HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-24 - Orange Coast PilotI
. Coast Kids Swamp Santa·'s Mailbag ~
Allout Utla time of y .. r, OOllll!leroble
mall ~ left the Oroqe CoOll lor
deotlnatlon Nortl> Pole ad 1ood old St
---Bo)'.& and.jlr~
ltom the coutal ·
MN hive &lvtn the
jolly old man plen-ll' 10 read Olf the
cold wlnlAr •libto·
.:hiro!i&h !he load ~ a( the U.S.
Poolal -· the DA,11, Y PlLCYI' has
-...allowed to~ , .
~ -of· the OUtl!Olili milsi~ headed lot Santa Claus, Here are aome eumples
" '
l
,
o1 mt Ille yampters bad to say:
Dur Sonia °""'· -ICY name-II CbriJlopber Rlpu. 1 have..
been • cood boy all year. Please bring me tbele toys: roUer skales, trampoline,
garap.t bowlina 1et1 game. Hope ·io see
you tbil Cbrlltmas. I will have cookies
~ milk lor you. Thlnt yoo.
Love, Chris
Dear santa: '
I have been a good boy. Please bring
me ad ln.cb worm, a little volts wagon to
plliy. a gun to sbool, CJlps and toy jack
(lammer.
Jeffrey Kemper
•
,,, .. ,, ,,., .. , ..
Dear Santa,
l want these things. Guitar, bicycle
(with training wheels), airplane, choo
cOOo traln and -tbe best thing I ever
wanted ia. a motorcycle (just a plain
one).
P.S. You can give ~ anything ebe If
you !eel llke It. •
P.S. What are yoo 1ettlng? Merry
Cbr!Jtmas and llo Ho Ho Sonia!
David
Dear Santa,
Wu tbtre, an abominable snowman the
year R~ph W8' bom? I hope you think
I have been ~good boy Ibis year. 1 would
~ a play bowie knife, a verti-bird, a
Robinson boot, a s~ rocket, twirl paints,
pencil, an orange shirt with a zipper, rot.
\ ler aka&es, galoshes, a bike born. I hope
Its not foggy on Cbrlstmas Eve.
l.o.'e. Greg Waite
Dear Santa Claus,
1 want these tblq1. A Barbi hoaae,
Barbi head (wlth ,m,akeup), a watch that
worl<J. But moot of au I want llOQletblq
for everybody In my family.
P.S. You can give me anything else
and Santa 1 want something ror my
friend!
P.S. What are you getting for
Chrlstmu? maybe you Will g e t
something from me.
P.S. Ho'¥> Hobo Hobo Hobo! Merry
Christmas
From, Mary Jo RooneY
'
Dear Santa,
I want a train. I like your reiodeetl
b<!cause they ~ao Oy.
J John~J.
Please give me a projector and a bflte
and motel blarie.
Dear Santa
'l1lank You,
John and Jim Fletcher
I have good this year so I am asking
for two toys lhia year. Thank You ~ ,
Sage and Merry Christmas the toy1 I
want are the Aurora name throwers road
race set and a pair ol walkie talkies DO(
' ' (See LE'l"l'ERS, Page I ) •
.. ····"·~· .. ··"" ... ' ... ' '
VOL. 65,.NO. 359, .6 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1972 TWENTY -FIVE CENTS
uake Rocks Ma·nagua
4,000 Die in Nicaragua Capital Disaswr
< , I
W••tlslt7
A few clue11, might help. It took 506 styrof6am bolls, 36,000 tooth-
picb and two weeb to build. acoording to painting contractor Danl,el
Gisse1l, 27, of 219 Fairway Place, Costa Mesa. Still curious? You'll
find the answer on Page 2. ·
'
20,000 Pilgrims Converge
' .
9n' Birthplace· of Christ
BETHLEHEM, Israeli-occ:upled JordSD
(Ul,'I) -Electrlc su...utance ·and army
command can competed Sat~y with
holiday bunting and a lone Christmas
tree !or the attention ol cro)'ds thronf!l<lg
Ille traditional birthplace or the Christ
-• •. ,~.:,t.i
tivtUes throughout 15'1'et ,
The visitors came . in 140 organized
groups, borne by ll special Cruise ships
and over 70 overseas Dlghts.
MANAGUA,'Nfcaragua (Al') -About
100,000 J><!'SOfl8 had fled this earthqualce-
sbattered "3Pital dty by Sunday .morn-
ing, and the emergency commission or-
dered the complete -evacuation of all
300,000 residents. '\
-Managua was devastated ~aturday by
a series of qijakes that left1 about 4,000
dead, accordin'g to several aources. How-
ever, there was no offlCi.11 Wont-bn the
death toll, although a Mexican govern-
ment report mentioned 9,000 deaths.
· The dty coolinued to shake late Sat-
urday night and early Sunday morning,
with three strong but brief tremors felt.
Fires bume<! out al eontrol . .-than
24 hours after the most serldul tre-
hlt Managua sbortly after 1 a.m. Satur-
day. Tremors still coold be !el\, this
morning in a crater of a •°'?Bo ~ , ,
Manuagua -Ille-« ..+!" _..,...
mmicaUona to the outside -by aatellite
-were aet up.
rn addltion to damage to the Presiden-
tial l'l!!oco, _the arnJY headquarters and other government buildings were badly
damaged and rendered uninhabJtable,
said Col. Jose Alagrett, head ol 1the NW.
araguan Army Corps al Engineers. He
said aU the city's tlu:ee major bote!J
were badly damaged and closed. . ·
Ai least 100 prisoners in the Mangua
jail were killed when the buldlng col-
lapsed, be said. The others escaped. The
water supply was cut off and Col.
Alagrett said this was a principal p~
blem.' Martial law and a state of emergency
(S<e EARTHQUAKE, Page Z)
* * * Nica r a gua Quake
Deaths Ra~ed
As Second Worst
child. · '
: In Bethlehem where Christianity places
the manger birthplace of JeSus, Mtiyor
Elias Freij said he expected 10,000 By United Press Intemadooal
• j
,,,
u,..,.......
Ollfil'HleEVE OF CHRISTMAS, Alf<NDONID MANAGUA CHURCH TOWERS OVER RUBBLE ·· i-. \• · · Nlc1r .. ~n. C1plt1I_ UV.W~1Tl\ou1encfs Die, Jn O.Vep1tin9 Quake
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hnghes Survives
One day before the celebraUons begin
with a Christmas Eve proCess!on fro!D
Jerilaalem, ~ciala esllmaled that 20,000
p1lgrlms bad arrived to lake part in a<>
visitors, a decline from last year. In tenns of destruction , t h e . "<' ....... ..u... is v•rv tlght here," Freij -Ho t;el Damage d But Mo st Escape
Seven Survive
Norwegian Plane
Crash in Oslo
'
~ ... ~~,. -~ Nicaraguan earthquake appeared to ·iSe said. "It alwa,ys has been and tho Middle the second worst in the history o1 tbe East a.itu8tion seems to be bitting us. Western Hemisphere. e.w-IJ still quiet but we all hope thal --t •-• -794 llV • M 1970
Truman 'in Coma,
Condition Siill
tomorrow it will start in earnest." """ wors wva -· 8 m ay, in northern Peru. About 25,000 were klll-
The Israeli military govemment1 al'fl ed by ava\anCheS whl~ smothered cities
to wl\f1llngll ol Arab guerrillia auacu, and villages at the baae of the huge redoub1ed their semrity ~Uurea with HuaJCBrll'I Mountain.
jeep petrols, helicopter overllights and The Peruvian diluter meuured a
radio-equiJ!Pid loot IOl4Jen, ' magnttude "! 7. 75 on the Rlcllter llCale,
., • " " less tbart the lalqprlJtc jolt al U dealt "Very Critil',al,'' · " • · -" · -Alaska March 24, 1914. ...... 55 Airmen Down 0n that day, us Alastans were killed.
KANSAS CITY, Ma. (um) Fonnor c pbetus !'!.. w17 ~1!! tldindt wa•est r:' the
President Hairy •S Tnuoani Ilia bWt cJU~~a~ v• qvo• a n or e r n
abowlng sign• o[ congeslt•• [allure, slip-As Planes Raid Dr. Bruce Bolt, IJnlvmlty 0 f ~ irito' a coma Saturday but doctors California seismologist, saJd a factor in
said hla , coildlt!On improved minu.ely . N V B the high death toll in Nicaragua would be
Saturday nlgbt. Truman, 811, waa In very • iet ases the type o[ construction.
CTttical condition., • 1 Adobe buildings, {he sild, a r e
Doctors were ....,.-Ip! 1!1· a SAIGON 'UPI) Anwlcan bd be particularly dangerous because the wal!J stal>llization In Ille ... Cbtel ' es· ' ' -• m " are brttlle, He said countries which ""'
eart've's hlood --Ind, ,..:...,•• c raided North Vlelnalli .satn todaf, the lltUe timber , sue. h as Turkey and Iran ' r~ .. -.,.._ oeV..th consecallvodlQ' ol -• !*'l<>da oUncrealed pube. , clock bombing, rnllltary -aald. where boulders sometime• are used to
'/Pieeldeol Truman remaJn1 comp-The U.S. wupi-llew agaJnjf what weilh down roof!, alwal'I llJl!er heavy
lJ .._.tve and '" c:lllcal """'"' -··bly ·~ ~-·~ t•··-~ death ,loltl. tlon."'loid 8-rdl ~.._an ™'P•-~ -v-an -~M• ''There ii Dre In Ilana...," lie aald,
.,.,,;. Dmo... ''Sjloee ~ Alftl . i. "'Thelssileullre.s. ~.:'.!' ~ .. Sat""'"" ~ ~ ~ft Inlbould "'...?~ lq ~!"'k Y ,,._,. ~•re hel dropped ,_ ~ """"'----, ·~ ~" re. In lhe , • ., .... ,...-e, ;;""" ~ lllOdk:atimo'llve" ;;i;;..,. more 852 heovy bombers,..,. abot down many !tre deaths occumd beca-i-, · ..--', over Noi11>,Vletumap'Frtday, .. ninth pie couldn't get away."
N.,.men '8ked Drevea K Tnnnan 1 and tenth tllla -k. Rodlo Hlnol clalDlJ In 1923 the Tollyo diauter toot 113 000
CGDtinuecl ~pont,lvenesa to·stlmyli 1"' 17 B5ZI shot down •Ince homl>lnl p Uve1. Fife ..... £bl!lldtnP qf
dlcaled 'l\'Um.01l '!u' In ~.coma i:net !)le resumed againll lbnol and Hafpboac wood and PIP\11' , .p<i .....-hoop!~ opo~ Wd, Y,., !\< 1 Cl!tn-• i..t NOl)Cloy nlihl· , , st,.,.i, made t-1!'" . '
-· • . 1 ; ·11'5.' op(,ii-~ lit mallrm a " T\le' -111·1. most aeetruotlve eartb-At Umee 'since nooo Sa~rday ·his ,.pori from lhe Florida White -at quab b believed· to bav• blppened it reoplratlo~, has been utremci,I' allallow Key B11eayno that U.S. jets -1d stop Shenll ~. China, In 1111. ll la ancJ 1low, Dreve1 ,.Id. • the bomblq !or 24 hours itartlnc at ...,. ealculaled thal 830,lllld people~ killed.
Truma1'1 wile, Beu, SI, 1pent much ot down today u port of a Olrlstmu -In 1m, In C.tcutta 1111,000 dllil.
tba clay 1ttltn1 al his becklde altor site being -....r hy both lldeL In tldl ceotlll')' the lllOll. ~ qwike,
Wit called Iron\ the!< lndependenct, In Moecow thO irm newi aaency said Alter Tolcyo occurred In Mealna, Italy,
Mo., borne when hls condition woraened U.S. air raids qlnast Hanoi. Saturday In 1908. lo contrast, the famed San Fran-during the earlY morning. Bot llrl. 'l'n> · cil<'O quake and lire of J9De couaed 162
man returned home tote Sa~. (lleo A!llMEN, Pap I I !atallU...
•
LO:! ANGELES (UPI ) -Howard
lfugbes, the billkmaire American b~
dustrlalist and recluse, a p p a r e n t I y
survived the earthquake in Managua,
Nlcaragua, wJlhout i n j u r y , his
spokesman bere said.
"The repori 1 have received iJ: sketchy,
iiUt It lndi<ates that Hugheo survived the
quake and th.it all his people down there
are okay," said the spokesman, Richard
Hanna.
Hanna sail! Hughes aod 10 or 12 staU
members are in M8nagua at the Inter-
Continental hotel. The ~el ,was report-
ed to have been damaged heavily by the
quake, which destroyed most of the city.
Hanna said that if.Americans are to be
Down out of the city Sunday, 111 would
1\1!\lme he (Hnghes) would be jn .. that
11umber."
ACUPUNCTUllE· .:. 1t'1 a oomblnatton
Oral .Roberta-Kathryn 'Kuhlman lalth-
heallnc! It'• hypno•l•T No.
-~:.'1:1>8 ~ ~ art
or· put11/1f ~·),,.,au thO rilbt
pl""8. Dally',1'liot atall wrtter ·C.n-
daee Pellnon tO!let a long ldok at the
medical pro!esslon's ne..est · enigma.
Page t.
SHOPPING -u you are loollnf r.. !01~ " mtnute O!rlstmas preeen\8 for over-
looked !riendl coJumnill Hal Boyle
has oome jllgg .. tlons. Par• 1.
l
Hanna said be received the report on
Hughes within the Hughes Industrial
organlution, but be declfued to say bow
Hughes had gotten word out ol Managua.
Htlghes, who recently acquired 25 per-
cent of the Nicaraguan Lancia Airllnea,
has resided in Managua for most of the
time since the controversy earlier tbl!I
year about his phoney autobiography
·written by Cllllord Irving. He bad taken
over two nocn of the lnter<'iontinentaJ
Hotel for himself and 's staff.
Coffee Magnate Dies
' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -"James
Athearn Folger Ill, who started as Clerk
and later becAme president of the coffee
company whl~h. btart his family name,
haa died at thle age of 72.
PEACE PlllZE -COlumnlat Ellzabelb
MacDonald Manntn;, llao editor or
OS1,0 (UPI) -Police said Saturday
al least seven persons survived the crash
of a Norwegian Fokker Fellowship
airliner wbicb arubed in 1 rugged forest
outside Olio. The plane bad carried 4S
persorui.
A police spokesman said 35 penons
were killed in the crash and that tllr9e
were miulng.
Airport officials said the plane was
found. at Assdoelatr. a small lake in a
forest about J2 miles southwest of Oslo.
.Earlier reports said two persona In the
area bad heM:f criel from people et tbe
aouthf?rn end of the lake. .
Airport sources aald radio contact with
the plane broke orf 12 minutes be(ore tt
was scheduled to land.
I The plane ·carried 42 paaseqers aDd a
crew or three.
lulde S••d•y
Flnllllf:e Magaitne, bellevet one man .... ..,..
, llll:tiJ4~most to the ibaptng or -·-
, .... .,... ....... , -.-. ,,_,..... " " • Nflmal worklo~ Ofl,& hoe~Of ., •o.r -
ralaied ' .' 1'ilt Int,\ li'l'retaiio'i' ' tm..-.· • '
Richan! , Nixon. Pa1e I. -"""" ' lfltlrtlll ......
SANTA'S ~RlENDS -SL Nlclc has a ::-
Wl)I with chlidren Dally Pilot ttalf I. 1. "" .....
writer ')\IUaon Deerr 'Joined lorccs
with 1tarr photosrapher Lee Payre to
documeril ~ o\d [IOllUeman'• knack -•-
for making !Ho-long !rlenda. Page !),
•,
'l""~ ..... w-. ._.. .,_
, .. IJ .,..,...
N Wiiii•""
1 Oii• Wtt-
,.,_
' ,.
'
• , .. ,,
l>ll ,.,,
• n •
t
l
I
•
l
I
•
People /Quotes
Anal)'llng last -week's U.S. Supreme Cou rt ruling on ob-
scene entertainment which upheld the state's aulhority to
nclllate nude entertainment lo bus and problb!ting "bottom-
less" dancing and so-ealled "adult" movie!, Call!ornla Attar·
ney Genenl Evello You091r said, "You can still see cllr\y
allows lo call!omiL You can still ea\ and drink. You just can't
do both at once ... ·• I
Prior to a niotion by ~ustee Patricia
Gillette lhat lhe 4guna Beach Board 1of Ed-
ucation terminate his contract, Assistant
Superintendent Dr. Chor! .. H .. 1 told lhe
board, "I've worked under this board for 33
pntty damn hard months and l think I've
earned my money. When lhe board has to
apologize for a mistake 1 make, they won 't
have to flro me, 111 resign. My perform-
ance will stay the same whether I'm here
sh: months or six days ... no matter what
happens tonight" He was !ired on a 3-1
vote by lhe board. 1
"Now. Joe, when the ceremony begins, walk straight and
don't look too pleased," said Mrs. Mlri• Bernerdln to her
son just before bis installation as archbishop o! the Roman
Catholic Archdiocese of ctncipoati.
' Revlvli>g an eorller decision. Newport
Beach councilmen laSt week turned down
a controversial, high. density condominium
on the site of BaJboa's Fun Zone, voting to
table indefinitely the proposal to build the
47-unit project. Vi ce Mayor How•rd Rogers
told the other councilmen he \vould rather
· see the matter tabled than anything else,
saying. "I'm caught between a roc k and a
hard place~ I ·have three homeo,vner groups
in my area. Two oppose the project, one
favors it and I wi sh I weren't here.''
Following tbe successful completion of the last flight in
the Apollo series, Dr. ~rge Low, deputy administrator of
the space agency, said, "Man has learned that space is his to
explore and man will return to space to explore, to the moon
and beyond. Apollo has paved the way."
Overriding objections of Orange County
labor an d construction groups, Huntington
Beach ci ty councilmen last week doubled
park dedication requirements for develo~
ers giving the city five acres of land for each
1.000 residents the proj· ect will generate.
Qouncilman OOnald Ship ey, angry at state-
ments by outside spokesmen that two-and-
one-half acres per 1,000 people is deemed
adequate, said, "This city has had two gen-
eral election on this subject and got over-
whelming support for it. I just go ape when
I bear the outside come in and say we don't
know what we are doing.,.
Saying that this year's tour may be the last of the holiday
journey he has made every year since 1945 to entertain Amer-
ican servicemen overseas, comedian Bob Hope said, "I have
had ~~ough." • .
The last of 17 dairies which once flourished in Foun-
tain Valley is scheduled to be leveled following opproval o!
a l19uslng tract on lhe site by city council. Commenting on
the passage of lhe dairy, Joe Courrogo4, a Ion~ time farmer
in the valley, and fonn.~· councilmen ,said "high taxes are ,
forcing the dairymen and farmers to· abandon their enter-
prises. It gets tougher and tougher each year to make ends
.meet."
Fro111 Page J
··EARTHQUAKE •.•
•
•
were declarod. 'lliousaoda of refugees
!led Manugua , tryiJli 10 get away from
teetering buildings 10 the salety o! the
countryside. Jl\unlture was piled up on
the llreeta and those Managuans who re-
mained In the city sat outside their
houses dur1nl the night as tremors coo-
tlnued to rattle the clty al. approximately
300,000 persons.
quake, believed to be the second most
destnlctlve ever to hit the Western
H<mispbett.
From the air, it appeered whole blocks
o! the city bad been rar.ed by the quake .
The tooa powerful ahock regls1ered 6.25
on the Richter 1CSle.
At the Florida White House, President
Nixon ordered immediate relier efforts to
begin... 'I1reO" Air Force planes were·
a~ to leave from McDUl AFB
near T a m p a, Fla. thia morning.
Another 11 planes were scheduled to
leave from Ft. Hood , Texas.
Gen. Anastasio SomOla, head or the
Nicaraguan National Guard, said be
could not give an estimate of d:!e dead,
but be said: "We are still pulling bodies
out from Wtdemeath the debris."
ln Tegucigalpa, Honduras, the Hon-
duran Red Cross said a radio report from
f.he Nicaraguan Nallonal Guard said 20
percent of Manaua's approximately
300,000 persons were dead or injw'ed.
, The Nicaraguan ministry of health told Jhe Cotta Rican Ministry of Health that
,as many as 18,000 persons had died in the
HMDAY •
DAILY PILOT
TM°'*"9 c..t DAILY ,ILOT, wM M1kt1 .. ~--~ ............ -. Or ..... CN1I "*'ltllllll ~ .....
,... .. " ..... -MlltfMll, ~ ........
l'riHy, "'" C.19 Miu, """""' ~.
HIMlll ..... 1 kactlll'-1•111 V•llrf', l..-
~ 1rY111tl-'"dlftKll .-..,, c...._..,
· lffl -"-' C..tkW•l'O. A ...,,.le ,_ICJMI , .. '*"' It. _..,_ ~ Ml ""*"'"
T"9 ,..i..c1 .. 1 "*hfl*"t ,..,.. II •t m w.t
.. ,. . 51,..1, C.I• #NM, GI~. ,.._
Rolt1rt H. W1M
" ,.
,..,......,..,,,,,....,,.
J•cll R. C11rt.v vic.~ .... o..r.t~
TI.eM•• k•1Yll .. ...
Air Force Maj. Guillermo Gonzalo
Quiroz, a pilot for Lanica Airlines, said:
"There bad been a little tremor about
10 o'clock, but we have a lot or quakes
around these parts and I didn't think
much about Jt. 1
"When the big quake hit, it didn't give
me time for anylhlng. First there were
no lighiS and the smell ol plll!ler dust
lilied the air.
"I felt I was going to lose control or
myself when I saw a wall fall on my
wife. "lAlcklly our two 1irls were oot
banned. I took my wtre to Masaya about
20 miles 90Uth of Managua.
NOAID
"'Ibere was nothing in the way of
~al usiatance here In Managua,"
M•J· Gonzalo 13\d.
~1any of Managua's principal buildings
were destroyed. The Hotel Gran, for ex-
ample, was leaning dangerously and
there was talk that dynamite might be
used to level the structure before it caus·
eel injuries.
llooplt.ls and morgues wer. !Uled with
dead and Injured. One major hospital, El
RetiJ"o..-the main government hospital -
was destroyed, but ho1pital penoMel
were able to get most paUents out of the
building before ll caved In.
Samoz.a said only a rew children In the
pediatric -...,. killed Jn Ef ReUro.
Samoa aaJd Utt quake wu wono t.ban
tilt -ot Mll'cll ll, 11111, Jn whlch 1,000
penmodied.
A huge muohtoom or smoke hung owr
the city from Otta burnln( out of c:onlrol.
Reporter• fiylng over1t<ad and 10urlng
I.he atmt.a could see at least nve major
fires bumlnc out of conlrol. Tht Otta lit
the sky with an eerie .....,. slow.
NaUonal euard1men ln blue helmets
and armed with earbloe1 patrolled the
streets, gurad.lng 1ga1n1t looting. Private
guards. nllhed lantern• over the d1rken-
ed boula.
Somoza asld 'IO percent of all the bous·
es ond public bulldlngs In Man•gua were
destroyed, or damagod~ and those le.rt
standing would have lo be lnspecl•d
before they could be lnhablled.
'
N. Vietnam
Peace Group
·Storms Out
PARIS (UP!) -The North ',?etpamcso
peace delegation skinned out or a
technlcal·level meetin1 with Amtrlcan
dlpl01118t& Salurday after prottltlog U.S.
resumption of the fullscale alr war in
Vietnam.
The Q>mmunists denounced 11frenz.led''
U.S air and navel attacb against North
Vietnam which they said. bad leveled
villages, hospitals, schools and populated
cUy lll'eas. and destroyed al leeat three
foreign embassies.
They declared Hanoi's wllllngnesl 10
.. 1ue the Vietnam problem · peece!\Jjly
and called on Wasblngttin to tal:o par(ID
serious negotiatiom.
It ,... the third time Ibis -k Ule
Communist& cut abcrt n11ott1tlng
"""1oM. They deeltned 10 eel a date for
o new meeting lmmedlajiely.
' A U.S. del,Ptton ll'Okesman said.alter
the brief con!nmtatton: "It was not the
sort of discussion we would like to b&W:."
Saturday's meeting was the fifth
scheduled session )Of technical t.alks. It
lasted only 30 minutes at suburban Glf-
sur-Yvette before the Hanoi team walked
out.
The North Vietnamese did the same
last \1.1ednesday at the fourth technical
session. Thursday they walked out of the
regular weekly four'4ided talks, involving
also Saigon and tbe Viet Cong.
A Hanoi delegation statement after
Saturday's meeting said: "Jn the e:r-
tremely serious situation· now created by
the United States, we are obliged once
again to declare adjourned the meeting
or representatives and experts of the two
sides Wltil another day." ·
The U.S. spokesman said: "The other
side protested against U.S. military ac-
tivity in North Vietnam and adjourned
the experts• meeting · without specilytng
any date."
He said .the Americans proposed a new
meeting one day next week tQ keep chan-
nels of communication open and because
they believed the technical meetings
could accomplish useful work.
i'The other side said it would consider
out proposal and let us know its
respanse," the spokesman said.
Nixon Orders
Yule 'Truce'
For 24 Hours
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPJ) -Presi·
de.nt Nlion sent his aides home for ~
holidays and se.Wed down to a quiet
Christmas weekend saturday after
ordering a let-up in the bombing of North
Vietnam during a 24-bour Ottistmas
truce.
There was no officlal announcemnt or
the decision. but an administration of-
ficial privately confirmed there would be
a break In the maastve bombing o! Norih
Vlttnam's heartland, wlltcb began slI
days ago.
The pause will confonn 10 the ™>our
truce beginn.irJg at S p.m. on. Christmas
Eve 8DDOUDCOd -earlier by the Saigon
goyernmenL
The official said be expecU!d the born·
bing -the war's heaviest -to be
resumed immediately following the truce
and that reconnaissance Oights and any
passible rescue ertorts for downed pilots
would continue during the truce period.
Ni:roo, who anived here Wednesday for
a week-long Christmas vacation, has rC-
mained silent throughout the intensive
bombing campaign. saying only through
his spokesman. Rooald L. Ziegler, that it
would continue unUI Hanoi adopts a con-
structive attitude toward negotiations to
end the war.
A Wbtte House official !Old reporters
Friday that one reason the Vltnam talks
In Parts snagged was that It.not bad
reneged on its agreement to release
American priJoDers of war within 80
days of a ceasefire.
Traffic Takes
Toll as Death
Hits Highways
By United Prt11 l~j.eraaUonal
The nation's highways saw Americans
rushing to their holid•y destinations
Saturday, sorpe never to make Jt.
The Notional Safety tlouncil said llO to
8!iO persons would be killed m traffic dur--
ing the weekend, which begar. at 8 p.m.
Frid•y and ends at midnight Mond•Y·
Another 14,000 10 30,000 msy be Injured,
the COWlCll lal<i
A count b)I United !'rm lnternaton•I
at 2 a.m. lhowed 238 peraoao killed In
traffic alnce the holiday began.
A breakdown:
Traffic 238
Planes O Fires a
Others 4
Total 2St
Pennsylvania led the coun1 with 15
traffic deaths. Celifomla ha 12, New
York and Texa$ 11 each Fd Indiana 9. 1 Georata state polico reported two
penoos kUltd and Injuries too numerous
"lo """'It" In a ch•ln·rtactlon pileup of
car• ln both lanes of lnterst11te 7~ r:iorth
of Macon. Traffic was tied up for mllea
for seven hours.
DAILY PILOT 51eff '"tit
Y 011 Guessed It
•
CHPTough.
On Drunk
Drivers
.
By FRI!DERJOK SCHOEMEUL
ot IN o.tllY Plitt lltff
~raUon HARP -a statewide eaort
by the C&tuomta !Dghway P•l>Ol 10 cul
down on holiday drunk drlvero -Is be-
ing felt stroogly In OfMgO Coonty. '
Traffic Officer Geora:e Morrill told the
DAJLY PILOT that,.dMillk driver arrests
\\'ere four Umes freater than norma l
due to the ltepped up enforcement.
HARP iM&nds for Holldily Accident Re-
duction Program, and wUI be In, effect
until tbe last bits of streamers arid con·
fettl have setUed Crom New Years cele-
' bnlloos. From 8 a.m. Friday to 6 p.m. Satur-
day, Slid Morrill, 6t drunk drivers wtre
booked Into Orange County Jail. Under
normal enforcement circumstances, 15
druoi drlvn might ht tiool<ed at the
' jail In. i+mur period.
In (.(Is Angeles CoontY. the effect ot the
program ts even more dramatic. 6frests"
for drunk driving in the county p.re up lO
times the nonnal rate, actording to CHP
officials.
The highway palrOI , said MOl'rill.
makes about 90 percent of the arrests on
local free'o\1ays.
Any type of erratic driving -speeding.
swerving or weaving in and ~t. of trar.
fie lanes -normaUy will force a patrol-
man to stop a motorist and check for
sobriety.
Routine coordination testa are admin-
istered, aaid Morrill. U the 11'1bject per-
forms poorly. he ts taken 10 county jail
and given a choice of a lx'eath, blood or
urine test to determine the alcohol level
Jn his blood.
A level ol .10 pen:ent elcobol per unit
of blood is c:oNldered legally dnink.
Mon-Ill said that he estimates the multi·
fold J.ncrease In amsts to continue •
Slightly Embar~ssed
Gissell's creatio_n is a nine f~ tall Chri~tmas tree. All , of the styro-
foam balls are mterlocked with the multi-coloted toothpicks. Tree is
trimmed \vilh small electric lights.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -When a two-
way radio was stolen . from his car.
Reuben Greenberg told police, "I'm klnd
of embarrassed by this." Greenberg is
the undersberllf of San Francisco.
H a1ioi' s Defense
Minister Giap
Believed Dead
SAIOON (UPI ) -South Vietnamese
intelligence sources said Saturday they
had intercepted a North Vietnamese
radio message indlcatini that Hat10i's
defense minlster, Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap,
was killed Friday in a time bomb ex-
plosion in Haiphong. A Hanoi spokesman
1in Paris denied the report as "an out and
out invention." ·
The Saigon sources said the alleged ex-
plosion octurred while Gia~ 60, North
Vietnam's top military strategist, was
leading a military delegation on an in-
spection of the Tran Hung Dao anns
depot In the port city of Haiphong, the
South Vietnamese intelligence soarees
said. '
According to the $0Urt"eS, the exploaion
that allegedly killed Giap was not th.et of.
an American aerial bomb, but a North
Vietnamese time bomb supposedly set.
they said, by a North Vietnamese \\·ho
opposed continuance of the war. Giap, is
the semi·legendary general who defeated
the French at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, thus
putting an end to the French phase of the
Indochina conflict.
In Paris a North Vietnamese peace
delega tion spokesman said tbe reports of
Giap's death were manufactured by the
American Central lntelligenct; Agency.
The spokesman. asked about the death
report, told UPI: "It is an out and out in-
ven tion of the CIA."
Forme1~ South Coast Jµdge
. J. Parley 'Smitl1 Dies at 72
J. Parley Smjth, former South CA&st
municipal judge. died Saturday at bis
Dana Poil)t' fiOme ·at the age of 72. ·
Judge Srhith served on the municipal
court bench betw~n 1963 and 1969. He
retired due to ill health.
Orange r.ounty Coroner's 0 fr ice
depu ties said Saturday that an autopsy
will be conducted today to detemnine the
cause of death.
Officials at Smith and T u th i 11
Mortuary, Santa Ana. said services for
Judge Smith, '24366 Santa Clara Drive,
would be conducted later this week. He
leaves no survivors. ...
.A nativ.e of PresalU. Ariz.., Judge
Smith was graduated rrom Stanford Law
School and practiced law in Los Angeles
and Orange C-Ountics before joining the
Orange County District Attorney's Office .
Sm.Ith was appointed to the Laguna
justice court in 1963 . Wi thi n a year, the
justice court was elevated to municipal
court. l-Ie was elected to a six.year
judgeship, from which he retired ju st
before it expired.
Judge Smith's wife, Gail, the forn1er
chairman of the English Department at
Santa Ana Q>llege, died last July.
DAILY 'ILOT lltff .....
VETERAN JURIST SUCCUMBS
Laguna's J. Parley Smith
End of Year
e ZENITH e MOTOROLA all
. e R·CA
TELEVISIONS . IN STOCK
OVER COST YOU WILL NIVER.
BUY A NIW COLOR
. TY FOR UIS
Low Prices are born here, raised elsewhere!
90 DAY Mtmbor of
• I •
)
I
l
l
Orange~st
Roundup
FLOOO THREAT: HUNTINGTON BEACH -City resi·
dents are starting to pass petitions urging the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers to speed-up lts ·study of Ill• S~nta Ana
River !Jood threat. City government.officials, meail!Jhlle, hope
to ac~vate all the cities 1n1 danger of a river flood to exert
coordtnated pressure on the CofPS and 011 Congress. An ex·
tremely rainy season could overfiow the Sanla Ana, the
Corps says. But no one l;tnows wben tha\ might occur, and
the Corps says the river won't be prepared for 1t for 20 years.
ONE PARK: FOUNTAIN. VALLEY -City councilmen ~ave decided they want on~ centr~ p~k·recreation corpple~,
mstead of two. The city will try to obtafu 55 acres from the
federal government in Mile Square Regional Park. 11 the
land can be obtained, It will save loci)! ta>payers some ~.000 -the price of buying ·a second park site, near
Fountain Valley High Schools.
EDUCATORS FIREO: LAGUNA BEACH-In a series
o,f S..l yotes last week, the Laguna Beach Board of Education
fired its thi;ee top administrators, William Ollom , superin·
tendent; Charles Hess, ~sistant superintendent for business,
and Ro~rt Reeves, assistant superintendent for instruction.
The action brought to a head months of bitter debate between
three conse'rvative members of the school board and parents,
teachers and students over tbe fate of the three men con·
sidered leaders in innovative education. Screening proc~dures
for replacements will begin next month.
r'
)J,, '~
I \
' .1/ -
I
..... -/
Just Puttin-' Around
Costa Mesa city councilmen, always quick to recognize
outstanding performances of city employes, this week singled
out Fire Chief John Marshall for a special award.
. But instead of re\varding him for being the best, mem·
bers of the council presented Marshall with a trophy and a
commendation for being tbe worst at something-in this
case the game or golf.
There was little doubt that rvtarsball merited the council's
first Incompetence Award since he finished 172nd out of 172
players in a recent benefit tournament for Fairview State H it.al -~e red·faced fire chief \vas .ordered before the council
to publicly accept a trophy of a golfer breaking hfs club and
to listen to an official city council resolution which reads in
!!.'!Tl. - .
, ''Wher:eas, the city council of the city of Cqsta MesJ" feefs
compelled to extend recognition for incompet~nce as well as
competence, now therefore be it resolved tbat'Fire Chief John
Marshall be commended for his complete incompetence in
the ~ame of goll . . . 1 " 'Be it lurther resolved that John llliirs08JJ be commended
for his efforts to protect the mayor and the vlcti mayor of the
City of Costa Mesa who also scored blgb in the tournament,
"Be it further resolved that John Marshall be encouraged
lo improve bis golf game only to the extent necessary to
score well above the mayor and the vice mayor on any
future tournaments,
"Be it finally resolved that a copy of this resolution,
edged in black. be presented to Fire Chief John Marshall at
a suitable ceremony to be conducted at midnight, near the
18th hole. at which time lbe city manager shall conduct the
ceremony for the burning of bad score cards."
Mar.Shall , who claimed a disability of the elbow, accepted
his award with a smile which camouDaged a bruised ego.
CONFLICT OENIED: SANTA ANA -Former Harbor
Commission Chairman Martin Usab denied this week alle-
gations he was involved Ur a conflict of interest over the
commission's approval of Willard Boat Wa:rks of Costa Mesa
for the Dana Point boatyard contract. Usab said he owned
2,500 shares in Willard Boat Works-a .06 percent ownership
according to the firm's books-and the state government code
allows up to three percent before a conflict charge is valid.
Usab was supported in bis contention by the Orange County
Counsel -and the district attorney. Usab since resigned from
the ·panel under what he called .business pressures and not
any preslUtes involving the boatyard bid. Willard bid only
a third as much as its nearest competitor for the contract
and the Board of Supervisors is still studying the matter.
SADISTIC TRICK: SAN CLEMENTE-A aog belonging
to a San Clemente family apparently strayed onto the city
beach ~arly in the 'week, ~only to fJleet with sadists who
grabbed the pet and hanged It to death from a swing standard
near lifeguard headquarters. ·Guards discovered the dead
animal dangling lroin a rope pulled from a nearby volleyball
net. Police later located the owner, but the sadists remained
at large.
NEW SITE: SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO-A major Pasa·
dena electronics firm announced late in the week It was mov·
ing its total, 300-employe operation to a new site in San J uan
Capistrano. A »acre parcel along the San Diego Freeway
soon wW be developed as the headquarters for "Endevco, a
division of Becton blcklnson and Company. The firm pro-
duces scientillc measuring and monitoring devices. Spokes·
men for the firm sald they planned to complete the building
end start local operations sometime next fall.
RECORO HIGH TIOES: NEWPORT BEACH -Tldes
measuned at 8.4 ,feet,-more than 12 Inches over what the
charts cljlim«I they'd be--socked In several low· ying areas
ol the • Wedne1day morning .. City olflclals "''ed that
unusual Swelling action in the back channel reed the wa·
ters over the efghJ..foot bulkheads and le everal blocks of
homes with wate.r see nder their oorways.
ORANGE COUNTY F OSTA MESA -About 33
acres of. the vut falrgro propertY, are being oUered for
sale as 1Urplus, Fair M ger Jame• Porterfield dltclosed
this week. The fair board opes to receive fl.5 mllllon from
the sale and to use the money for the Improvement and r&-
modcling of buildings.
. '
. . '
•
• •
,
Beneoth the tinsel • of Main Street,
Repid City, walk
somber townspeople.
They can't e~pe
tho June flood
that killed
family and friends.
•
• 1
{. '.... :'
. ~-...... . .-.•.'}" -. •
,..,., ~ 24, 1972
•
OAJL Y PILOl-S
HO_,
l " .,._'
Chri·stmas Eve in Rapid City:
Ain''t No Joy, Nor Very Pr.etty
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Christmas comes tonight; welcome c.s
the rain. Quietly, like the edges of rising
water , it spreads over the land. And
somehow, like the memory of grief, it
brings melancholy to a ravaged people.
Tt.ey are the survivors. In South
Dak<?ta and Pennsylvania and portions of
seven other states, they lived, somehow,
through ' the floods of '72. And now ,
Christmastime, tinsel, turkey and all,
they remember.
"There are people," says Sister Sarto,
administrator of St. John's Hospital in
Rapid Oty, S.D.·, "who say they must
sleep with a light on, won't drive down
certain streets in town •.• Christmas and
New Year's are nonnally, peak times £or
suicides. Jt would be foolhardy to think
these will not increase this year with the
tension, fears and strain the flood
wrought."
Two hundred Qtirty--elght lives were
lost in Rapid City when Rapid Creek
rampag~ last June 9. More than •100
million worth of property was damaged.
Two thousand families in that B1ack Hills
community of 43,500 lost their homes.
In Pennsylvania, the floods were d>e
worst in .the oation's history. Caused by
Tropical Storm Agn<o list June 23, they
swept down the Monongahela and the
Allegheny and the Susquehanna rivers,
killing nearly SO and damaging $1.2
billion wqrth of property. run recovery
remains years away, if it ever comes.
"One morning recently Annabel \YOke
and r heard her weeping," Says Abe Mor·
ris, 47, making do with his wife and three
sons in a house trailer behind his flooded
home ·in the Wyoming Valley, hardest-hit
area of PenM)'lvanla. "It lasted foe fiv e
minutes. She didn't say anything. And I
didn't say anything. Jt was about the
losses -our wedding pictures, the
movies, the continnations. I've seen peo-
ple weep and weep and weep for days
and days and days.
"It's bard. Looking back, it's a
nightmare."
In Rapid City, everyone who knows
A-lildr,ed Dieter-calls her ,Millie. She was
widowed during the 'eaily mi>rning or
June 10.
With ber husband, Lowell, and their
children, Patricia, 8, Michael, 12, and
Sue, 14, she was attending a ooncert by a vis.itirig orche.straJrom _Germany when
the dam at Canyon ·i.ake ·gave way into
Rapid Creek.
"The con<iert was canceled at in·
termlssion," Mlllle remembers , "and
everyone was told to go home."
About midnight, with two Gennan
youths in the ordJestra who were the ir
house guests, Millie and her family
--evacuated their M0,000 home near Rapid
Creek. But it was too late.
'
"We were hanging onto a fence pole
and the water kept sweeping at us."
Millie Dieter shudders at tbe memory.
"Patricia said, 'Mommy, my feet aren't
touching the ground any more.' She slip-
ped from my grasp.
"The water must have gotten eight feet
deep. Lowell told me to grab a board or
lY!'O from lhe debris to stay afloat. I
grabbed a door."
It swept her six blocks to a tree.
'"I sat in that tree thinking my whole
family was dead. Why me? Why did God
choose to spare me?" '
Two or her children, Sue and Mi chael ,
were brought to her bedside later. Her
house guests lived. But, as the flood
subsided, Millie Dieter buried her
youngest child and her husband .
She is also living in a trailer house this
Christmas, one or several hundred pro-
vided by the Department of Housihg and
Urban Developmeot for the displaced
£amilies or Rayid City.
Abe Morr.is' jewelry store in Wilkes·
Barre, in the heart of the Wyoming
Valley or Pennsylvania, is open again. He figures he's lucky. '
"We are trying not to complain," he
says. "I'm so deep in debt now ... but can
you reaUy cry over it? Can you worry?
Anybody who doesn't show some emotion
can't really care about life and the strug·
gles that make It worth living. But this ii
like a challenge to me ... to go back into
business. to rebuild my home, to have a
chance to get It back, even though I'll
probably be paying for it the rest ol my
life."
Between his jewelry store and his
home, the flooding cost Morris more than
$150,000. At first in his comeback strug-
gle, he lived on savings, and unempJoy.
ment checks that didn't start aniving for
eight weeks. His sons, James, 23, Richard, 17, aod
Steven, 15, helped him dig out from
under the mud. With a Small Bwiiness
Administration loan, he restocked the
store. There Was enough money left over to start repairs on the house.
Heat aM electricity are back on, but
fungm is starting to show. Morris will
have to let the house dry out completely
before hiring carpenters and painters.
Like Abe Morris, Lou and Eloise Hag-
gerty own a store. It's the biggest
department store in Rapid City. It, too,
has reopened.
"It gave the people a morale boolt to
see that we had come back," says Eloise
Haggerty. But she concedes it'll take
more I ban economic recovery to lift the
Christm.B.!I spirits that need lifting.
"A woman who lived near the flood
area told me recenUy she lost 18 to 14
neighbors," Mrs. Haggerty 11ys. "She
said she can't ming herself to return to
her home because it's like living in a
cemetery."
• Ill Irvine? Hospitals Two
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of tM DMty l'l"t Sl•H
A group ol 150 Harbor An>a docto'.5,
prominent business and community
leaders and a state senator are thinking
big about the future hospital needs of a
new clty that ln 30 years may be
populated by a half a million people.
Yet Walter Burroughs, vice president
of the Western World Medical Foun·
dation of Newport Beach, admits he is
"flabbergasted" critics of the proposed
~acre complex in Irvine "don't see
thelr own sell-interest."
Undaunted by a denial of the foun·
datlori's application by tMi county Health 1 Planning Council plans for the private,
nonprofit medical complex go on.
Western World, Foundation Oiairman
Donald S. BUms recently wrote doctors
and other interested citlzerul who
wondered if the denial meant the end of
what was described nearly two years ago
as 'the magnificent concept'.
"Definltefy not." Burns said.
"What the action ol the he•lth planning
COW>Cil does Is bar l"'llenta !rom ..OOv·
Ing Medi-Cal ttlmbUnm>ellt ror eare In
the Foundatton's Hospital -nothing
more," he wrote . Co the armlversary ol lhn•jectlon, the
foundation might apply for state l!eens-
tng or ~ proj)O$ed "seed" ~Ital lo< a
vast medical complex on 150 1cret near
UC Irvine's stmllar 150--acre pa,UI
reserved for a ~lvenl\y owntd and
operated, 350-bed, teaclitng . bospltal '111d
Ule medical echool campus.
BllmlllP., !onner publisher o! tbo
DAILY Pij.iri', added the foundation will
... t • rovenal or the !pl council
deci!lon lllrooah tlie )lOrmal apptals
cbanneil. Thll !nvolvot a ~lion to
the Son F'rancitlCo .health planlltn1' coun-
cil and Loter the ltate council. A final
declolOn ravorinc the w..tem Wodd
plane. " txpeCted to eoine In ~ugual Meenwlllle, planning for the llnl In-
. crement pl lhe private. non-pnillt but
1Clf-enctowlni hospital will contlnUf, Bui'
roo1hs 111d. • ·
Propanents of Private, Non-profit Facility
Cite Population Growth, Cost of Medical Care
Because foundation leaders h a \' e
always hoped to complement not replace
the university's teaching b o s p i ta I •
development of the private acreage will
be limed to match that of the university.
The liming ol lhe UCI teaching hospital
.remains uncertain. Voters approved a
state health sciences bond is.sue in
November. Nevtrtheless, that approval
does not automatically guarantee the
funds will be spent. The Legislature held
up approval of a $900,000 state planning
grant {or the UCI teaching hospital pen-
ding approval of the bond Issue.
Those moneys must r11st be approved •
to allow completion oC working drawings,
UCI officials aoted .
State Sen. Dmnis E. Carpenter (II.-
Newport Beach) 11KlCUSfUlly carried the
appropriation bill through the Senate.
When passed by the Assembly and signed
into law, the $922,000 must be allocated
by the Department ol Finance.
Allhough fl'l.9 million ol the ltate
bonck are ~ !or development ol
the medical IChool at UCI. only 117
million are set for the '37 million
teachlng bospttal. Revnue hoods and
federal grants complete the hospital
finance plct~re which II clouded by the
!act UCI roust aeelt CHPC 1ppro"I ol
the projeCt once mm. An earlier op-
proval baa e%plr<d. Bunou&Jis notes that the dtvel<>pment
ol the private hospital' and medleal com-
plex depends heavily on the adjaeent
location ol tbe university medical ochool
and hospital I[ the !oundAUoo'I hos><t !or
creaUn& a •1trut,y great" medla1 center
In Irvine •re to be roallzed. .
"I have lltrongly 1upponed UCl'a
te•chlng and ..... rcb ho<pital pl1111.
And, oo bavo all tbe Western World
Medical FoundaUon truatet11" Bunwgbl
said.
Admlnlltratlon ol liCI aod o1 the
C&lllomla Colle&e of •Medicine which
BurrotJl)ll aald he helped eocourage to
move to the trvlne campus, iupported
the Weslont World •Pl>IOV•I bid bal°"
the county Health Plannln& Coundl.
Unfortunately. some faculty members
who may have believed the private
hospital development might replace the
UCJ teaching hospital opposed even the
initial l»bed facility for which approval
was sought in August.
In its denial, the council cited a current
ovenupply ol boopital beds tn the plan-
ning area which includes Newport Beach,
c.osta Mesa and lrvine.
Western World spokesmen do oot deny
there is presently an oversupply of beds.
tbelr concern is about the future .
Had the proposal been approved, and
construction begun, the initial unit might
have opened tn 1975. By then, the present
population of. the city of Irvine alone is
expected to have doubled to more than
50,000 perllOOS.
By 1985, 274.000 pe.rlOO!!I are expected
to occupy homes or apartments on land
owned and planned by the Irvine Com·
pony, excluding further growth o! Coota
Mesa and Newport Beach, and develop-
ment of ts percent of the land ln the city
of Irvine owned by othen who are eeek.· 1 Ing city approvals to develop.
In all, We.tern World FOlllld>tlon plan-
ners envision 500,000 people Uvlng wlthln
the area of the proposed 300-acre joint
public and prtvate health facility. u the drums ol the roundatton's 150
Ind WJivenity plannera are realized.
metlJnc the health needl ol the ruture
""ldentl ol PoJ)Ulattons Irvine. Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa, wlll be at least
two bolpitals, an aJTay of medical sup-
port 1ervices, and a complete medlctll
ICbool campus training twice as many
dociort" each year ., praenUy graduate
from UCI. '
Del<ribed u • Potential "Mayo Clink
ol the W"t", the d"'I publle and prtvate
health ceoter. BUf!'OUl)la COl)tends. will
only mull fl'Om ClOQllUOtlon between the
foundation ID(! tbe linl-111.
Two holpltals '"' -.i bocauae the mll!SloM ol e ch ere dllltlnctly d)fl"""t.
The wit,.n!ly teachlna boopftal must
providb room '-' bl!ditdU, for example,
to accommodate medleal stud en ta .
I •
Further. the range of patients sen>ed bf
the teaching would necessarily bie
broader to insure students the wl~
range or learning opportunities,
Finally. because research is key to the
SUCC"'...SS of a medical school-bolpltal,
laboratory equipment must be provided
and patients with more unusual diseuel
be accommodated.
But, Burroughs notes, the tey reason a
teaching hospital cannot alone meet a
commllllity'1 hoepltal needs ls ai
economic Issue. 1
"The cost of care in a teaching bospltjl
is greater. Patients are usually teDt
longer ln a teaching hospital because•
_., Job ii to care ror bis patient '*
only du!ing the acute stage of ap Ulnds
but during the patient's coovaJescence a
well."
Practiced physicians dbcharge ~
patients for post-operative recuper1tkll
at home or another facility. Doctora in
training however, must have acceu ~
the convalescing P'lit.,l for a long~
time.
On the other band. ii: oommunil1
hoepttal, perllcularly If bull! and m•to-
tained separ1te and dhdinct from ~
te•clrtng racillty a !oundaUon 11Udy i..
dicatci. results In: 1
-Better pillent care.
-Reduced ovtrtge lengths ol ally.
-A I01''er COit ot care. I
-Avoid.Rnce ol fr l ct ion bttwtta
boopitat ttarf and physicians and medkal
acbool fatuity. 1
Avoid.Ince or friction is one majar
reason for seeking complementary rather
than •bared boopltal !acllllttJ, BurrougJ-4
ooted. . I
After tourtn1 nun than a half-dbuo
slrnl11r medl¢al scllool and hospital com-
plexes In lhe U.S., Bur?1Jllihs oonct~
that ID only ooe -Stronc ~
llolpltal tn Rochester, N. Y., ")1 there i
roaaonable r<fi"'""'1Q bthl.en u.. medleal communuy and'[acuJty. •• t
"They have a unlven!ly bead 'd.~ God. i.n•t i(llng to ltt frlotton
(JIN 1'Eln'f11N WOllUl, .....
I
I
I
'
l
. . • ... •
t OAILY l'ILOT s...i11. D«<mbet 2•. 1972
·• . . , • . . ' -, .
Farms Left Irvine /"City Father:s Want
i BJ JORN WUI\ pennaooot ""'·" states the Interim
• Ill
°' .. Cl* ,.. '"" Pol~ Plan. l Wiilie the Irvine Coaqiu,y .Is ...... Ing "Range lands with high quality llOilJ
for 'Ille ultimate ~ o1 oertculture .. , shall be .,.........S," It contlnu ...
Ill Irvine, city ol!iclals .,. lootlllc for • "We dao!t .. .,. "'11llt wa!J.4o....U
f1Y to ix-rve at least -fanning '-·-·" -•·'·· CI • f __! permanetK bull. • •~· ......,.aw.::1 Wayne a r .. ,
-··· ,, •• ~. • .......... not t .... <batnnan ol the pWmlng -· I "~ .._-.. --, .._. a "~ · ''Tber< is a aentlmental feeling that fann JIOlnt heated, can be expected to be the . lands ought u. be prooerved for their ..WJ<ct of cocUn~ debate In lhe nut cultural and esthetlc value,"
)lear ., the city s General Plan is The Irvine Campany, In a ...,.nt pulley formula~ed.; . . paper, takes a different point of view.
I The city s posthon is~containled in the For economic reuon.s il says, the
lhttrim Policy Plan a,pproved by the phaseout of agriculture' is inevitable.
I'!annlng Commission ·and due U. go "Wbile farming will not be totally replao-
btror. the council In JanlWJI. eel by homes, Industry, and commen:lal 1•At this time it shall be the objecUY< devtlopm<nt even In the nm docade or
of'tht City to view agricultural 1ancla u a iw~ such a tramilion Js inevitable
Dome for Christmas
' Arnold Cortei wmii home Friday. It was his first trip out of Stanford
Hospital since hll birth 16 :IJl!>ntbs ago. Arnold weighed only four
pounds, four oun... when be was born eight weeks premature. He
now weighs 15 pounds. Although unable to walk, doctors expect him
lo develop normally both physically and mentally as his body
strengthens.
. Merriest Yule Since '65
For 500,000 Berliners
BERt!N IUPI) -Germaru1 from the
Western part of the city began to pour
through the Berlin Wall Saturday I«
their happiest Christmas since 1965.
Thanks to the Big Four agreement
designed to lessen tension here; WeJt
Berliners once again could spend
Christmas with their relations in the
Eu!.
An estimated 500,000 were expected to
cross the border by New Year's Day,
raising to more than two million the
number since the occupation foreign
ministers signed the Berlin agreement in
J\Dle.
"Welcome to the German Democratic
Republic" blared a loudspeaker at the
Friedrich St.ruse border station. Armed
-~ petrolled tile station to make sw-e the traffic Ollly was-one way.
'I1»e average East German still was
barred from traveling West by the wall
built on the East·West Berlin border Aug.
13, 1961 to halt the fllibl of refugo.,,
Laden with presents, West Berliners
went Eut by train, subway, eW:vated
railway, in automobiles and by foot.
West Berlin police said the flow was
not u great Saturday as ·bad been ex-
pected.
The hilh?oint was expected Christma s
Day and Tuesday, which also is a holiday
in Germany.
It was the fir st Christmas since 1965
that families split by the wall could
spend the holiday together.
From Pa.ge J
AIRMEN ...
damaged the East Gennany embassy
and the Hungarian trade mission.
In the ground war, heavy fighting was
reported· in norlhemmost Quang Tri
Provin<e and along the Central Coast. In
the "Central HJgblands, Comm1mist troop!
stepped up the P'"""1"' on Kantum city,
2IO miles north of Saigon.
The B5% downlngl left at least 55
American ainnen mitsing in acUoo since
Monday night -the heaviest auch toll of
the war. Radio Hanoi has lllted the
names of lS U.S. alnnen it Ufl have
been captured in the bombing uaault.
oomeUme beyood the year 2000."
Nor does It asree wllh Clark'• otate-
ment that fanning bl! esthetlc beoeflts.
"Aarlcult~ i. proving lnoompaUbla
with the aensihilltleo ol new ..aldents,
who .,. offended by auch unaltracUve
realities of farm life as the odor ol
chJcten manure."
But 11 the city's Interim POiley Plan la
translated Into permanent .,ncu!tural
toning policies, tile campall)' m1chl flod
it>eH In a dllflcult position.
"There's no way in the world )'Qt.I can
legislate ~meone to plant C!OJll II he's
going to Jose money on them," objecta
Ricbard R<ese, Irvine Company's vlce-
praldenl for planning. "It'• limply not
fair."
U the city want> agrlculturo proservtd
for public reasons, be aay1, lt lbould coo-
alder pw<haslng the land and op0ratlng
ti U I puk.
"II public tnt....t la pier than
prtVate -It lllmJ!d be assmed outright," Reese aaya.
• Pllnnlng Commission cbalnnan Oark
Indicates he Is willlnfl to consider this.
The Ioterlm Policy Plan, he polnta out,
aeis forth the poalbillty that the city
lhould purehase agricultural land and
l<a!e I) back to the company for farming.
11tla wvuld free tl>e company-from all
prowty tax burden,,.
Wblle Oark does not want agriculture
to cootime to dominate the city, be says
that It might very profitably ~ u<ed u a
buffer against the city ol Tua11n and
qainlt El Toro Marine Air Station.
"Bulldlll( homes may be the .bllhest and best use for the land from tlie )>olnl
ol view ol the Irvine CamJ14DY," Clark
aaya, "bot It II not neceawily the boot
U1e from the public point of view. It~ our
job to prolect the pobUc Interest."
Oark -not eDilnly accepl Iha com-pany's positlon lhal agrl<:ulblre i. not a
profitable concern. "I'm not Upert. but
U oP.ema to me then must be au.mattves
available Iha! haY<n'I been tried."
Exclusion of agricultural land from
-local p"l'd'ty ~tn IJ one stroD8 poalhill·
ty, he aa d.
Reese, however, says It will take more
than lhal. Al belt, he said, !he profit
margin js thin, and 11tbe risk ts not ~
m.......ia With Ibo _, 1-i.
YUtrnent In land.''
Juat In tenm ol water, Ile arsua. lht
lrvtna ~ wlD have clllllculty com-
paUnc wllh the Cellfomla cmtral vallq
where water COlll $1 an ~oot. wbllt
In li'vlnt the cllll IJ f:7 and going 1IP
steadily.
The agrlculture Issue will likd)o
lllrl-In the W<Jrt about to beiln In
formulating the clty'a Jenera! plan.
, Wllaey and Ham, reconUy hired can-
.Wtanta for the job, must plan far aewer
and electric 11n... roads, and public
facllllles for all land In the city. A<·
cordlngly, they wm have to decide jult
bow much agriculture can be~nenl,
and how much will oventual!Y be built.In-
to homes and requlro utilltJ services.
Apollo Crew Home· for· St. Nick -
" This Time They Can Watch Yuletiik'~'Famous Flight •
SPACE CENTER, HOUJton (UPI) -
The last Apollo explorers relaxed In tile
Cbristmas quiet of home Saturday af·
temoon, while their nearly 1.5-millioo-
mile journey to the moon was reviewed
by the world through the photographs
they made.
A beautiful picture of the full earth
framed in the blactnes.s of space and
streaked with wispy cioods bighllgbted
eight Apollo 17 photos released by the
Space Agency Saturday.
Harrison H. "Jack" Schmitt captured
the view of Africa, Arabia and the
Antarctica polar ice cap a few hours
after he and Eugene A. Ceman and
Ronald E. Evans blasted away from
earth Dec. 7.
It may be the la.st photo of the fuU
earth this century. 'Ibe space agency has
no plans to return to the moon and earth-
orbital 8Jl8cecl'aft do not ny far enoogb
away to get a full view.
The astronauts must spend part of
Christmas Eve in technical discuasion.s
with space officials before taking a weet-
kq break for the holidays. They worked
Saturday morning In tedmlcal debrief·
Ines that followed evtJrY spaee!Ught. •
A spokesman said the astronauts would
spend Christma& at their homes in
Ncwau Bay and -El Lago near the Space
Center.
one of the photos rel~ shows
Evans clinging to the blistered slJ!e o! the
spaCecraft during bis spacewN 184,000
miles froi:n Earth. He retrieved fUm
packages from the service module that
housed cameras and scientific in·
struments used during six days oibltlng
the moon.
Another photo captures the command
and service module as the lunar lander
a111>roacbed after lllree days on the
surface.
'lbe third moon car· that carried the
astronauts over 22.• milt.a of the Tauru.s--
Liltrow Valley highlights t.. other
photos.
Famed Soviet
Jet Designer
Dead at 84
Adopted City
Linda Reck a Junior Miss
MOSCOW (AP) -Andrei Tupolev, one
of the world's foremost aircraft
deoi~. bas died al the age " 84, Tass
reported Saturday.
The Soviet news agency said he died
after grave illness but was not more
specific about the cause of death.
To his credit were more than 100
aircraft ranging from a primitive dive
bomber he designed in a Stalinist prUon
to I.he TU144 -' TU f9r ii~j)Olev -the
Soviet supersonic transpo,rt j>lane.
Doro In 1888, be graduated from the
Moscow School. of Technology in 1918, in
the turmoil after the Botsbevik Rev~
lution.
He was a ro-founder ci the Central
Institute of AerodynMllcs and a director
of an experimental aircraft plant.
His early research was devoted to wind
tannels and gliden, and as his 1rowess
grew, 'he concentrated on the basic
aerodynamic calculatioos of aircraft, as
well as the use of aluminium in planes.
Tass said Tupolev "was a piooeer in
· • all-metal aircraft construction," an 00..
ject of his experllllfnts In the 1920s.
Iii 1938, Stalin ordered him arrested for
"sabotage" ·anc1 be began a five-year
prison sentence. He secured h l s
rehabilitation by designing tbe TU2 dive
bomber which was put into mass pro-
duction in um.
lf some of his designs were eclectic
they were still useful to the state -for
example the TU4, a copy of the
American B29.
By MICHAEL GOODRICH
Of tM a.lb' PAlt l&lfl .
At age 16, Linda Reck, just a high
school junior, decided to leave her
parents in New Mexico to move to Foun-
tain Valley ~th })er alDlt and uncle.
It wasn't a whimsical choice to get
near the sun and surf. It was parl cl ~
da's deep ccnunitme.nt to becoming a
nurse.
'"I felt there were better bpporttmitiU
for nursing students in califomia and I
wanted to get setUed early, so I made
tbe move," she recalls.
Aside from having a ~at concern for
people, Linda is also an attractive ~
lady wllh a sparkling pmonallty. That
beauty and persooality recenUy _, her
the title of Fountain Valley Jwrior' Mm.
Competing against 10 other girls from
Fountain Valley, Linda was selected ~y
the Jaycees to represent ber adopted city
In the state finals In J anuary,
"It was really w:ltlng because I'd
never woo anything before in my life,"
says the Fountain Valley High Scboal
senior.
She was also selected by the other girls
to receive the "Spirit of Junior Miss"
award.
"That was probably as special as win-
nink the tttle," Linda said.
For Linda, her move to Fomtain
Valley was one of a teries d relocations
that have taken her from Chile to Seat·
tie, Wash.
Her father is an iron works supervisor
and his occupation has taken the family
many places. But Linda seems to enjoy
the change of scenery.
"A lot of people say they don't want to
leave their friends when they move but l
Newport Offers 6 Sites
F ()r Yule Tree Bonfires
It's not really ln the minds of people
yet, but the Newport Beach Fire Depart·
ment is getting the word out early about
its annual Christmas lree bonflru.
Fire Chief Leo Lave announced today
that the city will spoo10r what be calls a
Christmas tree burn Jan. 6.
'Il't really _for kids, the chief said, an·
naunclng that il they bring the trees to
any one of the deposit areas, they'll get a
ticket for a chance on drawings for
"valuable prizes." •
"Ollldren ma'f deposit trees at the cal·
lectlan and burn sites from Dec. 21 -
that's Tuesday -unUI 7 p.m. Saturday,
Jan. 8," Chief Love said .
DAILY Pl'-OT ...........
NEW JUNIOR MISS
Linda Rock, 16
always look forward to meeting new ~
pie am he.vblg new experiences," Linda
says wilh a smile.
She remembers coming to Fountain,
Valley High School, lhe largest student
body west oi Chicago, -from a high
sc hool that wasn't ball that size.
Christmas Eve
~ail Delivery
WASlllNGTON (UP!) The Poslal
Service reported Satw'llay tbat reg!onal
poslmasien general have been aulborJs.
ed. to llCbedule delivery service on
Cbristmas Eve in some areas where
volume continues heayy because or late
mailings.
Parcel post dellv~ was expected 1 to-
day In <lnclnnatl and Columbul, Obla!
In a statement, the service said
Christmas mail volume was continulna to
rile at a rate of 61Ai percent over lut
year's holiday crush. '
Schmitt and Ceman are pictured In the
others, takJng some ol the ~ pounds or
soil and rock samples they r<1urned to
earth.
'I1le samples include the •tartlli!c
orange soil that scientists believe proves
volcanoes existed on the moon. The
dl.scoioration 'was probably' caused by
steam or lava forced from the lunar
crust. scientists said.
. 'I1le geol~ ~Ian ~"' open the box of
ruat-bued ooil Wednesday. From that and
other materials Apollo 17 brouglJt home,
scientists may P-together tile vary
ancient and rela!IValy recent hlJtary of
man's neart.St neJ.cbbor.
Pilot Spends
Another Yule
As Prisoner
AUBURN (AP) -'lbirty years ago
when Christmas drew near, 7-yeaM!d
Gardon 8-Nakagawa eyed Ibo fl1ab
...... " cbimneylesa bal'racks bd!!d!np at the Tule Laite Internment camp for
Japanese-Americans and asked, "Mam·
my. how's Santa Caus ever £01.ni to &4
us?"
'Ibis year, it JooU as if Navy Cmdr.
Nakqawa, 11,-will be spend In I
OlrlBlmal Inside -ir&ernmonl camp, this one lor prisonm ol war ip
' ' NDr1!>~Vle"W'llw I " .
He was captured Wedneodoy after his
A6A fighter-bomber WU shot down over
Haiphong. Nakagawa said on a Hanoi·
radio broadcast Friday that his rlght
ann may be fractured, but that he was
being b'eatecl humanely.
His mother, l!arTlet Nill:apwa, oald
Friday that Santa found. his --
the barbed wire It the Tule Lake = In 1912 and she'• nol worried too
about thlJ year either.
0 Whatever happens to him be will
take ij In good lb1de," she aald In an In-
terview at her borne bert>. ''The Navy
waa the career be -· He fully ruJir.. ed the chances be .... taking."
Nakagawa, who was on his third tour
of duty in ·SOutbeast Alla, was pwtuated
from the University of Calllomla at
Berkeley, wtier. he studied under a Navy
ROTC scllolanhlp. He marrleil his
childhood. sweetheart, Jeanne Takemoto
of Lincoln, Calif. -~ In 00 Harbor, Wasll, with their three chlldren,
aged a u. 11.
Nakagawa's father, Bunny, is manager
of the Auburn. District Fair.
Bonwit Teller
Target of Bombs
NEW' YORK (UPI) -'lbree fu·
cendia?y devl<es oxplodecl late Saturday
In two faahlooable Fifth Avenue deport·
meat stom on the last shopping day
before Chrimp.as.
No one wu hurt and only minor
damage was repn:ted in both Incidents,
police aakl . '
The authoritiea said two devices 11-
ploded ln Bonwit Teller while the store
was l!!ied with late all..,_ lboppert.
I
Snow Cowers .Plains
It's a White Christmas for Much of Country
"A!ter the tree bl! been deposited, the
child must then atop by the nearest city
fire llatloo, aC<Ompanled by a pa""11,
and pick up their Uctet. '
"There will be an aUendant all day,
BURN DAY, at each of the bUm altea to
collect trees and luue ticketa1
11 hti aatd.
Chief Lave a!IO 1ald the cUy reluse
cre'Mi, will also accept tree.a.
The Postal Service OuiBtmas Cam·
munlcalions Center said 10.~ billion
pieces of mall were processhJ In time for
Christmas, with poor weather ln the eut
and central regions contribution to IOtite
delays.
' "The WWII winier weather al the cen-
tury -• big problem In mall
movement" in the centrtl It.ates, said the
report.
Houts later, a Slmilar device went d.f
in the fur department of Bergdorf Good·
man, several streets north of Bomrit
Teller. Bergdorf Goodman was closed at
the time of the incident.
A ,~.. for llonwjl Teller
epeculated that the devices were oet oil
to "cover up «>me tbetta." He Nld 1t:be
pollce ...... tnwotll•., !hit.,-~.
Pollce said -device had a battery
operated Umer that .... ·-to ... ploalvoa caolalned In dprelle packs.
M ~ u 'I ·" I .11
;. .n
i I · i I ·" s
I j! .a
n ,,,
II " ' ~ ll :ll
.,. a .1J Uf'lwt4ftCl f°'0CASI .
''
'"1'fley will is!ue a cbtt that Clll bt
taken to a cJty fire station and e1changed
for prUe Ucketa," he said..
He aJao aald you1l have to bo present
to win.
The born lites are the beach just ust
of the Newport Pier (1et )'OW' ticket at
the Peninsula slatlao, HO E. Balboa
Boulevard); the .Oceanffont at Orange
Avenue (llckets at the 3lnd Stretl ala·
lion); Santa Barbara at Jamboree Rold
(Uckell al the flrtbouae npl lhet'e);
Corona de! Mar Slat. and City Beach
(Ucket> •I the Corona de! Mar station on J
Marigold) and the comer or 16th lllrtct
and Dover Orin (UdtelJ al the Matlners •
station).
Chlel Lave aald first prl!e at each of
the born sites la a clock radio and then
are alto watchts, tr1na:tator-radl01, and
OaahllghlJ to be given •ll'•Y·
Eacb llflh prize winner ~· .et the
Ore, O!lcl Love said.
.
Same to Y oa, Fell.a
Scrooge lives! In Cincinnati. This me.,.ge was draped from apart-
ment ll<ll'"' porch for holidays in Mr1lt Cincinnati, Ohio.'
•
,.
Gifts of tJ:e Magi
•
W eren'tLike These
LAST-MINIJTE SHOPPING: Why, I'll bet that
riPt DOW you've all )'Olll' ~ llloppiDc -· llllvm~ yoo! Nlce IOIDI, l•m not quite -· So
I ibqapi I'd Dre wfd1 YoU a 1 .. Utile sJ11o I've
Jet lo pfct up ml dlltrlbute. Here Ibey att: · .
-FOil CECIL mcKI, ..,. orange County DA m eontlnued rl&lll oo lhrwlb lm in bis war IPfnat alrlto c11ncera, 1111111 lllld _. bed stulf: A -year
IUbe\:riplJ<m to ._ ... and Health" ·-,... .. -· -FOB SADDLllBACK. OolJece lrulteet, m bave
--.... '!boa -Not ••• plocarda-" all ..... campus: A DOW 11iiJ> that reads, "Welcome to our Happy ColJe&o."
-TO BOBBY BATJ'IN, b:iunty &upervilOI' from
Santa Ana who wanla lo let 1&-yeeMlda be cope: one
free year llvlog wlth my three toeuagers.
-FOR WJLLLUI D. "Bl& Bill" Martin, Laguna's
ex-mayor and man ot the white carnation who was
felled by a avOte: A lne peas out ol South Coast
Community Hoopllal llld a retwn lo good health.
'
-TO FOIJNTAl!'I VALLEY residents, who loot the
last dairy .tn tbelr C:ommunlty thia ,.or: A new one
to replace it with lluorldated water for C\)lllented
COWi.
-TO RON CASPERS, cbalrman ol the Orange
Coooty Board ol Supervisors, who liUs bigger gov·
.emmeot and new airports: Pmtooo.o oo wbidl lo bWld
a new aimrip just off Llilo lale and a new assign-
ment to aet up some :o1per-goveroment oo Santa Cata·
Una lalaod.
-FOR WESTMINSTER Police Oliel Walter Sc:olt,
wbo refused lo return lhal ~ fllll~ o1 sexy
filJDI be cmfucaled thil y-: An ubestos movie pro.t-.
-TO FRED SORSABEL, C.OSta Mesa city mana-
ger who loves street ~ that crack his sidewalks:
A begful ol eucalyplus aeeds.
-FOR JRVINE CITY councilmen, wbo can't d<>
ctde where Campus Drive ought to go: A cul d~ sac.
-TO BLACKIE GADABIAN, noted. Newport ~ owner and eoowler ai all thfnp: A new
public address system for bis yard that .each "°":!
automaUcally plays "'!be Stars and stripes Forever
f'Ollawed by ''Indian Love Call."
-TO LAGUNA BEACH voten: A lull year will>
out • recall electlon.
!.... FOB. ANDY HINSHAW, our new cmgressman :
A free bolllne lo Qllp Cleary. . ~
-TO AL FORGlT; former NewpOrt ~ ..
and ..,,.!er at all lhlnp: A free pUS to Blackie
Gadarlan'a boatyard at ooui.
-TO CHIEF ROGER NETH, supreme comm~
der ol Caito M-'• police bellcopt<r fleet: A volume
tilled; "How to Keep 'Em Flying .... "
-FOR SAN CLEMENTE residents : A newJihrary
provided by that certain penon wbo lives down at the
aouth end ol town.
-TO LAGUNA SCHOOL trustees Bill 'l'bomBs
Gerald Llllke ml Pat Gllletle, who just !Ired the
sup<rinleodtnt 11111 Ills' aides before Qirislmas:
O>pleo ol Dale Carnegie'• old book. "Jlow lo Wm
Frl<odJ and llllluence ~le."
-FOB THE NEW 005TA Ml!llA dogcaldler' A
leaky net and wea); rope.
_TO AIR CAIJFORNIA pilots ' Bini screens for
jel engioel.
-FOR DAN t:MOBY,, c:owrty airporl jet noise
ttltk:: Bird acreeM, earmuffs and a year's supply of
tranqulllzers.
-TO BOWARD ROGERS, Newport v~cemayor: A
new bicycle to ride on ,lhe Ocean Froot bike trail Z:,d
a bl.Imper sticker that reads, ''I Love the Fun e
-Maybe.''
FOR BALBOA ISLAND reoidenls' Three IOW'
lrucb to cleor the wreckage alter u-oew4angled
traffic slplall beve worked awhile.
* My list has run 00~ except for you and yours. I
wlsb you the merriest ol Christmases with loade ol
bappln.,. and love.
Accent on Youth Bike Trail
Board Member St.eps Up Fair Activities . To Provide
lly JAN EDWARDS
OfftMWJo ..........
YORBA LINDA -'Ille
newest mtmber of the Orance
County Fair Board, Kathleen
Huff, hope1 lo Include ublhfta
of mDH yoolh fl?OUPI In the
annual fair In Costa Mesa.
11 I would Uke to tee greater
emphasis on ,acitlvltes of all
volunteer youth erouPt. tueb
u tlie Boy Scouu, campfire
Girls, lhe Ys, Glrl1 Club& and
Boys Clubs, lo allow, In opera·
Uoo the ' good thlnc• they do.
to -there ............. partnb and kids cal'l all be in-
wfved In. ORANGE COUNTY
"I -.Id lib lo have the '-------~ Wr tx"lllpllfy all the good
wort these people do," she
111)'1.
And this Is why sbe want.d to ..._ a member ol the
32nd D II Ir l c I Agrioultural
Aaaoclallon board.
child is now 22 years old, she
L! t<mporarlfy l<Mlnc three
goats (one a retired, grand
cbampioo) an the famlly'a
four-acres until her daughter
MRS. BUFF says she' has returns from women Marine
oollced a dwlodlJoi number of --•--1 · F bru exhlbiUon claSlel open to 4-H training ?i\:UUU in e ary.
club members during the past SHE CONFIDESo "! have few years.
Her first visit to the fair been wanting to be on the
wu in 1954 when she saw briard for years" -ever since
many ''animals, polite kids she r~alized "the ireat in-
and a great interest in 4-H ac-Ouence that the board of
tivlUes." · · directors bas on the youth
~ then, she has been a 4-groupsr 1 am i.qterested In."
H leader, has begun four 4-H Mrs. Huff says she made
groups in Yorba Linda, and her interest in being a board
participated in animal husban-member known to local politi-
dry, ~ing and scouting pro-cians aod has attended
jects of her four children. meetings for the past eight to
And although her. youngest 10 months to be C()mpletely
lamlllar wllh the boanl's cur-
rent 1ctlvitiel.
She 11 the third woman to
aerve on the Orange County
board. Sile la 6~the posi-tion of Mlldrtd thorpe ol
Santa Ana who res lgn ed
midway lhn>ugb her term
wbldl ends In January, 1974.
HEB O'MER Interests U.
elude raising avocados and
oraages with her husband,
Robert, in a small grove next
to their borne.
For the past 22 years, she
has been involved in boy
scoutiag and ls now a merit
badge counselor in 11 different
fields, Including citft.ensbip
and journallmn badges.
And she-ls a member of the
Yorba lJnda Federated
Republican Womm.
HEB BESOLVE to promote
activities such as 4-H where
yooths Ieern· to t a k e
responsibilities originated in
Europe during World War II.
Mrs. Huff "aaw what Hiller
did to youths under bis com·
maJfd" while she was a wire
service reporter and resolved
"this should never happen to
our country."
She Says she wants youths in
Orange Oxmty to be able to
explore and display their hob-
bies at the fair, as an example
of the freedoms and op.
portunities that exist in the
U.S. today.
Tax Break
SANTA ANA -A unique
tradeoff will allow Orange
County to gain public acaea
to Z85 acres of mountain Jaod
in exchange ror a tax dlsa>unt.
The plan , proposed ~ the
Vedanta Society w h I c h
operates a monastery of! LlYe
Oak Canyon ~d near O'Neill
Parle, calls for s c e n i
easements which. COllld be u.
ed for bicycle tr al le,
horseback riding, and hltlng.
