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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-22 - Orange Coast Pilot7 aims ore . . -- ' • . FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 22, '1972 • • Lion Country Banger Mauled by Lioness VOL "' MO. Jt,7, 4 llCTIO!illr . ,,_.., , • • • • . ~ .. ' .:-... · ----. . .. _____ ....__ . ---. - • ·. • • • • • • • Kidnapers Free Dallas Dehutante ,,...,, otfdteo~· • County liidlets -Coast Cultists By TOM BARLEY Of ,.. o.Jly """ ,..,, Christmas greetings in the form of ar- rest warrants and a copy of a multi-page OraniO 'County Grand Jury Indictment are being delivered today to 211 alleged members of the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug cult founded by Dr. Tlmot)ly Leary, the DAiL Y P!LCYI' has learned.' Red Missiles Claim Two~ More B52's The arrests, almost all of them In Laguna Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and Huotingtoo Beach, wtll bring to 46 the number of defendants rounded up as alleged coruipirators in an organization descnbed bj lawmen as an offshoot of Leary's origtnal League of Spiritual Discovery (U>D). Two men were arrested ln Hawaii Thursday by Honolulu J>Olice who are ltill scouring the islands for a man deacr!bed today as a "key figure" In the drug ring -Robert L. "Fat Bobby" Andrlst, 29. It was teamed today that the Orange County Graod Jwy bu been involved for .several weeks and D'.lOlll intensively dur- ing this put week in jJr:eparing a new in- dictment tba~ was stlll biting wlt~kl at press time today. .. Assistant ·District> attorney E d Freeman admitted today that the In- dictment W8' being prepated but refused SAIGON (UPI) -The United States to release the names of 28 fl!!l'SOIU charg- cirrled 'ltl marathon air assault agalnst ed with mulUple narcotics counts pending North Vietnam's heartland Into 'the fifth the arrest of the indictees. dly todiy despite moontlng air losoes. Freeman coolirmed that translenta Hanoi Radio rel"'!1ed three more B52s Calvin L. Delaney, 30, and Ronald R. and an FUl fighter-bomber shot down to-Crawford, 25, were P!cked up in Maui, day and said It used MIGs as well as HawaU, by local ponce working oii tn- missiles against the American plants. formation supplied by Orange County The U.S. COtniDand reported that two authorities. more B52s ·were shOt down ·'111.ursday Both men have advised HawaUan , near Hanoi, along with a pair of Navy .A& au£bcrities from their quarters in the IlllrUdm. . . Honcitutu jaif that -they wW fl&ht a move 'l1Us brought to eight the nmnbet or by Orange County lawmen to return BGts the command reported loot since them to this area. ille mualvt air asoaults be&'"! Monday. "lt may take aeveral weeks to get Hanoi claims It shot down 34: planes, '15 them back here In view oz prolonged ex- OI them B5Zs. tradltlon proceeding," Freeman said. So far the command has listed 43 Freeman said Delaney was last seen in AnJer(cans as mlaslng and 13 rescued. the Southe'm California area in June Hanoi has broadcast the n8met of 16 when he was arrested by Riverside Cowr fllin, .most of them BS2.c:rewmen1 wbo-it ty narcotic.s officers who claim he bad 20 llld were captured. Some ruers were pounds of t!Shlsh and 115,000 on his """'1ed wounded, two 'too .. rtoos!y to person at the time. 11lend·Hanoi's ealllbitlon-<11 the eaplivea Freeman ~d they are the Ollly arrests fer the C.,...,. -prus. / -he' upeets to malie ID the Hawallan Rodlo Bono! aald In a broodcall ; Jsl&lfs uni... lawmen there manage to .-..red Jn 5"llOO u.,t. the "North ~ace the elUJ!ve Andrut. . -~Air For<e has partlclpotiiflii ""Mii -Art:" Co!Ony reolileol' has llii! downlnp of U.S. planes." · tTaded liia punuera since thO eriglnal A U.S spokesman sald that whlle· tllilre "Bnjlherhood Indlctmeot .,., laued ·rast bu been ''some MIG11 activity" it baa 1 •AQim;L La1"11en recently conCirifttd that not been "1ignlllconl." tbe aearch !Or tbe SOO.pound suspect has The word "1ignlfk:ant" is generalty us-'now'been extended to 9ther areas tn 1he eel -00.Ule actlvlly mulll In (See CULT, Pqe t) dlmage. to American met\-or" 1n1teriet. ,,. · '!be command spoil.....,, llld !llG "-In North VI«nam have been 'among tbe targeta for the renewed raids. ' He Ibo admitted that the runway of Hlnol'• Ola Lam civilian alcport, never -. struck In aoy of !!lo . Amerlcon 1*nblngs or ljqrth Vietnam, had been •1c:ratertd'' by bot;nM. • He declined to -"late as to how MIGi were 1ble to optnte with their betel uoiler attack. 11>e Indlan government a'nl'IQ'lnced to- ~ In Ne• Delhi !hot Americon bombs (Seo -ING Pqe II ' .. -' . '·. ,< , 'r• l;teseue ,_;~17 · ;~··Late · I I ' . ' J -:' I ' OFFICER WRITES GRIM REloORT FOLLOWING · FATAL 'CRASH IN HUNTINGTON BE"AC:ff""""- ·Tffnager Trin to P~fl StantorrMan from Wreck, ~ut ls·Drlven Bick by Fl•mes 3•hoar Surgery ' Lion· Country Ranger· ' . ' Attacked 'by Lioness A 300-pound offspring, of Fra1~ the sensuous Uoil, pulled a senior pirk ranger from. a fence a"-.Lioo Country Safari Thursday 'and , severely mauled him belote being forced back by groundsmen, pa;k'ollictals reported. Stephen R. Craig, 28,. Costa Mesa, was .Jtill fu the lnteMlve care unit of MJalion Viejo Community Hosptal this morning al14r. UDiletl\>lni three-h<iUrs '.of -surgery ~tn which an estimated 400 slltclies 'tlere req\l\fed to close his ·wounds. However, bosptt..1 official! described Cr1J1'1 conditipn as "satisfactory" and said 'be would probably be released ln a week: unless complications develop. Craig auffered fang and claw lnjurle1 to hl1 face, back, and neck, &CC<lrdln& lo paU ,officiala; · ' I He ' ,;., attacked by a two-ye&l'O!d lioness named Benjie. Prior to Uie atll<k park olficlalJ <oosldered her one of tbe P8J'k'1 -t docile eats. The anlmlJ WH "babysiW,." a litter of young cubo •.i. the time of the incl<lent and of0clal1 1peailated thal 1he . may simply have been protacllng them. "That proloct!V< l11$tincl can be ,.ally •tron& and you nevtr knoiW when it wlll come out,'' 11id OaJe ~tier, aatlstant manqer of. the.pork, Ibis morning. "But you can never be sure what the Hon w• thinking, either. Benjie may just have been belilg playful What Is playful for a lion is not playful for a man." At. the tl~e ot. the inrjdent, Craig was atop ~a lS.foot. fence repairing a nylon shading canopy. Benjie reportedly entered the area , whl~h Is SQ"eerted fr001 public view , and (See SAFAlll, Pace !I 1,200 SOLDIERS . REMAIN ON CAU M.\NHA'fTAN, Kan. (AP) -Some 1,200 .10ldl;er1 have been denied traveling airtstmu leave flOfn nearby Ft. Riley in order that they may serve as-honor IUatd to · former President Harry S Truman. should he die. · The tit aod Ind .Brigades of the tit Inlantry Division are stationed at the bale. Mllllary olflclall bad no commcnl on the matter, but other source1 sakl aome 1,200 men were belng requlred to remaJn In tclephone conllct with the for) every lit houn. I Countian's Car Crashes; Driver • Dies in Flames A Stanton mQn burned to death Thurs· day night before a horrified HunUngton Beach teenager who had tried to rescue the man moments before bW car ex· plocled. . Police said David W. Offrell, SO, of Stanton died after his 1972 foreign luxury ·tedan crashed· into a power pole and a light standard at the intersection of Sprinij'.dale Street and McFadden Avenue in Huntington Bciich shortly before mid· night. Danny Brown, 17, who'E! home at 61)22 Vane CIJ::cle ill close to the intersection , told police he heard the ttaah and rushed to the car lo try to aid Offrell. Officers said the teenager tried to get the car door open, but the auto burst into flames, driving him back. When poll<'e and fire units mlved at .the scene of the craab, they found the 19,000 car completely Involved In a ...... TraffJc tnveaUaatOn today. are at. temptfn.< lo ple.e iocelher the couse of the accMient, They llld akld mark& in- dicate Offrell wu driving southbound on J Springdale when be wt-nt lnto a four- wbeel skid aa he appioached the ii> tersectioo. The car appareoUy cl'OISed the 111- t..-..ctlon and Jumped the curb, striking the two polts on the eoutheall·-. l Money Paid, Police Nab 2 Brothers DALLAS (UP!) -Alice Amanda "Mandy" Dealey, the debut an le daughter-in-law of the president of the DaiJas Morning News, was released banned today by "foul-talking" kidna- pers who held the newlywed blonde !Ct" three days, threatened to kill her and then collected $250,000 ransom. Sheriff's deputies later broke into an apartment at nearby Garland and ar- rested two men "while they were coun.- ting the money." The suspects are brothers and 1!1111'- rendered without a fight. Charged with kidnaping were Franklin J. Ransonette, 33, and Woodrow H. Ransonette, 31. The e n t i re quarter-milliorHlollar ransom was recovered, authorities said. An FBI agent said Dallas ~ sheriff's deputies broke into the apart- ment and surprised the suspects ''while they were counting the money, There was no trouble." Six hours earlier, the ltidnapers put goggles on the ZZ.year-old blonde beauty before dawn and set her free on a street comer In the posh suburb of Highland Park. "Count to a thousand and your daddy will be here," one kidnaper told her. But she was picked up by an FBI agent and Dallas County Sheriff Clarence Jones. When tlle M, 13S-pound wife of·Joe M . Dealey Jr., 25, was found safe, she whlsper~, "I'm all right." s& said she saw only two men-during IS.. KIDNAP, Pap !I Caan lt'eatller It'll be cloody when you gel Up on Saturday, but don't fret. 1be weathertady '"YB they will elev by midday to sunny skies and &em.. peratures of .GS at the beacbeS ood 70 Inland. Ovemlg)lt lows -· INSIDE TODAY For the dghth rortieivtiw year, the DAILY PILOT fa haft. oring the top communftJI the· a~r actor• and actraH1 in-Or- ange Covn&u. Winnert of Ute 1972 DP aworcb are announced in todau'• Weekender. • , % DAILY PILOT s FtifUJ, Oecttnbet 22. 19n Responsible' ' . 'Hanoi CULT ... United States. I I ..The people we want ate In the belcb cities of Orange Counly,'' Freeman aafd. "That's where w~ are w~kloi ~1 and that's wb<co ,,.. • wW • ie -,, tbroughout the Christmas -until , all our arrests are made." l . I Police 1n Laguna Beach, Newpott V.S. Says Reds Must Guard Prisoners KEV BlSCAVNE. Fla, 1UP I) -Tho:! White House said today lhe United States is holding l-lanoi "responsi ble and nc- CQWttable" for the safety of Am~ric11n POWs during U.S. air attacks on North Vietnam. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler made the comment In response to repo rters' queslio.a about a Hanoi report of damage during a raid to a prison camp where some POWs are being held. Ziegler said the White House bad no in- The Fat One Custo1ners Win Spain Lottery MADRID (UPI ) -A 64-year-old cafe owner in the Catalan city of Vlch won a record $19 million today 1n the world's richest lottery. But he will have to share it with customers who bought shares in winning ticket No. 42~. JAB1E RIPOU.. MlRALPEIX, Y.'hO owns the Cafe Mexica in Vlch, a city of 250,000 population 40 miles [:rom Barcelona, won 1.2 billion pesetu in the S~sh stale Oitislmas lollery. ~ 'lbe ticket cost Ripoll 150,000 pe!jelas ($2.350). - Despite the crowds gathering around the cafe,.shouting in CataJan, "Eens ha tocat" ("W'e Got It"), Ripc:>ll ttmained calm. 0 WE BOUGHT THE TICKET hoping our luck would continue,'' he sal~. "The lottery bad been kind to us in previous years but we have never hit 1t this big." Ripoll 's prize is known as "el Gordo" ("The fat One"). Boat Searched Police Discover Blood On Doryman' s Clothin g By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 llM OlllY Pllol 51111 Huntingtor. Beac h police said today they have found "quite a bit of blood" on the clothing of the Newport Beach doryman who they believe mar have kill- ed his daughter and lhen himself last week. Det. Sgt. Monty McKennon said in- vestigators will be rechecking .the dory Sir Charles which belonged to fisherman Allan Vaughn Knight, 43, Newport JJeach. Knight and his 3-year-0\d daughter, Patricia, were last seen alive Dec. 12 when ho took hor w!lh him to check bis lobster traps along tbe coast. At mid-morning they were spotted by a Huntington Be.ach lifeguard as Knight stood in the stem ol his small boat, a~ parently cradling his blonde daogbter in his arms. A few minutes later, the guard told Robbery Suspect Holds Off Police, Then Kills Self RIVERSIDE (AP ) -A robbery suspect barricaded himseU in a market and fatally ahot himself while police tried io rorce him out w\th tear gas, author- ities said. Police said ty,·o patrolmen observed Lewis Frank Swartout , 21. of Corona enter the market. shoot Henry James · Williams, 48, the clerk, and begin rifling the cash register Thursday. Police said they fired one shot and Swartout barricaded himself in the market's cooler room. Police said they fired tear gas into the room, waited an hour , and found Swartout lying wounded when they entered the room. Swartout died a short time later at Parkview Hospital. Robert S. Gee, 20, arrested while sit· ttng in a car outside the market , was booked for investigation of anenipted murder and armed robbery. Williams was not seriously wounded, offleerS said. OIAN61 COAST " DAILY PILOT police he saw the empty boat circling aim lessly near the Huntington Beach Edison plant. Knight's body was found a week later, floating about a ha.Jr mile to sea, and his daugh~r's body washed ashore al the Huntington Beach pier 10 hours later. The case, which was presumed to have been a double drowning, took an unex- pected turn when It was discovered that the girl's throat had been slit. The Orange County coroner ruled her death a homicide. but Huntington Bea1:h detectives say they have carefully pursu¢ th~ possi~iliUes \!Jal her, dealh may have Deen accldental However, McKeonon said today the possibility that the child was cut by the boat's• propeUer when she fell overboard CX' that s11e aecldentauy cut 11eneu on something in the boat was 0 pretty slim," He pclnted out that the coroner's report indicated that a fine-bladed in- strument bad caused the deep ala!b across the child's throat. An old, rusty knife found In the dory was tested for the presence of human blood along with the clotblng but no blood was found on the blade. McKennon noted that the rusty knife's blade was too coarse to have caused the wound on the tot's throat. The detective said Knight's widow, Dora, told them she bad recently given her husband a new knife, but police have been unable to fUld it. "We will be going over the boat again to see what we can find ," McKennon said. The detectives checked the dory once for traces or blood, but found none. "It's a difficult case, and frankly, I'd like to be able to prove that something else happened, but tbe evidence just doesn't seem to be Pointing that way," he said, Goodbye, ' . Mr. Cliips Buena Park police have dubbed it lbe ·"potato chip caper.'' The victim was walking along sidewalk in a reside ntial area in the 7900 bloc k of Orchid Drive when an amied suspect leaped from behind a lret, police said. He demanded the bag the. vlctlin was carrying and be got It. WM: One bag of Potato chips, Value: 29 cents. rormalion to confinn the llano! report. 11e then said: l "There can be no question about the fact that the United States holds Hanoi responsible and accountable for the prop- er treatment of the Un 1 t e d States' prisoners of war held by the North Viel· namese under the provisions of the Gen- eva agreement," Ziegler said. "This includes responslbllity of not re- taining prl.Joners of war in or near mllltary target areas." 1be Ntrth Vietnamese said in a Hanoi broadcdt that duripg one of the numerous raids on Ha.oat this week, the . so-called Hanoi Hilton prison camp - where many POWs are belleved held - was damaged and some persons wound- ed. The broadcast did not say specifically that POWs were hurt. Ziegler also told reporlen that Preli· dent Nixon was detennfbed to take every step possible "to brlng'a rapid end to the war with ,a negotiated se.tUement. But," he said, "the nest st'ep is totally up to the North Vietnamese." · 'Mle Admi!'Jistratk>n cootends that despite tbe intense ADMrican bombing, it is intransigence on the part of North Vietnam that is holding up a peace agreement. A Nixon emissary, Gen. Alexander ht. Haig, returned today from a visit to Saigon and conferred for two hours with Nixon. ' He brought with him Saigon's response to a reported Nixon wanting not to try lo torpedo any agreement Wasbingtoo reaches with Hanoi. Ziegler said in response to a question that Nixon had no plan to report to the naUon on Vietnam during the Christmas period. • Haig, deputy to Nixon'S Vietnam negotiator Henry A. Kissinger, arrived at the Florida White House soon alter dawn and had breakfast with J(jssinger prior to a conrerence with Nixon and Kissinger. Ha ig visited other Southeast Asia capitals as well as Saigon to report on the impasse in Kissinger's negotiations with North Vietnam over a ceaaefire agreement. South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van 'lbJeu bas been openly critical of several parts or the October tentatve U.S.-Nortb Vietnamese agreement. Kissinger Mid Saturday in disclosing the deadlock that it was not South Viet- nam ... objections that wett holding up a final agreement, and said no one would be allowed to veto a U.S. agreement. Haig brought back from meetingJi wilh Thieu In saigon a !titer ~ tO a NiJ:on letter that, according to South Vietnamese sources, ~ 111.ieu that he woo.Id face a cut.¢! of military and ecqnomic ~id If he ~ 111, evenlUll peace seti!emm.t t~ ..,..~. Olll wilh the Com!nwiisls by !he Uiilted States. The While HOU!e did not cco1irm or deny t1ie Soulh Vielnamese reports. --·-~ -~ From P .. e""J BOMBING •.. ' KIDNAP VICTIM GETS HER CHRISTMAS PRESENT EARLY Allee Dealey With Husb.nd Joe After Release for $250,000 Frot11Pagel KIDNAP ••• her ordeal. Harry Truman's Co1idition Near "l wa s scared to death the whole C • • l S lime," Mandy said. "But I gradually got rtftCU tage used to It. I felt more reHeved Wednes- day when one or the men told me : KANSAS CITY, Mo. (U PI) -Harry S 'Don't worry, you 'll be home for Truman's heart beat irregularly and his Christmas.• .. • blood pressure fell severely today, Dealey said his fa ther, Joe M. Dea1ey alarming doctors so much that Truman's wife. Bess. was called to hia bedsitle and Sr .. president and ctrief executive officer • sh the 113-year-old fonner President was for of the A. H. Belo Corp., whicti publi es a time considered In critical condition. the Dallas newspaper, paid the $250,000 "I have no doubt that if l had had to ransom. It was made through a secret make a report at about 8:30 or 8:45 a.m. "drop" at a deserted shopping center. this morning I would have had to say he is in critical coodiUon," said Research "Needless to say, there was a lot of Hospital spokesman John Dreves, follow· crying, a lot or hugs and kisses," said the ing a news briefing delayed almost an ~Uilite's bus~. , hour by Truman's worsened conJlitioo. 111bl.s ls going to be the best damn "By the time the briefing came, the Christmas anybody ever wished for." condition appeared to be pas.!ing q&; at He then gave JJ1 wile 1 w boliday least 'improving," he said. Trufnan waa •till considered In "verY present early ..-.1t WU a ~ltrand of serious" condition which, accordldJ to pearls which he draped al'ound her neek. breves, means "he ls very close to 1bey then kissed. · critical at any time." Dealey and •Mandy were •man led ·Six Mrs. Truman, 87. was resting at the Beach, Costa Mesa and HUnt. BOa<b are cooperauna "11h <>ranf• County Sberifl's oflicers, agents fJ:om iJie Federil Bureau of · 'N~ alid Dln8....,. Drup, ageni. ·fn>lil tlle 111a1e•i Buttau ol Narcolics ~t and U.S. cu.tow olft<m 1n • Joll\l """°" !hat has becOl!le · kilown as !& Orange County Dru&' and Narcotics Taslt y....,., Freeman said those named In the new indictment will joln 18 persons earlier named in the alleged Brotberhood con- spiracy -a tola1 of fl defendants. "And this isn't by any means the end of the road," a weary Dl.!trict Attorney 's investigator commented this momJnc. Superlor Court Judge l)aYrnoeut Yin· cent bas been solely occupted In recent 'feeks with the flood of PIPfl' wwt ac- cumulaled in the form of multiple mo- tions filed by the_ battery of defense lawyers hired by the Brotherhood defen· dants. Several defendants have had thelr names removed from the indictment dur· ing that time via dismissals and pleas of guilty to redu~ charges. Among them was David Mark Reddy, 23. 33801 Streel of tho Copper Lintem, Dana Point, wbo races a state prison tenn of up to 10 years following ·a plea of guilty to amended drug charges and violation of an earlier probation. But Reddy must first 1erve a one year term in federal prison on drug charges sumtanttally amended . from ~ Hied wben ho, Brian Kendall McAdams, 211, 20286 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, and Thomas Blake Bidwell, 26, of Garden Grove, were arrested i n Portland , Oregon, last Jan. 13. The trio were accused or stuffing $2 million worth -of hashish into a truck that was being shipped on a Dutch freighter from Bombay, India to Vancouver, Canada. · All tbree received one yur jail 1erms but Orange C a u n t y "Btotherbood" charges against . B1dwtll we r e later diSmb>ed to Judie lllncmt'o -m and !he defendant silfpped oU tO Lompoc prison. McAdams has been ordered to face trial f.tarch 26. on charges contained in the origlna) lndictmenl. . The iirst of several trials stemming from the ftrst Brotherhood indictment will open Jlln. 10 wj.tb J a m t Leroy Crittenden, 29, i long Beldi the defendant's chair. ' -~ . -~ t~~ ........ .. · ~"f'OlnPi19e 'J SAFARI.·-· . '!~ago in 1,1-ctlCDOIY and . ~y Trumans' Independence, Mo., home w~en hOneymooned at Dragon Bay tn Jamaica. the call came just after dawn from the became aroused. The kldnaJ!O'• grabbed her as she hoopital. She immedialely hogan the I~ "She took a great !lyina ifAp, grabbed returned to the couple's apartment Tues-mile ride to her husband's bedside. Steve, and they came 'down tolether, day, then demanded ransom thrOO gh with Benjie 9f1 top," accordlng tO Jezry telephone calls to his father's house. Kobrin, Lion Country vice-president. "nie1r scare tacttcs scaroc1 tile hell ou1 Fullerton Woman Two nearby groundsmen 1mmedia1e1y of me," the younger Dealey said. "They came to Craig'• rescue, forcing the lion · · used .£Woe U..ata." bac); by hitting her.w)lh shovels, ~ =-Y struck tile Indian cbao<ery • ~-sa1cr 11at ,.1111ea,111s wife was Burns in Car Crash era1g, bleeding prolu..iy, .. ,.. n"1led Thero :"""' reports earlier that the ~~but"~'.'• lit~~-up, a • by car to the boapital by l'O\'k o!lldals Cuban am Egyptian embassies ball t>ee?-··,~'p1··t:..-•'!:.-..i ... th A Fullerton woman burned to death without waiting for an ambulance. He hit in Hanoi and that ~vtet, anne.e· .a . -ceaald. ~ ~~ ea~ bf ~k ~~Y a~hefl~t' i':~ =:.ed Into a ;:!r ':°s:1~nsclous at tbe .holpltal :~~:.,.;:.hit ID HaiP,b<mg, with other vsy mlldl. 'NoW, i koow .this hap. Police said Alice Ruth Stuckey, M, of "Benjie was one of the moat docile A Hanoi broadcast Tburtday 5 a 1 d peDJ oaly in movtee and the faJlT·tales, l~ Rolling Hilla Drive, waa alcoe in the cubs we've ever had," said Kobrin. 'bombs bit the "Hanoi Hilton," an Amert-but I believe U bap,pened to us • it was vehicle northbound on Lemon Street, "She's been around people all her life can prlm;met 41 war camp in 'Hanoi and lo•e flt flnt slgbl ' near Shadow Lane, when the accident oc-. and made countle11 a pp ea r a n c e 1 that' iome per.ou bad been wounded tiut Dealey said JU wife was "be!d at an curred. Police Sergeant Jerry Mason throughout Orange County." did DOt ·make clear whether tbeii•.r.· unkown house ln:tbe Dallas area from 4 said the car was totally engulled in Officials said the lioness would not be Americalls0r\1'ietnamese. -: .-'p-.m~.Tu~etda~~Y_wllen..,,.._lbe~-w_•_•_•_bcl_u_c1_ed.~~~flam~e-•_w_h_•_n_ho~a-rri_v_ed~a-t_tile~ICO!le~-·~~-d-es~!!!'<>Jed""'~--·~-:.....~_,~~...,..._,......,~· Ilanol;a ·eiclicMol lioop!tal, Olle ol, ljle _ ...... ~ .. --.----••==•-•l!!l•r ................. i. ... .. largest · there with 1,000 beds,. wait reported earlier to have )lela bit ln··tho · , • bombing. ' Today, the Swedish ambassador, In S~lm for .Christmas, received radio rep<irts from Hanoi that it was destroyed by 852 bombs this mom.Ing. "Many physJclans and nurses were kill- ed," tbe repcrt to Ambassador Jean- Chrlstophe Oeberg said, The report said he hospital was hit between 4 and 6 a.m. ln Paris, the Communist newspaper Humanitu>ublisbed a dispatch from its Hanol correspondent reporting that the BS2! were being abot down by a new type ol SoYlet Surface-to.Air Missile (SAM). • Bllt mlli!fry ICJW<08 In Saigon sug· geiied tho( Instead the NortlfV-se might ho u.slng proximity fuses which would cause a SAM to ezplode near a 8'2 without actuaUy bltling it. .. LAMPS-PICTURES -ACCESSORIES HOLIDAY· $ALE It's the r.ttte things that can mako the dif. ference. Stop by today end view our fine selection, now specially priced. If it's for a gift, or for you personally, you'n find just the thing to enhance any home for the holiday, .. ' TM Oflnoe tebt OAIL 't 1"1lOT, •1111 wtildl Im am9IMd h N-l"•tiio ti llublllllfd by tlw 00.,.. Clrtolt "*lllhlnll c.......,... S.o. ,.... ..ltllnl •N -'lltlld. ,...,.,.., ~ f<rld•r, • Coll• Mn•, ,._,,.,., kl(ll. H\1111,,._ Buc:ll/Founl•ln v11i.,, Lll9Ullll ~ ll'l'N/Jlddlolt9Ck ft 5'11 C'--1«1 Siii J.-rt Ca;i'll~ A 1ll'IQlt '"t-1 .dlflllt .. f*O(W\td 1t11.tnW.-a .,,. s.no., .. TM prfnd1111I publ1"fllr9 plmnl 111 11 Ill Wnl a.y .sttwt, c-•• MeM. c.n"°""', •2'iM. Survivors Found ' Reb1rt N. W1H l'Nei.tflt ~ ...,.,..... Jeck •. c.,1,y Ylol ""-.._,. ..... 0-rtl ~ T1ie11111 K .. '1'11 ..... Til•MH A. Mutphl11• Menlt1"1 l!dltor Q.,f" H. Leet Rlchcrd P, Ntll .........., Ml!Moltllf ld110r11 -°"' ""-! ,. WMf ,..,. ''""' ..,... a..dlr ua ~ ,.....,.,. \.Mlilll9 ~ m ,.,., ......... ............... a.tctl! l117t a.ctil MWYtnl .. Qllllmlll .. JlfWlll •1 CtmN llMI , ... , •••• (7141 641-4121 0 ·;w .Uaall I' I '41·1111 .,_~.,... .... II Uf9M IMdl 4tM41t ,..._..,_~ ~-_, .. ~.,. '/:'-,"c:.·~11·== ... ,.,. .......... ~"'~•"""' """ .. ·= .. ,... ...cf,t ,..,. ...... ......... . ....... .,.. ....... ,... 91 C"'• Mnl• ~ .-rffltttll .,, """"" ..... ' .....,.,, ~ mt1 · A.ts ,..,....~, m!llWY ·---II"' .... ~- ' Lived T·wo Montlis in Snow, Cold SANTIAGO (AP) -Two U"'i\IOyans who survived a plane crash and two monlM in the anow and cold of lhe high Andes moUntalns guided a a e a r c h helicopter today to the crash alte and 14 other survivors, police ttported. An ol'flcial announcement sa1d lhe wreckage of the pl&ne "wit slahted at 7:40 PST by helicopter pllot commander Jorge Mula." The' annoanctmtn\ t&Jd the p\fne Wit very blah up in tt:.e mountalni and snow and bad weather made lmmedia'te retcUe virtuol(Jt. lmpoulblt.1 Two ctRtb *'"'ivort. •who manapd to reach cl~IU&at(on afWr • walk and climb of more than 10 daya, helped Cbtlean rescue teams IOcate the plane, a tft. englno Fairchild " belon11n& to tbl Uruguayan air force • The two, Roberto Cancssa Urta and Fernando Parrado Oolgay, were picked up CjlriY todoy by a police patrol. Ot1,1essa and Parrado told 1utbo1'1lles I, • that 14 penons -are ft.ill alive, some of them Injured . The plane, accordlng to ndlo reports, appeared partly burled In heavy snow, about 12,000 feet up lD the Andet, IOllle 45 miles inland from the small town of San Femando. San F.....ao It •bout 110 miles IOI.Ith ot,Santilgo. 4 • Radio reports rtachina .ua ... 'Femando quoted ~· .and P"""411i '!' aaylng •i,ht pe"""' died immeCllAlelJ '!'hea the plane crashed. One w11 iolil-tO be tile pilot. . -... . Another II or 20 w.re ~ lo !\!fv• died loler, burled under onow·~ a beavy Atonn. - The P1•ne. a propell-..n .. 1nnn was la!! he•rd from Oct. ••·Jlhlle trylnj/. lo crou the Andes from ·Ar1111t1111 to Chile in a heaYJ snowstonn:--lt cln1t4 1 ' crew of five and 40 pa..,~, lll J)irt or tho Old Chrlltianl "'II team or Montevideo. Uruguay, on lhtir way to Chile td' play a st~les of aamea. ~ DREXi1,...j,tERITAG64iENREDON-WOOOMARIC-«AllASTA1>1 . ·7al111111/#e{" INTER fORS WIUDAYS A SATURDAYS t :DO to 5:30 NIDAY 'TIL 9:00 • . ·-• NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WlSTCLIFF Da., • M2-2050 'LA6UNA BEACH e 141 NOltJH COAST HWY 494.6111 TORRANCE e 2J6<tt H~WlHOlNE ll YD, • J11·127' ,, • ea bod H' WB& !peC bail lion HJ .club tons isl' H bel law B Hell T t Cycle Club Body Offe1· ·Revealed . OAKLAND (UPI) -The Hel1'1 Angel! proposed last yea r that they tum pollUcal radicals over to police ln ex· ~e for lhe release o( jailed motorcy- cle club members, It was disclosed here at the murder trial of three club members. An in!pector for the Alameda County jlislflct. attorney's offict tesUfied Ttwrt-. .day the offer from Hell's Angels leader Ralph "Sonny" Barger was turned down. Inspector Edwa rd Hilliard, an Oakland police sergeant at the time, said Barger called on him last year and said, "For each Angel released, he would have : body'"of a ·Weathemulh available for us.'" Hilllarct said be told Barger such a deal was "out of the question." Hilliard also said be never made any specillc requests lo judges in regard to bail or dismissal of charges for coopera- lloo by Hell's Angell. ' • UPIT ........ frida)', Dtctmbtt' 22, 1972 s OAILV PILOT :J 'Conflict of Interest' Boatyard Deals Denied by U sah By WIWAM SCHREIBER Of Ille DaJtr ....... , ... Conflict of interest rumors involving bids or. the Dana Point boatyard contract today were denied by the man named In the speculation. Martin Usab', fonner Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks Commission Chainnan and president of Dynatech O>rporatlon ln Santa Ana, said whoever reported the conflict ls telling "an out and out lie." Usab also said there were no uJterior motives for his resignation from the panel last week, merely that he was "fed up with politics and needed to devote more time" to his business. While discussions were ln progress, during which three boatyards were being considered for the lucrative boat repair yard parcel, Usah owned 2,500 shares of Willard Boat Wof'ks in Costa Mesa, one of the competitors for the contract. Hllllard re.lated how the motorcycle .club for fiff; years turned over to police tom of heavy weapons and hundreds of pounds of dynamite, plastic explosives, grenades and gas bombs cached by left- ist"groups in t):e Oakland area. Christmas Tit1ae in Saigon Willard eventually won the com· mission's approval for the contract, even though another company, Dana Point Anchor Marine offered a much higher oPlion price. Willard offered $10,700 while Anchor Marine was prepard to pay $3<),500. NO UL TERfOR MOTIVES Former Comml11loner U11b A South Vietnamese boy admires the colorful Christ- mas decorations in the st~et outside a Saigon cathedral. It was a rare moment of cheer for the beleagured capital as the war intensified. The .Orange County Board o f Supervisors bas delayed final action on tbe contract until January because of lingering questions about why the top bld was not accepted in the usual manner of county government. Park er, who was asked by the district at- torney lo investigate Usab's "possible conflict of interest." said Thursday there was never any conflict invol ved. He said on several occasions Barger helped load weapons and dynamite into law enforcement cars. Barger, M, l!: on trial with three other Hell's Angela for the shooting death of Tens narcotics courier Sergio AgerO in a burning Oakland home last spring. The case, expected to go to the jury late next week, was recessed until Tuesday. In return for Bareer's aid, Hilliard said he .lnf.onned tbe district attorney's office about Barger's role in the gun seizures. Hilliard said he did not know if his in- terce.ulons resulted ln lower ball or dropped charges. Barger'a dislike of antiwar and leftist groups went back to 19'.1 when the Angels attacked peace marchers from the Univcnlty of California campus as they crossed the Berkeley city tine into Oakland. PoUce, at the Ume, were ac- cused of letting the motorcyclists run amok -a charge authoritlea denied. Comity Reveals __,, Computer Errors In Election Pay Computer and clerical STOrt which resulted in electkm workers being io- correc:tly pald were revealed by Vic A. Heim, Orange County auditor-controller. Heim aaid letters had been sent to 862 "of some 6,000 deputy registrars, absentee ballot counting boards or post eleclion workers in November who had received checks for incorrect amounts. Helm asked that they either return the cbecb that tbey have received or remit the amount by personal check. The c.becks were mailed Tuesday. Some workers wtre overpaid and others underpaid, Heim sald, but most of the 6,000 were correctly pa.id. "It is hoped that all persons receiving aucb notices will cooperate," Heim said, "since lt will greaUy assist our efforts to mail checks ror the correct amount." Gumnan Get s Few Pennies, Slays Pair SAVANNAH, Ga . (UPI) -A bandit \\'earing a trenchcoat and holding a .38 caliber revolver demanded money from a who1esa1e potato 'chip and candy finn. Given what police: called "a few pen- nies," the tall young gunman yelled, "'11tia is not very much money. Somebody has got to die." He started shooting. Two employes were killed and two wounded. A police spokesman said today, "We have several people in custody. But at this time, no charges have been prns-- ed." Tbe· vlctlrm: of the Thursday shooting were ldentiifed as Carl Green, 65, co- owner _, of the firm, Green Brothers Distribu~s. and an employt; Kfrt Gttf-ru:i, 35. In serious conditioo were another employe, Mrs. Helen Stubbs, 34, shot in the face, and Jake Green,. 65, Carl's brother, who had chest wounds. Police said Carl Green was shot through the chest while in his o[fice and Griffin was shot in the throat as the man ran toward the rear. Police said all six bullets had been fired. Wallington Succumbs ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) -Jimmy Wallington, one of the big time radio an- nouncers in the 30s and 405. died Thurs.- day night after a long illness. He was)64. Wallington was best known as the an- nouncer on the Eddie Cantor and Fred Allen radio shows for many years. Ul"I ,,,.....,. First Great Grandson G~nerallssimo Franciaco Franco admires bis tirsl'. great g .. ndlon following the baby's chrlatenlng In Madrid. Bohling the baby is his mother. Alarla del Carmen de Borbon, Franco's granddaughur. The baby WU elven th~ names Francisco. Alfonso, Jlimc, Cristobtl and Victor. . 1 · . . . S111ile~ Winners Christmas Bright Spots Revealed 1r you're looking for the season's brightest sights there are some hinll! in- side the DAILY PILOT today. With the help of lf participating communities, the "40 Miles of Christmas Smiles" com- mittee has again helped gift wrap the coast. Winners .of the annual competition are presented in a picture page on Page 20. Other outstanding displays of the season (both at private homes and at stores and public buildings) are lis~ in a story accompanying more pictures on the cover page of today's WEEKENDER. Judges of the "Smiles" contest co- sponsored by the DAILY Pll.QT and Orange County Coast Association this year were: Stan Anderson, form.er Seal Beach ma)'or; Huntington Beach City Coun- cilman Ted Bartlett; CDsta Meaa City ~--,_,...._ City Councllman Howard Rogers ; and Ken Sampson, county director of parts, beaches and recreaUon. Local contest sponsors for 1912 in- eluded: Capi,trano Beach Chamber of Com- merce, Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce, Costa Mesa Junior Chamber of Commerce, Culverdale Architectural Committee (Irvine). Dana Point Clamber of Commerce, Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce ( W o m e n • s Division ), Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce, Laguna Beach Junior Clamber of Commerce. Laguna Niguel Homeowners Associa- tion, Late Forest Beach aDd Tennis Club, Mission Viejo Homeowners Association, Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce:, San Clemente Chamber of Commerce and Seal Beach Chamber of Commerce. Each local spomor was. allowed to no.mlnate one reiidence 8Dd ooe non- relidence for tbe areawide competition. QnJ.y •YtP wlnnera are selected aJoag tU.. "• ma.r•Q...,. ~ iiedolJd and tltlnI place In ncll Of the two ealegorle5, plus the "pla<e wl\er• CblJatinas b happening along the Orange Coast," the area the judges designate Cbristmasvllle 1972. In addition to the discrepacy in the 11p- tion bid, Willard's competitors say the in- clusion of a boat building yard in Willard's offer was contrary to the bid procedure. Willard offered to pay the cowity a fixed percentage of its boat· Quilding revenues. Sometime during the commission's discussion of the contracts, the Orange County Counsel's office and the District Attorney were notified of Usab's interest in Willard and began asking questions. Willard President William Tighe said. however, the whole incident ls ludicrous because Usab never beld a controlling in- terest of any kind in the company. "He owned 2,500 shares out of 368,000 on the market," Tighe said. "That is about .06 percent interest." Willard's books and public stock records prove Usab bought only the 2,a<X> shares when the stock. went public in 1971. Usab said he made no additional deals with Willard to buy more stock and as a minority stockholder bad DO control over uecuti ve dec.lsioos. " '"l bauPt ..... ltocb flecauie I bought a boat from Willard and liked the job they did on it," Usab sald. "And that is the whole story." Deputy .Orange County Counsel Clay "We .detennined easily there was 1•0 confl ict in this case and that Mr. Usab could have voted on the contract and kept his stock, too," he said. Usab said he sold his stock in Willard Boat Works weeks before the final vote was taken and commission records show he did not participate either in the discussion or the final vote on the con- tract. Usab said, however, that he was ad- vised to step down by Parker during the fin al meeting to remove any doubts of personal involvement. "Frankly I was pretty incensed by the whole thing," Usab said. "But l fi gured why drag out another red herring." The commission vote on the cont ract award was 4-2 with the majori ty stating the cpinion that Anchor Marine, which already holds leases on three Dana Point parcels, would hav e a near-monopoly on the commercial center at the harbor. Neither Usab nor Parker would reveal who was behind the conflict charges but they did say the charges were persistent even after it was proven no conflict was involved. "I will a<flnit freely that I enCOUnlied Willard to go for the bid but that was simply because I knew them and was aware no boatyards had even bid for the- contract the last time it was made available," Usab said. .Mercury MONTEGO • • • the personal size car with the ride of a big car. Montego NX Brougham 2-Door Hardtop ' • • • Built Better to ride Better SEE ONE • Rome Of Tilt ""' Ca ••• ""'· ...... ~ • • • l\Ionlei;:o -I-Door Sedan TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE -orange Cmi:nt,11 1otnflr of ''"' Cart- ohnson&son . f I• .I I 11 . • : ' .... " 1 I I I 1 • • I '11 11,. 1·· ' I • 2121 HARBOR llLVD. COSTA MESA • l40- • • --LEASE,--. Speciail1t In Full I M1inten•nce Le•1ingl • TODAY! • • 'f 4 IWLY PILOT f I I I I" with Tom urphine l County Santa Reall y Scrooge YVLE BONANZA DEPT. -Officials in tbe Orange County Auditor's Office ap-- parently went to ronsiderable effort to see that all the part-time poll workers in the late, great November General Elec- uOn got their paychects during this Christmas season. As a matter of fact . more than 800 l:>f them reportedly got. a Uttle something extra. I know U\is one lady who has done her civic duly as a ballot box worker for lo. these many election!. who got her payoff from the county just the other day. When she opened the envelope. wtlat to her wondering eyes should appear but T\VO checks, not just one. Well, you know how things go in the old pocketbook department about this time of year. Even the moths desert my wallet for lack of anything there to bite on. SO THERE SHE was, with a double election bonus for being a good and faithful preclnct worker all these years. You know she was just delighted. But hold everything, folks. Reports oozing out or the County Seat today sug- gest that Orange County may not really be Santa Claus after all . County Auditor Vic Heim apparently did a little re-checking on the some 6,800 checks that went out to the election workers and found that the county's com- puter -or something -had done him in. Some 862 election workers had been overpaid. Heim has reportedly dispatched notices to these peopte asking that they send back the checks. IN CASE THEY'VE already spent the loot, it is suggested that they forthwith fire off a personal check for said overpayment to the County of Orange. Can't you just see some of those 862 faces out there on election folks who joyously charged off to the shopping center with the Yule bonus clutched in hot hands? Alas, Orange County made a rea1 effort to look like St. Nick. But in the end, the County Seat turned out to be Ebenezer Scrooge. A QUICK NOTE fo r all you nostalgia fans out there: Do you remember radio? The thing with no picture tube ? Well , radio station KRLA Is reliving the golden yea rs of radio these days and they have a real classic going on the air lhis Sun- day on the Night Before Christmas at 10 p.m. KRLA will air the Charles Dickens' classic, "A Christmas Carol'' starring Lionel Barrymore as Scrooge and featur - ing the Orson Welles Players. · It's the program first to hit the radiowaves on Dec. 24, 1939, and ha-s been preserved for rebroadcast by CBS engineer \Varren Abbott. So if you're a nostalgla fan , don't miss this one. AND A FINAL NOTE for the holiday season when so me folks have been suspected of sipping too deeply of the cup. General Pi1otors claims it's come up with a ta.semnd 30briety test that can be built into every automobile. A needle on the dashboard starts wiggling and you have to hold it steady by moving the steering wheel. If you do, a "Pass" signal Ughbi up and you can start the car. Gtl-1 didn't say what happens if you flunk the moving needle. Maybe they 've built a new ejection seat? • 1t BorDl·&Dn? ' ' . .. ·s~elewn.'Probe f wlds Similariiies • • • BERWN (UP!) -A Wut Gorman , tlalmed ll<>nn1M Ond Dr. IAidwig p'°""""tor today 'Mid oew, evideuco 'In· SIUl!lplegpr, 1Dtler'1 ptnOMl pliysl- dlcatu • okeltton fO<lll<I lo B<rlln may be cllin. 'bad been ~ that of MarUn Bom\IM, Adoll IDUer's · W t u~-U .o.•-.... •··t · " deputy after 11u. . . ea ~ n ~ -UloD wee.. a )oachlm Rlp1iter, tbe FranWurl<listrlct prel)mlnary ~\Nl!Jt,li>o of the 1tulls attorney who haa lletJI working on the thought PoOllblY io beJIOnlwm'• abow..td 1lonnjlnn caaa !iilct lllS, said the &I"! of it was not his and ~ •belooil!I lo tho skeleton ana lrlCtl al wl)at '?l&ht be one or the llWIY antl-Nu1t ....:u1ecl m atass splinteJ)I IQ the leeth rai¥<d the. pClUihUity tpat )llO~ Of what 'l'eraUw'!l'Y.ardatlheetld .ol'!'e~- became ol Bor= might he solvod. . Police lod>y ho4 no comment Gil "We hope 1t will turn.. out to b& Richter's dlaclosure ot new eVktence. Bormaoo," be Hid. "But w• ... ~ saying only !hat .Jlle case la now In his yei. 11>e examination should he com-Jurlsdlctioo. pleted in the middle or January." Bonnann'I !~le has been a ihjstery Conslructlon workers found t w o since he was last aeen leavlng the skeletons Dec. 8 in the Lehrter Railway chancellery bunker aoe day after Hitler Yard, wheN! ~urvivon of World War ll kllled hlmseU tbere On'" April 30, 1945, as Getaw•fl Dal'ted the Russiaos closed ln. A West Berlin ret1illl1 off~ declared ~ dead In ISM but since lllen ..,. oOn.finned reports have said he la alive. ' 'Ole latest report, publllhed last month, said he II a n-ye&N>ld buslnesornlln Uv-lni·· in South America. RJchter said !onner Na:ila testified that J!Ormann took polllOll when he fallod lo l>roak through th<! Ruast111 lines around BerliD. "11>e troces ol whllt could be glass could be from the poison vial," Richter said. He said one of the skeletons wt! that of a small man and that BormaM was only 5 feet 5 inches tall. He said the second skeJetoo was bigger and could be that or Siwnp!egg~. Nixon Barely· ..._ __ .., ---•v.,• ... ~-··'-;T._, Falls Short --, 4 Gunmen Towed to Jail ~Of. Milestone ·fu Car With Hostages He's Proud Papa Entertainer Bobby Sherman shO\\'S off vlile, Patricia Anne, and baby, Christopher Noel , v..'ho was born Dec. 14 in Holl~·ood. Astronauts Begin Lengthy Debriefing With Experts SPACE CENTER (AP) -The Apollo 17 astronauts start their first full day of debriefing today, beginning a long series of technical sessions going over every phase of their 13-day moon miS11ion. AstronaUts Eugene A. Ceman, Har- rison H. S<!hmitt and Ronald E. Evans ( ...... _IN_SH_OR_T_._··~) "'ill meet with experts to describe how well their spacecraft and Us equipment operated during the flight. There'll be only a few minor ''anorilalies." the space term k>r prob- lems, to talk about. Apollo 17 has been described as the most perfect of the moon missions. v;ith each major slep of the cemplei project going as planned. The .. spacemen will have another debriefing on Saturday and will then take time off 10 be with th~ir families until after New Year's Day . e 'LI . Dish' 1'1orrles WINTER PARK, Fla. (AP) -Actress Jo Arm Pflug. who starred as Ll. Dish in the movie "~1.A .S.H .," has been married t~lle singer Charles H. Wollery in W lek s a small chapel on the campus of Rollins College. Miss Pflug, 28, designed the gown.she wore for the church wedding Thllrsday which included mostly family friends. The bride is the daughter of the l~te Winter Park Mayor and Mrs. J. Flynn Pflug. • '' ' e Det>iee De-ted . ' YUCCA FLA'.I'S, Nev. (UPIJ -An underground nuclear device, packini; the punch of from 2'1,000 lo 200,000 Ions Of TNJ', has been detonated ·at the botwm of a 2,ZOO.foot vertical shaft at tbe testing grounds here. Government officials said n·o fadiation leaked from the s1te as the result Of Thursday's blast, rated in the. low to 1n- tennediate range. OUicials from the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory in Livemore, said ttie device. code-named "Flax," \Vas weapons related. e Me at quotes Lifted WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on has suspepded meat import quotas for 1973 in an effort-to stop the rise in supennarket meat prices. Troasury Secretary George P. Shultz, who ~ tbe decistoo. 'lbui-sd.af, cautiODed that consumers ~ DOt ft.. peel a reduction in meat priceis. '" ' •WASHINGTON (AP) -While Presi-~ dent Nixon won re-election by the largest 1 vote total in history, his victory percen-1 lage fell short of a record. · Official vote totals released Thursday show Nixon beat George McGovern by , 17,971 ,294 votes, 15 million above his ." margin over Sen. Hubert Hwnphrey in· 1968. But the President's 60.7 percent of the total vote cast \\'8S just off the ,f!il.l per- cent piled up by Lyndon B. Johnson in his 1964 landslide victory over Republican ' Barry Goldwater. Figures com piled by The Associated Press from official state vote totals showed Nixon drew 47 ,042,924 votes in the fllov. 7 election compared with 29,071,629 for McGovern. THE CANVASSING of the 50 states and the District of Columbia was com-" i>leted Thursday. Increased numbers of voters this year ~ and l'nore minority party ballots held i down Nixon 's percentage of victory. , An assortment ol minority candidates· received 1,345,504 votes. If they are eruninated in this year's comparison. · .Nixon gels 61 .8 percent of the votes cast for major party candidates compared to ' 61'.3 percent for Johnson if the 196~ • results are similarly COO!piled. ATLANTA !AP) -Five gunmen who fled an abortive supermarket• robbery in Chattanooga, Tenn., with three hostages surrendered early today and released their captives unharmed. One of the men, Identified by pol.ice as Felix Bernard Lundy, 21 , surrendered after the getaway car was stopped on U.S. 41 about SS miles north of AUaota. The other four gave up after authorities had their car towed, with them and their b:>st.ages still inside, to the Fulton County jail in Atlanta. They were identified as 0 I i v e r Peterson, 18: Paul Wesley Berry, 25: \Vjllie Lewis Combs, 23; and Homer Lee Barnes. 23. All oC lbe five gunmen gave Atlanta addresses. Col. William Beardsley. head 0£ the Georgia Department of Investigation, said the men would faoe federal kidnap charges. r The OOstages were identified as Clar- ence Turner, 20; bis daughter, Sinetra_, 4; aod Vance Dobbins Jr. 41, a Chat· tanooga, Tenn., ambulance driver who offered himselr in place of a woman the bandits planned to take captive in Chat- tanooga. • The drama began al Wiilie's Supennarket in Chattanooga Thursday night when police responded to a holdup call and trapped the gunmen In the store. At one point, the bandits, surrounded by autboritles, held about 20 hostages in a b8ck storeroom. 1bey Weased most of their captives after Chattanooga police agreed to pro- vide lhem with an unmarked car. It was pulled into an alleyway behind the store. Dobbins said he was at the scene because an ambulance bad been called. He said he saw the men tiling a woman. "I told them to let the woman go and I would drive them out of tbe alleyway," Dobbins said. ''Tbey did and then thty didn't let me go. They had a 12-gauge shotgun at my neck all the way." But he added, "They didn't beat us or threaten us or anything.'' The bandits left Chattanooga m route toward Atlanta, but their car was stop- ped by police roadblocks about five miles south of Carjersville .. G11. . They sat on Pumpklnvlne creek Bridge on U.S. 41 in the bright glare of spotligbls and surrounded by officers for tin. ~ before they agreed to surrender at Atlan- ta and face ftderul kidnap charges, Beardsley said. The official popuJar vote totals did not ; cttange the electoral vote of 521 for Nixon ,; ~alld 17 for McGovern. This is second only 11 •to Franklin 0 . Roosevelt's trouncing in 1936 of Republican Alfred M. Landon, Three Sea Lions Die . who got only eight electoral votes. d . • q ·; . Flying to Join ·M~re WHEN THE ELECTORS met Monday I to ~st their ballots, Nixon got only 517 1 vOteS, instead of 521, as Alaska's three ! ReRUblican electors kept their votes ) ~r;et and a GOP elect.or in Virginia t ~~~~~d~~~~o~n v:~~r~~~~~~aei;,;.:~ 1 yot«:s were from Massachusetts and the District of Columbia. TAMPA, Fla. iAPI -Three yoong sea lions being rushed from Calilomia to lend comfort to April, the be'artsick sea lioness, died en route -just as the species was put on the government's protected. list. John G. Schmitz of the American party 1 polled 1,080,541 votes for third place. Dr. , Benjamin Spock, the antiwar People's ·~ party candidate, was next with 78,801. The deaths in Tampa· Thursday may mean an unrequited love for April, a sad and blubbery beast who has gorged t herseU and roamed aimlessly around the N~wspap~r· Protests WASHINGTON (AP ) -The 600- member Washington Press Club Thurs- day protested formally to President Nix- on .what it calls the "systematic ex- clusion" of a Washington Post reporter · from White House social functions. The clu,b's board of directors expressed con-cern in a re&OJution over the new White Hotase "pool'' policy that banned Post i reporter Dorothy McCardle from four JacksonviUe Zoo since three companions died last spring. .. We have this lonely female waiting and we had planned to start a harem," said a zoo offidal. "We even cleaned the pool. April 's been waiting in a nearby tank." One in-transit sea lion survives here. But it's not known whether it is a female or male. Four sea lions -pelieved to be three females and one male --wen! crated in two woodon fli&ht kennels and placed on a Wedlleflilay night Olght from ''Possibly the sea lions dried out en route." said Calvano. Sea.,tloos ~ve sensitive skin jhat must be kept wet They are only able to survive for short periods without acces!I to water. Replacement of. the dead animal! may be very difficult ; officials said the sea lion was placed on the protected species list 'l'hw>day and the new federal Marine ~tammals Act-wW make It harder for zoos to captµre such animals. Meanwhile., April pines away. ZOo of- ficials said she bas been he.art.s1ck since two compan.ioo females and a male died of beartworms and virus wt spring. They had hoped lo restore bet tights to conjugal comforts. So lonely has she been that April recently shuffled out ol her pen. invaded the monkeys' compound and stuffed benelf on 125 pounds ol their cal!ood. · He said the action hopefully 'wPI hBtt the current rise and stabilize p:>e ~ri~ ~ ¥'~e House social events. Los Angeles tO Jacbonville. The plane was delayed bfi mecbanical troubles aJ\d stopped In Tanipo. W,i:t.r; 'I hope Henry likes his present!" e Cou9ress1nan G~ilt11 TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) -Rep. Cornelius Gallagher (0-N.J.). who serve"d seve n terms but was dereated in the Inst · primary, bas pleaded guilty to evading $74.000 in federal incdme taxes. U.S. Altomey Herbert J. Stern said the government intends to drop six other tax. perjury and conspiracy charges ·against Ga11aghl!r, 51, because he offered to. talk to government agents. Because of \hat, Stem said, Galfagher aafled for a flv&-month delay in serr tendna IO give him time "to come in and make i:nowb such information that may be ol help to lbe U.S. government." When ~atlonal Air Line1 officials checked on the animals, they fOtDJd two dead and a third looking "pretty bid," said I..oois: Calvano of NAL's freight of. flee. The third died before a veterinarian arrived. ) Peron in Madrid ' 11 MADRID (AP) -Juap. Q.. Peron ar· rived in Madrid today alter his first trip 11 to Argentina since be was overthrown aa pr<Sident In ll!ili. feron dedined lo say ii ., he would return to Buenoe Aires to help ' his rupporten In the electlollll schecluled 1 for March. •DAILY PILOT OELlVERY SERVICE DtRwry of the D.lily PiSot is guarantttd ~.,_,......,.= II ..... .. lllf !law .,.... ,_,... .,. I=• """'" c.tll Ml ,..,,, Q9>f wNI ............ JI ,.... Cflflt .,. ..._ ...., 11• ...... . s. .... , .., ~ " .,.. .. -,.,...,. ,......,.,.,., .... ,.... ........... 5-hr, c111.-1 ..., 1'11 .._...,.....,. \'ff. ''"' .,. fll• illflfll '' .... Ttlt;phonts Most or1• Cowity "r"• ... MJ-4JJI N~t HUlltlflCllM 9MCfl s.!'1~nc.~;-'INdi: 54t-1UI Soll'I J-C••r-, 0.111 Polflt, 5outll LlllUM. L.teun. NIOI* 4tl -44JO Pacific Coast Battered ' ' " ' Raquel •st~ips!'. • I if'inds, Rai1is Sla m Oregon, W as hingwn Coasts T emperatures Miill L .. Pf ~1 ~· ·" ---~- liO SI ,76 ,. :u _,, >t ,, .?S ., '3 .u .M ,, l .?t ll l~ T .. ~ ~ " " " ~ " H I i r, " ~ tt ~, J, j ~: l B 11 ~ M LH ·-· .... I ) OlflE9iNIJlser Port.land, Ore., TV reporter Kathy Wong, ~l . needs assist- ance of"chafr lo Interview Miss Tall Universe, Tara Sheldon. 6-4.~· ------·· ,: Sex Symbol Makes .Nigh,t Club Bow 11 LAS VEGAS (AP) -ActrwyRaqutl i Welch perlonnod her 111'11 nlgiit Club act · before a houle pecked with Gl's and did , a slrl.p-leue "!mher 111111 kept Ille a .. -Ill the""" o111neai., . About 500 l!<rlOOI, most of them ~ ainnen from nearby Nellil Air torce Base and wtv<t O! ml ..... Fill ptlota, hid betn lnvu.ea to the "premier'' performance '11)undly nlibl -1 lull drua rehearsal of Ml91 Welcb'1 fil'll nlghl<lllh act.' She makes her formal debui here loolaht. The alrlp teue was more tease than strip, The ato""' wen the only thine to come oft · tler only previous stage performance was as a slne:er and dancer during -1 Bob lfope Chri1trtja1 show In Vietnam. "I thousJ!t ol this as my opining night," 1he 1114. "The first audience for me ts ope)llna hight. Mniy acta whlah come to Veges have alre1.d)' beat on the -103d, but lbil •&1 the nrst time T ever • did It. It was 'fun." "I've never done anything llke this tn my life. n.. Hope troupe WIS an u- per1....._ 'but I lllUlt say I didn't do anything clote lo what I do in this lhow." Whal she did -.. lllll'nllUld benell with marionettes and J>UPl"'tl aa 1he .... 1 on • mllllcal apoo1 ol her roles In "Fant.utJc Voyage," "50 M.UUon Years B.q.," "Myra B~e" &Dd fll(an. ... ... City Bomber." • '1 dldn'' want lo do tho \ypl"1 Holl)"llOOCI actrou OOlllloa lo 110,u _.,. they all do It wbm their..,_. are en the !Ode. And they all do u -lhty don't have any place helltr lo, .. • "And I didn't want to get· out there with all lhoae featbo[s and sequ!iia 1114 fondling boy -ind au lhll llufl .. u doan'l'loolt Uke I doo!t do llll7thlns With the puppets we give people a good production vallle wllho•I llV!nl mo a crutch." I ' • • Drug FiI·m Gets Suit In Death SAN F~ANCISCO (UPI) - One of the nattoo's biggest dnig compan?ea was sued fc>r Ill mlltlon Thurlday by a pa- tent lawyer who claims his wife or 22 months died as a result of taking the contra· ceptlve pUI "Norlestrln.'' The suit, ·rued in San Fran- cisco Superior Court, named Parke:-Davis and Company, a San Jose doctor who ·prescrib- ed the pill and 15 unnamed persons as defendants . Ronald S. Laurie, 30, a pa- ('-_B_Rl_EF_S _) ...,_ 'Kin' Arrelt414 Sandn Good. 28, was arrested in San Fran- cisco 'Vuesday on a rol> bery w;trr~nt from Portland, Ore. Cros.5 on her foretiead, ide'ntifies her as a member of the Manson family. tent lawyer who lives in ---------1 suburban Tiburon, said in the suit that his wife, Marcia Ellen Laurie, died Sept. 1~ this year. eDonorDles OAKLAND (UPI) -Retired car dealer George S. Daniels, who losl 15 members or his family to cancer, donated $150,000 earlier Ulil month to help victims of the disease. He died Thursday at age 89 of cancer. 'MM! money was to establish the Bay Area Tumor Institute to provide treatment and counseling for cancer pa- tients. In announcing the gift. Daniels recalled that before his wife's death from cancer in 1969, "nobody would tell me exactly what was wrong. Nobody wou ld say a friendly hello. There was no sympathy, no feeling, no nothing." .. e Younger Bit SACRAMENTO (AP) State AUy. Gen. Eve 11 e Yoonger, widely mentioned as a potential Republican nominee for governor in 1974. ha,, dropped a hint that he may instead seek reelection to his present job. Youoger, COllSldtred,. by. . some as the GOP's 1trorlgest prospect to succeed Gov. Reagan, said ln an Interview Thunday be hHn' reaCl>Oil a decision about ·1974. ' • e Rft•Suell LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A film production company has riled a $1 million breach of contract suit against actress Rita Hayworth, claiming shP failed to carry out her role in a movie called ''Witness Madness." The suit, nled Thur9day by World Film Services, Ltd., said Miss Hayworth started work on the film in England Nov. 15 but performed services in "an unprofessional, undiligent and i m p r o p e r fashkln." e Couple Sought SAN DIEGO (AP) -An Escondido couple accused of imprisoning the wife of a prominent jeweJer in their home for 30 hours were objects of a police and FBI search t~ day. Warrants were Issued Thursday for Alberta and Robert Carlon in connection with Ule ransom kldnaping of Betty Ann Ottoson, 41 , from her Escondido home Monday evening. Police said she was released early Wednesday, tired but unharmed, in downtown &.condido. Angel Barrera, 25, o f Mkhoacan, Mexico, was ar· rested in a car shortly alter Mrs. Ottoson was found safe, police said. He pleaded In- nocent Thursday to charges of kldnaplng, armed rob~ry and burglary and was held on $150,000 bail pending a preliminary hearing Jan. 5. eTa:Bre•k SACRAMENTO (AP) - California families who send their youngsters to private schools will get a st.ate income taJ break Wider a blll signed by Gov. Rooal<! Rea[an. • The meaaure signed Thlln- day profldel a rnaxlmum tu credit of IW per child for [llJTilllM with an adjusted gross Income up lo lli.000. e Bif•rker SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A convlcttd conspirator w h o ocknowkdged he could have stopped an airline hijacking in wi.tlcb three men d)ed .haf blfln sentenced to a maximum life term. 7 l 1idi.cted \ In Chino Escape Case SAN BERNARDINO (AP ) -Seven persons have been in- dicted by federal grand juries in a bloody alJlbusb.escape at- tempt near the state prison at O.ino that left a prison guard dead. A federal grand, jury in San Bernardino, Thursday return· ed mUrder indictments against four persons saying they took pari in the Oct. 6 ambush of a prison vehicle that was taking Ronald Beaty, 35, to a court appearance here. Beaty escaped in the am- bush in which one prison guard, Jesus Sanchez, 24, was shot to death and another wounded. Coastline Committees , . ' Appointed ( SA\)RA!,IENTO !AP) -'The state Senate Rules Committee has named Long Be a ch newspaper executive Bernard Ridder Jr. and fQrmer state Sen. Fred Farr of Carine! to the state coastal commission created by the Nov. 7 coastal initiative. The Rules Committee a~ point.'! two membe rs to the statewide commission, along with two appointments by Ule Governor and the Assembly speaker. 1be state commission and six regional commissions are charged with drawing up a conservation plan for California's 1 ,087-mile coastline and administering a permit system for coastal development while the plan is being created. Rules Committee Chairman Sen. James Mills (R-San Diego) also aMOunced these appointments Including that of a Huntington Beach man to the regional commlssions : Waterbeds ·Get Tests SACRAMENTO [AP) - A machine that im- personates human but.. tockS it being used by state officiab to try out waterbeds. Jloward Wlnalow, chit! or the Dtvls!On 0 r lo)Jmlture and Bedding in the atate'a Conaumer Af.. filra, says the mteblne was orll]!laUy bought to test ordtoary nttressa by •ppllcatMJn of tarlous degreu or ---It la now being uaed o n wa~rbeds alnce ne w waterbed·•trmiltl\ regula- tions have gone into effect,-he 61id .. ''*'· Dlctmbtt 22. 1472 4,GOP tor Farr Film Premiere Benefits ·Newsman LOS ~GELES (AP ) - Actor J1ct Lemmon prataed jailed newsman Wllllam Farr as "a man of principle" at a movie premiere which raised $4,000 for Farr'• lepl U· penses. of Gamma Rays on Man-ln- Tbe-Moon Marlgsilda," alar· ring JoaMe Woodward. was jailed by Superior Court tht Los Angel es Press Club, Judge Charles H. Older, who ·read a IV)te from Farr to the found b1m in C()Jl.tempt. audience. the vicklusness of organlied crime and injustices that elist in our society," Farr wrote. lie urged the audience to write lhelr congressmen aod senators, asking them to vote for bills which would protect ne"·smen's privileges. "I care enough to be where J am for days, months or even DAILY PllOT CALIFORNIA Lemmon led a cast of hun- dreds, many from the nearby Hollywood movie community, who attended the premiere sbowtng Thuraday night or 20th Century Fo.-'"!be Effect "TONIGHT WE face the borrib1e truth,•• Lemmon told the audience. "A good man, an honest man, an enonnou.sly principled man has been Im- prisoned :ln Our city because he wrote the truth." Older, who pre.aided at the Charles Manson murder trial. ordered Yarr to re.main in jail until be decides to reveal which of ille six attome)'s in- volved in the trial gave him Information IQ[ a s I o r y published In the Los Angeles Herald-ExamiDer. "WHAT HAS not been made clear er.ough is that those of us in the news media are not asking for some s p e c i a I privilege for ourselves ... rather we want this so-called privilege to hel p us better in· form the public of such things as corruption in high places, years, so I feel I have the ..._ _______ _ • Farr, whose 38th birthday and 25th day in jail are today, Dick Turpin, president of WARD 31 FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL right to ask these things of you," Farr wrote. Home to 52 teenage boy• and adult., all mentally retarded, in need of •ome re•idential' care; in those re•pech they're the seme a• the other 1720 people who live at Fairview. But these kids are physically handicapped too, so that they need wheel chairs or other means of ambulatory support. The challenge• confronting them have a con•iderably re- duced •c·ope in comparison to tho•e you might have - some of them can't even turn the pages of a book, while othen can't figure out how to get a •poonful of food from their plates to their mouths. Movement is tough, and figuring out how to do it is even tougher. All they want is to ,.;alk like you , talk like you, read like you, eat like you, act like you. And how they work at it! It may be a two-year project to get a spoon from a plate to a mouth. But they keep trying. To help them learn the<e actions, Ward 31 (like other wards in the hospital) has a specially-trained employee in charge catled a "group leader". Trained as a psychiatric technician, the group leader spends every hour of an extensive work day helping these kids to help them- selves. lf they are able to complete basic functions by themselves they will be better equipped to join and function in a group. Depending on their progress it is the ultimate goal of the hospital ·staff to have a, many of the teenagen a.s possible .co~sidered 1or placement in foster homes in the community. But in Ward 31 there's a need between the hope and challenge of what can be learned on one hand and the actual accomplishment of it on the other. The hospital calls it Program 4, the number 4 representing the Wards including #31 that have similar residents with similar goals. It is the goal of Program 4 to place in each of the 4 wards an environmental set~ing •imilar to those found in the normal home, to have a room on the ward that would be set up with hou•ehold furniture including couches, chain, rugs, book. and book.helves, tables, lamps, etc. The psychiatric nurses and technicians recognize that such an area would have a two-fold use; first, it would have great value as a "reward~' area to be used after specific accom· plishment; and •econd , it woud be invaluable in ih use as an area in which social development could be understood and accomplished. These teenagers ani! adulh would greatly appreciate and benefit from such a social, setting. So, we're going to help Ward 31 , under the auspices of Program 4 to furnish a room so that these kids can ~ave a living room like the one in your house . The people at Fair- view are happy about the ,contribution but it's not enough. MaY,be you'd like to help. This time of year you're probably exhausted from various requests and you probably "gave at the office", but if you aren't and if you didn't, here's a way to satisfy that growing frustration that so often hih this time of year, that one that questions whether you've done anything for your fellow man lately. If that feeling hits and you'd like to help put a lamp, or a picture, or a chair into some teenage kid's life , then get out the check book and endone a dollar or few to Fairview State Hospital, Program 4, 250 I Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. Drop it in the mailbox tonight -you won 't believe the way you'll feel tomorrow. 44 fashion island, newport center \ . 644-5070 • U.S. Dl1lrict Court ·Judge William T. Sweill:ert sild a factor tn his judgment was ''tbe public concem over the hlj1~1dng problem tn¥olv!:'j! all thecountriaollhe world.' l..--------.11·----~-----------~---------------~-----------------------'-.: ' "' " ' I ' • 8 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Man a ,nd the Moon Apniio 17 has brought the last or the U.S. moon explorers safely home for Christmas and ended the moon excursions. apparently for several de<::ades. Si nce the first Mercury flight was launched in 1961. the U.S. has sent a total of 27 probes into space and made six landings on the surface of the moon. The first space excunions had the world holding Its breath. But as journey afte r journey proceeded "un· eventrully.'' the excitement wore thin except for those whore imaginations somehow resist the cynicism of the day. · \Vhile acknowledging that the space program was perhaps the greatest scientific adventure of all time, ~nd Lhe moon landings a splendid "first" for the United States and the world. an iOC'reasing number of earthlings took to grumbling about the expense and "uselessness" of Lhe whole operation. The rumblings, which \Vere sufficient to bring the Apollo program t-0 a halt, bad to do vt'ith the many ob- vious deficiencies of life on earth and the many "better" uses that could have been made of the money. \Vhy worry about the moon , asked the cynics, when the earth has yet to solve the more pressing problems of wars, poverty and pollution? But the assumption that these and other earth problems could have been solved \vlth application of the effort and money that went into the space program is hardly realistic. Its adherents are those who would answer "yes" to the questions posed by one writer who suggests '"e have become so over-sophisticated we no longer can ad· mire historic accomplishment. and asks: "Do we look on the Egyptian pyramids or the Great Wall of China and say the money would better have been spent on the prior'.' Do we admire Socrates and Homer less because they taught philoso-phy and wrote poe~ instead of cam paigning Ior the abolition of slavery? ' They are, said another, "prisoners of a limited vision who cannot comprehend or do not care, that Nell . Arm· Strong's step in the lunar dust will be remembered when most of today's burning wue. have become mere foot· notes of history." Least of all do they understand what may tum out to have been the space exploren• greatest contribution: 2\vlng mankind. for the first time, the ability to see our llttie planet as it truly is, lonely In space, with all men a.s brothers, "riders on the earth together ... " Time for Reflection liteanwbile back on earth, with Christmas near, it appears the grim estimate of 700 California traffic deaths between Nov. 1 and Christmas Day will be met, i! not exceeded. Specifically. it means nearly 100 Californians will die in traffic this very week. Reflection on a few key points might cut the toll. -More than half the fa~l accidents occur at night or du.nng the dusk and dawn hours when visibility is reduced. Be especially careful when traveling at night. ·-Last year 461 children under the age of 14 were killed in traffic. It is predicted that one child will die each day in this week before Christmas, many from dart- ing in front of cars. Both parents and drivers should be alert to this hazard. -More than two pedestrians are killed in California traffic every day-again m06'Uy during the hours of de- creased visibility. -Drinking drivers are involved in 20 percent of all fatal accidents. Watch that holiday cheer! . -AOOut 25 J:!ereent of traffic fatalities involve vie· t1ms who were eJected from vehicles. Buckle A.he seat holts! And when you drive, think-about driving! 'I just want to thank y ou, coach, for the important new duties yoµ've assigned to me.' The Wonders of One Flattery Man Finds The Future of Community TV Chr.istmas Past Christmas bas always been an unfor- gettable day. The commercializa1ion of the holiday among grownups is of fairly recent vin· tage. But in the pi· rate heart of child- hood Christmas was always a something- for -nothing, grab- bag -for -everybody day. That is why Santa Claus is so popular with chil- dren. He Is the most giving as weU as lorgtving saint in the calendar. Every hear1 has ita I a v o r i I e Christmases. But )'OU· have a better perspective on the whole holiday picture if you can look back to Christmases past and rememer when - You were told that if you were a bad boy or girl Santa Claus would leave a lump of coa1 in your stocking. But few parents actually were mean o r thoughtless enough to play this prank m their children. CANDLES were used instead of elec- tric lights on Christmas trees. and the season "'as marred by scores of tragic deaths acros the nation when the candles set the drying trees aflame. Every child looked forward to getting a bright golden orange in his stocking. along with apples and nu ta and candy. Fresh oranges today are taken for granted around the year. but a half c~n· tury or so ago, they were rare and delightful treatl during the winter. This memory of getting a fresh orange Is st ill the one people aged 60 years or more hark back lO most when recalling the simple thrills of Christmas when lhcy were young. ALTIIOUGH Christmas decorations in some homes were just as ornate as thost! ( HAL BOYLE J no"" most families couldn't afford many of the delicate Christmas balls from Czechoslovakia, which was 3150 famous then for making tbe most lifelike glass eyes. A majority of the trees were decorated with homemade tinfoil stars, tinsel cut from the tinfoil in cigareette packets, and strands of beaded propoom and cranberries. Fifty years ago the most popular children's presents were sleds for the boys and dolls for the elrls. Some of the dolls could cloee their eyes if you tilted them, but they didn't wal~, talk or molsten their diapeB- TBERE WAS • rule d Uwmb about Christmas candy. No matter how much or bow litUe yoo gave a kid, in three days it would be all gone. Children then enjoyed chewing dried fruits at holiday time. Imagine banding a modem child a package ol dried apricots and telling bim. that was his ttWard for being a good boy. He'd think you were crazy -and when be told the nelahbors, they'd lhink ... loo. l\fOTHER DIDN'T get so much from Santa Claus in the old days. It was usually a scarf or a pair of gloves or a box of lace handkerctllefs, and Dad, then as now, counted hirmell lucky to &et a new shirt, some 90Cks, or a couple of neckties. Mother didn't mind gettlne a new household appliance for Chrisbnas, but she never laughed very hard when her husband asked, her lf she'd like a new laundry board for Christmas. That was what Chrl1tmas past was like -remember? Our Decrepit Capiwl California's Nte capitol building is about 10 fall down. The Gove rnor's mansion is an abandooed fire ila1.ant. The state's Jeglslattve leadership can't reapportloo ltself. A plethora of fellows within and without lhe legislature ere running for Governor. THE BEAU'l1FUL, stately old capitol bu!Jdlng apparently has just had il, ac- cording to the stories nowlng ou~ or Sacr&mento. ll ls a shame. True, the && cllll'd "new' .. •e11st wing I.! much more {11nctlonBI and makes far better use of space. But the old structure Wlder the dome ls one ol lhc lovelier capiv.>ls of all the SI.ates. Even the far-larger. vastly In· spiring national capitol ~sn't lend itself to any greater dl.gnlly. But now the 9Chool kiddies we 11re told ~:on'l be permitted their trips through the old buUdlng for fear it will fall on them and shortly, If things run true 10 Conn, the statt will have a multi-million dollar new job. ~--B11 George ---· Dear Ge«ge: I tum beet red at the !k.impincn of aome ol the mlnl aklrU around my office. What can l do? Qresses get more revtaJi.Pa every ye.,-. • BL1JSHY Deir BIU1hy: Vob're tJftd ~ tumb\I red? Do • u I do. I turn green with envy beca.,. I'm nol 21) year< younger &nd llltcJ&. " 11IE PROBLEM wlth the Governor's mansion is 10methlng tlse. The old nre trap is enouah to scare heck out of anyone even contemplallng spentUn11 the night, much le21.1 JJvlng there. Govemor Reagan, tc hit credit, tlmply hauJed anchor and rented a place where his family could live decently. The thame is that state officialdom hiu squabbled about a new home for the first family for so many years -without resolution - that the cost of any proper residence has gone up astronomically. A number of Californians became so armoyed with the situation they 'Jet ou! to raise the money to bulld a new home for the Governor, and have purchued an I I· acre site which wa1 then dm\lttd to the ltate. and later dcsi&D•ted by the legislature u the otndJl 1ite for a new man&kln. ' STATE ARCHITF£T Fred Hummcl Htimatts that the new buHd.tng. wttb ap- pu,...ance>, will cost about 11.3000,000 more. After the •rclll""'"' do their bit In desJ.gnlna: a muctwt, the ltglalaturt, of coul'!le, will hive to appropriate the fund.I to build k. Nonnally this mlgl>t be c:on1ld..,,d anotbe.r 10 year project. what with a DemocratlcaUy-controUed Jegisl1ture and a Republican Governor. But with moet of the legislative lttderahlp golng to sltep nights dreaming of belng Governor, 11long with various state coostitutlonal offittra, they might get 1m1rt and get the Job done so that they would have • pliM:e to Uve In if they won. CIJUonill Featore Strvke I Irresistible Thought• at Large : Strange that the people who most yearn· for eternity are so insufferably boring in a hall-hour of prozim!ty. • • • Parents should never, under any circumstances, set up one chlkl to another as a "good example" -s u c b comparlsoos breed a ton of resentment for every ounce of emullltJoo. • • • 'Ille one Oallery that no man can re- sist ls the imputation that be cannot be turned by flattery. . • • • A genuine leader needs a peculiar con· tradiction in qualities: he needs to be enough like his foUow~rs to evoke thelr (srnNEY J.HARIUs) agreement, and enough different from them to evoke their admiration. • • • ONE OF THE Ineradicable dlffereflC'e! between the sexes may be e~ in William Blnger'1 mot that: "A man is a penon who will pay two dollars for a one-OoUar item he wanta; a woman will pay one dollar for a two<lollar l1em she doesn'I want." • • • The most common (and dangerous) distortion by pride consisl.J In a man who has achieved command of one particu1ar field Imagining that such coaunand gives him authority to speak ln some (or any) other field. • • • (Evm the greatest of men are n:>t ex- empt from this falling -such as E\ns-- tein's platitudinous pronouncements M pollUcs, and Freud's assumption of antlu'opological and relig1ou11eamirla.) • • • YOU'RE NOT really mlddlHged until the "Top Ten" ""'rd!nga begin lo sound like the Bottom Ten to you. • • • On< wond<rs, If the Bible had l>«n composed ln a oorthtm clime instead of a tem..l·tropical ooe. would Hell be depleted 11 freeilng rather than burning? (Most metaphors are inspired by the en- vironment ln which they are composed: Dante's conception of Hell put "tralton" In the wont drcle. because duplicity wns the paramount vice of his 10Ciety.) • • • As soon u ooe is put in the pasltion of giving orders, lhe tendtncy is to Slflp leamlng; and It is precisely this ten· dcney, unchecked, that topplet: UJe vrder- glven ln the end. Dear Gloomy Gus Coupks are renting, not buyln1, When Ibey decide '110t lo marry. ~farriRge is and has been a good lnveM.ment. --GRANDMA NI IMIWn ""9m ,..._~ ....... lllf ~" tMM., .. _., .... ...... ,_ Ht "'" .. ·~ c.u .. o.llr PIMt. -. ' I ' I Electronic Free Speech 'I1lea Sklover was in town the other day doing the Washington leg of her perpetual national round-robin of lob- bying, teaching, and urging. Hers is the task cl arousing ~ pie to take action r-· now about something -\ lhal will happen in r( 'f ! the future. t · Thea Skk>ver. the .. Bennington College graduate who re- turned home to New York to become a public schoolteacher, wenb us to reverse our most ingrained naUonal hablt. She wants ·us &o stop sit- ting pusively In beerful stupebctlon in front of our TV sets and go on carnera OW1ielVes. We're going to have the chance beeauae the new F e d e r a 1 Corr1- munlcations Commission reguJations re- qutre that all cable TV systems reserve at teaat one channel for the public to use. "It's lbe first translation of the fr ee· speech amendment into the e.lectronlc age," says Thea, who knows that having a right doesn't mean much Wlless we can cta9C being "a people woo are basically pasalve, particularly when it comes to that machine. We're conditioned to get information from that machine. not feed It, and unless somebody comes up with w11ys for people to feed it the idea of public access will never be realized." It'll be another five or six years before all of America is ¥lired for cable TV, but it's DOW that local jurisdictions are negotiating franchises that will either make public access a useful tool or a sterile legal stipulatkm. As Thea says, "What we've done is get a road, pgtiod. It's not even paved. It has no traffic llghta an It. No cars." THE INCUNATION will be to view ( VON HOFFMAN ) wbUc-access televlslon as just some more educational or non<0nunercial TV. But public televlsion isn 't public access TV. Noo-commerclal television ls lhi rd- rate commercial network televisJon pn;. dµced mosUy -with a very few cUafhlguisbed ncepllons -by busb- leaguers wllo lack the guts, brains and talent to mate jt at NBC or CBS. Suell dull and craven stuff lm>t wbat~ Thea is pushing ln her capacity as head · ol The Open Olanne.l, a 11QDi111Jfil organization that has been doing real public-access programming on Manhat- tan's two new cable systems. Using pn;. fessional volunteers and inexpensive TV 11!1" recording equipment, '!'be ()pen Cbarmel has been going out to schools, hospita1s, dubs, every kind of bwnan grouping, and offering them the pro- fessional expertise to put themaeives on tbe air in an attractive way th:it is several large cuts above home movies. IF PEOPLE aren't taught how to use the medium with some knowledge and skill, public·access turns into tittle more than a room with a camera trained &t a desk where people .can come In and read s\eep-inducing statementa lhat no one will watch. On the other band, lavishly mounted, entirely professional work can't be done by the PTA, the Boy Scouts or the. factions involved In, for example, a zorung-code fight. Sklover is hoping to sbow communities the advantage of dedicating some of the revenues from the new cable franchises to do a sort of pro- gramming that is nellher rankly ama- teurish nor prohibitively professional. This is possible wl1h cable television because you can ··narrowcast" Instead ct broadcasting programs. The technology pernUts separate programs for tach community, neighborhood or school district. It allows television to be part o( the intimate political. social and artistic life of the small community. U there were. for instance. a dispute over whether a builder should be allowed to put up a high-rise apartment house ln one suburb, the contending parties could fight it out over purely local TV while the 1 community next door LI P'°Rranunlni its arts and crafts fesUval. ALL OF TIDS presuppose! a <Ufferent relationship between a man Ind his television tube. It must be an "organic" one, to use Thea's word. ~1erely putting an ad in the paper promoting an open-ac· cess program Won't work. People will prefer to watch Marcus Welby_ To corn· mand an audience a narrowcast program must arise directly out of community llfe, out of meetings, knock.Inga on doors, and the obliteration of the distinction between viewers and perionners. It's anybody's guess as to how th.ls kind of television would transfonn our ways of living, but at the least it ought to give an immediacy to our close commwtity life that network broadcasting has given our national politics. Broadcasting changtd our Presidential candidates from remote names to distinct personages. So now, if people heed Thea Sk1over, narrowcasting can oonvert local decision-m.ak.ing from small, venal tricks played oo us whlle we're away at work to ii procedure in '1.·hich. we take part. 