................... --11 .. ,,, INlll!llr1 miff,..,.,. ....,... .... """'llfr· Trulis Asks Dismissal, 'Was Fooled' .. Soul!Ll.aguna D~I Company owner Thomas· 'Trulis' lawyer loday urged an Orange County Superior Court judge to dismiss r,pe and aex perversion charges against the defendant"" tbe groonds tbat be -"acting ho!ieslly and in good fattb" al the time.of the alleged offens•5. Attorney Tom LUdiow told Judge Claude M. Owens that Trulli, aa, geq. ulnely belimd tjie •ttracllve Fountain Valley hfuftcie with whom he .allegedly bad ...ual inlem>une lasl Jon. J wa 2D and not 17. ' ... Ludlow Aid ·the lllleri<d victim ad· mltted, lmell. ii.it Trulli hid been suffe\oed' '"""' obe told him after the alleged o11 ..... bod. been committed that shi ..U Juel t~ _. away from her J8tlt birthday. Police eald the victim told them that TrulJs and Eugene ImoodJ Jr., 85, told her before she submitted to their smial advances in Newport Beach that they were Universal Studio executives looking tor the kind ()f talent they felt she possessed. Imondi again !ailed to show up in court today for trial. A Warrant baa been issued for his arrest while TtuIJs remains to face charges of rape and sex perversion in what is now a nonjury pr~ ceeding. U Judge Owens de.:t:es the motion for dismissal, Ludlow will put Trul.is into the witness box as lhe sole defense witness. Ludlow argued today that the alleged victj.m was "no stranger" to tbe kind of sexual perveraloo allegedly committed by Tnilis. The lawyet told Judge Owen> tbat the alleged victim bad participated in that kind of conduct with her boyfriend and with her gir.llrieod. F1·anklin Named Presiding Judge Pairolmu T.ll>&nlth said •lfolvonon . ~ off towar<fi Lk1n Isle, and 1 Jii1Stjjjili -a tntCk AW him comlng', jumped oat just before Halvorson's auto struck hts mail tnict on Via OpaUo. O!ficer Smitb aid be mad< I tl-lun> In his squad car--as Halvorson came back across the'Lldo Ille bridge and lilll 1fahl ol bim. • But bC,.id _..., "bn bid been watching R'alVOl'lbn'1 eatUei antics Poin~ northbound on N e w po r t Boule°Y8rd. • •· He said b~ .gave P!ftlit al\d ..., HalvO!'_son't auto~ iim I '.l;!JI. ltibt al Hospital~ and, ,contl?Nt ~ at speeds .,pproachlng •miles porliour. 1 ~ All three lanes at 17th Strwt were Ge.t""iJ t!! ~·~ ... l' .. "!_ ~:~·~~=~1:J:=~ -' -VolklWagen ,Jtappid"al ' tlio 118111 IJ> Wllll~_:;n!fnal hattci!8" Cheryl '§.D>ltl! holds Tawni , cub even though they can't see it. Children were, pareiiUy saw l)im comlil( aild cjUlclily Ru""11':LeNarz, 10; Anabebr!.':',illd"Peggy Martinez, •lll!!lli -il'9, . up of blind youngsten w)lo· loom " 1 -~ made-a right llirn. '" ~· • -• ..... . ~ Halv ~ ipfd tJiroUah I a. lD-12,. Stm!o!Jl learn about'..U. lour-month-<>ld 1100-Country .Safari Monday as gue!ls of -lb~ -par'.. +-t~lbo?-lald..dlel 1111 nd ~_,.,_ s~S .. ,_ :_ ' El al C 11~~ ----. ... -.:.~~~:~s;;:i~:: ~ .:,_. : ~' . fate s ector 0 ege --. . =i::.r~~~ ml tWo .. .... &.~· . ' . ... SmlthA!ill!IJ~1l')lll,chqef11ftb .. .,...,,-~ .Aff" · . N" ' v·. '. ·-·-:r:::;=~r:==.: l1 " --~ _,." . IrIDS IXOll S ·1ctOi!lr · said, Hal•--.. -off rdly \l~==-_;-;:;·;2 ~·-~.,,.=· =-==~]. ' -· · ' • ... J , , tree "!'118-.