No motorcycles would be
allowed.
In retllm for the easements,
the morwlery properly, DOW
used only for cattle grazing,
would benellt by a nluatioo
for tuing purposes,of •100 an aere rather tban the present
11,IJIQ. .
The society agrees that i1
will leave the land In open
space, bypessillg all plans f..,
development .
The society said it wished to
keep the land open but rising
taxes -.re forcing it \o con-
sider development.
Tbe 11 acres immediateq
adjacent to the monastery will
not be included in the c:aoml1
easements.
WESTERN WORLD • • • '
(Continued From Page 31 -and the head ol tb.e medical
school is a strong, capable ad-
mJnlstrator and Is respected
by both the faculty and the
medic a 1 profession," Bur-
roughs said.
Othei examples, particular·
ly cases where one hospital
was expected to serve both
needs of the medical school
and community, have been
less Inspiring. "Stanford tried
to practice in one facility and
ran into problems," Burroughs
said.
TwO distinct hospitals in
Houston, for aoottier example,
grew as best they could within
the mix of offices and com-
mercial buildings in which
they were located, but space
C()ntinues ~ be a problem.
Nol ao In lrvlne where the
univenity has land committed
to the medical school and
Western World Medical Foun-
dation has an adjacent ;
similarly large parcel saved
for them by the Irvine Com-
pany at the C()rner o f
University Drive and
MacArthur Boulevanl.
Financing, at the outset, is
less a problem ~ the private
fl?OUP than It appears to be for
the university.
"We have a grant from a
local foundation committed to
finance the seed hospital,"
B.urroughs said.
Unlike the Mayo Clinic
which bas· struggled for years
· financially, Burrougbs said,
leases of land and space for
restaurants, hotels, medical
services and fmm will "self-
eodow" the health complex'
future.
It was on this point, Bur-
roughs said, that Dr. Arnold
O. Beckman became in-
terested In working with the
private organization. ''Be isn't
the type of man who needs
another trustee appointment,
but be supports the ldea.
"'Ibit i d e a , ' ' Burroughs
adds with emphasis, "i5 to
have a community hospital
which · enjoys a fine working
relationship with a medical
college."
Foundation trustees believe
the addition of the private
facilities adjacent to the UCI
facility will result in a better
Coast Men in Service
Navy Fireman Michael W.
LMpet, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Henry A. Langness Jr. of 115
Cadlz, San Clemente,
graduated from r e c r u i t
training at the Naval Training
Center in Orlando.
communications electronics
officer stationed In Sembock,
Germany. He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Dunne of
Huntington Beach.
*
/. medical school because the sidered Hoag Memorlal
private ~lion can do -Hospital, Pres~fan, • ade-
thJngs the public institution quate to serve the comrtwnlty
cannot do for itself, such u :· needs. /
-Campaign to attract top . However. Burra..zglls/cltang-
night doctors to Irvine. eel his mind when lte . un-
-5eek research g' r ant s derstood the u n i <tu e o~
(foundations such as ~-portunity being aff'f)rded the
Irvine Foundation cannot coir community by the 1:-eservatlon
tribute to tu-supported iJl. Qf. the Irvine Cona.pany t~
stituUoM, Burroughgs n"oted). a~ii had met ~ CGD.tacts m
-Generate fi.lnds for use in-Sigma D e 1 t a (Joomallarn
support of. college aictiviUes. society) who "st.tared my coo-
ln return, the Hafbor Area cem about th&. qaallty and
communities gain an ~ hi~h cost of mlld.ical care," be
ding medical facility offering ""d.
a n alternative to He joined Dr. Robert~
"bureaucratic" practice of ca, whom h.e credits as being
medicine yet a comp I ex the surgeon "who is q.e
capable of ·responding to the reason I'rn Sill w a It lag
full range of health care the around ti.Klay'' thanb to a
area will need. successfi.YI operation "in 1111>.
Crilics o( the plan suggest Dr. D:-ecca and Dr. Gerald
doctors sotneboW will profit B. Sinykin, , both Newport
from ~Westi:fnrWGrld Com-Beach physiciaM launched~
munity RospltaJ. -found·a.tion dream, and con-
Chainnan Burns responds , tinue to serve as directon.
"There are no proprietary in-Siny.kin is also a vice president
terests involved in o u r of the organization beaded by
organization, either dlrectly or Buins.
indirectly. No rilember of the Other directors i nc I u de
board can proftt in any way." George W. Brown, dean of the
To lhta, Burmighs adds the graduate school o I ad·
human note, 11DoCtbn making ministrative at Ucf; Mrs.
good Incomes hardly want to Lucy Burns, Or. James G.
pracllce In two bOopltals when Kidd of Newport Beach:
they can get along with one. developer Harry Rinker !>f
"Wbeo I WU ftrat med to. Newport Beacb, businessman
work lor deftlopmmt <I. Richan! Steele and Mn.
another community hospital Charles S. Thomas.
on the olber (Irvine) slile ol'rii'iiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOi
HOPE
* Marine Sgt. Leiter B. Pat-
terson, husband of the former
Mm Merilee G. Rodegure of
Costa Mesa, bas reported for
duty at U.S. Marine Corps
Base, Okinawa.
Newport Bay," the C<mta
Mesa executive aa1d. 0 1 told
them I eouldn't be less in-
terested In -hospital." Burroughs already s e r v e s
Chlldron's Hospllal ol Orange
Navy Seaman Recruit ~County::~and~~a~t~tbe=~time~· ~~co~n-~=:~~:=~=:~ Martin S. Platt, son of !\fr ·.ri
and Mrs. Clarence M. Platt of
5861 Jones Ave., Westminster,
graduated Crom re c r u i t
training at the Naval Training
Center at San Diego.
* * U.S Air Foree Capt. GarJ K. Navy Fireman R ee r u It
To all our neighbors & friends
PEACE & HAPPINESS for·
the HOLIDAYS and
the COMING YEAR Dwme, 31, halr'been named in Mll'ID L ScbaffataU Jr., son
the 19'12 edition of "Outstand-of Mi. ond Mrs. Marlin L.
ing Men of America" for pro-Schaffstall of 13032 Yuma
l...tooal and community Place, We1tmln1ter, lllfT FOREST SWIM ASSOC. leadership. He i.s a lifetime graduated from r e c r u I t LAftt
Scout, a former orator ol tralnlng al the Naval TraJnlni · El Toro, Calif. ~lad,~~ 1::1~ ~:liriiCeoter~-~-~ai.t~:...~D~i~eg~oi,;.;;,;;; ..... ;:;;;o;iij .. :ii.~-~,,_~~-~~-iii-~---~-~-~-iiiii~iiiiiii~~~iiil \.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'.._~Sla~ta~.~Dun~~oe:_:h~curr~~en~U~y~al '
I ~~-,f!C'!'I! Lawyer Named
I
Hetborl Kalmbach, Newport
Beach attorney, baa been ap.
pointed to the steering com·
mlttee to hrgant:.e a mem·
benblp _ drive for & he -tea. 1 Unlvenity of
Southem Callfornia support
aroup •.
~ f ...... t
• Clwtolw j ·~<!>'-"!!"' . I
SPICl.AL flOURS
l'OR CHRISTMAS
WDI M~ "TIL.
llNMY l1 •I
~•N.'~· *!:
;.., ........... ,... ....
-·-•"'iii'"ii'<i"•":.'i< ... 11li1
.....
<1Jt1:,un11
'Uc~ullfullv Jec1nn1e.1 l ... 1:iu..'I •nJ bn~kcls til ~•c1u,iv~ '\;\end!o!d "'inL'!I ••• {t11)\r11nt C"r·
dinalc, guldtin A\n\Ql\d('f1)1 ~ll~Mic Gr11nada
. , . anJ other lh\41 varicUM In Gift l'acks
1•f unl.1, three or 1lx bottlt'I.:
Td.in1ko9mandGiftSbop Open i d:I}'~ !\ l\'<?ek ••• featuring lntttn.itlon;d 1n\·arJ-
\1'lnnin5 \1•inc~, !llYOry 'hte~ and •IL·ll·
..:.11c "·ine jellic~. ·
Your family is 1nvtted to tute our
fine wlnet:. EnSo1 a sandwtch
rtorn our dell with a
elul ot-wtnt.
I
'
I MERRY~
'
From all of us
to all of you-
Yuletide joy!
Dom lacltl
· lob lacltl
Costa Mesa Jewelry & Loa).
1831 N!WPORT ILVD.
COSTA MESA
•
,J
I ·
Sundq, Dtctmbtr 2~. 1972 DAILY P~T t
• l
i reasury
~ soe ,,.., llXICI ott9
Have a Happy HolidaYr~
We're closed
Christmas Day,.
December 25.
Open Tuesday,
December 26,
· with exciting
after-Christmas
savings ;~
".
..
" I
••
" ' " ' '
,
* • •
l
•
1
•
"" '
••
--.-~r .. · .. . -. . • ...... "' ...... . . • • ... '
. '
, , DAD.~ PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
Salute to an Army
Amid the glow of Christmas and ra1nily gatherings.
ton \gbl will find 40 persons tog ether. without fa mily or
friends, grateful ror a roof and a bed. Thl'y are a111ong
the forgotten at C.hristmastjme.
The>e 40 persons will be bedded down al 8 18 E.
3rd St. in Santa Ana as guests of th at dependable old
institution, the Salvation Arn1 y, now in its 72nd year of
helping Orange County's lost and dow nt rodd en.
The Third Street hospitality house for shel tering
transient men and women is only one of th e Salvation
Anny's Orange County operations, but it is perhaps most
typical of the type of helping hand proffered lo thos e
forgotten by the rest of w . •
The Salvation Army's history in Orange Coun ty
goes back to 1900, only 15 years after it was founded in
East London by William Booth. A tent in Santa Ana
was the army's first dispensary of help and humanity.
A store front succeeded the tent, then a downtown
Santa Ana building that served until 1970 wh en the op-
eration was greatly expanded in new quarters at 1710
W. Edinger.
That headquarters building provides many kinds or
community help - youth activities, senior citizen hos-
pitality, Boy Scout meetings, music progra1ns and the
like.
And at a service center in downtow!'\_ Santa Ana ,
year-around therapy and work counseling is offered for
those men who lead the aimless lives of the drunk and
the derelict.
The Salvation Army's budget is a mere trifle com-
pared to the budget of help programs administered by
government. Its 365-d.ay·a·year operation is handled
with $188,000, $5-0,000 of whicb comes from Community
Cb est. Most of the remainder comes at Christmastime
when lhe smiling Salvation Army men and women tinkle
that familiar bell to remind you that contributio111 can
be dropped ln the iron pot.
lt would be bard to find a place where money
c ... ould be,tter be used to spread the sririt ot Christmas.
For each gift dropped in that Iron po is a helping hand
ttselC, a helping hand to someone either forgotten or in
need.
So, at Christmas. a salute to an army -an arn1y
wllh a mission it has not forgotten ln 87 years.
Jolly Old St. Nellie
. Could it. be that the ho, ho, ho's coming down the
chunney torught have a feminine ring instead of the
deep-voiced baritone one assOciates with the man in red?
Yep. women's lib has invaded Santa's uniform and
according to Newsweek magazine, with some success'.
In o~ May Co. store in Los Angeles, not only is
Sa_nta fen;iaI_e, she's. Jewish. But her superiors seem to
think she s Just as good as the round·tummied male she
replaced . .
Other stores across the country have bowed to the
Ms. group and hired women to assume the traditional
department store role of filling kids' imaginative Christ-·
mas gift lists.
. At the ~isk. of incurring the full wrath of the Na·
tional Organization of Women, we're afraid we can't go
along with the movement. Charming she may be, but a
,female Santa is simply disguising as a man · for the plain
fact is Santa Claus is a man, always has ~n and always
should be.
Besides, there always was a Mrs. Santa Claus and
how's she going to feel?
. . ' • ,) t . .i' '
• l
:
Nixon Grooming
. Likely Successor
Federal Laws Needed
1 WASHINGTON, D.C. -It is simply a
ma.Uer of record that in recent history a
pmideol of the United States bas been
able to set up a line of succession to the
insldencJ In bis own political party.
Truman to Stevenson. Eisenhower to
N"lXOn, Johnson lo Humphrey are ex-
amples of the succession.
For a half f."Otw'y. at least, nothing
ruos contrary to t.be general rule that an
incumbeot president
in his second term
creates his political
SU«:OSSOr.
Nor ls there any
reason to suppose
that President Nixon
does not have the
SUccession actively
in bis mind as he
rearranges the per-
sonnel of his administration for the sec--dnd term.' It does not neoessartly follow
that because Ni.loo picRd Spiro T.
Agnew for a secood term as vice-presi·
I -b<i has projected Agiiew Inf<> the
1971 piooidential nomlnatloo, although t!tll bas certainly lmpm'<d Agnew's
proopocts.
Of ti-whom the Pnoldent bas
designai.d for blg!I p'ooitlons In his ...,.
ond term, mly one appears to have
pblitieal potential . Heb Elliot
Richardson. a Bosten progt essive and
careerist with a social and intellectual
eclat more associable wl.tb the Kennedy
tradition in politics than with mid-
America Republican.Ism. •
RICHARDSON W A8 editor or the
Harvard Law Review, law clert to Judge
Learned Hand and Supmne Court
Justice Felil Frankrurter. (la an earlier
day Richard.ton would have been called a
"hot dog boy" as a prol'le ol the late
Justice Frankfurter.) He was assistant
welfare secretary in the Eisenhower ad-
ministration, U.S. distrid attorney ror
M•ssacbnsetts and wu ~ attorney
_.i ol that 111& ...
·NW.. appointed him as -.ry of
dtfenae.
lllchard!on will tlwl become the -widely erperlenced administnUr at the
t.p level of 1ovemment. with a bMic
tnln1ng In Ill most lmportant operatloas
far exceedinl any that NlJ:on bad or
Agnew wUI have. This ii IOll'ltWhat ironic
irt that Ricbardaon's primary ambitions
have })ef!n political. He has bad virtually
no oatlOlllll political exposure, and will
(rucHARD WILSO~
have very little opportunity to improYe
upon his present political anonymity in
the next couple or years.
BUT THERE IS a serious dearth or
outstanding political personalitie! in the
C.O.P. with the exception of Agnew. Al
th is stage only Sen. Charles Percy of
Illinois, other than Agnew, enjoys any
natimal status as a presidenti&J pros.-
peel.
It might be said that Nixon needs not
worry about this, all that is Incumbent on
him ls to make his mark in history dur-
ing a brilliant second term, but that is
not realistic.
Like Eisenhower and Johnson before
him, Nlxon will wish for his era to be
projected into the future, which be clear-
ly reveals in his ruminations on making
the G.O.P. the oew majority party. U
tbat is to be the case the recognizable
Republican leadership will have to be
greaUy expanded from its present
, meager base. At present, neither Agnew
nor Percy arouses tremors of an·
ticipation, and the field needs to be
·enlarged to create the sense or vitality
which a majority political party must
have.
This need presents Richardson with an
opportunity to make himseU better
.known In the political w<irld. sllhough il
will be difficult in hi.! position as
secretary of defense.
SUCH DIFFICULTIES merely un·
derline Nixon's dilemma if he continues
being bemused by the idea of creating a
new political force . A strong force cannot
thrive on ideas alone ""but requlres
personification at a lime when lbere Ls a
shortage of personages.
U such luminaries do not appear,· or
are not created, the internal political
issue in the Republican Party may sim·
ply be whether or not a combination of
liberal! and progressives ean prevent the
nomination ot Agnew in 1976.
In the absence oC many governors or
senators who st.and on their own, some
Republicans will continue to look to Nix-
on appealingly to bring forward new men
of leadership caliber.
Crime Statistic Doubtful
Note 11 claimed In rint that Ille im·
m.llrant population o Latin e1tnlctlon
contrlbulH heavily to the crime rate in
Southern· CIUfomJa, Fuclnallng, ll !ac· toar. Which I doubt . Crbne nt< In Mex·
lco CUy ts oal1 abotll 10 pon:ent tllat of
Lot Angtles. I
THAT YOU AND I have I considerable
1motmt of If.eel In CKD' bl.tr u well u ln
our ofeo•btre has
-pnved. A1lo ~ ..... -~ Jy.:.11 that -• ba,. bali ......
muctr teod io tllllr
belr • •!!& Ono Dr-.~ .. -, ,..... ... nr
ilte -a• be-t .......... '
tho r.oll)n tltll -matter ts
mt Ali. ·
--. ,, TOl1 _. to trJ to 111&y
a11 .. juol ... -,.,. -pther tram
illo -· lleldo and nten -like fnrill, -. .,.ilall&. IO ... -"'"'d • •
,
' •.
( L M. BOYD J
need approximately twti 11quare mUes to
forage in. More or less. More In the dry
Southwest, certainly. Leu alq the
northern couts. But that two aquare
.mtlet is reclconed as a nationwide
aver1ge.
WHAT FEW PEOPLE realize is your
listening apparatus Is not confined to
)'O(lr eara. Your no!!IC! bones. !pine, even
shooldtr blldes. lhey're atl pllfl •of It.
ThJt becomu Jigniflcant 1-11hen you con-
ttri?J>l.ate the (act thAt the man who goes
to the ayrnpb(lny ln a turtle nec k swc111tcr
11mp1y don not bear the same tones as
the ftllow who shows up In his ahorta.
PRICE OF BRIDES In . the rural Mid-
dle East bas jumped !rom abotlt 11 ,rro to
$3,000 1n the last two ye11r11. That's no
small con, either. Represents about five
years ol a workina man's Income there.
1
I
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
. and the angel or the Lord
said: "Fear not for I bring .YOU
tidings of great joy" ... we ' Jost
only ten B52's over Hanoi.
A.R.V.
Tllll fNhln rl'fltCts ~ ....... -
llKflllrllY ltlftt of "'9 -· S..... ,_ NI _.,. IO Gloor!rt 0... DallY l'li.I,
Could Nixon
Win Coveted
Peace Prize?
By Eliiabeth MacDonald Manning
It is not difficult to find the history of
wars. There are so many.
The United States, which did not
become a world power until the 20th cen-
tury, fooght in seven wars, including
Vietnam -the Mexican-American,
Spanis~American, S e con d Philippine
Insurrection, World )Var I, World War 11,
and Korea. Not counting civil wars, war
was under way in the world for all but 24
of the 150 years until 1965, with the
gruesome statistics of 29 million battle
deaths. exclusive of civilians.
But if you try to find the origins and
history of peace in an errort to assess t~
future and learn from the past, there is a
terrible lack of any established body of
fad and a surprising mass of conOicting
interpretation concerning even l b e
motive s or peace.
If you accept the simple view that
peace is the absence of war, y<iu must
first understand that ·peace is much mere
complicated than war. lt is not im·
mediately clear even to the experts in
polltlcal science why wars have often
been used to end wars or why the pat-
terns of peace and war in the last part of
I.he 20t.b century may change the whole
bistory of mankind.
The makings of peace like the makings
of war cannot be the work of one man or
one naUon but a phenomenon that is hap-
pening now in the minds or people and in
the behavior of world powers. Yet one
man has contributed to the shaping of
national and world opiniun on a host of
IS!ues related to world peace at every
level -diplomatic , bu!!lioeu,
government, economic, academic, but
mostly to people who somehow un-
derstood instinctively the basic breadth Of
his concerns. Both he and the country
have changed drastically, 'i\-ilh the in-
tensities or peace commitment boldly In
touch with our own times.
What Is happening before our eyes is '
the wort of a statesman who has not
only lmposed himsell on mnts but has
transformed them in the Interests of
replacing the cauaea of war with qoo-
temporary reasons for peace.
One man'a peace has focused wurld
recognition on the immense role of the
U.S. President, on achievements rather
than the .,plrationJ ol peace, on the
adaptation.a to embrece alien cU!!llpnU
and ideas. the skillful u!Je of lntematlbnal
trade and filulnce as a potent fBictor In
long-term friendly relaUonship1. and
most exciting of all, rls\fll above aU the
pitfalls. the broadened and deepened
perspectlvts of peace as a living
organism of man's intellect,
, These are aome of the reasons why
President Ni1'*1 will be nominated by
more quallllcd peraon9 than any other
csndldat< In Nobel Peace Prize history.
Nomtnatlool ror 1972 clooe tbe end of
January, 1973. By that lime, even the
crllle1 will know.
Reprinted From F1aance Maiatlne -
Dec. lfll
Protection for Newsmen
By ROBERT smAND
United Press Intemational
With a half dozen U.S. newsmen
threatened with jail ror refusals to reveal
confidential material, pressure is rising
in Congress and state legislatures for
laws to give them immunity.
"I really doo't th.ink we can keep put·
ting people in jail who are supposed to be
reporting the facts, and still live in a free
society," says John Palil Moore, a Mis-
sissippi state senator.
But in Tennessee, State Sen. Calvin
Cannon took a different vlew in com-
menting on the case of Joseph Weiler, a
Memphis Commercial Appeal reporter.
"I'd like to put him in jail myself, and
leave bim there !:W-be rota," Cannon said.
In Los Angeles, William Farr. 4 Los
Angeles Times reporter, is serving a
sentence Cannon would like. FaJT is·
behind bars either until be breaks a
promise not to reveal his sources, or until
(GUEST REPORT J
the judge retireS -probably ts years
from now.
THE ISSUE is wl'iettler a newsman
should be compelled to give coofidential
information to a trial court, a fP'8Dd jlU')'
or a legislative body.
News media contend that if they are
forced to reveal their sources, tbe
sources will "dry up" and the public will
be deprived of it! right to know vital
racts.
The counter argument is lhat a
reporter hu the same responsibility as
any other citizen to protect our society's
right to justice by testifying.
Last June the U.S. Supreme Court
Last-minute Slwpping?
Give Books as Presents
Looking ror a last-minute Christmas
present for an overlooked friend?
Then why not give him that most
splendid of aU gifl.15, a good book? A book
is a gift from one heart to another heart.
from one kindred spirit to another.
A book has many advantages. Its
upkeep is minimal, since it needs neither
rue! nor repairs. It doesn't wear out, and
orten can help in·
spire the receiver for
a lifetime. It even
can be handed down
from generation to
generation. It can
refresh or renew
many minds, not just
ooe.
Books are al·
ways acceptable and
always ln fashion. 111 many homes a new
book is placed atop the television set now
and then just to let visitors know that
some members of the family still remain
\Iterate even in the heyday or the picture
tube.
Finally, you alw&Y3 get more than your
money's worth In a good book. It is a
1hlng or recognized value in all civillza·
tlons: tn tmns of the Inspiration lt ma y
poMibly provide, that value at times can
be priceless.
Of course. when giving boob as
presents. lt is hlgblt important that the
right ~k be given to the right person.
Each should suit the other.
Here, for example, and all in fun, is a
selection from current titles of !!IODle
books that might be fitting IA> give to
llOll)fl weU known people; ....
1·oPtn Mani.age" -Zsa 7.sa Gabor.
"Jonathan LlvingSton Seagull" -Your
parrot or parakeeL
"5000 Nights at the Opera" -to
•---By George --~
' Oc&r George:
t've always wondered why prac-
tically all your letters are signed
wllh lnltlal! or relatively br1ef pen
names such as "Worried'' or
"Distraught.'' Do ypu have a policy
nKainst using real names becau~
of llbtl , or what? •
TIMO'nlY FINLEY
McW ALLINGFORo.sMYTHE Ill•
Dear Tim :
Short column. Your signature us-
ed up today's.
I
( HAL BOYLE )
Aristotle Onassis from Maria Callas.
"Semi·Toogh"-: Henry A. Kissinger.
"The Winds cf War " -President
Thieu of Vietnam.
"The Exorcist" -Norman Vincent
Peale.
"Supermoney" -J. Paul Getty.
"Waiting for the Morning Train" -
Any Long Island Rail Road commuter.
"Tbe Best and the Brigblest" -Spiro
Agnew.
"I'm Okay -Yoo're Okay" -President
Ni.Ion.
"To Serve Them All My Days" -Gen.
Omar Neli!IOD Bradley.
"1be Years Alone" -George
McGovern.
"Women and Madness" -Or. Joyce
Brothers.
"The Joy of Sex" -Johnny Carson.
"Dark Horse" -John Connally.
"Bobby Flscber's Chess Games" -
Borts Spassky.
''The Greening of America" -Any
captain of industry.
"The Doll" -l'llytlls Diller,
"The Dream Team" -Members of
Prf:Sldent Nixon's new Cablnet.
"The Word" -Mll'gmt Mead.
"Forever Flowing" -Gloria Steinem
and other feminilt leaders.
"In Search ol. Nlxon" -Pat Nixon.
"BartleU11 FatnWar Quotations" -
Archie Bunker.
"Without a SUtcb ln Time" -Jackie
Onassis. "Mumbo Jumbo" -Whtte Rouse preas
secretary Ronald L. Zle«ler.
"Sane Living In a ·Mad World" -
Howard Hughes.
''Tbe Man Who ,Got Away" -D. B.
Cooper, aky jacker.
"A Rtpubllc. II You Can Keep It" -
Tbe Republican patty.
"11le Coming of Age" -Franl(
Sinatra.
"Blood lq My Eye" -Muhammad AU.
"After the Planoerl'' -The Watergate
c:rOwd.
"SlllkiDI tho oood Lile" -Huab
Hefner.
"11le .Only Wll To a-'' -Mayor
John V. Llndoay ol lle1r York Olly.
"llol Blnb • Cold BolUeo" -Dean
Maritn,
voted 5-f that .newsmen had no rights
under the First Amendment to refuse a
court order.
ABOUT TWO dozen bills were prompt.
ly introduced In Uingress IA> give
newsmen the privilege of withholding in·
formauon. Federal law now contains no
such provision.
Sen. Lowell P. Welcker, Jr., (R-Olnn.),
bas aohooncecl a "'" propooaJ deslgned to overcome some objectioo.s to bills In
the last session ol Congress. His measure
\\-ould give newsmen ''abeolute" im-
munity before grand juries and govern-
ment agendes, and &. limited immunity
in courts tcyin~ major crUninal cues.
•.·w~ do not need to protect newmnen,"
he said:-"Rather,-we must<protect a con-
stitutionaJ right we all have In the free
flow o( news."
"With minor exceptions, research
shows that every major public scandal
over the past ~ years wu uncovered by
~press," be said. "If we didn't protect
this news, we mJgbt never bear about
those abuses, again,''
Sen .. A.I~ Cranston, (D-Callf.), is rein-
troducmg a ...........,.. bill aUording
absolute Immunity. Rep. Olarles W.
Whalen, (R-Ohio), Includes book autbors
Bild college )oumaltsts u well u lulltimo
newsmen ln his measure.
. BUT ll&'llSTANCE IA> such proposals
lS stroog among lawmakers, and their
passage i_, in doubt. Gov. 'lbcmas J .
Meskill of Connecticut says lawyers. doc-
to~ and clergymen bave "earned" the
right to J>rivUeged conunwiication.
But now he says the right Is claimed
"by as unlikely a group to deserve it as
any ordinary nightmare could conjure up
-anyone and everyone who chooses to
claim that be is covered by what be calls
press privilege, and decides to tbumb his
nose at the law or the land."
Isn't It the Truth!
Here are four rlfbta a lady pollilc!an
mum tavor : equaf rights for women,
spending tight8 ror wives, visiting rights
for husbands and, for all men, t6e right
to support women. '
"I will follow the right even to t~
fire -but avotdtng the fire ~f pos-
sible."
-Afichel De Montaigm
The retired old Wyoming cowboy and
horse wrangler whq Uves down the road ,
thinks poorly of poliUcianl. He sees them
as opportunistic creatures who invariably
express love for their fellow man while
hoping to make a Jiving at It.
"Politk.! ;.,, p<rha,,.. the on1v
profe1non for which no prepar-
ation ts th.ought necesSOf\I."
-Rob'l't Louif SUI>"""°" . .
ORAHOI CO.ll-T
DA ILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, fl(blilher
Th...., K<:<vfl, 'Editor
Barbara. Kriibich.
Ed itoricl Paae Editor
... cdltr.Mal pqe or the O.ib'
Pilot fffkll to ln(urm and 1tlmu-
l8IC' rtaOOn by prncnllnt 1 thla
ntwJPlper'• oplnliOM al'l(I tom·
mental') on topics or lntcltst and siantflcA~. by providing • forum tor! th1t expn.>1alon ot our re&der1'
Oi!ilnlf)na. and b)' prl't{>ntlng thr
ctl-tur.e vlewpotnts of lnforml!d ob· teMn and 1pokHmen on top4ca
O{ ilhe d.ay.
Sunday, December 24, 111'72
i
•
\ \. ~
Svnd.,, -24, 1'72 DAil Y PllO~ 7
Addicts Hold Clue to Drug Traffic Control
-8y RICHARD C. SCHROEDER -----w ASl;IJNGTO!'\-,-No one seena to know for sure wbether the govem· ment'e Jlllbly pubi\died war on dnlp ii 1ucceed1Dg. The budget for fed-
eral ljlll~ efforts ~ ~ trom $66 ml1llon three yeata ago to a!~mo ~· Selzuho;M. ~..a ol.bler daneerous dl1Jlll -Y u,s. U'incl11 and foreign gomrnmeott bave dcUblecl lfl ,just one year.
Whlte:}:(ouse press ~ ~ 11\&t tli& pr!ee of lierotn bas shot .UP· In
East CJaast clUea,. an1i that the fti•s •na!Ullle 10 lddlcts have declined IURMA
u.a.
ANO OTHlft
CHINA
.
hundred dollars at most. But u the opium moves aJong the trade route
and Is transformed lnw heroin, the prices rise dramatically and will
bring as much as half a million dollars on the streets of New York. At
every stage along the way, the enormous profits to be made overshadow
the riska of tralficldng.
I IV\t-· I -, .Y ~ 0 yY-•,._.y. 4 "° ~ I ,
·Sttu. there appears to ik'.ll«le panic 11!' n~e ·park. The Bureau of ··
Narcollcs,1and Dangerous Dru1a IW just revised, Its estimates of the
number o heroin addicts from SOO,OQO, to 6001QOO -ten times 8' many
Wh<!n Turl<Uh opium was the primary soun:t of heroin smuggled into
tbe Uniled States, Marsoille, In &OUthern France, was the big processing
and smuggling center. Frofu Marseille, heroin found its way to the United
States In the bolds of trawlers, welded into car bodies. or concealed. in
luggage. Caribbean islands and South American countries figured as
transshipment points. But now, the smuggling systems are shifting rapidly.
and more heroin appears to be making its \\'ay directly from Southeast
Asia. some of it smuggled into \Vest Coast ports by Ch inese ship-jumpers
out of Hong Kong. as a <lecade ago. According to the bureau, the American market for heroin
may ee .. much as ten tons a year; compared. with. the previous estimate
of four to nve tons. Ex.perts aay that 80 to as. percept of the drugs from
abroad slip lhrough the elabol'.ate screen &et up by federal authorities. A
reeenl report to Congress by G<!neral Accounting Office Investigators
held little hope much of the !nflow can be stopped at the borders.
ThJ> United States has negotiated an agreem•mt with Turkey -
fonnerly the ~un:e of 80 percent of the narcotics entering the United '·
States -to ban all opium growing in that country. A! a result, Turkey's
share ot the U,S. drug market bas dropped. But heroin from Southeast
Asia la ,rapidly 111llng the gap. A few years ago. the Narcotics Bureau
said nOt-more than 5 pemom of th!a country's heroin _5UP.ply came from
the IDOQDl&inous ,Golden 'l'rlal\gle region of Bunna, :r~and .and Laoo.
Now, aays:"the Bun>au, M mtlch u 30 percent may be coming from lhel:t. ~ • ' ' ·J • The Situation ls oompll~ated by charges that U.S. a~encies, especial·
ly the Cli\, winl<ed a\ the Soutb'east Asian drug trade in years past. Am~
ican ajlf~s, ranging from Laotton generals to the remnants of Chiang
Kai'"5hei'S Kuom.in'tang armies, are said to have been kingpins in the SJ1!U~U~g of opium and :Processing it into ·heroin. N~t until the he.roin
ep•dOJ"ic hit U.S. tro.P, 10 Vietnam two years ago did U.S. authonttes
move ub°'closli tlie clandestine refineries and suppress the lucrative drug·
smuggling business. l ,
Such :charges, if true, underscore the enormous task facing this
country in its effort w cut oil the international nareoti~ traffic. For tbe
Shan or Meo htll tribes of Burma and Thailand, opium is virtually the
only cash crop, the backbone of a subsistence agricultural economy. For
growing ten kilos of opium, the tribal farmer probably receives a few
Chinese and Russians
Hold Stage in Qrama
The big drama these days at the
United Nations is being played out by the
Soviet Union and China.
For years, many political com·
mentators had predicted that if Mainland
01.ina were to be ad-
mitted to the United
Nations it would
fonn a giant c.orn-
mwlist bloc with the
Soviet Union in order
to dominate the Uni·
ted Nations. What
has actually bappm>
ed is that, far from
combining t b e i r
strqth. the two major Coramunist
Po""" have becune the two princlpald
antagonilts at the United Nations.
The present rivalry betweel the Soviet
UniM and China is far more the result of
conlllctlng natlooa! Interests than of dlf·
ferent interpretations of Conununist
theory and its application ln the modern
world. At the heart of the controversy is
someOting as tangible and nontbe.oretical
as a stru'8le over territory. The Chinese
want the Ru!sians to return the va.st area
seized ~ the period ol czarist
military expansion into Asia. 11le Soviet
leaden not only have served notice that
they do not feel obligated lo liquidate the
empire they inherited but are pttpered
to defond their territory by fon:e, ll
necessary.
Tbe result 1$ that both countries are
eyeball to eyeball in Aai&, with military
forces primed for lnoWlt action. Large-
scale cluhes have, in fact, occurred.
Both sides have done their best to keep
tbe news or the fighting from erupting in-
to big headlines throughout the world.
but the fact remains that guns have been
fired and men have been killed.
THE SPILLOVER of tJUs conflict is
now apparent at the United Nati095. Dur·
ing one of the recent debates in the
General Assembly, China called ftlr
abolition of nuclear stockpUes. The
vlgol'OWI opposltloD to thll position was
eipr<SSed not by the United States but by
the Sovie! UnlQD.
Twenty yean ago, when the debate
( NORMAN
COUSINS )
' over nuclear disarmament raged in the
United Nations, it was the Soviet Union
that demanded t.be elimination of nuclear
stockpiles. Today, however, the Soviet
Union opposes such eliminaUon. In U ·
plaining their stand to their fellow
delegates at the United Nations, the
Russians frankly express apprebemion
about tbe wisdoirl ol placing themselves
at a possible military disadvantage with
resped to China.
11li.s is not to say that the split between
Riwia and au.a hils no ideoioglell
underplltnlngB. Both cauntries bave been
contending for kladenhlp Inside the Com-
munist world. China bas denounced tbe
SOv1et Union for having deviated from
Marx. One of tbe main items on its bill or
particulars bas been the fact tbat the
Soviet leaders have favored a policy of
coexistence with the capitalist \.!nlted
States.
NOW THAT the Oilnese themselves
are emb8rting on a new and friendly
relaUonsbip wlth the United States, tbe
conclusion ls clear that nationa1 interests
come abead ol Ideology. It Is abo clear
that the Chinese have no intention of re-
llOlllldng tbe reacquisition ol the lands
seized by the czar. 'T1tiJ means tbat Cltina
has decided tt does not wish to face two
PoWerful foes at the same time. one of
the most ancient axioms of international
politics is that if a nation is faced with
two potential enemies, it should make
friends with one of them. To China, the
differences with the United States are
half a world away; the differences with
the Soviet Union are in their back yard.
There can be no ~mfort for
Americans in the fact of a possible
Chinese-Russian violent showdown. A
major war today, especially II fought
with nuclear wee.pons, could lead to a
global bolocall.'I. The only wsy the
United States can benefit from the
~-c:ompetltlon is lo -vent It froltl. becoming combustible.
'This is Mission Control . You s~a~ on +he gr011ricl'
·~
11
--•
PHILl,,.INQ
U.S.
AJOOOTMM
INfaNATIOHAL ..........
WORLD
DRUG TRAFFIC
FLOW
Whether China is involved in Ute new smuggling system is an enigma.
The Nixon administration 1 says flatly it has no evidence or Communist
Chinese complicity. Supporters of the Taiy,•an Nationalist Chinese regime
insist that huge quantities of mainland Chinese opium are flowing into
international smuggling channels.
There seems little chance that opium :growing can ever be stamped
out worldwide. Some l ,200 to 2,000 tons are needed each year for l~ti·
mate medical purposes. The production potential of the world's optum
growing centers ls staggering, and the opportunities for illegal production
and smuggling .,,, vlitua!Jy limiUess. Nonetheless, the administration
has mounted a m=lve effort to cut off as much or the supply as pos-
sible. Washington has pressed its allies and international organizations w take action.
But in the en~ success will ~robably be measured onl y in terms .of
how the world confronts the demand side of the drug business. The
tragic world of the addict bolds the clue to controlling the menace, if
that can be done. Utue is known about the root cause of the deadly addic·
tion that costs this country-by administration estimates-$18 billion a
yelr. 1
Knoy,1Jed ge of the properties and long.range effects of all kinds of
drugs is relatively primitive. The reasons why men choose to destroy
themselves by using them is still obscure. U, in fact, America is con·
cernM. about its survival in the face of the drug threat, the dramatic
action is likely w come not in the poppy fields of the Golden TrisngJe
or on the wharves of Marseille, but at home where the market growe
larger day by day. '
Minorities Defeating Themselves
Disobedience: Civil and Un.civil
Remembering what Martin Luther
King accomplished with civil disol»
dience, but remembering too the in·
numerable recent instances of disobe-
dience carried to the point of violence, I
approached with sympathy for both sides
the debate between Rev. William Sloane
Coffin, Jr., chaplain of Yale University,
and the distinguished Chicago attorney,
Morris Leibman. p¢>lished under the ti-
tle "Civil Diaobedience: Aid or 1-lin-
drance to Jmtlce?"
(American, Enlet'
prise Institute for
Public Policy Re-
seareb, Washington.
D.C.)
However, I could
not belp feeling .... nnisblng the book
that If ll>ffln is the
best spokesman and
philosopher the protest movement has, it
had better quil Coffin reve~s himself
to be seU·righteous, arrogant, and above
all antklemocratic.
THERE ARE two kinds of civil disobe-
dience. First there are deliberale acts of
disobedience, such as those led by Martin
Luther King, whose purpose ls lo bring IO
the courts a test of the constitutionality
o( a law. When successful, these result
in improvemenb in this Jaw.
Then. as O>lfin says., there is a "sec-
ond type ol disobedience (t ba t)
recognizes the-legalll)' of ~the law, but
feels tts inhumanity to be so great as to
(s. I. HAYAKAWA J
make obedience to it morally i111-
possible." An example of this is military
conscription, which bas been challenged
less on legal than on moral grounds.
The purpose in cases such as these is
not to improve the law, but to discredit
it. As O>ffin says, "We must recognize
that justice is a higher social goal than
law and order."
Those who disobey the law for a high
moral purpose ddi 90 for ''reasons of ooo-
science." But whose conscience? That of
a vocal mp.ity? Dr. Coffin's? Yes, he
says. What ~ do I have to base my 3c-
tions on but mY conscience?
AND IT IS clear that he believes his
conscience to be one with those of Jesus,
the Founding Fathers, Gandhi~ etc. -
"those individual consciences of the
world which, as opposed to the mass
mind, best represent the universal con-
science of mankind."
But What if my comcience comes to
conclusions different from tho6e of Dr.
Coffin? Suppose my conscience were to
tell me that it b immoral to permit
South Vietnam to be avemm and su~
jugated by the Commllllists?
What if I were also to claim that my
coosdence ls ooe~ historical believ-
er.i In freedom and dignity sucb as Jesus,
' '
the Founding Fathers, Gandhi, etc.? How
is one to decide w h o s e ~lence is
right?
Coffin provides no answer to this ques-
tion. However, Leibman in bis Portion ot
the debate exposes the consequences of
Coffin's position : "The advocates of civil
disobedience insist upon license which
they would not permit to their opponents.
·~mE POU CE, It :seems. are to arrest
members of the Ku Klux Klan, but not
members of the Weathermen:. Laws may
be violated if, and only if, ooe is a
member ol the elite. . . . avu disobe-
dience woold be allowed f« -ct 'liberal' re.fonn, but •reactionary' civil
disobedience would not be tolerated.."
Coffin bas little to aay, moreover, when
her-touches on the illue oft violence..
"When viokmce to penions is Involved,
the effectiveness of civil disobedience
becomes truly problematical, U only
because public attention tends to center
on the violence itself." Presumably it
should center on the moral Wue -
racism, Vietnam, or whatever. What is
shocking in Coffin's position ill that be
does not see violence ltseU as a moral
issue.
Indeed, Coffin offen -· in the same
terms as the Weathermen although in
somewhat more polite Language -an
apologia for viblence: "Violence can be
an espresslon ol cbarlty, albeit a distor·
lion ol It. lndlfference. 00 the other band,
can only be the perfedion d egoism.
"So It remalm an open questioo as to
whether it ts worse to have blood on
I
one's hands rK water Uke Pilate." It
would be interesting to hear Dr. Coffin
try to explain this theory to Gandhi or to
Martin Luther .King!
THE THEORY of civil disobedience a~
propounded by Qiffin. says Leibmarfl,•
"claims that most members of thf$
citizenry should be dominated and sut>=
dued because t h e y aT!: lrredeemablf~
benighted and incapable of cmi:
prebending the• lnlth. They must,'
therefore, be redeemed by a self ap:
Pofuled elite."
Civil disobedience as practiced by Gan·'
dbl. dedicated to nonviolence and moral•
suasion, has been a powerful force for
good in the world. But to resort to•
violence to Impose one's views on otben
is-1;~.
Funbermott, says Uibman, In a dense:
urban ooclety violence ii contagiou$.
"The new barbarians do not belp us· with
their cries for instanl aolutiom. 'I'he!F'
tactics appeal not to man'ih!Mher reason'
but to his savage nature~" .
Dissident minorities are de(eatln&.
themselves by their own tact.lei . o~
di.mlpUon and violence and lrrationaUty1,
It bao taken thousands ol yurs to cre&t<i.
representaUve societies commJtted tq
reason. '1
Wben men tum away from systems ~
law to .,...1ng mnolions and pea-.
the flnt lo suffer .,. the mlnorltiel ...i,1
,diaenters. "'lbat ls why," Leibman COClolt.
eludes, ·~bey should be In tbe fore~
ol t b 0 s e -ooodemn civil ~
dience." ,:;•. ... ••
What '-•ppened to To111 · Knehel? •
~I
Former ~enq,tor from Anaheim Alive, Well in W ashingto11 Law Office ;;:
By THOMAS D. ELIAS
aDd ARNOW FRIEDMAN
For a man who spent the better part of
the past two decades as a U.S. senator,
Thomas H: Koebel bas become incredibly
invisible in bis home state's politicl.
It's especially hard to believe since
Kuchel is an active partner in a very
Polltlcally.or!ented Beverly Hilb Jaw
firm.
But Kuchel himself appears ntber
aloof from California polilics these daY>,
both in interest and distance. I
"I'm a practicing lawyer and I'm not
in Politics," califomia's Republican
senator between 1953 and 1969 said in an
interview from his law orfice in the na-
tion's capital. He operates t h e
Washington branch of the prestigious
finn of Wyman. Bautzer, Fine l I.
Jtothman and Kuchel.
The firm is headed by Eugene I..
Wyman, former Democratic national
committeeman for. California and one of
his party's key fund.raisers and cam-
paign contrlbulon.
"We've had no trouble over politics,''
W)'tDM said at the firm's maln afflct on
Wllahlro BouJevard. "We agrted when
Sen. Kuchel joined the fum that he was a
RepubiJcan and I I Democrat and be
woWd IUJ>porl wllomever be llked In his
party and f'd support whomever I liked
In my party'"
Wyman bas ttmained hl&hly vlllble as
a political pro. Kuchel basn't -•\ leaat
DOI wtll ol WasbiJJcton.
The fonner Senate mlno<l\y wbip
whose modttate-t.o-Uberal vtewa were re-
Je<ted by Callfom!a Republicans In favor
of conservaUve Mn Rafferty In their
11161 primary race 800nds like he 11W1J11
It when he say1: '1'11e had no tbouilits at au about N!tumtng to the StnJt.e.."
Now ~. Kuchel sa)'3 he enjoyed hb ti
years In oulillc office "but tbat'1 bebind
mo now. J•m very hllppy doing whllt I'm
doing!'
lfowe.\fef, he•1 nearly as reluctant to
•
"l'M NOT IN POI.mes"
Thomes H. Kuchel
' talk abollt 11\bal be'1 doing now u abollt
PoUtko. "f do ol!lce -k." he sakl. "f
appear in court on the UJUal matters that
OCC.U;Pf• my partnera.. It would be
unethical far me aa an attorney to name
my clltnll."
A couple of 'bll cfientt are very w~n
known. Kuchel waa reminded that his
name •PJ>eartd prominently earlier thi.9
year oo the naUm'a sporta pagts for hls
work In be.hall of a mer(er between the
two leading profession•! basketball
l~agut1.
"Yes/' he responded. "my firm
repreaented the National Ba1kl!tball
Maoclation and the American Baskttbell
~atloo In hearings before Con;ras .
SOUTHERN CALIFoRNJA
FOCUS
But k would be unethical to discuss such
a cue in detall."
Wyman, apeal:lnc much '"°"' freely
about the ex....,.tor'a ~ w!tb the firm
than Kucbel hlmsell, noted tbat his
partner ts ten1q u general counsel to
both beskelbell 1-In their attmnpt
lo win federal leglslallon permitting a
merger.
"lt'a a caae we couldn~t ha ve Mndled
wtthout a Washington office," Wymnn
said. "Having Stn. Kucl'N:!I there on lhe
spot has been a great advantage."
'Mle Washington office opened when
Kuchel joined the tlnn in early 1969,
Wyman nld. "Although he wanted to
maintain a Permanent home i n
Cl\llfomla, he wanted to retain bis con·
tacts ln Wlllhfneton, allowing us to have
the Wasb.lniton offtct."
Kuchel bu arrued iC•56 before the Supreme Cour1, VI,.... said. Including a
parl In the• cootnctuAl dlap.ite ovor
bukttball star 8-lla)""OO<I, wbo
Jumped from Ibo ABA•a Denver team to
the NBA'a SeaUle franchlM .
Kuchel a1ao appeonid before tbe
Supreme Court ln a cue involvini an oil
rlgbta dlapute In the Anlblan Gulf.
Wyman uld.
Another important client for the
Wa&hlnaton offlee. Wyman said , Is tne
City ol l>llnt Sprlnp, "ooc1Sloned by tht
fl('t that IO mocb of Ill land is owned by
Indians.
"This means we deal with the Interior
Depsrtmtnt. Sen. t<ucbel baa llllUtO and
credlbUlty wben he woru befo~ aucb
agenelel."
Kuchel'a "lt.aturt," lll1• Wyman, has
made the firm "weU-known nationally,"
not just in CallfOmia. :J'11 "f would say he ranks with Clark CllllJ,
ford (secretary of defense under ~
dent Johnson ) among Washington ~
torneys,'' Kuchel's partner bouted.
"There aren•t many fonner mlnorltyr.
whips and sen>lon from Callfornla
around." ..,,,,
In fact, tbe only two es.(:allfomll>:
senators atUI alive, Republicans Wllllmft •
F. Koow!and and George Murphy, .-t•
lawyers. . Knowtand ls &n Oeklatltf.
neWSPoper publlsher and Murphy ,_
operates a Washlngton public relaUons
and lobbying flnn. "
Lobbying was one subject lhat arou!led
Kuchel. When his liltervlewer asked ll he
functioM as a lobbyi st In Washington, fi.e
1935 graduate of use lnw school soapptl.
"This ii a low finn , not a lobbytna
organizlUon.
"f appear before congrwkln.al com·
mittees occasiona lly. but that'• the moltl
nlinor pan ot our buslneaa." 11rlfl"I ;,,.
•
'" "'"'' ,..,
" "'
ttn• ,
l • "
' I
I
I
I ,,
' '
I
I
I
·I
.-... .... -:. t• .---.... ... ,,; ... ,, .• ·-... ,'4' --~· .,-., j>r'" • . ' . 'p .. f
to an ta
(n-Plpl)
•
kind with wire ··~ the end and you put tbe bot·
In 'lllY ltOcldn8 p1 .... :
'llwlk you again, Sage
1 Dear Santa Claus,
r.;Me· and Jd¥ itrandmother
'f9 G3 years old. We live
t atone. I am nlne years old. l ~ In tbe lourlh grade. Th<se
t ai• the things 1 want a barbie
I play house, a pair of boots and
t IOITle snow cloths, a dtme bug ! that I can ride .
1 Thank you Santa Claus,
1 l llke you Santa Claus,
t-Annette Back I
1 Dear Santa Claus,
f I hope you read my letter. l
~Im in the fourth grade. For
, Qu1stmas I want a om e
1 .Ut<s, and anything you wan I
t ipe to have. I have been riood-
: I believe in. you. t don't c~
1 bow old I am. I love you.
, Tbank you for the presents
rtast year.
I Love, Donna I
I Dear Satna Claus
-l want a slot car set and I
: want a drum set and a color
,TV.
1 Love, Colin Gibbons
I
1 Dear Santa,
1 May I have some shoes, a
I wagon, a speed boal and loot·
1 baJI, baseball! I have been a
' pn:tty good boy.
Chess Ages
MOSCOW (AP ) -' Uzbek
archeologist.s have found chea!
pie~ dating from the 2nd
century A.D., making tile
game 300 years older than had
been generally believed, the
official news agency Tass
reported.
Al:•LLOAMO
M9ry E. ~ Ill .51t1 Croupier
Dr.. Hvntl"'1m 8Nd'I. P"Md _., 0-. 22 at ,.. ... Gt .,,, Wf\11....:t "'1
l'MOMd, Jftln; 1 Hugtit.r. D.rMN
S.. Ar.tloMlol I ll•ttor, \l1aht lloltol\. ~ T-., 0.. », ll:JO IM"· •I
PMll ''""'ty ColcwAtl p::_.M Holr!t, . _...."""""" .
. , ARBllCKLE & SON
WEBl'CLIFF MORTUARY
, .f1:I E. 1'1tll St., Cotta Mesa , -• ·~ BALTZ-BERGERON
II FUNERAL HOME
C..-dd Mar l'JUUI
Cotta M... 14f.24U • s BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Brolldwly, Colla Men uwua _.., .
~11:..CCORMJCK LAGUNA _,, BEACH MORTUARY
1'l ~ CUyoo Rd.
"' '""'4U ultk e
>nt PACll'IC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAM
~::l:C.
.... ,.., -. Clllonlla ••a• •• • •"' ,_ f .llllLY
' ---ftJNEllAL .. --__ A ...
111'• • 7 ..... Mil~ • . ,I&' llllaftJU.Y 11' .,_ .. ... ,.,.,,.. _. . --
Doar Santa,
We have tried lo bl a very
sood boy tills ~· I would llke IC!nm boon, adloo ja<-
Uoo.1ce madlloe'(snolr -I'm be fut asltep on
Quistma.s Eve.
Nathan Call
Doar Santa ...
I try to help my mommy and
take care of ha.by sister. t
would like a Ute brigbt game,
shaker mak_er, some records,
for my show·n-tell some big
records for my record player,
magic slate. Baby sister would
like truck to ride and warm
jack-n-bo:r, and a chair to
match. My table for baby
sister to sir on. Santa we love
you and hope to ... you
Olli.stma.s Eeve.
P.S. Bring my mommy a
new present. too.
Dobby c.
Doar Santa Claus.
This ts my Christmas !~( .
and I want the followln&: a '
bcine, a saddle, a bridle, ·a · •
halter, a horse blanlol, a Ilk!~
Ue poker game, a fort apache,
at toy world, a show and tell
pholleagrapb1 a pair ol higjl
skates. I hope you don't mind
me asking so much.•
U>ve.'Milli
P .S. you don't exactly a
horse but I'd apreate It. But
please get me the games and
skates. I need them.
'I '. l
Claus. • • • •
·1 • h ,. ·1· ,., • •'j '._, j'1'i-~• .:......::.._~~I~ l~~'•l ---·--------
Iliff die Gift th.i
"Keeps 01 Givin'
Back to YOU!
HOORAY FOR OUR TEAM
CONGRATULATIONS
To The
BANK of COSTA MESA
CORNER OF HARBOR & BAKER -979-42Cj0
MAKE FRIENDS
WITH YOUR BANK •
This ls a bank for you, so feel right at home. President Pal~ Simpson and his staff want to vet tO know yo!.. Jhe
Bank of Coata M11a ls a plaCe w!iere you can pvt of y,_
ffnanclal lllilften In the hands of people you know ·OS nelgh-
bcn 1111d who wlll ~ you nelgliborty. N:•w·~s a Ballk YH <:aa c:an Year Own
Don Swedlund ·
COAST GENERAL TIRE
585 West 19th-Stree t. Costa Mes
' I
-646-5033 540.5710
.
For The
Record
•
Marriage
Licelues
PUBLIC Nq1'ICB
P\JBIJC NOTICE
I
t Your
Service
•
Got • J>TObl...r Thin 1Drile Pai Dall'PI. Piil tDIU e11t red
tape, Ott the muwn1 aM action "°" 11Ctd to IOlH --1 inequities in Ootitrnmtftt and bvdnea1. Mail ~ur Q"'"'°"' to Pot Dan111.t1 Your Smllc•, 0.•nge Coa1I
Dailu Pilot, P.O. Bo> 156(), Costa Mesa, qo. 92626. It>
elude your telephone number.
8J Miiiion Bllcerlller•
DU!I PAT: My lwband lell8 me l•m "loo old" to want a new bicycle
but I told him be'~ jlllt ~ old lmllloned to think thb way. Can ~
help me convince him tbjlt tmclS8llds of adulta hove tabn up bike 11dlng?
I llMw there must be staUStica """"""""• btll I doo't know wt... to
find them. Abo, do )'OU have any -i-many mlleo ol blkeways there are ln America? .,
R. W'., Foatala Valley
Tell yow babud that &ppnll)mately II mUJloe -. -wU1o ,_.
lhal bike rldlo1 1111•1 "kld .. llall." ne bib 11oom w ,...._ m11111q
dowtq 15,NI ..U.. o1 pobllc -111> ud ..... )all yeae of _.. -
'8.1 -u ,.. gel )'Oar -bib, ,.. ......... ..., • pad lock ,.,,-11
ad at.._ dealer -llleft ....,_, 1111-,, bteyda lbefu llave
-.... •• ,.,..., ....... ac<Gf .... to ... m.
M•ll Cltdt Lefllff.tto,.
DEAR PAT: I'm lempted' to join a bool< club, btlt don'!; wont to go
through tl)e ordeal ol receiving WIOldered' boob and having to pay for
them. I got involved w1tb a noconl club ... era1 years ago and swore I'd
never join such a club again. I kept ,~ cards in saying I dldn'I want
records, but they keiil coming and I was cliarged no rnatw what J did.
Are th"'-" any new laws protecting a person ...00 joins thb lype ol club?
T. Y., BalMa
Yn, Senate BUI UIO, ef:fecdve July 1, 117%, Uoald take eare ti die aort
ol ,,..,.em yoa esporieaoed w ..... Tbll Collfernla law reqair.t lllldi el...,
to .... vtde a -,.. ............ "' _, .......... lhai lie ........
-ta llave aie me1c-1e -ta ldm. Tiie........,. mnl be allqwed at JOall It day1 Ill wlllch ta mail .U can! to .._ ~. U Ille card 11
malled wtUdD. Wt period ud me1• t sndlle Is seat, tile entemer II ...
ao al>llg-ta pay. U .._ --oeifecla ta oead Ille Cfn1 la um.
ud ncelves Ute mercMndlae, lte Is eWf.pted to PIY tile coatraetval
price. ,
Risllt of Suh•~ber
PToipectiot record or book club members tab notef Before ~R!'
ing any --· providiwg few periodic a.u..,,, 9f gooda thr°"9h' tile
mail, make mre the contract or am:angement includes aU of the fol-
lowing terms, in accordance with Senate BiU-1210. The a.tptc_t_of the
plan under which 11ou must notify t~ 1eUer, in tht manner provided
for b11 the ieller, if JIOU do not wilh to purchaac the 1election.,An11
obligation a..aumed b11 uou to purcM.se a: minimum quantity of merch·
atidf.se. Your right, as a: subscriber to cancel 11our member1hip at an11
ttme. Whether 11our billing charges will include an amount for pos·
toge olld handling, I'
Cire for TefephOMltl•
DEAR PAT : I want to know wMt )'OU think about my problem. When
we moved, my mother got an millsted phone number and she vrop't give
it to me. I always.used to caD my friends end they called me. I'm 12
years old.
B. F., Fl Toro
I think yoa lied ap Ille family tdepllooe aid yoor ......... pnbably
tluui-d to lake 11111 drasllc .......,.. If yoa dldR'I lbape ap. Obvto .. ly
)'OI dkm't ud sbe did! Gtod for lter.
M•rriqe •ttll Lottfrerity
DEAR PAT: I 8m a divorcee, 31 yam1 old. and I have an insurance
ageat-...00 lhinU ·he knows ~. He iilid divorced women do nol
ltve a1, big u man1ed women. I IQ-be'1 ma.· What cb yoa1say?
G. L., Colla Mela,
Tbe tolllrODCC qcal Jo rtpL Tbe U.S. lilall1dcal Olllca .. uys la all
parts of tbe world 11man1ed meo ud wemtt l&sve lower deatti rates titan
tbose wM are anmarrted.'' Maybe he's Just trybtg to talk yoa into sav··
Ing yoaroeU lrom an early dcmbe.
'.l' ... ln Baek -TNIC!k '
DEAR PAT: My 9-yeal'-Oid son and I have a problem. We returned
his electric train engine lo Seers appro>lmately elgbt mooths ago "1r rc-
pail'S. Slnco then I've gone ·back six limes with my clalril check and am
referred from 1lle toy deparqneot lo =tome< oervlce. 'l'wo cu!lom<r ll>
qulries were put lhrough by cuslooler ....-, ya,· no one can provide any
information ahoul my eori'• qtne: CoWd )'OU pleese lool:· into thb?
S. N., SU J ... Clplltnat
Sean' -<.~ad to7_ddl;01f!!clJ-IDCIU .... ~· logelller aid
Ille .. , dcparlmcat Is ... 1q "' It .... yoor --a -...... glae.
Dl~et M•ll As.tstCltee
DEAR PAT: My son -128 in cash to Joe Welder in Union Qty,
N .J. for a series ol. exercise books which be' d seen advertised in a maga-
zine. He was told he ooold relum the boob af1er 1'Cllvlng the final one
II he was not satlslfied. lie decided to ....d l'1e boob back, bul has never
received a refund. We've waited almo5t a year anil have mailed numerous
inquiries, including registered letters which were signed. We are still re-
ceiving llterature rrom this Joe Weider, tu oow it's coming from General
Heolth and Fitness Qirporalion In Nonrood, N.J.
G. M., Newport Beach
Voar neli alep Mould be &O write another letter, including partbaH
and prevlom IDqalry .dates ud' tbe mallll'g label from tilt CVl'ft?t Uteri·
ture. Send Ud1 ms&erlrl, by r~ md, to tlae firm'• addreuet la
Ualoa City ad Norwood. Setld addl--....... to Ille adverUa1a1 mano-
11"' ol Ille m_.., wblcb cuTled Ille wlglul ad aid lo Ille PDllal In·
,,._ Ill ,C\arg• la botll N<w Jmey ---copy of dlJo materlll lo tM Dnct Mall A.d't'frilllll& Allodldlir., JJtc., Dt Plrk A vmae,
New Yort City 1•11. U this firm II a me-el DMAA. Ille ulOclatloll
wtll laterv<M .. yoor beMI!,
Net FfHid Sttppfement
DEAR PAT: A friend ol mine Is a llealth lood "nul" and .... I.! al·
ways giving me advice. I told her I take Vttarnlna which provide every·
thing I qeed In the way ol a food supplemenl She .looked al my vitamin
bolUe and aald I didn1 know what I WU lalking aboul She mentioned
severeJ missing 'jvltamins" not contained Jn my pills, including 0 1eclthln."
What on earth Is tt)a.t and does a person need It as a supplement?
T. C., Rallapa Beacb
Your frtend doesa't know Wlaat site's trlklng aboat. IAdtllll Is no& a
vttamlD, nor ll It a . DtCH11ry Applemeat llhtce It cu be prodaced in th
human body. Dea.lib food premoMl'I 1 cla1m. COmmerdal ~tin• of
lceltllln belp decreoM blood c:Wemrol, bal,.......... evldeoCe cllspnve1
1h11. U ,.... friend takes lec!Wf, ,..,, wa~ lier Ume 1ioeo U 11 ... kd
11o ... rapidly In the body lllta Ha -parta. Lceltldl II a flrpl ti '
fal i-wn u pblllWpld and u loand Ill Ha ..-form la .... food a1 eu ,oJb and liver. .
Coverlltfl Coneentlons
DEAR PAT: At a ~pbodlOod porty !all·--tl)ere Wat a dis-
CUM!oo ol the coverage of the -t pnoldeatiaJ elecUm by Ille prea, ,..
• pOclally television ---ol tl)e ... -. -......,.. up lhe questlM it --or not the preti bol alwoYI covtNd convontlono In the Ualtod Slates. Nobody know d "" aft dedded to .... }OU to llnd
out ·
• E. p" -"Viejo
Offlelal pren cover••• ol •-polllleal -lioc• la UIL 'Ille Nalhul Republlcu1 -led al ...,U. ever -IM ,,... -
be "lllylied" or 11ptr11111Ued11 te •w ..U w a. *,...... llNr . .Af'llsr
a lloJ arpmeal, It WU dcelded .. ''tQ!le" _..., ti Ibo - -
~ ,,,.,,, Tlpa
A ringli, fr., COPJ1 ot "7'ip1 "" Dnlq 4-Pr~llo•, • pllb-
!lthed bv Notlonol .lnltil•te •I Mmtol Elbllh for lllco~U of rovllll
cMldrm, mau be r«11 .. 1ted bu writing NolOmol Cleorl"Jlh..,. for
Dffig Abus< lnfonMti-Oft, P. 0 . 80~ 1030, Wlllllinglott, D.0 . 2001'.
'
.... ...
" " •
I~
"'
\ ... '>, " ... '" ' ... " "' I .,,
u
u "' " .. " '" ...
'1 ~. "' • " "' $plJ " ; " M
;pl>
'" Lv ll
LvlO
' "' 1
·~
\~ "
"'
\
~.· IJ
"' •W ....
''"" "'
·~ iloll~
"' ... ...
~ -<>r.M
l
DAILY Plt.0 -•r
DAllY PILOT
SECTIONB
SUftdoy, -:M, 197'! _________ .,,,,
UClla> ,.. tUJl>JAllS .~
lad!Ntff tllo9 14 ~ intel'HOt;1-~'. sen. •rif-1•,.. --·-of t.a .. rilll•M
l'O~teiAHl't. .
~ Forbidd9n w ...a ... cu~ t~ Cf.: .-..Wftion inMrt "'"'9.l•• ---a,..cial ..i\1lt.ive ' A e ' for ...U-t.ion point. not: loe1ted
on a .. rt.41..n
OV -~ VU•U. 1CEUD1M1 Tan; (:fl -COilCUf1Cll VUnL JmUDUll Tia
~ •t. tM coccp. up 0 :!lq at the ,. .. i.... ..,
to 0. !iood and tbo upper j-low tho ~ .J.4J.iM
an4 Ol'lda at tho 1~ lip
• L'# • Ll'n? -.m1Mr Tin. • .. OI -GAl.L .au.ma tDZDIM YMlf
..,w ... tbo •ter 'bi!f -ina at tho wter .,.. _. 0 1
too ..U -r tho nJ.pplo ...S.ot.tbo t~ tM
'1' .. mft.s WMMmlJ llDltllMI Yq es ... ClJlci1Ult'Iat-AX ~ Yin ~
..,,._ ot tho rint "lft9U' Q »oqina in t1'o c:hoat. 11114 · •,
--~tho~ 9nda in tho •iddl• ti ....
It .. Jamn' MDlllLW Yin • .. •LAOOPJt ~Wr'Yane
lt.orta QOMr tho foot, up • h'fin.1 ot tha r-. ~ 0
•~ t.o llfl4 nflOr tho clovialo t;o aoc:cyx, 4cllon\ fra9 lbo91k.
eda at fifUI tlM
II .. »W.L DITUTDIZ MDllllAll Y009 H .. DART Ml!ltIDIAI' Yio.
lelfln• at. tip of littl o 0 a.gin• in tho 11npi't. •• fibfl'r end.I in front at .... encta in tho little flhf"Z'
' . . Sp -IPLm' MDJDlAll Yin S ... S'l'CIW:K MP:YOINI y_,.
-.gins at. tho ~19 t.IM, up • ~irui on tho f.co, ~ O '
t.o ondl in tbo thorax outar front let t.o aocon4 too '
' LI ... LAan JlftU'l'Dll MlltlllIAS TaftO' L .. LUtilO MEJUDIAll Yin
~iMI · at. tip of illda 0 t.Mvi119 tbo aul:ilc-tP•t•r • flngitl' ODilo nM'I' tho DOM lof'M t.o ondl in tho thWll:I '
Indloot.M linn Ia4ieoteo tho . '
of loeatiion 14 -rid.i•M . .
• • ' • ' • ' ..
Acupuncture: ,
• .
'
•
Needling
'
Good Health
' '
·; ..
..
"
Chinese S·hare An.cient Practice
By CANDA.CE PEARSON just coming into prominence in the °' "" o.i" Paet '''" United states -and many Ame.rican
"Within each Yang tMre exist& doct<r1 are busy trying to join its
Yin; within each Ytn. must be Yang medical, bandwagon.
. : . There ii also Yin within Yin, and 'l1W! patients deacribed:previoUsly were
Y ana within Yang." all treated with special slim, solid
-Nei Ching, circa 2550 B.C. needles Inserted at specific points on
their bodies during o IW<><llly workshop.
The middJe..aged doctor stood up in tbe conference on aCu~ure for docton
crowd of. bis peers and described with held recently at the Huntington Sheraton
emotion the arthritis that had crippled Inn in Huntington Beach.
his bands, forcing him to give up doing "The history of science is the story of
surgery· the irrational and the fantastic becoming
For years, be had squght traditional accepted fact," wrote ancient Chinese
help for the disease that had so afflicted scholar Han Suyin.
him be could DO longer makt a fist. Acupuncture may be such a n
But now, dramatically, be cl~ his inexpllcable phenomenon. Its devout
right baod, and parUoDy flexed bl! Jell, bellevm even admit thal aclenllflcally
holding tbem blp for oD to oee. they're not quite obrc why or how It
"The rolief Is almosl mlracUlous!" he works, bul empbasi>e that II docs.
cried. The needles Used vary In 1i>e, ac-
, cording to custom and country. Most us-
Tbe young woman bad suffered from ed are sliver or stainless steel varieties,
severe headaches for eight yean. Even less than an inch to two to four ~
this djly, the ~-cauoed worried Jong.
IUrroWs on her lace. tool<ing for any way Only the tip, usually about a haU,tnch
oul of the pain, sbe acccPled the new to an Inch of the solid needle, Is Inserted
treatment. Twenty minutes later, she in the skin In more than 100 deslgnated
reported, "I feel much better." points.
"It 's so dramatic -it's rldleulous,"
one man said, sh a kl n g bis head in
disbelief, Tbe treatment bad only begun
five minutet before, but the constant
ringing in his ears that the doctor who
"'' zring on the table had had for four yeara was completely gone In lhe right
ear. In a few mtnutes more, the buzz in
bla left ear bad been cul in half.
"I lried bypnosil .•. .I tried everytblng
(bOlore this) -ii didn't help a bit," he
tesilfled liter. The CT<Jwd applauded.
Injured In an automobile accident, the
woman aald the pain In the tronl ol her
-· WM 10 llnlllg, she could oofy ollghUy .bend U-. II !el liu belaC Ille•
• td by "ruor Wldel." A Jlptn 111 man
adminillmd the thmpy. -tbt .... u.nt 9tepped down di the llll>lo and With
mauve we trtumpbanl!Y Imel\ on tho noor.
American Medical Aasoclltlon-l1ICCCA
1lorlea? A comt!Jleil KllthrJn \{uhlman-
0.al Rob er 11 "layl,.....lfl&.hancis,"
faJU>healhlg mlval mctlinl? No.
Acuponclure. Tho Oil-. . Jlri of
"needlq? -II In 411 the rl(ll! placea -It'• more than '61000 yean old, but ii ' .
I
For most patients, there is little pain
upon imertlon. All at the Huntington
Beach workshops said they felt no
discomfort at flflt, A few eiperienced
quick,, dull pain ,.hen the needles were
twisted or pulled in and out and many
felt aomethlng like an electric shock.
(Tl>ore Is also acupressure -rnauage of
potnu -to treat chUdren and ln/anu.J
The points, aa legends go, were first
discovered more than five mlllennhnm
ago when Ollncae warrion relumcd
from lleree batuea. amws pler<bl& thetr
bocllea. Surprilqly, ht many cuea. ln-
stoad ol new IU/lering, previous maladlea Were curod.
The main problem acupuncture
........ to the Occidental mind ii that
there II -no ocienU/lc bMil for ii? ii ii bMed on the Or1enlal pllilooopby ol the
balance of two _.,. oat,.... In lhe
body, Yin and Yang.
Yin II earthi the deep. dart, cold ;
, Vena ii heaven, IWVi;Y, ~idtl,
WlnD.
111-la 1n lndlcatlol\ lllal U.O..
•l.,..,,tal forcu are out It balonco and
lhat lhe C!ll'l (flow o1 Ul&CIW. _,y lhroueh the body) baa been Impeded by
-. ... a dam would stop tbt .....
fiow ,of 1 river. 1
'
Tbe Cltl'i cireulotes lhrough the Citing·
lo, twelve meridians, each named.tft,er a
body organ. The Chinese say that blood
circulatloo follo-.s this energy move-
ment. ... .,· • , ,
Six of ~be meridians, are. Yih, oa.. UM!!
front aide ol lbe body and beginniJ1I !beir
trip In lbe feel \cl....i to the ,earth) on
up. 1be Yang l"eridlans run from the
hands (heaven)> ~own.
Which meridian is malfunctioning and
thus which polota (impeded nerve im-
•lCOd Neeclle
'
l
pulses) to if are discovered through
pulse dla Is. True C h i n e s e
acupunctlD'ls say they can tell where
the problem! Is through feeling up to
twelve pulsel and sometlmet, the tender
•poll 00 lbe-l>ody.
' ' Some Wellem « Weatemhed Chinese
docton haft lrled lo leek oclenllfic
solace by -parinl lhla ba'-Jng· proo-
... with lhe wwl< el the syrnpatheUc
and autcJlCJINc nervou1 l.)'ltem1, but no
one really knoWI for ue.
Tbeo thert ara pi1Jllclaoo Uu Dr. x. a
genera1 ~1t1oaer ht .. Orone• eou1
cltj, who fetl thol tho foci If ean llelp
_. pmono ii enoup. He polnll oul
thal docton have never ruUy found 001 ""' ....... -u. but ii lo ... ol the --y preocrlbed and llbn ~-' But evtdence lfflN to 1t1pport
a9UflU11Clure eflccll-.
It .........,.,, baa been ~ -cc..luUi In n!llevtna variaut .... and
palna In lli6 noclt, low -· -... . a!ld ~; arthritis, -. lllP llloOcl
preaut'f, deafnell fra CI r l 1 ID chit-illne-. _ ......._
Also <*lain Catet It Iii: -(I
nervous facial condition), constipation_.
migraine headachell, bursitis, toothacbe,
insomnia and di.zzineSI, and 101D11 claJni'
jt's wtX'ted in slowing down or _.
lklpping the growth ol ...-.
' Relatively new (about eight years) ii
acupuncture anesthesia , more accurart!JY
aescribed as analgesia because the pa-
'uent ls not put to sleep.
1n China. American j o u r n a 1 J 1 t)I
recently witnessed open h<arl ~
done where the only analgeaia uled was
acupuncture needle•. A film of one ~
operation shows an attendant holdtng tbf,
woman's heart while th< patient, ~
awake, sipped tea and ate leechee nutl.
A doctor in T01Tance recenUy Uled tJi,
needles u the sole onalgeala In )a
tooslllectomy and It Is beglmq la Iii
widely uoed during cbildblrth, where I,!
rcpar1odly nol only eliminates palo blil
quickens labor and reduces bleedlnc· -le
All right. u tt·· .. s-1. wlly ... ~ I stlU skcplics, eapeclally In the U.S .? •
One rcuon u Ill seemingly IUddlJ.o
prominence. Although tt baa been ~ j
!iced lo• some years In London, FiancO 1
and Russia and for ages In Olina, that I
Asian nation has bed a ,terribly 11beil I
press" in the U.S. O
Presi~t Nixon's vtslt to China ...
spring made atlna and pracUcallf
everything 01.lnese "In" or at Jeut act'
ceplable. _ ",
Another celebrity, quarterback RorMa
Gabriel of the Los Angeles Rams, .__.
bring ncedllng In the news wbeo ba ~
proved bis allinl throwinl arm :1 acupuncture. ~
A story ou1 ol lloqolulu reported IMl
University ol Hawaii quarltrilad< :::;
barely throw the ball 10 yards, lben
to an ICUpuncturilt and "durk1c
weekend became the IChool hero." t
Bui It'• 11111 'lforeJcn." And ..... _.
ton have argued lhal -~
only .. ~tic u-•.Jrl
bypnoail aod -lion. :
Dr. X, who hlll Uled acupunctura ca
oome it his patlenu. poto11 001 lbatl
"-"' have performed OCllll'llldllN iil animall.11 Donke)'l 11"1 not ur~" tor
their smctpUblU~ lo -'*'·
"And 1 can ISIUre you. .. .,atmied M
doctor, """ -to not be ~
-be ai,..iy baa .. -acupmmr. ~ .. ba -~..,..
~ ... At11PCJNCTUllS, ......
'
,
I
I
•
.
I
'
1
I
I
• I
'
'
• •
(
(
\
•,
DAILY PILOT 1 Sunday, OtctmbPr 24, 1'172
Good Deed People
DAil Y ~llOT Slllt ,.._
Deck the Balls
Being in a hospital is not the happiest of experiences
for anyone; being there at Christmas-time can be even worse
for a child who has been looking forward to the holidays.
A group of teenagers from Mission Viejo recently bright-
ened up one floor of the Children's Hospital in Orange by
decorating a living Christmas tree, which will remain a beau-
tiful addition to the hospital when the holidays are over.
The girls are members of the Mission Viejo Chocettes.
a youth brancbi of the Tres Osos Junior Women's Club. The
lhree-year-0ld club of about 15 members exists to serve the
hospital in any way it can. Above, decorating the tree are, left
to 'ight, Sandy Ward, Karen McBride and Linda Wardman.
The living tree was donated by Hal Kelsey, the father
of one of the members, Linda Kelsey.
"\Ve offered to decorate the hospital in orde~ to make it
a little happier," Linda explained.
The group bas fund-raising activities so it can buy equip-
ment needed by the hoopital. One of the 11106t recent pur-
cbi.ses was a "baby tender," a device in which new born
babies are kept.
The group meets the second Tuesday of every month
under the dire(tion of group leader Mrs. Sandy Ward. The
girls have to be in grades eight through 12, but the only
other requirement is to "be willing to help," said Mrs. Ward's
daug~ter, also named Sandy, one of the members.
Me nded Hearts • •
Cpunt Their Blessings
By TOM BARLEY
• Of ~ O.i"' , .... ll•ff
"iVe had n,..e tl~ing in common long
before we forged th is common bond;
we h.ave all wulked through,jht val··
ley of the shadow of de'ath.
Andrew Cameron, foundtt" of
Britain'.t "Cardiac CLub.1'
Hunt ington Beach photographer Dick
Sheppard took a stroll through that same
valley several times befor~ heart
surgeons performed a coronary double
bypass 10 montM ago and cut him into a
brand new life.
He isn't yet back to the normal llfe his
surgeoril predicted, but Dick, 46, con-
fidently believes it's not far away.
"And I don't just want It for myaelf,"
be grinned. "l want lt for my wife,
Fran«f, and ll)Y children, Katl)y, Zl, and
Rick, 18. I suUered to the extent that on-
ly another heart patient can undentand
but I know how they suffered too.