'lb.at's a lot of daily, routine, y;orlcing democracy for a spectator--sport natkm. but if iri too much bother we can always flip channels back to the ball game and Jet Dllelxidy else decide !or us. Urban Indians Abandoned WASIDNGTO~ -'!'be urban Indian, who Oed the dry-dlrl poverty of the reservation to seek his fortune in the ci· ty, bas become America 's forgotten man. Most often, he gave up a hard tile Im the open range for a banter Ille of cold ctment and tarpa- per 1hack1, of joblessneu and alco- holism, of tuberculo- sis and early death . The grim story is told Jn the Broken TrtaUas Papers, which Irate Indians looted from government files and turned over to us. No one really knows how many urban Indians are ln desperate need. Eltlmates run as high as 300,000 -that's a thlril of the Indians in the Unlttd States -or the"' may be 1eA than 100,000. 11tE STOLEN p1pora •bow lhal former Indian Commlsalooer Robert Dennett became appalled at what be learned aboot the plight ol the city In- dians and uked his stall, In Auguil 1968, to prepare a report for blm. · An elhaustlve document, labeled "Study ol Urban Indian Problems," was d<llverod lo -11 on De«mber It, t9!3, In the dying days ol the Johnson AdmlnlltreUon. "An lndJan doel not cease being an In· d.lan slmply by movlna from the reserv•· tlon .... , " the study declared. "Tbe In- dian mlnl-tnloorll)i, alone among tho many urban ethnJc grouJMf, lacks an el· fectlve voice and commandl no advocate for · 1u intettlt." ' The study charged that the Bureau of lndlnn Affairs has nealected the forlorn Indians ln the cities and reCommended that it "enlarge its l'Qle ln the urban en· vironment." • 111.E snJDV was circulated to BL~ of· fices throu ghout the country for their commenu. "All replies," according to a conlideqtial summa?', • 'r endered favorable commenl' Slowly, tM bureaucratic wbcel1 were set In motion to Implement tbe at~y. In AUll.l$l 1969, the tK!:w Indian COD). riilaskmer, l.Ouls Bruce, promised that the BlA wou1d act IS "advocate" ror Lbe wl>an lndltlll. Bui r.,,sldenl Nixon had other h> teOUOllJ. A yeRr liter, he aald lh>t the 118IA 'a IUpOIUlibllity doet not exttod to t~ •ho have lelt the reaervaUon." Howevi!r, ht was ambiguous about \he details. Hll lnstnictlons • .,. clarified lo the BIA by aide Frank Carlucd wllo wrote in a memo that the Prtlldent "eavtn1e1 no extension or BIA services to lndJana who hove ,lert the retenatlon ..• Jt '°ppean controlling lhlt lndlan neec1I ....t...,. •. lion are sufflc{ently areat that rttOUrces available to BIA should not be dissipated elsewl\Cre.'' ~ TUE WHJT!! JJOOSE orders were en- forced hy Aas:llfant Interior secretary ' Harrison Loesch who decreed in an in- ternal communication that the bureau 's services are to be provided only to "the reservation Indian populatlon.11 Several wee.ks later, after lht urban ln· dian study had been discarded and Its recommendation killed by the· White House. Sen. James Buclcley, Con-N .\'., and Rep. Melvin Esch, R-Mlch., heard about the study and asked lntenor ' Secretary Rogers Morto1i about It. Morton knew the study was dead but be hedged In his letter to the 'con- gteS!men. Tfle study's ' • v a r I o u s aspects," he wrote, "will have to be thoroughly considered." OIANOI COAIT DAILY PILOT Robtrl N. Wetd, Publl1her Thotna• Ketvll, Editor Barbaro Kreibich Edftor1al Page Edttor fhC' odllorla1 llfll.lt' nf rhe Dally Piiot ~ttk~ to lntflrm and 1lln1u· hu" rt'lldf'n by p~nllng thla n""~P•P~r'4 ~lnlO•" and oom· mcnta-iy un tople1 of lnte:mt llnd st11ntrlc1nci•, by l•ffl\'\dlna a (orun1 Mr thf! ex11rt'llllh1n of our readttrs' nµlnlon1, and by 111''1"tt}llinjt th1• dlvrt'!le vlt"\\•lll"llnl a or Informed ob. •<"fl{Ct& and •IX>ktitmt!n on 1011lctt of lhfo (\II.)'. • Frida7, Deeember 22, Ul72 ' c J c ' CA ' L ,. " • •• L •• L c MC • c MC • • •• • DO c co ' " , .. • co ' ' . 5T •• H• ~ .. ... ... Gird t:· ·~· For The Record Marriage Ucetase~ COl.e.IMN-MCCAll:THY -Ill o II "''J. J1<k, 12, 2217 Httbor llyd,. Apt. H 1 COlll MeM Ind Mltll K'"*I'"' 2t, 17t CKM f'llQ, C• .. Ml ... (ANAVllilt•""otll -...... Andrww, 21, l:nA W .. I 91lbcw, N.wport ~ ...cl Lori Lw!M• lt, S6d I( ...... , Yttllol llMt. KllLY.CHlttlT11 -. SI....., ~~!f..: 11, IUSI E~ Af!t. O, ....,_,.., GtOW 91\111 f . , lt, tul Tropic Dr!... Wh!mlnttw. . ll:A!Jf'A?llNl-ElLIMGSlH -f'~ J...... n. '111 Clll'** Aw., W•""IMlw 91111 Sofia AM, », <111 ~. Apt. C, Anar.lm lll!Ofo!HEAlllT-OE VUSSEll: _,, ltllberi Ec1W1rd, Z1. 11411 lndl.,..,..,i. HUl'l-tl.... hKfl -* Myc""'61 M1rl1 L ydl1, !I, lm"I Okluellttr UM, Nun"notan IMdl. Cl!LGAOO-f'llll!l -Alotlell linrlqul, 'Z!, 2211 S. Ban11181111n AWl'\Ultio Apl, I , l.DI MOfMt, ... It-Juti.. .. 1$1, Cor1indar Orf\111, Aot. A, Celll MM.I. MCNllLL.., Jll,·W.10HT -1l1y""""4, 25. lillOl ~-f'1<lnc, s-1 hech and J1nll M1r11, U. 11171 l olM. Chica. Apt, '3, H1111ttnoton lffcflo. MCCLINTOCK-SMITH -Jimmie ll:tld, :n. 6332 1!11lmor11 Ot1'111, Hlll'lllfllllOll ISHCll Ind Judith Kc' tt, Ul2 1!11lmiw1I Orlw, Hunll IS1ach. lftOWH·LLOVO -W111 Im Adelb«I, 3(1, 911' N. C.ady, s .. t. Ana Ind Llrt· 01 M .. , U. Sl4t AWAM<n A¥1 .. W•l'nll11Sf9r. DODGl!:4lli1GHAll:O -J•,_ C1l1, 25, 2S4 ...,. ..... S.11 ~ ..... "·~ c,.,.., :ao. 2'U1 f'1l1'"9 onw, Ceoltlr-INdll. ' COHilN·BUCK -ROblrt S,......., k. !1 l l'tVM PIKI, UWM 9..a. •nd LMN l,.lt. 2S. !fl ....,_ f'llCI, .............. HESl!llTTUl·HAM1LTON -C 11rI I 1 Wlllllm, l1. 110 s. ll:lltt. -"'· J, S.n· II An1 llld Mlrffvn 11:9111 .. 27, 713 Hiid-A\111., co.ti MeM DOUllTE-MCKEHlll!: -Ohton Dwlghl, •• lwt Sit! Circle. Kunffnttorl 8lldl 8'ld SUNfl Kl't'. ti, IMO:! 1111 Clrc: .. , livntl~ IMdl. 5EHSAT·f'ltOIASCO -llkf11111 LN, !1, !100 Plt9non Pl.c., Apt. SM:. COlll ""'"' Md llllll\' L.., II, 511111 .... ISEOELL-ttOtlEllTl -ltacw ThOl'Nl1, 2'. \5'0 Placlt\ltl, l'tewpari IHCfl and Mll'iNortf K11N'yn, lt, 19°' l"ldlr11, C<11t1 Meu. HOLTll!:ll:40LOftt:LD -W1l11 r OIW'(ll, 'JO, 6141 SM-llOld, W .. tlfllMf« Md LIM u.r-, II. 11616 s.n11 Crl11-i, Founl1ln V1l11¥. COLE-WILLIAMS -ltlcfllnl ll1lndll, '3. U!ll W1rflll' A_,.,, Hunt11111111n lkech 1tld Edith ,.ICN-111C1, M. m1 W1r~ Avt., Huntlnohlfl llacl'I. <:ANDEE-0-DOHNILL -Wllll1m H""" ry, 27, 26502 C1U•.Lucl""' S.n Ju.<1 C1111i1tr-Mid Joa11 M..-11, II, 2U.1 Callo Luc1n1, Sin J11111 C1pl1lr•no. GOfWA'l"-MCNAMEE -Gr t 11 Pry JOMPll, 23. 107~ St.. Apt. I , N--1 llMctl Ind NMCY Ltl. 21, 1"'2 C..111-0lli' L-, S1nt1'An1. . STllUVE-CASTDlll!NA -HlfW'J' llO'J', •• 111\'I E. AJblrl1, A.Mhtlm Ind YcUndl, 21, 2ID4 Sanll Ana Avt •• Cofll MtM. ll:le:TSCH·lllENNAN -M111lr1d Arl'tluf", JO, Jlttl T1ntll, Soult! Ll9Ufll _. c-1-~. 11, urn "· 11\itlurj SI .. kn11 An1 Death Notices Grove Woos Coast Board Appointed Schools Seek College Affiliation For Minorities By JOHN ZAlJ.ER it might be wise for us to wort "The voters ln this dis!ric t GARD°' E"'N"""GROV., .. E.,~ -..~ oot a voluntary aa:reement have pald to build two first-SANTA ANA _ An :idvlsory nlU:rnale: Women ''IC' beforehand that would atlach rate ciunpuses," Dr. Watson Garden Grove acbool ay$tem ~me coMlt~ns to 1 he said. "Jt wouldn't be fair to board to Orange County 's Af· Jensen; Oriental: Mei Kat o: -Orange CounlY'• only tchool merger," Watson said. them to Jet another group firmati ve Action I' r o i: r a m Alexican·Amerlcnn . JI a n k district still unattatched to At present, Cardelt Grove come In and use lhose (AAP! has been appointed Acosta of Huntington Beac:h any Junior cotlep system -levies a tax J'8le of f l.30 per buildings." • The AAP is a fair employ· and Luciano Ramos. t~ountain has renewed a plea for mar· $100 a115es.sec:r valuation to pay Garden Grove, because it ORANGE COUNTY ment project for minorities Valley, alternate: Whit.e : J ack rlage with Its Orange Cout for its students attending has a very low tax base, has Turk of Huntington Beach and neighbors. other community co 1 J e g e been refused consistently by and '1'omen. Rev. Gala! Gouh. alternate. lt is the second straight dLstricts. The lax rate to the most of its neighbors. A piect' The advisory bo<1rd is 1011-----.--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I year c>fnclal! of the Garden coast dJstrlct ls 80 ceol! per ol special legislation that review AAP and departrncnl Grove Unified School District •100 assessed valuation. would have allowed Garden plans and make perloc:hc ad. have sought a marrl.ag, of A possible condition of Grove to form a community A t A d-\'iSOry reports to the board convenience wt1h 4be Cout merger, Dr. WatJon sug-college district on its existing z ec I... and to examine !he pro- Community ~e ,District. gested, is that lheae or similar unified school district boun· motional processes of !ht Lut. year,~<iout-trus_iees. unequal tax rat.es be retained daries was vetoed by On. DIS• play county in mol'f: depth. ref med the .sall oulriiht. after the agreement. ('r0veroor Ronald Reagan. The boan:I adopted resolu. "But the suitor who has lion calls for seven membe~ declined comes back to seek SANTA ANA -Aztec gods, one representing t he Why Don't You Say Merry Christmas With A lean Dahl Gift Certificate? the hand or the falr maid once N zz · c bl mullica l Instruments, cooking Orange County Em p't 0 yes 1&aln," SIW~~~st Chancellor on•metll ic a e utensils and other art objects Association, one Adelante, al Wettcllff P't•t• Norman . QYllU. uncovered during subway ex-Mexican-American employes 'nlis Ume the. proposal for cavalions in Mexico City wil l group, one· woman. one blac~. o.,., El'ft. merger may not be rejected \"pp.roved by Count)' be displayed here through one white. one Chicano. and 'Tll' P.M. so quickly, Dr. Watson in-:t:I. Feb. 1. one Oriental. dlcated. The exhibit is open to the Na1ned were members of "Several ~8-'have chang· SANTA ANA -Ornnae other metallic cable had also. public at Charles W. Bowers I.he advisory group and some ed 1ince then ana they might l!I Memorial Museum, 2002 N. alternates. They are : affect our position," Watson County Supervisors bave a~ Romex has been used (or Ma1·n St. Mus'1un hours are·. Ad I t D "' G B . proved the use of non-metallic, the past t\vo years in single c e an e : av•u · uriago said. sheathed eleetrM?al cable In all family homes. but has been 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Rudolph F. Di a z , WfSTCLIFF PLAli First, be noted, more than coUnty bulldiog. barred in apartments and through Saturdays, 7 p.m. to 9 alternate; OCEA : Bradley L.I HEWl'ORTER INN hatf of Garden Grov_e~a com-1be decision allows the non· commercial bulldings. p.m. Wednesday and Thursday Gates and Joe r-.1 est r e, 17th & lnlN, N1wporr lecich munity college students are evenings and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. alternate; Black : Nonnan C.I dlatrict achoola. A year ago known as Romex, to be used a former county buildin an already attendfng c 0 1 s t metallic cable, co m m o n I y Supervisor David L. B··'--.-c:v unday~-· jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiamiiiilicioirbiiinlia~ndi.iii.J .~Jii. iiiiK~i~n~g~, ::=iii:~·~-~-~~·=-='~,_~ there were 1,800 . .:nua__ year, rather than copper wires car·· safety ernploye, had op 2,300 are enrolled at Golden ried In metal conduits. the use or the cable. When In· West and Orange Coul col· ':{be second hearing.was held formed that the National Elec· leges. to allow County Fire Warden tr i c Cod e a n d the "lbe students have their Carl Downs to testify as to the U nderswriters Laboratories choice of several districts, but safety of the approved cable. now approved it he changed apparently they like u.s the His testimony was not coo-his stand. best," Watson said. cltislve but he did say Romex "I see no difference in wir- INDOOR WINDOW SHOPPING SEE OUR ALL·NEW CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS South Coast ?taza Another factor is the gn:iwth had proven less safe in high ing an apartment house or rate of the coast district. Last rise buildings. business building than a year It appeared the district County Director of Building home," he argued. "Romex would ·continue· expanding· its and safety Floy(I Mct.ellan, re<IUCes-·tfie cost of housingl;-;--=-:_.,;;;~;;;,;;;;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::----""'~::::::::::::") enrollment at the rate of 20 who, in recommending air and it is not logical to prohibit percent per year. But thls proval of the non metallic it in a building occupied only year It grew only 5 percent. cable, reversed bis position about eight hours a day in Thus It appeared last year from two years ago, said It contrast to a dwelling oc- that a third campw; would be woold not be used In high rise. cupled (or 24 hours. required t o a·ccmnmodate Carl Duncan, deputy fire The final vote was 3-2 with Garden Grove. This year, with marshal of Huntington Beach Supervisors Robert W. Battin · half of H.s students already and committee chairman on and Ralph Clark opposing. Jn here, that a.ssumption is eleetrlcal safety for the county the motion. bullders were urg- weakened. fire chiefs' organization, said ed to pass along 100 percent of The final consideration, Dr. Romex had caused fires but the savings to buyers. Quirk ...... it's almost time for Santa! Come to the peppermtnt pier lo wrap op your Watson said, is the approach.1,:;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=.~ll I Christmas lisl. You'll find magical gifts at our rollicking dock. Right op to of the 1975 deadline by whichll tM last minute! Grove must be included in !!~=============================~ a community college dmrict II, or be ordered into one by the state. "If the state is going to mandate a merger w i t b Garden Grove in 1975, anyway Bus Trips To Parade Announced SANTA ANA Ten Southern California R a p i d Transit District buses will 1eave here between 5:35 a.m. and 9:25 a.m. New Year's Day BEAUTIFUL WEDDINGS ... begin with a beautiful promise. • Magii!al Elfin M1isl11•00111s. Heri-t G. ~~~E118 u, o1 ttO for the Tournament of Roses 1t"'6dw1v, cosr1 M .... oai. o1 Ha1h, Parade in Pasadena. Dec:""btt' 10, lt72. S11n1tved rt _,, Symbolizing that promise we have created diamond wedding sets that ere you ... today and forever. Overlapping diamond engagement rings with matching 14 karat yellow gold bands. A S450. Puff stools! They're magical .sillings for Christmas setlings. Shaped like !he visions of eh1esl Made of heilvy guage vinyl. 24" in diameter. 18" !all. Vivid burs1s of color! Sunshine Yellow, Kumquat Orange, Parrot Green, Real Red, Wild Viole!, Ultra Slue, Brite Brown. And , of :~~~klr:!.i N~"~1111::.:-1 Passengers will meet et the s.r.1c.., to0av, Frldav, 2 PM. B11 bus station at 201 N. Sycamore =:r ,~e~111r=.~.a:t!~. St. and purchase a one-way Olrecton. Jl'FFE1ts ticket for $1.86 or a round·trip H•rokl J.tNn. A11• 51, o11n ._,, 111 si., 1;cltet for $3.72 with exact Apt. 1~. AIMmbrl. 01i. "' dt1lll, "' o.cemi,.r ti. 1tn. Ser.,lcti Pftldll'ICI 11 change. Buses will return to 8'11 eromowiv ~l':Gr¥. Santa Ana immediately after °"'*>lw'"I fMrie ICll!Q ...i 00...ld Nevin B. SsoO. C. $425. Do Something B_eautiful ..... CM'9t' Ac~h llrflllll -AMlr'klll h:llf'*U ....... ,.,...iaN Mf Mntw CM ... , toa SLAVICK'S IC.Ina. Jr. lnl1nr t.<lnl ol Mr. Ind Mr1. the parade. ODNllO N. IC1ftQ, 2.Ql 5. Ill..,_, s.nfl n~A ed -·~-d 815 J J $' 1917 ,..,.... O•t• ot c1e<1rh, ~~":: ''· nn, n.c:x:rv gr&llWllO.n se PWe. ers 1nce AllO wrvlwd ~ ,,,_, l "-d and d tri 11 FASHION IS' •No R1tr..n:1 •rid M1<:1 1 •blff, 1.n11111. a un::para e roun p ..... Prlv1i. Mf'tkft. ••?..:...~ "'"""'t at thep arade and round trip NEWPORT IEACH -644-1180 Homt, COlll MeH<Ssf1;r-•· Cflr111WMI H .... "' Sf., Cotti MHe. Daito ot OHlh, tmbel" passengers Will rfde only W!ltl loc1l\Dn$ of: TorrlfKI, On1119e, L.I Cerrl!O$, La HBr1lr1. ~oh~;!~: .. ~r'.~~ .. ~~~~~ .. ~: 1999 Lnl• K. LO/$.i>d•~ Aoe 62,.of JP.'. 20t1> morning for $18. These o,... MonNy "'"' S.hlnlav 10 •·'"-.. ,,,_ •·'"· 11, ltn. survlW<I bv hvtti<ind •rm''i ,_1 Alto; s.11 01eoo •nd u11 Vl!ll'I•· '"''""''-, ......... ......,kn_,.. • 111 -~bu~ses':°.Jl~m~a~r~k~ed~·~·spe~c~U.~.'~'-~:i:::======================='l lL ___________ ~====~-~====---"--------JI lro.dwtl' Mortii'J>PLE 1~ "°"" L. ~· 'b""" 691 r•lclent ol Hun-,.~~ . i:i•t. 01 d1•n1, '}E'" 'Ml, l 11rvlYM1~11C1hl1r, 1r~r1 Wl .. PI, l#lllNlon I lilt ... , In"' JI. Mer111r. W11rf1 r , Pt.: 11~.,.. r=t;~ .. fff~u,;~;.~IT: div. I PM, smOht C'MP91. RMlllfl'I'! MIU. S.turd1v. t AM, 51. lloM\'tl'llV1"9 Cl""'" ("hllf'dl. In~. Good Sh10 1rd C1""1'tn'. Fl/1'1~11• :ild lfl0r9tl1!1 memor111 offe!' to Dlvr,. Wo'll s.rtiln1rv, 11716 ~ 'Ill .• ll:l~raldt. CIUI. '2!05. SmlthJ, ~11'· Oltft;10rS. Elil.i.t~: 1 ot Cos.ti Mtw; d1!1 of Ml 11, ltn. Survlv-M 11¥ di MoVlll"OUD, Cotc!I MIM; -I -· 01nlll T-'HI~,., ~I ,... •llllrJ. 'ftl<I Waa.ttr,. ,.....,,., DDnlthY' MUll~pt, ,_,, 1b; or.nddll~ ttto <11'91•· <1r1nc1Cl'llldftll, ll_.,,_ I, Frld.ey, 7 >M 'l"jill'I --· Nf\"" 1v. t :)IJ AM, both at I HIM tN 1 .. 1111 C1ltlotlc r-11urtl'. ~. c._1......... C•-'-"' l11ft·l9f'Wnlll f-al Home, Cotti ~. Oll'KfOt"I. ARBUCKLE a SON WE8TCLIFF MORTUARY 4t7 E. 17* St., Outa Meu -• BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corolla deJ Mar l'IUlll Cotta M... '*'2ill • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 BrNdwty, Costa Meta LI f.3411 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY n• Lopll! Ca111GO 114. -·' • PACIPICVIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery M-.r, Cllopel llOt -View Drive Newport Beodl. CaUfol'lllo llU'lte • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME 1881 Bol11 A\1:. We1tmln1ter .... • SMITHS' MORTUARY If! Mola St. 11unt1n1wn Dcacb - • Ruby Rigoon: 3 ice c.ubes into tol l gloss. 1Y2 oz. Igor the Invisible (our secret new spi rit)1Y2oz. burgundy Add ginger ale to IL Igor is invisible - but not vvhot he does. Crown ulr.e C/r.riJtmaJ ~aJon. SAVE HALF ON HANO.BLOWN GLASS! Hand-crafted tableware from Mexico. Many sizes, shapes and colors of ha nd-blown glass. Pick up some for the holid•yslReg.,hl(-1.29. 50% OFF ' Add a majes1ic touch-our kin g chair. It's a throne 1hatlcommands allen- tion. Artfully woven of peel and core fill PLANTERS WITH POINSITTIAS. Black rauan, enriched wilh black designs. wrought lmn planters from Me>11co. Airy grace. Magn1h centl From the Standing or hanging designs hold e•.9• I H 9999 pol~. rill them w11h poinselh.ll, 1099 crown co ony, • ong wllh holiday holly ;ind ivy!··· Kong. 20"x2crxS4 ..... PIER 1 IMPORTS 2710 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ICORNll HARIOR & A.OAMll SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURt>Ai' 10· 10 , 540-7337-• SljOP 10 'tll 7 'f'm. • I ' r l'llSll 11~: .11:\HlU\ . . ' . .. .. ll''"' ~.! ~ " I • • \..11,, "" • -~ """ , ... fl' •. 1 . • • . ' • • ' . ' . ' 8 DAIL V PILOT QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi Pat Nixo11 ·Gets Top Ranking Sondanee Kid's Kid Students Nix Stadium Fee My Don't You Say Meny Christmas W'rth A Jean Dahl Gift Certificate? • • • Bandit's Son Took Secret to Own Grave FRESNO (AP\ -Student> From Wlre Services First Lady Pat Nl.100 says being named the world 's most admired woman in a poll con· ducted by Good 11ousekeeping magazine "was Indeed among my most cheri~ gilts" at Christmastime. "Surely there can be oo greater challenge or n1ore meaningful lncentive than a MISSOULA, Mont. !UPI) - If what Robert Lon'&baugh says is true, ht! not only ls the son of the "Sundance Kid" but nlso took to hlJ grave the secret of $300,000 in stolen BUT LONGBAUGll said they returned to the United s .. te. and h~ father Jlld not die w1til Aug. 28, 1957. Longbaugh claimed to have been a pallbearer at the funer11l of Parker -Butch Cassidy -in Spokane, Wash. loot. Longbaugh, 72, died in a where he aaid the famed ouUaw was buried in 1937 hotel fire this week after under the alias of "'William K. years of entertaining 1ocal Phillips." . residents witb tales of Harry "Sundance KJd" Longbaugh ..... -.. _.,,._.,_.,-,..,_,.-,..,_,.-,..,_,.-,..,_.,-.. .,.- a"d his part~r. Robert Leroy 'Thefl got ldllecl Parker. ahas ··Butch ' Cassidy." and I left Te%U • ( PEOPLE J LONGBAUGU, WHO was writing a book abool the pa~. "·---------'-claimed to have maps leading ver11 sf!Gred and lonel11 little 0011.' warm personal tribute such as to the hidden loot; but "nearly •"-"""'-"-""'-"-"-"'"-"-"'"-"-"'"-"-"'"-"-- th. ,. M N' t th every time I start that way The all ged son of "S"- Two yeara tater, he said. he at Frseno SUlte have Indicated joined another gang and they do not want to assess became involved in a bank themselves an extra fee to aid robbery with three men. Two in C'Ot1$truct.ioo of a stadium or the robbers were killed and ~~ split lhe loot with the ·oo campus. .s!ll'Vfvcr. A "straw poll" showed 665 Longbaugh believed h i s students against any ad· father's maps were accurate d1Uooal fee, whUe 458 stude11ts WettclHf "---'TH t P.M.' because he said he:used one of said they favored such a plan. JtoK\ tnhl them in 1940 to find $6,000 taken from a Nevada bank ln Under one proposal ad· 1900. He Sfld he found the vanctd, students would assess money · In Idaho's eruneua themselves "' per term for 15 WUTCLI# PLAZA years to help finance COO• NIWPOITll INN Canyon. stroction of a ~posed 20,000-,,,. .,_ H...,... -• :\~~~~~~r~-~~~~~:ii~~IH~•~.,.~~~~~'~'~'·~~~ LONGBAUGR SAID ,..t footbalJ.lrack complex. _ would have attempted to locate the hidden $300,000, "if I could have any assurance any of the money could go to reduce the national debt or for bonuses for Vietnam 1ntenude 'o0..~~·.;..:·.1m .. w.:.w~~ "'M.r. Hopper will see you in a few mi.nut.es, and I'd like my foot back, thank :you." ts, . rs. ixon wro c e every stray Treasury agent e ......--magazine , dance" claimed he also had an Th . · 1 h IL around is on my tail," he told e winner o t e po was • 1,,., ds . outlaw past, Wlder the alias chosen by 1.000 members of n · "The Cimarr{ln Kid." "Sundance" and "Cassidy," the Good Housekeeping Consumer's Panel. heroes of the popular motion HE TOLD IJSTENERS he participated in a train robbery in Sanderson, Tex. in 1912 when he was 11. veterans." · Nobody ~ally knows il Longbaugb was .what he sakl. he was. But Margaret Elwell , a librarian and one of the . several people who invited Longbaugh to lecture about the outlaws, said, '"Eilher he's made a thorough study of the matter or he's the son of the Sundance Kid." At lh" end of a long hard tin)' -A &ldwin •rnterlud!!" Or· g9.n Q&ft oikr you the ultimak in· reluation .•. aud the 1)rice it o refres.lting ) L. Jtl. Boyd Most Great Men Have Big Noses · Hardly anybody seriously claims facial fea tures re. fleet talent. Still, extensive studies of photographs sbow the enormous majority oC great men have possessed larger than average noses. Puzzling. LATESr REPORTS from jewelers reconlinn the an· cient claim that II percent of all engagement rings are for wives already married more than 10 years. Takes that long for numerous couples to afford those dandy dia· monds, clearly. ALSO, IT HAS been determined through scientific study that the male frogs ol Australia and the female frogs of Georgia understand one another's croaks abnost perfectly. Believe that's a good thing; Basic. HOLMU ASKED -"Why can't somebody give us a list oC things ttw everybody thinks and nobody says, and another list 6f things that everybody says and, oobody thinks?" Thl.s rhetorical theory was put forth by the Great Oliver Wel\dell B<ibnes. Aii right. start with these: No-- body says hall the evangelists are phony, but just about everybody thinks so.' And nof>ody thinks all deserted wives are to be pitied, but virtually everybody says so. Arry others? ON ONE BUFF ALO hun ting stint that lasted for about a year and a half, Buffalo Bill Cody killed 4,?.80 oC tbose sorry -beasts. With a SO caliber Springfield rifie. This comes ·up because a client asks U he were just a wild west show· man or a real slaughterer. He was both. IRRESISTIBLE SCENT -The maiden cecrobia moth emits a scent so potent it ca n turn on male moths at great distances. Now that.'s what the perfume makers would like to come up with . For single girls. Their labor· atory experts work on it night and .day. And why f:iot? Still, such a chemical creation. should it come about. might tie up traffic. ff it's as irresistable as that moth's scent. every man within a radius of a mile would be eompeUed helpl essly to converge on any young lady wearing same. Fascinating fantasy. that. I envision Mama Cas.s, doused in said juice, strolling through the Super Bowl at the tw~minute warning. THE HARD FACl'S -Age 26 is when the average mother has her last child ... FIGURE ABOUT EIGIIT ya rds o( wool in a Scottish kilt . . . THOSE WlllSKERS on your kitten officia lly go by the name of fetae . FREEZE NINE QUARTS of water to get 10 quarts of ice ... LIFE EXPECTANCY ol girls in old Rome was 23 yean. Q. "BIGGEST snowflakes ever were said to be some Siberian monsters the size of footballs. How about the big· gest raindrops?" A. There's no record of any raindrop larger than a fifth of an inch in diameter. Address ffl(Jil to L. M. B{lyd. P. 0 . Box 1875, tJcw· port Beach , Cohf. 92660. . 1'9.o~.t:!f!.Jl:S;~~~~~~~ a ~ Idea Worth ~ ,, ~ W . I $25 Bond w ~a . John D. Badgett. 25. of Hunt· I ,! MtnY ~ 1~ ingtoo eBach has been award· ,.. & Chrttt.. J cd a $15 U.S. Savings Bond t! :.i for a suggestion he submitted ~ ~1.!>"\.'U-'""' ! to hl!i General Telephone I enzloy~:~tallcr-repa1\rrn&n in W SPECIAL HOURS division, B a d g e t t recom· Wiii NllJHTS 'TIL' I the untllity 's Lakewood i FOR CHRISTMAS mended customers be notified . SUNDAY 11 • J , by directory advertising or in· lt voice inserts about the com· anJ .. JI Af-"J•..,;::rf'",;q pany's little-known service of~~ f{V1Wf'YW I pre-wiring for telephone in-; strument outlets on homes or 1467 V.. Ude N..,.,, IHch dd't' bu'll b "'"9: 67J-4110 ~ a 1 KIO! 1. y owners. ~-~1~-.•u·¢ I -----CVS=.;.;TO:;M::..:;TA~ll:OU P!~ IN SANTA NU< ....... '·'* .. w.-... SALE 2'iUiTi 5135 ,_, __ .~ ~ WMI •• ,,'1 ., II"~ •. , ..... t2 ...., ............... .. ""' .............. . SAVI UP TO 5~ Of! Cwtl-._.I.et .. i,.rt,Ht,, Stedl1, IM!lt19 •WI Pn ANT llZI ~ .. "':! ···~1 Cell_. • • • • • • • '2 H • AHY ITYLI ccwtto , .............. 110 ,. W"' ••••••••••• :o 4 • 1111 A&.TllATtOfd ............ N, llS BB OAllY•·•· • ~ ,. .. ,, tMPOl;lll IAJ. M ...... I.IN IWllA1' IN -' ,_a,,,,,.., :1• ...._ NJo0211 _. Ul.01tl tUfl ,...,_Mn.• tum W • IAHTA MtA .... ~ '""'· ... -,...,. ,_1'91• 0. ........ ,. hi •ff ... .,_,, w, ...... "'-0 .(. "'-' 1'9f-............. __.I l fl '""""""c.jlf . .....,., , The wives of pr isoners of picture, were known · f o r leading lawmen on a merry war in Vietnam ranked Sl.'C-chase in the !ale 1800s until ond, followed by Rose Ken--they Oed to South America . nedy, Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir. writer Pearl Most historians contend the Buck, Mrs. Dwight o . pair died in a shootout in Eisenhower, actress Patricia Vinccnter, Bolivia, in 1900. Neal, Mrs. Robert F. Ken- "They got killed, and 1 left Texas a very scared and lone- ly little boy," Longbaugh told friends. $995.00 515 NORTH MAIN, SANTA ANA • 547.$151 nedy, Sen. Margaret Chase Smltb (R-Maine), Rep. Shirley CbJsbolm (0.N.Y.), and Dr. Joyce Brothers, the television Computer Check on. Quake Whatdo .docfurs'recommend P he. M B T L for patients in pain? personality. Thirty-four ytars as a mem· ber of Congress a re drawing \0 a close for Karl E. Mnndt, the Repubican senator from South Dakota who gave Presi· dent Nix{ln an early boost up the political ladder. Mundt, 72, was felled by a stroke in November, 1969. lie has not been in the Senate chamber since then , although the paralysis he suffered has been pa rtially overcome. Friends report Mundt still has diffi culty spea kl.ng. Hi s wife r.tary said· they haven't yet made up their minds whether to remain in the capital or return ·to South Dakota, although she indicated they will remain in Washington for the time being. 'JHe can't go into cold climates," she sa id. The state of Tennessee. has sought to have James Earl Ray's latest petition f o r freedom thrown out of federal C{IUrt because it lacks his si gnature. Asst. State Atty. Gen . W. Henry Haile 111 asked Judge L. Clure Morton of U.S. District Court to strike Ray's 100-page pet\tion because Ray had oot signed it and certified it as required by federal law. Ray, 44, is serving a 99-year sentence at tbe Tennessee State Prison in Nashville for the April 1968 sla ying in Memphis o( Dr. Martin Luther King. Kate Smith, the 62-year-old former rad io and e a r 1 y television star, . has been released after a tw~week stay in a New Orleans hospital where she was treated for pleurisy. rop cy a y e 00 ate Doctors all over the oountry dispense over 50,000,000 of these tablets to their patien ts each year. SAN FRANCISCO (APl - Reuben Greenspan says that by the time computers verify -his earthquake thcory, it will be too late. Dr. William Kautz of !he Stanford Research Institute has been checking o u t Greenspan's' past earthquake predictions, and said Greenspan's theory "looks ~retty good." "J'VE BEEN running the theory through a computer and getting pr etty g o o d results." Kautz said. "We hope we'll have some ki nd of a definite reporl in two weeks." But Greenspan has said tha t in tw{I weeks -on Jan. 4, to be exact -San Francisco will THE be hit by a devastating earth· quake. He said it will hit 7.4 on the Richter sca le. The great earthquake of 1906, which took 452 lives and burned the city, was 8.2. eaMJlQuak~s ar~ more li_kely There are many medications a tors recommend m01t than any durmg eclipses, Kautz said. llhyaician or dentist can pre-other leading tablet. 11eribe for pain. Some are nar-Headache and dental pain it GREENS PA N, WHO colic, many are available only n-lieved ipcredibly fa&t: minof developed his tidal theory of on.presc.ription, B~tthere.isone pain11 of Hrthritis Brn depend- earthquakes while a ship's llBln ~h~ver. available i.ytthout nhly eaiwd for houn: e\•en the navigator says he ·n be ·n p~r1phon. ~octon; d1~pense achf'!I and pains of colds and flu . • WI . 1 again and again ... Anacin. rt'!l1)()nd to Anacin. So the ll•n· the htlls above San Francisco Each year, doctors give o~·pr sion and df'prf'l.tl.ion that can be GREENSPAN, 69, of Laguna on Jan. 4. 50.000,000 Anacin tablets to caul!Cd hy such pain will be re· Beach, was called "the earth· Thea, he says, he will visit t~ir patient.a in pain. If doctors lieve<l too. And millions take quake prophet" during the Mayor Joseph Alioto _ who t~i.nk enough about An11cin to Anacin without 1tomach upset. 1930s when he foretold several doesn't take the prediction d1spe1U1e all these ~bleta, what \VhC'n you're in pain, why major tremors. Lasl year, he . . . better recommendabon can yo u don't you (ollow Iha practice ot foretold the Feb. g· earthquake s er 10 u s 1 Y ~ut invited ask when you are in pain? so many doctors and take the --l.-Greenspan for dinner -for You see. Anacin contains tablet a doctor mi ght give you in Los Angeles tVl"Cl w~ in "seven courses of crow." more oI the pain reliever doc-in hi1 own office. 'Jake Anncin•. advance. -_;;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;.,.iii~;::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;:;;;:;;;;;: His predictions are based on , solar and lunar eclipses. He says the gravitational pull of the bodies creates stresses on the earth that cause faults to slip. The 1971 Los Angeles earth- quake took place the day of a lunar eclipse. The 1906 earth- quake occurred within a few days or a moon ecliPse. Lootless Leave NOVA CRNJA, Yugoslavia (AP) -A cifuen passing by a store saw burglars breaking into the building. He went to a nearby telephone and rang up the store. 1be thieves, ap- parently thinking the bell was an alarm, ran aw113. Police said they left without their loot. ixorr1 merrq merrq~ Gift Pac){ AT YOUR ,AVORfT! STORE 'tis the season I to be a jolly shopper • ~---.... '' O·BIT''· BUS ·UNE at Fashion Island I ALL IT NEEDS IS YOU I . . T ••• all you need Is a place to go I . . , . . For Information or bua sched',;ies call "The T.;.,.111 luo Lino'' at 547..ao4 or write to us at 1126 E. Washington Ave., Santa Ana, 92701 FASHION j ISLANO ' . NEWPORT CENTER • '::. • .. I f ) r l ! I I If • l Ufll T1.._fe Oldsters Leave Tab to Workers By JOHN CUNNIFF ,.,. hW... A11411t•l NEW YORK -Because our life mode bas changed in re- cent decadM, the elderly often have found themselves denied the respect that used lo honor age, and the COOlforl and security that should reward a Ufetime of effort. Consider only one change that led to this predicament: • The' tremendous · migration from country to city has, in · the past 20 years, increased . the ratio of urban to rural population to 3 to I from % to 1. needs, and ao many retirees now are consequently receiv- ing inadequate pensW,ns too. BEGINNING IN January, a special minimum benefit will aid such people. The special payment will range from $80 a month to aa much as Sl70 a month for workers with 30 yqn of coverage. Experience bu ahown that a worker !orced Into Inactivity at age IS mJght not be prepared, psycbologlcally or · financially, for idleness. Many are still vigorous and pro- ductive. And because of in- flation, they can al":"ays use more mooey. l New Ferti1 s,,.tem ' Two dire«!'~ of the G<llden Gate Brld~e, 'High~ay and Transportation District, ex~·~ .calo model of IS.foot a!U1D1num ferry d u r i n g keep laying cere- monies recently. The boots will carry 750 passengers at 25 knots. IN CITIES, wtlike on farms and in rural areas, spa.ct is at a minimum and it! irice at a premium. An d , therefore, there is sometimes no room in the family for the older generation, especially If they cm_i't pay their way. For decades now the coun- Beginning In 1973, these of· ficially retired workers can add to t:helr Income as much as '2,100 fronl jobs without en· dangering thelr Social Security benefits. This year they could earn only ,1,M> of "exempt" income. try has been attempting to FOR WAGE earners this remedy this sad development means a bigger burden, of of affairs. Goverhment agen-course. Payroll taxes rise cie;J have been offering more from 5.2 percent to 5.85 per- healtb, fmancial and social cent in tm, and the base on aid. Private groups have which deductions are to be prompted gemlons and ret.i.re-made jumps to '10,800 from ment homes. $9,000. It makes a total of t Concepts Changing Efforts so far might seem $631.80. ':, Workers Strike Out Agai'!-8t Inhumanity momentous when compared to · While many a young and what had been done, but they middle-age wage-earner will seem small In relation to the gripe about this tab, it is little continuing problem. It is not more than the modern version '· .. WASHINGTON (UP!) -A worker jwnps Up from his job and assaults coworkers. Another man takes drugs or nips whisky to allay boredom. Litton Firm To Offer An employable yuuth becomes a beggar. Workers strike against the inhumanity of the assembly line. These seemingly isolated ez. arnples are pattel'ns occurring with alarming frequency as traditional ..concepts of work become obsolete, according to a 211-page report "Work in America" submitted today to the Department <>f Health, Education and Welfare. "YOUNG · WORKERS ap-so much ~ miserliness of the of an old, old custom tn which pear lo be as committed to the income-producing generation tbe middle generation sup- . t't t" r k th · as of certain other factors. ports the YN'""•r and con· ins 1 u ion o1 wor as etr ---o elders have been, but many Two of these in partlcular tributes to the support of the are rebeUing against the made the great effort of one older. year seem meager a year That's the way it was back anachronistic authoritarianism later. Inflation has Steadily in tbe old days pictured on of the work place," the report decreased buying power; the those old-fashioned Christmas said. span of life, though not grow-cards. "Older Americans suffer the ing at present, has great!y'liii ________ ;;;;; ultimate job dissatisfaction: enlarged over the decades . they are denied meaningful ALL OF WBlCH helps ex- jobs even when they have plain why Social Security Last Chance To Think Jean Dahl Before A aMTo IUMEMM -·-~&PAST Df.CPUIR,-- .. t/orelco~· *· ' · COfFEE MAKER WITH FREE COFFEE Mill A TASTY Gin IDEA FROM NORElCO ' Automatic drip filter coffee moker with re· usoble nylon filter. 148 00 8 ® 8-cup coffee mak.,. ........ ., •. 21,11 lADY NORELCO TRIPLEHEADER Subsidiary "SIGNIFICANT numbers of demonstrable skills and are benefits have risen io recent American workers are php~~~-'~apable of being years and are projected to dissatisfied with the quality of continue growing for a decade ( LOS ANGELES (AP) thelr working lives" becatl!e As an e:iampte of frustra-ahead, and why it is likely that Financially troubled Litton of dull, repetitive, meaningless lion, the report cited a caae in when election time comes Industries lnc. plans to sell Its tuks that offer little challenge which "a jury refused to ci>o-again they will be raised Merry Chrisbna1 <v-fl---_ stouffer C<rp. s_u b s Id la r y or autonomy, the study said. vict arl employe who killed two again. tbmtigh !J public Offering of The report, a departmental fct'emen and another worker But it is Christmas now and new common stock. 1tudy cooducted by a panel of bt an auto plant an the not. a time for politics, and It · 10 -··_._. that pl grounds of temporary in-• Joo• 1be aaJe coUld ]Fing the ~. ' a~ . ~ oyers sanity, when t es t i mo n y is appropriate to a. at _some Wettclfff Pi-. --· "T1I t P.M. ~erly Hills coftglc.ne~ate up' ml>dlfy lradlUonal views of pointed up inhumane working of the benefits upcoming at to f!GfiJ<mlllloii,' a Lllion pro-,work to loclude eJ!l,i.<>Yes IA ·"'""'t .-_;1 , '· the tum of the year for Social , . ..;l..,. __ ,, J · ~h,.. dec!Jioo--,.-Securi°" rectpienu. Thelr • • ~~---~~~'"' -h;---• -' ov-e=u""'e ~"'~as present, " J·~ -4 ' 'f .... • . • ·S . AND THE J!.EPO!IT said •u ~nnsun ll '41.\ lnM · .,.,.,. ~us, ~ l 1 I e d ,. "Sev~ ..-... we 11 -trustratJon elfsts 'yen in the you care to view it that way. ' ~ C:,i=i'.: documenieil ~ents show 11eet (!! working ' condiljons, -While more Americans · · &e · • · that productivity~ increases identifying the efficiency qf an each year receive an adequate WISTCLIPF PLAZA ··W~o, bUer~·~ . 'apd-~ problems decrease 8S96111tAy line 8.!I the cause of wage, this was not so in the ~._.,..INN COrfmilD:. ·~ · · . ~ 'When workers participate in a wildcat strike in Lordstown, past. Wages often were paid l 7tl A '"'-' """'trt lffc• ' i,m.m ·were ae5tgnaWd al" the wort· decisions affecting Ohio without regard to minimum N•"'9rt lp&lt ~g. offered by Lltton as. their lives aod when tbeir1-_.'.'.'.'.~· ~-jiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii~liii~~~~iiiiiiiiiii'ii:ii~~~=~~~1 ( j l ' • • l SEE SANTA pnnc1pal shareholder, and responsibility for their work is 1,327,175 were shown as being buttressed by participation in sold by Stouffer. profits," the report said. The shares will be sold f0< HEW Secretary Elliot L. up to $25 each, the prospectus ·Richard.son received t h e said. Stouffer said it will also report warmly at a news coo- pay Litton $30 million cash fUence, saying, "I cannot from lls proceeds of the of-recall any other governmental feting, in the form of a cash report which Is more doughty, dividend declared and payable controversial and yet responsi- DAILY 10 to 9 CAROUSEL COURT to Litton. b1e than thi.9 one." She works Air California's new SKI DESK. Attractive s~o i~, person- able ~he Is, tdOI eu·t unlike other "bunnies", she's an expert at get-- ting Y<lu to.tho Tahoe/High Sierra ski slopes from Orange County. Specially trained, Jill Edwards, has a wide assortmentof convenlenl, economical Air California Ski Packages to offer you. Introducing I' . I Air Callfomla'a SKI OUR VALLEYS packages (for as many days u YoU want) to BEAR, HEAVENLY AND SQUAW. SPECIAL CONVEN- IENCE PLUS charter packages frof!l Orange County Airport to South AIR CALIFORNIA'S , OWN, ' I 1' •. ' • ! Lake Tahoe Airport Or, If It's Jysl lnformat!On you want ·6n the .. • , easiest and r11ost aconomlcal way to get from'llacrama.Qlo Airport, • I .I tho gate,..y to•your favorite TahOj!/Hlgh Sl~rra ski resort, JUI · · .knows 'and ivHJ be glaa to. mak~ YoUr arrangements. c.,111 (W. , , , 'Telephone · . ·. _. • • VERY SPECIAL r ' 171~) 919-9700 AIR .--<!•r--..;..-·ca1 IFORNIA. m • · Setvlng SacramentoJ " , SquewVdoJllJ.) San Franci.co, Oakland, . r . San JoSa, ontarlo,. Palm Springs, • · s.R Di~o an~ Olilngo County{ ' . ~-·~· .. · . . I •HMMIJVlillf \;l'-.:J .• ' -\llllf . , , -. ·. ... 1 " '· . . • .. .. . . .. · . . . . ' . . .... : ~ .. . ' • ., •·. ' .J . .... ~ . ' ,, , ' • '1 I ' I . ' . • ·' • , I ' . ' NEW LArN NORBCO TRIPlEHEADER •T• The first Norelco Tripleheaderforwomen. The same clou lhavlng rotaryaystem a1 our famous men's Tr1pleheader-wlth • veryfemlnlne design. The Lady No rel co Trlpleheader gives close and comfort- able and fast ah aves-for both legs and underarms I The featurM of thl1 spectacular shaver are: • Super Mlcrogrooverw floating heads • Self-sharpening rotary blades /Vo.re/co • • On/off awllch $198'8 • Colled cord • Elegant royal purple and lavender styling . ti- NORllCO ' 40VIP SHAVER WltH NEW ADJUSTAllllTY ;. . : Ninit settirig1. Super micro- :,gr09ve• floating heods, • " f>Ofl""up' sid.ebum triminer. '· Self-sharpening rotory blodes. . • ' J • . . • ., \ ":. ..... • ·- NORllCO" SOVIP, THI RECHARGWll SHAVER Nine closenen settings . ~s up to 2 weeks on one single charge. Case for tra~eling, sto"'lje. . .. W•ch. Hlllltlll9fOll C1 11• 1m.111•- H .. 1111g1w ••ii' ' \ • - JO OIJLVPILOT 5 Mone1J's ll'orth 'Marry' -go-1·ound Boo11 to Business • 8)' Sl11.\rlA PORTEil Ueforc 1972 ends. n1:irr1;igcs in the US. >A·ill ha vl' llp. proacheC: 2.300.000. a lll'\'tr· berore-toutht.'<i pc~k and cltar· ly topping die pos!-\\'urld \Vur II reoonts when Uic GI! came home to create !he mt1rri;1i.:e boom of the 1940s -::ind the bablc1 who are OO\\' in 1urn creating the marriage boon1 of the 1970s. Tbe U.S. marriage rat(' lnumber or !\1A \' ANO JUNE are still the "marrying 1nont hs," but \\•eddinqs arc more ::ind more "in" throughout the yea r. In fact , fewer lhan half of this year's marriages occurred in the first six TI)Onths. Wh:it's inore. th(' casual observer's 1m<lgt' of toda~1's swinging non·bl"idP ls \va.v off. Out of <'Very fi\'C yuung brides, fnur chooSI:' a tradi- tional . ft)rm:il v.·edding, a larger pr oportion than in 1967, acco r ding to Bride's r.1agazine. Out of every five, more than rour brides still re~i\'e a diamond engage· 111rnl ring. The young cou ples v.ho \\'ill have OCcn n1arried tierore '72 f11dcs 1vill spcnrl a stag~cri ng $7 billion hct v.·f'('n t he i r ' '"'"f:3ge mcnl 3rJd lhc rnd or the fin;t ye 3 r of n1arriaJ1:C. A bre;1kdo"·n i;f iu<:t f i v c cntegorie:. of 11cdding equlp- rnl;nt": S4ot i\11UION on flatware and hollov.•are, an average of $183 per bride; $393 million on dinnerware and 'glasswa re, an average of $179 per bride; UNITED STATES NATIONAi, BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANC H NOW OPIN SATURDAYS 9 to 1 P.M. MOH.·THUlS. •RIDAYS 17141 540·1211 S.. Co°'f "nca. 11)..S P.M. 104 P.M. locllted IJ11 Cotto MMO D. DEAN HEISER ORDER ~/ YOURS .. '~ TODAY! Personalized • Stylish 1000 ~eautiful Stick-an • Efficient Order For Yourh'lf or a Friend ' M•y b• u•ed on envelop•' ., return •ddr•l' l1b•l1. Also v•ry htndy ei identification l•b•l1 for markln9 p•rson.tl lt•mi such •s bD0~1, r•cord1 , photos, •tc. L•b•ls st ick an 9l•s1 •nd mty be u11d for m•rking hom t c•nned foc.d it•ms. All l•belt •te print•d with ttylish Vo9ue type on fin• qut lity white· gummed p•ptr. r ----------------, f:Hl hi nut Ull-. <II• •114 m111 W•tll t!,U .. : I I Pllfl PrlftH"'I Llltll Dh., l'.0, .,. ,... I I C:l•IJ frol••· (Jiii. J2U6 I I I I I I : I I I L-~~L_OT PRl~!!~L __ J OVER THE COUNTER COMPI,EfE NEW YORK STOCK LIST NASO U.linp 10< n-.day, Ooc•mbor 21, 1972 I DAILY PILOT Thursday's Oos~ Prices-Co:rµplete New York Stock Exchange List f " 'Market's Slide • . ' • • • • • • \ ---· -- DAJLV PILOT • I Special Christmas shopping hours. Open every ni '. . t ti 11 1 o :OO. Ch r:·i-.stm·a·s Eve. till 7:00 .. - little buys a lot of Christmas under the Squiggly® Roof. A lot of value on the stars of the top brands. Jewelry Dept. Norelco Tripleheader (J Lady Sun beam hot comb 3 attai.;hments. Heats instantly. Safe on coJored and bleached heir. (Model #EX2 & EC 1) · .. 11.88 Toni Purr'" power detangl er O Takes out tangles, prevents hai r damage. 2 sets of combs. Can be used on wigs. (Mode.I #AC1) I 1 ll!>T 14.87 0 (J ==......i G. E. lighted make-up mi rror ' Day, office, bom9, evening. liQht. Regular and magni· fy1ng mirrors. No glare. (Model #IM-1) 13.97 G. E. wrinkle remover 9.88 Remo\le wrinkles In minutes. Low heat plastic face avoids scorches and bums lo fabrics. Self.measuring steam chamber eliminates apl/ls. (Model #W_,A--1:0);:;;:::::-------=--:::;;;;;:::: 0 0 . -·~:·.,J"i c5§,.~r,-,l IJ . P *_:, .··· ~ ... . ·. ·. . . . . ,.., . . .... ~ • .... ·.·. ; :.·. .. HAIR.CURLE'"'. • • • ••• .-·. · :i1~ili!il~~~Iiii1ln$i " ·~' .. ~'.·:~ ·. ·.··~ ............ ·.'.." ... , .. ~-'·:.~;.: . • '/f·, ......... . . ·~ . . :.· .. : G.°2 women 's · , styling dryer 12.88 Contoured handle. Wid&-tooth comb attachment. 2 heat settlngs. Includes 8 oz .. bottht . 'rec~ Basic& t•xtutlng" abampoo. . ,. ··:~? (Model #SD-1)-, ~~'\. ' ....... ,. ,,. ·. D Sc hick men's hot co mb13.88 Gives professionally groomed'1ook. Man· ages any texture hair easily. Dry, wave or straighten. (Model #336) (HPl 122) Qftly ot Gronodo' Hin, Wood- land Hill1, ISonto Alla ' lllv- \ \ \ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' \ \ \ I I I I \ \ G. E. hot lather dispenser 0 Uses 6 oz. or 11 oz.can of your favorite aerosol. Press a button for preregu lated shaving cream temperature. (Model #SCD1) 9.96 ', () '\ , Remington ' ', hot comb ' Dries, waves; 2 comb enact\. ' ments, one brush. New power \ handle. (Mddel #HW3) ', 12.64 ' ' () ady Sr;:hic,k hairsetter Sets longer lasting curls in minutes. No hot metal lo cause dryness. split ends. 20 rollers. Includes clips, measuring cap. (Model #70) 14.69 Scpick Consolette hair dryer 17.88 4 t"emperatUre sell Inga, one perfect for wigs. Extra large hood. Easy·lo·carry. Folds Into compact case. (Model #317) , •. 0 . Toni Max Hoit Dryer w/Comb Attochment 2 temperorure 1ening for dry{ng & 1ryling. Comb otto~kmenf dries & 1ryle1. 1 1.-.98 _ • HMAIA lltlQ llOOO Clll>WGl1/I St e WOODWID MIW 21!00 YlclCllJ m1t. i>llYlllSIDI 3520T)ltr e SANTA AMl 3900Sol~11<1"" St e TDllA~I S.Ow•.,;i!J-• LAUW_ CW"" St•-81 .... e .. llll PMl -aOi'lll......,,. ' -:_! OUHI Gaiito Glowt I"'---lw o,. .-.,, t 1Jt ,.1Ml1 ci.u,_, .... ffll ~t.M. \ { --J " For Mick Spencer an ob,tacle in hi' path or a 'ix-inch curb make everyday activity difficult. • ., . ~men BEA ANDERSON, EdltW ' ' Dolly Piiot Photos by Ri chard Koehler and LM Payne Caring No H·andicap Bill Jayne is)E:gally blind but "not tum. dicapped In ge!ting a job done ." He feels that yOll don't have to be a large foundation, with millions of dollars, to get things accunplisbed. Sometimes all It tak:es' is a telephone ca ll. Finding that there ~ere no marked parking SMces for ttte handicapped at lhe local Human ~s Development offices, he made a call to Sacramento to see if it was possible to get spaces set aside. ff& got more than he askectfor. Soon there wlil be dea1'Mted space~ for paraplegics outside each of the HRD offices In the state. Jayne is president of a non-profit rouir dolion newly chartered as Jobs for the Visually Handicapped. Inc. .iJl this. capacity, as a private citizen aQd u just a friend he has seV<ral goals. Ekh pro)- ect seems to spur a new one. PARKING was parking spaces for the handicapped near UCI's library and a reading room for the partially sighted or blind student in the medk.al library. "Little things like not being able to have material read aloud to you 1:an change · a career 1oal," Jayne said. "Sopie who wanted medica1 careers may go in otber directiom if ,they can't get to lheir study materiala... - MENUS Some Alphy's 1feltaurants in the area :::i.r~ ~:,. '::i'. :o~: Jayne's efforts the Idea may 100D be adopted by DeMy's and Snack Shops restaurants, as well. Ideas don't always become reality in tbe-form,.OU. envision either, Jayne. ad· ded, but getting things done ls more im- portant Ulan how. For example, he UW. Disney Pr<>duc- Uom ta wortlng on 1 system ol tapes to pn>vlde tho legally blJiid with an audio Parking spaces ror paraplegicl have tour or the Magto Kingdom. Tape been marked along the state beach in recorders or tnpe players are to be pro- HunUngton Beach and near the HD Pler vlded at'no cbarse. through the efforts of ·Jayne and other roon<tallon members like s h 1 r 1 e y In boullac. &oais are lo mat. 1U multl- McCamy lamlly 'a.elling -Ible 1o the ha"' • dlcapped. '1 ft>aklnc doot w1y1 wide Among current profecls •re. making • ....... wheelchaln and ent.ranceo the 116 junior collegea In the state aw.,. ramped. 61 the otaJe budpl for vocallonal educa-1 lion .,.r thO' f\lllllp wltblo tMt )ludpl . "AH.r'-• tfll>'b.d\clPPld IN - av ailable ror tr.tnmc !lie hlndlc&pped. • cemed, otaln ahoulcf be made lllepf," he A -nt accompllehmenl, uUol al90 l6Jd. Other phyllcal ,_,.Illes Include Just.took 1 phone call 1o the rilbt pl..., haodrllll lo --..., alldlnc cloon ' . to bedrooms and bathrooms for easier access, as well as oon-skid flooring in bathrooms and kitchens. FOUNDATION The foundation and Jayne are COOlll'f&Ung with the Onmge County Public Llbraries in setting up audio- ~ reference centers to let the han- dicapped know where to go for help in- cluding lists of broctn.rres and books that are available. · Another project is a proposed c~ polgn to have public telephones loWtred to be more accessible and wide elJOU&}l to be used. lrom a wheelchair. H~itals are being urged by Jayne's group to ramp their front entrances, many of which have as much 81 a 10-lnch curb. one i:roposed IJ>•thod foe removing artiliclal harriers to employment ta tho adoplioo el a pey,ical anploymenl factor checklist. It would pmcTibe the physical re- qulrementa Of a job, from ability to IJU I certain weight to ability to maneuver stain. EMPLOYE "Thia Ylay aomeone with cancer, dlabet.,, heart lrouble could be (llnfuliy e.mployfd ." J-ta also work Incl with ~ m-'iln>nmental health divtalotl el the Or- County Health Department on llludlM of the ellecta of tome • c b 'm I c 1 I fertUbera. • • Barriers- Perking spaces help a little, but in,ide there are other barriers a' turnstile, right. Stories by ALLISON DEERR Of tM O•HY l"li.t ll•ft They are simple, everyday activities. Going to wort, shoqping for grocer~es, dining out, taking a short trip. But from a wh~lchair. they are not so simple, not so routine. From a wheelchair, the world is full or architec- tural barriers to leading a normal life. "To someone In a wheelchair, a six- inch curb might as well be a six-foot wall," said Mick Spencer, speaking from experience. Spencer, re~onal director - Calilomia Association ol the Physically. Handicapped -said that housing is the biggest problem, but there are many other barriers as well. "Doorways are the biggest problem," he said. "The average wheelchair is 26 inches wide and the average door is 24 inches. My chair is only 24 inches wide and I can't squeeze It through a 24-inch door." Because of this, along with steps at en- trances, the Spencers looked for months before finally buying a home. Even then , he said, they had to wid en three doors, remodel the bathroom and ramp the en- trances. "A 31).inch door doesn't cost any more than a 24-inch door to build," he added, "but people just don't think. Most apart. ment complexes have steps at the en-- trances, steps leading from the parkiiig areas, and most have at least one step up into the apartment l:itself. "When you finally find a place that you can live with, often you still have to pay for widening. the doorways. And many managers object to ramping the front door, even if you will pay for it. "I don't think these barriers are in· tentional, though,'' he said, "I just don 't believe people think . Not every person in a wheelchair is strong enough to jump a six-inch curb." What anyone with a handicap strives for is independenti!, he added . "'This is the prime thing. fl.lost of us after rehabilitation can drive a car with hand controls. But there are just beginning to be places for us to park. PARKING "In most places we have to look for an end parking space or park in the middle of two spaces so we can get out of the , ear. While we need are speciaJly-marked 12-foot spaces or more end spaces." Employment Is o£ten blocked because of physical barriers on the job. "In many cases, someone in a wheelchair can go and find employment but can't get into the building because 0£ a flight of stairs. If he can get into the building, he often finds that the doors for the restrooms are too narrow, so he can't use the restroom fac ilities. This would make an 8-to-9 hour job impossible." Grocery shopping is another I ordeal. Many stores have turnstiles that make the entrance inaccessible to a wheelchair. Spencer noted that there is usually a chained off emergency en- Faced tralK'e that may or may not be blocked by shopping ca rts. But after you 've done your sboppmg .• he said, yoo have to go out the same way and have your groceries checked on the other side, or have someone eJse run them through the stand for you. RESTAURANTS f\1ost restaurants are accessible, he ad- mitted, except those with .steps at the en- 1rance. But few of the older ones, he ad- ded, have restrooms that can ac· commodate a wheelchai,. Newer build· ings open to the public, oC course, by lav.· must provide these facilities. Takin g a· trip. simple for most or us, requires a lot of planninfl?. "Most service stations are buil1 on islands ," Spencer said. ''And th f• doorv.·ays are seldom wide enough. f'or a trip, we have to plan ahead and know where rest slops are located . Hotel and motel accommodations have to be checked out well in advance." Spencer said there nov.· are several travel guidebooks available for the han· dicapped. He cited "'Turning Wheels Stop" as an example. "'Mlere now are laws being made that all public buildings have to be accessible to the handicapped." he added, "and I OOpe that within a few years things will be a loL si mpler." SIMPLE PROBLEMS Other things are being made simpler. + also. The Huntington Beach Pier, a favorit e spot just to "slt and think" or go to fish for Spencer and several acquaintances was almost inaccessible. Now it is being ramped as well as several sites along the beach to make the beach itself more l\Cr cessible. ~ Curbing can be a problem almosl anywhere. Crossing the s1reel is impossible at most average intersections. In a residen- tial area, Spencer said. crossing the st reet means finding a driveway in the middle of the block to go down, doubling back to the crosswalk, crossing Lbe street, going up the street to find another driveway then doubling back again to croos the street legally. CROSSING STREETS 'l'fle· only time it is any simpler JI at a comer where there are service stations on all four comers, because these driveways are almost always ramped, although some are a little tao steep. "It really isn 't lega l to cross this way. You run the danger or rolling too fast out into the traffic, but you get across." And there are other barriers that are just minor inconveniences to most peo- ple. Like a streeUight standard in the mid· die or the sidewalk that you can't pass on either side. Or a high curb outside a hospital. Or/a six-inch curb which might as well be a six·foot wall. • f J DAil V Pl lOT Parties Praclice makes ptrh .. -ct and parties make perfectly wonderful IKllidays w h e n you·re a d1•butante. Chlldrcn·s llotne Soc iety presentees have plenty of both as they at tend 11 a r i o u s festivities and rehearse for thei r formal bow at the Balboa Bay Club The r-.11sscs Cynthia Vernon. Susanne .iackson and S<:Ol Adams !left to r1ghl l n1ade a ligh1-hearted allrmpt at the unison curtsy lo be 1nastered by all 18 debutantcs Mrs. Paul Burks of Pasadena ·hosted a supper cruise on the Pavilion Queen in honor of the t\1 isses Gayle and Lynn Harvey. Dcbutantes and their e9C..'Orts are invited tonight to a Norwegia n holida y buffet prepared by ~lr. and h1rs. Jonas Store of Corona dcl Ala r for their cl a u g h t e r . Astrid. The Mmes. William C. Adan)S, Robfrl E. Jackson, Donald D. Peck and Richard C. Vernon are arranging the tr a ditional father-daughter luncheon \\'ednesday al the Adams' residence. r-.lr . and r..1rs. William E. Langston will co-host lhc oost· ball breakfast in the Newport Beach home of Dr . and r-.1rs. F'rank R. Herma n whC're the young couples n1ay reminisce about the socia l \\'hir l. Behind all the partying is a serious note -the mone11 con· tributed to benefit c11s·s· adop- tion -co unsellng services. Tied to Bows Your Horoscope Virgo: Stress Golden Rule, Consideration SATU RDAY DECEMBER 23 By SvDNEY OMARR Ubra strives for baJance and needs Ume alone. Don't impose on the pr!Yacy of Ubra. These natives can be cbarmillg, persuasive. But Wira also ls an individual who is pel'C.1:ptive and who reveres lndepeOdence. Don't try to foree i.sltleS when dealing with persoos born under this zodi· acal sif:o. Li.bra harmonlzes , with Loi>, !iallitlarlus, Cle\lilnl and Aq~rius.· Ubra II drawn to Arlol, 'but lhiB could be a case ~. o~ites attfactlng .eech other. IJbra should be cautjou.o in dealing w l t ~ Capricorn and Cancer. Scme farilous pe1aons born under Libra Include Angle Dlcjdnson, George eepperd and Truman Capote. results. You deserve the btat Know it and put forth best er- you can afford. Stick t1> 9~ .! forts. Obltacle can b e ty. Applle! especia lly '4 lloroe. • oven:ome. Clpr!llOl'.ll per80n appliances, building mater11ll. can point the way. Don't back GEMlNI (May 21.Juoe 20){ down from pr Incl p I es. Accent on ideas, a-h or t:"' f'MPOf]llbllty. Older person journeys, relations with Cfole doe. have your LntliS't!Sl al neighbors, relatives. Yo~ Jn-heatt. nate llellle of humor surges to SAGm'AIUUS (Nov. 22- forefront ~ is your . ally. Dec. 21 ).: Op e n lines of Your versatility, enthusiasm, commtmication. Your in- intellectU.al curiosity -these, nuence spreads. You comple1e too, are em~lied-· • assignment. You gain throu gh CANCER (J'une 21~ul! 22)~ travel, writing, special study. To get what you want 1t will Aries ls in picture. One you· be necem.rrto 1ain cooper> respect confides problem. Be Uoo ot 6ne •shares your in-anabUcal, understanding. lerests. 11\lek to what is CAPRICORN (Dee. 12.Jao, f~u,tar. Y~u mar, . have 19): New approach to how you act't& of ~ Ill ~°'!'r · handle money may be re-o~ back yatd. ~uarius 1S in quired _ or requested. Leo pretwy. . can play key role. It Is best ~ (July 2J.A,Ug. 2%): COn-now for you to evaluate em<>- tinue path UJ;it leads to tions. Be sure you are not wrltlng, clash of ideas. Ex-going against logic or your press yourself in dynamic own best interests. ~~'...i Lead way t•o AQUARIVS (Jan. 20-Feb. ARIF.II (Mardi %!-April 19)' ·~..,,...., •. ~Uve chanles. 18): Accent is on marriage. You get almost anything you ~~ \lfllgt !ndlviduals are serious relationships, including request Key now is not to go likely' tO be fnvolved. Shake off partnerships. You sucteed by overboard. Means cont r 0 l any le~. cooperating. You lo.se if you tendenCy to be ertravagant. Vlll'fO (Alli-13-Sept. 2%): J.nsist on making demands. Emotions dominate. Special Be cons~ate toward family threats. lmJ>?rtant , to be relationship takes on new member w~ Ol.IY be in-aware oC pubhc relations. Be , meaning. Stress individuality · ca~ted. St r l v e for quiet within. -and 1o... bamiooy. WU! appears to be PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): TAURVS (April 20-Miy 20: an ~tioa:· ii only tern-Check work, health, rec~atK>n Teach and learn. Strive to porary. Yop ~make this a scbedu1e!. Try va ri ous reach run capacity of your fine ~ b;'-'ltresalng pin-methods. Refuse to be painted capabilities ... Pon't settle for · clples Of Golden Rule. into comer. Display versati_li- second best or for lulr.ewlrm LIB.RA:'l (sept'13-0ct. 22): ty . SagUtarlan could be 1n- ' ' • Some ot.~OIP' desires, wishes volved. could lac't ~ base. Key Wife in Jam T casted for Spreading Goodness ~~!~se:!~1.-=Las--tCha--nce--ro =;; ts stalling for Jime. Think Jean Dahl DEAR ANN LANDJo:RS : Th is letter is for the woman who signed ht'rsrlf ··A Loser.,. She said. "Old people can go to a home. Sick people can go to a ho!ipital. Drug addicts can go to a treatment center. But '>''here do unwanted v.·ives go?'' \Veil, I can tell her. After making sure your house is clcnn. the meals are prepared. the washing antl ironing and mending is done -go take a nice. long walk . Erijoy the beauties of nature. Get some exercise. 'fhen go drink several 1:!11sses of waler. You"ll C'al Jes~ and it "'ill help to keep your i11eight down. Go to !he library and learn soincthing There are thousands of books there about subjects you've never heard of. And it's free. Go look around your neighborhood and see if there's a lired mother "'i th a house full of kids who would just love an afternoon a week off. Go to church. God will listen lo you anytime. Go to the nearest children 's hospital and ask if they'd like son,eone to read to the children. Go to a \'Ctcran's hospital. There are lonesome men in there who nee<! someone lo wriJc letters for them. or do errands. There are so tnany places you can go -if you really want lo. Or would you ra!hcr sit aorund feeling sorry for yourself? -IT \YORKS DE;\R IT: Thankc; for some rommon· sense advict. The trouble is, too man;.· pwple would ruther sit around and feel sorry for themselves. DJ::AR ANN LANOEHS: Ou r daughter who just turned 16 is four 1nonths preg· nant. I noticert Nancy was getting heavy and asked her several times if she had a03•thing to tell me. She sajd no, so I took tier word for it. The father of Nancy's child is a ter- rible kid \vho is only 17 and has been sneaking around with her alfhough my husband has Lold him repeatedly to stay off our property . The boy's parents are de cenl people but they ne ver could manage this boy. He has two older brothers who are fine. No trouble. Nancy want s to get married and keep the baby. The boy says he will marry her i! he has to but he has one n'ore year of high school and would rather not. Also he says he has another girl in Bufialo he likes and she might be pregnant. He isn't su re. ~1y husband is fit to be tied. He says this rflt is going to marry Nancy -no ifs, ands or buts. He ""'ants to know ii there is a la111-that can force this mar- riage if both parents are in f;ivor of it. - NIAGARA FALLS TRO UBLE DEAR N.G.: Thtre is oo such law, and even If tbtre were, why in the world would your husband wan.I bis daagilter to get sluck with a rat'! My advice Is to contact a home for unwed motbers. The Booth J\lemorial Home for Unwed Mothers is in Buffalo. Your daughter does not sound as If she is ready for moth er hood . the baby deserves a better break. These days adopted children are very hard to come by and thousands. of eager couples are waiting to give a child n lol•ing home. DEAR ANN : I married a man who had a vasectomy before I 1net him. He had had a previous marriage and thought he 1 scoRP10 cQol. 23-Nov. 11>, Before A You &et ootbijag for nothing. v.·ould ne11er want any more children. He . said the doctor gave him complete assurance that the operation is reversi- ble. ls it ? I want a family. -L.A. DEAR L.A.: Some men think having u vatiectomy meam never having to say you'rt son')'. But your b&ls:band's case proves that it ain't necessarily so. The clurnce1 of reverslag a vasectomy are very poor. Any man who conslderi this surgical procedure should vtew bis ~terility as permanent. Discover how to be date bait without falling hook, line and sinker. Ann Landers' booklet, "Dating Dos and Don'ls." will help you be more poised and sure of yourself on dates. Send 35 cents in" coi n along with a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope and your request to the DAILY PILOT. ' y.• .. '-'•Nie ~<a. drid ... _,, Ir_,,.~ .... ...... , .... llH!' •• , -.... 4'T49a, .. 1c fer Ip • , . Meny Christmas Westclfff Phn• OpH lH'I. 'TII t P.M. WlSTCLIFf rLAZA NEWPOI Tll IHN 17ttl & 1,.1-., N•wport IHc:il Newport a.oc.11 Wise Shopping Stops Buying Errors Nuptials In Offing DWlci.w. u.AM Nfwtt C:...,., ..... 11 • ., -E•,!rn 11111/12 FERRARA TORROIE SLICED TO 01tOEa. l.99. •1 .tt Exlll .... 1!/tr/11 CAPAOOLA $1.68 Wise shopping will not only helr. you get the most for your dol ar, but will lead t~ fewer Instances of product dissatisfaction . It's probably impossible to totally eliminate buy i n g merchandise which may need NEW CLASSIS STARTING J•nu•ry S ~ Jtnuery 22 lil•tim11 Plac;em•nt A1si1tonce R.1V ·, a11tl llt•l11wl flt.''0""'' °'" ""w tl't",,t., to be returned. but you can minimize it. and save yourself the time and annoyance: of complaints and returns. Here are son1e suggestions to raise your shopping IQ: -Do your homework. Read consun1er articles and in· forn1ation in newspapers and magazines. Consumer guide books and periodicals are available in public libraries. Sorne give general advice and shopping guidelines Others. have s p <' c i f i c in- formation about certain pro- ducts and c11n be especially valuable when you're con- sideri ng a major purchase such as a sofa. tlin1t:N /oh, f( :u.1 U.ifllfl( 111 J man1Ju. • 62~ W. 17th, SANTA ANA 5414461 more recourse than with pro- ducts from unknown sources. SAVE LATER it should . Sea m allowances sho uld be at least one-quarter of an inch for knit fabrics and five-eighths of an inch for woven materials. il1r . and Mrs . K. A. Swick of Irvine have announced the engagement or their daughter' Colleen Swick, to David L. OUlt OWN HOMEMADE •K• .,. ,...WWI CHRISTMAS COOKIES fl . C'I\. /). ITALIAN DELI e BAKERY ol..ucci el.Jel i RESTAURANT 8911 Ada ms at Magnolia, Huntington Beach. 0111 ot 1M lol'Vell Dell o.,..-111lflt In C11ttern1•. Sllll In 01•1 .... 1nr 21 ,...,... \Vhile, the better known lines are sometimes more ex- pensive -often renecting CX· tra product research. better quality and post-purchase responsibility -they may save you money in the long run. -When buying permanent pt:css and 100 percent polyester knit or wo ven items. remember that they have an affinity for.oily stains which are often impossible lo Dolly 10-1; Fri. 10-t: S... 10-6; C:l•Md Mo•.: 961-4466 Lindsay, son of Mr. and Mrs.I~""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""''""""'""'""'""'""'~ M. Lindsay of Anaheim. Miss Swick is a graduate o( P""-------------------Again, ask friends f o r recommendations based on their satisfaction. Check. t o o . for guarantees on the merchan - dise. Some manufacturers off- er a year or more guarantee on their merchandise. If the item does not live up remove. So look for fabrics treated with a stain release finish which means that both dry soil and stubborns stains will generally \\'ash out. No date has been set for the wedding. to the guarantee, proof of ---- pun:base and the bangtag or :~":;Ji)!,':,;~::;1~~·:;:~::J~,':;;t~$'!,':;Hf. label stating the guarantee 1 'f" ~ will be helpful in obtaining a ·~ G f G ;~~~d or replacement of the i ts al 0 re . LOOK OUT ln large · and half • sizes Need extra money to cover your Christmas Shopping? With a_fle1erve Balance Account at Flret NaUonal It'• there as soon as.you write your check. You don't have to ask anYone because the money ha1 already been earmarked for your use, when you wlah. ll'1 Juat tlke being your own loan oltlcer. A1 a matter of facl y.re have 1 free booklet, ''How to Beoome Your OWn Loan Officer." Wr ite !or your OOP'Y or, better yet, stop In at any office ol Flrat NaMon1I Bank. We'll explain Reaerve B•l1nc:e to you and help YoU fUI out en 1ppllcat1on. First National Bank Of OR~lt COUNTY F INN OfflCl ti the Pit" 111 doltntCl'Wll Ol'lin1• 11.V<CH OfFW.. ' OllNCl: Tusll11 & Colll11a•Ctl•PM111.l PmOtCt (l)STA MESA: Mua Ytrdt I Adaml SAN1l ANA: 11th l Tutti" VILLA ~UC: Salltiero l Wttid. 1\IS1'1N: ~d Hiff I Walnut Flt•t in PfhonalBonlti1'1 S.rvi::. Sinc.1906 -- 14-·oo a de ba th ag un in ne .t .. I M al g •JI b ( ( i li t a a a t • BOB BOSWELL h·Troj111 l ooks Back Buckeyes' Success Not All Defense PASADENA (AP) -University of Soothem California football coach John McKay rears the Ohio State defense yet Buckeyes mentor Woody Hayes declares defense hasn't been the key to his team's success. ' Hayes doesn't discount at all the two great goal line stands of Ohio State in its 14-11 Big Ten finale against Michigan, but he says, "Our defensive club has bad a Jot or Injuries through the year. 1be defense hasn't carried the load all the way. A lot of the time it bas been the of. tense. "It's sort of seemed to balance out. .The load went to the unit that wasn't banged up the worst." The Buckeyes carry a &-1 record into the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day against the nation's only undefeated and untied major collegiate team -Southern California at 11--0. The coaches exhibited differences in philosophies as they met at different timei with newsmen Thursday. ''1be only thing we need to do is stay in cooditlon," said McKay who nevetthelfi:s! ranked Ohio Sta\e as the . toughest foe for bis current Trojans. "Our kids have been running and that :should keep them in shape." : McKay plans no ~ay practices wblle ·llay8 ...m 1u1Te bis team won: twice co Saturday and then give them Mooday off for Ciristmas. Of tbe 16 allowable days for practice for. the bowl game, McKay plans to use 12 and Hayes •14. The latter, however. was driven inside by the winter weather •L C.Olumbus for lour workouts -~t bis oquad came oul with apparenUy no physical ill effects from working on lbe hard indoor surface. McKay hopes Ob.lo State wjll aticl.: with ils ball control olfense -passing very little. "I hope they do," he said. "I think that's coach Hayes' style. We don't mind people doing that." I Pressed to explain, McKay said that a team which doesn't throw a k>t doesn 't score a lot. Hayes admitted this year's Ohio State team doesn't pass as much as some in Lhe past. "Sometimes you pass when you have to," he said. "ll you don't have to, you ·don't pass. A lot of games we didn't pass beca~ we didn't have to. We were ahead and passing would have been ·an 'additional risk. In the last game we pass- ed only three times." Of his qllarterback, Greg Hare, the coach said, "He's a good passer. We averaged 49 or 50 percent l'OOlpletions and he's got a heck of an arm." BRUINS, T ROJANS RETUR N T O PLAY Coach John Wooden ~joiM his top- ranked UCLA Bruins as they seek to make Pitt.!burgh lheir 50th consecutive victim and USC's youthful Trojans en- tertain once-beaten Illinois tonight in top college basketball garries. 'M'le Bruins' streak is not expected to be endangered by either Pittsburgh or Saturday night's rot. Notre Dame. Both games are at ·PMlley Pavilion on tbe UCLA ca .. pus. The Tro'jans (5-2) have won three in a nlw. Ulinois bas an A1l·America candidate in forward Nick Witherspoon who Is averng· ing 27.5 points and 14.7 rebounds per game. DAI L'!' PILOT IS Ex-Trojan Re~alls !>55 Bowl Tilt ~y H.OWAIW L. HANDY Of .. O.lly ""'' ,..,. Bob Boswell never did find trntt pol of gpld at the end of the college fool · ball rainbow but he does recall the 1954 Uofversity of Southern Califomlo season and the Trojans subsequent 1p- pearance in the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day. Boswell was a sophomore that yet1r and was liated on the USC roster for lbe Rose Bowl game. USC lost to Ohio Stale, ?»-7. ~ two teams will renew an old iiViJ?Y in bowl game competition on New Year's Day, 1973. As a aophornort, Boswell had been converted from bloc~ back lo center but was playing behind a COllple of pretty fair men in current assistant coach Marv Goux and Crul Rupke wh11 later playe(t professionally in S3n FrallCISCo and Dallas: With a llmlled JWter, the Tro)ans took. only two oenten to the game and even though Boswell worked out wllh the team 'right to game lime. he wa:i not aUowed to suit up because or player limit res trictions. Bob nnd brolher Bill, th e • Westminster High School football coach , are identical twins and both had their football careers cut short with back problems. Bill as a freshman aod Bob after h i s sophomore season. At Huntington Beach High School, both were three-sport stars. Football . naturally. along with baseball and track. Bill was the Sunset League shot U"I Telufwl• A Gop~ Handstand Jim Brewer of the University of Minnesota does a handstand as he goes over the back of Corpus Christi's Julius lloward in a basketball ~ game Thursday night. htinnesota posted a 67-53 victory. 49ers to S tart Brodie Against Dallas Saturday SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -John Brodie is the San Francisoo 49en' starting quarterback again, just as Dallas Cowboys coach Tom Landry predicted. San Francisco ooach Dick Nolan an- nounced hia decision Thursday, returning Steve Spurrier to the bench after nine consecutive sta.rts. 1be 37-rear-old Brodie will be starting for the first time since Oct. 15 when his team fa~ tbe,1.Cowboys here Saturday in the ftrSt round ot the National Football League pla)'O!ls. "Nolan Ms little choice arter what Brodie did against Minnesota," Landry said early Otis week. Brodie abowed no signs of his layoff - fdroed by an ankle injury -as he reliev- ed Spurrier last.Satun:lay and passed for KS yards and two touchdowns in a 2().17 vlctwy OVN the Vikings. tbe vidory made the 49ers National Conference Western champions with an U-1 record and matched them In a posl· season game against Dallas a third !ltraight year. The Cowboys, 10-4 this year as NFC East runner-up, beat the 49ers for the conference championshlp the last two years. "If the law of averages has anything to do with it. we'll be in," Brodie said. "But I just look at it as one game, we go in even." Although losing the starting call, Spur- rier promised that "I'm still going • to have my ank les and , knee taped Satur- day. I'll be ready." Spurrier said he: didn't think Brodie's starting reflected a lack of confidence ln him. ''The idea is to win the game." Landry picked Craig Mortoo as his starting quarterback, fooling Nfllan, who admitted, "I thought it would be Roger Staubacll." But the 49ers' coach, former assistant to Landry at Dallas, added, "Morton's a good quarterback. He can throw that ball , and he always couJd ." put chan1pl0t1 and a catcher in baseball. Bob was a pitchtl:r and third baseman in baseball. When they gredualed lrom hJih school, they had a choice ol signing a professional bale.ball (.'()Qtract with the Chicago Cuba or attending USC oo a football scholarship. They took the latter course and as things turned out, Bill remained in school helping wllb recruitment whlle Bob dropped oul. H.ow does Bob look at the game with Ohio State on New Year's Day? "I think Otllo State was very fortunate to win against Michigan. Those two goal line stands did it. "But SC will clobber them." What about a predicted SCtlrt ? "I can't name a SCtlre but I honestly believe USC will scare at least four _,,.. ................... ~ touchdowns and that Ohio State will not score more than t)NO. "When you get those fai;t backs !l ke the Trojans have and run al them (Ohio State) for four quarters, they ~·ill get loose sooner or later." What about a national cham· pionship? Should it be decided in a bowl game? ''The national championship i~ decided during the-regular season . Bowl games are a one shot deal and they aren't like a playoff. There is a period between the last game and the bowl game. "In a playoff a team will go all out. '"Jotm McKay's and USC's policy is that this is a fun game and should be treated as such. 'Mle kids go in it to win it themselves. There is no pressure on the kids like there is in a ... playoJf g<1n1t' Jt':-; ;1 d1rfere111 kind of atmosphere " Whe~~l'o etl \.\'a:i cavorting as a workhotsl" for the Trojans in 1954, preparing for the Ohio State ericounter on New Yea r's !)Uy, he was in ex- tremely good co1npany even though the Trojans lost. Included on the USC rosier that year in addition lo the two centers were such stars as Jon Arnett , Lindon Crow, Jim Contratto, LA..'On Clarke, Ron ~iiller and Ed Fouch. among others. Bob Boswell is a partner in Industrial Electric Service with offices in Cudahy. It is a parts and servlc:e distributorship £or restaurants.But he still makes his home in Or1:1nge Counl y and is a resident of fountain Valley. Ante_aters Step Up in Class, Clash With Loyola Tonigh t LONG BEACH -. Coach Tim Tift 's· UC Irvine basketball team takes ..8nother step up in class tonight in opeo)lg action of the lntematiooal City ~niament at Loog Beach Arena when the Anteaters tangle with Loyola Univemty at 7. Natloiially-ranked (6th} Cal State (Long Beach), winner of the Nassau Classic earli~r this week, will fa:ce Long Island Unlv,ersity at 9 in the nightcap. Winners will meet Saturday night at 9 for the championship with the losers playing at 7. Loyola University coach Dick Baker is planning to make lineup changes against UCI tonight. The Lions are (}.5 for the year but have played some top-n ight teams including USC and Utah Universi· ly. "We're not winning with the five Player.s we have been sending out," Baker· says. ''We'll try some new faces tooight against Irvine and see what hap- pens." Either sophomore Louis Gray (S.-11) or senior Glen Hannah 6-3 ) will start at a guard post opposite freshman Luther Philyew. Steve Smith is the Llons leader and had his best game recently against Portland State when he scored 31 points, had 11 rebounds and blocked fi ve shots. Sports Clipp ed Short West, Hairston May Sit It Out INGLEWOOD -The Los Angeles Laker's. wbo jwrt fiaJabed • llkxreMfut trip east without Jerry West and Happy Hairston, boot the l'lloeniI SWIS tooight at the Forum with no guarantee that either will be able to play. All-pro guard West skipped the trip to Buffalo and Baltimore because of a slight hamstring muscle pull and Haimon, a lorward, stayed behind to continue mend- ing a strained right knee. Either or both might be able to play against the Suns but if they don't they'll have until next Tuesday before the defen- ding National Basketball Association champs are scheduled to play again. Coach Bill Shannan was pl eased with the perfonnances ol substitutes in Los Angeles' 96-90 victory at Baltimore Wednesday night. "We have good depth on this team." he said. "Gtlys go a month or longer witbotit playing much. and it's tough. But when called upon , they come through ." With West and Hairston sidelined, Sharman has started Bill Bridges at JERRY WEST forward and Keith Erickson at West's and ultimately was recovered by Buffalo. spot. The game officials at that time said Bridges grabbed 21 rebounds against the pass was a lateral and charged the the Bullets and Pat Riley came off the bench to score 12 points. Erickson pla-yYled.t--llo.,...,..,to Morris. But a spokesman tor the both forward and guard and rookie Jim Dolphins said Rozelle had ruled that the Price was impressive when· given a play was incorrectly scored and should chance in the backcourt. h.ave been red>rded as a fumble by Mor- Yet much of the post-game praise in rail. Baltimore was for Wilt Chamberlain. veteran center who had 20 rebotmds, 15 points and as usual bl ocked many shots. Morris Gets 1,000 MIAMI -The unbeaten Miami Dolphins became Thursday. the first pro- fessional footbaJI team in history to have two 1,000-yard nJ!bers in ooe season after the National Football League reviewed films of an Oct. 22 game and gave Dolphin running back Mercury Mor- ris nine more yards. A spoke.man for the Dolphins sa id NFL commWiooer Pete RozeUe had reviewed the films ol. the Dolphim' Oct . 22 victory over Buffalo and ruled that a nine-yard loss charged against Morris should have been charged as a fumble agai nst Dolphin quarterback Earl Mor· rall. In that play, Morrall attempted to pass to Morris, but the ball was tipped by Buf- falo defensive Unernan Dave Washington Kings F all Again PHILADELPHIA -The Philadelphia Flyers narrowly escaped a possible $10,000 fine for missing a National Hockey League game 'Mlursday night. The team arrived for the game just 20 minutes before the scheduled starting time due to a 10 hour trip from Chicago. Once they arrived, however. they made mincemeat of the Los Angeles Kings, taking the game by a 6-3 score. Perhaps the team was angry from the long trip borne because they came out on the Ice smoking. In just Z6 seconds they had a l-0 lead. The Kings later led brietly bt.lt lhe Flyers bad too much steam to Jet out, or had just too mueh adrenalin for the Kings to cope with. McCafferty to Saints? He's a 6·8 senior from Sacramento. Tift isn 't cont.emplating any lineup changes for lhe Anteaters with one poss1· ble exception. Howard Hawkins (6-2 ) is listed to start at a forward post as he has done the last tour games. Scott 111agnusoo (6-11 ), an early season starter at Minnesota and North Dakola State, has been sidelined by suspension and illness but played half or the game wiUtCentral Iowa Tuesday. ••ife looked better in practice .the last two days and I may start him.'' Tift :;aid following the team 's workout at Long Beach Arena Thursday. The Anteaters have been paced by three sophomores this season. Dave Raker (6-8) at center or forward. depend- ing on Magnusm's status. is the looe returnee and is averaging 18.6 points a game. He is also the team's leading rt'· bounder with 60. Jerry Maras is averaging 1'4.9 per game and has 46 rebounds while Gary Eubanks, the third soph in the starting five, had his best night Tuesday with 25 points to bring his seasonal average lo 11.2 Harlan Peet. his running mate <il guard, is averaging 14.4 points per tllt. Tift revealed that he still hadn't heard from Don Newton , an early season starter at guard for the Anteaters. "1 will try to contact him as soon as possi- ble but so far r haven't heard from him ... Tilt said this morning. Newton hasn ·1 practiced !his week following return from the recent suspension. Nine Repeaters On Pro Grid Football Team DENVER I AP \ -There are nine repeaters on the official im Professional Football Writers of America All-Pro foot- ball team announced Thursday. but the younger kids are taking over the block on the defensive Line. While such perennial stars as Oakland defensive back Willie Brown repeated in 1972, four new names showed up on the defensive line in voting by members of the PFWA. Ci n c inn a Ii ' s Mike Reid and Pittsburgh's Joe Greene displaced Alan Page of Minnesota and Bob Lilly of Dallas at defensive tackles. Jack Gregory of the New York Giants and Claude Humphrey ot Atlanta are the first team defensive ends. Page and Lilly each were voled second team. In additioo to Brown, other repeaters on the 1972 squad were Kansas Ctty receiver Otis Taylor, Dallas tackle Rayfield Wright. Miami guard Larry LitUe and San 1-"rancisco center Forrest Blue on offense. Defensively, San Fran- cisco comerback Jim Johnson • Philadelphia safety Bill Bradley and 4kr linebacker Dave Wilcox were repeat first team members. Green Bay placekicker Chester Marool was the only rookie on the flrst teams. gaining a berth as a placekicker. whUe vete ran Jerrell Wilson ol Kansas City repeated as the punter. It 's the fourth straight year Willie Brown has made the first team, and the third in a row for Johnson. ()akJaild tuckle Bob Brown made It in 1969 apd 1970 as a Los Angeles Ram. Chicago's Dick Butkus also returned to the firs! team after a year's absence. Steelers Don't Expect An·y Surprises BAL TIM ORE -Former Baltimore Colt Coach Don MeCaCferty Thursday night conllrmed reports he was to meet. with New Orleans Saints' officials to talk about a possible. roach1ng position but his plane was grounded by fog. McCaUerty said no new date has been set for talks arte.r be wa1 forced to abAn - don efforts to Oy to New Or"ans Thurs· dly morn"'8. San Francisco placed fou r men on the first offensive and defensive teams lo lc~d all clubs. Pl1'1'SBURGll (AP) --PIU.oorgh SteelerS middle linebacker lleruy OaVb doesn't expect any surprtH1 from the Oakland l\eldcr1 lo Sflurday's ~merican Football O>nference playoff pme. The Ralde:rs were to practtce W oecrecy Ioday at Three RJvtn Stadlwli. but Dsvis anticipates t.bdr uauar blend of balanced running and P8Jlll!I. "It would be loolJlh td make .J1f1Y draatlc dilnge1 now," .. Id\. Oevll;'who helped Plttsbur&h to Ill fint cllvlalon title In tO yan. "It wUI be 1trenlth tll atttngfb. We'll dO the thinp "' dO bolt. so will they." •• I Davis made a key play in the steelers' 34-28 Win over Oakland in the season opent:r when he blocked a punt and ran flve 7ardl for the tint Steele r -, Plllillllllh wmt on to lnlen:ept three pasSes olf Raider quarterback Ken Slabl<!r lit lake a fH lead Into the nnaJ quai;t~r. .: ; I Ho-, veleJ11•-Dory)e Lamonica, wllo bod 1 kilt bio ]Ob Io Sllbltt In --· ..... off the bench and dlr8eled .... lalit ---· . ,.. "! lllppole w• J'!'l r<lued," !1Ulled - O.avls. "ll was a hot day and we were tired. Lamonica came in and made us look bid." Defensive End Dwight White, a key ngure in a StMiler front lour that led the AFC 1fith 40 u cks, ag~ with Davis. "Lamonica WllS fresh. we weren°t4" said White. "But t wotl't use that as an """"'· He 'll be there Saturday. So will we . .Then we'll find out.