~ clrdot·on v!a Lido. TONJGHT - NEWPORT MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Regular ml!!eting Costa Mesa High School Lyceum, 7:30 p.m. BASKETBALL -UCI v. Central Iowa, Crawford Hall, 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY, DEC ZO CXJAST cO~· i:0-1.LF;.GE DISTRICT -Regular board meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. BASKETBAU. -Costa Mesa . v. Moorovia, Mesa Gym, 8 p.m, "MOONCHil.J)REN" -South Coast Repertory Theater, Wednesday through Sonday, 8 p.m. .. l'r.oMPage.l ' ' "It is my pleasure to announce 45 votes for Richard Nixon for Pres.ident/' Elec- toral College chainnan Eldward Mills of Laguna Beach declared after the fonnal balloting. It was Nixon 45, George McGovern O. That -was the score M~y after .. California's 45 presidential electors - the bigge~t bloc in the nation -officially cast their votes for president. Since President Nixon beat McGovern by more than one million votes in the popular balloting Nov. 7, presidential elettors pledged to lllm got to cast the "real" ballots in tbe Electoral College. Everyone knew who was going to win. The electors gathered in Gov. Reagan~s COl)leren<e room at the Capitnl and sign- ed s,nall bJu, cards bearing one name: ' 'i'ben tliey di~· it all over . agii!D with president and the runnerup was vice president. "I'm sure we all appreciate the im- provements made in this situation through the years," Milla said with a grin, "or you might have voted for McGClvern for vice pre8idint..,., ~ -- The electors get $10 for their work plus five cents a mile travel expenses. They also got souvenir pms bearing the name of Ronal~11.~-: an-unsuccessful 1968 · president~ can_.,te. l'l'Olll Page I BOMBING ••. another set of cards bearing the name of Vietnam was preparing for a large«ale ,1 VJce President Spiro Agnew. offensive, although It. has begun itt1 will be eiaID.ined as paJ1 of .sty.d.jes, fQr After each ele'c:tor s1gned liis card, 'they traditional ·dry season supply buildup to APOLLO.:. future exploration of deep~space. were tallied by C1d. BuiMon;!S, a pretty stoctpile its forces in the tlOUth for nut The Apollo 17 crew easily jettisoned blonde e,lecto,r from Novato. year. America's serviCe mOdule ·a few minutes Legally, the electors could have voted The Saigon command reported only S7 before the fiery plwige back into the for someone else. But they were all loyal North Vietnamese and Vle1 O:log attacks Eartb' t pher t 24 606 11 RepubUcan <lfilceholders, party officials, in South Vietnam during the U.bour 11 a mo& e · 8 / m es per big donors to the presidential campaign hour, euetly on schedule at Jl :ll a.m. ~ .. ., ts •·-Tber 't period eoding at 6 a.m., the lowest Laguna District Trustees Fire Administrators Oesplte a lllrong showing of dtlzen support for tbe Laguna Beocb Scbool system, the lloml of Educatloo MoodaJ night Yoled to fire its -""' odo m.inistrat()t'S. SUperintendent of Schools WllllllD Ullom and assistant superint~ta Dr. Robert Reeves and Dr. C2larles Hea, in separate actions, wert: ~d tbe1r COD- tracts will not be rtnewtd wben they a· pire Oil J1mt 30, ll'IS . Each ·modcn ol _._wa1. -mode hi curt !