The former teacher wbo is married to
a schoqJteacher is detennined, however,
to do a lot more than thank his Maker
and the surgeons for his new heart and
achieve his dream <:l becoming a top
flight professional photographer.
So is Ralph Platt, a plain-spoken Costa
Mesan with a bundle of ideas.
Piatt, 50, was near death several
times prior to September, 1!168, when
surgeons performed an artery bypass on
his heart.
Piatt will never see oonstruction work
aga in but he's ·not that concerned. "I
NEW YORK (UPI) -lt's impossible
to put a monetary figure on the in·
vestment the United States business
community has in its executives. the • ones· in control now and the ones being
groomed to take over. But It has to be in
the billions. 1bey call the corporate shots
that make or break companies.
The biggest threat to that pool or ex·
ecut ive talent is the heart attack, the
"silent killer" that hits the relaxed ex-
ecutive on a golf course as weU as during
a stormy board meeting.
Heart disease accounts for 54 percent
of U.S. deaths each year. It kill::i lTlOfe
Americans than cancer . pneumonia, in·
nuenza and accidents combined. And it'•
no respecter of executives, aging or
'
I
wouldn't be here today and doillg what
I'm doing if it hadn't been for !hat
surgery," he commented. "Who w.ild
complain after that "kind or a break?"
Both men have put the ir rebuilt hearts
to the lest in tecent weeks in helping to
organire the first Orange County chapter
of, "Mended Hearts." A nationwide
organization, it i.s dedicated to the cause
of heart surgery and research and the
succor of those who have not yet bad tbe
chance to step out of "the valley of the
shadow of death."
It didn't take long 10< the audience that
januned the meeting room in the Orange
County Heart Association's. Santa Ana of-
fice to appoint both men to · executive
posts.
Dick Sheppard is the tnasurer of
Mended Hearts. Plan was unanimously
elected to sen:e as the group'• vice
chalnnan.
Working under chairman Jane Young
of Anaheim and with secretary l.-Ois
Ekema of Fullerton they intend to push
the cause of heart surgery arid its human
involvement -past and present -in a
way that has not been seen in this pan of
the world.
"Sure, we were given our lives but we
still get a raw deal in many ways," Piatt
said. "We're hit hard in terms of employ-
ment and insurance and we should be
putting all we 've got into a drive to make
restaurants include our kind of f~ 'in
their menus."
'lbose Ideas have become Mended
llearta' alms. So ba1 the ~epl that
those who ti.ave undergone heart surgery
m\JSt he prepored to aid tho.<e about to
Wldergo it, 4t ter'ins of human comfort
and counse11n11. ,
Working wllh cardloloeJlli a n d
turgl!Olll, the group intends to provide
that very servk:e. No one, it was pointed
out at an organlz.aUonal meeting, can
face the. prospect of heart surgery
without wtshing tbal he or she could tallc
lo someone who bu been there. .
"!l's the kind of lhinl most of "' wish
we'd had la our time," Jane Young aaid.
11They can throw all the staUsUca they
like at iou hut lt'i ~ all tbi data in
the WO<ld just to see B hatsr>y, healthy
person wbo'a been throo&h what you're
a1>oot lo .-'lit>"
-:Jane had her aortic valve replactd
with an artlf1Clal device ·two years ago,
Barely able to walk (let alone breathe),
lbe can ·tell anyone today just what "tbe
valley" looked Uke.
Today, sho helps her husband manage
the Anaheim apartment building in which
\bey live. A.nd she b.u taken on what pr~
mises to be a heavy, demanding chore In
hf#tdlng the Mended Hearts organization
she helped to form.
So has prtlty Lois Ekema, a Fullerton
widow . .,med unanimously lo the job of
...,...1a17.
' Mrs. Ekema, mOtber of 1 daugbler, 21,
'and a son, 17, and the proud grandmother
~her daughttr's thre&year-Old , go(tbree
close looka at "the v111ey11 before she un-
derwent open heart surgery in St.
Vincent's Hospital, Los ADCelek. lilst May
15. Her heart stopped three times and
bad to be restarted In a hospital bed.
"I get up every day, thank God 1 am
alive, Md determine to do tometbln1
that will help express my thanb for my
Ille," Mrs. Ekema quietly said. "Working
in Mended Hearta helps me lo ._ to
others my deep gratltuae fot What was
done for me by the lnlracte ol heart
surgery."
.. Today. I feel marvelous," Lois a81d.
"My heart has fully recovered thanks to
the arterlal bypaS! Implanted by my
surgeons and I'm ready rto do whatever
they ask me to do in a c1use that gave
m.e the life I thought I'd lost."
And while ~ surgeons go on P.Wfec·
ting current oPeraUaos and developtng
oew techniques that will allowJ them to
expand t~ forms of s urger y,
tbouaanda ofJonne< patients who -Id
have died a decade ago take up the task
ot pul>lic education tblt bu never been
adequately filled .
Executive Killer · ......
•,
' .
New Tecliniques Spot Heart . piseas'e Signals;
Earl y Warning System Could Sa ve Man y Lives
young. or the 700,000 Americans who
died from heart disease last year, 200,000
were under 65.
The death . rate fr001 heart attacks
amona men between 25-44 ha! risen 14
percent since ~950. A significant corollary
is that the executive suite, once a com-
fortable position of power, has become in
the last two decades a pressure-cooker as
competition for the consumer dollar
heiahtens.
This threat to executive ta.Jent has
raused many companies to have more
than a passing interest in recent ex·
perlments at the Arizona Heart Institute
( AHi I at St. 'Joseph's Hospital and
~1edlcal Center in Phoenix.
Under the direction of Dr. Edward B.
can determine what they will do when
the heart is under el'Jlotional or physical
strain. There's even equipment which
gives a three dimensional picture of the
he.art, instead or the norma~ two
dimensional reading.
William Robertson, eslstant to the
president and director d.. contractor rela-
tions at Grumman Corp., Bethpage,
N.Y •• is, literally, Uving teltimony to the
BUCCess of the "early warning" system.
. Because Grumman bad worked with
AHt tn testing pilota and c...~
puteriied operatinc room equipment,
Robertaon had 1 checlntp at the instltui..
His lep had beoo botherin( him. He
wanted to see lf the arteriea were
hardenlna.
institute mainly tests businesa ex·
ecutives, commercial and test pilots and
athletes.
Wblle a normal or resting EKG will
detect past heart injury, acute processes
such as a heart attack and disturbancel
in the 'conducttoa syttem, Oietbrich says,
It will m1ss other dangers signs. It will
give no indicat109;1, for instance, of bow
thal particular heart will function lltlder
stress or heavy e:z:ercile.
ACUPUNCTURE NEEDLES • • • •
"Ted" Diethrich, who was Dr. Michael
De8akey'1 chief associate at the Baylor
Collefe of Medicine in Houston, AHi has
developed since early 1971 an "early
wamlna" system which could save
tl>ousands of lives. Dietbrich calls it Pro-
ject 70s-Cardiovascular Screening.
Dlethricb put hirll through the "early
wamJng" tests and learned t h a t
Robertson had two major obstructions of
a coronary artery. Neither bad shown up
In his regular comPon¥ checkup.
"We advlled Mr. RobolUoo to correct
. the more MriOWI problem first,". said
lliethrlch. "So we did a by-paa operation
and it was auccesstul. 'l1»en we did the
legs."
He has introduced 1 t r e s s elec-
trocanliography by putting the patient on
a treadmill and nmnlng him to hls m.a:r-
tmwn stress point. If a penoo has cor-'
ooary artery disease, cha0ges UIOC!ated
with lack of blood supply lo lite heart
muscle will he detected and recorded.
Tbul, the treadmlll helps dlqnose
artberosclerotlc disease in \he <U'orulry
arteries of the heart be.fore, not after.
tl)e penoo develops l)'tllptoma or bu an
attack.
(From Page t)
can't open anyone's chest (to ~
ourgery) with hyjmOl!is." ,
Another reason Western acceptance
'Dll)' be slow in coming is that doctors
.,. afraid poU.Oll will ao f o r
l,CllJIUDClW'e becaUIO ll ii exoUc and lg· .no.. tradlt-1. equally (or even more)
helpful mttbock. The chlncel Ire o1Jo
•...,.S that ..,.. quacks wlll claim oeedl·
ln& ls a panacea for all lits.
Dr. X cautions , that "acupimcture ts
not a cure-all ... tt won't work for
everyone." /
The Food an Drug Admiolstratlon
(FDA) has 114ppod moat needle Im-
portation becauae they may fall tn . the
"
general practice clinic in Phoenix and an
acupuncturilt. told the 80 doctora
meetlug in HunlirJilon Beach recently
that "no matter what the theory is -
something happens which is benefic ial lo
the patients. We are tryina; to fJnd out
why and how to do it." ·
The weekend workahop, at a cost of
tW. was sponsored by the Academy of
Parapsychology and Medicine in Loa
AJ!ieles and Pacifica H01Pllal 1n Hunt-
ingt<>n Be8d>.
Western doctors have a head start on
learnina: how to do acupwtcture, Dr.
McGarey said, because they have always
handled needles and becaUJe they have
been healing patlenll ('"It's our Hfe's
work .")
Licensed doctors can do the necessary
• 04nt.nd th• basics aren't hard to learn. With olhen, Chinese
J.c:vpt.lllC!urisll In the treditlonal mode, needling is en •. , There are
lei 111111ln9 and twistin9 techniques, hourly o~n ~s, (astrolo-
ly·lnfluitnced acupuncture points whlc~ a!j l'id to !i" MpeciaOy
pful at certain H""'' of the dayj and other sophistl~ lions.
hands" and beoauaeiof probably
lid foan df 11do-lt·roursetr1 kits. i caflfornf• Medical A 11 o c I a t I o n
) relf:QIO calls acupuncture a
w1 11touah f1sctn1tln1 method or
atmant c:atrltd out by U.llcc~
h 1 om• t Im•• well-trained )
CW. did help &et Ill!< lqlalltlon
thlJ rtar which pemtlll Wllkleno-~Ui"i'¥u~ll to work their an In
....,. lo allow tnvlll!Pll<ll.
• X Otltllidtll It )ult lllOlher "tool"
1 docb' to ute. 1111•1 nlce '° have -. ol all typa ol therapy ,"
adilld, He olten lt'HIJ hll poUenll
-~raancture wben mora-W .. tern ,.,_ ... flllad .
A ,.....i praGIWOMr In santa Ana
itldlad ICllpllllCtull bt Hone Kon& ., ~ l:llCI~ pby1lctan Fall•
Mid wbal he liw tbeN WU "U·
d\111 ud 1tiap111q." Ila la alao .... tba trtatmenl where aDliilc:ai:=.~~ that tba needlu "are "*" than hypodermic ~ • the pettent." r · W1JlllDI A, llcGany, bud of a
I
•
research to discover any ktentlflc bs11ts
for the art and to find ou~l.l It can work
on diseases heretofore ~aht incurilble,
be added. .,
The doctors mHllnB la Hwillnaton
Beach were advised ol teebnlques ot In-
sertion, as well as told thlt•ftOm six to 10
acupuncturo lrtalQlenla Sid wOrk, ti al 111. Depending on \ho number of
needlet, trtitment tna)' 11 m..1Dnle1
to an hour, Some OU9I evtaJe& ·
Tbt COii ol tnallllent1..+ll •ary with a
lot ol thlnp, lllOludltis ' iftlth of care,
number of lllld1el and1 oi'lcourM, the
Pl each for •Ille nu! tOUt, lllopptn( at ftVe INatmen1l.1
tn oootrall, Dt. McG1rey: ~IJ wile1 Dr.
Glad,yl MC(Jarey and their a110C1at01
charge 111 a tru"""1!, 1 fff 1lmll1r to
that lor a l'l!ll1Jlar olf1iie vlllt. If It Ito 1
realcy dilli<ult ,.,., tbt IH may be «II).
"There'• moa.et to be rnadt lrf lhll,"
enthtll«I ooo 11JM11tbetlolotllt ~t the
weekend conftrtnee and he 11 pt0bably
rt1ht. But acupuncture takt1 more doctor
Umo than many other tnalmonll'-nwtY or whlc.h ar• nurso .. dmto.Lftered. Tba~ la
cO!tller.
A clinic with Kotoon ond Cltln .. doc-
tors (without western degrees) suparvi•
ed by American docl.ol'I doing diqno1!1
recently opened In Beverly Hllll.
An anesthesiologist from San Fernando
(who half-joked about doing acupundure
abortions on his boat outside the three
mile line ) may join forces with another
doctor and open an acupuncture office ln
that ripe territory bOrderlng Hollywood
aod Beverly Hilla.
There Is a allghl dlllfler In doctors
without the rl1ht aklll1 taking on
acupl.lllcture patients and h I t t i n g
dangerous "forbidden po(nta," 1lthou1h
Dr. McGarey contended the basic' aren 't
hard to learn .
One doctor reported at the Huntington
Beach workshop that a Clllfornla cllnlc
was cbargina '50 for the fil'!t vlllt.
With Others, like Miriam Lee of Palo
Alto and 'l'homJ>!IOll Liana of Oceanside,
both Chlneia tlClipOnclurlltll In the tradl·
tional mode, needllna ii an art. There are
special ancllnl and twisttn1 teclmlque1,
hourly open potnll (aslroloatcallY·ln-
fluenced acupuncture Points which are
said to be meda1lY liel~fUI at otttaln
times of day); five f.orcetul elements 1f-
fecting Chi'i (fire, water, wood, mttal,
•arth) and other aopbistlcotfonl.
\ 1111l0rt are many different ep-
~aches," Or. McCarey said. "Many c·an 11:ct good result& -it depends on the
excellence 0( the doctor and how much he
lJ able to tune in to this type of therapy.''
A needled patlonl can resemble a ptn
cu.hlon or an African voodoo dollL 'nle
p<&Uenll In Huntmgton Beach llttd from
two needles inserted (for ~l111lbow} to
lout (rinclna of ears) 10 10, 211 and IQ
(various bl.ck and tic allmont1 ).
The procedure is ,. different that at
time• It appem tauahable. Bui moot of
the docton who uw the Huntlnl:ton
dell'\OllltratloDI turued llriou1.
"So tlWl,ll -1• lluah at It," eald tho
San Femondo anutbellolofllt, who for
all his monetary le&nlnJ• waa 1tncere,
"eltJ)O<lally the doctorl wbo doo'I un-
derttanil It. Don't make lllo ol It"
On GM tablt, a mao with 1 his~ of
chronlt back poln 1U.tched out 'wltllo
Ja(JA!teae chiropractor Harold Silla UJld
Ryodoraku. an lnvol\'ed e I e o t r o al c
aa.p\IDCturt:, to NlleYo tbt man'• peln.
A ieneral pracUtioMr watching the pro.
ceu 1ho0k hi• he•d and 11ld almost
wlalfully, "It IOOks like a bunch ol bocus
pocua, doeln't It!" lie pau""', turned to a fellow -.Ver 1ltltn( nul to him, ond
•hnlllad bl• ~ouldora, conclucltna, "But
It works."
•
Through space age techniques atid
equipment developed in N A S A ' s
astronaut proaram, Project 70I detects
WllUlpected card1ovucular d l • e a 1 e
before It lhowa up In a. normal e1ec-
trocanli""""1 (EKG).
Basically it aims at early detection of
danger aijnt IDd then responding with
new life styles, medldne or corrective
sl:ll'gery, or all three. Ultrasound devices
are used.
Pau..,t.s are put through touch tread-
mill ttsta to produce otresa, 10 the AHl
Asked whether bl.I ezperieoce con-.
vinced him the AHi prolflDl wu an Im-
portant development In 1he llgbt qalDlt
heart disease, Robert9on told UPI , "I
have to believe that; after all, I'm alive
today.."
Diethrich sees the day when Project
70s will be comput.r!Jed and carried to
the general public via travelln& v111.1.
Right now, In the erpat1menta1 llqe, the
Then thero is the cmtinUOlll -.r
EKG. A penon occaslooally developa an
Irregular heart heat which cculd be
unimportant or It oould moan trouhte
ahead.-The Uacl type ol rllYtbm
disturbance can best be Identified by \l8e
of a small tape recorder worn on the
llloulder. II providea a contlnuoos recordina of a patient's pormal activity
during a 14-hour period. The tape can he
llCIMed and lrrqulartllea tdenUIIed in
minutes .. ·
Therapy, Exercise Aid
Today's Stroke Victim
...
-·--
•
•1112 Miil.
Another Ward's value!
LaMaur's Lemon Aid Perm
r19ular $12.50 now $8.33
!Normal Hair Only!
including Cut-Shampoo & Set
·················~ • OFF ANY • :$ REGULAR PRICED:.
• .SERVICE •
a IRING THIS COUPON • .............. ,., ..... .
. ON ....... '' -CotlM-A,,....,..,. "" 41Wtft
......,_...,~ ......
UM J9W Wlrft Cli....-AN
M•Ml &I•' C..., HU...... .... HM611, illlt. 1H
l
'. I
• • •vi 1 • i ; ·~ #" ••• ij. ...........
• Chlltlren elh•• f1tto ,. .. ,.,, ·hlfeeing.
" ' ' . ' .
' .
•
• I
, ,_,. ,,, ...... ,
. .
'
·Here ·Comes
..
' t
[
I •
I
And others mlth tllonder.
' .. ·It's ·a Gift: ·St~ N·ick Has a · Way With Children l I I ' '
. By ~N l>EERR
' Of 1M O.lly Pw.t Staft
I • ' • ' '
"You better watch out. You better not
cey. You better not Pout. I'm telling you
Wby: Santa ClaUS' is·cotrung to·town ... "
·Froni 'across the matt came a · little
boy'S exuberant shout, "There he is!
There's Santa ! There's Santa!"
He raced through the shoppers and
climbed into . the ample lap long before
his mother, pushing a stroller, could
catch him.
" . . . and a truck, and a train.
maybe, and a bicycle," be finished all in
_ooeJ>rea.lh. "You wonlt forget, w!ll ya?"
His mother reached Santa's li<iid·
'q · about this !fine. "No picture." ~to Santa's helper. "He does
-this every time.be sees Santa. And every 1mte the Ji.st gets Jooger." .
· Sant:l:scratched his chin, winked at the yoClhg motbet-, and asked the boy H he'd
baell ~his lnilk, brushing his toeth
ani1 ·being good to the folks.
WE'LL SEE
· After alflnnative answers to all of his
(
. . . . . .
questions, Santa, said "I'll' see•wliat •[Jean
tlo.'" · · · ' ' ·
ln quick succession he won over a~stlll
believing but shy .10-.Y,ear~ld, hugged a
·g;ggly' fout,-y~ld,: C\!ddled a' cdllple'of
infants for j>hcilO., pooell with t\00 gkls In
. tbek•20s ilnd' lianiled·O(ie unhappy, crylng
child baclf 1o his mother.
· "Come bict· 8nother · timeo when it's
·leSs crowded,'"he told ber, "and we'll try
again." , I
Such is the· Ure of ·st. Nlck 'from just
after Thank~g:iving unW today, when he
had to head n<rth to pack his sleigh.
'ibse ""' a few har.anls to the Job,
though, be told me. With,childrtn in-
evitably come wet pents, tears, .giggles,
small doubts and big wishes.
REFRESHER
Mr. Claus doesn't go into ~ situation
cold. He takes a retresher course in ta1k-
lng to children eac~ year In Long Beach.
Jay Howard, ot Western Girl, is bis men-
tor.
What special quallU"' must Santa
have?
''We want friendly ey~ a nice smile,
a'resonaiit voice, a love of dtil.dren and a
belief in the spirit of Christmas,"
Howard said.
: ·~Som60ne who bas seVeral brothers
and sisters, is al'OQDd. chil<ken a lot; ha~
.worked .• with the bandicapp¢ or the Y~. geoeratim In geDei-i.t is Ideal."
8'nta.qn be 18 <r 6S. And he.dOef"''t
""""""8rlly baye to be a be. Twenty
female Santas att work!hg In · Soutliem
·Cal!fonii» Santa la, often called upon to
speak several languages. Sometimes be
has a ~ ra_.t In CS'laln areas If be is. Mel:ican-American or black:.
Tbe refresber-trainin&_ Course is about 'elibt-:hliili's 'long: It covers Whal to say to
tbe 'childrent and what no~ to say; how to
keep Santa's beard attached to Santa and
how-to "get· close to the child.''
REcOONl110N
Recognizing Uie child as an individual
-by, pretty clothes or good looks -ls
the first step. Nert comes a check on
bow good the child has been.
Then, if the child hasn't asked for
, ' ' t j ~ • 11 •
chrisl!jl&JI gifts;~Santa mdft ,coaxr his
wishes ou.t of'IWn'wilh little suggestions.
The child that becomes hysterical is
not that common, Santa said, but many
are !Jby,or glggly, and some even like to
play tough guy.
One litl.Ie 'boy stalked up to Santa and
said, "My name -is Mike. I'm five years
old and wbiil's it to ya?" ·
A shy Uftle 'gill 1 wouldn't look up or
answer until Santa asked, "Is there
anyµllng you'd lite t!) ~Y to Santa?"
Sl)e i!Joked.up, a· oing,Je l<ar trickljng
down her ,.._k and $aid, "I rove you , Santa... C---, '
Happily, !be JoUY fella eiplained. 'the detnand for-war tOya 1s" doWn:Tanks and
machine guns, Western sidearms ~
bows and, ap"OWS ar,e losing out to I1l9re
construot.ive toys.
NAME BRANDI> PERHAPS
But unhappily , advertlslng has maote
them a'ware of brand names, and some
are coufident they should get all they. ask
for. ~ Santa ftnds it sunrisihg that so many
10 to J.2..ye&Hkis still believe in h~ in
·St. Nick brings smiles to
helper Debbie Foster at' Feshibn , lslend . (left l
end younger 'girl at' Sout"' CJ.•st Pl\\za. '
' . '
. . . ' -.. 1, . • ' ( ••
' . these disbelieving times. And there is a
growing number ol yOung women who
have their pictures taken to cheer loved
ones overseas. '
"If I were· a chili!, would I appear to
be Santa" ls the· tOOught that c&ITies the
man in the red-end-white suit, lull beard
and'n1UJ1d belly ti'l'11gb the season.
The, qUestions ctiange little from year
to year. ,.
"How did you get over here so fast? I
just saw you in another store," is
answ!red with "and I saw you, too."
011ldren thl5 year are very interested
in Pilrs. Claus and annually he bas to ex-
plain that his ..inde« are resting for
\lie Chr1stmas E•e trip.
NO REINDEER!
That's why Santa arrives by b:>at in
Newport Beach, or by helicopter, « fire
.engjnf or Nfaclrute.
Santa often glves parents a hand by
suggesting they ask for a surprise
pac.¥Be from Santa, or clothing, or
somethhlt that isn't too expensive.
Age has a lot to do with how the child
reacts to St. Nick. Infants are rarely any
• •
I,
trQUbJe. Toddlers woµld rather see Sa~
in a storybook. From three to four t
love to see ~nta. After thllt comes a r
tie doubt , then belief without question. ,,
Little girls take to Santa much mo~
easily than lx:iys.
Santa, like everyone else, gets a litd'e
discouraged now and then.
There arc the young men , for ez.
ample, who come to him and aak, ."Do
you know where I can rind a job?"
WISHES
And those of little means whose
children wanl things they probably can't
have.
And those who ask for the big things ..:..
like horses -and know they'll get them.
But as long as there is someone who
believes. Santa said, there will be
Christmas. And as long es there ,is
Christmas, there will be Santa. ,
Tomorrow riloming, thei-e will fie
packages under millions of trees. Sanla·'s
job will be done for another year. 0'!
"But," he told me, "I wish the spirit
lasted all year."
So do I, Santa . So do I.
Deity Piiot Phatos
l lyLooP1~
•
I
t
DAll.Y '1LOT
Green Bay,
Washington
' , . . . . ... • • • • • • '
Steeler·s, Dallas Pull Off .Miracle Wins
*·
~ash Today Raiders Fall, 13-7; 4.9er.s Bow, 30-2~
,WASllINGTON (AP) -It will be
primarily • soldier'• battle -00 Iba 'li'ound -when lhe G,... Bay Packfn
ad tba Washlngtoo RedHlna clash here
f<lday In a NalloDAI Foolball League
playell game.
' Both the resurgent Packers and tba
. veteran !ledsklnl depended oo strong 'l'unnln& and aelld def..,.. u they won
die NaUoDAI Conference's Contra! and
Eutern diYislolll, respedlvely •
.• ·For wisbtnstoii,11 will be Larry Brown,
,..the, NFC's leadiDI nuber, and Charley
.. l(airawy. a .... Bay will coon1er with
Jahn ll>;ocklneton and MacArthur Lane.
"Lane and Brocklqton .,. probably :!:t:!Jf •st and lb ciogest runners In· pro " " RedsklDa' coach George Allen lild. .
''Ibo l'lld<on mum.ct the compliment. -. ';'You can't ~te on Brown ~ Harrawy fl such I good ninner," ,~ikl Groen Ba,y cle!omlve back Ken Ellls.
YAM, because Brown and Harraway are
·__e:iod recelven, tbey actually have five
•pod recelvers In the game al the lll!De
time."
In separate news conferences Satur-
dQ, Allen Green. Bay coach Dan Devine
ljoth llAld roster cllanges may be made
lllorlly before tba game. 1be RedHlna are expected to activate special team
member Joo Jaqua while the Packers
will acid return speclalllt Joo Staggen to
1he active roster.
'"!be t<am that malt.. the ,.,....
m1atalra will win," Allen said as be
reluaed to pndlct • victory !or the
RedsktM,
Devine was equally evasive.
uwe hope it'• • clole game," be said.
"I'd be lmppy with a one-point v1<to<y
any time, any place or any where.
Al1ell aald W uhlngton probably has an
":'.liclge at quarterback "becaule BUly
'1 1-1 In the leoaue IO'yt111 u a
' whereas Green Bay quarterbacll
-ls • seoood year prv !run • bama.
'lbe Redskins coach also played down
the t<am's ""'1tame Jooing stnm by
ing: "I believe you can make your
momentum."
1 "Momentum is more Important to a
~ ours,'' Devine said to a
limilar queotlon. "lie (AIJ<n) has a very
....... loam. What they did yestenlay
Won't affect them today."
.~ 2.Miami Tabbed
I
y 11 Points
ver Browns
M!AM1 (AP) -StatlJticaIJy. the
layoff game should be no contest.
)ollaml Is favored by about two 1oucb-
-~~ (11 poinls)--o 1118Aive spread !or
a playoff pme.
But If the CI ... land Browns can do
bat they've done all season, they could Im-~ llllnp bot for the Dolphinl today In
' Nalklnal Foolhall League playoff
Wbat Cleveland has done most ol the
ay Is hang in there, staying close
gh to •trike for a late.game ~
'lllere WU • 3&-yard Mike Pbippe-1<>-
Pllll touchdown paBS that beat.
Diego 21-17. And there were Doo
kroft field goals that upended
ittsburgh 26-24 and CinclnnaU 27-24.
That ability to attek close to the op-
ltion, plus the emergence of Phipps as
polished quarterback. enabled the
On TV Toda11
C ... n..,l 4 at Noon
• J
Steelers Win
With 0:05 Left
On Wild Play
PITrSllURGH CAP) -It may not hap-
pen again for a \boo.sand Christmases the
way it happened Saturday for Franco
Han-is and the Pittsburgh Steeler1
against the Oakland Raiden under the
dart aldes In Three ru..,. Stadium.
Harris, the Steelers' own block Italian
Santa Claus, caught a Outterinl Steelers
pass that Oakland defender Jack Tatum
had batted away and danced C yard.I for
a touchdown to give Plttaburgb an ln·
credible 13-7 National Foolball League
playoff victory. .
The last-gasp effort by Pittsburgh's
Central Division champio111 to leapfrog
the Raiders into the American C.On-•
fereoce finals. came on fourth down play
with five seconds left on the ck>ck.
Oakland, kil1g ol the West Dlvflion, had
seemingly been rescured after a
miserable offensive afternoon when
backup quarterback Kenny . Stabler
scrambled 30 yards to the goal with 1:13
remaining to give the Raiden a H edge.
When Pittsburgh lined up for !ta laal
ahot at glory, the clock """""1 St
secood.1 and the end zone was ll yardl
away. · ,
Quarterback Ternr Bradshaw hoped to
pass for quick gaiM, cbar11nfl ~ •
range for a third Roy Gerela field goil
Iha! coulcl win It.
The blood from Louisiana Tech rifled a
nine-yard paBS to Harris. All 11-yarder to
John Fuqua pusb!>d the ball . to the
steelers 40, but the clock was down
to 1:37.
And then: Incomplete. Incomplete.
Incomplete. That led to fourth down and
Oakland was 22 seconds away from
bringing tears to the eyes ol most ol lhe
50,350 in the big circular stadium.
Bradshaw tried one last time, evading
a rush by Oakland's Tony Clines and
Horace Jones. He threw up the miidle
toward Fuqua near the Raider 30.
Tatum slammed Into Fuqua just as the
ball arrived, sending the football salllng
back toward the Pittsburgh goal. Harris,
trailing the play, grabbed the ball and
dashed toward the left aldellne.
The left side began to open. Jimmy
Warren, a· veteran Oakland defensive
back, had lhe Iut sltot at the 2»polmd
rookie 1from Penn State. He missed and
tbe Steelen fallhlul nploded from their
seats.
Pittsburgh not on1;1won, but sewed up
the homefield advantage for the Dec. 3l
stepplngstooe to Super Bowl vn against
the winner of today's other ·American
Coofmnce playoff betW<ell Cleveland
and Miami.
"Fourth down, fourth down," muttered
John Madden, the l<\Slng coach from
Oakland. "lt'• really unfair to lose llke
thaL lt wooldn't happen that way again
in a mllllln yeara."
Excited fana had to be bUltled off the
field by police .. the Raiden protested
that Tatum bad not touched the ball,
making it an illegal peas with two of·
fensive men toochlng lt lD succes8k>n.
"He went up for the ball." Tatum said
later. "I bell eve K bowEed-oft Fuqua. He
was in front or me and I jun bit him, not
the ball."
!TATllTICS
' UPIT ......
DALLAS' RON $ELLERS CATCHES WINNING TD AS WINDLAN HALL DEFENDS.
Green Powers Sun Devils
To 49-35 Fiesta Bowl · Win
TEMPE (AP) -Arl""1a Stile
University's 16th-ranked SUn Devils, led
by All·Amaica ballback Woody Green's
four touchdowns, plowed over the
Mlsaourl Tigers G-35 to capture lhe se-
cond annual Fiesta Bowl Saturday night
before a record crowd of over 51,000.
Green, named the game'• most
valuable offensive player, wound up with
21IZ yanll ruJbing for the emilng as the
Sun Devtls rolled up 718 yards total ol-
fense.
Green ac:orN the Sm! llevlls' first two
touchdowns in· the Opening period from
two yards and')! yards out He a1lo bad
a 17-yard scotini ·play In Ibo second
quarter and tn1 the final period scam-
pered 21 yard& for his fiDAI TD ol the
evening.
fullback Brent McClanaban who carried
the ball1171 yards and ooe TD.
Sun Devils quarterback Danny White
passed for two touchdowns, both to split
end Ed Beverly. One covered 34 yards
and the other 53 yards. He completed. 13
of 23 passes for 266 yards, With three in-
terception!I.
'Ille 718 total yards rolled up by ASU
was a scbool record. 'Ille previooJ high
for a Sun Devil team was 696 yards,
compiled in 1955 against Hardin Sim-
mons.
It was the most yards ever given up by
a Missouri team. 1be previous high was
set in 1V56 when Oklahoma amassed 602
yards.
The Tigers' top gainer for the evening
was halfback Toquny Reamon with IS5
yards and me TD. The next. highest was
fullback Don Johnson, who had 41 yards
and one touchdonwn.
hand, only was able to make seven first
downs on 16 third down altuations.
Tile crowd on, hand for the game,
Mild! was televfled to nne 150 statllns
througboot Ibo country, WU the largest
ever to see a game at SUn Devil Stadium
and tbe largest ever assembled for a
sportiug event in Arizona.
STATISTICS
ICOttl!' IY QUA•Tlllll
Mluourl 0 7 IA 1'""->S
A•!\OM St.Mi 1• '' 0 ~ ~U -G,_. 2 "'" (Cn,11 t~j
Mo u--J= 1l::: l&ir .. ~"r' ASU -M<C•M•" > ~ (C... kkk> A.SU -a.v.rtv 3' pen fnlm Wiii~~· ICrvt tldll .. -,,, .. -.... "'"" .. '""'' Mo -L;,_ • Pllll . "'°'11 CMrty U'* HU fl"om c~[TJ_ G,,_ 17 fVfl fCrvr kick)
Mo -l'lnk HID t lUoff r.iurn (Hiii tlctl •ju -a-Iv 11 PllH t..om Wh llt ccrui tlttl A U -G,_ 71 ,,,., (Crvl l!,lck\ MO -RNmon 111 run (Hiil kick
A -Sl.11•
Cowboy~ Shook
San Francisco .
With Late Rally
SAN FRANClsal (AP) -Tbe SUper
Bowl champion Dallas Cowboys stayed
ellve In Ibo N1Uooal Footboll League
playoffs Satunlay aa quarterback Roger
staubach beat San FranclAco with a
miracle llnlsb that wu fomlllar to -
lana.
·"It's the best comeback wetve had
llince I've been In llallaa," sald coadl
Torn Landry, with a mlile on hLI Uluai1y
deadpan face alter tba 30-18 victory.
stoubacb -two touchdown -38 seconds ·&part ln the last. two minutes
ol the game.
"This locker room is more excited than
the Super Bowl locker room last yeer,"
said Slaubacb, bero of tho Cowboys Utle
victory over Miami loll\ January.
San Francisco coach Dick Nolan aw
bis own quarterback, John Brodie, come
off the bench a week earlier to beat Mli>
neoota with two late touchdown poises to
put the -. Into the playoffs.
But In Ibo quiet San Franciaco, locker
room Siturday, be lllJd, ''I've.never bid
a -quite llke tblo .._ ID mp
before." ~
Staul>acb, Ute Brodie last -t, JlUlled
oil hll mlr1cle In a r.tfol role.
St•"'och toot ....., for starlar crala
• Morton late In Ibo lh!Jd quarter Willi
llallas tnUlng 28-1$. Tool Frltach ol
llallaa kicked hLI third lleld aoaI midway
In Ibo final quarter to make lt :ia:11.
Staubacb threw a 21>-yard lollchdown
pais to BUly Paro with 1 : SO lefl, and
clelensi•e back Mel Renfro recovered the
e!1IUlng OIH!de kickoff at Ibo 50-yard
line.
Stsubach then ran for 21 yaM!, passed
to Parks for 19 and threw the winning
touchdown pass IO yards to Ron Sellen
with 52 seconds remaining ...
Safely Owlie Waters killed Ibo last
San Francisco hopes by Intercepting a
pass by Jolm Brodie, wbo had engineered
a come-fnm.Wtind 49en vicb:ry over
Minnelota a week earlier to put bis team
In the playoffs •
The Cowboys, shooting for a second
straight NFL tlUe and third consecutive
Super Bowl appearance, will play at
Green Bay or Washington next SUnd.ay'
for the National Conference cham-
pionship.
They trailed the 49en, Western
Dlvisioo champions,, until the winnlnC
toucbdown.
. Vlc Washinton ol the 49en llC<l!'ed on a
97-yard klckoff return OjleJllng the pme
and San Francisco's defense set up three
one-yard touchdown plunges by Larry
Schreiber to keep Ibo 49era ahead the
first 59 minutea.
KOllUE ll' QUAaTllRS • • • . . ' ,_' .......
After ASU had compiled a 28-7 halfthne
lead Miasouri came up with three con-
secutive touchdowns to narrow the gap to
35-28 early in the fourth period.
Missouri's first score in the final
quarter came on a 100-yard kickoff
retum by defensive back Mike Fink, who
was named the game's outstanding
defensive player.
Tbe other two touchdowna In that spurt
were scored by the Tigers' C!Judt Link
on poasea of 48 and fO\D' yards from
quarterback Jo!m Cl>erry.
Cherry woond up with 12 net yards
rushing on nine attempts, but he com-
pleted 12 of 27 passes for 182 yards and
two scores. He also tilrew three in·
terceptions.
ASU managed to control the ball for ne8.rty 33 minutes to 27 minutes for
MillJourl. One reason the Devils were
successful 1D controlling the ball was that
they cooverted 14 of 18 third down plays
Into llrlt downs. Missouri. 00 the other
Anteaters Bounce Back,
Trip Long Island, 67-65
I ASU'a rualllng attack ns aided by
• GAME·WINNING PLA -With 22 seconds left.
Pittsburgh quarterback Teny Brad!!haw threw a
fourth down desperaUon pass Intended for Frenchy
Fuqua Oeft). When the li<!ll wu deflected by Oak·
'
ur1~
and'• Jack Tatum, it tnlvele~ MVen yard! Into the
arms o! Franco Harris who r~ "2 yards for the
winning touchdown. ·
•
111 HOWARD L HANDY
Of .. DIMf "" .....
LONG BEACH --< lUcb Mraule hit a
pair of free lhrowl fo put UC 1rv1ne In
front and Jernr Maras Jlole a pass, then
l>lt another diarity -.. the Anteater.
toppled Long Is::Evenlty Saiurday
night, 67-65, for place In the
International City , c at LQng Beach
Arena. -•.
llost, Cai State (L!>Dfl !leach) romped
to tis elll>th stralgh~ victory of ihe year
In w!nnlnc the ~ llJ5.77, over Lo-
yola.
Tbe berolcs of uct•s two sophomores
(l.!raule and Jlarul capped a corn&-
from.behlnd mial• that ..... i&lllted.
with U:Cl lell In ilii liecond·baU with the
Anteater• tralllnC brjll. "'17. '
In Ibo -...,.., inlnulel, 1bO LIU
Blackbm!I ~ held -by Ibo
tig!l1 UCJ -...,_and nne poOr outslde-. by the -oar-bli that 1pan, UCJ icond 1J ,potnta to
knot the count at IH6 wltb l :!.S !ell to
ploy, I
After -· to ~ ~t edge hr!ce In the clollln( ~' UCJ NW tlie
lead dfllppear In la"'°" of the Birds, 1$-
64, with l:ot leHraule l>lt l>i• ,....
throWI with It to play to move
UCJ In front -· But &Im Bunch onit Dave Baker MCli
missed Iba~ ajilvo oo lirn!lar one-'
and...,. 1ituatlonl Qd. II 1"nl c1oJm to
tba wire with Miras ltosllna a Blackbird
pass with lour seconds to play. He was
fouled and hit the front end of 1bO -
!IDCI...,. to give UCJ a ~Int cuslon,
67-65, with two seconda Ien.
•'Ttlls could really help us," an elated
coach Tiro Tilt said following the strug-
gle. "Our de£ense f1J18lly came out o~ Jt
when we switched to a man-to-man when
we were 18 down.
"I'm proud of them ,ail oot I thought
our front three did an excellent job -
Maras, Baker and Scott Magnuaon -and
Mraule was 1bO ooe who came In to tum
it around."
Does he tblnk lhl1 fl the turning point
for the aeaaen? Have Ibo Anteaters
finally found lhemaelvell
"Thia fl Just what I'm going In to ut
them oow mysdl," be laid In dlparllng.
'Ille victory brlnp UCI'• seuon rooon1
to '5-4 with the nat game at borne Wednesday n!gbt with North Park, lli.
Aftor that lt'1 lhe UC! tournament nm ..-.
Tblt 1w11 a1lo the second. win for lhe
Anteater1 over a unlveralty dlvlllon team
th!a eeaaon, the othfr oomlng over Mon-
Wll State.
UC .,_. .. (67) LM11 111... IMJ
' 'I".... .. ... ~ a.kW JJ1.)lr1tMMl2•1
"MIM 0 O 0 0 OJIMOl'I I o • 1 ~ • 1 • 1 "T, lfnlltl t • 1 ~ f: T t~:r::-t: :' ~ • • • 21 1"11111*''"'" 1 0 • l'ttl t I 1 I ltlt"MIJ11 o t t
Ml'llllt I 4 0 '! C:. ~th 1 I 1 Cltrll 1 ' 1 ' To1.i1 ,I' It 1J '1 1t'lltl » t n • H1lnlmttt L.11111 llll~.l14L
•
t
e
•
.. '·
s
t •
I •
• I • 0 ,. ti .... •
Artists Nab Tourney
With 53-34 Victory
II)' DENNll CAMPBELL °' .. ~ .........
Laiuna Beach High School
jumped oot to a quick lo.,olnl
lead In tho !Int quarta-IDd
then bit nine COllleClll!ve free
throws In the four\11 to loci< up
Ill lirlHveT champlonablp In
ltl own basketball tournament
Salunt1y night wljh a ourprta. io.&11 euy 53-34 win over
M«tooValley.
Dina llllll flnlJbed Uth In
the loumament with a llH5
victory over Apple Valley earlier In the day.
The Artllj.s pll)'Od • ·-perfect game before a
partisan crowd of about IOO.
With quick guanl Danny
Collen on the bench with an
ankle gpraln, Iha Arlllll used
• ~berate, paaaing olfenio
lo abut down Moreno Valley'a
fast break.
And wllh forwud Stephen
Garner and burly, 6-5 center
Norm Bedell CODlrolllng the
boards, M«too Valley rarely
bad mole than one oPpartunl!Y
at the basket.
The game began on even
Spwts Briefs
Bruins Breeze;
I '
King~ Triumph
LOS ANGELES -No. 1
ranked UCLA rolled to Ill 51sl
amlght victory, tripped Notre
Dame, 12-6&, at Pa u I e y
Pavilion Saturday nighl
'Ibo Irllb ..... tho last team
lo boat UCLA, IHI In South
Bend Jan. %1, 1t7L
UCLA could manage only a
~lead al ballllme, »fl,
!Jut poured It on ill the """""'1
bait, oulaoorlnl Noire Dame O.».
l\1rward Kellh -led the Brulnl' acorinB "Ith IS
polnll, followed by Larry
llollyfleld with 15 IDd All-
American center BUI Walton
and guanl Tolllley Qirlls with u eacl).
For the Irish, forward John
• Shumare popped 11 poillts,
followed by Gary Novak with
14.
Coach John Woodeo, bocl: at
the helm for his """""'1 game
after mlaslng lut week'• .,,.
oounter with UC s I D t a
Barbora, Uled bla atarlillg five
lbe Kinss blanl:od the Buffalo
Sabers 2-0 Saturday night in
National Hockey League ac-
tion.
V achoo turned aside 20 shots
to post bts second shutout of
the seuon. It was bis 15th
career whitewash. 1 The Victory enabled Ibo Kines to gain ground ill the
Western Division nee as they
...... tho only team In Ibo
division to will Saluntay nllbt.
Mike Corrigan fll>I tho Kings
untracked en a pc>WOr play
goal at 1:!0 of tho !OCOOd
period with Whitey Wlding oet-
ting up the play with a pass
from behind the net.
It was Conigan's 17th goal
of the season.
The Kings added an in-
surance tally at 14:58 of the
second period when veteran
Ralph Backstrom f~ed bis
16th koal of the le8.!IOD past
palle Roser Crozier from in
ctoae.
for Ibo wllolo fin! ball. Be •
aullltltuled tr...i;y In Ibo last EVANSTON, ID. -John
lb: mlmles ol the game. Pmt, head coacll at lndlana,
1be """PPY lrlah wuuld not was named today football
let the Brulnl run any early coacll at N-to "'"'
as ls their pattern. '!be 12-ceed Alex Agase who took the
point margin "u the lowest coaching job at Purdue two halfttme margin of the year wb ago.
for UCLA. Pon~ 44, just completed hill
"" INGLEWOOD -Rogie
Vachon balped Los Angelea
anap a foul'pme losing atreak
with -peJ tending ..
Alamitos
Racing
Results
eighth season at Indiana. His
best was 1967 wben he led the
Hoosiers to a Big Ten co-
champioosbip and the Rose
Bowl alllr bis team bad a 1-8-
1 record the season. before.
Indiana official! said Pont
signed a five.year contract at
Northwestern. Two weeks ago,
Poat was offered a one-year
pact to remain at Indiana and
it waa chang<d Friday to a
UJroe.year offer.
Font's J&.year o v e r a 11
coecblni ncord, which 111-
cludes seven y~ at ~amt
and two at Yale, ls 88-7M.
Al Indiana, be~,. 31-51-1.
""
lennl, but with the ocore tted
at four apiece In the flnl
quarter Laguna 'u d de n'Ly
ll)llll'ted to a 11-C lead behilld
Gamer's slJ: points, and then
Increased the lead to 13 points
at the ball.
The Vikings clooed lo within aeven ill tho third period, bllt
began to set Into f<ul trouble
when three otarters picked up
tbelr fourth f<lull ii> that
period.
Big center Dan Hair fouled
out less than, a minute into the
fourth period as MOl"el)O
Valley began to consistently
fool tho Artists In ID &!tempi
to gain pouession of the ball.
Guard Brent IJljestrom,
who hit nine free throws• for
the nigh~ lid ·• steady parade of Artists to the fool line. As a
team, Laguna Beaclj hit Clfl 23
ol 27 free throw atllmpts.
Defensively, the Artists
were able to keep their
counterparts ;1.way , from the
basket. Moreno v a 11 e y 's
guanls failed to get the ball
j.nside to !1air and M forward
Winfield Jerry until the fourth
quarter, when Jerry scored
eight of his )8 poillts.
Dana Hills fell behind by
four in a slow first quarter
during its g8.m~ but gained the
lead In the secood period to
earn 11th ptsce in the tourna-
ment.
The Dolphins trailed M at
tho end of the first quarter,
and then outscored Apple
Valley 23-IS In the aecond
quarter to tue the lead for
good.
Dana llilla outscon!d Apple
Valley In eacb of the final two
quarters behind the shooting
of Greg Thomason (12) and
Mark Schrey (IO). The win
evened Dana Rllls' record at
5-5.Jor the season.
L..-•Ndl CUI .. " ' . : ! I g • • I 0 0 2 lSU»U
Frosh Hoop
Summaries
~;,;' ~ ~ ... '.. . ;• . -.~ . .. ~ .
DAILY PILDJ• J3
, Te mo Hondo
tPirates Suffer
,4~ Pa/Mu Rustlers
.
11•
.• __ .,__ Fall, 86-72
IEr UP TO IAU. "AT ATTEllTION"
Tht Solfet who 11 sett1n1 up to tho bill property
may IHI llkt ho's In tho army-ck straight.sl10u~
dtrs back, stomach In. Ht ls •11t attention."
If you usumo such 1 posture, your buttocks will
protrude as you bend your knoos sll1ht1y (lllustra·
lion at left). You should ICIU1lly IHI IS if there Is
a bending. Inward of your bock at the base of your
spine.
From Ibis posture It becomes almost automatic
to swina on 1 proper pl1no and fully coil Iha big
muscles of your body.
Such 11 'not the CIH, however, If you stand too
stralg'11 (mlddlt fl1uro) or if you squat atthe knees
. while )'Our back Is rounded (figure it· right).
Chock your lddreu position In front of a full·
length ~lrrorto see that you are "at attention.'' · ...
Basketball Scores
Wishing you
To Rival
CHULA VISTA
Southwestern College, with six
players 1n double fia:ure1, roll·
ed to an 116-72 win over visiting
Golden West College here
Saturday nlght In a no&<ao-
ference basketball game.
The loss was the Rustlers'
seventh in U games this
season.
Coach Dick St rlckl in' s
Golden West club 19 now idle
WJtll Wednesday when it
meets Fullerton at 7 o'clock in
Iha openJns round of Ille
Riverside tournament a t
Riverside City College.
Golden West made a fight of
ll for nine minutes of the
.opentns hall, holding a 26-23
lead at that point.
But the Apaches got their
fast break going and rolled to
a IJ.poll!I balltlme lead (51·
33).
The RU!ltlers ralled to within
five points on tbree separate
occallons In the oecood half,
but that's as 'close as they
could get. .
Jeff st. Clair paced Golden
West with 28 points while
Mark Dekkl!l" and Ken Kile bit
10 points each.
Golden West guard Gary
Orgill was held to eight points
while Tana: YolDlg -who bad
started every game for the
Rustlers -did not play.
Golden West was outsOOt
from. the field, 37--33, with
Soutlnrestern also sbowinB •·
tu edge In free throws.
The loss cllmaxed a two<lay
trip to tho Bonier a1y f ....
Striclclln's """· Friday night the Rustlers suffered a 11~
setback to San Diego Mesa.
••
76-68 Hoop. Loss
jl By CRAIG SHEFF
Of .... Olltr """ lllft
IUo Hondo C.Ollege freshman
ctnter Fred Haberecht scored
31 points and dominated the
boards In leading t h e
Roadrunners to a 76-68 non-
cooferepce basketball vic-
tcry over host Orange Q:iast
~!Y night.
Haberecht; a 6-7 freshman,
missed his first shot, then hit
14 in a row before missing
again. h.fost or his shots came
from close in as the smaller
l?irates just couldn't cope with
bim.
Rio ·Hondo, txeept for one
l>rlel spot in the first ball, led
lll lhe way and held its big-
gest advantage (67-53) with
7:34 to go.
But then OCC, toking ad-
vantage of ruo Hondo
turnovers, scored four baskets
in a row to cut the margin to
1slx .(67-l;ll.
1 The Pirates' Dean Bogdan
hit a short baseline jumper,
teammate John Seymour can-
ned a couple of buckets and
. Bruce Miller added a two-
M--~, t-t.be<..:tll -"""''"' 1a11.rnin
"'""' -·-·--8 rooki Tol•IS
•• ...... "" flflplljl
3 0 3 '
' l 0 ' 1' 3 I ll 0 0 3 0
1 3 ' 17 2 0 0 4
? I f ~ ~~1~7:
Or...-c..t , .. , .. " ... "
pointer and wltb !oar -
lo go 0CC WU bocl: In it.
But the Roadrunners u.ii
went Into tbelr delay ~
and when OIX was f<reed to
pressure more, ruo 11-0ftdo
haBBed a coopfe ol •MY
baskets.
Rio Hondo, a.lways a ~
shooting team, fini&hed with a
54.8 percent mart for the
night (34 !0< 82) but even
more impressive wu ill IO
peroent cllp in tbe second ball
(17-28).
Orange Coast, meanwhile.
could only bll on 39.7 percflll
of Its shots, canning 31 of 71.
The Pirates had good
balance with five players bit--
ting ii) double figures. Mlller
Jed the way with 17 while Tom
Crunk hit 15, Seymour hacl 14
and Terry Meisenheimer and
Bogdan canned t01aplece.
The Pirates, now 7-4 for the
season, return to action
Wednesday in the S a n t a
Monica tournament faclllg
rugged Compton in a 7 o'clock
tilt.
Pro Results
Miiier 1 3 2 17
--'
'n' 1
0
1· ~vmovr 1 I) l It AU runk 71•15 " ft ,. t ! nook l 0 S 2 Vlral11lt 112, o.n .. 11r 3 ~ ~ 11 ~C:.~lm11r ! ~ i 18 =i.in~.1.1~~ YOft 10I ''" """~ kfl11 Ortllt
ST. Cl1lr
l(yl•
McKinney
I To111, ll 6 18 " l(enluclcy 11,, S•n OltOO lOI ! ~ ~ 1' -~"~""'"'""-'.:.'-"""-"-""""aft .... dO:.'.•::.· :::oc~,~·~· ==""":;;::"':..' :..".c' .. ::'c:-c:·..:.'"'--'-'POI_ .. _. M_, __
13 2 t :,1-CAd~IMmMll
:r0111s
J 0 1 •
2 2 I /.
ll6 1S.
Soutltwftlenl (16)
~ . ..
T99'1'9 9 l 2 19
Ano.rwrl 7 D :t M su~• • s a l:t
Roudalll S I l , ~ '0 1 woomi 2 s 1
8t1t.eley ' 0 ' Tol•ls 37 II ,, ,.
M~ ........ Ifni SI, O'#C JI
CALYPSO ........
LIESSONI
.......... 'h laHw 111 "'9n '
(7141 '4J.71ttl
a
,,.,_ S.Hillt ~,..,._. C•I U'1
• ..... lllwlflalt .. , ..,.,. ........
• Mtll'IM De4 ." l7u1 441-n• .,. I lllU nMJ•
SUPPORT
WYOLA Vl\'IVERSJTY &
MARYMOVl\'T COLLEGE
Your t•x deductible gift, ler9• or sm•ll will
further the cause of privete educ•tion.
Interested? Write for Ye1r End Giving
brochure, or Send your check or money
order to:
DfrfthM' of ..... ,......
....,... ..... ., w.t '°" St.
Lo5 ........ C.11 ..... t004S
(JIJ) 670.1170
.
I
''llAPPY IIOLIDAY''. • •
Vestanna and Clyde
Dick, Nina and
the next generation,
Jake, Richard and
Vestanna Johnson
"-Of. Tiit ... Cll' ••• ............ .,,.,. ,
.. '
•
'
from all three
. • generations
of Johnsons'
~ c-1(1 r...ar of"""~
hnso ·1 & son
.... ' ·--.
polTAllllA .......
..
•
Bnme oP 1't Ntw c.r--:, ,
"GeW.. r. fl.ell"
I
j
•
• i
I
I
I
t
•
i
I
' . I
I ·-I
r
I
. . . . . . -. . . . .. • j IY . , -~ , • j • l " '• , o , F
-~LY Pll.DT
••
Horoscope: Gemini N~eds a.Change
t:tS IMN (I)
.,_ ... ~
Stwtl We4. 11/Zi
I S1•. M.tf ... -2 P.M.
--------~
DAILY PILOT
THE HELPFUL GUIDE
j
MONDAY
DECEM8ER 25
By SYDNEY OMARR
AIUES (Marob 11-Aprll 19):
You fWt beauty in auas
previously tot.Ii !or granted.
Know that you can reach beyondcurrentaitu at Ion.
Broaden 'bori,.,..,
TAURUS (Ajlril 20-May 20):
CreaUve endeavors b r i n g
pleasure. Lov~ im& respond,
especially children. C h e c k
detalls concerning promises,
bas.le changes.
GEMINl ,(M~y 11.June ~):
Travel C(Nfd ~ f~tufed.
Basie d'ianges are in order.
Open Jines of communicat1on.
Be recep\lve to Ideas.
CANCqt (luno '11.July 22):
Relative surprises with gift of
luxury Jterll: -One' yoo thought
Jacked tmailnation is likely to
prove otfler"Wise. Music now
q.n be ng.
LEO (J •:z.1,1.ug. 22 ): You
will fetl in aura or
mystety:, f se.lf·'revelation.
TODAY'S CBOSSID . ·p' P.VIZLB
ACROSS 72 Po ... ch 138 Ben·-Otnme~i.31
73 W1(i1rd 139 Bonomless , vman ·
1 G11U11nd 1• Legume gulf m;,\:~~;~, 7 'f>llrnicioUI 76 Genus ol ge-eu 141 Wile
11 M.ellltll! 78 Old sol 142 An"iole "'"""' 15 Bread ind milk 79 Aflini1y 143 StrjJ)fll tatnic ~einlm1te
dish 81 Power 144 lay Wiste f1111ts
21 E.1:1mot 83 Hidden 111 Diamond~: . '!i'>"> 22 SP1nith 85 Listed· naut. slang. ~~gree .
Painter 815 C.-ress 149 Pronoun 2 lhin plaLe
23 Un~ged bird 87 En11.,gle 150 Pasttv tube 43 He11h
24 Ch1plet ' 88 01 the bffs · 152 Delinea111 45 Shelf
2!i Neon 'ymbol 89 Gr1ting 153 Phillppin1 47 C:Omp1u po in I
,.le V•l\icle 91 Bre•stwork tree 48 Luk•wtfm
27 W1.itt1r• 93 Altar bOY'i 154 Citinn 49 Di-.;ert
29 ··:tt 96 F•rm tnimal 156 Manor 51 ~r;lish Jet111
30 Thr to.d 97 Icy Oanicles i57 Partotegg S3 CUnblng vine · -99 Gibbon 158 Facility SS Fdn1h! pt
31 J~ln..,. 100 Ma\:'e 15.9'81e11ded !i6 Sp9nish hou~t
33 W1"1f · 101 Fo1m ol·Jolln 57 Cardolgoat's
35 ~il'!ducyrnb1ls · 102 "lowt Ct1V DOWN
58 ~:angued 36 l~h county 104 Sched11le
38 Expert\ 106 Rolled 1 Graceful 60 P1!11tin111t to
39 Shleld tobacco dal"lce rtephew
41 ~lw.VS: 108 Shave 2 Become 63 ~Mic
• I poetic 109 ·Pack horse m1nH11t 64 1upefy
42 Turkilll COOfl 111 Vigilant 3 Exist 65 ~e
44 Gods:l.ltin 113 Smtllp1e1 4 Name 67 Tin toil 11rip1
45 King ot beasts 114 Frencti h1!1 5 Obligat•on "t:" 46 Clnopln 115 Canon 6 Popular mov11 70 rbot
48 Orinllirtg 118" Con119lous 7 Actor 73 qiMP~ints ....... diSN•I Buchi1na11 75 F•~lt
SO Su~ 120 Appel'SI 8 Ohlersily 77 Sf'lor9 )>irds
52 l itdl Mg 123 Av1nge1 9 Bantu 80 ~1lortun11
54 SepaNted 125 ScU!ler liingu1g1 81 A Hlgl
.. !log 129 ~edley 10 English 82 B nnese
59 oevMoP .. ' 130 Se1bird yachtsman dtiTion ·
61 Outei 132 Sil&Mloach 11 lnform~r 84 Sii>rcto"riY ...
62 ~Cf"IJ• , ._133 Aid~( Ire: 12 Assent 86 E~•l'llPi.t"
fl6 /Ii.wry Scot. 13 Pl1yg1ound 88 Atijunct
67 ct.cipllned . 134 Ireland 14 Old chariot 89 Ckl!(J'I .
89 Wild buff1lo 135 Rabid 15 Loyalist 90 Branchn
71 ltllian 136 Mallcoou,; 16 Wh1t11ant 91 Amei~
princ1 ·bu1n1ng 17 S1est1 Pii?riir ·~ ..
\ ' ' ; a ' !G 12 ll !I
•
' . ,
HU
llJ h:C)lJEEl'I
-.
IVla,:CillA\f\f
'
••
92'Mcx:e11in
93'M1in1tterv
94 Nobleman
95 Dagger
98 Beetles
100 ·-and
per\llfl
103 kind ol
· painting
105 Americltn
lndilM
107 Urchin
Hlll Antiqualed
110 Mu•ictl
"''"" 112 Ll(im 111
114 lridian weight
116 R1pe1t
117 link
119 Michigan
city
120 C111ahed
1pplff
121 Treelu1
plfiil"IS
122 Succor
124 Sally
121'1 Mias Farrow
127 Attain
.SllCClfill
128 G1in~
131 Stupid person
133 Poplar
136 EnCOU•"911
137 Rom1n 1y11n1
139 Monksh,ood
140 Cic1tri.-
143 A11Kdo1u
145 M1n'1
nickn1m1
148 Wallebl 111~
148 Greek 1111191"
15i l'tigh1: lbbr.
155 Sm11tfilrh
11\IU20 .
Creative forffii within begln to
surge. You become aware of
what you are capable of doing.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 )'
Don't worry about nothing.
Cycle is such that you
overcome opposition. Yo u
receive mean Ing fu I com-
pliments and genuine ar.
feetion . C1 prlcorn is in pie·
lure.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Leave mundane matters for
another time. Relax and en-
joy. ~member one who is.
confmed to home, hospital.
Give now and you also will
receive. Key is to ride with
tide. Steer clear of senseless
controversy.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
New basis for a personal rela·
tionship may be riecewlfY.
'Friend m8y ·1ack something
and confides in you. Creative
idea on your part could right
listing boat.
. SAGITtAlllUS (Nov. 22·
Ile<:. 2l)' ~eed word> .•f
spiritup.l counselor. Your goal
will be reached -if it is high
enough. Give full play to irt
tuitive inteJl~ct. What you feel
now is apt to be on target.
Stick close ,to ,home base, ·If
possible.
A ROBERT CHARTOFF· ...... .,.,..,,. """'1.CTlCN m .aw cc•tomo• ,..., .. ..:...,olOSEPft'HtMBAtJGi . . .... 1o.iimo •"-"' ,
".THE JURGLARS" -~·hii . .-~M• ..
-.....
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. activity. Emottona1 bruise l'~I
191: Cood luaar ••peel now hta1 and yoo will havo ll'Uter
coincides with ablllty to com· -tunlty ror happiaeu.
mun!eato, to bring r or t b,,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iJ koOwledge which has beenll
supprHSed. You will have ,·~'TitnD ·1 =~:~am olto :=~ :a..aL. ~~
AQUl\RIUS (Jan. 10.Web, WORLD 'PRIMllRE,
18): One close to you may be l!NGAGIMENT .
embarrasied because cf mail,
delivery mix-up or <Jelay. Be W;fJH~
understanding. If patient, you Mattltan
gain more t)lan originally in-; c. ad
dlcnted. Leo, Scorpio persons "'i•"ll?¥4
figure prom!nenUy. .U•---
PISCES (Feb. 19-Marc6 20): "'··--·-~
Cooperate wltb mate, partner. "P*"lfTalie":
Let others know that you can ' _..,._...,.,.wclq:cr"'
defer to their dea.ires: Means ,._"'"'""' . ......,,,_.[!ii
play low-key role, Don't Nab. --· O.lly insist or cajole. Geml.Ill, Vlr&o Sun. thru S•t. 2 P.M.
per¥>ns ·'are in P,lcture. Re-~~=~~=~== evaluate goals. 1 ir
llATI. HllUAL ,
THEATIES '
IF TODAY IS '. YOUR
BIR'l'BDAY You . are in-
t ro s J>e 'et l·v e, · shidlous, spiritually · aware. ·In 11ri3,li...,,.,--~--'-"'--i...--'1
there~ wlU be more travel on
your agenda. There also will
be 1 greater lmoo.nt of ~ial
Chritfoph1r Pfurnrner
Rot,. rt Shew
L10111rd Wliiti'lg ..
'"THE IOTAL HUNT
Of' THI $UN"'
l The F1b11lou1
, "SONG OF NOIWAY"
SHOWING
NOW!
'
EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE COUNTY
AlllilOit QUiii
YAPHl1' ..,.0
. ............ "HICKT & IOGGS" ~ j I l ~
l 3:20 ·140·1·10.IS
NOW -IXCIUSIYI '
OIANGf COUNTY
5£NE.HACKMAN
ERNEST --""'""'"II , WOl
LIMY
'Walt Disney
FEATURE
NOW
IT,lll,
3 THEATRES
ft,~ A..._ 'f.'ofKnoti •
I hrii fi'llil • nt...crio ~ -'
.1:
. . . . ' I • "
N, I n::, _,-1 , , ear y JJVery,one ·
•
Lisiens to · Landers
-· .OW NANCY HAllRY KEDW1 !Em JGllES •OLSON• U6AN • WYNN • llllSEY . ·---·---Ol,--~!J e1t>1--~ • •
.... AMTHONYftANCIOSA :;~.\. ··~ma··· :.:a· .. ···· ·w' • • • ·~ ~~:: • •• •
·.iK ••wlln.ey . orld i:!::"'!."'::
Plus This
Walt Disney
Featurette
Produc..t by RALPH SERPE -i FOUAD SAID'
Exec:1111ve Phlduc,n ANTHONY QUINN .Mt BARRY SHEAR
Screenplay by LUTHER DAVIS a...d upon the novel byWAU.Y FERRIS
Directed bj BARRY SHUR •
A P"1LN OUAl!AMT'C*S. 1NC. "'<IDUCT10M ..... ~
'sin .. Am frwy, n1w CtwprMn
~ ... 547-6011.
ORANGE CQ..HITI
"SUPIR BEAST" (R)
'.
MATtNHS
AT BOTH CINIMAS
• .._,. .,..... c im•
&OWA"Oa
HARBOR,m.1
\
·--~-hi\\ SOUlHlOAST
~1 l'LAlA !
3410 Brlrtol Stl"MI
Com M9ol • 548-.2711
PlAZA #I CO.HIT
"HICKEY & BDGGS"
NOW
~HOW ING
tbeClllt.\lla~JUnr!'
..
I
• • • • •
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• NOW SHOWING
At All 3 Edwards Cinemas· Matinees Daily
' · Great Holiday Pnn ' .
E DWAR l1S
' I' I \1 II I \ I I ~
>1Ai!~«~ ._ T /\IA ... ',
lO~TA Uf \A · '119 4 141
• I
s=:'.-.. .....
BIST PICTUll
(1961) •
' . ~ .. . .. .. • • • • ..
Cat Lo~ers, Dog Haters for the Birds
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'll bet you've
alrudy belfl more than Y"' cart to
1rom cat.loVll'8 and dog-haters. May J
hive the. last word!
'l1le nerve .of that perlOll saying: "All ~~~~~ are vlck>us, mean alll( un-~. I have never met a cat-hater
wb& wasn't a scoundrel."
Have you ever been awakeoed in the
dud of night by that awful bowUng· of a
at during full moon! lt's e1notfgh .to
mate your hair stand on end. On the
other hand, do you know what it It to
awaken to the lovely melody of a mock-
ingbird or a red -winged black bird or
even a common sparrow!
Jy help to keep -and bulbel free ol
inlecll.
Cell. Whit do ntEY do! They rip
bOlll...,. and draperle' and fumllll,.., But
worse -yet, bllve you ever gone out lnto
the· yard and found the tiny hefd, or a
wtna and the feet of ~ UIUe bli'd -all
that was left or hlnl? ·Of aour,e it was the
cat who dld the dirty work. .
Cats DO have a ~~~ -In ~be barn,
"'.Ith the rall. -J .K.M, & Frlendl
DEAR J.ICM,: Take that and tbat a~
•that aD )'ti eat Jown -ud llOW tbe
score ts ·Uom • -C'arll&lau 10!
Have you ever fed these lovely DEA& ANN, LANDERS: When you
creatures and seen them beoorqe so tame ; fe &d.Ufia letter )'OU'll probably uy "A 17-
they would slt on your shouldir and eat .• yt,f~ 'kid libo .doesn't have anything
Ollt of )'OW" bond? They harm no ooe, on-µre to "°"l' about Is pretty wcky."
---CtNfOO,,,f ?O
.. • . • .I • l ~
•
••cMM or.;. c...., •..el'Y'M SMt ........ . """'~---i.u.. "'MAH OP LA MUCHA"
~-·•' "llHIATH TMll f't.ANIT
0, TM• .t.'1$"
"JUDGI ltOY 11.llf" ...
"THI. lllVIMllllS"
.... llTS 'N TILLll" ... ~y IT' MAIN, SAM"
• •• ;TH~g~~~GE
STARTS WED.
DECEMl!ER 20 Co-Hill
Gene Hockman
"PRIME cur· (I)
But my problem is buglng me like ~ crazy, l can't grow sideburns.
I've been trying to shave !or two years I _All# ~"""""" bot there'• hardly anything to take oil. • ~' -4' 'l:" The ooly spot on my lice that really 1...-.::_:. __ ::::=:______ . ~ ''°"' 'hair is my chin. I envy the guys with bulh1 mqtfon.<:hops. SOme dude&., __________________ 1 my 11e even hive beards.
Is tbeN anythhing I can do to h~Jp -
lhlnr• alon,c, like maybe take sbota or
pills? Once a woman wrote to you aboilt
1 certain medication that made hair
grow on her face. Maybe I should be tak·
ing iL I need advice. -HAIRLE~
. DW llAIRLESS: ~ccept tlle fact
Ulat Mme p)'I just can't grew akleburns
ud ,.. ....... ti lbeDt. Tb!• -.... y
,_ b a 18" and ti will pass. Wbtn H
clod, }"Ol'll be one of 1he luck1 (IJI wbo
woa•t bve te apeM m1cb time iUvla1.
MATINllS
SAT.SUN.
&MON.
.le!MI o...--
k•lllerlM ·-""'"'' OlllJ IC1M Ttltlt' ~~ ..
-''Ortllltl .._,....
""' 111 C.JW (PG)
JtMI H9drl•-l"•I ~rtlty ... AIMIOW lltlPOI"
"t U.119 llactl TOJt"
.1o111ncetor11111
SHOWING
NOWI
DAILY
WO· J,ls
5,50 • 7t4S & 9:f6
Delhnlmnce
A.D9'1 IOONl'M RJI
Sllrm; JON VOtGHl ·BURT REYNOWS • AANAVISION• 49(1J
OiNICOLOR• · From Wlwnlr Bros.. A WlmM" Cotrirnuncllion Comolnr
SHOWING NOW! AT AL.L 4 SPECIAL THEATRES
. ,
Waltei-M~~ ~~ .
[ 1:tete,.:f n1•ie" ]
'-· ---•4~•-Allaboul/ove-----'· ..,., ' and marri1ge ! ~ ~ .. ...
"'-· -24, 1972 DAILY PILOT ,
'!An exquisite Swedish film! Max ,1
1
Von Sydow and Liv Ullmann ·
Are outstanding!"
' -JUdilh Crl•I, Ntw York
"A bursting, resonant film, 'The
Emigrants' has reverberations."
-The New YOlktt
(
"Stark Beauty!"
-Playboy
MaxvonSydow
Liv Ullmann
The Emigrants
Teclricoo"f~ .biitl..A ~ flnncl..m llo<Lct<n·fiom
\Nooe Bro.. AWime.C:Omuicot""'~ -~
• • · ••• • • · • • • · ·THE ONLY .~ . • '~:ORANGE COUNTY
• • ENGAGEMENT
,,_
: STARTS WEDNESDAY
·DECEMBER 27
DfAll NANCY HAAAY KWW1 llEOlltlE
JONES· OlSON • MOllCAH • WYNH • UNOSFt ~l ... •••· DON TAIT ANO JIM PARKER & ARHOlO MAAOOllH -:.a .. ;=.•,:-.,-
~ RON Mill~ -~NORMAN TOOR flllil-• PL .. : .. ~;J -"'""*""" .................... 1.,. __ _
......_. .. _ .. _ ..._... __ _ -...... ...., ..,.__ ........
THIRD Disney
FEATURE! AFRICAN LION
E)(CLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY
RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT
This is how it was received by the nation's critics.
"A Tl••IACIUY _ ..
8".flt!Mtl ,.. ", ...
•1H, II ii 11 Old Milt• ................ -llMI ru1ttr119. It eM1itt1 iht
p11111dlrtly11111 g11M tM ,,. .......
•OHAN.IS CH"M'LIN
lot""OelH To"lft
''tlll! FH.M II A UflrTY.
A MOVll Tiil WHOLI FbllY
CAii UllOY,"
-Ebony M111tl•"9
•n Ult A cillllalll&n • •• fU AIOUT ............
... ...,." .. ----·-............. trtfl ....... -... Mrktliltlll ..... llLl ... IHW ....... llttlf ..,...n .
• • • -JAY COCKS, Time M•v•zlne Now
Showlnv
' '
>.
' '
-' " ,_ ,..,
CINIDOMI lD ..
...... -t.'.'~ \ '""''''1•.o•
....... AT h• -<••-ltlt ,,._ loM !ltO'# AT ti• -:r .... ... O.,ICO "''" ..... It 1'I' ~ • ACllS 0' '1111 ,it IMO
•.
•
•
'
• '
•
'
I
l
I
I
•
I
l
l
I
O!JtM' MllJI U. c-. C1'9 " 'i rur nm 1't.11i 1· u 111 Ill• H .11 M .11 .n
""' ' ' . ,,. '1 n u.-· fi.n t.1J J:?t "· .11 I"""°' 1MM ISM-ISM' II ·+ .... ll>C. Rlt M.IZ M.11 .U,tl So&.: 1-41"6 L-·--........... .. wMlt .................. .,...,, ....
Dally Volumes·
..... WI!. ,.,..., WI!.
T_..r ... , . , . 16.t 11An,11 Molli9IV ..... 17.M!l't.! """m r ., ··· 't]i 11 14,Jtt,
.•.• 1 ~:15 ''·"" ¥ ......•.. 11.MJ, 11.ttlilft "' ........... UMt .,....,..
Week y Sales
' P1.tM. Yr.•
NWt Yft Stocb U:Hf,Mt n:m::a &i!F,s= "'if'Jii s1,tfJ;:r
\'early Comparhen·
W11. 11 .... 1 MIP Low Mv OK. UIKll
O.C. IL ltn 76 H 44f 1~1 l" 0ec. 1s. 1tn 111 .. * t~ 11 Dec. U, 1t1l Mii IS tll 719· 111 OK-J;. lt7' 1'1' IJ llH M6 1'2
Standard and Poor
••
... 7t 4S.Jt 4,.._l.41 61.Jt 1W1.e1 ... 111.U
Brokers View Dow Jones
By STEVE "MITCHELL
Of tlle DlllY Plllf 11.tf
It has been three weeks
since the Dow Jones Industrial
Averap tOpped the 1,000
mar):. Many inv~tors and
speculators felt .that t h e
"Magic 1,000" was a
psychological barrier which, if
broken. would pre--empt a
stampede of bullish investors.
•
because <lf recent news LOU FAUBERT, OF
events." Gates cites the elec· DIVERSIFIED SECURITIES,
Hon results, the war on in-INC., of Orange sees things a
nation. peace negotiations, litUe differenUy. He's bad a
and Nixon's wage and price few. additional ~-, but
controls as ..5Qm~ or these ~ doepl 't "feel there was any
reasons. "'It'll 1 take another psychological effeCt caused bJ
year <lr so for inVestors to gCt the Dow Jones Average on
back in to the swing of things~ mutual fund s. .
been out since. 1968, -oot oow
brokers are feeling a few riib-
bles . Money has been building
up in savings and loans and
Ibis I11011ey is goiog. lo filler
into growth markets in 1973."
/ft ~
•
I
Man Fined ' ,,
f
$80\oh $J . ,
Tax Bill '
.. --d NASlilJAi N. H. CAP) -
Artllur Holl didn't botl!er""lo
file a state business tax return
when b1a wife. made just toe
doDat ..Uing pots and pans.
But tbe state found out aod is
' I
• What bas been iL! effect on
but good news, like record H, is optimistic about the
retail sales this year• are future of mutua! f u n d s
tempting investors." however. "I think we'll s@e a
RICHARD SPRAKER OF lot of financial reporters
BATEMAN, EICHER, HILL eating their words," Faubert
RICHARDS: "The P u b I i c says. "Mutuals were hand1ed
didn't throw all their money poorly in 1968. 1bey were sold
into the market when the Dow as a speculition mtead of an
went, over. 1,000. People have investn)ent. The same people
seen the Dow top 1,000 three who said mutuals were the
times before, so they want to greatest thing since sliced
know why !hoy should Invest bread in 1968 were saying !hoy
again?" dropped the ball in 1'10. I
J~-J:1ATllE·Y OF
MITCHUM, ,. JONES A ND
TEMPLETON, INC. says a
closing of 1,100 in the next
year is a reasc&ble-figure. He
cites the chahge from an in-
s~tional market to a public
m~~t fl5 one reu>n for bis
optimlml. He also says news
stories rev&Jing the rosy
outlook for \he economy is a
reason1 for an increase of
queries to bis office.
f!nlllg ~ "°· '.t
t
I
the market thus far? ls it
bringing «it the small inves-
tor, still licking bis woWlds af·
ter the last market disaster ?
A survey of local stock
broker& along the Orange
Coast reveals \he fact that in--
dependent COl)SUJllefS are not
linlnl! up outside brokerage -· • Tiie broken do \<Port ad-diUOoll QllOriea froni small in·
ves&on, and aome hllve nqted
an -In onlers, but moat oft the111 ,... waiting to
,,.. -11'/S w\)t bring.
Hen's bow Orange 'coast
brokers view the New Year.
JOHN GATES OF DEAN
WITI'ER A: Co: "The.small in·
vestor is beginnillg to show
more confidence, m a i n I y
Spraker .says that "veteran•: think mutual funds. If ba.ndled
tnvestors are 'not adveraie t& as an Investment, will Im.prove
JEtling more mooey into in 197S."