•· Aft.er regaining h.is 1ui.rUna job •'ln the opunlng game, Lamonica went on to lead Qakland Io • 11»-l reconl and Ill filth Western Division tllle in six yean. Pittsburgh C1>mpllcd :in 11-3 mark1 ed&- ' i.ng Cleveland in the tight Central Diri.sklo race, and the Steeleri ·were unbeaten ln seven games belore their rabid borne fans. Though Lamonica llnlshed ll«Glld fn passing ln the AFC. the Steelen AY they would rathtr tee him ot quarterback than Stabler. They feel lhe veteran 11 11lQtt prtdlctable. "You study tendencies ind you have 1 rough idei ot what to expect,•• Nid Davis. "B ut oometim<1 It oeema that when a new quarterback comQI in there It'• hanl lo ld)Ull. You 1et caupt OU balanct." Cincy Names Mason CINCINNATI -,.Tony MR90n, an ... 1 .. tant coach at P\Vdue University, WM nomed today bead football coach al the Unlvmlty ol Clnclnnatl. MalCln, a 1Taduate of Clarion , Pa .• Sllle COillllO. '''° bao been a member or the football COlcjtlng 11•11 •t the Unlvenlty of Mlcblian. , 'Ille appolnlmonl -llll10IUICed by UC atllletic olllclalo. · • I II DAILY PILOT Laguna Gains Sem is Laguna Beach High Scbool breeied int.o the semifinals ol Its own basketball tournament Thursday night , easing J)asl Lawndale, aJ.56. in second round play. The Artists meet SaddJ&. back a 57-tl winner over Aquinas, in a 7: 30 11ame to- night. The Artilts used extraordl· nary !COl"ing balance. a tight full-court press and good T°e:"" bounding to roll p a s t the Mustangs. Lagu.na had six players in double figures -Stephan Gar· ner and Danny Collen \vilb ts each, Dave Kiesselbach with 12, Nonn Bedell and Brent Uljestrom with I I each and Tom Anderson with 10. The contest v.'as clase only after the ftrSt quarter when the Artists had a six ~ point lead, 19-13. Laguna then blitzed the Mus- tangs 14-14 in the second pe- riod lo take a comfortable ~27 advantage into the lock· er room al the end of the first half. The two teams player on relatively even tenns in the third quarter. but the Artists turned on the 1ras at the be- ginnin& ol the fjnaJ period. With Laguna holding a 64-44 lead, a n y slim hopes Lawn- dale had v.-ere quickly dash- ed. Norm BedeU tOOSf<i in three baskets to spark the Artists on another scoring sprint. this one leaving Lawndale behind 11-4. The other semifinal ji!ame. at 9, will involve a pair of running and pressiru:i: teams in Sierra Vista and Moreno Va1ley, the tournament favar- ite. ' D41LY PILOT ........... CHECKING SCRAPBOOK -Hal Uplinger, former Long Island University and professional basketball star, looks over articles about bis playing career in the family's N'ewport Beach home. Also looking on are wife Hazel, TrW (13) and John (JI). Newport Beach's Uplinger Torn Between Two Teams • Ex-Long Islai:.d Star • Recalls '51 Scandal Snow Tops Drag Field At OCIR ... G<oe Snow o1 Forf Worth By ROW ARO L. JIANOY "They would ailO speed up "I'm sure the ecandal end will return ·to the driver's out °' .... O.flY "'"" ,..,. when you. were go l n g su.spenslon hurt the1n the "-hit 22A> mpb funny car for Wlien the name ot Hal Up-downcourt, then when you m01t. And the worst part the lint Ume In ttvo months llllger Is nashed on th e sped up. a pass would go Just about It I• they were ROOd during Orange County lntema· tele.vlsion screen following an behind you am:J out ot boundB. guys but hid been talked lnto tkmaJ Raceway's A 11 ·pc o NFL television showing, few lt would make you loot bad the situation with the aeriea opener Sunday, Die. l..J· people Immediately connect iNtead of them." gamblers." Snow was tddfllned with the man with the game of The three players were Upliager also recalls that severe Jef lnJurifll suffered in basketball. reportedly getting Sl,500 per when the arrests were made, I freak accldent at OCJR's But Uplinger had a varied game in J.950.5L to give the there-was no hesi.taUon. The ~facturws ~ps career in the cage sport ln-gamblers the edge. 1t Long officers knew e1acUy wbaf Nov. S. eluding being a starter on the Island was" favored by two was golng on and they moved While attemptin& to warm 1~1 Loot llland Univenlty points,· they would win by one in lo make the arrests without · np bis .,.,... In the plti, the team that was hit by a gambl· and the gamblers would cash MY previous warning. motcr erptoded and tta;gments Ing scandal that rocked the In and tllen pay off. Perhaps the lhing that hurt tore through his right log nation. "While was the greatest Uplinger the rOOst, at least his gougihg the booe. A brace has Three of the starters were player I've ever seen," Upl-ego, was the tum cf events now replaced the cast and shaving points and being paid Inger says. "He led the nation following the arrests. doctors have re I u ct a n t I y off by gambll.na interests but. in scoring when he was "They never even asked me . agreed to allow him to remove Uplinger wu not Otte ,,r them. caught Al H, he could oot-to fe!tify 1 -~ have told l!Je brace lo drive. Soow will UpJinger and Ray Fell; jump a seven-footer. J:d he them 8 tlung ·aod they knew have to wear the: bnl,oe out.aide were free of all charges thlt wu the leadei on fast this, J'm .sure. BUt it was 8 the.cockpit for about a year or found center Sherman Whlte, break. slap lb the flee at the time to until the bone is com.pl.et~)' forward Adolph '1SiP and ~ "Tbere is no doubt in my be ~ lh'ere and playing heal~. . guard Le!:l'.ISrnith convicted mind that be could have been Ith e ·•·y·-i'nvolved During recuperation the I the ooe of the all-time --a~ in " ..-"".. f -~• ~---'--has n · ·--and to t be ked armer -~ _,.,..,.. When the scandal bit Leng professional basketball But . . • no even as been directlbg the develop- Island U. in 1951, the team bad they wouldn't touch him. anytJtlng &bout It. ment of an entirely new a record of 26-4. Naturally, "Smith was a fantastic "It had been gtolng on .for supercharging system for next basketball P.laY was sWpended jumper and a floor leader and ma.n.y yeani and those making year's car. Snow a1ys that the for the balance of the year _ Bigos Was a rough, tough the arrests were sure of new racer will debut during in lact for a ·l!!!rll?d .. of six player. themselves all the way.'' the All-pro series but be would yean. ". ',. not elaborate. 'lbe entire pro- In recalling tbe'-incident, ject has been a closely-guard- Uplinger, a resident of Corona HB Rally Fal'.: SJwrt, eel secret. del Mar, says: i:J Other funny can entered in "Ray and I weren't iii-the AUill'O opener are _,.Volved. The team had a record 0 ' 3 w • Supematlonals winner Jim 'Wbf 11 straight 'wins and went · range ;n 77 7 "In Dunn (La Mirada), Tom on the road where we Inst • , • "' •• "' McEwen (Fountain Valley ), three straight. ' Don Prudhomme ( Granadll '>'l'be gambling situatloo had' B1 DANK 'IVESCll thn>WI to knot things at 67. HUis) and Roland Leong's been, golng-on for 10 year _ -JH,.. DeNw--""" ,..,, Orance W,.a chance _to win Hawaiian (Los ~eles). mainly controllin& the point Hun.Hn&ton Beach raJUed it in ~Uon Ume, but miss-Top toel entrants include spreed. Clair Bee didn't know hvm 15 points down in the od the fir11 haH ot a boous both of the sports' five-second anything about .it and it was a , fourth quarter only to fall to free throw situatim and Hunt-dragsten, Don Moody -S.91 real shock lo him," Uplinger ington's iaa\ oecaod shot wa.s (Santa Monica) and MIR says. Orange, T1·73, in overtime in off the front of the rim. Snively -S.97 (Rialto), James "C,oach Bee was a great the iiftb place game in the But the Oilers' comeback Warren (Bakersfield), Randy man. He WU one of .the most Anaheim ·Holiday basketball WIS made meaningless in the Alli.son (Vl!ta). PDA clwn- inDuenUal inen in my lile. He toumament Tburaday at the overtime u Qranie hit four pion Herm Petersen (Seattle) did more to help me than any Convenilon Center. of five field goal attempts and defending All-pro c:bam- other indivldual." The Oilers showed the after and cUhed ib a pair of free pion Carl Ol!On (Torrance). Just bow did the three effects ol a loog tournament throws. Butch Leal (Nortlridge), Other eames todav included Dana Hills and Neff this after- noon in the consolation brack. et and Brethren and Apple VaTiey. Aquinas and Lawndale meet at 4:30 while Walnut and North Bakersfield play at 6. players involved in the scandal schedule in tbe past two weeks The winning _points came Bill Bagshaw (Hollywood), play lo adjust point spreads? through the llrsl three quar-with 1:3.1 remalning in the ex· Dick Landy (Norlbrldge) and "I went to New York and it ters and trailed 54-39, but tra period when orange's Bill Sonny Bryant (Orange) lead was a different world." Upl-slapped on 8 full court man-Dowden hit .the first of 1 boo-the pro stock contingent. The l..<Jng Island University "I came down on my ankle way on the field ." inger pre1aces his remarks. "I «>man presi in the final pet· (See OILERS, Page 11) The four-race series fur basketball team will play Cal one night in a game and bad x· What about HaltOOy's? Is it was like a hayseed at that iOO aiid came 10 Jile. drag raclng's three ~ State (Long Beach) in opening rays taken at Johns Hopkins time, in from the country." Orange turned the ball over ..._._.. ._. ~nl" ., '' fesslonal categories boest.s a round action at Long Beach Hospital. When the doctor ask· here to stay? Uplinger played high school :denw~&:f~i: == u= ~ ! i 1i guaranteed cash purse of Arena tonight wh.ile UC Irvine ed me if J had ever thought "While I was with CBS, 1 basketball in L4s Angeles and Ing the way the Oilers au-Ad i=-":'"' ',, l, : lo,' $46,000 plua accessory money· will face Loyola earlier in the about the future, it made me met Tony Verna (a director). was a member of the Los back to draw even wtth&ia -· I 'Ibe Alli>fO UUe-and ita ac- evening. begin to wonder. He's a different type of guy -Angeles City College team seconds left. Fittingly it was ~ •14 i! companying cash bonus goes U Loog Jsland and _UCJ both "He told me I could play he's a creator and very that }'On a national cham· Carlson, who bad previously "'Vot"' ~ 17 :ii ~ to the points: leader in each '4 l~ win or lose, they wjll meet some more but that ii I broJte woultalendleddr .. If hehldld what I doll, ;It plonship in Hutchinson.' Kan. brt three baslets and a pair ...__ ....., 'm "•"• ", "•• oprof tbecat~ ~" ~-~. uslon ' l is Saturday night at the same the ankle again, I would be ive m up a wa · in l949. of free throws in the quartet, -nuuui ''9 uiwu :~ site. crippled for life. That's when 1 ~ive him the ideas and he Now about the players in·· who tied the score. ~r j } lo JJ Gates will open tor quaJJ- i :~ Ne"-~ Beach ,...,·dent Hal started looking around for evelops lhem." volved. 1 The &-0 senior guard stoJe a ~= I ~ . 1J fying at I a.m. with efunina.. o 4 .. .,.,. • Several of TV's most sue-"They wouldn't intentionally · and droV the ,_.,. of • • 4 22 lions fon....,;i.,., "'l 2 pm 1~ ..J Uplinger is a fonner Long .other employment." cessful innovations have been misa a shot," be recalls. "But f:8 fioor bef~ beirigf;tled T.:::,.!!'!"' ~ ~,, ,, ~ 11•1',," The ~"'6 sbowd ·tie con- Jsland player and will be tom UpUnger bad majored in (See UPUNGER, Pa ere 17 J they wouldn't block one elther. nd then h"t t 1-A .... _.. '4 •• -luded b S ' I k between rooting for h i s journalism in College and turn· ,--------·-------------Irma;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;' ;;;wo;;;;;;i;llleSlll?e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;u;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;°';;;;;;-;i;;;;;;;;;;;';;;';;;';;;';;;'•' ;;;";;;;;;',,_,,;;;;;;;;;;iic;;;;;;;;;;;;;;yi;;;;;;;o;;;c;;;oc;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;~ adopted UCI team or his alma ed to the neWspaper field for I Dana Hill s Belts Foe; Uni Ousted mater. ti.is first job away from Uplinger. a television sports basketball. He preferred the producer for CBS for many publicity dodge and became years. currently handles ooly associated with KNXT, Chan· games on the West Coast for nel 2, in Los Angeles in 1956. the network along with pro-He spent time in various ducing specials for Haltonys departments at KNXT until Enterprises, Inc. 1963 when he was asked by In high school at LA vice president in charge of Marshall. Uplinger was a 6-1 sports for CBS, Bill McPhail, guard. He grew dwing his to work for the network. Dana Hills High School ad· tenure in colleae and is cur-"They decided to auian us vanced to the consolation e """. bracket semifinals Thursday rently 6·5 and spent two years lo certain teams at that time m the Laguna Beach basket· with the Baltimore Bullets in and I was extremely fortunate ball Loumament, but Univer-the professional ranks before to draVir..,. Green Bay for the sity was eliminated with its . retiring. I~ sE!-asons. Those were second l01Ss in a row. Between his college career two great year!! with Vince Dana Hills. after fallfllg to at Los Angeles City College Lombardi and the Packers. Aquinas in its opening game, and Long Island and his pro ''Lombardi h,.d the closest had a surprisingly easy time adventure, he played for Los relationship with his players of with Ontario, racing to a 61-Alamitos Naval Air Station any coach I've ever seen. The 49 win behind Mark Schrey's with CdM resident George interesting thing about lt was 20 points. Yardley and the two lived on that he had this same rela- But University suffered its Balboa Island and became tionship with a]! of the second straight one-sided loss. good friends. players. It was a family affair 'lbe Trojans were bealen 6&-Yardley signed with the Fl. in Green Bay .. 44 by Walnut In the first con-Wayne Pistons when he was "Mr. Lombardi was great test 8nd then I011t to Brethren, discharged and Uplinger went for what be gaye his players. SUI, Thursday night. to Baltimore. He was able to develop in· 1be loss eliminates Univer-"1 was not a super slai: in dividual pride in each one and sity from tournament play, pro ball," Uplinger say!!. "I in the long run. the guy stood but Dana Hills advances to was a journeyman and I think a little straighter because of the aemiOnal round of the con-J could h d h " h ke 1_ ave ma et e t .... man t is. solaUon brae t and p .... yed roster for several more years "His teams played as a unit Nell thls afternoon. With Scbrey dropping in 20 when l quit.." and didn 't become egolb:tical Point.a 00 eight f}eld goals and What caused the retirement. and they always felt they were tour free throws and Greg then! companions and played that ,,.,.,,...., adding 14 , Dana ..... __., ••• ...--~ • ..-.......... _.-• lfills had an easy time with --ax••' ~··•4¥ 4¢? • ...,..........-.l 0n:ui~::;:;,::: !~":;, 10 !qr ,.'!'. COSTA MESA the Dolphins while Ontano · • P U B L I C ~ got a 14-polnt effort from aoph-, f omore ~nter Joe Jeffenon. • GOLF COURSE Univ61t~ was oot of ita •• <Oiliest alter the first quar-\ U HOLi$ -DllYING IANGI! ~· ter of pl•Y when Brethren ran up a 27-14 lead. stung by its 1. USHYATIONS '°'5 to Siena Vista the night • before, Brethren didn't eaae 1714 1 I J4.5U7 "• ~~the~qua~~ I ft1'!.tsli,._ai:,.7!'j ~and 1~ -W I N T ER S P E C I A L - Jell GI ... got 14 paints for 2 Golfen wit~ Electrlc C... • the Trojan& •nd Paul Simon J added 10, but their leammates 11 Hol .. $1 0.00 -w .. ..., °"" had dllllculty fmdlng lhe hoop aaalmt Bntbren '1 pressuro )!( >(. )!'. Y ~ defenae. -i" • lli\( 1'7l paOLINE GOLf ~ f. • I 1 ~,! 11· ~~;~!;~· • •• •• ::V~~(.i ~ .., l' I •i au..-~ s&•& ~ " r...il ,I .I i' . WllD tRElllRS ·-,! ~r~~~~ \.:Jtu/l !!:I! ~ ~ • • f ! I C:.tw M°16 5'!0·7500 -" • ,J ,j J COfHE $1fOP -IAR • --"N1',,_., ............. v•'$'A@-''*•1•• .......................... OllM'fe 11 J f 11_, ~··, T ...................... '~···~ ........ I I • THE SHOE WANTS YOU. -. Come see Willie The Shoe and his colleagues ride the champions. December 26 through April 7. Seventy-five days of Thoroughbf:ed racing, 45 stokes races, total purses"""' $7..4 million. It promi.es to be one of the greatest seasons ever. And ij you're hero oo opening day, you get on extra bonus: a record album leotvri119 the most elCCiting roqas ever col led by the late Joe Homondez,.fcr 35 yeors the inimitable "Voice of Santo Anita'.' So txllMol'I out December 26. It could be your day. ·' SantaAnita In booutifvl Arcodio, 5 miles"°" al Pc9odena. Phone: 447-2171. From Los Angeles: 681·7401. Dec. 26-Jon. 31 11:000.m. 12 :30 p.m. Feb. >-Apr.7 11:300.m. l iOOp.m. 'Gates open ot 10:30 o.m, oo Saturdays throughout season, with the first roceot 12:30. BOB HEUSSIR PRESENTS .SUNSET FORD'S FOOTBALL FORECAST OK Folk~ Here We Go ..• The Crystal Ball Tells Us .••• FIESTA BOWL: TANGERINE 80Wt: PEACH 80Wt: ASTRO- BLUEI ON NET BOWL< GATOR BOWL< SUN BOWL SUGAR .BOWL: COTTON IOWl.a OllANQE 101"-' ~OIE 1owu· Saturday, December 23 Arilln1 Stitt ............ 2t llilllurl ••••• , •...•. , .•. , a Friday, D•combtr 29 T1111p1 .••.•• , ••• , •••••••. 27 Klftt Stitt .......... , • , •• 11 Wilt Vlral1ll , ........... 24 NO:: Carelln1 Stltl • , ..•.• D S1turd1y, December 30 Tenl\I .................... 17 L.S.U ••••••••••••••••••••• 1t Colontdo ................ , 24 Aattum ••••• , •• , •••••••• ,, 2t North ClftllM •••••• , .... 21 T11111 Ttch , •• , •••• ,,.,., 21 ·Sunday, D1c1mb1r 31 Okl•homa ···:·"····· .... :U Penn &tat. ••••••••••••••• 14 Monday, J1nu1ry 1 Allblfnl ••••••••••••••••• 21 Nlb't Dellt • ' • • ••••••• • • -• JI s....,. ,Cll ••••••••••••• 2t TIUI •••••·•••·••••••••·• 11 .... -•••••••••••••• 14 011 11 Stitt •·••••••••••••• 11 HEUSSER PRO FORECAST SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23 Notlonol C°"foronco Pl•y-off Dalla• ............ ~ ............. 23' Sin Franclaco .............. 21 Pittsburgh 27 .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oakland 26 $Ulldoy, 0-...bor 24 Mlomi . . . . . . . ....... A~.'.k'.'". ~;""''C'/:.r.1:.r"" .. -1 •........• : .•... 10 Natlona l Conforonco Ploy-off Walhlngllln--................. 17 Gr-Boy ..........•..• ·, ....... If I Take Valley View Tum Off Fram ,Freeway • v ~. .. •• lli " L :For Los Al Racing Entries .... _,~ ... I~ •..... ,, ........ l'~ I C• -)IO rill, tf =· mt.,,. '"" 11Ai. c 1ml:.: ~r.... ... """!~.!.-" Mr.,c,,.~•~-··' 'f 1i!'fvff= ri:.r,.·-·1 h r .. h ••• r:,/lr"t: 1.S ~ ..... I I ( 11 l.r.f ~ill, 1J: I Hl MGn tllM 1o;mrl 111 S•C:OND ~~ ¥11'$. I ~Mr ~~\m~ :=1o. Cl1 •lno. 1'11r. tltoO. ~~·1 ' '! 1n .. 11rt 17 ' ~ll!'!""' in .,. ·~,,} lH r-.OV llMkll 1 ""'' I ilil ' I' Mel' .. •oet ,_,.,, 11 Ill.WI Moon Jtun •tdoul 117 '"''P,.!•AC• 7"'i'so vard1. 2 .....,, ~ S :lna-Plll'M $UDO. Cl1lmll'lll $M TM LffV (~1-1 117 ,..,.. loo IC•Olb'I 111 ausv ,..,._ ICM" •I' 117 Tht Mtw Lei* fftl 117 Deck .tow (All& r 117 Alamitos Racing Results THU•lOAY'S ltl"SULT1 CIMt"• Fut "lllST llAC• -400...,X•tot. t Vllr -~mlnflpJ:"°~fl-J:~ l.00 2.IO • Al A'1, l.4.1r l.MI S.411 Y'• ltoc-lwt ION>'t'«) 10.«1 Timi -10.'6 Allo ran -Sh9rp Roc.k111 hf.lllo Go. A.~'1 Klls. Miu ll:ocuntl*", T1111to Unkl. Hlcldl h Yo+1, NO ocrll'Chls. n hKt1 s.o.t • ...., & Mun Al Al ....... m. .... SECOND lllACI! -WI v1r01. l yar-~~ -. Cllll • .-..i. Cl91mlnlh P\lrM ~I MlllY Jo1 ,,..._.., lJ.00 1·· 3.to 'I'"' c '"""M""' .• J:• SI lor'I C~IM11Wd1) 10 Il""' -lt SO r1n -lbl PIN", SOl(I Noll , lllollb¥ lllotl, Mr. Sllady, Poco F1mr1 Chlo, Vkldwntvrl. No ..::rakhft. THlltD ltACI -..00 ylfOL Mtlldlfl 2 Prep Mat Ill lh $r olds. P~ SUIXI. SllW (K.lllOhl) •.:io '·20 2.IO tnt v .. oc:jl jAlllson.l '·'° t'" Hy OWnlrlw II Chl111ll .IO '\'"' -2D • A 10 ,,., -Myrt'I CDJIYL Cha!"ll CllOY, SunrlM SPIC.Ill, Dlndv 111r Chlo, .-... l!m av, "'" Bir•. Summaries ~·~T.1 RWi, 'Mi~n' ~~'. TIMNll• CMll ,.-. l•I fll) LafllWOClll ,OUltTM RACll _ -'«I vir$. 3 vur 95 -Sh,1elr.1r (Cl PIMed Mlrrio (l ), ~ds t. Ufl. CLn1Nlecl 1tlow111C1. PurH 3'?83-St1w1rt (Cl dK. Cem11ton (LJ, ,ICIO. 74 1rblir Man 1w1hol'I) )Cl.tlG l'° 2.40 111 -JONI ICJ plf'l'lld l'llrcv IL) I a,., l•nkll 60 J·i8 3:3S. _!K;;'_Z'.11 • l~ -NIClll {LI dK. Cummlnt11 (CJ, bo r1n -OPAL Mii, On R-t. 1i1 -DtnMrn Ill$. Dunnlra tCI, 5t;:~~~ ··~33 -Plunlr.9tt !LI cl«. Lewis !Cl.'" ''fTit lt.ACll-=--Jl:lrdr.. 2 VHf ~-,. -C1n'lcO fCl 41<. llfll"l /Ll, •1. olds. Cl1frnl11Q. Pun'tl 11 · 1.U -Toudllkuba !CJ IMC. ~ ~it.: c&rts!~'f'H) I • .cl t: ~:: fLJ'~ }-~ F.,_j (Cl drirw with V.-Zi R~~I ,g,~_.I F '"", (~l&s l~ Little tll lliMed Divis CCI, Aho r111 -R_.I Fllrtvr'le, 'loll"" 1:41 , . Chk. MooM~Mck. Fl .. Oft. Al<tlld, US -Slnlldl IC) plllllld l luhtnlrl'I Ml= ~:t-_ · tL11;1 ';E· ,,......,_ tCI c1e. Goodmln Sllmt 11:.t.Cll ~ ,.... I .,..,. (L~~~ p-(Cl -bY torflll. okll 1. uo. c111m1111. PIM"I s:noa. --DI< t • v . 11111 '!Jo ,_.._{!IJIJll W•..,.. ISMl'l!l ii ~5 -StUCklf'" I J -b¥ totllll. ::f,.t:J.': J:l_~) I 7:.o 1~ -Dlnlll1 WI IMC.. Sl--1" !CJ, IJ:";:;., ':!!· IClotv'• Timi, Flv"°" .!ll. -JoMt; IC~ llltlMd Tlkll l\10, Dailrd, BWk•'.J. Pllhll,~1 ··~~ °'*"""" (WJ 41<, C~ Scoaper kip. ~-,..,_ ... .., !Cl :M. l'le. 1h -lllllt.llY (WJ dK. Dunntra IC), HO 91:rildlel. --5433 -0.1!1 !WJ die. Lewi• ff"), 7-J. 15 IMCfl J.OkklY Miii 11¥ a 44'11t 131 -CllTko IC) d1'9W wlll'I 1.-ool<I CltlJt. .... SM.& <""flt !:_:t.TOl,IChlkubtJ IC) plllllld POW9" tllVINTM ~I -170 v1nl1, 3 YN• Jt t'cla t. i,ro. C/• ml11t11. PurM SUOD. 1"lh ':.:_ i...wc:titn {W) Oll'IMd F9f'OOl1 l'~~"~:'s.~. ~r!?/,..112·"' t: J,::.. (Clu'.!>'W1nan {W} dK. 01vl1 CCI, 10. Mt-PtnonltflY {~) · 0 l\Z: r;;; !~ Counl, Gl"'nw flir. '11s -Slrolch iCI die. korltl (W'l, S. 9!"'1 w11ch. s.:-ctv s.wn, Go l'loul1 '· 191 -Horoer IWI 111nnirc1 JohM!ln "kr1tchtcl -KMll ~ IC~V~.'~ P1rat {C) pJnMd Gii• CW), •10MTH llAC• -UI VMcb. J ll'tl"' Oldl a uP. (1111\flld All-llOC.'t. ,.UrMI U2Clll. TIM 5111 G1brlel Vellev T1v.m Auod•llDll. J,,m~~•I ll111111vll.AG 7.00 3.00 H9~Sound To \ICrtlahO 1.60 !'~ V1MQU. (Ad1lr .M Time -l¥MI c ... Miu l ltll• llld, llttho Wu Pow. Tin¥ W1!dl llwnd. No KrlfCl!es, 2:51, MUfTM llAC• -=--ftt'dt, 3 year. 1 clds & ~ Cl1lmtno. Purt.t SlSOO. n11 l kihmrn11 l..,1f111r) 12.60 ~-"' ~-'° I • 0111 llrMIJV (Knlillhtl .i.• 2.tlO G•rvln C.....,., tW"-hll 5.10 Tlnw -20A. ~:: Pl~·v~ fiiv ~~\e. P~=t l"l'rr <l~bMr, Bull l"tlfthl. 5cr11ttlld -ltMlld Fll!lhl, hrror1 ,., Basketball Scores Hoop Results UPLINGER Continued From Pare 11 brainchilds of Verna and Upl· inger. The split screen w a s developed by them In 1915. It was during a Green Bly game and the spilt showed Bart Starr going back to pass while Carroll Dale went out to catch a touchdown pass of16S yards. · Chroma·key Js tllOther of Verna's innovations that has been developed to a high degree with Uplinger'• aid . Another idea the duo has for the future ls a reotaiirant that would have teJevlilOn molllton for patrons to view such things as the auper bowl or other •Porll event$ that may ~ blacl<ed out In the area. 0 We woWd also serve ,the beat food and drink>' In -end have pttplesuch u John Unl!u and Olhm come to the restaurut to lail< 1 to our ..-,·up11npr- •rve ~ waat,i ~ Uve In llU .,. of 11\l'"''!ffe (fll11l) iJtd .two ·-(Tracy, 13, and Jolin,; ll), lo•' n here. "Wh<D ~lid . II WU with the . lllaL would --to Hrll game1 lrOlll. tba Olla. llo more Mliblpn A-ID Dcc:tmber for me ." ' n~llY PILOT • Southland Ski Report 8 Area Spikers • Ill Meet Rustlers Face Mesa . Skltna · COlldltioDI romaln fair to good In the Soutbem CallfomJa mountaJ111 during the holtdays with only the Mt. Baldy atta closed Wltll the next snow fall . The Wrightwood area is one of the favorites with 12 to 24 lncbea ot pecked snow In the Blue Ridge, Table Mountaln and liollday HUI area. ., .. It~ -114' ~-"' lllOW. "'9.J1·~.r. -~·~~ .. tntw. ~ oood. ci..ry:-" -~~lfn~'I:" ~ ·~ ulJ#'' """""'"'· Tlllll -•lt llldll$. ell tor •fllfttho r.1r '"I•"* '" ~.:.."'r" -,, "' '· '" Ml. IMdY -C: ...... vnlll lllJ;f l(lllW' f1n. ltttltl It'--lf..30 JnctM, f1lr IO "1!:1~i::«--1&11'lndi.., 11/r kl ~:r:-~· :iMict... f1lr lo ocrs~:~'if=·.t Y!.7:"'M:'·.., ~~~ri~7~=r= "J"..:.~1 ,~n~~~-r"·,, 1"c!IH1 ... ,;.J; ... -4 to : fftt1 lift' to .......... -. Tl~ $kl ArH -Ci-cl Vfl· tll lur."'f'"_ nollc4. Sodl ._."f..'llCI~ -t la 3 !Ml1 l1lr TO ~ '-''-""-c~ 1'f::t1 f1lr lo ~ V1ll1y -'"Ii'"" 11111 f1lr Alp MHClowl -to 4 fHI; tllr " = 111111 llll'T'llntl I. "' I lllCktd Ind torn t!IOW, .Sl'BCIAI. 2999 ~ ~ 6 AMP BATTERY CHARGER F•6&.14 v.it :S~111.,s 1299 CHECKER ANTI· FREEZE Proi.ct• Your Cow fr<>fl Wint•! Cold, •• 1~~ LOS ANGELES -Eight Orange Cout P<l'P o<hlelel,. p8C<d by lleW90rt Harbor aholpotter Jhn lleldhart, wlll be participating In the &midst indoor track meet at the Los Angele. Sports Arena Jan. 20. · Neldhart is the top seed in the prtp sbot put with a lifetime best of 80-10%. Also competing in' the iron ball event is Corona del Mar's Joe Tosti, who bas a 56-0"2 mart to his credit. Half-mile stars R o be r t Bradford of University (1:56,6) end Prestoo Campbell or Marina (1:57.7) will be competjng as will Marina's Ken Martyn in the mile run <•:22.7) and Huntington Beach's Robert Angel ln the two-mile (9:37.0). Mission Viejo's Scott Kipers is listed in the l500-yard dash. His best in the 440 is 50.1. Newport !;{arbor's Tom llistonislao (144) ls the No. 2 seed"'in the pole vault behind Crespi's Tim Curran (15-3). Prep competition begins at. 1:05 p.m. with the 60-yard high hurdles. HAVOLINE MOTOR OIL ''""' 'WEIGHTS R~t· 41 QUAR't SOLIDOX 5000° PORTABLE WELDlNGKIT """""""'w"ams.soto""' E••Y New Woy T• W1W ••• I 1"ok11 Only Minut1s To L..,..J EACli klTCONTAINS: S.lU.cY•Wlotf T•ofi' 14u. ,.,.,.... c,u...i..-1 :s.u ... ,..u ... { ... , .... 100 Ml"vt•• a ... ~1.,. Tl•lt 2 w.1J1.., Ttpo. si. •• °'° t. O...ll•••• ltM1 I'• 1• DIN•ttfll iilolMIOOP•oNctlw Gloo111oS,..lr. 1 .. 1i-o I!•"" r<u ... " T1, ci_...1 ~lei-""-11 ....... CHECKER AUTO LIFETIME "" BA TIERIES "9"'"c' 0-'""'' fM 1 99 Th• l llali"" Of Yow Pr11ent C11r BACff 12 FOOT HEAVY DUTY BATTERY BOOSTER CABLES 498 RALLY RAIL FOR PICK-UPS SEAL BEAM SPOT LIGHT 11 Vilt S~1i- Pl111• I.... ' v-Cl"""9 L< ..... STARTERS O..,.lw &.A-ICltlll .... ~. Prtdun1 ...... . IRUDPlll .,,,,, ... -111.lllTU ..... GRAND RIX ~It,,FILTER99 t, o-•llc & Popular lap.rt• EA. olLERs • • • Coatinued From Pare II us free throw situation and 6-7 Ruben Helick tipped in a miSsed second shot to give the Panthers a 7U9 lead. Huntington Beach cut the lead to 74-73 on a basket by Raul Contreras and a pair of free throws by Jim Wier with 32 seconds left but another free throw by Dowden and a fGllow shot with 11 seconds remaining put the game away. SAVE 30% • 50% TIU!Wl!Bl"SllOSTCOMPLETl!i ,00..IT-YOlJRSELF AIJTO CENTl<ll CARBURETOR AIR CLEANER For Most oom.uic Cllft An<:! Popular J"''°"' 1~.~ (utlt .. s ltOOl 1:2':1.0 (oM(I J ... 2 144) ... , ,._,, .... , 11»111 1:.56.S (-4401 SCI.I ""' '"' («tl 50.2 t~) iO.l l :lt.6 t : 19.6 •:r..o t: t.a 9:32.0 ;;ttl t :«.0 t :tS.O SAN DIEGO -Golden West College's basketball team ba:l· ties a co uple or rugged op- ponents this weekend when the Rustlers engage host San Diego Mesa tonight and lhen visit Southwes tern Saturday night. Co a c h Dick Stricldin's Rustlers will be looking for their seventh victory in 12 games tonight agains t the OlympiaOJ (7-3). Gold en West is led by sophomore guard Gary Orgill who has scored 184 points in 11 games for a IS.7 average. Another sophomore guard - Taras Young -is hitting at a 2.2 per game mark ( 134 points). Two otber Rustlers are alao hitting in double figures. Center Mark Dekker has SCQred 123 points in nine games for a 13.7 average while Jeff St. Cla ir has a 10.8 mark. AUTO PARTS PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU DECEMBER 27, 1972 CUSTOM BROME HEELS CHROME LOCKING NUTS Pro••tl Y011r a..-'#h.11 ~ 3~.? "" 8 TRACKSTEREOTAPE PLAYER ;t:.:;;.., AND FMSTEREORADJO ... PLUS CH ROME STEREO SPEAKERS FREE!!!! CllBCICl!R R•1•l• 1-'-l'·" CAR RADIO Bulh·lt1 s,...i.., Vcric. Or • Mu1ic Swilc~ Slide Rul• Tuni119 15?.?. BLACK FOAM STEERING WHEEL p.,1 .. 511•• lG-12-14 Inch.• ..... $1.00 699 HORN KITS OryO....ic•l Fir• EJC1ln9wi1lw Gr ... 1 For Cor1, C-1*'•• 80011 ALTERNATORS 1699 Jndivil~I A:ithr J.,nd L1h Vol11- And r-c .... 1.1!• Lorgt Chor.n.I S.l1etl011 Bor .... 692!. R•1•Mr L-Ckc-'"' Pric• J,,,, r=----,:; _-~· [!! 11 1--. STRACK STEREO TAPE PLAYER 29!9 LIFETIME GUARANTEE GLASS PACK MUFFLER 20 PIECE 3/8".)r- SOCK.ET SET T1ip1. Chr-.1 Plcrt.d Gvoront•.d 1?.? 14 PIECE CONVERTIBLE METRIC SOCKET SET c.._.1 v .... ~ic1>11Socht fn10 M.tric 8!9 FULL SWEEP TACII ll•t· ''·'~ 399 'Ell•ltwtt• T1.. U11 Of J.ck1 Or Htt .. • Atltll'll I•• l111w• PMllivt TrMllClft 19,!? 13~.?. RRG, 2.11 1%TON QUALITY 12 INCH J ACK STAND AOIXICB Co,. city p., StoNI M!"ullo~l• "' •"' 1 ?.9 HYDRAULI JACK Llffl T1 JCIOO LBS. l'r• """"' Ail!. ••• S.kty v .... 7''T• 14'' Lift ]98 ,. Pl1r1 Or Min~' ~c-q 9~?. GREASE GUN , MODEL 10 Fw Ho-, fl"••· lr.dwory E1t7 To U1e R•llll.~J. 3!?. K,..utell 150 LB. TORQUE WRENCH PHONE 111 l•IT 19th STRED, COSTA MESA 641·8264 , JUST1 OFF NEWPORT ILYD -IEHIND MUA TH!ATlE STOU HOURS: DOiiy f to t s ... .., • to ' BANKAMIMD 1 •• 1, • ········. . ' • [ I t ' , JB DA.IL Y PllOT CoastwlJe, no one is more coast wise than T o m Murphine. lle's the DAILY PtLOT's managing editor and virtuaUy a lifelong resident of the Orange Coast. Check out hiJ column, "Just Coasting,'' an almo.'lt dally fcaturt of lhe DAILY PILOT. Warn ing: it could be habit form ing. , ' I I I See by Todays Want Ads e RARE BREED l'lf car: .. Claaalc Mark JV'', ll'1 a 1959 wilh mint lnt~riot, )ow mil.eqc. 2 new til'\"1 11.nd warer pump. Nf'Nt~ LAii pl~. The 1~1 $395 Lakes It, e REDUCED DRASTlCA!,, t.Y tn pricp juM In time for Chtlstmu • this Rc- i.ax.cbor i1 Uke uew. Jt WM $40(), ft(rlV tellJl'.'W Cot un4' "°' ---.. -··-·---.. --· _..___ .. -------.. __ .. __ . ........ __ . ' .. • - UO(ND ---.... -----· ,._, ....... _ _____ .. __ ;;=;..;:v-- \ • --- • PIJBUC NOTICE ......... ..., fllOTICa TO Clt•DtTOll:S (S.U. '1tl-4*' U.C.CJ -A llil,illll. tr_,., II MOllt lo Dill """'-· Thi ..-aflCI llWI-~ 9' .. ,,~.,.: Cet:ll IE, C"'1'Y, ltl·tts EQf 17Tl'I atrW, COi~ ~ Calllwnla Tiit """"' Mid ~ lddreu11 ot ""..,.......,... .... Mlltt lllt'ftl. 4492 £Im Trw LIM, lno!M, Cloilfenllt 411 lll1'lw llullllell• -Md ~rnws 11..o "" .._ tr•Mfw• Wftlll!I """ ~r• .. rt *' .. ,... •. kMwn to "" 11'"_1., .. art! Moiw Thi locaHOft Md IM!Wtl <lncrtptlon ot tt. Pf'Optt'Y fO ... ,,._.,,...., _, Sloe;~ 111 tr• «ldllf'tl, M;IU!pn*lf Ml eoad wlll Df 1 ctrt•l11 1utomofln o-raoe !IUU-II.-" GeM'• s.r.tOt c;.ni .... ,., 1.111 rm. ''""'· co.t• ,,_., C1lll!)nll• TN .i.e., Mil lht ..,_ Oii or 1n.t "'1llcll, n. blllll trwftr I• la be ('(It» """'111ted -..,_ °' Afl'ltl'lcl NT&$A, iu.i Vie Udo. NtwPWt -..en, on °" titer Ja111,1.1ry 2. ,.,, Dlllll~lt,lm CNll II, Cuny, Tr1n1llror Miii• i..v11. ,,_..,. .. fl'lllllllhld CW-... COit! D9Uy Piii)!, OICtn\btl' n. 1t11 u,1.n PUBLIC NOTICE Pollution Bills Get Signature SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Ronald Reagan has s!gn ed two bills deslgned to strengthen California's battle against pollution. One bill puls California into conformity with the F~ral Water Pollution Control which went inlo effect fall. Act Ibis The bill, spansored by lhe late Assemblyman C a r l e y Porter, ( D·C ompton ). establishes a state system for pennitting p er s o n s to discharge pollutants l n t o navigable waters. Violaton will be subject to a civil fine of up to $10,000 for each day of violation. The second bil. sponsored by Assemblyman John Knox. CD-Richmond), creates the California Pollution Control Financing Authority. The authority is authorized, under a ballot measure ap- proved by voten Nov. 7, to sell $200 million in revenue bonds to finance private con- struction and operation of pollution controls facilities. eN-B•n RIVERSIDE (AP) - A fresh outbreak of e s: o t I c Newcastle disease has forced a pouJtry quarantine of 115 square miles near h e r e , agriculture officials say. 'U.S. Departm e nt of Agriculture officials said the disease, w4Jch has led to the extermination of millions of chickens in California this year, infected turkey flocks in the newly quarantined area. The disease is fatal to fowl but harmless to humans. e Dredging OK'd HAYWARD !AP ) -The Army Corps of Engineers will be allowed to dredge one million cubic yards of mud and silt from Mare Island channel and dump the muck in nearby Carquinez Strait. The Regional Water Quality Control Board voted 6-1 Ul re.la:r Its requirement th8t such spoils be dumped on land or 30 miles oul!Jide the Golden Gate. The Army F.ngineers argued that land disposal ls not feasi· ble on this project and oo money ~ available to haul the material to sea. e Letlee Snit SACRAMENTO fAPI Four landowners are seeking $400,250 in COMection with a break in a San Joaquin River levee last June. Ben T. Harano, Stanley Kunlsake, Ray Maliubara and Marilyn M. Com!tock contend in their Sacramento County Superior Court suit the levee was Improperly maintained Public B:gencles named in Ute suit Include the county or Sacramento, the B r a n n an • Andrus Levee Maintenance District, the state, t h e Stockton Port District and tile Board or Reclamatkln. e Talloe .Plan STATELINE, Nev. (AP) C a 11 f o r n I a Assembl)'Jtlan Edwin Z'btrg, (J>.Sacramen· tol, rays he will , introduce legl!latton to atrengthtn the Tahoe Regional P I R n n I n g Agmcy. "Obviously the agency can- not save the lake and carry out lta plan without substantial pliblic f'l""s." Z'berg ••Id •t the end of a two-day hearing on Tahoe problems hc:ire. Z'bera la chairman· of , the assembly · Committee o n Natural Re1ourcea -and' Comervatlon Vt111ch b 11 r d, tcstllllOlly rrom federal, 1tate and local' otrlci•ls. ' ·~ r .. So rej p BC lie 00 po .·im da Ya r •C. in fro or si ma dis dr fro m ski "d sai ve. ch a • wa ra bei au OW .ve in in he be ra At ba :P.e 'a Ca '•I do 0 tin ed de Su by ·Lo " n. "" D • Banner l' rsr Seen • • ~:Excalihurs Resurge Crackdown On Rowdy Sailors Set The North American facht 'Racing Union (NAYRU) and the Cruising Club or America ··tcCA), spoilsors of ma)or offshore Jong distance yacht races, will litertll}> "lower the b9om" on skippers and crews 1' who engage in urigenUeman1y conduct at the conclusion of : ra~es. Jim Mjchaels of San Fran- cisco, president of NAYRU cind commodore of CCA. outlined the n e w get tough policy when he appeared as an . ·impromptu speak.,. Wednes- • day at t h e Newport Harbor Yachtsmen's Luncheon. .: Michaels said crewmen who , ·create embarrassing incidents in the fu ture maY be barred from yacht racing for 10 years or more and that skippers who .sign on iJTesponsible crewmen may also be subject to severe discipline. The statement by Michaels drew a spontaneous applause from th e yachts men. · Michaels said the problem in many cases was the result of skJpper.i signing on SCl-<':a11ed "dock burn'' who are capa~le sailors at sea without in- vestigating their shoreside character or behavior. r llye Boole Phentl BLACK& DECKER DRILLBIT SllARPEMER ' 19·99 Hoy you can ,iii_., 11 llzoo of dllil blta ill this juol lib a pencil aharpener, !lo more· dull blta around your plac.. Uok. !lo. 7980 • F r1daY OectlTlbH 22 1 '172 O.All Y PILOT f tJ Inquiries Su r face. fo r Honolulu Race So, . if you haven't got all the goodies. then come in and walk away with twice aa much for .hall (Doea that make aenae to you?). We've got plenty (you know who ordered too much). • ALL CIDUSTMAS GOODS! BLACK& DECKER 1/•" DRILL 791 If I had. a penny for each one we've sold over the year• 1 could go out and buy a '3' LaSalle. 1 Reliabilitf you. -can count on. No. 7000. ~BLACK& ME RRY CHRISTMAS FROM "THE GRANDEST MALL OF ALL" STEEL TOOL BOX WlTH LIFT OUT TRAY The situation was brought to a head last summer as the result of incidents following the Bermuda race and the Transatlantic racei • Tlte "'in- cident in Spain was so blatant that the offending crewman .. : /: ., . \ ·~=LE U rou dOll't Ji.a..~ or tool• It make• a 19 7 fine bread box ·for 1kinny flat loaff1, or a lunch bucket for two. or a Todo Wagon if you put whMl1 on it • . was ordered sent home by 'race officials -on the threat of being turned over to civll authornies. "Its goinit to behoove owners and skippers to in- ,.vei;tiqate the character of the peoole they take on as crews in these races." Michaels said, indicating that skippers will be held respon!;ible for t h e behavior d. their people. Top Racing Yacht Enas Its Career Baruna , one of the great racing yachts on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, 'has been retired from com- • "P,etitlon and wil l now serve· as ·a training vessel for the California Maritime Academy , at Vallejo. · 1be 72-foot yacht w a s donated to the academy by ·awner John Mcintire of 1-fun- tington Harbour, who purchas- ed her in 1968. Barona was delivered to the academy in Suva, Fiji following · a survey by Capt. Dick Wakeland of Long Beach. Baruna Ui a Sparkman and Stephens design and was built by the Quincy Adami Boat . Yard, Quincy, Mau. In 1938. She was an active campaigner .• io Ea.st Coast races for many tears before being acquired by Jim Michaels of San Fran- cisco, Michaels campaigned the yacht in the-Bay Area before selling it to Mcintire in \963. Sutt, llfoon, Tide• 'RIOAY Mtond'f\19'1 ........... 1l:tp.m. -1~ $fCOfld low • .. .. .. .. .. . ; p.m. I ATUll:OAY ~l~l '/!:!' :::::::::::::. 1;! ::::: i: s.tond low .. .. .... .. .. :J "·"'· • I UMDAY 'I"' "" .......... '!'ft'.m. u 'fr1t low ............ : .. ,,,.. t' !iec-...:1 l!lafl . .. .. "". I : a,11'1. j ltcOMI lo'lt . • .. .. : ~11'1. =••re ta u· .. 'YOU Sedion' ' •• There's something fOr YOU • In lhe 1"(o·u SecUOO" of the ,DAILY PILOT evary &mday . Check ltl pmonal appul for f°" and yoora. .. -'/•"'DRILL KIT 2 9 99 You. aava 5.68 OTer buying the atuff aeparately. got tb e . drill aaddy. the pa:d1. diac1. ct-bor. bonn•t. whHl1, paint 'mixer. cmd 3 blta. No. 7122. YOUR CHOICE ' ' • I ~OIAWlll , •f-t",._.1 .... -......... ~ ........... ---•you oak . *' ••trlt U...). 1'191 It. "' .... " . ill . ' ....... t '•"P''' ""' 5-GAL. SHOP VACUUM 1?88 You can Yacuum up 5 gallon• of junk before you haYe to dump it • Really dHp clecrnt:, watch O\lt you don't get the cat too. VJlLIJlRT WATER PURD'IER J 97 Throacla right OD the faucet and tlltert out the cNd. th• dolt. and the ugly taate. (my wile and 1 alway9 aff eye to ~ .•• we'n the 1ame height.) ROLLING TOOL CHEST ,2488' I can't ballne th11 price with the tool box on tor, too. Rack to hap.g too a l111lde the door, two tbelna lnllde. If you need one a nd don't buy It, JOll'll ldck JOll,..IL SIDEWALK BIKERJlCK 1288 Ob. It bold a about ••• well .•• weO .•• a- bh ... a bunc::ha blkeL It ~u run a 1tor1, or your d1 and trt.end1 make you crasy. you gotta buy oa.e of deae. MERRY CHRISTMAS ALICE .,, '' . .. '\!~ ~ ' I '' o •, ID·IMTEISlTY LIGHTS 197 Cheap prlco, and. -you ready for thia, 'It worlc1J Got a twllty .neck ao you can put the llgbt where JOU IWed lt. CHJlRBROD. ELECTRIC BUBECUE 37 77 A alMper. off·Ma1on. but what the heck. lt'a er reel money a<n'er. You can uae lt right now If you. don't mind C 1tea.b with a ltttJe 11 Oil them.. CWhf doo't you wrll•?l l , .. • , • • • ! • • !' • I • : . • l ' " ' I l . . . • • -I ~-~. ' •• .. . ., I. I I . • •• , " D RISTMAS SM Co-sponso1·ed' by Orange County Coast Association and DAILY ~" ~t~*i;<; .'' • 'Christuiasville 1972' Slightest spot along the Orange Coast this Christmas season, ac· cording to judges of the traditional "40 Miles of Christmas Smiles" ~mpetilion, is tluntington Harbour's blaze of lights which comp- lement each evening's boat parade. The water-oriented commun- ity was declared "ChristmasviUe 1972," the place where Cbrlst- 1nas is happening this year along the Orange Coast. 'Best Residence' 1Specially built "Santa's 'Vorkshop .. ·on front Ja\vn at the home of Alan Quinn , family, 6601 Limerick Ave., Huntington Beach, is focal point of massive decorating job which became a family proJect. Toys, Runner-up Virtually filling the cul-de-sac Jot on \Vhich the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Castle is located (8617 l Hudson River Circle, Fountain Valley ), this di s· play has everything. Nativity scene, Santa Claus. Tlalrd Place Subtly lighted from Inside, glowing ligures of a Na· UYlty scene are arranged in front lawn or Robert ~ Swanaon family, 18701 Pepita Drive, Mls8lo~ ' games, Santa's chair and snow on the ground are an1ong elements of clever displa y the judges award- ed first place. clowns and reindeer, a11 cut out of plywood, cavort all over the lawn a nd up the side of the house. It's second place "inner. . ' Vlejo. Judges were captiVated by taped Christmas music and understated charm ot the religious dis. lay, counterbalanced by contemporary elements. fl . Turned On From DAI LY PILOT 51•11 PMt!K Seal Bea<'h Commercial Winner To Diamond-like white lights filJ the Christ mas fairyland that is Eschbach's new florist shop in Laguna Beach. Tall . green Christn1as trees surrounded by poin· San Clemente · settias and 10ther blooms of the season fairly drip \.\'ilh ornan1ents. \Villiam E.schbach credits' ~ son, Jack, with.. designing the display. Once the home of the South Coast Ne~ .. the building at 305 Forest Avenue h:is been totally re- furbished inside and out. Second Place Costa Mesa Civic Center, more colorful than in any Christmas season since its construction, was award- ed seoond place in commercial displays. Red old English letters spelling out "Peace on Earth, Good Commercial Thtr• ·Twinkling lights in trees lining Marine Drive set the mood for Christmas on Balboa Island. Judges awarded (!he ar~a third place Jn comm\rcial dis- Will to :ri.Jen," are set ofi by multi-colored 11:trings of light.Ii; face of building has green and orange spot- lights; Fountain are night-lighted in various colors. ' ' plays for street decorations coupled with incl!vidual window arrangements of many 1nerchants who hava c~tom-dcslgned scrnes r~r the season . 1 ' of and I ' • • ' ' CHRISTMAS SMI Orange . Coost Offers .S.etµQn' s Greetings ' . ' Above, yard full of animated Peanuts characters by James Jordan, son of Vice Mayor and Mrs. William Jordan, 2269 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa. Right, Lake Forest home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Oles- kiewicz has message on front of house: "Season's Greetings_ from the O's." House won first place in its community con· test. It's at 22842 Costa Bella Drive. By TOM lkCANN Of .. a.ltrP*f .... • '!be bright lights and .......,1 sights of the Orange Coast are a.s ready as they're going to get Ibis Cluistmaa sea· S<X1 and the area has turned on Its tra~ ditionaJ ~mil&long "smile." Judges of the areawide contest, ''40 ~files of. Christmas SmJles," co-spoosored by the DAILY PILOT aod the Oraoge Ccunty Coast AsSociation, will '°°'1 be announcing winners of the um com-- petition. Meanwhile, a list of the best4-the-best nominated from each I o c a I i l y participating ln the "Smiles" event ~ll serve as a guide to tourists and residents alike who are looking for tbe Christmas spirit in the form of. clever displays and mulU-eolored lights. From Seal Beach's holiday-festooned stucco city hall to San Clemente's red end gold street ~ecorat-ions, it's all turn- ed on. Lake Forest (El Toro), Mission Viejo end Culverdale (Irvine) are among newer communities to get into lhe swing of the season this year. They are all participating for their se- cmd year in the "4-0 Miles" competition and the three communities furnish area ' ~:. • c. <' • I Visitors.some of ciie·brf~ 1pot1 .. 1eng (compietely.redecQrated ,lnteripr and·ex- the coast. . • terlor ol old Sooth• C9asl' N~ws building), Here is 'a list of all·the!~ln the 305 Forest Ave.; borne ·of Rudy Burtqn competition : family, 697. ·Catalina ·Ave.; street and Civic Center ·d~rations, hills ablaze SEAL · BEACH -City hall and street with Dome lights. decorations. LAGUNA N!GYEL -]Jome of Charles HUNTINGTON' BEACH -Hunijngton V.-Dixon family, 31911· National Park Harbour area ;,Pome otAlin Quino fai;pi-DriYe. ly, 660J,. Limerick'; American Beliuty Florists Window disptsy, ·t78SI ·Beach DANA POINT -Home of Mr. and Blvd. • Mrs; David E. Locke, 33211 Sea Knoll ·Drive. FOUNTAIN VALIEY -home .ol Mr. .. aod Mr.;, Frank <;:astle; 86171 illldson . CAPJ~O ·BEACH -Vohann Of. River Ore.le ; Fouutain Valley FlofistS' fice and F~ctory· Outlet window display, window displays, ll!fr1 Garfield. 3WS Dohen~.Park Road. 1 COSTA ~ -·.James Jordan's SAN CLEMENTE -street decora. d~p!ay at home of his patents, Mr. aod lions,. Ci""'" Center ·Jighfs, /sparkling , Mrs. Wlllard Jordan, 2269, Saota Ana hillsides lit by tboosands of priyate borne Ave.; city ball and other elements of displays, home of Victor Di:y Renjio Civic Center. family, rn Barcelona; pan 0 r a·m a NEWPORT· BEACH -Balboa Island Apartments, 420 Monterey Lane. shopping district, along· Marine Avenue ; MISSION ·VIEJQ -Street decorations, home of John Lee family, 302 King's home of Mr. aod Mn. Robert R. Road. Swanson, 26701 Pepita Drive. CORONA· DEL MAR -Home of the LAKE FOREST -Sparkling homes Carling family (Bill, Pltty, Peyton and overlooking lakes and lagoons,J the home Scooter), 2021 Altura~Irvine Terrace; lhe of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Oleskiewicz. Lamp Light Shop's window display,.2443 CULVERDALE _ Richard Brown's E. Coast HighW.y. d. I horn r h" Mr nd / ISP ay at e 0 IS parents, . a LAGUNA BEACH -F.schbach Florists Mrs. Jerry Brown, 17511 Teachers Ave. I . DAil Y PILOT ~J .• Statuary in foreground, above, actually Is ~ ng;· urine on table, one of many pi~ "'pf . fiae_.,.art. u~ througllotlt new E.9cbbodl'•·Flori.cs in refurbished -. ttine South Coast News plant at 305 Forest Avenue, I;a- guna Beach. The Newport Beach•home1of J.olmLee fitm· ily at 302 King's Road.. bel<>w, bas.Santa sumng oa :roof llanlred by a oouple of elves. 'Sign·reads: •ns ~ d19' alter New Year's Need we Sily more Santa,qult.siJiflil' for a· long snore." · ' · Is the· Divine Miss· M for ·Real? BETTE MIDLER: THI DIVINI MISS M / 1 .,, By THOMAS PALMER Of .. Del" .. 1'91 Staff 1 first became aware of the Divine Miss M when she as>Rt?ared on the tonight show more than two years ago. Since 'then singer Bette Mldler (she prefers ttle other appeUation) has visited that show countless times, cut an album, continued pEirfonnini in the lesa-tban- chlc New York 1 clubs and backed up ,~ JohnnY ~ in Las Vegas. · • · GI~ the talep~ sbettw, that~ wasn't a surprise. But w)len. she qme to Los Angeles recenUy and rocked ·the rock world, that was. , , After a loog struggle,' finally making it rather well in the nigbclUb arena, Bette , took on tbe challenge ol the ~ ' mU1lc aceoe, and she knocked 'em out. Every nlcbt alter her opening nlsbt at the 1'1'9GbAdour (uwbere' we played for the Hollywood brass -toupee c(ty") the r<Celved oiandini ovatiol)J. Both ""°'! lhe came on....,..ancl afler her show. What doel: Jbe have? It's _expreuioo pl111. Not. to mention a voice that'• dynamite, · the quality ol Bar b r • Sµ-elsaod and the ~ling ol Melba Moore: • What does she do with )t! She mixes nostalgia (tbc Andrew Sisters' .. &91le Woogle-Bu ale Boy" was part of .her act beforo the past retumed,to • in the fonn ol a ....,.) with IOll)e reolly bolvy lyric inlerpttllttons. · ~ I Her act is hurled at the audienci! in a parody of Eastern Establishment style that never stops being entertaitllng - between songs, during songs or in the memory after the perfonnance. Rarely Is she serious. She speaks of the Divine Miss M in third person ("folks, this Is slease wllh ease. trash with nash"), putting the audience and herself on, stroking that '30s frizzy hair, back of the !land to the forehead, rolling her eyes like she's almost seriOU5. Her anus . wave frantically as she (tarts back and forth across the stage tslklng to the drunker fans aod belting oUt ''Leader of the Pack." Her voice', lD a rare moment ~mes serlOUI, as aht whispers the introcluctklo for a IOf1I by "the greatest blues singer, ·Bessie Smith." And "Am !Blue" follows, dead..uencing a boisterous crowd. Her chatttt never .,..,.., caricaturing t1le lbobbLlb star she1tmitates, her band P1IDldtill her chesL Oh, what she doe3 to henelfl~ , But !t'• notlllng oompu•d to what she do<o to her audlence. Throughout her "urban rock ~1 roll" including ''Do You loYe Me''1tnd'"a ~ition of Jobn Prine's- "Hcllo Jn There" that put tears in the .•)'N. Ille projects a feellng that comos through Uke ij'1 delivered In a pipeline. 8he bealtate• with phr .... , falling bock and <;11tchbia up,wlth,Umlng that II no lou thin portect. Bette trllldonnl ,, • \ herself into the Andrews Sisters, "raising our eyebrows in unison," and every feature •. hands, voice, body movement, is intricately programmed. In her blues ballads, white blues as she calls them , Miss Midler sll)>6 back to the past and takes the audience with her. "l'm Just a Woman"-it could as well be Ethyl Waters on stage. The depth, throaty vibrato, the lonely whisper almost let her become black. She strives not to Imitate but to com- municate. She succeeds with the utmost in sincerity. She seems at once 1Urpriled and &raliflod by the deafening ..._ to her act. In her "tough ahlxo voice" she does an encore, an early '50s Chubby Checkers number , and somehow It seems to flt in today. "I'm whelmed," she says at the oul9et of her second encore. But she Is ex- Mllsted, and has another sbow that even· ing. She Is not accustomed to the en- thusiasm. Near collapse, she reverts to thal rare, unCamlllar serious voice and . explains that she does not have t.be strength to give another song. She thanks lhe crowd and returns to the nasal, overdramaUc movle«ar voice. "I'm a hit. What artlatty!" But while she's kidding, the audience Is serious. The reaction is gen~.and the Divine Miss M had better let ta shape for lots of encores. \\I I h I '\ UI H 11 .\ 11 Ill ' It'• that.Ume.of ,_. apln and the Dolly Pilol'1 Tom ntua ls giving OU~ hLs 11111Ull DP awards for performances in commtllll,ty theater pl,ayhou.ses. H~ls .findllig It.more dlWcult each year as quality 111d quan· tlty ' increase. See his Inlet' mllllo~ column oa P•s• ~ for his choices for belt actor 111d actnu1 -. supporting actor 111d aea.a. Record Review Pago 22 GleM Miller Night Pago 23 Ont 'N' About Page "23-24 Ted Neeley Page 23 Us Posadas Pa&• 25 TV Log -~!IP 26 Channel llO . Pl&e 26 Dorothy KUshner Pase 27 American Ar:tl P.,. 27 What to Do Paie 28 Cotnlcs Pa .. 29 Movies Paie 30 • .. •• ,---· Best actor Wiiiiam Br • d y in "Who's Afra id of Virginie ·Wool f?'' and Denise Clements, best ac· tress, irt a s c • n e from '!Summer a nd Smoke." • . , and '72 -· Record fear f or Heeord ,$tara By MARY CAMPBELL U ........ t-Wri~ This year, 1912, Is the year two rock supentars decided to country. " C .. hbo. Mag--·-·.,... '-"11·1111: make beautiful music 1;Q.1J1 ~ together, a bagpipe band had ed a dl!o jockey poll i\fy IJlf ahltrecord,theNewportJazz the "mo8' prog _ra"nrined artists." Two of the top three Festival was in New York, the male vocalists, Al Green, first woman was named enter· Isaac Hayes and Donny Os- tainer of this year, the 1950s mond, are soul. Isaac Hayes came back and soul came oo won the Oscar for hls theme from "Shaft." It's the first strong. bll-ortented selection to win James Taylor, a new gold an Academy Award and Hayes wedding ring shining, an-· the fi l bla k nounced at a Nov. 3 concert In 18 irs c compaser to New York's Radio City Music win. Hall that earlier that day he The Rolling Stooes had a and Carly Simon had been much-pobUcized tour of the married. United States. They went 5,000 The Royal Scots Dragoon miles, hi.t 32 cities in seven weeka and had lhfee.quarten: Guards's 43-member p l p e ol a million ram jUmping up band had a record hit with and down. Tbe final concert "Amazing Grace," the same hytM Judy C.Olllns bad a hit was in New York, on Mick with in 1970. Jagger's 29th birthday. Elvis Presley Io u red , · The Newport Jazz Festival, playing In New York for the which ended its 18th annual flrst Ume in. 1 17·year career. session in Newport, R.l .. ln a The Moody Blues toured. Leon riot in 1971, in 1972 was in Mew •' Russell went back on the road York City for nlne days, with -after an absence of 8 year; 37 events, and 600 musicians Neil Diamond performed three taking part. More than 100.000 weeks in a Broadway theater • 'GARDEN PARTY' Rlck Nelton . Best suppor'flng actor M-r'fin Fuchs (left) shown wit h John Loughman in a sc:e ne from the Hunt ington S...ch Playhouse production of "Catch Me If You Can." • persons spent more than then tooi hirmelf "1 the road was hailed by some as the big- $500,000 attending. Miles Davis for one year or maybe two. gest movie superstar since compalined that not enough. E Barbra Striesand. e :i perimental programming very important tour com. Roberta Flack was No. I was done and withdrew from cided with the release of a hit female singer ID t h e playing. 'Ibere was a big record or two. Downbeat poll. Nina Van upsurge in live jau. in New The Osmonds got 10 gold Pallandt. 39, who had gone to York all year and record sales records in 12 months, surpass-Mexico with Clifford Irving, were up. ing Elvis Presley who once got opened a singing engagement Cream of County Theater Crop Lo Lynn ed eight and the BeaUes, who got at a New York nightclub while retta wu nam nine. ,..__....__ce Clearwater l ~-•-f the I ""~•:-u she was still in the news. en ecuw.::r o year n an-Revlvial o-was mven JI at al ~-gl b the ...... e--Kris Kristofferson won the nu awanlll ven Y one time, but it was for Country Music Assn. Nine a ·mger period than a )'eftr. Grammy for best country miles east of Nashville, the Cr-'ence, 10 __ , 1.0 l!l66, song, .. Help Me Make lt ~· ·ere ~ million Opryland ~ • 11n:u Through. The Night." The ~US A -new home of the split to .pursue solo careers. Country Mualc Assn. 's best It gets a little tougher every year. Back in 1965, when this business of picking out t~ individual highlights or the community th.eater season in Orange County first began, the process wasn't quite so difficult -primarily because there weren't so many of them. As local playhouses matured and their nwnber expanded over the years. com- peUtion became increasingly keener. The domination by one or two prestigious theaters came to an end as the smaller groups grew more ambitious and began • is an excerpt from the DAILY PILOT review of his or her performance. BEST ACTOR -William Brady as George in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" for the Irvine C.ommunity Theater. "Brady's George is a man in emotional pain, a contrast 1of high in· tellect and low ambition whose subdued agony surfaces in fits and starts. Brady calls upon 11 wide and varyin~ range of tactical verbosity in an engrossing and highly skilled performance." Star Spangled Girl," Westminster C.Om· · · " The Allman Brothers Band country song award went to munily Theater. Grand Ole Opry, opened in carried on after the death of "Easy Loving" by Freddie May. bass guitarist Beny Oaklay In BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR The week of Nov. 4, the November. Hart. Martin Fuchs as Inspector Levine in bestselling record chart had Other CMA awards were "Catch Me tf You Can," Huntington the Moody Blues's "Nights In Carole King cleaned up on "The Happiest Girl in the Beach Pla"house. "The st an do u i White Satin," which had first Grammy Awards, record of Whole U.S.A.," a first efforl J the ')'ear "It'a· Too Late by Donna Fargo, as: single of performance of the night is delivered by come out as a single in 1968, Baby", albwn of the year the year; "Let Me Tell You Martin Fuchs as .... the wisecracking No. 1. No. 2, and 3 and 4 spots "T try" f th b 1 u. Catski11•• cop who skillfull" spreads a were held ·11y stars from the apes • song 0 e year About 11 Song" Y Mer e n ... g-...., / "You've Got a Fr'••d", and d lb f the flatfoot facade over the character of a '50: Elvis Ptesley, with ..... gar • es a um 0 year ; tough, s""'-lawman. Fuchs bas a "Bnrnina Love," Chuck Be....., best female vocal po p best solo, duo and group ticklish t;;;{ _ that of garnering the with".7'0ing.MJng" and JU~k perform.pee "Tapestry''. vocalists, Lot1!tta Lynn . greatest laughs and remaining the com-Nelson with "Garden Party." James Taylor won as best Charley Pride, Conway Twitty d he male vocalist with "You've and Loretta Lynn and the · it<> attract the county's better perfonners · and dJrectors. Other high-ranking candidates for the top acting trophy were Jim Speirs for "Butterflies Are Free," San Clemente Community Theater; Greg Feuerborn, manding figure on!tage -an It wis the .ftrst million seller Got A Friend" and Quincy Statler Brothers. Instrumental performs it exceptionally well." for Chuck Ben-y. Jones won for best in· awards. solo and group, went Today the list of community theaters thus far hmei'ed by the DAILY PI LOT'~ DiSlinguished Performance A u· :i rd stands at 11, three of ~·hich ha ve sincr ceased to function. Rounding out the field of top Also in the top 100 early ln strumental performance with to Charlie ·~fcC-Oy and Danny performapces in support are Robert November were Donn Y her "Smackwater Jack."Gar-Davis and the Nashville Brass. \\'"en!%, ''tr'he Night of the Iguana," Costa Osmend's version of Frankie ly Simon won best new artist-::========== Although, as nqted last week, 1972 was the year in Which comedy made a co1nc- bat:k On the Prciduction level, three of the four ·indiVidual DP winners earned their troPhi.ea for outstanding i•t· terpretation .of dramatic ro.les. The fourth reclpij?Ot is a notable exception TOM TITUS Intermission "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,'' Huntington Beach Playhouse : Richard Gordon, "My Sweet Charlie," Santa Ana Community Players, and Denis 'Ibomas, "Dial M for Murder," Lido lsJe Players. Mesa Civic Playhouse; Bob Mills. Avalon's "Why," the Band's f the 1 · ., ••• 1.0COKIS'WJ'~HCOKP' ~ "Who's Afraid Gf Virginia Woolf?" Irvine version of Marvin Gaye's o rJ .• er::~. had the fi~ Community Theater; Ron Gibb, "My "Don't Do Jt," Joh a o y J!E.I .. ~ Sister Eileen," Costa Mesa Civic R\vers's ''Rock-in' Poeomonia No. 1 women's lib song, "I Am Playhouse, and Fred West , "A Funny Boogie Woogie Flu'' from Woman," ahd bad a son. Diana '"' Cll1' Thing Happened on the Way to the Huey Smith and the Clowns, Ross, an original member of °'-. (11.c1 ..,,.mo Forum," Westminster C 0 m !JIU n i t y and llones'S "Roberta," which the Supremes, starred in SOUTH COAST ,lAtA o,,.~ "Lady Sina .. the Blues" and '•'"" M.10 • 171•) 5'0·2191 ,_...,. Theater. Frank.le Ford had had on the1_,,.'.'.~~-'."!'.-'.....'.~..'.'.'.:~~~!.=:':"."::::':".:::::::::::::::::::'.:: BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS -Pa1.--------- · who performed in the first and fourth rated shows of the year but won his DP for a role in a play not listed in the top 10. ' In selecting the 1972 winners, at least BEST ACTRESS -benise Clements: es Alma in "Summer and Smoke" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. "All these qualities are interpreted with brilliat¢ clarity by Miss Clements, who conveys . them simultaneWsly In a portrayal or depth and beauty. From the quiver In the1 throat to the flutter of the hands, the nervous giggle to tbe bursts of maidenly courage, hers i..!I an exceptional performance." Mullins as Big 1'.tama in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof." Huntington Beach Playhouse. "Pat Mull ins is superb .... from her earlier scenes of ing ratiating, overprotective silliness to her splendid moment of !tlUUletl disbelief when Big Daddy's impendklg death is .reve.aled. M"'iss Mullins is physically preposses,,ing and uses her prodigious size to ampUfy her character in a most noteworthy performance." Completing the list of noteworthy sup- porting acu-esses are Laura Black in "Swinging Singles/' Santa Ana Commu- 110 Ww C.-t NlthWO't' -•42°J7lf o,.• FREE DEL I V R YtA.M. 1 ""'' .. tM H.,._ ~ n P'.M. 10 ~ees were chosen in .each category. From this list, five finalists were selected during a Jong and careful proctlS • which involved re-reading the reviews -written on each. Then came the balancing of one performance against the other in tbe memory, weighing t~e d~ of difficu1ty and the total effect of ·each, until the eventual winner and four ' nmners-up were pinpointed. Also in strong contention for the best a<:tress award were Denise McCanles, "1'.fy Sweet Charlie," Santa Ana Com- munity Players; Patricia Box, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Irvine Com- munity Thi!ater; C't!arlotte Mitchell , "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," Huntington Beach Playhouse, and Barbara Garlich, "The nity Players; Diane Traynor, "Who's •..--•mc.rk•r•icim ai..iu;....,DiMt'1 c1u111•m1ri<•n E•,....,M•1lff c~.,.. Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Irvine Com· 1--::;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;:---munity Theater; Charlotte Mitchell, "The l Girl in the Freudian Slip," Huntington Beach Playhouse, and Janet Allen, "An· tigone," Westminster Community Thea· ter. • And MW the winners, each of whom Mullins winner of the will receive the DP trophy at the opening Award for best support· night of b.ia or: her th~ter's next show or 1!19 ictreu, shown in • scene at another hme suitable to ~th the fl 0 m "Cit on • Hot Tin perfonner and the playhouse. With each ::!'~ ~t.i!.,tto., .. ~un1"1g1on l~!.~wiiaiihmoiiiMCiiiaiiiniiiiiiTiiihiiiiiiiiniiikiiiiiiiOfiiiiiiiiiEiiiiviiieiiiiryiiiiiibiiiiiiioliidiiiy~ ... -iiiiiii_.z;._,,_,.._v~I ~ At Christmas? ••• Lag unans Take Cln.ss es So, you forgot someone, but don't worry, you can still send a bouquet of fresh flowers or a plant . . . a n y w h e re in the U.S.A. by December 24th. Just pick up the phone and dial 675-6291 and we will take care of oll your "lost minute' gift problems." Cho~ge it on BonkAme6cord or Moster Charge -A~ .Jhi pments by F.T.D. or Floro/ax -Our Gift Boxes ond Fruit T r~ys o~ oskets, hove made us "Nationally Acclaimed" 'World's Finest Produc• House'! 35 years of "know how." 8 designers for t his Holiday Season. Silk ,screening, film-making and many other medias will be explored in a nlne·week LagWUI Beach School ol Art course taught by gnphic designer Ray Jacob. Other courses offered during the school's winter quarter beginning Jan. S inc I u d e printmaking, c e r a m i c s . sculpture, photography and jewelrymaking. No prerequisiste classes are needed to register. A free brochure is available at the school, 630 Lagdna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, 92651, 591>1520. H.Oda1 GUts by ...... 1500 Howpon 11¥11., 171 4 1 547-1792 N~/C•te Mffi - • f LOOK! AT OUR LOW PRICES, TOO • ••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••• • SprKe Up Ye•r Solctds : CUCUMBERS LONG GIEIN I • I $HIP A CAITON NAVEL ORANGES • I I I • I 475 A : , 3 Fo< 25C : From Corton 1 I • Llflllt SIJ • Ullllt 2 CtM. I • W1tfl Titli Co1tpot1 • Whti 'fllh CHf'O'I I ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• • SHI, A CAITOH • OUI PAMOUS • FIUH Mj)UIUID • • • • • TANGERINES For n. Hone..., ·l lll· •. I oo I • • I • ORANGE JUICE 49c9..., • I I I I OOOD SIZE • BELL PEPPERS • • 15¢Lb. • • • Limit 4 Lb1-• With Thl1 Coupen • ••••••••• • ••• • • • • • • SHIP A CAI TOM AVOCADOS -"'"""'"" • • • • ... • ,...., ht l/t ...... O.ty I limit 1 C.111rton • IJMlt v Chi • u.tt ~. • I W1ffl Thh Cnpett 1 Wltti Tllll' c..;.. • WM TWI c..,_ Ii •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !=OUPONS EXPIRE, DECEMl~R 27, 1972 "Orange County's Most Popular Produce and Flower House" ,----.-----, NEWPORT PRODU.CE Open 7 Daya a W eek 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. 2616 Newport loul-d Oft !hi holo .... Phon• &7M711 67W711 67$-6)91 "35 Years of Product lONDED' F);u1r SHIPPER "Whtrt Qunlft11 l(th.1 .., Knoto limo" FOlt 1s. YEAltS Ormr of thd Hoiu1" ~------...::..,---------1?..,--.. _, _,,_,,_ -....,-.,.,-=-· People used to pay $5,000 a voyage.to enjoy the wonders of the Queen Mary. You can do It for about the pric e of a movie. From th~ enormous engine room to the towering 'bridge, you 'll see· th is In credible ship as no passenger ever saw her. You'll also take a fa sci nating voyage of adventure and discovery through Jaoq ues Cousteau's Living Sea, a complete attraction In Itself. It's all on the Queen Mary and you're welcomed aboard any day, rain or shine • QUEEN MARY L0119Beach BtOOO Tons of Fun "Selllnga" dolly llOm the llid of tho Long BiiCht'rO.w1y:"'Plloni213f 435-4733 . --· ............ •• •• .. -. !,~ .... , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • /I I Miller Magic With Tex - T•X llMllCI Remember the Big Band Sound? The rich, romantic music of the late 30s and 40s, when an entire nation sang and danced to such memorable numbers as "Chattanooga Choo Ohoo," "Moonlight Serenade," "Ida," "Little Brown Jug," Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree" and others? This was "Glenn <Mlller Music," songs mag~ nUicently arranged and introduced 1'l the public by band leader Miller and his great orchestra and they'll be heard New Year's Eve at Anaheim Convention Center when Tex Beneke and his band, Ray Eberle and Paula Kelly and the Modernaires present their now· famous Dance--Ooncert, aptly called '1Music Made Famous by Glenn Miller." Tex, Ray and Paula were featured with Glenn's origjnal band and the idea ol as- se mbling a musical sb.ow as a salute to Miller originated with Paula's late husband, Hal Dickenson, who also sang with the Miller group. Appearing in key locations all over the coontry during the past four years, Tex and Friends have played w ·record crowds eager to hear the popular melodies ol World War II days and thereby possibly relive some of the emotional experiences of their youth. Doors open at 9 p.m. New Year's Eve and dancing will continue until 1 a.m. Tickets are now available at the Convention Center box office and can also be purchased by mail or-· der. Prices ~ $8.50 in advance and $9.50 at the door on New Year's Eve. .. •••••••••••••••••••••• : MR. MIKE'S : • HOUSE -OF PRIME RIB • • • • • • Special Coupon Offer PRIME RIB DINNER C:O.pt.to will! -et .....,, • Cllolce of potaton or rk•. • • • • • CLOSID AT t P.M. XMAS IYI. I. ALL DAY IMAS DAY • • • • • • • 209 Palm , Balboa 675-5774 • • l•I ... N lllM ,......,. UNll!lfl • •••••••••••••••••••••• MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB Lark Room DINNER SPECIALS Choice of So11p or S•l•d l•k•d Pol•fo or kico Pilaf e &aMic lre.td l•••r•t• e 0.11•rt WEDNESDAY -Top S;rlo;, SIHk __ ........ -$2.fS THURSDAY -Mme R;b ....... -....... _ ... _ $3.40 FllDAY -Beef Strogenoff ···········--··-·-········-$2.tS SATURDAY -Tournedo1 of Beef --··-·····-----$3.25 SUNDAY -2 lobster Ta ils ·--·----·-·--·-·····-····· $5.10 Orange County's Top Entertainment /I JOE LIGGENS The OrlglnaJ HOMyDripper with WILi. Y JACKSON l111q11et F1clliti1t llP te 450 PH,Me 1 •712 au.HAM AYINUI <At ....., •. H~NTIN•TON llACN' fn4J '46-1116 't21J MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW FOR OUR Gala New Year's Eve Party CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT PARTY FAVORS, SPECIAL MENU F<in For Everyone FROM 7 :00 P .M. ON NO COYER NO MINIMUM 37 FASHION ISIAND , NEWPORT CENTEI .......... wfhloM .......... ,...... l"erld .. ,i;_..,,,_ ..... _. Pelaing Bue/a: Trip to China Havfnl long 1lnce run the cam.ut or fancy wine aod food packs, Pfti>al" you're stlll l"Oking for a holiday treat for that special someone who happens to be an epicure. Look no further. Just get busy with the arrangements for an outing to the Barn· boo Terrace In Costa Mesa. Out 'N Abo.ut NORMAN STANLEY 400 dear.... ' Removed from the oven. the crisp, ltlD sizzling golden brown glazed skin Is artfully separated from the bird. Skln and meat are next sliced thinly. In small pieces, then replaced and ar- ranged in their original form. Picking up on the restaurant's sug- geaUon to celebrate Christmas or New Year's with Its gounnet dishes, we launched the observance early -but un· forgettably -one night last week. duck., it's not too ,urprislng the end result is a taste treat of unprecedented dimensions. is hwig by the neck for at least eight ~rs, preferably oventight, in a cool, airy place. Accompanying the r e a s s e m b I e <l ''whole" bird to the table are a bowl of piquant bean and oysler sauce, sliced young scallion shoots and steamed nine· layered buns. A bun is opened from one side and 1he layers partially separated to admit alternate portion of skin, meat, sauce and scalHon . It was an evening that won't be forgot- ten because Jt netted a suiF.b version of a sumptuowl dish that's been making headlines around the world. Peking duck Is aU -and more - that's been said about it since a certain Presidential visit earlier this year. To obtain a few of the partlculan, we turned to the Bamboo Tf!'f8ce's obliging and knowledgeable owners, the husband and wife team of I>eMia and Kathy Young .. In the next step the duck is placed in 1 pan and marinated for a mlnimwn of ooe hour on each side. 11ie marinade can be combtned Hobin sa~ and dry sherry or, as at the Barn· boo Terrace, 1 secret wine and spice ntixture o{ (])ff Young's devising. TUE FINAL creation. ready for eating. some~hat resembles a small sandv.·lch but one -it should be borne in mind - thafs the ultimate expression or hautc cuisine Chinoise. And the olferlng set forth by the Bam- boo Terrace Is enough to promote anoth- er round of. international goodwill JN cinNA, we learned, the ducks used for this dish are force-red for many days on special feed so they will grow fat and tender. Then the duck is hung again until there is no dripping. CONSIDERING the painstaking time and effort that go into tbe preparation. cooking, serving and eating of Peking And in this rountry, carefully selected Long Island ducklings serve the purpose very well. NOW 11IE bird is OY'tll-re&dy for its ,three-stage roasting proceSl!I -first for 30 minutes at 37S degrees, one hour at 250 degrees, and agaln for 30 minutes at So make no mistake that anything as simp1e as a sandwich accounts for this culinary masterpie<:e. this piece de resistance of Chinese banquets. After the duck ls washed and cleaned, it (Su Out 'N About , Page %41 Is Ted Neeley Made of Super Star Stuff? AVDAT, Israel (AP) -Ted Neeley, superstar? Some are already com- paring the 29-year-old rock singer ·with Bogart a n d M~een. The Teus·born Neeley was a virtual unknown without film experience when Dire ctor Norman Jewlson signed him to play the title role in the film version of "Jesus Christ Superstar." The successful rock opera was being shot here in the middle of Israel's blazing Negev Desert. Slight or build with a beatific smile and a wispy bean:ft the young singer really looks the part. "He's straight out of a Gi- deon centerfold," quipped one irreverent fellow actor. Neeley came to Jewison's attention for his role in the rock opera "Tommy" by The Who . He later played Jesus in the Los Angeles production of Superstar. "The role of Jesus required a great deal of reaction, which is the most difficult art in mo. t.lon pictures," Jewison said. "It is the same skill that Bogart bad and McQueen has. Neeley, soft-5p0ken a n d somewhat shy with strangers, admits he is still rather numb. He told of the arbitrary restrictions imposed on any actor portraying the Christ role and said it had affected his own life. "I had a terrible temper, and 1 still must watch it," he said. "But I find I'm .more pa· KERMIT Rl8GS DUO :::~rT~::!~' I. . NEW YIAR'S EVE, . Danci ng -luffft -No COVfl' CAROLE'S ltth and Pl-c:•ntla COSTA MESA We'll be Opa Christmas Doy l nJdes O\N' Reg•lar M•• ~~~~Y~."J,!_~~!~!~~495 .,_ S.... C...u.d SWHt Pehft°"" The Arches Opoto N ... to Midnight 3334 W. c-t Hltltway Newport ·~· (7141 646-8817 ... In Secluded Ali so Canyon CHRISTMAS DINNER Served from 1:00 P.M. Roa 1t Young Tom Turkey Prime Ribs of Beef Roast Long Island Duck ling New York Cut Steak Gleied Baked Virginia Ham ... complete with all the . trimmings. Special Children's Dinner Jl 106 Cwt HltJl-y ll•anetto. -4ft.26'J S.stli L..t•-. ~If. A...,.. rrtrcrt. P..tlltt • 11 I tient and I believe I have learned to be more tolerant." He added : woman held a baby alott and screamed: ''Jesus, bless my baby, Jesus." "I also notice I watch my actions in front of the children here on the sel I don 't want to do anything out of character." Some fans also wanted him to sign his autograph with Jesus' name , not Neeley's. "It really blows my mind ," the singer said, shaking his head. Neeley, who was raised a Southern Baptist, said : "A few years ago I might have felt sacrilegious treating Jesus like an Ol"dinary man. But I've read a lot of literature for this role and I concluded He shouldn't be treated as anything but a man. And, you know, He was one hell of a man among men. A good man." Neeley was bom in 1M3 in Ranger, Tex., population less than 2,000, "in the heart of the Bible Belt where they really don't dig Jesus Christ as superstar," the singer sa id. Music bas always been on his mind, or at least since age 8 when he formed his own rock gf9Up. He and his band enrolled en masse at Ode."Sa College, Tex., after · high school. They all dropped out after ooe year to hit the road. Son1elime s Neeley's portrayal of Christ has been ·too realistic for some of his theater audience. He remembers in Los Angeles a . Q) . 0 a.oak-LU~~J~~~!ER P'°~~ COCKTAILS SEA FOOD-ST~AKS-PRIME RIB INTERNATIONAL ENTREES FROM $2.1 S BANQUET FACILITIES For A Festive Holiday Affair liilllr'I'• 0W-1'tt I ;W fl ..... For Yo•r C•rlstnte11 or New Tean Partfn LIVE ENTERTAINMENT DANCING NIGHTLY Lunch-Mon. thru Fri. 11 o.m. to 2:l0 p.m. Dinner-Mon. th1111 Sat. 5 to 10 p.m. Complirn•nt•rv B•••d Al•1k.a for ell 8irl11Jey1 I Annivenerie1 ZMS Harbor llvd., Costa Mesa S4S·'471 GALA NEW YEAR 'S EVE PARTY M••~N•w $15 ......... . 1ac1.-. -· lottle .t C"-~ -hfty fcrwon. RON SHY Friday & Seturdey O.C:ember 22-23 DAILY LUNCH SPECIAL CORNER OF PARK AND MARINE IALIOA ISLAND 673-4530 ORANGE COUNTY'S FINEST NEW YORK STYLE DELICATESSEN • RESTAURANT H@OHMAN'3 featuring Kosh•r Style • German Italian Foods In our Dining Room or to take out COCKTAILS • WINE • BEER BAKERY -CATERING VISIT OUR COMPLETE DELICATESSEN AND BAKERY WITH IT'S UNLIMITED AR - RAY OF DELECT ,._BLE F 0 0 D S FOR YOUR GASTRONOMICAL PLE.>'ISURE. • I CLOSED XMAS DAY I s.in. lhru Thuro.-10 o:m. to t-p ..... Fri. and Sot. -1o·a.m. to Mldnl!lht AMPLE PARKING 428 E. 17th S1'REET COSTA MESA 645-1900 1 ' Later, the group split and Neeley went -it alone, winning . ' parts in the Los Angeles and New York product.Ions or "Hair," before going into I "Tommy." He took over the Jesus part in the Los Angeles Superstar la.st February and stayed on until June when he began the film version . What's next? "I'd like to get the old rock group together "again and go on tour," Neeley replies. "I'd also like to do a western movie. I mean it. If you know anyone looking for a short Clint Eastwood let me know." Jewison agrees : "He's the one actor I know who could tlo J esus Christ and a cowboy. /o.M do them well." W ESTERN NEXT? Ted Neeley ilrrru Ql}Jrt!itma!i from ··. -. • • .. :i t %4 DAILY PILOT GALA CLEBRATION NEW YEAR'S EVE. NO ADVANCE IN PRICES 496-5773 BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, fo .... Sat. ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR 4 to 7 p.m. Mon. thru Fr i. • HOUSE OF SEAFOOD I • • • ~NSSS•~•tai1rant RICKSHA , lunch•on & Dinner Daily COCKTAIL NOW OPEN . FOR LUNCH GALA N.Y. EVE PARTY Milk• Reservations Now 11 :30 to 2:30 Tues. ttini Fri. ~~~~-~E IUJlflt LUNCH 11:JO•l :Jt CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY 32802 COAST HWY. Nightly Oinner-Cockt•ils 4 to I I p.m. Sund•y 2 to 9 :3 0 pm-Closed Mondi1y1 .. __ _ 11NADAMSl•MsNrl Ill C,_,. Y•lltly P•rllWl 'fl LAGUNA NIGUEL 1814 N. Coast Hwy. IEI Camino Reall Featuring Exotic 540 •1937 cost& ........ .' 1 _ 3 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~S~A~N~C~LEMENTE 49~2~-6~5~7:1~~Tro::pl~™~Drl~nu::;iiiiiill'~~~~~~~~·~·I c:,Airporter qnn CJ/otel THE BLACK KNIGHT •mxmL.f.I. MEDITERRANEAN ROOM RESTAURANT MCXl.C.1''N Christmas Dinner Served From 12 Noon to 9 P.M. Cream of Watercre ss Soup •• Jolly Green Salad with Honey Dressinq ROAST TOM TURKEY with GIBLET GRAVY BAKED YORK HAM with CHAMPAGNE SAUCE PRIME RIB OF BEEF, AU JUS CULOTTE STEAK, EXTRAORDINAIRE ROYAL SPANISH PRAWNS on WILD RICE ROAST LEG OF LAMB, BOUQUETIERE Christmas Pudding -Coffee, Te• or Milk CHILDREN 'S PLATE e Roast Turkey, Ba ked Hem , Roast Beef 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD., NEWPORT BEACH !Oppo1ite Or1n91 Co11nty Airport) RESERVATIONS lll-2770 The HAMBURGER HAMLET IN COS'.l'A ·MESA Corner of Harbor and Adtmt Now -I HARR°:::::~·;-:~~-~15 I - ~).. KNOWN 'FOR SIMPLY MARVELOUS FOOO ANO DRINK_ "3 ~ l'RIPAREO ANO SERVED BY NICE PEOPLE fi#5'~ I . INTIMATE DINING c:X:._~alf.t; =~~~;r-~~:: "'-~·ciiRISTMAs \\ Open Daily 1 o A.M. ·to 2 A.M. &.~~"1:.. / I EYE I 1 Lunch 11 :30 to 3 "'w. Hiii ~.:...,,.. I COMPLETE DINNER I' ·Bock By JERRY LAMBUTH ~111 • .:.."';...-A I OLD F:O.SHIONED VEGETABLE SOUP OR : Populor Oom1nd --•--1 TOSSED GREEN SAL>,D. . c~~.:~lsl7TH s~:.~:04 11~~~~~~~~1 I i ' R2!!T •. !.~~. ~~!~~ .. Y I PIZZA HOME DELIV~ERIES '11 . :.r..T.f~:O:~if. I HAVE CHANGED A LOt ~ I :~: .. ;:.:::~.;~:a\.;G,G:•· .. :: 1I' I : ••Slill:VATIONS s42s DANCING TO 1I ! SINCE THE •t:COMMllNDllO TONY LOIO GROUP I r CHILDHN UNDl_l !>tE AGI OF U-52.75 ·I 1 OLD. DAYS I CHllSTMAS 11\IE lllUNCH I SE"llVliD F".'OM lf A.M, TO S:• P.M. ·:I A 11111t111H,1r .!HORT 011v1110M All 1111WAYS I Now Me 'n Ed's mobile ovens speed delicious pipina;·hot pizus to your door in minutes. Forprompt,.mcephon• 646-7136 (Newport Beach/Costa M ..... 17th and Tuslin) or 847·1214 (Hunllngton Beadt-Beach end Hlel). Get the Pizza witll Pizza~ls 'lnen-Qlt) CHRISTMAS· MENU FRESH CALIFORNIA FRUIT CUP CONSOMME 'ALA REINE' CRISP CARROT STICKS SWEET AND SOUR CORN· RELISH SPICED MELON RIND CELERY HEAR.TS AND JUMIO OLIVES RADISH ROSES ROAST YOUNG HEN TURKEY ............... -..... -.-------'--·-·-..... . $4.25 Giblet Gravy, Corn Br•ad ,O..•ssin9, Whol• ,Ctanb•rry Sauc:• BAKED VIRGINIA HAM, Fruit Souce ........................ _ ........................... $4.25 S•tv•d with Stuff•d Y •ms BROILED NEW YORK STEAK ....... _ ....... -........... -----·-............... $6.95 Mushroom C•p ROAST PRIME RIB OF BEEF, Au Jus --------...... $6.25 Yorkahir• Puddln9 ewc •. o1 c•ll•• of Garden Fresh Broccoll WJrilppttd Potato•• •Fr•sh Corn on the Cob Stuffed C.ndiiwl Yams fr•sh Baby C.rrota StuffM ••k•d Potato PISS8T . . • Choke of Ric• Pudcljn9 Pe~tn Pit - Ice Cre.nt or Crenberry Sh•f'b.t Coif .. , -T •• Milk Mints FAMILY STYLE TURKEY or HAM -·-·--... --.. ---• ... $25 I Minimum of 4 -t.arrY home what you cannot eat) • 1l1 &Tuff ~~IRf l 1 · l · RESTAURANT f' NIWPORT llACH ~ 2241 W, COAST.~WY, ~ ' , ~ '---(7141 646·5057 ~'!/;, -"""1 """"' ~ ...... -...... ........ _,,, Ctt•ef .............. f""'11ft11W.. W.w.ifltl .. 111111 A,,i. Y~llJ T,.. Tllrloy, Cibltl ""11 Sqrw Oillw Dnaint. C11obmJ Sia s.tr llllti."11·-·illddl!lf.~Jl&Wadt '·" IMrT•llrlhllliir · us llllolllpr.c..ti119,Q11·11 .. S.C. J.IS .,.,,., .. ,H .... 11•1;nl• '·" .... Tnlil.-Slolt,MlilntK~d 1.u ....... --.............. ~T•1 Special Clllh's Di-_,. R1111Tllll! w "kW llmt 1.•1 tlSKITS: ....... ftti ..... "'-.... JlllllC.I Pit, ,,., , ... ,.. ,... .. s.c. ,,.. Sir...,, '"'" ' --um CHILDR~N'S DINNERS I 10 ind underJ M,""TUMYOr .fl(IME-Rlf ................... -............ ----··-·=-··-···--$2.75 -: ----,,,.;--..J"-r.:"'!l!·-.r-----111--- l111M oftl6f4.1ioo TURKEY or HAM 10 GO -Ai ·tho Trimmings -··-=-............ _,_, $20 15 ..... 61 . . @~ldM-~~ ) I, 21112 l'aclflc COllt Hwf. Huntington -h ~-516-1421 ( • I I I I I I co , , • Ffite llulla11 C11fll11e Coektalls 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 ReHrv•tlon1 Open Dilly - 5 p.m. to 2 1.m. CLOS!D MONDAY -------r-- ' "*'-· Chinese Cuisine O~IN DAILY' 11 AM.II~ e CLOSED MONDAY I BDIBOD I ?EID.CE C'F.LEBRATF. CHRISTNlAS ur f\;E\V YEAR'S \\'ilh I 1f. I Peking: Duck rir other gourmf.'t dishes. Plll.l.'(' ord~·r no1v. I I COCKXAll.S '' B Open 7 Days ,.,._ Q..U., .... ~ N.UH M-FooM c/'4~ NOW APPEARING MEL . .... Detl: 111JOA.M. f91J:JO f.I. _,ht. ll:JO A.M. t. l :JO Sad9p: 4!00-12 MIDNISHT ERICKSON AT THE PIANO 9093 E. ADAMS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-79 11 'Beej )faster I form•rly llu• 0•) LUNCHEON DINNER M1111. tl!r11 f.rl. M1111 • ..s.t. 5 ta 11 11 :JO ta J:JO s..-,4to11 Featurin" a complete new menu of steaks, lob- ster. seafoods, Prime Rib, and other entrees Including the house special, Beef Mruter Com- bination platter. -SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MENU - HAPPY HOUR' 4 to 7 e Mon -Fri. with Hot Hon d'oeuwrn Now appqrlng MICKEY And DIANE ' Tu•a. thru Sit. -I p.m. to 1 a.m. DANCING 3010 HARBOR BLVD. IAt labrl Costa Mna Reservations: 549-0319 PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT STEVE IVh:C~lJ 1: 1: l~I; ALI RATED (PG) MATINE"ES DAltY - DUST MOP ---OF-TKl..YIAI- Mexican Pla y Hails Holmays Logs burning In t h e fireplace, beautiful nativity li(!ures. real evergreen garlands and colorful Mexican Peter Meets Wolf on TV Puppets will add their magic to the holiday season Wed- nesday at 8 p.m. when the classic Prokofiev musical tale "Peter and the WoU" is recreRted in a special broad- cast on Channel 28. Utilizing the Black Theatre style of puppet animation - which pernlits e x t r e m e I y life 1ike movements -"Peter and the Wolf" opens with nar· rator Karen CHfoy's com- n1anding the letters in the titl e to float from her magic trunk. KCET wil l repeat the pro- gram Thursday and Dec. 29 at 10 a.m. 11f(,A$}1!.~.X.? ob~1\·P01 cy ·~ ~. ' ~~R6€l~ ~iuccuknt &ef front Captain. Cook '.f broiler. Delicaci.t$ jrom U... &vm S.as. A1agnifu:en.t Harbor Vieu,_ Cockt.111, Ul~t.on 1nd Dinner dalh' SUNDAY BRUNCH 2S001 CANA OllllVE OANA POINT HAABOA ....... 