-by -Pltrlda Gillette and aecooded by Trul1ee Gerald Linke. lloml president WIDJam 'lllomu joined with the two other memb<n In ousting the top adminlltratorw. Trustee Jane Boyd, a longtime OUJ> portee of tbe administrators, cast the sole vote to renew the oontracta. Trultee Norman Browne was absent, vacatlonlD8 in Malco. Al 11:16 ... a:m, the ast:ronau€s-regained dJN grassroo wor&e-1~ e wasn a number since the first week of North Selim S. Frank.Un of Costa Mesa has communication with Earth. hlfit of"l defectlorr. Vielnam'a ofienslve acroa rb e been electerJ preakllng judge of the "Looking good," reported Evans. Electors and a few onlookers, mostly demilitarized ZOOI!! in April. More tban zoo persons poured l!!to the high school auditorium in watch the meetlnj, with acorea detnlDdlna an U· planaUon of lf>e action 11ftl!!r the: vott.a w~re taken. Orange COUnty Harbor MUllicipal Court Then the l&-foot parachutes blossomed, Reagan staff members, applauded. President Nilon halted the bombing effective .. Jaa:s.-t . slowing their descent to the gentle sea in Now the ballots will be sent oo with and all other military ot>efatlons above FraDklia,.G,.wa-1 appointed to tbe new· full view of television cameras on the those of the other atat.es to Washington, the 2tlt.h parallel on Oct. 22 as a aian of ly created judgeship last AprU by recovery ship. D.C., where early in January they will be good will when It appeared that a peace Governor Ronald Reagan. His election as "1be crew is go," exclaimed Ceman as opened by Agnew. That's one of his agreement with North Vietnam was iJn.. presiding jactge wu unanlmoua, court of. lhc cone-shaped spiEecraft splashed duties as president of the U.S. Senate. minenl ficials said. almosi directly below a hovering The ndmber of electors is_detennlned by Following presidential adviser Henry FrankUn replaces Everett lV-Dickey. helicopter. the number of congressmen. and U.S. A. Kissinger's news conference ·report His duties iocjude asmgnment of casea to Told how far lbey were from the.car-senators a state is entitled to at the time last week that his negotiations with Le the other three court.I. rler, Ceman said, "I guess we'll have to of the election: Due Tho of North Vietnam · werl!! FrankJin wu graduatl!!d from Newport argue with the captain whether we werl!! The whole ba1loUng process i n deadlocked. and bis charge that the Harbor High &:boo1 in 1947, took bis on station or be was.'' California took 33 minute!. North Vietnamese were to bl~, tbe bache10,l"s degree from Pomona College The recovery team radioed back: "You Aa he closed the mee~g, Mills noted United States reaumed tbe mintng of in 1951 and~ law degree from Stanford botb were.'' · ·---. . that although some cotl!'-der the El~ Haiphong harbot Sunday. Unfvtfitty tii 1958. lie Is former pre.SI· ~n 'hour after ~ Scbm2U toral Cc:>llege arcbalc, il still is better One B52 went down 30-lllllel northwest dent Of Ute: COsta Mesa Cha~, of Com· wrln:led' liut •0r the ~~'t: hat@; .i ·than when the nation first elected George of Hanoi with six crewmen missing, the mrJ'ct"Jnd"12f.the f9erd of· Education of followH by Evans and eemH...An 9,-~ ·"Zashington as president.· ' command s'ald. It waa the firs{ BU to bcb member of the rnajorit/ -bloc relUsed to ~· Prior to departing to the high acbool cafetl!!ria for an execuUve (closed) session, Thomas alklwed !O minutes ol. testlm<iny. There were no statements made criUcal ol the performanoe ol Ullom, Reevea ()I' Heu. "Why do three people tell me I can't have the kind of education I 'fl'IDt for my cb.Udren," _angrily Pked Mrs. Tbomu cutkomp of Soullt r;ijima. "I -the fact !hat -people wlllt no cldlmn in school c..an make these cleclslO!ll." th~ N_~rt-Mesa Ur¥1ed Sc boo 1 (foeeq "iblte fil£ht suili 'ii~M .. In-.. Then, the top popular vote getter was crash on North, Vietnamese territory. D1strtet. nal•<Hh<fr.mejacketi), ';" "· . Ii"----------------------------.