.. Just look at the market
volume, far enmple. Six
monUis ago the V01.Ui'ne for one
day . of trading. was nine
million. Now-it's 19 million ex·
changes. -y's gelling
the word," Cathey says. stocks, and , tha_t . n e w Faubert sees a dart in--
customers are beginnmg _to,, flaUonary cloud over the
8Ppear· lie Joqks for lh<i. I finance picture in tste 1973 oc , .B E T SY "$!If 1 T B 0 F
average·lobe ""ll·•bowl100tli \early 191,, ... , ·.;: ·:WALSTQN~·c;x>MJ'ANY,
by the third and fourth INC. says lriiproved corporate
quarters. "1 think we'll see FIRST CALJFORNIA COM-eamings, ec:onor;nlc lndlcators
1,070 sometime during ltr73," P~ SI'AN MO R9A!N and 'bints that Nixon will turn
Spraker said, "but then, I'm a thmka the public ls talqng to. the dotr.estlc scene1 show
broker, and all brokers are another look at the market. Walston researchers that 1973
bullish about the market." "The small investors have will be a very good year.
GRANO OPENING CELEBRATION FOR-<OSTA--MESA'S NEWEST-IANIC--
Dlrector Jack Curley Chouffeurs Thoodot-1 Robins and ~rl,. Monoudon
'
Mesa B.usinessnien Form
New Independent Bank
Mn. Holl staged u"91ll·
selling parties at o I lit
people's bomea and gr.-d
$132. Bui ·htt -· ...,. 1131. Her bu>band included the
·dollar profit oo the coople's
federal Income tu return.
Tiie llale aw his federal
form and lold Hoff be waa<be-
mg -110 lot each i!O .,. hla retnm was overilue. ~ a
total •t'8D. . . . '
"l -I CU. oee jioy\ng a .....ilri because. I -ly WI"' ...... In not filing a
•talem¢ lo the )!ollness
Profits Tu Dlvlllloo," Hoff
said. ·
"But 1 can'tsee beihg fined
Sil for falllna: to nte on what
amounted to a one dollar
business."
By JAN EDWARDS 'lbe bank's $1.2 million stock State National Ba'p.k in San 'Ibere would not have been
Oregon Rewards 'G 6od Guy' Industries
Of 1t1e o.lfY. "~ ~'"' offering, 125,000 shares at flO, Diego and pi"tsldent for one any tu on,, an amount that
Forty Costa Mesa was three times year of· the First National small,an)"tfay.Horrsoolyof-
businessmen have j o i n e d oversubscribed, according to Bank of Fresno. ' tense was not fUlng the return.
forces and formed an iJ>-Simpson, and there are cur-1 -~----------------=----
dependent bank, the Bank of rently more than so oll~~~:!:!::!::!::~~r""'...,.,."":=-:"::":~1 ~ta M...... sbareholden. 0 &
SM.EM, Ore. (UPI) -
Oregon bu started to reward
It hasn't been without pnr
l>lelru.
duct is lousy. Wouldn't the 1 ~ -· 1 0 0 1
CUP INignla mislead people? Temporary offices opened A permanent building will
~ the "lood guy" industries
wblch do something beyond
the requirements or the law to
clean up ~llution.'
U you give an award to a
paper mill which, for example,
nranufactures p .c k a g 1 n g
material -how ia the ~
aimer going lo know wbelber
the CUP Award \ii for tho
packaging materw or the cc.
Perhaps consumers will recently at the corner of be oomplet.ed within obe and ORDER come to Insist on industry Harbor Boulevard and Baker one-half year1 on the two-acre Ila lf.i
compliance with anti·pollution Street. site. Five lanes leading to . • ~··
laws, Mrs. Seymoor said. "If 'lbe lnclepelldenl bank, ·fonn-l';l'/!g,~sare proposed YOU , s .'-' Stick ••
Oregonians care u , much ed. to serve local businesses al>Oul A:lein environment as and Individual~ oilers lull "We must have ~ .... LABELS It Is called the Cleaning Up ,
Pollution or CUP Awaro. and Ii· given by the alale Depart· meot ol Enylroomentsl Quall·
ty (DEQ).,
That's the agency that some
industries wish did not exist,
becawe It clamps down hard GI t•llCIN
on polluterl. C.U.si. ,_,..AD
But lhOse who qualify tor a
CUP Award are 0nUlled lo brag about It to the world. A tline--member .c It Ii en 1
Pre 1 um ably e n-committee screens the &J>"
vll:onmentally CODJCWI con-pllcants who are ulUmalelY
......,. will choose the CUP· chooen by the DEQ. For a half
f1nn produced ..-o•er year the committee couldn~
the compcUton -glvint· the find anyone to approve. '~
pod BUY• an edgo In bulllleaL , Jlul, linallY. ft• Publllber'I
'11111'1 wbat Gov> Tora PQer · CO.,' with ~ It'
f..-when lie nm ' ~, CllJ and· ~lilrl ;
the award oyatem and '°"' ~ Can ()o.,
a yeor 1go. with • plant 1t Halley,
8o only two lndualrtel -~-""'°"' dozeDI which ap-Now theY ' can display 1
-bave quallfled !or tM dlst_..CllP ~ on the
Anni. Nolably, both 'II'• paper towela,1lollet ti-, l!'llf
-.mllla -trltd!Uonally the newsprllt! , thei' m..,uracture.
envlromnental polluten Conceivably even the Lot
the llale. Angel .. T!mea -.owner ol
McColl com....,led I h a t Publisher'• Paper -could
palp and poper lnduatry ldenU!y Ill publlCallm u -...... a. mos! VIII· bel!lfl prli!led <II CUJ>.w!Mlns
" 1111 ..-., '!be com-paiir. · _...,. tbll In-Jfhe ldu was conceived by
-)lave _,,. llul!on lie y mo u r , ad-
-1lot -vllf"-ol lbe mlnfMrllk'a " lslant to L. B. ~." Day, DEQ direclor.
•
they've iold me they do, this banking servlc<I sis clays a flaurallm that all9W1 for
tents? I
A n o t h e r pe.rplaing pro-
-lem : suppose a manufacturer
}¥11 the cleanest plant in Its
rleld and easily qualllies ,for
the CUP Award. But itl pro-
will being a real compeUUve week. Hours are 9:30 a.m. to 5 stacking. in line about elgh or
advantage for the comparlle1 p.m. Mondays through 10 cars without h~vtng them TODAY I
that earn the Oregon CUP seal Thundaya, 9:30 a.m. to s p.m. sUcking out Into the stnet," •
-at leaat enough to offset the Fridays and 9:30 am. to 1 claims Simpson. When plans
cost of a n t I • p o 11 u t i o n p.m. Saturdays. are completed, the lot should
j
equipment." The businessmen founded be able to ha'ndle • cai;:s at
the bank to serve the Im-once either waiting ln line or
med.late area and provide being serviced.
prange Crop Damaged
In Freezing Fresno
' ·bEsNo (M') ~ Fl"IDO ~letlltural spokesmen· in
S:t.••ty Agrlqollural C{io!, Ktn1and'llllatecounU.,sald mliiioner 'lboniaa E doi'ii thty s!lll ccUicf mae "'
11y1 up lo 'IQ perceit. ol the ::ale on Ille •-I 61 """"Y'• <range crop may ~ ,..._., ~ cblD --~~--t havo """• dam••ed by last ~)'de . ~·ur . • -m-' -r-··~ agrl<u_ral oonimlnlooer In week 1 1 u b r r e u I n 1 tern-Tulare«lounty, said field 1n-
per1tur01. ~reported damage"'' '~ the ""rat I've. evtr "getttni to the point whero It'• seen. Cj>rn aald Monday, ad-easy lo dlstlnsuilh.''
di l'lllt "well over ball the But he said be wu hol~lng
a ~-qalle • ... !>. off on any eallm,tes becauie
lem 10ttlq •D1ihlnl oul "we want to come up with a b\Jt 1-." Jlood report. It looks 'lo me
d-'1Jo w11 ex· Oke the ,,....,, rr/ay need
to bo lffor&· ,In oilier oome govemllet(t ••-n In Valley cltnla pro-for loano lnd we wan\ lo ba
duclna: counties. sure we're r1Cht."
ioo., "lo further the growth In The bank will be making
• this area and to help Coshl "all kinds of consumer loans
Mesa prosper and dev,p,'' O• automobiles, b o a t s ,
acoording lo Paige V • campers an<! other P<"""81-
Slmpeon, prealdenL ~ vehicles," rep.brts n•-• director R'..s.A...a Simpson. who was fonnerly
-· 1 are: ~~· with the Southern California c. Prlnllle, Jock. R. Curley, -====::::;;c=::::;:; Roy E. J-Theod•re1 .
Rob~., Bertr l Smith and Slrl>....,.
Slmpoon repjlrll .that ap-
proxllnately l,ollt -ao-"'!"•ls were opened In .the flnl
-t for neoril' •1 mllllon.
Savings _Bonds
WASHINGTON ,(UPI) '....
Moro than 1111 l>lllloo worth of
U.S. Savings -ore cur·
rently outl\anllllta, uys the
Aroertcan -, ,,_.. uo.. Tre.\SUl'Y ~ •llP«t at leaat 1121 million .n·bondl
will be !AUid this year, · '
..
.... SONAL .'
RADIO PAGER
TONI or VOICI
...,.o..Mt,...ttM
LOltV COST MONTH ,. MONTH
HN7AL IASIS
fJ11,'i{,f f"ll!J~ l \-
1~,(ll f) r 11 I l'Jr<1~r
\ I ~'\I I l" I I . ' ..... ..-,.. ... ,.
IJS.JJ05
Personallled • Styllth • Efficient
' Order For Youraolf.or a FrletMt ·
Mey be u•ed on envelop•• •• ,.+urn eddNll
N,bela. Also very h.IMy •• idHtificaffo11
lei..11 fer m1rklo9 penoMI 11.... such •• Mob. ,. •• r.1 •• p1,o1_,., etc. ui..i. sticli '"'
et.a ancl may ~ used fw .. ~ftt hofn.
c.-.1 focd it-a. All l•lttolo .,. printed
with otyli1h v., ... 1ype -fl•• ..,..111y wt.It.
9ummttd fMptr. •
1--:.·-;;;;-.-:-..;:-...::. ~I.II -:;=~w -1 I HM .. ,...... ...... Dl'I .. P.O .... , ... 1 C... .. M ... CtW.,.. I • ,
I • • ' I
I I '
I I
l · I ,l __ ~!.~ ... ~~!!~L :._J
" ,•
• I
. '
· ' •.. DODGE .. ,68 ' $ . -' . COlONIT •
~ v.e, auto, fl"lllll¥ p .s¥ vi,-i,roof .. lic. No, xw.
. 350. . , ·~ . .
. -., ,. ,. ; 11:USTANG .. , ' . . . I ·"' · , . · ,,. 6 .,,, .. ""··''"'"''""''"''"'"·"'~· $1. • healer. lictnSe UKIC ..... S2 . .
•
TAl<E YOUR'.·CR.OICE
I l -•· ·• j, ' . "" . \. .• .. ' . ... . . . , ; . . ' . .
19M YCKIJ·"~·-;•UG :·~™SE NUMBBtl,!Dt92~ : . , ..... J. . ' '\ .. :rt' -• . . ! •• . ' . -. .
. -· •• , . .
1968 FIAT S'-'l:DI.
LICENSE NUMBER XCF883 ,
,r
1969 OP~1KAP*iT
• · ., '1:!CENSE·NU~;vxns2« .
. '
1968DATSUN1600
. LICENSE~ XCPJ1'3' • , '· .·
"
.. .
, I
"
Sundar. -24, 1972
'
. • · .PIN.TO . , . . · • .. '.1"1 .. ,,.. .......... Hooj .... ..:., ... $12a·s , .(alOW166409). ,
, I ~ • ' : • --·-. • J • • -.• ' .. , . ' • • I . " . .. '
"
-~.6 .... ·9 ·~,0:.~~:. ~·=·· """" ... $13· · :a· a·· ;
•• , o. ... 4 73L . . '' . . ' .
.. • > . • • · . . . · :E~ONit.VAN · . '69 ''uouuti1~4~ .$1688 Auto. lfons~ radio, Mirl~ latlso Ne.
• > 29I02M , t• · ' . ' ' '.. ' ' . . ~.'. .. .. .... · · . . LA ' • . ,.''70> • ., . iQOoaMOTr. $·1· 1--.,."!'l!l"!"'-,-'""!"~""·j;o· '"!!'-.... !!""!!!-~!!'9'~~ ..... '· ~ ' '!"'·outo rr~Jaaoty•rHndit.on-..
, '6·'7 :;:.~~~at~-~''"'. ... ~$988",.. AY,~.1.LA~L~ .~~1:rH1s ~~LE , · . . . "v;~~~·.t.:E:~;;; .. · "
6
• • . ~::::::11.:~·.~~;~=:: · · · , · . " · ... '. , WN PAYMENTS . ~~ ""'" lowM.._ .......
• \JJIQG -•;. I '"·••• !' ~ # ~ i • '" < "' I ' '
ALL
NEW
. ,JDffrs.N.•
4 SpMd, f'ffr bumper g110rch. ~In!~
rior, lt!iebiT 1e<1h, fM1:9d oir llecri.r, •tc. ·
' (31f10W123480J • .
< IMMIDIA TE DfLIVERT'--;-: ---,f
.
• '.:ALL
: •. ~ ~EWi'Tr:==;;;
.
· 1/2 TQ.N PICKUP ,
(SGTAi.iC23876)
. ~Tl
IWVllY
FORD COURIE·R. ·
' '
•
·$
•• . -FULLPRla
'
. All
NEW '1973 -MUSTANG -·-
lOADID
Y-1, ovto.ftro11s.. power 1t .. r1119< ~
OYOI rolMd fetter 11r ... ,_., brok..,
AM/FM stereo, 1port deck reor .eat, ~
1119 rnlrrou,. tlnt.d qlo11. "" '
(3f02H 1360$71 '
IMMEDIATE DILi.VERY FULL -PRICE
~~ . ·1973"PINrO WAGON.
2000 CC •ngln•, tinted glo11, rodlo,
wick oval b.lted tlret. Dl.1t,'b\i,,.el-, ~
Interior,
(lR12Xl23,~0)
IMMEDIATl.DILIYllY
All
NEV/, 1973 LTD .
.9>
' .lOADID 'ITM llTIAS
Y-1. foctory oir, del11• biirnper I~
retdlo, wheel•cover1, belted w/1 tlre1,
tinted glo•s. u\.l~otic 1tt1nirnllllon,
p'ower ttr:ond broke>&. vinyl lnttirlor.
(31~3Hl26991) , •
-ID/ATE DILIVllY
•
FULL.PRICE
. ALL ·NEW
1973 'NCHEROSOO
302 c;10 V·I. s}ii1ec11hlft, eruh~ ...
moriC ~IMion, bell•d ~ ct.
• 111•• bumper.,.,, OIDll YOUll~
1 """--"*' 6alnlT ' • .. . . \ • I
•
,
•
l DAJLY PILOT
GREETINGS
BALBOA ISWID
FERRY, INC.
•
,, ... , ..
ri. 771
W• Wi1 h
Happy Holid•y1
To All
Our Fri•nd1
F.om
Th• S•l•1 Stiff of
Coldwe~ Banker
• Realtors
HAPPY llCYCLE
RIDING FOR
THE NEW YEAR •••
NEwPoRT CYCLERY
550 Newport Center Dr. 2116 Newport Blvd. 410 So. Baytront N rt Beach Newport Bea.ch e""l)O
•
HAPPY HOLIOA YS
from
FAR WIST
SIRYICIS, INC.
1672 R..,...ick, Sont• Ano
17141 540o9t92
• l11dw. • Cooo's
• .e ..... .
. ' . f4'J() •
. • • ~-.£
HAl'PY HOllDA YS
TO ALLI , e S-k.9-e R...-s
eR..-E.i..e ' ~ & _ •. ,,,.~ . ,,,. _.,.., , C-r,I~
c.mp1e<e -ttng lk m.ntnr ' tacllltles. .
1240~Ave.
Costa Mesa .' M0..1854 • ~ '° '" -!o\11'1 CUltlnlen .... .-
Old-Fashioned
Greetings
et Christmas
8redhill
R"'1ty
Univ. Paric Center, Irvine
May oood c
· brl9~ten your
Yuletide 1aaaon1
·'Fliilf & Fol~'
L•9ion I Goff
Balboa Island 673-1070 833-0700 644-2430 675-1700 8""9 """' klM• '° "' -Wrll OD 1IM All. Call Anytlme, ~ La.&UJtB. Beach
.:-"'~-; ~.. fd:J) ;,~'"•. ~.,. .. J..•"' ... ~. '®"'"'' ;~
GREETINGS
OF THE SEASON I
TO ALL OF YOU!
Spaghetti Bender
6204 W. Cout Hwy.
Newport Beach, Calif. -1 ~"'
RINGING IN
BEST WISHESI
-HAPPY HOLi D;4. YI
ond
Happy Holidays
to 111 our
Friends & Customers
from all of us at
Bay & Beach Realty
2407 E. Coast .ff,vy.
Corona del Mar
675-3000
Blessings To
You And Yours
HOLIDAY
GREETINGS
TO OUR FRIENDS
Coaslal
Personnel Agency
2790 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 54~6055
Happy Holidoys
To
All my friends
from
HAVE A JOLLY
YULETIDE I
Jim's lntemetlonal
Hair Styling Cent.r
For Men
222 Eait 17th St.
Cos ta J\.1esa 642-2631
Wishing you
Santa's Best
from
WELTON & COMPANY
Gr.•tings
from
Clyde, George, Sh•p
l P•rsonn•I
.t
Original Joe's
843 W. 19th SL
Costa J\.fesa
0 COME LET US
ADORE HIM!
M•y ·th• Stir of
B•thl•h•m
li9 ht your way
THE TOP DRAWER
221 Marlne,Avenue
HELLO THERE!
To oll of you
from all of us ••.
DIMMITT Gvy F•-Rootvr.,. &
C~ollL.._
Firtt National Bank
Of Oronge Cavnty
17171 Brookhunt St. 1650 Adams A""""' HELEN B. DOWD 3900 &st c-t Hlghw.., 2112 W. Oceenlront 3200 E. Pacifk Coast Hwy.
Fountain Valley 962-6625 Costa 1'1esa 546-9Z'l0 Realtor 644-0134 · Corona del Mar, 8S3-o'780 Newport Beach 673-3200 Corona del Mar 673-9605
HENRY'S MARKET Quick Clunl119 Service
~-,.,,i~~C-~:!~·-.i .. :i:i:tl:fJC!ll.lf~, ~ .... r=w~~~-~-t.•:.-..~ff~1;~~~2~*«t'!IZ~:!-.. r.i=:=i~1'~'.~ii1111 ... li.-.ie~lf!f~· -:.:·~· ;f. #JI-;~ ... ~· :.~ • (f Pi 1«24 ~ 4'±
A HAPPY
HOLIDAY
To One •n\I Alli
llochman's
Dellcatessea & Restmnt
I
H.m Holl<i•Y. F...
llsldff t.111111 -Hope: to , .. you et
our new loc1t1ori •••
~ of January ht
Our new llddn!u wtll be
1651 E. Edincer Avft.
S&nta .....
645-277'0 or
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
Mey it be bri9ht and
beautiful , filled with
cheer,
Girad's Collep
of Bealty
145 E. 19th Street
Cogla l\.fesa
•
VENITE ADOREMUS
Mey th• spirit of
p••c• b• with you!
Foutain Yaley
Commallty Hospital
"' Hep:r.y ·'
Holi ey 1
t Cb • In See1on holid•y 9rootl119• ans l3S from OU• entwe ofeff
to 111 ~~-friends An old-f11hioned Ginny Morrison
mnn 9rMtin9 from
LOADS OF CHEER!
A bri9ht Christm.s
to Our m•ny friends! AU Of Uo DIWEY'S • •••. -m:Al.TORS.
, JlllRGAN REALTY Rubbllh s.rvi.. :r.aatv..:"0r"':.., •rs WHARF
3411 &. Cout H~. * ~. Costa Me99. 2318 Newport Blvd.
C.orona del 1ttar 2113 Cl.nyon Road **•** · 557-4130 Newport. Beach. Calif. 673-6642 675-6459 Costa Mesa 642-1191 (()pen Even1ngs) 675--0474
~'!',.; 'l'~;'t f.t :-1'..-:11ti@~~~~:;lr1111!pl'1~"tQllt,!:i1"' lll'J;f~~~-l';;f~2'-il.1'i::i£~''1'/,°~
s. .. on's Cheer WRAPPING UP A Stockin9-lull Mey the Holy F•mily Joyouo 11Nolln9s BEST WISHES • • • of Boot Wlsheo
bleu you •I this time. To Al At Chmtmos JoM's ~~-"" Cycles Fill up f., the Holldeyd
Wl1hln9 you th1 merriest
Chrl•tm11 everl
•t Chrf1tm1ttlm~ ~ -· Yel•-11.i. "-my l'nm.l 1 ••11K n... • ..._ ... .., ,..., ,.,.. ' Floyd Smith & s..is IUW -UUll'l"'I KftllnU.11 1111ft 11111 _, All Acc111 1llo Union s.rvtce St•tlor> Dana liarU Realty
'P•ace
on Earth
and 9ood will
to all mankind
-tr·
At this season, many years
ago was born a Savior, Jesus
Otrlst our Lord.
Ma.y each one or us reco&nU-e
this season as a time or
worship, a time to turn our
hearts and minds heaven·
ward. a time to reDttt on
the grealalt gl(t ever of·
fered to iD&nkind --God's
gift or HU: Son.
Do this and esch day can be
a NEW day, .each year a
NEW year ror a NEW person
-YOU!
•t
f•lrvlow
6*1111
(onytlmo)
M•y the Star of
Bothlehem
light your W•y
SURF & SIRLOIN
5930 W. Cout Hwy.,
Newport Beach 646-4202
0 c~e, let us .do,. Hlml
M1y the unbom Kint bl111
1a ch encl everyone et
Christm••·
Costa Mesa
Blueirilt Corp.
our new phone numt)tt
Will be • • • . 54:1-8836
188 E. 1st!I s ..... t ~ 11u11or Blvd. Costa Mesa. Calif. • 3333 W. Cout Hwy. 273 E. 17th Street at Wlleon., Cotta Mflla 1900 Newport Blvd. 24871 LI. Plua 1~ Supe.rior, Costa Mesa
!548-22.. . Newport Beocb 648-7121 Cotta M... ~ l4M60S or ~ C..ta M,.. • 646-;illl Ilona Point 496-2790 ~71
~i~~r f\»t: ;~;t ft~ "'~r '~ =v ;.:., .@'r ,!=' .. ~; [h:P "'@ti: @Tr f~,
I '
I
••
•
•
I ·r
LIOAY
BLESSINGS
To One And· All.
ALLIED ELECTRIC
.& LIGHTQIG
222 Vlctoi:.la, Costa r.iesa
(acrou froi:n GJ'ei!nhliven '
Nqn:eryl
646-3737 -.. "' lk he::;:.11 "lilllll'!!! ~)::1' a
LET JOY
RING OUT!
"'A51' SEltVICl,I"
N•w cl•n only ~rvic•
Uc & 50c Ill.
H•ppy, Prosp1rou1 &
Cl1en.N1w Y1arll
Arrowhe8d Lintn
Service Inc.
& Dust Control Division
Sc~rig;. c;a11fornla
Anaheim, Cal.
' Season's Cheer
Mey Your Hom• Be
filled with happiness
thruout the holiday1
•nd .•II thru the
comin g new year
Dan Y. Franklin
Realtor 673-2222
3250 E. Coast H'>''Y·
'•I • o •j.
Season's Greetings
To All Our
Cu1tomers & Ffi1nds
F<om
~laa
RE.t:L ESTATE
1190 Gienneyre St
494.9473 549--0316
CHUICH "" ·OIGlllS Worship With
Mu1ic
AN Through The Year
NEWPORT ORGANS
•
'
MITl.A
' MIXICAN RESTAURANT
••
WISHES YOU
A MERRY CHRISTMAS
AND
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
COCKTAILS & ENTERTAINMENT
547 W, lfth Street, Cost• Mes•
12111 lroolchur1t, G•rdMt Grow•
649764.. 534 6300 .
-~o·--oo·,,.o • • ~ 0 .r
Sunday, Dtetmbtr 24, 1972
Merry Christmas & rr
Happy N1w Y11r To Wishing You
Our Customers The Best!
Beach Stationers, Inc. George & Sons
Balboa Arco 1807 Newport Blvd. 412 E. Balboa Blvd.
Costa ?t1esa 645-8300 Balboa • ~~II' .. :;..i,;~~~'lr'~:-:..=~~ :.iJlliiill'~
-1N~L -
\f,6,Wf "OUl>AY
it>' ALL/ WE HOPE YOUR
AIJAIL
Al'1W
Mit1 A!Ji9•il l
H•r Girl1 Wi1h
Yo1o1 A V•ry w,,,,., Old
F11hio11M
Chri1tm11 l A
Hippy
J., Pro1p1ro111
lo N1w Y11r. Here's wis hin9
Wi1hing _ yo'il\ th• best of HOME IS BLESSED you and yours
everything al Christm •s· WITH HAPPINESS ~ the merrie1t
t;m• ;;,~;!:;~er of TH l ~~~~e~~AS Abigail Abbot YuloHde ove•!
Newport Beech Plumbing s.rvlc:e Personnel Agency Harbor Optical Co.
Teleprompter Olbte 1V 961 West 17th Street 351 Hospital Rood, Suite 106
2624 w. Coast Hwy., N.B. C.OSta Mesa, Calif. 230 w. warner, S.A. Newport Beach, calif.
642-3260 646-0622 Suite 209 55.7-6122 646-8161
. .
Holiday
Greetings
CITY AUTO PARTS
2066 Placentia Av~.
Costa Mesa 642-8131
Yulethle
Cheer
Gills L~uor Stare
278 Broadway
Laguna Beach, calit.
494-4526
t;ill"'Ji(,:t.:~~ri:"'~"':...:i,,.i .. Ii»•ll'~.r· ~~~ ,. ~,,... ,tl'i.?J;"' u ~"-"'w· · ~ ..
ll~~TII~~
Eurepean ·Auto w'etts
1980 Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa. cant.
645-1440
Happy Holidays
To All Of You
From All Of Us At
E3stbluff Reaity
2414 Vista del Oro
,
Newport Beech 644·1133
glory to the
newltorn King!
Pyra111idrence Co.
700 West 16th Street
Costa Mesa. calif. . 548--9662
GREFJ'INGS OF
THE $EISON ...
Bali of ARlerica
3444 Via Lido
N"ewportl3each, eanr.
673-2500
·w. hop• this
holiday sea1on
rings in ioy fer
you and yours
Great . Western Savings
& Loan•As10Clatlon
24100 El Toro Road
Laguna Hills, Calif.
837-1551
-. __ , .
'TIS THE SEASON
TOBE JOLLY ...
rier's ll)iolstery
~:
lttu•~•im, . . Qt~~Llrbt
YIUIG Scond lnovl~n 'imports &
Modem f:umlture
17838 Beacb Blvd. 2488 Newport Blvd. (Acrou tram llospital)
Costa ?-fesa, callf. Huntington Beach
!)48..7691 847-7979 540-368.1
. , ....... \ ~
" I
IEST
WISHES
to ovr frie1ds
Welchel's Hearing
Aid Center
1716 Orange Ave., Suite F
Costa Mraa., CaUf.
642-7935
Happy
Holidays!
A-ADORABLE
PET SHOP
113 Broadway
Costa Mes-. calif.
642-4818
• • • ~~ .. ~,"' It »ll' If ~"ii\' ~.,.t .. =--:,;:~~l!r,:r"':O.J,,.~:i~·ll'--=:'i~ . -
EL
GREETINGS Mey Your Yule . FROM JOLLY Se Bright With
ST. NICK & Good Cheer end
Good Times!
Dave Ross Pontiac Theodore Robins Ford
2408 llarbor Blvd .. 2060 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa P.ic.a ~8017 Costa Mesa 642-0010
loaded with
the 11ason's
be1t wishe1!
Tarbell Realtors
2955 Harbor Blvd ..
CO!ita Me!& 540..1"720
0 come, let us
·edor• Him .. ,
Chri1t th,e Lordi
NABERS CADILLAC
... FROM
ALL OF US AT
Jllhnson & Son
Lincoln Mercury
2600 Harbor Bl\•d., 2626 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa '-1£'58 !W0-9100 C0&ta 1.tesa 540-5630
BLESSiNGS OF
THE SEASON
To All Of You
From AR Of Us
· associated
BA OKEMS Afll.Lr ,-;;5
101~ W 6clboo •'' J~t)
" v
let us foUow
the Star of
B•thlehem for
lesting p••c•
Santa Ana
Lincoktlercury
1301 No. 'l\ittln
Santa Ana 547-0511 . -. :lf ~'I:·. ·'~"'!:."~· ;--~,.«~~~'-¥1:!'"':..~T't~ ~»!Wi.-ii-..:1@~~ io~ 0 I ft»"" " @ .. .: ~.,......, .. ~"!<=~
h'tey the joy•
of the 1e•1on
ebid• With you
Wilson Ford Sales
TO ALLI
Mey th• Yule
season brin9
joy h1to ••'-"
& every ht1rll
• ' Courtesy Qldle '
A MERRY
CHRLSTMAS
Mey your hol lda'J'
be truly bles••
~~
MERRY
~·~Ai
CHRISTMAS ·~~
From oO of us
to off of you-
1 Yuletide joyl
Cll(INllL CHEVROLET
RINGING IN
BEST WISHES
AT CHRISTMAS
Atlas
Cllrysler
Piy.th
Christmas
Blessings ,
182M Beech Blvd., 2888 Harbor '8lvd., 2850 Harbor Blvd. 2828 Harbor Blvd., ~ Harbor Blvd., ' 13801 flarbor Blvd.,
When th• 1tockin9s er•
hung end the fire is
blazing on the heerth . , •
It'• tim• to wi1h •v•ry·
one e M•rTY Christmesl
DDT DATSUN
1-lunUngfon Be1t<:h 842-6611 COila Meta M7·92:20 Costa Mesa 54o-i640 Coetl. Mtlfl ..., .:.. 6*-1200 Colt.a Mesa 546-1934 Gnrden Grove
.·i e-.. ~ ·~,...;.. 1'b r '.k:itt "'~' ~®fr "'~" 11"1' ,~~e;..ii~~·QC~~t:lii"'.-:f;:~~~.f~"~iiillt~J»U.'~~ ~ T . 'j(~r;.tl"''t • • I • •
• ,
• ' -
at CHRISTM~ ·
An olc4.fe1hioned
9reetin9 from
Bill MAXEY TOYOTA
Ul8818'!ed1Blvd., rluntlngton Beach
• •
l
I
' '• '
Dt\ILY PILOT
HAPPY
HOLIDAYS!
LEISURE LIVING
MOBILE HOMES
l.J:l5 Bak('r, Cosla Mcsn
979-4110
HOLIDAY
BLESSINGS
To all of you
from all of us ...
GROTH CHEVROLET
18211 Bench 81\·d.
Huntington Beach
b-17-6087 Kl 9-3331
Christmas
Blessings
Southern california
1st National
Bank Leasing ,
2001 Michebon Drive
(Comer of MacArthur)
lrvlne, Cal.it. 92664
•
7141833-8620 213/627-0367
Sundiy, Dtctmbtr 24, 1972
Wishitzg you
Santa's Best
Roy Carver
Rons-Royce
234 E. 17th St.
cu~ta l\1C'sa
11
111
Bringing You
'B~± W.ihlm
HEALTH , WEALTH
AND HAPPIN£SS
TO OUR MANl
GOOD FRIENDS!
Ralph WiUiams
Leasing
2144 Harbor Blvd.,
Anaheim
SEASON'S GREETINGS
May all your dreams
come true at Christmas.
50 UIED MERCEDES
ON DISPLAY
HOUSE OF IMPORTS
?!1ERCEDES-ALFA DEALER
~ .. '
· Merry
Christmas
· lo All!
A h1artfalt greetin9 to
our friends, both old and
new; May your hol iday1
be pro1perou1
Gustafson
Lincoln Mercury
May the Star of
Bethlehem
light your w1y
CREVIER BMW
Sales • Service -Leasing
2C8 W. 1st St., Santa Ana
835-3171
0 COME
LET US
ADORE HIM!
D. C. TERRY BUICK, INC.
6862 Manchester, Buena Park SINCE 1933
on Santa Ana f'rreway 5th &: Walnut,
523· 7250 Huntington Beach 536-6588
• • • I•' • • • • . . . . . . .. . . .
·~'
' ;
Ward S. L" Inc. wlll be cl....t ChrloimO. D1y to
•Uow thtlr 1t•ff •nd f•mfllt1 to •niOy th~ Holkl•Y•
but ,.. will be opah Tuoodoy R...ty to ,.,.,, Youl
MAY YOUR
HOLi DAY BE ON
A MERRY NOTE I
DAVID J. PHIUIPS •
BUICK-PONTIAC-OPEL Inc.
310 Broadway, Laguna Beach
546-1975
GREETINGS
BIU YATES
AUTHORIZED
VOLKSWAGEN
OPEN SUNDAYS
493-4:')11 -499-2261 • 837-4800
SALES -SERVICE -PARTS
RENTALS -LEASlliG
San Juan Ceplltrano on
San Diego Fwy_
San Juan O'eek Off Ramp
TO THE WORlD .
L•t us rejoice
one.• more in th•
mu1•9• of the
Chri1tme1 sttson •
~BIHCI
15650 Beach Blvd.,
Westminster
•
TO OUR
MANY Fl~E '
CUSTOMERS
• s.i•'a htYlo .. ...,.,,
EXPLORER . °''
. .
H\JNTIN9'TON llACH, ' 18861-Beach Blvd. ~
HUNT{NGTON BEACH
1t :iii! . ""@··
PEACE
M1y it reign in
every llom• •t
Chrstmestime ...
end •ver after
LADERA REAL TY
18534 Beach Blvd.,
Huntington Beach
968-4433 968-4333
MAY EVERY .
JOY BE YOURS
TED'S MOTORS
2014 Harbor Blvd.,
COlita l\fesa 645-fi644
1# .• , 'It :@·~:~~~-~=="Iii."'~;~~~~.,.~'!<'~. J~--~ i:iliilii\i"~~~
CROCKER.
NATioNAL
BANK
Newport Center Office
520 Newport cmter Drive
Newport Beach, Calif.
644-5240
Costa Mesa Office
2300 North Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, Calif.
545-04TI
South Coast Plaza Office
3390 Bristol Strttt
Coeta Mesa., Calif.
040-6256
•
EACE
As w• c.•l•brete
Chris t 's birth ,
l•t us prey for
peec:• on eerth
llASABIAN
S1.tson1
Greetings
from ell of us
•t the new brenc.h of * SHIRUY
REALTY*·
(Magnolia le Edln~r, F.V.)
Real F.state 962-6644 (TI4) 842-2502 . . ' . ,~.,.=-'f .•r "'~·1.·111111~~-~=~~u~,~=ic,.,.,;-::-;.i~lir::ili;.il"liil,~;~~~, ~v:· : ~·: ;~.,.r !t:ili. .~~ ~,.. ..
I • ' • I
•••
Ho· ho-hope
your . Yule. is
jolly!
llAIBOllR Y. W.
18711 Beach Blvd.
HunUngton ,Beach
MAY THIS
HOLY SEASON
BRING PEACE
Road & Ral~e Motors
Home of Ctroen Maserate
Orange County's Oldest Dia:.
1609 Pomona Ave.
Cocta MCA Tl4-548-3M9
I
ONCE AGAIN, THE
CHRISTMAS STAR
LIGHTS THE WAY
TOWARD PiACE
BANK OF AMERICA
548 W. 19th Street
Costa 1'1esa, Calli.
836-3491
_ .... _ .... __ ,_ .... _ ..... -.. ~ lfiil-__ ......
Pete Barrell Reafty
. ut your confidence in us -
eke it Hsy -Let us work for you.
SPECTACULAR COASTLINE VIE.W LOT-
80' x 100' hillside R-1 building suite above
BOOMING DANA POINT MARINA. Febu-
1, Jous whitewater 1ocean view to South.-Can
• • never be obstructed. Only ,20,500. for a
future dream home. ·
BEAUTIFUL PRIVATE COMMUNITY nes-
tled in Newport Beach-Newly decorated &
comfortab1e -3 BR and dining roo m. Pool,
putting green, shuffle board -all in yo.ur
• own lovely park . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $56,000 .
SPECTACULAR LOCATION -Bayfrnnt
' home -Opposite the pavtll ion and busiest
water view! Sandy beach stretches in front
of tills solidly-built 5 BR home with Its own
, separate garage apt. ........... $180,000.
'," XMAS ON THE BAYI Two bedroom, 2V..
baths Condo. Boat slip lncludod! ·Come see
& buy, enjoy the holidays ... From $72,900.
Dlflco Open Soturdoys & Sundays
PETE BARRETT REAL TY
1605 W11tcllff Dr., N.B.
642·5200
I
j
AlN~tOtf
Have A
-UNIQUE -
Cbrisbnas
'
Ul'llllVUI: t1()Ml:S
ON TOf' OF THE REAL ESTATE MAFllCET WITH THE
NICEST '!Ol'lE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES
CORONA DIL MAR, 675.eoDO • MESA VIPIDf.
54&·5900 • Nl'iWOftT lfACH, 64s.tl500 •CALL UI
-------· -
General
MERRY
CHRISTMAS
fl'Olll
.
3336 Via Lido
Newp0rt Beech
67iHJ123
Gentr11
Ken Brittingham
Roger Brown
Margaret Meier
Virginia Nash
Lee Schonek
' '
TO ALL OF YOU
FROM ALL OF US .
Very popular slna;le level 3
BR, 2 ba.; beamed oetl's.
End unit. Oversized, priv.
patio w/maxlmwn privacy. N@U' by pool. Ov>ke early
area with lowest leueldd .......
May Your Christmas be joyous
And the New 'Year Your finest . [;st t:,' !?ff
11\e area's top professionals 175-3m · / are at your servlce.. rca ly ' . fj BAY~.~~:~cw .. ~' l~-1
--. ·-
2414 Vista de\ Oro
Newport Beach
~1133 ANYTIME
".hist Usted'~ l~o.~nor~••E:::::'~io~.~ .... ;~~L:~::: FaUlon Sllores
' One ot thote "most asked
MERRY CHllSTMAS
e FR-0¥ e
~rMl-S."4
~ •is11111111
REALTORS
:lallASl'CCMl'HQ-
COROlllA am.-. CAii.
644·TZ10
Dally Piiot Cla11lflell
ORANGI COAl'r'I 8llT
SALIS.MAN ••
• • ..
,.
about" bomea acluall J
eome1 °". Use . market.
Asked abodl because Of l:U:
location South of Hamilton
Street. Can yoo pictUl'e a
1800 Ill· ft., 4 bedroom, 2
ti,tl\ home •with a real tile
1ftoeplace, aJI tlectrle klt-
chen, teparate •er v Ice
-· • heavy -... ~ hllh 1--tuJ. tte.ac 1trett -tor o n l y
P4.ICIOt You better call now. •25315. LI 0/91 nl • • 1"1 /tlJN Jtl IE NICE/
I:;;·,. ·,] Tiff REAi.
•11.' 1··,1·TlR' L __ .. ) . ,I
·------J: ... ,T' • •
~··
#2 HARBOR -ISLAND ' ' . Lovely S BR., 5~ batlu, waterfroqt home.
Lge. living nn. l family rm., just redecor-
ated. Pier, float and sandy beach. Beautiful
yard w /lge. shade tree ~ swimming pool.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
:Ml layo .. Dr., Suite I, N.B_ 675-4161
' ......... .J ...... -...., ....... .....-,.. ........... . ,.. ..................................... e.
.,. .... it!ie ... - -.. ---,..._ II ....,.. MILT "LOT WANT ADS. ,..,_. ........... .._. ....... ,.. .......... ................................. ,,.., .... -·-· HOUSES FOR SALE
2 BR ind FAMILY RM OR DEN
2024 Port Prw,enco Pl. (HVuHomes) NB
644-6249 644-0396 (Sat ft $1111 12..S)
I BEDROOMS
2963 Baker ()lesa Verde) Costa Mesa~
557.7393 (Ill day Sunday)
DUPLEXES FOR SALE
• 1 & 2 BIDRODMS
708 Larkspur, Corona del Mar
873-1868 875-7818 (Sun
.,
'
,
I
•
.j~ .... a ~tt~-.;i::i~~,,. .. ==•r.ii1131·-· lJtii'ill'
May This Holiday
Season Be The
Best £VII'!
Our very best wishes
FOr •
Happy Holiday Season
From all of us at
•
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO.
SEASON'S
GREETINGS
TO AtL
BIU BARRY
• •
Have A
Jaymis
Yuletile
' -.
' .
11 )1~1 '-I I "' "'\ " I t' \
.
WE WISH YOU
ALL THE BEST!
FirstJtational Bank
Of Orange .£aunty
\
1650 Adams
Costa Mesa. cailf.
546-9270
· Wann Wlsltes
For The
Holidays
GREETINGS!
Have A Wonderful
Yuletide
••
-Merry-
"Christmas''
;, !he HERITAGE
of •II mankind
-.Happy-
"New Year"
the opporlunity for
• ntw beginning.
• HERITAGE
. , REALTORS
29lB Bristol
PONTIAC-OMC..PIAT Costa l\1esa 540-1151
•
l !J..:Jt
.-~-
TO ou'k Ml-NY FRIENDS a PATRONS
Mey ~~P• •Ml Love ~.
wiflt ~ JOA'( end thrw •+IM
1N•w Ywr. • \ •
we wish y0u and .
yours every . joy!
JOYOUS
HOLIDAYS
Howard Cl!evrolet
Newport Beach r.•ilh.., LfAN
(at Slat S.A. ,_,..) IMPORTS and 2000 E. 1st St., Sant& Ana 1500 Adams l\tacArthur Blvd & Jamboree
558-1000 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 Co&ta Mesa 546-5880 833-00M
,
' MUTUAL ~¥1!16$
· .. , .&'.. LOAH ·AisiM'~:
~ay your Christmas
be truly
merry and bri9ht.
[Nr•iwurt 1atsun] -~...: •.=-:t::1o
•
• .,;?'
THE BEST OF ' . EVERYTHING
--~Qci·~ I@'!;~ ,m ,,:" z,Jt 1' ~ ~.,. .. ,,~ z 11'J1"'
I -~ . . I "-I ' I "t •
I I I •
'----------------·· -··
oftnJa !J.t/,,
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT 'HOMES ·.
SHOWN BY APl'OINTMINT
53 Lindo ltle 'Drln
Elegant 5 bdrm,. 4¥.i baths; on lagoon. New
carpets, draP"' & wallpape~. Lge. attic' stol'
age area; 4 lrplct. & lge. slip .... $212,000
' For Complei. Information
On All HonM1 & Lott, PleoH Coll:
•
UNITED STATES
"4ll~ BANK
1845 NeWi>ort' Blv:d.
Costa Mesa, Calif,
646-3291
_,
/
HawJ Holidays
' '· ·To AD
from
Rm CARPET REAL TORS
2629 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, caur. -·
GREETINGS
For The Holidays
And Throughout The
New Year
JIM SLEMONS
IMPORTS, INC.
120 W. Warner, Santa Ana
546-4114
1,1
"I··. -. ··,<--
/I \'\_
CHRISTMAS
GREETINGS
DAILY PILOT
Have The Best
Holiday Season .Ever
BANK OF Afi1ERICA
2701 Harbor Blvd.
Costa. Mesa. callf.
546--311.!'i
Holiday Bless ings
ToOne&All
C. F. COLESWORTHY ·
& co.
Eastbluft Shopping Center
Newport Beach
640-0020
Season's Greetings
Our very best wish•s for
the happiest & safe holi-
days & for I particularly
pleasant & prosperous New
Year to all our friends &
clients.
ENGLUND
REAL ESTATE
318 Thalia
Cheers
Alld Have
Tbe Best
Season Ever
'
. . . . • • r
Sunday, Df<.rmbtr 24, 1~7i _ .... ---1~1 ~1 .. -..... -~l~i;~l--.;;~~l~~I -~-=--~-~l~;l!l ~-~I~~
,.'"-_•_•_ro_1 ______ c;. ____ ._1 ______ 1_o;;...,.,;.;.;..;.;..•.;..1 _____ 1_Cotono ___ Ml __ Ml_r ___ 1_Fo_u_n_1._1_n_v_ .. _._,..;.Y ___ 1 _1~rv~l;;n~•;;;;;;a,:;;;;;:;:l;A;•;;'";';';';'°;;;;';,.;;le;;';50;;A£=:;'";"!!;;;;;,.,;;;;';o;lo;;;:;;::l:;50;;; Money to !Mn 240
1~11'--1 ___ ... _-_]~ [ _ ..... l~I
NINE uNns s..•~~:~.;t .. !:i..i' sAWHTND i N!urt,r.~;"~-= oc•"N ......_ 1st TD Loans * * * * * * A d.119"1 to own bdrm. """'" wlelec. bll·ln -""' ., .. ..,..,
* TAYLOR ·co * ~?.;\J'.g' .... ";.!~.C:;: ~~"J'.1:.:.:=..'. LOVELY Laguno BNch ALONG THE .. 8~%TINTDERESTL
• ."" • 13.)1·~ """'" 0" 1.-d •• S2SO mMth to help • bedroo .... 2 bath & "'"" PRICED RIGHT! MENDOCINO COASTUNE LOU oans your (1111ntmc111. Good oc-~ the overhead. Prioed to lormal d1r\lJw roor:n for very
cupancy Only $96,500 ~I at $64,SOO. IPedal oCCl!llona. BullUn 8-Bia OOWI vleW! 3 Bdnn., Lowe.It ntes Oran&& Co.
Our Ent;,,, Slaff Extend tli;a. · 11-Q • ....,... ... 1o. a-2 bath 11ome with beeutUuJ n ~ S -IO 8hops Md " h 0 o I , • view ol ocean & hll11. 4'•·
JONES $35 750. Call ~14 llvlll&' &: farnll.y nn. w/frple. _'l<t,,.~/?f /? IU!ALTYINC 0mu· . ~~~!."fJ,,8_';8,:·,~:: ~ . L lu·iJlmtU '::JHelin~ IS[.... . ~rv21 •""'"""',;. ~,;;.\ ';: 149
•
950
· SEASON'S GREETINGS (114) o7W210 'T'
* . • ...._.._
And Every Good Wish For A cOArs -·---.............. & l--~=---·~.,.....~~---1 17910 MAGNOLIA, F.V. 1!..~Z
_JJ. n y. · WALLACE What A View! 4 BEDROOMS --:.":'"""
REAL TORS * Excellent Ocean View BO US 0 app'J ew ear --:s~46"44141-• • Big eooroom• N RO M DlmNCT
CORONA DEL MAR "OWN-YOUR-OWN" lOptn Evenings} ! ='.,~~'Table POOL
Vacant -lmmediete PolHSMo(t * Unique Sandblasted Wood Have a Men')' Otrist:mal!
On the water! Fantastic view & pride of own· lnte.rlor Treatment See and buy lhil very sharp MERRY • Cdl\t Beauty at $89,500 home. Lovei, carpelJJ tluu-ership bldg. Private marina, pool, jacuu.i & Ca.II 673-85M out tncludlrw the kitcb. J
security guard. Adu/I occupied. 2 Bedrooms, CHRISTMAS car pr. Pool hu Jots or
2 baths. By appt. Call for brochure. $89,950. To all 01" Happy Holidays deekl,g. 136.IXn C• I I
"i•oos & Customen. To All .......,,_
...• charm & comfort is all
)'OUl'l 1n this 4 bdrm .• 2 bath
borne. Large family room
for everyone A spacious den
tor Dad's very own, Call
Ron WUilams. $85,000.
.,,,/6/an
20 acre par c e I s nestled In Redwood and.
Pines. Localed at Westport Beach, north of
fl. Bragg ofr State Hwy. !. Excellent terms,
pre-paid interest available.
LAND OF THE GIANT TREES
160 acre parcels off the Mad River near
Eureka. Some parcels have creeb, great for
recreation. However, wfly buy the land only
for enjoyment or speculatlon. Develop Um·
ber groves for future profit return, program
available witb 1sheller. Avai!Jble from $200 per acre. Exce1lent terms.
Coll owners ogont; J, A. Woltrick 12131
37M933 or write, P.O. Box 1099 Torr•nn,
C1llf. 90505
Condomlnlum1 Condominiums
"WE BUY TC'S"
Sottlor Mtg. Co.
642-2171 545-0611
Scrvlna: ltaa·bor area 21 yn.
2nd TRUST DEED LOANS
Will Buy Tru" Deeds * BROKER 60-7491 *
Mor"°"',
Trust Dffd1 260
HAVE /I VERY ?o1ERRY
XMAS
Consollrtale your bllls
into just one paymcnl
"1th a 2nd Trust Deed.
Call 714/615--4494 Bkr _ ... _ I~
IRVINE TERRACE -$1SO,OOO F>um the "'11 Ontu
Including The Londl COLDWELL, BANKER (EVEN SCROOGE} ~· IV
21 Magnificent view of bay, oCean · & Catalina! Realtors 644-24:11 m-0100 University RNtty .,,
\Vari:n & friendly home. Perfection thruout. 550 Newport Center Dr. 3001 E. Coast Hwy.
l-;;'°;';;; .. ;i;;•;;::;;;::;;;;::;::;16;;;;0;for;,;;;";l;o;;::;;;;::;;;::;;;.;';;;'° Hou ... Fumlshod 300 49&<14'li" Glenneyre ~ul' Bolboo l1lond
REAL ESTATE
2 Master BR suites plus a third BR & bath. I!!!""'""'""'"""'""""'"'"~ I Orona del Mar 613-6510
Huge family rm, many extras in kitchen. 2 VERY SCARCE DUPLEX-BY OWNER
fireplaces, lge workshop area off garage. HONEST TO GOSH -Tri· 708 Larkspur, remodeled le
17910 1'1AGNOLIA, F.V. LAGUNA VIEW LOTS WALNUT SQUARE 2BDRMoot ..... pltll,ytum, 40x90 2547 Iris $15,<XXI % p.raae. Yrly S 2 5 O .
40x90 2559 Iris $15,~ Couple only. G?r.-0477.
Beautiful H&F pool. Call for appt. P1rx nxcr-upfK'r. Prime lo. ready to move ln. Shutten, catlon. J\1akr.-money here! beautiful new kitchen, baUt
OWNER, La Lfuda model, 4.
BR, 2 BA. 3 car gar .. 1 sty,
fplc, air, $43.000 968-&152.
Huntington a..ch
25x.100 Fern & Catalina S2.000 Lido ISie
EMERALD BAY LOr HOLIDAY SPECIAL ________ , LINDA ISLE -$245.000 $4.1,000. • carpet. Open sun 1-5.
Luxurious custom-built 4 bedroo1n home on ~ $66,500. 673-l65S: 675-7616-
1U'l !!mtirald Bay $90,0CO WINTER RENTAL: UnUI ror '°"' A horn•" call' Juoo 301h 1973 4 BR. deo,
lagoon. Hu ge famil y rn1 w/wet bar, forinal "'-•~e!elrf,
1 1
,C.:.•:.:•c.t•::..:.M;.:;'°;;;';;;o ____ _ dining rm , game r1n & 41h baths. Protected ~ 1·
patio, pier & slip for up to 65' boat. Built· No Snow!
Bill Grundy, Realtor 31,-s BA . $450. per n10. OR t
YA NO DOWN 125 Ba~t6r:.· Beach LAST CONDOMINIUMS -:: t"iJiri'A~'rr'
S<!tltt .,.,.. a11 buyers 000"-Ocean viow • $31,900 PHASE THREE • MH3lO •
in vacuum. Impressive 2-story entry. $32 800 If you need 3 bedrooms, a
' family n>0m and want 1
Sl.00 moves you ln! B1g 4 Ne BNch BR. 2 BA -priced below Large 2·Sty. 4 BR & den on e No CloM"I Costs wpot't mkt. $28,950. X) n 1 ID-1% lots. Sliding doors from , BIG CAl'IYON COUNTRY CLUB
Beauliful near-ne\v 4-bedroom residence in
this exclusive area surrounded by elite B. C.
Country Club. Sunken conversation area in
living rm. Lge dining rm, fam rm with frplace
& many extra features. Vie'v o[ area & golf
course. Priced right at $119,000.
LIDO ISLE FAMILY HOME
Spacious 41h bedroom 3 bath home with gate
to storage area for your boat. Immaculate
throughout. Lovely private patio for family
fun. 40' Lot , street to strada. Near good
beach. Owner wil l help finance. $79,500.
THE "BLUFFS" -$58,000
Popular "E" plan in choice end location with
terrific view overlooking park. 3 Bdrms fam
rm & 2~ baths. Private court-yard ~ntry.
Lge rooms. New paneling in family rm new
pairfl New cptng to be installed. '
540 VISTA GRANDE OPEN SAT 2-5:00
4 &>drooms, 2~ baths, large dining room, but ~ want
fa mily room. self cleaning to pay $27,950, )'OU should
oven, flreplace, Swim Pool see this newly listed Costa
540-1720. 1.1esa property. Cose to all
TARBELL
2955 Harbor. eo.sta Mesa
MERRY CHRISTMAS
To All Of You
From Al) Of Us
CORBIN ·MARTIN
Re1ltors 644-7662
3036 E. Const Hwy.
Corona del ti.1ar
WESTCLIFF
Warm traditional 4 Bdrm. •
21h balh home, In xlnt
neighborhood. Features
us<'<l brick frplcs., paneled
fan1lly rm. Immaculate!
20x40 Pool. Ollered at
""""'~ .... shopping. Has at1tomatic garage door
opener and a patio with bar-.
IHI-Lovely ....,.. -fireplace. Sa! it .:ion. Hrnn.
What They
Left Behind
Is Your Find
door/outdoor entertainment den to sundeck. Bltn., island • frff Upgrade (•rpet WATERFRONT -PIER &
home. Bcnut waterfall & type kitch. Carpe'1ng, • lmmedl1te Po.....ktn FLOAT • 3 BR. formal din·
fishpond, cov 50·x.U· paUo, drapes. No better buy in • $1000 MoY9I You In ing rm. 2 bathll. w/w crpt.,
aprin1den frnt & rear, Jrg all the "village." !WpL, dbl ~early
kitch/fam rm combo, wtw MIS&ON REALTY 494-0731 Santa Ana Fwy. to Culver, right about JAi ~~ u~ Fu.Gi mo. S:
""" •.~:!"'th· dbl IV· VA Lido Isle mile to Walnut (lat road on left), left 1 mile pets. Pele Blrfttt RWty . paymts >CN an rent. See 1.;;=...;.;.;.;;,. _____ , to 'Walnut Square"; or San Diego i;· to 6G-4351
today! * Oloice * cut left bo 3
I W Nord comer iol 5 Bdrms., ver, a ut miles to Walnut, t to WALK to Water on all. 1 Br
f, 31; bath> + clin. rm. + "Walnut Square" or call 714/SSl-4041. Bach $9.i 1 er dplx vu $125. -2 Br hse $115. Util pd. -·~·n C = lge. '"ndeck . .,,,soo. Ront..t.Houn 77f>.7330 ,_..,., 114+-&IOJ • • • •
2 BR +: 2 ba. Quiet end -------. _1n_,_.,_m_te;...;.P.;.r;;.o-<.pe;;;rty.;.:__..;l;;:66 Houna Unfurn. 305
QUICK CASH ~!' ;i~,,;,t"""'"' priced I ---]jieJ TAX SlifoLIJ~rTs
Your equity in 24 hours. Call LIDJ~w:'AL TV · $639 ~f for Immediate appointment. 32 UNITS CALL 96S-4456. I ;"~';';;;v;••;Ufdo=i:;, NB~~•::73-:..1300=J!N~,.~w~port~~lo~o~c!!h___ 1395 M
••.
Nowport BNch $23.000, 3 BR., 2 BA. 15%FOdownR l.NVW"'E'siTd•ORC.M.
Pen. Pt. Oceanfront Available immediately nrte.r Oiance of a lifetime to pur-$4;250 deposit and credit GOOD MGMENT
chase this prime of &lJ check. VA no down payment SaJe/Exchange Up.
EASTBLUFF
OPEN BEAM
Office Opon S.t., Closod Sun. & Mon. rrl'faRUNDY RL TR.
''Our 27th Year" 675-6161
ocean!root locations for the and mini.mum down FHA. 673-5221, 673-767{1, 662379
new year. This channing 3 Freshly painted inlJde, aim .,....,....,..;OwOll"'-'"'Oi/Bd<="---~ BR. 2 bath house overlooks new carpets, modem built-lncfuatri•I Property 1'8
the ocean & harbor en-iM for t.fom. Close to all
Separate house, unusual
large 4 bedroom or 3 &;:tl'n.
Fan1ily 1'00n1 plus lart:e
formal dining roon1. Cotn-
plete privacy wilh enclosed
rear and front yards. Lovely
garden. Available Dect!mber
15. No pets. $475 per monlh. can 673-6568 or 546-36..118.
Season's GrHtlng1
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Road * 4 UNITS * tranee. A ,.... U.ting at ohopplng Md scboolL * SAN DI EGO *
$110,00:H Industrlal bklg. $125,000 On.
to our many landlords &:
tenant•. both present &
prospectivt'. We v.·ill be
closed Sal, Sun &. Mon.
Open Tues., Dec. ~th.
rested & ready to give you
our peraon1d Jlel"Vice thru ma.
"Ov 1oo1c· B'-C C I Near Tov.n & ColDltry in er 1ng .. anyon ountry C ub'' Orange. Big 3 BR. 2 ha. NEWPORT CENTER, N B. 644-4910 owner'• w/frpl + 3 2-BR.
Gener•I General -GEM .
1610 W. Coast Hwy., NB.
$24,000, 2 BR., 1 BA. REALTORS 640-4623
HARBOR View Homes•
popular Monaco 2 BR +
Total $506,000. Prime loc. a>,800 Sq. Fl. Triple ·net
lease. Prine. only. Owners
646-0330. P. 0 . Box 409,
Corona del Mar, Cal. 92625.
den. All extras. Immed. Mountain, O.S.rt,
Occup. Fee land. Open l~ Resort 174 :lrl4 Port Provence Pl. 1-5: 1-.::::::=c;.. ____ !!;
ALA Ront1l1 e "5-3900
LANDLORDS!
NEWPORT DUPLEX
3 B<lrms. down. 2 up. Shag
carpeting. frpll'. in 101\•C'r.
Nicl'ly dC'COra ll'CI u p I• er
uni!; dishwasher & buiJt.inM.
$66.000.
Little doll house all pol.Wied WALK TO SHOPPING
& shined. Fantastic used Lrg DB Pool & st1ndeck. 3
brick fireplace. Plenty or BR + ore or den + 360 aq
land here to grow your own ft encl pa!in . All ter1n1. ~--------1 644-6249; Eves. 644-0396.
3 Br., 2 Ba In Harbor
SKI OIALET Available Dec. 21-Jan. 15 \Ve Special ize In Newport
Beach • Corona rlC'I Mt.r e vl'~etablcs and fruit. Beat J. L. YOUN G REALTY, ~~~==="---For Information an'ct location
upper bay area. Pay just 847-1216 or 842-8540. R-2 two, 2 Br home&-both of these FHA k VA homes,
4 BEDROOMS
FAMILY ROOM
POOL ~:1:.er mo. on this VA Balboa l1land · redecorated, both w/frpl~. contact -
1rg lot. Quiet nbrbd. Nr. KASABIAN
Call: 67:1-3663 675-8886 Eve.~.
associated ..
BROKEllS-llEAl TORS•
?02!. W ll<1lboa 67].]66]
~jl;JISIMlll OLDER & charming 3 Br, schools & shppng. Excellent ~. y •••--••• l~~ ba, new ,crpt, fl'eshly irlCC?t'l\e. "3.500. 642.0096. RMI E1t•te 96~
Realtors 545-8491 painted. Owner, 61l-l488. BY Owner· 3 Br, 1 Ba, food FAMOUS Dean Garden
Open Ews Corona del Mar · yd, oov patio, $750 dn. Home. "A" Model w/pool.
,_c;.n __ ••-1-1 ------Ge-"'-'-1-1-----SAN CLEMENTE !!!'W.:z:iW·500
• m-ll03. = 0wnor. !1611-1622 or
i iiiiiiiiiii $675.0CO or new liltingl on ln. BY owner -The Iarg~t, '1rv""1,,.='------
MACNAB
IRVINE ________ .... ______ _
FINER HOMES
"May the spirit of Christmas always fill
your heart and niay the New Year bring
peace to live and grow in faith, love and
harmony, each with the other."
And on ce agaln , may we personally, from
the bottom of our heart& thank our wonder.
ful friends and clients in the Newport
Harbor Area.
JOHN MACNAB
SHORECLIFFS -VIEW
Custom built. 4BR, 3 bath. Magnificent liv·
ing room . Wet bar. Gourmet "kitchen. En-
closed patio. Wine storaRe. 3000 sq. fl of
elegant living. Elaine Svedeen 642-8235.
(U12)
FURNISHED BAYFRONT MODEL
8 4 new Baylront Homes! Bayfront
lots available for your own crea·
lion (50x l00) from $130,000. Homes
from $236,350 fee land. 45' slip privileges.
OPEN DAILY -1653 Bayside Drive. (U 17)
BAYCREST BEAUTY
Ivan Wells designed & built. Tropical para·
dlse. 3 large BR's, S baths. Hideaway loft.
2-story tall llreplace. Handyman's garage.
Move-in condition. Joyce Edlund 642-8235.
(UO)
TURTLEROCK PRESIDENT HOME!
4BR, FR, DR BeautlM home -gteat
VIEW! Extra laree lot -end of cul-<le-sac!
Professionally decorated and landseapedl
Laszlo Sharkany 644-6200. (U16)
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Executive home. 3BR. 2 bath, DR. formal
' entertaining, garden kltcl!en, private patio.
· LU!b landscaping. Fee land! Joyce Edlund
I I
,2-8235. (UIS ) ...
[Irvine I
••• o...rom. 141·1211
1"4_"4_
come propertietl Sharp JD nJcest. I ea s t e:xpen&ve. j ;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; =hA:eu!~~~ :fM:;.~bm~~ GOLDEN GLORY
que combination of 9 ml-OCEAN View _ Nf!'W CUltDm Yoo'D step lightly on the
talll: I a r g e oommercial home. 4BR. ~ Fam. & lovely Cold ll\I&' carpeting s~ and others. Call d1nlqi rm. CplJ:, drps. thniout tb1a 4 bdrm., famll,y
67";)-7225. lDdlcpd $52.000. 646-5516. rm. borne. E n t er ta I n
C formally In the dlotlng rm.
~ j on the OJYered pat I o . ii F....ioln Volley or .-.lax uoond the fitt pit
a:Vt ~~ ~~~%.~• ;!~ IOO,.ooo. red h•111
lUP>!IDIA•r °" "~' cOlwttl co. Tiburon condominium and LAGUNA keep him a.. • pet. Total
exterior maintenance, total
electric bltlns &: air-cond.
Choice reaa.les are now on
the market. 1 to 4 Bdrms.
Quick poueuk>n. VA/FHA,
Brand new 3 bedroom, view
home with nice upgraded
features. The only one re-
maining of the 1972 homes
built by a realiable locaJ
builder. Call .,,..,.,.
Mlisa>t.Uf OJ ntl COl.wal. CO.
NEWPORT
IEACH
Mqnificent 4 bedroom, two
lftOry with c o.u n t I e 11 I y
apcraded feat\lftl. A pro.
fes.sionally deoorated hOme,
m>' ot prestige llvlrv. Appt. only. call 875--72'25
'UISll>IAIY OJ tHf: COlwtU. CO,
CORONA
DEL MAR
Thia bet.utlflll 4 lwboo!t-... -·
home on an out.tandlrw cor-
M' lot ta now cmq $IU50.
Tbe tel!en ,,. .. -and are wry motl\l&tad, Call ~
•• W'SfOtAIY Of lftf COlWIU. CO.
* DUPLEX * So. of Hwy. 2 A: Ofn plu• now
2 OR. now beina bull!. A
t'Clll good deal for •
MORGl7tt:eAL TY
·~ 67U459
l'or thll 1--Pl. "" the ... 11111 !'lnchar.
t
5%. From $21,000. 1 .. ...,_.,.,..,,..,,...,...,.
lorwln ~ty Inc. Sell ""' old lllut1. new atun.
S~\\.cil~-4'f-2fs•
The Ptmle wltli tit• Boi/f./n Choe/de
SIDMAS
11 1111'
C I 8 T E S
I 1· I I I
IC 1 S H E C
I I I I I
I N E B 6 1 N Clwrtlwd: "I-don't go ~;1·~~1 ;1 ~;1 ;1 ~ ~ ~.!. ia;: f~~ -twenty bucb to take • ~...,..R..;E,.E;;..,;.Y..;,A,..;B;...--1 girl to a gam. only to ... _ .... I _._I' _..I _._I ..J..l -1 ~"f.. another guy -
DEE KAP v"'""""''"..,.,. _ _. ~ ... C-lo!o .... dt....J." ;,".l.i r I I" I I ""' -to:!""'..::~ .......
•t-:m~~ .. r r r 1· r 1· I' 1· r r· 1
•;;.. I I I I • I I I I I I
SCRAM-LITS ANSWIRS 'IN CLASS .. CATION 900
' "
•
Highl.andl. 2 blkll from
Mariners Elem. 2040 Ber,yl.
548-7020 By Owner. Call for
appt.
•-=:=• 1nn Beach Blvd.1 i-1.e.
$180. 644-0>87 & La.r;unn. Ou r Rental Se r-
Real Estate Wanted 114 vice is FREF. 10 You! Try
Nu-View' * Qulc:k Cash * . NU-VIEW RENTALS
\Vlll buy ,YOUr property. AU 673-4030 or 494-3248
caah within 72 hrs, Call
2 BDRM, new crpls, drps,
stove, 1gc fenced yard,
garage. $195. $100. security
deposit. Water pd. fl73-7737
or 64G-88U.
[ Mobile Homes}~ EASl'SIDE 4 Br, 2 Ba, t.rpt, bltns, dfJhwhr, new crpt le
paint. Encl dbl gar. aoae t.o
8chla. No peta. 645--4220.
2 BR. Prlv. patio. Cl~. C'.lole to echla A lhop g.
$1651~ 642-9364 OI' Moblfo-Mobile Homes -· For Solo 125 For Solo 125 3 BR. crp11, drpe, 1p t•nc«I
....._ U-.. 'hm.la CLEAN· COOL ~~Ud, .. • pots ok.
•Ull """' -~ 11unttnaton Beach. L ate model lh40 1 Bdrm ,.1 up 3 Bf home. S235. Elist.lde. SALES & LIASING In one Hoo ·i noest New crpts &: treahly painted.
full lk'ivlce facillt, adult park.~ price & Frplc. DbM pr. 14&-2768
Da ..... r Motor Hames 1erm1. ' BR Newly redeeonoted, ••1111 U0.9110 new' crpt, frplc. Nice yd.
531-6800
FOR Sale. or rent. Starlrzhl Trailer Park, Adltl ,
• 2060 Newport Blvd, CM.
11
8'x42', awntnr, tumJtUTe.
Adlt pk clooe In · -C.M. $7-413lar-.
COLb Mcdsl 24x60 2 br, 2 ba $n; nto. Avail 113. 642-9008
+ den, porch xtru. nr fwy MONTJt;FJ..L() Townhouse 4
A &hc!N, ttduood $all). prln BR, 2 SA. Otlldrtn ok. Club
oey ll.B. odlt Pl<. -7. ~·=Poo="-'-'Cal=l_,,-;;:.::=·--
Trolfor for "'" MPBILE llOM£ • 5,15.8915
Llkt IO trade! Our Trader'•
Pan4lM column 11 #Of J"OUI 5i-,s<1ayous-
Vacandn t'Olt monl)'I Rent
your ............. ....
bldg .. •I<. lhnl • Dally Pilot
Cl.usUted Ad. SeQ lcUe llem.a
-•M60-MllHow!
. ,
• •
_ ... _ -
Office Rental -Unfvm. • Unfum. MS """" Aph., Apts., A.pit., Fum. w Unfum. '11 Fum. or Unfum.. Fum. or Unfu m . 270 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 $27 -' UP lnti u1il Sbmc J•H~un~ti..~ .. !~°';";aa;:•;c~h;;;:;lc;;.os='a:..;;M.;::•::•:...----iiGatiiiiiwiiiiiaiil iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii0ii•ii•iioliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '""'"""' ..... 2333 i.; -Huntington -h Huntintt-Baach Newporl Baach N-rt Baach o... """" OIM. """"" MME I.ARCE l BR Dupla. cpta. ;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;; Su1li' II. Pti. m..&:m or
I -Di ::iiit~.,NCY -blt·lnr. waaher, • VILLA MARSEILLES I 615-64<4.
114D1>1 -·· tllhwshr ~it~.t&'-No SPACIOUS 1 & 2 B•DROOM APT. HIJMTlNGTOft BEACH'S RNEST L• PRESTIGE o»nc>::s: •~ 1..,.,!"-~s"'"•''!"~ ... !" .. "'"~.a ..... 1~m.!,:::, ~ Fum~1f L'fv~ ~ ........ Coantrv Estate Livina I' 1ie ~~~: .. ,:""';:.~ =:
I' 3 Bloclc1 to -E. --· l!lt-1193. Dishwuber color coordfDated ~an~ • ......-llUJ "'& y l 1617 WESTCLIFF
New crpts, """'· 3 BR, '""" HunHntt-Baach ~~!.hog Cllll'OC ~:~-breakfast~ 2 Acres. Beaulltul~art-lilte surroundings. '"" "1· 11. Cpt, "" cond.
d"' nn dbl wuu~ UJbUn ~ IW~ S k p I Spa S · h F t · b. Atnll«' 1>ki:, 11111. j<U\llor. . .... b•"• cn·va·-1·~ed pauo • p, .... ·--·-··r. un •• .. • g C' oun ""'' ·--·St Ht 0·1 1uu 5 "' .....,.. ""4U ~ • ... · · • 1g Baunll(IU'dn~·r •l(M. ~1·5032 ~ -" •· ~·" ~ED. OCCUPANCY btf.;, rick Blll'B-Ques -large heated poo s • SpaclDUS Rooms • parate Dining 5.16-8334 or 5311-8188 New.3 Br apts S2:JO. mo. e Walk in Closets OFFlCE or desk ,:pace Nr. 2BR. e1ec bl tin R/O, FA ht, ~ p.r&&e, ctsbwsht &: al. Air conditioning. San Olf1t<l f'txoeway, La&:um
..,,,., c:rpts 1: drna. dbl pr, 334 Portland Cln;le, H.B. 3101 So. Bristol St., Sent• Ana 5S7-l200 e Home-like Kitchens &: C3binets Niguel. 831-t«X>
fl!YK.'ed &r la.nd5caped. Xlnt 536-lld COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. l BDRM. Unfum. $165. Furn. Sl85. lor s olfil't' suitt'S. S315
loc. $200/mo. ACT : J~!!".'~!!!l!~~~!!!!!!~J MANAGING AGENT 2 BOl{M. Unfurn. $185. Furn. $215 . t\dnnn I'mt \\"i kil,_.h bu.th
96H4'l1 •• 5'(H)03. DUPLEX 3 BR, 2 BA. ""'1,y TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, 11->Ba., 1400 sq , IL $ ll<J Rochesu,., CM.""""""·
3ljR. 2BA. elcc R/O, FA ht, patoted. Blt·inL "11 fDcd •~ F 36S Unfurnished $200. for 1'ust Q littte 1401 400 SQ >"T N••'I""' 81"1, w/w e<pl• 6 d'l'I, dbl g"', yard. Clilldren I< .... o1t.1_...,..,_••-"""----3AO-Apt. Unfvm. • • • • ""'"" Cocta M..._ C...,..
fn<d. ldocpd. Xlol loc. l190/mo. 11582 Roanne,~~ -C -ALL UTILITIES FREE & •"c. M2-ml.
$DI/mo. AGT: 962--44n or H.B.. Apt A. m.tT8S ~1• 1'iiootiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii \Valk to Huntington Center Living at Oakwood is $1 million in recreation . 11;ROFESSIONAL Sulie ~
546-8103. Newport IMch QUIET 1 bd .,.c... Quiet mid-I• Adults, No pets Swlmming pools. Health clubs. Saunas. Ten-· 10 i;:o. 111~11 •t Bolsa auca.
VACANT-Prestige 3 BR. 2 dle a&e tesiant on I y . UIDDftll f'Drnlt' nis courts. Billlards. Indoor golf driving range. 11.B. SlT:itmo. S4&-ll21.
BA. shag crptg, fnod. yard. NEWLY deccr -3 BR. 2 BA. Downtown. 51\-.mf, nAllDUll aRUntl LA QUINTA HERMOSA Sand Volleyball. Whirlpool Baths. And lots Bu•ineu R•nt•1 445
t.1arina High di.st. SDI mo. S\\'edhh frpl., 1 blt ooran. Huntf,_._ 8Mch more. There's a resident tennis pro and an 111Hl136-Yeuty. Oilld Ok. $250.., ___ ... ._.-_.___ OFFICE STORE ~ r-Furnished & 16211 Park.side: Lane, H .B. activities director who plans l~e Sunday 4 Br. Condo. Crpts. drpa. ' $145 -$165 Unfvm•-L-• b h d b rb f\;f'\\ port &r: Bay Center a'.52 bltna. refrlg, DOOl A clubhse. Bacbelor I.: 1 BR. pa.Hos. ...,_ rune es an a ecues. Nt'Wport Blvd., Cl.t. UtU.
1225. 5411-l<m: I l[•J lrplc's, prlv . ......,, • From $1• II> $215 mo 714: 847-5441 Slartingaslowas$140.Singles,oneandtwo-pd. Pkog. &16-1252.
Irvine ~,_,_. Divided bl.th A lob of b&drooms, furnished and unfurnished. Sorry 1400 SQ !"'T, Nt' San Otego 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;; . . closet&. Rec ball, pool '-B11c:Mlon e l Bdrms (4 blks. So. of San Diego Frwy. on Beach, no children or pats. Models open daily 10 to t-'rwy at Crov.n Valley off 2 ~.2Ba.Alr/oond .•. $265 C' ~~ 1T~ 2Bdrmse31Wrms 1 blk. \V_ o n Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane}. 7.l lveblg ... atOakwood. ~~n~~Lagul\ll Niiuel.
3 BR.. 2 Ba. aJr/cood .. $285 Apts. Fum. 340 -Lo. n b1k w. °' 1Ylt.,. 2 Full Batht Oakwood Garden Apartmenta -3 BR. 2 ba ..••••••• $3251315 Bea&, I blk N. of Slater). Apt Unfu 365 .Ant U f 365 lndu1trl1l R.nt1I 450
3 BR. 2 be.. Atrium .... $340 &..ltJO• P•nlnsut1 80-18t8 Master size bedroonu w/ ~-·-__ m __ .___ :.i:..:. " urn.
3 BR. 2 Ba. Atrium ···• $365 MEN • Small beach hotel. high beam ceilings, large Huntington Belch Newport S..ch Newport Beach 670 SQ. Ft. 3 phase !>\''!'. $95.
4 BR. 2~ ha ........... 1425 • $25 Wk &r Up On Ocean Apt.a $85/mo. Rooms living room w/gu or ---"---------------1rvineand16th l2SOSq. ft . llO&D>pwr.
6 ~ 3 ea. tam. nn. · · '4'ffi ~e1~k!': ~~~d sn.oo!wk. 536-7006. wood buminc ~pJaee. NEW Am.! 645-0550. 642-a110 tt.R~~RfeN~-=:
• Call ..,.,...,., • MOBILE home, 2 "'" 11> ha. Conu veklolt-~~~ ~~..... HUNTINGTON OCEAN and Apls., "'"" C.M. W-1>185
cozY •-• I BR, close to swim pool, ""''· Adult pork, o ~. ~ pa-~ ts. ~11116 tio6. 2 swUnmh>g poot.. BEACH HARBOR VIEW Furn. or Unfu•n. 370 1~ Rentals Wanhd 4611 ocean. 213/943-2928 or 14«13 nQ pe · sauna. ~ation facili· JD.
Manedta, La Mirada. L~• BMctl tics. Security guard. No 2 Bedrnom.. n44 ''Wher• Congeniality Costa Mew ,-PROF 9.1>man 15;!, no pets, 2
CoroNI ct.I •r BAO!•• bea~ nK n « Col pets. AJI Utilities Paid Prev•Hs'' BR aptZ.ndA~D/condM. ~ ha0""'
'! 1.i \1-I11·ll d.