111 Olf l"lcific Co.It HlglYway-Twiirt laguM H'(ll>el Md S.11 0.mtnM decorations in the lobby, :iet the mood for "Las Posadas" at Padua HUils Theatre. For the 4lst consecutive year the renowned Me1dcan Players present the story of Christmas in Me,x.iC1l. II Is ·the delightful story of a llttle boy, his faith in goodness and his dream aboUl the . nativity figures. In his "dream" the Mex- ican Players enact a medieval collOquio about the f i r s t Christmas. They use some of the dialogue and music ex- actly as it was written hun- dreds of yean ago. Christmas in Mexico is also a gay Hesta with pinata and songs and dances ; just as you.'11 see it on the stage at Padua Hills Theatre. "Las ·Posadas" will run th"r'nua,.J_an. 6, the Izth day of Chiislm""M; It is given at 8:30 p.m. Wednesdays through Saturdays w i t h matinees at 2:30 p.m. on Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays. Many matinees are sold out, but seats are stlll available for many performances throu gh January 6 -Reservations. which are a must for this famous folk play, are. taken at (714) 626-1288. ftMEftA U:STAUlt.Am' Continental Cul1lne Cocktail1 Strotn" Luncheon and Dinner Mondat1 through Saturd.ait. Closed Sundays We are loc•t~d na xt to the May Co. in South Coa,t Plaza JJJJ s. lkktel CCRt11 Ml'SO Raal cantonese .Food eat here or take home STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport Be•ch ORiole 3-9560 0,.. Y.ar A'"'9111o.llf12•12 -Ftl. -Sat. 'tll J 111.ni. ENTHTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WEEK ~~~~~L~! r=~ Wlltt o.M WHll1 "" '"' ( IOI IOSANAC WID. THIU SUN. ~ GALA NEW YEAR'S IVE PARTY Nlg~ly Dinner Specials $195 TALBc/tl,WBAtE 400MAIN, BALBOA PENINSULA PlEHTY OF PARKING • 873-4633 Ora the Road Program Warns Holiday Drinkers Alcohol and gasoline don't n11x! 1'he truth to this old axiom is graphi cally illustrated by four professional race drivers and three "street" drivers who recenUy par· ticipated in a special test conducted and filined fo r the "Medix" television series as :1 reminder to holiday celebrants inclined lo have "one for the road ." The half-hour program entitled ''lfow Drinking Affects Driving" is scheduled for air on KNXT -Channel 2 -at 4 p.m. on Saturday. .'\ specially designed precision driving course was set up at the Bondurant School of ~ligh Performance Dri ving, Ontario Motor Speedway. to test Lhe participants. The objec- tive was to have the drivers navigate the course in as fast a -time as possible while knocking over as few cone-roadmarkers as possible -first sober. then "under-the-in· fluence" or alcohol. Professionals Bob Bondurant and George Follmer, winner of the Riverside Grand Prix and the Can-AA{ circuit champion, manage the sober runs with ease. Once placed on a controlled drinking program to get their blood-alcohol level to a .10 -the legal maxi- mu1n of intoxication in California -startling and convincing things begin to happen on the course. More telling evidence \Vas produced when the non-pros had a few ''belts" and got behind the wheel. FREE SHOW Our Christmas Present To You ALL FREE --FREE SAT., AT 2 AND 4 ''SNOW WHITE AND tHE 3 STOOGES" And ~artoons• . ~· ~-1' MESA THEATRE 1884 Newport Blvd. MERRY CHRISTMAS •t11 5111fti\ .... J l111I Hendm P•I Mlrtley • "•AIN IOW ••IOGI" ~·- D1lhlllranc1 • • • • • • ••• ••••• . . .. . . ·~··. ·········· • • •&AC"' •1.vD. "' 11.\ia • • •tt c;OAll Of-.j SA• DllllO OWt> • a •" l'fl"l ... GT N •t:"C" ,, ..... ~ .... Slllft'G-;JOH VOOff-~ VNC>l.OS'--~vQOH• I, • • • . . . . . . ... EDWA~DS <.l\f\1\1 f\lfR M.li'-,•1 >' A'>.t.U\ lO\TA ..-f \A · ~7'1 •141 • ' lJAl~ 'I' PILOT ,25 Talent T ea111s Da1teers Festive ut CSF Proreuional, academic and !ltudenl talents \\'Jll combuie !u preaenl a winter festival of Dan<'e Arts at C~I State r~ullerton, du r i n g two "'{"('kt·nds beginning Dl'<.'. 29 The resllval, which will in· t ludc premieres of scven1I new works, plus several in· naval.ions that the d a n c e dcparunent is initialing, will be held in the UnJversity's Little The<:1ter beginning F'ri - day , Dre . 29, at 8 p.m. Reservations for all prrfnrn1anrc.c; 111 the festival mav be made by calling th1· theater box office betv.•een noon and 4 p.n1 . on weekilliys , or an hour and a half hefore cath perforrnance. The ll'lcphone nunlber Is 87(}.3371. The festival begins with a perfornlancc or the ~1atti l..a:-,eoe Dance Company of Irv ine on Friday and Satur- day. Dec. 29 and 30. ·rwo new works, "Exit" an1t "Synaptic Junction ," will he featured. along with ''Jubilatore," a work thr (·orr11,;1nv pt'rtormt'd 011 C:1I !-.t:1h· 1111~ tall On J,111 l ;, ,1nrl 6 1)1111'(' '7:1" JlPrfr1rnuin<'1•s of 1~·nrks hy ('.11 St.ht' /'11llo•rt1Jn stut!eril'i and f.11·u!1v 11 111 Lot.' 11·.'.ltur('(J The pri•11111:1 (' ut :1 new p1ec1· by Linda V I lat1·h, <1 n1cn11:>C'r of the dant't' depart1nent facuh.~ ;1('l'lllH)l<Ulll'd b " ntu:.it t·o111po-;l·d hy l~lnyd Hodgcr~. :iss1~lo11\ pruff'Ssor t>I 11\tt'-U ,11 C;il :i!Cllt·. IS in· clud1·d This jMJl'llOll ol tl1f· d.Hll'C lf•!itl\al \\ill a~o M·t· lhe in· trodu et1011 of ltvc rnus1c ac- eorn1)animt'nl. \\ i l h t·om- mi ss1oncd works tumposed and perfomlL'CI by t h e u11 lrers11y·s rnus1c faC'ul!y and stu1le11ls. Dr Frank W. Hatch, thairn1:i.n of the dance dt'part- 111<'11!, has indi cated that ii~" ac.·t-01npaniment \viii b\: n st~1ndard feature uf dant'I.! pro· du ct1ons at th'· un1vcrs11'" Christmas Eve, 1776: Crossing the Delaware The comforts or home, Christmas Eve I9n. will con· trast sharply with Christmas Eve. ITI6, as George \\tashington's victories al the Battle of Trenton a re. recreated i n "McKonk ey's Ferry ; Christmas 1776," Tues- day at 8 p.m. on Channel 28. The program opens on U\E b<lnks of the Delaware as Washir'lglon and his ragged Colonial Army prepare to cross the ice-filled river. Through the use of historical painli n~s. f1h:_ns. rnus1c at1d diorai nas. the dran1a of "!host 1in1es \\'hich tr1t'd rnl'n·.'i souls" bc<:on1es rtality. The 30-niinute Elim took about five months to C1lmplc!e according to Hobert Gar1hwalte. a rnembe r of the NBC Project Twent y learn for many years and recipient of nun1erous awards. KCET repeats the s1>ecial \Vedncsd<ty ;it 10 a.m . and Dec. 2!1 at 1.30 p.n1 . MUStC CENTER PRESENT AT10NS •• America's Affection ate • ·· · Empress of Son g EllaFltzQerald-, oscarPetersofl? \NA ·O . GalaHoliday~--~~ ~ Show ·:-: ... ·· 2 SHOWS ON .· ·. ,,,· Nl!WYl!AR'S l!VE YOU WILL L-0-Y·E Begin the Beguine A-Tisket A· Tuket I Can't Stop Lowing Y1111 Madelena Night and Doy •nd many more of hw ure•tnt hilt E\lenlngs at e:3f> Oec.26,27,28,29,30 Matinee at 2:30 Dec. 30 New Year's Eve: 7 & 10 pm TICKET PRICES: Tues. thru Thurs. Eves. & Matinee $6.50/5.50/ 4.50/3.50 Fri. and Sat. Eves. and 7 pm New Year's Eve $7.50/6.50/5.50/4.50 New Year's Eve 10 pm show s10_001a.001s.0015.oo TICKETS NOW at Muaic Center. all Mutual Agencies; S.C. Music Co. at 637 S. HUI; Wallichs and Uberty. lnfonMtlomi (213) 82&-7211 MUSIC CENTER OPAVI L'1'0'N 'M WIMN(fl Of 6ACADEllY ...... S INCLUDUtG ~····~ EDWARDS <l\I \(\I I \II I\ HA~~(IO\ ~· A IJA l,A ' • 1\',T'°' Vl 'A • '1 1'1 ,,olt --·- ~.a.u. /•,01tJT{1 ,.,__ -'SOlAC>ER" UftD / (GI MATINEES DAl1 Y ' I ! -• • .,-• <. • ~ , . ff DAl~Y PILOT "'"'" _. 22, 1972 TV DAILY LOG TV HIGHLIGHTS NBC 0 9:00 -"Ghost Story" segment, "Time ol Terror" stars Patricia Neal as a woman em barked on an unusual and disturbing journey. KABC 0 10:30 -"Who Do You Think You Are- Man and Beast?" Harry Reasoner offers a look at people and their pets. • Friday Evening DECEMBER 22 Saturday Morning DEctMBER 2l Lill> 0 0 0 !II !!Hfl .... Lill> (I) 1Y I ""-• m®J .... 0 '9ftdtm1 "G1briellt'" l:.JI 0 llaQ [Jperitlct @ Coll S111rt CD !At's •1• QWIN Wlldw..t 1:008Cil S..riM StlHlbt GI TM FliatstoMs 0 .a m HoulHkab ID SN!tr ry1e O rn 00 tt.l 11111Mbf 01 Ml Dulce Eull0fa41 CD lrother luu ID Hodppodl' L.odft .7:3011 Dllst(s Tf'fftHM m l'llflloust 40 D m ltlflllft HoUdlJI lfl lltr" Stoo1t1 g C.mpm Prollle l :JO @ Hoa11'1 Mll'MI Q (}) <IJ JtcUo1 Fi'lt Q Movie: (C) "The MM C.... Cl} TY I Cilulol• '""'*'"" (Clrtoon) '66. ®l Uaclt Russ Cl) CIS News m Movies: "'Foret ol Erir (dr1) '41 !llil Min lr1fflR Sllow -John Glrtield. "SW1Mp Wlttf' m AlldJ lrttfiUI (l!l)'S) '41-Dln• Andrns. CD S1tl1111'1 lslafHI &.ilO II()) lup l11•11J -...._,I "Tht Sun, 2" u:i o m Tlle 1ebotlS fl) lt11111t Cll'IN 0 .kltl1 WIJM "?Mitri m Adioll n.1t11 0 00 00 • e>s.oMs a) Dot 4Zf'M aJ eo.ntry Musk mum. Rlsuls fDSesl•• StRtt 7:00 I)(]) 0 m Nns l :JO 6 {)) Sabrtu o lowtl11 "' no11ar1 a IRi m,... l"lntlltf (j) TIUtll ., ColtstqlMllCtt 0 Cil (!)EB UC s.,.l'lbr ..... Cil Cln:111 b: (C) Olivet Twist aM tlM Atttllf D 'Mllf.f .. , UM? Dodpr PM!: I m I LM LICJ a> I DtN11 of Jun11le t.Oll IJ (I) Alluhi1 CU11 I!) ....... . 0 ®) !IJ -aJ Tiit U.ety Arb 0 Mlril: "Secnb 91 tilt II• ft\ o AlllOf n.111 C.ra dt Milt-·J11111" (mys) '33-f'1ul l1.1kas.. ~ ,.. 0 lllwll: ''Clpe CaMtal ..... m ltolltr Oerbr Aln" (scl·fi) '60--Scott Peters. m Speed ltac:ir a> Mo.le: "ltetura ol the Scldll 7:XI 6 Circvs Pi111pemel" (drl) '3S-J1me1 M1· 0 ltlll,..DOd Sflu1m son, Barri Barnes. 0Movlt: .(21!1) "TM lbllop's f)!tlJ,IC@;IChit.rt.11Makfo Wile" (11n) '43-Clry Cr1nt, 1.orlt· tinl A twtlvt·hour conoart of se1· ta Young. sonil music. live, lrom tM Musk (J.) T1 Tell the Trlltll C.nlt(s 13ttl 1nnU1I Christmas Con- ([) Tllrill ..... ,. ctr1. 0 Miiiion $ Mowlr. (21r" •A*f @El Clnt n i. Ttnlt and Di1110nds" (com) '62~1· t-.JO II ~Dll 11iew Cybulski. , D t1i m TIM ~ 0§ Tiit New rrlce Is llfllt (I) Tijuu• ..... • Ille s.ltll m n.1 c1rt 0 rn n.' •rMJ w. ID (}] Draptt ED Ln BffttlJ cit Ptr1lwilll Cl} Certlt1 Canlnl fD W1H StrHI Wetk lO:IO 0 fD"' Fltttaall AfC DiYisional ID Untalllld W1r1d f'\arolfs-Clnlul OMsioll. m~u~• o rnoo ......,. W T\t Ad41111 Ft•»t' (i:isu&lb 2020 1:00 lO:JO 8 ()) Jtsit tfllll tt1t Pu.,U lfJ MISSION· IMPOSSIBLE B-..,_ """ ld•l ''2 *moves to.FRIDAY! Set _,1111 H•rtid, liz11>1111 Scott. t . ht' th ·11 I 0 Cll00 "' '"" on1c s ~' er G Mowtt: "H•MI• 1v11att" (mys) 8 (i) MiulOfl. l111posslble '56-Gary Ntrrill, Jin Sterlin&. 0 ®I €n S.nfonl 111411 S.. ®) hMrluM • Q (})@ 6) Thi lraQ lulld: ID S.Spel Sinllflt JuWltl m Hopn's Heron QJ Pef1} M110ft 11:001) (I) Tilt flllbbllltS fJJ '*-'"" Con}I (1) llhbite HMM Show tll.lW1tlrilnfllll Wttli: hi Wtw O (I)&JFuHJ Pklnllfll . ·cm Emntt Alontt ~ !lj A1•11111I Utt Wortd 111 IO D1Jt m rtwtl• m AIM.lb l!l Ml'lit: (2111') "'WIMtf IMlhll" IE Llldll Ubre Beth D1vi1 sl11s. ll:JO (j) MIN: "'T1I~ Dirt aM H111f l:JOO ®"l mn. um.,_,.. ...... (com) '41-Ce111 Romtro. o rnoo mn. ·-,,. o rn m-" llJ lfl T1fP11 Wittl I &llllt m ...,_ crtmn SllR' mlll =.:-! ~ Ute" 1, > •51 m Cityntafrt . ... ... Ill ra t:aD II (J) CIS friCIJ ......-:: (C) C2llr -Robert Danit. KaJ W1lsh. ""l ,.._,., ••. _.. Im'") Afternoon '69-Plttr O'Toolt, Plt11l1 Cllrt. Sit Mich1el RtdJrM, Gtofl' llbr· l%:GI fJ (I) ArtNl's TY Ftaaln 0 ®l !IJ '""' ""' B "" """ ,..,..,. fJ (])CIJ CiD•••• 22Z O (})G)TM MlllUn Qli S.l1r1 ti Mlwtllrl 0 Mwil: "Cuttlpt lldtt" (wu) f8 Nl111 '57-Jotl Mc.Cfu, M.lrt Stmns. fl!) ·-,..,..,. (I) ®l '"'"' IE U Cnqultl• CD Th CllMt and Mrt. Mlltr a!l Dr1•1 U:lO 11 rr. FMlillll fl'rl.C1.. Skw t:lfl 0 USC lllketll1D Ttojlns ft. 1111· 0 (]) G) btr1t111 a.Mstl•d nols. (J) Fat Albert a1ld TM CtslrJ Kids o rnCJJ mT~• o•• c.11,11 cri liltrlt: "StllkldOWI" (dn) ·so 0 G) ,.,.. -How11d Duff, 8rl1n Dontevy, io:0a a am '"'°" "Jvst Olltt~ m Dt•nt1rr """ o rn (j) m"" -..,. Bl"'""._ O loris ~r\off ""*ll. 1:0011 rn F..._n Divislenal Play-Ofla m-ID "-•""" ID tt..1nt11t MM O H1ati Sdlltl 1asUtb111 cir fiJ Stt1lfttn ti .. Cltle 611111 of tl'lt Week. fli)IMI Ohllt1C... m Lai• Slttbn oo ...... : .,.,., .,.. .. ,., ..... ctl) ,.,...., 40 dr1) '5741lR Gutle. 10:• 0 llkiN: "DKWll .... ...,... 0 MAN lo BEAST. (3M) An ldnl .,, ....... ~ ""·""' * entertainin1 look It {)) CWWm'• Fllll F..tilr .. the relationshio be· m SMI Tttbl tween pets and people. I ::S .. 11 Tllft ~rn0o~!f>:! v':",.,!: mc..•u.•""' 1n0 a.asr GD "'lilM 111 ,,,_,_ • 1:•m-•- . "-' -· -11:00 DD Ill m m,..... cnsl ·s..-JJm Dnl-. Ktti, RJ•"' 8 Joh WOodt• Slltw 8J Ch...,._,, hllMll 0 Slllrl«l Hll-TlMlbt m M1 ... IM..,. ... I~'::.:" ~1 Cofflt" m llfL '"" " ... w..t: (hof)-Abll S1111:1n. t:OO (})FU• f11bl11 '1lMI Saviour"' tB ClfMI" Tlilll Aiwlnlll (I) 1.,..... HeW to .1H1M ~ TllrtlWr 11:15. ICU,, ..... RIVIM"' I =-lldMI bllflfl, &)lllb ... Ill "', ....... '"•§a m--2'300"""'""'"" rnoo m,.. ,_ -00 ..,1o ........ Tt Ttll till Trvtll ID McH•'s ""' 11~111 (1).... "'-""· u. .... NtrM Mltdadl ,_. , ...... Wiii .. ....., lt:lS I) CIS utl ~ "'Wltdl ... II• Adilfl .....,. (corn) '51-atd SltltoA, Al· ..,..: (C) "It•• JI_.. (dr1) 111'1 OaN, Mn MH!tf. '&7....&l Mopt, Ytrl Mites. CIJ N\ailUll (I) F• Olt Fldll -·-"'" ..... r.1-·-' (C) -("'! (lwJs) '41-Uobttll Scott '5&-0tl'll Mdrttn, UM1 Crbtll. 8 Ml* "'Wlf te tW1" 1•r1) 'M 111 ldlMt fldtMi Tlleltn -T_, AlllMH, B""'9 8'rroa. ..... : .......,. (WIS) '47-...... "hi .. ,,.. .loll McCtM, YttOAlca Ukt. -----~-r-----~~ . .,,...ats1r-1•rn••-m-· .. ,,... -a.e-.. (C) .ft. llwf• ~ Sriif)' star. CID) '&7-llllU'°"1 QulllR. Dekl S:JllCD ::-... N-Cllrlatmat" -· . .., ____ ...... ·~ - • --· Ult ...... ·-_, -..... (""1 .... -"" -(In) ,_, .......... '"'"" ------J>IS·-.......... _ I • -. ' . '" .... . . ... Bound for SAN FRANCISCO? Christmas Carnes to Channel 50 . . bu1iM11, ple•1ure .. WHk•nd, v•c•tlon. Stoy ot Nob Hill Motel. • c .. , ...... L.Hat5o• ... ..,.. .. ..... e COWfff P.ail .. e Color TV 111 loo• NOB HILL MOTEL 16JO roc.lflc MGT Vea N ... S.• FniHilco -7754160 Ice skating everyday. MESA YIRDI SHOrPING CENTER 2701 H•rbor Blvd .et Ad•m1 Co1t1 Mei•, C11if. 926Z~ Tel. 17141 979-8880 NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES EXCLUSIVE \ ORANGE COUNTY ANTHONY QUINN YAPHET KllTTO ~ Un11ed Arhsts 2H ""'9r• "HICKY & IOGGS" I lo20·S.40·1·10.IS NOW · !lClUSIVE ORANG! COUNTY IOOHACKMAN ERNEST BORGNIN[ RED BUTIOHS CAROL LYNEY .... 0-SIMwllf "THE BURGLA~" c-?lRi'E<L-· Orange County's own color television statlon began 111 !inl m<)n\h ol pf0il'8Jlllllln& Nov. 20. During Docember KOCE's schedule Is limited (4 to 11 p.m. weekdaysJ while signal strength and coverage ls tested by the Federal O:>mmunications Commission (FCC): full scheduling begins in January. MONDAY 4:00 -Bach FesLlval -Dr. Alfred Mann will direct the 153-voice chorus in Jchann Sebastian Bach's B Minor Mass. Metropolitan O p e r a conlralto Maureen Forrester, soprano Jennifer Vy v ya n, 1eoor Robert White and bass. baritone Sean Daniel. 6:30 CaroUng, Caroling - hlormon Youth Symphony and Chorus present a concert o{ Music. 7:00 The Sleeping Beauty - The Tchaikovsky ballet will feature new choreography by Rudolf Nureyev, who dances the leading role of Prince Florimund. Opposite Nureyev is Veronica Tennant dancing the role of Princess Aurora. The role or Carabosse, the wicked fairy, will be played by Celia Franca. 8: 30 Playhouse New York - "An American Christmas: Words and Music" A look at Christmas in America through the eyes of a Jewish child, a Negro slave. a 19th century girl, and poet Robert Frost. 9:30 A Christmas Special TUESDAY 4:00 Eleetric Company - Entertainment, music, and humor to teach reading skills. Produced by the Children's Television Workshop. 4:30 Mister Roger s' Neighborhood -Variety ·pro- gram communiating the young children, hosted by Fred Rogers. 5:00 Sesame Street -Hour· long program for pre-school children. produced by Hilarious Commentary on College Life "MOONCHILDREN" A t.omtdy by •.• lfich•tl Welltt l•OM•e•d•d ,... Mahlr• A.cffeM.e Wed. tin Set. • I p,M, -714 646 1303 ' • -1 ... 1:111/!1 {'',,'Ii~ ' . l ~fitUD!OI~ I M£WPOltT IEACH • OR.J.usb· WOILD PllMllll ENGAGEMIMT CONTINUOUS ·SUNDAY tr.. 2 Christopher Plummtr Robert Shew Lto11erd Whiti11q ''THI IOYAL HUNT Of THI SUN" l Th• F1bulout "$ON• 'Of NORWAY" '"1:• .. 1t1lt -"LAST SUMMER" CHRISTMAS_ -I _ sHow· tell a....I Ill FRIDAY ONLY-,...__. ........ ottt.19 ,....... ,,.. SATURDAY at 2 , and 4 p.m. "'SH~H':.:~::~: .. THI ~ CAITOOHS C•Mil .. M• .._ ........ L.Mll ... :'t•••'- "KlllMlPPED" llMP.M.M...._ Chlldrtn'1 Ttlevlslon Network. "'Cousin Bette" by l.fonore de 11:00 KMw Your Anlf41aes -Blazac, Part I 'Poor Rtla· Discuss enameled-Jronware tions' Bette F!JCher'1 long and abow examples of pressed time grudge against her rich glass patterns givirlg a general relatives, the lluloll, ls kindl· h1story of pressed .&lasa. Hosts ed when her second oousin, Ralph and Teny Kovel brleOy Hortense, falls in love with discuss procelaio marks. Bette's protege, s c u I p t o r 8:30 Elliot Norton Review• Wt:ncelas Steinbock. Bette -"Scratch" Featuring decides to use the beautiful s pec I a I gue.st: au,thor Vafernie Marnefee to revenge Archibald Maclelsh. henelf on the Hulots, 7 : 00 Jnternatloaal 9:00 The Toy Thal Grett Up -"'-1Y Boy" Jackie Coogan Performance -"Th6 Splen-. . dors of Versailles" A unique plays a pathehc orphaned waif musical and 'llisual re-creation who befriends an old sea dpg. of~ opulence of the cOurt of -The film, ~leased in 1921 , also Lou.ls xrv. Singers, dancers. stars Math~lde Brumdege and and instrumentalists w i 11 Claude Gllhngwaer .. perform music of the late 17th' THURSDAY century as the viewer tours 4:00 EJectrlc Company lhe halls and gardens of the 4:30 Mister Roger 1' great pa]ace at VerSailles. Ne.ig:bborbood 8:00 "M~Konkey'1 Ferry: 5:00 Sesame Street Christmas 1776" -The story 6:00..Artlsts in.America Sam begins on the , banks ()f the "Llgtitnln' " llopklns An in- De I aware as George dividual portrait of M r. Washington and his ragged Hopkins and his music. Colonial Army prepare to 6:30 The Jusl Generation - cross the Ice-filled river. "Environmental Law" Con· 8:30 Playhouse New. York -fronts the conflict between "Hoine" A drama which of· 20th century demands for fers a compassioqate view of energy and the pollution that the empty lives or four people results from generating this in a mental home. David energy. The Ace Trucking Storey's celebrated drama Company comedy t e a m stars two of the world's great punctuates the discussion with actors Sir R a I p h a man-on-the-street lstterview Richardson and sµ-John ~·ith a •passerby who lsn't Gielgud. J bothered by pollution. WEDNESDAY 7:00 Masterpitte Theater - 4:00 Electric Company "Cousin Bette" Part 1 See 4:30 !\lister Rogers ' listing Dec. 27th at 8 p.m. Neighborhood 8:00 Focus Orange County - 5:00 Sesame Street "Focus on Congressman John 6:00 Fam.Dy fl.Ille -"Lyn-Schmitz" Congressman John da" Focus on a young woman Schmitz of Orange County, , looking for a home for herself unsuccessful candidate for and her infant son and her president on t h e American reasons for deciding t<l take up Independent Party, will be in· communal living. terviewed by host J im Cooper 6:30 French Otef -"To and prominent county Ragout a Goose" Cooking newsmen -Tom Keevil, techniques explained and editor, DAILY PILO'I'; Jim demonstrated by Julia Child. Dean, exec u ti v e editor. 7:00 Soul! Poet, the Register; and Howard playwright and po Ii tic a I Seelye, political writer. Los activist Imamu Amiri Barak.a Angeles Times, Orange County will discuss, "Kawaida," a Section. philsophic doctrine for black 8:30 Special of the Week - people, when he joins host ''Awake and Sing" Clifford Ellis ,Hair.lip. Odets' play about 1 o v e. 8:00 Masterpiece Theater -triumphant over Depression· SHOWING NOW! 'Q11 \r\1~J V~lL£y-1 <:m:i> fllllV~ l!IJ I IM'0""9 ,.,,.,.,.et 9fooiii.hu"'t f-nuM V«iiihiy • N2'2481 CO.HITf GENE HAt;JCMAN "PRIME CUT" 'MATlllD • SAT., SUN. & MON. I, caUJed lnJO<Urity. The play stars Academy Award·wlnPlng actor Walter Matthau as the cynical one-legged World War I veteran wbo plays the ponles while de1tr\ng his inndlord's daughter. FRIDAY 4:00 Electric Company 4:30 l\tlster Roger 1, Neighborhood 5:00 Sesame Street 8:00 Boot Beat -"A stub- born Case'' by Charles Frankel. Host Robert Cromie will interview Charles F r a n k e I , <&. dlstingui.shed teac:her, phil.!IOpber, and social theorist at Columbia Univerui- ty. 6:30 Maklng-Things Grow- "Horticultural Presents" Tbal&ssa Cruso uses pumice rock and Id fish-bowls to demonst e that imagination and 11! pr:evail in .the hort" lturalist's art. 7: Playhouse New York - "Home" See listing Dec. 26th" at 1:30 p.m. 8:30 nmes and Tempos - Contemporary m~c a n d musicians. Host G e r a I d Schroeder, Golden W e s t C'ollege m~c professor. in· terviews special guest Shelly Manne. Several jazz pieces C.!Uornla Population L 1 w Centtt; John Noonao, auk and profesior or i.w at the University ol C.llfomla at Berktley; Anne Evans of Students Unlt«I for Ufe: William Marks, doctor of gynerology; and Judy Sy(ers o1 the Abortion Action Coali- tion. MOVIE RATINOB FOR PARENTB AND 'YOUNO PEOPLE ALL A(liS AOtllTillt Ct!Mnl Aul''"'" ..,, ALL ACCS AOIUMI ra1V111l G.Mtra ~ "" -------------- ® llD OMI 111101~ 17 lDtllMD (Agt 1111111 Ml'f V11Y 111,ll'lllll fl'llJ) •e•·····················•e•• ""DM·-111--___ .,,... . _____ _,_ will be included. w h i c h I ':::=========' represent Shelly's style. · 1- 9: 00 F.U.g U.. -"Abor- tion Laws: Pro and Con" Guests: ROy Lucas, lawyer and ei:ecutive director ol the Muppets Gain Award Jim Henson, known·'Primer' I y as UH! creator of 'J1le ·Mup- pcts for "Seasame Streel, 11 has been honored with the Award for Best Animated Film for a TV Series at the International Festival of Animated Films in Zagreb, Yougoslavia. Henson's one minute, stop motion. abstract film, entitled .. Number Twelve Rocks," was shown on the "Sesame Street" series. r ~****"'*** DllVE·tN SUPEI SWAP MHTS FOi fUll PIOflTI IAICAINS OAlOIEI -nlty & S. .. ey All Doy ' I A.M. to 4 P.M. •t ot••• 111 111 a •"-• ...._ SPECIAL SWAP MflT FRIDAY DEC. 22, 1972 OIAN51 f 2 DRIVl·IN PACIFIC DRIVE-INS 111~ ... 1 .. J ,, .... , •I Lemon SS; S2S.JSH .... 125TAI I POSEIDON ADVENTURE (PGI +"WAI DE~Vl~lS=::;' ll~f.,., I C1pill••,,. 011 .•• ..,, •93-•S•S DON'T MISS Ill ONE Wllll ONlYJ OLIVER (G) + RUN WILD RUN FIH &.!We ltro!Mlld "UI' THI IANDUX,. UIJ -~. G-HllCklNln "'PlllMa CUT" (Ill lmP"'rl•I b•l•'n ':'' l e•<h 81Ylt, .. thrbor 81~d • • 1-1862 TMRll OISNIY MIJS I Ill SNOW IA.ll IX,RlSS (G) (2) AFRICAN UON (GI (3) M.AGIC DISNEY WOil' ...... O,••• StlO & St•rtl •10t .M llncoln A"a, W••I ol Knllll 517·222J. I AIXll T MOVllS X·RA ID VIXEN (X) CHl~RY, HARRY & UQUU . FINDflS Kff Pf RS IX S•nll ,.,.. , ...... , .... , Clupm1n 11.ve. Ha-702:2 TOUTll MAllNlll 11 A.M. {lOM4i4tP.M. "HOSPITAL" (PG) + 11JUZI11 PG ' I . ·- • ' I... . , • ' ·, . • •' ' <f I j • • • • • ,, I Mesans ·Keep Art All in Famil y Art Ls a family aUair for the In the patio a re tml.l8Wll Robert Kushner !amlly, new lurtlo-Uke ICU!ptureo by' Bob, • residents of Costa Mesa. a recent graduate or Muir ' Dorothy Browdy Kus'bner COllege at the University of bas palnted since she was in California, San Diego. -hlgti school and has taught art lf the garage door is opened, • ~ince_ graduation from college. one fi'hd8 still more paintings, I .. Her husband, a retired re.al tor, jammed together in special ~ makes frames for her pictures shelves. Some are Mrs . and stretches the canvasses, Kushner's and some are bf and their son, Bob, is winning other artists. ._ acclaim as an art.LstJnJtls owD D o_r o t b y K u s h n e r • 11 right. acblevements are illustrative An expert printmaker as of the variotl! avenues · a well, Mrs. Kushner lavi.shl.y Woman'.1 career can take, mixes her own prints~ and even a "late blossomer." paintings, which she defines as "I received my . lowest "abStract realifQl," with her marks · In art in elementary extensive collcc~ of antique school," she saidJ "simply •, lurnltu1'. On the walls ol her becauae I · could not copy. ~ home may be found a gallery: became interes_ted in art in ,. of, prints, some bY'. famoWC'" high school and won a gold -arUsts. • ---\ medal in a, slate competition • . • '. .• ·' , " •• , . • • ·: . " • ... ' - The Award Winning Musical Is On The Screen! Exclusive Engagement WtLLIAM DANIELS/HOWARD DA SILVA/KE ~ HOWARD Now At All 3 Theatres ........ c, I .... ......... 111•1• Families like Sunday Package Wbat your family will like about the Suoday DAJL Y PILOT 18 that there'• 10methlng In It l<r ewryooe In the ' . -!'t'..lam111-·--clllor .. coilllcs-~ili0 • ..l8'!ll!1. .. ~ • • l • • •toe, TV WEEK, Siiaday Speolal (stortd.by, ol..llld for_ ~ , lilt Orlllf!e Cout u ooly a DAILY PILOT 0 1lil! 'writer • fl could write, lhe}1') and mucj), mud> more. Take a good _look 1i uie Sundly DAILY PILOT. You lllilJ'De mlasln1 aomell>Jns. I • Fri~. Decrmbtf 22, 1972 OAIL V PILOT' %7 Nation • Ill Love With Arts DOROTHY KUSHNER AT WORK for high school students." teacher," she explains. ' NE W YORK (UPI) -More e Less venturesome pro-tlonal I o u r i ng companies. Americans spent more µme graming by most 11yn1phooy which in the past set stan· and money on the art! lJ'I um orchestras and opera com· dards of excellence for Joc11l than ever before and the trend panies who are playing it safe. theater aclivity across the This leaves performances of country. A recent Broadway is likely to continue in Im much contemJXlrary music to mu sical nop cost J860,000. unlesa there is runaway in-the universities, w h l ch e A cutback of $3.6 m illion flstlon. already are the center of in financially troubled New "The arts are in the midst dance activity. A professional Yor" State's budget Co r ol a populisUc movement," symphony concert can cosl up nurturing the arts. to $7.000, a new opera costs Neverlheless, , artistic ac· slates the annual report of the $150,001 or more to mount. t n t vily is ourishing, especially -American A'!sociation of Fund e Shortened hours and even at the level that permits Raising Counsel . ''This means rotational closing of galleries heallhy amateur participation. more exposure to the perform-at some museums, fewer Private funding by individuals~ ing arll, more attendance-at traveling show:; and new ex-f o u n d a lions, professional museums, and more pro-hibitions, hence less chance associations and business - blems." fo r contemporary artists to be nearly $900 million in 1972 - Inflation is the biggest displayed. pays most of the bill, and cies ttlan evt'r before S la t e legislatures ap- propriated $22 n1itlion lo their State Arts Cuuncil'I, which support thl' arts at the com· mun1ty level, Jn the i!l72 fiscal year. New York Slale accounted for a whopping $14 mlllion of this. The councils are planning to as k for $45 million in 1973. Congress ha s funded the National Foundation for the Arts to the tune of $38.Z million for fJscal '73, about a sixth of it marked for support of state arts councils. Federal subsidy of cultural enterprises, long the rule in Europe, is pere to stay in the United States. She attended Kan.'18S City She also is noted as a juror, Teachers College, earhed her having recenUy been asked to masters degree in fine arts serve the California Water from Columbia University, at-Color Society, to which she tended Kansas City Ar t --belongs, as.a judge. threat to the nation's current •Fewer plays and musicals· there is greater financial aid love affair wllh the arts. The on Broadway and fewer na-fro1n federal and slate agen- spiralling c:osts of presenling·1 --------~~----------------------­ Institute, C h i c a go Art Moving from her studio in a Institute and the Art Students barn at her fann home in L~gue of New York, where Arcadia was one of Mrs. she studied with Reginald Kushner's most difficult tasks Marsh. in life. The atmosphere, th e " While teaching in public freedom to move around and schools, f r o m elementary the ample storage will ne ver grades to college, M rs ._ be l'ilplaced, she lamented. Kushner did no painting at Why does Mrs. Kushner home. When sbe married, think teaching art is an im· there was "a void that bad to portant profession? And why be fill~." so she turned to is art important? palntinf again. "Without art the world She finds lime lo paint and would be drab, cold, colorless be a homemaker by "cutting a and meaningless. Art gi ves lot of comers," she noted. meaning to our everyday life. Her point of departure for "We may like many forms her prints, watercolors, oils of art, but it does not and acrylics i! nature in vary· necessarily mean we would ing fonn. like to live with them." "I love flowers, rainy days Arcadia's loss is Orange windswept fields, early mom-County's gain, thanks to the ing, the brilliance of sunlight, Kushners' desire to leave the birds in flight, quietness and inland smog. blossoming trees." And-yes, Mrs. Kushner does Mrs. Kushner still loves give tours of her art gallery. teaching as much as paintiM, The admission price is a though she has no plans 'to warm smile, a neighborly r e t u r n to the classroom. greeting. And a genuine love "Once a teacher, always a for art. symphony concerts and dance performances, or maintinaing museums and performing arts centers, and of staging plays and operas already h a a · resulted \n : R esidents On Television Orange C o a s t residents, some members of St . Andrew's Pr es b y terian Church, Newport Beach will appear in concert at 9 a.m. Sunday on KABC, Channel 7. Members of the I ct h us singing group and sonshine, both of Newport Beach, will appear in "Born to Give Us Second Birth," a Christmas musical. Kim Strutt, youth minister . at the Newport Beach church, wrote the musical along with John Styll and Rich Kredel. It was produced by Master Productions of Costa Mesa, nonprofit tape ministry . ·- ' 2ndALL· . Walt Disney FEATURE DEAN NANCY HARRY KEEMAN GEORGE JONES • DI.SON· MORGAN·· WYNN • LINSEY .. _ ....... e:~·:::.:=a:: i~DI" . ' . ·~w· .... a: .... ~ ..... ·.~::.···. ; of a.~w-sneyWorld ;.;'.'!."':: 'Pf us This Walt Disney Featurette '·············~················ j ) . NOW SHOWING . At All 3 Edwards Ci nem.S ·Matin~ Daily CO·HITI "WAR DEVILS" -_...., f\AZAll DARY ... '-Gttac Holiday Fun !.ol).lo20-.S.~ 10t Is • l EVE McQUEDl/AU Modlltt.W ',jH[ Cl fAWAr .i. '" ,1 M!~:s ··~· ·,·,\:. ·• ' SALlJ Sllt\flt;EM :.;.··1 '!Jl.'1· r< ~· r ... ,~ A• f·• ,\II! If If ~ t'll._.,,f ··of.,_~ .~ ,. "'..._ ;.o1,10::,1f~-BIO\l'l''Rt'O.IC:l~YI '··.-OU<T'.)~• .1.c •• ,.... .. 1• '. ;r,·Y.V";-~'"' ,_,,., ,, • I'.,,,., "J.\ GE',•-'"-~If'·."\". l>!.U'- NOW PLAYING '.' •,, .·~,. \ •• ' _"\_. ·r •>'II .,,-,.,. -' •'. ' .. ",\. ®IPGJ ~'~':'".P l ATAUJ TMEATIES PALl NlWMAN In"'-ffm" ARTISTS P'roctudbl A Dfl 1-USlON «n 'iHf UfE AND lMS ~ .A:JOGE RO't' QEAN" GI.-Stars ~ 8SSET • TM 1-fJNTER • JCttN HUSTON • ST ACf KEACH • ROODY MQCO.\IAU AH'Tt-«:M' PERKINS • VCTOftlA PRIHOPAI. • ANTHONY ZER8E ltld AVA GAAtf.l£R a~~ ,_..CorflPOMd911d Ccriduettd !Jlf~ .IA.AAE • Soro "MamlllllPI, ~_. ~ l"rC-S bv MARllYN ll'ld BE1".iMAN • $ulQ bl/ /tiolfJ'f WlLIAMS • An OrrgNJ ~ bw .QiN_ M:WS . ~ tw Atil""""'"i ~ byXlHN HUSTON. PANAVl$(:>N9 · rccHNt.:cwRe ANltiOl'lllO....Pld!AIR-..S IHw M?: w,..,.. !!no m . MOillilltana s~QillT&ii m 1 [PG l"":Ut.~-:-1 SHOWING NOW ATAU.3SELECTEDTHEATRES • • • • . . .. . ····•··········· •········ ....... c .. •~110 ·' ·~~·· • • ••• eo•t• "•• • ... ., ••• •- GRE.AIHOU~l.NMENT_ ~. . ' ' i . . 28 DAIL V PILOT WHAT TO DO 'Travelers' View Russia A winterUJne Leningrad , Moscow 's hl.stortc sites and modern bulldlngs and a boat trip across the Black Sea will be shown in Dick Reddy's travel film, "Russia." 8 p.m. Jan. 5 at the Orange Coast College Auditorium, 2701 Falrtlew Road, Cotsta Mesa. Tickets at the door or from the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club wUl be $2 tor adults and $1 for students. Harbor Boat Parade Ends Saturday Night The film will be screened at DEC. 22 • 23 BOAT PARADE -Ne\\'port Haribor Festiva l of Llghls par- ade, sponsored by the Newport Beach Chamtx>r of Com- merce. Caravan of boats begins <.·ruising harbor at 6:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday nights. Approximate timl'S or arrival: Reuben E. LA.oe restaurant, ti :55 p.n1 .: J\lariners !\tile restaurants, 7 p.m.: Lido Isle Yacht Club. 7·30 p.m. Balboa Pavilion. 8:25 p.m. and out into the harbor l'ntrancc, returning to Balboa Island at 9: 15 p.m. DEC. %3 CHRJSTMAS CONCERT -Free Christmas music concert at the pavilion, Los Angeles l\1usic Center from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. (Live on Channel 28L DEC. 23 ''THE NUTCRACKER" -The Los Angeles Junior Ballet Company presents "The Nutcracker'' in the Wilshirt> Theater, Los Angeles. at 2 p. m. I>EC. 24 LUMINARIAS -Galaxy Drive. Newport Beach, Newport residents along Galaxy Drive do their aMual Christmas Eve thing-light up their homes in the Albuquerque. New P.·lexico tradition. Candles placed in paper bags. filled with sand, light the way for the Christ Child. THROUGH DEC. 22 LAS POSADAS -Olvera Slreet, Los Angeles. Religious custom portrays the journey or Mary and Joseph into Bethlehem. Celebration concludes with traditional breaking ol pinal.as. THROUGH DECEMBER APPLE HARVEST -Oak Glen 's Annual Fall Frolic In Riverside Count y. A visitor's shopping center (c ider, apple pies, cheese. old-fashioned candies, homemade pastries). Two . zoos, two trout-fishing ponds. miniature gold mine, nature walks and picnic grounds. Located north on Beau- mont Avenue. from Beaumont. or north on Oak Glen Road from Yucaipa. THROUGH DEC. 24 FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS -Outdoor entertainment will be presented through Dec. 24 with daily presentations from 11 :30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. in the Music Center Plaza and,f..os Angeles County Mall. DEC. 30 - 31 FREE RIDES -Landsailing. sponsored by American L..and- sailing Organization, takes place Saturday and Sunday at Mile Square Park, Brookhurst and Edinger. Fountain Valley. Free rides. 54~045 for information. ·DEC. 31· PUBLIC DANCE -tvlusic Made Famous by Glenn Miller, played by Tex Beneke and Band, featuring Ray Eberle and The Modernaires and Paula Kell y, Anaheim Convention Center arena and grand lobby. JAN. I ROSE PARADE -84th Annual Tournament of Roses Pa- rade. Colorado Blvd .• Pasadena. 8:30 a.m. Grand Marsha] Actor John \Yayne leads the parade of 60 floats, 21 bands and equestrian units. Parade, this year, highlights the theme ·'Movie Memories." JAN. t SKI SHOW -New Year's Day Ski Fest. Mission Bay, San Diego. Annual water ski exhibition. JAN. S Fll.M SERIES -Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Olsta t\1csa. Friday night film series in the J~orum. $1 admission: "Death in Venice," J an 5; "The Devils," Jan. 12; "Sweet Swectback's Song," Jan. 19, and "The Leatning Tree." Feb. 9. JAi\'. 5 FILM SERIES ON ART -"Museum \Vithout Walls," series of films on Picasso, Goya , Giotto, Le Corbusier and others, sponsored by School of Fin.e Arts Committee for Arts. Sci· tnce Lecture Hall, 8 p.m. Fridays, Jan. 5, 12, 19 and 26 and Feb. 2. Series tickets $10, single-ad mission tickets $2.50. For information call Fine Arts Box Office (714) 833-Qil7. , J . ~ • •I • • .. ,~. Excllnlwt Ot-11191 C1uftty Rewrweil SN! 1E1191191111111t. Ptlll~ O'Toolll -Sopi!ll Llren "HIAN OF LA MANCHA" IEXClullff 1Entaotmtlll NIW NG R-rvMI 59111 Winner of J Audemy Aw1n1' "l"IDDL£R ON TNE ROOF" .,. Witt Olsn"'' "SNOWBALL IEXPAIESS" • "AFRICAN LION" H$0UNDER" ... "IENIEATH THE PLANET OF THE APIES" "JUDGE ROY iaE.t.N" ... "THIE REVENGERS" "PETE 'N TILLlli" ... "PLAY IT AGAIN, $AHi" DEAN NANCY HARRY KEENAN GEORGE JONES • OLSON • MORGAN • WYNN • LINDSEY ........... DOM TAIT ~flll JIM PARKER & ARNOLD MARGOLIN ''"'',':".::' .. i .. ~:",'!",.'""" -.~RON Mll'\.ER '""'~:NORMAN IOKAR l(CHlllCll.OR • 1G .~!!'!"" .. _] .. ~ ........... "'" ~ ......... ,.. ,. ""' '"" ...... _, ··-- •• • • ~rufil• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• •. The I w ltfi:i\. w rid IO,•• '• ~ a w•sney o ~'."> ...... ·-·-· .. ._. . . .. _._.......,."' ........ _ --......~ ... ~-·-JJ --c:----...1 THlltO Disney l'EATURl!I j . . AFRICAN LION JAN. & -14 TRAVEL SHOW -8th Annual Southern California Spor-Js, Vacation and Recreational Vehicle Sbow. Convention Center, Anaheim. Admission St.25 adults, children 6-12 SL H. Werner Ruck show featuring recreational vehicles. travel and vaca- tion ideas. Sunset A-lagazine Travel Film Festival, entertain- n1ent. JAN.6 CHORALE CONCERT -Coast Community Symphony Or~ chestra will perform in Orange COast College Auditorium al 8 p.m. Orchestra, soloists and choir will perform "Beatus Vir" by Vivaldi and "Magnificat in D" by Bach. Admission $1.50. JAN. I TREE BURNlNG -Annual Christmas Tree burning spon- sored by the Newport Beach Parks and Recreation Dept. takes Place at 7 p.m. S~turday at Newport Pier, Corona del Mar State Beach, Oceanfroot at Orange Avenue in West Newport, 16th Slreet and Dover Drive, Jamboree Road and Santa Barbara. Children turning in trees will receive a ticket for prizes. Ca ll the fire department for informa!ion . 673-1315. THROUGH jAN, 6 LAS POSADAS -Padua Hills Theater, Claremont. Annual presentation of CbriMnas in Mexico. Hours: 8:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Satl.itdays ; 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, Saturday and Swlday. Reservations (714) 626-1288. JAN. 10 DANCE SERIES -Serie5 of films and lectures on dance presented by Olga Maynard, lecturer in fine arts, sponsored by Sch®! of Fine Arts Committee for Arts. Fine Arts Vil- lage Theatre, nooo to 1 p.m. Wednesdays, Jan. 10, 17, 24 . and 31. FEB. II ORGAN CONCERT -Organist Tom Harmon presenting prOgram under sponson>hip of School of Fine Arts Committee for Arts. Village Concert Hall, 8 p.m. Feb. 11. Admission $1. JAN. 12 • 13 DRAMA WORKSHOP -''How to Become President" with UCI students helping playwright Ian Bernard, UCI lecturer in Cine arts, construct play. Fine Arts Village Studio Theatre, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Admission 50 cents. JAN. 14 SYMPHONY CONCERT -Concert for the New Year'will be conducted by David Anthony, at 4 p.m. in the Community Theater, Golden West College. Admission $1. • JAN. 16 COMMUNITY LECTURE SERIES -"The Challenge of Ra- cia l and Ethnic Differeiices Around the World," series of free lectures by UCJ faculty in the humanities and social sciences presented under sponsorship of UCT Alumni Associa- tloo. Social Science Hall, 8 p.m. Tue.days, Jan. 16, 23, 30 aod Feb. 6 and LI. Admissioo tr.e. JAN. 18 NOW AT POPULAR PRICES!! DANCERS -Jose Limon Dance Company presents a lec- tw'e-demonstratlon ln dance at 8:30 p.m. Admission, Sl. Qr. ange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. JAN, %l CHORAL CONCERT -CX:C Chorale and Chamber Singers """""! a miclwinl« coocert directed by Richard M. Raub at 8 p.m. in Uie auditorium. Eighty voices singing selections by Brahams, Lupo, Bancbieri, WoU and Berger. Admission rree. • · JAN. 11-!0 DANCE CONCERT -Program produced by graduate stu- dents in dance. Fine Arts Village Studio 'Ibeatre, 8 p.m. Fri· day and Saturday, Jan. 19 and 20. Admission $1 . JAN. Z3-U EXPERIMENTAL TREATER -Two productions and work· sOOp presented by Space Re(v)action Company, Italian avant garde ~ter group under direct.ion or Giancarlo Nanni, sponsored by School of Fine Arts Committee Cor Arts. "A ts for Alice," Jan. 23 at 8 p.m. in Fine Arts Village Theatre. "Spring's Awakening," Jan. 24 at 8 p.m. in Village Theatre. Admissiro each production, $3. Free workshop directed by Nanni, Village Theatre, 1-4 p.m. Jan. 24. Foe infonnatioo call UC! Fine Arts Box Office 83J.6617. To Life! on the screen THROUGH JAN. ZS NOW!' SOUL MUSICAL-"Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope" at Hun-At2Ttiutr.I y ' • wtNNlRI 3=' tingt.on Hartford Theatre, Hollywood. Performances Tues-~I~~ days through Saturdays at 8:30~~p~.m~ .. ~S~un~d~a~y~s~a~t~7~'~30~p.~m~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Matinees on Saturday and SWlday at 2:30 p.m. For ticket in- formation , call (213) 626-5051. Kii·hy Busy HOLLYWOOD (UPl)--ln a whirlwind or promotion for his syndicated comedy s h o w George Kirby appeared on "Love. American Style," "The Bill Cosby Show," "The Merv Griffin Show," ''Din ah' s Place," "I've Got a Secret" and "The Johnny Carson Tonight Show." EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT PeterOToole. Sophia Loren and James f.oco dreamlhe Impossible Dreani in an Arthur Hillerfllm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~- .. Man of~· ID Mancha" Live Theater "Mr. Popper's Penguilll" A cbfldren's play for the Christmas holidays is being perfonned by the Fountain Valley Community Theater, 18280 Mt. Baldy Circle. Foun· lai n Valley. Curtain is 2 p.m. today and Saturday, as well as Dec. 27-29, Jan. 5-7 and 12-14, with evening performances at 7:30 Jan. 5 and 12. Reserva- tions 968-9663. ,. "' ANTHONY QUINN YAPHETKOTIO "TERRIFYING AND ONE OF THE BEST SUSPENSE MOVIES OF THE YEAR.'.~"" .s.nt:. An• Ffwy. rw1rChtip111111"1 0"8nll• • 558-7022 CO-HIT! FRE(IZY (R) . --------i ~ SOUTH COAST I lifll CIN EMA! EXTRA! DARE DEVILS SHOWING NOW! "" ANTff ONY FRANCIOSA -. Ntc:k D'S.I.,.~ Produ«d-by R,t,W>H 3£RPE .rw:t fOUAO S,t,10 e-..cuttw" ~ ANTHONY QUINN tind !:JARRY SHF.AR ~v trv_L11Tfi£.R.PAVIS _Dtttd uPonJbf~~WAU.Y Ff;R_RI§ _!)irtatd byBARR"'.!lH~ _ .,,w_ I Atli,.MGUA•Antlfl• IPI, ~ li.....-.1 .-........... -=·O "'"•_,..,..,. _....., --~·-I COlOI ORANGE CO ·HIT SOPERBEAST (R) 'LAZ) "I CO-Hill HICKEY & BOGGS. ~~i>Al •'fOI<'; "lj l .. 1 i ,..,.,..-..,: Jl\MES COCO ·HARRY ANDRt.WS · .KlHN CASTLE · f'mt.111 n:hlool i'T ARI HL!R H1ll[R • e..i111t•..&:a:~ -v. a:1,1r.uu • .- "Nlf"r DAL~ WASSER!~AN i<al'~111m1•&sbf!IA!. -·~"""n•toi MllCH U;GH · 11'U1:tlllot>iol'\l"""toi.K'1: OAAION 1.<~•~>t.f.D';'.l!rl'Oi~l .-: · Pu1.tail• .. ~-lll'IUOOW.!IUIJ!.il1W.j!O(S • i-~Al.11[/110~ ~f'I"""' ~IR D1olf1.l:j · lbl:n;ioid..t~to,1Joi.l19£fmlllllll • ~!JrflllllL'l llW • •l'U-~~-ll!Jlll:'UI IPGl~-~"'."'!"~ ~11)10l<Y:IR.IO.MllRl(llilUl.f.IJl\llfllllll!IS1~1l'Dl'~"'Ml Undlll ...... ·--.. --.. ·--"!!' E'.': -T =~ TODAY AT l :M -4:)8 -1•1111 P.M. TOMORROW AT I :• -l :ot P.M. SOX Of'FICI OPE" DAILY 11 TO t &<;ltl:S OF FRIE!" PARKING What did happen on the Cahulawassee River? A JOHN BOOllMAN FILM S<Jnoo JON VOIGHT · BURT REYNOLDS m "DELIVERANCE"· C<>S..rm NED BEATTY f()NNY COX • ~ by James Dcii:ey Basecl on h\S newel · PrOClucecl art! Direc!OO by Jctrn Boorman: PANAVISON: Ttctt41COCOA•·Ft'()'n ~net arcs . A. warrer Co'nnvllCilllOl'S Canimv 0 ..::~ ... =~t- &DWAROa HARBOR Al ..... k'tt. Al WU011 ti, Hiirb&r Bowl...-d,,.. Mc1'1drl9l'I , $8flt• A,., 931.121, -· ZAii • ... =.= ., ••• HOLIDAY MATINEES AT HARBOR # 1 and CINEMA WEST # 1 Lincoln A_._ w. of knon Bu.n• P11'k • 527·2223 A SE WI~ f ~' ·~ ••• •• •.,.· . . .~ .. SH TD ACR '1 Tabl 6 Asb 10 Mitd 14 Torn 15 Balle sec11 16 "I CB 17 Exce avar1 19 Gain '"' 20 Asia coun old 21 Set f 23 Fello 25 Ani ~ Gi.,.e whirl 27 ·--of 29 Gree lette1 31 Kno 33 Labo 34 We11 36 Coin 40 Cuti Ieng I 42 ..... mllli "' « Ple11 45 Kind pie tu 47 The Sien 49 St11f Abbr 50 Man' nick " )1 DAILY PILOT AMBLER ~'l'UMBLEWEEDS ' • :·FIGMENTS - Frld'1. O.C.mbtr 22, 1972 ._v, lltAfrWv. ocac 1'NE )C)ilTHOU51/ Tue:~ aAYS NtS GIWI. 19 IH THfRll MIG If OAITI ISN''l"fllAi A ~li ... UI!... UNtfsUAL FOfl A GflOWN MAA1 ve!'U'1Y1 OH,!'D LWE TO SH7:,~'(NG t'::i"'7 SEE ~~:i:T~H~A~T.~ OLD':'i1~E MOVIE IMAGINE·- FORTY YEARS Ol.D 40 YE'ARS OLD TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS ·1 Table··-·· 6 As blind It 10 Mild oath 14 Torn apart 15 Ballet sect1on 16 "1 c11nnot tell 17 Excessivaty 8VilflCiOUS 19 Gainer, !or 000 20 Asien country of old 21 Set free 23 Fellows 25 Animal 26 Giv11 ita wh•rl 27 ·-·of nerves 29 Gr11elc lelters 31 Knock 33 Labororg. 34 Weeoon 36 Coins .W Cui in10 l11ngths 42 ..... -• million yearsl" 44 Pleasant 45 Kind ot picture 47 The sticks: Slang .. 9 StatO(: Abbr. 50 Man's nickname • .. 11 52 Tanner's flW material 53 D1unkard 54 T e11. football power 57 Payd1rt 59 Soll mud 61 Active place1: Informal 64 Pierce 67 Not In favo1 or 68 Go~ernment report: 2 WOldS 70 Nourish 71 Treaty group: Abbr. 72 Paradise• 73 Wheel part: ••• 74 Winter precipitation 75 Thick DOWN 1 Fall 2 lnsect1' home 3 fl enk -4. Much to th• pqint 5 Energy producets 8 ~Id 7 South African 8 Found the sum of 9 US president 10 Family mem~r: Informal . Ynterdav's Punle SoMtd: 11 Learllng: 43 Faminine Nau!. nicltl'laf'!'le 12 W11e1cours. 46 Kiod of deck 13 In want 48 Prtrpleaed 18 Chair maker's fi1 Cleveland materiel teim· 22 "I didn't 14 AlttomobHe ruMze that! .. 55 4tn of.the 24 FOOtWoer realm hem 56 Pf0ft0\tf'M)9 V Wllo'the y "--,, ' ~ ~~.bjish: 2 WOfdl 32 Ftst9nlf 35 Al\Q8f1. frome.. -t 60 G1rdtn«'s i;- IOOI 62 PartoftM body 63 Fdod: 37 Oefe1mlK:I P1elix 38 01.11e1: 66 Optometriet'a Prefix , · 'Product 39 Theat•runit 66 Qlefic 41 Gi11: . · le11guage lntormat 69 Oraw behind' t' PEAMllTS MISS PEACH by Tom K. Ryan . • by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ef'\11•' l!lfsltmiller YOU .t<N°O'w WHAT1 .J THINKTHIS . POPCORN IS FORTY' YEARS .OLD, TOO ' PMONE ANO ELEClillar.Y TUMNEO Os:F,M.Y SON MISSING, TME RA010 BATTERY .-<TOQ a:><.AAUSTeO "TO EN GET 6UU£TlNS- DOOLEY'S WORLD by Ro9 e1 Bradfield H GORDO MOON MULLINS • ® -ol go/ti. wnkincensc and myrrh. " ~.....,----.,,,--.., WATCH IT, EMMY·· COMIN' 'TH~O~. ..• AAP ,f\'(1 Ol:,R£Sl'F(·r .. ~II '. B UT I AEALLY /JI/I,'/.." /ll vrr .4 1o r ,-.1, "J..'f USl ( t:r ,)/ Fllr IC: _<:;.V'f]L .\ by Gus Ar~iola - by Ferd Johnson SO, WHAT CAN )bu EXPECT WITH PL/"STIC MISTLETOE 'f' ' ANIMAL . CRACKERS by Ro9er Bollen e 0 • • 100 BAD~"'~ OF il!llJ AIJD~.IUIU... IS 60 SllORT'·LM!D .' H~VE <iOO EVER 'C!TOOD I~ /J. GIFT· i:l<c~AAJ6'! "~E ?' ... lll@l;' IJ/l.C . n-,...~l'l·ta l.!!1.l.!b:;;;dl.!.JL!..1..J il:i/ .I by Mell e>oes IT-A Por1NCIFMI. HA~ MOICli 1Ce1P!CT FOi( )!)14, Oil. l.11S lllliSPecr; w ... EN i.e CALL~ YOW •Y YOUll' G-liNel/C/G N.AMI!' r • \ "Now, dear, don't forget to pul SSO into this l'ilorlJng before I hang It oo the tree -that's my Christmas present to you," DENNIS THE MENACE ' I ' 1-===-i i 't(tr SIOSE HIS REINDEER RUN IN10 nlE TV 0 AERlAL ,CP.. Ruff 'llflNKS H6~ A 6UIWR Nf8fJFS HIM,OR .... • I ·' i 30 DAILY PILOT Pro11d Parents Tiilie (Carol Burnell) and Peter (Walter Mat· thaul are ecstatically nappy with their son in a scene from "Pete 'N' Tillie' now playing at area theaters. The comedy • drama a l s o stars GeraJdine Page. Barry Nelson and Rene Auberjonois. In LOve • FrldiJ , Dtctmbfr 22, 1972 Peter OToole and Petula Clark star in a color f ilm version of the J ames Hilton classic story of a gentle schoolmaster, "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" on the "Tqe CBS Friday Night Mov- ies" at 9 p.m. tonight on Channel 2. Richard Will Star As Cyrano Rlcbiir<I Clunnberlaln wj1l star In the -tlUe role of_ F.d· mood Rostand's play, "(qrano De Beraerac" at t he Ahmanson · 'ltleater, Lo a ~eles Music Center, · Chamberlain, wbo stfred in last year's CI'G-Abmanson production of "Richard Il," went on to the Eisenhower Theatre of the John F. Ken- nedy Center of the Performing Arts. For his performance in the role. Time Magazine call- ed him "America's finest classical actor." This past swnmer he receiv· ed glowing reviews from England's most distinguished critics when he portrayed the soldier in Christopher Fry's "The Lady's Not For Burn- ing" at the Chiches ter Festival Theatre, where ·be was the only American ever to' play in what is considered one of England's most prestigious theatres. Walter Mattllal"-:> Carol -·-Bumett iu------- [ "l)ete1tt'nllie"] ---All about love . t-. . and marriage! . -."'* r. Wibns .~ ... ,,_...; __ Julltsl[pstein ~ ~ ---.._-,__.PeterDeVnes . -..... Martin Ritt--...;...,Jellnial5Lft' A~ Ritt·MMJ.£,1.rtti Produclioll fiiiiiJ ·--·--· l!::!!J .AJ. L.19-Q.ONL.Y Mati... ... llwWl!f S@llday Top E ventsJ-.-liiliiiiiiliiliiiiiiliiliiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~=====sl At Center "SOUNDER~ In January a most unusual motion picture premieres today M .... •hanso,ooo perSO!li are This is how it was received by the nation's critics. expected to attend the sixth annual Sports ar'id Vacat!Qn Show and Recreational Vehicle Exhibition at the Anaheim Convention Center during its lo-day run begiMing Jan. 5. Other events taklng place at the Conventkln Center throughout January include music concerts. roller games and a SJX>rts clincic. On display will be the latest line in recreation vehi cles, in· eluding campers, trailers and camping equipment. Doors will be open 2 to 10 p.m. Mon. day through Thuraday; 1 to 11 p.m., Fridays; noon to 11 p.m.., Saturdays; and noon to 8 p.m. on Sundays through Jan. 14. Two music events schedu1ed during the month include the "World Vision International Korean Children's Choir" con- cert. Jan. 23, and ''Traffic In Concert" the following eve- ning, Jan. 2-4, beginning al 7:30 p.m. In the Arena. Roller games, featuring the Los Angeles T-Birds provide the month's sports action on Jan 25, and Jan. 31, beginning at 8 p.m. Conventions ·• utilizi ng the huge cOmpiex during the month1 include the Western Agriculture Chemical Aslin. on Jan. 18, the Nationa l Health Federation's a n n u a I con. vmtJon and exhibition Jan. JS. 21 and the two-day meeting of the Int.ernltlonal AMociation of Cancer Victims a n d Friends, Jan. 21-22. A tW<><lay confab of the Epllcopol Diocese of Los ~ will be staged Jan. 26 a 27, !allowed by an "All ~ aJD1<" on Jan. 21·2! "'SOUNDER' IS A MISSING CHAPTER FROM 'THE GRAPES OF WRATH' AND OF EQUAL STATURE:' The slory ol a lamlly re1allonship, lhe commitment between man and wile, ol the unspoken, roota.d 'underslandlng belween lather and son. Cicely Tyson, most exquisite ol actresses, Is a righteous warrior of Inner tire. She is superbly complemented by Paul Wlnlleld a large, stalwart man of courage -and tem· pered justice. Hereby our nominations for their Oscars." ' •• ,IT WILL MOVE AUDIENCES -MOVE THEM TRULY, THAT IS -AS FEW FILMS EVER HAVE. The periormers.are wonderiul ••. this slory ol nslllence and triumph Is the birth ol black consciousness on the screen." -PAULI~ KAEL New Yorker M°ligazlne "'SOUNDER' IS A MUST. tt hll the shining light ol a beatt1ilul love story." -LIZ SMITH, Cosmopolitan • -JUDITH CRIST,. NBC-TV "A TERRIFICALLY MOVING EXPERIENCE. Full ol para· dftll, ll l11lonce heart· bre1klng 1nd comic, ugering and n1uunng. 11 emulates Ille past 10 cl1rity ind guide 1111 pr11ent." -CHARLES CHAMPLJN Los Angeles Times • "THE FILM IS A RARITY. A• MOVIE THE WHOLE FAMILY CAN ENJOY." -Ebony Magazine "AT LAST, A COMPASSIONATE AND LOVING FILM ABOUT BEING BLACK IN AMERICA. It manages as no olher movie hat done to take the spacial pride and trial of being black and work II Into an experience Iha! can be ·shared and felt by anyone." -J>.Y COCKS, Time Magazine __.---- ..,.flun•t• / MAJTEL Prod-UOnl 51•11 ~ • ~~~~~!!~ , , TODAY o-+---P· ml U.-y meeting or the -~ iVTomorrow;oii . ' _., Include 1n .... ,,..c 1cELY TYSON' PAUL WINFIELD' K~VIN~OOKS ·~·-""'AJ MAHAL· JAN~T!.\ACLACHLAN prOduC«I ~ROBERT Q. RAONITZ·dlrlC1e<I DJMAATINl UTT· screenpiry l)yl.ONNE'ELOER, 111· bllec!on lhe Newbery AwarrJ ~ N<Mlltiy WILLIAM H;-AAMSTAONG · 90l"IQ~!'ld music ~ TAJ MAHAL· it~SION•·COL009YoE-lWtE• • • a 4'1': -Una of the Girt .... Of Orinao COunty and !!!' ......., dliwr "" Ille := I te _.,., Scoutl o ' • t .. LIST · MUIUTE 81111 VIIUES! . I COMPLl:l'E UNDERDOG SYSTEM 8SANVCJ'. ,AA!/FM STEREO RECEIVER WJTH 8 TRACK • 214 CHANNEL SYSiJ'EM SA'NYO OXl.-5480 AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER/8-TRACK 2 a.nd 4 OfANNEt MUSIC SYSTEM -Switchin1 from 2 channel to 4 channel opet-ation i1 accomplished auto- matically when 8-track ·a.rtridge is in1erted. Also, tbis unit ls incorporated with a synthe$izer 10 en;11ble _4-channel listening enjoyment from 2-channel sttrto, SOQrtt with the addition of ;11n optional re;11r amplifier. Comn wilh two hln- r.i.nge 1peakers. Record CMnger can be added. Reg/Ust "17'0 . $149.ol! . · I · , ' ! ·-... • ~ -t ... AM/FM STEREO DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO WITH .8'TRA91C ~ r ~· -. .ST~Eq,TAP~.µYER 1i" ~.. ~Prorin~n~Space Ag ·DIGITAL • ir I':· -'STE~O CLOCK RADIO that wakes REG/LIST .· $199.90 • *11798 l ~ u ~h a bu~ or FM Stereo ot • -JI Tt~ Pl~~rtOlfilal Clock shows ~ ~ f weelf.:ste:~ light indiaitor, sep.arate treble, bue and lalance sliding controls, headphone Jade. Complete with two 5" SpNken and h!S pfovision for Record ChM!ger. (BRING THIS AD FOR FREE STEREO HEADPHONES WITH PURCHASE OF THE ABOVE UNITI) 8 TRAGKSTEREO TAPE PLA,Y.ER DECK fWlll.UPGRADEANY SYSTEM) ... An 1111111'1111 ~ Ideal Gift 9ao REG/UST$49.9~. • -• • A fullywammteecl Brand Name product REG/LIST $549.95 *2-97 I :: -. o,...,..,.. • ®PIONEER' QX-8000 The Quadraphonic Receiver A sil'l.Ble unit, all encompasslng180 w<1.tl ·receiver fo1 the cre~tion of a living presence, FOUR chann el sound fi eld. · . ' Put your l'lnd tot ether between thne two full range dynamtc •Pffken 1nd find out wher9 yout. ,,...,.., , • l~dltldu:d Volume eontrolt • Colle:d &;frd " t ~ • Paddedf1~ Rog/List $687 $19.95 ' ' . Automatic ~ dl<1.ngerwi1h Anti..sk<1.ting, damped cueing , " ~nd Base. • • 1°-•MiG SPEAKER "Twcnvay·spearer System REG/LtST *"&ID $39.95 •• . , I DAIL V PILOT 31 • • •• DICK WILSON SAYS: .. 'BRAND NEW FORD COURIER 1/2 TON PICKUP - £.j 1 --:;3Ju'->" (SG T AMC231!'Y6) -· • .-..fl,~ IMMEDIATE · • '-· • -· • 7 . DELIYHT UMDID LOADID WITtl UTUI v .. , foi;tory air, "411•• bv,.._r ;-.,.,. redlo, wh••I cov•n., bolt~ w'/1 tlr11, tint.cl gla ... CNi..+fflO!ic fl'oflaft'lilllor\. ~Ill'. Ond bfvkM, "5nyi lnfloriar, {3163Hl26991) IMMEDIATE DUIYEIT FULL PRICE :, '73 MUSTANG $· All NEW $. FASTBACK '73 LTD ;~7~EW RANCHERO 500 A 302 C:IO V-1, S1l.c:1·1hlff, crui. .. ,. ·~ mallc: ll'an1ml11lon., boft.d tlr11, d• , luxo bvmpor grp. OIOflt YOUIS 'NOW. FULL PRICI· . • • DECEMBER IS THE TIME TO BUY AT ••• WILSON FORD . . . BUY A CH 'RISTMAS PRESENT FOR THE FAMILY AND ENJOY IT THE ENTIRE YEAR TAKE YOUR CHOICE 1966 VOLKSWAGEN BUG LICENSE NUMBER UDZ924 1970 SIMCA STATION WAGON ' Serial No. 3'10522F 1968.FIAT SP·YDER . LICENSE NUMBER XCF 883 1969 OPEL KADETT LICENSE NUMBER YXF152 1968 DATSUN 1600 License No. XCP313 YOUR$ CHOICE · CHEV. PKlaP I' FIHliidt. lictnH No. Sf8610 '67 FULL PRICE '72 ~~ .... hHtt" low ~11·~·$1788 (75'Z EAEl TOYOTA '70 MAllllWAION $1288 Aul•. tr•ns., air candit1onin1. radio, heat1r, wh it1wall tir11. Llc111s1 NI. 1718QG '71 ~~:~---~~$1288 ("'10W166409) BRAND NEW FORD COURIER 1 /2 TON PICKUP WITH A NIW LITE LINE CAMPER SHELL Complete Package IMMIDATE DILIYIRT (5GTAMC2J712) $299TOTAL ...... S2429.a5 i1 It.. total c~nh pric1 NI. $ PER la• & lie. Defe,.ed pric" $3032.60 incl. lo• liC &. all linonc1 charges far MONTH "8. months an approved credit. API! 12.78% BRAND NEW '73 FORD F250 S60 VB, 6900GVW Ply;i ., knl!led vinyl trim, 1:dr1 1aaling radiator, pcwer di.c brakea, 3/4 TOllP.lCIUP WITHA BRAND NEW CROSS COUNTRT I ' DUUllCAI OVll CAMPfl 7 FT Perris Valley CAI OVll UMPll S..,..., Wnk. ice box. cat»n111.. S.r. Nvrn- Mr 1377. 8 1 2 FT. El Dorado MONA WI $loft, link, lei bo._ cabin1t1. S.r. N11m- O... 22J077. -------------- IMMEDIATE DELIYIRT Re1ular Price Sale Price , ---------$204885 1495 ---------------'69 ~O~!~~.:!.~.w. $1288 low m~q1. s.rial No. 117 5&0 ------------------1. 8 n. ~~..P.P.rADO $194835 1395 lfove, link. Ice bo"" c.abineh. Ser. N11m- ,ber,22~. I · GALAXIE 500 69 ........ ..!~:.;.ii·,""""'"'$1288 powr slftring...., Jap. lluMI "'-XDE9S7 ?~~:.'~:~~~T.~~~~ ·i2--o-9--9-9s l-541- .. , 22 .. 267. ---------......... ------------------------------------·----~ .. ~:~~ ~~!.~.~~-.. ~. $277535 $2225 ._,.,_Ser. Numbe1 3002-'7. ------------------------------, . ..._ ____________ _. 8 n. EL DORADO UKA ~ -1 $..,..., •In'-k1 ~ cciblM'h. W . trM.-.. .,., 22•7•7: ---------------------------·---' IXCILLllllL9VYS ON LIKI NIW TllA ..... CAMP ... • . . ' . Everyone Hes Something Thet DAILY ·PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, T rede It With e Went Ad -The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642 -5678 for Fast Results I Someone Else Wants l -..... l~ -"'-I~ I -"'-• -twSU General General General ' General BA YFRONTS -OPEN HOUSES Elegance is the word for both of these cus- tom built hon1es. 60 1'""t. bay rtontage at 538 So. Bayfront, Balboa Island, with its superior design & construction OPEN THURS., Flll. & SAT. 2 · 6 PM On Lido Isle, at 329 Via Lido Soud, \Ve offer a lovely 5 bdrm., 6 bath home with slip for 2 large boats. Owner \vill consider trade for smaller home on Lldo or other good location. OPEN SATURDAY l · 5 PM The area'iS top pro(essionals are at your scrvic('. 675-3000 ** ** ** TAYLOR CO. BIG CANYON C. C. $152,900 New -Luxurious -Lovely! Rustic charm in this custom home ,.,.;4 large bdrms, family r1n , formal dining rm, 41h baths, 2 air-cond. units & 3 fireplaces. High cathedral L.R. ceiling, 2 wet bars. Situated on a huge es- tate-like Jot with a view of golf course. BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB Live in the atmosphere of this beaiitiful priv- ate Country Club. Cathedral beamed ceil- ings, conversation pit with fireplace, lge. family rm, formal dining r1n & 4 lge. bdrms. Vie\v of area & goU course. 3-Car garage. Sn1art decor. Security entrance. $119 ,000 THE "BLUFFS" -$58,000 Popul ar ''E" plan in choice end location with terrific view overlooking park. 3 Bdrms, fam rm & 21h: baths. Private court-yard entry. Lge rooms. New paneling in family rm, new paint. New cptng to be installed. ''Our 27th Year'' , ofinJa J j/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Linda Isle Wa terfront Just completed -modern 5 bdrm ., 41h bath home with family rm., ga1ne rm., formal dining rm. & magnificent 25 ft, waterfront living rm. w/frplc. & wet bar ..... $?....85-,000. 53 Linda Isle Drive Elegant 5 bd.rrri.,41h baths; on lagoon. New carpets, drapes & wallpaper. Lge attic stor- age area; 4 lrplcs. Lovely garden & jge. slip. .... ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' .. ' : ' ' .. ' ... ' ' .. ' ... '$212,000. 101 Linda Isle Drive , Lovely 5 BR., 4 ba. home with downstairs waterfront mstr. suite & lge. game rm . or study. Mexican tile floors, beam ceilings, quality construction,, slip . . . . . ... $155 ,000. For Complete Information On AU Homes & Lots, Please Call : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bay1ide Or •• Suite 1. N.B. 675-6161 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors Genar•I Genen l 2111 Sen Joequin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 BA YCREST BEAUTY -POOL General General General I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I General '.lO!,_ ~1"7"'"""'-$/ldt4, ~ MDASSOClmS REALTORS 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR. CAUf. A fine home in a fine area, center of New- port beautiful. Behind wrought iron gates, you enter a n Italian marble eotcy,-br.inging you to a sunken living room & a cozy1 fir~ place area, just the thing for these cool nights . .l\iany amenities that we can show you \vhen you tnake an app't. to view. Offer- ed at $81,000. CORBIN -MARTIN A Ul"llVU: li()Mf: 644-7270 REALTORS THE SPACE POTENTIAL * General Builders Loss ! Your Gain ! 1--------Duplex Corona del Mar It's clean, Jean and loaded with room! Four bedrooms and still space for your Unique ideas ! Courtyard entry, hillside privacy, ter- raced view and joy of joys-a motivated seller. That's space potential at $67,500. Spanish architecture prevails in this delight-2. Story ful DUPLEX -TR!· LEVEL, 4 Bedroom, 21'. CLOSEOUT . ONC Ho Me UNIQUI HOMO OF COIONA. on ..... 61MOOO Alllt&ittefYodrN ..... bath, fireplace, buitt-in kitchen. BACK ONLY! VACANT! Gorgeous UNIT l Bedroom, 1 bath. Enjoy your 3 ter-2-Sl'ORY HAR GAIN ! U~l()UI: tiVMl:i raced porches. This js a beauty for only Crackling LiN>pUlcC!. Step .... , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $78,500. cfo/L•Y•RHOOvingMmo4m and FA!'f-. quttn srze REALTORS . * bedrooms. Laundry. Builder says $36.500 . BUT YOU '"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I AUSTI N'SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES OFFER WHAT Y o U I'.:: REALTORS · 644-7270 THINK. Hurry -it's lhe last General General one . call 645-0303. 1-:;-::;::;;-;;;:;-;:;;;::;-;:;;;;;-::;::;;-;;;;l---------10eneral ,_G_•_•_•_r_e1 ______ 1 1-~~ $4000 DOWN ·· BOAT PARADE ASSUME LOAN GOES RIGHT BY What a buy! Beautiful 4 bed· In Newport Heighls; Rustic HARBOR VIEW fantastic action view in thls comfortable S bedroom, family home on Balboa Is- land bayfronl. Large chil· dren's play area on sandy beach. Renlal apartment over garage. $1llO,CXXl. room. 2 bath wllh a ran-Cape Cod 3 s!ory with 3 ca_r ta11tic family room. Huge garage., large lot & fn.ul shade in park like yard on lrees Wlth great ocean and a corner lot. Owner was harbor v\C!W. A story~k transferrt'd and must Aeil tlome with that Chlll'lTI that s Call now for information. IO hard to find. Owner wlU S42-2535. take 10% down payment. ='.\':.11111\ .~Ill I ORISI L 01\!I\ ' REAL TOR( 644-7662 1General ' "Just Ustecl" Fashion Shores One of those "most asked about" homes actually comes on Ole market. Asked aboUt tiecauze of lts location South 'Of Hamilton Strcet. Can Yo4 • p1cture a l 1800 sq. ft:. 4 'bedrnon1, 2 bath home w'ith a real lile flreplace, all elc-cttic kit· cben, 11eparate a e 1' v l c c porch, a heavy shake roof, lush le.ndsciping,-qUtet cul- de-.sac street for on I y $34,950? You better call now. 842-25.1.5. fteducicr~ $2000 2-Story Beach-Pool BTKE TO BEACH! JUST REDUCED BY ANXIOUS 5 BEDROOMS This homl· has ('V('rythlng nnd is cloti(' 10 st·hool and shopping. Heated Pool. Alr Condition('(!. Cu!to1n Car- pels and Orapeli. Atrium. \\'uod IX't:k Pa.uo. 1..arg(', Brighi Corn('r Kitchen. 2 F1replal"C>t;. 3 Baths. You 01~•n the l...anrt $79,900. C&ll Anytl1ne 646-0555. ESTATE PRIVACY 1 $75,ooo. 6 UNITS 2 Triplexe.s • 2 BR ea. :l Bungalow units & 4 - Srud10 units \Vilh garage?S pl1L~ xlra 1mricing. GROSS INCOME Sll.7fillyr. Stanr! in line ror rhis! Newport at Fairview· .646-8811 (onyti-1 SEE THIS! AND QUIT LOOKING! Large l'wo story ~tucco horn~ in exct'llf'nt condition and JJriced right lo sell fast! llXX) square feel of ..C·on- derful living apacC! on first 1loor, plus 2 bedrooms do'>l'fl, and 2 bedrooms upstain. AUum~ IBA -. .. 111, 10W,pa,ymC!nts $J2l3.I)) pc!"" lll(>nlh. 847-6010. •. OPEN TIL t • ITS I.fl TO BE NICEI FIVE UNITS EASTSIDE COSTA MESA · INVESTOR'S PA.ffADlSE -5 Separate horn~!/ nee:UC!d ln on ttrls huge lot. Great tax· shelter and potential -grmvth. Each unit witb sep&i'ale garag'e1 yarrl ancl ·laundry area. Lots <lf privacy, conVftl!ence and at- mosphere. CALL us for full details. Asking $76,500. CA1L 540-llSt 0J)f!n Eves. •'5~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS PETE BARRETI -REALTOR- 642-5200 Realtors 646-'ltll 2043 Westclltt Drive Open 'till 9 PM OWNER. Formal living 1 ~==~~~o==~ room and dining roo1n . $5,000. CORONA DEL MAR NEW YEAR PRESENT A little jewel Joe . on Waterfront St. in old CdM. 3 BR. & gst. qtrs. Redecorated, with red shag carpets. You must see tbis charmer! LA COSTA VI EW LOT-$17,500 Beautiful view lot overlooking LaCosta Country Club. For further information call Mary Lou Marion. DOVER SHORIS BEST BUY VALUE CONSCIOUS ? II so, you should in· spect this 4 bdrm , 2-story home. Exciting view of Back Bay. $118.~Fee. Kathryn Raulston BAYFRONT-' ON WATER Pier & slip for large boat. Spacious home w/5 bdrms., study, 4Yl baths. Dramatic 2- story living room . Pool. $175,000. Carol Tatum OVERLOOKING FINEST BEACH 3 Bdrm., S bath & conv. den borne with a magnificent view. All the comforts for hap. py, luxurious llvlng in private IRVINE COVE. $195,000. Edie Olson LIDO ISLE-BEST BUYS Enjoy Lido way of 1111>-private beaches, tennis & club, 1. Charm. 3 BR. best loc. $'71,500. 2. 4 BR. 2-story. Big mstr. suite. f76 ,500. Eugene Vreeland. OWN A BEAUTIFUL VIEW For the New Year! See the gorgeous Paci(ic & 'pectacular night lights lrom this 5 BR., 3 ba\h borne on Spyglass Hill. Lge. loL fl22,0Cl0, LaVera Bums -' ~ Coldwell,Bankar ~ S50 NIWl'ORT CINTEll Oil, N.IL ~~HERITAGE REALTORS .. 00-567!1 SUNKEN FAMILY ROOM! below VA appraisa l Cozy breakfa&t nook in chefs kitchen. Truly (!ant Out or town ·owner1 wtshes size bedrooms. Laundry fast sale -Sharp 5 BR, 3 room. Covered patio' opens BA home, c~tcd and to SPARKLING POOL! The nC'wiy painted, . Nei.vport sharpest home in the area. Bt>ach. ~uced to $49,000: Call fast, &15-0303. Calf at once to' st'e . vacant. CALL ANYT!l\1E 646-3928 646-4543 There is a reason 18 years a.an1e location . -. I 0111 \I I Ol \O \ General COMMUNITY H' "I '', , -------· iiiiiii LIVING With Putting Green & Swimming Pool-Spa- cious 3 bedroom com- fortable home $56.000. 2323 Private Rd., N.B. BACK BA)'• MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES BAYCREST BEAUTY Ivan Wells designed & built. Tropical par- adise. 3 large BR's, 3 baths. HJdeaway loft. 2-story tall fireplace. Handyman's garage. Move-in condition~ Joyce Edlund 542-8235. ( u 11) SHORECLIFFS-VIEW Custom built. 4 Bll, 3 bath. Magnificent living room. Wet bar. Gourmet kitchen. Enclosed patio. Wine storage. 3000 sq. ft. of elegant living. Elaine Svcdeen 642-8235. (U l2) HARBOR VI EW HOME S Executive home. 3 BR, 2 bath, DR, formal entertaining, garden kitchen, private patio. Lush landscaping. Fee land! Joyce Ed· Jund 642-8235. (U l3) LIDO ISLE LU XURY Exquisite beyond compare. 45' of sandy beach. l'rlvate master suite w/fireplace. Additional 2 BR's look out to bay. Gracious handcrafted stairway. Unbelievably priced at $225,000. Gloden ~·ay 642-8235. (U14) [Irvin~ 1-~1~~-.,-pe., I IOI Oowlf' Df"8 ... 1•1231 '"' M1cA.rthur IU· 1200 PETE BARRm --aEALTOR- BEAUTY Elegant 3 BR. It family home on quiet cul-de-sac In area of line OOmes, features dou· ble !irepl, OW, bltins, flagstone entry, lush ldscpg and much more. $39,!r.JO. 2290 Redlands Dr., N.B. ~ CALL~,~2-lTn OWNER transferred. 3 bedroom &. den, family 21 room wilh fireplace, park 1 like yard, brk, $32,950. Ph. I j ¢!0 J. J 540-tm. I ~11 , Ii 11 •ii, I I I 11 I 1 1111 ,I ,\ " ' HOUSES FOR SALE 4 Bed"'°"' and Family Room or O.n 2030 Oajaxy Dr. (Dover.,,Shor~s) NB ' 646-1550 $112,900 (Sat 1·5) 3 a.droom and Family ~oom or Den **1653 Bayside Dr. (Yaclitsmans Cove) Corona de! Mar 676-1935 • , (Sat U·5) . , ... ** w...,,_. .. 9:f21 Newport Shores 4 Bdrm Beauty $41 ,500. lmm11culntc lh1·uout. LaU1 !: plasler walls. new crptg. up.. srarled. like ncv•. Fanni dining -pl:ltio. CholN:' \oc. Xlnt 1ern1s. To sec CALL 645-7221 1733 \\'t•stcliff Dr., N.B. $194 PER MONTH P&;-11 or1"'1DI~. J Jl t e r c a t , ta:tcs Rnd lnsurance on th.I• tirly Jlrtle 1hlrter home with a huge bedrooms 1tnd good alwct ynrd tor <'h!lrlrcn and pels, llo1v aboul gctth~ your Jamll.y out ol lhat apartmc.nt r.nd Into your OW"n hon1e for Chrictmu. Reallora · 641-7711 l»\1 WtllClttt Dr1vtl Open 'IUI g PM IT HAS ALL THE "I WANTS" Back Bay Area CUSTOM SUlLT 5 Bedrooms, 3 bathl, !amlly rn1. ottice, many, many xtras. Swimming pool + wadin& pool $87,500. 3 Bedroom Home & BlueHaven Pool enclo!ed patio, storage for camper &: boat. New tile & Gener el * Merr y Chri1tm•1 * HARBOR COMP'ANV REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 ""'"· new paint Inside • $37,500 -POOL out. Move ln today. S26,500. Roy McC1rdle RNltor Exquisite home, 4 l>edroomJ. 1810 N~ Blvd, C.M. 1 ~I? fa nl i I Y room , S48-111f ~ 1 fireplace,' wallpaper ec- f """"!~~""!'"!"~'!!'!!""'I cents, Brk. ~1()-1720. TARBELL 2955 Harbor. Costa Mesa PASS JUOGEMENT . . aftl'.'r lns1»eetlng this lovely 3 RDRrif Back Bay home \\'ilh assumable fi- nancing. Large rear yard \\ith lo!s DI fruit trees. Only $28,500. BKR. 557-4130. .rca. W::~::E ~REALTORS -546-4141-Just Reduced IC/r• & tnln91) ELEGANT LIVING ~ Dover t1'~~1~jti! ... s0,.!"~:""""I "'°"'' '°""'' ,_,, I , ·C·'-"-..J rruplex bedroom 3 bath, tormai dlD-11MV,., D ~-room.,.J.With .~ ..lb1f ......,~ On large lot • is a spectacl&lar hOme IO wilh room ~pruid entertain in. A llil1:e 1.IBR \I Blk. lo ocean. $75,000. suite n1akes (Qr.comJortable George Wiiiiamson living. 18$-,£m. It woo't last. Realtor *5'1&4570* • $27,250 lr.iri:iii!r!f::r.. Estate. 3 bedrms &: den, Natural brick fireplace, ex· tra baths, 540-173> PENINSULA POINT OUPLEX 2 Bdrrns., 1 bal.h each unit. Completely redecor. inside; Live in uppcr-\011•er leased $265 monlh. I-lard to find du p I e x , this location. Sil.500. Call': 673-3663 675-8886 Eves. associated BROKERs--REAlTORS 2025 W !albee 61)-366] NEWPORT ISLAND INCOME Great, (.'Orner location: lge. 2 bdrm., frplc .. l \..r baths, v .. ith 1-bdrm unit; ideal home & int'Ome set-up. 166,500. Call: 673-3663 673-8086 Eves. associated . BROK ERS-REAL TORS l 0Z5 W 8elbee 6?J.J66l M·l ZONING 3 Bedroom house, fireplace, Th' x 120' lot. V('ry good lo- cation i.n area o( many new buildings. Asking $24, 750. Easy tenns. Call 546-5880 (Open Eves.) ~..f ·• HERITAGE •.• REALTORS TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa COSTA Mt'sa Triplex -ta.kc over 77., GI loan, all 2 BR. Income $~. Priced at 148,llQO. cau 897-1228. Balboa laland OLDER Ii: charmln& 3 Br. 1% ba, new crpt, freshly painted. Ch\'flel", 673-1488. Corona del Mar HOUSE + APT, South of Hwy.; re modeled 2 bdrm. house 11•/elcc. bit-In kitchen, plu11 a modem 2 txlrm. npt. over U»e prage, ll·asC"d al $250 month ID help pay lhe overhead. Priced ID sell at $64,500. JONES REALTY INC [St- I (714) 873-6210 I 2001 w. BelblH> BM&. Newport 8-;Ji.Calfoml992ee0 NEW LISTING What A View! * Excellent Ocean View * 4 Big &drooms * Family Roon1 * Space ror Pool Table * UniqUe Sandbluted Wood Interior TrealnH~nl * CdM Beauty al $89,500 Call 673-8500 * DUPLEX * N H • LA-So. of Hwy. 2 &: Den plus new 8Wporf •ICJnn 2 BR. 00\V ~Ing built. A E,ve rything Evtrybqdy real IOO<I deal for • W1ntil . 17!,600 3 bedlwm, ~ bolh,,2 liz'e. 1 MORGAN REAL TY places, den, electrlc kitchen, 673-6642 \ 675-6459 l cur garage off privatt" TARBELL: • ,, '"""· Dtwntio. 22, 1972 DAIL V PILOT 3 ,~[ -_ ..... __,]~I -·-:-neII --~I .::;::::--l~I . °C!.-:' J[j] I ---I~ [ -· .. -l~ 1 ---J~ !~--....... -...... ~!~ l~C~o~s~l•~Mo~ .. ~~~~~l~N;..,;,.;,,..;rt~l;11;dt~~~~No;.~l"f'O'~t;!~l~•;,;,hE~:tj~~;~,.,~~N~fe~~l~!O~. k~r~•~lll~•~fv~r~1~1~l•~':l~!O~f 1;H~·~-~~~f.r~u~rn~l~ohed~;t:300~;:f'rHou~~ .. ~· ~U~n~fu~r;n:. :~30S;lHou~~'~"~U~nf~u~r~n~, ::305; Apt1, Furn, EASTS I OE S29 'so Bolboa l•l•nd c I U--'"--'-"'--'---c M _ , os • m.M Newport &.ach __ 0_•1_• __ ... _____ 1 eoo .. ,,.,, '"" .1 00n 1, '""" •h•• Pre-Grand Opening Sale! OCEAN VIEWS 2 ttag . part] '" cri1tg. 1·u1111·r i1tonr tir.·pl. : f'R.Jilco ir1Y i 25Q· EA$TSIDE 4 Hr, 2 Se, hpl, EASTBLUFF WEEKLY-MONTHLY beuu1 d1·<., Simrkllng hltin11 ALONG THE tou~iY. ~77. ' ~l. ~~7~bi :;.~ c.e ,! Separate hoo1e, u 11 u su a I Ex1cutive Suites &-doub!t· rk•!at"h1·(t wurti~i·. rl llChlJi N 66--mO llU'Rr-4 bf.tlroom 0t J & don . 2080 Newport Blvd. •taNI h.»l in<I :t BH, 2 Bi\, 'fJO MENDOCINO COASTLINE lido Isle ' 0 peta. · ~·a111ily roonl 11l1J1 Jmc for. Costa M esa honu• nt lhLli p1·u·t'. Call WINTER RENTA ': Until E·S.U>J·_; 2 br, ihi 00, .'.idul! inul dining ruoni, Cc}rnpl1•11• 642-2611 54.').~-l:l\ SOUTII C:OAST .. ' ·~ tow•""". E""' .. ,,,·o. 140 1 l ...... d . June 3Gth 1973 4 BR, den, ... ...., .... privacy wt 1 <'Ile..,.,._. rrar STUDIOS & I BR'S Rt:AL. 1'tJ11$. 20 acre ~arc els nesUet,J i'1 Redwood and $450 0 ~~§s~· µ6{i. 518-5986 or 11.nd 'front yard11• Love·ly • 2 Houses Pines. LOeated at Westport Beach, north o{ ~~. 8!n & i ':~ ~. ~ gankn. Available De<.·rnil>t·r • FH.~I~ Une1~11 (Rent thr <1lhcr) 2 BR ca.ch. -i.·_... Newport Beach OCEAN Vk>w. CHU Dr., :i • llcatcd P~J Both on ly $32,000 t Ft. Bragg off State H'!VY. 1. Excellent terms, mo. BARRE'IT REALTY 3 RR, cr11ts, drps, l~c fcnc.~·..J I.l. No pets. $475 per nlQnth . 1 • FHf.E U11Jlt1f•s Xln'I re11tab1 nr llvt~ In 1. 1---a ~ pre-paid .interest available. * ~ * ~~9J6f.hildren Ir. pelll ok. Call 673-6568 or ~36SS. • Full Kilf'hen Priv1ue yurds. SL't" lirst-t11 ~ -~ -LAND OF THE GIANT TR EES 3 Br home. $235. Ea"t&ide. BR., 2 ba's.; dbl. gar..1gl'; •Laundry Joac1httn. 428 lltim\lton St., then call: OCEAN FRONT New Cl"pts .l fre:shl)' painted. carp/drps, refrig. Bltn. • TV & mald serv avaJI 642-1060 if 111tcrestctj, CONDOMINIUMS 160 acre parcels off the Mad River near Fi-pie. Obie.. pr. 646-2768 own & range. $300 Mo, iw. e Phone Si>rvice R-2 h\'O, 2 Br homrir-both Eureka. Some parcels have creeks, great for 3 Br. 2 ba, 1ncd yd, fAm only. GRAH.Al\1 Realty 646-2-U4 NEW apts for adults only. redl'l..vratl•d, bo1h '"/frplcs, ,rM recreation. However, why buy the land only 600 Blk W. Oceanfront. Attr. $250 mo/no fee, Agent, Don. NE\VPORT Shores 2 Br, den. &loonies, firf'plaet·.!I, beam- !rg lot. Qui<'t nbrhd. Nr. $51,495 for enjoyment or s)>eculatioo. Develop tim· 3 BR, 2 ba. furnished. Year. 830-iiQ.10. 2 Ba. /;001 I.: club rivl. Nr. ed ceiti~, wood PMeling. schools & shppng. £xccUent Lof!y llYI"" awaits you! ber groves for future profit return, program ~) L1LGRJNS~ R<f~R. 4 BR, 2 BA, $200 mo. bch. · &JS.2'21 . carpeting, drnflE'!. ~- nie. SC.MK>. 642-9996. ..~~."" .... ' "" available with shelter. Available from $200 Children OK. AVAll. Jan. 15th w/lease. 3 tion building "'1th poo · ---· Act swif11 " 67$-6161 540~" .,. -BR 2 BA I · Furn & unrum. Bacb('lor & BY °"'l'lf'r - 3 Br, l Ba, bx:i.J l'illk"lnt '1 per acre. Excellent terms. lr"V~ or ev~s .....,..,_.~ , • poo & tennis ~ · -dn to select your own TERFRONT PIER & privgs. Near beach. 54S·38SO l bdrms. from $135. 140 W. cov pa.liq, .,...,. · Newport Beach condominium. WA • 2 BR Newly redecorated. \Vil110n !Just \\'est or New - /n10. $23,500. 833-1103, h C II J W FLOAT -3 BR, fonnal dfn. new crpt, frplc. Nirc yd. LU:\'URY ocean!'.ron! _ New tnn Blvd. 1 ews &12-2312. Vlsitthetemporaryofflcesolt e • owners agent; • A. estrick (2 13) ing rm. 2 baths, w/w crpt .• s225 mo. Avail lilt 642-9996 big, dramatic 4 Bdrm. $-150 BY owner _ The llU'gellt, Newport Crest lofonnatlon Center. 37M933 or write, P.O. Box 1099 Torrance, lirepl., dbl garage. Yearly MONTICELLO Townhouse 4 1 ='"='"o'C'.Y0o'ILy~.4~>Hl615c.-c=-·'--= *30 WEEK & UP nicest, I east cxpenslve, cooveoiently localed at Calif. 90505 lease o~. Furnished $500 BR, 2 BA. Oilldren ok, Club BEAUT vu golf course, 2300 • Stucllo & 1 liR Apts sngl-sty 5 BR lm1 1n f.1eM 2400 West Coast Highway mo. Unturn. $450 mo, No & Pools. Call 54(}-&299. ft JBR JBA od 1 • TV -' Mald Service Avail del fa.l ar $38.500 549-1857 &lite B, Newpor1 Beach. pets. Pete Barrett Realty. "'°~"""CC'""===--:me.' lease $&.is, 557~ e • Phonr &•rvice-lltd Pool -• ' t'lftAn Dally i O a.m. tO sunset. Condominiums Condominiums 642-4353. Dana Point • Chil111·pn & Prt section OCEAN Vll!w -New custorn ..,.,...., •--... W I Br 2 & 3 BR. -$275fl350 2376 N1•11 purl Blvd., Cltt home, .BR' '~BA. Fam. a. """ sale 160 fo r sale 160 WAIK to ater on all. CUTE cle"" 2 BR H-···, y I \"alk I be h d•~-~~ "' I 7141 645.6141 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Bach $95. 1 Br dplx vu Jl25. ~ °"u'tm .,_... ear Y· '~ o ac · 54S-!l75a or frl5-3H67 ..... '6 rm. ts, drps, I' 2 Br hse Sl75. Util pd. ~ mo. . Avail Jan Caywood Realty 54~1290 $120 n1unth & up. hnscpd $.52,000. 6· Rent-A-Hou.. n6-7330 _0ana._~""-'-"'-'-"=K_22D___ Condominiums _L_A_R_G_E_l ~B~R~.-,,~,-;,~m-.-. -+ Fountain ~<~i:~:y WALNUT SQUARE Houses Unfurn. 305 Huntington Be1ch Unfurn. -320 1~~;1. ~T.:~ & &sho~·~~~ don't ""rnr hln1 out doing -.. General IMMED. OCCUPANCY Huntington Beach ~~~ino, Apt 1., c. M. Y"d "~'k . moo·o '"'• a HOLIDAY SPECIAL EASTBLUFF Now 3 B' $200. mo. 2 BR. Coodo, Ctpts, d'P•, * $"' PER WEEK* Tiburon condominiun1 and Dbl garage, dshw&br frpl, patio, dbl gar, nr. ~ ke<'p hiru a.s 11 pct. Tola.I ~le house, unusual 334 Portland Circle, H.B. beach. Pool privl. $215. & Up. Pool & mi.ud service. exterior 1nainlrnnncC', total large 4 bedroom or 3 & den. 536-8188 64~1857. Kitchens avhil. i\fo1l'J Tahiti electric bltins & air-con<l. LAST CONDOMINIUMS Family room plus large '!!!!'!'!~~!!!!!!!!!"'~~ =D'"u~p"'lo~x-0-1-F;:--u-m-.--.34"°5 cornl'r Harbor & Victoria. Ox>ice resales are flO"' on -formal dining room. Com-3 Blocks to Beach NE\V 1 S.· 2 BR's fron1S10010 the n1arket. l to 4. Bdm1s. PHASE THREE plete privacy with enclosed New crpls, drps, 3 BR, lonn Newport Beach $210. Nr. hl>nch & shop'!:'. Quick ~ssion. VA 'l>~llA, ri!'ar and front yards. Lovely din rm, dbl gar. 114 E. 3'.Jth St., CM, 5<;;. From $27,(MX). e No Closinn Cotti g15ordNen. Atsv~~b151e Decembethr 325 2nd SL, Htg. Bch. FURN lBR. 1 or couple pref, _54lHl°'"'"'='~'·=="°'"°"=""'°-I larwin realty inc, • · ope · .,.. per mon • 536..&334 or ~188 113~ 36th St., (off Balboa ~ 75 e fl'ff l,JpgrMe Cara.t Call 673-6568 or 546-3688. BEAUT F'URN 2 BR $1 a trp 96.'l- 4 405 --e 1---••-.. 11--· r-2BR, elec bltin RIO, FA ht, IDvd nr bcb) $.135, water pd, Util pd. Hid pool. Adlta, no OWNER, La Linda model, 4l ,~::'.:;;::,::_ __ -,;.::::~:;=:;:::, ____ j e $~1000 ~Mo ~YMISton Season's GrHtings w/w crpb & drps, dbl gar, winter lease. 6T;>-1972 or pets. Also 1 u n furn. BR 2 BA 3 ' l ty l;L Yff OU In ta our many landlDnls & fe-~ & 1-~·-·ped. Xlnt call owner 213-798-4356. 642-953'1 • • car ga ·· 5 • aguna Beach Newport Beach & ·-·~ w~ "'"'""""' '"""°""'"""""'=c-cl fplc, air, $-13,IXKI 968-3452. Santa Ana Fwy. to CUiver, Y'inht ·about ;.-4, tenant., both present Ioc. $200/mo. ACT: Duplexes Unfurn. 350 * SHADY ELMS • POOL .. H ' B h BRING THE KIDS .. 46"" prospective. We will be 962--4171 or 54&-8103. e Adulls Poolside $140 up unt1ngton eac FAMILY • ~ . • mile to Walnut (1st road on left), left 1 mile cloeed Sat, Sun & Mon.1 ""=-'='c"-7-"'=C'='-=°"'"' Balboa Peninsula e Cho.ld-n -xi bloc·k Near the beach Channing 5 uWaln • JBR 2BA, elec R/O, FA ht, 1----------" ·-... enjoyment is all yours BR 3 ba den. tonna.I din-to ut Square '; or San Diego Fwy. to Open Tues., Dec. 26th, v.•/w crpts & drps, dbl gar, 2 R d ? bl 177 E. 22n<J st .. C,\f 6<12-3645 $995. MOVE IN in this d~ghtful 3 bdn:n· .. 3 1ng: used' brick accents. Culver, left about 3 miles to Walnut, right to rested & ready to give you. toot ldsepd. >ant loc. B • <!'ti, w ba. tn.'I. ROOMS SlB wk,. up w/ kit. Vacant _ 2 BR 28A, clec bath honie. Beautiiul d!n!ng GEM "Walnut 59uare" or call 714/5514041. our personal service thru S'm/rno. AGT: 962-44n or ~':':&. :.r£3!2'~. y~~ $30 wk up l'lpl.l'I. Children &: hltin RIO. l'OZY liv rm an.•a for ~r entertwrung ---• A1f3· R I e 64>3900 54&-8103. I 1359 E B Jboa Bl cl pct sections 2376 Newport wt bt'aut r1r-10-crll brif'k pleasure. Situat~ _on large, ~~~t Hwy~ I p A enta 1 1 ~L~EAS~E~u,-.,.~,y-4-b-,-, -2\i~h-a, ffit A (dw~trs~. 536-JSJ o; ""='~'-'·~C~._M_._54_R-~""-'°'-·-- !lrepl, W/\V <"r11ts Sc drps, ~rner 101• prestigious loca-ncome roperty LANDLORDS• (am rm. 2 11tory, prestige' 213/863-1008. STUDIO an1 'furn, q \JI et lots of eloSl:'ts ·"'-"upboards. lion. Call Bryan Mace. * BEACH SPECIAL -• area, nr beach/acbools, '' l:.,fu~ ~;;· ~~1$i1'.~. Priced $52,90Cl~. of.a~ 3 ~.2 N~s2-!~· !~ s!4,~ ~;_a;::.T~:. hwidll II• I ~ee::1~n~"der~~~ f:.1~~· mo. No l ~'-0'-S;,;~.;c•E,.;M_,'-.B'-:-Du-p-le_x_, -c-p~-. ~~~;;~~r ~~c2r!!~ •1nz~ but pttced right at $33,900. NEAR McFadden & Newport 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::.~ &: Laguna. Our Rental Ser-VACANT-Pi'eSttge 3 BR, 2 drapes, hit-ins, w a s h e r , ;;-~-..-.-..... -..-CAYWOOD REAL TY Freeway, territic location. ~ vice ls FREE to You! Try Furn. Bach. & 1 Br. E x- t'2-44JI <= '146-1. 191 • RE L ESTATE * 541-1290 * :~,yer:o rr::·edG""'u.,...... In3 Bus01ppot'f.nas unity. 200 ~J~iEw RENTALS ~~~haftt~!i~t~~~: =rft~~ std:;~· No ceptionally nice. 2110 1 1190 GI St ~,, 84&-0L16. DUPLEX 2 BR 1 k.t Newport Blvd., C.M. -494-9473 549-0316 popular Monaco 2 BR + After fixture expenses and NEWPORT BEACH 4 Br. CorKlo. C'rpts, drps, chen. Shag carpet. Drps. BAO!ELOR. util paid, $145 l lC~~~~;;;F=:1~~~~J~~~-~~1H'.ARBOR VM?w Homea ' bedroom(S210)2bed($160J 673-4030 or 494-3248 . eec. 1- CHARMER p RIGHTI den. All extras. lmmed. loan paymenta $868. Sched-Marine Contracting Firm bltns, refrtg, pool & clubhse. ?.'::~v. yan:I. $170/mo. mo. $50 ck!aning fee. Nr Occup. Fee land. Open 1-S uled cash spendable which finest e q.u 1 p.'m en t & $225. 548-1405. ..,rLrvoo;:I OCC &UCI. 557-~. 23 1l living room, 3 hcdroon1s Big ocean view_! 3 Bdr!n" 2024 Port Provence PL 1-S: is 13.37 cub "'ua 8.34 ~•;ty 35 y * 3 BR. VACANT. $240 n10. $195-New 2 Br Ea.stsidc. f~UH.N. Bachelor Apts. $115 ., baths, benuliful clllJ!om 2. bath home with _beautiful ,,A~...,.., ~-,,AA,......,, t'.' -~-waterfront location. r. N " ak lo '"-A--. . ,,_,,. 292 & U N 1 . 11 drapes. heavy shat; Cllrp('IJI, ~Le:"\' of oce8:11 & hills. Lee, ~; ~ves, ............._. hulldup. Total ttttlrn 2l7L old company, Space avail. r. go course. A r ... ~.,ts. ... _, pnv ., ... s. p. o cu 1 l'l'n or pcls. ti1f' entry. SpotlC'SSly clean. hv1ng & family rm. w/f~lc. J Br., 2 Ba in Harbor All this and a ~ing for boat aales &: repairs. Steve, 892-4471'. E. 18th. 646-0087, 494.-1763. 2129 Eldrn Ap1 I. c:--1. Lev.· doiVTMJwnrr trunsfer-Attached 2 car ganlge. Nice ~~-2m. ~ u~L ~-~~ • ..._ _ __. y .... Wen BILL GRUNDY RL TR. Irvine ;H:u~n;;;t~in~gt;;;o~n~B~";;c~h~~~· Sl2j MO. - 2 BOR~1S. red. CALL 96fr.4456 i>alJO: areas. Easy.care land-,,._. .. '""'.,. ~ -~., ~•--.:• nLlUUU "'' 675-6161 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;::= Ncnr shopp ing, Cll•an scapuig. A Je.,.,·el at $49,950. 548-'nm By Owner. Call for 645-4048 IMMED OCCUPANCY Rel\lonomics, Bkr. 6T:J-6700 • 499-2800 * appl RENTAL Franchi!lt! service Coron• del Mir 2 BR. 2 Ba. Alr/cond .•• $265 , • . ~· ~~------~--Elmore Compeny station & ice houae on cor-1.:,;,;,;;;.cc.,:..;;_....,.;..,. ___ 3 BR. 2 Ba. air/cond ·-$285 New 3 Br apts $250. mo. Huntington Beach B~~ sg:c>~lhs.~\:, Hlda. rm. Re•I Etf•te Div. ner lot. Fantastic op-CORONA 3 BR. 2 ba. ·-·--·-· $3251375 Dbl garage, dshwshr -~COISflfft $42.500R..U1eyour~ TAXSHfi'UiJ1TS ==·~o1::i~~ i:~i~~:::::::: 334 ~~·H.B. BachelorS~5 l $~.patios. 1 ....... ~~"""~~"""'"1 ---"""'""' & . · .-... "'""' .....,.. "" 2,E!::n MAR si:;, •an. 216 ........ ,, ••• ws .. ,, !!!!!!"!!!!'!"!!!!"'!''!""""""'l"'/ """''" ""'· ..,,.... . OPEN BEAM *'"-.._.a-Dupleoei: near tbe Oot*ll tB39 II 645-0108. ~ :: 2 Ba. Pool $230: 6 BR. 8 Ba. rain. rm. f,, $475 I DUPLEX 3 BR. 2 BA, newly Divided bath & lo!B of feeling, lrg ran1 tin w/cir-MiJo1 Lanon. Realtor 22 UNITS P;;AR:,:::.TNER:=,:-:::=,-needed-~-ovet-...,.."'"1°", $J2j painted. Bit-Ins. Lrg fncd closets. Rec ball, pool t.: culnr firt'plRc'<', 2 BR, Ir& Lido Isle · * 673-8563 * $395 M male or female, •m dry l ~~-2v~~ New $l70: yan:t. Children & pets ok. pool rabies, sauna batb1. Uv nn, n1•wly red<'C prof'ly,1.:::::::c..:.;::=....,.....,.. ____ IDUPLEXES near the ocun 15% down, Westa:lde C.M. cleaning bua:lneu op Nwpt $190/ruo. 17582 Roxanne, See for yourself. J7lJl mature lds...:11:;, lrg c.'Or lot. * Lboice • Miles I.anon, Realror FOR INVESTOR Blvd.. no invest. wpte Agent 675-722.5~. H.B., Apt A. 962-9788 Keebon Ln. (1 blk W. of $~.900. Nord comer lot. 5 Bdnns., * J73-8563 * GOOD MOMENT CtaMlfled ad m 551, c/o ~ Newport Beach Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater}. Lf'ndcrship RE 842-4466 3\!i baths + dln. nn. + N-rt HeigMI Sale/Exchange Up. Dally Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, K~ ~ 842-7848 lgc. sundeck. $79.500. . 613-5221, 613-7670, ~2379 Costa Mesa, Ca.. 92626 I. · NEWLY decor -3 BR. 2 BA, H UN T I NG T 0 N Beach 'flUICK CASH 2 BR ·+·*2 :i. ~iet end ** $32.950 ** Ownr/Brk LIQUOR LIC-On s.1. x:;r=~ !st ~~~~="Bldg. Swedish frpl, l hlk ocean. (Sun.'ICI Bea(·h are111, 1 Your equity. in 24 ho~t'I!. Call of the 1~ianc1. Lowest priced 4 BR + Maid's or guest rm. INVESTORS Music store, ll'OWing ··-_, Univenlty Park, Irvine Year!)'. Child ok. $250. ~~a~h ~JOOi~: c'n4i for imn1rd1atl' appo1nlmcnt. honic on Lido Pecky paneling, aha& care; 'JWO -f.PLi:xEs, xlnt return, C.otfee .:= temu: • . • su&1101AtY cw fHl COC.wtU. S9-Days ~52-7000 Nllfttts I ~04~2-85l0~~· ~~~~::1 1835-742'1. CALL 008--4456. $58,Soo ~H~oor only $47,500. each. $47501 H0L D Bus. hies 3 BR, 28A, BLTINS, l ~M c=E~N=-~S-mal_l_be_a_ch~hot~cl·.1 •• LIDO REAi.TY BALBOA BAY PROP. -.,_Call ,u;iCI!. In&· Orange, CM .....,70 KITCHEN & I ][C!9I Ap1' $85/mo. Room• , !311 Via Lido, NB 673-i'JOO * 642: J4'l * • Mm ., · EDUCATOR supply stare-DINING RM. 3 BR. 2 ba.babonll.! rm. • • S400S22S Apar11Mnts f«Rent 'it" S2l50/wk. 5.'