------·-_,; .:.. ··-.: , - Ex-Stanford Prolessor '!J..eld··in Beaty Escape MENLO PARK (AP) -S.ve0 persons, including fired Stenlord Prof. H. Bruce Franklin, wen amsted by till!! FBI in California and Arizona today ln con- nect(9n with the ambush-escape from t'hinA of ·fugitive convict Rona1d Wayne Beaty. Two4f them Robert Allan Seabock, 2!, ariested:ln 1'1!0 Nto, and Bnl::e Warrta ffob!IOn , 23, arrtattd in Menlo Park, welii booked for Investigation of murd~r. The others were booked on charges of harboring Beaty following the escape in San Bernardino Count) In which a prison guard was shot dead. Besides Franklin, 37, arrested at his Menlo Park home, they were Morton Newman, 30, arrested al his home In MenJo Park; Dr. Jfarry Blahar11 1 publlc health serviCI!! worker In Ft. Defiance, Ariz.; Bl.sbara's wife , Lorraine, and Micbael Goldstein, also of Ft. lleflanoe. Seaboct will be brouibt to San &mardino C<>unty, shortl!'1 depull .. there lald, They &aid I hold bu been placed onJlobeoo, A warrant on ~ hari>or!>C oliata W'aa' issued !or In tlChth penoft, °"1rlee Woodbrtdae .Noble. FBI agen11 .i<f,,_ Shedll'l ,deputies In S.. ~!no aald ,, litlo .m.:;Jjit ol,•~ were recovered in Pak> Alto at Seaboci'1 home and In Ft. DeflJ.net •l Dllb.ara'1 home . Beaty. 35, was arreated'Dee. 11 Mter a high-speed chue 11croas the San. f''ran- cisco-Oakland Bay Bridge at lhe C>akland l!!nd wh e n two .Patrol cara blocked eastbound lanes. With Beaty was Jean S. HobsQn, 44, a Venceremoa ac- Uvlll. - She Is be.It ·ed to be Hobson's mother. An FBI-affidavit Ill~ 1n.San ---ranclspl today with t~: U.S. ~~agi"Jr:.te's office uJd Be .:.t: recited the detalls ot:::bls ·escape which led to the al'hSll •. JI said &aty admitted forn!ulalln(' tbe,er.ca114 plan with the help of 'Ven- member-. It quoted Beaty as telling agents that Jean and Bruce Robson drove him to a mountain cabln near her' on Franklin's Instructions. Beaty stayed there a month with Bruce Roblon, and Mrt. Hobeon brought supplies, the FB1 aaid. Franklin then instructed Boaty to r.ay at Seabock:'a home; 1Pbere ~ewman pro- vided lood and acted •u..a lookoot and S.abock gave e.aty $1.1100 and phony ldenllllcatlon pa pert": for t h e names Stephen Hurley ind Dlll"1 Collins, the alfidlvk .. id. • ll lald Boaty told tboJl'Bl,Franldln !bell provl~ a car for hlm anca:,Seabock to aei to Ft. Delianoe, Arit.,'!><\l'lbe f1l'lt w .. k or December returned heft t ·here Noble 1ivo hin>;lld Mrs. Holieon dot'1)!1( ind a tlfle w11h·a01munilloii; • .:£..r,; - · The Fiii u ld the •1~<P . .Jii..?>rge agalnat Franklin anC: ~£ 11te1nt "glvtog ald and corn:or %11t1ve ff(,rn jUlllCC," but gave no deta except lhot U.aly '.. ·~ly was tbt-fuglllve. I I WOULD YOU BELIEVE-. . l'HAT 1HERE ARE STllJ, COMPANIES . . . . . . . . . . WHO CARE IF THE PRODUCTS THEY SELL PERFORM 1 WHO PRIDE THEMSELVES ON SERVICE? • • • • WHO. WANT EVERY JOB DONE PERFECTLY 1 . . . . . WHO MAINfAIN COMPLE'FE INTEGRITY 1 YES, "VI RGINIA," THERE IS AN ALDEN'S! I TRY US, YOU'LL LIKE US.) ) -ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 PlacHtla AYt. ' COSTA MltA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs .. 9 to 5'30-FRI,. 9 to 9 -SAT .. 09;)0 to 5 ' \ l ' ' " . • ,.