---I \r ·1ill111· ·-... ,..,, • ......,........., Elegant apartments designed Und.r N•w ~ yn, · oor. ..... ve
"SINCE 1946" 2 BR., 1 BA. Util Pd. PX> tv. 1435 N. Omt -Open Models Open JO tll 7 pm ROEVTEIRRE62D 1111?1 "''ith a Master's touch, su-Mananement Hohtls, Motels 410 NBMlP~~~.~~~~ rm(t~6 i.t.WeatemBankBlds. mo. Yearly. Married Cpl. Ews.6'75-4367,494-2508 -p W CM perbhousesecurity, exclu-• .....
Untventty Parle., lrviDe Rers. Avl now. ~ nee .u-mrson ay, Carpet and Dr8.pes slve Versailles Oub and CASA V!Cl'ORL\ \VEEKLY rates· Walerbeds. I =pm="l=,_"77-..,--,---,1
Deys 552-7VOO Nights Costo u---Neiwport Beach nr Herbor Bhd. & ~~ ~o..~-pool wilh unique Aquabar, 1 &: 2 Br. Fum I:. Uni urn Color TV, Kitcbem. 1 block SERIOUS. older s tudent ~ ~ ~ ... JUI,. rou11tains and formal gar-Carpets, drapes, Dl\\t, TV to beach. Newport Beach Jookin& for 1 Br or bacll. C---~ _._ Oro 4 BR. 2 bL, 2 car encl Adams Gerden Htting. Con-dens. All Pftl"I: Of the South ant. Pool etc. Come By & TraveLodge, 6f2.t252. 1 1~,~,.~-~N~•or~OCC~~61&-'7234~~~·~ •MVi ..__ u. ,_...,, ,.,...._, Avail. I I • ......._ r--·r .,___ .......... lnquir(' about our ri.love·ln 3 BR. 2 ha. bonus rm-•. -..... .,.. .. i· w,Nl<U~-bOW. CJll!: ftoll)70 ven ent to •1'99 -.......-~ s ....u=I a...,.. ..... ,ent Allo-...·ance. 525 Victoria St. ROOMS $18 wk up w/ kit.
2 BR. 1 ~ ha. -·-·-····· $225 AU. UTILITIES PAID 3 BR. 2 bWu:mi&bed Steps to trltMhJ pi-ctint.r commwli~. t ,. __ , __ ~1 "'" ~70 $30 v.ic up apts.. Qilldren &: ~ 2 BR. 11.4 ba. Ait' Cond .• 1$265 Compare before )'OU rent ocean • •• • • •· •• • • • • • • • • S775 -·• No Peta.. 1 Bedroom/studios from $195 a mu uw • ....,, -u-u-o;;:r • pet section. 2376 Newport , ..
2 BR. 2 a. ............. !300 Custom •-. reatur!Dg: 3 BR. 2 Ba ...... · .... • S28S 1 '!!!!!)!!!!!!!!!!!!)!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! the YIUA YORBA 2 ll«h'oom from l'ffi Fountain Valley Blvd. c.M. 54H7>5. ,. * 'W
3 BR. 2 ba ......... $3251360 e Spacious kitchen with in-2 BR. 1 Ba, Pen1n • • • •• • $250 I= Time To ..._... Up Models open 9 A.M til dusk 415 I ~------~~ .t BR. 2 ba. Broadmoor S385 direct lighting We Have Winter Rentals ...,,.., "'\~lir SHAKEWOOD Guest Hom. II
4 BR. 2 ba. fan1 rn1 ,,,, $400 • Separat€" dln'g area WDl Take Students van. Your apartment in a French 842 .. 9622 ~-~~ Largest 2 BR's in to1vn:10349 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. Penon•ls S30
8 red hill i ~~:~;:~orago AW~~ ~ .. mJ.~7p::.~~ff;;! (=:~~&·~;a~ ON THE BLUFFS B:~:~'§:~~: * Pri••:,Room * ;t:~o~'F.i:~
Malaga, turn right). AT NEWPORT d kl che e 4 Ambulatory Lady or Man • King-sz Bdnns bedrooms. den, 2 baths, I iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiii anc-e power ! ns Good, nutritious Food. belle!' Profealonal advice
REALTY • Pool • Barbeques -SUI'-patio, plctutt-book kitchen. ON BEACH' F N 1 Blvd tum t Swirn'g f"OOla • Outdoor Nict', cheerful atmosphere. on life. Lie. RM!adinp da.lly. Uni\'. Park Center, Irvine rounded with plush land· Fittpiace and other RfUSes. • 1-~:,itaiw~~d c'i bJ~ BBQ's. e lndlv. prlv patios * call 548-t7;;3 * 10 AM-10 PM. 492-9136.
Call An)'tl.me, 833..Q: scaping, From $1$, adult aection. above Po.cific Coast Hwy) to 1 ;-;eC-,Sbag-;c-'~"'P;-'-ts-·..,.,..,.,--49'l-9l34, 312 No. El camtno
Olfice ·boon 8 Aft1 to 6 PM Adult living at its best $29.50 Per Week .t Up. 1 BR. THE VENDOME FROM ONLY $298 entrance. 900 Cggney Lane, Huntington S.ach Real1 San Clemente.
LARGE 1 BR $190 2 BR .l bacbelon. ColO!' TV, Fum. 2 BR 2 BA N ~ ch Ca 92660 1---------Rentals to SM... 430 PREGNANT? Th I nk in i On Major green be It, No Pets maid aerv., pool. The Mesa, 184.i Anaheim Avenue MAKE OFFER ·~ sublease T=ne: ·(n4) &is.ooso. HUNTINGTON Ga t dens Abortion? Know all the
H.ancl'Yel' model, 3 br, 1% 365 W. Wilaon &U-1971 415 N. Newport Blvd., N.B. can Mn. Phillips 540-0781 of 2 BR., 2 BA F\lm. Apt. Apts. Heil at Boise Otica. LUA'URY 2BR in Paricwest facts first! Qi.II We Line,
ha. Cathedral cell For 6t&-9681. Parlc-Lik• Surroundi"I Covered Parking. Large !-,;-;;,...==.-.==-,-846-1323, Comp&ZT -. See Complex, Irvine. Tenru.. 3 24 hnl, S<l~2'Z
le.,. uotll S<pt.• Bu•. LIVE LIKE A KING 2 BR.-• dupl<X • 1 blk to QUIET DELUXE Heated Pool. S.U<IU w * 2 WEEKS FREE * what you'"' m;,,;0g. Fr. pool~ Jacunl-<xtra -rm. Co<>
m-1010 ask for" R.M. Can-beach. Yrty er wtnttt $225 1, 2 & 3 BR APTS Recree.tlon Room. Vista del Mesa Sll> -$2i0. Male ~._3....;__mi to UCI S98 ~. ~·e 11 ; "'~ """'-552-1835. At Budget Prices! or IZO mo. 131 46tb St. S<e Pvt P•OO. * Hid Pool HUNTINGTON ADULT GARDEN HOMES DELUXE, Apt -prlv. patio. + elec. Umwu. '" """""'L .........,.. '°"""'""'· A ....
AVAIL 1/15 • 4BR, fm1 dln FURNISHED -Nov 2'-• er phon e Nr. Sbop'g *"Adult! only IRVINE AVE. AT MESA ~1usic, 6 pools Muna, tennis 552--ST.ll !.k?".,,J' adoptions ref. AP·
nn, tam nn, 2 BA, Cl'pts, UNFURNISHED ~· AOO FUm Bach. Apts PACIFIC Mow in w/deposits only f130. Spaclowl Pool side ROOMMATE needed; am. ~ 66-4436..
drpl:, bltinl. FA ht. abag, 2 SEACLIFt Maner Apt •. Martin'-Apts. m OCEAN Ave.: H.B. 1 Br. $100 2 Br. UX) Bungalow $150. 846-0259. hse/2 BR apt. by Jan. 15, PALM &: CARD READINGS
car pr. S395fmo. ~2699 * POOLS Bachelor II.PL Util Pd. "I-,Cn4l 536-1487 ~&:Night Security, Pool, 1 BR., 1 blk to beach. Shag Apply 1782 Ocean Way, Telll ~-. Pftlent •-Future $148.50. FUil. 1!i25 Placen11a lm Santa Ana Ave., CM ~10 am-6 pm Daily F tains. Rec Bldg I Laguna. r-.,,• • 3 BDRM. 2~ BA, bonua nn. * ENCLOSED &aa. boot dis-Mgr Apt ll3 6t6-5M2 wn-• ro. OUD • ' ... crptg, drps, lndry fac. $135. ~==....,......,=o;-'-::;::;; (213) 694-1350 F\zlly Uc. $360. mo. Villai.::«' Ill. GARAGES Avt!. ,.... 8 our =~==--~~ A.Lo .. ~ exercise nn, billiards, col· 1'.12 14th St. 53&--0352. G•r..-s for Rent 435 ALL'OHOUCS Anoo.,ymoua.
645-'996 . * CONVENIENT ~= 3BR. 2 Ba. lllealiBJIU 21 ""•"M!'!'!!'OVE~~IN~TO~D~A~Y!"'•!! ::,'~, ~ .. ~c:.'."'& =L~a~gu~n:•~::a.~a~c~h:::::: NEED 10 reot big sgl ,..dou-""°"" S<>-7211 or wrii.
La!UNI Niguel TO All. BEA.CHES turn. Monthly ar yrly. 'IWO • 2 Bdrm .••.•••• $185. $139 A MO. prt patio or deck. 545-4.'i.'i.5 llEART or Laguna, 1 blk. ble prage. W1ll pay S.15 P.O. Box 1223, Carita Mna.
YEARLY I~. NEW2Br, 2 FROM $1~ MONTH 557-l.8M Beautiful apts. w/private Spae.. 2-.1: 3 Br. in 4-p.lex. Yurly-Beyfront 10 beach. 1 bdrm. apl ., mo., 1 yr in advance-SWINGING SINGLES
Somo.. eai•"1 ~,,,,....Cour!le. • S.100 ADULTS PLEASE 2S900cc/n""1roooo _!1yl,""°utmil •1~cts.I. ~t1oob:...~,.,.e:+i~A,du..,._I.,, Several avail. All EX-3 Lovely new unfurn. opts. adults, no pets, Sl74 rum .. ,6*m0~=:;·==--•:;; CalJ J l5.19-'31;,8 P·"'-o1<r--..u ... J" .. ~ g ..... " ~ ... 'Iii TR.AS. Pool, rec bldg. Kids 3 &: 2 BR., 2 ha. each. Pier S165 untum. 494-0-151 or Offic• R..,t1l 440 -==,::;o,;;;===~-1
Mew Verd. VILLA POMONA fi75..l24.l. no pe~ ~ 2,!4'· C.M. ~~'r~n ~!i90~~8·~ & Alip. Many extras. In1med. 494-9794. ~~~ 2Pt:rtfJ
PHONE WZ.2015 OCEANFRONT. 3 BR, 2 BA. blk w. ot Beach Blvd. on occupancy. Newport IM1ch CORONA DEL MAR 53&-3344 , ......
*" IMJ\IEDIATE Occupancy (l760 Pomona Ave.) fplc. Call Bing, d ay 1 More Room-Less Money Slater. 9fi8..'l5l.O ol' 847-4260. Call: 673-3663 673-8086 Eves. Approx. DlO IQ. ft. otfke
-3 BR, 2 ha, S250-Opttoo 1~~~~~!!!!'~~-!~833-~l~49l~mdC:::~"""~·_!!6">-"949~~ roME ,.. a ,.al -*LA PARISIENNE* •pace '""""' to your Soclal Clubs Jn
-'bl• J Loclren Bea~ I' nfv 365 •M• Like •-· to a home * FRESH AIR 2 BR 2 BA Furn & u·•·-"'"""· Fltl1 -IY bl ... 1Ult, EVe.; 83&-&4L • ..,, WEEKLY-MONTHLY Apt. U m. ~~Sl40tmo. 2BR. 1% BA. Walkl"-~toT>-.... · · ... w ... w/amplepatklng. Oon'tBcAkme .:::;::.:...;==:.=.;=..o""---1 Eucutlw Sultn la -'*' tlos & ~ .IX"'"'" $190 & $225. Fireplace. llld. Ask for OuUtine For the llol~! w-rt S..Ch &.lboe PenlntUll :.... ~-1!,. ~.!:..:.'" ~~-Lrg 2 & 3 BR. Apts. New))' J1?<>L Adu~,....,.. 80\'D REALTORS 61!>-6930 DISCOl/E ·--..--No ....... llML ·--·--~ -~ •-·~ / -· •-.. ~-EASTBLUFF Cost4,.,..-M.n DELUXE Duplex, 2 Br., 11it oo WillOll St., W. of Harbor -.. ~ ~iiii.1i; Across from Golf Course New Waterfront Offices Discovery
Separate hoWle. u nus u a I 6ft.2'11 Ba., BH·tna. car, drpg. 64&-2846 $235. No linglea. no pets. 20C32 Sarti.a Ana Ave. Jn the Wamer meta. n~ 'li3-3ST
larte 4 bedroom o• 3 & den. STUDIOS a 1 BR'S •nclld gar, b1>lc. I"'°""' EXTRA LARGE I BR. $1$. 53&-l'lll. FOR LEASE ll!jl And $300 Mortth TraY9I Famib' room plua iarJ:e Joc-e FREE lJnma rm. No pefa. 838-«149. Uttla pd. Refrtg, range, cpl, I '1J1G=~~2~B~R.-1"dec-,---..... -Luxw-y Bayfront Apt.s. ~ Pl'1me Location
ina1 dln1na room. Complete • FREE Utflltles YOUNG muple wanted to =ta. 1:ant ~ :a..= crpb, bltiM. Near 'beach.. 1 A 2 BR.s. $350! to $5.50 .... I & 341 Bayside Dr., N'pt 9eech
privacy wtth enclosed rear • F\lll Kltcben rent a ~ 1 BR apt, on Walk to shops 1887 Mita. 00 pets.. $150/mo. George Wll iamson . ,.-BW Grundy JUtr. 675--filfil
and front yards. LaYely the Pen., $125 mo. 613-0172. MomoYia. 645--426'1: .~...-i.=~~~-~--RHltor I ~-----;;~;;I -· Avoil•ble o.e.m .... e Heated Pool . . . c..-. dol Mar * SHADY ~ ~ • POOL * NEW 1rg 2 BT unrum apt. * 548-6570 * 11 DESK apace avollable ISO 15. No pets. $475 per mooth. • Lawxlry ~acili~ ~ .-1 lk H ~ Rooms 400 mo. Will provide tumlture can 673-6568 or 546-3688. •TV Ir maid"" avail • Adults Poolside $140 up :r•u, wa to un 7I 'n I-=~=~===;,:-I---------at S5 mo.. Anlwerlng mervlct
• ....._ __ Service e Oilldren next bkdt Cente-r. $160 mo. 7 t : YES!! \VE TAKE PITS!! $80. PER MO. Sharp 3 all ble ~~Ave r~ ...... ~ 111 'E. 22lxl St., CM 6'2--3645 823-6417 2 Weeks Free Rent too! av a ' ..,.. .r.,....,.~ .,
SET SAIL
TA.HIT>
Grand 3 ?-1aated Schooner,
CTeW le guest sh. U)ll.I. •
(213) 371-123'
VIEW ... 2 Bedrooms, NEW apt.a tor adult!: only. ~ 13 .. ha 2~B~R-, ~ .. ~, .. -,~, .. -,-.-.... ~ .. ~,io-, Pool, Rec. Bldg, dshwhr. BR Coudo_ with 2-24 yr Laguna Beach, 494-94616.
2 Bath, den, yearly Balco~ fireplaces, be~-~ Sl40 up spac 2 br 1~ crpta &: drapeL $140. 1503 2 BR. $200. 1 BR. $160 old bachelors. 557-2189 DESK space available S50
lease of $375. Realtor, ~~·.;.~ ~: t;;l.~~-~~ .. = Alabama. Apt. c. Sllhm9. VlSt'A DEL MESA 545--4855 or 536-5029. :°Ss ~ ~ ~~ I ~~~~~~~~~'
644-7270 Oon building with pool. ON TEN ACRES 2212 O>Dege, No. S ... 646-4273 2 BR Townhouse, wallher/ SEACLIFF Manor Apts. 1 Vacancies CORI money! Rent avo.Uabl.!. 17875 Beach Blvd. I:
Fum & unturn.. ~cheJor &:: Apts. turn./unturn. Lease 2BR. stove, refrig, crpbl, dryer. Patio, frplc, bltins, BR. $143.50 Pool. Crpts. your house. apt., 5tore flunUngton Beach. 642-4321. a..t _.,......
OCEAN Vic~·. CHU Dt'., 3 1 bdnrul. from $135. 140 W. Fireplace / priv. patios. drp& &: util's. A<llt pk. Sl.S5 mo. 962-6846. drps, bltns, garb. di!pl. 1525 bldg., etc. thru a Dally Piiot I immmmm~~~
BR., 2 ba's.; dbl. garage; Wilso81n (Just \Vest of New· Poola Tennis Contn t'I Bkf.lt. $150/mo. 5 S 1 -6 13 4 or 2 BR. Studio. Patio, yard, :!:d:=un~.ves4s-~. alx>ut 0 1LMHied Arl. SPll idle hem• Dally Pilot Want Ads havt!' II
carp/drps, rctrlg. Bltn. port vd.) 900 Sea Lan, CdM 8f4..2Sll 839-5266. garage. $150/mo. lnfant ok, now! Call 642-5678 Now! barp.ins galore. Found (fr" Ht) SSO
oven & range. $300 ~~4 El Puerto Mesa (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) NEW 1 & 2 BR'1 from $110 to no pets. Avl. now. 842-4M9. ~~ =· P~~ Apts., Apts.,
GRAHAM Realty 1 BR' $1~&UP $190. Nr. beach&: shop'g. BEAUT. 2 Br, 2 Ba, db: -.Hos, adillts ~nly,-ro'pe1s: Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfum. 370 FOUND male Cerman NEWPORT Shores 2 Br, de n, I--ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 114 E. 2>tb St., CM. poolside nr bch, $155 low ,...... $225 Shephml, b&ondo wlth dull:
2 Bo. pool I< club privL N•. I AIUn)fUtum.lllt&I F, .... n,d. -floor. $350 ... _,. 511HJ137, ._.,_ dep. = Florlda-53&-:tm. ~'li.ai.'"· l, pee mo. l irH~u~n~ti~ngtiiiiion~B~a~·~ch;i;;;;iiiii~H~un~tl~natoniiiiiiiiiB~·~ .. iiiihiiiiiii ~· VHlclnltyt ,-, ' bch. $300. 64&-2218. 1 ne:!a:, plua tpM:ioul !.._~,. SPAClOUS, .t!_ 1:i •=• LOVELY 2 BR apt . Bltns. 2 BR apt. i,s, Nock from ~ <7t'" .. ,.. ..... e, un nii 011
AVAIL Jan. tsth w/leue. 3 Poo & n u,pataln with .,.... en. w/w crpt, .... _ ec .,. .. ..., ttpta, drpl.,or gar, p&tio. $150. ocean. flX) mo. Call Peggy Beach. 891-l&:ll.
BR 2 BA POOl & tenail 1959 Maple Ave., CM trance. $2X> pr month. Both llii ba. Nr frwYI I: llhops. 546-1196 D-5'763 John!lon, 6 4 6-7 711 ar Wack and Cold cocker/collie pl'1~ Ne;, boach. 541r3S8l Al"'..,.... IDr rent :1J'.,.~ ~·.r-No peta. 54Hl93. 1 B•, trplc, encl gar., """"" 675-0098. BRANO NEW w/w1>1to ~. -lr,
LUXURY oceanfront _ New LARGE 1 BR. $145/mo. + ==' E-SJDE 2 br, l'iti be, adult vw. 5'3-4640, (213) 5'13--0665. <2c,B'='R.i=Y"°earty-.c-.-;:Sl;:;B5;c/;:::mo::-. -;;!Ji found vie. Harbor It WU..
blg dramatlc 4 Bdrm.. $450 dep. Carport &: laundry SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 BatbA. townbse. Dw:l patio. 140 aft. Spm. blk to Ocean. pat I 0. QUO VADIS m Wevtnc allvrr ~e cbaia. mo: yrly. 4*-0615. facil. Nr: ftwy & sb>p'g. 998 w/1rpk. CdM Hi&h Sdlool Melody Ln. $165. 548--59116 or 2"BD='R.M""'"de"l'"'ux_e_a_p"'t,-poo....,lslde= G Adul pets. • 645-2"'0'1.
2 & 3 BR. -$275/$150 ~· Apt L, C. M. ~~~~-Av~ · SCB-9695. I tg prden bunplow w/trplc., ,cm.-.:;arage~"·;..,..,,_~"-· -""=....,~ SMALL black male des
Yearly. Walk to beach. . S135 Mo. 2 BR, w w Cl'P , Adult&, $210. MIHl259. 1: wfwhlte n~rir: on chelt
Caywood Realty 548-ml ':R "ff>U~ ~· 1=~ ~~ 1;:~ ~\t!.. ~ ~ :3~~ '1t pets. Levuiwi &Nett 3~~.2 ~ Dll:;e1:; ~;; Luxury GarcMn Apartments ~~a~ ;:us'i,untlngton SL.
BEAlIT w gol.I ~I~ maid serv. util, pb. BCrv., S. of Hwy. S 3 25 /m o. 2 BR. Crpts, drpa. blt..ina. e VIEW e ~)..~~ €~Cs~2-'Jn20 In Huntington S.•ch FOUND ln vicinity Sen~ ~ ~-t:. 557-9-'°9 ~~~ :ivrt~ 2'.J'r6 li'1&-«M8. h Bl ,__ Private patio. Cange. Cou-OCEANFRONT Ir 3Gth WH t Newport l.IRIJIJ ==::....:==-=--,_cc'"=~=o''='~"==~· ~12 bedroonu •ac . luo, plept'cl'd.548-5nI. 2 BR, 2 BA. Le.,.. Matu.c Soni• Ana BACHELOR, 1 & 2 BORM'S Slam<tlo kttteo. Odl a"41
Houtet Furn. or * $25 PER WEEK * carpeta & dl'a~. choice NEW 1 BR xtn.~lg yd. No Adults, m pets. Elevator to kl~tl.b' f115.-.4073.
U f 310 •--"--Le _.... NEW Deluxe 4·Pltx Apl.!!.. l n urn. A 'Up. Pool Ir. maid service. '""""....,... Ille .-/ir. kkla or pets, people beach, Pool, Secwlt.y. 31755 th fo"'OUND buff t'C)lol't'd f<>mllkt
N t 0 • h Kitchens avail. ?-.tot¥1 Tahiti month. Call 673-8550 RL R. prerd. 646-9533. C.oa111 J-lwy., s . 1..iw.1nu. :!r. o..,nc1ta:...t~ri::· ga~~: $135/Month fO $185/MOO She phttd/°'11\t> vicl~
•wpor U91C. t.'Omet' Harbot' & Vicloria. 2 BR. Stove, reMg., frplc, nu e 4,,.2135 e N•. So. ~ .. ~ ~p'g "-•t'.:.., Mt.Ion VltJo. Approx. S or dc<:o IW ' Vk! NEW 3 BR. 1~ ba. Condo. • VJa .,,,., ""'"' "' 6 montha. 586--1&92. ,, * YEARLY & WINTER * NEW 1 &:2 BR's lrom S190 to r. W Cl'Pt'i· w. Dbl, car _g~: cmop., Lido Isle Cn ll 545-Zttt or 642...S702 Enjoy Adult Living Al It's Best! -Finer Homes in Bc11ch Area $210. Nr. beach & shop'g. Adults, no peL S225. 10 to 4, drpa, bllnl $25(1. ~1633. 1----------BLACK A white dog, Ylc
Bill G~m~ 'i:r.Mon~161 ~W,". roth St .• CM, 3~:.e;;~l,.~P~.~:: 2~ts·~\rrDAJ. ~~c~I:.~ ~:: Af'J:;;n, or Unfum. 370 : ~~~~Pool ~ Ii ilazanJ. C.U
Condominiums BEAUT F1JRN 2 BR $175 up w/priv entr, Cent CdM, Ba)' SL, CM. 64M:ml. $275 ·ieue. 61>-3824. • Saunas JfAlS;p"OWn bunny rabbit
Unfvm 320 Utll pd. Hid pool Atllts, no 49'1-2575, 543-1115' evet. 2 BR uo!um. Crpts, -lMwDort Baach COlta Mola found v1c Marlon lA I
' ~Alao 1 unfurn .costa Meu range/oven refl1a.Nope:fl. :...:;_.,,,,__ ---------•Pool Tables \VarMc:k, N.8.6*-82..
Huntington -~ · DELUXE f140/.,..,, iift:14!5: l'ARK NEWPORT PALW'~~IN_(PTS. e Recreation Room ~o= ~ ~
2 BR. Condo. crou. -· : =y i:· ~:;;,* APARTM•NTS D~ ~ im: ~ Al'ARTMENTS MINUTES TO NPT. scu. • Volleyball 546-mt. ~pa~d~vf1'·n)5: ~n~~~~&U-3645~Conti~~~~t:1: :n.t,64H018. on the bay Un=~R~Pt•. : ~r:uch more ! t~~?~~e=~
646-1851. ~.1r srtJD10 apt tum. qu iet Tennis~. Game and ~e.=ia.~E~ Luxur)r ~nt I~ ov-~e.::~. ~~~ 49f.25C.
Dupl•x" Fum. ~ perm>n, over 50. 2191 llarlxf!' Billiard Room. ... <le ... r. .-.., ertook:tnfl: the waler. Enjoy tc •L .. ., no-· • Gold Medallion Award FOUND white male ldt1t11.. bhtd. CM (acroa from l UR. From S190 ........ .,...._,_ S150.lll1 health spa 7 awlm-e • l\UW • ..,_.... ':!'
Newport Baach K-MUt). 1 BR.. .. °"',_ $lllO 2 ""· ,..,.._ "="~ -...... 7 ll1htcd'tet> F'efu~. ~:: Furnished or Unlumisbed s::'.!:!ty~·=· ~
FURN IBR.. t •• couol• ptt1, Fum. Bach. A 1 Br. Ex· MEDITERRANEAN ;f:J"izl1~ ~ ~m. ~~~1..'\:1t1~'.':•it 2 BEDR.M. From JOO Adults Only -No Pets Please 131.\CK l•mal• port Coci<ll'
llJIO 36t1t Sti!Jof{ Btolho• ceptlonalli nice. 2110 VILLAGE MONTICELLO ,,_ 4 Debolrd. • ......,,, Juo..,. 1·1 ~~Avail From llO S.-lel • 12121 465 E. lltl :~.~ \':'!';.. m.~ '!: :'!t. :·~;/'';,4' >tOO ~*' 16~~ C.>t • ~.~a.~· Oub ~m r="'~~;.. ~.,J ~~;-:, 'lfij\\~·~ :""''"' * *SPECIAL CHRI SIMAS BONUS** ;~ Uul I ,, f •mal• G<t'-
call owner 213'-'19t-4356. .. ..... •M clC!anl~tce. Nr RDITAL OFFICE 3 BR.. 2 BA. '"' bit-In klory town ~. Eleco f5 blks tmm Newport Blvd.I Bn'lll In Jhi'S Ad and mnn Shtphfn.I. Blkttan. ~ D I Uni <1u. •"" _. hie kitchens, prtv1te pa;°" -... CdAt at'N. &44-75.18. ,up tx•• urn. -occ •UCI. 567 . OPF..N 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM n.rce. Family~ W· or ba.lconln, ca~na. dra• -=="""'i:i-...,,,---
Bolbo• Panln1ulo FURN. Boch-Ap<J. SW ** 3 Br., lY, bo. ** ~de. $180/mo.Baach ' pel'1n. SUbtt1T11"'4" pru1c· PINECREEK • • • ~ l'i:t.:~ so;i.:
2 I bl ~,~•d::, ·~ •• 1 CT.I P"" ea,.... •owl> decor. tnc1 Hunllntton 1,.1;1~~'J0"'; o,.11~4 ~~';"'_::'wt~ Ask About FREE December Rent klto 0.., CM. ~ ,
2 BR, dtln. *• ln:'1 • . patio, bltnl, crpt, drpt, w·LK TO BE·CH ma -..... v. UI no 0 . ~ nt. ' -~· -· ~=· dattwatir: Wlhr/d!')'fr. ,. $125 MO .• 2 BORMS. ClOflt to l!'Vtt)'thlnc. $170 " "' Fuhkxt ll1&Dd at J1mbotte tum~ walerfall• crN.te" lff'2 I W. S ~ , ...... ua w™te 111u .. 1
blk bch ~ ..... 1325 mo.)"" Neu ... pplllg. °'"" mo. 8llO <iater SI .. CM. Call New I " 2 ill', cpt/d.,,., and s.n J_.1, mu, Road. ,.,.,,,. ttt4tbiJ tor ,..... t•L bloclk .... ".."o' arfla~& aa--L) ... Wi!Olcllll ..... .
ly. 18511 E. Balboa B1vd.,nea1onnmtcs,Bt<r. 6IHlllO .n6,30pm wkdyo.llld<)' -· !rpL 118 16th . T'1-(n4)64<4900 ~·--l--~To"O "" .. 714-1 --·': ""' BROWN dos w/Wh"" .... I Apt A (dWl'llltn). &.16-3518 « ~ ,..Jenda! fi0.a340, IC't-3957. for rentat lnkmnatlon ~"'::., &. Meta. _,.._.. CaJI IO ........ •
213186>-1008. A lood want oil It a lood ll> -~ ~!!!!!l••••••!!!!!I•••••• .. ci..!lltd Ma OaaU~ Ml ... &Gal78 vdmtnt. Clusltled Ads ••• to.56711 StU tdlc tl4!"'8 ••• 64U&'lt Clul10ed Adt -•• 64U6'18 Ph.-"''-'~"'-="-----• · • •
••
' • • •
r
•
l -lY~LOT --~~~illot~2~~1972~~~~~~~ ~~~~~·~~~~,~~~~-~~~~'.l ~~~-~-~~~~~ ' -· ..... --~ISJ~,1 ---][5) ( .,.,.,, .... ][Ill ( .,,_,, .... !ITT ( ••1*11 ... ][IJJ( '=-iiil;liiii; I 'l[Il]~ •• ~-.~1~~~1 ~.,.~ .... ~. ·~~~~ l'-;;;·d--~~~~
I ;::..<::.'-:.=..: .... =:::l:......:':::'°:iOener•I S.rvieff --Ill Pl1no1/0.,-126 , HolpW1ntod, M & I' 710 HolpWontod, M & F 710Holf1Wontod, M& p 710 HolpWonted, M & I' 711 Anff<i-IOQ-llHo-
' MAt£ Britt.1.1'.Q' Sl>an\tl v\e STUDENT wW do a.nythlna:, --'---.---"'-"I i ........, "8oach. H.B. 101 .,,,..1mo .......... """'"" ACCOUNTANT CLERICAL pooltions avall. J........,.. Linotype Me-MANAGIR TRAINEE lee Rhbads PRIVATE ,...,. mull ORGAN •Y l Jia)' Circle, H.B. In& I: boa1 malnt. Reas. Heavy tn bbkprw;, .11.U t.axe.i, w/maJor corp. In thtlr N.B. ch1n1ll. Nllbt plllltlon. » AND SALliSMAH ~ fl.ne art collection.
I GIANT GtrdJ11 Tailed uuro ~t, 18.fe driver. refs. llldlv\dual, part!X'nihlp, rtgSonal oft. Hn &:l>-5:30 hr. wk. Xlnl Cblnpan)' Ben. for fut l(l'OWtna Tile A Home Antiqua Clocks All tten 50'56 or ltu oJ a~
from Atr)ca. 5484117. ,;•;:::.•~';;'"::'::.· ------corp. Penn. po1Uloll. CaU Mon-Fr I. Rec e. ~ clJts. P&ld Medical. Ute. lmprovemt:nt--.Centtt. .Jl•· EXCLUSIVELY pra1led value. Cb lo e • e Don't blO' a.riy r' pn untn
1
1
Coat ' SSS ,.H~•;:;•:;l;:lflll;?,..______ or .. ·rite. WBS, Joe . &U-0212. tlonlllt-Type. pleue. te&eph UnUon:n&. o-tdlt Unlon, ttc. t'°ttwlde txpu.don pro&ram • Sold • Re lh!d Ck>llonne 12'' dffp brown you can pfayl No~~ers
1• 563 W. 19th St., CoA1a MeM.. vok-e., nt111t & penonality DAIL y PILOT olle11 xlnl oppc)rtunlty tor 200 Vlctorll CM J:97t9 mo, J~ bro n i e welcome lo atttnd work
! * Loat. SAIALL GOLDl:N GET RID OF TH A 1' ARCHITEC"IURAL Drafter ~, Gen'I Ottical-l'YPl1. Aak for Larey Miller Jdvanctment. Eam..lna• lits Sat/Sun 'Ill IO .ea.led lamp in form ol lhOPI· For informatlon ! LAB. LrK ~ltwr collu. UNSIGHTLY TRASI{ ft temporary, tun or ~ hie, phone .t ml&e. Foi ln-e &b.Cl2l e over $10,IXX) ltt year. Phone Wft'kd.a)ta 1 pm 'tll, ~ lantem. eak bue $D), Cootact: Tom Dieterich ~ Ne!Pborhood of Hamilton i DEBRIS. FREE Es T . llrne. Start lrnn\e<t., hOun lerview I>leue send retume 645-IUG or awb' at 2221 ~-"ii"'=.:..<_:::..=::.o:::,:,~1 Pair ot ~ Japaoolt col· I 642~2151 ~ H~. MW:lng several cow... STUDENT M!H428. Ut·xlble. cna.y work tit hOme to Oasafrled Ad no. 5i56 c/o JUNIOR SaJeamen: IG-15. }larbor Blvd., Costa Meu.. Appl.lancet I02 or prim. tf'' x 6" $75. Coast Music Service
' da;ot ,~ 1-l HAULING L I b or ol!I-Call •= •111.11. Daily Pilot, P. 0. Box 15$'.t, Eam $2)..$40 per wet'k pt-... .,.,................ Wanled. F--Sidney \'ant tHacape 11" x Newport Bl·~ .•• Harbor , ~W • ,...... ""' on p&.\W "" c eanup Y exp ..... ;/4r,J -Costa Meaa, Calit. 926S. Ung new customers fJ)r the "~"·"' .... ~ KENMORE auto ~r too. lS" $100. l.al"(te modern oil vu ~ § · 642--4954. college student, lge trk. ASSISTANT ~ .l CLER DAILY PD.O'l'. Thil t1 not a eJan Car. GE auto wuher $'19. Ken-peintlna $12$. Many othl'r Cotta M'Ml t "TACO", ma.le Chihuahua,. 534-1846 ot ~2164. maintenance couple tor K, exper A/P to joln newspa~ route ar¥I does Colta Mea area. more elec. dryer, wlttd for rnUe. ilem1 ot C1o'8onne, *PIANOS.ORGANS*
, longhalr, black wtbrown, GEN. llauling. Tree/shrub large complll!.lt In Costa ~~ slAfJ ~: not include collecting or 642-Sl33 UO, $40. Gu.am. A deL s tau, allver. etc. Mu.st tee ll11.mn1ond, \VurUtzcr, mAD)'
' lost vie Eucl\d &: Slater, F. trim. Gar & yd cleanup. ~~pl + Sa 1 a r y. Send resume :· P.or:e Box deliwrina. Transportation la l\t~lC • Sa.lary + com· 5t&o86t.l or 841-&15. to apprJclate. Call 64-Mi631 others. Pre-seuon 1l)Oclala.
, Vly. REWARD. 551-9339. Eat. 839-ml, 557~ 10880, Santa Ana, Calif 9'l7ll provkkd. We work Jour mlaalon. Shell statkln, Htg. $80 1 YR. ~. del A in-LOWREY Orp.n, Model MS, model close-out.. Plano I
: MJN. Germ Shep, "G-ret-SKIPLOADER & dump truck AnRACTIVE GIRL or call 538-9631. houn alter 9dX>Ol and 8 ort"-Bch.-Att-3 pm, B41.fi600. 1taJI. Lat& mod. all cycle 2 aoeakets, $600. Green Or;an tenlab. Money 1av-
1 cheo" .l her puppy, both tan ,.'Ork. Concftte, asphalt, P/tlme work, high pay, short COMPANION: active ChriAt· ~1=· We have~ New~ Can1en Kenmore wuher. 839--1'"8. couch, 7' ~. $50, Y~llow i.na bargains are bere rta,bt
: ~. nr 23rd. C. M . sawina;, breakin&· M&-nlO. hrs. gen'I ~leaning. No ian lady, must ha.ve car. :"unt~~ieyare~~ BOVS & GIRLS e DJSHWASHERS. '(Rlhtrl. plald chair & matching ot-now at: 1 Reward. &u-62&t. • YARD, &arage cleanups. heavy work. ft.fut drive. Live In lovely Leisyre World Jy. You must be. oot of 10 )'l'I and ol~. dryers, rebJt, ~'.-. toman sm. Fruitwood coUee Waffichs Music City
: • Sbephmi·Husky, loR:t Remove trees, dirt, ivy. Apply 11-1, Rental Readier, home. Assume respoMibility school by 3 PM to W. Newport Beadi area. delV"d. IPS--D: st6-52JI. tbl $25. Decorator's Item· South Coast PW... 540-hl
• <ric of 19th 1: Oftnge, CM . Drlve\\')'S, grading. 847-2666. 569 W. l9lh, C.M. for a dear 79 yr old Aunt • participate. ExperlenceJ Good profits, O:>ntact Mr. Rent W• .... rs/Oryers ~~ ~~ := -
: Ans "Of'*". Call 834-6143 Housecl .. nlng BABYSlTI'ER needed, Afon noal
1
t bed-ridden. $.150 mo~~! ~ven prior I ty. Seay, Dall)'•~ .. ., ~ •• CM. $2. Wk. ~·matnt. velvet, $CSO. Mag n.a vox *PIANOS.ORGANS I aays: or 497-1491 ~ I-----""'----I thru Fri. Penn.anent.. Vic. expenses paid. fW.I,· ............... * 639-* ah!reo-radlo con90le SIOO. Going out For Bualneu
: WHITE toy poodle, 1olt vie MESA Cleaning, carpets. &aeh & Ellia, 1-l. B. erences. 494-lO'lL PART or Utime help • Apply OVER a:D wubera. dryll!n, 6"-0191 Best quality • priQet • aerv. f "-Ore.nee &: Bl'Oadway, C.M. windows. floors. etc. 842-9289. COOK <Fry) Exp'd only. All LIFE INSURANCE ln peno11, Kentuck;J Fried retrf,..,.a.1--from ~ 95. 'l'RAlN='"""~.,_,,--~~~~---IJ<awPa>l·-steinPlwa.y·Ba.ld .. !~r_etc. t APl>C'QX 7:30 Thurs eve. Resid / comm'!. 55l-6742, BABYSmERJllve in. lite 11hitts. Start $2.50 per hr, MANAGeMENT ChH lcken. 693 · So. Coast ~. wn _.. Lege :C,t ~~'t::i!, ayer anoe ._....,.... .A"'~!,......~!!~call~~54&-01>0~~·~~~1 ''='18"-4o;l-"ll"-._-c:-=--,--hsekeeping, Mesa Verde chance for advancement wy, Laguna: Beaeh. bldga engi ~als~······ We :iLJ.Y·S@U • Prof. Carpet Cleaning area, 5 day wk. CMon-1'Tll The Cnttage CoUee Shop, Rul Est•,. S.Jes 1;'~ =I(~·~~ Al~=~ lmleAt':' N~ iIELD'S PIANos" 12-5
I I . lf5l Al&o windows & Door care. 97S-3859 562 W. 19th St .• C.l\t ~~iv\ need a dynamic FREE us ea. 6*-58C8. money. Make otter. 673-7123 Costa Atesa cn.t) 645-m
s.t*-_...... _.,.,:C::;sli:::,,:;°";.l::;<:;b ,;;5'::;?e;·l:;51X!""-' ~, BARGIRLS, Im med ope~ COUNTER Lady, p/time. dual on the wa.y up! LIKE new M·~·· wa-A Brae!. . . HOUS" OF CLEAN ings, Tustin, Newport Days or eves & wknda. Newport Beach Home , vv._ ;:;;;;;;;,..-,.,.==,,...,--,-BUY a Player Piano tor t:. Beach, Costa Mesa, days or Orange Julius, H.B. Ottice has uriique train-Li~H Tr•lnl:;,, e1ec. dryer, $300. Call suPER 8 · tecbni~ movie Christmas. Dav l d T.
'
' Floor, window!:. crpt, wa.lls, nites, Grin & ·Beer It. 841-tl'13L ing program leading lo Liml~~ Tl...: On Y 968-4743. canLandiera $40 · 100 Dupree, 2940 D Grace La .•
An I
•· I 6 · ...... t'o•u .,...o_........ I•' Id t A -.. _ C camera with flash at· CM 54• ~
I IWOI' rl'Y eo/ yrs. in area. ~· ~·-DELIVERY of DA I LY e managemen · P-emern & -.:::..oc:::~..::=--~---1 pllcanl m .. ~ h In Famoua Ucenae ., .. ---· tacbrnent takes black &: col· -
1 Ectuip./ bll• Phones HOUSEWORK *BEAUTY OPERATOR• PILOT. SUNDAY ONLY, to ..,.. ave 8 m · available tbru T~iiCom· Equipment "'"' or $41), Both like ~·. PIANO w/bench, Xlnt cond.
Own l'ransp. $3 Pl"' hr. FULL TIME. APPLY -neWl!lpaper carriers. Re-imum 18 montfuhls 1t~ 1 2 pa.ny Applicaots tu.II·• "l"e-• 644-4687 Beaut walnut tinlsh. FbU *DIVERT ...A.MA.TIC • 642-3148 • al1 E. 17th, Cot1ta Mesa. quires the use of a Station years iruccess 1 e lmt ' · · v SLR Praktlca, internal lite ~'=:::;:c·==~---keyboard, call aft 6, ·, LA LlNES ONLY ..:<:/MO C W•....,n or Van. Contact Mt. sale• experience. J-3 N buned upon qualification. meter, 500th of second. 6 A LYLE HAIGH original oil 837-1430 ....., Dedicated leaning BUS boy needed, experien<."ed H -~ ,, __ 1 ·~ W Bay Year traJnlng profrtarn ew or experienced sales M Id painting gold frame SAVE OVER $1500/YEAR • WE 00 EVERYTijJNG * preferred. Apply in person. ~~ ey, JJU est will include wo~ with people. Openitlgs available. s.:ooJ7 · $90 or beat offer, 24"x36"' "Fa11'' scene $12.5. llAMl\!OND li-f3 Organ,
Divert Calls After Hoon Refs. Free est. 646-2S39. Alley \Vest, 2106 \V. Ocean St., a Mesa. our nationwide Agency Complete training program. · wonderfUI ch r i s t m a s bench, Mahogany N e w
' To Any Pbone-$25.50/Mo Front, N.B. 675-1D4. Management learn on all Future management> oppor-Furnltur• 110 prt>Sent 641H'.181B. $1060. Now $750. 497-~ * MOBILE TELEPHONES M __ •;;.ln;..ton.;...a_nc_e ____ CARPET installer, 0 w n DELICATESSEN .v. .. ~ .... of Agency Build-tunlties. Call Mr. Sloan at C"ln:>~n.ARD 6 TALL Dark & Handaomr SL25/Day! 4/12 Channel I"'-=" 832-5440. K IN G a I z e seat y ~ ... ·~ uv ' plastic fan-u · h ___ , 1 11 PTL Comm Systems 97!rl234 YACHT cleaning. Complete truck w/hclper. Carpeteria., ing. Position will require Paetu.repedjC with frame ta.stic, xlnt .cond. soo,. in-.png t •~• tun na:. 10
Babyslttl-weekly cleaning inside & out 64~303'.l. ask for Ga.ry. Host8ss /Cashier some travel. Starting TA RB Ell UO. King me_ bedspread dudes wetsuit. 53&-3186. 837-1622 or 832-G.191
••• by locaJ exper. business, CASl-llER, exper. tor collee Waitresses sa.lary to $12,000 per $10. 833--1857. . RELAXACIZOR, like new, Sporting Good• no
'
Licensed Ba'--itter 96.1-2838. shop. Hotel Laguna, 425 S. !';",~m, plua b1nge bene-RE,~CTORS DUNCAN Phyle _,,-......_, paid ,$400, sell $50. for face 1.:<:;.;.;_~.::;;;;;:;;__.;;::;:1 ~r• Coa.st Hwy., Lag. Beach. • u ... .. ..... ..,.-..v & bo(bt (eves) 646-25!2 SKIS Kneisael \Vhit Stan
· Day Care Mother seeking Painting & Must be over 21 IC you meet oor qualifl. R. E. TRAINEE dining Rt, 6 chain. 2 • · ~. $65. NottUea buckle
· permanent full time position P•perftanging Th & Experienced cations contact Barry R. E. Broker It Developer leaves, pads. $75.. 842-3454. Mitcelleneous booUI $15. &>Iker buckle ~ ~~ ,: ~a!.F~:1-C.;.U,;Sc:;T,;O;c;M=.:P;..A.;,l:,N_T_IN_G_ e ~~t'1or~ o.. li~I train &: sponsor fo; s0.!_1:,:J .. EGoodD. cond!Gretlonen,l-,;W.;;•;;n;;ted;;;:. ___ _:1::;20 ~~SJS-fi6.3880 o r
: ed yard Ii; two playmates. Apply in Person _. .. ,oco, COm ... et'ltta.I cense . .caJJ betwn 10 am I na-.°"V""'· · PRIV ,c•="·~~·~,-,-~~~~~---' lnter(Exter. Unfurn., inter. interview. 3 pm, St>-llll $75. ~1395. ~TE PARTY WANTS HEAD ......,,, ......,_ "'-' Breakftu1l, lunch & snack spec price Free color con-'IO BUY PIANQ FOR .-.. a. 4Ul'"'• ,;)!Uomon
included. Week days only su1fu,g &: ' est. Lie. Ins. HOCHMAN'S ·RECEPTIONIST • 2 ~oot~ $12.lf' CASH ; ~=· All like new. S'75.
S25 per week. So. of Won't be underbki. 642--6005. I Al LY DELICATESSEN & Interviewing hours 8:30 am· Poise & personality will'land eac • c ea..... ~-· · ~~erfi.e!'!, .. ~f5.S~ia. No Wasting RESTAURANT 11:00 am. )'Ou this one. Boss need! -'~-~~~ncb!:·_Prov __ D_lnl--Ta-.JiwY.ANTED>i<'i'Eii,:"M~lnk;f;coa:;;;;c<, ';i,;ik1v;;;er, TV, Radio, HiFl, .. _ * WALLPAPER * vlvaclous sell starter. Oill .. c ~~ · lli .,. white or blue or leopard Stereo
MO'JllER of 2 will baby11it When you call "Mac" 428 E. 17th Street PACIFJC AfUTUAL Jo, 833-2700, Dennis & Den-~!,~ ~ .. ~.2 leaves, $450. ~t.m Reas. Size 5 . 8,
your ehildren, hot meals, MS-1444 646-1711 Costa Mesa 700 Newport Center Dr. nis Personnel Agency of ........, .... ........,.,. ....,...,. ..... STEREO, deluxe 1973 Gv--
rartt model , large pro-
fessk>nal challl1!f", -Jeruien
air suspension speakers, DJ
\Vatt Afrl/FM M PX
receiver, tape deck. Brand
new & guaranteed, was left
uncial.med. Now S l 7 5 .
Terms. Credit d e pt .
893-0501.
836
Mon-Fri. Newport Heights, p I LOT Equal 6ppor. Employer Newport Beach, Ca. 92663 Irvine, 912 Mlcheb;on Dr. G•r-Set•. 112 Mu1i--l ln1tru--t1 l22
i ,;:Sl:::nrlhli=c:..,J;:o.n.="8."'j42--01'°".::_4!::.__ 1PROF. Painting, also roofs, SAL£$ ~--,,_, ; Cerpet Service accous. Cl'iL inter/exter. 0 0 MES T l c Phone: CTI4) 640-3090 G~GE We. Car, reflig, LUDWIG double Bass Drum
, I--'---------Lie/Ins. Free est. 645-5191. Couple-Thoroughly exper. lumber. 15322 Stanford Ln., set. Rogers chrome dyna-
; JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery INT & Ext painthlg, ceilings cook. Must have top refs. F.qual Oppor. Employer Orange County, H.B. • 892-0859. IOhic Snare, 3 Tom Tonu,
Ori-Shampoo free Scot· sprayed. Unfurnished spec. ORANGE Salary open-commensurate U • d 1-lry 115 5 Zildjian Cymbals. $525. , chguard (Soil Retardants>. price. 546-7887 art 6. w/f!Xp & ability. Send MA mite Travel can ti4-8851.
I' == : 10" m'G:~t! INT 11; EXT painting, paper -resume to P. 0. Box 278, CHINISTS NEW Annstrong 1 1
bl
~ ,__ 1 han'"ng, natural wood Corona de! Mar, Ca. 92625. Desire & "'"'....-. 001 .. --** SACRIFICING . . e ec · ea ... , I.VI wh te carpets. ... '""""a"' ~ '""" "'"tar + custom """""' Best flnishing. 543-7900 DRIVER f u_......_ quirement We do the rest Complete Line or European •-............ Save your money by saving COAST'S or , ...... ....,, ~a Orange Counly Be a ring Thia Royal Je"-elry Diamonds around. Great gift. Must
PRIVATE party must
s8.critice 23'' Magna.yox con-
90.le color TV with l't'mot~
control. Bellutlfu.I wa.lnut
cablnel. Ud:11 i operates
like new. Cost ST:iO Only s.m Phone 64H631.
me extra trips. Will clean INT. & Exter. Acrous. ceiJ. ~le. ·Must have <:Iear driv· Manufa.ctuer has immediate . Is not door-to-door Rubies, Etc. Atso, codrtali aell, $125/bst of!'. 546-2440
living nn., dining nn. I. lnga sprayed. Lie., Ins. ing record. Ap.ply rn pthon, openings for the Jollowing sales. Xlnt earnings. Com-ring 45 precious stones _ * TENOR Sax $190. Clarinet
hall $15. Any rm. $7.00, Local refs. 645-<>lm, Chuck. Newport Stationers, 4229 machinists: pany benefits. Management diams rubles sa..N.f-.. $15. Both. excellent cone.I.
much $10. Chair $5. B yn. EXT SPECIAL $l9' Birch, N.B. Ask for Colin opportunity. • • t'l'"' ·~ ... Call••~ Neal exp. is what courtts. oot West. MILL MACHINIS emeralds etc. V8..lue $600. ~1 • •
method. J do work .mysetl. 3 Br. Lie/Ins.,,..,,. lead"ing TS Call collocf for Sell lllXJ. H K. solld gold FENDER M..,_ gujlar Good ref. sn-aun.. p•-p !ch R I DRY Cleaning manager' • .._ I jade bracelet, value Sl'ro, made in '64. Xll'lt oond: COLOR TV ,.wer, a , •par Orange Co. <beach cities). TURRET LATHE in •• rvew•ppt. sell $40,. Gold pendeot $10. w~-~ -··.11-.... ...,_1_ .... ._ ca'b.'M25.,"·,eeas.c".t.Casbcol· ~ Sl~O~=~~ET * PATW PLASTERING ~us~:;eanexp~d~~:d-:e: OPERATORS .213/27J.4361.. CertiliedGIAapprala·al ':;: ~edric"'""G;;....,., ~;$195. 89'HTI6.
Demand the best, steam cln All types. Free estimates M k t I resume to P .O. Box 4781. CRUSH GRINDER sEcRE'i'ARIES I ~ ....... ilil~·.,ean~m.:;;;::~'152!1'"'.'::::l"'""'~·~lh~accessones~:J~· ~$80['_ AMPUFIER 550 walta, 6-12''
). Cemo!i,7-::..* =p1"'u-m"'b17:==---==--i Of e pace •bvin--ii'i.' ciiiaii'iii92664iiii;.· ---J OPERATORS * 100°/o FREE* ~~carDl.=:.nd....,,"."~ v10::.' ::;.
557.= At-i..::~:;ak..:199:::""::·-· ~mode __
1_._"°_455
_'1 Executive Liz Relnder'• A,gency sell Iii of apprala value, tracuve cue $75. ••• 21" TV $25.
PATIOS-PLANTERS DRAINS unclogged . $7.50 Excellent fringe benelits in-4500 campus Or. $450. Appraisal avail. 675-7009 *** 23" TV S3S.
, AU Concrete .work. Brick, Sewer* UnJs.~00~. $15 [ l Secretary ~mpany paid group 54&-211B Newport Beach 645-5662. Office Furniture/ Both xlnt cond. 979-4462
slumpstone wk-. SM-3533. ~ lrt:JEX Must be highly qualified in SECURITY GUARD LADIES K9ld Peao braeelet Equip 824 GERRARD Sl-95 w/Sbure
' PATIOS walks drives Sa.w PLU1.IBING REPAIR s.ng all secretarial skills. Sh Apply Personnel Dept. Exper. f/time. Contact Mr. (7 ooina,) 18 car gold tnount.J-=i.;;.<.';_ ___ _;::.:.; M-+I cartridge. Xlnt oond.
: break, 'remov~ &. ~I~ No job too 1.small req'd. Willing to accept re-LSI Ford, Sectirity Supv, lng, Sacrif. $350. 645-566.2. 3M XS Automatic Copier, 1 ~$75~-~~~J.---~-
' concrete. 543-8fi68 lot esL * 642-3128 * sponsibillty. Balboe B•y Club Miscellaneous 118 c omp1eteb' reconditioned. 21'' Color TV, $15.
; CUSTOM CEMEN'N'WORK cs.o.,.""'inv;.::./.;;A;;;ll_,'!l"._•;;,1.;;lon=•--l ..._forSarlt . Jlti!I Call or Apply ~122l~W~. ~Coast~',.li!i;wy~.,_, N~B!!;·c:·-1~:;:=:''"::::'-':::::::--;:=7::1d$400.~~-~3712~.'="-~._,. Beautiful color. m-4462 • Driv<•, WAU<S. polio•. -CLA·YAL CO. TRANSPOR'T SECURITY GUARD ELF.C. Typewriter, Smllh SF.c. chro l&-123, wood desks
Pool decks. Don. 6CZ-8514. Alteration~2~ Classification I 00-12 4 Foremost in the vital expand· DYNAMICS · Must be thorough!y exp'd. Corona. Perfect oond. Script P>-60. ator cab $40. 867 W. For that item under $50, try
Contractor Neat, accurat.e. ~years exp. Ing industry of .automatic 3131 W. Segerstrom Own uniform. Allt,+ Salary. type, tor the feminine 19th CM, Pierce, ~3408. the Permy Pincher.
TolevJ!lf'f..,.lr I --11•'¥1 valve• & controls. Sanla Ann 546-0310 woman! noo. 61S-2m. •••••••••••••••••••• , JACK Ta.Wane -Rep&..ir .:.:;.;.;;D;.~:.;.;;::;;:;:.,__ . . 17th & PLACENTIA Equal opportunity empk)yer SERVJCE Station salesman 1-lEIRl.reM Glass lbces , 1 •
remod .• addit. 31 yrs. exp. COLOR T-V .caF-'I'ronica COSTA MESA , & mecha.nfc Experle mfg to yoo. Made to order.
Llc'd. ~Way O:>. 541-0036. 769 W. 20th, Cbsta Mesa 011sific•tion 125--149 548-~l MACHINIS~ prefd.-Top pQ. 1 beDefi"f:. Lowest Price1. West Cout ~ I
Drefting \i~Service!!!!!!Call!!!ll!0~.!646--0lll~~~
1
[ii Equal opporturuty employer Both Day&:: Nlte Mitt open-Apply at ~ll Station. 17th Wood Specialties, 89.1--1512. I ~-~te. ines. 4 day, 40 hr work wk. &; trvtne NB SCHWINN glria ttandard
PLAN•H-·-s Remo d s I \[ll] __... EXP'D Retail Sales, FUll Some overtime. Med to lrg =:==o=•.:::·:::,,· ----bl~te. Noblet clartne• ,.,__ ~ "'"°" ' ' fl"' I I 'J'hneo. permanent pollition.. liq mactiinell doing inter· SITI'ER needed 2 to 4 hrs '-,#-., uiu: ~~ Additk>ns. ~7-~ Ml~ 1 1 f' Classification 150-184 Apply in person, Colin West esting short n.tn op68.Uorui. ~. 5 days per week. 2 ~~r"te comole mangle,
G.rdenlne r~ Birch, NB. dustries. Inc., 2101 Dove St., ~ area. 6T':r-86:1l or 1' low Magnavox •tereo co~ I I~ Newport Stationers 4229 Apply in pert0n, Elder In-girls, ageg 5 & 6 yn. Balboa
Job •·• F I 702 NB "'J"'U'..... !'IOle, walnut. good cood, 165. Wan)'Wllgl, en\11 • '------.J EX.PER. Cable TV un-· · Riccar sewing machine BOB'S GARDENING
& LANDSCAPING
Residential I Commercip.I
Irvine Industrial
Complexes.
557'""299 I.Iler 5pm.
FRONT yd. lawn serv. $10
mo ... ba.ck yds a Igo.
weedmg, yd cln up, tree
trimming. hauling. Free est.
Classificefion 200-260 derground installers Manegement Tme WHO WANTS TO WORK? w/cablnet $25. 675-1437.
NhaEED ¥;If.:;. at t~Jnl? We I I~ desired. Trainee considered. $200 por Wffk CHOODSE~ .. AbounCAB,! ......... LADY Kenmore Washer/ ve n.iu=o, 1" u r s e s , 6 4 2 3aJO Teleprompter .r~-WUl"' Housekl!epers. Companions. ......fotRlnt e · -. . Call Mrs Schmidt IM yoorself. be your own dryer. Xlnt cond. Canopy Homemakers, up j 0 b n, _ Equal Oppor. Employer. WEsrCl.lFF boss Men or women. can be Br &el, l..rg ~f'lk. best otter,
541-fi681.. C lassification 300-l:iS FULL charge bookkeeper Penonnel Agency slightly handicapped. Vts, ~84U0.12;;::~::·~~~~~=
H I W F
Newport Beach area. Write 20oll Westcliff Dr., NB ~tln!d. Age 21 to 7(), sup-GE Musa.phonic AM .FM
• p anted, M & 710 I !ft] Classified ad No. 497, Daily 645-2770 plement your Income. Drive radio $20.
°'PWbi•ltlforRllnl • PlloMe t. ':,·_9; ~ 1560, Costa M""UFA-'RING a caplyb 6 hrs or more a day. ,,, ... ""'I ACCO.UN TING Clerk, . sa. j,..<Ull "-· ,..,.., ... ,u Ap ln pe'tson, Yellow Cab -~=,o-==,_.., __ _
mature woman, some ~ GEN INDUSfRIAL ENGINEER Co ·~ E JG!b ...__._ ** nREWOOD -Orange & ing, o--""te 10-key adding Classification 160...370 ERAL OFFICE Vega Is a sml ...._ . .......,com· ·• ......., • st.. \..USUl =' -~ II
EXP II al.. G-~ ~-H ndl d ~v··~ Mess. .,. us. ••"~ con!. · aw n ....... ener. ma~hine, A/Jt ': payable a e front esk Lor busy pany producing OEM Elec-~='-------~
Complete garden serv. exp. Data proceal'lna: I «-]{ &I sales oUice. Great varlety Ironic & mechanlcal pro-WOMAN SE
~-
Kamalanl, 646-t67S, backgr'ou.pd deal.r.a..ble.. ~ spotfotthegalwhol.ikesto ducts. HOME PIECE WORK U D BICYCLES
642-1337. Salary $475. to $ 5 o o _ deal w/the public. Salary to Work in your home assembl· All t;ypeg * 64i.1272
PROBLEM SOLVER Intttuaded Data Corp,, Oeasific1tion 400.i465 $400. Call Sally Hart, We seek an agressive ~l~c parts, MustN-~ POOLTABLES .BRANDNU
Pml gardener. Tree work, Box STi', C.M. I ]~ 540-6C65, Coastal Penonnel engineer w{broad capabill-esa or ""t"'"'' WHOl.SSALE SLATE $245
JlliMing, pruning. llhaping. ACCOUNTANT-~d. 1.0 yr Im r ements ~ Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., t)' &: 3 yn exp. to handle all area. Call 640--0451 aft 6pm NON SLATE $29. 544-0tQ) ~anups. George, 6*-6893. old 1 •• oUi-. ~-com· , . •• CM. reapoMibilltlea related to .... '"" "/fl H production methoda, time 3 piece waterfall Bedroom
Sell the old stuff Buy the new 'misa\on. 1-77~1818. ae1sification 500-510 ouwkHper f/tlme atandardl & plant main-I ll~J set. Cactus plants. ........... • .__ . For Conv. Hosp. 549--3061 ·-~~ •JSsa · e 54CHi988 •
""'9onails H0U~EPER w a o t e d MAN'1 21" M~ 10 speed ·=· Classified ........ 642-5613 I 11•1 ~ ..
Trader's Paradise
lines
• '
' liif DATSUN Nluon Pa·
)NL l\!ol• PIOO. wm """" ~ laf ..U booat of equal val· ......... --, ...
•
••
times
dollars
I ,
•
. ~ time, own transporta· Direct replies lo: Manufac-bike, 3 months, exoellent
uon, H.B . .,. .. 962-4643 IUring Operations Manager, Antlnuoo 900 :,145;·;,;642-<i48'1""'~;..· --.--1 Oe11ificetion 525..Sli
'
·-~ 0
""' "'" $600 15'1!1 = = to $500
NEWPORT
P•rtonMI~
IU Dover 111-;, N.11.
MWrll
Vega Electromca, 3(1'.X) West .:.:.J: BROWN leather coAt. mens
Warner, Sanla Ana, Calif., FORMAL dining set, china fO tee-ZIP out lfnlD&-SW
92704. cabinet, 2 credenzas, 6 valu Asking $60. 645-\3088,
Like to tradef Our Trader's
Paradlle column IJJ for )'Olll
5 lines. 5 days for 5 buck1.
uphol chairs. SlSOO ftrm. FOR Sa.le, w ha r red a I e
673-1381 1peakeri, Teae A-2> cuset~
Sell Idle Items , . , 6(2..5678 te deck, 548-8065.
""""'
ft/AW4NJ,lf/I~
.:..i . A OCIHVEf«NT ltfOllPWolG ANO
...::T, SEWIMQ; CU0E FOlll THE
'> GALON THE GO. "' __ ,,.,....."'!![! l!lllll!Ji!
For an ad In Women's Workl
c.u Mory Both '42-5671, .. , 330
I nternaTIJC~eslgner Pattern
~ti.
~i~•,
" . ,. .. ,,
/)
.
" "
I /.
70992
Fontana
Font&n& ot Rome haa designed lblt hlahw&llted
dreu bMded In contrutlna' color at the wain f.nd
hem. Its llUl'PUce top has a. wide V oock. and wraps
to \?le side where it fastens with booka and eyes.
hbrlc aue1t1t1ons: raw silk. brocade, knit&, ~
thelkl, wool, bleoda. 7099'l i. cut ln rH.dy~to-wtu
Junior Si:r.et $-13. Siu 9 requlttl 1 • )'IU"da of !M"
fabric and l )'&rd of 54" mntrut.. To order 70992·
11ve 1l!e; name, addreta and zlp. Send $2.00 to;
third clan m&ll. Add 2!5c for ftnt clan and 1pedal
handUJl.I. Address SPADF.A.. Box N, Dep't CX·JS. Milford, N.J. 08848. PA1TERN BOOK: For New
SPA(\et. F•,_ -SPBdea Octlgner Patterns -Se<;..
uon 3A -Sl.00 •
JUNIOR BUST WAIST HIPS • 3111 2111 3311
1 32 II 2:111 3311
9 3311 2311 3411
U 3411 Z<ll Mii 13 36 :It ·:ri
•rrom Nape of Neale. to watat·
'LENCTJJ 1511
15'11
16
161' . 1611
~ndil. Dtttmbtf 24, 1~72 DAILY PILOT
J[§J I --...... l[B I .~ ... ~ I ~ l .......... l§l I ........ -·-l§J I _.... l§l I -.... l§l ( ~..... l
~iiiiiii
TV ........ HIP!, Dots 154 eyer... Bikes. TTUdtl 962 Aulol, lmponod 970 Auto•. lmportod 970 Autoo.oUHd 990 A-. u...r 990 AUIOI, Ulod s:::~ ~~ J~::=~::-~;~. =..~ P1~5l u~~oo l--v-.. 1-. __ ._M_:_bo_me_l_l_~_E_R_:-~-~-E_S_l_E_:_,_z_ --~-0-~-~-ILU_O_N_~_y_ FB ~ ~':=1!D PStPB.1 inw ~:~~~
l:~..,.,~~Dooc~~· ~~~~ M~ and female, pk.ic-ol· bike lrtr, l&OO lb <*118.d~ I cyl, 34peed. Good bocty, G cou,pe roadster, auto tn1 ns, Air. Mtt/FM Sttteo Tapto. VlP 4 dr. it.T. wU.h ~ u6ner. 110 up. Call a11<r ~-SIJnorl>, tlroo talre ~.!'~ ~~ N XIC, t~ 18"'4lo000• AUFTH:<croORRYIZED 36M Looded, ·Clean. Sharp. ;:'.;,..Al< ~:~t · p.m. --..uu.1. e ~...,.... n ~. • · Gold l3000, (l1SDFA 1 Pr. """"""" -•You J[I 96ll407 LAST CHANCE II lJ70FORD 1 too •take truck ~7 Pcy. <n4> m-3m Privatl' party •.. Ptb:
GERMAN Shep Pupo AKC. 'mini blbl A oddl A en.ls. a Del Rey cllltMI comper. MG CADILLAC SI.°"' 8n-<2l9. l'-----..J Champ , sired.' Top '54!1-UU aft, 6 p.m. 586-3928. ROY CARVD,lac. DEALER FORD PONTIAC 3~r...,1 Tlmu, $2.00 hloodllnos, hie b oned , YAMAHA Mlnl Endllro A Vons 963 234 &. 17th st., .68 MG Midget. good oooo. Lar&est ""1oction of Cldll· 1------------------ii Gor&eoua. blk/tan. .JC1nt tem· rnokrtycle trailer b' .ie. Costa Men 5t6-4H4 ~ It take over payments. lacs In Orange County. '70 MAVERICK '65 TEMPEST, aold. ~
LOVING dot to 1ovinr: 1am1)¥ perament. shotafwormed. Like new. m-tl?l. '64 Ford Window V•n 548-1519. Sales-Leasl.ng. 2 Dr., Auto Trans, air oond., (.'OUJ>e auto, air, all ~\
Golden Re~/ihephord Pel w ahow SlQ).SZIO. ~HONDA Scrambler . Xlnt 6 eyt, stk. Eng A tires kd CoorJ, select.lon ol Grey with conll'Utlng black 1tm/Jm, s,s95. Great Nq.
mix. Lows children. 557-196S. ClOl'ld. ~ or be.t oUer. $4'5. 53&-8891 utea BMW's MGB .. Nabers interK>r (ZV'E'l3t). !148-3975 '
FREE to~ home, a small blk A tan: 6 'M, 5"F, SS 4 HONDA.. '73, 500 • 4, Still in Vft'Sion lop, V-8, windows. 1970 MGB-GT coupe. Wtre S.. lt1 you'll buy ltl ER & AJR. $3Cl0. l 6#.-nl GERM. Shep. PllPI, -A 61H430 '10 FORD super van. Con· & Cad"illac $1766 196; PONTIAC GTO, PO)V1
doCt needl children love SlO. 1139 "!/. Sycamore, en.le. BARGAIN! Heavy duty equip 675-4363 whl.s, AM/FM radio. Uke 2GOO HARBOR BL. 675'-2785 w/yanJ. Good wa.tcbdoa: Qrang'e . <Main to nM9T-.2'A9arOf..2066 · _ • · new. $1995. 185.> Sheridan, COSTA MESA
64H606 ' Syoonore). 1159 Jnt'I Me"" Van. Cust. Apt M-204, N'pt Bch. 540-9100 Open SUOO.y ~· vr:, .
0
-! •. RAMILER l BEAtrrl~UL boi>tall cat ~":'°°LESQuaJ, ~ H~~ CL, ml, &IOO l::"".O..~. =.r,.;:r uade CREVIER llMW PORSCHE '69 Flec1w00d a_...,. UW '61 RAMBLER w....,,
needl love Look without a e. re e • Call 551-4383 · Sales • Service -Leallrv !\tint rond. !''ull in~·r. Sacri· 1 ,obllp=:~tion~. ~66.ou7-'""'7·--~P~~M6in prown 1972 HONDA 350 Autos W1ntell 968 208 W. h t St., Santa Ana **'56 CHERRY, b I a c k flee $3100. 6i5-2190 deys, ~~~~ d:'":!; ~~. GERMAN shorthair IJ.S..3l71 Porac.he 1peedster. \Vhat a C\'('S or \Ykends 962-428.1. 1966 Harbor, c .r.t. 6'16·9303
,,.. for CtuiJtmu. P"P8 RESERVE adorabl< Slllty 300 mi. Nr new. 615-"'18 REWARD Cbril t' M '66 FORJ>-$200 "2°"13"'633=-""='..,· ..-=,,,.-=l I ~" 847-3400 Pupnv for Cb r l • t IQ a.I • 'TI. YAMAHA 311) Enduro • , . DATSUN tmas presen . lllt '6.J CADILLAC DeVille, new RAl\IBLERS (21 1963'1, ~ ~-!::' bl line "'QI,__"'~ , _ __ ...... ,.-_ tell, best otter! 64-5--1319 tires, Allf/Fl\f, full po"Ner & J90.V8 . -~ ••~ h
REE.BLUE SHORT ......,__,,p. • ' __...,..i_ ....., or u.waao< uuo:a. •n Ponche Tarp 9U-S stereo. Good cood. Belt of--"-tirak auto .. ~ 51~~~ W~1&!0"''"" ......, ea c j
HAIRED KJTT'EN · 64Hl7I 548-GZi9 or eves. 645--0263 · Ex.tra Sharp! Must Sell. fer over $800. 962-8717 ~ :;: I: cl~ 7
can ~ LONG llalred. Oocbabtmds 3 BONANZA 4 h.p. minibike, WILL PAY OVER NEWPORT &l:Hm'I 545-'8345 '68 n-"'°"""4m •· STUDEBAKER.
MALE Uia A bla k &: moa old. ~ts. AKC. like new. Can be •treet Uc. KAllv ... _ •--t. '61 Porsche 912, ollvefblk. ?.tint nd Full Sacri0 543-389!.
11& pso, c * 637-8906 * Real bargainJ 673-Slll. .... , .,... 8UUll. co · pwr. · '10 Ford Oirttna Wpcl •64 Studebaker as is,· ..... ~ ru~ ~ old. Adults on-SCHNA~Min. AKC J'el. '71Homa150 KL tuJJy dress-For Im model, clun, A/C. xlnt cond. See 10 ap-~i:i :::-:~ da.Y•, RAH, map, bei ders, v.ide oUer. Cal~,!1,,!J'm. "'"l
y. · puppies. U wks old. Reas. ed. Xlnt cond. 9000 mL Ask-low mJIHte dome... DATSUN predate. 645-6)29. , • tirH, etc. l\1ust set' to a~ .........,.,... 1 * * White )'OUll&' female cat, $125. Aft ~ 49f.4887 lng $1500. 114: 842-9555. tlcsr Imports-,. trvcb or WILL 3 YoUl' Porsche or 72 CAD. 61 Dorado. Padded prec. 546-9187 art :;: 30. ~m:.:'1s h>me. Call AKC. Cl)UJE pups,~ wks., llQNDA MINI TRAIL Good campel'9. Now Open revnt Alle~oar~~ Call -~c!;.:1et11~°!.· :Jf n:pt~!~; 'n Foni LTD, Hftltp, fully ___ T_·_l -'1.R_D __ _..., Sable & white. CbrlstmaA condition. 1100. can ... ult lor Buyer In TOYOTA 1973 Ileen ... $7500 .... ..,11 eqttlp. Xlnt 0000. mis.
Oellvel')' S30-<l287 Call 675--3973. DAV£ ROSS NEWPORT 64&-06!8. Noed • Serooo Car! Good '61
'00 T-Blrd conven.. Cleani
runs X!rnl. ~7.(0) mi. ~
83:Hll83. I ll'L.1 F E M A L E Dohermon '10 llollda 100 Dirt bike. XI"'' BEACH 4 d• Cad. New bait. & traru;, MUSTANG '9tlMll ~ ~ Pinscher, 14 mos. old. · oond. Vf!l'Y lo nll'L $295. TOYOTA'S Best <!ffer, 673-7228.
. . 539-7392 ~54&-7.;'13211~,=.,.;,,,,,.-~=-PONTIAC 1000 W . CO.it Hwy. 1960 CADILLAC convenible . 1969 Mustang! Mach I. Full VEGA I••·-----Horse• 856 1972 HONDA SL·70 645-6400 '73's New u .... 70,000 ml. $295. """'"· Orlg nal p riv al e '71 v-a
Peh, Gtner•I 850 REGISTERED =?hone Lo mi. Extra acces. Best of· 2AOI Harbor Blvd. Call 5.1l-8013 o"'ll(!r. $1900/offer. Eves. -'21
---• -p ~-t1"'f"'i;j.,,..~";iil31=.i0.~640-J563.i;;;;;=f;;;;;;d I ~Col:!!'t~1,;Mo~11~,.;.5~4~4 ~IO~l7 WE HAVE THE CAMARO 55H5'l6. 2 Dr., • •pd., Radio, Hoat GROOMING & ~ina:. 10 ~":if~&~. &~·Am IL.A.DIES almost new 3 speed NEWEST OF Now at '72 Prices!. '66 MUstang, auto, P/s, air. (544CTN I.
)""exp. Tende< iovn11< """· bike $35. WE PAY TOP DATSUNS IN 0 1 owncr. MUST SELL! $1266
Sbmy's546-2848. * 613-7475 * CASH MANYM DELS ,.., Camaro , GMlt 511Hll6. ~~~~I ...t'~'t't t ·~~.j~/t:;:• 940 ~~~Nl~~J"c~~ l~D~el~1Lv3ei':!e ff~lf."'"b!'!.fn~~: 'Et:~~i;'~"'::. s"~" •w"9
BABY Parakeets. cboJce of . ' I~ 2'I' TRA VOO tor osed can lo trucks, just ry '"1 CAMARO 6 cyl sOcl< TOYOTA
-., 11.50 Mcb. 25' DISCOVERER call .. tor free cstimalel. AT •hm. $895. can aft a. OLDSMOBILE ~-Booll. -•I 900 :ll'·22' OONTINENTAI.5 GROTH CHEYROl£T See II . Yoo'll Buy It •m.2588* 1--,64-0_L_D_S_F-.-.-I J.966 -· C.M. 646-
PAIR -......... $5. 3J' PRlOE • JOYS , CHEVROLET -Seit the old .tutt. Buy "" ~~doe 13. fu< SCRAM.,LETS ::.J!":~~~ A>k~~~ ~lfADi& --,-69--C-H_EV ___ IGoodrond,$400. 962-S933 newotutl. I
.52 · * "-I * """"--Be ch fOlA . • Autos, lmjiortod 970 AUIOI, Imported 970 Clltl ANSWERS uunmar nc:. -·-a 9,,,,a,n>e. 2 cir, automatlcl ----...:...--------...:...---.-.1 131111 Harbor Blvd., G.G. 847<filll7 Kl W331 HIMALAYAN kl~ns &: cats Sll-6800 Cash For c•-n trans, pov.•er steerini, vs. $15 and up. ...,. 1966 Harbor, C.~I. 646-9303 air l'Ond. Lo\v miles. Green
•$-3118• ~ -Bisect -Si~~~--:; Next to G.G. Datsun ' u·-.. Cars & '71 TOYarA Corolla, ' dr, on green. #6863.
Benign -Beaver -P--.ai ACE ARROW MIU $1066 RED Persian male kitten. _ >.lAKE PASSES P T--L-orig. owner. 13,700 miles.
Sbob, CFA, papen $40. Overhen:I : "I don't go, for noGA ~ X1nt cond. moo or oiler. SH lt-You1ll buy ltl 546-9965 football. Let's fare it. Who Howard Chevrolet 645-2146 eves.