\6--7Cfi6 • WM.di Own. W, So. C&l Plaza area. 673-7507 2 BR. 1%. . .......... . _ Newport Bffch DUPLEX, t yr old, (2') 3 hr, llM-· $5,(0)/bllt otr. 551-1246. 2 BR, frplc. Adults, 00 pets. 2 BR. 1%. ha. Air Cood. • $265 1 •••••••••• Slli N~!~!anBdrm. INEW'""'~EN~c°"U.~NU~C~~~,,.~XG!!'E!'!l:::::.::i4=:.C.;h::rl:;:,::stmas:;...__ ~i.~.~ '1: inn Beach Blvd., H.B. Money to Loan 240 !:.'mo· 1~.Po~:· :ii i ::: ~ :=: ::::::::·iiis~ 1 .A,,;P:;.':.oL;..,.F_u_rn_. ____ 360_ RealonomJCll, Bia. 675-6700 . ' ""'· ''"Y iam• •'"'• Dell ,..,im Sbano -· inc1u.1r111 p._r1y 161 1st TD Loans ·-~~~-~~~....,,-1' BR -f""""· Broadmoor !!'! B•lbo• P•nln••'• z BR. & ' BR. run; .. fonnl din :rm ., . a _e CJht 61;>-{747. *SAN DIEGO* -2 BR F I p 1• 4 BR. . tam nn .... rvv Unfurn. Pool. 1 blk rom modl'rn hluns in k1tch • rp c. • 10 ocean Plf: 5.16-4332, 546-1153 w/breakfast nook. Per(ecl St'!' this. ~aufiluJ. two story Industrial bldg, $125,000 Dn. 6% % INTEREST • $195/mo. Ph: 548-8124 e red h·111 ~~y'~! ~f ~R.~~ BACH apt, l ml. from beach. house for anlh.iucs or early condom..iruum near Hoag 1·~ Total $506,000. Prime loc. Costa Mesa Maid Service -Pool • Util Pd $9j/mo. Gas & wtr pd. American furniture. Bkr. Hospital. Its many phu tea-.......... lill Z,800 Sq. Ft. Triple net 2nd TD Loans • Call 675-87tl • Avail 22 [)(>c. 213: 592-2!?'7?. !162-5.iU. tures include wood burning . lease. Prine. only. Owners S95 . QUIET RETREAT • l REPOSSESSIONS =.a~M se::;:te m:n~ =·dJM:;·, ~ ~'. Lowest rates Orange Co. Br. Nice yard. Pct ok. Univ. ·Pa~~r. Irvine ly~a~iy~wly decorated, $165 l_L_•,,gu_n_•_Bff __ <_h ___ ,_, For information and locaUon Privacy abounds. 2% baths Mobile Homes ''WE BUY TD'S" BEACON * '45-0l ll Call Anytime, 8.13.oo!O 6T.t-959l BAClf nr bearh $J.35..fl55. Col of these FllA & VA hon1cs, a:;ct com:lete: ~ kl1t· for 5111 125 RMI Estate W•ntecf IM Sattler Mtg. Co. $160 _SPACIOUS 2 Bl'. Stove, Office hourll S AM to 6 PM lBR furn, "'inter, ~ blk to ~· 14!~7~:4 • 2~';8 contact -c-en an1 00 , 8 ~~ .... 0 n.. ...... * "'ulcL Cash * '-2171 ... ~11 c-ts, "-•, yard. for kids/ beach 10 7/1173. $1.So mo. ..:'::~s. · -KASABIAN Uoe poc · "" on "~"" Motor H ftlilllAI~ ..,. • -~ -'" -• Oo"• M<lor. greeri bel'I 2JH95..4791 . ••-" 962 ~~ .... and onl)' S311,&>0., W71.1ll not -Will buy your property. All Serving Harbor area 2l yrs. 'B'EArON •'* 645-0Jll Hanover rpodel, 3,,.tll', J~ Corona del Mar Newport Beach Real Estate -OU't't last long. Cal 646-71 cash within 1t brs. Call 2nd TRUST DEED LOANS "I' ha: -Cathedral t'l!ll. For F-MOUS ~. Ga,den oPENrit 9 •1T'SFUN10BENICE! SALES&LEASING WiJIBuyTrulltDeeds SHA·RiP, CLEAN, 3 lease u.ntil ~B u s. 25,..,, •-be ed .1 4 BR, 2 ba., 2 car encl ~ome, A ..... ~~cl w/pool. ~ I full aervice [aclllty ~ * BROKER 642-.-1491 * BEDROOM. L·a r g e 833-1010 S:.,k for "'R.M. Can-sundk.rIO '-"r"ernJed.1 ea:~~ park'g. w/lndry. Av11il. now. $47,!XKI. Owner. 968--1622 or Dallnal' Malor 1 lhlmesj Mong.gn, yard, children o.k. non. Resid. 552-1835. de! Mar. 3 BR. 2 ba-furnisbat Sleps to 6'2--0844 I Trust Deeds 260 $210. per mo.~ no fee. AVAIL1 l/15 -4 2BRBA. lm1 dln c=0"',~1"1=Mno°'"------l3o;;~~n2Ba··::::::::::.·: ~ I • H 'la Reallo rm, am rm, 'crplll,,.;,;.;;,;,::..,._;.;......,.. ____ 2BR !B P · ·~ rv1ne 531 L800 VERY MERRY en ge, rs. "'-s, bit'••, "A ht, ~2 i . • n, entn -..... ....,., 4 BEDROOMS .., HAVE A ""1151 -• •• ' Caso de Oro W< "'"" w1010, "'""" XMAS onv-car gar. $395/mo. 83.l-Will T11ke Students WELCOME FAMILY ROOM CLEAN • COOL BROKERS· INC. CoMOlldato yoor b111' NICE 2 &. Ccpt, "'°""· 3 BDRM, 21\ BA, hon°' rm," AU. UTILITIES PAID Also O...aolmol< A"IL , .. in the New Year in one Huntington Beach. La t e "2.m1 lntn ;Just one payment garage " large yard. Sl75. $360. nio. Village 111. Con1pare before you n'lll CAU.; 67'.t-3663 of !ht' n1c~I area~ In the POOL model 12x40 l Bdnn. •t UP1---=---F7'::;'-:;::---with a 2nd Trui't Deed. 151: &: last plus deposit 66-2996 Cu11fom designed, featuring; city of Jrvinl'' 1,. ....... e full)' in one Huntington's finest Prlv•te Party Call TI4/675-4494 Bkr Resp. morrled coople. See • Spacioll.!I kjtcben with in-. ·-., ' Ouuming custom bu i It odult ~n..t., Xlnt ....tee & R-l loL ·~~ d" llgh · carpl'led 4 or 5 bdrm. home home, dining rm., large •--.,..... i-• -.-rv~ TIME FOR at 428~ Hamill!on St. Leguna Niguel 1rect ting on lge. cul de BAC lot. Bonus family rm. 2* baths. ..c........ 9 &12-1060. _ • Separate din'g area Pl"• family rm w/ ' UO. 110 FO~ ACnoN ~·"'Y ,..,. NEW 2 .,,_ " e Home-like sro"'"e rm. ... . Modern bltn I.Jani! kitcl>en, • • • DAILY PILOT MESA del ""· 4 Br., lam •Ba~. on Golf ·eo,,-, ~ • p,;,.,, pat<>s'-trplc. & wet har_. 3 Car gar-bltn. deep --, Beautiful-FOR Sale or rent. Slartight nn -·· d"""" Is e ... "'" ....,., Atrcd1ditioned for l.l'C'<'&.C' 1 only · ~ .. .,,. • .. ~. Call 675-203'.) • Cloro1 garage-w/storage ::~mer ~mf~rt, loo. See 2' .~::: i!~ i:ilN~m~~tla.r. sP CLAISIFIED AD' CLASSIFIED ADS I ~!-n~'.c'cc'~'-·m_0_· __ w_'_0_•_""_n. ::::.~. Ve rde ' : ~i~:.~ :~:n this one I ay. sparkling pool. $52,500. """·~--.--.== 642 5678 '642 5678 • Pool -Barbeque~ -sur- CALL '=" '''·1414. 8'x42', awning, furnlture.1:====:·::==~==:'.~~~-~~~~~~w= .. =·:"'::"'::··:"='·:::·=..,=·56:;:,:78 • IMMEDIATE Occupancy rounded with plush lttnd-':'ol·/·-A55d7lt,.. .. ~kor ~..,,,,in C.M. -3 BR, 2 ba. $250. Option . 'l1oh 'I \,Iii!. ---"I l."11 ll11r .......... ..,,.._,.. ~ pos11lbl:?. J. Lockert Beatty, ac~~~7f·11vtn~ nt ils best .-EAL TY Tr•ll•r for .... ~~ "'C~ Rltr. Eves: 83!H341 . LA.H.GL 1 BR $190 N1111r Ntwport P•tl Office MOBILE HOME * 535-8915 Q/IQ -p s· Newport 8"ch No Pets "STNCE 1946" Pen. Pt. Oceanfront \:>~ 3&.'1 \V. '!Vih1on G12·1971 Chance of • lifotlme 10 pur-The Pun/• with the Built-In Chuckle THE BLUFFS 1.11 Westf!rn Bank Bldg. Unlvi:rr.l1y Pu.rk, Irvine · oceanfront locations for the G:n..i ' chase this prime of all .... (stat I !il D•y• 552-7000 Nights new year. This charming 3 . LE --zr Bf\. 2 bath house overlooks 2 BDRM. CUTIE -°"" ooeon ,.. bt1rbor eh-154 trance. A rare lifttne at 1z==="-''""=.._-'-'-ff'• &.Ir~ .. hu 11>rlnklcrs $110,000! tront A roar I: hns 'been ex-t.rem'elY well cared for. Askin& on!)< ll6,000. ~noe CAREFREE LIVING ... IN NEWPORT'S AWARD-WINNING COMPifUNJfY LIVE LIKE A KING Al Budget Prices! F'URNlSHED - UNF'Vlli~I~11EO • 3 BR, 2 Ba. trl-Jevel "50 • 3 Bl\, den, 2-aty ... -S«Xl * POOLS • 4 BR, 2% ba. V11.cant $425 * ENCLOSED * 3 BR, 2 ha. View $500 GARAGES * 3 BR, Z\ii ba . "New" $525 * 3 BR, 21\ ba., eu•lom $325 * CONVENIENT associated BROKERS-REALTOR S 20lS W Solboo 61l-J66J $29.50 Per \\i'~k 6. Up. 1 BR, 2 BR & bachelors. Co.lor TV, n111.!d M·rv., pool. 'The ~tcsa, 415 N. Newport Blvd., N.B. -· 2 BR Jo"~r dupl~ -l blk to beach. Yrly or winter $225 or $250 mo. 130 46th St. Sac Nov 24-:li or p h o ne 2l:l/28.S-il215. SJ>:ACLIFF Manor A p I II. Burhclor npl. UHi Pd, Sl4iil.50. Pool. 1525 Placentia Aw. Ask nbout our r!L,._ COUllL MS-:.m. QCJ-;ANJ•'llONT 38fl, :Z Ba. furn. Monthly QT' yrly. 557-1844 2 Oceanfront I-room $90($100 yrly, ulll Gla-12•1. apta. liocl, ired hill . ,,,.:::~ , • REAL'rY ,....,...aor ... -r:-::.aeeo Furn, avail. to $600 Mo, TO AIL BEACllF'M" Short or l""IJ torm FROM $140 MONTH Balboa P1nrn1ul1 ADULTS PLEASE Apt. Unfurn. 365 Univ. Park Center, Irvine l-o::---...----· l·...;;:,;.,...-;.;.. ___ ....;l;,;60.;;I Call Anytilne, 8.'tl.ODl Doy•• Shor-Of'ficc hotI!1 8 AM lo 6 PM ...-•• View Turtle Rock Broadmoor N , pin By owner. 833-2389 Unique cmtom btlllt home, O. n. 3 BR. formal dlnini, famil)' Laguna Buch room, 3 car prage. Mutt Oc .. n View • $38, 900 $110,000, 1.ArfC 2-Sty. 4 Bit &: den on 1 ~ lot&. Slldlrtr dooni rrom den to aundcdc. BUn., l1ln.nd If po kllch. CArpetlnit, dtapea. No betto' buy ln all the 1'Vil1111l:.'' MISSION l<EAL TY 491-GT.U J I' 0 ;11~~~ ~!TIEU TO I I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWEU IN C~5SIRCATION 700 ~· ' ;'. VILLA POMONA DE:LIJX'F. Dupl ... , 2 Br., 1% ~¥. &.. Ult·lrts, car, dr-ps, ;5f G\ . PHONE 642-1015 encb<l gar, frplc, laundry \lh (1700 Pomona Avt'.I nn. No pe111. &18-4!M9. i rea ly . I ll'~~~~:"'!'"""~'!' YOUNG rouplc wanted '° Unbellev•bly Beautiful r\'1'1t ll cozy l BR apt, on 24.14 Villa del Ow:> ' VAL D'ISERE Garden Apta. the Prn., $125 MW>. 673.0111 Newport Beach Adlllts -no pets. Flowm Coron• del Mar &«-1133 ANY'l'TME ~rr-. St"'*~m~i;,·~~;;~:t.;~;;;;;~.f..---~.!! .. 2 belh' VIEW 2 n-•-·-· ,Sauna, Stlt. 1·1 ll<lm!., -•tttl noor. l3SO pr, month • ' • .cteWUUIJl"' Yum-Untum. fiom f138, Qj;' fp&l"IOOI 1 bodro<tm 2 Bath, den, }:early SEE IT~ ~ Pai.mt, upttnln with prlvale u. lease of ~75. Realtor, 64J.8870, '""'"' $200 pr n><>oth. Both 64{.7270 .;:,,:="-'------units ..,,. to ptrlt • ~ Wtc!d • •·Patt'"T Place an ad' call Bal ~ Alt. ' -, "'.-]It]!-·· .. -lf!11-.. -ll!l! ~ ............ lrtJ [ ;..,, ........ JrtJI .. a' • ...... JrtJ I ...... -!al 7 Untum. MS Apt. Unht& MS ' ""'-au ...... ..... -(tr. -.i ~~~~~~~~0on~..,.~1~~~~~1~~~!~~~1~•·:·~"'~~~·~·~·~,..~rt~~·~·~··~~~~~'~·~,..~-~u~·~"'""~;"'~~··~...;,....~-~-~"""'""~~~,,.:1 ~!A1L.,.... ............ VILLA IMRSllLLIS WHY PAD NMORllU Huftl!fr!! -~ ~!!"f!~ llMdt =~ :;.::~ Sl'ACIOUS I a 2 llDltOOM APT. ITAY HO• ON UTI•TM •r•N'S _. ::.~..;eat-• Pumhhool & Uolluml1hool -flllWI ~ Mull LIY"'9 WllKINDS. :;:.' ~ .. ~ Dlabwuher color coordlna1ed appliance• • wo' ULDN'T YO".. s,111111 CM~y Estate -Adami, H.B. 9flMm. Plush •bal ""'91 • Dllrrond wardrilbe doora-VI' GOLD/..._ eat w1Wlll11 , lndll't!Ct lf&btlD1 ID kitchen • breatfut bar • 2 Acres. BeautlfUI ,eark·Ulte llllrOUDdlngs. mark\-~ a. col-huge prlvat.i fenced patio • plulh landlcap. It's all here for ,.., to enjoy Slitllrda71 and Swllton Pool. Sparltllnt 8Panlab Fount&liis. Jar, !owld on -St.. ing • brick Bai-~•• . Jar&• heated pools S~1 end all week lorti, too. • Spacious lllioma •Separate -Dining ' '*'7'!11. · I & lanai. Air co""""'"'••, .. ~ ooo •··'th .... 7 ~--•·a' -'· 711·•• • Walk In Closets rEiiAii, Wil\10 -kit· --...... ''"'• .,... .,..L:.•:-~ .....,.., _..,. e H-· ""· KJ•·•• .. e, Ca"'··ts tea,_abt 2 me'1. -Lit• 3111 So, lrlltol St •• s.lo.... 557.aGO ed tennll courll, bu:ycie t.raill, puttllla peen. 1 eon•~u-~s-• ~. 65--.. ·~ ·-,tit' ~nd. BcJ,_lt(, fliatle COLDWELL, IANKIR & CO. shuflltboanl, croquet. Spactoua ~ ~. u.<wc<L 1 · Jl'iml....... !lu i>oi. Clll 'f!HIC-MANA!JING AGINT from $17t,!Q lllClllthly, plus 1 or 2 BDRM. UnfQm. '185. Fluti. '215. SMALL b1aCk ma1e doc ~~~~~~~;~~~~~~! planJaad:ktor)'townboulelwllllSorlbecl-TOWNHOUSE~~Ba., 14001q, ft. w/Wbile ~-chost ~~· ~U~llfum.~~~~365~ Apt. MS rooms. All .,itb llec:trlc ~vale bat-U $?1JO, /'l:s ~~ SL. u--CODY or patio, carpotlng, •Sa!IW-ALL UTILITIES PRIE FND .. ~.~ -·tlol. dol Mir c .. 11 -ranean lliutllu!, elevatora, II maid -Walk to Huntln"'• ~·-•·--~ 1--------1 vice. GGurmel food marko~~· •-n ~~ ~ FaunfalB ' Yalle1. tt 3 Ir., I~ ... tt beauty aaloll Gil-·""•· Seo fUI' Adults, No pets m. · , Laroe. newl> -· <ftd 1ecl .. ~ 11 AlllllT ~ Br!-Spuiie1 Ylc p&\io, bltns, erp1, c1ipo, nlsb modell today, 9 a.m. to I p.m. er UI 1111u1111A· HEllllSA Adal!U a ~ H.B. 'll!l CJooe to ..-. $1111 time• by appointment. Just aorlh Of Fuhlon Jay Circle, !LB. . mo. 880 Center St., CM. Call Island at .Tamboree and San Joaquin HD1s 1'21-1 PorlctW. L-~ H.I, ' ' !\tS'.<,,,. • white doc;. vie ~=--··all day Road. . -~ • Huard, Cill, Apt1?"1urnT>f~... EXTRA LARGE, 1 BR $15.1. PARK NEWPolT APAITMINTS 714: 947·5441 HALF-pow buM)' rablllt nr.plue I prlv. patloo. Utih pd. Rdri&, l'llll'· cpt, •• lollnd )!le Marlon IA .. I Pool> T.,,,,.. Cootllt'i Btf4t, -. Htd Pool Illa-.. ... .._ 7 (. bib. So. of san DI•~ ~on Beach, ' WltMK" N.B.' _.... ' 900 Sea Lan CdM &W-260 Adult.I. Infant ck. no peta. -r . 1 blk W H It to 1 1 P !A~ Lan ) ! ,;~:.::"":;:~==;=::=c.., tMa.Arthur i.. Cout Hwy) Walk to -ll&T fo!ephMM (7141 644-1900 fer l'MllllnfonMllon. · • OD 0 "" e · , J'!'D male G<nnan Shepherd ' lllonrovia, --.. ~· Unfurn. W Afots., ' . .., Sant& Ana Ave. in C.M., BRAND NEW 2BR 2BA apt, 2 BR. upstain. bar, bltno, Pum. or Unfum. J70 ,:'*5='7308.="°:--,---~ •Ftrepl. aeU clean oven. ura· $165/mo. Utll Paid. LatvM IMdl I~ FOUND; Beq:le ptqlpy, Vic. $31'Xl/mo. lease. ~o pets or Whlt:1~ ~ :r6 e VllW e Cotti Mell ti od :.=.Park. J..qufta Bch, AchilGT"". n. Eves. 644-0l25 pm, 96:)-.S172. .....-.a ... n:onn.NT ., ..,.,_;i:.AL,r nu THE EXClTING FND Bk &: wtllte fml kitten SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 Batho, * SHADY ELMS , POOL * 2 BR, 2 BA. Leue. Mahu-e PALM MESA APTS. vt. Weatclttt area, &Osll29 I-le CdM ui ..... Scboo1 • AduJta Poolsidt Sl40 up Adults. no pets. Elevatw to .MINt1J'ES TO NPT. BCH. Hot.la, Mlfefs 411 Announcemeftts 500 BRO-~ ,.-... ~· I w .... ., • • ...,... 8 Children next block beach. POo1., Security. 31755 nJRN OR UNFURN "'"' UU5 ,~... -- , atta~ ~tJ. Av~ 177 E. 22nd St.. CM 60-3615 Cout H"'X_·~ s. Lquna. Unbeli~ lu'E"e aPu,, R90MS $18 wk up. w/ kit lbrrv N...;.._,.. Call to tdefttft)'. tM 3181. :IW ' $140 up -2 br/3 br 111 ha • --• hUI• pool, Jae=! ti.ct bit· '30 wk up -· Oilldttn A '""" 1 11111 Allll!IS Loot 555 ~ ~\.,;._ ~ ~: \;.~~~ ~tn. = u• •• ~ ~:1:·:l:: oawa l:l!.i.~!"'~755,Newpon 11-11-y • Lost. SMALL OOU>EN ~Hwy. $325/mo . 2212 ~.No.5:'.'.-.mtJPSTAJRS2BR,2BA,crpts, SINGLES From$1500UHI-415 l"'l'l'J MIJ laf 'LAB ...... ·i.,-i>ollar. l."'-~~---c--='.'."'l 2BR, otow, -erpb, -. !rple. Adltl, m -1 BEDRM. From $190 Neiab-o!Hamll..,,\ 2 bedroom& each. Bltins. drps le utD'L Adlt pk. 12'75 leut t'D--!82C. 2 BEDRX. From. SllO & Hatbor. M:ta:lnc eewral 'earpeu • dnpa.~eboice $1l0/mo. 557-6134 arMouv..... u~~AvallFrom$10 * PrlY•leR-* ~~.,. 00 powo) ,._,. =.n.cau~-8550RL~ \l!9-52ll6. You're .... ~tbey'ntmllor, !or !au t n ~~~""'c,'-''=,,-,,--INEW > • 2 BR'1 from $1111., DELUXE 2 A 3 Br, 2 BL !>riced! 1561111"* Dr. Ambuiainr> Lady 0< Man IUd 0 Jiii 3 ~. -=~-.~ 2 BR. Stciw. ~1rla'·: trplc, nu $190. Nr. beach Ir: lhop'r . End pr, Sl.60 ap. Reatal (5 bib from Newport Blvd.) Good. nutritious FQod. °'l," new tun J2l6 ~-De f deoor. W!W crpt&. View. U4 E. nh St. CM. Ofc., 3095 Mace Ave . 546-9880 Nice, cheerful 1tmospbae. *Linda Adults, no peL S225. 10 to 4, 548--0137 • 54&-103C PINECREIK • • • * can 5'8-4753 * * HYP La £ltreUa. sc. .fn.1483 322 Heliotrope, Apt. B, CdM ' N_.:. :er * BmQunln ev• & wknd, ~. collect • GREAT VIEW • 2 BR. * SPACIOUS, 2 Br studio, -..-'""" • llMCft over 500 till tref;1 and 10 from Mom ol: Dad 640-1060. ;Reward. w /w crpt, drp1, elec bltna, boulder-bomid streama with BELOVED ~ ~• J , !"rplc, bltna, aundeckl, pool l% 1*. Nr frwys A: lbopl. tumbUnl waberfalll ereaee a ltantltl to Shlf9 430 from Grandpa A Grandma . .lg(ll ....... lte $210 up. -· 675--353S, No ..... 545--4893. OCEAN allld --tor ,.... -~~·TE --~.. ........ ,..,____ ·' ~. a), :...will ..... !.."'."!."...l! . ~ BR. Den, 2 ha. 2 •l;y each $135 Mo 2 BR. w/w ti'. Qllldoul 1-« ~ n.uv~ '~ : . srn. 11181 I J· • IMllMAi w/priv ontr, Cont CdM, bltns, .;. ebildrm or c;;:..; HARIOR VllW opt, From 11S5. 23 o o hle/2 BR opt, by Jan, 15, =~, llll1e. • ;497-2515, Sti-1054 evea. call 64&-6296. •OU&.-,. ~'-Illy Falrv!, ew Rd. ea.ta -... ~L1782 Ocan W13, wfth loft thrueut -""" ~ Pb c..., ..... ..,. ~-....__ SCHN.AUZER /Poodle, • -2 BR. C.,.ta, -. bit-Ins. Prevo! ' · ---BEAUT 4BR. 2BA. hie in '"" ro•r "!'Obie", bllt w/tan nwic· Private pa&, Garqe, Coo-Elerant _.., d..._ Pounllln Valley F.V. Need ,.. aduJg in to Jody & Lorin in.., Im collar, male, loot . , HlllOI GREENS pk' pnfd. 5C8-5ru. with • Muter'• touch, IU-SHAKBWOOD abaft rental. 9IH9lO.' tn H.B. 988 t839 • NEW 1 BR xtn. 11. le yd. No perb houe HCUrity, uclu-, --"'--·· .. -..__ F'f:MAI E roommate 2 BR. 2 --tpir_ • Lady's dlunond ldds or .-tz _,...... --i.. live Vft'l&illts (jub Uld .__ IWQ. • ......... -BA, -'_.. , _ ~':...ni.. w r 1"1 t w ate h ~· -"d &liHi:n. ~ ~ pool wttb Unique Aqt&abv Slater Ave. nr. Bnokllunt Qt. -mo. .i,er S. .....:o::-•• ...,._ • ~ Pumlohod & ~-' _ ...... ond fmma1 pr'. & SD Frwy, Ftn, Valley, 507.:zw. • W/\nocriptjon, REWARD! •~-~~ NEW 3 BR. 111 hi., Condo. dem. All -R ~the~--tn<I 96WW. • Prtv. adult GO hr Roni 435 ~615-415&."'-=~--~~~ ~ D_bl. b'i"tns-~-t.,~· C.out'1 &;;t-aputm~ areaa(famWestool)eBal-I I' I~ "TACO'\ male Ctilhulhaa. ,....,,$1• to $215 mo • JBI. ~ community &need p:11Wer ldtchena • 4 NEED to rent blR ad or dou-huJ •• .. kqhalr, black wttniwn. ·IBG 2BR, 1-11 Ba oltldio 1 -..Jitw!io. from $195 Swhn'1 Poola e OU!&u blo ....... Wlll pay $1S • loot vt. Ehclid .t. Slator. ~. lochelor1e1 ldrm1 2 ldrmo • J ldnno I~ ar 2 Pull llatho Shag. bl.Uni, pool $160 utn 2 Bedroom from $311; BBQ'a. • Indlv. prtv patiol mo., 1 )'I' in lldvanoe. Vly. REWARD. 55'H339. pd, 1918 Maple, 645-5647. lllDdel> °""' 9 A.M. W dlllk e -erpta, 614-8211\, Porlonalo 530 NALE German - 2 BR. Adutto, m petL BAY ~ Jlp Hunt ........ -Office llontal 4'l0 , named "Shep", m i>ollar, lllEADOWS APl'S, 387 W. • -J . *HINDU SPIRITUALIST* vt. 0.,. A W-. Bay St.t Cll. ...-, t!JU1 lllAHD NEW CORONA DIL MAR Let this ad c:bon1o ;-l!.11: -· ~1,.... .,:;:: ~~ .. ~ 2 BR .wdmn. ~ drpl. ~ QUO VADIS Ill ~ .lD .;. It cmce whole outlook on lite for the KIN. Germ ~ "Gm· ._.. ·-~~ -•· l'llll'I...., n!nr. No pet& OH THI ILUPPS 1.axt11y Gudeo Apa. ,.... tlllored ., '°"' bettor _, """""' _.. .. berJ>!IPPT, both tu llvin&' ~-w/!ireplaeiu °" Sl«IJ'ml).961--1f55. AT NIWl'OltT BacbeiOr 1A2Blt'a. daiCft. Fllll ltaD1b' bldK. onllfe.Lic.Readtnpdaily. cokr, nr 23rd. c.M. ~~~undry ...! DELUX 1BR. 'Vl<llll. • il3$to$113 w/1111~~.... ~lk~ --~· . oa kit<ben. Encloaed paz adlll m poU, &;: UO Eut n.m Nowport Blvdl -It Hid Pool.Jaeuui-saunu BOYD REALTORS 6'l5sSl30 Real, s.. am-~ REWARD. Loot ladil!I ptok t1os. 2 swlmmlna: poola, 21at, 6f6-Ql1S. Holpttal Rold. ( bkdc ltenaUon Room • More! • .... eokl wrilt wa1cb w/rublea. u.una, l'eet'eation taclll· APT. 1 Bdnn •• dr'DI. crptlo above PacHIC Cout Hwy) to Adults ~ • No Pets New Watertroat Offtcee PREGNANT? Th in k.1 n C ,;;i:all~615-4344o.:=..· ~"°' -,---,:~Security ouanl-No • .,.. •. Nopots.lisE.Bay. =·:>...,~.i=-~:ro,.,k,~I~:: lnlheh!and<rllldz. :~, ~w~X:.'. ~ .... -~ inAM!:~ ''iloodei 1135-645-<1313. T•Uphobe' tn4> 645-0>60 DICIMllR RINTI ~~ f:.~ "' hn, 54!""22 Mar AreL 141"140L I' la 0pon 10 tll 7 pm 2 Br. Twnhle -opt, 1M2 J1oC1da SL 847-341 -Dr., N'pt Beach PROBLEM -..,,, Co& LGE b1oc1c Gmnon ._ Pot. .... way,CM = ... ~~-~~ *2WIEKSPRll* (\lblk.W.o!Gllrlield BlllGrw.i,.Rltr. 675-QSI :...;=.:;~ .... in vie= .. •• tt.rtlor lhol • MESA v...i. O:nlo, 2 Br, 1 Vlsto .... .... HUNTIN_GTON_ GBlvd,~ DESK_.,..,. ™ ~ tloo .. -.ni. A.Ps --!LB. - AM Ba.dahwbr,lhqcrpt,pool. ADULT GARDEN HOMES ar e.n• mo WW &llWide blllbft CAR&&O-k16. • · • .... Pret adlta. $1!1\, --IRVINE AVE, AT MESA AptL Hell .. -QUeo, .. i5-~ -PALM • CARD READD!GS I I~ Cjl!ft'JD Huntl"""'1 llMdt ,._,.,./~uaoly !:F',;,.~=.,; ~ anllabl.:.1111SBwhlllvd. TeU.Put,-.t.Nnre ---il'ttMhl 1--...:,-----11 Br. $160 2 Br.~ "--. . _ ... -. -(213\ tl94-13M l'ully Ile, ' ' NEW •-O.,.•Nlllrts.turil> Pool, -·-. '' ' i.m•l!!ll!J!l!l~!lll-• I -.... 1 Fotmta!N. Rec:. Bldi. "' DELUXE, Apt 7 priv, -DESll "'""' -~ ~~ AnolQomooo. " HUNTINGTON -rm. bllllarda ""' 11uaic • J>OoU ,...,., tennis mo. Will ...---~·~1 .. writo A.MwlN ..._/ D LUX 0<TV.Ea.Apt,bao'diJb, $130.~Poohide atll-.:Anl•dbw...toe P.O.Bollll23.o.taMnL ... ul-.!MoWla"''unu APARTMENTS BEACH -· n!lta . ....., cp1, a -$ISO. -•vaillllle. m ....,. A .. , SWINGING SINGLES ~ '.!:, :; Oond • Flplc'o , 3 .....,, 2 Bedroom. ~" pit patio or de<Ji, -$1"5 MO 1 BR. d<uokoc. port '-......., -cau Jim. 2 tor p.m, *DIVIRT A.MA.TIC ..... Pool> • Hwth s,,. ' •n u111~-. .... y..,i;. .:;;,,.,., ..,, ... ~ -~ • UP. Ind util. Some S.3122 LA lJN>3 ONLY $111/MO Tennla C.0WU -Game and " ,,.. .l'f W\-1C blk·~· ~ furnitllre avalL 2333 E. COUPLES PARTIES SAVE OVER $1500/YEAR Billiard Room. OVIR 62 ?ft 3 Love'1 new......,., apts. trp ' bch, Ololt HwY., Ofll. ,_ Call Phil 2 tog PM DI-' CaUo All« i-. 1 BR. From $Ill) RETIRED f?? 3 & 2 BR., 2 hi. eaeb. Pitr 1 BR., 1 b1k lo ... ch. -swu H. Pb. 13M3S! 0< 530--3344 To ""1 l'bonrtl5-liQ/J 1 BR. A Den Prom 1185 ea,... and or.pee & oli1' M..,. extrll. lmmed. C!l>tl. -lndl'y tac. $135. -" MOBILE TELEPHONES MEDITERRANEAN Bufft-ino • · R<lril-""""'°""'' 202 l<th SL -. PRESTIGE omCEs· Air-S..lal ~ 5U su;10.,1 4112 a.- VILLA,...E 0>.....i -Call, 113-3113 --. Nw,.,i -""" cp1a, c1ipo, air' conc1, don't 11e AJooe Pn. °"""' S.-ll!M234 · <> Ga .... Mltlftt, (Mo dallJ malnL Ex«: bldo· Forlhe·llo~! ~ -' >tOO llarbor Blvd., C.M. vonlant le la,.. "-L• 833-8350. DISCOVIR en<> 557·8tQ\ ping canter. tve 1617 WISTCLIPI' DllCOV.rJ J~ Oorpot" Upilol>lary RENTAL O!'FICE Ill YWNo h!Lynll91 UOO OI· ft. Cpl, air cond. n,__ 213'387-3393 -~ 'if.~&;::: < OPEN '''° AM to ''"PM I -Ample pq, •W. Joni..,, fravat 5411 ~ • all ool« Time To Stop Up YEil! WETAK!:Pfll'Sll ·b•1g Baumg..-,•101.$U-0032 · -a JD,,,._ 142-"22 2 Weeki nee Rent tool OFFICE or dnk "*°' Nr. bleach for white carpets. ~~in_~:?= (OU San DieKQ Ff'l.ly, So. on ~sit.~ ~·mt'11~· San Dteeo f'nenf, t.aaun-L Save )'OUI' money ~ Avirll ohoppino and aeUvfU... O.ICh Blvd., 1 bllt. be)<>lld VlSTA DEL MESA 545--4&55 NllU<L 83l·lll0 SET SAIL ~ ""::,_~ rm~ -lmpeecab!y rnana&ed, F.dln&:er to Sta4k. E. toSEACLUT Manor ........ 1 4 ors oU1ce lllltet. $315 TAHITI ball $15. /iny rm. S7li0, penc>nal private:. Two ~Iallp, turn J'l&bl). BR. SlG.SO Pool,~ $140 Admin.IProl W/k.i~tb Grand 3 Milted Scboooer, coocb '11J. OWi' $5. 15 yn. bedrooma. den, 2 batbl, * MOVE IN TODAY * drpa, bltna, prb. dllpl.1525 from UJ) Roc:besler, CM, 97t--3188. cttW &: euest lh. costl. exp. ii what COQllb.. not -· ptcture.booli kltcheD. $13' A MO. ~ Aw. Aa1c ahout 400 SQ Fr Newport Bhd, (2111 171-lnt -I do --11-F1ttplace: and otlMr plUlea. di ~--cellba' a.ta ....... Carpft Good re1. 531~01. ,_ Slil\VENadult oeet1oo, Spec. 2 " 3 Br. '" 4-p&e.. · our l<OUl>L ~-Oakwood It $1 mllllon In a we. --o ... i!!ed Ado • , • w.ort1 'ft.JE DO"E ,...,,... •vall. ALI. !:)(,BRAND new -...,, recreation. Swimmin g PRO-ONAL~"1e-~1;;:::;::;:::::;:;;:.:.::;;;;;;;:::;;:;;:;;;;;;,:: '"' m TRAS. Pool ne bldJ. Kida do, 2 BR. 2 BA, bltns, ·-~ ·~I Anabe1m Avemae welcome. From $U9. See nfria, Wublr/dr)ier, yrt.y pools. He1lth c:lubt. top. Hell at~ Q:1ca. Call Mtt. Pblll1'ls 540-0781 Mp'. 11311 Keel.a "B". 1 tew. $i25 moatbll· m..'1894 Sauna& Tennis courts. H.B. $215/mo. 8*-1323. $135 bllt w. ot °"""' Blvd. oll 2 Bii .... II bloelt from Bllllafllo. Indoor golf drfv. lluolnHI """'" 445 • Sla\or. 868s1SlD or &tl-42!1D. oenn. ~mo. 0.11 "'811 Ing f9nge.S1ndVolleyblll. GIGANTIC I BDIU!. WALK TO llACH ,_ 6'1· 7111 or Whl~pool Baths. And Iota Ol'PICI STORI Y;:_1.~ ~··thll~i Nd:br~ ~f 8:is Cl'fe~ .. ~BR. Y·-~· . .,0c ,....., u more. A.realdent tennis NN:::..: •m8:I ~er= Jut """· Cpto, -. ,,.., 8<7"'951. •bill ., o;.;p·ti ~ pro and actMtles director pd. l'lml. 646-W =:= sr:i~":; LRG. 2 BR. nctec. new a... Adulta. 00 •.,:.: ~ho Jilans ~e~ Sunday lfOO SQ 1T Nr ~ Dteao pets. ~ Fullerton A;e <1 crptJ. bltin.. Near t..cb. l1'3-ati8I. run es an arbeeues. Frwy at clown v.u., on Blk E. of Newport mvd. • Adlta.. m peta. $150/mo. 3 BR. 2 BA, ~lex. Dlhwhr, Starting as low aa $140. frarnp. t..pna N 1 1 u et • 1 BJk So. of &JI, C.M.) 6tlH88l. trplc. Oolan vlew, $.125 per Singles, one and tWOe -"831-=IAOO=------ ...,._, 2 BR, bltln 1tove, pr1 ~~?.:. ~ ~ S3rd St. --~ bedrooms, tumished and Tra~,.s Paradise ' lines times dollars Border Border -~rgain Every clauifiocl wont ocl in tho DAILY PILOT eppeers in every edition evory day. Thet means your ad will bo - in popers dolivorocl to homes and ..Id from Mwsracks from bordor to bordor •I •long tit. Orange Co.st . • . aA tit. wty from Seal ·Beach to Sein , Clemente You Get It All 'Dmadngto• Beaeh Fematal• Valley Cesta Mesa Newport Beaeh Lagana Beaeh Irvine Saddleltaek San Clemente caplstrano (Plus the daDy newsraclc edition) Eor-Dne Price ' With A Park·Lllto Sur...,....... erpt1 A -~ $140, ""' o.,.t; 6*6111 Evu. unfurnis hed. Sorry no 1""""'111 -II 450 QUIET DELUXE Alabama, Apt, C. 536-mlJ, OCEAN VIEW y ••.rly chlldten or pets. Model• m IQ, l'l 3 -pwr.""' "loo ____ T" __ ._,.. _____ "-l'I 1, 2 • 3 BR APl'8 2 BR ~. wuher/ Duplex. 2 BR. 1 BA. ""'· open dolly 10 to 7. mosa. IL Ull AD> pwr, COMMER. INC. 1m1 a o GE Co. 11ounw.i !'Vt Pltloe * Hid Pool myu, Pollo, !rplc, bllinl, ""'110 Cl< !C:361!= "'-'---' Pvt. olllcr, DlenNI> --· C.M. $4,lOO Net Ranch ,\ -, ld<al ' Nr. Q\oo'I * Aduiu only IUO mo. tlUNI. NEW, ip, S BR., 2 bo., ..,..._ C. ~ IATl'REIS, lfdldable )'r. Owner bolpo lfYl!dl<l!lon, 11>1 c:hurdl, Aleo ,... Bach. ..... 2 BR. S1udio. Patio yvd, ---Year\J 1316 ............ 'llilllll9 Rltr., C-JI. -!inwe. For: "°"!!, TD'o. -tier town. Tnde tor • • • Martla'-Apes. ,.,.... $!JO/mo. ii'l.irt .._ -. -l1H2tlO. ,.._, ._ c1nr land or " ----_, - 1'ITI ...... ];: Ave Cir no -Av! Jan L IC •• , Lft (...,_ ~ -~ WC~I· 4M BUSINESS. Help run "'' RENTiSJf S BDRM iiOii1IO lU i.-:i&a ~ ~ Bri.Ci., 2 :;i e 1 A 2 BR. neer haoch • .=ao~170 ~ .... -=.=ii '"'.J'!:.: =~-= :'ix>a~~or:, =· f,: I~~~ II &I jop. lllO Florldo. sat-lt'IL lown, -Jndry, C.bl< 4 ..,; 2nd floor, Mmt bo.e. elp eor0<1. ~61i-2!90. SUborv-wep;. LOVELY 2 BR ... 7 Bltns, ;;:i $150-~-493-13lt. no ..,pie.-. A llv rm .,.., ..... -~· ... T.D •• 6111Cl'6,. < TWO · 2 ~ ... ,;,i~~ erp11,....,.. pr, -$ISO. •~ ....,, I ll;il NB ..... -c111n1 1 llllJST ....,, ·n El Dorado HAVE 1.0Vti..Y ,.....,, --pool, --.. -...,... -l1!::J fl!!) w/-"": bu OY--Lolle Auuw\wtWI, Laob ion1eo ,.w,;., A.tuHo, 1 Br !rpk: tne1 pr ..,.. ,_ •r Unfum. m ' • lncL '13 UC-. Ell<hlna• ISl,OOll equl1>. Trade 1or .. -m 11), 'Slit. C.lt vw.'MHito, (:113) 5iHle. c~ Miio TIME FO $1.lOO equll> .... omalJer "'1to or ' ~-~ * M • * aft lipm. .... IMf'M Cll' or TTT "'"6Ul. Btalt)r, !Utr. E'Ntr aMIM1 2 BDiiJi cioi.a.. .... -Uftt1tr Now Qll"lf "Al. U iii DATSUN Niaaoo Pa· 15W RUNABOUT w/N.B. -, 1'111 ..-, prdlft ~ w -MiiililiiiNiit-'80. PER MQ,_a.rp,,s .,.--,, II' .-.v.i..,-.._ww.,.._ ___ -•--lflrl· ...._.._.__ Adul~PI!: -· CAM·vferoNA .ilR Condo. '111111_1-lf".yr lorJail-oLequa1 VII• -Vel..'*5 -'lf+-l--+~~~-2--.116-M. . ·~ i "-P" I• 2 Ir. r\on • Un!llnl old bachelors, N'1 THIOUIH A ,., --•.iore s -· Jlc, -·VII.• I jll"'!> """ -• cu... ""'°"' DIW TY or 63Mo29. p.m. lor ell', TY,"""' ,, ~ -.-o. --., Frum --'" -'aal. Pool '''" Com• 8y A A;t;J1 MW' ' 41 WANT AD s '11, 2 BA. M•" Verdt. WILL !Jidt ;j &mliO l!r • -8l, W. o! -tum 11\om into Cllh iJ1!111ft Obioll our ...,.,. • ' II.ODD equil>. Trad• tor id -eor • 11111 ,......, .. .. Allonnce. 11Z -8l Wttl<LY ntool.w....-, outo, T.O. ., t J, Lockert Alm"185 Ac. l(wu Wbotit 4 C.W. DA!l.Y PILOT at J;!~1 9'· ta-ml. Oo1Dr TY, IO-1 blade •• a71 Ba1tty, Rtlltcr. Evmi•11i: land lot T.D.'1 0< f, Valb -.s11As-ok.Clob , ., blodl. N~--.. ,"ill l!UUL llZoe.~ ~ Poo11; can w ll!f. Cl.rlf!ll!W ······• ed Ms •.. f0687I Tnw!Adft. !!>pl: . • DAILY PILOT , Classified Ad Phone 642-5678 -YOU-CAI 'CUJGE IT, fDD, __ • • • ' ' l 1 " ' ' ' ' ' • -. . ' ~·· .. " - r • • • ''' , • Are You Letting Cash . ' ' ' Slip Throu9h Your Hands See .If You Have Any Of These Things A " . DAILY, PILOT WA"T 1'D .Will Siii Fast! 1. Stove 2. Guitar 3. S.by Crib 4. Electric Saw 5. Camera 6. Washer 7. Outboord Motor 8. Stereo Set ,~C~h lll'~' 1 O, Clar!net .. 29. Bicycle 30. Typowl'lter 31. S.r Stools 32. Encyclopedl• 33. VKVum Cluner 34. Tr""lul Fish 3S. Ho[ Rod !qulpm't 36. Fi .:. C•blMt ,37. Goll CllllK ·~ . .... 57. Electric Tr1ln ' . ·-· . ·, 58. Kl.,_ .. ' s9. Cl•nic ·Auto 60. CoffH T•bl• l>I ; Mot~r:"ycle 62. Accordion l>3.'si.is 64. TV Set 45'. Witk Bench . ')1.1 Refrigerator 38. Ster n,,.; .Sliver il9.' Victori•n· Mirror . ' {>{> Diamond W•tch 67. Go-Kart - 12. Pldj,~ , Truck 13. Sewing M.c:hlne ' ' 14. S'urfboard 15. Machine Tools . f 16. Dishwasher 17. Puppy 18. Cabin Cruiser 19. Golf c:;, 20. Blrometer 21 . Stamp Collection 22. Dinette Set 23. Ploy Pon 24. Bowling B•ll 25. W•ter Skis 26. Freear 27. Suite••• 40. Bedroom s.t. . 4 I. Slide Ptoi.ctOr ' 42. Lawn Mow.;.· 43. Pool Tobie 44. Tires 45. Piano 46. Fur Coat 41. o .... ,., 41. t.I-• . ' 49. Horse SO. Alrplono SI. o..,.n 68 •. Ironer 69. Camping Triller 70. A'ntique Furniture 71 , T•pe Recorder 72. S.ilboot 73, Sporst Car 74. Mattress Box Spgs 7S. lnboord Speedbo•t 76. Shotgun n . S•ddlo 78. Dart Game 79. Punchl"ll Bog 80. B•by Cerrioge 81 . Drums 82. Rifle 83. Desk '" 21: Clock' 52. Ex•rcycle S3. Rero Boob 54. Ski Booto. SS. High Ch•lr 56. Coins 84. SCI/BA GNr These or any other extra things aroun4 the hOlllill· . . " can be turned Into cash with a '" -~ -h • ll-A IL-¥ ~1lo0 T WA N-T--A-D ' • • "50 • • • • · , Don't JusJ Sit Therel DIAL DIRECT ' -, • • ' " I' " ... , . -.• ~ I• ". [~ ... ;.,.;;-~· ... ~, ·~,!*~·. ~~;t ~, ;~-~:;."~ ... ~-=;11;r;•1, 1 ~1;;;"'~~;· .. ; ... iiiil!J~oo~~ c~ ,, . ..., .... ~' s-rc.· •;• JOit w-. -..-190 H<tlP'Wonlod,M'lo·P1lO ,w -.l.M lol'710Antlq\lel ][fi] •c:.16:: 'SICK 0>' DIRTY CMwET HAVING A -f'oriyJ -·a legal Selrelary lee Rhoads Ol.B the~·DkW-· buU:ndet'C'·,Cill 'fu""' t>ELIC'TESS"N' t'ee Pa!d Demand •oe~cln 53&<ltJB'1 btfore·S pm. · " · " Your plenn« .. .,.., .... ,, Anhque Clocks c~~:"·co~:;,,';"'2c "1 ---~ •. •· " ·~ \iiiVllltwr ~~f&:~t~lnr:~:. Sold~ .Re ..... -•79-,. ..... · SC ~ Iii "os.:.;•/ .. -~~i-~-,... -'""" -°"' "' · •·:xcLus1v•"Y rr J '· ! "Wi:lftr.esses Jinn. Call Kim, 8.lJ.2700. )60 V1ct~rla .. C~t · &16-97 PATtdS.P,1!.ANTERS -. AN AJao "'" ,__.o.nn,. • !In :>av= ~ lO pm , ,+11 C-9ncn;tQ. work. Brick, , .~ • Mu\t be over 21 Dennis Personnel Agency of \l/f!4ikday~v1n tH lO pm -:l '1UmP1tooe:'.'fl~;.ff4=35.13. ' Bwilly -~ -Jl,a.JQ I ~ ,lo}.-, rJ,nctd lrv.ine, B2 Michel6on· Dr:_ LADIES Chinese skirt&: IDPM PATIOS, walks, drives. Saw., Gained ~ &ARGAlN . c;~-r· LJVE.-ln ltouaekeeper, cart' ~usual, 50 to_ 75 yn. oki;I break, .remove & replace 1'~atherly advice: "Son, Apply in Pel"llrnl of lO mos old baby. Mother Sullable for window dill concn;le. 543--8fi68 for.eSl 1 ~r buy a ~p used car. recup'g Approx 2 nws or pel'50MJ v.·ear, x.lnt ' CtiSTOM CEiiEiri ~ORK, It a hard fo drive a BAA· HOCHMAN'S 54S-8687~ 673-5092 alt 6 pn1. · $7:. flrin vr1ce coold Ori~ WALKS. 1)600&. GAIN." DELICATESSEN A MACHIN ISTS ~·~1~:. :~tttar uom POol deeka. Don.9 60-8514. j Jdb W1nt9d, f.,.,ale 702 . RESTAURANT Both Day&. Nile shift open· ESTATE Sa~ French Contr•ctor NEID ~-at bpme? We , lngs, 4 WQ-•. 40 hr v.·ork wk. cut &:lass it~m1, Chee ha . N 4'l! £7th .Street Sonie overtuneJ ~ed t.o C'""stal <:handl/('r mirro~ JACK Taulane -Repair: ve es, u ts e 8 • sll.e machines doing 1ntar-· •3 • • •• re~. add\t. 20 yrs. expi Housekeepers, Companions, Alts& ntlng ihort run operaliorui. many other items. 421 , Llc;'d. My Way Qi. 547-0036! Homemakers, Up john• F.qual Oppor. Employer AWIY"'tft~tson, Elder hi-Rd. NB, 6'12--0808 D .tti 547-fi681. --, dustrics, Inc., 2101 Dove St., ANTIQUE roll·IOP des~ < r ng t H•lp W•ntedi M & F 710 -DICTAPHONE SECY N.B. chair. Very gooc1 eondit' PJ..AN-'1..u,..,....., Rem 0 d 1 , Ek> i;1ght ~d gal 10 beaut!· ... •NAGER' TRAINEE Call 675-0111. • ~--,. l50 ACCOUNtI·NC Cll.'l'", rut modetn aalC!S offlci."""' A II ~.OOis Additions. ~7.~ ruatlll"e woman, some typ-01"eat variety spot. Start , AND SALESMAN •nc•s ing, operate 10 keY addirlg $450. Fee Paid/AJ1t0 F~ for last growing Tile &: llon1e $80 1 YR. b'Ullm, del & i 0-~lng machine,. AIR & payable JoM. Call Sally Hart, Improvement Center. Na-stall. Late mod. all cycl exp, Data , pro c es 1 in g 54ll-fi055, Coastal Personnel ~wide expllD&ion program Kenmore her. SJS-lm. background des i r ab lq. Age~, 1100 Harbor Blvd., oilers x!Dt opportunity . for • DISHWASHERS. washer BOB'S GARDENING Ii: LANDSCAPING Residential & CommerciaJ Irvtne Industrial Complexes. 557-4299 af1er Spm, FRONT yd. lawn serV. $10 -mo., back yds a l's o ~ weeding, yd cln up, t~ _.,,,,._.,,,. . '"' ~i;.('~ HXP. Hawaii¥ :f;;ardenet\ Complete garden s e r v . Ka ma lan i, ·114·fMW16, ~138'11 ··~· ~-~ 1"' .. ,, PROBLEM ,!()x..vm,. · Prof, gardener. Trtt wont, thinning, pNnID«. stia:pitlg. C1ea'1\I~· Georp, ~. Gen•r•l· SW'itpe• . , ~ Salary $475. to $ 5 D O • CM. advanceme!nt. Eanungs dryers reblt guarn Intergraded Data Corp., D 0 M f. ST IC over $1D,IXXl lst year. PMne delv'd.' 839-7b'20; 546-5218. l &x 577~£·M. , ~ Coup~ exper · &t.>U26 or apply at 2221 ACCOlJNTANt cook Mu&t hiivl ·fnp re!s: lfarbor Blvd., Coiita lotesa. Rt "t Washer1/Dryen. Heavy In bbkpng, all tixet, ~ open-commensurate MECHANIC Wanted. For-S2. \\'k_., Full main\.. ~ ·ncr Id aJ -1.· w/f!fP &: ability. ~d elgn ·Car. * ~1202 * 1 JV 4. ' . ~e~~11?1 resume t6 P. ·o. lJOXttz18, ' C08ta Mesa area. G.E. GAS DRYER corp. Parm. pas;ilion, C8.ll 926:!fi or write, WBS, I.nc,.6d.cl11.2, 6irona del Mar: Ca. · 642-5133 2 .)J'8'. old. Xllll oond. Ji· 563W .. 19th;S1..~Cq1\a111'.esa. DRIVER for Harbor area MEDICAL Asilitanl: Exp'd, 645-09:.i7. .. ARCHITECrURAL Dratter route. Mu.it ha Ye <!l~iv· Primarily tront o r r i c e , PORT ABLE \\lasher sl)Ell!d temporary, ·futr or •part lng'rect:>rd . .Apply bt pel'l!On, Salary open, NB a.rea, Send Queen Never USl'd Won 9n tlme. start lmmed., b>uril Newpbrt -sta~ 4~~ ~:U:ifioo&:Adre~ere572 110 game show. 979-8367 _nexible, may wort: al ~e Birch, N.B. r , >' o. ' c o OVER :n:i washers. dryer.t, or offJce. ean·496-5155 West. Daily I ilot, P. Q. Box N?· re(rlgeralOn from $39.?i. DRY Clen"1-manarer , ~ <hit.a Mesa, Calif. 545--0780. ASSISfANT manager & ....... ~ ~~ -~~------maintenance couple for Orange Co. (beach cities). LATE motlel auto washer & large coniplex in Costa Mll8t be ~p'd Jt lica'd. Able NEEDED-Sitter, begi.nning elec. dryer l220 J. A-1 COlld .• M A t s 1 to t.1ean & flrefs. Send Jan. 2. 2 sch!. age children S45 ea 64&-5S48 ,, C.'Sa. P .+ a ·a r Y • resume to ~:.~t . ~ ,.4781, Mi11sion Viejo, nu El Dorado C · & · 642--8970. Lrvini::, .Ca. :r.!tiM.. . area, plse caJI 586-2179 aft amer1s I rr ncelh to '""' •onei u 't . ·ATTRACTIVE GIRL 6. Equ ipment Bj)I ~~'Jin. .G.d:'it.401'1.C P/time work, high pay, short Execufi'ye Newspaper Carrie~ -·www h' "·"" ,_A.:11 'now, carf ·Jfai\Cfyrn'an hrs, gen'l cleaning .. No . BOYS & GIRLS SPEED grap zc 'UW w/.._., 546-9723 . heavy woric. Must -drive. Seer........, ' plane shutter Reg. lens .1:, S'MJDENT will do "tlJ1Yili{~ Apply 11·1, Rental IUadier, .... ..._I ._, · 10 )'l"!I and older. wide angle lens. ~ i anytime repairs, ~inr 569 w. 19th, c .M.' M~l ·be hi~ qi;lli'ed ~ ~ew~~ = 1 ~a. 546-8620. · &. boat maint. Reas. hopes( Alltomotiv• Mechanic a secret.a s. pt I . c r. SLR Praktica inli':rnal rue sate driver, refs. 6(5-1'101. R -• fro HS ~d .. b\il~'iltyling to accept re-Sea,y, Dail• · .. ~ .. ~~~1'••Cl\t. meter, 50th "or second. i eq: gr<Sll. m or s-1s1 1 · .........,,.._ Mo&. old. S90 or best o!Ier. Hauling G.E.D. oert; ,.._. 2.)'\S ~-in Cali or APPlf PAINTING in exchange for 546-0037 . : repair ' of au'tomotiVe & C. LA-VAL C .. O.. motel apt. 2376 _Newport Furn'•ture 8°':, GET RID JlE 1; 1!,A,,T -lJNSIGll'\'LY ;rWl ·& DEBRIS, .. EREE. E ~ t. COLL. STUDENT 548-6428 . diesel @quip. Salary range Bl d c M "'•8-9755 ~v $727.·$883. per mo. Apply Foremost in the vjtal expand· v " · · .,. · .. • Personet Office, City HaJI, big: industry or automatic PART or f/time help . Apply MOVING SALE? Anliquei,? San Clemerite; 4~101. vat9el & controlii.' in person, Kentucky Fried decorator lamps, furn ;-,! HAULING • •• , b · JI! l1th & PLACSNJU, Clrlcken, 693 So. Coast rpisc household & gara~ ""euup Y exp BABYSITrER needed, on · · COSfA MESA Hwy, LagWl8 Beach. items, designer clothes jij. t college student, lge trk'. thru F)i. Permanent. Vic. 14 ·rh /1:' "/Sa 10 A¥1 534-1846 or 534-n6'.. Beach & Ellis. H.B. • ~S.2201 I • R .. 1 Estat• s.1., . " urs n t, .. 84"""89. , Equal opportunity employer FREE lo :.i:30 PM. 1008 Santi&I? YARD, .garq:e.' de&nu!S& . Dr., N.8. .-. Remove trees, ·dirt, Ivy. BARGi.IUS • .' In:uned ·open. EXP'D Retail Sales, NI GLOVE leather-like sofll"'tl: DrlveW)'!I, grading. 847~266&. ings, ·Tuatill, ~ N>e.w port· Tl I Ibo rmaJ din me, pem)aD('lt po& n. License Training Love seat. 1'~o -~ SKIPLOADER & dwnp truck Bent ach, CG~ta ~~~ 1or Apply ln perso~_OJ!in West limited Tkn• Only set .. ~ mer i can ~ wock. Concrete , · asphalt.. ~'._.. ••n 111 , .........,~ t. Newport_ Stationers W F Uc Mart1nsv11le lables, pl sawing, breaking. 846-TilO.. ·~ Birch, NB. !l!MUS e~ course now velvel .sola & lovesca ~ I .. , BEAUTY .~rato• Apply available thru TarbeU Com· l·-p• el" ·~ ~·L r'l'UUSK Hnlng • ' ...... }"' • -· EXPER. Ca!>1e TV uh· pany. Applicants fully re-·-~~-·-·--~= . .,.-,-., intpt'raon. dc~und 1 n st a I I er s imbuL'Hed upon qualilication. l-PC bdnn !i<-'I, Dan1sh-ty , MESA Cleaning, cal"pE'IA, Windows, floors-, e t c , Re.sld I com1n'I. 5S7-t>742. 543-<ill. ·Prof. Carpet-Cl9911lnrg1 Al&6 Wln&WJ &. floor-· " CiiU Dulcb'53'1-15iil!~ . ROUS& 9ff,CLE4i1'f F1oor,· windows, crpt, walls, I yn. in area. 642-6824. llOUSEl\'ORI< Q.Wn 'l'l'aMp.' Sl ' "' -·--A'l-~ v :'' : Xlnt. Ho~eaning By Day. Own Transportation * 83&-0648 * Dedicated Cleafting * WE DO EVERYTHING * · l\'eb;. Fr'ee est'. 646-2839. YACHT cleaning.' Compieia M?Ckly cleanin1 inside &'out by 'local exper. busineu, 963·:l838. Painting & ·. P•perhM111lnt CUSTOM PAINTING Inter/Exter. Untu:rn. · inter. gpec. price. Free color con· aultlng &. est. W!~ ms. Won't be underbid .. sb-Gooi. No '1asting * WALLPAPER * When you call ''Mac" 548-1444 646-1711 549-0757 desired. Trainee ~df'r~. New or expe:rienccd !i;!lles II' M>fa, crib & IIYdt l •BEAUTY OPERATOR• I 4 2-3:260. TeleprOmpt&, peopl,e. Openings availlible. sl roll~r. table11, I amp.._, FUU. TIME. 'APPLY -Equal Oppor. Employer. COmplete ltainllig progrum. 64~18 i:.: ~ ' a>7 E.17th, Costa MeA F/C BKKPR l!"'uture management oppor· LARGI!: Walnut dinuig rooi CaJi.bfGllOtl •.~fit l_~ ~ tun1Ues. CalJ Mr. Sloan at tabk!. Uke new. $&5. l . l~)lilcklll ; .. (;:~· ;,~J:•1ar11 DUN~-::;.,,,.4 Ekpe'" " •1*''1'' .,.,,. , -~_..i-= II ,_. dln'"" ,.., • c...._ brallng Pl ·mech. de· ~· ~estcll~~·~ NB REALTORS leaves, puds. $75. ~. J vices: BWiic ,1eleelronicl 64>277r Corner Group Bed~ " req'd. Day· or ·nite' &hift. FULL charge bookkeeptr R. E. TRAINEE J35 496-4'1 Please applt, .· · Newport Beach area. Write R. E. Bruker & Developer, .. Gultort maustries Classified ad No.' 497, Daily will train & sponsor for SOLID maple dining tabl , . 1644 ~1J.:~.!f~Vt;:,,~ Pilot, P. o. Box 15001 COsta licen.se. Call bctwn 10 ani & e~~t:'nd~bJe $50., perfect OD ~-2,....., M<llla, Callt !r.S). 3 pm, MS-ll24. ~lion 64~~'----""'~ Equal. Opp;,r. Emp~r GJRLS wanted to take ~SALES Clerics & Caahiers. Gar•g• Sile i l'i;i CARPET installer, own in college e~ment Must IOme expe.r. Apply in --''-.-------"''"""''"·I truck wfhelper. Carpeteria, weigh p t lea.st .IBO lbs. Un to penan. Checker Auto Parts, NORITAKE !lne bone u~ 645-3(00, ask tor Gary. • Sil/evening Mi-5&n. -, ill E. 19th St C.M. ~llector's dishes; m iof.l=. CASI·-· expe• .... -ttee -. , 64s.'8264 • dtSh('S, V&S('S, etc. Bcnt-1 u.c.n. ~ ....,. ...... JI EPER: ve-1n, . stand '& Ponl. Tern~' shop. Hotel ~. '4:?5 S. ~ake care of 2 sml children &LES Oerk, Cashier, 3 .to 8 fende~s le hood: Ra I Cou.st Hwy.', I...ilR: Bea<!IL in motherless home ref. dally: Good pay, fringe hult.it·nietaJ ~If-clean· I CHIEF ACCOUNTANT Salary 10 $300 rno. 673-4186.-benefits •. 1-·010.Mat, 3(1118 s. r l<JCk!. Maple ~ngl bed ; A young & rapidly ex~ing Hou1,•kffper. {/tim• Coast Hwy., So. Laguna. n1a11., rollaway tx-d & matt N.B. real e11tate develol>" For Co'nv. H.osp. 549:3001 SECRETARIES + mii~. 546-8620. 3 nient co. needs yoti to fW ·its I no. 2 "'""""""• & finon· ~ * 100°/o FREE * 1 • .,.1,y I cial position. Advancement loillftrl..r~ DCDt"~i..tn Liz R.einder'• Agency LADlt:S Diamond watcl i to controller expec~ Your "'-v:1r~ f" ~""U'"<i'Q. * responsibility & exposore Ctl>l.N""'rl"aA.rc ... lr'V 4500 Campus Dr. 91/100 car never worn. I will cover the whole spec.. ~""-C-~~I 54&-2118 Newport Beach 11ell ~ ol apprais va.I , trum ol "'''" finanoial al-FEE PAID SECURITY GUARD ~Apprail!al av al,. fairs. H )'r1 rai.1 estate ac· Ex c---· $800 Exper. f/Ume. Contact Mr. tc:-~c,=c.-,-,..--~-;t counting l partnership tax-ee . ....,._.-ctary to Ford Securi~ Supv. 18 K jewelry lrom virtu a~on ~r. req'd along ~~tary .. · to $650 Bi.lboa a.y Club unt&.pped gold mkt in ?.fl • with bus111esa / acOOW1Ung :::>ec Y/.Advert111ng to $6.!iO tin W Coast J-I NB die Eut. E1eganl, rare. u • educatkttl .. -'Sa.JarY eommen-A/P, mventory contrl $460 • wy., · que. By appL, Mr. V surate · w/e~r. sen ...g¥J. Typi1V~/" $160 SECURITY GUARD ni/MLM Walley. 496-7489. resume Classilied. ad no.. ~~-1 ~!J'ol Oetk. )~ $460 J.IU11t · ~ •thoi'oughly exp'd. LADIES gold Pe'IO bract' PROF. Pairiting, also roofs, 554 ~o. Da,ill! Pi\QI, P. • -i C: &:. Fee ~· Own uil.Uonn. Apl +Salary. !7 coinsl 18 car gold mou accous. CE!ll. inter/exter. Box 1560, <;bit& Mesa, Ca ~ 488-,11Jh (at lrf~ CM 546-0310 Ing Sacrif. $350. 645-5661. Llc/In1. Free est. ~91. ifornia 9¥·) , \ l'.~·· ~'42--1'7b :;.. ~VICE Station salesman M'' II • -·" CLERICAL ·"--U -~ - - ---"-'-a-• Expe , 1sc• aneou1 "' INT & Ext painting, u:uings posllJl.!uS ava . ~=----~ • mec ........ c. nence sprayed. Unfu;trisbed spec. w/trnWr cOrp .. J.n their N.B. prefd.-Tup pay &: benefits. 7' low P.fagnavox grereo ~1 price. ~7887 att &. region&! .olc. Rn. 8:30-5:30 Jr. Draltsman $650 Apply at Shell· Station, 17th llOle, walnut.~ cond. . ~'7""'='.c..,.""'~~--cc I Mon -~h. fRe c e I>" Siec'y/Reci!pl, sh $550 &: lrYine, N.B. Riccar Aewing ma c h I 1~~ na.~'w':~~ tio.n~. ~-tele_Ph Secretary $600 st t I ER oeeded 2 to 4 hrs w/cablnet $2.j. ~1437. finishing. 548-7905 \.'OJce.,.· ·~at &. personality Tax &."Cretary $515: daily, S days per week. 2 WASHER. complf'te bed APr=;,:=.'"•"'nt",-',,"0,~P:;ain=-,Lin~g~.~0~.-,.· 1 1~-~0 1 '-Cl~ricali~' ~· .~:t~~r Lag. = glrlll, ages 5 &. 6 yrs. Balboa suite. 2.1'' black &. white pet shamJl(Xl, cleaning. Rq.&. te~iew'=e~m~8!f ·~~ Enjjr. Secretw-y $500 !7~33 area. 675'-8630 or "SSO~ea~oC'h.:,,C;::•;:tl:.,55::'c.7-<524-'=':7' -±·I Ins, 642-7059. to C\aa.silied Ad no. 5.56 c/o Medic1'l .Bek Ok $450 • SLEIGH (1 horse open) Dally Pikit. P. o. Box 1560, TyP.ift to $500 SURVEYING Instrument tique. Sell, trade or re INT. & EJClel". Accoos . .cell· 1D;t sprayed. Lie., Ins. LDCal refs. 645-<8l9, Oluck. Costa Mesa, Calif, 92626. NEWPORT Repalrmr!n & helpers. Call 53\-3374 or 645-T':J54 eves: . p 1 Ag In per!IOO at KeuUel £. ESSC'r . F C:OMPANION : active Chris!-•rsonne ency Comp., 1327 s. OUvt St., lA'I GE Musaphon1c AM· t 1an lady,. n1ust have car. 833 Dov•r O.r .. , N.8. Angeles An equal Ol>" radio S20. Pl••l•r, P.tch, ·R ep.Ir Live µi lovely l..('isure ~?rid 642-317b portunitf employer. ~8 home. Assume resporunbtllty · GAS e J C' c t r I c Bar-* P4TCH PUSI'ERING tor a dear 79 yr old Aunt • JR Sal 14 & • WAITRESS wMleWe. Only a lew 1 All typH. Fne ~tes not bcd'r1clderi. $350 mo plus F · ~ . )'n upl · Exp d & mature walt?'efll ~2131. Call 541).6825 all expensreg paid, Ref-or. infonnaUOO &: r>-wanted. 5 days a week. No =c-=:~==,--,,.---tccl Plumbl"' . erenceJ. 494-1,021.-terview, call ~ btwn split .shirts. No Sunday • * nREWOOD -Ol'anF · -4-6. ....wk Unifonn rurnilhed Eucalyptus. fl'l.50 % ---"'------· ICONCESSIOft ~P needqd at JOBS Medl~I & hospital benelits: 540-888t. DRAINS unclogged· $7.50 O.C. FaI~ ~Sat URGENTLY NEEDED Apply Llndi...-Nutrition In -u=s=E~D~B~IC~Y=C~L~E~S"j,_ Sewer Hne to 100' -$15 & Sun $2. ril". "NO smokm ""'& • 549-25()2 * Pref ... -4().$j &IHOOB tt g • Scctctarles rear of the Tey World Store All types * 642-1272 I ~ a • Keypurk:h Opera.Ion on IOWf't level So. Coast , , , PLUMB.NG Ri!J>AIR pm. ' . e SoltNters/wire v.·rap Plaza Shopping Center, In SURFBOARDS, S'9' to 6 · No job too small COOK • Billlng Cleek Typist Costa Mesa. Ask for Al Nl'w & Ust'(I. $40 ea j * ~:n28· • ~u . Ii 111trme. trv1ne MO-Q50 eubara. i:c,.._0'-'1258~.=;;;-=.:;:;;tb S.twi!'Sl{Alt•r•f1'1!1~ · c,rt•s Jr, Anaheim ~2µ2 * WANTED man 90me exp ** BARBIE doll clot 6882 Warner, Jttlnl. Bch. bi'EVE&-A FEE AT~ if'l\.'f yard aMt Newpori brand new, 'l'Se41. Vlckl'I Orlginal1 Sec Manager lift 2 pin. Tempo Temporvy~ c.c-n1er Texaoo, 6#.6755. POOL TABLES-BRAND Prof. df'~~1_lallorlfl&' & COLJNTER. Uldy, p/Ume. Joumeym~ Unotype Ma· WHO WANTS TO WORKT J'ACTORY DIRECl\LO rntyllpg. ~. Days o; ,ve1 & wkndiL ch!nlst. Night position. 33 DRIVE A CAB! $29. 63J..3461 , S4W4166, Alttr•tlon~2·Sl45 OrMJre .Juliu'1, H .B. ht. wk. Xlnt Com.pany Ben· OiOOSE your houni, •'Ork R.EJ..AXACIZOR. like Neat ,~-•· 2')'elini exp. 847"6731. rtlta. Paid Med~cal, Life, for younielf. bl'! your own paid $400, tell SSO. for f -COUNTER · l"ir.i Fry cooks Unllon;rts, crtdft lJnfon, ~IC. IXl&ll M@n or WOl'nt'n. Can be Ir body. feves) S.2512 T•levl1 R.,.lr Pfllme OI' t /Ume. Days or DAILY PILOT sllghlly handicapped. Vt., H.O. slot c.ar trade on ,.._, ~-nlghtJ, J w:k"ln tbe.J)ox, !85 Aak for Larry MUlt>r rttl~. Al(' 21 IG 70, !tllp.. boaltdl & ~ ..... 2 I COLOR. ..<l..'ry'• va.-iwnk:ll • •Dat :tmt• ... ~ e &U-4321 • plemenl yoUJ' Income. Drive $30/beill offer. MH138.JIJ 7G9 W. Mn! f!!!rta lih'lllll .. a cab 6 hl"ll or .mtrn" • fll\Y. · ,Suvlqe Cpl •w..64&--00.2 D~RY· ·()f 1)·A1L Y JUNIOR Salemien: 1().\5, APP'¥ tn pftWOn, Yellow C.b OOX 11prl.ng I ITUltltt111 115. PILOT, SUND• ONL'l. lO Eam $»-$40 per week get. Co .• 1 tB6 E. l8tb St., C.O.ta Retrl.gerator, ruM rood • new.~ '~ 'R.. Una b()W CUAtomtta tor the Mela. S4H132 aft S. qulret .... uae.ot". lli!itkm DAILY PILOT. Thia ~ ""' • ="'Tt~M""E"'"'FO=Ro-t- woaon-otW>f.'Cdnloct Mt. _,.,..., rvute ond """l~~~~~~~~J r llan;t..~. a-w..i. Boy. not lnoludo coUectJno °'I , '"r.\' Bt.lul'day..We haw T"I""' I'\ Cl{;l ._.CU . tor Foonndn Valley SW.h • ... '!\-' ·"~ ' HIAIOI~ Beach ...., .., Antlqueo IOO QUICK CASH RfOlJ~K DAILY PILOT :T St~~::-~--. ~~~~rlg·~·~·~~~I ~· THROUt.$ff'-A II'·· You mtll1 "" out of FORMAL di I chi DAIL ... "llll"OT -' by b 3 l?.M 1 0 n "" "'· na WANT AD I 't ! fi':_ ~ .. ~ Ex»er1tnCeJ et.billet. 2 cnde:nu.s, 6 _...uiu.u.;__...! _·_,,:W~ANT=:..:·...:...A:.:D_ iiMKt."'" P' 1~' It y. !¢\\rr chalrL ~ "'"'· 1 _;C,;.A:.:U:.:....64.;,.,;2;..·.:...56;.,7+ -·- ' • -· . . .__ .... -- .I .. . . :JfJ DAil V PILOT Fridq, Dectmbet 22, 1972 ·~· ][§] [ .... t c I~ .__I _ ... ·_· • __,J~ I ·-I~ 1---1~1-==-l~jl; ~-~-.. ~l~~l~-~ ..... ~l§J~~l;;-5; .. ;;""~l~~j Mltullaneous 111 Ml1celleneou:t Ill --------Ii Pc. Walnut Conl!!mp PIUVAT£ party must tx'llmi Sl't. Kltch('n Aid sacrilil.'e ftne art collection. Oishwaahcr, 2 Thermador All ittfll!I 00% or less o1 ap- hllll ovens, Ch11imbf'r$ cor1'11n pralsed value. Chinese t(JJ.lf r.tnK•'. 11talnk·u sit-el C."lolsonne 12" dttp brown sink, llll bltna. Woodlllhr $200. Japal'l(!lt(' bro n z ~ bt-hek. Lidn l•le-, fi~. 1MM1ted lady l~unp 111 form of i2 Gau~ shotf(uns, l Ethlca lantern. Teak base $300. S7:i. J Remington SIOQ. Never Pair of sig~ Japanese col· US('Cf de""' sea tnckl~ lroln Or prints 14" X 6" $75, ~" Sidney \'ard seascape 11'' x fta(y.l!nest quality avail. IS" $lOO. Lllrge modt"rn oil llod $95, 50 lb reel, $140, 421 Muslcol IMt_,.m TV, llMllo, HIFI, Dov• IH hots, ..... & Sid 911 Trvcb t62 -· ,._,... 970Autos, Imported 970 Stwoo • 836 GIBSON L .. Paul l -""-'..;..;----..;c..~I COLLIE PUPPIES 16' Booton W11a1er wl._ 'ff FORO F-100 c•-1 •• guitar-Hardly .-. Uoed u STEREO, oolwce 1913 c.,. FOR CHRISTMAS molor. fUl(y equip. eut port Slick lhitt. V-8, "mp<r sbell/1-..,.---'l'lr..;..;":;.;..---l---M.;__....,.;.;;.D;;..;.A.;___.I ,..,. oo TV show•. ...rn ..-1, i..,.. .,... AKC reaill•.-.d "°"" pupo. modol, $00). eo.t nu $2500 radio, low inu .. CV""111l . A. STOCKJN"- Sacrlfice $'100. Call &rt fHak>na1 cha.1¥lr, J naen 6'73.-6%1). $2066 " 4~. air auspenaion apeaklE"l'I, m 1'-111.le and female. pkk-of· NE\Y Amutrona elect. Watt AM/FM MPX ~';:~. $00 up. Call aher s .. It, you'll buy itl THRILLER guitar -to tu!llon1 cue. Beat tteal.~.~ deck. Brand , .... •.tA7 ~-11•1 a round. Great gift. Must new A KUart.nteed, was left -11 ~la...:• Sl!ll, $125Jblt otr. 54&-2440 ut)('Ja.lmed. Now 5 175 . GERMAN Shep Pu.pa. AKC.1~;;;;;;~=~ Ulllll OfEflcel Furniture/ 824 =1. Credit de Pt . ~I~~ .. b:: e :on~~~ Compors Sale/Rent tMA YOJA it. •-:=======:;::;:;,) qu P· PRIVATE party mu s 1 Gorgrous btk/tan, xlnt tern-;:.:;.;;.i:_""-;:;'..:;;~c;.:;;.:;;...;.."::.:" • Oust•fson Linc. Mere. 1· Klng!I Rd NB 642--0808 painting Sl25. 1a1any other -· ' -mi."l'. items of Ckli90nne, 3t.1 a>9 Auuunatic Copier, TRAIN 11et for Christmas! glass. silver, etc. MlL'lt 5'-e c omph>tel,y ttrondhloned. l..i.'t:e 110 layour , tunnel, lo appreciate. Call 644-QiJl 1 ~""'=·0-084)-~37!2='-· ---- bldg1, ca ~. C'tlgines, etc. SEC chn ••-•~ .• ~ d-"· sacrit1~ 23" Magnavox con-perament, 11.hotslwormed. CUSTOM van tntertcn for 1966 Harbor. C.M. 646-930.1 l~·Beaeh Blvd. 11.t \Vamer sole t.'Olor TV with remote Pet or !'how SJ.OO.#"IO. all make A model vans. '57 111 TON CHEV PU 84U8'4 • (213) 59~ ---------·I control. Bellutiful walnut 557-2965. Paneling, naug., plush lhq __,=~115'1;;;;·,.*;;548-:=;,9':=::;»~=ol·".:.H:::IOl::m::IO:...of::...:.lh:::•:...Y1::..::k::l::ng!.'.'i RARE l~~ Merced~.~~ ca~net. Looks L oporates St D-rnord Pupplos cprt por• .... 1~ .._ --• ·--· ;;: coupe rot&u.ler, •uto ...... l'kY' Cost .,.$150 Onl ~ • u_... • naw ""''.., REVrl'AIJZED 100% Font P/S. AJC, AM/l''~ radio, Alniost 5200. invested. N~ LOWREY Of'R:an. ~todel MS, · ---... """" .,,.....,. 1noney. ?\lake oUer. 673-7123 2 speakers: SSOO. Green $20-50. stor cab $40. 867 W. Brad. couch, 7' long, $50. Yellow 19th CM, P~. 642-3408. plaid chllir & ma1ching ot· Pi•no1/0rg.n1 826 ORGAN HOBBY RO'' AL portable typewr\lt'r toman $60. Fruil"--ood ooUee S:W. Easy 1._'fec Ironer $45. 1bl $25. Decorator'a item· Lamp & shade $8. Folding Spanish antique high-back ironing board $6. 402 Costa chair, gold & cinnamon ~tesa St. ~7392. velvet, -'450. Marn av ox Don't buy any " pn until SCHWINN Varsity 27'' 10-6pd sten?O-radio COlliOle $100. you can pJa.y! Non·playe.rs ~iris, less lhan t yr. Xlnt 6#-0191 welcome to attend tree work cond. $80. 15 &. 5 gal. shOps. For information aquarlun1s w I s ta 11 d s. CHRlsrMAS Special! 115V Contact: Tom Dieterich 968-5TIO. Arcwelder $79.50. Complete 642-2151 A LYLE ~lAIGH original oll w/access. Plug into house Coast Music Service painting, gold fra me current. No need for spe· Newport Blvd. at Harbor 24"x36" "Fall" scene $125. cia-1 220v wiring. Also Victor Coala Mesa wonderful C h r t s t m a s Cutting & Welding Outfil, present 64&-0818. $85.50 complete. Oxygen *PIANOS*°RGANS* Service Co., 2072 Placentia, Hammond, Wurlitzer, many F1REWOOD: 0Rk. cedar. Co 1 M 64'8870 th n ~.. i·'- pine. This wknd only, 1 c=',,"...,..,'="'=· ==."""~~~ 0 e · .-.~ amn spec ...... model clo.ae-outa. Plano & Mrd-$60. l.!,; -$35, 14 -$20. · · .. _ _. O •-• M !-Yee delivery Fli & Sat. ACME JUtcer, hardly lUl<'U, rgan ren1a1s. oney sav· Call now 557-35?.?. $50. Relax-e.-ci%.Or, l Ike lng bargains are here right new, needs straps, $50. now at: NORITAKE tine bone china, 642-1063. Wallichs Music City service for 8 + other dlshes to serpe 12, same pattern. Miscell1neous South Coast Plaza 541).2830 sso. -· Wonted 820 *PIANOS*°RGANS FARBERWARE e 1 e-c Ir i c IS there a trompe! gathering Going Out For Buslness broiler. i..arJ!'.E' size, like dust in your closet? Young Best quality • prices • serv. l'l!"w. Cost $35. Sell $20. fRtherless girl n e e d s IC.awal·Stelnway-Baldwin, etc. &l-l-7067. trumpet to play in school Player Pianos &:: Rolls l-:1.EC. Typewriter. Smi th orchestra. Price must be Rentals ...•... We Buy-Sell Corona. Pl'rfect cond. Script very low. Help a deserving Daily 10-6 Sun 12-5 lypl'. for lhe feminine girl have a nice C'hrl<1tmas FIELD'S PIANOS "'OmRn! $100. 6/;,..2733. and have new doon opened Costa Mesa tn41 645-3250 HErJ\,LCX'l'.f Gl11ss Box£'!! to her. 54&-2279 after 5 p.m. HAMMOND Splnet. Cos t mfg to you. Made to order. PRIVATE PARTY WANTS $1.XO. Llkl" new. Original l.o\\"l'Sf Prices. \V~t Coast TO BUY F!lANO FOR owner. Sell !or 5 4 9 9 . Wood Specialties, 893-1512. CASH I o'61>-523!"C'='-· =-~~-~ 3 PC, c.rvd. Sl'Clional, $50, 3 ~2278 BUY a Player Piano for bar stool!<, 515 eac. 64" Musical Instruments 822 Chrlstma!. Dav t d T. round rust c-olor rug $25. Dupree, 2940 D Grace La., &10-1932 -t TENOR Sax $100. Clarfnet CM 545-4650 MTNI Bike $75. Lrg wonder $S5. Both excellent cond. KREU. Upright Piano with horse $12, Guitar $18, Nu in-Call ~1 Neal. ~nch, 5125. G o o d cond. l'line bnch $1 5, Por1:acrib FENDER Mustang guitar, Must ~II! Phone 646-3632 or $12. playpen, $7. 546-3398 made ln '64. XJnt cond. 661791. SO-tWTNN girls standard W/hard cue. $100. 536-1283 PlANO w/bchch, Xlnt cond. bicycle. Noblet <'larinet, like e CI..ARINF:l'·A Beaut walnut finish. Full nu. lronrite console mangle, Selmer. $150. keyboe.rd, call aft 6 , 644-72.51 Call 54fH!6ro 837-1430 * °* LADY'S Schwinn, 3 BIWOOn Mollenhauer HAMMOND Spinet organ, speed bicycle. Like new. Beautiful Tone * S350 model M-100, like new. Pvt. $35. 673-4262. 646-2562 pty. $!0). 847-3341.. •••••••••••••••••••• ELECTRIC 0.-gan, 3 oct"''" 40 chords. $70 or best oHM. 96!Hl175. A OON'iEHIDfr SHC>l'f'IN: AN SEWINC GUIDE FOR THE CAL ON TH£ GO. HAMMOND fl.1.3 0 r g a n, bend!, Malqany N e w $1DOO. Now siro. 497-1859 Sowing Mochlnos 128 FOR Chrl1tmaa give her a. part-Singer Slant·a-matic. Sew mach. l yr guar clean & adjuat. Comb card & sew s'zrs ~~ 644-663L Y AKC, l!EALTH GUARRAN., Wc!!t-'C:'~ ~ild '56 ~'i';"t~ Great extraa.1~----_;-'----I 2-to{Jll9. Xlnt oond. $8,000. PET k SHOW QUAl.ITY S9TS. • r 96.i--3517 SCOTI' 342 FM stereo MALES, CALL Slide In aarnper aleeper. 1-'-'"-'=-~-=---- n:!ceiver, 20 watts/channel 637M55/637·33SO INSULATED. 1970 FORD 1 ton stake trudc UG al ~,otr -•Del Ray CWllOm camper. NEWPORT .., w/w nut rover, ,.,... · BEAUT. 8 mo AKC lrlsb Set· _.. 58&-3928. . 962-3323. ter, female. Ort&. cost $175. ___ _,,53,,1;::-"30!,,,;: __ ....:... I ~~1965'-'-~Dod-~-Pl-ck-... --t '68 MO Midaet. good oond. COUJR TV, 25", Beaut. col· Must sell, $125 • my job C I Bikes DATSUN SDJ I: take over payments. or & ·cab. Ml.lSt Sac. Cash keeps dog alone too much. ye es, $150. ~ ii, 5C&-157'9. only $195. 892-5TI6. 536-3387 or 979-2644 1 _.:.S<oo..;.._l•;..rs _____ 92S_ 1So. Ll.aUna. C.3881 ~~~~~~~~~'.IYORKIE Terr., fem pups, ·n~ BULTACO Punarta V•ns 963 Now Open I~ l[I AKC, 10 wk, 1st perm shots. 250cc Xlnt running cond. ,44 ford W indow Vin tn ,,.. toy~ s ~~~lw6.ier bred. 5'&-3541 ~!~ ~ end & ported $650. NEWPORT MGB l9"m MGB-OT coupe. Win wbil, AM/FM radio. Like .. w. $l985. 1856 Sherkl&n, Ai>< llMIM. N'pl Bch. _ • """r1N '"""'"" 6 cyl, stk. EJll & Ure1 gd 3 LI 2 Tl $2 00 RESERVE adorable SilkY HUSKY ·n. 360, xlnt cond., $495. 536-1191 BEACH net, MM, • Puppy for Ch r 1st ma !I. all extraa SfD>, WW. ,'take 1959 Int'I Metro Van. Cust:. 1000 W . Coast ~wy. Champ. bl. line. $150-$175. 1500 VW eng. part trade. Coov. Make offer or trade 645-6400 MOB '63 • Radiala, radk>, new · Pf,lnt, aeats, other xtru. $500. firm 846-6722. FOR Olristmas, 2 min poodles, to good Home. Good natured. 645-5000 apt 411, eves.. FLUFFY, white & beige female cat. 9 Mos. Shots, spayal. Baby allergi c . f>40-01l7. LOVING dog to !Oving family Golden Retriever/ghepherd mix. Loves children. 6444.119 FREE long haired kittens, beautiful. 54&-<365 FREE to good borne, Shaggy dog, spayed, hsebroken, good w/kids. 84217Zl GD home for 5 yr old Cockapoo fem. Fixed, shots, very gentle. 646-9586 MALE dog Shepherd/Hu.sky mix, very friendly. 968-1753 after 6 LOUNGE CHAIR * 675-715S * 2 Ma1e puppies, % Silky, 6 weeks. 2519 Holly Lane, N.B. 64&-3848. S"T'OCKING stutters! Free black male puppy. e~nse LOVABLE friendly 2 mo old puppy, house trained . 114&-2982. J[B Pets, Generel ISO GROOMING I: Boarding, 10 yrs exp. Tender loving care. Sherty'1 54&-2848. PAffi checkered rabbits $5. Checkered doe $3. Fn.'I? food. 546-9965. 644-Gl.78 !194-25()4, for good vw. 642-ITIS. DACHSHUND female puJ> RALEIGH International, WE HAVE THE pies, standard blnck & tan, 21~" Full Campy, except Autos W•nted 961 NEWEST OF AKC reg. 531-1455; eves. brake!! },JI, nu $225, aft Spm, 1----------1 54ll--0344. 557-0674. REWARD OATSUNS 1N LONG Ha ired Dachohund• 3 LAST CHANCE 11 INVENTORY l'OR mos old. Shots, AKC. 3 mini bikes & odds & ends:. YOUR SELECTION '"* 6.17-s906 * 549-1313 aft. 6 p.m. AKC champ ped. Cocker "YC,AM~AHA~~M°'iruc.c-'. "End='°"~"-,..-,& Spaniel Pup!!. Butt, 6 wks, motorcycle trailer for sale. 51001$125. 548-2514. Like new. 83:r8173. BUUJX)G, AKC, puppieL ~ HONDA Scrambler • Xlnt ~. l~~te & ~ or best otter. BEAGLE female AKC. 7 mo. Hc;Oc;N=o=A".~n~. ~500~-. ~ •• ~Still~" ~in old. Frisky, lovea children. crate. BARGAIN! Housebroken. 645-5916 714-497-2249 or 494-SG SCHNAUZER Min. Pupa, HONDA 350 CL, 1m. 6400 WILL PAY OVER Kelly Blue Book For late model, clNn, low mll--tics, imports, trucks or campers. Call and &ak for. Buyer DAYE ROSS PORSCHE PORSCHE 91 lT '71 Sparkling tangerine ttnllh, factory alloy wheel.1, 5- speed, A1'.l·FM radio. lJIS. Jn. . . $6395 AKoouc. ·•'"°'''~'.~P· line mi·,, l500. . PONTIAC 1 si es. .._..,.,.;u. Call 551-4383 **'56 OIERRY, black SCHNAUZER-Min. AKC reg. ltJ2 HONDA l50 Porsche speedster. What a puppies. 11 wks old. Reas. .. .-Hor•·r Ill·~. Christmas pre.ent! MUil $115. att 6, 494-4887 300 mi. Nr new. 675-3808 ...._ 11111:11 TI1 aell, best olter! 66-1319 AKC, COI..UE puP!J, 11 wks., 10 Spd. Bike, Raleigh, new in l ·C_o_s_l•~M~o~•·~--54_6_80_1_7, 'Sf Porsche S-C Conv. Orta. Sable & whit.e. Cbristmal AU& $160. plus extras $80. WE PAY TOP Datwn blue paint Ir: chrome wheels. ;"~":,'\ L E Do= ~;~ 360 Endlll"<I CASH 240Z S.. to apprec. $2950 olftt. Pinscher, 14 mm. old. $525 or make offer. =~ '66, 912. Good 539-7392 548--0259 or oves. 645--0263 ZELLEBRA TION condlllon. Koni shocks. Boot SHERRY'S POODLES BONANZA 4 h.p. minlblke, for used·can A trucks, Just ofter, 541-(1120. Large variety, all colors a: like new. Can be street lie. call ua for~ Mthn,.tea. Best selection in Oranp O;y. ·n Porsche Targa 91l.S sizes $25 & up. 54&-2848. Real bargain! 673-5111. GROJH CHEVllQLET SAMPLE VALUE Extra Sharp! ~1usl Sell. LHASA Apso puppies. Dar-1971 Kawasaki, Mach ID ·n ERMINE WlOTE, '-6'2-07'17 56-8345 Jing. Champ sired. Rancho SOOcc, lo mileage. Xlnt speed, mag .. ~httla, n.dlal '67 Porsche 912, ollve/bUL Santa Fe, Calil. 756-3232. eond. 9'79-ii&tl. Ask~ ~~:h ~ ~· radio, 13 license. (Xll· A/C, xlnt cond. See to ap- Shellies -CHRISTMAS! 'TI Honda 750 KL fully dress-Huntington Beach . $3595 preciate. 645-&129. "Little l...assies," SSO up. ed. Xlnt cond. 9XXI mi. AU:-847.a7 Kl 9-3331 '66 PORSCl-IE 912, $1395. ,AK~C:C'"~"!,·..!Sho~l_!:•·..!5<'>-0~1!m1'·:... I ,1;;ng;.,;:ll!i00~-:..,n;'•:;';;;842-9555:;.:2,;;;--· -;;;;; Cash For Clean '70 TAHITIAN BLUE, " Xlnt cond., no enidne er ~ FOLDING 3 speed bike. Ex· speed, air conditioning, seat.a.. 968-0738 or SSf-3088. AIREDALE Puppies, AKC, C€'!.lent condition. $45. U·-.. Can & ma.a. wheels, radial tires, WilL Buy your Portche or champ. ~dam. 1t6Th-52331t ~ AM·FM 1tert0. VW paid for « mt. cau - ENG. Springer pupa M/F, HONDA MINl TIWL.. Good Trucks .71 SUNs~koNZE 4-Kent Allen 837-4!1Xl. AKC, 8 wks, s 7s/1 o o. condition. $100. Howard Chevrolet speed, air ronditiorllng. Hunt/Show/Pet. 496-4536 I "°'=="Call;::..767>-~3973.=,.--, Newport S.4ch mag. 'A'hee:IS, new radials, TOYOTA * Batenji Pup• * SCHWINN bike. boys 3 ~lac.Arthur Blvd & Jamboree radio, l'O-<-"O mats. 1----------1 ""·-'"""· """"'"' '°""'11o"· 13:1-41555 027CPC TOYOTA'S $40. 56-7215. ·n SHERWOOD GREEN, SUZUKI 50 \VE PAY 'IUP 001..I..AR auto. tram., a.ir conditloi..: fUR TIJP USED CARS '·· dlo '73's good ~~n $l!iO It your car i!I extra clean, uit;, ra ~· radials. Ho,... 856 For an ad In Wom•n'1 World Call Mary S.tfl 642..5671, oxt 330 Super Pattem! Pets on Parade U,1. lai. ......,.. MERRY CHRISTMAS from Redwood Stables • All Rent "s"'po"'"'rt71n=9.c.:G~ •• ~d~.-~a=30 .;.C;;.•ts.;;... _____ 8;;.5:.::2 5 o.al · t ~t .,.... horses, $2.50 per hr. 22nd, 10 SPEED BICYCLE °"" "f.!\7ii, BUICK ·n LIME YEWlW, '""""'· N '72 Prl I Won contest · $6$, 6M-0833 ~ Harbor Blvd. ::J~ radio, mags.· O~ MO c• I 9251 8-16 10Y2·20~ Evcryont wtll 11op to smile at the nt'W be.by and his coverlet of hat-happy pets. r,,, 41" 11t· .-c Gay parade of pet!! In their l'tMi..,.. Ml.... Ea.ster hats. Embroider in oval design or block$ on crib Count all 1tw> changt>1 you or carriage cover. Pattern get with thl1 SUPER PAT· n54: nine 5x7 Inch motifs. TERN! 1. Shlr1dreu 2. Vest SEVENTY·FIVE CENTS J. Pant& 4. Skirt &. Blouse 6. for each pattern -add 25 Scarf. ~ carefree knits! cents for each pattern for Printed Pattern 9251: Nt;W Alr Mall and Spec1aJ Handl· Hall Slie~ IO'il. ll*. 14 !.h, ing; o!h@rw\ee thlrd-cll\lla 161. 18~. 20%. NEW Mir.K'S' dellvtry will take three Slzc11 8, 10, 1.2, 14, 16. week11 or more. Send to SF.Vt:?CTV·nVF. CENTS ~~"i:.• ~~ for ~ach I)lllern -add 2:1 Dept., Box 163, Old Chebta L'Cnta for e111ch pattern for Station, New York. N.Y. Air Mall and Special Jfand1· 100U. Print N~ Address, Ing; otherw\Mt thlrd-cla111 Zip. Patten Nwnber. delivery wlU take thrff N E £ D L £ CR.An' '72! ~ka or mort. Send to Croche'I knit. tc Free Mari&n Martin, the DAILY dlrtetioN, SOc. e . Pllm, 442, Pa Item Dept.. in.ta.Ill Macnme Book. 232 Wetll Uth St., New Buie, taney knoll. Ptt· Yortc, N.Y. 1(11.L Print tema. $LOO. NAME. A.DDRr.ss wlth ra1ta1tt ~W ~ - ZIP, 81ZE and IJTYUI: team by pict\lre1I Pat· MUNBl:JL t~nw. n.ao. SEE MORE Q u I c k Cam~ lnfiut Otn .... r.~ = e :: -more than 100 aifts 11.00. Sprtn.-.SUmmer Catalog. All Complt!te Afrllu. Beot - """' Only OOc. 11-00. JW!T'Aff1\ SEWING-BOO 11...,,lffy tt:.-900k1 • SOc. In' 10da.Y., ~ tomoc1ow. Book of lJ Pt1le ~ 11 . OOc. 1Nirr4NT .J" .!.!1~ I 1,1.11 • Qolll -1 -16 .. Hmut. BOOK -HuJMI~ o t .soc. flllhk>J1 htc~. $1. M-..,._ Qotlt 8oc:1k I - NHd a 11Pad"f PllCtl 1n ad! Call6CMJll. OOc. ""'"" ,., .,..,,. ........ . 15 -tllul ........ 50t. I, PARACHUTE, 28' db:I L, ...,., pom' ""ens, "'-'' 23rd & 24th only. LEASE new, $115. Remington 700 Kt110"'"tio•" n;,,.. l~ng nature, yoW' child a horse for 243 Winchester w/scope eac · ........-.<>JU Chrlshnu present. 20286 La,. SUS. Shakespeare hunting RED Persian, male kitten. guna CRnyon Rd, 494-9182. bow $15. call 642-7637. Shot!!, CFA, papen $40. QUARTER hone, Sonel SKIS KneiMel Whit Stars ~---=-546-9965~=--= gelding. Good We 1 t e r n DJ. $65. Nordlca buckle Dog1 854 horse. $300 incl saddle 1: boots $15. Relker buckle 1-"""'------...;;.c.; ha.ck-a-more. At Irv I n e boots ~ ~3880 or GOLDEN Retriever, AKC Stables. 675-5887 67H799. ped.., 7 wlcs, Male &. Fem. REGISTERED Quarterhonle SKIS B 11 z z a rd fiberglass "Be=au::tiful=c:dogs=:::·..:646-4593=c:-=·--1 mare, 5 yrs, Palomino. Xlnt l95cm Marlcer Bindings W). ARC, Chihuahuas, show qUal· conformation. 962-1652 2 paln Chlld?'en akla and tty, 6 wks old. lmmed. de· PORTER roping saddle, bri· boo ta $5. pair 545-.2779. ~':::'"">c=:,c,•..:494-::::.;27:.;.:42:;.· -~--I die &. Spade bit. $250. Call: SPORTSWAYS 2 stage alngle BRlARD Pupa, AKC, shag-646--0716 aft 7PM. mse ft'illlator , 70 cu tank, gy, French !!beep dogg· liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil back pack + 16 lb \I/eight & (713) 696-'ni91. or 698-9436. belt. $85. 646-6441. DAOiSHUND Puppies STANDARD belly board, AKC, Miniature. M/F. Red ~730condltion, $25. Call or blk & tan Shotl. 531Hml. ,....,.-.., MINIATIJRE Schnauzer SURFBOARDS Gr e g AKC Cllampion aire, males. Pau~h. 6'5" &. 6'9" & 6'11", 639-4225 Bo1h/~rln• Equip. $40 each. 646-1706. GREAT Dane Pup, lnt'l HEAD Di's. :rtscm, Salomon champ. blood line, AKC reg. 91,.S HP Johnson outboard bindinp. All like new, $15. $75. After S pm 962-5495 motor. Excellent condition. 846-9S1S. COLLIE Pups, AKC regis. 3 Sl75. Call: 646-7535 TV, R..dlo, HIFi, malea, 1 fem. Sable & Ba.ts, Power 906 Stereo 836 f;;iwo;h"';t::;•"· 9'°w0:ks7.c. ::.54>-~2536::00'-=-1----------________ .;.;..; TERRIER Wire Fox Pups, 31' CHRIS CRbin Cruiaer, top AMPUFIER 550 watts, 6-12" AKC, champ line. shape, twin eng. radio, 11peaken, model no 455, 837-8070 stereo, depth finder, full 979-4199 i;i-alley, many xtras, sleeps 6 · BEAUT Female Samoyed in comfort. $9975. 675-8577. ZENITH Zl" Color 1V $145. puppy AKC Champ •Ire, 18" K•'-n Cab ~-•··r (2) ...._ t El,....-I 2001 ,...,., '.._. . ......, . ._,-.,s """uun cs, shots. papel'!I, incl. 646-8749. 35 hp Johnson outbrda. 64EHl389. GERMAN SHEPHERD pup-w/trailer. nooo. 551-4383. *** Zl"' TV $25. py, female, white&. black. Boots, Soo"I - -t * * 23'' TV $35. 49oHi996 7VJ' Both xlnt cond. 979-4462 THE Cutest In Town; Tiny ISLANDER 24-ft. Sailboat. GERRARD S1·95 w1Sh11re toy poodle pup. 11 weeks ~1any ex1ru. Call 54.>5784. M-44 cartr1d&e. Xlnt oond. $50. 642-4818; aft 6 534-3885. lor appointment. $?5 6+H!59l. 2 DARLING Cockapoo pup-1 -~V=ENT"=~UR=E~C~A-T-19_7'1 __ 19" Adminl color port. 1V. plea, SlO. 642'4818 or &. trailer, used once. $139. Crest Electronics, 2001 AITER 6 pm. 534-3885. $500. 1t 548-94lJ Harbor Blvd, CM 64&9389. LOVABLE PUPPIES--TWO LEHMAN 10' Sail boa bl For that Item under $50, try Perfect Chrlstmu pre!lent! Fiber. hull•. Dae. sails $7'5 the Penny Pincher. $5. Call 892'-1784. and pXJ. 67&-482i. 10 spd Bicycles: 25" Sdlwinn Costa Mesa 979-2500 36SEOK DELS Sparta Tourer, 21" DaW11:a IMPORTS WANTED All are r~eciy for you at & COLO.RS :;::. ":'.;i.se:!l32a11:_ ~::'i =' . rl\'I. rt M-•-~:1 Imm~ wu..,., Ap1 3. CM 1>e1ott 11 111u. MAXEY roYOTA [Empn Jt1<1U1un Delivery after 6::11. 18881 Beach Blv..:. -~ ,..::.•.=-:r.::&,. AT '70 Honda 100 Dirt bike. Xln't H. Beach Ph. 847-8555 See It . You'll Buy It cond. Very lo mi's. ms. * ~1;t~~ ~unk:!u: '66 Datsun Rdstr 546-7326. ~le.U W TOYOTA Motor HomH <t94-I003 ext Gm. 4 Spd., Radio, Heater; spe.rk· S TOP S for junk or wreclred Una: yellow with contra.stll:IE •le/Rent 940 cars. Eves. & wkeJ11\ls black lntttior <ROA727 J. 838-4589 $766 27' TRAVCO 25' DISCOVERER 20'·22' CONTINENTALS 21' PRIDE Ir: JOYS VAN CONVERSIONS Sales e Service e Rental'I * Danmar Inc. * 13801 Harbor Blvd., G.G. 531.00I) Next to G.G. Dat!lun PACE ARROW TIOGA VOLKSWAGEN BILL YATES INC MOTORHOMES AND CMIPERS San Juan Capistrano Alongside San Diego Frwy. 493-45l.l • 499-2261 • 837-wx> Rent A Motor Home for your V•catlon -* 139-4301 * BEAUT. NU 23· & 25' Llletlmes Christmas open· ing still avail, pri pty, S.A. 831Hl533. 1971 PACE ARROW 22'. Compl self cont. Sleeps 6. Make offer. 9£2...2397. 1973 EL OORAOO Mini Motorhome for Re.nt, • 956-2714 • 945 Autos, lmporttld 970 ALFA ROMEO Alfa Romeo SH It, you'll buy Ill ~ltADi& -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ·n TOYOTA Corolla, ~ dr, q . owner. 13,700 milea. Xlnt cond. $1500 or ofler. ~2146 e\U. VOLKSWAGEN NOW ON OISPLA y FIAT vw 1968 SUNROOF. Salts Servi<·~· AM/FM/SW, lite blue, very Part!I Body Shop ·59 !-~lat 1200 Sedan good cond. ~--7i~'" -0:;.7} S~Bes~tt!un~ ·59 VW,*rt~1= :eat, 8 . 'I :!} U.!Jl· JAGUAR oellenl lransportallon car. 1100 w ~ $265 Cub. 536-8400. 1963 Ken Craft 19%. very ~ 9'ICtl • 1970 JAGUAR XJ6. Perfect. '68 KOMBI, Blue!,, radio, xlnt cond. $1600/best offer, '69 Spyder Conv. Xln't cond. 24.~ miles. Red. $J500, 40,0IXI milca on neW efl8i.DI. 12881 Ga1way, apt 101, GG Neat Christmas gift! $2650. C&.ll &G-1391 ot $42.2789. $1400. 96S-1486. 534-1785. Call for appt. 646--0742 or 1963 Mark 10. $795 1970 VW Pop Top Camper, Auto Service, Part1 M9 642-1331. 421 L•l--, .... NB ..... .....,.., Clean, nu t.lrea, $2400. Aft nu~ """·• ., ~ 5 pm • 646-2ti06 ~ l§J LAST 1970 VW BU&, ract air, laJ)t .......... ~ ROY CARVER, Inc. •eok. AM·rM "'"~• ""' J ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-~~ root, relJow. s11S0. UJ-2179. I' 234 E. l'rtb St. '58 vw. RUNS! R~,._tlOMI Colla Mesti 546-44._. • • • NEEDS WOR.K $100 VohlclH 956 Good scltctlo" ol A~MAJIC • 546-"00 """' • u!led llM\V't lllVS '66 VW • Good runnlns oond, slock 40 HP vw tna. Street IMMiDIATE :W0-6214 alter 5:30 fl.m. l'lf,Q1;,.;;:~• "°"'· DELIVERY ·70 vw ltldmy camp<r bu1. ·a Dune aum. fbra1' body. & fl", ssoo or belt ofler. CM! Ro-bit •Iii· AM/FM. --Trucks_ 962 · HUNJ NOTON llEAC -m.s. •100·-. - CRIVll!R BMW "'UI K CASH '57 CHEVY ....... Sorvic<. '-<..... MAZDA ... PICI< UP-$300 '°' w. ,,1 st.. Sant• Ana TH~OU.GH A m..1111 1m1 ll!ACH ILVD. DAIL y PILO 6 ''1• ~·-· Good body, Vncancl•• -. t moooyl "·n1 Mwi""'" !-"w T llrco lair. Finn. '"" ·~ ~ ~ WANT" AD ; e :>43·3691 e your houM!', 11pt., 11loro V1 Miit '"" ..,.. . hldR:1 etc. thru a .~.l!y J'l(Qt :!'!"* MM"6 64"5678 S.U kilo ltoms .•. tl42-0678 Q.,..lled Ad. 64H1171. C:::"lau=l::U«J""-'A::ii<~, ;..• ,_ • .::;™='-''·---..-"'---- • • . ' I ; • 2 Fndl1, Dtu-22. 1972 DAILY PILOT 37 [ lr;:::;i . GtnorOI 950 Gonorol '5o -"'s.~ L -..... · 1§1 1-"'.. §J I -"' J§l ! ~ .. "'... J§l I _..,.. l§J ~~ 990 A uto., U...S 990 A-. Uooli 990 Aut05, Used 990 AutN. UMd 990 Autoe, UMd 990 ~ GADEN GROVE CADILLAC CHEVROLET -FllEllR~--FORD MERCURY PLYMOUTH ~ DATSUN '6' VW BUl DIW tifll, p&lnt "'1!'\1n y ,_ ,_ El J'B •n Elplrit 350 PSJPB. -' , , LOW mUeap 1961 Plymouth i -luo 'l!t "'I. -led i: •CADILLAC "~"" pa~ted ~· Air AMJS'M Stereo To MUST .. n 16 !om LTD · GOMERC\IRYwap1 -JQnt VIP 4 cir HT Uh Yin I •• pl ' to i...J 1 . , Camino. Top CM4. ¥aa ...,.J ~pe. Fair cond. noo. shape $550. 917~ w 18th roof Air · · · w Y • '°'" ~.;! :,:=-._•tmo,..,',· EL DORADO ·'69 whla. lllOO. W IG i m -l<lodod. Clean, ' M&-1652 or 646-5842 St c ·M 543-1627 · · · condltlollh•1. ....i~. Autot, 1"'1'•11M !~ Aut91, UMd VOLKSWAGEN lug. '19' ..,. • 1 __ , cabhl&h catn,-pft' lop op-Gol,d $300(), (1750FA) . " · · · heater. Excellent c.oMl&n. Many utiu-,11211-494.fl&'!I, t!.u:-:;ahnai. 'control, Fire. tional. °""'' 5 44-24 es' Ply. <n41 81H111 JEEP MUST AN~ Pri,gle party . • . """" VOLVO m~, point, landau loP, Nltw 54&'61!4 . FORD 11,009 837-<239. stereo ndlo, lilt wheel ' ' '63 J t 11 PONTI 1---_,._ .... __ ., power door locks, twlllibt '61 Super ap.~ camaro, 3'° ~p u I l y P U 1969 Mustang Mach J. Full AC VOi.VO 5tntinel, auto dimmer 4 spd, Nu ent, mags, wide '70 MAVl:'RJCK w/Camper. Best offer takes power. Orlglna.I p r i vate _____ ;..,;,. __ Jea~r interior crullle con: ovals, must sell moo. nf: 2 0 A ~ lr coDd, It! Must. Sell! 548-8068. owner. $1900/offer. Evel, '65 TEMPEST • iOld HT ~ trol, aulo "'1nk IDck low 526-2876 uk for WWI&. G~y .JI:...,~ black LINCOLN '5>-151'. ""'pe aulo, "1r on' pwr, N '73's mi~, ·~1 . I 1960 Parkwood • -a I I 0" lotmor (ZVE239). '66 Mutana:. auto, P/1, air, am/fm, $595. G.re&t buy. . $3695 ~ ~1~. • $1766 HERE'S THE ONE ~~· MUST SELL! :-~NTIAC GTO, POW· HERE NOW! ~ Good lhru Dec. 24. CONTINENT AL Seo It, you'll buy Ill YOU'LL LIKE '66 M..WW GT, p/o, diac ER 4 AIR. 13110. .\r Come In test !>rive ~\ltnpnrtsl ::c:::issrc. Mario IV" ,59 .,. • ... I •• ..! • :" ~~~n=i Ar"';:~ ~.'=: =· 3 opc1 m-m; f' TODAY! ~-II\."';' -Mint .!nteojor. Lo ;,,,~ WA 1.""11 stoal.1899. (RQTS1i1. HWTY IS67 BLUE convert. Mu.tang STUDEBAKER - --· ~. Rare. 2 New ttre1, Water YOl.Vftl on This. ' rood tlttl, nu water pump, ,fW G t I LI M Radio 9T9-«>t9 '64 Studebaker u 11. make •-I y 'll YOUR ONLY """"'1395 .• '!~ talllt pl548-5883pe. lit u1 •son nc. ere. 1,0~0.· ==;:---,--.,.,.. t ~ ou Buy It .......,. 1966 11lON> DAach Blvd. at Warn""' '87 Muat• .... , Air, auto, .....,.. otter. Call at !i pm, 6f6..6022. Harbor, C.M.-. ~9303 """""',..c ~ -• r-· llR 1\. .... I .... !. FACTORY 66--'770 842-8844 w (2'l]) 592-5544 disc brakes, pwr atee'r, T· D - lUWILYOLaNLYO AUTHORIZED 'Tl Mark lit au blaok BEAUTIFUL CANARY YEL-"Homo of tho Viking" Good rond. $925. 646-5669. leather. AM/FM stereo LOW ·n 4 DOOR LTD FORD . '66 T·Blrd convert. Clean, CADILLAC tape, 21,000 mi. lmmao. I 4500 TOTAL MILEAG.E. MERCURY OLDSMOBILE NnS xlnt. 57,000 ml. $550. DEALER owner. Pvt. pty. P.tr. Golde. OWNER LEAVING COUN--'83><11l63."'-'=----- 1966 Harbor, C.1\1. 1).16-9303 LAlie•t selection ol Cadil· Bus. 892-5501. TRY. SACRIFICE $3200. MERCURY 1968 Olds, 442 Convert. IA-FIRM! • 842-4228 A,_ ,..._. 1960 Volvo-PV 544, 1:/h, ..,.. In Orange c.owity. '67 Lincoln Cont'l, xlnt cone!. ........ PS/PB, v11g owner, needs aome 11f:'Ork. $250. Call Sale•Leuin&. Fully equip. 1 COOGAR '69 SllOO; 646-3470 l-------- 67;-3117. '141>. 493-46611 66 FORD-$200 Sparkling 0,;ginal lin"h, 64 OLDS F-85 '71 Y99a U 990 • Naben 390-V8, a uto, pwr. steering vinyl interior, air condition-Good cond, $400. 962-5933 2 !'::·J..!.IPd .. Radk>, Heater Autos, Md Cacllllac COUGAR & b'akea, w cond. Needs Ing, AM·FM stereo, diS< PLYMOUTH C"4C'm). · SPECI L minor work Ir clean up, brakes, new belted Fire· $1266 Jt. 2liOO HARBOR BL. 'Tl Cougar, Excel cond, new 543-3691. "°""• 230AGV. *'6S PLYMOUTII ~·-· III Seo It-You'll Buy It ! VEGA WISHES A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR TO OUR MANY CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS OF PAST YEAR$-AND WE HOPE TO SERVE YOU IN THE COMING YEAR THANKS AGAIN IWI W1U U CLOUD IUN. I MON.J Garden Grave Datsun ALLOTMENT COSTA MESA tires,' 'lf rolld, "'I g · '71> Font Cortlaa 4<pd $2195 Co I '_, \ii' 541>9100 Open Sunday owner,, !30:-21ll, 61H2lD RAH, map, header., wide Good thrt; Dec:. 24. 64=be, 54,ooo ml., 1285-.,, l••.:• i~' 13801 Horbor 81.d., Gordon Oro .. 1973 CAPRIS '12 CAD. El Do-. Padded DODGE ...... .,.,, MUii ... lo ap. iht-· v I -· 534-1255 ARE NOW HERE. cabriolet lop, •u ncool. ,,..,.5IMIB7att 5'30· ""~!. 41mnn..+~ aoanc:i:,.,~ ":';,"' = TOYOTA * * Jn~~~~· All extras! '72 Dodge Van. 'TI Ford LTD, Hrdtp, fully i ~'"'P .Y .. ..,.-JUJ ~ .• etc. thru a Dally Pilot I READY FOR Wll.%•ix. 64Hlll Cu1tom. Priced to sell. equ) 64 ,,ip. 8 .Xlnt oond. $2695. ! ~-,..::.. w= :t.::&i Cluaitied Ad. Sell Idle items 19615 Harbor, C.M. SM-9303 \'(,N_.. IMMEDIATE '69 Fleelwood Brougham. 1"61)-7"51' 6'-064 ~ now! Call 64H6'l8 -! Claaallled Ads . . . 642-56711 1•,<tP,;>•.':J~":;l>-~3.~~~ Mint oond. Full pwr. Sacri· Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Avtos, UMct 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autot, u--• 990A•ot05, u·~ 990-DELIYERY "" 13100. 615-:nso .. ,.. _ _ ev~ or Wkends 852-4283. • COMPARE 1900 CADILLAC corrmtlble . STANDARD New tires. 70,000 ml $295. Call 5.52-lll13 EQUIPMENT 1912 EL DORADO !uJly L 4 Speed Synchro Trans. fCJUipped, doctor oWJ1e(!,. 2. Pwr. Front Disc Bn.kl!S a,000 miles, S!OXJ, M&-9511. 3. Style Steel Wheel. c RO 4. 3 Point Restraint System AMA 5. Bumper Guards Front & -----.-----Rear l.1!68 Ca m a r o , Great 6. Bucket Seats Christmas gift. 350-4 spd, 1. Radial Ply Tires r/h, lo mileage, xlnt cond. 8. Rack • Pinion Steerm, $170p or best offer;,536-6896: 9. Aasist. Ban; CAMARO '68, lo mi's. 400hp, 10. Simulated 'Voodlmln xlnt cond. $1fi00. • Ca 11 Inst. Panel 548-8452. fi. And m&Jzy more • · • -.67o-'CAMA!l~-0-6_cy_I -,-tlcl<- AlL HA VE EUROPEAN shllL $895. Call aft 5, DECOR *830-2588• GustilflOll Linc. More. CHEVROLET 16*» Beach Blvd. at Warner M2-8S44 * (213) 5'92-SM4 1-------- HHome cf tho Viking" '69 CHEY. FOR THE Blocayne. ' cir, aulomatio trans, pov.w 1teeriag, V3, GOOD LIFE ak cond. Low mil'" Green Gustafaon Linc Mere ha.I OD green. #6863. oeveraJ 1972 """ mob!Je $1 066 units ready to roll at re--S.. It-You'll buy it! duced prices. Choice ls limited but savin&• are 4'aa• I • ...! .1 sreat. Enjoy Xmaf holidays -~· LfAlll ~..':." Ge~voi:!'.iln w~ ' •. YOLW =J.:8i.inc. Mere. 1966 Harbor, C.M .. r ·~ Beach Blvd. at Warner "12 IQrcwood Esta.ti! W~ 842-8844 * tmi 592-"44 H,ooo mt, am'""· pd "'" ome of the Viking'' lug rack + all (act. options. Prl pty. 6'4-4147, alt 6 pm. IUICI< ' '61 CHEVY wgn, nu tires. bib&: b'attery, Top mechan BUICK s~ 4 dr coad, nu motor. See at 917 sedan. Xlnt roM. $afklin& W.1.8th St, Costa M'esa.··$450. tftean A/C, $450. 64H818 1968 IrnJ)B].a wtpte w/vinyl, CADILLAC top, s b a r p ' $129i!/Olter, 673-6007, 83!H!8ro, pr\ Pl>'· 15 CADILLAC' DeV~ ·n a;;J; Townaman Wag. tires, AM/FM, tull ~r:: FuUnd P"'"Lo •,, a~~IOnd!O Xln't lf,e~. Good oond. Belt O(· co ' pl s. "'" ' fer over $800. 962-871T 1969 ClfEVY Nova fl. Clean '68 F1eetwood Brougham, ~ =s·~ aft 5pm, Mint cond. Full Jm·r. Sacri-'°"c.=:::::·.:::::.-="---fice $2400. 675-1190 days, '72 EL CAMINO, custom, eves or wkends 9Q2..42!0. fact . Air, PS/PB, R&.H, Need a Second Cart Good ,61 w-w'11, orig owner, 497.J.9(6. 4 cir Cad. New bat!. ~trans. '63 Chevy Impala 327 Best offer, 673-7228. m:;. Call 847-6953 Autot, Now 980 Autot, Now 980 DOi -DAISUN DEAUN' DAYSI '72 CLEARANCE SALE ---------NEW DATSUN 1200 z.oooa SEDAN ~ *"''"*" WM:Mttt Matw. lllfrtlttr, ....,,..,..n tht. IMlmMr --. toUllW -'°"" :I --.. tit •Yftdlni t..-. .. nwcA -. ~"' """ a '"!\" .., .,..., lel'ICll •111f™. CLEARANCE $19-t& PRICE 1 1 ---------DATSUN 510 WAGON 1'\111¥ IOll1'1Pf'd w1!t1 AM l'Vdlo. I~ fl'lnl lllte brallee, tt"'-9 ..... """"" ...... -'!-WHtl WOii 11 ......... "" .... ...,.. fl¥e -· ... 1o1 •NIOM. • CLEARANCE $,.,A PRICE · .!IJ ---------DATSUN 510 4 Dr. s.-.1 _____ .,._. __ _ ~ ........ ~ ........................... ..... --; TO CHOOH PIOM I CLEARANCE $1)3861q PRICE ~ , ALL l'llCH + TAX I LIC. l l ,, ,. I ohnson&son All Marks and Continentals . -. Ltl\(:{J lN . . . ... - CQtJG,1r.; ·"" .. ., ......... ME:H CUR Y . - ' . ~ ... CAPl{l'.;1• .. , lo" ... Are Now Being Offered at APPRECIABLE SAVINGS Step Up. To LUXURY -. • • '71 Continental COUPE SALE PRICED Excellent Selection Of Owned Mark Ill's and Previously Mark IV's SPARKLING exterior finish with immaculate interior. Landau Luxury equipped tbru-<>ut. Full power, auto. temp. air, AM-FM stereo, tilt wbee1' power door loclu. Drives lil<e new. (809210) ' $4575 '·. '69 Continental HARDTOP COUPE , BEAUTIFULLY maintained inside and out. Equlpment with landau, power steering, power brakes, power wmdows , power seats, radio, ~ater, factory air cond. (641FYV) '71 El Dorado SALi PRICED Luxury equJpped, full power, factory air cond., 6 way power front seat, landau roof plus many more luxury items. Priced for quick sale. (693471Q41663) $5675 '68 Cadillac SEDAN DE VILLE A'M'RACl'IVE thruout, full power equlPJ>ed with factory a.Ir, 6--way seat. door locks, tilt Ir: tele wheel, landau root. Excellent tires. (XTA354). $2375 1970 CHEVROLET MALIBU H.T. COUPE I OWNER CAR WITH JUST 20,000 MILES ' ·This beautiful car is like new thru-out. The best of care is reflected in seeing and driving . VS en gine, automatic transmission, radio, heater, power steer· ing, power brakes, factory air conditioning, Landau roof. ( ZSJ488) '69 Mercmy Marquis 4 DOOR HARDTOP -SUPER SIDAN Immaculate Inside and out. Fu.11 power lncludln1 6 way seat, factory air, AM·FM stereo radio, Landau root. 'Ib1ll beautiful car 1hows excellent care. (YXW 397) $2275 '69 Marquis Brougham HARDTOP COl 'P~ -SALi PllCID EQUIPPED with the finest equipment lncludlna full pOW· er, 6 wa,y lnd1vldual front SC'ats, factory air cond., AM· FM stereo radio, tilt wheel, landau roof. C323DRB). $2375 $2775 $ '70 Sedan Deville EXQUISITE Beautiful lnslde and oul The belt at l~ry. full power, climate control air, 6 way power seat. landau roof. See today and drive. (480BEK). $4175 '70 Mercury COLONY PAl:K WAGON 10 pu1tn1er. Bcautlfully maintained. FUlq equipped in· cludina factory air cond., power 1teel'lne. power-btaket. luu a1e rack. <982 BIM) $3175 SEE ONE o. 0 0 TRY ONE o o. o BUY ONE .. o o TODAY! ' r: 2IDIHARIOlllLVD.COITAMUA •MO- .a.n. or "" "-emo • • • "Q•ll• r.11..- ,, .. . ' . . ~ . ... . . . ' PRE-CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE NEW & ALL NEW 1972 OMEGA Drive it home today! JUST $ Only $166 Down. Only $63.24 Per Month. 48 Mos. $166 is total dn. pymt. and $63.24 is total mo. pymt. for 48 mos. on ap,:ir. credit. Deferred pymt. price $320 1.52 incl. tax, lie., all carrying charges. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE 'RATE 10.98 %. USED CAR SPECIALS *100% Money Back · Guarantee! sg&& ~~~~E S66 DOWN TAKE YOUR CHOICE S36.46 MONTH '69 Olds 88 '69 PLYMOUTH '68 CADILLAC 4 Dr. H.T. VS, Auto. trans., factory air cond., P.S., P.B., radio, heater. 1662 ELU) 9 Pass. Wagon. VS, automatic trans., power steering, radio , heater. (715· EIM) Coupe De Ville. Full power, factory air. IWAE 358-} S66 is total dn. pmt. and $36.46 is tota1 pymt. tor 30 mos. on appr. credit. Deferred pymt. price $1159.IO incl, tax, all carrying charges., ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 11. 11%. '67 CAMERO '70 ·TOYOTA '70 EL DORADO COUPE Full power, factory air, stereo radio. Radio, heater, vinyl interior. 4 spd., radio, heater. I 2 I 4 AZJ l ITON 977) ' 1523 EAE} $766 $666 $4995 '67 MERC '66 FORD Yi· TON '71 TORO'NADO STATION WAGON PICKUI' Vinyl roof, AM-FM stereo, full pow· V-8, •uto. trans., factory air Factory Equip!. (U3926t l cond., P.S., ~adio, healer. I UJA er, factory air. 13%571M707I79J 286). $466 $666 $3995 *If you are not satisfied with the purchases of one of these specials, you may return the car within 48 hours from date of purchase and ,..ceive your money back. Specials good 'till Dec. 24-72. BUY WHERE THE SAVINGS ARE ! t, ' ' " ~-... --~ ........ . ' . ' . BRAND NEW 1973 98 LUXURY SEDAN Fully luxury equipped includ- ing full power, factory air conditioning, AM-FM stereo $ radio, vinyl roof. ( 185908) ONtY · ' • . • l ? l ............................................ ORANGE CIUNTY'S NUMBER 1 . . ' HONDA CAR· DEALERSHIP . Brand New HONDA SEDAN I 1051888! JUST s1466 Visit Our Large Recreatlonal Vehicle Dept. New GMC Trucks, Large Seledion of Used Vans and Trucks. EXAMPLE SAVINGS: '69 DODGE Red·E·Kamp VAN CONVERSION. Fully equipped with all the travel c-onveniences. (1987119014) Phone Us Now for A 5 Minute Credit Check . . If you are new in the state e If you owe on your presuit car • If you are new on the job e If you have little or no credit. · PHONE 549-9640 Let us tailor your financing to your personal needs. t ' t "' ,, •:: 0 '73 DODGE SWINGER . SPECIAL 2 DOOR HARDTOP Full Factory equiJiped Onftr TMrs Now FOR 36 MONTHS ·::o. · · '73 · DODGE VAN Fully factory equ ipped 109" wheel base. 1/2 ton, coil, spring s, front & l"IOI', /,6 gallon fuel tonk. duel jet wiod· shield washers, fresh air heoter with defroster. LARGEST SELECJION OF VANS IN 50. CALIFORNIA IMMEDIATE DELIVERY " F"nday, Otumber 22, 1972 DAILY PILOT 30 '72 DODGE MONOCO Auto. trons .. power steeriog, power brokes, electric windows, air conditioning, speed conlrol, fodio; heate r. (585021() ·' I $19~ DOWN $104 A MONTH FOR 36 MONTHS $3188 ~~~~E \I oq " to•ol d". ''"''· \\().I •I tolal mo. Pl""'· ind. IO•. I~"'"' & all CD<T'\' .... <lio•Qtl Oto_... trtdol lor 3b mo1. Otltrrtd Pl~". p<llt 539•3 ttl. 'IO• II. 1 .. <tn1• ANNUAi P[~CIN· lAGf RAif 10 10•~ 'BRAND · NEW 73l0~GE. ..........__· CnARGER ~. .. < ' ·-• 2 DOOR HARDTOP Fully foctory Equipped • ·Ordfr Yours.flow .. 1 ' 'I' I • 1 $199 DOWN $73 A M,ONTH .. , ~~~;~; $2288 :~l~LE 1100 ,.10•1fd" P•"'' ''l" l<>ICll "'O P1'1"' n;I_...._.,.,,.. &9' ................... _. «IG•I 1 .... J~ .... Oof.,,.4 ,, .. , ,,, .. ,,.)1 .... 111 ., IKIOM l.MoiUAL ,llCOO.t.Gf. U.11 10.11%. TAK:!;, YOUR., '7~tOlT 2 DOOR HARDTOP '72YEGA HATCHBACK '72DODGE $1388FUll CHALLENGER ·· . -PRICE ~ $J99DOWN -· ' $42AMONTH FOR 36 MONTHS CHOICE . Auto. trans., radio, heater, whitewall 1ires, reclining seats, tilt-steering wheel . (419FAX) 4-Speed, radio, hea ter. (Ser. #-2 -Door Hardtop. fully factory equipped. Low mileage. ( l 96FFH) Slt9 i1 lotol cfrl. pyml. 142 h to!al mo.pymt. illcl. lar. l.o::.-1t S. ol! i.,..,.,_ "IQ chotge1 on gppr. cred11 for lit"'°'· Dri••.d pym!. P"(f S 1711 o>el lal' ht MM. AHNUAI. "fMlHTAGE RATI 9.90 "' 1 V7782U3474301 J '69DODG"E · V-8, auto. tn:Jns .. power steerir{g, radio & · heoter. (ZDV786) '71 FORD 2 DR.Hardtop '69 FIAT 850 . !~.~~~~ .. ,~!a!un $)388 .SPIDER 'rodio. healer& wiw. Complete foclory equipped, hos 4 speed. . (XXW530). 2 to choose from . ____________________ ....;;• . '71 DODGE CHARGER 2-Door Hardtop, V-8, outo. Irons., power steering •. radio, heater, whittwoll tires. plus much more (009DFD) '68"DODGE' · 1/2 Ton Pickup FULL PRICE '66CHEV CAPRICE V-8, auto, Irons .. power steering, radio, heater {SBS424) " '65DODGE VAN V-8, auto. trnns .. pkls ITL!Ch lllCl(t. {R2793S) '69 TOYOTA .