0op 854 wan" 10 ••'""'twenty bucks VOLKSWAGEN Nowpot't Beoch VOLKSWAGEN -1\Wl WN
lo take a girt to a game. BILL YATES INC MacArthur Blvd • Jam~--lU YOCYI) GREAT .Dane Pup, lnt'l only to watch another &UY · • 8...,55 ~= '66 "~-Reis -blood line, AKC .... MAKE PASSES!" MOTORHOMES --uunmn " vw ,.., SUNROOF.
$15 After 5 96)-6495 AND CAMPERS \VE PAY TOP OOu.AR 4 Spct, Radio, Heater, spark. A~Moo/~1f· lite blue, very
• pm Botiti/Mlrine
904
San Juan Capistrano FOR TOP USED CARS li?li" yellow with contraslln&: •""" ~ .... 5.5?..a735 * 1966 ltarbor, c .:r.f. 64&.sn-J ~~ ~fem. AKC .S::S-1 Equip. Alonplde San Diego F'rw)'. It )'OUl' car is extra clean, black in!erlor (ROA727}, "-NEWLY painted 1967 "El
·-493"'11 e •2261 e 837-48llO -UI fir1t $766 l9'JtJ VW ~P Top Camper, Ounloo. Top cond. Mii white. 9 wkl. ~2536 9'iii HP Jobnton out~ FOR LEASE BAUER BUICK Clean, nu lires. $2400. Mt whls. $1100. w I Gem
TERRlER Wire Fox Pup&, motor. Excellent condition. """"" H·~-Bl d Sff it, ~""I ~v it( 5 pm -£46.2ti06. 646-6.108. cabhlgh camper top ~ AKC,champllne. $115 • .'Call· 64&-1535 NEW ~ .......... v · ,_, ' tiona1. OB,YA: 644-2465; --arm •--"--a.:.__ 906 Motor home _ · RV main. Costa Mesa 979-2500 ~ tfJDi&• '?2 V\V Campmobile, P --30 Nltes: 54&-M84. °"'' _.., rvwW'f" IMPQR<N: \V !TED int. \Varranty, clean. Why
BEAtrr Female Samoyed tenance bldr. (2) 17.IXX> lb. •-r-AN -. pay more, $3250. 495-4892. '72 Kingwood Estate Wgn. -we ~--sire 31' am.IS Cabbl Cruiser. top hoists -S.E. comer Garden Orange County's TOYOTA t3 000 . amJtm pd to P6...-..-An. '-'MUll~49• shape-twin eng radio Grove &: Harbor Blvd. TOP $ BUYER 1970 VW Bug, fact air, lape • rru, ' p,
shots. papen, Incl. · stered depth fuxier Juli Santa Ana OU Co. 8llL MAXEY TOYOTA deck. AM·FM radio, sun ~ ~-~4~~.!it~
GERMAN SHEPHERD pu~ plley' many xtru, at~ps 6 Days cn4) 6M-M98' 18881 Beach BJv.;. 196S Harbor, C.M. 646-93)3 roof, yellow. $1750. 493-2879. tires,
py, female, white &; tQck. in c:onrlort. $9975. 675-8577. Rent A Motor Home H. Beach Pb. 847~ DATSUN '70 • 510, Air, rac-'70 VW lactory campa bus. ·~ ~tiel'y~n;~ .:o~PoodJ AKC. Shots, 18' Kebon ~Cruiser. (2) for your VitUition PRIV Party wants low mile-~~ .• etc. n4-t97-2249 ~t eng. AM/FM. fiew -&nd, rm JDCJtcr. See at-<911
BeautllUI qualn ity. $«11 ~ as.; hp .JM-~51~~.s. * Qf.4301 * :!e good cond sta. \V$2ag000on. or 494-2666. tires. $2,200 673-76.17. w. 18th st. Ole:ta Meta $«50. ttraJler .........,. MJ---,......, .,.e motor, approx ' ' 240 Z V low Iles I VOLVO +-= Retriever AKC BMtt, S.il 909 ~Wm'es N~~ & ope2! Cash. 4~· maculat~ Must :11. $.n$: 'R1~ !0~ ~i
ped., 7 wks, Male A Fem. ISLANDER 24-ft. Sailboat. ing still avall~ pri pty, $.A. ~L.LARS cu!_or ~unk~ 64&-3880 or 6T.H79'J. VOLVO cond . IA mi'•· 673-IOlD.
BeautHul dop. 646-4593. Many extra):. Call 545-5784 83&-(15.13. ~1003 ext EDI. DATSUN '68 Sta Wfl&On, 1969 CHEVY Nova 6. Oean
(.'OCKER Sparucl Pups -for appointment. 1971 PACE ARROW 22'. Avtot, lmpomcl 970 = B:~;~.=· La· '73's ~~·~ aft Spm,
AKC champion stock, 6 wks TWO LEHMAN lO' Sailboats Compl .elf cont. Sleeps S. ~~-·~=~---
Ou1mnas 1100. 55....,, Fiber. h"lls, Dae. Ail> $'15 Make offer. 96>-2397. ALFA ROMEO JAGUAR '12 EL CAMINO. c!Wom,
ARC OOlilE pups, Sable & and $200. 6'15-4826. Im EL DORADO HERE NOW! lad; Ai,, PS/PB, R&H,
wtUte. Quilt:mu Delivery. 16• Boston Whaler' without Mini Motorllome for Rent. .aU-Ro--1970 JAGUAR XJ6. Perfect.· w·w •. Ofl&' owner, 49'7-1995.
5JO.Q2117. ' motor, fully eqttlp, ... t port • "'6-2764 • ...... ...... 24,000 miles. Red. $0500. Come In test Drive '12 VEGA, ...... m inL,
LHASA Apeo puppies. Dar-model, $1500. O>st nu $2500 railers, Trawl 945 Call 6'2-4391 or 6f2..2789. TOOAYI AM/FM stereo, auto trans.,
Una. Ownp ..... Rancho .,,,_, ~ 19'3 Morie 10, $195 • burnt ......... ""'3682.
Santa Fe, Cal. (1) '156-3434--. 1963 Ken Craft 19~, very _, .,-1M-Rd NB ... -CONTINENTAL SHERRY'S POODLES xlnt cond. SI600fbest offer, . ... ... ~ '• ·• _...._ See lt • You'll Buy It
1: ,25!~. ~~ " I To ; -I[•] ~~· apt 101. GG . MAZDA -m 1.tAN ·~: ,!"'';,,1;!
AJREOALE Puppies, AKC, · · Auto s..vic., Ports M9 * AT * VOLVO Rare. 2 New tlru, Water champ. a!re: I: dam. 19 5 6 T R . 3 p a rt • , pump. Needs tail pipe. ht
548-0063 C.mMrS,Sale/Rent 920 Transm i ssion, motor, ~ 646-930.3 S395 take'I it. 548-5883 * -II Pups * ,~ -6 many many 1966 Harbor, C.M. ~&l.HT!ll=~===,.--
-SIJtle tn camper mepcr. ..... ~1486 LAST AutOI, Ulod 990 CORVAIR
AKC, Oill!uahUU. lhaw qua!· IN~TED •.
Uy, g ..a old. Immod. de-531 2304 -BUICK '63 CORVAII! Monza cpe.
llvny, 82742. -I 11 c:il I e e e auto, R/H, ~~s. Sea·
BRIARD Pups, AKC, Iha&· Cy;!~k11 925 ---. AUTOMATIC BUICK '67 Skylark, Powu, :::l.N"· s._,~,. SlllS.
Nu, ~~ o~· ROTARYS ~ E~'i'm~h ';"~' ~': .DODGE '71 HONDA 750, Farina rack book u~ s-<~ DAOISHUND Puppies -500J Mi , Show room cond, Antique1/Clanic1 953 • rwv. i.J".......,,
AKC, Miniature. M/F. Red SillO, 642-{;007 IMMEDIATE '68 RMERA, tnAOEO. '12 Dod .. van.
or blk Ii tan Shots. 538-6771. '49 DESOTO 8 pass Lemo DELIVERY Pvt. party. Call after 6, CU11Dm. Prioed to ee:ll. '72 YAMAHA 250 Enduro. running oond. $250. Qi.rysiei'. "~"' "192 :itr673-7445* l\.flNlATURESchnauzer Perl-... oond Lots of ex 8 ~ AKC Qiampion •ire, males. """" . • Wlndaor •47, pass Lerno, HUNTINGTON BEACH '68 Buick Wildcat. Steel Uke to Trade'!' OUr Trader'•
DOT DATSUN
DEAUN' DAYS!
'72 CLEARANCE SALE ----------NEW DATSUN 1200
2·DOOI SEDAN
Slelldlwd _.,,,_, l"Cludff t!MNf'. llltfrw""" .,..,..._. .._
...,,,_,. _.111;, toc.tll'8 -kll!ll, l -.if, oU ~ ,,_. ...
MJCll ...... lndudlns -.. """" ,,. ...............
CLEARANCE $1976 PRICE ------·---DATSUN 510 WAGON
Fllfl'f ffV!Qolod wllJI AM ,.,.,,, Nfwtr frtillt -_,-. ..... OloU, Jl.IXllrV llUtJlit·-. ......,.. Wllll ...... '-...... -. ti... es. Sel1al .,...,_
CLEARANCE
PRICE $2429 ---------DATSUN 510 4 Dr. Secbi
"""' ....... ..,.~"'-.AM ,...,..,.., ....... .................. ~-...--.--. ..... -.w. ............. Clr.SWllll•2'CD1.
3 TO CHOOSI flOM
CLEARANCE $1138670
PRICE I.
All Pa.ICES + TAX A UC.
'WHERf ITS FU ~ TO BUI ,1 cr.R·
DOT DATSUN
18811 BEACH HliO H U~l lNGTON Rf,\CH
'· l' 11 . 639-4225 tru • .,._
2163 950 T~~L8417-I640. ~2 ~ow ON DISPLAY MAZDA i>eliod tir~;.s~. Puadtse colwnn ts lor Y011t GeMrll 950 General ..--79 Sales Service ........... ..-.. 5 lines, 5 days tar 5 bucb. l~~~~ii:i=~~~~~~~~~l=~·6:9~F~O~R~D~F~-~IOO~; I Parts Boc(y Shop 17331 BEACH BLVD. ----------------~--------------11 SUck abltt, V-8, camper abelI. , radio, k>w miles (V'3538). GARDEN GROVE
DATSUN
WISHES~ ~RY
CHRISTMAS
AND
A PROSPEROUS
~YEAR
TO OUR MANY CUSTOMERS AND
·PllllNDS OF PAST YEARS-AND
WI HOPE TO SERVI YOU
IN THI COMING ·VIAii •
THANKS AGAIN
fWI WlfJ, • Cl.OID Mii. I -.I
Garden Grave Datsifn
13IOI Ho"'°" llvd., Go ....... 0ro ..
~ * 534-1255 *
$2066
SH fl, you'll buy Il l
I •. ..!. '69 -°""'' X1n't,oon<1. UURI Neat Cu1stmu gill! n;so. ~ YOTA ~~ ..... ~., °'
f.t 19611 H.-. C.M. 846-93031 ___ A_U_D_l ___ I.::=======
i\' REVlTALIZED 100"1 Tord '7:1 Audi 100 LS, silver !)Jue, Jlave 10melhlng ~ want t> ~ '56 Pick.up. Great 'ntn.a. under warr., Arr. rlh. air, .ell'!' Cl&11SlHed ada do it
$975. 644-t688: ( dr, pert cond. 586--3758. well • call NOW 64~
T 41 B
)l~ <ibristmas TO OUR Bes t wishes for a Christmas that's
• • • both merry and bou ntiful -F RI EN OS! from all the folks at
) I
0
"
•
r: :: •• •• •• • . •• !•
-'73 , DO.D,61 · ..
·SWINGER ,
SPECIAL
2 DOOR HARDTOP
Full ·Factory equipped
Onltr Yo11'.S NoW
s199 DOWN s65 MONTH
$208 8 sitthi.111"',•rou.s•.sh
F ..... __ ,,.,... ....... Ii<_ ULL , .. ....,..c1wta·•-· crHll tor l6 "'°'· Oottrrft PRICE ::::;:,:,::"~:.: Ull•.111%
•
LARGEST SELECTION OF ·y-NS
IN SO. CALIFORNIA
--DIATE DELIYllY
I
.. TAKE . '72·COLT '
2 DOOR HARDTOP
· '72:¥EG:A:
.HATC ... ACK ·
. '
YOUR
C'HOICE Auto. trans., rodio, heater, whitewall ·tires,
reclining seats, tilt-steering wheel. (419FAX) 4-Speed, rdctio; heater. (Ser. # 2 ·Door H.ni,;,,. Fullyfadery eq<i;pped,l.W
•
'69DODGI
' v..a. auto. trons .• power stetrlng, rodio &
· heater, (ZDV786)
' . $68.8
. '. • . .t
'69 MUSTANG .
V-1,~~h~~M~~J(X~~) $ ],088
. ' PULL PRICI
1V7782U3474301)
. ' ~ ~ ~
'65'YOl;KS
BUS
full factory.equipped including rodio;and heot-
er .. (RTT027) • 1
m~--(1961ffl)' _ . ,
.... "'"""""""'""""" ......... """'"~--.................. iiiliio
'71 •o•.-~·DR.Hardtop '69 FIAt aso. !~~~~~~ .. ~~~mi $1388 SPID.EIJ ..
: "' ·, '70:.DODGE ... , . . ' ,. , · ',, -.. $4:,a·a' YAN $.1·6: ·a·· ··a ..
· rodio, heater & wSw. ' Complete factory equipped; hos 4 speed.
(XXW530). 2 to choose fr~m~
~ ~· • ~ fully foctOrY equipped ·including-6· Cyl., . • . .· • ' ,
PULi.'PRIC.I '~ .,, r stic:k ~hi~,(93909£). " . -.. • ':~ • • , ,
· , ·· · JO·:.·'.~•:'~ '70 MAVERICK·.··· ·· .. =~~=-'.: 51588 ~~---"" . ··.$288 ~~.!-" '588.8
ii0plu•solimuc-hmo•r•1(00•9•DF•Dl ______ _..uu.;;· ;;,;:P;;R::,:iC;;l~ .... "'!1''"7"'.,;;,;,;. ·~·---.._-.:.;,•.;.;,__,',.:.--:.;Plfl=i;. , RlClc r: · 11 . PUl.L•Ric· -
·166CH.•Y . It , ,
··CAPalCE
. '71 DODGE
CHARGER
'68DODGI
1/2 Ton Pickup «·s".· .. a··. '88. ;6$ DODGE ·$:3·~ :a·:·.a·, ... ,:, O;D,. ·, ~I $··1·'a· ···'·a·a· YAN · , , . ' -, llolara:.. : · : : , ·
\ • , .• Auto. trons.. Rft•r -1tMring,1 oir cond. · , ,•
,V-8,outo.trans.,plusmudlmore.!R7793S) PULL --~~~11 (Dl41GOD1~l'622J ;~ :
i~ ~ • ' ' ' ., •• •• • . '
I ..__ -·-·-.. -~ ... ·~
-·--· COSTA MESA SADDLEBACK LAGUNA BEACH
HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY IRVINE SAN CLEMENTE
THE DAILY ftlLO~ TV Wl8. DICDtallt M, 1m
·DICK WILSON'S
~~ WILSON FORD SALES ----a......_ BUc .. 18255 BEACH ILYD., HUN:rlNGTON IEACH .. •lr0Ro 1
When a Baltimore motorist
stopped' for a red Ught not too long a,o, he and' his clog sat
patiently waltl~ for It to
cf\ange to green. Durln1t the In.
terim, a man aoproached the
ear an« asked, "does your dQfr
bite?" "Of course not," the man replied. With that answer,
the man forced the driver .' . .
and his canine comoanton out
of the , car, stepped into the
d'river's seat and promptly aped
off.
About the only answer we hav~
for an unfortunate situation
like that here at Wlbon Ford
Sales In Huntington Beech fa
..• make sure you have proper insurance coveraire.
We not only sell and ae~
America's mOlt popular line of
automobiles, Ford. but we have
eonsld'erable knowledge in the
field of automobile Insurance coverage.
lt'a that time ot year again
when mo.t of us are thinking
about new can. And you can
believe us . • . Ford for '73 is
somethln& extra spec1al1 May-
be you'd llke to save a lot on
• brand new 1972 Ford T Could
be, YoU're in the market for a good second car from our ex-
Cenent selection . . . whatever
• • . be sure and chat with one
of our Insurance counselors.
'l1te chan(es are that he can
come up with the very belt
procram for you and your w-
tomobtle Insurance needa. -
Why not drop 1n and see our
g:TMt '73 For& and while you're
bett ... check out your insur-
ance needs.
············~··················· .
WE PROUDLY
PRESE.NT THE
ALL NEW •••
ALL MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY!
ALL REMAINING 1972 CARS AT LOW
CLEARANCE PRICES !
JUST 2 MILES SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO. FRWY. ON IEACH ILYD.
18255 BEACH BOULEVARD
842-6611
HU"TINGTON BEACH
SALIS DlPr.
' ••. te 10 , .•.
7 Deys
SllYICI OPIN
'"' tlW• M .. I •·•· fe S , .••
MOM. 7:Jt •·• .. re l tJt ,.-.
..
592-5511 •
9•
10:00
12:00
12:45
1:00
3:00
!5 8.
TV !PORT! HltJHl/O/IT!
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24
9:30AM 1(1) "° footbefl ~me Show 10!00 Pro Footbel-l>Mslonal Pleyoffs 12!00 ,.....~ ..... yoffs
This Week In l'ro Footblll
12:45 CJ) Pro Footbell Post-Gem• Show
1:00 ,;v Footb9U
3:00 RMrw 5a30 The John McKay Show
8:00 Roller Game.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 25
12:30PM D (I) (I) NIA llasketball Chicago Bulls vs. Phoenix Suns.
6:00 D CJ) Cl) ROrth·South Shrine All-Star Game From Miami, Florid•.
TUESDAY,DECEMBER.21
9:30PM B Tommy Prothro Show
WEDNESOAY,DECEMBER27
6:00PM I Lallera BnketlMH Lakers vs. Houston Rockets In Texas.
8:00 llt ue.Qrey Footbltl A bowl game played with the "all·stars" or tootbltu.
9:30 fJD ~-·Where No Birds F1y A documentary on the 12th WO !_ta•nJ Championship, held In the U.S. for the first time.
11:00 I lob .. Show 11:05 UIC .. •ketb911 Tto)ens vs. LaSalle in Quaker City Tourn•·
ment.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28 8.-ool'M m ._.,.. From the Olympk
9:30 ...... Action
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29
5:30PM 8 llil NHL HocUr Boston Bruins vs. Minnesota North Sters.
TedUriJMy, ott.n called the ~test left wing who ever played
in the Netk>nal Hockey l•gue, ls commentator.
l lloblo,dlhow
6:15 UIC ~II TroJens continue In the Quaker City Touma·
ment.
7:30 I John Wooden Show 8:00 UCLA BMlletball The Bruins play in the Sugar Bowl Classic.
,.._.. lowl Footbell North Caroline State vs. University of
est Virginia.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30
lO:OOAM I Football The Sun Bowf Game 1:001 F'oatblM The Sun Bowl Game oiler Glimee
CJ) (I) F'ootbell The Getor Bowt Colorado vs. Aubum from
acksonvllle, Florida. 0 Shrine Eaet·W..t Footbell Clauic Live telecast from Candle·
iiick Park In San Francisco. 2!00fl!)11-Jr. O.vfs Cup Finals of the 15th annual Sunshine
Clip n Nations Tennis Championships, from Miami
Beech's Aemlngo Par1c
4:00 I NFL Geme or the Week 4:30 Altro llue Bonnet Bowl Tennessee vs. LSU at Houston's As·
trodome, In Teus.
6:00 "°Sidi= Thellob Show 6~ USC... II Tro~ns cQntlnue '" Quaker City Tournament.
8:00 ='9w~:L
Ch1ml)k>Mhlp Wrestlln& 8~ UCLA .._._II Sugar Sowl Classic.
NHL GAMES ON N~ Orr or the Boston Brulrn (left) end am GoldlWOl1hy or the Mlnneeat. North Stan wlll be on opposlnc
sides when NK lneumum-Its Nltlonal Hockey L.eque Oam•
Of·the-W ... frtde1 et B:JO ,..,
THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24, 1972
KNXT CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
Tiit falltd choir of Utt Fint Baptist Qurdl in Van Nuys, anan&ecl to auqest a
Clwfst1111 tnt, sines• •lecdon of tnlclltional hofldaJ tausic In a KfCXT Special ''The
L.Mlla CINtstius ''"" on Sunday {Dlc::l•btr 24) at 10:30PM on Channel 2. This
brNdcast .. m UM t.lewblon P"•it,. of "The Uvin1 Cltrist.Mas ,,.., .. a unique
Cllrtttaas celtbratiN that Ms "ctlwd wof'ld·wide attantlon. The KNXT Special wu
induced It tile Ven""' a.,tist Cllw'* by IUOO's Doll Hall, and will also be broad·
cut ... Qrtltma ~
1W8AY
LADIES
DAY
WASH&
Jn WAX
W•. eAI DAY
FR WAIN EE 1n~Ax
Wiii 7 5AI.. Ill UP
Paa• 3
THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24, 1972
THE CULTURAL EXPLOSION ~--· ...... ,. -~
Barbaralee Diamonsteln, writer and author and described Anyone who thinks a tele·
by June Wayne as "en activist In cultural attal~s," will join the vision comedian's work is
noted artist for a candid discussion of corporate end govern-pl~y shoul~ talk to Dom D~·
ment support for the arts end the cultural explosion when she Luise. During one week in
guests on June Wayne, Sunday (12/24) at 7PM on KCET Chan-October, Dom rehearsed dai·
nel 28. ' ly for two NBC shows, The
As former Director of Cultural ·Affairs for New York City Ms Dean Martin Show and The
Dlamonsteln Is the author of "Open Secrets: 94 Women In T~uch Flip Wilson Show. Both shows
With Their Times," and is a contributing writer to Saturday Re-were taped the same day.
view, Vogue, Harpers Bazaar Ms. and McCalls. Dean Martin's show began
During the program Ms. oiamo~steln comments that the ,;cul-taping at 4 p.m.; Flip's, 30
tural explosion" of the 1960s became a numbers game which In m1~.utes later across t~~ ha!I.
turn became negotiable In terms of a visible constituency claim-I never sat down, said
Ing that "polltlclans know there Is electoral mileage In it'... Dom. "I ran from one studio
Ms. Wayne and her special guest also discuss the National to the o~her and changed co~·
Endowment For the Arts, why less than 10% of those funds go tumes in the hall. I was in
directly into the hands of the artists, and why tax reforms of ~uch a hurry that some~dy
1969 have made It vlrtually Impossible to give grant money di-rn the hall of!ered .me a drink
rectly to an Individual. Both disagree on the avallablllty of art an.d '·drank 1t-w1t~out .eve~
to people outside the metropolitan areas with Ms. Dlamonsteln Hunking that I don t drink.
clalmlng excellent overall accessibility and awareness. The plan was executed by
Ms. Wayne maintains many elements of the population don't show stage managers. They
have access to the arts, holding that there ls an llluslon that had to arranfe Dom's appear·
cultural arts of the large clttes constitute the United States. She ance on Flips stage when he
~elates that creative people are everywhere, In small towns and was not in a sketch ori the
m big towns, and on a small campus they know just as much Martin stage. So they taped
about llterat~.re as they do In New York. "The difference," notes the acts on Flip's show that
Ms. Wayne, Is that In the small town those people never get to did not include Dom first
see a work of art, they never get to see the plays." Th h h ii I · Ms. Wayne feels also that the arts have reached the point e~, w e.n e .was ava a~?·
where they are too big to be small and too small to be big. "The they d whisk him o!'t~ Fl~p s
nation ... has to address the Integration of the arts as a natural, stag~ and back again in tu~e
normal way of life, where creative people are not just the sup-for his next act on the M~rtin
pliers ... but where they can get on with the citizens like plumb-show.
ers, doing what we do awfully well." ' "It was really too much,"
B•rbllr•IM Dl8monateln said .Dom, "I was g~ing over my lines for a magic act on
Flip's show while getting
dressed in a Santa Claus suit
for Dean's. Another time I
was wearing the magician
costume which had a gim·
mick in it housing three doz·
en ping.pong balls. The thing
opened up in the hall and all
the balls rolled everywhere.
"Everyone scrambled to
pick the balls up and •get
them back in the contraption
-during all this I never
stopped running." Through
all of the commotion, Dom
made only one mistake which
was quickly corrected, he
called Flip "Dean."
* • * "Applause," the award-
winning Broadway musical
play starring Lauren Bacall,
will be produced by Universal
Television for a special two-
hour color presentation on
the CBS on Thursday, March
15, 1973. Currently playing
In London for an extended
run at Her Majesty's Theatre,
with Miss Bacall repeatinfiit
her Tony Award·winning role,
"Applause" will be video·
taped there in February,
1973.
All·STAR
FAMILY SPEOAL
Sammy Davis, Jr., the 5th
Dimension, Miiton Berle, Deb-
bie ' Reynolds and the ca.at
of the up-coming Broadway
ahow, "Irene," will star In a
Christmas Day Musical Spe-
cial, "Opening Night USA,"
which airs Monday at 8:00PM
on CBS.
SAMMY DAVIS JR., one of
the mo1t popua.r of cont.n-
oor•ry entertlllnera, alng1
r'Blrth of the Blun," "The
lady la • Tr8mp" •nd "Mla-
ter lsoJ•nglH" when he ap-
pu,.. on "Opening Night:
USA."
The one-hour Special host-
ed by Ed McMahon will feature
~he star performers in their
opening nights filmed on loca-
tion around the United States
and Canada. Sammy Davis, Jr.,
will be seen performing, and,
in an Intimate backstage look
of his opening at Harrah's In
Lake Tahoe; Debbie Reynolds
and the cast of her upcoming
Broadway show, "Irene" will
be filmed at the pre-Broadway
tryout of the new show In To-
ronto, Canada; the 5th Dimen-
sion will be seen at their open-
ing night In the Boston Music
Hall In Boston, Massachusetts;
Miiton Berle will be filmed dur-
ing his opening night engage-
ment at the Desert Inn In Las
Vegas.
6:
7.
7:
a.
I
9
1
1
1
MORN INC
a am JleplNy
(I)~ lollflNt
G) Crafts Wttll Katy Mon.; w .... ,.
6:00 IJ Cl) s.dll SI_., lust Tues.-Thurs.; ... a.,... Fri.
Qi T9'17 II tM F .. Tues., Thurs. = ~ ~.,
1:25 D ....,._,,. "Memorandum" 11:15 GI ... Hit* 111t1m..s
6:301J Slit ,._, 'thlr Y• Mon., Wed., 11:30 B (() Swdt for,...,...
Fri.; NJmJ Tues., Thurs. II t1i g, ..... Mil, W1'ere ea .. C.IJ • ~._....... ,..,., a ... .._ Ca.di IJ ..,.,.,.., ... .,..,.. Mon.. D CJ) Cl) m lewttdled
Wed., Fri.: ,.,. Y..tli ""'"' GI L.t°I ...
Tua.; YHllt 1114 U.. lllNS Thura. 11J ..... a ...... TM hstrllll &'lft hlttlm
6:45 fB c......, 1.,..-t W1
7:008(1) ..... ·\t 1 f RNOON D\llfDTodlJ SM ., .....
00 ,.,..... s,ttts 12:0011 ..._.. ..
fJ Hlltefy tf Art Mon., Wed., Fri.; 8 g, T1ne on I Mltdl
Tiit 8r11t C..MMlr C-test Tues., U .._.:Se. Daytime Movies.
Thuri. D (])(I) m ~
DtamerTld~I ())am News GI 1up a114 HI• IMdia 1B ~ 1euntet
• c.tlMI f1i) F..-.. g ....-o,.a.1 12:15 D Dr. J.,ce lmllers/T..,.
Eli)..._. StrMt 12il0 8 (I) As till Wertlf 1Wm
1:30 e..,.., , .. ~ a am.,.,. .. o. Uwtt
(j) ..,_., 111 '" .._ D CIJ Cil EB s,11t SICMd D..... fJ , ... •ltff ......... Wtd.
D ._ ... s.-GI n. ~Law m c.t111• m Dlabc .., D111ar1 aJ NeM...., fm ,.,..,.. Mon., Fri.
fl) Setcl h~l"/Maftlet U~.W 1:00 8 CJ) 1lle ...... Upt
1:00 e ~ 1a.,..... a am lllt Doct9n IJ 'ht 8a11fJ (I) tra YHr a.t
CI> c.n .. "'-'/CNWrH'I T D (I) m All My Q lldraft
fJ .... st..f• AM D Mewl
Cl) s._, Mel Knoepp OJ ..-: See Daytime Movl1J;
OI l>HMt die Mtnacie ltlnl Fri. only. mat.cl Ma"9t c:.w.ra,. em F•mm ID Felbll'll 1 :30 • Cl) Edie .. Nlaht
•=30 a .... WrJ a a m AneCMr WOftd Cll Jlc:k La lalftl U MM: See Davtlma Moviea.
D CMracttu c.t/s,.fta Chtll D ()) (j) O> Ul'a Miiie 1 Dell ID, .. _. Ffll• D MM: See Daytime Movies. • ,..., m... .... KJcun l11ndNH
fl) f..... Fri. only. Orlglnltln1 from tflt
9:00 8 (I) TM Jebc'a WIW Pesadtna Civic Auditorium, with IJ tll I! IMull't Pt.a Biii Welsh as host. This luncheon Is IJ w. w.,. 1'llMtN a special pre-pme prosram featur·
(ll Pllll .,..... ... in1 the co-apt.ins of both Olllo
D Jecti La La111 Strte and USC and the 1972 Rost
ID ....._: Ste Daytime Movlu. Queen and her Court m Uldl w... II) Falllla 111 Sewlftl m CIJ SaaM 1tntt • c..•HJ a.pert
9:30 II Cl) 1lle .... f'lb II Rl&ht fill Fublm a a m c...lltrltilll 1:.40 m .... ._ 0o111r1 D ....,..: Set Daytime MOYles. 2:00 II (f) LM It • M.., Spit,.,..
...... llla1 m ... ,., .... a a m 111tur1 .. ,.,. l'lac:e
fl) Jf• ,.._., .. Show D (I) Cil U> Thi ....., .... ta•
10:00 II Cl) Ca•llH m Not '°' WHltn Only
Cl) MM: Sff Daytime Movies. &!) Ftatum D Ol 8' s.w tf ttte Cttttutr 2:30 11 Cl) SKrtl .,.
8 119'1e: See Daytime Movies. 8 9J m Softttntt Cll stu• t11t at-r1 D CIJ (j) a> Thi Oat1n1 ..... f) y_,. 0) Joenna CarMn Dow
GJ QtJ IOllt Sandra Esc1mlll1 fll) FlltUrts ID Ftablm 3:00 IJ f111lfJ Affair
10:30 B (I) U.. tf lit D II• Too Show; lllb Dou011 a a e ...., ... d 1q.,.,.. Fri.
Cl) ...... CM'ltft IJ Hlatlwq htrol m fl>,....,._ D (]) Cll a> c.nen1....,....
11:00 8 (() Wllltrl Ult Hetrt b Cl) t1j Mowll: See Daytime Movies.
THE DAllY PILOT, TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24. 1972
D n.. LNe ...,., ......... m a.clJ • ,.,.
tJi)Fut.ra
fl)LaC..w.411Dll m,....,..,,...,..,
3:10f!3 ....
3:30 8 tra l•r let D Cll .. ._ Dtqlls SIMlw
• Or.dt ... Hlm.t D CJ) mo.. lit a 1..1vt ............ m ~ DrlW Mc:Cmr •Ila'• ... T., ...
fJDFllblm
II) tint en la Tlf'dt
3;45 fB Una Awtnbll'I &pantla
4:00 II Uttll Wontlft New children's
series based on tht stories by
Louisa May Alcott. D News Ft1. only.
IJllleliftttla• D CJ) ED Lewi Allerialn Strit ................... mearttea
GEIA11t
8!)""91 StrMt
&)f ... tlltCat
4:30 II MM: See Daytime Movies.
()) Mowtes: See Daytime Movies
Except Mon.
" f atller lM'WI Int
D ,.... Schu'*', Moma
DFT"" m, ..... ,,...
m Clltl&H'• '"'" m n.tu"" &JIO•
5:00 Cl),._. Mon. only.
811(1)9 .....
(f).,,.,,... D let S.art Tun., Wed.; lnertf
ttlOll6lties Thun., Fri. ID 11le f11Md1MI ID N•nnJ 11M1 Ult f'rtflllOf'
tJ) LI f Uficl
tJi) Mister 11 ...... llllahbo"-'
@DTralla West
&)Till'llstoo,..
5:15 Gr!) hHrl•• Mu ... I
5:30 CJ),.... Mon. only. 8 Ill NHL HIQey Fri. only. 11 s.a Hun; .11nJ Wnt Slllw
Wed.
(I) m DIMls ... MIUCI
fJ Cl)aJ ..... D MMe: Ste Daytime Movies. m CNrtsM, If E.Mt'a Fltller ID n. £ledltc c..,.., .Laa .....
@D 011 Wllloft'1 Tewa Tall ID> Flltllnl
f!Jlpeed~
5:55 B Laan w ... u, Wed only.
YOUR INVITATION
TO
GRACIOUS LIVING
UnllW MANOR -Reside nti•I u re c;enter for the •ctive rotir•d
llAUTIFULL Y APPOINTID SUITES
.... t~f•lty qpol19tecl .. itn with b•lconits, •nd priute or •emi-
pri¥•te rooms fe•ture diitinctive color-coordin•t1d c•rpeh •nd in·
terlor clecor. Every room h•• • prlvtf• l.eth compl•t• with +vb or
1how•r.
ALL MEALS AND SNACKS
~II n11•l1 •nd tn•ch •re nutrifiously prep•red •nd 11ttr•civelv
,.rved bv our e11pert diehrv st•ff. Speci•I dioh for ihose who re-
quire t .. em •nd tr•v service to the room h provided when lhe rui-
dent is un•ble to come to the dining room.
SEIVICES Centr•liied heoting .,.d .;, con-
d itioning: Buutv,'Bu b•r Shop; P•tio •nd,......,.-----~--
belconies: P•f\On•I l•undrv room; Intercom : l/ji:.i~::::.=/~:1
music: Doctors on ull; Attend•nh 24-hrs.: f,l,tl'
1
Air conditioned limosine. t f ----l?Vlew Mano• ii--_-=i. :.~1 \-:_.. .v,.
350 BAY ST 540·7095 ... ~~ .. ~
, ... 5
AMERICAN MOTORS
Ward S. Le e Inc.
123~ S. Main St., Santa Ana
547-5826
Harbor American
1969 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
646-0261
Roy Carver Inc .
234 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa 546-4444
Crevier Motors .
208 W . I st St .. Santa And
835-3171
BUICK
Ba ue r Buid -2925 Harbor
Costa Mesa 979 -2500
CADILLAC
Nabers C adilld'C
2600 Harbor Blvd ., Costd Mcsd
540-9100
CHEVROLET
Connell Chevrolet
2828 Harb~r Blvd., Ccsta M ~sd
546-1200
DATSUN
Dot Datsun
18835 Beach Blvd.
Huntinqton Beach 842-7781
DODGE
Courtesy Dodge
2888 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa
55 7 -9220
FORD
Dunton Ford
2240 So . Main St., Sant a Ana
546-7070
Theocfore Rob ins Ford
2060 Harbor Blvd ., Costa Mesa
642-00 I 0
Wilson Ford
18255 Beach Blvd.
Hunt in gton Beach 842-661 I
University Oldsmobile
2850 Harbor Blvd ., Cos ta Mesa
540-9640
JAGUAR
Bcwer Buick -2925 Harbor
Cost~ Mesa 979-2500
LINCOLN • MERCURY
Gustafson Linc/Mere
16800 Beach Blvd.,
Huntington Beach
84'2-8844
Santa Ana Lincoln -Mercury
130 I No.Tustin , Santa Ana
547-9183
Connell Chevrole t
2828 Harbor Blvd ., C osta Mesa
546-I 200
OLDSMOBILE
University Oldsmobile
2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
540-9640
OPEL
Bauer Buid -2925 Harbor
Costa Mesa 979-2500
PONTIAC
Dave Ross Pontiac
2480 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
546-8017
PORSCHE -AUDI
Chick Iverson 'f>orsche-Audi
«5 E. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach 67 3-0900
ROLLS-ROYCE
Roy Carver Inc.
23 .. E. 17th St.
Cnsta Mesa 546-«44
TOYOTA
Dean Lewis Imports
1966 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
646-9303
VOLKSWAGEN
Harbour Volhwagen
1871 I Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach 842-+435
Chick Iverson Volkswagen
445 E. Coast Hwy. NB 673-0900
VOLVO
De•n Lewis lmPorls
1966 H1rbor Blv~ .. Costa Mes•
646-9]03
..... 7
SUNDAY
DECEMBER 24
,;
\' 0 R ~ I "i (.
DYouqltHMrt
Cl)FM• fNtMn
IJ CJ) GB l•hlMll a• Wilt • Mewit: (C) "Utlte W...11"
(dra) '49 -June Allyson, Peter
LIWfotd, Elizabeth Taylor.
ll)Cllurdllatlle ..... ., ,.... .......
5:15 at Tiie Cll...,...n/Tlle llMe AA-ll:lO D fD Talaiq WMtl A llPt
swen -Dow TI•~ ""'
1·45 ()) Chrfstephtr a.se-Up Cl).._.: .. MIPtr lanl•" (drt)
7:00 IJ ._ .. ,_, 1V F •-· '34--Adolph Mtniou, Wallace BMIJ. . ,.,_,., ., ... ~ U (l)El>Mab•Wllll
O S~•s of F•itll D .._.: -war tf tile lltdttn" ~ ::;,.rd (~l·fi} '58 -Susan Cabot, Dick
O Hour of Dtllvtrlftce Miller.
®) Rioa11n Holid.,a 11:'5 IJ ho football Pest.Ci• SllclW
at U111t Ont m S.Crtd Ht1rt/Tht Cllrtato,htra
7:301J Hartt• Globttrttttrs O W.l'190fl T1btmaclt Choir
(j) Curtotfty Shop
D Dr. lilly J. HarcJa
®) Tiie Jttseas
at Elt•lltlry Ntws • CIJ Mtltdytlnd In Motion
1:00 IJ c. .. ,.. Ttlrtt
D n. ct.nst.,...rs
D lei Hu•blrd U It Is Written
()) lAt1p Ullto My fHt
0 Herald tf Trvtll
~ ow TI• c.s,tl Hour .......... .,.._.Fire•
l:JO fJ h• football Pr•-'a111e saow
D T1"I Is tlM Uft
Cl) Real Estate Open House D c..,us f'rtfU.
()) Lit n.. ..... upt
D Dlf " Dbmtry ID KATHRYN KUHLMAN * (IN COLOR) 11J klltlryn Kullhun
9:00 II Pro Football Divisional Playoffs
CJ) lllll Is ltlt Uft
DCM1ttqeMyStf111M
D Dlf et D11c1very D I IHCW I lont .. llw Us s.c.
end 1"111 Music end comment by
collt1• students. D CJ) 0n1 Rtbtna
Qj It Is WrittMI
ll)IMlterAI
@!) Malca J P11tbns
9:JO Cl) Ace* dt la Cem1111ldad D s.reit11p1ty
0Almlq~
Cl) Mewtt: ''lMMnlN r....r•
(rom) '4S-8renda Joyce.
DDHilnrt
O ltlUNyn Kuhl••n a.g .,., of Dbcowry
11J Ohl Tl• 8osptl Hour
II) Esta tS .. Yid•
10:00 D m s.atab 2020
DHHrof Pwtr D Cil Curtostty Shop D Movie: (C) "Sh1111 Aptlra"
(dre) '$-Victor M1ture, l1i Meet .. ,.,....
flt frnte I It Ylcll
10:10 a m ''"'"unie1 a••&M
llJFtltltftrTectay
CE) Veca dtl S.Mhttrto
11:00 D m Artuftcl tlM World In IO D.,a
hi•.
.'\ I 1 I p ... l 1 (! N
12:00 tJ I IHc!AL I Tldillp of &f'Nt Jty
Soprano Veronica Tyler and the
CBS Orchestra under the direction
of Alfredo Antonini ptlform music
for the Christmes seuon. rn c:.sultatioft D Qi m '"' r-.11 l>Msionat
"""'°"' u~-m•~htetl1 m •ltlllJrt U) Tiiis W ... la Pre FeotNll
12:JO(I) D1J ef Disc:Mtty
00n.l 11btna
@ Dtctw la tile HMM
.., Jot Ddilw1'1 Opell ftru•
&)5*' Set ..
1:00 f) hlllk Strwia Fll111 0 1111 Chlltpions
(j) Mnit: "lllrtt Mua .. tHrs"
(com) '39-Marx Bros.
U Cl) Dlrtctltns Cl),.,,
fJ I lflc!A I Tiit f'rolllbe A moo·
t11e of events leadin1 up to the
birth of Christ. Bina Crosby ner·
rites. m Dlttlrt .., ..... m raatinl n1.Jce m,..,.....42
1:30 1J lhwl•1k1rs Rick Devis hosts. D Mewit: "Mlrdl .. tM Woedt11
SoWitft" (cfts) '34-l.1urtl and
H1rcly.
IE Ytkt tf C.!wery m .... rlttlH
Z.-00 . Cle ..... t
(J)hlll• 0 MeM: "llst.op's Wife" (fan)
'43-Clry Grant, lortttl Youna.
U F1•ltr Tllutrt: "The Savior''
Produced In Speln with Spanish
actors In 1967, this film tells tht
story of the birth of Christ end
re.creates his lift up to the aa•
of 12.
CJ) Movie: (C) .. Aaron Slick Fro•
Punkln C~" (coin) '52 -Alan
Younr. Oln1h Shore. m Otlttr U•ltl m ,,., ., DtscM,,
mMtttlM Prtu
2:30 1J Movie: "h's A WOftdtl'ful Uh"
(dre) '47-James Stewart, Donna
Reed.
(}) UnlvtnltJ Dlaltpt
THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEI<. DECEMBER 24, 1972
Ci) MoM: "Drll••" (ldv) ·3~
Sabu, Reymond Massey. ., .......... All.
l:OO CJ), ......... 70's
DMMttM,.... a MtM: ..,.... lllrM -...
Meet Html ... " (com) '62 -The
Thrtt Stooets. Vick.I Tricttett.
tl§HTllln1TllW
Gtc:ailltr 8J Saldi Clln lAM hndt (R)
f.mSUq
ti) Sllltl Miu dt Medlt .....
Pope P1ul11 Christmas Eve Mau
and Mmas1.
S:lO (I) I IHc!A( I Tiit Pnl•be
D1t1t1e11 tta.t1ee U I IPIC!Al I A Nevy et.rtst.111
Jontthan Winters hosts es NIYy
men 1round the world play Santa
for the children of their particular
locale.
f.mC.ltMltatlon aJ It la Written
4:00 Cl) lktcMt as.• IJ i IHcfALl Mickle Fln11'1 Mam
Tit1t HMr (R) Fred and Miclde
Ann host this hour of comedy and
melody wl1h suests Arte Johnson
and FOfTtst Tucker.
00 Tiit belies D lltM: (C) '1llt Mlndt'" (adv)
'~noll Biker, Ropr Moore.
(J)T ...... 111ltlf2000 tli lldeul , .. ,...,..
g W..0. IUftt CluisttllS S..-
det .
fJl) Well Street Witt m Tiils la ... Utt
ln}htlenatlAtiM
0> ... Hlllbanl EB Cl•pa "9f11t
4:JO CJ) S-n Seas
CJ) f ICll tlM NttiN
at Mtwtt: "'Mlt'ldt 11 Mtlt
Street" (drt) '47-Maureen O'Hare. fJJ Tiit ,,.. ...
fl!)W..WPflll
IE) llawltlt4 n ti lama
m ~ " E1enllty me....""'
s:001cn. WldlJ Wtf1d ef ~ Wln.
tin Martin Milner, end AndY 1nd
Otvid Weynt 1uest.
Cl) te.blt
CJ)Aau.ttM Die
D .,THE RED SEA" * Brou1ht to you by SO. CALIF. GAS CO. IJ 118c!AI Tiie IN Sta The
third in 1 series of seven speci1ls
on the Seven Sets.
9""" m llHc!XLI Pepe raura CMst.
•11 Mesa lftd MtSMft
fa C.rMr Ttd ArmstnN11
fll) DIMn' h at tlM Stof'lfrtni
@DHo11tlf stars
E!)MMlt .... .,.
5:JO B I ldc!A( I Mother low Aa-
M•bfJ (R) Chlldren's prosram
besed on treditionel Mother Goose
VtrstS,
(]) Mftle: "Inn of tht Sldh Hap.
,........ (dre) '58-lnar1d Berr-
man, Curt Jur19M.
D n.t ,.._ lkllJ ....
1J Mndftl &t...mitn Jotl Grey
end Jecklt Vernon pest.
CJ) ..... 9 MM: (C) ..,,.,,_,., ..._ All·
""'-"" (ldv) '64-8rian Ktlly,
LUM Halpin.
fl)Ketta1Valtetytte.lr m • ....,.,.. .... 1a 1ev1ew
g)s,eed beef
\, ' •• •• ! .
6.-00trJCl)SiltJ Mii• CBS Ntwl
COITUllOnd•nt Mllcl Walltc9 looks
at the flood of •ll•M tnttrlna
this country lll111lly and the prob·
lenu accompanylna this lnflu~. . ., .....
O Movie: (Ztir) "~ Inn"
(mus) '42-Blnr Crosby.
Cl) Rollin'
UIAmSoMbitdy
D lefts Kat1off rme11ta fB ...._ ,.._ HIPll&frb
fii) llacl *'°"' m•.tewnt EC!),...,. dtf .,..In ... mn....-..,..
6:30 D Lault "Run to Nowhere"
Conti. Joey Greer continua hii
fliaht to 1n uncertain future.
CI) llad: leMy
UEJNftMa OJ CrublN ftlblNS .
II) llHc!AI Clutstaaa It (R)
Anlm1tld feature about 1 rouna
boy who finds the true me1t1ln1
of Christmis when he takes part
in 1 school play.
fl)Dr ... mz...
fmllladta m ..... JI•• ..
&)llttttlacab
1:00eu11n1
D Wlld Kiii,._ "Winter Comes
to Ytllowitont" Merlin Pertclns and
Jim fowler lra11tl to Yellowstone
Park etter the tourisu hive left
and discover 1 f1scinatln1 story
of 1nlm1l llfe in winter,
Cl) Wlftd 1f Sarvtval
(i)At .....
0 lllll la Yew Uft "Vikki Ctn"
II) llH<IA I Wllllt• 111d Mary
C:.rislmaa Cllelr FR>m the William
and Mary Colleae in Wllllamsbura.
Vlr&lni1, comes the choir slnflna
aonp In tune with the spirit of
Christ ml$.
........... Dr1t11
fJl) jpe •• ,.. m Wlld KJnad•• ED l.Nrteet Wtf• St.ow EE SiJ.ed beer
7:30 tJ Anne tnd the Kini Louis finds
himself with 1 most unwelcome flr1·
friend when pretty Kai-Una, one of
the Klna's d1u1httrs, aets 1 crush
on llJm.
Cl lfD @D Wonftrful Wtrld of Db·
MY "A Present for Donald" In this
animated Christmas pro1r1m, Don
1ld Duct leads a romp throuJh Ltt-
in Amttlca with 1 holld1y packaae
of rifts.
Cl) TM Pf'Ottdora
a
O H•lf tile hofp 1Urt11 Comedy from the scene and a fortune In
Hour Della Reese auests. jewels misslna.
Cl) El artto dt Aztl111 0 Ntws
D Mllllell $ Mewlt: (C) (2hr) ''The 10:00 D Ul m NIPt Q1llery "She'll Be
Uttlt Slleplttnl tf IU11,.io11 Come" Company for You" When his Invalid
(adv) '59-Jimmle Rodaers, Chill wife dies. a men is aiven 1 cat for
Wills. . company-terrifyinr corppany. Leon· ID ! IHclA( I Ctuisllnu QrHt1nrs ard Nimoy, Lorraine Gary and Kath·
Fro• Ult City of Los Anplts Dave ryn Hays stir.
Reeves hosts show with the Braille 11 OJ fJ) News
Institute Chorus, the Sylmar Cho· D tt.ur of Power Chrisbllas Specl1I
rus, the Los Anaeles City Youth ID I lflcllt I Throurh t11e £1ts of
Band, Cota Boys and Girls Chorus, 1 Child The 1werd-winninr film that
and the Chris Korney Chorale tells the story of a float from Its m ...... frtndl CMf drawina board birth to its IClual
fl) LI Crilda lltn Crild1 participation In the 1971 Rose Pa·
&) Add11111 F1111lly rade.
8:00 IJ (I) M•A•s•H Guut Arlene Go· fD Flrinr Line
lonlla portrays a likeable but inept €!) Y Ahora Silvia
nurse who feels the need of male m I lfi(1lt I Tht Saviour Proaram
companionship, and unjucky Hawk· depictina the events surroundina
eye Is nominated by the other the birth of Christ.
nurses. 10:15 El) Futmls In Japan
g ROLLER GAMES DIRECT 10:301J I sBctM I The Uvtnr Chrtstmas * T·Birds vs. Renegades Tree A unique choir production by D Rolltr Q1 .. 1 the First Baptist Church of Van D CJ) (j) m Tiit Fii A prof es· Nuys.
sional killer wounds a leaitimate B m News
businessmen while attemptina to D liamer ltd Arm,trona
find his intended victim. (j) The Evil Touch OJ Movlt: (C) "M"t Me In st. ®) San Die&o Panor11m1
Louis" (mus) '4>-Judy Garland, m Bonanza
Tom Dralle. 11:00 IJ @)News
EE Nlppen No Uta 0 I 16c!A I Christmas Eve St>e-ED I IPicllL I Circle of Urhts Pete dal Musical service featurina the
See1er and friends in a holiday combined choirs of the First Con-
son(fest payina homaae to ideals 11re11ational Church of Pasadena and
that lud men out of dartnus. the Pasadena Presbyterian Church.
@!) El C.nulft g Rex Humbard
CiI1) Cine del Domlnao O Carner Ted Armsbon1 m Dmcl Suaklnd Show m Movie: "A Christmas Carol"
8:30 1J (I) S1nd1 Dtinun Show A bank (dra) '38--Gene Lockhart, Re1inald
error results in Sandy suddenly be· Owen.
comin& $10,000 richer at the U · ID llathf!R Kuhlman
pense of • local politician Vlho'd m Janak1
rather nobody knew the money was el Pandorama
his. 11:15 IJ Cl) !S•lclALIColonlal Willlams-0 (fj m NBC Su•daJ Myste,,-bura C.rols A alimpse of the famed
McC&oud '1he Park Avenue Rust· community accompanied by appro·
lers" McCloud has the dubious priate seasonal music suna by the
pleesure of breakin& in a new part· Williamsbura Singers.
ner-1 policewoman-while tryina 11:30 fJ I "lc1ll I Let tM Desert be
to infiltrate a national car·thefl Jorful The Tucson Boys Chorus per·
rina. formina at the classic 17th century ID Movie: (C) (90) ''Gulliver's Tm· Spanish mission San Xavier Del Bae
els'' (cartoon) '39. outside Tucson, Arlzona.
9:001J (I) Dkl V1t1 Dyte Show It looks B To le Announced ,
like a blue Christmas for the Pres Movie: ''God Is My Partner'
tons when Dick is jailed in a little (dra) '57-Walter Brennan.
desert town because he doesn't have O CV News
the money to pay 1 traffic fine. Cl) Movie: "A Christinas C.rol"
U Hour et '"" Christnlas S,.dal (dra) '51-Alistair Sim. 0 Cl) CJ) EB A.IC Su11d1J Movie: ID Movie: "The Red Shoes" (dra)
(C) (21flllr} "TlloM Darin& Youn1 '48-Moira Shearer.
Men In Tllelr J1unty .lltoples" (com) @ri) Estrella MusJcales
'69-Tony Curtis, Susan Hampshire, 12:001J C.ndlellpt Services Bruton Par·
Terry-Thomas. Slapstick comedy with ish Church In Willi1msbur1. V1.
Curtis 1s a brash youna American B @) Christnias Eve Mlclnlpt
who 11mbles his half of an auto Mass St. Patrick's Cathedral, N.Y.
factory on e bet that he can win the g Mlclnlpt Mass From St. Besil's
Monte Cuio Rally In the late 1920s. Church in Los Angeles. •
fB Sl"'ural RewofutJon O Movie: (C) "SIJ One for Me" fD Masterpiece Th11tre "lhe Moon· (mus) '59-Bin& Crosby, Debbie
stone" Reynolds.
&I) Nmdld en Hollywood €!) Santa MISI de NOdlt Buena
9:30 1J Cl) Mannix A wealt~y bu~ine~-1
1:00
30 ! Movff:l ~;:ssport to rtmlico" man 1rrim home to find his V11fe · u:1 • • murdered, his best friend running (com) 49-Stanley Holloway.
THE OAJL Y PILOT, TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24, 1972
DON'T '111/il/r
1111;1~11;111'~ I~
AND BREAK THE PAINT
HABIT
' . ' All WORK CUARMTEED ~~ . · ..
f ...--& Pacificote is Guaranteed
for 15 Years!
PACIFICOTE incorporates 6 steps:
sandblasting, trenching, patching,
masking, waterproofing, and
Pacificoting. 24 colors to choose from.
PACIFICOTE YOUR HOME &
BREAK THE PAINT HABIT!
FREE FREE
FIRM ESTIMATE FllM ESTIMATE
SERVING LA. QVER 30 YEARS
CALL MR. EXPERT NOW
DIRECT OR COLLECT
836-1878
407 No. La Cienega
Los Angeles
,.,. 9
MONDAY
0£CEMB£R 25
',1 () f? ~ I \j ( ,
6:001J Cl) Sunrill Semester
6:25 0 Knowled11 "Memor1ndum"
6:30 IJ Sut Yun1 Yln1 Yee
Cf) m Eduutional futures
fJ Survertnr ltle Universe
@)Gamer Ted Annstronr
6:45 El) Co1W1110dity Re,ort
7:00 fJ Cl) News
0 ®) m Tod1y Show
0 Search
Cl) lanina Splits
0 History of Art
fJ 61rntr Ted Armstrone m I s•mll ! Tiie Promise A mon
tage of the events leading to the
birth of Jesus. Bing Crosby narrates. m Cartoons
fii) Sesamt Street
7:30 U Garner Ted Armstrona
@ Bozo's Bia Top Show
ONews fJ Banana Spllb m CHRISTMAS MASS IN * SIGN LANGUAGE WITH
CAROL McEVOY m I sJlclll J ChristmH Mass In
Sip Lanau•1• Father Fachtna P.
Collins celebrates. for the first time,
the Christmas Mass in sign Ian-
guaee.
Q) Hobo Kelly
8:00 IJ Captain Ken11roo
IJ The Galleiy
@ Cofftt Break/Children's TeKJitr
0 Ralpfl StofJ's A.M.
Ci) Sunup Mel Knoepp
D Movie: "C9'aplln C.ntlYIJ" (com)
A collection of Ch1rfi1 Chaplin's best
films.
(j) Stump the Start
Ill Cttr «ldJ Sandra Esclmill1 m 1 l!«<w 1 n. c.t1at... c.ro1
Alm produced by the LA. City
Schools Adult Education Division.
10:30 1J Cl) Low tf Uft a 9 @E Hol.,..... S.u•m
Cil JNnM Clrt0n Show
Q)W.ndlalk
fii) I lflc!AL I C.Nlltlc. C.rolb11 A
concert of Christmas music by Tht
Mormon Youth Symphony and Cho-
rus under direction of Jay Wt lch
and Had Gunderson, from Salt Lake
City, Utah.
11 :00 1J Cl) Wiien tile Heart Is
D (li mJMp•~
0 Cil Cl) I lficlM t Ftflz Ntvi·
dad, A Mulctn-AIHriclft Chrlatau
A mariachi Cttristmas MISI with
members of 1 Mexican·Amerlcan
community from Our Lady of Gu1d1·
lupe Church In Sin Antonio, Texas. mur1 lap
Q) Craib With ~ m n. £Jedrk c..,..,
ff) Yoces del Duitrto
11 :30 IJ (JJ S.arctl fOr T OtNmW a (lj m Mio, What, • ., .....
Oltattht Cloct
fJ Movie: (C) ''f••ltJ fea" (com)
'57-Fred A.st1lre, Audrey Hepbum. m I l!lclXL I JeufMY to lttldti.t•
The story of Cttrisrs birth, per·
formed by members of the Em-
manuel Lutheran Church of North
Hollywood.
Q)News
fii)Ll1KY
m Dennis t~ Mentct 12:00 1J I IHciA\ I The St Leula Zoo A
fii) t .. ldnr Thines Grow "The Cool musical romp throuah the Children's
Window" Zoo to the accompaniment of the
&:30 IJ Gene Autry 48 members of the Norm1ndy High
CI) Jack La Linne School marchine band
fJ Coarareous Cat 0 m Tltree e11 1 Mltdt m Yori and Friends 0 Christmas Ewe Mldnl&flt Mau
l!)Gumby (R) m Maule and the Beautiful Ml· 0 CD (I) m Password
chine Cl) Qi) Ntwa
8:55 fJ Sports Club Q) Gallopln& Qourmet
9:00 IJ (j) The Joker's Wiid fii) Weshln,ton Week In Rwln
@ Film ''Christmas Is" 12:30 II Cl) As ti.e Wof1d T11rns
0 (19) €E !SFlci;AL! Chr istmas D Qj) m Days of Our Lives
Dar Service live from Washington 0 (])Cl) tl) NIA lastietbell Chi·
Cathedral, Washington, O.C caro Bulls vs. Phoenix Suns.
1J John Wayne Theatre m Ntw loo ltewitw
(i) Phil Oon1hue Show Q) Diallnr for Doll1rs
fJ Jadi La Lanne m ft1tures m MO'flt: "Boy's Town" (dra) '38 1:00 fJ Cl) Tht GuJdi•r Uctit
-Mickey Rooney, Spencer Tracy. 0 Qj) m Tiie Doctors
I!) Uncle Waldo 0 I l!lcll\ I Mau for Retardtd m Stsa111e Street Children Father Gilsenan leads I
9:30 IJ Cl) Thi New Pric.e Is Rlctit Mm for mentally handicapped chil·
Ci) Movie: (C) "Gay Puree" (car· dren and helps them re·enact th•
toon) '62. manaer scenes from the First Christ·
D Movie: (C) "Hey The,., lf1 Yoai mas. Archbishop M1nni111 speaks.
Bear" (cartoon) '64. (1) tt'• y..,, ltt
0 Movie: (C) ''The UmbrellH of m Movie: (C) "Htr TWtht Men"
Cllerbour(' (dre) '64-C.1therine (com) ·~reer Oarson, Robert
Deneuve, Nino Cutelnuovo. Ryan, Barry Sullivan. m Romper Room m features
10:00 O Cl) Cambit 1 :30 IJ Cl) Edee of Nlpt a @) m Salt of the Century D ®) m AnotlMr Wortd
Pait 10
1'HE DAILY PILOT. TV WED(. ~HJt 24, 1972
0 Mowlt: '1'M uttlt Fqttfwt"
(dra) '~lchlt MdMCO. mr...._ .. ,...
l!)Fa .....
II)iIHC@;ls.tl Clla
1:40 ..............
2:00 8 CIJ'LM Is 1 MMJ ~
™"' I am..._. " ,.,.... Pf.ICll
i IHCW I Tiit ,.-.. A mon· t•ce of the tvtnts le1dln1 to th•
birth of ..lauL Bln1 Crosby narntes.
•11etteirW..O.lr flD llH<W IA Jtfful Netae (R)
2:30. (() Sea1' -
D w .. Tia:;··"" D Orlltma •• (R) Anl·
mated ft1turt abollt 1 youn1 boy
who finds the true meanlnr of
Chrtstmu wfl1n ht takes part in 1
school play.
Q)JMHeCarMISllR .,. ....
S:OO 8 f..., Alfllt
DTiieMtl•SM . ..,....,,..,..
D (I)()) m .._.. ttespital
([)Mtwte: "A~ C....r'
(dra) 'SI-Alistair Sim.
.. , ....... ,.......
m11ac141c. ............. , ..
rMt (I) Miu Mary Ann of Romper
Room and Ill! Bumid host this pa.
radt tponsortd by tht Huntlneton
Park Jaycees.
O)o.tUPM ......
5:00 (I) (I) ..... .......
(I) .....
I Tiie fllllllll'tllllk•••n
laf*kl ............. ~
eTralllWtll mnn. ......
5:15&>,......... ......
S:JO (J)News
es.Mm
(1) ...............
DCl)aJlltwl m n. EJectrk c..,...,
ll)LuC...au mo..._·.r ... r•
G!)f..W. ..........
I 1• ' •• ... (I
9MeN: <C> .. ....._..,. "t11e 1:aoaaaee..._
0.C." (mus) '57~t Kelly, laor Di idCW:ITiie ... leaN Los
Yousklvltdl. Ana•ltl DJ Sam Rldcllt hosts this D DI t..e ._.., Christmas Dey Sl*lal ftaturtn1 the m I MCWI Clwtlb9a wttll tile top IJ'OUJ>t end solo perfof'm1rs of
lOq F1111J A muslcll salute to the the year In 1 full·eolor utrava11n·
festlvt season from tht famed z1.
Kinas .•. all 45 of thtm. D Cl) (j) GB ...,._SMdll AriM
8) ~ .... frtalMll Mob I•• from Miami, Florld1. em c....,.. a 11scw1 .... ., u. Art DH· II> Lt C...N• al Ill tettttt fra4 t .. cMurrey narrates this m , ......... Sewtltt story of handicapped childrtn.
3:10 ID MeN filmed 1t seven of C1llfoml1's Slit
3:30 B It's Y• .. clal ldtoob for the handle1pped.
D Cll -. DMttas a.. GI ni. n.at nu • om. 1Dll ltaniet ............ ,,. ..... CffJ of Los a (I) Cll m AH .., Cltlld'" .. ,.... <1> D .... , s,1111 fl) 1111 hlc:t Ela..,..• mi IHcW:I c..,_..•, QI&-fl!l IW ..... LMtt
,,.. Six talented children from £!J Aca.a n.tn
South KofH Sllll I nl1tty Of SOftCJ. 9J n,.. ......
Pi t Boone hosb. 1:30 Cl) CIS ..._ Walter Cronkite
fE tlat9ly ti Alt t8t Men lltfthi SM
8) Chit n II T... 11 ANJ Crtftlttl
9) I IBclA I Tiii ""9hl Blnr fm 111U111 Tllfttp 1,.. "The Cool
Crosby narratu. WlndoW"
4:00 IJ l.Jttte ...... m J9allM Clt'IH Sllft an. ......_ m ,,...,.. Ptida1
D CJ) a>• SlaM el Ut11t ._. m ltlp llMI His ..,._ 7:00 II I IHCW: In. LMtl& ta.mt•as
Gt I IPICWlcant..u sttrr (R) Trt1 Set Sun. 10:30PM llstln&
Tht stcMy of tht f1m11y dal. Goober. De 11ew1
end the household mc>UM, Gum-D ......, ftr Dehn
drop, who are dismayed to dlacovtr Cl) WNlt 1"ltft
on Chrlstmu Eve thtt their master 1J WUt'a My U..1
Timmy's letter to Sant• WU nMr m I .... lMJ
malltd. I Qrlatlua la (I)
fJ) 0 ... fray INaMllto m ,..... Street fJl) .... u... aed a., ''How to
l!J ftlfl tit Cit Mix 1n Enaot>e"
4:30 IJ Mewte: (C) "MJ MM Sodfrey" II> P aer TIIM C... dt Muftr
(com) '57-0avld Nlvtn, June Ally G) ltv. 11J rtmm
$0fl, ........
Cl) YHltl In tlM 10'1 7:30 II Je1MJ M*'"''' .. ..., Up aftd D fltller ....,. a.st Cltetr Joty Bilhop auests. D News Schuble-. Molrls D Tiit New Pl1cia 11 llcM
Cl) I Dru• ., .... D -..: (2lill1 ........ .., ••f' D Mwi.: ")lard of h Woedt• (dra) '44-8in1 Cr01by, Barry Atz·
Seldlen" (des) '34-Laurel end aereld.
Hardy. Cl) T1le hmt 11•
8:
•
9
9
0
1111-$ .... : (C) (Zttf) "Mir· 0 lolll1'
Ide If Ow LNJ If Fltf .. " (dr1) 6 II) News
'52-Gilbtrt Rol1nd, An1el1 Clar1!, fJl) TltlrtJ Mlftutls ~ •••
ShtrtY Jacbon. lO OO -• . a.\ WIW .. ,,._ : ~TIM New 1111 Cubr Show Music
IDll' man Ray Chutes 1uests. m n.t lkt CD Dnpet m UH® Jeyful •• Triu•· u m News
pU11t A musical production, utillz-(I) Mtwte: (2") "TIM Bells of St.
in1 1 40 volc:e ctlolr ind full or-M1ry'1" (dr1) '4S-8in1 Crosby, ln-
chestra, various rock sroups, solo-rrld Beram1n.
lsts. d1ncers 1nd children's 1roups. O DtptrtlMllt S "A Fish Out of
ti> ~ W1ter" Accidental d11th can be
fl!) T'al Clll Q'Ulll ruled out when 1n Interpol 11ent
fl3 1" AliMlrbnr is found drowned Ind J1son Kinf is EI!> Mipelitt Valdez Show the next potentl1I victim. m TIM M'lm Fl•lly 0 Crt• fi&tlt9n m 1111 Cesbr ..
1:00 ~ Stcutstrt ... •I Qelo 11 A CHRISTMAS TREAT fE Roads to Freed•• It is Sept., * SAMMY /DEBBIE/UNCLE 1938, and Hitler is threatenln1
MILTIE/5th DIMENSION Czechoslovakia. In fr1nce, reservists II (I) 1 IHcW;;t Openl11 Nlpt are bein1 called up, ind Mathieu
Ull A musical specl1I coverin1 a has a brief holid1y before he must
broad spectrum of openln1 niahts report.
from ni&htclubs to the theltre and @!) Lucl1 So11brl
f11turina t>penin1·ni1ht 1ets of Sam-EI!> Virleclld
my Oms Jr., Miiton Berle ind the a> S,Orts Clullleftp
Sth Dimension. m 10np11 ot t11e Sea II (Ii B) Lauiti-11 Wiiiiam Con-
r1d, TV private eye Cannon, 1uests 10:30 CD ~rican Life StJle
11 the e1pe-d1d superm1n, Cap-0 Talk lldl
t1in Arrwins. OJ Petticolt Junction m ......... ....... m 42 Plus tB ...,._ Cerate m Otltdoor Sportsun
fl!) i IHclM I Slelplnf lt1uty (R) . .
Rudolph Nureyev and the N1tional l0.45 fE J1nlkl
Billet of Cln1da In Tch1ikovsky's 11:0011 D 0 @!) m a> News
billet f11turin1 new choreo1raphy (I) (I) ®) News
by Nureyev, who d1nces the lead· U Ont Step ltytnd
in1 role of Prince Florlmund. O Movie: (C) .. Court JuUr'' (com)
llJ Jl9dlt • 5111 ·~1nny Klye, Glynis Johns. Em ....... m Trutll or CoflstqUHCllS m llewit: (211r) "Clln Ind M1btl" OJ Mowtt: "Trie" (dra) '51-Jean
(com) '36-Clark Gable, M1rion Da· Simmons, Mlch11I Rennie, Niael
vies. P1trick.
a:30 m ~ ''""" SIMw
fl) Qamer Ted Armmon1
II) I IHclA I CllUfdl in tM Home 11:15 &!) Roller Qa••
9:0011 (I) Nert's Lucy (I) Lucille Car-U:lO IJ (I) C1S Litt Movie: "TIM
ter pts a ticket for "reckl8$S driv-Next Vike You Heir" (dra) •50-
ln1" In htr wheelch1lr ind also James Whitmore, N1ncy Divis.
winds up beln1 Slled when she ac· CD MO'lie: "follow tM Sin" (dr1)
cident1lly colllda with 1n oul·of-'SI-Glenn Ford. Anne Baxter.
work country sinaer. D [ij m JollnnJ C.nen Joey D m -....., Mwit: (C) Bishop Is substitute host.
(211') "'Ille bilny CNldf't1" (adv) 0 Howie: "Wtkio• St111119r"
'71-0lnth Sheridan, Jenny Aautter. (cont) '47-Bina Crosby, Bury frtz·
Bem1rd Cribbl..s. Tht adventures of itrnld.
three younpttrs livin1 nur • rail-O Movie: (C) "S.I P1rty" (com)
way line in En1l1nd In 1904. '65-Frankle Avalon, Dw1yne Hick·
Cil I IHc!AITIM lie Record man, Deborah Walley. 0 CJ) a> TIM hotlts "The Rab· m To Tell the Truth
bits on tht Runw1y'' The police un-a> Movie
knowina1y 1ld 1 murderer pretend-
i111 to be 1 run1w1y's father. The 12:00 (I) Movie: "You Were Me~nt tor
runiway SIW him dispose of the Mt" (rom) '48-J11nne Crain, Din
body 1nd noW hu run 1w1y to pro· Dilley. te~ herself. m Alff9d Hltdlcock PreMnts
~ M~: (C) (211r) "Kiss Me Kite" 12:30 m Movtt: "Tt111, Diet incl Hany"
(mus) 53-Howard Keel. Ann Blyth. (com) '41-Buraess Meredith, Gin-
g) Nino 1er Roaers. EI!> ""811 OJ Country Music
9:30 1J Derta DIJ SIMw Peter L1wford, l :OO D (I) News
suest st1rrln1 In his recurrina role
of Or. Peter lAwrence, Doris Mar-1:10 (])News
tin's sw1ln, Is mystified by Doris's
const1nt f1t11ue when she secretly 1:351) News
resorts to moonll1htln1. 0 News
THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. D£CEMIER 24, 1972
Order Yours NOW ••••
1000
Beautiful ,
Stick~n Labels v-
• PERSONALIZED
•sTYUSH
•EASY TO USE
•ORDER FOR YOURSELF OR A FRIEN
IHAPE AND SIZE OF LABEL
Iba. JOhh Doe
123 ...... ltr•et
An1town , Anr•••'" 123'5
Lebel• Do Not ~ave A Printed Border.
Stylish Vogue type on fine qu•llty white gummed paper,
., r---------------------FUI In this coupon, clip and mall with $1.25 to:
_ ............................. -................................................................... .
...... ._ ........................ -....................................................................... .
........................ ~ .................. -........................................................ .
L---------------------J
Pete 11
'CINCO VIDAS'
Life in the East Los Angeles barrio, as seen through five individual
profiles, i.s the focus of Cinco Vidas ("Five Lives"), a documentary
special airing Friday lOPM on KNBC, Channel 4. This hour-long
film i.s hosted by Ruby Cruz, a young resident of the barrio (the
community or neighborhood) where more than a million people live.
But what is it like? The film combines the stories of five persons to
demonstrate the underlying unity and basic humanity that exists in a
community that has undergone little social and economic improve-
ment for generations.
Ernestina Gomer. is a 72-year-old grandmother who is rich in
Mexican culture and the arts. At age 22, she left her country to
come to America in search of a better way of life and the dream of
opportunities which might fulfill her artistic talents and abilities. She
found her culture frowned upon, her arts ignored, and at times her
children forbidden to speak her native language. She talks about her
life, her involvement in the local senior citiz.ens club and explains the
importance of being active ... "in a time of life when many think
we should be put out to pasture . . . we can prove that we are u
productive and creative as we ever were. It's never too late to learn
or continue learning."
Vince Villagran, principal at Malabar Elementary School, talks
about the innovative approaches to education that take place in his
school . . . school where he is the Chicano administrator, in an Anglo
society with a mostly Anglo staff. He discusses his problems, bis
policies, and how he tries to help barrio kids get the most out of their
education.
THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. DfCEMIER 24, 1972
TUESDA Y
DECEMBER 26
For momlnc end etwnoon lid..,
pleeM ... DAYT1M£ PROGRAMS.
....,., few ~ convenience, •
the dey'• movlea.
DAmME MOVIES
9:00 81 '1llt lell If ltlelltt Cristo" (adv)
'40-louis Hayward.
t :JO D CC> "Tiit llN1 ....s tt1t .._..
(com) '56-Georae Gobel.
10:00 Cl) "'Meat W..W M111" (com) '62
-Femandel, Zsa Zsa Gabor. D tr1 a Ifft" (com) '34-W.C.
Atlds, Baby Leroy.
U:OO U ....... .-., lea11tal,." (com) '46
-Bob Hope, Joan Caulfield.
1:00 m .... Ir.de tf Ult lelll" (dra) '46
-Alida Valli, Frtd MacMurray.
1:30 D .,...,_ Z.." (dra) 'Sl-Hu1h
8Numont, Tom Neal. IJ (C) ...,._.,...... (dra) '42-
Gent Titmey, Praton Foster.
3:00 ()) ......... " AkftlZ" hrt I
(drt) '62-lurt l.lncaster. a (C) ,.... ..,.... (wts) ·ss-
Dana Andrews, Piper uurie.
4:30 II (C) ......,,. (dra) ·sr-watter
Brennan, Marp,.t O'Brien.
(I) S.. a UM .....
5:30 D CC) '1llt F ...... '""" _. ..
(WG) '67~ Orbison.
I • I • ; .• ( '
6:00888••• ..... (1)9 .....
............ "Th• Apt"
(l)Ws-rt .Tiii ..... •• .,....,,,.. U1MC
flJM1Dllce£aa ......
fl\) ..... , ..........
E!).,...
&)Tlnl ......
6:30(1) ...... '• ...... D Mewll: CC> CtO> .. ._. et lln11 ..
Part I (rtl) '62-JtffrtY Hunter.
()) CIS ..... Walter Cronkite
lfi Mefv Mftlt .. m w, trlffllll
ll)U11•'1 lalaM
f1l) Astre•_, I "Sun. 3" m ....... ea....., ...
E!)c..aaClub
G!)Dtt4Z,.. EBUttlt ......
7:00llCilDm,.._ u ........ ........
Cl) TMll et C.u .. ...
(J)s.t..tttW.••
Dnat•MJ u..1 m11. .... Lsy
ID I DrM• " .luHlt
• La ,.,. Sil '" m"' ,,.. a.t
E EJ A-. 11tM C.. • M•itt
~AMltwe~
&>5'etd ...
7:10 B he let a SecNt Joan Rlvtrs
runts.
Chief of Su......, Vincent CempeneHI (series sbr Jemes vthftmcn, rfeht) C8tc .... the lleht ..... rted ,,... of Cepftal Genenl Hwpftal
DUlH111 off •nother ·:~" ln ''ODenltlon FHtbalf" on A.lie'• temperetul'w _.,., ..._., llt ...,,
Percy Duran, director of the Mexican-American Legal Defense
Fund, lives in the barrio. His is the voice of the young Chicano whose
only voice has been the riots, bombs and Molotov cocktails of anger. ,,_
He has been part of them and is oow working to give them their
power and voice as a lawyer challenging the system to live up to its
own laws. * * * Delia Cardenas was born and raised in East Los Angeles. A mother
who started out as a Head Stan mother and is actively engaged in
community projects since 1967, she believes "the mother is the focal
point in the family." She lives in Lincoln Heights with her children
and ex-husband who is on the methodooe program, attempting to
rehabilitate. She is seen working toward establishing a Chicano cul-
tural room at Belvedere Junior High School.
Tom Crur., a 36-year-old landscape gardener, is a typical suburban
middle-<:lass family man in all respects except one. He devotes at least
part of his working day, three times a week, and all day every other
Sunday, as a charro. He explains, "By becoming a charro, I was, in
a sense, living a part of my own heritage, my own culture. The
charrera is something that is Mexican, not American, my parents
were from Mexico. As a cbarro, I reaffirm my pride in the life and
culture of my parents and now, in myself."
,... 12
UNDERWATER
EDUCATORS
SKIN & SCUBA DtVING
INSTRUCTION
Bectulnl & Advaneed
CLASSES FOR ALL AGES
Startiq Now
We Speclalbe In Private
Ir Small Group lna&tllctlon
For laformatlon Call
D hUct S1.1ra1t11 "Llcty x·· When Ill Safari t. Altwtlbtn
Ult city ls terrorized by · 1 mad fB NIM
bomber, eynltness reports lmpll· m ....., tlle u._...
C.tt I most unlikely SUsptel. GI!) ....... 11 Mtwle: "'Sol1t1 MJ W.,.. (dr1) t:30 8 (I) CU T....., ...... : (C)
'44-8ln1 Crosby, Barry Fltzaerald. (90) .. A D11tll ti 11........, (dra)
(I) Te Tell tlle Tr• '71-TI"'-Sttr1int, Shelley Winters,
(I) f1.U, Clauka ''The Chr1stmu Ann Sothern. Arthur Menntdy. A top·
TrM" flllht lewytr Is en111ed bJ 111 Idaho D MBllM $ Mowtt: (2tlf) "Psydlt-couple to defend thtlr dau1hter
S9" (dra) '64-turt Juraens. Patri· 1pinst 1 murder charre.
cla Heel. It r .. _, Pmln Slttw
91WtJ•Md S.111ru fJG)News m na.t aart m 1a.ca ...,....
.. CJ) Dnpet ., hwtlta .......
fl> LI IWla Odtoa 10:00
f!) ~n "Union Rescue D XEROX PRESENTS--
Mission" *"AMERICA." Episode 4: m DllllMttt I Inventing A Nation ml Prtl'fflte Usted Jefferson to Boone
Ql It It Wrttlt11 D l1j 8' AMftca "lnventln1 •
'I> AIW1•1 fi•llJ Nation" In the fourth Installment
1;00 8 (I) Maude (R) Carol learns all of his series, Alistair Cooke tells
about tht "wrath of a woman how the Constitutional Convention
scomed" when she starts d1tln1 • in 1787 cre1ted 1 l1ndmartt In po.
man who Jilted Maude before she litic1I development and the found•·
married Walter. tlon for a unified nation. 0 am .... IWI "First LOYe" 11 ID .....
Jamie Cartwrlpt aets his first crush U CJ) (I) 0) llama Wtlby, 111.D.
when he falls In love with th• wife (R) ''We'll Walk Out of Here To·
of the new schoolmaster, unaware aether" Alt tctlve younr 1lrt must
that her husband is Insanely Je•I· adjus1 to 1 lifetlmt In 1 wheelch~r
ous. followin1 a serious illnea. u CJ) (I) m Tt..,....Wm ...... D lerta ..,, ,,......
(R) "Operation fallb1ll" Dr. Jerry II) i IHCW I Fw t11e Silt et .....
Noland performs an unauthorized utJ Art Unkletter, Rldlard and Pit·
operation to htlp • youns baseball ti Roberts join host David Ray.
pitcher on the same nl1ht that hos· fB s.c...n • el a...
pltal examiners are tourln1 the flD ....,.._ New ltrl "All Amert·
hosplt1I with Of. Campanelli. ca11 Christmas: Words and Music" m ....... , Henn Burt Llncaster· hosts Jamn £Jr1
DJ ,_.,., Mltff Jones, Linde Lavin, Freda Payne fB ...,..,... Ceralt and Peter Yarrow. m 11acw: 1 *"-""' ''"': m Lad• ~ Ctlrlstaa 1 n1 Vivid recreation of ml rttttwll Mtx.lca.o
Geot1e W1shlncton's Chrlstmn Evt &) ...... ti t19e SH
crossln1 of the Delaware and sub· 10:3011 Tiit llct
sequent victories at the Battle of m Pltticolt Jlllltdtlft
Trenton In the winter of 1776. IS OutidMr ----· e Atu ce11 """' 11:0011 a u 11> m m....,. ml...... (J)(l)9News m MM: (ZIW> ...., C1tJ "'*" 11 o....,..,...
(dra) '38-Humphrey Boc•rt. (I) ... ..., Diiion
1;30 IJ (I) ttnrlll FM.o (R) Ricardo 1J lleN: •A lkt Frt• f1IMlr1"
Montalban plays Alta Pareno, 1 (dra) '63--Mulmllllan Schell.
wealthy auto rldn1 enthusiast m Tnltll • C..1.ue11e11
whos. mechanic is stain on the eve e T,.. Mv111blrt
of Hawaii's most Important rOld e....., T .. Anlltrelt& race. fltHIMf ~: ......., u CJ) CI> m AIC r..-MM: 11:15. a.-M
(C) (tO) "'Stdlltt lltl M1nW' (R) 11:30 8 (I) CIS lltil Mowte: (C) ..,.
(com) '71-Monlt Ellls. MlchHI DMs ._.. l*p"' (com) lnarld
Bums, Don Amechl, Joan Bennett. Btriman lftd Mel Ferrer star.
Gld1et and her lonatlme flal'CI, 1• fD JlllMIJ C... a.. Jeff marry and no sooner are thty 11w1t: ('C) ._ ...... (mus)
settild in their new home thin th• '4&-fred Astaire. Bina Crosby.
br141e be1ins to rallJ her nti,hbors a (I) (j) m Diel Cavett
aplnst community conformity. m Te Tel tlle Tnlttl m Men lrtfflit Shew flD .._.. flD 1111 .. .,..... Jo11mal 12:00 m AlftM Hltdlcecl Pl'ftltltl
II) LI M1Wkllll de la lllnda • C:.UllbJ Musk
t:OO Dam TM hid °"" "A Na· 12:30 m .... : "f1nl ......... r ... Out·
tlon of Human Pincushions" An ICU· ., s,.c." Csci·fl) '56-Anthony Dex·
puncture expert and admitted Com· ter, SUSln Shew.
munlst. demonstrates the technique 1:00 CJ) DD News
et Crala Institute over objections of 1:30 8 (I) llewl
an "old auard" conservatlvt doctor. Z:OO m M.flicl" ...,_: "'Frllndly E.M-
Car1 Reiner. Jack Albert.on, Lloyd ...... -&a,e Fw.• hcl led. ..
Nolan and Jeff Corty 1ue1t. "'T1'e l1111fbna"
THE D.\ILY Pl&.OT. TV WEEK, DECEMBER 24, 1972
'SOPHISTICATED THEATRE'
" ... A fOlltlistlclted kind of theatre-not a Punch •nd Judy show." That's how
Mi$Sl$$lppl Ctnter for Educational Television puppetffr Peter Zapletal describes his
Czechoslov1kl1n Black Theatre technique used In "Peter and the Wolf," which makes
Its netlon1I television debut OYer KCET, Channel 28, WedntsdlJ at 8PM.
Narrated by Karen GiHoy witb music by the Jackson SJ111pholly Orchestra under
the direction of Llwis Dalvil, "Peter and the Wolf' is 1 d1liahtful and unique 1d1p-
t1tlon of Prokofiev's classic musical tale.
Alter seeln1 1 st119 production of ''Peter and the Wolf," Mcelndlish Phillips of
the New Yortt nmes described Zapletal's technique by rem1rkin1: "The Zaplttal trou,.
stood full·len(th ind moved freely behind 1 screen that mede their performance looll
like 111 animated cartoon In color. The screen hid them from the 1udl1ra, while 1
black curtain dmm behind thero and their clothin1 of black velvet hoods, Jeckets.
pants, and alofts completed the dis1uise."
Z1plet1I, 1 n1tM of Cztdloslov1kla, is the only puppeteer In the United Stlt9S
utlllzln1 the Black Theatre pmantation, and rem•rtts abOUt his work. "PuptMt Theatre,
which hes always been accepted n an art in Czechoslovakia, attempts to IChllve 1
standard of titctllence rather than mere monetary profit." He continued, "Tecllnlque
b not so Important as how much feelin1 is projected. Th• puppets must tell the
audience somtthln1 and inspire them to use thelr lm11in1tion freely." ........................ "
"
MTI
8r1~11tes
Get The
lest Jobs
Are you q~nfi.d· for .~ excmng career in ff.
lusiness wortd7 Do something positive for yow
future. Rnd out how training at Mil can pre-
,,.,. you for • high paying iob as:
Secretary F/C Bookk .. per
Stenographer Accounting Clerk
Cltd-Typist Keypunch Operator
Free Placement Assist•nc•
MTJ Business College
2100 N. Mala St.1 Santa Ana '2706
i 541-2673
..... 11
WEDNESDAY
DECEMBER XI
For momlnc and aftlmoon Ustfnp.
ple•se see DAYTIME PROGRAMS.
Below, for your convenience. are
the .S.y'a movtea.
DAYTIME MOVIES
9:00 m "Central 0.111 Rovere" (dr1) '60
-Vittorio O.Slc1.
9:30 0 "Who Wu Th1t udy" (com)
'60 -Tony Curtis, Dean M11tin,
10:00 (}) "Adventures of H11ll l1bl"
(adv) '54-John Derek, Elaine Stew·
art. D "Roc.ketshlp X·M" (sci·fi) '51-
Lloyd Brldaes, Osa Massen.
12:00 D "Ro1d lo Utopia" (com} '4!>-
Bob Hope, Bina Crosby.
1:00 m ''Carrlnrton V.C." (dra) '5!>-·
David Niven, Mar1eret lelahton.
1:30 D ''Tiie Crf•e of Dr. H1lltf' (hor)
'38-Ralph Bell1my, John Kina.
0 (C) "Sont of the lsllftd.s" (mus)
'42-8etty Gr1ble, Victor Mlture.
3:00 Cl) "lint111111 of Alcatraz" Coacl.
(dra) '62-8urt Lancaster.
"111 Ptradt of Co!Md(' '65
-Compilation of early comedy hift.
4:3011 "lodJ •IMI Soul" (dra) '47-
John G1rfleld, Liiii P1lmer.
CD s. .. u 1o.ue 1istin1
5;30 0 (C) .. It's • 0.(1 Ufe" (com)
'55-Edmund Gwenn, Jeff Rlch1rds.
,
f '•' f N I N (I
1:001111 a mm m """ <Il 9Net1S D llbrs lasbtttttl Ltkers vs.
Houston Rockets In Tun.
(j) Ctt Staart m The Fll.tmmes
Cl) C...r PJlt USMC es MI Dulct & ... ,.d.
fE ModftPOC11• Loci,.
a!) Actiea Theater
&> lllree Stooaes
6:30 CJ) Hoa•n'a Heroes O Movie: (C) (90) "Kina of Kinas''
CGncl. (rel) '62-Jetrrey Hunter,
Siobhan McKenna, Rita Gam.
(j) CBS News Walter Cronkite
@) Merv Griffin Show
G) Altemltivts M Seidenbaum
hosts.
d) Cllllpn's lsl•nd EID Sdlools Wm.out fallure "Devel·
opina Class Meetina Topics"
@m MHM Cll'Mft Sllotf m Affdotl.,_ • i. C.•unldtd
alDeU2PM m Uttle Rasuls
7:00tJ(])OmNns
Cl) Trvtll tr Co~1ttnces
Ci) Unta!Md Wortd
0 W'Mt's MJ Unt? mu.ow LMCy
G)IDruaef.laHle es F,., DltbHli.
g) WllMfs, Das tnd City "Lotdina
ind firin1 a Bisque Kiln"
ti) El AltOI Tlene Carl de Muftr
......... c ......................... ~ .. .., ....
re4 fW ....... ,....... ............ UI ., ...... t9 Tiit C..
........ ,.... ee41eew • ,..,,.., .. ~ ...... ~
hit Miter Te• .. ....._ ._ ... • ...... ~ .._., ..
........ w.114 .. ,....,. ..... cee.-....... ,.. ... ,.,...
IPMfM ., tt. 0r-.e CMlt.
4'ast Coastlag
With Tom Ma~p .. •e
... ,. 14
THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK, DECEMBER 24, 1972
6) Speed Racer wom1n doctor whose millionaire
-... n... ...u~· Steve Allen suitor w1nts her to aive up her ~-7:-.. ·---•aen reer •nd •n elderly patient Who in· aunts. D Witt Tiii Your FatMI c.ta HoM sists on her for suraery.
"The Hippie" (R) H1rry puts the CD Stfarl " Mwtfttu,.
f1mily on 1 limited food bud1et In ~ ::..
•n 1ttttnpt to dlspl1y the hypoctlsy w.:1
of one ol Chet's "non·m1teri1llstic" 9:30 O 11J"""
friends, who 11ts his me1ls 1t the fl!)! 18c@:i.,.. Ne llnh n,
Boyle household. A document•ry on the 12th World
Cl) Te Ttfl Ult Tnitfl Glldlnt Championship, held In the
Cl) Tet1 Wed fot tt U.S. for tflt first time. G MllllM $ Movie: {C) (ltlr) "loss m lhdttt T ......
Of 1.,_.act" (dr1) '6l-Su51nneh 10:0011(1) c.... (R) Bredford Dill
York. Kenneth Mort. m•n auests IS I WHlthy m1nut1c.
l1i he Cot 1 Seutt turer 1nd aun f1ncler Whose broth
CD Thtt "" er's sudden dlup1111rance brtnrs : ~:~et C1nnon In to ln1111tla1tt. David Bir. °"' ......, , tt "t .... Sto f t H' ney 1lso pests.
Q:I -" " U1W ... ron . IS· 0 a m SfAICH CR) "One of tory of the blactt church and its 1m· Ou Probes 1 Mlssl .. A ,. h · p1ct Is eumined. r s n1 arc is 8' Yeuna Dr IOldart ordered for • mlsslna 11ent who m 1'ls Is Y~r Lfft runs Into trouble while lnvtsti11t1n1
El> MdHts hmlly 1 $100:blll r1Ck1t thrHt1nln1 the
l:Gq.I) Cl) S..ay _. Qer C1rroll 0'. worid economy.
Connor of AU In the Ftmlly psts. D G) """ D am Ah•lZ (R} "Pick·Up" D CI> (I) m Ju.lit AIMINWS Hour
While s:earchlna for a rtpist suspect, (RJ . Robert Goulet joins Julie In re
Officers Milloy end Reed discover 1 pnsina mtll'IOflblt music by •
YoUna alr1 dope peddler and her qu1rtet ~f the nttlon's most ooted
supplier. B1rbtr1 Htle, Bill Wil· tone ~nters: lrvln1 Btriln, Georae
Iiams ind Klthy Girvtr fuest. Gershwin, Colt Porter ind Rich1td
0 Movie: (2111) wc.Ht1 MJ Wa(' Rodftrs.
(dr1) '44-81111 Crosby, 81rry Atz· B lhfls Klrtetf P"ruenb
aer1ld. fB s.cu.str. .. tf Citi. u CD (i) m Ptul lJMe sew m l11ct. 5-bnl
"Ho More Mr. Hice Guy" Warned by EI!> n..ter
his doctor to avoid unnt<ltSUry ex-~ '°",..• ef tftt Se•
cltement, Ptul Simms mikes • SU· 10:30 D Ttlk llCt
perhum1n effort to be nice to his f1i) Just 51...mJH "Th• Portable
son·ln-law, Howle. Phono(l'iph" m Hec1n's Heroes al 4Z rtn
I!) ltut.CNJ footbtll A bowl game &) Outdoor Sportsun
:~r with the "all-stars" of toot· ll:OO IJ D O Q) fl) m OJ NeW1
m · ... ,..nos Coqje Cl) (I) a ..... m I i!l<IA I Pttar •nd Ute Wolf D ... '°" ..
Puppet char1cters act out the tr•· (I) M1IMll DHftft ,
dltlon•I Russian folktale. G Mowft: ""°"'lddtl" (hor) 61-
11) ltlcu Ubrt Glen Corbitt, Patrlcl1 Breslin.
Im) Mewl• G) Tnith or C.ftltClutllCel
&) Mewle: (Z.hr) "front Paae Wo-fE '-"'"Teel Anutrtq
•111" (oom) '35 -Bette Divis. fl1) Jlntld
GtOrae Brent. 11:05 D USC lnlltMll TroJtns vs. La
1:30 0 (11 @D NIC WtcllttSday Mp-Stilt In Quaker Ci1y Toum1ment ta,,_...teet (R} "let's Heer It
for 1 llvlnc Le1end" A well-known 11:15 QJ Cltleu S4
footb11t pl1yer disappe1rs In view ll:JO IJ (I) C1$ Late Movie: (C) '1lle
of millions of television fans 1fttr AppoimMtwr (dr1) Omar Sharif
belnr tackled on the fridiron tnd •nd Anouk AllMt sttr.
81nteek is called In to find out D l1i m ....... .., Canon
tiow and why he vanished. Stef1n1e D CD CI> OJ Diel c.wttt Stiow
Powers, Chuck Morrell ind John G) To Tell tM Trvttt
Brodie auest. ID Tnit Adwntvrt fJ Cf) Cl) aJ AIC Wtdntldlf Movie: (C) (10) .. Mr. 1t1d Mrs. lo 12:00 G) Alfred Hltdt*' Pmtnb
Jo Jena'' (R) (dr1) '71-0an Dai· 12:30 G) Movie: .. A View from the
ley, Desi Arnaz Jr., Dina Merrill, lrtdte" (dr1) '62-M1ure1n Staple.
Christopher Norris. A teen11e cou· ton, Ctrol ltwrence.
pfe tries to tdjust to the newness Q) Country Music
of • mlfrl11e which ctme about l:OO (]) O O (I) News :ctuse of 1n unexpected preanan· D ..._..: "Topeb" (wes) •53 _ m Merv trtffftl SM Wiid Biii Elltott, Phyllis Coates.
fil) fltfftt Une 1:15 ti fhtlS
9:00 8 CJ) Medical Center (R) Lob 2:00 G) Ali Nlpt -..: . ...mrsttrs
Nettleton, Nico Minardos and Will Mlfflont," "lfttM1 5tttit1 C•rtar,"
Gttr cuest In a drama of an ailina "The Y••"'9'• Ci.t"
THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, DECEM8Elt 24, 1972
llEf!fRAUM tlCH LOITEHS AOUAY IT
O~lO NORWAY
qqc SIO 70 ~ 6 6 4
flHBOCk Sl 1"
BO C ~ BEER
..... 15
SEE ORANGE COUNTYS
.+1 °Lincoln
Mercury Dealer
FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON
THE MOST POPULAR
1973 MODELS
CHRISTMAS TWINS
Christmas comes but once a year-but it will be twice the fun from
now on for Shelby Hiatt, actress and proud mother of twin boys born
September 1. Shelby (Jane Dawson on ABC's General Hospital, air-
ing Monday through Friday al 3PM, and her husband, musician
Marty Benzuly, named their sons Darren Douglas and Brett Howard.
Darren, weighing 5 lbs., 8 oz., was born first; Brett weighed 6 lbs.,
8oz.
"The boys are not identical twins. Darren was born with masses
of dark hafr and resembles his father. Brett has wispy blond hair and
looks mo re like me. Even so, l did have a little trouble telling them
apart when they were first born," Shelby admits. Like most new
parents, Shelby and Marty eagerly are awaiting the time when the
boys will be old enough to share the excitement of the holiday season .
.. We have a very traditional holiday," Shelby says. "On Christmas
Day we have our family and friends over for a big turkey dinner with
all the trimmings. Marty and I both love to cook and each year we
make a special stuffing for the turkey. For weeks in advance we pour
through recipes, trying to decide what kind of stuffing to make. This
year it will probably be chestnut, but we haven't made the Big De-
cision yet
"Ray Girardin, who plays my husband on General Hospital, and
his wife, Marlene, are very dear friends and they'll probably be here
for C hristmas. In fact, the Girardins are almost like a second set of
parents for the babies. They gave us a twin stroller and as soon as
we could, Marty and I took. the babies {or a walk. We were the hit
of the neighborhood! Another tradition at the holidays is our Christ-
mas tree. When we first were married we couldn't afford a tree, let
alone decorations, but we 'bought a tiny, .t iny tree and i>ropped it
up on a table. l remembered J'd once seen a tree decorated with
nothine ·but bows, so I bought about SO cents worth of narrow red
crepe peper and tied big bows all over the tree.
"When I studied art in Europe everyone decorated their tree with
little candles; we bought about 20 white candles-I think they cost
29 cents--and put them on our tree. It was one of the sweetest trees
I've ever seen. That was the stan of a family tradition. Each year
our tree seems to be progressively larger, but l still put red paper
THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, DECEMBER 24, 1972
THURSDAY
DECEMBER 28
For momtna •nd afternoon Hsttnp,
plMle Me DAYTIME PROGRAMS.
Below, tot' your convenience, •
the d8y's mcwln.
DAYTIME MOVIES
9:00 m (C) "hpl Weclctint' (mus) '61
-Fred Astaire, Jane Powell.
9:JO 0 (C) "f'nt Mtn In tfM MOOft"
(adv) '64 -Edward Judd. Lionel
Jeffries.
10:00 (]) "Once Upon 1 Hone" (com)
'58-0en Rowen, Dick Martin.
10:0011 (C) "Ebb Tide" (dra} '37 -
Oscar Homolk1, Ray Milland.
12:00 a "Tau • l•tttr Dartint' (com}
'42 -Fred MacMurny, Rosalind
Russen.
1:00 m "Room at Ult Top" (dra) '59-
leurence Harvey, Simone SifnOl'et.
1:30 8 "M1rsllal of Htldtraclo" (was}
'4!>-Jimmy Ellison. Russell Hay.
den.
D "SixtHn F1tlto1111 Deep" (adv}
'43-lon Cheney, Lloyd Bridees.
3:00 Cl) (C) "Help!" (mus) '65 -The
Beatles.
\
111 (C) ... ....., ef .,.. Qrand Cu.
,... .. (adv) '67-Jostph Cotten. Pat
Conway.
4:30 G {C) .,.." Anetr' (com) '51-
loretta You111. Joseph Cotten.
Cl) Seti• 11 lOAM llstlnc
5:30 D {C) ..,...,. Fapt1" (com) '52
-Jlnet L•ilh. Kttn•n Wynn.
t \, I •• •• G
1:00 •a a em m""'
(1)9 .....
• ,. ....... "flit Courtship"
(j) Set Sllllt mT11tn .......
11J lelMr r,11 USMC m • Mee Ea•..,.. fD....,..t..4p tlI9 Aeliee .,........ mnn.-...
1:30 (j) ........ MlrMs 8 .... : (10) .,., f riend Irma"
(com) '49-Jofln Lund, Diana Lynn
Cl) CH ,.._ Walter Cronkite
a Merv''""" .... m w, 1rtffttl .,....,..,,, .....
fD Altn••.,. I "Sun, 3" ., ...... c...... .. cm, ... ••tm 11a1ca1
E!)DtU2PM
U)uttleluc8ll
7:00 8 Cl>DG,.... a 1.w11.,.., ""'"
.
bows and candles on it. The only other ornaments we use are ju~!
a few tiny silver and red balls."
After. a momen~, Shelby remarks: "Next year at Christmas_ the
boys will be w.alk.mg. I can see it now-they'll be all over, into
presents, touching the tree ... Christmas is bound to be douhl}
exciting."
1
Cl),,.." c.~-M:lll
(j) A9efb• ~ ....
" ..... My U..1 m I Lew LllCJ ......... *• .. g-... llfecbc:ularu e T:ll QI Cll'ue•
ti) tJ a.tr TleM Caf1 de Mujer
lJ)s,eMhar
7:30 8 Y--c Dr. oa,. "No More
Thin 1 Bad Cold" Venereal disuse
endlnprs the life of 1 pretty youna
commune firt ind her unborn baby. D TIM Adwttltllttf "Miss Me Onct,
Miss Mt Twice, Miss Mt Once
le1ds to a former K·9 Cotps train·
"· Ttatr (autlt Bo SWMOft). D <IHI) GB UHCIAI L I t • ,
Hultll alMI h AIMdca• ..... (R)
Actms Patricia Neal Is on·camera
narrator for this proaram which fo.
cuses on the symptoms of cancer.
llQrt diseue, duth In childbirth,
menop1use. hypertension and sul·
cidll depression . ...... m llltltutloul ,.,..,.,nee
a!) Dnlll
t:JO D ·a.•s Actiot1 ....
4•1n" Gene B1rry hH • &rim ch1r· 10:00 B ()) Tt le A.INOIClld No lntor·
tcter role when he t1kes °"'' the matlon 1v1ll1ble from the network 1t
Jdentity of a potentl1I murder vie· press time.
tlm 1t the Cenna Alm festival. 0 (Ii g, Dean Martin 5"°" Deen D Mewle: (ar) "toi•1 MJ W.,.. welcomes Glenn Ford and Lynn An.
(dra) '44-Blna Crosby, Bury Atz· cterson.
1er1ld. llNews
(I) Tt Tell the Trvttl D CJ) (j) E!) O w e n ..........
Cl) '9lcll SW..-"Hour of Judimtnt" Owen Mar· 11 MllliN $ Mowlt: (2'1r) .. Mr. shall's friend Dr. ClfYloo Kerr
..,.._.. (hor) '61-0scar Ho-(auest Paul B~rb), Is a suspect In
molka, Ronald Lewis. the detth of a mllllonllrt's flnanclll
9 Let's ..... t DMI secret1ry who opposed 1 pnen>us m TMI lift aift to a hospitat Lew Ayres and
• CJ) Draptl Mike Farrell 1lso auut fD AccM Cllllca• D leJil --.n ~ ....... . ....
&>....,...~ -~ .... cs.tt GI) .... s..,.e. ., w.w .....
U> Mdl• fa.My ., lalda s..IMa
1:00 II Cl) I IHCIQ; I..., ...,.
ptMd ti '72 An Innovative look at
mJUdlllalt
........... Sea
the top news stories of the past 10:30 D Tell ~
year, futurln& news CDl'respondent m PtttlcMt Jondlon
Walter Cronkite and a ,roup of fm J1• w.,..
Junior hi&h school students. m °"""' ~ 0 9 m flip WllMn Alp's auests
.,. Petula Clar11, Redd fou and 11:00. a D fl)f!'=' m ......
Roy Cleft! 1lon1 with Fllp's dler· (J) ()) 9 Nen
acter, Leroy Roaers. II 0.. -..,.nd a CJ) Cl> m Med Sq• <R> Cl> ... ,... oua.
"The Thunder Makers'' Bobby Sher· D Mewle: '"In Utt French StJtt"
men auuts es a youth who joins a (dra) '63 -Jean Seber&. Stanley
motorcyde 11n1 ind plots to steel Baker.
the payroll •• his fethtn con· m 1mtt ., ~
llructlon job IS I Job, but the m Mewit: ...... llC." (dr1) '5S-
11n1 hu other ldees. Rttd Hedley.
I ._..,, HtMt fB lar1* Ted ~I
...... , ..... ~ G)JM.at
......... c.91e
en.u..c• u:Hea .... ,.
E,,...,...... U:JO 8 Cl) CIS Lita Mewle: CC) "'Doe-ll>....,... tM falllta" (dra) '67 -Rlch1rd
l'f) .,._: (2W) "la.ct l..tc*" Burton, Ellzatltth Taylor.
(cfra) '37-HumphttY eo11rt, Ann a a m ... ., ear...
Shtrldtn\ 9-..: ....... AcrMS tllt T•
1:30 ..._. elltrY lrttfln .._ W (com) '3!>--Carole Lomb1rd,
.., frtd MICMumy.
UIO 1J (() i IH<w I l.T. (R) Youne D ())CJ) GB Diel c.w.tt
Kevin Hooks, son of ector Robert m lt Tell dM Tnitll
Hoob, pleys th• tltl• role of I lZ·OO m Atfttd ltitdw.tdl Prteents ehy uncommunicative YoUnpter • vee~ln1 toward dtllnquency until he lz:ao m M.vlt: "Tte1cllat Man II Aft.
MIS 1 purpose to his lift with th• lHI" (Wft) '51-Vaulfln Monrot,
help of his perc.ptlYI v1ndmother, Joan L.tslle.
two undem1ndln1 1rocers encl en IB c..titty Mllic
old, one-eyed htlf·starved alley cat. l:OO (J) DD Cl)..._
0 am,....,. <R> "The s.v-·
aa• Sentry" Ctilef lro~ t1ku e l:JS B llewa
courst In proftSSlon•I dot tralnl111 Z:GO m Alf..lfiOt SIMlw: '""'-•""• It
when prtVlousty efflcltnt auard doP 1Nt IM,"' "T..,a," ......,.,
fall to 1tt1ek. Pollet lnvtstlaation Humc.."
THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24, 1972
MORT SAHL HOSTS 'PERFORMANCE'
Mort Sahl, just nturned from a tour of ooe-oighters oo college
campuses throughout the ~t Coast, is host to a group of young
performers from 12 Southern California Ct!mpuses OD Performance.
a special airiBg Friday at 9PM OD KNBC, Channel 4.
The program is the second io a series of hour-long musical specials
focusina oo Southern Califol'hia's undiscovered collcp and grade>-
Kbool taJent in professional perfonnaoces. Producer Jim Gates
("The Mort Sahl Show") is re-united with Sahl for this series of
programs that plaoes him in informal conversations with the young
performers; then, in an unusual ftashback technique the viewer is
taken from the conversation to the performance.
Highlights of the program include QUIET FIRE, a soul-rock
instrumental-vocal group performing "Where Is the Love," "Trade
Winds." and a gospel...soul arrangement of "Without a Song." QUIET
FIRE represents Immaculate Heart College, Los Angeles City Col-
lege, California Hospital School of Nursing, and Paramedical Oc-
cupational Center.
Lovely soprano SHERYN DONAHUE, a Cal State Los Angeles
co-ed sings "Climb Every Mountain·· and a Spanish madrigal Jove
SODJ, .. De Los .Alamos Vengo, Madre." Also from Cal State Los
Angeles is a group called EL GRUPO FOLKLORJCO, exciting
young dancen dressed in native costumes of the State of Jali3co
performing the fiery "La Negra. '' From Tujunga comes Glendale
Community College co-ed ROCHELLE LESTER, who shows her
range of talents with the beautiful ballad "Something" and the funky
"Look What They've Done to My Song, Ma."
Ao ensemble of l 0 concert harpists provide a change of pace by
performing the beautiful "Fraicbeur." Later, the ensemble is joined
by soloist MIA EVANS, who swings into the jazz hai'p number,
"Harping on a Harp." .A very young dance troupe (ranging in age
from 7 through IS years), 11iE TRJNIDETTF.S, demonstrate in a
delightful comedic number, what would happen if .five Charlie Chap-
lins found themselves on stage together. The members of the group
attend Angeles Mesa and Crenshaw High Schools and Louis Pasteur
Junior High.
Finally, a scene from "streak o' Lean," a play by Abbey Uncoln,
is enacted by SONNIE BANFIELD and CELESTUS BLAIR. They
portray a young couple who has found a large bag full of money ...
do they keep it and get out of their ghetto life or return it to the
rightful owner?
,. 17
FRIDAY
DECEMBER 29
For momlnc and att.moon llstinp.
please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS.
Below, for your ~venience. are
the day's movies.
DAYTIME MOVIES
9:00 m '11uvtn Can Waif' (com} '43
-Gene Tierney, Don Ameche.
9:30 0 (C) "CarowMI" (mus) '56 -
Gordon MacRH, C.meron Mitchell.
10:00 Cil WSttp Down to Temf' (niys)
'59-Colleen Miller, Charles Drake.
D '"Star of Teua" (wes) '53-
Wayne Morris, Paul Ax.
12:00 D .. HoneyMoon 111 a.II" (com) '39
-Fred MacMurray, Madeleine Ctr·
roll.
1:00 m '"The Juel .. Steps Ouf• (com)
'49-Ann Sothem, Alexander Knox.
1:30 8 °'Sllftl of Justice" (Wit) '49-
Jimmy Ellison.
Q tOfJittlt t. ·Ma,,.' (sci· fl) '52-
C.meron Mitchell, Marauerite Chap.
man.
3:00 Cl) (C} ''l,.nder (adv) '50--Alan
Ladd, Mona frHman.
~ (C) "Deltfl Da1tc:e It Medalla"
(wes) '67 -Don Murr11. Anne
Francis.
4:30 II ''Sbllioa load" (dr1) '47-Ron·
aid Reaa1n.
(])Se• u lOAM l1st1111
5:30 Q .. ft61r Soni" (drt) '40 -Don
Ameche, Mary Beth Huahes.
I VfNING
6:()(111 (])om m....,
D 9l m NHL Hodtey (cont'd
from 5:30PM)
DIM lo,dShow
(I) let S•art m The fllitttt.n•• ma.er Pyle
fl) Ml lhllc.e EnallltOrHI m ....... pod •• locla•
GI!) ""1MuM 40
&)lllfM5'1oaet
':15 8 USC lnttttlth Trojans con·
tlnue in the Qu1ker City toum•·
ment.
':30 Cll Hepn'a Heroes
D Mewte: (C) (90) "Priftc:e v.-.
llnr (adv) '65-James Mason, Jan·
et lel1h.
()) CIS News Walter Cronkite m ...,, artfflttt
Q) Sllllpn•a ldl11d
fl!) AahftHIJ I "The Stars, I"
GI!) Actlen TMatrt
ti!)Dot42PM
&) little Rastals
7:00 IJ Cl) ,...,
(I) Trv111 or Ctnsequencea
())Ckcut IJ Wt.lt'a MJ Une1 m I love laiq
II) I DftaM of Jeennle
fB J..va ~wiam m The u..1y Alb
(Continued)
,... 18
FROM THE ISLANDS
There are at least two unique features regarding
Warner Bros. Television·s series The Little People
(Fridays, 8 :30PM on N BC). It is the only ha~f
hour comedy program being filmed entirely _on lo-
cation in Hawaii and the only one, to be given a
special blessing service conducted by an or~.ained
minister, The Rev. Abraham A.kak a of Hawau.
Series star Brian Keith assisted The Rev. Ak.aka
in asking God's blessing on the project before pro·
duction began in mid-July, 1972. No stranger to
Keith, The Rev. Akaka also married Brian to
his wife, the former Victoria Leialoha (Leialoha
means Garland of Love), and is pastor of his home
church in Hawaii. From the first. Keith has con-
sidered that filming in Hawaii is certainly a blessing
in itself. He was, in fact, instrumental in the show
being done on location in the Islands. He wouldn't
have done it any other way. He has a profound
interest in the history of Hawaii and a love for the
Hawaiian people. He's also delighted to be working
with h is wife, who is seen in the role of his office
nut'se, Puni, in the show.
The true to life incidents involving Island pe-
diatrician Sean Jamison (Keith) did not come
about by chance but were carefully researched by
the series' creator and co-exec utive producer Garry
Marshall. Jn developing Jamison's character, Mar-
shall drew on his own experience as the father of
three children, all possessing allergies of one sort
or another -.nd his relationship, as a parent, with
Dr. Marvin Goodwin of Beverly Hills, his family
pediatrician. He interviewed Goodwin at length
and was allowed to pursue case histories to gain a
knowledge of specific childhood complaints. Good-
win is roughly the man on whom he built Keith's
character. He is a gruff man that most parents
don't ~et along with too well but the children all
love him.
Keith 1s an excellent choice for the role, both as
an actor and also because his own seemingly gruff
exterior cannot hide the obvious affection he holds
for his own children and the dozem .. of moppets
that go to make up the show's "Little People.' The
Keiths have five children, three of whom are adopt-
8.HEll..EY FAliJlltS
THE OAILV PILOT. TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24, 1972
ed. But, the family doesn't stop there. On the n1gh1
of the blessing service, Keith and his wife sho"ed
up with 18 additional members of his wife's family
and other friends that also sh are in the Keith's
warm hospitality.
A private man, Keith prefers to stay out or the
press limelight and let his wort speak for ttsclf.
He's fond of music with interests ranging from the
classics to modern jarz. and encompassing a wtd\'.
range of Hawaiian music dating from the earltest
beginnings of the Islands. ·
His credits reflect a dedicated profe sional life
built on substantial early training in the theatre and
in "live" television. His early television work came
in such respected series as Studio One. Suspense
Theatre, and The Philco Playhouse. His Broadway
stage credits include "Mr. Roberts." "The Moon h
Blue," and "Darkness of Noon," to name a few.
He's starred in three television series beginning
with The Crusader in 1955 and followed by The
Westerner in 1960. H is most notable TV succm
came in Family Affair, a highly successful ram1ly
comedy that ran for five years. Some of his maior
film credits include "H allelujah Trail," "The Rus·
sians Are Coming," "Reflections In A Golden
Eye," and "Gaily, Gaily."
Joining Keith as his co-star is Shelley Fabam,
who for five years portrayed Donna Reed's daugh-
ter on the highly successful series, The Donna Reed
Show. The winsome Miss Fabares plays the role or
Dr. Anne Jamison. daughter of Sean and his part·
ner in their pediatric practice. When she lets her
waist-long chestnut hair fall fetchingly askew, she
looks more like one of the older Little People than
one of the doctors. She admits to being 28 years
old, but it takes an upswept hairdo and a serious
look to give her that mature look.. Her youthful.
good looks help with story points when young
swains dare hope for a romantic entanglement be·
yond their years.
"J ought to be paying Warner Bros. to work
here," enthused Shelley, "I love my work and when
you consider that shooting in H awaii means we're
surrounded by beautiful trees, ftowen and the great
big Pacific it makes me wonder ii a gal can ht so
luclcy!"
UJAN Drrll
I:
•=
9.
FRIDAY (Continued) Southern .talifomi1's hiah schools
fl) 0 Amr Tltnt Ca..-de Muter ind colleaes in professlon1I per·
EI!) 11911er Dlrtly form1nces. Mort Sehl hosts.
g) Stlttd Rlttf 0 Cl) CJ) a» Room 222 "I Won·
7:)0 II Wttld of Survive! der If J1nu1ry 15th Will Ever Come
(])Te Teti tM Trvtll Aa•in" Strena• thtfts at Wilt Whit·
Cl) TIM T11rtllseeken man Hl(h become even mor1 puz·
0 MllllOll $ Mevle: (2hr) ''TM zlin1 when student Jimmy Thompson
ahst Dupr9U1 Man AIM" (dra) is c1uaht in the act, obviously by
'61-Aon Rendell, Debra P11et. his own desian. GI TMt Git1 @) Na• of the 811M
m m 0niaa-t m "'"° til) Wall StrMt WHk til) M1starplece Tlleattt (R) m U11t.t...i Wet1d ti) la Cosqulll1 a» Natltwllle Mtnic m To It AnnHnc:td m Tiie Adda•s fl111lly ml °""''
1:00 II Mlmn: l111possible (R) Vic 9:30 0 rn CJ) m The Odd Couple
Morrow iutsts as Joe Collins, • "Bia Mouth" Felix faces the loss
nuclur scientist who Is made to of 1 lucrative account es 1 result
believe that he is a prisoner In the of a feud between Howard Cosell
year 2000. and Oar. 0 9 m Santoni Ind Soft '1ht fJ ......
Pl1no Movers" A simple )ob of mov-10:00 0 llPICllt I Qnco Ykl (Fi Ina • pl1no out of 1 men's 1p1rt-. · ----; -· u ive ment becomes • whimsical idven-Lives) Th1.s documentary provides a
ture when Fred Sanford us...,... look 1t hfe In the barrio In East s l'V"~ Los An&•les.
the m•n of beln&. homosexu1I. 0 Cl) (I) m Lowe Alttrican S1Ylt a Jeltn Woodell Sllow "L d t .. A N y .. D CJ) Cl) m The .,.., lunch ove ·~ '"' ftW OU, stars
(R) "My Sister Benedict Amold" ~ass Elliott ind Shecky ~.reene;
W1rren Mu11..-beats Gre1 out to LUit •nd the Wlshin1 Star, stars
t
·~1 r Sam Jaffe end Soupy Sales; "love
ht besketball team and then eslts a d th G"rl' h G .. t Vi Mardi out. She isn't too Impressed n • 1 •15 roo~, s •rs tn·
with Warren, but contlrtues to see ~nt Garden11 ind Knstln1 ~olland;
him when Gres orders her not to. R~ove ind the Oldyweds, stars
Cl) ! lflc!AL I Voy1p to the St• ichard Deacon end Haney Wilker.
of lco fJ Ions K1rteff P'rosellb m Hopn's Heroes m Newt ID Poadl lowt fooul'11 North Ci r. fl) Secum,. en el Chlo
ollne St1te vs. University of West !!? ~ So IN'
Vlralnia. ~ • • • fl>,..,., ... eo...ie ml Pre•ier 40
til) llBc@: ! Apart F r 0 • t lu g) Kln&do• of tllt Sea
Crwd Exploration of renewed In-lO:lO D News
terest In h1ndicraft and home In· &> Otltdoor $tlefb11111
dustriff vi• Interviews with several 11:00 ti 0 D m IE) .....
Americans who have ch1n1ed their CJ) Cl) 9 m m ......
basic lifestyles. II OM St9p ..,.._,
@I) Emtsto Alonso Prtaentl Cl) Manbll Dillon ml Newell fJ Shtrtoc:l Hol!Ms Tlltatn
g) Mevle: (2111') "l11ruu of Ml,. GI Trvtll or Cofttequenas
una hnons" (mys) '33 -Bette fl) Gerner Ted Armsbonc
Davis. Georae Brent. til) J1n1ki
l :lO D Heltyweod Sqtlaru Guests In· 11:15 m CIMMI 34
cludt Ross Martin. Glenn Ford and 11:)0 11 CIS l.t. Mmo: "Mu•r at a
David Steinber1. • Glllep" Merpret Rutherford ind IJ UClA luketbiell The Bruins play Robert Mor1ey ster.
In the Suaer Bowl Classic. 0 9J m Jeltnny Carson
0 (])Cl) El) The hrtrldet Falft· IJ' .... : "The halonltle Thief"
lly "For Si le by Owner" Sentlmen-(com) '62-Ben G1zura.
t1I Shirley is dls1ppointed when the Cl) Mo.te: "Seti of Dnaila" (hor)
children e11erly accept her tent•· '43-ton Ch1ney, Louise Albritton.
tJve suuestion th1t they move to D Cl) Cl) a» Dick Cavett Show
1 larpr house. GI Tt Teti U.. Trvltl a AlslpMt1tt With Cart Suaklnd aJ True Adwtrturt GI Men Grtfffn Show 12:00 GI Alfncl Hltdlcoct l'ments
fll) Cltywatdltn 12:l0 fJ Movie: (C) "The Old Din m Te le Allnoun* Htue" (com) '63-Tom Poston.
9:00 II Cl) CIS Frtdly Movie: (C) (2hr) GI Mowte: "5'lr1d of Atlantis"
"Hool, Line 111d Sieker" (com) '69 (1dv) '66-Cresh Corria1n.
-Jerry Lewis, Ptter uwford, Anne II) Ct61ntry Musk
Fr1ncis. A struulin1 youna Insur-1:00 .. Cl) a D CJ) News
1nct 11ent believina he hes only 1:15 ti News
I few months to llw roes on I 1:45 a Movtt: "I Mtt Hl11t In Parts"
worldwide fishlna trip, usln1 only (com) '37-Robtrt Youna. Cl1udette
credit cenis for payment. Colbert. II I Ifie@:) hfforNnet T h Is 2:00 GI All·Nlpt Shew: "least fftt11
one-hour muslc:•I specl1I presents U.. H1umlld C.ve," "I Cowf tM
youn1 people from the campuses of W1ltrfnN1t," "Itel Fro• Ult Dud"
llDD-ll-ROOM
EXPERTS
ROOM ADDmONS •BATHS
KITCHENS • R~ODEUNG
EXTERIOR
COAnNGS
FREE ESn MATES •NO OBLIGATION
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
FINANCING A 'y AILABLE
FREE FREE
FIRM ESTIMATE FIRM ESTIMATE
SERVING LA. OVER 30 YEARS
CALL MR. EXPERT NOW
DIRECT OR COLLECT
836-1878
40 7 No. La Cienega
Los Angeles
,...19
INSIDE ~
the tube l
OUTSIDE
holywood
Mclean Stewnson, who stars on ''M•A•S•H" es Lt.. Col. Henry
Blake, the Commanding Officer and Chief Surgeon, t>es•n his career
in Hollywood under unusual circumstances-one mi&ht say hl&hly un·
orthodox circumstances. Unable to convince any agent to represent
him as an actor, Mclean wangled an appointment with Tommy
Smothers of the then highly successful "Smothers Brothers' Show,"
and convinced him to accept McLean's offer to work as a comedy
writer for a week without pay. There was no offic. space available at
NBC, so Mclean sat In the lobby outside the studio writing insane bits
and pieces, but he also met agents and studio executives who passed
by. The week over, Mclean was on the payroll as a comedy wrltt!r and
eve[ltually got the chance to do acting bits on the show. Now, In c.w this atve. anyone the idea to try to do the same. I'd
better add that Mclean wasn't just someone new in the business try·
Ing to prove ·he ttad talent. He, like many other actors who come to
Hollywood from New York, found It difficult to get going even though
he had been relatively successful around the New York acting scene.
It's just one of those strange things. Mclean had his underpinnings In
acting well grounded.
A araduate of Northwestern University, Mclean eventually migrated
to New York Where he started his professional career working at the
famous Upstairs at the Downstairs Club. At the same time he studied
at the Music Theatre -Academy wtth classmates such as Barbra
Streisand, Carol Lawrence and Bobby Morse. Then there was the usuel
run of summer stock. He eventually got his big break on Broadway
when he replaced his friend Paul Lynde in "BYE BYE BIRDIE" and
Mclean was on his way. He accepted just about ffWJry part offered
him-on stage or in TV. "I learned never to say 'no' to anything. Just
get Involved. Even In the tiniest part you meet people and one thing
usually leads to another."
An uample of this Is how he got his role in "M•A•S•H." Mclean
was offered a small one-day part in a movie but was reluctant to do
It. However, he accepted as a favor to his agent. Mclean likes to have
fun on a set and it was during one of these "fun" P.t?riods before shoot·
Ing a take, that Gene Reynolds, the producer of' M•A'S•H," came on
the set to talk to someone. He not.iced Mclean and stayed on to watch
him work. Three weeks later Meleen was offered the pert of Lt. Col.
Henry Blake.
* * * MAN OF LA MANCHA is such a superb film thet one begins to won·
der if its director.producer, Arthur Hiller. lives a charmed life. This
will meke \hree hits in a row for Hiiier-LOVE STORY was first.. gross·
Ing seventy million or so, HOSPITAL s&e<>nd, so far grossing twelve
or fifteen mllllon, and riow MAN OF LA MANCHA looks good enough
to surpass those figurn put together. Hiller's success goes back much
further than that. however. THE AMERICANIZATION OF EMILY, star·
ring Julie Andrews and James Garner, is considered by many to be
one of the classic films of all time. And POPI, starring Alan Arkln,
still stays in my memory as one of the finest films l'va yet seen. MAN
OF LA MANCHA Is • prime example of innumerable talents moldlnl
together with perfect finesse. There is not a flaw in the film end the
contemporary, almost futuristic. editing will undoubtedly put some of
today's young filmmakers who like to resort to gjmmicks In place of
talent back In the classroom to leam what film technique is all ebout.
Pfter <YToole end Sophia Loren would never have been my choices
for Don Quixote and Dulcinea. That's probably wtly I'm writing this
column instead of producing films. the thing I always wanted to do.
Both O'Toole and Loren give their best performances to date and will
undoubtedly walk away wlth·all honors. James Coco as Sancho Panza
is equelly good. Technically the film should go Into the cinema deiM1rt·
ments of colleges and universities, so youna. hopeful filmmakers
could have the opportunity to study every aspect of it. Not only Is the
film editing outstanding, but the photogrephy, sets, costumes. chore·
ography, music editing, sound editing, and most especially the make·
up are A+.
Dele Wa1sermen, the man who wrote the screenplay and also the
play, Is an old friend of mine. I met him In 1964 when he was working
as story editor and partner In the Mann, uurenoe, Wasserman Com·
pany, an independent film unit workJng out of MGM Studios. Wasser·
man's record wasn't particularly distinguish~, having been connected
with films like OUICK BEFORE IT MELTS, MISTER BUDWING, and
DOCTOR, YOU 'VE GOT TO BE KIDDING. Whan he came up with the
idea of writing a musical tor Broadway based on Don Quixote, nobody
laughed harder than I did. I've ha.rd that when he went .out to ra1se
money for the Broaway production, most of his old friends snorted
an refused. As it turned out. Wassennan had to back the play with
most of his own money. To steal Liberace's famous line, now Wesser·
man "lauahs all the way to the bank." He has not only secured his
futu,.. financially but he has given the world one of its finer pieces of
entertainment.
THE DAILY PILOT. lV WHk, DECEMBU 24, 1972
SATURDA Y
0£C£Ml£R 30
'.~ t) ; ' ..... I .... I I
5:00 (I) s-tte Se...W
1:30 fJ llac:t bperitncie
(I) n a Loeb tt l.tu'IUfta m lAt'a ....
7:00 ti Suntbt Se•Httr
u a m"" ...
fJ (I) C1J H.R. ""1ubd
marothtr Im
7:3011 Dmr'• ,,...._
D m ao.an HeticllJS D ea.pus "9flle
O (l)(l)McbMFM
())n•~
9)Uftdtba m ....,: "1lle ....... ,,..
tr.ttitl'I" (sportJ) '51 -Thomis
Gomei, Dorot~ Dandricfl'. "WIJ
Owt Wttf' (com) '37 -Laurel and
Hardy.
11:00 D di G -.... ..._ Wot1d In 80 ...,.
Cl) ..........
l ~F-"*"
ll!)Z..
G>t..M~
11:30 DID, .... -I lllnt
Cl} llewle: -o.,u.t ..,.. (adv) '3 7
--.sallu, W.E. Hollow1r. D CJ)IBUM611 ................ m llwle: CC} .,._, hNeb for
JM" (wts) '64-$'aul Pa11t, 811
but NMlty,
fD Tiie o.drk ~
u~oo o Mn: CC) -v ....... ot kan"
(dra) '65 -sentt Btrttr. lex
Barilr. ....... .,..n..n a w m• ...... D ....,..: (C) "TIM Kill 11141 Four
~ (WIS) '56 -Cf1rtl C1ble,
Eltlnof Parbr. 91•--m TM Ce.t _. Mrs. Muir
m....,....,......,..~ mr,...._
12:30 B CI> EB AmtncM ludsbncl
9Mlwll: (C) ...... It~
....,.. (wes) '53 -Jullt Ad1ms,
Steptltn Mcftally. mo.....,._
a:30 e CIJ s.t>rt... m s.... ..... a a m "-k r.nttw ., w... A1to11
B (})Cl) ED A1C Slpefstlr .... 1:00 II (j) ....,,._.,..
vie: "'Ohtr Twist .., a.. Alttll D IWttr .._
Dtdltf" Concl. (R). D (J) Cl} m F..... Tht G1to1
t:CIO ti ()) uazl-a a... Bowl Colorado vs. Auburn from
Cl (Ii m U!Mltnlo& J1cbonvfllt, Flor1da.
11 llevlt: ,.. ., leflt Stir" fJ ·-lalt·Wtlt ,.... ells.
(was) ·s~ltll LarMn. lk Llw teltcast from Candi.stick
D llevlt: "HWeon Sua o. ... • Part In Stn fttndsco.
(sci-fl) 'Ss-Robtrt C11rte Petri· GI SMI T•
d1 M1nnln1. 1 aJ Men
Cl) Movie: "'Mltaion to MtftCCO" ., Clle H te ,.,.
(dra) 'S9 -Lu 81rlltr, fem1nclo m Cua •lei .....
Rey,
tii) Mlstlr lltpn' NII~ ., a. ..... ,,,,..
t:lO 11 r 11 Albert m t111t Cesbr .w. a am n.. 111tJ1rs Cl)~-: ...... tit it.it Setrtll fJ (J) • .,..,, ~
()) Ca"9ee Cara'-1
m1es1-.smet
10:00 fl "9 F~ll Tht Sun Bowl Tuu
Tech. vs. Ho, C1rolin1 at El Paso,
Tu. a m Sul•b 2020
fJ (})CIJ~
(lj F..tball The Sun 8owl G1me
10:30 D am hHroulld
D ""'9: "feftJ.NlMn" (MS) '54
-Wiid 8111 Elliott, Henry Mor11n, a rn Cl} !lid , .. .,
fJ ""'9: .,... Matt" (mys) '54-
Rlchlrd tarlson, V1ronlc.t Hurst. ......... ........... , ......
., .... bpn' ~
1:)0. c.a.... ": ...... .,......,....,., ....... ~
Gtt.wDl•1-...
2!00 8 hlti'• ,,.. ..... ............. Cl) m.lllc ,_
llil""9t mc..i..1 fD l iH<w; I Jr. DIN· C.., nnal$
of tht 15lfl tt1n111I Sunallint Cup
between n1tlons Ttnnb Ch1mpl0n·
ships, from Miami Bttch'a Ramin· ao Pm. Pt1y1rs fl"Ofl\ 30 countries
art upectecl to oompet1.
lmc...ltltlel
2:30 • ..,. " lelntil&
DID ~UIA m Mctlal9'• ....,
3:i00 8 TN Sltlt.a 11 0.. DAllll .... W!Nlfenit.m "WOd
fife 1t11nd" Awtnl-wlnnfna Cana
dlln fllntmlUr Den Gibson uplom
3:
••
5
SATURDAY (Continued)
1 wfidllfe lsl1nd th1t studs like
1 woodl1nd reef 1eross the b1y
from Toronto.
• ... Adloft
CJ) ,., °"' F1kb a SdetlCe f1dlH TMm m Mewlt: .... tt1e Clf'C1d" <dr1> ·s3
-4tumphrty Bocart. June Allyson.
U)ntVlrllllila
II) f flltbtl.S.CC.r m...-
3:30 • Jat ... tu,.,
00.. CH1pu1 u L.st •• Sp.cl
4:00lltwb
(I) Movie: "fr1ltdl of Auill" (rtl)
'61 -Bradford Olllm1n. Dolores
tt1rt. D lnil*to Wltlt Manuel Ar119n
(]) Fil• f eltau•
&Startt• 1J Nfl 81111t et the WHll
fl)EIAMo
g) nt Otdrtc C..pa"'
Er;)h'*IN UtlH
&) Ytke of Acrtalltu,.
4:301J Mevle: Tt It Aneouncitd. No
1ntorm1tlon from the networtl at
press time.
D ftca "LO$ Anples County
Health Dep1rtm1nt" Dom. 111d Hanttt "Rick's Din-
ner Guests"
Cl) fll• flltlf,.
CJ) Tltls It y "' Ufe 1J Astre llut lo1111tt lowl Tin·
nessee vs. LSU 1t Houston's Astro-
dome. In T UH. lli ""11n Sitlfl Sllow
Cl)lml111
f.E) F1rst Adventurts In lmprovtsln1 a> NFl 8a•1 of tt11 W"k
&)C.11na ....
5:00 D Wllafs Coi111 On Wltfl Wlllll
Dnh 8 (]) a> 4ttl Aftt1U1I HlnHan In·
vftadonal lowfmf Toun11•11t
(I) a""" m Movie: "Abatldon Sllltl" (dra)
'57-Tyrone Power. Mal Zetterllni.
0) Deftlel ... M
&)Atta Tension
fZl) M.,,i. ancf ttlt ... lftfful Ml·
cMM
@!) S.Plt' 5""' m eowntrJ "1a m Ki .. ba
s:30 a (I) """ @) Mowll: tl'fht JourntJ" (dra) '59
-Yul Biynner, Oebofah Kt". m n. Adwecltu m C.11 tf tM Wut m SpHd Rlcitr
f V f N I r, r.
6:00811 ll)@DNtws
CJ)"' aw.1 "The L1nae Cup"
UtoblordSllow
Cl) HIP ~p1ml m n. Ptnuleltrs
a;)T..U.dtl40
f.f) Three StNtn
l:JOtlUNewt
(J) ....... Witlt .. ,...
llKNIC,.._~c. 8 USC lasWMH TroJan.s continue
In Quaker City Toumarntnt.
(I) Spelts Clllllt•ll
fE) Acdea Ctllel11 (R)
., EJ .. dt lldtup, SalllW m....-, ..........
m""""' &) utlle lluab
7:00 IJ (I) UFO "Clost-Up" Commander
Striker launches a new space probe
project which will follow a UFO to
Its oricin.
C1) WQd ..... D 11arlhtthrs Chuck Connors pre·
sents footqe of skYdlvln1 cam1ra-
m1n Bob Slncl1lr. Also featured Is
Sonny Allen, who puts his ht1d Into
the open jaws of a klller whale.
(j) Trutll or C.llNClutllClt D 111t P1nt1t a. .. m LMmnce Wiit Show
Ill It T1kel 1 11aitf
tJJ YMMa Hoftiplfl fD I i8clAISIMpl111 ... uty (R)
Rudolf "ureyev stars In his own
chorqraphy ot·rcflllkOYSl!y's bel-
let. VeroniCI Ttnn1nt Is Princess
Aurora In tr1e N1tional Ballet of
Canad• production. m NecM • Sabllllo ml..IM
&)S.I Street
]:JO Cil The ...... ,.,
O Tiit M ... flCt.fJ Dave Mid·
den is 1uat host for a 11lute to
the turboat.
(I) To Tell the Trutll . 0 Lat's MMe I Dul
8'111dltaltJ . m Desert Allctlon Qalltry
a:oo IJ (I) All I• the F111llJ (R) Mike's
best friend, 1 hithly rupected artist
speclalltln& In nudes, aw Glori• to
po$1 for him. 0 di m ...... 8 .... c..,jA..,L'"'I On1111 lowl
hn4t An!U Btyant and Joe Gira·
1101a will serve u co-hosts for th1
THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, OECEM8ER 24. 1972
parents' wish to be remarried in a
rellclous ceremony, but it's not all
that 11sy since Bemle is Jewish end
Bridaet Is Catholic.
GJ Mtvte: "Ablndotl Slllpn (dr1)
'57-Tyrone Power, Mil Zttterllna. m Kath"" Ku1t1 ... aJMov .. e ucu latMtba11
Clusic
fZl) lttll"4 ttlt Unn
ll)TVMulkaf
Su11r Bowl 11:15 CJ) Mtwft: "MaJm" (com) '53-
Michele Mor11n, Charle Boyer •
11:2011 Mewte: •'Lolttly Are tlll lflft"
(dra) '62 -Kirk Dou1las, Walter
M1tth1u.
9:00 8 Cl) Mery T~r Mitre Show (R) 11:30 0 90 Minutes Burt Reynolds, Gold-
Lou Grant is by·passed by the tele· tinier and Dove (ma&icllns) and
vision st1tlon m1na1er who asslans Sim Grt1nlff 1uest.
M1ry Richards the task of aivin1 (]) MoM: "Meu ._,. (mys) '47
th• "Six O'Clock News'' a new look. -Victor Mature Ethel Barrymor..
Lou has hi$ doubts but M1ry plun1· U MNt: (C) ,_,,.,.. (mus) '63
es ahead with bold plans for a -Rosalind Russtll, Natalie Wood.
"llthter, more Informal" look. (I) Mowlt: "Wt'N NI Aqlltn
D g m NIC Saturday M~le: (com) '55-Humphriy Bocart, Joan
(2hr) .. Moua Oft the Moonn (R) Bennett.
(com) '63 -Marcaret Rutherford, G MMe: "Sla•pttr of the Ya•·
Terry.Thomas, Ron Moody. lhe plrtt'' (sci.fl) '62-Wllllim Brindy,
Grand Duchy of Fenwick's only sci· Diet1r Eppler.
enlist develops I rocket Ind takes QI TOM Joell S11ew
a trip to the moon, where ht meets 8) Mftlt: .. Ha•tet" (etas) '48 -
Ruulan and American utropauts. Sir Laur1nce Ollvlar, Jt1n Simmons. U CJ) (I) a> Str9lts tf Saa Fratt· fJ) Ctltd JMlltfl ...
ctsco "45 Minutes from Home" (R) fl!) JtMlll
A salesman In San Francisco for a e a...1 JC
convention picks up 1n 1ttr1etive 12:30 D MM: •1tfp. ~ 11Mt Htntf.
air1 end ~mes a suspect In her ....... (dti) '37 -lnine Dunne,
murder. William Win~m. Jacqueline Rindolph Scott.
Scott and Stephen Ohver auest. (fil MM: (C) ....... le..t fw m 1111 Man froM UNQ.£ LNtMf' (wes) '6()...-.Mdlt Murphy.
&) NIN 1:00 0 Cl) Cl) Newt
fl1) PlaytMtuse " .. Yortl "A Nice l;JO m Al-NfaM SMw: (C) une Tnltll
Place to Visit" P1nh1ndlers. sex ex· Allelt .._" ~ .,....
perts. comp1ny executives ind 1V atet," ...,_.. ~ Uf9"
commentators are tar1ets In this Z:JO 18 ...
satiric view of life in New Yort
City. Marion Mercer and Antho1111---....... --~-=~===~
Holland auest. GI EJ Sllow de Loco Yaldtr
9:30 f) Cl) Bob ffewtl1rt Show (R)
Bob's "fear of flylna" workshop
aets a new member when Emily ac·
cepts his invitation to travel with
the croup by plane end has to ad·
mlt, for the first time, that she too
is a "white knuckle" flyer.
tJNews
II) Minority CotllmunltJ
37th 1nnual Ofanae Bowl Parade 10:00 I) (I) C.rol lumett Show St1ve
f11turfn1 theme-decorated floats, Lawrence 1uests.
bands from various sactlons of th• u Cl) Cl) m SiJtll Sens. "Dear
country ind specialty croups per· J9an. We're 6oin1 to Scare You to
fonni1111lon1 the routa. Death" (R) Joan Crawford 1uests as U W.11 Wtedetl SIMM a lost tr1veler who finds lod1ln1 8 (I) (I) al I IHc!A I Tltt Year with 1 bl1ck maalc aroup.
th Wlh C.. hwft ABC News tJ TNttaft Trtals
correspondents stationed at key lo· m .....
cations 1round tfle wor1d will rt· fl) C.sa Jlll(ada
view the import1nt overseas news fZ.l) hsltflt Ttn11 Drama of a col-
IY\Jlts of the pl$t year end how le1e professor's strained relationship
they may be expected to affect with his children.
chances for world peace. g, loa di Mexia. 1J Millien $ Movlt: (90) "Only CI;) Chlntte V1r1tty Hour
Two C.11 ,,.,.. (com) '62 -Peter el) Lou Cordon Show
Sellers, Mal Zttter11na. m Alfnd Hitckock Prwnta 10:30 a Rollln' 11t a...p1e.....,, W*11ln1 tJ lorts Kirton Pratnb Thrllltf
a L11CM Ubn m ""' ta Mowtt Ell) lntematlo111l Perfom11nce
Q):Mowtt: (2flr) '"SllWr Dotlar'' ll:OO II Cil 0 U (I) di News
(dr1) '32. -Edw1rd G. Robinaon. • 1J S.,..ur PrtHib: "Clptivi
Btbe D1n11ls. Wiid Wollin" (hor) '43-John Car-
l :JO fl Cl) lridpt lAMs ltralt (R) radlne, Evelyn Ankera.
Brldltt and Btmle acrM to thllr Ci) Manltal Dlllcl11
ROYAL PAftAO£R -Ora,..
loWI QuMn Mana 0'81'M wUI Nian CN9r the 31th ennual Kine Oranp Jambcne ,.,..,
known " the 0!'9nc• llowt h·
..... to be coforcast flw '""" Mlaml, Fla., on MIC. 81tuf'dey
(Dec. 30) at IPM.
• ••••••••••••• •••••••••••••
ARE YOU MOVING 1
RENTAL READIER
utw ,.,.tot_ c-•-c..
MS·4820 ••••••••••••••••••••• I I I 0
Tiie Time Machine! \
wmNAUER
··2000··
• Tells the YIAI
•the MONTH
•the WHI
•the DAY
•the HOUI
•the MINUTE
•the SICOND
A lON~INfS.WITINAUU PRODUCT
lONGINES-
Cho1111 to Tilfte the
19 72 Olympic GainH
-M1111ich.
-~UTOMA TICALl YI
And computes, with simple lin9er.tfp
adjudment, ell Days and Detes ihto
the YHr 2015
• Sell-winding • Weter.Resistant •Anti-Magnetic
• Dis+tnctive Midnight Blue di•I.
Metchlng bracelet, $74.tS • with strap, $64.tl
• BanlcAmericud
• Master Charge
• Kirk Chug•
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. I 0 to '
HUNTIM•TON C:INTll HAllOI SH°"IN• CINTll ....... ...., JJOl ........ IW.
".............. c ...... ... lt2·1101 14J.f411
6:00
7:.10
a:oo
8:30
9:00
11:00
11:30
7:30
t:OO
10:00 11:00
ll:JO
1.:30 7:.10
l:.10 t :30
11:00 U:.10
l;,30
7:30 a:oo 1:30
11:00 11:30
1;30
7:.10
11:00
11:30
6:30 7:.!0
•:00 11:30
l.'(JO
t:OO
11:00
11:11 ll:JO 11:30
THE DAILY PILOT, TV WUK. Dl'CDllBEJt 24, 1972
IUHDAY, DIX:l:MKll M
S "Hollday Inn" (mus) '42-81~_1 Croa~. f!'M Aatatre.
9 (C) "The Uttle IMphMd f//f lllftlllMm ~ (•dll) '59-Jlmmle Rod· ~era. Chill Wiiia. 11 'C) ''ltllleet ... tt It. LN9" (mus) '45-Judy Gerl•nd, Tom Or8ke. 1J C) ~. Trs.,.._,. <c•rtoon> '39.
7 3 I (C) "l1MIM Delirlil YOUIW Man In ni.lr Jitunty Ja...,._" (com) '69--Tony Curtla. T•nv-Thomaa. t (C) ~ .. My fl1end '11clui" (dr8) '43-4'0dcty McDowell, 9'1t11 Johnson
11 .. A ctwtsbftl• Carer ~d,..) '31--Gene Lockha,,,
• '"God ts My ,.""-" dra) '57-Walter lrennan. I "A Cf\ttetmH Caret'" cfaa) '5l~latalr Sim. 1J unte lted ....._.. (dr8) '4t--Anton Walbrook. Moira Shearer.
MONDAY, MCOIH9' 21
5 "Golnc My w:r• (dra) '44-81~rotby, 8alJ'Y fttzprald.
9 I~ "Mlr'9cle °"' ~ of f i'' (i!ra) 'IS2-Qln,.,, Roland. 4 "T1M lltallw.y Cl!Mdr'9fl,. (•dv) '71-0lnah lherldan, Jenny Aautter. 10 "Klu Me te.te" (mus) '53--Howard KMI, Ann lllfth. I '1lelts of It. M•PY'•" (dr11) '4S-8lnl Crosbyl tnartd l"•rsm•n. 9 IC) "Ceul1 J_....,. (com) '56-0enny Kays Giynlt Johns. 13 ,...,,..,. (dr8) '51-J .. n Simmons, MlchHI ltannle.
2 I ''The Nut \fotce You HM,.. (d,..) '!50 -J•mH Whitmore, Nancy D•vla.
3 "'Fellow the Sun" (dr8) '51-Qlenn ford, Anna Bnter. ti ''Wetc:eme Stnn..,.. (com} '47-Bln& Crony, larry fflu1rald. 7 (C) "Ski ... tty" [com} '65-f'rankle Avalon, O.borall Waney.
TUESDAY, D£C:.O.Hlt M
7 (C) "KJ~~ Part I (ref} '62-JeHray Hunttr. S "Oofn Wa (dr8) '44-81na Crosby. Berry fltzc•rald. t • .,.~ ( ra) ·~rt Jurpna. Patricia NMI.
7 J I (C) '"Oe4lnt Q.ts Mam.d" (com) '71-MOf'll• Ellla, MlchHI lum1. 2 I (C) ~ c..... Car Mu,.....' (mya) '71-Robert Hooks, Jeremy Slat .. t "A 81ri ,,..., flafMlen'' (dra) '63-M•xlmlll~n Schell. 2 I (C) .. P•m 0... lh•~ TMnp" (com) lneid l•'W"l•n. Mel fernr. 5 (C) "•iv. Sldee" (mus) 4f>.-f'r.ct Alt.I,.., ITn1 Crosby.
WIDHQDAY, MCUIHR rl
7 w ol !Otlp" Concl. c ... I) '62-Jtff ... y Hu~.
9 C "~• f//f IMOCet~ (dra) '61-Susann•tl YCHtl, Kenneth More. I Mr W•Y'° (dra) '44-8ln1 Crosby, l•"Y fltzaerald. 7 J I ( .... ,. •ftd Mra. Bo Je Jenee" (dra) '71-0..T Amaz Jr., CM1• tOPher Norris. 9 "Me.tlcWal" (hor) '61-Glenn Col1>ett. P•trfcl• 1,...11n. 2 I (C) •-n.. ~ (dra) Omer Sh8rlf, Anouk AlmH.
THURIOAY, DECW•IR 28
7 "My 'rtMct Irma• (com} '49--John Lund, Diane LS"· S .....,_ My Wa~ (dra) 4'4-81ns Crosby, l•ny •raid. t "Mr. larMnlc.us" Chor) '61--0sc:er HomOlka, Ronal L-1•. t "In the 'NnCJi Style" (dra) '63--Je•n Sebers. U ,......._Inc." (d"J '5S-RMd Nedley.
2 I (C) "Oector '•usbN' (d,..) '67-Rlchard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor. 5 "kan• Ac,... the Ta..._,, (com) '35--Carole Lombard, f...cl MacMur r8)'.
FRIDAY, P£CEMHlt 2t
7 (C) "ftrtnc• Valiant'' (edv) '65--J•mn Maaon, Janet L.el1t1. • "The Mott O.nlSfOW M.n Alw." (dra) '61 -Ron R•rtdall, Debra Pa~.
2 I (C) "'Heoll. UM and IMtlf" (com ) '69--Jerl')' Lewie, ,...., L.ewford. 2 "Mu"'9r at • Qatlop'• (dra} Ma'1u.t Rutherford, Robert Money. IJ ''The ,.Mlonate ThJef" ~) 62-Ben G'aaa,.., A11na M•sn•nl. I "Ion flf Df9Qala" (h04") • Lon Chaney, Loul .. Albrttton.
SAnJltDAY, DECDitKlt 30
• "'OnlY Twe Can Ptay'* (com) '62-Pet., S.llera. 4 10 .. .._.. °" the Moon'" Cc:om) '63--M•l'l•ret Rutherford, Terry ThomH.
S ·~ WIM W.-n" Chor) '43-JOhn Carradine, Ev•lyn Ankara. 11 .. ._'"'°" IMp" ~dra) '5)-Tyrone Pow•r.
J .. Madrne" (com> 58-Mldlele Morpn, Charin loyer.
Z "l.MMfY AN the ... ._... Cdra) ·~111t DouatM, Walter M•tth•u. • .. ..._.__.,.(mys) '47-Vlctor M•tu .... Ettiel-.anymore.
7 (C) ~~ '63--4tos.llnd Russell, Hatall• Wood. a "Ws're NO A (com) '55-Humptirey loprt.
9 "SlaumMiw Sf • y.,,,..._ .. (tel-fl) '62'--Wllllem lrandy. 1J "Hwril.t" Cclaa) ·~If Le\lrenee OIMer, J .. n Slmmona.
THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEIEI<, DECEMBER 24, 1972
BRAND NEW '73
I
oo ·
··-..... __ .1
BllAllD NI LV 1973
MOITECAllO
..... u:.~ S9!---. .... m· 11, · ·-NL 111111 I 911 • ... Pi ....... ----·-
LAN · .. ····· • '.''" ''o.'.•·•'• , .. ,,, •.. ,,,11 I•' .1 .
' • • • ' • ' • • ' ' • ' .. • ' • • • .. .. • ' ~ .. • f • • •
• ' ', I' ' 1'• .. • .. 't .. t • j. II ~ o .. " > .. If I 1t , ... \I > \
' ',' ', 'I' •'It ·.•,\ • ..... T ...
llALPR WILLIAMS LIASD ALL ~IS & MODILS
IUl9 -'71 lllCI mtt•Y LftW IUl9 .. '71 .. amAll M-IUl9 llW '11 POllTIAC .-J. CP.
==-.::orz.t •111. =r.::·t:: 1114. -5'~' *116 •
• ......,..,_ ...... IAY-.._..... • .... IAYW ":.':"..,!.~~-:'
flllmlaftlllrnn -_.... ' ·--
---'JICANI
/Flt ==== .,, li111111911=···, :tc--,.... -...... ,.. -===·
~~= •179_ ,..... ~ .... ':';;.J--11'-
I
A DMSION OF RAl.PH WILLIAMS ENTERPRISES, INC., A PUBLIC COMPANY
2144 HARBOR BLVD. ANAHEIM (714) 638-8410
OPEN 9 AM-9 PM-1 DAYS A WHK
..... 23
CLOSED
DIC. 25th
Hl·FI SllREO DIMONSTRATOR ~-~ALI DAYS
YIAR IND CLEARANCE SAUi ~·3~ C:~u.
Latest Model DeMOllltaalon -New Factory • ...,.,..,
FROM OUR 5 SOUND IOOMS ALL MODELS PRICED TO SELL
SOMI llLOW COST I
.
K'(MS 106 .3
~
ADC e Ahc e ~· e ....... e D.I e Drw• • .,...... • ......... 1.... • Jll. • ........ •
·-• ILH • I a...c. ........ Mc ...... .
M•tr .. ec • P•1111lc • .._.... e •••••• Scett. s •• ,,.. .... s ............ a.. •
S-, e s::: ... e SAi e RAC e Y ... e w..f.
..... • T•ftA ..
......... Cr•t • • :
'-= -
~-ecc .. " ••W• 4411.1M.c ...... ...
0....tMDeMy,MW. IN ... . _,
"Gem"-AVery Special ·
Story for Kids
By MacKinlay Kantor
..
DAILY PILOT
Marlo Thomas:
Christmas ,Lessons
My Dad Taught Me
ORANGE COUNn, CAUFORNIA
From Our Kitchens:
Make This ""Tree"
Out of Sandwiches!
sk Them Y011rself
Went to aa • f81ftOU9 s--• (IW8lioftt Seftd the ci-UOn on a potCC&rd, to "AM." Fe111lly WMllty, 141
lexJngtOft A--., N-Yori!, N. Y. 10QZ2. W.'11 ,_,ti IOf pubflahed .... IOM. Sony, -CM't ~..ottlefa.
FOR ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK
l waa in the audience when you appeared al t1te
Rioiera Hotel in Laa Vegaa. You aabd for rolcm.
teen, and two gorgeocu girl. walked on noge. You
aang to them and kiaed them. TeU me laonady,
were tlaoae girla plant., or do aoerage mlddle-al{1td
FOR DORIS DAY
What actor did you enjoy working with most?-Karen Her·
ing, Appleton, Wis.
• I've enjoyed working with all my leading men, but if I
have to be pinned down to a favorite, I suppose it is Rock
Hudson. If I had to pick a favorite movie, it would be any
of the ones I made with Rode.
FOR ROGER ST AUBACH, pro football ~
Do you think your shoulder .eparation injury will hurt your
future as a passer?-Adam Romo, Jr., San Antonio, Teus
• No. In fact, the doclors tell me that my arm should be
stronger than ever. I'm confident I'll be a better quarterbaclc
than I was before.
FOR SEN. EDMUND MUSKIE of Maine
Do you think acquainting the American public with Polish
history, especially the contributions made by Americans
• of Polish descent, would eliminate Polish joka and slun?-
F. Jasiorkowsb, Chicago, DI.
• Yes. I thinlc as more and more people become aware of
the heritage of others, there will be less reliance on so-called
ethnic jokes. Any form of humor that relies on slurs on
others' origins is in bad taste.
FOR SHELLEY WINTERS,
namng in "The Posei.don Adventure"
Every actor and actress seems to have a favorite role they
would like to play. What is yours?-F. J., Boca Baton, Fla.
• f d love to play Golda Meir on the screen. What a womanl
FOR DAVE BRUBECK, fazz musician
You're a famous jazz musician, but your chi)dren are into
rock music. Do you see this diflerence in musical taste as a
generation gap?-P. L., Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
• Every generation likes its own music. It gives them an
identity that sets them apart from their elders. In my early
years, .. swing was the thing." It became the basis for my
style of jazz. My ~n Darius, 25, grew up when follc music
was in vogue, so his approach reflects his interest in ethnic
influences. Chris, 20, reached junior high about the time the
Beatles took over, so his music is more roclc oriented. But
all my sow play jazz as well as rock. And they were trained
in classical. I suppose our difference in musical preference
(not taste; we all agree when it's bad, whether it's rock or
jazz) is a .. generation gap," hut it's one that is easily bridged.