$6. ·as ~ 4 Sp~~~~~{~4S~ ' ' . PULL,.PRICE $ '69 CHEVROLET . 388 J96V·B1E~~~~~s>e~i~ $588 radio, heoter. (YQ0759) PULL PRICE . FULL PRICE $ '70DODGE 48 8 . Fully locto~~::ludi~ 6 Cyl. $168 8 stick shift. (93909£). FULL PRICE $ '70 MAVERICK 2 8 8 Rod;o o~h:~!~~ equ;pped. $ (Y Wl911) 88 ULLPRICI FULL PRICE $388 :~~!;;;~ .. ,~ ... $1088 (Ol41G00101622) I I t ,, ' ,. I I'll ffi BE .HOME FOR CHR ISTMAS IN A NEW FORD • (b~ Ph1totl SO GALLONS FREE GAS TO MAKE . THE TRIP LTD S""IRE WHEN YOU BUY YOUR NEW 7 3 FORD AT THEODORE ROBINS ~~~ ... FORD " •· - ' ' A 1.7.Jewel~ Custom Made . . "Pinto" Wrist WatcJt vci1,.,e $59,95 With The Purchase Of A 1973 SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY. You Will Like Our Price Our Service ·And You r . New Pinto Watch! PUT A UNDER YOUR TREE l ( BEAT THE '73 PRICE RISE !. WE HAVE A mo SELECftON OF .. ~ '73 CARS AND TRucKS THAT WERE PRICED -.ORE DEC. 1-PRI , ·fttcQUI. YOU .,. ,' •.. ''I· . '( .... , ... ·1EXTRA :SAVINGS . WHILE THEl .. LAST!~ 9. ' T-BIRD SALE . WAGON SALE IMPORJ, ·.-13 TO CtiC>oSE 20 AVAILABLE-'62 to '72-MODE!-5 v.w~ .... -r~·. 415 DATS~~·'-.1'5 . llAMD MEW A S OF SEPT. 11th, 1972 ! OUR A· 1 WARlANTY IS GOOD AS GOLD FROM · COAST TO CQAST ! ' ~- Wh1n you 1:.uv 1 ured c:1r with th. n1w A·I War· ranty, you l11we your ~" on your ford 011l- 1r'1 doo'1t1p. H-'•· wt.,. for the 1fir1t JO .d1y.,...,.•2.000 Mil ... your F';ord D11!1r t u1r1ftt1"' to ~P'1 IOO i. for 1ny 1111fOr . . for th1 n1rl 2'4 111onth1, your Ford D11l1r 9u1r1n- t111 a IS '% di1c:ount•on r1p1iN c:ov1red und1r the new A-I W1rre11ty. Yci u 91t A-1 protectia11 wh111 you're out of town foci! 111 1very St1t1 of the Union yciu'll fi11d p1rtici- p1tint ford 0.1l1n who will promptly and court1- ou1ly honor the 2'4 month provi1ion of your A-1 Waftanfy. . ; - Ccimt 1ae eur 1tl1ctio11 cif A-I W,f1'111tMt1 'U1ed ' car1 today! W1'r1 A-1 Werr1nty headq111rfwJ In I thi1 area . - . th1 d1al1nhip w ... r• yo11 l1aw1 your worri11 on our dci1H1fep. 6 AVAILABLE-'70 to '72 MODELS ··-··-~3496 S... w/l.millm • ..... :'71 f41rd L.. • ..... ,_ ""'·· IMb.. .W., IHtl, air co-c1 .. 1 ...... 1125· • CCMI '68 MUSTANG HARDTOP Fully factory equipped. Radio, heeter, etc. Good miles. I 128- AYD I '71 MAVERICK 2 door. Radio, heater, 6 cyl- ind er, body side mldgs., wsw, wheel covers, low mi les. I 722COLI $1096 ----------------------· 69 LTD H.T. Ra dio, heater, automatic, pow- er steering, air conditioning , good miles. IZSS438 I JIOIDI -c ... cKnr-DOOM -TOYOTA -..... .. ....... • • "''~"" '71 L:W.$~;3A:--211-911T 6 ~;:#i~tt: $1·696 Squ1r• I 0 p111. VI, , :; a.Ao. 1uto., RAH, pow•r 1 -. .-. ... . • .._. , ., • -, .. • . d ••• ,. .. 1 1r1119, l tt eon " .... ...._ 1157· . roof reek. Ill+ CAii ISXl -------------- '63 MERCURY COMET Conve rtibl•. Automatic, radio, heater. Good miles. ITVE1 61 I '67 COUGAR XR7 Full power, air cond., vinyl roof, good miles. IVGA1921 $496 TRUCKS & VANS 15 TO CHOOSE FROM Example: '69 Dodge Sport Van. Radio, heater, autometiC, good miles. ( YCU917 l $1'396 '69. PL YM. SATEl:.LITE R. & 1,-l., ••I•., pwr, ~t .. riog,. • ~596 air con.d. ,Go°il:j mJl.i. (YXV. ~ 1061 ' ' I '65 MUSTANG KARDTOP . Fully factory .equipped. Rad i'o, $7.96 heater, etc. Good mil es. ( OSX- 8561 ·~67 TOY OT A LAND CRUISER '70 CADILLAC 4 ~heel Drive, 6 eyl .. Good s1 791 L Full power, factory air eondi· '70 SIMCA WAGoN Miles, New P•int. l674DZK I V tionj ng. Low miles. I 16'4EADJ R•dio end he•fer. low miles. 1419ELVI ~196 In ' I i I S-airt;Ieniente Capistrano EDITION • ... • . ' VOL 65, NO. 367, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, PAJ.IFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22~ 1972 ~Ollll Severed Rooms Gutted .. . $5 Mil lion Blaze _Rips Home Industry In San Clemente Near Capo A searing fire lbat apparently started in a kitchen wastebasket caused major damage to lbe bJuse of a San Clemente hJSinenm•n late Thursday. The extremely bQ1 blaze "gutted several rooms ln the home of Otto Goodcase at '91 E. Cordoba and Caused severe heat and smoke damage to the rest of the residence , Fire Chief Burl Hancock said. 1be fll'e damage is ei:pected to exceed ,U,IXIO to lhe large residence. The fire was finl noticed by a passerby on the nearby San Diego Freeway. 1be motorist, who noticed a flash in the Gordoba area, called police and s))ortly afterwards, volunteers v;ere dispatched to the residence. The fire destroyed the kitchen and one Boat Searched bedroom of GoodcaSe's house. Hancock said tbat virtually every room had major beat and smoke damage and many paintings, antiques and other furnishings were heavily charred. Police said that when they arrived, Goodcase's mother was asleep In a guest room detached from the residence. One officer awakened the woman and fuok her to safety. Her room, however, was not imperiled. Hancock said he and other firemen planned to survey the residence one more time today to confirm the cause of the blaze. Preliminary theories bold that a -lighted cigaretle accidentally-discarded in the wastebasket sparked the blaze. Good.case was not at home when the fire broke out. Police Discover Blnod An lntepiational manufacturer of medical equipment today anooaoced tt will develop %9 acres in the ·city of San Juan Capistrano into a major manufac- turing complex of sophisticated elec- tronics gear -an operaUon calcuiated to employ bUndred.s of" technicians. ' The announcemeol, made tllday at a J\mclleoo in the MissJon Community came from Becton, Dk:kioson and Com- pany whJcb several years ago purchased · a large parcel of land in the north section or the city. Products from the manufacturer bear the familiar B&D label. Initial proposals by the firm to establi.sb operations irfsaii Juan came In um.; but were stalled for a time. Today's announcement, b o we v e r lightens-up the projeCL ' The Initial propo8als called !or a 15- millon industrial coinplex wjth a Door ·space of up to 1001000 square feet. The 811QUa1 payroll was upecled in Im to reach 112 million. • The plant '!Ill be located, said spokeSmen fo.r the firm, alo.ng the east side ol the San Diego Free'f1l1 aoutb ol the Serra •!!ramp 00 land wldcb..former. ly ..... part of Baac;llo r.oo CerTl!os. -- • On D~r~~~-l}~J"hi~g . ~~~-· ........ dol1li' • 'llii 'lo- -... bo """'""-~,....." ............... ~-. • 0 Ill By JOANNll REYNOWtl Of ... Deltr ..... , ... Huntingtoo B .. ch police said ~y they have found "quite a blt of blood" on the clothing of the Newport Beach doryman who they belie~e may have kill- ed bis dougbt ... <ind Ihm -it Jul -· -!let. Sgt. Mooty McfCmiOI> said in- vestigators will be reclwdlng the dory Sir Ofarles which belooged to fisherman Allan Vaughn Knlgb~ ._,, Newport Beach. San JiM'-flu ~ -Well OD-the -Nl41ilelil ofJlpU11cfliatly. Thll lalelt -. 00...Ver, will' involve the 1arg.,. a1n11e:1actory operation thus far lo cboooe. Jbe dty as a home. Debutante Bride Freed; Marathon Bomb Attacks Continue In North Vietnam SAIGON (UPI) -The United States carried its marathon air assault against North Vietnam's heartland into the fifth day today despite mounting air losses. ·Hanoi. Radk> reported three more B51s. and an FU! filhler-bomber shot down !<>-' day and said it used MIGs as well as misslles against the Americari planes. The U.S. Command reported that two more B52s were shot down Thursday near Hanoi, along with a pair of Navy AS Intiuders- 11rls brought to eight the number of B52s the command reported lost since tbe massive air ussaults began Monday. Hanoi claims it shot down 34 planes, 15 ol tbem --So far the command has l~ted 43 Amerlcam as ml'ssing and 13 rescued. Hanoi baa: broadcast"' the names of 16 riien, most of them B52 crewmen, who it said were captured. Some ruen were "!P'rted .....,ded, two too oeriously to affend Haooi's exhibition ol the captives for the foreign press. Radio Hanoi said in a broadcast mmltored in Saigon that tbe "North Vlelnameae Air Foree llas participated in the downfugs of U.S. planes." A U.S spokesman said that while there bu been 1i90me MIG21 acilyity" tt bas not been "1ipificant." The word 0 algnU1cant " is eenerally us- ed wbeo hosllle activity -1ts In daJna&e to. American men or materiel. 'l1>e command spokesman Aid. MIG buts In North Vietnam have been ---the-targell for the ,.._ec1 l'llids- llo lllso admitted that the runway of Hanoi'• Gla Lain clvUian airport, never be.fare atruclt in any or the American bombings of i'lorlh Vietnam , had been .. cratered" by bomba. Be declined to speculate as to bow MlG.s ftre able to operate with their butsunderatt>clc. ,,., lndfon aovemment announced to-""i In New Deihl that American bombi · oo Tbur1dq ltru<k the Indian cbancery ID HanoL 1beTe were report.t earlier lhat the C)lbao and Egyptian embusles had b<on bit In lbnol and that Soviet, Chinese and __ l'Ollsh lhil'l .ltW' hi Ill Hal hoo1 will!__ tlii'i<Polei killed. . A Hanoi bl'08dcut-Thuraday '" I d bombl hit the "ll11110l lli!loo," an Amerl- cao prl8onar of wart camp in Hanoi and tbll IOme,f'!nOlll had been wounded but did not 1111k'e clear whether the,. were AmerlcaaS or Vletnamett. Knight and his 3-year<>kl daughter, Patricia, welt last seen alive Dec. 12 when he took her with him to check hill lobster traps along the coast. At mid-morning they were spotted by a Huntiog!on Beacl1 lifeguanl. as Knlglit stood in the stern of bis small bOat. •P- pareoUy cradling hls blonde daugbler In his anns. • ~ A few mlltites later, the guanl told police he saw the empty boat clrcllitg aimlessly near the Huotinglon BeaCh Edison plant. Knight's body was found a week later, floating about a bal£ mile to sea, and bis daughter's body washed ashore at tbe- Buntlngton Beach1pier 10 hours later. The ease, which was presumed to have been a double drowning, took an unex. pected turn when It was discovered that the girl's throat bad been slit. The Orange County coroner ruled her death a homicide, but Huntington Beach detectives say they have carefuny pursued the possibilities that her death may have been accidental. However, McKennon said today tbe possibility that the cbild was cut by ,the boat's propeller when she fell overboard or lbat she actidentally cut benelf on something in the boat wu "pretty slim." He Pointed out that the coroner's report indicated that a fine-bladed In- strument had caused the deep alHh across the child's throat. An old, rusty knife found in the dory was tested for the pruence of human blood along with the clothing, bul oo blood was found on the blade. McKennon noted that the rusty knife's blade was too (See KNIGHT, Pqe I) Nden Perkins Rites Saturday.. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday morning £or retired Clnadlao sof't4rink execOUve Alden M o .J.• e Perkin& ol El Toro . Mr, Perkins died Wedoeaday In Sant. Ana. He was 65. The fonner San Clemente retldenl had retired several 1w1 aa:o u the ~ prietor of Jobn Collins Co., ._ major.ioolt- drinl: company Jn Canada. Mr. Perklm, of 1333& Oondor Drive, leavt1 bil widow, Lucille; two aons, Jotn Perkin• ol Browlllburg, Quebec, Cludo; and Owlght Foster Pwklna of Yl(W LI Salle ·ellec; ~ o!!ulh!ert. .Jtijdr' , vary ol Mont iiiid cliOrlol Vanelli of Waylaod, Mau., anc11 f our grandchildren. Mr. Perkins was a lonner member of tl1< San Clemen le Kiwanis atilt and had ,.rved as a president of a Klnnlt club In 1111 naUve "111111r1. .;/ Lion Country-'s Ranger Mauled By Frasier Kin Kidnap Suspects Seized A 3QO.pound offspring of Frasier tile sensuous lion, pulled a senior park ranger from a fence al Llob 'country Safari Thursday and aev<rify mauled bim before being forced llack by groundsmen, park offitjal& !<pOrled. Stephen R, Craig, 28, Costa Mesa , was 1Ull in the intensive care unii of Mission Viejo Connnuoity Hospital thia morning after undergoing three-bl>urs of surgery tn which an estimated 4do atitches were required to close bis wounds. However, hospital officials described Craig's condition as "satisfactory" and said be would probably be released in a week unleas complicaUons develop. Craig suffered fang and claw Jnfw'ies to his face, biCk, and heck, according to park officlala. He was attacked by a two-year.old nooess· named lleo~e. Prior to the attack park offlciala considered her one of the part's mewl docile cats. The anJmal was "babysitting" a litter of young aJbs at the Ume of the lncldenl and ol1idals speculated that sbe may simply have been protectiog them. \ "'nlat protective instinct can be really strong and you never know when Jt will come out/' said Dale Coutier, usilltant maD1ger of the park, thia morning. "But you can never be sure what the lloa·was thinking, either. Benjie 11111' just haye -being playful. Wbat la ployful -'.(See SAFAIU, Pqe I) DALLAS (UPIJ -Allee Amanda "Mandy" Dealey, the debut ante daughter-in-law of lbe president of the Dallas Morning News, was released binned today by "foul;t.lking" kldoa- pers w)Jo held the newlywed blonde for three days, threatened to kill ber and then collected $250,000 r&J180m. ~rifrs deputies later broke into an apartmeqt at nearby Garland and ar- resfed two men "while they were coun- ting ,the. money." The s~ are brothers and sur- render¢ without a fight. Charged with lddnapillg were Franklin J. Ransonette, S3, and Woodrow H. Ransooette, 31. The e ,n t 1 re quarter-milliOIMlollar ransom was recovered, authorities said. An FBI agent said Dallas C.ounty sberiH's .deputies broke into the apart- ment Md surprised the suspects "while they were couo!iog the .-y. Tbere was no·trituble ... ·one Customers Win Spain Lotte ry MADRID (UPI) - A M-)'tll'dd ca!e owner In Ille Cltolao ci1y ol Vich -a record llt mllUoo -y Jn the world'• rlcbeot lolte<y Biii he wlD have lo eblre II wllll ..._, ..... .....,, ,;.,.,.. Ill winning tlcbl No. U43$, . of ~':8 = ~ who ..., the €ale Mnlca In Vlch. a city Span!JJ11ta1e Clrilt..: lotter)'. !tom Barcelona, '"'."" U blUloo ~ In the 'l1>e Ucnt C06I Rlpell lll0,000 ~ (12,36111-. • ' .... r~&l~~~e,.aboutillflJo Catalan, ':Ecnl ' - " "WE BOUGHT TllE TICUT hoping ""' luck would continue," he said. The loller)' hid been kind fl> uo In prevlouo --but .,. have never hit It thU bl(." . , __ ~'wprlaels-..,.. . ....., t~·Fll•Olle". I' ·-• ' J Six boors earlier, the kidnapers put goggles on the 22-year-old blonde beauty before dawn and set her f-ree on a street comer in the posh subur.b of Highland Piu-k. "Count to a thousand and your daddy will be here," one kidnaper told her. But she was picked up by an FBJ 'ageot and Dallas County Sheriff aarence Jooes. When tbe 5-6, 135--pound wife of Joe M. Dealey Jr., 25, was· found safe, she whispered , "I'm all right." She said she saw .only two men· during her Ordeal, "l was scared to death the whole Ume," Mandy said. "But I gradually got . used -to it. I felt more relleved Wednes-. day when one of the men told me : 'Don't worry, you'll be home for Christmas.' " Dealey said his father, Joe M. OeaJey Sr., president and chief er.ecutive officer of the A. H. Belo Corp., which publishes the Dallas newspaper, paid the !250,tltltl ransom. It was made through a secret ' ISee KIDNAP, Page!) Harr y Truman's Cond ition 1'ear Critical Stage KANSAS CITY, Mo. ('UPI) -Harry S Tnmum'.!I heart beat irregularly and his blood pressure -fell aevenly today, alarming doctors IO much that Truman's wife, Bess, was called to his bedside and the M-year-old former Prtlldent was for a lime eon1idered in crlUcal condition. "I have ~ doubt that If t had had to make a report at about 8:3'.I or 8:45 1.m. th& momlog f -.kt have had to say he la in crlllcol condition," oak! Res<arch lloopllal epotmnan John °"''"· follow-ing' a new1 btleftll( delayed almoet an bouT by Truman'• '!on<ned condltloo. "By the Ut)le lhci briefing came, the condition appeared to be pessinc or at least lmprovini," he said. Truman "'' still COMldered In "very 1et klo( ....... C'(ift(fltlMt WfiJc , 1cco ng to- Drevea, muns '1be 1' very ck>ee to crltlcAI at any lime." Mn. Truman, 17, J'AI reotlng at the Trum1n1• Independence, Mo., homci when the call came just afler dawn from the hoopltal. She lmmedlatllly be1an the ti- mllo ride to lier hlllbond'• bedllde. ' l \ 'l'ed•y'~ Flnal N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS Dr.' Learv's .; Followers Now Sought By TOM BARLEY Of Ille O•llY ~1'91 SI_,, Christmas greetings in the form of ar- rest warrants and a copy of a mulU-page Orange County Grand Jury indictment are being delivered today to 28 alleged members of the "Brotherhood or Eternal Love" drug cult founded by Dr. Timothy Leary, the DAILY Pn.oT has learned. The arrests, almost all of them in Laguna Beach, O>sta Mesa, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach, will bring .to 46 the number of defendants rounded up as alleged oonspirators in an organization described by lawmen as an of!shoot of Leary's original League of Spiritual DiSCilVery (LSD). Two men were arrested in Hawaii Thursday by Honolulu police who are still scouring the islands for a man described today as a "key figtU"e" in the drug ring -Robert L. "Fat Bobby" Andrist, 29. It was learned today that the Orange County Grand Jury has been involved for ~ver~ weeks and most intensively dur- mg lhis past week in preparing a new in- dictment that was still being withheld at press time today. Assistant District attorney E d Freeman admitted today that the in- dictment was being prepared but l'i!fused to release the names of za per90{lS charg- ed with mu!Uple narcotics ·counts pending the arrest of the fndidees. Freeman coofll'Dled that transients ealt'1n I· ne11N1'..-JO.-alid -8ani1c1 .a. Crawford, 115, wen picked up in ' Mllui, &wail~ by JocaJ pclice working on m. formation suppiled by Orange Oxmty authoriUes. Both men have advised HawaiJan authorities from their quarters tn the Honolulu jail that they will flght a move by Orange County lawmen to return them to this area. "It may take several weeks to get them back here in view o~ prolonged ex- tradition proceeding,'' Freeman said. Freeman said Delaney was la.st seen in the Southern California area in June when be was arrested by Riverside Com- ly narcotics officers who claim he had 20 pounds of ~1Shish and 115.tltltl oo his person at the time. Freeman said they are the only arrests he expects to make in the Hawaiian Islands unless lawmen there manage to produce the elusive Andrist. The former Art Colony resident has evaded bis ptnUerS since the original Brotherhood indictment was issued last August. Lawmen recenUy confirmed that the search for the mpound suspect has now been extended to other areas in the United Slates. "The people we want are in the beach cities or Orange Coun\y," Freeman said. "That's where we are working today and that's where we will be workJng throughout the Christmas weekend until all our arrests are made." Police in Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach are cooperating with Orange County Sheriff's officers, agenlll from the Federal Bureau of Narcotics ,and Dangerous Drugs, agenll from the state's Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement and U.S. Customs omcen bl a joint sweep that bu become toown as the Orange County Drug and Narcotics Tuk {See CULT, Page li Orange Cea at Weatlle r lt'U be cloudy when you get up on Saturday,.-but dOn't fret.--'Jbe weatherlady saya they will clear by midday to sunny akies and tern· peratures of 63 at the beaches and 70 inland. <M!might lows tUO. INSIDE T.ODi\ 'Y For tht ~ghth CO'l'l.St'ctetivc year, the DAILY PILOT iJ hon- oring tM top community the· atcr actors and actrcuu fn Or- ange Countw. Winner• of the 1972 DP a10Ct"dl are announced In today's W ttkender. &..M. ..,.. • _ ..., .. CetllwM.I J ---._, .. ,_ .. OMl'll ~ 1 ·-~ ,_ . 'lflMH .. II ......... l:KM'f 1 ~-,. AIOll........ II AWll* • .. ...... n. ... --_, _ " l --~ .......... ---S'tl¥1!1 hrt&r lt ~ lt-17 .... ~ .. 11 ·-. ,........., .... ·-. ..__...-.. 1>14 . .,.. .._ . .......... , ... .. ' 2 DAILY PILOT SC Oemente's Road Worl{ Announced A list of major projects proposed ror • ~50 hu1ding between the city of San Clemente and the cowlty of Orange \1 ill soon go to county officials for approval. The work is suggcsh.'<I durin g the next fiscal year. San Clemente COWlCJlmen settled c.n the list al midweek, and one common trouble spot -a section or South El Camino Real -head!! the list. Amoog the proposals for South l~I Camino is the \\idening of the four -lane highway, expanding traffic lanes, in- ttalling a " new left-tum pocket and resurfacing. .nil between Av e n l U a l.<tagdalcna and San Gabriel. ' The total cost or that project, to be 3pli1 between the two entities, is set at $71,60'.!. Another proposed major rcbullding l·f- fort would invc!ve improvements to Avenida Estrella from Avcnida Palizada to El Camino Real. That rutted roadway 1\·ould require $86,961 in repairs. Several other minor jobs also will be proposed throughout the city. The critical approval. however, is yet to come from the review board which rp- proves projects to be funded under the Arterial Highway Funding Program. The city's share or the costs is paid for \Vith rebates from state gasoline taxes. So far this fiscal year about $76,<m re- mains unspent in the gas tax reserves. That money wi ll be spent soon however. on small-street improvement throughout the city, City Manager Ken· neth Carr told cowicilmen this week. Dozens of separate repair jobs are being placed on a priority list by the city street department. From Pagel SAFARI ..• for a lion is not playful for a man." At lhe time of the incident, Craig was atop a 13-foot fence repairing a nylon shading canopy. Benjie reportedly entered the area, which is screened from public view, and became aroused. "She took a great flying leap, grabbed Steve, and they came down together, with Benjie on top," accordJng to Jerry Kobrin, Lion Country vice-president. Two nearby growtdsmen immediately came to Craig's rescue, forcing the lion back by hitting her with shovels. Craig, bleeding profusely, was rushed by car to the bespitaJ by park officials without waiting for an ambulance. He was reported conscious at the hospital prior to surgery. "Benjie was one of the most docile cul)s we've ever had," said Kobrin. "She's been around people all her life and made countle ss ap pea ran c e s throughout Orange County." Officials said the lioness would not be destroyed. Ceramics Firm Decor Champion A ceramics manufacturer located in the Gapistrano Beach viHaa;e area was named the top winner today in the annual decora tion contest sponsored by the chamber of comme rc;e in the community. Vohann of Califo"1 ia took the grand prize in the competition. Other winners in the judging whi ch look place at midweek are Kent Dry Cleaning for the best-decorated tree: Salm's Fashions (or the most unusual decor and Fashion Conspiracy for a special award. - Trophies will be awarded to th e businesses at the cham ber's annual ln· stallation banquet in Janua ry. 011.MGI COAST K DAILY PILOT °tl'lc Ori .... C..St DAILY l"ILOf, wllll "'"ldl 11 comblMCI , ... NtW•-P•n•. 11 1111bll"' .. b'I' "'-Or1ng1 c;..11 Plllltl•hl,,. (°"'""¥· j.,._. r111 I'd!!-'" p,if>li1htd, MltNll•V ll'ro119h Frld•v. ti!' COii• Mt••· f<ltWl'Of'I •111;11. Hunll...,.,., lt..:lllP-i.111 V1l1tV. l19un1 111cr1, '"''°"''Mdl10K11 •net s ... c1,,.,...,,, Siii J11f11 l::1pl\lr1no. A •1119!1 •t9•0lltl ldl1'°'1 11 DU~lllhld S1h.1•••v• •rid $11...i•n. Tiit prlM.lpel P\llltl•hJnt 1111111 li ti llO Weil ll'f S!rn l, Cell• Mew. C1lllorftl1, tUU. Ro b.rt N. W11d l>r111~1 11111 P\IOll""' J11.k R. C11rl1y Vitt 'r•kllnl 1no 0.11tr11 Mln"9« lh•M•I Kttfil IEdllof 1\''"'' A. Murphi111 Met\1911!9 leitw Ch1rl•1 H. L•ci• Ric.h•rd ~. Nill A11/1IM1I MtrWelfll IEelllln ... c-...... OHie• JOI N•rtti El C•ml11• •••~1672 --C..I• "'-: UI WM! a1,-• ~ 9'tctl: 2W H.....,, ..... !e¥-itd ..._..,...,,_ lhldt: llWJ htdl .......,.,. u.-hlc:fli m ,.. .. , .,,....,. ,.,.,t1• l714J '4Mhl c--.ww ...... ,,. .... '41-'671 lai C ....... AJ..t .. «1MJ!tl , ....... 4fJ-MJt (:rlwt)Oh,, !111. Or.... (MO l"V'llll'llftf ~. ,.. ...... ...,,.. lllin1r11-.. ........ mltl« ... ..,_.,...,....,. W.111 f'N,. .. ,...,...... Wltl!ovf .,. .. , ..... MlttlM .. ....,.,..,., t'IWltl'. ...,_.. de• ....... , NW 11 eo.ft #tttll. Ctl!fpr11la. ~"" .... CMr~ u ... "'°""''''-11ir --'I U.lt • !liiilltl,Y1 iJijft,..,. .. 1111111• taM """"""· .. ·~ ··"- ' JJteslaeer S..,•t ' Clemente Aid.ing . ' . ·Park Water Rian· Tile city o/ San. Clem<nte thl1 week Weed to act as the "aaent" of IOrts for Ille slate parb deputmCllt In a project g~ to fumlshlna: water to tbe new Sin Onolte State Park. Stop °"" la to hire an ..,ineertng fJrm !or cle>tplS. Oouncllmen agreed tllil week to 1landle tho ~allt ot the project whldi, will be paid for tllfoogh a ledetal (flllt flmmed through earlier thlJ year Iller Pmldent Nixon ordered more baato In developing the park. • The engineerln( firm will be paid by the State Department of Parka and Recreation. '4Thty plan to keep the area as prlstlnc as they can and they won't eisrupt very much of the native plants there now," he said. 'l1le city at present has some elfiUtnt lines leading in the general direction of the part. Carr promiled he would propose the 1dea of parallel w1ter pipes once again to the "ltate ottlclals. Deve'lopment 'Exclusion' OFFICER WRITES GRIM REPORT FOLLOWING Fl.<TAL CRASH IN HUNTINGTON. BEACH . Once the pipes are lnltalled Crom the city limits to San OnOlte, the clly Will continue to maintain t&e mains at state expense. Teenager Trie1 to Pull Stinton Min from Wreck, But 11 Driven Back by Flames Told by City Countian's Cai· Crashes; Drive1· Dies in Flames A Stanton man burned to death Thurs· day night before a horrified Huntington Beach teenager ••ho had tried to rescue the man moments before his car ex· plode<I. Police said David W. Offrell, 50, of Stantnn died after his 1972 foreign luxury sedan crashed into a power pole and a light standard at the intersection ()f SpringOa.Je Street and McFadden Avenue in Huntington Beach shortly before mid· night. Danny: Brown, 17, whose home at 6022 Vane Circle is close to the intersection, told police he heard the crash and rushed to the car .to try to aid OffrelL Officei:s said the teenager tried to get the car door open, but the auto burst into flames, driving him back. When polic:e and flre units arrived at the scene of the crash, they fouod the $9,000 car completely involved ln Dames. Traffic investigators today are at· lemptinf to piece together the ,callSe ()f the accident. They said skid marks in· dicate Offrell was driving southbound ()n Springdale when he went into a four· wheel skid as he approached the in· tersection. The car apparently crossed the in· tersection and jllfllped the curb, striltlng the two poles on the southeast corner. Clemente Backs Hotline Service Bid for Grant Volunteers for San Clemente's busy but financially-ailing hotline service y.·on a swift and hearty endorsement from city councilmen this week - a move that would reinforce the service's chances for foundation grants. Loc:al insurance agent and hotline president Bud Scheele won the en· dorsement from councilmen Wednesday after explaining that the service has ap- plied to the Disney Foundati()n for a grant to help booster a dwindling bank aceount. Scheele said that before his Listening Ears Hotline can make formal appeal for the grant, it needs the endorsement of the city. police department and other relevant community entities. Scheele explained that the service presently is seekin g larger and better quarters and tha t local donations help handle daily expenses. But salaries for counse lors and other mounting expenses require more funds than the c.ommunity can supp ly, he ::id· de<!. The center operates on a volunteer basis, save for one position paid for by the county. That one salary is split bt:tween two paid counselors, he said. Fro•n Page I KIDNAP ... "drop" at a deserted shopping center. ··Needless to sa_v, there wa1 a lot ()[ crying, a lot of hugs and kisses," said the socialite's husband . ''This is going to be the best damn Christmas anybody ever wished for ." He then gave hia wife her holiday present early -it wa.s a single strand or pearls which he draped arouud her neck. They then kissed. Dealey and Mandy were married iix weeks ago in a gala ceremot1y and they ho neymooned at Dragon Bay in Jamaica. The kldnaperl grabbed her as she returned to the couple 's apartment Tue .. day, then demanded ran.som through telephone calla to his father's house. "Their scare tactics scared the hell out or me," the younger Dealey said. "They used coarse threat!." Dealey said that when h.ia wife was relea sed she was "a little brulsed up a llWe shaky, but. ln &ood gpln.. -.:_ "We are pleased beyond words" the husband aaid . "MIHldY and t lov~ IFadt other very much. Now, I kno\t thl1 hap- pen s only In movl~ and the (airy tales. but I believe It haRpent!d to us -.lt,wu love at !irat sight. 1 Dealey said hl1 wife w11 held at lln unkown house in the Dallas area from 4 p.nt Tuesday when .she was abducted. From Pagel CULT • • • Force. Freeman said those named in the new Indictment \\.'ill join 16 persons earlier named in the alleged Brotherhood con- spiracy -a total of 46 defendants. ''And this isn't by any means the wd or the road," a weary District Attoniey's investigator commented this morning., Superior Court Judge RaYJMnd Vin· cent has been solely occupied in recent \\1eeks with the flood ()f paper work ae- cumulated in the form of multiple m~ lions filed by tbe battery of defense lawyers hired by the Brotherhood defen- dants. Several defendants have had their names removed from the indictment dur~ ing that time via dismissals and pleas of guilty to reduced charges. Among them was David Mark Reddy, Z3, 33801 Street of the Copper Lantern, Dana Point, who faces a state prison term of up to 10 years following a plea of gullty to amended drug charges and violation of an earlier probation. But Reddy must first serve a one year term in federal prison on drug charges substantially amended from those filed when he, Brian Kendall McAdams , 25, 20286 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, and Thomas Blake Bklwell, 26, of Garden Grove, were arrested i n Portland. Oregon, last Jan. 13. The trio were accused of shifting $2 million worth of hashish into a truck that was being shipped on a Dutt.Ii freighter from Bombay, India to Yancouver, Cana da . AH three received one year ja1J terms but Orange C o 11 n t y "Brotherhood" charges 8Jainst Bidwell w e r e later dismi!JSed 1n Judge VJncent 's courtroom and the defendant shipped ()ff to Lompoc prison. I McAdams has been ()rdered. •to face 'M'fndwhoggling' Drug Conspiracy Told by Police District Attorney's officers preparing the newes t indictment in the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" con- spiracy today ~ed what one in- vestigator described as "the most numb- ing slatlstics you ever saw in your life." They include the allegation that Brotherhood membe!'S hf.v'e smuggled. hashish -a refinement of marijuana - into the United States at the rate of 1,000 pounds a moath for the last six years. Aud it ls alJo alleged that Brotherhood members have distributed many mlllions of LSD tablets throughout the world dur· ing that same period: ''The amount of money involved is mind-boggling," an investigator said. "Just put it at many millions of dollars until \\'e can come up with a reasonable estimate." Lawmen said the Brotherhood's major smuggllng network1 utilized false iden- tification and forged passports that allowed many of its members to travel around the world maJdng illegal drug purehases for impart into tbe United States. f\.1any of those purchases, investigators said, w~re made in lbfjia, P~ a.pd Algha1114tan. • . • . It was noted today that Dr. Leary's B~ o/ ,Et~mal 'Lov. wa. until recently a legal corporatJoQ ;tn California that had beejl IJ'Ulled ... _,,.statl!I by the State Franohtse Tax.. ~ "on the grounds of 1t1 l:eitgloua nature." The corporation was formed in October or ti66. It was hurriedly 'dl9'0lve<I by lawmen last August. The Wiler golJlll tllroogh t-mains will be said for llO percent more than that used in the city because the service ls outside San "!lemente. Councilmen re.served a final approval of the entire engineering contract until they obtain written auurance Crom the state ()fficials that the department indeed will pick up all the blll.s. City Manager Kenneth Carr assured councilmen that the arrangements will be completed to city saUsfacUon. Councilman Thomas O'Kee!e brought up <me factor In the lnsta:lf1tion ol. the lines that relates to the dty'1 search for customers of reclaimed water. The dmnclbnan aated Carr U the state would have use for city effluent Jrultable for irrigaUon, and whether t!ffiuent pipes should be Included alonplde the water mains. Corr replled that past mntacts on the issue wltb the 1tate brought no en- couragement. "1bey have said often that tbey wouldn't have any Uk for reclaimed water there. Their only need will be for potable water," he added. Add I City Engineer Phil Peter added that state parks designers plan t() do little if any new landscaping In the entire San Onofre park area of 2,300 inland acres and six mlles of oceanfront. FromP .. el KNIGHT ••. coarse to have cansed the wound on the tot'• throaL Tbe detective Slkl Knight'• widow, Dora1 told them she bad recently given her husband a new knife, but police have "'f.!: unable }'> !iJ>d IL , •we wm lie going oyer the boal IRin to see what we can .nnct,~· McKennoo said. The detectives· checked the dory once for traces of blood, but found none. san Clemente city officials this w~ rmally setUed on the am()un\ of the citfa coastal strip (1,000 yards inland from the sea) whlcl! they seek to be exclude<! from the stiff rules et up by the coastal in· iUative. But no one wtiuld a:ive odds on bo\v much of the request would be granted. Roughly, ·the city wants to have about half the ooastaJ strip -where develop- ment ls meet intense -ellrnlnated from the area wbert1 pennlta from a regional commissioo would be required before development takes plice. The map covers Portions in the south slde ot the dty where de1JSily and b> tensity of development l.s most con- centrated; the ()lder, central portions of the 1,~yard a~a (Along both sides of A venida Del Mar); the Las Bolas area and apartment districts surrounding It and most of 'the Sborecliffs and Colony coves area in the northern parts , Councilmen adopte<I a philosophical, "it·wouldn'l·hurt·to-try" attilude about the requrest which will come before a two-amnty review commisslOo ...,Ce it starts ()peration Feb. 1. • Director of Bulldlrig and Planning Richard Ahlman prepared the map recently with guidance from bi.J staff and planning commlsslooers. Tbe problem of predicting the fate of the request rests in the lack of legal definitloo.s f()r "intensity and density " and .the lack of guidelloes. "We'll just have lo send: this in and then find out what lhe real definition! are, be said Wednesday, • Ahlman~ that in most~. be US· e<I the "lntenslty" approach to try to show that4he amount of the developwent in I gi.ven area amounted t() at leaSt·BO percent . '.i.vn: Jet ~ Crasli Lai.d To Radar Flaw "It's a difficult cue, and lrankl)', rd like to be able to prove that BOmething else happened, but the evklence just doesn't seem to be pointlog that way, .. he said. trial March 26, on charges cootalned in La ers Back P thP. origlhal indictment. :" wy re SS CfilCAGO (AP) -Federal of!icials The flrst f I tr. I st · say a prellmlnary lnvesUgation shows a o severa ia s emm1ng SACR ... ~N'l'O (AP) _ The California from the first Brotherhood indictment l\llu:. blind spot on a radar screen may have wm open Jan. 10 with Jam es Trial LBWl<n AssociaLion is urging Gov. SAC Launches Missile contributed to the colliSiiJ,, ol two Leroy Crittenden, 29, ol Loog Beach Jn • Ron3\d Reap\, ·1011lgn ~latlon giving jetlinen In which nine penoo• ""t< kil> the defendant's chair. repllrlen protectm.agiitlilt . contempt VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE e<I. Today's arrests again raised the cltadoiia !or """•"'.-tO .r....i conll-The crash occurred :Wednesday nlgbt possibility that Dr. Leary may bO°fllUril-derit . .c.-·._,_.l,-068,, ~!..• jury. "A ~~~·-•Aa8e~u.:c_>;!! ll~e docre.;, when a North Central Alrlines plane clip-e<I to Orange County to lace charges ~ -~..., w ~mN ·-~ •= ~~ T" ped the tall of a Detta Alrllne! jet on a leveled against him in the first strong Independent press ts ooe . .of the the Air Force's Western Test Range over twrnY at O'Ha~ International Airport. Brotherhood indictment. tmportant elementa to assure oor the Pacific, a mWtary spotesmlil fllY•-The North Central plane was taking off "But that's only a d1m posalbillly," democratic society," woclatiOD pm> An Air Force spokesman said the missile with 45 persons aLoard.and the Delta jct Chief ~ty District Attorney James dent Herb Haflf said"""-wa.s fired at 8:$5 p.m. 1bursday and wa.s was taxiing acros.s the runway to a Enright s&id. °''Dr. Leary bu, """1 ---:· ~~-;ii··--.. --'' ;;;;;;;mm:°":s"""""=~·-·;j•!ii;r;;;;;;;;;;liiiiit~erminal-iiiii~· iiiiiiiiiiiil;~~--~:--ordered to leave Swilurland by Ile<. 31 1 but I think that Orange Cottnty 1VW not · .. ..-· · '.. :'f • be on t11e list of places he bas put m ·his • LAMPS _ PICTURES _ accESSORIES, • Christmas list as possible f u tu r e " ha!',!;:;· sought re ruge In Swlti<rland , • HOLIDAY ' . SALE ~ a~ter a brief sojourn in Alegria followtui hi s escape fr()m prison in San Luis Obispo . The LSD cultist has been serving a prison term imposed in Orange County following his arrest on drug charges in Laguna Beflch on Christ.mu day of 1970. Seven Clemente Residents Seek Planning Seat Seven San Clemente residentl-thus far have formally apptled for the position of planning commissioner !~ft vacant recently b)( the resignation of1 build.er - Ray C. McCaslln. ' City councilmen beard tb.e.. tesuJl.I of the quest for v()lunteen Wednesday, then agreed to delay personal lnttrvle"• Of the aspirants until a special Hision Jan. 1 in the council chambers. Originally, the interviews were to have taken place next Tuesday. but Mayor Arthur Holmes said that several of the applicants to the advisory post said the date was inconvenient. It's the httle thi1191 tho! can"""k• ·t1ie clif. forence. Slop by today •nd ¥i-our fine Hioction, now spociolly .pri~. If it's for • gia, or for you .,.....,..11y, you' I find just the thing to enhance any home f« the holid.y, - The appointment of a new comihloner under a revised system ·(resumes and In- terviews) will be the aeoond Olide thla year. The process began at Rolme1' In· 1\1tence when he assumed office last April . DREXEL.-HERITA6E-HENREDOK-WOO~~ Previously, commis,,ioDe:s were •i> -~inled by individual I ·Russ Satellite Up MOSCOW (AP) -The f!Ovlet Union rtpOrtcd it launched another' Coanol satellite Thursday, the 5391.h tn the tecr"el serlCI, Tass said th&-ttqle of Ill first t>rblt was 113 mlnutts. ' • INTEltlOltS WDkDA YS & SA TUIDA YS 9.00 tw l1JO PRIDA \' 'Tll. 9.00 ; • NEWPORT BEACH • tn7 Wl$TCLlff oa.. • M2·2010 LAGUNA BEACH • ,45'NORTH -C0AST HWT ..•. ,,., TORRANCE• 2J64t HAWlHORNI IL VD. J7t•f21' ) • ) j ' • I • • • ' " r ' ' .. •. I • i I llelettt Ctrstom .,.:;,.,..;:...L ~ Oldsters Leave New. Ji'efertl Sflsteni . I TWO ~tl ~fp/J Gol en Gate ii d~·· .Highway and Transportation District, 1 examlri~ a scale mode( of 15-foot alwrunum ferry d u r I n g keep laying cere- monies """'nUy. The boaU will carry 750 passengers at 25 knots. I• Concepts Changing Tab to Workers By JOHN CUNNIFF ,.,, ....... •111tv1t NEW YORK -Because our life mode has changed in r~ cent decades. the elderly often have found themselves denied tb.e reapect that used to honor age, ·and tile comf<irt and securJty.tbat should reward 1 lifetime of effort. Consi'der only one chana:e ., lhat led to th~ predicament: The tremendous migraUon from country to city has, In J.he past 20 yN.rs, lpcreMed the ratio of urban to rural • population to 3 to I from 2 to I. need.I, and IO many retiree• now are consequently rectlv· Ing Inadequate pensions too . BEGINNINO IN January, 1 special m.inlmum benefit will aid such people. 'Ibo spe<lal payment will range from $80 a month to aa much u i110 a month for workers with 30 years of coverage. Experience has shown that a worker forced into inactivity at age 65 might not be prepared, poyd>ologtcalty or · tlnancially, tor idleness. Many are still vigorous and pro- duetl ve. And becauae of ln- flaUon, they can always use . IN CITI&9, unlike oo farm! more money. and in rural areas; apace ls at Beginning tn 1173, these of· • mbttmum and its price at a ficlally retired workers can premium. A n d , therefore, add to their income as much there iJ sometimes no room ln as $21100 from jobs without en· the family for the older dangering their Social Security generation, especially if they benefits. This year they could can't pay_ their way. earn only ,1,680 of "exempt" For decades ·now the coun-income. try has been attempUng W FOR WAGE earners this remedy this sad development means a bigger burden, of of arrairs. Government agen· course. Payroll taxes rise cles have been offering more from 5.2 percent to 5.85 per- health, financial and aocial cent tn 1973, and the base on aid. Prtvi.te groups have which deductions are to be prompted pensions and retJre. made jumps to $10,800 from ment homes. $9,000. It makes a total of ~ Worker s Strike Ou t Againsi Inhumanity I Efforts so far might seem $631.80. momentous 'Nhen compped to While many· a young and what had been done, l>ut they middle-a ge wage-earner will seem small in relation to the gripe about this tab , il is little continuing problem. It i.! not more than the modern version <' WASHINGTON (UPI J -A worker jumps up from bis job " and assaults coworkers. ••• :~ Another man takes drugs or ... nips whisky to allay boredom. , .. . ., ,. •.. Litton Firm To Offer Subsidiary An employable youth becomes "YOUNG WORKERS ap-so much tQe miserliness of the of an olil, old custom In which a beggar. Worken strike pear to be as committed to the ln~rne--producing generation the middle generation SUJI" against the inhumanity of the institution of work· as their as of certain other fact.Ort. ports the younger and con· usembly line. Ider bee bu ho of these in particular tributes to the support of the These seemingly Isolated ez. e s have n, t many made the great effort ol one older. amples are patterns occurring are rebelling agalnrt the year seem meager a year 11\at's the way it was back with alarming frequency as anachronistic ftuthorltarianlsm later. Inflation has steadily In the old days pictured on traditional concepts of wort of the work place," the report decreased buying power: the those old-fashioned Christmas become oNolete;-acCO'tdlng to said. span of life, though not grow-cards • a 211-page report "Work ln "Older Americans suffer the ing at present, ha!: greatlylW-OiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiii"il America" submitted today to ultimate job di.!satisfaction: enlarged over the decades. the l>eJ>!rtment of Health, they are denied meaningful Education and Welfare. jobs even when they have ALL OF WHICH helps ex· d bl kill nd plain why Social Se<urlty "SIGNIFICANT numbers of emonstra e s s a are benefits have risen In recent American w or k. e r s are physically capable of being yea-and are projected •· productive." ·~ ..., dissatisfied with tbe quality ef oontinue growing for a decade f • LOS ANGELES (AP) tbelr working lives" because As an example of frusfra· ahead, and why it is Ukely that ~ Financially troubled·· Litton of dull, repetitive, meanlq\es• tkxl, the repcrt cited 8 case in when election time comes Last Chance To Think Jean Dahl Before A Merry Christmas ~ Industries Inc. plans to sell Its tub that offer little Challena:e which "a jury refused to coo-again they will be raised S(Ouffer COl"Jl •ab 1 tdi 1 ry or autonomy, the study said. vlct llJ employe who killed two again. through "8 -'pobllc offering of The report, a departmental foremen and another WQrker But It Js Christmas now and ew ................. stock. ..tt • .+v conducted by a panel of in an auto plant on ~e not a time for politics, and it n ~-· , '• "~~ grounds of temporary in- 'Jbe '!}~_could <bring the. ~~ .. ~~ em1ploYenof sanity when te·stlmonY lsappropHatetolookatsome Beverly ftllllll.cgDglomerate u2 ._._...3 w·twl~ v ews lnted' '-"··-i..•-of the benefits upcoming at . --• to Incl-•· em""'•e1 In · po UP,,~•ane wor~,g the turn of "· year for Social Wntcllff Plea 0 ,..1 .... 'Tll t P.M. to ~111'1.5 mJUlon, •.l>I.~ pro-c::;,~t~•·"--""':.-• 'd~eclsl' on· condlllons. ·~ -. •• -"' .. ~ ~... -Se<urlty recipients. The 1 r 1 a,.,.,..., _,..,, ' . -·•••• . ' rd c•~·tm I ll J • ~~...., 8 "'Severi! ~~~ we 11-'lrustnUoo. etjstl .et.e:D in the you care to view It that way. · · ' oft,e _ ............. fll d-......... ,.. . ~\ ,, ,AND TBE ~·REPO&T said ove ue 111~ as presen, } ~ toJd W'JP.eld•Y With, the Seal!ltJ ' documanted experi!nents sbo"' · i>esf "of worilftg' cOndlt~ , -\Vbil~ more Americana , , ~-~... . ·~~.::-lllal ~ tiicn;11e1, ldentlfytng the effioieocy.OljO.: '·e&c!b year reoe!ve an•adequate ....._... ~ f"r.~r,; • ~ ($1'! · tDd 'IOClal'-prObiem1 decrease &SMmbly Uoe aa the cause ol. wage, this wu not so ln the NIWPORTn·l NN ' ~~·'er· d.,1gn.· 85 when wlarkm particl~te ln>,.Ja~wtl~dca~t~s~tr~ike~in~Lo~·~n1a~1o~w~n,~pas~t~. ~W~a~ges~o~ft~en~w~ere~pa~id~~1~7~"~'~1~'"~1..,~.~~~-~,..~rt~~·!'·~'JI .., .,,.,_ w e the • d •·to ~•·• bou inl : ,. • .,.,, ~ .. be"-· off ed b Lltto wor. ec~ DJ ..,......_. Ohio. wit t regard to m mum { I u• er Y n u their lives and when their principal shareholder, and responsibillty for their wort ls 1,327,175 were shown as being buttressed by participation in sold by Stouffer. profits," the report said. '!be shares wlll be sold for HEW Secretary Elliot L. up to $25 each, the prospectus Richardson received t h e said. Stouffer said it will also report warmly at a news con- pay Litton $30 million cash ference, saying, "I cannot lrom Its proceeds of the of· recall any other governmental ferlng, In the lonn ol a caab report which la m<>re do1J8hty, dividend declared and payable controvef'lial and yet respoosl- to Lltton. hie than this one." SEE SANTA DA ILY 10 to 9 CAROUSEL COURT loaflt Coast ·?Jua .. . OAILV l'ILOT ~6~ D~ ·~ t/orelco· .,1.. ""' · COFFEE MAKER WITH FREE COFFEE Mill A TASTY GIFT IDEA FROM NORELCO ' Automatic drip filter coffee maker with re- usable nylon filter. 148 0 8 [fil 8-cup coffee makM .......••••• 28.1 1 TRIPLEHEADER HP 2117 NEW LAfN NORRC:O TRIPlEHEADER lntrodqclng AIR CALIFORNIA'S OWN, She works Air Callfomla's new SKI DESK. Attractive she lo, perebn- able ~he Is, tool But unlike other •ibuhnles", she's an expert at get- ting you to tho Tah oe/High Sierra ski slopoo from Orange C..~\Y· Speclally trained, Jill Edwards, has a wide assortment of convenllnt, economical Air Calllornla Ski Packages to offer you. · 1,1 Air Calllomla's SKI OUR VAU.EYll packages (for aa many days aa •T• The first Norelco Tripi.tinder for women. The same cl OH lhavtng rotaryaystel}l 11 our ramou1 men'• Tr1pleheader-wlttl a very femrnlne design. The Lady Nor el co Trlphtheadt'r gives clote end comfort~ able and fast ehaves-lor both leg• and undararmel Theteaturea of thl1 spectacular shaver are: • Super'Mlc rogrpoverM floating heads • Self-sharpenlrlg rotary blade1 1 VERY SPl!CIAL you want) to BEAR, HEAVENLY AND SQUAW. SPECIAL p()NVEN- IENCE PLUS charter packagos lrom Orange County Alll>Oit to SOuth Lake Tahoe Airport. Or, II It's Nat Information y90.vi¥! on tho • , . ! easiest and mo~t economical wsy to get from Sacramento Airport, , •••• the gateway tel your /avorlto Tah oe/High Sierra akl resort, Jiii · knowe and wlll be glad .lo make, your arrangements. C.U her.' ! · . . Telephone 0141 979.9100 .. .. . . : • • - • -- , /Vore/co • • On/ofl1wllch s1 gas • Coiled cord • Eleg ant royal purple and lavender afyling f : 1· NORElC-0 ' -40VIP SHAVER WRH NEW ADJUSTABlllTY NIM settings. Super micre>- groovel floating heads, pop. up sidebum trimmer. Self-sharpening rotary blades . I OUR 100n+ANNIVERSARY .YEAR \ l . NORELCO' . SOVIP. THE RECHARGWLE sfi'AVER Nine closeness settings. Sha'(lls up ta 2 wwks C111 one single charge. Cose for traveling, storage. Wards, H11ntlngto11 C•t• 7m .E•""- ' i i I I() D.\llY PILDI •• "ftloney's Worth 'Ma1·ry' -go-1·ound Boon to Business By SYLVIA J>OltTt.:lt Defor1: 1972 rnds, rnarria gt>s 1n tilt> U.S. will have rrp- 11roacheC: 2,:J00,000 . a llt:.\er· before-touched peak and tlear· h lopplna: the post-World War l1 records when the G\s came humc to create the 1narriagc boom or lbe lMOs -11nd Uic babies who are no\V 1n turn c.Tea ting the marriage boom of th1: 1970s. The U.S. mRrriase tnumber of \l'(-ddings p e r 1.000 or popu· lation I ha s :>00red a \vhop- ping 26 percent JUSt in the last. dl-cade -to I the p o i nt v:here \1·e no\v have the high-l'OttTEll est ms rriage rate in the world . \\'cs. belicvl· 11 or not: 1 fl1A Y AND JU~'E :ire still !he "n1arrying 1rionths." but weddings arc more ;u1d more "in" throughout lhe year In fact, fl'wer than hair or th is year's 1narr1:iges Ot'currC'd in the fi rs t six months. \\'hat's rnnrc. the easual obscr\ t·r's 1n1ai:e of !od::i~"s !':"·1ng1ng non-bride is \\':l~' off. (lut of e\'cry fi\'e ~·uung brid1•s. four choose a rradi- !1on;il, for1nnl 11 edd1ng. a l:1rg{'r proportion than in 1967. accor ding 10 Brid{''s f\tagazine. Ou t of every five . n111rc 1han four brides still receive a diamond engagc- n11•11t ring. Tht:' young fouples who y.•i!I ha\·e bcc·n 111arried before ·72 fatle..i;; 11•il! spend a staggering $7 billion between the i r t'ngngemen1 :inrt !he Pnd of the fi rs! ye a r of m~rriage. A breakd0\\-'11 of just r i v l' categories of wedding equip- ment": S4M ~IILLION on flatware :;ind holloware. an average of $18.1 per bride; $393 million on dinnerware and glassware, an average of $179 per bride; UNITED STATES N ,\TIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW orEN SATURDAYS 9 to 1 P.M. MON •• THUIS. 10-S P.M, FRIDAYS 10.6 P.M. 17141 5-10.IZll. lec:llfWd lt1: $0. Con• ....... COltm M"o TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Youn.elf or • Frtend M•y be used on envelopes ••return address l•bels. Also vtry hendy •• identific•tion lebels for merltin9 personel items such es books, recorch., photo1, etc. leb•ls stick on 91111 end mey be used for m•r~i ng hom• canned focd item1. All ltbels •re printed with stylish Vo9ue typ• on fine quality whit• 911mmed paper. , . I I 6VER 1J:'HE C-OUNTER _COMPI.ETE NEW YORK 8-TOCICUST NASO U1""'° fw Tlwncl..,, _.,.,.,. 21, 197l r ·. • ) ' ai ~I ~1 I , Stocks Rebound ter Four Losses ' ' '"""" '' li!li 1 ·9 I~ ·a u11o-1v. II .. • .. rr1411, -n. l m. ___ 5c ___ DAlLY ~ILO!.._lJ -•• I BEVERLY IDL!S-Frod W. O'Green ha! been named president and chief operatmg officer of LUton Industries. succeeding Roy Ash who Is joining the N I x o n ad· minU!lration as director of the Office of Manqement and Budget. O'Green, II, has been ex- ecutive vice president of the &iant ~ firm since 1967 and a member or the board cf dlectors since 1968. LOS ANGELES -W. S. McConnor, who jolntd Uhloo on o.. 1n 1tt1 , hu boe1I .. .,. td pwldent ol tho oil ...,,_ pony'• Uhloo " -· m>l•clnl Q1udo lrb-. who bu bffD ...,.lnatod by PfHIC!iilt N1mi lo bo tho ... t U .S . S1 c rtt 1 r1 o f TrlnlpoNtlon. Mo<lonnor, who hid bftn vtce pnlldcnt "" mlnlnr and mnrke1lng In t.bt eastern United StalM, WN promoted l'lid1y. I I I I ' . • -,. . . • . . • .. .. --- ' • DAU. Y PILOT -------_.,,- little buys a lot of Ghristmas under the Squiggly® Roof. A lot of value on the stars of the top brands. Jewelry Dept . Speciat-ehristma shopping h_ours. Open every nig~t . . . ti 11 1 o :OO. Chr .istm,as~:· I ')> ~ Eve. ti11 .·1:00 .. 0 Lady Sunbeam hot comb 3 attachments. Heats instantly. Safe on colored 8Jld bleached hair. (Model #EX2 & EC 1) (J . . G. E. lighted W make-up mirror Day, office, home, evening light. Regular and magni- fying mirrors. No glare. ' (Model #IM-1) 13.97 . ~tl.88-0 · G. E. wrink le remover 9.88 Remove wrinkles in minutes. Low heat plastic face avoids scorches and burns to fabrics. Self-measuring steam chamber eliminates spills. (Model #W';R:.'.-11::) ==-------::::;;;;;~ 0 0 .. ·~~.-.. J';'$~rrf IJ. P *.:,. .... ~ ... . •, • • •. n "' • • .... . • ..• ·:·. ;:,·. 1'HAIRCURLE......... : •• ~:·, . .: ~~lffiiill~~ l1iimr$'i? ~ :::~ . ...... ·· ...... , ...... :"·:·:: .• , ...•. •.•1 ..11L•···· .. •, .. ··::.; .. "'"':~.·~ , .... · . . G.f'.women's ' · . · styl ing dryer 12.SB 1 Contoured handle. Wk:Je--tooth comb att-_chmenl 2 heat •• • settings. lncludes'6 Oz. bottla Breck Basic• texturing shampoo. ' (Model #50-1) n Schick men's • , hot c6mb 13.88 Gives professionally groomed took. Ma~ ages any texture hBir easlly. Dry, wave or straighten. (Model #336, (HP11 22) Only ol Gronoda' Hiii, Wood· lctnd H•tl1, Sonto Atto & Riv· ltrl•d•. \ \ \ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' \ \ \ I I I I I \ \ \ ' ' ' ... ' ' ' \ G. E. hot lather dispenser Q Uses 6oz. or 11 oz.can of your favorite aerosol. Press a butlon for preregu lated shaving cream temperature. (Model #SCD1) 9e96 0 Remington hot comb Dries, waves; 2 comb attach· ments, one brush. New power hendle. (Model #HW3) 0 ady Schick hairsetter Sets longer las ting curls in minutes. No hot metal to cause dryness, split ends. 20 rollers. Includes clips, measuring cap. (Model #70) 14.69 Schick Consolette hair dryer 17.88 4 temperature telling•. one perfect for wigs. Extra large hood. Easy·to·carry. Folds Into compact case. (Model #317) 0 Toni Mox HaiTDryer w/Comb Attachment 2 temperorure setting for dryi ng & tf'ytingi. Comb otta~hment dries & styles. 10.98 .. • llA•W •W lllOOll Cbl!Jw«tll SL e WOODU ND HIW 21500V1Ctory ~id. •llYllSIDI 3520 T~" e SANll'A ANA 3900 Sol~ 81111~ St. e TOHA~I SepjlltdaaMHowthomo • UllW-C-Sl IOI "'1-!lid.• llDA PAll -lllil1Jni,.1111o .. • I • , ...:.!_ Oii.AMii ~Clove 81Yd, 1111 Matichtstw ) o,.. •••k4•r•t1JO,. l01001 <•r11,..•1 l••tlll 7,P.M. ; I • • I ,, • • • ~ / ..... , go11a Beaeh ~D I TION Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks OL 65, NO. 357, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22, 19n TEN CENTS Laguna S.cho~ls Will Benefit From Tax Shift 87 FJ\EDWCK SCllOEMEllL Of .. Dlltr ,.... .... ' A state Ju shift package. algned by Gov. Rooald Reagan may cblp 31 cents oil the La{juna Beach UnUied School District tax rate over; the next four yean. At the same time , said Dr. Charles nesi, a.qlstant superintendent o f buslnw, senate Jllll 90 will put Laguna schools on relatively sound financial looUna. The thrust of tbe bill ii to cul tbe amount of rmney property taxes bring to school districts and replace it with revenues generated from increasei:I sales, personal income and corporation ~es. Laguna's tax rate this year, including a levy for bood interest and redemption payments, la $3.31 per '100 assessed valuation. state Department of Finance figures indicr.fe that rate could drop to about $3.00. For the owner of a $40,000 home, it means a potential savings of $31 year- ly. SB 90 also will save the property owner _oun * ff * MiUIQtas Involved 'Numbing' Facts On Cult Revealed Diltricl Attorney's officers preparing the newest lndictment in t b e '-'Btotbetbood of Eternal Love" con. IPiracT today _lq>dated what one in- l"'ltlcltor described as "the most numb-- inl. stfttUUct you ever saw in your life." They Include tbe allegation that Brotberbood members hue smuggled ~-a -olmari~- by the State Franchise Tu Board 0 on the groonds of its religious nature." The corporation was formed in October or 1966. It was hurriedly disaOJved by lawmen last August. Frasier's Cub money by lnmaslng the peraooal e"' emption on the ~ vaJuation of property. Ndw 1 only f150 can1 be lopped off ~ asseaed valuation be.fore the property tis: is levied. tmder prov1sions o{ SB 90, the ~lon ;will increa!e to $1,7!MI~ ,'lbe ~t fiscal year, H,ess saJd; is considered the base year for future com- putations. 11lis is big)lly favorable for Laguna BeaCb, he said, because of the massive 16 percent . incre8'e in the assessed ' val&laliGo ol Ibo-dlllrlct that allowed for building of a:subltalltial 1100,000 ....... in & number of "l'Mtrtcted" aCCOUDts. 'lhe restricted ftmds.'have been created ·by opecilll w.. levied° for sue!> ex- pendilW'el aa bellllb and ~are, com- mmllty service •!Id special programs. SB 90 1bolitbil 1 tbeae a p-e c i a I peimlaalve rates ariol' pl""! all tbe mmey rll1aed througb lbem . into tbe gen<ral fund. 1iWe"re'-~ all our money in ont;: big pot ~year, apd then· we.'11 decide v.'hiclt programs we want and which ooes we dqn't. It's a whole new ball game," said Hess. Heu said ~ge of the bill may force the achoo! board to meet 0 two or three" Umes a month before budget time to dee~ whftt pf'Oll'Bms It wants to fund. .In future yeara, the budget will in- create tbroogb an "inflatiooary factor" of up to a maximum of $65 per student per year. Laguna Beach now spends 11,100 per student per year. The Department of 0 Ill Finance estimates the inflationary factor will allow that cost to increase to $1,335 by fiscal year 1976. , While the bill will help both taxpayen and schools, many school officials aay modifications will be needed to make SB 90 conform with the Serrano vs. Priest 'decision handed down by the state Supreme Court last year. It ruled that property tualion, as a method of school financing, discriminates against low wealth districts, such as those in inner city areas. Dr. Leary's Followers Now Sought By TOM BARLEY Of .. Dml!Y f'llet • ..,. Christmas greetings In the fonn of ar· rest warrants and a copy of a mulll-page Orange County Grand Jury indictment are being delivered today to 28 alleged members of the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug cult founded by Dr. Timothy Leary, the DAILY PILOT bas learned. The arrests, almost all of them in Laguna Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and lluntlJliloo Beach, will bring ' to 48 lbe number of defendants rounded into U.. Unltod Slafel II tbe rate of i.ooo . M ' ls' D ' · ' ....-·a ,_lb tor ibo 1o11 m. ,...._ -au .ftUff-"-PJ',.,. And ii 11 allo ....... Ifill J!looU>erbood ' ~- •: up as alleged oonspiritoil in an orpiijzaUoo described by lawmen aa an off-ol Leary'• original Leque of Splrttual Dbcovery (l.'>D). members have dlltribated many millions of Im tablels u..apau1 the world dur- 1ng·lbat -period. "The alllOllllt of money Involved Is JDini:l..becgli," an Investigator said. u Just put it at many millions ol' dollars until we can come up with a reasonable estimate." Lawmen said the .Brotherhood's major am.uggling network utilized false lden-- lilicalioo and forged pessports lbal allowed many of its members to travel around the world making illegal drug purebueo for Import into lbe United States. Many of those purchases, investigators 18.ki, were made in India, Pa.tistan and Afibanlsl.l n. II waa noted today that Dr. Leary's Brotherhood of. Eternal Love was until recenUy a Jegil corporation in Caillomia that bad been granted tu-exempt status Harry Truman's j Condition Near • f:;rirical St.ag e : XANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Han-y S Truman'• heart beat irregularly and bis blOod pretSl.ll'e fell severely today, \llrmini doctors so much. that Truman'• wife, Beu, waa called to bis bedalde and 1lle IS-year.old former President was for a time conslden!d in critical cooditilln. "I have no doubt that 11 1 had had lo JDUe a report at about 1:30 or 1:45 a.m. 11111 morning I would have had lo IO)' he i In critical coodiliGo," oald -.Ch 1ioop1W spokeaman Jobn Drevts, lollow-lnr a ,_, brlefinl deloyed almoot an bciUr 111 Truman'• worsened colldltlon. . "By tbe time tbe brltllng came, tbe lsindltlnn appeared to be pullJ!i or al ·19at Improving," be oald. . Truman WU atlll CGNkiered in °Very lllllrioul" condition which, accordlng to lhws, meeDIF "1be-is-every clole ·to critical at any time." l(n. Truman, ill, was reaUna at tlie · Trum11111 Indepindeoce ,..Mo., home wben tie call came jUll alter dawn !rom tbe llolpJtal. Slie"lmmedlatel7 bepn tbe lS- lllile ride to her hU!band'e bedllde. I ,Airedale 'Dognaped' 'From Laguna Home / J A two • year ~ old AlredaJe named "--AlloYUI" wu reported dognaped Thurs-111.l' !!om. h!I bac)IJard dCIC run at. 150 Cleli SI., Laguna 8M<h,.. t" 1be dH" wa taken when owner Eugena Wahl •u away trvm !be' re1idence. 1be .Airedale la dlacribed .. havlng a r.ddlsh bmm cool wilb a bloct< saddle Potch and lie has a mj>ped tall. Laguna Beach police are b1e•tipUns.-• I ' At-'Safari' A :JOO.pound offspring of Fraaier tbe sensoous lioo, pulled a senior part raD8'r from a fence at Lion Country Safari Thursday and severely mauled him before being forced bad: by groundsmen, park officials reported. Stephen R. Craig, •, COsta Mesa, was still in the intensive care unit of Mission Viejo Community Hosp~tal this morning alter undergoing tbree-llotli"I of surgery in which· an estimated 400 stitches were required to close bis wounds. HoWever, hospital officials--.-4escrlbed Craig's condition as "satisfactory" and said be woold probably be released in a week· unless complications deve1op. • Craig suffered fang and claw injuriea to liis face, back, and neck, according to park officials. He was attacked by a two-year-old lioness named Benjie. Prior to the attack park officials considered her one of the park's most docile cats. 11le animal was "babysitting" a litter of young cubs at the time of the incident and officials speculated that she may simply have been protecting th.em. "That protectlve_Jnstin.,ct cwi be reJllY strong and you never know when i1 wU1 come out," said Dale Coutier, assistant manager of the part, this mornin!J. "But you can never be sure what the Uon waa thinking, tither. Benjie may just · have been being playful. What ls playful for a lion is not playful for a man." ' At the time of the incident, Craig was atop a JS-fool fence repairing a nylon (See SAFARI, Page ZI Purchase of Gas Station Approved In Laguna Beach Purchaae of thO now abandoned Shell service station near Main Beach for. 1132,000 re«tved lino! IAIW'I Beach city appro\·al with councl1 acUon Wednesday to exen:iae tbe purchase option. · 1be council alscl approved bauance of 1455,0000 In bonds by the oon-prolJt development corpOraUon to pay tor both the Shell llation and the Arco station at the north end of Main Beach. The city baa rec:el\>od approval from the State Parka and ~reatlon Com- mission for • grant rO!mllflrae.,...I of IO per«nt for the purchaae cost for the Sheil site. rinlll IT'!'t appr<1Vlll la pend-Jnc 111 Uu U.S. ~ Gf .1 i>a ~ Interior'• eure .. of -08joW Roaeatlon. Purdlue price for the Arm station la 1210,JlOll. The opUon on lbll ~ will come up for ftnal lllPf'OVal after the money from the bond luua la In hand, probably in March, N1d TUlly Seymour, citylltonl01. • 1• f I ' t' ' ; ' ' I ' I 't • ~ 1 : N K..vl,.._o,.,...t:,.... OFPICER WRITES GRIM .REPORT··FOLLOWl.NG FATAL -CRAsH IN HUNTINGTON BEACH THnager Tries to Pull1Stanton, Man.from Wrec~ But is Driven BKk by·Flamef ' DebufL!,nte~ 8rUle Freed; -. Kidnap S.uspects Seized DAu.AS (UPI) -Allee Amanda "lt!andy" Dealey, the d ebut ante daughter-in-law of Uie presideo of the Dallas Morning News,· was released harmed today by "foul-talking" Jddna- pers who held the newlywed blonde for three days, threatened to kill her and then oollected $250,~· ransom. Sberiff's deputi~ later broke into an apartment at nearby· Garland and ar- rested" two men "whil'e they were tcoun· ting tbe money." 1be suspects are. brother& anll SID' rendered without a fight.. Ch'.tlrged with kidnap!~ w.ere• Franklin .J'. Ransonette, 33, and oodrow. H. l\Onsqo~Ue, .31. The e n t i re quarter-millloo-dollar ransom was recovered, a"uthoiit~ said, An· FBI agent said Dallas ··eounty sheriff's ·deputies broke into the apart· ment and· surprised tbe suspects "while lbey were counUng the money. There was no trouble." Sii hours earlier, the kidnapers put gogglea otl~h< 22-year-old blcinde"beauty before dawn and set her free on a street comer· in the ,posh suburb j of Highland. Park.~. , . "Coun~ lo a thousand and yoor daddy will be here," one kidnaper told her. Bqt she was p,tq:ed up by,an FBl agent anl:I . Dallas . Cinmty 1 Sheriff Clarence Jones: . , . Wben•thers.t:, ~pound wile-of Joe M. ~Y Jr., .2$, ·w11 found aafe, she whts~red, "I'm all right." She said she sa'w·only two imen during her ordeal. "I wU acafed to death the whole (See KIDNAP, Pap ZI The Fat One Custom ers Win Spain Lotter y • , . MADRID (UPI) -A 64-yeaN>ld cale owner In the CaWan clly· of Vich won a rocord 119 ritl!Hon today in lbe world'• rldtest lottery. But he will bave to &hare It wllb customers ·wbo bougbt.abares In winning Ucket No. 4243$. JAIME RIPOLL MlltALPBIX, who oWlll •the Cale•Mulca In· Vlch, o city of 250,000 population 40 milea trom Barcdona, "'"' I.I billlort po-. In the Spenlah llate Chrlllmu lottery 1be ticket cost Rlpoll lSO,oot-tu (12,:llill). • .. Ilaplla tbe crowdl Jllllimq anlun4f lbe-~afe,~sbouting-in"Calalon,• "!!ens , hl.tocat" (.!1Wa..-Oot It"'),..RJPQO remaJQed..cairn. -.. • • ".Wll 800011'1' TllB '11Ctin' hoPinfr cu< Juel• would continue," ho uld. "'lbe lottery bad been k!od•to Q In previcJ:ul years but we hive never bit It thl• big.'' .. • • .Rlpoli's prize i.. known M"•I Gtrdo' ("'l'be FatOne"). Cou,ritian's Car Crashes; Driver Dies in Flames A Stanton man ~ to death Thurs- ~ay nigbl bef<ltt a horrified , HunUnglon • Beach teenaget Who' had tried to rescue the man moments before his car es:· ploded. . Police said David W. Oftrell, 50, of stantdn died after his 1972 foreign luxury sedan crashed into a power pole aod a light standard at the intersection of Springdale Street and McFadden Avenue in .Huntington Beach shortly ~fore mid- night. Danny Brown, 17, whose1home at 6022 Vane Circle ob close to tbe interaecUon, !Old pollce be beard tbe craab ud rushed lo the "" lo try lo lid Oflrell. Officen said the teenager tried to get the·car door open;but the auto burst into names drlvlpg bim baci<. . 'whe~ .Pollcle ·arid lite units arrived at the ....., ,of Ille crash, they found lbe 19,000· car compleloly involved in llames. Traffic investJ&aton today are p at- tempting to piece to,ether the cause of the accldent. 1 They said 'skid marks in- dicate Offrell waa driving southbound on Springdate when he went into a four- wheel skid as he approached the in- teraeclion. The car 1 apparently crossed the in- teraectlon and-jumped the curb, striking lbe-"lwo pola on tbe'-lllatbelSI corner;- Holm End,orsed For Coast Post Laguna Beach vice mayor Roy Holm has r.ctlved !he endontment or tbe City Council for app61ntment to or. South Co&ll R4fllonlll ConlervaUoo Commla&lon .,1 up under authority ot PrQposttiod120, !ht coastllnr iniu.u ... -Holm ,....ived the supPort of his fellow' CO\tifcllmen by i:etalulioo Pouad W......_ day ·1n a City Ooancll meetbtc. The reaohrtlon cilt<I !be vice mayor'• service u a .member of the city coUrictl, and hi• interest and wtder&landing of the .......... . ' Two men were arrested in ffawaji Thursday by Honolulu Police who are still scouring the island! for a man described today as a "key figure" In the drug ring -Robert L. "Fat Bobby" Andrlst, Z9. It was learned today that the Orange County Grand Jury has been involved for several weeks and most intensively dur- ing this past week in preparing a oew in- dictment that was still being witbbe.ld at press time today. ftssistant District attorney E d Freeman admitted today that the in· dictment was being prepared but refused to release the names of 28 persons charg- ed with multiple narcotics counts pending the arrest of the indictees. Freeman confinned that transients Calvin L. Delaney, 30, and Ronald R. Crawford, 25, we.re picked up in Maui, Hawaii, by local police working CID tn- lorrnation supplied by Orange County authorities. Both men have advised Hawaiian aulhorities from their quarters in the flonolulu jail that they will fight a move by Orange County lawmen to ntwn them to Ibis area. "It may take several weeb to get them back here in view o~ prolonged. es:· tradition proceeding," Freeman aald. Freeman said Delaney was last seen in the Southern California area in June when he was arrested by Rivenide Coun- ty narcotics officers who claim be bad 20 pounds of hlhtsh and 115,000 on his person at the time. Freeroan said Ibey are lbe only arrests he expects to mate In the Hawaiian Islands WJ..less lawmen tbere manqe to (See CULT, Pago!) Weadl~r It'll be cloudy when JOU get up on..&ilurda)',-bul don'.\-frel. Tba weatherlady saya they will clear by midday to sunny skies and tern• peratures ol 83 at tbe beaches and 70 inland. Overnlgbl loW1 4HO. INSWE TODA.11' For the eighth CO'n.ICcaitive y<ar, th< DAILY PIUJT 16" "°"' 07ing CM top communitv lM· ater octort and ac£reutt fn Or· ange Co1n1Jt11. WjnMft of th4 lr/72 DP awanit are annou"l'&Md in toda~'s W eekmdcT. L..M. -I ~ 1: &!..ir' ~ ·-" --' .......... ' --" --' ..__,, , ~.-: ;;;;·~.-. "''' .... --.... ,_ . ......... f.11 _ ........ J ...... I llFI l4 "-"" ..... -. ..._......,\loM• --~ , .. --I ......... Wtf1111 ..... 4 .,. fl tt• • OIJLY PILOT LS Fl'Ont Page l CULT ... produce Ille tllJl)ve AMrist. Tbe former Art Oolory ruioent has •••Jed blJ pw:ouon 1mce Ibo ori&inaJ 8"1~ lntttctntlol .... ""* Jut AuC\111. l.lwmoo ...,..11y eonllrmed that the search for the 300-pound suspect has ~now been utended to other areas ln the United States. "The people we ¥.'ant are In the beac h cities of Oranee County," Freeman said. ''Tha&'a where we are working today and that'• where we will be working lhrou&hout the Christmas weekend until all ou.r arresll are made." Police in Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, COflta Me11 and Huntin(ton Beacb. are cooperatin& with Orange Count1 Shlrlff'1 officera, agen ts from the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, agents from the state's Bureau ol Narcotics Enforcement and U:S. Customs offlcer1 in a joint sweep tbat has btcome known as the ()range C.ounly Drug and Narcotics Task: Force. ~ old those named in the new indictment "111 join 16 persons earlier named tn the alleged Brotherhood con· spl.racy -I tot1I of 46 defeddants . "And this lsn't by any mearui the end of the road,'' a weary District Attorney's tnvesttsator commented this morning. Superior Court Judge Raymond Vin· cent has been solely occupied In recent weeks '¥\'ith the flood of paper work ac· cumulated in the form of multiple mer lions filed by the battery of defense Iawyen hired by the Brotherhood defen· dants. Several defendants have had their names removed from the Indictment dur· ing that time via di!lm.issa\1 and pleas of guilty to reduced charges. Among them "'as Davld Mark Reddy, 23. 33801 St reet of !he Copper Lantern, Dana Point, \\'ho faces a stale prison tenn of up to 10 years foll o\i.'ing a plea of guilty to amended drug charges and vio lation of an earlier probatloq. Bui Reddy mu!l t rlrst serve a one year term in federal prison on drug charges substantially amended from those filed when he. Brian Kendall McAdams, 25, 20286 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, and Thoma1 Bleke Bidwell, 26, of Garden Grove, were arrested in Portland , Oregon, last Jan. 13. The trio were accu1ed of stuffing $2 million worth of ha!hlah Into a truck that was being !hipped on a Dutch freighter from Bombay, India to Vancouver, Canada. All three received one year Jail terms but Orange County "Brotherhood" charges again.It Bidwell w e r e liter di1mlased In Judge Vinctnt'1 courtroom and the defendant shipped off to Lompoc prllon. McAd1m1 has been ordered to fact trial M1rch 28, on charges contained in the original lndlctment. The flrlt of aever1l trial1 stemming from the fint Brotherhood indictment will open Jan. lQ with J • m ~ 1 Leroy Crlt1"11den, n, of Loo; ll"8ch ln the defendant's chair. Today'• arrest.I again raiaed the possibility lhat Dr. Leary may be returri- ed to Orange County to fact cluu:-es leveled a1alnst bJm in the first Brotherhood Indictment. "But that's only a dim poaalbility," Chief Deputy District Altorney James Enright said. "Dr. Leary baa been ordered to leave Swlue.rland by Dec. 31 but l think that Orange County will not be on the lilt of plaees he has put on h!.t Christmas list as ponlble ! u tu r e bavem." Leary !IOUght refuge In Swlturland after a brief sojourn in Alegrla following hll escape lrorn prison in San Luis Obispo. The LSD cultllt has been serving a prllon term imposed In Orange County following hit arre1t on drug chargea in Laguna Beach on Chrlltma1 day of 1970. Lawyers Back Press SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California Trial Lawyer1 AslOCiation Is urging Gov. Romld Reaean to 1lgn legl1lation giving report.1r1 protection aa:ainst contempt citations for refU1lng to reveal confi· dentlal sources to a grand jury, "A strong Independent preu 11 one of the import1nt element.I to a11ure our democrati c aoclety, ". uaociation prttl· dent Herb Haflf uld Thunday. t \ DAILY PILOT "Tiie °""9t C..I MIL Y l"JUIT. WOii 1ljflldli k c.N_, Mw N~ .... 1' pV9llillcd OV ... or.,. C...t l"lltllltlll!!I Dnlplny. ~ ,. .. .i11111M '" publlll'Mll, Mond•-r ttllWlh frldt"t, I# Cosll M"•· Newporl 1-.dl, Ht.!!1111"" JM1;h.l"Mil1ir1 VIII .... , LlfVlll llacll, lrvtM"IS.-"-1;\ Mod St11 °"'*''--' S.11 Jlt8" C1plstf'IM, A •111911 "9klMI _,111on J. P\IOl'-'*i lltvnflfS Ind $VNllY,. The prWi..I llVMflll"" '411111 It ti "° Wftl .. "t St,.., C-11 ~ tallfonl ... t»». 'l•\•rt N. w • ..ii ,.._...,,,.."'*'WW J11k •• Cwt.., Vice ,,_w.nt Mii .,..,..., M1111tW . Th•111•1 K11wl1 ...... T\1M1• A. Mvr,hl111• MMltllne ··-a..rt. H. Le11 Al1J.1rtl '· Nall ......... "41111111M ... 1 ..... .._ __ tlJ htt1t A•t11111 M1lh .. Mtlm•1 P.O. 11146', tJ61t --lfldl1 Na1 • """''"' CMfl ,. .. , • ii.I·- ... , hldll 11111 ... .....,.ff """ ..... .,~ ....... Ttlqla 1 C1141 '42"4111 Cl ..... ..W.afl I ; '42•1611 • .......... All ,.,. I 1•1 '''"·· ••• 4f+ttU 1!JI. ..:r-:.~' -"i.$ .. ,.'ir .. ~~·· :::t..: •''='"= ::....· ......... ~ ct ... ,_..., ~1111 tt C-'• Mt11t (Ill..... ~·-.., "'..., "·" -thfYI ll'f INll U.lS. -lt!1¥1 rntllt11ry 111t1Ntllnf Mi+S ,_,1111r • • ' I Uf'IT ....... • ·-1~ Billing Denied . -. ·· £aguna . ays ewer, Trash Fees -Prope; . ... ....._ ~ . .... llr Hm ~EU. tU the feds take -your seats up cane, just bl!!or&-recol•of Oi4 Pl"lperty °' .. .,... .... se.n &here,'' Mrs. M~ laid1 to the cooocil: tu revenues and s"lii ura:ed the city to Alleaation1 by the Laguna ~ach Tax· Mrs. Mayer also quea:Uoned the bor· reduce the bonded lndebtedne11 of the pa,.r1 Alloelatltlol ~ !he city had rowing by Iha city of lubdl durfnl "dry Main Beach to Ille actual •eqµlajijon do(lbta.bllltd tor eome sewage and tr31h periods" when expenses exeeed'"ed ln· oost1. ctollectlon have been denied bl' city of· nc1111: Thi City eotlltlll litjl" w"~ 4~ll!ted to rooclod the portbient uUlf~ ordbllnces. Lo=' ;.":t,*,r.;;.y~:.:~i:: LBTA ), mode the s!atemen during a 50-mfnule pmenlelillo Jtelore. lb.• City Council Wedn<sday. Sbo allo hit Main Beacll rmanc1n1, ac- ceptance of f-11 reVlftUO 'i harl"i !undo, aild city bom>Wrtrg anil ln- vesimentt, tli'•· ...,.., 1!111!1 tllnl•l -a1al111l tha rolllae Ind -OI' fMl lnlUatecl by the city to pu1 Ille oervicoe 1111 a uaerPOY· mont bU.~: \ . . · Undor lllllWftOID, 01<b ~ pay1.for • hll own aervlce lllldl. Prevloully, the service wu provided by. f\lndlng from the genarll Iund Pl'OPlliY . ~ . dollan. Bia ...,.. and omaU, l>oth paid by lhal tax 14 Iha city. '·Mrs, "Mayer'cliar~ that tho city had J)()t only billed residents for; the sewer and trash collect.ioo st~, but that ha~ ~ atso applied property tax dollars to the running of the lll'Vicu. Boat Searelaetl ., Police Discover Bl-Ood On Doryman's Clothing BT-~~~ If .... ,. .. Huntinfltor. lleach ~let Nid. !Oday lhey ha••'foulid •qullo •bit of blooll'' lln t~ •lo!hliti of, lhl 1'11Wport Beech doryman who they believe '"-Y hive klll- ed his d1ughter and then hlrnself la.It week. 0.t. Sgt. Monty McKennon ,.Id in- vestigators wUl be rechecking the dory Sir CUrles which belooged to flshermao Allan Vaughn Knight, 43, Newport Beach. almleasly near the Huntington Beach Edieon plant. Knlgbt'a body Wll found I W .. k later; floatlna about a haU mile to au, and hit d1u&hter11 body withed .,.OOre at the Hun.tlngton Beac~ pier 10 boun later. The C&H, whlclt was pruwnad to havt been a double drowning, took an unex · pected turn when it was discovered thal the girl's throat had been silt. KIDNAP VICTIM GETS HER CHRISTMAS PRESENT EARLY Allco Doaloy With Hu1bond Joo Aff9r Rolooee for $250,000 Such clouble-hlllin& WU 11rongly tlenied by both Larry Role, city managar, and Tom M•ade, accountinfl offlcar. Meade sakl thero wu 1" duplication ol billing and added"lllat 11C1W I opeclol fund was being established to hold the monies collected in the .. 'utility style" bWing for sanitary 1tervices. Knight aod his 3-year-old claufbter, Patricia, were last -al.In Dee. 11 wbtn he took her wltb him to cbeck hla lobster traps along the coast. Al mid-morning they were spotted by 1 Ht.mUngton Beach lifeguard as Knight stood in the stern of his 1mall boat, ap. parently tiadling bis bloode daughter in his arms. The Orange County coroner ruled her doath a homlcldo, but H1111tinJl4n Beacb delecUva NY lltly hive carefully punued the possll>lllli.,;, lhll bu death may have been accidental. Snag Looming Ou Laguna Plan For Parking Plan A le1al hitch may peril La&WJa Beach city planJ to seek a federal loan for development of a parking 1tructure on the lumbery ard 1lte adjacent to City Hall. The loan by the U.S. Department of Transportation appears to be subject to certain provlllons of the Callfomia 5t1te Constitution which reatrlct.1 the manner in which cities may borrow. City Attorney Tully Seymour w11 directed by the City Council to consult the law firm of O'Melveny and Meyen for procedum which may be establlthed to pmnlt rocelpl of tho federll monlea. ln other action, the council: -App<'OYOd on onlinance Pf'l"ldlnl for abatements 11 a public nullance wreck· ed, abandoned and dismantled vehicle• from Jlllhllc oJ¥I prtvato property. -l!eLa hur1llJ dale of J1n,JT l!!t.1!!t proposed agriculture and recreatJon wne. -Approved, subject to receipt of e~ croachment permJt1, the construction of structuru below city 1Uey1. -Authorized City Attorney Seymour to draw-up contracts accepting the gift of Mrs. Hortell88 Miller'• a:ardens. -Recommerided to the State Dlvillon of Highway! that a portion of the Laguna · Canyon Road right of way, now unused, not be abandoned but considered instead for rest stop or bicycle trail develop- ment. -Called on the Orange County Board of Supervisors to direct the County Flood Control Dlltricl. to take ccUon to alleviate the fiood hazard in Laguna Can· yon. Fll"Ont Pqe l SAFARI ... shading canopy. Benjie reportedly entered the an111, which Is screened from public view, and became arou1ed. "She took a great fiylng leap, arabbed Steve, Jnd they came down together, with Benjie on top," according to Jerry Kobrin, Lion Country vice-president. Two nearby iroundsmen immediately came to Craig's re1CUe, forcing the lion back by hitting her with 1hovel1. Craig, bleediJlg proluoely, waa Mllhed by car to the hospital by park 0Uici1ls. without waltln& for an ambulanc1. He W8! reported OOnlC\oUI at the holpllll prior to surgery. "Benjie wa1 one of the moat iSOcUc cuba we 've ever hid,'' Jald Kobfln. '"She'• boon around peopla all her IU1 and made countleu appearances throughout Oran1e Counly." , · Ofticlal1 1ald the llone11 woOld not be deatroyed. Police Hold Six In Hashish Raid BEAUFORT, S.C. (AP) -Bondi total· ing II .$ million have been set ror six young men thret of l h e m from California, ch1r11!d with handlll\g il1eg1l hBshish lhal aovemment agents 11ld would be worth $4 million In street sate.. The Jlx wera ·arrested lite Wednelday by U.S. C:U1to1111 a5en11 who oonfilcated 11 duffel ball In a •takeout on a sea island spit. Vernon D. ACNe , U.S. Commllliont1r ol Cultoma, aet the value on the m pound! of the drug, which I• 1 product of the m1ri~!ll(Jl1nt. He (d W Ille 111 u : Patrick . Gordsno, 17, of'l'iiillJllon, $.c.: KO!Jll•lh Woyoo Brownlna, • 211, ol 'Fripp 111,nc1, ' S.C.; Nell Patrick liawyer, ,., addret• given; Arthur H1rold Fancace, 15, of Los Angsl.,: Alan Whitney Adolph, 13, of l!:ncino. and Richard Allen Stacy, 20, ot R4.>dondo . , Fl'Om Pqe l KIDNAP ... PreviOU$ly, the monies were deposited in the city's general fund and there was no Way ol tracing the course of the funds . A few minutes later, the guard told police he saw the empty boat circling time," Mandy oak!. ''But I 1Vedu11ly 1ot uoed to It. I felt more relieved Weclneo- day w he n one of the men told me: 'Don't worry, you'll be home for Chrlstma1,' II Role llf4 bo bo1Jeftd than WU IODle OOll!u1ion by LBTA dua to tho dlllerence• In mUlnJ l'liondat year and !flcol yur comparll<Mll, 1 He emphlllcally 111d thero ...,. ,.., li1ddea or addltlcaal ciW'I• In tho prop- erty tu for the -_ .. t. Malabys Capture Grand Prize in Lighting Contest lleoley oald hi• father, Joe M. Delley Sr.1,prealdeot and chief necuUvo ollictr of ... A. H. Belo Corp., which publfollel the Dalla1 newopapor, pal<! the '280,000 ranaom. It wu made tbroUgh a NO'et "drop" at a deoerled 1boppl"i center. "Needlea1 to Ay, there WU I lot Of crylnJ, 1 lol of bup and klHu," Nkl the oocllllle'• buaband. "Thia II IO!ni to be the beat daJl!I! Chri•tmu anybody ever wthld for.•• He then pve hi• wtte her holiday pruenl earb' -It wu 1 •lnila atrand of pearll which he draped around her lllCL They thelt kflled. ' llealey aod Mindy were mm1ed all weelll qo In 1 a11a ""rmlClll1 and llley hooeymeoned It llrqm Bay In Jamaica. The kklnapor• ... -her u ahe nt.mtcl to Ille eouola'• aperlmanl TueJ. day;-1lien-dem.mloti--1"11110111-lllroulh telephone call• to bJ1 f1t.be:r'1 boue. "ThoJr llClfO tactlCI acerocl Iba hell oul of ma," tho youn1er llelloy Nld. ''Tiiey used coarM threat&." De1ley uld that when hil!I wife w11 released. she was "a little bruised up, a litlle lhflcy, but ill good sp~ .. "We are pleued beyond !JOl'h," the huaband 1ald. 0 Mand:y and I love each other very much. Now, 1 know this hap. pens only in movies and the fairy tales, but I believe it happened to us -it was love at first sight" Dealey llid h1I wife was held 11t an unkown houae ln lhe Dallu area from 4 p.m. Tuesday when she was abdueted. Marathon Bomb Attacks Con•u~ . ' ' In North Vietnam SAIGON fUPll -The United statll carried it1 marathon alr uuult ag1lJ11t North Vietnam'• heartland lnto the tlfth d1y today despite mountin& alr lotMs. Hanoi Radio reported three more BUI and an Flll fighter-bomber 1ho1 down to- day and Aid it used M1G1 II well u mtuUet agalnJt the Amerlcar. pl1nes. The U.S. Command .. ported that two more B52s were shot down Thunday near H1not1 along wtth 1 palr of Navy A6 lntntden. .Thi. ~ to 11&hl tho number of ~ tha command ttpDrted loot alnce tht ........ ilr -·If• bepn Monday. Hanoi clalDll It 1bot down M planee. II of them B12s. sO far the command ha• lilted 13 Americans as missing and 13 l'elCl.Md, Hanoi bu broadcut the IWl1el ~f II filers, mott of them BU cnwmen, who It said were captured. Some nters were reported wounded, two too 11riou0ly lo . attend Hanoi's exblb1Uon of the captives for the for~ R8dio -Harlor Aid · tn 1 broadc:Pt monitored in Slip that the "North Vietnamese Air Force has participated in the downinfl of U.S. planes." A U.S spoteaman llid that while thert has been "tome MlGti activity" It ha• not been "significant." The wor0 "l11nlflcant" 11 1onerally .,. ed when holUle •CllvitJI multi In damaae to Ami11rtcan men or m1terteJ. The commAnd spokesman said MIG !»sea in North Vietnam hive been amonc the tar1et1 for lhl l'9tl0Wed raldo . He illoo edmltted that, the runway ol Hanoi'• Gia Lam civilian a!J'port, never before struck in any of lbe Amerlc•n ~mblnp of North ~letnam, had beln 'cratered '' by bombs. Ho declined to 1peculile as 1o how 111101 ware 1bl1 lo opero!O with their ba1e1 under 1ttflck. The Indian governmen t IMO;Unced to- doy In New Delhi tbat American bombl on Thursday struck. the Indian chancery Jn Hanol . Tho council declined .to tab ·action on Mn. Mayer'• roq-t to --out tho rluaa ud -11e·f111. . . Mn. H..,... a1eo . ouqeated lltat the fedml revenue ahari!ll fllndl received by tho city bo rtturnod to the U.S. Trauury. Shi pointed ... t ihal I llftlll !Conas !own had -just that ncenUy. Roae eomclld lier, llld· .llfd that ollbcuP'llll lown had tried to tum back the lundl, llley wort fivan to tllo eounty 1ovonunont lor dl1trlbut1on lo munlclpallUoa thal would -the ,,_,, Ho allo lilted flally tliat the ctlty had not rocolnd the -becaUll ol any,.,...,,._ ol HUD~· ''nlal IMY bo lwmy now, but wait un-, Legion Takes Yule to Vets A Cbriltmu proaram by the American Legion Poat No. nl of La11UD8 Beach has mulled fn tho dlatrlbution of more than 20 gift.fruit baskets to local veterans con· fined to their homes over the Christmas lllllJP. • • . Nwe . Jhan 1150 _ ..... t'@ised by tho i......aoq·~~~for il1lt to'1lle local-~ aod lor pa· UemJ 1n the ; Veter.abl Administration H0<pltal In !.OOi Beach. 0. '(I, Pr~, toer}'lce officer fbr tho local pool. delivered u. &ill pl!Ch111, and -..... 11 trfp1 to tM bospltal with bo1es of books, magazinel and bun-4"<1Lo! ~Car® . • , . Chrlltmu doconllon of Ille home of Myrth and Zachery M1l1by, 511 Unden, was declared the grand winner ol the Laguna Beach Jaycees' Christma.s Li&ht Up l'ro1V1m. The scene deplctln& a villlgt 1t Christmas time wu alJo lelected u the winner of the residenU1l ..c1tegory for the fifth straight year. The Malabys' village scene includes a church, waterfall, farm 11.odt, rallroad and nativity llCet'le. 'Mle winner of the religious category --the Plotts' ~ @! 21,16 Alta Lall\lll•· au .. Hind at tm South Oosll llighwoy received first award in the business category. Second place awardl were stven to the Fraser residence at Cl Vir&lnia Park, Resi.dent.ial Cate1ory; the Arco Ii re1ldence at 1969 Temple HUIJ Drive, roilalcu• ca1<1ory, and tho Pottery Shack, at 1212 S. Cout Hlahway, Bu1lneu Catesory. Other resldencea awarded were 475 Panorama, residential t.btrd plKe; I• Del Mor, Rellllouo lhlr<I place; and Eschboch'I •I 1117 Fomt Ave., -third pl1ce; and, Mlllor of stm Outteau Way, httoonhle mention reeldontlll; Za.,..i.ty, mt! Allview Terrace, honorable mentkm ruidenUat; Burton, .,. C 1 t 1 11 D 1 , honorable. mention -tlll. Tbe Llftllll Beach City Hall WU livtn a special award for It• city llclll ollplay. ' . . " LAMPS-PICTURES-ACC~!ORIES HOLIDAY SALE 1!'1 tho littlo thing• that con ,,,.k• the dlf. foronce. Stop by tod1y ind •lew our fin• Miection, nol" 1peci•lly ·P<iced. If it' a for a gift, or for you penonoily, you'I find Jud the thing lo enhance ony homo fOf th• holld1y. DlEXil-HiRITAiil>-l-iENRlDOM-WOODM~~ 7tdltJlt ' -I" . INflRIORS WJUDAYS I SATUIDAYS .trOt 19 •tJO NIDAY 'T1I. ttOO \ /_ However, McKennon said today the possibility that the chlld was cul by the boat's propeller when sbe fell overboard or that she accidentally cul herself on something l.n the boat wu '1pretty sUm." He pointed out that the _., nport lndlcaletl that a flnHladod ln- etrument had couoed the doep lllllh across the child'! throat. An old, N1ty knife lound In the-dory wu tested for tbt pruence of human blood alone with, Iha alothlnr, but no blood was found on lhe blade. McKennon noted that the rusty knife's blade was too coarse to have caused the wound on the tot'• throat. The delectlve said Knl,_t'I widow, Doro, tokl them she bad ncenUy liven her husband a new knife, but police Dave been unable kl find il "We will be gobl.i over the boat again to IM what we can find," McKennon said. The detectives checked the dory once for traces Of blood, but found non1. "It's a dillicult oue, and frankly, I'd like to be able to P"'" thal IOlllOlhlnJ elae happened , but the evidence juat doesn't seem to be pointing that way," bl lllid. Church Offers. Fi-ee Christma11 Dinner A ti.e Chl11tmu dinner will .,. . P'°' vided to Laguna Beach vtdt«'t without m""' !rom 3 In & p.m. Monday II tho Nel1hborhood eonereaallonal Church, MO St. Ann'• Dt'ive, Laauna Btaich. The traditional dlru11r wW Include turk<y, hom and Venf80ll and e!llJUlb food ii being ~ by Volunleel'I lo !eed abolll lllO pereon1, 1 Chui'ch 1p0ttaoman lllid. Russ Satellite Up MOffCOW (AP) -'l1le Sovie! Union reported It launched ll10lltar Coamol sat.Ullo Thursday, the !39tli In Iha aacret sert<s. T111 uld tho Um• of Ill lint orbit wu llS mtnut11. ---·" " • MfWPORT BEACH • 1n1 WUTCLI" DL. 4 ,..1.2010 LASUNA IEACH e HI NO~TH CO~ll HVIY. • ff4"6111 TORRAMCE ·• IJ'4t HAWYHOlMI llVD. J71d11' l , l . ' ' Sadillehaek EDITION • Today's Fbull N.Y. Stoeks . ' voi:. 65, NO. 357, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO~ FRIDAY, .DECEMBER 22, •19n TEN CENTS ~ ' ' ;I;)~uglas I ,oi', Project Likely After Zone Plan OK t Irvine planning commissioners a~ proved a new c:.omme.rclaJ z o n i n g ordinance .lnNnday that clears the way for doyelopmen! al the Mdlow>ell boogJ.; property adjacent to Orange Cowlty airport, . -i>oiia1a J)ouglas Jr., who bas penonally attended the last several plan- ning commisolon me<tlngs affecting his property, said after the meeting be would ._ IJ!lli,Or ~•plaiis .,.., ••'l'hle city bU D(IW ~ clear what it will allow through its zoolng, 11 Douglas said. "We will now develop plans in ac- cordance with that zoD.ma." Douglas said pi.ns would lnclooe a "hotel of roughly 300 rooms, a restaurant and profe'ssional offlce complex on tbe SO-acre property. Doug1ns is president of the DouglaS Development Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of McDonnell Douglna Cor- pol'ljtion, 'lbe new wning ordinance approved Thursday, although still subject to dty councll approval, imposes uniform con- ditiODJ en all land bi the 2,500 acre Irvine lodustrial C.mples. PreviOUo!ly, different standards applied to Irvine Company land and to llouilas land. The Irvine Company could be given ap- proval to build if it presented a detailed master plan of what tt inte{Mted tO-bUlld. But Douglas.was required to get'a con· ditional use pennit, a cumberlOIDe and eljlellSIY9 p~ that Involves a fUll. scale pUbllc lioarJni. In addltloilj ror many months ~ dltlooal uSe. bid \)eel! Interpreted to mean no llBe. J . Tliat pn>ee<llrit was Imposed Iast year by 'the Coualy -Board of Superviaora before 1rvlne Incorporated. The new dty then cootinued the ati11 ftqUlremeot 1mtll It could devile ill o'ttn zoning law. The new Wllng ordinance specifla es· actly what coocems can be built on Douglas property. n..y Include botw, offices and food outlets. "The dty ean tell us to build our buJldlng high or low. round or oquare, bot It can't tell ua anymore that we can't tiullcf anything," said a pleased llouglu alter the meeting. The ilkere Douglu tract lo located on the. northeast corner of campus Drive end MacArthur Boulevard. It ls Im. mediately nortb of the Newport Beach ci· ty limlta. Last year Newpoort Beach vigorously opposed Douglas plans to build a hotel and offlce complex near the airport. However, in the last six months Newport Beach has on its own approved con· stmction of two large hotels in the same general area. Douglas said be has hired an architect and will present his master plan to the city within three months. Ite said he could not reveal exact plans beyond that, but added that he ~ to begin coo- struction by mid-year ·um. Arrests Hit Cult ' 28 More Charged in 'Brotherhood' DAtl.Y PILOT It.ff Pllttll OFFICER WRITES GRIM REPORT FOLLOWING FATAL CRASH IN HUNTINGTON BEACH T._ager Trlff to Pull Stanton Man from Wreck, But 11 Driven Back by Fl•mes By TOM BARLEY Of Ille DlllY Piiat Sl&H Christmas greetings ln the form of ar· rest warrants and a copy.of a multi-page Orange County Grand Jury lndJctment are being delivered today to 28 alleged members of the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug cult fotmded by Dr. Timothy Leary, the DAILY PILOT bas learned. The arrests, almost all of them Jn Laguna Beach, C.OSta Mesa, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach, will bring to 4e the number of defendants rounded up as alleged conspirators in an organization described by lawmen aa an offshoot of Leary's original League of Spiritual Disccvery (LSD). Two men were arrested In Hawaii Thursday by Honolulu police who are still scouring the blanda for a msn described today as '8 "key figure" in the drag ring -Robert L. "Fat Bobby" Andrist, 29. It was lea!IJed today that the Orange County Grand Jury bas been involved for several~. and most ln~vely dur· cent has been solely occupied in recent weeks with the flood of paper work ae. cumulated in the form of multiple mo- -tkm flied by the battery· of defeme lawyers hired by the Brotberbood dele .. dants. Several defendants have had their names removed from the indictment dur· lng that Ume via dismissals and pleas of guilty to reduced charges. Among them was David Mark Reddy, 23, s:IMll Street of the Copper Lantern, Dana Point, who faces a state prison term of up to 10 years following a plea of guilty to amended drug charges and violation of an earlier probation. But Reddy must first serve a one year term in federal prison on drug charges substantially amended from those filed when he, Brian Kendall McAdams, 25, 20286 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, and Thomas Blake Bidwell, "8, of Garden Grove, were arrested i n (See CULT, Page ZI The Fat One Customers Win Spain Lottery MADRID (UPI) - A M-year-<>ld eale owner In the Catalan city of Vich won a record $19 millkm ·today In the world's richest lottery. But, be will have to share it with customers who bought shares in winning ~~ .. , Countiim~•· ~ ' .. -€rashes,Dtlve·~r - L . ff~ D ~· .· , -iueq,11·~ ·-,;on, t:.AJUntr i i1~(tJi; . , . .~.j"'.f'' 1 · ·-g · n, ,,,, ._,:i.:t- -----itslbtant---Dlstrict attcauey ~~ ;i.p. ',I. lwob.. ~;;;,;. owns the (:ale Meslca In Vic!J,~ty of-250;000-popolltloo -40'1iillellfroiii Baiceloua, _, 1.2 billion peoelas Jn the ----Freeman admitted today thal U. loo • Dies in _Flames .4-ked b L . dlctment WU being prepored l>ut refuted 11.Uac -y _wnes·s ~=--~==~ A S-man burned to death Thurs- day night before a· horrified Huntington Buch i.enager who had tried to rescue the man moments berore his car ex· ploded. PoJiCe said David W, Olfrell, 50, of Slanton dled after his 19'12 foreign IUIUrY oodan c:rubed Into a power pole and a • light .standard at the· intersection of Sptqdale Street and McFadden Avenue Jn HDDtlngtoo Beach shortly before mid- nlgbL Danny Bro.wn, 17, whole home at 6022 V-Clrcie Is clole to the intersection, tl.ld police be~ the crash and rushed to the car to try to aid OUrell. '1.ibmcen s8id the teenager tried to get ~ car door open, but the auto burst into llomes, driving him hack. . When police and fire units arrived at the . scene of. Ule crash, they found the if,ooo car 'llfDPletely Involved In Dames. •. Trame investigators today are at· iamptJng to pjece together the cause of the accident. ,'Ibey said skid marts in· (Ueate Offrell was driving southbound on Springdale when he went Into a four- .-Rid as he approached the In- ~- .The ear apparenUy cn>saed the tn- ~Uon and jumped the curb, strlklng U. two poles ·on the aoulheast corner. · • * * * .Jl-tingtOR Crash A ~pound offspring of Frasier the sensuous lion, pulled a senior park ranger from a fence at Lion Country Safari Thursday and severely mauled him before being forced bacl.. by ground&men, park officials reported. stephen R. Craig, 28, Costa Mesa, was sun in the intensive care unit of Mission Viejb Community Hospital this morotng after undergoing three-hours o'f surgery in which an estima.ted 400 stitches were required to close1hl.s wounds. However, hospital officials described Craig's condition as "saUsfactory" and said he would probably be released io a week unless complicatlons develop. Craig suffered fang and claw injuries to his face , back, and neck, according' to park officials. He was attacked by a two-year-old lioness named Benjie. Prior to the attack park officials considered her one or the park's most docile cals. The animal was •'babysitting" a litter of Young cubs at the time of the incident and o!ficlals speeulated that she niay simply have been protecting them. "That protective instinct can be really atrong and you never know when it will come out,•: said Dale Coo tier, assistant manager of the park, this morning. "But you can never be sure what the lio,n was Utlnking, either. Benjie may just have been being playful. What is playful for a lion U!I not playful for a man.'' At the time of the incident, Craig was atop a 13-foot fence repairing a nylon shading canopy. Benjie reportedly entered the area, •• ... 'It Was Horrible,' Says ' -~ ---·- 'Student in Rescue Bid : Danny Brown, a Marina Hlgb School 111Jdent who tried to reacue • man from bis burning auto. in H"'1llngton Beach, 'will remember Thunday night for the r..i of hl1 life. • "It WU horrible, .. be utd' or his UMUC· ·..-W 1tt:en\pt to pull David Ollrell of Sllalon from the flaming wreckage of bis CV. Of!nll'• .. crulled Into two poles nar Ille 17•year-<>ld'a "°""'· Danny laid waa• w1tcbllli lelevt•lon when the occorred 111111 be ran oulsl<le to ... thappell<d. ... uw the car on lire acrou the '. ' street, wllb the man In lt," he recalled today. "I ran over to the driver's side, but the dor was all smashed 1D and.J couldn't get It open. SO l "'"t around to the passen(l:er side, but by then the whole front ... 1 waa In flames and all I could dow11111od}lck. "Some pociple come &Iona wtlh ~ caropolo that had woter In tt 1114 tried to put--oat Ille-. I>ut " dldn1 do !Dlieb good. "Yeah, it w11 honlble. J couJd tee hlm Inside. He WU Wlviag bis anu amund aod honking the born. It "'' so hor-rible." ' j • • I which is screened from public view, and became ..aroused. "She took a great Dying leap, grabbed Steve, and they came down together, with Benjie on top,'' according to Jerry Kobrin, Lion Country vice-president. Two nearby groundsmen immediately came to Craig's rescue, forcing the~ Uon back by hitting her with shovels. Craig, bleeding profusely, was rushed by car to the hospital by park offidals without wait,\ng for an ambulance. He was reported conscious at tbe hospital (See SAFARI, Page !) Harry Truman's Condition Near ' Critical Stage KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Harry S Truman's heart beat irregularly and his blood pressure fell severely today, alarming doctors M> much that Truman's wife, Bess, was called to his bedside and the 11&-year~ld former President was for a time considered in critical condition . "I have no doubt that if I had had to make a report at about 8:30 or 8:45 a.m. this morning I would ~ve had to say be ts In critlcal coodition," said Research Hospital spokesman John Dreves, follow- ing a news briefing delayed almost an hour by Truman's worsened condition. "By the time tbe briefing came, the condition appeared to be passing or at least improving," be laid. 'J'r:Uman was still considered in "very serious" condition which, according to Dreves, means "be lll very ·close to critical at any tbne." ~To!mM,~'1~was r:esUng4t. the Trumans' Independence, Mo., borne.when the caU came just after dawn from the holpltal. She Immediately began tile 10. mile ride to her husband's beclslcle. Two in El Toro Home Overcome by Smoke Two resldenta of an El Toro home were trnated ror amoke lnbaJatlon Thursday whtn the structure was damaged by~. Glw:n OX)'leri bY. Orange 1C.Ounty llremen -e Ed Cooper, owner of the bonle ,, 11111 ~ crra.. ancf Tbebna Plckta, another occupant. · Tbe blaie was otarted by ·1 ligbted cl(mtta dropped Into a plastic rectp-tacle, firemen aald. Damage to ~ '51,000 home"" esUmated at 12,tlllll. • the arreot of.the~- Freeman eoofinDed that lramieots Calvin L. Delaney', 30, and Rauald R. Crawford, 25, wer~ .plckod up In Maul, Hawaii; by local police working OD in- formatioo supplied by Orange County autboJiUes. Both men have advised Hawailan . authorities from their quarters In the Honolulu jail thet1hey will flgbt . a move by Orange County lawmen to return them to this area. "It may take several weeks to get them back here in view o. prolonged ex· tradition proceec11ng;• Freeman said. Freeman said Delaney was last seen in the Southern California area In June when he was arrested by RiversJde Coun-. ty narcotics officers wbo claim be bad 20 pounds of ~ uhlsb ind $15,000 on his person at the time. Freeman said they are the only arrests he expects to make in the Hawaiian Islands unless lawmen there manage to produce lbe elusive Andrist. The former Art Colo1'y resident has evaded bis pursuers since the original Brotherhood indictment wu Issued last August. Lawmen receoUy confirmed that the search for the 300-pound su~ has now been elf.ended to other areas Jn the United States. ''The people we want are ln the beach cities of Orange County,'' Freeman said. "That's where we are working today and t~at's where we will be working throughout the Cbrlstmu weekend untll all our arrests are made." Police In Laguna Beach, Neeport Beach, Costa Mesa Ind Huntington Beach are cooperating with Orange County Sheriff's o~. agenls from the Federal Bureau or Narootlc1 and Dangerous Drugs, agent& from the state's Bureau of Narcotlcn Enforcement and U.S. Customs olOcen in a joint sweep that baa becc:me tnown u the Orange County Drug and Narcotics Task Force. Freeman said ~ named In the new lodlctment will -Join 18 peraona earller named In the alleced Brotberbood . co .. splracy - a total of 4f defendants. 11And this Isn't by any means the end of Uie road,'' 1 weary Dtltrlct Attorney's lnvllllaator commented this morning. Superior Court lucJeo Raymond - I J ~.llale ~ lotlery; -~ The tlckel cost RlPoll UO,CllO-taa (12,JSG) • bespjle the ero..i. pdlS'Jn( around lbe cafe, shouting in Catalan, "Eem ha loclf'·("We Got lt"),.llJpOlll'llll&neil calm. "WE BOUGHT THE TICKET hoping our luck would continue;• he said. "1be lottery had been ttod to us In previous years but we have never hit It this big." ,Ripoll's prize is known as "el GGrdo" ("The Fat One"). Pro-bonds Group, Plans '73 Campaign Resumption By CANDACE PEARSON Of .. D111tr PW It.ff Campaigners for BONDS (Build Our New District ScOOols), the Saddleback Valley Unified School District 128 million local hoods -$!& million state ap. portiooment electk>n Feb. 6 are resUng their efforts for the holidays. They're hoping that an intense publici- ty drive and door-to-door block worker campaign to be kicked off with a rally at Mission Viejo High School Jan. 3 will start the ball rolliog klwar~ iuccesa a month later. Every school tn tbe Saddleback Valley District bas a representative who wW recruit the bloct workers to mount the ''per~person kind of approach" over the entire area, publlclty chairman Helen Riilord said Tbunday. The Saddlebact Valley Unified District was one of three formed in a succesdul unlfJcatlon electlou last June and July 1, 19'13, will take over schools in tbe area from the San Joaquln and Tnotln Union achool districts. ntere·are lt tchool1 now (including El Dorado Primary. housed In model bo!D!lJ)-ln-lbe-~ck Valley. The -dlitrlct will open with about 13.000 atudentl In July, In comparison to the 7 .IOO espected In one of the other new unlfled dJJtrlct.o,...lrvllle. BONDS eampaigner1 eatlmate that tn 1,200 SOLDIERS REMA.IN ON CA.LL · ' l the next five years the district will need eight elementary schools, two in. termediate schools, two high schools and a district office racilit), Including maintenance, transportation and warehousing. The local bonds and the state aid will cover the estimated COits o{ these proj. ects, campaigners say. Local bonds are considered alx>ut the cheapest way to finance schoolll and Mrs. Rht:ford said the passage of these Feb. 6 will create "little or no increase in the bond redemption (part of tbe tax rate)." District Superintendent William _Zogg has not wanted to commit bimselt to a definite dollar figure on the effect of the bonds and the bom>wlng capacity for state aid. How muclt bonded lndebtedness the (See SADDIEBACK, Pip ~I Oraage Coast Wea&lter It'll be cloudy when yoo get up .. Saturday, but don't lret. The .W.1tlllorla4Y says skies will clear by midday to sunny ski .. and tem- perature5 of C at the heacbel and ro Inland. Ovemigbl lows 46-50. INSIDE TODAY For the dQhth conucutive ~tar, the DAILY PILOT lo Jwn. orill{I the top .....,.vattv the· atn actoTI o7ld octrUH1 in Or- Oll{I< COl<ftty. Wlnn.,.1 Of th< 1912 DP moonb are announced in today's Weekmdct'. ._.._ . --.. ....... It --. -. _ _.., . Cl_..... 1Mt ..... ... ... """" .. ,,..,,. .... ll Qa ' • .... ,...,,. ::: .. "!C ~ ~ .... •• ... ._. 1 I ... II H -,,_ " -. .......... I i::.ca·· ·:: ,..... ..... -. ............ \>. .. --. - f I ' 2 DAIL V PILOT IS Observ~tory Fundillg Set For Study l rvlne Unified School District trustees have continued until Jan. a consideration of possible district ' funding of an Qbservatory at University High School, in order to have more time to study pro- posals for Ibo project. n,e dlstr1ct1 which will become opera-- liooat July l, 1973, is being asked by the high school to consider providing a "ma- jor portion" of the cost, which has a maximum estimate at $36,100. That amount would build a n obllefVatory, double classroom size, darltroom and oflk:e. Tbe idea for an astrooomy study area began in fall, 1971, with Uni High science teacher Jim Shannon. A mirror, a mount and I few auxiliary Pieces were obtained froq> the Tustin Union High School District. U the observatory is built, University High would be the only high school in Orange County to have such a facility. Since the initial efforts by Shannon, the Hoag Foundation has expressed an in· terest, especially sinci! the <1bservatory would be used by community groups, in· eluding the &y Scouts. The Hoag F<1UDdali<1n has donated $3,000 to the project and the Irvine Com· pany recently presented a check for $2,000 for it. · Architect Lee Kline has m a d e preli minary drawings for lhe project. At a meeting <lf representatives of the high school , Hoag Foundation, county schools department architect. Irvine Unified School District and the Scouts, the $36,100 alternative was recom- mended. Three other possibilities, according to Uni High principal Vic Sherreitt, are to buJld the observatory. s m a 11 e r classroom, darkroom and <1ffice for $29,400; to build the observatory and dome only, $17,000; or to revise the pro- posed plans, at an unknown cost. The observatory would be used as a regular classroom during the school day and probably opened at night for adult education, said Sherreitt. In asking that the item be continued to Jan. 8, trustee Nerrn Ginsburgb Wednes- day night indlCated he'd I i k e more time to consider it. Board chairman Cha rles Boulanger said be would like teacher Jim Shannon to appear before the board. Boulanger said he was concerned that the space allocation for the racllity was not suf- ficient. Alden P erkins Rites Sa turday Funeral services will be conducted Saturday m<1rning for retired Canadian soft4riqk: executive Alden M o rs e Perkins of El Toro. Mr. Perkins died Wednesday in Santa Ana. He was 65. The ranner San Clemente resident bad ~ several years ago as the pro- pnetor of John Collins Co., a ma}or :K>ft· drink company in Canada. Mr. Perkins, af 23335 Goodor Drive leaves hi.I widow, Lucille; two sons, Joru;_ Perkins ~f Brownsburg, Quebec, Ctinada, and Dwight Foster Perkins af Ville La Salle, Quebec; two daughters, Sandra Ravary of Montreal and Charles Vanelli of Wayland, Mass., and f o u r grandchildren. Mr. Perkins was a fonner member of the San Clemente Kiwanis Club and had served as a president of a Kiwanis club in his native country. Wright Services Set DEL MAR (AP) -Private funeral services are planned for architect John Lloyd Wright, the 80-year-old son of in- ternationally known arehitect Frank Uoyd Wright. He died at Se!ripps Memorial Hospital here Wedne9d.ay following a long Illness. OU.NM COAST es DAILY PILOT 'Tiie ~ C.... ~ILY PILOT, wlll Mllcrl k ~ ..... "'--""'--It CIVllU.tllld 111 111e Or•noe ~ hblWllne eon-.,. s.,. nN .,ltlltM .,.. Pllbl.._,, Monc11v tl'Wwtl't .. ,.,.. .... Coal• Mfta, ,......,, '6tdt, ~ lffctll'"-!tln Vtlt.y, LllllUM hedl, lrvll'ltl S...i.tildl Md S.n C*'-ft/ S... J-Ctpl&ttt.... A 11Aole rt'Jlonal ft'!lkln It pub!llllM:I .. fllr'Hys arid Stlndlya.. rrw .,.._,.., llllb!lllllM 111Mt h al U> wnt •• , $1JW, C::.t• MIN, C.lltonlll, ,.... lolt.rf N. W.M ,., .. .,. and ll'Vblbl!W J1c• R. C.rl1y YQ Pr•lf.it Mii Otolltftl ~ lllff'lll Kee,.;1 ·-'"'•"'•• A M111rphil'l1 ---ClieMt H. t...1 llr.h1rd P. Nall ... ......w.w~ ldl'-" °"""' 4 OMfl M4!MI »I Wfll ht° ltfwt ltfWllOl1 .. Kiit -N""""" ...........,. ~ BMOll tit P«MI A-MIMfi..-audl1 11111 9-.dl ........,. .... ~ ........ 1~11: ... 1 , .. ., •••• (71 •• '4~U1 C1 Mell M walk .. 1 '4W671 ,_ ClcaJSidS A•,.,.,_$.! file•• I I 4'2-f4U °"""""'' 1m. 0niNt Ceftl ,~ ...... Mlfl•• ~. "" .......... , .. .,.,,., .. ................. ~, ...... .......... _, .. •• l1111:M ........ "*"' ,,.,. ..... .,....... ....... . .................. ., cat• ..,.,. C.""'1N. ....,,,..._ "'· e-fl't'9t'' UM ......,.., ... -11 A.IS ~I t-1111...., .... I I aM R*tlfltY. • ' • Valuation I In Irvine .• Chalkng~d The use of the 1970-71 tax valuations for the Irvine Unifled School District In determining the '!P1lt of real f!"OP.rlY to be taten over from· ootgoinl districts 0 ts open to cbal1-. • 1rv1ne superv,.- stan ~ told trustoes Ibis -t. "lll'e &bould Uplo<e it," he oa!il, adding that the district's assessed valuation ta quite different now from two years ago. 1rvine iJ one of the three new unified districts created In 1 Wlificatloo electkm last Juoe. It, and Ille Tultin ind Sad- dell>ack Valley unified dittrlcts, will become operatiooal July I, l'7S, At that time, the Tustin UD)cn• JDcb School and Tllslln, San Joaquin and Trohuco lcbool -wtD ·go out of business. Their real property ls suppOIOd - Bleed °" (Jlotlai., Evidence -F-0qnd ' • • • • • In Knight Deaths By JOANNl'l REYNOLDS Of .... ~ """ ..... Huntington Beach pollct uid tod1y thtey have found 0 quite a bit of. blood" on the cloU*Ji of tbl Nowporl Beach doryman who tlley bell ... may have kill- ed his de\tl!liltT ancj tllen himsell last week. Det. Sgt. Mooty McKennoo said in· vestigalin wW be recbecldi1' Ille dory Sir Charles which belonged to flihmn4n Allan Vaughn Knlgb~ 43, Newport Beach. Knight and bis ·S-ye8l'Old da118bler. Patr!cla, were 1181 _, ollwe. Dec. 12 when he ·too!< her w)th him lo check his lobote{ traps along Ille cout. ker husband a new knife, bl.It police have: been unable to find .It. "We will be goine over the boat again to see what we ~n find," McKennol;l said. "The delecUves checked ~ dory once !Or traces ol blOod, hut lonnd """'· "It's a difficult cue, and frankly, I'd like to be able to prove that .something else happened. hut the evidence jU!t doesn't seem to be polntlng that way," ht said. · to he divided proportlonally among the new dlatricts. !t mid-morning lhey "(UO spotted by a Huntingtoo ·Beach IIIOiQard 81 KnJcht stood in lhe.stem of his small boat, ap. parently. a'adllng bis bloade daughter in Red Missiles Claim Two UPI T ....... ,. KIDNAP VICTIM GETS HER CHRISTMAS PRESENT EARLY Allee Dealey With Hutb.nd Joe After Release for $250,000 Debutante BrUk Freed; Kidnap Suspects Seized DALLAS (UPI) -Allee Amanda j<Mandy" Dealey, the deb u t a n t e daughter-in-law of the president of the Dallas ?i.1oming News, Was released harmed today by "foul-talking" kidna- pers who held the newlywed blonde f<lf' Lbree da ys, threatened to till her and then collected '250,000 ransom. Sheriff's deputies later broke into an apartment at nearby Garland and ar- rested two men "while they were coun- ting the moo.ey." ' The suspects are brothen and sur- reodered without • fight. Charged with kidnaping were Franklin J. Ransonette, 33, and Woodrow H. Ransooette, 31. The e n t i r e quarter-mlRion-doilar ransam was recovered, authorities said. An FBI agent said Dallas county sheriff's deputies broke into the apart- -ment and surprised the suspects "while they were coWJting the money. There was no trauble. 11 Six boors earlier, the k.idnapers put goggles oo the 22--year-old blonde beauty before dawn ind set her free on a street comer in the posh suburb of lllghlaod Park. "Count to a thousand and your daddy will be here," one kidnaper told her. But she was ptcked up by an FBI agent and Dallaa County Sherill Clarence Jones. When the 5-6, 13$-pound wile of Joe M. ~~~~~·:,1~ a;a~g~~ safe, she She said she saw only two men during her ordeal. "I was scared to death the whole time," Mandy said, "But I gradually' got used to it. I felt more relieved Wednes- day w be n ooe ol the men told me: 'Don't worry, you'll be home for Christmas.' " Dealey saJd bis lather, Joe M. Dealey Sr., president and chief executive officer of the A. H. &lo Corp., which publlsbes the Dallils qewspaper, paid Ille $250,000 ransom. It wa.s made tbrougb a secret "drop" al a deserted shopping center. "Needless to say, there was a lot of crying, a lot of hugs and kisses ," aaid the ooclalile'sbusband. "This ls going to he Ille best damn Christmas anybody ever wished for." He then gave his wile her holiday present-early ...;;-it was a Jingle strand of pearls which he draped arouud her neck. 'Ibey then kissed. Dealey and Mandy were married sil weeb ago In a gata ceremo.uy and they honeymooned at llraRon Baycln Jamaica. '!be klclnapers grabbed her u ahe returned to the couple's apartment Tuet- day, then demanded ransom· through telephone calls to bis lather's house. "Their scare tac!lcs scared the bell out <lf me," the younger Dealey aaid. "They used coarse threats." Dea1ey aald that when bis wife was r_eleaaed she was "a little bruised up, a little shaky, but in good apirts. .. We are pleased beyond wordt," the hll!band aald. "Mandy and I love each other very much. Now, I kno1t this hap- pens only in movies and the fairy tales, but l believe It bap,pened to us -it ""' love at first sight. ' FrotnP .. eI SADDLEBACK BONDS • •• district may inherit, at what rate it must pay it back and the area assessed valua- tion may fluctuate, Mrs. Rixford said. A previous tentative estimate by ~ission Viejo Hlgh School teacher Bob Minier aatd about $6 increase for homeowners with a $32,000 home. ''The biggest problem we have is apathy of parent voters," Mrs. Rlxford said. Headed by finance commit tee chairman Jeanne Rattray, lhe BONDS group is working towards an $8,000 cam· paign budget to counteract l h i s "apathy." So far, about $3,000 In ca.sh has been raised and another fl,000 In printing of brochures, postcards and fact sheets has been contributed by the Miss ion Viejo Company, a major developer. Tbe largest individual contrlbutlon was $1,000 from El Toro resident and developer V. P. Baker. He is one of lhe prlnclpal owners or land propooed u the Canada Foothills Planned Community ln El Toro. Now zoned agricultural, the :zone change on the vea is now before county planllU\g commissioMn. It ts estimated that u schools would be needed to serve the 34,IOO resident oommunlty If It 11 ap. proved. Ross Cortete o! the RoAmoor Corpora- tion, developers ol Le1lure World and New World, contrlbOted ~. Mrs. Rattray said 1be WN pleated by !he ...,..,...loo ol reaponse. Donations have come from merchants, dcx:ton, service clubs, lndi't'ldua11, other area developers and both !etcher or1anlia- tlMI -the Sin Joaquin and Tultin Secoodary Auoclatloo. Even more money ii n~. Mn. Rix- ford said . -llokllt...,__for block workm a l!O a1t wel!Ome and .,_,. q.all tllelr 1"' cal school prlnqlpola. , The Bnii:dler trvlne Unlned Dlatrlct recently pa9'0d 1 1611 mlllloo bond "elec- tion , a record fu Ora.nae County, •Ith an averaee 81 percent ytJ vote, on a bu'dgct of bout 12,lllO. The tbrtlat of the · BONDS campailnen arguments foJ pa!Hge, which r.equlre 1 1wo-lhirds yes vote , are: -The bonds wan't cost much to the taxpayer. -8addleback voten approved previous San Joaquin District bonds which will be null and void next July. New bonds, for the Saddlebaclt area oniy, are oeeded. -Unless Ille -. are approved, there will he oo building of !Cbools. The campalgnen: tnow they may have a few abstacles to overcome -getting residents out to vote for a special elec- tion . when turlKIUl! in general are notorlous!y poor and convincing Leisure World realdents. Of tbe aboqt 311000 reglstered voters ln the valley, ll,3S'/ of ihem (81 of Ille November elecltoo) are in Ille Laguna Hilb retirement communlly. Most of the senior clliunl there pay taxes hut don't ""'Ille -Glen Olddinga, Lalsun World realdent hooding the BONDS campaign there, "'' relllcllnt to talk, 1hout It. "A lot of ua have grandchildren In school and art inlerated," he Mid. He would say little ,iooro, e•cept that the campaign --tbe<e---d --f .. ture ad- vertising in the "Lelsun World·NIWI." In the Iut San Joaquin bond election, an offldol of that school district aald, Lelsure World voters gave the measure 1 better tbao llimple majority but fell far abort of the .......ry 1 .... thlrdl ma- jority. Other rtlldenlS in Ille San Joaquin District helped Ille bondl pw. IJnollld1I flguns compiled by officials In the Tllll1n Union High Scllool lllstrtct, whoae tut bond efJart lo Fet:,., 1172, faU· ed, ahow l!lat LdlllJ'O World volen give Ille $15 miJliOtt boodl .. Olllmlled 41 pe~ cent Yet vote and a companion tai: overa ride a U.S pm:tJJt Yet vole. A county. education dtputmonl official t'fJCalled one election, • Stlddlebact Com- munity College hon dlssut In 1168, which received trtmendous poelthie support - 89, IO and 11 percent yos In throe m1Jor preOlnclS -from Leisure 'World . Jt. was a compromise, the county of· fl cl al erplalned, since there wa1 a. pro- pOSll to put part oft.he college's phyllcal plant 0011 to Laisure World if the bondl didn't pass. They passed. In Ille plan for unification,· Ille 1970-71 aueued valuatloo hi the areas of all the new ·d.1$tricts was set as the ap- propqrtlonment factor. Trustee Lee Slcoll• said W<dnesdaY, night that, "I tried to get Ille asoesaed valuation rule changed before 1lni1lcaUon. I thought Ille closest assessed valuatioo year to July l, rm, would bO!airest to all of us." . .... Corey aaid he would try to research the poaalbWty of change. "We &bould get (from the di.!ltricl.!I) what we put in," be said. State Won't Pay Landscape Costs At Irvine School '!be IUCCOSlful 1Ul4 mllllon hid oo Collep Park SclJool lit Irvine came In seven per¢ent under the state-allowed budget, bUl Ille stale now ll)l1I It _, pay for Irrigation and landllcaping in fr<l1t of tile scbool, according to San Joa- quin f1cilitles p!anper Dave King. '!be district Will fiave to negotiate with lhe OODlrlctor a change order. This wtD up the price an unknown lllDOUtl~ King told lrvlne Unified SclJool District lnl&- lees Wednesday night. Irvine Unified will take over operation of Irvine arta schools from San Joaquin July I, 197.1, according JO a uniflcalion election last June . The refusal to pay for turf and ir- rigaUoo on general school grounds js "one of the arllfkial comtralnts of the state aid program.'.' King $aid. '!be stale dou allow for landscaping on playground areas within Its budoets. Trustee Lee Slcoli suggested ihat some schools have · solved the F_Oblem of landscaping through· commuruty gilts. She cited the eumple of an Irvine Company gilt of f!Ol,000, part of which was used for laod.scaplng at Turtle Rock School and landscaping and atJdio..visual flquipment at Rancho San Joaquin lnlennediate School, both in Irvine. Trustee Norm Ginsburg oomplimeoted IUdl acijonl, ~ \hat the public too often Jso1t aware Of·llfta: to the schools. R088 Satellite Up MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union repcrled it launched another Cosmos satelllte 'lbunday, the 539tb ln'tbe secret ....... Tull ·aald the time Q( its first orbit was 11~ ptlmltes. ' - his arms. . A few minutes Ialer, the guard told police ho saw the empty boat ctrcllng aimlessly near the Huntington Beach Edison plant \{night'• ii6ay was found 1 week later, floating about a.ball mile to ,.., and bis clngbler'1 body washed uhore ·at Ille Huntington Beach pier IO hours later. The case, wblch was presumed to have been a double drowning, took II) une>:- pected tum when It was cp.c.vered that the glrl'a throat bad been aliL '!be Orange C<lUnty oonmer ruled her death a homlcld<, but Hunlinl!ton Beach detectives say Ibey ba•• carelulfy pursued Ille possibllltles that her death may have been aCcldeotal. llowever, McKennqn said today the poalblli!y that the child .... cul by Ille boat's propeller when she fell overboard or that she accidentally cut bene1f on something In the boat was "pretty slim." He pointed out that the coroner's report indicated that a fme-bladed m. $'11menl bad caused the d .. p alash across the child's throat. An old, rusty knife found in the dory was tested far the .~ of human blood along with Ille clothing, hut no bJood was found on the blade. Mc:Kennoo noted that the rusty knife's blade was too coane to have caused the wound on the tot's throat. 11le detective sakl Knight's widow, Dor" told them she bad recently given FrontP .. el CULT ..• Portland, Oregon, lut Jan. 13. The trio were accused of stuffing $2 mWioo worth of hashish Into a truck that was being shipped on a Dutch freighter from Bombay, India to Vancouver, Canada. All three received one year jail terms but Orange C <l u n l y "Brotherhood" cha~es against Bidwell w e r e later dismissed In Judge Vincent's courtroom and the defendant shipped off ·to Lompoc prison. McAdams bu been ordered to face trial Marci> 26, on cbargea contained in tM original indlcbnent. The first of several trials stemming from the first Brotherhood indictment will open Jan. 10 with James Leroy Crittenden, 29, of Long Beach in the defendant'• chair. Today's arrests again ralaed Ille possibUity that Dr. Leary may he return- ed lo Orange C<lUnty to face charges leveled against him in the first Brotherhood indictment. -. LAMPS-PICTURES -AC<;:ESSORIES • HOLIDAY · SALE It's the trttle things that' co n male tho dif. feronce. Stop by today and view our fine selection, now specially priced. If it's for • gift, or for you person ally, you 'I find just tho thing lo enhance eny homo fqr the holiday. DREXa-HERITA6£>-4iENREDON-WOODMARK-ICARASYAN INTERIORS WUKqAYS • SA'IUIDAYI ftOO .. 1:10 NIDAY 'I'll ":GO More B52s SAIGON (UPI) -The United Slates carried its marathon air a!Sault against Nort!i Vletnam'1 lieartlud Into the fifth day today.despite mounting air tosses. Hanoi Raljio reportj!d ~ more B52s and an FU I fighter-bomber oho! down t .. day and said It used MIGi as well aa missiles against the Amtricar. 'Planes. The U.S. Command re~ that two more BS2s ~ shot don. 'Ibunday near Hanoi, alo0g with a pair of Navy A& Intruders.. This brought to etght the number ol B52s Ille command reported lost since the massive air Uuautts Degan Mooday. Hanoi claims It shot down st planes, 15 0( them BSls. . • So far the conunand bas .Ilatod 43 Americans as rn1sslng and ll re9CUed. Hanoi. bas broadcast the names of 16 filers, most of them BS2 crewmen, wbo it said were captured. SOme Olen were reported wounded, two too seriously to attend Haool's ezhibltion Of the cipUves for the foreign pre11- Radlo Hanoi sald In a broadcast monitored in Salgoli that Ibo "North Vielnamele Air Force bu patliclpoted in the downinp of U.S. planet." A U.S apol:esman said that while there bas been "some MlG21 11cttvtty" It bai not been "sJgnificant." · 'Ibe word "signlfiCant" is generally us- ed when hostile activity results in damage to Ame.rlcan men or materiel. The command spc:ikesmar a.aid MIG bases ln North Vietnam have been among the targets for the renewed rakb. Re also admitted that the runWay of Hanoi's Gia Lam civilian airport, never before struck in w _ot the American bombinPO! Norin Vietnam, liad -beiil "cratered" by bombs. He declined to speculate u tn how MIGs were able .\o operate with their bases under attack. · The lDdian government &\1nounced b day in New Deihl that American bombl on Thuroday struck Ille Iodlan chancert in Hanoi. ' l'rollt P•ge I SAFARI ... prior to surgery. • .. "Benjie was ooe of the most docile cubs we 've ever had," said Kobrin. "She's been around people all her life and made counUeu 1ppearanee_1 throughout Orange County." Officials &aid the li<lness would not be destroyed. -.. ~ .... ., ... a . ' . ,. ' "'i'' I , , . /.':,.! < " ' NEWPORT l~ACH e 1727 WESTCLIFf Dl. ' l • ' "' 1 .. . ' • ' ~2•20st • LA6UNA BEACH e :1141 NOATH COAST HWY. ., ... ,,., \ TORRANCE e 2J64t HAWTHOANE •l VO. 171·127' , - . ·~-- • Bnntin~ien Beaeh -Fountain Valley . ., .... • Today's Final ~.Y. St.eeks Huntington Trustees, Get Behind Bond Issue By MICIWIL GOODRICB Of .. °"" ..... hlff Trulteos ol the Huntington Beach ' . Vnioo Hieb Sthool Dillrict announced 'l'lundaJ they have patched up their dif- ferences and DOW ltand unanin;M>usly behind the dillrlct's 127 mllll0n bond meuare tbat ., 1oe1 before voters in Februlry. . . . Tiultees' met ~Y afternoon and hammered out• a comproml.se proposal affecting the bond election. ln essence, lbey agreed to abide by a policy not to build a second high school i::ampw: uniess it becom<s ..,lutely neomory. The a~t was approved by Trustees Goorie Logan and Ray Schmitt who bad voted against the bond proj>Olal. Both Logan ,and Schmitt bolleV. one new.school is needed , but were hetttant _..-oun· , I lff•rtd,..._ Assault Reds Say 3 More B52s Shot Down • • SAIGON (UPI) -Tlie United States carried ' its maratbon air assawl against ~orth VlOtnam'I heartland into the filth 11ay follaY despite imetlng air losseo. llanal Radio reported three more B52s and an FllJ fighter·bomber shot down to- day and said l,t used MIGs as well as missiles against the Americar. planes. The U.S. Command reported that two more B52s were shot down Thursday near Hinoi, along with a pair of Navy A& Intruders. This brought to eight the. number ol BS2s the command re]lOl'ted loet alnce the massive air t:SSaults Degan Monday. Hanoi clalins It shot down M planes, 15 ol lhenr BDr. - So •fir t1le .. Qi ... , ...... od 1m lllled 13 to supPort a bQod to build two campuses. Tn11tees uid the compr:omi.se, written by ~ Rolph ' Bauer, will be In- corpora¥ info the bond proposal wbef\ it ;, ~-~ vQ)erS, lt says that all reasonable efforts will be made · tO Inerease utilization of ex· istlng_ lllrucltires and !hat the bond !Wlds Will l;>e allocated only for campus con· sttuction. n Logan bad 1 previously v o i c e d dluatisfact.loo· -wilh the bond measure because be believes other methods of housing students such as all-year scbool- lng could 'solve the problem. He also was concerned that, if funds were voted for-. a second high school and not used, they would be spent for another purpose. He ,had' sent letters to other elementary school districts and city councils · voicing his fee.lings about the bond proposal. Logan said 1bursday he plana to 9ellCI letters to the same agm:ies giving his blessing to the bood measure under the new agreement reached by trustees. "I'm very pleased with tbe new pro- posal," ssld Logan. "I ho~ that everyone who £avors increased utilization of lbe scbOOls will work for the bond." The ballot argument will also read that NY .. ....,..,,,..... _,~~~-"....,'iiii~:ili1 r·"'miii'~.11~:;1" lliort; -ol ~ • J p w It uid were copland. -llli'll """ ••led wounded, ...,,._....,..y, to attend Hanoi's ezbll>illoD ol lbe captl'I"" ftlr the lorelp press. • ·Cl'IT, .... CUfll -llany s ~ ~ boot .... •*-Ir and Illa ..... ·-· fill • ......., tnday, ........ dodon. much tMt Truman'• DPFICEl ·Wltll'Wf GlllM REPORT fOLt OWl!IG·FATAL CRASH IN .l:IUNTINGTOH 'BIACH ' ~.-~ .... ll"!Trlifs·to.PUll'S,t~,.~-~;frio.~ w~;-8ut la Driven ·a.ck by' FIMIH Radlo1 Hanoi said in .a ,broadcast monitored in Sal!l<lJI that the "North Vie_tnamese Air Force bas participated in the downtngs ol U.S. plones." • ! I' \ ' . . -. -. WU called to hfa bedside aoil Ibo •fUM!d former l,'l<sidenl was !or a Ume comklend in erltlcal conditioo. A U.S spokesman said that while there has been "some MIG21 activity" it has not. been °signiflcant." . ·• .. So Do .. rihle!) "I have no doubt tllat ti I bad bad lo mate a report at abont f :JO or 1:'5 a.m. thla momlq I -have bad to say be • in critical conditiaa," said Research llolplbil ~ John Dreves, lollow- lni a -brteftng delayed -an boor by Truman's wonened conditlon. The word "significant'' ls generally u. ed when hostile actJvity results in damage to American men or materiel. 'lbe command spokesman said MIG bases in North Vietn:am have betn among the targets fpr the renewed raids. Student T ells of Futile R escue "By the time the briefing come, the -appeared lo be passing or at Jeuf1mpn>vblc," ho said. Trumm 'HI still considered in "very ltrioul'" ccmditloD which, according to Dftftl, means "be ls very close to critlcal at any time." He also admitted that the runway of Hanoi's Gia Lam civilian airport, never .before struck in any of the American bombings of North Vietnam, had been (See BOMBING, Page 2) Danny Brown, a 'Maruia High · School student who tried to rescue. a man from hla bw:nlng aljlo ·in ·Huntington Beach, will remember Thursday night for the rest of his life. "lt was horrible,'' be said of bis unsuc- cessful attempt to pull David Of.frell of Stanton from the Oaniing wreckage of his car. • ' OUrell's car crashed futo two poles J--• • F 1. • , Vall near the 17-yeat-old's.·home. DaMy said " ngtnne Oll n a1 n ey be was watching . television ~h•n the ;... , crash occurred and he ran outside to see J what happened. ~ "I saw the car on fire across the street, with the man in it." he recalled today. "I ran over to the driver's side, but the door was all smashed in and l could· n 't get It open. So I went around to the pa.Menger side, but by then the whole !ront seat was in flames and all I could do was stand back. "Some peop~e c~e aloog with a camper 'that had wa,ter in it and tried to put out' the fire, but it didn't do much good. ' "Yeah, it was horrible. I could see him inside. He was• waving his arms around and honking. the horn. It was so hor~ rib\e." f anµer Harry FultonDies p · ·1. n· . Blo d · o ice iscover . o Harry C. Fulton came to Fountain ~. "'. 1117 to iann all.Ua and lima -; His lrlend -Gisler bad told him of tlla rich landJ in Fountain VBlley, so "" aod hla wil• ol lour ,..,,. left OnDoryman' s Clo thing • ~ and bouibt a »--!arm on . ._. mrtbwest corner of whit is today "81bert A venue and MagooUa Street. He pold !SOii an am lor 'tand that be IS w.te0 In UfJ2 for f25,000 an acre. lie Mme lciive in lbe ranplnc .com- lil•ilb'. beadln& the drall board during 'fCitid War I. i.t. he was elected to tb6 111iuntaln Valley School Board. <·'l'hunday anei:noon Harry Fulton died 'lit the qe of 11, leaving behind a legacy e(•lllCClllful farming and ctnmunlty ht- 'llllmnenl. "11111erat Services lol-Mr~Fulton"Will-be~ Mild 1t 1 p.nt, Saturday, in Smith's ~ in Huntiqton Beach. He will be ~ at Falrhavon Memorial Patt in ~· •He wu a !Ille neighl>Or 111<1 a good ~tltmU," recaU. Art Gille<, the ~ ol Robert Glaler wllo bad carried ~ 111111 wllb Jl\lltoo in Camlrillo. · "lb'.-llld lither told Harry llbout t11o rlcb i..ct in Fountain Vllley. 'Ille t..i wu too high in Veotura County ao ,Ill deC!tded to move hen/' recalls 'Gisler. Be w11 named to bead tbe draft board 8artDg World War I aod allO -World_ DI AD AT IT H1ny C. Fulton By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of IM Dtlt¥· l'ltft Stiff Runtingtoc Beach police said today they have found "quite a bit of blood" on the clothing or' the Newport Beach doryman who they believe may have kill· ed hla daughter and 'then himsell last week. ~t. · Sgt. Monty McKennon sakJ in· Vestlgators will be· rechecking the dory Sir Qiarles which belonged to fisherman Allan Vaughn KJttabt, 43, Newport'B,.ch. Knight and his S.year-old daughter. Patricia, were last ~n alive Dec. 12 when be took her with him to check hill lobster lraps along the coast. At mid-morning they. were spotted by a Huntlngloo Beach lll'fWlnl as Knight stood in Ibo stern or hla small boat, ap- parenlly cradling hla blonde daug)IUr In bis arms. A lew minutes later, the guant told police he saw the empty boat circling aimlessly near the Huntlngtoo ll<acb Edlaon plant. · death a homicide, but Huntington Beacll detectives say they have carefully pursued the possibilities lhat her death may have been accldentaJ. However. McKennon said today flie possibility lhat the child was cut by the boat's propeller when she fell overboard or that she accidentaJly cut herself on something In th~ boat was "pretty slim." He pointed out that the coroner's report Indicated that a fme-bladed in- strument had caused the deep slash across the child's throat. An old, rusty knife found in the dory was tested for the presence of human blood along with Ibo clothing, but oo blood was found on the blade. McKennon noted that the rusty knlle's hlade w.., too coane to have caU!ed the wound on the tot's throat. Countian's Car Crashes; Driver Dies in Flames A Stanton man burned"to death thurs- d'ay night before a horrified Huntington Beach teenager who had tried to rescue the man moments before his car ex· ploded. Police said> David W. otrrell, '50, of · Stanton died after his 1972 foreign luxury sedan crashed into a power pole and a light· standard at' the intersection of Springdale Street and McFadden Avenue in Huntington Beach shortly before mid- night. Danny Brown, 17, w~ home.at 8022 ·Vane Circle Js close to lhe hitersection, told police he heard the crash ancl"rushed to the car to try to aid Olfre!L Officers said tbe teenager tried to get the car door open, but the auto burst into Dames, driving him back. When police and nre units &rTived at the tcene of the crash, they found the $9,000 car completely Involved ln names. Traffic investigators today are a~ tempting to piece together the caUBe of the accident. They said skid marU in- dicate Offrell was driving touthbound on Springdale when he went Into a four- . wheel skid. as he approached the in- tersection. The car apparently crossed the in- tersection and jumped the curb, striking the two poles on the IOUtheast corner. Santa Taking Plione Orders rr your chlldrt.n hayeo't gotten around to mailing their letters to Santa Claus, they'll be able to reach hllll by pboOI !rem Hun- llngton Beach, . War n tro11e out "If w11 aa boinorable. also participated In tho actlvlUea or lbe --jloolllon'iit-days, 1114-Gloler~-"""!•e.Jana.ollbe.Jl!lkioll W.tll,_,_ I• ltll, Mr ......... w11 11ec114 to tbe llr-Fulllln enJo111l r.nntnc bul 11 • nlain V•""".....,.l bolnL He oarved 1111 Mlolllg ,lllMlm come In l'ollntaln ~·s body was found a week later, Jla!Jiii 1boul a bat{ mile_.,lQ,sea.tnd bl!_ _ daullller'• body wii!1iil a!liiire at the Huntlrrgton Beach pier 10 boun later. ~ ---hU~i~S:~~~~~- ,ou _,, ' ' vane,, lligb. tues lorced him to .. u hi• ,. tho boant lor :IO yon. . ta t~ an elementary school was Janet It eventually became the Cerdlnal "iamlll -hi111. housing development Re w11 • member of the Senta An1 He retired 'to Huntington Beach where Sib Lodlt lot more lllan 1$ years and (Set FULTON, ..... II I ~ --_, • ., The case, which was prawned to· haV'e been a double drowning, took en une.x· pected tum when it was discovered lhat the girl'• throat bad been silt. The Oran(e Count)' ... roner ruled her -' . ,, _,_ :• I . the North Pote. It will be open untll 8:30 tooigh< and on Saturday from 2 p.m. lo I p.m. The number to eall II 5*7581; ~\ tbe majority of the board members still support the concept of two schools. This represents the views of truJtees Dennis Mangers, B a u e r and John Bentley who passed the resolution to go to the voters for the $27 million. If the bond passes, funds for one acbool will be allocated immediately while tbe other campus will be built onJy lf studles show it is absolutely needed, trustees agreed. Dr. Learv's .. Follower s Now Sought By TOM BARLEY Of the O.llr l'llel lllff Christmas greetings In the !onn or ar- rest wa1Tants and a copy Jf a multi-page Orange County Grand Jury indictment are being delivered today to 28 alleged members of the "Brotherhood or Eternal Love" drug culL founded by Dr. Timothy Leary, the DAILY PILOT bas learned. The arnsts. almost all of tbem in Laguna Beach, Costa Me!I. Newport Beach and ;funtington Beach;-will bring to 46 the number of defendants rounded up as alleged. conspiraUn ln Ill orpntiatlon de9ttilit<I by lawmen u 11> offshoot or Leary's original Leque of Splrilual-~.,Y (LSD)~ - Tiro men were arrested in Hawall Thursday by Honolulu palice who are stlll -g lbe lalin<is ffJr a man delcrlbed . today as a "key figure" In the drug ring -Robert L. "Fat BObby" Andrbt, 29. It was learned tdday that the Orange County Grand Jury has: been Involved for several weeks and most intensively dur- ing this past w~k in preparing a new in- dictment that wa.s still being withbe1d at press time today. n.SSistant District attorney E d Freemsn admitted today that the in- dictment was being prepared but refused to release lbe names of 28 persons cbarg· ed with mu1tiple narcotics counts pending the arrest of ,,. indlctees. Freeman cooOrmed that transients Calvin L. -Delaney, 30, and Ronald R. Crawford, 25, were picked up in Mau1, Hawaii, by local police working on in- formation supplied by Orange County authorities. Both men have advised Hawaiian authorities from their quarters in the Honolulu jail that they will fight a move by Orange County lawmen to return them to this area . "It may take several weeks to get them back here in view o. prolonged ex· tradltion proceeding.'' Freeman said. Freeman said Delaney was last seen Jn the Southern California area in June when be was arrested by Riverside Coun- ty narcotics orficers who claim be bad 20 pounds of ; 1shish and SlS,000 on bis person at the time. Freeman said they are the ooly arrests he expects to make In the Hawaiian Is1ands wtless lawmen there manage to produce the elualve And:r1st. The former Art C.Olory resident baa (See CULT, hp I) Oraage Weatller It'll be cloudy when you 10t up on Saturday, but don't ll'el. The weatherlady aaya akiet will clear by midday to IWIDY llldes and tem- peratures of a at the beaches and 70 inland. Ovemlghl lows -" INSmETODAY For the dghCll. comecutive 11<•'· th< DAILY PIWT u "°"' ori110 Ou top commMnity the- ater actors and accr1sies i" Or- ange Counl~. Whiner• o/ &he 1912 DP a10CJ1"d.I are mtftOtHICcd I• toda~'s Weekendn. .... _ . -" -. ( .......... ,. .. ----. --. ·-.., , ..... _... ' -.. ... .._ .. ... -. --..... ' I -- 2 DAILY PIL_Dr ____ H ____ •.:_rldol=·----'--'11.=.:.1m;_ Bope_s .Baited Consumer Prices Take New Climb WASHINGTON IAP ) -d>nsumer priets climbed another three-tenlbs of I percent in November, virtually era5ing Jlresident Nixon's hope of bringing the inflation rate down to thrte percent or leis in 1973. The Labor Drpartment 's an- Air Victims Live Through Andes Ordeal SANTIAGO (AP) -Two Uruguayans who survived a plane crash and l"-'O rnonths in the snow and cold or the high Andes mountains guided a s e a r c h helicopter today to the crash site and lt other aurvivors. police reported. An cfficlal announcement said the wreckage of the plane "waa sighted at 7:40 PST by helicopter pilot commander Jorge Massa." The announcement said the plane 1vas very high up in tte mountains. and SOO\Y and bad weather made immediate rescue virtually tmpouible. Tv•o crash survivors, who managed to reach civilization after a walk and climb or more than 10 days, helped Chilean rescue teant1 locate the plane, a two-- engine Fairchild belonging to the Uruguayan air force . The two, Roberto Canessa Urta and Fernando Parrado DoJiay, were picked up early today by a police patrol. Caoetsa and Parrado told authorities that 14 persons are still alive, some of them injured. The plane, accardlnR to radio reports. appeared partly burled in heavy snow. about 12,000 feet up in the Andes, some 45 milei inland from the small town of San Fernando. San Fernando ls about 110 miles IOUth of Santiago. Radio reports reaching San Fernando quoted ean.... and Parrado u ay!ng el&bt penoos died 1.mmed.lately when the plane cruhed. One was uJd to be the pilot. Another 19 or 20 we:re said to have died later, buried under snow after a heavy atorm. .. Thi plane, a propeller-:.dr\ven aircraft, wu. ~ hoanl lrom Oct. lJ while trylni to crou the Andt! from Ar&entlna to Chile ln a heavy 1DOW1torm. It carried a crew or five and 40 passengers, all r rt ol the Old CbrlstliDB rugby !<Wli of Montevideo, Urueuay, on their way to Chile to play a .series o/ games, ST ALL llTK -Sarvtwra ..••..... Marj A mountain cattle hand, Serglo C.talan, 44, brought the report of the Uruguayan 1urvlvor1. Cltal1n walked for five houra Thursday to a pollce oulp08t to aound lhe alarm. He told police that he found the survivors signaling to hJm from acrou a amall mountain rapid. 11'ie noln of lhe case1.din1 water prevented Catalan from bearing what the two 1ald. The two then ICl'lbbled a note on paper, wrapped lt around a stone, and thrtw it across the g<qe. The note, 11id Catalan, wa1 acribbled partly with a felt pen and partly "With llp1llct. It 1aid: "We are Uruguayans from a plane that crashed . There are 14 more up, We have been walking for a IOllg lime. When are you aoing to come? Some of us are in- jured. We have nothing tc eat." Catalan told police the t~1urvlvors had long beards and lone ha d looked roughed up from er:poaure. e aald he tossed them several pieces ot bread be had In a bag. The police outpost al a vlllaa:e called Puente Negro called tor reinforcements from San Fernando and organlud patrols thlt aet out early Thunday after- noon. OIAN61 COAST "" DAILY PILOT • nouncement today said two-tblrds ol the rise was contribu ted by higher prices far food. clothing and residential gas. Beef price1 roae instead of decllning subltantlally, as they usually do. NJxon yesterday e1tended into Jt'TS l he 1LL1penslon of m@at lmporl quota• Jn hope of curbing the rise of beef on the hoof and in mea t markets. The November living cost indei: at 128.9 ercent of the 1967 ave.rage, was 3.5 percent above a year ago. The actual lnctease In November was tw1;teaths of 1 perceat, but when ad· Justed for normal seasonal treodt, the rise was three-teallu1 of 1 percent and matched the tncruse of a month earlier. Pri ces In the last three months, lDltead of declln!ng to levels between 2 arid t percent as would have betn required to meet the anti-inflation goals, roee at a 4.2 percent rate, the departm ent reported. This compared with 2.9 percent in the preceding three montha. In another economic development, New York's First National City Bank, the coun try's second largest bank, the Mellon Bank of Plttlburih, the 14th biggest, to- day raised their prhne leading rates to f percent, in the face of the Nl1on ad· ministration's campaign to keep down bank interest rates. Citibank, which earlier modified its prime rate fonnula to appease the Admln!slrallon. said the boost from 57-4 percent will lake effect on Monday, the same day Mellon increases lta rate from 51' percenl On Thundaf, New York'• lrvilll TIU1t Co .. the 11th llr&••t bank, lllllOIDICld It was temporarily changtns tbe method u. ed In calculallrig Ill prime, or mlnlmmn interest rate on oorpor1te Joana. The lm· mediate ef.ftct will be to forutall a boolt lo 6 ~t trom 511 percent under the bank 1 old formula. With IO!lle banb holcllna the line on In- terest rates, and others Onatened with federal action U they don't do likewile, tha atocl: markel took heart and llaged 1 modett advaoCe U11a momfnl. The final Dow J01111 averace of !O lndllllrlal llocb cklled up 4.21 po!nta at 1,004.21. The fndlcator declined more than 17 potnta: tb1I week on news of aetbacia to peace proopecl1 In Vietnam, and c1oted Tbureday at euctly 1,000. The Dow had not dropped below the 1,000.polnt level alnco Nov. II, wben It first clOled above thJt hlatoric barrier. Limerick Drive . ' ' Resident Wins Decorating Fet,e The winners or the annual Christmas City decorating contest hive been an- nounced by the Women'• Dlvilion of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Com- Sweepstakes wtnner is Allen Quinn, 6601 Umerlck Drtve. Grand Award winners are Robert Bonillas, 17711 Collie Lane ; Alvin Nichollon, 1U Adams Ave.; B i 11 Bourland, lMBl Trude Lane; R°"5 Jocl<Jn;I!>. 21401 Pine\ret Lane; and James Andereon, 1382 Shayne Drive. Allo roc•lvlnl Grand Awmll are John Seibert, 1706 Park St; Jolm A. Flawa, 1011 12th St.; George Greenan, 20641 Goshawk Lane: George Parke, GU Warner Ave,; the Sea Air MobU Home Park, 6241 Warner Ave. and American B@auty Florlst, l?Ml Beach Blvd. Speclll A wan!a were slven to 'fl homeownen and bualneumen, The win· ner1 are: Sharon Helt. 17081 Frlml Lane; Art Birkheimer, 17&21 BUD Harbor Lane: Leonard Burke, 6761 Rook Drtve ; Deiter Klnnard, U41 Wa.mer Ave.: Dan Reynolds, 6241 Warner Ave.; Roy Davidson, liUI Warner Ave. and Kevin Chard, 16111 Nor1Jove Clrcle, AllO Mory Rogers, 117'1 Softwlnd Drive; John O. Lowe, 15031 Vktorla Lane<: Nancy Corcoran1 Goldenwut Tract; Fred Snlpp, 1&771 WUlet Lane ; Judy Ramey, llOl Hell Ave,; Tammy Owens, 1!311t Bay Shore Lano ; Gerald Graham, tllCll Melody Laoe; W~ Hendricks, tan Monterey Lane~ Stave and Geofla Reed, 11111 Wandenr Lane, and Chari• Webater, 11111 Pua Drive. And the SOUthetn Calllornll Bdlloo Company, Paclllc COalt H 11bw1 y : Charles A, Fr~1• llllSI Newland 81.; Robert Shedore, 11111 New!aad St.; PhU Balaton, 80 Hunllnt!ton St.; Jell lrvlnt, 816 Joliet Ave.; Warner Flllllly, 17'12 Park St; Vlrl)nl1 Lauer, 1%21 Park St; Ollie Rider,-!OD !Ith St.; Ton> N<Old, 1010 Main St., and M11n Street LJbr1ry1 525 ~lain St. Fre•P .. eJ FULTON ... he lived at Ill 11th St. until bta dealh. Hls wife of 58 years, MUdrtd, died In SCplem~. He ta lllrVIVed by t1'0 dauiJilen, ldah Tedlonl and Charlolle Fullo!., both of Looi Beocb ; two 1l11at1, Bllll<ht Behal· !er, of Ventura and Beult Oardlol of SOUth Like Tahoe, and one srand- dauahtcr, Marte Tedlord of Lona Beoch. Ruse Satellite Up MOl!Ol}f (AP} -Tilt lovlel UnlOll rtported It launclwd anothat Ooarno• aa!.lUte Thunday, tha llilth In the owet series. Tau 11ld the time of 11.J Ortt orl>lt .... ns m1nu1 ... I • ..... ~ .. ·~· • ~"'. ' .... : FQRE1(3N MINISTRY r: . . ..... 41. -• ~ "··.. ~ : .; "·"·'.. . . .. "" .... ~ . \' . YEN VIEN .-RAILROAD YARDS • .. . - • -- • . . . ' OILD£POT'- • • • ,.&: .. '-,.:;!. J. - ! RADIO STAT'ON . . - • .& MILITARY SITl;S • UP'I ..._.., DEVASTATION REPORTED IN HANOI AS U.S. BOMBING OF NORTH VIETNAM CONTINUES Eight 852 Bombers lost Sina Raids Began Mond•yi 43 Americans Listed•• Missing Hanoi Held Responsible For Safety of U.S. PO)V s Yanks Continue Air Strikes Despite Losses KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI} -The White Houte llld todoy the United Stat" II boldJni Hanoi "rupcm1lble and , .. countable" for the aafety of Amerlct.n POW1 durlnc U.S. air att1cb on North Vlelnam. l'na Secrelary Ronald L. ZleQler made the oommett In . ..._ to .. porlen' queltion lbout a llaaoJ ~ o/ damqe durlnc a nld to a camp wller. 101119 POW1 ue be!na d. ZlecJer aald the White llaule bail no ln-lonnaUm to confirm the lllDol nport. "' then 1114: "Thero CID be no ci.-about the fact lbat the United Slltea holds Hanoi ,.opoaalble Ind aceountlble llir the _. er U..tmeat of the u n I !e d Slate•' prilonen of war be.Jd by the North Viet· namese under the pro~ of the Gen- eva agreement." Zleiler a8id. "Thia lncludff mpimlblllty of not re- lllnlng prllOMn of war In or near military target areas." Tbe North Vietnamese said in a Hanoi broadcut that dlllin& one of the numel'OUI raldl on HanOl this week, the so-<alled Hanoi Hlltoo prtaon ' tamP. - where many POWs are believed held - was damaaed and IODlC penana wound- ed. The broadcast did nol say specifically that POWa were hurt. Ziegler also told reporters that Pre31· denl Nixon WN determined to take every 1ttp poulble "to brtn& a rapid end to tne war with a neptllited aettlemel But," be lald, "the neit step ta totally up to the North Vie-:· The Admlniltrat!oo ccotendl th•t deoplte the lnlenoe American bomblna. It II lnt?llJllomco m 'the pall of North v1e1n1111 tliat 11 boldlna up a P.•ce * * * BOMBING •.. "cratered" by bombs. He declined to speculate as to how MIG.s were able to operate with their bases under 1ttack. The Indlan government lllllOUDCed t<> day in New Delhi that American bombs oa Thursday struck the Indlan chancery in Hanoi. Chamber Ladies Reveal Winners Of Yule Contest The Women'a -Dtvlllon ol tho Fountain Valloy Ownbtr of Commoroa u.· an- nounced the wlnnen of the dty'J Chriltmos Decora1iJ11 Coateat. Sweepalake1 wllmon ue llr, and Mn. Fron~ Clllle';"tffllliiiliii,.Cliclt. Other wlnnera lnclude: Jl'ounllln Valloy Flori1t, 1877 Garllald Ave., bualnesa 1Welpstak11; Mr. and Mn. John Ma&ner, 11070 ca~ St1 moat nU,lowl ; Mr. and Mn. MllDllll Wl!oon, llWI Sandalwood St.lniimoct lllllllllll, alld Mr. and Mrs. w m Rudo, mo La Eoperan:a. Santa Speclll. Additional winners Include: Mr. and Mrs. John Richard, 111211 Cal<!lnll Clr<le, most humoroul ; Mr ..... Mrs. J-h Flnn<U, 16111 llbadbulb II., llnt placo1 mool ellocllft -ol 'IWlllor; Mr. ana Mra. Cblrloa A. 111omi'o,.·lli0 Warner Ava., and Mr. and Mn .. ~ MOlllOUf, 9620 w,....,. A-..,11e-n:. place, lllOlt ollecUVe 1111 ol • .\loo, Topper Stea llou!e, 1006S Garfield Ave., belt w\adpw deconUon; FOlll\taln Valley Flodal, llt1l)>l ... , besl Indoor and outdoor dooarltlm, and P. J. Cllp Joint, 18970 Garllold /i,ve., ll!COnd place, but Indoor and outdoor decor•· Uon. r aareement. A NW>n emlmry, Grn;;A!uander M. Half, returned tod•y trOfu a vl1h to Saf&on and conferred for two houri with NlJ:on. He broqbt with him J!alcon'• ttaponse to a reported Nb:on ••rntnl not to tey to torpedo any 11reomeot Waahlniton reachet with Hanoi. ZlesJer Aid In l'OIJ>Olll9 to a question thJt Nlaon had no plan to report to the naUon on Vietnam dur!ni the Cbriltmas period. Hell. deputy to Nlxon'1 Vietnam noaotlator Henry A. Klulnier, arrived at the J'lorida WJi1te Hollll~alter dawn aod bad bnakl•!ll wUb er_ or to 1 conference "Ith Nlron and er. Halg visited other lFSolJthea$'1 Asia capilal1 as well as Saigon to rt;port on the lmpaue In KJ.ll1nler1s negotiations witb North VJetnam over a Ceasefire agreement. South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu baa been openly criUcal or aeveral part.I ot the October tentatve U.S.·Nortb V\et.namese agreement. Kissinger said Saturday in disclosing the deadlock that it waa not South Viet- nillle&e objections th&: ,..,.. boldlng up a finil ~ment, and said no one would be allowed tu v@to a U.S. agreement. . llalJ ,hnlal)ll •b&cj. ~ with Thiell ID Salp ~ tetllt .~ to a Ni.on 'leuer ·11111, .,....,,,n1 to south Vietname11 '°""*• JlarfleSl Thieu that he -Id faee a C!lltolf Of ml1ltaty and ecooomic aid U be tielked at :e·ventual peace lllttlement tomta worked out with the Oommllllllta bY the United States. " ' · By UGJted PN11 l.Qtematloul SAIGON -U.S. ah: .strikes against North Vietnam enter fifth day despite heavy losses; tiaooi RadJo reporta three more B5ls ahot down, says MI.Ga have been used aaaJnst U.S. plane~ KEY BISCAYNE, I'll. -Gen, Alex- ander M. Haig Jr., returns frnm Saigon with P@rsbnal reply to Pruldent Nlmn to a reported Nixon notice of a cutoff of U.S. aid to South Vietnam U It does nol go along wttb a peace settlement. VATICAN CITY -Pope Paul VI ay• motives for breaking olf Parll peace talks and •teJ>l>lni up hostUIUes In Vie~ nam appear "lnRffktentl' CIUI fOll tnd of "palnful delay" In 1191olllllool~ ''to ICCW't a more atahle and aoUd foundatioa lot peace.'' '\,· .WASHINGTON -State Deputmtnt remains silent on renewed air war despite flurry of worldwide protests. Spokesman has no comment on Radio Hanoi claims thal U,S. warplali11 damaged U.S. prisoner of war camp In bclmbing raid noar HflllOf. But Penlaaon spokesman says If report ii factual, Hanoi is to bllime for housing prllonert iii arta "expoeed to danaen of war" ln violatJoo of Geneva Convention. PARIS -Both Communllt deleptlom .,..alk out on Tbundty11 rwgular puce talks aelllon 1n prote1t over bombtnt mumpUon.. North Vletnamele hive no comment on Radio Hanoi report that they wUI boycott lower-leval "teclmlcal" talkl Saturday, but U.S. doleptlonl AYI meeting II lt1D on. LAMPS-PICTURES -ACCESSOllllS I l HOLIDAY SALE It's the little things that can inal• the dif· ferenco, Stop by tod1y and view our fine aoioet!Oft, now spocielly priced. If it's for o 9lft, or for you personolly, you'D find Jutttli. thing to enhonco any homo for tho holldoy, DlOOL-HERITAG64fENREDON-WOOOMAA~RASTAN INTlllO 111 WDKDAYI •SATURDAY$ t :OO 11 li.10 l'IHDAY 'TIL 9100 r l l •......... 1 CULT •.•. • . . OYadOd bll punuara since tlle ~ Brotherhood lndJctmenl WU 111\Jed IUt Aupill. LI-~ et¥kJllld Jhot the ........ for tha .,,...,..~ )Ill oow been extended to other areas In the United States. .. · ''The poople we want are 1n .the beach cltle1 ol Oran(t Coun{.y,"· Fr<eman aald • "That's where we are working today and thJl{'a where we ,.tn be working thrGJghout the Christmas wt!ektnd untll au our arrnta ir'e'made." Pollce In Laauna Belo .Newport Beach,' Coall 11.... 411'1 Huntlf111D~ Beach .... ··cooporatlng with Orange County Sheriff's olflcer'1 agcnt.s from tbe Federal Bure4u o! Narcotics and Dang...., Dnlp, 1"'111 from Ill<!. state's BUttau of Ntrcotlca Enforcemen' tnd U.S. aiatoms of!!cort In • joint sweep that hu become known aa lht Orange County Dru1 and Narto1lc1 Tuk Force . Free.man uid tbo11 nan\ed In the neW fnd.ictment wlU join ts· penom earllq name<I In the alle&ed Brotherhood con- spiracy -a total of 46 defendants. "And this isn''t by any means the end of the roa~," a weary District Attorney'~ investigator commented tblJ momina. Superior Court Judge Raymond Vin- cent bu be'1J aOlely occupied in recent wee.kl with tbe flood of paper work aer cumulated ln the fonn .Of multiple moa tlons · flied by the batlery or def..,. lawyers' hired by the Brotherhood defen· dants. - Several defendants have had their names removed from the indictment dur/ ing that time via dismiualJ and pleas o guilty to reduced charges. Among them was David Mark Reddy; 23, 33801 Street ol the eop.-Lan1ern! Dana Polnt, who' faces a state prlaod term of up to 10 Yfil'S following a plea oC guilty to amended drug charg• anq violation of an earlier probat!Oh. ' ; But 'Reddy mutt flrst aerve a one year: t....,. In feder-1 pr1'°" on drug charges> sub.!tantiaUy a"mended from those filed when he; Brian Kendall McAdams, 25; 20286 Laguna can.on · Road, l,oguna· Beach, and Thomu Blake BldWtll, 26, o~ Garden Grove, 'fftre arrtatecl l rt Portland, Oregon, 1a1t Jan. JS. • The trio were accused of stufnng Q million worth or hashish into a truck ~ was belni shipped on a Dulch lrelgbtar from Bombay, lndll to Vancouver. Canada. .... All three received one l"lr jail term but Orange Co u n t y "Broth.-hood" charges against Bidwell w,e re lat~· dismissed ln Judge Vincent's coortroon1 and the defendant shi pped off to Lompoc: prilon. ,. z P.1cAdams bas been ordered to f~ trial March 26, on charges contained in U,., orlldnal lndlctment. The IlrSt of &eYeral trials stemmtna from the first Brotherhood lndi~Clll ~' }l!L.;Jll~~....l-~Rl!.1-1.eroy Ci'\llendell. 211-;Drt.Ollg Bdcb. ln II!• !W•ndaJll'• c;llair. . . • '· . ~w;;}=.~\.y"'i:e·~ ed to Oranae County to face chanlai leveled arainlt him In the 'llfal Brotherhood lndlctment. "But that's only 1 dim ponlblJUr,:: Chl.t Dep!lly Dtstr!ct Attomey J....,_ Enrlfht lald. "Dr. Leary 'has beoi orderod lo leave Swltwland by Dec. 31 but I thlnl< thet Orange County wW IM be on the llat of placu be has put on hM Cbriltmls Ult N pollfble f u t u r e. bavena." " Leary: oougbl r<f\lae In , 6wltrerland alter a br!ef IOjoun\ In Alelrlo lollowlzw bta OICape from prllon In San Lub Ob!Jpo, ' The LSD culllJI had been "7:!!J pr11on term !mpoeed In Oranae · lollowtna hil .....t on clrui char&" In Laguna Beach on Cbrtalnw day ol Jl'ltl. NEWPORT HACH e 1727 WESTCLIPF Dk.. • ,, ' M.1~010 - LA8UllA IV.Cl'! .. 141 NOUH COAIT HWy, 49441SI TOUANCE e JJ'-it, fiAWTHO*Nt llVD1 111:1tH ' • . • ) ' Frida" Dtctmbtr 22, 19n H O.lll't' PILOT Kidnapers Free Dallas Dehutante S111ile, Winners Christ mas Briglit Spots Reve'aled If you're lookln& for Ibo ""'°"'' brlahlosl ll&hll Ihm are IO!lle hlnll !n- sjde !be DAILY PILO'I' loday. Wllb Ibo belp of 1' parlldpallna oommunlUes, Ibo ···40 Miles of CJ.riltmu Smiles" com. miltee bu again belped gllt wrap Ibo coaat. Winners of the annual competiUon fo~ presented In a picture page oo Page Otbtr oulstaoding dlsplays of the seuoo (both at private homes and at llQres and public buildings ) are listed In a story accompanying more pictures on the cover page of loday'1 Weekender. Judges of the !fSmllea" contest co- opoilaor<d by !be DAILY PILOT and Orange County O>osl Aasocllltlon Ibis year were: , , · Stan Andersob, former Seal Beach mayorj Huntington Bea~ City Coun- cilman Ted Bartlett; Coota Mesa City Counclbnan Bob Wlllon ; Newpert Beach City Councilman Howard Rogers; and Ken Sampson, county director of parks, beacbel and recreation. Local contest sponsors for 1972 in- Goodb ye, Mr. Chips Buena Part police have dubbed it the "potato cblp caper." The victim was walking akmg sidewall< In a ,..ldentlal area In Ibo 7900 bk>ck of Orchid Drive when an armed ruspect leaped from behind a tree, police said. He demanded lbe h88 lbe viclbn was carrying and be got It. Loss: One h88 of potato chips. Value: 29 cents. County Reveals Computer Errors In Election Pay eluded : Capialrano S.ac:h Chamber of Con> merte, Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce, Costa Mesa JlDllor Chamber o! Commerce, CUlvenlale Arcbltectural Commiltee (Irvine). Dana Po In t Chamber of Commerce, Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce ( W o m e n ' s Division ), Huntington Beach Chamber of commerce , Laguna Beach J u n I or Chamber ol Commerce. Laguna Niguel Homeowners Associa- tion, Late Forest Be.ICb and 'Teonla Club, Mission Viejo Homeowners A190Clation, Newport Ra~r Chamber Qf Commerce, San Clemente Chamber of Commerce and Seal Beach Chamber of Commerce. Each local spoMOr was allowed to nominate one residence and one mn- resldence for the areawide compeUUon. · Only seven winners are selected along f.he·1140 miles" -first, second and third place in each of the two categories, plus the "place where Chriatmas ls happening along the Orange Coast," the area the judges designate Chrlstmasville 197%. Lion Country Aide Mauled By Lioness A ~pound offspring of Frasier the sensuowJ lion, pulled a senlor park ranger from a fence at Lion Country Safari Thursday and severely mauled him before being forced back by groundsmen, part officials reported. Stephen R. Craig, 28, Costa Mesa, was still in the intensive care unit of Mtsalon Viejo Community Hospital lb~ morning after Wldergolng IJiree.bours of 11ll'gery in which an estimated 400 stitches were required to close bis wounds. However, hospital officials described Craig's condition as "satisfactory" and said be would probably be released in a week unless complications develop. Craig suffered fang and claw injuries to his lace, back, and neck, according to park officials. He was attacked by a two-yeaNld Computer and clerical errors which lioness named Benjie. Prior to the attack resulted In el«tloo workors belni in-park officiab comldered ber one of Ibo C"':'<clly paid were revealed by Vic A. park'a DIOll docile call. The animal ,,.1 Beun, QrJllle_CouMY auditor-eomroller. ~blbysittlna'' a-Utter-of-young cub& at Helm saJd leUershOd &eell aelit IO!lr Ille" lime of tbe Incident and offlclats "! """ 1,000 deputy rqlsirara, ableotee apeculaled lbOt Ibo may simply bave 60llol coonUng boards or poet election· been prolecllng lbem , wortei:a in November who had received · ''That protective in~uDct can be really ~ for 1ncotrect amounts. strong and you never .tnow when It will Helm uked that they either return the come out " said Dale CouUer assistant checb that they have recetved or remit manager ~f the park, this mo~g. the amount by person.al check. The "But you can never be sure what the cbecb were malled Tuesday. lion was thtnking, either. Benjie may just :. S<xne worbra ,..... ovupald and bave been being pllyful. Wbat Is playful others underpaid, Heim: uid, but most of for a lion is not playf\11 for a man." lbe l,000 were oorTedly paid. Al Ibo lime ol tbe Incident, Craig was "ii Is hoped !bat all persons receiving atop . a 13-lool fence repairing a nylnn aucb ootlcOs wU1 .,_.ale," Helm aald, sbadlna canopy . .. since lt wUJ greatly a.al.rt our efforts to Benjie reportedly entered the area. mail chects for the correct amount." :: ~from public view , and Large Industry Complex Eyed For 'Capo Area ,itAn International manufacturer of ~ 'equlpmelit loday &nnounced It '1110 develop 29 acres ln the city of San Ji&an caplstrano into a major manufac- brtng complex of sophlsUcated elec-ionks cear -an operation calcUlatetl lo iioploy huiiilreds' of l<cbnlc:laru!. ~ announcement, made today at a hlncb<on In lbe Mllsloo Community ~e from Becton, Dlcklnflon and Com- pMny which seven! yean ago purchased a large pared of land In !be north 8eCllon of lbe city. Productl from Ibo manufacturer bear the familiar B&D label. lnlltal proposals by lbe firm to -bllsh operations In San Juan came.In 19f0, but were stalled for a Ume. )oday'1 announcement, bow e v e r , tlgbtem-up Ibo projOd. ' ' Tbe lnlltal proposals caned lot a.15- mUJon Industrial complex wltb a Door space of up to 100,000 square feet: 'Tbe aMual payroll WU --~ In 1'IO to rtach f!S million. • ':i'!>e plan! wru be located, ulcf iqiObsmen !or Ibo Orm , aJoni lbe eaal sli1e of Ibo San Diego Freeway IOlllb of tbe Serra o!lrall)p on land wblch former- ly l'U j>art of Rancho Loo Cerrilof. ' Si>ecllJc: detalll about """1StrUCllon, amended dollar amounta: 8lld other in.. fonmtloo wu expected to he aJllllUllCed Jalf this alt<rnoon. aon Juan bas IOOl'tld well on the -bllahmenl ol llahl lnduat1y. Ttu. lltest move, however, wm involve Y larleat alngle factory operallon lbua !alto cbooaa lbe city u a home. ' City Manager~amed SAN JOSE (AP) -Ted Tecleaco cl!y iaioagar of Boulder, Colo., wu c!.iien ~ lo take over tbat job he!e e!- !ecllve Feb. 15, !Illini a poet vacant lor nearly a year. Tedelco, 411 wu h!red J>y the city couricll on a 4-S votei I "She look a great llylng leap, grabbed Steve, and they came down together, with Benjie on top," according to Jerry Kobrin, Lion Country viceiftsldent. Two nearby groundJmen Immediately came to Craig's rescue, forcing the lion back bx hilljngllec.wllb shovel1. er.Ii: bleeding ')irofusely, was rushed by car to lbe hospital by park officlals without waiting for · an ambulance. He was reported oonscio111 at the hospital prior to surgery. . "Benjie was one of the most docile cubs we've ever had," said Kobrln. "She's been around people all her life and made counUess appearan c e s lbrouahoul Orange County." Officials said the lioness would not be destroyed. Fullerton Woman Burns in Car Crash A Fullerton woman burned to death early today when her car smashed into a block wall and burs! Into flame. Police said Alice Ruth 3tuckey, 46, of 143~ Rolling HillB Drive, was alcne in the vehicle northbound on Lemon Street, near Shadow Lane, when tllle accident oc- curred. Police Sergeant Jerry Mason said the car was totally engulfed In flames when he arrived at the scene. .. FBI Captures Triple Killer HEMET (AP) -R&ymond ldus Hudgens, 31, • convicted triple ,. nurdertr who eecaped Nov. 11 from Arl2ooa Stale Prison In J1orence, bas been captured near lbia Riverside County community, autborlU" said loday. Hua,.nt escaped Iron> lbe prllon with Owrtet Sclunk1, another . 'tlple....mulder lll'-clbn~­ over ~ fence. Scbm1d wu C'l;ptUred tine days later In 'l\ICIOll. Rlvmfde Coun!y 1 berIfI '1 deplillel u ld Rudgtna wu cap- tured Thuraday nlcht by depuUes and FBI agenta. They gave no olber delllla lmmedlaiel)'. · ' UPI T4'le!IM .. KIDNAP VICTIM GETS HER CHRISTMAS PRESENT EARLY Al lee 0.1ley With Husband Joe After Release for $250,000 Six-week Delay Ordered In 'Taj Mahal' Hearing A slx·week delay was ordered today in an Orange County Superior Court hearing that will produce a date for the trial ol Laguna Hills financier Joseph Dulaney and h1.s wife or dismissal of charges en- dorsed by !be Grand Jury. Judge James Turner rescbeduled to Feb. s the bearing on a motion to dismiss II felony counts agalnsl tbe coople. He made comment on tbe act.ion this morn- ing. ~.