~like my.elf have a chance, eooP-N.
H~ Sacramento, CaUf.
• Those were no plants, and sometimes the women who
volunteer are old eoou2b to be my mother. It is just that
usually the young ooes l>eat them to it. Maybe they are leu
reserved, or maybe they can just wallc faster. But next tiJM
you come to the Riviera. please don't hesitate to step forward.
FOR PAT BOONE
You have four daughters. How do you feel about letting
them live away from home?'-AI Lee, San Antonio, Tens
• I suppose you only refer to Cherry, 18, the oldest ooe.
She talked about getting an apartment. but my wife Shirley
and I are not willing to let her go. I simply will not oomider
Jetting any of our girls move away from home until they are
20. I lived at home until I was married. Of course, the girls
can say that Shirley and I got married when we wtn 19-
and it may be diflicult to answer. But then, we were almcm
20 •...
FOil llllCE MANSFIELD, Senae. Maforlty UaUr
b tbe Senate turning into Oaicbn Little? I undentancl lt
-recently approved • treatr &xlng Ba~. for man-made
lpiloC8 objects in case they fall on our Ttue?-F. D.,
Green Bay, Wit.
•As of February, 1972, there were 2,730 objects in outer
space, and as of the same date 3,120 objects had been in
orbit but since decayed. Thus., as space expJoratioo cootin~
uea, it becomes increasingly possible that persons or prop-
erty may be damaged by space mishaps.
FOil DAVE DEBUSSCHBRE of the New York KnJcb
What made you give up your bueball career few bealr.e«ball?
-T. S., AndeilOO, Calif.
• After two yean of double-sport participation, I realJ7.ed
I had more chance to be a star in basketball and dropped
my baseb&ll career. It's difBcult to flay two sports. Only one
other modern player-Ron Reed o the Atlanta Braves-has ~ attempted playing two sports prolessiooally. And he
dropped besbtbf.11 quickly.
FOR CLORIS LEACHMAN,
cu"ently namng in Wall Dlmey'1 .. Charlie and the Ang•l'°
Is it true you ooce won a beauty cootest?-L. Jobmtoo,
Yuma, Ariz.
• In 1946 I was chosen Miss Chicago. I was also one of the
five finalists in the MW America pageant the same year.
[Editor's note: When she was a shapely student at the
Actor's Studio a few years later, Cloris was told by Julie
Harris, '"If I had your figure, I could rule the worldlj
oec.ml*r 24, 1972 /iiinfGJ~ TM Ncmt,.._ M • dm
LEONARD S.. OAYIDOW, Ctuilf'l'ftlln MORTON FRANK. P .......... Md ~A t If
DONALD M. HUPFOllO, V.P., Advertl1lng Dlre01or MOftT NMKY, VJ'., EdJtor In a,i..
Anoe. Advertising Mgr.: Robert J. Cllrl8el8n; REYNOLD8 DODSON. Menaglng Editor
Mar1e•tlng Director : 8lcl .....,...,; Nn Yor1c RICHAAO YALDATI. Art Director
Sale• Mgr.: Gerald & Wroe;
Chicago Salee Mgr.: Joe fnDr, Jr.;
Detroit s.1 .. Mgr.: Rldmd T. "'*'
Publisher Relatlon1: Robert D. Cemey and
L" Euta, V.P.s and Co-Directors; Robert
H. Marriott, ThOMM H. O'Netl, Managel'I
Aut. to PubllatMr, Joeepfl G. AnMtrOl'I
Women'• Editor: ROSALYN MMYAYA
Food Editor: llAIULYM ..........
Aasoclate Editors:.,.,,, A--. Joea ~tt.ILMlloa>. ContrlbUtlng E~more: ,.., Opper.MllMr,
WHt Coatt: LMTJ ......_, Spol'\S.
Art: H.._ H ... lloll, LayM;
Newspaper Sen1lce1: Promotion, Robert Gloria llrter, PlctuNt
.. nicer; Merchandising, MaJY Stnyte Production: ~ ztppricl\ Director;
Ol1trlbut1on Manager: LoWe lArlile Ak:Mrd Wendt. Menager
Tranaportallon Coordinator: IE4lftlca Ndleer AdYertltlng Meaup:.....,... C.-
~ 6 ~ ~:141 '--•lngtott Ave., New YOftl, tt.Y.10l22 01172 FAMILY WHtn.Y, INC. Aft rf91t• ra ... M.
You are Invited to mail your queaUon1 Of' co111ments about any ma'9rl1I In Family Wffkly.
Write to Setvice Editor, Famlty Weekly, 841 Leaington Avenu., New Yonc. N.Y. 10022.
Because this eminent doctor discovered how to utilize your body's
FMH -the fat mobilizing hormone by ex perimenting on himself
You can now command your to
AND LOSE AS MUCHASQJ WANT
WHILE YOU ENJOY EATING AS MUCH AS OJ WANT!
The Famous Superdiet -Dr. Atkins' Diet Revolution reveals in full the
recently discove red weight loss secret.
You don't need pills -you don't count calories -you don't even need
wi llpower (because you're never hungry)!
Yet you can lose 10-50-100 pounds or more (6 to 8 the first week!) and keep
it off for the rest of your life!
It's truly 1 Diet Revolution!
For over 50 years we've all been brainwashed into think-
ing that the only way to lollC weight was to cut calories .
.. It's a hoax!" says Dr. Robert C. Atkins. We all know
some lucky person who can .. eat like a horse" and never
gain a pound -what has she or he got that you haven't
got? .
Nowweknowl
It's FMH (the Fat Mobilizint Hormone).
This is a substance that signals yow body to start ••livins
off its own fat." It was isolated in pure form only a
doz.en years ago, and it was just a medical curiosity until
Dr. Atkins discovered bow to make bis body -your body
-anybody's body -produce FMH on command!
Listen to his story:
WHICH Of THESE DIETING
MIST AKES DO YOU MAKE?
1. Do you hive nothing for breakfut but hiab protein
cereal with skim milk? 0 WRONG," says Dr. Atkins.
"Have two fried egs and all the bacon you want!"
2. Do you try to get by for lunch with nothing bu t a
piece of lean ground beef with a little ketchup on it?
"WRONG"1 says Dr. Atkins. "Have two cheeseburs·
ers instead. '
3. Do you skip lunch entirely and nibble a tiny box of
raisins? "WRONG," says Or . Atkins. "Have some
chicken kiev drippina with melted butter!"
4 . When you eat out , do you 10 off your diet? "No
need to," says Or. Atkins, and tells you how to enjoy
Chinese food, French food, Italian food right from
the menu. "Only 10 years out of medical school I was already a fat
man. 40 pounds overweight, with 3 chins! Yet I bav~no --------------------""'
After completina bis medical education at the Univer-
sity of Michigan and Cornell Medical School, Dr.
Atkins interned at Strona Memorial Hospital, and
served his residency at Columbia University Hospitals,
and St. Luke's Hospital. Specializ.iq in cardlolOI)' he
knew that obesity is one of the primuy rouons 1for
heart trouble. willpower -even the idea of hunger scares me. I knew I
could not follow a low-calorie diet for even a single day ...
He read about FMH, and by using his own body as a
laboratory, discovered that he could command it to make
this miracle hormone whenever he wished. The FMH
switched his body engine over to a different "fuel" -it
started to bum fat. He continued to eat all he wanted -
he never felt hungry, and at the end of six weeks, be had
lost 28 pounds! And the diet revolution was born.
started and quit Weiab.twatchers several times. Alter four months of Dr. Atkins' diet, be bad lost 85 pounds ____________________ _.
-yet he was never hungry. I'm losina. but I'm not 00 1 men lose 7-a pounds the fint. week -moat women S-6
diet. I'm eating up a storm," be SIYI happily. "It's pounds.
Why the Diet Revolution works.
Or. Atkins found a simple test that would tell him when
his. body engine was burning fat. And 65 employees at
AT&T agreed to try it. Every sin&)e one lost as much
weight as be wanted -yet not a single one wa.s hung.ry!
Then the news got oul -and thousands, many of whom
were S~ I 00 pounds overweight, fiocked to Dr. Atkins'
office for treatment.
fantastic!" 4. You'll lose inches from your measurements ... nabt
Why Or. Atkins'
diet will work for you.
I . Unlike any other diet -you control your own body
chemistry to burn off unwanted fat and keep it off.
(You're different from everybody else on earth, so DT.
Atkins' simple test, which you make every day, lets you
know it's workin&, and lets you regulate your welght
precisely.)
where you want to lote them!
(30 DAY NO RISK TRIAL)
ORDER NOW I THIS BOOK COULD
CHANGE YOUR LI FE I
If you are over your "ideal weight" (most people are) ... tt you "Ye ever tried to diet it off or exercise it off and
f~ed ... if you've tried a "crash diet" and put wei&ht
naht back on when you stopped ... if you're afraid to
sf?p smokin& for fear you'll pin weight ... if you've
tned amphetamine pills, water pills and injections with·
out re~ults ... this amazina book could help you cbaap
your hfe! The week after you aet it in your hands you
could be 8 pounds lighter and many times happier!
Is it any w~nder celebrities like Roberta Peters, Buddy
Hackett and David Sus.skind have told the world about
the miracles this diet works? ls it any wonder his diet
has made ~ews in magazines liJce V oaue, Town cl Country,
Cosmopohtan, and Woman's Day?
2. Unlike o ther methods -there a.re no pills to take no
calories to count, no strenuous exercises, and n~t a
single hunger pang to suffer through! (You'll probably
eat better than you ever have -and feel better too -
because you can lose while enjoying such luxuries as
berries with whipped cream, bacon, cheeseburgers,
butter, fried foods, all k1nds of meats, poultry and sea-
food -even asparagus with real hollandaise sauce!)
--~~~~·-----------~~~~~~~~------,
Rhd thete
incredible true stories!
From size 18 to size 8 ! Beatrice G bad been taking diet
pills since she was a fat 9-year old! Yet when she came to
Or. Atkins, she still weighed 166 pounds and wore siz.e
18! Now she's size 8 and still fosin1! "The best part is
I know I'll never have to go hungry apin!" she says.
Loses 85 pounds in 17 weeu. Herb W wei&hed · 367
pounds at the age o f 32. He had tried diet pills and
MAIL NO RISK COUPON TODAY!
AMERICAN CONSUMER Dept. DA-39
195 Shippen Ave .• Stamford, Conn. 06904
The Diet Revolution !9111 you
everything you need to know.
Why d iet piW are bad news (p. 88)
How to start your body producing (FM H) -the fat
mobilizing hormone that flushes out and bums up your
excess wei&ht (p. 16)
How to test yourself and regulate-your rate of weight
loss (p. 126-130)
How to tell if brand name foods and diet drinks are
okay -and which to bewue of (p. 163)
Why calorie counting and starvation diets are a hoax
(p. 94)
The 4 simple things you do to start (p. 123)
... and 94 pqes pecked full of luscious meal plans food
lists and recipes -and you can eat every one! •
If you read and follow Dr. Atkins' advice, four beautiful
thinp wiU happen to you.
I. You will feel free of hunger.
2. You'll feel better ... perhaps better than ever before!
(MAIL NO RISK COUPON TODAY)
AMERICAN CONSUMER Dept. D~
196 Shippen Awe., Stamford, Conn. 0690'
v ... rush mt ..... ce>piei of Or. AtkJnt' Diet R91fQfutlon.
310 ~in hard cover fim edition. I may reed ft end try
the d•t 30 ct.vs frM. If it dlupointt me in eny wey ... If I
don't lote the Wllight end inches I went .•. if I'm not at>-
sofut91y delighted, you will refund the full purch .. price.
[] I encl~ S ........... In full peyment ($8.95 I* ·
copy poflpeld I.
I
I
I I I
Amount encloMd ~ ......•.•..•...•.........•. , , • , .. , . I
I
N.sne • • • • . . . . • . • . • . • . . • • • . . . • • . . • • • • • • • • . • . . . . . . . • I
'Street •........••..••.....•......... Apt. . ..•..... ,
3. You will lose weight the first week, and continue to City ..•...........•... State •....••. Zip ......•....
lose until you reach the wei&ht you want to be! Moat (ConMCtk:ut ,....,,.. .td • ._ tn.t ._ __ ........................................................................................ ..;~-~~~~~~~------~~~--~~~~~
-
~larlo Thomas Reealls Christmases Pase:
By Marlo Tlae•as,
u teltl a. He le• Dersey
Some people might tell you about
the first Christmas they discov-
ered there is no Santa Claus. l
don't remember that.
When I think about Christmas, I
think of family sharing. We always go
to Maas and have brunch together,
just the family. Actually, most of the
Christmases l spent aa a child were
mixed in with a lot of traveling so I
could be with my father.
My rooet memorable childhood
Christmas came when I was eigbL My
sister Terry was five and my brother
WU11't even born. My father was ap-
pearing at the old Chez Paree in Chi-
cago, and they , wanted him to stay
over for Christmas and New Year's.
My mother was determined to spend
Christmas at home. Our tree was up,
the praenta were all under the tree
and my mother said, "I'm not uproot-
ing these children. They're all excited
and waiting for you to come borne."
My father told the Chez Paree peo-
ple he could never be away from his
family at Christmas, but they said,
.. Ten her she can bring all the pres--
cnts. Tell her we'll get a tree, we'll
have a Santa for the kids on Christ-
mas morning and everything ... So we
went.
We went by train because my
mother didn't like to fly. On the train
we bad a roomful of presents. I re-
member that very well. And what a
terrific Christmas they gave us! Santa
was waiting in the hotel room when
we got the~. There was a big train
with presents stuffed in each car and
a big tree.
I've only spent one Christmas away
from my family. That's when I was
in London, playing in "Barefoot in the
Park" onstage. It f cit very strange be·
ing away that day, but l gave a Christ-
mas dinner in my Oat for the cast and
crew. I bad to have something I could
do myself-especially since J was go.
ing through a trying period. It was a
time when I was trying to break out
o( the identity crisis that always goes
with being the son or daughter of a
famous person.
Lots of people think it's no trouble
for children of famous people to
make it. But it's a tremendous amount
of trouble, an unbelievable amount,
and some of us make it and some of
us don't. J know many kids I grew up
with, children of famous people, who
.. TheG
My Father
tMe"
HOfMIMde pn11MI Md carda, Merlo.,......, w more than prnent8 llnd
c:erde 11\at .. boutflt. "Do t'*'le Jounelf," lhe .......
"When my play opened. my father gave me
a set of horse blinders, and on the card he wrote:
·Just run your own race.' "
are now in sanatoriums, or have be-
come alcoholics or have talccn to
drugs. They just couldn't make it.
But it was on that Christmas in
London that my father gave me prob-
ably the best gift 1 ever got. He knew
I had been having a lot of trouble in
the U.S. just getting out on the streets
without people bugging me about who
I was. I guess I went to London so I
could get away and be what I was
myself. Then when my play opened,
my father gave me a set of horse
blinders, and on the card he wrote:
"Just run your own race."
Jt'a true! He had told me, "Thor-
oughbreds run their own raoc. They
don't look at anybody else or at what
anybody else is doing."
I think the greatest gift you can
give anyone is to let them be them·
selves. I mean, if I could ask anything,
if (was a new baby, I would say to my
mother, "Let me be me."
I think this is important for us as
grown-ups too. Let the person you
Jove be who they ate and like what
they like. I often wonder why, when
we choose somebody to love, we then
often try to beat out of them what we
don't like or what doesn't agree with
us. I keep noticing that in couples. I
always say, "Why are you torturing
that poor person? Let him be. 1f you
don't like what be doea, how be walks,
cats, talks, then move on I"
You know, I took off the last year.
Since then I've 1pent a lot of lime try-
ing to concentrate on my own feel-
ings, rather than oo my commercial
pursuits. My new 'record album re-
flects that. It's called "Free to Be ...
You and Mc." It resulted from my
own anguish over the children's fairy
talcs my niece was reading and hear-
ing. I listened too-and what I beard
was the roles of children and parent&
that these talcs traditionally assign to
boys and girls and men and women.
The purpose of my album is to help
free children to be who they arc and
who they want to be.
I guess my most remembered child-
hood Christmas gift was a piano. I
wanted one in my bedroom. My
mother and father gave me a white
piano, just made for Little girls, and I
wanted it so badly.
We always decorated with a Nativ-
ity scene out in front of our house.
In Beverly Hills, where I grew up, the
Chamber of Commerce gave a prize
for the best display. We won it so
many times they finally gave us the
perennial plaque so we wouldn't be
eligible any more. We went crazy with
our Nativity. We started out small and
finally we had this huge stable on the
front tawn with life-size figures my
father found in Italy.
My parents still put it up each year.
One year when we were no longer
at home my father thought, "Gee, the
kids all have their own homes," so
he didn't do it. All the people in the
city wrote him letters complaining
about its not being there. "It's a place
we always take our children,'' they
said.
As for my presents, I've gotten more
into making things for people now.
because I've realized, through the
years, those arc the gifts ( like the
best. Somebody would make me a
pillow or draw me a picture or knit
me something. I just felt the best
about thaL It's the warmest and best.
Last year, I made a pillow for my
niece, Dionn, for whom I'd do any-
thing, and for my boyfriend, in needle-
point.
As kids, we made cookies and our
own Christmas cards. l would still
love to make my own cards, but now
I send close to a thousand of them.
and ( don't have time. But I love it
when someone sends me a hand-
made, homemade Christmas card. h
makes me wonder bow we got so far
away from the real spirit of Christ-
mas. How did we get so far away from
truly giving to each other? Isn't giv-
ing really giving of yourself in M>me
way?
If I had to select a single thing to
tell people about Christmas l would
say this: Don't worry so much about
buying the blggu1 present. but do
make it the most pc™>nal JM
present. Do things yourself. ~
'AMIL.Y WffKLY, Dec.mbet 24. 117'2 •a
Pulitzer Prize-winner Mac-
Klnlay Kantor is famous for
his books on the Civil. War
and for his beloved animal
stories (his dog story.
"The Voice of Bugle Ann,"
has become a classic).
His most recent book is an
autobiographical novel, "I
Love You, Irene" (Double-
day, $7.95).
The Story of a Dog
A Special Christmas Gift for Children and Parents
Written Exclusively for Family Weekly by
My name is Gem.
I will tell you how I got that name. I was
too small to remember, but often I've
heard Her telling about it.
They drove over to a kennel and there I
was, wriggling with my brothers and sisters.
She picked me up and cried, "Oh, isn't
this one a little Gem!"
He chuckled, and said, "They all look
like gems to me. But now, with old Rang-
er gone to Heaven, we need a 1>;ew dog."
So I was Gem, and They took me home.
First thing I can remember is getting
spanked. I was out in the yard with Him,
and He strolled to the driveway to get His
mail. Suddenly, in the road beyond, ap-
peared the most dreadful but exciting
monster. It was a car.
I wasn't very big, but I took out after
that thing tickety-split. I barked and
threatened, and chased it safely away from
us. And all the while I could hear Him
calling to me to come back.
I did come-proudly at first. But He was
standing there looking fierce, so I wasn't
proud any more. I crawled and slithered
• • FAMILY WEEKLY, December 24, 1972
.MaeKinlay Kan tor,
Author of ''Andersonville"
and dragged my belly on the ground.
He bad a rolled-up copy of the
"Times" and He gave me several
swats with that, across my back and
rear.
"Don't you ever chase cars again!"
This was the end of the world. I ..: . had been certain that He loved me, ¥
and now He was beating me. I wanted
to die. It seemed such a long time that
I was wanting to die, but maybe it
was only a matter of minutes.
Later I heard Him telling Her about it,
and Re said that He'd given me a spanking
with the "Times." And She said, .. Well, I
should think so!" And She scolded me, and
I crouched and shook, and was miserable
again. For several minutes.
Once more I chased a car. Again I came
cringing back, crawling and slithering and
dragging in the dirt, and this time He gave
me a more severe whipping. Actually it
didn't pain me. You can't get hurt very
much by being punished with a newspaper.
It was just the idea of the thing.
And next time a noisy car came past, I
/, Y,
I
I, I
"1 •
1,,, u .. '. .,
heard Him speak my name in a low firm
voice when He saw my ears go up. So I put
my ears down and skulked back behind
Him. Pretty soon-It's odd. But I lost in-
terest in chasing cars. Somehow it didn't
seem the thing to do.
So I have been spanked only those two
times in all my life. Oh, I got into trouble
on a few occasions. Once there were some
chicken sandwiches on the kitchen table-
we were going on a picnic-and I jumped
up on a chair and put my nose into the
basket. But She came into the room just
then and screamed at me, and 1 got down
Continued 0 11 page 9
--------------------------------~ I I
I I
: Quantity Delcrlptlon Prk.• WORLD WIDE MARKITIMG CLUI aacu COUMtS :
I lox 4221 Dept. FW12 Block
I Wlc•lto, Keiue1 ZIP 67204 Off Block 11 Dot1r. Brown
I Med~~ I Uoht Brown I NAM Uoht Auburn I
I ~~ I Light Red I ADDR Golden Biondi I
I Sub Totol Honey BIONia I I CITY Light Blofdl I
Hoodllno PlotlfU'll
I Totol STATE ZIP Oarlt Grey I I ~~ I
I Light Grey 0 Encloeed S 1.00 extro for fast one day stilpplno. Ool'k Frosted I I 0 Enclosed S for eoch Wig plus S 1.00 hondllno. HO MedlUU' Frot19d I
I o EnclOMd for three Wigs plus S l .00 hondllno. c .O.D.'• Ught froated 0 EnclOMd s 1.00 f« perfect color match. (Send holr somple) Blonde on
I O Encloted $1 4.95 for BONUS ''BUBBLE." Blonde Froat
- - - - -.............. ..,...'"4 .. ,.., ......., dMerfwlJ Nht-4.-- ---- -•
Hair
are
• Beautiful hair is one of the most im-
portant adjuncts of a woman's attrac-
tiveness. It's also one of the most easily
acquired. Yet astonishingly few women
know the secrets of h'air care, including
how much they can do for their own
hair beauty, without professional as-
sistance.
Now a new book is available, which
for t~e special price of S 1 to PARADE
readers, discusses simply and straight-
forwardly the way to atlain beautiful
hair. Called Hair Care, it is profusely il-
lustrated with photos and line drawings,
and written by stylist and' editor Lydia
Peraza. Hair Care provides all the infor-
mation and instructions you will need
to care for your hair with a minimum of
expense and effort, and with a maxi-
mum of return in the form of hair
beauty that men will admire and women
envy.
As Miss Peraza points out, hair is one
element of feminine attractiveness that
is susceptible to quick improvement
and enhancement. "Hair is the world's
first miracle fiber," she writes. "It can
be washed, tinted, straightened, curled,
brushed, combed, teased, rolled, pinned
and dried!" Of course, hair problems
differ from person to person. Hair Care
shows you how to get the most from
your hair whether it's straight, curly or
kinky, with a full account of the styling
that is best for each typ~. From cutting
to coloring, it covers the complete range
of hair treatment.
It's a practical book that can save you
money, because it tells you when you
will need the help of a professional hair-
dresser, and when you can do the job
yourself. In addition, Hair Care empha-
sizes the importance of general bodily
health in keeping your hair in tip-top
condition and will show you how prop-
er diet and ~ise may bring dividends
in more lustro~appearance.
Included is the latest informatibn on
coloring and setting, brushing and styl-
ing, and the use of electrica l appliances
and commercial hair aids. Products are
listed by b~d-name, providing a clear
and pradi guide to their value and
usefulness, so that you can tell whether
or not they're for you. A list of "do's"
and "don'ts" helps you decide which
hair styles are best suited to your par·
ticular face type, and there's a whole
"Q. and A." section covering the most
commonly asked questions on hair care,
accessories, and even wigs.
Hair Care can make a more glamo-
rous you, at only a fraction of the cost
of one visit to the hairdresser. It may be
the best investment in personal beauty
you ever made. ,, .. , •• ,: Send $1 In ash, check or money order for each copy of H~r
C.u e to PARAD E, P.O. Box 4, Department J, Kensington Station,
l rooldyn, N.Y. 11218. Please print name, address and zip code
and allow lhl'ff weeks for delivery.
'
Continued Jrom pag~ 6
and ran, and hid under the couch.
I can do a trick. He speaks my
name, and says. ..Here," and He
puts down a scrap of meat or a
dog ttt>kie or something nice like
that\ 1r}ih&.in front of my nose, I'm
supposed to lie motionless and not
eat dltfdlDlicious thing, because He
says, "Stay," when He puts it there:
I don't move. I'm not supposed to.
Sometimes it seems like a very
longtime before He asks, "Would
you.lillLiDhave it?" I lift my head
and 1 say Y ~s out loud. "OK," He
says. 'lbat's the signal for me to
gobtlla dmt thing as if I didn't
kDOW' where my next meal was
co~from.
· Also I am a hero. It was in win-
"He awoke and opened the door.
'Gem, what /a It?' Then he yelled,
'Honey, get upl
The houae I• on ff rel'"
closed the door of Their bedroom,
knowing that I would come in and
try to sleep with Them if the door
were left open.
I woke up feeling disturbed. My
nose was hurting, and a queer
smell drifted in the air. Also I
heard a strange sound. I went up
to Their room and scratched at the
door. The smell hurt my nose
more than ever, so I began to howl.
He awoke, and opened the door.
"Gem, what is it?" Then He yelled,
"Honey, get up! The house is on
fire!,,
So it was-almost. There was a
place on the wall, around a panel
of light switches, where wood was
scorched and glowing anq falling
down in big red flakes.
He yelled to Her, "I'm going to
pull the master switch!,, and He
ran downstairs. When He came
back He had a flashlight in one
hand and a fire extinguisher in the
other. He shot a lot of awful smell-
ing stuff from that extinguisher.
but at least it put the glowing em-
bers out. The house smelled terri-
bly, and I ran around and yelped.
After They opened up some win-
dows we had some decent air in
the place. But it took a long time.
He said to Her solemnly, "If it
hadn't been for Gem, the whole
house might have burned. With us
in it."
Next day was Sunday. And
Marie and Luther and Herb and
Ed and Nina and all tbe other chil-
dren and grandchildren came over
to see how close we had come to
having the house burned up, and
maybe all of us as well. Some of
the neighbors came also.
I lay looking up at Them, and
was petted and scratched on the
head so much that I rolled over and
waved my legs in the air, and held
my mouth open. When I do that,
They always ~ I'm being a
clown. So I w~wn again and
again, because They petted me so
eagerly, and talked baby talk.
I have heard some people say
that dogs don't like to have baby
talk spoken to them •. but that's
silly. Dogs do like it, and I espe-
cially enjoy it very much.
You'd be surprised at some of
the people who do it, too. People
who you'd think would never talk
baby talk to anyone, not even to
babies. But they do it ,_
to dogs. Secretly. Illa
FAMILY WEEKLY, December 24, 1972 •I
~ SPECIAL OFFER TO OUR READERS
Per roll with coupon
from this ad only
FAILURES CREDITED
Off• ends June 30, 19~3
r;w ••• Apply Pure Vitamin E Oil
t to Wrinkles and Blemishes,
·coarse, Dry or Old
Guaranteed to give your skin that
glamorous look of Youthful Beauty
in only 5 Days-or you pay nothing!
• Skin
ru>ply to these Skin Problem Areas:
Throat ... Chin ... Neck ... Forehead and around
Eyes, Lips, Mouth and Cheeks. Smooth into
Surface Scars, Sun or wind Damage, Tiny Lines,
Rough, Flaky Skin. c= :'!~-~ ~~ '°°
Pleue c1on•t conf\118 Vitamin B OU EACH OtllCE COllTAllS: with cnum, Jotiom. muqa-. abort..
28 000 lived wrinkle JfllDOWft at Mtrinpnta
-DO matter bow apemivet Thia CXJ8o-
' metic oil ia IO MIO and diflaent that it
VlllfTArrsMoFIN ~~e..~e-::~ potency Vitamin E ia eo pure and
fntk that it m.n be med ewn on a
E baby's akin with cunplete ..,..
A B!AUTY HINT itt Tbey'te 8Witcbina from old fMh-slamoroue new you -llO much youa,er
At bedtime, wub oil. .W. nwkeup. ionecl. peuy product. to senuine. and lcweable lookin1t 'Ibat old. chill.
'-----------Then apply l8Ye1'al drope ol ilm licbt, hifll potmcy Vitamin E. Now. you too unattractive look ii fQM -~ NOtD aoaflab~ to tM feMl'Gl P"blic: wcoderfu1 oil to probllm am anu. cim join the ranb ol thme lovely, with a dewy, 1lowin1 compt'GiOft.
Garonm, HI PonNCY, Vrr.umf E On.. such-~~ pan:hed. qins *in .. · y-,,.~ ... women, simPlv by fol-Thrill to the eoothin1, beautlfyins
-nature'• wonder cosmetic. Ewr:Y-tiny blemiabel, ecan. ~ mub. ~-~ a day \fitamln E comnedc e«ect ol thia product on akin
where women, u well .. men, are talk-wrinkles and liw aJOUDd .,_, mouth, beauty ritual Of coane it cto. not faulta, 8UCh u : blernWwe. tiny lJnm.
inc about thia myatmom inpedient. cbin. and neck. Ned ~· tt-11 pay to uae a weak. watend down and wrinkJe1. IU1face Kan, ecala and
8 ince 1922. when flnt iaolated by :;;. ~~'~.;:tty• ·~ veraioo with only 600 or 1000 unit. P.S' ~ etc. All tbeee romantic nmltll alb-mu.. ll-ounce. Guaranteed SUPREME Vita-in just 4 or 6 dayat AD your-. tbanJm ecientiata, Vitamin E baa been the ~ BEF'O ~ on min E puta a miJhty 28,000 unit. to to the hidden powen in UU. vital
ject of int4fnaive reeearcb by akin °'" mabup. U.e oil llPU'inll,y. Bztra work for a more romantic lookins you. beauty hid! If, lite other worDm. you
doctor8, nutritionlAI and ooemetidam rkhl A few= are all yoo need to are fleued and thrilled, pleue c1on•t in Europe, Japan and the United start ita wort-moiatwiains, emol-PRH HOMIE TRIAL atop Go right on usiJla and tryin1 our
Stat.ee. But due to ita cost to syntbe-lient, and beautifyina actlcm. Vitamin No Rlllcl No Obllptlonl Vitamin E Oil Supw -for a lull
size, this incredible vitamin hat been E Supreme i8 expemive. but ir• 110 30 ct.ya -entirely at our riak. 'l1len
added only in very ...n amount& to /onf laatinf that beauty treatmeatll You don't have to take your friends' you'll really know the full J)OUnlial ol
certain beauty products. lt'a a pity CI08t only penniee a day • word for it! Now you can tlMt the th.ia 1uperb cosmetic dieco::d': Of
that IOlDe c:reanw and lotions COltins HOW DOD IT WOAK? wonden of genuine Vitamin E for ooune you must be pkmed tully
man.y dollan, be.rely contain 600 to In recent yean. docton and lldmtid younell -without rialdnc a linlle eatiafted. Othenri8e retum the empty
1000 unit& per ounce_ or eoen luaJ have delYed .deeply into the my9teriel penny! When your Vitamin E arriva. bottle and set your money back -no
NOW ••• ApplJ Genuine, PuN
w.nln E Off eo.m.tlc
Direct to Your Sklnl
YOU DO )onpr need ~a high. inftat.ed
price for crearm containins just a few
unita olVitamin E. Nowatlut.youam
pt 1erwiM. pure Vitamin E Oil ,.Su-
pnme' that's la.ded with this precioua
substance. Not j\.t 600 or 1000 unita
per ounce -but a full 28,000 Inter-
national Unit. of Vitamin E . And
famom ·~·brand ol Vitamin
E J. neY8J' cut. NeYlll' watered down,
but llOld oaJ,y f&dl •~Ila_. Yest A full
.28,000 unita for full 1003 1'9Ultat No tons waitinl. Simply 8pread m a few
dropl of thia pnt1i and 8WI' IO lisht
oil. Smooth it onto dry, old-lookinl
din. It tab8 mly minutea to penetrate
the outer akin layer. It allista Mother
Nature In _.m, away the hanh dry-
neM that accentuatim tiny wrtnk.lee.
of this atran1e vitamin •ubatance. smooth it directly onto akin problem QUeetiont asked. Order yount today
They have mpended time, money, and areas. Test it 4 or 6 daya. Then ready few immediate delivery! You'll be llO
enc11tm labor in 88ek:ina to unlock ita younelf for a delishtful supriael Sud· glad you didt
hidden potentiala. Now at IMt 8CllD8 denly the awful. rouch drynma ia saner c.._ Di ( of its incndible ~ have been Your face, chin, and throat have the .:iuflreme ·v. 123-DA)
reyea)ed to the wOdd. It bas hem di8-smoother, moisty f~l of a baby's akin. 12.31 E . Lu Olu Blvd
covered that when Vitamin E ia ap-Look into your aurror and aee the Fl Lauderdale, Fla. 33301
plied aternally to the~ 1t acta .. re----------------------------. an anti-oxidant. Thia emAPDI quality c itn--SUPREME DIVISION (123-0A) I
belpe e1'8Yellt the Jou ol vital moilsture I 1231 East Laa Olas Blvd~ R . Lauderdale. FL 33301 I
!::'1~ ~=-n~ ::!:oa~ I Rusll fletl potency Vitamin £ Oil SUPtlEME Oft C-.CI SIZE nml I
euppliee ol lif•-fwinf osyf6'1 Tr\lly a I 100% money.-. IUlflntff. Send size dttcW D \\ tr.. Trial SU. 14.000 Ullb lttnlft SI I b~ for the com.pkmion ~ I wlttt tt111 c:ondtion. I must be c:omplettlJ tMlltd 0 1 Oz. Double Size21,0D0"'"1 Remit $11 I
cially m women OYer 86. No wonder I Ind utisfied. Othtnrise I "'11 rttum tllt EMPTY only (Save $2.11) eo many CI08tly CftllJD8 now add eome bott1t ltont -MJtlme wttllln 30 dlJs -for full O 2 II. Economy Size 56 000 lllts Remit I
Vitamin E into their a.mat I~=~~~........ $15 only (SM $1.11) tW•,., II,_..., I
NOW ••• TRY fUl.L POW!R I I
OF 21,000 UNf1'9"" I """----------------------WONDERFUL VITAMIN E I I
Today. modem, smart wamell ol fNf!Jl:Y I ....... I ~. don't jlmt taUc ~ Vitamin 8 . CffJ ltl I
'I'hey are allo do.ins 80IDethlnl about 1----------------..!!----!!..~----_. ---
Bite!
........ _..... ............ ................ ,....
·-Clllllt ... • .......... c.,, ...... Stow your ,._ _.,. tllia IMl!llftalJ bottomlns "u.fllltl·lt" tot. bl& wltll wlkf .,....,,. "11·
1111. • ~"' to lllloae orl&IMI blue jeens, So "'"" ,... Qft c.ny lft1tlliftl. lo pod toollllt It 1oet .,_.,.., Acctftttd Wftll
btlt bbl eod ,....rotmd lldcllt 1titcllkl1. Tllost two ''Mel lllOCktta" Mtp UNll Items lllfldJ. 1311 OX3W" r MAil 1..-AT, ..,.._ COWOH TOOAYI ,
I 81tDNLAND STUDIOS I I a.., .. ...,-. . ..,, ........ ,
I Enclostd I• dlecll or 111.0. for $ I
--Tott Blc(I) (#12C3) 8 $3.91 ti. I (Add 55' oost.i I I /'FIL rtlkltttts ldd 4 ~ aaln tu.) I ,.._. I
I Mllras I
I Cltr r: I IO 1Aft$1.1tordtr2Tott8apfor$7.HI L~ -~ w.!.P!?.~':-- ----.J
When You Order
By Mall From
Family Weekly •••
A .. se allow up to four weeb for
delivery. The eds are plll<*S by rep.
utabl• compenJes. The It.ma a.nd
copy ara checked by family Weekly
for r911abil~, too. Yet wtth thou-sands of orders comlna In usually
to our advettisets, sometimes un-int.ntlonat delays occur. Althouah
such delays happen only Infre-
quently, when they do, Family
Weekly wants to aaalst you .. much
• poulble. If you've any question
about mall order, Just write: Lynn
Headley, Famlly Weekly. 641 Lex-
lnston Avenue, N.w Yo~. N.Y. 10022.
Sports
Mlnl-Pronle
JERRY LUCAS:
A· Magician
On Court-And Off
Jerry Lucas, 31, la
a court magician
whose sparkling
play enabled the (
New Yort< Knicka
to win the NBA
eastern division championship
last spring after ·star center Willla
Reed was sidelined with Injuries. He's
also an off-court magician who has
mastered so much legerdemain he la
presenting a series of "Jerry Lucas
Magic Specials" for children on TV.
Hie magic qualttles Include a fantastic
memory. He can recite the namee and
numbera of a~ telephone
book. ••• The 81x·foot-elght-inch
Luca1 attended Ohio State on an
llCMemlc-not an athletlc-ec:holanhip
and wu a tine-time AU-American.
He became an All-Star with the
Cincinnati Royals, then was traded .
to San Francisco. His mental wizardy
failed him In the'buslness world. how-
ever: he lost money In a chain of
restaurants and declared bankruptcy .
His financial worries, plus an injury to
his wrist, plunged him Into ·such de-
pression he thought of quitting
basketball ..•• A trade to New York
proved a tonic. His outstanding shoot-
ing an~ dynamic floor play put the
Knlcka on top of their division ....
LUC88 hll1become10 good at hll
maglc he'• not allowd to pllty In team
C*cl oam-when the Knlcka are
travellng-theJ feel hll mental 9kllla
would....,. him to win au the time.
... Lucas and his wife Treva live In
San Francisco with their two children.
-By S.ny Abrameon
~andYou.
Whr If• Sometimes Hard
To Ask for Help
Ever notJce that a woman driver who
loses her way wlll quickly stop and ask
directions, but a man will often
struggle a long time before asking
directions? Investigations Indicate that
if you think you are good at some-
thing-map reading, for example-It Is
painful to you to admit failure and ask
for help. But If a certain ability Is
not very Important to you, then It's
easy to ask for aid. Your attitude Is
also affected by whether you fMI
your problem cornea from jour own
failure or from caUMS outside your-
lelf. Suppose you need extra money.
If you are having money dlfflcultlea
because of your own Incompetence,
you wtll probably find H much h•der
to uk for help than If you feel that
out81de event8 crMt9d your money
~.-By Shtrtey Sloan Fader
FAMILY WEEKLY, o.otm~r 2'4, 11172 • U
New Miracle ''No Iron'' Polyester & Cotton
Classic KODEL Shifts
Look Like 520 Vdlues-But Each Only s19s
At last high fashion and easy care!
New miracle polyester and cotton
Kodel never needs ironing, drip dries
to perfection in a bree~e. gives your
iron (and youl) a well-earned vacation.
In two new in shifts for you to live in
and love! Supplies are limited-order
yours today to avoid disappointment.
STYLE 40004 -SHIRT SHIFT -with con-
vertible collar in miracle Kodel. Buttons completely down front for easy-on, easy-
off. Graceful roll-up sleeves, two large patch
pockets, self belt-all elegantly accented
with contrasting "Saddle" stitching. Navy or Plum. Sizes 12 to 20, 14¥! to 24\.'!.
Only $7.88
STYLE 40012 -LOVELY LADY -Cleulc
charmer never needs lronlna-mirecle Kodel,
of course! Beautifully detailed with ne.tly
tabbed ti• belt. decorative aotdtone front· zipper pull, contrasting "Saddle" 1tltchtn1.
Two l•'le patch pockets, two mock brNst
pockets 1lve fresh country look. Or1n1~.
Gr .. n or Navy. Sina: 12to10, 141h to 2.4"'2 .
Only $7.98
,. -Ad ~ 3 WAYS TO ORDDt: PREPAID• C.O.D. •USE YOUR CHMGt! -.,
I GREENLAND FASHIONS, Dept.aAJ. 41500 N.W.13Sth St., Miami, Fla. 33054 I
I sea• •• tti• tt11ew111a. "' 1••11 • ...,.. .. ...,... "11111 I
I ~~ I
I City I
I SW I
I You I
I o Muter CNr1• § Olntn Club I 0 rtlt:PAIDt I enclose the 0 SINO C.O.D. I l..Cl0$[ Aect. "° l1111CAm1rlurd full price PLUS post.11• fo1 $1. DEPOSIT 10< u ch Item lnterNnll "o Amtrlcan hpreas
I each 1s shown llsted 1bove 1nd wlll 1111 postmen bll· (find MIDV• )'OUr n1111t) GooG Tllrv I
tor eech Item. enct plus •II post•I c:lllr1es. Cood Tllr Acct. No L--~-----~-------------~--~
SAV~ UP TO 2 GALLONS
OF GAS EVERY HOUR!
... And Gives You Up To 25°0 More Horsepower Doing It!
How? By eliminating "Fuel-Pump Slop-Over"! And thus feeding your car up to 253 LFSS gaa (as much as two gallons an hour
in heavy stop·and .. go driving) ••• at the same exact lime that it gives you"" lo 25% MORE Hor$e('OW6r doing it/ Like this •.• -WHAT DOES THIS MEAN TO YOU? Jut tllls-• "'ti .... w,. pl• lllSTAlllY!
• --~~· ~AlllYJ • a,...at , .... 1 .... -l'5TA111.YJ
• 1111ti1111111 ... ,_ ...... 8'1111 llSTMTLYJ
• AIMllftl$1••,.. ........ ,.. ...... ~
lllSTAllTlY ••• _. ftr • 11111 • ,_ ..,_ tlllt art
WMt ... It co.-,.,., 1-u.a • -eet of lllUt ... , i-~ cellll I« •1'Cl'Y dollac '°" C11D .. .,. oe 1U blJJs THIS" YBAJl
ALO NB I Aad bow ... 11 won? Aa.....,.. •um--
Stops Your Fuel-Pump From
Ov1r.f eedln1 Your En&ine One Minute •••
And Starvin1 It The Next!
Your car, like nny ochet car. ftOrel fU ~ la • pa Wik •.• ud the1I draws tbat Pl out ol tbat tut ud ~ It to 108' ...-
with a fiMI pump. nu. f\ld pump WM ia"8ted OW1' -~ ..,,
It 11 a ~ Wiotl It Ua DO braia-Jw& a JMllPI Aad drilftrfo~ h altrQI feedl yaur eQliM THE SAME EXACT AMOUNT ur GASOLINE, whctber fOU'n ltopped dead ID tralk •.• ex ..,.,..
put .-tiler car at •llDl.1 mile an t.oml
Tbillk allout It for 1 -ntl TM -.y 1M Is fed iMo JOUr •llllim !Oday, WbeD ycMi'ra pu)Jed ue for a liPt JC*F eJlline la beifta loodecl
wltb..• that It caa't polSibly bural (1'11al .. n7 ~ drtriae Is 5lJ ikrcdf~ c:qieaahe-becauM _,,. of your IM IOCI npt out
lhc l&llpQle.) Then Whn YoU okk up IPMll apJD to nira ooto a blsh-
way, )'OW' etlline lt still .,..,Ina a 11tde S.. IM It 1i> mUa aa hour
... wutlq 1 Uttte laa pa at 30 ..0.. an klur .. t ud ba1lY .-tJoa
}Int lbe rlaltt UllOGllt of pa for llOP parformuce Ill abold ~ « 50
mllet an houri And theft. If you JP oftr 50 .U.. aa "°"' ... If '°'1 we.U, wlDl to zoom away It 60, 70 or IO ••• « If 10't eeed ~ .. to
flash awav fl'Otll anot!ler car oa a cmw ... theft JOQT "tdloe 1'11.i
pwnp" mu. p-.. '°" the 1ame eQC't ainount of .. lt fad 'IOU
when J'Oll -re 9l>lftl 40 mlJa aa hoof LESS-aad •-,_ wllaa Md ~ wlda JOUr ..ct M1ICk out, • dlouP tt.at car -lO yeari old ud can,illc a toe ol ~I
IT COULD COST YOU YOUR Lift ON A BAD
CURVE! ITDOESCOSTYOU UPT0$100A
YEAR ON WASTED GAS ALONE! AND IT CAN
ALL BE CORRECTED-IN JUST FIVE MINUTES
WITH A SCREWDRIVER-LIKE THIS • , • ....
Now. Jmt DktDre the awt1111s ._,_ wttll dlM ED ALMQUJST
MINJ.l~JEC'roa OD JC*1 ----At~ cu -by ths plloeo aboft, tbe MIN'l·INJ'ECIOI 11...U er~• to bold ta )'OUr bead. It t1jpa riabt oa IO your ~. bctww1I u. uel ,_. end the cartionlDr. A. 12-)'eaM>ld bor cm put II oe
perfectly, uailn1 nothlDS -llMm a tcrewdrtftr. c-If lla •'lier Oll9ftCd the hood before. aut oac:e be'• doae ••• and oace JOU awtldl on that Qliae ... In .•• )'OU',. aobla to HEAil die clUk1uce-Ud FEEL tbe diftncnc:e-from the '\'el')' tlnt teCOed tMt Ullli8t JtOAJlS
to llfe -.a1n. Yeti JtOAJlS to Ufe aolnl 8ecauee thb Is 1 NBW TYPB OP ENGINE you're drtYins With from now on! Aa cnpac thlll O{leillta at at.olute _tC>9 ..... po-r •"-'1 An&le drt'rintl lllCOftdl TKA.T DOESN'T OET ONE DROP OF OAS-IT DOBSN'T NBED . . . AND DOESN'T WA.STE ONE OUNCE OF POWEil THAT IT CAN D~L~ TO YOU. ~I And Udt fact lhoww up for )'OU the tmtant YoU llart your earl
Becaueo -.ea on free.itna momincl-yovr key 11 hardly la Che
awltcll before that ~ b _J)Urrina wtth ~rl Why? Became .,,, there'• DO ea.ftood at an. The -111 of that ookl ctlPec amt't ..._
cbobd "P .tth raw Pl that """' the qiutt from catcNna Ira . . • eac1 that then drame out !Mo yow llDplpe, ~ • dloutlt ,_
poUNd It rtaht Oii the mound! Now at thh tlme-YOUll l!NGINB rrsBI.F SIGNALS TO THB MINI-IN~ EXACTLY HOW MUCH GA.5 IT NBBDS TO
STA.a.Tl Aad die MINl·1"'.11!CTOJt lllll die ru.1 JllllllP IO .... ..., JUST THAT AMOUNT OP OAS, AND NOT ONE DJlOP MOU!
You',. oft la "81 tla» dau It laba a MOl)8d ~r ID dole U. docwf Aad ,YOU"l'I about IO We die mcllt ~ rtlll ol your c.U.*i ... tllll
You Would Never Have Betined Tlaat Your
Enaf n• Could Deliver Power Ukl This!
AND ALL AT A SAVING OF ONE GALLON
OUT OF EVERY FIVE!
Now peD taco dl9 ltftet and atan cndAlls 1~tllc .._ trdlc llpt. You'I ~ ~ lllat ywr foot ika r oo llM,.....
-.•• tllM J10W •...a-__.. .i111:aa •DOU! . . . It'• ~
ftoMal up .., ........... ·-.....,,.... It -*-<Old oelJ a ,.., lbonlialedl...,.
Tiie,. •• -°.tif'~ ..... Of ~· .. Uloel ant ... cold ........ )'OU l*G 111' IO t.be Uebt. and put )"Oii' foot oa llM brata. FOOi e!'li• wlD t.oee riabt dow1t to • coatcllled purr.
It will be ....-dllie ,oe•w nk ~ It befoft, without die
~ lllltfar i. die ,.. oldie car....,_ -.Q...,. daat ...... 11
NOT U7b1i1 to W out -IMI No& tl7lell to~__, f-,_..
brake! Not llllllls J'CMI bow -..17 ndes ICCI08d dW you're pour· '-_,..,out ol lel ~' -Now U. ~ c118119n to lf'ICD. Walt a ..,.,.., ud tMD carwftllJy
plMl8 ,_, tooc 11eek Oii dill ... pedal. Mab ..,.. to atw It LESS ~TillS TIME-lhea JOU ewer diet betoftl aECAUSB THA.T
POOi' IS GOING TO GIVE YOU MOU 91..AST-OFP PO~ FllOM THAT CAil TKA.N YOU'VE EVBJt 11.NOWN aEPOJUU
AND \'OU'U GOING TO HA VB TO SPEND A. DA. y oa TWO
GETTI'NO USED TO m
Preve It At The upts! PfWft It
On The HNltl PROVE rT ON THE HllHWAY-
BY FLOATING RIGHT PAST OTHER CARS
WHEN YOU WANT TO!
AQl!NTS, DB.ALERS, AND DISTRIBUTORS INQUIRE WELCOMEI
MINI-INJECTOR, 1044 Northern Blwl., Roalyn, N. Y. 11576
~ ....,. tmw bcf<>NI Aa ..... cbat ta .... 111111 dllhe .,_ at .... ,.. toucll of,_, loot! Tilat ..ut off ICTU8llft1 at
tllc tWlb ~ '°" wtlftt to ..• ~ odler can a.lttillll bdltad
yo.a. ciiokleil l.D JOOW duat! Aa c..... !Mt uraply lllclla .,_ odler can al 'JO ••. ., ••• to
Ml ... a111 llow-•tl•.,.•r you want to w.ik awav from t1'cm! Aad Wt lies 10 mudl ,_,_ po~r tefl mat J'OY ltNOW lllat lltcre'1 no•'°" can llfl lftto oe U. Wslnni1 tJ\aa it cu't toOnl YCl'6 riallll
out of al die lflllMat kMlda ot ,.,.. foot! A.,.__,.. -~~n..t of al-snt.L USING F.VUY Tll1ULL-PACltED Sl!COND ONLY THE BXACT AMOUNT OP OAS THAT
IT NEEDS AT THAT INSTANT-AND NOT ONE SINGLE DWOP
MOllBI So tha& IM s• •Wiss o0c 11Jt-4ay afrer '-7 ... WHlt .ner -11: ... -111 aftn MOlllJI! Tl1I )'00._ put a SlO bill back 18 your
pOCltet. •.•• S50 WI bed .. ,.,.. pocbt ... I ftOO Mn beck ID )'O'Or Plld.d-n ''°"' a tl-ote llUI "~" Iba• eo1ts YOll ortldultY ..., .............. , "'"*' .,. .... ,
Prove Evety Word Of It At Our Rls.r
Far More Power On Far Leu Gas
Fram TM Very First Second-Or We Send
Every Cent Of Yeur Money Back!
And ...... , die co.t '°' an dll• pertomwice .,.. an tti.c ._..., <>aly Sil.ff c:omptm-ie. .... mil MlNl-INIECTOll CUI ..... you la rour nry ftrtt nt011dt!
Aad roa try It cnllN-1y at ow rllk! Jiat 8'1c> It °"· aod ,.....u,. l1'c NS.atb! Eltber :rou·~ dirin.d from dw ftry llm tau-off-or ""1'Y ceat of your moaey beet! No Ila. aDcll °" butll It -U fM YOU, or It eotb you llOdlln1!
Wby 11CK .-d In die Ne>-Riak Coupon .•. toaJI
,----MAIL NO-RISK COUPON TODAY!----,
!'AINl·INJECTOR, Dept. 16336
1044 Northern 8 1¥11., Rotlyn, N. v . 11576
Yn. l went to 1ry TOW m110h1dotla17 tMW mlN..(njeaor
c1Ml,.1y 11 your risk. O 1 -cnc:lollns only Stt." eo _, fllh C'Oat9 at tMa thM. I wlU try It on my car fOf OM ~ at 10ur mt!. If 11
does DOI do ""'"''"'"' you .. y. I will t.hn rctum h to you for .wry cent of fllY ino.y back M Offer.
CAil MAKE ______________ _
MODEL ________ YBA.A __ • CYL-
N---:-----------------( ,.,._ f"ri.Dl)
A4il~"---------------~
SM# lll~-~~
0 // to• wW ,._, o'*r #Id C,0 .0 ., ca..elr IMre. Sclld Olli)' sa.oo "'°" • ~"" ""°"'-• .,. .-..... wuice. ,.. c.o.o .• ,. .. s..... hill _,..-.ll ... ,. ..... of COWM.
A. DtYllkle oC I.A. 6 L. .._......... a-.
L.. o s.A. • L . s ... ,,....._ JM. am ..J ----------------------
Smart Cooltjng
This week, Food Editor Marilyn Hansen makes a
HoUday Sandwich Tree and a Spicy Citrus Punch
to serve visiting children or carolers. "The
sandwiches," says Marilyn, "are made of ·corned
beef and chicken spreads, plus seasonings.
The flavor's unique, but not so unique, I think,
that kids won't love it."
Make a Holiday
HOLIDAY SANDWICH TREE
1 can(Cl\ oa)oome•llHf ....
"' a., .... curd cr....d coa.ge ,.....
2 taDlpD W dHpp Id cfllwee or
...... drtld .......
"l\ t111poo11 ,......,_ ............ .,. , ............... ...., .....
1CM(4 .. 0D.) ...... ........
1 Wll ... DW....., aMpp Id....,
dlull!I ldl, oee.ry °' C9C •II• .,.....,.. .....
1.., (1t ... , Nilly .........
btHd (17 lllcM) ..
2 llllll1111aw ..., ..... ,
~ a.,.....,cllappul,.,...,
1. Mate fiJlinp ftnt: In amall bowl
combine corned-beef spread. cottage
cheese, chives, honeradish and hot-
peppcr sauce.
2. In aoother bowl combine chicken
sprud, water chestnuts and ginger .
3. Trim crusts from bread alicea.
(Keep bread dices under damp dish
towel to keep them from drying out
as you wort.)
4. Spread corned-beef filling oo four
slices of bread. cover with four addi-
tional slices of bread. R.epeat with
chicken filling.
5. Cut each sandwich in quarten,
malting four squares. Dip one cor-
ner of each squ~ into mayonoaile
and then into parsley.
8. Arrange sandwichel into tree
shape on aerving plate, beginning
with 9 aqua.res in bottom layer: 7
oo the outside and 2 in middle, &0
that the panleyed points project.•
7. 1n· shaping the remaining four
layen, uae 7 1quara outside and 1
in the middle; 6 1quares outside and
1 in the middle; s aqua.res and 4
squares.
L Top tree with remaining slice of
bread cut into star shape. (Use a
star-&baped cootie cutter if you have
one.) Pointa of atar should also be
dipped in mayonnaise and panley;
secu"' star on top with a toothpick.
9. Cover with foil or plastic film and
refrigerate if not serving at once.
Malts 32 par~u sandwkha
•If you are abort on time, arTange
sandwiches in tree abape and sprin-
·kle all over with chopped panley.
Tree
SPICY CITRUS PUNCH ........
• 2 tl•IPOOM ..... dowiM
1 tlHPDDft .... 8"'plce
llllcbwttole ... .... ........
1 ..... .....
¥.cup ... .....
Se11pe .... °' .......... Wlloleciowee
1. Measure 2 qts. water into a large
saucepan; add whole cloves, &u1pice
and cinnamon aticb.
2. Using a vegetable peeler, remove
the thin outer yellow-and oraoge-
coloRd zest from the white part of ~
the fruit peel Add rat peels to
water~ combination. Bring to
boiling, cover, reduce heat and sim-
mer for 30 minutes.
3. Meanwhile bring another 2 qt..
water to bolling. Remove from beat,
add tea, cover and lteep 10 minutea.
4.. Strain both mixturea and com-
bine. While 1tiU bot, stir in the sugar
until dissolved.
5. Squeez.e juice from reserved lem-
ons and oranges and add to bot tea
mixture. U made ahead, refriaerate,
coveRd, until needed. e. May be served steaming hot or icy
cold; either way, stud orange slices
with whole cloves and float oo aur-
face. Garnish punch cupa with
wbQle cinnamon aticb if desired.
Maus 4~ qts., about 40 strvlngs
FAMILY WEEKLY, December 2.4, 1972 • 11
Because of Their Beau-.y •• ·•
Monter9'f Co. S .... C.A.
A GRISLY DEATH
With bone-crushing force steel-jaw traps spring shut on millions of wild
animals each year in the United States. These animals die a slow, agonizing
death of starvation, thirst. freezing, fear, or gangrene. Many times the animal
will actually chew or twist off its foot In a desperate attempt to save itself.
These beautiful wild creatures are killed primarily for their fur; few are
used as food. Furs are a luxury Item catering to our vanJty but hardly neces-
sary to our survival. From forty to over sixty small animal skins are often
used for a single fur coat. Consider the Immense pain, fear and suffering
each coat represents.. Steel-jaw traps account for 90 percent of the annual
U.S. fur take. Only 10 percent are caught In more humane, instant-kill traps.
State laws regulating trapping are rarely enforceable. Steel-jaw traps may
be purchased and set by anyone, including children, who often forget or
neglect them, leaving any unfortunate animal trapped to die a miserable,
painful and prolonged death.
we are a nation who has put man on the moon. Yet we treat our fellow
creatures with barbaric and primitive cruelty. It Is time to redefine our val-
ues. It is time to end this abusive use of our wild animals. YOU CAN HELP.
r--------------------------------------~
Mell lmm9dlatety To: llfE ANIMAL PROTECTION INSTITUTE OF AMERICA
P. 0 . Box 22.505, 0ec>t. FW-1
!58IM South Land Parlt Drive
YES-I WILL HELP I Sacramento. Callfomla 95822
My TAX DEDUCTIBLE contribution .of S ...•.....•...•.•... la encloaed to help:
1. Bring an end to the UM of atMt-Jew trape within the U.S.
2. AP our gQ\f9mment for an lmpC>Ntlon ben on lure taken by meana of ateel·Jaw trapa.
3. lnfoml ottlen of the crueltlea to anlmala caUMCI by our deelrw for fuf'8.
4. Finance l'llOf9 ada llke thla to call publlc attenHon to tM h0n'of'8 of tTapping.
• Your oontrtbutlon of $10 Of m0f'9 entltln you to memberalllp In the Alllmal Protection
lnetitute and • YM"• 1UbecrlptJon to .......... ~ne.
What a crazy way to diet. .. but it works!
EAT YOUR FILL O.F TASTY FOODS-YET LO 10 LBS.
IN 10 DAYS WITH NEWEST GRAPEFRUIT DIET
New, Special Way -to Catabolize Fats
out of your body-without unsafe drup,
annoyilg exerc1Ses or strict dieting.
By Elizabeth Loui1e •
FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA (Special Report) - A new,
different Grapefruit Diet, that really works, is sweeping the
country. Overweight persons everywhere are losing excess
poundage faster and easier than ever before, with this unique
diet. Now they can eat all the foods they love-including thick
steaks, potatoes, bacon, scrambled eggs, fried chicken, even
alcoholic drinks. This special, high speed grapefruit diet begins
to work within 24 hours-even while sleeping.
Absolutely no medicines. No muscle twitching exercises
and no strict starvation diets, either! Instead, dieters can fill
up on scrumptious, satisfying meals. Nevertheless they ~hed
excess poundage fast-up to 1 O pounds, or more, in 1 O days.
This is the reason why: this diet combination wakes up your
lazy body CATABOLISM and flushes excess fat out of the body,
quickly and safely. weight faster than you dreamed possi-
ble! Up to 10 full pounds (or more) In MELT OFF UGLY FAT only 10 days. And remember, this new.
WITHOUT STRICT DIETING fast-actlr:ig Super "C" Grapefruit Diet is super-charged with NATURAL VITAMIN
"C". This vitamin hait been acclaimed
by dieticians, doctors, even Nobel Prize
scientists both In America and abroad.
Best of all, this diet wakes up your na-
tural CATABOLISM to flush out excess
fats-not the old fashioned, strict diets
This improved Grapefruit Super "C"
diet requires no foul tasting medicines
or boring exercises that wear you out.
You don't cut out the foods you've al-
ways liked. You _never suffer from starv-
ation pangs. Faddish, atrict dieting 11
not nece ... ry. You feast on hundreds
of delicious, satisfying dishes -meats,
poultry, sea food. You enjoy soups,
vegetables, salads with scrumptious
dressings and fresh or canned grape-
fruit. You get breads, muffins, cereals,
cheeses. and scores of heavenly des-
serts. You may also drink cocktails.
wines, beer. And between meals, you
can munch on scrumptious snacks and
tidbits. Eat all you want day or night-
without guilt feelings. Yet, unbelievable
as it may seem. you'll lose excess
that half starve you to death.
RESHAPES YOUR BODY
This Grapefruit Super "C" plan actually
transforms your figure, day after day.
One mornln9 ·you'll wake up to a wo~
derful surprise! Your mirror will reveal
a glamorous flew you-a slim, alluring
body. Suddenly you're more limber and
lithe, aglow with youthful sex appeal.
Thousands of persons have already
tried this safe, natural, CATA80USM
way to dislodge fat. Why don't you try
it also 1 Simply follow the delicious
satisfying diet and special private in-
structions. That's all! You will be re-
warded with thrilling results. This diet
gives you the right COMBINATION of
foods that wake up lazy CATABOUSM.
As ugly fat Is catabollzed out of your
~. it also helps you conquer that
tired, sluggish, "old age" feeling so
often caused by a fat-burdened body.
DOCTORS WARN AGAINST
STRICT DIETING
The United States Department of Health,
Education and Welfare plus many doc-
tors warn against restricted diets de-
ficient in vitamins, minerals, proteins,
fats, and starches. Yau need all these
elements for abundant health. If you
eliminate any of them, you get only
temporary weight loss. Eventually, your
body fights back and ugly fat returns,
pound after pound. Super "C" Grape-
fruit Diet Is dlfter9nl It works with you,
not against you. No hunger pangs, ever.
No skipped meals. You feast on hearty
breakfasts, lunches, dinners. You enjoy
a. r ich variety of good eating -foods
you've always craved for. Just imagine,
you can partake of formerly "prohibit-
ed" foods, such as ham, bacon, stews,
rich casseroles, creamy desserts, etc.
You certainly fill up on many delicious
foods. Yet, by following thls fast and
easy 10 day plan. you can catabolize
pounds and pounds of accumulated fat
out of your body. Right up to 10 pounds
(or more) In 10 days!
HOW DOES IT WORK?
Your body burns up fat very much like
a car burns gas. This natural process
ls called CATABOLISM. After years of
faulty dieting, excess fats become hard-
ened and lazy-locked up in body tis-
sues. Meantime your body catabolism
may also slow down. Result: cholesterol
fats may clog up arteries, piecing life
Itself in jeopardy. Fats become lodged
in arms, thighs, buttocks, belly, etc. You
look' older. You also act older.
NOW there is an easy way to wake up
that lazy, sleepy catabolism! Within 24
hours, the Super "C" Diet atarts to ca-
tabollze this dangerous fat ollt of your
body. The unsightly bulges and awk-
ward pot belly vanish. You eat your fill
without regrets, yet strange but true,
you lose pound after pound-even ff you
gorge yourself on scrumptious foods.
This great diet helps you feel younger
. . . act younger . . . and regain that
sparkling, youthful look of long ago.
KEEP IT OFF-ALL YEAR!
This newest grapefruit diet will be
malled to all interested readers. Write
today and also receive Full Year Main-
tenance Plan -at no extra cost. Tells
you hOw to reduce down to your Ideal
weight and keep it down! How to-win
that slim, attractive look not tor just 10
days-but for year after year.
REDUCE OR PAY NOTHING
To obtain your copy of this complete
diet and the Full Year Maintenance
Plan, mall handy order form below with
$2.00. They are fully guaranteed. Try
them 10 days at our rtsk. If you should
not lose weight, simply return diets and
get your $2.00 back at once-no quea~
tiona asked. Address:
Readers' Diet Div. (123-08)
1233 E. Las Olas Boulevard
Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33301 ,--------------,
I Form for Reader•' Convenience I. I Readers' Diet Div. (123-08) I
1233 E. Las Olaa Blvd. I I Ft. Lauderdale, Fl 33301 I I O Enclosed $2 for l set of diets I
I O Enclo~d only $3 if you want 2 sets -one for self, another to a good friend. You I I save $1 when sent to one address. I
I Print Name __ . _ I
I Address I I -. --I
I Town ·-------_ _ l
I State _______ Zip I
I I ! _____________ __,
''SANTA., HELEN SCOTT
Another ...... b1111oft .....
J v-.V1ro•Na....,.••s.ntae1.,._
and here she is .... With today's equal-
opportunity laws, it's no Jonger legal
for department storm to insist that the.if
Santas be men. So at least one t.ein-
porary-heJp agency is training women
for tbe job. One graduate from Western
Girl Santa training is bim housewife
Helen Scott. Do child.reo object to sit-
ting on the 1mee of a bearded Jady?
Apparently not. They're too young-
and too nervous -to notioe. Three
things Helen has learned: Neverprom-
ise the lcids anything; always refer to
the child's .. folb"' instead of bis par·
ents (in case he doesn't have parents);
and never, ~ go "'Ho-ho-hol• -be-
cauJ no one, man or woman, can give
that laugh the real Santa ringl
SHOE STORY
I have tome shoe trees made of wood
That I keep cla.e about.
At night I put them in my shoes,
Repladng feet now out.
But I regret thete trees don't grow,
As trees d.ould, toward the skies
And bear a crop of splendid shoes,
Each ooe, when ripe, my size,
U su.eh a tree I had, rm sure
rd tend it e\191')' day
And pl'Op the ladeo branches up
A.ad friibten bints away.
At buYelt-time f d pick my shoes
Robert Mitchum hoboed around the
U.S. 39 yean ago-when be wu 15 and
16 years old. He was arrested for va-
grancy near savannah in 1933, and
lel'Ved seven days oo the Chatham
County Camp chain gang. Then he
escaped. Mike T~kies tells the tale in
"The Robert Mitchum Story" (Reg-
nery, $6.95) : .. After the fint day and
night. Mitchum's ankles were blistered,
ioBamed and bleeding; just to walk at
all was agony .... The pain of the
shaclcles was an integral part of the
punishment. ... On the 1eventh day, '
as the prlloners were being transported
back to the farm, the guards removed
their chains. Mitchum watched. and
6naDy ran. ~be tore across the road
• ·, ._ 1~;~ ·;.
\ .. v .
and toward the
6e1ds and distant
woods, he beard the
guards start to
shout. Then he
beard the ·whufr
and thump of riBe
bullets u they tore "°'*' ...._ into the ground
near his pumping legs. When he
reached the first clump of trees, he
found to his amaument that no ooe
was chasing him. 1n those days ... if
they missed you with a riJle,' Mitchqm
explains, •they just went out and
rounded up someone else to take your
place on the worlc gang.' ..
f ii
PIERRE aonON118 SECRET
Bank look ft. Left Bmk look
Next time you .... "hip looking"
young man with shoulder-length hair,
look again-it may be fake. FTOm Paris
comes word that men's wig salons are
the latest crue. Young banker Pierre
Bottoni (pictured) is one of their C\15-
tomers. His employers demand short
hair during work hows; fashion de-
mands that he Joolc like his mod friends
at nighL Men'• long-hair wigs are hav.
ing brisk sales in the u .s .. too-particu-
larly among Army Reservists and Na-
tional Guardsmen. Here, the situation
i.s reversed. Youths maldog their Jiv-
Qulps & Quotes
~ u I picbd ~smile.
rd hope that half wen left, half right.
And all the latest style.
THROUGH A CHILD'S EYES
Klde ... life dlfle,..,.Uy. Send origlNI contrlbutton. to ''Child," Famlty WMkly, &41 Lexl"9'0n Ave., N.Y., N.Y.
10022 .. 110 It UMd-none retul'Md.
My five--year-old son has been
worried about the scrapes people
get into oo 'IV, and I explained
that these were just shows, not
real life. Shortly after, he came
up to me and asked, "Mom, are
we real people?" Then, looking
around the room thoughtfully,
"Or is this just a show?"
-Mt1. Joel< Bohn
Uma,Ohlo
Search all your parks in all your cities.
You'll 6nd oo statues to committees.
-C. Fiorello
JULIET LOWE.L'S
CB.EBRITY LETTERS
.kaUet l..oW911, ...chor of the •11-thne beet ... ller .. Dear Sir," collec:ta unlnt.n--
tlonatly humoroua lett9na to end from
P9oPle In all welka of llf•.
To Senator Frank <laureh
The Senate
Wuhingtoo, D.C.
Dear Seo. Church:
Pleue tee that I
get into the tailor-
ing ~nt of
,
the Army. I know a lot about tailor-
ing as rve spent most of my life in
women's clothing.
Proracla J ___ _
This is the time of the year when
every contract between parent and
child bas a Santa clause in it.
-H_,.ry E. Leab<>
Look at It tlU.t way: .A fouNUJIJ worlc-
weelc would make posnble another full
day of telemed footbolJ go.ma.
-!AM Ollnghoule
ing as rock performers, film directors
or advertising writers claim their busi-
ness calls for flowing tresses; it's the
Army that says no. Girls, beware I You
can't tell a head by its cover!
DATES: Merry Christmas! 8und8J is
Christmas Eve and Monct.y is Christ-
mas Dayl
ANNIVERSARIES: Washington
crossed the Delaware 204 years ago
Menct.y. The U .S.S.R. was formed 50
years ago Saturday.
BIRTHDAYS (all Capricorns): Su~
ct.y-Ava Cardner50;Howard Hughes
67. Mondliy-Cab Callo~ay 65; Tony
Martin 59. Tu..Uy.-Mao Tse-tung
79; Steve Allen 51; Richard Widmark
58. WednMday-Marlene Dietrich 68. •
Thc'indliy-Sam Levenson 61; Martin
Milner 39. Frkbly-Pablo Casals 96;
Jon Voight 34; Mary Tyler Moore 33.
S.turday-Sandy Kou£ax 37.
..
BIRTHDAY PEOPLE:
Meo T ... tung and Mary T,ter Moore
BJ Frank B8glneld -
LITTLE EMILY
,
>
FAMILY WEEl<LY, Oeoembet 24, 1'12 •ti
. .
Fabulous New Art Concept Turns Any Plain Wall Into ~Colorful
"WINDOW ON AMERICA''
12 Exquisitely Beautiful Oil Paintings Of
AMERICA'S MOST FAMOUS NATIONAL PARKS
Reproduced As A Colorful Art ~riot For Your Home
The full grandeur and natural beauty of America's wilder-
ness bas been captured in 12 magnificent oil paintinp by
Bruce Mitchell. Each painting is a masterpiece by itlelf
... high)igbtina the most familiar and distinctive features
of each world famous national park. Any on~ of these
paintiap would enhance the decor of your home. Dis--
played toaether, they produce a colorful vista of unpar-
alleled mapitude and beauty.
lik• v ... inc America
Throueh a "Ma1ic" Window
To \>roduce this unusually beautiful art print, all 12
colorful oil paintinp were artistically arrao,ed on a
special wooden frame to separate and accentuate each
famous scene. Then, and ooJy then, were they reproduced
as a sinafe, spectacular composite lithograph on fine art
stock. The moment you display it on your wall it creates
a .. Jivina window" of incredible beauty.
This Unique Art4-r1n1
REQUIRES NO PICTURE FRAME!
Another unusual feature of this unique art print is that
it does not haw to be framed. All you do is mount it on
an inexpensive piece of ftat backina and simply ban& it
on the wall. The 12 colodul scenea are already "framed"
by the realistically printed wooden frame.
UMJTED EDITION-MAIL COUPON TODAY
If you would like to transform a barren, windowless wall
into a colorful •"WJNDOW ON AMElllC~" may we
urp you to mail your order today. Although another
printina of thia mapii&ent lithoaraph is already planned,
the supply on hand is truly limited. The cost of this
28" x 28"' full color art print is only $2.98. Money back
guarantee it you are not abeolutely deli&hted. To avoid
any possibility of delay, please mail coupon today.
C CldPe..e..tlt UC. 1172
Enc..,... I.•-----
I City Stitt Zit
I o SAVl MOMll. SPIClll. OfFtl: Order 2 llttlolr-for Oflly $4.91 I PoStpald. Eltra art print MH a ~ 1lft for 111t1 occa•on.
l~-------------~-~-------J
NANCY
'' OEA~ ~NOON, I MOPE '<OU 1-tAVE.. A NICE
CHR~M>\5 ... I 1lUNK I
AM GOIN610 BE our .
. 'ft)lJR WA.'( 500N ... l'LL
;i"R'( TO ~p fl.I ••• SA'I
\HELLO To Q{AR!JE ea>wN"
· YOU KNOW
I INSIST ON
HAVING A
. '7E'RY Tl DY'
HOCJSE
mAT woooo se Jt151'
LIKE ,.,ER NOT TO
geMEM8Ei ... ~ME'tL
COME 10 ~e Me, roo~ ..
l KNOW 6UE kJILt. ••
By· Ernie Bushmiller
I WANT YOU
TO WRITE
u I WILL
BE TIDY"
TWENTY,' TIME'S •
"
I
•
)'
DENNIS THE MENACE
I> t>I>
I THINK YOU'D BETTER .
WAIT IN TH! CAR' UNTIL.
I TALK TO MISS SPENCER 1
. . .
Wl&.1.,
TONIG~
'fMI .
NlliM'T'!
HMM-'TMAT~
'TfUI ...
-=--,
• YIS, If
'4Uflf
If!
Al.I. TMA'T
P~OO!.lGT'IOM
JUST TO~
AWA'/ ON
CH~~f~. HOW -.:·CAN Ml~· . -rr ?r .
'-«"•,/ ,, '
-"' -. ' -
,
Af' TH& =-'ft. .o~ TWIL: ; ,
~Ac:::'UUS
'WIU.8'~ , AVllr)ON
MOWUI
I -.a • -. -
tMAG-INl1 ~T'A WORK'S
AL.I. VIAlt WITM A fTAFI'
O'fl a.~, J"'S'f So HI
CAN PW Nal.INO 'TM5
WORl.O ON CNltl~MAS
IVI ANPGNS Ulf '7IW'
l#l'IAV 'TD US IC"1 •
•"--f' ~
I (°'/ft • ..,,.""
I , .
' ' ~ -
<l <l<l
IS MRS, 51LV!9TER
H!R!?
'
I R!ALltE THIS 15 l'LACIM6
YOU IN A VERY AWKWAAO
POSITION •1• AND. J TRULY
APOL.O<:ilZE ,,,
r
,
• •
·-
,
. . . . ..
• ·-
•;
. .
,
·MUTI·1nd JEFF•
..
•.
•
' •
•
By Al Smith
•
•
. ..
:by Charles Barsottj
•
•
•
I --"lo-'-~ ' .,: . ~· " -:..· ---• r • I .....
· . .-.. • HO~l7 OLJT
. ~R HANl/l . . . -·. -...... , · ~
f • •
"T7 YOU, \wet:vs, f P!iRSI:NI' MV
P!?RS'NAI.. 1.0.U. FER 2 ~UCK$!
••. RE:DE:EM'l'IE THE: MINUTE I
11iA]'lKsj 6'ef SOME CASHl .
t SOP . ' .
. , I •<><>LE~'..$
m UKE >f!xl .. GUYS ~ SHUT' C/P. $()I' CAN
GET SOME sUiEP !
---
. . ' .. .. . . .
•
·/DUKE ':,
''A Unr/.G
. ,. •. "
.. A~J*". ~NO
. J(.WG{'
.•
•
• it • • l
• ,I
•
•
•
"
>
.
. ·
• • j • • • : s
! • • •
• • • •• • • . . • .
• •
• •
G~ . Wl"l"\T .
. .-..RctUE
190Vl!--Me· POP. ·.
CH1'1ST?N1Sf
• ·•' ' r•
. . ' 1.E
TliReE. · ~Me.uas• .. 0 1'\:JRTl:E
·'ESGS AND /J\1
VVOODPeCKElt. INA~TREE
-
I '
·sur l~N"T
iHe ·PO~
CLEYe.R?
•
a .oNER!S A~K. . .
' .,, .,
•
PASl"ED ON
THE SACK •
·~·LlsrEN ••.
r MA'OE HIM A ~N
• CHRISTMl'IS COOKIES/ SHAPED UK.E TRE!!S
:r •a'JK rr it:> . THe!M t.JM ·MUM, THEt-1 THaY
PUT IT '"°' THERE ....
I •
•
'
•
GORDO
We sti II have a qi ft
to deliver but we're
prettv tired.
sv the wav,
where is that
present we're
to deliver?
How Heck, Pop, it would
take us clear 'to the
other side of,town .
, I i "'
So~
,
Getoo your
jackets and
let's qo.
,, .
Okay. It's
a nice night
for it! .
•
• • • •
When the SOON melted
today, it was muddy
~nd sloppy outside.
,~
By Gus Arriola
----• --
• •
t