~.and-his Wife;,Marlene.,33, 2633 vlA Cateecli&I, .San Clemeate1 IU'e ~ oo ·their promise to appear for that hearing. Defense attorney Robert Law said to- day he is confident that many if not all the charges against his clients will be dismissed In view of documentation he is compiling for the court. Law said most of the charges against the Dulaneys are based on statements D}ade by former investors in Oulaney's World Financial Trends empire in Laguna Hills. The ii~ Sii<fbiS ife-w eVideoCe ~ "'1JnOl!I certainly" .,.Wt ln·di.smlssal <ii the multiple 'alleg,at1ons. Brothers Nabbed Counting Ransom DALLAS (UPll -Allee Amanda "Mandy" Dea1ey, the debut an~ e daughte r-in-law of the president of the Dallas Morning News, was released unharmed today by "foul-talking" lddna- pers who held the newly~ blonde for three days, threatened to kill her and then collected $250,000 ransom. Sheriff's deputies later broke into en apartment at nea rby Gafland and ar- rested two men "while they were coon· ting the money." The suspects are brothers and sur- rendered without a fight. Charged with lddnaping were Franklin J. Ransonette, 33, and Woodrow H. Ransonette, 31. The e n t I r e quarter-million-dollar ransom was recovered, authorities said. An FBI agent said Dallas Cowity sheriff's deputies broke into the apart· menl and surprised the suspects "while they were counting the money. There Was no trouble." Six hours earlier, the kldnapers put goggles on the Z:Z.year-old blonde beauty before dawn and set her free on a street comer In Ibo posh suburb of lllgbland Parl<. "Count to a thous.and and your daddy will be here," one k.idna per told ber. But she was picked up by an FBI agent and Dallas County Sheriff Clarence Jones. When the 5-8, 135-pound wife of Joe M. Dealey Jr., 25, was found safe, she whispered, "I'm all right." She said she saw only two men during her ordeal. "I was scared to death the whole time," Mandy said. "But I gradually got used to it 1 felt more relieved Wednes- day wh e n one of the men told me: 'Don't worry, you'll be home for Christmas.' " Dealey said his fathe r, Joe M. Dealey Sr., president and chler executive officer of the A. H. Belo Corp., which publishes the Dallas newspaper, paid the $250,000 ransom. It was made through a secret "drop" at a deserted shopping center. "Needless to say, there was a lot of Wallington Succumbs ARLINGTON, Va. CAP) -Jimmy Walllnglon, one of the big time radio an- nouncers in the 30s and 405, died ThW'l- day night after a long illness. He was 64. Wallington was best1 Mown IF'tbe;;a. nouncer on the EddJe Cantor and Fred Allen radio shows for many yea.rs. crying, a lot of hugs and kisses," said the socialite's husband . "Thi3 is going to be the best damn Christmas anybody ever wished for." He then gave his wife her holiday present early - it was a single strand of pearls which be draped arowid be.r neck. They lhen kissed. Dealey and Mandy were marr\ed six weeks ago in a gala ceremot1) and they honeymooned at Dragon Bay in Jamaica. The kidnape rs grabbed her as ahe returned to the couple's apartment Tue~ 'day, then demanded ransom through telephone calls to his rather's house. "Their scare tactics scared I.he hell out of me ," the younger Oealey said. "They used coarse threats." Dealey said that when his wife was released she was "a little bruised up, a little shaky, but in good spirts. "We are pleased beyond words," the husband said. "Mandy and I love each other very much. Now, I know this hap- pens only in movies and the fairy tales, bu t I believe It happened to us -it was love at first sight." Dealey said his wife was held at an unkown house in .the Dallas area from 4 p.m. Tuesday when she was abducted. Area Po st Office Lobbies to Open Over Wee kend U.S. Post OffiCf! lobbies along the Orange C.oast will be open for mail deposit, access to lock boxes and stamp machine services Saturday through Mon- day. Saturday deliveries will remain on regular schedules and registered letters or packages may be picked up at post of- fices during the following hours: Corona dd ft.1ar: g a.m. to noon Costa Mesa: 8:30 a.m. to noon East Irvine: 8 a.m. to noon El Toro: 8:30 a.m. to ~ p.m. FOWltain Valley : 8:30 a.m. to noon Huntington Beach: 8:30 a.m. to noon Lagoa Beach: All registered mall not requiring cash on delivery can be picked up from early morning houn through 6 p.m. Newp8:11 Beach: 9 a.m. to noon.. SOath Lapna: ll a.m. to noon Tnlb11co Cuyoa: 9 a.m. 1:0 noon Mercury MONTEGO • • • Montego NX Brougham 2-Door liardtop • • • Built Better to ride Better SEE ONE. • • • TRY ONE • • ' . MoMtcgo 4-Door Sedan the personal size car with the ride of a big car. LEASE~ Spoclallst In Full M•intenance Lea1lngl • BUY ONE • • • T ODAY! "Orang< Cov~tr'• '"'""' of Fl., C«I" Rome Of Tiii N.,, Car • , • ."G•lll .. r...n ,. \ - I Rome Of Tiie New e.r • , • "G•W.. l'"do" ~I I I • • • • • - 4 DAILY PILOT County Santa Really Scrooge YULE BONANZA DEPT. -Officials in the Orange County Auditor's Office &J> parently went to considerable effort to see that all the part-lime poll workers in the late, great November General Elec- tion got their paychecks during this Christmas season. As a matter of fact, more than 800 ()f them reportedly got a litUe something extra. I know this one lady who has done her civic duty as a ballot box worker for )o. these many el ections, who got her payoff from the county just the other day. When she opened the envelope. what to her wondering eyes should appear but TWO checks, not just one. Well, )'1JU know how things go in the old pocketbook department about this fum of year. Even the moths desert my ""'aUet for lack ol anything there to bitto on. SO THERE SHE was, wi1 h a double election bonus for being a good and fa ithful precinct worker all these years. You know she was just delighted. But hold everything, folks. Reports oozing out of the County Seat today sug- gest that Orange County may not really be Santa Claus after all. County Auditor Vic Heim apparently did a little re-checking on the some 6,800 checks tha t went out to the el ection workers and foWld that the county's com- puter -or something -bad done him in. Some 862 election workers had been overpaid. Heim bas reportedly dispatched notices to these people asking that they send back the checks. IN CASE THEY'VE already spent the loot, it is suggested that they forthwith fire off a personal check f« said overpayment to the County of Orange. Can't you just see aome of those 862 faces out there on election folks who joyously charged off to the shopping center with the Yule bonus clutched in hot hand s? Alas, Orange County made a real effort to look like St. Nick. But in the eod, the County Seat turned out to be Ebenezer Scrooge. A QUICK NOTE for all you nostalgia fans out there: Do you remember radio? The thing with no picture tube? Well, radio statloo KRLA i! reliving the golden years of radio these days and they have a real classic going on the air this Sun· day on the Night Before Christmas at 10 p.m. . KRLA will air the Charles Dickens' classic, "A Christmas Carol" starring Lionel Barrymore as Scrooge and featur· ing the Orson Welles Players. It's the program first to hit the radio waves on Dec. 24. 1939, and has been preserved for rebroadcast by CBS engineer Warren Abbott . So if you're a nostalgia fan , don't miss this one. AND A FINAL NOTE for the holiday .season when some folks have been suspected of sipping too deeply Of the cup. General Motors claims it 's come up with a l<Hecond sobriet y test that can be built into every automobile. A needle on the dashboa rd starts wiggling and you have to hold it steady by moving the steering wheel. If yoo do. a "Pass" signal lighlS up and you can start the car. Gf\I didn 't say what happens if you fi r.ink the mo\•ing needle. ~iaybe they·ve bui lt a new ejection seat ? UPIT ........ Be's Proud Papa Entertainer Bobby Sherman ~ows off ~'ife, Patricia Anne, and baby, Christopher Noel, ~-ho was born Dec. 14 in HollY\\'·ood. Astronauts Begin Lengthy Debriefing Witl1 Experts SPACE CE NTER (AP) -The Apollo 17 astronauts start their first fuU day of debriefing tOOay, beginning a long series or technical sessions going over every phase of thei r 13.d.ay moon mission. Astronauts Eugene A. Ceman, Har- rison H.. Schmitt and Ronald E. Evans ( IN SHORT ... ) will meet with experts to describe how well their spacecraft and Jts equipment operated during the night. There'll be only a few minor "anomalies," the space term tor pro!> !ems. to talk about. Apollo 17 has been described as the most perfect of the moon miss ioos, with each major step or the complet~project going as planned. The spacemen will have another debriefing on Saturday and will then lake time orr to be with their families until after New Year's Day. e 'Lt. Dish' Jlorr;es WINTER PARK, Fla. (AP) -Actress Jo Ann Pflug. who starred as Lt. Dish in the movie "~1.A .S.H.," has been married to Nashvill e singer Charles H. Wollery in -- H'icl<S 'I hope Henry /;Ices his pf8Sflllt!" a small chapel on the campus of Rollins College. Miss Pflug, 28, designed the gown she l\'Ore for the church wedding Thursday which included mostly family friends. The br:ide is the daughter of the lete Winter Park ~1ayor and Mrs. J. Flynn Pnug. e 8-iee Detonated YUCCA FLATS, Nev. (UPI ) An \Ulderground nuclear device, packing the punch of from 20,000 to 200,000 toos of TNT, has been detonated et the bottom ot a 2,260-foot vertical shaft at the testing grounds here. Government officials said no radiation leaked from the site as the result of Thursday's blast, rated in tbe low to in- tenned.iate range. Officials mm the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory in Uvemiore, said the device, code-named "Flax," was weapons related. e Jleot Quotes Ulted WASHING TON (AP) -President Nix- on haa suspended mut import quotas for 1973 in an effort to stop the rise iu supermarket meat prices. . Treuury Secretary George P. Shult>, who announced the decisloo Tbursda)', cautioned that OlOSUDlen sbOuld bot lx- pect a reduction in meat prices. He said the action bopefully wU1 halt the CUJTent rise and stabilize the price. e C0119ressman GuUty TRENl'ON, N.J. (UPI) -Rep. Cornelius Gallagher (D-N.J.), who served . seven terms but was de!eated in the last primary, bas pleaded guilty to evading $'14.0QO in federal income taxes. U.S. Attorney Herbert J. Stem said the government intends to drop a.ix other tax, perjury and conspiracy clulrges against Gallagher, 51 , because be offered to ta1k to government agents. Because of that, Stern sakl, Gallagher asked for a five-month delay in sen- tencing to give him lime 11to come in and mu. ilnowD lllCb lnlo!tnatim that may be ol ltelp to the U.S. government." Pacific Coast Batteted 7e1nperot11t"e•· "'-" L" I'• ...... " " .fl "'" ..... ~ .. ·" -" " ·" ...... " • ·" """""" " "' ·"' ,_ ~ • '·" ""'-" n ' '""""'" .. • """'"" " " ..._ " " -.. ~ " ~HT " " § l! II ~ » ~ ~· M HitlM ir. .. I ~atf ~ ... I .n :II 1:~ "" WI Antt1 fOIOC'.uf. ~ • '• ' ,/ Was • . - Skeleton Probe Yields Similari~ . llERIJN (UPI) -A Weet Germon _.,., loilay ~ new .evldenoe II> cllc""'8 • •keletoa lciund In Berlin may be that ol ~ 11on11ann. AdoU ,,H!Ua"s d11>U1Y,,.11ter all.' > , J"!Cl'll'I Rl~hter, tbe F~ <llatrlct attcrney wltO hi\& Ileen -tine oo . tbe ~ cue ilhee 111!15, aard the 1li..t of tho •keloton aod traces of what .mlgJi be &!us apllnten. In !he teeth -·111e poealblll13' t hi t Ille mystery II! - became ol Bot'mann ll>l&ht be IOlved. "We hope It frill 1urn out to , be Bormann.'' he aald. 1'But we can not say yet. The u:amJn1UOn lhou1d be com- pleted Ip the mlddle ot flmW'!'." · Construc:Uon tvorkers found t w o slteletoos Dec:. I In the Lehtter Railway Yard, where survivon of World War n Nixon Bar£ij Fall,s Short Of Milestone WASHING TON (AP) -Wbile Presi- dent Nixon won re-election by the largesl vote total in history, bis victory percen- toge !ell short of a recon!. Official vote totils releesed Thursday show Nixon beat· George McGovern by 17,971.294: votes, 15 million above his margin over Sen. Hubert Humphrey in 1968. But the President's &0.7 pen:ent of the total vote cast was just off the 61.J per- cent piled up by Lyndon B. Johnson In his 1964 landslide victory over Republican Barry Goldwater. Figures compiled by 'Ill< Associated Press !rom official state vote totals showed Nixoo drew 47,041,924 votes in the Nov. 7 election compared with 29,071,629 for McGovern. THE CANVASSING of tbe 50 statea and the District of Columbia was com· • p!eted Thursday. Increased numbers of voters this year and more minority · party ballots held down Nixon's percentage of victory. An assortment of minority candidates received 1,345,504 votes. U they are eliminated in this year's comparison. Nixon gets 61.8 percent of the votes cast for major party candidates compared to 61.3 perc(!nt for Johnson if tbe 196.t · results are similarly ccmpiled. The official popular vcte totals did not change the electoral vote of 511 for Nixon and 17 for McGovern. This is second only to Franklin D. Roosevelt's trouncing in I~ of Republican Alfred M. Landon, claimed Bormann and Dr. Ludwig Stwnpfewr, ':ti: pel'IOllAI Pll)'ll- clan, had been West Berlln pc)i1ce Uld lul ,...k a prellmlnary ~xamlnatloa ol Ille atullt thought P'*ibly•to be...._..,.~ It WIS not hJa and prObeblJ belonpd lo one of the macy AAtl-NUl.s executed lo tbe ntilway yard at the eod ol the Wv. : Police today llAd no _..,. 0. Richter'• dltcloeure ot new e~, saying only that the CW la l'l>W In bla Jurtsdlctlon. Bormann'• fate hit been a ~ sloce he was lut 1een leavinl the chancellery bunter one day after llltler killed hlm!ell there on April IO, 191$, u Getawa11 Bfllted the Rllallanl cloaed In. K Wm BerU. nptry olflce declared Jlonnann -.. ltM btll ,...,. tbon .... """'lmtod .-i. blft llld he la alive. The lateot ,.port, pul>lltllod lul month , Id be !a 1 n.y.....id ~ Uv- Soulb A!Jter!CI. uld !omier Nail 'tesMed that llonnann tool: poloon when be failed to -tbrouih lbe Russian -ammd , Berlin. "The 1r1c.. ol 111>at oould be ,ia.. could be from the poilan vii!,'' lllcbter aald. 1 He U!d.-~ tbe --!bit ol a llllall !Dltl aod thal BonDmm ... only s leol s Inches tall. - Ht Uld Ute llOCOOd tktleton was blg&et and could b€ that of StwnpCeuer. 4 ·Gunmen. Towed to Jail In Cm· .With Hostages ., ATLANTA (AP) -FiY9 gunmeo who fled an abortive supennartet robberJ Jn Chattanooga, Tenn., with three boltagea surrendered early today and released their captlves unbanned. One ol the men, ldentilled by police .. Felix Bernard Lwldy, 21, llll?nltder<d after the getaway car was ~ on U.S. 41 about 15 mil" nol'tb ,/. Atlmta The other four gave up after autborlties had tbelr car towed, with them and their hostagoo atlll Inside, to the Fulton CouQty jail In Alllllta They were klentified as 0 11 v e r Peterson, 18; Paul Wesley Beny, 2S; Willie Lewis Combs, 23; and Homer Lee Barnes, 2!. All ol the five gunmeo - AUanta addresses. Col. William Beenlsley, bead ol the Georgia Department ol lnvestiption, said tbe men would lace federal lddbop charges. The boetages ....,, ldl!ntilled as Clar- ence Turner, 20; his daughter, Slnetra, 4; and Vance DObbbls Jr. 41, a Chat· tanooga, Tenn., ambulance driver who offered hi1111elf in place of a woman the bandits planned to take captive lo Chat- tanooga. The drama began at Will i e's SUponnarket In °==a 'lbundly nllbt -pollce = to a boldllp call and trappeil tlio -In the ....... At -point, lbe baodltl, -by authorities, held about ID J>ootqeo In a back~. 1 'lll<y rtJeased -ol tllolr captives alter <Jiattanooga polJce qreed to prn- vtde tbem with .. -..... It .... pulled Into 111 alleyway bth1nd il>e store. Dobbins uld be -at the ,.,..,. beclue ID amhu\anoe bad ... called. He Uld be .... the .... taidrl&. - "'I told them to lei the -CO and I -.Id cir!'" them GUI ol the ~." ~ U!cL ''.They dld and -the!' didn't let me p . They had a i).ptJIO shotgun at my neck. all the way." But be lidded, "'They dldn~ -us or threaten UI OI' anytbjna. 'I . Tbe bandits lei! Chat._. 1111 route toward Atlanta , but their car was llop- ped by police nJOdblocka about five miles -of Cutonvllle, Ga. '!'bey sat on Pwnpkln-ere.I: Briclge oo U.S. 41 in the brlgbt Rian! ol llPOlliibtl and -by olllcers }« ~ boon bel0« they agre<d to 111mnder at Allan- ta and lace ledtra! lddnap dwp.s, BeanllleyU!cL Three Sea Lions Die who got only eight electoral votes. , .. ~:Nthe~ball~~?.~~0~t~~~~-Flying w Join Mqfr votes, instead of 521, as Alaska's three Republican electon kept their votes secret a n d a GOP elector In Vll'g!nla broke ranks to vote for Libertarian party candidate John Hospers. McGovern's 17 votes were from Massachusetts and the District of Columbia. John G. Sctunitz of the·American party polled 1,080,541 votes for third place. Dr. Benjamin Spock, the antiwar People's party candidate, was next with 78,801. N~wspaper Protests ,WASlllNGTON (AP) -'lbe-'00- member Washington Press Club l'hun- day prntealed lonnally to President Nix-. on what tt calls the "systematic ex~ clualon" ol a Washington Poet reporter from Whit. House soclal functions. 'Ill< C(lub:s board of directors expressed con- cern in a rt10iution over the new White HOUie "pool" policy that banned Post reporter Dorothy McCardle from four White Houae social events. Old Eq•pllrer Portland, Ore., TV reporter Kathy Won g, 5-1, needs assist- ance of chai r to interview Miss Tall Universe, Tara Sheldon, 64\io . .. II TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -'11tree young tea lions being rushed from California to lend comfort to April, the heartsick ,.. lioness, died en route -jult u the species was put on tbe govemmeat'a protected list. Tbe deatlls il1 Tampa 'lbursday may mean an unrequited love for April, a sad and blubbery beast who bu J!O'led herself and roamed •imlesaly around the Jacksonville Zoo since tbree oompanlaos died last spring. "We bave Iba lonely female waltlog and we had planned to start a harem," said a zoo olliclal. "We even cleaned tbe pool. April'• been waJUng In a nealby tank." One in-trans.it eea llon llll'viftl here. But it's not known whether it la a female or male. Four sea lions -believed to be three females and one male -were crated in two -lUgbt kennels and placed oo a Weclnetday night !llgltt from Los Angeles to Jacksonville. T6e plane was delayed by mechanical troubles and stopped in Tampa. When National Air Lines officials che<ted oo the anlmail, they found two de.ad and a third looking ''pretty bad," said Louis Calvano of NAL'a freight af· fice. The lhird di~ before a vetertnarlan arrived. Peron in Madrid MADRID (AP) -Juan D. Poron ar- rived in Madrid today alter bis !Int trip to ArgenUna alnce be WU CIV'erthrown u president in 1955. Peron clecllned to aay ii be would return to iluellOI AJrea to help his 111pporten In the electlonl IClleduled for March. Raquel 0 Possibly the sea lion5 4ried «Lt en route," said Calvano. Sea lions bave .... m .. sldn that muat be kepi wel They ~ cinly !Ible to llW'Vive lw short periods witboul - to water. Replac:emenl ol the dead anJmall'llllf be ...,., dlffln~t: olfldal1 Uld !bl ... lloo -p1-r .. the·proCecled .opeda lill-'lbursclay and the .... lederal -Miml)l"It Acl will ~ It jiuder for IOOI lo ppture l&ldl anim1Is, Meinwl>Jle, April (lliies away. ZOo ol- lkiail said she bu been beariaid< •Ince two companion females and a male died of beartwwms and virus lut sprinc. They bod bopeCI to -btr '111'11 to cmjuga! comforts. So 1-ly bu she 1-that April recentlJ lhullled Gii "' btr .,.., lnnded tbe mookeyt' compound and stuffed bel'lleltoo 125 (>OWlds ol tlielr catlood. DAILT PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE 0t"""1 ol tllt o.tf1 Pilot ;; ;IQrllltttd ' ......,..,,.,..,, H "" .. ,... .... ~ ..,., ., J1)1 ..... cMI .... _. ..,, Wiii -~ ....... c.11t .......... .... 1ia~ , ......, .... ~ 11.1 ........ ...... ,._ QA' "' ' ...... ,.....,. ..... .. ... W,M•••...,Ml ......... 11 ,....ee. .. -. ... , ..... Ttltphonts MNf Orante C0utrty ArtN ... '°4LdJI Mottl!•t Hvntk!tloil hKfl ..... W.fmlrll.... • ........... , ... JJZt kn ClemlnN. C•pltlftne ... di, hft JMl'I C.plllreno. DelMI l"olnf, lo\lfll UOVM, LaOullll "\"'' 4fa.+ut ·sarips~ Sex Symbol Jt!akes Night Club Bow LAS VEGAS (AP) -f>ctrea Raquei Welcll performed her first nllllt·club act before a house pocked with Gl's and did a slrlp-t.83e number that kepi ihe au- dience on the eilge of Its ...... About 500 ' pel'ICllS, lllOlt of them almien from nearby Nellla Air Force ' Bue and wives of rnbllna Fill pllots, bad been Invited to the ''pNmler'" performance _, nlgbt -a lull ru.u robeanal ol Miu Weldl'1 lllll night.dub ~' She maDI her formal debut be1' tomlhl. The alrlp leNe was .,... teaM than slrlp. Tho gl...., """' the oalJ lb1na to come off. · er Oiily provl~rmance wni as a sin,er and dlocir dut'lns • Bob Hope Christmas •how lo Vietnam. "l tbOught ol tlllo . u my tll'!lllni night," she 1ald. 11Tbe flnt audience tor 'me Is openJni klrht. Many •eta wbleb come lo Vegas llaye already be<n oo the rOt1d, but thll wu the flnt lime I eve~ ~· .~ did ll It wu fUn.'1 "I've ...., -anythln1 like tbJa tn my life. The Hope troupe wu· ari ex- pen...ce, but I mlltl ..,. I dldn' do &n1tblDI olote to what I do In tbi1 tbow." Wblt Ille did .... to ~ - wllb --and -u the -Oil • musJeal -ol ber roles In "Fantutle Voyage," "50 Mll1kl\ Yean B.C.," "J(yra ~" and "Kan- tu Oty Bomber " "! clJdn•t -t to do tbt iypkaJ Hollywood -cornlns to Vegas becl111e tlley all do It when tlielr cu.en are on tbe lade: And tbey all do II beca~ tlte7~· bave_lll)'..pll<:f.beller JO. • "'And I tlldn't nnt tO 1et out the,. wllb all 'lhoae 1 .. t11en and .taqUJna and /ondllnf boy -and all that •Julf II) It dotm't lool: lllta l don't do llll'lbing. Wiili the puppell l!f llvtM!JPle a good produdlon Valut w!tJiOut pv!ng mt 1 crutch." I l • ange Co~st EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stooks . :VOL. 65, NO. 357, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22, ·1972 N TEN CENTS Bal l8le Dri.,er8••Bed Means Stop! • ~ By L PE'J'ix KRIEG O:f the Dlltr "*' ..... , The Ingenious mlndl of the men who deolp 1ralfic cootrol atgns and signals have outdone themselves ln the newest sjgnalllfd iritersection in Newport Beach. In the midst ol a symph.my of stop 1111111 just lnslalled at the entrance to Balboa Island. they've cot a lighted .... row &bit pointa straight ahead in the lms ol ..,. ai«na1 where the red Ught1ls aup- pooeil to be. 'n.e arrow ls red, but that huo't meant an awful lot to any nwnber or drivers who've zipped right throoch it, figuring It's telling tbelll to go r\cht on by. Tbe llgbt wa.s turned on Tbursday and trarnc ~ Robert Jaffe, wbo9e last day with the city IJ today, said the red arrow 1hoqldrt.1t cause any confusion wbon -le get used to It. "G~ meiµii go · and red means atop," Jaffe-decreed. "A red arrow stops movement in the direction of that ar- row." "If the arrow was pointing to the right, that would mean )!OU couldn't tum ~()llll • M•ratlwn .hsaalt Reds Say 3 More B52s Shot Down SAIGON (UPI) -The United States carrled its marathon air assalll~ against North Vietnam'• heartland into the fifth day today despite mounting air loaes. Hanoi Radio reported tm.e more B5Zs and an FUl ficbler-sl¥>t down to- ' l>ol~C~ New EvUlen ce • In Dory Case By JOANNE REYNOLDS °' '*"' ~ ..... s .... day and 9&.id it used MIGs as well as missiles against the American planes. The U.S. Command reported that two more B52s were abot down Thursday near Hanoi, along with a pair of Navy Al Intruders. . 'l'hls bnJu&l>I la • the IDDber af ll:n~,;;:..Jtt :J:t:. .i:.Jr '. Hanoi claims Ii sllot dowa.H planes, U -ol-thom-1!611,-~ ----- So lw 111o,g;-t .,. ~ a -ill1!!1-.. UlOIClli!d. Hanoi bu --doe -·of U fiiers, most of them BS1 crewmen, woo it said were captured. Some n1en were reported Wtnmdccl, two too seriously to attend Hanoi's exhibition of the capUves for the foreign pre113. right," be said. • Jaffe said the red arrow is a standard use throughout California and the rest of the COlllllry, but be conceded that It Is new to this area and could very well cause confusion. 0 1 ~ some people fmd it new, but it's not ·reall,y unlqUe," be said. The arrow confronts motorists travel- ing eutbowld on Bayside Drive at the often.congested intersection with Jam- boreO Road ind llfarhie Aveoue. Balboa Island residents have been · clamor1hg tor 'the signal for years and n • Jaffe says the entire signalizatlon of the intersectloo is highly sophisticated. He said that hi! department will soon install electronic signs that will say "no right (um on red" for eastbound Bayside Drive traffic. ~'The signs will come on when there are cars stlH on the bridge going onto the 1s1m1tt;.. be wd. "111 fact, wben the bridge Is full, all on- island movements wil lstay red until the bridge clears," he said. He said sensors installed in the bridge will detect when traffic is clogged. Wi•ter WonderlaRd Jaffe also cautioned motorists to make sure they're in the proper lanes when they approach the signa l -or else it won't work for them. "Somebody coming down the hill on Jamboret who wants to go left -if they are in the center Jane tl'\e signal is .going to forget them. "'The lanes are detected individually," he said. uyou have to be in the proper lane in order to go where you want to go." In heavy tnffic, the signals will be e Ill DAILY PILOT Pfltte llr WWlllm SdnlMf Huntingto< Beach police said today they have found 0 qtdte a bit of blood" on 1 the clothing of the New.port Beach doryman who they believe may have.kill- ed bis daughter aod then btmsell last Rad.Jo Hanoi said tn a bl'Glidcast monitored in Salion that the "North Vietnamese Air Fore.: baa participated In the downlngs of U.S. planes." A U.S spokesman said that while there has been •1some MIG21 activity" it has not been "significanl" Although winter officially began on Thumi,1, these wetsuited surfers enjoy relatively warm tempera- tures and 60 degree water at Newport's 37tb Street. It'll be cloudy Saturday. morning, but that won't deter Orange Coast surfers from riding a few holi- day waves. Besides, it will be sunny in the afternoon. -k. . Del Sgt. Mooty McKennoo said In· V'esllptoro will be ,.......,..,g the dory Sir Charleo wblcll-belonged to fisherman Allan Vaughn Knlgbt, 43; Newport Beach. Knlcht and bis :I-year-old daughter, Patricio, were last aeen alive Dec. 12 when be took her with him to check bis lntiiter ti'ape along the coast. At mid-morning they were spotted by a Huntington Beach lifeguard as Knlgbt stood in the stem of hi.! small boat, a~ parenUy cradling bis blonde dauchter In hla: arms. A few minutes w.r, the guard told police be uw the empty boat ci1cllng alml"'81y near the HWltingtoo Beach Edt9on plant. Knlght'a body was found a weet later, ftoatlng about a half mUe to sea, and hls dailglttar'• body washecl a3horo at the Huatlllgtoli Beach pier 10 boon later. 'Ille caae, wbtch waa P'""'IJD'd ·to ha .. been a dwble drowning, toot an uneI· peeled -Wben It WU discownd that the girl's throat had beeo 1llt. 'lbe Orange OJunty coroner ruled her death a homlckl:e, but Huntlngton ,Beach detecUva say they have carefully pursued the possibll lUes that her death llUll' have been a<:<ldental. However, McKennon said today the po91iblllty that the child ..... cul by the boat's propeller wben sbe fell ov_erboanl or that she .accidentally cut hene1f on • (See DOllYMAN, Pqe I) Trash Pi.ckup Off on lfolidaj 1be word "signlficant" ls generally us- ed wben .hoot!le activity multa in damage to Amerlcan men at materiel. 1be command spokesman said MIG bases in North Vietnam have been among the targeta·for the rebewed raids. He also admitted that the runway of Hanoi's Gia Lam civilian airport, never befo're struck in any of the American bombings of Norlb Vietnam, had been (See BOMBING, Page I) Electronic-Garage Door Thefts P r obed in Newport Newport Beach police are looking for two teenage boys they believe are steal- ing electronlc garage door openers trom homes on the Balboa Peninsula. "We've bad five ot them stolen In the past week," said Detective T o d d Wilkinson. ''Three were taken from one, tlJreelcar garage," He aaid the. owner. o.f the house replac- ed the stolen ones the ne:t.t day and then surpl'iaed two youngsters two daya later as they were trying to steal his new ooes. He was unable to catch them, however. Police believe the youths may have some sort of electronic project under way and are using the radio equipment for it. "'Ibey also take the transmitters out of the cars when the cars are around," Wilkinson said "But they don't take anything else," be said. "And there have been some valuable things In some of the garages." Wilkinson 'said the thefts have taken' place in lhe area between the,1400 block of East B8fb08 Boulevard and the 900 block ol West Balboa Boolevard. Usah Denies Any Conflict Executive Says Boatyard Case Charge 'Lie' By lVILLIAM SCHREIBER though another company, Dana Point terest of any kind In the company. 0t 1111 Dm<I" PMlt sMtt Ancbor Marine offered a much higher Hffe owned 2,500 shares out of 3611,000 ~-••~ of Interest rumors Involving ...,.._ price. Wlllaid ollered ltO 700 wbtle Oii the market," Tlche said. ''That IJ 'N!u.u.o• ~ -·· ' about OI percent interest" bids OL the Dana Point boatyenl-.anlract Ariclior Mllrtnrwas pn!pard to pay-wmmi•1 boob and . public stock today were denied by the man named In !30.500. rocords p,... Usab bougbt only the 1.100 the opeculatton. n.. flnnge County Board o f sbanoa wbon the stock went public In Martin Usab, former. Orange County SUper\'lmn 11111 delayed final actlm on 1111. the contract until Jiiiluary becluse of Uaab said he made no additional dea!J Harbors, Beaches and Parka COrnmlBslon !'"--'•• quesUODll 'about why the top bid wlth •Wlllard to buy more stock and u a Chalnnae and president of Dynalech ..... ..,. f CorporaUon In Santa Ana, said whoever" was not ~pted in the usual manner o minority 1tockllolder had no control over There wlll be -no trash pickups In -·"' Is tellin .. 1 county eovemment. exeaiuve clecilioos. Newport Beach on either a.nstmu :::!'': 1~. ~ct g an ou In addition to tbe dis<repacy In the op-"f bought these 1tocks beoauae I or New Year's Day, General uoo bid. Willard's compet.Jton aay the in-bought a boat from Willard and liked the Servlcet Dtreclor Jake Mynderae Uaab also said there were DO ulterior clusloo of a boat building yard in job they did on It," Usab said. "And tbat 18id today. moUves for hls resignation from .,the Willard's Offer wa!J contrary to the b\d ia the whole story." Myndene said reoldents who panel .lut wo;ek. merely that be "'11 fed proc:edu...,. Willard offered to pay tho Deputy Ornnge County CoU1111el Clay normally ar~ serviced on Mondays . up wit!' P;';"1tlct and . needed '? ,devote county a Ored percentage of ltl boot~ Parker, who was asked by the dlatrlct at.- more time to ~la busineU. ~revenues. torney lo tnvtstla:ate Uaab'a "possible Wiiiie dlacusotons w... In rw, durinJ!mt lbO ....,,. conf1 nf lnterut," said 'lllursda there ~-.111(ln1wt11ch t~ d on ~ racti; lliii ange wu ....,. any iiiiifllcf1iiV01• ~lor the h!<:P~.l)oll !W•· -c.mq C<Mi;o1•1 ollb and lhe Di.trio! "We detennlned eostiY there was no )•rd,~ U.sa.b. ~ .J.lOO~~ :. ~ wm mtllle.i al ~· Interest conflict In thlJ case and that Mr. Usab lllaol Baol ...,.,..lllafo • -• !n'lliltanl'ind began askina = C<lllld have vot<!d on Ibo contract and ol !be oompetlton tor the COllll'ICI. Wlllanl President Wll~ said, Ittpt' his stock. too," he said. WIDanl .-tually -\he com---the whole lncldlall. JJaab pJd he sold his stock In \Vtllvd rnim'a a~val for lbe-con1ract, evirn fic<iauae lJsabne\oer 1icla I ~ in;-· fS.. BO.I.TV Alio, l'IC•·lf . ~ • t . • -' . Consumer Prices Climb-Dampen Inflation Goal WASHINGTON (Al'J -Consumer prices climbed another three-tenths of 1 percent In November, virtually erasing President Nixon's hOpe of bringing the inflation rate · down to three percent or less in 1973. 1be Labor Departm ent's an- nouncement today said two-thirdJ of the rise was contributed by higher prices for food, clothing and residential gas. Beef prices rose imtead of declining substantially, as they usually do. Nixon yesterday extended into 1973 t h e suspension of meat Import quotas in hope of curbing the rise of beef on the hoof and in meat markets. The November living cost index at 126.9 ercent of the 1967 average, was 3.5 percent above a year ago. The actual increal!le In November waa two-tenths of 1 percent, but when ad- justed for normal seasonal trends. the rise was three-tenths of 1 percent and matched the increase f'lf a month earlier. Prices in the last three months. instead or declining to levels between 2 aod 3 percent as would have been required to meet the anti·infiaUOn goals, rose at a 4.2 percent rate, the department reported. This oompartd .wllh u percent In Iha precedJna tm.e mootha. -In another economic development, New York's Finl National City Bank, the country's 80COlld laraest bank, the Mellon Bank of Plltabwlh, the t{th biggest, to- day rolled their prime lending rotes to I ptteent, in the t1ce of the Nlxon ad- mlnJJtration'a campaign to keep down banll Interest rates. Cltlbonk, which earlier modifl<d Its prime rate fonnula 1o appeue the AdmlnlstraUon. 11Ald the boost from M4 percent will lake effect on Monday, the same day Mellon increases lt.1 rate from 5 '4 percent. On Thorsda~ri!'.1,lt:Yln& Trust ~ llil\ 1a....,1 bank, lllDOUnctd lt WU temporarily~ the-method.,,. ed II colcuJating its prime, or mlnlmum lntet&flt rate on corporate loans. 'M\e Im- mediate effect wlll be to forestall a boost to lkoerceldn!t_rrom1 $It ~nt. under the ban ,,~ o'• ormu a • . ' I t . . . operating on a regular cycle, he said, "but if you're there all by yoursel f and you're not in the lane you are supposed to be in. you'll get the wrong signal." That means anybody dumb enough lo want to tum left from the center lane will never get a green "left-tum" light. If he makes the tum, besides getting a ticket for making a tum from the wrong lane, he'll al.so get one for running ll..ftd light. even though the light over his lane may be green for traffic going straight ahead. Dr. Leary's Followers Now Sought By TOM BARLEY Of t"'4I PllllY Pltet Slaff Chri stmas greetings in the form of ar· rest warrants and a C{)PY :if a multi-page Orange County Grand Jury indictment4U'e being delivered today to 28 alleged members or the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug cult founded by Or. T1motby Leary, the DAlLY PILOT has learned. The arrests. almost all of them in Laguna Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach, will bring to ii the number of defendants roonded up as alleged compiraton in an orpnization dooCI Ried .,,. 1 ............ """-al !atY'• on,inaI League al SplriWal Discovery (I.SD). Two men were trTeBted In Hawaii Thursdayrby HonoJulu police who are still scouring the islands for. a man described today as a "key figtire" in the drug ring -Robert L. "Fat Bobby" Andrist, 29. It was learned today that the Orange County Grand Jury has been involved for several weeks· and most intensively dur- ing this past week in preparing a new ln- dicUnent that was still being withheld at press time today. n.ssistant District attorney E d Freeman admitted today that the in- dictment was being prepared but refused to release the names of 28 perso111 charg- ed with multiple narcotics counts pending the arrest of the lndictees. Freeman confirmed that transients Calvin L. Delaney, 30, and Ronald R. Crawford, ~. were picked up In Maul, Hawaii, by local police working on in- formation supplied by Orange County authorities. Both men have advised Hawaiian · authorities from their quarters in the Honolulu jail that they will fight a move by Orange County lawmen to return them to this area. "It may take several weeks to get them back here in view o. prolonged ex- tradition procttding," Freeman said. Free.man said Delaney was last seen in the Southern Callfotnia area in June when he was anested by Riverside Coun- ty narcotics officers who claim he bad 20 pounds of ~ uhish and ltS,000 oo bis person at I.he time. Freeman said they are the only arrests he expects to make in the Hawaiian Islands unless lawmen there manage to (See CULT, Page !I ' Orange Coa1t lt'eatlter It'll be cloudy wben you get up on Saturday, but don't frel The weatborlady ---w!U c1ffr by midday to aumy .ties and tam· peratum of a at the beaches and 70 Inland. OmnJiht lows 4>60. INSmE TODAY F01' tht cfghth carueeittlve uear, th< DAILY PILOT ls h°"' oring the top communitv the· attr actors and cictressts fn Or- ange CountJI. Wfnner1 of the 1972 DP m«1rd.t ore annoNnctd If codatt'• Wttkend«r. L.M • ...,.. • ...... flillMll 1• ..... lt N ....... I ,..... f Cfltltwlll• • 0r.... (.Milly 1 CIMtifllrf ,,.. • ... __... IMI ,_ n :s-M crw&i¥:'1 ,.--, .. , DM"' Nt1k9 1 .......... ,..,, ... ..,,.. ,.___.. -11IMlltill • "'-.. 11 .,...... ..... ,. ........... ' ........ . ·~·-, • .,...... ..... 1 ... 14 ..... L..-.n '' ..... ..... • Mlllllell • ••••r t1• ,,.,... u. ... Fridlf, -. n. 19n NO ULTERIOR MOTIVES Former Comm11sioner Utab l'romPagftl BOATYARD. • • Boat Works weeks before the final vote was taken and commission records show he did not participate either in the discussion or lhe final vote on the con- tract. ~ Usab said, ho""·evcr, that he v.•as ad- vised to step down by Parker during the final meeting to remove any doubts of personal involvement. •·frankly I was prelly mcensrd by the \vhole thing." Usab said. ··sut I figured ""·hy drag out another red hrrring." Th(' commission vole on !he contract award \\'as 4-2 v.·ilh the majority stating the cpinion that Anchor .\lar ine. 'M'hich already holds leases on three Dana Point parcels, wooJd ha\'e a near-monopoly oo th<> commercial cenler at the harbor. Neither L'sab nor Parker would te\'eal \\-'ho was behind the conflict charges but they did say lhe charges were persistent even after it was pro,·en no conflict was involved. "I will admit ft'f'Ely thal T encouraged Willard to go for 1he bid but that \Vas simply because I knew them :ind was aware no boatyards had even bid for the contract the last time it was made available," Usab said. Bomb Thrown At Apartment, Fizzles in Yard A Molotov cocktail was thrown at a young Balboa couple's apartment '11turs- day 'Bf&ht but landed hlnnlessl.J jn .& I courtyard. lta sputtering name waa ,-, qwckly doused by the apartment dweller. 1 Newport Beach police said this morn- \ ing lhe frre bomb was a~ntlf in- tended for the apartment of Mr. and Mrs. James Pomeroy, 113 E. Balboa Blvd., the only occupants of the small apartment complex there. Detective Reid Gloshen said he could find no apparent motive for the attack, if in fact it was something more than malicious mischief. "I can't find any reason why anyone would want to hurt these people -and th~y could have been hurt," Gloshen said. Gloshen said if it was only malicious mischief be didn't think it was very fun- ny. He asked that anyone who may have seen any suspiciol1S persons in that area about 6 p.m. Thursday to call police. County Delays Action On Night Goll Course An agreement allowing a private finn to develop a night-lighted golf course in the clear wne south of Orange County Airport has been held for further study by the county Board of Supervisors. Supervisor Ronald Caspers expressed doubts over the advisability of allowing the establishment of a pro shop and restaurant under the airport takeoff zone in Santa Ana Heigtrts. OU.NGI COAST N DAILY PILOT n. Or.,._ CoQI OAll. Y PILOT, wl1'1'1 W!llch h ~ ttoie Hews·Pron•, II fll,lbl~ by ~ 0......,. C.11 Pvl>lltllln9 eo.np.....,, S.0.- ... 1. eon'°"t ••e Plll>ll.tllld, Mond.11¥ !llf"OU911 FliN¥. flt' Cot.II M .... , MIWl*I 81Kh, """"""°" IHKl'llF011nt•in V•lley, 1.1911"1' &.ad!. lrvlrie/S..cldldoldl ..W s1., ci...•efHc/ Sin J11An C•pl1tr1no " l ll!QI• •tQIOMt .cllllen ti; PVDlkMll Selllnll'fl 1t'ld Sunday~. Tiit prifl(.lplil llUblltilfnO 1111"1 It ii l.ln W~\I e.ar St,..1, Cot.I• M .. 1, C1ll10rnl11, f2t2t, RolNrf N. Wttd f'r"loenl tt'ld Pul:llliller J1clr R. C11rl1y Vkt PNt.ldMll .....i Gt119rll MlintW n-•• KM•ll •1111or Tholftt• A. M"rphi1t• MIMtllM ld1TW L P•t•r ICrl•t #-..rt IMdt Cl!y d!tor N...,_..._.Offb JJJl H•""port lo"l1,.1rd M11t1., A.Ur111t P.O. l o• 1171, t2"3 ...... .._ CttQ M ... 1 .m Wit! .. , Sifter t....-hlcfl: m .. _, ... ....,.,,. Htlrrllrlff!ln llldl: ,,.,, hKtl MvltftH S.n C~i ., Naorl!'I !'I C:.m""' illMI , ........ (7141 '42-4J21 1--~-Cf-..... _ ............ HW471 - ~ 191!,. Df"llltt ONlt.1 "*"'*'I ~f, HI" llf'Wt IJOrtft, lllUi'fftiffolll. "'"""" -11.-... .......,!Mnwtff. ,...,. fMY " ~ •llt!Wt 8Mt5lf .. ........ ·~ -*'· ...... clMt Ml ... Hid •I Cllt• MM. c.llforft... WltcttiJllM W arr• UM .• M111tl\W1 ~• -It ll.lS-tnltlllllr1 1111111W¥ ..... tiw. SIM moi'I~. Harbor Schools Won't Feel Bill By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 "'• 011" t>ii.1 '"" The Sl.l billion Reagan-f\1orettl school finance rl!form measure approved this week ln Sacramento won't affect Newport-f\tcsa district programs, school officials said. Bul SB90, v.·hich provides for a rollback in properly taxes and a one percent boost in state sales tax . is expected to help Harbor Area homeowners. "'There \\'ill definitely be tax relief for Ne\\'port-1\fesa taxpayl'rs.'' said Walter Adrian. d1s1nct financial director. "But our overall analvsis of the dollan and <'ents show Ntwi>ort-Mcsa won't be af- fected one v.•ay or another as far as maintaining our current services." Adrian said no definite figures on tax rate savings ha ve been made available by the state Department of Education, but he estimates it will be in the range of five 10 ten cents per $100 assessed valua- tion. Current total tax rate in Costa lifesa ~t ands at S5.08 while the rate in Newport Beach is $4.67 per $100 assessed valua· tion. l'rona Page I DORYMAN ... something in the boat was "pretty slim." He pointed out that the coroner's report indicated ' that a Cine-bladed in- strument had caused the deep slash across the child's throat. An old. rusty knife found in the dory \\'as tested for the presence of human blood along with the clothiru?, but no blood was found on the blade. M:cKenoon noted that the rusty knife's blade was too coarse to have caused the wound on the tot's throat. Adrian said the tax relief will come ln a second fonn. '"Ibe bill increases the ext.mptian on · your tu bill from $750 to fl,750," be said. "Tblt Is deducted from the _..., ~ value of your home and the tuea are levied on the lower figure." Adrian said the reductlon in tax rates and increues in aempt.ions wlll be made up by new state funds collected by raising the state sales tax and other tu· es. S890 i5 des!goed to give gruter in- come to low wealth school. districts with hlgb property ...... Cloe part of the measure eliminates ell but tea IO<aUed perml.ssJ.ve overrides th.at district ~ can levy to fund special acUvitles. Adrian said 11ewport·Mesa has not been greatly inYOlved wllh I b • permissive overrides and thus will not ·be afreeted inueh by the elimination of some of them. Among the Overrides not eliminated that slllfmlght be used by Newport-Mesa a.re those to finance special alterations ordered by fire marshals, earthquake rebuilding, public school building loan repayment and bond interest and redemption levies.. "The overrides that were eliminated invo lve such things as retirement funds, community service funds and adult education money," Adrian said. "We don't even have adult education and we eliminated practically all other permissive overrides by ineluding needed programs in the general purpose tax rate," Adrian said. "About the only override we are still engaged in is lbe school ¥!ding bond redemption and that is still aDowed," he said. "And the way lax rates are shaping up, the interest oo those bonds may go down as well" l'romPagftl CULT INDICTMENTS • • • produce the elusive Andrist. The former Art Colory resident has evaded his pufsuers since the original Brotherhood indictment was issued last August. Lawmen recently confirmed that the search for the 300-pound SU'lpect bas now been extended to other areas in the United States. "The people we want are in the beach cities of Oran&e County," Freeman said. '"l'hars-.,, ~•orkinc IOdaJ<md that's where we will be working throughout the Cbristmis "'.etlr.end untU aU our arres~ are made." Poli~ . in. Laluna Beacb, Newp</rl Beach, COsta Mesa and Huntlnfti>n Beach are cooperating with Orange County Sheriff's officers, ageni.s from the Federal Bureau of Narcotic.i and Dangerous Drugs, agents from the state's Bureao of Narcoti~ Enforcement and U.$. CUstoms officers in a joint sweep that has become known as the Orange County Drug and Narcotics Task Force. • Freeman said those named in the new indictment will join 16 persons earlier named in the alleged Brotherhood con- spiracy -a total of 46 defendants. "And this isn't by any means the end of the road," a weary District Attorney's investigator commented this morning. Superior Court Judge Raymond Vin- cent has been solely occupied in recent \veeks with the OD04 of paper work ac- cumulated in the form of multiple mo- tions filed by the battery of defense la\\:yers hired by the Brotherhood defen- dants. Several defendants have had their names removed from the indictment dur- ing that time via dismissals and pleas of * * * 'Mind-boggling' Drug Conspiracy Told by Police District Attorney's afficers preparing the newest indietment in the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" con- spiracy loday updated what one in- vestigator described as "the most numb- ing statistics you ever saw ln your life." They include the allegation that Brotherhood membc:-s hf ve smuggled hashish -a refinement of marij uana - into the Unllcd States at the rate of 1,000 pounds a month for the lasl six yea rs. And it is also alleged that Brotherhood members have distributed many millions of LSD tablets throughout the world du,... lng that same period. "The amount of money Involved ls mind·boggling,'' an investigator said. "Just put it at many mllUoru: of dollars until we can come up with a reasonable estimate." Lawmen said the Brotherhood's major smuggling network utilLr.ed false ldtD- lification and forged passporta that allowed many ot its members to lravt:I around the world making Illegal drug purchases for import Into the United Slates. ,,_fany of those purcha!M!:I, Investigators aaLd, were made in India, Pa1tistan and Af(!:hanlslan. lt was notea locJay lliat-n?. Leaiy'"s Brothtrbood of Et.emaJ L9ve wu unW recently a legal corporatloa in C.lllomla thal had be<!o granted lu4umpl 11>1uJ by tbe State Frarichlae Tas Board "on the grounds of 11.t reUgJoul nature. II n.:e-corporatlQn·wu formed In October ol 1966. II w., hurriedly dlMOlved by lawmen Lasl August. guilty to reduced charges. Among lbem was David Mark Reddy, 23. 3380t Street of lbe Copper Lantern, Dana Point, who fa~ a state prison tenn of up to 10 years following a plea of guilty to amended drug charges and violation of an earlier probation. But Re.ddy must first serve a ooe year term in federal prison on drUI charges S1lbltanl1ally amended trom tliliee llleil whtn be:, Brian Kendall McAdams, 25, 20Z86 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, and Thomas Blake Bidwell, 28, of Garden Grove, were anuted i n Ponland, On!gon, last Jan. 13. The trio were accused of staffing $Z million worth of hashish into a truck that was being shipped on • Dutch freighter from Bombay, India to Vancouver, canada. AU three received one year jail terms but Orange C o u n t y "Brotherhood" charges a~ainst Bidwell w e r e later dismlssed tn Judge Vincent's Cllurtroom and the defendant shipped off to Lompoc prison. McAdams has been ordered to faee trial March 26, on charges contained in th" original indictment. The first of several tria1s stemmlng from the first Brotberbood 1odictment will open Jan. 10 wiih J am e s Leroy Crittenden, 29, ol Long Beacb in tke defendant's chair. · Today's arrests again raised ... the poSSlbiUty that Dr. ""8ry may be relurn- ed to Orange County to face charges leveled aga~ · him in the first Brotherhood indictment. "But that's only a dim possibility," Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright said. "Dr. Leary has been ordered to leave Switzerland by Dec. 31 but I think that Orange County will not be on the list of places be has put on his Christmas list as possible f u t u r e havens." Leary sought refuge in SWltzerland after a brief sojourn in Alegr'.a following his escape from prison In San Luis Ob~po. The LSD cultist had been serv111i a prison tenn Imposed in Orange Cool\ty following his arrest on drug charges ln Laguna Beach on Christmas day of 197U. Free Christmas Trees Offered Families unable lo afford a Chriltma!i tree may get one £ree by calling or visiting the NeWPort Harbor Elks Lodge between 6 a,m, and noon Saturday. The lodge parking lot.'m VU11lllorto:-- Newport· Beach, will be trued w1th 175 gr<tn lrees on wooden rtand donated by the Wiseman'• Club, a Newport Beach group thlt aold tl'ffl lhis year at the cor- ner of MacArthur Boulevard and Paclflc Cout lllchway. Elks memben will dellter lhe trees tiectnntng at 11 a.m. U families are unable to tranport them. Call the lodge at 173-tllO. Lawyers Baek Press SACRAMENTO (AP) -The CalllomJa Trlil Lir/ffl -h111'g1ng Gov. Ronald n..gan to •llPI Jeetilallon 11vtn1 re~rten protection against contempt cJtatfonai for rtfuslng to reveal confi- depttal rout<:<S to a grand jury. "A strong lr>dtpenclent p.-..s ls one or the important tlemtntt to UMare our democratic society," assoclaUon prui. dent Herb Halli said '!'hunday. ... • YEN VIEN ..... RA,ILROAD YARDS •• • . . . .. ' . © . . BActtt.W. ti'OSPITAL BACH MAI . RFIELD@ \ A···· A RADIO STATION '. .A. MILITARY SITES • UPI....,_ • DEVASTATION REPORTED IN HANOI AS U.S. BOMBING OF NORTH VIETNAM CONTINUES Eight 852 Bombers Lost Since Raids Began Monday; 43 Amerlc1n1 Listed as Missing Hanoi Held Responsible For Safety of U.S. POWs KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. !UP!) -The WhHe House said today the United States is holding Hanoi "responsible and ac- coo.ntable" for the safety of Am~iean POWs during U.S. air attacks on North Vietnam. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler made the comment in response to reporters' question about a Hanoi reeort of damage during a raid to a prooo. camp where aome POWs are being held. Ziegler said lbe White Hoose bad no 111- formaUcm to confirm the Hanoi report. He lben lllld: ''tboft ... be .. ~-..bout• tbe lad tbat the United siates bolds· 8- respomible and 8"""'"table for lbe prop- er treatment of the Un i t e d States' prisoaen of WU beJ<l1 by tbe:Nortb.Viet-• ..,. .. .-r u.. pro~ql 'u.i Ge. eva agreement," Ziegler' said. '"Ibis Includes responsibility of not re- taJnlna. _ti:rjsoner1· of war lo or near military target areas." The North Vietnamese said in a Hanoi broadcast that during one of the * * BOMBING ' . "cratered'!' by bombs. ••• He 4edined to spe<)!la~ . as lo how MIGs were able to oPerate with their ~ under attaCk. The Indian ,....,,_, -lo- day in New Delbl lbal American bOmbs Oil 1'hmda1 stnick Ibo IDdlan chancery in Hanoi. numerous raids on ffanoi this week, lhe so-called Hanoi llilton prison camp - where many POWs are believed held - was damaged and some persons woWld- ed. The broadcast did not say specificaUy t~at POWs were hurt. Ziegler also told reporters that Presi- dent NixM was determined to take every step possible "lo bring a rapid end to the war with a negotiated settlement. But," he said, "the next step is totally up to the North Vietnamese." The Administration contends that despite the intense American bombing, it is ·intransigence On the part ot ~orth Vlefnal;n tbat" la holding up a poact· agreement. A Nixon emissary, Gen. AleUnder M. Haig, :!)'turned, today ·lrom a visit lo Saig'an and canfEl'ftd ftir tWo boort wltb Nixon. He·brougbt with him Saigon's response to a refiorted Nixon warning not to try to torpedo any agreement Washington reaches with Hanoi. Ziegler said in response to a question that Nilon had no plan to report to the nation on Vietnam during the Christmas period. Haig, deputy to Nixon's Vietnam negotiator Henry A. KWinger, arrived at the Florida White House 9000 after dawn and bad breakfast wilh Klls,:'::,i;::r lo a conference with Nixon and • er. Haig visited other Southeast Asia capital! as well u SIJgon 'to report on lhe Impasse in Kissinger's negoliations with North Vietnam over a ceasefire agreement. LAMPS-PICTURES -ACCESSORIES HOLIDAY SALE It's the little thiogs that can male the dif- ference. Stop by today and vie~ our fiM selection, now specially priced. If It's for a gift, or for you personally, you 'll find just the thing to enhance any home for the holiday. DREXEl,-.l-lElllTAGl>--4-iENREDON-WOODMARX-ICAltASTAN Yanks Continue Air Strikes Despite LOsses By Un1ted Prtu lntematlonol SAIGON -U.S. air strikes agalmt North Vietnam enier filth day despite heavy losses ; Hanoi Radio reports three more B52s shot down, says MIGs have been used against U.S. planes. KEV BISCAYNE, Fla. -Gen . Alex- ander M. Haig Jr .• returns from Saigon with persoo.al F<!ply lo President Nixon lo a reported Nixon notice of a cutofr of U.S. atd to South Vietnam if it does not go along with a peace settlement. VATICAN CITY -Pope Paul VJ says motives for breaking off Paris peace · talks arJll slep~p11p hostllltie• In :Viet-nam a1*8r ~ " 5Cleftt."~C1Jra'tof ml of "patnlW deli' 1 in negotiation! "to .secure-a more.stable.and solid foundation for ptaee.'/ I I ~,!'"01 •' w ASlllNGTON -• Slata eepOnm..1 remains silent on renewed alt war despite flurry of worldwide pro~tJ. Spokesman has no comment on Radio Hanoi claims that U.S. warplanes damaged U.S. prisoner of war caniP in bombing raid near Hanoi. But Pentagon spokesman say!I if report ts factual, Hanoi is to blame for housing pri9oners in area "exposed to dangers of war" In violation ol Geneva Convention. PARIS -Both Cominwtlst delegations walk out on Thursday•s regular peace talks session in protest over bombing resumption. North Vietnamese have no comment on Radio Hanoi repart that Ibey will boycott -~ ... 1 "technical" talks Saturday, but U.S. delegations says meeting ls still on. • u • :i: ' "'' ,, • 17 nge Coast Today's Flnal l:DLTION N.Y. Stoeks ~Ot.:. t.~. NO. 157, 4 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES O~NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1972 c TEN CENTS 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . Mesa Vice Mayor Straddles Fence on Access . '• BJ RUDI ~ZIEi.SKi ............ , .... Willard T. Jordan, vice mayor of C.OSta Mesa, Aid today be Is "not totally con· vi.need" that a new ordinance barring I public a<:<eSS lo certain city ball I documenb obould be stricken from the ·1 -· SUch action was S1JllOSted by membenl • ol the ~ two -ks ·ago w""'1 it became mown lbat lbe ..... uec1 pro- cedural Ordinance prohibited the public from uamlning correspondence ad- ' dTesaed to counc:llmen. Jack Hammett. Both officials believe they should be allowed to see letters ad- dressed to them t>efore the public does. Correspondence addressed t.o the coun- Adopted·by·f.O vote-of the oooncil-in- November, the ordinance ipakes it unlawful to JOok at letters and other oor· respondence addresled to ihe city council unlea coqnctlmen have seen It fint and allowed lb re!easO to the public. . cilmen of other cities ln the Orange Coast area is· ~eased to the· public as soon as it h:as been received and stamped by lt1e city clerk. "I'm kind Of altting on the fence as far as my reaction on tbis thing is con- cerned," aald Jordan. "ll I could get my inlormalloo before It goes out lo the ne~pers, I could' care less if anyone sees my corresponderice a week before the council meeUDg.,. Jonlan's belie! Is shared by Mayor With passage, of the ordinance, Costa M~ now occuples~the unique PoSition of being the ooly local ·municipality wbich restricts the -public from examining council correspondence and documents relating to city COlDl"cil agendas. .__oun n ' ll•rst"fton Assault Reds Say 3 More B52s Shot Down SAIGON (UPI) -Tbe United States canied its marathon air assault against North Vietnam's heartland Int. the filth clay todsy despite mounting ·air losses. Hanoi l\adlo repcrted lbree more B52s Poliee Check New ·Evidence In Dory Case By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. DallY ...... '''" and an Flll fighter-bomber shot down to- day and said it used MIGs as well as missiles against the Americar. planes. Tbe U.S. Commaod reported that two more B52s were lhot dawn 'lburlday near Hano~ aloog with a pair of Navy A/J ir~-,-· ... -~it' B5Za the .......... ~ 11111 - tbe-Dmlive ., 11111-.,.-...~ Ralloh:lillms' ll ml .. M l>Jllnel; IJ of tllem 8$Zs, 8o fat the Mmmand bas lllted 43 Ari\erlcaM u Dlllilnl and IJ)reoi:ued. Hanoi has broadcast the names of II fliers, most of them :est crewmen. who it said were captured. Some Oiera were reported wounded, two too seriously to attend Hanoi's eJ:bibition of the captives for the foreign press. RadJo Hanoi said in a broadcast monitored in Salgoo that tbe "Nortb Vietnamese Air Fore.a bai participated in the downinp of U.S. planes." Jordan, wbo said he recognized the need for the public to see council cor- respondence, admitted that the council's former openness in releasing such in- formation had not caused it any prob- lems. The vice mayor, who two weeks ago promised that he would discuss com- plaints abollt the ordinance with other councilmen individually, said be had "un- der)ined some things" on the ordinance but that be had not yet discussed them wtth Councilmen Dom Raciti, Alvin Pinkley and Robert M. Wilsoo . Huotlngtoo Beach police said today they have found "quite a bit of blood" on the clothing ol the Newport Beacll c!oryman who they believe may have kill· eel his daughter and then himself last week. A U.S spokesmsn Aid that while there bas been •c80IDe MIG21' activity" it bas not been "slgnlficaaL" H~ S.9s He's Who? Jordan said the ordinance appeared lo rollow the same procedures the council had , always followed but that he had "perhilps not read it that carefully." The new statute was written into the Costa P..tesa Ordinance Code oo the sug- gestions of Mayor Hammett and Coun· cUmart Raciti after both had returned from a .conference in San Diego for new city councilmen and mayors. Passage of such ordinances was urged . during that· meeting. In addition to restricting the ex· amination of correspondence, the oew c Ill 'net. Sgt. Mooty McKennon said tn- Vl!lligaton will be recbecklng the dory Sir Qiarleo whldl belODied to fisherman Allan Vaagbn Knight, ·c. Newport Beacb. Knight and his 1-year .. ld daughter, Patricia, were last seen alive Dec. 12 when be toot ber with him to cbeclt his lobsier lrapo along the coast. The word "slgnlllcalit" Is g<nerslly us- ed wben -activity resulta In damage to Amertcan men or materiel. Tbe command spolcesman Aid MIG (See BOMBING, Page Z) Some ·youngsters · lining up for candy canes: don't ->too· sure whether the man In the red outfit is really .santa -0r their 14-year-eld neighbor, Doug Carson. Santa apPears from 7 p.m. to 9 p,.m. on COsta Mesa's Colleen Place each nigflt to pass out goodies. It's a tradition the nelghllOl'hooil bas .main· tained for 18 years. Boys are·(from left) Bobby An· derson, 9, Raymond Welter, 5, Jonathan Berg, 6, and Michael Welter, 6. , At mid-morning they were spotted by a HUJJ!lngtoo Beacll lifeguard . as Knight stood In the stern of his small boat, ap- parenily cradling his bloode daughter in his arms. A few minutes Inter, the guard told polloe he saw the empty boat circling almlesaly near the Huntlngtoo Beach F.dlson pllnt. Jtnigbl'1 body was fouoct a week later, llOatlng about a ball mile to sea, and his daughter'• body wasbed ashore at the H!Jllllngton •Beach pier 10 boors later. Jbe case, w~ was presumed ~ haw been a double dfowniftg, took an unei:~ peeled turn wben-It was discovered that the girl's throat bad beM lilt. 'Ille Orange County coroner ruled ber death a bomldde, but Huntington Beacb del'ectlves say they -fJave carefully pursued the posslbWUes that ber death may have been accidental. HOwever, McKennon said today the possibility that the cbild was cut by the boat's propeller when she fell overboard or that obe accidentally cut bersell on (See DORYMAN, Pqe I) Plane Crash Kills 3 DUBUN, Call!. (AP) -Autborities were to resume efforts: today to remove the bodies of three persons who died -n their small private plane slammed into a hillside in thick fog near here, the Alameda County Sheriff's office said. Sberllf's Sgt. Leonard Leavlll Aid there were no survivors. Identification of the victims will not be )>O!Sible uoW the bod! .. are removed, be said. I' 11 II !I .. Ii )l ,._ _ _._ ~ November Prices Ri se, Dash Hopes on Inflation WASHINGTON (AP) -Consumer prices climbed another three-tenths of 1 percent in November, virtually erasing President !flllOD's hope of bringing the infiation rate down to' three percent or less in 1973. 'lbe. Labor Department 's an- nouncement today said tw~thirda of the rise was contributed by higher prices for food, clothing and resKlential gas. Beef prices rose imtead of declining substantially, as they usually do. Nixon yesterday el1ended into 1973 t be suspension of meat import quotas In hope of curbing the rise of beef on the hoof and in meat markets. The November living cost indei: at 126.9 ercent of the-1967 average, was 3.5 percent above a year ago. 1be actual increase in November was tw~tenths of 1 percent, but when ad· justed for normal seasonal trends, lhe rise was three-tenths ol 1 percent and matched the increase of a month earlier: Andes Prices in the last three months, imtead of declining to levels between Z and 3 percent as would have been rt'Qulred to meet the anti-inflation goals, rose alta 4.2 percent rate, the department reported. This compared with 2.9 percent 1n the preceding thr<e mooths. •' Crash , Victims Live for 69 Days at 12,000 Feet In another economic development, New York's Firs\ National City Bank, the country's second largest bank, the Mellon Bank of Pittsburgh, the 14th blgges~ to- day raised their prime lendlng rates to f SAN FERNANDO, Clllle (AP) -Elgbt days wltbout oulslde help. plllW creab vtctlml wbo manqed to stay Tbe plane's 45 occupsnlf bad been aJive more than two mont.M in the 11\0W'& given up for dead until two of them, Roberto C&neMa and Fernando Parrado, ol the blih Aridea were rescued today lltnluJed to civlllzailoo early todsy. and broogbl, to a hospital ill .Ji• NPall Their climb down the mountains toot town In central Chile. mort than 10 daY1. - Another •liht IUMllYOis wnre left "It's a miracle that they are still tied a eevere bilzzard encountered en percent, in the · face of the Ntxon ad- route from Argentina to Chile. rt carried minlstratlon'1 campaign to keep down bank interest rates. a crew ot five and 40 passengen -all Citibank, which earlier modified its members of the Old CbriJUan1 rugby prlme rate foimula to appease the team of Montevideo, UNgUay, or their Administration, said the boost from W. relatives and friend~. percent will take effect on Monday, tho Canesia and .Parrado tQld rescuers same day Mcllon lftcrtaae1 Its rate from eight persons died shortly afier tilt plane 511 percent. Harry Tru man's Condition Near Critical Sta ge KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Harry S Truman's heart beat irregularly and his blood pressure fell severely today, alannlng doctorS ao much that Truman's wife, Bess, was called to his bedside and the 88-year-old fonner President was for a time considered in critical condition. "I have no doubt lhat tf I had had to make a fl!port at about 8:30 or 8:45 8.m. this morning I would have had to say he is in crttieal condition," said Research Hospital spakesme.n John Dreves, follow- ing a news briefing delayed almost ,an hour by Truman's worsened condition. "By the time the brleling came, the condition appeared to be passing or at least improving.'' he said. Tnunan was sun censtdei'ed IA "very serious" condiUon which, according to Drevea, means "be la very close to critical at any time." Students Give Trees To Needy Families Approximately 40 needy lamlllcs In Oraqge County will have Christmas trees donated by a group or Estancia High School students. ordinance prohibits any councilman from reveallng the nature or a secret ex· ecutive session unless the release o( in· formation is authorized by majority council vote. Since secret sessions are pt'9bibited un- der the Ralph M. Brown Act ·-with the exception . of discussions pertaining to personnel and pending litigation -the procedural ordinance could make it unlawrul for a councilman to disclose to the public the content of an illegally~­ vened session. An attempt to pass a similar ordinance failed in Newport Beach in 1966. Dr. Leary's Followers Now Sought By TOM BARLEY Of lllt Dtll'I' Pllet Slaff Christmas greetings in the Corm or ar- rest warrants and a copy ~f a multi~page Orange County Grand Jury indictment are being delivered today to 1.8 alleged members of the "Brothttbood of Eternal Love" drug cult founded by Dr. Timothy Leary, the DAILY PILOT bu leamed. The arrestal almost all of them in Laguna Beaco, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach, will bring to 46 the number of defendanb rounded tlP-..-aJ1eaec1-consp1r11ors-Ill an organization described by lawmen as an olllhool of Leary's original Leque of Spiritual Discovery (LSD). Two men were arrested tn Hawaii Tbure:day by Honolulu Police who are sUll scowing the islands for a man described today as a "key figure" in the drug ring -Robert L. "Fat-Bobby'' Andrist , 29. It was learned today that the Orange County Grand Jury bas been involved for seteral weeks' and m~ intensively dur- ing this: pasf week In preparing a new in-- dictment that was still being withheld at press tbne today. ~lstant Di.strict attorney E d Freeman admitted today that the in· dictment was being prepared but refused to release the names of 28 persons charg- ed with multiple narcoUcs counts pending the arrest of the indictees. Freeman confinned that tranrients Calvin L. Delaney, 30, and Ronald R. Crawford, 2$, wete picked up in Maui, Hawaii, by local police working on in- formation supplied by Orange County authorities. Both men have advised Hawaiian authorities from their quarters in the Honolulu jail that they will fight a move by Orange County lawmen to return them to this area. "It may take several weeks kl get them back here in view o. prolonged ei:- tradition proceeding," Freeman said. Freeman said Delaney was last seen in the Southern California area in June when be was arrested by Rivenlde Coon. ty narcotics oUlcers wbo claJm be bad 20 pounds of : isblsh and $15,000 on his person at the time. Freeman said they are tho only arrtsta (See CULT, Pqe Zl Ora nge Weather It'll be cloudy wben you gel.JIR oo Saturday, but don't fret. 1be weatberlady II.YI skies will clear by midday to sunny aldoe-and tem- peratures of !3 It the beacbes and ro Inland. Overnight lows 640. INSW E TODAY For Ille eighth CO!lltCVdD< JIOar, Ille DAILY PIWT u hon- oring ths eop community the· ater actort and acire11e1 in Or· nnOe County. Winnns of iht 1972 DP awards are announced In todat1'• Wteke11der. behind at the olte of the wrecka1e, at an alive," .c.ar CbarloM, !be Uruguayao elevation of about 11,000 feet. to wait wr charge d'allalres,. lold ,.porten 11 thll l---11une...wealheLcleate<l.llOJbeY.LWLJ>O._l_.:t1lim~~lled flown down by belkoptsr, Three moun-the foot "IDcredlble." tali) IUl'rinl l)IOclalllts stayed with' "!Jiit pl-. when tho plot cnalted II cr .. bed near tilt Argentine bonier about On Thursday, New York'• Irvin& Trust ll_mileoo<llll o1 Saallapl.,CIDe OL!hem _ eo., the...13thJaraest bank. announced t. w11 the pllC. w8' temporarily cbani;lng the method 111- -C.-.,. Pom4o-sald •ollw .. 11-ed In calculatln1 llf prime, 0< minimum .,, 11 died during Ille lint tr two big ln~st rate on corporato loans. 'Ille Im· 'mw.i.;.011 lo bit the mountain all•Nbe mecllateefftct will be to lore1tall a boost ........ """'-11it1 uld tho -to I -t from l'lli per<ient llllder the .l>alcS ol 'llo:lllM was.burlea by Ille -· banll'• 014 lorml!lt, The yooths told more tb8n 500 trees during the put two wffka from a lot at their ochool to help fund their American Field Servloe Americana Abroad pro- 1ronr. Wlielfd!ilr'lile eiilciJWtiliii~ they bad trees lelLnver. "' them. -alWl)'I ilonnbocmd ADii lelTib(J fte ll perw -p11111111111bolrd. rocky," be llld. • Uruguayan Air r ... plae tbll crubed Ttil plane, a _-.... l'ldidllld Oct 11 --!or .1 .... 11"'"8 !or • wttb two...,_, dlAppear<d a_lt bot· So, they cootaclM the Oranao (:ocmty Welfare DeportDient ollkel in Santa Ana and offend to --lo homes aeywbere In the ""'"'1 · '--------~·· NO ULTERIOR MOTIVES Former Commi11ioner U1ab Vsab Denies 'Deal' in Bid On Boatyard By WlLI.L\~I SCHREIBER Of fM 0111~ Piie! 11111 Conflict of interest rumors involving bid s or. the Dana Point boatyard contract loday were denied by the man named in the spe'.culation. t\Iartin UMb. former Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks Commission Chairman and president of Dynatech Corporation in Sanla Ana. said ·whoever reported the conflicl is telling •·a n out and out lie." Usab also said there "'ere no ulterior motives for his resignation from the panel last week, merely that he was "fed up with politics and needed to devote more time'' to his business. While discussions were Jn progress, during v"hich three boatyards were being considered for the lucralive boat repair yard parcel. Usab owned 2,500 shares of Y.'illard Boat Works in Costa Mesa, one of the competitors for the contract. \\'illard eventually won the com-- 1nission's approval for the contract, even though anothe r company, Dana Point Anchor Marine offered a much higher option price. Willard offered $10,700 while Anchor Marine was prepard to pay $30,500. The Orange County Board o f Supervisors has delp.yed final action on the contract until January ~use of lingering questions about why the top bid v.'as not accepted in the usual manner of county government. In addition to the dlscrepacy 1n the op- tion bid, \Villard's competitors say the in· clusion of a boat building yard in YlU!ard's cffer was contrary .to the bid procedure. Willard offered to Pay the county a fiDd percentage of its boat· building revenues. Sometime during tbe oommi!liGD'I discu.ssicn cf the contracts, the Orange County Ccunsel's cffice and the District Attorney were notined cf Usab'!I Interest in Willard and began asking questions. Willard President William Tighe said, however, the whole incident is ludicrous because Usab never held a controlling in· terest of any kind in the oompany. "He owned 2,500 shares out of 368,000 on the market," Tighe said. "That is about .06 percent interest." Will ard's books and public stock records prove Usab bought only the 2.~ shares when the stock went public in 1971. Usab said he made no additional deals with Willard to buy more stock and as a minority stockholder had no control over exeeutlve decisioos. "I bought these stocks because I bought a boat from Willard and liked the job they did on It," Us ab said. 1' And that is the whol e story ." Deputy Orange Ccunty Counsel Clay Parker, who was asked by the district at- torney to investigate Usah's "possible conflict of interest." sa id Thursday there was never any conflict Involved. "We determined easily there was ro conflict in thls case and that Mr. Usab could have voted on tbe contract and kept his stock, too." he said. OUHal COAST CM DAILY PILOT n. Or-..~ DAILY Pll..01', wl!tl ~ ll comMM111 IN H-f'reu. It IJlllblblm "" Ille or..,.. Cout Puelblllrit CO""*"f· ~ raft t1111-. ar1 Plltlllll'led. ~ lltrwlll "'""'' ., Calla ~. fll~ ~ """11"9'°" BtKhJFounl1ln V11iey, Ll9Una llludl, 1"'1Mls.ddl~ d s~ C....,.,...,11/ 'f'" J-c.pl•lr-A •!nole 1'911iaowll • aClltlon 11 !Nblltllld Sall,ll'da'fl ant kMIVL l'l\1 prlncl•!I pUl!Ulolllng pl1"' II •I !Ill We.I Bir Strfff, Colli M .... CllftfomJ,f, tlt:llt. R.obart N. Wa•d f'rnldftlt •I'd Pulltl.,... • J1t•""11:: C"Urtty Vk9 ~I tnd GaMf'al """'-" llto111•• K11vll ..... n-a• A, Mwphln M ........... Gerl• H. Leet l lcli1r4 r. Hall ""6MMt ,.......... ... I .. c:-.--JJO W11t lay Straet Mtfffitt MldrMn P.O. lex 11.0, '1626 ' ~..-,......,..,, &tad!! JW ,,......,_, ... .._... L."""9 lll'dl: l:tt ,_,.A_ ~"'"''"'~ H«tt: 1"1i aMdl ~ -.n Clll'l'Ml'ltt: at Mal1ll a1 C.1111M Jl•I , ........ 1714) '4J: ... J21 Ml•lt71 Bonte0tctters WiU Harbor Schools Won't Feel Bill By \\'Il.J..IAM SCllRElBER Ot 1M Dlllll" ...... Sl•H The $1.1 billion Reagan-Morelli school finance reform measure approved this week in Sacramento won't afiect Newport-Mesa district progralll.!I, school officials said. One part of the measure eUmln1ter 111 but ten so-called permissive overrides that district trustees can levy to fund special activi ties. Adrlan said Newport-Mesa hu not been greatly involved with t h ~ permlulve overr1dts and thwl will not be affected much by the elimination or some of them. But SB90, v.•hich provides for a rollback In property taxes and a one percent boost in state sales tax, is txpected to help Harbor Area home<iwners. Among the overrides not eliminated "There will definitely be tax relief for that stUl might be used by Newport-Mesa Newport-l\1esa taxpayers," said Waller are those to finance speclal alteraUons Adrian, district financial director. "But ordered by fire marshal!, earthquake our overall analysis o( the dollars and rebuilding, public school bu.llding loan cents show Newport·~lcsa won't be af· repayment and bond in,terfft and fected one way or another as far as redemption levies. . 1naintaining our current servi~s." '"Ibe overrides that were eliminated Adrian said no definite figures on tax '-....!_nvolve such things as rellrement funds. rate savings have been made available community servict funds and adult by the st.ate Department of F.ducaUon, educatkln money," Adrian aald. but he estimates it will be In the range of "We don't even have adult educaUOn five to ten cents per $100 assessed valua· and we eliminated practically all otbl!:r tion. permissive overrides by including needed Current total tax rate in Costa 1.tesa programs in the general purpose tax ~lands at $5.08 while the rate in Newport rate," Adrian said. Beach is $4.67 per $100 assessed valua· "About the only override we are still lion. engaged in is the school building bond Adrian said the tax re lie£ will come in redemption and that is sun allowed," he a second form . said. "And1the way tax rates are shaping up, the interest on those bonds may go !;The bill increases the exemption on down as v.·ell." your tax bill from $750 to St,750." he said. "That i.s deducted from the assess- ed value of your home and the taxes are levied on the lower figure ." Adrian said the reduction in tax rates and increases in exemptions will be made up by new state funds collected by raising the state sales tax and other tax· es. SB90 is desl~ to give greater In· co me to low wealth school districts with high property taxes. From Pagel DORYMAN ... something in the boat was "pretty slim." He pointed out that the coroner's report indicated that a fiae-bladed in· strument had caused the deep slash across the child's throat. An old, ru.ty knife found In the dory was tested for the presence <>f human blood along with the clothing, but no blood was found on the blade, McKennon noted that the rusty tnlfe's blade was too coarse to have caused the wound on the tot's throat. Paper Carrier 'Bushwhacked' In Costa Mesa David Brian Welch, an l l·year-old newspaper carrier from Costa Mesa, complained to police 1bursday that he was bushwhacked by another youth who grabbed his sack of goodies and sped orf · on a IO.speed bike. Welch told oUicers his 108! consisted of a box of Inzooka bubble gum and three 45 !pm recon11 by Janis Joplin, Neil Diamood, and the Fifth Dimension, for a tota1 value of Sl.10. He said he had been delivering papers in the area of the Tradewinds Apart. meats on Costa Mffl\'S west side when the · youth rode up and warned hlm not to deliver to an apartment because "that's my friend's customer." Police today are looking for a f.reckJe- faced bushwhacker in a flowery shirt and wearing blue pants. l'l'Olll P .. e 1 CULT . INDICTMENTS • • • be expects to make In the Hawaiian Island& unless lawmtu there manaa:e to pr~u~ the elusive Andrist. Tbe former Ari Coloey tt1iden1 bas evaded bls pursuers atnce the original Brotherhood indictment was issued last August. Lawmen recently conflnned that the search for the 300-pound s~ has now been extended to ctber areu in the United States. "The people we want are in the bea~h cities of Orange County," Freeman said. "That's where we are working today and that's where we v.·ill be working throughout the Christmas weekend unlil all our arrests are made." Police in Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach are cooperating with Orange County Sheriff's officers, agenis from the Federal Bureau of Narcotics ind Dangerous Drugs, agents from the state's Bureau of Narcotic~ Enforcement and U.S. Customs officers in a joint sweep that has become known as the * * * 'Mind-boggling' Drug Conspiracy Told by Police District Attorney's officers preparing the newest indictment in the · "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" con- spiracy today updated what one in- vestigator described as "the most num~ ing statistics you ever saw in your life." They include the allegallon that Brotherhood membe=-s hr ve smuagled hashish -a refinement or marijuana - into the United States at the rate of 1,000 pounds a month for the last six years. And it is also alleged that Brotherhood members have distributed many millions of LSD-tablets throughout the world dur4 ing that same periocf. ''The amount of money involved Is mind-boggling," an investigator s•id . "Just put it at many millions of dollars until we can come up with a reuonable estimate." ' Lawmen said the Brotherhood'• major smugglina network utilized false lden- tification and forged passports that allowed many of Its memben to travtl aO'OWld the world makln1 lli•pl drug purchases for lmport lnto the United States. Many of those purcha:iie1, lnvtlt.lplors !aid, were made In India, Pakl!Wl and Afghanistan. n--was notad.10d•r-that Dr: Leary'• Brotherhood of Eternal Love was until recently a legal corporetion In California that had been granle,d tax.exempt status by the State Franchiff Tb Board "on the grounds of ill religious nature " 11te corpotatlon wu formed In October of 1!166. It was hurriedly dissolved by Jnwmen last Augu8t. Orange Counly Drug and Narcollcs Tuk Force. Freeman said those named in the new lndiclment will join 16 penons earlier named In the alleged_ Brolhed>ood con- spiracy - a IOlal of 46 defendanls. "And Ibis Isn't by any means the end of the road," a weary District Attorney's investigator commented Ulb mondng. Superior Court Jodge Raymond Vin- cent has be<n solely occupied In recent weeks with the flood of paper "°" ac- cum ulated in the form of multiple fllC>.. lions ·filed by the battery of defenae lawyers hired by the Brotherhood defen- dants. Several defendants have bad their names ·removed from the indictment dur. ing that Ume via ~imls and pleas of guilty lo reductcl charges. Among theiit was O.vid Mark Reddy, 23, 33801 Sire<! of the Copper Lanlttn, Dana Point, who faces a state prison lenn of up to 10 years following a plea of guilty to amended drug charges and violation or an earlier probation. But Redd y must first serve a one year term ·in federal prison on drug charges substantially amended from those filed when he, Brian Kendall McAdams, 25, 20'286 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, and Thomas Blake Bidwell. 26, of Garden Grove, were arrested I n Portland, Oregon, last Jan. 13. The trio were a~ of stuffing S2 million worth of hashish into a truck that was belng shipped on a Dutch freighter from Bombay, India to Vancouver , Canada. All three received one year jaU terms but Orange C o UiD t y "Brotherhood" c~es against Bidwell we r e later dismissed in Judge Vincent's courtroom and the defendant shipped off to Lompoc pruon. McAdams hu been ordered to face tria1 March 28, on charges contained in lh" original indictment. The first of severa1 trials stemming from the first BroUterhood indictment wlll open Jan. 10 with J a mes Leroy Crittenden, 29, 9f L<>ng Bench ln the defendant's chair. --"r6<1ay'I -affi!ilr"&r•lil ·-uiJ!4!<1--tbe possibility that Dr. Leary may be return- ed lo Orange Couniy lo lace charges leveled against him in the first Brotherhood indictment. Party for 'Fairview Kids Set Saturday A Chrlstmu party for children at C.osta Mesa's Fairview State Hospital has been scheduled for 5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Saturday by Gen. Doug I fl a MacArthur POA~ 499 of the American Lcgloa. nic party ls open to th• pubUc and Jlubor Area residents are inv1ttd to add to the donations of toya and ctot.hina, ac- cordtng to Post Commander Louls Ca"' rklo. The party is scheduled for the hospital's auditorium, 2501 Harbor Blvd. • • \ A RADIO STATION .. ... .--.. ·. .· YEN VIEN ..... RAILROAP YARDS • • . . • . ., ' " I i.. I. t l ... ' ' DEVASTATION REPORTED IN HANOI AS U.S. BOMBING OF NORTH VIETNAM CONTINUES Eight 852 Bombers Lost Since Raids Began Monday; 43 Americans Listed as Missing Hanoi Held Responsible For Safety of U.S. POWs KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI) -The White House sald today the United States is holding Hanoi "responsible and ac· countable" ror the safety of Am~rican POWs during U.S. air attacks on North Vietnam.. Press Stcretary Ronald L. Ziegler made the comment in response lo reporters' question about a Hanoi report of damage during a raid to a prison camp where some POWs are being held. ZleaJer said the White House had no in· formation to ccnfirm the Hanoi report. He then said: "There can be no questi90 about the fact tbal the United Slates bolds Honoi re9p00111ble · 8lld accooihlablO li>~ the iiliip- er treatment of the U n i I e d s£ates' prisoners of war held by the North VieJ· namese un<jer the p~qm ol 11!1' Qa> * * BOMBING • • • bases in Ncrth Vietnam have been among the targets for the renewed raids. He also admitted that the runway or Hanoi's Gia Lam civilian airport, never before struck in any of the American bombinp of North' Vietnam, had been "cratered" by bombs. He declined lo specUlale •J lo how MIGs were able to operate with their bases under attack: Tbe IDdi.an government announced to- day tn New Delhi that American bombs on Thursday struck the Indian chancery in Hanoi. <'Va agreement.'' Ziegler said. "This includes res ponsibility of not re- taining .:irisoners of war in or near military target areas.'' The North Vietnamese said in a Hanoi broadcast that during one of the numerous raids on Hanoi this week, the SCK:aUed Hanoi Hilton prison camp - V.'here many ·POws are believed ?leld - V.'aS damaged and some persons wound· ed. The broadcast did not say specifically that POWs were hurt. Ziegler also told reporters that Presi· dent Nixo n was determined to take every step ppssible "to ~rtn.& a rapl<J end to the wat wtth a negotiated settlement. But," he said. "the ne.xt step Is totaJly up to the North Vietnamese." . ; Tbe : Adraioistratkm cotittodt lbat despite the intense Ameri can bombing, it is intrarnigence on the part of North Vietnam that is holding up a perce agreement. A Nixon emissary, Gen. Alexander f.f. Haig, returned today from a visit to Saigon and conferred for two hours with Nixon. He brought with him Saigon's response to a reported Nixon warning not to try to torpedo . any agreement Washlngton reaches with Hanoi. Ziegler said in response to a question that Nixon had no plan lo report to the nation on Vietnam during the Chrlstmu period. Haig, deputy to Nixon's Vietnam negotiator Henry A. Kisinger, arrived •t the Flori@ White House 8000 after dawn and had break.fast with Kissinger prlcr to a conference with Nixon and Kissinger. LAMPS-PICTURES·-ACCESSORIES HOLIDAY SALE It's the little thing• that can ma~o the dif. ference. Stop by today and view our fine selection, now specially priced. If it's for a gift, or for you personally, you'll find just tho thing lo enhance any home for tha her.day. I . I~ DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-l<ARASYAN Yanks Continue Air Strikes Despite Losses By United Preis [Qtemattonal SAIGON -U.S. air strikes against North Vietnam enter fifth day despite heavy losses: Hanoi Radjo report! three more B52s shot down, says MtGs have been used against U.S. pl~. KEY BlSCA YNE , Fla. -Gen. Alex- ander hi. Haig Jr., returns from Saigon with personal reply to President Nbon to a reported Nixon notice of a cutoff of U.S. aid to South Vietnam if it does not go along with a peace se ttlement. VATICAN CITY -Pope Paul VI says motives (or brealtiJlg. 9!f P,ads •W&C< talks and stepping _up. loO!tintles In Viel· na'!!-appear ''.lnsufnclent." Calls for eOO of "painfUI delay" in'·pegotiatlons '"to secbrt a mbre· !fable arid iolla folffidaUon for peaCe." · WASHINGTON -Slate Departmeol remains silent on renewed air war despite flurry of worldwide protests. Spokesman has no comment on Radio Hanoi claims that U:&-warplanes-- damaged U.S. prisoner of war camp in bombing raid near Hanoi. But Pentagon spokesman says if r.eport is factual, Hanoi is to blame for housing prbtoners in area "exposed to dangers of war" in violation of Geneva CcnvenUon. PARIS -Both Communist delegations walk out on Thursday's regu]ar peace talks session In protest over bombing resumption. North Vietnamese have no comment on Radio Hanoi report that· they will boycott lower--level "tecbnkal" talks Saturday, but U.S. delegations says meeting is still on. NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WlSTCLIFF Dll., M2°2010 LAGUNA BEACH e )45 NORTH COAST HWY. 4•4-6511 TORRANCE e 2JM9 HA.WlkolNE ILVO. J71.121t I v cos bu Fri " m hir d te H d st w r el n 0 E p 0 2 a a a a II h a r